The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 12, 1860, Image 1

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    THE
-t-!'iltetotitt*'.'lniiviliV* .
,DAnopranss-4
,
',ll l tl4vll',Chiiflti."44ls*li; poifit t l*A* *lion
to Boboritiort - out tbo ot 81* POLkAllte
Faint :Dot t tot„,,o*,,,;k4 . 4l."Atiiitmoo,
Nos moilitastax uet
* l *; •
1 0 1 .4. : 004* 1 04 1120 0. '
illytiiliMilloosilyttiMott of the • City It Teas, Dar
01410 1 : 11 44 0 5 4,4614 . • -
TlitohLtS, - X' (MAI:
oalwrilisib Ittim NT
9 / 2 : 0 / ;IBettig i l'Mqggir!
itenatio - bitime
OLOnilk:00412(68, Buyzas
.„. Argaratfa:
MO:4VA Plis*
IiOItAtBTOZ4-'
, , At4,4num map OP.
F
4NlPrit• - - OA§SAMERF,43.
/! 4 4, 1 0F RAPL9I., 1 1/ 4 /eN 1: 1 4ARIMM11 1 *
..74511.111M.143rMs;;Vsnibiclii;atiii•
RAGIAi Waal' '471.0'128, VSFIIIII, so
S al l e Wi "Z A P ,
no - olanwirsot.
'reavisniator-':-;
PnitADELPHIA,4I4\DE
GOCKM, ,
W M[A " 6I . 43 °FFIN& ( :k )
116 O111p7.!1152 brain',
Oen, by the poker, the A:Cowin delettptki
AMERICAN GOODE*
staiwii, mina MED ri MAT vaannir
Qum staroz,,ottatOre c 0.% Patm;
BUMMED AND MOMS tipxornres,
DRINIENON AND DRELIN,' . ' '
08NAND1D18, DENTNO, AND' DUMB;
OODAT _JUNO, =MIA AND NAN.
Ram ;
WANTON rusincra AND PNDUND
mairea;
RHODE INLAND mans; ,
AIRIADIELPHIA LIMITS AND MOO;
=mart JEANS AND oonozwas;
mew, mobil AND lONDIDV/N;
ALt-vrooL'AnD UNION CLOTHS ;
mx.tineasi) ' Fairer mum= ;, •
SLAM AND MUD DOE KING;
BATINIMI AND UNION
2wzobs; CABILMARNTIND. Acr., Ae. avian
W~fBHING`TOR MILi.B,
IoqUOLIWY., B4X, MIS Kilda.
iILWIA! a all klngh in in, riff*.
lavotind apd printed Teem OOVm
-UNION =AV= anallitOAD moms.
li&LMORAILL MISTS.
IWSLllfl.ied Doable and Tgrisol cxtAniet.' ,
swim% obi militra - '9LivrBe.
wawa ;kid 41101/1,4"0-
IMAM FELT CuLiTETINOR
rotakb, ' .
PROTHINGNAK & 'WELL%
K SoliekFACllllsbrt. sad
• , .36 mum& gibes",
iNiilXlrittuf. GooD's:
TktPifac4NNEDY.O3 BRO.
- • -
craxeSTitßET,
listaw EIGHTH,
111 1 a eO.4R[IDID 41180131111.1111 T Of
W1L440111.7.141/B.la, RIAD ARUM
twasusus. 11320X11. • • STRAW , 000/M.
BONNET MATERIAL,
AT LolI PR/C6Ol. :oM-to -
ak, - F.0441 , -
RIBBONS.. BONNETS,
aD
OOODS ItanvErceix.
adid v rir , kw.
'itiosore, OF 'Miff, DRISORIFTION,
BONNET bi.A.TERIALB,
unaw Arm raiitsi so #1475,..
KITS e Op maxi, HATo. MUM* Ikon
niNCIPE Al D Linaucias FLOwzie.
*tins; awn*
AND imam (you marina
MILLIOSAY
V* 'dilanil "steaks of' thir trod. is dummied.
ROKKKKEOK 'BROOKS,
" _die 11,41ZOTIOritiio.")04011100,-,
AT! UID J
JOHN . E. ' , FOSTER.
tuts o(,so IhisticThird street,)
%VMS Oka the Mt, at.
NO., • CHESTNUT ' ST..
tr i agAtiol lituLesperiar Juntas , the attettion
VaIUerAND EXTENBITh MOIL
4 1" a AND OAPS.
Noir till pity* exam:soh Maim:
, • -
C o H";"hItDEN ,b Co..
limdmotesesataneWhobialellosi6sioi
ALM • atm-
•
R S '
• • • • ; • ANDSTIAW GOODS.
FANCY /ILI AND MAW PONNICTO, AITIFI
-941,70wn5..4.11AN1M PXATRIMIL*44-
!telki"Mbiai 1101411Attint arnuraT. •
. Abisilempit wawa' mi
Ira %I LA:
‘)••,:• nt?',-;4 :SWIRL • -7
, .
FURS
Una! —'
Clitialikkg F. WOMRA.TH.
414: Biro 4tl Alt.oll 6TAIRT,
' Ikessow Open
• d.-FULL ASSORTAIENtf
or
LADIES' FURS,
To Theo thiretencion of it iii:gabh • .ii,iimted.% im
KELLY ic 13011R 1 "R Y
TAILORS, 1 '
71 sad Si NMI! FIFTH iTIENT;
. .
sw,w . Timis ,
1141‘1•11 AND WINTER OTTLIIII,
Toropifi*lti ininostortimt of
11W LIED PARIIIO24#IIA 000DL
Teirldrilitim.:llooprei Lartsid Oman*. "
0 . 1 R . .
1111ACAfilliARDWARS'11008B. , :-Wii
LipaidirdeNdalty ielt theAttoptivq ortiti
• T `r; 10 1 ;:gh a rrioreVieljal.
•• 4 "" Apottion 'WV lid, dti~odede
es.
wir f°7
6 th tiaari t eriOpi
Jia r ia l tild6=V Imo: • weept
ItifgillVOlN* BRANDY,
•
VlNieAk't ,
4,111111 Gum Mustard Need, apicet. kO., ke.
ARO* !Nide** ?cookniag , al4/4wirig meow.
441PdpRItT P-BoW4II,Th.
- 'DitAtivkitt
- .0 - fuxvgaram, -
- Gui ou tumult?*
a AND' S t y ( imam
'''itikAE
- 010441:611144 -
airt,"o.l4eatiliii*lkrtSitlgaa4 A
2 ! 1 -14. tortm4titirr**.
&
"MAU 41. 1 4144 1 4/W ati tzbeit.
•
• -
virksvirrifu
- • C-11 r • ,
• NI
:-.4Pltlrgvil 4,14 Ao7. ve71 , 1 Jci s h4rit tfi ;IT
"Vik i ct l
'/% 11
. . - .r, 4' • • . * lt . * .
l .
ats , L Bpi
0-1 ONO *
I li 4
4qi .4411••...J , 6 .4 1 ✓ P erf 6 •"" P '•
• .th , •-• • 4" ;•.'' , • • 4 , 411 •
- r: 1 ( ' '
~f f,iAL ' " - .[
..ri• - , • I "' • •• . - eere4 , ' l -- - •^ • .
. 53 3 3 072: 2 1"- xr ,
""
• , 11. • JP ••'• P • ifj, ;••• itPI • i f :qi
; • l• 1,11 cl ,
-4 - ;• r
• I •4'l • -• • 1 I . P.. 1 P . • - ••. • t •
voia. 4.--No. 62;
BILE DR r ( MOPS 4C.OMPERS.
WILL : OPEN, ,
MONDAY, 00TOBEN BTR,
A. , Sued, line
FRENCH AND GERMAN
,toitEss GOODS
/ROM
AUCTION.
The attention of our customers is invited.
JOSHUA L. 8A.1.14Y,
IMPORTER AND JOBBER,
No. MB MARKET ST..
' .
LARGE ''.ollll,' ATTRACTIVX STOOK
rot
• FALL AND WINTER BALPA
tI3I:IORTRLI,GE,
' 'BROTHER. & co,
. r ..IBIPORTERS,AND4JOBBERS,
No. 449 SUEZ* ernonsz and
Ito. 41S NIEHOHAiiT STHERT. PHILADELPHIA.
frolit c irep_liptlisma , POHElON And
" r "
-
DR -Y
Weeded ergh a view to the interests of ppm
d
tiaggVitral3:whi°4 in vite trade.
U 3,T.0 K
IStriAle,POWNVltenvirdeglij i git .
' found heerhene.'
Ma.exinlated tromptly,itt LOWEST MARKET .
' CLAGAItb 'CLOAKS
WHOLESALE BUYERS.
EVERT ?royal:tit OF THE SEAEON,
'TKO-LOWEST CASH PRICES.'
Illirttorotulate own rititortalti toads up tteotroth
XVEN;S.
''No. - 9S South NINTH Stmt.
LaTTIF4 &
SILK GOODS.
~ • •
.No. 111115 MARKET STREET.
attB4a,
F
daIiFFEES. STOUT. ita do.
POREIGN AND DOMESTIC DIM GOODS.
.41114 m. No. SU MARKET STREET.
MARTIN & WOLFF,
wztozamazz mamas Iw
MEM ADD DOMESTIC DRY 000Thir
114 iILPHLIBT BTREII37.
Oda Ind Prompt Six-nicmthe Buyers, of all eponym'
Invited to an trounituttirtn of our Stook. sud-au"'
E ' -id "- 9 V • A
In Gentlewomen* of the ileetruotion tor Ire of their
Time
•
GILLMORE. & co.
- .
- HAVE REMOVED
610"
,PHESTNUT . ST..
ABOIIi cam ,
renneentristo. •
thee litee new even AN "— BNTIRE
NEW STOOK.
•OP •
SILKS AND 1411+10Y DRESS GOODS,
SHAWLS, GLOVES, NIBHONS,
DREES — TRIRJELECS, 4c.,
• iftwether with *WWII ASSoftTlaiNT of
' • STAPLE .itED FANCY
WHITE' G o o'ns.
lIMSBOIDERISS, LACES, MANTILLAS, to.
;jinni rOosivoll bet a small Ironton of their
• • FALL —III,PORRSTEWS,
i
steric,... to the trii, thity onabhod to&Wilt
A NEW 'STOCK.
to Wei , they invite' atemiumt of their (*Mem»
end name genersUr.
-WUR'TS.
McVEIGH.
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS/
IN
DRY - 000138,
Ito. 311 3111101,1' BOW, above Third.
p 4 11 ,4 11 52
....eVismb. • PITIGADILTNIA.
OW Ow.
' won Annum.
WOOD, MARSH, 'do IIitYWARD,
IMPORTERS
IrnoLECtiaz DEALERS IN
DRY GOODS
OLOTHING.
NO. 309 btIiNNET STREET.
Fall so4Priutartitook Dow 003091910 and reitilVe
baring. au! iv
_x: l,l 1•[`t•1
pAPER-HANGENG,
(PALL TRADE.) -
HOWELL, & , Boratim,
Navies removed to their near &ore.
CORNER I9OUR2'II* Am) Kamm RUE Pr%
Are Bow sr sand to ogler to the Trades hump end
sihmt s•eortment of,
WAL OPERA: •
DigiDhlte,
PIR& BOUM&
' • - -
FIttDOVi OORTAIA GOODS,
All
- of the eremite sod beat deelei•, from tt ie in est
siio•d whale to the finest
GOLD AND puma DEOORATIt )NS.
; Southern and %wen' Merchants Will do nett to visit
the ertablidanont of. ' ,
BOWIII.I. BOIJUILIBI,
S.*. admit. FOURTH Aro memory wawa,
an1114:82 ' PHILADELPHIA.
I&fmt
GAS PritrUlt.r.s, LAIIIPS,fdro.
KIROBEN; OIL er stfPAmq# WM
ziaosinix, oi •
:00Alitar., - L . /MFR. •
-AhiAIUiIIMILD/maxim, 4 0 „
Itscutioutred
_ad for NMI.
• , ,
can PiIICIRS.
• • ,oc).,
3D NORIA EIGHTH DTR EET,
m agi:. Si! of,r l lb•d• betinsn Markel. and Arch.
GENTS" ,00(11108.
78 FURNiSUING e°9ns'
17JANTP;Mqt.,. iliorttNignt of
" I Pin. Vet gtriVrigt ANIN
hieh r
etaeer • eitual'lMiteivhisehiguTt Tap
•
doors balrAT the • Con I
_ ; firif
„
W9Cek4d, - •
'Now in storm and for. sale at
,tie lowest Market -
Milaral liirsiptoidCof r:ae most desirable trades of
Ar4i),ro l l4,ravAtitA FLENCEiI.
LOW Alto MEDIUM WOOLS,
Irkisimirehasen reeseited to_ aell and examine.
„ COATEB,
In Market Street, Phi ladolvbis.
THOMAS . THOMPSONI;
BON. & CO.,
MFORTERS AND /OMAN OF
,0416/11/NET-MARERIP MATERIALS
• 1 . 1 . 00.110104114Z00ND OTIMIST.
Dapauks, and every,
to sad cdresia Goods; sedlim
6HOEMAKEILI 63 06.
77+ -sr; I,:n
, - , ..1:111141111111./AMINV.
/Alll
Q ua Am !
• DMA VAWATI AND aitox annoi.
azdat
•oitqf
CAIIPETING AND OIL CLOTHS:
FALL; TRADE.
McCALLAUM 88 C 0...
CARPET MANUFACTURERS,
GLEN EDHO MILLS, GERMANTOWN,
Also, fraPOrters and Dealers In •
OARPETIIsTGS.
OIL...CLOTHS.
MATTINGS. RUGS. &C.
WAREHOUSE, 509 CHESTNUT SAM,
(oppihnte the State House.)
Southern and Western Buyers ere respectfully Invited
to oall. anl7-am
AUSTIN BROWN.;
• • -
~•• •• , WHOLESALE DEALER IN
FLOOR „'OIL-OLOTHS,
184 North THIRD Street, sonthWeet corner of
' RACE, Om maim) ' een.irn*
BLIND'S AND SHADES.
.BLINDS AND SHADES.
"No. 46 NORTH SIXTH STREET.
- 12 the moat extensive Blanufeetuter of
VENETIAN BLINDS
AND
WINDOW SHADES.
The largest end finest assortment in the oar, at the
lowest
STORE.; SHADES made and lettered. REPAIRING
'remitly attended to. 001-lm
LOOKING GLASSES.
LOOION 0-GLASSES
AND
PICTURE FRAMES,
Of every variety.
ENGRAVINGS, OIL-PAINTINGS. 4•0.,
AT
NO. 526 ARCH STREET.
•
• ' GEO. F. EMMERT,
MANIITACTIIREN AND lISPORTNN.
PICTURE, CORNICE AND ROOM MOULDINGS.
can-am Wholesale and Retail.
L9oxiiio*-9:14403`z 8,
.PoancArr pxoTmen mamas,
ENGIL4k.VINGE-.,
OIL PAINTK4OI3, &a..
JAMES EARLS & SON,
IMPORTERS, MANUFACTURERS. WHOLE
SALE AND JiEzur. DEALERS.
EARLES' GALLERIES,
1860.
HOUSE.FUaNISHING GOODS.
WILLIAM • YARNALL,
' IMPORTER AND DEALER IN
HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS,
No. 1040 CHESTNUT STREET,
(Immediately Ofloaite the Aoaderny. of Fine Atte.)
TABLE CUTLERY; OVAL WAITERS,
KITCHEN TABLES, DOOR. MATS,
CLOTHES MANGLES, /to.. IEo,
POMO commencing HOUSENEINNG are pattioulerly
invited to an eXaminatlon of thin stook' of lienvot.
GOODR. eel-fmwSm
REMOVALS.
REMOVAL. ,
EVERETT, MOSS, Sr• CALDWELL,
CLOTH HOUSE.
Kaye removed ti
32$ MARKET STREET.
Swam are invited to examine (mistook. aulll-2in
lIMB aEL Las .
KLEPPER; . Be -, PENNER;
WHOLESALE MANUFACTURERS
IMBRELLA.I3 A ° II'D,TAKRA.BOLB,
NO. too MARKET STREET,
PRILADILPEWL. -
ere kw making moserthen
TIM* HIINDRIDDITPIIVAINT VAIITINTIES OW 172011aILIAS
Or every Mae, from M to 40 Moises.
Boyers sorko have mat had L & y.'ss make of sue de wit!
God the, time well spent to loolcmg aver this we made
stook, 'dock inoludee sum vfmvett,rize, wet met with
elsoteltere, - aurs-Sm
SPORTING GOODS.
GUNS.
SKATES. &c.
- A PHILIP WILSON & CO.,
AISRUPAOTURERS OP SUPERIOR GUNS,
Importers and Dealers in
FIN IR GUNS ANA anoorma TACKLE.
CRIORBT BATS, BALLS. &a.,
lIABE-BALL IhIPLEMENTS,
SKATES OF EVERY VARIETY,
AT Tfiti LOWEST PRICES
48 CHESTNUT 'STREET.
oos-1m
sewi,Vg RULCULNES.
HARRIS' DOODPIR
SEWII C 4 MACHINE.
No. I—FOR FAMILY 118 B:
NSW . 90 it QUILTING AND
HEAVY WORK.
Both sew from two spo . ole without the trouble of re
and runs With MO or oh nese.
For at No. 720 ARCH more , l'hlladelphM, and
No. 73 IALTIMORB Bt.. Baltihtd. 0c11.3m
Pug BEST AdANITFACTURING AND
PAMILY
SEWING MACHINES
/N THE WORLD, AT •
• T. , M. SINGE & 00. 1 S,
or.B-3cn No. SINGE
OIitAITNUT erreet,
WHEELER & WILSON,
SEWING MACHINES.
61iIS CRUMP" STREET; OROORD FLOOR.
irsl4ra -
I . P. UHLINGER & CO.'S
v v
BILUTTLM AND DOUBLE-LOO? EMIT=
SEWING AI/WHINES.
FAMILY 17.11/3.
TAILORD
MfaXERS
taiDDLBRA, NMI
No. 628 ARCH STREET.
Frio of tIIIUTTLE MAMMY. SOO:
Prloe of DOUBLE-IMOP.S7IITON MACMITIVI3 from
$U upwards.
- The simplest and most eMoleht maablne friFil
featured for all kiods t use.
P. a.- MACIURE. BILL OOTTON, MEL ima.
(muskeg, oonsaantly on hand. Jyt,t4m
WILCOX & , SEWING
• • 'Mel& The great and increasing demand %';
Wilcox & Hearing Machine in rantre t
rialMlS S Wl l ti e e n Tare P h i gh 8 4 1 16 VIEIII4II I I
tad('
SUOE FINDINGS.
ISAAC, BARTON & CO..
. IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN
SHOE STUFFS. ,
MEECH AND ENGLISH LASTINGS, GAN,-
LOONS, PATENT LEATHER, Ao.
Also,
GOODS FOR CARRIAGE MAKERS.
NO, 3 SOUTH SECOND STREET, PhSadelptosi
ikoi-Sm
LLIES' PATENT
WROUGHT AND GRILLED IRON
IMP OT
; 01
716 CHESTNUT ST.,
UNDER. MASONIC NALL, : 03
M. C. SADLER, GeneralAtellt
• AND RANK LOOKS, DOORS, 40.
etylta,: g r i a r lLtlaoantile fleire ,Tiada t e Ez .t,ti mit,
"
I wrARTIN & QUAYLE'S • '
xmATATI9N7 TOVID VANCE/ 00016 V I
.... QIR UM f
:r ; . 103 SA.Lar4 8 tRgET t
now sr,IIIVIIRT_ HA . • , t
nit.WLPEZ.P}Wit, t
1
,
*it-Orp'
616 011115114U1 STAB RV,
Philadelphia.
FINE FISHING TACKLE,
SAFES.
VITILADELPWA,. OCTOBER 12, Isoo.
TlllO IerItO.4 I :•JVHBIN6
BTJNN. RAIGLTEX - 4 - ex, 30.
• DIPORTiftd•AND , JOBBkIeB OF
FANCY DEN GOODS.
No. IN NORTH THIRD STREET,',
NOW' OFFER TO THE TRADE AN. UNUSUALLY
ATTRACTIVE STOOK OF GOODS,
CONPIIIiIISO
SILKS, RIBBONS, DRESS GOODS,(WRITE
EMBROIDERIES.'LA'OES, CLOTHS, OAS•
- .SIMERFS;;VESTINGS:IIO- '
SI ERY, GLOVER, AND .
TRIMMINGS,
- Together with a fOil and varied etook of
'FALL AND
WINTER 'SHAWLS.
To all of whleh they Invite the attention of
CASH AND PROMPT MX-MONTHS BUYERS.
pp/mum, MOOD E ) 85 CO., Nos. 220
and 222 NORTH
THIRD STREET.
SAVE NOW OPEN THE LARGEST AND M. 087
COMPLETE STOCK
or
FRENCH, BRITISH, GERMAN,
AND DOMESTIC
DRY GOODS
They have aver offered, and to whieh the attention of
CASH AND SHORT-TIME BUYERS
Is respeotfully whited,
mr l e r te, F :Tk v N a rti*T . , p°.;llP,lr_._eterroln all its
datig
au., stook
huu2
irPHE attention of Buyers is solicited.
! - 4 4
FRESH •
FALL GOODS.
'RIEGEL. BAIRD, dc 00.;
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
en
DRY GOODS,
No. 42' NORTH THIRD STREET.
Would respectfully Invite the attention of the trade to
their
, LARGE AND WELL.BELECTED
Stook of
FRESH FALL GOODS,
.Which they are now opening. We are daily In receipt
•of all kinds of frech and desirable Roods. Call and
examine our stook. ' ao7-2m
JAMES. RENT.
. 1 ' SANTEE. Bd 00..
- IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
or
r .
•
DRY GOODS.
' NOB. 289 AND 241 NORTH THIRD STREET,
ABOVE RAVE.
Respectfully Invite the attention or Buyers nigher
usual
LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OP
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC GOODS,
Among win oh will ho found a general assortment of
PHULADELPIIIA•MADE
,GOODS,
Also, a large variety of new and confined style. of
MINTS, MERRIMACK SECONDS, Ac,
nary -9m
THOS. MELLOR & 00..
NG. 9 NORTH THIRD STHENT,
IMPORTERS
1-1 0 8 I E-R Y.
SHIRT'S AND DRAIVERD, _
SMALL WARE& 40.
THOL MELLOR,
EDWARD SAWN.
aul7-2m
FALL, .1860.
COOPER. PARHAM. INC
WORK. ' •
Iniportero, filanalaotuTon.tma Jobbers of
HATS. OAPS..FTIRS.
AND•
STRAW GOODS,
NO. 451 NORTH THIRD STREET. below ARCH,
P.KfLADELPHIA.
MILTON COOPER. WM. !VI. PARHAM.
ROBERT D. WORK.
Mr Pall Stook - now complete and ready for borers.
anl7-2m
OWER. BARNES. cla CO.,
BOOKBELLbiRB AND PUBLIBREBB,
No. 37 NORTH THIRD STREET,
Lower side, above Market Sheet, Philadelphia,
Invite the AiNentlon of Booksellers and country mer
chants to their ve large ,stook of Sobonl Hooka, pub-
Liahed in thus and ory
tner thra. to with Misoellane
ono and Blank ilooks, Paper, and titationery _generally.
e., B. & 0p0.• arounblishem of annul popular wotke,
among whioh are the following :
THE OENTRAL GOLD REGION,
BY COL. WILLIAM GILPIN.
(Late of tho U. S. Army.)
ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS MAPS.
One vol.. Bvo, bound in cloth. Pries 41 . 1. M ; and a liberal
disorient to the trade.
' This book ts pronounced the mast wonderful, scienti
fic, and comprehensive treatise on the geography of our
continent ever published.
SCHOOL BOOKS:
B zumits , SERIES OF READERS.
BROOKS' Pipit:MAL PRIMARY
..... eta.
BROOKS' NORMAL MENTAL ARITHME
TIC ..... ots.
BROOKS' KEY TO bli - NTZ . Alta"E
uta
-
BY R. BROOKS, A. M.,
PioTenor of ALsthematme In Pennsylvania State' 1 "r"
mat- Behan.
Liberal terms for intindno bun,
WHITE'S COPY-BOOKS.
T. KIRK WHITE.
Ygeisident4 enturylvania Commeroial Casio.
PELTOWW OUTLINE MAPS.
This series of SIX SUPERB 'MAPS le now adopted
IA almost 01017 sohool of note in the Union where geo
graphy is taught,lind has no equal. Prioe We for fell set
of six maps, or SIO for set of temisphere maps alone
auB-dm
CABINET FURNITURE.
FRENC3H FURNITURE.
GEORGE J• IiENKEL-:
624 WALNUT STREET,
■ must opened a large invoioe of
ULU,
QUADRILLE,
MARQURTRIE, and
ORMOLU WORK,
Whloh he will sell at very REDUCED PRIORS,
FIRST-CLASS CABINET WARR.
GEO. J. lIENICELS,
8414 WALNUT STREET.
Oirere at
VICRY REDUCED PRIORS
helargestassortment in Union, all of New Designs
Call and elatnlilio before pnrohnsing. eel 4 Em
-
NABINET FURNITURE AND BM-
J WARD TABLES.
MOORE al CAMPION.
146. 'lttiod MOUTH SECOND STREET
In 'connection with their extensive Cabinet Businesa.
at sew manufartfNTrirA i Ligho . le Cl
t D a ll2S n .g w C o i n .efilleigig l irtql4regA ti tters:
W are pronounced, hi' ail who have used them,
besuperior l 0 all others.
faoibr the contitv and finish of thews Tablev the menu
re re f er e v attenerone patrons throughout
the cloth wb ogre larniliar with the character of their
won aull•itm
•
N" C
THIS ABI
EEKN 141
nit WAREROOMS
OFFAID W
H. 7 , nunTß,
No. 45 Smith" BEtIOND Street,
Four doors Et.: , olro Mieatnut Street'
Philadelphia.
A a reb neeortment of FURN ri ; HRH of eve ry desori p
boa o nnatantly OA hand. nt the lovreatocum or oen..
003 ao°
HARDWARE.
M DottE, H N eZkri'.4s6'
ARE NOW OPENING
TiVEIR , PALL. STOOK Or
HARDWARE.
4ST MARViri ,and 416 OOMMEROE OM=
,sediOnt
OUTOIiER 12; i 860:
c• ' it + • I► l
tin e egrapt cabins.
to the Atlantic cable
continues unabated , at' least. ~The, compara
tive fuilnre, sudden Mid :aitiatitandons, pf
nearly all,the deep-sea telegraphs :the oiq
inalins this question eitronisely
nciv. We, •nosi:. sutmit cornmu f
nicitti6!l - ott the subject from.fdr, 11'ijliam H i
Leorstmann; of N ew — cork, from
t, I
its
practical good sense, 'aPpeare worthy of 4ravo
consideration. •
- •
,
'rho' whichC have drawn, him into
print aro the 'proposed lino across Dehring
the - line across- leiVand Greenland,
and Labrador the report,, of IV; VarieY t
his atteniits 'rase the cable near New , :
fohndland and'the report" of I thci British GO
verhment COninaittee on, ifebraarine,cabres ,
generally.. 'lll.r. t , 1
rbelleve; that thd le.ne/noress Retiring gtraith
proirei 'to het 1414 'splendid'enter:
prise '
but at presenbit is altogether preinaturebY ,
more than a century. Steam commuploatten with:
Dunipe witrproi - e—mptir'llibtinfeL4o 'be' a shoiter
anda muchoitolelltiliable tnedicarl-Thltlifidondelg ,
to, the (14u0g4uptriusnipg 11,0012 or. more audios. off
wirb thrliugh a, Gonn,try- bordering, on , t 1 1) Polar,
Irgtons, - olther entitelyinitilhabltaif or pee by"
tribes In ainere oirlearstwegil Othflitnitio.doithe ,
almos¢gertwinty that not less. than a dozen, planes,
on this widety-exlinded line would be clemently,
down by the Olen of the elementoosdthOut the
facility of an immediate repair.
For the same:reasons and for the additional once
()
ef the movementsflea end the drifts of icebergs,
it Iv to' de 'roared' that the line - storcir -
Greenland, :.larid Lebrador-,,--ememoilly , eilled the'
Danish route—w,ill fail to meet the expootatiolo of
its friends.
, .
Allow me le ask, tvbat Is ,the use of , :telegraphie
ooromunioation, if not firmly established, without
fear of constant interruption? , -
hit% James Stuart Wortley, ohainnan, in .the
early part of this year, stated-before the Atlantis
Telegraph Company, that, in , consequence of the
failure of their oablp,Clovernment had appointed a
scientific oommittoe, to wilt* ..the officers of the
company had been joined, to investigate the exist,
ing cables and to report on their merits, with the
view to select the beat cue. ,
The language of Mr. Wortley led us to believe
that preference would be given to gotta paroba ;
for he said that amongst all the aamples presented,
a few bad been selected, and 'that in the expert.
manta made with these thegreat struggle appeared
to bade boos between India rubber and grata per
oba, and that thelatter had carried the day,. .
Thiel expeotatioe Is hot borne out by the result,
for if Otte peroba bad rosily proved to be as sada'.
faotery.asthose partial to this style of manufacture,
docire ,It to be, said committee would certainly
he,Vit repotted in favor of it. ' ' •
Brit, op the contrary, (see 'London Times. Ally
19) ‘.._They he,voilittle to 'say, for. they lecOgnire
that whole !raceme of telegraphic* conimunloa.
Con bestill'in its infancy', and much 'exPerlence is
required before rules can bejald down, while tome
risk of lose must be peerred,in the efforts to bring
it bite a,s tate of greater pierfeetion."
Weil - they may say so; for all submarine' outbid
laid? up to the present moment, are made of grata•
peroha, and, of the whole number; there is but one
or taltglyinvinythins liko full satisfaction, and
this efeeption IsOwing to their' immelise she. • •
_ The committee, atthe time .of their• report, did
net knest.the valued!,,, result of Mr. Varley's ei
pertelltte on the coast of Nee•foundland, - on 'the
ocaasien ((his attempt to rains the old able, as
will follmhereafter.
The main question - is: Can a telegraphic, mes
sage he verit 7 tlitough a table en a direct
from Europe to Newfoundland? and the answer Is
most emphatioally in the affirmative.
The proof has been famished, by the old Atlantic
Telegraph Company, to whom the world at large
is so much indebted .for their experience.' Honor
to them men for their enterprise . , A leap in the
dark, a forlern hope, was accessory, to'rerVO others
as a beacon to steer clear by.
The proof of oommunication, I repeat, has been
given 'by this company ; for, leaving, for argu
ment's sake, theirtestimony i out, B.# an interested
party we We' the statement of the British'Go
vernment that toditein. , messages have been , sent
and others received through this cable; and there
is nobody prepared tolielteve that the firitish.E/a
vernment would eltbbr make a falio statement to
bolsteretritti Company,' 01 ail ofrtbalagelves to be
made a dupe of. •
The .collision of the • two Cunard steamers was
also known to ..togiand before the report could
have been *tight by steamer.
The ,Old sabre' failed from amariely of causes,
amongst witiohl 'allude to the following ones :.
I.' The twisted form and botuseticient kinks.
The effectof heat and pressure - on the - giatta
perch& when the cable wee in coils, whloh displaood
the copper conductor from tho centre of the cable,
and brought it in conteot with the iron wire or the
water.-
Jour 8. 111suol4
620. 0. SVAIII.
S, To the hardness and shrinking of the gotta
peresa in ice water.
The temperature of the Gulf stream, between
Riortia and Oohs, according to inveatigations
roaBe by the United States Coast Survey, is from
75 toSO degrees at the surfnee. and only 85 degrees
at a cepa' of 600 fathotes. If this is the ease near
Hama, it jo not to be supposed . that the water at
the inttom of the ocean to any warmer in colder
latitules.
The bottom of the deep sea to covered with a
line lllak mud, of great depth, and gradually thick-,
cuing -
Wiun the cable was passed out, the stook, on
reach ug the vicinity of the bottom, formed coils,
in colsequence of its twisting tendenoy. It took
a long whilo to settle down completely into this
mud, and, in doing so, it naturally extended and
otraimd. ,
Gotta peroha, however is pliable only when
warm, and it shrinks and ' becotnes bard and brit
tle saten cold, and when reaching those lower re
gions it bore alone all the strain exerted, and
parted in an infinite number of instanoes '
creating
thereby a corresponding number of fissures,
thron* whioh the water came into contact with
the cower conduotor, impairing the elootrio cur
rent.
As above shown, this was not done all at once,
but iradnally, as everybody will recollect, until
its effidecoy wee totally destroyed.
The first condition of a well-working cable—
besidesits porfeot insulation—is a protecting mo
torist vhioh remains pliable in ice-water.
. I COMO now to the report of Mr. Varley on hie
attemph to raise the old cable. It proves two
things.
Firetil, that iron wire will completely rpt in
salt vratir ; and secondly, that a serving of hemp
and tar rill keep it in a sound condition, and even
perfectly bright.
The riot that the gutty peroha and the copper
oonduoter were found, for a few milcs, to be in a
good condition signifies nothing,, for it was taken
out of absllow water, and not out of the deep sea.
Bat if t simple serving of hemp and tar has been
found to teep a cable in perfect condition daring a
two yeas' submersion in salt water, on a rooky
bottom aid on a rough omit, I ask what more
olinchingprootts required for tho superiority of a
cable suck as I proposo to lay?
Where in iron-bound cable will chafe and be out
through, bine will remain in its place by °mine of
its pliabisand sticky substance.
It sonsits of a copper coudnotor, wound with
q, thin tapir of cotton filling and insulated with
etio: /80.
Aftor'4,, it is protested by alternate layers'of
pitchy ooupttpd, Gotten Cloth, and twine, twice
repeated: -
Ail this li done °loss by the steamers, by moans
of ,simple nachinery, and the (sable is to be coiled
at 0 eon ward. Provision ; ass been made to so-
W the het sheet of cotton with an elastio paint,
td' Cat he ooring i throngh of the pitch.
consound OW/insist of a mixture of tar and
1 mit , 0 soh progertions as to remain pliable un
t.
Aim an .eintimetances
. The advaitages resulting from' this construction
ate:'
The niosiperfect Insulation and proteotion of the
o c o a tt e erzi: ; re t n il er i
s igh w yt i o 4 a 7 t , i a nA , character n o o f ze t e h a o ...
sive a , trainart of the question ; the certainty that,
the copper ionduotor cannot escape under any oir
onmetancescut of the centre - of the cable ; and the,
rapidity art cheapness of construction.
/ The °ably of course, can be made of any size and,
at rength.
The media paying out is as follows ' and offers'
ne importat advantages At the stern of the ves ,
eel to attaaed a Innnebnhaped boiler, filled with
pitchy oomeund, which serves at once as a paying
out macbin, and to giro to the cable a final Coat
ing immedately before entering the water, re
pairing and perfecting thereby any possible de
feats.
In mink Out, the cable settles down into the
water at a aiform rate, but owing to the pitching:
and, rising e' the steamer, the passing out over the
stern of tit( steamer Is alternately more or lend
rapid.
This count be effectually remedied by rum
chlnory dopnding on rotary motions, as shown by
experience.
On the ectrary, I aloha my paying -out mao'hine
to be perfec since all the required eheek can, at
I pleasure, beaverted In the tunnel-shaped boiler,
I and the onl3efreot of themovements of the steamer
will bo a grater velocity on the cable when the
steamer pitotes, and a less rapid motion when she
rises.
Friction robots, of course, will be employed for
the better ipidance of the cable from the coils to
the stern.
blovementeare now on foot with patties, which,
if leading toile desired end, will give no a tele
graphic comennioation with Europe before many
months to one.
In conoluria, my plan has been fully approved
by our most minent men amongst our electricians
and engineers
We have lafore us drawings of the manner'
in which Mt Horstmann's telegraphic cable
is made awl a to be laid. The construction
is as follows Taking a portion of the cable,
we find a tanier conductor in the centre,
wound round tith a thin covering of cotton,
over which isplaced a coating of shellac gam,
which entirely insulates it. Over this is placed
a canvas meting, then a layer of pitchy coin
pouni ; nmitotnother canvas covering, a se
cond coat of )Iteby compound, a third cover
ing of carom, all being wound round with
prepared tviie. Finally, outsido this, and
terming the eirterior of the cable, is a tena
cious pitch) impound; upon which salt wa
ter can, exordia no dee,Omposing action. The
whole cable wouldbe about an inch, in diame•
tor; and the copper conductor, through which
the felegraphic.message must be transmitted,
ever remains intact _and insulated: in the con•
tro. , Horstmann's'cable is 'patented„-as also
his processes of manufacture and of paying it
out into the'vrater, without risk of ~ that snafu
ping ,in twain; which occurred repeatedly
ashen the old Atlantic telegraph was laid. it
appears utterly ithpossible that aimed ass
strain can break each al. cable as. we havo.de,
scribed. It.could only occur while being
payed .out, but the lightness or the cable,
which, almost enables it to float, prevents a
strain ;capable or breaking, stretching," or
snapping it.. .
' We•rejoice to leara. from •Mr, Herstmanu
that there, is. a prospect, of •another:Atlantic
Telegraph beiug',ltdd, befete,xuanyr months«
Rapidity, of •communication, of tvhich I.he first
Cable just gave us .au idea,•raust be:obtained§
because It , can•.. .If;Mr. Horstmano succeed
in. effecting, it; his lime will. be remembered
with the.unmes of Franklin,Tultoni Strphen 7
son, Morsc,and other, benefactors ofxraudriod,
who; have compelled Science to: al' happy
argon Nithartility, • , •
.
I:9o.4Sner - W ,t,
stentrev erep.;l4f!fft
'tord Ranfir, has wade a Rotnt of oarMaf, oat,
In thii bbn:ntry, hid mother's praotiati,of tre.,
leepting Ifroteitt 'llnyittliigirbibli Oit &Par;
'Whiban Washingt4m lidvasi presented
by? Roars: Pfdip • Eielotnoift,'.beolidoller&
with • an; appropriate and' itiggestive photograph=
th9onalynnaarar - 4kon froiwsossitargad - fillignot'a
11 49ttir8.44, "iT. 1 43 41,4 11 1e.,4 7- #4. 8 4 0 11t0A after, the
( L ' a f • Yff t4 4l lB 4 , l9 4 1 4011417. 84 4,19/I!qh
iti!ae pnititinioas rupi d f e° l . 4 4 4 'Fare , 'F r f. x .f.P a t
thsi., - by a very .- iippreeistiNielltio.
gi'SPh :iocihnetirtii - kbirtY forty:irides "(as
td
Ocee.* 'aiif i ffition s inforniike4/aff.ai" liy
'Brady, is a Very filieziliniointien of the art; was fife
Telly.fiernel in 'white and gold, and was mom
;Panted by :a sultableireetiptlon: I Tliepresentatloru
irraenagde Py 4fr. .Ftsmtlin Philp, on behalf ofAhd.
14a L, ; „ . ' • •
.Accompanying tho plotare was a. hook, Idstori-,
leally'and locally degortptive of it, and a spletailq,
„12 - opy of "lesqlng''s 'Mount:Vernon and - its Asso
ciations," . ritofooly,illnittirpie every, ohjeot of
ntaraat eartatiding, tins ('l'itoail`lfltbit:
:books are..splenilldWbettatVill'ioYillottie,`ellibo;'
Irately 'but s.ddlinatelyi gliti , thei;ultrotint •Vdrdon"
haying, an emblazonogli.mut.ornansental- fesfi'do-t
6igned and, drawn, eptettelly for this book and mi.
'fmsion, bearing the . , arme• of the. Rrinoe,.and an
,inscription, as•foliorrt:,
Presented to '
life Royal Itisliniell'Albart*Edward, Prinoo of Wales,
. On the (station of his visiting
:The Rome of washington. , .
' •
lly Philp* Eolomonse Washington, V. 8;
'1 The bestutitul,presents were the, theme of great
praise by, the select party who, ere permitted to
inspect them.
I lifis.:Grers New 'NOvel:*
Mrs. -Grey, one of the moat imocessful and pro
duotive novelists ef England, may pave written a
better story than 1, Coniiitaitiriy," Vat we have
,hot encountered it: listituili it is a tale of do
inestio life, .withent any veryitartling , ineidents,
!but tinily such as might have occurred, had. the
;creations of her fanoy,been,real men pnd women,
Iplaoed In the situations in whin]; she l puts them.
The book is really a narrative,ahout !too, cousins,
named Harry, and tutees 'their' fortunes with in
finite spirit, ending, as Is the cein in life; for the
moat part, with inatrimony. '
"The ldt
* B e e o a u t li t i;pt lc r o ry . or v e . y 4 , o a l ut r h h or na 9 a f
t e
S B o y 14
l. limo.
v
B. Peterson & Brothers.
, Letter from 66 .1tappa. ,,
Correemdenoe of The Preeej
'Wettutstarott, Oct. 10,1860. .
The result of the Pennsylvania election, although
it might :not have been unexpected to those who
are not fond of indulging in illusions, has mated no
small excitement in.our othe'rwise quiet town. Last
bight the olub-rooma of the different political fac
tions were densely crowded by analous,betters and
ts hoar the telegqlphiedespstehes read.,
Some Pennajdranians, l in anticipation of ; the
glorious news, were ' l , tlgbt ae brieks.'.' ...13nt when
the majorities for Curtin became 'larger and
larger,' they 'Sobered doWri and gfadaally thinned
out, aunt - not it solitary soul was left. The worst
of His that there has been considerable betting.
It is remarkable that yesterday nt noon the Ad
ministration was oertain of Foster's defeat. Mr.
;Buchanan expressed himself in that way, and the
Star, a rampant Disunion paper, positively as
,sorted in its a ft ernoon edition, that Curtin would
:be elected. How did they know it? Nothing
could then have been known of the result of the
selection. Or, is there some wrong, some cheating
in it?
Mr. Jackson was elected Governor of Missouri
.because he bad declared himself openly in favor of
Stephen A. Douglas, the regular candidate of the
'Democratic party., Mr. Foster has been defeated
'bebause he either bae not had the courage to come
out boldly for thou Little Giant," or has been se-
Crotty favoring the Disunioniats. Dad he openly
declared, as Taekson, of Missouri, did,"that Dou
glas—not Brecklnridge—la the regular candidate
of the Democratic' party, he would now be Go.
vernor•elect. In these days of cheating and cor
ruption the people want to know for whom they
vote. They expect their candidate to come. for
ward like a man, to whom principles are higher
than political BUCIMISS. The friends of Douglas will
not vote for his enemies in order to elect him.
Nothing is lost yet. Let the Pennsylvania Do
mooraoy rally under the standard of Douglas and
Johnson, at their brethren in Missouri and else
where are doing ; them have an •undefiled,
pure Douglas electoral ticket, with no Breckin
ridge Disurtiontsta or bolters on it, and victory
may yet Grown their efforts. In vain has Air.
Douglas beseeched the leaders not to Alice with the
Itrookinridgers, who are more bitter enemies of
his than even the B °Publicans ; in vainhashe told
than that a fusion with the Diatmloniste it a for
saking of the principles of the party,' and can never
result in victory. Ills voice , has not been heard.
The mere declaration of Buchanan, Breoklaridge,
governor fitevene, and other loading Blennionists,
that they are in favor of a tioket, is death to the
same; for the Douglas men, knowing that, they
would favor nothing whioh would be beneficial to
Mr. Douglas, remember the old classio quotation,
" Timeo Danaos et den fereutee,' 0. • "
of Laoaoon
Every true friend of Judge Douglas in this olty,
the National-Densocratio Executive Committee In
cluded, hopes that the Pennsylvania Democracy
will have profited by adverse experionees, and will
Immediately, withoutloss of time,,pit up a straight
out Douglas electoral Whet: That le their only
saliatibn. • No caneesslone to Disunionists and
holf9t 4 .
The" election of Mr. Lehman, something *hioh
was considered by all Administration men impos
sible, as it was well understood here' that the
Brcokinridge mon were instruoted to vote against
him, and for Mr. king, if. not for thq Bopublicani
nominee, has caused no small sensation- lie is a
straight-out Douglas man who is not ashamed to
avow ant pantie ' and therefore.he haS been elected.;
Shenk! not that, also, be another Inducement for the'
Pennsylvania Democracy to follow the course'aboVe
indioated ? - • '• • -
The Douglas re oept'on at Chicago la the greates
thing of that oharaotei that has happened on thli
continent since the days of Montezuma. His speeeh
is moat excellent, and your committee cannot do
anything better than to circulate it all over the
state. Illinois is safe. KAPPA.
A NEW Picnics BY Enatr.--LThe Tribune
of Saturday rays: Mr Page has at hie studio in
the Tenth-street Building some admirable copies
of Titian, but be hap three or four:paintings of
his own which are much better entitled to atten
tion. than any copies of. Titian could , be, however
admirable .they may be. .Two, of these paintings
are full•length ,porrralts of extraordinary power,
'and ono of-them in a life-sised'eoraposition; Which
the artist calls Dolce far ideate. It reprosente a
group on the common, eonsieting of &shepherd;
two women, a young child, a dog, and two or three
sheep. Those who are accustomed to the convOn
done], shepherds of . the oampagna, .and to , the
manner in which similar snbjeots dove been treat
ed . by other artists, can have no conception of
the .masterly skill displayed in this ,remark
able painting, which hat nothing in it to dazzle the
eye or stir the passions of the spectator, but which
nevertheleee fascinates by Its marvelous °reality,
for It does not seem a painting at all, but a group
of actual persons and animals standing In the broad
field, with stately hills in the distance and the blue
sky bending' overhead' One of the leomon lies
snoring sound asleep on a little hillock, thtishep
herd stands in listless indolence quite indifferent to
the 'World about .bids; a younger woman, a model
Of physical • comeliness, site languidly on' the old
Roman pavement, and a little child Res at her feet
in a sweet slumber, while,the- sheep : are ring
oboe by. The only wide-awake among t em is
the shepherd's dog, which Landmer might be proud
As have painted: , .
PaESENT Cognritoil or TEIAS.—Mate
number of the Galveston (Texas) Uhrestian
Advo
tato has the following comprehensive and, encou
raging paragraph " Viot excitement pretty raltoh
au:Tended ; a remarkably placid interest in the
election, irldioaHog a steady hope in manifest des
tiny; copious rains, grass abundant, cotton im
proving, schools resuming their sessions with good
prospects; acme revivals of religion, no provaDing
doubts of the goodness of Providence' remarkably
wed health, and sr very general faith in the old
virtues of• prudenoei• industry, 000401n7, and com
mon senae.-"
TWO. C.ENTS,
Additional 'Neviro ftoni Make;
commonommisvfarittio THE spirizirr 101Dioff AT
VERA C6177,-SNIZURI4 OP 4 CONDITOTAIBT TUE
ISEICALR.
[From:the New Orleans Pioafonte, 05i: 15 .1 -
The brig Hines, Oapt: Merge; 'which' arrived Off
the Pars Tuesday morning, direct from Vera Otos,
but subsequently went ashore, as etSairbere
report
ed, brings to Us several days later riewS froth
Itisof the most importalat'obersiefel, and not
only contirnis-what, we have - befere,hed,ho regard
to the dual condemtion, and ,confiseatien of, the
Spanish hark no
ConcePtion; bet presents` an
entire nevil phase of the •racent difficulty between
the two Governments. „ ,
It is to this effect,thatimmedfatelyaiter the ar
lival out the, Spanish War anfrinter Velaece, with
oiHoial deopilibes from Havana, aa before stated;
a note weapThed from the Spanish commodore to
the Constittifiemil Goveinnient, demanding theim
mediate- restitation of the condelinted Vessel' and
the payment of damages; otherwise the, pity of
Vora Oruz would at once be bombarded; as Oomph
acre with this demand had already; in accordance
with the decisions of-tbe courts, been formallyde
ci teed, an the laet note was conceived in the most
peremptory terms, its contents Were at once com
municate& to Captain Jerrie, Of the United Stites
sloop of war Savannah,- and. flap:darter of the Home
Squadron. Tnerenpon Captain Jitivlcimmedlittely
passed a note to the Spanish commodore, in which
he not only condemned his "course in 'the decided
terms it deserved, but flotaliy concluded with de.
Waring, as the words are, quoted 'to rut, " ihat'he
would consider the first 'shot fired upon Vera'Ortte
a shot tired upon-the Amerioan 'Squadron."
In eon/equate° of this note all farther Rotten In
the matter was suspended, and this whole Spanish
' sqoadrise,_withlhe exception of one vessel, sailed
hank to Havana- Without intending, to, endorse
this statement, whieb Comei to us only as a verbal
I report, we may remark as partial iforixiboreitionef
lit, that the latestifevena mall reports the:return
horns of three 'vessels of War; the lierettittele,
Aloedo, and Vetere°. The truth, however,
(soon reach us in 'en anthoritative form; bythe
;English steamer at havens, from Vera Ortiz - the
'lst inst.; Offeald the mails direct by "tier Potomac,
I row some days over dire, hot„coma tolitrid . before.
By thernellfrom 'Northern Mexico . brought to,
7 "% r d? i i/Ae; 'Mier; from Mexico;
tiestei it4have itiej Ortaint (life] or
thiii 04W; r*defsititfcfailleialll d„,of an,
ilDieftel2fte:itiee croanatistarerthdtiothic MO,VW
iti frofit"ftatteetni ; and tertanW fr, :hottad.to
.Templed.
The eterhioneebief,thfa, roandalortartet Is
;said to be undoubted , itaPisietr to rein supped of
letters item the cond(isiorethentistivek - te'
viduals lakgely Interested- iii•the Safety' of the
money. Tiler heisureiwas made at- Logruiefietia pn
tho.dth
,and' the Whole' ordered back to 'Lagos, ,
The oply canes assigned for the seizure of the .
iiioney.thatave have surd IN that the exigenoies
of the catepitkit demanded it. It is supposed that
it is to be stood in support Of the expttion.against
the capital asebefine mentioned. - &Mai:treble
portion of the - litoney awls , de:Mined ter ifty.
IT° ens ,°Ur'Prek"ll4/ 4 0 11 8 .18$ ~ eP4debsteft, was)
consigned the hirge,stna,of VOO,OOO. In _
I In this reormeation - leia
'equally good authorily t 'that Gen./ANN:3'041%1104
' equally
a loan at Guanajuato of $600,000,,1et support
iof the same expedition:, Tee - ,security , given was,
the confiscated ,property ; of-the ohineh. _How far -
Ithe loan_ Was voluntiry or !' forced" la riet,stated.
!As to' the - pregrees ;of the," campaign, the gineo
(brings idnether iittedilgoiielhat'the vanguard of
the - Liberal array tied already arrived tat Tee&
Ibaya, and other divjoions were 804;1 expected to
take np their positions befortthectly, .
, •
The Disaster to the Connaught. -
; The Boston papers ate mail with details' of the
disaster to the Connaught. The Journal sais:
The passengers saied nothing but the clothing,
in which they were attired.
At about half past ono o'clock the brig Minnie
Schiffer, with the passengers of the steamer on
board, made fast at India wharf. She was horrid
up by the tug-boat Rescue. The R.B. Forbes
;went down the harbor to render any assistance
;necessary, but ample provision bad been. made,
-
and the returned. .
The scene at the wharf is beyond the possibility
f a comprehensive description, The brig's deck
capacity was enroty taxed With the number: 'ln
! fact, the crowd of humanleings wee wee, ae thickly'
; packed as it could well ho.
,
As the vessel neared the wharf, and - Wag within
hailing distances shout. after shoat arose frote the'
crowd of hundreds gathered, partly out of curiosity •
and partly with' a deep-Mt sympathy for, the per
;sons who bed thus been thrown u pon' our shores'in
'the most abject, poverty, and under eirtiuMstanoes
;calculate/ to commend our, sympathyr.., . • -.. „
• The pa't,teegers caught the feeling of their strati•
gerlriends on shore, and 'reiterated the oxpressien •
of joy at their. arrival. As soon as passible on
their arrival, our reporter engaged In aouv,ereation
some of the rosoue.i. They all erfireas,ttiemeelies
in high praise. of the captain. 'stud alders - of the
;steamship„ and cannot, account for; the origin. of ,
the fire which resulted se. disastrously, te,;al.l con-,
,earned.
- Everything was lost; hardly a person oh board
saved a shift of clothes, .and s as, there, were, 4iat •
few on board who had property, all cowing here
--second.class passengers—as thsigranti to soh ti
fortune ; they_ are thrown upon es fit subjectil , for
charity.. , • ,
They were in ecstaeice as the cosset neared the
wharf, and as soon as possible gained a landing,
and many eat down on,the first block of wood or
barrel to contemplate. The stores of the, brig
were insufficient for no manyand In conseqUenao
for over two days many of 'the bun:ChM% been
either on allowance or without foodeitogether, ten•
ill relieved by tho steamors sent down tbis, morn
ing. As soon as possible' after arriving; pedlers'
of apples and all kinds of fruit; were in motive sere
vice.
The poor people wore hungry, and, no doubt,
parted with their little cash on hand much more
willingly than they have done heretofore: Some
disposition will be made of them till, Mitt after-
Won't train leaves for New 'York, When nearly
two-thirds leave for that- eity, they having pur-•
chased through tickets of the Steamship „Com
pany. •
Those that remain deserve the immediate help
of either the city or private means,. in order to
sustain life, for they have saved nothing; hardly,
enough clothing to protect the parson in one of our
frosty nights • -
The commander of the Minnie Schiffer Is Capt."
Wilson. He does credit to his craft.
All accounts concur in commendation of the
(tended of Capt. Leitch, of the 'Connaught. Hun
dreds of lives were saved by his self.peasesaion and
magnanimity. Few men in his trying situation
could have prevented some fatal blunders; but
scarcely the smallest error was committed in the
whole transaction. Ho , directed the conveyance,
of all the passepgers to the brig,and was among
the last td leave the steamer. 'ls officers alio re
ceive a due share of praise.' •• •
We should not omit also to speak highly of the
conduct of Capt. Wilson, of the Minnie Schiffer
Without a question or a manner he generously
received the whole of the paasengers of the burn
ing steamer. His conduct ; else during the passage
in with his crowded burden was commendable m
the highest degree. ' • • ' ' • • •" • ;'•
It has been auggeeted that. a subsCription be
started in aid of the sufferers by the Connaught
catastrophe. - We'irtisf thataneh will be acted Co.
Many of the , passengers -poor at the.beet-;-am
deprived of everything bat their clothing. ,They
are in immediate and pressing, want. A hide mo
ney will do a great deal of good. Let these who
have the means—and there are hosts of such
among us—contribute liberally.
Anarchy in Florida.
TIIE MILITARY ORDERED OUT
The Marianna (Fla.) Patriot of the 20th Sep
tember says : Yesterday a patty in Salhotn, styl
ing themselves Regulators, went to the house of
one Joss* Druden, and, we learn, shot him, giving
him a mortal wound. . They then met and ebot
Willis Musgrove from his horse, who died Instant
ly ; also, mortally wounding Larkin CAllusgrove.
These are the fasts as far as we have been able to
gather them, but it is believed that last night
another barite war fought between the Regulators ,
and the lindens
The Apalachicola Times of. Ootobar 3 says :1
From advice, resteired ty telegraph from Mari.:
anna, yesterday, wo:nrere apprized that. General:
Win. E. Anderson had ordered out the _First brl
gads militia, and they are, ere this, at theaCene o
tumult. By the mail boat to•dayore are place
in possession of •farther advicea. The foliowtn
order of the United States judge of this distriol
-to the United States marshal will explain
CALVOCN COUNTY, Oat, 2, IttO.
TO U. X. SIUONI, U. S. DaOOTY MARsitsy:
This county has been declared to be in a state of
Insurrectionary war by the lion. J. S. Finlay, yudge
of the Western Judiciary Circuit of the State of Flo 3
ride.
It is believed that persons from other Staten are en 4,
gaged in the commission of open hostilities %pipet the
good eiveens of this State, and in violation of One 19144
of the United States., As deputy marshal you are hero{
by required to be at my office, in Calhoun county. that
YOU may, without delay, receive and execute such pro,
can as it may beoorllo necessary_ for me to Issue.
MoINTOSH,
U. S. Judge Northern District of Florida.
How BARON RENERER WAS TREATED IN
RICHMOND—Ins CHARDES or UNCIVILITY DENIED.
—A correspondent of the Herald, writing from
Richmond, October 0, 1860, says: The special
correspondent of the New York Tomes commits a
gross libel on 'Virginia character and manners in
that paper of the Bth instant. Some of it is cord
rent in the main ; but, take it all together...it is a
mendacious report on the Prince's own word and
that of Virginia gentlemen. No person - insulted
the Prince or 'offered him an indignity, nor did he
visit Robert A. Mayo's farm at Powhatan. 'The
reason why he did not meet with a military recep
tion, or a ball, is obvious from the following letter
from Lord Lyons to the City Council ofitiehmend :
WeautNerett, Oot' 5,1860.
GENTIMMEN : I have the honor' to aoknewledge
the receipt of your letter of ate,daibefete guitar
day's date, and to thank you heartily, , in the name
of Lord Renfrew, for the cordial welcome to the
city of Richmond whioh you so kindly , offer him.
Lord Renfrew is partioularly sensible of the
friendly consideration for hie wishes, 'and of the
true courtesy which has induced you to abstain
from display and ceremonious demonstration,
and to allow him to visit you In a quiet and
unostentatious manner as a private gentle•
man. Although the character in which he
travels, and the very short tittle which is rat his
command, make it necessary for him to avoid
the reception of formal addresses, he is not on
that Room% unaware of or ungrateful for the re
spect to her Majesty the Queen,
and the cordial
iiiindship for the people of Great Britain; of which
so many striking proofs have been given during
his visit to the United States. He desires espe
(daily t o eXpreSS his gratitude for the expAsion of
those statements contained in the resolution of the
City Council of Richmond, and in the letter to
which I have now the honor to reply. - • -
I Mmainitentleinen,
With great maw and - reaard, •
Your Very humble servant,
. • ONO. '
„
A SEVERE WARNIRile:—The ' Atlanta (Ga.)
losontotave of the=lBth -mit. learns that at the
last term of the Buprenie Court of Tallaferro
county, a man was flood two hundred dollars, and
sonteneod to thirty days'imprisonment, foF.solling
one dTlldt Of liqtior to a negro.
TILE WERRIX-ERR 6 4-
_
-21rit-WMIELT PRllla will be - men to subienbers by
mail (per annum, 111 advanced st.— —o2'42°
Three Corlett. " " ' 6.00
Five' ." " " 8.00
—.—
Ten" "
Twenty " " (to one address) 20 6 00
Twenty Coptee, or over" (to address of
each subsonbord each. 1.20
For a Club of Twenty-ene 'or over, we will "send en
extra copy to the getter-up of the Club.
Poatmastersi are requeited to act ati AgeUtefOT
Tun WICULY PYED. • - , .
6.SLIFORNIA PRESS. - -
leaned three times a Month, in time for the Califeriiia
Steamers. . -
GENERAL NENVa.
•
ARSENIO EATERS OF AIiSTRIA:—The 'MD
:Cm Academy of Science" has recently made .an in
tweeting reportin- relation to the at:fettle eiateis of
8 teleteatith, and ether.provincesi south of See
berg :
.-'. The a r s ol.l A gl ateal- Alltwith it dose the
on e a willlet•giale. and* moan gradeally 4o 0, done as
large as a pea, in quantity tronstwo,,teur oral, a
half to five and a half grains. Some take the ar.
genic ifold;othere etrery other, de. Milord sUll
ones or twice kr itheiweek. • 'in Rh igirg_lt iii the
custom - 4o , netuni with melt stow trieon,mtal begin
with relatifelresnalPtrosed‘agabs. frarriasitately
aftertaking arsenic"; they fofbeaedrinntagtfr eating
meat and- fatty , tatbetanbito"They_are, tor the ave
rage, strotig,`Aidaltby iiimiple', lifontly of. the *lrk
ing olassekirtadt'aS wOodmemgrtfoinei,ilte° Seldom
do fen:islet indedgeln - thif tracer - lel ' iiiifint 4 be
gin witlahrrefghtiettill'yeill,.tind Isordelit% to be
aeventy`iiir aisitidder. They dregeiteditliiAiura
ge°M, ratrP/MOiltlifForliiint- 81311algitt,6/0118.
It le t eir ihellef - that' Ihd dew isi4tilif ' 4 pre: servee them eta° strong beilihy; 'nisei tidal
them from sickness of all kinds; though nTent,
many of them end theirdays trponJbeda of dissam.
Errna n t ntruari v . Silio f n w .`— 'Th &sOn Zf M r
4k.BradhUynf"tivi%tairttit'Arm ef.tdburyt
Evans' ef'Lthiden2 Printers ' wad ,proprietors efPmr4'iadrothet wllihevin pubilcationii, hasreOsrti,ycortMllted`etiloide'inatemarkihlaman
ner. Is went `os`Vretionte Gardstabind spent
&
the evening The amusements of that Celebrated
!place. 1 Townids the '4l°3n'of the entettidonsent
ha pmetirod'sitieffer a ter4tound note, and - going
to the front oft the 'dittoing platform' - scattered 'lr
amongst-the otowd2-1 rel then &died for a glees of
gtog, and having emptied into It a - phial of pinata
acid, suede' ae spchproposeti the health of the
I reirepany, , drinsk off his eats, and alas - Pfeil dead
,in the midar oforken men. of wild riot and donfa- ,
ision. Ho was a young man of great ability. , and
iI pronsise,end pary,reaeatly,was; presented with a
gold wateltubt-the 4sciesroref iha Xrenchon ao
t 1 nowlidgetn_qt s .ottli n e ; Taliin,f sti impreve e nselit 15
'r h e a fa ;gi d e; l i f n eli r g' t r i eoltip s i sty 1 :4 a ,,.;". "
....„.. 4 -fiee a'
" Navr t Alinn'oan Ezerratestraz,-- i -A , tine of
railway la .projtoted between Oairo, Illinels, and
alemphih Tenaessee. - ThecomPany having the pre
16t in hand is operating under,chartent from, Aro
Vitlro° of. KcnraigliddT°94erilrp.tp-.4_,
et last amnions ri th bOW 6 7.011/Sai
eativerhasi beetrandleW and'the'prp s' of en
trineera srre.mow 'Wattle the line'. ' Tha• Mate la
nearly arfair lino; withlo grade %Welding forty
feet per mile. The'
lettgelqas `Bitil_ered, is ono
hundred and fifty miles. Br the shade now ope
raating the distanee-te4Lemplihria one hundred and
eigbty-fivitmiles; by the river it- is , two bared-red
nd forty ranee. Tb.a cost of this mud will not
(exceed S2AGO,OOO.
TilE GALE its Tan Ginn.---Capt.. Talbot, of
the steamship Atlantic, which arrived last eve
ning from Ilracii Santiago, ripbrte that on the let
last, when Off :Ship Bhealt,43o eneiiMtetwi a ter
'dad tVicrf; tbc 'northeast, which lasted eight
heals. (rind, afterwards shifted_ southwest'
lima - in Qtrectien it blew with inereated ado
tepee, 'miler hastily to centriel otillt. Talbot to throw
overheardikin• deck' obtr,iciiiisieting of. sixty-five'
head eg tattle.: The ship• behaved verylmell but:
Wit labored heavily, and finally sprung- a 'leak!
front various damages. -itia elsewhere recorded, the
Atlantis reached her whAvforith all her putout
gem, in safety.—Netc - Orfedirs 'Picayune, Oct ;
~ , 1 ,- .
Ertheertow or .i U. S. Conv,to a
r:—The r,
smote Observer, of the Pd ; says : , _
.The Hate of the repite granted by the president
the Valied'States ia.rerdinanel liteileakiW ex
lrires out the 12th,inst., and on that, day: he swill be
execruteat it is well known the respite weagiven
,witti a viewfo WM ti deci s ion theopinionnfthe
In
regard
General to theof ,Tildge hilobitosh In
to Me erelludve jurbdietion of the illutted
States oyes the „lifav7 Yard iterienntioll• -.The
anion of t4*
he Athoniey General con fi rming the d ...
sion ofJldge Mclntosh Upon this cremation, &Coati ! ,,
item. of the cetitt is conllrmed, and 'the eireoatiga ,
of Magaskill will take place onthe 12th inst. , '
i EIteIiCEPATSON 80113311 , .—1r 19 stated that
there is a grand emancipation seheme now in lila,:
ibryo in Western Virginia., whith will develop itself,
;in the course of the coming winter. The movement
'a to haie for its leader •' a dtstingulahwiganihS= .
mien from Eastern' Virginia, not regarded as par.
I tioularly sound upon the slavery question for Many.
ears past.'! , „ • „.-- -
A firmware. respectable merchant, of,-Val.
araiso lately attempted -an extensive. insurance
rand by secretly substituting stones for doubloons,
o the amoinst of $150,0(11), which he had chipped
nu boxes, and lectured on board I vessel of his own.
i j
?The vessel wee, of course, lest, bet the underwriters
Made an inveetigation, , and nnravolled the whole,
affair. -. _ . . .
AN BEENDLANY rtes, Of a pecidiarly rillatn
ouecharacter, ocourred.at Charlestown, Mare j .,o7:t e
Monday night. inoendiary had placed' gun
iowder or camplume In a IMOOnd-door robin, "which
gnited sometime after, the firemen came np, four,
of whom weraknoOkedbackwards down the stair;.
;way and eiverely.liurned in the face and hands. -
Tun Toiento., Leader. annowices.,thsit-Sic
!Ede:Lut! Head is to Nate foi Baena on the 12th."Be goes On private business. and will be absent
from hut post about tiro menthe. It is rumored.
that Sir Edmund has lately,interited 180,090 in
;money, and some valuable real estate.
NEW RAILWAY Eq . FRANOE.—The French
tillonitizir contains an imperial decree, ordering
jthe construction of a notion of railway between
lToulon and Nice, which will connect the two do
ipartments of Var and Nice, and be & work of pub".
;110 utility.
A VEGETABLE( Cuatoarry.—Mr. H. Bunnell,
!of Burlington, has a stalk of earn labia garden
measuring twelve feet and nine bashes. It wan
{grown from Michigan sesd.
A LAWYER, at Whits Sulphur Springs, Vir
'ginia, who had been on a spree, drank two bottle,
of cologne,"and died.
Tm wolves in the neighborhood of West
Point have left off their earnivorona habit.", and
begun to devastate the melon patches in that
!toot. . ;.
Tus, Alabama papers mention the fall of
heavy rain far up in the interioret the country,
end a rive in the rivers, whieh were still low, was
hoped for.,
A VALUABLE bed of white %arta° has been
discovered at Salisbury, Conn , and appears to'bo
inesharratible. The enthusiastic neighbors think it
superior to that found. at Ratlsnd, Vt. '
Maker Tams.—A yeasel arrived. tit Satan;
nah, on Saturday, from Stockholm, with a cargo of
iron consigned to a firm in thatrity. , -
Amos° the cargoes lately cleared from San
Framisoo, woo ono of snorted otipplloi for the
English and l'renoh forties In China.
A Lyman down East propose's to navigate
icebergs from the Poles for the refreshment of New
Orleans. that.
THE pollee of Memphis, Tenn., appeared in
uniform on the sth inst..
GR&Cg Cannon (Episcopal) was consecra
ted at Alexandria; Va., last Bunday.
THE Steam revenue cutter Harriet Lane ar
rived at Nov York on Tuesday from Wellington.
LEGAL INTELLIGENCE.
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT—Judgell
Grier and Cadwalader.--Crist, Jay, and Reis vs.
Joseph B. Baker, collector of the customs. This
was a ease involving a question of feet 'under
the revenue law-of the 3d of March; 1857: • That
not et Congress imposed a 4 valorem duties, and in
the Behedulos A cad B of the tariff act of- 184.6
adopted by this act," blankets" were required to
pip a duty of fifteen per cent while " woollen
goods not otherwise provided for " were made Ile
bit, to twenty-four per cent: ' • • •-•-
The plaintiffs are merchants of the city of Phila
delphia, and they received several invoices, of
what - th ey trmed "Mackinaw blankets," and tire
collector infornfed them that the articlee • weia lia
ble to a duty of twarity.fouS per cent.- ' r
They wets advised by their own Mail that the
duty should-,ifis - kfteen , per cent; and net twenty
lour, and...asiordliegiy, they paid the sum de.
mended, an t then filed the ir protest. - The de.
eisioli of We 'Oolleeter was affirmed , iby the de
partment. These 'invoices 'were. the subject of
controversy. aDd'the whole amount of overcharge
claimed, is 5619.68, and the , single question for the
jury is, whether the articles imported were blank
ets, as eonimorolally known, or whether they are
to be classed among " woollen goods not otherwise
provided for,
Samples -of the blankets in question were pro.
dosed in court.,They are of ,vary fine texture.
The color-is blu, and the goods come in lolls,
with the borders, actin regularly recognised bleat
etc, marked through the piece. .-
The witis essee for the plaintiffs testified that the
samples produced in court were known•in corp.
moron es blankets, and they Were fold as each;
that they were of a finer quality pan was menu
factured prior to -the year 18441- 1 4:,r thereabouts,
and while they could be used as bed severing, - they
would also answer for , gatments. In purchasing
them from the manufacturer so mach per_ pound
was paid, while Beaver and Pilot olotht to which
these blankets bore some resemblance; was charged
as so reach per yard, end witnesseeCtestiffed that
there was a distinetien between these, blankets and
the coarser quality of Beaver cloth, .- ' •
The Government, ori the Other hand, coUtnnd
that these blankets" were the result of a man
bination- among the English menufacharore to
evade the _tariff act of 1646, ea . this -partieular
quality - goods - Was -not known In' the market
until after the passage of the act of _that' year.
An the aot of 1867 - adopted the rusheditli" of the
year '46, the question would be, of comae, iiittlffier
these artioles were included. • No - Wit - nesse - a - were
called for the defence, the court adjourning-after
the opening for the Government.
Nun Palos. —The mat ter of the injunction
to restrain the Building Commissioners trom- pro
ceeding under the lesolution awarding the con
trast to John McArthur waa postponed•.untll Sa
turday, Judge Read being unwell and unable to
attend court, .
DisritlCT Counm Judge Sliarswood:—
Baler ye. Murphy. Before reported. Virdiet for
the plaintiff' for the undivided moiety-of the Ship.
pen street, and for the defendant for the remainder
of the property.
William J. Alger, who survived, ve..=jehn
M. Pomeroy et al. Ah action on a recognizanoe
in error. Verdict for plaintiff for $1,260. •
Etting V 3. Imlay. An action on a promissOry
note. Jury out.
DISTRICT (.3 ;uaT— , -JudgS ok vs.
Nenzei. Before reported. Verdiot for deb:indent.
boat McColl= vo. Alexander. An eetion
on a promissory Robe,' • Verdiet for'pleintilf for
g 100.44.
Thomas vs. Hancock. -An action on a promissory
note, On trial. •
titIARTEa Sitssnws—Judge, ThompSOrt.—
Itt this (mutt, thirty-two cane of trifling character
yesterday. The only tWe ct note lore
, Clem, of Meriln Kelly, eonvioted of horsetettehos,
'bad Sohn Harley, convicted of preeenting's forked
'cheek.' Both were tautened-to elglitoea -mate.
in the Easton Peateettery. •;
;/.,