• . J • eITHE P RESS.v; VUNDAY I3 EIXOEPTipS ,BY: JOHN W.-VOILNEY. .-„ozprce, vc;„ 41.7 aussim- taxforac. DAILY tnitssi, Tteet,tri 'Chin iglu. Weeet.liereble to the Ofitteri, olti roue lenient 'vet' Ei4ert Molitnit • TuitesbuLulte,troalimitioetee — inrektsbly , st4J. s'Aefe cor #0914, 0 0 1 , 4*. - t • a .11111 ,, ,WEEKLY.0111141.. - teeubeeilbers out of: the Olt/ et !rims Df,t,- ,4.0e,./ele#?teq,),‘A 4.4Yeeee..,, „ 860, .14-E,w-,Fitiz3B,. As. D_ l „. - 43si*s; ~, . 40'011ERT1tITA = (...3 POP! FO4rtht... .3 itiamiittainias or " . L ' IC - ROO KO; • - • Made otLjnaa 80:4 aaa 13. ave ekk.a obo o • OJT ar p OOMITIPM is UatI e , • iSIIALINERY; 729. W 129 VLbWER 53 FEATREiC 7 729 01111E3TNIIT STREST.I en Utdr a gratt GREATLY REDUCED PRICEB.;our BEAD MllkMaterAithvirx) raoSatTLI S M . S II : 3 ? BEd: 729 OflinnUT Erp, AND 43 13.3400/41 0 BT. BOOTS AND SHOES: iciviutas „ '`: . , BOOTS 'AND 13110E0j NO. 128 NORTH THIRD STRUT. A m anorhean t of ofti made Bodo owl isioix (ion- U===ll S -X LV E W:4 R ' "14 7 M.- WILSON 'a 'soi4 - • • invite aveelel attention to their stook of &Mit WARBorldidi is now mmsaally large. Saban 011- , netr of pattern and design anampassed by any heti* ' the United Stater., aid'of fiber 'quality that: is amautfho - Wed for table us in atiriart - of the world: ; ' • , . o f ••- i - ' Sox Steamed f Shi er `ll . 986-1000 parts 'pira.. The Enklbilt 11terling; , Amerlian Mad Frarnoh. ,; • : ,• • %limit will be seen that we give thirty-Os 'automats? Ohm the /Merkel% gad French coin, and tea tarts Muer ' ?thif the Eusliah Eiteilizos. We 'milt all'our owa • -Sad we Motrantse , ths quality as abOve (Ma): ',kilt te the Awl WArit tea bs made to Se'rerviciabre. and {wilt mist the mites of acids mach hater that At Oda., 1 0 4 ° I ""rgertar4 - • - Wi/4• *UM* fig BON, O. W. 001=11, PIflR MD mom OM finnan of ailtur mens*tunt d au avoid non, but suggivriv mow inferior to Avocli met Misr& sonoirinl , —Dottutu4supliodelth Moon= standard Ai sand In on. tutill'thuntrtment, - • Plus Woof Bum VIM bath ontO, ooniton /on • - - .11LARDWARE. 4 1P,ACK&GE'lf0118 : 8. . , BR TTANDY & BREN • ••—• Nos silo, as, Arm as lioisif ihrrst T ntrummr,Ety.. ; , 10 . 19Mit AL i doitlitiffllON ma • Pat the salad all kindli of ; 411 1 .1111tIOAX 'I . tLtiriI";IFACTUREDHARDWAiI.;' ma• '.- GERMAN, iBLOIAN, , FAANCII, AHD' E 4401,11111 HARDITARE A ND bIITLERT, 1110 P costautlr ackaad kip jrtook of'o9oll wF • PIT Rardwari " sirTal!pB7l3 . rrriza;. -- i ' . ,Bilasesior °rapids. •- 1 I 'TOOL% , " 1 _ BUTOECRA FrEant OF VARIOU **Di * m u" P,A 7 /9 7 - 42 rens ,Al,sw.-v4OEO; ' . elliP s -C111,&:111; , /al othailtituli ja *Mir radar. A 4ll rie MA P,'A - RIIII 0,P:41 TICIt Pifik i `oll,- wiczeniive wourfcze. IIitaWI,I9IW,X#ODipALIPIfEB:OI:I 411:r0ria airinabyr,wari."4**,:astimilin.:, Nlllllll***, pAciLt - ;11A11DWATtE ROVEIE.;-We • Atiattentlonof r iisimurtensio: ove r the Vetalesge. 414 It at laignSrtaitrit"4di do _ ~Nsr 5 4 7 Issas. • ta, And:AseiAliK4Vottgr md*"="ik"'l4746. • - -•7 • -Aril: • r. -whim; ÜBB IND B ; • . 'MOORE 16 CAMPION. " 11 " n tr rni B erl /1 ! I ti l iffin V iim.s. 1 11) .....„„t r vi they , 4.7 l , . „.. , . !..I,rtpTintl i ,,,.... C"> 014,8 mt 3 ,7 a...„ _..„„... „ ~,. ~, 0- wring4of,...,?teit.Tilttnuunt , trg tae 'tatipg h os strz ertm int D # ll( 4t 'C O ß , / /044 1 Y DRYGV GLA0. 9 ,144.,Nt5) , ROST. SHOEttAKER it 60. , NORrULUIT ,001/.IML 7 , 01 M 2A. /4 0 S: 9011 M. ir4O - IocsALE limecniere and,Dredera In Wu(ErOir iilABll, 641,, tint. the attention of 1 . COUNTRY -MERCO.A.N*B . to their, large .toe li oleo** 0104 thee ogir et the toilet market rates. „ q(k.tt 4CALES , . , — 4 O FORAAI4BI- itATFOOP3M4II raj ;fthibi ORRIS LAVEL ;715 ORRIS ,1 , 4 trr t 4 - 77 7 7 lil F.s. WINWAVW, , 1 . , ...... e g WaILOIENOW,IftritOB Abal .15f5,511011 • " 1 Pritterrerf rin 51031.,0H1LD131117 :ITZETHING, gan i =ratt in . of on ; iii 7 4 f 4 . - MM. • won Pa ' e l A si=gy/14 114 I sod toyouroorom 4ND turALTH TOYOUR.IIO.6IPM . %okays 'O rr ~,Id, t:t: ~ nra t i o aLi s for c tr i f ti lt ni - 7 zikOrt i, 4 t i o ,otn, 114 4? , iiii . ' , 4,_ 7 0 'so f A irtraii. 71 1. .' , 'on' brio cL .. .ni; 04 w..;t 11 41 trot% . 84 - g :'.C• tiouir go .e te o : .ro r c°sl4 tarn DLit 0, 0 , • .., ~ ... . otto ! a, ;Mr, v T leA , : °a., --- ' , 't , Zutlago ,1 v; !tuvii,:"lor 7E• iti • :kal i :s u av e tli I . nv t 4 mi t or t vistn in a • c ., ", a or wow ~ , - ,:yif ' the e. , + ." ' ' •1 • . .- a t 4 " - rr 100111 *OW . . ;;;•410:__ , 7 , 73;04 ,- m , •.. , ...; , ,5,,„ , itidi, —.'l4x.raohsiA;.;;; j .*.?4„,p ~..g„, ~. .= , ~, c 1 ,9 t. kr ., Dg mtd., c f...., s, . 00,m.c.„.., i, 4 " eli• d 43 . ' WM .t , - 0 . 1ira1.24. t t‘ . ' ° Q •I Ca dig t § a Iti v ilt• - Saes OM -.." ..,124.-._47 bp. 4 7, Witfroll=ii, . t:i T'snitlitr t z tit: 0 tr; r k Y rzirs,, , r7 ...it = , , . Aillt jin -..., tilt f r eb, -Vont 11 - : es 21101..UT1S eq .Y, UMX,..40,1410TS 1 : l.l' ' ' Taelflil7ls " ". 4l'4l t n :Dr e ietilla l NI, - . ', , the fiat X . 4 -' l . l - v ., ow : - •orn„lo or, . „ octet nrrennoi. -..- ~ - . - ... .%& 1 4 . itlvingmhol i t sw t, i tzt . el. Or ' l ll4=tswitiq'• .. --............ JOHN 101,014i ii S'rakt i *x.rit :, cii*c, _,.:CALVES',.` EVATJ, ' . . „ tat,t S - b . r 4 , il illi i h r- qg y i , Rlc o W ,SeS l S i S 1.., :o T os o td :ED:iV44D , , i i ktriiitil L t ; rSOB.WEAVER. " , , • , IZESnit it ty _,_.1110-ir - .' - - itsdAp ß and thitl.i: NAVAL STORES: ! ",-; .. , , Solibbllo - nits Toventise, ~ ;" ; ,_ ' ' 4 1):- il h ' is i groor e ' r:' ' ,- ! . -Z t '‘ "' '- f e - itsh 0 .4.4 re l a nfautikaz .7. ' ' ' • ft ' . IaWA , W.,tag o . . -..,_. t, - ar.: ..,,,,- 1,, loi_Oi INDOW oh hand, 4" , f ‘"j 4. {.P . Ti Fit rirrA Glininli alß :- , ulibt)..N. - 7, =" , :•`‘ ' : i , fit 4, .., , teaotortir rit..,in,imis ~, . - I !"--`"'" 'l4 ,I, t4V*ldel,Tra- ' ' :;. -:Bll4lo'B9',.miVidiatlind eta,*ll74jefleli. ' ' - '- klid 01/010a . ,v pit MUM/ , bi t maw AS --`A 1ir4,..1 odoutto willOit ...- ,gg ,IvrE x fat AB._ „L.iirs7ls *•• 61.,....d trVin'4 Attc.l4liqoll;3 .*, , - al r;'' ' - ' 4 1: 4 1 ° 47c;ra gOR - ” ',, - -'I 4 ' e "- ''''.." -r i• 'VP! ----' ' ' ' ' ?4- 4-' 4. tf• '"- '''''' wrilreTtill4l4l . gr-t( R , 1 . , ;.... 1,, iii,i4 4 ,,,,,,.. Rod o' t,6* - „Aimoilittoril+ ff .!, .iiri Ze4l/44i4,--- `9IT-t4V4"'" _, ,- ANyot,,Agi I.l4l4YhtirP Lfor ,vretwit 101 eltir 4.4111 +t-It/f.rt • . • ' ' 4, - \\4 \‘ II i; ./ 1 • 16t. '; i*" . , . . . .- - ' , • , ...... . . , • o r ' :"...- i' .. ':.:..'';'''' ‘.,• • _ r ' v".'' '''' \\ ‘', 1 , 1 1 1 . 14 1 / j ~„ ..1 1 -719 4 ~,,,,, , . r ,..": -. ' : , * t !,, tt , - ' (7' ( . 314ra.,- ' - ''''.. ' 4 P -- - , ,--=,4 ' 1 , ,:i-__ - • - 7 -s- -- 'vo l, ! , ''---- , 41) r '- - -t '.' fi . ' ''.- •- - - . 1 ti'll' R er . L. 0- , --..t0. ' .. / , ' ,.., .._(. , ..,-:-....: - ,, , a01--- , 1 , --......*:-. - 4, -- " , 4 1 -' - 'rt.", , `'.:•,if '••.': • .-.-,. ..,..,.- -, , ,---- - . . 7i7.= ,t.:l- 'ir . : - :`. , 1111 , 11W,i- f . .. •,. ,- • L.,_ 1 .., /., •'. ' - \ . . - -7- :-.. i ,.,-.„4. j ,4.,... .!... ".....!;.•• m y , . y r>: - ~. . , tr,...,,;.;-;-7.4..,-c; a pqr.,......... ; ,.,...,.. . ~,,_,.„....,...„„,,,____ , , ~,.:. . ~. ~... ...---•,.... . ;.1 - ...,-. ...,,, -'- ' ' '''. ' . -- 7,a ir& •. ';;;• ,7 ` ''' • el' ....-; .._"1 14 °Ol "....... - . -• •_• 7 7-c-i-4 . - -,. ...,4 •:-..-..: ''''''.?"'„. - ---, t. ---.-1-I .`r,: - .2 .. .,': .....1 ----- , , ~,....- f -_,,,,..... . . ..... ______ _ ___•,.- - - - ._.. • • d.„_,- ... ,„...:..._..._ N.,' ' - -"1..-- •_.„, z ... , ....._„................ 1 „ . ~.. • -1 •,( I , 2 . . VOL. 3.-INTO. 1.48. IV~ETAII. DRY GO OD'S. ,17416.1 car • GEO. - F. *OMR/LT.I-I,i ' -„. • , I)lo6,"'4ls'4lo,4 l 7l l i.toBisMagT, , CIAGIUE ASSORTMENT ,or FURS, )44,4:064.4.k oeleoted b 7 hlmalf isihsuoDe datln6 to past „ , „ • ~ P UI6I `ISIiINODRY. dOODS: - • . ItietritLYirag 'Premv::„Wrms r otitt. • " • ugrii=" " • • S• rizirtint Wane pm bed niertobArkw.. " • awl Drokall Cloths.. • , Etirkat ic aYtClTgitttk Tinve L I Colored Bordered . parnfulk Towels.' tel g e " , a _are k teri l l=k a fi n ala A r VUtrITINIOnAirr/ozdi,..,luvrel6.„ thrTable and Piano6or'ers r . n . - ufr, Blue and Green nude Holland& 3 antiArnerioan fine Bien aeta. 3 ittate le ao i r i gt * fair .• " littandarattaletrrttreet. BARGAINS FOR SIX WEEKS. TtfoftNLET &OMNI, N. B. crier DIDgTD and BPRI I IO 6 , Ariftiirrivrortionspeottmly inform the ga e l i tip l i nclia- pat from now (January 14, IMO drat' 13i4-002;iftelitra&RDLESEI OF PROFITBI I They v• an excellent atook, of ng ;Omaha filtairja. f t, palish and Amenean Idanitets. at ohirting and Sheeting' Muslin*. mans or oar OWA impOrtatlon. , ~ lerutele. Cloths and Oununtereq. ;& Rood want cloaks atilt on_hand. A lAn GE STOOK OF FANOY BlLlffi. Notmake pf Nag& sillre. - Meet:tom De La tries, Gettnen Poplin Plaidil, ao; - Maar of ctee above goodie wdl be gold MOOR ',INVER COST PftIOEI N. Br.lt,vill 'nay to - elns us a call. alit 4 .4 • WAIIISIITI`A. f.illitilNGS Sal' I'INISII L 'Just opened.- 1 _ 44 Masolllssittlrtings at Jpt4 coats. 4 4 Jriah 131, Wog hrol-Frpting Linens. , , land .4-11• nahrlakittils tanagls. ' user .. _,- - i tko - , 1 4 , 0 r I n flhani; tit i liette r tgoit;4 ) • tr.l4raarigtaTtlfird:r2PL i rep uambrio alandkerobiefs, Ito. . ~: ,• ' ,--..... .': Lad*. and ()sale Ulm' Cambrio -IfoltAkeroble . ill 4 111 9 1 1" 11 - 'dk ' ili . re Blitilk 0 ll" did Neck- a sa aro e . , rasa , '.: 1111TR•GOODEl_in wrist?... : _ - • j wprna sT9f.p D c,_ m iu.d in TIN. of all hinds.- - - ' - • Itra GOODS rota and Sitoha Sawl ff s. •• •. ' • - " : '• ad end Crib Illankets.,- Itch Cloaking Cloths. ' • 1 . , ErVelya ß l e9 , 1.3 4 !1 1 .: f • . GREAT KEDuullOrt until-drily J ot 14,115 t A A we t i ffit "k" '' " . scow& anhlidirEtregs. BLUE FLANNELS. PLAID, potat , Brobbe Shawls. - : ne lotls Cloaks. • . , col on Lora' eltavlt i. roily 20 and 23 oant elAines. fa IN and-et so wool oboe. toot* V and 475. ... ~: west Blank Sildaseelines, SS le 06 twits. • , . coat alt-wool Plaids. . . . ' C_AbSIMNV.B, ' t ' 4 .7bi for beet FAII9 t Caul mares: f mxi (Mods at e 1 ,X1:10, and Va. attinata and Casatmarea, 40 to 75 cents, -, - eibzwa very ohonp. fie cant findlrate 81(1 ta and Drawers. ' ' • elevos. TienHada, teo. auction ots. _I '— ~ „ .. •r , ~00Pstil Or JUN RD. NINTH and xo.R.Krr. N. B.—LINFN GOODS, a large and desirable stook of ever deaaription. alO , THP MEEICCOiIiBrit. tiortheitit °other gIOUTH and SPRING (4.R DE etreetr.woulkihytt4ortjustion to their atook or " f en i t h i ii r t bwm Ortilj E f s i ft:,l Li mpo l' ' /E rit i tti P cht, ( 44 B 4 . 4 tlily Oaa eo l lin: Alio. au au* Itnt 'took O - ''‘, , • , littittka elbeett k klitatithi. '. , ' ' ugludi mad 4 . orke.Vaammelin Pr " ta and v .... r . - au at netts: • • , . araeilleaguilta and Comforts. 1 is '' • ' Attlencat of Maki okd brooks an d ß lanket'be rh,el44,69aar cost i - • Bl wbi , - oh Paneitilika tilt chain, t Jill our atOok wilrbe ik t i o l A l ifi ll6e" l ik ' " ' -' - ifelrhb e., . • i Sari COADMISION-110USES. tivimTD;::NELL ,- CLOTH. STORE. NOS: 4111 W, 6NC4TH .811PpOND 811411111". • • Ora00.&111 , 76, intrioßrize;NoßioNve, FROSTED, AND FLATLY - • • - -BEAVERS, '4Iao t OASSIIIERER, VELVETR, WHO , I-29ALEI Alf-D 31124.1 t. a27-m&Oit.F6 rj & , IesoIiEBTKUT SWOT. ; 11131• Antm. • 'I M P _4S•R• TERS.•' maitra4 , ;Pr 00 . - MMISSION .11fRit C HANTS Arta ' Vine MOTHS.. tisr OASSIMEN.U. ..-• DOEBRINif, AND • • - BATINETEL SPOluta AND • • BUNKER COATINGS, - BLANTBLETO - - •' PANTALOON STITPAL •417,1114 Av., Attl. F RO T EII f N(III,S3I & WELTS, 85 LETITL4 331t31*," AND, 34 BOilTil - FRONT STREET. COTTONADES. I*w tof opal Olorldere sad Jobbera, tarsi yarlety. ,• BMA Ilya COATINGS AND OANIIMBENTSIS ' Vide by Vteehiustott ICU& OtleNtiren for theee:deafrable roods for Spring trade SHIPLEY, HAZARD,' do HUTCHINSON, NO 112 O'RESTRUT BT.. CONZIPSION XI ECHAM FOR TRH MB OF PHILADELPHIA-MADE • GODS. firnIUSE=VUBNISHING'.GOOpEi. GOOD/1401i THE SEASON. - -BRONZBD MINDERS AND IRONS, "STSRI; FiRE S;tS, 706 T TV4RACERS, DIAMARII,OIB,7I4TA WA Mh EMERB, HOT ,WATEH &. SOUBS STORES, 140 i. 622 AND 1226 CHESTNUT STEEET. IlsTO. A. MURPHEY & 00, 61.1.wrma PREPARED GLUE. SP,t!),JC I pI.NO'S PREPARED GLUE! "A STITOR IN TIME OA VEI NINE," DIEWATOH iAri ilsassr EOONOMY! •. As acordonts hoopoe, seen to etelt-ratulaled families, IEII very deg roble to Love some cheap sod oormselent war for rooatrinit Innately, Toys, Crooke ho.'• ' IgTALPINO - '6 PREPARED GLIM - - and no household oan afford 'mete all such emergencies, bawithont It. AS li always ready and up to theatie%- Intpoirst, Thom tan* longer a neeeseiti for limping Ogre; splintered :veneers, headless dulls, arid broken e Wise, yt jig SW the , article for none, shell;and other orrianientalwork, so popular wick !sateen( refinement ; fah!" egandvable nreperailon is road old, being Om nneally held in golnhon, and possessing all the valuable enalitlog of the best cabinet-makers' glue. 'lt may be ?media the Sao* of ordinary madam", boing vastly more, adhesive: • „ ugEt'UL IN rgRYIO9O 3 N.B. A brußh"-n i7 .. . • • FRIOiTVg4.grNNTB. Trho;seals Depot,4B OSDAR Street, New York. Address • . , • DENItY 0. SPALDING N o wO., Pox No. 3.v0, York. Put up for Dealers in Caseq oontsining tour, eight, and twelve doses, s, beautiful Lithograplno ei t ow., AßD sooompsnyink Gish ersolcase. R®" A single bottle of SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE wail save ten times its oost annually to 'Very haUsehold, SOW by all . proininent Stationers, Drugg'sts, Hard ware And Furniture Dealers, Drams, and Fanoy Stores, Country Merchants ehould make a dote of 1 1 ALTANWS PREPARED GLUE, when making UP their list. IT WILL STAND ANY CLIMATE. dga-mvf-g' SF:OONti SESSES' OP DR: CUMMING'S Great Tribulation; or, Thine* • Comine noon the 14_11.16 Unto. 01. • - ' • • ' ' ‘ --` ` whuystlnin, forme . e 0911211181011 ot;Dr. Cummins's 'Wilk: Jt differs MeeWhit from the termer volume. Teti' *hilly the loaner, dealt with the' nature end the inlet/lora th!Greet Trtbol tion,Gtereent volume Gi l/1141n the heraoteE and condition, he he l ls, the hop. r_ptie and, CI the eeopie of od. , • , - _. -JILPG WALL and td r Yale by ,' '• .. w Ad 8. & Alintglit,MlLTLEN: , lii/,- - i ,-,- 'i; 40.690 VIVA •4• Chid. , , sale - bjr mink Daft*, NEW PUBLICATIONS. VALBNTINEg.-FIBHER' &BROTHER. Our splendid annual meortniont of • ' • VALENTINES. now ready for the trade. We call the attention of 46 031 Tergli 820 A MO R TMENT OP VA , • MaNTINES. Each assortment oompleps ta tteelf,andwhiohwewtlt warrant to we setlefaetto Fl n. RRER & WIDMER.' • 10 Routh ERWIN Rime. FROAt THE PRESS OF T. 35, LIPPINPOTT & CO VOOT.E:. , f!IMEN '*7lll BOUND4RY OF ANOTHER WORLD HON. ROBERT DALE OWEN. SECOND EDITION READY THIS DAY Otte Vol. l2mo. Price gip. Thi*work is devoted to an innulrY whether otleasiOsill interferenees from anotherworld in this be reality or delusion. It treat* of thophenontena of sleep. dreams, Somnambulism.. It examines the alleged evidenoeut for presentiments, second-sight, house -hauntinge, and 119- Dar4Ons t 'referring to the most approved modern works liallucination.-insimity, and the Timone mystem. It inquires whether. when•we set down the narratives of all ages (including oar own) that touch on the marvels referred to, e►mere vulgar superstitions, we are over looking any actualphanomena. "He (the author) certainly dismisses the subject with calmness. dieerimination, and ability, and bin volume must at once take its place as a valuable collection oC feats and Illustrations on itid Myaterious subject o which It ('eats."—N. Y. Tribune. " he 'Work before psis one to' make a decided sensa tion in the intellootual world, Its contents are matter Ant at calculated to oxoitn *bandit, investiyation. and enticism• it is sid6olent for ns to call attention ton as 'an extromeir,well.writted.'clear. and _attraotive work, on a seder:din which every reading and cultivated thing that is riotaddave to bigotry must tribe a deep interest.' —Worming .Bul/riin. • • • " Enouglrhas ;the said to call atlan tic% ti a aterline book—one OE * Me low 2n this subject aro worthy of perusal. I not con vincula, It is cetainly entertainlng."—TA/ PreVt. O'O'AIIiEITISAT 10 N; *ALWAYS FUTURE ' "tm ANNE M. lI.,BEEWETER. Ons Vni., Vino. Price Si. " It wouldliewell ter ye if we oeuld learn bow muoh enJoyment,and happiness life can bring when the eye and beartare ope_neri to the kingly influences of the beau. Wu! in Art ttad Nature: and t la' book it to full of en thusiasm and nmoreeintien that the reader eitnnot fail ooatehoorne of its genial. hearty spint. * We aam that those wham, laata 0131tIVatal pill end 'Compensation'eery de li ghtful novel."— ren tnglaurnai. • . Published this WY, NICICOLO DEI LAPI. ; OR. TUN LAST DAYS OF THE FLORENTINE REPUBLIC. BY MAII49IMO D'AZEOLIO. - • Tnthelated by H. HALLET. • One Prlop ELM. It le. nerhare, sufficient to authorst thls.book le wtitten by one of the beet Italian that it Is lull o tne warmth, Pf4lBloll. fiTO. (gree t and sennup_wh oh c aractengo the fins writers of that nation. Pio one can venue these glowing pages: whleh relate to 'events and men of ohivairie and grand age,•vrithout haring the blood loneken in his velne andpie betrt respond to noble dean and Inflyeento manta • • . • In the oapaoity of historian and ndvelist. D'Asesilo has woven a literary web which teal powerful as it is charm ing."—Review. , • „ • . ja2l-It fI.AIINOORAN'S CONTRIBUTIONS. TO opsßawnos fillyry,—PAßT•ph D o i tY - sntiTS/11, No. 258.81 AStblg, rateTi4t, r'Ap f T R E11.401V 414 4 -3 O W P P:R E A A4 IVF AND 81.11t(PC/Ii PAl 4 l3OLOOY—Pititlir. big I. rd. Irorthtile i grAn a n, tro? r err Val 11at t ri i iii dr Y a c :gfli e rn nature: Frloe Theents. LIND/3A? tc BLAKIBTON üblish NEW EDITIOVI OP 13F.ADIAND'8, ACTION OP IdED 3 ICIIAB TUE e/YBTEed. Third American q t At:Wril glaioloAL PATHOLOGY.' &and Am.- edletqn. ago. , BELL ON BATOB .ANDRATIDNO, 'A new revised edition. Largo 12mo. an'tlußßlB ON SCARLET.PEVEIt. Anew revised i enlarged edition. A. so, al-waggon ha qd a Large, Coniplete, and iraßitd, eitooknt hIE DMA soulCD. Catalogues fumithed gleam upon application. TM ART JOURNAL, (LONDO.N.)". The January number of IliiePormiur walk 64 :010eneell anew vvilume , and ernita no, in addition to its daunt nt t-actiooA, a New Fames, of Papers. DeseriP,Urtgof the COUrite Ot tlailedsoo. Ifern•lre flouroe to the MIS, De Heparin J. seit R profusely illustrated with original eneritilheeoe wood from actual sketehee taken in the Aetnain of the pest year. The Companion Guide by Railway in !South Wales • tly, Mr. and Mrs. 8, C. Hall. illustrated by J. D. its.rding. Mast% Fader, anigko, The on Journal will obtain engravings from pictures by this neat master., lb. Art Journal le a works fpeoially suited foreonnolssedrs. artiste, and all lovers° the Pm!, Arta. b.nob number three large titan k.ngra vings, end numerous Illustratione on guard, fluNrorig, bens. r Per 'Veer. 7e.oeqta per month, • t unit- E t :VIRTUE CO., N 0.2,3 John i t., New York. MATANB' GIFT - BOOK LIST - NEW JUA BOOKS. JF Yu? ARE IN WANT OF ANY 131g0K8 u POO If 81TR THEM A ' CEORtre, , O. o VA 'fP • A It Hook fitore,Vo. 439 Chestnut 60'044,1 0/R Hook /Eon No..o9,Ch*ontit etreet. , 'Tis the bead , plate in the city. I Hooks aro sold all cheep seat tiny other Stets, • and pzeithave the advantage. . Of getting a ‘ hyndtme Oift irdlt each Book. ' BLICeSTIONB. • • •• LIFE OF THE HMI" FAS JO IothSEPHINE .. Ey Cecil King Herod. one 'bsolumej Mogi. Prom 84 TNE pi swed tLEASON wait. A Ninny Gu i de to &limn' Reading.' Qua volume; 12m0., cloth. Price et. • THE ART OP DANCING. Bye. Ferrero. One re., 12 T m e i r —P YRIK8 OF JONATHAN itordr ;RED Rani Rho . Jr, One volume . limo. , doe #l. Tt. r DOOMED T rii""r mniM 'N l' 4g: , I BT the ''''etilettrd'hu t i3Vartit YtT v o l, preletiiiiiteer. Edited by R. tthelton Mackenzie. One ulnae, HO CO HELP IT; or, The Heart Tri umphant: Sc A. S. Roe. One volume, limo, Price van. BOOK OF POPULAR HONOR. The best oolliction of b A h .IVATIV: Vat* trOT . H P A r if e on A , thu Oriental Traveller, comprising many ourious de scriptions of the Mysteries of the Harem, eta. One volume, limo. Prjee 1. MEMOIRe OF' VIDoCQ, the celelir,ted PreMili Po- Rosman. One volume, limo., cloth, with a OM. Pride 81,24 , - . • THE BOOK OF FLAYS) FOR,__HOvIE A 4,IUBRMENT AND_PRIVATE THEATRICAL htiTERTAINMENTB, Unit a millectien or Original end selected int With full description, 0 .. f. Cothurne..Boenery, rroper. o Liao. &0.. end every eirection relevant to a private or perforraanoe. Tho whole carefully arranged and adaptett by SILAS S. STEELE, tiamn2 Handsomely bound in one volume,l2mo., cloth. Price BOOK OF HUMOROUS POETRi'. Containing choice seleotions from popular authors. One volume, 12rno. price $l. VIII OLD STONE MANSION. By gharlot J. Peter "Bß IMlTUrglir ri Ora 8 0193AVIr. Viler. 1. 14 Z82.25. 0 A OUR.) y Michelet. One VOI.;I2Tho. Pelee $l. TEN YEARS OP PREACHER LIFE. By Milburn. One volume t 12mo. Yt toe $l. ALL, W BOOKS can be had, and yQU have the ediantape of getting a /rift with °soh Book that you paAr" us,• and one trial toil/ assure you that the best place in the city where you should purchase &ohs is „E ROE O. EVANS' OIPT BOOK_ 'tSTABWBHhIE/iT, - CD EsT VT St.. Philastelphis, Je2o-0 Two doom below Fifth , on the upper aide. CAPTAIN JOHN BROWN'S LIFE AND HELPEIn IMPENDING CRISIS, far gala at Gm Anti-Slavery Gmas,lol North Fltill Street. Jae)-Bt' PAPER HANGINGS, &o. TO CLOSE BUSINESS HART, MONTGOMERY, Sc 00., NO. 322 ONEEITNUT STREET, Will soli out, through this winter and nest spring, their large stook of PAPER HANGINGS. Onsietins of evory variety oonneoted with the business, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRIORS FINE FRENCH PAPERS AT 10 PER CENT. DE LOW 008 T Parton wanting their Rouses Papered, osa get great BARGAINS. MILLINERY GOOD& F OR EVENING PARTIES BERTHAS, CAYES, SETS, SLEEVES, and In RE4I Lace, CIAO, Blond and Imitation, - in gram viniatlen, (dais NEWEST .ST PLEA. ALE, 4-4, 84, 8.4, p.a, 10.4 ILLUSION, TARLATANS, CRATES, Ac., Much below the usual PROM. WARBURTON'S. 1004 CHESTNUT Street, above Tenth Street, SOO South SECOND Street, below Spruce. lal2-tf MESS MACKEREL—A fine invoice of Idn , qrs., and kits Newburyrnrt inapeo- M4tal:gitVa c't Mil l ivl.lB3k l f adt re I nN 199 and NORTH WHARVr,R. HA MS AND MOULDERS. -2,300 Pleoen City-Smoked Home and Shouidero. Alen, Poo Fieeecextra sugar cured ROM. for late by 0. SADLER & CO., ARCH Street, 24 door aboce Front. MACKEREL. -'-485 bbls. cos. 1,2, and 3 Maokorel, in sported °gene! Pnokanae, of th e intent cotton. do or snle C. C. SADLER& ARCH street. 44 door abovn Front. 'WES INQ FLUID . ALCOHOL; AND 3-0 PINE OIL. in barrieN and halt barrel!, ann No- Siva and fiar gale ROWirfl I", MOO unztu m ß & CO.. ttn. 18 0, Worvel, PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. • JANUARY 23, 1860. Vrtss, MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1860„ Modern Italian Fiction.* No have upon our table a good trauslationi faithful and spirited, Of tt Niceola del tappl,", an historical .romance of the early part of the sixteenth century, written by the Marquis Mesabi° Taparelli, formerly prime minister of Sardinia—the immediate predecessor of Connt Cavour—but also well known as an artist find author, as well as a publicist and statesman. ' We are surprised that more of the recent Ita lian novels have not been translated. hide pendent of their intrinsic merit as werka of fiction, they are interesting as a development of the Italian mind, In its political as well es_ its literary character. They all, more or less, belong to the inovetneni—to • the existing struggle for liberty and independence. " Niaj 0010 del Lappi" is peculiarly tier; - but all have the same political bearing. There runs through all the same bitter hatred of !nevem , siblo authority—the same keen and indignant perception of the misery and injustice of exolu• sive privileges—the same scorn and loathing Of the mingled profligacy and meanness of .a heartless and unprincipled aristocracy. The abiding interest—the staple, so to speak, of the great and good qualities portrayed, mete with the people; not a base and ferocious mob, I who, having nothing to lose, have nothing to• respect; but the peop/e--,tbat • thoughtful, earnest, and well-disciplined class, with whom, perhaps, in all communities, the largest pro portion of right feeling and conscientious no. than is to be found. The publishers have done wisely in select-: ing " Niceohli del Lappi" from the' crowd of Italian novels, for presentation to the public, in an English dress. The author, Masai*: d'Azeglio, (brother of the Marchese d'Aze-: glio, and son-in-law of Manson', the poet,) after being alternately artist, pamphleteer, ' novel-writer, soldier, and statesman,- has, In the recent Italian Revolution, filled the dieting( guished post of Sardinian Commissioner in thel Roman Legations. Born In 1801, he has won for himself, by a life of patriotism and bonevo-, lance, the enthusiastic attachment of the Ita lian people. Ills romances, no less than hilt' political writings, have made a profound presslon upon the thinking portion of his coup. trymen, and have done much to stir up thq Italians to something like a practical realize t iOn of their favorite boast—ltalia fare de se These romances are two in number—Btleri Fiera:meta and Niceo/d de Lappi. The first of those was published last year, in Boston, irj an English dress. Its gorgeous descriptions, and its deep pathos; remind the reader of Scottie itKenliworth," and the freshness of its style and subject make it well worth the attention of the .American reader. The Ita-- Hans, however, give the .preferenee to the larger work, which la Cie charm and delight of all Italian readers, and is second only—if In deed it is second—in reputation at home to the " Promessi Sposi" of Afanzoni. fg Niceohi del Lappi, or the Last Days of The Florentine Republic s ?! treats of that epoch so honorable to the Italian name, but so ter rible to the city of Florence, during which the Republic defended itself alone against the arms ofPope Clement VII, and the Emperor Charles V. It addresses itself to our deepest sym pathies. The lesson which it teaches is that of self-sacrifice. In an ago which, is spite 'of its great and manifold improfernents, is an age of' egotism, It shows us that there is something sit,perloi to our personal well-belng._ jt,preises , to itlit uc ' - waned by many abstract principles, are not a delusion; that tho external isinferior to the lutenist man ; that the accidents of worldly position are but for a time, while the essentials connected with the perfection of the human character aro for eternity. In fact, D'Azeglio's aim is em bodied in the description of his own Lam borto;and the high-minded men of his ago and country. , They saw before them a life of labor arid trouble ; but tho determined to meet thorn resolutely, and found repose in the consoling idea of fulfilling a sacred duty. They prepared to suffer, with that readiness and joy which •R ellgion - alone can give, because it alone can teach the heart of man that auffering is a blessing. The men of that age, stained as it was withblood, and darkened by crime, were free from the guilt of believing in nothiug except gold, and the pleasuies It can purchase. Their loves and their hatreds were, indeed, furious and excessive, but it was for this very reason that they believed there were things which deserved either one or the other. The poisonous breath of indifference, of doubt, admitted as a principle, had not con gealed their hearts. They could throb lathe dom and security. They were taught, by the faith which they had embraced, to sacrifice