_^ , o--A , .• ; ,5 - .4 : ;,TEmospytESS; PUBLISH:CD 'DiTtY ' . (St11;11:4t8' RKOEP TAD 8Y4611N W. 'FORNEY. OFVIOE NO. - 417 011B8TNUT STREET DiTLY intkss. TIVELVB OMITS PEP. WIINA. payola!, to OA Canista. blelied to Stibeenhars out of the City at fia Doctieits USU. ANNUM. YOUR DOLLARS POE 8101 IT MONTHS; TIME{ DiILIARS IVOR HIS MONTUS — tiONTIabIi in ad vinoe for the time ordered. ' - 'TRI-WEEKLY PRESS. Mailed to itilitionbere out of the City at ittaiut Dot. LAIN !111 e'simet, m edveneel STATIONERY. 1860; NEW j A nal. A" .1860. -WM. F. MURPHY & SONS. SSA CHESTNUT BTABLT, Below Fourth, PSICITIcALIjaintFACTURZRO OW BLANK BOO'KB) IStade of Linen Stook. gt:0180. - PrAtt l Yoeolpsy".1 4 . Letter an. i with P ei obis stook o vv...4 4 0,"1,4.4 , 1.1ExetivurnE STATION' RY. /FILLLINERY 000138. 729.- E W 729. FLOWER & FEATHER STORE, 729 ORBSTN-UT STREET. Mortar out, at GREATLY REDUCED PRICER. our tare stook of READ GRESSEI r ERIDAI._ WEEATRI4,_ PUNCH FLOWERS, EATHERS. MILLINERY GOOD& mos. RE u IsTNEDY BRO., Y 39 CHESTNUT 81`., AND 48 8. SECOND BT. oal9.tarl BOOTS AND SHOES. HAIL & BARMER. idL&NITSACTDI3ZIIB WiIOWNUUiI DEALERS BOOTS. .A.NP SHOES: 128 IVOIIII/ -THIRD was= A hllassortroon t of OUT made Boots and Shoes 0015 way on hand. • elO-tf WATCHES, JEWELRY, &c. SILVER WARE. WM. WILSON do SON ftmite 6964141 attention to than stook of SILVER WARE, which is now unosoally large, affbrding a va riety of pattern and design nusurt.assed by any house the United States, and of finer quality than is usanullso hared for table use in any part of the world, • • Onr .Standerd of Silver to 9354000 parts pun The English Sterling 025-1000 " Amnia= and Brent& 900-1000 lt Thus it will be seen that we give thirty-five parts parer than the American and Primal coin, and ten parts purer than the English Sterling• We melt all our own &War, end we marmite° the quality as above (OM. whieh Is the Assisi that can be taadt to 6$ serviciable, and will resist the notion of acids mach bstts► than the cot& ware Misr seseittfaatuted, WILSON & BON), -i~:a~.~):1;1~95~'1hry:IdcplU:ra.~ 3y:p~:~ 'N. Ber Any fineness of Silver mansfeepizisd ea agreed neon, but patitiosly sons isiftrity {o,lNliti wed dar4ri- Cot Biaredard. Dealer" ■upplied with the game atar.dard as used ha our retail department. Vino Silver Bari, 149-16080 nano Minh oonotonni on band. • onHfim IL4RDWARE PACKAGE HOUSES. HANDY & BRF,NNER,, .„ NOR 93, Oft AND ST NORTH FIFTH STREWS PHILADELPHIA, WHOIMALB 001ktlifISSION HICIIOIIANTO, For the sato of all dada of /MERMAN MANUFAOV3MMD HARDWARS, AND, INFORM/5118 01 GERMAN, BEISTAN, PB33NaB, AND MIL= HARDWARE AND' CUTLERY, Moon constantly on hands lane stock of Goods to taw- DI) Hardware Dealers . . . BIiTOHBR '8 PILBO I tbioank or,otbenrbx. BVROTEIVB MGR TOOLti, }MOILER'S STEEL OP VALIUM MDR WRIGHT'S Men ANISIS AND WOKS, SHIP OHAIN, And other kinds to emu nests!. SOLII .1011141 soft SHARP'S HBPSATE H,PIRTOL, WEIGHING ONLYAH OUNCES. EHAHP'S NEW HODRL RIPLHB AND /"ISTHIA. NOWAILD a, SANDI. 700, Y. inumnst. V. s.silAmpts, isat-ef 1110MOKAGE RARDWARS #9l:llL—We I . .' ll4 r i a l M mi ta a ilPtr•Vt i rtil *. . • , - , Te ,i,lerl; li,to,' ' 64 4l * .....dirteil t rsco ' il trft )4 ~..... ...Ora oar, W. I* ew rletni. • .' • - • al . 00ild li R litie l k aal4 AzenutVe l lin a and c tiomultlerf=r • . _ autt-tt CABINET. WARE. nABINET EITRNITURB larD BILLIARD a." TAItIMB. MOOSE & CAMPION, Ito. 101 BOUTIii EIACQ111) EITILEBT t eouneolson with their extensive iblost /3asineas, are o wan h wis i muil t re i r g f aIVIM a kVA r u ff a ireekddim ir oNs i _ o o m a r l o p a r l o l a n oune ther ed by au who have a to ae Por the quality anl finish of these Tables the mans batmen refer to the u m ar tua: r r i o u t i te t r e tr:gthrf e a r gr t t h rg Unto, 'lmo ere La von , free-em DRUGS, CHEMICALS, &c. DRUGS, GLASS, PAINTS, &o. ROBT. SHOKAIATrva & CO. 111,011.T1M1.8T 00,111.02. METH AND RAMS STURM WROLeSALS DRUGGISTS, Lnporters and Dealers In wrpo* °LAB% PAINTS, U g h:site the attention of COUNTRY MEROHANTS fro theft Imre stook of Goods, which thsy offer at the jrpreit market rates. - oos-tf SCALES. ItIANCLIEST ER SOALES.—Counter, Plittarnii warehime, nab Coal. and Railroad dio ea. Alan, Planing Maehinor (Androw's Patent), and Dolt- IA d 41T novo. {Ye CHEITNLIT Street. 011ARLES A. DANIELS. FAIRBANKS PL.ATVORM 80ALDB. MEDICINAL. MRS. WINSLOW o , EXPMENCED NUM Atrp e rayddi ti tresTireTt e rief P FOR ORILDREN TEETH/NG, NeeM s it 4 °1 =1, 1 1? "°"1,11 21 41;1= 'llifff 9 i l OlMlLAlt....lo ilndk. Dimond upon It, mothers , Atm siva rest to you:Wm lial tra if illartp '"D andwol TI ! 1 . Is TO TOUR ! for 09 er te . n ykanfoldrkb.yon ad ils I hnuse and truth of it, 'l7 P A,. T .0_ worirflr I r. 1 „3.,...4 nd Cult ~z, of sad. eve r a b., we know en ine 494 rr 9* , :tire t fih c al ie. rwi re rrad It. rtiAlkitNs. a itots,tM utedteaf:s, al fnea l le " s u pea -t rn ttly r what we 4 X ow, ',..,after tap lAN mr neremomo &anger renotemolr for the PIM- Ft Of what we ben de f' , fare. fa wilratot avery where the infant X s suffering from pain and tiatio t t e rglier Wilt Its E., ..ti dln mum or twenty a r tue Syrup 14 'stand. b u know mesamotittilu t i Wilkti n in t iesirlen wa c' hu IV .m -- it all v 2 -- Inal-Mihri aralks F pig ss: sil It not W.,. retievt ths r mid,. pale, bul tr.- v 4 ° I:k:r i te? .er I t IL' t 7 I tr cr 'lt IN c) '6074,1/11.1.1,11. .0„,,,w.E&,, A , g ).. A rdi y d roma:lT: L eal!! e m_ e ,d , 11 an ndirD i l l a ° RkfiegritiMr, A netherause idt tuointstas romp t ar i n iv a r i w e a y Le! , intld SitreAnlfiatn aly t o ° l tW: All ' n =fga nt : t*: nth o y rila r nTl444% Ni.x— o 'l4l.l°3ll.ole --, 9 .1 E .fi- to ll tilts ..", 16, 11 ...- amer v ase4. P aw.- .Bay tor using WU/ 'mom fR palsy naafi ottle. one int West ' the far X Walla of CURTIS& ER. 8,, New York , is on , the ontaidearapper. M by Drugntats tnrcntsbeitt the world. PAW, No, DI OSSLUAIt Street, Rev Year. iylll7y -11 A-- - 7. Orate .r. battle ..,....—._ ...._ ..„,......, k. A''. - 8 OR - 'BO5 bblaVto Turpontlo3. 30 do rdo Tuitontino. V . a o l ?Wag KU n. WY 3. Pttdtrtur re andfo Kuwlr 1 , . :l 1 I.s • OLSON 7 • • Mennfaoiarer of BIIIRTB, LINEN grid SIARSTULLES 130.90kH3 ASIWCOLLARS A Wad BAd ohoioe sksortmoot. and WILL TILDE, al veto an inlaid, unto whist!' settionleirly invite the at- Orison o mon andltning-paYlds lapel Titan bums. •8. )5. aerner, EISUUND and ARCH Streets, rhil•- daieh RAP- For il ORIRE—For sale - by WET & BROTHER. a sad a NORTH. BB . 00ND Street. . loan Tuft AND PITOIL-250 bbls. Warning. tortTs2o9 kftga Wllmjogton 'Pau SoO bblo. Pitoh toitora, t ool* nie by ROWL.BY, AbIIBIJRNER & 00., Na. e n d . arves. • r 1;121 P1i311.4—'.601:/ qt.'s, Extra Grand Bank A-4 Califtaa,ura_ore and f . vals Ita amt E••EA)D A— Fo r sale by- WWEUERILL e•-. 7 . sr.:,*aoraga; at and NORTH BROOND _,BROTHER; , s G A:: on hand alitThr en NO • . W. :111121 tafrai r" "I* VOL. 3.-NO. 151. RETAIL DRY ,GOODS. LADIES' FANCY FURS. GEO. F. WOMRATH. N 05.415 AND 417 ARAM STREET, HAS NOW OPEN HIS USUAL • CROWE ASSORTMENT OF FURS, Made of stunk■eleoted by himself in Europe during the neat Bprimr. ocsa-sm FURNISIIING DRY GOODS. STIARSLESS BROTHERS have replenished their Stook of Staple. Cimiale of their uwa importation. Bernell and [rut fdnereheetinge. i ll in tirl e n i iri l l a sllilin f ic ° 77 7 4 l as t Tiro a i h int " . 6" mask Nap and ' , Dynes. unfree/wk. Russia and Damask Towels. Tared Bordered Damask Towels. tawn Cnish and American Linens. ens. Worsted Damasks. Ratan Lame. ace Curtains. Embroidered Muslim Ulured Lasting'', Moreens, Drussetts. 1,0 11,:rable and Plana COvelrl. ,Blue and Green Slade lionands. dish anlATerman tine Btankets. ailt i s i , e llbtli t n i g:, r Fl:TTielti:al y Shirtings. jail - 801 and 903 CHSATNUT Street. RARGAINS FOR SIX WEEKS. TilotunEyat N. E. corner METH and SPRING GARDEN. would reapeetfully Inform the publ i to gFsvlll that from now (January 14 . 1 D11 ,) until the aLL, Go c oDrltE m alll WASS OF PROFITS I They have an exoellent stock of tengistrn i t i llirrl i c a tin Illenkets t jest nbirting and Stteetin,c.dltuutnx. irir,Wa r treng2r: t r p ' _me.n t Cloaks gill A A L,Ab oft STOOK OF rkrici t y BILES. Beet make of black talks. Afermoas, Do Laines, "in Plin Plaids, &a many of the above gliDdll Vri be w alite,}l LINDER ST PRIOR! .N. B.—lt will pay to give as a call, laid 4-4 WAMSUTTA tifiLRTINGS, SOFT PlNlSiljust opened. 4-4 Wilsonville Stuttinge at f 2) cantor. 4 4 Dish Shirting and lilting Linens. tand 4.4 Unshrinkable is ail s. imer do ornfants' !bawls. Largo Stook of Paris Embr oideries. vffy cheap, v ia , Setts Collars and Sleeves, cotters, Embroidered Linen Cambrio Handkerchief', &c. Ladies and Gent"' Linen Calabria Handkerchief", In grG a ents' Silkt wi Handkerchief", Blaok Cravat", and Nook , Iles. WHITE °outs In variety. WINTER reduced In tripe. of all kinds. A:NESS IiCtOLFS. Blanket and Brodie Shawls. • ad and Orib Illanktds. laok Cloaking Cloths. Cloakg. Reedy glade. " Silk Velvet, &0.. /co. GREAT REDUCTION nor fiebrE t ri Ist, while. taking stook. 'Han it ADAMS, lal4-t1 EIRE and 013. Ettentx. BLUE PLAID FLANNELS. tegant Brood° Shawl,. ne Cloth L Cloaks. oollen ors Shawls. iratty 20 and 23 cant Detainee. 3.59 and 8110 Wool Robes. worth ar end /$B. meet Black Bloomlines, 33 tole elms. tent all-Wool Plaids, CASBSI ER ES. 1t1.55 (or beet Fancy Cass( mares. ond (mods at $l, 11110, and 8135. Hoard' and Casanova,. 40 tog cent. *stinks very cheap. 50 oent hyst.rate Spits and Drawers. tiloves, Ties, "Mkt's, &0., Ruction tots. ,„„cooriifi et LtoNARI). NINTH and MARKET . N. B.—LiN'EN GOODS, a large and desirable stools of every debonption. Jalo T IIORNLEY & 011 ISM, Northeast corner EIGHTH and BITING GAR DEN Streets. would Invite attention to their stook of IRISH LINEN HDKI , S...kc.. Of their own direot Importation, which they can °ca dent!), recommend. Also. an excellent etook or Shirtint and Sheeting . Muslim,. English and American Bkrikets and Flannels. Cloth■, Cassimeree, and Petitions. Marseilleelluilts and Comfortables, &u. Helene* of leloaks and Droohe and Blanket Shawl, itelhng at lees than siost n ! Rich 1111, 6 11 1 . All our stook well he found dertrable. ja6 COMMISSION •HOUSES. HENRY D. NELL 4 CLOTH STORE. NM 4 AND 8 NORTH SECOND STREET CMINOPLELLA, NOSROVPA, FROSTED. AND PLAIN BEAVERS, . Also. ()MI/SERBS, VELVETS, &0., &n,. WITOI L ESALE AND RETAIL. nir-sosssolS FA REELL & MORRIS, Sedi OFINTNUT STREET, IMPORTERS. CO XMLEIBI I O N NEB liel,NTll OLOTID3, SPRING AND EUILLIER COATING% FRO'n3lNGliAlct & WELL% 85 LBTITIA 8111EBT, AND 34 BOUM FRONT BTANCT. OOTTONA-DES. Suitable for both Clothiers and Jobbers, in large variety. guMIEBE COATINGS AND CABILMBENITS Made by Washington Mils. Or i d a rjaken for these desirable goods for Spring trade FROTHINGH.A.M & WELLS. D 4 BOUTS /DONT, AND 85 LETITIA STREET, Are AGENTS for the Wont Goode Idannlsottired hr the following Goinpanres, vts t Illascscriusnrr LACCI ALT F. 1.1.1,1. LTKAIf. 0411917. DWINT, Ra ni:4lo4 Ilsartatig. Brown. Stools& and Colored Bbsotings, Shlrtings. hem, and Do Is 'ROB S ' ON'S BLUE PRINTS, LIASIPINiN COMPANY'd • TWEEDS AND COTTONADES in great garish , . WADDINGTON MILLS (Formerly Say eltars) FiFeers i4 A 4 j!W e iga . n r it i atgi v iq'e P gg i , h F entli oe ..fiNere,Odastmoree,iuld doote. Also, of 6111.8atinsts. and Tw•ods. di-stunt-13m SHIPLEY,, HAZARD, & HUTCHINSON, NO 110 ORRWFNUT BT.. GONMIBBION MERCHANTS FOR TES BALE OF PHILADELPILIA.-MADE GOODS. d4la SADDLERY, HARNESS, am LA(IBY,BS PHILLIPS, RARIOVOiII. BAD I)I,ZR, Alp gl ROBi. Tag ram 01110 AL at the World e Fair held in Lon dos. in ,1881. wrill awarded to tie !or the bnel II num . A nit,rstiza ninDAl4 at the World's Pali. held inlew York, in 1863, was also awarded to us for the beet at ones. , living 611160 then greatly enlarged Our Initnefitotoring [sodium EAT. s p s tg r pre l ypia4i i t fi t ir j eirpke the vu lio at ° Yoe. SO end Mitkiuth gg*NTii tit, above Chestnut. , PHI LADELFRA. The mast complete assortment or &Meisel in our line fhtnlinesa, inlOh ß na d liervp r imbadie: ' a: i v i t r Ogleme i r) i 's d i: 31 8 411 g eciveill f i g'Somtn i g li n td Ih nter use 'Bd. l!o and all other Pindc 01 roues ur goods are manufactured in the very beat idyls of wolkaloloant i ot k i op LEATSIEni l t isi which Is the,beetifie now a furnish. Attention in risked to the wines/vela of prleee I Ord e i tzsermrabls :gills pees fr,o, m 4 .1 9. 86 012 W u, Et Agia doable banana ~ tf4o to PO uonntry harness makers can be supplied with harness chestier than they can manufaeture them. nill-etufethilin . 110IJSE-FURNISIIING GOODS. HOUSE FURNISHING STORE. WILLIAM YARNALL. No. 1020 CHESTNUT STRENIT, (Immediately opposite the Aoademy of Fine Arts,) Invites the attention of 'HOUSEKEEPERS and others to his extensive assortment of USEFUL HOUSEKEEPING GOODS. TABLE CUTLERY, •. NURSERY FENDERS. CHAFING! DISHES, FIRE SCREENS. PLATE WARMERS, romuthed TEA TOYS, &c., &cr. '; 4lj ~aR REFINED SUGAR.-500 bbls. crushed, ET - :nr mi c tniie n e ri ftßWAllea lone ec I. Fir. 'RUA .omq. Y 14,0,_ HA M 8 AND SHOULDERS. —2 ,300 Pleats City - Smoked Rams and Shoulders. Also, 800 Pleats 24ats extra sugar-oured Hams, for sale by C. C. TH-f SAIdR &- CU., ARCH Street, Rd door above Front. G UM UUALAUCIM—Stramed. for Sale by WRWHERILL kBROTHER. 40 North stwinno, Atr.nt AVM. D. KELLEY AND GEORGE A. OBBBY. Attornors at Law. have removes to IN W484. 1 4* Iglrion. below Oksataut. jast.ua tI I /-, /,,,, , _ • , /./ / .. 1 : ' '.-.-' , 4 ,:,_ • ti, {1,. / , _ .. 2• 111 ' Of, - .. ' ;,...,:i7i . ''... '; . - -.,... - :.::.: , . - 1, trtt. tt .. rrad L:111 . . ._ _._. .. - ..... a ....\:..... ..... .., .. /.7___R • i : ~-.-. - . I . , 1 11 41::;: i ?.. 4 :•.. ';1 - . 's : . it .4l-1311 ,f,-I . ; v a°ll4-1 ' ~.„. '6 : , - . :40 1 :',.: . :',. ~' ' ~::,,,, . , -‘,,--,:=- .' . - 7 - vr - 4 :: 4: 1. g :: ,-------, J.1Y...: .0.. T ,, .t •, :•• , - 1 _ • . ._,,t4.- . .4 , 4 .. /4: 0 i 0 '• -:-i, .. • . ~. . 4.: , ." ' .'7. , ' ~' - . - - ''.-zt: '..--,-,:.::;;.;1;:;:t4.:.1/4"V".i. ~ -7 .;- ' - ,• ! (‘ ‘,, i ip *.;'''''' •••• --, ...•.::77 , ,.,y - -1.41,- b.1.,4:; . 04, : 1. - -:•,-, ;...,..:., .., .... • . \:. , ..." ( A, : . , ,,....,,_„, ~_ - .....1...... 1', .. 4 1,' .- , r.Y 1 11 - 4 . , ,-..,-..-- -- •' - '''''''''''...- - ' - ''''Z''': :' • ' ,',7 ..• 7 7. - : ;.,: 7 . 4 ,-- '' ' -a--- \-..5--- ........ ---....,........,./..::: * .. . i t,' l : ............... :::: , 9VERCOATINGB, CIASSIKBRBB, DOSWKINS, AND BATLIIRTB. MANTELETS, PANTALOON STUFFS, DRY-GOODS JOBDERS. J . O. HOWE & CO., No. 240 MAIMET STREET, PHILADELPHIA, ()for to the Jobbing and Clothing Trade J.T.BEAORAVE Sc. 00.43 GRANITE MILL, BRADFORD, TAPT, & CO.'S BLAOKBTONE MILL. BLM.BTREET, AIILLBURY, MERRIMACK. MILLFORD, And venous others of the oholoest and most desirable makes of American PLAIN AND FANCY OABSI MERE& Also, a fine of very choice high-lustrod BLACK DOESKINS, Colored and White CORSET JEANS, Bleached and Brown BURSTING& LIIIIRT INOS, and DRILLS. Jr. C. HOWE & CO. Are also Agents of the MANCHESTER PRINT WORKS) And offer the various goods produoed by thla Company DE LAINEB, ORALLIES, OPERA OLOWB, PRINTS, &0., ho Jab-thitulni JOSHUA L. JE3AILY, IMPORTER AND JOBBBR FANCY AND STAPLB DRY GOODS, No. 213 MARICBT Strout, rnmarstrna, invitie attention to a large AND VERY COMPLETE AMORTIMENT LINEN GOODS. Of his own importation, NOW OPEN. IRISH TAI3LE LINENS, SCOTCH TABLE LINENS, BARNSLEY TABLE LINENS, NAPKINS AND D'OYLIES, BIRD EYE LINENS, HOCK AND DIAPER TOWELLINGE, BORDERED TOW iLS, IRISH SHIRTING LINENS, PILLOW CASE LINENS, LINEN TABLE CLOTHS, LINEN CAMBRIC HANDKERCHP'S, Ao., La., La., In all aim, etylea, and qualltlea, num TUB BUST BLEAOIII3RIE9, SOMPRIAING One of the choicest lines of LINEN GOODS. TO BE FOUND IN TlllB MARKET. For sale at a mail advanoo on the COST OF IMPORTATION. OASII AND PROMPT SIX-MONTHS BUYERS Jest -t[ CAKPETINGB. CARPETS. P. A. ELIOT k CO., Noe. $ and Si North FRONT Street. ere the 60LE ACP NTS in Philadelphia, for the ROX BURY CARPET COMPAN Y. and have co:latently for sale s full assortment of VELVET and TAPESTRY CARPETS, of chomp patterns. Also. a large supply of the various kinds of CAR PETS manufaetnrert In Philadelphia oar amt cowl, from nearly all the best menrhiotarers. Dealers will find It to their Interest to mill and examine these goods, which are offered for sale on the tonal favorable terms. N. B —P. A. ELIQT & CO, being the Bole Agents In Philadelphia for the gale of the Worsted and Carpet Varna spun by the Bazonville Mills (formerly the New England Worsted Company,) awl betas agents also for the Baldwin, Wilton, and Abbott Companies, have peculiar facilities for keeping constantly for sale the various kmda of Carpets ninntifitotured in Philadelphia, on the most favorable terms. jal7-3m PAPER HANGINGS, &a. TO OLOSE BUSIIsIESS: \HART, MONTGOMERY, 8.:C10., NO. 522 CHESTNUT STREET, Will talk out, through this winter end next spring, their large stook of PAPER HANGINGS. Consisting of every variety connected with the busmen, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. PINE PRENOR PAPERS AT So PER CENT. BE LO PI COST. Person' wanting their Rouses Papered, eau get 1111161 BARGAINS. JelS•tf MILLINERY GOODS. FOR EVENING PARTIES BERTHAS, ()APES, SSTS, SLEEVES, and curl's, In Real Lace, Orape, Vineion. Illi)nd and Imitation. In great varlotdos, aft* RR WRST STYLOS, Also, 4-4, 8.4, 8.4, 0.4, 10-4 ILLUSION, TARLATANS, GRAM Au., Mach below the usual prices. WARBURTON'S. 1004 CHESTNUT Street, above Tenth Street, 906 South SECOND Street, below Sornee. jal2-tf SEWING MACIIINEN. WHEELER Sc WILS()N SEWING MACHINES. HENRY COY, Agent, Gib CRESTNIJT STREET, SECOND F 1 00R, Machines, with Operators, on !um to Private Falaihes. BRANCH OrfICBI: 7 West STATE Street, Trenton, N. J. 110 CEI4THAL SQUARE, Eastrga, Pa, jaWarn CIGARK, TOBACCO, du). ESTABLISIIED 1700. PETER LORILLARD. SNUFF & TOBAGO() MANUFAUTURER, 16 and 18 OfLAMBERS STREET, .(Forraerly it Chatham street, New York,) Would °all the to , peolat attention of (3/goers and Druggists to his removal, and also the twinges of his manniaoture, ins .Bll.OWN SNUFF. h 1 5 71 1 : 7 ha • Demi rori, aoagrftrippeo, FIL I T Viral ateld too es, Amerman trentlernan. Copen igen, YELLOW 113(1)FP. 130otok, k T . /ib rtoh, 11.1ph Toast_Bootoh, Inds 1 tab T omit. Fresh Honey Dew3eoeh, or Andy foot. TOBAOCO. ..,SSIOIINO. VINE COT CHEWING. SHOEING. no.) , P. A. i... or Own. Bt. Jaye, i'l y4l, Cavendish, or sweet, Spanish, (9. I .9(. 2, m1211,_ 0 , soot &anted Orinoco. Canister, atiEitsfoot, TID Foil Cavendish. ru re Turkis h. Oven), rof Priers will be rent on upplioniton. N. D.—Nato the new article of tura Hcotoh Snuff, oh will be found a superior article for dipping pur- Pales. d:lll4in HAVANA OIGAItS.—A handsozno as sortmoot vow landlnK from brigs " Karneek" and " Alfred Ezell; and for sale low by CIIA BLEB TETE, is2o-10t leo WALNUT ntreet. 300 nein IIAVANA OIUARS---Uom sll-F,J4-7 prising 0 4 all ° tie Oro, Kerp i tt g n a :' A want), rruebeso, ralrna, v01(1101.08. Lairadaria, Yurniri, &0,, S a., of different Bizas and one:linen, now landini t il.atnra, d anor sale bY ja.2 f o-10t ' HO ' C i tliT;l : a , iieet. MARTIN & QUAYLE'S !STATIONERY T rOYs)le AND FANCY GOODS Ai 1031036wmar trr STRE ' E'T, 11LOW 12 . 4-3 0 1119 PII4I4DELPHIA. Cnstantly on hand Forbin.... and mai Aytinles. V INEVIAIC-100 bbls. Clarified Older Vinef.ar, in store and for sale by _ROWLEY, Al3firiVil & CO. 16 nOU'Ill WHARVES. Ja 24 RlCE.—Prime retailing Charleston Rice for 'ale by JAMES GRAHAM to 00., LETITIA om, A LtiOUOL, FLUID, and PINE OIL, in 4 - I, ,barrels and half barrels, manufgotured leech tied delivers& free of t.orteitte. For sale by ROW LEY, ASHIWICNIMI, & 168. WHARVLS. ja24 CIIEBSE.-375 boxes Ilerknuer County Cheese, in store, end for sale bl 0. C. BADIAR & CO.. aRCH mreet.sd dnor ahoy& FOnnt In3l HAVANA ClOAltB.—A full assortment a—n• Just received, in store and bopd. The stleption of dealers la Invited, a,FUQIIXT d2Dlf Nn tOt Rontll FRONT firroot. HORSES TAKEN TO WINTER on a Farm in Delaware (minty. Expellent ride! and experienced groom. Apply No. 821 WA NUT Btraer. poonnd atom. Yo-tf P EPPER.—An invoke received. and fo 471 ■ Mos:9l7EgaMaingillaol. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1860. NEW PUBLICATIONS. RIR J.O lIN FRANKLIN." CAPT. McCLINTOCK'S NARRAVVE OF THE VOYAGE made by the eorew-etennter '• Fox," In search of John Franklin and ha ominanions. One rtiliT',ilitll,4';',rlto'fiTirAl.T: ,, "Fend of Faintly." kn. One volome MVP, cloth, lb genie. TOM BROWN AT OXFORD. Part 111. ()OLDEN RULF. A chat minq new Mary, by the authorof those delightful books," Trap to eAtah Sunbeam," &a. SYDNEY DORELL'B POEMS. A new volume of the " Blue and (4old'' aeries. TB FoOL oF VALITY. By Brooks. PAUL aluttrill B 011En8 IiAMEB, with notee by Lowenthal. One volume, 51.26. BA IttillEBTr.ft TOWE be. By the author of Dr. Thome. agasomil=mu • • . tPLOT IN PRIVATE LIFE. By mine R ANA . mouxws DIARY OF TEE, JOIE h OWN 'VOLUTION. 2 volume 1, 800.. cloth. Illustrated. THE LIVES or E'ti INENT NOW DECEASED. Oho largo octavo volttme• Wtlh Portraits. SEVEN YEARS and OTHER TALES, HT Julia En vanur,h. Peeler. 38 ante. Idtt EFRESSNTATION, A Novel. .13y the autho ress of " Friends and Fortune." NIB ROIL UltOd V. A new story, THE RECTOR OF AIORELAND. A Religious No vel. The attention of HOOK BUYERS fa oalled to the nr rename:it of thu erelflabuteut. All the hooks ore nr ranatfoonvtniently m dt, fawns according toot:dr cha rmer, over wind. 111 lettered the subject. alfogillui to vlsiters n pleasant and easy method of p ing at their langur° the ',gee nod varied Hoek of Hoot. now to MOH), constsimi el N ENV &FAN Ds ft DROLOGICAL, MISCELLAN EOuti df.3•HNTIFIC,A , BIOOR A PHI T., ece. dAttIUEI., HAZ sit , 704 efililtiTNU l'Str4t. For sale by Ja2l.3r AA VERY REMARKABLE BOOK.—Lon doll Literary Gazette. O N THE ORIGIN OF 13MCIES T MEANS OF NATb H HAL SELEOTIONf Or, THE PRESERVATION OF FAVORED RACES IN THE tit RUM; I,E, FOR LIFE. Ity °HAULM. D4HWIN, M. A. - I vul 4.12 Mee. $1.25, [From the London Saturday Review.] " Whou we say that the conolusionsi announced by Mr. Ramie are such as, It establantod, would cram a omnpteto ret ()Intim' 111 the lundairmutel dontrines of Natural History—mid Wither, that a,thousta hie theory be essentially distinct hoar the dbvelopulent theory of the 'Vestiges of Creation,' it tends to tar in the mama ill reetion as to trend' plain the te , moo of established religious belief—we imply that his book is one, of the must impel tant that, for a buns Late, has beau given to the publio, 'No have not been mum; trio foremast tri dpass our Judinient upon It—tor it me a book—we say it eltteratelt—that writ out boar to Le doubt wttri It at the result of lung-continued thought and labor, dr reatart by a man of remark/010 nullity and w,de tittatn moats to conmdrtiet and a theory %Moll has for its Welt wine u..tiaumnt.le . • .. tF rota the N. V. Observer.] " Readers of his deliztitsul book, Voyaf,o c(s. Natu ralist,' will reclining.) to this now work bi power on a writer, whatever Ina> be the scientific verdict on his theories." [From the London Literary Gazette.) " The aoneluthene at which he anus are so startlinS, that they cannot fail to meet with conentsta le oppeee. Lion. Mr. Darwin loweell is far front antieibritaba that they writ be ',Amorally lOQUII od. But he has seabirds a right to demand that they shall be opposed onis m tho same spade! Oltlldnr tad moderation by Isaiah bit a:I -VA/WM) of thorn is seeminently Matins dished." dont by mail to any address on receipt etprice. D. A.PPLETOI , I & CO., Publisher', Nog. Saa at d 343 Broadway. SAMUEL- HAZARD, JR., 724 cuEsT NUT Street, having added the BTATIGNEII'i to his Book business, would 'mono his oninotuats and the ;albite that the 81'ATION DEPARTMENT, Under the otiargo of on seismal clerk, a now in full oteretion. The stook of PAPERS and ENVELOPES pomprists some FIVE II UNPR ED DI FUER I,N L . VA kl bilk 8, HT YLEB, AND dIZI S, of t;NoLloll AND'Aftlaßl- CAN MANUFACTURE. co all the NE WEST and PRETTIEST ETTI'Lial, and of r.LL PRICES. Per- sons desiring it can lotvo their minas stamped on paper without extra charnel. NEW PA 1' l'Elt NH OF oTAM,PB having bean expressly triode for this eitablishruent. DE LA RUE'S cal-Antted vipers aiwarson tr,ed. and warg lt I. auted genuine. Pia FOL.IOS. PAPE Fitton, TO 0111' ~OMPANtON. I.ADlEtt"ritasELLltto BA B and WRITING LIOXEn. of the host nutnufac.• tors—a terraessmtment constantly on hats Among the latest _novelties in 'apays ano ItrekVall are the ARRA pa PER.% o fUkth, Wlllll5 , PINK. V 0 LT TINTeI. Thee a A It ILLS PAPERB, bozos drive quires, a V t imra g iud I'M° CARDS ENGRAVED, PRIN FED, or witITTI44, a the very lest manner Ijepublio arm invited to cad and examine the Sample Book before purchasing elsewhere. .141 ti AN IMPORTANT WORK, This day in pabliahad— Man—Moral and Physical; or.tha intliienoe of Health and thiamin on Hailstone LiDarit3lo4 , At Rev. iwiehli H. Jonos, ly. L. moo. 41. Thls yolk ham a"-axed tha a ttsintinn of tho author tot many 'OATS, nhlisd by Viirmilt reading and mach ex Penance. It m not knora that there it 'minims York on the Immo 'elle in the English littigunhe. Publisked by WILLIAM d, & ALFAVIIi huamErt. Na.MU CAPTAIN JOHN BROWN'S LIVE AND RELPER.B IMPENDINQQR'O3. for sale nt the Ants-Sownry Onion. 107 North rl rrei titreet• atO4t* NO W El GIFT FOR ALL BRABONS• ILLUMINATZD SDITTOW IS CSIVLSIUZZOTON't3 FAREWELL ADDltlilk" TO TUX PEOPLE OF THE UNITED BTATEB. Embelliabod with Arabeinuo Desigrai, - ia 0010:11, pr'ff RECENT VIEWS OP MT. VX.R.NON The pablishers feel tot reared with a oonrotion that a time has come which demands a more thorou4h and solo' examination of the pr.nelples and troths con tained in this great Kate Payer ; and that it should be more generally &duped runcrng the people at larfe. To this and dm have striven to sire the "Add rein' a form and garb in some measure worthy its importance, had calculated, the; Oust, to popularise acid sive it perms, pence. The "Address" is inquarto farm, printed in colors. on superior plate pacer. The putdie he r cannot but hope that with the attraotive externals or illuirtinated typo graphy, and aniline embellishinent, it may be 00111- mended to public taste. and tot tettehints, by 0040 DIMADII. be more green% ely reennimentled to, and fast ened upon, the popular mind end heart. Price of the " Address;' smote oopies, one dofbr. Early order. respite fully whetted. A liberal discount to th tirade. be all the 13 °heifers in the United Ptates. C. Ors and oommunications iny be andiesseil to Uf.Vß4il-UR k COMPANY. .la l -tuthslm 112 South Third street, Philadelphia. N'' E W V all BOOKS TIM GREAT TRIBULATION; Now complete in Two Volutnee. Reprinted from the London Edition. DR. COMMINOII NEW WORK. which bag already awakened such n prodigious excitement throughout the religious oonnon itY• SECOND SERIES NOW READY. The Lecture• contained in the SECOND SEATER differ somewhe , from thooe that precede them. In the Ivonle or the nuttier, they 'relate to 'ho ehlrimier and condition, the hope's, happiness an destiny of the peo ple of God. • * • There will t o found in this part much to cheer. enimere. and modem them, in eir outristancee of unprecedented trouble." One elegant volume. Muslim Pries 81. IN PRESS. WOMAN OA FEMME.) By M. MICHELEI'. A oquel to LOVE IL'AMOVR.) Thin book hneJuut b•ou publinked in Paris. nod ix now In press, trnmolatod by Dr. J. W. Palmer from on etri) copy. Reedy itumedintely One volume, untlorm with Lolls, by the enmo nuthor. Nu° s l. TILE HABITS OF 000 D SOCIIITY. An Interesting and moutons Hand-bunk of F,tosiette. Reprinted from the La; bah copy, whieh, Jost published, has already pealed mad several editions. One volume, 32m0., mitalin. Prow 6126 RUDD & CARLE MN, Pollishere, Lail anthtf Lw trItAN It Ht., New York. 11'A NS' GIFT BOOK LIST-NEW . BnoKB. IF YOU ARE IN WANT OF ANY 1100 k P. BUY THIOI AT GEORGE (I, 1-LyAhdt , BUY Tit EM AT Li EOR,GE G. EV • Nio I"Tliti A T ROE,i. VA Gift Book Flora, No. m Chestnut atreet, UM Book &ors, No. 43 , 1 Cl. slitit street. 'Tut the hest place in le sit,. Books are sold as clasp di at y other store, and Corr have the ailvaitate Of getting a ti irphoime Gilt will] each Book. NEW LUBLICATIONtI. LIFE OP THE E;vIPREaS JuSh-PLIINF. By Cecil B. Hattlet. One volutos,l2nin. cloth. Pries L THE Q,UF,LN'S FATE. A Tale of the Days of ling Bacot One Toluine,lFion,clolle. yr:ne ti t TH BI BLIC AL. 41L,AHON W LIN . A Family Guide to Horlytural Ronclicrt. One volume, 12tu0., cloth. Pppgqa 1 ,..RT OF DANCING. BY E. Ferrero. One vol., Ilmo,. cloth. Frio ft et, THF. A DVL.NTUIII-.S OF JONATHAN HOME BB By Ham Slick. Jr. One volume. 12m0., cloth. THIIOOALED CIIIh.F, or ri) Years Ace By the 1"!11.11 fffff ,17,1 u 07 ,u 1INI,HY v P lir i STA l g tenr. hholtoo Maokenzie. One volume, Into, 11 W 80 - 22t,i) HE HELP ITC no. The Matt 'rri umphant. Dv A. Roo. Ono volume, itnio. Price . BOOK OF POPULAR BONUS. The best oollertion of Sonia ever publiahed. One rries THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF lIAJI BABA, the Oriental 'Traveller. econproona man) animas ne sorlptions ot the Mysteries of the Herrin, etc. Ouo volume. 12mo. Prim. :it. ME6lOlHrt OF VIDDCO. the velehrattal Freueh Po Beeman. One voluinu.l2tio., cloth, with a Gilt. Friue 8146. THE BOOK pie PLAYH I FOR VON R AMUSEMENT AND PRIVATE THEATRICAL ENTERTAINMENTS. Being a t lillocti• n of Oro'inal and •electod CO tlEDlhitt.. PLA Y` 2 , CHAR • BES. A:0 r n , With fu rh-sriptions 01 Col:macs, Beehery, Proper ties,te &ho.,,ind every direction to a private or adpublic, per by formance. The whole oa•ofull) arranged and apd HILAR N. STEELE, PH.0011157. Handsomely bound w one voluine,l2ino., cloth. Price S HOOK OF HUMOROUS POETRY. Containing ohoice *elections from popular authors. Ono volume, 12nio. Price 91. Tlik OLD STUNT'. 'MANSION. 13y cloarlas .1. Peter sopp plume 12d1.2., ) wil h. ,c sift. L',Oile 9 . YglnrD.ll. Pore 91 .(2 1 r . DA 11, Rev. J. THE, Nlah rnha FIRE. Prioe 91.25. LOVE, L 'AMa R.l By 5110101ot. 0110 a'ol., P TiSK YEARS OF PREACIMR LIFE. Ily Milburn. °nl. Al v e l Vlll 3 . i l4 m l l l Etna n had and you burn the advantage of getting a Oat with eaclißook that >Liu Pu ert e n B. , end One trial tar t enureyou that the best plate an the city where you should purelin EV NO ' Books is OE01131.: O. GIFT BOOK _Ed' 111.1811111 ENT, 439 CHESTNUT St , Philadelphia, la2o-1f Two doore halo. Filth. on the never aide. VALENTIN P:S. —FIS ki ER & BROTHER. Our splendid annual eort mon tof VA LENTINEd, now tomb , for the trade. We call the nttontton of dealers to our popular 3'u, tin), 315, AND P2O AFNORTMENT VA- L gram vs. Each asanyttnent noraplnto in itHelf, and AI )11011 we wit Warrant to Kiva aatiefaotion. 1 , 154117,11 111161 . 111 M. la2o.ot' 10 South SIXTH. Street. R,UMS OP $lO,OOO AND .5,000 TO BE loaned on ISlortogn of Cqy Property. 8. W. I'HACEAII.4 & 80N, Je2l-3t• tO Eouth THIRD Rtreel. B _ URNING FLUID ALCOHOL, AND PINE OIL, In parr le and half barrel. Ingmar', tured and for Edo by ROWLEY. /181111UttNER & CO.. N 0.16 a Wharven I all MAOKEREL.-485 bbls. Nos. 1,2, and 3 Maokerel, in asmortedFkee L l Prtekovee, of the latest catc.h. or sato In C. 0. B ALER & (A)., AR( ri street, 2d door Altovo. Front. In2l M I✓SS lIIAOKEREL—A fine invoice of bbln., bin, rs., ntr tiewberyport ineero- Alen t st nmali it. of re Ilex iftviikNtlevl, to re Aca ler eve tt , k t 1 1.11 d Lt 4 Oljt Vitts6. TURRSDAY, JANUARY 26, MO, A New Poet--Sydney Dobell. Tickaor 8: Flolda have just issued two vo lumes Of poetry, in which, wo think, genius and tahat are decidedly exhibited. The wri ters arl male and female. Both are English. The genius Is represented on the person, or rather by the heart and soul, of Sydnoy Do bell. Tho talent Is manifested In this compo sitions of Dinah Maria Mulook, author of that truthful, touching story "John Halifax, Gen tleman." Whg some admirers of Miss Muloeit's may exclaim, Do you affirm that the author of trJohn Halifax" and "A Life for a Life" is not a woman of genius I—Not we. She has genital-4hr writing prose fiction, but she has merely a t.uack, at the most only a talent for writing poetry. There Iles the difference. Sydney Doboll, we dare Bay, could not write a novel half as well as Dinah Mulock. But per eontrd, Dinah Blalock must be born again be -fore she can write Poetry one-sixteenth part as well as Sydney Doboll. There is very little difference between their ages. Miss Mulock is almost thirty-four years of ago, and Mr. Doboll is only two years her senior. From a brief biographical prel:ace to " Poems, by Sydney Doboll," now first pub lished in this country as one of the Boston far famed " blue and gold" series, we take the flowing particulars, believing that readers like to know something about authors. Sydney Dobell, born in April, 1821, is eldest son of John Doboll, author of a work entitled "Man unfit to Govern Man," and grandson by the maternal side of Samuel Thompson, well known in the earlier part of the present century na a leader of political reform in the city of London, and as the founder of a Christian Church intended to be on the primitive Scriptural model called " Freethinking Christians." At the age of thirteen, the Dobell family moved from London to Cheltenham, whore the father still carries on the business eta wine merchant. Ms son, Sydney, became his father's clerk at this early age, and re mined so employed for the succeeding twelve years. While thus eegaged, his educa tion was carried on, chiefly by his another, and, at the age of twenty-two, he married. In 1844, aged twenty.four, he wrote his first book (published in 1830), a dramatic poem, called "The Roman," and about that time made an arrangement which released him 11. om active business, making him a sleeping partner in his father's firm. Ms next poem, also in drientio form, entitled ((Balder," wan about two years in hand, and the first part was finished in 1858 and published in 1854. Im mediately alter, the condition of his wife's health compelled him to seek medical advice in Scotland, where he remained three years, spending the winters in Edinburgh and the summers in die Highlands. Ile made the acquaintance of Alexander Smith, during this Scottish sojourn, and joined with him in writing a small volume of " Sonnets of the War," also producing, separately, " England in Time of War," suggested by the Crimean contest. - Mr. Globell has principally lived In the coun try. Except when travelling on tho Confluent or In Scotland, he haa resided in Glouatershlre, chiefly at Charlton Kings, a beautithl valley of the Cotswolds, near Cheltenham. In the spring of 1868, he took Cleave Tower, a small fort nbar the highest point (1,160 feet) of his fa vorite Cotswoldhills, where he novrillves, over looltlng an English landscape of eighty miles by may, l • Ills that poem, « The Roman," published under the nom dc plum. of 46 Sydney Yendis," was received with unanimity ofapplause, which l i es porhapa never fallen to the lot of a poem by an unknown author. Even that wet-blanket of literature, the London ✓lt/enaum hailed the author as a great poet. In a note to the second edition (February, 1852) Mr. Dobell said ' , That I puller Rile Bondition to go forth without the customary revision and correction ro. quires. to modesty, a word of explanation. "Of the faults of.the bock I em fully conscione. knew them when it went to press; I never forgot them in the applause of a generous reception, and if I ever look into it again they will, doubtless, bu additionally Offunsive. ...Lint I did, toy best in 1819; and in 18.52 I will not alter what wan done Whether I can yield purer poetry at eight and twenty than when I white 'The Roman ' at twenty.five, my readers may in due time have occasion to oonolder; but-- classic authority to the oontrary notwithatamling— I hold that to beautify the work of that day by pusslog some of its members through the mind a this, were to borrow the expedient of that imbi. dolts artisan who recast the limbs of Cupid In the mould of Psycho. '• What I have written I have written. The words Dramatio Poem' in the iltle are not mine. • Poetry ' and A Poem' aro not necessarily aqui pollents. In the next faw yearn I hope to write more • Poetry;' ton years hence, if Qod plaits°, A Pony." " Balder," on the other hand, albeit a bet tor poem, was vehemently attacked. Tho critics said that the hero, not excessively ami able, was held up for imitation. Thu author says : cc The present book Is the first part of a work, nhich 1 hope to completo in three parts. I intend as the principal subject of that work the Progress of a Human Being from Doubt to Faith, from Chaos to Order. Not of Doubt incarnate to Faith incarnate, but of a doubtful mind to a faithful mind." Hu has designedly arann his hero a poet, ant an egotist who has built his throne upon a mountain of self con ceit, and continually revolves On a pivot cc England in. the Titus of War" met with rather an angry reception—but has finally been acknowledged to be composed of many noble lyt its. Front these, and the sonnets in this present notice, shall wu quote. But the nimbi of Mr. Doboll's poetry is iu this pocket-volume of t• blue and gold." Hero, tint of all, are two honest, earnest sonnets, the last worthy of Wordswmth's pen, upon '. AMERICA, " Men say. Columbia we 1111(.11 hear thy gum. But in whet ton:us shall ho thy hattleiory Not that our sae. did lore in years tone by. When all the Pilgrim letherellfir6 little .one In nitrite Mimes of Entailed Rack, and sea Thy satchelled ancester ! behold, he runs To mine, end, ebispod, they tread the equal 164 To the e ono vial e sohool, where side b , e.de Thep spell 'our Father.' Hard by, the twin pride Of that pray hall alnico an c ient oriel gleams Thro' pun 'Animal pines, with looks of Wilt Our' •tor-mothers tit beneath one tree, Meanwhile our Ithakspeare wonders past and dreams hits Helena sod 'tenni .. Shall we fight 1" 'Nor force flue frnuo shall murder us: Oh ye Who. north or south. on east or western land. N litre to noble sow dm nay truth ior truth. Freedom for freedom, Live for love, and OA For (rod t Oh ye who in etetnel youth dpui , k with n living and curative flood This univr rsat klnghsh, and do eland Ito bra ttliinr book t live worthy of that grand Rotolo utterance—parted. vela whole; Far, yet uneven) ,--ohildren brave and free Of the grant hioiher-tonsue. and ye shall be Lords of an empire wide nti Shaki‘peare'e soul, sl.3blime as Milton's Immemorial theme, And rich an Chmwer'e 'porch, and for as Spencer's dream" Next, a homely lyric. Only a mother questioning about her child. Homely—but, oh, how true : HOW'S MY 130 Y "11e.133i10r of the see How'. my boy — rof boy ?" " What'a 3 our tmy'e mom good ' , alto, And in what goo] ship Fooled ha t" " My boy John— Me that went to sea— Whet cue I for thn ship, sailor 1 My boy's tio boy to inn. "You tome busk (Minion, And net know ray John t I ought as well hove ached some latnlstnnn Yonder down in tho town. There's not nn nee in all the parish But he knows to John. " How's toy buy—ins boy? And unless you let me know I'll sueor you Ore no sodur, Blue Iseket or no. Brass buttons or no sailor, Anohor and Crown or no ! Here his ship was the ' Jolly Briton,"'— "Speak low,vonutzt, speak low I" " And why should i apenk low, sailor, About my own boy John I If I won loud as I am proud I'd tune him over the town! Why abouid I speak tow, bettor t" "That pod ship went down." " How's my boy—my boy ? \V fist cars I {or the ship, sallistlf I was never aboard Oer. lie she afloat or' be she aground, Striking or swimming, I'll be bound, Her owners can afford her ! I tin how's my John 1" "Every man on board went down, VA *Ty man aboard her." "Vow's my b y—my boy! What ears I fur the men, sailor! I'm not their mother— How's me bry —my bo. t Tell me of him and r o other: ]tow's my boy—my boy 1" Lastly—for the space of dally newspapers is limited—ono bit of black verse; blank 'verse as it should be, and not prose broken into lines, every other lino ending with such diminutives n.e of,from, to, et id OMI2O genus. No, a true, thoughtful poem, breathing of the country : THE SNOWDROP IN THE SNOW. 0, putt. of Faith! The Earth le rook—the Heaven The dome of a great palsoe all of lee, Huse-buds. Dull light distils through from 'Mee Thickened and gross, Cold Fancy droops her wing, And cannot range. In winding-rheas of snow Lie, every thought of any pleasant thing. hare forgotten the green earth; slip goal Deflowered, aid lost to every summer hope, Had sitteth on an iceberg at the Pole; • My beast assumes the landscape of - mine Glee Moveless and white, chill Handfed with hoarse. rims ; The Bun Mensal( le heavy and leeks shier Or on the eastern hill or western clogs ; The world without 'stems far and tong ago; To silent woods stark famished winds lowa driven The last lean robin—gibbering winds of tear: Thou only direst to believe in spring. Thou only emilest, Lady of the Time! Even as the stars come up out of the sea Thou glue from the Forth. How is It down In the dark depth,? Bheuld I there. 0 Flower, For beauty? bhall I find the Bummer there Met manifold, MI In an ark of peace? ' And Thou, a lone white Dove, art thou sent forth Upon the winter deluge ? It shall cease. But not fur thee—pierced by the mine.' North And spent with the Evangel. In what hour The flood abates thou wilt have oloeed thy arias' For ever, When the happy living things Of the old world coma forth upon the new I know my heart shall miss thee ; and the dew Of summer twilight' shall shed teen fur me —Tears liken thee, ah. purest! than Mine wen— t:pop thy vestal grave.° vainly fair! Thou should'et have °obie destiny, who, like A Prophet. art shut out from kind end kin r Who on the winter silence coolest in A still small voice. P tle Hermit of the Year, FloWer of the Wilderness! oh, not for the* The Jocund playmates of the maiden sprint. Fur when she delicate forth with oymballed feet, Waking a-sudden with great weloomilf:, Each calling each. they burst from hill to deli In answering music, But thou art a bell A passing bed, snow-muffled, dim turd sweet. As is the Poet to hie fellow-men. So mid thy drifting snows, 0 Snowdrop, Than Oifted, in south, beyond them, but no less A enowdrot. And thou shalt complete Ms lot And bloom as fair as now when they are not. 1. Lou art the wonder of the seasons, 0 First-born of Beauty. ;As the An g el near Oozed on that Brat of Ilving things wh.eb. when The blast that ruled coca Chace o'er thews Leaves of primeval palms did sweep the plain. Clung to the new-made sod. and would not Clive. $o gaze I hi on thee am/ the reign Of Winter. And because thou twee. I live. And art thou happy is thy loneliness? Oh couldst thou hear the shouting of the floods, Oh couldat thou know the stir among the tress When—as the herald-voice of brew on breeze Proclaims the marriage pageant of the dyrtittg Advancing from the South—each hurries on His wedding garment, and the love chime ring Thro' nuptial vaLeys! No, serene and lone, 1 will not flush thy cheek with joys like thee*. Bens for the rosy morning; at grey prime To hen; the head and pray. Thou driest well I will not tell thee of tha bridal train. No; let Hi) Moonlight die before their day A Non serums the Mudge., thou and ther. Each bath some fond sweet Mlles that cloth strike One of nor trembling heartstrings mnsioal. Is not the hawthorn for the Queen of May t And cuckoo flowers for whom the cuckoo's voice Hails, like an answering sister, to the woods? Is not the maiden tiL shit a in the Teas? Shall not the babe and buttercup rejoins Twine in one meadow? Are not violet, ell Br name or nature for the breast of Dams? For them the primrose, pale as star of prim. Fer them the wind flower. trembling to a sigh, For them the dew stands in the *pellet der Thal bunk in April on the deleted lea ? Like their they flourish and like them they fads And live beloved and loving. Bat for thee— For such a bevy how art thou arrayed. Flower of the Tempest. ? What but thou with them? Thou shalt be pearl unto a diadem Which the Ilea7ene Jewel. Thee shill deck the brows Of Joy and wither there. But Mom shalt be A Martyr's garland. Those who, undismayed, To thy spring dreams art true amid the snows As ha to better dreams amid the games." Sydney Dobell rhymes properly. Re eschews the monstrosities called allowable rhymes. Only the other day a correspondent sent us some verses which we rejected, partly (not wholly) because the rhyme and rhythm were bad. In return he sent on a long missive to show that other writers, acknowledged to be poets, had sometimes, through carelessness, made bad rhymes. As if the faults of ram of genius were to ho construed into virtues! We have shown, we hope, that Sydney Do boll Is a poet. Yet, what sad blunders and littlenesses has he fallen into I Here, of a poem called .c The Wind," in six stanzas, are two, as specimen bricks t "Oh the weld, the Told, Oh the weld, the wold Wats wtnter stark. Oh the level dark. Ott the wold, the weld, the Told! and so on. This is what Shakspeare calls "damnable iteration." Aud here, nearly as absurd, are stanzas in a poem called "The German Legion :" " Oh the wo!d. the we'd, Oh the weld, the woad: Oh the no story tas blasted tree Ogi the weld, the weld, the a, o.d: " In the er.t boxide the water, in rho whlte not by the - Teter, The white cot by the white wetter, There they laid the Cloonan meld. "Singing grief vr.th eiery leaf. Sadder grief critli +Uttar loaf, Sweeter loaf Willi iiwzoteir grief, Bo 'twits aunt in ft dirk tougue." Vim repetitions are 7vry billy. Mr. hobell, if foolish enough to write them, should not have published such were verbiage. Such to not poesy'. Ito is a man of manly mould and habits, and should have done bettor. Ills biographer says "Though by constitution and habit pro.oninently a thinker, Mr. Dobell's private life is sufficiently practical. An ex cellent man of business, an expert rider and driver, aceustorued to the gun, the ride, the rod and the 'oar, he is singularly unlike the fancy portraits of a metaphysical poet In vihich his adverse critics Indulge." Dinah Mulock, and tier versicles, must wait for another day. We would merely add, that Ticknor & Field have done well in admitting Dawn into their blue and gold " corpa. By the way, they have just published a superb edition (large paper, gilt edges, and so on,) of Oliver Wen dell Holmes' great poem 'in prone, The Pro fessor at the Breakfast Table, with the Story of Iris." May Holmes, flourishing in Immortal youth, ever give no an annual book like thlis I A Sp y tv TUE FAXILY.—Some time ago there was an association formed in Paris, under the title of "..Voriels pour /am , Saws les Maris." The name sutholeutly explains the °Licata of the society and the 'Aureole!' of the persona eho would probe. bly be its assooictes. Competent agents were oho. dial, and, it is said, nothing escaped their vigilance. It was in vain that a Frennh husband came back to his apartments In the evening, prepared to an. count for althorinua and weil.speut, d a y. lie was met in his salon by his wife, calm ad Deathly, and well-informed as the Council of Three. Ile was suf fered, for a time, or rather invited and led on, to expatiate in his little elute of Ingenious Abs. It was not until hie powers of Mon were fairly ex. hau.sted that the inexorable partner of his desti nies put down her crochet-work, looked him full in the taco, with a hard, stony glance, and said : '• lielas, Adolphe, how have you passed your day 7 jer vats t'explicruer!" EVOly partial. tar of the manner in which his time had been spent during the period of his absence from the guardian• chip of the loving eye was then deliberately related to that astonished and immoral Frenchinau. . . Ile had not ieeu at the Bourse; he had not been to moot hie Bourdoeux correspondent about that parcel of wines; tie had not, unfortunately, wasted—if wasted it could bo culled—a part of the precious working hours of the day at the Bureau de Benfaisance, as he hypocritically pretend• ed. Oh! no; hie time had been wasted quite in another way. A slip of paper was produced from the workbox, from which the steeliest details of his misspent day were recounted in order to the treacherous culprit. A oaso was decided on Satur day lam, by Bo Cresswell Cresswell. It is that of "Bopwith vs. Hopwith," which is an excellent ex ample of the mischief which arise• from the em ployment of professional spies to dotucstio life, more especially when the etnoluments of the spy depend upon the extent and importance of the dir ouveries. ritiould the practice of spydom become universal, farewell to all dotuestto eonfidenoe and happiness The wife or husbAutt, as the case may Le, will take measures to set the other's vigilance at defiance, and it will be strunge, indeed, if oc casion does not emus to those who am ever on the watch for it The country may well be grateful to Bir Oresswell °rumen for having struck a decisive blow ut this wicked practice before it became hardened BIM a system.--London Times. 1.7' Touching the rumored marriage of (iari- Lunn, letters hemmo reiterate the statement, the day named being the 15th of January. Ilia eon has already married the young daughter of Count Enttnondt Ord rixtoon); the widowed (funeral marries the elder daughter, aged twenty, who le deseribed as endowed with the attributes g4att depluted In Diana Vernon. TWO CENTS. Letter from New lurk. PARES GODWIN'S NIR HISTORY or FILANCIA—DIRRY AND JACESON . II PORTHCOMINO WORIS—HOX. HO WARD SUNLIT—RAILROAD nylons MICHIGAN SOUTURRN, GRAND AND lIARLID--CiAw- TORD's STATCE "DANCING JINNI" ARRITID •ROY LONDON—ACCTION BALI Or PICICRkS kT NNW TOR( ARTISTS—III NIW/•DOTS' LODGING NOUSE. (C 4 nrespoodones of The Prowl Nsw Your. Jan. 11, 1860. Harper d Brothers wilt publish about the lit of Stroh, The History of Frame, volume I, (Authat Gaul,) By Parke Godwin. This is the fret eam. plate and elaborate ,hlatory of France, drawn from original sources, orer attempted in the English language. Mr. Godwin has been many years en. gaged In its preparation, and has spared no puns to make it worthy of his own reputation. Its pub li.mtion will add another to the Hat of great hlsto riot works by whioh Bancroft, Hildreth, Freioott, and Motley have already abed lustre upon their country. Tour correspondent alluded, a few days since, to a new book, soon to be inticd by Derby &Jackson entitled "Adventures and Observation, on the Wert Coast of Africa and Its Islands " By Rev. Charles W. Thomas, member of the Georgia Con ference, ad chaplain of the African Squadron In 1655-'56. The chapters of this work were Ant contributed by the author to tb•Chatteetos Chris tian Advocate, where they attracted marked at tention from the secular as well as the religious press. 811100 their publication there, -they has been asked for in book form by the Georgia Con ference, and so urgent has been the demand for It, that, In one conferenoe alone, it has been ordered by one hundred and thirty itinerant preachers, who are bookseller.. At the present time. the facts and views which the author presents with reference to the African slave-trade, are moot timely, and It is believed that they are m harmony with those of the Methodist Bplsoopal Church South. Derby S Jackson have pot to press, since my last announcement, "Our Bible Class, and the good that came of it," by Mica Fairchild; and the complete works of Thomu flood, in sia valuate'. A report was circulated in the religious and se cular press, a few weeks ago, that the lion. Ed ward Stenly, of Cal:lards, formerly in Congress from North Carolina, designed taking Holy Orders In the Epiaoopol Church. The report is without foundation. Mr. S. contemplated nothing of the kind. Re lies recently returned to California to devote himself to professional and agricultural pursuits, on his fine randm, some thirty miles from San Francisco. e There is no foundation for the rumor that the Michigan Southern Railroad Company have sold or leased a part of their road to the (}rand Trunk Company of Canada. There is, however, good rea son is believe that the Orand Trunk Company have In contemplation an arrangement which will give them the control of the 11‘riem Railroad from Al. bony to this city, and them furnish another 000neet lion between the Grand Trunk and the Atlantic Coast. Crawford's status, " Dancing Jenny," presented by his widow to Dr. Fell, who attended the artlet in his latest moments, has arrived at this port. in the ship Palestine, from London. The Erasing Post says the work was a favorite with the la mentedartlet, being modelled slier his daughter, whose name it bears. It is the life airs, and repro tents her to the attitude of dancing Dr. Fell has been requested to plate* it In some pubilo gallery, in this city, that the admirers of Crawford May hare an opportunity of viewing it. ale will proba bly *amply with the expressed desire. The annual auotion sale of the New York artists 13 to take plane in February, at the rooms of the deademy of Deeign, in Tenth-street Church. Ken sett, Durand, tlignou.t, and nearly all the promi nent artists of the ally, will oontribote to it. I have Olre or twine spoken of the eagerness with which the young and middle-lied people of the *Sty avail themselves of the advantages offered by the Cooper Institute. The following facts, quo ted from the Tribune, will interest those of your readers who take an Interest In the progress of be nevolent institutions of thb: sort : "During the limited time the reading-room of the Institute has been opened, it Las been well at teeded ; It is, however, capable of accommodating • still larger number of percent, and will be cotton more frequented when it is generally realised that we have /tare a reading-room equal to any other in the city, and that It la free to all During the Arc eix week* 20,337 persons visited It, of whom 1,945 were ladies. 'the number of vialters, male and le. male, is registered every boor by one of the young ladles in charge of the room. It Is found that while the number of lady 'Flatters leery's** gradu. ally from 9 to 12 A. 31., Is greatest between 12 and 1, and than decreases, the number of masoullne visitors gradual) y Increases through the day up to 6 P. M., when there is a sudden 111011111. from 20 to 100 or more per hour. During the hour from to 10, on one evening, there were 242 viaitera ; this was at the *lose of • lecture. From noon to IP. M. there are nearly as many ladies as gentlemen in the room. Ladle' will find the foreign illustra ted papers a great attraction. Visitors will dud 12 New 1 ork dallies, 10 dailies of other American ei- Hee, 3 foreign dailies. 40 American weeklies, 23 fareign weeklies, 101 magasinet, 22 Prenob and 26 German papers and tnagaalues." During the year 1550, the Newebeys' Lodging house furnished 16,E.00 lodgings to about 4,300 in dividuals. 11.701 meals were furnished to the same time, and during the same period 229 boys deposited $BO3 10 in the bank of the institution, saved from their earnings. Letter trent IYaah►ngton. Worreenoneenoe of The Prem.] Watsmains, Jan. 24,1830 Douglas and his speech have occupied an hour in the Rouse to-day. The Illinois delegation are more divided on the letter, If potedble, than they have been on the helper book. The Repubileans, through Parnswortle made an assault upon it, charging It with proposing measures which were tantamount to a slave coda for the Territories. Logan and Ma Clereand defended Judge Douglas' pesitinm, and expounded what was actually meant by the propo sition and restommendation now before the Senate. Mr. Logan was particularly enthusiastic and ef- Naive. lie agreed with every sentence uttered by hit leader, and showed that it was their inten tion, if possible, to pass laws to prevent insurrection and oonepirecy on the part of one State, or its people, against those of another, end to carry out the laws which make the atealicg of horses, mettle. uegrou, or other property, a penitentiary offence. At one o'cleck, Lien. Thomas Corwin took the 1110 r and resumed, in continuation of his remarks yesterday afternoon. lie applied himself in a less desultory manner, explaining why he bad oxn• pied so much time yesterday in getting at lbe point be desired to prevent. So many questions had been put to him that It was Impoestble for him to keep to his theme Carotin is a natural actor. Re worn hare made a capital diplomat, or a feet rate comedian. The arts which go to make the latter enter largely Into the neceseary requirements to attain perfection in the former line. !lobes all these good-natured resource's, those arts which conceal art, and a kind of sly gravity which is a negation of anything he deed not care to hear or admit, that are most offeetleo in '• bluffing off," as the gaping is, any one who may think he has applied any re marks to him. lie merthals his details as if they were generalities, as a military officer would move a brigade, and so prevents detached single com bats in the breadth of the general engagement. Then be never gets into apeasion,butaays unpala table things to a humorous tone of astonishment, or In a comical querulousness that provokes a laugh from hie opponents, but is remembered many a day after they appear In type. There the actual words appear, without the manner of the speaker. The drollery which disguised his own thoughts, and the humor that mislead' his hear ers, the rapid changes from grave to gay, the wave of the hand, the motion of the body, the opening of the mouth In well-feigned astonishment, the oomprosiion of the lips in a ludi crous emphasis on some distracting point—these vanish with the Amor and tee orator, remaining only in the memory ; but the words, the arrows of which the action and manner were the directing feathers—they remain In all their simple and un disguised force. lie made a defence of the Repulettetutt party, ex posing the shallow especifent of connecting them with the acts of Brown. Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe held the opinion which the Republicane of this day bold. If the views of them Revolu tionary men were right, then the Democracy was wrong, and vire versa. Ilepletured John Brown a fanatio, as probably having read Jefferson's Notes on Virginia, the writings of Washington and Madi- son, and pondering on them in the mountains of Now York, grew desirous to carry out their ideas, feeling that, as be said, the angels of the Lard would camp about him while engaged in forward ing the views of these patriots. Senator Toombs had time floor on Deuglas' tesolu tions, and has menial the day in a apeeoh on the great (Ideation of the day. He is in laver of the proposed measure, but is not quite sure bat that it is too late. He asserts that several of the North ern States have broken faith with the South by their actions on the fugitive-slave law; and in rep port of the cause he argued for, queues from the speeth of Webster, in 1550, in valet' he Call the., if the Northern States did not keep the compact, the South should not be bound by it. As for the mon who tigned the Helper mom. rueniatton, he thought that there was not a State. from Waehlngton to the Rio Grande, In which any ono of them would not, and justly, be amenable to penal enactment. With Ruch people, he could have no common country. There was a respectable attendance In the galleries; and. on tha floor, to alltlon to a full Senate, Meure. Kettt, Pryor, Da Jernetto, 134rnott, BoaUgny, Pore4eridilee, THE WEEKLY PRESS. Tan 'Moony Pima wili be rat to • Illebeenbeve ti moll (ter soave. ta adlosed at— I VII Throe Loewe, Five CoNee, " . ..... --. see Ten •• .. .. __. ISA Tont? Cores ' " (to ose &demo) Mal Twenty Copan'. or over. " (to oars* of sub ba (*untie r.) eseb.....— --........•.. 3! Par • Mob ofTvez (vow or over. we trill S M anus ropy to Me getter-me at the C. Postimasts r itg.cieted to sat as anon ha Tax WILILLT Pans. CAL IFOR.YIA PRESS. baud Saal-Mostily la tame for the Oinks etaB n rs. Pugh of Alabama, and other Repreeentativsa, ref* at'entire Menem .ka I ear!, Senator Toombs is gull 'peaking. Ent Timums. PERSOIIA.L ANO POLITICAL. Woo mut. dertee.—The two house of the V. ginta Legislature have recently weed a bill se thoriting a lout of half* tattlioa dollars for the per• °hare of arms and munition. of .ar. The band inge elate public armory at Richmond are to be pot in complete erdar, and a =LOW armorer en gird at a salary of twenty-Are handled dollars. The Governor is authorised to purchase all num- Hale and mulaldons and patent rights in newly %- vented army, that may be neer/airy for tie opera tion of the armory. Tb • Troy Arena, of the 18111 Intl, =kat the somewhat ha:inedible statement that there Is a voisano In Putnam eounry, in the State of NSW York, Ina mountain known u Break Beek Moue train. It sap that "there is an opening of a canentou description, tontesrhat integrant In its direction, and twenty feet or more in disaster, oat of which, at certain times, there issue ID UM of matter with great fortis. These eruption' are composed of vitreous and mineral subsidizes& ot "axioms kinds, torahs , " with fragments et trees, and net unfrequently mingled with it rtiarses at animal existence. There nausea amount same times, in hulk, to went tow; they cave a deaf ening roar and:aro accompanied by tris and sa,ka. The inistimoe of this volcano has not been knows until lately, which is probatly the rows that 1$ has attracted no more notice." Stearns Siticza —Tele gentleman to the tee ing aim in the Untied States asset' Lc craontratir, the doetrine that the people of a Territory bars any rista to exclude darer, if they do not west It. Be Imams that slavery emir,. in the 'ferrite:tee, and that the On rim mast protect IL A few lean age, while in the Peansilrania l.egistature, he ad.-nes ted acd voted for the resolutiotL—Ciams re new WICIRL.I9, The existing war with Mexico may result in the acquisition of new tartitsry in tag Union; and whereas, meararet are now ?rueful in Congress, hiving in view the appropriation of money, and the eonferiizg anttessity epee the treaty-making power to this end : therefore, Resalrel, That oar &naturist:id net Btpre• Inn t. tires in Congress be requested to Tuai slavers any measarea whatever by watch territory will sa• true to the Colon, unless. In a per of the the fan dameutat law upon which any oompari or user, for this purpose L hued, slavery or servitude, except for crime, shall he Grav e r pm hi hited. LARUE PAL!. or Nuances —On Teasley last. Styr the Savannah Repx..ihean of the 14th lest, to.; oegroee were so'd et Coddler: to aside the burioess of Mears. W. i; Lockett, telt rut,' contractors, one of whom is deceased. Then has probably near been offered in liburgie b One e lot of negro.' at one time. Ont of the I.S.oedy ten were children sal "IS women. Of the moats lag T 3 men. on. was 60 jean old, another N. and Done of the balance over 32 years old. lb. Mims were cask, and the Floes paid were enorcenna. She avenge of the entire sale wu51.354- A tow ohanin brought $2 MO. The day prerioas, zee , day, lien. J emu W. Armstrong sold 61 nertsou Mooteinmc They were en ordinary w.lleetims, jut nob as would be gathered on a plantation. Priers were about twenty roan, the reasinder bur tog women and children. The arena.* wu SUM ieveral of the men brought over Li 000. A girt of eleven years brought $1,4115, eat( &Luther a hada younger 11,335. The terms were one and two year. eredit, with interest added on the Imo of the notes. rip The correspondent of the Ilsrati says: " It la anierstood that the eellaotorehip Of BOOM has bean ofered to John Appleton, Amdataat tta- Jretarp of Scats, and deelLowd, ha haring beet urged by General Cu. to continua at his preseml pan. Among the eandidatea mer.tiosed for the place are Mr. Griswold, of Orsenfeld, Mut, and General Whitney. the naperinteadett of tha Spiirgtleld arsenal. Both gentian:ea were promi nent eandListas at the time Mr. Amnia was ap. pAnt CRITZSAILI3I.—The Mork; is a Ilat of ate names of persens et cue hundred year. cf aa4 gPrant , s 'who hare died in the Vatted *atm I.2ring the year 16%59 : Nexruit, Slate. Feb. I-thi4p Jesse— Mat. - j 41.1-11111111 i t&...A1/ t 1.1-Zeistic -No Jones „_....,„ . 11, 8 -ALsbano. 304 23-farth zy.nolol nuts - CT limy, 17- /boats nwelny MAL marl bh.n.ners44l Alutafaits•ua /7-ELLutletk Ci &eta Quo/ 10-ponhe Chruithereoen..l.6lo - Ap'l 211-Polly &Wee. sot 4.-- ) 34, 7106“----.. • -a as-jelta theism .... ii jw 32 -Yawn& Fard, eard.... ishinsum ine Jell ?Ave .311 , ennebesi1ti -rah W. Bozic's.-- ..-M mein p . m . 113 Ang.l7--rsa non A arrey..... --1.10.4111 gl 2*- amt. - hula ____ r.- en. ewer. %%muds— -.•-...3 Sly. &inn ._ sir Yink ..... S 711-311Wetit <inns _Gem, ra ..-..-... 1211 Oct. 11-John Vitiator.. Tennesh••........- 3 , 4 Na. 1-John V( • a stare ..... Dec. )T-t) ea:Km:hoax. eof d..Vm. :a_ ()mealy. eel d I far The ti.llowiog anecdote is related by a Loa don correspondent, u illustrating lisemilay'a an. wavering monopoly of eotrennetion: "He once spent a week at a entry vicarage ea the guest of Sidney Smith. • Well, and how did p.m get ob with him.' asked a friend. • Get on—l did not get on at all," said the wit. 4 Ire talked all day, and I have no doubt he talked all eight; but I went to bed as usual, and, thank God, slept roundly, only when I got np In the morning I found Ilsaaulay bard at it still. I took my revenge., however in my own way, for when he was leaving I went tit the door of his chaise, and after tilling him good bye, said, • I admit it." Admit what!' he en claimed ' That you ars the greatest man is England.' " t&' At Brig,*ii'a benefit, in Boston, on Monday evening, the following wag, composed by Signor Musio, was rang by the whole company. The original an.i • tranalation are given: IL RATA PL AN" DI IiARIBALDL De P odor, di ;atria d irdobilingiii ld oisi core ; Ed Id teut.ino onadmid'd Empis Valais di terror. fratetlt! it rtozo isfsaa Di se mutt° al Ea gl (ruts; Soria cs2a.! •gm aoa wata t No. till szaLara za mar& NS. fh CON nen ItIIIL Wrm• di da.N. , rd,A ; Coa ntioa. Ardir, N &NAIL:A, gee Ati auto Ilbarts. [TRMIIILATION.I TRZ GARIBALLI RATAPLAN Der eauctife call to cane gad tattle Tann...tarot:l;h each he.laa binge „Lad the destrma tyrant trembles. As with Sudden fear pmeerea. Cy, then, brothers! let the iok• cif bond.bts base sl.set. be tre'sse ! Arouse! Itslrs! weep no store! The own* of slate no more thy totes And yet. amoagot a.. let nn s Ira Of Strati itnnbl., over •pr.ng; For Freedom's cause, a C.... Um.; Is tie best ofer.ns eau b:mf• New Oates-vs vs. littrlxistr. -The issue be tween the two cities above named, in reference to the 31cDonogb estate, is coming down to a plain and praetieti tune. The difference Is this: Obi MsDicar,7l: hr.ving bequeathedithe talk of his great estate 40 the tw o cities, they became joint partners la it.. The will of the old man being contested by parties not spe cially remembered in the will law proeeedirgoard lawyers became necessary. New trisme, bete in, upon, and generally around and in the centre of the great property left. at once met the ocraide as sailants in legal battle and same off cutquaror. As Baltimore had an equal interest in the anal". New Orleans, after winning the victory and herself pay. ing the whole expense of it, sett a polite note to Baltimore, informing her of the triumph, and heave tog it to her sense of justice and her genereitity so came up and teke an equal part in settling the ta• roue of the victory. Baltimore failed to respond to the polite invita tion ; probably thinking that, td none of tie coma tested property was within her own boundary, aid that as New Orleans was the big bird whose wide. spreading wings overshadowed mat only the earthly remains of the late lamented MaDonOgb, but his very conallerable earthly possessions. she left tt to the genenwity of the great and magnanimoua me tropolts of the Southwest to Settle up the pier yune expenses of the little business, and to sate her an entirely complimentary offering of a toll half of the earthly remains of said lamented Mie Danogh. It ea happening that New Orleans and Bald. more, knowing eaoh other well by reputation, and having naturally a huge esteem f r earth other, from the sidle and commingling of their talented and handsome children. rail never had the plea sure eta personal introduatioe, or any other oppli•• tunity of hugging and drinking together; or, dis pensing with picayune formalities, It s out thla way : A dying man asked the two, who had never seen each other, to drink to his health after his death. They drank, though invisible to each other, the screen of disunite being between thetei, New Orleans, being nearest to the grave of the generous defunct, settled the bill at the bar; std, tearful of offending her Maryland partner, whom she had never seen, proposed on this savant to make a Cineloneiti treat of it—that each, in other and plainer terms, should pay for her own drink. Here arose the di* Baltimore. probably thinking this too pi a propos come to mo from New Orleans, at lier dignity, and failed to respond to a second polite intimation that she hadn't paid her picayune at the bar. New Orleans, Laving settled at the bar for both. felt hermit' shab bily treated, and went to law about the picayune she had paid at the said bar in good feeling, be her distant and unseen sister, Dal:imam. The latter proved bow much or how little dust:wed :or expense, by employing a New Orleans lawyer to defend her from the picayune charge brought against her. In plain language, Christian Rosielfus, for Baltt. more, and Mr. Livingston, for New Orleans ha• • lately brought the matter to law, before Jut'', Egglegon, In the Fifth District Court. The altar being duty tried and argued. the judge yemerda decided th at Baltimore owed New Orleans tit C0 .,.1 one half of the expense of 8100,000 incurred 4 4 New Orleans in !outing at the bar for the Kee Danogb treat. Mr. Hemline, in courtesy to his salient, will eoibt. lest invoke the anal lodgment of the Baprem• Court. But we'll bet that Baltimore w 4 ll in the end hare to pay for her drink to the health of hits who, dying, reumnibored her so handtc9ol.-1 8 6 0. Cre.revis. •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers