Ytrib4 l 4 , I) !Rtii#O. I OM*4I!IXCEPTEIII I'.• , ;OBXECIWVITILBrio, *O 4 ; - 'l* M* 1 44 1 Wi54 . 1444.1040 Olt '11 11 ; , M4llo4)3itbikiribik out pt tine Caw #Blx ik i LVA M :Tepticl)ll4l4. *six itaii;!s 016, 01 f 4 ' !! 42 , Or WI Ups, I - 1 • 741 44 k ' !',4t , * I 'l6 * X*' :" , LAltirmi • :ii' i 1 i „ 1859 - 414,1,:-(TR ADE' . 1859-i RAIGrITE.T.J: CO., 'w,oltpits,44ND .rofq4= F : 4,10Y ' DRY ._ GOODS:: - ; ':,ln{• No Tan Eitargar Atilr iriPased - . ,exhibi t at tlisFtialituirnorn!tlns most templets's' ilitAx;)c,4goodi ever'oftered,by.thern,'•iproient , Ina unusual atttnotions to the trade generally,. Meet.** eornerisee a soinsloorassortnient sq . :strop , va4ety of • ' ; ":"-"4 ' OEM DAMS GpODS, V*0:0011E4 AtuvlpptlNGl3,",,;, ' l, * i lka:Yt.:9yrißli , * l 9 l lo 6 tlNl* #464tou:imijio,4l;l4.44,#tiiii F f ' ig if * O liT t7 Y T t ifikO it lf fl4sl A l ',l: , Q LID itlyditior*lfidmiii` ;:t4 in r aPri , ' • ,- - AALQIIII4 . I- iF ri Xttrzi , F. BUNN. • , yAlt,l3o3ll_4l4oßE,' & C CY., *ill!. 40 AND 414 .NONTi,;rINRD Pri i ,-MX4O 4 14/ "B A L E R S trix,,B,Anasoze,Dit6mi 4aixims, inunia tuomonizittaiao, eiOVl3 4M; iNi) IAI4O , 4 " - INGLIfili 'AND S 110 E = ••"1'L'1441,.E A - E0 skamti Asp:,: 13#03-MANVFAKREAI3' ARTIO.LE; fipviiiihriabiae; • ;Thriluland Needier. ". • : :0 41011.. THUM ST.," keitgla YPOET.DI:I4744IT, *OOT-twas. • , 40' co.; - r IPUBIJBB.BIIB AND - 11EA4BRICIN , • • • - mrsuitinAwsovs,... SCHOOL, AND - - BLANK BOOKS AND STATIONSIM NO. 37 NORTH , THIRD STREET; BELOW ARCH, - Dn.: • ,*ati-A;LO El s t hCAN BLINOA.s. OP Readedri - Nair- Readers. Graenlanit'a ;aid Breidire Aithareßos, Ae, Blank *Oka, Brthlasy., W,rapinneY Oartajnona yralAyAnar!i.., toe WOS, 'MELLOR 431:00i; ,NO. B NORTII TAIRD 13T U Rl. , , e IMPORTERS • - ENGLISH, FRENCH, AND GERMAN ' faLOYMB, DRAWERS,:Ao Patti Sniesa, Wiley. Jevosißisott, , D. 8, Bantu RIEtCtErg . PAIRD; iSI co (tete Sfegir, Lemb o IMPORTERS AND Joansiti . „ no. 47 Nor3h T9YStD i 3 R B lt7. r#l - papixop., OUR FALL STOCM{. BUYeni• PIPMPt Daiing:hieraltaifrom au puts of the Union aro intinbottutly aoGoited to oiiirand nimble for themselves, ' - - non-Am i STOVK'BROKERS. ' wi..iniotEr,&. : , :•p4 . **Aiitc,kil , , ,•,;:,:::;,',:;,:::-:,-,, :?:'-,„-- ~- - =.4..- - ,'-'. 7 : :- 1 . -crOdi47i4xt.o.ktit,a,'• NO: 89 , 801J_Tft , THIRD , STREET; ATOOK ANII,IISONDS OF ALL TEM ..LEArsitio PASSENGER • 4LLWAYS /N PiIILAbtLPRIA, toichiatt they Litivite the.attention "of capitalists. Bonds. , and Corporation Loans bought and Gold on coma:n*l . 9n at the* Board of Brokers.- ael-!m GENIrit',II , I[IIINISMOrKG W. SOOTT--Inte,of Uzi of Win obeiter 1r; BOeit—VllBlT4lllEBl4l'l l llßNltat FIG :CLOAK, end -If ;ilittT iU.FAcTORY, 81 gr.gall-gleilteteerlzei? Itthe ; guard Boum Cleood retoootrull eon the attention his for;F:pettens trieteleig t his nest, store, en 4 is xtrii par 0 Ail, orders Sett Tit r i t stkon, nem023,1. Uril 3 , jEißci;; ISD ,figOßT33gB AND WHOLEDALD DEEMS H A R'D:W A'RE't, otpLiß , S; GIINS,PItiTinaI, 526 , winum sTitzwr,, 629: . ans-Ilen - ' ' ' PHILADELPHIA. , MOORE. lIENSZEY a:004, ;.; ',ll/40,WA 1 - o,UnsElfir, AND OUN WAREHOUSE; PO. 491 MARKET, AMM coputlios 8T9.. .01 EXPERIKNO6I4ITRWALO 1100iotazetratetir 0 ‘, WO 4 il. ro 0-ut Lin ftrArffgrErtgiNG,: wi l ieh r mi,6o . m ititir c r 6 t%Vg; re - Doebuditiontanothete.iwys”rognumaii , " A u sTo. ygo ; II wr.PANSTY4 -amt- FT,4174,111r t it -44 t . , - - ' 11M - 00 t ' 6 ffStlEo., , , ix, ,-, LL It gat ofairkatla „. ~- Ir on 4 4 , 0 4 to trot: vlor t , - ,2W=Fre i'. - liaeirerteginia -2 ..44,,.. 4 , 0 0,..q ~g 5 ectiE,..ivrarkrii; ~.., B u t i v .. g ,,er . rir n i l. A ,0 0 ,Z w a at t,A sec role agoreroatanygpe ,_, Of PM etiOtteld eaq to 6 *van soo th er lettO a—, (Mild „ fet - ena eronleay et, * ~ the ,toragetthe tee me * c o lo t r i tiorma n y d re n°l X l lf /1 • 81 ' ' thA , ,AOlll it, Teen Wi t t greloe a se, esi litA ir ettegell i i t et glA t si ll naeLy3t ll6 wi • filet : Il rgalit VI& PR . *mi. , ie ee. on a wroillet. by, yri Oi , ' plog di.. :,E,..;iii,v„ , :lils !GAs* ..-...:... - ..:4 - , --, --...1.' - .. — _ - ::, --- - ---- 7 - 1 -- ri - c7" ----------- ' AIM long nepp-300 g ums. , assorteri, l- gl *O. Pi r , ' iattna,--*O bLls ~3OU, tatif„b Is., 1 IpAittotirtio,, Ow cos , Iftteat Tellow_greasa; - - Otterr i rg i galtit h eaMlrtimtri . . AR '/ 'fitiontryfolorth - v0iti,04711,.!. , , :, 4 4 ii' as.* Ow jf litstat Otto orostoarte t w'pf in bi too if it iiit APOIIOI I IO 03 1 grii AA •ARORRI 00141 0 7 40 AAURAI in. Itu ant &maw t iiii quantity , i 0,4444A1iti al , _ lA% kailiPliof Oftr„zart .. rft • ea e t 44,7 ' i • - rrrra ..."4 - 7,,i9 ,, :e ,,,, ' ~,., ' ' . ' 14, ..1/ , r, AI 10* a Mrelk , - r - . " ' " . . - 1 Weil' ..,..,, ~,,, 1,,, , . ~.„ t6oli6s • "h'MftWiftkrta:Adrigdfriti, -,• MAP"- , it't' :I‘. PLII,LAIIIit.PIfM; I'e .I_-rI ~HARDWAIi~: VEII4 ALFMA' xmin'emAi f : =MEE .. . , „...,• . . . , . ' ', i 5 ~; i• ' * • . --.„, %,. 1. :. '- ' ' 7 ,V, 11 ,/ " ." 4. 414:1 ;4 '4' 4 . . , . . • , ir k , :,- , 4' ..,--, , 1 . / , , - • lit k. ... ( 4 .3 ” ', ad :. • g.& -L -- -:... 0 , ~ .„ ,,, L,..--- • .4,_ , ..• *te $t , ' ....A,,,, .-- 0", ('' - - -" --- r• -P.-- f-' 1 " h ... 1 • :•- . o ll ' n ': ,;" : ' ii ** * ' . , • ~..,' ~ .: L. ) 100 r e r „, s ~..., i: ar 1 F ., oal IP/ 4°17: -`.: .. , 1 -,----,. 1, 0 AI;I r' , ..... '. .... 4... * ' °"" l ': .7 7 .-- - ''. a Oil , ,i, ~,,........._,, t f,, _ • ~ ~..... ..-- 1 .. - . ' 14-11\ I ..• It'n , l:, , a ,' ! t,.. • Z - " ... t=--- *-. .. —.' "' S- r .' t '.......'''....' ' a '".-.. : ""il . . ' - ',. 4 7""' . ''''' - --- . ' ...* -;' . 7- -. { I' ' .., o N ....4 .......'"....- -1,.._.........„:, - ..., ~ . : t, •• , ,:., yt,, , ... , . . . , IMMO , . .. . , NOol' 6 ' !, 4 .V - , P .1 - 111 ADELPHI A $ 'T , : ' AV, OCTOBER 18, 1859. TWO YQL::3 19115,11 rat IMPORTATION. Qui h C 5 6. , J1A.A.11.7 iL'EtAILIC -00..'": 4 0 . nifpcA ;;uvp sos bawls . AWAY, kilahaß4PU4l Kiva fifrieiviid by 'rikeAtioriligil, ii k dzwiu ecn iti tiue. t o Yp aatia during the sem= it fell te . oeelete Wont 'Ant WiliTEB.ooolo, • • , lioatinty, GLOVES, MITTS, AND id, , P l Pg ; i'SqlsZtt7fli ' • BOYS LimBELWOOL, AND Cc/1 7 C 4 AIMS. 4.10) ?Ma* ; GENTS' GOODS. and Piney Bilk B,3aifo, 'haai ang qraviti. t 4ntsq canablibi ant Hakfa , , •• , ,BUET.LAND:WOOXIZEPIWEB. r ; Alio; Wet of VIIITE, LAM* . MILPNOAAV aciffpg AturpaVtpurimEtt; • , ' COtToN; iiiksEtuts, ' • BitIRT ; • 11 1 .9.,Nroklarge,anil'qliesp,ilrittfr, , I. JOVVIN* . 14Wriitiiam 'BEST QUALITY RID ,Typ3.' A ipleildo siaorttnab! of colors audit -,virdottbitEwiziwutobta,/AbKitoilisfAs,rtg •-• T ogether with a large exiktinent of CLARK ' S seen- Deposit . oterdj ".8010-Piniebbd ind . ,•. , Yedineldied'i 811'9LPQTaTstd.409.ittatrBOOPE Arioldne Caton' , :tut es odirpoehieedkeee yardeenah., to whioh• the Siitn tientdBhitpdaboyi end Idenuttudnieni is Dement:4)r iF4 ,1 00/41 41 e., •• • .• • • • •••• • •,, crApir, Amfompt . arx-mormf zunwra r :11 4 T ' SPV ); Nab ' iiibtellt and iiien 7 itheethoeietni•eirefelte the trade. 0 : 2n1 —4a• . • ~ - -- s 4 , P P.q.# .k,q,,P,„Pc-i,IAT,.A•A`T,44AN,,' IMPORTERS AND bEALERS IN 6 - 2 ' '•• . SOUTH, SECOND, Mita, - 4091'UMISPTErr• • Are daily rygetypcaddttlidaliblifkigdr filrfady large aroogafr.• , , • ~ , , , , 'F ALL'qpct s domprbied in parti . MASK AND uOLORED CL n 0.4 0 - Num , RB , 1 ' 141 " '' W/ditidd*LES kriVDOEIAINO; 144.1k4110 ' BILL AND tnBIIIIESICYESTINGS. &c. !N.X....: , •A'lwiriter of Clothe it'd Atavara atdpabla' for LAJDIPP4OL64XB and gollyzas, which will larsaid . attealonable ; 10441 W. - .414. 4 5T.tW7,41Err - e',:(3.04 - fisvenowu tine 4,, 1 „ 'ROOKS Azo • • BILL htAtntkl,qtyr,.; ;: Of all eiadtei,'eed intt a iewi letti:teet . ,,D#lll , (Atli*, to "tick we invite the etteetithvet , • 01,8 H AND ',Pitt:llM Alik-ONTiK 09-3 m . BITER: , P140.E„ . BF CO., AD jOBBMIS :Poi : i►Aib , bobigSllo DRY ROODS $l5 iatARK T tSTRAM: 01:113'BS .10, SONS. , Ato r !At 4411.11 ET. BTRE ET, Aro - - • 146;41V,ititait i'TOOK 'OP fthbali ADAPTI4) In'likiuti iii[! , fouted.‘ flit! a:du:ottani of "vF,snsai, TRIMMiNOB. a •: • R 6 ..woop i , : mig{B 4 l, &-fLAYWAILLV, rs:rlVLP'O'n TEES p . 147 G,O.DDIEO AND O,LOTAIN4. , NO:Aiii•MASID&T STREET. PHILADELPHIA. Patl atIAl Wittir Pio* vrtesfonivieteakutripult tot _ "5-3-111 " ,IMPPBTIMAND WIIOI,ESALEDEALZIIB CLOTHO, ,OASUISOINI43; vosnlres, ,TAILORS' > Ng. $33 MARKT,I3TREET,,, (Up StiinG) • 'IIIILADELPSIA, 1014111 A ; W.. P.TTLp, I s" Co. leatix.:Gds o Ds. •.," •. , NQ. 325 MARK= ST SataILEIGH, Bun, ea co., 'IMPpRTERVOI Winn 000DII, . LAM , and EMBROIDERIES. Q. 329 MAIM STRUT. . Oar Meek, geleited M the 'best Europe:US markets bg Dan ererkie large sad complete. aug-Sni M WILLIAMSON & CO., WEOLESALE DEALERS AND JOBBERS 1N DAY GOPDS , .NO. 425 fiANNET BTRENT, (And 414 Commerce itre'eL) • IIITWXIM7OIIIITir AND myth, NOR= OM Onrsteoli, eepeolettp adipted. to Southern and Men em tad% is now largo and. *caplets in every parti cular. acs-if -"' 1E69 41,1 4 1111PORTATIONS.1859 DALE.ROSS de WITHERS, SAIL MARKET, AND Ste COMMERCE ISTREHTS; -- • . ' iMPORYBEE AND IORRR2I3 OT SILK -Ana • FANCY+ X304 - .131G Uses now, s ooraphste stook, to ernloh thet Invite the et tentionht buyers. itutt-Sht FATiCY DRY GOODS JOBBERS! SOHAFFES 'Si ROBERTS. • - • - 429 BURNET STREET, IMPORTERS AND, JOBBNRIII BOS/BRY, GLOVES, "IMAM; WARM, COMBS; BROSVAS, LOOKO4O oLAssus. lIAPIAN and rARNoR FANCY woos. _- TAILORS' TRIMMIiOn. MARTINS. & HAMRICa. ~ ', Ireporton sod dealers Is . - , HOSIERY, NtaVEO, AND VANDY NOTIONS, ' , NO. 30 NORTH...No:AWE STREET,' Five doors below the Ateielo c Fg Hotel, tTali.,olllo °spate the ntookoomstele stook o 0 , , in their cl, e r V i l n ol i rvtiifir -x ! ,?.