The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, September 19, 1860, Image 1

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a9ailii4B Diena. 4
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mum . 4/AFB,:rI44.VOIAB ; AND JIA#-
Kirabra; = , f; ;
Cr " lo27 : ' MOM Ilia' AND, NOM'
RRODB ISLAND LINISBY8;
PRILADNLPIIIA UNSAYS AND CHNOSii;
Jerrtrcar nom, Op' cionONADEB;:'
MONO ODOM AND XERBBYB
Au-if*. ND usioi MOTES;
BLACK:iIn?,N44IC7 ,ratf/E91112,1*;''.,
BLACK AND NEIND , DOXISKINEc ,
O A2IOI73iNTDDNI4CIAJNWONNS; f
o Ailtianit*e. 4;4;
, •
WASHING T O N ' -.MILL 8, =
'ltairsitLY ILY' isZl2/"Hithie
astawas arauona in ' '
smocipasiaiiiatocraux
rpm UAVEIIII ind BECiArD 9:IQTRIt.
BaxampitAti " - maims. .
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1411110thallisimi Juan WILYA OLOTRIS. ' •
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1 11 440. , -1
!dated :NWT UWITIMIL s
iii seidknion ittrok,,*,
Am's; - . samaras. a:ma,
PREPARED GLDE.';'
5i:!,4, 4 44:411131$ -
PRAPARED,;(EftLVE!
,Airracit
. _ .
11.00X0Mirt •-•- - ••• •- • - DaPATCIII
• „, 41,141 T: per .!..trenuri,,,,„.
.
As WiriAosiowl.mosi. sig
fessaks, itis.vety-Aosirabli to hoooosow oboacsoi
omookoltwkloppoistiohnolinh7Oroornovolts
aimilsglestek iftessemift aid iittototoi said
to bestial& IV , it it obagittik*uselltillitheoll•k=
tag point; Timmy Liao loiter • totowegty to, liiehor
chain, istiatotia witioasomifiamiltdithe: aid booby
meow Mated thCortie9pfereomeatollii4o6•V
ontaimaiivad.'
itifsaboiraM mists' deals ,
aidaltilidi malibrikiitad *Mies* all ' •
vialitiseetlk• - • blipsirsisre stiii. •it tW
sled - tie 41••• vnie9ii* Wit**
airmi verrohns; -- • - t
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W . ITZIA I6I X , YARNALL•;-
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, N0.,14,20 CHESTNUT *MET. • •
um:rthaulitArposit. ths Molloy strait Arti.) •
TABLeCTITLEEY, OVAL WALETEria."
xnaturromi. DOCH
• - 41,01211.11 italloLES,*e.: tO. . ,"
limmiteoinaigioiss lloriusineo-al pietbsaily
isoiisd to on sosaisittos - at.tkli Moak of Mum,.
.CLOTIEUPIG:
K E .,4 -ti r l ig:PO#Pl47K,;,-
#01:04 ~utis Br BT.
Bart soar itiourospArrot :1
`1 44 447. fl4#:ile;BriE* kViirift a;
...rogotioiwitik a la;aosmortosoit of '
NEW -AND . I * llo /4 131 a1 . :9000.: - •
irkdoi lizia9Pot,
SOE FIPIDINGIL
FEIA.O3 BakiTTON & `4040.,, •
zuroinuts AND,DIALERS
Eiri s tnr*Be
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iiatoinnuentap t itium,,
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k t t*N4W ittatith
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imiffrffikelffiff. Off BONN'
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NMI is las* artionslatort:bs
v:INICAELAS Zr.TAlNLlkihromikAgest,
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14 ' fW
OU
, 4610 NW „
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aitnsE..,-2tobo-bibls
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NES
DEWING, :
.fissaluiturrAri /num ; lISOOND , FLOW'.
lIARRIEVIEOU'Db/B ,
I , ; -, 13 WING MACIHINIit,
Nita%
/ 4117 y.
A itill:FOß QUILTING AND
, 1 , f - 1164 L i'Wcsitic.
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11,4y*VPIWENGERAI 00.13
.41>1Et i LV" AX D — DOITBLII-LO4 IMMO*
•
SEWING :MACHINES;
,FAlnvy i o s . „
: ,••
MaDDLERn, nem.
NO. 1328 ARCH STREET.
Noe of Erfu7'ntataourrs;s4o: • "
moo of DOUBLE-VIXT.B7IToa IitAOHINE from
Illesamnisi , 4 ,4; !: „
Pro onototent oat most! itiolont tsoot4nolt mann
inolarod allkindir t _ •,• • , •
P. airAcninoll,elLlC. 7 oargruN.,iljEirritifis
9.11.4 sta. soutduitls on nand. • J7ll-am
ME=
'Witoor a UMW • SEWING 'MA
'.furr-mat/ChMisilltei
; LApA.gre.pgicss;rxumapica.
•WlLLLild , lliliOßSTlktittli.
might%
s • is • Odjotifiltethc,Jranssfadory,)
Invlte the attention of buyers to their Fall stook of
LADIES' DRESS
;; AND: ,
TRIMMINGS,
; ."CoMplitININCi
FANCY DRESS GLUM CORDS, BINDMOS ,
' 'VELUM Fkrivozs
" •
111;LX AND,6III,I' BiairINOB.'BUTTONI3, BRAIDS,
BEWitatl, &c:, &c.
I • - ; Ocrinw 'took of •
1 3 /CRUIN;ZEPIMUI I I ,I PIET, I 4 I 9k SycKg,,
, ' I vaiiiarne and embraces a full line
of all colors and shades. "
co lt "
facilities for home pro4cotion, as well as, direct
unleatton with foreign markets. enables us to offer
in tioemlnitil to iurohasera: sag -lm
itpaTIWI
-..e.kiwpaciet, 40, mmoittEßs,'
, 7 - RATS. 111110TXD TO ,
I :1.10i4: sOUTh . ZO . Vitt . STREET.
12 , rs, sap_
, thin 4crier stand.
• = - •tr 77. •:••
i s t i 3e. h es e rch n l 1111,11. 'added `rte. aonlds
t ostimers aost migr oompisto amarriormi /moral
09. •
•: ' •
thineiVairmeoinaitiL Tkrwt
r ilitO o t s w i tco r
, • .
(PALL 1SIMI.)
HOWELL
Nmen.dtotuir.ev..,
00011111 FOURTH AND 11/114:11T OTRIETS,
ire Mew mewed to 'Ong; filing tradai large and
' 44 .4 1 04 Wi1.°4 1 4 0 4 of
~ 4 .
- -
Amapa wauxncoultani eons. kg.
iraesks .4,1 of tbs. systut,ssd best dodos. Oast tbs los set
sissatattals Ur lust • • - •
- -
!' t plottbintssa Waiters ussiluutts Intl do well to visit
u
• saastdialanwiata
• 10 . ,W•I'L'Ii , :dC ;B'OURIIIII,
Ai;kilii**.Yoiiiiiitiiiniitiii.**Orrd*ril• I
$0 11 . 4 EC.1 .4141.400;0144.:,, ,
trifilitELLAS.
"` T.X.E.REIC&I.T.ENNER.
111411,3111 L 80 L B,
,1411i011 1 MAW boo thati ' ,'•`; '
sirwooso otrrizawr VAIURTISCOII 4141111ILLAII
mai
• soanow SI to ' •" •
ftloto w sl ho *ow" not sad •ot .•• Niko plr gook will
• mountbstorouppoot 111 ZIS twit Voll , waal ,
• wkiroll meow Wan' woystauwoot nut wit
-
SW). *RE'," ' •
cloicaciaceNszzy,Otitki
: Autz, avvrtagisziowt,, „ ,
" Titsin:
-1•-7 .11ARDWARE.:,
'97 IIEAR:KET,I idd 41a .Acommititos STREET.
YORK ADVERTISEMENTS,
E. FOREST,. .
I :.. 2 ..',ARMSTRONG;& CO-,
1 ,
iIItPORTERS AND JOBBERS.
OP •
DR-1( (ICp'cl 13 S.
-
70t 711 1 . 9. 81. 81 &
DIIA.NE STREET,
•
brpea, BROADWAY,
:OF i FEE FOR BALE A NEW AND ELEGANT
BTOOR of DRY GOODS for the P ALL TRADE,
ndted to al/ fortiesm of the country. T bey ere opening
I r P . J ll r.
•• • ,
' .AMOSKTgAG •
AND.
T A
FAIN Ts,
NEW AND, DEDIRAH LE STYLES. THESE
MELEBEATIMPRINTS are the CHEAPEST end
-B,EsT.now mold in the MIMED STATES, And they beg
Leese to ealitileniar attention of dealers to them.
:‘'N".T.IIP.PISRI,•;IIIIIprO GrO,ODS.:
W.;,SPO, ,
it .:.T ,` Cite
N of' the arra of Wfa-'
‘ll rikrioili -431011TATRN'El /11.14.111110.,,,_.% J. MILT ITFACY WHY, 014
1 a... .7.-7 , :, , Ow IT Opp! to the orird,#orcy,
' ' 4 / 4 466 - 7 11141, 1 11i,411.iite attornhoo of his
fgrttiSr" Me tee "tor * t one to We
ror tf o rt ehort to Woe. A eet-i
!lee Illiiiiii W . t
i i ma kto -Trate 'evened with
, - •
fr - P,llll2 . olEbßik -
•
aiin-
Mr/NE. V ie
iNeAR•
gilleithit: sr, Mufti' d Bead. 8i1e.,, &a.
MIA* noisllf Mt.. toiriefOisr fiadhokling furpom.
'ArailliOir ca. 11,0BERT8.
, • . IN
F.I44E,':gIiROODERIES.
Come stress,
N! 'H; :`:401) 001Y111: 'CAROLINA
IMMIEN
'e • •
1,:ja110 aleir.laborirrent faa4s pi low.ristm.
iptlittive 417A11,11
ye t pjANCY 000118
SLIMIXTII_g. •
PHiLADELPOIA.
1
i
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.i,p- , ; nr itr,Ll.IT <-7 t *Li!. ';' . ..P 1 / 1 ": T.T.t rl '; l ' ) ' --- ; - ' , i , is t a temactiq e'. • '1
.gall - Oaraq, 4 1104 Yd 01: 'imerrri: % 21100111 dellag "akar MR 3a ,'n , C. t ' ift ti 01 .no;• .r.,.
...m,....,.....,:....... ,MIIIINIIMY mca rte•La •••••••rnmammor••••• _ __..,..,...
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NM, ' . ISERPELIki-WEDPIt4BO.4tY,., , . 11 '! 4, illti .' ! , ' , 19, 1860: ,
glirte : • 1 1 , :4- 7, :r:ir• ;f; '1
. TWO
..,.
_ . .
PERFUMERY.
PAM meacinrirosa,
VIBGINXA. LOIIISIANah
WORK, Xoool7Cili 8z CO.,
No. 311•Ikeith THIRD Street.
60: n, • -
SILK AND••DRY, GOODS JOBBERS
JOSHUA L 13AILIg,
4#414.0 . :iO.IOIE - 44 : , •
.
NO.. wq:
,MART,4OIs,-"sT.,
Ku now 4en
LAB4EAND BEAUTIFUL
• Aniottrnent of '
DRESS '4:IOODS
Ind
SHAWLS.
Of the
NEWEST AND OROIOEST STYLES,
At the
LOWEST PRIDES.
The attention of oneh and prompt etx-months Inners
hiptrtted. ese-tt
LARGE AND ATTRACTIVE STOOK
vOi'
PALL AND WINTER SALES.
sgaft,T,Eunan, •• •
BROTHER. & 00..
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS,
No, 4SO MARKET,STREET. and
No. 414 MERCHANT STREET, PHILADELPNIA.
Davein titan:complete Shot Of FOREIGN and AME
RICAN STAP LE and FANCY . -
D
Mooted With vivo. 'in' tho intitoids, of CASH and
rilnietteggcertglertlrZetiti.
N. T . to which they invite
- F:E.T.LIA - STOCK
ofinetantty hand,_entbraoine_tnany_ittyles "'RANO
/61),T, FOR THEM, OWN BRODY, and not to
OitiJeFe exruterd l iooklitly, at LOWEST MARKET
CLOAKS 1 CILOAKS 1
WHOLESALE sox -Pais.
EVERY NOVELTY Of' THE SEASON.
Ar
' tHE . Lotirksit CASH PRIDES.
itirMerehrints' own materials made up if desired.
' 'HENRY IVENS;
rie4-2m No. 25 &Mtn - NINTH Street.
A. w. taTram & co, , •
SILK GOODS. '
No. 325 MARKET 13.22,13EL-sm
FALL,. , , 1860.
OHAFFEES. EtTOTJT.,&. Clo.
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS.
•nll-3m No. 523 MARKET STREET.
Aimt#N.&wourr,
WAOLAVILLIII DIAILIIS IA
FOREIGN AND .pontspyia DRY GOODS.
$34 MARKET STREET.
•
Coati and prompt Six-months' Buyers, of aU seottono
are invited tO tut oaandnation of our Stook. auBdm•
E 0 V A L.
In
,
oftseaumo• of the deetrootion by tire of their
TIM) Bum arm.
YARD, GLLIAMORE. & CO.
RAVE REMOVED
• • TO'
NO.' 4310 CHESTNUT
NourNismi. ABOVS SIXTH.
inuxaciparaia.
nay itaYe sow own ANt EVRE
or
SILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS,
SHAWLS, Gi,OVEEVBIBBONS,
'DRESS TRIMMINGS,
Togother 'with ILAROE AMORTMENT of
STAPLE. AND FANCY
WHITE-GOODS,
lIMBROIDMENI3, LACES, MANTEL:LAB, La.
Naviof received but small portion of their
FALL IMPORTATIONS,
prinilons to the lire, they are enablid to diet*
A NEW STOOK. <
tow Weil they Write, the attention of their Customer!.
ao4 Dime generally: • oaktai
VirURTS. AUNTIE. & •
MoVEIGH.
•
AND JOADENNI
• IN
" - Drcy EI'OODB.
• - - No. 311 MARKET Iltriet,igar• Third.
TTana Warts, „
Patt.lo;tantA.
:s h e i pt ;Lilo • aal4m
FALL AND WINTER.
tbEiDAHS' Att MANTILLAS
FOR TOE
WHOLESALE TRADE.
.80UTHERN cad WriaiERN_MERCHAPITS buf
fet: Medina to Fir cleat 00008, are invited to in
ept tot oar Stook, whoa we oder at
LOW , PRICES.
AND ON LIBERAL -TERMS.
nT.W. PROCTOR • & CO.
y nE PARIS MANTILLA and CLOAK EMPORIUM,
, 708 CHESTNUT STREET.
111014 M
R. WOOD, MARSH, & HAYWARD,
IMPORTERS
• AND
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
DRY GOODS
OLOTHING.
740. 309 MARKET STREET.
Fall•andWinter Stook now complete and r ft e n t z der
berm
WOO".
Now in store, and for sale sy the loweet marts
prices, a large Stook of the most deeirahle gradee of
OHIO AND PENNSYLVANIA FLEECES.'
ALSO,
LOW AHD MEDIUM WOOLS,
Which purchasers are requested to call and aunties.
BENJ. COATES,
127 Market Street, Philadelphia.
JULY IST. 1860.
NEW FIRMS AND ORANGES.
MERO)IAPITB IN WANT OF BLANK ,BOOKII can
suppled from a vary superior sasortment made from
Linea stook, or reads to order.
WAIMAIMID /7 LOW 71101$.
WM. F. MURPHY dt. SON'S
NSW swim. ,
matinnere, LiOlogranhers, and Letter-Press Printers
SIONOW MAIL.
No. 531 OILLVENUT Street. •
'Jet ri-ti
CAST4RT RI RT BELLS.
10z CINIIIOKBao PULS ALUMS, tim.
101 ILLI IT
tpLYLIOR & CO..
w it , A COM.MERCH Street
114,1181111813 MEN ARE ADVERTISING
=Eat?,rrrinrepor. of 014 and . Country—at
COE, &
Vaigfildri"MagitiP6
MEROUNTkAND, omits, AMR
comrefirrang,t .c 'L E . J , N , B eigan t rito
Chum teikkL•
g0 r. ..27 R 'au ta
or _____ or Of _ enragamig• 1-ti
A RTIFIAAAL A RA B, , ~ ARTIFICIAL
micas,nag by.IL GILD/SA.o'4o, an
711 OHM
NCInewt, fan, to ,Dyip, Jobs , 11014 dT. OUr
mith. ormanylboppiird. Pee. fttligl.2l
CARDAMOM SEED, MALABAR-1 cue
ter pale. ,' WE 47 Bkorant..
mow 47 and 49 North sEcor4D At.
MINT , 'UMBER-43round Amu, in Oil
•,.nr fOr OiIsIII93THERNA 8t BROTHER, 41 an
49 Notth hguuND Iltroot. , so%
refitieit to 'case's, said. bAriels,
• fc „. sale, WETHERILL BROTAIRIV
r o ja = 47 MI 48 north 9.1400 NP St: ,
lIMISEMII
E=IMERIMMI
CAtfrAfillT4 4 1 0 3 ! , QIL
I- lEtt . tbAle , .
" •
By late arrivals I have received A full vanity of all
this new styles,
FOREIGN CARPETING.
coicsisrina IN PART oy. • - '
TEMPLIVTOIVIS Square andßrisadth
ROQUELLE, RICQULA k CO.. AvotisoN.
FRENCH MOQUETTE IN BREADTHS;
JOHN CROSSLEY a SON'S
WILTONS, VELVETS.
BRUSSELS AND TAPESTRY ; •
HENDERSON'S BRUSSELS;
HENDERSON'S WORSTED DA el ASK YEN ET lANS.
These goods have been Weider abroad during the
last four months, and can be offered at unusually low
price..
In addition to our variety of
FOREIGN GOODS.
we have the usual variety of • •
AMERIOAN INGRAIN THREE-PLY CARPETING,
• OIL CLOTHS
From I toe yards wide, of every variety of style.
' JAMES H. ORNE.
No. 626 CHESTNUT ST., below SEVENTH,
Selo-mwf Im • PHILADELPHIA
1 - 41 AL L TRADE.
MCCALLUM & 00...
CARPET MANUFACTURERS,
GLEN ECHO MILLS, GERMANTOWN,
Also, Importers and Dealers in
OARPETINGS.
OIL CLOTHS.
MATTINGS, RUGS. &o.
WAREHOUSE, 509 CHESTNUT STREET,
1
(Otte the State /361 m.) •
Southern and Western Buyers, are reepeethily Invited
to Gall. aulY-enu
AUSTIN • BROWN.
WHOLESALE,DEALEA IN
;FLOOR OIL-CLOTHS,
164 North THIRD Street, southwest corner of
, RAM (Up strum) self•lme
RATS AND CAPS.
NgW HAT • STORE. - • gip
•
' JOHN E. FOSTER,
(Leta of 109 South Third street,) •
- Hams taken the store at .
NO. 331 CHESTNUT ST.,
Apd fitted it up i superior style, invites the attention
of Ids ptt.tts to bit
h6L on EGANT AND EXTENSIVE STOCK
oa
HATS AND OAPS.
kw- His new Cell styles ere much admired.
e,14 Sro
C • H. GARDEN as Co.
Manufaoturent of end Wholesale Dealertin -
RATB, OAFS.
. FURS.
AND STRAW 00490.
•
FANCY BILK AFID STRAW BONNETS, ARTINI
i MAL FLOWERS,RUCHES, FEATHERS, ittici
Nos. 600 end 602 MARKET STREET.
Southweet °oilier of Sixth.
The most extensive end ptete assortment, The
best terms end the lowed ase. Fort-elan buyers
are particularly Invited to ca ll. aute-ft.
CABINET VURNITURE.
,pRENpEtFt.TRTSIiI'UItE.,
• • • •
GEORGE Je 1-IVANKEIJS,
624 WALNUT eTRERT,
HM Nit opened a large invoice at
BOOLE, ,
QUADRILLE,
MARQUErRIE, and
ORMOLU WORK,
Which he will sell at Very REDUCED PRICES.
FIRST-CLASH CABINET WARE.
GEO. 3. nENKELS,„
SII4 WALNUT STREET.
Offen at
VERT REDUCED PRICES
The lament assortment in the Union, all of New .0#11555
Call and examine before enrolment. nen an
GAS FIXTURES, LAMPS, &c.
JUST THE THING} FOR THE LADIES
WARNER, MISKEY, & MERRILL,
718 CHESTNUT STREET. •
Manufacturers of
GAS FIXTURES, LAMPS, &0.,
Hive been appointed Agents for the lade in Ptilladel
phis of
SBALER'S PATENT SKATES
These Skates ars so oonstruoted that carpet' or oil
cloths are not injured by skating on them. and persons
can therefore learn to skate indoors as well as on the toe.
Persons wishing to purchase at wholesale can be IMP
ed at the manufacturer's prices. selg-et
KEROSENE OIL Of SUPERIOR QUA
LITY.
KEROSENE, or
• COAL - OIL LAMPS,
CHANDELIERS, BRACKETS, aro.,
Manufactured and for Sale, at
LOWEST CASH PRICES,
by
WINTERS & CO..
No. 35 NORTH EIGHTH STREET,
N. E. oor. of Filbert, between Market and Arab.
soludin
LOOKING GLASSES.
LOOKING -GLASSES,
PORTRAIT AND PICTURE PRAXES,
ENGRAVINGS.
OIL PAIWITIIOB, &c,, Ac
JAMES S. EARLE Sc 3 ON,
MPORTA,,q, MANUFACTURER I WHOLE
SALE AND RETAIL DEALE g
EARLES' GALLERIES,
916 CHESTNUT ISTREBT,
MEDICINAL.
H ELMBOLD'9 EXTRACT BIJOHII.
THE OJREATIHRETIkI.
For Disease of the bladder,. vinare. Gravel, Dr 0147
ORGANIC WEAK EBB, am., &c.
Hnfferera m Mi diime m oaorammeriens•
Pain u Zre - Vpl7 lllt Neal i t ftsrvse,
o memo]) mainly of *settling,
MIRIAM or
mvz.NEAL uestu "ea Ur liVill'usouLta
YEITHM
Whine ifi lm o Gni a rr ei r difir ; w ! liob,
variably 1111119•411.
s oon f a ll ow ki t i B I. .1 7 1 91111Epileptio Firm.
1.1t0661414 Mal/ A %ICE
Thleame/6"riArttipmitv, Jotla6W11".""
And is oartaia ll to 6tre.t.tie doraired %foot in the &N-
U" e T ime itl e ihit r e tirialrA l laf
LNDIECEETI - 011.0 wrifinusxresi,.
1 Virs° 9 rwaldillbeirtir
ispresori pre
uthei..'
Certificates o spree of from one_foonth to twenty
raittlt d i n icop irw rrentrra l the
t e itr i eb . sr and is o r v ti
ion Ftme lir:Coal Oral
Mrvi r gi ng a r allladssfrit. Ifepot 104 Lk No
etreet. below CHMTH UT. ' iarkat
FAMILY! ,FLOtilt,
MADE FROM ) OHOICE WHITE WHEAT,
C. H. MATTSON,
ARCH and TENTH streets. *ME
500 000 HAVANA OIGARS,—Com
, arising
rtagaii. Figaro,
gpanola, CA balm!,
Week sea,
0 Vii t
i;1:: raw,
.. A. doraecoa. rm., noado. ta.
Or Regalia, bohdre., Kivu. Conn 6, opera, And riga
rinse, 0( MI BIM. rallies, and itrie v e il getarsrbg re
°eat arrivals, nod or sale by 4,11. 4 re TETE,
. seg-lhir 190 um Strew!.
Wrlnpu,s'ElouanziLooo Barna Lo
-0408Wki:0111.64171742
sST.A.
Tifigy IiTkET JOINSING HOUSES
',sacrum of puy,ors )aB9llcited,
;
i VAAT I GOODS. ,
,BIEGEZ J3AIRD. & CO.;
1111PtTEXS AND JOBBERS
or
• .DTir GOODS,
26. 49' )RTR nuRD sins Er.
Would reattfy invite the attention of the trade to
their
PAR:GIAND WEO.-BELEOTED
Stook of
FRESI FALL GOODS,
which um arerw opening. We are daily in receipt
of all kind, ofreah and drawable roods Call nod
examine our eta. N7-tm
1860. FALL TRADE. 1860.
BUNN,RAIG-UEL, & 00.,
IMORTERS AND JOBBERS
oa
FANiY DRY GOODS.
NO. 1: NORTH TRIAD BTREET,
ARE NOV FHPARED TOoFFER.To THE TRADE
oxisseu.y AN UNDSUAELY
- - ,t - EACIVIE STOCK OF (MODS,
. .
COMMISIAIS --
'IIIILX.9.
RIBBONS,.
DRESS GOODS,
WEI;It GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, LADES,
CLOTHO tABSIBTERES, VESTINOEI. HOSIERY
GLOVES AND TRIMMINOS,
Togethr with a fall and varied Hook of
FALL AND
TINTER SHAWLS.
To all q 'yak they invite the attention of
CASHAND PROMPT SIX MONTHS' BUYERS.
.71.. T HNHEL. ' 4.V. 3 11 5 1.4(TH.
H. F. BUNN.
186). FAI-a ' 1860.
RAIGUEL. MOORE, & GO.,
NON. D2O AND 5122 NORTH
THIRD STRERT,
RAVI NOW OPEN THE LAROXBT AND MOSS
UOMPLETE STOOK
DOMESTIO
DRY GOODS
Thu Imo over Oozed. tad to which the attention of
OAIIII AND ISHORT-TIME SINEWS
la napeatfally aalloltad
:r-*•-•-4......- , -
Ingetat Oat pr vent stook offers kw:loam/tints to buyers
unearpaemed by any other house
JAMES - . KENT.
SANTEE. &I 00.,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
or
DRY GOODS.
NOB. 239 AND 241 NORTH THIRD STREET,
ABOVE RACE,
Resgeottliiir Invite the attention of Dl2lOlll to their
mmal
LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OP
FOREIGN AND EN:RUSTIC GOODS,
Among Wkiloh be:mind a general assortment of
PHILADELPHIA•MAPEGOODS;'
Also, • large variety of new and oonfined styles of
PRINTS, MERRIMACK SECONDS, Sc.
►THOS. MELLOR & 00..
NO. 8 NORTH THIRD STREET,
IMPORTERS
or
HOSIERY.
SHIRTS AND DRAWERS,
SMALL WARES, Ro.
Taos. blYt.l.Olt. JOAN O. MILLOR
EDWARD RAINS. ORO. 0. EVANI.
ataD-Zm
FALL, 1860.
COOPER. PARHAM. &
WORK.
Importers, Manufacturers. and Jobber., of
HATS. CAPS. FURS.
♦ND
STRAW GOODS.
NO. 01 NORTH THIRD STREET, Wow ARCH,
PHILADELPHIA.
MILTON COOPER. WM. M. PARHAM.
ROBERT D. WORK.
ST Fall Block now omelete and ready for buyers.
anl9•Em
Philadeighis.
SOWER. BARNES. do CO..
BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS,
' No. 37 NORTH THIRD STREET,
Lower aide, above Market Street, Philadelphia,
Invite the attention of Booksellers and country mer
chant/ to their very large stook or School Books. pub
limbed in t h u and other oaten, tlether with Miecellsne-I
one and Blank Booksj'aner, an Stationery generally,
S., H. A, Co., ate nu inners o many ntmular works;
among which ire the following
THE VENTRAL GOLD REGION,
BY 02,L. WILLIAM ()ANN,'
(Lite of the IL litaiimy.)
ILLITESTRAitO 1W NUMEItous MAPS.
One vol., Ivo, bound sc in oloth
the . Price $135; and a liberal
diount to trade.
This book le pronounoed the most wonderful, solentf.
fio, and Comprehensive treatise on the geography of DUI
continent weer vabluthed.
soH.oot, BOOKS:
SANDERS' SEEMS OF READERS.
BROOKS' NORMAL PRIMARY ARITHME
. .. . —l6 ots.
BROOKS' NORMAL" MENTAL ARTaIME
TIO—,---.
BROOKS' KEY TO MENTAL, ARITHME- '
ots
BY E. BROOKS, A. M.,
Froiesior of MatheMatio• in Perriartvania stets Nor
mat School.
Liberal term for introduction.
WHITE'S COPY-BOOBS
' BY T. KIRK WHITE.
President of PennsilvantalCommerolal Collet*.
PELTONIS, OPTI O INS *APS.,
This smite of SIX BUREAU burs ie now adopted
Midmost every school of note m it', Union where gee
g Mph,' is taught, and beano equal. Vries SW for full set
dim mapi, or $lO for Oat of hemisthere maps alone.
ane-Dm -
aAVA 0,0111114.1-1,000 pockets, prime
g imatfee, for sale by JAMMISkRAVOt_it 00.
.4.14N1S 'D casks Its aa,for slp;
, WETICERILL ksbßoTliklt' '
.i• 10 - , •47 sa4 49 :loth LISONDIti.
FRENC3II„
BRITISH,
GERMAN.
WEDNESDAY,'SEPTILMI3ER 19. 1860.
Magazines for October.
Midway in an article, to be called (c Byre
niana," intended for this column, we were in
terrupted by receipt of an early copy of
Harper's Magatnts for October, duly marked
if Prom T. B. Peterson & Brothers. ' Please
notice. Price 16 cents." We threw aside
the pen, threw ourself into the easiest chair in
our Sanctum, seized an ivory' .aider, and cut
the leaves and read them until we had mss-
tared the contents. The results of this pe
rusal we annex.
Harper has more and better engravings than
any avowedly illustrated periodical ever pub
lished in this country—more, oven, than were
given in Douglas Jerrold's Illustrated Maga
zine. For example, Hoppin supplies four to
a ballad by Bayard Taylor, called "The
Quaker Widow." Mr. Marble's second paper,
"To the Bed River and Beyond," has nine
teen original illustrations. "The Home and
Grave of Byron," has three. "King's Moun
tain ; a ballad of the Carolinas," by W. Gil
more Simms, has two. cs Steroscopie Slides"
consists of two whole-page designs, by Frank
Bellew, and there are
,two Intl-length Fashion
figures. Here aroBloriginil d'eids*l - Tand-
Mon,. 4:llnrptipt . are enabled to draw, in
advance, nrin
Ono
which they hive
in the press. Ono of these, Mr. Atkinson's
forthcoming , " Travels in the Regions-of the
Upper and .Lower Aractor; and the RUSigiAll
Acquisitions •on the Contnes of India and
China," supplied thirteen engravings, and
Burton's "Lake Regions of Central Africa"
an equal number. There, also, are five wood
cuts accompanying Thacknray's third Lecture
upon " The Fonr Georges." Hero, then, aro
81 in all. Thoso from Mr. Atkinson's book,
from drawings by the author, aro even better
titan those which embellished his " Oriental
arid Western Siberia:" Some Of these, cover
ing only half a page of the Magazine, aro
wonderfully 'effective. "The Red Sand," and
"A Sapd t Storm" are especially good, but a
!little sketch of the "Mirage in the Desert" is
ono titthe most Tarneresque gems we ever
saw. • • .
The•letter-press contains an agreeable mix
ture of grave and•lighter literature—the bal
lads, by Simms and Taylor, meriting especial
notice. gc'The Editor's Easy Chair" is becom
ing awfully mannered with its repeated allu
sions to cc Solomon Gunnybags." We have
been puzzled what specimen brick of Harper
to extract, but believe that our readers will be
pleased with the following Now York sketch,
billlr. Hall
A DINNER AT THE MAYOR'S. '
In the year 1855 I attended a remarkable din
ner-party at the residence of Boa . Fernando
Wood, then Mayor of New York—remarkable
ohieflywith regard to the oharaoter of the _guests.
Delmortioo's maitre had received all the proper
orders for entrées and wines; and It is sufficient,
on thee" mores, to say that eierythlng (the Soy!.
la of entree" and the Charybdis of bibulous alters
nation included) was worthy of the Deoaalon. The
Mayor Pat the bead of the table, and his wife was
vls-d-ris. As the magic words MOM elf r on a
soros le diner had been• uttered, I•found a me
nientary pride in enumerating the guests. Tower
ing aboVe all •was Winfield Scott, • Martin Van
Buren iodide tall son John, Washington Irving,
Commodore Perry, Bancroft, lforatio, Seymour,
(just superPeded as Governor), and Ogden 'lonian
wore In the first group La tire doors opened. Of the
local celebrities, Collector Redfield, Surtergor (and
since M. 0.) Cochrane, Lorenzo B. Shepherd, •Re.
corder Smith, and that prince of durereout and
Saratoga habituiss, Barrister Gerard, stood around
in a confidence of bossy chat, whleh generally
succeeds the " service" annoneeament.•
Upon :entering, the ex-President was waved
to the right, and General ficott to the left, of th e
head. Tie General, with a gems most delightful,
took Irving by one arm and Bancroft by the other,
caring, playfully,
"Yon honor me, Mr. Mayor, but allow me to
honor myself by being aandwiehed between the
two hiatorisna.”
. -
"A palpable bribe to a favorable posthumous
biography," instantly acted Prinoe John.
" And long may it be before it appears !" added
the Presidential tether.
These bog vurts seismal to drop from the nap
kins as Caimmodore Perry, lloratio Seymour, and
Ogden Hoffman were obtaining their honorary
places at the other end. All was napkin rustle
-roalioxinAti bustle when Irving, who had
been momentero7
hill eye misohtevously, and, In his peculiar few,
womanly voice, said, glancing up the table to Com
modore Perry,
"General Scott, you ought • to have for • biogra
phy more genuine lustre than either Mr. Banemft
or I could give you ; in fact, you ought to be Jo
panned, and the Commodore yonder is your man."
This agreeable sally took all eyes to the burly
and bluff Commodore, who, always blushing like •
true seaman, mimed to grow feminize about the
e yes as he saw all the others levelled at his quarter
desk. But he rallied enough to stammer out that,
"for his part, he preferred the Kniokerbooker
shines."
. -
Mere the soup was served ; and I remember ta•
king another enamors persoill 'survey while the
fragrant and steaming terrapin momentarily inter
rupted the feast of reason. Your of the guests are
now dead, but I seem to see them elLitinotly—
Irving, Perry, ifotfman, and Shepherd.
Lorenzo Shepherd, although attaining only a
local popularity and eminence, was a remarkable
young man. While scarcely over boyhood be bad
written very artistic) verses, which one will find in
the DemorratteßeviAir of about 1840; and barely
past twenty-five be bad excelled as a member of
the Constitutional Convention. The notes be
wrote, and the treatise on Mandamus, furnished
for an edition of "Johnson's Cues," are satlsfac-
tory monuments of his legal mind.' Had he lived,
he would have been prtatus enter parts. Shortly
afterwards he was r °laically estranged from his
host, but on this night In question his modest, but
selfoonsolous bearing and geniality were very de
lightful. lam referring to them in a courtanat-
Hsi way—youngest first.
Hoffman died the year ensuing the dinner. No
one can fully understand is description of this In
t:temperable orator unless there exists personal
knowledge of the man. Indeed. eon any one de
scribe him? He had but two Units in the world—
lavish generosity, and a confidence in native
genius, which Interfered with private industry.
In all other qualities he was crooning and be
loved. He was highdoned, courteous to the mean•
cat, never irritated or petulant, with a fund of
conversation and oratory Inexhaustible. His mind
was a fountain perpetually at play, and Its stream
ever pellucid. If ever phrenology desired vindica
tion, it found the same In surveying his head and
features. Benevolence and love of approbativener
were large, and language was enshrined in his
eye. Ills voles was a personification of lingual
melody. Utterances that in other mouths would
have been termed "sing-song," became, on his
tongue, oratorical psalmedy, perceptible only to
cool remembrance and calm criticism. Where has
been the New York advocate who found such grate-
All listeners in the wades" of court-rooms, or at
the club, or In the evening salon[, or in the jury
box? I remember once being on a Jury, in a ease
wherein he was counsel, and it was about being
taken from no by the judge, on soma law point,
when old Turnur", that ancient juryman, Insisted
upon hearing Hoffman sum up! This night in
Question he was somewhat reticent, but when the
dinner topics drifted toward him they were melo
diously treated.
Commodore Perry was the most silent men at
table. I had never met him before, but I was
charmed with even his silence. He seemed the
embodiment of a true sailor, who loved to listen
to the yarns of the soholars around him. There
was a spontaneity of hearty response, however,
when he was addressed, th at tempered the licenses
of the dining-room wh ir the decision of the quar
ter-deck.
Irving appeared as the apotheosis of a dear de
lightful scholastic old bachelor, with .his trim
,wig, and thoughtful face, and methodical ways,
in turning to the butler and the viands, or in
nursing the bottle. He looked ill, (for he had
Just been correcting Washington's Life,) and to
some extent nervous. It was evident that the
pen in heed rather than the knife and fork accord.
ed.with his flow of language. There Was a halo
of (geniality about his head ashe sat towered over
by General Soon, and ats•ei•nts'd by exsPresident
Van Buren, whose polished held and venerable
looke befitted the geniality of atmosphere I refer
to. •
Of course, I surveyed the personnel of the others
they, however, aro living, and the references in
this aspect of individualization may /top bare. •
I do not propose to narrate all that bad eocurredi
I remember very distinctly the prominent topics
dieenssed, however, although half a dozen. years
have tripped away. Nor d 6 I propose to speak of
what was said in the.preolse order of saying, but
as the things oMne to mind.
The ex-President was among the first talksm
and he led the conversation very diplomatioally
and aptly to the Japan expedition and Commodore
Perry, and in a ll usion. to the, advantages which
were before long t 6 nowise from the Perry-wedge
of civilization le that very Wolfe granite-bleak
Government. The Mayor took an animated part In
'trussing the to is ; he little thought; at that time,
that he would be asked to veto a little bit of Japan
est ' hotel arrangement: • Bancroft 'fired off a fen'
Material references to Jipeni which Perry, sole
perfect iapporkretponded to briefly. The Dori
modore gave ettridry laughable anecdotes of ilia
extent to which the Japanese carried imitation.
He said that belied seen at Jeddo, in the bandit Of
a boy, es pedant a me tel of the steamship, woodepa
pip es and all , as a Yankee' artifact could make.
ihe Inhabitants
xactitudes teemed to Tival this Ohineee tall¢r
,•• the eldp's cook having
'Cooked some :toe and tinrnedtt, one of the native
(make, on a subsequent manifestation of hospitality,
performed the same:blunder. ,
The ex-President :an Mr . Irvine ' eing vzs,d
ass, then' fell into p (10reerilsetfonal amble in end
around Lindenwold, the seat of the former: Irving
lead been, ix- gliest of audge Van ~ N ess' many
times 'when the Judge owned and ocoupied
plesont mansion nem , Kindeshook • and the IMO
discoursed gratefully of remembrances. The
Van Ness house bed been mooh. attired and im
proved under the Van Buren: limirniteetb.enii• , in ,
dead, made .a different. pima. ais. Irvin ac
knowledged to thi delights of &mead, with
its English law* aid treocitiops (literally linden
wood) Ind HtorwrgttlY ,Brlfilti insilosio• • B ar.
rlster Gerard' area In e goodicsiturea 'remark
about the cabbages; whet: r ibs ex-Priseident re
marked the% the "saw,' so iptipalarAn l th_e min, -
vats of 1840, wag ea Tautly', =OlO MA Pines
end Rindorbook, es probably tb 'bard to,
war
to General Harrison. Irvine , mat be bad
never °heaved a plum is the Astmlettit raft"
frOm cabbages, and indeed cabbage head., al nu .
Rinderhook. This induced some humorous; fr.
:necks from Horatio Seymour upon the curio& .
tire of political persouslities— Boastrboo awn"
the theall celebrities then referred to an editorial
tilt in progress between' Nears: flemler and
James Brooke, with referees* to the feat that, Le
the early volumes of the New Yoder, edited by
the former,
certain European letters of the latter
had been Oepled, week by week, with seatatia
commendation. A guest remarked that to differ
with Greeley, evert on the taste of Torrid? wPg to
boonme an enemy at once, and Chet the els • rttar
of the Tribune, in toatroversy, ism* eqbared
the hyeothenase without sommiag up the twee rides.
Then the conversation drifted beak to Lindentecld,
and the art-President eon:insetted upon °fatale re
markable ectineidenses of ladividubste and locality
near Rindetbook to those of the lohabod Crane
stotry. Irving had hoard of Gls. He remembered
the mehoolalrouse between Lindetweld WA Binder
book, and Uri village bridge beyond. acid lelitrwte,
this old eohooirealter, who wise. meek Ilia lobs,
bud Crall•--11011111II0li 1110 MO a cot' sepesidmiete eir
send akin to that between Meese earths Mirk
stare sehoolmaster, who deemed ideumiffilhelledby
the chatiesser id Elecumna 2f,iettehy. bir Ireleg
admitted 'that p•Mtbly hit h asectlijitlbei of the Tar
syttowa setOberhead bad been•colored br mesem
bnineare of We accessories to the Van Nem men
bl n,14 whose lihiery he confessed to seriblafieg.
overnor Seymour gave a neat ' sehigy of Jane
V n Heel„
.te lemaanhersd , Item hiefittiddlrune
o/ 1
the horpitalit7- Van /lieu kids httbn te• Se'
C dln the duel. Lor e tto 134e/pbetd Some
tli
ng to abode eatable he bad reeisb tty taken
6 r the Wookatrken Make, neer to which • client
a his had ! II ferry In contemplation. He bad
allotted the duelling ground, widish was exactly
opposite Thirty-fourth' street. The old dads, tree
wee still standing, jot outside of thich the duel
hdd been fought, but all of the other trees about
titan standing had been thinned away
Bohn Mantae became poetical at this juncture,
repeating over II glass of ohatnpagne• Ammo lien
which Irving 'aid had been written by the lamented
Ithbert O. Sands at the very spot:
! o mere law he stood ! Iltfore hie tight
Flowed the fair river- free arid brlght :
I The rising mart. the Isles, the bay
• Before h , e view in arendsur ear,
Been es of his glory and hie fame,
' That instant. era the death•ahot came."
Referring, of course, to Hamilton.
This brought out Ogden Hoffman, with acne
choice rbetorio about New York and the
Knickerbockers and the changes of locality and
society: He stated that, in court that morning,
hi heard some steps applied for to open Park
Place, through Colombia College grounds, where
Hamilton bad made youthful revolutionary
speeches!
" And where Peter Stuyvesant used to retire of
damp nights before the Rivg's farm 'was laid oat,
td air his - wooden leg," added General Scott, with
a,wine-glass wave toward Irving.
:General Scott referred to the first volume of
living's Life of Wathington, Just then in press.
Irving eald he hoped Ito live to Beth it. Bald
Bancroft, "I trust the - p " ergss are not to be your
limit of life." ,‘ I hope, retorted Prince John
perceiving that Mr. Irving' grew modest, "tha t
the pages of your histdry, Mr. Bancroft, may
Measure your life." Bancroft laughed heartily at
the sally, and said that, If at his age he — had only
got down toward the American Revolution before
he came to the campaigns of the American Merl
borough, (bowing to Scott), deerepiteds, as well as
the responsibility of the task, might Altogether
svent its completion. The references now being
toricalnallusion was made to a volume said to
preparing by 'George H. Moore, librarian of the
*goriest' Society, proving the treason of General
hoe. Bancroft remarked that the conduct of Lee,
It reference to °Tortured to the British during the
Boston occupation, and his vaelliationt nith respect
to Moultrie, on Sullivan's Wend,' were contract.
obey reprehensible. • ' ' •
"Atone time," said • Bancroft, ",Lee ordered
Moultrie to build a bridge.for his retreat from the
island,'and refused him gunpowder." ,
"Moultrie was one of the -bravest •men of the
i e
evolution,"• said General Scott ; ', and , there is
o account of the Revolution I, read with more
I tercet than the • one of Moultrith defuse
gainat Sir Peter Parker and Clinton. And /-
m always to . see him:atria .and Marion to.
ether in the fort. However," continued General
colt, very , gracefully, and looking equally 'at
rrlog -and Baporott, ,"t As tumult has yet, to •be
titter'. It was the ford helped Moultrie Ototteh :
linton heard that he could ford froneChe melt
of land on which *ere. hie troops overt to the
ialand. Ile never ;minded, however. , and when
Mie attempt wu made there was only • rein
mieet and sinking. Se Parker bed it all to Min
itel'. '
" I place that defence of Charlutop neat to
Banker 13111 In point of Interest, valor, and foe•
portanoe," remarked Governor Seymour; "and
Eat same of oar anti-Nebraska orators will bare
that South Carolina had no hand In '7B patriot
to, or in fighting."
" It would be vary hard to write a sectional
tory of the American Herniation," said °nand
Scott; "there mut needs be such interlacing of
patriotic deeds from all the States en the tapestry
• f commemorstien."
At this stage irt the entertatuasent, I remora
mr Kaye"' Weed nroroptly ga • Wee Arairfl of
Llenern. ororr—is true erojesser- s ay-sA. rt. : f oi e. It
was drank 'with all honors, and Prime Jeha
'Van Boma sailed for the General's rsttleenake
story, which the old soldier gave with emphasis!
It 'teemed that, during the Amide campaign,
the General and his staff were quartered for a
night in a rough, building conetruetad from the
round, and the floor open at various placed).
oaroely had the preparations for the bivouac
seen completed when • noise from below of rat
tling told conelurively that :attlesnakee had their
bivouac' on the ground under the floor. Indeed
they were soon seen from shove as a goodly bet
;tattoo. "I want outside arid measured with
Ony eye," 'said General Scott, "the height of
'the floor from the ground, and saw at cues I
was beyond reuh, by about two inches, of the
tallest rattlesnake ever known! I knew as a boy,
'from experiments, that the rattlesnake never
jumped or darted. Ife gull up u far as he could
reach only, and thee bit- I returned and told the
offloors that I Intealed nevertheless to Bleep on the
floor, and pronounced it rate. Bat they left me
alone in my glory with my martial cloak around
:me—a temporary Sir John Moore—whUe they
:camped outside. Indeed, I rather' enjoyed the
'discomfiture of the snakes as they rattled me to
.'sleep, and vainly tried to reach the holes la the
'floor.'
So much for a knowledge of natural history,"
'said the younger Van Duren;" but there were no
Sean snakes there (alluding to the General's
height) or you might have been wounded!"
Some one remarked that Theckeray, who bad
been two years before in the country with his
George's lectures, was meditating a novel In which
Washington was to be introduced.
"That will be difficult," responded Timing to
the Illusion, "if the story be of the Mackerey
style; for no hero ever had to little private life as
had Washington."
"Rho circumstance Is Indeed remarkable," add.
ed Bancroft. " From the time ho took surveyor's
tools to the day of resigning the Presidential eagle's
quill, he was incessantly In public life."
" And always hard at It," said General Scott
"I'll venture to Ray that nine oat of ton well. MO
boys, when asked about the pirate life of Wash
ington, will tell you about the hatchet story, the
Damp prayer, and the rides around Mount Vernon,
and that will be all."
"Unless be chose to add about the lore-dit
ties," added Bancroft; " Washington wrote •
good many love-lines, almost as many as Jodge
Story, whose 'youthful volume of Solitude and
Oother Poems' was always kept chained to Har
vard Library to his great annoyance!"
" Who was Washington's Lame?" asked Hoff
man.
"That will be left to future bistorlana. I trust"
replied Bancroft. " dome gentlemen of the Bos
well and Malone retool of commentatorshlp will
embalm the lady or write emit about her."
" Come now. I protest against this belittllng
the memory of Washington," maid .Martin Van
Duren, playfully. " Remember. al least, that he
was 0000 ro unfortunate as to be President."
"Next to 'Washingtonwho la your favorite rm
,
volitionary hero?" some one asked of Mr. Ir
ving.
" A very hard question," he replied ; " but my
mind inclines to Philip Schuyler. '
"Ay !" responded Ilonnen, heartily. " With
all my heart, ay! Like Washington, his parse.
his time, his home leeriness, his disinterpated
services, his burials of slights—all, all were auk the
demand of his country."
" What a fine picture that is in Charles M
Leupp's collection!" said John Wan Baran. " I
notieed it the last time time of dining there The
subject is Mrs. Bohoyler firing her husband's
grain, as an example to the neighbor', when
Burgoyne wee on his Saratoga expedition, and the
result was doubtral "
" Who Is the artist?" some one asked.
"Why, Louise; and it is not odd that some of
oar best revolutionary scenes have been mast ar•;
tistically sympathized with by foreign painters.".
Before leaving, Commodore Parry had insisted
upon hearing from Ogden Harmed the story of his,
boy-dlient, Rieherd P. Robinson. Roffman, in re
sponse to a direct inquiry; answered that he most,
implicitly believed in the boy's innocence; and
this had been deepened einoe his death and the dee,
ceaae of two of the women living in the holm a
the time of the murder. Ile admitted tha;
the ease on the surface was a very strong ens
against the ollent; but when analyzed the evl-1
dances beeeme susceptible of explanation.
Robinson had been in the house during tbal
evening; he certainly owned thecloak whiell
was found in the adjacent yard; - the hatehel
picked up was. audoubte_dlyone from the store
wherein Robinson was employed, and he possessed
some motive for wishing the death of the unfortai
natetrl. There was theta the usual Conooniltanti
of gu i lt=icoision, presericrojrnotive;• Bet anothev
in the house wits jealous of her,- and all the dirt
cutuitstmee' of, cloak and hatobet connecting the
boy with the orime.were ip thepower of that othii
to manufaohire. Thb intuits of crime '
abounds
with testimony ; especially wins
the Young Said theme artlessly surrounded with
peodedillo.- Add thus to the boy's youth, the fondl
seas of estoh for .the other, the-double heinousness
of the °rim's; (amperadding hdlily dlifigurement
of the deint , -the lovely dead—to murder satinet
soe,) and then the improbabilities of his guilt inl
created: - Commodore Panty 9beetame inteneelt
I Interested in the advooste'e melodious story, an
expressed himself abundantly cortvir.ord of 'Mr.
Boirman'e theory.
'There *se very much Motu said; on all 'then and
Otherltoptos; by not only the preeminent persons
above referred to, bat by those who do not Agars
seamed' in my narration. The I Van Bursar, and
Mt. 'lrving, 'with Genova Scott, lett the earliest of
THE WEEKLY PREM.
Viz Intiary Paw vtll be rat to oshotribm
=lite* *nom, ix adveatee.) et— --SSA.
Throe Cooioo, "
111
Tan Si 411,
" " fto Me ollbleel~o
throaty Cosimaroror" - (to oibtrom ar
'soh ratoczt bard
Fora Club of Tooorr-otto or owts.us win of#
extra Doubt the lottor-to of the Oath
Pootmastoro Ara room** in tat as Aa br
Vu Wall= Pam.
CALLIIOII3II numm.
Lem* Urn than a Youth. thre fir *, OW* ola
CENTS.
the haute. Mr. Bancroft sad - Glatard .dlew Shari
together and had some little paws of wit be
tween theinielyci, in which • licirriirtweic brdia
eourdenanu and the beiterheen. Tesur spite
alternated in appauedy sena 'arftmerart. Dee
none of the ethics =
"Gent& seen alter itaegroft's irstireasea t tole.
„ii ' t;:i; r landfo n t s, Pork tn .Z4d mot
kR re
Aside 'teenier tti ;Mom kutra— is t u m .
self, in Tiense. freediorit perstalidi weadag
a felt bat, i I Kusetta: sad had agent dem
mead, got tats the abetehos of the Asada, P.•
Ono moonlight night, by tke g ig or
- groschen, be captured an orgaa-grtailwr aid rat
id. at work in one of ibis pedal equetit Like
/wheel got freshened up to hisaiatod .13eadawil,
' iniiirtegthmbrd at the Swot of se aatlaiitagovara.
hien rucei;a4which alio the anprairiaiLwilead.
la t hed p stioaielbig ths Kama
list, tuft pig= De harmaiky lend
tow. to pima its Itairittalie miry
tans favirrabta td Shorty. A t this soirees a ear
vnisst spy, who serdally added hat sad Ilittany
t ape,
dis his
the dsepotio seA oviform% barrister mette he ogsaimar,
er,
aSSet lUirtage Ids, Mk. Ostiel, sad wee
14 the right tut of drpplambda Prat*
the Meal that his Mead, was assay.
and bed hue not mooed fora eau. The VI
ealted Girard what wade We 1 1 0 ~I to
made sneerer that his hued bed
nail, youth, 'wallowed a spread segge. bat
so 'ersay as the Austria* art of seno," atalaseed
litaadford, abide his bras* u t ea that hoggael
toned a two-beaded urge;
PETEEBOreII LaDildr
nu periodical it alto early In the du d. Its
frOutispiace la an illestretioa of a fenacaa Ga
tlin story, and repiateata Efediste diacerraring
herself to the Knight Huldibria. It is finely
en:graced, in line and stipple, from a picture
by P. Wybard. There are other engrartngs
illgetrating fashion, dream, crochet, &e., as
well am music. Also sone good poems and a
variety of short stetted. Of tbe two (To be
contused) novels, Mr. F. Lee Bertedkt's
.‘ Redman's Run" is very readable. As for
"The Ruling Passion," by Yrs. All= S.
Stephens, we cordially say that (To be con
cluded) would be a satisfactory Mix. The
driscriptlona of ladies' fashions in Peluso% ars
written In good, plain English, without a single
foreign word or phrase, and we take this to be
a great merit in a magazine intended Inc gem
ral circulation.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL
—Mr. 77. .d. Dunlop, a wall-known Masher of
Imb-keeping and penmanship, in New Orleans,
died on Tuesday week, In the third story of a
house in that atty. He had long been salfirring
frbus consumption. He seems to bare died gaits
alone, and in his room was found the Mowing; pa
per, prepared in rim of his death :
1" I was born in Belfast, Trataad, ISSL issues,
Isos. Came to New Orissa is January, 1332.
" I with to be buried in a Vilna:dile, sad is the
esrth, not in a tom*, in the Fireman's or Cypress
Cirore Cemetery. No funeral resting.
" Please mad is newinater anammeist illy death
Mn.t s Mary Byrne, Klllteml, Ireland: Northern
Whig, Belfast; Newry Telegraph, Newry Er
cuntner, and Loath Reporter. bandalk; !Lomas
lannedy, counsellor-Way, Pletalsergi Pa.
"Farewell! W. A. Dwstor."
bHobert Tucker, s notorious horse Mak wag
rag at Polary Sprtsp, Tizu, the other day. Ha
read. a confeadon, implicating law endow at
fair reputation.
I—Gov. Banks will go to Chicago in a few days,
to mete arrangements for as rsaboval of his fa
tally, sad for tint ammoption of Ms amp daft..
Ms family wilt remove thither early this felt, sad
tps Goma.* will join than at the alOws of his al•
alai datiat.
—A letter from Mn Cobden has barns Inge gab.
lie, written only a week elms, in which he says be
tins experieneed nothing bat rtralghttbrerardmer
is his dainty with the Preach Gorammaat, and
twit, when the remised French tacit L gablideed,
tie English garde wilt be pat an sad to. He adds
that there is a groat deal of systemwide iyieg ba
England about the French annammet.
The father of the venerable Josiah Qiiney wan
anted Jodah. Ills oldest son Is alb named Judah.
the oldest son of jodah Qrsine7, Jr., is memsd Jo.
/di, and his oldseesan is JIMA: Thus leer Jo
ahs,' Basally demeaded front the fathers/ had
eat Quinsy, are still lilies. Jana tadarye eI
ew liempskire, who has !LINN' emend pramdam&
adios*, and is the leading lawyer ta that State, Im
*rigs to the same stock.
i —Ely. E. P. Bogen, of Newark, N.. 1, wail salt
for Mriea on the bak of October ander tbe
siaspiees of the African Cfriltentitei Beeiety, to
Make the neteasaiy arraagenuents for eanyfag tato
operation the plans of Um Satiety in tbe Yenta)
I °ll ' lll7 '
—By the recent denim of Mr- Waking-rasa, esi
iingliah dlliaeafro, Eiroater J. IlieLeccl Mori,iiy el
Chia city bemuse hair to a fortune of over half a
million of dollars. Mr. Waldevere who was a
geserudent of one of the eat fausille; faygl d,
glad imemasel 0f..53,1E9.100. *UM tall Ale MMIII
etridedamoog mare or hie sieseem mastree, Ale
Senator named being ane of them.
—A Keistneky paper says
We lave boa hobrmal by a gramilsma of
high position, and whose statements so ens tea
doubt, that in • recent tut/Mew with Mr. Guthrie,
be (Mr. Guthrie) stated that soon after the nasal.
nation of Mr. &eaten/Igs, the Whore at the
Courin milled on him and urged him to dealers
his approbation of Mr. Brsoldaridge's amaination
and pledge himself to hie 'Nippon. To ml. be re
tells& emphatiosily. 'ilia% ha wield sot metert
Mr. Breekintidge, Mom by m doing be Timid
be giving aid to the election otLineola."'
Letter from Backs Comity.
Dormiming, Sept 13,1460
Cot- Folmar—Doer Sit ; The Ilth of Stittmii
bar, 1544, will long be reaternbered as A ameaora
hie spools la the history of the National Daaaexaey
of " Old Backs." Never km Dollestown iota the
theatre fey the display of such unbounded enamel.
awn LI was manifested by the Desnoersery of oat
'pouoty yesterday. At 2 o'eloak P. M. a yang
hickory, 100 feet in height (nal seitdoat a splice)
Was raised to front of the Democrat *Ewe, after
which B. Freak Fisher, Esq , • Wended rnters
man of oar county, made an alopant sprat.
What he ha& easelad.ed, three roaring clean were
giren for Douglas, Johann, cad regular rossiaa
tires.
But the etthtsisam of the mouton did net meth
its oulatinating point until treeing. At 6 e i elisek,
near two hundred Deemeretie eater. headed by
the Lambertville Bus Bard, feeeted la purrelse,
lei marched to the railroad depot kJ Neat* you
townsmen, the lion. Richard Vaal and Denial
Dougherty, Eaq , who were annooneed to adders a
intim meeting of tie Democracy. to he MU la the
rcirt hots", in the eveniaj. When the Mule are
dyed, three cheers were given for wet of the
opeaters, the bend struck up a natisaal air, and
the procassien, which was the mist grand end ho•
poring r bane ever witnessed, marched batik le the
town. As nightfall approached, delegations moo
la from all puts of the ecatV, bringeg in bar
drada of patriotic hurts, ready to Jots with, se is
demonstrating the feet that the Stemouesey
Backs musty are for the taloa, the Caseeleadets,
end Deugns, the /anises of the Northwest
At Tio 'clock, the mast of the people, tautening
about Snort hundred, eatuablut ussi
house. The ladies of ear borough mud oat, In
order to give eneouregement. fq Sett
to those who era engaged la Nadas the i rrea " t
cause of the people, %slut a tyrannical, dei tis,
end eorript A derdaistratioe Samoa Derrah.. .
one of oar harduorkieg Demonsett, prelidat. •
lima. Bit:hard Vieux we the first speaker tortre
dared to the meeting. nib spoke for an hoer sad a
half, and ettertaieed the inresemet erred with ea
able sad eloquent epeseh, which was serehted with
unbounded &politer. lie was followed by Yr.
Dougherty. The Inlretteble Dan almost ezeseded
himself on this oonesion. fa Want smaahheg
analysis at the principles of free 'were-meat, been
logiu, stud unanswerable argxmeat, letetuperned
with passages of the =Oat beautiful and penman
eloquenoe, Yr. Dougherty', 'push has never bees
excelled, and only establithee the more Mealy his
wotid•wiis reputation of being cue of the Ant oat
tont in the country. After Uri 'orinsictiOn 'of his
speech, the folb3witg meantime were reed 'zed
nttenimously adopted :
Remelt-et!, net we, the Dentocisay of Backe
county, in' ass meeting asnembled, de hereby re
cognize and endorse fiteehem A. Deafer std lier•
echel V. Johnson as the only Democrstie condi
' data far President and Vice President of the
United btates, - and as each we give them end the
principles they advocate our cordial and earnest
support.
AT cooked, That we are oppoeed to the Buten
tritium Of the State Central - Ctuamittee, adopted
at Cree.on on the 9th at August imt, and that we
will make no compromtie of our principles or can
did etas.
Risolra, That set appreveand endorse the at.-
Iton of the State Central Casseu'ase appointedby the Democratic State Convention so
ambled at Harrisburg on the 26th day of filly,
and will vote for no elirteral tie Let "easel ts not
pfedgel to the unqualified support of Douglas
and Johnson.
Resolved, That the Demoormy of Hanks county
have confidence in the patriotism, integrity, yd
ability of Henry D. Foster, the Democratic candi
date tot. Governor of Penneylrania, and we hereby
pledge biro our hearty and undivided support..
itssofy:ed., 'Pat we will Ignore the Preidideattal
question In ottr local politica, and that themoinipa-
Cion • which" shill be Made •by • hdeDiShoeVatie
County Convention shill receive air united seepswart.
The meeting then adjourned 1 , 19114r1 . 11t ch eers
for Deriglu, admen, and - Dainociacy. 4 •
After the meeting, MMus; DlimliertylWall Vlsl
were serenaded it Ow halal 111 Y.--/beer.
They each, in beautiful and eloquent epee:dies,
returned thanks to our nitiaena for the honor done
them, and. retired for thepigbl Thus ended one
of the most enthnslastle dessionatietkoM &ter bald
in our county, Ink w/ileh oteskletely emote Into lie
shade the mberabhedusweson flaw of .tiollfists
day evening preview', which mat gotten '11; 1 1 the
postinkitins . and censaktakere, and, whim* by
Dept. 'Day, Palethorp, and Thea?e, the e tanior
member* or the disu ni on, seoemian; disoigatlliisg
political Ann of Hweltabaa; Tyiat, t Co:
lio ivapit.