The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 30, 1860, Image 1

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ighlisto* bAr6T:olThilikikliXONTlT 4
111f40161 W ' '. I4IIIIEY
011101310. 417 piagErnitli smolt
Twx9i)s pAsiis Plin:Tiriike;pebysh,sta,lhotpalwier*
MOM tObsibiolibiniOit, of the Qty dt St:DOLL/MA
PIA; Altling., ;Pima: DOLL IS 1011. MOATRIP j
Tulsa Ifoulasslbit &tit ItosTas-.4.*Tarsebly t* wi
n* forlhe ; •
;TRI-WitEKLY PRESS.
Mailed to anbeeribent out of the City ut- Tatum Dot,.
LARS nu! Axtttnig,
. ,
BTAT,IONEItir
186(k,w 7 074.'" 1860.
WW.V.MTRPH'g* & BONS.
33$0112.13TNUT,STREET,
' - • BelOw ninth:
- PRACTICAL MAIIVITACTORZIS OP
L ATZ-K-EV.O,
'AU& of tht,f Stook. 4 "
e s v oidook_Bovo i eoo, "nth ohofi Atook o
7-3 m 00U/1 MS- utTHE STATION Y.
Down AND-SHOES.
HAZELL-& HARMER.
-I[46IIM'ACTUURB
•
•," •WHOLINIALX DgALIEII
. iIOOTS . AND SHOES. •
NO. 128 EVRTH THIRD STEM.
iisf 04141 s Hoot. sad Mama
otaaigy on beta.. - • , ; dO-tf
WATCREB, JEWELRY, &c.
ILVE WARE.
WM. WILSON & BON
Rke Amid - litenlion to ihur 'took of SILVAN.
WAitß,whioh is now woluntalli large. afrOrdlar a va
nine of senora end donna uneureaseed be any basil
the flatted States, and of finer anskty than in nuinaSe•-•
rand for table vie to ear part of the world. ' • .
Our Standard of Slim St 6-1001) ysr WM
The - English Starling (024-1001
Anterteint *end - Peewit 4004000 1 . 1 '
Thu Morn he seen that arealre thirty-ftve peltts waist
than the dmedoan andFroliah ooln and ten parts run
than the /Inglis!' Bterling. We melt ell •ow own Eldon,
and nonnaretnee the • ought, as above (9X), whit& is
the Mess that can to made to to attrottsobtai tutd
resist the , action or soils !tack Mos ahem tee ant&
Muir fithier teteunifecerred
WY. WILSON & SON,
11. W. 0011NINI NIFTB AND OREABX
n.B.—.Asy flumes of Silver maso=d eireed
non, but pOokivay sou Wolof to owl Amoni=
ale standard.
Deem! supplied with the isms spadard u mod ,A
0112 totandepastmenat.'
:Plus-01m Bars, WS-1670 part* par* onitintly Od
ILAIIDWAKE PACKAGE UOIKIES.
HANDY' 'al' .1111,,gsTNEIL'
MK Xl3, 74, AND 27
,I(0014 MITI MINS
PHILADELPHIA, - -
WHOLISAiII COMME3BION -Xll3O/ILlrnk
For the mile of all kinds of
. il t • HK sl :+!Jtlillli
AND ZEPOWIIIIEM or
eiRDIAN, RED MAN. FRENCH, AND =Wag
, DANDWARN AND CUTLERY,
ion ooludgintly on' head stook of Goods tows-
•lr Ilardwarp Dialers.
LUTOREIOB: IPILIS.
By the cask or otheririm
HIPEDIERT EDGE TOOL,
- SMOKER'S STEEL OF VARIOO UNDO.
WRIGHT'S PATENT AN LS AND' WON,
SHIP onAiri.
Aid ether kinds in every miser
10141 AGEISM roll
filiAßP'll RYPtATIIR
'WEIGILLNO ONLY BE OUNGE/1,
SHARP'S NNW MODEL RIFLED AND DIEINDN.
=WARD B. HißAND!.nro. n a. i!..nsa. I.?. 111111111111111 L
peoif , AGE- lie c r i eE. t. ll4:39l- O We
' " lirtivi rExrdEr,f. a
~.,,,,r,...,2ri4 40 .4 . 0 1 ,..„6-41,0 r, ...„ 4 ...
... _,---.- . ..... ,- 4 . It vi t
4
Imnartlng and at Mar= -
And /outs ICI /fofll4ll and , a maraware. • -
anit•tf,
troolowouiroAmoos.
GOODS POW 1111:15Witi,
''‘, '-= • - 2*;
'o2lAlfai i Ser oo2 C*44lol4
tNikifrfttk gr A VENII&VM
•-' .C".•
• ;-•
• ) - 1 0M-P..*4 WM0 1 ' 1 7 0 44 : •; -
,2 orb' 1200oirEsiztlit simian
ATNO.v . -..C, MURPHEY & CO,'
DREGS, CHEMICALS, &a.
Irma, GLASS,- PAJMNI, &o.
11013 T. SHOEMAKER & CO.
1 - ;(o,9v:cmigNol;r:-1
NOtTATA LND ILLON'DTBIUM,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
Wolters wad Dealers in WINDOW Oldlia PAINTS.
aa. Invite the attn.= of
COUNTRY 'MERCHANTS
*9 their Imre stook' or '
aoodb 'blob 'their Wet at ' the
*wait ierket rata& ooLtl
S CALEB.
jz..l.
MANCHESTER SCALES.--Counter,
4 rorm, Warehouse, Ray, OW, and-Railroad
11' 4 1%A:415f itif, Taal? ;w a r , And Belt,-
-Wm°HAULER A. DARIELIS.
FAIRRANILT PLATFORM SOMAS
PornthmAgagogliii.
J~CEDICINAL.
us.
WlNgigh.Nl,
F.P.lttrit anon
ArGY
ros, CIHILD.REN TMITHINGI
gg bollikitay theW ti t d r e, .k, A
• r . = lill 4=tta ,vw
- - , , IOWELa
wen lit =et test to yoanans
AlOiiimina,To limn. trtviNTlL
.^.."loLapfumd &a • _Mr $0 . 1918, for
.oyer.tig
IL 01: n it: arz 1 , ,,a ,
.4 I rowils
13 t: W tilfs rl
o ln°7°l n"
1
• 0 „mu t eoarl• 1
• e. s in
M . 1 , 4461vrz: .
04 . Frh:447:welii
E. 'rh n ate d.
g l Rr Cern ' lAN
ra am'
Za 1
6 1 112 4 g 6
ism bat in
' Is. =obi,
it
ei Cr Pt e rans
;41 , fi tzi id li zt
/12 44 *Z i t
' trbig acy of
the V l =
"9",
oi it i f y lk-rfo 3
the .. i ..,
......
-1/4i4smared•igti
'MARTIN it _QUAYLE'S , -
Arrislozmay i elv i rtoy 'moo* -
• • • Yiai UT STMT.'
w multriXT3p ,
ADRLPHLt
I= m ittlT on timid Teriumerr Mint AV:1011111.
•
NAVAL
ds STORES. RE u S
e . '
t S nits m rpenti
, v e; .
: 6% 1 r r k gg-..
,
1,,, A ,i za , La o r . c ,
:' a • • ' • v 7Nri: id alllff
-monorsoN;
- - • • Mennfnotnret p t :
131iirrllUgfEN end M t, RAELLES ,
O Wallowa °hole* aegortm dNp
ent, and - wILL NAM al
re.P.grlortliVnginb I_ " ta rlY T i git e il b i n ") a ys t .
: 4 1 ; F earner of ISZCOrtp endi M ACH Stritayinal4e-
-112 AD LIQUORICE44 , cii este by.WITII
; R ' AD
& BROTHER; 4Y arid 491YORTH BB
.00ND,terees - „ , jaw
?VA& AND PITUIL-250 bbla. Wilm mg
flv OM Tar ;AV kass Villmiagrop_Tari gobble. Pitala
co. :No.
hutorat 163 sad . t. asta eff. 11.07.48 y, AailiUglißit ac
w hary
4JODFIBO.-500 qtla, Extra Grant Bank
cow!, la ewe end toraale hr.
44.
• • • V. Ai/WW2 ( ); •
fie:, , 1111 naul 114
At SODA-='or' vale by' IVETIIERILL
i , r N , A' noTinut. , • is • tiostpt sBOOND
, taw
011.0C,",-FLOID; ".01.1;,' in
nhAtterib,iturongiypi
; 4 Ja24
668 - tis h invoice id'
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fek • - --• ..„:\ \ll ! ~,, e,.••• 1... d. • ',. tti tt
Ail
,_.„-. ..." • . . (2 . , lIIIIF ,• ' "."--- '., -.....%; 'S AW , ::... 1, ''.‘" It
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71 .
. . ,
. .
VOL. 3.-NO. 154.
RETAIL DRY.GOODS.
RACiFLIFICES! TRIMMINGS and ZE.
PHYRS I
• 01415 oeiattrt ounce for
BERLIN. KM Pv(li ZEPHYRS,
• „Doable, 8 gje or Nola.
POR PSW DAYS ONLY.
. To make more room for our preferred ounlity Cash
mere Zephym we are preparing to Aend our large re
tail eto4k ot Harlin Zephyrs to the New York auction
rooms. For some days rior to shipping them, ladies
may
liberty any color ,erefrom each shades as the,
may need, of or black or, " shaded," at 15
tents Per ounce. TRIMMINGS.
atilt }wavier redue it one. to make room for Spring
Trimmings.
• Every cash purohaserof Fancy Trimmings, receiving
quantits of Zephyras bonus.
J. 0. MAXWELL k BON.
• Trimminge, Skirts and Zephyrs. Store and Factory,
P
8.8. oomer ELBy.ipiTH end CHESTNUT Motets.
• M-4MM
PURNISHING DRY GOODS.
SHARPLISBB BROTHERS have replenished
their F in oo! of Staple Goode of their 011411 importation.
ley aull
• 1111 Pillow and later Lm Clothe .
ens.
Oen Ihi
in !Arpnask a ne
nd Delll rom beetit
lf Bleaeastiss.
amask /nouns and Voids*.
noisabsek, Russia, and Damask Towels.
mad Bordered Bumph Towels. •
• , , maga Oran and Amerroan Linen.
Worsted Damasks. Satan
Ourrainii. /embroidered 'Kuehn.
ured Lastinum Moreau, Brunette.
lo h.Table and Piano Boson.
Blue and Green Shade Holten&
usllsh and Amerioan 6ne Blankets.
amides Quilts of everyquality.
alas, Sheetints, Flannels aneliaktiaps.
,411' , 801 and SO CRESTti UT Street,
BARGAINS FOR SIX WEEKS.
TIMBNLacy INER3I4, N. S. corner. BJGHT R
and SPRING GARD E N , WoUltl Repeettaly lAforin the
public 6pnentily that Dr now ( January U , /Med wan
Pe HI i
L M ltatt e i IN AltDialBB OP PROFITS!
' They ve an Sloe ant atop of
- & mobe Shawl.
apish pd Atnonoon 81antets,
, " • t thi nit and sheeting Muslin,
: . moo o our own Sin its
• ' el, Cloths rind mores.
. - A " Il num i Ckik lf43l l 67 i tilLirB.
ALA • E 8
k O o Sl i f. 0
itit nuke _of Nao
_s.
einper, De /Aitken, Oormsn Poplin Plaids, Ito.
cOm above FMI WM be sol
• Maa :- ,° MUM! UNSER COST PRIORI
N. 8.-4 t will pay to give as a call. laid
A' :WAMBVTTA bEURTINGS, SOT
A
pnusit but open ed.
4-4
. alt s illigairtitigpiat e lp* s.
Je..T4-4 tinelirtitirlattungela. Lin en..
Ire" do SVtigi n r . vr w t.
fistraTintl i ff
Cambria Haa kerohlefii &c.
Ladioi r rd elite' Linen Cambria Efandkerohlok In
Ton t ft, tikl e VlTart . dkorohleffi, Bleak Cravats, end Nook
ti,wmos.
;k a-. r v edVa r t • in odes of all bac
liftEBB 000U8.
rap i e d ar.lie k ei t itals,
%rook CleaViaa Croat
4- - ifilltVeLiterk 2 ,ra.
GREAT RED vu'rlyn ustipqnr, i pa"_whilat
ng stook. , g S e
101-tt EIGHT an Streets.
HOSIERY , GOODS. —J. WM. ROF
......MANN, No. ,N_arth Strut. ham now
optabhin Fall Took of Maar trgf r e ri se .
re d dade7f e o r r a tilirstMs yrear, Crinf t puta
sad plum. tor_aeata snit 'plank merino ery,
Cotton Rostov, Woollen Hoinery, { stoves and sant
eta'
and aa, g r*,. ve.izroi
fan e lm to Ms stook, amain them that stock is
no d for variety by any other in lir oar% f_i!it_tnet
h rif i g t t u arite g n a t ib m
ere a l
Mit _
jareilinnAr
BLUE PLAID PLA.NRELS. •
ant Brecht, Shawls.
Fine cloth Cloaks. ,
Woollen boriglisawic .
P rits tr a s° o.A l l6o V n YM. ° 4.o l .th of and se.
west /Amok Mog ia c iki 003. 3810 ga cants.
' •
sent all-wool Mo p es
1 ,
• _AbSI ERNI.
I. 136 for bind Fancy mares.
Good Goods at 8 ti 41.10. and to
wing, and Caseinseres, 40 to 76 sante,
stains' very cheap.
SO cent filet-rate Shi•ta and Drswera.
Gloves, Ties, Edicts, ko..enotion las,
43M1. 4
i A ftla i %
N. 8.....L1NFN 0001:03, a large an d e rah e doe of
ever deseription. aid
FIVORNLEY & 1)11101,
p
JR. Northeast Guinea EIO Et and BPRITIG OAR
DM Btroetsizoldimit l et nee to their stook of
LV4 119 .
Of Asir own direet Imports oil, who t they can oonfl
madly moomplend.
•
an aneellentatookti. .
tartans sad flhaidang laic
lira and an lvdcsts and Naimoli/.
s. &Motto. .
"C
' Wits aild i t t omfo b . &
'"lta,....ol a loilos and nroohe art lilt) riK (bawls
4 7. """peli Pa l i ilk! aslTV&saa:
makes otk lack Ellitic, ko.
. .
All our stoe will be kind desirable. JaB
11:101111111111910P1 110178E11.
HENRY D. NELL,
OLOTH BTOICM
-1040,:*0;1010;91.1111100140001110..
'~ ~,
- i7itIMOaII.IIIO4OBICOMF:LI PB O B TF.D. ANDII.4IK
• 7 • BEAVEBB,
AIiVOASSXIIIHRBII, ELVETS, itc.. &Ai
W,
N'O.S.JOISAIN AND IL.
-
FA MORRIS.
ttl ousErrNu'r trraErrr,
IMPORTERS.
Ann
OOMNIBISION MERU HAN TB
write,
OADSISIERSO,
DOSSILINS, AND
• &WINDT&
SPEND AND
IFUMSIDR COATINGS,
r IDANTHLSTS,
PANTALOON KIWI,
d 1740 &0.,
FROTUINGHAM & WELLS,
36 LNTITIA STRUT, AND 34 BOOTH
/DONT SUM. ,
OOTTONADEB.
limitable to both Clothiers and Jobbers, in Info
!MUM COATINGS AND 0
Made by Washington MU
Orarjaken An these desirable gouda for Spring trade,
SWIM, HAZARD, & HUTOHENI3ON,
NO 1111 CHINTNUT
001101388 ION =BOHAN=
FOR TM BALE OF
PHILADELPHIA-MADE
GOODS.
SEWING MACHINES.
WHEELER & WILSON
- -SEWING MACHINES.
HENRY COY, Agent,
eta CHESTNUT STREET, SECOND FLOOR.
Wahines, with Operators, on hire to Private Families.
mums 07PICIN
7 West STATE Street, Trenton, N. J.
110 CENTRAL SQUARE, Easton, Pa.
lal9-99m
WILLOOX & GIBBS' SEWING MA
w v oisiffMC J Pl m at hi ronVenTail
nllO.
CIGARS, TOBACCO, &c.
E STABLISHED 1760.
PETER LORILLARD,
SNUFF Sc . TOBACCO MANUFACTURER,
and IS ORAYIBERB STREET,
Wl Araswerly 4S Chatham street, New yorki)
D41 1 ;4414 ; Vs =I, =IC th ' ifiZZLlegt
uusauleatero,
- BROWN SNUFF.
trarY ke
• Th 'REtintini
11116 0$ 4:1 4 1 t ,
'
- Axon% eetbgaati,_ ytsteC(*cam
meos.
bUW SNUFF.
M e g tritElootok, Itltv see
=nee' hewMild co : or nedpoot.
SMOKIMI•
- Bt. j . lIMONINed
l' giV l, 1 & 01,;,111:ri t iit i ttai.:ktitoter,
' eltsfoce: . t Pure mink,
tsr2;a r i r r e e l er il erlid a l e e n d
weh be found superior artiele i —r erp tt pk a rr...
VIOL
HAVANA 010A118.—A handsome rm.
ecntrnent p ost binding from brigs " Karnaok" and
"Alfred Null." mid for sale low by
CIIMILEItTETE,
Ja2o-10t WAL UT Street.
HAVANA OIGARS--Vom
-30°,1309 prising
Ardo oio,' • KV:1g,:::
mann. p l uebose,
Ar ds . eguevm.
5 ria, - . v
Yurnin, tca. t &a,
re
call arerit mos and 033111133ograr;Itnlidito ,
/or sail) bi '
13)-xot . 130 WALNUT Bark.'
WM. D KELLEY AND GEORGE A.
40PIPHY, Attorney , at Law. hue ventovad to
UM Saab SIXTH Street- balmy Onestmg.
BENCH
•
111 19o1n
Ehan
d,
a fotWsby WETHOvon])&EOUPIStmt.
invoiee receive& and fo
- 411 - 11 . 14
Ko., p xAd
DRY-GOODS JOBBERS.
1860.
(.I\'Lsls) m
FANOY OABOIMBREF,
NEW SPRING STYLIIB.
OASIIMARKTS,
ALL COLORS AND QUALITIES.
BLACK DOESKINS,
PINE TO SUPER.,
KENTUOKT JBANA,
ALL-WOOL PILL! NO
SATINETS,
PRINTED, PLAIN, AND MIXTUERS.
OOTTON WARP CLOTHS,
' ALL ORADES AND COLORS,
TWEEDS, TALMA CLOTHS, La.
I , OR BALE BY THE AGENTS,
RICHARDS, HAIGHT, & CO.,
B STRAWBBRRT STREET
Jall&th&th St
JOSHUA , lA., DAILY,
IMPORTER AND . JOBBER
FANCY AND STAPLE DRY GOODS.
No. 213 MARKET Street,
pnitAturatA,
Invites attaation to a large
AND VERY 015AIPLIITN ASSORTMHNT
LINEN GOODS.
Of hle own Importation,
NOW OPEN.
IRISH TABLE LINENS,
SCOTCH TABLE LINENS,•
BARNSLEY TABLE LINENS,
NAPKINS AND D'OYLIES,
. BIRD EYE LINENS,
HECK AND DIAPER TOVVELLINGII,
BORDERED TOW CLB,
IRISH SKIRTING LINENS,
. PILLOW GABE LINENS,
LINEN TABLE CLOTHS,
LINEN CAMBRIC HANDEHROHFI3,
As., Co.,
Iu all sizes, styles, sad qualities,
PROM
THE BBBT BLIIAOHIIItIV,S,
SOMPRISING
One of the ohotoeet Hasa of
LINEN GOODS.
To B FOUND IN THIS hIARKIIT
For eale at a small advance on the
COST OF IMPORTATION.
DASH AND PROMPT RIX-MONTHS BUYERS.
Jan-tf
CARPETINGS.
CARPETS.
P. A. ELIOT & CO., Noa. M and 34 North FRONT
Street. are the SOLE AGENTS in Philadelphit for the
ROXBURY CARPET COMPANY, and have constant!y
for aide a falkassortment of VELVET and TAPESTR,Y
CARPETS. of choler patterns.
Also, a large supply of the various kinds of CAR
PETS manufactured in Philadelphia city sad county,
from nearly all the best manufacturer/.
Dealers will And It to their interest to mat and
examine these goods, which ere offered for eels on the
mom favorable terms.
N. 8.—8. A. ELIOT k CO, being the Sole Agents
hi nits&lshii' lot the sale of the Worsted and 'CarPei
Yarns spun by thellixonville Mills (formerly the New
England Worsted Company.) and 'being agents also for
the Baldwin, Wilton, and Abbott Companies, have
peculiar feellitlee for beeplturoonetantl Sr sale tbi
various kinds of Carpet. mantifsetured an Philadelphia;
on the most favorable terms. M.17-11m
PAPER 11.ANGLRGS,.eo.
TO OI,OSE Busixgss.
: 71+74.4
sm..** - natter tintur,' -
Will Hit oat, through this Witter sod nest apring.theit
Isms stook of
PAPER HANGINGS.
Oonsisting of every misty octanestedwith the buslasu,
AT GREATLY REDUOND
FINIS FRENCH PAPERS AT 33 PBR MINT. BH 7
LOW 00t1T.
Parma wanting their Houses Poem& oas get Vast
BARGAINS.
MILLINERY 'GOODS.
FOR
EVENING PARTIES
BERTHAS,
CAPES, BETS,
81.118VED, and 0118Bd,
In Real 1,6641, Oruro, Illusion,
Mond sad Ingtetlon,
In groat votiotho, of the
NEWEST STYLES.
Atao,
4 , 4, 0.4, 6.4, 9-4, 10.4 ILLUSION,
TARLATANS, CRAPES, .Ito.,
htuoh below the usual prloos.
WA.RBURTON'S.
1001 011118TNUT Street, above Tenth Street,
NA Booth 811100 ND Street, below Spruce
412-tf
PREPARED GLUE.
SPALDING'S
PREPARED GLUE!
"A BTITOR IN TIMB SAVO NINE"
DIWATOIL I
84V11 THE PIHORS:
1600NObtY I
As accidents toot karats, teat in welriveviaird
yamates, rt la very desirable to Lave some obese sad
oriavealeat way ler repairing Furniture, Toys, groats
CI, ILO,
BPALDIITG'D PREPARED GLUE
meets all such emergenoles, and no household oan afford
to be without it. It is always ready and up to the stiok
tall point. There le no lostgor s nooeseity for UllOOll4
choke, splintered veneers, headless dolls, and broken
*radios. It is Just as article for cone, shell, and other
ornamental work, 60 popular with ladies of refinement
sad Mate.
This admirable preparatka le used cold, being elm
wear held in solution, and pooseuing all the valuable
qualities of the best cabinet-maker►' due. It may be
used la the visa of ordinary mumlage, beta; vastly
more absolve.
- USEFUL IN EVERY HOUSE."
N. B. A brush sosornsati les such bottle.
PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS.
Wholesale Depot, No. ati CEDAR Skeet, New York.
. Address!
HENRY 0. SPALDING A CO.,
Box No. 8600, New York.
Pot up for Dealer.' in CMS containing four, eight,
and tweire dozen, a beautiful Lithairrso BROW - OARD
aooompanying each package.
Ifir A single bottle of
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE
will mice ten times its cost annually to every household.
Sold br all prominent Stationers, Druggist", Hard
ware and Furniture Didem, groan, and Fanny
Storm
Country Morainal should make a nutria
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE,
when making up their lint.
IT WILL IiTAND ANY CLIMATIC.
Mni.rnwf-y
COLORED PHOTOGRAPHS!
IVORY TYPES.
DAGUERREOTYPES!
AV
MoOLEEEV,
NO. IMO OHBSTNUT STR BHT,
Bslow Seventh (opposite Jayne's HAIM
$l., PLAIN PHOTOGRAPHS.. $l.
Those who desire a really splendid
PHOTOGRAPH
Should call At this
TUB OLPHBT•ROTABLIOHED AND MOOT H/GTEN
OLYS PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY IN THE STATE.
Comm( DAGUERREOTYPES or Ambrotrowhi
say alms, Ihnehed In OaiyOA, OIL, WATIM-COLOR
?ABM, or as IVOILYTTPIi. alts-Sto
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MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1800,
MO Muloch' “Poems."*
The poems, we should rather call them
the verses, of Miss Dinah Maria Muloch, are
not worthy of being collected into a book.
Nothing bat her celebrity as a prose-writer
could have induced publishers in London and
Boston to reproduce them in that form. At
an early age, she wrote occasional poems, with
some .prose-sketches, in Chambers' Journal,
and her lyrical writings wore of the usual ave
rage of young-lady verses—simply up to that
standard, and not higher. InlB4B, then being
In her 54th year, her first novel, tc The Ogil
vies," was published. It Is a book in which
she displayed great earnestness, while her
imagination ran riot in some of the incidents;
In'a woid, affecting to despise conventionali
ties, she thought fit to speak in a manner
winch beroritics condemned as tot free, and,
whilaltbetnaln incident (the sobutioa of, a
rarried;Wermus) was elaborately , workocl up R
Ole coloring itaatOttstdered much too warm
faor genenst leadlng.,4 so, much,
tio
so, that by
tore than ono leading libmry as' The Ogilvi .
ut i ndignantly expelled—put in again—again
aitcluded, and so on, drawing attention to the
*ark better than any ordinary advertisements'
could possibly have done.
t Olive," which followed in 1850, was a
hatter novel, with a tono of more propriety.
tripe Read of the Family," in 1851, a very
it:ltching story called e‘ Agatha's Husband,"
and a few minor fictions, followed in due course,
and preceded "John Halifax, Gentleman,"
one of the beat stories, from a female mind,
which thepresent time, frultfhl as it is in works
o imagination, has yet produced. A Muth)
book, entitled if A Wentan's Thoughts about
Woman" next came—and made no sensation.
It showed the writer's desire to be considered
one of tho 't strong-minded " sisterhood, but
merely uttered commonplace in a bold and
combative manner. Lastly Caine "A Life for
a Life," tedious in some parts, exaggerated in
some, but a truthful, womanly, earnest love.
story, which has become very popular. Last
of all, this volume of di Poems," chiefly col
leCted from Clambers' Journal, Household
Words, and other periodicals.
The Preface, which has the merit of lauda
ble brevity, is as follows :
6 Many of those poems, extending over aperiod
of ten years, have appeared anonymously in Cham
bers' Journal and elsewhere. The frequent re
printing of them , hero and In America, has In
duoed Use author to collect, select, revise, and Mahn
—her arrant obildren.
" Whether they were worth collecting and are
really' Poents,'.polle opinion most decide."
How a lady could collect and rerisc "hor
errant children," is a mystery which we leave
others to explain, if po►siLlu.
Tho fault of Miss Muloch's •reracs is this—
they are chiefly surface.writing - as If tho lady
had produced them merely as task-work, and
not in that spontaneous outpouring of the
heart which will breathe its thoughts in the
melodious utterance of Song. In all this
handsome volume, of two hundred and se
venty pages, containing over six thousand
Mrs, thero is not even a single passage which
lingers so lovingly in the rosder's mind that,
after a single reading, it cannot be forgotten.
Not so with the poetry of Felicia Herons and
L. E. L.. of Caroline Bowles and Caroline
Norton, of Mary Howitt and Elizabeth Parrot
Browning.
V.ven Ellie Hook herself, with her many
commonplaces changed Into song-song, has
some passages which it is pleasant to remain
bet. for she wrote with great simplicity, and
r d hi: l etin n ta nobr ti" "ese, to
phllota
There is talent—but - not much—in man
Muloch's verses: there is no genius. • Her
pros3i writings show, by the evident care taken
with them, that the author of "John Baur" ,,
doesinot disdain the labor which, after genius
has found the gem, enhances its beauty and
value by elaborately polishing and ekilfhliy
setting it. her verses appear to have been
written in a host, with a tired brain, and to
have been printed without having been road
over. This Is the fault of other modern
writers such as Robert Browning, who
really possesses genius, but has not learned
that one great qualification of a poet is—
to To write with a ilatigued mind
is bad enough, but to bo so careless as
not to polish is worse still. In Browning's
ease it is evident that an excess of amour pro
pre—an idea that whatever he writes must
be very good—has caused it. We need not
ask whether the same cause has produced the
same effect In Miss Muloch's case.
The volume opens, however, with a very
pretty poem—the best hs the collection. It
Is a baby-lyric, which goes home, at once, to
the heart. Wo subjoin It
PHILIP MP KIND.
" Who bean upon nil baby brow the round
And top of sovereignty."
Look st me with thr large brown eyes.
Philip my king,
Runnel whom the enshadoviug purple line
Of babyhood's royal diguities:
Lay on my noel thy tiny hand
With love's invisible 'moire laden ;
I sot thine Either to command
Till thou shnit find a queen band maideu,
Philip my king.
o the day when thou goest a wooing.
Philip my king
When those beautiful bps 'gin cuing.
And some gentle heart's bars undoing
Thou dust enter, love•orowned. and then
Sittest love-glorified. Buie
Tenderly, over thy kingdom fair,
For we that love, all ! we love so blindly,
Philip my king.
Up from thy oweet mouth—op to the brow,
philiv my king t
The spirit that there lies sleeping now
May rise like a giant and make men bow
As to One heaven-ohosen monad hie peers! •
My Saul, than thy brethren taller and Borer
Let me behold thee in fames years:
Vet thy head needeth a oirolet rarer,
Philip toy
—A wreath not of gold, but palm. One dal,
'PhiliP my king,
Thou too mu t tread, es we trod, a way
Thorny and cruel and cold and gray a
Rebels within thee and foes without,
Will match at thy crown But march on, Ormolu,
Martyr, yet monaroh till angels shout
As thou sit'st at the feet of (hod victorious,
the king I"
Hera, also, Is a pretty poemlet. Not much
in it, to be sure, but flowing gently, and sound
ing sweetly—like a brooklet gliding, with a
soft murmur of melody, over Its bed of small
pebbles
A BILLY BONO,
0 heart, my heart:" she said, and heard
His mate the blackbird calling,
While through the sheen of the garden green
flay rain was softly falling--
Aye softly, softly falling.
Ths butter-cups gores, the field
blade sunshine rifts of splendor:
The round snow-bud of the thorn in the wood
f'sep'd through its leafage tender,
As the rain came softly falling,
"Ok heart, my heart!" she said and Inured,
"There's not a tree of the valley,
Or s leaf I wig whloh the rain's coil hies
Fleabane in yonder alley,
Where the drops keep ever falling,—
" Tiara's not a foolish flower I' the erase,
Or bird through the woodland calling,
So glad atom of the coming of rain
Asl of these teats now falling—
Those happy tears down falling,"
There aro verses here which wo have often
seen in the corners of country newspapers,
and sometimes thence copied into the abomi
nable nuisances called Albums. Read them
once, and they sound prettily, but the teat et'
poetry Is that the more It is read, the more It
is liked. Road these stanzas a second time,
and the conventionality of the matter is ap
parent. It Is a namby-patchy song which any
stringer of rhymes might have written In
twenty minutes.
LSTTICE.
I said to T,ettlee, our sister 'Attlee,
While droop'd end alleton'd her eyelash brown
" Your men's a poor man, a told and dour man,
Thero many a better about our town.'
She smiled goeurely—" He loves ins pure!) t
A true heart 's We, both In mile or frown
Art nothing harnis me while hie love weans me
Whether the world go up or down."
" He comes of strangers, and they are ransom
And ill totting. girl, when out of light
Premd folk may, blame )e. and e'en defame t , 0—
A gown oft handled looks seldom white."
She raised serenely her eyelids queenly.—
*Poem* by the Author of" A Life for a Life." " John
Halifax, Gentleman." Ike. Pp, 97e. ((Author's Edition )
Boston t Tlaknor la
" My Innocence is my whitest gown;
No hush tongue grieve* me viol* he behoves me,
Whether the world go up or down."
" Your men 'a a (mil man, was no'er a hale mei.
And stokness knoeketh at every door,
And death comes making bold hearts cower, breath..
Ing—"
Our Lattice trembled r—but once. no more.
" If death should enter, smite to the centre
Our poor home palace, all erumbhog down,
Ile cannot fright us, nor digunite no,
Lite • been Lore's cross. death brings Lore's
crown."
The Jingle of these verses Is terrible.
She reined serenely
liar eyelids queenly—
" My innocence limy whitest gown
No brush tongue ;nevem me
Whilthe believes me,
Whether the world do up or down."
Reminds us, involuntarily, of Millikin's de.
seriptipn, in his wmid.known "Groves of
Blarney," thus •
Then us litaillil gracing
Thu noble Amino—
,All bullion godo sad nymphi to (sir I
Bold Nondiuno, Nagar,
And Nalmobadoeszir.
All standing Asked in the Olin air!
The verses entitled wAn Honest .Atexi.
tine," exhibit this author's fault---ciistiten.
place and carelessness. In an idleinopzit
she might have written these lines—saa -
.ttut Read, who Is poet a w0u.14
*at like Ida 'pencil; is a of.
Idleness, and cover a sheet of riper with frag
ments of figures or of landscapes—a bit here
end a bit there. But as he would not endeavor
to pass Mr these !hilts/ale tracings as a picture,
so she should not have published her incom
plete sing-song as ais poem." For example,
what can be more prosy than this dogerel
thmsy.moon Carle over,
If I less should wan
Yon with eye of lover
• Then of mortal man'
Seeing my fair charmer
Carl hair spire on spire,
, An in eerier amour,
By the parlor firs;
Gown that wants a stitoti in
Bid by apron fine,
Scolding in her kitchen"-
0 fie, Valentine!
Bhould I come home surly
with fortune's frown
Find a burly burly.
House turn'd opmde down,
Servants all a-mart, or
Cleaning steps or stair
Breakfast still in parlor,
Dicnsr—anywhere t
Hhall I to cold bacon
Meekly 101 l and dine !
No—or I'm mistaken
Much, my Valentine.
These stanzas, to the familiar tune of w Hey
for Bob and Joan," ought never have been
put into a book, as poetry.
Some of these w Poems" are in blank verse,
which rarely rises hero above grave prose
broken into ten syllabled lines; some are in
the Scottish dialect, which Miss Muloch has
not mastered, and should have avoided. She
seems to have had Motherwell in her mind
When thus singing, while Dr. Mackay's ballads
and Mrs. Browning's fine lyrics and sonnets
have been in her mind—too much in her mind,
by far—while writing other portions of the
book. We prefer the sad sweetness of the
nightingale, the joyous melody of the lark, to
the multi-toned variations of the mocking
bird.
In a word, and we regret to say it, Miss
Moloch, who writes exceedingly welt in prose,
is not a Poet, by any means. Original thought
and felicitous expression, which wo flail
abounding In her novels, are not in these
tt pi:loam . ' Yet the book will not be without
its use—if it show to herself that she cannot
write poetry,—if it lead her to retrieve her
reputation as a writer, which this volume
must have weakened, to •eft down and write
another prose-poem, finer and better, if pos
slide, than "John Halifax, Gentleman,"
which, with its earnest pathos, has often tilled
our eyes with not unwelcome tears. Thai is
what Mimi Moloch must do.
Lotter frOm Mew York.
yen t a ju t s. ju r ft. llrefrN2P JASCAR,:
Bf ILLIOTT-THIC FIRST SIWARDII!CII ri a r .4 1 111
YORK-TSI PACIFIC mom orionignir coormtr :
ORSAT ' , ALLIS° OFF IS IT.CIIFTA -TIN If ZIT
ICQUETTSIERME AT MILO'S : IB *HS A WOMAN' ,
DISAPPIARANCII OP OLD LANDMASS/.
Corntopoodono• of The Proaa.l
New Your, January 28, 1880
The import tables for the first four weak, of Jan
nary fantail no Indication of a want of confidence,
on the part of importers, that the buslneu of 1660
will be leu than that of 1839. Up to and Inclu
ding yesterday, the January Imports foot up 112,-
001,098, whisk Is an Inatome of 61,193,303 over
the Importations of January 10.59, and 13,90 3,601
over those of January 1856. The imports of the
oeven fiscal months eanimenolng July 1, show an
increase: of 6:10,627,629 on those of the preceding
year, and of 621,375,125 on those of 1857.
Dropping in at Elliott's studio this afternoon to
observe the progress of his full-length portrait of
Governor Seymour, (for the Governors' room, In
the City flail,) I noticed two portraits npcn which
the mild was placing the finishing touches, one of
which is of a gentleman whoa name is familiar to
nearly every newspaper publisher In the country—
John G. Lightbody, the extensive manufacturer of
printer's ink. The picture Is excellent, the like
ness perfect; hut, excellent and perfect as It la, It
is, In some rupees, surpassed by a portrait of Mrs.
Lightbody, which, for softness of coloring, and
elaborateness and &Sony of finish, Is perhaps the
hest lady portrait Air, Elliott has ever painted.
The remark has frequently been made that Mr.
K.'s style Is too bold and rough to give the features
of the gentler sex that softness and refinement of
expression that are generally deemed eseential.
This picture conclusively puts that mistake at rest;
and I venture the prediction, that when hung upon
the walls of the Notional Academy of Design, es It
will be nt the next exhibition, It will be pronounced
one of the most admirable pictures Mr. Elliott has
ever produced.
The first fantod organisation In this city for the
purpose of promoting Senator Seward's nomina
tion for the Preeldeney wan effected on Thursday
evening last, In the Twenty-first ward, where a
Seward Campaign Club" was duly inaugurated.
A decent regard for the truth compels me to say
that the commune of organisers was not beyond
the power of computation, but the enthusiasm
wee splendid. The exact number present, all
told, footed up six, and as the little band gathered
, 'gleefully about the stove, and talked over the state
' of the country, and mapped out how things could
be "fixed," and how the Interests of the greet
irrepreesibler " oould be test promoted, the
pealed° was charm log, and suggested the con
solatory thought that a large amount of national
putty would he ground out by the aforesaid, and
the Union more firmly cemented together than
ever.
. .
The billions of the Pacifie Mail Steamship Com
pany, for the three months ending November let,
will, it is understood, show a loss of $lOO,OOO. It
is estimated, also, that at the rate at which the
company are now rotating their steamers, they
must ho losing at the rate of about $750,000 per an.
num. Bow long the corporation can sustain itself
against deficits like this, lea :natter of some me.
ment to the stockholders, thoutitt the public don't
teens to be very much worried about It.
The Tribune, of yesterday, contained a very re
markable article, entitled "A Phenomenon on
itorsehack," referring to the wonderful rides at
Niblo's, whose name In the programmes is printed
Mademoiselle Ella Zoyara." It Is as good as a
play. Thus :
A PHISNONIESION nN lismagatex.—There is ■
rider attached to the oompany of equestrians and
athletes now performing at N tblo'e, called In the
bills Mademoiselle Mils Zoyars, whose equine ex
plolto, though they are. very surprising In their
way, have not caused so much excitement as the
doubts entertained in regard to her see. Made
moiselle Ella dresses and acts with the grace of a
woman, and her face has nothing masculine In its
expression; it is, In fact, a most feminine and gen
tle face. But she has the springy agility of a
man, and Is taller and straighter than well-propor•
tinned women ever aro. Disputes nightly arise
among the spectator.] on the subject of the fair
equestrian's sex, for fogy the so-called Made
moiselle Ella is, whether male or female.
The facts In relation to this remarkable creature
were simply these : Some years ago a circus pro
prietor in England, an American by birth, nailed
Stokes, picked up a fair-looking young German
boy of fire or six years of age, and taught elm the
art of circus riding. To enhance the child's at
traotions he dressed him as a girl, called him Ella,
and br,ught hint out as an infant phenomenon.
Little Ella grew up in womanly graces, was con
' stoutly dressed as a'girl, taught as a girl, made a
sensation in the ring, was greatly admired for her
beauty and grace, and became the recipient of a
good many valuable presents in the shape of jew
airy from her admirers.
By the time she reached her shrteenth year the
phenomenon began to experience the Inoonvenlenee
and ditfioulties of her double character, and deter.
mined she would continue it no longer. She
threatened to leave oil crinoline and put on trow•
sere, but Mr. Stokes at last made 4 compromise by
which she was to be allowed the privilege of put
ting on male costume, except when performing
in the ring, and in the announcements in the bill
s h e ins t o be wilted Ella, only, without the prefix
of Mademoiselle. On these conditions she has boon
performing In London; but, shoe she appeared in
New York, she has been announced under the
highly romantic name of Mademoiselle Ells bye
rt.
Our old landmarks are at disappeatiog frota
the lewer part of the eity. The Downbeat
Methodist Episcopal Church, greeted to 1797, and
the ground on which it stand!, were Ywltsrdark"
for s72,7so—bid in by one of the tnutres. The
reboot widening of Duane street, and the proximi
ty of the wharves and railroads, make the location
very desirable fur busioses porpoeee. With the
exeeptiois of the John•etreet Methodist Church
this i the oldest edifice In the city emoted to that
denomination.
Letter from Harrisburg.
ICorrodpordasa of The Prow.)
lIARRISMO, JUL 23, 18611
Yesterday wu devoted to the consideration of
the calendar of public bilis, but, notwlthstanding
there were thirteen on the calendar which were
roperted affirmatively, only one was to:addend,
and upon that no definite action was bad. It was
entitled an eat relating to actions of **truant, aid
patients:ly Interested the people of the mantled
outside of Philadelphia.
A vigorous effort will be made irj the brokers to
defeat the bill pow . before both houses, Intended to
ten them, and the .paseage of which would add to
the revenue of the State thowatuds of dollars. It
may, neretihileos, beoeiters kw.
There Is ne exaltanieekeri say natistbn Were
the Legislature, note arlithyikalieugar
Several of ibeiViiikithassigt In aparnUelfrlugst
atttiiiiigetlllol6ol.4 and S.
for suppielemeds to tarmac* Aim tine inteat sad
meardest -of their several sets. and we presume
they will get what Use, sok. There is also a con
test for the privilege of laying down a track on
Broad street, but, compered with the war between
Green and Coates and Germantown, it "pales its
Ineffectual Ares." Both charters are nearly alike;
both e , lntsin the names of citizens of Philadelphia
coris)rators, ail confer the 'Me immunities
end privileges. One is entitled "The Broad
street," and the other " The Citinne." The for
mer was read in place by Mr. Strong, of Philadel
phia, and was reported favorably by the Committee
on City Passenger Railways, but not our the beads
of the Philadelphia members, U was erroneoasly
stated In a Very partisan leiter on the 'abject In
one of the city papers. It is a mete "question of
privilege," this thing of giving charters to such
aorporatlons, and it is to be expected that the
party tensed will make complaints. The truth le,
the Legislature ought to leave the whole matter to
Councils, instead of bothering with these conten
tions between rival interests. Pero.
BY TELEGRAPH.
'OUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE.
THE NOVA SCOTIAN AT PORTLAND
Posoaful Zffeet of Walowald's Rating:nut on
tha Trough and Znirtiah CoMoots.
he Papal Demonstration at Dublin a Failure.
TIIE SP AMISH-MOROCCO NAIL
COCION QUIST -BREADSTAMPS DECLINING
Proggons Dull—Consols 9Sia93l
PORTLI3D, Jill. 28. 131 h —nu steamship Nova
Scotian, from Liverpool on the 11 th last, and
from Queenstown on the nib, arrived at thLt
port at half put ten o'clock this morning.
The steamship City of Slanobester left Liverpool
for New York sintaltanecouly with the Nova
Sootian.
The stestothip Americo, from Eaton, arrived at
Queenstown at 1.34) A.M., and at Liverpool at 10 34
P. M., on de 9th insL
The steamship North American. from Poirand,
arrived et Queenstown at 930 A. M . on the 10th
Inst., and wu off Liverpool early the following
morning., unable to rain owing to the toe.
. . _
THE CONGRESS.
A Paris despatch says thatit was booming every
day more doubtful whether the Congress woaQ
assemble, and the Pad correspondent of the Loo.
don Timis NUB that there were many indiestioes
that the chances of the Congress meeting were of
the most shadowy kind.
The Punch journal, the 0,411.111;1e Natsinde,
which was supposed to spoilt with some authority,
eye 14 bellies" that if Italy decided for the an•
nessitiso et-the north and gentio.ar—tlpe
combination, wtilisf France would wept It with
.tau wester enema, on condition that Bevoy and
Nice should be restored to her. The Opinions dom
not anticipate that the Cabinet of Turin would ob
ject, and after awing- that neither Austria, Rua
elan or Prussia has the power, right, or will, to in
terfere, says that It is assured that this eousbins-
Hon is serionsly entertained by the Governments of
London and Paris.
GREAT BRITAIN.
The funeral of Lord Macaulay took place at
Westminster Abbey on the nth Instant. The re
mains were interred in the poets' corner, In the
midst of many of England's most distinguished
authors. Among the pall-bearers were the Lord
Chancellor, the Speaker of the HOW. of Commons,
Lord John Russell, Earl Carlisle, to., and among
those present were s„ great number of gentleman
of eminence, both in politics and literature. The
funeral wu essentially private, and although di
vested of all pomp and ceremony, wee eery im
pressive.
Earl Clarendon had made a speech highly eulo
.:. of e rise mement. He de
cleared thatth thevolunteer
movement, althou ov gh in its infancy,
had produced a moat salutary effect throughout
Europe, and he believed It would ultimately render
invaalou Impossible.
An eleotion at Reading bad molted to the choke
of another Jew—Mr. Goldamhlt—aa member of
Parliament
A large Papal demonstration, presided over by
Dr. Cullen, had been held at Dublin, bat it Is rep•
resented to have been a (allure.
English papers had not said much to regard to
the President's menage, as the document only
reached London the day before the steamer sailed,
although a brief telegraphie summary from Queens
town had been treetopsly published.
The London Daily A OW, commenting on this
summary, says that there appears no reason to
complain of the manner in which the President
deals with the general relations between England
and the tinited States.
In the 2exce' city article. It is remarked that
the President's reemamendation that military force
be employed against Mexico exercised no unstained
Influence on Sfethan stock, owing to the know
ledge that the mot.r does not rest In any degree
on the ~11 ant Prceident.
The Alauchmtor Guardian does not approve of
the manner in which the President has treated the
Ban Juan dispute. It thinks he ought to have ex
plicitly dielpproved of Harney's prooeeding. al
though it regards the praise accorded to the British
admiral, as, by implication, a most severe con-
Bare of Harney.
Other prominent provincialjournals somewhat
qualify the praise th ey aooord the deounfent.
The London Iferald'a city article remarks that
the message, in the Amanda! aspect, was not re
garded as of a hopeful character, especially in re
ference to any deficiency which might lead to an
Increase in import duties.
PRANCIft.
Lord Cowley had returned to Paris.
The Pans says his mission to London was truly
ono st importance. Ile is represented by one
authority to have announced that Count It'alaw
ski's retirement very materially hallitated rela
tions between the Cabinet ct Prone, and England.
M. Thouvenal. the new foreign minister, was ex
pected to reach Paris about the 15th.
Count Laßemand bad been appointed oharo de
rakes ad interim at Constantinople. Ile was
first secretary under M. Thouvenal.
It was reported that the Duke de Gramment
would he removed from Rome to Constantinople.
and that Canrobert would probably go to Rome as
ambassador, and commander of the Preach troops.
In Patio the appointment of McMahon to the
command of the army in Italy, numbering 50,000
men, was regarded as a sign of warlike complica
tions.
A chapel in connection with the English church
in Paris, after being opened fir two years, had
been suddenly closed b a p the French authorities—it
was believed, on aisociunt of a short service haying
been given In French for the benefit of the
children of British imbject3 who do not understand
English.
The Paris flour market was dull. tut raft, were
not reduoed. Wheat also was dull and rather
lower for inferior.
The Paris correspondent of the Tsmas says that
a company, consisting of eight or ten principal
sbip-owners at Marseilles, jut established, under
the name of U. M. Meant d Co , had purchase'
from the company of the Maritime Canal of Niel
segue the lands dependent on the cams; which
form a part of a oonoesalon which the canal com
pany had obtained, and gicard k Co. propose to
turn to account the metallic deposits the lands con
tain, to out down timber, and to establish European
colonies. They had already sent to Nicaragua
from Marseilles two vessels with one hundred and
thirty persona, consisting of engineers, chemists,
and workmen of different trades. It was also sold
that the company had besides engaged a number
of railway laborers to execute a railroad on the
Isthmus of Rivas, which separates Lake Nicaragua
from the Pacific.
The latest rumors from Paris say that General
Canrobert was not going to Paris as the miecersor
of the Duo de Grammont, but that he would carry
to the Papal Government propositions which, if ne
gloated, would be fbllowed by an order for the
evacuation of Rome by the Frenoh troops.
All sorts of reports were current as to the rela
tions of France and Rome, but were very contra
dictory, and wholly unreliable.
The Paris Bourse had shown some improvement,
but a relapse occurred on the 10th ; the last price
was 80f 450. The market again showed symptoms
of improvement at the Morse.
SPAIN AI)N MOR'ICCO.
The following telegrams indloate the course of
events in sforocco, according to Spanish le
mmas
MADRID. Jan. 3.—The Spanish have advanced
on the road to Tetuan, without being attacked.
sten. Zabala had recovered from Ms illness.
The Spanish lota in the Ration at Castellogos was
- 13 killed, and 49 wounded.
istAssaso, Jan. s.—Yeßterday the Spanish were
attacked in the Valley Negro by 9,090 - Moorish ca
valry, and 2,000 infantry. They were dispersed
by the Spaniards, who had 5 killed and 10 wound•
ed. The health of the troops at the encampment of
Snail() is Improving,
THE WEERTN PRESS.,:-.
iiiii, Wastaxy Yalu vl3l be asst to :ftheartbeis lee
Three
nail ratetra. a hdrjere.) et....—.....--:.. al re .
/qv* Corua, •• .
__ ......... IN
Tea " _.... _ aft
Twenty Cowes " " (to ono sidles* We
Tv•ha Cosies, or orer. " (to address of
shah tfebeeri bee, / mak-- --...- .... - tie -
For is Mb Of Tveaturne or ever. all allf hehh ha
ewe eosi to the groarr-es of the Choh.
ilia ^ rortasitsre are reassiet to let's again he
Tax WIULT Paw.
CALI:PORTIA PRE'IIB.
Basti-Xcratily la ism ix I. Oalitsta
Stumm.
M.AIMIL. Jan. T.—The whole army faileeMped this
moralise to the north ef tin igto Taney, after Mutat
defied dimwit the pease withwat °mention. IN
the ettsno of the day a (Lanett of metals wee
held to determine upon a plan of is oporationa. It
etatiod that the war/ ta Mira will be tonal's.
bly increased-
LATILST.
Despatches dated Madrid, Jan. elk. report that
stormy weather lied iorreated onecomitioules
with the igeadism, bat tia storm had abated, sad
COIEUISIInkadOII wee re-ettablished. The Spanish
fomee had again awed forward.
• .
ITALY.
The saw of Count Walearattra tridouithe had
pp:minted a very palatal Impression on the Pope.
H• called together the principal taexaban at Um
!leered Collage, and dictated tattiest that ha weadd
never fall to the minion which God had entrusted
him with, hot that. like DU predeocasnr. Pita VII.
he would Naar arils, and gran martynion, rather
than do to.
It Li odd that ?ranee supporta thsiL ,, 14 n .st,/
i bst of
Piedmont against the enlistmeat of f far
the Papal army, and partiodatiyftel-w wbok
esia of Ambles -swift into
The theatres, of 'Ceske hod been skied, owleg
to political demonstrations.
Letters from Genoa /peek of the ?Mobility of
hostilities' being Footstool id Italy.,
It via believed that the Papal troop', reka
by the Ambles; wall meter Legwaggis,
al
in
the that owe &Male meal mod allirettis
-
Th. I, t i 4 . r i 4 4 .449 14 4, 1 1 j;
tooreselng - '
tat?my*
_Anil Bared ailthiemeid beast tate'
. - etathelis Name me?! Sinliala. -
Reiser told boss mum ems Lamellas an the -
pert of Ude Pope Writ Rome, but the Posittetsiy
gives &dada' to Savo-sort
APCCILLL .
Chu le
gs' en lifeegatait Anil& et a wevnew
Interventioe Italy.
Ls Nord directs &Minikes to the teernitiestries-
on in Vienna for the Pontibeal army ande
eyes" of the Austrian Goverenume: An A .
geaeral directs the °pendant They theLe l2 4
beet 'Wien dishasded on aeocent of the Mao=
Sons of their own army. and the most aide mlbsertrr
whose perukes are now arallable buswespemmeg •
of puce. It is jolt aa if limy , siimmni t t aa ,
auxillery one of the elite of their Memo •
and trinefunmed them. by a mare change c t s= 4 .
form. into the army of the .Pope.
/4 Nerd adds The media of the Cabinet
of Vienna, on this oecasks. is net merely diets*.
*able ; it entails sedate daggers to place, end en
Austria herself. By hreeking her Wed. Semis
tears up the preliminaries of %IBaPrsaee, tali do
treaty of Twirls, and in her tarn forted Prates
from engagements entered Into by Napetuva, re
specting the restoration at the Doke& and their
restored rights."
The Austrian GOTSITICOtit had ordered Prize
Metternich to declare to the Free& Caltest, that
it would steeling to water Fats oigothdiamo ON say
other bade than the agreement 0i Villa Pnoce, er
treaty of Zurich.
LATIMDt LiIaMITE VIA WEE'S:STOW&
Loina.v, Jas. 'S.—The Pommiesl:( the
Ministerial petty is Presets le atill that
the restorstion alto Dukes la lusty weal har s h ees
the most desirable Wettest d the Italian tries
It, however, gives. sp the aeliect as imposiless,
awl thinks the annexation of their Batts to Sari!.
ile by far the next beet Meg.
The Conference arm the easetkm of „lertlyieg
the vermin coests had opened at Bettie, tisoieM
Moltke presidieg. Prussia had ealstnitted a sys
tem for theca:semi demo,
13DIA A3D CHINA.
A Trieste deepeteb ghee adilneal use tram
Mims and India. ender dale of eaatae, NeTtet
bor Mb. and Cabinets, Deeentber Attr.
The truly between Us Veiled Stater sad eblu
Dad been pat in fem..
Part of the Engli/la troops. &drain fu apart
ti.me
b. against tbe Cline% ked already kitrt Ine the
aort
Indian derpstrbes as manes that Jars Ilsirssiz-r
was operattag aaralnie the Weds in Tend.
A sabaaarias eabt• had Lena manressfany taif
&lira belvista Singapore sal &Uri& -
Order had bees est/Winked at Farawa.k
A ETTA AL !A.
latalliesen frvs Melboarne to the Ik Di Ns
reenter. taro Says hair tdaa at restrike atail ei.
eke., is raseired.
Flour was .heady. Uhl is lamb raved from 33
aka California Wheat wu adding at k.
At Sydney Flour bad declined to IN per dm
ticklers of Weal were ellemaadia; as 'drama
At liobartiown, neer was animated, and
at f per tat_
Look* Yowler Ifsaarr —The Suck Farling,
bad exhibited a deur, se katieney. Os the Mb
Aare war er • heavisam. and Quads
were last gusted at kikitif for abasey. earl kik
93} for eremite The ether departmemb of the
ktoek Exthaties sheered a tondoney to dopes/eke
The imam( for disorient centineraid Wire, tat at
easkinat transaotiou akit pike. be ow th e Beak
tatainrays. Attend , * Vll drawn to the tact that
the bullion at the Bask of Englaset wet toasty
.L 40.000 below Übe lowest saserent toe eked thremaile
oat last year. This is ascribed to II& emornieca
Importalloct. tad the creatins of the kik* weer
!Brea. The imleeieekkh•rL-oser:oksrrrf-daeacdL
-nwy4v use nartas Loan eked at shoat 3 per eas t.
onrsalks. The applintioes for it emu egad to
twenty-two mrlibsi PtilbUlt, hardy eight times abs
amount needs&
The Tinos' city article of lad maker sap -
'• Coueols to-day dethned I, sod several asks wet*
ended on the part of the piddle. At the mate
time there ta no inherent Wel ksess in lbe market
from over Sealy of luck , aid mark of the elan
nem would d ppear if then was a prospect of
gold arrivals daring the sent few day/ /*Geleat
to meet the constant drain to India_ Farther
name continued to be withdrawn from the bank,
and no considerable receipts are expected tataiedi
akty, either front New York cedar:Ostia Oirkg
to the supply of money from dividends, the demand
for dioroant has not been large, and at the bank a
moderate Romani of failure her aloe been trans
acted. The railway market also exparievons a
little heaviaese. Anal priers of nearly ail the prim
ei pal stocks being a fraction lower than yesterday
Coned, closed for mosey at for moray;
9.51 fir account, and 93ia93f for the now threes.
The bank has made no change in Its rate dis
count."
In the London product market sager wed un
changed; Cores steady; Tea very dm, bat trent
amino, small; Eke firm: Saltpetre steady and
Tallow firm.
The Duke de Gremenent has demanded to ha
released from his functions as French ambassador
at the Papal Court.
Active preparations are being made for the
eompletion of the Elan eamd.
Botooes, 11111.—The revolutionary committee
has organized timMferstkins in the neighboring
Papal prosincee. These which took piece in the
theatre of Aneona and Bonn are especially men
tioned. On the authorities eppeariag in their
boxes the spectators left the theatre, as If in SO
eordspee with a preecocerted arrangement.
New pamphlets against th• temporal power or
the Pope base been published In the Legations
and in Tuscany.
VENT LATEST.
The rnirers is the only paper allowed to pub.
lisp the Pope's discourse. The impression pro
duced by the Imperial raining is generally (iron.
bly regarded at Paris and weaned nearly as much
sensation as the pamphlet.
The hulopeneforret Beige says that there was no
foundation for the statement that Marshal Canto
lien was ti be seat on an eatreordirary mission to
Rome, and that he has already returned to his
command at Macey.
The upect the Italian cv!estion bu assnms.i
caused mach rejoicing at Venice and .Milan.
The fret electoral college of the letter pleas
chose Coon' °STOW' IS lie candidate, after pre
viously °Plainly:lg hit consent.
AUSTRIA.
Agitation against the concordat WU Ittereasing
The Austrian public openly tpeak of tae pmts..
etc of selling Venetia.
Employees and some Government officers have
reseired ardent not to take part in public tVOIIII7-
estlon retpectLag the ceent of the times.
Tort, The steamer Borussia, from New lork, arrived
at Poothamptos oq As morning of the 12th. •
The steamer Pere had arrived at Southampton,
from Alexandria tith December, Malta January 2,
and Gibraltar Januere 7.
FRANCE.
Lord Cowley arrived at Paris on Tuesday.
The Gazette de Pram., had tacit ed a Srat warn
frig froth the Minister of the Interior.
TURKEY.
11th.—Letters fnsm Constantino
ple announce that pablio agitation h increasing
It was supposed that rasa Pasha would soon ha
dismissed.
Skip Sews.
lavniteram. Jet. IL—Arrived. bhips 'Western Eel
vi re. I Morton. and .1.14 Prescott. hem New Orleans:
ship Elsa Boonsll. from Charleston.
Flailed. snips SANIII G. Owens and Minnesota. fur
Charleston.
-
Memoranda.—The sh 4 Britatutia. which was ashore
at Barmouih, has tot OE, and her COMO LI bet us Leaded.
Commercial Intelligence.
I.lVElteoOl. COTTON MARKET.—The .nl . • of
Cotton for the three days were 21.0f0 talcs of .Eleh
6.000 were taken bL . speetdatora and for export. The
market closed on Tuesday tinter. but
offsrour their stooks freely. but not prosier sdes.
The edifices from Manchester cortowe of a favorable
etr•rtrter. °lnsane steady and Erm for Cloths and Tam
Baz.luovri --RItharOSOO SOEIMOO. Co. (ante
Flour dull at a decline of ati awe Fnday. The quota
tions are 2le Ma. Wheat dull and earner:bat Dot quota _
tut lower prices. Red On Malik ; white Str Mettle 6d
Corn dull and very difScult to sell Yellow nan
P row isimui dull and 1.1.-• ant a:mortal:lt. Lard dull but
unthaneed In price. Tallow firm at tea (or butchers'.
psopree.—jiabo l quiet at Vs 64 for Pots. &tear
stenos. Rice steady. Coffee steady. Roma stes4.l at
is 3(1 for 001111DOO. Srinti of Tit effluvia firm, ant
holders demanding an ukases to Zs- Oils (stet.
Lemma hissaers.—Fkiurquiet. Suter firm. C. flee Grin. Tea slow °reale at unaltered tinges. Rice firm.
Linseed Oil Vs ed. tallow Ms
LATEST—wm Queenstown.
LtrEaeuOL• Thursday afternoon.—Cotton a+lea to
day Me Wee. Yesterday's quotations tarely cum
tamed.
Bresdrlnds dud, and salmi unimportant.
ems-means dell.
Lo Tuesday afterinot.—Consola closed at RSV
.03'i for money, and 90‘ilebeli for account.
There are rumors of • probable advent* in bank rates
of dtwount.
. .
THt R.DAY AY TERNOON.—COR.IOII 93 , .." 7150 i for inn
waf mkt 95 , a896% for account.
LIFE AT A New ORLEANS Horzt..—.Night
before last some rascal of a fellow dropped a lot of
torpedoes on the floor in the hotel, where the
crowds were in the habit of walking and standing
around. One man trod upon one of the combos.
tibles; it popped, and he jumped. MN jumping
created a stir, and some one else stepped on
another torpedo. A rude followed. Gentlemen
squatted around, and dodged behind pillars, and
got out of the way generally.
The special officer brought out from New York
by the lessees, to stay about the hotel and keep
things straight, had that day, in oon.aequence of
the superfluity of flying bullets on the previous
days, packed up his baggage and started back to
the North via the Jackson Railroad. Be being
absent, some one sent for the city police, and spe
cial °Beers Lard and Boylan went there dying.
They found no dead, they found no wounded ; they
found out nothing, jest then. The people who had
stampeded bad begun to smell the sell, and knew
not dug, but in g0...4 time the jokeleaked
G. Crescent, January IT.