: ".40/ 131 4 1 1D,PAILY, (BUNDAYB fiX9EPTED Fel4Pfltiri OFFICE 100;:41fbibi8Ttit1TtISEET DAILY PRESS. YwrCVr 0111111. rise Wars, payable to the Carrier: Magid to t!*eoribere out of the City at Buc DoLyalte PU ANXltl4 , 79rl, '!:11OLLAR8 tiGiT ficionrue, Tratektoop.mte POR Bia Monsa—lnvariablY in !Ill usive* for the time ordered. pßzcss, rost44a to Bobsoyiboi:o onto(' ths,gitl atTEßra DOL.* /4 1 4 liadietwoO: comilisssitnF gov!rEs., SimPLITY, man% a mnicautwou, so. its classmir tr. UNINISSION IZIONANTII _ FOX ll* ULU of 101111.ADr.T41 2 }11A-MADE ..8-1.1 GOODS. WELLING.COFFIN & Co lie MEMIIVNIfT EITRBN'N, t, th• page l p, tho Mowing denripts4 AMERICAN GOODS, a WidaDAAD Reim An 8 OBIA? VJYSIS ttRUNE itANUFAOTITRIER 00.13 PRINTS ; ELRAORED AND BROWN SHERTLNEB, SKERTINNO AND DRILLI4 OSNABURGN, DENIMS, AND STRIPES; 04: 1 EART . JEAN% SILESIAN, AND NAN. MiNS; (UNION MMUS AND PRINTEID LININqo RHODE ISLAND MOM; YILELADELPNIA LIMN AND MONA; Kinauwar ' MANS AND OOTTONADES; IMMO WARS AND RZELSEYS ; ALL-WOOL AND UNION ()LOTUS; DLAON AND FANOY CABSPIEFA ; BLACK AND MTh= DOESKINS; - annum AND UNION CIABISEILRBIS; TWEEDS. CIABRAIARETTES. •0., La. aal•Dm WASHINEk TO N "MILLS, VOEXERLY BAY trrATIO BEEkLB tatAwLa of all elm, In mat 'meet!. isinNomed ono Pnnted TABLE COVER& MON BRA4ERB and BROAD CLOW. B&LMORAL SKIRT'S. ISOESEINS. and Dodds and Twisted COATINGS. EIACIUN GS end heavy ZEPHYR MOTEL Twil/s4 and Plain FLANNELS aad ONBRA FLAN NELS: Printed FELT CAEPEVINSO. Far sale by FROTHINGRAII & WELLS, 84 Routh FRONT Btroet. and 34 LETITIA Street, 110U6E.FIVRNISHING GOODS. -- - - WILLIAM YARNALL; ' IMPORTER AND DEALER IN HOUSE' FURNISHING 000 DA, - . No. 1090 ONESTNUT EMMET, (iarzsdiatsly . omits th Academy otPine Arta.) VOLE CUTLERY, OVAL WAITER!, KITCHEN TABLES, DOOR MATE. CLOTHED MANGLES, Ito., Ac. Pars.r.ooonnenolaglloresswerrs. ore ssrtigniwry. WOW to an examination of this stook of llsssim GOODS. sol-fewer MILLINERY' 000118. • . C 7 2 1.1 OFOSTIIUT STREET, BELOW EIGHTH, Eno openod a SPLENDID ASSORTMENT of FRENCH FLOWERS, HEAD DRESSES, FEATHERS, RIBBONS, STRAW GOODS, BONNET MATERIATA AT LOW MOM Isi.tal RATS Mill .CAPS. NEW "H&T STORE. JOHN E. FOSTER:. , miteonsa south Third sintatil limas When the store at NO. 831 CHESTNUT ST.„ /.,Agttad an i f i nvertar aria, Juntas this attention "rirjAsr EXTENSIVII BTOOII. OP HATS AND CAPS. sum new fall Wisp are =oh admiral. FURS. FURS ! GEORGE F. WOMRATH. NOS. 414 AND 417 ARM EITRBRT, Row now Open A FULL ASSORTMENT FURS ! LADIES' . To whioh the sitt;satum of the PAW is invited. oot-ilin CLOTHING; KELLY &I DOHERTY, TAILORS, $1 and 88 SOUTH FIFTH MUM, HAVE MAT SECIIVED THEM ALL AND WINTER STYLED, Together with • large assortment of NEW AND - FASHIONABLE 000D5, To whiah the nubile are Invited to examine, CABINET FURNITURE. FRENCH F URN ITURE. GEORGE 3. HENN...ELS. elm WALNUT STREEf. • tila Mimed rk In•• invoice of QUADILTIZZ, MARATITSTRIE, sad ORMOLU WORK, VIM Oa ea at, very MUM PRIORI. • FifitirsOLABB C.4IIINET WARR. ONO. J. HENKELS, 144 WALNUT. STR.BE7f. Offers at VERY ft EDUORD PRIORO Who Laud sasortment in Mil Union, 411 a Kew Dumas 00 ea exmilins beim introbasing. soli ern CABINET • FURNITURE AND BIL LIARD TABLES.' MOORE & CAMPION. • No. 281 SIOUTR BEOOND STREET. in esitnestivn with their extenstee_Derat Bneinau, " Isimf etTi V4 PI with xmtiiirgt,,piertiflrifx,itaug Deed t„bslo ceureAor to g aft Jere: Attie entlitr. see finish of i t ri llm Tebles the menn trx,rovz.z. XII& with thel=ol7l g lo4 - WM. W OABINET' WAREROOMS MIND TWO WEEK BY B A S. AVM, Neh44-19ooth BEr OND Street. :Four down übove Ohaatt4l22 l assortasaut FllRlatrllt& ofirferydesotp traa ormalsatis va head. at ta• Wren au al )U4514.‘ CHINES. HARRIS' BOUDOIR _ HEWING MACHINE. itiaiMPaiat FOR QUILTING AND HEAVY* WORK. fro tw,oi t irgeirghat ni ttp e tronbla of re / rk:TikA t ROPI GUN% Philadelphia. and pay; Baltimore, Aid. ocll Sin - BEEIT MAXINAOTURING, AID. ErWr i Np. AVORINES I. M. 4x44. N 10 OHM UT Street, o. WIMP-TX:It & wILisoN, WING MACHINES. ofie eigginwn =RENT' XECOND MON iljfiratOOX GIEBBS', : SEWINQ TIF Mt; i a lf i g r oskri i i n nn i att m dial/ fa I ' • . 1141 Vast r ikol,Nti worvoq , IWO • UMBRELLAS; , staireEPEß 'ea: FEN NER,,r' . "101405.1131 ItATINFACTOREfti PA it A. 80 L , . • no, lac MUM= BTRIEKR, • • *ale Mr. than i • • • 1 1 1 QM44 8 T P/IIIETIIIIIOP 8i110011441 2 C _..J t .11 04 4 42 1.. VNo ?OM KO IlVd; , . ' N,.. 4 5,,,1\ • '7 7 / ' lAt . . __ c o ' '''' - ' -:•`,,_, ~ , „,-, , • • „ * , t % A, 1 /// " - .. , ..T'<::° - , ? .., 3 *, . 4 4 ~ .-4-,,.:„. . . _____.- ..• : (7: ~ ..- . .r .p . i i i . iL ~‘ -, : •‘, . : 3 '—. ., ;. - f - ,_,...„,k 1 trk ki i _ , , • ~,;. "Ast '''' ' F- '''''-'-, - - -f::: N l q 4 Q 4 ,' - ' --- : o i ,'"---• „ . ___. - ..,.,„tp, (9 ,,,v..;,4-, 3 ..„,4.,- ~.--- 1 ,.:19 ,-,_ , • :',.'' - • IT, f or k` : ';l 7 -. .;:y . -11T 4 • • 4 , ,-,... . _.,,,, , .JfL -E--I' . i tW.• 0. 1 .- r, ".W ' ..,-. ~- '" ~'',. -i i ,•.. ,15 ~ , .1 - .. e ~_ -, f W%%' tri..' ~A i r . L l 6 `4.‘Z ; ~ . , ._:- , , 1 = , -. i. - .11 , ... A - 4'ligt,*.„Lr'' o 44.,., A kr. -- ,-:-. 4 7 -,, ,,, iliNkets.,w,4ox .-,- 4 •- , .. , ~: '4 r'' ' r• IC ' - . ...' - - , • , -1; .- . --- ""' --. .. - ' 1-r1w .,-_-_,-.., - ' 7 "- - 4..-„. 1 1 , ,. Ir--,-4- k.' , 4 1,4, r, 14 4 , -Tp - ", -I P - at,. 41 ef '-'Plil6' - •7 , _..V't -- V ., " •.•: - T.14 , f-,;;,-.; - - .-- ..z• 4 1 •ri -- ... ,,'',1 i ....' '''' ' 4 .. . 4" '''' ' ''''F' • '- ' .:‘''' , WAP-S:—: - ..' - # l, '' r - - -s i .fur..: ,- ;, -, ...- - -- -- - - -P. - ---,."-- .....141/4,.----.....7.."...,...:.i.,,,,A SUE -ti o - .. . , r,„01 . ,:pk , ,,;,..,, ~..: . . , - ,- . ~.,.., _. ..,,g,...,'-'is:7- „ ,, r, •,..„...,w- - • 0 --,....... -_---... .., -.1.- -;4.- • • •',--- , 4 . ~------.•-• . + ---_—_,.r....,.........„ —.... ...... _ 44.- 1 1. - ...,.. -- . .. . ~, . . •, :. . , . VOL. 4.-INO. 74. SILK kiIIii 4 .BRY . ,OOOPS JOBBERS. WILL OPEN. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8141, A Superb line FRENCH AND GERM &N DRESS GOODS AUCITION. Tito &Motion of oar ClaiitOlTlaTa to toviff“l JOSHUA L. 13ArLY. INWORTHR AND JOBDEN. No. UlB MARKET ST., waif LARGE AND ATTRAOTIVN STOOK TOR FALL AND WINTER, BALM SHORTRIDGE, BROTHER. 86 00. 1 IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS, No. 420 MARKET STREET, and No. 410 'MERCHANT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Rl v Od rtritt l t,i" M gr FORBIGE and AME DRY GOODS. &cleated with a view to the interests of CASH and f i raf ei t i EC n ll f taT t ylCeiter i l, to which they Invite . A FULL STOOI LlMiteitithr e nfrarkab n ALZ i na l g l ic; found elsewhere. Orders executed promptly, at LOWEST MARKET RATES. sedXin CLOAKS I CLOAKS TO WHOLESALE BUYERS. EVERY NOVELTY OF THE SEASON, AT THE LOWEST OASH PRIMO. eirlderohautz' own matonals made up it dextral. HENRY IVENS; act-2m No. 93 South NINTH Street. A. W. LITTLE if 00.. ' SILK GOODS. do. 326 MARKET STREET. auB4m FALL. 1860, 01-IAFFEES. STOUT. & Co. FOREIGN AND DONSBTIO DRY GOODS. rnJLAm No. 493 MARKET STREET. MARTIN & WOLFF, VOIDIGIv- AND DOMESTIC LMY 000LSo lid MARKET STABBIts Vasa and aroma* m onthe 13 - aysro, of mi neat/ ona We honied to an examination of our Stook - . aua-am" REMOVA in GozzaTazreaa of tha .5411.gr.zzla3u 1.1 tisir Tanen Stars: &oar,: YARD : , GO. Atri PR REMO if I' TO NO.' 810 01-I.ESTNUT SGUTH EWE, ABOVE SIXTH: PSILLIALLPHIA, nay haw now oven AN ENTIRE NEW STOOR - OP SILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS, GLOVES, RIBBONS, DRESS TRIMMINGS, ijrc. 3 Vogether with a LARGE ASSORTMENT a STAPLE AND FANCY WHITE GOODS. EMBROIDERIES, LAOES, MANTILLAS, Having TOOOINVO beta mall portion of their PALL IMPORTATIONS, Tuitions Weis fire, they are enabled to display A NEW STOOK. to whit* they' invite the attention of their °woman , and Bayer, generally - . eku6-Sm W 1 Ts. AUSTLE. di MoVEIGH. II ORNBRIS AND JOIMEM IN DRY GOODS. Na. 311•IJIARKET Mint. &Wye Third. T aw srtli. 11 9 :11411TALOVO! k YUILADILP If lA. - OM a. Weimer. I ' aleph Dump. I aul-Stn _ R WOOD, MARSH, & HAYWARD, IMPORTER.? AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN DRY GOODS O AND 14 OTHIN NO. .SO9 IRRREET STREET. Nell and Winter Stook now oomplate and re t Jto baron. en'- RAPER HANGINGS. PAPERHANGING. (FALL TRADE.) • HOWELL & BOURSE. aIIVII7I removed to their new Store, OORNER FOURTH AND MARKET BTRERTS, Are now prepared to otler to the Trade a large and elegant assortment of WALT. PAPERS. BORDERS, FIRE SCREENS, WINDOW CURTAIN GOODS. &c., All of the newest and best designs, from the how est orioed artiste to the finest GOLD AND VELVET DECORATIONS. Southern and Western merchants will do well to tilt the establlelunent of HOWELL . BOURKE, N. E. OORBBR FOURTH AND MARKET STREETS, eels-fm ' PHILADELPHIA. GAS FIXTURES, LAMPS, &o. K NROSENE OIL OP SUPERIOR QUA LITY, KEROSEXE, or COAL-OIL LAMPS. CHANDELIERS, BRACKETS. Alsonfootursi and for /We at LOWEST den PRICES. by WItTERS 8a CO.. No. SA .NORTE EIGHTE STREET. sel.l-2 N. E. oor. of Fdbett,betyroor. Market And Arai, st SHOE FINDINGS. ISAAC! BARTON & IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN SHOE STUFFS,. PREECE AND ENGLISH LASTING, OAI, LOONS, PATENT LEATHER, &et, Ilan, GOODS FOR CARRIAGE MAKERS, Ro, SS SOUTH BEOOND STREET, Philadelphia, aut-thn SAFES. LLIEEP PATENT WROUGHT AND CHILLED IRON DEPOT 7115 OHESTN UT ST., UNDER MASONIO HALL, 51. 0. SADLER. General Agent "AND BkNK LOOKB, DOORS, ko, tits onirMirstotils fists made thst is bth. !mist prow: sess•tut-tt AlAttlailAMßl AVIATANOY ItOODB B tor K,~ ...atEm MAW RUMS 1111 , 4 " Vitaltenrithi, THIRD STREET AMMO- ROUSES BUNN, itAIGITEL, & CO IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF FANCY DRY GOODS. No. 137 NORTH THIRD EITRIMT, NOW OFFER TO THE TRADE AN UNUSUALLY ATTRACTIVE STOCK OF 000DS, COMPRISING RILICS, RIBBONS, DRESS GOODS, WRLTR GOODS RhIBROIDERIES, LACES, CLOTHS, CAS STMERES, VESTINGS, HO SIERY, GLOVES, AND TRIMMINGS, Tot:other with a full and varied stook of FALL AND WINTER SHAWLS, To all of whloh they Invite tho attention or OABH AND PROMPT SIX-MONTHS BUYERS 004-1 m FMOUEL, MOORE, & CO., Non. 220 and 220 NORTH. THIRD STREET. HAVE NOW OPEN TRH LARGEST AND MOSS OOMPLETE STOOK OF FRENCH, BRITISH, GERMAN, ; AND DOMESTIC . DRY GOODS; Whey have ever Oared, end to which the attention of CASH AND SHORT-TIM SIMMS , is respeotfully nollolted. _ipr - F , or variety and comsletenees In aye tl.epart al!sVP:sTe rgr:rl;nl e'. "`"m"‘ Tara" ►rHE attention of Buyers f p solicited. FRESH FALL GOODS. RIEGEL, BAIRD, & InIPORTERB AND JODI:MIS os DRY GOODS, No. 47 NORTH THIRD STREET. Would respootfully Invite the attention of the trade to their LARGE AND WELL•BELEOTED Stook of FRESH FALL GOODS, Whloh they ere now opening.. We are daily In receipt of all kinds of fresh and desirable goods. Call and esanuno our stook. eel-3m SOWER. BARNES, ea CO,. BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS; No. 37 NORTH THIRD STREET, Lower ode, above Market Street, Philadelphia, Invite the attention of Hookasnen, and aountry mer gra In a ka t it;To y ti l irr 13 e .tit, n' ta °eft Schaal il ikl ° V3ll l 4 1) ; - gu sin Blank ttooke b r i ager, an; etattonery generally. many popular Work.. &Gong which are foliovitga: THE CENTRAL GOLD REGION; BY COL. WILLIAM GILPIN, (Leto of the U. S. Army.) ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS MAPS. One Mt C=l t ol 4 / : : s ti f o ri t O r Oj e l . .36 i end a Sham This book u pronounced the most wonderful, solentl fie, and oomprehensive treatise on the geography or our continent ever published. 'SCHOOL BOOKS: SANDERS' SERIES OF READERS. BROOKS' NORMAL PRIMARY ARITRME -115 Oa, BROOKS' NORMAL MENTAL ARITILME; T1d_..—..24 Oa. BROOKS' REY TO /RENTAL ARITHME-: eta. BY E. BROOKS, A. BY., Frotimor of Mathematics in Pepnolrma itata Ru ral &shoo]. I.:trust tzrsra for introduriou, WHITE'S OOPY-1300.1 - 04. BY T. KIRK WHITE, ' 'President of Pennsylvania Commercial Rolfes*. FELTON'S OUTLINE MAPS 'lilts aerial of SIX SUPERB 'MAPS us now ad‘ted beelmoat even school of note in the Union where geo gray,hy Is taught, and has no equal Price 885 for rap sat a r i . ; Vans, or eh) for aet of hemisphere mane alone. ang-.3m . . - BLINDS AND SHADES. 1 BLINDS AND SHADES. B. J. WILLIAMS. No, 20 NORTH SIXTH STREET', Ii the moat eatausiye Manufaoturer of VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW :SHADES. The largeat and tineat ausortmeat in the eitY, at the lowest prices. STORE SHADES made and lettered, REPAIRING promptly rittondad M. 001-tm LOO ,KING GLASSES. I 0 OKusia-GLASSES ' AND PICTURE FRAMES, Of every variety. ENGRAVINGS, 011.-I:AINTINGS, AT . NO. SSG ARCH S T } ET. GEO. P. ZtENKERT, MANI/HAMMED AND IMPOW:gR• PIOTURE, CORNICE AND ROOM MOULDINGS. oe2-am Wholesale and Retail. LOOKING-GLASSE3, POILTRAIT AND PICTURE FIWASO, ENGRAVINGS. OIL PAIDITANIUM, aer., ete, JAMES S. EARLE & SON, IMPIRTERS, MANUFACTURERS, IYHOLE BALE AND DETAIL DEALERS, EAXLES I GALLERIES, Sit O.II2BWNWN STREET, MMM SPiORT IN 0 GOODS. GUNS. VP, IV:VOLS. SKATES. &e.. PHILUP WIL,9ON ik MANUFAOTIUKHRS OY ih'IPEIRIOII OUNd, Importers and Drat. b , in FINE NUNS AIM SHOOTING TACCELE. 01110,E1IT VATS, BALD, &s., BASH-MALL IMPLEMBNWP SKATES OF EVERY VAIKIETY. FINE FISIIINO !I'AIJKLE, Kif TEE LIINVEST PRICES, 492 DHESTNITT STRI2 HARDWARE. MO ORE, HENbZEY . it CO. ARE NOW OPENING TpitElß FALL STOOK, VIP HARDWARE. • 4G fk LARICRTS and 410 COMMERCE Of/TIBET.- infils-5 ID M.o. / 010 EIEGGIM KEROSENE OIL. pORTLAND KEROSENE OIL 1 n order to meet the oonstantly-inorassing dam, and for. this Justly CELEBRATED OIL AS AN ILLUMINATOR, toe oomparry have now doubled their louder caplet - 1 7. and ha ve from Coats xtensive works _far VP )111.1. ar tun ns Nil s it the Missed States • and a order dam e, , insure for us a oonstant guoPli. establish to the dram .nd, they have positively vetoed to establish any new as alleles, or create any aew MIMS far it Whitt. Siren What tra claim for this Oil iei UNIF ORMITY IN QUA LITY ANV KINE II3- 01 CITY OVER ALL CURER OILS. It le *Mit ely free from the ofenerve odor pepullar to al) other t "al Oils in the market. and for brillianoy es a Hat, °lei tallness, ohearnese, and safety. (having' no explosive I cropertiee we may confidently salt THE ON; L Y OIL THAT WILL GIVE GENERAL SATISFACTION. Wherevi ir it hat teen introduced ooninsinera will use no other. As there are many inferior Out told ea' Kerosene. we eautiol alert eartloular againet tieing thle trade mark. .'heneVer doubts eatst as to the. genulnenessi of the sime. reepeetfully,aelt that a sample miry be e it. to us for inspeottop. WoolWef te(l * rittothetradeaStas ' 'COMPANY'S LOWEST PRICE, and sal rams addressed to se by ffiail or othortraio trll meet ttt prompt attention. 7OOKR & tele/gents and m:sufaotureraltr rn'oßninjw.i.mri!,7oli, PHILADELPHIA, PRIDAIre‘ OCTOBER 26, -11360. (ri,) r t FRIDAY, OOTOBER 26, 1860 Notices of New Books. WABHINGTON Invrao's Wonsrs.--Wo have al ready had ocoasion to bestow warm ootiwnendation upon the National Edition of Irving, now bolog la med by G. P. Putnam', Now York. The lateattvo lame, just published, is the drat of the Life : end Voyages of Columbus., to be completed in three volume. It gives its hero's onreor, from hie to the tall of 1491-, when, mind and body bothlx• hanated by anxiety and toil, he returned fo fps. panicle, lifter having. discovered Jan:Mica. This was after he had completed his second voyage Pram Spain. Tho narrative of the disoovery of the New World, and of the difficulties which Columbus 16,1 to battle with, before hie plans were adopted, Is written in .frving's most natural and impremivs manner. The volume is richly illustrated. There , are two engravings on stool—a portrait of Cohuh.. bits, and Wilkie's picture of him showing his plans et the Convent of La Rabida, The engravings on wood, reduced fah chalice of the original, which' were lately reproduced in Mr. J. Jay Smith's second volume of " historical and Literary Curi osities," inolude.deslgna from Theodore Do Bry's, 'remarkably curious Voyages, and other rare Worko —namely, Portrait Mid Autogi'aph of Columbus; departure on his first voyage, and taking leave of the Ring and Queen ; Columbus and tho Rgg; Co lumbus on the deok of his ship; a Caravel under sail; the Ship of Columbus; Inside. Hyspania, or Bt. Domingo; the building of Fort Isabella; the Arms of Columbus; a Medal of Columbits;, his house at Genoa ; Galley coasting the Island of Hispentale, supposed to have bean skotahed by tho Great 'Admiral himself. These engravings coml. dorably enhance the value of the work by inerce. sing Ito interest, This edition of Irving is on tale by S. Hazard, Junr., Chestnut street. Pruners BACON'S Warms —The mond volume of the Literary and Professional Works of the great rranois Bacon (which is vol. Xtl'of his complete worke, edited by bpedding, Ellis, and Heath, in London), has been published by Brown Sr Taggard, 13oston. Fees of the choicest library editions of great author?, no matter whore published, aro equal to this, with its mast binding and tine paper, besides being steroot:iped and printed by Houghton, at the famous Riverside Press. This volume liar been especially edited by James Spedding, H. A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who has closely collated and revised the text, translated the per- tiono written in Latin, and annotated wherever necessary. It is worthy of notice, by those who, from obstinacy or ignorance, still use the into Lord Boon, that in this, the latest and best edi tion, by soma of the best scholars in England, Francis Bacon is used always and Lord Bacon not once. They know bettor than BO to miscall him, Lord Vend= he was; Viseount lat. Alban Le was; Lord Bacon he was not. Thin volume oon- tains, with translations, Bacon's Eulogium upon Henry Princo of Waloa and the obaraotora of Julius and Augustus Otesar— , the original Latin, with translation. A. 160" Amendments and' Corrections inserted by Bacon in a Manuscript Copy of Corn don'a Annals. Then follow, prefaced b'y a carious bibliographical notice' by Mr. Spedding, iho "Essays or Counsels, Civil and Moral," pub• lished from 1597 to 1025 (tho year before his depth,) which exhibit the earliest and the latest fruits of Bacon's observation in' that flold in '.bleb Ito raise bas boon most approved by universal and undiminished popularity." These fitly- eight Emu's, co wise. and so eloquent in their simple yet terrible diction, 0000py the greater portion of the volume, end the Editor nem traps- . toted the Latin quotations and added some nests eery notes. The original title-page, poblished an. der the author'a eye so soon before his demise, states these 'Campo to be by '• Francis Lo. Vein lam (not Lord Bacon) Viscount Ct. Alban." There is an Appondix to tho. Essays, containing a Fragment of an Essay on Pomo ; Reprints of , the first edition of 1597, containing only ten, ind„of.. the second edition of 1012, with thirtrnight Fs says, and two Essays attributed to Bacon 'Without authority ; but, notwitlastantling some similarity of style, marked by Mr. Spedding as spurkirts. There is, also, Bacon's treatise De Sapientart ire tentin, itself a curiously learned hook, the transla tion of which will appear in a faturo volume., 'ln page 374, as it seems to ns, the words T/ti ji'issaff upon the Aolerrre, should read ':Thn fjie eater'_ Thowrong placing of a spare hao eaused,4b*.er•- ror. Mr. James Maloney, 4dB Walatit.-""atreak is the sole agent for the sale of this edition of Ilsooo. HOUSEKEEPER'S EIRDEOLOPEDIA.—Airs. E. P Haskell has written a book bearing this title, do• voted to the instruction of hengekeepers on Cooking and Domestic Economy It sauteing nearly five hundred pages crown mimo, making a handsome volume. A very good book it is. For our own part, out of over a more of volumes, the chief fault of which is that they can be used only by persons who had much money to spend on the table, we have hitherto found none so entirely eatiefaotory as Soyer's Standard Cookery for the People, pub lished. by Charles Desliver, for twenty-five cents or thereabouts. Mrs. Haskell's, a much larger book, in somewhat in Sayer's plain and prsotioal manner, but takes in a great many details (as to housekeeping, gardening, the tick room, care of infanta, made wines, and miseelinneons mattere,) which Sayer did not touch upon. Her advise about housekeeping is very sensible, end her receipts for preparing, making, and cooking a vast number of dishes appear exact 1113.1 not extravagant. Silo even shows how to lay a table, and gives lists of 'athletic nceoesary not only in the kitchen, but in every room in tho house. The two pages upon cold dinners and lunches will save a world of thought, doubt, and anxiety. In the forty pages which im mediately follow, Mrs. Haskell shows how to cook, dry, preserve, put up, and hermetically seal all sorbs of fruit, so that they can keep good for years. lier plans fur these results are now first male pub lic. The beak, we should add, is American in all its appf:letione, and not an English reprint. We no ti ce a few omissions, applloable to this country. Pumpkin ectup, f a .e example, so much used and liked in France, and atuael. heart, roasted or baked, whioli the middle classes :q England much Ofreg, front its cheapness and pleasant _ I I3V . Or, the remains making a savory hash for the next :.!ey's dinner. Neither Is there any mention of terrapin, a titles which Proseer'a cookery has elevated to the dignity of an " institution " of this city. We should have liked, also, to have soon the Isiah reetiipt for cooking potatoes, with their jackets sit. There is a full Index to this volume, which, however, by no means enu merates all the subjects, and might be much bettor arranged than it is. Notwithstanding these little drawbacks, our verdict is that Mrs. Haskell's book really i.e a Cyclopedia of Cooking and Domestic Economy for husbands as well as for wives. Seri ously Plinking, we believe that it might advantage. ousiy take the place, in ladies' sehools, of math menthes and such rovers studies, which, in about ono Instance out of ten thousand, are ever remem bered, continued, or understood after tho fair din °Joie bids farewell to the aohool room. We advo cate the acquisition of useful rather than of useless knowledge. Mrs. Reekell'e book is on sale at Ha zard's, in Chestnut street. W. A. Townsend & Company, New York, have j„.i . issued a leash of books for young people. Th eo volumes aro illustrated with numerous wool ougravitta;, of morn than ordinary merit, and may be described ,ea highly entertaining and Instruo- See. " Famous Bl'sva i and how they became Great Mon," con t a i ns t we ,„*v.four biographies, Foreign and American—the leiter including Daniel Web• star, BerJamin Franklin, Di'. Ham, Henry Clay, Nathaniel Bowditch, Oliver Eyeing, „Robert Fulton, Amos Lawrence, Stephen Girard, X. J. Audubon, an :Roger Sherman.—" The White Eleptent," by Wißieea i)alton, Is a romance of the Burman Em pire, full of exciting ineidente. " The War Tiger," by the some sulker, is a tale of the last Tartar Cenquest of Chine, The Appletona have ptildished the ' , First Greek Book," which is at, mum a Gra,;ntuar and an Intro ductory Greek Reader, with notes nrd vocabularies, by Dr. Al beet Ilarknoss,ProfffAiri if c,. reek In Brown University. This book ,bas the etAt [ening morit of , eimplicity. It layr me elements of this leuguage I .%efore the render, divested, as much aapoisible, of CZ= d,•y rules and forma. It is so arrangod that thorn tab o know Latin grammar can instantly apply to the Groek the prinoiplee and rules trLioh are com mon to both langungos. It IE, what the Seetoh would call "a solf-contninod" book, combining GrammtrX, Doleolua, and Lexicon. It la on solo by Hazard, tThestnut street. The Boston publishers, Brown dt Taggard, have sent us Dr.*Ware's "Philosophy of Natural His tory," prepared on the plan, and retaining por t Hone, of the work of William Smellio, of burgh. The work, which has been very popular it t the schools of England and. the United States, lit a boon in e manner recast, in acoordanoe with tW s vastly extended information which modern ra n* rah and observation have aconmuloted respect tag, the animaloroatlon. It is not so much a salon tito and teohnical Treatise upon Natural History, E wa popular Inttednotion to its general principles. The merit of the book, with its handsome typogra phy nd illustrations, adapts it for a companion in the sit tidy, as well as in the school-room. ea. Evans sends us, from Ticknor t Fields; Captain Mayne Reld's last book, entitled "Odd • Peoples," which describes eightcon different singu lar pees of men. This is the author's edition. The book, (hough true to the letter, is as varied in ' adventure ae, a romance. Two other Juvenile works are on our table, pub lishdbY Appletona, and received from B, Hazard. Tbey belong to the popular "Night:cap" series, written by a lady whose sobriquet is " Aunt Fanny." Both volumes have neat engravings. " The Little Night-cap Letters" are adapted to the comprehension of children from seven to nine years , old; and "The Fairy Night caps," which closes the series, is fanciful and smusing enough to ,please children who havo passed into their teens. From T. B. Peterson t Brothers we have neat editions of " Iloyle's Games," from the last Lon don edition, with the addition of thirty-five games, mostly American, now first published. The trea tises on whist, cribbage„baelrgammon, and chess are very full and olonr. A reference to "Hoyle" will deride many a bet and out short many a dis pute. We have " Rambles of Fudge Tumble, or The Love•serap OS of a Lifetime," with soveraloostsely executed wood outs, published 13y F. A. Brady, New York. A poorer book we have rarely met. Briefe an eine Freundin," published at Mato: burg, and sent to us by F. Loypoidt, foreign book seller, Chestnut street, contains a number of Let tere, from 1844 to 1853,,wripenhylho late Vern hagen von Ens°, the correspondent of Alexander von Ifttraboldt. Tho lettere In this volunta,mvi dontly not written, for the press, and therefore more 'natural and easy, relate principally to lite gry subjects; and 'Mere especially to Antographr, which Varnhagen was a notable goßector. - The opinions upon popular ,pglish and 'Amorleatt • ifooke are these of a Mg* educated man and eon elide oritio. • • • itudd & Carlofon, Now Yoylt, h;.ve got up, in a neat the poetical brochure, by Edmund O. Stedman, author of " The Diamond Wedding," ,Wiriehlately appeared, with illustrations by 'Ste phens, in Tranio Fair, bearing the title of "The 'Prince's Ball. As a pees de eiPeonstaiice, thin is `alone° apropos and clover. Mr. Stedman rattles bfr his rhymes with great feallity and effect, and chows himself a wit as Well as a satirist. Tho Royal Progress is fleet described ; thon the prepa rations for the Ball; and lastly the Ball itself, with its Imps and mishaps. The illustrations aro as amusing an the text.—Prom the same publish ers wo have a volume of Poems, entitled " sya , tranda, a Legend of Old Orange." had the story boon told, with equal ability and fooling, in any ether measure than that of "Hiawatha," its SIMICES might be counted upon as certain. As it is, most readers will consider it only an imitation —which it Is not, hut an original legendary and historieal tale. Both volumes aro on sale at Ha. nerd's. DuArnim Howl Portman' GALLEar.—From A. Brown, Boston, agent for the Illustrated News of th,e World, we have the eleventh quarterly part of the Drawing-300m Portrait Gallery, containing memoirs and portraits of the following distin guished persons : Earl of Aberdeen, formerly Prime Minister of England ; Lord Wodehouse, Undor•Sooretary of State for Foreign Affairs ; William Chambers, of Edinburgh, founder of cheep literature In Groat Britain ; James Wilson, lately deceased, Minister of rinatoo In India; Rev. W. W. Vhampnoys, Canon of St. Paul's Cathedral, London; Sir C. E. Trocelyan; late Governor %ne rd of Madras, and brother in-law of Lord Macau. Say; the late Robert Stephenson, engineer of the Britannia Tubular Bridge, in England, and the VietOria Bridge, over the St. Lawrence, near Montreal; thei - Ray. J. C. Miller, D. D., Rector of Birmingham; the late M. T. Baines, formerly editor of the Leeds Mercury, the leading provln -4.1 journal of England, nod Prosidont of rho Poor- Law Board; the Rev. 0. IL Spurgeon, the well.' known Dissenting preacher; the late Measlour nation, the well-known chef d'oreltestre, who vialteti Amoeba In 1553; John Walter, M. P., principal proprietor of The Times newspaper; and Madame Nantier•Didioo, who, as a contralto vocalist, ranks next to Alboni. The memoirs are fell and :lc:curate, and the portraits have been engraved from photographs executed expressly for this Gallery, The price of these thirteen Is a dol lar 411(l a quarter, or, sent peat free with the Rl:a -tm-4d .IVern.r of the World, roe thirteen wake from the date of subseriptien, only two dollars. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL —The Cleveland Plaindealer, in a burst of edi terieltmtbusiasm, says : " The average Demooratie vote en the :State ticket at the Into election was 190,000. This is ewes 16,00 more than ever was pied in the-State. The vote for Smith, Jed, e. on the name' ticket, was in round numbers 200,001111 This w . otti . hue been polled not with the help, as formetly, of a Democratic Administration, but' in the teeth of Re opposition. Hoorah for the inaor ruptllde and ininnahle Demooraey of Ohio!" A pleasant incident of the ball given to the Prince by the Bostonians was the interview be. tween his Royal Highness and Alias Roomer, the sculptress. Ae Mies Homer, in company with Mr. Everett, approached the Prince for presentation, the latter turned and, recognizing her at once, anticipated an Introduction by greeting her warm ly and expressing his great pleasure at meeting her again. Ile geld that little " Puck " (ordered by him some time since) now adorned his rooms at Oxford, and still called forth the admiration of ell wile clew it. After a pleasant chat, Miss Roamer promenaded with Lord Lyons. A correspondent of the Herald Bays " Vir ginia appears to bo making ready for some overt military demonstration. Not only is her Gover nor taking steps to arm the militia of the State, but through the proper authorities an order has been given to Col. Ries, of Philadelphia, for a quantity of his newly invented explosive bomb. shells, represented as the moot destructive agent of its kind known." By the way, who is Colonel Rice, of Philadelphia? —The Washington correspondent of the New York Tones says: "The lien. A B. Meek closes his campaign speeches at this point, and returns home. Be ridieulea the idea of Sanders having seriously offered to Mr. Yancey the Vice Presi dewy on the Douglas ticket, and thinks the edi tor of the Constitution has been badly cold' by Mr. Baxter." —Hon. Isaac B. Redfield, having boon on the Supretne Bench of Vermont just one quarter of a century, and for the last ton years its Chief Justice, has deolinad a resolution. —The correspondents of the New York papers speak of Bunker Bill as " the first battle•gronnd of the American Revolution." The historical knowledge of the New Yorkjourntrilets is nearly as defielent as their syntax and etymology. It is now beginning to bo understood that, in despite of rumors and assertions to the contrary, Senator Seward Is a oandtdate for re•olection to the United States Senate from New York. The Lyons (New York) Repuldtcan says: " Remember that every vote east for John S Lsmoreaux is a vote for the re.eleotion to the United State's Senate of that fearless champion of human liberty, William 11. Seward. Remember that every vote cast against him is the same EIS a vote against the gallant Senator." —Captain Hancock, with a Greek for courier, has pioneered a camel express from San Diego, California, to Port Mojave. The man started on a oinle camel on the 21st ult. —The Washington correspondent of the 1 10 71[1 says: It is understood here that Gan. Lone will not return to Oregon to reside, but will go back to the Old North State,' and seek the old roof tree. lie has been put out, and prefers to stay aut." —Tho following note, says tho New York Even tng Post, is said to have boon picked up on the City Hall Step To the lion. Fernando Wood, illayOr of Now Yoz k : •' eta In answer to your kind inquiry If the Prince enjoyed his visit to your ait9, I have the pleasure to inform you that his Royal Highness bore it exceedingly well, "I have the honor to be, Jro., ,to., " NEWCASTLE." —The mother or Hon. John Richman died at West Chester on Wednesday. PRESENTATION Or TILE CREDEETIALS OF UEN, NEI. An MINIRTZU. Or VENE,EITELA.—On Satur day, General Paez presented Lie totters of ore donee as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni potentiary of Venezuela to the United States. No was received by General Cass In the State Depart ment, end prersnted to the President. Gen. Peer said the government of Venezuela bad appointed him their minister plenipotentiary to the Govern :atilt of this Republic, over which his Excelhug no worthily prestded, and ho had the honor to pro sent to his Excellency his letter of orodenoo. In compliance with the orders of his Government, ha hod the satisfaction to assure his Exec,llonoy of the unanimous disposition of the people and Govern ment of his country to continue this friendly rela tions happily existing between the two Republics, and of their most Amore desire for the health of his Eriellenov. The President answered that It wee very satis factory for him to receive General Peer as envoy extraordinary and minister Plenipotentiary of Ve nezuela, the United Stites being always happy to • cultivate the friendship of the South American Republics. No better envoy could have been chosen than General Pees, who has alwayi been considered the friend of the United States, and whose distinguished merits have made him so con glonous. General Paez then Introduced Senor Camaohe as his soorotary, and, after some friendly remarks, bade adieu, and went to pay, with his secretary, the customary visits to the Secretaries and the di plomatio corps. Gen. Pees resides at New York. Senor Gernache has boon the consul of Venezuela at New York till he accepted the appointment of secretary of legation. DYAS, a magistrate of lleathetown, Ire land, TFOS fired at on the 23d of September, on hie way to the ohuroh of Athboy, to atund prayer. lle had hie daughter with him; soma of the grains hat were lodged in her bonnet. wit PRESIDENTIAL CANVASS, If. V. JOHNSON ON THE UNION Mr. Seward Deprecates the Disunion Cry Mr. Itreektorldge Answerq the Norfolk questions. CATECHISING • YANCEY IN CINCINNATI A Union meeling was held at cooper Institute, Now York', on Wednesday evening, in the coque of which speeches were made yIL V. Johnson, of Georgia, and Leslie Coombe, of Kentucky. WILL THERE BE ATTS3IPT 'AT' SECRIFISION IS 1aNgoLI:1 IS zuleczeh? r Mr. Johnson said: "I profess to no peculiar sagaolty as a, political pilot. But I think I see our proud old ship of State tossed on the ocean of pc- Mfrs, with evidences of danger all around her, and .if I come to you as a friend to point out the don. gar. and if possible to load you to a haven of safety, you ought not to charge me, my follow-countrymen, with seeking to dishonor you, by appealing to your fears. Applause.] Rather give me credit for an honest purpose of endeavoring to :each your no bler emotions of patrlolio devotion to our ooranion country. Is the 'Union in danger? [,' tre."l- It loin 'danger, my countrymen, if You believe that there is danger of:Lincoln's' eleation. [Cries of tio danger of that."] I would rather see the reaUlt so than to hear talk 'about it , Buts Lan., nounoe before yon, my follow•gountrymen, that die election of the ftop,ubl i loonoandldato to the presi ' dopey of these States will put, our Urtion,m peril. I speak it ealirtiy`, deliberately', with measortd and well.siudied phraseology, and I mean what say. Understand me, however. do not mean to have it inferred from there remarks that I am among those who advocate the dissolution of tho, Union. from the more not of the election of a Republican candidate. I state distinctly that Ido Doi' regard ands a result as a sufficient cause for the , dissolu tion of them States. [Applause Ido not say that none of the SOuthorn States will not regard the ciliation of the ItOpublicarioandidato as a suffialent cause of secession. Icannot fay so with asiuranee. What are say. poor opinions, if adverse to the con trolling majority of the people ofiny State or of any ono of tho Southern States?. In the South, per ticularly in the cotton States, there Is a large body of intelligent, chivalrous, elevated, patriotic, true hearted men, that believe the election of the Re publican candidate will ben sufficient cans' for the dissolution of the Union. And I tell you, my fel low-countrymen, that in the event of the election I of Lincoln the proposition will be distinctly made to the Southern people, and Ivo will have a hard, I bitter, end animated contest in the South on this very question. And when I announce to you my position,l have no authority to say that the majo rity of the Southern States, especially the cotton States, or a majority of the people of come or one of theca States, will not resort to an act of teens sion from the Union. IMI=I The Union is in danger ! I desire to preserve it; I will resist its overthrow as long es I can. But I am a Southern man, and believe the institutions of my section to be right. We do not interfere with you, and we ask you not to interfere with us. I am a slaveholder. I believe it le right in my seo tion—[cheers]—l do not wish to deceive you. I would ask for this right arm to he palsied, and my tongus to ()leave to the roof of my mouth, rather than stand hero and abate one jot or tittle from tho constitutional rights of my people to pander to the prejudince of any audienoe in the world—pond applausej—and yet, while I avow these sentiments, I believe and trust that this poor heart does cherish a suitable regard for the Union of the States. [Cheers .1 SENATOR SEWARD ON TILE DISUNION AL6RItil Senator Seward delivered a speeds!' at Bing hamton, Now York, on Wednesday evening.' Ia the course of his address ho deprecated all at tempts at creating an alarm for the safety of tho Union, as if the Union must not condi" with the temper of the times, or bonid not be preserved by say bustle against the rising neoariathd or svolal lito. Those alarms which same from within the South, were absolutely opposed ti tho spirit of the Declaration of Independence Itself. Could it be that all parties of the Oonfederuay should take a ground so absurd as that now assented by the Democracy, and yet that no now panty should arise to cheek them? But that party had arisen, and was the Republican party Look at the isaue3 those Demo crats tendered. They declared themselves in fa vor of removing the Inditms 2 and vet, with an in consistency that proved their selfishness, insisted on replacing them by negroca. It were better, a thousand times, to leave the Indians alone, and take care of them, than harass the country with this cry about the African. 'To avert the calami ties which the Democratic party had - settled on, the Republican party was formed, and its forma tion was due to an exigency which required of all mon who bad the interests of the country at heart, to arouse themselves, and do the patriotic, work imposed upon every citizen of the Confederaoy by dangerous condition of public affairs. =PORTANT LETTER PROM JOHN C. SRECRINRIPOE— RE ANSWERS TELE nonromr QUESTIONS,'APTER (From tee R ehraond Whig, Ontobey 24.) - In the Albemarle So titlacn, published at Eliza beth City, North Carolina, and in its issue of Fri day lost, the Igth, we flud a short letter from John C. Breckinritige to Dr. Cahoon, the Mayor of Ele zahoth City, wide!' is a beauty and wonder indeed. It appears thnt tho aforesaid Dr Cohoon, anxious to obtain a reply to the Norfolk questions, and no thing daunted by the iil cantos 01 the Breokinridgo elector for the Norfolk diettiot, nadertook, by him solf, the peculiar task of pumping an answer out of the distinguished leader of the Disunion forces, and has actually succeeded in drawing forth from Mr. Breokinridgo an epistle of greet magnitude and marvellousness. We agree with the editor of the paper aforesaid, that the eminent incense of the aforesaid Dr. Cohoon, in unsealing the lips of poor Breckinridge, hes immortalized hie name, and hencleforth he will be known so the man who zueoeeded in extracting an answer to the Norfolk questions from Jove O. Breoltinridge. The follow log is an entreat from Breekinridgo's letter to Dr. Cohoon, as we find it published in the So lithron, newspaper LEXINGTON, Ky., Oot. 5, 18E10. Dasr. : lours of the first instant has hems received. The questions you ask, are answered in my enolosed specch. "I ESTEEM . MR. YANCEY lIIGILY, AND STAVE KNOWN BIM LONG AND FAVORABLY Mr. Breokinridge is not Mr. Yancey. " I love the Union, but the South hatter. If eleoted, the Union under my oaro shall never be disseminated. Yours, respootfully, Jon:r C. BRECKINIIIDOF.." "Dr. J. T. P. C. Commx, E. City, N. C." In commenting on the foregoing, the editor of the Southron nye " The letter has been shown vs, franc which. we took the above extract In the above extracts, we have quoted the language of Mr. B , I.es - bat/In. What Mr. Dreckinridge means by the concluding paragraph in his letter, we are scarcely able to comprehend. We think that a gentleman who aspires to fill the high and respon sible office of Chief Executive of the United States, ought to bo competent to express himself in an in. teltigent manner. Why did not Mr. Breckinridge declare, that if elected, under his care the Union should not be disunited. That would have been eo plain, that the wayfaring Dian, though a fool, could not have erred therein. As it is, we think it exceedingly foggy; and, furthermoro, wa think Mr. Breeklaridge an exceedingly fuggy candidate Ito does not intond bis real sentiments to be known. "Now, we would suggest to Dr. Cohoon to write again to Mr. Br eottinridgo, and endeavor to suer• fain whether or not he means that if elected, the Union shall not be "disseminated," as he wrote it, or whether he meant to say, " the Union shall not bo disunited" in the event of his election. By the timo all answer is received, perhaps the election will be over " 13= Bon. IV. L. Yancey delivered a long address in Pike's Opera Douse, at Cincinnati, on Saturday eve ing last. Tho following was as interlude in his ad dtess. Mr. Yancey said : I defy a man to point to any ease of the South injuring the North. What pro party of yours—what institution of yours have we ever assailed? What privilege of any of your old zens have we ever assailed ? [A voice—. Freedom of speech.") We have assailed freedom of speech— Whore? Name the place where? Name the not. Where ! tSoree confusion ensued in the audience, and there were (sties of "Turn him out," in refer ence to the man who had made the remark. Thera _were also cheers and hisses, which ceased on Mr Yancey's requesting that no man might be turned out. lie then resumed.) Nobody can point to any act. Nobody has ever assailed free speech. EA voice—" Sumner.") Tho South assailed Sum ner? No, sir. Au individual in the South did that, but that is not the South. You have Indivi duals here who, when a man undertakes to tell them actnethivg they don't like, they knock him down. Do yeu call that putting down free speech, because some bully knocks a man down? All these little Individual eases aro not bound on the community, and I defy any man to point to any act of the South ne a community or by a repro. suntative of the entire section; which would trench upon any of your privileges. On the contrary, we have done utuoh for you. TREASON IN THE CADDIE?. Tho Now York Sun saps: "It is said that Mr. Cobb, Secretary of the Treasury, has not only been personally solicted, but written to, in one cane, by an earnest Democrat, during his visit to this city, to nso his inflection to harmonize matters in some of the Congressional districts. To those appeals Mr. Cobb, it is alleged, replied that he would not Interfere in New York politics, adding that ho was indifferent as to the result of the election of Congressmen, insomuch as ho was for secession in the event of Lincoln's election, whether his party had or had net a majority In the next Rouse of Representatives. Perhaps, Mr. Cobb Is now rich enough to stcedo to Europe or elsewhere, but his disunion sentiments have produced a bail feeling among the party leaders in this city. He cannot now carry a good eoporars guard after him even in his own State of Georgia." 'HO ARM DIRUNIONISTS 9 A Southern correspondent of the World says : ‘‘ Tho number of real disunionists who, in the matter of prinoiplo are so, is very limited, being almost entirely confined to the class of woalthy, hot.blooded , and aristocratic: slaVeholders, of which ohms, however, there aro many who are as loyal to the Union as any are. The hot bloods, from their eduostion and position, are able to make a great noise, and, to a certain degree, to control the bal ance of the people; but when the question of dis union comas up for praotioal notion, they will bo found without a party. Yet, the most noisy and troublesome are those political gentleman who, for the salts of aloe and power, foment the political fooling for that only end, and, having no moral courage, would never dare stand before a people whoa° best feelings outraged, should at last tri umph. That the "South " should permit them selves to be outraged in their rights by the " sortb," or vire versa, is a matter OM cannot be desired or expected ; but in a country with eo TWO CENTS. diverse interestens ours has, there 10 a ooniliat of interests which "should be tempered. by mutual concession, and neither party should call such, g ivin i! , °"s a subuil,ssion to °forage ;lon the oon intere trary, sit. " t la a Tirtue to make mutual sacrillees of Proceedings of City ,Councils. TIM PUBLIC BUII - ,BINGS Quo ertou. The regular stated meeting of dohnells was held yesterday afternoon. SELECT . COUNCIL, Petitions were presented for the paving and're -pairing of,pertein atreetS. , A communication was received from the Penn sylvania Railroad: Oomphrly, asking that the rail way:tracks in Market mulct be put in good order. From Eleventh street to the ,7 Sohuylkill the track is so bad thht it will, require $5,000 to. repair it. Referred to the Committee on Rai{remit. THE PURLIC 'BI7ILDINGS: Mr. NEAL amid& to take up the subject of the public buildings, and that the CoMmittee of the tYbole be discharged from theeonsideration of the subject, which was agreed to. The resolution offered by Mr. Nur, two weeks ago, to advertise for proposals for the erection of a ftre-proof building, to harmonize in taste with the Watt House tiiillding,nnd the - amendment of Mr. Fox .thereto, to which Mr. DRAYTON made 8 further •entendroente providing for 'advertising . for prepo bats 'for the erection of a Are-proof building on In denendenoe Square, at • a east ndt •, i iacceedierg *350,000 was,taken .! )141.1, r l iriVETZEnrroL4the 'AZAR r 10,14, ;Colo& TriftWtehrtMigetir — Voirti of Trustees from the old . thirteen States, for the eruption of f~ monument in -Independence Square, 'teCOmmeinortite the Declaration of Independence, transmitting the'predeedineof the nrootingpf the Board of•Trudtees; hold.in this city In June lat. gThe cpmmunication concluded' with this ,tan.. unge : • With 'other sites at command sufficiently welt adapted to the acadminodation of the effiees of the city, it roast ever be a reproach to its public spirit, if the temporary convenience of the present generation of its citizens should be deemed of more moment than ari enduring. testimonial of the act that gave birth to the nation.", ' ,Mr. WETRERILL then offered an amendment to the amendment of Mr. Drayton, providing for locating the buildings on Penn Square. . This was .designed to test the sense of the chamber upon the question of location. There 1981 very little debate. Mr BRADFORD favored the amendment of Mr. ,Wetherill, and Mr. Neal and Mr. Fox opposed It. Both the latter gentlemen denounced the act of Mr. Waterman in sending the proceedings of the board of trustees of the Independence Monument to Council, alleging., thet he did it without the authority of the body of which he was president. Mr. Neal said if Councils had agreed to give the trustees 60 feet of ground in, the centre of the spare, they did not intend to surrender the whole of it to them. Mr. WETIIEIIILL warmly defended 001. 1 1 / ' 4ter man contending that his action was - proper Id the matter. The vote was then taken upon the amendment of Dlr. Wetherill, which resulted as follows: IN PATOIS OF PENN BQUABB, YEAS—Messrs. Bradford, Craig, Davis, Ginnodo, /Mclntyre, Borman, Riley, Smedley, Wetherlll-9. OPPOST.D TO PENN SQUARE. NATd - --ZINELITS Benton, Dickson, Dougherty, Drayton., Ford, Fax, Jones, Lemon, Moi!akin, Megary, Neal, Wallace-12. to the amendment wee lost. The President, Mr. Cuyier, asked to be excused from voting, which rctinest was granted. A vote woo then taken as to what part of Ind°. pendence Square, the building should be placed upon, with the following result : IN ' , Avon Or UM TtAiNIIT-STREUT ?AM. YEAS—Messrs. Beideman, Benton, Dickson, Drayton, Ford, Fox, Jones, Lenten, Mclntyre, MeMakin, Neal, Wallace-13 AGAINST IT. NATS—Messrs. Bradford, Craig, Davis, Gizmo do. Allegory, Norman, Riloy, Smodley, Wotherill ro the Walnut•atreet front was decided upon. Mr. Clayler, president, was again excused from vetlog. Mr. Pox objeoted to Mr. Oilyler being excused. as Mr. C. coutd not claim that he was a member of the late Public, Building Commission , as it had ex pired. Mr. Curran sold the members of tho Commis sion did not think so, as they had held a meeting only this morning. This announcement caused sauce surprise. Mr. Nam. moved to strike out the sum of 8860,- 000 for the cost of the building ; end insert S4CO3- Mr. Got :sono thought that this did not look like going On in on economieal manner, by jumping up $50,000 at a time. If they went on In this way, nobody could' tell bow much the inaliding watsto cost. He thought $lOO,OOO a pretty large suns for building a " cotton factory " The allusion to " cotton factory " brought out Mr. Neal again, who charged that Mr Ginned° did not want to see any buildings go up unless they went on Penn ',genre. The amendment, to increase the sum to $400,000, was agreed to, after a short debate. „ Mr. River, of the Twenty-fourth ward, moved as an amendment that the proposed building be two hundred feet long, two hundred feet wider and fifty-seren feet high Mr. R. said that his amendment comprised, the dimensions of the buildings considered by; the public Buildings Commission to be necessary+ for the Recommit ation of the courts and publia offices. These gentlemen wore competent to judge of what was necessary, and he believed that nothing less than buildings of this capacity would be sufficient. Ile woo in favor of putting up suitable buildings when we do build them, and he thought Penn Square was the beet place to put them on. We were to build for futurity, as well as for the pre sent. If the buildings were put on Independence Square, a generation would not pass before the city would be compelled to remove them. Tho resolution, as amended, then passed Brat and saaend readings , but on third reading, two-thirds being rtquired to pass it on the same day, it wee brought forward. The vote on its final passage stood—yeas 14, nays 9. TIM RESOLUTION AR AMENDED The following is the resolution an it passed on se cond reading: Resolved, That the Commissioner of City Property be, and he is hereby, instructed to advertise forthwith, for four weeks. in two daily Daher., for plans. speo,fion tlons, and estimates for a fire-proof building. to he elected on the Walnut-street front of Independence Square, at a cost not to exceed $44.0,060, for the courts and their attendant Mr. NEAL asked the President IF be Considered this resolution in the nature of an ordinance, which would have to be sent to the Mayor for his approval. The President said he so considered it, as it pro vided for the expeadituro of money. Mr. NEAL differed with the President, and said that on former occasions it bad been ruled that re solutions could be passed finally on two readings, and become laws, 'without the consent of the May. or being necessary. Tho President defined his decision, when Mr. NEAL said he would appeal to the Ohamber from the decision of the Ohair. The President directed him to reduce ble appeal to writing. While Mr. Neal was doing so, Mr. Cuylcr, the President, read from the journal of the Select Council of last year a case precisely which was decided under the administration of 0. P. Cornman, the late President. In that OGPO, Mr. Cuylcr appealed from the decision of the Chair upon tho same ground as Mr. Neal did now. But the Chamber, In that case, by a decided vote sustained the decision of the Chair. Mr Cuylsr now decided that the Chamber, by sustaining the Chair on the occasion he quoted, had established the rule, and it could not he altered without going through the usual form. Mr. Fox thought that, as the last Connell had decided In this way. and as this Chamber had adopted the rules of the preceding one for its government, and this particular rule had not been repealed, the ruling of the President, In the pre sent instance, was correct. Mr. 'NEAL then withdrew his appeal, and the saki eot was dropped. The resolution of Mr. Drayton will probably coma up for third reading and final passage on Thursday next. In the event of its passage, there aro sufficient members of the Chamber to defeat a loan bill to pay for the proposed building, as all loan bills require a vote of two•thirda of the whole number of members to pare them. A communication was received from high Con stable Clark, stating the number of suits instituted and the fines recovered for violations of ordinances, which showed a very inconsiderable amount. The most of the delinquents wore released upon paying the costs and promising not to violate the ordi nances in future. Council refused to allow the Green and Coates streets Passenger Railway Company to male a cer tain turnout which the company desired to make on the Ilea of their road. The Committee on City Property reported hav ing selected three designs for publio fountains for the public equates, and reported an ordinance op preprinting $lOO to Edward lareblo for the plane selected, which wore the only once presented to the committee. Passed finally. Resolutions wore passed transferring oortain items , 11 the Departments of Polite and City Pro perty. Council passed an ordinance for the construction of a culvert in the Fifteenth ward, to drain the neighborhood of the new atation.house now being meted. The City Controller woe authorised to appoint two additional clerks to examine the books of the late Receiver of Taxes. Mr. BE" TON offered a resolution that the Com mittee on Railroads be requested to inquire into the expediency of taking up the City railroad on Market and Dock streets, and Broad street, south of Market, as soon as rho new bridge of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company above ttray'e ferry is completed. Agreed. to. A resolution to release the aeouritles of Samuel P. Fearon, late Chief Engineer of the Fire De partment, was agreed to ; atter which the Chamber adjourned. COMMON COUNOIL - - - The following communications and petitions were received and appropriately referred: An invita tion to Councils to witness the exhibition of a street sweeping machine, on Chestnut street, at half past ten o'clock this morning. A communication from the Guardians of the Poor, asking for a certain op. propriation The usual number of petitions asking for lamps, &e , were received. Mr. HACKER, from the Committee on Finance, submitted an ordinance authorizing a loan to re. deem the funded debt of the city maturing in the year 1861. Resolutions directing the Werke to ad• vertise for the some were adapted. The loan to be obtained for this purpose Is about $325,000. The same gentleman presented a report, accompa nied by an ordinance, giving the commissioners power to sell certain bonde, around ronts;mort, gnges, 2to , to meet thepayrnent of the funded debt maturing in 1861. Postponed, and•ordeted to be printed for the use of members. Mr. HACKI:n ales 'submitted a resolution pro. viding for the payment of, the claims of B. G. Webb and Charles hock. neckties of Mr. W‘ta I TI - 114.1 WhICKIX PRESS.: s- - inc littaarLY Faxes wilt be sent to attlatanhere by limit (par annum, to advanced at.— ......... _ itt: . 0 Three Copiax, " 2.00 Five " " 0 IL 00 Ten " " o ......__ Twenty " ..0 (to orao addreat)2 l (l 2 :o C : Twenty Ceram or over" (to address of each subscriber.) each,._....„ —4—. 1.20 Fora Club of Twenty-one or over, we will road Eti extra Copy to the getter-up of the Club. Itar Postmasters are ragunatart to cat 11 , 11 Agent?. ft I Tax WECCEY Pnzes. CALIFORNIA, PRESS. issued three twee a Month, in time for the Califon:l a Steamers. . _ 120 S, for services rendered while Prothonotary of the Conn of Common Pleas. The claim of Mr. C. is for $66.38, for laying gas pipta,ln front of MS property. Agrteed A resolution was reoeived from the same com millet), asking the appointment of two additional temporary clerks for. the City Controller's °Mee. $266 67 wore appropriated to pay the Salaries of the clerk's for the two remaining months of this year. Agreed to. Also, a resolution releasing the suretle(of Cam nal P. _Fear.* late Chief,,Enginoor•of.tho pin Da partment. Agreed to._ A message wee redoived from Mayor Henry, stating that he had appended his signature to cer tain ordinances. - A eommunioatlon was: received. from Soloot Council stating that they had passed a resolution authorizing tho sale of the almehouse grounds. Mr. Creswell, rim the Commitleo on Gar. pre. seated a report making- certain traneferz of ap. r.ropitation•fer lighting the oily with gas. Agreed. to. Mr. Potter, from the Committee on Highways, submitted resolutions authorizing the Dep'srttnert of Highways to contract for the paving of Men. sing street, front Twenty-second to.Twentythird, In the Eighth ward; Morton greet, from:Girard avennisto Brown street, in the Eighteenth ward; and Webster street, from Nineteenth to Tvientleitt, in the First ward. Also, to notify owners of pro perty, to set their curbs and lay sidewalks oa Armat, Rittenhouse, and Chestnut, in the Twenty- Second ward, and Cambria and Auburn streets lit the Nineteenth ward. Agreed to. The joint Committee of Highways and Health, to which Was referred the proposition of A tremble Litcycou to cleanse the streets forthe sum of $50,000, With certain privileges, report that they aro of opinion that, under the not of Assembly, they hcre no authority to make said contract, and ask to bo dischargod from the farther consideration of the subject,, Agreed to. The Committee on Health submitted a report au thorizing a certain transfer to the Board of Health, to pay the Salary of a clerk, whose duty it shall be to keep a proper register of births, deaths, and marriages. Agreed to. • • Mr. MOYER chairman of the Committee on Trusts and Fires, submitted a, report recommend ing the formatimi of Bream hose companies out of ordinary hese - eon:Tanks. ' The committee express their surprise' at the unequal distances at which steam•fire engines are located in'somo parts of the city, and advise the blending of said companies together, E 0 az to run but one apparstus at a time. The present district system is considered capable of great improvement. They alto recommend tho introduction of alarm-boxes in all the engine anti hose houses. An ordinance accompnie-d the re port, which Wes road and ordered to be printed. The came committee submitted an ordinance ei• noting the weighing of eft coal purchased out of the trust fund. Agreed to. A bill was , reported from the same committee appropriating 0700, to the hope Steam Baez° , Agreed to. • Mr. 6-SWELL from the Coitimliteo'on Surveys, reported n authorizing the iteading•Bail-road Company to build dertain bridges in the Nino tenth ward, for the continuance of.their road on William and Bank streets. _Passed. - Mao, 2111 ordinance hnthorizing tbehoard a°Fur• rays to extend the lines and grade regulattor a in the Twentythird ward, from Pike street to Brides burg. _Agreed to., Also, a resolution dtreoting the repairing of a culvert 202082 Main street, in Germantown, Agreed to. CATHEIELI7OI:2I, offered a resolution instruct ing the Committee on Police to prepare an ordi nance, to be reported on the Bth of November, to provide for the batter regulation of the passenger or railroad care, and to prevent cruelty to animals employed on the some. Mr. 13.5.172 LL offered 28 an amendment that it shall be unlawful for any persons to cause to bet drawn ever.the city railroad more than ono double, or two single oars, on - one train, and that there shall be at least one• hundred feet betwoan earl. train, under •penalty of fire dollars. , Both motions wore referred to the Committee oa Police. . Mr. MaGARGEE submitted a resolution iostrzo'ing the Mayor to attend the next annual mikeiing of the stolkhelders of the Penr.erlvant._Reitroth Compapy and, vote upon the shares of stock ir k said 'ocinparY, hold by *the 'city. to prohibit the preaident and board of directors from .payieg any COMllli,B3ioll to frolght.earrlera by sald.opolt.n.Y., from Now'York and Reston, td oitieC west of Pitts burg;, an d frond cities west Of Pittsburg,i to Neve York and Boston, under pro rata nereemcnt, at rate below what is charged on the less! ar, thior.gli freight, 'ahem shipped from either railidsliinta e: Pittsburg. Mr. MILLEn asked for the reasons which indnt.•ti Megargoo to offer .the above. • . Mr. Mr.ciennan considered that the cem7. , ..r.7 were paying commission for getting freight, a d they were carrying goods nt toolow,mrate.. Mr MILLIIII did not think they, paid any commission. Fie thought Mr bieOrgeo dSeired to break up. the Pennitylventa,Rcilload Company. Mausnedsx said ho repudip!ted snot inten tion—he had nothing but a petriotts Tinrpoio. The resolution was postponed fir the present. Mr BATED nailed up the ordlesuco directing the widening of Delaware avenue, from the south line of Arch street to Ton alloy, north of Water street. Concurred in. A resolution from .Selast Connell. transferring_ certain items of appropriation to the Department or. City Property, was concurred in. The bill from Select Commit relatla'e to the pur chase of a lot of ground at Fairmount, for the hot< ter preservation of the purity of the Schuylkill water, was called up by Mr. FREEMAN The yeas and nays were, balled, bait no quorum voted. Ad journed. LEGAL INTELLIGENCE UNITED STATES CIRCUIT C . OURT—JudE , 4 Oadsralader.—Rnapp et al. vs. The Chester Val, ley Railroad Company. A deem as follows 11113 entered in this era : That the mortgage in the bill mentioned is a valid lien and charge upon the rood and property of the corporation defendapta _therein li:tendon:A, end referred to and upon the' franchise, thereof. That default hoe been made in the pnyticent of the Interest due upon the bones -secured by,soitit mort gage' as In the bill is charged. That the trustees complainants are of right entitled to enter upon and take possession of the. railroad and proeorry in the said mortgage mentioned, and to take the same into their custody and keeping and control, and are entitled to take, receive, and hold 'upon ; and for the purposes of the trust in the said mort gage declared, all the rents, tolls, income, and profits thereof whatsoever, from all persona in any manner using the same, whether by centrecz, lease, or otherwise ' and to use and. apply the panic in accordance with the Ormsby the said mortgaLro declared That the writ of injunction do issue against t"ie defendants, their agents and servants, restraining, them, and each of them_ from interfering and inter meddling in any manner whatsoever with the true raises in the said mortgage mentioned, or with the rents issuing, and profits thereof. or with their nra, control, and management - thereof, or with the re ceipts of the rents, issues, and profits thereof by the complainants, trustees as aforesaid. .• This donee is made without porejndicie to any question as to the right of the complainants, or any other party. to have the said mortgage foreclosed, or a solo had under the same, until the maturity of the bonds in the mid mortgage mentioned. and that oithcr of the parties have leave, from time to time, to apply for further orders end instructions. Not Putus—Justice Read.—This court was occupied with motions, in a number of eases. A formal withdrawal of the bill of Mr. Ketchum against the city took place. In the care of Woolston vs. The assinees cf the Merchants' Insurance Company, a preliminary junction was granted, to restrain thO defendants from negotiating certain securities In their custody. DISTRICT COURT —Judge liare.—The Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, to the nee of , &bit ltertzler, Jr ,vs George Mcgee and sureties. Be fore reportod. Verdict for defendants. Thomas Pratt vs. Aaron Conrad. An nation. m a foreign attachment, ,to. In this case ajudgmeni was obtained by the plaintiff against the brethn: of the defendant, and that gentleman entered cc. amity for a stay of execution and the defence a - az that a mortgage and grourd rent were tendered to plaintiff in payment of hia debt. Verdict for de. fondant Arthur M. Padmore es William A. While and criers An action of trespass to recover d4rnagra for injuries sustained in conscquenoe of the removal by clefondgnts of a fenoa whion had been erected by plaintiff. Verdict for defendants. Michael Grossman vs. Jacob (Impel. This was an action on four promissory notes The defence sot up that the notes were accommodation toter, and, therefore, without consideration. The pieta tiff then produced the affidavit of defense flied by the defendant, in which he set ont that while these notes were given to accommodate the plaintiff, yet upon a settlement of accounts there would be found a balance duo the plaintiff, but the amount was " less than $100." This amount seemed to trouble the (tortoni in the case, the attorney for the plaintiff claiming $99 99, that being less than $lOO, while the attor ney for the defendant claimed a verdict for his client. The jury settled the matter upon some bags of their own, and found a verdlot for plaintiff for sll' Qt. William R. Dickerson, to the use, 4,.c , vs. Pyic, Wilson, & Pyle. An action to recover a sum due Mr. Dickerson for professional servioes. Jury out. DISTRICT C lIIRT--,Tudge Ftroud.--- Mc rienry k MuSmiley, aE3igners of the IVestern ow RIM Company, ca. Franklin Fell, tr.vbre. 4c. Before reported. Verdiot for plaintiff fur $872. Commor PLuis—Judge Ludlow. The appeal from the cleelaion or the Register, in matter of the 171110 f Mrg. Arnold, wee argued yc et tarday. QUARTER SESSIONS—Judge Thompsont— This court was still engaged with the assauit and battary cans. FROM THE BRITISH PROVINCES.—By the St. John (N. B ) papers to October 10, we learn that late gales have been very destructive on tho shores of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, but no addi tional shipwrecks aro announced. The railway wharf at She(liao was greatly shattered At Cope Negro, near Halifax, the house of Samuel, McLean, boatibuilder, was, burned to the ground, and, me lancholy to relate, Mr. McLean himself, his wae, and a grandchild who was staying with them, pe. rished in the flames, their remains being dieeo vend among the smouldering embers in the cellar. Mr Caldwell has been re-eleeted mayor nf HRH. fax. The St John (N. B ) papers complain that for some putts past the °Metals of Buitoe, and other towns in New England, have taado a prac tice of sending down a number of paupers to St. John Samuel - these are quite helpless, axd soon tad their way, to the almahouse;. soma are idiotic, and after a time become inreates of thensylnin; others are broken-down thieves, burglars, &o.„ and try to, practise their old profeations.,, , ,All come, in one way or other, a burden tO the4lOmmn nity. Every year this meistreits b ll9s farm ing, but our vigilant Govormatest seems tolatint nothing wleatover about it,
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