everything for its sake—to follow it and make it triumph. They could say, with uplifted brow : di We believe that there aro in the world things higher, more worthy, more estimable, than riches, pleasures, self-interest ;" and they did not fear that their words would be an swered with irony, that their noble sacrifice would ho received with the smile of scorn or compassion. They did not think that life is s journey without an end, virtue a dream, Oa practice of it a labor without compensation. They did not see in human beings a pack of knaves and fools, in death the end of suffering, and alter death—nothing. The limo was yet far distant when poetry and literature would call him bravo and magnanimous who giver way to his passions—him weak and centernpii ble who has learned to subdue them. In a word, it Niccola del Lapp" possum a moral grandeur quite refreshing In these do. generate days. This shows Itself not so mud by remarks of the author himself, as Inciden- tally during the progress of the narrative; for, unlike Tbackoray's novels, tlds one is a] plot. The story marches. We have brought before our eyes a moving panorama of tin siege of Florence. The figures aro the citizen; of that pclebrated and marvellous Republic. "That people," se the anther calls them, lc If so much nerve, so finch life, Which, afte . three hundred years of agitations, wars, dirt nerds, uproars, and proscriptions, found fled; even in 1680, sufficiently sound and vigerow to resist alone the power of pbarlep V, ant fell, offer a long contest, botrayed,pdher that vannulsbefl ; a rap Mat prospered while # appeared to parry in its hoso,st the germs cc destruction, but which became despondinf, and lost all spirit, all gaitittness of soul, after long SW stable trantellity under the Medici; perhaps, becautie P 6 pf 1661 00 Pf thP QI4 Stah was to enkindle patriotism, that of the Mogi , coati to stltle and extingnielt it." The unit/ . of Interest is more fully preserved by tin storfo following the fortunes of a Billgb foully. Imitating the architect who, to de monstratn the Internal order of an edifice, li presents It in the designs as if eilt through th e centre, Vekzegllo depicts, in the soap manner, the interior Qf the house of a Fit. rentine citizen during the siege. The translation is faithful and idiomatic, ant this classical romance preserves, in its Engll4l form, the features which Make it so attractim in the original tongue. It cannot fail to bt come, like Manzont's 6; Betrothed," a standard work. Nu•cot.o DEI LAP'; or, tho last days of the Floret tine Reeublio, Translated from the Italian of Mamie) d'Azeglio, by IL Ballet, Philadelphia J, D. Lippe eott, k Co. rjr Miss J. M. Davenport hoe been playing it Louisville, Ky. Speaking of her Julia, In Knowles' delightful-play of "The ilunohbaolc," the Louisville Journal enye that, "Mona Fumy Ramble's meteoric flash over the dramatic) senitl, no one has appeared in this country who can we. Min the part to compare with her except Miss Di. vonports, and, in some of the subdued passages, ye have ofteh thought that Miss D. Is even more pt. thetto than her great rival." Mr. Paul Murphy has arrived at New Or pane, his home, awl it is announced that he will enter Immediately upon the prunee of the legal profuelou. Jotter from a Student at Georgetown College. HAUL ONEEIiONIER Or TEE REV. JAMES MOHR. Otorespondenee of The Frau.] GEORGETOWN COLLEGE, D. C., Jan. 2.0,1860. :The Oath°lie community and Jesuit Society have ben oast into deep sorrow by the death of their ost esteemed friend, Father Ryder. In the fut. seas of hts .age, like a shock of corn, folly rips, helttbeloved brother was gathered to his fa there, leaving a painful void, not only In the itafts of his companions in years, but also in the esrtf.ef every Mao on the threshold of life, who had found, in their interoonrso with him, that ge- Isial old ego !maid awaken in youth, not only re. ipect, but the warmest affection. Ills genial wit Snd sparkling humor must be remembered by all /who enjoyed the pleasure of 44 acquaintance. rifted .with talents of very high order, he was Ver modest and unassuming in his deportment, ml his friends appreciated those talents snore ighly than he did himself. His body arrived at the Washington depot yes. • day morning at six o'clock, accompanied by ev. Father Biox, (pastor of St. John's, in your ity, former president of the Washington Semi , ,) and Father Lilly, (Resistant pastor of St. Jo. Philadelphia,) from whence It was con. Iped. to Trinity Morel', Georgetown, whore, ex. .to nubile view, it was visited by a large fetrither of hie friends, who came forward to gaze kith tearful eyes upon. the mortal remains of their councilor in religion, and friend In time of adversity. r • At ten o'clock, before a orovr.le , .l o ongiegation, the ceremony was performed over the deceased, by Rev. Di. White, who in touahing language depleted the ohsracterlstio features of his well spent life. So said that during the ferty.five years, which he alwattin **Jesuit Soolety,whether ocempyiisg p highest post of honor, or an Inferior position,- @had always been found obedient to tho minuteet Miesnedlthearder n that his strongest energies had bean devoted to the education of yolth, and know.' ng as be did that many of them would be the fu. ture bulwark of the institutions of their country, he Instilled into their youthful minds true mined. , `pies of morality. The discourse was listened to Iseith breathless attention by the entire congre-ga ,tion. The funeral ceremony being conoluded, the !ODOM was borne slowly from the ehetrols and planed t within the hearse with% had boon waiting for Ito reception.. At the solemn tolling of the bell the ;funeral train moved on to its destination,being composed of eminent divines, among whom I no. need Father Villiger, the Provincial of the Order, Father early, President of the Georgetown Col- I lege, Father Stonestreet, ex-provincial, Father Mal lady, of Baltimore, ex•provinoial ; Father Dominick Young, ex.provhscial of the Dominicans; Fathers Maguire, Bios, Nota, Fulton, Welch, Lynch, Bic. kensopp, Duddy, Clark, Curly, Boyle, and behind these came the literary societies of the College, 413 d a number of other students, followed by an Jimmie crowd of people. As slowly the mournful procession proceeded through the streets of George. town, on their way to the College graveyard, no sound broke upon the air save the solemn funeral dirge arising from sorrowful hearth . . With dila. Gully did the funeral procession pars through the crowd which bad gathered at the College gates. Raving arrived at the grave, the usual core. tawny wee performed, and the mortal remains of Father Ryder were slowly lowered into their lest resting place, amid the sobs of his brothers in re. ligion, and the lamentation of his surrounding friends. The commune slowly 'retired from the mournful spot to listen to a eulogy, to be deliver ed by Jas. F. McLaughlin, a student of the college, and .member of the Philodemie Sooleti, of which Father Ryder was the founder. The pathos of his langiage, and the beauty of his sentiments, drew tears from many of the audiences. After he had flubbed his remarks, the audience retired to their respected homes, and Georgetown College was /Aloft to its former quietness Letter from New York. -run NEW conic r : Ire IFANCPACTCRIIRS-.-LIO. 'NUMMI Phornors FOR THE CITTTUR GALLANT TQUATATRATiL TO CALIFORNIA-PRORPECTIVB RILE OP NEW TORIC.-ADVANCP/ IN RAILROAD PRRIORTR—POPLIC RCROOLS OP NEW YORK cm: minium lIIACIIIRN9 lIITRODUCED..-KX•SSCRKTAIIT OP STU% TUCKER. ic_Ortgo.uutawA• j me. The new nominal and satirical paper, Vantly Fay., bide fair to become a decided sums. Bo far, the sales bare been better than its solid men antioipated. The men who write and illustrate it are John Brougham, (equally clever with pon and Flinty Fitz-James O'Brien, T. B. Aldrioh, " K. N. Pepper," Henry Olapp, Jr., George Arnold, Frank J. White, and W. A. Stephens, with an on oseional bit of Ed. G. P. Wilkins. The itinerations aro by Bellow, McLellan, Cylingo, and Stephens. The — ooneein pays clash. Oar Logialature In in full blast on the vrvions schemes for plundering the oily treasury, reward, log Republican politicians; and making political capital for Seward. So far, the following projects have been brought forward . ; let, For city rail roads; 2d, Sound steamboats; 3d, Breaking up of the Almshouse Department; 9th, Abolishing Cro ton Board; sth, Excluding Mayors of New York and Brooklyn from the Police Board; 6th, In creasing the police force 2,000 men, by adding 500 Republicans to the force; 7th, Now markets in Brooklyn. That sanguinary individual, Captain Henry de la Ranger°, the only animated " Zoneve" who has sniffed the air of theso confederated States, has collapsed from his once eminent position, and, an rumor has it, accepted the appointment of marker at one ofPholan'a up-town billiard saloons; salary $9O a month. He is said to have been negotiated into the plane through the influence of that clever, kind-hearted woman, Madame Lola Montes. Travel to California keeps up wonderfully. Yes terday the Atlantic, for Aspinwall, took out six hundred and fifty passengers, among whom wore the new Grenadian Minister. General Herren, and ff. 8. Sanford, Beg., late United States Secretary of Legation to Paris. The city of New York, notwithstanding the im. mouse else which it has attained, has barely cover ed mere than half its boundary. The city compri ses 141,986 lots, of which 51, 725 have been built upon or improved, and 86,761 still remain vacant. In the ensuing fifty years, it is probable that all of these lots will be built on or improved, cad if Brooklyn and its suburbs aro in the meantime con solidated with this city, New York wig equal, in area and population, any oily in the world. The New York and Erie and Cintral railroads have entered intoan agreement to advance the rates of freight on live stock They will charge $OO per oar from Buffalo or Buspension Bridge to New York for cattle apt sheep—tho latter in double•deeked oars--an/ $75 per oar for hogs In eingle•deoked oars. The rate from Dunkirk will be 099.50 on cattle oa sheep, and $51.50 on hop. Hereafter nothing but sheep will be carried In double•deeks. • . None of the documents relating to the public af faire of the city possess greater Interest than the annual wort of the City Superintendent of Pub lio Sokools. Tho present educational resources of the city consist of 52 want schools, comprising 44 grammar schools for boys, 45 for girls, 3 for boys and girls, and 46 primary departments; 35 primary and 8 oolored wheeler. Pupils on register, 133,688, average attendance, 51,488; pupils in Free Ando. my $6O, In thell evening schools 15,351, in the 3 normal sobools 659, and In the 12 corporate institu tions, which share In the public money, 7,309, mak ing In all 181,828 pupils taught. Financially, the Superintendent reports the ex penses of salaries of teachers and Janitors, $617,- 128 91; new aohool-hoiniee and aopalts w 03,946 23; fuel, $29,53010 ; books, stationery, and apparatus, $72,485 73; salaries of dicers of the Board, $25,- 187 63;1 ree 4oademy, $50,112 04; evening schools, $99,089 33; Normal soboolP, $9,155 73; contingen cies, $9,681 31. Totill, $1,?14g.09t1• of this sum $1,038,097 05 was raised by oily tax, and the re minder, $207,332 95, was appropriated from the State fund, towards which the pity contributed an equal amount, and $191,68103 in addition. During the peat year an effort has been made to Introduce Wheeler it Wilson's sewing machines into spheols. The plreira Female College, the State liormaj School of yew ,fersoy, 4thtger's male Institute, and Ward qabool No. 49 In this city, are among those In which the experiment has been tried. In the last named, several of the young girls exhibited unusual skill in the use of the machine 15 prestmee of the pgard g+ j`4uuai~on t school °theme, and °Bisons. Thp ease and rapid' : ty with which the work was thrown off, suggested the idea of an association among the teachers and pupils for clothing the destitute children of the school and a considerable amount of clothing has already been made and distributed to them, Mayor Wood has nominated as president I'd the Croton Board, Gideon J. Tucker, Esq., lota Secre tary of State. Mon. Edward Everett is putting Ma Frank. lin leeture to a worthy purpose. Attaohed to the Charlestown (Mass.) 'Ugh Fchool 18 an oSoollent library, purchased a few years ago by individual subscription, and to provide• the means for making additions to it, Mr. Everett, on the invitation of a number of gentlemen, delivered the above•nattted lecture last Friday evening, at the liarvard Church, at Harvard. Lir Arthur Napoleon the wonderful young pi anist, has gone to Cubs. I.VP General Cass has given to the Board of Edo cation of Detroit a lot of lard north $15,00 for a 0401 how. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. ry , Miss Matilda Heron opona In New York, this evening, at the Winter Garden, in her own play of " Lesbia " She will be supported by Mr. J. W. Wallack and Mr. George Jordan in the principal parts. jam" The following are the resolutions of the Min nesota Domooratto State Convention, held at St, Paul, Jan. 12 ; Resolved, That Stephen A. Douglas, of Illinois, is the first &oleo of the Democratic party of the State of Minnesota for the Presidency in 1880. Resolved, That our delegates to Charleston are expected, as an &premien of the will of the De mooraoy of Minnesota, to support him as nob, so long as such support may prove available to him and for the general interest of the Demooratic rul ßes y. olved, That the DsmoCratio party of this State will - support the nominee of the Democratic, Convention at Charleston. Resolved, That we reaffirm, reiterate, and fully endorse the Democratic platform adopted by the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati, in 1855; that we acquiesce in the Dred Scott decision; and that we are opposed to all attempts to reopen the Afrioan slave trade, as disgraoeful to the age and country. Resolved That, under the Constitution, the alit sena of one State cannot interfere with the domes tic, institutions of another State, and that any such interference is an attack upon the peace, safety, and dignity of every State in the Union ; and that wo denounce, with indignation and abhorrence, not only the treasonable participators in the recent in. vaster' of the soil of Virginia, at Harper's Perry, but all others who, by sustaining, °sousing, or pal llating,theon. offense, aid'and comfort insurrection a sediti riP The N. Y. Journal of Commerce says:: " Without doubt, Eleuthera. trade with this city has been somewhat affected by political *MAO). meats. Yet there Le nothing like a general ens. ension of train°, as some indiscreet. jonnuldisti 'would'have the pablio-belleve.: While some house., fervaridereVeiLsorre metres' slimy exist; have not enjoyed the usual extent of business, others are quite as prosperous as lest year, and a few have Cr' perionood a positive increase. "M regards New York oily Itself, we believe there haltmever been serlotur apprehension of any immediate disaster oontraquent upon the non•inter• *Muse ' Panel' ,Preolidated In many parts of the South. Her trade might be affected indirectly, espeolally should the' Beath syssenuutcally perse vere in the determination lately evinced. But the oommarelal metropolis has never been looked upon asunfriendly to any motion of the country. Her Immense vote of something like 90,000 has gene rally, if not always , been thrown in favor of consti tutional law; and by other means she has shown her true national character. * • . . She therefore had little reason to apprehend withdrawal of confidence. or any hostile manifesta tion. Suspension of trade with the North would rather tend to concentrate in this oily those chart. nets of intereouree which have their ramifioations at other business points. Snob, we believe, bas been the practical working of Into events, as some of the manufacturing towns to the eastward feel the changed condition of things very sensibly. " We are led to believe that the non-interoourse doctrine has not been practically noted upon to any groat extent, as compared with the aggregate trans actions of Northern cities, though It to imposeible to foresee to what extreme measures Southern men may resort, if urged forward by aggressive legisla tion. If we may believe the evidence, much noise has been made by mete who have no sincere inten tion of sitting up to their creed, in Me hope of dissuading rivals front buyingin the most favor able markets, and so in:icily their own success in competition. 'The same proems, which may be olaseed as one of the Woks of trade,' would also Nerve to Increase Individual purchases--eaoh one supposing that the delinquency , of others would leave a older market to hiotealf.' Er The ladies la Conoord, N. IL, are taking advantage of Leap Year, and are giving parties at a rapid rate. At a party at Music Hall, Monday evening, says the Democrat, "The gentlemen were served, waited upon, and treated with a de gree of elegint gallantry which made them well nigh wish all years might be Leap Years." re. At the Duck Mill, in Rockport, tact Thurs day, on amount of the slackening of a large bolt, the bell wee rung to stop the machinery. Instant ly all the operatives rushed out of the mill In the greatest consternation, fearing that a calamity something like that at Lawrence was about to be fall them. their fears were utterly groundless, as the mill is built of granite, and is only two stories high. This panic shows how deeply the minds of the people are impressed by the great calamity. Uzi AnteSua DIMORATIC CONTANTION.—The oommittee appointed to draw up a platform embo dying the principles for the Democratic party of Alabama, made their report on the 14th. instant. The platform takes the highest possible Southern around. It insists on Territorial protection to slavery, and deMauue• otthe Government shall bo emplOyed, - if necessary, li lts protection. It negatives Douglasism in all its forms. The report was adopted, almost unani mouldy—Mr. Forsyth, of Mobile, objecting, with; perhaps; a few others. A Sit Dior A resolution nu adopted, almost unanlmoylg, instructing the delegate', to the Charleston Con. vention to insist on the endorsement of the panel pleo of the Alabama State Democratlo Confeuthn, before the nominations for President and :ci , to 'Pre eident. In case the Charleston Convontfor,Mfusos t, make mob endorsements, then the delegates from Alabama are instructed to ratit . en. home, esti together this Convention and, mks., their re- port. The following-named gentlewdn we're elected by the Convention ae delegates tcs the 1 7garleston Con- Tendon, for the State at larg,i: Leroy Hope, Walker Damn, Daine, John A. Winston, Alex. 11. Meek, Vivi. L. Yancey, Levi W. Lawler, Francis L. I4yon. Henry D. Smith. RILIJARKAIIIat PFLOCEADMOS—MARRIKD TO TOE W/lONO Mol.—The Pert Olinton (0.) Demoera4 of the 7th reports the jallowlog extraordinary case: As we hare Ire= informed, quite an excite ment prevails at Phyder Bed, in this township, owing to the fad that, a young German girl of that plaoe was uneenset(pany married to a young German of the same piker, on Wednesday evening last, without her knowledge or consent. The fiesta are theft; TXO young lady was engaged to be married to It young man whom we will call 8., and the evening set for the event was Wednesday last. Accordingly B. made the necessary props ratioaa, such as procuring Manse, 'to., and was to cause to this plaoe to have the matter solemnised. Bet the sequel shows that B. had a rival in the War,' whom we will call C. 0. getting wind of what was about to transpire ' came to this place and procured a license to marry the same girl. At early evening, and before B. made his appearance, souse friends of C., who were concerned in the plot, re paired to the residence of the lady, who was at tired and waiting for her expectant husband, and informed her they were sent to convey her to Port Clinton, where her husband in expectation wag awaiting her arrival. "She itamedlatelloompliod withythe request, and was conducted to the ' Island Mouse,' where she was induced by the friends of 0. to take some re froshments in the shape of wino, when she soon became unconscious of whore she was, or what she did. About this time C. made bis appearance with a justice, and but a few momenta elapsed ere the ceremony was performed between 0. and the drugged female; after which he conveyed her to hie own house, where they.spent the night, (8., in the meantime, being unable to find her where abouts ) 'The girl, in the morning:, acknowledged the marriage, out declared she had married B. instead of 0. But the latter remonstrated with her, declaring that she bad married him, and was then in his house, whereupon she left instantly, and took refuge in a neighboring house, where she stated her case, saying she bad been drugged and made to marry the wrong man, and that she would not live with him, Iler affianced, 8., soon came to her relief, and took her in oliarge. tie came to this place with her on Saturday last, when she commenced suit for divorce against the said C. These are the facts; as near as ascertained." Tea FIGHT BETWEEN fins AN ASIJ SAYERS.— The long-talked.of fight betweenlfeenan and run Sayers, the champion of Nngland, !fuels is now positively tised for the 16th April, is creating an immense excitement among the sporting fraternity of this city. A larger amount of money will be stak ed upon this contest than was over before risked upon the entertain IMO of a prize -light. The betting, so far as we can learn, is governed entire ly by pre judice. Old 'sports" who owe their birth to the little tbrelgn island are enthusiastic in their devotion to the cause of Sayers, while the wooden nutmeg stipportera of the P. B. as earnestly support the stars and stripes for the Rapists Boy. We learn from a reliable scums that Donnie late opponent, John Mor(•iesey, is anxious to take bets to ally follOput against Theban. Ile has bets al ready out le the amount of $5,200, in different stakes, that Heenan does not whip Sayers ; and while he has not Inn At all backward In offerin to stake his tilonely the result, thus far -be has found plenty of takers. Mor rimy hilt week received a letter from Tom Sayers, enclosing a draft for 4500001°h the latter desired Morrissey .to stake Mut him to the host advantage. It is el%) arrapued 1 1 0 1 00 them that if 'Morrissey bete his gwn money at odds, and afterward, un see ing Sayers, is diaaatisfied with him,. Sayers is to take the bets off his hands. Morr issey intends sailing for England on the 16th of March, in order to be In time for the fight. If, after he has seen Sayers, and considered all his points, he shenld he doubtful in regard to the resgft -of the tight, Mgr rissey will"hedge," in order to save what money he has pitt up. Per this purpose, or to continue his betting, should ho be satisfied with his man, he will take over win; him $25,000, part of which is entrusted to hint by other pereens, to be used at his discretion. Should :Oman awned in conquering Sayers, and winning the °ham plen befit (*ruin Eogland's One hero, Morrissey will instantly challenge the viotor, and insist upon fighting him in England at the earliest pessiblo moment, and before either shall relurn to this country. Morrissey atatea it as his determination, however, to tight no more hattles in America. oer Information be correct regarding blorriesey'a intention to challenge Demon in 01111 e the latter whips Sayers, it will give additionel interest to the match an time anth d April. There are many here who are unwilling that Morrissey should wear the American laurels, and who feel aggrieved at his refusal to accept the challenge widait lleenan sent him after thefr late tight fn Canada. Any eircusestanee which can lines about another mete between thee° pugilistic) rivals, whether it takes place In this country or in England, would he bail ed with delight by all whb take an interest en the P. R. Mien Adah Isaac. Menkea, the clever young aotreso who was recently elect's 1 the captain of IS military company in Dayton, Ohio, and who io at present playing an engagement at tbe Troy Thcatre, TWO CENTS. is the wife of John Ileenk The lady was exceed ittgly,anzletts to aoconspany her husband in his profesalonal trip across the water, but he objected to It for various reBBoll,B, She will sail for England, however, at the earliest possible moment after his fight with Sayers. Mrs. Heenan has attained con siderable oelebrity in her profession, and is said to possess much talent.—N. Trtbune. BY TELEGRAPH. LATER FROM CALIFORNIA. (Br. OverLtud Ma[L] Politioal Excitement—The Senatorial Contest. COIIPLEXION OF THE LEGISLATURE Distressing 'Aooonnts from ()arson Valley STARVATION AND SEEM:MAT/ON. INDL&N MURDERS AND RETALIATION LATER FROM OREGON, WASHINGTON, AND BIIITIBII COLUMBIA. BUTTERFIELD'S OVERLAND KUL ROUTE MALLOY'S STATION, Tithuary 2t.—The overland mail ooaoh passed here this afternoon, with Sam Presides° advisee to noon of the 30th ni t. The California news lap( an interesting charge ter.. The poGtiolans were gathering in large num• bens at Baurapsento, preparatory to the meeting of the Leirialatame on Monday, the 2d of Tannaty. The last menage of Governor Welter, at was thought, would be sent in on the next day, the 3d .fnetant. ` • The Governor Meat, Mr.. Latham:l..lmb' probably be Inaugurated owes* inh last. 'Ate approaching Gulled: Stake Senatorial elec tion in the State lambi' was the engrossing toploofrimmittgatima ppllthmlelreles. Governor Weller an - General Denvetwere an doubtedly the leading candidates. Senator G win favors the election of Governor Weller, and Go. 'cruet Lstbam's choloe is General Denver. The political complaxioo or, the leaialatnre is as follows: Demootits, , 93; anti-Lecemptonites, 8; stepublinans, 3; and eld.llratiVtde, 1: - On the 21st a Ore 000urred at Poker's Flat, In Sierra county, which destroyed property valued at 820,000. The last accounts from Carson Valley represent the snow on the mountains as from three to five feet deep. The inhabitants on the western side of the mountains are in great distress from the extreme cold and the soarolty of the necessaries of life. All mining operations had been of course suspended. The live stook in Honey Lake valley were:starv ing In large numbers. Hay was very scarce, and commands $l5O per ton. The number of cattle wintering In' the valley, east of the mountains, was estimated at twenty thousand. In ordinary win ters the stook have heretofbre thrived well there. The Indians were also searing, and dying from oold and starvation. The principal occupation of the miners appear to be speculating in mining claims, which were sell ing at $B,OOO to $5O 000 each. The general opinion of those who have made ex plorationa is that a grand chain of sliver minea exist ; on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada =our,: tabu from the Honey Lake region down to ',fie Golerados. Two young men while hunting in the violn'ity of Humboldt Bey, were murdered by the Matt//to In dians. A party of the Humboldt people rent ou t, to reoovet the remains of the murdered Tien, and falling in with the Indians, killed fcifuteou of them. 0RE00 1 .7 Craton dates to the 14th ult. had 'been received at San Franoleoo. The Oregonian ; publishes late news from the Similkamen mines o!",eatt encouraging character. The Portland Advertiser men4jojaa the arrival a t that place of an express agent i'who reported that parties had readied Dallas vri`a twenty-five pounds of gold dot from the new 'Alines on Canal rirer, which are believed to be as i far north as the British posseseions. Tin Tillamook Indians/were oommitting depre dations in the vicinity jil. Tillamook emanty, goo, and had burned !qr/tabor of houses and barns. WAS - AM - YAM TERRITORY. Advice', from WO!Austell Territory to the 23d ult. are furnished... A bill had pooootl Site /Wombly to remove the mat of Governutcnt, from Olympia to Vancouver, but it wouldptCeably be defeated in the Connell. A bill had kre t 9 introduced in the Legislature to organize thaielvds between the Canal de Raw cud the Sbt , alts of Rawareo, as Harney county. This is Ifs 'ditputed Territory, claimed by both Ragland and the United States. The to rip on Paget sound and the straits on the 4th of/Leee caber, was the raost Severe ever known. Large', qugatities of kvc belonging to v . ariorre saw map abyng the Puget 's sound and the connecting inlets were swept away and lost. The Seabeek teAnartost a mtnion het of logs. Tye United States schooner General Harney, was blown on San Juan Island, and stove. She wss loaded with stores for Capt. Pickett's cam= cony 4.3 0. Her cargo was damaged to the amount of ,00 Bina* the @dorm nothing had been heari of may oral sloops and schooner@ trading on the sound. BRITIbH COLUMBIA The advises from British Columbia are to the 2Dth of December. The news is mostly political and only of a local interest. The mining districts were still frosen np and the miners at a stand-still. A good deal of banding was going on at Victoria, and a large immigration expooted In the spring. The British Government had ordered their men from Ball Juan island, and abandoned the disputed Territory until the Governments Bettie the title.: COMMERCIAL AFFAIRS Sax FRANCIBco, December 30.—There has been little doing since the recent arrivals, but nothing like an active business. Numeroas parcels of Ro• °belle and Cognac brandies have been taken by leading dealers at former rates. The market for coal is unsettled. The Lawrence Calamity. Lawny:en, Mum, Jan. 21..—The coroner's In quest on the bodies of the unfortunate victims of the recent catastrophe at the Pemberton mule still continues. Captain Bigelow was examined to-day with re ference to the iron pillars and mortar work of the building. Ili, testimony was mainly corrobora tive of that previously given. 11. D. Clement testified as to the foundation of tiro mill, which he considered as substantial. The following is the testimony of Thomas 011. ver : I have examined the foundations of the mill sines the fallim of the building ; I saw nothing to doubt the thoroughness of the work ; I saw several defective pillars; I broke a good many of there, and found holes in them ; I saw none that could be detected by their ontaide appearance ; I found nearly of them broken. When the pillars were brought from Boston, I helped to carry them in ; think we broke one of them ; don't knew whether it was defective ; af ter that I cautioned the men to be oareful with them ; not, however, because I considered that they were poor pillars ; at the ruins we found many of the pillars that we broke of unequal thickness. The Invest was adjourned until Monday mom ing at ft o clock. From Waslangton..7Examination of Richardßealf. WABIIINGTON,..I6O. 21.--Riahard Reaif, who reached Washington on Thursday night with Door keeper Jones, of the Senate, was this morning ex amined by the Harper's Ferry Spooled Committee. He is reported as highly edaoated. Arrangements have been made for executing the Senate and Executive printing at Rives' GiosB othoe. The " Irrepressible Conflict" at the Qasnr asrom, Jan. 21—The Baton Rouge Garotte sap, that resolutions are to be presented to the Legislature of Louisiana, proposing a oonferenoe of the Southern States, to take into consideration the moat feasible means of discontinuing further oommerotal interomirse with the Northern States. Fire at Marietta, Ohio. Manutria, Ohio, January 21.—Cram's flour mill urea deetroyed by fire this morning. The logs, whioh la covered by insurance, amounted to $lO,OOO. Arrival of the Steamer Edtnburgh. NEW YORE, Jan. 22 —The steamship Edinburgh, has arrived. her dates from Liverpool are to the 4th inst., and have been anticipated. COrlgreSS. U. S. CAPITOL, WASH/NOT" JAIL St—Thera ie 110 Sosslou of either house to-day. Markets by Telegraph. 7110411.1{1 Jan. 2O—Cotton--6,000 bales gold to-day at 10111 for middlings. The eels, of the week amount to 10 r , hales, the largest on cord. Meceipts of the week, %- POO bales, against IS agfi last year. Rec ah of last year. 99 000 bales. The exports of the me 'seek are valued at $1.4214.0fde. Thtve is stook of Slit SOO bales to Ent. Freights on Cotton to Liverpool, hi S/tdis)id; to acre / 1-13. Exchange on New York ei 41 , corm; on London ley A ft , cent. premium. BLVANNAIt, Jan. 40—The recent foreign whm is caused an advance of no on Cotton. Hales to-day of 1,100 bales, AVCItiSTA, Ca. Jan. 3J.—Cotton—sales to-day 1,450 bales. The market has an advancing tendency. CIIAIILIGTON. Jan. 20 —The Cotton market has an ad vanoina tendency under the influence of the advices from LiYerecad. 1,500 bales were so d to-day. fkavtrionit. Jan. :I—Flour quiet; 'Howard street 85 37 cre./30 Wheat is firm at an adsanoe; white $l6l et 1 tO; rod .51..11) Corn dull at 61.1t700 for white: 70a/lo for yellow. Provielone firm at ailvanoing tendency with outohrinee ot quotations. Whiekey steady at me. Bills on Naw Volt unohanled. • New OHLEANC. Jen, 20.—The Cotton market in verr buoyant ;76 lgai hales were gold to-day .at• en ad ranee of So. caused by the foreign advicee ; mtddlinge are quo ted at Mabee ; the sales of the week loot tip 96.000 t'ele'• the ift'Feet week ' s sale on record, and the market was swept; titereetiiPla of the week amounted to 67 Otal bales, against 70,000 bales last year; the exports of the week Ell 000 bales, makingthe total exports Incfor the sea son 011.100 bales • reempte ahead of last year VI 1:00) bales; ditto at all ' Southern ports 405 000 balsa; stook in port 612 500 bales. against 400 WO balee last ) ear. Sugar to dull, and Ngrho tower; sales at eXerio Molasses olio tic. Flour dull at 116 Vet& Corn steady at 7a5i8750, Aloes Pork. 0.4,447.55 inew, SYS. 1 ard, in bids, 10's.. Whiskey 220. Cotton firm. at 11a113.1c. Sales of the week 20000 bales. Imports of the week 4,000 tales. Stock in port 3tl 000 hales. Exchange Ort Lencon, 71 . 7M0 ;_on t New York, 340% mama. ctl3OOllllG. rielgat on C o tton on ty Literpoot, TRIAL OF STEPIIRNS AND Ifaztur.—The Lees. tetra. of Virginia haring anthollsed a special term of the Circuit Court for the county of Jefor• son, Judge Parker has directed notice to begiren that the term will be commenced -on the AM day of February next. It Is understood that Stephens and Billet, two of the Harper; retry cOlaapire tors, wll3 thu be tried. T INTEERLY-PRE. lime Wrisms Panes pill be sent to [Babeembers by roe niNr v ii n ? adttoeed • —. 4 =4 eCO .• Five Combs. " " • ' r BCO Ten " ..... Twenty coma " " (to oda address) *O3 Twenty Cop( ee, m over, " (to address Of each Butworiber,) - -• • • 123 Fors Mb of Twenty-one or over, we will send an Mrs obey to the cetteritn of the Club. W Postmasters are requested to act as ndente fof Too Weutux Panic CALIFORNIA: PRESS. heeled Stemi-Monthlr In torte for the califoraia Steamers. THE - C TY. AMUSEMENTS TIM EVENINE. Wituari TS TIM ARCII-8114012 Ve.Wr&F. Aviz ttak iri litjtrs Sluh.—...Everybody's entr— WAINor-Oritinrr Tyzatyrd, poriwr WAttitt and Ninth. - 11 Troratore The Laughing Hy sus." NATIONAL TARATAIt.Emu between ismhth and Ninth.—Dan Nace's Went Tha Magic Ring." TEOMRt r ell VAIIECTITO, N. W. 411 : tei . Fifth add Chestrint.—" Songs, Dances, .f &o. ACADIC&T Owir ARTS, Oman= WOOL —" Pari inna"—"The tyrdoni of John. anns..ko." - Elattnitsson's Exurarrion Room. 'Jsyne's Compon- Itea,lth Suddins, Chestnut street, ahoyeSitith.,--Tha don s Museum of Art. IttcDononna's Rao. stoat, beton , Third.— Entertainments nightly. Tustin or Worming, upythesat Corner Tenth and Chestnut streets.—Rigr.or BUM Tan OPERATIONS Or TH.I TAX. Runrceete.— Mr. Flemerfelt, the Tax Receiver, has prepared an elaborate statement of the o &rations of his effete which will be submitted to Councils on: Ticaraday. There wes collected on the duplicate of 1859, from the 30th of March to December' 31st, 59e8,V5.01 for city purposes; 1324,295.62 for the State; and $1,200 50 militia tax. There was alao eallated 6764,835.72 of registered taxes.. The allowaeces granted by City Commissioners, In anseitienee of errors, duplicate assessments, ita., amounted to $4.203,256, and amount of city property abused in the duplicates was $3,464,220, making a tota l of $7,727,45 exempted after the books were-made out. The Receiver having completed the rueq eon doused register, it appears that the entire "Monet of outstanding taxes. exclaire' of_lBs7,:enteluite to $313 946.14, and of this there le about ;alma in the hands of defaulting colleetors and over $2O 000 In the - hands of sheri ff s. The w hole amount 4kely to be collected beet down at $200,060. The elder men of the city paid in during the year $2,609 40, as the amount of palatial tenor:4l°ooM ; in add' , tion, costs to the sum of $555.55 were ebt making the whole ailment collated by .theidepews. ment, $3,690,001..10.. Prom the Ist of Jane Ay, 1860, to the 16th instant, at which time tha - w i ty,k o were closed, $167,666.46 have been collate' VIOLATION or A LATT—LAILHE SWAIM' OF PORDER.-011 SAMITINT morning Mayor t ßo u , l7 co _ 'starlet information that a large lot of pevidir was stored awarlee iorize the delfteentwed. ta 1865, a law was Puled by. this Magi b i r o ip*. toga penalty upon the salt of ganAowwa s with ou t license, and also against the etori4orgittillilirder beyond certain limited qiumtiti . ww in , m y put o f the silty. The penalty for the ',attar offense, it the forfeiture of the powder, and, the Ike of five hun dred dollars in money. 'e,finclra emmeraiment was in direst violation of e srise statute, the Mayor issued a warrant authe i tising a imarch foe the powder. The warrant _ern placed la the Once of High Constable Chair ? , who, with Lieutenant Der cuaLeought out the r.tpliedve material, and Retired it. The dangerous l'6eamodity was found aonaaled in two °Wheeler td Spring Garden street, between Twenty-fourth ',ad 'runty-Nth greets There were forty ken, of blasting powder, reescient to blow up theilifteenth ward. The powder be longed to (*Amelia Kentady, who not only for feits the property, but Is also liable to a doe of $5OO, milting $750 as the price for breaking the law arainet storing large quantities of powder in the C,lty. The fine and forfeiture go to the fatal A of the Association for the Relief of Dim ble,4 Firemen. OPERATIONS or PnOresereiste. Triune.— On Saturday morning Officer Britton, of thei E ghth ward ' took in to custody, at Eleventh and DAMS t streets, three fellows named Geo, Lincoln', Benj. Ogle, and Daniel McCoy. They have long been engaged in systematic depredation, generally con fining themselves to petty spoils, the most promi nent of which has been butter. Thia annuedity they have been in the habit of stealing and ailing at twenty rents per pound. They confessed the theft, in all, of over one hundred pounds. Part of this stock was -taken from Franklin Plan, part from Callowhlil street, and the rest from the Black Bear Tavern. On Friday night the weals broke open a arum /a Arch street, and another InChestuut street, extracting from the latter flee brushes. Two weeks ago, they stole from Messrs, Pacithal it Morris, Chestnut street. sixteen pairs of-specta ales, two of Which were silver. A few days since, from another cue they took two bonnets, a head dress, and other articles. The party-bear a very extensive and unenviable policereputation, and are evidently booked for an extended enjoyment of municipal hospitalities, as generusly dispeneed by the jolly host of Moyantensing.- DEPARTTRE of THE STEAMSHIP 1 7100.—0 H Saturday morning the _steamship Vigo- Carte Mahan, sailed from Queen-street wittier for Li verpool. She bad a full Cargo and twenty pas rangers. The men engaged in loading her wero at work nil ninht in getting the cargo an board. A large crowd - witnessed the departure of the ehip, and she started amid the cheers of the epcntaw. e and the persons on ..board. 'Me cargo,: of the Vigo consisted of SOO tierces beef, 304,- bonds pork, 1.600 barrels flour, 21 tallair, "50 tans cloeerseed, 1,000 barrels rosin, 300 bales' cotter, 60 boxes cheese, 50 tiereea lard, - 200 'packages sundries. The Vigo's inward- oaten which con tained no French or German fine goods was ve ined at $715,000, the" duties of which-amenuted to $156,000. , ANNITERSART OP Berate' BLinerer,—Pro partitions are being made to celebrate, in an ap propriate manner, Cite one hundred and Or; annt versery of the birthday of Robert Burns, the great poet of Scotland. The anniversary will miss place on Wednesday, and will cionsiee et a dialler at tho St. Louis Hotel. The literary and Oratorical por tion of the entertainment will be of 'an interesung character. John D. Stockton will read anoriginel poem. It is arranged that addressee ehalibe made in response to the regular toasts by - Wm./I:Cr:any, Angus N. Macpherson, Win. J. 'Meg. .4=3 JObititQD, Col. Rodgers, Walter Hauge, John W. Forney, Robert C. Gibson, Mittel:ell: McAllister, David P. Mitchell, Walter B. Dick; and Daniel blelntyre. - - - ARUSA7AY.—Oa Saturday mornln&rthorso attached to on® of Adams' Express wagons became frightened at tho blotting of the steam whistle of the Vigo, as ebe was about leaving:gni:Kt-street wharf, and dashed up Queen atreet r lumAing down and running over a man and a boy, each of whcm was somewhat injured. Proceeding on up Queen 'divot, be upset a baker's wagon and horses and was finally stopped near Second street, bz.-.11r„ Wm. J. Young, at the risk of his own.life. CASE, AT TliE EIOSPITAL:—On Saturday evening. a man named John Frazier, felt from an omnibus, at Eighteenth and LOME street:, and broke one of his arms. On Saturday afternoon a lad named Thomas Welch, fire years of age, felt down in the yard of the holm Ne.-103 npruce street, and fractured his thigh. The sufferers were admitted into the Pennsylvania Hospital. DARING Rnßuzety.—A few afternoons since, a middle•aged woman having by the tariti a red. haired girl, abut ten years of age, walked up into the third story of a house in Warnock (late Lewis) street, above Girard avenue, and stole front tha bedroom a lady's hunting ease gold lever watch, worth about forty dollars. iNCENDIABISX.--At a lata hour on Friday night an attempt was made to burn thestable of Mr. Brown, in Enen street near Passynnk mai and Eighth street, in the First ward. A quantity of camphene was scattered about and set on fire. The dames were discovered and extinguished be fore they made much progress. Tae Frsinnia of George Emmons, formerly president of the Cordtrainers' Grand At3ociatieL of Pennrylvania, took place yesterday. Ha VTAS prominent member of the Journeymen CordWainers' Union of this city. His funeral 11913 attended by s large number of his fellow-Craftsmen. RAILWAY Pnorscr. , --The citizens of North ampton county have bad sarveyed a route for a rail road to connect Nazareth with Easton. This will place that point in direct conneotion wlthFnilsdol phis by the Freemanaburg and Eoaton bratob and the North Penraylranis railroad. MILITAay Esc cas os.—The Xatlonad Guards, Captain Lyle, bare accepted an invitation to visit New York on the 21st of February, to at tend the annual ball of the Independent Guards, Captain Boyle, of that city. The Guards will pro- bably number eighty men upon the occasion. FOUND Du .i.—At an early hour on Satnr day morning the dead body of a newly-born child was found In an alley near Ninth and Weed streets. Coroner Fenner held an inquest, and rer.- dered a verdict in accordance with the facts. DARING BODDEnr.—On Fri 4y everkiriiMn rogue carried away the ebow-care from the trent ,t the bet and cap More, corner Fifth and Vian streets. The case contained a number of, oaps and hats. Acernwar.—On Saturday morning, an elder ly man, who is said to bo a master stecolore, was caught between a hawser and a poet, when tho steamship Vigo was about railing, and he wag badly hart. BramEas nt tnx COrRTE of SAITHDAY.— in the Conrtlof Nisi Prins, Justice Strong, tho Aire session waticorsomed by the closing speo , sh ea of George M. Wharton and William M. Meredith, is the ease of White vs. Welsh, before reported. SVPSEXIS COrRT rat BAHC—Chiefltthtice Lou-- de, and Justice Woodwerd, Taompeon, and Res I. &hall vB. Williams Valley Railroad Company Argued by John Barman for plaintiff in error; 1y Francis w. Hughes and J. Hoffman for defendants in error, and by G. Mallory for plaintiff in error. Green ye. Tyler. Argued by W. - B. Wells for plaintiff, and P. W. Hughes and R. D. Parry for defendant In error, and by John Barman for !Asir tiff in error. The court adjourned anti: this morn ing at 10 o'clock. Nothing of interest transpired in the Diar:ol Court' or Court of Common Pleas In the Quarter Sessions 20222 mi_eellaaecits ho. limes of no general importance was disposed of. To-day Robert Thompson will be tried for the mur der of John Copia. The case will prohab'y excite. considerable interest. Messrs. L. C. Cssi,dy cr.(' F C. Brewster hare been retained 23 Conasil for the prisoner, who Is quite a young man. MULTI/ OFPICO, Jan. 21. 16d0.—The nural , r of interments in the city of Philadelphia fp: the we l• ending January 01, at 13 o'clock, is.—. • 8:3 Deerease A popiax) . . 41 ttelts. Croup —• ID; Children . Coug ea two of Brun.... 21 Lungs.— 5, Consumption of Dings.. 34. Con vnLe.ons --........ 61 Drone), 8min............ 6 Males- . .-. Cheat 4 Fematee— - - -... 11;Iva° of Heart ...- ... 8 Debility... Parer. gtearlet...— ..... 7 r rl'a l 6011 of tm Intim:pa . B t rgt :::: I " nose.— 111 iver. ...... 3, Under 1 year... .., _._ ;a B. and Ifoiwe Is ai tie mean 1 ands. .. at Menurmes ... 51 Old age. ........ ......... 3L'ader 5. Paley... ........... ....... 3 attli ;tom •—. • .- 10 , Sore 'gh mat ... _ ... 2. From the Almehcase.... 11 Tetthing --. 11 People of 001 et.........,.. 8 159 —I Fro m the country. ..- ... 1 . (Met diseases.-- . • ... 21i • ARTIIBIt. lICGEF_S. T0ta1......-...... -10 Jitellli Mcer,
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