i,~~~, ; BERIEZ FUDLDBERO -DAB4r (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED), , BY rpgN FORNEY, Mite)/ ZIO. 41.Y.MERSTNVT.iititilffitt twatri Owl aas :Wkikosliiole to **Venters, 081.1 t DoMP4B • Fcgrii3OOLLAMioll *NTT t[ol7llo 701 But Mornms—lnvarbibly la 16da 7111noi fat the tints ardaiDd. TAP* tiff,* tittle". • Melted to trtileteribets tint or the Clty at Taus Dot,. 1316 Alie e7iR Aiminto4 advii,4ee. ;STATYONERY. 1 NEW oraVESB. AND 1860. wm. FaVEURPHY & SONS; No. SU CHESTNUT STREET, - Below ; Fourth, MOTICA.IO KAIMUYAOTttagaII OP BLANK BOOKS, Ittade of Linea Stook. otidal Owlets svemptly exiietitee. oohs, Drafts. Notes, Cm= Presses, Letter an• sote Paers4. Kavelpos. with s. ohmotitock o dr/4:1 OOUNTINO-HOUSS sTerton U. .;,XI.4I.I.NERY -.G'OtPDS. E 729 . -FLOWER. & FEATHER. '. 0-TORE, 1211 p'ER,OTR T STREET. tellf o rt,V7ooATLY REDOC.4O PRIM, our 212);Dit i g f 144_,_ BREW, WitATat - FLOwEßS,Fikililmr oona. 1308.:RENNED Yea 8R0..1 CREBTRIIT,f3T4AND 430.131300 tn. 0419-3021 .2ißlYttylloEl9. =lid A .11 1 .:STAT 4 ' 43 HARMER • ". IMANINAOTIMEIII3 ifIIQLEBALE 1;011.061JEN '' . .I3OOTS - AND SHOES. . *0:1•118 NOR= THIRD STRUT. biodiabit of Oity mode Boob end Bhoes c 00,01041. ,o1041. HARDWARE .PARKAGE HOUSES. lAr & BRENNER. .11(08; 87, 48; ' 11 . 141) 47 NORTH FIFTH aTiBET PHILADELPHIA, WMOLESAIX COMMISSION MINICHANTS, yFoz tho isle of all kinds of MANUFAOTt!RED ILiRDWAIN, • AND irroitran or gitrossN. BELGIUM;' PNENCH, AND ENOLDED H~DWABE AND OITTLERY, Istr isonstast ttr oti bond n largo stook of Goods to say " ply Hardware Donlon. 711,14011 E OVB F/LZO, the oast or otherwits. LnrITETEE'S WOE TOOLS, BUT9IIIEWS STEEL OF FARM KIND& vnuarriv.P4TENT ANVILS AND VICES, rSHI•P CHAIN, Sabi *Cm kin& In evert varisty. • ; 4 "4 44 ROM easszi POI!, B Ali", 111 BEPEATSB PIBTOL, ArEDMING ONLYB omicse, MEW% -NEW MODEL RIFLES AND PISTOLS. MDWAIID ttititaT. 11 , 10. I. 3111.101ZiEL ___ .IPCti“.4 r , , BARD WARE • HOUSR—We 111: ,' ~ 0 .E,. . rcal7 call the attention these of, m : '',l ' . 6 : lA. iWAftWaronr: St o ok .. or t tuporteaton isdloited, and Ira de , ~ ow ' ". a* r i ts . e. atty. Airy 1 otatlYeit leant. ~:, i , - . t r.w ii 3 4 on,. Ail OtiiiS . 1r ' cc sai ' a llid gi Dpate j sillgiar tlet t . tt ... HOltffg-FIURNiitINt: G 0 tib4. Gott MR:TIIE SEASON. -• • .tr.pripEr.B AND raters, VOr.,,BETS, -700 T W4R1112.118; ZA/191RL HOT - A. ; AT 7RI ly4irsr4igaiiiiiiiNG STORM :11044 . 41 AND '1.190 (=SMUT STEM. jrak - A:M. URPHEY & CO, %' ITANAGIU,A2rD BAWLED °ORE& .OAMPI6N. , Oi aset 91qH,ascso kgasu g nr hew extfaelv i aurp,t,u 'nee% sp . 141 ."BaVia4 Veitiragoig [MO fiiitinona, 'Molt ore p r by all wbo bait! used Wm tO DO 411trIeti°41 era finish of time 4ab t l i mete maw r.w...z"garriar ohataoter gh ol u t t bZ in3ir am trall-Dm WHIGS. CHEMICALS, &c. DR 8, GLASS, PAINTS, Aso: ROBT. SHOEMAKER & CO: NORTHEAST COV( • SWATH AND MOE MUT% WROLEBA - LE DRUGGI4TS, 4. Importers and Dealers to WINDOW GLASS, PAINTS, &a, invite the tattenhon of COUNTRY. MERCHANTS To their isota efeek of Owls, whioh they offer at the lowest Market rata. 00-tt SCALES. - evr MANCHESTER SCALES.—Counter, dirgouratirorm, Warahousa, Bay, OW, and Railro ad dames, • • 4ilio. P4tua GS ta k.Ato;ddali t nl i zir T 's Patent), aad Belt- Aria ETAVRANTELEI. FAIRBANKS' PLATFORM WALES For solobz_Ftipaak it grl . E is. on-ly MEDICINAL. 11111 )18. - WMEILOW lta Al REPRIURNCk e NUILSE AND MUM& "lifraTilri eurfrin her row OHILDIttIi TEETHING I Eitetirj:4l . t a tiv i d .r mf rg o tt n iiiv i nt _ W r i t clin e rarn i kif &WWI: Arend Upon xi', mothers, it will rtve rest to youivelveo iI ItELWAND itztaalt TO YOUR mon. Webs e out osaroe %li lt, M u ir l ia S iLL ; tria Eli in wi t y i te o l a SY tr u th Qy • 41, V . }ED, _in_ e: 11 STA ,T 1 :1 SI CURE. wof 61 4190. over .(d ;,., we know an _ionises oi non soy one _ ho mild it , VA the eon. . are delothtu W With its operations, tiato tonne or Weise • ..... mmendatiouiftta mil Ward medical vi ~ .17 met. We spesk In nuttier what wed r z know,.' after ten yed open ,and pledge ou r ..., repatatum Iphe to - cgtl ir ek r irA . hso do mi eis i r: thr in ut s t a e ri veri Ilameiti2 t irso7:erdi • E . Lod 'Vasco or Well y of i rAr . 72. . 0 sdrrastero eso k e stl i wrp w 0 Lea and glifiP T l n ow tins and has been ued never- I _sir II ra , iio ANDS _ OF.CANRS. , teat oat, re Breathe v child from pm, bat ,41- orates thes=h z , bolls, oor i reots mut:, I Inv , " . b rtibe I t. town ?Tell'lNTl t rkd .f , 4r. IA 0 0 uOl.l and cowpox, elm , . Vil lab ;vet To ~ s lirml Pirind.v. in Lizifinalintri. :, ghlur.„,,T t 1 Den gor from any other cause. .. e would us to Mt= Znitrat i ; 3 1 ,41, atlZ .4. lritill sorts pre! 4104 0. . ot-o_th - 7 a. eft; fri .ei Mi d m • altifitY.- t 4O ro tg. 1 us o giug ui me wl ins, ;4 : timely au4. S,ol d lions s tae and - "an 21 tZle s oVlnti. ims, New I s in o ..: ule ontalcupwrapper. 46:111. tratralitr iu straVg id. 1 l at i- As ili sail a hotels „ JOHN MACKAY'S PURR RXTRAOT OF CALVES' FEET, , Ltriatit t lefiliotlV l MPi t g4 EDWARD PARRISH. to ARCM Street. 4101.1 4 WEVBR. _ Nat4,l4 VIN E apvetit, itSotr Al3 :llR6Abead EIPRIIOI3 Streets D %AWING AND PAINTINO MATE. ALCM. pgimlets' and domineers' Stationery, er pra. terialev s 'n s o Co l lor tit, and s ilo for Artois and eta, Hand Piotriro Framer, tearde. American sad Fran& sratis to nu trade. BOHOL& LAIVENIZILY, -WHO - Lan Athl o ar i llfr h 1E, ' 1011:11 . 14,1 M WEST INDIAN BITTERS.—These eels heated Bitters ate Pontine with general, favor. They meg etreoteellpana pinneneutlT owl! f l r Ilqr; liera stir rye out of tvtizt of proper tone Mid es moo pae s l d deti r by thT g rolrgt n tlie ' pl l i e n 7 eilo r :l h ortl i ee Tgrge usutpd Sr - Steeped Europe for the cotedy our or Doe mono, !Aver complaint. Epitome Dpi ht Fever and " L : • TH ' g " 3 rlst-lin:n. yr, corner SIXTH lien nr nAir;F: Street& leitENCli -WINDOW. GLASS 'otv hand - m; - ". MO for pate_hy IrtetIRRILL & BRtent RR, al •---- •,• rim• et mild 49 Mirth FIMONI) kt rA qt. - 114.4 aassortment,; or d4ti l ls 4 1=1: 11"" o. R i .VU l eT T i e S h O t a ti" • : 411-6, , th rRn T•Fare.t. • 043.1t-110UeLF,MULAItiff*--.00 hhds tistie+OFltbsrrellifskustebk ir ityr, 'Cr°, !DITRO,NELI4 I—Foi 1 —Foi sale by L •.- _w,glirigßitute.Bß,THEßi " OS: ' - 47 no9l 49 North, tcycrorin 80449.. - . 110,W4) I*NilriV paws StIIIAR.- itAA OW, i*Alift4o.l4lo;"Vi .:',..-- , •f• . . . r''. ••„‘-.„,.\ 1.• i ii ii /:,/ , ..1,..• -.. trlta,,, ' r .- _, ..'. ; 1 . • •,• ~ 1..-, - -, •'• ‘,tt 19 ~ if , .:' •-:,,:, 4 -, ii. " A • . •••••••••• . . . ' 1 '3 4 ;•••••' ' .fr 3. • -3•• .\., % I t 1 / . ,:. A ; . , _ 3. • A. A _ t ''' ( d" 3.3•• ,r • • • C . 4 1.3-FI L '• Jll ' • t .4 ,,, g dp '.•:-:,: j; „„f,. •*".... 4, ..4"!.',, , ..."' 5 . - . ; .'' .,4 '.TrA, t4 ... A ,11 '" " -‘"- - -- f ilt ... . ~. ~. .. ~. i k .,.. ~,.. ~........iiig. ~,,,, I .. ,f , : 4":4 ft::::. ,- . ft,2_ All „4...... . _..:ft - 4 --e - v.,' ~ '". r .. t_.. 6#.t' '. ~ .*7. ': -.- 4' , * . • f; , 44 , 4 - cft ftr i pilft P-, 1,1 --• - 17 -,' -` 1' I.le-1.;1. -.--- --; , :- -1 ;, -.. , ''.: , , -.,i . : . .. : i ..: • ~ t . , ' -- --: ; - ' . (e • ~,,( 4fti ..; ',...` .ft, ft, . ffft . .Aft 4t4 A5.Y.,,,,i'.. ..g ~,,,ayi , 1 .44 -•-•{...;,,- • t:-..•-', •••fy. ,i W., 41 c.i. ' 4l- 'e'';'"' .- ! , ...Pt...'` '• , ..."'i l t 5 . 44 1. 5" '''';':r'- -- - --'-'11.,..t::,,,,t - c ...) , .4 :,...;•••:?‘..... '';...:...'',' .... l'''''' '''' 3,4 '';• 4 • - ,E.c .....i.r, , , , , t. e . ~ ....... t .......,...:,,„„...,,,,J.„. .. / 4-• ------ - I' •t' 44 ~.( 2 Cf -." ..Q .,, ft , • " . " ;--. ... ft:7% _:,.., ~ #:, A` , i Plt •. --- - ..r r' : .- -4-:;.--- "" -r--- 0 ,—. -- ---*. . ''' .. .-, ' N. - 110 ''' ' .. - ;•:.4.. ' ;` .. t ..' l k . ''' -' , , s ' - ' - -.1'7.- ' -.7--- - 0 h ft" ..'' ''' " - '.:-..-' ' .-- ' ,---'.-- ----:'-'>--. , . ......_, _ ~.... . - ..-grt.,. ..,-. 5 :72,. -._ •. .... I .' L,:*l . l l ' „L : l_ 1- . r . l. -- •.7 - 1 ( : . ...t,. • • e ...i i ~,:•.•, -----.. --- -- t,,.4, ----- -- , --- , --_4 - .—' -..' Z--',„-- VOL. 3.-NO. 140. RETAIL DRY GOODS. DECEMBER REDUCTION . - IN PRIOE% L. 3. LEVY & CO. Animitio4 to the Public, and their Customers that to ao cordat:el with their usual custom at this Beason of the year, they have reduced the prices of their stook of FANCY ,DRY - GOODS. Whioheorriprisesinany photo@ and beautiful descriptions of goodi suitable for CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. b., . & Co. have received, this week, a very snows oolleotion of Embroidered Cambria HMI, New Uwe Goods, ~Embroideries, km, to which there will be added, on Monday. December lit, several rases of Noureautee, eameatly. seteeted for HOLIDAY PRESENTS. • ' : 809 andlll O.II3gBTNIIT BTlt BT. 1114' LAMES' FANCY FURS F. WOMRATH. NOB. 416 AND 417 ARON STREET, NM NOW OPEN 818 USUAL CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF FURS, Made of stoatr selected by bin/self In Swope during the past Spring, 0c628-61u 4bLOAKB CLOAKS 21 WENSE ATTRACTIONS. EVERY KEN STYLE. RATRY NEW MATERIAL. THE LARGEST STOOK IN THE CITY. sr rrtoi. more 1011110111 able than at any other estab nahment. IVENS. AS SOUTH NINTH STREET. CLOAKS I CILOAES I / THE MUTEST VA PPI RQAINB IN CLOAKS lIVER uittED. • IVENS, at-tt itS SOUTH NINTH STREET. 4-4 PARIS CHINTZES, 25 canto. CU RWFN STODDART & BROTHS % 460aL1, 422, ul ll 462 North ORSON D Street. St above, Walow. PINK AND •BLUE FRENCH PLAID • OLOAR rl4 OS. t;Sx WEN STODOART te BROTHF.R. Sal, St alrAr 450, ' and 444 No, th SECoND e rtreet, STELLA MIAMI'S, BROC SE' HORD FR S. Of all desire WA. nolo. a and rylet, CUR WES nTODDART 8e BROTHER, - 460, 462:and 464 Anita oEcr 'ND riven., jal2 St *brave 9ja PILLOW OAS LINENS . , I.) • gelvAEI *eats perran d. CURWL a ndD DAR & BEIOTURW, “0, IA 04 North bE(X.ND r eef. lat9lt above wallow nLIIE PLAID FLANNELS. 2.1 1, Flagon' Broobe Shawls, Fine Cloth Cloaks. Woollen Lore shawl". Pretty 20 and 22 oent Coining'. 991 and e II 61/ Wool RObell. letVih ef and 88. meat Rook Ittouvoli um 93 to 041 agate.. vent alt-wont Yield". CABBI94EBEB. It for best Fancy Cuel mores. - Ono& at $ t, BLIO, and 11.15. ' • att.ngta and Clasiatoro",4o to 70 *sag. eat we very o gap SO oent Opt-rate Bbl te and Drawers. Gloves, Ties, Hap, 80., auction lots. _ of of IP Is it a u. , .012 111 . 121XTR and MARKET.. N. B.—LIYT N GOODS. a large and desirable clock of °gory desonytion. ______ ' alo TIIORNLEY & Northeast mow EIOIIIII and SPRING OAR DJ N Streets woold invite ottentinn to their stook of IRISH LINNtlf iID6FB., arc.. Of their own direct Amportittion, whack they can confi dently recommend. Also. ap excellent stack ic! - typing and Etlteettn; Mending. wand) and Amerioan lltiintets Ind Flannels. ottoi Commerce, And Satinetts. *realties quilt' and Comfortable'', &o. Atlantic of Cloaks and Sancho and blanket Shawls selling at lengthenooat 1 Rich Fancy Silks very cheap. Beet makes of Black Bilk, Is, All our stook will be found desirable. Jaß OSINRY CI.001)8. —J. WM. .110 - Open 6131 1 11 80 k g otlgi l l i ell i atigi g . 417 e l t ielge n e o st w e atul Drawers oT artemeht anti Warner's sone nor mann restore, for ladies' and misses' wear. raerito Shine and Drawers, toysente and youths. Merino Hosiery, Cotton Hosier Woollen Hosiery.. Gloves and Gaunt pi, and go s gionprally eppertainipg to the Hosiery Mem .J. .H.. respeotrully solicits the attenton of snultes to his stook, assuring theta that Ise 'took s on eseeked for variety by any other in the atty., an dthat his ttieocapp.es towns name of ear atfler regular heath N. 8.-It abatement wide from the prince named.. sil-wrenr 4-4 id ASO NVILL E LONG-CLOT II Martins at US oesita—the bent " levy" muslin in the market WINTER DREBB GOODS, all. induced In prim Previous to &oak takinK. ipul'e Frenah Merinos, In wilds', Mania, plain, and h h *alert. , Broohe and Blanket Bhawla in4reat Intl. C ARLtli ADAMS, la 2-0 , EIGHT and A CH Mmes. SUARPLESS BROTHERS have now open the balance of their Fanny Dram Goods. hiouseolinei. Calicos, Plaids. - Blob 6iike arid Bones. Pinured Merinos, Poplins. Marked et mud rednoeSpnete to sell off the stook. an CHESTNUT AND EIGHTH. LYONS OLOAK. VELVisTd. All widths of these goods in brllllani blacks. cone The y MS composed of pure Bilk, and cone the beet manufacture that reaches thus market. lmported expressly for our retail gales 811 AR by eLt;sB IMMURES, (WRATH 1T .and MTHHTH Ptrtota. COMMISSION HOITSES. FARRELL & MORRIS. CIIESITIUT OTREBT, IMPORTERS. AND COMIXISSION 'VERO Hdi NTS CLOTH O, OAEI9DIBAE4, 110EBRINEL AND 8P111.113 AND BUltibira COATINGS, ISANTBLETZI, PANTALOON STUFFS, FROTHINGLL43Ido WELLS, $5 LETITIA STREET, AND 34 SOUTH FRONT STREET. CIOTTONA.DES. Suable dor both (noway and Jobbers, intim* sviety. SUM= COATINGS AND CASEMERETTaI Made hp Washington Mills. ti Vi e r iltalren for these desirable goods for Spring trade. SULPLEY, HAZARD, & HUTCHINSON, NO 112 CHESTNUT ST., COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE SALE OF PHILADELPHIA-MADE out. GOODS. LEGAL. STATE OF JOHN MARTIN, LATE OF •IL:A lien Earl township deoeesed.—The undersigned. Auditor. appointed byteh Orphans' Court of the county of Lanoanter. to pews upon tho exceptions Bled to rho ncoount of the F.xecutors &Ike amid decensertid to dis tribute the balance remitininr in their Kama to and N arit e to s i v ir li te , Aly d eptatled thereto , hereby ye cation for the purpose of their appoint mlnt, on Plti DA Y the nth of January . A. D., 15'4. et 3o clock P. 111.. at the Court House. in the city of Len t:as att ter. d if hey think roner. 'when and where al, persons interested m " enD D 0 F.SHI,FATAN, al MON P. )7,DY. ABRAM SHANK. Auditor". rretteeeTelt. December 23. M. 0.11/•hrt TRH OMPIIANS' COURT FOR I'llE ou'Y AND 091(a YOF PHIL ELPIMAi Estate of Dittlae MAN KING. deeeapetl. The Auditor 'oopein hy the Cowt to nuda. sett)°, end adjust the Recount or prIIN Q. ADAMS. Adminis trator. and to make dietribution of the histapoe In the hertdaot the accougt‘et, will meet the parolee interested for to voipoet hie appointment on M ONLA Y. the 10th ay of Japing. at 4 o'clock P. fit, at the Wetherill Haute, 01 4 ;01KULL Ettrent,_above Sixth. In the city of Philadelphia.ito-i UHARLES T.COLLIS. Andlter. - - TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE CITY AND COUNTY OF PHILA DELPHIA. TN Auditor appointed hr the Court to audit, fro. the Cash Aooriunt of H. J. Biddle Esq. Trustee of Mary M. Riuketts, under deed of trust of 'J. Ricketts and M. M. Ricketts; dated April ID, IMO, recorded in deed B'k W. R. No M. pas° AM. wiA peat all parties in at the office N 0.702 wALNUT Street, Phila delphia, on MON BAY.l6th January IMO. at 4 o:elook P. M. pal-wfm•St• I KD, WALK. Auditor. 1111DITON't3 ENCAUSTIO TILES fol at floors. ori.tal Claw TT for cottages. ttri aeee r TWater oondordoro Implied and AT .2.tr 4A. IN If IiIhAVIAIM RY ' P MOLASSES, &c.-500 lihd3. and i l / 4 -7 ~ ~. eholee and mediate Syrups. iden t prime Mee cave, (verve,. lor We by JAPANS ORAHAM. & CO., LE L Street. Jag GU" BUAMON Y—Vlrgio, for sale by WETREttILL & ?340TH ER. J 494 7 and 4M ninrth 8E0uNI) Street. kEIOtILDERS. —7O hhds. dry salt Shoal t?tlarnhat reeelved and for sale * hi C. 0. SA.DLER ;act , — A Null Attest. 9.1 W., .1.1. From Jai • Tim—Pri m e retailing Charleston Meal .11010 ter isle br JAMES ORAEAAt it 00., LET ITIA areek Jag , , WATCHES, JEWELRY, deo. F. P. DUBOSQ & BON blautata4turen and Importer. of JEWELRY. J. B. JARDEN 88 BRO.. kisaufloturers and Importers of SILVER PLATED WARN AT FIRST FRIOESt WATCHES, JEWELRY. SILVER AND PLATED WARE, The above, Whofemale Manufacturers and Importere, find that the reputation of their wares has extended De- Yond the eirele of dealers, to such an extent that the calla of consumers at their counting-rooms cannot meat proper attention. Thq advantage to them, as manufac turers. 9f direct arsinaintanoe with the wants and tastes ef indiviquals porch/1140p for their own We. 10 too high rfraepreetated to allow them to negleot the °mama thus ° P l o r ghe more to:revoltAMY Olassilloation and diaptaj of pair CHOICEST STYLES. they have fitted up the NEW STORE, No, 1098 CHESTNIIT STREET, Where IF offer. at FIRST ( even' dawn:l -lion ofJE WELRY in DAMONDS, PEAR LB, STORM_ 0 L a oomolete stook of SILVER and WARE, orthe funs , : quality, in ri.Eoui or MS. A. full inmortment of Etunten and Bwris WAtonne of the mostselebrat.d_makers. will be In the oare of F. CONBTANT RICHARD, to woose skilful °horse our customer work eon be confidently entrusted. dla-lm WHOLESALE ROOMS. SO4 CHESTNUT ST. SILVER WARE. WM. WILSON & SON Write owls' attention to their stook of SILVER. WARS. which Is now unnenally large, affording q wi nery of pattern and design utunupeased by any bonne the 'United States, and of finer mighty than Is snanolho tared for table use In any part of the world. Our Standard of Silver La 9115-1000 parts pan ma English Sterling 9254000 " American and French 900-1000 It Thus it will be seen that we give thirty.five parts purer than the American and Frenoh coin, end ten parts purer than the English Sterling. We melt all our own Silver, and our Foreman being consumed with the Refining De partment of the United States Mint for several yearsore guarantee the quality as above (9SS), which is the fleas sant eau be made to be serviceable, and will resist the action of aalds much letter gas the ordiaare Biker ataaaradared. WY. WILSON & BON, B. W. CORNICE!. PUTII AND °DERRY BM B. B.—Any !Maneuver enver manufactured u agreed upon, but posisfrely eons istforior SO /Yoga and Ameri ca* standard. Dealers sapplied with the rams standard ea need in oar retail department. Fine Silver Ilars.10.101)3 oasts we, eanstantly on hand. nnss•rm PREPARED GLUE. SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE! 'A STITCH. IN TIME SAVES NINE." ECONOMY 1 SOT TER PRIORS! As esculents soil, /tappets, even in teell.vsgulatact tt is very desirable to have some cheap and convenient way for repairing k urnittue, Toys, Crooks ry, ko. SPALDINCPRPREPARFD oLn. meets all such emergencies, and no household can afford to be without it. It is always ready and up to the stink ing point. There is no linger a necessity for limping chairs, splintered veneers. headleas dolls, and broken mauler. It is lust the article for done. shell, and other ornamental work, so popular with ladies of refinement and taste. This admirable preparation is used oold, being she ; moans , hold is solution, and possessing all the valuable Qualities of the beet cabinet-makers' glue. It may be need in the place of ordinary maples*, being vastly more adhesive. USEFUL IN EVERY ROUSE." 11, B. A brush sooonipanies Guth bottle. PRICE TWENTY•PIVE CENTS. Witoteente Depot, No. 30 PLATT Street, New Tort. &Orem • .tiENRY O. BPALDING A CO., Box No. 3801, New York.. Fu rip for Dealers in Caw* contginina four, eight. and twelve dozen, a beauhfut Ltthograplua Snow-cant , anoompanying eivAi paokage. Er A single tottle of SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE Intl sage tin times its wit annually to °eery household Bold by all bropritoat Stationers, Drug lots, Estd ware and Furniture Dealers, Grooers, end Fanny Stores. • Country Merohnnts should make a note of SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, when making up their lint. IT WILL STAND ANY CLIMATE, d23-mwf•p ViVAKItr, 11.1/13A0155, ESTABLISHED 1760. D S.N urr R AuC O O MAN " J R, T & F TOB RIE uFACTuunR, 16 acid 18 CHAMBERS ST_RBET, i :oroterly 44 Chatham street, Newcwt.) Wouldoall the espemal attenton of (4t oeere pad print to to hp removed, nett Moo the Ifiloioll Of bia mauttOkoturo, via ! BROWN SNUFF. • . . M - _acaboY. Perpisros, !int HAPPee. run Virginia, Coarse fehvgail, .• Natchitoches. Ame"VanAlngiltFF- peCo nhosam tlookrb rrosh Scotch High ThasiSootah, o r H-g un h 1 1 , 2 0. n.t. Fresh Roney Dowfr o irk eo. or L OF L lIMOICINO. SINE CVT CUMIN°. SMOKING. NO. /, P. A. L.. or plain, 8L Jag°, 10,2, Cavendish , or ilwe4t, Iduensli. N ,I& 2. Mix'd,Oweet Beouted Orinooo 'mister, t il itefoot. Tin Poll Cavendish. pure Turkish. 0 reeler of Pries* will be sent en epplination. d pm .—Nnte the new article of FiskFisk Scotch Snuff, with will be found a superior artiole for dipping er. poses. 2.1-3 6ATENETf3. ZWISsLER & FIORILLO, 135 NORTH THIRD STREET, Eve for sale a largo raga/ of CIGAR S OF THE BEST HAVANA BRANDS. TOBACCO, SNUFF, PIPES, Ac. AGENTS FOR SAIL & AX, GERMAN SHOEING TOBACCO AND CIGARS, oag-om JOB PRINTING. THE NEW JOB PRINTING OFFICE "THE PRESS" oraporod to exeoute neatly. °lmply end expodatiolitlf IVY DINCEITTION 011. PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL PNINDINCI. PAMPHLET!!. BLANKB OP EVERY DESCRIPTION, POSTERS, friutlng for AIJOTIONELAR, LAWYERS, MERORAIiTS, MANITFAOTUREIUS, MECHANICS, BANKS, lIEL All orders left at the Poblioatlon °Moe of The Press, No. 417 CHESTNUT STREET, will be proMPtlf ttende4 tn. lelB-tt PAPER HANGINGS, &c. TO CLOSE BUSINESS. We offer from uow to the end of the year our LARGE STOCK OP PAPER HANGINGS, AT GREAUX. REDUCED RATES, Poisons wishing filth' Houses Neared, nun get vest BARGAINS Er Wins ertyly on HART, MONTGOMERY, & CO., d 1341 NO. 322 CHESTNUT STREET. JAVA CUFF E.-1.000 pockets prime • java Cone. for IMO by JAMES ORAILAM A- CO.. LETITIA Street. Jag SAI4ISIOAIA—For side by WETII- N 3 EJULL k, MOTHER, 47 and 49 I'iOUTIT Bt.eet. Jalo PII.EAPEST. WINDOW GLASS in town, i II i aDIGICII.. B. W. urn.? of BliVEN•Moad DISPATCII i PAPER LtOOKI4, OIROULAMI, BILL READ% HANDBILLS, LABEL! RAILROAD AND INOURANOR COMPANIES PHILADELPHLA, FR MY. JANUARY 13, 1860. ( CPC ( 41 rt FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 189 b! PERSONAL AND POLITICA, MARRIAGE! EXTRAORDINAZY....I2I ,4/0 TiXoronto Colonise, under the matrimonial headVappeare the following singalaraotice f 4 ‘ Mama —By the Itev.Johnßrowu,, ruby terlan Milliner at the village at,/low eget, township of Vhitchurch. C. W,,,.- at ° : Teal dance of the bride)! father Benjamin': : woo, Toronto, Orange Brigade . bruin-filejoy,-, p i ,-Yull scarlet regimentals, with _Orange aatib{ t rard, he., to Flora, eldest daughter of Mr. A !Maid, McMillen, of East ft wlllimbery, C. W. W. en the minister got through with the neetooary oellimilmy by law establiched, with a very Appropriatellieture on the occasion, the bridegroom itamediatery -after wards requested to add a few wordaan the riabJeot, and after he bed get the sanction of all Intl vitae witnesses, drew Ins, sword troth the scalthe ; and giving it into the bride!a band, kohl, in tit tire• Intl vitae of all there assembled, ' T now au alcire you, my dear wife, to plunge this naked . word in my breast In cage you find Me unfaltllifp4 ;the marriage tie now taken place between moral Ooh (as unworthy of a moment's longer 'exlitOce); henceforth you will have this owordploceil q, the head of your bed at s vour service . 'Al 'Matt seemed very feelingly Impressed on the he ' rig of / his heartfelt remarks , antnieltended." ~,, birltDEß AND SELv-Mrtiharrog.—An iii we- man, eighty yenta of age ,- rending near A, , urn, the county seat of DeKalb oonnty, Indiana,' beat her husband who woe as old as herself, Oh an axe and olub till he died, This was six wwska ago today. She was lodged in Jail, and on the follow ing Sunday she procured a common ease-1110'4nd sharpened it on the stovoldpe In her 4'5014 tyjih the intention, she said, of cutting her throat; but roaring the knife was not sharp enough for the operation, cut or sawed a bole through ilo the cavity of the abdomen—tore out a portion hf the caul, and then seised the large Intestine—cirldett that..and cut off a piece about five inchei long, thrOwing the piece Into the stove, but it siis s se cured before it wee burnt too molt for ideatiihra tion. She le now getting well. The rem** the assigned' for the act was that ebo wantatto go where her old man wee. I . • - • • • • • No surgical ahl was rendered, ne it woe lion& she would die, but the Inflammation bee subeided— the storritioble end of the intestine protruding about two Inches tut of the wound, through which the secretions pass . The bag has been partially insane for some time. She tells fortunes, and call* herself a witch, Moms FIIEIGIIT TO TEE FOIITtt THIS WIXTIC:I THAN EVBIt neronc.—The Control Railroad of geiirgla, 'tinning from Savannah to Macon, connecting at Savannah with a tri.weekly line of ateasnektps to New York, li the grand freight.earning :road of the South, and would ho the first to feel a Wing oifof trade with New York. The year enditigpeo 1, 1852, showed an unnoralleled suocest, thot net narninge being nearly 25 per rent on the capital. The month of December, 1839, shows an lass of receipts over the corresponding moot of the preceding year of $23 200; and the baslaed *V the month of January, than far, meintalos the mete advance. We lin leve the Southern sternness serer did a better winter bushiest than they are now doing. A now additional steamer le nearly featly to hike her place in the Bement' Ilne.-41! Y. Tribune. A GREAT Orte.—Lieut. Rodman, who banded a plan for casting cannon hollow by the •tree of a core, through the centre of ableh a strewn of wa ter to forced for csonducting off the beat and thus cooling a large mass of metal, recently Wit gon suoessafully cast which weighed upward of Cdr. tyiire tons. The casting, which is four ifiut in diameter find nineteen and a half feet long, if said to be the largest cannon in the world. Thistion ster cannon ores oast tiro latter part of last istonth, at a foundry in Pittsburg, Pa,, and has: been named the Floyd, after the Soorstary of War. As Tient. Badmen's plan for casting proyedlintrrely suenesqul, it Is said that should guns of this calibre be required they can be manufactured with des patch, and in any quantity. L.T. The Count de Leurlaton, whose duel with the Marquis de Oalliffet has been narrated by Malakoff," has written the following letter to the IndwndaneA Beige, whose correspondent tied spoken of him as a man of eizty—years old : " Mortsiour le redadeur—l am one of Hnoi- who think it in always well to defend onts'errAtuoci; loch by boob, In now writing Jo you, (Ina ground I have to defend is that of my ago; but I nevertheless with to have this letter inserted, in order to correct a mistake in ono of your Paris let tors of the 9th—a letter, In all other respects, er namely flattering for me. This mistake is, morally speaking, tomewhot of a detnmont to my honors- Me adversary, and, in regard to the physical feet of my ago, it is detrimental to 7nyeelf II am nearer to fifty than aixty years of age. I am a great sportsman ; would you like to ace my license to shoot ? I often travel ; will you are my pats. port? It is my gray beard which bee played me thle.shabby trick ; my beard makes me look much older than I am, and is mash grayer than my muttaablos. I have been advised to Shave my board and keep only my mustachios, and I avidly think I must do no till I reach the ago of ably." BucllAaAa'e BACEF,RII.—Mr. Dnobanan says, in hilt late montage. that the question of the right of the people of a Territory, like those of a State, to determine se to slavery, bee been settled by tbo Supreme Court. The late Democratic. Convention took the ground that it had not so nettled It, and nay Whenever it shall hereafter be properly me• tented for adjudication, and finally determined by that tribunti, its decision will ho obligatory on the people of the United States." This was unanimously patted. Be, it teems, of the Familial anti-Douglas men, there erne not, In the Convention, a man to beck Bedew' In his opinion. In fact, the whole platform of resolutions breathes nothing but Douglas interpretation of the Cincinnati platform, and not a vote dissented to thin view.:—Cleveland (Ohto).Plasndealer. Derviem or Deentana.—lt it eto rare, in this age, to meet with a defence of the practice of duel ling, that wo publish, as a curiosity, an argument to its favor wo find in the Southern Confederacy, published at Atlanta, Georgia. That paper says ; , (Wo do not regard it an any groat honor to fight a duel, tend or accept a challenge, pimply for the notoriety in the matter, but we do look upon any man as disgraced who refuses to send or wept a ohallengo niter he hes placed himself in a position that requires it, according to the recognised neago amongst gentlemen. We know of no instance where the fighting of a duel injured any man, but there are innumerable (Mee whore the refusal to meet the demands of gentlemen has sot the meal of Infamy upon men. It area not the law that did this. but a-lightened nubile opinion. "Public opinion is law amongst and with all in telligent and oultivntod classes; public opinion has Nitrated and endured duelling. It het oven been endorsed by God himself. The firstdael that wetted of was botwoen David, the Israelite, and Goliath, the Philistine. Gott challenged , David so 'eepted, and the ruddy boy slow the giant. David afterwards become King of Israel• and one of the most distingulobed statesmen of his tribe end gene. ration " We hold further, Mane gentleman willoffer en indignity without a fined I urpom to give satiefao tion as recognieed by the min of honor. "Ile who insults a gentleman whom be knewe is governed by the rode, and then skulks behind a statute, or hie religion• le a base coward and a poltroon Public sentiment has rendered this verdict, In all cases, and there is no escape. Again, we hold that no man should engage In controversy, such as public Ppenking and editing newspapers, unless be fa ready sod willing, nt all times, to render antiefnetion to those who demand it; we moan where all things are equal. Where duelling is recognised. society Is always bettered, fewer insults aro ',med. and the nubile peace seldom dimurhed. Female Muddily Is protected, the de• tumor is aileneed, and the cowardly marked. ft lee gent bleesiog and advantage to all °element ties to find out who are and who aro not the onwards; for all cowards are mean. dinhoneet, and j a nuisance to society. There are conselentious professors of religion who are right in not engaging In duels, for the ma son only that a good man will not insult. a gentle man, and a gentlemen will not insult (In his sober senses) a Cbristinn gentlemen. But if a Christian gentleman is Insulted. or fool that his bonor is wounded, as did David by the challenge of Goli ath, we think ho would fight, and it Rao the prompting of Inspiration that enusorl David to meet Goliath In mortal combat. 'David represent•• ed the great family of bred, the chosen people of Cod, and they wereinsult:d by the taunts and Joon of Goliath, a powerful Philistine; and to protect the honer and prestige of the house of Dead, Da vid went forth, armed with that chlvairle spirit thatOnd had implanted in his bosom, and slow him who bad defied his people. " Duelling has been recognised by gentlemen, In all ages of the world, ne the proper method by which to settle difficulties; rand no people, save the Puritans and round heads, bat what have ea• domed it, and legalized it by the ptuilir yoke. There should be no reetrietions unon duelling. If a gentleman Insuite you, and refuses to make the anionic, challenge him. If he fella to lecognlse the usage, post him, and let pnblio opinion (as It awa y., does) rebuke him for hie cowatdico, and disown hint in society. "Thl' Is public opinion in South Carolina, Vir ginia, and other places; end where, we ask, can there be found hotter society, hotter morale, more Christian piety, true philanthropy, a higher sense • of honor, or n titers noble roes of men than these of the Palmetto State? What has done It? The recognition, in a great measure, of the duello.- Cowards, cravens, Reduoorp, and Slanderer', cannot live in South Carolina. The code of honor has driven all such men from her limits. Wherever duelling is not recognised. the 'miller', the Ignora mus. the blackguard, and the poltroon are the con trolling spirit. in society. There aro no lines of demarcation where there should be degrees and grades. according to the manner In which men de mean themselves, There taunt he distinctions and grades in society, for the public good demands it, and nothing retains the proper line of demarcation in 'moiety so well as the full recognition of the du elling system." LUCK' s famous opera of " Orpheus" has been Mired in Paris, anti received the highest praise, Madame Viardot has the part of Orpheue, and hat addod to her triumphs by its porformance. Lotter from Washington. (Oorreapondensa of The Pram] WASHINGTON, Jan. ii, 180 lion. George W. Scranton, of Pennsylvania, in trodnoed a series of Union resolutions from the •alley of fair Wyoming. Re supported them In a short, written speech, which, in to far as I could hear It, seemed sensible. no earns hero without knowing any one, a perfect stranger, but he did not intend any one to fulfil the scriptural idea and take him in. Ile had heard Mr. Sherman's die claimer, ho was satisfied with it, and also satisfied that a descendant of one of the greet pioneers and founder!! of Rhode Island would do nought to bring disgrace upon such en ancestry. He also "complimented the patrietio and Unlan-loving sontimente which had been avowed by the South Americans—suoh men as Weldon, Stokes, Anderson, do.—and hoped that their constituents would con tinue to return such men and more of them. lie did not share their polities, but no disunion pent!. Anent had fallen from that gallant phalanx. Mr. Scranton is a good-looking, well-faelioned gentle .than, °owing up towards fifty. Mr. Campbell followed in a heated strain of patriotism. Be exulted in what be called the un conquerable Anglo-Saxon blood. Ito made a brief but impesaiontxt tribute to the Union; and was about to read Garin% of Georgia, is statistical Ito tare—apropos of that gentleman's declaration that one cotton crop of Georgia could purchase the whole of Peunsyleanin— when the stalwart Georgian begged to say that be meant to say that elm !cotton crop of Isis State could purchase * 4l/ the arms in Pennsylvania. Ron. James L. Pugh, of Alabama, delivered Speech, unusual for Its brevity, (for a set speech), ai well as for its closeness and strength. It was a theoretical essay, and devoted to the philosophy of the slavery question and its reference to the questions of the day. Mr. Pugh is a secesaionist, if I know what. that term menu. It is but a day or two since he said he would perpetuate discord, if he eould; and I knew what he would say when be took the floor, but I wee not prepared for the ability with which be presented his views and oonolusions. He aneoringly reviled the psalm•singing to the ULion which takes place In the North, and said it was but tho tell of the anaconda Ito did not believe that' the Constitution could survive the tests with 1 , which It had been loaded, or that we could get back to the purity and patriotism of our fathers. Perfect !mord was not necessary to harmony. Tho solar system exhibited tho most splendid il lastration of counter action providing perfect bar mony. Of course, ho took the ground of secession in case of tbo elootinn of a " sectional President," and is a believer in a united South. Mr. Pugh is a sturdy-looking, ralddle.aged gen- Hainan, both In figure and feature, strongly re• minding ono of Mr. Kellogg, of Illinois. Ills fees Is full, freshly tinted, and closely shaven; his cheeks massive enough to show that be 13 not easily moved from a position ones taken ; his chin !spina from the jaws In a rather picturesque pro minence, which indioates a delicacy In the selection of appropriate phrases; his brow is broad and round, and the thin but sleek curtain of brown hair has been moved backward and upward by tho hand of Time no as to present the forehead In a eapa• °lonely dignified manner. The likeness to Kellogg Is more casual than lasting. The gentleman from Alabama Is not so stout as the member from 1111. note, but what ho wants "in girth" ho makes up In height, being taller than Mr. Kellogg. At tke oonelusion of Mr. Pugh's spard' ho was molt warmly congratulated by MOSITIL Boteler, Leaks, McQueen, Crawford, Oartrell, Mattes, Barksdale, and others. Some shook him by the hand, some with two hands; some caught him round the shoulders, otheri round tire nook ; some were before, soma behind, and several at both sides of the honorable gehtlemsn. Parolee Miles fairly embraced him, and at a inter period Pryor made his compliment.. Hatton got the floor, but gave way for n ballot, which resulted In Revlon 10d, Hamilton SI, the former lacking three. A aeoond is being held, but parties are re. solving themselves into their original positions— going book to the first loves, an.l a dpeaker seems farther oil then ever. Clark and Adrein have again declared that, when the Opposition parties to the Republicans oomblue. they will be psrtectly willing to take tho responsibility of their positions.-. reserving to 'themaelres whit they mean by " nurh responsi• LUDY." PARK RICHARI4. Lotter from Itarrixburg. Correspondence of The rms.] .thitatsarno, Jan. 11 In 1830, the Manufacturer's and Mechanic's Bank, of Philadelphia, veal chartered with a capital of $600,000, on which they paid the State a bones of five per cent., or $30,000. About seven years afterwards, the bank asked and obtained leave to reduce their capital to $300,000, but, in 1837, they again got the privilege to increase it to $OOO,OOO, agreeing to pay therefor a bonus of three per cent, on the Worms.. After they had got what they wanted, they alleged that they had paid n bonus on more capital than they had used previous to the increase, but Auditor Omani Fry did not coo it in the same light. Ile said, if they intended to 'nuke such a set-off, it ought to have been so stated In the act inoroming the capital stook. Mr. O'Neill has introduced a resolution relieving the bank. A similar effort was made last winter, but it felled. The amount the bank will gain and the State lose by the operation is In the neighborhood of $5,000. Mr. Strong read in place a bill to incorporate " The Philadelphia City Local Telegraph Compri,- ny." Section first oreates tho corporation in the persons of George H. Hart, J. Edgar Thomson, William D. Kelley, Henry K. Strong, William B. Poster, Dr. Joseph B. Longehore, Louis Blanche. W. 11. Witte, 11. 0. Pratt, and Jacob Zeigler, and their associates. &alien second fixes the capital stook at $130.000, In shares of fifty dollars each. Section third defines the right of the company to enter on property for the establishment of their telegraph lines. Section ninth binds the corpora. tion to the service of any of the offioers of the State or United States in the event of any war, in surrection, riot, or civil commotion, or resistance of publlo authority, or iu the prevention or pun ishment of °rime, or the street of pernins charged or suspected thereof, to give mob officers immedi ate despatoh, de., under oertale heavy peualties for the non-performing of such services. Section eleven gives power to contract with other persons or bodies politic to connect their Ones of telegraph, and with lines in the city of Camden, New Jersey, making compensation to owner or affects. Bolton four empowers those named in 'cotton one to oall a meeting in ten days after the passage of the cot, to organise, Co. Sootion live defines the terms of offloors. &Alen six re lates to stockholders and their rights. Section seven grants power to appoint such officers red agents as mny be deemed neoes.-ary. Seetion eight relates to the power to sat up their fixtures in any of the roads, etreote, elle} P t Laura , waters of the Delaware and Ss huyikill, and le oeaneot with similar Hoes in Camden, New Jersey. This bill and pro jeot is understood here to be the work of the fertile brain of Louis Blanche, a well-known , reporter, who has devoted a long pe riod to the subject of transmitting lounges through the means of numorioal signals It ill proposed to send despatches throughout the entirb oonsolidatail city for the moderate sum of firs oeuts, to which end each ward is to have two or more Stations at convenient points. Hotels, also, are to be made stations, where privilege may be granted, affording to business men and stiengers the nein ties of the telegraph in the trantaction of their business. There is no doubt it will he it popular institution," and lu a short period be the imme• diet° means of rapid eoutesunleatiou in all matters of business or pleasure. 3fr. Ridgway read in place " an lot to confirm certain deeds not acknowledged in ovnformity with the not of Assembly of this Commonwealth, passed April 19, 1853," entitled an sot relating to the salo and conveyance of real estate." It appears bat numerous deeds have boen Londe and execu tad by virtue of an order and decrto of tho Or pbana' Court, or (Courts of Common Pleas, of cc-- Wu counties, granted under the above.-monticned ant, seithara having Lesn act itowl6.lged lefure the court, as required, on account of that tcquisi. lion being new, and consequently overlooked. The present bill is intended to remedy any such oversights, by declaring that deeds acknowledged In conformity with the law as It existed prior to 1853 shall be as binding as if acknowledged in open court with the seal of the court 'Macbeth The mime bill hos already passed the ,Senate. Mr. Preston, a bill to incorpot ate the Bank or Mallayunk. Joseph Ripka, J. V. James, James M. Proton, C. B. Miller, Arch. Campbell, 1). Arbuckle, Charles Boone, Wm. King, Byron Davies, It. Stiller, James MeSinnto, John Ile •ris, Jr., Wm. Jones, 'Wm Kirk, Samuel Wrigley, and many others too numerous to mention, are the oorporaters. Capital stook fixed et I.'ISOMUO, in shares of $5O each. It is further provided that the bank pay a bonus of I per cont. into the State Treasury for the privileges of the charter—a very small num, indeed, and much lower than the per centnge generally assessed. (Jovernor Packer has nominated, and the Senate oonfirtned, Dr. Wm. It. Do Witt, for State Libra rian. This is his third term of three yearn, he having bean first appointed by Cov. Bigler and reappointed by Gov. Pollock. When the Doctor entered upon the duties of his aloe, the State Library was in a horrible state of confusion, but out of chaos he has brought order. The hooks were likewise scattered In all directions, nod many were annually lost. This condition of affairs no longer exists; and lent of all, he has made a capital cata logue, of the write of which I have before spokon. Pup, THE LAWRENCE CALAMITY FULL PARTICULARS OF THE DREADFUL AFFAIR. TERRIBLE SOENES. 162 PERSONS KILLED AND BURNED TO DEATH. NAMES OF THE DEAD AND MUTILATED THE CAUSE Or THE DISABTEEt. We compile from, the Boston and New York pa pers of yesterday full particulars of the late heart rending disaster in Lawrenc), Massachusetts. Ter ribly vivid as are the scenes and incidents as desoribed by those present, all written accounts of this unprecedented calamity must fall far short of the horrible reality : LAwnatect. Mass., Wednesday, January 11-10 P. M.—The two hours L have spent in this mourn• leg city have been replete with heart-rending and appalling WOWS.. The harrowing grief of the, be reaved, the agonies of the maimed. the intolerable suspense of those who are seeking lost friends, end the horrid mamma of charred and crushed hut:tient. ty still Indistinguishable se they were taken from the ruins of the mills, tend. to sicken the heart and paralyze the hand that attempts to give• an ado. (pate description. I append such Isolated feats as I hare gathered. STATEMISKTII Or SURVIVORS Mr. N. P. H. Melvin, an alderman of this oily, was at work in the repair -shop, which is still un harmed. The first Intimation ho had of the ap proaching calamity was tho rattling at particles against the window, and the appearance of a cloud of duet and limo coming In through the broken panes His first impreselon was, that the boiler had burst, and be started for the door. When he got out hecould Fee nothing at first for the aloud of smoke, but Boon observed soon, women, and chit. dren, crawling out from the ruins, covered with blood. Ife saw two women loaning from the base ment, and ran down to them, but one of them said. .• Do not help mo ; there are others in here." lie went In under the ruins, beneath the projecting roof. about two rods, on his hands and knees, and found a man wedged between two looms, and a large shaft lying on his beck. He saw that be oould not bo got out without tools. He procured a monkepwrenoh, and, by taking the loom apart, extricated the man, who wenton hie way rejoicing He proceeded to the next loft, and saw one Perkins trying to get out, but was unable to do so, being wedged between two plank frames laid acres' his hips. Mr Melvin could not find an axe nearer then at his home; but ran thither quickly, and on returning released the man by cutting the plank. lie continued working In the ruins, although gut tering from an Injured eye. Mr. A. 11. Winne was in the fifth story when he felt the shaking of the building. lie expected to be instantly killed, but went down with the felling mass to the first floor, and walked ont of the rains nnbnrmad. lie wee obliged to tear away some timbers to get out, which he was enabled to do by his powerful exertions the wounded and impri• toned is the vicinity beseeching him not to move anything, for fear the rubbish would crush them. Mr. Burredge. of Engine Company No. 4. took out a young girl from the ruins in a perfectly nude state, yet, strings to say, with hardly a scratch on her person. Ile wrapped her in his oyercoat ant carried her home, when, with groat presence of mind, she besought him to return to the sufferer+ in the ruins. The city IS ringing with the praises of Miss Olive Dridgo, who at the first alarm 'lid down the eleva tor rope, and when she found she was safe, nobly assisted In helping her wounded oomrades faring at the City Hall. Mr. J. H. Dana sae: The first intimation moat of the operatives had was the swaving of the walla of the whole building. Then the falling corn mewed at one end, and the whole male gradually settled ; the majority of the operatives reaming to wards the safer end of the edifice. The welts fell outward, but the roof fell in the shape of a V al lowing an almost unobetrnoted passage on eeoh side of the mill along the basement, through which many miosped. This paesoge was open two or three hours afterwards and many persons walked through it. Ihe work of getting out the bodice had been continued until the basement was being elected, when the fire drove the rescuers away, Mr. Adams, the overseer, being In the basement, was overtaken by the falling fragments while at tempting to escape, and was we:ged between the timbers. A caw was passed to him through the ruins, and he eased until the nails prevented his going any further. An axe was thew handed to him, end he got himself out not very seriously in- jured. A boy In the (eatery ma In the upper story when the crash came. lie went to the bottom of the twins with the rolling moss and walked ant unhurt. A girl working In the upper room felt the•giving way of the walls, and held to hor loom She was also carried to the basement, her clothes nearly all torn off, and yet she mmaped unhurt. The in• Eames of there miraculous escapee aro numerous and almost luctedrule. It seems wonderful that fire or Fix hundred were not buried elite. The Mayor, Daniel Saunders. Jr., has attuned the city to be canvassed thoroughly, and informs me that the list of killed, wounded, and missing will be complete to-morrow. The registers of the mills are destroyed, and the only way of finding the ex act number of the Inmates of to building, at the time of the disaster. is by oollocting the receipts which bane been distributed to the employba, and finding the Wiling from them The Mayor sees no reason tonight to alter the figures of his procla- mation. The statement that the mill was a notoriously unsafe building is not generally oredited. I have been informed by the Mayor, by some who saw the buildings erected, and by some of the employks, that they did not hoar until this amsideut that the building was unsafe. At the time of its creation the undermining of the penstock, or the small ea nal that loads 'the water to the wheel, led to the fear that the walls would fall. The damage was repaired but no portion of the edifice fell. The mills were turning out about two hundred thousand dollars' worth of cotton goods per week, and were insured for about $lOO,OOO. The opinion is, that no insurance will be paid. Thera was no extraordinary weight In the building. though the machinery en the lower floor weighed six bun deed tons. Sympathy comes from every quarter. Myst. claim and nurses tender their rerviees freely. houses aro thrown open to the sufferers. The treasurer of the Pacific Mills has given the Mayor two thousand dollars fur the benefit of the TIO. time. The work of removing the ruins for the purpose of searching for the missing sixty live, has been suspended to-night, but will be resumed by the Pemberton company tomorrow with a gang of one hundred MOIL The west side, for two•thirde the length and half the width, hos yet to be ex pieced. Coroner Lamb still hold the inquest to-morrow morning. The scene in the City h ail, where the unrceognised bodies are placed, la excruciating Tho shapeless, blackened corpses, whose postures denote the unspeakable agony of their dying suf finings, aro spread on the floor; and the crowd of moaning, anxious friends end relatives, socking for their lost ones, borer about the corpses, vainly en deavoring to recognise sows romp of familiar gar• meet, or some ph:valued peculiarity. The entire city is shrouded in sadness. Not the least notleenble portion of this calamity le the de privation of employment to nearly a thousand em ployees. Lawrie:4M Jan. 11—P. M. If we could forget the °cession of our orowdod stret's Goo should at once couolude that some great Goal lion for a holiday had arisen, but the air of sadness and ahnost despair s) risibly depicted on the coun tenances of our citizens, and especially lhodie who bon a been personally bereaved, keeps the dark re ality constantly bittore our minds Every train from every direction conies In laden to its utmost capacity with living freight, and when we consider that not less than onehundred and ay long passen ger cars have run in here to-day, some realizing Idea may be arrived at in regard to the number of cur ViillOrt. But the railroads did not alone contribute to swell our numbers. for every kind of vehicle was brought into use. In canny of the surrounding towns and cities not another horeo was t bo hired The morning and afternoon were busily toed in re moving the rubbish, after being sullaciently cooled, in order, if pohelble, to got the bodies known to be s.till under the ruins. Quite a number wore got out, and, strange as it may appear, two persons were taken out alive. . . Early In the morning a squad of canvassers was organized, and the whole city laid out into !mall die tricts, and a pretty thorough canvass entered Into, men going front house to house, thereby ascertaining in every family where persons were either wounded, missing, or safe. The slimming up alone that one hundred and sixty-two persons are missing. This embraces all those known to have been killed, and those of which no tidings bare been obtained. It is admitted by those who have gone into the in vestigation, that fifty.d.wo persona are yet immo lated in the brick find mortar. Ono hundred and thirty dead bodies have been removed to tho City Hall, or been delivered to recognising friends. The following is a LIST Or Trig worsnrn. Elislsa Ryan, Patrick Riley, Jeremiah Sullivan, Rosannah Lynols, William Child, Mary Armstrong, Catherine Vane, Ellen McKenna, James Dal i,, Filen Murphy, Catherine Dolan, Kate O'Brien, Hobert Hayes, Even McLean, N. D. Robertson, lifleu Rare, Bennett Hayes, Bridget Simpson, Henry Haller Thomas Moran, Samuel Martfu, Prudence Spreed, Ira Mother, Mrs Kenney, Robert Seam, Mrs Doyle, 'MOMS 11. *arson, 11. Hickey, l'atriek O'Donnell, Mrs. Motitvern, Richard Sumney, Owen Brannon, Augusta Simpson, John Welch, a boy Abby Pottle, Ellen C4rty, .1. H. Jewett, ---- Daly, Mary Callahan, Mary Sias In, Margaret Hayden, -- Luney,(sincedead I Catherine Corrupts, -- .Tewett, Jesse Lem+, -- Brown, . James Kenney, Mary Hurley, Michael McCormick, Ira B. Locke, Ellen Mahoney, Mary Kennedy, s Elizabeth Woreil, Margaret Hamilton, Elizabeth Burn, Henry Kull, Henry Peckham, Ellen Ilannon, Kate Kearney, Sarah Doyle, Bridget Bradley, Ellen Mahoney, 'MOMS CODS, Margaret Mahoney, John Ward, Catharine Bandera, Mary A. Coleman, Rosa Kenney, ' Damon F. Ham, Mnry Ann Hickey. Cells Slovene, Ellen Hickey, Eliza Orr, (slim dead.) Hannah Hennessy, Mary York, TWO CENTS, DUD LID MISSING. John McDonnell, Bridget Loughley, Mary McDonnell, Margaret Feley, John Dearborn, Domani Halifield, Bridget Ryan, Bridget Sulliraa, Msrg vret bistillvan. Catharine Callaghan, Morrie Palmer, Annie Shay, Ellen Colbert, Eliut Orr, Ellen Roach, Miohael O'Brien, Hannah Shay, Peter Callahan, Mrs. Job Jewett. Margaret Feeley, L1G31313 Leonard, Richard 311digly, Margaret Hamilton, Hannah McKee, Hannah Mullins', Michael Sweeney, Joanna Croatia, Margaret Fallard, Martha Hughes, Julia Roberta, Ann Manning, Amen Nash, Wm. Keith, Matthew 0. Ryan, Patrick Callaghan, Bridget Render, Mary Mayan°, Cora Hickey. Bridget Riley., Jeremiah O'Lerin, Kitty Clark, ' John McNabb, Alice Murphy. Martin llnghee, William Metcalf, John Hughes, Thomas Elul, Garret Sweeney, Samuel Reiff, Catherine Connors, Ellen Illekott, Kate Maroney, Dora Ryan, Mary Smith, A. P. Martin, Bridget Lougherty, Mary Jewett, Augneta Aghworth, --• Pllmpson, Katy Hickey, Abby Pottle, Ellen A. ham, Harry York, Llszle Town, Margaret readout. Alice Cutting, Wm. Jordan, L. F. Beane' Margaret Coleman, Elisabeth Kemball, Mary Ryan, Patrick Connor, Mary Grifiln. Ellen Connor, Bridget 'Rohl; Wm. Crane. Ira G Lucke, John II Allen, Bridget Kelly, Lorinde 0111231,11, Mr. Packard, John Than, Martin Hue, Catherine Conners. Previous to the are, two slaters were together, and oomparatively unhurt. They would have been rescued. Flearlng the roarer the flame., they exclaimed. "Oh, Cod ! we have got to die !" Another woman shrieked out piteously that the fire was burning her hair, but the Same' won after silenced her criea. It has already been stated that one men cut Ms throat hat he should be burned alive. Mr Branch told his Meads, who were digging for him, that he should resort to the came means to tampe the tortures of the fire. He was peretiaded to desist, and fortunately was reacued. Tho awful death which some died by the firs was fearfully attuted by their baked and black ened forma when taket out, not In anything like those of lumen belngr. (Prom the 9.aiton Herald, Jan. The dreadful calamity whichyutudity efternocrn oast a gloom over the city of Lawrence haa already been detailed with much fullneir. but the following fuller account, gathered lot night by our own oe pottArs on the ;pot, will be read with intense in. ter.rt. The mill. which was a long brick building 3ilo feet long by eighty4Jur feet wide, was 'palter. day In fell oneration, when, at a very few minutes after fire o'clock in the afternoon. It fell with a ea Hen crash, and without har.ily a moment's warning, to the ground, burying to its rule' the veil masses of machinery used at the mill, and with the mass of Pad Imo, and mingled with the beam; and brick of the edifice, lay in mangled and gory layorc the forms of over four hundred Daman ngs As scow ea those in the neighborhood onuld re cover (rico the horrified astoolshatect into which they were thrown by the disaster. the dna alarm was at once sonudnri, and the department wars noon on the spot. Their seerieet were not, bow• over. required to extlngainh any flame, for at this time no fire bed broken nut. Without the horror of fire, however, the scene was frightful beyond de:vital:4 The ruin , lay In en* confuted heap, covering an area or about two norm and plied up to a height of 'bent thirty feet. From nearly every hole and crevice in this vest pile, from the top, from the sides, end in feet, from every fissure from whence *voice from inside could make its way, came shrieks for help, groans of an guish, prayers and moaning's; and in many very many asses the poor.suggrare could be distinctly seen, talked to. nod even reecled by the band from the outride. Many thus imprisoned were encou raged and sustained by assurances of safety, and In mew, cases cups of coffee could be, and were passed down to those below, who, alas! after all this near approach to safety, saw hour after hour pans away, until, et last, the frikhtful cry of are, and the greedy licking of the times as they an. preached with fearful rapidity, crackling and hies. Ng all over the remains on the ground, told them too plainly that all hope of life WU gone. The fall of the building took piece jest as the min was be ing lighted up, and outside, of course, all was dark. To obviate this difficulty huge Area were made to the leeward of the ruins, and the light thus made lighted up the horrible scene with Inexpressible grandeur. 7DH ATTZYPT AT itt3CTi. At this time—six o'clock—fifteen hundred per sona gathered about the spot, and by the liaht of the fires the more daring were on top. crawling no• der the ruins. fixing ropes, and delrg all in their power to extricate those within. At the ontset their efforts were claim sureesern:. /trout seventy five persons, men, women, and children, more or leas wounded, were taken out, and, if recognised, carricil home, and if not, taken to the City Hall • which had been cmverted into a temporary hos pital. After the first hear, however, the work be• comes much more dangerous, by reason of the fall of timbers as displacements are made, and often the rescued and the rescuer are again in danger of a fresh entombment. We I not learn however, that any parlous accident has befellea any of there who rendered assistance from outside; but still, the danger of the attempt deterred many from render ing any help, except by standing at a distance and screaming themselves hoarse in giving' advice or direction to the more daring spirits who were hot at work. womer's urnotsx . . At one point when a ropo bad been axed to a projecting timber, a call was made to the crowd to take hold and pull with a will, but for a few mit. tars, such was the danger of the attempt—for the beam in falling might engnlph nil near it—for a flew minutra, we my, the call was unheeded. Men Shuddered and drew back they would rick much to aid thoeo below. but life was sweet, and thedanger great. At this critical Juncture, a wo man rushed from among the crowd, and daring the spectators to follow, seised the rope and attempted to mount the pile of smouldering ruins to clear away with her hands. The example was enough ; net a word was said, but strong hands at once drew her back, and then there was no lack of hands to the rope, the beam was drawn out, and, at least, two sufferers retell-ea from the opening thus made. Bedded tbe , o thus saved, a large number of ope ratives, mostly males, who were 10 the weaving room, which is in the lower story, managed to es cape by crawling up from that room through a couple of low windows which were not obstrueeed The weavinr room was partially saved by a heavy 81000 floor ef the story above, and many in this de. partment were thus saved. 110 W THEY' wens BIIOCGIII orr—BORRID 0101311, Tho sights and scenes at this period of the dis aster were frightful. One poor girl, alive and fut -1; condeions, wee dragged from the east end cf the fallen mass, with her left arm torn from the &casket and hor body and legs awfully mangled. She was token by her friends, but could not have survived long. In one place the bodies of three girls wore fn n I locked in such other's arms, but quite dead They could not be removed without mangling the bodies, and, being abandoned for a time, the dames broke out before another attempt was made, and all three perished. One Irishman was taken out quite unhurt, and his drat eat was to foal In his pocket, from whenoe he drew forth a sooty n dudhdeen," and Betting a brand from the Ere, he lit his pipe, and went or, his way. Next from the ruins we law the dead body of o led, and following him wan borne a girl with one of her anklet burnt is awls?. She bed been con fined by one foot between two beams, and only by the utmost exertion was she reoorered. She wee also taken home by her friends A young girl was released Just before the flame burst forth, and in answer to n quemon stated the: ahn woo unhurt. It afterwards appeared that leer right arm was badly !uken near the wrist, but it. the excitement of the moment and In the Joy of de liverance from a dreadful death, the had not noticed the hurt. One woman was found with her head jammed between two hoary balms, and pressed to that I was not thicker than the thickness of a band. It was a ticketing eight One young girl whole name we hero but do not publish, was confined in a narrow hole surrounded by broken machinery and ragged timber and boards, succeeded in crashing out into the oper air, but when the emerged from the tutus she ha - I scarcely au article of clothing on herpers , in. Perhaps one of the saddest epodes of the whole calamity wee the fate of Mr. Maurice Palmer, who was an overseer in the mill. In the fall, he was so' imbedded in thu ruins that he could not be extricated before the are, and seeing the dreadful element approaching him, he, in his agony and despair, determined not to be roasted to death, and so draw his pocketknife and cut his throat .118 was, however, taken out alive, and w mid have ITITTiVeI but for the self-inflicted In• jury. Who, however, can judge the anguish and agony which induced the fearful deed? Our reporter to told by a gentleman who nes early on the spot, that, at ono point of the mins, he distinguished a female voice crying in distress, and seen another T(.100 answered, Is that you. Lizzie? arc Tou hurt?" The rcpt, was a amoth• crud groan, end an appeal to God's mercy in her behalf. Both these girls were afterwards rescued. LIMNER AT TEE CITY WILL—TUE DEin AND TTOCNDED-100NIZING SPECTACLE. Immediately after the dreadful occurrence, the City Hall was thrown open, by order of the Mayor, as a hospital for the wounded, and a receptacle for the dead. At 7 o'clock this merning the stairways were thronged by it multitude of people, every one ap parently in an agonizing state of auspewle to ascer tain whether a tether, husband, wife, or child, had been Immolated In the awful funeral pyre. It was a struggle fur our reporter to obtain an entrance to the maul hall, but by the t.id of the city officials he finally succeeded; and the sight wale fearful Stretched on mattresses around the ball wore men, women,and children. all more or insured—sewn dreadfully mangled. On the right of the entrance, in a small ante room, were stretched the corpses of thirty-sin per sons of both sexes, old and young. The bodies were so 0100 together that it woo difficult to pan between without treading upon a mangled limb. Fest were crushed—shoulders, arms, legs, bodies, all terribly gashed and meshed—fAcez so dis figured that it mould be difficult for the moat inti mate Client's to recognitos the bodies by the coun tenances In the midst of the ghostly throng was to be seen a minister of God carefully scanning each countenance, and we could see a tear drop from hie eyes upon more than one of theghastly dead. Our reporter attempted the duty of ascer taining the names of the poor victims from the little labels pinned on their garments. lie had proceeded as far as writing the names of Mary McDonald, Beard Holland, Mlahael O'Brien, Margaret Fallen. Catharine Kelleher. Bridget Ryan, Margaret Foley, and iolln Dearborn, when THE WEEKLY PRESS. TEI Wirmat Puss la be sent to labooritiors malt! oar snout. is adesseeJ Muss °video. nee Conte*. . -- —. the Ten .. e. Twee, Cofiag." . tea, one aidrese) !Lee Tirailty Copia, or om " (to a‘boat Kelt thttrottbet) tab—_ __ lant For a Club of Tentotpowe or over. veleta non ell extra copy to the Better-ap of tha bib. gir Pastas:uteri are mussed to set as emit ter 9 .cs Wnium Pius. CALITOKNILA ram's. lamed Ilased-Mont44 is time kr its Clilibtlda !teasers, a frantic mother rustic,' put tLe d or , and recog nising the dead and mangled b•ady of child in the as Midst of the ms. clasped it, called it by Endear ing tatilei. and. wept--as mothers we.p at wash dreadful moments. Our renc,rter I.ttt =pled to tut. ene his Leek, and probably his senaa ct duty would bare orertsxue his fens/ of commies: alien, had cat crowd at the same Jun:tare catered and utterly precluded the pneslbility of his pursuing his us} at that time. The officers in attendant° ware kind and indulgent to all who sought far their dead; and a number of bodies, the names cf nr;,nuit were unknown seen to the coroner, ware couseyel to the residence of theirfriende Coroner Lamb but not completed the list of the dead already run. vend at the time we close this portion of cur re. port. Fading from this shaking apt-etc:ale, we an plated under the guidance cf Alderman Salta, who exhibits to no, stretched on a mattress to the right, the form of Mary Ann Colmar, aged 15, drazeter of WM Ilam Coleman. She has an arm broken azi hind badly cut. 311se Coleman was emplzyed is dot frtnnieg room, and the first ftritanon thtt ttratk her Drier to the crash was, the board seinethlng fall," after which the knew nothlzg Entil Lar M ena. Sarah Doyle, aged 17. Has to paree.e. Resides with Mrs. Bridget Watson. Mira Doyle le severely Injured In the left foot. She watt react, d from be. neeth a large beans prior to the fee. She rushed in the lower nand nom, and her Prot knoteledge at the diustar was, she "felt a Pullen shock." Elisabeth Ward, aged 22 Sererely irjuned 'moss the him Worked in the esrd room. John Ward, husband of the 1L270, severely in• Jared at the same time Nancy Connelly. daoghter of Patrick Comma:lly, severely, but not dangerously wonted. Mrs. Bridget Doyle, alto duet:sr of Perla Connelly. Not dangerous. Patrick Connelly, slightly irjored A miraer, be. escape. About a quarter to tee. when about lighting up, heard something owerhesd. - Looked up and saw the rooms end ererythlcg ecrzlog down upon him. Re Instantly ran for the tile of tha building, and gave himself np to die. Suddenly he saw daylight through the rains, and made Lea way out without eadstartee. ellen 3fahoney, aged 19 Ilts lived. in Lawnsnee aboat Biz weeks. Thigh and trot hal:y ir;ared... Worked in the cording na-ea. Bawd were altar —taw people ttla , lnr —thought •the tut:dins tad been 'truck by a thunderbolt Thomas Canner, aged 33 Bu lived In Law rence eight months. Badly atrosa the lower part of the abdumen ebd lege. Saw ths building begin to fall, and eniunored to ran cal, but was prostrated beneath the GM:4 =143, and was provider:tidily rdazze4 wizt,:t =mut Injury. - Bridget Bradley, an latellfgentdocking girl. 17 years of age Badly injsrai it beck 17.,d shoulders; also terribly cut ea the bud. Lindley was etenilag between ter'-ens la tcs weaving room when the root felt She lay lassml his some time, and what she retuered her st:.:es she began to scream. Her cries artre,ted the attention old* matters, who. be se•irg eg the timbers that ■ere above, and by toe AU of r:l:ca succeeded in hauling her (rem the mlns. the re melned beneath the mum upward, cf an he:: and a brit. hateHerrtdj e azed IS. A deTicrable taws u she poor ereatere hal a leg en. - i am. c -atm, enti la terribly cot in the tau azi eyes Mr en pa rents Her only relative is a Eger. Liu lire.l t. Lawrence ain years. Henry Baku:use. S you' old. 13. is if TOT Cannot ;reek Eighth.. It3th net ernsheb. flu no relawrea here, bat no c►red f.:r by ',ma German friends. Cie.riro Eradolfer, a ;afire of Sidsu'ird. Shoulder brokou nod serer* lolsr b brad 121 hands. Worked Is tho dretibi Cs: 17 eared fn by his fdtsls ilenry Korblor, a native of Geris say. Yrs.; t ea in this wantry four or Are years. sod t:1 re.t. tire, hero. Mil strenrs: triarlos Ire in L'a sad In pans of his body Lisa not +polo:is sines his revue. Mary York, a native of Brighton, Me , vh , ra the L9l relativel. Has been to Lswrete.. a y..zr and eight mootti, and has hese." as bar attentive nurse of-sened. File is braised and cat in the head• and one of her az'a:sa LI probably broken. Rchert Haver. of renft, Ire:7nd. Fight tyre_ broken, and Eesd and arms hally . brcited. A tai looking ease, lent the poor fellow Is in ;e-r: He boa been a retident in LI wrctee teTet or eliz.ht years Hu a wife and ch,;'.l and a s's'er rtaid , og in Boston. He worked fa the dressing MM. Pet says the trash wait like a shot from a gun, ar 1 he had no ti©, to '• take coo cep fr°nt tat other." Remained ittett.ble until he f-cni bimlef L.= to rnattrere to the City Hon. It is a tomewb.at el:- cuter fact that Mr. Eaves had an arm and a leg. broken 015,70 while serving 99 a sailor co beard toe schooner Mary B. Smith. of Beverly, Msgr. Mary Kennedy, aged HS. A distre. , tirg The poor creature has a leg broken. and her held and (sue so badly in; •".a! the can r7.7,r,...1y ar. tieulate. Aa we'! u:d to rrzertalr.“l what she a s ire of Ant:: .a. in Ire land. where she 1.• tot ~ , ht erste to diatrere them ty her tnirfarttre Ire lc'o the papers " It will. however. be 9. the peer gist's frier.d., is kr..,rs this to hco mastap starts - mu ..... -- r—...,,retoLa‘erf cared fur. Ira D. Locke, of Derry.::. II , has en a• k'e r - - ken, and his body is badly burn:. De wv, ths ruin% six hours, and !ail be surcr. - ..1 mcCri f 7,7. t cold." and the dunes were hisain:r lie also lays that be has a wife rot ITte t • nurses say that Ids mind is wandering'. Ile is •;7,.11 taken care of by attentive trifle!. The &bore does not include the names of art rata reeturd alive, for a number were carried to eceir homes by their friends, and tins did rat rzr_.:tw der the reporter's notice The 1..ere.1 hate an abundanze cf at. tendan.:.o from the Icsnl ts tl:sa from Lowell. Manche , ter. !lave:Ent, a 7.1 places. Coroner Lamb Ranh:rued at Iteineet t~la to but witheut taking actin, the cum-le...e'en uostFned until to-trorraw (Thtticisy), et S B. The Pemberton Mill was erstted serer, Tra.7l , lp, by a corporation which bore the title of the •• pen,. herton Mill Company." Its original cost vas about $,E...a0 00 After the pa ni• r !IA into the bands cf Mem!. David Stein a Howe. who purchesed it for the sum of and hare since conduoted its oper•iots. Th. , o , s, whioh, Including the building. and ita eCV.ie a. ehinery, will probably agreed half a cf lam falls upon these gentlemen. It is under.:c there WILs rao tbsursnoe Cu the pre;erty. The "Pemberton " w. 13 one of the newevt In the city of Lawrence. and but coo other. the 'Pacific." exoeeded it In rite. To sty that I'. o:31 .:onatrueted upon approved principles. or that tha design of the original proprietors was based tpao a liberal estimate, would be to utter a manifest e.`... , - surdity. In view of the terrible calamity cf is day. The simple truth of the matter it, tha. tze mill has been regarded as ereeedingly Lrosfe fen •he day it wee built Competent erehree.o on; mechanics In Lowrenee, familiar wi.h t' e struetion of mills during Ion:: 'cries of yetra bee., repeatedly exprceg‘i the opinion that the " P•ra herion" Wee the worst among all the greet m ro factoring eatahlishments wii-h arrong el r+; .. .1'1 into exigence In that flourishing el y. Tot th,s rorebodings of danger were lat too well florid, we have row mart melanchrly proof The architect employed by the Ca r 4 mbeetm Mill Company to superintend the e-o-s•tp--c -the building was one Capt. Bigelow. fort - rrly r 1 - :.- I.ltnt of Lawrence, bur now snevarie'reden• r'•: a Gorernonant works at New Tedford. Capt. _to, .1 a brother of one of the Jug,cet of the Sup re::_-o Court of .Maitsobasetts, a eon-in-taw of ex•GoTer tint Briggs, and—partly, perhaps. in c. - rtscq7. , t7.) , r hit social poaition, at well as from his re; are I enginetsting—was regarded as a o•uo-i neraon to he engaged la the direction of the s.:st 'mportant works in Lawrence Per:riot-1.4y t ho lonstruction of the Pemberton Mill. be hal "err: ..mploved to bard a granite dam azrrsa 11-o M - r.-1- nee river, but met with a miaban on th .t sHo, ilia dam proved to be s'w'at a hot to, ',CIO. T-n arty corporation expended came tt.o.tands of col lars in roetifying the hien far. The Capteln'a next puLlto appearance wee rn th e , 311.:1t7 of erchitect of the Pen.bcrtan • Tha "fork proceeded until the outer walla hat Iran nearly ffnished. It wee then diecorered that the 'mild:rig wee imacure. The walls had been honey-combed with wir.dow+, e , enpp.artet 17 In tdequele thickness or wall, until the iurn•rt>ra neril of the whole stew:Are hocinte a. mantlf. it 'hot the work was inqautly eu , pendei. It w”..1:- ermined to brat, the bulgl , g 'wills with 1 -I.,• e a 'rot, and several theneande of these tt , .naria 1 tnrlianees were accordingly asa which appeared the meet perilous The mid then completed. An 1-1113:M., artticlt of machinery wee put upon each liner of ti et building. Sown *even hundred looms were ran a yt.IT ind others had been recently added; the ..n.; o• rate burden being greater titan commnn pro len. o tr a decent regard for the safety ef a thatnitr 1 07 e • reticet wonld have warranted. The Pacil:t." tercet mill, bean a corresponiingly greater weight, but antlered no trii.‘hepa in its early vagei Ink e that which OCCI.IiOCed a temporary .ttan•-tn• of the work upon the " Pemberton " The appre ,er,ions cf dio , ater, freely expret,-1 by the re,. -, .1 - 1) of Lawrence when the fallen building was ecnt. 'quoted, led to serene reiloctions uron the C T. [1:111V, not less than upon the architect It it highly probable that that community will dema-.1 and obtain a thorough forestigationt of ihn with a view of fixintr the rEnpor.Fibility cf this catastrophe upon the party or parties to who.= it legitimately belongs. A sxtrfn OF TEE CITY 0? TAR - 2E24'CE (From LiTtricott . 9 Gasetwer.) Lawrence to a city, and one of the capita's of Essex county, Massachusetts, on both of the, Merrimack ricer, tweets sic toiler north cf ton, and ten miles IT mid at thirteen or rsitretia northeast by east of L3w.,'l. It also has railrea.t communication with Sa:a.u. or-rentv•sic and with Manchester and C•:•:ord, :Siew Ilxrap=btre. (the former txtuty•six 1 the latter forty n; rate is one of tho,o wonderful eccatiora ctthe manufacturing enterprise of :Sew Erglard at , .It. the influence of which a tract, airci , et iz t,bitants, is suddenly converted into a r °plods city. in 1845, the Eiger Company constructed n dam across the Merrimack river, at this place, by which a full of twenty-eight feet in the entire v...:t.rue of the river has been obtained. The work cost rob:v.t $250,000. A canal, more than a mile 1ce,, 100 feet wide at the head, eixty feet at the teat, and fourteen feet deep in the centre, conducts the water from the dam to the different mills. 4,lThe town is laid out on both sides of tte .S.C.,A et river. but chiefly west of the Spicket, end 5..•: the Mertimack, the streets running mostly rt angles with each other, dividing the ei:y tcto squared. he town of Lawrence was incorporated 1115, and it continued a town about ei;ht years. wren the amount of its poFlition huvic e ; reached tier preecribed by the laws of :ilassachnsetts f a ci:y organization, (I 2,000.) a City charter was grant and accepted In IYt3, and the lion. Charles S. titerrow was chosen the first mayor. The city wu named in honor of the Lawrence family of Boston, sad hee pew (104) a rtimatativti Qtaegriri4,oo.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers