• i.•" , •;„ ~..•1 !.,'!, ' -'' - ~'.• : L . --:- ' - '.- ,_ . , _, ' ..: . , ; . 4 . 0,•: , .3X -- • 4_ , „,... , ,-;:_....._-_ . .. ~ _ ~-4.,,_:-11.- -,,,,,54„r , . . Ylat, I r • -''''' - - AitirvAe'-sr, '4 ,, ;•-• - ••!. - f..o. - • . /.: , ... 1- .1.4... - 4:1 ,. .N.,.512 - '..4m,r - A4 . .6- , ...n4±:,, ~ ~ - - „ 1,r,:54.7 - ,:a ,, ,1i., , ,x, A„,,,,,, ~ -; -,-;:.- -,,.- .' .. 1 : - -,,..2 , :„...-„, ~_p,,y 1L ,1 16 - f 4, iiiitoiane7. -- . 11 - 101:01M10. = '!:,,..,--.- ,•:::,-i- -- - • , I, , ~..:j.,-,, l_,J , ~,,,,,:._.• i -,,, d, ,=•,'- • I '':".' ' , s , -- •- :;-...:-, ' 1 ~.7,.,•,:,,,,, :F, , !..,'.,- c Jr; ~,,V,,,,y, -..• . :1 , 7 .., olonnr , -i,, , ,. ,„,-: .2- ~,,-c,--- -- ..,.•,... ~:._.,,:,,,,. I, . , , ~,,, 1 „., „.. , q5",t. , ./¢#4,/,4e ~,,.?,_ ~,:e4. 1 ., ~2, ; . ‘ „,.. ~, _,,--. ~..., : , ,, •,,, .. 4,1., . ... 4 :14 ,-,,, -L ,, t- ~ , '4 ., t,-,,,t, - ...-..., , , .. CA 40 ... . „ .nfit:Lifilwril,,,. : .: Fu t .( - • ~; 7 1, • H ; ,„_,,., p. , b+, 1 .i .: ,k• 1 . - ~.', ": 10 ' 1 ' • A - re•APc.t.44_, ~ •,, -,,' ''''', - 'l'V:-'' ,- 7 7 9,,T,K7, - ,.7, - ,,,V.,.1 :"...:i..., , , - ,i,;, - ,R1. - , 1 ~,,, -, - . 4 . , - 7 .=-,-, =- , F.,: . •,• Krit';`4 , 44. - It ..q3,.. ' :- 4,. % . ,s.,v , ~,,,, ~,,,...,-,, :4 -- ;,,ii.,,,k./:41;,, i ~,,,,i i V.l . ' -,,,- 1 - ;-•- , t'l , '' ! 7 1 ,4 1 4 : l ' u l f, 1 1- - i ;'.:?1: 1;: ' ' .;...14 ''''• ark '' .: Iviiimkak , :q , 01: - 41; ,, - . . -1 :5-? , .; t. -...= , ' ,, ; :-,--- .:1 , '...F - `, k ce i ;... iaMx.-e-T4 ,,, 004 •T':: 4, ' , `• - '''''''''''' -N "it, L '''._ll.''' ,:'. t` , ;,,:1!., 11 nn \ „,_ _ ..Dii ~,, ll •.‘.-:', :•,,,• . 1,.......,, Mlllls ol , l o llo# °- ,k"M . ,, , 1 - ,1. -,,, j; .-,, , , , e,== ~, ,',. 4,1 --- . , ''' -14) ' 47 " Y .'''• • - •0. , -° , - tr.A.l''' "•'"1-iiiii,14111. 1 ,111_4_,41#44144., .',.:,,,,{- ~ , 4 „, , r,",, - .7 , -- ',l ~ , , , ,a ~....;, • ,,,., - 17.,:r ~, • ,,,,,,,,r, . ...:.„ ~ „'4: ,, ' ,-,,,, , 5,,r'5,,,a, :',' . .-t• _, ~ :-,- ~ , , 1at.. ^1 141 . ,.._ 4 111 4. 1 . 111 !.. 11, .-. -P . '‘,; . ' ;: •;,t':;'_ , , , ,'..- -, , . . , ~ ~ , ..'••;-' ,• , • • • ••• : i ,• ~. '-' 1 414 11 0 14 .--;-- ... ', l rek i ldit f -, -,-, 4 ..-- .!!!), , t 1- fV . :- T . -,-;''' Y :-:!,-,-;' ~ -...:', ~: T r , . ..;:f. '. ' ' iovl giveur - - -....-:-. -, ,:-.1: - m...,'., , ...,,i - g-dorisolioNartiaisi•,-. , . , --A , ': , ...k. - -74"-,?..1.,.. z .t...7, : ::-.! - , :ij4 - ,:k71 - -.20 , ... , .., - ,Wv.„,: „1 .! - ,,,t ,, rii-;; , : - /p1, , •=.0,..4,1 , :l •,-1,1 , ,,r,m1. ...._•.,_,.. , • • • perignis , „„. • "•.; 7." . • Or , 0.14171 Op itt ist4l ' :10114.1: —••';:=0‘ - R ?!t 14'4 'f':111'717:1111101" 0* is* irirsaikiiiwcatidorlit air oßiliiikiat4 . 11 0 0 ,1. 01:41iii;Wall CUSTOItEII = • fa 4 •1 0. *4 0 4 440 4 i' ,4 4 1111 P: 41 tt slue onfiarY %Main% itirria tarn prirOvitioire tho Me* , 41 " 44 ,r 4 llrST4 w lir ‘-! • , , ‘ 4,44;6 ; :i 4 iiii . 1 4d , (km*4oo6o°o,o:' stfiruoi imr4Tir AND,41491t *?.'3Wli.X.W.Bl4.ti;‘:&r.SON„‘i t-ioTant - ' tiiiiiii,'ilin - iTt' - :ligb'ijgiiiiieii.t - .:.'."9. - :", ,' ..•.`f :',,' : • ~'=;:-.. -,,,,., • fl --;--.."..'.'•---:‘,_.-,•,. -, i ' ''' I. IIIIO2.34ND I VAOTOBS ' . .EiaIfiVENTIA 'AND OilE, STlttrt STS. ',,; _ .„ _ BUY iwy. ; oift)LiDilf iitati:110001 . 411. L ' . LlNoinar, , woolp, ..v . NicuoLs:% - ' • 41,6 ; 41,i) ; ortr-soritvw , STORE. 'AI+WeAIOIOI,I IOI, 4NETO. ntatiti wrong,: Lilicouir; WOOD, WIOROYEL AMR! PIANO FLOC BRO. its, WRITE, , ~ • . itEPTlali4 Rm. RIL ,. : _. , : . 7 ....,.;',:L-, , -„ : 1 . , , . 1 err H zottAYS -, f r l * - ,ii-,v7.,' Bt ., ~--Innurnivr. ,• ~ : --- 3)i-:-,.-, . rg!ir, 4, ,- rgic . b/LPP. , ,-. ~ 0-4 Anicto:ig.,7, 3 ,-sOr I` . 'OE 0A118*...,..,,, I".oflff'V7l ''''l,-„ ,i10,118'41.07:6;.;&:N,/..', ,-...i.'-',"54,%- laiiitti..,i!,, .....;.; - ' imitiii,: , i-- i ~ - • • ' Lleal t al li torreitAM. - joilt- 'gee , i''ltiii 4 T B '. " iinfirr 881"‘ 4;iii* _ _ FIRMA lon cithistblut Street; _ .11aeu M VIVO And Madill a Za f 40.4 ! i Tr lna".l 110:114. rig 01111,W., 914 0M18T " ' ' :e i kitts at Nir l Ylerairg t ' s • - 7,407#0. „- *366 ititorrteiratitrAB6o CARPET , ;`-;WAX=i3OP . 1 1-IWit Asoim ottani' snow, lb. *Az ", MING lIMPORT#TION Of tit harrala Pro, ItY , . • • • trilriror attsi awricilm4 l ,o l ; i 14ftiass 1 : 41 0 1 0s gni sokierdi if ..a‘morer,Ostirt. Oil Awn Skins. ki) . Alo; of atiiiiMe• el olai_ aster , 0000 A, MATTINNOS. 7 `.l . rU 44ENItO I. I 111 99, 4 1.6 . lizosau>4;,oo,l-, 14,0406.11i-Ai.a**;';#l4lPo4l4--1% iazditag w. HILL , ' r-luNuomMtVaititreAkit:P t-q`in wmuitiotisai,l4.4-Ifolitit THUM Brawn', 114ri,‘mn) „,; tirPorvaii - A; , -No. 4111 X R I ST , , STRANT : , jthitmaertrltEMlL, titi; Joe. •isatais tislje,lllll.' , WOOL, APIALMASP2V434—: . . • --. rosemetlalbArfigioo o ; seislit. ll lll._'Di, • immasefaritisrears* ea," MO, Aigg, , -77:1111- "*" • • - • ; '4:3EAS=.I7EXTTYBE WORKS. WAIMEit• = MISKEY• & MERRX/44 ,OWIBI'NFT:STRIgIyr, t 1 0 ,1,1 F 3 4 ,: NVAEWER,f'RECIr; ce..,";" . Ito; 'MIA/Qum-A ,Pir ~WfOliolm4Mkrlefoiistlii °el * , 5!. - -Plowzrai Ike., 414 And that bins sail 'semi eta* emittlimi olieplastaswia es tWorelit siliasassis retteros, designed AlilrfibsamitAtibldr stomp Pla. 1 17 10 4 1 ,40A.OWAT.,• 1 1 11 1• 1111 4 6111110 9nallnititen, 4:.4o l lloA l ,94statidiandev Pe 4 !41 1 ,4 1 ilitg$0 0 .0 1 14 1 04#0 1 41; ; 1.: Obi; SIieVia.PLATIAKITARE•,•;' - • `• i ns de ig44 1 • 40 2,.._"4 41 f , i1i" Ito* ti • ••••- , • • TOW th=9looo l ' lAsurstm, EMI ...eou),AND OMR* ' ' `•tatV TVs I t Oirispr ipalllito Timms. •li s i:;, ,, „infeeptgArit.:4,itioss. ~ f ~j O TI~ft3MPbON. - 001LartiNTO.,0420 liimuiranki4Tit made ?CI 61M1 I .** o4 #f *l4 o,l l,assivowq 4 clitibt , 14; - mAliteiagdmiopitions tlii citi 140 volislied ‘MOC:VO4 , g O ,FIiTi s A 00•JI 1, . , ,--. •,,C Vtittift,g44o,o/ ' ' ‘ j ''', ' ; •,','-''' , - E - 14, IS • _-' • , - ' ^.. . , '"' '''.., ' : . 11) ' i '* '':: ; r:-.; : -- ';' , I mi' •' " '''it&ii o ioo.o 6 o_,,___, ~ . , ' 'i•;`'-,.4''':L'';--- 41111. 1& 10 A300 ,- 03: 7 04 1 M—willAui , , ~ . - ', l'.Vikiis t l, ,i!::4 - :` ,. ' , . -1 ~.. ',l,- iggsvailath4;:: ,i ' . •,. A„~,iner erl4: ' - 4,451?' , 1 `. 4 .14/ . l.,i ' ; * . , ,4 i'''' . l''' ' ' r- -L'' • -. .o"t`ifk , ;•C `,1...,'..,;,.....1- - / 4d... r~tori4tvuui: ; :,I:4htri6".:;:-:..E40 - I),* 'k':::::_tiioko , *o*/** ,, , • ' , r• ,c.;; .tr;, • --. *4l itie • : ' 2 .',WAREttiptIOM • ,1r 4 .3e . glikoo 7 44l.sl7rtaTßA l EW: MOO . nea /443:4' s. - 011 Ted llob4' jat a g 1.; OA 01),101101/* -!• 58P.47,'1 1 44444',4.:PuT0U11i60P1, Na. 33.• Wtixs tWooIALENs I :,;hicILTA*4/NE & BACON. ..0•484. CONSTNITT, $l./LtitT, TOWtkieillt6 iMilnit, teOtitimi Mtn& Of 7n ll li "? 1 " '/" lialtea It! 111. Whist alui 4eiiiiiiTtede:miuss 1414 ir• the toMowiag roiWeir ‘4 1 1:441604 , ikett , ,Inmigs'aisd That tuck: lfaKfEeT tundary , Or - 11 4.*.Y ;!IfMM,°!,,fo4tm•a. aiii);l4: sad id DOESKINS. OASSINLEILES. DAN' _traral „ 1 4 1 4 " 1 ' DOES. awns us mum!, MAUL SILK SATINS, GO:ZION_IiAttt 7,I 4:I II 4 O rISU4 1 ,510 (0 8, *ACM- via P t iNOT BILE. MISTINOS, am: Ica /Of : 434,tiiiirabi: firma. ' • - • - L riv „ ' ' ' , 00OFFIN; & Darby the hseoh• a•nrtas AMRIGQ 00.DT3 1it4 6 4 4 Mikis aind , ilk Ir.* vsztor • ' N . PII I* . 1 1.I ' AF T /WM Ornallg• )44 1 4. 0 4 1) r tArii) 'BROWN , 11111111TIKOn Agaitiuies.;itip ' osmannum - 111(11 . 31yANJ 711LIPZA !TlFi l tli r g . ; ll4 " l4l o l4 4 4' .""Al"a ll a trtnim monis. ' TONADIte. AND PANOY CIAMBIMEREe. ILA= AIM MIXED DOll6l. 114,2 4 1/iirri adolanilt. z * * l o/ .11 A1 11 ) SHOES. TAPREI. 0 67 4 0 1 1 109* Al9;7( 1 /94, 1 Als iwn AHD, EiNTWHNIADS :BOOTS, AND_ SHOES, Ago: ss*aidAss`Mm4a rr OREN/. 044 e • , -11$11.41iLizz••• Lovics; R - z rN.I4 46 1#00! AID aft I la** &hut PHILADELPHIA. OFPOCrge sad sacniivofk47•4444#o,..or RIX Ow* 0* jiktiam!**-PRYMYrimit *OW& 10 . 4 4, ,, 641 , 44 44 _,MOtr , a 'water% bwo „ VZBItELLAS. 811: 61 rPE,14,'&, VF-414INER. " MB R Fa i c AL - , ammo pita% NANu,PACIIIREBar , 'stoma ;,,_lll , oUBl3o.ltUßN,lloififfo GOODS. rim:aunt iitaranitifieroßs, , . mo, beriria OillO*B' GOO Ail) iMititlAello. is bloat Vanity. ristratraularrnsta, van lurid m iireadias C 1111416 and Matting. WILI4AM • YARNALIA3 • 1101JBEIUMSEILNG BT6IIL , ssre..i.sii - enthantirr *roam - • Asiiraq'at Pim Arta. „. , . 43: 1 T.4-g.Y - 4N;olll ,o tx's BOAR'S HEAD • apt -06D • COTTON. ownioit. ever =podia oik asisotbfkilis, sod staatieity. kw *mobs* of hold .607417.1111'. i ifr t altßA/VT/D. od • Ws' eiii4 a r tiv On” fig i teltit thim SIV P -11 11W1U011; . Megilli • ! :Y. • ckevityllLLX. miOsestOtesr•York; - • . J. B. .ROWIELL, - , • -- -"Asrat for il- rum k. 1:701115' bY,WIlft! - "MACHINE MOANS sistitit," •• • Mbri-ine 10 4 i$D8`AND k4I:IA - LpEtk, , • MOI ` guns ienuprr. ~‘ re isole.4oneigotreiuodlimmet , VENETIAN 13 , 1.1.NDS AJID ,• I FXN.I:HtiNV • SIIAIJES. ,414.1 — arioti.voig iiii%!acatratint la tio at** i•tom;01,, IL•PabillS immintlitdindod Is. , TRUSS. , ~ ;.,„_-^ MINDIA'S. • 014.31412$ Plills44o6l ‘ &MA far," r aruuL sibtl•las pmsc - z- - ,IMPERIAL • , - ::-:: 0 RA,II.I!A-42VN E. rim 'fDE Inge** co.. gfEINAY. PROM • Setniti iaisilieestsbli lintionsilunseneut tbe sonar,. ' Tads' fini "Wan AGNII; • erigen• inns to Piet tr ee site Wk / to th e bed tIIDION 01 •Irosi," now, Ted tits , mint in oinsitgL 1 0 Is ieeradriii..4! •A , 4; , ' 7 ' r ligil* , . . • . sogias '"" ritir il O w . iw tedaug mftli""esitn : ? e ll I 1 l E attett , s • , We , 4 , , , i; • tVir l Att t at i go kti t.t _ rd. —A. ‘ W M ii . r° 1711 . 2ia i ".. 1 1,7, af. " I, *. i „, g 4. , Arafteitt , ork.. t , :—.•,,.• - -,,TF-.ij,4tjiiilj"&'Diuu. "i;ft• - ` . r':.% - •10i11.1(67 Wiest. 1 tillr ' XXIStjr4.O4APHY, EARLY . BIIJI . AR 1 , C9 " ! " bist ' it 6 TL I VIATON, 131 iii;i,illi fin', is MA tweet • a e Muth. r&priA: I...:MELON.—A should Itigariatuotoriert• it ill 11 " 4 "V i e lb° .•d in *plat 4vor • r pie& Pot sale by NW! . 06110. 8111- ' - - ,s 4; war & sort. • • a" , woliP444 l o, l hiiia•94 X AAXET Bout,. - above Ninth.' VII I If• upt*_, g OO - ,9RANGE OAR ' • • 7fi1i:1106 4 134 Xig P pat i . eigll4l ,„ • sisolt• wilititloiroifroter stttr bloolii. t. frog , 41 ; 1 4. ' li t , plc ciml_av; _ „ .490.10.10g1i5 , . _ 61; MEE nitp,soons JOBBER/. S- • ''• 'JOSHUA 14.,.13A1.1.11. NO. .QlB, MARKET ATTENTION A lIITPERM'ABBODTMENT OF , • STELT.A, -18HAWI..$; PAINTED AND BRO9MB JAORDEBB. Ia Dint mid Colonel Centred, - BLADE .DB WOE . BRAWIA • .', MODE DE JAIME SHAWLS. • „BLACK CADMIdgiID,RBANYLE, MODE CARRIERS SHAWLS, " ' PRINTED OAREMERE BRAWLS: '!BLACK TElBirt - - MODE TBABET REAWLD. BLACK RIBBON,4I,OtIND BRAWLS. MODE RIBBON-BOUND BRAWLS. - BLACK SILK FRINGED BRAWLS, DODGE RATIICRA'IMPMEHAWLO: BLACK CAREMEM'E LONG SHAWLS, . ,—ELACK VILEST LONG lELAWI.O. BROOKE LONG SIAMI4I;.; ' • DRocgs eflattAtitibi4wi,s, r, • SEIAWLIL From the ma , ,ATIOTION SAT.,ES n FAR ,BELOW.41111:00eX OF IMPORTATION.' frifißßY;: PRIORI • it CO. ", „. . : -- :::*4lls.4l4lttritT . RITEBE Ts lIRPOWIIIIII AVID /OURS arr . 01,01411,,06.811IkfittEir; Ito., Him now on hapi a large and' etell-xeleeted iibeek, which thew fere, 'militia to era et the lowest market rrierts.e 3 b 3- 4 4 , . . w. LITT.LE & CO.. BlL'lt' *00.1213. VP-11 26 "EMIT 'MEM J. W. ataiiiiSUNS. ' lit Nujuarrornarr. Are now OPPOIM *Or BfRINO sTvoir Qi 000DS • " aftem•to • ME WEA. R . in.wolitu be laird w lru afoortiant or 01,0146,DiMINEINO, GS. ha MCOLINTOOIe, (RANT, 00., LKPORTIOIB AIM IirEOLLOIALM DELLEAD Lit i ertorne 6mile:um imam% , TRIMMINGS. santAluarr insmer, (Up MOM) i Ara ow ovenlneeheir eerier Ittoek, to ,hid' they le rite the attention of thetratle. ' ' fes4 113= WM. 8.-141'.8WART AND reaps OF BILK v • • • AND 'FANCY DRAW_WM 800 MADNT HUM.: jive BM Dia stpti.azia uoturtanuf reasiDtilig kialiti Mar usa for osolutODDDiat t ii , l‘lll WAR- . Ze li Meitil t ZElTraitir ?az' kid.:Etki - XILS4t O N . AiSCA,L Y. ' e r 11, ii ) 11 1 1 , • osigoadatottalowp mirth. . p , - zarrOprilm a *xi vosimm . ? ...: Ananias - SKIL"' ~ ~ lip, _ ••_.. thew , . 600 4 riClrlio AtiretAr Jo Jill itu. ilkdr retw i ls , ihi 64° Vilt i lLlO g i r• to WI pciand,l64l.tlell DAM. , si43.o4sa. 1880.- • itairkiutt - .411. thowisioN. Ie v9P I7r ITWAII4 Alll4 W ; 4 11WIZIMAX. Y. AI!1} , AL , S. *OW), maiteiit umponirii - sisa Wholesale Dealers is •P , ItrY .• ,(31. .0 4:1_.1). , ta-aa rick 299 1114110.31 T, ,Wtriers. AtigTl.E. & . ~ . „„. , . - , . -. • •-D,IoVEIGH. . —. ,IM/o,ll7fliti! ' step .10,BBERM ...DRY 4100DS. ' - N0.'211 ~ Kilian AITRILHT. Above 'MIN, . MINI* A a rgaitliTAPYl l lo , '', )61114.111L7113a; 100611 , 4 21 4 111 P. . iittLADIMPVIA. VIT#I4.N., JONES,' 4, 00. W t lllo4Will Mount AND DON:EST/0 DAT. ' , 0, ODI3 . 140 MARUT =ma.' waW Gomm Nointng irrsyy day for • -. OUT AftlY MAX TRAM& ,SIELAPIGH, RUE. a Co.. ' ' lowtfono of 111116114 • ' war/11'4cm% . 'JON, and EMB.FLOIDISRIZO. . . , . , ,NO.lll KARIM 13TAFXsT. sir Our potent stook, eineeted in the beet Eninemin - ALszkite, by oentelvee, is the mast (template 'we have eat ONTO; : • tin-ete pHILADELPHIA ;WARMING AND VENTILATING. WAR HOUSE. NSW. OAS-CONSUMING CONE' FURNACE. - Tim S bia• sussi . been In sun In this disc ansipit plots oftho Count, Stens, and, sifter four nearsthyNovo mood to Lit siuts itYSOUSi eeoo4. Rego of hush ass 4 moot POWERFUL 1-IEATRES „. ssvot won, ea imadrois of Terolllßool will prom NU sad Oh Show at • ARNOLD & „WILSON'S. lot! Off&Iff7EVIT STREET, B. tikes. - , ' ' , mblf-dcwiln ENAMELLED ' .w.m • • 'SLATE MANTELS, Mastifeedured from Penneylmmo Hisie Stone, and onnarrifed_ond nurldnined innitanna as molest and most rimlegyoMen..elpetueb. Peril antieue.Menne, end other amnions ?derbies.' They are highly polished, will sot stein at dinaolOr by Mb Oidt 4 or Smoke, are OM tones sis strong as marble , and an sold much Mueller, Thar have been used In this Country for the test artaireand in Europe for the last forty years, with Inermsed satafttottom , ArehAeoui, milder'. and ail In want ormantate. should not fail to examine them. Maim- Notared and tomb by ARNOLD do WILSON, , . , ant° CHESTNUT STREET, • B. FIL am TOVIILLt BOJO fs • Philadelphia. mtill-slew • COOKING RANGES. OILILSON'II PATENT ELEVATED DOUBLE-OVEN COOKING RANGE. Something new sod diaidedir the but and r7t corn- Oda Zookapr Range over offered to the Yubitl, war !Wed to give sitimation. in an oases. Cat and roe 1 "' _ RN Otp & WILSON * , 1010 CHESTNUT STREET. H. frf Pll LT W LZ.. Sep't. rahti-mtwim MACHINE SEWING SILK, Warranted the beet article for SEWING MACHINES. Per sale by the Manufacturer, at the LOWEST B. 11001ABY & 00N, No. %It *ARREST STREET, PHILADELPHIA, rit ARTIN . & QUAYLE'S' rimnpNv t , inern FJANOY 000D11 US RALIC i UT - *WM Warn& MO. nm heed iii;rfourairry I.llmPfnilot • &IVY. WELLS .OLE ED AT A LOW pqr so p i ttert Vanes. Adams 0011410. ' fi!. sks—r44loo4l.". Br:d iNG MACHINES which tem- AJW . plidatraivevoitregludirli her, r i : boat 6. omeen - Affroiri hAi!•• *root ••• try a ,AXlll4olE—Oround pare in Oil go . PaZdiflatk &SUVA% '' . ~` ''' :' * w ! l' rq *-* '. O .:* -."? *l. r, M i t% \' c i f /y. .. ~ .. , .,.. ~.! , 0 f,- f i t , ~ ~ 1 ,, , ‘=4:==ze )1 .; 1,....:,,,. r. ,..,... 4 . • ••=.= ', i :f . , ~= ====="=••/.. :. y.:=l' e i .;., t . , ,',. r . ' ' . , ''''-'-'-'' ' "tq il / 4 .•\N S4 A li/ 1/ 4 '.;A t _4l;# l e e . _, , _ ' , . .., • . ~ _.,.., ..., . . ~.. i-. -,-,-..--- ...: ~„„---- -, , , ---,,,itti .....-,.., y. , .". to yi !-- ' - •,: , , ,,...,.1' . : Id :, , -, , , ~.. . r , . . . . -. . --- - - - - ' ' ' 'A '' 4 ' ~' • i exi - 4•„..::: - 4 , '- . - . - .41K ..'-- . :.- —— ' • =t - - , - " '‘,..,- Z114,,,, --: - '.. ___ -, --1 .„ .-- -• --0_ * f ik :-.-t•: -- ,.' .- 1 . t:,- _,,,-,. i 1 r 4 l _I 11 .- ~, , „ a ,„d Ft ~... k ~. . • . • '4 4--- : =*---_---="-, filVii N - .....L.-..r , ......• - , , r-T -' 11.4, Lit =. t . " ..- "7 .t.• ^ .':: ') ' '''-'.-= , .. - Jrs ---. ....., = - ' , "l r ir ' -. 17,_ , '_'' -„. . lOC I' , ~........"----- --'--'" - 7... , - -- .7.•f0;- - -;.,V.r...z..1, -- % .• • ', ,- . v.csa:aua.-• • . .4,151E.,...-e , _,:,--F , ~, - - . 7 , ...,7 - , ...„. ---- -. • . :7 t ( ,• i ‘ , 501 , ,,, ,, , ct. '. t,,,,, 7 -4„,.. ,:ZeiallL t, , f , tr.... 7 -, --...----'-` ~ ...,--. . ~, , ~ - I ' ,' •' -.-% I;i'i :':-!. 1". ::' '•'- - ~ 1 ': - .i le .: :;••'•;,..,:r• - ;:' 1 14 . ~• . • ~„,,.. -'• '''-'•- ."" ' ' `••••24:: . , '•' j•••',"*" '.l ".•. . — - . , .... HL DEU W 4 ~;s. Eind rc "BT. TOE riann or. ToWitmoll4,li We, te•daY, Ong. With pleimmtre; Of the clearest earthly- treeing* - ' U - . - . ; ,,t.yey in n, boozy "mal pod , e a wg t a y ingfrera sense of duty! , ' bleat inth Waal . • Of the person end the mind. .3 , `' 'With a form of grace the rareati - ) She possessed a race thet fat reet,", , nd with luer• in big eyes , the beaming of the wain the nol-exalung igatught% • ' 11 '1 Lends in glory to the okies. • In a cottage She wag „ Ii peot the tower of toiling ;, •_ 5 not a sorrow matted the hour," • • Rritilirti n alt i oTlAlV , Al4° .er h . Seemed to bloom with felt gonad thir cottage birdiders To compote With Hatt singing; 37 • • But with efforts all in vain; ',And their feather °Towne would ittisben, -As this turned their heads to listed • To the sweetnesni of bireirsin. All the city girls eschewing, To the cocain wentd-woonts One who thogght Ito there would try ) . - He had never reit it mission - For the Luton-111Ni of fidnioni • Whieh on wines of folly fly ; • 80 , . had heard of lotroly Hats. And bad reasons very Weighty Fora visit to her oot: "Be dented give direction To the How of her affootlon, ' That its coulee might blame his lot. flail at Tower Hall. hie regnant " P i g Vitra Iny r claimant . That ohs wbispe o I t• l it' a yiiiell ever Clothe at. Tower Will. and never annals suit oleswhero, I will,marry you. no other, Ami will leave my home, arid mothir. which ray heart will hot forbid. • When he pledged himself to dolt , (Well we gnaw Abell never rue tit. hemp, kw:4ON did. 0 • A complete and will-assorteli stook' of timing egill Summer Clothini-how on hand, unsurpassed is *4310 and workmanship, to which the, attention of !to _delll4 andretail bayeis ts invited; at t • TfriTER HALL, bl B MARKET St., Philadelphia:..": SENN/MT* OS.: r . L1:TA.11;11SY (10011$. , WP. CADAPS.P.LL; • • NO.. ift4 CHESTNUT STREET. I - .SPRING bLOAHp • AND MANTILLAS , riPw OPENING DAII,4IG` ; Eisibmeine ell the NEWEST 81114343 and qi44114, !defend:, at the LOWESi PRICES. 6114:161 LADIES' DRESS TRIMMINGS. • NEW GOODS: Al! the new styles now open, and ooniterttlt reeelvlne every novelty. PLAITED CORDS, ALL COLOR& DENSE KNITTING BALLS. SPESHOIDERED CUSHIONS. supßolpziotp ppgrEN3. BEST .QUALITY , SHETLAND WOOL. GILT BRAIDS, TASSELS, AND COWL, RA.PSON'S , TRTMIHINGS 4D F,Pit*'s.ro9v,- CORNER OP EIGHTH AtID onitny PRlErrt stal-sm LADIES I REMEMBER THE CHEAP - D-Ooode Store of S. V. R. 111124TRR:No. 40 South S ECOND Street. Opening, this day, egtz i el D r steles of Bummer Silks, of so: pints. 4t rk lOW OPEN, AT THE 'UNRIVALLED Cloak Mennfaetorr of 8. V. R.• IIIINTSR• all styles of Spring Cloaks—come es eet. e tow 5u92,14...inidf1i4 worth double the money. Re. 40 DOnm KIMJ.J O. "" Strpl4- SIA Te R n P u L in E g ag ora t ß hi lt ir o F r o n u E LA ß l S . , 0011 E• 8 ' , at a teduetion from recent sa f er Gbints colors. "r "14. L Y4 rd trade Goods, , . . • „ andßlack iiiova emua de. .... - Nest and mama! slylos, ...,,,._-,, . - . , 'tisis Friendly eseeptaltlirltst BroWns, • -..... rad length Robes, ' *: ' °mil I*. 'theiard, '..: API . CV:litsvarr and minx at.:-' VEA:RLY 111114 T !NG: - tIfARPLEMI BROTHERS. Ofr.r for 'Friendly Wear Very neat styles of Goods. BMWs Handkerchiefs, Plain &toyed Silks. Lawns. • Gingham'. Baffles. Casehnerseh Clotho t vesting& Farnishins 0000 1 silts Warp ORES NUT and EIGHTH Streets. COOPER, & CUNARD Invlu attiltion the largest itif:lA*lw lima air wr "'" II .S II VVED inn; (11 - 4A - KR Of nab, etriri, and Mixed OmniAn of the new ""VitelgreitetliVitrrigkerahms, • and to ma at very i r e titant h s t r ze rltrik. B We in proportion t andyill be ' , raft niadowdaya. 44VE yotaTe AND MANTLED. a KENT AND ,4 YS . WEA/iL Embrsonnt thelonowinf eta t ,#Dm -rata ets Dtaok loth. lack Cloth, ot *nor or aattty for ELM. • liter trades or Back !Ltd mistimes. FINE 1811.A0K-DODDICINIL Fanof w eealimeree fcg s l i otrui gents. Ibis, t a IVAIVOAIIki CLOTHS. Fret rate, at 1/141t ; be ßno ttor oir t e. a sl4o42tr. w -N. Willi aol ojiliFFfite. , TIMIORNLEY ' Ol: x. 4 ) 13 1; 11 V1 , 1 : 411 A Cell epeeist attention to their Stook af 816LBKANnh. Dale ff or • BILK MANTLES. EARS& ASOLAP in awn DEEM& &Wog: ,Ituingl u Stook rhiladelptoa, of— • 140, - 0r.(4.0 rt i o l Pointpidt. • • Ty ch Leas ago es Diana Lfott gawk onintedi. Flllllolll,lloo French French'WEAL Cambria Loom CliontittiLsoes, to., to. BOUGHT. FOIL CASH I We twit. attention to our Staple Goode, PHI Beet amity and Frootuto Mimic Beet bitty. Sbeettek n and Pillow Muslim DiguEnr,r q r pr:eh rignr„ro. .t Rid GLOM, • Silk Move., Mowry, LIDOS. Band kerohitfit,te., to. Northeast earner Rltill_TH sad SPRING fIARDEN. mate THE HARRISON BUILDINGS." pny GOODS, ADAPTED , TO jaSLPHIA. PLAIN ',PRADE.—EYHE & LAN:. DBLA,, POUNTIT and AR Off ittlr•ste. have thtsaenann. Al runlet a Mack of goods (IN AIMMTION TO THEIR OAYSTYVA:,I of Owing finality, and neater deaorip- Uone. adapted to ' PIAILADELPNIA PLAIN TASTE. Very neat Foulards. - Neat Mama and Lawns. Diet Plaul Drees Silks. Diet Colored alike. nwommittal Lawns. Nestralned Style Cadooet Mode Colored Otto Shawls. sod Neat Carew eves. Plain Mats, Gloves, Bifida, ko. apm-tf • POPULAR TRADE. - CITY RETAIL BALES.—EYRE its LANDELL FOURTH and ARCH. Btroats ‘ have Oil* 'town made it a_pront to have &id stook of Goods of the fi at quality , and or the most de- ADAPTED TO CITY SALES. Richest Berms &Ike., Magnificent Flonnoed Robes. Little Flounces, and many of them. Grenadines. richer than onlinart. Orgendies, Ramos. and Illoulards. Fie new stets Sprang Pardemans, hick §ilk new shape At anthi, leek LO6ll Points Burnous. ko. soli-tf Vigil LINENS. —A fresh invoice of sninTnto LINENS direct. from Om ioenorao toren, RICHARDSON, bONS, & OW,DEN, of Beirut . , Juti. received. These Goode are selected exoressly for our family' PENE tradeood are gyousgtied free fro DO m any.l lade n4_o9 attire of Coma. . S _,, spi - South Street, SEWING MACHINES. WHEELER. & 'WILSON SEWING.- MACHINES. RRNRY COY, Agent, . O.IISATNUT STREET, SECOND FLOOR, Machin/re, with Operators, on 'nue to Private Families. .11A11011 °MOMS 9 West STATE. Street, Trenton, N. J. Re CENTRAL SQUARE, Reston, Pa. Jate.lin vvll,oQx.& GIBBS' SIMING MA CIIINE.--Thp greet and Inortougna demand for Wilcox lc Sewing Machine m ortarantee gate raptor exoeuenoe. Moe eao—y9LApios at FALK- B Boats Watchman, 716 cuurrrivr Street. eft•tf FERTILIZERS. 9110 FARMERS AND GARDENERS.—The Inbilgriber has now on hand a large lot of GENU INE YOUDRETTE. of a superior quality, which will be sold at the lowegtotteh prices. Werrnoteal to gave seisfacijon. __l will in all oases Warntet Its quality. WM.I I ek BON, Second stree t t, one square above the first Toll Gate, Office, No, 1214 orth &moue street. above Franklin avenue, Fhiladelp la. lipll-11n* PRINTING PAPER OP SPOUT DNS OHIP2IOII NANUF'AOTURED TO ORDER, BY E. C. & P. H. WARREN, PHILADELPHIA. PA M ATTI N Q 3 ! MATTINGS ! MATTINGS INA /A while and oheakal , Matting,. 6.4 n- For solet lowest onah a 10_1' ri° itn li nVK &KNIGHT! . 262 &nth SECOND Sties'," at.23-Itn . above BPR U OE. west ale. SHOULDERS. -50 Ot I pounds Dry-Salt Eltodiders. Just received and for pale by C. 0. g_ADLER & ARM Street, seoond door &olobore 'rout. - s Bbls. at 849 hcs. large No. 3 Meek ere. btds, and 480 arc No. a Mack erel roelvad per aohnoner roads Ldarards, and lot nib) t TAyLOR In slut WHA v WIRTE FlBll.-194 ban' BbLs. blacki nem White Fish, ioupstiorsaole, kilt resolved suul for door by O. V. k 'Brost, NOON shov• irol4l Al4 - .-,Ativ,,m ,, 28, 1860. r6 o . s . „.:::!: . 1 / 2 ,,,,5i,,,,,.• 5- , _ , .., ' „ : . 4 4 ~,., ....,,,A4:.„,...,:. „. ~,, 4 44VIDAY;AP.ati, gg, /860.. -. ratiTER no zuROPE.., ligalitiVerrtspoiadelsecoi TAue. Press." LONDoIf, April .14, 18450. PERT MUM INTOXICATIIM -We haftheard of a :Watt/Oleg :so remelt Intort-1 fisted tiohtetrj,to 114titLli:Plie at ;the pi?", ind of another being so far 1/41.3 as to ew,far **Ally the' kephole of, the ; street door ;( but 'tilitinifinpy, tali - cf. - Wu °halved with:being drank 4.l4 . dbionierlya'feir do, wird_Cardenounet : nave al#,Aza • ide Wad **night up for endeavoring to , mega gator. ; - entranoe into the Bilhopgate•street. Opel; itition. — ltielxilltienitin who had' the , pilsobarini charge said, last Algli t tnlwaitoivitieter to triilre ; - thl. Oracular called to ther,station and OSP**, r a took it h and told ndetaknore dldnit,dialbeatiolk articles ; endthota4 Ike find birds - a mistake, lief - hid , better) go,hatatt pith bed. With that hetlariti isfr Ilk ertiajriehroaa, 'eweartng that 'lt - was ptibli - horwe, ind be wanted isomettilni to driilf. , ;'i l o we wertrobtlged to serve him ; .but we - againtoi latetahen, , arid that it was a police fitfit l o 6 4-1:1 0 t hor". He said We were what of Ole*, who 4Klyt, know ,:who was *list; and threatened to toll tame frieadp of hie sob trice Well todo In thVioy, and wltotroold ;set ()air ifeenieforfeited.% We' 3 .thon hhnOnt Obeli blit c , he rushed again, OOP. striltlng it tee ? Arno armwith eonitt.vlotinee eieinit the doorlioe kollep We OtOld bpi get ridothlnt at all,,we were coin pelted to leak Mil tip, and item a 1 914 ttifie before )0° ,00 1. 0 e4 'POilog- out, -'l7,4lter, bring rl l O some . The maglitrate sold he mot have beim very drunk indeed tomistake a police station for a pub- . Ile house. : .'-'l‘nother officer." Why, my lord, he was so drunk *ben be , paw one of our *ave.' hanging up lliesa with -the, oitY ALl:ea "peinied on it, bosaid; ''"Look there • *or; wall you say it is siota pOb • hoyse7 jVh26 o:ere's the sign of the goo's.; p 7 , 14 firidOgrpF The prisoner, after hiving received art adinoni ties from the 'magistrate, was told to go his way, iadafa no more; " Dimasimor locht - • • , , 2Pne..of. the most, Intereithig works extant in Zealand it the Domesday Book,' belonging to the crown.' - Wer.-haie-had the pleasure of examining ft; t -lt Is in three ,volirines, writteenpon parcbMent. :Tito remarkable • Compilation' was commenced - alma the year 1084, and completed about 10 86 ; Atli meeting of the London end Middlesex Arch aeblogioal ficoletT on Thenday evening, the BM' *huge reed an interesting papei'deseriptive of :fhti Doniesday Book, from Which we Forose raietAtig a few extracts. Its English nsme i of Ylegaeatiay hat been. variously Interpreted.' BY semi It has been held to refer to the day of dooni, lesM , the ealouterreit end nirsprwleg nature of lie 4e.ells ; whilst by others it hat been Mid to derive Its flame from the feet that'll, was deposited in the ;Kinkel 'teatime', in toe obproh OViecheiterj et Wesemiretter, . ttlef in a particular place Jenne of those churches elated Deserts Fed. It was greatly valued, and kept under three looks and keys, in the eaitodyr of the auditor, chamberlain, and , depaii„ohamberlain of the Exchequer. Soon after ittiminpletion it was removed toWestmineter ; wits, Bribe°, placed in the Chapter House, and re. mithied - ,' there until a very recent period, when it found a safer and better place of deposit in the new Record. -Nome attached to the Bolls Chapel. The loliewiekle the mode of its compilation : The!ite I.4loevielo3 the oath of the -sheriff, the lordtfof )(Otter, the , presbyter. pf °ME' . church; the, retesweicArery hturmirmli the Rod six !Ditties, of friary ylliage. were to it wire Into tins#,Neveral nt thoplitne who hold it In —ol.4 l oo,l4*lELEdwird: vibe was 'the present pmempeor, , tidal frtwerk 7 fiti the:4ll-: mor t hew many earraimetes in the'reentroste, hoer many homagert, how many villains, hoed:many oot tali, how Many sorivl, what freemen, how many te nants in sooatte, what quantity of weed; bow many tenants and pasture, whet mills end Ash ponds, how much added or taken away, whet the gross value in King ,Edward's time, what the present value, and ion much each freeman or soomsn had or has: All was to be - triply estimated : first, as the estate Wei held hi the time of the Confessor; then, ae It wet bestowed by ; and, thirdly, what its vainestood at' the time of the formation of, the survey, and whether any advance could be made In its value, It may ossify be conceived that 'this iuisition was not Very popular. Sornefif the customs and serviette 'of those times -were very interesting: for instance, here' are some in the oity:of Chester. If any freeman coin 'rnitted burglary,: and added murder to the crime, all his property , ' was forfeited to , the King, and himself made an outlaw. Any one gull ty of blood-shed q betweep the Monday morning and the ' ninthhour of Saturday, Wes' to forfeit ten shillingt; if from the ninth hour of Satutday to Monday merino, twenty shillings; on great testi vale maxualsyers forfeited .f,,t; on other days forty shillings. If a fire happened in the city, the per son at whose house it broke out -forfeited three Oreee of twenty pence meth. Any man or woman giving robp gemenee, or 'selling adulterated beer, ferecited four Chillings, or was filmed in the dung We might go on, did epee allow, and give many f uture aitra9te from this famous work. At some future time we may have ocri::!!'..'n to retiv to it again. THE GREAT EXCITEMENT To an Amerman, the exoltement regarding the prise-fight between Sayers and ,Heenan, for the champion's belt of Rogland, is somewhat incom prehensible.' lint in this poontry, where athletic sports are encouraged and supported, it does not seem so strange; however much the brutality of the ring may be decried, we cannot but admit that "the manly art of self-defence!' is an accomplish ment every min ought to understand. It was ' piloted that the great fight would come off on Monday morning,: the 16th lust, but it has been postponed until Tuesday morning, the 17th, full particular Of which we shall send you by the Vanderbilt, whioh sails on Wednesday. Mr. Wilkes, of the Spirit of the Times, New York, publishes 50,000 copies of his paper hero, to send by the Vander bilt, and one hundred thousand copies of Frank Leslie's illustrated Paper will be issued . % Lon don, with a full account of the light, and illustra tions. AVCIIISTriI. For The Prem.) Cape May Railroad. From the vigorous efforts the citizens of Cape May county are making In obtaining eubsorlptions for the extension of the Miliville and Glassboro' ailroad, from Millville to Cape May, there would seem to be but little doubt of the early completiori of a direct railroad from Philadelphia to Capo May. This mute will etart at Camden from the comma. dime depot of the Camden .k Amboy Railroad, and take the West .lersey Railroad direot to Glassboro', eighteep miles—eight tam' of which are now rue and the balance in rapid progress of eomple lion by the Camden & Amboy Railroad Company. At Glassboro' it connects directly with the Milivillo & Glassboro' Railroad, extending twenty-two miles to Millville. This link is nearly completed, and will be entirely thrashed, with care running regularly, by 16th of July next. This road bas been built through the liberality and enterprise of our fellow townsman, R. P. Wood, Esq., and the energy of the citizens of the counties through which it passes. If I. ootistruated in the most substantial manner, every way a first-class road, and without one dollar of debt. 7hie latter company have determined to extend their road to Cape May as Boon as a further subsoription of $175,000 to obtained to their capital stook. The citizens of Cape May county have re sponded vigorously to the offer, and have deter mined to raise from $5,000 to $lOO,OOO before call ing upon their friends in Philadelphia and New York. The small amount of $75,000, required from those cities, will, no doubt, be obtained without difficulty, when Roared. that It will. insure the completion of the last link of a direct railroad to Cape May. The Cordova Counterfeiters in Court. ann ISIGELOW FOUND GUILTY—OHESTER C. CLARK TURNS STATE'S EVinnann. (From the Chteago Frew&Apra 24.1 The ease of Old Bigelow, the Nestor of counter fetters, was concluded yesterday in the United States District Court, by a verdict of guilty. The old man has a fame of his own, and no very fra, grant one, ended by a forty years' checkered con notion with bogus coin-making. With enough of the "Simon Suggs" order of talent to give him and his doings a peculiar Savor and stamp that was purely their own, he has mind enough to have fitted him for more than mediocrity in any useful calling. Bleached as his features are by ill-health and confinement, the old man wears a east of fea tures that would not do discredit to a deacon of the old school ; but there is still a lurking devil in his eye that shows he is good for something yet in' his chosen vocation of law-breaker and coin-maker, if the penalty doe the laws leave him scope enough this side the grave. Acoonling to his own statement, Bigelow has been engpmed in the business of counterfeiting for forty years, and has been convicted at least four times, and served terms of imprisonment in four State penitentiaries. • Old Bigelow was indicted with his fellows some months since, and his trial came up on. Saturday, terminating on Monday. The testimony was brief, and conclusive, and most damning in its character, mat the jury were out of their seats only ten „minutes. The man Clark, a confederate, irse,put MIMI the stand and became State's evtdenee, stating moluctly, and beyond all possibility of contravention, Higelosocluderstdp pruinie• Lary LAMA in the iddr. 4 ~.~ .7T. Pe P XaTiri . • lira' Where is Jr. Snakes' tor min it. ft ; tf/04 ,t3d6r D. D. [Reported for The'riesa.l r ` A discourse was delivered On - biat •floridity eve. Meg; upon' theli'above sibject; by.thoitwel liamson, in thistAtirch of the-hieselah, (of which he is pastor,) ItiOnst 86.08 k bertfie.airtiliod: This Isj a Universalistebiesek and itepaitur has the repu-; Ultima being one of the most preftemd preacher/1 in that denoiiiinatian. The title of his sermon on!I this occasion Siditiates dootrinal character, and the lbliiiritigittiethelet , Of liiltirittal atrgam ii!Olt nthhabititts: 0014 Pith e/nlernsi.hit tn,Y, lyiko can! afford taart,filtritit /oneaed _author in acme of the poh4assenteit. %With a Txdilar, , keuttsien_to the typo.; 'grail:deli brier, which had in sine of the,dally pa- , _ -- pat Aside hie advertisement read " Well " instead of " Kell." This,-sald-hertothose who Rambo& .the idea of tOrntoitictinatho 42.14fr0 :would,-be pre-,;muted, be a happ,plOstitstie,_Bie 'object on the present , oceasiento inquire into the meaning of the word tiiihaa,.:*l - ed pith, Teateuttent;,the, felleiring • :se,hepig solOttalits his text i I fie Wig s tinned lirtiell,anditti tie cal .1-yemilisattopiat_ %N. P s *,:. • Iliilfitieezeiliiis4.l4otdiagt,„.4e,eald,thilt he hid Aegean y bad occasion rardikilt- tteal-Im hada° oehndentes' thinly doctrine which depended 'elf eta validity upon-the-eotrtroetion of a mere word and, yet he - west 1,..4°Cr1f1t'"44',... apparent inconsistency of too .Dg & dial course upon - the - meaning - of the slants Wort( "hell." • Be was compelled to do:se hieortier , te meet a popular, criticism, which sought to establish the doctrine of ehdlelaf misery upon the mere fords of the word Which he was ainput to, consider 'he believed' 'lt .Wiletfilr,to,infer that the word hell, in its popular aceeptittlion could be blotted from the Bible , the-argument ' in favor of endless punishment would be,whhent. fou ndation. It was easy to see, therefore, th at if it 'could be proven 'that there venue such place, thore,ceedd, of course, be no mph punishment'. The word hell 'ae, how ever, foend'in our version, and all' the reader had to dd was to tuni tct *skater , ' Dictionary, aori see that it meant " the plats, or Sate ,Of Minishment Ali th e• wicked after' death" and his case era made out °overdo:the 'Snob, he: Odd, was the eeni.. mon mode, at least, of, proving •this doctrine,, though he must confess that it was exceedingly superficial, for be held that the Premises witteirt correct, and the conclusion , hence erroneous. There wee, therefore, no alternative left for the speaker but to meet this criticism by old* eism, 'which he would now proceed to do, sod as the word hell was the 'ground for the doctrine of eternal punishment; the propriety of the In quiry he wee about to Institute was self-evident. At waif howeeee, net the mettern, bet the sentient use of the ward, that would engage hEa attention. I Ile would not met iti dehnitionltellfatister, but in the Scriptures themselves. As to the ,English word ' hall," it was from the Saxon dells, a term used to express the thatching or covering of a house. The idea of it was, to pieta under cover. Thus the •English word " heal" wiet4prived from the same word meaning thereby 'Weyer up' a wound.. So far, in fast,' as the derivational the word " hell" wall concerned, there was nothing he it to suggest In any sense the idea of punishment ; _• nos . e r rotete known acceptation of the term at the %teethe King James trarmlitiarsehit Made wee it at all nu- , - that the translators theMeelvee slaw ugh belle - as in thethsitrith ot endless torment, had used it with the idea now popularly attaithed.to it, From this mime original use of thee term he believed that printers to this ley had in their composing rooms what they styled a " hell" forth* reception of re fuse type.- There was, of coarse, no idea. of pu nishment in this. but hoSiras now ready to take 'up the word ae it ocean is ,the Old. Testament Scriptures, in doing which he stated that in the thirty - nin e dittri books which th ey contain , includi ng 929'ohap ° ter u s t , and '23,214 verses, the word hell occurred just thirty-two times. In the same books the word "Jehovah" (whisk was' but one of the names of - God) appeared nearly seven thousandtimea, whilst in them the word ," heaven" occurred about Ave hundred, times, although in modern discourse he believed' the word hell," notwithstanding its much less frequent occurrence in the Scriptures was need quite as often as heaven. Now it was, to say' the least, a little remarkable that the na mei Jehavah, and the word heaven, should be numbered by thoueands and hutdreds when the word hell, upon which was founded so 'important a doctrine, manned hat thirty-two hems. -Ile would, how ever, not attempt to, determine this question by jeans:to, or a very str ong case would be uvula out at place, that in the whole Old Testament , the on !Ord trans lated hell (which was the In:4dß/tea ln the Eta , breweend..ffedee bathe „Greek,) ,oessarred aszey: foul - illnes s and Mad, 'as already_ stated, translated hell thirty-two times; in the remaining thirty-two passages in which It occurred it emu twenty-nine times rendered grave, and, three times pier. The question here naturally 'anise, why this difference In translating the same word , It it really meant the place-where, men are to be punished. after death, why not so translate it wherever it occurs? We must bear in mind that the translators of the King James version were every one pf them be.- hovers in the doctrine of eternal torments, and their having translated this word differently in dif forentlmesages, sometimes hell, and at others grave, and pitt, was unmistakable, proof th at they themselves did not regard the word hell as a Place of 'punishment at all, but, -as already indi cated, they used this term in the sense• which at tached to it at the time, a place under sever, bid den froth view, literally, the rayeterione region of the departed, whieh to human understanding was fittingly described as apiece in darkness. A number -of passages were quilted to show that the rendering of the original word elleol, as a place of torment, would involve the'groesest inconsisten dee. Arid yet, if shed was the word for bell (with its modern meaning) it craildief course, neverstand for anything bat hell; and then what were we to do with such passages as that in Genesis xxxvii, 85 ' in which Jacob Says of his beloved con, Joseph, "For I will go dawn into dheol (here rendered grave") unto my son mourning." Certainly, said the speaker, no one will be so foolish as to suppose that Jaco b prayed to go down into endless misery, or that he believed that such was the most likely place to find bin eon. And then, in another passage, we read of Jamb'e,reflosinz to let 801301.- MA go down with his brethren into Egypt, lest mischief aliould befall him, and be, in hie old age, should be brought down with sorrow Into Sheol, (bore, elm, rendered grave.) Again, in the thir teenth verse of the seventeenth chapter of Job, the emitted patriarch looks forward to sheet (also trans laiedgreve in the English) to rest from his troubles. B°olloo:teethe 18th 'verse of this same chapter, where the same word is rendered rift. Job had prayed that he might go into sitee/ ; David, in the lidd Psalm, although trusting in the fiord for salvation, spoke of his latter end as drawing nigh unto /heol, And was it reasmiable Oppose, in 'view of this, that these Scripture sages had looked forward to a heirof eternal torment, with the eattsfaction they express with regard to If we turned to thelOth verso of the ninth chapter of Nosicelastes, wet ebould And shed deecribed'as a place where nothing was known,' or. dent, A place of &White Meet-V(49i which wee certainly not in keeping with its deiorip don as a place of endleM torment; and, moreover, if we-turned to Hosea we should read, "0 Sheol, I will be thy olestruotion I" here, then, was a pro; mute that Gad will ultimittelydesirey the place itself, Which was' certainly sadly adverse to the stioklers for elernaltorment. We thus clearly saw, unless grossly blinded with prejudice, that the word in the Ohl-Teelament which is translated act!, did not mean a place of punishment after death. [lt may be mentioned here that some' of the most learned orthodox commentators perfectly agree with Dr. Williamson in his, oonoluslon that the I word Sheol in the Hebrew, or Hades in the Greek, should never bare been rendered hell at all, at least in the sense in which that word is now used by Christinns; holding tha t the word so rendered is never used in the Old Testament to designate , , eternal misery.] - .1 ' Having concluded his criticism-upon the mord, the speaker was ready to take up the place itself indicated by the term Sheol.' Whatever it might be, it was the plane whore all scent to, Wo had their own testimony for believing - that the patri arohs Jacob, Joseph, Job,'David, and others, ex ilere, to rete t t i : e tWeiy to hn n re t x t P l ec er bTl to nd rae r e es t t :P e g; ' dead. He might notice, in the next place, that the word never occurred in any connection that showed its existence to be eternal; on the other hand, its destruction was clearly foretold ;' ale°, that' in the Old Testament it was never mentioned as a place of punishment at all ; and finally, it was nowhere spoken of as a place where men would be separa ted from their kindred, bat, on the contrary, the place where they expected to meet them. Ili thought that enough had been said to prove that in the word' which he was criticising there was nothing to warrant our belief in the doctrine of eternal torment. Bat, having shown What it did 'not mean, he would now take up the true idea or the word trans lotted Hell in the Old Testament, mith the view of showing what it dud mean. lie again remarked, that the original word was Shed. In the Boehm gent the corresponding word was Hades. Prima , rily the word meant unseen, hidden frown t'LeS", a mystery, a place In darkness , Now, inasmuch as the state of the dead was unknown, he thought this word' had been fittingly selected. Grave, which was, in foot, but an emblematic word, he did not think would have properly expressed the thought. Thus we were accustomed to saying that man was in his grave, in order to express the mere idea his being dead. Those who go down to the grave aro seen no more, It is true, bat In acme other respects the characteristics of the literal grave did not correspond to the sense implied by the term Sheol. The speaker added that he know no one English word the meaning of which ex actly corresponded to that of the Hebrew Sheol. It was not the sepulchre, for it was the place to which 'the soul went as well as the body, .Prima. My, then, the word referred to the dark,vigsterions under-world. The heathen poets, indeed, taught' that, in eel; there were two apartments---one of happiness, and another of misery ; but Moses and the prophets told us no ouch thing; nor was this hea then notion endorsed anywhere 'tithe Eeriptures be was consider/lag, To define his own opinion in the matter, he said thatif, in all the sixty - four places where the word, Sheol comas, we should, read, as the English of it, the .Re son of the Dead, no violence would be done to the sense in a stogie in- stance. As we had seen, it was sometimes trans. toted hell, and grave. That it wan used; in some institheee, in a figurative sense, could not ho doubted, as, for example, where It is used to de note trouble and sorrow, ae in the passages of Ds. vid, in which he says; ". The pains of abaci took boiti l lPon the and again ' Thou host delivered My so u l from the lowest hill-(Shea.") Wo °could notunderstand these passages llterally,*and•woro, ,therefore, compelled to accept them ae ilgereitivie. There might, he thought, be Mine , ond present Wined to say, " if that's hell,'l non'teee that .our going there can Mae mach difference;, et any rate, I don't MO - kit we thalrall 'fare about one _as well se another." " Boit theil,'l inquires another, " what about ' the Uncled" belig turned. lute AM,' or the,leflonothte ditad, as yotz express aiy:. 4,..: ~ tag, *Xf.litet_ TWO CENTs. it ?" as is declared in the text. To • this the- speaker ieylled that it was the.time theman net', and the means of it, that the Psalmist bed in view in this ~and,sicalias passages. Be bailee= how the, wicked were snared in `their 'own' evil 'fir align' oftiti tunuAl, dinen'upert themselves a iatinineditei, itid then showed that this- win less tnia in, ati•masta sad Might even be sp. 1 4 it naiveraally,,,te nations. as Irell.sa to be viduale. Ile saw that the wieltalwere east . qlt In the odds ,f lifo, 'and in cettthlet witlf 4 aol.***K l us aid a wisdott'i *eye me -ways 't;d:, plea- SILVA . all her paths; are , pease,l l .--whilst miseryswignthe inevitable lot of the:~. The ; differessof,then; between the righteous .and the wicked was,. theman who lived to a good old age, i with the trefdlogi — of children and children's! Children to otteirthitt , pathwaylsomakard, and the) man who hood is ator- without mate, and who was Out off prematurely. aad pent down into the region, of the deed. The id* 1p other' words, was that) the wicked tlioulfrtie **lipped in their own Wiok-1 edness. -13d11; belthh* this was w matter which, many who had beensdneatel to take a different) viltfrwould be slow to, believe. To each be must,; therefore, add a few ward, more. If, said he, they, persisted in applythqs thsemeaning of eternal pins-1 ishineds to thaword WAIN emploYed its the tent, het would fora moment sialethem to confider the terms tel which that deeratilempreesed. Theist:wage wed veiling. It did not my, they'may be, turned into; hell ; et they will he ifthey do not rspekt ; bat thal statement ' was tialphatie, " the widited - shati ba Mined into hell; and all the mikes that forget aleck??„ The qtthetien'th be decided In viewer this was,:hew many wig** are there in the,world, and ,1 0 ,4 t, , q4a,,Atey'? In' attempting to answer this, he retbelhid that 'Abe thtly , Cleod One hid one look' "down from Irirrinviw , tpon thsichildren ol men and' saw that they had all gone aside; thit they bad' altogether become • filthy ; that there was pope thatdoeth good ; no, net o n o.” The apos-, tie told. us that ql/ had sinned; . and that "if vos `say that we have not Ahead; "wirmakil, God' a •liiir." And in vie* of Them etetements4 be would:ask his opponent. , whoevethe might bei " Aro yen a wicked man,? • New can plead no ex, otwo, as that you are sorry,.or. that you have re!, panted, for if you have shifted ‘ you are' wicked; and, the decree is unqualified= and .abeelote, into hell you must be tamed to confirm tha truth of the teat which you quote to prove tho doctrine of -etert, nal torment!" Tq he consistent, - therefore, the spealter held th at such an one was hound to preach either the 'doctrine' of universal. damnation, (for that all have sinned,) or else not preach at lit; awl he therefore protested. against, mep ,pinching ii doctrine to others, the logical conclussons of which they were not willing to abide by themblVes. 1 "In brief, the sum of this discourse may hi, re solved into these three propositions: - That" hell" is a misnomer for the-• words Sluw/ and _Hadar, which imply simply, " the region of the dead;'.' secondly, that the idea of eternal 'pumehnient nd where attaches to these words; and lastly, that from the positive declaration of the , Psalmist, if " hell" does mean a place of endless milieu, all men are booed to Ito turiqui ;nto it, Weenie all are *loped; •Nte May take the liberty of stating, however, that this brittle criticism was based upon a word, from which we presume ne intelligent , Bible snident would attempt , to establish the doe trine controverted ,by the speaker•—the, term usually accepted as ,designeting the indgutent of the second death, being the word Gehring!, cskieh is also translated hell in our versio?l. lists w 94: from what the speaker slated at' tip, close a his sermon, will to tad* the - MN/kit VITATO, of a future d - Report of Committee on Gas Werke: Preseved la the Select and Cprmati Conned, pf of flee Cyy of Philaddphia e April 19; 1960.: • _ . . . .To the, tileteot.end Common Counoile ot,the city of ,P . htletdetphia . ; ' . The Committee on Gee Works, to whom were re ferreddhe following resolutiona—vis . u - kesdesd, By the Select, and Conimosi Cannel's of the city or Philadelphia, that ' the Committee en Gas Work* -be instructed to *quire , and -repent whetberlthe manufacture of gee from .any mate rials other Mtn thole now in use at the Philadel phia Gas Works, is precticable; and trio, whether such gas eat' be manufactured at a °beeper rpte than is now charged, and if so, atwhet rate; and whether such gee gives an squalor greater degree of light than that manufectured.front etal, and if thought practicable, what cost will, be inearre4 in change - of apparatus, Se., and - any other nefordia don relative to the subject which they may deem important. _ • _ .- 1 Voolved, That they be further instructed to Inquire and report frora what tame (if it can be ascertained) the bills of consumers of 'gas have been, of late, so' largely increased; whether from defective meters, or from inferior quality of gas furnished, or from other canes • . Itesolved, That the committee ,be in s tructed to report at as early a day as convenient." Itespeotfully report, That, in reference to the first resonator, the com mittee are' not, se yet, prepired to rec i r i t i;o4 PliremitioWs ofitheigeounCsitietsi 044, 4 10 toting inquiry into Measurer of theireeent. 'amount of gat bills; it. seethed 'right 'for' the Om matte° first to ascot/do whether thO Inereaselre , retied - to had any existence in feet, - . For this purpose a statement has been mangled from the bill books of the gas otheer, exhibiting all the bills Issued in the months of December, Jana ary, and February, during four successive yearn, to, all consumers who, far :that time, have continued to use gas in the same premises, in the .wrieds com prising the old city 'proper, Moyaniensint, Spring burden, Penn Township, and West Philadelphia. • • This statement comprises the bills ef-1r,114 con sumers, to whom mote than d 4,000 bills were issued during the four winters. . •' It uppears- that the bills of 3,259 of the eon formers, or not' quite' one-third,' are higher in the last winter than those , of. the previous years and,' the bills of 7,855, or rather More than two-thirds, are not higher than those for previonsyears. • The aggregate amount of all the bills to these consumers, in the' winter of - 7830-7 ............ ens,77 70 1K57.8 ..... 516.702 1850-9 the increase of 1859.60 over 1856.7 being $3,190.84, or about 21 per cent. The reports of the intimaters of fittings Show that, in the interval between 1856 and 1859, the nutaber of additional!lights, put on by the consumers in cluded in the foregoing statements"' is 8,200, or about 0 per cent. increase of 'lights, if these 00 0 t 0 . mars are supposed to have In use the average num ber of ligbto, which is shown by the published re portlto be 12 to each consumer. From this it appears that the amount of gas used has not ineresseds t much as the number of lights in use ; and a similar result is exhibited by porn- - paring the whole quantity of gas sold' in the year with the whole number of lights in use at the be ginning of the year. For example, the number of lights reported to Conceits , as in use in Jamfary, MG, was 300,406, and the cubic feet ofs sold in that year was 415,888,950, being 1,384 f ee t to each light The lights reported in use in January, 1859, was 3t8,462, and the cubist feet of gas sold inlthat year was 494,128,346, being 1 , 305 feet to each light, or 55 per cent. less than before. ' These comparisons have been carried back go as to includo'four years,in• orler to avoid the erro neous oonclusions.which 'would result from taking only the Past two yea:B,lodd' inelnded a period of commercial depression, the effects of which are very marked upon the consumption of gas bY oor tain *lasses of oonsiumers,aineng whom the varimia manufacturers present very conspicuous examples, While among other classes, net thus affected by business, the quantity of ,gas. consumed has been curiously regulati soMetimes the bills; for three or Tour supeessiye wintert, not materially varying In amount, and, in thousands of instances, not differ ing so muck as one dollar for several years. The aggregate amount of the bills for the periods of eounnoroial distress, and' also the average con sumption per light in- use, -are shown to tie di minished in a remarkable degree, and give strong confirmation to the other proofs elicited by this laborious Investigation of the oarefulnets and ae.. curacy with whim" the books and inwounte of the city gas trust are kept. The table of annual con sumption per light, complied from the published' reports tc. eounells, shows the average amount of gas need per light to be less in 1859 than in any other of the eighteen years elapsed since the city has owned tho gas works, except 1857 and, 7858, when the consumption wee so much reduced by the suspension of business • In addition to the statements exhibiting the fore; going facts, relating only to consumers wha have been supplied during four successive years, two others have been prepared, embracing all: those consumers Who have used gas ddrlng the last two winters, in Southwark and Kensington. These comprise two hilts for each of 3,408 con markers, amounting to 0.816 bills, and make an ag gregate of more than 50 000 bills, whose amounts, making a total of $543,231.84, have been'examined and compared in this investigation. In the firstnamed district the gas was derived from the city works during both winters; but In the former season received only an inadequate supply, in consequence of the imperfect communi cation between the 'local main of the Southwark Gee Company and tboaeof the city, from which the supply was drawn ' • which defects were removed in the summer of 1359. • • The aggregate of the bats here on the Ist of March, was •'• 410 852 79 And in March, 1860, was 11;683 24 the increase being $1,030.45, or not quite: 10 per cent. In Kensington, the bills rendered by the North ern Liberties Elea Company on the first of April, 1840, amounted to $12,573 42; and those by the City Gas Works, to the same consumers for the corresponding period in 1860, amounted to $lO,- 22474, the former amount being greater by $2,348.68, or 22 per cent. over the latter. Part of this gain to the people of Kensington re sults from the lower price now paid per one thou sand outdo feet' but the broke show that nearly onehalf of it is in the saving of gas consumed, which isnearly 10 per cent. loss tints their supply from the city works. It is proper to remark, in this connection, that the saving to the oily of cost of gee for public lighting, by the purchase of the Kensington (las Works, is, about $5,000 a year; while the quantity of light In the streets ,Is gene rally gloater since the change in the source of sup ply. In Fouthwark, out of 1,618,bi11s rendered, 1,029 were larger in 1860 than'in 1.859, and 589 were not larger. In Kensington, out of 1,790 bills rendered. 378 bills were larger in 1880 than in 1859, and 1,412 were not larger. The unavoidable conclusion to whittle the com mittee has arrived after a careful consideration of the loregoing facts, is that there has been no wet ral increase in the amount of gas bills,' nor any local increase that is not evidently the result of an increased facility of supply; and, moreover; that an examination of the accounts of the many thou- sands of gas consumers, kept In the ogees of the city gas trust, will satisfy every unbissed'mls olio the regularity and reliability of the record** con. itumption given by the instruments nwpg , • , * the measurement of gas. The voluminous statements oompliett Hooke for the use of the committee are kuft Open to the inspection of any member Of Ommetts, ead Indeed of any eitiaen, who may desire to examine theta ) and thus form-hie own jedgmaat se to the #frip.. 4, e•-sl*4l : .„,4.„,,,„ TEM WEICULT PBXS& Wissiv Paso VW i• mist ilatistiben 000 , 1114 " " Pi " !!3 " • '" ern. Tra " of , Twenty " (to one sdtheis)l4.4/0 Twenty Copia", or over" esaliffebaolibur,iusirti:-..-..------ i.e. For a Club of Turunti-Ouo br over, we - will Waif au *Um ourli to rho satior-ripof Uri airl* - RP Pattosa F te m an! pvimetodl,tir sa l M Assts for TER WIYALY , . csuroaxii PUll. Waal lisini-iitnntikly in tin* for the Graircnais Stamm a0c , " 10 9 of the statistic's that hairs' been derived from their eritical smalisfs 4,7111190.11TCR WISTER, • Atalt i t t elto , Committer. , • • , QUALM T.,10m pp • • 'Wit saktoPolin, ar i Slikieakke' a m Wm l i PlithidelphistApril.l/), low - ' - RECAPITRILATION.. „QTY.,. • Firit Section. Norm orthe north aids of Mar ket strait; froas',Delawarecto -do. Fe ittuary 1:, - - vat: " 7858: - 188). .534.115 - MO'S *Kant et out mg Is Second. Section. From -.north, Bide of Market 'airect to eolith tide of -Walnut' atroat r ( ll3ol wall`e), from Delaware te Sehttylkill rivers, doc,December sweet te Arto,s,teiu •• • Saa eaat IDotata2o lfltrd 84101081. South ol'.. th e /oath aide of -Wal nut arrest to Smith greet tihDriehtel, ' fron` Deli. wire to Schuylkill rivet*, dee Zanuars ••• fsiagii.., • 6 rtent ; i atf t e : S ' entr P l" t tinclueice), from Delaware to Schnylkillricera, due 188 S-7. )857.8. 1888-9. 18111111. te. 1....84;488 64, _84,107 41 , 04.719 48 ammo in. 4.438 14 4 81E1 41 4,7 8 8 81 4 SOSO *b. 1.... 8.380 71 "4„848 82 4.418.91 ;4.09 VS 1914.202 49 813 2es $12,229 22 Cl= 143 0 0 • SPJLING fiI4ADBA, First Seed On. East of Twelfth etreet;and 'north of Vine street, all streets miming north and amtb, die December _lll6l . , IW. -1933 „ . • 1369. 811" • - 0,418 45 86,131 75 46,7/196 0 05, 4 61 4 6661 digtTh•- Eaat o( Twelfth street and north. of, Arias stroat,4ll effeetarnuning east' and west, due - January 1 /61.7. 1868. 1869. . 1860. 116,916 86 .616 639 113 ' 87313 91 873711 35 Third &Wien; 'Wet of Twelfth street, sat streets 1 / 9 9th Or. Yipar, Wear. duel:Oran/7.11 1337. : lite. - • • U. " 1 18 est 41 4911 Ka 46 1651/90° Ti ; . 1195,66/ 61 Xpottitlies . . .14orth of Nine, strbe6 ;sops "diZth street, dc.. toSaboylklll-rlfar, thie • '• • • • • Iga6-7 18518.. "3669-4 1669-60. Dee. ....d tin ST . e 474 73 $617 26 615125 an. 1_.::..2,6'75 Vi • 654 at 653 31, 615 43 Feb. L 551 35 669 36 567 31 , 604 41 - ' ..Tots).,.*LlM lion S tfifi r ' 0 / 1 /4 7 * - i - 1,17§, Due December let : 11587: 44,y5,1 SI 1E ' $lO3O SS " it3,40.0Va •s( .a. IV BST PIIIGADIAL/11141. , Pas _ 18g. 1888. 7559. MO. Jan. L .. - ...dlits 33 - • effre 80 - - eats 83:. i , 4901E3 f Ob. L ~... • Ol6 73 ,. .1 803 73 ~ 839 95 „ 02:_33 -81.466 06 01,563 53 $ 1 . 4 5 3 77 81:64.29 000....200.222 20 11256,711 1 . 237,920 00 .1110,111-24 Grend t0te......_ +93421,23t KENSIIOTON. ' • 1889. Duo Aprilll437 4 st) " • - §1247A 44' $10,4[474 anb.ll.. 4 . 0. 40-Wrcub. ft. 4.544 Ut3 Ot about 44ipar,nent. nson k tn .180 tbal Ink 378 inns Rroaterui 1859. • 1,404 9 ea4' . " with +ascota • Tbteql. 4.74‘1,1bAb sotnawAßlt. 1853- Atm ?Much 1,4 L • L 1304. AIN 66 19 Men 3+ 1,039, ireattr zi 17/4. 473 less ' 4destioal ',..• vith . T0ta1.:2,518 MII& . actigehe, - ilhoWing the4r9poTtioa of MIN to, the laet winter that are greater, or isew„ or identical with then of prorionerms ". . • Old CIO' ?roper.. spfing WeeThiledelpitis. T0ta1..........6,313 1,471 - 11,114 =Number of instances of identical bills in four 0111 City Proper., atlritl643llllfilill Mnyamensing Welt , ...........WO 167 . ift use 141 ' q .. aisele during , Cubic feet Year. January. the I ear. Der light. 1.842............., 64896 - - 49,283.830, 2.9 W 1843 ....... 28 080 - 47 565,761 1.691 ...... 31567 63 ,631,163 1,589 1616 . 36 583 64,076396 1,745 9646 ' 42368 - 24 547.300 1.761 50,792 89,790,993 1.731 1846.. 65 821• 106,663,0 W 1819 ........ • „ . , 64,623 34 10113.8 W 1413 - : 081 -' 1 101,267.849) - - 1,639 1851.... 129,027 ~196 213.225 • 1,617 1851— ... .145,441 . 16/15743211 '' legit 1d f .... ..... 168,381 — 2111.1.1463 , ; 3.473 CO SSA 2 78,307,174 1 310 •,00406 .41 1 M889150 / 1857 • 338.692 a 1.1739:04 • • • 1,276 j llO 601.-979 • 3,242 : ...... ' 496,133,345 ` ''' . 1306 ' -496 aSSIIM 11: 2 6. ClArtroe'-WAsictieroxi*tif 71 ,filtiATE.p :The genste is not in: seargehOlheirg 4dielitsted tin Monday. • , HOUSE OE REKLESENTATIVES CURTIS. of lowa, sakedLlenve to offer a ;tech,- hoe direetinkths Secretary of Wer communicate to the Military Committee the full pleased achedme of the floating hatters now in the 0001116 of oonstmtion to the vicinity of New York harbor; the amount of money expended thereon, and the estimated coot of completing the same; and that the Military Committee.. port mice changes in the plan of operationg ins y ee consistent with the public interests. ' • - ' Mr.I3CRTISaMd lavas time the country knew some thing abint the battery, the peculiar totemw :an of which had been kept perfectly seoret..- - • Mr.. 110 USTON,eI Alabama, said it Wig anneal to direct an executive officer to report toe oommittee. Mr. Cult ris explained that the reason for this was. that the committee maY . exmaine and determine the propriety of the construction of Stevens' battery. If Proem, this work' could go on. If - anything vita neeeetary „to..- be, kept secret, this could_ be done in committee. .... ••• - - Mr. HOUSTONN thought it urea better for ,him to ob ject to aresthatioo this morning. - The house then went into Committee of tie, Whole op the state of the Union. Mr. CAREY. of Ohio, spoke in favor of the imme diate organisation of an A priaultursi Bureau, and ad vocated the interests of the farmers of the country as opposed to slavery extension. There was no constitu tional power, however, to interfere with slavery to the etates. Instead of an exhibition of pluck, which sumo men seemed to think necessary. they eittdu fa Umtata this subjeetlike sensible men. In the °Mint. of Ilia remarks 'be said he went to the-Western country when there were not more than seventy-five thousand souls there : and now hie heart tratelledwith gratitude to sea five millions of haPPY, thriving and industrious peopl.. hlr. LANDRUM, , of Louisiana. argued that the 'Demo cratic Party have not departed- from the lessons of wis dom of the fathom of the Republic. and that a Republi can or auttelaveyy party are the cause oz all the politi cal evils with which the country is afflicted. • hlr. VANDRVER. of lowa, reviewed the history of tho Democracy on the Territorial question; oharttn test the existing evils result from their dereliction of duty and their held and* reosless poloay. which disre gards ad coincromisee of the nest, and the violation of the solemn pledgee to the comatry. The bernooratio party has acausliy become the pro-slavery party. Mr., YERRea. ,of Pennsylvania, advocated the pro tecion or Amerman industry. Mr. ROBINSON, of. Rhode Island,, defended_ the Re publican party. arguing that freetiom was national and slavery sectional: - he committee then rose. and the Rouse adfcrarned till Monday. . ANOTHER RETOUTZIONAUT Moxsztuxt.—A hoie.tinze ago a proposition was' made by citizeze residing in the vicinity,. to erect a monument to the memory of the men who fell at the " Crooked Bil let," (now Hatborongh, Montgomery county,) du ring the Revolutionary war, who have lain in their unhonored graves for eighty.two years. A meet ing of citizens was held,, a few days ago, at Bat borough, when the following gentlemen wore ap pointed a committee to' make arrangements to complete-the undertaking ; William E.. eoentner, John-M. Rogeland, Gen. John Davis, George Ja mison, Mr. Morrow, Dr. Reading, Joseph B. Terkes, Latvia R. Willard, Robert' Beans W. W. IL ltlattis, Dr. Charles IL Bill;• ;Andrew,". an Bus kirk, David Newport. C. W. Frets, David Marple, Witham J. Bask, and .I) , r. I. Newton Evans. .at the meeting at which these gentlemen were ap pointed, a resolution was adopted to call a publio meeting of the citizens at the ',oiler ;Academy, in liatborough, on Tuesday, next, May let, the anni versary of the battle, to take measures to assist the committee. ,Sab-oorsocittees, were also ap pointed to select a site, and repUrt the plan of callable monument and the cost. The military of Bucks and Montgomery counties were invited to attend the meeting on the let 06 May. When the arrangements are completed, it is probable that the military of Philadelphia will bo invited to parti cipate in the ceremonies of laying the corner shine. lI(PROYEMENT OF DElayirAßß A.VENFE.— This thoroughfare is to be greatly improved be tween Walnut and Spruce streets. Da width from the house line to the face eap-log of the wharf at the head of the dacha is to be increased to fifty feet. The footways are to be widened, so as to measure nine feet from the honie line. The car riage-way is to be, paved entirely with cubical blocks, and a vitrified glass pike ten inches In di ameter, Is to be laid from the II alnat-street culvert southward, of sufficient length to drain the proper ty owned by.the Camden and Amboy Railroad Company. The bead of the docks is to be dredged out, end the wharfing to be framed and construct ed in enah a manner that it will rest upon a hard foundation. All drains or onlvertolemptyi.ng into the docks are to be carried through the new con struction at low-water mark. ' PIC-NIC OF THE BASHFUL BNION.—IH tho upper seotion of the city there is a time-honored organization, kMown by the .13brquet of the " Bashful Union." Its members comprise an im mense amount of good-natured sociability, and the annual reunions are enjoyed with refreshing zest. The next plc-nic of the Bashful Union will take place in Jane. "Mohlcan, ,, on the Delaware, i 3 the chosen spot for a renewal of friendly hospitali ties, and we venture to predict, judging from the experience of last year, that a more delightful oe eaaton will Dot be afforded by any of the many ex minions of the present year. Attractive Mohican will have a merry throng upon its green carpet of nature when June with the roses is staying. ' Tns CELEBRATION AT ROXBOILOIIOR.--Tho laying of the cornerstone of the monument to the memory of the seven Virginians who fell in the Revolutionary War, at Roaborough, which was postponed on the 22d of February last, will take place on Monday, the 28th of May. The Second brigade, under command dam:keret John D. Miles, have been invited to do the military honors upon the'ocoasion. It is not unlikely that the officers will "kill two birds with one stone," by ordering the annual inspection to, take place on 'the same day. INTERESTING TO THE FIRENEN.—The bill authorizing the extension of the fire-alarm tele graph • to Second and Read streets bac mat the aps proval of both branches' of Councils; an only awalte the signature of: Mayor Henry to, become law. , 'loo fire companies ,in the, lower section the city will halt this, iMprovement with pleasure, at it 'will off . rd them thelatirie faellitbals4opui b llitirtrathrarriu Cnterarattigia. . : .... - r', ~,_ ~, ,u,ii (to oddroat' of Glre979 ater, 4 Lea& lilantleal. T0ta1.330 .I.WO • ' 1560 ' 1 ton; tin . 2.969 . 16E, - - 101 taa 46r ".101 - • 1711 min,: • a Bilk. ♦ Bills, , 39 • • 17