The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, February 16, 1860, Image 1

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    orite o - 7 p10405,ivi:
rutim*BVlzareibutßAYN
_ Jouriaw, ra*mix.,.)
oirgrotmoz*Woup2o7,eintlork:'
DICi7iX,PUUr
Twzrail yppllc4rita,. to Vie *Apra.
• MOW tit adoecibirtiost *a Clitr st fizz DatiAss,
43;nrm? fOus , Virzsaa 70i 'Built* Moms;
Titan Iblaulti"jimi Six ,Noirou4invoriabb in ad
tiactobrostimoriered., •-
i'VilvPit4T, 1 1400
mi1144:4*;*11,4494* i 4947,
"" P " 4411411 4 , 1 4 44 t• '1
MPVE/Citn.
' DRY aO,cori•liii:
FrrgrlAN, JONES, & 004
fOPEIEIN..,AN,D• DOMBEITIO
D R 131-0 0 D S.
No. $4O ALMON ATRIUM
11E'940614 nosroiM every:Aailor:
'VITT , AND,MAR ,TRADIA „ J*am
ELAPIMIGH, rwE, •si co..
fowortoro of
LINZNIL
WHils 000ne— •
siKl
asp MAR NAT STJEBT.
lir Oar vtoliat' etOci, Nleotill lti Vii bolt yutvpeaa
Maiksta by builogvaa,jalks iaost oomplata jai bred
o'er offered. ' ' " *
PRICE ; FERRIS, & (X)..
' I 111601TEDA0, ' '
• WIFTW!,..!De. ,
!OA '
' ass Avmmittitirintiarr.
ow oar warn vigsi.tor by a hbouLloir at 41010".
BEJITEUROPEAN It MAT& [14414
' • •
SPRING •'• • :.• • ' 1•860
•
OHAFFEES.STOUT-ec CO.
• JTORRIGIN AND"DOMHOTIQ
DRY GOODS, ,
110. inft! MARK STREBT. 11,34 m
WM. 13.•871 1 EWART''& 00..
iII:PORTE -S RS AND 308331113
I tar, " r • •
_, - s• 30 T wweee,
_VainVisow' ht" mipt• *id immistm rot)olting
imulsopottmestor 'wad ustuablir ; •
Purobariiii fiCs e alt,r vtaoh tot *lts mam,
"ragyp c ",4llPßo;4ll'nfju, o 4 , 4lll' new'
*vies 04 reinted rabriat aoasliin ' ALM -
JOHN B. STRYKER & 00.„
810 - 8149triT ST., SOMA kil:
kHILADELPSIbOI, S. THIRD.
' -
1,11011184131),RALER8 ix
"
Barg - en, sulaion, 416 Ai - MICAH '
0 O.
Aiac4chirseiiii . oll-okithi, and Mania*, bought duty
- &9LD AT REDUCED MOW.. , fas-asn
- ,
DE 004 : 7 45EV. : '
, • 4 . 4 t
LA.FOtIRCADE. 81 00..
BATE morns TO
NO. 1121 CH ESTNUT STREET,
- ,
• •
JAYNE'S HALL. ,
mgne'T , A 3 Pu'r'n"
Tatra flPittiCk 1263ETATIONO. -•
44 0 01; :10 1 7 5 Bcritr,7o•ll4ti,
-V 2114 ther Ante t 6. suandat of doolsre Ist isolt
rooli•,• - • • , • • jez.baa
psTo,B.ELTA.BOI,I:B4BpIS%
:,111,A - 19r:4 T. ST* UT , ,
(limpid door Wow !Muth.)
xxaq xis zi "ai A??2,iijui iof
Ot:Prial; •
--, LOU' 7RIMICENGtei • r •
wood Invite. ito,ittentton of Wien; to theti`laipi
Ueu id'PANlfs( 0481316113528, 1 , 3 PiVrefi; and dlr.'
Arent makeIq_FORRICIII OLOntifluid DOZBKINS,
in Blacks and cetera and - oder' tea naelaidfo Wariin
Pkilidalaltii'4lll4LOßßlt eatobratid nilite 'of Clothe
tug . lkwaktan't also,Palrai , nitta Bellies, (warranted,
ne4itiaa,inen,idd end gm:llpm rsvisT le en eo•
TER,
thipomitirme JOBBNiB OF
DYO 0 D S
No t pOttiltrleT
''PJEOLADILLP#TA.
. NOB. 404 AND 407 JURIST ' STREIT..
/3“ , ORTBILB AND JOBBBItt
701LEI0N AMP plytuorrio DRY Nom.
itkolin L ei 61:14010,e atiaytadr fgt . Deices ts3:B,fr
80111146„.1e09.•
pituno MAIM • • ' Irat }VIMII3O2I.
Ira Y. RV; ro , Auratirß.
- R..WODD; MARSH, A HAYWARD,
vrtoethe ails in
,
RY '4:31- 0' , .1D 8 •
AND •
" OLOtlittslia;
16.5.410 No. 309 MARKET 13099 t, Ph 90149043.,
PAPER HANGINGS. ko.
~0r.,445r: BUSINESS.
SUST, XONTGOSERY, & 430.,
SO; /22 OIiSOTNIIT friSbOri,
- wdson eat, ttrigisi thiivintir and nut ;win's:their
, Urge Mack
:JFA.PER, HANGINGS,
Vrwiltiatof 'Oen misty oonAA6Atdyri . th th. brialutim
AT OSSA= ASDUONO PRIOAS
PIIiRPIANOSPAPERS AT 30 PER WIRT. 88.
. AAW Con. -
MIN Ail Inman loisq nOUNIII Parrott. een get Ro
STATIoifEItC,
'Ma" ' ' MR* , IMADI B OS
• 'ORAMCapu •
INILF.VIVAPITYie,iOSI4.
Naliff susir rroknv, UT BTit*Sii -
P Vomit,
rii.olo4xonniurrvitate ,
A - N )3 . 00'103•
ma. of L f init Ilto* -
AZVALVt“, l4 _ l lgirnt i firomiso_i
P E4I-ItIMITISMi Ir e. 411.67E3r7
'. , „-'''.; i ltODTN AND s.losBi',Z
- B °IC PIAT B #9T REIe
MAti,tfrAll 4Np , 4rNOL.Z.A.LN
3. ',d i ' •
BOOTS :-AND SHQES,
maitKwitiTßlti,
-.%' ,N,kni,F.lNTl4ll,treot!6outh,doi '
t__EV,x„ox' BA - ' - exisi aoo
ii INATISHOUOII
*Fr, z '; gip .• "
n,-. , ',:-': , ,) 11 4; 1 4S 1 1/ AO ) ° •
3 .llo3olirlaiii , ZET PHILADELPHIA.
tWellikAtiomfooliaidooeitonitiVe 'cook of BOOTS
'filt nalkOi IVO didlattiPtiOnt Of , '
001PICAttrAPTUO -tfaRtirACTURE;
IZlVAlrrifir the - attention•ci eiouthent And
fW Sal
• LHOII.LIVLUW, ind P M ,01Li• m
WitSriVnitekilfti6W
Yoh;: '3i=-=-NO.-1169:'
Ditir-GOODEi JontMas.
.SHAW 41'1314,0THEit
,
" - Jun ,11,81KOVED TO
N
O. 8 S MARKET STREET,
Where they have on hand e complete neetrtment of
• 0. - L. 0 T ,
OASSENERES, VESTINGS, &0.,
. •
!.tettablefor the ',
SPRINO SEASON,
To whloh they invite the attention of buyers. •
QFRING %RABE. 1860 .
DALR. ROSS. tie
WITHERS. .
, 551 - MARKET; Ann 518 COMMERCE HT.,
, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
•on ,
, , •
SILK & FANOY GOODS.
lia4 now s'ee:nintete stoat; to Whl%l they invite the
attionticinof Wars. felo-Im
AMBROWEIUBB
MeOLINTOOk, GRAM', & 00.,
utrottnißs AlO itriOlakit,t 'DEALERS IN
_ OIATRB, 64138111411138, VB3 TINOS,
TAILORS' TRIMMINGS,
fro. .383 MARKBT EITRAMT, (Up
Are i ow Optinitur their Sprint Steak, to *doh they in
otte pee attention et the trade. . t.3-Stu
,
J. IW. ;GIBBP, SONS.
- Na 081 MARKET STREET,
Air now opining tholc " •
Sit RING STOOK OF GO ODS
Adapted to • • •
•WEAR,
l'u l yhreh will be, kuid a tail asiartioent of
VLOTIfit ! DOIRIKI,NI,*TINON,TitII42dIfiGiI, eco.
& SON.:
- • 1111POITSill &ND nasals in
purifis.
' CIABI3IIIUHREB.
VESTIMiti.
; 1401;031 , ,T11111#1,, ace.
. "62' IfountOnit . 13Thi0g1`, •
(B4twoton Marko% And - Chestnut Sim%)
PHILADELPMA. falm
VOLL7#IIt A. &MINNA , ONALIELET 110MNAL
W. LITTLE & CO.,
GOODS,
No. 826 MARKET STREET.
A. SUPERB ASSURT*NT.
~, ' , I o INF,,N GOODS,
OF MY 'OWN' IMPORTATION. '
NOW OP:ENING, ,
,-.,.. .., . •
.•. • .
' .- , AND. FOR BAL E• BY' .
, -
JOBHUA. „11. 13AILY,
; •,.;_'.; ' IMPORTER:ARO JOiiiiiiir: ; '
IV8:,/6 ' 2:th' itiRE:O ,4 1 ,1WIA.P.Vii MA.
--- 'TWENTY NEW 871M4RO C :j
TRIO D - -- -
I ' • :A €. - ORR ._ 6- Lira, - -
jOtifilllA ifl e DAILY,
(Zt' s *wan . mut
i ti
044. , ~,,, , . , PATLADELPRIA.
CANTON FLANNELS,
slow sin,'
Amatigio, - •
KENNEBEC,
DORCAS,
Beetthod, Unbleaohod, and Colored
' CANTON FLANNELS.
sir THE MOB OR CABE.
JOSHUA BAILY.
• • , • 913 MARKET STREET,
4114 f , . PHILADELPHIA.
.
RHANDY & BRENNER.
nos. 91. 9f, AND' DT MOWN MTH WELD=
/1114ADBLITUA.
witozamum 00iLIUBSION MORAVA
'AForWimdiidWthmkg
MMIMMMMMOAMVWWWAWNIAL
OriCLEAI4, DDLOIAIt. FRENCR, AND MOM
HARDWARE AND CUTLERY,
toe; oonatantly ea bind alwostookof Ow& to go
' 11l Hardware Moslem
BUTOREIVI3
-- - Br the mite/ opts:air,
lITOBERII WOE 'MILL •
. - ,
HUTURIBWII 'STEEL OF VAILTOV KINDS.
WIAIOWVI:PATEAT ANWAVANI)
BRIP ORAINt
AM 'Um 0124.3 n ovsqlluistr.
lIMANVEI IVIPIATER*PISTOL I
REMIXING ONLY If moss.
NAIAD'S NEW MODEL RIFLED AND PI/MOM
AMAMI. Klan. no. O. MUM fh P. DRMIEIL
111100Ap.HENSZEY,&; CO.
'HARDWARE, ,
CUTLERY,
, eta OUR
P7A.7OIIOUBE,
No. 497 M.ftRICET, and' 418 COMMERCE Otreets
PIIII4D4PITIA. 14344n0.
DRUGS , AND CHEMICALS.
B A.FAHNEBTOCK & CO.
• DRUGGISTS,
IMPORTERS, AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
DRUGS,
ONEMIOALS,
'CORKS,
SPONGES,
AIiZRICIAN AND maws ESIINNTIAL /sO.,
And Manulanturers and Sole Proprietors of
' B. A. PAPIRSTOCK'S VRICRIBUON,
tr og4 ,9 and 9 NORTH PUirTIL STREET,
Fad aide, a few doors above Market,
fe34m PHILADHLIIII4
iy0748, GUM, PAINTS, &a.
ROBT. SHOEMAKER & CO.
• NORTHAM 001INDI
3ATB 'AND RAGS OTDENTB,
WRO4SAI.Ir DRUGGISTS,
limiiriii r rs Mid Dealers in WINDOW SLAM PAINT&
invite the attinition of
Ool*TlCir MERCHANTS
tfe their kite' etoOlt of Goode, ittoh they oder M the
Whet nattost ?Mew oes-tf
f S HOE visom4s.
WM. JOHNS & SON,
IMPORTERt3 AND DEALERS IN
- BOOT,EIKO', and GAITER. MATERIALS,
LARTINGS, HALLoong,
"' • ':IIHERTINaII, PATENT LEATHER,
- pRENOH KIDS, LAOETN.
• IILtPPEI UPPERS. &o.
N. E. CIORNRIt AMR Axe ARCH EITRIBITO.
i*lnt
.... ....._ ..._.
. , •
_. NVA\ 11 i /A/ :,..":".. ; !t ~ ilett4 t A. ,
. 1
N. -, . 0 ..! ..f ,e , 1 -s - ';'-'7 • 41 ( ~
~-
..s _.
_ \ .
.'
i . .
f............,
•...-,
f__-
, A
. i... ,'
A ,... : -- P I
•_ b l . l i
0.4.. ..... . ' •
',
~:-....1.'.-0"-,?-el, --, 1 •
"-':• _,
•=,.1: t
,"
. i. •
-r ;
. a ; , •
4, 7 ' s ,
.. -
~. -
_,
~..... .. i -
.•.4; --.-, .., ' ., itt.i ..g l' r t i tl'
ma _...
.... 1 . i .. l
.
h AOC i
+
....„
'' t* ' l5 4 : ...... • _ 4 ,..................LtLA1
...,•,....-' .':. p•P ,
'
- , i ' • . .
. .
. • -
•
IL&RDWARE.
,A 111) IMPOSTIZII or
so= rims vox
1860: - STRAW GOODS. 1860
•
TOOMPSON & JENKINS,
' IMPORTERS AND, JOBBERS
OP
STEAW GOODS;
RATS AND OAPS,
SILK noriNap.
ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS,
RUCHES, &o.
NO. SUS MARKET STREET.
Sayers are rewieeted to examine our stook.
THOMAS F. FRALEY is enraged with the above
house, and minute the patronage of his friends,
feS-Im
MILLINERY
AND'
. STRAW GOODS
EXOLUSIVIII 4 Y,
7" -- • •
ROSENHEIM, BROOKS,
da CO.,
481 MARKET STREET, NORTH 818 E,
Are nor opening, for the Spring Trade, the moat an
tensive and chained steak in their line ever collected
together under one root
RIBBONS of every coneeivable description.
BONNET MATERIALS.
FREROR'ARTIPIOAL FLOWERS,
. - RIMERS, and all other ndlanary &tilde*
STRAW, BONNETS IN IMMENSE YAK/KTY.
OHILDREN'I3 AND MISSES GOODS. DO.
BLOOMERS, ERASER HOODS, tco,
Oonsoloun of our superior feel litles in obtaining our
supplies. we flatter oureelvee that superior induce
ments, both aa regard' choice of saleotlon and mod era
tion n Prices, eennot be met with. fes-Sin
F °R.
EVENING PARTIES
BERTHAS,
• ' CAPES, SETS,
SLEEVES, and 01/111 1 13,
la Reel Laoe, Crave,
Blood aad
In great varleidee, of the
• NEWEST STYLES.
Also,
44, 6.4, 9.4, 9.4, 10-4
TARLATANS, CRAPES, as.,
Noah below theism/. pion.
WARBURTON'S.
Mt CHESTNUT Street, above Tenth Street,
'SOS South SECOND Street, below Spruill.
lall-tt . . a
S TRAW AND MILLINERY ODOM!.
LINCOLN. WOOD, &
NICHOLS.
' No. TSS OHESTNEFT STREET,
Have now in
(Betwe b en Seventh and Eighth,)
store
COMPUTE MOS OT
SPRING.' GOODS.
sitintableo
11 74 0 1 11 1117 8 A t i: r i it . Fat AW GOMM
go iti g i y o ttiff i ha i ihrt
iv
To wth My riga ti aliT invite R L attention of
mi gle ei g i a n t t at abort-time bn Ore 'Will find sewsisi advan
tage in examining th is stolt before purotemituti teagim
HILL - BORN JONES,
Importer Do Manufacturer of
FANCY SILK AND STRAW
BONNETS AND HATS.
ARTIPIOIAL-WLQWWW AL .,‘ •
, - ,---rgammote; mutants, - rie.,
" the, attention of City and Country 11.`" 1 * wrtited
to large and vaned . 0 " Or thO &bOVO goods at
4252. MARKET STREET.
fea-3to Below Fifth.,
LADIES' DRESS TRIMMIAGS.
FEBRUARY 4, 1860.
WM. 11. BORSTMANN & SONS,
FIFTH AND CHERRY STREETS, ADJOININO
ir A 0 TOR Y,
MANUFAOTURERS AND IMPORTERS
op
LADIES' DRESS
AND
MANTILLA TRIMMINGS,
;we are now prepared to direr a large and desirable
sook of Ladle.' Dream and Mantilla Trimming", to
gether with a full line of colors.
SSEPHYIt WORBTBDO,
. 811WrLAND WOOL,
BMBROIDERING OHIINILLE,
&c.. !to.,
To whtoh the attention of the Trade to directed.
SOLE AGENTS FOR SPOOL-BILK.
' fee-ift
1860. SPRING. 1860.
EVANS & 1-IASSALL.
IMPORTERS OP
LADIES' DRESS TRIMMINGS,
Ito. a a. FOURTH ItTRIIBT,
♦re now opening s tine alsetlitnent of
NOVELTIES FOR.THE SPRING SEASON,
To whioh they invite the attention of buyer/. fel-fm
MEDICINAL.
MRS. WINSLOW,
AN EXPERIENCED NURSE AND FEMALE
Physician, presents to the attention of mothers her
SOOTHING SYRUP
FOR OHILDREN TEETHING,
whloh greatly faeilitatee the process of teething, by
softening the gums. reducing,. all infiammstion; will el
la
i AI giIIiVVITINATIVIrT
nob itia l p sta.
Depend upon it, mothers, It will gTire rest toren:salve'
and
101101EF AND HEALTH TO YOUR INFANTS.
;Mil IT it il l ;lit Til l 13:4 ItgEfa i llll frktrorr ten
Y have never been 0 tja to sar,of any other
medicine,_NFNEß HAS IT
_ FAILED_ jg_ a UM
:OLE INSTANIF,TO F F EOT A CURB. when,
timely used. ever d b., a know ers instance or
dissatisfaction y any on '' ho used R. Oil the oon
.trary,,all are lielighte 122 th its"rati.cine. and,
speak in tants of hashes .... mmen nof ite magi -
caleffects and medioalvi ....7 toes . e speak in this
matter " what we do now," after ton years'
experienoe.andpledgeour " eputstion for the fulfil
ment of what we her! de
__'" 4 Mare. In almost every
instanue where the to ant 121 ni 'ermine from pain and
exhaustion. relief wd be E , found In fifteen or twenty
T i Til e a s histrp h re d irt: 0 emni.t..-?.0 i .
tth. mott ziPli- 0 ErVed ND AIrEFIPL
I rd
NURSES In NewEngla and has been used with
never-failing sec In res
THOUSANDS OF CASEF,
It not only relieves the ..4 child from pals, but In
vigorateathestornach and . bowels, correots &oddity,
and gives tone and energy ke to the whole eyittnni, It
will almost instantly r "-- ileVil oßtrimu ix THE
BOWELS AND WIND 0 COLICand overcome con
vulsions,_which, if not ~,1 speedily remedied, end in
death. •We believe it the beet and surest remedy in
the world,!p alt eases o 0 1 DYtIENTERY and DIAR
ItHWA IN HILDREN, whether It arises from
teething or romanyother " osuse. We would say to
every mother who has " child suffering Dorn any of
the foregoing complaints. tt do not letyour prejudices,
[ nor the prejudices o r" others, stand between
our eufferini child and, .. the relief[ that will be
SURE...yes, BSOI,UT go 14Y BURE—to follow the
use of this me o ne , ...,, timely used. Full direc
tions for using w t I mourn wt pasta each bottle. None
MVP, unles s
i York, l 1 ti ° ," M tliglgtsg i ggpti." -
.V' Sold by Ddiggists throughout the world. Princi
pal °Moo, No. LS CEDAR Street, New York.
Price 26 cents a bottle. 102-17
JUST RECEIVED, PER
V IGO.
A oonalenment of new and beautlad
SSEREOSOOPIO VIEWS,
Wilk& we offer st very rearm:table rues.
EDWARD PARRISH.
PRIVY WELLS CLEANED AT A LOW
Priee, to obtain the contents. Address WILLIAM
TIMSON, Poudiette OffiCe, reB 4 lm.
No. 1213 North SECOND Street.
VINEGAR.-200 bbls. Clarified Cider
• Vinegar: ISO do 'White Wine 'Nem A j a p & t il t
h"vithNifttnr" 4 1 6fir4alrA11116.frul.
ABR UR , C ~168
f . AMS AND , SHOULDERS. -2,300
Pima CST-Smoked Earns and Shoulders.
‘ nEt:FV ' PAT rielYerlirti f sfs,riera thinnBi
CITBEBS--Por sale by WETLIERILL &
/MOTILE% 0 and 0 North SBOOND thrrrt. MS
hi I 11, 4 11 1 0 1 ,1 1J:1 TO I• ' FEBRUARY 16, 1860.
COMMISSION HOUSES.
1860. , 1860.
AMERIOAN WOOLL E NS
FANCY CABBLIKERES,
Haw SPRING BTYLES,,
CIASHMARKTEL •
ALL COLORS AND QUALITIES.
BLACK DOESKINS, •
FINE TO SUPER.
KENTUCKY IRANI,
ALL-WOOL FILLING. 1 .
SATINETS,
PRINTED, PLAIN, AND MIXTURES.
COTTON WARP CLOTHS,
ALL GRADES AND COLORS.
TWEEDS, ; PALMA CLOTHS, '&0: •
FOR SALE BY TEE AGENTS.
RICIIIARDS, ELAIGIIT, do 00.,,
.8 sTRAWEBRRY BTREET,
JaNI-Ilarri
WEST, FOBES, & LLOYD,
COMMISSION MERCIVINTS,
No. 819 CHEIITNVT,
ANS
80 BTRAWBERRY STUMM.
OININIL PON 'ALB--
OOTTONADES,
TICKINGS
CHECKS,
SHIRTING , STEIRESi;
DENIMS, and
PHILADELPHIA-MADE 000D8 GENBRALLY.,' : .:
Also, a fall aalortamt. of
NAT.LNETTI3, OASSIMERES, and WooLLENO r
Of dasitatdo =kilo and Myles. m•tf
FARRELL it MORRIS,
OHNTNUT STREET,
IMPORTERS. ,;
COMMI2I9IOIY MERCHANTi
oLovtis,
SPRING AND
1101141 IR COATINGS.
dl7-4m ' kr.. &e.
WOLFE, 78c CO..
. „
WROLBSALB
OARPIPING, OIL- CLOTH, ANDldArTrivi
WAREHOUSE. ,
NO. 182 CHESTNUT STREEt\
W Manor for Philadelphia Carpet fdaanfaetrtieie.
ro34m
FROTHINGHAM
• .
& Tfuti.
84 BOUTH TEM
AND 36, LETITIA
AM AGENTS for the gale of 00044 MIIIIIISIOOI by
the jollowing Doementes. tie(
Mugaoxo
Lamma s
GREAT Fe u,
r •
""ai s m,
Dwr r.., Ng,
ifeietell&
Bnsayt,
Drotemßleached, and alcand Alubelislin: •
HAMPDEN COMPANY'S
TWEEDS AND OOTTONADES la great varletY.
WASHINGTON MILLS
(Formerly 1147 dtate)
probi l liViwall Table Coven , PAW •Feltbm
am i rgrm )I,;.,Zeal"°"" Z176.0t. tiler
mg. Bstinete. and 71141 1 11%. " ' - 0.1.01
p A TEN T FWR AND SEAL SKIN
THE BUBBORIEHRO.
VOWS AMINTII IN TH UNITID STAIN/
For the above desonption of goods of the well.kaown
maaufaetore of
KUBIK BDWIN FIRTH & BON&
RECEMDEDWIRE, YORK/MILE. ENGLAND.
Are preparing to exhibiteamples of the venom Mall
ins, and to take orders f or immediate or future dell
very, to suit the oonvenienoe of the trade.
The goods mionot be purokeeed through the enstom
cry channels In England, and all orders for the United
Otatee must go through the subsoribers.
WRAY & GIGLILAN.
PHILADELPHIA, and
FANBHAWE, MILLIKEN, & TOWNSEND,
lalo•tuthkodm Now York.
FROTHINGHAM & WELLS,
IS LETITIA BTRHBT, AND 34 1301)71
FRONT MIST.
OOTTONADES.
Writable for both Madden and Jobbers, in lane
variety.
iIIthIMISS COATINGS AHD OAMEMILABT7M
Made by Washington Mills.
Or ti jaken for those desirable goods for Daring trade.
SHIPLEY, HAZARD, & HIITOHINSON,
NO 1111 CHESTNUT ST.,
• OOMMISSION MERCHANTS
Fox THE SACS or
PHILADELPHIA-MADE
GOODIEL
sikens
M'CALLIMI & CO.. ,
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Ely V 1155.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1860.
Queen's English.
Cohbett, in the very amusing English Gram
marovhlch be wrote, used to draw his exam
plea of bad grammar from Pitt's King's
'Speeches, and Castlereagh's louse of Com
mits harangues. The result was a marked
improvement—not In Castlereagh's slip•slop
talk, which was incorrigible, but—in the com
position of the documents severally called
a The Speech from the Throne."
The Times, which always reminds u of an
elephant, equally capable of rending an oak
of;the forest and picking up a pin, has an
amusing criticism on the Queen's Speech,
which abe read, in the House of Lords, on the
24tit of January, on the opening of the present
Parliamentary Session. It asks, "Has the
Queen—being impelled thereto by her con-
E. , ntional advisers—a right to clip her own
milish, to cry down the good old sterling
: diem that have passed current since the
tirye of Elizabeth, and to iseuo forth with her
ow* image and superscription, a certain base
mohey vulgarly known as slip slop?'" It
adds, tt The best Queen's Speech that was
ever made has come out in the worst English
that ever was written. It is strange how so
many singularly inappropriate words wore
°Sr got into so many singularly Inappropriate
placas."
Jfhoever wrote the Queen's Speech, knew
,lMle of the English tongue. It la a jungle of
was through which a pathway his to be cut
With an axe to arrive •at any meaning. The
'rnie (which Is a little hypercritical, we think)
•,t otes several instances of clumsy wording,
'and adds t 4 , There is not in tho whole Speech
a good old ringing English idiom, nor even a
happy plagiarism from any of our neighbor
tongues; but the idioms, although they are
flabby, and lack the sinew and muscle of true
English, are not so ridiculous as the metaphors.
When her Majesty endeavors, by friendly
means, to prevent a rupture,' we strive in vain
to realize the scene; and we should like to
have all the authors of this composition lobked
up together, until they produced a satisfaeibry
Picture of one of those embers of disturb
ance' which are so feelingly spoken of in re
latioi to the Indian mutinies. In old times,
whtin constructive 'treasons wore numerous, en
earned Attorney General might have got a
verdict of high treason' against the framers of
this Rpyal Speech for conspiring to take away
the Queen's breath. Ho would have had little
more to do than to desire the twelve good men
andAine all to stand up and read through the
paragraph which relates to the Conference. It
consists of two sentences—one of eight lines
and another ofth rteen-eand Is such a labyrinth
of assertions anti conditions, with parenthesis
within Parenthesis, and with nominative cases
Irregularly divorced from their eorbs2--it in
volves such a holding of breath and continuity
of utterence, that very few ladles except the
Queen could got through It without breaking
down. Ott a wet day, when the Hampton
Court labyrinth is inaccessible, we recommend
this Clowess paragraph to an idler as a capl.
tel Fazed: Let him once get Into it, and run
up and down among the twisted phrases, and
thee let bin get honestly out of It if he
The' Congresi paragraphs hero alluded to
arc as foiloWS
At the clue of the hat cession; I informed you
, , dines had been made to me to ascertain
great •rs by the
arrangements oonnected with the pre..7.4 4 Settling
future condition of Italy, a plenipotentil
be emit by me to mist at each a Conference.
have since received a format invitation from the
Emperot of Austria and from the Emperor of the
Proaeh to send a plenipotentiary to's Congress, to
consist of the representatives of the eight Powers
:who were parties to the treaties of Vienna, of
1816—the object of such Congress being stated to
be 20 receive communication of the treaties con
cluded at Zuriob, and to deliberate, associating
with the above-mentioned Powers the Courts of
Itome, of Sardinia, and of the Two Staines, on the
means best adapted for th 6 paoltioatien of Italy,
and for placing its prosperity on a solid and dura
ble basis.
"Circumstances bare arisen which have led to a
postponement of the Congress, without any day
having been fixed for its meeting; but, whether in
Congress or in separate negotiation, I shall endeavor
to obtain, for the people of Italy, freedom from
foreign interferon°e by foroe of arms in their in
ternal concerns, and I trust that the affairs of the
Italian peninsula may be peacefully and satisfac
torily fettled "
This certainly is a notable specimen of the
description of writing called rigmarole. It
would puzzle the best scholar in the High
School to parse it, because it is put together
with a magnificent contempt of the ordinary
'trammels of syntax. Murdering the Queen's
English is a crime of no ordinary gravity, in
social life. 'When the Queen herself is the
culprit—the offence forced upon her by he;
Cabinet Ministers !--it is very difficult to de
cide what punishment should bo meted to her,
It is as if a Chief Justice should himself com
mit ono of the offences which ho is in the habit
of trying in his Criminal Court.
When Victoria announces to the Lords
Spiritual and Temporal and " her faithful
Commons," who conjointly constitute the
British Parliament, that " the last embers or
disturbance" in her East Indian dominions
"have been extinguished," wo are inclined to
ask where, in the name of all that is rational,
such a remarkable mixed metaphor as this
could have been put into her mouth. " The
last embers of disturbance"—what ran it
meant Att the "confusion worse con
founded" of o Queen's Speech, one learns
to think with more tolerance than tho sentence
has usually received, upon President Taylor's
joyful announcement to Congress that this
country was "at peace with all the world--
and the rest of mankind." Here Is tautology,
surplusage of words, strange iteration; but
here, also, is a plain and straightforward
thought, intelligible, if not exactly grammati
cally correct.
The Queen's Speech Is a sort of joint-stock
composition framed by the Cabinet Ministers.
Not ono of these fifteen noblemen and gentle.
men but had the advantage of an University
education. Some of them have even obtained
no small celebrity as men of letters. Lord
Palmerston was ono of the authors of "The
New Whig Guide." Lord Campbell is the
biographer of the Chancellors and Chief Jus
tices of England. Mr. Gladstone has written
largely in the Quarterly and other Reviews,
and has written several octavo volumes upon
Church and State. The Duke of Argyll is the
author of several pamphlets and one volume
on the Scottish Presbytery. Sir George Corn
wall Lewis, ha philosophical Historian, and has
been editor of the Edinburgh Rerrew. Lord
John Russell has written history,
plays, politics, poems, and so forth—after a
fashion. Hero, at all events, are siy, men who
have mitten books, yet these, assisted by nine
trier°, (every ono of whom has published at
least ono Parliamentary speech, which is ono
degree of authorship), were unable to com
pose a Queen's Speech which should be intel
ligible and grammatical ! What a pity it is
that while the dead and living languages had
been crammed into the Veda of these public
men, they were not also taught how to explain
plain thoughts, correctly and plainly, in their
mother-tongue.
In fact, the Aristocracy of England, who,
as Mr. Disraeli tauntingly told them, are born
to seats in Parliament, are instructed very
much on the system which prevails in some
of the Female institutes in this country,
where a young lady who shows superior pro
&Riney in Mathematics receives the highest
premium awarded—though he may be utterly
unable to hem or mark a pocket-handkerchief,
and may have no knowledge whatever of the
domestic arrangements which come under the
general term housekeeping. Of course, in a
multitude of instances, the fair premium
winner throws the abstract sciences to the
winds after she enters into society, and gets
married—lamenting, too late, when her do
mestic arrangements aro wholly, dependent on
tho sagacity, experience, and temper of hired
menials, that• she was not taught something
usethl.
Whatever the sex, whatever the condition of
life, a knowledge of one's own language ought
to bo the first and greatest object of instruction.
There cannot be, there ought not be, any ex
cuse for the parson, who cannot speak and
write his or her own language with propriety, if
not With elegance. It is very discreditable to
English education that a- fifteen of the highest
men in public lite in England, several of them
authors of no small pretence, should not be
able, among them, to produce a better-written
state-paper than they mado Queen Victoria
road aloud, the other day, as her Speech from
the Throne. As far as capacity to write good
English goes, American publicists are very
much ahead of the same class in England-
They rarely murder the Queen's English.
Eloquent Eulogies on the Death of
Hon. D. C. Broderick,
ON MONDAY, FEBRUARY FOURTEENTH.
IN SENATE.
Mr. SEWARD. Mr. President, the great na
tional event of our day, I think, is the extension of
our empire over the interior of the continent, from
the border of Missouri to the Pacific ocean. He
who shall write its history will find materials
copious and fruitful of influence upon the integrity
of the American Union and the destiny of the
American people. If e will altogether fall, however,
if he do not !fumed in raising llonston" and Rusk
and BRODERICK to the rank among organizers of
our States, which the world has assigned to
Virintbrop.and Villiers, Raleigh and Penn, Balti
more and Oglethorpe, as well as in placing Taylor
and Scott and Worth and Quitman. as generals, by
the aide of Washington and Greene and Marion
Impartiality will require him to testify that I
BRODERICK, MOM vigorously and resolutely than
any of his predecessors, overcame accidents and
circumstances which opposed his success. Neither
birth, nor fortune, nor education, nor training,
nor patronage, nor association, nor prestige of any
kind, favored ambition In his case. While yet
very young, he disappeared, unobserved, from
among the excitements of mere municipal elec
tions in a great commercial city on this side of the
oontinent, and rose as suddenly on the other side,
towering and conspicuous among the ill-assorted
and irregular troops of adventurers from all parts
of the world, who appeared there, reckless, as It
seemed, of all restraint, and animated by the one
absorbing purpose to become quickly rioh by be
ing the first to scoop up the golden dust in the beds
of the rivers of California. As we looked upon
these tumultuous assemblages, we asked, how
shall even peace and life be secured among them?
Row and when shall this political chaos be re
duced into the solid substance of a civil State?
even while we were yet asking these questions, we
saw that State rise up before los in just propor
tions—firm, vigeroua, strong, and free ; complete in
the fullest material and moral sufficiency, and, at
the same time, loyal and faithful to the Federal
Union. The hand that principally shaped it was
that of DAVID U. BRODERICK.
Sir, when I beard in a foreign land of - the death
of our late associate, I experienoed, beside the gen •
timents of sorrow whioh I am sure are common to
no all, a keener sorrow that arms from the refleo.
tion that he had fallen prematurely, while yet there
was need and room for further publio service to
augmenehie fame. But in this I erred. It is not
the amplitude, bat the greatness of achievements
that secures the statesman's renown.
The manner of his death gave a severe shock to
the moral sensibilities of the nation. But I will
not dwell on this painful subject, because, if be
could hear me, he would forbid complaint. He
consented, I trust, reluctantly; but he neverthe
less consented to the combat in whioh he fell. I
never have known a man more' salons of his honor.
or ono who could so endure to be an object of
pity or compassion in misfortune or in disappoint
tent. I leave him, therefore, in his early grave,
content to confine my expressions of grief within
the bounds of narrow for the loss of a friend, than
whom none more truthful and honest , survives ; a
Saunter, than whom none more incorruptible ever
entered these Halls; and &statesman, who, though
be fell too soon for a nation's hopes, yet, like Ha-
Milton, left behind him noble monuments well and
completely finished.
Mr. TOOMBE. Mr. President, I wish simply to
announce my entire concurrence with the resolu
tions proposal by the Senator from California.
My own acquatutattee with Mr. BRODERICK' com
menced in this body and ended horo. It waiPure
ly and exclusively of a public character. I had
not the pleasure of any personal acquaintance with
him outside of hie public capacity in the perform
anoe of our relatiVe duties here as American Sena
tors. But, sir, there were strikingpoints in his
(diameter that won my respect, and I may IST my
admiration. I found him bold, honorable, truthful,
attached to the Interests of his country, "clear in
his office," and n man that I considered an honer
to the American Senate. He was one of the best
specimens of self-made Americans ; springing from
iliegurbkeLaustira of society, by virtue of his
life, almost uncultiveitaTedellain early
peer of the proudest in the land, and condi:Taw
himself after he came to this body in snob a man
ner as to win respect and approbstion, notwith
standing the many prejudices which had surrounded
his advent into this body, produced, it may be, by
the many and stern partisan conflicts which
marked lila active but troubled career. I trusted
him as a faithful, an honest, an upright, a fearless
Senator.
I give my full oonourrence to these resolutions.
I had not intended even to say this much but for
the dissent which has been manifested to our pro
ceedings In honor of his memory. He fell In
honorable combat, under a code which be fully
recognised. While I lament his sad fate, I have
no word of censure for him or his adversary. I
think no man, under any circumstances, can have
a mere honorable death than to fall in the vindi
cation of honor. Ile has gone beyond censure or
praise. He has passed away from men's judgment.
to the bar of the Judge of all the earth, who will
do right:
" Earth's highest honors end in 'here he lies;
And ' dust to dust' concludes her noblest long."
IN THE ROUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
Mr. BURLINGAME. I rise, Mr. Speaker, to min
gle my sorrow with this general expression of grief
at the fall of one so gifted and so brave as was
DAVID C. BRODERICK. It is true. that I did not
know him so long nor so well as did those gentle
men who have just now spoken so feelingly and so
justly of him. But latterly my relations with him
were quite intimate, and I presume it was a know
ledge of this fact which led those who were near
and dear to him when he lived, to request that I
would join with them In these last sad tributes to
his memory.
And now, sir, standing by his closed grave, I
will do what I can to lead your mind, Mr. Speaker,
and the mind of the House, far, far away from the
causes which laid him in his bloody shroud, and
call your attention to a few of those singular quali
ties which made him the marvel alike of Ms friends
and bin foes. Ido not shrink, sir, from a defence
of the motives and actions of Mr. BRODERICK ; but
this is not the occasion, this is not the time for re
sentment; it is the hour sacred to friendship and
to grief. In this spirit, sir, I shall offer the few
words I have to say.
He was the child of the people ; born to that
great American heritage, the right to labor and to
enjoy the fruits thereof, and he abed a new dignity
on the toil of men. It is true, as the gentleman
from New York (Mr. Raskin) remarked, that '
now, worn and tired labor may look up from
its toil and be proud. Sir, that was a beautiful in
cident to which he made reference when In the
Senate of the United States, representing, in part.
an empire In the West, Mr. BRODERICK permitted
the reeolleotions of his early struggles to come upon
him, and pointed out with pride, the handiwork of
his honored father, as it appeared In the traceries
of the Capitol above his head. It was a recogni
tion of his alliance with the great working classes
of the country. But it wee nobler far, manlier far,
on that occasion, then Instead of flattering the pre
judices of his people, he told them with a fearless
tongue their faults, rebuked their prejudices, and
yet leaned confidingly on their virtues while he
vindicated their rights.
Slr, he was a Democrat, without being a dema
gogue; he loved the people and he never betrayed
them, and with passing time, as they discovered
these traits In his (diameter, he won their enduring
regard.
Str, I never knew a man who was so mtsuuder
stood—who differed so much front his common
fame. I myself sought him in this city, as the
Representative of a hardy but tumultuous portion
of my countrymen. Imagine, sir, my surprise
when I found him a student—a student of history,
a student of poetry, a silent man, one who sat
apart from his fellows, pondering deeply the great
problems of life ; one instructed, as the gentleman
from Pennsylvania (Mr. Hickman) has informed
us, in those motives which underlie all the notions
of men. I found him firm and dignified in deport
ment. It is true his struggles with adverse fortune
had clouded hie brow, and that his face, In the
presence of his foes, over wore a mingled look of
scorn and defiance, but for his friends he hail a
genial smile—an irresistible fascination. His look
watt honest and sincere, his voice firm and truth
ful, and sometimes it had a manly melody which
caused it to penetrate into the deepest recesses of
the human heart.
Sir, ho was a born leader. Bitting in his
solitary room In San Francisco, his wizard mind
went forth over the hills and through the valleys
of California, until the whole State was filled with
the breath of his power. lie had an indomitable
will. Before it party names and party organize
Dens disappeared, and men, under the spell of his
great spirit, forgot they were Republioans, forgot
they wore Demoarats, and only remembered with
pride that they were Boom:wiz men. Few men
with power to draw the masses to themselves, to
(muse their multiform feelings to flow in the indivi
dual channel of a single will, have appeared at
any time. Few have anpeared in this country.
lie, sir, had that gift. lie had—
., The meteor of commanding
The God-like power, the art •Napolcon
(if winning, binding, wielding, handing
Tho hearts of millions till they move as one."
I say that this quality is rare. Men with it
have appeared at long Intervals upon the shores of
time; but when they have appeared, they have
been the Idols of their rase.
Mr. BRODERICK fell in the very dawn of his
(ueer. Though ho fell thus early, yet he had
stamped the impress of his mighty mind upon the
affairs of the Pada() elope. No wiser brooded
over the chaos there. He aided in laying the
foundations of that new State. lie aided in rear
ing its fabric•of government; and be did all be
could, sir, to fill it with the pure soul of the peo
ple. Ile believed in something. He believed that
he bad a miesion to perform. lie believed that
be was a champion of the people. Their wrongs
were hie wrongs; their rights were his rights
Ilia heart throbbed responsive to thoire, and their
wild and stormy passions rolled ever through his
soul. Following this line of duty, he fell into
conflict instantly with those tyrannioal elemente
which, in every society, are seeking to destroy the
frichte of the people.
Loving the people, jealous of their rights, be
TWO • CENTS.
ought those elements with fierceness and with
bitterness. No man knew better than he did the
requirements of his times. No man knew better
than he did the logic of events: No man knew
better than he did the hasard a man takes to him
self who is really, earnestly, faithfully for the peo
ple. lie, sir, had read history, and knew what
had been the fate of the Roman Graoohl; but no
personal consequences to himself deterred him.
Rtanding in that presence, scornful of corruption
and Of tyranny, in the majesty and grandeur of his
pure, stainless private and public, life, looking to
his stormy past, looking into the dark future, he
saw,,with the clear eye of his judgment, the very
point where he must abdicate the leadership for
the people's rights or yield up his life. Mr, he did
not"imitate one moment. Many a man here will
remember how the shadow of the event which is to
clothe us in mourning this day was upon him ero
ho left this city. lie bade farewell to his friends
forever.
lie had, as I ea* 'stated to-day, seleeted—and
the gentleman from Pennsylvania. (Mr. Hickman]
himself has attested the feet here to-day—the very
man who was to speak for him upon this floor; and
one; speaking of him with transcendent ability,
desgribes his departure from his loved city of New
York ; bow, when he saw one dear object after
another sink beneath the waved-68'001re of the
church, the palace, the hovel—a gloom 0111111 over
him! which his friends °maid not lift from his heart.
lie paw a hand they did not see, waving him per
petually toward the shadow-land. He followed it
with bteady tread and fearless eye. Me is gone ;.
and I will not penetrate that shadow-Imid. lie
star In the presence of the great Master of
eve ts, who will judge fairly 'between him and
tho e who sent him there.
,
Ilia body sleeps, an has beep said,
,by a, lone
mountain, behind the oity• of hie adoption. Re
has ono kith nor kin who will go there to water that
lone grave with their tears; but the people who
laid, him down to bin last resting.place with their
tears and their Sobs—the people for whom he lived
and for whom he died—as long as the seasons shall
ooniL and go, as long as the great ocean of the
Wl* shall ebb and flow titrongh the Golden Gates,
will cherish and love 'the memory of DAVID 0.
BRODERICK.
Mr. Mortars, of Illinois. Mr. Fpesker,we are
told that California's great Senator is dead ! it
were not so, every breeze that comes to us front the
Pacific bears upon its wings the sad tidingtof this
great woe. Although I am the last,' et lam not
a kiss sincere mourner at his:closing funeral rites.
Belioted by his friends to speak on this oeeasion, I
come to pay to his memory the tribute of a sincere,
and heartfelt sotrovefor his low. I bring with me,
sir, a knowledge of his personal character 'naval:die
worth, arising from an acquaintance which l I am
happy to know, ripened into a sincere friendship.
During the last session of Congress I °coupled a •
seat at the same table with him. Ills chair was
directly opposite mine. Our intercourse was free
and familiar, and afforded me opportunities of
stddyiug his character; and I shall speak of it,
therefore, briefly, as I knew it. Others have given
the details of his short but eventful life.
At the commencement of the present session
returned to my aconstomed place at the same
table ; but, upon looking around it, I did not see
BRODERICK there! All the incidents of his melan
choly death rushed
formacrosay mind, and I wea led
to relent what security reputation and life has
a 'conscientious and fearless public man like him.
The boldness of honesty and truth is too often the
gateway to detraction and death ; while the artful
and wily politician aud dissembler, by the tricks of
his art, passes on upon the high - road of power and
fame, to bask In their sunshine.
. .
It has been too often the ease with those who re
bake authority, denounce torruption, and vindicate
public, morality and justice, that a hard fate awaits
OM. DAVID C. BRODERICK '
the Irish stone-ma
son's boy, who toiled at his father'e trade, and
raised himself to eminence by Ms own great energy
and talents, early, and alas! sadly, realised this
bitter truth, and now sleeps the sleep that knows
no waking. The funeral cortege that followed hie
remains to the grave Is dispersed Another now
fills his senatorial seat. No wife, no child, no rola
tiVe survives him. Who is there, then, to weep for
him? Who is there that wilt bring incense to
sprinkle upon his memory ? There runs not a drop
of his bicod in any human veins. Ills onoe noble
form Is wrapped fish bloody shroud ; his manly
video is bushed in death ; his flashing eye has
withered in its socket; and he, who, but yester
day, shone in the national Senate-ohamber, a
star of the first magnitude, and, moved among
his peers, possessing a vigorous physical frame,
free from disease, is now food for worms. Why,
oh ! why, Mr. Sneaker, all this? What bad
IM done. that he should pay the penalty of his
life ? Why was his onoe bosom friend, who had
nb just cause of 'quarrel. with him, his execu
tioner ?
When I tontemplate the proper answers to these
qizestions, the heart grows sick, the mind reels
upon its throne, and I find no consolation except
that "lie who doeth all things well," and " whose
Jaye are not man's ways, and are past finding
opt," bath in them an inscrutable provident.
Julius Omar fell beneath twenty-three •
aid gaping wounds; but it was the • :ruins
that was the unkindetit of them all., But though
thesar entered Rome as a victorious geners3,. fn
vi
o)ation of law, the conspirators who strutdr. hlm
down gained nothing by his death. Justice some
times comes with a slow and muffled step, but as
inevitably as destiny itself, and it overtook each
tbeir'ildior ater. It starts the guilty in
desert, dings to them iii-fhtnbluthefiLilallis aril
whithersoever they go, there it Is whispering tio - ifi
uneasy and violated conscience.
I pretend not to say that the death of D AVID C.
BRODERICK was the result of foul play ; but many
think, if he had been lees honest and independent,
be would to-day be a living man. What was his
offence? What had he done that he should fall
by the hand of violence? Why was he bunted
from place to place withoutjust cents or provost,
lion? Truth's historic page will record the re
sponge to these coalitions ; and the people of Cali
fornia will read and understand them. He bad
wronged no man; he had sought to quarrel with
none ; but, as far as he believed duty and honor
stould allow, avoided personal difficulty. Yet he
Seemed a doomed man. Ms true, that born of
poor but honest parentage, and toiling with ble
bands for hie daily bread, a child of obscurity,
add buffeted by misfortune's waves, he had looked
up from his lonely and KA I aond Mon to " fame's
dread mount," whereon stood the rich, the proud,
and great, and dared to enter the list of honorable
competition for honorable fame.
Settling in a State possessing a heterogeneous
population; poor, without friends; scoffed at and
derided—he started out in a direst line for the
goal of hie ambition, while those who were hie ri
vals, and had gone to their new location invested
with the charms of acknowledged talent and fame,
were startled and alarmed that one In whose veins
ran only plebeian blood should be so bold and pre
sumptuous as to jostle them from ambition's lad
der. Nothing daunted by opposition, however,
and relying upon the energies of his own great
soul, his coons was upward and onward, like the
eagle's flight, and In a few short years he was the
acknowledged head and leader of his State, while
his ;nod powerful foe was prostrate at his feet,
asking his aid, and found him as magnanimous as
ho was brave. Perhaps no man ever overcame so
many obstacles in so short a time. Without the
possession of more than ordinary mental faculties,
he never could have done it •
lie was, indeed, an extraordinary man. Ills In
tellect was cant in a capacious mould; his energy
knew no tiring; and be was a moral hero that
stood for the right. lip ascribed no principle to
expediency, acknowledged no leader but duty, and
alike scorned the smiles and corruptions of power.
his allegiance he owed to the people and their
rights, and be refused it to Presidents and Cabi
nets, when desired for base purposes. Always
open and straightforward, there was no dis
simulation or guile in him. Els language was
the open, plain Anglo-Saxon language of frank
near and truth, and he called things by their right
names. A truer man, a more disinterested pa
triot, a firmer hater of wrong and oppression,
a more devoted and consistent friend, and purer
public servant, never lived. No suspicion was ever
even whispered that corruption bad tampered
with him, that bribery's base coin had adhered
to Ms fingers, or that he was in any way impli
cated in schemes of public' plunder. Temperate,
moral, simple, and frugal in his habits, and ad
dicted to no vices, with all his aims his country's
good, he trod life's path not as eociety ' a spawn,
hut as one of nature'a noblemen, looking down
from his lofty eminence upon hie tradnoers, and
moving forward as a comet amid lesser planets.
shedding a radiance in his pathway. lie knew no
obligations but such as duty imposed, and those he
faithfully discharged. Direct, bold, faithful, and
single in his purpose, be never hesitated, never
wavered, never faltered, 'when right and' wrong
were presented to bim, which to choose. Ilia was
no weak, doubting, cowardly tongue, that was
afraid to give utterance to truth,
As a statesman, be had not the polish of those
educated in the schools—not their plausibility or
flowing language ; but possessed a native vigor of
intellect, expanded by reflection and reading,
which marked every effort of his forensic power.
Who that heard him or who that has read his re
marks, will ever forget his manly and eloquent
reply to South Carolina's proud and gifted Senator,
who reflected on the laboring men of the North in
unjust terms? It is, Mr. Speaker, no disparage
ment to others to say that no Senator ever gained,
in so short a time, so widespread a fame. Coming
to this Capitol with the breath of slander preceding
him andbreathing dishonor upon his character, in
two short years his State reputation was swallowed
up by a national one, and his name became a fa
, miller household word throughout this vast Repub.
lio. It will go on, sir, culminating, until truth and
justice shall place it in the highest niche of fame.
Though he was born in this District, and spent
his juvenile yearn around this Temple of American
Liberty, he was the true typo of a Northern Demo
crat. All his instincts, sympathies, and feelings,
were with the Democracy, and they were every
where looking up to him as their future leader.
When the heart-rending intelligence reached their
ears that ho was gone, gone forever, down to the
cold and silent grave, an almost universal wail of
anguish went up from their midst; and the question.
prepoinded at hie funeral obsequies, " Who shall
speak for California now '" was echoed from the
Atlantic) to the great West, ran along her lakes
and rivers, and sounded through her valleys and
mountains, like the death-chilling notes of an ill
omened bird. "Who shall speak for California
now" to the free people of the free States of this
Confederacy?
Mr. Speaker, Senator Bnonentcx was, indeed,
an extraordinary men. It may be said of him, in
the language of Ireland's immortal patriot, Em
mett, " the man dies, nut his memory lives." It
will be green and fresh in the recollection of mil
lions, while that of ethers will go out, and be fors
gotten forever. Now, and in after years, wbe,
the public shall crowd the galleries, and look down
npon the august men who compose the American
Senate, the question will not be asked, who fills
the chair at present? but, where did BRODSRiCIC
sit? Unless all truth is falsehood, and history
speaks to the future of the past with a lying tongue,
no brighter name will shine in its annals, among
the true moral heroes of America. Ile knew his
duty, and, knowing, dared to do it. Mothers
will teach the tale of his almost fabulous life. and
repeat the horrid story of his untimely death, to
their lisping children ; and, as riper years come
upon them, they will pilgrimage to the seated
nronamont Which friendrhip lo rearing to pupa*
THE WEEKLY pREps.
TiE WKULT Pane WI be sent to rEtabsanbars by
mall (~peer ana9a. in adtoee t ) at Tires Ba
Plre Corm. "
505
Ten " " Itwe
Twenty Centel" " (to ons address) UN
Twenty Copies. or mar. " (to address of
'soh Butmoriber,) eaoh.—
Por a Club ot Tweuts-ooe or over, we will mad as *Guy to the getter-up of the Cl ub.
Postmasters are requited to ant as wants for
Tax Wszut Pau&
CALTPORNIS. PRESS.
law Seutt-Monthly to Moe for the Ca:L[omM
Steamers.
ate hM 'worth, and there pour out their oblations
OM the dust of the noble martyr who fell a victim
to hie devotion to the great- principle of popular
liberty, and his love of birth.
"Oh! bloodiest nieturei bemoaned °lnane:*
Great BRODSRICI fedi. , " without &crime."
flu student of American statennenahip, and look
over the bright galaxy of names which &dent the
pages of your country's history; and when you
corn& to that of the stone-mason's eon, learn from
him how to model your own character. Learn
what native talent and energy will do for one who
woo eli fortune's miles, and etarted out upon the
great highway of life, determined to win for him
self emcees. As he stepped on board of a vessel la
the harbor of New York, with no friends to aid
him, poor and unknown, except to a few stegrmint
, snots, , Where are yon going?" inquired one.
"Td California," he replied. ‘• When are you
coming back ?" "Not until lam a United States
Senator." A wild about of laughter went up from
the b ystandere at what was regarded as his vision
ary Mee. Yet In eight yeara he did come hack 11
Sensitor, and in two more ae9uired a deathleas
nitldnal fame. If the Politicians of the golden
State had bean congregated upon the wharf of' San
Francisco as he stepped for the brat time upon it a
stranger to all, and scarcely with a penny in hie
pocket, how they would have jeered at the idea
thatithere same a young man who would throw
them from his pathway with a giant's strength • and
ruehy them with almost the speed of thought to
the ighest position! It hardly appears, indeed,
the he labored up the soiled and worn way, but
" dcprn from higbakreiglonseame, - and perched him
I
there to see what lay beneath."
B . t, Mr. Speaker, if his career was bril li ant, it
yeas alas for his country, too short. In the bloom
of anhood, and at the moment be was standing
on e Mated plansole of fame. he was cat down.
"D th levearto shining mark." The poll of his
Stab drank hie noble blood, and the ericron spot
has not yet been washed. oat. Row mournful is the
thmight ! The seasons will emu, and go, and vernal
?lode?, bloom with nature's retunaing warmth, but,
alma! we shall never look upon the bee of our
friend again! Pelee to hie dust , r pretend not
to say who is to blame. That, Impartial history
wilt determine. But, I will say, that when the
roll.call of California's statesmen Is gone over at
the Judgment-day, and Brionsercx Is inquired for,
more than one voice will reach the ear of thegreat
Jehinah from secret places. "Am I my brother's
keeper?" Farewell, my friend! ,
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Rzsrucar Titus TO TDB UNIOZT. , —PTOOtICT, of
thOLLOIIIITiIiO Journal, thus declares the sterling
an i patriotic sentiment of the .people . of Ran:
tuc y :
4As little willing or inclined to submit Patiently
to She intolerable oppression of a reckless sectional
ms ority as Virginia or South Carotins, or any
ie
otl r ante, is, Kentuelcy intends to make all her
re stance and do all her fightirg ineiqa the Union,
an , so far as 'possible.-through its matchless ma
eldhaery. Her determination in this respect is
Arid. Her mind Is made up. She is for the
Union; ' peaceably, if possible—forcibly, if me
ceesary ;' but, at any rate, for the Union. Re
garding disunion as the sum of all evils. not except.
lug publio shame and dishonor, the rejects it as a
remedy for even the worst, In an emergency suffi
ciently extrome,Retitucky would readily precipitate
°fig! war In defence of her honor and her rights, hut
di nion never. She holds disunion to 'be, for the
American people, the lowest possible deep of wit
tiest wretchedness and infamy. It is, in her esti
tuition, the most guiltyand terrific form of national
suicide.
f . Actuated by these sentiments, Kentucky, so
far from deserting or entertaining a thought of de
parting the Union in the present strait, has, as we
have said, and as the whole nation knows; invited
this neighboring States to unite with her around
tab festive hoard in pledging the Union afresh, not
mbrely in fall view of the evils that beset tis; but
in the true and statesmanlike, as well as the pa
triotic, mode of removing them. With what corn
plateness, heartiness, and transporting seal, tills
high sot of wisdom and of public spirit, has been
performed we need not repeat. Tennessee and In,
Mena_ were met at our board by Ohio, aad tutder -
circumstances perhaps the most commanding and
1 enkindling that have stirred the heartsof men and
, States in this country sines the organisation of the
Ghvernment, thefr voices mingled with the votes of
11:antuoicy in lofty, heartfelt, and thrilling expres
sing of devotion to the American Union. The
ft me of patriotism, releuned by KentnakY, • • '
sea to spread until it enwraps the •
ite healing splendor." • on. G.t.—
f SnOCKING TB AGEtir AT 1 .. ea a shoakieg Ira- .
a telegraph has ,•, .. Georgia, on the 6th inst., -
1 ,. "lay at
ft 1v pe r sons
farsis Per" b n es lo pa st ri 4 i h n e u i l r ars liv orthe lb eff e-e Z,
Ba
b
a i. that
merchant
plantation
overseer,. e.b
o i .. t r , ) , ni ... d.
.. fi. ,,ii,.... : -... jot ot'ha sv il.. : ( v en al s k , a e n io:
o gra ms .
day int Walke(deliberately
if er•tiesal4alnues
from
m ed ta la w t n ely
Thleft.'ea'f:oxet-r and killed
gape and dogs, started ,to arrest bins. .Oh their
the It e o town orthre bteame very great, and five citizens, with
a'rival at Walker's holm, Wrdker issued from Om
deer armed with a ride, pistols, and a knife. The
dirty called upon him to surrender, when he as
- ed..en attitude Of defiance and refused, while
i wife, - In gre...s.ALstsms - ,--.nug to him to prevent
[Arther violence. Throwing her off, he levelled bit
rifle, and was about to fire, when the whole party
of panniers discharged their pieces, killing- tam tn.
s lastly, putting two buckshot through the arm and
hand of his wife, and mortally wounding his daugh
ter, a little girl about seven years old, who was in
tile house at the time, a buckshot having entered
.
her face below the eye and lodged in the rear por
tion of her brain.
rr A bill has been introdneed Into the Albany
Legislature, to enoonrage and promote the mechan
ical and ecientifie arts, and proposes to give one
hundred and fifty dollars out of the State Treasury
to earth young men over the ego of twenty-one
years, who has served a five-year apprenticeship
at some mechanical trade, and who can produce to
the Governor a certifioate of his qualifications from
three master work - men, and a ccrtineste from a
Probate Judge of his character. This amount is
to enable him to purebase necessary and
tiose tools are to bo forever exempted from levy
find sale under execution.
fa' One day last week, in the Maine Legisle
tpre, there was an interesting exhibition. by a pro.
essaion through the Senate Chamber and Repro.
sentativea' Hall of eight giant men, viz : General
Henry P. Cotton, sheriff of Lincoln county, WI
pounds; N. A. Farwell, of Rockland, 235; Eurone r
Whitney, of Presque Isle, of the Senate. 202
tiamuel C. Hamilton, of Biddeford, of the Houso,
p 5; Raymond B. Rich, of Tborndike, orthe
House, 254; Enos Phinney, of Jay, of the lionie,
254; Mr. Morrison, of Farmington, 250; and J.
W. Davis, of East New Portland. 245.
I_7" A curious book has been lately printed In
London, for private circulation, by Sir John Si.
Meets. It is the cotemporary account, In Italian,
of the murder of the monster Cenci, and of the ex
}cotton of his unhappy wife and children. This
is the document, we believe, upri. which Shelley
rounded his tragedy, and an extras! from which,
in English, Is given in Mr. Moxon'e edition of Shel.
ley's works. It relates the horrible circumstances
4.f the affair M a matter-of fact and no: re tone,
which rather enhances than destroys the horror
rhich attaches to it.
LV'''Profe.saor T. S. C. Lowe has turned up In
Charleston, S. C , where he is bewildering the
southerners with his aerial purposes, views, and
speculations. lie has furnished the journals there
With an apology for the mysterious die ipposrance
or himself and his mammoth silken glebe from tho
cognizance of the citizens of New York. Ile says :
"The mammoth air-ship, City of New York, in
Which I intend to make a voyage to Europe in
May or Juno next, I built last year, designing to
,start in October. Owing, however, to unexpected
labor which, from the great size of the ship, it was
'difficult to foresee, and the delay to which I was
,subjected in the construction of the mechanical
'.apparatus and other equipments to the ship, it was
not completed until November; eenaquently. I de
cided to postpone the first experimentuf pro:tinily
testing the theory et oceanic aerial navigation un
til spring, when, as everything is in tho most com
plete and perfect order, I shall (my life and health
being spared) solve the problem. I have deter
mined not to neglect the opportunity. which the
time until then well afford me, for making obser
vations in the lower latitudes. My object now is,
to make an examination of the upper currents,
ascertain their course, velocity, &c , at short dis
tal:we to and below the equator, to see if I cannot
discover a return current setting from cast to west
—a theory in which I have wrong faith. In the
thirty-eight voyages I have male abn-e the cloud
regions, between 47 deg.. and 33 deg north lati
tude, I have found (though not always at the came
altitude) a current setting fro n west to east, relia
ble in its course as the Gulf Stream. If, then, I
can find at or near the equator a e.noter current,
possessing the same uniformity and reliability, I
shall be satisfied. The advantages arising ftem
such a discovery can hardly be determined.'
CRINOLINE SERDEED.—The London Times I'o
porter, in sketching the scenes at tha recent open•
ing of Parliament, remarks :
"As the ladies sat closer and closer together,
first six, then seven, then eight, and at leaqt nice
upon a moderate bench, a great light flashed open
all beholders, and they saw that the reign of cri
noline was over, the literal and metaphorical iron
despotism of fashion was broken at last. The ex
ceptions to this rule, it is true, were neither few
nor unimportant, but still they were the exception,
and taken ass whole the sitting space allowed by
that sumptuary censor, the Lord Chamberlain,
was generally allowed to be enough:'
IV' That giant's throat (Paris) swallowed last
year 1,454,145 hectolitres of wine in barrels (ox.
elusive of wine is casks). 60,470 hectolitres of ai•
cohol, 20,778 hectolitres of cider, 23,130-4t13 kilos.
of butchers' meat, 9,222,620 f worth of salt-water
fish, 2,053,0721. of oysters, 1.070.1a3f. of fresh-water
fish, 18,315,7081. of poultry and game, 19 :3.13.7351.
of butter, 9,641,7411. of eggs. These figures were
taken from the owes books. The kilo. is two
pounds, the hectolitre is a little over twenty-two
gallons.
CONSUMPTION OF O)FPCF, TE%, AND S. ['GAR E -
timating the population of the United States at the
present time, at thirty millions, each inhalitant
annually conenm es eight pounds of cc.ir, , o, one plun I
of tea, and thirty pounds of sugar.
['The principal theatre in Sacramento, Cal.,
Is called the Forrest Theatre," in honor the
eminent American tragedian,