-----.- , NE l o t tl Yrtostit l'ilfitr L II - = tel fltußiptia ClOt,t,Afta. ' A ir : PER C IO H RELTA L ‘iVII R cr "VT:: Ta li wllt'-lui;TitgLYT°F of NO- T V-. 4 $ Winly.jtk Alt-DIU II rRERN ', , u 'shit& , , ' - auS-3m HATS. 4dArt9. „ It :' A 159. C. jIARDEN tta GQ.; Manoteaturel 'end Wholesale Dealers in FURS: ANBrwrovs. ein PS f. # o%_ e nott ti.y trmgraftiffET SU DTDEBT, EXTEMIIVE 8:/:06f i e $184” TAP() 3, LOWEST "aul64in " RICES. ITERRINI3.-270 bbls Pickled Herring, Boffins, for Solo by 0. 0. Rrl LISA . A-KOH BOW, mond door above IVIAOKEREL..--725 bbla. Nois: 1,2, and 3 AtT• O4 Mookerel, bi assorted Origtroll rookay,ta, ado, litteiidotto,h, tor mad by O , RAHL,F,R, & CO, A ROH Street s ooottoid door Abovo Froot, oo 'IIIIINIIA itOM-4 sto M Qi thiamellogittra,yosizesonatiesotured ca:kndProfrionlae *1.11114, yrietallrliTLEß • 10' • PIAiitART):„ A I',oonoto3l/11,NINQ FLUID, arid PINE 611 in lona dhdr.bblk. Mannrydnrod and for Ondo by ROW ASFLIWILNLR & 00., nIS So le South Wharves, IMISIIIME 'ILLINERY Gl).oliS MILLINERY OPENING. 723 • ORNaTNUT 1312KET; ' WILL'HAis )VINTEN OPNNI4II, 'OO •42ONNNTS t ON TNIIILIZAi, 'OOlO/in OTM k, This display, to verieti, style, andataalitY, ie intondod TEE OPENING Or the Beason, and le espeoiaJir amntrioPlod to the no tice of the Ladies of this *ity and Viotglty. , No. NOM open, the cheapest assortment of MILLINERY ROODS in.this city, sold for oash, or i on short fume, at wholesale mill'. RIBBONS; BAJO* V.PLYS.A r tiS , SATINS, 401316 - if iiiAllitts4B, and TOA. W :GOODS * frVlitdoh ,Sple pall the attention of the trade, as we are A. 14, 791 - uit Li4/49Ea. N. ;cm stt lm AtQA/1, OW; R. SECOND 13iREET 43 El. linineinge variety; n ; 14 ,4W ./PWR* 62 , I3 O I UAL B . IREINET , YELYSTEI, 11ATII(8, 111R0 DE NAP& . ENGLISHORAVES, of the boat friskier • runic & AMERICAN ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS, FEATHERS, RUCHES, ito /tleo. neweet Fall styles of • * STRAW AND rerun BONNETS, And STRAW GOODS, of every del:toned° n. I • Iww!1 44 1 ,41 1 11 arrenallais altogether the, roost nom elehi itook of MILLINERY 'GOODS in thiernarket. Merohante - and Millinery front every section of the teichtryAr‘ Cordially invited to' call end examine our Idea, whioh we offer at the ' - . fOLOSERDPOSSIBLE TRICE& • BROOKS, a ao., aitlo-triovlo " " -- 431 MARKET STREET. ay IIILLBORN JONES. • boort" r and Mannfaotosee of FANCY D SILK STRAW BONNETS. 'ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. • • ,FEATIIERS, RUCHES, he VV.! attention tl' =lnd e t euntiv Dealers is Invited tou tars ego! vs i l od kof ut gum goods, st • 433 snow `T ad-got . Below MU. pi s J.. RAM - BERGER, No, 116 North yrAoLogobrfn Street, ie prepared to eildlitte moat i f complete rk of Millinery Goode, com meg blame. Flower, where Blopdi, Imes. ocbes, elveti, and other neet . gatermle, Also a i!tadsoina snort me* of Petters inlets, to all Itr telt be would ill v 1 tat 1 i t o% ° gag L I TATAZ l'uatlgffind wa at ll . tepreet prices., ~ „ :. , • aST-tm• hOOTS AND SHOES. lEAZELL 86 HARMER. ' ,PWIUMACTT:IRERS AID • WHOLESALE DEALERS tec , BOOT*S 'AND SHOES. No. 120 NORTH THIRD STREET. A full asnortanOnt of City Wide Boats sad Shoes colt otantly on hand. - 110-U . 3' . W. Itt, a .01.1_041-2. 881 OfiROTNUT EirREBT,"(2I V1,60/0 LADIES'. MIESSEB', AND CIIIIIMBNII -BOOM 8110E8, AND CAITDRA. manufactured expressly' for the Itetail Trade. eull-ft FALL STOOK *V BOOTS AND SHOES. JOSEPH H. THOM 130 N Oo;, tit MARKET STREET, Have new on hand a lane stook of BOOTS AND SHOES 01 , EVERY VARIETY, EASTERN AND CITY MADE. Pareisas s ere visiting the oily will view call and ea. amine their stoat. LEVICK* RABIN. Sa 00., BOOT ,AND MOB WARBBOUBB MID DIANITFA.OTORT, No. SOO , MARRUT OTREBT, rhiladalphla. We have now on hand an extensive Btook 'of Boots and Shoes, of all descriptions, of cue OWN and EASTRart Manufacture, to which we invite the attention of South ern and Western buyers. sus-8m CLOTHING. RAPHAEL; P. M. ESTRADA, MERCHANT TAILOR. FINE FAKIioNAELF. READY-MADE CLOTHING, AND SUPERIOR FABRICS FOR CUSTOMBR 110.21 SOUTH SEVENTH STREET, PHILABELPBIA, RAPHAEL P. M. ESTRABA, having associated with him as ARTISTIC CUTTER, Mr. JOHN MASSON (Isle of Glanville litokes%) respectfully invites the at tention of the public to his new establishment, and his solondid stook of FURNIS HING 1300D8 for Gentle Ineh's wear. 14e has on hand a choice selection of Fabrics nsr.pial ly for cast r omor work. coda varied assortment of fa shionable READY-MADE (11.0Tiftria, to which he writes the attention of buyers. Bach article warranted to sive entire tuttisfaction. 5241,-Sat JOHN BOBSON, Artist. _ ibwratharr, -- 111INTES, & SCOTT, MANUFACTURERS AND JOBBERS COMMON, MEDIUM, AND FINE CLOTHING. Wa invite aveoial Attie:9in to our complete line of hIACIIINVI-MLNUVAOTURBD 000D8. NOB. 494' MARKET, tr. 419 !Agile"(ANT SUL 1.011-301 DRUGS, CIIEIMICALS, &c. DRUGS, GLASS, PAINTS, &O. ROBT. SHOEMAKER & CO. NORTHEABT CORNER FOURTII AND RACE WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, impotters and Dealers in WINDOW 01,A89, PAINTS, &e., invite the attention of COUNTRY MERCHANTS To their large clock of Goods, which may offer at the lowest market rates. oas-tf CIGARS* TOBACCO* &C. MERINO. ' . 140 601.1T11 FRONT BURET, Hu in More And bond, and uteri for Bale, a Large Alum Went of nIGIAI B, Reoebred direot from Havana, of cholae and favorite Braude, , sa-tt lc non OXEB AMERIOAN AND Jou'raism 7 FßENCll WINVOWILAtt The in 0/ I , l4 l; u ti: m n alt uut s r i n ei h a ll . a utoh DOA ono, orator ifrap '! „; : , • FROTHINGHAM ~ 34 NUM ~ . : • ": .,:l 4. 11 - 7r , , . , AND 35 LETITIA ST Ate. AUNTS for the sale of goods Menu( are r the following ,Companies. viz : MA esficuinleive, , il, y • LACOA4 OR 611 . FALLS .1 r /MIA !I, •-' CABOT. . OWIOII7, - 1 ' PtaKILLI , ' llt An Er. Brown, Bleached, find Colored Sheelli ' , Jenne, and Drille.. , ' ROBESON'S BLUE PRI 4,. k , , BAMPOIN CODIPANY'46 , , f . TWEEDS AND COTTONADES in groNSAIII.,. WASHINGTON MIL thirmerly Hay &Ate) " ‘ , .. Shawls , Piano-ant Tab's .Coversi • Print ra FlAnnenh_All-Woo end Cotton Ware Cloths vg_ era blue ne avers, mimeses.. end Trivets. ,•xer sem Satinets. and Tweeds. - 01.• bstitte: . kiln i ,LEY ) /WARD: 4c..11UT1 Fs, NO.IIO CHESTNUT COMMISSION KORCHAN/,4/ FOR THE SALE OP ' 4 PHILADELPHIA-M4p GOODS. T • R. GARBED fit, OBigERAL ciomMiaßloN baße C 444 ° 44* *" " _annum; LARD, AX" " , wuabg ILOUR, ' to ' • LP The attention St Mitattfootorline (Mad to our , • •‘•., - • • • "1141a1 No. 1. :11r, FRONT BTvorr 7 ,p ‘ 1144.. C'LARK'S 8 P 0 0 14 uit reosived, WRITE, BLACK, AND Ob,Lo.ff3, For sato by • °EARLE S FIE Ltoj'i,,; 276. 20 NORTH SIXTH' B#.lolT t ,"' AGENT FOR PRILADELFW4t':"i SMIT,/-1; MURPHY. 0, lin MARKET ST., AND 226 CHUNDi ATAXY.' Arc now opening their TALL AND WINTER STIC ov STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOOD To which they invite the attention of DAM AND PROMPT 811.041-Tilllit Mitt PIiILADA.; ngustoSe4 ang.i. WAIL•CIIEs, JEWELIiYi.Seo.' SILVER WARE- ' .WM. WILSON & 4ON . Invite openial attention to their *took r SItiVER WAREorhinit is now unusually large, attpling aye,- bi l nety of pattern and design unsurpassed any haul! the United States, and of finer quality thin manethe tared tar table use in any part of the world, Oar Standard of Silver le 935-1000 sif, pure. The English Sterling 925-1000 '- ' 'it American and French 9004000 j Ci Thug it will be Been that we sly° thirty-fire trt.i ;stray than the Atuerinnn and Frenult coin, end tie net than the English Sterling. We melt all oar Cr, and our Foreman being oonneoted with OMR De reruns nt of the United States Mint for fleYe 7 n guarantee the quality an above (938). wbushl the finest, that tan be made to be serviceable, and O M it .the motion of acids much bitter than the ertfl ,Itilesr: mankfactured. , ~.. „, WM. WILSON & AS"- 'y ,';' -, ,1 4 ,..,,,, B. W. CORNER Firm AND CIIRIaIt 1 , N. 11.—Any finenen of Silver mansdeetnied Ms limed' aeon, but positively now infole- m 1+0404 Am.WV can standard. _ - , , . •, 5 ,,,...___ —ssmect WWI the Name standard akeseit ill our retail department, , dt SON, Fine Sliver Beni, felt):4000 parte pure r oerusilti7 hand. BAILEY do 60.1, ,-31477":"---7"‘ aye removed to the hew Fire-tired, What Bitable NORTH 810 E, BELOW THE MAIO noun. Now Opening their Fail Moak a UtPORTED JEWELRY, PLATED Wan, AND to whiott they tante the attention of thelablie. NIL VER-WARB, WATCHES, AZAWN.I4, AND J S. JA RDEN & BRO., *MANUFACTURERS AND /MPORTERI OF SILVER-PLATED WARR, No.lol OILESTfiIUT Street, above Third, (ui Calm Philadelphia. S tigrangrAliarbi,to,tl47... W INCH FIB 4111. 11 11 7 1 4 8, C UPg 41 1 1 TE e' KR 'l3 . CASTORS, RTOYEB, POO , FORKS, LADLES, to., SAN elidi ng . and plating on all kinds of metal. HARDWARE PACKAGE MIGUEL RANDY & I3RENNER. NOS. 23, 25, AND Sin' NORTH IFIFTII ECREET PHILADELPHIA, WILOLVALLE COMMISSION biEHOMISafi, AMERICAN MANUFACTURED RARDVARE, GERMAN, BELGIAN, FRENCH, AND ENGLISH ' HARDWARE AND 'OUTLERT, Keep oonatantlr on hand a lance stook of, Rods to SW Pis Hardware Dealer% BDTOIIER'S FILREJ, By the cask or otherwise, BUTCHER'S EDOM TOOLS, BUTCIIEWS STEEL OF VARIOU KINDS. WRIGHT'S PATENT ANVILS AND VICES SHIP CHAIN, And other kind' in every variety. HARP'S REPEATER PISTOL WEIGHING ONLY 8 OUNCES. 811.ARY'8 ItIrLF44 AND ono. %Dui ar.. or ANDY. /NO. 0, DUX N it& 'pi/Irma 14094 _ 13ACKAGE HARDWARk ITOITSE.—Wo 41.• would:swat:oly call the attr ell4oriwOrr Prod f ;It% ''re cfe. at &s 4•11 advance by the package. Orders for direct inundation solicited, and g oods livered either in this city, New r 3,: rikie s ex tAtarte. 43 1 CUM Alpe F.; Btreet. Itnenrting and Cornelis on Merchants. And Agents for - Foreign and Domestic Hardware. au.l3-tf LAMPS, CIIAND ELIt3S,-ic: CORNELIUS & BAKER, MANUFACTURERSOF LAMPS, CHANDFILIERS, OAS FIXTURES, ac 3. STOW 710 CHESTNUT EP.HEET. MANUFACTORIES, 821 CHERRY ST., AND FIFTH ANID COLUMBIA W-lheto-Rml AVENUE. CHINA AND QUEENSIVARE. BOYD 80 STROUD. IMYORTERB AND JOBIEItAt Have now on hand a complete stook if QUEENSWARE. SLANWARE, and PRINCH AND BNCIIIBII °HOU, At their OLD 8x VIID, N 0.38 NORTI mug four doors below Merchants' Hots4lo/think they invite the attention of 1 4 1110LESALF, BUY3BB. Eir AGENTS YOB PITTSBURG °bass. acilt-km WM. JOHNS & SON. IMPORTERS, AND DUMB IN BOOT, SITOE, AND GAITER MATERIALS ARTIE OH, onakorat OREETINOB, PATENT LEATHER, RENON KIDS, SLIPPER U.PPE3B, LACETR, A 4: N 4 E. CORNER FOURTH AND ARCH STS. ikul4n2 7IEGLER. & SMETH, corner SECOND ff-. 1 and OR N, have flanni rqd area reputation by WIRO and prudent ocurlie they have . pureued no° t 'air commencement in busineen, by,eeiling first-r te artiole at a law figute. • • 404 6010118qION TIOUSESi COTTON,; A FULL ASSORTMENT IN. ' , ?plumy ' MIRY .E KITCHEN, 819 OXICSIVUT narst, FANCY COM, PEARLS, At WOOLUALI AND JUITAIL For the sale of all kleda of AND 114PORTERI Of SOLE dattirrB fO3 SHOE FINDIN(18. f,„r iet , t ' 14.,1 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1859. Notices of New Books. .Most genial, of poets and of men is John G. Saxe, of Vermont, whom we have long eoraiderod as more like Months :good than any other Amerienn lyrist. Ile would resemble his prototype yot more pt,osely if ho yielded oftener to his serious mood, Sad, in his song, gave us more of " The low, and musk; of humanity." Ns jests, but is not a jester. Ito makes us smile, and'eould as readily draw down the tear. Saxe is Ohoroughly original writer, yet reminds us of I.llood, Holmes, and Prned. We wore struck with Abo resemblance to Praed, while glancing over the .iroof.shecte of a new volume by Saxe, entl -74.4.1" TIA Money-King and other Pooms," 'rah Ticknor ets Fields, of Boston, will pub in, A, few days. The Lyrics called "I'm gi wingold," "A. Reflective Retrospect,"" Ideal 4054tea1," and Epistles, aro very Prudish. But Sue is "himself again," in .the poems,of The lifoaey-Ring and the Press, and especially so in the tra4e,stie of Richard of Gloater, the King and the Cottager, Ye Tallyor-Man, and how Cyrus laid the Cable, The three, or four lyric's. hero, In a grw , r lino of thought, show what Mr. Bare could do serious poetry, if Impinged. Cf his former ' , Maine of poems, publist, e ma -4 ....-_ adltlons have been sold, We %Ay o 4A that" rn The Illoney-Klngr ,deserves a Ytit,, 01 1 0 ,:.. I.ltraled topularii9,--/lUM4 -t a l iMnita ,wit. ; Stowe's romance of New England life, oif• (tiled "The lifiniater's Woolng,'! which has been Orally published In the Atlantic Monthly, is now brought to a olose, and is published, in a very 'handsome volume, by Derby A Jackson, of New York. Wo are indebted for an early Copy to G. G Evans, of Chestnut street, with whom it is on sale. This romance, semi-religious in character, will mak among Mrs. Stowe's most suceeesful perform ances. It Is free from the exaggeration with which "Uncle Tom's Cabin" is imbued, and it has a more decided aim, with more probability of incident and truth of character than " Dred," Slightly anti alavery in tone, and very religions in sentiment, ",The Minister's Wooing" is most artistically exe cuted.. The introduction of Colonel Ilurr, who figures in the story as a sort of tempting and se ducing devil, is not in the best taste, but in the 'close of the tale ho is snore tenderly dealt with. Madame do Frontignite is the best drawn character in the book—so womanly and as true, so weak and ;yet so strong. Whoever dolma to road an in. tense love-story will be delighted with this. Mary Scudder, the heroine, deserves an excellent husband, and wine one nt the end. As for the old Minister himself, Dr. Hopkins bight, ho is the truth of a Christian gentleman, with a deity beauty in his life. So, with a lingering regret as we close a book which has deeply fascinated us, we com mend "The ;Minister's Wooing" to public favor. Here is another book from the pen of a gifted .woman,—Miss Muleek's "A Life fora Life," hand somely put Into an ootaveedition for the library and gold at one dollar, while the London edition costa eight. We welcomed this sound-hearted fic tion when It first appeared, not many weeks since, and are glad to tied it in a more compact and at tractive form. Published by the Harpers of New York. told in Philadelphia by Petorsons' and Par ry and McMillen. "Men who have Riaea," a series of biographies, handsomely illustrated by C. A. Doyle, is a book for boys, jest published by W. A. Townsend A Co., Now York, and a very pleasant, instructive vo lume it la. We have , read It through end found it Fe. It contains memoirs of fifteen eminent men, who have contended - with and conquered low birth and Iron fortune. Of these the most interesting are Stephenson, the Railway Pioneer; the Rothe. chide; the Peel family; Hutton, the bookseller; Llmuous, the Naturalist; and Wilson, the Orni thologist. A companion volume, for globe, is enti tled "Women of Worth," and is illustrated by W. ,Dieltte, It is. 'comely as good es the other vo lume. , Several of the shorter lives are taken from Sarah Jeaaphe 'Hale's "Records of Women," a hastily-executed and far from reliable work. The mom exteluled biographies are by far the best, and ,the engravings In both volumes are beautifully ex ecuted from good designs. The Ottobor number of the North Amtriton Review (published by Crosby, Nichols, A Co., Raton) •opens 'with en excellent article, critical m A_lak ir TkilpO tn ow Twee Popham: l means -vinswil nia - wofita of fiction, now in course of publication, with Darley's Illastrations, by W. A. Townsend, of Now York. The cther literary articles are upon Douglas Jer rold, (declared by 'the reviewer not to have been aynteal or ill-natured Plutarch's Lives, and the new edition of Praeil's Poems. There is a semi-historical article on the Age of Chivalry, and a notice of the old-world city of Nuremberg. Edu cated Labor, the Depreciation of Gold, the Causes of Mental Distress, and American Diplotnacy in China, aro also treated of. The last-named subject is full of interest at this moment, and the article 'applies a great deal of Information. Upon the whole, we have found this number of our oldest periodical unusually attractive. The .Presbytertan Quarterly Review, as a class publication, presents few artiolea of interest to the general reader. There is one article, however, upon 'Humboldt and his "Cosmos," which may be singled out as containing every thorough examine. Lion of a remaricable work and its subject. We notice, too, an earnest and able reply to a hostile oritielsen In the Princeton Review, upon the Rev. Albert Borneo' recent and, we must say, admirable mirk "on the Atonement." The lash is keenly ap plied, but was well merited. There aro several articles on Church discipline and doctrine, which we can only mention here. This Review, we may mention, Is regularly issued in July, October, Jan uary and April, corresponding with the publics. tion-time of other Reviews, and in the .July num her,"commeneing the next volume, smaller typo will be used. Those rising Boston publishers, J. E. Tilton & Co., have just Issued a very readable book, printed with exquisite neatness, whisk will have a legion of readers. It is " Germaine," from the French of Edmund About, whose "Roman Question" has excited no small attention. The story, characters, situations, and sentiment in "Germaine," are ominentlyErench. Tho plot is well developed, and every personage—from GOTIEHODO MA Madame Obermidy, down to the Duke and Mathieu Mon toux—bears the impress of reality. We shall pot say what the plot is, for that would forestall the reader's Interest, but say only that " Germaine" is full of varied interest. The translation, most spirited and faithful, Is by Mary L. Booth, author of the only good History of Now York we have yet road. Peterson's Dickens for the Million pro (seeds steadily, a volume per week, the whole to be completed In twenty-eight weeks, at $5. A very good translation of the Memoirs of Ito bert-Ifoudin, the renowned French conjuror, has beet , y-Idlshed by tioorge O. Evans, of this city, under the eallosss.4. nr Or. Shelton Mockensie. Tho book, which is copiously desi.sa with extramt- genes, contains a good deal of parte...Lana pro Zulltional adventure, related in au off-hand, lively manner, vrtilelfinagewit nightly amusing. Who Houdin is, may be learned from the following bio graphical notice, which wo take from the edit o r's preface " Houdin has been considered of rush import ' anee and interest in France, that in Ditiben Nom. cello Biographic Oineralr, now In course of pub Relation at Paris, a whole page is given to him. from memoir, and from his own aeco»nt in the pages which follow, we learn that he was born at Blois, on the 6th of December. 11),05; that hie father, watchmaker in that city, gave him a good education at the College of Orleans; that his inclination for caramotagr (or juggling) was so de cided as to make him averse to pursue ills father's trade; that he early exhibited great taste for me chanical Invention. which he so successfully culti vated that, et the Paris Exhibition of 1814, henna awarded a modal for the ingenious conetruotton of sereral automata; that, haring studied the dis plays of the groat masters on the art of juggling. tie opened n theatre of his own, In the Valais Royal in Paris, to which his celebrated xoirice fa wa, flow, attracted , crowds; that, in 1045, when the Revolution hall ruined all theatrical speculations in Paris, he visited London, whore his perform. (Lucas at St. James's Theatre were universally at tree live and lucrative; that he made a tour through , threat Britain with equal success, returning to Paris when France had settled down quietly mkt' the rule of a President; that he subsequently visited many other parts of Europe, everywhere received with distinction and applause ; that at the threat Parisian Exhibition of 1855 he was awarded tho gold medal for his Relentillo applica tion of electrinity to °looks; that, shortly after, he closed ten years of native publio life by Min. quiehing his theatre to Mr. Hamilton, his brother in-law, retiring with a moil-earned competency to Ws, and that, In 1857, at the speolal request of the Preach Government, which desired to lessen the Influence of the Marabouts , whose conjuring tricks, accepted as actual magic by the Arabs, gave them too much influence, he merit to Algeria, on a sort of ambassador, to play off his tricks against theirs, and, by greater marvels titan they could show, de stroy the preittge which they had acquired.lost ae so completely succeeded that the Arabs 11 1 l faith in the miracles of the Marabouts, and thus was destroyed en lawmen very clangorous to the French Government." A sumuEß or Interesting drawings and roan useripti by Michael Angelo !Inv° Jest boon dis, c overed nt Florence. "The.haralacnnot woman on the stage" is sal, to bo Alisd Cruvolli,'rine of Strokosch's opera troupe MO ten 1080010 contralto, Vottintli. 41;7. • 1 41 CHOICE EXTRACTS From the Files of the N.T.' Herald, During the Presidential Campaign of 1850. BENNETT CONSIDERS BETUAXAM A 'COLD AND MID MAN." [From the N. Y. 'Herald, July 12,1856.3 "Mr. Buolianam_on the other band, le sleekening Itil colt Perceptibly. His papers are deserting him here and there, and his most active drummers seem to be labor- Ingin vain to get up a little enthusiasm . The stuff of whreA popular enthusiasm is made, however, fin's vs hint. anti cannot be brought out of him. Throne] hie whole life he has been a cold and timid man fallowing in the Wake of other men; while Fremont has been a ve ritable and notable pioneer, loading the way in the peth of entpire." &e. BENNETT'S CAUFAION SONGS, IN WHICH THE IL LUSTRIOUS AUTHOR OF HART ANN" EXPRESSES IN MITRE HIS ADMIRATION OF JAMES BUCHA NAN. [From the N.l. Herald o[July 14.1834.1 UNCLE lA:I'M TUNE... , uncle Ned." There was an old gentleman whose name woe James; lie was born long ago, long ego; Be men t don't e, have had come other names, WWllhappen to know. Cheruy—Then lay down the fiddle and the bow, Takenp the shovel and the hoe. And w&ll dig a log hole for old Thiele James, And bury him deep and low. In the Federal ranks lone time be stood, And once lie was heard to shout That " if he had a drop of Demooratio blood, He'd be glad to let it out." Then lay down, &c. • To (Mend once went this old tnan.' And this honest scheme did reveal: " We'll buy bpain'a daughter. Cuba. If we can, And what we can't buy we'll steal.' Then toy down, ho. When he'd grown old his party thought They'd take Uncle James by the nose, Wttlara,...P.ln4Agflt the! fought Then lay uo'lvia HuLLniir 'Uncle TAMMY was NO Old to fight, BO uma.noolifthatt- • And foond herbed lost th Then lay down, dco. THE FOUR YEARB' RAcg, , „ Tuner-Few Days. The four years' race is to be run In Pt few days, a few days Ay slavery's hark it can't he won, Oh take" Buck" borne. " Bunk's" wind was hurt on the Federal track, In hie young dare. his young Jaye, And slavery's takete strained hie beck: Oh! him home. 'T,o cruel to run to old 71 hack, In a few day'', in a few (hp' His shoe, are loom. 00 Spin, in 111 0 Oh! take "Bunk" home. Our free mountain colt will win the field, In a few de ye . ales' days, And eleven , minions wi l have to yield, Oh! take them home. THE BACHELOR CANDIDATE.. , Tt'a time to be damns, the play has begun, There's mischief s browine as sure as a gun ; The Rook and Break noodles are stupidly bent On choosing a Bach for our next President ; A bachelor who, like his species, you knOW. I. afraid of the girl., and to union a foe: • nen up and be doing, for danger is rife— A man Is but moonshine who hasn't a Wife. For a tasty old sourer, who, ne'er—no 'tie said— Hail children to speak of, and never was wed, To be our chief ruler, it must be minimised, Is doint up matters in mighty bad tuts. Imagine him in the White Ifouse—if you can— With ell things err:Limed on the bachelor plan ; "Not apetticoat In it to lend it a eliarm, Nora bright smile of woman to keep the place warm, In festoons the cobwebs are elustering round, All things in confusion. from to ground. chairs, sofas, and tables with duet covered o'er. While quids end cigar Mumps embellish the floor. Just think what queer things his receptions would be ; Uncouth sander parties. as all must agree; • Where ous well - b r ed mistress a place is, wean. no bury would wish to be seen. With pride we can point to our own eandulale, Who doubled his value by taking a mate, And found in hie Jessie a treasure more bright Than all Mariposa will e'er bring to light. . Come on. boys, we wont go for eitlebs—that's Ilat— He's only an unit. and cypher at that ; 8n we'll march to the poll* with an unbroken front, And give nur amprort to the gallant Fremont ANKNETT CALLA AIIiIIAXAV OLT Pony." [From the New York Herald, July 17, PM ] "Bees it need a nythingfurther than these hints to ex plain why the nomination of Mr. Buchanan drag. PO heavily . .? Ile is nn old Joey' —et timid old gent lemon, ereept in the bander& Houle—an old eager. with his little family confidential clique in ever] State, before whnee claims and metennions all other Democrats, of high or low degree, must stand hank; and is not this enough ?" BeNNETT FISCFSSES SITCRANAN'S IVATRIMONIAL QUALIFICATIONS. [Prom the New York Herald, July "It I. admitted that Mr. Buchanan loved. that the ob feet of that love long airo—say thirty-five yearn—enr imbed : that he love. her still. Again we inquire whether thin is a rocommendatmn Quo of two things! either Mr. Buchananshown that he had no tame for matri tnonr. which plainly imrdies a tack of ..one eeeential gliolity—,v , for instance. was the Mee with John Ran dolph of Roanoke: or Mr. Buchanan line signified by his conduct that there was not in Pennsylvania or in Waahington a huh Rio bn his bride. Nut there is 'mother view to be taken—no man who hag not linen married can thermic:dr Dv:Jarman.) human nature. Female society has always been considered esaential to politician.: last as hgehelnr satiety has sl - been detrimenal to the moral. (dell who have fre quented it. All our President,. have been married men. Rome theni had two wive.. Nor would they have been pa able officer.. undoubtedly, had they never aeon that peculiar rude of human nature which is revealed by matrimo»e. Air Bunhanan, it seems, never had the nerve or the pluck to recover iris first love; if lie ie elected, he will be the first President who shall carry into the White House the orude and ,possibly the gross tastes and esperiencen of a bachelor.. BENNETT Co3rltsargEs VIE von:Lan...m:l_olmo _vir-f TRES:Mtn. Herald. Tulj 27; Id3e.T "'rho Wheatland greg.coutrovereY continues to be waged with the most acrimonious hittsrnese. To suelt of your readers as may not he nev.tai livid with the orl4 gin of this dispute between [woof our livid rapers. st will lie necessary to State that soon after Mr. %Oman wne nominated reference was made In the Lancasteo Saturday Errors, to (terrain convivial arteries, aright'' , nn exuberant and profane character. which were stated to have taken place in 'Wheatland during the contest its la% with the expression of a hope that thee would not ha repeateit during the present campaivn. Thereupon, the Intellegrneer mid Lagrasteroan-11r. organ—came out with a furious attack upon the editors . of the Salads!, in which strong personalities were em plyed. The Erpre's of the 2Gth publishes a reply. inl which it Content. Itself with quoting from the renter a n ti Etinengrrinn of Sa11111", i t se, (that paper being then In opposition to Mr. Buchanan, I the original statements on which its own remarks were founded. shall just quote two or three passages from these choice entrants. The Intelliseneer affirm, In one place, that for litorithapset it Is notoriously known Mr. Buchanan converted his residence into en unlimited tavern stand, where all were invited to Call and partake of hill liquors, the qualities of which he was by uo means modest in extolling. free from any other ciliary° nave—the health of Buchanan," In this manner.' it adds,' night after night toe he nought by making men drunk, to 'secure from them in their drunken moments pledgee to support him ' As it these charges were. not sulTicientla damaging. the winds up with tine ',nista indignant. coin inentary: ' That he ham a right to invite persons to his residence. icon on the Sabbath, and that they Lave a right to go we will readily grant, but common decency. we Should suproae, would prevent any ems of the least moral ottoman,' from getting hie demijohns filled whilst on his way to church, and whilst the last words of Re impressive Rormort tics 'Pt fresh upon hit mind, from (lima/eying his glasses and liquors before his invited corals. who, towards the Hose of the day, or late hours of the night, - wore but to fill a vehicle with drunken man to Inc conveyed to their homes. not these things 0 el' transarted Sabbath after Sannth, deliberately as. , erl, and deft honest denial. They are not known tons alone, but they aro the common Moira of conversation amongst our people. What smut have loon the rosil tom of the beg we cannot say.' This, it must be owned is rather an embarralsing polemic for the having old gentleman who does the honors of Wheatland. Seeing that the eliaraes oriel anted will' his own organ, it is surprising that he did not hn_pose silence Op the indiiiereet editor of that pa per. Ire must have either n very short memory or havo been dining at 'Wheatland when lin penned the artiste which drew forth this terrible replication. 'Out of its fullness the mouth npeaketh.' " DEN'ETT DISCUSSES TUO WHEATLIND °son awl TION EDITORIALLY, WITH SUNDRY REFLECTIONS ON THE HABITS, TASTER, AND HISTORY OP BU CHANAN. (From the N. Y. Herald, A ngust 1, 1 ad6.1 "THY, GREAT GRaii QRMITUVe AT IVIIISATLAND. , .- While yet the Democratic and Know-Nothing organs are dismissing the nativity and Catholicity of Fremont, the baptism of him children. and the wealth or poverty., as may he convenient. of - his Zier 'prise purchase l end 'chide some of the antiquaries of the Republonn 'wheel are anvil' tiny into the Irish esthetic anteeedonts of the late Men. Fillmore, nail the Catholic' education rif her amiable and acoomplished daughter—now elan in the crove—a t new question, end a question more apropos to the Presidential issue. has been started up among the Party Journal's at Lancaster. near Wheatland. in Penn sylvania. This question. ',described by our Lancaster enrresonnilent, in Tuesday's Herald. is the neat Wheatland grog question, and the specifications of the ant i•Buclianan Journa la are an fi ery plauxible. and Cue. tamed by such creditable lean mom • concerning the ad ministration of the domestics government of the old linehelor'a hull at Wheatland. that we cannot dismiss the sadden without a kw pnicong renearks. The Lnerost,, , a and latellireneert snow the home coon of Mr. 1 1 11ChiliMI. declared in Pia, that ' for months pint. It is notoriously known, Mr. Buishannn converted his yosideriee into an unlimited loosen s t an d, where all were invited to call and certai) of his liquor,. the qualities of which he was by no means modest ha estellin-s. free from any ottifir rbArga save the health of Mohr:Tian. In this manner,' it adds, ' night after fronttots be sought, by making men drunks to secure Don' the., drunken memento, pledges to sup port Lim"' This he Positively frightful. and gives us a shuittlisr..p-reptilleetion of hontsy's letter to Boloirta, touching tie r hid the aa nutho rity further &elates that i there pri,”,if s (ran geerrni. sodnish nil bottom denim. Vne,rould hare hehoVeil it ? ariTt respectable'f that Mr. Inuehanaele... lived all hie life a old betolzolor. afford rat care a embstaatiP groan(' Or "'Vas t i t i an phinoplrk of the ease as very simple. An old bachelor, ii in n retired eiullitrY house. oennot flourish upon hooks and neasitesseerrs, rt.tor 10- male day. hie needs tahmathinK Mare. Man is an wit ml. and cannot exist lis a rational or a t e ul man hout society. Pin tuna Into a ilium , as mstr and mistress, mid the administration of us allairs ineoli- I La run inn' s itisiorcler. and he t ic eeewnwiy fall Into I outside sown' lastitla to snarly the absence a wile and children. Ile will gather about him aci We of joll g oo d -yellows, amantionditern. wild )oIiRS char and fren-and-easy old codgers, of the party to Whie he be longs. who will drink his wines, flatter him , imbue hint, and menage loni.lust, for exani pie•aa Colonel War nny and his set hove ninneged, roil are militating Mr. Puebtanno. A wife In t he house eilinita of no such 'aunty arrangements. But Imw could we egreet a ge nial, Well-to-do old bachelor. for twenty ) ears, more or loss, n candidate fur the Presidim!, to escape suco nr roctationo rind nniusements It is said that hl r. Buchanan. in the flower of his manhood, Wei crossed in his first love, and never hail the courage to,lcolc alter another. It is said that the young. Indy, driven to despair by the despotic course of a hard-hearted mother, took laudanum and died is nisi, stated thrit, with the lanientabla result, Mr. 11u ehattan, in his desperation, attempted hie own life, nod that the coarequewe was a rnaernclien of th e mn „.1,,., on nor ,side or hi, threat, Ina ah en re him that A bet or twi in ht' week. Irnirti hr corm, N this day. At all events. neyoriling to the reports of his own friends, Mx love af fair Wan badly inainued, and n onto of criminal folly on all sides. The )sung lady. failing with one bean, aluoulil have resolved to succeed with another t or the young gentleman, to save her from the crueltr of her mums , should have plucked up the courage of n cavalier. and earned her ottl, and got married. even bv Cathelio priest. rather than fail. That's the war Fremont did. and be land' Old Tom Benton ' to [tattle with. a more terrible enemy than a legion of old women. Bad Mr. liuchennii dime so. he might have loom President 'Printed years ago ; having foiled, lie may be - in the only possible opportunity that can ever ho offered turn for winning the White Mouse." BENNETT PRONOUNCES BUCHANAN AN "OSTEND HICHWAYHAN ," [Front the 'Herald of August G. 1 5 34 . 1 "Tint OaTEND ANNA N'i MANIFFATC—BUCHA NICN TRa,ac.. hl‘aCT.—To refresh the mernenee of all parties. Mom the happy family at Tammany Mail down to the taalanalaly ramaias attic Know-Nettling ledges. we republielt, thin morning, the telebrata Oncild high nu:allot° of Mews. Buchanan, hlnerin. and docile, together with the important letter of Mr. Smile, enclosing Vox pree ohs legacy Intim Govettwient at Washington, and the reply of Secretary Marcy. BENNETT ACCUSES BUCHANAN OP MAKING " SEAN AND CONTEDPTIBLE !BREATH." [From the Herald of August 8, 18.58.) A BaCTIoNAL PB.EslDEattar. Tirana.—A great tine and ory hue been raised against the Fremont party' by the Buchanan and Fillmore organs. on the ground, that it in &emotional parts, and in represented by it lectional ticket.' ignoring fiffeen States of the Union. innsinuelt as 1.,0th Fremont and Dayton hail from the North. ;Vlr Fd!more himself, we.helteve„ tens the first to make this Important discovery. and to raise the cry of retelhon. mid *etymon tu the event. of Fremont's eleetton. The Inn 'wan and contemptiOr threar MN sines been oeted by Mr: Buchanan. Mr. Senator Toombs, and ,er lendum Southern secesstobists of the modern de moralized Demooracy.", , - • . • BENNETT EXPIAINfI HOW 111.8YOFT /lIIMT HATE PUT BUCHANAN'S '‘ NOSE OUT OP JOINT." [lrom the Herald. Atignst 190856.] ' We know what we gay, and the whole Myslery in o e season will he folly enchained. We only repeat, for the present. with n knowledge of the mrenrostances, that had Fremontmhen applied to kr a Democratic com mittee. consented to swallow the KeTana-Nebraska bill. h mould hare put the nose hi ye. Buchanan out of .i int as the Democratic nominee. B NNZTT ACCUSES SCCRAN.tI OF BRING PLEDGED TO PERPETUATE BORDER nurnAsunt, AND TO FAVOR PILIBUSTERISN. [trim the Herald, August 28,1856.1 "Having shown that, it there be now existing any denser to tbe Unio im becil e*gsts in Kansas, end Oat this deuble-deahog And Pierce Administration and the soils Democracy are responsible ;,and knowing, ft. W 0 a ll do know, that Mr. Suchenen is pledged to _per ntteate nit the abominations of Puree's Denier ruffian ! ent, with some filibustering •additions on a larger scale, it necessarily follows that the first thing to demand is the kntervention of Gonereal.for peace in Kansas; and that the next thing for the peace of the whole country is the election of PrenioSS ned a new Administration. We cannot cure a cancer ay a bread poultice. We must strike lathe routs of the disease:l' tiENNETT RECOMMENDS RECHANIN AS PRESIDENT oP TDB ISLAND CY CALYPSO, TO .4 OPPICIATE AMONG THE GODS AND THEIR LOVES," DOT CON . DRAINS MS FRAILTY is A POLITICIAN. ir roni the New York Herald. Aneurit.3o,lSs63 i it . ; , I :t rr ii l i i i i i 2 a e n ulro l u a sta t e h re n r e c i e l I s utt ana t sTnlitaa r r our trt i rs ea l rd caarseter and conduct. like teal a cruieliday loses.. thin and carry out the noble principle of lore, ra a n its power and rtrmemen ry; Vas waste k made Presidet qf Ir. blond of CauPso, end there officiate amonetly gods Tut their Sores.' or to rule at to meth heaven, where all tours ore to be made. happy, we latest make little or no obieerioa. According to the article which appeared in Harper's Maitosin. arid which was published by all to'garrotes of the Drew. it is evident that a tender ple na early mamprilized his soul, and that it remains in *seamen al 'tilt. fri love, therefore. he is true to is faith and his principles—an example to the present rAripo mitt() inylktaaa he may leave. relit,. thy tame is—Politician i nittiftriVeal,ki grAanaii tapeblir lifisfullsjorritArt this repilimg. he variations have been treater than those of Mr. Van feman and It is very natural .thev should be ara la nay tiro he was of lb. respectable Federal. school , pnre nd unadulterated ;hi mature li fe, a Whig. of alma Prtn mien; aryd in inter life a Democrat of the prevailing ot; a friend of Jackson, yet entherritesing him with enantkanzed propoaittoes from Mr, Clay; a blend of the Absentia Compromise. and its enemy'; opposed to and in favor of Territorial severeitnty ; a conservative statesman, and yet ready to steal hubs and plants the hation into a war with Brain." EigNSETT EULOCHZIS BUCHANAN AS " A. DANCINO .- - - • ma.g." • [From the New York Herald, Sept. 6, ]W.} • "!teeing secured the Yomez of the old maids by the terrible account of his earlier sulferitrs. all for lore. he now appears in the market to but for the rapport of those young Indict who wonder why there is no more tionetur trim Mr. Buchanan is a dancing man, and will doubtless open the White House with a hat costume. when he will. like the estimable routlarnen mentioned in the goenlar gong. danoe all night till broad daylight end go home with the girls in the morning. All hand, round!" BENNETT PUBLICHES BUCHANAN'S COMPLIMENTARY OPINION OF THE RAVE AND FILE Or THE UMW CHAO', THAT THEY "ALWAYS GO WHERE TUE OFFICES ARE OIVIT." I From the N. Y. nerald. Sept. 10,1350.1 " During a conversation with the Base of Wheatland in London, one day. with reference to the brui marifkite meat of Mr. Pierce in relation to the New York tippet nt moots. Mr. Buohanan not • Mr. Pierce. I fent, has fallen into the louse error that Mr. Polk dill. The leew York Democracy are very troublesome patriots. The only way to treat them is to eintertatr. which faction is the strongest. the most popular, and the moat talented. This done. the pest step le to give the whole of the of fices to thin faction. and none to the other. The conse quence will he that the feeble which has nil the offices will be your trite. constant, devoted friend., while that which has none will he your moist bitter and nwrelentlng enemies. But in lea than three month. you will find hint the rank and file. wka always re whore arres Orr Eivrn, turn to to the succesehil party. and the leaders of the adverse faction will be leillrithout any troops.'" BENNETT OV THE CONTEST IN PENNSYLVANIA (From the Herald, Sept. 16, 19561 PrANayLvANIA, THE PIATTLx-FIELD.—Yo doubt of it. Thorn the Democracy are rpreparing to dispute et ery inch of ground, inch by snob. It in their last KW. To Pennsylvania, acconlimilv. and her October election. the combined efforts of the Fremont party of the whole Union should be directed. Let every paper. every docu ment. evert man that can he spared front the stump elsewhere, be sent to Pennsylvania. and let every man of them open cad kespno a raking are upon at mifitory ni , X4 , r-drmag drgsotiiin which the Thiehasein Porno rrary Cr, seeking to fasten upon Kan sa( nett 411 ;he Territories of the great West—for Pennsylvania is rine for this Fremont movement for the Union. the Conati tution. and white men's rights. Pennsylvania—the first to Leadoff for Jarkson. for newborn. and for Taylor— will surely go for Fremont. if his supporters only keep up the fire there till the October battle—a raking fire, fore and aft—against tAr Kansas rvffionistn and 0,- grad Jrfriltatrivrn of Pierce, Atchison, Buchanan. Forney, and the rotten, thsjointed, and Aemoraltzed Bentoesoen. Keepup the fire in Pentotylvania, hot end heavy. for free white men's rights in Kansas. against the Democratic policy of makine more room for nigger, at the point of the bnyonet—and the work is done." BENNETT PRONOrNeRS RUCH tNA-V A " 'Mop, COl,O, InLCULATING, ar.brtan,PLIABILM,PARTIZAW,"AnD WARNS THE. MIMIC NOT TO ?RI'S? THE Wend- CHATIe Num% [From the Herald. Sept. 22.1M1 " Our amistim President laughs at the shocking bru talities and brirhartties committed upon the defenceless People of Keenan by his events ' - end brieth. to all re monstrances, he turns over the victims of Strins fallow to the justice of Lecompte. Mr. Buchanan. the timid, c calculal SOW , . Pn , tiz . nn, has never a sword to sny, except that in becomes the Cincinnati platform he ban ceased to be James Buchanan. and le necessarily demli. Be consents, however, and is there fore a psrty to the mine* of his supporters; he adopts their rob ey—is pledged to carry it out.' • • • " Don't IrN't to the DemOtralir pasty. lii preslize i. gone. and fh , life and treat., of it hers bete eking- Med Off. Mr. Ruihonan is a dorsi? drer, end Hercules is prams to Mr. Fillmore for help. Bat don't be de luded. Wenrcwilling to let Arr. Fillmore keep at) he ilg r ig . !,42:_. He a !Min; no Semmes. an NOneo the A tioN, It cone come ; and We i'l gtl=o .) .lv , z& Bualign". in November." RENNET! EXtrtae OVER TIM FIDDIIT AMONG TEE DEMOCRACY, AND VIE PROSPECT TUAT DODD, AUI MILD, FIZAVEN.FOUNASEN, LOVE-PORDOTTEN JAMEN HUMANA:I, WILT. HAVE TO REMAIN AT trIMATLANT. I From the N.Y. Herald, tient. H,15.56.1 "Teenier.]: Fluent Aswan THU Dxvormact.—The Democracy here aro in a terrible state or fright sod sus- Pantie ea to the mutt of the coming elections. Forney and his clique are particularly cut up. If the speeches of the Southern fire-eaters—Cobb. Johnson and Com pant —in Pennsylvania, should briny out such a vote in October against the Democracy Bs Cobb end Company brought out in Maine in September, tnere will be no Bu chanan party left in this Stale in November. The entire Demooratic party—horde and sorts, rank end fila—will rota the Fremont electoral ticket. with Jude. Parker for Governor. This will give Fremont the State of New York by forty or fifty thousand majority over all other candidates, and elect Jude Parker, the anti-olignrebr eandidate, over John A. Xing, who was nominated by Thurlow Weed and the Central Railroad ,peculators. }.:%erything looks like a revolution in Pennsylvania in October; and if it should take place toe moderate ex tent arils, there will be terrible times in New York, out Fond/ 4rniable, I-rearm:romans. tere-forsottentJames Hnehnhatt mitt hate In remain nt Whmetaand. to torn river his uhf documents and write ax history of his life and times, no Mr. Benton in doing/ by way of con notation for hie lose of the Presidency.' BENNETT Art,GrEs THAT TDB WADDINGTON ENION PROVES DUCIIINAN TO DE A LOQUACIOUS OLD DOTARD," "AN ixtigerr,E," "A MISERABLE, GAB. m.lvo OLD anATAir," "A SUPERANNUATED OLD myr.inu." [ From tho New York Herald, Sept. 25. IHL.) Tar. (IA6INV:r Otte An PeeNorNCEsJAmlot Ord!! iXAN AN 01.0 Dotavr : —The Washington Union of Tues day last, In leading article on • Janice Buchanan's de position,' the cane of Bibb" ve. Fremont, labors. like a pussfed.pettito4ger, to diSnreth t the witness—the De moutatte nomtnen fee the 1%/nel:ohm. If we take the ar gument of the Cabinet organ as conclusive in the matter. It settles the pornt, bJ Cabinet antboritw, that lames Bileltkalite IS IL /aquae tau, obi &lord. vehAte test , 11101 y 'patter oath it tarot for n,,thin c—tie off tfornrri Dorris is. hgnorant , I t the impoethetce of as oath a,, or the fort , of istory. The Washington 0110/1 says: *ft is evident that Mr. Buchnnan, tti 13. V. lin declaring Fremont the conqueror of California.) Int.red under the earn, min apprelienkion an to the conquest of California whiqh pre vailed throughout the country.' " • • •' • • ***** "Yet the W"tulhington Union tells on that this opinion thus deliberately Binned, and from the beet poseibk l.4.ources of Infortnetloll, Was n miattiprehensiou'—that Jame. nUe4llknie nothing of what hewn., .went t 6 to be the truth, and that Itis testimony is good for e - (bine. If. under ail the circumstances recited. such Is the case. the Not is established that fumes Bucheneta it Ile Oki datari t ttoberile,n thieerh6te, gethqlt•ir old greens, who has loot his mind adel his memory, arm/ ark , Lit r onseqftently.stirerly nor for the singer:eat ditties Other PresirirorV. We plead that James Buchanan told the truth in big opinion of Fremont's public rev ripe.; but if our Demouratie organs will have it other wise, and that Mr. flachanan 13 a mant.re old fool, so let it be; nod la the 3//rtra/0 1 / 1 6fri dotard be roadrootel to stay at home." 11F.SSZTT PREDICTS THAT DUCITANAN WILL RE CON. TROLLED RY SECESSIONISTS AND NCLLIPIERS, IP ELECTED, AND 11'ARVS THE PEOPLE OP C t 1.1 1 .01 1- NIA AND OTHER STATES TO DENY.tRE OP HIS .41..4t EANCES. (From the Sew Voris Herald. Oct 11, Id.L J The result is. most prolialik. those sealedf:malls of which we have spoken Ara IS. exclusive CaliforniaC. consumption. These spoon! Californil vouchers are not to be seen in Virgin's or South Carolina till after the election. We know very well. however. that the same molten, antl-California, streslion,itull(firinion bard,- ruAln and Alrhustnus eouiittl.f that rontrallrd 211 r. BurAnnam at o.trnd, thin rontrolled his nominator., nod rlinprd hit pl.tferl7l at Ctnrotnatt. and that are Dow threatening disunion if the people relent hon. trill still rule the roast whould heErr to 50. into HOY Ig by lA, nor, California. Whntarar. tbetefore. Mr. Be clinnan may send out to Son Vrenriner, r0.d0,. In the way of sealed proposals for the California vote. let him he elorted, and let n 101 l be passed mAkinr an appropri, or Mr. Too sis—A ; rithneds And moony for a Psei Go Railroad. I) .` • '•• '••• Oorernor Wire. or Mr. Brooks. or :Mr. Mole WI. WI furnish him with a pair of coostita- Penal Ewes. , es. %brooch which he will see elesrly etlntlEtt that all sporepristione come ender the exercise Ot Ore veto power. • PtValt r ,irr t rbtl , .Pereleof California. eel of every mit+ Qtneinnritt platform. the Ostend manifesto. thisrierco Adimuistrafien, and its tAllotstuffing and Milken polio . of meshing Kansas a slave State by force of:trigs. TDere tat ettiodr, th ere the penole will hold him, , told npon these issue, h o , with lie Butted on election day The Cattily,— tieliPtntion were tricke Buchananinnti they will perhaps be tricked by this letter. when they set it: but the California people have is different raise to play. A California Fremont majority of twenty pr thirty thousand will meet ProbriMl mire the problem in November. Don't stop the steamer.' VENNNVP CHARM! ?RE DEMOCRACY OF PENNSYL T'ANII,WITTI ELECTION FRACII6 [Prom the Herald. Oct. 11, BMA ' " 'ELECTION FRAED ., IN PENNiTLVANI/1.--II is wall ascertained that a tery extensive system of lawless colonising, and ballot-statue has been arranzed and will be brought to bear upon the Penns) leant& elections lo the doomed and desperate spoils Dein:mute) , on Tues day. The lake sums of money that bare bean raised among the Buchanan financiers of this city during the hut twn or three weeks, have been tinauentionably at, trinirtated in this SEAT. Yet Foams, like a regular hief, on int ` atop thief,' warns the knowimt Demo on,r,v,,,Tetervictvrritih; hillnovnthLraerniez.l..e.,lbteni'l f and arrangements for wnolesale cheating o'n etre, n day, Let the oppcnition forces, especially of Pintail ‘- phia. prepare not only to presence the punt) or the I I- Int-box agronetpertured outaiders, but prepare for the defence of their own ri g h ts ri at the polls, and they will achieve a reatemble AM triumphant election. Alt eyes are turned upon Penner cants t but Philadelphia is the point where vigilance will be most required. Let every freeman buckle to the work." • DEXNETT EXULTS OVER TOE SCPPOtED DEFE IT or ktTDY. DEIIOCRACY OF rENNSTLCANta tyi THE ou- YODER ELECTION OF lyatl , ANn RR. areiLitstaN . S W.tNT OF PERSONAL INFLUENCE AT HOME. (From the N. Y. 1181141 d, Oct. 16,15M.1 " Pennsylvania hes gone for the Republicans by fritm five to ten thottaand majonty. Captain R> mkt. Mx pounder, in the Park. last eveninv, very approprtatelY celebrated this triumph of Col. Fremont. The gallant Captain's Mayntfieent display of fireworks in Canal greet, altheilith intended for a different purpose. was a welbtimed Illumination of the fewness of the Pathfinder. thathe returns froni the baok counties come in tho show the generiii reined is better !or the anti-Buchanan coalition. than could have been expected from the Mkt Jetports.'" "The vote in Mr. Buelianan's own township. and his own county of Lancaster—several thousande actltiet evidence enough that Ins personal influence ban been of no hdypntare to IPS party Ari renesylvallut : and the vote in other counties where Know :gothinCtsto was thrown put Jest as clearly shows that the Vastest of the THE WEEKLY PRESS. - ..._ Tlii WrOILT ?VW will hi watt to Bnpootillai hi mail totir annum, in advanced at-- --. 7 . .--,-t , eb•ilb - ‘: Throb Coines. ' " ' " .......,.. -..., .• S -0 • - ; Foe Copies, " TOP Co O. " 11.4 TwontyCopita,.. •,,, Ft;; l oa . o .-- ada :-. 7 — sas) " gu t : - Wont,' CopioLorover " (to sadism or - each ttlftworibord each —:. -.....•-• • • ... ...- LID Pot a Club of Twenty-owl or over. we will wad as - --. extra oopr to the getter lia er the Club. Sir PostmAsters art reins/Led to fUst ak nem for TUE WHICILT PRIM. /mod in time for thit Caking* Ste&Mem. CENTS. opposition Marptots has web Fillmore' and that ant deed foss. with him or his peddlinc heekkora is a o.ftd lots. In a word, Mr. Fillmore in the Northern States is dead cock in the pit." SNIITT DISAVOWS ii JAMES IttrEANAN AT HOYE.' [Prom the New York Herald. •0ct.17.14:41 "isaccs SIIPRANAN •T is made Pram bY the news from t'eansylrenia, orals alsewhere,that the Boehm:lan Democracy have been beaten In Mr. Bu chanan's own town by four to firs hundred maionty, end in the county by three to four thomemst !Me shows a troadrrfal wort of popelari i rat the neralatc t r ter border reigns -Donor-rare, The people of Leorraater county:and toerns are respectable and int:ill/rent men nt In<ieal monde and rovoninc hahttit They hare blown Mr. Buchanan for thirty or forty years ; and of all their knowledge of him, boils personal and political. they now declare solemnly nt, the polls that he is not their choice. 'This ic e roved sir:alder foot it indthstes that Buchanan has in his own State and his own neigh borhood no personal or political popularity." BENNETT APPLIES TO ECCITANILN ale P/YORITE CON- PARISON OF "A DOM" [Prom the N. Y. Herald. Oct.lB. feaB.} ' 4 Mit. BocitANANI AN, TAD HEICALO.—We notice that Alderman Libby's oyster beast organ mates a greet cackling over some old articles of Dare in which we speak well of Mr. Buchanan a appointment to En_ilarol. and eulogize Ws talents. Why not.' 'We have mwere considered Mr. Bandanna a yery respectable man and a -- stateansan of for average attainments; and at the time -% hewne sent to England rag we entertained a still licher - opinion of hint than his Ostend maxicemo awl to ietik the diJEcutars whir* .31r. Dallas Aar settled is glue months, now permit: at to hold. But there is a world of difference between approving bin appointment u minister to a foreign !assert'. and nonparties him on his Present alatform with km present affiliations and under present circumstance*, for President of the United gates. We wil) put the 06 . t. in seeks abate thu Aker nap Libby shall undembtnd it. He might hare a sea. - for instance, so excellent au artist in the kitchen of me hotel. that he. oould not sneak of him without Praise; yet would he therefore aired to make him cashier of the establishment. or meter of the city We think not-' and so. we could speak well of Mr. Ihrobanan when - he was sent abroad an foreign minister. and yet deem him a moat ineligible .candidate fog the Presidency. the via:form of M1CA5340 . 1. • blood. murder. and =threw* despotirm is Bosley, and with John W. Forney as his hige Mutt. and Main dig Paiair." BENNETT, TEASING THE DLZOVION OP srersexes. CONCLODid TEAT NOTHING HUT A " VIOLENT REVOLT or AN INDIGNANT PEOPLE" CAN PET tapas ' VENT IT. , tstlntak- ( (Prom the Pler!ild,Oct...V.lBs&) • ..mhanrieea,4l44.4.7=4 hut a riefser hatrave , l Plrty yr tiers. harken—nothing Imt an Indignant and ove rwhehning po. the reaction In rennpylvania and Now 'vier &canal . the trielre and treaohenea of har-katerina Sewardite and Fillrocrreita pohnetans—can r scent the rumen" of the scheme for thwelaetsoa of Buchanan. with the aid or the outside ticket in Penasilrania and New lesser of Pill mots and 13caselson. It is the old game of Bigger and Van Burma Neither of- them rot an electoral Tote; but each. in turning the seals-of the eleetion, accom plished Ina pupae of reven-e. There is a popular mt ionty in Penruniventa and New Jersey *came-8ud...- nazi. but theonnoeltion India rabbet :toil umlaut. h 3 bargained to 'th row it away." BESNtrer DESPATCHZ9 A noaPIDENTIAL AORST TO ,SUCHANAN, BHT ZEDEATORS TU MISLEAD THR . PUBLIC tE HUARD TO THE CHARACTER OP THE Immo% [Prom the Herald, Oct. T7,1531.] "Thin reminds us that the Morelia Waal' has been am .se the late pikrinie es Arkestiasa! : but Yu dui neu a Basil. explatned. After the election he inteepla to bring out his book of sketches of his diplomatic ex..- rimless in Eniland and Prance. comprehending alt the 'intrigue* and plot" rit Lord Palmerston againat.the ra ted Buttes. .11.11 Mr. Buchanan may he drswit inoident ally into this history, the Chevalier WikelS has thoasht It tircitier, perhaps, to confer with oar ex-tninhnu touching all those enlistment and other anoint:imp' in which he played a semindarT put: ISSINCIT STILE, ENTBRTAJNING FAlky HOPLS or BUCHANAN'S UREA?. (From the Herald, Oct. MCI We hare no doubt that this Beton sentiment, muter this Southern hue and cry eholdlou." disunion." Southern confederacy. and what not. hu been brooyht to bear on the North. in fever of Bu chanan. But it does not follow that. with his ideation— if he should tie elected—'he Salm ruffian policy wilt stand approved by the people. nor the Ostend manifesto. He will prohably find that. to save his Admits-rattan from quick destruction, he will have to cot adrift Croat thrw secession and dummiea demagatees that have ruled the roast and the party in the lamtneu of tins campaign. He will probably Rem diaenc.c that the tarot of ultimatum' end suluutation is played oat. and that the very People that have been frightened teto his support will have diseorcred the trick. We are sualrins this in antictaation of Mr. Bs chnnan's election. But he is not yet elected. The car- Tow tnarain of two or three thousand slues. oat of an nutmeats of nearly Gun hundred and .44, that:mud cast in the Peonsylvanta October election, is not an ab solute assurance or saccess to November. Poembli, with a rebound of the people to the rent. mettles'. lir ing iasnea of the contest is Pennsylrama and Indiana, Mr. Buchanan may still be defeated. T he . ProbstUbties Me in his favor; be' the neigh M./ 0( 11/3LESI We await the result." BENNETT, RtTISTiED THAT Bread-Nei vat, RH ELECTED, FORESHADOWS HIS POLICY. [From the New York Herald, Nov. 1, }Rte.} "He will be elected as the represen Wire of the policy of Mr. Pierre. it hone and abroad. The home policy involves the extension of Southern slavery into Northern lattitudee at the noon of the bayonet ; and this foreign police comprehenig the piratical doctrine of seizing such of the territories of nor veasker neish• hors sun may be desirable. 'if we hare'the power.' The former policy is at war with evert crawl** and ordi nance of the Constitution ; and the I .tier is in &fancy of international law, rood faith, honesty, and common decency. The poliey of extending slavery mimed the western auk or the North, by force of 'ems. min_ only result in totems! diecorde and ernrolginne ; end that other policy of • wresting the desirable al/edged' ode neighbors from their poen/scion.'if we hags the nnwer.' can only, if attempted. embroil tie in n con flict with the combined anvil Forms of Enrage,. We dare say that if Mr. Buchanan were felt tb pursue hie own course. his characteristicprudenen and timidity would lend him into thes e channels best adapted fora quiet, easy. and respects hie edimeistre tion. both In regard to our rObillfin sad dolllelitie • /ann. heft to himself, he would rather do nothing, or no baktk. ward, than inn into danger. Yet err /cars entrinaviesry front tie eel! exiierfte ti tint 'rill sterrabrnd Aim. -The same bid spirits that could made him men that Ostend manifesto..may be able to hold him to its fel fitment— the amine birds of evil omen that byte persuaded hem to echo their crittking cry of disunion age mat Fremont. may hare the covet to compel iron to eoessmozatg tke Maids irerk of Atehison mad io Ka SIAS. The filibustering lind disunion lenders of the debauched Bea tooeracy, andtbeir disorganising sche mes . may tint he the rocks andquickisode upon which he is destined to be wrecked and broken to piece." nnitirlivrg MUM THE TRVItoNTERS TO 'HARR A ....vprea. EFFORT. - --11 1 , pyillyNlfrAithrershl, - Ncre.l.l.W.l Indians. stoic root time hasOit -- ien/ nicht ;gull to recover those +Hates. sod whettor thei tone has been usefully employed. the returns to-mor row evening alone eta determine. Our , beat informa tion tends to atursrsy.t nma work has been done. ifhift - to;Z:ri "" that th e States. I3ut this meat slot. to moat *nil ear, thiAie member of the party. The contest was , a 6 rts 'Were!! a very close one. nod tar Fre:m.ll,s ,nom rate. be every rote on Steer side is rolhd. BUCHANAN RAVING ME' ELECTSD, RENTETT FEABB ♦ R WITH SCHOCH. (Prom the N.V. Herald, Nov. T. bee.] Hot so with our foreign policy as proclaimed hr the coup try in its choice of Mr. Buchanan. By the election of one of the authors of the Ostend manifesto we de liberatetg announce to the European Governments that keurforth it it wet inleoeion to plirsOe the ovrees4lte. Pleatieol. and elichomoroble rAtirse itt our deal:nes w tb other nations which was so distinctly indicated in that remarkable State paper. or the effect of the news of Mr. Buchanan's success on foreign interests we shall not be lout beGire we have 101 OSSOISIIIIIIs of matins. We are witch mistaken If the London nod pa ri s metie' motets do not Afford immediate evidence of the priblie recline abroad on this enbiect : and it is pretry certain that the dock-yards of Portsmouth and Clierboisra witt also betray unmistakableindicationa of the lirht which this event is viewed in hither entire?"s. Three ant:lola/alone are, indeed, inevitable corollaries of OW own action. Here we are a nation of thirty millions of people. more impulaive, energetic, and darns than any other people on the face of the el. be. entitled. from the extent of our naval and oommereial msnne, to be ranked as a first rate maritime power. rieb in internal researeee. as well as in patnotio devotedness.. end secure ISSILIMS lot anion to a decree that soother country can boast of— here we are, we reties[. inool3lMintt it , the world, tmenlY and without equivocation. that we consider the new of Mudd superior to that of neht, sod that we mean to act upon it to any extent that our &were - ice pleasure may dictate. How can it to expected. in the face of such facts—with the memory of the schemes concocted,. ' in this countre artiest Cuba. and the estabbahment o f I an American filibustering ruler in Nicaragua—that the formen Governments should not rerard the election of 'Ali...Buchanan awn re entlet theme,* doer, is eke foe! of Europe. err , ' mate astir prrtracistiesr neeerdinciii! It IS consideration+ like these, that influenced the bin,e vote which ban Men east ataMst the Deniocratie nomi nee. Let ay hope that the polies of his Antrim iarrarioc will be coca as to tranquilize. both here and elmcw.l. the wh.ch they are calculated to inspire." arCHAsAn HAYING MADE Bin pe tcE Wird nEteattrr, THE IIitRALD DISCOVISETH AS TOL. LOWS t [Fe= the .N.Y. Herald..Noy. 31,1354.1 *regard to the foreign policy of Slibustetine Pun' q 14 43 and annexations to strengthen the star e-holalint wale's of the Union against "Northern ageresstoia.sre have as set no whisper from Wheatland as to what may be expected. Wey resume. however, that the popular reoglts of the hats Yresigianival election will hive enter ed deeply Into the mind of Mr. Buchanan before he takes up his line of match to Washintten st.d that ha will perceive readily enough that the highwayman'. Policy of ' wresting the island of Cuba tram Spain, it we hAV9 the power.' and that poor Pierce's auxilrary all bustennt acheme with Gen. Waiter. are not the keket for a .mset and respectable old hu akar Ike Mr, Burhia. I nen. e dare say that he go to Washingetin.fte General Taylor. with a sincere desire to live at le.sc with all the world end the rest of mankind.' his arnbi - lion and Fdibustenrir propensities being amp:y satisfied with the cl a ps to which all hie political acts. speeches. torten and manifestoes of the Last forty sears have btex &ream) with an sea ever faithful to the venues as/Ph ancea of the Deiriocrst:e nominstien. "in 3 WC .. ki, has•ne secured that luspartant oblect ofa life time of abide end labor—the Presidenor —and fully aware that a ieseond term for him is wholx oat of the question. M Buchanan. we R elieve, eydey wpm r. the duties or his °Aloe respiredto get I hronth with his four years as quietly as soastble. and without rennin' lite fused into the noose ofJeferson Danger )Ir. &Mitt. or the trap of the Ostend manifesto, be the Dense nuances to Ins party what they mar.' "This cogy nod comfortable VrOVIATIIIe fer•nolet and reittectilils Administration, adapted to the babas of maneralle toad-vat aryl eat sesaie aid geatitruies. leas possibly be superseded by a policy of darning bor der ruffianism at home and deaperate bneema•erint shroud; or portiere the newagannon of a region. mad. :lid new federal conrutution n. - cordin; to the p_as fo,sha.V.nred by tOr. Reim We sn't know.. The lest resolutions and the wisest designs of statesmen and soldiere are often overthrown by the mischievous inter tosition of bad advisees." LTrom theli. Y. Herald, December 3.1154.1 .• Mg. Tlrenalits'es nark .—On Friday lase. nee 'unfired students of Franklin end Marshall Collier , . cent', Icania attended 0, its President and Faznitf. orte...tem-ad cult to Sir. Bechanan. at Wheatland. to es of the trbon. a,a election td the Chef Maniacs themselves. who. theure dhe idea of the atadants dices. and melerenees of treaty own ...arm aoss...-,sain unanimously resolved to call upon the Pretraase --- . who was el,. the Pres.dent or the Board of Trustees their own rollers To the ronnatulatory address med. him on the occasion. Mr. Enchsosn replied m s tern impresaite manner. and beyond all doubt .:jigs tat his trial 0P111441.1 ore tie MO/UM 0113 q4 , 3f1,11 , of tie dap Re reminded these count men of the responsibilities resting upon them, in the future administrauon of gr:s ermiont. and above all ir..prevrc.ni intact. oar IC,C , - nous Unfelt and Constitution.' How and the Southern a-ceealorusta lite this? But he seemed determined to go tart her. He perceived his good fortune m thts oppor tunity of having a a ounere press ritation of the trues be fore him, pure. fresh, pattmue and unpressible. Whitt totter audience could he hare.' The Inaugural was in his bead, the substance of it area in his heart; it was the vety moment to forestall all heresy end schism by a frank and statesmaithkaileveloPment. Without as , m ins which per was rcht or wrong. he declared that 'the chant of his _.l.tei in ix:tie:tam te Oge I.l' 1 1 CAY seasonal party, North or South. rid kurmoniz , rr': lfejlolls (11 the Union 1,144 , T a Rai IP , al arm? C041411 - 2: 1, fitrernWilt, nA it tot , Arty ovum nee. If he could bothe honored inatrument of isllPPsnc sections] excitement mid restoring the Government to the principles and pallet" of the fathers.' lie would - then feel that •he had rot aa. slimed the arduous dittes of the orEce in Vain have here a complete toilet. to the future yolies and conilitet of the President elect. From a tooth. elltlet could determine the structure and habits of the a novial to which it belonged. On the same princip . e we rat imlre Mr. Buchanan. and therefore take for granted twat the counsels which he has receivral from the inde pendent press which the If , rat/ has particularly recommended h•m to follow. will prevail over the heated Weand unsound guar rations of Southern extremists. We have pow b I fore us the pith mai marrow of Mr. Ds chanan's mans - utak He has given the public its outline and direction. The Untret is to be sustained in spite of treason—toe Government is to be broucht hack to Pristine purity in spite of oppottition ! We sak no mots than this. Let to Stye thanks: CLERICAL iftwrixo —We understand itrit Roc. 13x. Thompson. of Buffalo, N. Y., Dr_ Bethnne. of Brooklyn. and several othergentlemen, startel last Thursday for a hunting and fishing exenrsLat in Canada. The field of their intended snorting exploits, we believe, is in the wild. region of forests and lakes north of Lake Ontario They went thoroughly equipped for the campaign, and will doubtless meet with great stottxs, in enjoying the expedition, at least, CALIFORPIIA PRESS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers