, , —' ' ` , t' - :; , s'bl• - "--' ,, -,- - _ , ,,' -• •.... ''-',' T"4 `.,!"'••-..• _ 1 r” Er •^ y ‘ - ', 1,- -;-..,, ~,. .,....0, 1 -41 , 14 r, i ,":.' qv , . 4.,,, -,110,-4,---p r o ,_ , 4 t ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, j 1 :;;4• • •- z• , '':' ^•• 4, PM:ip7llo ''''',l - I . ,V` ie..,',. , ' . 4. lrt - R v x.,,,,____,__, _, . :>-: -, •., . -,- • ,::.' ,-,,,,,,,- 1 ;..., ',liti,l4l3lAuotiviltotk.:„...-,-,„i '• :, ',:-' ''., -.---tlii-';.4t,,,--sitiaa,iiittic i ka4 s , i `' 14• O W, %ma Diatmal '''ll 4t # 444zifia,VTorti4o4 , . 1 ...,..‘ ,-, ' ,. , , t .. , ._,., ,„ ~,, ,i• •''ir. , , ~ ,i '.: •, •,-,_ iookkfir,Mo,lll,rr„,..r.,7:l ,- ;:zilati',,'-;`, ' ', ,,Z1 { ~:. %,-1,7,,Z,,,,1•*„-'::!"•,-,=',?•:ThOWs,1„.4,1,,n!F.,11.7:',„ ,koak e-g. -- oai e tmmt , - • - . „W rmz7c47F4E7,b0n1,,, w, ~zt Z .:l4- L tial, ' . fr ; i _ . - , - ~ ,t 3. vi - ,A9 s • i, ' ' - pi, .-, - :.•,,,,, ',,,,,(-... 14.;--14,1Cifitiri'sgimift oiliiii*l%v.kb,44. NtOgOLlE''' i , ...,..,..,.. ....... 1 ....- "wrirjelOtitt*,"' 4i saAgowoWeis• --- -4 . •-;•,,' -- -, .. -;: sainime ?.e. , ~s upo— u men, s aiEd i Te,,„. .._, , 1 •-• --"01#:•• r• CI rf SosmerafrollX, --; , • - l ibriadafre,:itigagritillatcV, ' --tTIRriiO6I,Ik,WOOD,;III(O II ,.. I ?/A„ ':;., 4-...4t-*-:_ ,r .iiiikoi*, Want: . 446outrawica_i_PL, ',. ' ,---, , r 'llloll4l' ItEnlVl Z HA intr' - - , , - ,-;,_ -, 4lll.lloiotir lIA -7 n. , ' . .7 i.l inswar zothors, - f-lactotar , WOOD,' a -RUMOR& :74iliiiir,iii.014m,44/411' .., : , ~s si imilarinT. : , r -,•-" OA -- ,„ 4 • , ' - ' 00VSLAINsuli, _ Arm -0006Acr-,041721it 1 1.,.. za - 4 ‘: , iltuttiLiCiroOlx - 4,, =yaw_ ~ ..,, , l ir , Lik ria n i mid i , , , , i Tow mi l I Im Y _ LE oamitft ' 6 r I tp tali! e 1 . ' ; - ,r 7,lii CUITNIn $ 11.14 ` , ‘ NPFI - 8T,1 7 1:49:-.IOV G 0.0,D B a_ FNHFIM,°;'3IOO. 88,,. iituurr' , NOATILKPA 441 4 1 /4 ,1 11 1 M , - lait tv!9ll ;' , 4 , ••04111 , •+* -7,7-- • 0 • 10 11 1,--ften vinsorripi- krFiNA:tok. yid aim's" minim , . IMIAVKIMUMI IN MEM! ' 1 4 111 : 117 to M , DIURNI:ANIO6.SII I IB OO 3*-I) , * - ' SLOOMPROMEWIMI"If. 8114' 'hisido6,itimi-ip 'soda tasithwilitiblaudig par stoWigh " 1 " * " 111 s. a***llothsik teguigoirkko of relidiuktiapeedeli z bkinimiegiiiiitbs est vi :,6111.1 -1411,actiorlite;OV, Alet: 4 F1W1141,10;r4 A ' e ra `lz% o ''u• .oe-Tim= o , mf"Arg.t• -4,„,• - 4itiims. , -:7_471111A21 9 ~ ..i .i.. . 2 , :: - ;!', ;-,,J,-;-1,----' :,:iiiiii*-,---,,- i ,, 4 , 4-;,,,-,• • --Atio moor ~ , .•,, ," r:,,irkiwirgaii: .„. ~, _•,,,-;;;,,,,_;,,.t..,,:, ~_ -,, Aktb:-.3........... -, , :i_, -:•00 •- - 4 - zoiriow --- --:-. • •,- _ - ,-_-_-.Air,joiow - -• . -.., ', -,•-•-•;,-311r.,MPFP.I!..--'' ---' . 'I; "1. ,-- : -- 1 ,-- iti1iiii0•404 , 04.40!... - - - ---i-,ejkw*:1.6.,,,,,,b,- ningThrtit!lltEk.' q' 4 ggink o'o 4:ll2loTh' • . 4 —%Run'•4- , - --- -:"± ilmatollk iuttasWfus gad Wl l - 001114 4: 14 eal of tenth 5 1 P:Alml -0 tht • ,0,, K:A3A.R.DEN ; ald - ;i:..R.:A.Tr A. P•S; 'FURS; Idi"Nutt 2011nurrsCsibiaT2AW 000a1 11 grilgrn morns nammuh mos. ; r. ' • ~._1 1• 34, 1 0. fifitalgto;hrt soraSrt gmneia:9r)§6o.,-, , ~-,- , ,-• **Or- ...-40. r - . - 'itkEP.l„ ' -`'...,-,.--- 77.---„,_ - ii**l '''T --, i- ',- ~ .',..„imioltilvvltri....,- 4.,;..i1ai?" ._ __-:.'',1K:1., „„, ay.-40_,?-7.irt.,4, vainiOLOV/M,.. m i s.. ~1-11011001[cuss,APIDOMIPL - . , .-, • . -tmiformilwriujim av , b* . in tavitsfaiiittiattaiiliniCilanliti • -.- • • , _ linproketi f , . - stimadWriiiii leigir itaisirk* *id of ilk ous,soons; hig vitt ov. • '`• •'; ,L Wear , 1 4 **T B ! jiAl, -.l iLOWilik4 l o.-'• Otajbeistait.sati iisinsith**Ottitivr ... . - , 700 *waif sisami jok aii:or i , t , 46440 . 141 , 6 „,. - 24,-13ERMirabla • —' Owl= ip,gcoND ' imams strait. EMBE IlL4*114.1,10,VAPIII; • • tOAVI '''lllo6Pkit , - :rikiX44o.***Kll:..a.Tlo4 • -,- • • •-• • - • 11 41 • V ‘••••• , 1 rint.-1091,,4. 0 ~,11710.ri4W041444 ••". • - , sal= LUX • -, • itiwAr MOW AIts4rICLAI: ~.31 1 4 9 WEItar /kik C=lk _fteNerrekt Write" thik . Ationtuocti== Berm to OW WO SOIL • el fa". ' • • Amilmptikkgpi •"• • • impr io :uroticar woman • 4 • illnikerteillft,Serw..ltr. Isgarei; deih a rairtirii_ A t az wortmff; • r 4 /14 Nit ,. unit &" -MilM S :ll ' id it aad USW jiir.ln'6l ,cagermuT ' 4 0 4 - 474 10. ;Akie4ll" ' . ' NarTLER '-,• offi Auto; i` ALMS — 1101— •-, L ,GOTA AND. 074 2,0 0 1 0 3 3 • m ,, ,i,,itir , •Talk-Urriglit '.IOIIIKKEi•PRIOITi. 0,4 ' , 4l*pir traittiej,tittgriaititgerrik, ..,..-;,-I';,-,, ; ,- ,k•.. ,_ =,,,,,iti0p, , ..4044J, , ;,,,;::;, ;-,,.', '' ',.. .' = , --6-vii-,4l.l4iiiiiilshili bi . - ' lll l.----AitlS • -i.-3., ;;5•:' ,' }f,..y• , : - ,` , ,::?' 1 " ' ~i gkrri4s, '-;, -- ' i ' a - , --, i ,-, box4 - 7 , m J ,i ni A - N iree vmr,.,eut c ort N A i11 , 4' -=' pg.oie . f!o,aii .„ n , „AL, -Arpo, rR73Zi ~x: ~. ;.,.tr,,,, -,:, .;,:: : ,. c k:i! , ',:'' , 4 .-!, ::-,` • - ',O ;.: ,- 4.,i,:_;:•lmoief liKiilt ; re:f •:::' !.._ -," ISKRA.II " ORp -4 triliik NTS. ; ra,• , „, - .1-.4.): -BLEVIINTILANILOHEMILIT, Pint - OW-AL DEPOT Ain *wax - ' .1 - I,OOP ASICIRTS - • 001110ININO ALL TEN • DDASTANTIAL,iiise*SDGE.SLIDEB,. . . . - Ilibi, - , - - • Stg:DirS. • oomxttoa nide. • ' 'Tlibmsorris NEW Voltz n* *-Nif;, R S. vanity of Bolos! 810 d ossO• itar CHERSiiii , s MODE Di !ARM, GPM I#ACIRTS: ; The - NENlTqlesTlNNituilitiVoi tin; ab,etio oils ,t • • _ 4 . ;` , • "',TEININIINGO, SKINT% IND zintiai,' • itiotisau . Asp liITAXL4AIII37:4OTIMINII ass = ELEVENTH AIM CaSSTNUT ST altOW - istikEisTAgonwe notriEs 1860.; 1860. clopna. RIEGEI4,• BAIRD; . & ,iIIiPOITRIUI 'AND 40118E2D es ,1 021114 :T., Nip AMERICAn D GOOD S. the, 47 11. TELID EiTZEgis 4.siuttamplus., , Jamie the ittilAtioit 0011147 o *MOE - AND M:1114.4111,411 MCI Of - bißiNe: WON, .~rwmsal,Mwi4sg!ti. , tkilrodrostisio to • . 1860 8 g I N 431 * ' ' lB6O • At, 0 (3.4 ,AIROO-4 *iothi3O :WI"! • - D EVO_O'n S. No 9H NORTR THIRD ' IIT..; , llow.,ifarfiw law -8 , P , B- LN: ~ .1 1 RA ,D . <Aiott,omoroa..to.osty to: aim; Ilita - *mask six apallw Ilaywa l csa of tbi • - itTraitcriiirit siecKs !li arMeas.tioil vue deg wowsli- Wwsisasaaly la tibl.balla aat othir Parabiaftwill alidzaatatoalc well mamma at all 0 1 .11.V 1 11. 5 4 . 01, - 1 •1 4 , • • lown4w.: :wx. P. WIL . TA ; 11034/1. , SONO" P.'II.AY. lIA'N T 8 , BUYING OIL. : A6 OVnies, AND WLIPOW IntADRIL :p .r.Ats ow-. Ist 13 MITH• • •;= , .iiiiiiTtriiictirmunta or',OnooLinsa, 4_4 NCIFFII,Vatp. 41TIMET.11104DELPHIA. AtAgangr " l i gr i ge "f 010311 N 94AVD: QIL 04019R10, WENDOW inIADES -.1.."41111PY110 aa itoot of tta # 1 ,044 1411 0t01440 1 %, 4 0 Fa-ft 4 . l:be) • 4 20/A idTliIR u. spezit IDEPOIIIREAD AND DBALESS - F~II • ' o ‘ l i, f.6 tr, ,41.4, 0 0,611 ' l= .000C LADEWLINENL W• AMIN, IDIMIo WAVE& W AND ANAWIA - - • jfßsa~ wit 1i 04,111‘4m: *oat. D. :tom COOPM.,-1410114011.41V0RK, ' • goitriukiLkim4crithir*,Al6 ionsius HAVE; .40.kP.S illOr . _4IM . • wltoimit , TED STREET. , —SIT s' • amortmatof ORronr 54. Lig was .4.••••••rzartueviris, La,. iss AttitalNTrus. • - 1. - r "-" Airdititsiu &NOOSE Latrrufee - Ba c k rdift Wean. - . L _ALIS_Nrs FOR Nub's* Bilk, and Uslisid's ;..: 147.19 Korth TRIED Street. foill4m SOWER,,BASSES.._ & ADO.. 1001[114LLESJI • Aso sot RI liprotre ()Inuits m.tra ,114 D, RRY I 141111,0211 W OBOLOGY: . • imam. urramrnoe, MALPIDZJUP INA.DIIIIII, Sta., tiog,TH•THIAD' STREET, bekiw' 'mak -stria.) tell-la THQ*PSON„ • TAILOR:- • •. • .. • • N. B. tin.. tormirta AND WALNUT, STREETS, • Clothing mob TO OHDER tilrlioltoilt pf Mataripis slims on band. - , E.D.T.4..myisigiag• ihe City slvi sroDaDed, to 5414 efliki*OiO•o6 , : 1,0840/ 1 4 1404AE AS 'MARTIN; 911ElkiiiiIIT,STREET, SEAMI,EBB BAGS. r 11140.PLINg , SEWING SILL &LA- " belkertiele ror ORWMG fitiCßlNEff. Iror':aiile 'Sy tbi Alits;l4seitiotee; it the LOWEST NOWAY 4 SON, -lfd:'' l Aß . 14444 NT STREET, ,PII:ILADE'LrEa. ' • CHARLES' TA.G . GAT, U 06611110 1. tO " - 101/*n#r **WINO 14111•1 in, 8R4101114-.WINEN GINS, 4c. Old MonoisataihNitse, Bourbon WiLMIT oonetantis cepaad,At *: eii,29h! • • Gal MAKIMT Btraet. NZ BURLINGTON , HERRING, CARRIAGES. muso,ooo 0 vitrr TAM . ROGERS. .", trositozy, ' ' - ,11111.ATTONtt MATTI—NOS! M. TTINOS 44whioiipoitumkedi ,01 44 !!!t , "" vat :41 4 VVitiiiairr , sk neurea..', irtoaL t je t 0 '0": .,21.1 ' 7 40 - Ti aUil r u n r c da ,i r t at O lt . moos 4 mor -loge . .. , - •...,- . . .. -. . . t . ' ,A4t4.:',•14•1}t :', C ,, , .:, ,- 7 - , .'' i ;.... ' - ..4: 4:4 • :•.. •. '4 ••'", ~ ~ -. , - ~ t . r. - ., , 4 1, 1 / 4 .A.Att 7 . ily , .. ,:, , ~,,,,,,,_ ,Ictr '-•' - - '-- y - 10- g1a..„.1 ~ ~,..7, I.iti ~,, ., •., , . :'" ;',.."., i- .:,' I : '... • ''' \•• ri. • 11/, ..11/ -.- ,* t 4- .' .. .1 - ' ' ' . ' - ':".: i rtt -,.., ~,-;.--._-, 30.„ ....... ~.......,..,,„ I ....,._, ‘`.. ~,,,,,AVI .1V, , ,, ~,„--t1 ...i. ;4, . ..•-..... I • •,•': , i tr'te A - 2, ---- -e-1 , -::' " ''' 4 •P': , i,.sl ,' '------: •'' A : .- ir - ..mt -42r1r . ...1, , •• . ~.;;•- -4 2 1 ?.-.'l ll - , 1,, '' i ' -• i i .-, -,- • ! ' ,-: r -` (, ''• •• • -.1 • 4 ---4, --- - 7 -- -•-- .- • I 4 ; • :;•;T'• . ' '/ ' ; ' j .. _ ~.. 1 ...„....... • ,a ,, , k .„..: .................._ r,, .0., lb, .„ . . . • 747 - --'.:l''-'f' ' '' . Zrtt; ' , ' talltil ' ! u 4 c ,7, 9 -, I . I': - , :: ,t ...mm .. . - ..i ,f ;O r i"Tr_ ~, 1 . . . . ...,., ~ . .1, \ 'z, i ~.) t \s, ' . ....- ..... 2.;. " ..‘ ' - `* - -f'l,i - V a erk... -,C01,_ ''' 2' k '.. • -.oft. , - "., '''' '''''‘. .4 ' '.. ~. `-',-;,...-- •• . :s . ' '-'• "' : -, •-.•, .. .......,....-- , ........._____.,.,.. .. ___ _ —...............w....:,.. --.... . . , . • „ . . , I • _ ... , . . . MERCHANT 'TAILORS. maiii vov lALI APLQU4U 'Ai,L 1117;tra MINT OF THE SEABON. ALBERT 0, ROBERTO, Denier in Fine Groodries, Cor. ELEVENTH Ind VINE Ettiretio. CARPETS' AND OIL' CLOTHS: g ,7REW',OARPET STORE, No. 0O NORTH :DTLtipi BURST, (It000nd • door 'above Falbert, Weft nide,) • , - :.ixr # o4 rowodpi inform tlunr friends: nd Ai nub he tonally, thet they have otinek an a entlye new stook of • •CARPETfi•- - - • 2• oll,43l;iYilifil; - • • MATTING , &c., &c., Oi th#1 9 . 40101 , i,v?PorSiont „ - Porahaieininir retriprin an entire new stook to eeleot fronr;' and an insveottOn - of the same Is re : : ',814.1111411r OLD ESTAELISHED STORE, NO. 30 NOIIIII. BEOOND STREET, ' , ABOVE OBEESTAUT. - TOWNSEND & BUOOEBBORB OF 841178 L TOWNBEND Er., BON, Importing and Denlen VELVET, BRUSSELS, TIMER-PLY, and 0 A R, P E T -El , Of the boat English ap Amencari Trek.. 11ATTIN08,. oth CLOTHE, ko ! . &0... do: 4011cnted. mldamfaitm FOII4TH," STREET ,1860 CARPET WAREHOUSE, ABOVE CHESTNUT STOMA No. 47. , • • • BPRING IMPORTATION Of Velvet, Brasseb; Inmate Three-ply. Buser In gram, and Venitian' • CARPETINGS, or New AND DEAD2IIIIDILDENIANG . Fresh Canton Strew Matting. white and oolored , of a supsnor 'quality. Also: a large assortment of Oil moths', - Rugs, Drusgets,, Oniinli Cloths. • aid English Base, Bkinir,Door. Mate, to. All, ingios of W rung COCOA MATTINOB, of mina" widths.' • 'JOHN. LEMON, • fIITOOEBBOR TO RICHARD M. HUNT, igig.grg - Manufacturer, Importer, and Bestir. CARPETING. GEORGE W.. HILL, MANUFACTUR ,OARPBT WARBEI6I76B, 144 NOM' THIRD STREET. FiNOY DRY .GOODS. BURNETT. - SEXTON, & SWEARINGEN In voiles of . - FANCY' GOODS. MOLINE AND GERMAN XONIE/ty. MEN'S PUNISHING GOODS, LADIRIP'DILESS TRIMMING& SKIRTS-BloHand Wool, To to VARIBTIBIL tomoose No. 419 MAB.E.T 19TREBT. •DUHRING :AN 9S mad 98 NORTE FOURTH. STAVE% Ati now reeeirimi: by. secomsive erring from Pla- Moe, their „ , S PRINO IMPORTATIONS 01 - KNOWS* AND GERMAN " -, • HOSIERY, (nova. AND MALI. WARE& , . Plichirte eireing Silk awl Thead—end option u In reettion of Melt complete mot well-snorted stook— neescterms Amman TO Necroses awe W i ente TIMM , • GAS FIXTURES. piIIT A RDELP4* „ ; fGAWFIXTURE WORKS., WARNER.,'MISKEY, MERRILL. 111.1111/ACTlTtille. STORE No. 118 OFIESTNIIT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, WARNER.: PECK, AI co, No. 579 BROADWAY, NEW _YORE. Woeld toeyeetfaUyinfonrt the yobbo that they continue to nteaufdetitre all bade of - - 'OAS ?MURES, LAMPS, GIRANDOLES, BRONZES, &0., /to. „ 'And that their lame and varied stook o,ooletieell the eitephlet *a well 611 the most elaborntiletterna, designed by their Freneh artists. They also keel. et their atom No, 879 BROADWAY,. large and full manhunt of all their menufsatured goods. Deakin and other* Cr. in. Nited to ea sad examine. aptl-lm LOOKING GLASSES. L001;IN G-GL PORTRAIT AND PlDrltliE PRAXES, • ENGRAVINGS, OIL PAINTINDS, &v,, to JANE'S - 5..411LE -& SON, IMPORTERS. IIfANIIPACTIIRERS, WHOLE SALE AND RETAIL` DEALERS. ZARLES'•GALLERIES, 816 CHESTNUT STREET, HARDWARE. ABBEY & NEFF, NO. 308 NORTR THIRD STREET, Rave now in More • moot °omelet* stook of HARDWARE. of. late importation, end interleaf mannlecture, which they offer to the NEAR. TRADE on the Very beat terms. , ' 504 m fritUtt.T. BRO.. & CO., Dabitnits AIID WHOLESALE DEALERS • HARDWARE, CUTLERY, (WNS, PISTOLS, &0., *ARM STREET, 629 ISELOW SIXTH, NORTH OWE, fo.finwilm PRILAOHLPHIA. MOORE. HENSZEY. & CO. KARDIARE, • CUTLERY. and GUI( 110, 496 116211111, tad 416 COMMERCE Streets .PHILADELPHIA. PAPER HANGINGS. &c. TO "CLOSE BUSINESS. UAW lONTGONERY, & 10. $22 CHESTNUT STREESIT, Will sell out, thnritsh this winter and next spring, their • large stook or PAPER HANGINGS, militias of airs variety countetedwith the basineet, 117 GRUTLII, =DUO= PRIORI. MB MINCE PAPHRA AT le PER OENT. BE , LOW 005% Num imam Moir Hours Amend, sap tot trod SARG.AINS. RUPT ORE TRUSS. WRITE'S PATENT LEVER. MiuS. TWELIIfT oil RZE ted N A E ro li etif , ' glir gond for Pomohlot. " 1 111 rohllf•ano a l oolii)ls..and 840 bfa lirgeNo. 3 - Mack- Mt/ ISO big& *ad liks9o no. - S 31,4k :grow Itittf t irrrepik c 1 " Ash. 111 RAN NIL HITS-FISH.-194 half Bbls. Macki. V V not Whitit iLsokeitorirtioicipsueocved and Co Web, . NADLER* CO.i AnClij Mot, mODQAdo9F OM Fe , PintADELPIIIA; FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1860. 1 : , : JOBBERS. .A rw. L 8 - JOSS-ITJA. BAILY, ' NO 2la MAR — ICET INVITES AT/Ipm Ort •. •A pii.gilies ASSORTMENT OF sTgr.,LA H FEINTED AND /MOORE BORDERS, In Blank and °Mond Centres. BLACK , HE LAME SHAWLS, ; . MODE DE LAME SHAWLS,. BLACK CASHMERE ,SHAWLS, - . - MORE CASHMERE SHAWLS, FAINTED CASHMERE SHAWLS. :BLACK THIRST SHAWLS. _ MOPE THIBET SHAWLS, BLACK,RIBBON-BOUND SHAWLS, MODE RIBBON; BOUND El HAWLB, BLACK eiLH-FAINErED SHAWLS, • ' • BAHEGE SATINITRIFE SHAWLS, BLACK cA6nmEa6 LONG SHAWLS, ' BLACK 'g'HIBET LONG SHAWLS, BROCHEI d ONG SHAWLS; • BROM& SQUARE SHAWLS. qm.1.,D.P.R171 SHAWLS. From the great . • AUCTION SALES. A.l . PRICES FAR BELOW THE COST OF IMPORTATION, INGRAIN PRE[ ARED GLUE. SPAIMINGIS PREPARED GLUE! "A STITCH IN TIME SAVES NINE." HOONOMY I DISPATCH SAVE TER PIROSSI At di<ellddliti rill haPirm, mai is ersil-rsgalaret fastUiss. A im. eery desirable to lave genie 011014110 convenient way for repairing Furniture, Ton, Creel, An. SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE meets ell mob emergencies, and no household gen afford to be without it. It is alwapi readr and me to the stieß. rog point.,..Thezek Mao longer a neoesaitir for limping, ohaireAsplintered veneers, headless dolls, and broken hibat the 'artiols for cone. shell. and °filar ornamental work, so popular with ladies of refinemellit and teite., , • This admirable preparation is need °old, )Mnu oho. mwelly held in solution,nd polletellilig the maestri* qualities of the bent oabinet-makers' glue. It inaihr need in the 'oleos of ordinary' miming, being Mu* more adhesive: -: - --- " USEFUL IN EVERY HOURS." N. B. A brash aactompaniee amok bottle. PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. Who Mole Depot. No. 48 CEDAR Street, Nor York., ~ Address HENRY 0. SPALDING & 00. y - Box NO.IIIOO, Now York. '' Put up for Dealer* in Cane contaliung four, stall,: and tw elve dozen, a, beautiful Litaogrsehio Snow-oats !mammalian nob mionsge. ler A single bottle of • SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE will save ton time its oast atolually to ivory kowerbolL Sold by all_propinimL Stationer's. - Dnessists. Hari wareres and yurnitnre Dealers. Owen, lad Fenn Sto, • FM Country Meretiantifabould make aitoteof SPALDING'S, PREPARED GLUM • Whoa !asking' up their. IT WILL:STAND ANY OLDrIAT)t. 'd2ll-rturf-y TO FA: It E R . s3; RHOSPHANO GF. T. 7 A -N, 4Z - .) FROM SOME/LER° ISLAND, WEST THE RICHEST FORMATION OF PHOSPHATE OF LIME KNOWN IN THE WORLD. Roontainr over 00 per cent. of Bons Phosphste of Lime, being 60 per oenkrioher In Phoaphate of Lime than Bone Doer. FOR SALE BY THE TON OR CARGO, AND 'TO FARMERS, AT -- ' $3O PER TON OR 2,000 LBS. JOS. B. I-lANSON & Co, „ Sole Agents In Philmfolphis, mhll-fmer.tm No. 39 NORTH WATER Street. fI_ENTLEMEN RAVING COUNTRY IUR SEATS and GARDENS, who hays rot sufficient manure of their own, or who are desirous of a {tutok gyowth lawn and Erasedan early Orolls of vegittables, a beau tiful lawn and will fiwd whet they need In the OM) REITE OF TUE LODI ANUFACTURING CEIMPANY. This fertiliser 'is peat, handy, without odor, rooked in new barrels, and has the advantage of not injuring the seed or plant by direct contact therewith and of be ing known for twenty leafs as is reliable article. Price .I.6Wper barrel, for seven barrels and over Pamphlets with directions, Ba. free. Apply to • THE LODI_ MANUFACTURING CO Is 6 South DELAWARE Avenue, Phiis. mhP3-f mw-lm TO FARMERS AND GARDENPAS.—The apt riber ham now on E POuswErt% or ndw farce, ot of GENII wjll De sold at the lowest Ca s h ' 6 4l= r • ;I " swisfeetion. _ j will, all owes . warrant r its ruaVg. _wm. I I AMON. Fewnd street one winergebove knit 'Foil Clete. Oilloe, /213 N orth Boone street. above Franklin avenue. rbiladeleble. 5911-Im* , WALTER EVANS & 00.14 ROAR'S-READ SIX-CORD SPOOL 00tTON, Superior to any ever imported, listrength, smoothness. end tnastiofiv, for Machine or hand mewing. LENGTHS WARRANTED. "We have tried Evens Co.'s Hoer's4lesd 86Wini Mnehine Cottons. and find them apoellent."—WnsigrAn Wu.son, M. F. El. Co., MS Brogdwny. N. Y. C. OAKVILLE, General 401% , NeW York. ' J. D. HOWELL, Agent for Phfiddelphis, At FINKLE LYON'S ()EWING MACHINE ROOMS, SIC Chestnut street ushl7-stn' FlaWeigh's. BLINDS AND SHADES. B. J. WILLIAMS. - No. 16 NORTH SIXTH STREET. Is the most extenitve manufacturer of VENETIAN BLINDS AND , • WINDOW SHADES. The largest and6neat assortment in the olty. at the lowest pricey. STORE SHADES made and lettered. Repairing Promptlr attended to. itpg-d3m PRINCE • IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE. FROM DE VENOGE & CO., EPERNAY, FRANCE. Bold by all Respectable Dealers throughout the country. ,Thle fine brand ofglidiAßßE,r a nte the t lg wa lr eexl hvto thbeat le trideetrVarope, as:Owobtaned t he mat unbounded sums" and populanty In thin country, It reeommended by some o f the first phyviiHans o f ttie city Of New York, over all other wines, on account as ea) trams purity and delicacy, and ose who once try it rarely- use Any Otber brand. Althoug t l only one year um h elseeed since its introduction into is country, the demand is anormows and constantly agreeing. Our Wa g Vel e nr4t e ntf h ed as agtl74l.l " t e Ntl u lta o nA e . The Prines Imperial is imported solely a.ti we the solo Agents of 111 . ernI A D4 G Yant 0.. in this CO country. Noe, 488, 423 and AI BROADWAY, New York. fold in this city by BEEVES & DEAL, fe 904 MARKET Street. WA.: MOUSE, gig NEW ,ENGLAND:EAktLY SUGAR, ...T. CORN, the best variety fa i r i Ve rs uirlool i e , by warelioae, 922 and 924 MARKET Street, aptittt - above Ninth. sag APPLE PIE MELON.—AII should ...76grow.this eelebrated variety. It la used durnig the fall and winter for stewing. &0., and in point of Ilitvor ace scarcely be dootinguished from apples. For sale by the pound, ounce, or paper by R. 811187 to SON/ - Seed warehouse, 9112 end 924 MARKET Street, ap44-4t shove Ninth. - SUPERIOR LONG ORANGE OAR mar b Eh% grown from "ideated stook and war ranted, for wile by BUIBT & 8014, Seed marabous, 922 and 924 MARKET street, ap2d-41 abore 24intb. lig FLOWER. SEEDS IN BOXES CON: Veining' 44 beautiful varieties. that. will bloom from June until frost, for !L Bolos w_lll 12 varieties, 20 omits. R. BURST' & SON, Seed warehouse, 922 and 924 MARKET Btr§st, ap2a4t above Ninth. MAOKEREL-300 bbls. 290 hfs. 100 ars. AAA. an aro kilos No. ILI Jule rooohrod, and in prime Order. For rile b/ WILLIAM J. O A T t.OR CO. 'TOOT - • le sail "A TOOKTI3rWRAIIIIIOII. KIVY WELLS CLEANED AT A LOW P twAgiti. Ad/f reed 1511YRnitlgrat) VA L. - tiftwiCswiNe mAolluirb which tow J" - • ~t 4gv ' We • PO Bre PrOaNar 11114 FERTILIZERS. rtE W. P:O'AMPEIELL: • NO. 1124 014STNOT pTREET. SPRING ,CLOARIS AND -• xow • Ok..ENING. DAILY . ' •Embandag allthe ;4ETTEST STYLES and Choicestat the • 7CAPJFST4'I2IOES: • i 4•12, 5, DRESS TRIMMINGS. -7 77 :17 - 'NEW GOODS: - n e ez r otylea now 0814 And amotaatly receiving PLAITED ,CORDS, ALL COLORS, oitiaoKl4l*tita EMBROIDERED CUSHIONS. EMBROIDERED SLIPPERS. DEBT QUALITY SHETLAND WOOL. OILT BRAIDS, TASSELS, - AND CORDS, • - RAPS ON'S - nuntrittlas AND ZEPAYR CORNER OP ' HIORTH AND CHERRY STREETS. m WA "VRT°N 'S . 1004 CHESTNUT STREET, ABOVE TENTH, 308 SOUTH SECOND STREET, BILLOW IPPRUCTI. RIBBONS, FLOWERS; GRAPES,. , TARLATANS, ILLUSIONS, RuanEs, 7 -, AND LADES. We have just opened our Spring Stook of the above feeds, end feel oonfident that they cannot boarpaased, either in style, Quality, or price. . aPl44m OUR STOOK OF LADES IS UNUSUALLY LARGE. CIO I III3.'OIiOTHS, An aamortment of the above at SN6D'GRAS & STEB.ISAN 'S No. 62 South SECOND Street, above CHESTNUT. INP , AIeo, PLAIN and STRIPED CLOTHS for LA DIES' OLDIES: agile-wfaa-tielo LAD= 'REMEIsfI SER . TIB CHEAP 0 -Geode Store of 13;V. R. 'HUNTER, No. 40 South 4 1 COND Street. Opening. this day, entirely new ;nylon o Summer Silks, at 37% cents. ap344lt. NOW OPEN, AT THE UNRIVALLED • Cloak Manufeetorr ,of S. V. umwilut, all 'Aylmer Spring Cloaks—Engem; low air 4;, 413_! sal fib worth double the money. ffo. 40 South BECtutu Street. • -apii-6t* OIARPLESS TIROTFIERS 1 , 3 Are sellint out their FORUM ROBES at a reduction of from recent prioes, per cent. Yard wide Goode, Aytilats colors. klitok and Brown Ground'', Nam and medium atslee, camaieur Brom. New Friendly Mlles. Goode by the,leasdr, Fall length Robes, apU --01038TRUT sad tIORTR tits FRENOII PANOY , GOODS FROM THE - il l it e ct u arVitie s Oeritr 7 "! / " *4 ra u `' . mg cow maw.. 38 (tents. Mode BOA Bar Aimee, 81 allot& 4 ' -Satin Br Node, Ruth Colors,/ sni asst`. . and k Milloalee, . New flts e Iblk Strip•d Ba rer'.. 2 6 Cullati. t 3 ' sails &lc Poplins, Memo. , raid, - So.. onialAJlßlre sod Chelhen. " obis related Maio BsTßeites els. oso n t me pie e f•gi ttr_s is j e Z e o ri t _o l.4% A full stook,. Blebs. Shawls. Barcelona, Cestr u er i m & T i tir Sham! With the anal stook of Cap State, Book higelthe, end gsndkerohisfs. TARIATA NEB.,_ kr. Black Bilk thatlesiustfrA i New York. CAM, AHAM & BON, aottlittnntr HIGH' and ARCH Street`. yEARLY MEETING. SHARPLESS BBOTHERS, Offer for Friendly Wear Very neat rm.ern sty lules of Goods, . Handkeroefe, lain Colored Milks. s. Gingham. Berates. Caselparea OnodCl othe, PL Vesting& Ftirnishint's,uiNg. . g , Urn .. CHESTNUT end EIGHTH Streets fIOOPUt & CONARD 'e•-• Invite etteltioneo the largest stock they have ever Oared, cowrie Br i ,ig ri d LA TH CLOAKS Of Plain, SVC arill Mixed Olothssalf of the new e" Pa t i e I I 2G C AN f u' AVD s ARTISTIC MA INSR, and to sell at very BeLKMIATLE MANTLES . are In proportion. and will be ready inn few days. LAOS POINTS AND MANTLES. Also MEN'S AND BOVIr 'WEAR, Embramng tbe following, via: A tirat-ratip Blank cloth. Black Cloths or superior quality tor . 81.60. Finer grades of BAck and Mixture.. FINE - RI ACK DOESKINS. -.EaderCassimarea for 'puns yenta. SOlll wear St great variety, MORT CLOAXING CLOTHES, First rate, at SIM: better rods, SIAS and r COO ER & CONAR , S. R. NIN R and M.A.RICE Sta. rriIiORNIAY & 011I8M, .A. Callimeolal attention to their Stook of— , SILKS , , , • liILIL .. , DitESR GOODS. CLOTILD'USTERS. SILK MANTLES. 7 ' BARGE AUGLAP DUBTHEB Ann DILHEIBEB. &leo, to the Krobeet Stook In Philadelphia, of— French Lace Bournous. Freg n l a torZoktrrr47. Preach Lace ;bawls. French Le. Pointe'. Frenoh Lune Mantles. • French Laos Tolman. Cambria Lase'. Climitilla Lamm. /co., &a. BOUGHT FOR GAM! Weinvite attention to our Bteple Goody, viz : Boa =lir ilind Fronting Linen.. Best hirting, Sheen and Pillow Muslin.. Bering and Bummer ft anneal mad Ca./Imre& Mixed Cloth., Black ranch Cloth., ace., &o. Beat Kid Gloves, Bilk Glovea, Homy, Linen, , Hand trmler. &o. Northeast comer EIGHTS k awd SPRING GARDEN. what , THE " ILA BISON BUILDINGS." (CRY GOODS, ADAPTED TO PERLA .-...DELPHIA PLAIN TRADE.—EYRE ar.. LAN DELL: FOURTH and ARCH Streets. have thisAisason. gel ulna] : litt3ok of Gonda WI _ADDITION TO THEIR GAY 831 q, 1ih,) of the Ant quality, and neater dentin ttone, adapted to _ , PHILADELPHIA PLAIN TASTE. v ery met Foulards. N g,rn 'Zig" Nobdued Colo iro Silks. Nomeommlttal Lawn". Restrained Style Calla:M Mode Colored' Silk Si Plain arid Rest Camirreres. Plain Mitts, Gloves, HMI, Am 020 puma. TRADE. -CITY' RETAIL SALNS.—EYRE Et LANDELL, FODRTO and ARCH Street.. have this season made it a poin rootave &stook of Goods of the first quality, and of the de mded good tas D te. • AAPTED TO CITY . GALES. • Richest Spring Magnificent Flounced Robes. Little Flounoeik and many of them. Grenadines,rictota than ofdinarv. 'Organdies. lititgtell. end Hoularde, The new style spring Pardo.. Mif i c ' e n nn il t l a a rd = s ic . aril4-If IRIS" LINENS. A frenh invoice of SHIRTING LINENS direst from' the Menefee torero, RICHARDSON, SONS, & CARMEN, of Belfast, Sui.t received. These Goods ore selected exoreiody for our family trade, and ere guarantied free from any ndmi xture of Cotton. - PHAN INN Isp7 9 South rizrus Fittest. STATIONERY. MOSS, BROTI - lER, ik Co., 630 MARKET OTREET, BOOKSELLERS, STATION/RS, AND • BLANK•BOOK MANUFAOTUItERB, Keep a large and well-selected stook, IMPORT'S'', DOMESTIC, and of their oien MANUFACTURE, Wholesale add Retell at the vary lowest pried& BLAND , BOOKS On hand in large quantity, or made to order ? of ally desired pattern, of the very best matenai and work manship. • We are enabled nom mar extended facilities to offer opener inducements to purchasers. A call is solioited. SEWING SIACHItdE S. , WHEELER & WLthON ' SEWING MAOHIN ES. HENRY COY, Agent, 05 CHESTNUT STREET, SECOND 11.0011, • Maohinee, with Operators, on , Itre to Matta/Familia" , waren amass: f West STATE Streit, Trenton. N.LL • 110 CENTRAL 'SQUARE, Beaton, s. . . A Jalll-ihn - - WILOOX & GIBBS'IIIOIVII4G "lidA; . 1 ~„., m,h,..4,., -,,„ ~-.......04,c0t.i. d i exesilanoc in ntoe ' jilt - PAIR; ' Bah Worsham 0 fIUW • OM. D . ._. _._ it ! FRIDAY, , APRIL 27,1960. . , Thomas; Hood. : - I,'; Scarcely any modern English svititer, not ' . the first rank of literature,- has received e. -much honor; in thiacountry, as_Thomas H.... Three of hirshorter-poema-have obtained 4- -Mat tinbObuded popularity , here '. These tr Tlik Dream of,Bugerie Aram,", which fi t appeared, over , thirty years ago, in The Ge , an Annual-edited-by-him-He The Bridge t Sighs,"- ofteireit 4noted, , : perhaps,. than. an other modbm abort poem; 'and " ril, e.a4t . iho.ShiftLtt 411‘11,310 , ~ 1 • Punch, a little' beibill'aloVel's . Magazine w commenced, and the author. thought Mine well paid, as be wet, at the theit eurrent pi of poetry, by a Ton Pound note. Had he S tained it, authe opening poemin his Magazinb, it might have proved of greater Viable to him. We are not, imre..4#74-"l,44*.ritnit eilly..thrt;iminensa, cireplikiCin NyllciCrttista. then enjoyed.gave-- wings-to its publicity, and helped to make its popularity. . - • . . , Twe- editions of Hooil , a poetical.works hate been printed In America, while in his own country they, remain .scattered,. uncollected, 'and :inedited.-- One, in four. ,volumes,, edited by Professor _ P.. J. Child, of Harvard Uni versity, appeared, in JAN, as part of crThe British Poets," published by Little, Brown, !fa Company, cif Boston—the best ? and most ex tensive collectiOn ever ven tb the World, became it includes, severabinthors, such as Scott; 4 SOntlikv; 'MOOrii; "Wordsworth,' &c., whom, on rieconntnriiiiexpired copyright, Ali; Pickering, the London' publisher, was unable to . hiclidO in his Aldine edition. The other edition' of Hood, also emanating from Boston, is in_ two volumes, edited by Epes ? Sargent, who, we ,believe, is preparing a yet more complete collection,, to be published by Derby & Jackson, of NeW York. ' Hood's first volume, ec Odes and Addresies to• Great People," was- not entirely- from his own pen. - Some of the poems therein were written by John Hamilton Reynolds, his bro ther-in-law, whe died • abont seven years ago. This Reynolds was war a lawyer, - whose best com position is a poem called ce The Garden: of Florence," founded on one of Boccaccio's tales. He also wrote a poem called 44 Salle," which Lord 'Byron praised for eta talent and fire. In the London'-Magazinc, (at the time when De Quiucey, Allan Cunningham, lyle ) Barry Cornwall, John Clare, Talfourd, Charles Lamb, William _Harlitt, and a crowd of other, liferaS almost as able, contributed to it,) Reynolds, who.was some years older than Hood, wrote chiefly under the *om de plume of Edward Herbert. , One of his most amusing hits woe the publication of a 'volume called "The Remains of Peter Corcoran "—an Ima ginary personage. This appeared about 1819, when Pugilism was"the fashion, and to laugh at it, Reynolds invented a hero—Peter Corcoran to wit—who, after receiving an University education at Oxford, lived wildly in London, taking to drink on the plea of ill-requited love, and handling the pen, the pewter, and the Mawbre's with equal spirit and success Fitibd's prose has never been very popular, because it is not so good as his poetry. Flis "National Tales," in 1827 , , were :other_ em inent-place. In 1884, his novel called Tylney Hall" appeared, without creating any marked 'sensation:. ".Up. the Rhine,", in which he gave.his own experience of Soreign travelling, is amusing—but it is only a series of sketches, and did not require a continuous effort of mind. The story called "Oar Family," com menced in-Hood'e, Magazine, and left incom plete at the authoirva*ii, - wa something In the desultory manner of Sterna's "Tristram Shandy," and is but, a literary folio.* the ircone character in it, that oflEczia, the igno rant but true-hearted servant of an English country doctor, which is drawn with such ex quisite truth and even delicacy that we doubly lament, on her account,' that Hood did not live to complete the story: Whoever is curious to road all that was ever published of cc Our Family," will find it in vols. 3 and 4, (1844-Er) of Littell's Lining .age—a work which, by the way, contains the cream of British literature during the last eighteen years. fc Tylney Hall" was written in the full ma turity of Hood's genius. He was thirty-six years old when he completed it ; ho died at the comparatively early ago of forty-seven. There is a want of artistical construction in the story, but the characters are ably drawn. For example, how marked the contrast between the brothers Tyrrel, and again bow decidedly both are the nibral antipodes of their cousin Walter, Mr. Rivers, the kind-hearted justice, who 'used to Steel his heart to harsh legalities by contemplating a painting of-the Judgment of Brutus; Sir Walter Tyrrel, like Nimrod in his hunting predilections, and charming Grace Rivers, are distinct• individualities. Indiana, the Creole, is rather in the male-dramatic and Meg Merrilies strain, but some fine touches of nature show her human, and even wo manly. The Twigga family, who give the bur lesque of the story, are executed in Hood's' own "Comic Annual" vein, and their fete champetre, with its pretension and its failure, is irresistibly amusing. But the original cha racter of the novel is Unlucky Joe, the post boY., pursued from his birth by misfortune, trs by a resistless and implacable Fate, such as Greek tragedy loves to present-=and all, in the victim's own 'opinion, because he was born ou a Friday. This character is well sustained, and though the tendency to exaggerate must have been great, is never once overdrawn. There is considerable clumsiness and much Want of probability in tto manner in which the denouement is brought about. St. Kitts, sly and crafty to a degree, would scarcely have forgotten the .caution conveyed in the words literal scriplo mauest—he,was not one to colnmit evidence of his guilt to paper. Nei ther would the English law • have permitted him to step into a baronetcy and large landed es tates upon forged certificates of his father's marriage with a mulatto. Doctors' Commons would have sent a Commission to the West Indies to search parish registers •and examine witnesses before tho half caste claimant for rank and wealth would have been legally acknowledged. Nor would Roby Tyne], pronounced guilty of fra tricide by the verdict of a coroner's inquest; have escaped the formality of some legal pro cess to 'follow it up. Lastly, Ned Somer ville's slaying of SA. Kitts, without any no tice being taken of it, is out of all reason. Tet, with these drawbasks, cc Tylney Hall" is a readable and agreeable book, in which the combs and tragic elements um fairly balanced and distributed. The admirers of Hood, whose name is Legion in this land, will be glad to read it, and will thank us, we hope, for telling them that Whits been placed before them, and the rest of the American people, by J. E. Tilton & Co., Boston, in one volume, 'mall octavo, of tour hundred and seventy ? nine pages, not only neatly, but even beauti fully printed. We have received our copy from Samuel Hazard, Jr., Chestnut street. BOOKS RECEIVED From d, B. Dirruscorr & CO. : Critical and Miscellaneous Essays: Collected and republished by Thomas Carlyle. In four volumes, with portrait on steel. Boston : Broin & Taggart. Political Debates between lion. Abraham Lin. nein and Ron. Stephen A. Douglas, in the eels. brated campaign of 1858, in Illinois. 1 vol. Bvo. Follet, Foster, & Co., Columbus, Ohio. From LTITLE, BROWN, SD CO. Elements of Ohomioal Phyelos. By Josiah P. Cooke, Jr., Irving Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy In Harvard Univorsity. 1 vol. Eivo. Erona,McKNole &FIRLDS, Boston Fresh Hearts that Failed Three Thousand Years Ago • with other' .things. (A volume of Foams.) B y the Author of 4 , The New Priestin Conception Bay." 1 vol. 12m0., pp. 121. Theßtemi.detaehed Rouse. .(A. Novel. Edited by lady Thereon Lowie: 1 del. 12m0., pp. 311. From 13. HAZARD, Jr.: The Werke of Washington Irving. New Edi• lion Bovieodi with illustrations .on stool and vtiro worn w 04 , 4, . „ PPoems.ilk , MAUI: lama* ciarenoti,stmb*in:,l2lo4#.l9ohAlielrek • *Abner: t' - - .'" 4 44 4 *Argo:LA 400 4 i0tpe67lir,. , Translated from the riikkariplaw:rdrir.:: t7u G. goriboor. • • 4'4 = 4 7: - From N 7. isuTtifit,CdoV — .' l t` B. B: 1em01, 4 fp2275:" News ' York:" ,S6o3l¢ors'i CO. G. Tvent ei : r hiajor ., 4loit Downing'e Lett•4e.4 My Thirty Ywile Oilt Of thellentite. By Major SaidtlYourn i4gArith eLtty-tour original Mustrationa. 12•14:: ' l oe ' - 468. , -IBasiN ' . 0107 k. 4 410 4 4 - .— r 4 lraf. • 1 , 1 ' :••,vo , '1.1 4 : • = q ?. ''' it - . 4 016 °- - AP* .., ' It 4 tilt lk• •'' aka a - co. ‘'!, k I , :tiae' ed.D.t..i , !- , , --,:- •' ,' " - ,- L'AAnie - LitierairOitt Dramittkpa, ovi Baru.. ' Aiitinelle dea PiinoitialesPiiideatiosedit rature Fringalso, &o. Piti"(l; Vapareau• Deuiime Annie. Peti:k : L. thorobefe.et Co.'. 71•10 - Siiiredtgpai ./ iiifieasee. • , The Preithitnite - tie pas agar Tall; way coreptitiArt kave,reseived to increase the pries of exchange,, tiOkett!t6`,.aeven Cents; and we hope :the pnblie 2xlll eatulit'granefelly to,the edvanee. But le able I'4o thatitkeheada of the railway companiealn Outten will make - w Wight concession to the wishes of ,the.oltisenei generally, and make their exchange tickeiti:jood toi'any day. If the editor of Tke Ificss, will lend a corner of hie piper to..ventilate thin inib3eo:a. ,little he wtll probably benefit the public, and confer k faioron Tae OlniaT Proceedings of City Conetis. The regular elated meeting at Cowie]ls' inarheld yeaterclity afternoon. , " ' entries DRINCK. Petitions were P resented - fOrPaving striate; and for a lire-plug In front of the Indepeaclisnee Bose house; 'a communication from , the 'Twelfth stool district, protesting against the manner in which , the school loan was distributed, wee also presented - . These petitions and communications were all ap propriately refeired. The President presented 'a communication from 'the Board of Health, Asking for the sum of $l5O to purchase a horse for the use of the board. • A remonstrance against paving Mechanic street, in the TWenty•first ward, was presented and re ferred: The Chief Engineer of the Surrey Depart-, ment presented the following appointments for his department: Receiving clerk,. George Sturges ; messenger, Charles Read. The appointments were , referred. An ordinance was pawed directing the construc tion of a culvert In the Nineteenth ward. An ordi nance from the Committee on Water, authorising the laying et suttee -pipet in Norris street, was alio pissed. An ordinance was pissed authorizing the Knickerbocker Ice Company tit -construe* a rail road turn-out `at Willow and Beach streets. This ordinance came from Common Council. Thn hilt in relation to the width of the pave , mann/ along Spring Garden street, by which fifteen feet are added to each sidewalk, leaving a fifty feet highway, wee agreed to as it came from Com mon Council. • - An ordinance appropriating the ewe of $730 for the purpose ofpa3ting the expenses At:warred by the extension of the loofa telegraph nes agreed to. An ordinance nuthorising the contbsetion of a wharf at Lombard'ittreet; on the Scheylkill river, was passed after an extended debate- Mr. Davis offered a ;Whitton directing the dis trict surveyors to make returns in full to the Chief Engineer 'of the Survey Department, before they receive the amount of their final wttrtants, which was agreed to. Au ordinance directing the opening of Chew street, in the Twenty-fourth ward, was agreed to; an ordinance directing the grading of certain streettf in the Nineteenth ward was agreed to; an ordinance making an appropriation to pay the claim of Howard - -Spencer t was passed - Ain ortit nines' placing the sum of $l,OOO in the heists of the Mayor for the purpose of paying the expenses in curred Id the . arrest 'and recovery or criminal fugitive, in other States„ was also pitied. An ordinances sultanates; the City Treasurer to employ an additional clerk ileitis belleitment was passed, as well aa an ordinance authorising a con tract to be entered, into with one J. Fisher, for the purpose of erecting a Wm} in the Twenty-fourth ward. ' - - • Mr. Davis moved that the Committee on Schools be discharged from the, consideration of the ordi mum authorising the erection of a estkciel-house in the Fifteenth *ward. After a very tong debate, the motion was agreed to—yeatt 12 - nays ; •- The Chamber; thets-peeneeded to consider the or dinance,- and debated its promistona for an hearer two. The various- amendments were voted down, and the,billpaseed, amid muc h excitement, by a vote of 11 to 3, as follows : - Was—Messrs. •Beideman, Benton, Bradford, Davis, Enos, Jones, Mclntyre, Parker, - Peters, Wetherill, and Coromen-11, • • - NAYS—itios4m. Loughlin, Read; ,anti Thomp son-3. , Ansusr—Meaart:Bartolett, Bringbard, Cuyler, Drayton, Ford, Leidy, and Lemes-7. NOT VOTlNo—Meare. eta and Smedley-2. Adjourned. COMMON COITNCIV Several petitions were' received asking for the repairing and paving of etreeta with tramway; also for the construction of grammar schools in the Twelfth ward. Referred. The Committee on Finance submitted a report with an ordinance attaebed makingan 'appropria tion of $1,231 15 to pay Crime, fdarkley for printing a digest of the city ordinances, acts of Assembly, and for re-arranging them in the libra ry of Councils. The ordinance was adopted. The Committee on Highways reported resolutions recommending the paving of EllswortyFairmount, Hope, and a number of +streets in various wards; also, an ordinance , to provide for the payment of road damages, cleansing the streets, !co. Mr. Miller presented a minority report from the same committee, stating their reasons why the or dinance should not be reported. Idr. Miller moved that it be laid on the table and printed. After a long disouislon the motion was agreed to. The ordinance authorising wioan of $d4 ,000, . for the extension of the water works at Fa i rmount, was considered at length. A vote was taken, but as a two-thirds vote is required for a bill of this character, ityras laid over., • A resolution was adopted that the CoMmittes on highways be 'requested to, communicate to Colin oils, at . th e Next meeting,lbe names of • persons having claims • against' the - chi Tor road damages, the amount of eaol(claim, and the date' of con firmation thereof, bY the Wirt:- - An ordinance was agreed to,' making an appro priation to the Highway Department to pay small 'A report was received from Mr. Winter, chair man of the special committee to whore was referred the subject of inquiring into the expediency of manufacturing gas out of other materials than those now ;wed, which states that, In pursuance of the resolution they have examined into the details of the appara tus and processes used in manufactu ring three different kinds of gas : first, from bitu minous coal ; second, from the distillation of wood; and third, from the distillation of rosin and some other hydro-carbon In cenjanctlim willithe vapor, operator, and hence called water=ges. These seve ral prooesses, in actual • operation, have been examined' by . the committee at the city works, and it was made evident that' each . can pre date illuminating gas of ezeellent quality, and that the choice between them must depend on the relative economy, convenience Red certainty. The committee are of opinion that the cost of gag produced froth wood is the Jewell', and that from rosin and steam the highest. The subject is now under investigation by a special- committee ap. pointed by the Board of Trastees. The report states that no change can- profitably he made at present in the manufacture of gee by, the managers of the Philadelphia gas works, and concludes with a resolution' asking that lhe committee be dis charged from the further consideration of the sub ject. The resolution was agreed to. The special committee to whom was referred the petition of Charles Dorris and other property owners on Tork street, through which water-pipe Is ordered to he laid, report that a majority of owners are not desirous of having it laid down at this time, and submitted an. ordinance that the work be suspended. Agreed to. An ordinance from Select Council making an ap propriation for fitting up the sheriff's office, and an ordinance as amended by the other Chamber rela tive to , the constreedlon of a culvert in the Nine teenth ward, were concurred in. The bill to pay a claim to Mr. M'Oonegal, pond. ipg for some time past in Councils, was coneureed in. The resolution from Select Council, relative to the possibility of constructing alootway over the bridge of the Pennsylvania Railroad; in process of erection over the Schuylkill, in the lower part of the city, was consorted in; a resolution rela tive to the surveyors anti regulators making cer tain returns.. An ordinanee from Select Council, authorising the Controllers of r ablio Schools to pay certain gee bills, was concurred in. The bill providing for the laying of water pipe on liorris and other streets wee agreed to. An ordinance authorising the Board of Contrel lers 'to cancel a lease made to them by George' Leace, reported by the School Committee and passed by Select Council, was concurred in. Ad journed. SUGING•DURISG AMPUTATION.—The Hemp- Shire (Massachusetts) Gazette of the 24th has following t " A little girl, less than two yeast old, daughter of Stephen Laughlin, had her foot caught under the wheel of a freight car, on .Friday, and smashed so badly that amputation wu necessary, which ampntation was performed Saturday morn ing, while the patient was under' the influence of chloroform. The foot was taken olf at the instep. Before the operation wascompleted, and while the doctor was etitehing the wound, the little unfortu nate opened her eyes, as she • lay upon the table, and being unconscious of pain or of the operation that was being :performed, commenced dogleg as cheerfully as if she was at play. It WAS a touch ing exhibition. The ear which ran over her foot was hit by another car loaded with coal, which some men were moving to the gas works. The little girl fell in attempting to get out of the way, and her foot rested ati one of the rails." A NEW raannotsran has been invented by M. Victor Beaumont, which to isid.to be' far superior to the mercurial thermometer. It consists of a strip of Meet and ode of bran: soldered , together, and bent in the formbf •Segthenttif *oink. Brass is afibotoiltedoe ae murk at Steel by the tempera ture; and hence, by graditatins the : roavaak a uts at the end of the compound awe, the variations of temperature are recorded. l I I EMA I niggrAttPENEM TZIOWZIWILT PRIM 1 1 1/11161lEt tO filablkibitiArr m t (9 0 111 4 104 Waft "• - spo •• - _ !);bet " 19.00 Twenty " (ta osafidfus)2o.oo T . weaty Cestal.aeoliw"" 110 Wien of fors laidiNCrvioros. a ems yr, AP•o4oo64lleltenb.ooo., . Ttis • g 0 e, 9prmitel!•, s* so ADM • fir ' • - • CA104011441A - Si r .-• , • luged Ali*:l4lo4 - .4ii tor, the Celiforais etesnism.. glits2-'=4l44emillfri ettimiatcisaiimiVinfeY . , bersarot: Peroka -106 fflei‘wbe-Podeskapa ` ii• balder logriii*of 4 10 Pi** - NirtiogiCilaiL Twat* collawthe /01- I#4I.OPPIIMPtv • ~wr else4tsPer real'att 7 ttkeq_Peeple Weieloolish enough to the stour..,-..N.4:•• TrthenejApri426. -• iiiicige:4l.l' the 'lnsane of 4.4 ll l4 lll ok o , ol44.4 _‘„o4...ilfutill)iitstp it to tto. :0 1:44i: th asse it t e t sideneyiike - g Lftealreigivbitimm.*zirlin nearly tWelie yea* ogee, tit egfrisnivkistatilttio rate and utchanged..isonvictionaiMthegient lieu° o! t he . day — ltiLt r he itteehlOr 6 tii Cus Ohici;artdp.2B, 1841 , kinetzsuaul ill ha r d Ador e -an anewer to your oommiugeation of the llth :instant,' that might have time for nature This 'was due to you, to myself, to the eubjeot, and perhaps tothe country. I have endeavored to consider the matter in Milts aspects and consequentant. - - The great aid emitangt question of slavery ex tension, in the. jadielel form it has maimed by . the Sots*: the Senate, *sit bears up . mi-my pialtion on the tench; the. misitssy. same lathe pretent'eata vasiyand the rejection of it bythe Ohio delegates Ito ithe National. Convention; tins !relation which itr: Vairlinrion maintains to the public—have all been deliberately considered, and I am brought to therennelasion that .I ought not to go beforertho dinfalo Convention .es a. candidate tor the Pres', 4teney,-: and,graigfully- iha. honor you hive done the the supreme:ln your kind neieand cOuddenea n ConnectiOn - with-that Aiigh Itesting upon the-principles of . . tlie ,Cous d tuljon, as they have , been jmflkeetii . eiilled; We Tree Zttitell,‘ by moderation, ' Welts* , and 6 ' 11=05, may prevent the ealegsion of slavery to, Abe Ireo territory lately annexed. Tiritpout tlse saastscat af Mut, siavPry can cissi lit 'Teriita ry than ir matt tan. bses Mei iya ; - Slaves are net property urbfre- ski y ,gre, , rogt,ma r ie, by ttie - asum ov w al la, The begioleittre4 erri sp to ry can exercise no point. WM& it nOteonfeired on it by not of Cengrese, • -..- • r, - • With the higheit cespoot t ' arn gratefully , obedient servant,' •-- • Jew, ALTliass. .To JamesAilltiggs, ReubmtHitebeoek; ble,.Samnel Wittiameon,ll. - C-Kingaley; Thomas I , Brown, rind Kelley, ,Tolin - pelemoter, and T. 1 G. Tureen., Zits. - ; -- • AnststroA7s-Bam.lB, AnnoAn.-11. • Gaillariat, in his last _letter . to the Nosirrier ags Atat. U;Atis, writes : "Among the MihgrMoirly .announced is that of Itiarlfutteli; of New NM*, -with the nu ll* de Porten:, The writrquis falnuelf younger than Ws intended,rrho must hays inspired her lover.crith a profound q.egerd to enable him' to ovens:Me the resisteueeif his mother, a highly atistoeratic lady, who said, at the tiaae,theinarriage of alt. de._Moray with this mule Mfas: flatten, was talked-ef, that she Could' not tiantilistand- he* a gatit/emen could stoop to: Marry thedirmpterti a:trader in silks and ,calicoes.' The, 04 4,41 y, bp," pot, lolwavah much right to . feel io prend,:for her mother was a !temp 'stress, and her- hnehand'e fisidly.dates its nohnity but a hundred - lean! ago. " - - - ' . They talk, also, et the aparosehing marriage of "another Amerioan 'lady,' Miss Phalan, with a count - nusigitis of the lanbourg Bt. Gerinain. The rieU npeldirmai .of the - . Vatted Btatea are fascinated with Atka. Nobility„ the, .only thing they Cannot - obtain - there, has for there the attrac tion of forbiddes fralt.'? L. --• t • •:1-• feern li - titivated end Im prisoned at this Smith Po iltegnaveited polygamy; he bad- thirteen ilexes':: The 'theagister,of. the jailor, wiles* hoepiteli .the inteitiable. polygamist was 'enjoying while iiiiitinettiiCintlievedhim Inas -66kt,, pitkd'gi®; • love. hint, -Opented'iliii4rieou doors, dolt, pithadd • beaareelhie poazteenth wife. Attar eight days ut detuestio bliss, thahus band disappearott,'sad lettnatther kstee nor Isney bobiaa. isr.l4-RairroirgrvalGebiiretiptitrn.;- deacorlptlop ot Ida • tasclastiutTema: zealut !thou litod„;,ho Was recoOttier a,village tiveru , by a matt Who' thought: of the' reward offered, and set about prepari als eons :tor the 'victim' in order so-s.ostit. ewe Into:his breast, h. made hie as qualntanee, invited him `tti'llitrmson, and then Went (OW prosier* legal isestietaride:' , Whin he re • turned, hishonte, wsedeserted atike_by his intended prey and his own wile, whom Iverson had lad. astray: - K iiiiikthed man suggests that & proper, 'though a terribly severe, pnaishaient;weold be to compel this polygamist to live with hie fifteen wives at onott." ' Tan SPA./Olfr4ezrzzit.—The following is pub lished in several of the jonniale as from a letter from Hamburg;, ; ".t Spanish gentleman, one of the-boldest players overseen, keeps the bankers at the gaming tables. is thetamostalarna. Re plays the • maximum stake nearly every time, and has, so fir, - won 1.500,000 f. - One of the dliectois of the bank has returned from Paris ; bringing a rum Of two Minh/1M to increase- the- resources of the hank. Immediately after his arrival a notice was posted np' at the °tinsel; stating that the bank at rouge-et-noir would, for the future, consist of 100,- 000t.,-instead of goo,ooot, and that the maximum stake for each player would bo 12,0001.; insieed of 10,0001' People go in crowds from Prankfortto wit ness the daring and coolness of this intrepid game ster, who braves such a formidable bank, and has given his word as a Castilian that he wilt play till he has ruined it or been-ruined himself?' la"' Adele illaye, aged-fifty-three, formerly pro minent in the fashionable circles of Faris society, committed suicide a couple of weeks ago in a - garret in Faris. She told one of her friends' Ai - Would not melee use of a rope, like the rabble, but with great care she dressed herself in her richest clothes, and constructed a cord from silk - ribbons, with which she hanged herself. She left a letter re questing that her crucifix, ring; and Miniature of her mother be hurled with her, and the last re queit af this very Frenehy "Travista" was com plied with.= kREPARID TOR Aceizesevs.—A gentleman in this city, who takes an occasional driveswith his family, always goes provided - with powder and ball to shoot his horse in the event of a runaway. This ie a singular,lnt certainly a very wise, precaution. Ile got the idea from a gentleman re siding a few miles mita' New York, who, driving home one night last summer, with hie wife and two children in the carriage, wee placed in imminent danger by as unmanageable horse, which had taken fright at a lantern on the roadside. In attempting to hold the affrighted animal tha. lines broke, and the horse dashed off at a break-meek speed. Fortu netely, the gentleman bethought himself of a re volver in his - side pocket, and; drawing it, shot the horse through the' head. The animal staggered and fell. The occupants of the. carriage worn thrown out, bat escaped without terioua Injury.— Lola ante Courier. Toe Cow DISTRIIPIIIC Iw MASSACRIISETTS —Thu oommisaionera appointed to examine' into rho causes of the epidemic that is now . prevailing among the cattle in the Bay State, in pursuing theirinvestigations, found one farmer who had lost eleven cows by pneumonia. The lungs of two of the animals were found to be diseased. Tho progress of the disease is so insidious that the owner stoutly 'declares that the cow has not been sick. The whole stock 'of another you, farmer —eighteen head—bad to be sacrificed, comprising very tine animals. In every herd of cattle visited, the disease was found. Ten thousand dollars were appropriated by the Legislature for the extermina tion of the disease; on Wednesday last, this sum hail been exhausted, and one hundred fresh eases were reported. The greatest alarm naturally pre ' rails throughout the grazing country. The malady is as infections as email-pox. NARROW ESCAPE or FAYRTYR MCVNLVE74.— On Friday last, Fayette McMullen, ex-State Sena tor. ex-member of Congress, and ex-Governor of Washington Territory, met with a very narrow escape from death. It appears that he was riding on horseback, and on approaching the railroad neat Marion, discovered the train was near qt hand, and miming very rapidly. Re at once checked his horse; but the animal becoming frightened dashed off,' and reached the track, where the road crosses, at the very moment the appreaohing train got to that point. The horse was run over and instantly killed, and McMullen thrown on the cow-catcher, where he remained for some moments, until the engineer was able to reach him, and succeeded in dragg ing him on the i engine, the train all the while being n rapid motion ! The moat singular part of the whole transaction was the fact that the Governor was not injured ' in the slightest degree.—Lynehdarg Varginran, April 23. Tea RAILROAD COLLISION—TAE GRAND TIME Shags-C;.—The Detroit Advertiser of the 24th loatant says that the accident on the Grand Trunk proves to have been rather more serious than was at first reported, though the loss of life was happily not great. " It seems that the construction train was off its time, and the conductor was endeavo ring, by running fast, to reach Stratford before the down freight should leave. The two met at the curve, eosin under a full head of steam. The en ginee, tenders, and `several ears were entirelyde molished, and, besides the man killed - outright, twelve others were more or less injured: The con ductor of the gravel train has not been seen since, and it is presumed he has fled to avoid censure, if not the punishment that his recklessness would be likely to draw upon him. _ . Tan new bleachiry at Leilston, Me.,is the only concern of the kind m the State ; it wil turn over viz tone of cloth every day. The quantity of drugs used is immense. The fdassaolnutetts Agricultural Fair, which was to beheld next September at Springfield, Masa., is to be abandoned on account of the cattle disease. Owners of valuable stook do not 'wish to expose them. A Miss User Smoor, of Kanawha, Virginia, while counting some money in the house of a rela tive, ono day last weelt, was suddenly seized from behind and ohoked • until she wee insensible, and was then robbed of $443 in $2O gold pions. A negro named Bill hem helm recopitted ita,one of the perpetrators. Tat LAISCIEWI' aranbitidn of any one bank in the United States is that of ths.Oititens' Bank, New OttnanN. $5,535.000. Others in that city bare large Issues, viz Bank of Louisiana, $1,00,000; tate Bank, $2,/43,0011; Penal 0 tusk 044000.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers