Xllltlainio ',C l4 ‘4# -•.. ^ !. : awed wambiliaiiiviiiiitii• - aipaihi viafinfOsmifiellatiaViiiiiiiiiiikt* Tinian / 4 , 1 0* mr. 3 .0 11 °31 : 4 mop hr UM ants aided. •-• VOYIPtn*.V: 9 4CW;n:; ', 4:: : 11* *4- 1 40 4 1 , 4 1 . /r 0P 14g' . 7 . 4 ' Mk!' Pla wrrvalssvr..de%Milp, . . W 1001 91;#1111143UNIFCabei• Tentki) ficuth M e g n) *OW , 141"14.06", MEMI Cardatt* l ti , V4lClZETA44ol; For ooverilag.i, GLAISSESi,TRAILISS; A1t04:#174; AT raoli • •- . 131.0)701VIS usaywoupro 87 ey.#77., guißTlV3,L'A i rlx, , ,•,stiorriNGs„ OVITY* ", Ono or Slid J„ ..1 It TT,M44' -. '" • kiss - iissostiosistw, , sad. r • • . - , ,sr • a‘,„ • • - tsat#S6 • , r .800A1W,-; , • .;.;;.• laovairmi SA Tsfr;kor M ool;fo4 obrisys M lb. Guru . * rorrirAr*lWlt . • --- - ofidsawl_i - rukoil • ' - • -rtol Of tioako,7ltl4vmti 1 14 , 0m atu!. I = 6 • • • 14Y-4 CRAB • ' oats & Sort ARE N f.IV sValigriAlmialmi what awn) to pro, Wafter # l. '" S • thfir Ntia Ailizigis Nam = sootek .ti m g iml d ir d. RY.and 11 . 1011 . , VIM 0 1 0iiiii." in&Le imica'svitsers: , .....- .. . . ~.. n n n n , nnn V. IC L-L 11-2CofFo:l , lll:vt.; , z , -.. . K 7 CA : -,.• - . r =wan ..t:lt -, ,=•• -, - _,. 4:.;, . ,4. - . oAuest t! ~;.- —. .• i . wi l i t .. • a a, f ,„„,„*„ *.! ,i s li set i c t i ..- TeVarG.Pllol36.' L 4-= ---,'•'-' frt e it , lid Witli ~, , , AIIIIIA A MAL -,....:. , ~ • : FAN/41r . ' 0 .II DAriNNIT t - A Hdkh., Law ;, . , ety .si . ~, , .., aid , ri fkrikkei li V4o 4.• cil fiti qi' 4 . 14.•: • iffANTOLPONWIS Na Natant Oak* tit O.* _ Lead eol "or : 2 1 111,1 r PIMPS* lor.ftoter& tonna; roiiiiisrinuf!Plis of a Two good . It 64 ; 14 4Armai !muter roar. !IN . , cinuftliftt -%*41 FT N OROORIMI':4iND Ia4WSS , daeint*VVlMSFael SUMMED" GCSYDS BS BOLD , Tan al".h!!'"! mo MUSi - AINDAr tr s4l - euc, wig FA I As Q As 9 Q4 I :4BST Or "I"9"" Vir tin ti • ilo:qatr..4AD %:T; ILINNNB; miasomuns,stowt mdt.o.4 , eirktnazi. GENtllcAldtllingta GOODIN, - • Y vary _ Tik rA*ll:lFiilitt‘carD:eol,4ll4, ~isYiitElti 'FURNISHING ' -43 .99E8i ALL. -SAW 1 1 4i4 14, 'Willa; • To op mat - -------------------- BEVEreplAill camervr. LOOILIN6y , G~;ir ►881:f~:_ LOOKING-G , y.ktISFE!,,, rOßtMrc A ND PLVTURN_PRANSO, ENGRAVINGS. 2;. -* zwlrngs. kc JAMES S. EAGLE sox, IMPoßitlit - . - MANVIPActrRERS,": WHOLE, sALE,AEDEETAIL DEALERS, EA ES' GALLERIES, 818 cipiZTAUT MITRAET. .111:11AT • mistciANTi bs appliid firoki wylln 4 siedi 44:ai Lim stook. ot mid to *Mai:— • "trimuLiarriro - AM SOW PMTS. „ - _ • Sisitkqais. 4 411tottspbersi sad Uttar-Pram /Waters tam *ow*, 4 / 1 *.:339.1.7.ELE15T14UT Stmt. Jed sw-tr : ---, 't," • - VATAWBA' WINE, Still and Sparpig, iN otos 111111 WOOD.- 41,Lt3ABT c. ROBERTS, DkALEa FINE PE9Og4RIPS. Caerr`SL Simi& =lfi;M;ggail MADE nOli PURE, Wkit WKEAT. For rali - , :d1011 AND TENTIL NT Mitt - gPAR,KLING . A ft , IDATAWBA` Pql`F wings.: • ' El= j , .:*- 8 ,47*,...41:f1t 0610:' /WM' - /o t. • -,. ,- °Procssttt AMUR Knot. 111USINROMEN , ‘ , ARB ~A. 111114 - 6181140 raggli . oPtliriP 4 !ini Cau l gritik• "'o sok, ri.rtiatjamaitettartiti",-...' .8194141,ifit , • veYerALUM M . 4lltii 44A.' 6 -'lO - , . 4 : 4 CA", 4 g:41:43L W it - VHIALDIGER:! 431;30:13 HO Wl4ll-I.oold STITCH -:I3EW NC MAbNINES. • SAINfdrII U EIB. 3 ; . • ' MOEIHASESji : • - • • - • • ADDI.ERS,:iro4 No: 6R13: Att(3O,.STUAUT. 'l4) of SRUTTLZIACHINI3,OO. •- •• '• • 11 Trim of DO '. ÜBLE-WOE STITCH KAMM' from ,211 ',wird TS" sunslerdt sad mod- .effloiest machine" mono ieterad foriSVidsof ma. • f • ' : 0: "[SWIM apt. , COTTON(, 10.8 m .. pojaVont, , 11 SEWENG MAADEITNE. ,_Arrastalah,:tthAtioth. e trouble of re rithlainVan -18=rtidlarittir .11191/31COX & : "OIBBS' "-BSWINGI - The greet end humming demand for Mikan* Gibbs' Sewing iditohine le a gnarontee , Arrelt u rAtiV i t z geenti - dg«;;Nta' EffrAtulA St r AIX O E - ititaaWit*l 3 ) * ll -1 1 ,Orr edriiRds • r •HILDIENIO GUTS AND CAILILAIINS. In Great Valuer. iitairstraixanim Voiy ui4llll Carilotr aad IPITII3 AM YARNALL'S _Mira FUENIBBING 82ORN. se ammo slummy: num - `ussimmiltiestbsAmid4wayana• Aft* '-1111.11 M=:==oll TO' MOSE - Strig:NESS* iiatiVri l " l - 4 P/4 41.1,. * 00 .1 so; Si2, ol * lll , li !A* 66 at' MINI 41dr larval% thli Ida* pdaoitpiliti, , YULWII•PAPERS -AT HO /AI! ,Hlitly HE LOW 0017 • emmiNis weathis Sem Mow Papik ow tot Feu AN.D.ftEWIA'fle SON. • UN K. VALIEIN, AND TRAVELLING • BAG NANITRACVDRZR23, ONEerIUT OTREET. PSILADEL.IIIIA, . (I/08r Jones' DotILY Hr-FACTORY, ISOUtrit BIRTH aTkZET. . &knit diAlWent is ask isOwitisation fiem sit otitis Sad WAIRLSITBD tolniii the WE LONOltktifs sat Pitokir now in anent a konnoistowl of seventy do gma FalsoshilL 'Dm sboW• PitoiniiiirWill kook the 'lna Or sold for iwawspiwor isow, krivisid Nits kW otta liitkria *obi ef ' water will too inks hounilaset Apra: nowatti, • _ esnioutondr Isitts two Moan sad,pon litre . - . , ranionit ihiWill Abg solitquid Wei kitdieriiTiolitt ther,lrsalif Old ; bit iniiire kir ,',' - . -. ' : - . HALI9 ) 111 PA:TAINT. • WM.,±14":"..1-3EVATIT. , :,.1•6 /o.iftr Rom- A - L Lz Y, 01l Itsiusf sad' Patentee for thl oft, op ssa ,; • PATENT PAPER BOX. 110 Hoff excels all Wier* for beery, streratik, and - dispensed wlthJ&its mosianteo tare; thus sociiirini ths,tiiat desideretiii • STRONG, 'CORNERS. " , Igr Orders' noliciffed.l CAST-STEEL. Ifga4PEL FOR' OSUAQHF3 , FIRS ALARffiB, #o., 702 sALII IT • , -NAYLOR &CO.. Jew " 620 COMMERCE amt. 90 1 .0 1 4 127 0 0 A -- --mt.rill.. k t ~ . __.....• . ...:_c.. -- .1 - ,:.:,,..-.. - . , . , • 1.) • . . 4 • 4 qt.?. ; !"'. - i..V? :"'`, ,-- . '`, .. • : • lit , .a. v e.,"Lif;y4,... 11.4 Ley! • .. .. f .... ..„ -,,,.. ft. .an rs:..,f• -.-, NO A f / - .):_•..A . aii0 c ,.." i;i4i.)..•) IN. •1 • .7., :"..s, _, , pi )14., - ii r. - .: . • . '-er: .: 'rr,', Yi - ea_: , • . - .17.6, vi,..: - , ";,,.,' .. ).1 , ..0,0 - - 1 , a ay:, /a . ,:, . L ., ' ~..,,, . ~... '• , ' , - :; ' "..1,1;J: ; ~ ._ i . 1, : ,, :3, ~. r: ; ~1 -', •',:' ;. - C ; 1 : ..., • - 7 , 1,..,= 7 . : . • ..„,"10.!,-r,-- , ;. !!.. v' ' \4I, 111' ..sk, r t . . .- . t . i , 1,• •:r . ., r• 11,1 0 ;AI \' . ' . 1 1 . 1 ~ ,!• - ' GM: 1. ,"/ l' • .•Mal ; '-;; 'I ",-• ; la " . . 4 , ~:„.,.. . I T,,,,,I.a Zi ii . • - - - ''' . - '1) ro, ~ ; - '1 ri 0,,: 1 --: ..,. , ", ....,,,,, ... , ...,, , ~ , !,, la , l-3. 4 pi "" le' et ♦ .. -- i . - ...."At:.; • . z-- , ..., -- .7-7 - set r, ....,, ....\,.. ~,,•„, , , . .. •, . ~,,......,,,,......„,., , ..0 1. z . ., •__ . ' ~•,,,, 1 .. !tr,...... - ti, - , ia . ", ..!:....... _,„ -t , ... ~-, -, --;-,-,...--,.....,‘ .. • ,- `, , 1 . ' :,:.:. ''.- -- - • -''' -'-.- :"‘ 2 2. - ... .1:..1 '''''. ----' `cam - ------, =••- - --- - -' 4 7;a- ': :i . • ~‘ .- .-,--,‘.....::, - - -- ' 3 :....7' . .,,. .--"-, -• 7 -- --- • • . - . ..-, - '. - ‘ , .e.:' . i. --,, . • '.. .:'' --.',7 • : , •( - ~„; ' ..- -,e .; - ' ;-- .1,,/ fr4l, ,li,k ' ..,. • • • - --...,:---.,1,,:' r• - . , . . / . . . . - • . .. -.. . ~ , . ~ • . . , ." .I. NO :: 4 -P . Z . '''' ''' , „ , „. , . , , , • ”.- • ' ' 'PHILADVIII I II4I - ' 4 OATICTINDA '' '-' ' AUGUST -,"" „ .. 4,. 1860.-- '-alt• . ti•-,11 , . • 14' o,_Lit 1 , . -,,,,. f . ' 17. !0 :' ::. :';' -'• ..n-i'; .**,'tpika',l4o'jn'ii*;ii. urHEELER & v.v.. - , SEW ING. MAC 65115 CEESTEDS. OTEEET; SECOND 'FLOOR. -'-fiottslo-sigis . CO,ciptis; -444 sat Wit acTaii • PAIL PEWEILA I NG IN GS of inity varleireamolitaimelfh thibuinsso, AT GIAAATLI :1011:0101D .21401118. BARGAINEV,, - IagiLi*P.AiTENT , PLAIEDAEOIt• PITO „ • Whi.*WILSON &BON. ,"_ -ikaa Agents for the NatuillOturer, ' &W. Cotner FIFTH sild CRERRYStre?4,, 130.0,E14.likE.Itta Co. sum. rim% OILI AND VARXIESIUM abilities( Ocorpor FOURTH. AND , DACE Stmts. ABINIIT . tIIRNITILELX 'AND. :BM- C ,-- ;..1100RE, , fa , :,OAMPION; ..= No, it ill MOUTH RECONDIOMIEET jzi eaticietios with titbit; inteinwee Cabinet , Basi nem .ara at/ mac afttslarr acaetneregkale of • • • " Ltattito wABLEs pl iti fi trove e°, iaP OterlgrittlietteVoNs. are crosOa c ze n , !.. b,r . ail who have used them, to ; ... ,..1 111 r l e g& I l i Via 4.. thee. Tables the mean , refer. ta - r Murarms P atr o n° thitgut theTh7triaii, wit coo air with the character of their work.am em .. 00,10111111PATINT-...- •- - - ': ' . gii , irriN ja, _ „ ' ~:." ', Tier Ma Stoskkts s ik . 3 Nririem3433 i : , ideal for Kelt s win, Nhiltki &.., • '.._, -... illaNieklof• ofl sad r,, and I fiilsi k nod 3 sad 3-I,lb, Tlitili libiiiki s m ak e P l yZ ill itarkiiirictit Needle, 14 3 FJPIrE. 3 sszn!cksarekt. spa smart rapia . irs Qr 'N 33 : ll lr e dirXkittin 'Nicking, for ~,ilhiCiaiing au, is I: klirw r and airecessfut ,=k and , g uer m ugatiallo,,of stif km E Pad ranks _ _ #'""Kr , 11 ", "V• 7, - l'ir 344,11 1 1 ; Y N ' • , iisi.l . . ' • . ..: V tit eNAY:erne WIRE MILL :NELi3OI , I .&-ItIORMOND, -,' " Maniernoterent- of. and Dealer, In., : WISE OLF , ALLf DEjSCR,IT.TIOttiI. t Wiar ad !, git n ireet g 1 1 Wol e n i ttl it h n e g Vanier ar nsi t e ii k knoineb. . ! • - • rn A aiL tom Liet.or net pl • 1.0 5T ATMS.' , .—nix_imontbee noterjaarates at „Bank, wick g -. at Meat Alonans 4 & onilee! 4 iork, near per cont. ..i. Mal:Siilb WOO, ' 'I. ' Ng * YORK. Maill,o s lkitan "HU )2 '' - pailimmuxas TIARA •oom - MA.; r u agovr i erarri . 7 7 4 6 1t. : - 45 .°1 iuLat tl i htl Ftt - ba ,e ...Apgromo tti.4144.74 ) aLrg• the littor sags; man spas war itucksrsessi OL Woof sow sssrd in Omar etlisist , Shisartie *eare . br a mi r :ot laly - WWI s or 011U111Nratli man 1511 RiR: Maalox: REAL' ETA 111 int°. •IRR ARDpORVEFAR,ORR:I,CqRRIOTOWN, Yip.- . in tCigia: niiixi b '.sd .SOT FOR ...m if= ir Z i a irret t n; g - ah cp,r, I ..,.., ng vit. bit : Alban' proven* . rote el 4 &No*, pegoßstid &Oar rottlalli/fD 7 i IMMO tor We notrlitmem Your -. sod inte r s ato:plooeo. i t. otokspoLarui 'motion, tois - . 11.- COKnOril UP ' 00W, TA • t e rat ra iri initrfilm Rftea n ever , • ta_PTlObtfi, ;Mt , teibitkAisitsVanted in all Darts of the ihernlefaso sontif re , dirsi Nue!. • • vavil-se ALAP—Toi MU by :1 1 /711(111UM ustorisiti dif mai 4osartaasOomwerot. rriPloo. l l=,=gotid:r4oi get; 'by want: flat•le M1C1M1514_41',144:11,0 15ZOOND QTOOPODIUM—Por stile ~ by WSTHE. *ILL & BROM& VW and 41 m i d i eitkorn PET°, •VGAltt — ,4 so , l o4 B , sethitiim isi t isy, -by .; , ''el • A Atkiatih's Molt - DT THE BARD' 01',gtiwin HALL, " I wonder oft what I shOuld say. If one—l'll not tell who!— Resolved to make of me swt ' Should some in joyetp,yroc Alas! I cannot cannot Spin!. Igor can I oven guess! ' I might repulse him with a no. Or might, perhaps, pay „ " I might with curling lip rebuke. He bold presumption vain ; - And crush his bones sothat his lips • Should noVer offend aghin; I might be imesoldees with surprise. And tint a love-lit. eye, , • With tellidale blushes on my cheeks, ' - Would give my beayt's reply. • . do not like to live in doubt, For certainty tebest - • And that I'll havevirhen some ono comes Topat me to the test. I think my guardian angel would • Freverd my noting wrong.- " . 013 h ud a ll m ! ma thy doubts at one-iV o I re long ! I not-telt who A"ntoe young:man-4'li not tea who!— hat Morning made &call, - Arrayed in garments cbeaply bought, coursecat TO,WEI HALL. , T e maiden gayest* element Whnever thought oS a fi; en Met gonna MM Lely dressed, The question popueg that day. • Rummer stook clueing out at reduced prioee.. at TOWER HALL, 418 MARKET Beree,t Plutadetchia. BENNETT & uO. EXCURSIONS. SEA BATHING. ATLANTIo CITY, NEW JERSEY. 236 HOURS FROM FRLGADELFRIA, ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 6,000 VISITORS, ATLANTIC CITY le now conceded to be one of the moat delightful deataide retorts in the world. Ili bath ' ins II unsurgionsid ; its bgentifel enbrokea beach (nine miles in length) is °neatened by any on the Continent. save that of. Galveston ;AM Mr If remarkable for Ins drytexe; 'its willing and fishing figailitieg are parrot; its hotels are well furnished, and as well Mogi/thaw of Newts* or Saratoga ; while its avenues and vralks are oleanor and broader, this: thoee of any other Bea bathing place in the country, Trains of the CAMDEN AND 'ATLANTIC RAIL ROAD love VINE-STREET WHARE,Phitadephiat Many - at 7.10 . A. and aP. M. Reterkuag—feath Poll •adelphia Maind TA P. na.. rate $1.84., Round trip Rotate: good for thine dim', 4110, to be purcheaed or exchanged at the iinket Offices only, and not of or _by eende.otora, Minium El miles. Panday ,traiu leaven Vine West at B.so, A. • • leaven Atlantio City MOM f,,Mi—etepping only, , for wood and water, , A telegra p h anapodstheurtidelennth of the Todd. 101-tf FO* Ofil it t liAit bl.FAV k li NEW YORK AlitOrkW i tl E tk i lk Ael New ' oA A , Tke GAT retie_ P,E i t o o,oelit,_q&o i - NON; N, apt, CNOO Egad KENNEliii i e C t r . e.4Mir. and Mjesjin E tr b o e n t i r t n t lei:r i Weir 6P 170.6 street (Sunder emelt at," AA il i tr_Vne, leave New Yr . 's* fLort , U ri e u tt rz t, Ex at t i r, nu JAM'S tem msy t elp"Ospe MAT Nudes. lure tnehlded./.. -II DO mote do do no --..:::: . ;i:ratpare,AMlll , re Bktrtt) . . .... itaeurc..".tt:"-::: 00 ist7.VocEdlt4 a gfrtlleti a 107 warded with &sesta 0 0 .00n001211 Am, . • JAMES ALl:66lWit:6 _, Mem, .1014tirt, 814 and 316 South DELA ANN Avenue. . Of ',ATI — 'kW . ' elankt')Al ll 1 . 65 ski'. 1 t'grlfe? 44, tite IttAtltt "Yircaotr fgr Po s r ate x t e .MV Of f ett6,llroed - and Callowhal o hatis Patio s'nd return-. -...— 016 60 Kenton and rotary.— ....- ...--. 660 o k Have; and return-. -. 8 For either partioulgrs sees a y hale oriterny to st" 3 'tweet Agent of the Company, osa ihg thulowhlll bet, or to ~ is I GAIT, Railreed t Phila. G A n niAt t t tit gienate l ident, Reading, .9rl -'r a d dri s a .; PORVAPE MAY.—The swi ft wAsiamoTs Areb ieTc. Mgr 1 9 eV j ef Omit Irked eve_ty elehtri l'adnY, and &tu tvac at 5% retanunn on the intorno stn. haiiateleded,'. • are, minw,carrisirs Sirs tr«..teigr4.l7lllgre=:.---iiarlit . ;•:10W: .THE El El A - HAIR a .—OilitDEM A N D 1 4 ": mai : 11. 1:5 1 : , ... tie5 i. : 10rv i 1Em.E.;,...4 Iran,. A . ~ Arl y hlpthegmh.alkint_ ' - 1.110 AL URI. train (stotlttolt on? . . .....,..... cm vo.. Az : InA4449 l °4l * *4 i r til i i it ßkfrtratie l. 111 AM X. M. xrress traftt......... t .. if ... t ;;; • "* - .;_:.4 A. M. M. Aooommodstaon Alm et T ec tA l tat. NUN A 11.44;o Vixe street a ...-- ..—::::—... i l l A. A: biill,V•dr Maio at . • only .E,F4,:,„wf ind wit. ' 4c l PPlng e ttZtiare rill mod before Fare to At Natio gn u VrlpVlo eta flood for ie n ree ten iami g 4 / 1 ,1c0 " ,10 . .be inrithosed or ettobsustpu at the dekqee on Y. Soa sor dor bY avaanotorc am ,A, do --4...... t . • 44 ... Ra1i 3 p.m. , FrooK t mast be delivered at Tap mummy voui no t .r o wyrano b re wr lOl g a e ni t ft er th : :I rteeivft awl rem h at SPEC! 11/ MAIO. tion gin to Air, Harbor 741 A rti r r! th if ;lA ° A P . in g i a; every 151allidaY brroroooll WWI IO Throegh baggage Vinolitrott ferry. checked at ./Yl t4 ho b anlitY/M i t i at 108-13 , , Agent. 'TO.• PLEASURE - TRAVEL falitfle:4lrand Expansion from Pligkdel phia tp_ ma Falls & Moreal, Queb ec, _ River_ e; , Rrla b and Actsv 4 ,',lre rtr,,Pc:. CR, it. r.Z749 d Tri k ßPTl i r 'w .gi ACM r ta via °Maar and Lei n 4m s . or'llaratosa Sprints. Farm or thp_roimi tr as fo llows . m'Pkiladelphist via Quebeo, White Moantainsißos and New York— - ago F rom'hiladelphia via Montreal, Saratoga Springs, - and New York. ........ SIM From Qiusheo filutuenay River, and retum.— nuo Ffpn,..roilad,sinnla to Niagara Fails, and return— MAXI t w irotiVi l oli c isi t i b a e o r d U allinfcirmation as tonsure, rape W. 00Ther of SIXTH and tramrtittigets. GRA.B. 8. TAPPER. General Asent. MEDICINAL. HELDIBOLVEIIftTRAVT BUOEIV. ' TOE GREATrlisTic. For Dlserwe or the,Rledder, drum, Gravel, Dropsy ORGANIC WEAK ERB, fito., &c. . Ittllbrerewith_disemees of three slimy experience i , i mi Wl N gh i wkbil l iur NYMr"4.I3, ~ .rt ifte t t: Reek, Weak Nerves. or Menem ' Difilonity of Breathitt!. !mem or v LS 9 lififfEßfitAl. LABBIT I tip OF kr - G in° fiTURCULAR BY Tim. These diseases or symptom!, allowed to so on. which ELMDOLO'fiI GXTRAUT MICRO Invariably removal/. Boon follow L m of Power, Fatly, and Epileptic Pita. IR YOU ARE RUF RING, PROCURE TDB REAM if AT ONCE. Diseases of these or romdre the dof a Diuretic. DELMBOI 4 OI3 BRACT DUC/IU Is the great Morale And is certain to have the desired 'effect in the dis eases enometiegar i tito emitivit A Am ti . INDISCIIITION,ormatoixdFssEs, tVitt.t.tinofiellettvinitt% Is prescribed so usedkr tbere . . E trENT PHYCATM Certificates o corer of from one _propth to twenty tino rs e st f a th d e i gott l eratrrin Y re i go ra tire i :tili nd te e r v ii ?nn e for ihreotiog ia hum zol per bottle, i x I fi. Rt e rti v ergloW a tNlESiftlfT. 61)(4 ' 1" ti Ur Tiegt? ILLUMINATORS. Eve/7 one Is complaining of their exorbitant gas At 'No. ad Smith THIRD Street, may be seen the " best Lamps in the world " Can be used wherever light is wanted. Cheaper than coal, oil, or gea. Agents are making ROO a week selling them. More wanted. .80.090e01d. The Gas Lamps will light a room SO feet equate for I 'sent an hour, or will burn all night for _few oenta. , DR.ORERNB lc CO., No. aa South THIRD street. 1170 THE PUBLIO. CALHOUN'S ANNULAR. VENTILATOR. The above patent is deemed, by scientific and prison calfoeti,to be the very beet ever offered to the public, and needs only to be seen irk actual operation for its manta to be a lppreeinted. nothing ever introduced is o ..Mre_o l 4 for voytilating. private and nubile !ZATTAti MITI; 1:"Nul Pg' houses, min" ' ease and or the aura of smoky meets they have yo , arotureti and or et ra L__ ° C eaßoialettervarcii: "eilirwhotesale and retail, at ifLetyPhile Personal attention win be given to all delonet ons of heating and ventilating b# the =de/signed, who hem been teeny y.ears motion y engaged n the mar *a bulb'. ano lot valet Mint funny-or eb tad warm-air ne , =mg ; cooking ranges, bath bakkailtttiflab.7 %IRS. JAMES BETTS' INVENTIONS ,LUL , FOR LADlFlL—AgsraYred of and hi hip tedeth- Fndedvberdloalipmfesaion throgghout the United lee t irty heroism* fpweide baying bean advised tkiVar p woe ens to nee her flargiordanpilatioel. She would caution hlarehrinta and olbersegitinst purekowng except at herreaulair, 1059 WAIN U'r Street, where she oar be corm! daily, between the hours of and.. Her book o testimonials will he clean on wit nation. Seat free to any part of the United Staten. Ile stgoitture to each article. wySI lath -tf itIEROLiANTS AND OTHERS, ADVER. JAR. Tlti4l PO R 'PALL TRADE TN B EST CITY AND COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS (ai yubliehers' prioes,) through 1 wEjoirE , 8 , • ADVERTISING A Emory, 8. W. Comor WORD and ARON Street*. RP Cu or send for Ltd of Newspapers. Jy3l-tf - galkilis Extra Bleached •-r , Eiephant. col ; SADO gallons 'Extra Blesobed teglisca Oil° 4,620 bilious racked Whale Oil; 975 gni eximiffoi_kil_pat in store and 18tor ilitTbil Vai% tem.A,m L !" w t "* CO., se. " a • I D IV 8 211 8 11 B a " :I; 1 L f " g iaBVMddin -1 lilYi r a l r " NAVAL 15TORES.-250 bbls: Swift Tar- Re atm ShappliN Rosin ; 450 do; yer ; 500 tiVELIP S nbrinkr. 140 f . °T 1 al trotn HAIL v file 11011RW, V- LLS•Oleaned at a low p ac e, LoXia b o t tgo i . h tsirintil; erintrZthiThlgg Pg`aP IR I T p SO i OF rlplUo RP E le N nd T in lNE o O m . Wl7Bo Bar g E. L.WEO aTe re OTHI_E W & ABB BERNER,&CO.iEaItS PION.-200 Tierces • Prime Retailing a la cesitanee 'hoc for silo by JAMES OILMAN wan* strati `s..! SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1860 Thomati 1i004,-No. IV. Heod, it may be remembered, resided in Scotland, for the benefit of his health, while yet in his teens. Ho did not again revisit that country until September, 1848, eighteen t months before his death. Ills son'says r,“ MY, father was received with open arms bi- 'tti o- Scotch, and; having a little Scotch blood In him, was not slow in meeting their advances. He used - at hotels always to go into the public coffee-coons, where his genial dlspoeition'arsi courtesy invariably got him a good reception.„, I dare say. there are many still lisintwho4l-: member that thin, serious-looking gentle,' Who often set the table , ; in a roar' by an un expected turn or a dry remark, and irho'vrask so fond of a certain brown-skinned Urchin, much given to the devouring oFloieks. To any Such, I take this opportunity of returnlni, my thanks for the great and unvarying kind ness I met with wherever I Went, for the sake of my father. Nor shall my thanks cease with that early period. Hp to this present hour, for the same reason, the mere 'Mentioning of my name, in any part of Vngland, has ever fis sured me a welcome; such as people are wont to give when they recognize in,a stranger the son of an old and valued familiar friend." We can assure him that in this'country, also, the name, ,of Hood would, insure him a warm and even affectionate welcome, for his father was the poet of humanity, and tine toWoh of lettere makes the whole world kin." i They, went first to Dundee, where some of Hood's relatives liVed, and Hood wrote home':, Dandpe„ at first sight,,Wae much altered in one reepenVowing to the march of manufac tUre. To-the east a remarkably fine crop of tall chimneys bad sprung tip in lien of one—' all faenarieir." aniiiiniaCect his intention of banishing " ail thoughts of bookeiy," and of taking his swing of idleness, and added: "As soon as I get settled at the Ferry, however, I Shall fltiish the article on Temperance by the help of 'whisky, toddy, but that need not be put in the'pappr." , Dickens had given Heed letters of introduc tion to Lord JeUrey, With *item he dined. Professor Wilton was out of town, so be missed ai; Noctes" with' bid Kit North. In the 4; hank slums" of Edinburgh he saw the shop whore the rope was bought to hang Porteous, immortalised in "The Heart of NidlothialS"‘—still the Mine fatally in the 'tithe _line its the shop. hood wrote no se &tint, exnept in letters to his With, of his SUottith tout. Ito *rote to his Wife: "I think I Wald make a funny burlesque of Wil lie' Pencilling style, only the characters visited to be Imaginary Professore, &c., &c. They would enjoy - it here." We find him, in November, 1844, within a few months of hie death, writing to 1115 doctor, in high baultitiefi at haiinglha p t month « sold tVienCy more copies of the Magailne." How electrified ho would hive been at hearing of Harper's sale of about 200,000 a month ! Pale, thin, and worn as need was during the last fifteen Years of his life, no one could judge from his face that he possessed the slightest humor. Tho portrait prefixed to cc Hood's Own," while he yet resided in Ger many, 30 a capital HkUnebo. n flaod'aMaga is a bust-portrait, executed by Mr. Ed ward Davis, the oieoution of which was gaily described by Hood himself, as folltris "Some menthe singe, Bdward Dark, the well-knoten aoulptor applied= to me to sit to him for a bust. My vanity Yeadily complied with 'the request, and in due time I found myself in his eta die metalled in a driesson•eoirered elbow-chair, amidst an , namanbinge of beads, hard and soft; white, drab, and atone odor. here a jous i valt a te l f=4:l l :looking %%hop, in clear, white, sparkling marble, nett to brown clay heed, like •helined and Moist A number of unfinished models of what Bean Brume' would bare called .datep etrangen,' were tied up in wet clothe ) from whigh every moment you expected to hear a eneele—the veiled ones comprising a %Ay or two, a barrieter and a judge. AU these wire on I pmleetale j but n the background, on board, stood numerous other busts, dwarfish and gigantic:heads and shotilders, like Oriental Genii coming up through the door—some white and clean,' u if hash from the waters under the earth; others dicta and smoky, as if from its subterranean fire. 'places—some young, some old, some emillu, and others grave, or even frowning severely, with one alarming face, reminding me of those bard, brutal countenanoes that ate 110412 on street.doors. 11 On the mantel-shelf silently roared the Caput of 'motion, with deeply indented eyeballs, instead of the regulation blanks, and what the play-people call a practicable mouth, i e. Into which you might poke your finger down to the gullet- and lastly, on the wall t! were sundry mystical sketches in black and white chalk, which y ou might turn, as fancy prompted, like Hamlet a cloud, into any figure you pleased, from a weasel to a whale. "To return to self. The artist, after setting be fore me what seemed a small mountain of putty, with a bold amp of his thumbs; marked out my eyes ; neat taking a good pinch of olay—an ope ration r Seemed to feel by sympathy—from between my shoulders, clapped me on a rough nose, and then stuck the surplus material in a large wart on my chest. In short, by similar proceedings scraping, smoothing, dabbing on, and taking of, at the end of the first sitting, te sculptor had made the upper half of a mud doll, the sure of life, looking very like the 1401 of his own circle' in the Oen. Wind Islands. "At subsequent sittings, this heathen figure • radually became, not only more Christian-like, .ut more and More like the original ; till finally it ~ut on that striking resemblanoe, which Is so sails aotory to one's wife and family, and, as it were, ntroduots a man to himself." His son describes the oil-portrait as an ad mirable likeness, and says : tcAt the same time, although of heeeseity in sculpture the elo quence of the eyes is wanting, the bust itself, and tho engraving from it, boar a fine and re markable resemblance to the original. It ren ders very faithfully the calm repose, almost amounting to solemnity, which characterized his face'during the latter part of his life, and at that 'short period after death especially, which is so well known to exhibit an unearthly beauty often wanting in life." When on his death-bed, the proofs of this last mentioned engraving, with a few kind words inscribed, and a signature, wore his dying legacy to those who knew and loved him. The number ro d upward of a hundred, and the names and in scriptions were written at intervals as he found strength to sit up In bod. The clear, delicate writing ;bore, even then, but little trace of 'weakness. There was an idea of burying him in West minster Abbey, but the foes (£.200) for privi lege to open a grave there were too heavy. He reposes, "after life's fitful fever," in Kensal',Green Cemetery. His son says.: c( I have a perfect recollection of the funeral, and of the unfeigned sorrow of those kind and be loved friends who attended it. It was a beau tiful spring day, and, I remember, it was no ticed that, just as the service concluded, a lark rose up, mounting and singing over our heads. I This was in the middle of the day." Ilia daughter adds : I only really felt the pe el:Dar fitness of the choice of his last resting place in its fullest force, when, two years ago, I visited the grave, now covered by the noble monument erected by public subscription. It was a lovely morning, just watered by a few fitful showers—the relics of April—which a May, sinishine was now lighting np. The pink and white 'petals of the chestnut blossoms stroweilthe path, and the scent of the lilacs filled the air with fragrance. The whole as- i pect of , the place was beautiful enough, and though a City of Tombs,'. it had its own pe culiar charm in those small silent flower-pots, looking like children's gardens; but where no children have ever played. Under the open sky, whether in sunshineror storm, *th green turf and flowen around, was where, we felt— could he have chosen—he would ban wished his last resting-place to be." Nine 'years.after his desitli,Alizapook-hav-, ing cononenced the movement with a poem lamenting that no tombstone marked Hood's grave, the result of a public subscription, peared 'on the erection of a monument, exe cuted by Mathew Noble, the sculptor, over bin remains. Finally, we cannot more appropriately clots' this notice of Hood than lby :complying With the r . eqeest of several correspondent:: 'to re publish the Song of the Shirt., Scircoly any modernpoem has achieved' So much populari ty F(t s.te.tl „_. • . .' • ' ! THE, Etifi3 9E, Titig.BRIRT. • • r • ' 'With Honore weary and wont, . . • , With eyelids hoavY,and-rodr A.Woman eat In unwomanly rags, , ' Flying her needle and thread— ; Each I KIWI! stitch! • • ' . In poverty, hunger, and dirt, , And a tilt with a artIRSO of d01011)118 pitch 'She aang the "gong of the Ehnt !” i' " Work ! work ! work ! I. While the nook is crowing aloof ! • . , And wort—irork•-work, • Till the eters ibine through the roof I Ate Oh !to be &mace ,r. " Along with the herbage:pi Turitr„ • Where woman haa never a Front to :live, If this is Christian work ! ' . : 1,,. • : “ li`ollt —work—Work II the brain beanie to &Aim • . , I. - •II otic—work—work Ilikfeyeakre heitw.r.and dim Pl' am. and•gusiet r mid hand, •• 'I • I ! •' ' soil; and gumot, and swan, ... ~ ~. . "' 'l ?l'over the buttons I fell asleep, •, • • , ,• , ' Add ireW - thenion in a dream 1 . "Mr, Men, with Slaters dear! Oh. Men, with Mothers and Wevos ! It is not linen you're wearing oat, '"• But human creatures' lives : ' • -di.•.' 1 iiititaitmetitels—eilthhi' ••• •' G •• ,' ! n poverty, Ming/a n d dirt. • • , . E wing at once, with a double thread, 4 . A Shipud'aiiirell as a Mild, • - ft , Or r tritte-tht I. kof , firtath i . .. ~ .'....., , hat Phantom of, grishrbono, , r „ Juan* fear his terrible /have, 3, -tebtlitlidOlike my win— I"' • ' ~ nietureolike mg owni '', • •L: °came of the feudal kee p ; ~ , 1I flk.,Uod ! that bread should be so deaf. And gosh and blood so oheaD '!WOrk—worg—vrork ! - + 1 - • ray About never liage• - „ what are its *eget ? it:bed of ittaw, A eititt of brlfat‘ititil • 'That chattet'dyeof—and this naked doer— A table—a broltenchatt-- Atid await ePtisok, my shadow I thank Forsometiinel falling there ! " Work—weak-work ! From ;welly chime to chime, „ Work• - •-worle---ittork , -• As erietnietk Voik for orlitis Itandosndlgagsetoind ' • ' Beam, sad gusset, and band, Till this heart itt sick, and the brain beuumb'd, lie well as the weary band. " Work—era serk. Itithedtdl eeember light, • , Ata ior . . 'hen the weithiti is Warm and brlghE-‘ Whitstandendenth thettlVies • Mtn twoodincerweilows chits As ifissphow me their sunny books - • —' 1, And Twit Me with the, spring. " Oh! but tobreethe thpbrentli - Of the ootttlip and graniose sweet- , With the thy above lily head, And - lhe stets beneath my felt, For only one short Lour To feel as I used td feel, Before I knew the woes *want And the walk that omits a meal I ' 4 Ph ! but for one short hour! A - respite however brief! • Noldeesed leisure for Love or Hope, But only time for Orief ! A little weeping *Mild ease thy hedrl, But in their briny bed My tears must stop, for every drop Hinders needle and thread !" . f l ngtirs *nail and With eyelids heavy and red,. A woman sat in unwomanly rags, Plying her needle and thread— Stitoh t stitch ! stitch ! In poverty, hunger, and dirt, And still with a voice of dolorous pitch, Would that its tone Could leash the Atoll ! She sang this Song of VIM Shirt !" The cc Methorhila of Thotttas tided," from 'whichawe have largely draVinifiASS6 ndtibeA, is a work which may Safely' iitcod lii tile , hands 'of young and old. Ills childieh hive done their duty towards his &mina and lila memory, and shown themselves Worthy or Suck a sire. Ticknor & Fields have toonglit slut the work in a manner very creditable to the act oWledged taste of BoStOn - Letter front cttiox.t, Cornetliidenoe of The Freeci Witahnialort, August 2, 1880 The grand scheme of Disunion In the Borah, fos tered by the inflame and patronage of the pre emit Administration; is assuming from day today a bidder front. The Charleston Mercury shadows forth, in ip article disguised t he title of Glic...ve 4 AL the Future,' l the robe f the or ionisation of the "Southern Confederacy," to be tiomPetted Illißeatell.,COttOri States—to be 4 , pro. .olpitated into revolution" upon trio - morrow of a Republican President. Atlanta, Georgia, is to be the seat of gOvernment" Mr. hi., (tiemminger,) of South Carolina, is to be President, and Mr. F., (Yancey,)' of Alabama, the Vice President and Speaker of the Assembly. Five - thousand volun• teera from South Carolina are to be called tato na tive service, besides the garrisons of Fort Moultrie and Sumpter, and fifty thonaand volunteers and minute men to be ordered by the Provisional Go vernment to bold thenmelves in readiness to march when called for in the six States. These di States are South Carolina, Georgia, Alebtima, Florida, Mississippi, and Louisiana "Ail debts due from merchants and other citi zens to the people of the Borth, are to be seques trated in the bands of the debtors until ordered otherwise by the Provisional Government, (a is Miramon.) But all debtors who may desire to diseharge snob debts (to relieve their consolenees) may pay them over to the Government. '(How kind-hearted!) These debts, it is °etiolated, will amount to forty million of dollars, and their reten tion by the debtors, or If paid over to the Govern ment, will operate as a forced loan of so much, for the benefit of the Southern community." Your readers will perceive that these Disunion ists are very smart finanolere. Their first act, after having gone out of the Union, will be a thieving operation. But they forget one important fact: a strong man can often rob unpunished a weak man, but very seldom the latter the former. In the Northern States, and In other regulated communities, we catch those who steal and put them in the penitentiary, no matter whether we have to hunt for them in Alabama, South Carolina, or any other State. It has even been stetted upon high authority that consorted action has been taken by several, of the States in seceding, and that an agent is to be eant to Europe to sound the Cabinets of France and England as to what polioy they would feel bound to pursue toward a Southern Confederacy in case of a dissolution. Rem wo have high treason openly deolared. These traitors want to sell the country to its bit terest enemies. They want to deliver us into the clutches of despotic powers. They already dream of being rewarded for their treachery by those Go verementa with titles of barons, counts, mar !lulus, lords, etc. Would to God we had a Jack son in our Presidential chair! Aaron Burr's; at tempt at revolution and secession was less open and developed, and yet ho was arrested and tried for high treason at Richmond, and died afterwards in exile. That agent, whoever he may be, and those who sent him out, ought to bo dealt with in a similar manner. We have ropes enough for all the traitors and disunioniets. The chief executioner of the Demooraey of Now York, Hon. D. S. Dickinson, arrived here yester day, to consult with Mr. Buohanan as to the speediest decapitation of the Demooratio office holders of that State. Being engaged in the praise worthy work of assisting Mr. Buohanan, Bigler, and their consort,. in butchering the Democracy, and In facilitating the execution of the designs of the Dlsunionists to sell this country to England and France, under the bestained banner of Breakin ridge and Lane, Mr. Buchanan concluded to give him an official reception, and, therefore, ordered the U. S. Marine Band to proceed to his hotel, (Kirkwood,) and serenade him. The Breokinridge Committee had in the afternoon largo bills posted all over town announcing " that the sage of Bing hamton" would be " nerenaded " in the evening, the first time I ever saw a serenade announced. About two hundred people were present, most of them, however, Douglas and Bell men. Mr. Dickinson spoke about thirty minutec never beard any man of half the reputed abilities of Dickinson make a similar silly speech. He him• self did not know what he said. He can sidered Lincoln dangerous, but Douglas still more danger one. In his idea Dangles was first to be overcome, and then Lincoln, because the Douglas party was just as sectional as the Republican party. He did not, however, express himself as to his own DlD union party, whether it be sectional or not. Be believed that Douglas was forming a great North ern party for 1864, which would absorb the Repub. lioan party. When ho finished speaking, three er four oheers, given by two negroes, one mulatto, and ono white man, greeted his patriotic efforts, ,The people do not like executioners; they feel chilled in their presence ; the axe in the bands of these blood-thirsty men is constantly before their eyes. Mr. Ohurchwell, of Tennessee, followed next, Having recently travelled through Illinois and no. tioed the enthusiasm for Douglas, he made quite a HOUglas epoeoh. He sald that Mr. Douglas ,was "all right in his heart," and that he would make a good President, which remark was voelferously Cheered by the orowd. He corrected himself after. Wards, stating that he had to go for the equality" of States, and, therefore, Mr. Douglas would not enjoy the pleasure to receive his valuable aid. ilts Miltrks were quite incoherent—in short, all the speeches made were of a very Inferior character. Mr. Duehanan has been endorsed at last. The Jackson Association of Washington, after having been purified of the Douglas element, did that lau dable act. Hon. '_ ~~,as~ r :f: ~3= ~ ~.,~ e@tl 'Ai Ciinton„ te/orresoondono4 of The rros#:4:l LOOK niVEN,Pa, JOIy3i,IBBO - The general .tople of Conversation here . is the lotion of the'Oonventbut whisk Met last week in . Harrisburg: Ail the' lending lismcioritts'Wh6 ate in fairer pf. the, regulat dehdidatec of .the regular National Convention- sustain, the action of .the Harrisburg Convention as the wisest and most con sistent courselhaf could haveheeit.pureued. Sus: Mining the regular Permeation and its oraididt*, they could not set an example of irregularity ; pot: being dlsorgenliers, they could not set an example at diaorganitation. perhaps I Weald Say" they did: net wish to follow liagider Jimi,disorganieleg estV ample@ ; for with all due deference itdsteubinhtted; that after the proosadlugs at Baltimeweits State Central. gaumotee, that the. plea imity could nob binesd, ageinst us bythasupporters ?of the Buoheatin ribmniqn ticket. The men Who support.areeltiniidge and isalSe.in Aids county are few and far hetrteen. ,Parsax•Pes• Gressman, Al. , White, Is circulating, X sun told,,the speeohei of.Hmaplurtry T4erpltaAatad R.-B. Hallett at the Breckinridge meeting in Washington : .it •may not be oat of place to call the attentive of I readers intO r witoss hands these Speeches may find their way, that, Humphrey Mareballis the Know fiothling Ile'epriseentative of the ,Lortisville district, which was,ardy carried for him.,b4f.,tbe burning of Irish and ,tlerman , men, women,.. and children. And Benjatnitch*. Hallett, .who is fraudulently put forth as the author of the Cincinnati platform— what olabn.has_ he upon the Democracy I„ . .lle,was repudiated. by the present Administration when Its robes hung fresh upon it; has teen rejeoted by the Boston Democracy. since; and has,now dieted his -Demooratio principles—if he ever.had any. , „ The only difficulty with the Democracy here is the porsigtance of the (Minton - Deentairat, owned and edited by fl .L. Met:lath, In !sustaining, tho action of the titate Central Committee, while. jt Aosta the flag, of, Douglas !and Johnson. The only_ osplaiiation for his (louvre). Um supposition that he prat - oil &Disunionist to a consistent Pomo brat; and hope, thereby to throw the election, into' the Senate. but the schen:to has already been re pudiated by the sterling Democracy, and befogs the first of September; an .electoral tioket, , - clean and pure, in favor of Douglas, and ,folinson, and than, alone, will he before the people.- . • • par County_ tionirthtto,i.ft;eete on the 41st of dtitgust. I will advise you of the result. • But ria, Men can be nominated who. doss not stand fairly tind,equarely ,on the record in favor of. our thee. honored prinelplesend the nOminees of the party. The prospect of Foster's ,spsfss is growing stilt stronger. Thank Heaven there is no division. of . the Democracy on that subject. Mark the tirodie. 'ion—Clinton county Will give ft greater majority or Douglas and Foster than she did for Buohanait or Packer. Yours truly, Letter from New York. TIIE GREAT HEENAN Trarmst.: CHANGE IN TAM PROGRANNE—CONSTERNATION AMONG THE OA/- Units: A BOY *lion VIRGINIA WINS slo,ooo l — OF intone NAPOLEON BONAPARTX Von PRANCE—REIGRATION—EXACTIONN IN TIM Obero3t 80/./Nll-11;1? QUARTERS OP THE SAYERTA /MOANER?. • . ICorresporidenoe of TOO Presci , ;Iris Yomr. August 2,1880. A change ha; been made in the Heenan pro gramme. lie is tube exhibited in different style on a muob larger and inort`reapeotable soitle,tlmn was originally intended. The speoulatois in the Idiair look upon it as a "bik tking,'i and are ma king calculations accordingly. The gew Betsy, Theatre, where it was proposed to open, will corn kirtably oO t four thousand persons, but a far more ntimmkris t dddiende to expo° fed. Tho Neiman menage Mont has passed into the hinds of Mr. Nixon, of "Niblo's (larder., a man of la eaperionoe sod tact In everything Connected ,public.,Aleistqwe o , has cods, apcitril are thelprilennenoe take place in the afterndoi: Is 'arrangements will &Doom- Misdate Witty thowiand spectators, Including seats for rode thmisaltd ladies and gentian's' aeeompany leg thesh- , -no, lady to be ad<teil ifithottVie melt companion. Mr.hilion had the Idea thio there sae many ladieit'in New York who would like to see the complete modus operandi of a prise• battle, in all Its details; and he proposes to show it to them. Rir this purpose he has engaged thwfamons Ed. Price, of Boston, the soholarly fighting man, with whom Heenan will put up his hands." Several other fistlo notables have also been hired. The usual Sparring motions will be gone throllgh with liy the secondary arthlts, after which a full representation of a regular mill " will be given by Merman and Fritie—seconds, bottle-holders, corners, scratch, shake bandit, punch head, "go to grade," and all that. You can imagine how, in thia irefined and • ealtivated age, and in a town whose moral tone is so unapproachably high as that of New Yorg, that a mevel-earathition „like this, so ealculated to elevate and improve and, to strengthen the holier affeotions of our nature, will draw. Everybody will go. Of course they will. All must see the man who chivalrously stood up for the honor of his country, and came mighty near licking Thomas Sayers to immortal smash. There is something national about it—considera ble of the national bird and the stars and stripes; and, besides, the American fair want to see one big fellow knock another big fellow down. This femi nine and laudable curiosity must belratified, and Mr. Nixon has undertaken to do it. Speaking of pugilism, naturally suggests gam -bling, Stories have frequently boon tgld of men 'Who have gone into faro banks, won Ave and ten ' thousand dollars In a night, and walked'off with the property. An irstaners of this sort has just been told me by an 'impostor of police. A few evenings since a young man from Virginia, ap. patently not more than eighteen years of age, went with a friend to the most extensive of the gambling hells in this city. After partaking of the trumptuoue supper always served at, those planes, hecommeneed playing faro, and in a short, thne, by boldness and luck, won ten thousand del. lam Be asked the banker to change his u ships" for money, which was done, and he went away without stopping a moment or uttering a word. Be has not entered the place steno,nor has he been seen in the city. It is understo od be left for home, next morning. He is said to have exhibited no trace of agitation, no elation at the tide that let so steadily in his favor, nor was there apparent in his features the peculiar expression 80 easily detecta ble in the face of the professional player. That this young man will become a habitual gambler can scarcely be doubted. So large a sum so easily won will ho sure to lure him on again. Mr. J. N. Bonaparte has been In town - for a few days, but left in the steamer Africa, for Liverpool, yesterday. He received last week, from Paris, a despatch desiring his immediate appearance in that capital. It has been intimated that negotiations are pending for an amicable and satisfactory ad justment of all the domeetlo diffioul ties existing be tween the Patterson Bonapartes and other branches of the original Bonaparte tree. The emigration at this port alum January I it 60,5.58, against 46,978 in the corresponding period last year. The custom-house men are in profane mood to day at the exerbita nt demand made upon them yesterday for one-fifth of their month's salary as a contribution to the Breckinrldge politloal fund. Some had the pluck to refuse. but nearly all yield ed rather than risk the loss of their places The Seventh Regthoent will, at the close of the present month, move into their now armory—the most spacious and costly one In the country—in the upper part of the now Tompkins market build ing. Their drill room is 180 foot long, by 100 feet wide, and free from obstruotions. A balcony for speotafors is eroded at one end. Under the drill room are eleven rooms, 21 by 36, intended as ar mories for the eight companies, the engineer corps, the troop, and the bend. There are also rooms, tastefully upholetered,' for the regular monthly meetinge of the (liken The design of the whole building was made by Col. Lefferts, commander of theVeventh, who, of course, kept in view there quiromenta of the superb corps of which he is the A Mercantile Suggegtion. [For Tho Press.] I noticed in the papers some days since that the banks of our city and the neighboring States bad formed an association for the purpose of suppress• ing counterfeiting, .to. I approve the movement, and have no doubt they as well an the community will be much benefited. This has recalled to my mind an idea that I have long entertained, that a great advantage would accrue to the merchants of our city by a somewhat similar assooiation. It is a well-known foot that we aro frequently Imposed upon by parties who make their appearance in market to purchase goods; representations are sometimes made for obtaining credit, whioli have no foundation in fact, and it sometimes happens that parties who have enjoyed a fair credit pur chaos new stooks, (perhaps larger than usual,) take them home, and in a short time sell out, pay their home debts, and leave us nothing. I have known of two Instances, (and there are many more on record, I have no doubt,) whore gOode have been purchased here ; immediately on their arrival at their place of destination they have been sold, and the parties absconded. Now, I have a remedy to propose, which I think will at least have the tendency to lessen our risks. It is this— For the merchants of our city to form an associa tion, cash contributing an amount annually, in pro. portion to his bales, (after the Mercantile Agency plan,) which will form a handsome sum; this / would appropriate for the purpose of following, to any part of the country such parties as have pur chased goods with the intention of defrauding their creditors, and the prosecuting them to the uttevmost , extent of the law. This should be the cardinal prin-. alp% of the association. When it ,became known that there was an institution in existence whose duty it was to follow to the remotest part 'of the Union absoonding debtors, to prbsecute them, and all others who obtain our goods undet false pre. themes, my Impression. is that the , evil would be 'mitigated, Under., cue, present systemyof each creditor soling for himself, the rascals, in the large majority of oisetl, are suffered to escape; in 0021110- queues of the trouble - 'and • expense nedibesdry to. obtain a conviction; but if the proposed associa tion formed, it would be InmeseavY to have • proper °Moen in charge of it, whose sole duty it would be to carry on the objeotof its institutions— Of bourse, it would be undershiculthat none but members of the aseoelation would be entitled to its benefits. I throw out the above views for consideration. The details of the system will have to be worked out at another time. M. S. tENTW,: RELILGIO t tIi4;, I ,INTk!ALIGENPE T .. onuismat'irmott.-4 Ba l ptief'icitemiporaty, this Week, dttiotii it °Anon eilltnitif to'thi raided 'tif 'Phristian union,as it has' lioritt''atintht ' to' de-: veloped within "the last tiro yeire, to *kW wir gue.thsl.That there are me+ batrttnienterdlinion; whieb i hs• safe to use, but three, willokale suPpli tlt,the,W,ord and apirit of God. Thist 14 to only In the use of them thitthe 11.12RW01 to out 'Lord's privet esti be, oxpeoted,,tfist "all nosy i n One* a find the rather are l one." "That i Oat 1 piss in spirit; 'doot+se, , Illid. piehtee? Ai!, l owit i t 411trist h preyed.A. V, ifnd the "apostles' kbideidiet, and wh h alonsilitilll'ismfeht' the WO 4'AM:: 'Xis) w ere thislitnet,&tiiAilli4lisit,ttlihtlethark iiitirld pe and.prilr nerisoiat:br wa i h e a s t li po i Signe th&t they, hue It stitlet•litiey •hisee It ylltit itildlil, t` W/ 11 4.-ih the Wulff $ 414 rhm. 1444*ft Lord." , Wh!it do the ' iraterute ; to , o fr 4 "Whit is Ithbusd id. resorting to ??? 2 ,40,1al ~ ithrepee lot' thi tritel•iiti''t • tits Writer has evitlently °Wired, 'Whtf lid not bee. altegettie'r' lase, table-Id sionie - other Owes, • • st4istsJ6rs hettsiistiek in' wehiel effist4; toys, lis leg ilisainidaatiprofessien Mt Allsoien".ol. the TAO gotrmily, el'at NOT. •1 , ;•y . , ~ ~. :,,n.,. ~, .. Air. Parnitknatiarut, OT. rt,Blll,,Clitr , rrahls 0 le one f the moat actuated Cathallo a dlyinee in Philade liii . rant Ma obtirob—st. ?TollP.Fli, O 1 W strait a d Williig'i i li a:l—W one Of the; beit'Alrf tended. I The Roden 'atot, commenting upon, the serileea otlrether Bailialiti,:11 1 4101161 . alit; 'to*, whiledhi health, a' full4eingth portrait'obweld tail 1 taken o Idta, and , that!Mi.o Salty • (*fro fdrini 1 Bishop Waffle 'portrait. , for the Propagasta •at Rome w th 40 mink anootea) ahoold be engaged do execute 1 10. The fact that no ,portralt bad Imipo pioanrec of the Ante Dr. Ryder prior to)* dqatb ha ailed as n r °evil for Rio above apostle°. ' The 'J'itot is slightl y y nihnalien; howilier,. as many who have prardrid final Mr. *Mean; 'in thleolty, conies of the fine phOtograph lateen Uteri' by him of Tor. 'Ryder, a few days preriona to hie hat .ran, are data latterly, not, to any bi starlet' in Allele, Imo intlyite, as tkey irtiOte, 4re aware. '.Gina; JSWlllllll4l3T.—Lasi . Banda, ants that Jpithib.flist of the nsixath' of Ab, a month which •iti,:ftils history of Israel stands mr•-ernirtent for the number at nations} pa:amities fierminted with 1 it Itk,l,orohronoloa. I iimencot4ity arenta it 4 inemora leler:the dee* of dartruOite deelona. t Ron that( none but .ii)thui and 7glitob'sficiuld "enier ' , into th ' Promised tant?the'distniation'• ef At tirst To ple by Ifeithohadnesser i the 'destruction of the end Temple ; the devastation of the ti_iy.' .Better, ad the ploughing ttp.of the fttokhstlefunt the; Tem le by Tunnmandre, in the-trim e at's.' Brian. he feat above Wan* u,thoweves, has more spia4referenoe to the. destreation of. the first.and send Temples, and wee, genera l ity ob. served ii rellMte aynagoguoe , where the Book of, Lanierititiolkwes read in the original Hebrew. - 1 / . Thin fi , Methodist paper, entitled The Mato /hal r Hood in Relit:Ai; Witch 'mai be said to hive prang into being from the steunlild maintained in the late BairalOConferl ewe, onithe subject of slavery, hu strudy taken Its plead in the drib rink of reirgiotiOreekileal, It is 14h- toned, patented!) , independent, and in all rear:Ftts better deserves the name of wirosliapar than fonollftho of its contemporaries Nertit,and Beath. !The grounds taken by it on the slaver*, queslioni are what are ninally itylid , reettrwrve: tive," dialing midway barrier' the two eitremir. The nerd paper ieptibilshed in' quarto form, and is edited hi ROY. G. R. Crooks, 1).D., aad Rev. .lobn MoClin k. D. D. • Dn. Br ten' 8 SANT- CASSWIANIAL.-4S is amaeunoed' in the ew York papers' that the,venerableillr.r. Spring, low pf, the oldest the • sonl•Aproainent living raintsterai,u the VS:lk stlyterian. Church, will preaqb lie fiftieth anniversary sermon oat to-inor row (entiday) morning, in the church over Which he WAS Scat settled as a pallier, and in which be lies 'mutinied to Tibor ever einoi. Di. Siring ii now the (Admit liiator ti n the WY MIN* York, with a Mingle exception, and% is •nrsmoted that hie semi oarjtenblal review at bin ministerial labor* will be m valuable contribution to the religious and theological history of his time. • Toe Am , . Amu. Bravaxs, 1 ate editor of the Christian Advocate and Journal, (Methodist,) bad, within three days after his withdraWal from the editorship of that paper, three *Alegre offer t 6 Make biro the; pr , Wident,und two elturehu their pastor. ;Two :p,iara,tts solicited his areeptarese their editorstdrrand two oolleges offered him a 'prOfetworship. Comment upon the , popularity of Dr. B. after this, would he separleous. GMILIBMXI AND Tllll • Paissis:—The Stainan clergy are reported to he 'delighted with the sim plicity and modesty of Ileribeldre bearing. He is said o And himself more at home with the Sicilian lergy than with any other, because it hag never made common canes with tyranny, or lost the manly virtues of the citizen. "It was worth while to come to Sicily," he said, "if only to And out that there is still au Italian clergy." UNITARIAN.—The Annual Autumnal Convention of the jjnitarian Communion, will be hold, in Brooklyn on the Pd, 3d, and 9th of Ootober. Rev. James Martineau, of London, has accepted an in vitation to be present and preach on the °passion. Tea linv. Dn. Tyra states that in the thirty-one years of his ministry and personal connection with Sunday schools, he his received, directly from them, over three hundred youths of both sexes to the Lords table. AT a recent Methodist love-feast at White Plains, N. Y., remarks were made by a son of Van Wert, one of the oapturera of Major Andre. Van Wert is now a local preacher. Ray. JOSEPH RUDDER and wife, lately arrived from England, are both under medical treatment in the city of New York. Tea Rnv. JOHN B. Kvaicn has been ordained pastor of the church at Strasburg, Lancaster county. INTEReSTING Review or viz LIBAtiON Mae earat.—:The Rev. W. M Thomson, D. D., writing from BeYrout, gives an intelligent review of tbo outrages 'reoently committed upon the Christians cf Syria, udder the Turkish Government, from which we eatrant the following : " 1. The European Governments, having adopted Turkey into the general famllyof nations, consum mate their folly by deciding that no interfertnce with hes governmental operations was to be al lowed. ',Hence the connate of all nations found themselves paralysed by positive instruetiens for. bidding them to do anything to arrest this mad and infernal Fork. " 2. Bpyrout has been governed for the last few years bynn old, talented, but most bigoted Pasha, 'who has , managed to get the Christians of the Kesrawan,of Zahleh, and of Delv el -Kamar, lute, a state of semi-rebellion against himself, and be has been i plotting their deetruotlon for a long time. By increasing the between all and espeoially by stirring up the hatred of the Bruges toward the Christians, be has now suceeeded. " 3. The Christians, having been!now for so many years without any acknowledged head, found them selves utterly disorganised, and unable to resist the wild onslaught of their enemies. Except at Zahlob, they have made no real resistenue,. The whole affair was driven through with startling ra pidity. All Lebanon wee la a blase In one day. The Turkish Government everywhere assisted the Drnses. • "5. I regard the somas of the Drove and its accompanying atrocities" as their Anal and meter destruction as a body. Never again will they rule over Christians. Remember that the scenes of cold-blooded butchery of unarmed men, of wo men, of priests, monks, and nuns. not to speak of conflagrations of towns, villages . , hamlets, church es, convents, eta , has no parallel in the history of Lebanon I have this very year reed through the entire history of Lebanon since the Arabs have re sided on it, end it contains nothing that can cont pare with this tremendous tragedy. "6. There were no European ships-of-war on this coast at the outbreak, and they are just be ginning to assemble, but their coming is certain, and non-intervention cc at an end. The consuls yesterday received orders all to act in eoneert to stop the twat. "7. I is expected that Ruesia and France will act seprotately front England, Austria, and Pres flia, and the downfall of the whole Turkish em pire may be looked for. I am slow to blow the trumpet of alarm, bit this grand and fearful result is not Improbable. "8. It Is to be expected that all these commo tions will bo overruled (by Dim whose promise is to bring good out of evil) for the ultimate triumph of the Gospel in this empire No real disaster to the cause of Christ is possible." s 4 Sharp Practice.” (For The Prue.] Mn. EDITOR: Allow me, through the medium of your 'paper, to correct a statement in your loot! column of Thurtday, entitled "sharp practice." The parties who visited the magnificent but badly managed chip at, Cape May, were put on board the flne , propealer John S. Shriver, owned by the Bal. timer, and Philadelphia Steamboat Company, end from her transferred to the deck of the Great Eastern. when, instead of being huddled off after a few minutes' inspection, it was almost impossible to leave her—as the writer of this occupied at least two hoard in his attempts to get off-owing to the crowd on board, and the bad management of thole in charge. VaRITAS. o f Ridgefield, Conn., FRANCIS A. ROOLWEL 7, ) made a shipment of his of domestic wines year,e of the Missionary staticnis lndia about a and a half ago, since which time he haareeetesd °niers and made three shipments more teClakutta, and a point 900 relies in the interior:" The - Norwalk. Oaartee has been shown letters ftoit a Sesident there, in which he speaks particularly of the keno; Solid remits' followins the use of his blackberry: wines in the chronic dysentery so pre iilent'inthe hot swoons in that be' until. This speaks wall for oar Connecticut winemaker, and the quality •of his wines, which hav,e kept unimpaired after twice passing the equator. „ - THE iatt - F.E . etv Tint WILIILLY Plums will be 11111114 W osbowerno mil (Per annum, in advatico,.)lo-- Thies Corms, ” " ' • -- ' Five' " ". , 1 ‘ •• Ten • ~" " . MIAS Tlifeatl" " " • (to coo ailinosloo,9o TiOhot7Corilee.ollover " (to MMus of eat* nboarileW sash.-- 1.90 rera Chihli(' Twooty-oworri ererOnt semi as room eopy to the setter-ap,of oho MMEM=I emu/myna PRIM . , . !Imo! three Milk*, a M 0011,63 IWO ter COSSIA" ecoapnen. • - PERBOA . 3L'. --Professor Yowler, the piumr4ostAmill !Pm to Europe on a profearloial tder. - • . • The Republicans of POMOeMikvi nominated Tom Corwin fee, ii!lsemil . ; mll7:sildassa. tiop,, it their 'musty ocksvmetios*Bealedisir. —Primte orders ksvolsisly beer Shur to - Ihe PreSoh press to ssy as Halo se pbmilds ityNl 411s -Ihsiai. - " abuse° at Gamow 991*-Tpra a vie% *AM; ria "Wag poem: VO. Trpimr." . friaVide of a vanarable oftiksaa, writiss ftein . Ditreit, wbiw leils at pro ineithiefearaies, sigmas *sift of kb am Mum- A ll6 "" c t tb of.offeli- •,..) • v• 1 4swg, of minpos... -;101tIli art !pi • 11359 tha pene ee & wait Bii~jBlii. 9494, 11164 9 f .41*i Se *we: ititlssi leek or= ll-, L - -Tha Knigliiiiffri' • - otillnkag • nia•t• beg in Norfolk on 14914ir . evifeb . hp, eget Airs 'Gen: • Cfiingio Maltby; the 7ge99 • Isaao lipsidgte; Sw.llo 'Park% dad Ml* 7 ,%/ 1 : • -.:14 , 7 lipa. to said that Mbo Abby FijotYinigAiant :oan Toot Hot, boa nada quite.' otoolittal it s por• toriaanno fyi F,kweses ;bribe bum& of ; nid that Tannueliati Nor .traledr, prediso slag- Bait titan for her. , • • . • - ..,! • = —GeV. Ghos t of Ohlo f Is to giesibe sasses dress before.Altswitgrienitarial 41oeirly:ef ASSIMOr eounty.-Vt.t.ed their-fair, is Eieptesiber nut. A ppm is 411100 be gives JAN a: flaw "Nbst• fair, wbte4is.sl. Iy Re of *stela is ilmilosstbli lint be he'd of tlie Ng, 6th, end Mee September tie 6 1 4 skin Ida be en the-76: • . r • • :L.(ioreritor Rant, says the' Loeigisrt was yosterday salmi by the martin Is leaf 1125 for non-titters/awe as st *mass at lin pt's. sat session of the Cireult Wirt. Alp Um piesdod'its eittana4ton list -the Goners* mai a raembei of theNlapra mount, Uzi autimilge Da vis insisted ost *peen ibetlase,' • - - • —Another Poetical', Ittotioor• of Mr.' mend Tad ayeon has appease:L-1a %alarm oil 16. fr.• Cb.iw - Toanyson Turner, as a eosittibistor to Komilines Itfagazins. -This gontionsse puked Or ki~ai In his Ant pablioatioa, "Papule _Two Baalbearl" ha afterwards. took PAM ei Tanen' ON we: landing to a property is Lisoolaabitek ' S yvierr loarthar, Prodatiok, psktiahnd 1 welledo• air pesos —The wealthy Men* ids Aligrb 'of hew" who died roma time ego, weave liarshetaimathrt, Maio 'hit invent 40111 day emeseliedrtag hat,hi : reprimended • hint . kw>da' - ertrwriipaie . Bet it it the old hat rxi tyre as; I had It ironed for a- freed." ''Alt," edit the Nemptir, i , bot I aid not know it oould be restored. Here it the frano you paid—rwilf take the tusk" led be forthwith transferred the resented bearer tilde Own heed. The Great Eager* filpatahatior, Bynum? (bur Bartans, "c- RI! Yaw, Ay , ,sast X, Mt 9. aki it ankr.bip , .doatrahla that the pylons *ran Oa informal of the slap, taken by the dirsotors of the Great Sagan to mews maple means of astresb- Saints for the visitors' en beard dxaria the late es ourdou to , Coln May, jam' Wtneta le state that - the whole arrangements Ihr providing seals aid refreshments were undertaken by Jar. Oxr.,' stilt - whom it was stienteted as. follows : " 210 Wawa attendoi to visitors 'will be required frost than, under your dheetien; and •the" refessluassits to be provided will, neither in quality ow quad% Ml below the standard of a lint-clams hotel-7 , By order of the directors. - I PUN, sir, your; very rearealilw J. H. I'AT, Donnie the last fifteen years, tits& is to My, rinse 1845, 9;178;69146A11i t 0‘11111,4* ias and 2.285.520 wartiagenariv bawd In England and Wales. Ttaa pa~oB yid* anettated to *boot , 16.71/6.000 ie 1.848, wasortf. sated at about 19,740,000 in 1859, bobs aa %- onion l ofjaboat 18.06 par east., or 1.18 per sent iannalb -Jawriew -of The Ploiliadlelpeda Markets. • rayrAssiariA,, Maul a. LR The inerkets for most of the leatmeartieles have ruled inactive during the neat Inseir.'Otiletald are dull. For Wheat and Cora ,isetter edema have-peas real zed.' Bark ie. quiet: Potters, orosnicnea time Oset continues quiet. Grochrise sit not *V meta inatirld for. and Caressed Mienes are eget.- lee. esatimmire irusetive. The Provision market roatiewie line, with [air seise at lull rates. Fish erode% Fran no eireese. sides and Leather continue suet.' Navel Stoves ass in moderate request. Oils; there is wore demeaVer Fish Oils, which are bringing full 'need , teed, an Tees are very inactive. Tolima:* very . LittM emu. Whiskey continues dell. Wool, the &mead contraries . . The Fleur market has teen enteneel, dario m t MO west. sad notwithstanding the sidles°, in ;noes, oodarly for old OWN& &Tor ib• „VZ &dee only reaeh abouti.ooo Mims ftont it& barrel for old stock, on to alkali WM 515 tres to s rmh-troW mi txtiran g auill % anoy fo anamilma *M m ° l t n o freshness. There is no export demand. Madge Wog ere confined to tee want. of Ike retallair eat &Ow* at our stove quotations. Rl.l Flour and Cma are VIM valet ;_the krrener held at USW. sad Ma tter at UMW_ ..10f, if: barn& „ • - The following is the mioieetioli of !loaf and sea. for the week,endmg Await& infiii Barrels, of superfine ._— do, fine. , _ . da . do. Rye do. Com Mea1...... do. condemned Total.. - • ....... SAO wil.:4T.--The sienna still eminana mark amt it is in r demand at the ‘advaises Wan out about' RAMO elm good and crime Pennsylvania & South ern red, at from Weak& Mud, at WOK II; • choice lot sold at alAsiabs IP _bus • silts !Imes at from Mango. the tatter fora saunas Mk sonars *a slowly ; *bout gjne bushels sold daring Ors week at Uo for new. and 74.15 e for old POSAVATILIDI4' - Can sew- Daunt in good demand st tie ad_PFlO l / 4 - . 4 .4."5".4 411111 S bushel. "nine yellow. In atom , a dd a t ineres. lag a email iot of fair atalaty at OK Gala vete heallauha mand ; tin Commie about &OM Mahe& 1141110110_ for sew thorn. and 37,406 for old Paingsrmants- PROVIII 0116.—Thi re is &firms realms. bat tlictsw. &shone is all den are limited. Kra Frt held at 1/193f•RY0 Par Dbl. City-peeked Mess Reef natl. slowly for liblDe MOM• anont'loo Dennis ma re seed Rammed at Lie ; Bides, i• and Shoulders at 101(e. Dash and N &ance ft meats no Mutate. Lard—TM moot is mare Iv dimed. and holders are drm at 1.33(0. to tierces. 4nd lb in kegs. Igo chants ia Sutter I W Cheese. RIBTAT4—fa Iron there has been an isetivity. amt no chants in Pia Metal_mnoe our last rePart. • 800 tan. sots at an for No.l Anthracite, em I. and SRA* for N 0.3. A lot i tsf ur itronal add at 163 pqr ton. g Monti.. Bar iles iron— re Is more inquiry *don oh sass urines. lone lams transactions in Railroad Bare hays been sands. Om terms of which bare not tratindred. CO PP KR —Prima are without alAeratioe. We quote Tallow Metal at No, on time, and English Sheathing at A e par lb, LEAD.-There le but Lttie offering. and we hear of Do males, ; • B RK :-There it very little °ferns ; wan of about 30 khda let .No 1 Reiterant:cu. at WOO, which as a de cline Tanners nark contain:an sis last quoted, via $lOOll for chestent.suld 0124111013 fore pews' oak CANDLES are very dull ; EMS boxesolty-nsede Ada mantine sold, part 143 c. 4 months, and part on private terma "germ are dull attic.. COAL,,-The market is without any change. and will probably remain n for several weeks, neat the addi tional advent* of freights and tolls from the Schuylkill; Me dernatid is moderately activate this -amen ems the leer Is h ke r ig n t a bt d . 1.1:70nr mor.haa COF FIFE meets with a good megiri from the trade. at fully former Yates: but there is lift or no stock in fust Laud.. The gales comers.. about2Aubmil geed Rio at law Ohio on the usual terms. COTTON.-There es a Awn feeliam in the market and holders have succeeded in realizing an advance, which we noted, leek week. bat numuNaturare came forward slowly. Bales of about MO elnely Up lands. at 73in for inferior. tollede for mob, for trnAMlng fair "stay. IIAUO3 AND DYES.-There is bet little doing. Among the Wes we nodes Rode Ash at Skiet.Bleaohilig Powderest d Relined Borax at Mc.= months. Indigo-We notices sMMI sales of Bengal at 411.2234 to el Se Yr 7b, nu months. FRUIT.-In famine Merit has Wag ery little do in g. A cargo ef Bahama, Ping Armies sold from the wirmf at 417.028 , 100. OfOraitem end Lemons there Cr, gone now in Brat hands. Green Avalon are erriving tingly' maim at 816002 50 jir bbl. Peaches are beginning to come in. and sell at eh Ng basket- PRAT( 1 :8-There Are but few offering. Balm of memo 00. -There are dull. and Mackerel are Ribes sloe& from stare at 817018 for No. li, and 17 14, M0d for No. hi. The lass invoice sale was at 817, 8 and 841.11104 for the three number* Pickled Herring sell from store at 8303.25 per bhl. Codfish eontinne ennead quote at 82.3.26 per Ito lbs. FREIGHTS-There is s better feeling is the market generally for foreign and coastwise. for Liverpool and London ; ship ownenr are demandum higher rater, Mit no engagements karts the reported.. A malt vessel Su gar e charted for WI West 'lndite and bath. with Su at Mo per 100, For New Orleeneltior foot ; Mobile 120 Cbartestsniand Savannah So Wilmington 50. For Seaton 100 for Floor So for Oram t to %for measurement oods and lILTS to eh% for Pig and Manufactured Iron., ()old freights continue the same es lastweelr. GINS fc,1413 is without movement, and prime are un hanged. GUANO.-There is very little doing, and no change to note in any of thelsading kinds. HEMP.-There a *err little stook, here, and we hear of no transactions. s t HIDES are dull; An import of 4,olB•Lagnslrs. and Porto Ca bellolust arrived remain - unsold. , HOPS are 'ter, dull, and onlyin a recoil *ay at 80110 4fr' • _ for New Hester:l and Western. LIJMBEN,-Thericle a fair trade doing in Sout h de scriptions : sales of whist Flee at • 1014018; ern Bap do.. 'Ue 8r wl.llllofeetvileinleen. 08 8001 L Lathe sell at 111 MOL ABBl,B.—The Market.•*oedema& renuriably :inset. and the sates have been omitted Somali lots of Cuba at 810, and 'New Orleans at 4111.011tilete. NAVAL STORES.-There has been very little/outs in any description ; small lb s of obmainon Roam sold at el 00. and No. lan 1.76 ii bbl. Thiramil pit c h m ali ce as last quoted. Spirits or Tiirpentine Is held with more firmness. but the demand fa hunted, with yaks at tee 400 ew gallon. *ash. • OILIL-In Fish title there us/it feeling. with sales of crude Wade sib° tone; bleached Winter de at Nip Mo. and Sperm ' APonnin. Littered Oil yells slowly at Mto sac. rto. 1 to iwtor Lard Oil at Mo. Pine Oil **a muse select adored. revolts of Beans and Whale Wand Whalebone into the United States: Bids se. Ma tab. Lbs bone. Total for the week-. 4,278 010 44,141 HOW j,Ol ,440 From Jana to date 110,8M1 1.014,181 Same time last year-•... 44.106 MAN 1,212L1100 .old PLASTER is in HMO, dems;td ; two cargoes of soft surto tr too. SALT is nnohangod l en invoice of Turks Ireland re mains unsold. • • s SHED&-There is but little Ciremeedefernin. and sere in lots at 1/ 11805 . 0- Weri TnsoiktY 421 bus. Flaxseed is beeinaneg to *nits frost the Sou th. ' and Neils at ai 600)1.61 qr bo, 8 UGA -The market is duieL Istit kiriese r anehanged: males of 700 hbde Cuba skid forte 1110 at 761131 a, *AY MO biases Havana brown and white tit, ?Melte fe 1 on time. A' Kilt ITS -Brandy and ihiLare,,stm • et..,. Rain selling at 380370 411 0 gallon. L liatee to dell, with sale of 10? bola Pennsylvania and Ithio at 1140610, hate tie, and cl a Ludgellec gr gallon. - TA I.OW it tOokloge,sad the Betolem A Areories ton tonne making any conelts for - Vire darter at resent quantitate • we ifs inty-ren *red a logo ;0 odind coontrx at Of Ole WS. •r. • °SACCO continues quiet, and peleeliare uachinged. WINF.-No treasacticaue Werth, MOM WOW been I tooottbds ofttinn, 46E4,—ns 'noel* Or Wel— r xe . Isn in lo At O accamulatinw sallm a. fo r tgeod ale au hom e lo to - 01 pet, for oormaan to , Awe. MEI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers