tfra PRESS. Rai2tuiaip:p4rrot EXOSPVID) B' " /WM ronPIEY, oploarro. 011115TIOR aga r. inicser: Twitist Cliiim . rait Wan; $.0.610..tii lifillid.tol3ablieribors out °Nile pit? DOLLAis I ,l ll;eirerthat. Dozwis log Ban 1 1 4.0eTrie I TI MIS DeLLARS Tut: 81.* 'ilthX 2ll4— trivaneAr in ad . Vence ter the thee 'thdbrite. • TRE.WEEKLIF TRESS. Mooed to eutsifitbais Oa a the City st Tanss Dot- Lam rut exempt) %n adratiee. , • IS!CA.TIONERY• 1850. wv 'lB6O. WILL F. MU R.VHY & SONS. No.l* OftERTNUT !MEWL Saw Fourth. 11L0110AL hii,ttIITAWITHEIII 01 B 1:1 A 14 - g -, s () o x - , Made of Linen Stook.' , 84oial ptomplifoieouttoi. - Mr, Urattil. xfotea v Copil Primes, Letter ani prr, apara.all' Env° von, wth a oa t rwrook o 74m CO Tt?l , l-E1 LISS erlerio MILLINERY. - doom. 729. NE W 729 • FLOWER & FEATHER STORE, '7 . 29 CIEUBSTN UT STE EBT. eti vryzip GRBATLY REDUCED PRIORS.= ire c i A I PrOt 9 OVISI3a RA ATTIFIR Lid MA" ouODS. L'HOIEt.* EN - 14ED Y & BRO., rett, ORESTRUT ST.;AND AS & SECOND ST. BOUTS AND - $llO ES. HAZELL & HARMER. , KAN'NUNN= Axt, W/LOUSALB Mid= . boom AND SHOES. No: 128 NORTH THIRD MOM. A &Dimon:ram of Min made 'Boots and Nunn ton gently on hand, . - - .1041 WATCHES, JEWELItt, SILVE.II. VA. WILSQN & SON Invite eiredal attention to their idea of STlMilit WARE, which is now unusually WO, afiataala a aa rum of *tern and &run tuzeirtiasse4l by an, home the Muted Hiatt:44o ptfinet ouellty than is rhatrafes Saved for table use In am Dad at the world. Oar Standard of Silver is 985-1000 pert, pare. The, goglieh Sterling 9254000 cc Amerioan and French .9004000 , • This tt trill be seen that we give thirty-five parts met than the American and Pond ooln, and ten parts num them the Buelloh Swami, mat all our own Silver end we gaintntee the quality as above tele). which it thejteesi thar roe Aiimalo to ho serviorablo, end will resist the ea eat or acids wag Gotta taste thy °Mt -soy Biker weeatatnusersit. Wii.:WILSON & BON, Oceania 71:1131 atm amputy on. A, 11.—Ale Samara oia.tvor tiutottOtotated u agreed UM but poiittottv sow *Odor to Avacit owl Alosint cot stostroitt. - Dihstsra" truptded*ll #tiouoi site:Ward tut mad fa ott titan depoattileat, • • • • • r/ 36 6 4sTr 80, 9Y14900 to z* Pro. eacatantly CHEAP WATCHES, idislert :Studs. Elle4ve Pattode Coral. Levi, and ~/rdeond Seta. old Chiding: duster . and 'es* Spoon.. Forks Casto.l , o Ter. and Bid.' rsC,2 3l ulketis! .13old, ad. 1464 t . l B.I.J6ELTLed, 11 K. SIXTH Street. n.itAntWARE, PA.CILAGE LIOUSES. .B.I3ENNER,, nit 2 • filth Alp fit :Milt PLibi STREET ilq:44Duza-fan. - - WHOIMBALIr 00,104SSION BIEECTIANITI, For the aLL of all kinds of nIPORSIIIS OP 0111141 1 1, BILGIAX, FRENCH. AND If:Nadel! HABDWARB ANTI CITELBUY, • Toot Matial on filial* lanel,eltoOk of Gotido to Kw • 547 ,41 3• R )13+.'13‘ V EDGE t.4 00L , ta; ottumitsi. )313TOIWIthr MAL of WMORTif - z 2424; A" MA' - °RAUH; .01.11 - wineittmo 1114.103 NEW. MODEL it4PLWAND FINTOISi Takiiut if.irire.. rnt - 4 6. ' r;svimaii pACKAGB ,W,D,WARE 110178E.=-Mit , old moiled:idly colt= rho attention of rho top; 1 " r gd w b a llirat t l i n. h 4 irtgat t s I . 7 T e pa t. • • • .4.7. or roo t ignoortsaourdtadr det war 14 fal&l&Vb Ni Ma r Or • , fr4r M 11111140.1414 andool=llllllo TOPISIM ; Ala &S u &&&flia zninatn and Drannidao ROM itoin-tf CABINET• WARE. VABINET FURNITURE Arm BILLIARD TABLES. MOORE &CAMPION. i "No. ita aOVTII BRAND EaRENT, .ra - _ . ,cilsia taw exAsawys canet oral!" aro IA" 4a 'fft rn, - •, , ! ratal i o hinti v tr oi„,, w are 'Oen me re taem to oo or to al so , or the no bl , ankh of these' Tables 9 ..... tgrtArig, ' 7014714741 . 1%t %fail DRUGS, 'CHEMICALS, dm. DRUGS, GLASS, PAINTS, &o. ELOBT. SHOEMAKER & CO. nommen pampa 10IIIXTR AND RUM STAMM ' IrSOLEBALII, DUIIGGISTS, Wodui ea °odors ta WINDOW OLAMPAMTS. ilmhi !mg the summon of COUNTRY MERCHANTS tttf their ion .took of Goods, whloh that oak at tie lowest market sum _ oall-tt SCALES. '44;t 4 MAI4CHESTERSCAT:TeS.—Cotrte, ,r Plftr e nzia,Virsitaimis, asy,Ootil, Reardid _ Abp. ale cltiijn_EVAMAT T 's atui Belt- Oel•mmtim ." tt 0 4liFil A. OANTELS. AI.IOILN PUTFOtild CILI A Litto tor'litta by F4IIIINKt - -715 ausaTNuT strut, MIR. sznlciNAL. M. Ala. , MAI. ematericivranr. &ND insm4s , ;1 1 .7 1° 16 7 1771111! diff ETV' , 1 .P9ll CHILDREN .TEETHING I --: N.,ek--ilitals 7:r I' .1 r 0 " 7 olf rt It 41 1 ; „ . laftriNkla wzus. 2•41-174 rt.. , en. iterill reettoymusenres fiElialf-iitiliailitial6, Willi iNPANTO• ere haven 1; 014,60 00 : 1 4 , kVA or over iet la r i tte•e &air °° tz Are "Muth °ay. ,_ . 1. 0111 4 1.. le OAt 1 :.., ebb, tgi "11 ii-4. ' ..1 Cy ',- 9 a6iFir'Atra! 99994.:_ __wikz+ted ca, „Oki te owe ptlik. 610 VigU e ggliasili CD r • mu°9l l :l74:llM 1 •= , i '. t ' • , 24,1 141 ”.„' i : , v : Li pi ti rg t::::. 7 . 7: 0 r. , r it. ier vg• hap "*- la -in tweet every: v ... 00 w 0 ,- Ns 0 114 la Er from ettl . :en4 lim it: „., Z.= egir or Orly ~,o n, 9 , , frs ,.. v i w r oft I v z . ha s bean leWaltlt V I obe 6in; bAs 1 11. 4 sn 4 " be ete correote soldlti, 1 t I t terikEllteglintil M a t erfit Enta. z wee i et , lad e , = 4 l Art'retiZe ill NV 14)11ti le g ,I ll e e t ^ Et, 1 ef t , ~ , , aliii - !-F4h ',:z„....zypm.. iiii , eutel elm Ott, - 1/2itt-uorAforte ~t 381; 44,0ava __, -l" ktriiis ItICRAOT 02 oArNitiv g.g.va% , . 65tbit i - lt bi rin d Iwo st• %,,tho , ~4 4 ,1, • ,•, g ° g • vilw - A.:E,,0 IEs'ARRISH. —,—,---• • - • ,•• , •• - -gde - Anzirstreet:' ' '''' 4 r6 V 7 t .klel4k. VINE Streets. -- Hi XNAlmd , L..- , k sWAllayikt, SToREIOI2:, ~,,;. , j....r'-'&11;11:b°&B gticinial*:- .; , ::'=;011t itilP;m 4 ?., , - .)i,,....- i . ~--. 2Z-.4ooratv J -=. :...,,_„-_ ~,,,,,k ., : katin4 7 lo,tat"l.2;9ll.hand, , i, ,, 4 , ~...116 iti I t alk It Rffritigal Vt.? ..: ' A ilat ~ ..4 , ..:7,77 . IWO' .40 tirt#l4 pgetild fllitraPt. * A ~.,3*-:„...,... 14Y, 1 4 we • =44,„---(1,4e.c-x, tor -j'. „ 1 ;.... - . • V.; • . L 5• 1 1 1* ' ,rt f " 1 , .1 . el ,- ! ‘ •; 7 , 11 4 : ‘' i dl.t.ol; . • • • -•••Mr•••-- ...-S4W- • A -""- • •-•- • ~,,, VOL. 3.-NO. 146. RETAIL" DRY GOODS. LADIES' FANCY FURS. CEO. F. WOMRATH. SOS. 415 AND 417 ABM OTRINST, 111k8 NOW OPEN EDI USUAL MOWS ASSORTMENT Or FURS, Made of itank 'sleeted by himself In Enron* daring the nut Spring. oagYten fiIURNISIIING DRY GOODS. a: gIiARPLENS DROTTIFIA 8 have replenished their Rtook of maple Goods of their own tmportation. rWales and froth Linen e beatings. , rlphP Los, and Holster Linens. hums Luton* fro Damask nowbe Linen Damaelt and mClothe. twat Nansinv end D'O.lise. misalsisk. H unix and Dam .ak Towels. toted &ordered Damask Towels. watts Crean and Amertoan Linens. ern. llirortted Damasks. Satan Lame. see Currants. r tubrotdered '0 us'lne. igured Imetinge. tilineens, Drugsetts. loth,Table ono nano Co era uff. &lug and Green Shade Holland., Foulish and American Ike LI ankete. Marseilles Quilts of Co. rr quality , Jal7 Mns/ins. &beet/nes, Plasmas and shi rting*. Bill and 803 OH ANTNUT ritrest. nattimlNS FOR 81X WEEKS. TgoaNLEY & ODOM. N.E. corner VIGHTH and SPRING QARDEDr, would respeolfully inform the whim generally that from now(Jentlarg It. the let of Marchhe) 1011 (10009 REGARDLESS OF PROMS! They have nn excellent amok of .ong. Brecht:. Shawls. , inginth and Amerman BlatOete pat •hirtln4 and §lheetini Medina. .4nenipfmir . owat7 --- ado' ....mai of .2pr owe imporiatiOn. LPIERIOIII. vaoths mad 011111 Wpm A good man Y ClOkiatill on WO. A LA -OF. eTOOK t.tF FANCY &Lye. NAt make or block milkm. JAVlO l eige I, ?lierrt :64,5ftirl' en so ... P 7d itu ae . muou DER COST rftICE 1 K. 13.—1 t will pay to sive us a cell. 41A WAMSEIT'FA I.IIII,TINGS, SUFT -2 FINISH. last opened. 44 Ma logy)jle ritortineg 124 gent& 44 rinh &Shirting •nd Fronting 1.10004, 34 nd 44 Unsbrinkable Darnell). NWT do for ',Ante Shawls. • Large Stock of Paris Embroidenee very cheap, vial Bett4 Collate nnd Sleeves. Collars, embroidered Linen Lambrio ktandkernbieCe, &r. Ladies and Cents' Linen Cambria Reutdkerohlefe. IA 'F l:trisl i all ' Handlcorahlefir, Black cravats, and Neck ties. • WHIZZ gOODS in v riety. WINTER 8 met( reduced in cries. of all kinds. Lift hsu uoutrs. Illanket and Broohn Shawls. Bed and Crib blankets. Blank Chinking Clothe, Cloass /fried, Bade. ' Bilk velret, &tr.. &a. ortzer 888 IJOF/Ori until February let, whilst taking stook. VBARLEB Aboalts, lalt-tt EIGHTH And ARCH &reel*. TILDE PLAID rhANNELIS. AAP Elegant Broohe Shawls. Woollen Cloth Cloaks. - Woollen Lots hatvls. - Pretty 20 and 22cant Detainee. 436 , and a 6 Ell WOO% Robes earth 41 and 88 Finest Black Alouvelines.33 to 60 01111116. 31 sent all•wool Plaids. MSS for best Panay Casettnnree. 80 - ed o,lnts at 8 t and $ 1 . 15 . Bstrt.n.ts and Colattneros, 40 to 70 cent& Vest WI very. cheap 80 cent fir.t.rate Shi to and Drawers. alone. Ties, aloe, Ste., &potion lot% e ltgrt ; I n .141 /AUT. N. a.—Livt..N CH7OD3, a large and desirable stock of every desonphon. lato fUSI FRY (KMDS. —J. Wll. HOF lid ANN, No. 0 _North ElciflTll Street has now open his Fall/Rock of Nosier! 'rood. z ['Warr esis and Drawers ofCariniriehtand Warner asuyerior ninon facture, for ladies and missizia' went. Merino Shirts and Drawers, for eats sod youths. Merino Hosiery, Cotton Ilositia, woollop Hosiery., gloves and (taunt rte., and lood_er generally appartnainpg to the Hosiery lumen. W. H. respectfully solicits the attention of amilos Is stook, assuring nen" that his stook is un excelled for variety byß oilier in the city, and that his price are as low ae t eoany other regular house. N. B.—Neabetement ttfrom the prices named. afl-afrntf TIiORNLEY & cHTSM. Northeast conies 810B TR and BPRINO GAR DEN Streets would invlte atention to their stook of MICH LINEN AISF4.. Of thew own direct Importation, wtoolt they can coca aanttv recommend. l. an excellent steak o , ,mina and aneettoe Wish and American Blytkote and Flannels. Cloths. Corlmeres, and Connate. Marseilles is and Comfortable'', /no. 'letten of C oaks and smite and htanket Shawls seMnar sties/too coot ognoy Silks Tin 11841). Beat makes of Cloak , o. An oils stook win be (mind 118.111 Mo. , Ind •C0M111111813101 4 4 HOUSES. FAARELL & MORRIS, Lli ONESTNOT lITREWP, IMPORTERS... - CO At Netil it 10 N' 1ie1142 N 2 7 ,9 akarini, ciAxiage, DOESKENIS, LATZNETIL AND MUER COATING% AIANTBLZTBI PANTALOON STURM • +1174m - &c., &o. - • • FROTIIINGELAId & WifiLLß ; $5 LETITIA STREIT, AIM iltt SOUTH FRONT sTazarr. COTTONADES. Nonni* &a both Crlotbiers sad Jobbers, mints variety. SUMMER COATINGS ANC ' tiLISIEMEREITS Made by Waradagton Mills. Org i ll?ken for these desirable goods for Boring trade. SWIM, HAZARD, •k, HDTCHMSON, NO IISI CTEIHTNUT COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE SALE OF PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. HOGS E-FURNISHIN (a GOODS. GOODS FOR THE SEASON. BRONZED FENDINAS ANDIRONS, STEEL FIRE SETS, FOOT WARMERS, nwws:3l FAVLIVeIt. T erTE Ens ' ROT AT TICE • HOUSE-FURNISHING STORES, NOS. 9U AND MS CHESTNUT STEEET. A.‘MIIAREIEY &CO, 015-wrnitr CIGARS, TOBACCO,' &o. E STA BLISHED 1760. • PETER LORILLARD. SNUFF & TOBACCO MANUFACTURER, 18 CRAMSER9 STREET. (Penned) , et C hathamstreet, New York.) Would 00.11 the 0.14010.1 etteeuon of °peers and Druggists to Its removal. and also the smote, of ht 4 manuleature, els: BROWN SNUFF. Idecabog, - Piet Reveal,. warms Ropes Natetutoohes, Amertor e taNn i v iturp. Coprusgen. % t l e . t Yon. - t Scotch, • c inch eL; ° K___t t iq'r±t t r nush Ilona, Dew Scotch. or goindytoot. TottAoco. E. 11011.1110. EINE CUT CHEWING. ILITOEING. (o. ' }V... L.: or plain. tit. /asp, bievendieh, or sweet,_ - Bpanish, ste 1 mils d• ewoettloonted IMIIO.OO cester, Kltef o ot. Tin Foil Cavendish. Pura urkish. neder of Frites will be sexton Replication. N. 13.—NntE the new aglow of Ruh Baotok Snuff. which will be found a serener article for dipping our. Naos. ‘133..fm ZWISSLER & FIORLLI,O, 'no NORTH TIMID STREET, Mtn for sale a Iwo sapYb of CIGAR • OP TES BBB? HAVANA BRANDS. TOBACCO, SNUFF, PIPES, &e. AGENTS nu SAIL 4 !X 4311RMAN BMOXIMO TOBACCO AND CIGARS. a054-3w IFIBAWING AND PAINTING MATE , •-•- auto. flaisisteere and Arolitteette Stational, c moan rainung Materials. • otcolazlnacus Petiole etad Vases. %slat Spies for Sittldren, and alio for Artists and I eats. reaAad Ptotare "qualm A 11•ZTigtriciattrtil F . mai. 0011.01 8 . Z ittRE:I7IC, 11141"." Malan* %VEST [NDTA! BITTERS.—These cele • • brated sitte are meetine with metal favor. They moat effeatttell rs y and tiernetnently cure all doior- Mror "f.'11:0Cduit,Z1`,7:4:101'11:;; ° ;,11,1 1,d 0, 1 7 1 4.1 srpold hl the Feaalty of the 013W:demi °Wes of toe etfttell end Borne • for the Wade cure of Dye /Wm, /.IWerCattlpielne. Nerrotia Paver and saps. &a. ' THOMAS F. Hite ilt,hY Kent. ..d.11.4m S.W.' earner airy rt mgss MACKEREL --A fine invoice of ../-•Ji,'bbta:. am, and r t. Never, inseee. tien. Alsookemati to of .at if ax Wee i v. 1 14 blalereh Indere/Me tee eitle W .1. TAY & et, ite e,ol IPA ivonvu AR V.PI. 14AIi LIQUOttIOE—For sale by WEILL *II#-.do BROTStilt. tt (a Kula- COD , NEW PUBLICATIONS. fIICKENS' LAST BOOK-AS 'WEL .8 OTHER NEW VOKS. PUBLldfir D AND FOR BALE THIS DAY. J. THE PLANTEttiB DAUGHTER. Compsnim te the Planters Northern Bride," by 5 1 118. CA MINE NENTZ Dedicated. by p•I mission. to Mrs. Atm 8. erspatxsi of New York. Complete in two volumes. punier cover. P !nos 41; or, bound in AIM so nme. cloth, 4125. l'ttE BALI rfl 1-101T5R. BY CltititLEd DICKENB,( complete in one large octavo volume. large type. tine 25 cents. M. LOLA MONTEZ'S LIVE, AND LECTURES ox LORE. BE nUTII-UL, WIRMEN. &c. THE LoCTURr 13 OP 1,01. e. MON Tr Z. mcludire a full and compete " Antal, orrapi y of her Ida." writ ten by harself, na well as her celebrate d end popular Lemmas on " Beautiful Women. " Gall . for., " • Wits and Wom e n at • ans.•• Rionnnierrr " Comio Aauent o va 'Hemmer' o History, ' &a., kn., with n hernial! Steel Portrait o f Polo Mottles. Corn lot 170 1 , ,lt d w t o . r n l:ms u .ap e f r o .. r . !fr . One Dollar ; IV! THE MAN IN BLACK. BY 0. P. It. JAMES, Elio., Author of '• Mary r , if Burgundy." "Allah Neil," Lord Montnaue's Pare,' •'i he Cavn/ior." Sto., &n. It la thr boat t wit ever written by mules. Complete in one largo voluma. Price Fifty Cent,. The aLova are published and far son THIS DAY, at T. B. PETEHSOa & BROTHER., m IS-3t Po. Sol CHESTNUT street. OUR MUSICAL FRIEND. " , LIR MUSICAL FR Men for the Winter Months. Every Pianist, Should procure this week- Every Si ne. r, It publication of VOohl and Every Teacher, Piano forte Music,. costing Every Pupil. but 10 CeN PS a number, Every Amateur. and prononneed by the entire Press or the country "THE BEST AND CH E.APE WoRIC OF THE KIND IN THE W_ O R LD." Twelve full-sited pages of vocal and Piano-forte Music) FOR TEN CANTS. leap en: , et 80; quarterly., 51.25, iSubsori my to "Our Musical Friend," or ardor it from lia nearest nand(' .ler. and you will have &lull° enrillah or your entire family nt an inti l fnifioant cost ; and If you Want Must° lor the Flute. Violin. Carnet, Carionet, Aosordenn, &e.. eubseribe for the "So lo Flelo dist," issued semi-monthly, contatnung also twelve lows; prose. 10 cents per number; 040 per year ; Slab for ili us a mouths. Jt published and for sale by O NASS A UMOR & 107 Street. New York. TEND," a Rare Comp dig maim SECOND SERIES OF DR. CUMviING'S Greet Tribulation; or, Thinze Coining upon the Earth. Irmo. el. This volume forms the coneluEion of Pr. Comming's work. It differs somewhat front the former volume, for. while the fn m.r &Alt with the nvure and the tnerke .1 the Great Tribal tom, the present vs,lorne re. Wes to the ohernoter and condition . the hopes, the hap piness and destiny of the people vi uod. lust received and for •de by WlLLiedd b. & ALFRIRD NAT/TIEN, Sale No. OS CHESTNUT street. I ItItA1111) GLUE. SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE! aA ETITCE IN TIME SAVES NINEP DIMPATOH: SAYE THE PISQ2I3I ECONOIAY 1 As aectdotes wit, happen, even in welt-regulated familia, it it very desirable to have some obeap end oorivsnient tray for repairing kurnittire, Toy., Crooke TI, Ito. SPALDING'P PREPARTD GLUE' meets all inch emergencies, and no household can afford to be without it. ft is always reedy and tip to the etlok• mg point. There le no longer a necessity ,for limping chairs, splintered veneers. headless dolls, and broken oracles. it is just the article for cone, shell, and other ornamental work, so popular with ladles of refinement and taste. This admirable oreparatloo fa need 00/d. being ehe meetly held in solution. and Posessains all the valuable qualities of the hest cabinet-makers' glue. It may be used la the place of ordinary tatteilage, bean vastly more adhesive. ' USEFUL IN EVERY ROUSE." N. B. A louth accompst.ien each WAIL PRICE TWENTY-FIVE OENTS. Wholesale Depot, No. sill OSUMI iitrset, New York, Addr.se HENRY 0. SPALDING & CO., Do: No. 3880, New York. Pat op for Dealer, in Cases oont , lnina four, eight, and metro dozen, a Loan t.f4iLithog raptuo sittOW.C.llll) rsompanyin4 each package, sr A Angle bottle of SPALDING'S PILFPARED OLLIE will gave ten times Recant annually to every household Sold by all prominent Stationers, Druggists, Hard. ware and Furniture Dealers, Greene, sad Fangs stores. Otamtry Merobante 'hon)d make a noted SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, when making LIP their lint, IT WILL STAND ANY CLIMATE. BBLAJD pußz AND OLIEAP BREAD, MANUPACYURBD BY THE MEOHANIOAL BAKERY, WI SI OBTLIIIID AT TIM POLL:MIN* PLACES: IitatORANIOAT. BAKERY, BW. comer of Broad and 'Vine streets. O. M. CLARK.— pier !tree below Tema. H. B. corner 811th and JAM) street. JOHN A. DIOXI3Y.-. ....-.N0.1323 Vine street. T. P. 111 North Fifth street. S. BOOT.. B. corner Fifth and B W. W. MATHEW& _-.- —.B. i n . glnlei:B treetas.irenth and Locust s D. KNIOHT.— —....Droed street, below Wal. out. UEOROE GARVIN 141 Lombard street. D. W i4 comer Butteenth WM. COURTNEY .. t to n . d aueB=ahtAtiorellln . street. _ B. IL WANANAKER....—.—F adore! street, above S. LUNTZ:---. ixth. South Fourth and Johnston streets L. HOLLAND. Ogden ts. DAVID 8ADDLER.—..........N0. WO North Eleventh IltrOtot. J. WEWLITMAN--.7hirteenth street. below Thompson street. 8. IL 1040 North Front tr. t . &corner of Seventh and hue arena. N W. water Tenth and II BROOMS.- -- F. MORRIS.-- ...-. Bhipsee streets. No. 7216 Booth Front attest. B. W.. porter Broad and Parrish streets. Corner. Nineteenth Ernst N ti giii:r " Wn e tli and Federal streets. Ttrentpeecond etreet,alt. E. B. Tvaimi.;— /. THOB. T. Buzn--. B. B. SOWN-. .7. hicINTYE2 Coates. ALEX. FULLERTON. —.Oc t Ter of Filth and Chris , MRS. E. RAMBLER....—No. 1731 Coates street. D. F. k T. W. Girard avenue. WM. McORACREN—..-2303 Hamilton street. R. It DEATLY .N. W. (tomer or Twelfth JOLT Ud KLEfN ...31"4. 61 :0 n r. Th grits teenth and earner or eet. M. ppm; cr ier Fourth MRS. F. c r o a r e ner l gnith and Green street. J. L. HlCKl3.—."—.......—.olunden i n. J., more O. EL RAINIER,— —WeV i lligglphi OM at. N. L. YARNELL. Letiln' v ell. rd 444 JOHN 13A.RNET--.Tnsmont and Fuse Grove: _enn GEO. D. TOWNSEND,.--. Wen Chester, rentll MoCLEF.B..—..—.—..Atlantle City. PC J. D. HORTON —.— Moreno°. N.J. 8. P. EBHRLEIN --. —Columbia. Pe. lin-tf 3 11 1R " O A A I D ll it t3 n i d l ir ' IN I h i t U re ' o R ta Y , igI . L W AE4Fi e A r . This establishment is now in sucoeksfut operation, ay and night, and all are respectfully .in vited to call nal see the whole process of bread-making for theinselvee. The undersigned takes the liberty of saying that for thirty-flve years he has been a prantinal Illaker—five as apprentioe, and Svc.. att Journeyman in one of the him houses in Scotland, and twenty-live as quieter—during which time he has had the opportunity of making many experimente. Mid observing an the improvement@ whim) totve been made during that period. ln this establielinient. of which he him now the man• agment, in addition to (be complete labor-saving ma chinery, he hui how faoitities of many kinds not hereto too possessed. Being enrestralned In the purchase of flour, none but he boundeat and beet shall ever be used; end he bite to visitation in saying that Bread of all kinds can be de tvered. unsurpiunied In quality and weight by that made .ry the ordinary process. FamilieslD which the Broad made by the Mechanism) Bakery has not boon tried, or in which It brie been tried only at tte commencement, before the machinery woe In Perfect working order, re respeetfullyasked to give it atrial now, the undersigned believing it would lead to mutual advantage. JOIIN O. MOXEY, Superintendent HAVANA DINARS.—A full assortment. 11-1- pet re.oßived. in store and boa. The (Menden of &mfr. Is invited PIM .1r k 80118. Amur Nn, VA Strouth PRO NT Strpoxt. MBITON ENUALLSTIO TILES it doors. Ornemental Chimney Tops for cottages. ! a grden Vases end Fountains. ttrified Fine for drains and Water conductors Potted and for saw I meta sr El. A. lummox. 1110114RTNITT Rtrotat uf All 34 AND SHOULDERS. -2,100 Pieces City-timoked Hams And Shoulders. Also, 900fieces extra 'wear cured Horns, for wits by C. C. NAIII.INH k 0., yoni., " A .,. gel Annr .11.noo Vrn.t Tv]At;KEHEL.-625 bbls. N 05.1, 2, and 3 Mackerel, in assorted Original Packnres, of the latret catch. for sale byC. itiADlAtt & CO,, Rini streat. donr 41. v. tr rnt i: Jail nil, AMBER—Rectified and 'onuon, for NJ , Noe by WETta RI LI, & ensi VArtit mgrtmin CIEE4E —375 boxes Berktintr ("aunty Cheese, in *tore. and fornale by C. C. SADLER 00. • Nilti •lon. slum. Rrnqt lal4 1 Jls,W t WA" trk,,W 01.i.LEADS SUGAR .1 60 bhde prime new orop N. 0. Suter, for sole by J&NIA,S GRAHAM & CO., I,ETITEIt Street. Jae j ILI E. —Prirne retailing (Marleston Rice Lad for We by JAMES GRAHAM Os 00., LBTI4A gt•tot. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1860. Ely Vitss. FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1800, Now Publications, Ticknor & Fields have a new "blue and gold" volume in the prose, containing Poems by Sydney Dobai!. This is an English writer, whose first book, "The Roman," excited no small mention. It was followed by " Balder," alto a dramatio poem, and a volume of short lyrics, called 4 . Eng land in Time of War." The contents Of tts three volutnes aro hero colleeted into-one, wit is judiciously prefaced by a blogrephioal sketeltof the author. This is a desirable addition to !Aar "blue and gold" series of poisular literature. The same publishers aro bringing out, in a hand. some l2mo, volume, Poems by Miss Mules*, aa thor of "John Halifax," chiefly contributed Co Ohabibers' Journal, The National Kaoline, anti Household Words, during the last ton years. Thetys, is very little passion—the soul of poetry—in Mta Mulook'a versialos, for she is somewhat of lA' strong minded class; but good senso.preinminater, and some of her sketches have a quiet pathos Mid a domestic feeling which gently move, though they may not strongly agitate, the heart. A re ligious feeling pervades several of them poems. But, on the whole, they aro deficient in strength— they aro sometimes merely conventional, red seem rather the task-work of a tired mind, which had to write something for a rangasine, than the Involuntary utterance of thought and passion in irrepressible song There is a eareleasneas too, as if, having thrown offa poem, ohs disdained tobeelow the necessary polish upon it—in this resembling Robert Browning and many other living writers who, resting satisfied with tho first working out of their idea, disdain to 810 it down, to isonciontriae, and to polish it. The true artist is not satisfied With putting his conception into the marble, bat Care fully goes over it, again and again, to make it per fect. The volume, however, will be road With some Interest, for Miss Mule*, the novelist, has numerous readers in this country, who will be curious to see hew she succeeds in poetio compo sition. The publishers hare printed her book beautifully. Another volume, and the last, of Margaret Ful ler's writings, has been published by Brown, 'reg gae, do Chase, of Boston, with a portrait of the anther, whose untimely death, with her husband and child, within sight of her native land, which she loved so proudly and's* well, cannot be thought of without sorrow. The volume is edited by hey brother, wko tolls us in a somewhat transcendental preface that it is less a republication than any of its predecessors, as "only one of its articles has ever appeared before in book-form," though some of its reviews and essays have appeared in the M. lawns of the Tribune and the D sal. Still, "a large portion of it has never appeared at Mlle print, ceps. chilly its poetical portions. The work of eolleetieg these mem reviews, and poems, bee been a MC fault one, much more thou attended the prepara tion of the previous volumes." The critical arti cles show a great deal of good some and onside ruble acumen. The miscellaneous papers, most of them evidently written for the ocoasioe ' are better than oeoasional pieces generally are. The poems please us the least, for Margaret Fuller, as faits we can judge, wee deficient in that "imagination , all compact" which makes the Poet. The book,' however, nosy be read a second time—which is a great test of merit. The sumo Boston publiehere_ have in proem the eel:Lipton works of Francis Bacon (Ineorreetta and commonly called Lord Ram), which will be issued in twelve crown ootavo volumes, in s ttals of unprecedented beauty, and excellence. This is a ieprint from the English edition, Just completed, edited by three eminent member. of the Univers lily of Cambridge, Messrs. Spodding, Lune Rine / and Heath—an edition vattly saparlor to that pro duced, someyoars ago, by the hate Basil Montego. A Boston paper says "Mama Houghton & Co,, of the noted Riverside press at Cambridge, have these works in hand. The books will be plated upon the finest tinted paper, and boned in a style which, for beauty and, durability, will com mend itself to all tastes." The came pubilatim alto have in poem the whole of Scott's works, prase and verso, in twenty-four volumes, 12m0., with the Ltfe by Lockhart, and pledge themselves to make it greatly superior to any ever yet lasued. Theta are extensive, as well as many, enierprisce, but Brown, Taggart, It Chase are determined, it would seem, to keep up the character of Bolton as a book•produelog plea,. Peterson & Brothers have published, in one vo lume, uniform with their Sem editione of Diane, his new eungeries of tales called The Haunted Rouse." Tho Caine publishers have sent us a 12mo. volume milled " The Planter's Daughter, a Tato of Louisiana." It is written in the style of the late Mrs. Hen% and the plot anti eheraotere era very well developed and drawn. From Sheldon rg Company, New York, we have "The Nonsuch Professor in his Meridian Splendor ; or, The Singular Actions of Sanotided Christians laid open In Seven Sermons, at All.hallew'e Church Landon Wall. By William Seeker. To which is added Tho Weddingsliing, a Sermon, by the same author. With an Introduction, by C. P. lirauth, D. D." It seems that Mr. Seeker (cot to be oon bounded with his namesake, the Arohbishop,) was a Dissenting minister of the seventeenth century, "little known, not bectause he did not write well, but because ho did not write much." Exactly two centuries ago ho first published the contents of this volume, of which eaveral English editions have ap peered. It was partially reprinted in New York, in 1813, and Lowndoe, the biographer, charaote rites it in his catalogue as "a beautiful little work, worth its weight in gold." Wo have read it with great eatiofsetiou, for it is eminently thoughtful, serious, practical, and ooncentrated. The present is an age of wordy religious writing, and some olergymen who rush into print, apparently fur popularity, would profit by studying Seeker and imitatiug his' simple manner, in which much thought is oonveyed in few words. The book Is emixontly worthy of extended circulation. Mr. Jeremiah Clemtne, formerly United States Senator from Alabama, has been engaged for some time, it hes been reported, in writing a book in which Juana woe to be done to the [motive oha raoters of Aaron Bear and Aleaauder Hamilton. Mr. Clemens had previously written two works of fiction, Bernard Lilo," an historleal reenact, and " Mustang Grey," a romance., Ills long-ex petted book, entitled " The Rivals i a 1 ale of the Times of Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton," has Just been published by Lippincott Sr Company, of this oily. We have read it—with disappoint meet. .A wore work of 110(10A, ahltawashlng Burr and blaokeotug Hamilton, is not what wet finked for from Mr. Clemens. We expected, at the twat, an bletordeal exposition, with every point of vindi cation and attack dearly proven by accessible eat deuce. We believe that popular opinion, which has condemned Burr to hatred and dirgraoe, has erred on the other side, in giving an undue excita tion to the moral obarnoter of Hamilton—hut work of notion, with imeginery oharaotere, wooer asthma, and incidents, is not the way to adjust the balance of censure or of praise. We repeat, this hook disappoints us, for it loaves Darr and Iliunilton Jan as they were left by Mr. Partors's ineelleut hi• ography of the former. Mr. Clement has written it very well. Ilia aceounte of Burr's monetary in the war, in Canada, when Montgomery fell—of LI, bravery and tact in the Revolutionary army—and of his oonsummate ability and toot as a lawyer, are graphic and powerful. There our praise meet rest: even al a more romance, the story does not Deng well together. SACRED MUSIO CANTATE 11011INO A Collection of Chnntii. nymph and Tuna, ndlptad to Charon rOttleft. Lew! H. I T4l‘litt It, SCllBl'lllO. Bosuns 0. I.lstion 4' Co. pp W. in Scrumpy, the laud of church music, hymns are always wedded to certain tunes, and no ono is over daring enough to pronounce a divorce of such union. The words and air are always suggestive of each other, and become a part of the spiritual life of the Christian. In Englund, and unfortu nately la Atuorioa, the reverse is the case. The choir•leaf.er generally soieots his tones, not on ac count of any fitness to the hymns, but to gratify his own taste, or to display the special forte of tho members of his choir, This constantly causes an Inoongruity of melody and yens,' exceedingly dis tasteful to the cultivated mind, and, at times, be comes positively ridiculous. Io the present col lection, an effort hue boon made to adhere to the good old German rule of making the words and air breathe the same spirit. We question if there he any book of churoh mode published in this count!) , containing more sterling melodies, or with as full and harmonious arrangements. There is noticeable, also, a duelled carefulness In the selection of the hymns themselves. The editors of this work appear to have aimed at making a collection of decidedly choice airs, and, with this view, have avoided a cumbrous calico• tion—the grave fault •f all church hymn-books, There are in all three hundred and eighteen hymns, and among them the reader will nut only recognise the standard hymns of our English lections, but also admirable translations of th 4 gloriously Mitring chorale of the Sermon chum!) vendee, and of the glowing hymns introduced at an early date into the Latin Church. Some trans lations of special merit have been expressly made for the book by American scholars. The book contains a full collection of chants adapted to the Penises, (in the received English version ' ) with mike for tho Nowticrua, xinvoe, from Ilarriliburg. Oorreroondenee of The Pros.] IlAnniseuno, Jan. 18, 1800 Yesterday afternoon was devoted entirely by the Rouse to the consideration of the resolutions passed by the Senate, approving of the course of the Opposition in Congress on the Speaker ques tion, and which were published In The Press of Saturday. Mr. Strong moved to modify them somewhat ; but the amendment was voted down by 39 to 51, although all the Philadelphians, together with Speaker Lawrence, voted affirmatively. The resolutions dld I:ketonic up to tho standard of lion. L. P. Willieten. of Tioga, the representative of the unadulterated Republicans of the Rouse, who offered to emend the amendment by resolutions of hit own; but finding his patty averse to rejeeting the action of the Reptadioant in the Senate, he withdrew them. lie then supported the original resolutions In a speech of thirty minutes, clearly and earnestly defending the Genres of his party In agitating the subject. lie showed that for fifty years it has been the custom of the Legislature to take part In subjects before the national Congress, °t it slavery and the mammal questing, and he maintained that It was eminently proper t) 4t this should be so in a repreeentativo Govern ment. Mr. Williston is an honest, oilman man, and his record on the slavery question having been asosistent, It 13 impossible not to respect him ; while nothing but contempt can be felt for such armatures al Plolett and Bigler, who ono year shout hosannas to the Wilmot Pr 07150 and the next make themselves hoarse for Leaompton. Don. George V. Lawrence, of Washington, spoke in behalf of the more coneervative Itepublioans. Helms been three years in the Senate and two In the Roues, and is consequently thoroughly versed in State affairs. ilo is a ready debater and Said fo bo very popular with lale oonstituents. The Demooratio view of the question was sustained by J. Simpson Africa, of Huntingdon, and Mr. Hill, of Montgomery country, both of whom took the position that it was not within the province of the duties of this House to interfere with affairs at Washington. Mr. Africa is young, self-made, and elicited the applause of his party by hie ortho dox views. In the Senate, Mr. Connell read In place a bill to authorize the clerk of the Board of Health, of Philadelphia, to administer oaths In certain oases. Mr. Yardley, " An act fur the assessment and re covers of damages upon the Delaware Division Canal Company." It provides for the appointment or seven viewers by the Court of Common Pleas, who shall view the premises, and report; and when the court confirms the report, the company is to ply the amount awarded within thirty days, or they shall be liable to be sued, as in other cacao of debt. 'This bill proposes to provide for all damages State; for right-ofsway, tko., claimed against the State; and as this subject goes book more than twenty years, and many of the papers must be lost among the r ubbish or the late Canal Commissioner's office, it will bo seen that the Delaware Division Company bare a serious matter before them. It wee referred to the Judioiary Committee, of which Mr. Yardley is a member The State Agricultural Society mot in Barris barg yesterday for the purpose of emoting elle Oil for the ensuing year. The statement of the trees surer shows that there is a clash b Aeon of $7,823, upon whiob exhibit it was resolved to appropriate $1,500 towards the Permor'a High School. Eton. David Taggart having deolined 'a re-elsotiou, tie following new board wee chosen: Premieres—Jonah S. Haldeman. Via Presidents-Ist district, George W. Wood ward ; 21, Snow Cadwallader; 3,1, James Gow en; 4tb, Robert Miro Powell; 51h, Thomas P. Kaor • 6th, George Thcm to •, 7th, Adrian cornett ; Bth, deorge M. Lauman; 10 , 11, Coleman Render son •, 10th. B G. Peters; 11th, Amos E. linpp; 12th, S. W. Sturdevant; 13th, Roney D. Maxwell; 14th, Henry Drinker; 15th. John B Book; 16th, Christian Eberly; 17th, William Ileyser ; 18th, Elias Bnker; 19th, William A. Stokes; 20th. Jo shua Wright; 21st, John Murdoch, Jr.; 221, John Young, Jr ; 211, Thontns J. Power; 24. h, Deng Souther; 25th. James Miles. Cotrecsponuicuz S•critary—A. Bop& Damllton, Ckitni.9 and Geologi,TNS. d. iluldomna. ... and Lidrorian—zlionry Gilbert. It Is Weil that the otloers of this eootety ate not necessarily required to hare a prootieal knowledge of the farming Interest, or a majority of these gen tlemen would be ruled out. They ehould 6e, new practise' agriculturists, who would take a real Interest to advancing the agrioulture of the State; instead -of lawyers and gentlemen politl dant. Both house* have passed and the Governor signed a bill creating the offleo of assistant oentroller of the oily of Pittsburg, who Ic to be appointed gni paid by the controller out of his own salary. If the diet officer was necessarily absent or sick, the business of his office came to a dead 103%, as no person was authorised to perform the duties of controller. It was simply to remedy this defect that the not was passed. There were no new bills introdnood into the House to•dey. PErtx. Letter from New York. DISSENSION THU SOARD Or ?moo COMMISSION ERR: MATOR WOOD APPARENT—TER NEW STATE ARSENAL: LIARS FOR ITI STRENGTH—MINS MART GANNON—TIM NNIY NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC lIALL—DECLINE or Mn. DVIITON—COONN'S EgCO6• TRIANS-3111. F. I. OTTARSON. (Conosooodopo of The Prom) NEW YORE, January 18, 1860. More trouble among the pollee commtulonera ! trouble that promises to bo kept up during the mayoralty of Mr. Wood. Lie has succeeded in making au entering wedge of discord among the powers that be, and, like any other shrewd mans. ger, will codlo and watch over it until it grows into something worth while. The general caper intendant having been sailed on by the mayor to detail an additional Tome for duty at the mayor's Meet, refused; whereupon the latter procured the salting of a special mooting, at which the rule. transferring the duty of detailing officers and men from the Board to the general suporintendent was rescinded, and that power restored to the Board This takes from the hands of the superintendent a strong element of t Goieney, cud co far us possess• lug oontrul over his mon it coneerned, places bun entirely at the caprice of the oommissionere. It is intimated that General Pillsbury will, in oonse quenee, resign his position, but I doubt it. The recent calamity at Lawrence had given ride to a rumor, that the new and spacious arsenal ra• oently erected in this city by the State, Is not as assure as such en edifice should be. The large rooms need as drill rooms by the Seventh and other regiment., which are believed to ho strong enough to bear up almost any amount of steady weight, it is feared are pot sufficiently etrong to resist the regular, elmultaneous tread of between two and three hundred men. At all events, the men of the Seventh, many of them, do not feel called upon to lune the rick of their lives In ex actly' that way. They are ready enough for a ii4hior for danger, as the stook brokers say, "in the regular way," but when It acmes to smashing in roofs of buntline, or breaking through floors, they beg respectfully to bo excused. It isn't mili tary. bliss Mary Gannon, a leading favorite at Weil leek's Theatre, bee been compelled to retire from the stage, temporarily, in conaequenoe of a serious opthalmie affection, which may destroy the sight of Oat of her eyes, 1 he Mewls of Mayor Wood, and smith Demoorats us aro disaffected with Tammany flail, bad quite a meeting at the Everett House. on Monday evening, fur the purpose of completing the organisation of the National Democratic flail Asses,'anon. Up wards of a hundred gentlemen attended, number trig among theta many Democrats of prominence. A committee, with Judge Dean es chairmen, waa appointed to solielf a epeelal charter from the Legislature. The capital was find at $lOO,OOO, with power to increase to $300,000, the shares to be $:l5 each. The building Is to be so planned and constructed as to yield a handsome Interest on the Investment, irreepeotivo of the room' required fur the purposes of the association. There la every prospect that the new building will be " stomas." I was told list evening by the family physician of Mr. WO2. E. Burton, that ho is gradually sink ing, and cannot possibly hold out many days longer. His disease is of that charaeter, and has ' reached that stage, that precludes roomy. The debut of Mr. Cooke's company of clues- Wane, from London, drew an Immense audience to Niblo's last evening—the largest I hove Been in that Spacious establishment. The old, legendary awv dust has seen ita last days—so far as horse•drama in the oily is concerned. Mr. Moore, the alert sagacious, and courteous representative of Mr. Niblo, has introduced for ring purposes a covering of gutty peroba, nearly a foot thick, covered with heavy matting, which gives the "arena" a per• featly clean and neat appearance, and renders noiseless the eavortlngs of the quadrupeds. Of the portormeta and performances, lour only eau thus far be eel down as particularly meulion•worthy— the dashing equestrianism of Mile Tema, eurpass tog any feminine horaevronoaushlp yet witnessed in tide country; the brilliant nerobatle feats of the Hanlon brothers; the oontortions of a ohnp named Dwerroy, whose spinal column Rooms to have bran premitted—a sort of " bona man "--and tho bare-backed riding of Mr. James Robinson, whose four baek•totnereaults daring one circuit of the ring, each time landing fairly on the bare back of his steed, brought down the honer," In the noisiest possible manner. Mr. Franklin .1 Ottarson, for many years peat at the bead of the oily department of the Tnbutie, bag become associate editor of the New York Des pateA. For three or four years Mr. Otterion has been a prominent member of the Common Council, and is much better qualified for that position than some who found themeelvee enoinbori. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. HON. EDWARD ETERETT ON TUE LAWRENCE Dis• AMR AND THE DEATU Or MACAULAT.—The an niversary of Franklin was celebrated at Boston on Monday evening. The address wee delivered by Bon. Edward Everett. The Boston Couritr says: Wo think we never heard Mr. Everett speak with snob effect. All his themes were intereettng ; and two of them were touching. Before entering upon hie general oration upon Franklin—which was a repetition of the discourse delivered last year— he alluded to two events, which are Just now en grossing the attention of the world : the sad catas trophe at Lawrence, and the death of Macaulay. t shall do !elastics to the audience before which I have the honor to appear and to myself," said he, "11l could beginto addressyou on any subject, with. out fret giving utterance on your behalf and my own, to the feelings of amasemeut and grief. caused by the recent calamity at Lawrence. While our first emotions are those of unavailing sorrow at the ea- Mete of life (terrine, is amount, and doubly ea for the cruel agonies with which. In many eases, it must have been accompanied) end of Christian sympathy with leelte c tiV•ittrylvors and bereaved friends, it.; is our duty to oberieh a sentiment of devout the4teinety tot the gracious Providence, by which limits were pined to whe work of de struction, atidshtlndeade *tie mute tied from the very isles. oat 4eA we fail to take a melaucholy pleasure in reflectiag, thatetbiAtein eorlbitble horrors of the scene were relieved by die plays of Christian resignation and ealut•like hero ism, in the humbler walks of life, not to bo cur pained In the history of our me The poor child who, cheerful and unselfish, refused to be rained till Mr. Nash pas saved, and whe was crushed before her turn eame—the little girl who, when she per ceived that her own memo was impossible, held out her duo-bill to her more fortunate companion, amidst the scorching fames , saying, You will be saved—l shall not; carry this to my poor father'— needed no further preparation fur the company of the angel,, to which, like the prophet of old, they were caught up in a chsriot of fire." And passing from this sad topic to another as sad, Mr. Everett said : " Nor will you blame me if, in connection with this calamity at our doer, I allude to the melenottoly tidings, which have just reached us from abroad, of the death of tho most brilliant writer of our own or Any other age; whose 'trot lee for thirty years have been the wonder end the delightof all who read the English language, beucetu the circuit of the eon; an author who, as it eeeans to me, m ore than any other, ancient or modern, was clothed with the magic, power of recreating the deed past, and giving to the men end things of other times the term and color of an actual reviv ing presence; a writer eminent not uniting ordi nary assichitee, but unsurpassed, if not unequelled, in a company of hietorfene—several of them our honored countrymen—two of them with himself mournfully eignalizing the year that has just dosed ; any one of whom would have conferred suflicieut honor on the age In which he lived That in the intensity with which he throw him calf into the toms described by him, and took part so to say, In the great contentions of the times, he never fell tutu an error of Julie mane, or made a fades estlusete of chat motor, need not be maintained; ono such has been keenly felt in this °cannery.. An honest anti a fearless thinker and writer. he,could not avoid collision of opinion and feeling with those who differed from him. But his errors were mote on the noontide sun, Better than this, in Lard tatacanlity (truly a nobleman by Heaven's patent,) the writer was less admirable thee the man ; the eplerilor of his page was excelled. if possible, by the brilliancy of his conversation and the charm of his personal intercourse. All the world admired, his gorgeous imagination, the magnificence of it e diction. hie miraculous range of memory, which graeped the literature of every language and every age, and held all its stores of illustration prompt at command; but those who knew him loved him, for the unaffeeted meekness with which he bore his transeendant honors, the sunny cheerfulness of his dlepeisition, the generous warmth of his heart." AN AKCIENT PARALLEL row THE LATE Dicta? alt AT LAWRENCE —The Lowell Journal, in alluding to the late ellsuter at Lawrence, cetera to a similar (catastrophe near Rome, and says : Taoltus, the historian, from whose works this so. couut ts taken, was born nineteen years after the death of the Emperor Tiberius. Coming on the stage of life so mule after the event, and aesoola ted, as he must bays dune, with those who wit nessed the calamity, Li* account is the more re liable. Taeltue, Ann. book 1, pp. 196, sea 6X: " A sudden cataluity occurred in the consulship of Marone 'Medea end Lucius Celpurntue, phial equalled the havoc of the most destructive wars; its beginning anti ending were simultaneous. One MEM had undertaken to erect an amphitheatre at Fidense, there to exhibit a ow/that cif zbutlatort lle was of the raise of freedmen, and as he engaged in the buotness from no exuberance cf wealth, nor to acquire popularity among the inhabitants, but as a matter of sordid gain, he neither put it upon actin toundatioas, nor employed breves to strength en the wooden fabric which farmed the superstrua tore. Thither flocked front Rome persons of every sex and age, eager for ouch shows, es during the reign at Tiberius they were de barred from diversions at home, and in greater crowds from the nearness of the place. Reece the ()eternity was the morn disestrou• ; for the theatre being crowded so as to form a dense mass, and then rent asunder, some portions tumbling inward, others bulging toward the outer parts, a count. less number of human beings, either intent upon the speetalle or standing near around the place. were either borne headlong to the ground or buried under the ruins. These, indeed, who were killed by the shock of the.flret crash, escaped, as ter as was possible in such a diacuter, the misery of torture; much wore to bo pitied were those who, with portione of their bodies torn away, were not yet fureeken of life; those who by day beheld their wives and children, and by night disteu. guished them by their groans and crier. And now others, summoned to the spot by the sad tidings, bewailed one his brother, another his kinsman, a third his parents. Even they whose friends or kindred were absent on a different account, were yet terrified; for, as it was • not yet distinctly known who had fallen in the calamity, the ;lam eproad wider from the uncertainty. l• When the ruins begun to be removed, they crowded round the dead, embracing them and kissing them ; and frequently there arose a con. test about their identity, where distortion of the featured, personal resemblatioe, or similarity of ago had created a liability to error in those who claimed them. Twenty thousand penmen aecord• leg to Suetoolue, and 'Sty thousand, aceording to Tacilus, wore crushed to death or maimed by this sad disaster. It was therefore for the future pro vided. by a decree of the Senate, that no men, under the qualdleation of four hundred theusend sestereer, should exhibit the spectacle of gladiators ; and no amphitheatre should be founded but upon ground of proved solidity.' Atilius was punished with exile. flowerer, immediately upon this de structive calamity, the doors of the great were thrown open ; modielnes and physicinne were tar nished to all; and at that Juncture the city, though under an aspect of eorrow, presented an imago of the public spirit of the ancient Romans who, after great batiks, relieved and sustained the wounded by their liberality and attentions." Lia*, Mr. Grow does not recognise the code. Mr Grow won't tight. Mr. Urole's WA to among the things that were. Now, we do nut blame Mr. Grow for refusing, 03 a matter of principle, to reeoguise the code, but we think Mr. Grow has no businem to innate a gentleman, refuse to ap.logiee, and then refuse to fight him, Mr. Grow is done for,— Memphis We are no partioular admirer of Mr. Grow, but we are not prepared to endorse what our old friend of the Memphis Bulletin says in this case. Mr Branch imputed an improper and dishonorable motive to Mr. Grow, and Mr. Urow replied, as well he might, that the imputation was "ungentle manly." - For this answering of insult with insult Mr. Branoh Invited Mr. Grew to eccept a ottel• lenge to mortal combat, and Mr. Grow, while de ()limn, as a matter of principle, to tight is dud, declared himself responstble for his language, and ready and willing to deteud himself wherever and whenever entitled for the use of it. Must certainly the member of Congress who, under the existing laws, tights a duel, should, by all means, be sent to the pouitentiery ; but this abould not prevent a member of Congress or soy body elm from olliwerluit an insult appropriately. The editor of the llalctin tags he dues nut blame Mr. (}row for refusing, as a matter of principle, to reoegulse the duelliugeode; and wo would ropect fully ask him whether he Woke that a gentleman, who refvea, as a matter of principle, to reougnise the mle, is toiler any obligation to submit tamely to Insults? If ho beam dishonor or dishenemy inc• puted to him to his vary face, boa ho nut a perfect right, whether ho recogniata the duelling code or not, to answer the author of the imputation with words of insult or a blow? should net a men, even though he may morn the code, be allowed, when insulted or when not insulted, to spunk Just MI freely at the men terrible tire-eater in the land —especially if he avows his readiness to take the conauguonaiii of his language? Are the professors of the oodo to be allows:l,th chase drip of Nati eighth and privileges, a monopoly of the luxur y of ventilating their opinions as to the conduot of their fellow•tneu 2—Louisville Journal. Is iv RIOUT ?—Tho President has nominated and his supporters In the EaD4to have confirmed, 49 minister to one of the drat cations In Europe, a gentlemen (Charles Janes Faulkner, of Virginia,) who has recently publicly declared that If a ma. jority of the people of his own country elect a Pre sident of a different political creed than hie own, he should consider it a sufficient ouuse fur breaking up the Government, and that ho was fur soling on that declaration. Is this right? Ie it tho way to encourage the Union sentiment? What conolusion will the world draw when men holding snob senti ments aro made our representatives abroad Y. Commercial Advsrtsicr. A DUBIIIVED ComPust.exr —A t the recent meeting of the Garrisonian Abolitionists, held in litiea, the following resolutions were unanimously passed : Resolved, That we congratulate the friends of the enslaved everywhere, that in the New York Herald they have found a oafs and seeforamedium for the transmission, throughout the South, of the most powerful and eloquent utterances against tho Hare nystetn of Liarrwon, Wendel! Phillips, Thoo dore Parker, Dr. Oheaver, and many other cham pions of liberty, iu both the hemispheres. Resolved, That the thanks of American Aboli- flotillas generally are due to JIM Gordon Bennett, Eeq., for au earnestly espousing their canto In this hour of their trial, and porceoution by the Govern. mout, nor eau we refrain from expressing our ad miration at the almost superhuman skill with a hid' ho is able toldreight his columns, week after week, with what are called the" most treasonable, mur derous, incendiary, inflammatory, end insurrec tionary doctrines," and pour them all over the South, as unmolested as though they were sermons on the" Fall of Men," by our ',treat and soundest Doctors of Divinity, or the publications of the Amt.- rican Tract roolety. Resolved, That whatever other public journal shall bo proscribed, we trust the Newyork Ifer4ld will be allowed the moot uninterrupted circulation possible throughout the slave States, carrying as It dues, all the arguments of Helper against slavery—all imaginary encouragement to this threes to rebel against their tyrant roasters, in the. %Ant 011; OWD Revolution of 1176 TWO CENTS. rirg them at the lame time (rbotuch In that sr euueuee we are compelled to differ with this moat veracious journal) that the North is filled with men like General Lafayette and Captain John Brown, anxionaiy and Impatiently waiting to come to their reeCUO. This recognition of the Farriers of the Herold was lots .• slime due. As it is the only paper area 'vine. at the Booth, which spreads the speeches cf the Abolitiornets at full length before its reader!, it has entitled itself to the special thanks of that body of reformers. In its editorial articles, it is true, it misrepresents them a great deal, brit as they have the chance to speak for themselves, they can not, perhaps, complain.--N. Y. .Evening Post. TUC PUHLIC PRINTIIIO PLWlDEltltit9.—Major General George Washington Bowman, as his friend Senator Bigler et,ylea him, was yesterday elected printer to the Senate, by two majority. He re ceived twenty-seven out of thirty-tie Democratic rotes, and fourteen members of the Senate were absent —every oats of a 'ecm would, in all proba bility have rote, against bins, if they had been present. Senator Pugh, who would hays voted against Bowman, was sick. and could not attend; and Senator Clingman left the Senate before the vote was taken, with the underetanding (so we have heard) that the resolution for an investigatimaeould be the subject of debate during the day, and that no ballot for printer would be entertained The resolution was eabilquently withdrawn, in our opinion, for very questionable reasons, and a snap judgment taken curing the ebonite of Senators opposed to Bowmen, to enable hie friends to put him through. This, we think, Democratic Sena tors will in time regret. They most assume the responsibility and boar the loud themselves The Democracy of the oountry must not beheld respon sible fur their action yesterday. If they hsd consulted their constituents, not one in a thousand would have counselled the election of Bowman as Sonata printer, after the charges which hare been made against him. If Bowman bad 1301 been satisfied of his guilt, he would, If he had in his nature the spiritof is man, demanded an investigation, before ho would bare accepted the office, and if he did not demand It, his friend, Senator Bigler, should bare demanded it for him. But the impression Is, that the lion. Senator is as much opposed to an investigation as Bowman. for very private and important reasons It is even hinted that As is , or was, Interested In one of the newspapers which was the recipient of the pro ceeds of the printing plunder contrail of Weridtll it Bowman. We still insist upon an investigation, for a more corrupt and villainous transaction than the Wen dell k Bowman contract has never occurred during the history of this Oovernment—a transaction which wo will devote our columns in expecing to the bitter end.— Washington State, and Union. Theatrical and 11Inincal Chit-Chat. (From the bew York Programme.] Bltds UMlda has received offers from both thea tres in Pailadelphia. She will appear at the Arch street theatre on Saturday 2lst boat., as Pauline. Miss MARY (limos has been compelled to retire from the profession lot the present, in sonsequence of a serious opthalmin *Gauen, which, it to flared, will destroy the sight of one of her eyes. Wreanan hiansuag i t was the principal ate traitiou at the Worcester Glass) theatre, last work. In the company is Miss Clarks bublo, pee pl, of Peter R•ehiugs. She has a very prepossess. In; appearance, sod her efforts thus far give pro mise of future semis. Mr. E. F. Marden Is also a member of tne company, who, rumor asp, has been left tole heir to a fortune of 1100,000 by the dtai h of his uncle. A p.tnyr, called the ~ Tones Bryant B.6toptan Jig Troupe," hue releutly beett orgaillseu iu Poughkeepsie. Miss BILL Cans' has organised a company with whine she looms, giving a sosios of drumsuo pot formances at Ilartisourg, Pa. Mu. J. A. NZAPIE was at the Metropolitan Teatre, Rochester. last week. Mr. 11. J. Con. way has written a play fur him, in fly. atm, founded partly on American hitcory, and 10:Q with romantic Interest in a legend, entitled We oom-ket ; or, Tao Indian's Cum " Tay ivrisa Belt-Marrs are at Vittsbuts. BARIIT SOL LIVAS ass at SaYannalt last week Mae. Joss Woo 000aluded her engagement at the Metropolitan Theatre, Hanle, last week. Ma. AND MU. WALLIN ()occluded a second week's engagement at Montgomery, Alabama, tut week. EDWLT Boom is at the St. Charles Near Orleans. They are pl.yleg the French pita°, " Le Raman lieu Jenne liontme Pauvre," a play in flee acts and seven tableaux, at the New Origami Opera Bottle. Max. Firma BAREES is now the lames and di rector of the St. Louis theatre. M:. 8. W Glee was starring there last week. It is proposed by the friends of the late Mr. Fatten, in that City, to tender to his estimable widow a complimentary benefit. iktit. ANDSII.SOX And MI! ElSWOteby aret at ills Mahn° theatre. ADAU ISAAOS 3.I3nEEN Concluded her engage ment at the Troy theatre last week. Mr. W.ll. Hamblin la the acting manager there. HD, together with Mr. Oren Marlowe, advertises to give dra matic instruction; the former in tragedy and male+. drama, and the latter la light comedy ! MADAME, OnnieTlC boo had the extraordinary number of one hundred and fifteen original pieces cent iu for approval to her duce the auumption of management. MR. CIRRUS DILLON tras engaged to appear at Drury Lane theatre after Christmas. A Ma. ANDRYIT GARRICK, a I.lCACCtiallt of tho Manorial Duld. was likely to appear alter Chris:- mu at the Princess', London. ALBERT SIIITH who was recently attacked with npoplvxy, was better at last Recounts, and hopes WOKa entertained of his recovery. Tun Eoho theatre, it is Mid, is likely to pave into fresh hands. Report gives the future management to Mr. Rayntun Rolt. Miss HODDART, • pupil of the late Mn. War ner, is about to make her first appearing on the stage. Ax unpublished and 'enacted play written by Leigh Mot, hes been discovered. and will most likely soon tied Ito way on to the boards. "Itecou.nottoNs of the English Stage," by Charles Young, Esq., is announced as in the press. ❑cnao.s, the Irish comedian and vocalist, who WM in this country some years mince, is giving his entertamment in Australia, entitled " The Irish Portfolio." AN Australian manager, of the name of Gibbs, should h ave full booms, as ha mates a nightly distribution of watches to induce people to attend. Tan new tenor, Musiant's porton:nano* in "Teo. vatore," is said to have been the finest ever wit messed in Havana. In the aria of tha third art. " di quells pira," he made use of the g reat C note from the cheat , called •' do di petto, only sang by, and which made the reputation of, Tamberhk. and Dupree. The Pren3a, which wrote against the manager and artists, says that Marettekt in introducing such an artiste to the Havana public. has won the greatest triumph that he could Food bly achieve. A correspondent of the Daily .:Vsmt says: "it is the intention of Sig. Maretsek to present, at the close of his stetson here, his two grand tenors to so Amorican audience. He will also introduce to your public other new artists and operas." Tna long-antlolpated benefit of Roger r the tenor of the Grand Opera, who shot off his right arm about throe mouths ago, took place recently in Paris, on whioh ocoeslon be was aided by Mes dames Alhord, Altolnn Carvalho, Gueyinard, Fer raris, Fume Llyry, Messrs. Sainte, Fey, Dufrene. Alert!, ..Orie, and other eminent artists ibe regular price of tickets was raised to 20 francs, and many were edd by speculators for treble that sum. The ovation was perhaps the most flattering ever bestowed In Faris upon a singer. The Em peror and Empress were present, often jibing heartily in the epplause. Roger used, for toe 6ret time in public. nu artificial arm, manufao:uied by a skilful workman, whose fortuse its secured; ler the false limb performed a) admirably its tone- Clone that the illusion was complete. Roger re turns to the stags with a voice much improved by repose, and a long career of art, interrupted it wee feared fatally, is again opened to him. PALICIDN DAVID, a revival of "Herculaneum," draws excellent houses, though of course V• wall is not a substitute la all respects for liarghl-Mauro, nor tiueynard for Roger. Vestveti is DO 4' studying Fides to ,• Le Prophote." She is decidedly a woman of talent—her vowel organ is detblent log foyer of the Cons:ilo Frone2iss has just boon adorned with* full length life sire portrait of Rubel, painted by the celebrated Jerome. The portraits and busts of the most renowned artia:s who have appeared at this world-renowned temple of tha drama, form a most Interesting colleation harm Ina large cap stalled Eldorado, in the Boule vard de Sebastopol, near the BJuleTard St. Denis, is about to be transfsrmed into a theatre fst the Detwseiwts Comipme, it is so constructed that it can °wily be formed into a theatre. Jr is said that Madera° George Sand has com pleted a piece for the Pelsis Royal grounded upon the remerkable work of dI. Maurice band," Mssgnca of Bouffens." Vaunts new opera, Arolde," (with which we have been threatened), Eel a failure at Naples, although the principal parts were sung by Speszia, anti Signori hianaleni,essigati,Arstt,andDisao cis.. A FRZNCII tenor, M. Nandin, has appeared with great success at the Madrid Opera. 11291:11MtS WRITING LORINI, and Core de Wit• honst, both Americana, are the prtrwr done, at Berlin; Mlle Artot (Belgian) the mezzo soprano; M. Carrion (Sparleh) the tenor; and M. Bremood (Frenchman) the basso. Mile BALI C, who, with Mr. and Mrs. Beltre, hae gene to the Ruisfan capital for the purpose of gleinr, concerts, la bringing the subjects of the Czar to her feet by her charming Taloa. Louisiana Legislature. Trig 00VERNOR'8 LESSACOL Raw Onassis, Jen. message of the Governor to tho Legislature recommends that the State be prepared to meet the sister States of the South in a Convention, in case of certain contic• geodes. Ife also favors measures of rotaliation against the hostility of the North, by the issue of Wellies so as to inflict discriminations against Northern goods amounting to absolute prohibition. The House hoe passed a joint resolution declaring the Harper's Ferry affair to have b'eu an attack upon the rights and privileges of the South, show ing the hoetility of tho North, esti that the elec tion of a liapablteao President will be ample cause for the dlssolutiott o f tho A Member of the Massachusetts Senate said to be Implicated in a Forgery. BOSTON, Jan. Io,—Mr. John E. Frye, 4 member of State Senate [rem Worcester county, Is cad to bo implicated in the recent forgery of $3,500, on 4 firm In Pearl street, and has reigned his seat. Charles O'Conor for the Presidency. AUG1761 . .4., Jen 18.—A eorreapondent of the Chetlesion Coen*, reoommendiSbarlee O'Conor for tho Preeidenoy, in oonsegasnee of his spseob it the late traloa mulles la New Yerk THE WEEKLY PRESS. Teri wrsur PAINS Win be seat to Babsartbeen by veil tretancat, ta adtzia, Dia as-- —.Si a Thew Locum, . . LA Fire Copts, " " Mx Tad " " .. 71'.10 Twenty Coeva " .. (to oat Wren) U.S Tweaty Cot•Lree. or ewer. " (to Wrest of nob entecriber,i tank— .... __. ........ —.• • 1.11 For a Clab or rinaty•osa or over. Ti wril ara4 as extra tart to tat rata r-up of tba Ctab. acr Postmasta rs ore maenad to set so Moots far Tax Wzaitv Posts. CALLFOILNIA PRESS. Loaned eanai-Stor.thlr to Um for tha CaLtorsok &demon. BY TELEGRAPH. LATER FROM BRITISH COLEMBLi. AND OREGON. Rich Gold Discoveries, 111' Er. Lour, Jan. 19.—Tle overland mail. with San Francisco dotes to the UM nit ' re.ssehol hers lam night. The California news has already haux, phlllatiett, having been received Dolt IleHazy ate two on Tuesday. FSO BRITISH COLOMBIA. The House of Assembly of Vancouver Lal , end was dissolved on the 15th of December, prepuces, to tie mcetinF of the new Home, eleost 1 iuti..ter De rtiormentanuo act of 1659. Four British men•of•war were expected at Vic toria to reisbrise the fleet tender command of Ad. Mira! Baines. The miotra lobe have errired at Vittoria frt.= to Upper Prater ricer, report richer go:L1 arias daring the previous month than define any rtaer perled—Lztaay of them havis4 111:44 three weeks. fCoarse geld hu been fend in nosey placer, std ese claims hese Nil richly with.est the ail of oicksilser. [Mazy miners intend wiliterirs at Ilmagl+l, Ter, Hope, and Westminster, and they are zeprasoo:ed as entertaining. glowing andelpatlon3 of Ma yiskt of gold during toe coming oftelos. Te Dallas (Oregon) Jotait.7l t.sp that several parties had arrived Iron the upper ear.n:ry, ireie dlog the Colville and SitnelkattenLf. - 4, all a ahem eaoartn the previous report' in regard to the lichees:tot the mines in tha; region. Nome donbta the existence of rich gold depoeits on all the streams tributary to the Columbia river. From Kansas. SZTTLIXENT Cr THE LLIIIII.LATITL DITTIMLTT- L Jan. 18 —Tee Terivrial Lrviv. !stoke tcparned ,in di4, tte genet.' ...Lair. a:ending being that the Governvr convene kby special proclamation. The (.11Mcnky arising front the adjoarrutent Lt, thertf.ne,e- Ltered as settled. Later from Havana. NEW Oat zaart, Jan. 18 —Alaires from Harass to the 15th inst. haa• been reeelved. The weather had benumb hot. 111111M411 was reooterieg. &- gar Elms, but only small trara• sewn'. heights remain nominal. carnal:ls Ex.rhange, 15 per cent; - bills on New York, 8 India Rubber II erasion. Nzw Onmaaaa. Jan. --4.46. Caleb lea granted intanedans to favor of livraco ii. Day, agaira; tkrly•stecu Irma thtr 4.uky, rawaraog lAosn from orating oarrug.t..l +guac rubber awls. Sailing 01 the U. S. 'Steamers 31ohican and Iroquois. liaw Yeas =rs Jauusry Is —lts U. S. ste Mohican an, Iroquois sailed this morning La the coast of Fire at tancinuatz. Ocooveretr, J.away IV --Pa. bialfditip oa Ammon. street were buret tLb Inumtug. 167 were owned by Usury 2iluncli. To. Ada aoit ttia4t4 to ;3,000, withal' R 53 er.vered by inanrauca. The State of ueorgat. BAY&INAll, Jacumuy 19 —rt ......h•ps,ate °c, rata, Irvut l'aii..clmphla, retired bets et sum ~arty 00111 Una LlVirbulg. AU mr.-11. The Weights of Great Buttocks. (From th New Toth Tribunal To settle the question gt . the hoariest bullock," we collect from, the Mead - The Trash' the !snow. in; weights of whet are supposed to be s.ate of the tkaavicat fat bullocks that bare been ;town Ls We country. We advise readers to preserve this table tar futon ratcren7e : Tee os. Worse Washington was 6 years 9 months awl 14 doyaoid when slough toted, In the T. el' PM; tilt the Weight WU 5 ; 204 lbs. Weight of one fore quarter 611 lbs. Weight of the other fore quarter. &PS lbs. Weight of one hied coarser 487 lbs. Weight of the other uind quarter 477 lha. 2,17411*. of beef-70 tht per tee. tt lyre weight'. Measurement Imes buttes to not of tail.. 9 fr. 7 us. Wirth.— 12 ft. 41s. Height 5 in 9 fa. From hip 10 hip 2 ft. 91n. Uz !tad Jacket, killed March. 5,1951, weighed alive - 3220 lbs. Weight or meat 2,114 lbs. Lose, 31percent. Ox John llancosk, tille , l the same titre, 2 916 weighed, alive Weight of meat_ . . • •1,242 t -=... . Loos, 33 per cent. Pokier: L. Pelt's mu-year-0d heifer, fatted et Pelham Yam, 30 mites up toe uudioo, weighed, alive nis. Weight of be' 1,310 1.14. Los, 31 per cent. The Blabs county was killed sctne years ago, in weighed es follows z Lire weight 3,3L3 lbs. Net weight 2 333 Iba Weight of one fore.:izarter. 732 Its. Weight of the other roreiusrter 73S lbs. The liindKparters, each 4,1 les. This wu beaten by the Lancaster c....unty .x. fad by Coalnoel Landis. and sold to William F..atdlar, of Lancaster, for $.500, and slaughtered on toe 211 of February, 1e".. , S the weirat...l this ox was: Live weight, lbs 3 ~4 7 Not weigh.,4o2 ForeluarLdfll '47-7t3t) Iliad quarters 4d -44 L Less weight of hoof, 2 iNs 2,4.52 This was a deep red half-blood Durham, over seven years old. There was a steer butchered at Laurxter, in February, ISLS, by Darld Eillinr,er, whk.b TrY.3 fed by Atm. Land's, that netted 11,14 i !be Toe Berke county or, we believe, was fed by a Mr. :Shots, and eleu.;!..'ired to 1513. The S , sr.3toga Gaiety Pass stated in Msy, thatJ. 21. Cute elau,e,b.t:oced au ex in 1K,7, Saratoga Springs, that ste..rhe f , thie, 3 5 2tIbcands. and dressed, 2.557 • hot gave no p-,rll,..alsrs or vouchers. “Tharchces Military .),,ortn,l of the Revolution," under date cd Jane 24, 173 1 , has the followtog entry : have just had the esti/Lutist:, with 31:1^_n bet of gentlemen, of viewing a rernsrhsbly largo fat ox, whiny has been presented by some .geo men in Connectiutt to his Excellency Out,. Be is 6 feat 7 inches high, and weighs on the hoof 3 200 lbs., the hugest I ever beheld." We hare male efforts to get the weights of the lot of fat cattle exhibited at the Crystal P31.11V.3 ot the time the World's Fair opened, bit have tot to:weeded. There was a fat CAT that dressed 1 451 lb. '• a pair of steers that dressed over 41 cwt. Ono of them, we believe, netted 2 173, and, it is sts'el, only forked two pounds ofmakieg 72t lb. Ter cal , live weight, which is supposed to be the .cr cent. ever made in this country. Col. bevos a pair of steers, a year or two since, which '1 hnzas White & Son, of whom he bought them, state test they wade T 2 lb. per cwt. Forty head of Illinois steers, utd here two years ago, averaged over 23 oat. each on foot. The weight of the Saxton steer, reported laze week, weighed 'January Idtb, by Darla Allerlon, upon the cattle sealee at Eorty-fourth street, was 3.4.32 lb The weight given by the purchaser ' roe January 17th. is 3CV lb. We will publish the dead weight as soon as he is dressed. • POISONS AND COLONS.-20 item in a Belgian medical journal, which has been exteteivelY Zo,ned throughout the United States, mentions tb...t a "child about a year old, who appeared to ha in dreadful pain. and bed a sort of form at 'he mouth, woo token to an apothecary at 1.1,•±n, when it was rayed that the little creature bed been misered suckles the painted feat of a doll. io which au ex tract of lys4 had been mixed. Re administered medicines which eared the child's, life, bat he pro petty suggests that toymakers ought to be pro hibited Irons employing poisonous substances in painting playthings-I. This steteir.ent reminds no that there is no one department of trade or 131,mila:tures that nquires so tenth reform as - that of punted csafec ioeeries and toys. Incredible es the aascrilen may appear, we feel ourselves very safe lu saris_, that neatly every painted sweetmeat or toy contains schslenees to a mere or less degree hArtfol, and io meat. cases actually poisonous Coneidetirg mhe gem clad ingre donde that figureln thee trap ~P.ton of p:lnle, we cannot See how thee.) baneful effects emn be iota avoided. Brunswick green, a very common color, is a deadly piton, containing, es it does, aar;,:e degree of copperas . Red or scarlet. when made of vermillion, as it frequently is, is pnisezems. Weca made of cochineal It is oomFaretivaly barmle€l. I Chrome yellow is another deogerotte prep trat , mn while chroxe green, being one of the preparations of lead, is &deadly poison. Purple, when e‘n7oved or ye rixtillioo and I'ittssian blue, is a deadly poison. Ultramarine is sometico.s lased, but coca ultramt me le a substance rery dangerous when token in ternally. it will he teen that of these cardinal talon a great majorimy are composed of deadly poisons. In foot, when a color of a poisonous natare, end the same color of a perfectly harmless nature, pre sent themselves to the manafacturer, he le pretty certain to choose the deadly article, as it is gene rally a brighter and more attractive eniorm Mint. rat colon, which are poisonous, are preferred to vegetable colore, which are harmless, because the latter leek the finish and beauty of the former, an; age, as a general thing, insipid and doll. We en tirely agree with our transatlantic eotemporary that toy makers ought to be prohibited from em ploying poisonous substances in painting play thing. " Manufacturers and merchants are not prorrrhial for their regard for the health and ha:- p:uess of their customers and consumers when a dollar stands in the way, and it would be welt for oar legislators to interpose in a matter which, how ever main it appears to us floe, lacy, in the na tured course of events, present a very pliant an 3 impressive aspect. HAVDSOXE SILVET: MILDAL. Yesterday morning we wTtrw Shown a Ittersire main), presented to the Hope Hose Company, of this city, by the United Statt:e Agricoltural Society, tf Chicago, Illinoir, for the superimity of their cr.= fire engine, over all competitors. at the eahibitint in 1612. Tho obverse represents the Gottie,i cf Agriculture, wielding in her hand a laurel wreath, the whole surrounded with a wreath cf oth tans and acorns. On the reverse Is an appropriate in. snrlption, agricultural implements, dn. Daring their sojourn In Chicago, the Elope was piessr.ted with a rpltndid pitcher and gobist, for genteel rendered at a conflagration in that city,. Fxra.t. ACCIDENT. --On ItleidAy on te:zon-a men, apparently a Herman, and between forty and fifty years of age, was hilh4 by a 10,-cenotire the Camden and Amboy Railroad. near the Cam, den Paper idHl. Re was without 'boss, and bs4 east hie coat aside, after wbleb be jumped io front of the train, for the ramose, it is sapped. of committing stzioiie Tbobodyoftiled,ceased was removed to the undertaking establishment of Caro. u 4 , 4berts, at Osaidea, to await litattootiaa.