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' -----' ' . i .---u.r.,,.. ....,.---,. .‘ , , „ . .._______ - ----------- .. , ~ fe, • --..., 74 co ' '' ' - -• ' ' .:'-: ,'" - isiCait' imigo.r. - .oviv Dimwit Ada AM* figolltmu . : „ 1. , 2 1 0.2slINNukas vil* .114.;, tiliiiivuowtavensl4l is. at - , , : , . , 1 ~ • 4.:,: . ~ . .. . „ ,i*iiiotAletas, thowindome,': ,4 :' , ' , ". ~- "' ''-' ' '''' ' '.- • . • ' ..- .. ~-,- . , , ... . ' ''''' ". '''' ' thia.Wit*ll,'.it i t a • l ' , - , ! _ .1-.- _ ww l3o . illia.Fmoriumt of 40 of /A Tawas Wrill mom a - *L. • 1- . „ - . , ieoo G E 1 , • *:,: S :AcopITAU4I; BAILY. •"„.. '.1 . 0:151404 ' ' 00015% ' DRESS ,000P13 „ tiqual va t ilety stiiiia ityles• Sat4l7 4.l!lisios VIA novot Tlinos, • ALitiewartilent • • SPRING t SHAWLS. -7, XPuftbuNck GooDs. -"" mama .7orD ZWltll66oliptipti of 8 .41 : s • 5 - jut' &04 AND TV/itIETY IrmiXDAILD MAKEIII :DOMESTIC 000D8 ' NO. 21$14.10RIVIttrq, • - - reLOTILSJ , OAESIDLERES,'&I:4' ; - -LIPPXNOOTT . &PARRY. • IIiPORTKRB AND JOBBERS,I 1.10, ROO MARK= AND No. 6 S. BROOND 19T8.. jittiLtDELPHIA Invite the attention of the Trade to their lam stook of SPRING GOODS FOR BEN AND BOYS' WEAILI: nor, ' ' I DOUR 4.19 FOREIGNALMRAOTURR, SHAW & :BROTHER . RAU . 11010V - OD TO NO. ket,MARINT STREET, Whets they hay* on hand iixnaplete imminent of a I, 0; T H S . , - OASSIMIRES, VIEWING% , &0., fistiabio for the PIING EIELB011;- To whiih they invititiii titian of Wye & fol•Clui ; • . TE&D/O. 1860.! • DALE. BOSS. ,WITHERS.' EititipEOT, Aura 518, 001.111111 LOB ;",;!: PHlLAitiaiik;* ! ,IMPORTI* AND plump - •., I •or• '4301515 . 8. 1 )'Llir4;rAt. , 4 l ' •Eirsk.,-",-;4-m*me• -31 fad* TO 00; Licpp*TitO ANDViCzeusar, mittiiie I 01,0010, (4314M2M, MEM* TAILORS' TRIMMINGS. - -No. 333 ?wit= STET, ftfp etsitsa Ago cogniiiiiing their Spring Stook, to which they In, vita tki attention of th. trods. '6112 '" a ao • . - Jel mina ,; N OE DUSB 000 j aaina now ; a O , 4 5 , 11 4 4 . a tnno4.6 --- Wit; WI. , MPuiltrigiitr t #Kno • • . Y 3 OHN BTR3' KEii, etkiCiL • 1.; , ito mut.wr tar,isouni sum A 8.1110116 , ‘, , 1131h,0815,11ELL. r„ ' • • !mamma pLusais **on, AND manuoix "k o o D S. Auvarttfou-cuthz, and Maim, bosiebt 41141 1 ,114°-°n 'ams AT aIIDTIOBD 110.030. feS-1 9 a , . .. ..„.,.. pro. B. .F4 . .r.iliC:iNitsl3oicS. ' -IR MAII.XSViSTRIBITp „ • 7 4' t" ''• • - linorld don, Wow Fans%) ' ~ ~, Anpnannits ,'Airrr 40n nall'-01# f ' , -,! Itl A TAWffidagr l. 4° ' 4 , 4 -4 ^ t!.:' n :if esi Poi ITIPOWEIVIs a ° u x i Igo .... clojgre • ZOO , th e exolu.vcia e u ot_RlLOt i a eetilbrated maks of 0 Win so s' MO, avor tr a i rp r witim vird OLIO VOW.) and 0 Lyn tar %ITER, ai CO. • IMPOWPESS AND lOBBEILB OP ,SED DOMESTIC= 0. 8 . :Infittst . • ;.• - • 'GOODS'. ilidloloFT A L `OO.. . woe. tes.Alin 40Y1tARICHT eraser , P 2- ; ,* * A, D B z,s, Demenio DsY 0001141. ready fir:bnyenk 1•41 w SP/4 . 1144X 1060.: trne w lilfAVA ENZAVir"' oftwatp• , Iltap 09:1,11 1 , 1 , 90, 'Luisa; -D . 4X p CLOTHING,' , 444* - . 1100:*Mikrlikte4Willidelphifs. 44 11 / 1 0 8 6'APSTIP , . 4 1 : • AUI 4011Basot f' • Gci 0 p S, '',ltablAftert ElPOrns • kw 'War% I #1,11r611/!, famaffslaisu.• Mita fea _ . ‘lOl4ZEL' , '63' CO.. F. 414.1 0 3 A l 4 l . , M4 l Aiat4 ' ,• • • 1101XIGN-411D.Ti011te.TIO • yy E•P 4 IVP.V';.• .- OP D • • kW& irni • T. votamiKONl reettlturnentr, day for., ; ,011(iti,tioltirgr+19,.# 1 „s10: 1 7 1 ADM ' h 3 4 1 6, covlit{ 1 s - vkk••: , .a..te. , 41 - . • t ,••• - • 6147.PKOXii AM& 00.;, 4._pf iftio „p ia „ A reilt 4triftf " t t , t• 1 • - , Atik , 1164,--4 boo 0-0071141114401 1 0 . 4479*11 1 . :117 •EZO • •-• 0114^ Is ill 141,13. LINEN. GOODS, WRAR. „MWiEI;PiII4I. ',„ VOL. 3.-NO. 187. COMMISSIOX liCollsES. FARRETZ.• & MORRIS, IMPORTSiB and COMMIBBION KIEROBANTiI ,931r,OHA8TN_UT WRREZT. BoieritoolvedhY tie West Steamers s full fuwortnien of RERMAN and SAXONY MOTHS and DOEBfillie, amour yldoh eta all the pude. of J. A. REBBELLRATIL'BwhoIe sal half !goose I °EVERS & RCBMIDT ' do, do. B. & L. CELEBRATED' DOREOLINL • ' F. &_ B. do. , do. .L. Wfth o full flint ef the iffy rbtoluf IMPERIAL and ELECTORAL DORSI/NB i BILK MIXED 00ATING8; , COTTON WARP CLOTHO i COTTONADEB and , VEB2' PABDINGO, Ail of which as offered for sole ON FAVORABLE TERMS. • !Me V1761.4.Fre * WHOLBOALB OARENTING, 0.111.0119121, AND Minn WAREHOUSE. '- NO: ISt CHESTNUT STREET, Mir Amoy for PhllAdolyttla Carpet Mainutootomk foS4ua Virit FOBS : lb LLOYD, COMMISSION MORCILIINTS, No. 219 ORESTPWr, Baia 30 STRAWBERRY STREBTS, 0,1711 10/1 COTTONADES. TICIIINGS,. • CHECKS, SHEETING STRIPES, • DENIMS, and PIULADSLP.I3.IA-MADE GOODS GENERALLY. • • Al o, a full axiortment of - SATZNETTS, OASSINERES, and WOOLLENS, Of deallabla uudrea and Who. in-tf PATENT EVE An SEAL SKIN COATINGS. THE erussompEns, SOL Aasatsra Rani UNITXD BT/111111 tor the above description of goods of the well-known manufaotiue of • MEOW EDWIN FIRTH & SONS, ow • HEDESIONDWIRE, YORESIIIRE. ENGLAND. Are `preparing to exhibit simples of the various quell ing, and to take orders f or immediate or future deli very, to suit the convenience of the trade. The goods cannot be purohased through the oustom am channels In England, and all orders fod the United States must go through the subsoribers. WRALY GIGLILAN. PELLADELPHIA, and FANSE&WE. 'MILLIKEN, & TOWNSEND, jalo-tath&slku New York. FeIpTHINGHAM . . &i WELLS. ' . at SOUTH FRONT, ' • - - • . -- AND lIS LETITLS. STREET. Are AUNTS lot Cho Woof goods Manufsoturcot br the tollooruct Clogoontiee. olsc • Mossoolourro. • bo co. '' - , p actior For r t ',''.'• -.' ' A1 ;111) .1 2 --"" -- - , Dwigle ir t r4;cS: ~ . ~ , • ' BMWS" 0,,,' ssasi BririnAlleo, s. bidt Sad Ookrrod Shootiusg. iflatinsa , ona otit *QBESONfiI Burs PRINTS, 11AMEDIN :.00),Pare . '.iwzina AND vorriguame. in grw ncrletv. , - ',' w4.szurievozz - 'MILLS" ~- ':... 114itroit4.Ait State) Dr a dfi a -Vtio c ittai l 4 1 8 1 IVis ARM no ve... ersl4 on rialto. ' or sem ors. , aitO - - -em CARPETOTGS. NCIALLUIVI fa 00.. 0.411,Pir, muittkAannums, Kam Bobo mum, oaßiairromf. Abe. hoporters and Venters in CARPETIpTCIS. ,01. ti CLOTHS. -*ATTINsa. TWOS. &O. Waasxuv®s muserrars er.. • . • Conoffita the Owe Maw) MiZE=E;M;I ARPETS. - F. A. sulyr. ri Noe. 21 sad 114 North FRONT it* rth, SOLE AOENTB in Philadelphia for the ROXBDAY CARPET COMPANY, cunt hays oonatantly fei L aale s hi! asiortraent of VELVET and TAPESTRY CARPETS, of °hope pattema „ ft large imiply of the various kind, of CAA PETS manufactured in Philadelphia city and comity, kola tietuly all the beat mannfaeturers. Dealers will find it to their uttered to esti end maim these goodek whlohare offered for ale on the most tevorable terms. N. H.—P. A. 'ELIOT ta CO, bang the Bole Agana in Philadelphia for - the sale of the Worsted and Carpet Yetis spun by the Osionville Mills (formerly the New sngland Worsted Company,/ and being agents also for the. Bahl* Wilton, and Abtsott .Companies, have Peoullatfatellties for keeping constantly for sale the varione kuids of Carpets matutfaetured in Ph/lad/461a, 6 the most gsvorable terms. HOTS AND SHOES. BOXER* BROTHERS. MANUI4OTUBBN3 AND 191101.FAALD DELLXIIII tlt CITY AND Ddirl'lßN-MADE' BOOTS AND , SHOES. Noe, 489 And 434 2dARKBT BTERI37, • ' Below FIFTH Street, Routh aide. te,3-Be7 - mum:wk. . . „ . LEvw g,A ss BOOT AND BROS' WARKHOUSI Ain MANUPAOTOET. . OW. 405 maga STREET O PHILADBLiERA. We hare now on hand an extensive Moak of BOOTS and 8NOES;o1. every description, of OUR OWN AND EASTERN MANUFACTURE, to which we -Invite the attention of Southern and Western buyer,. fe3-am- SHOE FINDINGS. WM. JOHNS & SON, IMPOSTER AHD DEALERS IN Boor, SNOB, and GAITER nu TBRIALS J LABTINOB, SALLOW% SELEETINGS, PATENT LEATEERI FREESE RIM LACIETS. • SLIPPER LIPPER& eco. - 00DiUMS RODE.TU AND AMR BUBBIL RATS AND CAPS.' licipPEBl & DAVIS. „, ,No. 1617 MARKET STREET, wiIItIFAUTIMERB' OF. AND WROLESALE DEALERS IN, 'FUR; WOOL, SILK. CASSIMBRE, STILTW, AND PANAMA. . - -HATS, Oen - BONNETS, BLOOMERS, Kumasi mad k WILLOW HOODS, ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS, /to, -We, tfully invite the attenteert of_etoli er d ic t weletylitg bum to our lam Ina wonigietri THOMAS & MARTIN: : %t7' CHESTNUT STREET, ' •• itsys ros APAQUAI SEAMLESS BAGS. IN ALL EMIL ten-am MUM & SONS L KJ. IMPVTERB r #AVIttNi. CIGARS, liseitiViSWllt u iciraaifo n rtaterl e t e itdeisirsble 01- ATii orer at WV mtea, or easta l tifr Wavy. OT L. . UVITIN .O:WAYLWB." ' JAISTATIONER RI Y. TOY 9 i.tALNUT Awn tr STlism r PANOY K GOODS - a _ , alrabW kliliVrtiffa u ~(474tinfif diatiStirairdsilyispefilit 114 D BEIOULDICAS-1,900 Pieo - eti il AM. Street.% dwir *riCiarrtreititig..2stlfi4t.WtS/E1 UtH,DISTILEET JOBBING HOUS RA IQUEL, 1400X1E, & CO., rmpoR'TERS WHOLBSALB DEALSRO DRY GOODS. NOS. DOO AND ON NORTH THIRD STREET, ABOVE RACE, WEST SIDE. 'Their extenatve More ilhvioe been remodelled ens- Ides them to appropriate to Eaoh Cuero of Goods ItBEPARATE DEPARTMENT, DomsTteg, GINGII.AIkta, PRINTS, SHAWLS, LAWNS,' . MANTILLAS, SILKS, HOSISSY, PRESS GOODS, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS, TRIMAIINGS I MEREIVALOIC AlitD 000111300 OEOO/TDB We have now open the LADGEt3T and MOST 00fd- PLETE STOCK of GOODS we hare ever offered to the Trade, to whioh we soltait the attention of ClBll AND SIX-MONTHS BUYERS. fel2-111/ JAMES. KENT. SANTEE. as 00., IMPORTERS AND 10211/110 Ow DRY GOODS, NOS. 239 . AND 241 NORTH TiIIRD STREET, ABOVE RACE, Reepeotfully Invite the attention ai of buyers to their m LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OF FOREIGN AND DOMRSTIO GOODS, Anions whioh will be found full line, of BATES' MILLS AND _YORK COMPANY'S TO COT- Also, a LARGE VARIETY 01 New end oonSned Styles of PRINTS. AtEßßnkrAcic SECONDS, 4.6. feS-Sm 1860. SPRING TRADE, 1860. BUNK. RAIGUEL. & 00.. DIPORTERS AND JOBBERS IN FANOY DRY GOODS. 137 NORTH 17/111D STRUT, Ms propagate exthit at their salesrooms the most complete stook of goods ever Mated by them, present ing unusual attraotions to the trade generally. The stook °Pyrites a oomplebt assortment of 81117 variety of. SILKS, RIBBONS, DRESS GOODS, WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, 040.783, 04.88.MtERES Aiirb STINGS,' HOSIERY, GLOVES TRIMMINGS Also, a fall and general assortment of bring SHAWLS lab MANT1L17,444, I To all of whit& they invite the attention of MR AND PROMPT 81X-MONTRB BUYERS, 8. M. BUNN, V. 0. BUB% H. R. MIGUEL. W. W. KURTZ', - H. P. BUNN. fe 13.11 m 1860. s PRING. 1860. J. T. WAY & 00.. IMPORTER AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOO * DS. No. SS NORTH THIRD ST., Are now taut) , for the SPRING TRADE, And prepared to offer, to DASD and prompt nix months Bowe, one of the LARGEST AND MOST ATTRACTIVE- STOOKS In the country, and at Prices that will defy competi tion, not only In thie, bat in any other city. - Purchaser, will (bid oar Stook well assorted at all seasons of the year. 7. N. WAY, )rue. D. DUNLAto W. P. WAT,S rDS•SM use. P, WAY. yARD, GILLMORE. & CO. NOB.lO AND t 7 NORTH THIRD STREET, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN BILK AND FA.NOY DR? GOODS, WHITE GOODS, LACES, LINENS, EMBROIDE RIES, HOSIERY, GLOVES, MITTS, AND faim BRAWLS. ANSPAOH; REED; & CO., • • WHOLESALE DEALERS 'DRY GOODS. O. no NORTH THIRD STREET. Nam THIRD AND 171111RIT 11141) PHILADELPHIA, J. Aitencg, JL, 011A11. E. ANIIPACIL WM. ANIPADIL /411. M. REID, DAVID M. Sw•sa, fea-2m MMTON COMM WM. Me MUM 10876 De woo. COOPER, PARHAM, & WORK, ' IMPORTERS, BIANUFAOTUBBRS, AND JOBBERS Or HATS. CAPS. AND STRAW GOODS. NO. 41 NORTR TRIRD STREET. Wir Oonefently on nano a barge aaeortmenLot Straw v.. L 640 Banjo% Panama, Loghera, and rap Leaf te, Bonnet Trimmings, ArtlAoiai Flowers. whet o. e3•Sm FAIJBT, WINEBRENER, - . &I CO.; IMPORTERS IND WHOLL'IbILE MEARS In HARDWARE, NO, 49 NORTH THIRD OTRNET, tl tm t rtir e t t Lir Brown Stone more, emoted on the PRILADRLFHIA. DAVID elver. D, e. W.ll. OAILTIII. RAZIPTAT. & HARMER. MANUFACTUUNNB AND WHOLESALE MAW= nr BOOTS AND SHOES. NO. ile NORTH THIRD MEW A NI assortmant of Oity nos Boots and Shoes** stnntly on hand. LAING. & MAGINNIS. tlmPorte» and Wholnman 'Donlon In IRISH, ENGLISH, AND AMERICAN SHOE. THREADS; FRENCH AND ENGLISH LABTINOS, VI I E F IANUFACTURELT ARTICLES : SE. G AOHINE SILKS. THREADS, COT TONS. &a. SOL g AGENTS FOR Clarnera o,llibratts4 IXL Machine Silk, and UpSeld'. Patent Boot tom o. 30 North THIRD Street. Ini-ant A NEW AND WONDERFUL 01800- " vE VAT: ara c rirne Ward G"t tdd Thie mechuine is ofered th the utmost confidence of e its bated' the mOit effecto rowdy for the ed ebove 11711 8 61 v gent:M f g a tte N g:gig:at, liPtrai e IL9 2 ,:nal'olnigmrcVatibrthniA stlitt A tii If e dit - , 40,144 Soiitti op vith PHIL . ADELPHIA ' ITHI.J#SDAY ,' ! 11'44,4..gt : :$, , lti 01. ', THIRD.STREET Milan S 1866 SPRING'. IT,' 1860- • +3004:„ R.rEGEL., JESAIIiA;;;'4I - TALPORTNRS AND ;JOBB ERS , FOREIGN AND ADISSIOAN , DRY GOODS. , • NO, 47 N, THIRD STUNT. IPHILADELETILA; Would reopeottully Invite the ittOutiOi of 00 Uxiti/ hterohante to their JAKOB AND WELL-eNtEaTDD STOOK OF BUSH bPRING (316004. • ; • vndoh they are now reeelvina is Btorej • " Moratatuta wotrld find it to OA "sdiantato to ea sad examine our stook. SOWER, BARNES. as CIO.. ' BOOKSELLERS 1 1..14D ' ~ j.. PII3ILIIIHNIIII OP FELTON'S OUTLINE MAPS AND KEYS. EMMONS' OEOLODY i BROOKS' NORMAL ARITR RTICS, SANDERS' READERS. 0., -, , No. 87 NORTH THIRD. TRENT, (East aide. below Arab, Stieeb) fe3.3in , CLOTILO. OdBSIMERSB, rD El ED HANTS BUYING Olt'. OLOTHS AND WINDOW SHAVER. BEA.BON SMITH; MANUFACTURERS OF OIL-CLOTHS, 146 NORTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA: 'We Invite the attention of dealers to our large stook of FLOOR, TABLE, AND OARRIAOH.OII, CLOTHS, ' GREEN OLAZe,II OtL CAAIDRIO, I a beautiful :Miele for Shades. The Wawa stoelt-ot WINDOW SHADES and BUFF HOLLANDS to the market, at price, which defy competition. fe3.4m FANS! FANS!! •FANSI I! /net opened, a large and vaned eaSortment of • F ANS. Suited to all Season, comprl elite ' CARRIAGE, OPERA, MOURNING, AND CHURCH FANS, In Silk; Crape, Linen, lco. Also, HERBARIUMS FOR SEA MOSSES, - Sam Hods. Dressier efteel,_Porte-folioe, Folio and %thee Desks, Leather Bags, FOrte•monnales, 3 4111.rgfasioitmee t t ,i 4 , 4 Sleeping . Speaking , and Patent Ortoliet tAr. e ."" Paper Dolls. Unman end C. E. MOELLING'S VERY SUPERIOR PERFUMERY. Also, TOILET ARTICLES constantly on band, • dentef the above artistes can be had on the most mo.: term!, at MARTIN da QUAYLE'S '! STATIONERY. TOY. and FANCY GOODS EMPORIUM, 1035 WALNUT Street, below ELEVENTH, PHILADELPHIA. A °home lot of CHENILLE EMBROIDERIES. tah7.2t DRUGS AND CIIEMICALS. I, B • A. FAHNESTOOK & 00. • DRUOCLIETB IMPORTERS, AND WHOLESALE DEALERS TN DRUGS, 0116MIOALS, CORKS, SPONGES, Alll9lO/9 AND tomes g eitatt4t. OILS 60 .4 And Manufaotorers and iota Proprietors of B. A. PAHNESTOOK'S VERAILSIIGN, Nos. 7 and 9 NORTH FIFTH STREET. East side, a few doors above Market, fd..tes DIMS, GLASS,. PAINTS, km. . RO]3T. SHOEMAKER do CO. NORTEINVIT MTN= ?OMNI AND DAM MINT% WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, /Noortere sad Dealers la WINDOW •LABti, PAIN7G. ee.. holt* the ettoutant of COUNTRY MERCHANTS To their lute stook of Goods, sthloh they otter at the lowed wakes Teem ooi-tf CHINA AND QUEENSWARD. TURNBULL, ALLEN,, tt CO., IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS CHINA AND IN . QUEENSWARE. Noe. A 8 end BOUTS FOURTH BTRBBT. (Between Mallet snd Chestnut etreets.l ?ter PITTIII3O/10 °LAIN MIRROR. GLASS, OPZN OR BY THY PAOKAOR, AT MANUFAOTURERS' PRICES. felB-2m BOYD & STROUD. IMPORTERS JOIMERB, Rave now on hand a oomplete Stook of QUEENSWARE. OLABEIWARE, and FRENCH and ENCILIBE ORINA. At heir Old Stai d, N 0.32 NORTH FOURTH no four van below °reboots' Hotel, to whioh they M yth, t attentionWIIOLISALS HUI Ole. Itiratallitil TOR P/Inlailisla UtAee. fe3-3m LOOKING GLASSES. LOOKING GLASSES. JAMES S. EARLE & SON Bev° now In store every large and choice aesortinent of LOOKING GLASSES, err 71Ia BEST FRENCH PLATES, And of a quality impeller to any imported during the Putt few year,. The designs are of the newest and most elegent character'. ineledme all the French and .naltah 1101 , 81[10 , 1. Looking Slaws made to order, to fill every character of space, and at the very lowest rates. Ratt ierfurtnebed, on application, by mail or ntherwiae. LAVES, without Fremee, et very IoweiTICOS. liIISRAVINoB,_FORTRAIT, PICTU Rom(' PllO - FRAMEd—tike fineet oel ection in the COWL!. EARLE'S GALLERIES, mhl•tf filet CHESTNUT STREET. MOURE,HENtiZEY,Fc EARDWARE, CUTLERY, No; 407 MARKET, and 416 COMMERCEBtreets NEW YORK ADVERTISEMENTS. AUGUST BELMONT Lt CO., BANKERS. NEW YORK, Inoue Lettere of Credit to Travellora available In ALL PARTS 01? MN WORLD, TIIIII.OIIOU 71113 MESSRS. ROTHSCHILD, or PARIS, LOW)" FRANK FORT,VIENNA, NA PLES, AND THEIR CORRESPONDENTS faSSAm• AWNINGS ! AWNINGS!! AWNINGS !! WM. F. SCHEIBLE. 49 sown!. THIRD BTREET, ABOVE CHEBTNUT. Manufitaturei of Awnings, Flags, and Fancy IVl4dow Awnings. All Awnings inade'at this establishment are proofed to prevent mildew, without extra charge. • fa.Vt•ran EFINED SUGARS AND SYRUPS.— C.DONOOHUH will continue business until May next, at in Routh WATER Elmer, and now offers for vale. at the lormet market prices, for cash. or oil an proved short °Wits 4.1 M) barrels steam-refined &mire itndellytune, of various grade!, moluding Lovering . ' retied and l'alver , sed_ and Moller's l'atent-ent Lost t agars. Also, Rio and Java Coffee, Adamantine Can is! Primnh <Worm. iot27llm• IVA INERALMATER, APPARATUS, 011 MLE- the most approved style and fin'eli. jle would oleo oall the attention of all druggistsand dealers In anda.grater Apparaftis ezamine big new Urn 504 Drafting Pipe and Syruping Apparatua. Algo, Beta 0 4 idnds east and finished to order. Alt kinds of raise tiro* executed. r 4. n.—tArtioular attention paid to repaving of nit ktodo of felooral-WMOI ApPailltll9. &O. MINOR - nibs -tm Mr MINOR Street, Philadelphia. pIGARO CIGARS. —A small invoico of, by OlGARB,2lillittr dam a. 4. For trile: tow. by UILARIAII2.rkyr h. mh64ot t9O W ALNUT Street. • 111 . 0 E. .-Prime retailing gharleaton Rice J1 Z,i 9 0 64 9•V :POO, i nt Aßiqf t'POl FANCY GOODS. HARDWARE. ma OUN R A 'EHOUBE, FiIILADELPIIIA. • miLLisErtg - 4;104?rf5 , . , ' ,1 1101 . "' • - MILitThi,JERY:'G99PpI : ~ • ' SPRING,. "•••,, n I 1111:Ny7MW: gg CRAPE - .11 61 s -,-. 14 1 . 1 • " • .• ,40 ' i I sTRAw. BoxistpT3 l , - ; • PLAT% '81.0014111!1}, *AHD ••• • All'of the latest and hied faahlenktato steel; to telitel he invitee the attentlettot 2delohnnte and ' Those wishing to eeeeitiottethe Ddting 0 oto Inn do elelktl M2l2ll'o'l him belbre:l2abbitint ohootheio. ' • ' M. BkIRNTIV.4I?4 No. 21 8013111'2EC0ND.2121111214' •, ^ mhl-2m - Below‘Markef itriot/ 1860. RP" 011)(11 r .: :18601 THOMPBON 4k: JENIf..T.NIei. naFORTNIIS AND JOBBERS • OF STRAW GOODS; RATS AND Oen, • MILK BONNETS, ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS, RITCRES, tso. NO. 555 MARKET STREET, - • Buyers are requested to examine our stook. THOMAS F. FRALEY to engaged with the abci/e hovie_ ! and "ohm's* th e Detreeele of bia friend"; feg•gto ' 11 . 1X.41.41NERY AND STRAW GOODS EXCLUSIVELY. • ACGENHEINI, BROOKS. (Ss CO, -, • 431 MAILEET STREET, NORTH SIDE, Ore now ononlap'for the Spring Trade, the most ex tensive and °boldest stook in their line ever collected together under One roof. RIBBONS of every conceivable description. BONNET MATERIALS. IFRENOR ARTIFIOAL FLOWER& ROMA and all other millinery artiolei STRAW BONNETS IN IMMENSE VARIETY, CHILDREN'S AND MISSES GOODS, DO. • BLOOMERS, SHARER HOODS, M. Oonsclous of our superior facilities in obtaining our Supplies. wo dater ourselves that superior induce ments. ooth as regards choloe of selection and modem tion In priors. cannot be met with. feddm FOR EVENING PARTIES • CAPES, SETS, . SLEEVES, and 01:11111, In Real Lane, Orono, illation, Blond and Imitation, In great varieties, of the , tfllrSiST' STYLES, 44, 0-4, 0-4, 9.4, 10-4 ILLUSION, TARLATANS, CRAVES, &u., Mad: below the nrool Pries& WAR,BIJRTONI3. 1004 011ESITIAT Street, above Tenth Street, 305 South 81100 ND Street, below Beoritee. 1613-tt STRAW AND IifiLLENERY UOODS. LINCOLN, WOOD, ea NICHOLS, N 0.195 CHESTNUT STREET, Have now In (Betwe a en Seventh and Eighth,/ store COMPLITE STOCK Or SPRING GOODS. EXIMACING 113814) o ß i t qp i ff i l E A RAW 0001)11, ihttAWatitl, RIBBONItird To wick they respecting d in 3l tl i te 2- 6 - Ihtttention of merchants. (Ash and short-time buyeye wttl tnd epeeist adula ting. In examilunk this stook before purchaanut. feS-3m T HILLBORN JONES, t ir • • 'lmporter and klanufsotarer of FANCY SILK AND STRAW BONNETS AND HATS. ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS, FEATIIBILB, RUCHES. &o. The attention of City and Country Dealers by Invited to s large and varied stook of the above goode at 432 MARKET STREET. fe3-gin Below Fifth. 1860. 8 R l IIR G ANgET). KlB6O. One of the largeet and most oomultite stooks of goods in our line an this country. The best terms and the oheapast prices. 0. H. GARDEN & 00., Manufaoturera of, and Wholesale Dealers In HATS, OAPS, FURS, SILK and STRAW BONNETS, and STRAW GOODS, ARTIVICIAL YLOIVRaa, ItLiTHIRS, 117011E1. ato.. Nos. 600 and 602 MARKET STREET, S. W. corner Sixth. fez-3m SPRING OF 1860. MARTINS, PEDDLE; , HAMRICK, & CO., No. 30 NORTH FOURTH STREET, Have now :n store, and are daily receiving, complete lines of the following desirable goods, vie.: HOSIERY AND GLOVES, SHIRTS AND SHIRT FRONTS, PARIS AND CANTON FANS, SUPERB BELTS, PARIS COMBS AND BRUSHES, • NOTIONS OF EVERY KIND, Adapted to Southern and Western Trade, to whloh we invite the attention of first-elan Milers. fed-dm HOUSE-FURNISUING GOODS. HOUSE FMNISHINO STORE. WIT,T ,TAM YARNALLs No. 1000 CIIESTNUT STREET, (Irrunedtately eremite the Academy of Fine Arta,) Invites the attention of HOUSEKEEPERS and otkers to bts exteneive aseortment of USEFUL HOUSEKEEPING GODS. TABLE CUTLERY. NURSERY FENDERS % CHAFING DISHES, FIRE SCREENS. PLATE WARMERS, TEA POTS. &c.. tem mht-thtustr MCDIOINA.L. MS& WINSLOW .? AN EXPERIBNCII.D NURSE AND FEMALE Physioma, present' to the attention of mothers tier SUOTHINO SYRUP FOR C 111 LDR E N TEE T II ING, which greatly facilitate/ the proems of teething, by softening the come. redeems all infistranation I will al lay ALI, P SURE and spasmodie soden, SURE TO RECULATE THE BOWELS. Depend upon it, mot hers, it will give rest to yourselves and RELIEF AND HEALTH TO YOUR INFANT'S. We have put upend sold • this article for over ten years, and can say. hyo b. min 84 fidence and truth of it, what we have never en able to say of any QUIST 'donne NEVER (A 8 "' is FAILED in a Ili r o a m& rtiera r NoE,•fic EF Pi FELT A CURE, when timely used. Never did 0 we know an balance of dissatisfaetion by any one who used it. Ott the con trary, all are delighted CO with Its operations, and speaicln terms of hashes.... numendittionof its mai I cal &Teets anc medicalvt I .iii tuns. We speak In thin matter 'norm we eie X know.' later ten years' experlence.andpledgeour reputation for the fulfil ment al what well re de " attire. In almost every instance Where the Milan IR wandering from pain and exhaustion. relief will be E ., found in fifteen or twenty minutes after the dyrup ie administered. noeyalunbleproparminn 0 oi the prescription of one of the most PAPER'. 0 ENCED AND BKILFUL NURB,F e ta in NewEnslan. ..., and has been used With never-mime 'napes.' ill ia. THOUSAND- OP OASES, It not only relieves the id f al mrom pain, but in rrateathentonnaoh and •• bowels, corrects acidity n g d ° Siven torte and energy It. to the whole eratem i t will_elmoet inetestly r • love OHirltiu IN THE BOWELS AND WIND 0 COLICand overco me Nn VllllOOlO. WbiQh,• if not ~.1 epeedily remedi e . end in death. Wo believe it the beet and rarest reine d ! in the world, in all noose CO DYNEN'FARI end D Alt AINICA IN UHILDR Eft, 14 whether it arises rom mottling or from snyother amuse. We would say to every mother vi ho hal a ,'''' child suffering from eny of the furring complaints. pc do not let)our prsludices, not t e oreiudicee o others, a and Datvrep Toot it ming child and . the rehe that Till swa—yes, ABSOLUTE pp 1 4 Y kIURB--to..follow t e roll s o lo ge s t n1 1 ;1 if i e n o e c'dn P 4 t It i t n 4 l 'l:7l 7 4 l.g,fitill,Tß . 1 fenuina unto. s the Ise N. X mile to 13 R. • ... ..... e . yjr4B, New York, in o the outside wrapper, IP' Sold by Dnieplststhronshont. the world. Princi pal Office, No.ll CEDAR ;street, New York. Fripe gti cent/ a bottle. 1y25-ly :AirAOII3REL —545 Bbls Nos. 1,2, Jo 3 Ica fifsekftVel, itl assorted origlprilp4ol44o4, of OA bitoist ontoh ~' for solo b_y 0. 0. Fioutut t7O : , g i on street, nd door above Front. • l t 2: 11 11 - 5 11111 r. • • ' ' • , IToo44or*Ruhl.lo4, Bultronettenr Pisinul-tkare 0. •, In IW:haus:l lido* ( Of a Biala/Nib, 1 8 thriethistlani 'tic a poe.,, -131 i litarifietif to; caned. t, Otbbini t ijofi.*rtVl; .ftarirs: ?Ole At ria ry i ” ,4 ; 7l Y.P4 , lPrNl , 9 wPi1. 1 4.n."210 1 3 4 _1 3 e.9.4 1 45# ‘3oMlied. ' OLS 0 0 1 .00' tine Brni Piallattielit. , • That &at 'portion ,of the, p 0,,, 4onoluded with -- -a sketch 'or L'oi4 „ Olititliana, sad said - ' Te.eo)der&he len the vents. thattesoh ; ' Hs roed had onuthed-:the Alsohrlwa of speeoh.l :73(etkiini&I'fo'r February, which we - received ilArtirOs: ego trom,3ti. Zleber agent'fin-tie „ ]'ley' Fork republi y ekers, gives us the, second part,bt, 4 ‘,St,,,Stepheam. ' ,We can say of that it is rt6t.inferier to - ,the • first. • The Eng. lish,oraters in this department of -the gallety are Fox, the younger Pitt, Wilberforce, Dun datcthe GrimYilles, Sheridan, Windham, ark Burke, with' glimpseis of Reynolds, Garrick, ,Boswell, Johnson, and Goldsmith. • r A , comparison is ingeniously instituted be tween English. Pox and French Mizabeatt.. Then the poet, proceeds to describe the cha racteristics of Fox, all alt Orator: Oirr Poxrs voice rolled no melodious atresm— It rose In splinter' and went off in sensate. Yet could It vary , In appropriate place, ' • " From the sharp alto to the rumbling hue. Such sudden changes when You'd taut expect, Secured to dissonance a stage effect, Eltrikins you molt When into talk-like ease Mid the wild gamut down the ()racking keys. The aotlon f what Qulntilien would have shocked; 'rho huge fist thundered, and the huge haunt rooked. Al clattering clown, immrnru ore, went !Splinters and crags of crashing argument. Not for neat reasonings, subtle and refined, Paused the strong loglo of that reeking mina; It tore horn out the popular side of Truth Fragments the larger because left uncouth— Hand., if less strong, more patierit than his own Perfect the statue, his helped Mill the atone, And in the rock, hie daring °Meal bfoka: -• • Hewed the bold outlines with a hasty stroke. '• • • But an this force, with its disdain of rule, No safe good sense would like to found a sohoOt; And (drop the image) he who leads mankind. Meat vest to soothe and not to shook the mind. ,The chief whose anger all the angry cheer. Thine his own, Tanks—the temperate disannear They Alike theirhOids and Ina sober fright Groin. "What a vision he was in to-night: Men in a' rairtoin blast be in the wrong ; And, heavens I how dangerous when they're made so , strong I" Thus is it strange, with all his min?, seal, Suoh•head to argue, and such heart to feet, Thus the great Whig, amidst Immense apptause, Soared Of his clients, and bawled down his CAM— Undid Reform by lauding revolution. Till cobblers cried, " God save the Conatitutionl" That by deserters in his own approaches He Bed r his followers fill'd three hackney coaches. This ostithato of Fox may appear severe, but we suspect it to be true. Tho Whig party in England, after Burke seceded—into pension ed patriotism—wore compelled to give pelf: tics) canonization to their best man, who was Fox. Gambler, spendthrift, and rest as be was, they had no abler leader. The Whigs of the present day swear by his memory, and Lord John Russell has dedicated his in_ tensestdullness, to keep him, as a sort of mummy, in a mausoleum constructed of four volumes of a heavy biography. Every Whig is expected to buy this Life of Fox 'but to read it Is a punishment so enormous that. Mercy has invariably interfered to prevent Its being carried Into execution. But, to prof coed. Next, we come to Fox's accosted rival All that eoutreated, foil'd and ttudermlned Els rival Wet. the Younger Fitt combined. Proud self-esteem, decorous, and austere, etritteelf-oontrol, not 2 etto's more severe ; Like soine e'd Chaldee, from hie Pharos Mei, O'er human errors Namely stooped hie eye; Brill on that eye shone unobeerved no star, and still that Pharos guided fleets afar. • ...... • From birth to death, through pomp, ambition, strife, Serenely Ilt , oll[looC pau'd that stately life. Why marvel that the beardless hierarch sprang At ones to power 7—the hitirsroh ne'er was jonng, And na'er was old, but, dying in his prime, Stands forth completed while vouolisafed to time. ••••• • • • • Men praise or blame a Pitt the iron will. Well. steel, though supple, is of iron .1111. Thug will In Pitt could bend to ward the stroke; It was by bending that it never broke. The time explains each dazzling contradiction; Hie wise reform, his policy restriction; Magnum for Peace so wary to the last; His warlike vigor when the die was cut. As veers the wind, co shifts the pilot's art ; Who saves the ship, MY well reset the chart. Pitt was a bachelor, but his house was kept by his eccentric niece, Lady Harriet Stanhope, who retired to Syria after the great man's death, and long survived him. Thus the poet indicates both ihcts : Tne lone proud man ! for Mat no graces smiled, No love the pause front J.,•!:a toil beguiled; No twilight tryst exchataed the youthful vow ; No tender lip kited trouble from that brow! Hie sole Reeve (0 supreme caprice!) A oraek'd, uncanny, watwitoh of a niece, Who, at his death, found Syrian sands alone Replace the lost grand desert she had known. For rule in wastes by preview empire fit, Had she not ruled a lonelier world in Pitt Very graphic is this description: The form, the face. the bearing Of the man ' Itecame the Bayard, firm agminst the van Of lances, standing on the perilous arch, And singly staying armies in their march. We see hint still, the front with labor paled: The eyes that rarely glowed, but never quailed, Within disease, without the host of foes; What grand contempt itneAins that ca'm repose Gives the dread sneer that withered Erskine down And loaves the brow 'came ruffled by its frown. We hear the elaborate swell of that full strain Linking long neriods in completest chain Staying the sense, from sentence sentence grows. Till the last word comes clinching op the more. Wilberforce is overrated, wo think, in this sketch. Daubs (afterwards Lord Melville) is brought in as a contrast: , bee it in Dundas, Timing the hour as truly ae its thee. Office wee made for him. and be for It; He felt tho truth, end glued hie soul to Pitt. No shrewder minister e'er served s throne, OrJoined his oountry's in lomat with his own That wonderful man, Sheridan—of whom By ron said that whatever he did, and he did much, was always the hest—is' hit off with great tact and truth If eloquence can find its sur eet test In the degree to which it thrill the breast, And not the enduring thought, which after oil m Retains, then thine the sceptre and the pu lm For never Fancy shot more gorgeous ray, Nor left air duller whoa it died away. He did not rule opinion, shape a creed, Controls council, or a nation lead These make the power that sage and statesman claim, But to the orator applause is fame. Viewed at his beet, while yet the nerves were strung, While silvery yet the clear keen accents rung ; While yet erect and lithe the sprightly form, And the eye lightened o'er the words of storm, What tone, before Humanity arraigned, !Chanty of empires.though to England gained,/ Stood the grand VeTTOS of the End ; not then Had Tully's self more fired the souls of men. Before that lerigthen'd train and rapid flight Of splendor dwindled Fox's disc of light, And Burke's was paled; as when the inlet War Comet shoot. flaming over the fixed char. Seen then, heard then, what could Ambition hope Or States bestow, that seemed beyond his scope ? He whose wild youth had courted i.eagdzil's frown, Deserved her anger, and then lansli'd it down; He whose gay forces seemed, if not too light, Too laxly disciplined for serious fls lit ; He who had known the failure, felt the sneer, &nit burning brows in muttering, " It is hem" He now one hour the acknowledged lord of all, Hears Pitt adjourn the agitated hall, That brain may cool, and heart forget to swell And dawn relax the enchanter's midnight spell. Out upon Time I the years roll on, and to! The broken wand, the taken Prospero I 0 shreds and rays of that once gorgeous soul! 0 priceless peal dissolved amidst the bowl! Hide—hide the vision; let our awe forbear To note the trembling limbs, the gluey stare— To count the markt' whioh through the gathering abide ?tart from chary ',I embers, gleam on wreaks and fade— To hear of ifs wrangling found the bed; Hush, and uncover !—Homage to the deed! Upon Burke a dieeriminating opinion is passed. Wo aro told that As poets odor all that Sher regard, And among statesmen Burke stands forth the bard ; By hie own genius both obsoured and fired, At times inebriate, and at tams inspired; Haa Truth ten sides. he must invent the eleventh. And quit the earth to gain a heaven—the seventh! To the question, was not Burke called «the dinner-bell 1" because alien ho rose to speak, the members, conscious of his tediousness, would rush out to dinner, Bulwer replies : Friend, if some actor murder Hamlet's part, No hue smiles the hietrio'e want of art— Nay, the more beauty In the words prevail, The more It chafes you if the utterance fail, Bhakspeare, ill-aoted. do you run to hear And Burke, Ilbspoken, would you MAY to cheer! Rig unpopularity, as a speaker, whilo is thus accounted for I Partly in matter—too intent to teach— Too Brea as essay, not to flag as speech ; Too Might a fellowship with those mound Words too ornate, !i,nd reasonings too profound-. All this a Chatham might have brought in vogue Yes—but then Chatham did riot speak In brogue: TWO CENTS. 'AV ableisitind nildleithd brogue lei more durfaidio d , load Innis olony, of inseam keys; 1 ,-to , sn.if strong, to will-bind Simon edinei 'And thht fetlgpi ng fervor=waiiii of force 30311 theanin B arks, and acid Minna:km iaok'd Wh,t;niat (iteltlei Dia& and anineal—taet. Still whoa some awl '"idth 'OM. intone" Haddad Et abampiOn, snob 'gain Wit thought— ' pa:oh:Qua in tilts wbeee nainat-Itnishtspnonand, ay wall- on i Bed lance and difity-inined steoa I Wet hot for Conflict in Scinitt 'flint tweed of Mahlon, and that broth of shield. Topa, opita of, faults his audienoe,laast snout!, ! lltunovad bt pr4iee, yit writhing whin abased: l'hoi aunt; yet sadsltiali; tho' hadgbty , kind: P:POr to PP ISMS. YR; Isobar naafi - wind,• - ' Odwitd h d.h440 the fastheat g9g, • ii front - mintier. additdindilltAtood,thao - incil: iddlitAil wadi sap Ann thtd-ilif4 times ran— Wlini holden writ?, ir4ist Itianunl towards thn son, W blab. anti by rea lt a. upward cleaves Its way., • And' high der &fen* bathes i arid In daY the isuiamhik-np, which puts Burin its blerproper niche : Already Poi le relent to our attar Burke quite the rostrum to Blaine the page. - He did not waste his treasure as he want. • But hoarded wealth to pile his cnoeumeat, ' Now voice and manner can offend no more, ' and pure from droadadineir out the golden ore; Down to oblivion Wake each rude defeat, And soar!, annahrd;this eternal intellect As we are' notleing a poem by Bulwev, may here dhisi attention to a library edition of hie ptose works, the publication of which hi just been commenced by T. B. Lippincott fic Co., of this city. It is a facsimile' in all roe. spects, except that it it printed upon better paper, of the new edition in course ef public ~ don by Blackwood, of Edinburgh ; ft is alto much lower in price. It will be issued hi four divisions: 1. The Caxton, Novels 2. Hiatt rlcal Romances; 8. Romances !I. Novels of Life and Manners. a The 'Citztone," in twn volumes, have' just ttpriiiiated, and in Aye, typ graphY, paper,'ind binding, are nit Who ani passed. A volume will be issued Monthly. This edition contains the author's latest, anit we may prestune final, corrections. A Bold and Sptcy Letter. The following extracts are from a recent letter written by the ton. Irtaao 'N. konani, who represents the Fifth Congressional distriit of the Slate of Ilitnois, He speaks with's* reserVe; and utters' Some truths which this Admlnistraf on and 'aecessiOn leaders shoe* to heart, , Although Mr. Monate is openly committed to Dottaxas, inside of the organist*. Bon, yet he Is resolved to submit to no wrongs for the sake of what is popularly called thb harmony of the party; • • • I "I stated at the last session, and repeated ad this, that the true'poliey the ' Demooratic part was to separate frem the Administration, and le It take care of, itself, and every day convinces re more and more that lam right. What have w to gala by adhering to it? Its war upon Judg Douglas and his friends bas been, and Will bskep E up bitterly. Every effort within the power - a f tf patronage, money, and corruption is being, an will be made to defeat his nomination at Oharle* ton . and if he succeeds; the same e ff orts will ba continued afterwards to defeat his election. It kir. Buchanan and his dependents preferred, ai they did, the electiOn of Lincoln to Douglas, i any one filly enough not to believe they woul prefer the elution of Seward to the Prealdenoy The truth fa, the Pregame would not hesitate sink the nation to-morrow, and to blow the Demo. °racy to atoms, if lie could only avert ow Senator'', trlompb. Neither that Senator nor his friend ' have anything to gain by humility'. Their onlj tree policy is to make a square, open, bold, ant manly tight, and then they will win the victory . Every assault, in the pretended estimation o mime, that is made en us, should be borne' in al Ince. It,we open, our menthe to repel they ory, Oh, you are making a, fast tht party.' You ought to seek' o reconite.' Fuss In the party," indeed! Who made it? and wire id keeping it up ? Mr. Buchanan rotairit ors. Has he not dirooted those of them ist,IIIMo to bold Convention and • ippohst delegated is Charleston inappoattiontathesegplasCQovatitlon And what la this. for but to ,orea dilittrait_ and it Feasible, defeat I:fougtas: nomination Hex in not commended his adheiettts everywheie to be °up and doing' to neeamplish the end which - lezhisal so devotedly wished for? And mast this be Noll; unrebulied? For one, I say No-and ' intend t continue to say - No. I have reproached the Preel4 dent far his conduct in what are regarded as se rare, but merited terms, and I shall do so agat whenever he deserves it. "At the moment we were supporting a LecoMpto man for Speaker, and one the Executive desire. very mutt to have elected. he again threat in on fans his abominable heresies, and for no olbe purpose but mischief, and I did, the next day, as thought and still think it was my duty to do, re, ply to his message. In doing so, I not only eri pressed my surprise and indignation at the bol and moastrous assumptions contained in it, bu vindicated the great doctrine of popular Sher upon which we fought the great battle In Illinois' and rebuked the sentiments of disunion whic were being poured forth in the Douse fro the Southern firs-eaters as burning lava fro & volcano. If Id theie things I did wrong. I ani enable to comprehend it. The true course in such, cases Is to let the antidote go out with the bate ;I the poison should not be suffered to diens Heel through the body politic without being exposed l, and as we are to get no favor , no mercy, nolustiee, , and no toleration from this Administration, I sun! not for giving it any quarter. Both North and! South it Is equally detested and abhorred by the! Democratic party. There are not over three ell four men that will attempt to defend and apologise. for it. After all, I devoted but little time or at-i tention to it !Luray speech, and only noticed it as its thrust Itself into my arguments, and then only to throw it from me as au unclean thing "I am for conciliation as much as any one but I: will never purchase it at the sacrifice of principle! or the price of dishonor. Judge Douglas holds the! Administration at arm rlength, nor seeks or desires • fellowship with it. Ile proudly spurns it from' him, and defies both its malice and its power.! Nothing could be more iejurious to him than to! have it banned he was friendly to it. "While I have not been able to act with the! anti•Laeompton members of the Dense, as I win! inside of the organisation, I have not thought it! necessary to quarrel with or denounce them. Ifj Judge Douglas is nominated at Charleston, as I firmly believe he will be, they possess an element' of strength in Pennsylvania and. New York, as, well as elsewhere, tbst will' be important to his 1 election, and it will be for him, if properly treated. Besides, you know me well enough; to know that I am slow to give up old friends, and I see no reason fin doing that here, or throw ing myself into the tender embraces of Mr. Bu chanan, end I don't intend to io it without good clause. If I cannot act with them, as I have not been able to do In the organization of the House they shall have my respect until they do something to forfeit it. It is right to conciliate the party • everywhere, but there is a wide and marked dlr. !uction between the party and the present Admin istration, which must be kept up for our safety and , the welfare of the !country; and 'I trust I have lived long enough, and have had sufficient experience in public matters, to knOw what is due to propriety and prudenee, and I shall endeavor to keep within their limits. I feel that so far I hare been right, while I know my course hu been generally ap proved. In what I have done I see nothing to re gret or take back, end I am proud of your endorse ment. "When Col. IlieClernand wu being voted for, Senators Clay, of Alabama, and Green, efildisaouri, entered the Hall of the House, and went to button holing Southern members to prevent their sup portMt/him. Mr. Green was particularly furious In hie assaults upon popular sovereignty andilthe Il linois Demoornoy, but was taken down handsomely by some of kis own friends, partioularly one who lives in a State j . .ist below Missouri, and whom he will have 000rtmon long to remember. He evi dently thought ho wan playing a sly and deep game, but he was transparent, and soon found out, and hia effMts afterwards, to avoid the effect of his course, were only laughed at. lie bad better learn at once that be cannot deceive the friends of Judge 11/ouglit anywhere except in his own State. Thens, it is believed, although four-fifths of the Demo crats are for the Judge, Mr. Green will have a Pet of packed delegates against him at Charles ton. If to it is to be, lot It be. The Judge sun get along without them; though in view of the fact that the Demderstie masses in Idissonri are for biro, ho would be, and is justly entitled to, them." AT lIARICIALE LONII MM.—Captain John Rice and bin wife Ilisebeth, nettling In hover, N't., both departed this life on the 7th ult., within a few hours of tech other, the former at the age of 88 years, 3 months, and 2-5 days; the latter, his wife, at the age of 91 years, that day being the Hail- , versary of her birth. They were married at , Shrewsbury, Worcester county, that being their! native place, November 19, 1790, from whence they removed and nettled la Dover fortysix years since. They were the last of eleven brothers and sinters,: and had lived happily In the married slate furl nearly seventy years. The Brattleboro' Pitcrnsz,t in its notice of their decease, says that they had! lived to see all their children—seven in number— , grow up, marry, and settle in life, Ave of whom) have survived them. They have lived to see their' children and grandchildren wearing gray hairto and to embrace a grand•child of ono of their; grend•ohildren—a circumstance very rarely wit rimed. MASSACHUSETTS DELEGATES TO TEE CUABLES TON CONVANTION.—The „Boston Eteniag Gazette , learns that the delegates from Massachusetts to the', Charleston Democratic Convention, and sub as: propose to bo present at the meeting of that bodyl in May, are making arrangements to go in %min.', Der that will beat one. convenient, agreeable; and ' " Imposing. The proposition is to charter a staancerl for the trip, provide her with music, gunpowder,i and the many essentials for a good time that social and patriotic feeling may suggest, and sail Into, Charleston bay with bunting flying, guns flring,l and other patriotic demonstrations. Negotiations, are pending for one of the new steamers of the Baltimore line, which, it is thought, may be bad. Sympathy for the Pope in Canada. TORONTO. C. W., Sterol:. I.—A.resso meeting wsa bekly yoaterdob to militPopifikviat O. Dir._ 4:b.Cori four thousand persona eter /regent. , a/TEI SLY PRESS. *maxi' Pairs vue to seat to Ilabtoribrog by (per exam, is adtiateet) —.O LOS! 2brosoeatte„: 11.00 /vet—. • ...1 • „, Twenty (*pia " (to ewe addreetvlo.oo TT•att 9 0 0 0 8 or Per " (to Waal et each Subsoriber.) each... 1.80 Per A Club of l'westy-me or trom n TM goad ea *atm ow, to the getter-op of the Crab. SV-Pasteleggsgi ore requested to *etas Aseals for Tax Waxxxi• Pszai. CALIFORNIA PRES& loved Semi-Roothis in time f or the Niford& Stesmera.. Mr. Fields. Lectures on the ern&don. Litman VIZ l'orave —The foarth kola In 01 . Kt. Field's course was given on Monday evening. at Ilea del and Haydn Hall.' Ths andiro:est Inamees ewer/ night. - sad the - osiakerie listened to with' the -admit interest. Ella Mont. startling and novel maths'-ere to his. tisanina are *attained with an earnestemiteif men ner and a terror ofdevetiOo to theorem eirest g rpf ell thinge, which enchain their attention andmad their respect. He commenced bin (earth - bp stating that soolal7 proves tooalusiirelt thist lo earth wee at one time hot—ia the onmittve lecke bolus rag descend in the earth From the sirrtaillo death' Mat steed& thermoset at aaaha Mite that st the depth. of four or Ave miles as ate mitts st a."! girrg i l, ' lght. " toyfu- %hint Water, ,pa . s: theta:gm ghee rlsoth below=-rise mime water omit. arlirliteMshew that *items/am men depth bents th* me it atil/ ,as hot as resoessery_to mediae, n estate of Noma At nue time Uhl nom Mole se tensively the ealte taros acrwrAivirolegoomil lava wale elt in many parrs of the truth where that are now extrot. It beinashown that the _earth woe hog. bow did it tt. • mom soft The thdlerftliat 'tame by 'elismossl omen. nation-was aserniaed eadreireted.r. Chemical etenbilts- Cone calypsos* rubsteamate mot' out the lissantheat thev PrevionelY cOutemedr thinrona ems not sakes& tinhorn they brat *entitle at. `tru e Idnhamehl shove that bimaam heat is evolved from the earth. therefore *X was Phillorily implanted in the elute Pow it was it Implanted was afterwards shown. The earth wassail to tie obedient to the same divine laws Ms anmolda of vegetable', which laws am immutable • liithe ems of animals or vegetables it is necessary that thsreebalt be secretion to constants a germ or seed. whith Oen forth en embryotio body. to be horn. to poet. and to women to its full type. Conformably terhis law env earth thevery planet was emmived and •mre.. homer zee I. cormoon meet of them l, arable her maternal bosom the earth was gene rated,sod (rem is e. born. The lectrawr then eroitooded to =anus* the quest:Mk "What is thn soar. rho modern scientific Mow se MAW bt Mr William Horsetail, Is that the em Is* send °Pesos eche. surrounded by a &miaow lIIMUISSeng. woman nof two - strata °robed', the ooterVkhdi la self-M=lmm. The mountains of the son„ kin dred miles high. in p l aces pierce thmugh this atoms.' phase and present dark mots. These lagainotie "leads. he said, alto were phosphorescent. The oblessimes to this Mee., me found. first. is the Amway-of tbe um, La a scale of &Impala's° aensitv. Saturn - Is marled astrommiars as Y. Jupatsr 1141 the asteroids itemlrt Alan 2T. the Faith CI, limes nearly I. illeroary a A lan above 9, and the tee at only This Oct also overtsres the theory of the =thereof the Vestiges of Creation.", -which wag that the um• versa area at first an intermit* mom of matter. whlett grolcally collected ,wa if intomames or bore Agents formate the planets • arab riage or amend and 'he neatest mesa. the son la th e centre. If this wore true, the furthest ganet wmld has* hoot fronoid firsts and the son ; and theme. tie the metre of Masetall motion. would have been moat dement alt - The w i ned olsection to tiersehers theory no, stated to be tha, if a solid opaque body should Irma oat elretallfeumme!of radiant I•ghtitveriuld Itself be dis tinctly viable in the metre. The watt of lb Watt% candle andtaiently proved this, d Gismo:vibrance of decants fire amend any tomes body shoved the omen* body most distinctly. Not only tire sammitsof moun tains cormng through the dams .would be visible: but the mountains themselves. ,Beirdes if th us Phorpho rescent atmosphere were wren or from the moat would degrease as its supply was , drawn upon. and finally en out when the troptdr ceased. turotruis all life on the planets in its destruction. In addition. it was urged that if the mots at the lam were the Gas of mountama, Piercing its lameness at mosphere and rooted an its surface. Mentz 7 , 713 al ways bear the same relative positions to cd r and to the sun's surface. BM they not only aes !Methane* to each other , bat one had hers mean te di vide - into parts, and them parts seen to recede (rem emb other. Dr. 1 oex. making obeetvatioso on thestin. observed scoot diode into two. thenatteof whelk welled from from each other with yelocity. The Bev. Tr. Wollaston saw *spot beret in emcee lihis a piens of lee broken op M. Bdisehlas coureuded. from ,las obser vations, that th e spots on the can hare a = N zr 20. sad change their simmer' the sun othr of his monthly revolutions. /lathe aneeitseiviii pkaassof their formation and motion have been distinctly sees.. Mother theory was stated. that the leathers egret the nun were openings in the solar atmosphere ar t dsntatione upon its surface ; bat the Mims one &Imbed to this theorr. If they were so,the nest fiat woul make them the more platalv visible. de to the statement that the light was pot fiery. tot ehnsphoree cent, it was said hr the lecturer that It would be more Plaumblir if It had been said or this moon; tot es said of the min, it carried its own contradiction with.. The light of the sun. if ohosphorescent woold be only light without heat, and light alone could only pi Tarot tight. whereat all Nation and experience tearin.va that the ran lives both light and heat. The Mee Ides. mud )4r. Field, it that the sun is pure firer, or weitire Woos, This stair the tretversal idea of the anetinda. - rind lie mcb, the sun was worshipped in Egypt. Chabies - Por tia. and in all Asa,. The solar fire nom the hallowed shrine. ard the- sacred lime at the vio n g - ,l'gr u g:the Egyptian 1110011177007115 IMO Pet t rat ed mita-Ts. or Is-ls,and oalle4 by the eactests by various Munro, all having the sons eereradeteallnrloe. Sir Irmo Newton says the sea taffitre litr.Lartner et7R there arc Three states in which imam bodice ex ist—the solid. liquid. and ase• ans. Felittled that when a solid body lemmas incliedsaceet the mint whip& it emits re polarized : that the light emi ttedbf la la eandemeut liquid—se molten iron.-is likewise polar teed, tint the lish• of incandescent 711SPI—tlf dame—ls not polarised. Timm feets - are tree. Whatever, may be the nature of the nistertals." - Dr MIAMI of them lacta If. dram has deterustheni the nature of th e ma s atinosithere mid by alrekent the mast theta fottna.thitt the ligh ted the, tea stir; Polarl,sed,' thereby. showing that the sun heliT of purl~,tie4o.lloollllwolmances. - - - - - -- - T thr i mmistion hint desk sp then.amesen upec the leo rer aniarsrod thatne gamier body is hot except 117.011 7% Itarellll4 7fle Initatailel=l7 Set that the essedle-nock on 7 becomes red.hitt it is told m threat pis -into the earthen of the llama end br =MTh expanment. Take a watch *hue and _all awl* aleokel.putthrg a Iltts" } ea of eutpkorta tha ; set the l ig t eolinj: r fir f .44 . 4w4 i but puts =ii tie erthe dams cameo to the antilmr. es the . g a alcohol hems Rimy. but only when the salehnit the nateredts of the Hems - it bovine to hem ir tg ri tambont Mita and peculiar odor. - - Moss ne-wmrwo fianitionly blouson red hot at the edam of OM Soma body In the UM that was not in the toter eurf , um of its dime would pot bent. bat appear • dark hods, as the candle-with or the minims sponse tunligh Ai dams top's °teenier. , Yr.he objection that we do not feel the beat of the sea to be rester as we attend from the myth servants it, was exelateed by. the feet that the rarity of the stare sphere as we receded from the earth's surfsee maze* rndtinnalir lest and Lusa the medium weeesaan foe the transmission of light and heat. a. d therefore thee& Were liras womnbly feat If the atmosphere were of the n'-e detuott so we mead, tlt cirsot would be vary different. - The sun as a body of puns Ire. the lecturer ma i twee sustained and recuperated from the spiritual or do** sun, the sun of At , aintibil.l or angelic hosvesur.wldelt to the Lord himself—the 18, or the IP, or the i Att. the Infinite Marrs of all bet or. who s °lathed With Lidt as aartasat; the eternal one. Vbo is the pea of the —the Held ot light. the God of God—portraved the ggYntians as IS-is.or RA. begotten of THYNOR. He is the one Pelf. existing' and eternal son from wbich our mu and all the sues of the universe hare their beige— the AD-OG-lE l .Or Fountain of Salop. The ancients all clearly maniac) two pans, the Arehart's' and thp tatitypal. the divine sun mid the natural tan. AU their templeaviere erected to the sun. Onth e tem* of Pal las. at Sus, in s gypt, is this inscription: " I am all that has been. all that is. all that will be. Pio mortal hes ever raised the yea which conceals mooed the fruiting off2rincl have produced is the ran o nature.. rn tis are ants clearly understood that it was the loanable that pr aced the visible. the spir teal that brought ierty he nit the natural. elsewhere the Divine Pan is called Visheou, as it is read—all which hia base—all whieh is —all which will be. W. in Rightism He Mamie:am everything as the run illuminates the world 'the In dians, gar s Mr. Relooleraft. regard the neat astute sa the crawl trim of the Great Feint The influx or influent life from the divine or arebeti eal in n incessant', or doesd °rmee by the este nil sun es the vest or maby hi, body. sestalstag. recuperating. and .einmeorstra. it. and readertaa it productive or fruitful. The sun we. called by the An cients hermaphroditic. masculcofe rime. maU and remote, bemuse of ire two-fold nature. The spiritual divine elm arta male; the natural created sun was fe male; end then enton was denoted by a 1011,117.1g0. the me.rriste of beerytt e and earth. or of the spiritual and natural sans. Then we ars told that Jupiter as male. and Jupiter is sat immortal nymph Ovine is the mats son, Ire is the female can vend from theme °rites's:id he Pillions • and Phallus. or the male and female princi ples of nature. Rnem, the Creator. Is represerted in Egintoto monuments as - forming math:QM the abusing house of life—that is. the sun •••• - . • - The lecturer then proceeded to &smite the erodes of creation ; to loot tem the womb as it were oflee ma. and see the work of meatiest going oa there. Atm re port short of a verbatim oat CAA &Melee to this yore tion of the lectere,whieh held the audience to detest reethless attentren for nearly an hoar I Be said that under the perpetual influxes from the gun of the seminal Heavens. the Almighty Creator. the and of nioure is rendered active end Prolific- its magnetic ited deutrie elements combine to constitute calor i e or pure (temente/ fire, which feeds urn the Aurae la wh , ch it lives. as the earth doe. upon its sexinspl area. The conjunction and combination of these Auras with the heat, light, and murned° and electric elements form gases. end these gases, uniting and combining in the body of the sun. (win seedy. cloudy &Oda whice. attract and secrete kindred elements in combination. %ince the d ups of tidier ne r and Galileo the-e spot. hare been seen terrine's in the run-at firstcnily as a diode or cloud. then with a nucleus . which increased or ex tended. But this nucleus. Mist tie. expending, or con racting. was always scurvd meal. dews tendert to % debater term. Sornetimrs it would burst ea from internal beat. but it tem etsadtly increasing seal oongloborating. Its first motion would b eatery. then circular. then Initial. Theag spots are Mettle Meths, tending be their expendisiy . spiralsontionatothe eirraM !nitro, of the Miter bode. Thimble" this e riciunferesee, nee of these embryo earl!. would at first be men as a dark Meet 'tithes the sun. till. eat-ring Mtn the vehement and internees fiaming'cirenmferenee. it would heteqr to debt in its incandescent heat. At the same time, its mo- tions would be quickened with ineenceivable nail it sawed oat of that fiamme fiery circlet. Then. liken eons from a sling. in the line of its tangent, it I. shot off into the realms of mime, a new born (smeary to•tA. Prof. Leomis mid of the comet of LW that when fire. seen. it appeared as if it were shot motif the eon, tied receding from It almost In a straight I se •; and. that it wee red hot for some days after its perihrelion. and re tained a peculiar fiery appearance , while its tail was like a stream of fire from a foresee. The pathway of a oomet at hest would be very irredt ler and ellipttcal. and the vapors and ream streaming from its surface would naturally make its tram. which. m it reached the farthest part of its track. it weeld fold about it as a garment an hi they were agree bronebt Inte their gaseous state by its return to the peritonea it wered come black again and main to the suit as re child to its mother's breast-still gradually cooling on .its sur face. its vapors condeneme more anal more. and deform -- harming more rind more globular or epheroidal. its pelts would be rectified. its orbit rounded. and its onsetgrenuleted, or the enmities rocks • formed. it would have ceased to be a comet and hays grown to be a eland-en edit. To this It might be objected that - stars are said to hero been seen through the nucleus of a comet. On the other hand, on many occasions stare hare been entirely ech pied by them. Messier lase a Star was entirely eclipsed by the , small comet of 1774. and in 1828 M. Wartmansew in star of the eighth megramde entirely eclipsed by Enekes come t„ Cometa have been seen to transit the dim of th e sun like dark spots. The lecturer explained this by stating that a fluid or serai-finid masa oft matter. like a elobe of molten lead in rapid rotary root 6n. would act only become an oblate spheroid. lint would lx hollow around its su •1 diameter. oenst,to itt ratite fusel motion. There would seem tote a necessity foe this, also, to anew for expansion and contraction as it came nearer to or receded from the sun. until its emit should be medtfied. tee as it was necessary that the sutures man infaere skull should remain open nring the earliestrenod of its life, when its Meta was tap dly enlarging. While a comet warm this field or semeiluid state. it could easily be understom that an dimmer who happened to look at aster 111 the direct line of ill could see through it. A mess of astronomical statements and authorities was adduced in support of the views thus advanced. We hare room foe but very few of them. In Hallett% Encikets. and Bieda's comets the orbits are harem= more circular. arid the period of their returns dinimish int, thus approximetins to the orbit of so earth. Professor Looms says that the comet of ISO bad an orbit neelcoirnating to that of n depot, being but hide less than that of the Asteroid Jueo.. Mrs, Somerville says that Lexel necertai o ned that the Major axis of the comet of 1770 had a diameter only three times that of the earth and its year voted be only /I)f i 4 h if ours. a napery trains of comets diminish en ry time they return te !be sun; end they exhibit otters. _Herd= arid La Hire stets that in their subsequent stages they pw sees a solid mess resemblin(a planet The nuclei of the comets of 1799 and nor had diame ters of Oct and 545 miles. and that of 1811 was eoeo miles Lerner then edercu , y and near) e the site of elan. It is affirin•al that Ceres and Panes. two of the Aste roids were but recently tomes t they hewing wary se oentne orbits, and some re balcony. Dr Hitchcock says that comets present a striking re semblance to the early condition e f our globe. and That the Asteroid! Ammer to be in a transition state be tween habitable and uninhabitable werlde Then it wee sheen that the spots in the sun being embryo comet., and the comets resliment.t po, a t ae they were made of calorie, or the subeatioe of Are„ All their solids were previoesty dards and gases. and these were evolved from b i ht. heat, electricity and galvanism. In the ehamber of mete birth. the interior of the son. They go forth from the sun into an immense atmosphere Into which these imponderable meets con stantly flow. and in which they grow by successive se eretente, An OAT earth WIA tOAIIII LINA MAIL Thus. too, it could be seen Whit became of the spots on the min end Asiatic the numerous new planets dames ed daring the present century mead be found the comma that Mid failed to dente when they were G.tPeOted. TAUS the work of creation was perpetually game tea. The Creator win not a creator whom work was eaded, but one whose isoweverse yereetrelly exerted. Be twerp ear sent' and the son there was stib rem for nestle handred o th er planet". a willow of miles die tett from each other. and beer thotesed between the sun end Neptune. Oar so aesystem was bet one fundh Ali the planets were horn Of one mother-the sqn-cad were sustained by her hest. light, electrieity.ned mag netic attraction. Yet oar ma was eel; one star-nye of millions that glitter in the firmament--each created br the one central and infinite run of the 'Mental dad eternal hearses. • A cloying and eloquent tribute, to the [oedema and wisdom and power of the Almighty melter of aft thlage closed this disocieete-mte it aria IAOAi ft . 6, ,11,14 4 / 1 4 peg haps, ever delighted tic ► f• saga&
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