The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, December 14, 1859, Image 1

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01 1 7:14 NO. ivr CIEEBTITy;,I'4Est,.
Twlwv.ll, Galati rint:**.ilikY3o;ll4,4:ol:e6iktilimh.
Marled to Buttforiboro co4:olltkok9ltt 'at BM llottdokie
Tl,/laxnuni:,: ; gpba'liPaiaae Ao*l.tasViW.lito#no ;
Ttfirsa DoLLoatir yo MONVM7 gitmriabli Mei&
r'iuiooforthittimoirrdotedo,-.; - iy...0,.;;,;;;,;
•
xapofr
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timenririffirtm. aAlyrotlir,i,?-314' .1-, ,:"1 1 '
-.ll:gheXtkV,i,
APHAEL P l 'llA s " ' '''' 4
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• - - ',' ltriliti ii i N -: k t
MA'S Pmliioit,44or, -•-•,,' •, . -
... r _ :
- :. 11 ..',g - D T;., 3 , 1 4 D fil-41iti1.:114-4C.4 v
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,;
. .IiUrER/ORlPiniiO3:l4Pt OUTI** ~, W y 4 4 4 .
• . : NO. "at 00=-*lihWAtftitfati .'j..'
, • - ' --I :
~
•121t 4 ifirgiViPARIVI4V1r I st
t
Viggif iOrp .F u tibrOiroutZ,Vt 41,1:
eso,,durstools o f U Ut. . a . 4 ~.!,,_ , elle
lins',latha C . elMiCe selectiori of PAricuStiselkolui
ly for oustomet uottr, ao - 4 . imned efflortmeent ,QI Ill'
Womble It AnAD.I3, CLitYltra., to womb., ho.
mvaesthootteutio4of..buseri. Aeohorttoll TM:4MM
to give tostue actiaMottoM, - • • n , , .• ,- • ,
524-3tet 302 N .11.013802 ti mutt.
BOOTS AND 'OBOE&
.
UIAZET4i , 4 HAESEII.;
,
. ' - *IIOiESALE DBitplad
439iDTp ,AND SHOES.
of ciirisWiti*otieind Ethoei eon
stittly on hAnd. , • ' • .10-U
11011J:SE•FVR4ISliaN(4GOODS.
6,060, 3 3 . .#01i THE SEASON.
.....,...„....
..*Pogaip FENDERS Aii. IRONS,
StitT. FIRE4ETS, ; FOOT W.a.R.AfERS,
BLOWER STANDS,' PLATE WARMERS, HOT
...-- WATER DEUCES, Ac., Am,
• ' .kr Tilt
ROINTR:RWISI I.IfNG STORES,
NOS. 9251 AND 1426
,CIIESTNUT, STERST.
JNO: 4... AiPitPtitY de, CO,
CII)LNA -Aido'QIIEkI4IIWAR.
GRANITE AND CHINA
TEA:BETS, I
DINNER SETS,-TOILET SETS,
PRHSSID GLASS GOBLRTS,iIINBLIMEI,'
- AT - Low pucrEs.
61,EITH k. CO.,
NO. a NORTH FIFTH BT.
olg-wfmtf
HARDWARE PACKAGE HOUSES.
"'ANDY
,BREIsTNER,,
NOS. Sti, Of. AND 121 NORTH' FIFTH STREET
PAILADELPHIA.
WHOLESALE OOMMBSION MEROHASTS,
Fox the sale of all kinds of
AMERICAN MANUFACTURED EAILDWARE,
' MD nopotrasB OP
exitmax, FROPILAND ENGLISH
. ILANDWARE AND CUTLERY,
seep oonstantly on hand a largeldoolrof Deeds to sap
ph Hardware Dealers. -
D
•
Bs the mak or °them*.
BUTCHLEICS EDGE -TOOLS,
BUTCHER'S STEEL OR -VARIOUS RINDS.
WRIGNI'S - PATENT ANVILS AND VISES,
BLIP. CLO-I.li,
An othor kinds in every varier.
• , • ' NOLA AMMO POE
ISHII, BP . 'S REPEATER 111,13t0D,
, 8.4 DIME&
44.6.R1 0 8 NSW 'MODEL RIFLES AND PISTOLS.
EDWARD E. EtANDE. ;NO. 0. REARDIER. C. I, BaRttEBR.
peatAGE PAM:MARE ROUSE.4--We
~.wlinlitiesnttete l lt
. 111 tlie4V r atloge i llpmt
feLagATILA - tfi3WAßLalolk we offer at
em
advatloo tMthe r a g ba g °. ' I I 11 IoW el "-
- O r d e n, for direot in Val:tort& °I I ° 2 or' dean&
tivOreA.MLer lesrAmthwiff
ffoff Vggale
•
'CABlint ritifITURE *Wag)
s' fro: 951.6OUTICSECOND1PrEENT.
.',wiCtosialiotioti with thew ar,kostivA Ishirt Blikiholl4 ba,
411 BrAttEr kat i
Wft e .B l 7PAPlOlVidaritylitt MoNsH
Ica,* are prop cad -11/ 0 Ye them to oe
nem= to alt °theirs._ ,
Yet the quality isti fitish or taw 'TsiMio the Menu;
' • Wirers tofu ,obillunecoas patrons throughbut the
Union who tip hat with tho ,ohemsoter. of their
, „
DIUI9B, CHEMICALS, &c.
'DRUGS, ;.G1,48,5,.. PAINTS, .
axpE,4411,..E1R 84 00.
NORTHEAST CORNER -
FOITATH AND RAM STRUTS,
„Wift/LXLA..tiN DR lI,GGISTS;
• ~ . • ,
Import/nand Dealeri 'WINDOW GLASS, PAINT%
ke.; intake the atteatica of
COUNTRY --MERCHATS
-To their luta stook of Omits, whit& they °Nor at the
toiretit market rat& ' 005-tt
LOblatif GLJONES.
.
I*—,OOKING-GLASSES, , . • •
",• - At reduced nrleee.
- N 0.61 South Fourth street. low on
Nine a large stook of Frenoh Rine Mirrors in gilt
from:is, richly ornamented or plain. which are offered
steely lop , prices. liquive add 0 , 15 i Portrait, Picture,
antkn r
otograph rames,Freoeh Plosk ■ on fiend from
36 by 10 up to 126 by SEI r st numb below former_pnees.
.Orders solicited. JosittrA COWMAN!).
- ' -••- • ti 0.63 South - Fourth street.
pOKING 9LAEI2;CS.,.. , .
• , .
ktowth Amp the most , iiziensive mut olemi
LOOKING GLAEMBOr
Far 'you same end every 'wattled. end at th e most
4"4"4t6 Pnr%OOKING'GLUOS
la the
most elaborate and the most elmele rmun.
LOOKING GLASSES
=Mil;;;;1=;1=1
OO
elrn Pusule ,e p ti t uu d O mi ts
n az_manalao 6 t 446BB ured by Els onnelrae la ens
• . GLAOSEIS
tfatZtROOANY WALNUT frame. for Wince
B. BeitLit . eon,
18 ofigsTinpr STREET ;
. .PII,I4ADELPIIM
HOPE COAL 'OIL WORKS.
FIRTT, ~PREMIUM,
AWARDED AT
• InTEI49YLVAI4IA STATE FAIR,
•- stArpr, w. 1140. actitryz,
OESTORILET WAT•I4I7 STREET.
- ealn-mm . R. R. HON
PAT.ORS.
A' simple anparatut, to be , worn ever the mouth,
for filtering and warming• the air, without impeding
reapiration. . -
These are admirably adapted to PROTECT THE
LUNGE from COLD and DAMP, on leaving HEATED
ASSEMBLIEek and generally in INCLEMENT WEA.-
Imported and gold by • "
EPWATID - PARRISH..
die 74:, • ; *ARGWIStrest
.I)ORAWItiq ' ;PAINTING 'MATE.
ETA
'EnginestrAnd Arolittiott?TimerY.
Ortolan aiming Materialn.
TV:t h is="Poralfig,Larib. for Artists and
4.4 dente. . isiid ire Freimos
jatikit B ceinis, i 4reorisau an Frenaok.
atatoglifi mug tau.t
~so7ge~2ppAc
j ai l ifr Y at.
wErs) I.33'AN TA, cel6-Sin
•
,Q,ILVER SOAP-A preparatin
Tor olentadrot Silver Plete,jeweire;mirme, m a y.
blei &op, far Ile oonveinent end elective than any
Other. One, hal the labor of Hodge cleaning. may be
saved by lining t ie tioap,,whieh (Anent mai* injure
.the fieeet 'lane whitib and as no notubbing in required,
'the minim( in the weer or the paint In web. greater than
th e Dort of the poop, boxer. the sumo as , tinre and
white es when new. Taiinufetettired only by the *don
wonloal Soap ilomp nyi
aend Edo by theli_ppos Inted
Aseerei YrassAltrp Apotheeenee, TWELFTH
--,4tetHaVITNUT.'
• 111AOKEREL.--470 Nil o. N 00. 14 2 t and 3
' /45fikerrl' In eMerted VAINIVW"Lit
" "P " ' "' d Stn a e are'lf; t. "
trAPYl e 'r u, • • • ° R nl9
ARTUCA' QUAYLE'S ;- • •
STATIONER TOY Avritirtcy own,'
R WIENVI C Z S YIt e ,E P ET
2 L°W 11 . 1 1C 1(11 4..
ttiVlßet tE A l itrt .
AMOY
' Ftock' of lho bed,
crsade aoli!,#oo,od
tg , Trall 1 4,11,112 i N. olmorve
SII,OIJLDVIS.-2,300
, ,
estc Billiikeklhaut Amid for
il;C: OLER ath, Aftoa strestopeaja
- *or tposd rront. -
,
. .
, ‘
. .
-
(..
4;4.1..1 74 ,i ""
~ . • , . `
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, •-' ‘s,s • ‘\\ I I11,(/ ' / I ~
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• Ptik .--%.,... ' 1. 1 1 ,.' , ....,:,, ,, i,‘ , 11 ' '. ...-- •-e .!:•-. '"A' 'et ,
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r.' •• 4l I r:O V: 14 41 •• '- - .:::°: . !'.-.------.1.1111-• . '(.. 4 cf . i.l .N i --411iiiii p..9P rr, '':
:. '' t .. 1:e4P.F ' '' 4416 :‘•• . . ':
' .-• : -:
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_ , . ril ,
IR : •
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1i ...:,. ~!,....... i . t ..
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----- - _..
~,L,01, - , . .._•:,„.,-_777. .2..
............________i -..,4_ .t , sc-RAzzz.
....,.,. _ _ .....
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.... ~..,.,.. ~, c., i •-•
........,......„.. „.. t ..
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;voL. ,3, No; ;u 5 :~K
,#O,pDA)C., ;G.1100114
_
- ~, , ~ . . ,
otius goß . : Tus 110LIDAYS: :. .., r.,,,
- .4%2Olicifooinal WOO seitortment of .0(113 muted fo
the confirm Holidays'. 'selected fremAkala ettmparta-
Coos from Traria°, derMituyi Mid Bnam ,to whiok
, tA i tl4 l" ire a elm " Jewel BOzek, li '' ColciritL i otrivbe,
PortFinioe; . : Porte filantiMee(paitay les in
Ilireeeing Canoe, Hata fltaridt, ..Tatia
..„
A
„Oval-to:es, rieroariuma," .. , Hobe a 1410,1111,
Workßoxee, Berapltetke, " 'Lava, China, ete.,
, Prim' a LAMM lEAinsti_or , •
.foils; Model, Sleepius, „Btaaletta t Wak, Cklua.2. and
aterit; - .4180,,D011's raratole; umotelleus, Hats. Atte,
beau Hose, and. Jo•towt_OT4 Conrolete Bete or Baby
NOM; Furaitre, Paper , VollaMouseti, and Furniture.
Ornaments 'for Christman Trace, Box Toys. Ware
Nausea. Baby Home, Storni and Stables . Fine Bug'
/lab Bowe, Cricket .Bate Cm.... -,
, ,
tr . C ' e • d r f o ' MA DT : v I . III NeII Fine Petfurebrir)'it only. Teas be
superior puNna
Pane I A nundsorne assortment of Silk
Oyern:Fent at unusually tow plena. -
1 A very-Itirse enrollment of Games. All of which will
be sold on the most moderate terms, at the'
Stationery, Toy, and Fanny Goode Emporium
•MARTIN on
QUAYLE.
' 1016 WALNUT Street, below Eleventh.
• • Sill-wPtfp PHILADELPHIA.
STATIONERY.
;ACCOUNT' BOOKS. '
:OLD AND NEW runts,
ENQUIRING
:' WHOLE OR, PARTIAL • SETS
Nor thi l 9ming seas*will Atld..J on r athalna a
LARGE AND cottinirnostiziratiNT---
from which to ',elect, or aan have them made to order of
ANY DESIRED PATTERN,
Of TEM
VERY REST QUALITY OF MATERIAL AND
WORKMANSHIP,
Together with a full aelortmorit of
FOREIGN.AND DOMESTIO
COUNTING-HOUSE STATIONERY,
,AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES.
MOSS. BROTHER, & CO.,
amint No. 430 MARKET STREET.
CONFECTIONERY.
CHOICE CHRISTMAS
CONFECTIONERY.
FINE MIXED SUGAR PLUMB,
PRESERVED FRUITS,
FRENCH AND AMERICAN.
BON-BONS, SUGAR TOYS, NICK
NACKS, Bco., &e.
Mesinfeetured 'and Imported by
ED. G. WHITMAN It CO..
dIO•tD 25- SECOND and CHESTNUT Streets.
MILLINERY GOODS.
729. • .14 W
.729.
FLOWER & FEATHER
STORE,
728 ORESTNUT STREET.
Coiling out, at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. our
entire stook of
HEAD DRESSES. BRIDAL WREtTHI rt
FRENCH FLOWERS, FBA ,arqn
MIL IRE Y GOODS.
THOS.RENNEDY & BRO.,
. ISDYCHESTNUT ST.. AND 43 8. SECOND BT.
on ,17-3 ml
CIGARS, TOBACCO, &c.
'ZWISSLER 433 FIORILLO,
125 NORTH VIM STREWN,
gave for isle along+ caPPI7 of
dIGARS
OF TRE,
HAVANA BRANDS.
;, TOBACCO, SNUFFy - PIPES, - &v.
AONNTB FOR GAIL k AX,
osameNtfpXlNO TOBACCO AND oloißa. •
A . , NI,E•RI , N 0
IA SOUTH PROAT STREIT,
Ku in store and bond, and
Wars for Solo, a Largo Amoortroost of
OIGARS,
leoeived direst from liavata, of cholas and favorite
Brandi. sati-tf
HAVANA SEGARS.—A handsome as
sortment of the moat eatetirstda brattis, vix :
,Hojas de Oto, Daniel Webster.
•
Neptuttn, Ftgaro,
Zarsossans, Preebese,
Yunntre: f Sabuderis,
Esp. Boalisade, /Mille,
Bengeeeeat Luz de Ameriert, ko.,
Of various sizes and qualities, now lendin from the
schooner ' Fannie." abd deity expected per rk "119.-
miltob," and Mr Isle low, by CHARLES ETB,
nta-lro , De WALK Street.
110TEiS AND RESTAURANTS.
THE UNIOH L _
ARCHSTREET, ABOVE THIRD.
STREET,
ILABELPHLL
UPTON B. NEWCOMER.
TR' situationor this "HOTEL is superiorly adapted to
the wants of the Business Publio; andtn those in ;earth
of pleasure, Passenger Railroads, which now run past,
and in close proxlmity,atiord a asap and pleasant nde
to all places in interest in or shout the city. i) xam
SCALES.
t o •VALRBANKS' PLATFORM SCALES
For sale by FAIRHANXB & EWING.
on-Ir 718 ciusTri UT Millet, Ms.
As, 110WE'S STANDARD SCALES.
STRONG & ROBB PATENT.—CoaI, Cattle, and
Hay Reales require nomt. Platform and Counter
Bealesof every description. They timely° all Friction
and Wear on Balla instead o f Knife Edges, as on other
Scales. Call and examine before purohasing elsewhere,
and see the improvement.
PENNINGTON GREEN, Agent,
112 BOuth auvFccrn. Street.
Philadelphia.
BUSINESS CARDS.
THOS. M. BIDDLE, Attorney at Law,
No. 273 South FOURTH Street, nld•em•
WALLACE & BRODHEAD,
.17 EXCRANOR PLACE, 'RENY YORK.
:Nooks and Bonds bought ono sold. 00 Commission.
YRANcill R. WiLLici. EDWAIID 0. BILODMIAD.
ca-4m.
ALEX. MoKINNEY,
ATT9IIIS,F,Y AT L_AVP,
GRr4BllUPtu, rA,
Will Drnatiee In Wedmorelimn, Armitronnll4 IP ,
tunas count's*. eu-n
%IDE ADAMS EXPRESS CO., OFFICE
xt.E9O Off_F.STNITE Street, forwards Paroels, Psok.
ages, Merchandise, Bank Nntes, and Snaoie, either by
lta own Lines, or in oonneotion with other Express Com
anies, to all the pnnooSe towns and
_adtes of the
United State. E. S. SAND FORD,
General Elnperintendent
MEDICINAL.
Pitt Re. ':WiNSLOW_,
Ma. AN EXFERIENGED NURSE AN FEMALE
2 hydolan, magenta .W, tboottentionlf mothere her
' - SOOTHING SYRUP
-ron , CHILDREN TEETHING,
willed' greatly fsoilitetes the promise of teethln ir, AY Wl
sninriihAele, reduza all elami d nation ; WI u allay
kIA. - SU ritE m Olif.VE n Tri n E i t °WEL&
Depend n n tt, mothers, it war eve rest to yourselves
d,, RELIEF AND HEALTH TO YOUR INFANTS.
We have put4p , and solg 04 '
fi ls trrtiole d !cj gayer'
Tr Ctir njet u teln b ei 011'1 as o f o otnt:;
no 00 . o, VAR get —IT FAILt.D, I any SIN
InEitiNSTdQ
_E, TO EF P 4 'MOT A OLIRE, na
when
=l7 pried. Piever did 0 4 ri know an Mistimes of
ustsotion by 1113, one ho need it. On the non-
IRall are &Spade CS with Ito operatione, tend
In termer of - htshrir „$, oommendation ofits mast
oid-1i eels and medical vir k. , tees. We speak m this
reTrien oe " ,tl pledges d rkuirpontet'eonfiliir ten Yfte
plejilaf . what we here e liil owe. In
.glrnost. every
„whanathe Wan round
suffenntfrom pain and
is. t" - 7 — oliaOn, relief will be Ey round in fifteen or twenty
minute* atter the Syrup is administered.
;P i tn v eri u ge It a itat :,,,) ouniripwrift
iv.
NURtir,l In New mislead - en t i ° h g , w en ~,,d pith
never-tailing stiese in, kw
H al BANOS OF OASES.
It not only r eves the ta ehild from pain, but in
riscirertee=tryTheltst; ;:..... bowels . Corset, noiditil
a err inganay.v) 't treve . oltll4NinnlrE
r:1,1% yytt i o , 1 V .° ,4 We l arrtt e di c ergri i n -
Seath. e believe t the _ best nktour eat 'sno o d ! La
. ivx ,,,,,,,......,,,w_ „,,,,,,,,,,,,,,R 4 e gi Il
from
teetring o yfrorn any other n came. We would say to
svery mother who has " ould suffering from 11127 of
the foregotag complaints ifc. do not let your wet ndioce,
nor the , preMdsoes o other a, stand between
Lour mirroring_child atid , Ve relief that will be
SURFr-yes, AUSOLUI'R no Y SURE—to follow the
S3G or tide medicine. I ~, t i mely used. Full di/po
tions for tonna will ammo iw pany each botde. None
gAnnina unton the. foot X simile of:CURTIS& PER
KINS, New York, IS on the intiodewrapper.
Vold by Drasaintejhroushout the world. Prinol
iy,e No. LS GEPAR Street, New York, ylv-Ir .
rorsooanurn born.
0 WESTERN AND SOUTHERN MER
pnArTa.—Pirerola Rope, au me., neatly pezhed.
and wpm by the manufacturers at the lowed New
York unties. WEAVER. FITLEd. &
• -FM 92 N. us
MAQH,EREL.- 5 25 Barrels Nos. 1,2, and
3 Mackerel, in assorted original eaokagee, of he
Weld mita. for gale by
. , O. SADLER k CO.,
dlO. .• ARCH Street, VI door above Front.
REFINED SUGAR. —5OO barrels various
or-w'trades. 110 kbli orukkod, nifted and powdru
ore . lukr ]AMEN GRA4I,OI CO.,
sat.'
WOW bulk, in prime
order, to lately
IN 4. IP KMINOJAO anti FROM? BUM,
.'ciimbussioN HOUSEEI.
FROTHINGHAM & WELLS,
35 LEMIA STREET, AND 34 SOUTH
FRONT STREET
COTTONADES.
Suitable for both Clothiers and Jobbers, in terse
SUMMER COATINGS AND CARIMBRETra
Made by Waahington
Orders taken for these desirable goody for Spring trade
nl7-tf
'WELLING, COFFIN. Sc
COMPANY.
116 CHESTNUT STREET,
AGENTS FOS THE SALE OF
A. & IV. SPRAGUE'S PRINTS.
In greet variety, including Chocolates, Turkey Reds
Greens, Slues, Shirting', and Fancy Styles,
BLEACHED SHEETINGS AND SHIRTINGS.
Lonsdale, • ' Masonville, Slatersville,
pe ' -Washinothan Union Mills,
Dltiol;touf, Gobannet, Johnkton, ' '
Belvidere, Phrenix,
BROWN GREETINGS, SIURTINGS, AND
OSIVABURGS.
Matoaos, Virginia Paraily• Groton,
Eltriok, Eagle, Manchester,
Mee's & Farm's, Blaok Hawk, Meroer A,
Warren A, Farmers', Riverside l
Carr's River, Elwell.
CLOTHS.
Bottornley's ' Pomeroy's, Glenham Co.',, and other
Blackmakes of Bla ck and Fancy all wool and cotton warp
Cloths on great variety.
DOESKINS AND OASEGMERES.
Greenfield Co., Saxton River, Lewiston Falk',
Stearn's Id. Gay & Sons, Glendale,
Berkshire Co., and others.
SATINETS.
Steam's , Ayres & Aldrich, Taft & Capron,
Minot, Charter Oak, Crystal Springs.
Swift River, Carpenters', Fliftenoe Mills,
Carroll'', Duhring'S, Conversville, &o.
SILESIAS.—Lonsdale Co.'s, Smith's, and other makes,
plain and twilled, of all colors.
Fancy Negro Stripes and Plaids.
Jewett city and Irene Stripes, Denims, and Ticking,.
Rhode Island and Philadelphia Linsey', Apron Checks,
and Pantaloon Staffs.
Shepard's and Slater's Canton Flannels.
Pisbenrille Co.'s Corset Jeans, &o.
aukdtseal—sepi-fm&vG
HENRY D. NELL,
()turn. STORE,
NOS. 4 AND 6 NORTH SECOND STREET.
OVEROOATINGS,
CILINCRILLA,NOSROVTA, FROSTED, AND PLAIN
BEAVERS,
OASSIMERES, VELVETS, &0.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
nll-tf
SHIPLEY, HAZARD, & HUM:MON,
1.10 11 '1 MIDWEST ST.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
OR TIE SALE OF
PHILADEIRMA-MADE
GOODS.
03-Cm
WATCRES, JEWELRY, &c.
SILVER WARE.
MESSRS. MEADOWS & 06.,
MANUFACTURERS OF [STERLING
SILVE R-W-ARE,
Would respectfully Inform the Publio, and their
numerous patrons that they have OPENED A STORE at
633 ARCH STREET,
Where will be fouwi a hied ettehifive datiertiniint of
SILVER, VIAIIII,
Entirely of their OWN MANUFACTURE, of the latest
design, and at sates as reasonable ma con be found in
the oily. nel-1m
SILVER WARE.
WIVI. WILSON & SON
Invite epthial attention to their stook of BILVER
WARE, whioh is now unusually large, affording a Vll
rtety of pattern and design unsurpassed by any house
the United &etas, and of finer quality than L manning,.
tared for table use to any part of the world.
Our Standard of Sliver is 93.5-1000 parte pure.
The English Sterling .....
....925-1000 It
American and French 900.1000 it
Thus it will be seen that We give thirty-live parts purer
than the American and French own, and ten parts purer
than the English Sterling. We melt all our own Silver,
and our Foreman being enunciated with the Refining De.
pertinent of the United Staten Mint for seyeral pears,ve
guarantee the quality ne above (930), which is the finest
that can be made to be serviceable, and will resist the
action of aside much better then the ordinary Silver
martirjhetured.
WM. WILSON & SON,
B. W. CORNER FIPTII AND MERRY BTt3
N. B.—Any fineness of Silver manutuotured M agreed
upon, but positivity sons &Onto? to &tech and Ansi.
can standard.
Dealers supplied with the same 'standard as used in
our retail department.
Fine Silver Bars, 990-1000 parts pure, constantly on
hand. coil-0m
8. JA BRO., •
ar 'MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF
SILVER-PLATED WARE
ANNA OISESTNUT Street, above Third, (tip gain,
Philadelphia.
Constantly on hand and for sale to the Trade,_
TEA-SETS COMMUNION SERVICE SETH, URNS.
PITOGE443, GOBLETS, CUPS, WAITERS, BAR
RE 8, CANTORS, 'KNIVES SPOONS,
FORKB, LADLES, Dro,', tro.
Gliding and plating on all kinds of metal. eel-li
WINES ANO LIQUORS.
CHAMPAGNE.—We recommend to con
lumens and connoisseurs the Clutruptgne Wines
of Mr. FERY% from .hpernay, France. Th 6 excellence
of the brand " INCOMPARABLE " has been fully esta
blished throughout France. Kumla. harmony. ko.
Samples may bo seen and examined at our cam
d2.lm F. D. LONOCHAMP, 211 South FRONT.
JAMES STEWART & CO.'S
PAISLEY MALT WHISKEY
GEORGE WHITELEY,
Importer of Brandy, Wine, ko., W SOUTH FRONT
Street, of for sale, in bond only, STEWART'S
CELEBRATED AND UNEQUALLED PAISLEY
➢IALT WHISKEY. all-Dm
WE OALL ATTENTION OF THE
• • TRADE to this really Superior artiele
ALFRED RENAUD COGNAC.
A supply in
.assorted paTiotees constantly on hand.
Orderareoeived for direot im_portation.
Also—liennesaY Cogna_,o Leßoy CognaorLondon and
Rellaud Gins, Claret in Wood and Cases , Champagnes,
high and low proms. LONG CHAMP, jmporter.
010-em 21T South FRONT. Philadelphia.
GEORGE WHITELEY,
N 0.135 Borth FRONT Street,
Importer of Brandy, Wines, &0., olfere for sale, In
bond only, the following, among other standard brands
of brandy
rind. Coatilion, & Co., Thos.lllnos in Co..
juloo, Robin, & Co., °bud, Dupuy, &, Co..
A. Boldnotte, btarett,
&Mee!, Pellevoisin,
Union Proprietors,
kur glat,%:, • JAM. He nnewy.
o, Stuart's Paisley Malt Whiqtey,and r th ii e n ehoinesto
*lL.mitig 4 tPeheerdrri., I .4giaitT ftuil i ha a n n t.:
Cruz Rum. Bordeaux Oil , eco.. wo. spy-ly
CLARET. -100 cases Barton & Guestior's
St. Julien; 600 F lo. St. Este ; 800 do. Washing
ton Morton St. julien ; 109 do. do. faience, pints ; 60 do,
Chateau 1,4 Rose ; 60 do. do. Leoville • Scotch Ale, to
'stone and gime ; Younger'a, Harvey's Falkirk Brown
Stout and London Porter in store and for sale by
nub A..MRRINO. 140 South FRONT Street,
CkLD COGNA BRANDY ;
i tt ,..3is, told N .. a P c ztt
Ito. do. Ilennee4y.
In bond, and for sale by A. 151581140.
nlO 140 South NRONT Street.
IVIOA.MO O O F F m O O LT i I
I s EI A
11 WONDERFUL ANIE
AIR
REPARATOR.
Soptember 27th, 1859.
This is to (fortify that I was b'eld for many years, and
was recommended to try your Reparator : and having
procured three bottles, used it for three months, which
has caused my hair to grow, and although not quite as
think as before, yet it is oonstantly Lrowing,
E. M. JONES,
No. 89 North Third street.
Heptoinber 27th, 1859.
Mr. J. F. MONELL 1 Dear Sir—Bonie time clone Rif
hair commenced falling out,. so much so, that I won, in
foot, fearful of booming bald; but hearing of the won
derful power of your Reparator, I was induced to buy a
bottle, and after using one-bol t of it (ay hair nut only
Conned coming out, but commenced grlVring finely, and
I have now as think a suit of hair as ever 7
715 F °di
r b i y a T i H 8
t. JACOB EVANS,
No. 524 Cherry streot,
Sole Agents, No.
r l ee P t r , P hiladelphia . R BCsegg-dm
It/FENTON LEMONS.-250 boxes Menton
4g-a.
Lem"Bl44llVMPßlAl,VtlithV.°4y..
GANGS OF RlOGlNG.—Standing and
Running Rigging, menufnotured of the beet mate.
nal, and for Belo, at rhanufriettrers' lowing prim, by
WEAVER, FITLIIR. &
one et N.. WAN°. . N ni.111.1111.1.
SHOULDERS. -65 Mids. Dry Salt Shoul
dere, Just received and for ee^
.)
C. 0. l
RA ti LER k CO.,
dIOARCH liitreet.ed door above Front.
SCOTCH WHISKEY 4 0 puncheons
Amos Stewart & Co.'s
Wt, hond and
for otaln hv GROFIGF, WHIT smnm
ARD.--168 bbls. No. 1 Leaf Lard, fo
beta by 0.0. SADIAIR & CO.,
dlO Age , : wet, 2t door above Front.
IMIEM
pHILA_DELpiIIA, 'WED,NESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1859.
DIY-GOODS, JOBBERS.
MERRIMACIc. PRINTS:',;
, THIRTEEN NEW t3TYLES.
ALTO,•
ELEGANT NEW. ETYLEB •
CHRISTMAS PRINTS..
CASHMERES dISD DE LAINESp:
CID
A JOB LOT
BLACK SILKS
TO OPEN TlllB DAY,
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12TE.
JOSHUA L. DAILY,
IMPORTER AND JOBBER OF DRY MOB,
dl2-8t 213 MARKET STREET.
RETAIL DRY GOODS.
REDUCED PRICES.
WE WILL OFFER TO-DAY OVR
OLOTIi AND VELVET
CLOAKS.
AT REDUCED PRIORS
THOS. W. EVANS A: CO.,
819 AND 820 CHESTNUT STREET,
&M 9!
CLOTHS -CLOTHS.
JAYNE'S HALL.
A complete assortment of
Clothe, Cassimeres, Vestings, ko.
$lO to 020 Saved on a Gent's suit, and $6 to on
LADIES' CLOAKING.
(Patterns furnished.)
Cali and see at
ESntsEM AN T S
025 011ESTNUT STREET.
nSO-tdSt
DECEMBER
REDUCTION
i'itlCEl).
L. J. LEVY & CO.
Announce to the Public and their Customers that in so
cordanoe with their usual custom at this season of the
year, they have rodueed the prices of their stook of
FANCY DRY GOODS,
which compriseh many ehoice and beautiful descriptions
of goods suitable for
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS:
L. J. L. & Co. have received, this week, a very choice
collection of Embroidered Cambric Hata, New Lace
Goods, 'Embroideries, &o, to which there Will be addtab
la a few days, several oases of liouvaatties, tlspamally
sainted fOr
HOLIDAY PRESENTS.
SOO and 811 CHESTNUT STREET.
di-it
CLOAKS! CLOAKS n
IRISMSE•
ATTRACTIONS.
EVERY NEW STYLI:.
EVERY NEW lUATERIAL:
TIIE LARGEST STOCK IN TEE CITY '
Mr Prins more reatunetblo than at any other ; eetatr
lirhment.
IVEN3,
, 99 MOUTH NINTH STREET:
CLOAKS I CLOARS I I
THE GREATEST BARGAINS 1N61,0.11.0 25 , VER
OFFkatED.
I V N S..
09-tf 93 Milli NINTH STREET._
ilostEtty Mk-
MANN. No. II North SMITH Street. has now
Open his Fall Stock of Hosiery Hoods. vier under Vests
and Drawers of Cartwright and Warner'ssuperiormann
fauture, for ladies' and misses' wear. Merino Spirts
and Drawers, for Amite and youths. Merino Hosiery.
Cotton Hosiery, Woollen Hosiery, Gloves and Gaunt
lets, and goods generally npperteining to the Hosiery
business. J. W. H. respectfully solicits the Attention of
families to his stock, ensuring them that his stook is un
excelled for variety by any other in the city. and that
his prices are as lowa, those of any other re ruler house.
N. B.—No abatement made from the prices named.
at-wfrott
CLOAK EMPORIUM.—A handsome ay.
eortmeht of Lashes' and Misses' (looks how oat
at B. V. B. HUNT EDI' New Store,
No. 40 SOUTH SECOND Street.
N. B.—A general assortment of Shawls and Dress
Goods. tDO-st•
BLACK 13EAVER CLQAKS.
Cheap Cloake, from eied.
Fllll 13,leck Cloaks. as to am
Black Beaver Cloaks. 810 to 819.
Black Tricot Cloaks, $lO to el%
We are now salting larus quantities from a large,
(reek, and clean stook. Cloaks made to order and lull.•
antend tofit and please. C(X)PER ttio,
NINTH and M AR 1(1I.
CLOAKING CLOTIIB.
Fine .13lack Cloths and Beavers.
Ladies'
Mack Closkinss. 6115 to e 340.
Overcoat Cloths, el to 85..50.
Dress-coat Cloths, 6250 to 65.
Blink and coops Cassitneres.
Extra heavy enoy . ( ‘Vint i tg Cumeres.
!dC t .Oil e a t gi NearYesti a nTatlilk, Plash. Valmia.
mops' wear—soods espeolally adapted to.
COOPER 4 currAßik
4.17 NINTH and ,_
MARICIVP
DEOEMBER, 1859.--REDUCTION IN
PRICES!
TEORNLEY & CHISM,
Corner of SMITH and SPRING HARDEN,
Witt try to oiler tempting inducements during this
month to buyer. of
DRY HOODS.
WE HAVE PUT THE PRICES WORT DOWN!
Very rich fnnoy Silks reduced to 8730;
All wool DeLaines reduced to Cost.
THE CREAMS P LONG BROOHE SHAWLS IN
PHILADELPHIA!
CLOAKS OP THE NEWEST STYLES,
Rangin itirsn 'Arat:, TiTol„ti,
Beaver Clothe. 'I riot Cloths, &n., he.
HOOD BLACK SILKS, HEAVY, BICH LUSTRE!
Ladies', mimes', and children'. Shawls;
Gentlemen'. Shawls ingreat variety, aco., &o.
at THORNLEY & CHISIIII3.
D
ESIRAB I, F, PRY GOODS,. FOR
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. AT LOW PRICES.
BROCHE and STELLA SHAWLS.
BLANKET SHAWLS. Gents' and ildyie do.
Super MANTILLA VELVET.
French Merinore—plaln and printed.
Super White do.
Black Cloths for Cloaks.
LATEST STYLE CLOTH CLOAKS, ready made.
RICH PLAID DRESS GOODS.
MOUS DE LAIN ES, all Wool.
Bouquet and other Myles do.. part Cotton.
Bich 4-4 Frenoll Chintzes. for Wrappers,at 25 cents.
Very Cheap WORKED COLLARS and SETS.
LINEN CAMBRIC lIDKFS,
For Misses, Ladies, and (tent., in great variety.
Goats' Silk Pocket Hdkfs and Cravats.
Do Neck Ties and Mufflers.
&doles Kid and Gauntlet Gloves.
Hooped Skirts, reduced in price.
Blanket", Table Clothe, Nanking. Towels, Re., Re.
CHARLES ADAMS,
d-3 EIURTH and ARCH Streets.
CLOAKS. DECIDEDLY CHEAP !
THORNLEY k CHM% EIGHTH. and BERM)
GARDEN t keep a large stook, and gall an nninenue
quantity of
LADIES' CLOAKS:
- - • - - - - -
Also,
Long Brooke Shawls.
Long and Hume Blanket Shawls.
Very no Reversible Mewls,
FANCY BILKS BELOW IMPORTATION COST!
Black Silks. best boiled,
Panaya Dress floods, very oheap
Meek Bilk Velvets, 86, tia, 88, 80, and $ l O per yard.
Black Clothe, Cassinieres, Ao.
Blankets, Flannels, Quilts, ko., fko.
Linens, of our own Importation.
And as good a stock of general Dry Geode as Dal:Wel-
Om can twat of *
ALL BOUliliT NOR CAPII
1119 AN!) TO BE BOLD CIIBAP
RAPSON'S.
CORNER OF EIMER AND ORME En
Havo now open a fine neaortmantof
BERLIN ZEPHYR WOWED,
SINGLE, DOUBLE, AND MIT.
Tho whole front the eele hotted manuteturera, Hertz
& Wegener, in Berlin. Our oustoinen can depend, on
getting the hoot article over offered & retail ID PhDs
dolphin, at the lowest prices.
!Laflamme ASSOIIThIENT r.mßßoinvsn thierxxs.
A VARIETY OF SLAcK CLOAK TAIOELS.
BANDSoME CROCHET CLOAK Floone.
Now AND HEAUTIYUL DEESSTRIMMINGS.
WOOLLEN KNITTING YAVS, ALL COLORS.
ZEPHYR. KNIT TALMAS .ND CAPS.
ZEPHYR KNIT GAITE7s AND SLEEVES.
A CULL STOCK or STAPLE TRIMMINGS.
AT HAPION'S
LADIES' TRIMMINGS AN) ZEPHYR STORE.
Cor. OF LIGHT,'" ANDCHERRY ST&
.16-3 m
LADIES' FANCY FURS.
GEO. F. WOMRATH.
NOS. 415 AND 411 ARCM STREET,
HAS NOW O'EN HIS USUAL
ORME ASSORTMENT OF FURS,
Made of stook seleeted it himself in Europe during the
east Spring. oclB-3m
- -
NEW OIL —1.500 GALLONS EXTRA
WM I PE ivinEß Oth. now inekinv at
KENSINUTuNBCREW DOCK OIL WORKR,
mutable for bent rep it tender, for sale by
& CO.,
At Factory, or nt Store, No.lo sount WHARVES,
below Market BOWL 010
NEW DUTCH HERRING.-500 kegs of
New puler Herring 1-16 the rind 32de lust received
per bark Anal& from Rotterdam. and for sale b the
Importers. HENRY BOHLEN & CO.,
d10 , 6t 221 and 223 South FOURTH greet.
Egg- ACKEREL—A find Invoice of
bbli„lda , are., and kits Newbu yooil
ion. Also, email lot of Halifax lance tin 4 ka n b B :l7l .
Moro ma for sate by Wm, j_, TA? oit
nl7 , 1124 PURIM WHART2B.
Ely Vress.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1859
Applotons' Gift nooks for all Seasons.
We have received (from Mr. S. Basard,
bookseller, 724 Chestnut street) several finely
illustrated volumes, published by Appleton It Co.,
Now York, with the view to approaching holidays.
Christmas Day is the great gift-day In England,
on which all the world exchange "Christmas
boxes." New Year's Day, there emphatically
called le Jour de ('an, is the especial day on
which, all over Prance, each person gives a present
to each other person whom he knows. In Paris
alone, on that day, It is estimated that the inter
change of gifts involves an aggregate expenditure
of at least $1,000.000. In this country it would
appear that both the above•named days are digni
fied by the exchange and intetabange of gifts.
Books which, if worth anything at first, never go
out of fashion, are among the moat desirable, be
cause the most permanent presents. Messrs. Ap
pleton's gift-books, of which we shall now speak In
detail, are literally gifts for all seasons, and arc
got op with surpassing taste and beauty. They
bare been illustrated, printed, and bound in the
Bret style of London excellence and finish, and take
rank a mons the Most handsome works of the present
time.
Tha " Book of Favorite Modern Ballads," in im
perial octavo, contains 51xty lyrical poems, Select
ed from the writings of dead and living writers,
and illustrated by eminent modern ititlsta Scott
and Longfellow, ;lures and Hood, l i ned and
Mackay, Rogers and Southey, Bloomfield and
Wordsworth, Mrs. Norton and Mary Hewitt, Ma
caulay and Lover, Campbell and Coleridge, Percy
and Deattio, Tennyson and Kingsley, Lady Ha•
forin and KWh Cook, and many others, are drawn
upon to make this collection varied and valuable.
Oddly enough, neither Byron nor Moore is repro
stinted in title volume. Besides the ornamental
designs, by Alfred 11. Warren, upon nearly every
page, printed in gold, there are upwards half a
hundred exquisite wood engravings, engraved and
printed by Edmund Evans, from original designs
by litrket Foster, 0. W. Cope, E. Hannan, G. H.
Thomas, George Hodgson, Harrison Wear, G. G.
Rids, Samuel Palmer, William Harvey, D. H.
Fria ton, Percival Skelton, W. J. Grant, Edward
Wooden, E. li. Corbould, J. 0. Horsley, and: A.
Solomop. Many of these are actually as polio as
the Wits which they illustrate. We have to
droll , attention to the effective tone of these en
gravings. They are all printed upon neutrally
tinted grounds, which Involves double labor, but,
when suooeseful, as in this volume, are remarka
bly telling.
" The Most excellent Ilistorie of the Merchant of
Venice, by William Shakspeare," printed on tinted
paper, and most eiguisitely illustrated by Dirket
Foster, G. u. Thomas, R. Brandling, and Relay
Rogers, is really a gem. pictorially and typographi
cally. Besides the emblematical devices and orna
ments, which are very graceful and appropriate,
there are tvr en ty original pictures here. The figure
plc tures here aro by Thomas: a scene in Veniee, and
the exterior of a Court of Justice (showing the Gi
ant's Stairs in the Puoal Palace), are by Brand
ling. Five of the illustratleag, and these the best,
are by Foster. These are St. Mark's Place,
Venice), tbo Garden at Belmont, the Rialto, another
view of Portia's Garden, with Jessica and Lorenzo
in the foreground, and airiest Leautifiil night scene,
in which the lovers are again introduced. These
are as fine conceptions as any in modern art, ap
plied to book-illustration, and they are engraved
on wood, in a style which really is delicate and ef
fective. The little head•pieoes and tail-times, mi
nute as some of them aro, aro wonderfully sug
gestive and expressive, each bearing upon the
text. All these engravings aro by English artists.
We have not vet arrived at such luxury of pencil
and graver in this country—though we have made
rapid strides in advance during the last th:c ±
four yeata.
"Roynard the Fox," alter din dertnan torsion
of,Ooothe, with illustrations, from the designs of
Wilhelm von Kaulback, is a curiosity of literature.
Thu original of the legends relating to Reynard is
very old in Germany, and must have bad a poll-
Goal allusion when first written. Goethe seized
upon the familiar theme and throw It tutu verse,
in which shape It has become additionally popular.
Mr. Thomas James Arnold, one of the Police
Magistratei of London, has supplied a free trans
lation, In English verse, of Goetho's paraphrase,
and a German artist of celebrity has illustrated
it, in a fanciful and original manner. English
wood-engraving has done wonders with those de
signs. The result is a volume with no ordinary
claim upon public attention. The title-page alone
is full of grotesque life and limey. But the repre
sentations of the various animals, in many scones
of courtly and common life, aro curiously eleven
Each animal Is well represented, and has a pecu
liar charaeter of his own, quite in keeping with
the free end easy poem In which the sin and
shrewdness, the quirks and turns, the knavery and
arts of Master lteynard are described. It Is an
odd, amusing, and hutuorous' book, with a deep
meaning running through its parables—for, as we
have already hinted, the story of Roynard is a
satire upon Royalty and Courts, chicanery and
courtiers. Even the adornments on the cover are
suggestive—in their grotesque humor.
In "The Waverley Gallery," richly bound in
Turkey morocco, so as to make it exactly the
volume for a table in a boudoir, wo find thirty-six
imaginative portraits of the loading female charac
ters in Scott's novels. These engravings, from
original paintings and sketches by leading English
artists, were executed ninny years ago under the
superinten Icy of the late Charles Heath, and,
reproduced now, ere as good as new. The engra.
vings were made by the best artists, and the sub
jects were supplied by J. It. Herbert, W. Drum
mond, J. Ilayter, Kenney Meadows, F. P. Btepha
noff, E. T. Pardo, J. Penstone, W. Fisher, J. W.
Wright, and Mrs. Mann. Each engraving is ao
cneupanied by several pages of letter-press, from
Scott. which gives the key, as it were, to the oha
motet represented. Tho plates have been most
carefully printed, and the typographical portion of
the volume is no lees autisfactory.
"The Children's Picture Gallery" is a small
4b. volume containing ono hundred engravings
from paintings by the best English artiste of the
present day. They have already previously ap
pelted, from time to time, in the illustrated Lon
don News, and are, in foot, the gems of, that pub-
Motion. Among the artists hero represented, by
their works, aro Modes°, Mulready, Millais, F.
Goodall, E. Duncan, H. Warren, John Gilbert, W.
I'. Frith. John Phillip, J. C. Horsley, G. Lance,
G. Thomas, E. Corbould, Dirket Foster, T. Web
stor, Kenny Meadows, 11. 'Weir, L. Ilaghe, George
Cruikshank, E. 11. Ward, T. F. Marshall, 11. Le
joists, 11. B. Willis, john Absolon, T. Creswiek, J.
Sant, A. Elmore, and others of the English school,
will specimens of Rosa Bonheur, Paul Delaroohe,
and a few other foreigners. This volume, though
children will espeelslly delight In it, also possesses
condilerable interest for adults. Indeed, it will
be ofgront use in conveying a correct idea of the
dillercnt styles of art in England.
Bonyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," with a short
preface by Charles Kingsley, and numerous illustra
tions by Charles H. Bennett, will be a seasonable
volume at any time. It is quite a superb volume.
with beautiful binding, and other aids. Mr. Ben
nett'' illustrations are very peculiar, chiefly con
slating cf outline portraits of the personation' so
freely introduced into Bunyan's wonderful story.
Mr. Kingsley nays that Banyan, as a poet, thought
in pictures, and the artist has essayed to realise
this b) making ideal portraits. There Is no high
art in his designs—only simple truth, for he has
represented English faces, being those alone which
Bunyan knew. Homely faces, it may be thought,
yet the typos of people whom, no doubt, Bunyan
hail before him, In his mind's eye, when ho wrote.
They are unequal, but, for the most part, realise,
pretty accurately, what we luny well fancy was in
Bunyan's mind when ho wrote Ills descriptions.
Glittering in blue and gold, wo have au illustra
ted edition of the veritable Adventures of Baron
Munchausen. The engravings are from designs by
Alfred Crouquill, several of which aro colored.
Theso engravings bring out the humor of the nar
rative, which consists in tho relation of inonstrwie
canards with as much gravity as if they were the
concentrated essence of truth. The second volume,
by the way, like most continuations, la inferior to
the first.: introducing Don Quixote as a living per.
son is not only on incredible but absurd fiction.
Munehausen, however, has been translated into
many languages, and this handsome edition will
•
be acceptable to many.
"The Boy's Book of Industrial Information,"
being a miniature oyolopedia on natural and man
ufactured products, arta and processes, products of
skilled labor, agricultural processes, apparatus and
machinery, and engineering works, is illustrated
with 370 engravings on wood, which greatly eluci
date the descriptions. It relates to industrial pro
ceßsos; and products in England—we should like
to see such another volume relating to this country.
" Bible Stories in Bible Language" is wholly an
American book, and likely to find its way into nu
merous households. It has ton wood-outs, of no
great merit. The groat superiority of this volume
is that it gives a groat number of stories from the
Bible, precisely as the Bible tells them. There is
no paraphrasing, no rewriting, no alteration—sim
ply the most Interesting Bible narratives, in Bible
words. We earnestly express our favorable opin
ion of this book, Its design and its execution.
All of theso books, with a great variety from
other publishers, are to be seen at Mr. Hazard's,
Oheetnut street, and to his store we refer our city
readers.
PERSONAL AND 1 3 OL1TICAL.
SOUTWERN gentleman in this
city redently reoeived a letter from a friend
at the South which eontainathe following descrir.
thou of Southern sentiment. We do not doubt,
however, toat the meetings held sinoe It wad writ-
ton have done much to quiet the apprehensions it
deseribes:
"The question, now shall the integOtk of the
Union be preserved? comes up with greater gravi
ty than has ever before attached to It. I fear that
even among thinking, conservative, Union loving
men at the South, the oonviotion that a separation
is inevitable rapidly gains ground. They have
heretofore allowed their fears to be quieted by
the assurance that Abolitionism, fierce and foul
mouthed as it was permitted to be, was confined to
a cdnteteptible faction, and that the Northern
masses were sound and consortallta. (heat doubts
are beginning to be entertained on this eattlest,
growing very much out of the impression produced
by Brown's raid. Abolitionism has deified him,
and blasphemously ascribed to his gallows the glo
ry of the Cross. Republicazdam denortnees his
enterprise, not for its intrinsic wickedness, but as
premature I and therefore calculated to embarrass
her own operations, in the seine direction, when
the time has come. Fanatioal preachers dettecrate
the pulpit by anathemas against slairebolderif.
"The press gives a feeble and uncertain sound ;
snaking sport of the Virginia panic, or admiring
the coolness and bratery of the old here who
raised the bloody flag of servile insurrection in
our midst, or coupling its faint censures of his atro
cious conduct with sarcastic flings at the " pecu
liar institution," and the intimation that this is
only what we might expect, and what must come
with tenfold horrors, some day or other.
!'Ono thing is certain—multitudes of Northern
men, in their ideate and Insane devotion to the
negro, have got to hate the Southern white man ;
and, to free the slave, would be willing to arm
him, and let him loose upon Ids master. What se
curity can we hate that shoh mett will be reetrain
ed from the bloody doings of which thej are fully
capable? The seething of the infernal cauldron,
will throw to the surface other John Browns. Are
we to feel forever that not only our property, but
our lives, are liable to be put In jeopardy by reck
less fanatic's? Men cannot live with such a cloud
hanging thretet user their heads.
"The instinct of self: presertation Will impel
Southern men Warts for the protection of their most
taluabie fights and with arms in their bands,
and the strongest passions of twir nature aroused,
who can foresee the result? It is Said that the
Northern maser are conservative. how is this to
be known, unlesi they make themselves heard
above the roar of cursing and denunciation with
which many even of their churches reseund ? It
is easy to pass the matter over, ter ascribing the ex
oltement at the South to Democratic politicians
manufacturing capital for party purposes: But
whatever looks in the most distant manner to a ser
vile insurrection strikes deeper than the short line
of the partisan ever fathomed. The ides is going
deeper and deeper into the minds of colt reflecting
men, that if the North can stand calmly by and
utter no rebuke, and enter no emphatic protest
against the phittings, by men in her midst, to con
vert a portion of our country Intel a modern St. Do
mingo, that it behooves us to gird °Wadies to the
work of eelf•proteotion before the evil day Is upon
us. I beliefs, [Oven; that God will interpose to
save us from the follies and the crimes of evil and
designing men. I would fear that the deluge; would
be upon us, but for the bow which he has placed iv
the clouds "
Er' IV. 'O. Rajas; Big., was last week, on mo
tion of Robert A. Lamberton, admitted to
practice law in the courts of Dauphin county. The
Harrisburg Telegraph soya ho passed a veryeredi•
table examination. We predict for Mr. H. a enc.
ccr‘ful career in hie profeEsion.
ri Washington Irving woe never married. An
curly disappointment preyed upon his over-sent!-
five nature, and caused him to remain to the hour
of hledeath Unwedded. Ho was not, however, n
churl. lie loved and respected woman with a aim
cero and holy devotion that is manifest in all Lis
writing'. There is not ono word in any of his
volumes where there con bo found a word dime
epectful concerning woman. For the honored re
lations of mother, wife, sister, and daughter, he en
tertained the highest admiration, as he has °lmbed
them in the dweetelt and noblest prom poetry.
And it is gratifying to know that his hut years
were toothed by the kind attentions of the daugh
ters of a beloved brother.
ri f 9 . Thomas B. Monroe, Jr., Mayer of Lexing
ton, Ky., Secretary of State, treasurer of the Lu
natic Asylum, editor of the Kentucky Statmman,
and law partner of James B Clay, was married a
few days since, In Philadelphia. to Miss Grier.
daughter of Judge Crier, of the supreme Court of
the United States. Mr Monroe is the son of Thos.
B. Monroe, Sr„ judge of the United States court of
Kentucky.
Pr" A letter•wri+er at Tarrytown presume=
that Sunnyside will be kept in the Irving family
and that its olden hospitality will be maintained.
Ebenezer is the only one of the Irving brothers
who now retrain. He is the last of the large house
hold of William Irving, Br., and Ma age, like a
lusty winter, is "frosty but kindly." He has
been for a long time a resident of Bunnyside, wher e
his children will no doubt long preserve the me
mory of their illustrious kinsman.
ms's Mr. Choate remarked that ho had beard
Clay appeal to Webster personally to leave Tyler's
Cabinet. It was in the Vice President's room at
the White House. It was only two or three mi
nutes, but it was a grand appeal, very powerful.
Webster never mazwered a word. He took It all
kindly. He felt be was in somewhat a false post
don. As Clay went out, though, ho looked at me
(Choate) and winked.—Parlcr's Choate.
Tux FREUD:NT L►AD CLAIM. -By the late intelli
gence from California it appears that the Pinions
ease involving the validity of Colonel Fremont's
claim to his large tree( of land in California, and
the right of mining companies to extract gold ?rem
it without his permission, bee been decided in his
favor. The San Francisco correspondent of the
New York T 577 1 ,0.1 says:
"The litigation of this ease has coat Colonel Fro
mon' and his associates over $30,000 /he result
vindicates him from the long•per.d.ng charge of
claiming a fraudulent grant, and effectually die.
posse of all the legal difficulties he has been corn
pelted to contend against in the proseoution of his
rights. It is safe to assort that hie income from his
mining estate will, within the next nix months, be
equal to $l,OOO per day !"
SCIWYLKILL COIINTr.—The Democratic Coun
ty Convention met in Pottsville on the sth inst.,
and instructed their delegates to the next State
Convention to support Jacob Fry, Jr., of Mont
gomery, for Governor. A series of fifteen resole.
tions were adopted, but no reference whatever is
made to Mr. Buchanan. Perhaps the Democracy
of echuylklll have found him rather a dead weight
for the past two years. Bence they have fallen
back upon the principles of the Kansas-Nebraska
bill. F. W. llughes was recommended as a dele
gate to the Charleston Convention.
VIRGINIA AND VTR TRIRONL—POST OFFICE,
Lynchburg, Va., Dna. 2, 1859.--Mr. fforaee Greg
ley—Sir : I hereby inform you that I shalljnot in fu
ture deliver from this office the copies of the Tri
bune which come here, because I believe them to
be of that incendiary ehar.mter which are forbid
den circulation alike by tho laws of the land, and
a proper regard for the !tasty of society. You
will, therefore, discontinue them.
Respectfully, lt. H. GLAss, P. 31.
MR. POSTMASTER or LYNrnntron, VA.—Ste:
I take leave to assure you that I shall do nothing
of the sort. The subscribers to the Tribune in
Lynchburg have paid for their papers; we have
taken their money, and shall fairly and folly earn
it, according to contract If they direct us to send
their papers to some other poet office, we shall
obey the request; otherwise, we shall send them
as originally ordered. If you or your masters
choose to steal and destroy them, that is your affair
at all events, not ours ; and if there is no law in
Virginia to punish the larceny, so much the worse
for her, and our plundered subscribers. If the
Federal Administration, whereof you are the tool,
after monopolizing the business of mail-carrying,
aces Otto become the acctomplice and patron of
mail robbery, I suppose the outrage must be borne
until more honest and less servile rulers can be
put into high places at Washington, or till the
people can recover their natural right to carry
each other's letters and printed matter, asking no
odds of the Government flo ahead in your own
base way. I shall stand steadfast for human lib
erty and the protection of all natural rights.
Yours stiffly. llonAen GRIST:LEY.
New York, Dec 9, 1859.
MUM FROld FoamsN.—Patrick Ifoneyman, a.
man who was afflicted with a pugilistic disposition,
had a tight, on seientille principles, with Patrick
Fanning, an Irishman, at the corner of Twenty.
eighth street and First avenue, New York, on the
night of the let inst. Fanning had much tho best
of it, and knocked his opponent down several
times. lloneyman did not, at the time, complain
of serious injury, but in a day or two ho began to
fool the effects of his encounter, and on Friday last
died from Internal injuries, and the coroner's jury
returned a verdict in accordance with the facts
Fanning has surrendered himself, and is locked up
In the Seventoenth•precinot station-house. The se
conds, John Brady and Thomas Smith, have not
yet been arrested. Deceased was recently the
" Poople'a" oandidato for alderman, and bore
the reputation of a trpubleeonto character, as clout
hie antagonist,
TWO CENTS.
AV' The celebrated lion-tamer, Herr Driethaoh,
has given a certificate to R. C. Russ, editor of the
Brownsville (Ky.) Journal, stating that he is the
only man in this country, excepting those engaged
in taming wild animals, who has had the nerve to
follow him into the cage of the lion, and takes seat
on his back. The certificate to this effect wu writ
ten while Mr. Rues was in theintereating situation
referred to. Mr. Russ thinks he will not repeat
the experiment.
The Gotnexoe ELECT.—II, is with pain that we
learn that the second eon of Governor Leteher, an
interesting youth of ten years of age, died of lock
jaw, on December nth, at his father's residence, in
Lexington, Va. In consequence of this sad afflic
tion, Governer Ratchet's family will not go to
Richmond until the Ist of February. Governor
Letchor expects to reach Richmond on December
Slat, to enter upon his oflieial duties the next day.
L . 7' Certain of oat 9authern contemporaries, more
passionate than wise, are disposed to hold the
people of the North responsible for the ravings of
the mad fanatics amongst them. In fact, they
accuse the Northern people as abodif of sympa
thising with the craziest of, the bolitionats.
Nothing could be more unjust. Nothing could be
lees rational. Nothing could betray a greater -
noranoe of the North in particular ; and oftoe
principles of the popniu nature in general. The
manse of man are not to be moved by such despi
cable causes. The common integrity of the people
is above and beyond the reach of the vagaries and
profanities of fanaticism. So is their common
sense. "In a time of political agitation and tur
moil," as the National Intelligoneer well says,
" that 'common sense' may seem for the moment
to be overlaid or swallowed np by the billows of
partisan violence, but it should never be for
gotten that the ebullitions of a popular excite
ment are limited In the range as well as in the de
gree of their prevalence. The population of our
ethos, ever eager, like that of Athens, to spend
their time in telling or hearing some new
thing, may be carried to and fro with the
surges of a transient agitation, while the great
mass of the people, the substantial yeomanry of the
land. are pursuing their daily vocations In a state
of indifference to the petty dissensions which con
vulse the denizens of the town. The loudest utter.
epees are not, for that reason, the truest indications
of what is deepest In public opinion. It is easy for
the political mountebank to attract a crowd who
shall gape and stare at his rhetorical antics, but
this Is a popularity which he shares in common with
!Houdin, the rope-walker, or even with the dogs
and monkeys of Signor Donetti. If John Brown
has been glorified in a Poston conventicle as the
highest type of American manhood, and if the
outbid on which he expiated his crime against
moiety and the laws has been blasphemously
likdrtd. to Jim Cross of Calvary, it would seem
that reflecting cltipens, in an parts of the country,
should not fail to find, in the very preposterousness
of sob declarations, a sufficient token of the shal
low sentiment which they embody and express. It
surely is not necessary to defend the people of the
'Mirth from any such reproaches to their common
sense, not to say the instincts of our common he
manity." No. the great, honest, sound heart of
the Northern people Iles far Inland from this thin
and retinas uproar of the shore, undisturbed and
imperturbable.—Lociatitlis Journal.
TII6 CHICAGO Ortlei•lioLlinas.—The Washing
ton correspondent of the Chicago Press and Tri
bune, writing under date of Dee. 1, says:
"Your Postmaster Cox and Marshal Pine are
here defending themseltos sigainst the charges al.
leged against them. It is thought that Pine will
go overboard. lie is charged with being a defaul
ter to the amount of ten or twelve thousand dol
lars ; but it is reported that be has arranged
the payment of the money'. There are several
applicants for his place, who are striving to
blachen his conduct as much as possible. I un
derstand that Mr. Fine pleads that he got behind
by bleeding two freely In support of tto Ad
ministration—that he has 'meet large sums to
sustain the Chicago Herald, the National De
mocratle paper of the State of Illinois—and in
other ways to promote pore and undefiled Demo•
cracy. It is reported that if be is removed to ap
pease the wrath of his enemies, Old Buck will al
low him to name his own successor, and that if he
has to surrender he still be treated leniently in
consideration of his ertices and devotedness to
the falling fortunes of the Administration. Cook
is beset by a numerous pack of hungry can. He
is fighting them as bravely as Old Brown. He has
met the charges olio by one, brought against him;
but what report Postmaster Holt has made to the
President has not transpired. Holt dislikes Cook
and wants him removed. His assistant, Horatio
King, is also an enemy of Isaac's. They gave se
cret instrhetionS to the spies sent to Chicago to ex
amine how the °Mee was Menage& to find all the
fault they possibly could, to held him rigorously to
the letter of the law. Old Buck wants to save
Cook's head, but his Cabinet officer is bluer/01e
and insists on the pound of flesh.
" One of the charges alleged againsthim is tbathe
has violated the subdieesury in Viking paper mo
ney for postage and paying out current'' , instead of
coin to his clerks on e few occasions. The ebarge
I presume is true, but is accompanied by this ex
tenuation, that the same thing le done more or less
In nearly all the leading post °Meet of the United
States, sad that it is Omelet Impossible to avoid do
ing it sometimes. Cook asks the President why
King and Holt have singled him out, bat wick at
the sun, thing done by their favorites elsewhere?
He has a limps by the acme of Stanton defieding
him. The ff. - A[Ol.4W have made a dead set op him,
and the result is doubtful. . ,
•• The President says that hie Chicago Mace
holders give him more trouble than all his other
appointments put together• and that be has fewer
supporters In Illinois than in any other State. Ile
thinks there le teo much pork fora shilling is your
State "
Tho second tri.4 of the celebrated dunspeita or
"barrel murder" ease, with which our readers
are familisr, hrs just been closed, at Chicago, by
the acquittal of the prisoner. Some new and toys.
team!' developments have been made which the
Chicago Tim., gives as follows:
"The examination or Elizabeth F. Riley wu
continued Saturday forenoon, and it Is not jet eon
olu:e4.
'• The story of the connection of this women with
Jumper:: is full of the strange mystery whieh has
surrounded this terrible case from the first. If
true, it heaps a deeper and more damning weight
of guilt upon the bead of this man Jamperts, then
even the most vivid imagination had before con
ceived. If not true, It reveals a degree of turpi
tude on the part of the witness which it is barffly
possible can exist.
" It appears that while living in Mi',make/ with
Sophie Werner as his [Mitre/id, Jumperta at 'a leo
titre one night received an introduction to a young
and beautiful girl, Elizabeth F. Baldwin. With
the instincts of a libertine, he perceived in her
a lack of those positive intellectual qualities:whose
very presence forbids the approach of suet! a rib
lain as himself. lie called upon her subsequently;
acquaintance quickly grew to intimacy; and love,
or something akin to it, was awakened in the
bosom of the young girl. Under a promise of mar
riage, the smooth-faced and oily-tongued barber
seduced her from the way of virtue. Then be sc.
qustnted her with his relation to Sophie Werner,
and promised to become the husband of Elizabeth,
his second victim, as soon as be could get ;rid of
Sophie. The young girl left Milwaukee, and re
mained away until her child was born.
" In the meantime, Jumperta and Sophie bad
both left Milwaukee, and were supposed to be in
Chicago. Hither the young girl followed :them,
and thorny after arriving here met Jumpertz en
the street. She asked him where Sophie was. Be
hesitated for awhile, but finally told her that So
phio was dead; that she had taken laudanum
and slept herself to death; and that he bad cut
her body np and sent it away. Some other
conversation passed, which is given in the tes
timony. Not long afterward, Jumperta was
arrested for the crime of murdering Sprible
Werner. Bearing of his arrest, Elizabeth visited
him in jail, whore he again repeated substantially
what he had told her at the previous interview on
the street. Ile further said (so runs the story at
least) that he would problibly never get out of his
troubles with life, and advised her to endeavor to
forget him. lie returned her miniature, and told
her that she had better resign all thought and hope
of him, and marry Imo one else. She left him,
and became the wife of a man named Riley
" It appears that some extraneous and powerful
influences were brought to bear upon her to induce
her to consent to this marriage, as her conduct in
all other respects shows that her affections and
heart wore still with Jutnperts. Never a night
passed, state her friends, without seeing her upon
her knees praying for her seducer, and for his
liberation from the terrible death which stared
him in the face. It is likewise said she stated to a
woman named Kehoe that she did not care what
Jumperts had done, for she loved him still, and
would marry him if he got cut of his trouble.
Thin, however, she denied very positively bn the
witness stand.
"Subsequently toJumports's first conviction and
the granting of a raw tnal by the Supreme Court,
he again had en Interview with this unhappy girl.
lie then entertained strong hopes of au acquittal,
and was so firm in his belief that he renewed his
vows of affection anti love to her, told her to ge t rid
of her husband and of the fruit of her marriage with
him, and promised, if this was done, that upon his re
less4he would marry her. The girl, still actuated by
affection for this wretch, which neither tithe, nor
guilt, nor marriage vows could efface or weaken, ap•
pears to have followed his advice. She left bar hus
band, whose character appears to be neither up
right nor manly, and, from statements made by the
girl's mother, it appears that she took medicine, or
submitted to an operation which probably had the
desired effect, but which was followed by puerperal
fever, from which she is just recovering.
'• Such are the outlines of this strange story,
which, if true, certainly reveal a motive, hitherto
unknown, for the horrible act the prisoner is
charged with committing, and also contradicts out
of hie own mouth the pretenoe that Sophie Werner
committed suioide by hanging."
The Richmond Dispata4 gives the following
piece of information, under the head of " Worthy
of Example:"
" The home Guard, of Lynchburg, at their first
regular meeting, passed a resolution to have their
uniforms made in Philadelphia, since which they
have reconsidered the matter, and resolved to have
them made by their fellow.townsman, Charles
Baino. Wo trust that other companies will emu
late the example of the Home Guard at Lynchburg,
and keep their work at home."
By the overland mail from California, we learn
that the important lawsuit In regard to the Mari
posit estate, (in which it was attempted to di}
possess Col. Fremont of this valuable mining pro
perty.) has been decided in favor of Col. F. From
Carson Valley we have news of the election of John
G. Musser al delegate to Congress.
The Charleston Evening News of Saturday tart
says:
"The man Phillips, previously reported by us
as having been sent cm here by the city marshal of
Fernandina, Florida, and another named Daly, who
was driven from Kingstree, on suspicion of being
Abolitionists, having been placed in our guard
house, with a request that they might be sent to the
North, were both placed this morning on board the
steamer Mellen for Now York."
.. , .
%WE Nv r a&CHLY PRESS.,
Tat WEEKLY PP:Bili irtll lm mat io Italmaribma I,
mail (per annum,Oladasam)at.----.......us
Thrall Copia. " .4
.--.--..—. 11111
PIVII Copia*, " 4.
*--- .---- --- &MI
Tea se
---- ---- nal
Twooty Coma." (to ono witroto)
Toottti Cowes. or over " (to Wrote at
mob Babooribot.) slob-
For a Club of Tveztty.oce or otworo V 1 alSi at
*lin coot to tlut - gottor-up olds Club.
MalciaM=
,CALIFORNI4 PRIM •
hated beral-Moathlr In dm* flu the
&miners.
Letter front Ex-1 resident •
Pierce. -
Coscoao, N. EL.:, k •
Generalise: lam itonrseeption ef je ,
your letter of the third inetant, intorerbqr lee that ,r;•
"it 41 proposed that eitisens of Messeemo,4* wh o
honor and cherish the Union, who mean to stela
lain the Constitution of the United States, and --
_
tdthfully to carry oat all its recidrierents and ote
assemble in Tamil !Won Thursday
aiih k
the eighth day of December instant;," and
ing me to be present on t hat oeession:
Twenty-ffre yearn ago, one would hare ask
voluntarily, upon readieg a letter like that before a
me, whit are the dangers which threaten the
Union ; where are the men who do not honor and
cherish that Union. who do not " mean to maintain
the Constitution of the United States, and &With
iy to carry out all its requirements and obliga
tions ?" Could we not then, each for himself, hare
promptly answered—the denser', if they exist. are
too remote, and 'the men too inconsiderable in RUM..
berg, and too wild had extravagant in the principles
and purposes which they avow, to make them the
cause of even serious consid eration, much less of
apprehension and disquietude.
How is it to-day r How is it to be to-morrow
,
when patriotic hearts will beat in nelson In the
old Cradle of Liberty, and patriotic lips will repeal
the sentiments and doctrines which were elm
elated there more than eighty years ago, while the
men of Virginia were repines their erode - bat
trusty weapons ' not espeeially to protest their mem
borders, which have now been ruthlessly ihniadel
in violation of all law, human and diriete, bat to
oome to Massachusetts and mingle their liked with
that of oar fathom in defame of the corneae° emus!
Undisputed requirements of the Constitution, ar
ta:ding the rights, the security of life and property
of the eons d Virginia's eirrolationary men, are
set at nought. Lessons immlostiag disobedience is
suet' requirements hare beau mattered broadcast
in our community. and have borax their resits, net
merely in the exhibition of an insurrectiooary
spi
rit, but in an zebra invasion of a sister State by ea
armed organisation, the - objects of width an not
disguised.. This is not aIL The immalass„ and the
overt eats of treason and seamier, are openly just;.
tied and applauded at large meetings of man gad
women in yoar 4 r,
This is a sad troth, but not - disheartening. , It may
be well that circumstances hare declined to MOW •
us front our lethargy; and to compel us to open ear
eyes, as if from the delusion of a dream, to the rowth
nese and magnitude of impending listrandea. It Li
comparatively safe to honk dangers la the thee, and
meet them on the ethane*, but fatal to be appetite(
by them.
I repeat that the upset al stairs, daft as it eon
feasedly is, still is not disheartening, be.
lien there are in New England, and
the Middle and Northwestern States mallll7Zi
conscientious and patriotic eitisems, moved, it may
be at this moment, by sentiments dittoing widely
from these which will animate you tomorrow bat
who nevertheless, would not wilfully and delibe
rately shake a single column which illetatin tie
fabric of our existing leatitations—Cnaltitedes who
have been misled epee the question of duty and
personal obligations, and who now, when they harm
Practical illustration, drawn in blood, Cr the teach
ings to which they have listened, and to which they
may have given (heir anent, will puma, long
enough at least to take counsel of intefteet Mb.
son.
You, upon the soil of Hassachusetta, where the
first blood of the Revolution was shed, and where
Slinehington took command of the army is one of
the deftest periods in our csantris history, cannot
gaze listlemly upon the gathering ekorde, and will
not bow tamely before the coming storm. We may
all hare regarded with too mush indifference the
swelling tide of reckless fanaticism, but we are not
too late to breast it now. If honed men, rite re.
ally think the Mien worth preeerring, will stand
forth in the majesty and strength of patriotism and
law, and with united purpose and
back
enargy,
they an and will roll that tide bad, to the dismay
and discomfiture of all conspirators against the
public pome and the integrity of the seated beat
which Folds us a suited people.
I am glad to perceive that your meeting is to be
composed of citizens *traria' us pities. The high
resolve, aid the solemn duty to which I have joist
adverted, rim above the range of thoughts and
motives which ordinarily connect themselves with
political organization and party IPEOCIMBIL • If vs
are true to ourselves; if we revere the memory, or
appreciate the service of our fathers, we shall L ot.
get, in the exigency of this crisis, that there Is , or
ever has been. mob thing as party in the ordinary
wept/Hob of the term. At all meats, we will
forget it. rintß., throogit oar steady, united .huts,
we see the matted ty of the Caratitntion vindicated,
and the Volta repoisog spin securely apes its old
foundation.
You are right in amerng that this ism Beelike
hesitancy ; so time fordestb, baiting halfway
profentions, or, Indeed, *einem profess ma of say
kind. It is a time for resolute pupae., to be fol
lowed by decisive. eonsistent action_ -
Shall the fundamental law of the land be elosd ;
not with evasiserahsetanee, but In good c .
Have we the prime to andante obsdinses to it, and
will we exercises that power? If en, then se :outlaw, to gayly the multiplied and aryl s
blessings of tie peerless taheritanee has
been transmitted tons. If othenrim, fanaticism Ur
not mistaken the significance of its emblem
the National frig , with "tits Cities Anne."
That has waved through Wee foreign wars,
with the Nuns sip; eheering the hearts of brave
men, on sea and land, wherever Ito folds
have unrolled in the smoke of battle! Bow mazy
of our countrymen. as they have sees it does.
ing from the mast-heed en a foreign pat, Sr
giving WI ample wimp to the breeze Over a OCIN.
snlar dace, have proudly and exultingly *inhibited
I am an American citizen, and there is the en.
sign which commands for me rasped and smutty
wherever throughout the wide world I may roam,
or wherever I mey choose temporarily to dwell !"
How one would abut him eyes, and weer his flee In
shame and sorrow, if be believed he were demised
to see the day when that deg will Boat no more. And
yet, if agitators and ooestdraters can have their
way. it must to down in darkness and Wood. Is
a &public" like ours, law alone upholds it, and
when that lows its power, all human power to save
is lost_ It such overwhelming disaster to koniant
ty is to overtake us, I, for one, wiil net by to peer
through the darkmess and blackness, or to iota
know the end.
Let us est calmly and deliberately, without pas
sion and withaat acrimony. Let as take an harry
or narrow view of the cassia which hey* pralumell
the dangers we would meet, and if rossible avert.
It is not the recent invasion of Virg t iziaorbkik
should awaken our strongestapprebension, but the
teachings, still vehemently persisted in, from which
it sprung, with the inevitable necemi4 widish
evolves the effect from the cease.
So, again, it is to o• remembered that those whe
boldly approve and applaud the se's of treason
and murder perpetrated within the limits of Vir
ginia, are not the most dangerous enemies of the
Constitution and the Union. Subtle, orally men,
who, passing by duties and obligations, habitually
appeal to sectional prejudices and passions, by dr
mooting the institutions and the people of the
South, and thus trillium the Northern mind to the
pitch cf mistime to the clear provisions of the
fundamental law,— who, under plausible pre
texts. addressed to those prejudices and maims,,
pose local laws designed to sesde oemoultaliosial
obligations, are really and truly, whether they be
lieve it or not, the men who are hurrying na elm
swift destruction.
Your reprobation of the ethical and political
teachings which inspire this line of conduct will, I
em sure, be pronounced in times so earnest that no
man can mistake their import. Vim will show, on
Jour part, readiness to glee to feltur-eidatems of
other States such just legislation by Congress as
shall provide for the punishment, not only of
actual invasion, but for the setting on foot of
armed expeditions, and thus do what you may
effectually to secure, by constitutional enact
ments, each State against violence from any
other. I shall hope that oar meeting will awaken
a spirit which will lead Massachusetts and Virginia
to grasp again, reciprocally, the hand of &fee-
Senate sympathy and suppor t—of love end honor
—as they did in 177 e, when, as the elder and more
powerful of the colonise, they made up the isms
of blood against the power °ran unjust 'Parlia
ment Why should it not be so? Is there any
cause of alienation' on our part, which did not ex
ist at the formation of the Government? Whea
have the people of the South invaded our territo
ry, slain nor people, or conveyed away oar pro
perty? Why should not the authority of New
Hanopehire honer and cherish the authority of
sissippi ? Are they] not each sovereign, but Jet
are they not bound up together in the endearing
bond of a common country ? To establish upon •
firm footing these relations between all the States
what is required but cordial, loyal, manly re•
cognition and enforcement, la spirit and in
ant, of all the requirements of the com
pact entered into by the father, who have paned
to their reward ? Can it be that there is, among
any large portico of our people, North or South,
settled purpose to accept the benefits, but deny
the burdens of the Constitution? Bus all sen
timents of patriotism and honor perished together?
If that time has come, or you discern Its approach,
then, indeed, should you, who desire to lire under
this Constitution, expounded by the august tri
bunal into whose charge our fathers gave its expo
sition, raise the voice of warning. and PITO, if it
be ble, the voice of woe. Bat it hu not °cue s
and it is still in your power to say it shell not.
There is no inevitable , irresistible impulse hurry
ing it forward.
I deny, in the name of all that is most sacred
and precious in our inheritance, that there is an
element of "irrepressible conflict" between the
Southern and Northern members of this Confede
ration. The doctrine is as unsound and untrue
as it is fearful. It is contradicted by the unbroki
experience of the first fifty years of our history.
It would have been the price of the loss of repu
tation for life to have uttered it while the men whe
fought the battles of the Reectlutionrend framed
the Constitution were yet alive. No ! It has not
come, and with the blessing of God upon the ex
ertionesof good and patriotic men, it will never be
nearer.
I bare faith in the power of your efforts. my fel.
low-citizens ; faith that y ou r example, in this rela
tion, will be followed and your action imitated, not
only in other parts of Massaelmsetts. but by citi
zens of other States, wbo appreciate the blessings
which the Constitution has conferred upon them,
and wbo, some what may, intend, on their Wise
soil and with their children around them, to claim
its protection and uphold its authority. r bare
faith, above all, that the continued favor of this
God of our fathers, who watched over oar feeble
Political beginnings, who preserved us through the
innumerable perils of the struggle for nationality,
will yet make the wrath of man subservient to the
peace and durability of this Union.
With thanks for your remembrance of me on this
occasion, and regrets that kis Impassible for me to
meet you in Fanenil Hall, 'I am. gentlemen. eery
t r uly, Your friend, Flusgsve
Hon. We. APPLETON,
Fitasrvas Gsys.e,
ll CERT J. GARDNER,
LEVERET? SALTOSITAIL, Executive e m a il ,.
EOBO 6 LENT,
J
oie T. HEAP.D,
S. T. Diu,
ELIMIT Wasinn,