tvpvtlowt. risugniromalttOtintipp QM . 0; e'' h 1.4 = •+, , e' , 0 01 Vr41410114 Twisoni Can. risilWasm. Nsiablels Os anion , its_ara M 60 ? illfollollolo.lool.lfig ir 11!.1 310, likiht LUJIB • PM A* 4 l""su rtt ' l l' o h of_: ,i olt ir , vas * ' l4, ' ,„ " i r e • , .**, tee n*Sii ii ii** sl ,; . i : „, _,,;:: „ 4• -,-,0--Istofv,!*uls•-•-'' - r, mid4oo, 4 ooo l o , (oo4 l 4l:***poiii - LA " * 4040 1 . 4 ‘ 1 744 , 4 1 ;. , 1 ,L, z , I, • • , ' , '''qfWlPOlr!) l , l ll ll i'7 MICROPIACW, , , -• !AMOY', 'PRINTS HAKIVrelf 41 _:.PURPLE cg ; , 11 9.9 4 1P; ?4, 11 4 l Eig ROBBSOrO ,:art STAN N „ p!fEPTWcf:ANDPPMT'S APPIXiON aDENTINGS AND SHIRT SUFFOLK: BL*4I:DNED . . RAl4jlir9X MHOWN - AND BLEADEIHD FLUALS.' HAMILTON . WIDE 'Mr/U." BLIAODIft - OH 11/11D AND FOR BALE BY CHASE a sok,. )00. ORESTICUT STRUT:. ., aidllstudt-Im H.W,tY' (4)0159 ; F: V.. ERTJEIr & '00.;. SS& 011ESTN , IITA3TBSET0-: oar tooo"astona:lia'd SoadiOrii WitoWO! Boir , soot °angst* has offSophisdfisoy . ' IKIIOITIO HOSIERY 00001.• • - tbaorisisii. is mi.: -,. , GEIIthfrOURPIIPAROY WOOLENS.- ' - . ousurrown , 0.01/.DABB'S. - ,111/1011er WO - ANDISSN'S 110101,.; BOSTON sun= = HOSIERY.' SO' .*9tdiFN 100IffiG MID SENTWINOIfSIOO6 - • loing Uelt:iiilCNlntstiad ' sat' 000sploui Us of am loots Wig laidrovo*Mbril4, foOsiilokasoutakod . wastiot thomooloit is vivo, quilkti oudstfille• SolcAloals binillsiolplibi failkiet , • - - • W a t i TMLSIT HOSUlftlir; r I# L S A ND w•Mvint.tirtrrnWoo. , . a Ix '- , - { NORFOLK. MEW 00., .. - US n%.1 a : OTIB MANIMPACtiIItINO 00.; - ,; ' . ' OSSOIItI AleD ONSIIIIILifid. : • • . Also Sgsaiosor o-- AirsiiiWl AND ROWS PIN : 0041 PINS:,,, . '. 1 177-stathha . wp:tmc• & wEN,ErHiat dR A R OP- I M./MWMAA #psnigy r - .114iftnrepricaugus. - . Wet would eatl Na inisidaitaidaatof liradoir Barns iad Mdaalaaama tp lafaild 'assokieled amaiadt la" ClinangteCald Tuoz AMUR TOP ROBIBILT webbed aid pab Colors • lierket 'ATPIUD' OWL' . PINCITWOOLEN 600 DI. ROO!" O,IOAIM, TALLia,. SONTAGIO;;MMUAL OaswiatidOYYlaM;. • • !MYLES 4keti as Wei hoid- . halt &Am Pima ourowa laas im'aadaalaxs•rtasiaat'' ddit nialieraw mac bat kat tam saaloakia, mamma to aollw ii• Rosary Berms Ihibtabils• deals NOM 20.1101ft0 mist or Wawa: sad latraitaik-at ...F. V. - -PO.; - CAPTNTIT.erun., TH9M44! B 00MItIONION AtUtilliA NT Kb. 1119111011111=UT irr , a A r r . • • , :: se~eDsciaz . tor iikt brit" ulocrtai s -:.,FAXOY. (*ATRIUM, BRAUN' INALUINS, iriatraito. —•' MTLIENUeIat „ 9,&TosKANY, !MN. Aiitoomos num* ot . FAbithe' l iWeribtEßES NARWA'4 ,II 9/r UN4 0 4 .1 4/ 411011 00, BA -213111610, $ll.ll. ILA aA:. . 4thriat, amiaa SI~ZA aW. ;tm°, irk its awn,/ it- CONKUISION • MAUI "MC" r •. I 1 a EtrAPH.Ia•NiAbE ~; -ot pco 1)TS: , r4 i a: P I Ct•POFFM 00. 11, , OHISTNIIT MUM Mr; tie Plek , * felkndag bortPtio or AIUMU4:I;iN:ER3OLO. G. 110 , 141#' *lO3lll* 0 imumrr : filetrete oo.'OPEINTB 111111410111 D AND Mp.OWIII MIMENIB, villOsas..4l) auuthi; 08141"WIN:ITMO, AND tmuns; , copse- mtats, , :Mum" AND NeN 7 thbolfilk , 0 44.MqtY 00 12 P 11 4 5 AND nix= masks; - 1 0100Auttat ;WS ITS dUIDO. / 4 1 00X8; /1 1T0 1tr 01A2 1 9 545/6.9314111315; Nome° ,cionp AND slump ; Akopoira AND vim CLOTHS ; BLACK AND lANCIY OABOIMNIUM MAUL 1111),MEM pumps; , oisomPio; • Ommumums , • sid-sna Wislintavo -6101111111114 M 8TA1111"11111I8. !Kaki *ill, 01_1“ riO tyil • 2*o444o7ii‘kTo4o4** - - - ummurrxnpulai err ,m!ancunms. 4S44.IWTWOMMITOL: • • **lllloo'l3l***ll'!daid ociome,e; • atom. orut_kniax g#4ll:**ePtiiiii*Nl • 1- • ;ritorummukirat - , liittAo. - SAATON '0410«, 1ffi,61127: IMIANIITJI . 4I t tIiRp Ix • sHOE struFFs.i• 4Air t aw. ' ' 4 . OO "74VR I TA*PAt , Af. ' 6IOODIS FOR oDutraes MAUR& Veil.u Ipik T 9090 . liit !MIEN t tldlWlyttlr , - I 61,AND: KILL CATAWBA; !'t• - tivreirtettiss st • ciAtilasos - 4 obi% kw sit mei iiiramerr: by --ptitakan iteemtN, asitialont. , .:11941t:' 2f 1164 eft mairsr mien. iSl'O6; _ k , ,.4111.1111111.PAM7114 . , &Ca AldetWOMUlit •At ; , I:=XMO=4= ~. - 9 - 9,'• 9 . i' : : 'WS; AgEADVXII . 1 I r s ''.. i hlt • ! , imis Stemiararis:94o 9 / 4 9 , imil•Csastonst ',;;7• , ,th.AStaillt . '' ' j 4: - - • ,"'-',.':' • ' . 6 41, 'e 4 - --' :!: ' . : 4 aIIKILIONVANDOTHIMai ADVE/t7. at 9 ' - ' IIMOSNI111:,:i, : 414i_ 9 ilid,re , . . in Oil, ••,-,;,, I ~ . l'. 4. - _ rr, itrXßdt , 0- 1 4 11 - .1: - ~i.i / 4 E=Ml MEM VQ4. T. ,r '1'";11,10WEICIA " 111(4'&001. ON. pftWoir l irotii , aitAckurrEs. •st,' sitioND' nowt. ,IsotrxiiatEt, .7 7 1 . Bk7siiiNaittAca-trivE. 14-FORLIAMIAILOOR. • . • poi 2—A WNW, xio OOS. FOR Q.OWITRO, AND 'illtkiitetb ' efiroa ". Die ' of re. theal_wi den ~yi 14 4 WALITW " ! I fr‘ 974 r7,° t°3 • Vir . .V.AaltatftoFalt . :* tX) . :B . LITTLE. AND DOUBLE-LOOP STATOR HEWING/ 'MACHINES.. (. • 1 . 414 ELY IVA" . • I#4* * AKEI V I ADDLERHOITo„ N;,.0348 :AItOPH 3rittart. Primo of SIBUTPLE MACHINE, LW, ' • Pito. of:DoWDLB-LOor.BBLToR BILMMINS from • Ehl six**. Rad,iimist ,ePloithat imaqhissa mom &tared for all Walk mai., • , P. flf. -pitolog. Nll4, COTTON. NEEDLES. 000stantly on hand., .4 WII qt X ' GIBBS ) "SEWING MA ', • ammgd groat and inordagni &mood for Wtkioilb Gibbs' 'Bowing lisobine a intaroarpo iitrAh' ex rali nC kieh il otto . . 1 114 P A 64114 og-tf ties , nlikki4RxmiONGs. Wilitlild H. HORSTILANkt A SONS, , v, 1 _, , .• , , • itarTH A 141) CHERRY STREETS, , • _, , ' - , (.ddjotain g ihe Manufactory,) Inirits the otte4ion of bujori to their Fall stoat of - i LAI:OI,ES . ! .DRE S S - . 1 Ar 6 0314,041* . TRIMMINGS, - - , compannla, , ' . *AMOY DREDB,DpitIB o DODOS' BINDINGS, 01 MID 0114. DID:FINGII.!IPFTONS, DRAMS; , BERTHA., kc.;ke. - 1 , • Our u m stook of *Ler ZDPICYDDVD ilitifi e tlii : i : DrDOL, 'to., 1 I. very 44 •;britoea a full line . i . - .of all nolorirand &ado'. pie 44" for home ? II:41 4 ,1 1 a, as well aa dhoti!, eaerittf t erehtninaikate.amableanato offer .... 1 .0„.. had inai t titaintnbetaap. PERFUItIERIC. t . - ---. ---. TIAN- .t . :41: do.; • .4 - IPliaFtlagiiii. 41D:IMPORTE118, 1 LYN 'mom to • i . 11,0: sellout* romencerrititri. • , 1 7lviliolni *Jove theulehaeiiteiet. • ' , t , _ '' 0. 1 8 igq.hivipieelentell the ieshetiate, teintlee i Jarmo - late ann et T. .'Peleas ft 00.. 010, n• b ra" sufm,,l tad hi m oldad aij them Miss to row o t kat al " 11 1 rakr4ii t aten l iVZ *Sinter.' . (1.146): pefiebeeeitie fieritation of , 1 „ • 'lnitrodisrsi .iit.rxeLE:s. dirmei v it iv illiski i iitatir t titiout. alikr* • bp tar nit tato good e i l 4t7k 4ir , ' ens-too PArRIVINANGINGS. `AkERLIIILNGIING. • 4 ' ' , ArALL' Thant.) . 00V11*. BOIJRIM • *wing itaturi4d to their saw akmli ' - *Am= rinpra Asp RABBET wnwirre, • '4l4'ivirr4saredio" Trade a large kid *,t anprupinit W VAPZIOC t BORIOSIU1; : • PULE sCREENth ALL, WINDQW,OURTAIII GOODS, ho.. ;of the' nii rest 'Seat dir,IBIH from the low ort kitieili,to the , ; • wig Asp vg,vrr bteintiroxtf. irarbikah Wirtara mezatuntit wio alarm ot. visit lidasont • - : ; 11 ir.„; t BOVittw, • _ N. 4441 3 t OltMyt - FOUITH AND IitAIKET*RERTE. - • 'PHILADELPHIA. • • lIMIMELL'AWC • . .• . , staigrElt ac• FENNER. .. .. . i . wm#,Easkit StANIMAC'TURERS -UMBRELLAS AND PARASOtS, I ' ' ' RO, ';118 MARKET STREET, Wilson raking more than meat ntraDann mammon. ,yannmtu on VIIIIZZLLAII 1 , vett shisOrroonto Me ineh k , , , . yea Imo have iwthiM R. & ■ .'s mks of Emil 1 Emilio* welt ism tit 100 eg• overtbil well-m • korkiskisolades ,1114X11109E1711111. 110 g MSS Wi • ,rier*l 7, . mmo-&A„ , HARDWARE CORE, HENSZEY.&CO. - .ARY; OkENING ,THETA yAra. OTOOK OF 'HARDWARE. MAIM, tad' 416 00110031011 STREET. sei•fto - , NEW'NORN ADVERTISEMENTS. -1 -* .O RE S T , ARMSTRONG, & CO., VAEPORTERS AND JOBBERS -DRY GOODS, 711, 77,, 79031 1 193 - k of ' D E T, NEAR -BROADWAY • , OFFEN 4,0 R ,53A1.1 A NEW AND ELEGANT :STOOK of DRY GOODS for FALL TRADE, potted to aUsationt of Gletotextry.' They srilconlat AMOSICEAG ' W A SUTT AIL PRINTS, IN NEW AND DESIRAIILE STYLES. THESE OHLESRATER-yRDI,TS aro the' OHEAI9MIT and IMT-somr mold is the UNITED STATES, and they bet parqool# ettoralintrl dation to Skarn. • - • 'OEI"TS , PURNIIIIIING: GOODS.' fidonr.:444telorthetrip of 'Win= illejeffilArl:Bloo 6 it , is, 011101 , 1,•0 , t, ` • , Mud nOtd)r , [actor 9l7l :,,, er taivrto., not Onillt.?. PI.- WPC , , , 141/4/1 . lad* , WRIS: PRIBERVINEf BRANDY, • - PURE cntER • " WINE •VINEGA R, Griot CAW, liturtard flied, liploss, krt., ke, AHtkiN for Propierrint gad Plokling rumor `4,i,al3rskra -itOßEtetti. • • mutiEßnr. • • FINE . GROCIERIEB. • : - Omit ZUMENTIL est WIN *Mk, OBIS • ARO 130irT#' VIRGINIA, LOUISIANA, lad ollieriiieisirent fends bought at low rata. • WORX, 11000II0Hj Ir. CO., 1!!!!! !' . 116. 35 606 . !.3 :THIRD Street. -• • , INEMISDI-Jir4IIATLVB '=, ' , irraeratzli t y •WyEO , 1r E l 9 O O • 311LIWr R lgil woe ? .s• WIJOGUK..IO,, I,l_l , 01:10A1pf,4 7 - 1,1 I 80iti.00,0 . ;.• 1; 1 ,4'; 3 • . • ,ir:4•WlZti .9: j _ , ''',f .1, ' ,:. i• f „ 0. 1 ., , , , ,,tr!!•4 , ~-•., iir IA • ,-•-"' "( Ai) lIYIR „.4 ti ili,. ~,,-, t z • ; , „,, • ..,, , • ,•,- ,t ; ;• - ;"'„; 7 4 ay •,, , 4-.1,5 4 - 1/ 1 ~ .; L4L.4 i L. -,.. ,t 1 1 • I J . 1 raLi 7 ffifi a --1-; Wrie,7, o • • , . •• . .7 Jai J. , - !.,,,,,,i!,,,,,N I t ~-•. ....," ..: , ,-;'• ~:f ' , . • _ • r , ..,. . __. . ~ ---...,. t t o , .4, . , . 0. 4 ....4 , , , .,. .... i . . It ;•.:' _ - - nAO n g ;: , - • r - 4-- ~, ,A x._ .., t , ,trf--...:. "._4444: . ....... .) i ... . ,• .... J A.,g: ~., ~.,:...,: _ . ......... _ ....,_,..0__ ,141 . :__!.... _ . ar t_ /...-77,1 ~---- , f-': ' !"*... - "-!..: 1 7 ' '3)* - .., ~ .... .. . :._ i I Tt ^ \.- L• .1 , e:, 1 ' t : ' r ..t - OPN,, Y''' Jan. . - • 1 : • •,.... - , i. s: ; )„, - 1 i i !,*., :*••' -,• .4,„ ;.. 1 ....., . - : ) 4 '4 :: 1 .„,,,, :., ii\ 0 ,,,:„„„,, . ~ 0.:. NEN • itit .—., -_ , . . .„.,. . . .-. ....._ . . ‘•• , , ..,, .._, • ...._. . ~... ... .."...!, - / --) , ~.-.--. ,—,,:,59, , _,,._..• 4 - ..—.._ „_,),,. ~,., ,• , ... ~, , f , _ ..•, u , . '- ___ I _ _ ~ I •, 0 , , . . . " • : 0.: • . .. . ' , , " stirs bbcffiti"Striklizits JOSHUA BALLY. IMPORTER MD JOBBER. No. 218 MARKET ST.. - Has now open s LARGE AND BEAUTIFUL Asi;torment of DRESS GOODS and 4 - SHAWLS. Of the NEWEST' AND CHOICEST STYLES, At the LOWEST PRIOES. The attention of cash and prompt eis•montha buyout ix Invited. se6-tf LARGE AND ATTRAOTIVN STOOK • - PALL AND WINTER BALED. SHORTRIDGE, BROT}ItIt. & C 30., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS, ' No. 420 MARKET STREET; and• Np. 412 MERCHANT sTRERI.,:PEILAD'ELPHIA. {taw grai n iopi a grolizioN and AXE -313 -(1.0 OD S. selected with ki - view Ai the interiele of CASH and Droplet SIX-MON rim , Dente" to :which they invite the eitteptlon of the trade. M.D.— . 'I I T 0 - Vile Mailam;n4.sl '`'and not to be odd ataiwherc • entosooated DrometlY, at LOWEST MARKE T DA /21. , ,• • , • 4 CLOAKS TO . WHOLESALE - - BUYERS. .EVERY NOVELTY OF THE BEASON. AT' THE iorii.OT clAin NP filerohanta' , awn =limb made 91131 desired. HENRY IVENS No. 93 tkplUt riatruduseils.* LITTLE Is CO.. BILK GOODS, No. "8111 MARKET STREET. azolam OFAT -r-4 1860. ite..FF.ES. STOUT. & Co. FOREIGN AND pikisavo DRY GOODS. aula-Dm No. U 3 MANX= MBE% MARTIN WOLfl, Er= FOREIGN AND' DONEE= DRY GOODS, 334 MARKET BTRRET. Ottak snd DromPt 1311mottlue Doyen, of nll MAIM lire invited to an emoninetion of our Stook. etin-dm‘ SILKS' FANCY DRY (loops. IMPORTATIONS FOR PALL, ista. ri:HArat,ciwzrz, & Co . $33 MARKET STREET, . BY NORTR FOURTR tritslar. .kre, 'waisted to offer to the trade their usual varied assortment of Goode, purchaeed on the , MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. By' experienced barer*, in the principal MANUFACTURING CITIES OF EUROPE. , The , beyj lititisoieoted with carob!. FIRST-01A138 TRADE, And will ba offered at orlon to command attention. Otos, Bursas, from eU s u ctions of the country, erg muted to inspect our stook. Tintwo.—Ella . months credit to Merchants of un doubted per or six per cent. discount for cash Twelve per cent. per arm= discount for advent* , payments. ant-thstu-im R EMOV AL. In consequence of the destruction by fire of their THIRD STRIMT &Wait YARD; GILLMORE. & 00. HAVE REMOVED TO NO: 610 OHESTNIJT ST% SOUTH SUM' ABOVE SIXTH, ruttAvirralm. nes have now open AZ4 ENTIRE NEW STOOK • Op SILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS, GLOVE ' B, RIBBONS; DRESS TRIMMINGS, • 4•C •, Together with a LARGE AB3ORTIdENT of STAPLE AND FANCY , WHITE GooDs. EMBROIDERIES, LACES,: MANTILLAS, ,A 0 Having Te 001 1 ,04 bat a small portion of their • • FALL LIIPORTATIONS., Prelim touts the, they ere enabled to diglflWr A NEW 'STOCK. to oldok they Write the attention Of their Gado mere and Bayer. generally. ault.der yViYE AUSTIE.- & MOVE ibaHs IMPORTNIS AND .700/3314 DRY 000 Era. ' Ho. 311 111AlttET 11tirmit, al JOY& Third. FulaurAllatt ent ittip2r. inoVeigh o 1 railiX34 PHU* ohntp.yinnur, , opepn =MIA • 1 attlllm FALL AND WINTER. CLOAKS & MANTILLAS F,fOR THE WHOLFMALE TRAD:Fao , 09FRERN ittiTERN. MERO . RANZO glar u gOO t t, „mitiroc,r , w - LOW' . PRICES. AND ON .4IBRRAL T.E . RMS. 'J. Ver, PROCTOR , & CO. TEE PARIS MANTILLA Cad 0L0.A.1 t 'EMPORIUM. 108 CHESTNUT 'Ef • auf4ne R . :WOOD, MARSH, a; HAYWARD, iMPORTI;Rs Aum WHOLESALE DVIALERS 12f • DRY GOODS' am, CI ra 0 7i-I I G NO. 309''ANYANT EIT.,RSET. gill m asidWints r Brook now wilapints and Vie WOOL: il.°ll ' f a entire, 'and for wae at tad lowest xarket iTioon. a large Stook of th• mod eiestrable grades of 01110 AND RENES,YLVAI (Li FLEECES. ALSO. LOW AND lidiyiiiNht :WOOLS. Which purahasieri av, returned to:i call and examine. ENI.B COATES, sell-Im CASX - rirtmr. B 'ELLS. iPoik trinnwass. FIRE tau IMM=arl NATEO 'R & C 0..„ 4 ; MISISAVEAtreett. OMSE.IIIX"M. lIVASAR-1 dailee fnt jam. WY.THERILL i 111.0TREjw 47 and 49' ?With IMCOrill Et. PHIL OELPHIA; THURVAY S-M , PAPg Assq, COLYETIKG AND OIL 'CLOTHS. FALL TRADE. itTCPALLUNT & 00.. r CARPET MANUFACTURERS, ' GLEN EODO RILLS, GERMANTOWN, Also, Importers and Deakin oARPETIzips., • r OIL OLOTHS. MATTINGS, RUGS. WAREHOUgE:ISO£I O.IIEIiTNUT STRUT S (opposite the State Southern end Western Buyers are irpoetfully t Attid to oath CARPETS, CARPETS. ,BAILy 8c I;IROTHER. No. 920 CHESTNUT STREET. AN INVOICE OF ENGLISH INGRAINS. J useopened from emotion. Pm) ?Scents & ;BAILY & BROTHER. VELVET CARPETS. NOV open, the flawed patterne of " ENGLISH. VELVET CARPETS. BALLY & BROT'FIER. No. 920 ORNSTNUT Street. TAPESTRY BRUSSELS. We now o ffor for sale the largest assortment of those popular Carnetiogs, at ' ONE DOLLAR A YARD. 'BAILY & BROTHER, No, 920 Oi4EBTArr. !tree!. BRUSSELS CARPETS. of the beat quality; ic great gaiety. at No. 920 CHESTNUT Street. 'DAILY & BROTHER. DRUGGETS, p CRUMB CLOTHS. &c. The molt extensive stook we ever anted, to all Width' end !lieu. - BALLY & BROTHER. MATS.; RUGS, &o. — Areinster, Velvet, Toniney, Brumele, Wool Tufted, COoo, plain and bordered, of all aloes, in groat varlotg t BROTHER,' sede-lhetur3nt No. 920 causTntrT Street. AUSTIN' BROWN. . WHOLESALE MILLER IN thoort:,catrtneoleas.: 164 North TWRD Stmt,!souttoreot , oorner .pt • RACE. ( . %strum). • ..5•12 : Avis AND cAra: HMV HAT STORE. imp I JOHN - E. FOSTER, (Late of IN South Third street,) , Hams titian the store at NO. 331' CHESTNUT ST.. Ara attodjget i rpotioi style; the attention ° " I tLVIANT EXTENSIVE STOCK HATS AND OAPS. nevrtailetylei are much admired. ' ae14.3al C. H . H GARDEN da Co.. 2dedinfoottirero of and Who Wale Dealers to Od.1"8. FURS. AND STRAW GOODS. FANCY SILK AND STRAW BONNETS, ARTIFI CIAL FLOWERS:RUCH/W. FEATHER/3,km, Nos.6oo'and 609 MARKS', STREET, Southwest corner of Sixth: The most extensive end complete oseortment. The best •terout end the lowest !nom . First-oleos hover' Cr. portictilarir invited to osll , . - CABINET FURNITURE. FRENCH F URN ITUlit':•J GEORGE J• HENRELS, 624 WALNUT-STREET, Hag Jut opened a large Invoice of BOULI, QUADRILLE, MAItQURTRIE, and 'W ; hiah he will sell at Very REDUCED PRICED FIRST-CLASS .CABINET WARE. GEO. J. HENKELS, 694 WALNUT 9TREET. VERY REDURED PRIOEE3 The• tweet meortment in the Union, all of New Dement Call and 'examtne before purehaelni. self am eftEMET FURNITURE AND LIARD TABLES. MOORE & CAMPION. No. 901 SOUTH SECOND STREET. In connection with their extensive cabinet Badness. are /lOW raanufeloellrEpa a superior arhele 0/ BILLIARD TABLES, homtvoir on hand alai] impply,Asitsbed 00K1 CAMPION El CUSHiONS, hi& are pronounced. by all who have need them, to fmperlor W apt other". or the qualitt and S y of these Tables H the Man fan/were refer ,to taeir maternal patrons awaii= t the us:dented/ OATS lamiliar with th e character o f their wort. aaf tai GAS FIr i JCITRES, LAMPS, &c. KEROSENE OIL OF SUPERIOR QUA.- LITY. ST.ROSENE. or COAL-OIL LAMPS. CHANDELIERS, BRACKETS, &0.. Manufactured and fur sale, at LOWEST CABS PRICES. by WITTERS die CO.. No. 35 NORTH. /MIRTH STREET, M. E. oor. of Filbert, betweon Market and Mob. sole-Yea MORE LIGHT I , ' THE GAS LAMPS FOR THE ?ELME, may be seen at ttu4 NORTH SECOND ;Street ;1130.000 worth aye now to one. The laarsig street, Green and Coates, Ridge road. and other hone, oani are now using theta. We altar any fitthy Kaftan, Lamps into Oa* Lamp* or or ; 10000 Agent' wanted Id sell them throughout t o U Red States. The Gas Lamp wht Light a room twin tynroot senate for one cent au hour. 0: A. GREENE & CO.. No. 204 WORTH SECOND Street, above Race. selg-ths&mar LOOKING GLASSES: LOOKING -GLASSES, PORTRAIT AND PICTURE FRAMER, ENGRAVINGS, OIL PAINTINGS. &0., to JAKEB S. Ed ILLE Ic3 ON, IMPORT% it C. MANUFACTURER, WHOLE SALE AND RETAIL MULE h EARLES' GALLERIES, •18 CHESTNUT STREET, MEDICTNAIIA. T_TELIABOLDIE4 ird:TRAOT BUVHU. X.. 3 Ti tt fi 121104,T piIIRETIc. :,For lawnBf r o Vddi t loln e nt o uN o 6l, Dropsy . ' ',""ritincr a giMarafffNir del " . • 1 4 ° ill tTrehst k, u be iv o rag Nervy", - • 9f bitem_oic y • - Eldlioulty of Breathing. wpm vaalElAsew. -OF ,11911.18CIULL111 IsYeltelet. Vlill• I ilr e fdlaWattl l n e lVdiiir 1"116 l i vanablyromqvos, Goon folio 1118 Yrr t tr i MilfdTplleptio Fit& pßo t. 6/1 B - W REMEDY' A ONCE, Dkienig tt rifOrit l leralgtli Thniena. JII a Ave ,glllO, Diuretic, to Ji the de.ini cm dis eases And . ul aa r t S la t t ors a n eireet ill the IMUMeltr it t O r k l aritalh mt. 0 a 8 011iLER ?,_XrES, 'lllolBontik egoilit .8 x 9r a mititi l a of c il irm . 0 :11 pally the e ldedline eg re olg Ispresori an vie int i ll i ldllt i . tr . M. NED. f from 0 1 Amg, month to c l aw s , reto. galtezmiwe ritiliblit Ilia re4vongbie o r bi gi g, is FiLf°treat. low /MU/. Ted rrr 4 toaatiele biPOl: I b 4 kofi'itt.TErfb FAMILY FLOUR, MADE FROM CHOICE WHITE WHEAT. CI H. IVIATTSON,I4,- . ARCH and TENTH amts. , IS gnn 000 HAVANA47Iq.AIIB.- 11 13om 1!7•7", , Espanola, Cad Ines, " :"." • Id 00010. • BUY Me% a • Calhoun, Adorn:Hon. Arroyo Hi:lift !to. Or Regalia. Londree, . G r ollohia, (Vera, and Raga meg. of at cites , dua li ties, and priegag stored), re aent arrtMisond for sale by CR e la Tligla. sal 4w . el rytm noose. TOWAMIERT 0411 " *G n°"Eti trilf*tent!Oli• of: liliyors:lE4 VRESH: FALL coz•Otis:. AFI GEL. BAlEtp. , 8a Co.: imPormus A D J9#muttr op DRY GOODS; 47 NORTH THIRD STREET. Would respectfully invite the attention of the trade to tlieir • kA.DOE AND WELL•SELNOTED •. " Sock of 'MESH FALL 009 DK r Widek t!ker areiloiopisinK. 'We rare, doily tit isagg la kinds of trash and dimn!ablo Janda., otto, and, exinetne our gook. • • ~ ser-arn 1 8 6 0. FALL TRADE. 18 00. RAIGUEL., 8a 400.., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS Or . FANCY DRY GOODS. NO. 137 NOMTIi THIRD STREET, LRE NOW PRKPARKD 1001 FKRTO THE TRADE . GENERALLY AN UNUSUALLY ATPRAOTIVE STOOK OP 00003, COlOllBlllO SILKS, DRESS GOODS. wit TE GOODS, ,EMBROIDERIES, LACES, SLOTHS, OASSIMEREIL VESTING% HOSIERY MOUS AND TRIMMINGS, TOsetherwith a full and varied ..toot of or PALL AND WINTER SHAWLS. .T.*l of which they Invite the attention of CON AND PROMPT SIX MONTHS' BUYERS. 7 0V. KT • WS -Ina H. F. BUNN. ' ' iff469.! FALL. 1860. 1 i 1 t .~ ' • • • . 1~ GUEL. mug, & GO.. 14441•0101:11141.10 HAVE NOW mai THE LAROBBT AND MOBl COMPLETE STOCK DRY GOODS The/ hove ever offered, and to Which the attention of ORMOLU WORK, CASH AND BUORT-TIME BUYEIB Ie respsottally solicited sir For variety and oompletenaaa in all Its depart ments, oat aranant stook onto inducements to buyers =Jur/Kissed by arty other bows. JAMES. RENT. SANTEE. & 00.. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS or DRY GOODS. NOS. 289 AND 241 NORTH THIRD STREET, ABOVE RAGS, Itesneothilly Invite the attention of Moyere to their ueual LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OF FOREIGN AND, DOMESTIC GOODS, Among winch will be found a senora] assortment of PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS, &go,a large variety of new and confined styles of PRINTS, MERRIMACK SECONDS. Ac. anlT•gm THOS. MELLOR it 00.. NG. • NORTH THIRD BTREET, IMPORTERS Or HOSIERY, sillitTB AND DRAWERS, SMALL WARM, AO, TEM. MELLOR. Jon" B. MELLOR. EDWARD BAINio ONO. 0. EVANS, IRA-fin F ALL, 1860. COOPER. PARHAM. & WORK. Importers. Manulaotnrem. and Jobber. of HATS. MAPS. FURS. AND STRAW GOOpS. NO. al NORTH THIRD STREET, blow ARCH, PHILADELPHIA. MILTON COOPER. WM. M. PARHAM. ROBERT D. WORK. OW Fall Stook now oomplato and ready for buyers. enl7•2m SOWER. BARNES. & BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS, No. 87 NORTH THIRD ,STREKT, Lower wde, above Market Street, Philadelphia, Ipeite the th erntlon of Booksellers Cod a: wag wen. LTlLTgiTtlitrlt. ogIVIZ..11,11): t e l i dar , .4 Stationery . Inerally. among rate ** are de follorat ° : mang "" v"ks. rbilsdelshli. THE CENTRAL GOLD REGION, BY COL. WILLIAM OILPIN.i (Late of the U. S. Army.) ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS MAPS. One vol.. tivo. bound in cloth. Prioe *L2s ; and a Liberia discount to the trade. This book is pronounced the most wonderful, scienti fic, and comprehensive treatise on the goof mph, of car continent ever published. SOIIOOI, BOOKS: SANDERS' SERIES OF READERS. BROOKS' NORMAL PRIMARY ARITHME TIC— —.. —.......—....18 ots. BROOKS' NORMAL MENTAL ots. BROOKS' KEY TO MENTAL —9O Ws. BY E. BROOKS. A. M.. Proteseor of Mathematics in Pennsylvania Slate Apr mai School. Liberal term' for Introeuotion. WHITE'S COPY-BOOKS. BY T. KIRK WHITE, 3'reside/3ot rounailvanlallomerotel Coßogs. PELTOWS ouTuicrx MAPS: Tide Barka; of SIX fiUPEAB MAPS 'ke nAr adoeted> in alptoet ovary eohool of noto inthe Union 'geo graphy is taught, and hex no **anal. Price $1 forfeit Big of nix mem or $lO for rot of ttemiathore maps alone. sab-,Sm" AVA .001ITEL-1,000 ritifeACettfor "tie b ,TAMEEI UR,AII.OI A NNUM At —4 casks Italian ref sale. &IBR0TIIER,„ Bele 41 414 49 Medi BIiCuAND 6ti No. 220 AND 222 NORTH FRENOH, BRITISH. GERMAN. DO3MIESTIO $., TITESDAY; 1301EPTIIIEBtR 20, 11.430., • . By . niVat*. „ ' In Moore'a -Life of . Byrn" numerous Tefer °noes are made to 7 the illustrlcras poet's per. Bonet deformity; and Ids tritn extreme sane- tiveness upon that Mooie inbitiobs this «the lame iiess . Of bin right feet; thouglian obstacle to grace, hutilttle Limieded the tic:. tbrity -of his, moyemeotai spit, from, this circumstance, ,aa. well as , ikom the skill vvith whiCh tha foot was disguised by means et lcmg .trowsein, "it would: he dittleulte to conceive a defect of this kind less obtruding Itself as a 'deformity ;: while the diffidence which a con stant censdloc3ness of the liffirniity gave to Is ilist approaCh and. address made, In him; even lameness a source of interest." The ,defect, after all, was not either very greftt very perceptible ; considerably less, in fact, than in Sir Walter Scott, who was lame from thelhip, and, like Shakspere, was "a halting fellow." The accplent occurred at the ,time of his birth,, owing, he bitterly complained, to his mother's false delicacy on ,that occasion, and consisted in his foot having been twisted.out of its natural position. In`Moore's Diary, vol. V. p. 186, he states (as, told' him by Dr. Butler, Read Master of Harrow School, and his wile,) 4s his tenseness, they both agreed was from an accident, being lot fail when at nurse," but in the Life, throe years later, he declares it, occurred at his birth. 'ln the same volume, , a year later, Moore mentions a conversation with Lord Sligo, Byron's' wares Mend, who travelled with him daring his first visit to Greece, in which Lord S. said thatono day when ho was talking with Byron on the Shore of the Galt of Lepanto, Byron (who had before said that he would tell him some time why fie hated his mother se,mricb) pointed to his naked log and foot, - and said, "There's the reason; it was her false delicacy at my birth that was the cause of that deformity; and yet afterwards ate Zopioached iae'witii it, and not long before we parted for the last time, uttered a tort of imprecation,on me, praying that I might be as 11l formed in mind as I was in body." Lord Sligo, Moore 'adds, said that Byron that day bathed without trowsers. The advice of the celebrated surgeon, John Hunter, was taken upon his cue—but too long art.:a:the accident had occurred, and various expedients wore 'resorted to, in'hope of re storing the limb to shape. Even when a mero child at Aberdeen, certainly not more than eight years old, he was observed to display much anger if his lameness was noticed : yet, on other occasions, he would jest at it, and there being another little boy in Aberdeen who had a similar defect, Byron would laugh ingly say, sometimes, c , Come and see the twa laddies with the twa club feet going up the Broad street." Ills mother, In her frequent gnats of vehe ment and angry passion, would alternate be tween wild admiration. of his handsome face and the repulsion of actual disgust at his lame foot. In his Memoirs, Byron strongly de scribed the feeling of horror and humiliation that came over him, when, in ono of her fits of passion, sho called him "a lame brat." In later days, he wrote a The Deformed Trans formed," the hero of which, addressed by his mother es a hunchback, retorts, a I was born so, mother !" Subsequently, when Arnold assumes the form of Achilles, he nye— " I uk not For valor, since deformity is daring. It le its amines to o'ertake mankind By heart and soul, and make itself the antral— Ay. the superior of the rest. There is A spur in its halt movements, to Naomi All that the others cannot. in such things As still are tree to both. to oompessate For stspdatoe Nature's avarice at first. They woo. with fe 'Tien deeds, the mules of fortune, And oft, like Timour the wild Tartar, win them." In a letter to his friend Mr. Hodgson, at the same time when ft Hours of Idleness " first ap peared, Byron replied, when his correspond. ont said that his verses wore calculated to make schoolboys rebellious, "If my songs have produced the glorious effects you men tion, I Shall be a complete Tyrkens ; though, I am sorry to say, I resemble that interesting harper more in his person than in his poesy." Three years later, in his cc Hints from Ho race," written after his return from Greece, but not published until after his death, he again made the same comparison : .. And old Tyrtmuz, when the Spartans 'wed, (A■ lame as I am, but a better bard.) Though weird (theme had resisted lanai Reduced the fortress by the force of song." In a letter to Mr. Word, In 1813, about the time of the publication of the .4 Bride of Abydos," (who, by the way, did not deserve the name, for sbe was unwedded,) he said, it It deserves no better than the first, as the work of a week, and Scribbled t skins pedo In nno,' (by the way, the only foot I have to stand on;) and I promise never to trouble you again under forty cantos, and a voyage between each." The following year, wilting to Murray, By ron said: «The Morning Post, in particular, has found out that I am a sort of Richard lll— deformed in mind and body. Tho last piece of information is not very now to a man who passed five years in a public school." In one of his latest letters to Moore, dated Genoa, April 2, 1823, only three months be foro he started for Greece, wo found Byron alluding to 'Henry Fox, (the late and last Lord Holland,) saying: "I always liked that boy, perhaps, in part, from some resemblance in the loss fortunate part of our destinies—l mean, to avoid mistakes, his lameness. But there is this difference, that he appears a halt ing angel, who has tripped against a star, whilst I am LLe Diable • Boiteux—a sobriquet which I marvel that, amongst their various nominee umbra., the Orthodox have not hit upon." In one of Byron's letters to Leigh Hunt, the opinion is expressed that it an addiction to poetry is very generally the result of an un easy mind in an uneasy body. Disease or de.; fortuity," ho adds, tc have been the attendante of many of our hest. Collins inad--ChatterY ton, / think, mad=-Cowper mad—Pope crook. ed—Milton blind," &c. However Byron, zn propriet person 4, may have alluded to or Jested upon his own de- formity, be constantly and bitterly felt it. Moore says it haunted him like a curse, amidst the buoyancy of youth, and the andelr pitons of fame and pleasure. To his reve rend friend, Mr. Becher, who told him he had •a mind which placed him far above the rest of mankind, he answered," If This (laying his band on his forehead) places mo far above the rest of mankind, That (pointing to his foot) places me far, far below them." Ono of his Aberdeen schoolfellows met him, after sepa ration since childhood, at Cambridge, and failed to recognize, him. wlt is odd," said Byron, "that you should not know me. ,I thought Nature had set such a mark upon me that I never could be forgot." After the publication of if Child° Harold," when be woke ono morning and found himself famous, Byron avoided showing himself In public places, and, Moore says, the Imo rea son,.no doubt of this reserve, in abstaining from all such miscellaneous haunts, was the son sitiveniss so often referred to, on the subject of his lameness, —a feeling which the curiosi ty of 'Abe public eye, now attracted to this Infirmity of his fb.mo, could not tall, ho know, to put rather painfully to the proof. Rogers, the poet, has recorded that he was once going out to the opera with Byron, end a link-boy lighted them along, saying, f , This way, my Lord, this way." Rogers said, " How does he know you aro a Lord 7" Byron savage ly aneirered, "How does he know I Every ono knows I am delopned." perhaps the intense consciousness of this phYalcal defect sCting'hitif into, the desire to become great. ' Frltncisßacon (so often deilg noted Lord Bacon by ignorance or careless ness,) has a, sentence beating . .upon this : cc Whosoever hath ,anythifig flied in hit per ape that ddth induce contempt, bath also a perpetual optic In himself to rescud'and deliver TWO CF;Nn. . . t ,liim elf from' s;c4p.;;ibeiefore' lalrdeformad , V nlkare.eitioinie`bblOr •" 4 ,' .. .. ,' , ei all, the deffait' hi' IhTi'M'conid not hay been greatly obseriablea.' Moo sauilly did not 11100110ot; when he " wrote llte first vol ,fit of Ilyron's tia,'whleh wiii 'the lime leg. ig It will; inde:ed;vritb gmi c ati. be be: iteva, t yi fie ' says, cc what 'uneertainty I fbniad upon this point, even aimingst' thdae most intimate, with bin?. ,Mr. nun% In"hiii book, 'states it to have been 'the loft foot that was ni der ed; and this ; though contrary to my ow imßression, and as' it appears also,' to the roc, was the opinion I found also of others wh ha d been much in th e habit of living with hi On applying to his early Mends in Smithwell, and to the atMetaker of that town whq worked for hire, ao' little prepared were they to answer with any Certaluty'on the sub ject, that it was only by recollecting that the ni z, la 1 foot c was the o ff one In going uyi the atr t,' that, they at list came to the concht-' sio that his right 'ilmb:wits the Cone iffebtid ; and, Mr. jae, , kson; his' preceptOr in ingillthi, was, in like,,manne!, obliged to call to rabid ith4ther thill44 , o4pMagoui aright Or e. lett-, Nana hitterbeton could arrive entire idle declaim]." ~ After all,the decision was erroneous! The lull upon which Byron's shoes and boots we made, at Sonthwell, in Nottinghamshire, by l ir William Swift, from 1805, eo May 1807, were lately presented by 'Mrs.'ColOneT'Wild man, of Newetead Abbey, 'to the Niturallit'a Sotilety of Nottingham, with a certificate from the:shoemaker. These lasts are described as "shout nine inches long, narrow, high 'at the inslep, and generally of symmetrieal shape." Mrf Swift's certificate declare* that Byron had not a club-foot, but thatthe defectiie foot Was forfeed the same as the other, "except being exactly an inch and 'a half shorter." (Nine inches was probably the length of the smaller last?) "The malformation was in the ankle, which was very weak, Consequently the foot turtied outwards. To remedy this, his Lord ship wore a very thin boot, tightly laced nnder hid stocking.. In his .early life he wore an iron, with a joint at the ankle, which passed down to rho outside 'of the leg, and WA Hastened to the solo of the shoo. The der of that leg was mgch sir ler ; It was the left leg" • • . Bore, then, Moore was - wi , orik,'ind Byron's friends were right in their rectilletionig." The shOemaker's plain statement . nulliflei Tretaw nisi's improbable declaration, given ' to the world in his "Recollections of the Last Days of Shelley .and Byron,". published in 1858. Trhlawney accompanied Byron to Greece in 1823, but was ebsentfrom Missolonghi, when B)Iron'8 death tools plaCe there, on April 19, it , . • He arrived there on the 24th or 25th, an the only person • then in' the house was . Fletcher, the faithful attendant of the poet. We give the last of the story in Trelawney'S min words: " As if hdknew my wishes, he led me up a bar rote stair into a null room, with nothing fn it bet a edam standing on trestles. Na word wait spokes by either of us; he withdrew, the blank pall, and the white shroud, and there ay the embalm-8d betty of the Pilgrim, mews•lwauttfal in death than in life The contraction of the mufti's and skin hal effaced every Hoe that time or passion bad ever traced on it; few marble busts eonld have mktolred its stainless white, (ha hanntail of its pioportions, and perfect finish. Yet, he bad bean dissatisfied with that body, and longed to•out its * * 1,1 ■ 'I asked Fletcher to bring me a glue of water. On his leaving the room, to confirm or remove my doubts as to the cease of his lameness, I uncovered the Pilgrim's feet, and was answered—the great mys tery was solved. Both his feet were clubbed. and his legs withered to the knee, the form and features of an Apollo, with the feet and legs of a Sylvan Satyr." Comment on the indelicate curiosity of Tre lawny is not needed here. But his statement was untrue. Lord Sligo (el supra,) had seen Byron bathe without drawers, and would have noticed the defect imagined by Trelawny— Particularly as Byron himself had drawn atten tion to the malformed limb. The Countess Guiccioll, (wife, since 1851, of the Marquis de Boissy, of Paris,) published &letter in Gettig noni's Messenger, after the appearance of Tre lawny's romance, declaring from perional knowledge, that his story of the two clubbed feet and a pair of withered legs was all a lie. The appearance of the shoemaker's lasts, with the certificate of the handicraftsman es tablishes the plain fact that Byron was slightly deformed in one foot—his left. Philadelphia and Fruit-Growing. To TEE EDITOR or TUC Peels In your last Thursday's issue, noticing the meeting of the Po mologioal Society, Ton make come commentary on Philadelphia trait-growers, and fruit-growing around our city, on which I beg permission to make a few remarks. After alluding to the various ex hibitora in flattering terms, you say say that" Phi ladelphia has materially declined as a frult-pro- dnolng district. Formerly, Philadelphia uniformly carried off the palm for superiordisplays of fruit ; at later displays, however, only amateurs have made contributions." Now, gentlemen, these statements are only ap parently true—in reality they are opposed to the, facts. Any one who may have bad opportunity of travelling about the anbarbe of oar ally cannot have failed to notlee that the pear trees are loaded to the utmost capeetty—iiterally borne down by the weight of their fruit—and that this Is annually the case We will net speak of other fruit, and, after all, " the pear" to about all these distin guished pomologiste understand byfruit. The full amount of the pear crop this season In Philadelphia county alone, we are well assured, might be esti mated by the bundredrof bushels, but all thee' axe on well•established trace—trees raised, grafted, and grown in our midst., and treated and cultivated after the old-fashioned notions of our forefathers, generally planted in orchards and paitures, or in rho grass lawns and door yards of our country I homes. But the fruit trees that have been planted the past ten years about our city have declined, and for very obvious reasons. The great Eastern wearies, which have come In for so complete a share of your reporter's press, have but one object in view—the sale of their fruit trees to us. Whether we ever gather any fruit from them or not, is to them of no consequence. If they can produce a cheap article for oar market, something that in size and price shall compare favorably with our own, their aim is accomplished. Consequently, their trees most grow vigorously at any sacri fi ce; they pile on the manure lnches deep," as your reporter says. and gat a tree as large in two years as more 0 onpsientlone dealers would in four, and with these, and a few drawings of fruit, or samples in sedate, ore few hundreds at an exht- • bitten. as the produce of such trees. sell thousands of dollars worth to outsiders annually. We say "outsiders," because it Is a well-known fact that they have, oeseparatively, no fruit at j home. Their treat are mule to Pell—to look well at II small prioe—and will not bear healthy fruit, or continue healthy for any length of time. Not withstanding all the talk they make about the pro-, fits of trait-raising, they raise no fruit. Like ear-: ten sharpers, who sell secrete " worth thousands, of delimit for twenty-five cents," they sell their, aocrets—their trees—and leave others to wldetld for the profits. During the height of the centre-1 verily, three years stito, en this subject , a gentle.' man of this city, by every inducement, failed to' get one solitary barrel of pears from Roeltestert The feat iv, they have not got the pears, but they have the trees. The Rochester nurserymen have large interests here at stake. One fi rm sold last I fall - in one of our ward' alone $6,000 worth of fruit trees, and yet, out of come fiftyptinoely es• tabilehments there, only two had any pears to send here at the Convection in question, and one of these had less than a dozen varieties of pear for his collection. Of their amateur trult-growers not one was represented. It is a well-known fact that trees that have been, like these, stimulated with an 'bandanas of nitre genons giowth-produoing manures whenyoung, will not continue healthy. Fire blight, leaf blight, frozen-sap blight, knots, creeks, and " complication of disorders," are their inevitable concomitants. Hundreds of- such- specimens are annually selected from the " stook " and burned in Rochester. These, gentlemen, are the tree' whi make yorir instilment apparently true, that Phil delphta has failed to be a holt-producing distrie , but which the tent, before noted, of ens Old-fash ioned healthy trees In the hands of our "ama teurs," producing such Immense annual crepe, shows to be not really the ease. There are two opposite principles in tram—the growth•produeing and the fruit bearing; and the one can be overstimulated only at the expense of the other. If our cultivators would care less fbr growth, nso lees stimulating manures, and levied less whet le Sailed. " high culture," they would find out, what is 'ritually the fact, that they have the finest climate and soil for fruits in the world, despite all that interested New Yorkers may hate to say to the contrary. Veenex. —The Norfolk Herald says " lion. Roger A. Pryor, in his Ashland Ball speech. while com menting on the reply of Mr. Donglaa to the )se cession question pronounoed to him in Norfolk, wound up with the startling declaration that if a President of the United States should have the ta. merity to use fore* to prevent the secession of s Southern State, or State', from the Union, and no effort from, any other quarter should be put forth to resist the exercise of Federal power, he, the Ben. Roger A , solitary and alone, would be the• Brutus to plant a dagger in hiaheart„ ,, - -George William Curtis spoke last evening in .New Yolk, at Styemot, institute, berate the, ..young Ideal Republican. Upton., Mr. ,gartla had' been prevented from .speaking :for several weeks by protracted illness la his family. 1 TELE Wiramax 17,_41 . 1!1f . . laWsizu Pass will to 220,0 isimenisi 14/ 1 (ger orns2s, ha sdivammh) 22—. .-- --VAMP Vh Ce" " N 2iis. " - ....... ;OL IO -4 NO Ave .--- Toni .. " .. —.11A44 TwentY " " " fto air iiirsailLeft Vosity C02222ar over " ' Os Mims se , midi eat•artbec) itaik—:— .:-- -- wee For a Mabel 142020-este or ow, vs via mill si 21121 sir 22V122 retlpPat a alialabr Eir Postoarters sal NOININII lit me se AMOR Mr Tim Wzmi Pups; ' ' ' . _ . • . ell.llOllNl4lll=lll. tried throe them a Mouth. la liner the ClllMiute PriRSONALANDiI:haiuAL. arl Man ii a rattrost Bustadilimmi tho hod a oollailato odatatioa itadarAndliaair ora Pour-n 8 tough of alouloltio *IN* , doif Iri th e forolatiaaau akoiromosaittlipit:, , Bobfti3b took an 'olive part, sad, to 1841, mai ita- . teat to death for tromps to the Skfla 1 Mis file amps from, the parfait d **Praia* troops , wasiutts`rasarkaltio. - •• . .f - • . - Professor Kinkel beliMMI e o lsta ilheprask Man 1 Gorrernmmt, and mai impsimeasal, ea 'a eill mon; felon, in thaiiimidem,44lll4 llattgam. Bohm' determiaill Pir4isifs Wm, suld.lifill *TM pinions, prneeeded M. Baths.. lila ',wok* weft oompied la OrcieWally et Spandau, sad. at ism, haring imbed thejeller, Iheltara eseteetted is MP tying off Kinkel. They heiteued to the ••••1110,11, and pmbarkett for Raglend. - • .1111851 biz. Sefton ease to this emetill7, lad took up his abode is Philadelphia. Be eras, at Mat dime, absilist ignorant of Um XVI* leagaege- The rimessity of leanday, ear leagoage . bareme at ones Waal's; Md the German Mile set Myra* ng nothin bit Emil*. - To Ila ematiat go of the daffy pipe* Kr. Beams ettnimbee, mu of hie miasma be learniag ear language_ ne now:stßaks It with reset Imam emeramesse Of prormetatiou, and a funilbnity with phnesesiMa. With the isrearimratllallai, the IMllaa intim; and : Kossuth, no foreigner hal more emapleialy mastered the English. A ter remaining in Philadelphia three or fear yea ,ilit.t3ointrit remorrad to iNstesiii, aset-boa mezoci the rustles of the law et Mileneskae. life residence is, bowairer, at N r itottown, ' solid dia !lntin the interior of the Stale. It Ix only hie ros years since Mr. Mara leads his first po• Mimi speech" in EngNsh, In 'one of the Modem • towns. lie was msocesdni, and sines that threads_ spoken frapiently, in all parts of the oraudary, "Ala speech delivered at the Cooper Imatilate vie Init. bin on a Lake Er!. steamboat, darts; a day's de tordion at Detroit by s stores. " -,The New tork Hirsh pablhhoe a long article ism the history of the Wufi-efircill as. 'lt thus speaks of their origin : ' r • On the night of the 25th of rebramy, MO, the oity of Hartford was mutt sassed by the edema of the Eon. eassins ISE. Clay. Same setteutassie a m t as Republicans of the aal oiahe mi l in acaas an escort to tbe,distingvieliter, mil in passuanee of this design barrelful heal & see awn , patty herd by some of their trainwenteetibeet •Br ingot a rather fastidless time( soh d , Ind /MUM& • to protect their broadcloth from atly inwaindow, the procured so me led clo th sad eat it In form of saps t to t their abouldent - A Mee giTel ed caps gm tie yreiserisimm gad OM • a d loped hel st led in meet tarthe enter: -11 mis and military appeal ream athaselget ebb attention, and dew forth the .plamian amembled multitude, re mem fter taw forthought. On their Warn emu of the ty was &hackedby iietest'y Diligent; -toe 'a blow from the original Wide4walts tenth gmetteed him on the ground and stopped all berths, disturb anee. Before diseasel a meeting wet held, tusi after expressing their indignation at the asteeit o they resolved to foist a *lab et limited mmisheal,,.. equipped with mingle( torches, and bleak asps , and cans, to sot as a spacial escort on osmium of public parade, and be ready at those for say lib. duty that might forward the Rerabliseg • dThe - Republitara et ' Bertho were ever ld elaked with Inane front ail parts of the Hake, in .for ,informatios toseideg their Islas, am. nor of erode/dint, drills, do. It ass dint found inseataary to buregandst some wise by wilieb then letters meld be amessed, ea* a as. tie. 11141 In aU the lapaidiela Jeannie. thtt hir. H. T. Sperry, tb Hartford arld•Awakewseld dl=st Inlormation. In the mane of • ew weeks OM gentleman bad received sad SIM 01111111 Ma deonnsenicatioas. • T e From the great number ' win hare alresAllt d their intention of joining in the great li t Tn Fula* In New York city On the 11 of b, et is eitifn.stei that from Merry to fifty th • wand Ism will 'aura. One it d espeadt• e will give sows idea of tie pesparadee. It beg b • .n found necessary to purchase two kessined b • refs of oil to MI the torches of slatting ma p .les." . • Herald supposes that there are half It Wide-Awakes in the Meese. • 1— At s meeting of the Itepubtkaa Cliabs. of New Yell, on Tuesday night, M. Itleharle preeented • pfen for eirreisting a life of 14110012, In filersean, tinnighont Penne7lvania. It wu stated that tie engraving wee already paid for and that $4OO wee winted to pay for 20,001 septet of the Life, whit* wonki be reedy for distrUnatioa In two weeks. —The Tribune, of yesterday, makes an appeal the Republicans to *het Curtin, sad stets' that ihe is defeated,: Linable'a obsesses will be Ise. *red over the whole vonatry. CIFENIMRAL NEWS. • A NNILO runaway was &treated near Pren tice, (Mtn-) and pat on bout the Vtetotta ea ban list trip. The negtowaa hand-aatesk bat aid% - the boat WU I?roeeeding down the siear,ihe ma. iay got the oaf off WWI head, eta hamiteW . • ado pretwattaa as leer. tee beaten the Met er tinnily. -Be aottordlunly hid Atwell to the heel-house, and when pursued, be *aped does thaide the wheelhouse, Whet. ha actdd' tot' be isaehed. Immediately& did wan stoat to take Itim from hie 'Adieus position, but before it Gould reach him; he jumped Into the rivet and was drowned. . Da. Oirra, a celebrated French physic/an, las disarmed that hens does net imaediehay alts !hen the heart ceases to beat tor, after the death rfann Olier has reuteted bone fresh th e 3 , to theta's& firing Matta, and the WWI this troduced hes milted 'itself eonspietely-ter , that Properly belonging to the animal. 'lltertreetass to be no doubt, therefore, that we May mend and re place our bones, as easily as a tithleieg. - Srvraio MlCHteas.—Nisdriint, Sept. l & At the Tvasessa• State lair this day the titles premium was awarded to the Grower di saker ring Machine as the east for all dame of Nagy ork. There was also a premium awarded to this proiartr. Baker on the double-loop match, ea bah* superior to the shuttle or look-stitch for the mat 'purpose.. 'Thus premiums were awarded ryes the Kesler h Wilass, I. M. Singer, sad fifes. ma chines In competition. Aurora those who rendered valuable assist- AGO., gloms the beasts of the like, to eetstretin 'the bodies of the lost yeasengert of the Lady Klee, war s noble Newfoundland dog, who utterly re desed any reward to the ships vs' wireless frost hp ;standar', sttspplng and marling at thall then they offered them Goxietics or Lnsira.--Tho custom-house retorts trim the port of Monrovia lot the year ending. fistaaniber 33, 1839. snots tarpons, WI, 1143,8.34 ; experte. total. 1110,388 32 ; 1112114117 of exports, $48.515 32. Of the imports, 138,631 was from the United BMW ; 131,9 M trtatt GPM'S Britain. A. M. BALDWII, of lows, on the 24 hut, murdered a neighbor named Abner Meager, with blows on the bead with a board—then went before a justice (') while Monger ley dying, eatepiefied of himself for assault and 1.440, wee Awed one dollar, sod dlaoherged. He.theeforthwith took himself off beyond the retell Ut arrest - A Ituxitsoiosi (Cotta.) &tine, whip visited Sprinstild last week, wide* marl, fatal leap from the engross train. al Hwatingtow. One aide of his body was completely undressed and skinned. He "erelabled the matter by !Wig he had eon to milk." • JoDoi."ltroursu., of Now York, oesteneed S yostog Jourglsr, only sleets= years old, to iffy fa prflonliktl On Rtirsdty.lfs woo nand metforsly,-. A nor, seventeen yearn old, named John Tower, made s great speech" at Cluarterten, 111., last week. The Lodger hopes that he will apply himself to the study of political history. Goon- news froin Texas Mates that bat little excitement now prevails relative to inoesdisaiset. "Rumor" has burned almost every town in north eastern Texas this season. Tine quantity of coal oil produced is estinia ad at' thirty thausaini galloon per day, or ales wil low per annum, worth over six millions of dollars n the aggregate Tae wine crop of France Is very poor this seuon, and the opinion is that it will fall abort of the last one. Vines are affected by the oidium, and the grapes are nearly destroyed. THE world receives now in a single year nearly one-tenth u much gold as war obtained in the whole period from the Obtusely of America down to the year 1848. Tux population of the city of New Bruns wick. New Jersey, has been aaoertatned to be 12,156, an inorease of 4,223 in ten years. IN Lynn, Massachusetts, boots are now chiefly heeled by machinery. One establishment has sold to tour months about 50,000 turned heels. MTIRS, the Houston deer-hunter, says he has tilled sli thousand deer in the leet ribeeyeare, on the Houston prairies. TUE Dnko of Newcastle has written a letter to ex-President Fillmore that the Prise, of Wales will be unable to riot Buffalo. Tux Republicans at Occagruan, Vs., haro ereeted another pole in the plate of the one lately eut down. Ray. CRAW/08D TOT, son el 3fr. Toy, of the firm of sing Toy, of Norfolk, is about to to WI • missionary to Japan. "Worcester Unabridged." MIJ!fS=MNIZMI When our trite era hke bisects by eobwebe eereleXed. On the blank chart or memory the meanize steads burred, And the bnghtsst and guest are equalLr vexed. Bat these trial" of temper no more need annoy— As the plough smooth" the field with potato hills ridged, Your doubt' are dissolved in a fountain of joy, If you own but a " Woroester "—and that Una bridged." Here have scholars and tradesman and husbandman found The hand-book complete they bad long sought lassie And the maiden's sweet eyu 'Lace In hekt frost the ground, When the phrase she had wept over " Womestel" makes plain. 'Tie area:dire—a store-house—o f word-hooks the sum— Veda have its rivals famed. fretted. and Mged hey know the achievement of ages has cows. In this " Worcester" usmatohed. as it is" Una bridged."