The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, February 01, 1860, Image 1

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    'X'Ht PRBEIS,
PUSUSICIW - DAIIT IrioßPTim
flrEqo/31: . /50.' . 4 . 17' qiIESTIATIT STREEt
DAILV:PRASS.
PBS Wsl3l6..patib.6 io the Clint ere.
•
'Melted to lidheenbere out of. the OW at DOLLAtt I
' FOWL DDLI;I46 HOU Biala. hlsolverte
Tanax.Bor.iene VOX Six adoirres—iniiintiblir in Ltd'
1/11i148 for the time ordered.' '
-„ •
- TittavTer,xx..Y._
Melba tO eu6eonhexe ayt nf. the City et Taal= Dot,
tAng PRE etiNtlr, lu adviduilyz-
STATIQIO4Rt.'
112M1 NEW. _FIRMS AND. i lagn
, •Oitstia 1 3 - 7 V %,,•
WM. F. IVIURVITY & bONIS,
4.11! CRESTNUT ''_•" •
Selo* Four% • •
PUOSIOAt HAIWZMACTOIIIIIII DIP
BLAN IC B 0 0 IC 5
mid" or Linen Stook,
SpecHted Orders Oroetialy
Dra,Re k, Noteapprins reasalbetter and
BOW reperboio Bove a, watt n, tato orrroek or
inpam- currN cum STAT/Ora
trt , AND -supps
AZILL dc MER.
MANDMITURaItii
VIROMALII 'DUMB
BOOTS AND 610125.
VO. Itosvi TWO nun
►hil wort:men tof Car midi BM" and Shoes OQII
Wfd4tle, ac.
SILVER WARE.
•
WWI. WILSON it-SON
Invite medal attention to their stook of BILVDR
WAIU, wbioh is now unusually !aim affording a wa
-7:04 of pattern and design unsurpassed by any howl
the United States, and of fixity quality than is inannfao
tared for table use in any part of the world. -
Our Standard of Silver is 935-1000 'Willi*
The English Ptarllng',
Azateriagn 'and 9004000
Tlingit will he nen tlost wealvo thing-dye parts purer
than the Amerman and French coin, and ten parts purer
than the English Sterling. We melt all our own Silver,
and we riuwantee the quality Cu above (Sip), which is
the ji/i4SS Mon Celt di 'molt to lid sorviteabk, end will
realist the sotlon ot :acids mac better than sks or4i
'lrgary Nies" trzawwfaetwtui.
1911,WILSON Si EON,
II IY. CIONSIIII, RUTH AND OBSURY 13T13
11.--Any Lneness of Silver talataptared as agreed
eon, but positivity f%0114 infsrior to lintts.l and hoot-
Mg standard.
Deelora eupplieditallt theism standard u need In
our retell department.
Mae Silver Bala, MI-1003 parts Titre, oonstantli on
band. sa34-ilm
HARDWARE PACKAGE HOUSES.
Alsan & BRENNEI-1,..
NO3. 93, Hi, AND 91 NORTH FIFTH ATREET
PHILADELPHIA,
WHOLESALE OOMMI88ION• taiscaurn.
For the sale of di kinds of '
A ICIMOAN itIANUFACITIRED HARDWAISp
AND INPORTNNS ON
GERAIAN, BELOLIN, FRANCA, ABA ANAL=
lIARDWLIE A D OUTLERY,
Seep constantly on nand alaige stook of Ooids to cop
sly Hardware Dealers.
BOTCHER'S PILBO,
By the east or otherwies.
BarNONER'S EDGE TOOLS,
BUTCHER'S STEEL OR VARIOU SIN%
WRIGUT'B PATENT ANVILS AND VIM
_ .
. •
burr ct.qein,
Alit ether kinds in °Tors virletr,
SOLN AGXIIYB /OR
8111,1&P'8 RE, PBATB Ir PISTOL
• WEIGHING ONLY aN OHMS& ,
aluutra NEW NORM,. RIFLES AND FIST4IS :
■DWARD 8, lIMIDT. nto, 6.3Uaximi. 4. T. 11811101211
81339-tr
p .
.
AOKAGE HARDWARE HOUSE.—WOe
*mid resmtlif call Te &grin ..
Ica! 1 . ;; e f ic tli ati. o
a I UiriA IW A ra fIARDWAIX Wutot! we ofrer at e. sm&l!_
074174 ftt e forrjrur ge ita ri den sktroi k tsde a d Howie de
&era e ft 'r n !(1 tr. gr . u l, 18 rkt n,
at COMM ROTA Intim,
• , ra e y
I rtmg and Commi on merohants.
MO Atlanta to (wawa add yknnettlolisadera
&0234?
OlitIGS, eneftncAts,'&-c.
DIMS,
Si:
*O.
HOBT.. SHOEMAIIIY C7:0:
{{I)oK. I2~r I
FOURTH AIM RAOR'STIMITir
WHOLESALE . DRUGOISTS,
Importer' and Dealers In 'WINDOW KAM PATNTO,
ana, invite the attention of
COUNTRY MERCHANTS
to their largo stook of Goode. whiekther offer at the
lowest market rates. coal:
DOUSE.PURNISHING GOODS.
GOODS FOR THE SEASON.
BRONZED FENDERS AND IRONS,
STEEL FIRE SETS,. FOOT - WIRAGTREI,
DIAAVER sTANDs 'PLATE WARMERS,HOT
waa . R.ol.93im, ha.,
HOUSE-FURNISHING STOMA
NOB. 922 AND 1220 CHESTNUT EMMET,
'ENO, MURP,HEY & CO.
SCALES.
MANCHESTER SOALES.—Counter,
Platform, Waretanuse, Ugh Coal, and Maim"
AkoMs e ntng Machines tAndroles Patent), and Bail
in An. W.. at No. 44 CHEnTN UT Street.
ORA. LES A. DANIFI4.
la .. •
.FAIRBANKS' PLATFORM WALES.
I"
For gale br FRlA4,loriegNia.
IHEDIdJNAL.
111 RELWINSLOW -
rOR CHILDREN - •TEETHING,
ishp nallitatee the. of t o fthilati a ll e t
Me reduajg an i t el i r ti co ;
and epaam sr swn. a
tam To itEounaTr s .T BOWtLe.
.NEM UPolli it. mothers. ttwul give rest to li es', yourse
"LBW* AND ILNALTH TO YOUR INFANTS.
' wa l l ard ° 4l t lay , °"4 tri • afn:V24 ror pi BM, t r,);
4, aw. h......? . able to as or my ocher
fi l lgrro Pli d eo i iWgi
eon
. 1
61patiqt#' 4 t',. I:m4dwit. 0,, 0.1..-
IKu are . del at •••• w beereit a rna, and
. in terms of Wallas ... armee ono Its ras9
eots,and mediae] vir ;V es. . e' ape An"
mane; - *what we ,d , A ow ,' of air !,egi yea
MiriVel l uir ge '"' M a e 7:" PA r get everi
Cue
Whereh the inn a I
f s 6 .44prar n mPt i l:k nag
IV:Air t i g r g i rlig l i: E ' Mint:We* or
en
1 :ram lentstrate 0 Omer
d usimit .
tiUbtilu New Itagenii P,.. , d glie beim eartai with
Saver- lbotz t rgi .., F
,i i... E6
in
it not only renews' t IE I child . rom 7 ' Dean, but
rrthe etnmeoli end ' bow pll4' rote SoidltD
Aover 10114134 erg/ 4.• t w tra It t egerli e
LI AND Vrat 0 001,10andoverootoo on-
Carrati_whlobi if no , Yeeedily renteSied, tid lb
efa.h. -W I believe it the co beet Sad re i rr pr r A ll
1 / 4 11( 2 0IIII2.111. ia.; traether it artas from
teeth/rigor froul any other care We would say to
fryer - , mother • who bur a lit qh ld anferins front any 01
the foregoing eguiplaante, go not let your urtn t reg,
-not the premai d em or othertot eland
Wift r it i ft iiirOMI I I 6 t 4 17 ElPAPlL at i w royl the
ea o rom me brine f timely led. F ° ipito.
.laorm or ulna will lawn Pan, eic b0t&1.4. IttMe
amine unless the fact xi mauls of URTts& Prat-
WO, ,New York. is on the outsi
I an m ewrepper,
t i iold by Drug Lists throusho N t the word. A
mu
-
samos_S,sNo' l OLWAI Street ow VerK. 171-1
'VI ARTIN 4 QUAYLE'S
ISTAIIONERy, TOY,agn FANCY SOON
V 1 ZNM 4 8"1 1 4.7614
111 LOW
1114111fP t' LADXGPIita..
4anatanOT on hand Pertninary an rant arOntea.
NAVAL_ ST9BSS,
SY) bble 8 Iritß :ro ru nC iti ti n n e e;
to ' plans
C .
,E gihozoiwre mid for stde by •
toBllollFrilTirMiga
•
1 NICHOLSON,
sr* • Slanufaeturor of
' -- • efflaTt I,I*FM end eIARRRTLUB
BOSOMS AND COLLARB
A latie end choice assortment. and WALL mans, at
wdyron bend, unto which t yetueutarly invite the at
tention of 040116ndOfnMpt-pNying SHORT TIXN Wynn!.
B. E. earner of RECOND end ARCH Streets. VinM
doled Je.lB.lm* .
,
AK AND PITUH. - --250 bbliz Wilming
ton Tar 200 kegs Wilenington Tar bbla.into
(rt stoic. and tor kale by itoWbLY, AnIiBURNER
010.,1k0.160.. Witnrystx, NS - Pal
AL; , (4IOL, IfLUID, and PINE OIL, in
winds and half bitrrels. manufactured frtehgttai4i
tifid...6l7lSrlt It' qrati'v . jail
11/1 Eels. MAOKE811;--A floa invoice o
Av 011., hrs.. are., 6114 kits NoDurypon iturpoo
tiMott.' also !myna lot of naltaller 0.1 Maokarel
k *tom oo for iamb! • W Y MAR A
4g4 ,
-kilitUkrblol4sBS, &a, —stlo lthde. - and
obotop mid mediato Syrups. 'Ale°, primp Mum
-451113.0.; o Pl. PliPiPiei by lAMEd , GItAIIAM &
.';:s".l..PiTrf A AtTARP IPS
BV,"6:NAAit 8.- 7 ,0 assortfurnt
- neve6nVod. more Atitroop
To M. Arli b i 4 1:boo,
No, mg Ada FRO !Meet.
.`•COFFSS.--4.0 = pockets
-,.1 ..11P 1 1.0 0, 44, for We J,10141,0 040104 & cO.,
1,1111,1411 40.04 -
- _ •-- -- -_,Z• 2""
~
-- - `;
.:.•.--,. . , --...
_ -„ ,- •. - - - '• ,-. ..;.7, , .%`1•.-' , .
• -• : --;=-.• -• . :•;!•0 ~ .4, t tage- - :7,'i.
. . -
•
•
_ 7..,.,
..,:,
~.„..
x „ ,„
~
..." ,
.
THE WEEKLY " :,'::: 2 -7, -, 1;r4-i - „T4 - kf - Z46.
Tea ;Roa r
.... y ric.t. i. zio rt. b. 7 1 )
a t
_to - -....- :I:: ..'7,:rdi.,,_,44.
•
t
'a
.• . t„.\\\ N l I f/// „,,,,
....„ „,•,„,. , , ~,..
...._ -..,,,, ...... • ..., AF -.„, ... ~
. t... ~.._
Three Pm , .
` ,
urR
___. s. `,\ 0 111,/, ' RI .-..
.• •. : -.".' VI •- ' £:ve Copzet, . .
(. e 7- • ? '/ 0. 1, '-
',,,- ' . !'.,% •• •11 ) - -- , `" - ''fi L < ‘ \ I . ;.' r " -- ' - 4 " e ' - ^ ^ , •
Ten " •• ..
,
T w- v i ent at7 y C° Co l ; e r a s,.o . r °Ter, : Itoc73 . routi llab".ll l; ... 111111.1111-'
- ~..,.....-..., ' I.
P r - •
---- :,- • ----
. . ~......f „, ----__ . f --. ... f. ; w
...., „..,.. ,
~.
~, .
. ....
. ,
4 - .! - MlOWiii:':‘P-:'.' .s 7Cze'
" - - • - .- , b" . Old -
01100111. 14111111 0 , . I . :' •.:. ,t .. ..
:, ' ._ - '': -, : E.Os
1 , :._ • + each Poahscribero eszb.....______ . Ise
, - 4 _„.,.. _.._.,.., \......
.. --
7 - - , • - '.. - T-1 . 4 ,- ;.'''.-'
..,,r.h..,i', 4 : , .,-,......„.1'4,:,......! • ...,:..• :., Li;*..- k- • .Av '' -- •.• .-. ~. -' , .1 '•-- .. • u- - -- . ..!g
"" i N ~. •:. •./t/ ...„•
-
.--........ For a Club of Twenty-one or ors', Ire wth mai ai
..--, ', 111 .!"..,-...., ..... ii , ••••.. AO. .• ! ... .:: - , ...,44.
...-' • ';.:i.•:;'rl.?,ii.. • • • •)444 104.0 : : : •••; , •::-.... :-: •.:- ... '', '. • .l e lo°.l' . -.. ~,. `'.....: • . ...•-•,'' • • -,.• • ' _--
.....--........
..... -.
-`
intro copy to the getter•pp of tto Chic.
..._ .,
- g.7..,.';',/,';`,:::i;11;
-'.~~t ' • ' ,
.- ..,0;• -- 1 ' , ,.„ - . ..:.'#,• 10 !w •::.:: 1), ....,•• • • •./ -.- ' 7, -!,: - - .„T ....', ..,- -........
''''' . ' 7, , .... : „,
..: :.;..--..,,-,. - ,'-..
...:...!: ...:,,Ne-• - • -. TPrlefk t Lt..-;; tiZ - . ...A-aai,- —...-- --- ' ...1 :, --..."
IfirPcotmsaterl aze zeesested to act as wets ftlq
.„,,. -........._ ~. ----
Tax Rune Pine.
f t : -:j . ___..„................ .......„,„.„,. „. .
• -....
-.
----
VOL. 3.-NO. 156.
RETAIL DRY GOODS.
EIV,ENING DRESSES. •
-- L. a. LEVY .51 CO.
Invite the attention ofthelr customer's to avers' beautifu
are u rtmentrrt
BALL AND EVENINCI DRESSES.
MONDAY. ,Tenuary $O,
1:1344t . - SO and 811 CHESTNUT Street.
Neap FOULARD t•ILKS., •
r a , T. LEVY & CO.
' Have opened two moo
NEW FOULARDS.
Of good quolitp,
AT
itn.R CENTS PER YARD.
JASO-at EB9 nod 811 C.REsTNUT Street.
- [ 4 I U ftl , i ibli tN ot un Y tiVUl.4s.
WARM:BM gßarttvas bare replenished
t
their took of Maple Goods of their own importation.
males' and Irukt o Lities theetinso.
rishP , hosr and biter Linens.
turtins Linens elm best tileamieli.
nen Damask and Damask Clots.
rink Napkins it i r t l ti G , ;T?iie.,
oliToVi.derea Damask 'towels.
tanum Croat and Amerioan Linens.
ens; Worsted Damasks. Ratan Lame.
ce Curtains, b imbroidered Muslin,.
mored Lasting". Moment, Druitgette.
oth,_Ts.ble and Piano Co ere.
Butt Blue and Green Shade 11011 ands.
nolish and American fine B.a.nketa.
' • targ:ghtiV4.llll,7.lfahithig.
jal7 801 and 803 tIRItBTNUT direst.
BARGAINS FOR SIX WEEKS.
TRoRNLEy 4.01118 M, N. oomar FIORTR
and SFNIN .91INDErl, would reereiotfully inform the
ghtrail that fir now (January /h /Oh) until
4a
HR Drilit w elAßDLEN OF PROFITS!
Thor awe anannel ast 'kick of
F i,
n u gfigal.d e fuligican Blanket%
t elhitting wlihootittg,Maattai.
;=eglArOtgraC=:;6l.
d rood man . olatiintilton
ALA GE L STOP OF FANCY BIL 8.
ftet make nnon Naito.
t_irert De Daniel!. (Jarman lin Plaid', &o.
14"7 Pl e lrt i trarEfr 8 1 0 b S 9 1PRICE!
N. B.—lt will pay to give na a call. lal4
4-4-F lZZe i tT ra i t7pa A HIRT/NOS, SOFT
s rieBTil l r e tar t n i rD
nd 4-4 Unsnruasabla r rlannets.
anger de for tntants' Shawls.
Large Stoek of Paris Embroideries very ohean, viii
Setts Collars and Sleeves, Collars, embroidered Linen
Cambria Handkerchiefie •ke.
Ladies pod Cents' Linen Cambria Handkerohiefs, an
great varlets. •
Gents' tellk Handkerohiefs. Black Cravats, and Neck
ties.
WiIITN GOODS in v-rioti.
WINTER STOCK, redu S oed in_nries. of AB kinds.
DRES 000 DEL
Blanket and Brock!! Shawls.
Bed and Crib blankets.
Black C 100114- ClOttli._
Cloaks Neat rat:- -
GREAT Ik tLE DiltriON tintlkPeb ARCHcwt
taking stook. C ARL AMS,
talt-ti StailT• and Streets.
BLUE PLAID rLAIINELS.
Elegant Broobe Shawl&
B_lne Cloth Closes.
Woollen Lora 7 thawle. '
irony 20 and 21.1 cent Detainee.
Sett and et 60 Wool Rodeo worth et and BB
watt Black Moossehnea. 38 to 66 Dente,
id cent all-wool Plaids.
CASSDIERBS. ' .
• 1 for best Fano, Ceasitnerea.
Ono& at et, 'LIP, and 51.16.
ulnae and CassimefBB. 40 to 76 oente.
tte6nee very oheap.
r
. •
. 60 neat futt•rate Bht to and Drawn,.
(Novel', Tie., ildhla t Re., auction lots.
000P8 it et CUNARD._
NINTH M R..T.
N. B.—I,INBN GOODS. a large and desirable gook of
every deberllytion. Jab
1110SIFRY - GOODS. -J. WM. 110 F.
11 . A•MANN, No. g NOrtfi BIGHTIi Street, hae net,
°ninth is Fell ?Kook of gantry Goode viz t Underveista
and Drawers ofthurrneteno ilarner'earnorlarin•
fete d tu v re, s for ladles an nieires ut e t ilar ite h e n l o inft inns
&to:l a gers . I°r lClrenioirery (hives and Mgt!
ills, and, 44 general!? enertelelea to the Homer?
less. . . reepeetraily solicits the attention of
atm es to h ie stook, areartng teem that hie stock ie
eirei ed for variety by nny other in the city ' And that
h prime are as low as those or any other regular bowie,
abaumentinade hem the prloes named.
eal-wfmtt
THORNLEV & unISM,
A. Northe.t corner glOll7ll and SPRING OAR
DEN Streets. would Metro attentior their stook of
~ • " • OUSE LINEN,RDRF ~ , k,c..
) r,thadown direct linvortitnon, w oh tney can cotl
. -ntil. recommend. , •
AWL no axe:alien recommend. .
a
; t
' lt ' •Ilittili r irtli z itge k rUstr u Petrets and Flamfehh,
Mseill e or 4 " ,:irsligk i ttn a f t o i rta "i b ta rea; 40.. •
Baum. of Monne anal °matte , and Dianna Shawl.,
seam at Jou than coati* -
. ph Vanor,Ehlice tort.itheap. .•
, . stmakeect smolt iik, /kg. -
' Allier etoo will be loud desire le„ • in!
COMMISSION ROUSES.
HENRY D. NELL,
• • CLOTH " STORE.
w00. : 4---Arra--*-- - erAlNKANtrunrr;
0931100ATINEM,
ourNaurme, NOSHOWA, FRONTED, AND PLAIN
BBAVERB,
Moo, CIANIMBIUM, VELVETS, Ac., Ac.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
nl7-m&then
FARRIELL & MORRIS,
132 OREBTNUT STREET.
IMPOR TERS.
COMMISSION NERO N TS
CLOTHS,
OABBII4IIREB.
Po - Herm& Arm
111 3 ,11fif0 AND
811MMER 00A77N08.
DiANTHLItra.
PANTALAM STUFFS,
dIT4ro ho,, ,ito.
FROTIIIN4RAM. ot WELLS :
36 LETITL& STREET, AND 34 3013TH
FRONT STREET.
OOTTONADEIS,
taltablo for bOtb, %Atom sad Jobbing largo
misty.
On a mEit COATMDD AND OASIIMERDTT6
Made by Worthington Mills,
Or t n i fokan for these desirable goods for Dodos trade.
SHIPLEY, HAZARD, & HUTCHINSON,
• MO US CHESTNUT ST.,
OOEMISSION KEROHLIM
FOR Teat, SALE OF
PHILAD.BI4PHLA.-MADE
GOODS. _
CIGARS, TOBACCO, &o.
ESTABLISLIED 1760.
PET ER LORILLARD.
SNUFF & TOBACCO. MANUFACTURER,
.18 and 18 cireminits STREET,
((Formerly 43 Chatham Street. New York,)
Would. call the es veinal attention of elrooere and
Druggists to ha removal, and also the artieles of his
inanulacture,
DROWN SNUFF.
ktiteaboy, mente,
Fine Ramos, Re •
Puss Virsinia,
' Coarse Rapp/ Natchitoohea.
Amenetin entlemits,_ Copenhagen.
YE LOW SNUFF'.
rgtiA l oast Scotch, , 1 111VYeast,
rah gone) , Dew Elootoh. co or Lun 'foot,
TOSAC •
SINE err ctittiVlNO. ShiokiNe,
N 0.1.. , A.L.. or plain, Bt. Jag°,
Caveralieh, or sweet, Spanish, '
NO.. 1& 2, oiled SweetSeented Orinoco
.inister,
Eitefoot. tin Foil Cavendish. Furs Turkish.
A Circular of Priem{ will be cent on application.
N.- 8,....N0te the new Article of Froh Sot:doh Snuff',
whieh will be found a tumenor article for dipping put.
taiece. d25-am
HAVANA OIGARS.—A handsome a--
entitle*. now landing from brigs " Karam& "arid
"Alfred exnll," and for roe low by
CHARLES TETE,
Ja204.0t 290 W a Wan' Street.
ONVI fyifi • 11AVANA CIGARS—Com
'‘."•FV Paging
Flom gprtagal,
Wu do Oro, Neat ;no.
fraann, it mebeee.
eaueroe.
MIAS.
Abudaria. Yntniri, &a. &o,
of different vacs and aualitiea,all.ndinb4ibatara.
(A IR, T,. .
MO for age by
im W A Nu Btreet.
ja2o-10t
mACIN'E f ftEL.-425 bbls. Nos. 1,2, and 3
Mackerel, in assorted anginal Paokafes, of the
latest catch, for sale try C. SADLER LO., A Roll
'treat. rod door above Front. hal
A. FACT WORTH KNOWING 7 -THE
4 -a• nrdi_elace in the City to et a first-rate genuine
Imported Havana Cigar at DE-...V.0N'ti,41A CHEST
NUT. above Fourth. North side.
airr LEON keens none but toe very best on hand.
A single trial will convince you of that fact. Ja2B-1
STEREOS' 01)10 VlEWS—Freah arrival,
and
"Id le s"AYAl.Winni"troatet t n,
112 South Kill STII. Street;
bellow Chestnut,
Also. Improved Spectacles comedy fitted to the
eye.nlght and warranted to suit; midroseopes, opera
ginestor, ho., in a great variety and at the lowest
IMMO. ja22-tit
HAVE YOU REARD OR D b YOU
k n ow where to set the best Imported Clear in
the City I f not. I Will tell _nod tgo to our young friend.
frE LtiON, ell CH , fiTNUT Street above Fourth,
North eine. end you will be core to be anted. li e bee
also fine lot 4 Bleentohaum Five& Clear 'rubel , .
Canes, iltrivre Atams. ka.
IVI ALIKEREL.-500 bbl. Prime No 1.,
IVA 000 bbla Large No. 8., 200 bble email N 0.3., linden
ileaortmeat of Packages.
For sale by WM. J. TAYI,OR._gr. CO.,
451 122 Bad 124 NORTH Wherveg.
NEW YORE ADVERTISEMENTS.
AUGUST BELMONT & CO.,
BANKERS,
NEW YORE,
Issue Letters of Credit to Tampers milsbie to
ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD,
TRHOttall TOR
MESSRS. 1107MORILD.
OP
PARIS, LONDO v. FRANKFORT, VIENNA, NA
PLES, AND THEIR CORRESPONDENTS.
508-6 m.
SKELETON SKIRTS.
1860 . SPRING FASOON. 1860.
. •
WOVEN GORE TRAIL
SKELETON SHIRTS,
NODE DE PARIS.
OSBORNE & CHEESMAN.
ANSONIA, CONNECTICUT,
ARE TFIE SOLE MANUFACTURERS OF THESE
CELEBRATED FASHIONABLE SKIRTS.
Their Ooode are all made with special referenoe to
the ;wants of a critical trade, and they are confident that
for
SYMMETRY OF FORM,
QUALITY OP MATERIAL, and
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THItY ARK UNIQIIALLT C :' , % z r
R T , F a OR IN ART °TRU
Being made nuderboth the "Extension" and "Woven
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P. S.—Ladies should be particular to see that "Woven
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Ja26 det&wmfilt
CAEPBTINGS.
CARPETS.
F. A. ELIOT k CO., Nos. SS and Si North FRONT
St.eet, are the SOLE AO t NTS an Philadelphia for the
ROX BURY CARPET COMPANY, and have constant])
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AM a large supply of the various kinds of CAR-
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from nearly all the best manufacturers.
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N. B —F. A. ELIOT & CO, being the Bole Agents
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-Ent 'and Wonted Company,) and being agents also for
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various k rule of Carpets manureetigred in Pluladelphie,
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PINE FRENCH PAPERS AT 80 PER ORNT. BE
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Copies of IisiGUERREOTYPES or Amt , rotypes, o
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DRY-GOODS JOIDIERS.
COLTRSEY.
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HAVE REMOVED TO
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THEIR SPRING IMPORTATIONS
OP
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ALL NEW STYLES",'
OPEN THIS DAY
BY
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(IMPORTER `AND MIMIC)
213 MARKET STREET, ,
Ja3l tf PHILADELPHIA.
V
I
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pa,
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can
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Those excellent GOODS will be °front
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LANCABTkR,
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nTSFASEB OF 'HE THROAT V4D
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JOURNAL
th . fr o h ;
rx i tri n r4ril te4 3 y a wl v., wrt.k
Ja3ttl2t&W2t F. N 0.308 iROAI3WAY, f.
r , 8, JOHN V WRI
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ii7 l 4l; e 4 in iousxi t t , .
ltnrni
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YOWL , N
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pETER COO
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phronnloranni
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Skull of Robert Hru
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booby. or the Duties
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°l63l.:27tinet
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-IL•
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THE F.t.01.11M RBITAT.EDion d 8
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D. ?MEDI' Or the Pm/byte:ten Chino W y,
31)1111.1.
CONI74?St '
-,bmwry........--ghavtispoot...o , 46 4 l pool. ,4
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CHArRIL f—,7h i : Triune 74entot.
.. 4
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—Aden. the I geod.
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PrineildvS , too Lnw, r
(41111 ay I
" X—Toe - .r.• a Covenant nI Lde , I
X—Adam the I. 4 .wennut Road of the f Aoe.
Xl—Extent of Mem'. Perinea Role nil.
Ori.in of the Soul.
Xll—The APMILACT of Mem.
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X FV—Poture Ingtionnon of Original Sit.
xV—Definition of Guilt Awl of Imuetirh.
X V f —The Guilt of Mem** nett Btu.
XVI , —Netlve Deprariti.
" XT I fl—Prneetntion of Original Sin.
" X IX—The Eternal Coven tat.
0 X X—The Second Adana.
"X I—c_hriet's Obeetetiee to 00 Lnw.
X X 4f—The Nast ''am a Quickfmng
XXlll—ebriet's If irodom and blerr.
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.30
WSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1860,
•
AML. ,
&
cu
1 1.
if
Bulwees Now Poem.
January number or Blackwood's
ie, just republished by Leonard Scott
I NewN York, is the commencement, oc
, nearly five hundred lines, of a poem
a St. Stephen's," from the pen of by
pe most accomplished of living men of
ts. he British Commons, it will be re
amed, assembled in what had been a
el in Westminster, built by King Stephen
put 1135, rebuilt by Edward 111 in 1347,
Iproßriated to the House of Commons about
)48, and burnt down in October 1834. Hence,
i ordinary parlance, the 'House of Commons,
for centuries, has been known as tr St. Ste
phens," and Bulwer's design, in this new
poem, Is c , to give succinct sketches of the
principal Parliamentary Orators (of Britain]
commencing with the origin of parliamentary
oratory (in the Civil Wars) and closing with
the late Sir Robert Peel." The poem will be
completed in Three Parts, and the first portion
ends with the elder Pitt, first Earl of Chatham.
Tho poem opens thus :
When frank•eyed War with Love stood hand in hand,
And cities oped on lonely Faeryland,
Bong was the voice most faithful to the time,
And England Spoke in Chaucer's lusty rhyme.
Thus long ere yet tho Orator is known,
Beatings demands an utterance all its own;
Now thrills in carol■ wise without a rule,
Now fires a camp, and now dictates n
But not till warring thoughts mature their strife,
Till some slow people swell to stormy life,
And, lost the Inert hereditary awe,
Emset a reason where imposed a law,—
Not till the right to argue truth be won,
The heart of many fires tho lips of one ;
And the great Art which sways this age of our.,
Maude forth as Justice 'midst conflicting powers,
And last the foe of aU, Brute Force, prevail,
Leans on the sword, while proffering but the scale.
After glancing at Bacon, the poet comes
down to the period when, in the Civil War,
peril making men bold, there arose the earnest
and eloquent men who may be said to have
created Parliamentary Oratory. Bulwer thus
apostrophizes them :
Foundorsof England's slow-built eloquence—
Truth'a last adornment as her fast defence—
Pass—but as shadowy:
DATES, and
,TILLTS,
Then follows an illustrious roll-eall. There,
"the earliest, hardiest orator of all;"
next tilts by
AILY,
HER,
ARIChT ervEET
Weller of the eilrery tongue,
And youth ei ouottle u the Tyro he strung :
Next, "sad with foresight, moves the solemn
Hyde," followed by Atlae•shouldorod Pym.
There, are briefly sketched Vane and Falkland,
proud Strafford and gallant Raleigh. Here,
drawn with great breadth, is ono of the noblest
of that ago—the patriot Hampden :
But see, when rising last os lull'd debate,
With brief discourse, in which each word has weight,
With "brain to plan, tattoo to persuade, and hand
To do all mischief,"—which can free his land,
Great Hampden fills the et e :--
Oh, wise as Strafford, and as Vane sincere,
Warm without frenzy, wary without fear,
Freedom's calm champion, while in peace her trust,
Freeilom's Brat martyr while her war was Just.
Hada thou but laved thine own ilesigns!to crown
No at Its brighte,t tat thy sun go down!
If Heaven In thee had viewed the later guide,
From Heaven's elected death hail turned rude. f/
Thrice h .ppy one! thy white name is not seen
In the red list of Brailshaw'sjuri men :
Thy manhood emote not the gray crownless head—
Thy faith forsook Oct the good canoe it led—
Thy cheek not at the usurper's ecolT,
When pikemen bore a people's bauble oil;
Hid hom thy sight the sired Republic's doom,
In courtiers orowding Cromiell's anteroom.
And Gideon-etaints, the men of Marston Moore,
"inn' into orintrien at the Brewer's door.
Bo pus, 0 pure Ideal of the freed
True star to steer hy,wheresoe'er the sea,
Linking the cause that gives the world its breath—
With Cromwell's triumph No with liainpilen's
death.
After a few lines about Oliver Cromwell,
which are the weakest in the poem, Buiwer
passes on to the time when Charles from
Louis takes his annual fees, snubs rude St.
Stephen, and misrules nt ease. Hero follows
a sketch of Shaftesbury, immortilized in Dry.
den's satire as Aeldtophel :
But from the flats of that ignoble hour,
What genus lifts its ilghtmns•shattered towers
Wild as the shapes invoked by magic spell,
Dire and grotesque, behold Aohitophell
Dark Convict. se ged by History's branding curse,
And hung in chains from Dryden's lofty verse.
Yet who has pierced the lab) nnth of that brain:—
Who plomo'd that genius, both an vast and vain?—
What moved its depths I—Ambition I—Passion /
Whim ?
This day a Strafford—and the next a r)m
Is it, in troth, as Dryden huh
Was his" great wit to mildness near allied ?"
Accept that guess, and it explain.' the Man
Relent—and solve the roldio if you can!
lialiftx and Somers, whom Macaulay has so
graphically described, are next tro'no justice
to, and particular . ' pains has been taken with
St. John--afterwards Viscount Bolingbroke.
art historical character introduced by Bulwer
into " Devereux," one of his `artiest novels.
Hero is the limning:
What voma now molls from Mines Augustan
days ?
What form of beauty glows upon the gaze ?
Bright as the Greek to whom all toil was ease,
Flashed forth the Bullish Alcibiades.
He for whom Swift had not ono cynio sneer,
Whom hardiest Walpole honored with his fear,
Whose lost harangues a Pitt could more deplore
Than all the gaps In Greek and Roman lore,
Appaling, charming, haunting Bt. John shone,
And !aired that age as Byron thrilPd our own;
Bathing for ease, t et ever keen for strife.
Zeno'e his creed, yet Aretin's his life ;
With Protean grace through every change lie sports,
Now awing senates, now perplexing courts ;
Animal of flame, though both a brand and torch,
Firing the camp or daz :ling from the porch.
Behold him now, not in his autumn day,
But the lull flowering of lea dainty May ;
Not Pope's end tend, and eoul-deceiving guide,
sut the mato , ' darling and the Chu roh's pride.
How the fair aspect, ere a sound is heard.
Prepares the path for the melodious word ;
Mark in eaoh gesture, force with ease allied,
And manly pawoon with patrician pride;
And oh, that style! so stately, sweet, and strong,
Whloh, tamely read, has ell the charm of song.
What meet its power o'er boating hearts have been.
Tne gentile speaking while the man was seen!
Judge it. by this—behold a later time,
His party shattered, and its cause a crime ;
His white name blotted, his young vigor spent,
A lone gray Man come, backs from banishment.
Fear seized the Council; England seemed too weak
Against that tongue, If onco allowed to speak;
Law ransacks ail the expedients at Its °home,
Restores the peer, and then proscribes his voice.
Bo the grand orator, bile field denied,
.Shrunk to a small philosopher and died.
Harley encomia. and then we bare
Swift," half Rousseau and half Rabelais;'
Steel and Addison—the beet that
fortunate Genius. to whoa 3 ChillOlN line
Tho ivory's polish lends the ivory's shine.
With strength so sweet in its subdued repose.
Virgil of humorists, and Pope of prose ;
In this what dignits. in that what ease!
In both what attain!—the rarest °harm to please
Berkeley, Cibber, Gay, and Congrovo are
alluded to, albeit no orators, and a full-length
of Sir Belied Walpole,. ot which we quote a
few lines :
Sir Robert waits; those shrewd, CMS& feature: ACM , .
How strong the sense, how English it the man!
English if left to all plain tunes bestows.
And stripp'd of all that man to genius owe,.
Ile sets no flowers. but each dry mimic, gleans—
Statesman In end,, but huxter in the means—
Bo.clly he nearside haute, extends the (Mail,
And hinge the halter with en ostler'. laugh,
Corinetlr, !rank. he buys or bullies all,
And in what placemen style " the practical."
Is this nian eloquent? The man creates
New ground, now ours—the level of debates.
Eloquent.'—Yes, in parliamentary ounce,
Thu skilful scorn of what seeing eloquence ;
Adroit, fanuliar, fluent easy, free,
And each quick point ns quick to seize as see ;
Shielding the friend, but covering from the foe,
Anil ne'er above his audience nor below :
Arm'd in finance, blow up with facts the speech.
And roam of figures bristle in the breach.
Soft in t is tones, seductive in his signs,
When doom dto take " a vote upon supplies ;"
At timea a promr, at no time a putter,
And six feet high—in short, a great debater.
Pulteney, Chesterlield, and Carteret aro
separately described, and then this first part
of .‘ St. Stephens'" concludes with this ad
mirable summing-up of the characteristics
which made Lord Chatham by fur the most
impressive and commanding orator of his
ago:
Pees by the leaser, not inglorious host ;
Awed, they shrink bank ; arise, majestic) ghost
Lo, the great Arts' unrivalled toaster one,
The mightier Father of the mighty Son
Like hero myths before the Romano time
Looms the vast f .rm—if vague, the more sublime;
That pomp of apteoh but such memorial leaves,
As the gone sterna with which the wave still hos , go;
Or as, on hill, remote, the cloudy wreath,
Fluted with the giant sun that sant. beneath.
Yet it le not by words that orifice praise.
Not yet by deeds which after Judgment weighs
With ounce and aeruPle in imps tint orates,
That a great soul, like areal' truth, prevails.
Apart from what is Md. Mal what is done,
There is a force by whloh the world is won,
Born In men's destined ruler !—Reason halts
To gauge the merits or aaseas the faults,
While forth unstudied magnetic influe see flows,
Attracts the followers. or unnerves the foes.
Our fathers tell us what their fathers told,
Bow from those lip, the glorious cataract roll'd
RUARY 1, 1860.
And while its scorn all barrier swept away,
gaoh wave the roughest etill finsh'd back the day.
The edict sublime ; the rattle why fritter down?
Did stage-craft teach the mode to wear the crown'
Leaned he from Rowing inerhat folds to bring
The imperiai purple ?—was he leas the king ?
" Actor" you call him; yes, with inborn ease
What labor made divine Demosthenes ;
Tenei with the might of MIMIC at their choice,
The front august, the ere istalf a voice,
These Nature gave ; did care the rest impart,
Nature herself were chaos without art.
Was It a fault if cowering senates shook,
ThnlPd by a whisper, spellbound by a look ?
Or could the secure dazzle and control,
save as it launch'd some lightning of the soul ?
Other, take force from Judgment, fancy, thought,
CHATIIA3I from passion ; for its voice he sought
Sounds rolling large as waves of stormy loot,
Dr pride made stately, hut by anger strong;
To colder lips lie left the words that teach ;
He awed and orush'd—the Alschy lug of speech.
Here, too, wo conclude this notice, in
which we have allowed the Poet 'to speak for
himself. In cases such as this extracts are
better than criticism, and wo rat content with
having presented our readers with a few
striking specimens of Bulwer's now Poem.
Publications Received.
FROM PETERSON ot BROTHERS
Life In Spain Past and Present. By Walter
Thornbury. With illustrations. 1 TOi. pp. 383
Now York : liarper a Brothers. Mr. Thorn
bury, who has been well known as Art Critic in
the London Athenaum, contributed n
portion of this volume, we think, to If • ..old
IVords. We read snatches of it there w,LI, great
satisfaction, beeaute never before has SpaAish
life bean drawn with a freer or more faithful
pen. Mr. Thornbury has photographed the
eountry, the people, and even the animals, with
equal truth and force. His account of Gibraltar
is the boat, as well as the liveliest that we know.
Above all, he puts his reader, bodily, Into Spanish
hotels, and posts him up fully on Spanish dishes
and Spanish wines. In all respects, a book
pleasant and profitable.
An Appeal to the People In behalf of their.
Rights as Antboriied Interpreters of the Bible.
By Catharine E. Beecher. 1 vol. pp. 38g. New
York : Harper & Brothers.
Lisa; or, the Mesmerist's Victim. By Lady
Clara Cavendish. New York: Evert D. Long
Co.
Fanny. From tho Fjonch of Ernest Fcydeau
Preface by Jules Janin, 2 vol. pp. 2:/3. New
York : Evert D. Long ,b Co.—This story, appro
priately printed upon coarse and discolored pa
per, is one of the most infamous, in tone, plot,
and moral, ever published It is intensely
French—not only sensual bat grossly purrient,
without even the poor set-off of being well
written. A young man of twenty-four gets up
an intrigue with a married woman, who has a
husband and several children. She is aged
thirtpflve, and is represented as a Loretta, who
is attached to her husband as well as to her
lover! After a groat deal of grossness, the
lover becomes jock us of his middle-aged flame's
attachment to kn husband, and thereupon.
querelling with her, retires to a lonely house on
the sea-shore, to write this vile book, and die.
Tho publishers advertise It as '• superior to Mi
cheat's ' Love.' " It is quite different in plan,
style, and motive. In fact, this very same
"Fanny" was considered a little too bad for
Paris itself, which Is not usually straightlaced,
and the censeur publique actually prohibited its
sale. We regret that any person should have
descended to translate it, or that any publisher
could b• ibund to send it forth in an English
dress.
rnox D. Arnerox A Co., Note YORK :
The Origin of Speclea by means of Natural Se
lection, or the Presorvation of favored Races in
the Struggle for Life. By Charles Darwin, M
A. Author of "Journal of Researches during ,
11. M. S. Beagle's Voyage Round rho World." I
vol. pp. 432. New York: Appleton!
The Path which led a Protestant Lawyer to
the Cathollo Church. By Peter 11. Burnett. I
vol. Bvo. pp. 741. New York : Appletone We
reserve theso books, and particularly Mr. Dar
win's, which is one of the most remarkable of
the day, for future notices in detail.
Fluor Dense A JACK3ON, new YORK.
Recolleettont and Private Memoirs of Wash
ington, by his Adopted Son, George Washington
Parke Cuetle, with a Memoir of the Author, by his
Daughter; and illustrative and explanatory note!
by Beam , J. Leming, with Illustrations. 1 vol.
Svo. pp 644. New York: Derby d Jacksan.
A book co full of racy anecdote and authentie
reminiscences that eve hope to make two or three
articles out of it.
Fans J. B. LIPPINCOTT A CO. •
The Voyage of the "Fox" on the Arctic Seas
A Narrative of the Dlecovery of the Fete of Bir
John Franklin and hie Companion+. By Capt
McClintock, It. N., LL. D. With Maps and Il
lustrations. Ono volume, pp. 3n. Boston :
Tioknor Ac Fields. We noticed this very fully
some time ego, from the proof-eheots, and hare
only to pay that It la a suitable companion and re
pel to Kane's Explorations, for It narrates the
ooropleilion of the search to which he so earnestly
devoted his life.
Tom Brown at Oxford. Part 111. A sequel
to " Sohool-days at Rugby." Boston Ticknor
it Fields. Now, that Mr. Thomas Hughes has
fairly got warm to his work, he Is showing sol•
lego•life at Oxford as it never has been shown be•
fore. Tho autobiography of Hardy, the college
servitor, In this part, is admirable.
FIIO3I LINDSAY A BLARISTON
Lyries and other Poems. By S. J. llonaldzon,
Jr. 1 vol., pp. 208. Philadelphia: Lindsey d:
Blakiston.
FROM G. G. EirAss
The Doomed Chief; or, Two Hundred Years
Ago. By the author of "The Green Mountain
Boys." New York and Boston: U. 0. Evans.
The author of this romance, Mr. D. P. Thump•
son, hae written several works of dation, but
none euperior to this. Ile draws the India,
character almost as well as Cooper did, and has
produced a very interesting story.
Life of the Empress Josephine, wife of Na
poleon I. By Cecil B. Hartley, author of tho
"Life of Colonel David Crockett." 1 vol., pp.
377. With portrait. New York and Boston:
G. G. Evans. This is the very romance of hi.
ography. Yet it is a true story, for the personal
adventures of Josephine were at once exciting,
?uprising, and historical. Tho Life is well
written, from a great variety of reliable sources.
chiefly French.
A newspaper published at Colima, Mexico, on
the 24th of October, tells the following frightful
story: "When General Puoblita entered tho town
of Aye, In September last, he exacted a forced loan
from the people, and a share of it fell upon the en.
rate of the place. The curate acted 03 though he
would pay, but as be di.; not make his appearance
at the point designated fur payment, General Pus
blita ordered him to be arrested. A party of men
went to his dwelling and knocked at the door;
there was no answer and they broke in. They
found no one in the house, and were about to leave
it when they heard a frightful voice proceeding
from the ground, saying 'I am hungry.' The offi
cer In command went back to General Pueblita
and told him about the voice. The general ap
pointed a commission to examine the house. This
commission went to thecurate's dwelling, and, after
a careful examination, they found a movable stone
in the floor, and under this was a stairway leading
down to a vault, which was entirely dark, and
had no connection with the air, save by the
ataireene, and a small bole that served as a ventila
tor. In this vault were some books, a few articles
of furniture, and a woman who had been shut up
there for eighteen years. She was taken to General
Pueblita'a quarters. When brought into the light
where she saw a number of persons, she fainted.
After she had returred to her senses, a thousand
questions were asked of her, to which she replied
only that she had been buried in that vault for
eighteen years without going out for a moment;
that she had boon mulled, and had children by
her husband, but she knew nothing of their fate;
that, while imprisoned in the vault, she had had
children by the curate, but she knew nothing of
what had become of these children; and after say
ing this much became obstinately silent. While
this was passing, a sergeant of the l'aeblitalltigado,
then present, discovered that this woman was his
mother, and she recognised him tns her son and cm.
braised him. The son then ran for his father, who
tame and recognised his wife. The husband, fif
teen years ago, wee imprisoned three years under
charge of having murdered his wife, this woman."
Theodore Itougeot recently died in Bangor,
Maine, after u life of singular suffering. When
thirteen years of age he was taken with inflamma
tory rheumatism, and was almost helpless for two
years; ho then recovered, but In two years there
after ho was attacked again, and continued entirely
helpless and confined to his bed for eighteen years'
There was but one joint (that of one thumb) that
he could move. lie was obliged to be bolstered up
in one position, partly in a sitting posture, for the
eighteen years. He could talk and read well, but
could not otherwise stir or move; his food was
made very fine, and sacked up or mumbled over in
his mouth, as his jaws were Immovable; ho was
nothing but skin and bone, yet his appetite and
general health were good. Hie mind was clear, his
memory good, and he was a person of considerable
Intelligence, and quite a reader. He lived with
his parents, a couple of miles from Bangor, and
was kindly eared for by a patient and attentive
mother and other roll/tiro during hie long end
tedious Illness.
TWO CENTS.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
AN Evesti t r, Live.—Mr. Darius Nash. who was
revaued from the rains of the Pemberton Mill after
several boors of groat suffering, has passed throuh
us many imminent dangers as usually fail to toe
lot of one man. On the stormy night in which the
Minot's Ledge Lighthouse was carried away, he
was on a vessel wme fifty miles from New lark,
and was wrecked. The whole crew lashed them
selves to the wreak, and out of the nine only four
survived. They were picked off by the crew of a
vessel from Salem, after four days and three
nights of danger, and Nash was among those eared.
At another time he fell from the maintops:al yard
and saved his life by catching late reeling bit
At one time In his life he had accumulated SLIM
by his own industry and frugality, and he invested
it in a bark. The bark was wrecked on the Florida
Reefs, and the insurance bad expired two clays bet
fore. Last spring he had a long and painful siege
of bilious fever, which was followed by the typhoid
fever in the summer, and on the night of the terri
ble calamity of the Pemberton Mill he was among
those confined beneath the ruins. Ilia thrilling
narrative of his imprisonment with Wm Lizzie
Flint, who perished, we have given before. Mr.
Nash's father was killed by falling from a load of
hay. Ills brother was killed under the ruins. Mr.
Nash is still in good courage, and rays that all be
desires is good health.—Boston Journal.
BUILM.VO Or A FEliAt.6 COLLEMZ.-A Female
College, at Oxford, Ohio, was burned a few nights
since. The building containe4 ITS young ladies.
The escape of Miss Sallie E Moore from the col
lege is unparalleled for daring She roomed to
the fifth story, and returned the second time to her
room for some books. On opening her door she
discovered that the hall was dense with smoke, and
the stairway was in llamas, and all meats of exit
in that direction hopeless. Closing her door, she
deliberately tore the bed clothing in grips, knotted
them firmly together, and, tying them to her bed
poet, she hopefully stepped from her window, and
made a successful descent to the ground, a distaxce
of forty-tive foot. The preience of mind shown by
the entire body of young ladies was remarked by
every one This was no doubt promoted by some
remarks Miss Peabody had made the day before
commenting on the Pemberton mill accident, mai
deithiandf any sudden casualty should visit them,
Lit-fliew4lege should take fire, or any other AM
dent ocestrylbey might act in a thoughtful and col
lected maxiter.:,,
Er The aria frigate Mississippi arrived at
Ruston on Friday, after an absence of &early two
years and a half. In that time the gallant frigate
has been twenty-Otte months in the Chinese and
Japanese watleil is visited twenty-three ports
sad sailed over fort' on thousand miles Seven
of the crew have died iltaing the voyage. It wilt
require nbeut a hundred thousand dollars to payoff
the hands. Dr. John L. Fox is the surgeon of the
frigate. The Mississippi brought from St. Thomas
a prisoner, named John R. Lamb, who is eliargot. -
with mutiny on the echooner Empire, of Salem,
and attempting the lives of the captain and mate
of the vessel, Horace Tufts, and hit sow. Wm.
Tufts. Ile was delivered into the hands of the
United States authorities, and will havian exam
ination before United Staten Cesamitotioner C P
Curtis, Jr. Two other persona were Impllcaled in
the mutiny, but one of ttylgi died at St. Thomas,
and the other is sick stQF,al,:plece, and unable to
be brought home for tMkt,'
!To . A Mr. Joseph SchiMesg, a well-known
citizen of Cincinnati, who lefr•th at city some
months since for a visit to his native-lead, (Germa
ny,) writes back to his friends that he Sal been ar
rester,' in the Grand Duchy of Oldenbutg, Germany,
upon the claim that he oweeo_a_qtkpr service to
that State, but that be Leposelr — v Ogjise media
tion of Gov. Wright; to who wen la written, that
be walls. epoodnyitheratel. Mr. Schierberg left
Cincinnati about the let of October, 1,3:)4, for than,
and Paris. lie went for his health, and designed
to remain absent a year. He has resided In the
city about twenty-five years, and was not over
eight or nine years old when he arrived in the
United States.
Detre or DR. ADDISON ALCCANDER.—The Rev.
Joseph Addison Alexander, D. D., whose death at
Princeton, on Satardey last, has been announced,
Was one of the most distinguished scholars and
theologians of the Presbyterian Church. lie was
the third son of the late Rev. Archibald Alexan
der, D. D., and a brother of the Rev. Dr. James
W. Alexander, who died recently in this city. Lie
was born in Philadelphia in the year 170 b, gredua
ted at the College of New Jersey in the year
In 1&30 be was appointed adjunct Profeotor of An
cient Languages and Literature In the College of
New Jersey, and filled that position until
when he visited Europe, and nn his return as
sumed the Professorship of Biblical Criticism and
Eccleelastical Victory in the Theological Semiaary
at Princeton, havirg been elected to that position
by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church. Dr. Alexander held this but proteseer
ship at the time of his death. Dr. Alexander was
one of the purest of men, an eloquent preacher,
and a scholar whose powers of analysis and critieal
acumen were of the highest order. He was the
author of various Biblical works, among which the
leading ones are '• Criticsl Commentaries on the
Prophecies of Isaiah," " Essays on the Primitive
Church °dices," and " Psalms Translated or Ex
plaices' "
AID TO THE GOVERNOR.—Goy. Packer has ap
pointed our exoellent friend, N. .11 Ellis, of
rhmoixville, A id•do•eamp, with the rank of Lieut.
Colonel, for the Third division, composed of the
counties of Cheater and Lancaster The present
able and upright Executive has not, like tame of
his predecevers, conferred the military honor on a
regiment of men In all parts cf the Commonwealth,
but has exercised a rise and decent dLscritnina-
tion, not only In rcpt.(' to numbers, but the cha
raoter of men appointed. We congratulate Uov.
Packer on the chosJo he btu made in this county.
Col. Ellis Li a noble and true-hearted man, and is
gninently worthy of this military distinction.—
Chester County Democrat.
LEAP Yr.so.—A Scotch statute of 1223 rends at
follows :
It is statnt and °slant that daring the reine
of her maist blissit Magestio, ilk forth year, known
as leap year, ilk maiden layde of beith high and
Isw estatt, shall has liberty to bespeak ye man the
likes; albyit, if ho refuses to tak his to be his
wit, he shall be mulcted In To sum of sine porundia
(f I) or less as his esteit mot be, except and aril if
he can mak it appear that he is betrothed to ane
woman, that he shall then be free."
ISTERESTINO LETTER FROM OLI) BRONN'S SE
CRETARY or STATE.—The following to ft letterfrom
Richard Beall', old Brown's Secretary of State, to
the brother-in•law of Cook, who was executed for
participating in the Brown raid :
Wasnisorow, D. C., Jan. 30, ISLO.
"DEAR SIR : Your favor of the 27th inst , ad
dressed in care of the Senate Investigating Com
mittee, is received, and I hasten to assure you if
ray sympathy and condolence with yourself and
family in your recent sorrowful bereavement. You
will, I am sure, pardon me for dying that, in vela•
lion to your deceased brother, I cannot consent to
adopt as my own the sentiments with which you
appeal to regard him. I cannot, that is, consent
to call him unfortunate. Doubtless life is dear
and liberty sweet, and to die by the executioner's
hand is an ignomininue doom ; yet, in the lapse of
time, the deed for which John Edwin Cook incurred
the extreme penalty of the law shall be seen its its
true proportions, and calm analysis shall be sue
stituted fur loudmouthed horror, and the motives
which impelled to the act shall, as they will, de•
(ermine the verdict upon it, the name and memory
of your dead brother may become unto you a glo
rious inheritance forever. I take no shame unto
myself that I dissolved my connection with that
mistaken and ill-fated enterprise; and yet, in jus
tice to the solemn dead, I must confess that the
spirit of benevolence, mad self-sacriftee, and high
audacity of courage, upon which It rested, eclipse
so surpassingly my careful prudence and politic
(mutest), that though the result has confirmed the
justice of my judteants fears, I cannot choose but
do homage to their memories, as oeings who, in all
noble attributes of character, were infinitely
above myself.
f The fatal error of John Brown consisted in
taking for granted ibet premises upon which hie
movement was prodizatcd, and without the a bs,..
lute correctness of which it could not possibly else;
coed. It was based on the mistaken suppositiou
that the slaves themselves were anxiously aeatung
an opportunity of striking fur their freedom, and
John Brown labored under an infatuation of Intel
leetual obtusity in attempting t 3 execute his pro•
jeot before having thoroughly e•<ured himself mat
he might rely upon their co-operation. Ile wei
swayed by other errors. lie confounded his own
inferences as to duty with duty itself, believing
that the conclusions which bound his conscience
were binding on MO COIISeidIaCCS of all other men.
and he translated the sensitiveness of his heart anti
the suggestions of his idiosyncrasies to he a com
mand unto him from Neaten. These things im
paired his reason, and prevented him either from
thinking impartially nr judging accurately and
wisely. But as he possessed that strange power
which enables one man to inflict teeny with his
views, he so psychologized his associates chat,
seeing only through his medium of -sisiou , they
consequently were unable to controvert his thee-
Ties; therefore the movement went blindly on.
Fur myself, too, it is certain that had I not been
sent to New York. where, out of the reach of his
great mesmeric influence, I could in some sort
master the questions involved, I should have been
with the enterprise down to the bitter end I
should, indeed, have had no other choice. Had
John Brown sent a titan on en errand to !lades he
must have started thither, for ho was one of God's
own commanders.
" I know your brother. Wo have been friends
Permit me to say of him that his faults wore such
as belong to a warm, impulsive. chivalrous nature.
Ile was quick•hearted, swift-blooded, brave unto
recklessness, generous unto prodigality. We have
been together on the stump, in the solitude of the
far prairie, in the social circle in the retirement of
our own homes. and I never knew him other than
that which I have stated. In the history of Kan
sas ho bore an honorable part, and leaves an hon
orable record ; and you must not, in your sorrow
at the manner of his recent death, forget to cons
alder thit causes that led thereto, for so shall you
be eon/forted and consoled by the reflection, that
all the clamorous noise and passion which the in
surrection has engendered, the sure and true in
terpretation it will receive front time is even now
being rendered, and that too, in the spirit which
sooner or later causes ever the truth to come upper
most. and makes justice ever be done.
With inueh rospect, yours, truly,
"RICIIARII RE up.
" R. Crowley, EN., New York city."
CALIFORNIA PRESS.
Trued Semi-Sloatkly m tan Ga tL. Oiltfa" ra
Staxmors.
iitienrrum has the following statement'
In an artiete on the bariat of Matantsy
•• Lard Maculay'e ambition was to stand in the
tame rink with llume. If a publisher's bsdaire
sheet proved anything, Lis rank would to far
higher than that of Hume. The Muer/. Longman
bare paid to him the /eructs of a prince,. We
hare board, on the Lest anthoetty, ct one single
check from publishers to historian for LAM!
"Asa table-talker, Lord Macaulay had a repe
tition most peon:lir. He was not witty. like Jer
cold, nor humorous, Lie Smith, nor poetical, like
Moore, nor dreamy, like Coleridge. He war nar
rative. lie wan the troubadour of diciatrocens,
who charmed the company with none speech while
they cracked the "sic and passed the wine. In
his conversation, Often as it took the form otmona.logne, there woe no indication of anacanee on his
part, c- of detirc to monopolute the attention cf
everybody. The stream welled ford" out of the
fullness of his mind and prodigious memory A
quick and fertile intellect got excited by the ap
plause of aaditore end by the nrreity of its own
eloquence. When he launched ioto sty rabject
there was no hope of arresting his voyage, Der any
wish to do so. lie would begin with the remotest
beginnings of the topic—just SJ he begins hie He.
tory of the reign of Janata the Seee.,l with tie
Phoonicians—would gather ttrength and substarce
as he went on—would pick up Wis.:ration here and
there from men end front books. tearing no comer
for objection to fatten on. no opportunity tor reply.
There seemed no reason why the tilinoureas should
ever cease; no more than for the Thames to run
dry or Time to pause. The talk badef
Milton's organ-roll, and was only to be dwa3 by
Milton's organ-stop. It was rot vivacious, as
much as flowing, suggest:re and steer usly puede - al.
It was like his ruses and his laye—is • lair de
scribed it to her friend—it was all ?mu. tens,
though Lis copulation far eau . ..ruttiest otelenae
was great, few of his saying." are abroad, or will
fumes the personal re-s- Attu:ens of his triends."
A NEGIIO MINSTREL SOLD taro Szargar —An
affidavit was yesterday male before Justice W P.
driffiths, by deputy tiherdl findgina, that a free
negro had come into the State, contrary to ter
laws, calling himself Joseph Vincent Suarez. and
passing himself for a whits man. Tberupeo. said
OUSTS& was brought before Justice Griistha
zs
elated by Justice Trueheirt, and upon examina
tion by Drs. Friedman and Banks, they rated on
oath, LI medical men, that said Soiree was a rer
un of color, and had over one-eighth Afrstan,
Wood. It being proven to the satisfaction of the
court that he was snob a person of color as is pro
hibited by ear laws from oaring within the limits
of the State, it was therefore ordered that the
Sherif take said Snares in charge, and hire him
for the term of win months to the highest bidder,
at the Court House of the county, giving notice of
, the hiring by advertisement, posted np at
. two or
more public places in the county. The law says
I that the proceed.. of the hire of a free person t f
I color thus c•ming into our Sate. as proven in this
case, shall be collected by the *bent - , and after
deducting expenses, the remainder shall be paid
over to sail person of color :o enable him to leave
the State, and that the theriff shall notify hin to
leave within thirty days. Should he tail to learn
the mate as required, the theriff is directed to
arrest him again to be hired ',rein at public eat
ery for cash, far a term of te - e years, Ea. It is
proper to remark that this Entrees tune to ear pity
as a negro minstrel, and be has, therther, the
merit of passing himself cr to his psnfeetizzal
1 charaeer for precisely what be is.—(G.erer:, , n
(Ter , / t) News, Jan. ID.]
John Minor Botts_ of %irginio. has published in
the Virginia papers a cart of a colanut in turh,
in explanation of the reasons which induced kite to
publish his late letter of eight Sr ten columns,
principally relating to the conduct of Govertzr
Wise in the latelfarper's Ferry alts — r. It seems
that Mr. Botts began the letter without any inten
tion to publithit, addressing it to a friend who had
asked Lim for his views on the matters now
agitating the public mind He real the letter
to some friends, who earnestly insisted on its pub
lication, and Itnalty yielded toe request. signed by
six members it the Virginia. Sonata, and eight of
the Virginia Howse of aepreuntitireS, SO let it ap•
pear in the newspapers Near the close of his card
Mr. Botts sop, in reply to SOC2II. violent attacks on
his letter •
"I was, or intended to be, stetliontly elatkat Ist
avoiding grecnd for remelt complaint_ Bet if I
wanted high anthonlyt to . ; this right of eniisiam oa
the 1 -
- .
acrernor WI
spades of pal
no r.arallel Ir
I shall indalt
matter's rod so
ooenpy say
dent, Govena there
to do the ear sr of
eorsqlaint hear
their *attain; w in
he oblige.' to deer
ties enough twist
my politteal r
me in taking rel,
whenever I ,
bas been pb hank
tied, we hare not yet trite resebid the lima, al
thocgh it maybe rased" appmeshAstr. when &el ,
public man is this free ea 33try tan be elirrated wt
hi 7 . 4.4 shove his fatleera that his fc.b.lie trader; is
not open to aninsadverti=, mtwffiteteadir.g the
:errortsm attextr.ted to Fe exer.r:srel ty 1`..4 ;rev,
end the daily threats of perelnal er•- , untalstlitr
the part of all who knew the content. rf that lets
GU in IdTSWi. 11111L!ff they and 1. •I'Airs, revcrl at
I ensald s getle snmr.• et t.nr ir. at s tcr grater"
eml refreshing, fir it ch. es the leter to,.' wr.t
ten ID tale.
•• No lc teed' the latter :I i:e G ra at. yk
rot .)111, fn this State, but thr:agb at the z.;..etry,
oman; a people over wheat It.a Is t%t• eel it tot
daily shaken for intimielpti a ; and what is m-re,
it can't be checked I hAve r'y izheair.:44 listts
kr,own tail, mil drawn my csh
them—the pecple will do the sirs. , erifew of
labia I sits already daisy rereiring„ If ray mtr..•
C 111.51005 hare been erroceoaa—as I mire ad=itted
they may be—the decel.•ymea'a to be melt be t`•
cotomittee9 inct±tigat.)z, here a•d :in
ton, attllsh..., that they Aft roe., ttea
be mor ready than I t
The Ileettester ;N. T.t •
Vet, t..t . January;
gilts the following servant"( the trezbles
of &family there:
"A few months since a man named Squire
Bowers, who resides in the town rlll'elater,v.hrre
be has a wife and 'children, m-ede the acquaittasce
of a respectable family in the Fourth ward. He
passed by the name of Drake, and paid his atten
tions to a daughter cf mature age. and centre:lei
a marriage. he arrangements for the /spatted
anion were so far made by the girl that the pro
cure' her wedding garrcetts, and we believe that
the day was fixed for the ceremony. Two or three
days since Bowers. a!taa Drake, came in from the
country, and was taken itl, or pretended to he.
while at the house cf the parents of the wor-_an be
had betrayed Be was kir...By taken care cf ar.l
nursed by the lady who expected to become his
wife nod remained there until yesterday, when he
WSJ unexpectedly expee;tl as a villain to the family
who treated him to kindly.
The &toil entrat was as redden to him as to the
family, and neither were at all prepared for it It
WIN done in this way: A constable of Webster
had a aimmens for Bowers, and had been in search
of him two or three days. Some one who had the
secret of Slowcrs told the constable that if he went
to a certain number on a certain street, and asked
for Mr. Drake, he wenid and the man he warted,
and might execute Lis process The cater dii as
be was directed. wad inf,reued at the der that
Mr. Drake was in, and he was shown to the room
he occupied. There Bowers was reclir.ing at ease
upon a eel, attended by the lady he had deceived.
and who Ras still confiding. The conatable told
him that be had a Emmons, which Barrels, with a
wink, reached out to take. The °Meer did tot
take the hiat—pnthably he dil not want t›—ar..l
read atop 1 the name cf Squire Bowers as defen•
dent, de. What followed cannot 1e described. It
was useless for Bowers to attempt to carry the
cheat any further. Ile speedily eriaped from the
house, and by FO doirg Trobably saved his life, as
the father of the girl was e.,a enraged when the
case WAS disclosed. that ha declared he would kill
the offender
" An inquiry as to the eltaracternf•Howers FOOn
revealed the fact that he was a men of ,, issolute
habits. and utterly destitute of principle.y
...
his own family have raffered is too offensive to
decency to relate, if correctly stated. Bat the
most unfortunate pert of the story has yet to ha
told. He had accomplished his purrose meet folly,
and sedated the lady he had pr0ra 5 ...,,,,1 to mercy
She had confided too mach in the This
ftmily repairee last evening to the ritilitr.2o of
the pollee jaitice, and obtained a warrant fcr
Arrest cf Bowers, but he has not yet Len caught.
The character of the lady who has thus been
roircd stands fete, and w Los as we can learn, she
has always been catecmtd by thc:_ oho knew her
Bowers cannot make repstation ts, her, but if
caught ho can be Eel t tr . , ,S rrl eXIMF:a to there
who may he inclined t rractise the arts tithe gay
deceiver."
The Ersnkfort I, re rf the :ith instant, re
ferring to the New England tnechani.,4 who live by
making boots and shoes and other articles this
South, says
" Hunger and rav aro staring these poor p 2305
iu the face. and untess they put a stop to the mad
folly of their }•''tali:al leaders. will surelycos.e arch
them. We say they most put a stop to it, and that
speedily; they can do it, for there are cue hundmi
thousand of these poor wretches in Mass:chusatta
alone who do not go to the polls, and it is high time
for them to take the power that belongs to them
into their own hands. If they permit their pcilo
- to exasperate the Southern people, 13 they
are now doing, there will be bat one altertatire
for them, and it is to do like the poor Irish—tbay
must starve or emigrate. This Ls a thought that
has probably never occurred to the Deena philan
thropists of New Engtcnd, that whereas hunger
and want reduced the popalatic n of Ireland in ten
years some three utilliums of souls, so the same
causes can do likewise fir New England, and that
more rapidly."
A singular and truly aflictire casualty occur :N.l
in Olmstead, Cuyahoga c,unty. New York, t. few
days ago. A bright little la• 1 of three or roar
years of age, a son of Mr. Triggs • wishing to see
the men dress ist.r,s, his mither pnt onhis cloak sod
the father placed him in the breathes of an apple
tree, where he could look on and be out of the
way The lad was perched near by his father. and
directly otter where pereons frequently pamsed to
bring hot water, do Nothing sunsimal was oh.
Ciq.cd, but when, after sometime, the father tilted
down his little eon, to his horror be foetal him dead '
The cloak hod caught on a limb fad larsagled the
child.
The Richmond Eitql.drer urges the Tatlois le
es lobate to respond to the appeal et/touttft Cata
lina, through Mr Meraminger, tkteda eSoutiwzn
Convention. The LOULITint Ilittnret, in
r an ale
article, hopes not.
ter. E. Irani died in
at the age of 91. fie
terenee in 1621. and for
thodlst preacher.