=MN .: -, :14641904111t=1,4V )0011.41tir...1:",",::1,..5 ;; r4,tittL=ti.2ll4l,' z.T 6i iii -r it 4.- --: - -'''.;4o:i..-- '- *lokiiiiiirl*, votiila -` sl,lirliteal*lli!i-V'"l -WM*. ~,.. - , --- .lii, s:fl:Tit i'.444'.-• ~„I • "-: •040,- •, - lifig l 4 l -..r- taii--diff at, Jr/ .4- , s• .. , ,.....ml. ~,,x...- lkonti-11,--.7,-77 " ';.,1, - 7„1# . ". 4,14- , -, . vi.fif-u-ciprirt,7-F. a 4 .ice * ~..._.,.r..71i4iiii,.- .ihNtr4 l 4a .1“1 --,. u ol 'mss 1;44 atkOklas)."4l-,. - . teoolo4, ,445-11- itamleivittA", 1790 'll/14644-",. 7.."-.-. ~-; , 4 , 4 4.44.,,t e t ? ' , . ,v.0..t mv,vl4,!*** PI ~.,,A. .:. =,, 4l4o4friThilke - -.._...` - • tot arlitatiorc: -. •--0-.......rzrzi na t is tit ark idt:-.....: —•• —l.' --, - ,4t - 7-, 4. ,---- " , ”'---7 - „ , 4 -- . , "-, f illri, 414afi. • ..„"fus -,,-+ , , :, , ,4 „ oxixtoOtt f,- .1 nttorkieja, -.. t- . -.,-,q 5- ^' ,. .Tii:';'thi4-itik WI. • - 1 - 4 • --• • • "Psrpriute, .orobx z!i!, S;Ei A' f: ii: itts*Citt,! l • 4l 44l4o 4 los4VAM l o l 4,o • 1 , 1 14- 11 COW91 0 41 0 4104:011e1Iii:::t7 , '' i' - ‘ 1 •••':•11 • alas% he; '-:.. InT;'! ~-k- -? _- . ,, , : 4:PAM_ 1110;!:- ;•' , .: ,, - e't -, LtIAD - - t:;16 . ,J-'7 , :.• • " 7z' USIA '.14641:3 ';Ai r 4t.ittl*. 4 , o o 2 fAe-44 1 bP4 11 !.' , a 4,- ;;;J:) , VIIRINCE,-‘4O o xi e ir, :414611911PRZR s - il l - pkiir144 { 014 1 ,4"44#446e' MOWN :C .10,47 ibetiAopliak oula *444 1 ,41 4 / 1 0 0 1 *P*IMAAMOIC10 1 4 1 4:, :40040044***_? -4, Tic Tr.mr, MI • ;: * :: ? < 2 ' c :44l:lll4lrt - ,ti.igiiollll4, - ; . gii4iiii`eyifti*iik*,iefirillTm94s - 11100, iiimyv 41; • kr e/MeMignittirarVatt • .2114 c SitakinoWrtasifilimeD s. '• 1% 3 , • - 1 44r 1 kfAilywint!it 1 0 0.1 dientton 14 the . 1 , 2146 , * 4l o l o l W l'll f 11 : 4 41* * :#4#0 : 11 . i 1„4 0' *4. maw*. A . z ; *,1.10A...T :it w.,AM1U4111.1.-i- ;.~ 4 Yuad s3il 77iioitiewt ' oE;iigY Z - ;^' ,- :;•r"- • niteilai aiitimagmiux I . A l o.l4 l taliWinto; : eTetitterjoiuttairviii. 4stki.tet .11. f ' Bid pg LaTBOACUIR.; iteikkalliMAlll9o4*.t:sbois:Moird :04' *l4 ): - -71.kiimerokt.•:—. , '-- • : ti foie tatre WlClRitifer -11331,10.11:81 :01fOffluseteasSersi•ou'es 'Am p: 61,07400/ - OASIOIUMENLVRIkIevprio 1118 ." 1.Aut A 0 0 1 : 144441. owist .101:1414 wee au:4w :1 1 4.4 1 , . • 4 7, - - iII4SSIS enz ALS-t Mk Rs *ow kiduiat sic wow awe 1,?t , •-e WW., 1 4 1 . Jur , IT!' Vt ittAIVOCIM1104140010111$014,01.10101h1101:37 A• 001111114 1 -.. iXiiillill44:l4lllll , *4lll44l,olllliiiit 111111!1111C t-,01V.V1WIR lallibellA*000111**1.1*(4101114,01411111* _ _ OUUK4f, imp4ptuurr asa r4igtre realm kne OS,* POW,/ .1" • - ~‘ Le 2,ol"*',lllAlti."lloat.,' i lira aa a itICIT 13,irea nr) WHELDERVIONXLSN• - "N"AP'''.Eq• *figarnata,.. l . , 1033WINCIF/WAPODIES,r, $4244 4 0 1 4 1.1 1 0114 aNriii, IRAWO . 104, OW niaissitakodui . ' iffirristrziketiatmerirribitii' is1I1:111r,-"i0r lib 4 -P"1-IA ~,"•. - taT.!. . ( ! . 4 ! i . h 1 !t.!- !bs_ay..i,tiln,;4::,,:i. , ~., „. :: .!; ~.". . • ~. . ~..-4,- r,,=.-;_ider, .. 7 .-mt.„-0.A., ..-4-23.1, --,:- - , , • .-.., ._,..a....- : • ,- ;: 4 ''''''''' '' ' ' 114, 67C1AT4 ':."---IF,1,1:- '-,,,,_'' '-' `-' - ' : • - ~,- .--,.----ii.v.P ---4 x. , ' '- ' - - sTii-777-4,.-- ai,%"iiiiiiil, ;8!,!1 .S-- _,--'•,.f,,k0g,-,-;;iiiiii' :11ic.,:4-b,,,-.7,127.4.±:7t.,,,,;..:y.z:, 10"':-. ''- ,44.4-q,,'•,*-"-- :' , .. - 4T77.....54 iiAii, ~.„7"-,,i11-1134° iri7muswiitrititro,. '' 4sitt„,.oillittit‘ill '...ii,,r0: V=lbict;WCl lAT : ilt m...... •*t : ' -"- .-Ife SkiIMIPICIf ~ ,': =l m uirj a ti.. :if i Sti n fo,CW 4. ~« ::,:,,fß,l'. ::,,,- A -, i,,:e...., --,. i ', ', ~,i1,,,,----- 14,1„:,0171!., ,i.f.iAss'7•:-.,-,,,•-----.,`,.,_-,lv, }v...., 'j , '---- :_>: 00teri,s , 0 ~ , 1119 A• '''- ' - : - 'own - - .'," -''''''----` 1 ';,'''," : - ' . "' : ' , - 6 3'..,-q - ';' . .f. i c .f-% . 4"..'.4 - :' ' i r; - r -• , if' iik , V, l' ', l -..'''', i' : ::;: - ;;', - ; ( ; : ;,. ,' ' ',-P•i , :'- ir:," ; - q - t j 1 1 1 v -r• ,:, Adjiiim,„:.' -,,i,i. ' l * - 00:i4ti"- - ittilitArlON‘fi...,-,;;,174:Zii:0 ~;::,._ .. - 44 - 0440, - • ,44#004 11 ) 0 0V0i9tetti.* • /r."/" 44 , 10 : : -r . , '. ', : r ,: • : , . * :„, • ~, ' ll3ll- it . iriA l kattal , , • 1 1 ,&tlii , t a :.- , '-, - , -,0- . -, 1 - 7.' :ittto ilk atior,Aps iii - WC, i ' f, - mourpn ki WoOkly li t hm+ F tli bPr - , - =- ,- ' ,l O .- ..- ItilW4trtk l Atil } :i i ty,: ..-6 90 , .-! ~ e, V , , , 1 F . , iii,' linallf 'ilit*lge Oft 40:3faintir, :Z I" gito.':l)*4 I P lik t it 4 VAJditer47l '-' . , If* ' ' 3 tyaliset i „oo,oo:o: .1.: - -,. - " 4,74_ , .d 4. ',.• 4 01 1.4 1 610 0., , •-• ~ .7,-,. , ..-.l' .9.2iwarlaik"'fitaa '-•,‹ sfeNAVY•4O7 , " ,'''' ~ i 0 - "'A.7I . O9, I O k POMIAWAP3..: ' , ..,. . • " • ' -.' - ''- —; - 1-,-- ,= -- .• - -• '• - - ..'!'" l,i.-i - : . f , --,...- 1 , - ~,, s ,'"'... ,- ,& 4 ik, -ii - - i4A, - 4. ---," ''•-;--- •••..---.-- ..•4*4 3 - -- ', , . r tr • ... y .,.. ,. , 1 .1, J, . -',. , . . - :••,..1= - '•• , .:- i ; ~ •-, • - - ,- - -' " - ..0""" , ,; oi. 'O-14, '- •; :. 'f.e.; ' •.: • ~, ••••••„"- • -. "- t . `At ~ "/;•P'" 1 ~- . ., ? ;-•.;:0 - ; , A , r.• Y: ::::' • A 14 ,* '",•-_,-;!: ____•••••.„'f :' : -,: t - L' ''''' - . ,, ,k k• i , I, 'G - 4 t111W4 ' . ''f . "ft• . 4 ___,,___A ( :•.:--,f.....:'.;:e. ,. .-1- t ilv. • . .* s, . .. , . .. . •it ,LAV"' . "- --- .;v,r • : .. ••• - -'•g- , Trierjr.f . .. , :....•:rfg?tr, p -- .11 - qViii. -- .;ftr , ,.. ..r . ''fi!:: ...,:' 2 - ' ~:. 1 ,-- N , „,,,', -_-:.- LA .- 4 . ,- -, --• Ap,„ , „„., .. 4 , , ...,., ~,,,L . k ., ,,,, IsooTr o24? -.. ! - ,;:.', - ;,, 11 •-flz-s.,..';F ',-..,,...:,•4( ' _. ,", , . •-',-, '' - 411[1. - 'f,c4 -- -' - !'"..'•,...,,,,.;„, ~,.. ~...:,.., r • '',, -, P - •‘1 ,, ,,-. , •,- • - -1- ,1)•.::',A '. .if...".... , ...:71415N0?2, .. ~,,,.,_.._ , ;.'• ,, .t .':: : ,....;" " ' fl / J. k ' 74.: " "' - = 1 ' •:' .: . 4 '.': ~.:- . 1,:., . .. -; .- .„,••• ... 4 p • . . . .:-..i..\\....L. : -"-- " " . "' , ; ;.., 0:. : .i ..1 1 ,.-- z - 41 1 1 4 ,- .____..' ,-- .41',•••2:: , i:.(4 4- .:- - !... - -' - •••••.i. • ,--' ,•-.. -- - ~. ; • . ...., . •,..-'•:- .-,- .••• 1---, ...,1:••••.;•-•-• -:•-' I .. .., . _ . • . - , _ . 1',v431 - ,„1:,2,4N0. 309. AT'NtrIXOLESAr.ot. - , ,BUNITACibiarD BY TUB *******TTEl e *Air ES. 24, - • - • MECHANICAL BAKERY, - pas •1021111;13110311r -..-.11101111,440C - 4411111.01_1::VP 01 0 1 BTERISTA . OAR - BE V/14Ail:i2D AT rciTzo wino 4 - ochr 'E i3;M a , ~Y iiiandrrit~jrgslTf bf if, TEN - 5 ::: 7116111 ../* *0 -W , B3 P, ltii TitApg" pit zollio; ' ' VA.T.AD!, , :STPOK 1!;-STOOK . FEMME BOOTS AND SHOES. • 4'O..B4PI4,,Bq:TUOMFOON sr. 00., I,3TANIIT, . _G-,: zkcT 94 , 1,11 A. ,11 lons stools BOQTB AND•SHOES .T; = • 111TYMIICASVIIIM . AND - "FeitilWiettini; the - ally will please call and ex, •r; ;,; ;•-!.; • , ; ; ;,' • : ninon Skett gook. , „ _ irtgAr: ~nin..4otets: • _ _ . . -NI -1 ET rdo • co. ".- tii:OHjir*l7fi - • *met of T=lll* MULLARD d: AO., - "•-'; ifiditrsis tMprEs, soweAFtiau ' nut • :. ; iOiOO.ItOWIY,STELT.A SHMS, , ~ , maa..az0..,,:•„:- Pritteo.-EXitiiiiiERY•'PCVS MERTI,T9" SHIRTS • „...• B , P. ••••-• . , - - • ‘- • • ; - •NOEI.4Ii 130triiriROild - 0 4 1, Ts • -SS"Larf/TM EVISAET' • IMACENICZERIr !. ran •416:$ 1300'.t0"1 • ,I**ig-goorgB,«...peong. • tkliti4.B_39oltjlo,3llfivtiatamiNptvitv.watatip k? 1=1,14:7,-`v". " : ; 13310lioalelain jrobs, ttOktritc-i_oOoD. F. icktp‘a. al . Co.. 325- (=awn , 37 EET, , .p i ir t - ithsittoixittiin oCwLolorigate SOiont to that WWI kr MI6OIO WANTED TBADI, tine etolooB 'AND DU &W. okBs W 001441 P sO=lssT, entspiamirpwfr pawl' X1ig00 0 . 1 4 415 ,1D5,: ko., sta., : _ . KILE ILOBI/T8 IN PHILADELPHIA VON , • iravinotratxltre. troye , come /017 s lal&usio igan l s•4 o o•P 34 7ll + l- - , • • , • illirAlllP l /1 1 1T, gosrlay. AIN 0 Xlykil-A0`0;00W000'.00.11080..,I4 17 • 1108S .Atin wooLLAN Amax() *pink. , i• '; • , pitontsrumsaptiko,nratisrc• lawn , fakir; lrootrant. Gown, - \0114T3 1 kOLOIND 1103014011,11tA00. • - • • , Igi-10'0011ritANOPXOTURX00 1 , Co: 3L P A NY'.B iwooi t tairsarirtik l•isae. • ••• - i1if,14.10,07111in ti 411109 ; idti, • ions -mAsmckoltiansek antriairvi mosso *sussa Asp , mikwißs. • • - esigaseunniculetolmtaTts AVD D01:3 1 71010. 'AMIORIOAN AND NO In'00MPANI00 ) yr#Riatoie' . • .., ILL4ADELPHIA- MADE GOODS.; , • r; 4,15*,0*. likiARD, ib ITUTORLiiiiii, ..,... I.IW MI asrstri , Meer, , eir.s. to a* igsa• ~tlie tallaging well•lngowa =kat at i -; : sithi:Dilliintal ; lost, and Lleiwoodg __. .1 _ . ' t -., li x ',, • - ,74 and 4.11 ,TIO3/003, . iimata; Liaaaod, VoUI4i. *ad cAntagton, BR tIttIeistVEVILIPO6, - Boat? 0.110,- Plasearr; 114 - 4moalkook . ,,Yolodo, and, Erie f 'sumac a tat tAxn, Amp ; PC,4lO Wan CrAia. Wu* luirs,Atawanist.sneit AM. Uostekiarto 4, Waal; 1 kaliton, lea f War, lisabbiln.` Talialimmati Ameri= eau Klls; Blau - aid' Oa Dinah, Mai, , ' ' i PLUTON NIA5kalA AND POPAciltAg, ' ''' Agnigni Blealeibili 11619iid.,Taad..rtfusted,, at Taxioas ~ 'IN .'ittiortrOict mums - t ilop taw rows. li atinagia,acenbakiti fosakitailloward,.B le ergo. • •.. -, 1.14,110 4111110T15430 ANO • Daum. r acmiumslatd - Aimoziamar•kfii nil &palish, feint riik... , WatP 4 ari Warolk - rdalatiliao:s -, intokoonooaao, , tratd,ami Pioneer '• ' ;- - ''i - 7 To au of which tio r attaitioa or timaart la !mated. limitLEA, 1 25 and 186 'OIIESTNUT =Boat offour.tiatba laltgrale a 9 4contabli agsoit) 14 4 4.13 WR I/ 4 6 , 1 1, f4 n "),,S i t.)lo/ 3 P4 C abri" ? lii ..*A 4 PPR I4 %:- ' . ~ . ' . D. 641"11CA14610 0 baelP o,lo4egaimaor Prints, fivvoti iivr(P do =, , 0 , zr,: i tri ti l l etrit . o o 2r l r latd filmatlitpo. ,,, L ;Ina _, ; , a a i - "•••= ,; * ''' ,-' ' • *netiltiOisrita fere, and , Orarf in t. 4 :^..r, t - 1.- ~-, .-- , „ groatArtialoa. 6 .. litsadard :dr 103 t AT Aiiiii• do; , , , inset:sot Whites, and Imtare. i „ ~ged *Mtn • - Antique, Mmaninge ?il#Cala 00. , „ sheik's ,-awl baions . MK: 7.- ~,.,' - ' ..,,„ - . sad ...,etsfia so. Improved Plain t , . ~• `.: - ehidelkanti Cambria. i lingiiiiot.)!4 .1, Irs,po.-491.filisattno, EhtrUnge; raglictioatiso A ^" ' -, • , • pAIAdiAIdRA 1Y,1N1115:,'1344p4a, Ttot -400.40; .- 1 7 ':'''.. ' ' • '• - ' AWOOLVAIVO• • , ' - ' laW lillyer.AND co. ilh. ko Peaking. Vane, Ocas. ...„ . , „ T • .• , 1,1. 1 ,0 4 ,. sad Whoa Cloths. i. Xoolt. 'MAXON 4.21X4 Ili* 00 "1,129 , tniassniares. _ f eLapliatAt CO:4filao Odianneisii. 1 lationtata.oo, Inorbeastnaissi:' - - - i., 'OXFORD IlittancsAaa Douala.; Tatious snits*. i - a oduivitica MILOS oamilearet in gnat variety. Wang virMiotkeeTwerdar &e. , • •i" 0,12.1 , 01M-Ilaait Platiatn4 - and lina staple - and Ite,4 6 V-KW lttr O l i.l l3 . l9 P l'. a li Ykik.F!. • , , '.r ir2Ortt - . , :i4100 3 4-1 1 ttn#0inD 14, Oats. rIC43,):4EEiAItEI; , PPAIIINNOINO . 110VONKIIMPII Kt, C.401*, atotilt of ilsj. l Waste iGtialos in *el*, wave:tang IWO-I°X P 6 AoriP 4 '. c' t 44 Al " Row ff* silo M444 , 4• 1 l 4 .4 witiroovis or SO;SIIISTIk;WiIritPITPIII . OC). 922 ORiSTKIIT , -„ vr-f , :•7 1 ABM/ NINTH. [Afs74 l ll"irw4 ,,, tt ~; tett - ilk* ,htl,l,43l,Fut:itiabiniedobi.' ' —l4 • _ e paiti,,,saortqlace of. the firm of Was -4..*4ootiVkli-togollT IntittrlS )1. AWOL Ill.l ' Agrax., If 4AI UP ACTOBT 1 114 tie illirMillioiltoppootto afore How 0,) 14 - og em sw. IClVlloos4roopoolfally eell,l6e,attoottoo of 3 thy *OWN Ha 4016[4010 JAW Mora , mid hi 1 11 ,*. At Aoki ootioe./ pc "Eit "FirtiliNalt Woppltot *it itr . _0,1104104004n, 411,47 -- -~Bceab.~- romzE Azip ogiO,Jmag., . - 5 •-- • • rhi..011113 ii&NENit; 8. W,, iroo and - Moe streets... •, • Pop l ar street. b w it: Ltttrß!" and ooltO;oto. NM& N. BIIOH No. 4CW-11t1lowhIll, _ strait T.,- • • a. rptooeiT,' No. :91D. Spri ng_ !Jordon JOHN G. 1,225 *tie, T. F. Skiff 0f„ . No.; rIIF. North`, fifth JOHN BliRH street," ' "0. ,comer fifth and, 414 iTg 1 WFL ' : o. l3 r=i l erN t leventh terliereUeets." - X ° . KNIGHT; - - Broad itssat . bele* Wet e 10143 ci4Brns, - 41 9 Lombard' corner Sixteenth' and' Pine eireetcy W MUCK 00CIITNEr, N0..1016 South , '/'esifth' street. O. B. WANAMAHER, .',Federal street' *bore O. LINTZ, , - Corner South Fourth, and . , Johnston streets. L.-HOLLAND, " 8.19. server Sixteenth unti. DAVID itiDDl.llll4 • No. g den I t i r o e r e st Niosenth: street. •7. WAGIITMAN • D. corner Bieienth - and ' - Jelfensms streets. O. O. TOMPHINB, No. 1949 North , front street. . ' BBOONS,', , „S. W. pocr re o e l l. fierentit jANllll7oliff cos . tr a street'below fhb : tienthetreet., I. Fj0914 ' • B. W Owner Franklin and - ' Coateestreets. - monala, - N. -W. -comer Tenth and Shippen streets. D. TWAlit No. , - 19/0 411)11th "front street. W corner Broad and l'arrieh streets.' • TUQL T. BLTST, ' Corner-Niketeenth 'street - and Bless avenue. B. 8. Bows, . • 14.- 2.. corner Ninth and' federal streets. J. Moitrrylla, Twenty.seoonit street Lb. • Costes.' . / !' 4lf ' ' * 4l:MT lBr • Costits street above Seven. - ' taenth. ALM PIYLLIBTONi Horner of )fifth and 01,r1s 1. L. ECIOKOs. ' Camden, - N. 7., store 119 Arch street. O.N. Jungian, • _wee Philadeipblatlethlt. ovellarertora N. L. ' Lat. rums. „.., JOHN BARNDf. Tremont and Pine Grove, TOWIifiIND; W l earaester, Penns 3601,11.110,' 4tlvatla Olty,N a. IAIIIB GARLAND, • Capella'', . • . D. - NO/VON, 71.oionseiNdi. sus iminivr; • • • ` yllatapton, Dd. 'Dearille; : ta ;,9.n 7 DAgs, je2-tf- ~; trijiIANTOALL BAKERY, 8: .W.,l3osnor 11110aD and NINE Streets; Philadelphia. , Thin eetablialiment is now be stmesesful operation day and . night,. and alt. ar• respectfully Invited to all inCsee sebum. the wkolk process of bread•sselthai foe them' The underaigeeitiktibillbertyi of ening that for thirty are years be be been a practical baker -dye fie apprentice; end ate as journeyman to one of the first lentsce in Bootlaad,ead twentriive ea maeter-daring which time be has keg the opportunity of tacking many expel:neat} and obeerrlog ill the improvements which have been made daring that period., - In thiaastablialiniant, of which he beerier:the pan againant, 'addition to the complete laboroaelos m eteors', holes soy buoy kWh; not here- Being aorastralead in the porobsse of Boar, nbne but tbaaatunieet ens beetehall seer be need ; and he Imo no beeitation la espies that breed 9f all kinds can be de• livered, unsurpassed la iinailty and weiget to that made in tha ordinary process Nominee in which the bread made by the lifeehintect fishery has not been tried, or bajada It hie been Wad ohlf at Its commented:tent, before tbelnarblinrY 'ruin reran workinifordet, ktis respeetlailysaked to sire ite•trlel noir= r the undeolipuid balipTing iteroald lead ap mutual adreotap• '"•-•• rJ•-• " • siys4l4f. ; • . JOEir4 .tie;3l44.ll..evilitet. v'ttait iora f ,INlgif GOODS. Bent maim heiry fine Linens:" ' • • - Some cheep lotaby the Om or yard,, trapklnsiDoylire, Towel,. Bayern. ••,- • -;coos.ss 4„aostativ. '- JOT rod rdb.tiltn. " • WiLLlAitiAtirfLE, ••• - Wattinutta:antroiner " Plait swilow-prietti bin Bogota". t beeVogs by the yirl or )14de: •• llamala s Tto,ktngoti d+ • - , • , : •,0001 , 178. dF CON 4111). 30'7 f1LuT13.3,, (WSJ higRE • 1••••/: • giro EsidNuto44: . %loos; 1414 color's and blank. Pine Black Dpiallins and 0100 , 130Yee.• Bang Olulinicrn; , Veagvot and Satinet% N. B.,,tlll:l2tber sallin. , , GOOPEit. & ,doNanD. %Vint and ladidlET 3127 NEW RIOU FQUIJARDES, last reasired , • 20 FOULARD Rosta, fall largtka, rostualne Dpsigns, to lea style!! Neat atylea of fipßen, Blacks, and Blues. lawntid by - ' 212227erii1s BROTRIRS, $027 • 6l:ol3Teln . and =GSM Street!, CHEAP Ditti SS ' GOODS . ' ' Ism Cellitfif2ooo/ 311 d$ 0812ta. " Lunn of good styles and qualities. roillard Blitooll4 at 16 oonta. RIARPLEBB BROTEIEita,, /727 OHIBTI4I3T sod BIOSTII Stree ts CitSAP AND DaS la ABU: Day GOODS it ADAM , CENTRAL 13TOBIli ' - - MIGHT.II and ABOBI ilitreots. . /Idiots BOW, ill radnewi iu prtoe. Printed Lawns and Organdy .. Tuns Napoleons. and Double Male/. Printed B.llliants and alarsethell. ' Tswana% Dreaa atstetisis lions Detaining and' Challis. Plain Tautittttoss and.Orape !amis. ~ Sleek Lase Mantles andPelnie: • Wide:White and Bleak Agape, tit altawti,Mitttleis . Blegoust Bigot Mks. , , • Tarnishing GoOds to Variety. Bates pr Waffle Quilts. ' Lancaster anal Ailendale do: - Angina - flannels, `Zwllled and Plain. , Batlinivale So. • - &toms, Bosoms, &a. ao - ,penl Blasts, 10 grest•yarlety. Minna:mu Goods al sad out low. tieriVa Travailing Berme, jyldea tu•th-tr vino French Drain Goode at half-price I I ! We mare Just dosed out, froin an importer, , 1 0 08 • Omni lots of excellent goods, • - Which we wilt sell a t less then, • elm:tux MIDI ltltttuLtatillloat Also, the balance of our regular stook of . - I ANOV tints, p&ENOES, deo.. &e. Drench Lao 21toolontinfee. • /ranch lime Polstes sod IdentilleS, Olutotilla Lams Goods, In great muddy. - Rich Maar, 811 k Dusters, very Cheap Travelling Dusts e, In'aiffereat 'materials. -tistemer Goode. for Menlo and hoyat, wear . ens, Linen !. Dathitovelsoho., &o ,a-coven, 'rental:nears, titaitleacersi &o.„ end A fall stook of Domestic Goods.. • , .-r.H.GAttalil A,; / Gone* V 411771 tb XPRIRG ftAItDAIN, 3rll BUY AND SALL - xvp. Gla OM OEI LACE ' BOURNOTTS ' WITH ° s pe l l, troiats arid If aatillitei (Aleaedn,) all a ;:adtteed prlisteyto'oloee the 11.20017. as Sao ra.itla MANTILLA .1152P0114711, - . , -.708 013BanitIT St:teat. • • • . lung Tao% , BOURNOTIS WITtE O,APSB, Pointe and, btantlatia, (Oacebfay,), In grad profusion, at le. duped prides, to dopy the /season et the PAWSriuviMPOTtlllhf, .103 011.38TNUT Street BLACK AND - Vril , DARIGN OLOANB AND; Dustoro, arroatioad.irloa!o, to Mose the wane:4'st the . PAIUB MANTILLA SMTOBIIIM, 7^ WI ODXSTNIIT,Ttreet. , suminewoLoAss AND DIIITTEI4B, In an Infinite estrietyout &brio atredneelLprlooe, et the ' ~_ pATIt it MAN TILL& SMPOuItIMA:'' 'SOS OHNSTNIIT Street . Ale libels Of our stook - Is now drains at refined piece, preperetoty to the wee of the 110101011. J. W.' PRODTOTI to 00. ha' , 703 ORESTIIIIT Ttreet. eftbitittAtiare, CABLNET IPUBNITITRE TA.Broa. " iblOOttE . 4%", CAMPION. No. an ,801:71% SECIOND,S (MUT, Ls epaisisotion with their ,rnstansive Citblitatliatinen,‘ artz noir tztattatatnazing a superior article , ;BILLIARD , TABLE.iI, • - atla luthkliebw ou band a Poll supply, Aelsked with 1100&1 1 lb CAMPION'S IMPSOVID 017011 IONS, Whig* ari Pravawageti by all who Lave wed them to be 'aperitif tas "theta. 11.4. the quality awl Pnith of these Tables the mann tontanno !Or to, their numerous patroius tbioughout the Union, so ha WM famtillaz with the &Meter of 'Mar wait ' jy2.13-5m . . , 1/1411A01. 5 B 0 COFFEE.-3,20 1 ). Bagri „LLD- prink+, /Statiig . from Dirk Inns, and for sale by ' • , (1,11.6.043 1 . & jylB. - • " - • tetitiastroet. cifos4--littAttoy.-,10 131zile. pure , Oen ueoUrur alder -'n!'skaa-75 alio, AOla' do. old tztra (panty.. Oa oopelgoomb And tot 010 by 0. 0, tARLEICk CO. , . Al{o}iF - t;'sooond'door iboye Q,Bil IT LPERS 90 bhds., dry salt Shona t" digirP4set iststAssa snit !or sato by • 0.t0.-samvx & CO. • • nu , seconddc!i door above PONT: TO BIM 04EA' WATCIIIES, go to Kottß yeLut 1411100trn,amid crWLSkB, 22 ..,a: '3611-assorted ON)Ok of sa: it , ?odor pal l Nadi T ribrOillirtore gad for 0010 by - Wg6VHI3, ;mute. & CO., ' 400 NAVAtettletl. sod N WIDOW NS. BV/INSD 801A.Z. -20 calm foe,gale by 01411:l &eNvß.ol44ivPriv !"!11.in110. ' . "PHILADELPHIA. FittOA-V. -.Tax 29, .~ .. ~~ FRIDAY, itaiY 29, 1859. ,PitbiiCatphs. Boats about B,;4erting,ife lintel sell very well, we suOnea,e,seelpg that so, 'inait',of them 11T lito- 110401:1 - gere, froin - ilie'prese 'of tippineett 4k 00,,; ire hive a henalome - veinme,i r reilsed„and'illuatra. ted hy,E:' * Btablerof ilarewood, itaryland,'Wbleh ' l Ferty , lenar 'years at the tife,'of, .Thanter,;" being „ferninisoonees of lgeeheoh ; Browning, a IllarParal hantar, ronghly dewe by.hlmseir., The Arlene iseldelly' laid In:ther Allekhaniaii: The bantr; hearlyeighty yeara old) la'so - real a personage,"tha Ike'llek over one died 'and :tivcpty. deOeidants . .''He appeavi..to, - have written.down reugh;netee of hia'adveatures,, Which Mr. Stabler hai revised, preaerving ail snitch; 1 as possible of the original style. , There are name-i roue Vouchers for the identity and geed oheraeteri of Mashich Drowning. 'The book is as fates-OW( int, In its way, as M. Gererd'a account Of his) lion-killing adventures in Attlee, and that is MP; log ,a groat deal: Bears and deer are as exciting ; to sportsmen here as lions can be to amateurs in: Africa The whole-page - engravings are - Very ! good, in • design and . exeoution._ The woOd•ant& printed inaiith the letter press are evidently oldt, customers, and do not liziprorelltebOok. '. • ' ' "Tent and Harems - Notoi of mi. Oriental Trip;"' by Carolina :Falne, published by Appleton, Nab" York, lea book of Eastern travel and adv.intare., l The anthem% who arrived at Constantinople lir] an American steam.frigeti, 'ettriit in the winter d 1850, describes that eity.tvitlyttsi People and Mts• toms, with the ease ind'iraols s wiiiilr proverbially makes - female writers;froiri theday a 'of Lady Ma ry Montages, the best tourists in the world. Fiera Turkey Miss Paine went to Egypt, and tbroigh Desert into Byela.• The narrative atoms jest es the travelleits "going up to Jerusalem." This is exaotly the Book to take into the country and read, until you fancy thatthe stately palm trees and thenoble mine of jilts plotaresque Orient - aro I before you, when you lift - your eyes from its en grassing.pages. ', . Two, iblunieslave just been added to "The ihisteeliold,Lilirary;i' in course of pubiloatien, by Dalleser A Procter, of New fork., This coital:4km is biographical : The new suljict la Peter' .the Great, and the- preceding 'were" Joan of ' Are; Robert Burns, tiooratee, Columbus, Frederick 'the Great, William Pat, Mehemet, Luther, Oliver oromwell,,Torquitto Tene t and John Milton. The anthori from •wbotri these lives haie' hems 'ohltify drawn; aro Lordefasaulay, Jules Michelob, George Grote, Dean Illimen, Edmond Gibbon; Thomas Carlyle, Dr W: Smith, - Alphorae. de Laniartine, J. If. Wiffen, Chevalier Deegan, and Profaner Matson.. The win 'has been jidielously 'edited Mr. 0 W. Wight, who' has carefully and ably compiled the Life of Peter' the `Great froth a - variety of anthentto sources. Thil actual forindor of the Maslen Empire Is Well. worthy - cif a , nlohe in this - gallery of biographies' Portraits,' and Me i lifeAs one of. the Moat 'valuable in the series: ' Were andlieyoad : or, the New Man, the Tries - Man, by Hugh Smith Carpenter, (published by Miami:l/others, New York.) is a charming book, we (UM say--ooOld we nodes-Stand - it, wlalch we have vainly made repeated - efftrts to do. Per haps there maybe transcendental people who can not Only appreciate but sanity it. TO - these subtle I minds we` leave it, without 'passing On opining uPoits it. 'Hoer' could we ? 'seeing that ills 'yeti; tally dire and unintelligible to-us. • • isFaller, of New .York; whose nom de plume is Della Britten, 'has lately anent I few month/in •L'arope. .I.le landed tat - Liverpool; rushed Orr to the Burns Festival at Da mfries; visited Abbotti.. foil . an d'Edinburgh;' ran• do wit`to Landon, (whets' be wail ektremely well iiceived 'll2 literary, pond:. cal,.and'theatrloal eoctlety,)'anderwent a fewdejli Of: Water-cire at Malvern, paid it dying Visit' to Paris, thence 'to' Fiore-doe and Iloilo, toiishiocat Genoa, in' route,- hastily visited 'Melee; bad another glitiliat at Paris, where the Emperor' Was jest suirtbig thy Italy, returned to London, "tithe midst of , the late Ministerial contest, aqd wag , biok in itor-York a lbw weeks sgo,Lrasolved to Oiled, into a volnnie, - - the various lisilY letters which he had • written 'from -Barope`to`Aiairicah i OeWipaPers, - With snail' revision and -add - Mimi as • - DIM , 'tc- aria.A.,. - 4.errevi4bratzvita • • • ...- of ' Sparks from' it Locomotive° ; or, 'La; and. Liberty in Earope." An agreeable, lively, sketch", . pleasant book It is. Colonel Fatiorhad the mipor trinity of becoming familiar with noticeable people, . pieces, and things in Europe, and has given his impresione, eurrenti edam° i in a most agreeable manner. Ho will have thou/lan - di Of readers. His only Units are that every thing to him, in Europe, is tinged" with conleier de rose; and that his good nature , sometimes boo muob exalts very small people. • Thus, over and over again, we have men tion of "Herbert Togram, Bee , M. P.," who is merely a oommonple co parvenu, made -wealthy,. as a newspaper proprietor, by the brain' of ethers. bo, also, when he dwells on thoheeuty, attractions, end artistica' perfeotion Of Madame Fres zolint, the singer, whom we -saw hare, a couple of years age : ;-a stout, middle-aged lady, whose v o ic e I was gone! Who, that saw and heard her, but i 1 mast wonder at. Col, Faller's laudation. go praises not only " the loveliness of her Mao, eter," but , the excellence of her talent," and "the beauty of her percOD ;" lands her "as the most purely. perfect artist, as well as ore of the most beantifull women," he bed ever seen on the, stage; and winds tip by sayivg "she is the very embodiment of musical tragedy." If this be true, then there aro two Freazolinis, for she who was heard and seen in Philado/plia neither sang well nor was good-looking. lie speaks of the Picaolomini pa lace, 'at Rome; 'end doubts whether the gay littlel singer who lately left,usWill ever " settle down "i in so gloomy a palace. Eli mind may be eased on; that point, for Plecoltmini, the singer, is no rola- thin to Plecolomtni, the Cardinal, who owns that palace. All these points, at which we hero Ilgbt , ly glance, show the good nature of "Belle Reit-, tan." The bcok, as wo have already said, is live ly Mid agreeable, and we ehould not object to something in the came vein. and With the' same ready-cleverness, every season The Ang,ust unmoor of the Eclectic, Magazine, edited by W. H. Bidwell, and received from IV, B Sieber, has a fine engraving by 3. Sartain, ci Elarlotre's celebrated Trial of Queen Sather doe," containing portraits of the liftable family' There aro also 144 ootavo pages of capital artiole 'from the, British Sevier and *matinee Among tMoriginal itattei to a Memoir of Edwimi Eve rett. Having thus disposed of the books upon our tablr, we tako Mare to break through our 'almost Intl risible rule of not notioing a book in advance. What is called " having. had the opportunity of examining advance-sheets" usually amounts to to more than that a publisher has urgently reseed the critic MAIN , . publicity to the work,, before it is issued: If he doeS so 'on it hasty glance at fa eteotatteets ho delivers an opinion on. defection data the obance being. that be overlooks none points, which would not 'have elicited his appro bation,•on careful . perusal. - We sometimes do 1,0-. deo books in adhnoo, though rarely—upon good grounds, We assure the publio. fret, theta is Petersons' complete edition of Sir Walter Scott's Works, complete in ton volution, with eta sr type and good paper, from $l2 to 630 per at, accerding to the binding, of which there aro numerous varieties. This really stupendous work, or congeries of works. will be publithod this day. It estende to ove; 7 , 000 pages largooo. tavo, and - contains wholeof Scott's prose and poetioal writings. That is, the Waverley vela, with tioott'e last introduotions and notes (in volumes;) the Life of Napoleon ; all the prams, lyric, deseelptive;and dramatics; the series ographtee; inolutliog Swift and Dryden; the eiti. oat Essays, to which are now added the articles upon Molter* and Rottman; and, complete k r one volume, Lookbartts • Life - of! Scott. We hesitate not to say that,tbis series of Scott's Life and Weller' is one of tbecheapostpublications of theag,e. Next, in a few days. the renowned Mrs. Paving ton's new volume, "Knitting Work," • sell be published by Brown; laggard, k Chase, of Batton It was due a week ago, but the aggregatim of orders from all parts became so great ltdel the first edition had to be trebled, and even this will leave many booksellers inadequately suppliet. Another book,, which will appear in the middle of Augtut, merits' a few 'lace of toilets, helms° the author is one of the 'oraft—being Mr. Dory Morrol.i, editor of the New York Leader, in in 'Mantled and well:conducted weakly journal. Mr. Morford's book, to be called `"Rhymes of Tardy Years," will, be published by Dexter k Co., of New York. The title conveys an motet ilea of what the book will be—namely, a selection from lyrics written at various timeson a variety d sub jots. Many 0 these we have already seen is the "Poet's Corner" of the Zander and otherjour-, nals. They have attrimted• s ocuelderable Mien tion, and have been eitensively copied—wilt% is a pretty good, test of their success. • Mr. Mind has more pootie ability and affialits than soiree of pet?rhymesters of wonderful pretension. lore Is pm) lyric, simpii and natural, which may aim as a sample of the hook : r 1 AN HOUR AT TOE OLD MAX./TAMA% I ' Eat an harm today; John, . Beside the old brook etream, ' hate we were sehool-boys in old time: When manhood wag a dream; tree leis choke d - with fallenleaveg, Thi, pond is dried away—: 4.; scarce holievethat you would. know - The (liar Old-place today. '6l•TileielM6l-inithse'le'iso more, John,. • .e4z,r - -, • Beneath our loonal-trees; • :7-Tbe rose,by the window; _ -__ No more waves, in the, breeze ; ' he roattered,stones look desolate; • "The sod they reefed Crla Itaii.beeriplouglied jep by stranger AVri''Binceyou and I Isere gone.: 1 Thei ohestaut tree Is clead,•John,- - And what-ie setitlernow— ,, a The broken grape vine or our swing Hangs ort.the xtthired bough ; rta'our . rt. - Mies upon the bark, " And font:4 the pobbles rare Laidup-beeSeth the hollow side,- • ; ',Asses hatkpited them there. , V.''Beneatlithograse,grown bank, John, • d looked for our old'apring, .7„,.2That hubbledidown the alder path,. Three pace! from - the swing.' s 4r---71213 rushes grow ripon - thebrinki -The poiji is black and-bare, • ' - And not a foot this trutuy.a day, , - . has trodden there,, , ViCelt the old,blind road, John, ••.. . • That wandered -up thi,bill ;._ - ' -.l4o . darkqr then it titled to be . • $:,." 'And.seems Rime and still l birds - sing yet: enahug the'boughs, ' 4 riere once - the sweet grapes hung .et note - voice of-human kind, - 'Miter° all our.voices rung. , I. i t in s t a b & r o e n lrti ° e t , ' f That } The Santo half, panel in the path,' AVe used en oft to - 4.An d thought how o'er:the bang of life :&Osr playmates houl Peeled on, 'And loft mewommting arable sp ec - • - The faces that use gene: ," Dinah Marla Mulook, author of "John *llfsg," an Illustrated parlor edition was lately pplished by Messrs. Harper, of New York,) has litather newbook in the press. It will be oalled .'„fA Life for a Life." Thia will be pleasant news fir novel-readers. • ; , IThe forthcoming number of the Edinburgh. Rs iiew will oontain the following articles: Mate of the Navy; 2, The Acropolis of Athens; kr,' Memoirs of the Court of George IV ; 4, This Title and Remains of Douglas Jerrold; 5, Fossil tV,Otprinte ; 6, Queen Marie Antoinette;, 7, Dr. Oureton,'s Syriac, Gospels; 8, Brialmont , a Life of gm Duke of Wellington ; 9; Adam Bede; 10, Ten. Arson's Idyls of the King ;.11, The Late Ministry. -kThe third. number of Deco a Week," to be pub. lishe4 In London on the 16th, was a dver tised, to con tain is new and original poem by Alfred Tennyson, With an Illustration by J. A. Itilliaes, the Pre aphaelite. ;',:P,eterson .1.• Brothers announce, in one large yolume, with Ornik shanks' illustrations, the sole •f ated Autobiography cf Vidoeq, formerly prinel pel the Detective Pollee of , Paris. There never was a •moro Dank confession than this—maroely over' one more ananelog At lean a score of dra- Matra; pleoeshave been made out of the exottiOg reYelationt in this carious book. Vidoeq died re - ()surly, and the truth of hie etatements hes never Bien impugned. tr Stroll- Through Laurel Rill—No. 10. B OUTII DIVISION. DT ORAYDBARD On the carriage-way a abort distance northwest et the cuperintendent's house ore three immense Vaults,- perhaps equalling the moot splendlyl , man sqleums of their class in this country. "flio cen tral, one of the three is owned-by Mr. B. A. ll'almeatook, a wealthy member of a familyboner: ibly identified with the drug department of mar, Ointile affairs, in several cities in the Union. This chaste and substantial arresters+ is built of pure white.marble, and massive as it is in its pro 'Portiens, is composed of but five distinot slabs. 74 heavy railing in front, nobly carved, of the 'ram material, is in beautiful harmony with the Fatal. itself, and, with the flowers and shrubbery Ivhitb 'adorn- the intervening enclosure, forms a 154140 sage/Jive of-life, rather than the silence ails , tomb. Bow features in this renowned ,etioetery coMmend snore general admiration than :these w's)Lheared-for premises of Mr. Fahnostoolt. ;Azfoyrsteps south of this is the still more, extensive'. *lt.-pf ;another of, our most successful and es learned ,Kiladelphits Jaerolaants, Mr. K. Nelson Iprroiw t h it, :Were it not for the vaultlike Ap '- ejans4.glyen to It by being laterally imbedded tite aide of , the bill, the (rant of this beautiful olTvnenostruotura would also more resemble a *,4me for the dead. ner - irnu 4- .-Sa..enetomand_th.a Mimed In close proximity, is onothor of brown storm, but with nothing to designate .its owner ship. The, natural ridge which extends along the carriage-way. here for some distance, is admirably adepted for the purposes to which it is devoted. Without' any of the gloom and dampnese which mark,hill-side vaults generally, this lovely spot hes• at owe nil the cheerfulness of a envoy; glade, the. requisite. dement for vaulted tombs, 'red wanting nothing to render it desirable for burial lemma. After examining the above elegant structures, the visitor can, in noway, more pleasantly oompy a few moments than in taking a survey of the grounds upon, wh'oh they front, extending toward the river. Drives, footpaths, gentle acclivities, deep, sunny vales, graceful Irene, and well-or dered shrubbery In endless variety, ,eonstante &me of the peculiarities of this delightful portion if South Laurel Hill. Looting westward, glimpees of the river are seen through the forest trees that line the bank ; to the sight, en open spot reveals the Schuylkill, like a placid lake, with the little steamboats, at intervals, plying across it; 'while beyond. forming a noble background to this lovely mane, rise the farestretehing bills on the opposite side of the river. For the beauty in landscape that cheers, there is, in my judgment, nothing in the Norlh division to surpass this admirably-do slgned and variegated slope. It is a spot to lin. gor for hours. If it is in the earlier part of. the day, you will, in all probability, be left undis turbed in your meditations by the presence of any other than the native dwellers, whore carol is the most befitting music for such a temple. 'Passing southward, we visit the large and band mutely-improved lota of John B Myers, Esg , and Mr. Le Hontillier ; and farther on, directly oppo site to the .Conte' premises, already mentioned, the grounds of William H. Hart and Rev 0 R. Vemml, D. D. To the latter belongs the distinct •tion of being now the oldest Lutheran minister in Phlladelphie—perhaps in tho State—having. as early as 1823, become pastor of the old Zion Lu. tboran Chnrob, at Fifth and Cherry streets, bailt in 1160, over which congregation he has presided over since. As a preacher in the German lan gnus, Dr.. Demi( has the reputation of being without a rival in America, as ho has also the credit of being the most learned member of the Lutheran Synod. At the foot of the hill, in ohne proximity to this, le the handsome marble vault of Mr. Byre, near which to the graceful obelisk (voted to the memory of Lewis S Ware. Wending our way t ward tho higher ground, a varied monumental scene is presented, id which wilt ho found, al meet worthy of e getentien, those bearing the names of Stewart, Paused, Ferdinand W. Hubbell, with its classical inscription, nod William Millward, who died in 1833. In this Immediate vicinity, in a lot with the natural em bellishment of two tonerindhemlooke, and within an ornamental atone railing, of enormous strength. is the massive brown monument commemorative of Charles Collins Parker, M. D., deceased in TM. and removed here aeon after this cemetery was opened. The splendid monument of George Hays, in a lot magnificently enototed, also de serves the visitor's attention. _Here, too, after passing the Joseph Knight and Mead monuments, enclosed after the style of the Farnham lot, rso. tioed in a former number, is the tomb of Col. Wm. Davenport, reeontly deceased: Re was born in Prince George county. Va , in 1787. A very interesting feature of these cemeteries, to which no rsferenee has as yet beau made, and one that has tended to fix them more deeply in the affeolions, espeoially of the religious portion of the ssiunnuitY , Is the fast that a large number of our most eminent anti highly-esteemed clergymen have here selected their future resting-places, and not a few already sleep with l ln these grounds. Among the living we may mention the names of Reverends Alonzo Potter, D. D Bishop of this dioeme, Albert Barnes, Dr. Henry Boardman, Dr. J. P. Durbin, Joseph H. Kennard, Samuel Ifaziohurnt, Joseph H. Jones, Thomas Brintnell, Omirge Chandler, (the oldest living member of the Philadelphia Pa' plt,) Dr. 0 11. Demmi, Dr, Geo. R. Durhorrow, Cobbe J. Good, Franols D Ladd, John Patton, P. B. Ripley, Charles W. Shields, Wm. Bacon Stevens, D 1) , and others there may be that are aceidentally omitted from this list. The late Rev. Dr. Philip Meyer, for many years the mush.baloved pastor ti St. John's Lutheran Church, (Rase street,) is also interred in the North division, in the grounds secured to that congrega- tion for burial purposes, to which allusion has at. ready been made. Since the opening of South Laurel Bill, three distinct religious (Moieties have there selected groUnds, more or religious, extensive, for the use of their own people, and to which their dead, inn large number of Instances, have been removed from the city burying grounds formerly attached to their planes of worship' They have acted wisely in this ; and, while upon this subject, the suggestion may not be inappropriate, for our city churehos gene tally--or at least those having private grave-yards itithla the thlottly built.up portion of the olty—to 1859. securda desirtible'spot in any of oun piddle eerie teries,-where their dead may be conveyed now, before their removal becomes a matter of nomesel ;ty,Andeonsequently coacitiletou. The. betlai . of the pleasautiplooated, and weltoared for rural cemetery is GO manifestly preferable,lx, ail resieete, to interring in the' heart of a'nOley! city, Wit . It is, really - a Matter,ot - nstonishmene that title 'suggestion has 'not heen`already reme,h, widely sated upon. "The Wit Of the grounds Obeys 'referred to, .ad-. Joining the carriageway of-the second or.northerf entrance, on. the right, is that devoted to the Society, of Friends, where regulations salted to, their peoular mode of internient are `girded out. Next to thies,on the north, hi the beautiful ground of the First Reformed Dutch' bhurCh '(looated at Seventh 'and' Spring Garden theists; ander the, pastoratidiargo of &sir, A;A:Willits,) extending from the line of the' turnpike to the first carriage. '.way running parallel with it, and beyond thie, in -the sime'range, Is the large and- beautifully:int.' pioved, lot owned by. the : Fifth papist Ohttroh, Saris Ont street, below, Ninth, -key, illerrisrether . Winston pastor.. ,In, the Friends' giound are - several graves ) , according to the existent of this unostentatious and 'greatly respected Society, without anything to signite the clambering ashes they contale ; though there are some - ales neatly marked With marble head and foot Stones.. Most prominent'among the latter are the graves or Jacob S, Wain and Tamer . Oope, the former of whom is remembered, as an . eminent, merchant ,of Philadelphia„ who. died in 1850, at' seventy four years of age, and . the' latter as a brother of our late excellent and:enterprising fellow , ottlain Vicunas P. Cope, whose reputation istrti Pnblia-spiiited merchant, atid ' owner of the line of pocket ships to Liverpool, is too 'generally known to require comment. In thin oonneetion we may also note the lot belonging to the estate of the late Jacob a. *orris, who was a passenger in the ill. fated Petolso, Captain Nye, and was returning home after,u pleasant sojourn in Europe, when he was lost with so many others in that sad cites trop'he oil Gape Race. Among the *recent interments in' this saetion, that pro wolf remembered b the youngisr portion of our readers, we may mention that of the late Geo. P. Heaney, a young man of energy, and esteemed for many excellent traits of character, who 'de ceased in 1855 at the age,of only thirty-one. He was early engaged in meroantile pursuits, and a few yeast before his death was 'elected to the State legislature. ..Tti ore of the' most beautiful sec- Hong of both IVorth and South Laurel • Hill, tie!i planted and eared for, is n plot devoted to "single interments;" though these have never been nu• morons at either of the ' divisions. They - are opened at an entire cost of only ten dollars. With all the in tereeting features of thesegrounds to which reference . h aa been madein these aketoht a' it is not to be wondered aithat they attract more visiters than any other point within the beautiful envirims of our eity, not .even o 'as may be seen by the record, excepting Girard , Gollege. The rein , lationi of this cemetery have been the model from which most subseqUent institutions of the kind have been taken. They are published in a guide book, and in their completeness seem to have left nothing unprovided for. The company, in framing them, had the advantage of the advice of that emi• non tjurist the late lion John Sergeant, who took a warm intereit in the project, and whose remains also rencose in a large lot near the river front,'beatdo those of other members of his family , including one or more of the children of Governor Wise, of Virginia, whose second' wife - was Mr. Sergeant's daughter. Coming to this dot of Mr. Sergeant's, I em re minded of having, from my multitudinous notes, omitted to mention the one adj wining on the south —that of prederick Brown, Etg , who; as already stated, was ons of the original managers of Laurel Mil t and who has continued to be an aotive and efficient friend of that institution, ao tine in the city as its treasurer, and devoting mu,h of hie time to Ito arduous duties. Mr. ..Brewu'a lot gives evi• donee of orire,.end its tenants Wapiti° that ho has not esoaped the blighting of a parent's kopts, In the death of loved ones, "not lost, but gone be. fore." Bente :of the Fifth and Sixth. Street Railrotid—No. 10. - - • lIIS PRILAD=Illret Per The Prem.] We have. finished up briefly the • history of the Philadelphia Library; yet there aro a few interest lag faets in connection with it which we -should _Sie k l of Philadelphia, left, in 1828, ft...greato4sr or or hie hooks to the Laganlan Library ; of thereat; some, as then 'stated, were , presented to, "others bought cf his executors by, the Philadelphia Li brary. We shall not, in them few remarks, dis criminate between what belongs to the Loganlan, and what to- the Philadelphia, but consider tbo former as forming a part of the latter, just as if before the coneolidallon of the oily wo included the city and surrounding Incorporated built-up die tricts under the' general name . Philadelphia. At present the library is open daily, except Sunday, Christmas day, ite., from ten o'clock to sun. rat. To determine the . ending of the period, and Agility it to roadera, the large elook . in the book room FM oonstrueted, which, when in order, strikes jest at sunset, the time, of course, varying daily, and only then. It is conaldered quite a curiosity in its way, and Is in the room appropriated especially to the Logo. plan Library. A few years shims a member of the British Parliament, while exploring an old curiosity shop." came to an ancient painting, which, though possessed of few attractions as a work'of art, was shown, by an Inscription upon it, to be ct The South East prospect of the City of Philadelphia, 'by Peter Cooper, painter." The gentleman procured it for Dir. Dallas, our illinis tar at the Court of St. Samos, who kindly trans witted It to the Library. % It measures about eight feet by one and a half. It to ettearn, by comparison with other views, and by what we know of the !condition of'tba oily, to be the earliest viers , of Philadelphia which we have, dating, pro. bably, from about the year 1720, not long before which, we are informed by minutes of the City Council, "Peter Cooper Painter woe admitted Ffrooman of Philadelphia on payment of 5 shil lings 6 pence." Mr. Cooper does not appear to have been an adept in perspective. r rertunasely. and this is a great merit of the work as it is. he ' hoe pima numbers over the prier& pal buildings, with reference to a list ap pended. By this some of us can see where our anoestors lived, and in what kind of houses ; for though his comparative ignorance of perepee, Urn made his combinations ut-fortunate, it is probable that the separate buildings tire dell: nested with coneiderable accuracy. This paint; ing hangs just under the clock we mentioned. An cient manuscripts aro naturally rare in this country. Such, if of any 'considerable value, are rarely sold at public rale, or, if no, are diapered of chiefly to bibliemanines at what moot would con sider very high prices. • The rarity ,makes more ,interesting a copy of the Bible writtantmoutilully on parohment in the year 1016 (before the Norman conquest of England). It to about the OiZO of a malt. paged_ stout octavo. Its characters are clearly formed, and worn it not for the many all breviatione employed, which 'confuse one not used to them, although in Old English ohmmeters would be very legible. Initial letters, in red and bine aro interspersed through its pages. Next to this, and more beautiful, though some one has trimmed down the edges too closely, is a copy of the Book of Psalms. written in 10110. about the time of William the Conqueror's inva sion. Its obarssoters are generally similar to those of the Bible we just now inentiontid, but the int_ 8010 are more finely designed and executed. Ap• pended to the psalms is a collection or prayers. in which it is interesting to some of us to see, with, in some eases, hardly a yariation, except the translation from Latin into• English, the same prayers we use yet. 'Another waiter, written, it ie believed, in Clormany during the fifteenth eon tory, (it is not dated,) is, perhaps, the most beau tiful of the three, though not the moot interesting. Its pages of vellum aro whiter and cleaner than many ddeed fresh from the officio ; the letters are like those we now use in print, and, what many highly prize, there is a broad clear margin around the page. It has, 113 tho other, prayers annexed, and some rituals. Perhaps, s , rao of our musicians, if they would study it out,'would find the latter a jewel. Not knowing, can't ony. The collection of large folio volumes of plates of Egyptian, and Ninevite, and Mexican antiquities; ss volume illustrating the antiquities of Paris, which will be indeed a record. of the past if Louis Napoleon continues to pull down and build up as ho has been doing, (ibis volume, with one on the Hotel de Ville, was presented by the city of Paris,) are of great value, and were published by aid of various Governments . of Europe at enormous ex- pence. Perhaps there 13 nothing here more interesting to the most of our readers, than the collection of Philadelphia newspapers from the beginning ,to the present day, The first isfliadford's American Morally, of which the ; set, Is complete. This reaches from 1719 1745. Next .comes the Penn. sylvania Gse)tte, printed Sect by Samuel Reimer, from whom It was soon bought by Franklin, and continuid by Nall Sellers, extending from 1728- 1804. The Pennsylvania Journal Is front 1747- 1793 , Tho Pennsylvania Prinked, cornmenalog In 1771, merged Ia the Federal and Philadelphia Gantt , " in 1788, in 1845 In the United States Gs- .CeMs. set te ;:ne*.the Rorthiltiniriourand , Thiltedlitathi Vizette. , Of English. risiodissin, of ilthiahAheret Ilifilutte alp:mbar; the,atost gonerally,Anteyeatini ls..the Gentleman's hdage;ine,g_whiels. *fait:- eat hare Irons: tha,heglnsing to the Piii - rit'; - thna,, It wattoolimenced, 1'61731 13.*goo t ro f ,y 0 , 1 a printer , oeidenee'tiou '431 ,papers, a :; fofetighse magesille`fin 'idroits doorisfiiiiihe'tiged trait; thid to be' l:repoeiteritieri of olritginstralifoiwrangi - essaye;enoh r eeitheterreimigaeituisisielniles :Dr. Jotatortl'ents=one:Cr its :earliest 'nott'2llmhzdt; and blast:mei& - .from Ale writings C 004: thpu.git, ' , malls Were Jar a .00t:1414444e, ttireer, PArLsaPaii :source of ble liyingi -The liPrary hesji , :manneoript papers of :lames 1;1640 nrelifneWlthi hii entepanit.. -Rey, Mr: Prestoi, Mikae atitied,l gave hie heolueto - the'llb;a l rediciiklit th e titiorki)r BenjkiatiWeiti'tbeeeiciViteiti -Wesi Orited fife Eitikl396st;mide:li„: pre-; sent icie . toliPleotnistrith thertiooks. - :Ifs chit.; eldered hy:theate competeat - to judge: to be a hoe: worker • eloeka, stand, one the aide, se you enter. the room, ; that, to the lefthe longed to William-P,enn,the other is said is ham s Cromwell's, 7henrtoe of sebere to this Oorn-1 1 F pang je tip, the ,monnal payment Tian: le: higher than In the Mercantile, bet: tits iiolleittlen I books here le tb ifar the niore"valtiablei of the tem.; There are naturally many more of this oldi standard wort In:solemn) and literature, - and-the : additlorni wide yearly are selected with very good' .jeutturuMt,,from the, be:America rabliebed at home; and Abroad: is not intended as the other for al reqdipg. room., The loginlan Ltbilaiy v*3E1 , 1%17111 ab9 l 4'ty,iiiend books ; the - Philadelphia ,netsr4elkty thouiand; In all, not far froci etnientyiiiiMmod. It' 'fa o esdet ee 46( . 1' txi as truillfilieht ilia& are •PrOrided,' to'eleat , either Upon the same- or eerie Cabal , site , allrelorinf building •to isontaba theectreaturee. Theinss of the go:egressions! Library, by. fire was so great, and as • irremediable too, for mach could. neeerb a Ye- Placed, that: it should excite oara.to pr,seiltye the , yet glcire valuable collection we haire , here." Qsite ' alergestinotnit boa been already 'subscribed, btit motets &died. mayiefnit iicongrttons to speak of haok dri vers and tie library in the same paper; - but, 10. catty, they 80' not ler ; removed, and passenger railroads and ,pnblic oarriageshave much in elos- MOW ..I.Tboola lief Mast ono would. thick Mach affected : by_ the new facilities for locomotion In al most, evaryAirection afforded by the ears. Are not cab-driven' charger too high? They are muoh lower in 'London and Parte, (about half what they are tore,i and se a Conveyanoe are far more wed; -whore 'Matter is more coveralls: man aged- there -than here; and extortion, dr 'arm in elvility,More readily : brought to amount; What is to be d6ne? • Bedew the ayetem , hard to relnettel ed, it seems likely,thet haokmen,win find - t , ,their occupation gone." But they may say, holt can we keep two boric! and ti - Eite carriage tied make any thing,byit if we rednee 'oar prfoold L W;C:,itetb. hardly get along now What is' the nie rtwo • 11101189 and such carriages as on a Man wishes logo -half mails to - a:rallroad station :with a valise or a small 'trunk, desalt° need trio horses to take him there, or a earriagelarge enough for a family? In; Paris or London, if trgentlenisa, Or two, or three, or even four, wish to take 8 short ride, they can hire a light one-horse carriage, which is Jost as convenient, and Otte as kite as onre, but for which they have to pay only a tea ionable price, because the expenses are not un. reasonable. A common mode of eonveyanee in London to by what are !mired Hamra cabs, or simply hansoms., These are light vehicles with seats for two, the top shaped like a boggy, top, but made of wood,,parohed, up behind which the driver has perfect con tr9lof the hem, hod leaves the view interrupted in port, and . the pasiengers to enjoy their priya'oy to their hearts' content, While they are whirled along gaits a gotid-sised ride for a guartmaef a dollar. , -• " , Why not try these, or; if you .please, an' Irish jaunting car? Wouldn't theta make 6 Sensation? Why roust every onearho wishes -torlde be com pelled to go in what 'punt be expensive, "payfrg for three or more extra seats and a second bone te keep the other from being remedies ? Token in connection with the passenger railroads, the bop gage express System, by IThiott baggage can be checked at 'Your own dtor for delirsty 'at any depot, will, unless a 'change to made, - take away 'he patronage of many, accustomed to me car riages. All men do not have to wear drawees% whether they-wilt or no. Scrag , prefer frock or sach•coalsAnd they are accommodated. Itrallore made bit one kind of coat, their trade would per getting more re o. antyvn The'publie will not accommodate itself to hack- Men ; let them then yield to the public, for lila- hornet went to tho mountain when the - monntain would not came to hint. , . . Franklin and Marshall College at Lan caster, Pa.. The Annual Commence. merit. (Reported Beattielip for The'Prese j • In New 'Ragland which, as - a section of the Craton, enjoys the peculiar historio -prestige of learning, dollop commencements are always cat down as sensational occasions, as grand' gala days marking so many intellectual triumphs, reflecting far moo lustre on a State than any mere feats of arms. The annual ritYanolloo of ,` cominencement day" is looked forward to with eager anticipation by theussnas; its celebration is attended with " all the pew, pride, and oironnastanee " of a national festival ; historical memories are invoked; State, pride is thoroughly awakened; and the, warm aympstblea of all .who believe in the final victory of mind over more brute force 'are br•ught into earnest activity. Yale, and Har vard, and Bowdoin, and Dartmouth, send. forth every year their academia heroes to the battle of. life with a grand flourish of trumpets befittirli the °cession. It is no wonder, then, that these in stitutions, becoming thrill part and parcel of.the fame of New Hoglund, have sranitad a oommand • int importance throughout the country.': It has often been a some of-regret that a similar State pride has not been fostered in our own ()Emmen : wealth. It certainly is not that Pennsylvania is lank leg in that subs 'Tatum of gene ral intelligence which forms the working bags of eohools of learning, or that she is deficient in col legiate institutions of which any State might well be proud. The State University, Dickinson, Jef-. fee-on, Lafayette, Fraoklin and Marshall Col leges, with their list of honorable alumni, would ' afford an ample refutation of snob an ungenerous imputation, if :an admirable and thorough sys tem of eahool education had not made the name of Keystone State proverbial everywhere. A most gratuitous and illiberal prejudice :appears to have bold the different elements of our composite pops- - lotion apart *The large body of Teutonic set-, tiers and their descendants of the central comities' of the State were unjustly regarded as opposed to education—an opinion which ignored, the fast that Germany has given the world its greatest, thinkers, end that education it more .. general Germany than amp part of, Europa. - The history of Franklin and-Marshall'College, in this connection, is pot without interest. 'Tole institution, , at present tinder tbe 'specialpa • teenage of need- the great German - Confessions (the' German Reformed Canroh of the "(Jolted Staten); dates book to a very early Dolnt in 1-tate history As early es the year 1781.'“Franklin College" was created by tho Leval° lure. - with special re Swamis tO the interest of eduontion and lenrning among the . German population of the State. ft Teo-sit/0d an endowment from the -State or to 000aores of land. To secure the otj sot of its foundation, It was provided in the charter that. the managing bclard should represent three dis tinct and equal interests—one' repretentieg the Lutheran, another the German Reformed Caureis, and a third, the community at largo of Lon.. castor, where the college was originally founded Owing to circumstances which the Wird bad rtd, Power to control, the original 'ptirpose of' the founders (who had seam-eel the sympathy of eac h men as Dr. Rush, Benj Franklin, and Governor WOO was not carried into full effect. The in stitution remained rather is high : sebool than ati actual college, its advantages being Meal alto= . giber instead of general. •It belonged to Lan caster more than to the German interest of Penn-. mylvania. Its history was a 800108 of chequered succors and misfortune until 1821, when it ceased operations for a time In the meanwhile, its is totes increased in value and offered strong reason; for placing the institution on a-Moto practical and substantial basis. After is suspension of eighteen years Franklin College Nan again_,' in 1839, re ' opened. It was found that if the enterprise was to snorted, it must go forward in some way under the aosposes of one dr the other, if not both, of the German Confessions, which divided between them already two-thirds of the corporate rights and powers of the institntion. I hie conviction on the part of thrifts interacted led to negotiations_ the result of which was, finally, that the German Refermed Church consented to buy out the Lutneran interest in. the college, and to consolidate it with her one repartre tution, $llllO/3 was establidied at Ilereetsburg, der the title of Marshall College. The chatter of the latter institution bad been - granted is MI). By the arrangement finally made by netatiation, the history of Staraball College SS a eepßrate inste tattoo was brourht to an end By an act of Legls• latore, parsed in 1850, a new charter was grant ed, providing for the union of these two institu tions. Alter the claim of the Lutheran Chords was satisfied in Intl; after the citizens of Lancaster had, hi vote, relinquiehed their interest in the 110 i bond of trustees; after the entire property of Marshall College, at 'Mercer/burg, had also been transierred,lhe new , college, started under' the most favombte, 'C.:maidens for success. The MM. zensg the city and county of Lai - toaster generous ly 'contributed the film of twenty five thousand dollars for the l torso of purchasing a site, and erecting, buildiogs for the use of the new college Thean odds were finally accomplished, and - the in= stltution was opened at Lancaster in Sannary. 1853. The property held under , the 'charter "amounts to a suet rising one .bnodred thisusand dollars; its eubstantlal collegiate buildings and Sooiety H oil Ora uninoudibored; and a ova of Ay loos Ilan Roves T® eerassroingrili:': aorrimprnisatt-iil is mina 4k. tole /gal 'fit . ftt; b. a°T l l l • c taw of the 'Ritter. - In es* to saiaies the typagraply„brdonsol - i* . ! Ie Oat iikenta Dt vdtt ""4 l4 f:z L rfc Wf"!han 4 1.0flisiy iiii!ntiap, • Vella, end otherll,teegee , ertFitetioiss e eP e l4e e e, ae ' Y ekell ' Pstieeqr. t i the reeeeeeee eileeeetioet4-400enterte!**4_;=' ar ttepilalknihien)lighreyetheetlkililli stiftitireelk ne to At s giftex4 $5. a rl7:* • • , - 7..; - ;, - 44- c‘.4 ifixty-Ave thoyintrd dattos_brivanestiiißrAteir neriodoliintit-fornd OCJa - Ilant.pregreasad the itterjrcalolfirti4f..tarkltirr-"--- 11 1 a 1 0 n 4 g!mlllk /, , t 4 W -moilt Vat ";0 4 * , -" o Wien, otatudi Mahal/ liacafistreirlog; tea:the rei- • - Ml:owe ItSiWt,r„Taera of tlie - College 'beastlier& isfestil 'LL thonnoshlra Sylvania fonodatfeWthe - great =asset its nusithOrtt lents being- from war own - eounatenwealth. - Thy course of edecastotti n htfeilyiOn a Par -with that of - - Saatera ,psilogos„and- thajty.Orr or,abilite of the grade - die ciitifort:not-bi 2a: thtterliin, 'tired that indionideHlerit&ths orinfrkArficatift enneihbits of iltirlfosiff-tifaTerislatsid.itiNitett Vas lactrity, represent an kept:inset eel fermi .irtrtirntiPtS ttetail'A,P4Paailgo4ricolii4O,4lo44) SYStomooL.Whrolkaaetarliqtrak Crgs*,-PBsr4,,a-1;" OhNideledrey;,the '27Elf We P - IrsnWim• naatebmmedcatnenbaifkiabkilnlegd %vita' eilebrited ai LlAnciaterrl-add , wirk. l 7,ote - ,than M u saWeverkintitheasnernAl oration, was Clegrered Els yi_dijans ,_ - o'lifestrioreland 'll4 oraldiebbabl,yhtilitt tbs.! , Oberaeter of Themes Paine": Theitthiter by - considerabliabilleArtlrelddratittrea lequaLin origintnifecsizutinte4oOttuallordhusisausio the usual arandardnfifgrerteloArfor4forlshiektrta ,speakei has gainetra, , irideipteastremtitice. j E was liatened - to Hy's' idr,te an-dtbooti, of reedit - 6i their appresiationisldesionstratieria of heir idr-111)- Patois , 7:7,4 zi -,- The gotateepeement,exestrifet begin-milk Hilt usnaq Nees don, horn .the cojlega dint.t4ing,`ofAe students, alumni,' Irtiatei, sad , fi"c ttlfy, .e,n‘der mcrebatehie 'or Hanel:if •MartritisigLA'ffseaffar. Felton Hdli was the, want Or-ther proceeding`!. 3Eb edifice being Titled, with- pn 'esseroblegeof g , fair women 'and bravo mei," such as Lancaster his rarely twrnedout on any similar noctisipa: ladies, unforterntirely, frilt- - bekisteT. nub daing the inloirsitte - nupirrallefisd dloptayirf Unsnap The following Was - .oEasa OP rtmneraga. , - . Mtrituilt Orittab:-:ol,t e tr u ,nl4 Gratioa--Whill Truthl - - -•' i fispendis ilr - f,f; ere : - ,V,Lideii Elorstateri -•" ' ' wAltilWg y st D: Aalstatarjr. - IE4 pry:Uaaansa."l:;. Gem= Oratbia-rT24,,kix...nt.that,Thuts,.*litieset. vale , letory' -"" • ••••• IPetterlialtDitti. Orattqa-Pagen Pities - -D.Hapsest:fr4opii. °Fatten-American CM.. en t , robe P. WM'''. 9ratlaa÷Palai Itlia-ar44ollsl2llll'.l.2.iw.ll4WlCArkay; Ontfoc.,Bovalntionaf INS oration-The Osthintrerowoire - ' 'WsQ, IS `WM Oration -"'atria frorniatnriteer,l;;;Facilli,lifitbfi. Omuon-fdenmil Patri " orptial ' . Or:apowt-yht!lptropf"Dasary, it . - .laa.l„,L., , ZsAil. Olzolghty Data , ' nratioti-Paine Prinelpisier Mozal - Antiok • Oratimi-OneNsts: - - -'" ' 'SftttittlildgiraA Oratiost-141, far ..... pa* .IFuagi Oratina-Ch•lfaiiiital crleii . . poles ß . Oratfiii-Ouba" •"- - 11.tictele. The a'odieorder cluating merit, all,thdes usailre4. , orations?! reado ing equal. This Wass of twenty one is ebeiamesit In .atum bars :yet gredatied - -front: the ; tristittrpoq . Ttiti obit ractef of "the'addreslis 'waklanperrei,'as whole, to that of promos countotstreententai Tim* wag Isacerndify titan , nand enronsiOntba• aloes; ranch - Jess Aar trapoter, fteeplerer Oe-American,ente, endow inanitasimatAntry of ".:sitatent * teats" aiutirome 1. " -I )...l.lbeCote, eat relays, eleven were pretioinstrity numerals o thir Thegootheen and ten by members of the Gearheth Society, thri 2 formir. nascolatkarerinhingethreV of the honors, and tintqatergainingtfonr„) Agri:oft ilifoeable of the essays ware those- roomtnesdAl Messrs. Whittier, listin; Itieste;;Relgarklreyne; Moore, and Fisher - . - " - • - After "the :orations; thellegrewof . Wltifeketleytat Arts".rwas conferred upon.the membentssf4lo.grer duottne class. " t th , The degreeof as ere r ;wee. - - ferroff open Charles A Mayer,'Bol of -184 P; J. H. l'abl; Rev: P" It:15/485 afirrast V. - Mar, J. hi; Fray; end 'tte...B: Viughash - ttleient c. Twiker, Seoratery pf:Stattiof ire* _ Tte degree of D. D.'tias elicr-frectseat'keir,'Nd than'l3.em, "reidor' of-St Jelin% BlaariarOhitielt., Norris. o.tl, Pa , and of L fr.‘"en If o -'tdi~eon The " Baeoatautiatestddressu-; wee ipliremtby President Gelb art. was,„-mes4o, bp , ati,e4s, sense,ol mein vlser,and ' , finest Hyou 'diction • lire eanmet close Witbeiti sterforrir - the diAtel interest taken in the troeadie to - y - thre a Idientid present. Botincera ware fairly' aboatered .tptailldS nose, and applause wee-given -with markel die oriminatioa : - - The,dofinince cogega upoti,the %mann - :Centres "Of populatiOn'in Oar State captor be'und,r eared:: , Itlrattitireadyartakened in the frittirier:ot the -Oommonweadtk, a,-:generat, eatbuskasca,on the Inalest. Of oolregieta„,edrteation. The 11- , ,ard:af Trustees, of which his Eaceliencilnneir` 13 , tottif.' an has been president kicker tho organisation:l,ls co napctsed,aft-teen of rha.higitest lolurtactor, embrn* ring anoh moue tis Govhrnor'PiekoV,,Brahbn:.Baw`.. man, Judke Sher/Inn - 4i licannel Alf- 7 Rsi Beq-and.HOn. ,Tahn - dY: -The- ansitY o , nsists, at p7epant of the folio sing, gentlemen; Rev. Dr. "Gerrie, t, ProrCasor Of Mental and Moral Pailbsophy ; Williitim itlY,Nrivirt, Drufweer of Art.: - olentlisegusges ned,Belleff i si tree Rev Thumps o.Porter„A M , p oi ssgr of blatttrar Soleness.; ” Itor. 'Theo Appel li M-; Professor if Msthetria , forix_terlPrAfensornt, A , ‘atamiaarreaysiolciey: •-•' 7-7 '. -- The Orie maim at Axe teat aollegiate•yeee glll - begi_a about tba ,or _E. iivausbar. coming elan o freebalea Is - already large; apo, will, donbtlaf a. Vera many eacaniona aTe tle,cipaw tag of the lan tarp: • , -; •7,• To Ladies ClOrre!Pondeviee' or Tie 110.), Oindis; 'W. T. June. 24;1859. There ht at the presidetitne a gieatAlde of amt.. gratitin to the:Pm:ate - meat; tibth.of and gentlemen; andthia Is as it should be, bfmanso the settlement of this country le no longer aproblem of doubtful saintion,-',..itls a reality: 4 rarathing noty fiMasarning a porinanent, for M.. The ale ; malty heretofore cidparieneed on this lioak4 2161416. from the fact that man Va've left their fatailldiid the Grates."' The aaying 4 -true, Wet the settle ment of any canntry withotttlrom'an!a Influkee is amnst diffloult volt, anti.l aniriatutropilsedAa Sod many who have bean Ilishearteogdat the-an-- settled state of society. 7j - et this difftenity is fast „ _ being corrected; ladies are,cotalag in-by the hurt. drede, and I hope hy; the thousands. / woud)* say, that it haonr opinion that young Islies'ohnid do exceedingly emit hate, and...they nreTary much =abaci in society. But the partieufor objridt of 10 communication is; to gtiard the maftY yanngladtce from - danger who may- be - ectiang,to. thia 'gone. Eyerylady, should have a good, trusty gel/Camas for her ttayelllog compatibm:. , The rnbliogeeerally, and csp — eolally.iffilie!, 4g , not aware of the danger aitending'everlypang lady oomirg here without a proper companion T would tot allow a lbdy friend of nine to Stall to this cenotry withcnt this proper guide to 'assist her,l care not how well guarded in other iesreots she might be. On this point my remene are very obvious. There are many more, men coming to this &Wintry than women •, consequently, the'aid calty is increased—not hat what.she t.ntion. for they are all, ready to bow atrthe shrine of womanhood, and lead der aid. A ladv bight not to be so situated as to nee.] the attlatima, stronger in travelling. ate , may- - "d.'d trusty companion, and she may not. The ladtv Wag entirely alone, t think that that' ere - -entnewlitat disarmed, and if a 'frentleinah hlsratoFeelt crofter, she feels under great .obligation: tq him. -Arty woman, in travelling to thiscoast will anckmlenty . that willing to medal bar, and they, will - be very ataniative. - and Make thettiseives very agtooM• ble, and the ladies theofelyea- in their Innooanott, gannet understand why.it is that nosh_ attatioa is' poll to theta until they arelost in atoms and prostitution. rob not Say that all ,fall thw—far From it—bat many an itommermone. has, and, if I be correctly informed, they: are 'nit safa,e,veitt under the earn of the (Risers - Of Th'e stoatitiara - I could tell wane deeds. of erie a that would -ha enough to tarn a Nero pale, and make a °ottani& thu ider ;lout I forbear for itiadeatfa flits ' Doe inordent t will relate' that barite tinder our (1 teTi • observation. -Au excellent young: Jadrearne -on the same steamer with pe, entirely rilone,piad do r:lig our DiFrige the became very eta sick; (as nearly all do-) and "dur.ng her siekreta a - young man of fine as pearance made hico•elf very-atten ;lye to her .Ai was noticed to go and Pit in her elate-room, and read to her. and -.fluidly he pro timed to givo 'her same - nredielneithat he braeght with him far sax tickets', as it was enre_to cure. She being entirely unsi m pectiog; tAbli - it. audit proved M be obloreerin • 'Phase no- - tieubt - hat this innocent girl :Would have heats - led-into crime had it not been fora good Christian man who saw his movements. and - interfered to save the tat - eant girl froni the graip-br the villain The' ra s cat hatltaken some -twolatedrod dollars' worth ef jewelry from the young lady, rind would have tit, ken bar good name. The interference - of , this good - man-would "have led to a -hbstiie _ moo lug, had it not been for the interest felt ,13y,a _third party. and the villain was left, at the drat port - Satan may thank that there are' enatiah Of goes men, who will save the character of- any,,fmnalo It is impossible. Some, in ooming put, here; from all appearance, we would" think thews tole hos. hand nitd - wife, until , she 'tells her 'fate of wo. Many will say that ,theb education and. refine. wont will tiara them from soils insult. A lady without aPrope r coimpaition is left ent hely helpless. Site have seen *him Mt down and weep beoau'e they bad no existence, and. thus they.are,tht.owrt entirely upon the morel of strangers. - I find that education, refinement, and even ma incistvirtuoug, are sometimes led to shame and dishonor be beint; - without a protector. and no one is truly, safe with , ant One Many husbands bare sent for t-h - or ' wives, and on their journey some become .thfi orer of demons In human shape; sad thus they are last to shame before they reach their distant - homes. young men eend 'for Young - ladies, intending to make winos of them, but on their j Inrney they are led into the whirlpool of passion by these attentive gentleman, and are lost ere they stand up a joy ous, hap 3y bride. Now, these things ought not to exist It enrol would say, when yen come to this coast, be ante to have a good, reliable travelling companion, and there is no diMenity. We view: you here, but- we do not want you subjected to the insults of wicked men. _ - TIIN SIIRDLY,QII/KSTION.—Tbe Sunday qtiffro Lion is heit:g agitate'd in ttit. Louie. Boma two .thoo mad ottness have , signed a petition against the tam of intorloatilm - Aquore ors the &Labatt day. Tho'e who signed-the plititlon .stslcca t 4.6 City et wnell o order a'speelal eleetnren etittie tits MO , day in August, at whiett.the . qUestiort,of th Sat day liquor truffle w•rold be submitted to these. pie. .'.fhe Connell pamd tirssolntiolordering tai oleoCo 1, but the Melon refused to Sip it. has riti FI*19(110#'91117 " " -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers