;-,-• 5 • , • r 'AI• • ".?•.-'• -- • .2. • 1 - fir{ Y. 5... .' " ' ' r •1, • i fyi,/ !'" - 1 4'' • - - ; • • • •,\ _ • ' • - • _ , : ileet • '(";•• ' 447, ,r,„„‘,. 1. . ,•••• • I ilt.oollooMtulteitinev . P - 1 _ ... 4 1,1M,4111111 . • ;I -,•. . , ' I°' 11 . 2 ! ps _ , )) N EN • L. nal • - J A ÷. - • ' - jar ~ • Iii 7•6••••••• 11 0.114 •11111 14 . 11 0 . 41 11 . 1 • e; „„t „ i • ;; j ••';'" :1 101 44 1 1 4 . 2 10. 1. 24 -;; ;;;'-:;; ;; ; e'• ;• e ; • • . • ;;e - • • Viit-n4iiige-twaisugy*,* • • 1 7-77 • mm , • . KT ' 15 .4111‘11/1111111MIVINUM - - - - • : sra%ram . • .-.1- 1 , --- . 4 lo WilellwtOt Jim 011# at touti'Dov• 0 : f 'Yr 0') • +;- _•; ••• •%• • , )1105011:1411 , 1? "I s t; ; I tit• 2.•0•2,11 ±•-• . am - " ' --e - , ,41t riiilt r ia,0001141Calt Or 1 4 I.ll‘ AL. SHAW- - 8' sonsints. - 45' , ;?' -. 3;t41 - 1 1 1,Reigi•dituoteiedosiarak ~yw• - •'; .1 1 44 1 44.647 t. NSLlvai • • - iimicaCCAIMMIU4IIIG4IiI4.•, • • •••., - 1 - 410INI0AGGinel1g suites. ' "71 I`llllCiltsltptt 1014WL . 11!iliiiit:1***ARCCLIC , • Itobstraliktrantiwkii. • *mu wasox-sounweakiria •• • • 'krill; iittiostilonzto stfachisi 64111C*At.filltipitt 0EJOITIA: ' , ' 11 .40 4 0140* • - • Lame siumiA, - • muck =Gar LONG SHAWL& Bilious Loire esusmo; - • • • • - alictins siatraufeasina. —GGILDGIUMI GNAWIAL • 4110TION MEI PAit taco* TR 00131.'.c0r IMPORTATION VARY, 14110 Z,•• ;00., • ~ 1 16_0_,MARICETtATJISI. 0118111.10111g1h 1 - 6.34", 'l64i ,idok propenitick Arrr 'W/1 4188104 iiOVOlllll. EVANS Is 00.!ial 1101241-1111 AD Slump guioor. cowoN„ of wis mewed, iiiftesstl4iiwouisen, "fis,* 104 kihal sly** ' • ,LEN9r* WOR:gArath ws. a ist u Lthiiiergracp=pit= it — lriliosistar. • oisNakelnw - ar; i; " • MCARVILLIT. Geftetill Agent, New Yisti: ' • • • B. soWITA: • Agent for li thrH o gU ni rtiOtt Tpp !!.S I 4PLEW, SAZARD, ,HUTOHINSON, , 40),114,411/1111 . 117T 07. . OWllluszoir - xszomurra • ". 1 TiallllX OP TAIDLIEADELP.HIA-MADE OPAYO* WELLING,: POMM 'OO4 wiiiirrut smiler; Oft is the ithaige. th. mowing - astiiiiker ie. • , - 421ERIGA1 4 /: 000 Di; 10f rl¢t,lllkee a*d snit n2letl: iltoki'ol6ll%2l.l aim' 7.111014 - Tn.= , Akavaiip 7AO si t i vi rw„ Alma , arie*aa'ar_ *mum Am:2 mink 41 0 1 rAfilgigini - :: -.: - 13 01 4 4/ 41441 4 1 / 4 4/MOLIMi/Cli: : 410 TORgeLL AND moo moms. '11114,01t A kulat *AP!. AMP /AMA DOEMPS ' ASP MT* CAIMMiIIe• , • Twang. ctusinumem !WV/ 11 , 11 • 1 1Y*SMIaThGr. 04 N )0 S. VP.:011101041010100.0te, PIMAIntr el& A okaluicum la Gnat Vanity; • vial Is lerflaiS 011104 aid Mali,. inintZkidt YARNALL'S 5 44 -ss. 91 118 : 1141 1,1,APIM!, 04040* 4poria! tie Ailieir rho tio‘ 44 - ,1 1- JlXiiN JIIT I&40 T.,13,241111 T, Arommounusite -W. Am) , IrsoLtsAmi __ , ' l4Ol- r l4. M- wally a ll 4, 0P 410 4 111 . 1141r4114 ; . „ ' • i -; - Xf HA TS „, ,; LwNitolig,miclparrAut *-,intaalf ZOOM AirrursoutkrunivtiVfia rhimpraz — broi• thi saskety e` ge t israt wpm toullesslias vialo w ane*r „ xoi~ ~ s~ra~~ris~iTi~. Axiom 'IIIII O oNT .4 004 • 41,41-K altar , rots • • -, 01148 ir4r "P U. ii * ad. "'" 12 . :1111361. 'Anil, ON Ism *mai, "- 40: 1 / 1 4 ZOIEDOW; - 7R4liiiimr. ViIiNNAL , J 3 - ,-- 0.13:41141;r/g/t. 111)***SPOMPINTS knit. T TofiE. . Pr! 4 I*" :1 4 TP,RT/F .4XCC.qP 1 3 TRRET, impona. • bagommaiipt ocithi laud silts. VII.II4OI,IINOLIMI, AND !MOTOR ' , '' , • AISp - Aisa,iirmitvitaityar- < r . 'llll4l,Mkk' Writs' .9;Antlit 64. - , , , Lompati.BßOWN 4,-.• a./ e sIiC7 H ALE. . ttiv ; di Ass. ALBERT 0. BOBER D e sia na. Orooodirs, ulyvtr geraiLiiiiiNTlaidlVlNEStrawitih °cEt.UMMS WAtKiART. J. I. 111101Ut & Co. hoortop ll 4 lol 4•Silexii MLII/0/1/I**LNEAti Wlllllllll soistutitorbeadrat 40 1.4. - 5111' Int OW* THQIdAST&VIitikatINE lit o if in Nift:trgast AP4LIZIT* 4 I. I 5Z,11,1110035 - BA GEL; - 1N 44 ""."' 011114 . .. . • II • • "' - Abtlo• ' ' 4 0 - A • !2 - . Y . -a* j ,• ,VOL 3.--NQ. 236. RETAIL DRY _4OODe. • _ _ 'll O StRtYpEr4ll,liidENT. • - . THOS: EVANS .'& CO. 161tiattentioa tstlsisl ittglos stook of : - 4Nir SWISS • -SUMll , lgail - ,HOSIERY, Coyaketisiot Taus* AND COTTON MOOR' iittj) OADZII MININO -VENTS AND DRAWERS, la, , Ladies', Gentiraiq'f,ll4o Chtldren'il MOald 1100 to. their (.11ArisifENIS :EUTIN:ISHING Caisirida[ the Lint itOineltion in , .111()01£1, TIMIDIAVATIL eft, PLAIN AND UEMM'D LINEN lIDICFB., '/OUVDPII Ella oievre; . ?reach sad 4eitorieaa tiLH VM Bit.NLlAii, ke. Sit sad 00 OgEBTI,TuT EiTRBST. QUARTER, LOW B6BT QUALITY PARIS K.1,1)' GLOVES. - BELLING Ar ONE THIRD LEN THAN TEE COSTAR? IMPORTATION. AI A R isi ocHesi 'ter ikt,Attp 'or AN INVOIcs, Ar ViTA'it r BTIRTON'S. 1004, CHESTNUT STREET, %AM'. 1108 SOUTH SECOND loam. P. CAMPBELL. v,v , NO. liS4 CHESTNUT STREET. SPRING CLOAKS • • • AND , MANTILLAS NOW 'OPENING . - DAILY. ifiV4EBt arum sad Choicest ai ll .nlllllo4tllo • zowssr RICSB., 'Warn . LADIES' Mite TiajdßilllGS. NEW ctoo.bs. • • Ell DiADO , EADI Am open, and constantly /11661•111, Amy Emr•Dr, - PLAITED DORM ALL DOLOR& OMEN KNITTING BALLA. sountonusrisn • • , woutopslaso BLIPPEEIL • azirr AttrALitv sitarriartt WOOL. • DILT *WO. taNDNUL AND DORM ".• A P El 0 N • AIfp•ZIPWIA STORM, iicarnrAzo commix nazis". 644 n triNAY Sta. POPLINE& ma. wsksve reimitid Gkiesy Orgy Poginion,' • of very alsoh dailted Mil cants. . Grayßarpget Anti* For dltsr,rla and Maatios. 4144° flar°°°. 01 ,7 Trsv;gieries, Griy otaikaims. 40 4110400 g, • " - tura lot foss , ito.. 014T11:13; • CAOSIMEXtEEL ' . . lc ismortme. atom M STRILMAN 'S SBCOND atr S *bore CDBeTNUT. , PLAIN and 871ICIPED CLOTHS for LA roter atomic ' CIIRAP Dna 0001:43:=, B &MAIM, -. v. , - ' . !NAM AUCTION. '• :, "rim*, , ri l ti o rt IskadThist, . . k 1011NOID Robot, k ' ! to, ' ' t.tOk - 6‘ . . • .. . . - e a, , row Ow ._ it rk Room. Am ; rip , ~.! D - e, • tng.' io h Montlos - , • t,d • , .• ~ kart 4korr :, 8. IL ow. RER astinlitWets. TRISH MINS. 7 A frisk • invoice of j i423 l 4losloMoiriat:nritt t o r a gi g to r tZwir ti ' " - • 'x i aolitt!lTFAlHßthwit. ngy: 0000%, ADA'PTED'• TO .1 0011A bytiNtilgtin I ; x—rwi4 aliantlimadittjater MAP f!" lll,,, 4l l e4illite PLAIN Tien. smoi. It o " eat. It Silt Skov. •♦ • NIV f OSovor a rdat &a. COPULAR TRADE. —CITY. RETAIL AliClicin="ligiiiiit LAND=istotligtilag tbs eu Zity sad oir P rhe most de =gooo/ at "'I 4 ' AFTED TO CITY BALM • ~ ' ~.r orv: 1141= zoos. • •' ' ' aoCkuukr of dim. • • vovis,rl • TWalg OZI= . 4 • JosnrClC F irm .„ V v ik qiiial a rril ma • :r . " 4 Waldo Arses.. kA. 1 04141 .. .. ripacißsLiry , k Mat, . . '7a . f ottontiOs 'to their Mock of— Art Br. 1 gT . . 8 An . ' . mow Ai r p mita ott. n DRENES. oho to the T a lStook in nu1a,104,01 . - - • ttlikeA NOilL. :01l fooploouoioo. Ics rennt"="ltiellsw -: • , •, • Mu* I rotiatas. - • . • roma woo fdatotso, mob Laos Telma. Cnist4n iii•lnA o MlOAtea dA ta iri &o. 'irn Ti ottoilloa to oily fitosiis tfoodo, obi 1 y ttott Froototo Moo. ootkon a t4 r4 . IIUOUJUI. - timir• is neuters*. 4 ♦ molt. k. eta 6 to, i ta trim Tr, lanais. Raad la cal: ' ,- t -"Wolfwiam. 2AOO PqIINDB ' PHOIIDE OOLONG TEA. aO 011iTS PSI POUND. O. H. MATTSON. D NOIR IN EIRE GROCERIES. isinC , • ARCH and TENTH Stmts. AMINERAL 'SPRING HOTEL, arum eaciva, klontiameri Co., 1 , 4. ,1 7 4,71 par. mry.triwr the witio. Vuo z yi t targlßda7.74lVi t t 7, iv: A pre. z:t".. - L''''''',;rd :'° 4l: i t e riff, ° ll , • i v orty:lls4t i "EVA': Aiosait....:- , , .: . i .. _ . ~.uor. St.%) • VIESDICSIOTEL J UO - DWAY juirli i,.., ~ ,i NM . YORK Ma n 0 Si: . ' '*.; ' oft, 114 11 E r riV I . n eL io ' , ti'l im gm* 0„ i tt t o., 4 , sotH ar . i .. INA &I. . . =096 Ih. 16! . ....„4.•• ~.....,. • . I_,irritrY Pilot. I • _-• •, • , ~ .. : ,- 1 . , Wrilr v go IP rhoton -- rf,l2 - .A v 4so r? Ta in l o stonk, and for 14N • A vt Ale * CO.. Ito; 'Hitched, Ine -4;4 - pm . A/ 1 1W INN _ '4 NMI GAO JFIXTIIRES, PHILADELPHIA - OaAS-FIXTURE WORIKS. WARNER. MISREY. & 7 MERRILL. )11A1IIYACTO*1111. STORE Rio. *is OVIASTNITT STREET, WARNER. PEON. &I Co.. Si. en BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Would reopeotfelly Inform the pubho that theroontanne to inentifaotura all lands of OM MOREL LX,M.4I!, GIitANO3LR9, sco. And that their' large ant ti9ilOd stook cninpiises the simPlikk mu: ins the most elaborate patterns, designed hy their French artiste. They also keep at their store, fi10.679 - BROADWAY. s large and foil assortment of all their manrifaatared good,. Dealers end others are io vitod to me end examtne. • sate-tto' LOOKING GLASSES: LOOKING-GLASEIpI, PORTRAIT AND PICTURE mums, ENGRAVINGS, OIL PAINTINGS, &c., &c JAMES S. EARLS & SON, AtiittIFACTErBERS, wlroms HALE ,AKD. RETAIL DEALERS EABLEfi' GALLEELES, 916 CRESTNUT BTABET, HARDWARE. ABBEY ea NEFF. rto. 3015 . NORTH 1111 RD Rays now in often molt thnittien, ilitbk df ARIDWAIW, latim I"a or , itz grtier VAt nntve„t terms. avg-tm WATCHES, JEWELRY, &c. BUTLER ifc NIcOARTY, N 0,131 NOILTII OBOOND MEWL AMERICAN WATCHES. GOLD AND SILVER OASES, AT TIES LOWEST JOSHING PRIORS, ialsb4snall - btAMORD STUDS, PINS, RINGS, 6., Carbuncle, Lava, and Etrcecan Jen:elry, in a I !mot aqua. • 0. itutiNELL. myti.at - 22 North SIXTH Street. ICE' PITCHERS.-A GOOD AS SORTMENT of Ice Pltobers of Tut pal oattottoo iarwr and Plated ware, of all dooartotiftok• ,11. ,61118OLL. m14,4t ins oloito MTH. Street. ,FINE MY At MANUFAC UItER'S PRICES. _._ F. DtißoB4Z & 1301. autrottoroono, AND 711701:71 6 _ 4 Nave nor on bond o nal atoortment o t • Oath Pout owl Jot . Ntrooss, an An d was ow* the tsn "ries bgESTNOT OT ET, Penz4Prim e ra. Also, • 140 aaportaint arra w 4 „ • PAPER lIWIGINGE:' *4. To CWSE HART, lONTGONERY, & • , no: $22 01111812 MI - will Wl' est, through idle whiter and next entitut their thin dont e! PAPER oedema ;it iiiiiteer oonrieoted with the beebreest AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, ME MEAUX PAnf:ll3 AT N PEA CENT. BB - LOW goST. Wiese treatise their 1/011/1116 Papered, en set treat BARGAINS. 13-11 SEWING itAclustb. WHEELER & WILSON SEWING MACHINES. HINES COY, Agent, dB CPLECTNuT, STREET, IttobliD PLODS. *whines, vita Wai t -raters, on Mrs to Private Families. MANCH 0711C1111 f West STATE !Street, Trenton, N. 7. HO CENTRAL' SQUARE. Beaton, Pa. 'tale-An WILCIOX lb GIBBS' SEWING MA lvvit;3! euI~6NE The MUISDICiNAIL 11RS. WINSLOW_, 'Alf EXPERIENOND NUR,NE AND FEMALE Pligeioisp, presents to the ettentionpf liners ner ' . DUCITHING RYRUP ,Y,OR CHILDREN TEETHING, purr wilgrogibearar of trutida g , —Altifßattrkoecia 1_... .Depend 010011 it, inothemit will WO rad tO Yen...lvey - ULM AND NEALTE t TO YOUR INFANTS. - r I Xi t' have pet %VA Ten a k h gett i n l yl f il t o r Or t ?i, rAer_sitlttl e s7o ° 4) rill a tiS t in AV etas uturAs it, g Pll NOT A RS.. when treel , ever did p oi we know ant astano6 ol • potion by any one who used it. 0,1 the oon- Adt ars 4enghted In th its operations, sr id epos 'in terms ot Iliz lies ~, mintidstionotits mut oat e eotaiiiid =Wu:llm %., mos. r e speak in this matter whet .we d A Irnotr,' sfilr ten leers' lllPMVlOSSOldplipdgeOts ~., toputoln dr the Ufa sant (a wnst we nor de lite n alMott eve r ! mews wheTke + 14 is suite owtm vain end to 'Olin Ey foundin 311471 in or twenty pun it y e ern? ix 0 . 'austere?. i of or_Abir %V riallact 0 'l4B Bl Arptgi,Firt ri U.NNewisuglitad d has been asst' with cover -f • suilpeee Ira OuSAN 8 OF OWN , It not only rslii it v • M hild from pain, WS in sisorstestne and ^ bowels, °moony acidity, s e em tazk tr imer g7 kip to the-whole qtr. ft ro,aut oho 0 creitto.,...rtoc .... 0b2 ,,,,, rit sot m i otoodily , i remedied, end to fitrhy6.4)...._..., of M iiirsVNITRY so est m a:at *BMA Let UHLIAUNIP4, X whether it arises row toothlOit or from anytifter .., atom We would Pay to every mother who nem a,- ghild suffering from tiny of he tonlig i rogeouni7l7untii, pie do not Itt your oroludioes, 10 r t e ,ref idols Co . others, St! eCI bet Wet: 0 1 40-41 6 .1141 1 8&71 th the golilit nary,: the refpus medicine , if as timely used Lo Pull d l veo- LemAne r r u ines the Naomi X i l idleTorpw.Twe 1. Pir La- uort „Yriketilli rottAroXt t ge d 'w lv oy r r e kinot- N g (Ittlew, No, 7,3 _ /13. Street, New Yea.. Prim N oents a too. ir2S-Ir • PRINCE IMPERIAL. CHAMPAGNE. FROM DE VENDOR & CO..•EPERMAY, 'FRANCE, Sold by allltespeotable Dealers throughout the country. • This fine brand or ORAMPAGNE, which until the Peet jeer wag confined exclusively to the bast tables of the yontipant of Kerima, has now obtained the most unbonnawaucoess and populanty thia country. lt regoMinended by some of the first physicians of the city of new York, over ell other Winee, on amount Of its Ur treme purity and de 'hooey. and those who once try it milluse any other brand. „Although only one year amespeed idnos its introduction into thie country, the and is enormous and oonatantly increasing. , Our rgement* Cr. such as tonsure the quality or the i being anentteitied at its present high standard. pnno• Impanel in imported Noielylue, we being to sole Agents of _Meows. Dors bto..rti this aoaatry- E. V. HAUG WO & Hoe. aeon* and OM PIRO WAY, New York. 101 l in this city by REEVES & DEAL, 1011-.lmfr 204 MARKET Btroet. RUPTURE' _TRUSS., ' I WRITEIS PATENT LEVER. • , ;Adjud et NEEDLE 'S, TWELFTH and ste RAGE Streets, Fhilndolent& SP" Bend for a Pamphlet. "11l mhSl-11m MARTIN & QUAYLE'S LTA- pg irmlbriz Eli alt TOY Ar i m FANCY GOODIS um, • VA wALMIT sTRE.NT, AzioW ILWIFINTS Pj4LADFAMMA. teat ' ml hand FOrtamirry allot ArtinlAc pROVISIONS.—Hame r Sided, and Sboul *fizior..nr.iiticp 17. Radler . utp„, " A 0 r ant. 0•0 46 dem *bow: rmit ftr? H.E P EIRED—For sale' by WEINERILL a ()TARR. ova 47 and An North Avrvorn 11141XTEN3ION TABLES ARE NOW stn rri.kir oss. at if . pggggg Ma, 9114 CA LLA)wHILT, m ' A+ 1111RIOLIMING MAOHILNKB which t taw ; r ria . iw ,". "'"4 4 . - 110 1 MAY ,7;;;;,110.0. MILLINERY ,GOODII; BONNETS! BONNETS PINE CHIP BONNETS. BLACK NEAPOLITAN STRAW EDOEI BLACK ROUGH AND, RBAin HONPtSTS, THE VICTORIA BONNET, NEW. ; LINCOLN, WOOD, 3 NIOHOLB, FRENCH BONNETS!, !, Of recent importation. /dm, - FRESH MONTITERB AND FLOWERS, Sad received by ' LINCOLN, WOOD; k NIONOLS. myl-tr ' ?DS giperki"urcitt; ; Cl-11LuRIEN'S. OroyDs I %. Every Style of STRAW owns,' - - TEISMED AND UNTRIMMED. , t , BUYS' iIT4AW BATA ANi) CAPE. 1 . WOOD, & NICHOLS, , myl•tf "- 126 CHESTNUT Street. • 1860. EPRI 14G BT2OK .1866. One of the hunt and most oompleto 'Welts of Seole z In our line in thisoonntry. The best terms and tpe ohilaytet WO% C. H. GARDEN &i CO, Monorooturaro of, Sad Wholesale Dealers in, HATS, OAPS, FURIES,' SILK and STRAW BONNETS, and STRAW GOODS, AITINICIAL FLOWS'S, 11AFIIIIILS, SWIMS, ito., Nos. 600 and 6061 MARKET STREET, O. W. conic - , feT4O AtEitcitititT •fAitttits. E. 0. TTIOIVIENSON. tAxtplt. N. E. UDR. SEVENTH AND WALNUT STREETS, Clothing made TO ORDER only. Rhiladelphith A Fine Stook of Materiels alwel7l on band N. 8.--Streagers visiting' the City ere solicited 'to Leave their measuree. ats•Ydt V,kff Tsi — iiiiiiiiitittrio - 0)0b a. PROCLAMATION I 1 a. - ..w.010p.N co 5 and 7 North SIXTU., Otreetr still continue the GENTJAin.sN'S IND ENKA isBB, in 811,10 depOrtMentel. 411 the i r CAND, And Intend to norninue *Molt 'threw t. dt 181 mita ituettottats tit stIO to the eehttetT• Thie non oetheht is made in or er that know umerous pa. trans In thin oitY and eleewhetp met that their or- der. adddressed as Above. win always reach ne. whrth er they happen tomes out advertisement we the Mtn. papers r the time bens , or not., Please ouS this out and paste it in your • mein windings hook. • myl-tf J !l i ef I . :43003W0te of the Ern of Win. . • r k digTKRU n gMI ; 0 V Street, (tutailileprette the urtitrafeetej 1 , Welled& . W. n. wank! taTotfolly ei v i t the attention of. hie tbi l itr pattone and ends to new wore, and le are a ort tin ordecUAlß •al snort aotioe t a met sot tanner= ed. wain Irma, ~,helegl la ane Skirts end 0o ' ►fiO FARMERS. PHOSPHATIC GUANO FROM SOMBRERO hilt D, IrEBT ; TnE RICHERT FORMATION OF PROBPRA77, OF LIME KNOWN IN THE 'WORLD. eantabis pier 80 par sent. of Bone Phosphate of. Lime, Wing 'Po per sent. riohar In Phonphate of Line than Bonn Dust. FOR BALE BY THE TON Oft OAROO, AND 70 PAIIORdi AT fISO PAR TON die '" f%is. tt. RANSON &Co,. ' Bola Agents in " asidr-finw-fir` No. 31e NORTH WATERIEreet :CLENTINION HAVING ,00 If Nfiß Y , LA. SEATS'ss i t GARDENS, who bays sot carioca mitna i r : r i iiiielt ow 3 , e or.wi To are f d ro u ti of a a r ot . i firelaw:antra2 v i iiiit °war% hies, i f VIL RE ..$ itiblipA 0: 4 7410Di thrN PA F RI:A t -This o e . it i a iit . this sa i ti e I lit * * Portr t itttilats ass tiffs sArtisis. ,° ties $ ' re st & serren ba r bisnd ow l , oh, tiwi. . re g yo al ? ar mp i t b to,, It SoottiMAVAittE Avenue, Tiik. .hat-c emr-tm fro FARMERS AND GARDE N ERS.—The JO- 81141044 r has now on bandit large los of °MI NE POUDRETTS, of a superior anality, whieh will be *Ol3 ri t t tke4rest,,aash vines. Warranted to gwe wisfaetion. will in all omen :warrant its analits. Wht. 313180 . Second stree t t. one senate above the tree Toll. Gate. N. /313 (nth Benostl stmt. above Franklin event's. Pluladel ) 111. , sell-lm' PREPAitikro dtivk. St'ALDINO'S PREPAREb GLUE! "A STITOE IN TIME SAVEM ECONOMY t DIBPATOR SAVE -THE PIECES! As occults.. still happen, boss ill le za-r e Wand Mosaics, it lb Oft 4totillible to bete &Atm ohbop sod b • Onv•ni•tik Trigs. Crooke BPALDriikk'S PREPARED GLUE meets all am* emergencies, and no household obi afford to be 'without it. It is &Ways ready and ni) to the click ing point. There is no loasero. asoessits for limping chair., splintered veneer., headline dolls, and broken smiles. It is Just the article for cone, 401, and other ornamental work, so popular with ladles of refinement and nuts. This Admirable preparation is used cold, being oho. auceliy held in /elution, and possessing elf the valuable sualitiee of the best cabinet-makers' glint. It may be used in the place of ordinary mucilage, being vastly more adhesive. „ USEFUL IN. EVERY ROUSE." N. B. A brisk aeoompanies each bottle. ' PRIOR TWENTY-FIVE OENTR. Wholesale Depot, No. 48 CEDAR Street, New York, Addrees IMMIX C. SPA:WINO it. CO., Boa No. Rico, New York. Pikt us for Dealers in assee containing emir, eight, sad twelve dozen. a beautiful LiCtograaluo 800 W-01.10 sooompanying took pobkase, efirA single bottle of SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE will save ten times its cost annually to every household, Sold by nil 'comment. Stationers, Druggists, Bard ware and Furniture Dealers, Grooers, and Fanny Stores. Country Merchants should make a note of SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, when making up their list. IT WILL STAND ANY CLIMATE. ad-tawf-i CHINA AND QUEENSWARE. WRIGHT, SMITH. do CO.. CHINA, CLASH, AND QUEENSWARE PITTSBURG. AGENCY, ',LABS, NAILS, &0., delivered from the I. eatery AT MANI3PAOTURBRIP PRICES GRANITE BUILDING, No. 6 North FIFTH Street, ca -how 6m PHILADELPHIA. PRINTING PAPER OP EVERY DROCRIPTION MANUFACTURED TO ORDER, SHEW &Co PHOTOGRAPH FRAME DEPOT, No. 29 SOUTH MORI% Street, Above Cheetnut. This le the only eetabliahrnont in the city detoted exolueively to PROTOURACH. FRAMES. A. ;renter va r iety of OVAL (ALT FRAMES on hand than can be found in any one eatablielunent in the United States, and price. lower. Xi?' Bring your Photographs, and hese them fitted without oxtrP oharge. othg-em BLINDS AND SHADES B. J. WILLIAMS. No. 16 NORTH SIXTH STREET, Is the most extensive manufsoturer of VENETIAN BLINDS WINDOW SHADES. TO largest and tined ameortment in the oity, at the toweet pilots.. „ . . . . ' STORE SHADES made end lettered. ~, t ilepsirtni promptly attended to. apiddin 726 CHESTNUT Street. TX4TILIZEIte: E. O. & P. H. WARREN, PHILADELPHIA, PA. AND • it rtSS - MONDAY, MAC('' 1860 Thomas Carllyle.l. • . ! Thomas Carlyle has plieed Opon'reeard fact that the first competisatidiiiiirth speaking of, his liteMry labors, *is received by Mtn from America, This mist be 'taken cum giusna sails, we think, .ituMMuch as he eef tainly. had been pitid, at, the.timi they were iespectliely published, for his biographical pa pers in Sly David Drowstetis 'Edinburgh Ency elopedim - fot his contributions. to the lived litw .kdintnirgh ittaisic ; tot hie matte iations of Legendro's reile'ciotetryo o for his translation of Goethe'd Mater," jnibllighed ill Eilthbitigh Valid I'd hia it'tdre bt S'chillei," in the tendott,7l.lagaine. , These Were'prodticed from 1822 61824. Carlyle was past the age of twenty 7 skx ; when he made his illrst'essay innuthorildp. ,Da 1825, ho revised; enlarged, and published his 'biography of tichilierln book-forro, ritid,, in 1827, Published g 6poilinenu ef Get baan Romance,'.' translated 111 took omitinten, In 1827, at the ripe rigs of thirty-two, Carlyle enierOd froth his condition ; of student and beetatne'' a !teacher. At tha t time, which marks 'the . ',sooond :epoch in his literary career, he I4gairtiiierlinfor,fite .EXTes4 burgh Review. ' Hie ,ffietattlelpsoviiich apprp. priately are pla4ednt the,threeliold of the new refit volumes of his 1111.4etiefileille*. hetet% 115 treat of Jean Faul,Eziedriehitiebterandlise the State of German-Ifitinsititati. They are as well written as asrefilibiltiter and'at traded attentionVeit:',lo2Blll fts write for the-Foi e t titsit - ing with a long. paper iiptin'- tlee'Zife and ,Writinga. of Werner, in which trishatrAdueed specimens, in blank verse, of' that driimatiO worl ds. This was publis hed.,in Sit il i rlioutriber of:the Porti4l its bitte, c 6406 rtuvAntis,cin tallied. a iongOtirikaflotwitgiranitailerfa,l6l GoOhe's "Hetet:AO:ll Inenumher four' he re *Wed Ileerelys ( 4 Eifel of Ileyne,"• and, at the same time, apPeuicii; - irrthe, Edinburgh hierioble Briins. These four akiPle44 all',o34bilie . -in' 1 / 3 11,` I niido a year's full Work ; in' T o , o and .1880,,he con' tributed several ,papers, upon French and foreign literatyre f to the Yoretgif , Review, and a paper ei On the Signs of , the Times" to the Edinburgh' Review. I ' ; hi 1 880 . Wan nointhenceil a Periodieal OM, ditilni the liretiirie or *fillani 111 - 10 l `.-that is, to 1842—excited W'MEitili 444iitiotOrt, the literary circles of.,Englandand America. This was Frasei's Magazine,: viNch paid. high priers for great talent, and' seen enlisted, Car a Monk its ailthoial The 'oisiiiing nrisubei of Prover ,eontajned ids, translation of Jean Paul Richter's Review o f. Madame ,do, Steel's frAllemagneo (given in the Appendiii 11. of this nevr•edition before its,), and in the 10th nnint,ter, smeared his "4houghigl, qn His tory," . A M eat Matt,. 1140 did Osittlio cliti tribute to Rraser, we mean to the -early. 'vo lumes, a;uong..whleh may particularly be . niatted a' noble critical biography of Schiller the characteristic notlee.of Godthb; for the Fiesq- Han Gallery4l-two ditiolis on BosWeil's Lifo of "Johnsen . ; COunt Cagliostroilti two TOO! ! lectloha of Edward Irving ; the romantic history of the DistfiendNeeklaeo, &Pt 'As: arnetter of tourse t aubh a distinguielie4 c i entri l buter4aa riot portrait stands thin treeier#in the Fraserian Gallery of 'Litera ry Characters, (MeCtisa has there _made :Jilin almost !A-looking, whereas his:actual face reittniiii*o of a pet of the P.. 11.4 'and Ma ginnovisuChad a fellow feeling for his scholar shiptykiite an accompanying page of eloquent etilegy,-Which was well-deserved. Meilittime, as those rolames before its show, Carlyle con tinued to rite largely for other'periodicals. Thet,Edin r itrgh Review 'received some - 044as moikthongh,ftvriting, and he contributed also to thiiForetgo Qtsaelerly,as well as to the, Lanctou. and Weatminster Review. Thesefour volumes of Miscellanies contain these papers, and more,—viz: his Petition to the House of Commons on the Copyright Question; his Therighta:upon the Opera, from the Keepsake; a fragnient of biography, of James 1., from Leigh Htint's lonrnal, and something from the Nett Mont* Magdifne. All these papers Cailyie has hero bolleEteti anti reidieti; to th eke:Stein a Cornisieto let of his Miscellanies, he has placed in the appendht the preface and in troductione to his Gerinan Romance, and oven added, under the name of (‘ Fractions," a few poems and prose fables, written between 1823 and 1933. As far as completeness goes, no thing can equal this edition. For Fraser's Magazine was also written, by Carlyle, that singular work (‘ Sartor Resartus," an imaginary History of the Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdrockh, an eccentric Gerlhan PrtifeSsot and Philosopher. It ap peared in 4934, and et-Sited great interest and no Sinall curiosity. In this, Where ho al lowed his imagination to twist arid turn the English language into all shapes and forms, was first put forth that Germanized mode of expression known as the Carlylian dialect— which almost requires a particular glossary to make it quite intelligible to the public. What he has himself written in the Edinburgh Review, so long back as 1827, of Jean Paul Richter, is as much applicable to Carlylo's own ((Sartor Resartus," and some more recent works. "Not," said Carlyle, "that Richter is igno rant of grammar, or disdains the sciences of spelling and parsing, but he exercises both in a certain latitudinarian spirit, deals with as. tonishing liberality in parentheses, dashes, and subsidiary clauses; invents hundreds of new words, alters old ones, or, by hyphen, chains and pairs and packs them 'together into most jarring combination; in short, pro duces sentences of the most heterogeneous, lumbering, Interminable kind. Figures with out limit; indeed, the whole is one tissue of metaphors, and similes, and allusions to' all the provinces of Earth, Sea, and Air; inter laced with epigrammatic breaks, vehenient bursts, or sardonic turns, inteijections, quips, puns, and even oaths I A perfect Indian jungle it seems; a boundless, unparalleled im broglio; nothing on all aides but darkness, dissonance, confusion worse confounded)" (Vol. 1, p. 10.) Yet, with, the publication of o Sartor Re- Bartels," a work of moat unquestioned power and ability, commenced Carlyle's third lite rary period. In 1884, the fortieth year of his lifei ho removed to London, where ho has since resided,—a burst from the almost utter solitude of a remote Scottish district, describ ed by himself as "the loneliest in Britain," into the literary society of London. In the third year from this removal, ho published his (( French Revolution: a History," and this splendid prose-epic immediately made him weild-ramons. It appeared in 1888, and was followed, in the same year, by a republication in book form, of "Sartor Resartus," and the "Miscellanies"—to which ho was driven by their previous production in this country. His subsequent separate works are "Chartism," 1837; « Heroes, Hero-Worship and the• H eroic in History," 1840; "Past and Present," 1843 ; Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speech es," 1819 ; (‘ Latter-Day Pamphlets," 1850 ; "Life of John Sterling," 1851; and twe volumes of a Biography of Frede rick the Great, published in 1858. As suredly, Thomas Carlyle has not been an idle ratan. Neither can any ono read a book,—a page of his Without learning something from it. And why f—because this roan had searched out and hived up knowledge, during many years, from youth to manhood, before be com menced writing. With him it was no Small dropping from a vessel which had never been half filled. In this country and at this time, when school - boys undertake to teach the pub lic, without knowing much themselves, this example of Carlyie's should not be lest eight or. The man wrote, because 'there was; that in his mind which it would serve mankind to know. When the Oracle had nothing to say •'nod hlitoellnneouo Fosoin: COllioted and Reoblithodbynornas Cat We. 01=00 small Bvo. Bolton: Brown & 'rsiontd. • it was silent. The boyish 'Sir , Oraeles of to day are never (hintbithotigh donkies frequently are. the subjects treated Of in Carlyle's P. 3115-: condoles" are principally literary, historical, edited, and biographical. About iit'orthirds . or these volumes aro devoted to foreign sub-. jects. such are the jiapefa Schiller, Jean Paul liichter, Novella, Werner, Bayne, the cfNibelutiger Lied," Oagilostro, the French reituanCe. "The Diamond Neck- lace," Dr. Francis, Burt*, Johnson, Sir Wel-. ter Scott, Mirabeatt, Diderot, and Voltaire. In an equal quantity of print there leno where to be found an equal amount of information. Be it borne inmind,,too, that Carlyle, in the articled eolleCted here, almost invariably *rote good English--plain, intelligible, and . without that 'affectation or grotesqUe 'originality which he' broke into in his Sartor Resartus," and htt. l l too hitt& in4etifediii ' Heid,i : ithlt.r. Atli:lode that a goad Index la. a great accelisory to a good book, it is .a great completion to. seewhat•Mr. Carlyle has, done, in that way, for these vo-. lames. Following each:title-page is 'a table of , c(Contents," giving the name of articles A£ the end of each volume is w ec seminary of contents," *filch really is2eirintiiing analysis of each separate , paper; and ; closing ittC last 'ioltittie, lad '9loue occupying „thren pages or,snaall print, lidetibie:ticiltliniif, which makes _reference -.extremely facile. , - ~,Frontispiece to volume one Is a portrait of :Carlyle; flirely"engraved , by IL W. Smith, from an original likeness in the POsseMion of R.' W. 'lPtnerson, of Boston: Bold,„ dtrik t ing , and un firio-set, *vivid , - 001R•ttanging brait,ihtifif rto**MAß44ifit:olll. there be. , 4., Finally, we have. notice what manner Athe.'aozeOulp :puidisherir Of this edition (13toriti.& teggart4 c;flioatony have Ibroogh •it but, piper; bATiding;' the 'most exiMisite typography' of 'lthegli'd ton's Riverside printing (4110 e—which old Baskerrille, of Birmingham, or, more modern , Whittington, of Chiswick, would have oinked to Make thid edition`, darlyie a typographiCal bijou,. .Boston publishers, :we must say, deservp credit for, the -manner in which they bring,out their hooka.: Carlyle; we have heard, has an interest - in this•edltion. stay its enceess induce Brown & iitigafd Id pliddttce, hi a etittipanionible'form; 'the whole' of Catly!o'a Wahl: .tie hi a Writer ,whose hooks should occupy a place upon the Student's table and the general reader's book shelf. . _l 4 lnit. , Derby k Jackson, New York; Piave published a 'Pew 'edition of " The ,Amerlosin Statesman;'' by Andreyr W. Young ; :'hit is in eistave'volune of over a thouiand pages, and the autli4iteiliGl9 and Only desoribis let° be a political exhibit fog the orliinj'initure, and practical operation of edruftltiltional ii;iernesent ip the United States; • Cie titre, and image* of fiefdem: and the views of 'distinguished ,statesmen on questions .of foreign aid domestic polioy, brought down to the Present time. In fact, this Is the history of the United iltatet as a nation, commencing with ,'Sketch' of Ile former dolemidi rhlations. Its nar ration of public events ooknes down to the close of the Session of Congress in 1859: This beck has a double" valtie—iirst, it is, written with an evident desire to tell the, truth, without party, see- Donal, or personal bias, and, secondly, narra tive ie very full witheht: being diffuse. , We have referred to lt, in mapi instances; and haVe.found its information Tellable. , pi an Appendix, 'we have the flisdaraiion of Indepeadencei Articles of Don federatibno donstittitidnof the tinited States, Dotes on the test or tine lva, d , iseety of Idtatistics, and in Index. The e•tatistlds, borloer, do not come down later than 1333 (except where the dettlement of `meraliers', Xislirlee, at $3,000, in 1856, .is men tiM3ol,)"sind the Index libnperfeot because it con tains no references to the last five chapters, writ kon'sinee the first Publleatien of the book, five years ego. ' But for these emi`ssiens, we ehoulAgive Mr. Young almost unqualified praise ; even as it is, the book will bolound tuieful, became full and reliable. Dr. 0. M, Mitchell, Pinder of the Cincinnati and Dudley Ctfaertatt,44l. hasvblished - (per Phinney, Blakeman, A Mason, 11. r.y a u Popu 4u'Asstronomi," which is a concise elementary trofatise on the sun,' planets, satellites,. and comets.' The author is already well known hero and in Europe, by his "Planetary and Stellar Worlds." As all that is known about Astronomy is fully and clearly stated and explained in 'Miss Bouvier's excellent work, there was not much oc casion for this book by Dr. Mitchell, One chapter; however, will certainly -reward the student's la bor. It treats of'lnstramental Astronomy, and is eminently practical and lucid. The . book has several lithefgrapititi illuetfationc. George Dnyekteck, of fie* York, one of the compilers of die Cly.i.lope.iis of Aideriein Liters ture;and author of the Life ,of Bishop Ken, has also become the biographer of Jeremy Taylor, Bishop of Down, Connor, and Dromore, born In tan, died in 1667. Caleridtni declared Jeremy Taylor to have been " theAakspeare of Theolo gy," and the designation is very appropriate. Mr. Dnyckh3ek has written this biography con olsely and clearly, relating the incidents in Tay lor's career, and illustrating his character by his lotions and writings. It Is, in all respects, a good book. It is embellished with a portrait of Bishop Taylor, and le pbblished 'by the Funday-schbol Children of St. Paul's t poops! Church, Albany. The Mei:noire of the Duollesa of defeat's, lately deceased, which Messrs. Appleton, of New York, have republished, show us the character of an so complishod, affectionate, and truly Christian wife and mother, upon whose head suffering and sorrow descended, and who deserves to bo well considered, as an boner to her sex. ' There is a double bio graphy in this volume, two writeri having recorded their opinions and rcoolleotions. The oorrespon dence and compositions of the Prineess are liberally given, showing us the beauty of her mind and life, BOOKS REOKLVED. FROM Sam vim Ifaxann, JR.: The Poetical Works of Robert Southey. In 10 vole. Boston : Little, Brown, A Co. •Plato's Apology and Crlto : 'With Notes by W. S. Tyler, Graves Professor of Greek in Am herst College. New York: D. , Appleton k Co. A Course of Exercises 'in all parts of French Syntax, methodiioally arranged after Poite yin's "Syntaxo Frangaise;" to which are added Ten Appendices. By Frederick T. Winkelman, A. M. and PL. D. New York: D. Appleton S: go. Momenta of Chemical Physics: By Josiah P. P. Cooke, Jr., 'Erving Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy in Harvard University. Arctic Adventure by Sea and Land, from the earliest date to the last Expedition, in search of Sir John Franklin. Edited. by Epos Sargent. With maps and illustrations. Bunton : Brown Taggard. PAM J. B. LIPPINCOT.T CO. : Fresh Hearts that foiled Three Thousand Years ago ; with Other Things. By the author of " The Now Priest in Conooption Bay." Boston: Tisk nor d: Fields FROM T. D. PRTICRBON SC BROTHERS : The Life of Stephen A. Douglas. By Jtunos W. Sheehan. Now York : Harper k Brothers. Margaret, Marchioness of Miniver. By Lady Clara Cavendish. New York : Evert D. Long & Co. . „ Fnom CUM. Suntnnnn, New York : Poems, Lyrical and Idyllic. By Edmund Cla• tonne Stedman. New York C. Scribner. PROS[ SOWER, BARNES tt Co.: The Central Gold Region. The Grain, Pas. total, and Gold Regions ot•North Amerioa, with some new views of int Physical Geography; and observations on the Pacific) Railroad By William Gilpin, late of the United States Army. Illus. trated by Maps. (Advance Sheds ) FROlf RUDD t 04RLITON, New York: Lettere of Alexander Ton Humboldt to Yarn• Kagan Yon Bose. From 1627 to 1858, with Ex• traete from Varnttagatea Marled, and. Lettere. of Yarnhogan ant others to Humboldt. Translated from the second German edition, by Freldrioh Kapp. (Advance sheets.) Fitem W. B. Zatnnn : Eleatic) Magazine of Forei g n Literature, for May; with engravings of Richard 111 and the Duke of Buokingham, and Louis XVI threat• cued by tho mob at the Tuileries. Historical Magazine and Notes aryl Queries, for May. FROM' MONETT lc MUMMY Emerson Bennett's Dollar Monthly, for May IV' Considerable exbitement, prevails In Pana ma lb consequence of a new phase in the slave trade having juat been brought to light. It ap pearelhat a Sailor Lafourie de Bravo, a Cuban, who has•been for some ; ears past a clerk In the office (ditto Pacific Mall ° Steamship Company, ham , been in the habit of contracting with negroes to gn to Cuba, ostensibly to serve at $ll a month, u servants in the family of Seiler Morales, formerly of Bogota, Now Granada, but now 1k sort of negro trader in. Havana. ' has been ascertained that lafOurie has shipped not less tbadlwelity-persona on these , "nontraote.tt not he quite safe in the midst of this negro .population after to-day. TWO, CENTS. M . i*tiUActu ConventiDL EDI2OICiAL%; Obi] IZ`i?„ . a oat 2171 PAOCI — ZD ' LIT aft. 1 ! (Proem th e Petri* Ersegrotte, Mar ;) , . The if seertursn. Cersvannow.—The ;amide pages of our sheet tire nioesSailly pot to press at an early i hour of ..the night" , the, ontaide pages being kept open nntil a late hour for news by - telegraph. and' the matte. At the - present writ ing welave nothing from. 4 iftarletton of ti;tepr.o,4o4tPlita the 0° ""k" ' Son, 'striae the adj . ciurnment on ender wining. We trust that dur ing the night we shall have a re. port of all the prodeedingeOffeideirdity k aud *tern- Kenai of the nomination of Stephen A: Dangles fok President. I - • ,'. ~ ‘... , , .. . -,, , !.. 1 ~ ; Though it is to be lamented that the de/septia of any, of the States 'attould hail) withdvawn from the • Convention .for Ithreause, we' have' no Mate that the withdrawal" which did take place will turn oat to be aelensitons„, -We do not believe, that the ed.. oviiitg , delegates, is any cue, represent - the pre,- 'railing' , ientitient of the' Staten froni` which th ey game: I They. are latgely, - we:epprebeed, , ,gentbs• men who bare no great, attachment to_the Untel ll of to theensoeratte Party; end dome orwhoka oh. tattled appointments as delegates for-the, very pa* pogo of ; prodoehkr the result 'ln `, Ult. oo lWOntion which We bate beheld. They, are efrteellaishi tt: the. South,list is Seward and his' tilZ ati Tftine are extremists of the North. , The ' Tel will eland, as it , alsiothe kin at!o, botlfel*,°ll Tr eozli stand tn the preaeizt exi3Oney,itatt Maur! " /643 .4100 d; THIS OntAS Carton PAkiT.' - ,Whoever, bas honer shall be nominated by ihit Convention, be it Mr. Doughip or ,anoiker„ he Will be the ropresedtative of the miiiiii uplow AlliNTl itorir Icm rim , vottekter,' , Jand to hie - suPport the I,llniception of ailleationa will ranyterith.an aloe rity,which wi t itottish.ris Well th e, Abolitionists of thoNekthleit e eesioniats of the Booth. 'lt will bean movelmentiMeht its Wu never been known ma this condi:4lth., It will be o.nreventent teaching to the depths of the anta4publio opinion, the telling waves of which willi 'aka,' all °lntuit's 'that 'thiyteitkeinefoil atir. , ...!-, 1.. •• 1 • , . . • ~..t We prey, that , the. ifilPkideta of the 43 .9P0/talon , May ho'Dolgfer; follih, shore all °theft, IBA" NAN Eva rue crate' ' ' t , ' l '' ' • ' ' ' • ' ..' I .' (Prom the lelYtielider,ediMfd fii iohri dhletsii'd deli * . 1 , AMA, to Charlial9m) . . WHAT lre Tuive, or 12.—Thejpiiieitte lying 1 the root.of damessialtrgrvirimitentis , eti Mission the minorit __,...,, ...aacartathed and leg i voice of the.• ~,M! tritithilasiodpet dire , dermaratio frith , iiiiiiltKtu led, tut expe • men of dttrlte .•. .. • ...f10 be lible....A4the antenginem,,in • ' henna f „- c h tub ,i o hats. •" ; ~. dell t e *ord.; itrid' e t &els i rt i . w r it: on ode tid,.abdialeded .' ' ''' MOViesseould 'fate Ulltithaluaritheb;. " . • • Ohio, And'yot we have Peen ntailikpeOlniferthwares lir , Vharlesten'Of ne OrgOtthit:rehellitfri'legalast fundamental' ithiviii .ofieito twitted,' Onene tart certain clell,3 4 .4. l keiebtatfirto Isresillit the Dow - cretin strength anet' convictions f eight movers States—States, lot us add, perhaps more interest in the Ntalnterreneeefdiseiptine and governor t than *uy others in the Linton. •;' . ~ •' 3 3it These eight States not only withdrew .from Convention' in- which they found • themailies o ‘numbered, but:even strove todiotate, when it , what should ant what should not be done biz t e .twenty-five States remaining in. Convention I,W a, 'it 'not well thottgh bitterly .said . of these, lb t .e they have.boi. 'even the gambler's faith!" ` T e. faro shaft), mane entered upon a game, will eh t; to Win, ltitllet has the manlinees to pay the f - felt whenue 1,..114..•4 .., , , - , Oar friende of tha Gdlf Sthisdrpn hate a diff - dlit - etbliti,l itd" they succeeddd be doMinati g' ir Yancey,rcir a( itill 'more odlotui—leoeuge Mil r —Clay would have expeeted o r support) and,vrell know that earl tropportwo d have beeniewdeffl. NA when, on ~ the first shqw of hancy ' ,it was clear that. duly had boetetty lost ; that, theliettiKet the people; woe with tiettglos, ' we' alsitiths 'Mid- it was 'and; always know it war i why th en ear they friends of the ~ Chivalry's h not the honestg.th remota and pay the stakes ! For thugs, cis which they.hlui }n View from tie start, no , belief, bicker could be Whited than t e one they had—the fuiserable Jame& Buchanan. No betthr dealers - Oen have hied wished than the one they had—no merit /effort slather of marked cards —no more, unprincipled thrSrter of ', lo aded dice than Caleb Cushing.. This intethx3thelleperorhose, glisten is the „result of corruption -who *Am p• utterly a tinily were he not at heart se poltroo Who awns to have skimmed the' earfaie of 11 .. . , .. . ... . .. . learning only in seard Of new IIVEMIIai to basin • —this dealer of their castle has left et record of '. • - famy In his rulings such as the past cannot Vara 4 and God grant that 'GM fixture never may This let these eight heceding , States remembe • let them not lose sight of this one Jewel; which as sit in the toad's head. of their action. It is t. at they have - lost nil an csample and justified a co. .. We of the North' are, net slow, scholars when ~e lesson is written in - snob bold, black, - and deals • e eharacters, , The end of this contest will not be. 'n until nett ildtis, and alter that •" beginning of , IS end" there will be be ute both of as en Aiello:G d future wherein to push to its legitimate event he lesson of thi {lay taught lit CharleMort i Galeb Our trg in the pilliik . - (From the Charlestonrer,thier. htiar2.l • - ) Tun - Sacra:wan Ditied:tras..— , * * * Ili is not our province, or doty, or desire to dlctate or t advise, or anticipate any deoision. It is snail to give our cordial approval to the acts of the rea r,g, delegations, and to utter our earnest wish that he lesson may not be lost. Let none deceive th - selves with the assurance or assertion that any p• gacska be made with success or efeet from Our utheni ,delegations to their constituenaies. t rooy . ba that the people In all cases are not with th e retiring delegates . In :Waft' easel - it will be fond, however; that the people an tidee' and beyond their leaders, in the amen and resobite cleterini. nation that, the rights,• honor, and interest of the South and the Federal integrity and equalitl of the great family and sisterhodd of Amadeu' Stiltes shall not be a plaything or pretext for politicians. If the Union can be saved, let the terms of sal a. lion come from those who; for forty year; sailed it. The South can and emit oe vindici llial lef, and with the South, in ell climes and contiogenoies, will be found the State of South Carolina. ~ God -tare the Commonwealth." I tFrorti the Charleston Mercury, May 4 lit I , i u tiournanii DitialtialreS.—The Sontinirn States which have remained In the' Convenon may, we suppose, be fairly considered ,as enge ed in the oialted tocatirm of Preeident-making, w . out regard td the 'CACI of the South. They o go into the ballot with a sqtratter' strvereignty plat form. On such a platform it is ht llttle or no en sequence to the South whom they nominate. Air. Douglas Is just as good as any Southern man Who can be nominated. Indeed, he may be far better. A Southern man who will accept of a zominabion art a platform opposed to the rights of the So4tli, whether he believes in ft or not, is . totally unitor thy of the support of the cotton States. If heoo- Mayes in it, then he is worse than Mr. Douglas,'for in administering the Government, he will endeavor to conciliate the North. while Mr. Douglas, on the contrary, being from the North, would strive to conciliate the Booth. And if he does not believe in the platform, then he is still tees worthy of ',the 'support of the Barth. Tor.,PROTSSTB,OP TOE BEenDnitti.—ThetChtnies ton Courser of Tuesday contains the protests drawn up by the various delegations which witbd ow from the regular Demooratio Convention at Charles ton, addressed to Mr.. Cnehing,,president ofthe Convention, and explaining the :reattons of their movement. That of the Arkansas, delegation gives the Substance of the whole in the following para graphs near its close: We declare; therefore, that we believe onr den to this Convention is at an end. 1. Because the numerical maiorlty have merited the prerogatives of the States in setting aside the platform made by the States, and have thus unset tled the basis of this Convention. and thereby per manently disorganised its constitution; Its tde. °recs., therefore, become null and void. 2. Because we were positively instructed byAlie Democracy of Arkansas to insist on the recognition of the equal rights of 'the Sop in common terri tories, and protection in those rights by the Fede ral Government, prior to any nomination of a 4an didate; and as this Convention has refused to re cognise the principle - required by the State of Arkansas, Zp her popular convention first, ,'and twice subsequently reasserted by Arkansas, tbge that .with all her bouthern sisters, in the report of platform to this. Convention, and as we esilnet serve two masters, wo are determined first to serve the Lord our God, we cannot ballot for any candi date whatever. (From the Charleston Evening News. Wits ADJOURNMENT OF THK NATIONAL CON VEN- Inift.—Aut Casar, nut hu las, is the motto of the Douglas men. With reckless pertinacity they in sist upon his nomination—reckless of the destruc tion of the Democratic party, of pulling downs the pillars of the Constitution, of precipitating a !sec Goma collision and severance, and of all regard to the opinions, interests, and harmony of the Orin try, other than their own, they strive to compel the whole United 4tatog to submit to him, his heresies and. his dictation, deSpito the overwhelming and de termined repudiation ' of his °bursa and ohreets, How does he stand? support coma almost seiely from Blaok Republican States. Every reli able out-andout DemootaGe State Is opposed to him. Of the thirty-three States, eighteen have de clared opposition to him in the eighteen by voice or o:herwise, and two more -are divide by hie opponents. He is arrayed against the Presi dent and his Cabinet, against the Supreme ;Court, against nine-tenths of the Democratic Senators, against the overwhelming majority of the Domo• oratio Congressmen of the other SAM, and against the sentiment of the statesmen of the country. In this spirit and under theaceirourastarices, these men having a majority In the: Convention after the secession of the eight Southern States, have, in violation of DemocratM precedent, and in disregard of the order of the Democratic party to lay down a platform and make a nomination at Charleston, adjourned the body to meet at Balti more on the 10th of June next. Yet the motion*tadopted by these men) oame from Virginia. Oh !' 'Virginia! Virginia! Dow long will your subServioney to Federal and party objects, honors, and offloes, abuse, the patience of the South? And. they call upon the Democracy, of the seced ing States to fill the vacancies in the Proposed Convention at Baltimore.. This is cool. The 'true Democracy of those States have, through tLeit faith ful representatives, repudiated -the body'and' its soulless platform. They wilt not yield to eagle dic tation ; they will not permit Douglas and .N.tatter sovereignty to be thrust down their Wreath and they wilt not submit to bo dragged here and there, to this or that, by party' politicians•and -arrogant demagogues. Wherever they are or go, they will demand and have their right protection. to slave property in the Territories, and to extend their tnstitutions to the common domain - Of the United States. They will this. day unfurl their banner, and, standing on their adopted Platforin, will go before the country , on a position worthy of the Democracy, of the Constitution, of the fte publio. , The platform will be to them "a shield and a sword." is the same with that agreed upon in the Committee of the National Convention by the repreeentatives of seventeen States The majority of ,Yhe sovereignties of the Union,) andb, the real . Deumaratio States of , the .country.. he, wb.ole Staith, l and California and Oregon, approved i lt, end from the Atiantio to the Nettle, and. from - Mason and Dixon'a line to the Gulf of Maxim), it ill the Orn - eta sue. sistis * bit ~il(rwingw, advsais.) Fi ve 114 1 44, - Firtiab bapibi, or Ovir' - Pat' a C.Tii.af 40:over, is will aped as autetri - OOrs teitiose9siris of thg: pita' - , Postisiatehesaiiottlot amt se 4/inter - tat Tux Wren•risso:' . • . . • j 'CAL4PviiiNitt! raltO, boned Sihai.Xontair ' ; time tar- Califorsia , exposition of theaantiment of ato4ittoPtc2 Itasr iiea "n F ront , "Truth,, Justice, sad constitu tion'?" • • • • ' .isettec from .nom : ,York; LOGE s fld-LX Or ;BM. PART_ SOLD Folk $433, 0 00—/KPLOT,NeIf A pr TRp. OILARLITSTON COTTEIVVIOTe'ON"-OT4TH 8 T 0 ( 4 8-1roii - or TOE 11,4V16- , STOTIOVii - CONDUCT. or tr: 0:• or- TICKET—TIM OflXAlT.i4avems, - cexprs TO TWIT. YORK — orriczne_ OF Tin A/MT/CAN DANE-NOTE COMPANTr - NEETWO iv - TIE irmijoins or ass ' [Corroooomeme Now Toni - , May 4,1866. The last of the great. undivided trade of real estate on Manhattan , filand, the Thornmite, known ea theßlai Birk Trotting - ,,Conn , e, sold ,at ttuothe yesteidaYet 16E1401mi: The track ex, tendedfrom Migapidoth tellioety,fearth strewn) and from Broadway across Tenth and Ninth aye netirly la; Central -Park, - and 'contained four l:utuired 'and ''sighty-seven lots: • Tie" bhal amontit of 'the ',side- was about-. $633,100, .or an .; average tof -i CAM. :for each lot. . The property-11m origteafl - plaraissed In: 1758, by Mr. .liurtaiy; the lather*law of the late Col. Them, fOr $25,000„ Mr- Jaawcatiil44)t to the eldest son of. Doling that ;bang .gentleman aesaming.tke Weis. e( Janney,) - who ;was killed while riding i ateephAtase {r;; and, and as he died intestate, the :propeitY reverted' to tither. Whße Col ., Thorn livid, the estate Wee_ kept ht . but las deeesue-btat year rendered -as:lobe impurstivf. ioAt OM gismo& it would seem that tbirtidfinint in'tbd Iralair.of the property is an iumillj largo, and, 4 414, It poryblit it thi automat pail) fur it la .174424 ilddl-kad bees Pelet com pound interest, istairttof *ve neumbettever 009; so that, tauMnite Odd tire ~,fialttelAitieft, .1014. I_,lteeid.4.otcrn'Oita in *et , thee.Biettletteelial. nottiondted-Oittprollte irridicat- het; tan lifOdsfunkreot bi table tA peclitiariseenni the "Clutrlyabau4stiioo;kte f/telkaa, of rim to •kt ttlisife4isdilkiblitiussia of Stosamosso,,Vir -01114 missitiKiiiigill**ll:ViSaktiteisii Soutbe*Otitlt•ti,lner also auni - seitsilljr 'Minded' during tliellastiireek. TIM toptd4 ! ° i ° o 6l llP?Mg,,?!.% ildtP gnu , Yoititoyatelbas . and ritilirtp, of intliVi4tiSYS, 'l 4 O 54 )"fir li * J ia tlOlb= , recta - 4'414i canner to im4i . It iiiteheiat roltetitlat 'number ilt - ilbat within a year past have cleared from dibi port' for Ithl? :try # l 64e sieve ey" . eit: officers , of 6temed _ indesvored detain-thstar--vmtmicr;nommemwe.l fetid eats for thle n e stle • ket'wftwee‘meeejle• Yesterday .in effort' Was' Medd; Ea' teitie; strii.elme i t, as elt 'wee pacing.tie - Negiele%ftaa 4er,oiretansumetta cosneetek.with. it imitinek Ira trettuire thole. dupery neareleho-Whilhaditite ittichis agithilWO iptp!alitlbelittiidWto!the traiekseetir patzipe •13urzietoki is thertiTheodoreitynderaMitt, A cerb alluded -to, boarded - the - vessel ; 4kkan slter datioin enacted atilt eimittein end 'tarethenr; that Rypdosa drew -revolver op. * n e g ro, but th at matters aket coaled 40iri; weenikped to.go (mien wisp, add the aodukal's diems re- Awned to New York,-turd *doted to the Celled BestetlifliWit Aseltddaer:thai : the 'Applied 5ia4; 1 14401 - , 4,4 s Ali* I.: Bather odd f Abe fireekEeeteart is to seats.. to Now Yorke la formatlelitollmealfeeichaviag lean eormanidcated by the tidiiitg Rfajer to the' Cddinion" Couatiljast evening., „. The new .IkMrd :of. Trentetat of the imerieen BankNote_Conspanylistirday elected Traey .11.• Nuson, president- Mosely,,t. Danforth, - 'ice _pie& dent, and t. :Idatunds; aecretary. -Mr. Edson. , is. a geatleatart.ef superior abillties,'wnd 'Admirably. (lodated ito- manage - -Um mammoth omit-ern whit* has been brought to its 'pined or gaitifstl4Cistainfy biliehar , terided as geoltY, 'AUL' , and address.-' /to acearete idle of the' Wanness or the - romps, .ean only be gained by going through , their hammers .halls, oam - end Offiees ,in the. upper, story of the ..)terehaste Ez change, which was butte tip and arranged earlasly for di/dr The friends of „the ,Benicia Boy are a bout, to a itteeili4 :for tiia iarpUse' aoitsideringthe et presenting to bus t a suitable tesdritaddal, on hob rettineto this Mastir- fr- is Conti:Witted Cleo to give atia•leiplinteniary-epaning lion, at wlAlt all the PMatipal eta Paginate of the „town Will appear.. The tickets. will be' plead at each s figure as will clear ;".the.BOY? et leett fif teen hundred or two timesaad dollars. The Late 'Fight for the Chanapioaehip. [From the'Loodork Tiber Aiwa 211 ' ' Yesterday the friends of Heenan near foyers again met etthe officeof the refereerth the fitrand, to etidearor to arrive at same delOblioll that -may bring the late 'mutest to a satisfactory and arnica conelusion.." finyemagain attended; now bear trig scarcely any tokens of the battle on his face. .Ills arm, however, is still powerless, and, indeed, has got rather worse than better, the whole limb being,swollen,- dinsolored. and seirdul in the ex treme. 7 -Az on, the previous occasion, Heenan was not present,` andlni Onion Mae given for - "his ab sence,' though it 'was kaolin that It did not arise from any disfiguremeat petleating his Miming out, though his left, hand is_ atill . sore and contused. ifeettan'e repreeentatives pat in a thief to the tril vet. belt of the 'Ohamnionship- M.Baglazid, *which they consider manvirizally lost by hayere before the fight was moPped; . - As a matter of wane, tide claim is utterly repridillist by' Sayers' friends, while the Chatorpitomhilaelf atensteuggested that, if the least doubt existed t they load :batter fight again. Thil wig also, proposed with equal alacrity- by , Heenan'S .friends; and, '-for a time, there seemed. every: !probability that another day irould' have to be named for a final contest whea'each - Map was 'After a while, however; a better spirit seemed to prevail, and the friends of both nen grades/1j grew %Mani" mous in their Wishes that the affair ought be settled in a kinder way, and that the men. Mho had already proved = their unflinching average tad aesiorance so :trail—might not ~be obliged to fight again. Eventually, a kind of undoratanceng to this effect Was Come to on both 'Mei; and, - though no details were nettled, there seems. little • doubt hat that the matter will end where, it is. , The angry spirit *tank' oil the day of the coideat, *Mated to into enee the American supporters et Heenan; and Which led to the Most partial smelted' of the struggle be ing transmitted to America, has in a great measure passed of, aid Hiereis no doubt' that bYthe next Man 1210Zejustioe.vtill be done to Sayers.. The great redeeming virtue of . the prize ring-,-p love of fair play—was certainly never better exemplified than in the recent 'contest; and the 'foot - Of both roan strongly claiming tehave won, when the fight was stopped, of itself proven bow equally the male was balanced to the last. In the interval 'w*h had elipared since Tuesday, the referee has received some hundreds of letters From all parts of the kingdom, enclosing money for a testimonial to Siyers. Nearly'ailthe letters are enonYeamis,lind state that the writers never raw a priselightopr ever herutdwf ilayers. till .the recent contest, and they'simply send their individual con tributions to him to mark 'their admiration of his courage in defending the English belt against such fearful odds. As we have said they come from all parts of Engiand, Ireland, apd Scotland, and con tain sums varying'frote a shilling's worth of post age stamps up to motes for £25. Repudiation Repudiated—The Tax Levied. . [From the Pittsburg Poet:) The Common Council, at a special meeting lest night, took up the ordinance which ,was passed by the Select Council some time slime levying • tax for the purpose of paying the interest upon' the bonds issued to the Chartiers Valley Railroad Company. The original ordinance, as passed by the Select Colincil, levied a tax of four and a half mills. The Common Council reduced the amount of the levy to three and ahalf mills, which they helieved.enough for the purpose, and passed the milk:ranee. When the Beleet Council shall have 'condi:died - 1h the amendment, it will be a-law. - Tlimshoth bodies of the City Connoil'have complied with the mandamus of the Oupreme Court ! ate was their to do. The prospect of, going to jail nexkatonday, after a short visit to liarrisheirgchas brought these gen tlemen to a realising ;sense that it is wrong and foolish for good citizens. to disobey the law. Those who - voted in favor of the ordinance for merly, and were not included in the writ of at taehmentjented by the Supreme Court, stood out- Side ther t bar.and, enjoyed the spectacle of witness ing their repudiating brethren back down from the rash and indefensible position which they had as. awned. - Trim notion will bring the subject where it be longs—to the people themsares, and in their ho nesty we-have every confidence. iv. The story rare that a gentleman, living f t St. Joseph's faland,oht. West, was engaged to be married to a pretty Azfench girl, and the banns were published in the Catholic Church on a dertain Sunday. The next day a Yankee made a bet of $lOO with s - friend that be would marry the girl himself. The money Was placed in the hands of ti, third party; the Yankee then called upon the young lady, and made a propdaition of marriage. She, tolti him that tier intended hid already given her $4O to buy clothes, but that ehe, didn't like him Teri , well. •At this her new- suitor handed her a like amount; and then planing forty dollars more with It, remarked; "There's hie The dollars, and I'll 'go forty dollars better:" Th e young lady could resist no longer; and taking the money, 'returned the amount given her by her brit' lover, and mar ried Me competitor: within an bier,' well satisfied with the hargnin. The bet was mon, -and in the course of a mouth ,the St. Joseph islander married the sister of his first AIM. (ciduk!it) Reporter, :giros an ac °omit of some Indian pottery; of esier7 primeval deioriPtion, wash was discarered on the farm be longing to Mr. Georgelleagi near Gait.:-4tie field la, on •the bank. of the. tdrusd Adver, and: being ploughed last week for the Ant,tinte; a ands bowl or basin was turned up.,. ,41,,berustifeldliut was deo found on the same s p ot ,, td #swe l yitisonss of deer and other 'aniiiiale.`"The'Repoirtsr add. that the Adds around are full of such antiquarian rellectil -rte