The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 25, 1860, Image 1

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    ,PRESS,
IiaBOWED DAILY (SUNDATB BKOEPTED)
1% sow( W. leotrow.
OITION NO. 417 OUBSTNUT mom
DAILY r.XESN.
JWIRLYII 0112Vtil PEA WaBB.Pa7ebleto the
41118 d to Buteerthers out of the City at Fitz Dom,um
en ienuat. Poen. DOLT.rof. vote EtGUT Monte';
TIMISDOLIASS Iro9, !Ai. Mourne—invariably In ad
eanoe for time ordered.
Tiu-vrzitimv PRESS.
Mailed to eutworthere out of the City at Taa Dot-
LAU Palt4loll7lll;MltaVallee.
sTATioNEBI4:''
FIRMS
186 0 . Mr.
CILIA (143E8. 41413 1860.
WM. :MU SPRY do SONS.
Na. kW ONESTNUT BTF.BUT,
Below Fourth,
• IStittllPACTVlttill OF
B L.A-N K. 8,0 0 K SI
Made of Linn /Nook.
apeotat °awe sonmsdlp ei.etated.
044 0 4 Drart s i gn CoPyhtg Prauds, Later and
Nitsja'atiN N traTAITIAt agef'. "
KILLINEIRT ,tiOQDS.
729. NEW 729.
FLOWER Bc FEATHER
STORE,
129 ORBBTN UT STEER'S'.
en Viwpr z itt GREATLY REDUCED MOM our
IniAD OEM3RIDA3 4 7ier
.1:2-PZUR r.bow-Enna A" jam
TAME V GOODS.
011.013.1CF4NNEDV & BRO.,
729 1511.118TNUT BT., AND 49 B. SECOND BT.
BOOTS AND'SHOES.
H A, lir.P.r 450 HARMER.
MAlMPAOTiatiaill
AND
WIWI 1 ?-' *LB DW&M
BOOTS AND SHOES.
130.128 NORTH, THIRD KR UM
A hill assortment of Olty mode Boots sad Iniaes Ma
dan* on and. o f f
WATCHES, JEWELRY* &e.
SILVER WARE.
WM. WILSON & SON ,
Wits coolsi attention to their stook of BLUM
WARSosbieb is now nnassaily isyse, affording a sa-
May of pattern and design tussurnassnd by any house
no Vatted States, and of finer quality than is nutadso
tared for table use in any tart of the world.
Oat Standard. of Silver h 925-1000 path pure.
The Argil& Sterling ...... -026-1000
AMOdOIIII and Pronalt 900-1000
Thus it will be 1001 that we give thtrh•Hve ;ens purer
then the American sad French weln, and ten parts purer
than the Smash Sterling, We melt ell oar awn Silver.
and we guarantee the queliti es above (t3b),wbloh le
thejletts that, can be made to be torvietable, and will
resist the settee of Wilt' wed batter teas the ordi
nate oiler stasttfattanat.
WM, W/LSON & 80N1
BOMB IDrat & =MY &
1 1 1.11.—Arr7 fineness of Bilter nreautiotarsd u sorted
upon, but oesitUsfs nose is/Mos to Rauh sod Mari-
COL stooderd.
Deolois RIPON inch tho was otandsrd AO uMd is
cat Mail department. •
Tim Ittivoc Hari, $4l-1000 coastantly os
tuutol. :nt • snOtint
HARDWARE PACKAGE HOEBES.
HANDY & BRENNER.
NOB. OS, 15, AND Q 7 NORTH Finn STIMET
WROLNSALN COMMISSION MIRORANA
For the sale at all klada of
ANSYJVIOAN MANUFACTURED JUADWAJM
AND Moms. or
0111101" 1181.6101. TIMM. OW ItNeLnlit
HARDW.ARE AND OUTLECT,
asap onnatantly on hand abut , stook of 'Goods to ow
ply Hardware Boaters.
OMER'S VILliDi
• • Bs the castor ottusrwinh
BITOHER'S TOOL%
wren:Ewe BTEM, 01? Wang) 1C1.105.
iramrs FATSNT ANVILS AND WOW,
- Aai of iOr Ends is every `nifty.
===3
&HASP'S IL Pi PEAT'S PISTOL
WEIGHING ONLY PJf.OVNOBB
IE&W8 DEW MODEL RIFLES J►ND ROME
lorras.neaGuin•• silo. a. 3142101111.• 411. P. MEWL
stOP-tf •
pAGRAGE HARDWARE 11 9TYM- 0 .7:3 .
' 'ttroll r Ti t ; g°p l o ook 1 , 11.
AR., "duo er ai o
al woo bisrlitt4* , •
• 'l.l
0?'
_ _
iv, C7', t hr s t i.
Imsintrir jua a
.16jta
:401, W4P064-11)And
• CABINET WARE. ---,--.,-----
giLLIAED
No niffkakte, '4s ORAIVIRTON,
.....0. ,
uso lo on •V i r t h i T e r ezca U niol D rut ei t ri T Ul6els, tin
SOW robtOW BONAIRE& 1,41, E
ond IWite,l lo ,W SP NAM iviattltore,
f ,
wpm-. - by all w o ye twea two to De
Woo *e nrol
wifri t yp t 4 n e i finish of these Tables Ms miinly.
rs oarit l inirrt=fOral
So •
WIGS; CILENICALS, 41co.
2
eLISS ) PAINTS &u. .
rBT. SHOEMAKER & CO.
voILTREABT wax=
goviSTIE AND MOB STREETEI,
Wis(iLESALII DRUGGISTS,
Importers and Dealers In WINDOW GLASS, Pane,
ea, favrta the swam of
COUNTRY MERCHANTS
Tfo their lorlto stook of Goode, ',blob th 4 offer et the
lowest 'nuke rates. ocl6-tf
SCALES.
a m m.. MANCEIESTER, SCALES; —Countor,
%fotra,Worotionzio, Slay, Goat, and Railroad
Ate M
IgniogAsohinee (Andrew's Patent 1, And Bee.
. for 14, at No. 42A CREn TNIIT Street.
• •••tawnro - - CHARLES A. DANIELS.
Itt FAIRBANKS PIATFORDI BOA ti
P° " s " MIMI" Itforktia.
MEDICINAL.
PRS. WINSLOW
o ax.rE fa ztrfp# 1 mus k aura=
I ""lai t e 9 l NT It riff ird P "
/OE CHILDREN TEETHING,
,7gh fgailitaras die memo( reeding, y mutt
g =a s reducing all ruilaninigrion ; wrU Wag
• I ' i rl i i tini n artkriV VOWELS, '
UM It. maim, it give *vet t° yourolrra
4 a:4 MO MORK TO , YOUR INFANTS,
1
t
• We here
ea o rd irl d to' l ga; ih?altall for over ten
It
Fre As Ic lik 0 P VI, Ara OUT Otter
0 * (?miltitr
of
tiro: 0, 4 or, knovr i eNjutoo ot
i OD bY KT 01)6 'Pa d t' milt Ute CM.'
ID W I Z
IGO; , r* • Vatl i tt46ll •
tots and suedi et .1 , ,r. e spa ut
7 • grim. ere d 4 ”:.stor Om , A
um atl l r&l l , l M 6 e al s *, , pose r for th e
Ikeil - q4t .. ,hitto.tbs am 01 totterti hrt40,17:3
k t =y r t e ra, g•t. f at i A . tan or turgraty
ril ; I NAS t g i lj d rVi rdi
Se
et-
1 1118przila ul our:" 1
.
41 0 % . .0 cgr art re ev.gl S r ~,,t,'W:c% biatg .
gaill a ndl Pt reglicargir4
LMN: .„. I. l.:lfittiC- 3 "e"
owi nerzy
1
atroltienie, :, rIE I TiII ) .4.
tViIry L LV,PAV gas° - ratligrPuTi
soodtMerg2
no niiregodig :eglantine' t r do t irt e: your % uguet
1 0iPaiilrii . fil iiiirf i tel:
, XT u) i 11.
c o ot o lbi l li
1 4 Leg , 04 tAc i i ) eir m it e r f , l t r t iA
DIVA* sates' W.. het X curl of QUITilm a
Luta, Now Yon, !Ii ou tub ontaitteirrappor,
jrhalst by Druonh i raV ri tlcEld, i l i ggd
, No. til luau
"14:711 . 5 w0.t.,,,,..*E*
NT
ANTlE — frfOrg S • - -
. .
I sop bblt Tits Turilatin o . , ,
ao do ruclotTurpeilt 040,
flap t IPving Ravin,
WS ao Tkai.A,' iin, sail for_olo_ll _
V ' " V r. 48 EiriMAINPAI.
O. • ' n. ItS II
I LSO, ,
• Manulaoturer ot
Ellitarl, LAN Skala MAIM-MLLES
BOSOMS AND cobLiatia
A largo and hie misortment, and watt MADE, al.
**yarn! yand, unto which particularly invite the at
taettlif o wan andsmnlpt-pAy)rtgivvvr 71X 8 bUyerii.
8. copier oINSCWID and ARCH Moms. Alla
delP lalnirre
Rik AD, LIQU.OII,IOB—PIir Bale by WWII
D att
I.ItILL k. 1411.0TIOta. 4 7 and 44 NORTA 811
voNest. - ,
rIPAN, AND PITUILr4SO bbis.
•Ar 10ti TM./ 200 kegs Wilottctun Tad SO bbli: /0
otoiedind forp,ox htitOW,WSY, AIIIIBURAER &
•00. 4 No. /8 H. :Wbarres. M. 21
0 1811 . S DO 08, txtra Qrand Bank
fulasii, in stare lian far Wyk? •
- • - • • W. .I.KATLIIItA
innw. , Ti( NoRTH wfairvan
S4L, Et:ODA—f t & ear() by - WiwTHERILL
*.:-Inunnu, aid at 'NORM aRcoNII
WW 031,AS
W S on hand,
' ta4 00047 VWZggigt4. RIER.
, pooh t7agutipowm 8000
. .
tit I ,
• '‘` 'I // ~,,'-',- '4144*
(~._ t..
' s.
•\ :\ ,1 / - *:?`.-;-: . "ti
„,,„,‘, , ~, / / ill it
.., *
.' k •:,--, ,'-- - , , `''' ' . .., k ,,..,‘i /;/7. --1 7 '''.',•;;;,. ',‘, '''', ' ••/"'lt ;, ,
C' ,. . I (i i i,: s
. . :N.
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_a...v. 1 7 1,1 1
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~downqq„,.- ~;,,:''...k.,401„:„!..:••:.. , I, ; : W I N ';:; •
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4...87„...„..,_...J...„
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_. 1,.. Ak h ...; -•-•:. , }.- ,, t4,4.k. - , • , ap 0 „,w,..-,...:„. ...•,... .......... , ..-....-4. , ...-....7,4....... -.
,
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,:......?,..k.,:..., .„4.,„:„,..,,,1.tm,..,...,.„:„.w.;.. ' I 4 ''"*"....::."°' -' ' 1. ... 2 : ;. ..., - " ,- / / „ . ./ , ';-.. , ''' • i : „..,..-''' :----- - .
A rie
----__ ------
:, : i .:: : . .'• '::: i 1.s.:1111\ , •- , ' ,2-- . - -- "4 ,,, '' .' , Ae , ”' '':•'• '-.-- . 2 It 7 . '-: .-,ii'l..- - • „i" ,- - 2. .`:. , , - " 11 1 ', , 4.1%. ~.:,-,;-,_,
-
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-
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(i'''.
VOL. 3.-NO. 150.
DETAIL 'DRY GOODS.
1.14-13"51" FANOV FURB.
GEO. F. WOMBATS,
NOB. 05 AND 417 AIWU STRUT)
lidA NOW OPEN 818 I/BOAL
ORME ASSORTMENT OF FURS,
Made of stook tended by himself In Europe during the
%Alt ?bring. , 0038-am
VIIRNISIIING DRY GOODS.
IL" SHARPLESS BROTITBRS have replenished
their Stook of Staple
Iris Go Linen ode of their own importation.
Barnsley and h Seetlass.
Irish Pillow and Bolster liinens.
Shirting Linens from beet llteacheriee.
Dinen. Damask end Damask Cloths.
amask Ganging and D'i'shes.
Baokeback. Russia and Dam risk Towels.
Colored Bordered Darnell/ Towel's.
Faiesta Crash and American Linens.
epe, Worsted Demaeks. Satan Lame,
ce Curtains. boihroidered Muslin.
Filtered Lastinge, Moraine', Druggetts.
Bud 'Rue
and Piano Covets.
ur, arid Orqen Shade Holland's,
p"ylish and American fine Blankets.
nettle's quilts of every quality,
Wine, Sheeting% Venue ts and Blirtings.
Salr aot and 803 CHBIST UT direst.
1110tARGAINS FOR, SIX 'WEEKS.
TIRIBNIEir &MIMIC N. E. sorrier IFIGHTII.
and SPRING edit DRN, would reeveotfully Inform the
eubbo gsnerally that from writ (3811.1t6ryli, UM) w a rt
tae let o i t . Alvah the l l
BE L GOODS RGARDLESS OF PROFITS!
Tboy ova a= jesgre of
4 1 c n a gi r ish and knwriolin Blanket%
Bps itk flirting and Sheeting Muslim
Luiens of oar own importatton.
71annele, Clotho end Cammeres.
AIL good many Cloaks still Ma l.
A Lilo OE STOCK OF WWI' SILKS.
Rost make of black edge
ntennoee,
hiennoes, Laines, German Paella Plaids, AM
Many of the above ;mole w CO STId
MAWR UtfORR alOgl
N. B.—lt will Pay tp give us a call. Laid
HOSIRRY GOODS. -J. WM. 110E
•A-KtANN J ( o. 9 fferat e ELORTH Stree.t, has now
IliribraVeli t o i rettiv .i rrrtgl i ataM i tirte .
ir re x Upderve n s i t i e .
facture; for ladies' and misses' trear.,.. " Mifef Shirts
and b/mwers, tor_geata and youtbm Morino Hosiery,
eut.ton Hotly .Woollen Hosiery, twos and Gam:A-
M:gat g WI. re n ep l ingulty rt :ctigs ge t igte l are i n
families us la stank, assertngFlom th at his stook to Un
exoelhul for variety by any of ot her in the city, and tb.at
hie_ ppees are as low as tbosen any othez regular beam
41
P..
.wfo.—No abatement made from the yriose named.
mtf
WitIOUTTA t•HIRTINGS, SOFT
FINIS If,ltuit opened.
4-4 Hasonrille Signings at 123 cents,
34
our,r . do mnkeble for n rants' Shawls.
Lure Stock if Embraiderlen, vary oilcan, via
Bette Collar. and alcoves, Collate , Embroidered Linen
Cambric Handkerobiefs, Se.
Ladies and (bum' Milan Cambric Handkerchiefs, in
treat vanetr.
Gents' Silk Handkerohlefs, Black Orarsta, and Neck
ties.
W BITE 00058 in vriety.
STOCK A reduced ia jr se. of all kinds.
R FAS 0009,
Blanket and Brooke Shawls.
ed and Crib blankets.
Isok SVollie7gß%.!".ifsde.
" Bilk Velvet, co„, Re,
GREAT REDUCTION until February let lOW
taking stook. 4p/uSau f
Alegi ItlOrtTil au Await atTivs.
potwrE PLAID FLANNELS.
2L.1 1 1 1 4egarit Braille Shawls,
• Fine Cloth Olean.
Woollen Long Shaer%
;ratty 20 and 23 pont Detainer.
3.0 and St be Wool Bohm worth IT sad $B.
i nest Black Mourretines, as to 66 cents.
111 cent ell wool Plaids.
OASSIMER ES.
1 1 .26 for best Fancy bass metes.
ood ()nods at $l, 51.10, and 81.15.
Attie e te and thuna me reit, SO to 76 dente,
imbues very cheap.
10 cent first-nite tint•ta and Drnarers,
Glovee, Tin, Mktg, &0., ligation lots.
.0.9.1/Eb it & tiolili7o).
MGM and IttaRKBT.
N. fI.—LINEN GOODS, a large and desirable stook of
every delealPtien. pao
riIIIORNLEY °BIM,
-11- Northeast owner EIGHTS and BPRINO GAR
DEN Btreets,woold invite attention to their *took ot
.14/41LINEN HDEPE.,
Of thew own damn Importation, whit& they out oontl
avail reoommond.
Also. sn enotnt wook 0 ,
Martina an Sheeting Muslim
fraliah an Amenosn Blankets and Flannella
othi. Caroms, end cahoots.
areellles mite And Oonifortableli i &a.
Uinta of oaks mid thoohe and blanket Dhow!!!
sedum st less than oast ! , R ich 'Fancy B i lge vary otiose.
set makes of Black Bilk, Ico.
All our stook will befriend desirable. lad
COMMISSION ROUSES.
FA.RRELL & MORRIS.
SSA OWL9TNUT STREET,
IMPORTERS.
. EttD
COMMISSION MBE HANTS
MOTE%
• 04881iLP.A88,
•-•
serf z
-13PRiNO AtiD
00 1 - 1 "
burpaL'ETi.
PANTALOON STUFFS,
4114 m &a.. a.e.
FIROTHINCaIAM (t. WELLS,
86 1.171114, mar, Alll4 34 SOUTH
STRNNT.
COTTONADES.
"wow to? both %Abbr. and Jobbers, to tare
nasty.
SIMMER COMM AND CA/MAYERNIVII
Made by WagLutob Mils.
Orders taken for these dettrable goods $3l . Spring trade
FROTHINGHANI
& WELLS,
84 SOUTH FRONT,
AND 96 LETITIA STREET,
Ara AGENTS for the ,ale of Goode Mannfaotored by
the following Domenico, vim t
Itlegeentraw
pApii,
LANA,
Was 22,
Xga lgtloll.
Lana?.
w. rthed. and (Morel Shootings, Skirtings,
Je, en x
tu
RO ESQN'S BLUE PRINTS,
RAMPYGaI COMPANY'S
TWEEDS AND OOTTONADZS in great varlets,
- WASHINGTON MILLS
(Formerly ties este)
pular, Pietro and TeNe Covers, Frinted Fattier',
ent,all•Wool and Cotton Warp Clothe, has lx
and ne thufaiinees, end Tricots. Also, ner
*M. Satinet/. and Woven. , oletuth-ein
SHIPLEY, HAZARD, 41, HUTCHINSON,
110 112 011.28TNUT
COMMISSION MERORANTE
FOR TIER srax OF
PH E
ILADL.PRIA-MADE
GOODS.
SADDLERY, ITARNESS, &o.
LAITY & PHILLIPS.
fießtv_oBB, SADDI/41, AND ROSES.
'Tits YRial Maw. at the Wtorid'lS Pad', held In Lon
don, to MM, was awarded to on for the best Names&
Taa.Patign blather. awardedord's Fair, held in flew
York. an /363, awe alio to al for the beet Har
neirtiving sine. then greatly enlarged our ma ufaatunas
%mates, rtyp r ravire i met i ltrarA r lie pub/la at
Voit.SGanf 31 boa 8 dt., above Chestnut,
AOBl.Bl-IIA.
The,moet complete rumintment of artioles in our hue
rinsitiess, mirth as prangs,. Ladies' and Gentlemen's
tdiptig_Seddles, Brid ea, DriVing and %rims Whlps,Ply
eta. Hm COVOIS Or Slimmer and Winter new. - Buf
Waved allother Made of robes.
Our mode are manufactured In the very best style of
radtcresUsblidiad Wife but
ONE QUALITY OF LEATHER.
,vrtilatte lathe beat the market seat Furnish.
Attention Is mica to the following wale of pikes t
Ooad r ain servfittabls alpha bellies* rpm— t° Et'
Plain ItlitiAt hartien 828 ISO to 84
e4O tO SO
Country harness makers win be supplied awn Minim
°heaver than they tan manufacture them.
nbeeirt&ttitm
iTousE F'CrENI,9IIII , IO STORE.
WILLIAM YARNAEL.
No, logo PRESTriIa AtTRIMT.
(Immediately opposite the Aftdettl., Finn ATte.)
invitee the attention of lIMBEREBPIIREI and
others to his ex teneive assortment of
- 'USEFUL 110158ENBEFING GOON.
" TABLE CUTLERY,
NURSERY FENDERS.
CHAFING , DIMES.
FIRE SCREENB,
P. 141,1: WARMERS.
JAS-tuthett TEA VOYE3. kc., &c.
REFINED SUGAR.-500 bbls. crushed,
coarse, and finalynlyerinrd A jpairseandialiw
&ma i for sale by JArd.EB ORABard k CO„ J -
TrA strAnt. ms)
HA M 8 AND 8110IILDERS. -2,300
Pieces City-Brooked linme and blioniders. Alan,
800.Pinnos extra sugar. oared linms, do o r hy C. C.
SAIGIAR CO., ARCH Btreet, 2d Breve ?root.,
mAsmaitEL-485 bbla. Nos. 1,2, sad 3
Ataokirel, in model Original Paelcagerof the
lagemt Walt, for sanely O. O. SADLER CO.,
greet. ad door nbove Front. D. 21.
TURNING- FLUID ALCOINL, AND
A- 0 'PM OIL, In lotrrole /Ind half Mir rels, nom few-
Wred and tor sato by ROWLEY', .4.81-LSIIR,NER.k. CO.,
Nn,l6 8. Wham'. 101
pm—prime retailing Charleston Rice
At• tor site bj , UP= ORARAM 00.,wri a t
oet,
DRY-GOODS JOBBERS•
PRINTED LAWNS.
FAIRCHILD & FANSHAWB,
62 & 64 PARK PLACE,
4 4 ,
HANK NOW OPEN THEIR USUAL LADOE AND
DEAUTIFILL ASSORTMENT or
PRINTED LA.WNS,
ON SKR BEST 12.00, 1000, AND UM CLOTHS.
ORGANDIES and FANO? DABBLINS, and ROBES
In GREAT VA It:ET 'lt all confined etylee, front the
beet Olaegoer Printers. Produced vrith the greatest NM,
and to 'winch they invite vattivelat Sttoation.
WOVEN DRESS FABRICS,
Oomprlaws all the Novoltkee of the deacon
BRILLIANTES, White and Panted.
GINOHAMS, New and Choice Patterns,
and a Large Stook or Mane!ligneous
BRITISH DRY GOODS.
MEM
BRADFORD STUFF GOODS,
nOth Etalita and F6Wart in Great Namely
IRISH LINENS,
OD THIWILL-INOWN ALMS 01
PATRIC/CZ, MCHOLSON% D'UNSEATELS,
And others, notaprising evert description of
BUYS, DLO USE, MOLL ANDS, 6 5 12 A 3S. SHIRT-
ING, and rand? L !NBA'S.
ILOENT6 FOR
J.&P.COATS' •
BEST BIX-00RD THREAD,
Of erldolt they have on band and eta oonatantly rsoely
lug., every number and suortment, White and Colored.
ALSO,
MARIANO RIIBINACCI AND RICOTARDI
SEWINGS.
Ja.l3 111 t-if
JOSHUA L. BAILY,
IMPORTSR. AND JOBBER
P ANCY AND fiyAPLB DRY 000D8,
No. 213 MARICRT Street,
I.IM at BLPfile,
Invitee attention to a large
Me VERY COMPLETE ASSORTMENT
LINEN GOODS.
Of his own importation,
NOW OPEN.
IRISH TABLE LINENS,
SCOTCH TABLE LINENS,
BARNSLEY TABLE LINENS,
NAPKINS AND D'OYLIES,
BIRD EYE LINENS,
. 11170 g AND DIAPER TOWELLINOV,
BORDRRED TOWgLS,
IRISH SHIRTING LIMO,
PILLOW OASE LINENS,
LINEN TABLE CLOTHS,
LINEN CAMBRIC HANDICEROLIF'S,
&0., &0.,
In all sloes, styles, and qualities,
PROM
THE BEST BLEACHERIES,
BoILIMISINQ
One of the oholeeet Hues of
LINEN GOODS,
TO RE FOUND IN TIM MARKET.
For sale at s email Advanoe on the
MT OF IMPORTATION.
CASH AND PROMPT MX-MONTHS SHYERS.
ital-it
CARPETING%
ssr.lo7' re cu. Nos. 31' and Si North PRONT
Street. are the BOLE AOlNrB in Phibulelrboar for the
11.0XSUItYrAftPE'r COMPANY, and have aonstent4
for sale a toll assortment of VELYST and 7.16.1118T1t1f
OARPETO, of choice pettems.
Also. a large SUP.* of the various limas of ,CAft-
PETB manufactured in Philadelphia say and imunty,
from nearly all the beat manufacturers.
Dealers will find it to their intermit to cell and
examine these goods, which are offered for sale on the
most favorable terms. •
N. B —P. A. ELIOT k CO, being the Bole Agents
In Philadelphia for the sale of the Worsted and Camel
Yang spun by the Baxoneille DLlle (formerly the New
En esnd Wormed Company,) and being agents also for
the Baldwin, Wilton, and Abbott Compenlea, have
peouliar faollitiea for keeping constant , ' for sale the
various koada of Carpets manufactured in Philadelphia,
on the moat favorable twine, jaltlra
PAPER HANGINGS, 4lve.
TO, CLOSE BUSINESS.
HART, MONTGOMERY, & 00.,
NO. 92.3 OBESTEUT STREET,
Wilt sell out, through this reinter end next spring, their
Large stook of
PAPER HANGINGS,
Cowtiling of ovary variety oonneotederith the bulinere,
AT GREATLY REWORD PRIORS. •
FINE PRENOR PAPERS AT 30 PER OBPIT,
LOW COST.
Persons wanting their Houma Papered, can get great
BARGAINS.
Jetd•tr
MILLINERY GOODS.
F °R
EVENING PARTIES
BERTHAS,
BABES, SETS,
SLEEVES, and CHEFS,
fa Real Lao*, °rape, Mutton,
Mond ard imitation,
In great varieties, of OA
NR was? STYLES.
Aheo,
4-4, 0.4, 8.4, 0.4, 10.4 ILLUSION,
TARLATANS, CRAPES, do.,
Ai nob below the nrual prieee.
WARBURTON ' S•
1004 011RSTRUT Street, above Tenth Street,
300 South SECOND Street, below Spruce.
Jal2-tt
CIGARS, TOBACCO, Am.
E T A.BLISILED 1760.
PETER LORILLARD,
814IIFF & TOBACCO MANUFACTURER,
to nod 18 GEtAltßra4 STRBET.
(Formerly 0 Chatham street, New Y ork,)
Would pallth e Onreal&l /titanium of Oreeers qqd
tougsista to hia removal, nod moo the articles of his
manufacture, :
BROWN EINLIFP.
24 1 , l b o a e r kaohee Denostos,,
P VlSTattell
COMB Retypes,
inenovaramm. UFF. Copoubsien,
ernoutflotolt, itktwart.
Fresh Honey Dest;ffrolph. or Luntlytoot.
TopaCCO.
wooing.
I'. A I . I E, ggl c a i g wl". 14.1s:fir m".
sp. 1, 2.
ua C i 7erielt, or swel 6 Spalh,
Canister,
?4 rtar l o 4 o 2 )".
Tin Foil Cavendish , pure Turkteh
A cir.t. or Price* wilt be seatn ounlication,
ii.—Note the new ample o f NJ i Scotch Snuff,
which will be found a superset article far &ovine our.
00401. d.O-ern
nAVANA CIU/kitS.—A handsome as
'mimeo now landing from tongs " Karnank" and
"Alfred ,Exall," and for sale low be
CARLB TETE.
j020.10t. 130 WALNUT enreet.
3n n flan IJAVANA OlGlARS—Cona
knylvlyty priming
Figaro. PArtagas,
Bolas de Oro, theut , tnth
p Al usno, Yruebese,
alma,
nimin, Vegueros.
Yuma!, &0., &0.,
of dilierent mato and qualities, now lending, jn store,
and for sale by Cliaßla: I TPITE,
je.2o-10c 190 WALNUT Street,
MARTIN QUAYLE'S
LLA.BrATIONER.Y. TOY AND FANoy Goon
4410krunt,
AtiRIUT STRoBT.
MOW lit
4mtv &natAnttr "3"MiIpfDELTRI/t.
on hand Parlamorr ni nt Art cilAr.
MESSMAOKEIt.6I,--A hue invoice 01
MESS
~bL., hfs.,ATL,I!,,TO, Ickte Nevbuill
gilTV:4l:ll,t:Ox Wirrrit.CBi t ie, 8 0,4 6 "
AIT Multi 144 . W p
GUM GUAIACUM--Strained, for sale by
743'1'2, ILL 101;213f,t,
WM. D. KELLEY AND GEORGE A.
corir wl7, Attorneys at Law. have removed to
Inflow' NIXT,K &root, below Chootnat. JaP•lm
PHILADELPHIA, WIONESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1860.
NEW PUBLICATIO al
"E SIR .JOIIN F IRAN/AN."
".." OAPT. AIeCLIPITOCK'S fIART/VB OF
THE VOYAGE made by the ecrew.elanntr ." Fox," in
search of HIT John Franglin end hie Om wove. 040
large 12mo. volume, With illustrations
POEMS. by the author of "John A rt." " Heart
of Family." rte. One volume •12rin... dot 4 otato.
TODI DROWN A'r OXFORD. Pat
THE GOLDEN ItUbe:. A charm , * storY, bf
the author of those delightful books, ' , Tie 0 Caton a
Sunbeam," &e.
RYDNI...Y 1)ollEI.1.43 I'OBASS. Anew ' , time of the
" Wee and Gold" settee.
ile: iklol.4 , Pt.i 11ALITY. By Brookc
PAUL AI.OXPIII , B CHESS HAMBS, h note. by
Layentbal. One volume, $1,20,
BAHOilEhre,R TONVEItd. 1 1 1 the or of Dr.
Thome&
THE; WARDEN. by the author 'or The, Her.
trams. ' , I
A PLOT IN PRIVATE LIM Ey Wilk (lolling.
vita aiir. litoottE'S MARL OP TH E, z a WAN
REVOLU PION. 2 volume*, Po., elotti. ITV
THE LIVES OF EMINENT raga!) Pm R,
NO w DECEASED. One large octavo e. ith
Portrait e.
SEVEN YEARS and OTHER TALES. ' Julia Na'
vanangh. Paper. Moen's,
MIS NE PHES SNTATION. A Novel. Into autho.
Tess of" Friends and Pontine." ',
0111 SOH" N'ts (Mos P. A new *too'. „i
THE RECTOR OF AIOfth.LAND. A NOMA No
val. 4
The attention of 1100 K. BUYERS is jto the AT-
Tongament at this a slabbehatebt. All the Skeet° ar
ranged conveniently in di viewns neeordiniFghelr ohs
rip ler, over Which to lettered the lalbje94. , b(dlnit to
vlsiteyge. placenta and EMU method of tome at
their leisure the iarge and verled stook of now to
st 13 of ~
rElli c P t ,TlN ' ir ARD THEOLOGICAL,
Mrde,EAANKouti, so. ENTIPK,
weromoAL. Moccaalley, ice,
Vor sale by SAMUEL hiAZP., , a . ..
.104-3 t 721 enEtcrzr -Street.
-a,
A VERY REMARKABLE' 0 —,-Lon•
A.+. don Literary Gazette.
THE ORIGIN 08131'EOIRS
DT
AIEANB OF NATURAL IIIII;ECTOt
Or,
THE PRI.4F,RVATION OF PAVORIO ins IN
THE ht RG00143 FOR 1./F.8.(
By
CitkaLlta 13).8.W1N• Al. A.
lVol 12nao, 432 roges. $1.25.
...a , Isom, ~.... .
- l
(Frain the Louden Saturday Ravioli
" When we any that the anemone en(noed by
Mr. Darwin are soon as, if established, wo aausa a
oomplete revolution in the fundamental runes of
Natural Sudan —and thither, that salmis a theory
is einisntinily Marmot tram th'e developmen eory of
the 'Vestiges of Creation,' it tenuity°. tor tat ame (ti
tration as to tronch upon the to ritory of Weighed
relisioug belief—we Imply that his book is.e of the
most imam lent that. fora long Line, has beiglven to
the outdo?. Wo bays not Won anions the *most to
pass our nidgment upon lt—lor it is rt heal say at
dolitetately—that will not bear to he dealt wU itAtty.
It is the moult of long-continued thought sabot, di
rected by a man of remarkable ability and * attain
merits to construct and to consumista ath which
has for its heals some im.deniablo faete."
From theN. Y. Observer.)
.. Readers of hilt dotis.httut book,' Voyages Natu
ralist,' will recognise in this new. .ork hi. Or as a
writerortiatever, may be the soieutifia Teri! on Mx
theories.' 1.
irrom the London Literary (layette
" The concha one at which lio alms are Wattling,
that they cannot taut tomcat with consuiLmopposi
tion. ! o ar • t arwta him:self is far froze anticilos that
they will be generally received, but ho has thinly a
right to demand that they shall be opposed y in the
same spirit of candor and nioderiition by whittlit ad
vocacy of them is so eminently distlnguilliee
heat by mail to any *duress on recount of all
D. APPLE'I ON dr. CO., Pohlman
Jet2l-3t Nos. 316 and 3451804 y.
HAZARD, JR., 724 (EST.
P.J NUT Street.haeing added the STATIIIRY to
Ida Book business, would tnterm hin COWMANId the
public that the
iAIONF,RI7 D RP aRTAIEN7
Under the charge or an eepecial olerk,ledin fall
operation.
The gook or PAPERS and'ENvvitiopikeitlriess
S
some INN HUNDRKD DIFEBRhNTRIits IES,
ST KLI43. AND of ENGLISH it RR'.
CA? MANUPACTUNE , of fill the fi end
PRETTaGT STYLED, and of ALL. P S. Per
sons desiring it can have their initials BPI Ka on pap e r
without extra ehargo. NEW PATTERNS !STA
tomtit been expressly wade for this shltehnient.
bE LA ROE'S celebrated papers laweqrd, and
wartarted gammas , . PoR rouTUI3 : LEI hri.
8' t,OhttION, NADIRS T MANG
BAGS end WRI I INS 110XEmi of the lttoinnfrio.
two—a Pure nabartmt tit constantly on hat
Among the latest novelties in Pawl_ Tipp.,
are the Zb.BR P.PERd, of AZUK BITE,
PINK. VIOLEP TINTS.
The QUAD MLLE PAPERS, to poxes o tares,
a srortt d onions.
vvitpiiiNG and VI-IT_ING cARLI raidorED,
PRINTED, or WRITTEN, in the very bellMner
Saleh goblin are incited t e ls ew h ere . de the
Rook before porehatons tr
AN IMPORTANT WORK,
This day to I m'elaat...
Man—Moral and Phystenl; or,the Infilenntteeth
and Disease on Religious txperienos. By flYßyeyti
H. SoliCA. D. U. 12mo. $l.
Thus work luss (mowed the attention of thwiiii for
many yenta ansbtod by varmus rendins andm ex
pel-tenon. It is not known thnt there Is nnottrork o n
the tome 'Nilo in the knahsa tenons*.
Publish Wed by
ILLIAItI & ALPWlfk.Pallta trotlie
Din. CR.Eaktrl t
FROM TUB PRESS OF '
J. B. LIPPINCOTT 00.
.V00'1W49.X.X48
oN TITS
BOIYRJJ4RY OF rtivortrpit fr(4),
sy
IfOff. RODERT,AtiE OWEN,
FCOND EDITIPta READY TM DATI
opynt. rune. ?rtes 101,13,
_;O%,
.
port"' ttemithiftoW‘Motry whether Oanelard
illtiTtOTelaVili tram AttOthOisrorid in Ma he r 0, 1 1 ) 0,
de'usioc. It treat/ of the phenomena of AWN (404
spuriafranillitilll, It examines the ellegeteldeneter
prmantirnents.second-ateht, house hauelloge.
g,,,VitiOD II; referring to the moat aPProaed =horn was
on helloometion, inseuity, end the yams' gletv 11
inculoas whether, when we met down tie statratteof
ell atm tanaludinu our owe) that touch o n the toms
referred to, ea mere vulgar superetitiona, we erg a
looking any actual phenomena
"From Eedysto»ii to Barwick bounds, by Lynn to Mil
ford Han "
From ono extremity of the isle tea the other—
" High on St. Michael's; Mount it shone: it shore on
Death, Beal "
On the waves of Tatnar—o'er Longleat's tow
er% o'er Cranbourno'n oaks--over Stonehenge
and Beautlen—on Bristol, from Clifton down
—to Itichtnond hill, overhanging the Thames,
between Whitehall and Windsor—thence over
London, But let us quote Macanlay's own
magnificent language:
" And with one start and with one cry, the royal city
woke.
At once on all her *Welt" gates arose the anewerleg
s;
At on es the wild alarum clashed from All her reeling
mires :
From An the batteries of the Tower pealed loud the
voice of fintr ;
And all the thouitnil mute of Thames sent back a
louder cheer;
And from the furthest wards was heard the rush of
hurrying feet,
And the broad streams of pikes and flags rushed down
each rearing street :
And broader still became the blaze, and louder still the
din,
As fast front every village round the home came spur.
ring In t
And eastward straight from wild Blackheath the war.
like errand went,
And roused In many an anoient ball the gallant squires
of Kent.
Southward from Surre)'• pleasant hills flew tlinee bright
°enders tbrth ;
High on bleak Ifamptitead's swarthy moor they started
for the North;
And on, and on, without a pause, unti red they bounded
still;
All night from tower to tower they airing; they sprang
from bill to hill :
Till the proud conk unfurled the Sag o'er Darwin's rocky
damn
Till like volcanoes flared to heaven the stormy hills of
Watee,
Till twelve fair counties taw the blare on Malvern's
lonely height,
Till streamed in crimson on the wind the wreklie's creet
of light,
Till broad and Sew the star came forth on Ely's stately
fans,
And tower and hamlet ruse in arms o'er all the bound
1011S !Ain ;
_ Till Habitues lordly terraces the sign to Lincoln sent,
VAN.Y GIFT !it ta( .UST—NE' •
knd Lincoln eyed the niOSSMEO on o'er the wide vale of
2 4 BOOKS. Trent;
lf . YOU ARE IN WANT OF ANY BOORS, Till Skiddew saw the Ste that Durnt on Gannet einhat-
EIIX i HEM AT GEORGE G. E VANS tled pile,
1.11 THEM AT a EORGE G. Elr • NS' Aqd the rod glare on Skuidaw Unified the burghers of
tit THEM AT GEORGE G. e VANS'
(lift Book Store, No. 437 Chestnut Street, Carlisle."
()in Book Store, No. 43) Ch taut street. In the t , blue and gold" edition of Macau-
Tie the best piano in le eats.
Books are sold as cheap as at y ether store, lay's Layi: of Ancient Home, published last year
Of gettra . . d it ) ii 3 a a ndTo v g i llili w h ; I. lt At:h Book,
i
1 by E. R. Butler, are given two more ballads
Aglc EMPRESS JOSE P HINE, ' which first appeared in Knight's Quarterly.
LIFE OF 7RE EMPRESS JOSEPHINE" Ity Cat
B. geol. One volume, ume. cloth. Price Sill. These are ‘c The Cavalier's March to Lendon,' ,
THE, Q T'FAT . A Tale of the Days of Kir
Herod, nei v olume, l2rno.. r lat h Moe 81 and that ~ Song of the Huguenots," coin-
VIE BIBLICAL REASON WHY. A Family Omild
to Scriptural Reading. 02 e volume, 17irva.. Glatt Wendt% ;
Price St. "Oh! weep for Monoontour.
I fig ART OF DANCING. BY K. Ferrite. One V01 12m0.. cloth. Price el, oh! weep for the hour
THE ADVENTURES 0 JONATHAN if EVE When the onildren of darknees
BRED. •Ily Sam Slick. Jr. One volume. Um., oh 0 And evil heel power:
Prior 411.
TO 1., DOOMED CHIEF. or we Years Age , By th When the horsemen Of VAtOS4
author of Gent (lodes. ino vol. 72rno. Price SI. Triumphantly trod
MEADOR OF SOBEI‘T 110111)1N. Preatidigitem On the bosoms that bled
Edited by R. Shelton Nlaokengle, On. whune, na,c For their rights and their tod."
cloth. Price RI,
HOW COULD HE HELP IT; or, The Heart Tri Macaulay'; "history of England," Dian.
umphant. By A. 8, Roe, One volume, 12mo. Prim.
411 n ; o A ox OF POPULAR SONO& Thebes . ; oelleotion o pleted, remains a magnificent torso. He Con.
BOOK. owe rrob]; e ,, ,d, O ne v ol u me, ninn. Pries St . templated bringing it down to the memory of
THE LIFE AND AOVeNTUKES OF HAJI. BABA
the oriental 7'rii,eller, comments many curious de living Merl ) Which 'Nelda have taken a score of
seriptions of the Mysteries of the Harem, OM, Ont v oune s _.:f not more—at the rate be covered
volume, Hato. Price SI
hIEMOIRi OF YltlinlCt, the celebrated Freaoh Pottle ground, for the four which we have relate
Beeman. One volume, 17m0., cloth, with a um. Pricy the
even., o f on l y t en y ears. T wo othe r .
et,ge, t only ten -
THE 11001( OF PLAYS] PRIVATE
port 110%. IC A NICSENIENT AND lumen, it, is said, are nearly ready, bringing the
THEATRICAL bNTERTAINMENTS, reign of Queen Anne down to 1711, when the
Heins a colleetOn of Orismal and °looted
COMEDIES. PLAYS. CHAR ADA & r,. Duchess of Marlborough wan supplanted at
With full descriptions of Coe,unies, Scenery, Prow
ties &0., and every ei action r relevant to a private o Court by Mrs. Mayhem; when the Whig Minis
pubic p erformance, The whole carefully arranged en,
adapted by try (dismissed a few months earlier) wore for-
SILAS.
AT STEELE
n• ,
ORA B MI molly accused of mismanaging the affairs of
Handsomely bound in one volume,l2ino., cloth. Prim England;
el.when Marlborough, on his return
B is V,K an O i F fr lLU'h ig ,Ull B ,,PX:r ro ß . Y., ) c n o e n v t o g i iV ii n o s: ,, S h l o na t7 home from battling in the Low Countries, was
Price fl,
Tlit. OLD STONE MANSION, By .hale;
J. rotor accused of peculation, dismissed from all his
eon One v o lum e,l2iiin. With a gilt. rice elle, offices, and succeeded by (lie Duke of Ormond
lIINCE OF Tiik: H9llBB OF DA ID, ,fly Rey"!
H. ns . raharp, D. 1i„ . .. P n r.iatAL2s.
.. ACaptain General of the British army. This
Zoa, l , l ( T A VAl t .rl 3 ";',r, , ,c,„ii , ,,- , ti ne ,.. 01. , 12 4 0 period is not distant front th e signing of the
of Utrecht, (March 50, 17150 and
NVA , EAIIS OFPREACIIbR LIFE. Hy Milbuns Treat y
One volonnygreo, Price el, which time commences Lord Malion's History
ALL THL 14 - W BOORS ens he had, and you lute
the edventage of getting a (Jilt with ceall hook that ym of England, to the clos.• of the American War.
ponchos- , ,
We have suggested that Macaulay's early
Call rn, and one trial trill a„ sir you that the 1 , 14
Piece in the city inhere you i t e l f d i r cj ch ,V A E l 4!” is pieces, in prose and verse, shook l be cob
OIPT Both{ EnTABI,IsHmENT, tested. To these might do added his political
05 CHESTNUT St., Philadelphia,
lath-tf Two doors below Filth , on the upper sa t e, squibs. When Torn Moore Wan hitting the
VALENTINES.—FIkikIER & BROTHER Tories, right and left, with the sharp arrows
Our splendid annual assortment of of his wit in The Times newmpapor, Macaulay
VALENTINES,
now seedy for the trade. e wall the attention o was doing the same, in the same columns, with
dealers to Mit popular
55, sty, $l5, AND 820 ASoORTMENT OF VA- equal SUCCORS. At least, many of Macaulay's
LENTINES.
Each eesortment complete in itself , and which we wil satirical verses were attributed to Moore, who
warrant to give eatisfactlon. wee quite at a loss to know the seined writer
gustigg & BROTHER,
lateat • ho South A/XTH street until, ono day it dinner, Macaulay frankly
SUMS OF $lO,OOO AND $5,000 TO B 1 owned to ono particular jeu cresprit which
loaned on hlortgage of City Property.
Moore dinavorred, and mentioned others which
5. W. THACKAttA & SON.
V/NEGAR.-100 b 24 1)1 4 8 8 . " C th l a T ri ß il l 71 St f r ;i e d t e . '
w Vinegar, in store and for sale hy
_ROW i 424
h e 7 lt h a e d Time3,
written,i its obituary of Macaulay, no-
ASHBUBIibm, lc co.,IIB.OUTH WHARVES. la 24Be a •
d one of hie special peculiarities—hie chary
" Fie (the author) oeptainkillacnsees the etddiaetth
calmness, discrimination, and ability, and his Vote
grunt at once take its elate as a valuable collettlrot
11 , 011/ and illustrations On the mysterious suYetif
whioh it Ocate." —N. V. Tll6unr.
The work before tit to ono to Make n cleated Pil
lion In the intellectual world. Its contents are nor
that to calculated to excite thoosht, investttatiount
criticism. It ie andicient fort,, to call attention tots
en ex , romely we , l written, clear. and attractive et.
on a atibiect in which every readine and cultivated id
that is not n slave to bigotry muet take a deep inter
—Rt•ening Eulletsn.
* "'Enough Ma heen mid to Din at
tion to a sterling' book—nee of the Jew on re tuft
whieh worthy of * not -
rig:mot, st se certainly enterteinins rem
COMPENSATION
4LIVATS a FUTURE.
ANNE M. H. BREWSTER,
One Vol., Mo. Pries el.
." It would be well for ua if we could leam how nt
enjoyment and happiness life can bring when the
and heart are opened to the kindly influences of the be
pint in Art and Nature s and this book to ao full of
thuement aid appreciation that the reader cannot
to oatoh some of its genial, hearty spirit. • •
tire ars sure Oett lenge whose Putt r it cultivated I
pileropetaation' II very del ehtful uove."—.Se
rnal.
Ifl.
P, b'is' od this Deb
NICCOLO DEL LiAPI;
LAST DAYS OP TILE FLORENTINE REPOS/
BY MASSIMO D'AZWiIiIO,
Translated by
MALLET.
One Voi.,l2nio. Price elz,
" It is, perhaps, Rudiment to state that this hook
written In one of the hest Italian authors, that it Se
of the warmth, passion, fire. force. and Kenna whi
characterise the lire writers of that nation. No r
oan peruse these glowing pages, which relate to eve
and men of a chivalric and grand Itßti. without heat
the blood quicken in }do veins. and the heart respond
noble deeds allti*Clll/MHDIII. *
In the camseity• torten and novelist. D'Aseslio I
woven a moist whieh la fte POIIIIIIIIIIO II le 01111/
toe."—Revreer. -
glje Vitss,
IVSDNRBDAY, JANUARY 25, 1880,
,liacanluraHß.
It has generally Won supposed that the last
article contributed to the Edinburgh &rim,
by Lord Macaulay, was that upon the kart of
Chatham, which appeared in October, 18 , 14.
The London 011ie says "We believe Lord
blactuday's last article iu the Edinburgh Review
was one on Barrer°, whom Burke had pre.
viously styled a the Anacreon of the Guillo
tine.' Thls essay was published somewhere
about the year 1846 or 1847." Several arti
cles written by:Macaulay, not to be found in
the - English collective edition of his works,
are worthy of being brought togothers In a
former article we mentioned his papers on
"English Politics in 1827," and "On the
State of Parties," which appeared in the E.
11., in 1827. He also omitted three papers on
the Utilitarian Philosophy, in which he had
attacked the late James Stuart 211111. "He
has determined," ho says, speaking of him.
self in the third person in• the preface, "to
omit these papers, not because he is disposed
to retrain single doctrine which they contain,
but became) he is unwilling to offer what
might be considered as an affront to the me.
mory of one (Mr. James Mill) front whoa°
opinions he still widely dissents, but to whose
talents and virtues ho admits that he formerly
did not do justice. Serious as aro the faults
of the 'Essay on Government,' a critic, while
noticing those faults, should have abstained
from using contemptuous language respecting
the historian of British India. It ought to be
known that Mr. Mill had the generosity, not
only to forgive, but to forget the unbecoming
acrimony with which he had been assailed,
and was, when his valuable life closed, on
terms of cordial friendship wills his assailant"
The Critic says: "We must notice the affec
tion which Lord Macaulay over bore 1,11 Uni
versity. When be was ill good health it was
his constant practice to visit Trinity, and Its
his old rooms—which were always temporari
ly vacated on hie coming—to perhaps dream
of the early days when he linked the name of
Pompeii to numbers, and contested in the
Union with Mackworth Freed." In Knight's
Quarterly Magazine, edited by Freed, the
first outpourings of Macaulay's licit fancy
and stirring poetry are to be found :—not the
very 'drat, for the Magazine was not commenced
untillB23, whereas Macaulay gained the prize
medal, in 1819, at the Unlyeraity of Cambridge,
for a poem called "Pompeii," and again in 1821,
gained the Chancellor's medal for a poem
entitled "Eventing." His contributions to
Knight were In prose as well as in verse, and
would all bear to be collected. To this time,
also, belongs his translation of Filicaja's" Ode
on the Deliverance of Venice from the Turks,"
a noble production, nobly rendered. That
magnificent, fragment " The Armada," was
probably written while a student at the Uni
versity, as the ()thee ballads were, but it was
not published far many years—somewhere
about 1833, we think—when yielding to the
solicitation of the late Thomas Pringle, Seere-,
tart' to the Anti-Slavery Society of London,
Macaulay allowed bins to publish it in "Friend
ship's Offermg," an Annual then edited by
Pringle. Not oven Homer himself, nor Mil
ton, had happier skill in introducing the names
of localities into song.. Tbeddaeriptlou of the
rapidity with which the news that the far
famed aad much-feared Spanish Armada had
been seen at sea, "beyond Aurigny's Isle," is
one of the most graphic In the language. The
news that is brought in to Plymouth Bay by
merchant-ship, for
" The ta3. Punts, till the noon, had held her else In
The bbbkoti - Alea,blazes "up, rs the, roof et
by
tire—
use of pronouns, and especially of personal
pronouns. In a most Interesting letter, mit
ten to Bulwer by Macaulay, is a long and In
genious defence of this usage. The Times did
not notice, however, ono great defect of Ida
%mill's' writing—viz, the excessive nee of the
disjunctive conjunction (qui" at the cow
monument of a sentence. Ills Ifistory of
England Is crowded with this abuse of a very
Insignificant monosyllable. On the average,
about one sentence to three commences with
Bet.
Ills biographer in the Leaden Daily News
says: "Before his retirement from the House
of Commons in 186 C, ho was the mere wreck
of his former self. Ills eyo was deep sunk,
and often dim; his lull face was wrinkled and
haggard; his fatigue In utterance was ob
viously very great; and the tremulousness of
11mb and feature melancholy to behold. Ma
caulay's was mainly an. Intellectual life, bril
liant and stimulating, but cold and barren as
regards the highest part of human nature, As
in his History there is but one touch of ten
derness—Henrietta Wentworth's name carved
upon the tree—ao in his brilliant and varied
display 'of power in his life the one thing
wanting ishoart. Probably the single tench of
sensibility was in him, and we should find
some bleeding gashes, or some scars In the
MDT bark, if we were at liberty to , search;
but bard and rugged it was while throwing out
its profusion of dancing foliage and many
tinted blossoms. It was a magnificent growth ;
and we may accept its beauty very thankfully,
though we know it is only fit for ornament,
and not to yield sweet solace at present or
perennial use. If we cannot have the man of
soul, heroic or other, nor the man of genius,
as statesman or poet, lot us take him use the
eloquent scholar, and be thankful." •
Peach, which is not always cynical, has the
following tribute to his memory
MACAULAY,
43yrt Ducuwatin,laN,
0: dying year didn't wreak thy latest good'
OD those who, wearied with thee, We thee go.
And narlint, Met with palsied hand strike off
The ablest name our Goldin 13ook could show?
Vela apite! self-branded. thou shalt pals away,
Bearing his life whose fame was England'. pride
But through the ages England's tongues shall say:
That year An ill one. Then Macaulay died.
Macaulay was to have boon interred in the
famous Poet's corner of Westminster Abbey,
on Monday, January 9th. A singularly worded
notice, in the Timer, declared that the mem
bers of the Legislature and the gentlemen of
dististiien in letters, science, or art, who may
bo desirous to show their respect to his me
mory, are requested to signify their wish to Mr.
C. Buxton, M. P., 7 Grosvenor crescent, as
tho space in the part of the Abbey chosen for
the interment is limited. No ono can be ad
mitted without a ticket. Here modest merit
was wholly excluded. Only those who felt
themselves to be c' gentlemen of If:Windom in
letters, science, or art," could hope for tick
ets. Suppose that Mr. C. Buxton's opinion of
their merits and abilities widely differed from
their own ?
Tho place for Macautay'a grave seems hap
pily chosen—near the last resting-plum of
Camden, almost the father of English history ;
near the spot where repose the ashes of May,
the historian of the Long Parliament ; close
to the grave of Dr. Isaac Barrow, formerly of
Trinity College, Cambridge, of which Macaulay
himself had been a Fellow ; near the graves
of Dr. Johnson, David Garrick, William
Gifford, and Brineley Sheridan; and the fect
of Addison'm statue. In that Bradt Wal
halla, now lies all that was mortal of Thomas
Babingtou Macaulay, poet and critic, orator
and politician, historian and conversationist,
scholar and atudent. No doubt, hd will take
rank as one of the great men of his age.
Letter front New lurk.
THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY: ARTICLES AND AUTHORS
—LAM!' CIRCULATION OP SUNDAY PATERS—
PAIS OP OVA smartarr—?ns BENICIA DOT : xoTt•
urns OP TEM rvanten—TEE EXODUS QV Tin
MEDICAL STUDENTS: ACKIESOATB LOBS OP TWO
• ..,04„tvcosco , Rostm4Tor-or—YalrllliDaLD;
AND TRIBUNE.
[Conaspondenee of The Prem.)
lisw Thaw, Jan, 23,18£10
The February number of the Atlantic Montlate
le out, end will bo found to bo admirably kept up
by the new publishers. I give you the names of
the writers of some of the artioles ; 1. Counting
and Measuring, by 0. R. Lang, of Philadelphia;
2. My Last Love; 3. A Shetland Shawl; 4. Robe
di Boma, by Story; 5. The Amber (lode, by Miss
Prescott ; 6 The Poet's Friends ; 7. The Memorial
of A. B.; or, Matilda Muffin, by itose Terry, a
young lady of Hartford, Connecticut, who is now
reckoned among the beet writers in Harper and the
Onions ; 8. Some Account of a Visionary, by
Marion James, of London; 0. The Trace of Piece
toque, by d. O. Whittier; 10. The Maroons of de
mina, by F. VT. Higginson; U. The Professor's
Story; 12. Mexico, by C. O. /farewell, one of the
editors of tho Boston Traveller. The editorial
notices aro by Loyal!, Dr. Palmer, and Grant
White, and aro olever and spirited, as usual.
Some of our Sunday papers are obtaining a cir
culation that memo almost inoredible. The Met
&try, for instanoe, now prints a weekly edition of
135,000 copies, and is steadily on the inorease
Bayard Taylor is now among its star contributors.
An industrious member of the Tra one editorial
Moir has been diving into the mysteries of the
sheriff's °Mee, and has ascertained that the income
of that office from fees alone cannot be leas than
$BO,OOO per annum.
On huge placards posted on fences, monnis of
brick, dead-walls, and on every spot that can he
made available for the purposes of 31r, Wiz. Poster,
may be seen, In huge capitals: "Two to one on the
Benicia Ploy"—moaning that friends of the latter
individual aro so confident of the prowess of their
champion, that they are willing to go tuppence to
a penny and larger Roma in proportion, that "the
110.nit•si-a" triumphantly mauls the hitherto vie
torious Boyers. John Morrissey, however, ileonan's
last antagonist, has five thousand two hundred dol
lars wagered that 'lke Boy" does not van the
battle. is geinti to witness the skrimmage,
and if Thomas Bayern has a bad show, will "hedge"
in order not to lose.
Tho fighting men are monopolieing quite too
much of the public attention, every little knock
down In which they engage being made the ealdeot
of minute description in the daily papers. On
Friday night, for inetance, the famous and gallant
Wm. Mulligan entered the slaking saloon of the
famous and gallant John Morrissey, and Intimated
to the lost-named individual that be could thrash
him. The last named ordered the brat named to
vacate, which was declined in vigorous and untols.
takable - English. Mr. Mulligan wen prepared to
back up Ms position by an appeal to the revolver,
but the apparition of a policeman or two calmed
the bellicose gentleman, and he permitted himself
to be quietly walked Mr to the station. home. All
of which has been duly chronicled in the daily
papers.
Of the young medical students, fourteen In num.
ber, who resolved, a few weeks sinoe, to return to
the Bouth on mount of " Old Brown," three only
loft, and one of them has sinee returned. 'Young
gentlemen who are ambitious of excellence In me
dicine or surgery find there is no Northern or
southern mode of obtaining it; and that large oi.
ties alone, with their numerous hospitals and publio
institutions, offer indinpensablo facilities for a
thorough mastery of the science.
Bo much has been field during the last week of
the relative circulation and bueintss of the Herald
and Tribune establishments, that it has elicited
the following facts
Hanano Rscatrrs Tomas gusts rs
for rnronne n 1 tier font weak*. end=
December, 1 , 67...547,01.1 151 January 16.1861-372 449 76
Ileoember, 1666 .. 47.816 thy January 15, 1869.. 76 645 79
December, 1a69 . DOJO 05.1anuary 34, lohA. .. flu en 31
There figures show the average receipts of the
Herald to have boon $51,865 65, while the Pi.
tune thaws an average of $88,242 95. The In-
crease this year oror last is $12,948.95 for the
Herald and $35,007 58 for the Tribune, or nearly
three times the amount of increase shown by the
Herald. The threatened dissolution of the Union
don't scorn to 'Toot the prosperity of our daily
papers. Indeed, it would NM that the eacluelon
of the Tribune from the South by tho Peet Offtoe
Department has only tended to swell Its eiroula
tin and business.
rfr Mr. James McLean, father of Washington
McLean, one of the proprietors of the Cincinnati
Envit rer, foil In an epileptic at last Friday after
noon, on Court street, between Race and Rim, Cin
einnati, Ohio, and injured himself quite seriously.
Ms bend woe badly cut. and he received some in
ternal wounds. Mr. McLean Is over seventy years
of age, and bite been a resident of that city for
nearly half a century.
MI" 'She Narita received by Bishop lifoClosktt
of New York, at the recent aocident on tbo Hudson
River Railroad, aro more et:rare than at grit 'ap
posed.
rir It is announced In the fashionable world
that the handsome Madame Bodies*, widow of the
Into Russian ambassador, will shortly wed Captain
t Cott, of the British navy.
TWO CENTS.
THE PULPIT.
Jubilee Sermon on the American Board
of Comnsis , lionera for Foreign Ms
clone.
UT REV. TRORAR J. tatracao,
Pastor of Mil Pre,hterian Church, Buttonwood
street, above Fifth.
On last Sunday morning, the Rev. T. J. Shap.
herd, peel?' of the lluttonwood.streatPrisbyteian
01:math, &divan," ft discount. to Ms commotion,
founded upon the following text of Sorlpturo :
A JURILRI9 Mt:ALL TVA? nrnzra TEAR ON UNTO
TOV."—Ltviticua. xtv-11.
A few Introductory remarks of the speaker will
!Mints the deaign and object of the sermon. It
wee, In a large measure, an extempore effort, and
was delivered with the surnal grate end propriety
of language whlob, oharaoterise Mr. Shepherd's
pulpit efforts.
Ile opened by saying that among the Hebrews
the fiftieth year bad been one of Joy and gLuiness,
because In that year possessions reverted to their
original owners, and liberty was proclaimed to the
oppressed. In many respects that year of jubilee,
as It Is termed, woo a type of what shall be when
Christ shall reign over the aglow' or the earth, in
the millennial ago--when Infidelity and ail ilia
etinectid,tasit vet% Asti .give place to hie albeon
nutting love. It was the prominence given to
the jubilee year, under the Levitical law, that bad
rendered the fiftieth year, by custom, a period of
jubilee and special interest even In the Christian
church. The period thus selected was regarded as
peculiarly fitted for such observance, in point o
interval, and being At it were the picot upon
which the century turned, it presented 11e most
natural point from which to review the past and
anticipate the future.
Approaching more nearly the special theme of
his discourse, he remarked that in the second half
of the present century of the Christian era, the
occasions of unal-eantenniatjabilees of various in
'dilutions dear to the thatch, bad been already
numerous. In 1853, the British and Foreign Bible
800ieiy had reached that interesting epoch in its
history, and the current year, 1840, was to be
memorable as the jubilee year of the American
Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. And
what an occasion of joy did the reminiscences of
the doings of that noble Institution afford ! The
historical details of this Board—its origin, and the
grand objects which it had been instrumental i n
achieving. as portrayed by Mr, Shepherd—were so
replete with Interesting information to the Chrie
titre community, that we shalt endeavor to repro..
duce them here with as much fullness as our space
will admit.
On the Trtb of June, 1810, in the town of Brad.
ford, Massimhosetts, some five or six ebrisu sti
mon, ministers and others, had associeted them
selves together to form what is now known all
over the world ow the "American Board of Corn.
mission era for Foreign Mindere," with the view of
sustaining the heralds of the cross in foreign lands.
On the nth. of June next fifty years of its exist
ence will bo accomplished, and the thought he
wished mainly to consider in this connection was,
how to make this jubilee period a auitable once
sion {for grateful joy? In attempting to specify
some of the modes, it wee prepay to inquire as to
what God in his providence had achieved within
the past half century through this nosey.
In the first place, it bad accomplished the lift
ing up of largo communities of men from abject bar
barism, to a state of olVilisation and comparative
refinement In this country it was difficult to
realize folly the extent of the great changes that
had that been wrought, unfamiliar as we are with
the gross practlees of heathen lands. Of what had
been nebleved by this agency, however, the Sand
wich Islands, in the North Pacific, Ocean. furnished
a notable example. No more than forty years
ago, the inhabitants of those islands groaned under
the absolute despotism of petty ehlefe; they were
subjected to all the evils of polygamy and lawless
licentiousness. and their property was only held at
the caprice of a tyrant. But since the Introduction
of Christianity, how different was their oondition!
A system of human lawn bad been adopted ; courts
of justice had been established ; the taxation of the
people was now moderate, andthe Governmentwas
administered on just and economical principles,
Fla bad, in fact. no hesitation in eaying that the
Sandwich /elands to-day were ahead of what Eng
land was two centuries ago. This was Oct a re
trainee, but a reality, and be rejoloed to know that
it bad pleased God to bring about this happy
change through the preaching of his Word, by LOU.
slonariss from these States. Sorely there was
cause for joy in the foot that a people had thus
passed from the horrors of barbarism to the men!.
ties and courtesies of Christianity. Especially
would this change redound to the future benefit of
oar own beloved 'sentry. These islands in the North
Nelda were the half-way human the grand future
highway of our oommerca with the distant Fast—a
commerce. he begged his heerers to remember,
which in every age artist vast had decided the
destiny of nations.
But, in the next place, this Board had been the
meats of imparting new life in the churches in dif
ferent eountrtes. The novae of review WAS here
changed from the-islands of them to Seethe/thorn
Europe end Northwestern Aslee—the work acme:
pliebed. by 9511510193944%/Et 194145t94.14 . 5145 9 91195009-
AliSIATKVIC9191511t111110 " /7591r parted an the seventh
oentury, when the mirsionariee of the former were
carrying Christianity to the East; when it seemed
to be sinking in the West and rifler: in the East,
wee here referred to. It was then, also, that Me.
hcruedanism Drat reared its head. Pts.ioic over
the struggles of the tenth century, and the parse
mittens which at length, in the sixteenth century,
bed driven the Nestorians to take refuge in the
mountains of Persia, he adverted to the condition
of those people in that region to-day, and the great
work that bad been wrought among them by our
missionaries to restore them to a true Bible Chris
tianity. So sleep. indeed, had those people fallen,
though professedly Christian, that when our mis
sionaries first went there, the necessity of a " re
newed heart" was not recognised among them.
The work presented was, therefore, not only to
evangelise the people, but the preachers them
soiree. The translation of the Bible into their
own tongue land greatly facilitated this objeet.
The history of the Armenians, who, on Recount
of their shrewdness, were designated as the 'Yan
kees of the Bast. was not dissimilar to that of the
Ilestorians, and dated back as far as the fourth
denture of our era. Among them, also, the Bible
had worked wonders. To-day ootverelone were
hiking place in and around the city of Constanti
nople by hundreds. We saw then, In surveying
the past, that the last fifty years had served to
part new life to churches that bad long beets dead
—like 90 many LAMMAS raised from the grave.
And was this not en °session of real joy?
list, again: The rousing of our ehurches to
greater activity, in spreading the Word of God in
our own country, was in itself a suffistieet canoe far
blessing God for ever having called into existence
the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign
3lissions. Ile had not time to elaborate, bat would
merely indicate an argument. Tho very hot that
great tffs9tl were matte to carry the Bible to the
heathen abroad bad tended more than anything
else could have done to awaken Christians to a
deeper interest in the perishing ones in our midst.
And now, to the question, Where were all these
agencies before the year IMO? The only answer
that could be given 1911--NOWWERS ! If esid he,
the American Sunday-school Union, with its noble
edifice on Chestnut street, bee done anything to re
claim the children of our land, and to lead them
In the way of life, all is due to the establishment of
this Board.
But he could not dismiss this subject without
sumo reference to the future (fitly years) history
of this useful institution. Already the halt cen
tury to be ushered In nn the 2Tth of Jure next was
flushed with the dawning of the day. in !comport.
eon with which, even the noontide of the past deep
ened into midnight. Turkey was tottering to its
fall; England was rapidly marching on to sover
eignty in India. and it was not hazarding too much
to say, that fifty years hence would witness the on
prernaoy of Christianity among the nations of the
earth
Yet our joy should be incomplete if we only
looked over the past, and contemplated the feturo.
We must riddreas oureelves to a practical work,
involving atom self denial on the part of God's
people. If Christians expected to participate in
the glory that is to come, they must not withhold
their contributions towards carrying it on. They
should strive to " abound in the grace of libe
rality." and the man who had not yet learned the
pleasure of giving, had not yet learned the alpha
bet of Christianity. It was the benevolent man
alone who knew the sweets of real • joy. That
heavenly quality beamed in the Noe of every man
who possessed it, and marked him as a follower of
the Lord in this respect. We had nothing which
we had not reesica, art , that, on the common prin•
cipie of restitution, It became our duty to do what
we could in return, and be therefore called upon
all who beard him to be present on next Sunday
morning. (when the annual collection in behalf of
the All. C. F. M. will be taken up.) and give
liberally, and hoped that all who had, on former
occasions, withheld from God what they should
hare given, would come forward and restore it by
a generous contribution. Within the past two
years, the receipta had not been aufficient to justify
the coals of labor which bad been marked out;
and be thought that labors which bad been so
much blessed of Cod In the past should not be
left to languish for the want of a proper interest
on the part of Christians to continue them.
A EItUMMAST.II FAVALT.—refed. In Twinsburg,
Summit county, Ohio. January 4th, 1660, Mrs
Molly Post, widow of Joshua Post, deceased. Mr.
Post cams with his family from Saybrook, Connec
ticut. to Horthfield, in Summit (then Portage)
county, in 1820, - and died in 1822, leaving Mrs Poet
en a new and but little improved farm, with thir
teen children, two eons and eleven daughters, In
Int% moderate circutnatiumes as to property, but
by her energy, industry, end good economy, over
came all pecuniary difficulties. so that she not only
cared well for her own household. but gave liber
ally to her less fortunate neighbors. All of her
children were respeottbly monied in early life,
and each ono of the thirteen raised a family of
children. ton of which families have resided in
Twinsburg. Her posterity now living le eleven
children, seventy-fivo grand-childron, (only three
of her grand-children hare ever died. except a few
infants.) Sfty-seven gront•grannl-cbildren—in r,ll
of the throe generations, ono hundrsitaul forty
three.
3fINNz gore MAD.--The late Democratic State
Convention of Minnesota made the same mistake
that the Democrats of Ohio did lit reg ard to
en
dorsing Old nueli's Tom Fooleries. Net one
Word wee enid in any of their 'resoluttoes that re
forted in the remotest sense to the President.
Th e y passed him by in solemn silence. They
even refuted to endorse their own Senator, Mr.
Rice, beoanso the latter was an Administration
man. What madness! It was kindness. however.
in the Minnesota men, not to eennure. They toted
upon Oray'e advice, rot Gray the printer, but
Oray the poet, in his elegy written upon en un
fortunate youth who died and was burled in a
country chat-oh-yard
"No tether seek his merits to &Worm,
Or dmw his frailtme from their dreedatoee."
G7ovtiland Vaindeator
THE WEEKLY PRESS.
Twa WIIRILLY Paws will be seat to alubeenbere br
(par attar, in adr4noe,) at— ...... . ens
Three costae.
Fire Copies) "
Ten••
..... • UN
Twenty Copies " (to one address) 20.ei
Twenty Copies, or over, " to (tares' of
ereoh Subsoritesr.) lb)
Fora Club of Twenty-one or over. we will anti /13
extra oopy to the setter-up of the Club.
Mr Postmuten axe rexxestad to sot as snob for
TUX WiULY rims. •
CALIF ORNL-1 PRESS,
tuned Borai•Sionthis in taus fel tha Califon
at4amere.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Mr The editor of the Memphis Avaiandie
quotes a little paragraph from one paper, to the
effect that Mr. Buchanan does not look like an ho
nest logo, and characterises it as "trickeri "
if that's winked, we feel disported t o to a life far
ther in oar career of wickedness. and esy, not only
that Mr. Buchanan doesn't look like an honest
man, but that he doesn't art like one. The UM
phis editor calls him " a venerable roan," but era
think him merelyold, without being venerable. IBA
defender boasts that be "directs the glares of a keen
gray eye full en the countenance of the man ha
converses with " It can't be mid, though. that ho
ever direct' (too gray eyes full upon cry man's
countenance, for his tieb graya are always gotrg In
different directions. And to what a desperate
strait must an organ be reduced when it oar make
no higher boast for the President of the railed
States, the inettmlAnt or the Brat office In the
world, than that he con actually look a man in.
the fare!
- - .
We hare geld, and tens of thonsar.ds of the bet
men in the nation hsve said and do ;sty, that Presi
dent Buchanan doesn't not like an honest man Ws
conduct in lending to the Secretary of the Navy.
with lots own endorsement. a letter receturneadtrg
that a valuable Government oentraot should ho
given to a epeoltied house in Philadelphia, with
out regard to terms for the avowed reason that the
election of spartionlarDemterat to CODOESS oruld
thereby be rendered certain; his conduct In not only
teleratink, but rewarding with one of the highest
oincea of the Dorothea/ant, the notorions Glaeoy
Jones afterthepubliestion of Jones' letter proving
him to have secured, while in Co term valuable
contracts at the departments for business drine upon
the stipulated condition of sharieg try! profits; his
conduot In countenancing and cooniving at, if not
actually promotin,g, the wretched froula and vit.
!alnico proved to have been perpetrated in the Guth
mule Islet and handredsof other maters, at a tre
mendous expense to a nearlyrathed ttecotrv—all
these things totem his vcandß,leno improbl'y in the
eyes of all the world. The Memphis editor thinks,
or thinks be thinks, that " the exalted po-itha
which Mr. Buchanan bolds as Chief Maxistrate of
this Confederacy" should protect him from snob
language as we have need toward him. In oar
view, the higher and more important a man's po
litical position is, the more he deserves rebuke end
condemnation and execration if halves his powers
and prerogatives, as we are sure Pr , sider.... Iln
ohanart has done, for evil /Ltd not for good —Ln:rts
ville Journal.
Dora bits in Toragsse.s.—Thetreshingten. cor
respondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer says :
" The nomination of Hon. Andrew Johnson for
the Presidency by the Democratic State Cons. eUtitai
of Tennees.eo, hea carried consternation Into the Ad.
mlnistretion camp, !Ince they have ascertained it
srlia produced by the united action of tins friends zlf
Judge Douglas with those of Mr. Johnson. The
further Tao t that the delegates, chosen by the Coos
ventlen,-are the mutual friends of Jobneon
Douglas, clearly indieetes who their se and ohrica
shall be, and for whom their rotes will bo cast
when the great struggle comet."
rr Among the :web/tiara adopted by the late
Democratic State Convention of Tenneuee was
the following:
"4. Resolved, That the Federal Govern= vni
has no power to interfere with slavery in the Savor,
nor to Introduce or erclude it from the Terre
tories, and no duty to perform in relation thereto,
hut to protect the rights of the owner frontarlttir
and to restore fitorttew from labor; these duties
it cannot withhold without a violation of the Con
stitution."
j',• do anti.ditanion meeting was recently bell
In Parkersburg, Va., at which resolutions of tho
following character were paesei.
Resolved. That we, a portion of the eitizsrs cr
Waal county, Va., honor and cherish the Lfril:a
which binds together our great family of Stairs.
We regret that the declaration should have gota
forth front cur own State, that " the VeII-81RVIS
boliling Sines are in nearly solid array vowed to
Ili" We believe that an immense majority of the
citizens of the free States are now, end- always
hive been, willing to extend to the elacelacldir.g
States all the protection and all the riett which
they can legitimately claim under the Conatta-
Resolved, That the freedom of speech end free
exercise of opinion are guarantied to tie hs the
Constitution of oureortatey end the Constitution cf
our State. end we will regard any leylelatirn
reeking to deprive our citizens of the legitimate
exercise of these. as an nnwi.te and en unauthor
ised invasion of theirconstkotionst rights—"zights
inestimable to them anal formidable t) tyrants
nly;" and we pledge ourselves - Is 135.0 all lawful
end hottorsble means to arrest and defeat each
@' 'ln the State Senate, on Tuesdly, Tenuery.
17, kir. George W. Stiller, of the Greene and Fey.
ette district, presented a petition, signed by ono
hundred and eight oaten :is of Greene oceraty, pray
leg for the passage of a law to prohibit the emi
gration of free negroes into ibis State, which. at
his requeet, was read, and, on his motion, ordered
tote printed in the Lrgislatire Record, as fellow e :
"To the Honorable the &011ie and-In -woof
Reprelpitatirg. of do ComniMWRZIA Penn-
Itvarda..l33 General' Airrmbly met: T le'i
tlnners
b11X 9131 .1-/ 9 4 33 3.9 9 319.91%. 3 -. 1 '•. - trbalOtaal!gt,-..
4oeseldrse nagste'poptdaties by emir:diem. within a
brief period, is not only a burden to your pets
' boners by increasing demands od our poor fund,
bat, owing to their great indolence and dissipation,
they have filled our prisons, thus increseteg our
taxes to en enormous extent. The recent raid at
Harper's Ferry will result in stringent laws by the
Seathena States for the expulsion of free negroes
from their limits; so we must shortly have them
elude more of those unfortunate creatores tillers!)
upon us, many of them in the decline of life, or
etherrrise incapacitated for labor. The exie.neey
0 Vie upon your honorable body to adopt 9,9399 LI Ea
-19E9 to prevent an increase of our 9311904, bre
d mad oendltion. If your honorable licety has net
the power to prevent their orni.:nitien to this State,
we would prefer a 'lave code "
A EEC , Ita VICE PiIE3IPEEE.-119 proirtteted
and unsteesestful effort of the fence of Repretenta
lives to organize—at a time, too, when there is
danger of one department et the Government eleo
lately coming to a dead lock for wan: of the neces
sary appropriations to support suggested the
question to the minds of many whether some re...R
eal change in the mode of appointing the Speaker
Is not required. It hem beet suggested, e proper
remedy for the growing abuse of a failere to otTeen
toe, that the Constitution be so amended 93 to cre
ate the office of a second Tice President, elective
by the people, and whose duty It shall Is to pre
side over the popular branch of Ccngress.
MR. &MEAN SUSTAINED AT ROILL-7.1e Itr
publican members of the Ohio Legislature have
adopted a series of resolutions, warmly com
mending the support given to Mr. Sherman by the
Republicans in Congress. A copy of the runic-
Cons hue been transmitted to Mr. Sherman, ac
companied by the following letter:
Cocrx erg, Thursday. Tan. 19, 190.
ilox. Jonw Swettxxa—Dyer SIT : It is pith
getudae pleasureitbat I ttaanoit to you the o:closed
resolutions.
They were parsed by Botta:nation at a full c•-z •
;maims of the Republican members of bah h0u , ..c3
of the Legislature, held last night, only six out c
eightpthreo being absent.
I will say further, that I belies e they CITFIV3 tS o
general sentiment of the Republican party ib.rcuils
out the State.
As to yourself, there is but one feeling hers, sin I
that is of warm admiration of your 6rm eta dig
nified aurae, and gallant bearing In this trying
contest for the Speakership.
With Pentimente of high respeet,
I am, Saar•., truly,
%1. 0. Contras.
A Wesnsexy'. CA-NNOXS:ior.—Duringtho firing
of the salute on Jackson Square, Now Orieans, tit
Monday, the Sth lost , ono of the shots had a 'ren
der:al stftet, for it not only restored bootleg, but
speech, to a young man who had boon deaf std
dumb for the past three years, the result of severo
sickness. Re was born in Quebec, but, subsever.t
to his misfortune, he went to New York, and then
made his way down hero. Abont midday, zua
Monday, be was preying in the St. Lenin
Cat 'e
dral, when be suddenly heard a cannon, thy vl_o
being accompanied with or producing instantly a
cold, crushing sensation through the ear, a chok
ing sensation about the throat, and a feeling ai et
something breaking in both places. He reeled out
of the church, and heard anothershot, bat literally
"could not believe his ears " A Odra shot solisticd
hint, and also that he could speak, so he burst inta
tears. Hie name is Joseph Wells ; is a six rooter
in stature, end an intern gent young man, and
speaks, as before, loth &reach and English.
/ wag the recent distinguished r - sitors In
Paris to the Bev. Dr. Spurgeon. The preacher's
object is professional.
WHARE ALL situ TOTA Cows FROM —The Toot
majority are condo at Grunbainscher, in Saxony.
The glass comes from Bohemia. The bottles and
cups are so fragile that the toor workman has to
labor in a confined and vitiated atmosphere, which
cuts him MT at thirty-five years at age. All arti
ales that contain any metal are the products of Nu
remberg and the surrounding district. This ~id
city has always been one of the ebi.f centres of
German metal work. The workers in g , ll not
silver of the piece have long been famous, 2,11
their iron-work le unique. This speciality has now
descended to toys Here all toy printing.pretsts,
with their types, are manufactured, magic lanterns,
magnetic toys, such as ducks and fieb, that ate at
tracted by the magnet; mechanical toys, rash at
running mice, and conjuring tricks, also . come . from
Nuremberg. 'The old city is pre - eminent all
kinds of toy dieblerie. Hero science puts on the
conjurer's jacket, and we have a manifestation ,tf
the Germanesque spirit of which their Albert DU
rer was the embodiment. Tho more solid brat-rh 3
which attract boyhood, loch as boxes of brick 9,
buildings, an., of plain wood, come from Grua
hainseher. in Saxony.—Ones a Week.
[From the European Tlrnee.)
Two gratifying cimmuntances appear with the
opening year—the state of the national revenue and
the decrease of pauperism. On the quarter ending
with December, 159, there is an inorease of
280,000; on the year a decrease of tna,ooo ; but
thts is accounted for by the falling oft in the income
tax. In both, the purchasing and consuming power
of the country, as shown by the returns, is sub
stantially increasing. The decrease to pauperism
exceeds four per cent. in eleven of the districts of
England and Wales, and more than nix per cent. in
he metropolitan districts. This is every sails.
factory remit, and the commercial, manufacturing,
and agricul past prospects path which the year
1380 commences are encouraging, we might say
geattfying. There is no great interest complaining,
with the exception. perhaps, of the shipping into
rest. and in that branch of trade the despondency
le likely to be only temporary.