The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 27, 1860, Image 1

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    -Y •• 4 1 441: - PRESS.
PlitAtiP onnwiya =OPTED,
' \sl e, -4 9 11 tt• W t * O .
pariesi Niff. 417 oggsrmi2 , =UT.
nexi.s
' Teratet asks zee !resit, eaysble to the Carder.
lit4tiod to Butitittitiiro out ottho City at fitinoLLAtog
Attportei.Fotnt Pocues 'reit EIGIIIT Motterte.
Tizeitleustas Iron Biz blositiot-inviriobli to ad
"ewe ko-the tims ordered.
Tlll-'WEEKLY PRESS:
lei to life*orlbere out of the City at Tann Dot.
N:LeJti lIIIVANXIIII. to Mew*. -
commissioN Houtirs.
VOW, Rawl% a nmertisoN,
• o. 'llll it T.
.CNIEUSSION KNELORANTII
FO2 WE BALM OF
PHILADELPHIA-MADE
GOODS.
WELTAINO,,COFFIN& Co.
.116 OHESTNI3T BTREITI,
hy the putter, the following deeoriptlo
AMERICAN GrOODEL
NeLINDMID MARS AND IX ONLY TAMS!!
4 1 ZUPNA MANUFACTURING CO.'S PAINTS ;
woliaD AND DROWN BERETLNGe,
•
RUXRTINOB AND DRILLS{
(fANABITAGE), WNW, AND BUMS;
CORSET „JEANS, tiItEXt3IAS, AND NAN.
' NIMNA;
CANTON PLANNELS AND PRiNTND
, WOES;
RHODE ISLAND LIMEYS;
fiaIiADELI , MIA LIMIT AND MOCKS;
KENTDOKY JEANS AND 001TONADES;
'NEGRO CLOTHS AND Katopys
marr-Won AND ONION CLOTHS ;
WAGE AND JIMMY OASSIMERES ;
BLACK AND MIXED DOESKINS;
SATIN= AND UNION OkBBIMERES;
TWEEDS. OASIIMARETIMI,
WASHING TON MILLS,
PORMERLY DAY STAYS Auto
SHAWLS of all ninon In Mat rartetr.
Embalmed and Printed TABLE 00VBIO,
MOS BEABKRB mi BROAD CLOTHS
BALMORAL SKIRTS.
puss me, end Doable and Twisted 00A133108,
64 Ski:KINN and ham ZEPHYR CLOTH&
'Dwelled and Plain Fluiligndl and OPERA FLAB
PIELL
Printedllllll CIABI4III/80.
For
THOTH:INGHAM & WELLS,
114 South FRONT street. 6114
15 LBTITLII. Stmt.
~~Tz' .~
WILLIAM YARNALL.
IMPORTER AND DEALER IN
IFIOUSE FURNISHING
(GOODS, •
- No. 1090 OILBSTNUT ISTRIAT.
, .onedlotsli opposite the Aoedemy of Fine Alto.)
TABLE C11T1.F.9.1t, OVAL. VirAITE3IB.
WOKEN TABLES. DOOR KATE,
- GLOTILEO BUXOM& &0., &o.
k `stioittroomiistititu notomtssento ate ssttionlatly
trorited to an assmlastion of this stook of Drumm
Goose. - ' ..7-fessoso
MILLINERY :GOOEY.
TAGS. KEN N EL)Y & BRO.
7 IA 9
ORESTNUT STREET, BELOW EIGHTH,
lave opened a SPUINDID AVIOKTMENT of
PRIM= PLOWER% HEAD DRUM,
YEATEER4 RIBBON% Eall,AW 000118 3
- &ND
BONNET MATERIALS,
' - • . AT.1,03 , NUM oaf-tin
MATS AND CAPS.
NEW HAT STORE.
JOHN E. FOSTER,
Mate of KO South Third street,)
Navin taken the store at
NO. 881 CHESTNUT ST.,
/geed it in enrierior *We, invitee , the attention
trfidWAND EXTENSIVE STOOK
or - -
'HATS AND CAPS.
fit fa no fel styles ere muoh sdnalted.
FURS.
FURS I FURS I
OBORGE F. WOMRA.TH,
NO& 41 AND 4(1 LICH MUM.
lles now Open
A. FULL ASSORTMENT
OP
LADIES' FURS,
To 'which the &neaten:La the Mho to tented. oc3 Ito
'CLOTHING.
KELLY & DOHERTY.
TAIL,ORS,
SI sad 93 !SOUTH FIFTH 13TREH7.
Frays IUT 11WILIVED TUEI/1
• ALL AND WiNTER
, Together with • large assortment of
AND FAIDUONABLWIMODS,
To wtfah the N*14.10 are lavitsd to immune.
myrruwwvp*TMF73
OiON)iliatsi::Tolf
r,+EORGE J. HENKELS,
fe4 WALNUT EITRZET•
e just evened 6lease invelee of
.
QUADRIILB,
1e1141313111,0, sal
ORMOLU WORE )
14111 , ,!%, he li9D toll et yen RIZIOUOZD
FIRST-CLASS CAB/NET WARE.
GEO. J. lISNIZLS,
4194 'WALNUT lITIBEIT.
Mu at
VI/BY REDUCED PRIOEB
wwortioottin the Wool, all of Now Demon
' Golf sad 'monis WWl* sarohudog. eel 4 Den
fel:
• LIARD TOLE&
-.' MOORE 6' CAMPION. I
4
_. _ -
..n0; imillotrilt itEouND !BET
411`0611ffliontotwitet them exteettore moa t BUffirMills
sure ails soeberetbrtneray o . le co
r ,
, i„,,„..,„.„,,TrYbm5,
4 .. fe mom., .or .11 wno have seed theme to
euetrior to au others.. .
, . I • mottitt eh finish of then Tablei thi-Mmsti
e • err numerous patron turogsnoot
idrilloh;l4rottieo fin ish
with the °hone* or their
8 0 4 m
I , O tt . , ---- -
..,
_. ~,_.- -OABI N E T , WA:11E11.00MB
-utz.ND TWO WREN By -I ~ -
po. id touch hAngt i tt,
our 400 rs alloys abir street,
r. , • . . . hibudelpaii.
~.s. . Me . it t l i tanN e llUßt a ki l lg dissorisi
e
I ...
, • - ... _ .. ...,. . , .•
- ,7, - .:2,,T. - SEWING IfILACIIIIKES.
Araus. BOUDOIR
I , IACHINE.
, itrfliMilFa FOR QUIIITIRO AIiD
'HZ4Vr:Y 'WOIIIC.
• 1004antbaillt las livable of re
:
-';iikit AItOSK gar gliolbiptiti.. fina
.; I et.. 14510,m0r0, Md. 0011-5 m
THE DIM — MANIIIPAOMINP AND
Ef.MiNg MACHINES
T. 14. r4.l\ll7o D rea'S
msato•TNUT etrellt
Eturznit & WILSON.
tworXxe,tl,44oHnvEs.
.itntsirrilirisifitituxi worn) rim'.
, 11101001E:'-'tu-AMOMPIAMWINCI MA,
sila
'#•••,.- Ditift Titii. ' isorsaiiii demisiidlbt
"alms 5 (10124:1 e - 1g is Aran Of
..,:-.., , #
_ _-,4).._ srat, - * PENNER."
. 1 r410 1 4:0 1 44!, .MANO.,,, *trFol - Jmus
IvirssigVar AD 1yi..114.110 LB,
5 ....z;s ',.... sis. m a n, ~
~
4- „i ... ~,, •viv , ••" i ' ,
': ,•., • „ ,
. • , • Ounurreira umaaufa t is
iVt'" ` :r).:::: t *'. 1 • : fs'imiag U
: ......
• ' 711 ~, Q .
) .... . -
4itt .st.
'-..,\\111 / 4 / 7•'- - , • 41 ,
~ • ,
~.
\ X ',/ •• I :
er i ,_. • , - .:: .tr tt
. .
~,..,„. . f.T
~
.... u ... - •:4‘ 4 4 1 ',.',.•" - I' . R i..i , : -.- tett. -I
.. .
..: 4 A t..........
, 0 01
.
, 1 ,- - ,- :.?.,.- - :- 1-----" eftsilt - .7 -4--11' i` - .'„-.,-, i,----irrir' -‘,--.'-',::'-=,:..-, • - -.---- ' gi--- • ,-..., ,
:
~........
~.
....,,.„,..„...„ t.„.4:;....,.,......„_... . , . 1..,.. ~.,
... .
i
c. )
,-
,!', -.•,:e s..r.V.Tri - ..tl, fl!
,": •=,.,—.:---
=' i ' -'-'.. .": 6e,r r - • - i - ..,4: , y ~ 'Air ' ' \ii.-..1.-5:.%,". -=', ,' A7f. ,,, .,....., 9:• ,- " , -;‘,.'r-rY2Y,' ...,,-.4.3: - '-_-_
.. , _ L__ , -V.,, --',. .'" .- . . ". 4 ' ' ' ' .. .o:- O P l' oC,l . `,.....? ''',..'. - 4 1 ' '. .: . -.' ''' 1.. --` , F:401 i i r.. , ..- „L 4 Y?,,s( drr t t.- . 4 - 7__-::: --, - --...4 , -.. . ---.....-___,....- -...
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'!.
ii
VOL. 4.-NO. 75.
SILK AND DRY GOODS JOBBERS.
WILL OPEN.
MONDAY, OOTODER BTH,
A &Web UM
FRENCH AND GERMAN
DRESS GOODS
?FLOM
AUCTION.
attontJou of our metonym* to Invited.
.TOSITUA L. BAILY.
' MOOR/TM AND 30138 ER.
No. 213 MARKET ST..
no&-tt
LAROR AND ATTRAttivE fiTOCDI
FALL AND WINTER SALES
SHORTRIDHE,
BROTHER. tift 00,
INIPORTERB AND,JOBBERB,
No, 420 MARKET STREET, and
No. 41J MERCHANT STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
Rag ra p oirZonsmi r FOREIGN and AME-
DRY GOODS.
selected with Is vteew tq_thp Women of oOn and
prompt SIX-MONTHS ' Dowers, to whioh the, incite
the sttentiotiofthe trade. V. B.—
A FULL STOOK
A miettarrinoriztotrailkw
found elerwhote.
liva.exeouted promptly, It LOWEST trlalgT
CLOAKS I CLOAKS I
TO
WHOLESALE BUYERS.
EVERY NOVELTY OF THE SEASON.
AT
ME LOWEST OAHE PIUOEB.
bierobante: own oraWrialie made as rf desired.
HENRY IVENS,
se4-11m No. 93 South NINTH (Wee.
A. W. LITTLE & 00..
BILK GOODS.
Fo. 815 MARKET STREET.
asta4m
FALL,
OHAFFEES. STOUT, & Co.
lIPORRIGN AND DOMMITIO DRY GOODS.
21-11 m No 523 MARKET STRUM
NEAR= & wour,
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY goons,
184 MARKET OTIEWL
Nat and prompt Ka-months' Buyera,,c4 roottotm
to fantail an examination of out Stook. au/34w
REMOVAL.
In eoneegaence of the destruction bs five of then'
TRW STRUT 8701 r.
YARD. GILLMORE. & CO.
•
• HAVE REMOVED
TO
NO. 610 CHESTNUT ST..
SOUTH SIDE. ABOrr MTH.
FILTIADELTRIAL,
Whey hare now open Alt ENTIRE
NEW STOCK
Or
SILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS,
SHAWLS, GLOVES, RIBBONS,
,DRESS TRIMMINGS, 4. g
*gather with IMARGE essORTMINT of
STAPLE AND FANCY
WHITE GOODS,
EMBROIDERIES, LACES, MANTILLAS, disc
Raving received but a mail portion of then
FALL IMPORTATIONS,
Prnktrs to the Are, they are enabled to thole,'
A NEW STOCK.
to whiek the, invite the attenhon of their ()Women
and Buren generally. ant-esa
WITRTS. AUSTLE,
MoVEIGH.
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS/
IR
DRY GOODS.
No. 311. MARKET atm% above TIM,
O rA W ndl a t
moTelga, PRILADIMPHIA ,
agra " . J SAViss
EL WOOD, MARSH, EG HAYWARD,
IMPORTERS
AND
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
DRY GOODS
CLOTHING.
NO, 809 MARKET SMUT.
bums.
Pall and Winter Stook now oraivlete and re% itrfor
arer rfm
PAPER KANGENIGS.
pAPF#R-HANG-ING.,
(FALL num.)
HOWELL do BOURKE,
Having removed to their new Store,
CORNER SOUR= AND MARKET murs,
Are row Prepared to oder to the Trade a large and
elegant etwortment of
WALL VAPERS.
)!ORDERS,
FAH SCREENS,
WINDOW CURTAIN 6001)5, An.,
All of the newest and beet &davit, from the lowest
priced arttole to the finest
GOLD AND VELVET DECORATIONS.
Southern and Western morohanto will do well to telt
the ostobliahroent of
/10,WElat di BOURNE )
N. D. OciltNISR FOURTH AND MARKET STREETS,
PUMADBLPHIA.
GAN FIXTURES, LAMPS, exc.
IROSENE 011 01' SUPERIOR QUA
LITY.
KIIROSEINE. or
COAL-OIL LAMPS.
CHAADELIEM3, BRAOHE/E,
riiiirmrsigarkt a r litue it
Loirr e .l6,okli WHORL
br '
WITTER'S .53 CO.,
Pa SIVNORTE EIGHTH STREET,
E E. GM. of Ptlbert,bottreso Market M 1 Aroh.
MU-m. • • -
SHOE. FINDINGS.
ISAAC 13ARTON CO..
firPoirimi AND DEALERS IN
SHOE STUFFS.
:111on ABD mount mamas, am,
LOONS, PATENT LEATLIBIL, &o.
Aleh
GOODS .FOIE CARRIAGE MASSA&
NO. SA SOUTH SECOND MEET, Misdeal&
$Ol-3m
MORE LIGHT 1
THE OAR LAMPS FM THE MILLION. nay be
Whoa at *l4 NoRTR , BROOND /Street ; 1180,000 worth
ow now in. ENO .. Mutat street , green an d Colston.
teditirladkligelithregithwittoretiFted Btateer The a . . Ltr ell ee ll ir o c r e ei Ft wO hr a ongo in nr tfe ;
tight groom WOO
(beRZNE & CO.,
No. 204 NORTH SECOND Street, above .Rsoe.
oeltelumm-te
AII T I 0 141-ORIENTAL' DETERSIVE
A-e•SOAP-41'noonedied by tbo'graistind moritid uo
OiliNcUthis studio, novatal uoytinoiplotl Junkers have
ok,iyizoitstedys In appeosanon only: and we fool it
our aty to notify the publie th at none in genuine, n
o. an rionots Annum, OA slob br
Ma. lll- wii Lit • , vAry -BAGIC MoNEONE.
MARTIN rAYLWB
wove
Am^ IsTA.TTNist ur
iauolNfeeilEdil.
• 1161161in0 - • 71117.1.11TliiLAuirayam
Ara :•SUGAA-iioo6Bariele LO.
tillariantil4lll4
THIRD STREET JOBBING HOUSES
BUNN, RAIGITEL, Ea CO.
ZIPORTSIS AND J088V.103 OF
FANCY DRY GOODS.
N 0.137 NORTH MERD STREET,
NOW OFFER TO THE TRADE AN UNUSUALLY
ATTRACTIVE STOCK OF GOODS,
COMPRISING
SILKS, RIBBONS, DRESS GOODS, WHITE GOODS.
EMBROIDERIES, LACES, CLOTHS, CAB
BIKERS% VESTING% HO
SIERY, GLOVES, AND
TRIMMINGS,
Tof ether with a full and varied stook of
FALL AND
WINTER SHAWL.
To all of whioh they Invite the attention of
OABII AND PROMPT 81X-MONTES BUYERS,
rift AIGUEL, MOORE, & CO., Nos. 220
-KAP and rtl NORTH
THIRD STREET,
RAVE NOW OPEN TEE LAROEST AND MOST
COMPLETE STOCK
or
FRENCH, DRITIdE, GERMAN,
AND DOLEOTIO
DRY GOODS
Thar havearet offered. and to Ithloh the attention of
CAM AND SHORT-TINY , BUYERB
le reapeottally sollolted.
m i t7t7. gr7r r et t at a itot d res i g e lit e dlogA ll te it tl d t . nigi;
unearnasseu by any other house. ee2O-Im
T HE attention of Buyers is solicited.
FRESH
FALL GOODS.
RIEGEL. BA.I.RD. & 00.:
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
os
DRY GOODS,
No. 47 NORTH THIRD STREET,
Would reloootfully Invite the attention of the trade to
their
LARGE AND WELL•6ELEOTED
stook of
FRESH FALL GOODS,
Wide& they are now opening.. We are day in rooelot'
of an kinds of fresh sod deeirable Foods. Call and
examine our steak. eer-Sm
SOWER,, BARNES. & 00.,
BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLNIFIERtii
No. ST NORTH THIRD STREET,
Lower side, above Market Street, Philadelphia,
!EVthe attention or Bookeellets nod country. mar
ts to their very large 'took of School Books. oar
Ihired to this and othor cities, to eiberwith Alleaellenefr
ous fl t ß Ink , I: t i r o:ka l i:v:4 ad Stationery man io n fo a r ig :
among whToh ore tatollovnag
1860.
THE OENTRAL GOLD REGION,
BY COL. WILLIAM GILPIN.
Mote of the IL S. Army.)
ILLUSTRATED IN NUMEROUS MAPS.
One "M., evo, bound in ol t oth. Prioe SIMI and a liberal
disomm to the trade.
Thin book le pronotumed the most wonderful, eotenti
do, and oomprehenmye trauma on the geography of our
mmtment over untanned.
SCHOOL BOOKS:
SANDERS , SERIES OP READERS.
BROOMS , NORMAL PRIMARY ARITHAIE
TIo------ eta,
MOORS , NORMAL MENTAL ARITHME
TIO---- tote
BROOKS , BEY TO MENTAL ARITHME-
BY E. BROM, A. AL.
Professor of Mathematics s in PO
Permalreme Stste flor
in Bott.
lat*ml terms for In4oanouon.
WHITE'S COPY-BOOKS.
BY T. RIME WHITE,
Pretident of gennsylvants CommeroLal Caw.
PELTON'S OUTLINE MAPS,
nos aeries of SIX SUPERB MAPS is now adopted
to almost every school of note in the Union where geo
graphy in taught, and has no equal• ?doe SO for fall set
of zaz maps, or 810 for set of hemisphere maps alone,
mia-gm
BLINDS AND SHADES.
BLINDS AND SHADES.
B. J. WILLIAMS.
. No. Itl NORTH SIXTH STREET.
Le the most extensive Manufacturer of
VENETIAN BLINDS
AXD
WINDOW SHADES.
The largest and Hnoet aseortment In the city, et the
lowest prices.
STORE SHADES made and lettered. REPAIRING
promptly attended to.
LOOKING (LASBES.
LO (KING-GLASSES
AND
PICTURE, FRAMER,
Of every variety.
BIYORAVINGS, OIL-PAINTINGS. 4c,
AI
NO. BIN ARCH STREET.
GEO. P. BENKEAT,
MANDIAIITDRXD AND IMPORTER.
FICTURE, CORNICE AND ROOM MOULDINGS,
oe2-3m Waolepale and Retail.
LOOKING -GLASSES,
PORTRAIT AND PIOTURD YRAAIDS,
ENGRAVINGS.
OIL PAINTIVGB, ho
JAMES 8. SABLE & SON,
IMPOIIT,STS, MANUFACTURERS, WHOLE
SALE AND RETAIL DEALERS.
EARLES' GALLERIES,
SPOUTING GOODS.
PDSTOLS.
BRATES. Bev
PHILIP WILSON & 00e.
MANUFAOTWORS OF OUPBRIOR GUt
Importen end Donlon in
ELLIE OUNB AND 131100T11V3 TACilciA,
OVUM' BATE, BALL, *a.,
DARE-BALL IMPLEMENTB,
SKATES OF EVERY VARIETY,
AT THE LOWEST PRIDES.
432 OfrESTNIIT STREET.
MOORE, HE Mt ZEY„ do CO.
ARE NOW OPENING
THEM PALL BTOOK OP
HARDWARE.
421 MARKET, and 416 COMMERCE STREET.
se.B-10.
KEROSENE OIL.
PORTLAND KEROSRNE
Jn order to meet the oonatantly-Inereaaing demand
for thts Justly
ONLEBRATED OIL AS AN ILLIIM/NATOR,
the company have now doubted their farmer caveat
tr. and have Me most exteestee setwke_for manic
futurist tt Ott from coal IN the Mesta! States; and
to order to incur. for tie n ponetant futely, adequate
to the demand, they have eoeltwely romped to eatablien
any new agenoiee, or create .ay new Olttleta fot it what
*What We claim for thle Opts.
ITS UNIFORAIITY IN QUALITY UPERI
ORITY OVER ALL OTRER OILS
It Is entirely Dve from the offisneive odor peculiar to
all other Coal Me In the market, and for brilliancy
a light, oleanlinega, abeam:teal, and &trot', (having no
explosive properties;, Is i ,lre may oonfidently any.
THE ONLY OIL THAT WILL GIVE GENERAL
lOATISFACTI ON.
Wherever It has been transfused am sealers win me
no other.
As there 11•6 many inferior Oils sold as KerPsene, we
‘aanttou taters inpartionlar against using re trade
• . inaprit Whenever doubts exist as to the genu neneee of
thOuele, we resnentfeltk that a same e may he
gin t as for Iris
iNtie to the treara n &
OOMPAN VT LOWEST
snd all orders addressed tow by saril or otherwbie will
meet with prompt attention.
a Z a k i o a olE3i. Ic 00.,
fi rtj u igra s t
ooltbdm o, 0 4111.n.y,T
PLO OICEPTIV WY PTRBHV,
Phdadelrblz.
PINli FIBUING TACKLE
ELARDWARE.
PAIIIADELPHEA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1860.
llotace ?to Pat on Front Doors.
BY TUC 13.01 D OW TOWNE HALL.
l'efflers. take especial notice!—
is no , matter what you sell
-We are sink of " wire pullers"
And you rausn't pull our bell!
We've a girl to do the homework,
But her work is never o'er ,•
Tor, from dawn till dark she's busy.
Running to and from the door.
Cry your 'Fares, in tones of thunder!
Of their merits loudly sing!
Let your voices ri mustn'tdiscords;
But our cell you ring!
Bridget, armed with brush and bucket.
Must her scrubbing o! , - N repeat.
Or our steps would Oaf .th e-buried
'Beath the mud from milers' feet !
Brooms and matohee, tapes and ribbons.
Needles, hooksthod.Ores. and pins
Small potatoes. eprok'd tomatoes,
Oysters, clung, and weettleseglin2l.
At our door are daily offer'd
BY a never-tlring band;
Al 4TOl i kitg l i i iiEgFe r ie w n'd!"
Pedlar, if you have a conscience,
Voir , will let our bell b. mull ;
Bhonld you ding-dung. ding dong, dine it.
You will surely Bridget kill.
It von have to live by peddling
From a basket or a oars,
D not ring our hell for Bridget;
For such ringing wrings her heart.
" Live and let live!" is the motto h .
Whioh should be the guide of
It is one that's ever heeded
At the mammoth TOWER HALL 1
Bennett sells et small advances.
And the mottoes worth he gives—
Thus ho lives ota modest profits,
And he lets bin patrong live!
A largo and oomplete agsortatent of Ewan-ALM?
CLoyuino, adapted to the wants of all classes in prices,
styles. and Ezell. Rvery arttolo gold is anbthintially
made, a price being paid for making, sulliefent to Insure
perfect workmanship. Every man or boy, whatever
may be him site, taste, or peculiarity, can be suited
from our stook, in fabric, at, and price
BEIM ETT at CO.,
518 MARKET Street, between Fifth and Ststh str.
CARVETItkrOS.
OWI- 1 1 0 T or THE LARGE IMPORTA
CARPETINGS„
and comment forced sales
THROUGH THE AUCTIONS IN NEW
YORK,
we are enabled to offer a large ageortinent of
VELVET, BRUSSELS, and TAPESTRY
OARPETtii,
OP TILE NEWEST BTYLES, AT
MUCH BELOW REGULAR PRICES.
ALSO,
SUPERB THREE•PLY and INGRAINS,
o IN (MEAT VARIETY.
BALLY & BROTHER.
eao-etuth Nn, 920 011139TNUT Street,
MILLINERY.
CHILDREN'S GOODS.
MI the nevi ;styles of Hate, ht Felt, rloort. Bearer. or
811 k, trimmed or untrimmed.
OUR OWN PATTERNS,
A very largo variety, now ready
LINCOLN, WOOD, NICHOLS,
No. 725 CHESTNUT STREET
001.9-then
MISSES' BONNETS.
The Pa Sty/en r b Toady at the CITY BOTINBT
•
LINCOLN % & NICHOLS,
726 CHESTNUT STREET.
.i9-thertu
WHITE PRESERVING BRANDY,
PURE labßß
♦ND
WINE VINEGAR,
Green Ginger, Mustard Seed, Sem, eroo ko.
All the regulation for Preserving and Pickling purposes
ALBERT C. ROBERTS.
DEALER IN
FINE GROOERIES.
Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Street%
gP.&RKLING AND STILL CATAWBA
Kg
11421117AC16U1D
a. ESHELB Y.
Cincinnati, Ohio,
lowala on band, and in lota to suit parchment. bY
011ARLE3 N. TAGGART, Solo Agent,
,rll-em No. 031 MARKET Street
SAFES.
WILQUOIIT AND CHILLED IRON FIRE AND
BURGLAR-PROOF SAFE. AND COMBINA
TION HANK LOCKS, VAULT DOORS, .to.
The time hap arrived when Bankers, Merchants, and
businessman begin to feel not only the Importance but
the neeenity of laving a thoroughly fire and burglar
proof
That Safehe.
t sheet-iron or common safe has beep much
improved as a fire-proof since its firat itarediletion, and
that it will preserve the written matter, under favors
able eireumstanour, is adMitted; but that it still has Be
rlina defeats must. be eonooded. Its liability to be
fall:by the (allot walls, timbers. an., or by its own
fall Its inability to tirevent the constant evaboration of
tne moisture from the filling, as lire noordely possible to
make or keep the vapor ohambor water-tight in so frail
a etruoture talst), its entire inability] to retain the steam
or 'repot during the lira; its rapid etenoration by rust
and otherwise. and its entire ingeourity against burgla
ry., will hardly be denied. It is claimed that all these
defeats are remedied in the above wrought and chilled.
lion safe -sad look, and the object of tins artiste is, not
my to show this ttat, but the whs. and the wherefore.
To do this understandingly, a short synopsis of the
etraaturs will be first presented. of this as as of the
sheet-Iron safe, premising that the two principles now •
Prise all the popular safes now in nue. Further, that
the vaunt principle is the only:one now relied upon
to make the safe nre-proof, by all safe-makers having
any celebrity, ooneequentiv, all now put In a composi
tion-chamber for this obleet.
STRUCTURE OF OttibLED-111.0 SAFES DE
SCRIBED.
The base or body of this safe lea box made of bars of
wrought Iron, of an inch thick, by I)fi to 2X
Inches wide, crossing each_ other at ncht melee, and
Placed near each other, forming a compact network ;
about K inch holes are drilled near each other through
these bare, and counter suok ; oast iron is run between
these bars and into the holes, and over the outer our
face, making the whole thickness 136 to bashes of solid
iron, wlihollijoints; the wrought-non hire thoroughly
ohilling the oast iron, and making it drill proof, while
the two trona are so strongly tied as not tol, BoDarated
oraIaWIANWPWRATTRox SAFES DE
SORIDED.
The sliest-iron safe is mado of sheet-Don plates, from
one sixteenth to one twelitn of an lath thick, banded
round the outer edge with light bar iron, the larger ogres
having a band actress the centre. This constitutes the
whole tree work, adding the door filmset and back plate
and the door-way or Dont flanges: expert in tome oases
a thin plate of hardened steel is placed inside, and this
metaled burglar-proof safe.
As has been mentioned, each of the above Safes have
"composition chamber!, or, more praotioally, vapor
chambers, an vapor is found abomiutely neoessarr to act
upon the tron Senses that surround the eempoaition
otiarnher, or the heat would be easily conducted through
these flanges to the interior. though the compani o n
be ever eo good a non-oondnotor. as iron la a See con
ductor of bent, sad vapor is the only preventive. It
roust be admitted that toe beet material for thin oham
be r is that which is the greatest absorbent, and will pot
cake or become hard. Limo may Ito conceded lo be
that artiole, as most of the Safe makers nine n
opmpo
ettlon having time for a constituent, and thin Is tile only
relianc) for the production of vapor; but as lime is
light, it in in the sheet-iron cafe adulterated with &re
May. or come heavy subetanoe, to give themweight and
aohdity.
The Chilled Iron Safe hair both In the outer structure.
• aonescinenitythe chamber is filled with lime unadultera
ted, producing much more vapor
tnanimeeiimpoteia
ted, the composition
used by sheet-iron makers, and while the sheet-iron
bale le Warping vapor isti Dave, every joint. when heat
ed allowing the to wve the chilled iron has po
outer nt. and the thicknose of iron prevents the
springing of theJolnte. oconequently the vapor cannot
°soave. and here Ilea the great advantare this bale
human a fire proof) over the sheet iron. but it has other
important advantages. The structure shows that it
cannot be
o fffctd by. the falling of walls. timbers.
L io n
or its ow fall; that there to ne ahanee o fi eetrotion
from runt or otherwise ; ,that to case or re its shape is
not affected ; that if It is ohooked by water, or other
cause, the chock can only' reach to the wrought iron
bars, consequently the Sate la notio n ured for use ; that
the gleam Or varier le mainly kept i the WWI' OMR.
ben and dotbil not destroy the bindings tO books, or eo
iniure tub e, aper as to Iregillie copying. thereby caving
this trouble, as wallas the expense ot a new Safe,
As to Burglary, the ttruoture ehows this safe to be
drill-preof all over the surface,
w and s ,with Lils cele
brated Bank book attached, hich i drill. sledge, and
powder proof, `,t will be seen that it in thoroughly bur
glar prooa—weile the emitters of the sheet iron safe
shows nhat the crowbar, axe, c o ld-chisel, ci p can
penetrate tt in r, few moments.
withoutea, melt noise or
disturbance.
The following late severe testis one of the Many of a
mitercharaoter now in my possession. and published
in my genera! &router, fully demonstrating the advan
tages claimed for this Sete:
alums Li t n g , Wlsoppirt, /MOM
k'eable, NoWh , Feg • Agent Di Lillie 8 Owe,e , My
warehouse wee 'untied oh the moraine of the llikt
and you may Judge of the_ character of the fire w e ki i ii g ni t
tell you that Afty barrels of whieky rood within eight
f oot o f o ne of your larg_e Size No. 6 Safes, makincen
awful heat. which your lbfeilmised through. andVto the
boomisht of .all. preserved everything, money,
, and papers, in a Portent state ,- BPrea•
080 rt. BAYWoOD.
M. O. SADLER,Ogneps)Arent;'
716 Wilitrrni UT street,
under ,Maeoni o Bali.'
ez2o.th f Ztt
"PIMP MEMItal 41011.D.ED,; iit:the
.... lato Airriou'Rral Elooiati. to AMMAN Or4 i ßliti-
Mt. ,Fourtn a Vigo, for Boat FaffiltrY ug,,..
onatantlr on ban
We
Hartor'm Form,' &Mite
.Tour -does and.tran Horn, Bt. Lows, arid liambritt's
Plasm° Vomit, Flour. , ' ao3-lso-
Cip ,Itru3s,
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1860.:
Art-Poetry.
Perhaps the moat difficult achievement of
Poetry is properly to illustrate Art—by do-
Scription. Byron, of all the great poets, has
been most successful in this. His allusions to
Art, in the last Canto of ce Child° Harold,"
attest this. He has succeeded best in the
stanzas written with reference to such chefs
d'ieuvre of Art as the Apollo Belvidere, Viinue
do Medicis, Dying Gladiator, and Laocoon.
In the last Annual Exhibition of our Aca
demy of Fine Arts were several beautiful
paintings by James Hamilton, ono of the most
gifted and original artists in America, who has
hitherto been our Stanfield, but in one work,
entitled The Sceptre of Egypt shall depart
away;" has also shown that, if it pleased him,
ho might reasonably aspire to be our Turner
also. This picture is the property of 11. C.
Gibson, Esq., and wo are happy that—next to
ownii4g it ourself—it is in the possession of
one who so thoroughly appreciates it. The
folleVng stanzas, by Mr. John L. Stockton,
suggested by this composition—which is a
poem drawn by the pencil—appear so worthy
of the subject that we gladly assist in giving
them publicity. Their groat merit Is that they
convey so much thought in so low words
Suggested ley James Demilton's painting, entitled
The Sceptre of Egypt shall Depart Away,"
Through the strange solitude, day following day.
Drags the slow Nile her Immemorial waves :
Dim glittering afar, the waters play
'through the waste beauty of this land of staves.
She to the ocean tells the mem story
Of ruined grandeur' mirrored in her stream ;
Of fame long sepulchred in night; of glory
Old Zgypt wraps around her as a dream.
Crouched In the sands the Theban Sphinx, Its grave
Sees DI the crawling desert ; and alone,
Over the mysteries ho could not save,
Stares the stone Idol from his steadfast throne.
Yet eve by eve, before the darkness shrouds
Tho sombre waste, some spiritual hand,
Of light, and air, and shapes of shadowy aloud',
Rebuilds the ancient glory of the land.
Par, far above the desert stretehing wide,
Hangs the fierce Emmet in fantastie forms,
A burning splendor that may not abide,
Of ekiee oonvuleed and shuddering in storms :
Temples in apparition, of learning bright;
Visions of conflagration flaming higher;
Low sunken in a mist of dizzy light - ,
"She red sun oiroling with its zones of fire.
INFIDELITY IN PDILADELPIIIA—Tmo SUN.
DAY IRSTITUTE.—A week ago, the Now York pa
pert detailed at length the proceedings of an Ina
del Convention held In that pity. Several well
known puttee of Philadelphia took a prominent
part therein, and the usual supplies of the Herald
and Tribune were inadequate to provide for the
extravagant demand here. Twenty-five cents
wore offered for a single Herald, and large DlM
bore of extra copies being despatched from Near
York met with an immediate sale In that Con
vention Was stated that Philadelphia was the
only American city which had continuously main
tained a public hall for the discussion of Infidel,
or ' , Liberal topics." Wo have been at some
pains to learn the name of the organization having
the said hall in charge, and present, as matters of
public. information, some account of our resident
Delete, Atheists, Infidela, or by what other name
they may he deeignated.
The society most prominently known as adroit
ting infidel principles, is the Sunday Institute of
Philadelphia, which was organised about fifteen
years since, and hold their meetings in the lec
ture-room of the Chinese Museum, which formerly
stood at the corner of Ninth and Sari= streets.
While this tordoty held their meetings thorn they
were rather popular, and many prominent citizens
leeittired:befOre them, amongst these may be men
tioned the names of Loretta Mott, Mr. Rush Plum
-147 Mrs. Oakes Smith, and °theta. The ball was
usually welt-fined. The society, after the large tiro
which destroyed the museum, removed their place of
meeting To the corner of Ninth and Arch streets,
which building they leased for five years. Prom
various causes the meetings hero varied In num
bore occasionally crowded, and at other times
thinly attended. It was under the auspices of this
society that the celebrated debates occurred be
tween the notorious Joseph Barker and the Re?.
Mr. Melilla and Bev. Dr, Berg. The first discus,
alon took place in the Chinese Museum, and was
to have continued eight nights, but on the fifth
evening Mr. McCalla closed the debate. The
second, with Dr. Berg, took place in Concert Hall,
and created the greatest excitement. The vast hall
was filled to overflowing, hundreds being unable to
gain admittance. It continued for eight nights, and
closed by each party claiming the victory ; the
disputants received sash nearly eight hundred
dollars as their share of the profits after all ex
penses were paid The Daily Register. edited by
Mr. Birney, published reports of the debate every
morning, `and the papers sold by thousands of
extra copies. The subject discussed by there gen
tlemen wan the Divine authenticity of the Bible.
The °Bisons of Philadelphia seemed mush in
terested in We debate. Mr. Barker was a native
of England, and for upwards of twenty years was a
very prominent minister of the Methodist Church.
Ha finally left the Methodists and preached
In the Unitarian churches. On his separation,
upwards of five thonaant poi-eons left the Me
thodist connection in England. Mr. Barker
eventually came to this country, purchased a
farm in Ohio and seemed devoted to agri
culture, but his religious or irreligious outhu
' slum mould not lot him rest there, After the do
bates, he travelled over the States lecturing, and
occasionally holding disoussions. lie recently leo
; tured for twelve months in Sanford's Opera House,
to large audiences, and has since that time gone to
England, where he is now editing a liberal newe
-1 paper. The infidels have mush opposition from
the Christian churches of Philadelphia, by whom
they are considered dangerous to the pease and
welfare of society. The Rev. John Chambers has
been one of their most Relive opponents; he fre
quently preaches against them in his ohuroh. The
most prominent advocates of infidelity, in eon
neotion frith the efundey Institute, are Mr.
Thomas Oman, who was educated for the
Episcopal ministry, but never took holy or
ders. This gentleman, recently deoeafied, was
extensively acquainted with religious and other
literature, and frequently gave leotnses before the
infidel society. Ile wrote and pulitiehed !moral
works, mostly against orthodox Christianity; he
was also considerable of an artist and engraver
on steeL The Sunday Institute possess an ad
mirable portrait of the celebrated Thomas Paine,
ainted by Mr. Inman. Messrs. Hamilton,
in, and King, (the latter a brother of Judge King,)
aro also prominent members of this institute.
Some years ago the society applied for a charter
to the bupreme Court, which was opposed by Wm.
B. Reed, then acting attorney; the charter was
refused on the ground that the society opposed
the Christian religion, although no intimation of
the feet appeared in the form of application.
The same court • granted charters to a Jewish
and Unitarian Society, just previously. Mr. Tho
mas Eastman is also a prominent lecturer before
the society. This gell.tleman,has been long con
nected with the press, and is eatensively booked
upon sclentifio subjects.
Occasionally, the Christian ohurohes and the in
fidels come in collision. This occurred sores years
since, when the Sunday Institute announood a pio
nio to bo held in Montgomery county, on a Sun
day, on the form of ono of their members, Mr.
Thomas Curtis. The Christians wore determined
to prevent it taking plaoe, if possible, and for that
purpose employed a lawyer of Norristown to in
form the president of the Philadelphia and Norris
town Railroad Company that action would be com
menced against him if he allowed the society to
travel on the road on Sunday. The sheriff of
Montgomery county and several °Mears wore en
gaged. to bo on the ground, and at the lime of start
ing a posse of the city pollee attended on the care
as far as Flat Rook. above Manayunk. The pie
nia, however, took plaoe, and everything passed off
quietly. On another °cession the Mayor of Phila•
delptda closed the Hall of the Sunday Institute,
at Ninth and Arob, because they advertised a
panorama of hell to bo seen in oonneotion with the
evening lecture. This was exhibited, however, the
next evening at Bansom•etreet Hall to a crowded
audience. In addition to tho Sunday Institute,
.the infidels have other meetings in the city, under
various names ; but owing to the discredit which
attaohos to the name of infidel, but few parsons of
position care to make themseivee known. There are,
however, said to be a great number of our
moot prominent °Weems secretly oonnee ted with
this party, physicians, merchants, lawyers, salon
tide students, professors, dm., who never appear
publicly as ouch, but are recognized by the public
leaders in the movement A largo quantity of in
fidel hooka are bought in the city, and meetly at
high prices. The German infidels own a large
hall in Third street, below Green, where meetings
are held every Sunday. Mr. Thomas Curtis is also
an active advocate of the infidel doctrines. This
gentleman is an Englishman, residing the past ton
years in this city. He frequently lectures before
the talidele of Philadelphia, and has recently made
a speech before the Infidel Convention at New
York. Ile also wrote a totter to theJapaneee Am
bassadors, 'warning them against the attempt to
convert them to Chrietianity. Mr. Curtis is an
athelet, and expresses his opinions very radically.
At the present time the infidals seem to be inao•
tive, but no much of their work is done in private
and out of roach of our observation, we are una
ble to say whether they are increasing their num
bers or not. The delegation recently sent from this
oily to the annual Convention et New York, claim
ed to represent upwards of two hundred thousand
members.
The proceedings of the Sunday Institute are
marked generally by an excess of enthusiasm,
amounting sometimes to that confused discussion
known as wrangling. The " Progressive Friends,"
an association composed chiefly of skeptics, meet
in another section of the city. In both these eon
vocations the novel raw is witnessed of Old Hun
dred and the Doxology tunes appropriated to the
Singing of infidel Words.
TELE Finn Conrrath—The yacht Richmond
returned to port Monday everting from a orut®e
with over 200 00thish, caught ten miles W. B. W.
Of the Sow and Pigs light-boat. Those are the drat
brought to this •port this seaaon. The brat ones
'caught off Nantucket were taken on Friday.—New
Pedfoed Standard.
THE GREAT KANSAS FAMINE
Zxtreme Suffering among the Inhabitants
Thirty Thousand People wanting Peed
The Ohloago Press and Tribune says: The
facts cannot longer escape the attention of the moat
tardy and incredulous, that an extraordinary con
dition of affairs prevails throughout a large share
of the new Territory of Kansas, where there le at
present a "a famine in the land," so general, so
Inclusive, reached by such stages and falling upon
a community so situated, that it is doubtful whether
it has had any parallel within the present century
The thrilling descriptions that reach us from vari
oue and reliable sources, painfully realize the most
vivid and painful narratives of such visitations, in
Scripture, which WO have boon to apt to deem well
nigh impossible to our age of civilisation, and cer
tainly among our own citizens, on our own soil.
liven the groat famine in Ireland, historlo in the
tales of suffering, and lists of generous deeds,
whose memory will live in the plaintive
"Otve 1110 LIMB scales of corn, mother,"
. .
seems to promise to be surpassed in the soattered
homes of a now Territory, unless help speedily
roaches them, for thousands now suffering for food,
to whom November, now at hand, will usher in
fresh terrors.
The matter is not new to many of our readers,
but it certainly has never been fully presented in
adequate detail. An agent representing his own
community, Col. Steele, a highly respectable gen.
Haman, IS now in our city, and for some weeks
past has been quietly simulating his appeals for
aid. As winter is now near at hand the danger
becomes imminent that, from the rigors of the
season, and the enhanced difficulties and expenses
of reaching them from these States, river naviga
tion ones closed, many will suffer keenly, aye,
starve for the very commonest neeessaries of life.
The eubjeot is brought more immeilately and
publioly to our citizens by the mission of Rev. E. 0.
Reynolds, a highly esteemed Episcopal clergyman,
of Lawrence, Kansas, who, 83 announced in a pre.
vious issue, has come to our city to present the
olaires of the suffering residents of the Territory.
Mr. Reynolds will be remembered in this same
connection from his efforts some months since to
secure seed wheat for the farmers of Kansas, in
which he found generous responses, and through
his instrumentality many acres are now in seed
awaiting the results of another spring.
But this does not relieve tho present and appal
ling wants of communities whose orops have ut
terly failed through long-continued lack of rain.
A public meeting was called at Bryan Hall last
evening, for the purpose of hearing a statement
from Rev. Mr. Reynolds, on this matter, From
reasons arising from the briefness of the call, and
the inclemency of the evening, the numbers pre
sent were less than would have, under other sir
otunstances, answered the appeal; yet our Solid
and substantial °Bisons were well represented,
and the meeting; impressive and interesting,
though entirely informal, without formal action at
the close.
The speaker gave a brief but thrilling sketch of
the condition of affairs in Kansas. Re said that,
out of a population of 100,000, about one-fourth
had been driven away within the year by tho
gradually • darkening aspect of harvest matters.
The crops planted in the spring had dried up.
Gardens boom° a waste. Corn fields gave no
yield. Farmers who, In a previous season, had
realized from one to two thousand bushels of corn,
gathered in, this season, from one to two bushels
of corn to the acre. In the hope that rain would
oomo to their relief, potatoes and other root crops
were replanted, but only to the reduotion of the
stook of food for an outlay that gave no return.
Mr. Reynolds says that upon his own table in
Lawrence he has had potatoes but three times this
summer, and thee° vegetables are now selling in
that market at $l. to Si 25 per bushel. Store
hogs the farmers had purchased for fattening with
their corn orop, had been kept as long as possible,
and whon nothing else remained, the animals,
many of them purchased at 4 or 4b cents per
pound, were sold for a penny per pound, given
away, or also taken out and shot to save the food
for the families.
Jour , : L. STOCKTON.
The settlers are not of a Class to complain, and
have restated to the last the necessity of asking for
aid, and the last necessity is upon them now, both
of food and clothing, slue many of them in nar
row circumstances have left the repair of their
wardrobes to this very orop that has failed.
For miles and miles in extent, the fields have
not shown a blade of grass or token of vegetation.
Everything is barren and bare, and the settlers
see winter approaching, their families without
food.
The appeal of these settlers will not fall upon
leaden ears in Illinois and her sister States, bless
ed as we aro with an abundant harvest. The ma•
terial aid should and will be forthcoming at once,
and flow generously forth from oar older commu
nities, until want and suffering Kansas are alle
viated.
The Wife of Andrew Jackson,
The new volume of Mr. Parton'a "Life of An.
drew Jackson " hes the following account of the
death of tho General's wife :
On Monday evening, the evening before the
233, her disease appeared to take a decided turn
for the batter; and the then Bo oarnostly entreated
the General to prepare for the fatigues of the mor
row by having a night of undisturbed sleep, that
he consented, at last, to go into an adjoining room
and lie down upon a sofa. The doctor was still in
the house. iluanah and George were to sit up with
their mistress, At nine o'clock the General bade
her goad night, went into the next room, and took
off hie coat, preparatory to lying down. lie had
been gone about five minutes; Mrs. Jackson was
then, for the first time, removed from her bed, that
it might be rearranged for the night. While sit
ting in a chair, supported in the arms Of Hannah,
she uttered a long, loud, inarticulate my, which
17/1111 immediately followed by a rattling noise in
the throat. Her head toll forward upon Hannah's
shoulder. She never spoke nor breathed again
There was a wild rush into the room of bus
band, doctor, relatives, friends, and servants. The
General ;assisted to lay her upon the bed. Bleed
her,' ho cried. No blood flowed from her arm.
Try the temple, doctor.' Two drops stained her
map, but no more followed.
"It was long before he would believe her dead.
He looked eagerly into her farm, as if still expect
ang to see signs of returning life, liar hands and
feet grew cold. There could bo no doubt, then,
and they prepared a table for laying her out.
With a choking voice the General said :
"'Spread four blankets upon it. If she does
come to, she will lie so hard upon the table.'
" lie ast all night long in the room by bar olds,
with his farm iu hie hands, grieving,' said Han
'nab, and occasionally looking into the face, and
feeling the heart and pulse of the form so dear to
him. Major Lewis, who bad been immediately
sent for, arrived just before daylight, and found
him still there, nearly speechless, and wholly in
consolable. He sat in the room nearly all the next
day, the pleura of despair. It woe only with
great ditlienity that he was persuaded to take a
little coffee.
" And this was the way,' concluded Hannah,
that old mistris died, and we always say that when
we lost her wo lost a ralstus and a mother, too ;
and more a mother than a mistus. And we say the
same of old master, for be was more a father to us
than a master and many ' e the time we've wished
him back again, to help us oat of our troubles.'
The remains of Mrs. Jackson still lie in the
corner cf the Hermitage garden, next those of her
husband, in a tomb prepared by him in these
yours for their reception. It resembles in appear.
taco; an open sommor•houso—a small white dome
supported by pillars of white marble. The tablet
that covers the remains of Mrs, Jackson reads as
follows :
'Here lies the remains of Mu. Eaohel Jaokson,
wife of President Jaokson, who died tho 22ct of
December, MS, aged 61. nor foes was fair ; her
person pleasing, her temper amiable, her heart
kind; she delighted in relieving the wants of her
fellow•areatures, and cultivated that divine plea
aura by the moat liberal and unpretending me
thods; to the poor she wee a benefootor ; to the
rioh an example; to the wretched a comforter; to
the prosperous an ornament her piety went hand
in hand with her benevolence, and she thanked
her Creator for being permitted to do good. A
being so gentle and so virtuous, slander might
wound but could not dishonor. Even Death, when
he tore her from the arms of her husband, could
but transport her to the bosom of bar God.'"
senator Douglas on the Union.
In a Dpeoeh recently delivered at Jefferson Oily,
Mental, by Senator Douglas, he thus alluded to
the Union, and the efforts of the Secessionists to
dissolve it :
I repent, that it Lincoln Is °looted, then these
Breektnridge voters will be the emcee of his aloe-
Son. i" I say no," and applause.] Raving adopted '
thin plan, by whieh they purpose to divide and de
feat the Democratic party, and lot Lincoln be
elected by a minority vote, they asked me at Nor
folk
,Virginia, whether I would help them dissolve
the Union in the event they succeeded in mom
plishlng their dosigns. [" No, no.") I told them,
No, never! 1" Good," and abeam J The election
of any man on earth by the Amerioan people, ac
cording to the Constitution, is no just canes for
breaking up this Government. [Cheers] I would
lament the election of Lincoln as much as any man
on earth. I think that be is not a safe man in this
Government. Re holds principles which I believe
to be subversive of the Constitution— princi
ples which cannot be !sanded out without die
solving the Union ; but, if be is elected, I
am for fighting him in the Union ; and under
the Constitution, and not in favor of breaking
np the Government. [Cheers.) Thank God that,
notwithstanding the efforts of the Breekinridge
party to elect Black Republicans to cams, the re
cent elections have shown us that we will have
Dentoorate enough In the Northern States, united
with the South, to hold a majority in Congress
against the Bleak Republicans. [Cheers) We
shall elect a euffielent number of Democrats in the
free States to defeat any treasonable enemy that
the Black Republicans may get up, r You're
right," and cheats If Lincoln should be elected,
I and should attempt to violate the Constitution, or
make war upon the rights of any sootion of the
Union, we will proseouto him according to the
Constitution and the laws, and when eouvioted we
will hang him hi her then the Virginians did John
Brown. [Cheers. lam for preserving this Union,
and my only me e of preserving it is to carry into
effect In good faith every provision of the Federal
Constitution. Whatever rights, whatever oblige-
Sons the Constitution of the United States imposes
must be performed. The Ropublieans, under the
lend of Lineoln, tell us that they are all In foyer
of the Union. and all In favor of carrying out
every provision of the Constitution, with the ex
ception of two or three clauses: [Laughter.]
in new Lindell hotel, at St. Louie, ap
proadfros oompletion. Ito construction will cost
over $BOO,OOO. It is the largest hotel In the world,
far exceeding in sine any in New York or Phila.
dolphin. The front on Washington street Is 212
foot, and Its depth is 221 feet. It will easily ac
commodate 1,200 groats, and the boarders oan take
a walk of a mile and a hail, before breakfast, by
going through the several hails, no one of them
'twice. - The Messrs. Leland have the lease for
fiftisea years.
TWO CENTS.
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE
Hannan(' of the Rev. 11. G. Gu inness.
It will be an interesting item of intelligence to his
friends and admirers In this country to !learn that
Knee leaving our shores, this celebrated Irish
evangelist having become convinced of the pro
priety of the rite of immersion, has been baptized
in Somerset-place chapel, Bath, England, by
peer of the realm—Lord Congleton. When hero,
it Is well:known. that if he had any decided done
minational proclivities, they wore not expressed;
nor are we informed that by his recent immersion
he has become any more of a denominationalist
than he thon - wae. On the occasion of his baptiiim
Mr. Guinness, it is said, made an address to a large
and interested audience. He stated that for five
years the subject had occupied his attention, and
that he had come at length to tho conclusion that
only believers en the Lord should be baptized,
During his public ministry he had been repeated
ly asked to baptise infants and adults, bat had de
dined the former, heimuss he considered it to be
unsoriptural, and the latter because he had not
himself been baptized on a profession of faith.
After reading to his audience the various portions
of Scripture which refer to the mode, the subject,
the design, and obligation of baptism, he strongly
urged believers in Christ not to plead Ignorance of
this important matter, nor to permit indifference,
or prejudice, or pride, to keep them from the de
lightful privilege of being buried with Him in bap
tism. We may mention in this connection that
Mr. Guinness to expected to arrive In Boston about
the first of November, by the steamer Europa, and
resume his ;labors there,
_and continua his tont
through the United States.
'Tolimalonnit'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.—An
association has been established In London for
young women, after the plan of the Institutions
that have of late years become popular with
young men, under the form and title of." Christian
Associations." The newly-formed society in ques
tion, located at No. 3 Chatham Plane, Blaokfriars,
is designed to furnish the means of mental im
provement, by olassee for French, drawing, writ
ing, book-keeping, ,to. The inouloation of Chris.
Lien principles is also kept in view, twenty minuto6
each evening being devoted to religious exercises.
A Bible olaes is hold one evening in the weak, and
the rooms are open for divine service every Lord's
Day morning.
Tan Aari-P.ow SYSTEM—HOW IT Weans.—
There are in England what are ealled Anti-Pew
Societies. From what we glean from the reports
of these, made from time to time, it appears that
in churches where the ohange has been made from
appropriated to free seats the result has been that
the attendants) has doubled, and in, come eases
trebled; also, that the attendance thus induced
is, to a great extent, of the poorer classes. In
some of these churches those whe rarely if ever
attended divine worship at all come regularly
since the distinotion between rich and poor has
been abolished.
Tan POPE'S PROTEST.—SposkIz% of the Pope's
protest to the Powers of Europe agaiust the iTAT.
sten of his patrimony, the current number of the
Boston Pzlot says: " It would be supererogation to
show the justice of this. The domain at stake is
his of right, and there is a clear duly on all Catho;
lie nations to save it for him. History, both me
direval and present, proves the first—rather they
prove that the Popo holds the estate of St. Peter,
not for himself, but for the whole Church, and that
the right of the whole Church to it Is superior to
all impeachment. God would not permit his
Church—that is, lie would not bold himself a ter
ritory for more than ton hundred years unless
there were justice in the claim, and injustice
could not exist for that length of time in any
single fact."
Tan Porn IN JISRUSALE3I.—The idea of insta
ting the Pope in Jerusalem has boon broached by
the French press. They say it is no further from
Jerusalem to Jaffa than from Rome to Its sea-port,
Olvita Vecchia; a railroad would place Jerues•
lam within one hour of the Mediterranean, and
it would be very nearly as convenient for the Ca
tholic world as Rome is now; alto, that it would
add mush to the advance of Christianity in the
Bast, and that the French army in Syria could
easily take possession of Palestine, if the Sultan
should dare refuse a demand for it; in short, they
say it would bo the easiest way to Bottle the Roman
question.
THE PRESS AND Tea PULPIT.-1101117 Ward
Beecher, one recent occasion said : " The articles
of the press go farther than the sermon, and carry
with them really more weight, certainly where
one hears three, which is an abomination before
God and man. No preacher who is fit to preach a
sermon is fit to preaoh more than one a day, and no
man is fit to bear more, or if he does, be is not
fit for much also. Sermons are like boys' pop
guns, however many wads you put in, it's the last
wad that drives the others out."
LECTURES or hay. DR. Wrraastrsoßt.—Our read
ers will find in another column, a notice of a se
ries of lectures by Rev. Dr. Williamson, on the
question : "If a man die, shall he live again?"
It will be remembered that Dr. Williamson dis
cussed this subject in this city before large audi
ences, some three years ago.
TRIT. VICTORY Or SURPLICES.—The Church
Journal says :—" After long delays, the choir of
Trinity Church in Now York city at last appeared
last Sunday morning in. surplices—the only pro.
per habit for choristers seated in the (Memel. We
are thankful that the uneccleslastical and anima
tiful sight of boys' jackets and roundabouts in the
chancel is done with. It will not return."
UNITARIAN CONVENTION.—Tho annual Unitarian
Convention was held at Now Bedford last week, on
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, Hon. Thomas
D. Eliot, of that city, M. C., presiding. Rev. Dr.
fledge, of Brookline, preached the annual dis
course, and an essay on the religious wants of the
West was read by Mr. N. Tracy Rowe, of Cam
bridge. A colleotion was taken up for Unitarian
preachers in Kansas. The convention was the
largest of the kind ever held.
A GERMAN St/NDAY.—A gentleman writing troth
Dresden says: " Divine service begins here on
Sunday at half past eight commonly. At one
church I have seen advertised a service at five
in the morning. The great object is to keep as
much as possible of the day free for plonks in the
woods, or expeditions by steamboat on the river."
BAprrare tR Tun SOVM—Numerous protracted
meetings in all parts of the South continue to be
reported in Southern Baptist papers, and we find
reports of over a thousand baptisms during the
past two weeks.
IN Rim ENGLAND. —Tho letters from the
ohurehea to the various New England assoolations,
generally indionte that the Baptists are maintain
ing their ground, though not hennaing.
Ray. Gnarls T. CIIAPILLN, D. D., of Newbury
port, Mass., is completing the biographical notices
of the Alumni of Dartmouth College, commenced
by the late Dr. Richards.
IN THE IVEST .12611. /BLANES there aro two hun•
dred Baptist churches, with 311,250 members.
There is also a theological Institution, for the
traildrg of native preachers.
Ray. Dn Trim's volume on Sund y schools is
to he reprinted in Edinburgh.
Affairs in Syria.
TIIS BENEVOLENCE OF THE AMERICAN MISSIONARIES
—THE NAEED OLOTUED AND TUE LIUNORY EED.
A correspondent of the Boston Traveller, wel
ting from Beirut, Syria, says:
The Angle.Amerloan Committee, while it retains
its original name, bee now among its members
leading man from the Greek, the Roman Catholic,
and the Jewish persuasions, and relief Is eitcnded
to moo of every arced, irrespective of any pectin'.
tufty of faith.
Nearly 20,000 persona ere now fed by the come
mittee, and the number is still upon the horsed,:
Rev. 11. 11. Jessup, of the Tripoli station, who has
been spending several months in Beirut, is occu
pied from nine A. M. till long after sunset in die-
Ideating alms to the starving thousands which
surround him, and moot nobly has ho devoted
himself to this department of labor. So great has
been the press and clamor of the throng that be
has been obliged to apply to Mr. Job noon for eel
dices to aid him in preserving peace among the
lighting applicants, and to defend him from being
overrun by the excited multitude.
Roy. Dr. Thomson hoe charge of tho clothing de
partment, 'and the Mission school rooms, whioh
have been devoted to this purpose, aro thronged
with ladies, who, under hie supervision, are mea
suring out, cutting, and folding the garments for
distribution among the poor. When a Redolent
number of garments have been out out and prepared
with thread, needles, et , the multitude of the
naked and ragged are lot in, and the scone becomes
one of the wildest confusion and uproar. The de
sire is en great among the candidates for clothing
to be supplied before the stook is exhausted, that
they fight and trample eaoh other down to get into
the front ranks. Mr. Johnson wee again requested
to send soldiers to keep the ()roved within proper
limits. Notwithstanding this precaution, some of
the meet delicate among the ladies have been
obliged to give up this department to the gentle
men, the excitement proving too great for their
powers of endurance. They continue, however, to
out and sew end prepare the garments for distri
bution by the 'sterner cox.
Dr. Van Dyok had taken charge of the hospital,
and with the surgical aid of Dr. Barclay, relieves
the sick, and ministers to the mind diseased"
while he applies the healing art. The soup kit
chen for nursing mothers tsetse connected with the
hospital building's ' and is very useful in preserving
the little children from starvation.
It will perhaps interest your readers to know
that Dr. Adler, the Chief Rabbi of the Jews, who
resides in London, has issued an address to the
Jews throughout Europe, calling upon them for
liberal contributions for the poor in Syria, and that
llethroblida and other eminent and wealthy Israe
lites aro feeling much interest in the subject.
Dr Adler bases his appeal upon the ground that
Syria and Palestine is the land of their fathers,
and that as it is a land so full of holy associations
eonecoted with the poet, and so replete with hope
for the future, they must rally to the aid of their
Christian brethren In the Bast, who are children
of the flame Almighty Father, and calls upon them
to give libevallyas they hope to be restored to the
land to which their traditions, prophecies, end
hopes, point as their future bonze.
THE WEEKLY FREES._
Tux Weeny Plus will be sent to inbeonbere tri
Omit (nor annum, in advanced at.— .--- -40. 00
Three Copies, " •I 4.00
Five " "8.00
Ten
--MOO
Twenty " " " (to one &darer) 20.00
Twenty Cowes, or over" (to addles, of
mai subscriber ' ) each.- 1."
Fora Club of Twenty-one or over, weerUl mead us
extra copy to the getter-up of the Mob.
KT Postmaster.. are mil:tested to sot IS Settots fotF
Tun Wasn't PRIM
CALIFORNIA PRESS.
belled three times e Month, in time for the Oalifomia
Steamers.
From Persia.
The Vekaio, the official organ of the Court of
Teheran. apnounoes that 30,000 families of a no
madic tribe who have until now misdated by the
eels of their cattle and robbery, have been colo
nized and settled in villages, built at the expense
of the Crown. on the right bank of the Lester
Araxes and In the plains of Mogane. The war
like tribe to whieh thby belong, known aa the
Chabsevene, has for centuries been the terror of
the peaceable population of this portion of Persia,
and especially merohants, whose caravans they
were continually pillaging. Henceforth compelled
to confine themselves to agrioulturel pursuits, they
will increase the laboring population of the country
by more than 150,000 souls. Their serdar, Asta
Khan, who has aided the Government in the col°.
Titration, has been generously recompensed by the
Shah. This is but one of a series of reforms will*
have already crowned the efforts of the young
sovereign of Persia. There, remain '200,000 other
families of nomadic tribes in the `Persian Empire
who sooner or later must be settled and civilised.
News from Teheran to the 16th of August state!
that the Shah had gone on a great hunt, eecompa
nied by Mr. Albion, the English minister.
Sloan Ons OF TITZ SLAVE TRADE.—Of Ole
three slavers captured by the Un , ted States squad-
TOR on the coast of Africa, in August last, two of
them, the Erie and Storm , King, had 1,005 slaves
on board. A letter writer says that on opening
the hatches of the Storm King, which were all
fastened down from one end of the deck to the
other, with neither light nor,r , except what came
in through sideholes or ports, being almost ac dark
as a cellar, the deck hardly high enough to allow
them to sit down. the stench which came up wee
perfectly awful. The men and boys were in one
part of the deck, and the women end children in
the other, being separated by a tort of bulkhead.
The manner of stowing them was as follows : They
were stark naked, both sexes, sitting down upon the
floor with their legs apart, with another sitting
between—sort of "spoon fashion." The women
and children wore stowed in the same way.
ARERICAR SLAVERY IN 1715.—The following ire
some statistics of the old colonial days. One hun
dred and forty-five years ego, in the reign of
George I. the aseortalned population of the Conti
nental Colonies was as follows :
White hlen. Negro Slaver,
New Hampshire 9,500 150
Massachusetts 84,000 V 1 000
-.
Rhode Island 7,600 500
Connecticut 40,000 1,500
New York 27,000 4,000
Pennsylvania. :.. .43,500 2,600
New Jersey 21,000 1,600
Maryland 40,700 9,400
Virginia 72,000 23,000
North Carolina 7,500 3,700
South Caroline , 0,250 10,500
Total 375,000
Weekly Review of the Philadelphia
Markets.
hiILADELPHIA. October 26, 1101.
The operations in Produce have been to is moderato
extent during the past week, and the market generally
without any important change. Breadatuffs are rather
lower. Wheet is rather more 'active at the deal*
Flour and Meal are very firm. and Corn and Oats stead.
Bark oontinues goatee. Sugar and Coffee bring full
urines. Molasses is quiet. In Cotton there is loss ac
tivity. Candles are unobanged. - ,Coal meets with a fair
demand. Fish are less firm. Fruit—There is a fair de
mand. Hemp and Hides are quiet. The Iron market
ramming inactive. No change in Lead. Lumber moves
slowly. Naval Stores are snore active, cad for Spirits
of Turpentine we slightly reduce our quotation. In
Oils but little change to notice. Provisions—Prices are
firm but quiet. Rica le lower. Clover and Pintothr
Seed are in good demand. Tobacco i.e to better request,
and commands full rates. Wool is in steady demand.
In Freights there is a limited business doing.
The Breadetuff's market has been languid and dull
Chit week. and braes of both Flour and 'Wheat have
declined since the receipts of th 4 late annume from
abroad; of the former the sales only reach about LOCO
bble for ehipment. the demand being very email at 8676
etr. 87i for superfine. the latter for batter brands ; 85te
612% for extras. 86.264 e STK for family 86 le for fatter
and 84,250460 for middlings- closing with more sellers
than buyers at those rates. -The aisles to +he trade have
also been bibr ar the above figures, including premium
Into at .97Z7Z0 dr MA, as in quality. Rye Flour is inac
tive and selling in a small way at 81.12%04 25 SP bbl.
corn Meal is not much ingrored for bet steads. and MO
bble Penns sold at 43.60 bbl. Brandywine is held
at 133 75
Too following* is the inspection of Flour and ?deal, for
the week ending October 25,18 W
Half-Carrels of superfine
Barrels of euperfine.— —•
do.
Rye-
do. .
do. Corn
Total"— —.31.736
WIIBAT.—The receipts have been fair during the
Past week. but prices have further declined: sedge
comprise 10000 bus ranging from $130121. 33 for ordi
nary to prime Perylvania red, 81 350140 Tor South
ern d0,818021 . L0 or inferior and fair Pennsylvania
white. 4001 60 or fair to good Ohio, and 81 mom
for It eniuoky ; at the close Priebe were ..81 358144 for
red, and 8/ 40m10 for white. Rye is in limited re
quest. and lower ; 2 000 ban sold at 780 for Pennsylvania
and 74e60 for southern. Corn is dull, but stead/. and
25,000 bus Southern and Pennsylvania yellow sold at
720 , 73)40. closing at 73e. fair quality at 71072 c, damaged
at 642706: some new yellow - sold at header. Oats are
in fair request. without change in room: melee of
16 000 bus M.. 3403310 for common and prima Delaware
and Maryland, and 3336m57, for Pennsylvania. 8000
hug Barley sold on private terms. Barley Malt is worth
06 sz97c. with sales at [fusee figures
PROVISION o.—Th stooks of all kinds are very much
reduced, and the market is quiet and prices without
change ; sales of 130 bble Mess Pork at 8 12 .6 2 34, 'Mort
time. and prime at 814.50*13; city-packed Mess Beef
Bella nt bbl. Sawn is quiet, with a small de
mand for Sides and Shnulders. to go South ; the stook is
very light; sales of llama at 120160, Rides at IN emu%
and Shoulders at 931m9X0. each and abort time. Green
Meats—There is none commit in, and the stook is about
exhausted. Lard—the receipts are light and the de
mand limited ; sales 01300 Ms and bble at 1233f0130, osah
for Western. Il3iinl2o for soft. and 510 kegsat 13c. But
ter is dull, and for solid packed prices are hardly main
tained; sales nt 10„sist12,i, and Roll at 132166, as in
quality. New York Cheese sold to the extent of 300
boxes,ohielly to go out of the market, at /Mello, as
in quality.
META.Ln.—The Iron market exhibits no new feature;
the ionly sales reported are 600 tons 14mill and 2 An •
thractte at $321423. dcotnts Pig m held at 821, bat with
out salee. In Blooms, Ears, and Boiler Iron the sales
are limited at last week's quotations.
LEAD is held firmly, but there le but little stook here':
a mile of Selena was uvula at 85.75, and one of Virgudia
at as 0504 the 100 lbs, equal to cash.
coPPElit la dull. and prices the same as last quoted.
BARK comes forward slowly. and Quercitron is In
&mend at the advancernoted last week ; sales of No. 1
at 528 00' ton. on Tanner's Bark nothing &m 66
.13 KrB vvAX ie scarce and in request ; 2,200 ISa prima
Yells v sold at 321 in cash.
CANDLE'S —1 he manufacturers of Adamanttne have
Cr ntraoted for all their make us to tae commencement
of the now year. There are very few offering. Sales of
500 boxes at 17®190;#+' lb, 4 and 6 mos. Sperm and Tal
low are dull, at former qUOtta.loll%.
COAL,.—The demand for atuttraeite for dormant
continues fair • the inquiry for home consumption has
wan increased': prices are firm. and the market more
active than for several years peat. The operators are
trying to !enure coal lrom one another, to keep pus
with the demand.
- • - • •
COFFEE. has met witn a good inquiry, and mines are
Ivery firm. A cargo of 1,000 bate Rio has been sold at
40 016 c, 4 Inca; 5.603 bags, in lute, at 135244163, end La
gusyra at 15e, on time.
COTTON.—There has been rather more inquiry from
Manufacturers, but the high rates demanded by some
holders has had a tendency to restrict opetatione ;
sales of 1.600 hales. chiefly Uplands. et 601064 for to*
grade and cmonths. for middling. and Mid
dling fair. Including OUlfs at 130 ordinary Illobiles at
79, ; 1,0, goed Middling do at 130. and Pickings bade ky lb.
The movement since the let heptember lest, as com
pared with the previous three years is as follows
1460. 1669. 15.59. 1867.
Receipts at ports. ..- . 432.000 605,000 420,000 211,00
Export to (heat Britain. 00 000 143 000 80,000 67,000
Export to 15.000 40,001 61,000 13 000
Export to other F. P..... 16.001 13.0(0 10400 12.000
Total exp0rt............131.000 201 00. t 121 000 82,000
Stock 0n.... a),000 975 000 340,000 170,000
Of which during t he past week, included in the above:
Reuel pis at ports.. ‘• ... 80,000 130 IVO 110.003 50,000
Export to teat Britain. 22,000 53,000 26000 16003
export to Prance........ 4,500 11,000 9,0 03 8.000
Export to other F. P...... 2,000 1 000 3Mt 8 COO
Total exports.. 19 000 05.000 37 000 32,06060 p
SITMgAtt s—.ueereaYest the potts,comparea
with last year. 73,000 bales. .Exports—Deoreane to Great
Britain, 69,000 bales; decrease to Franco. 16 OM ; in.
crease to other foreign ports, 2,000. Total decrease in
exports. 81,1100 bales
DRUGS AND , DYVS.—There ban been very little
doing' among the sales we notice Soda Ash at 2 iicenXo.
6 months, Which lean improvement; 100 mats Cutch at
5540634 ; Refined Borax at 200 3 Oil Sassafras at e 2.00,
6 menthe; Indigo, prices are hrtn, but there is very
little gelling.
FEATHERS are inactive. with salesof good Western
in a small vrav, at 43.1 , 600 Ite lb.
FRUIT.—Some small lots of new Raisins have been
received coastwise and sold at $2.88103.26 per box for
bunch and layers, ane half and quarter boxes in pro
portion. Domestic Obit of all kinds is arnvw.g freely - ,
The .upply of green Apples is large sales at 81.6ers
42.60 for common New jersey and choice Eastern and
New York. Dried Apples are plenty and dub at 40.
Sales of Penohos at 6090 for unPared quarters and
halves and 100120 for pared. Cranberries range from
;88 to $l4 per Itthl according to quabtr.
FISHH.—I here has been lem oemand for Mackerel
/tad prices are hardly maintained; wiles of large No. 1
at eao ; medium do at 0 . 19 : large N 0.2 at 11; medium
to at 010; large No. 3a. 5325; Mamma do at 36 605.
7. and email at de. Codfish are selling in a email wee
ot3 .1003 76. Pickled Barring ore in limited demand,
at $16003 A sale of 1 1300 bbls Eastport was made on
private tering. Prince of Salmon and Shad remain as
last quoted. White Filth continue to sell in a email
war at 1046234 per half bbl.
FRE I OH I'S —To Liverpool, no further engagements
have been reported: we quote Flour at as 6d, mid Orain
or. 12013 d. To Loudon the rate is 3s tid for Flour, 'llk
for Orain. and My for Cloverseed tied heavy goods. To
San Francisco, there is ne Verse oil the berth. lo New.
Orleans the rate is 0); Mobile, 10.3 ; Csarloston and a
vent all, 60; Wituungton, Zo. Coal venerate aretnde-.
pnd, at 420203 to Beaton, $l.O to, hew York, and
61.70 to $1 15 to Providencia;
tNSENl.l.—Nothing doing; we nudte crude at '4O
10420.
HEMP is very quiet, there being no stook of Anion
ran or Foreign in firot hands.
RIDES are held firinlY; small sales of oitYtalftnet
ter green-estted. at 33;a9e, 6 men, A cargo has mat'
arrived from Porto Cabello.
HOPS are soarco and high. but the demand is limited
sales of new Eastern and Western at 3003.60 its, -
'GUM hE IL—The active season is nearly over; a cargo
of Eoseport Laths sold at 01.80, and Pickets at 80a7 for'
4 and 4.5'0 feet. Yellow Pine rap Bounds sell at $13016,
and Susquehanna Boards at $14017 4fr 51.
MOLASSES.—The market. is very quiet, but Priests
are firm ; sales of 100 Muhl Cienfuegos at no, 4 mos.
NAVAL EtTOßEl.—ltosta 0011 es forward more free
ly, and there Is more doing ; stars of 8000 Ohl* at 8/ 46
101.60 for No. Z. and .31,71,22 60 (or low grade to goon
No. 1. Small sales of Wilmington Tar at $325. anti ni
bblo Newborn do. to arm°, at §88734. 4 most and.
Pitch soils at 31.7502. Spirits of turpentine sells at
40350420 tr
011.8.—tu Fish Oils there i 3 a firmer feeling. and.
more - inquiry ; Winter &peril) is held fitmlrat 61.
Mee. Linseed Oil is dull. and selling in a small war an
17,2190, in casks and bbta. which IS a decline Lard Oil
le very quiet; eaten of Wlidar at el, 4 mos ; w 0 quotor
Siring az; ‘ , ; Bed is...tamtee_, and prints
l un bo chaared.
Imports of States for
sale Vit an W a e
the United States for the Week ending Oct. 22. 1850:
nto
ROMs Sp. Bbls. Wn. be Bone.
Total for the week.--..-. 1.407 4 976 VA OCO
Previously— 67,078 132,094 1,072.54X1
From Jan. Ito date 6,3,am 237 0,55 1,353 IMO
Same time last Year . . ..'
_BB 198,3 , .1,812 400
egg:
pi 'Ad l'Eft contuattes dull; a Cargo of Colt Cold at,
.0 a
HI isdoll and has declined Mc ; sales of 200 neroite
at pi 5004 76.4 moe.
a i...—There hAve barn no farther arrivals or salads
nod no change to notice in prons.
szends—There is a good demand for (novenae& and
supolies:come forward more freely; sales of new At
85.8735062 k, and old at 80 15 d# bus ; 1 500 bags sold to
go of the Market oa private terms. Tim o thy 1,
plenty and lower, and selling at $2500175 bu5,
flaxseedi9 arriving freely, nod sell= at 81,62 V4,9' "
bus.
SUti art—The market Is firm at the aavanoe pre
viously noticed I•there is a, nuirderate slaw:y.o3o bldg..
(Aim, sold at 870,7 50. end Porto Rpm at 87.52}407 75,
and Havana Bcts, brown Let 70Na. all on time.
PI R I rd.—There ft drindUee;ing in Foreip, and,
a small business domikm Btantiy bud Glll- N. Rum
le e ' ea l Y ti a ti t ing3 4 ' o 4?) 31 ne denvma " s et l °
P a i 1 z:: ' :2,X0359.1/1748 , att223613! Ltd i lra 2 4f; itik e giP T 471 a,
le TA n.
I,LgV7 „ nnehanged ; melee of•silty rendered' at'
103010, a t and OonntrY 9Notzirie 4gs lb.
OBA is held•witli more firmness under the frost
sioaounts; sales of 600611 hada Maysville and KeneaditY,
Leaf at very fUll rates; 50 eases Pennsylvania Seed
loaf. cold on prtrate terms.
00L.—Thero is a moderate demand for:nth:Nara;
and the One grades are also rnoro Inquired tor to gia.
East; micas are steadily maintamen, with sales of
about HOW IDs. to note, at from 90 up toy 15 stale 4P'
net for common to fell-Wood and line fleece, including.
some on terms kept private,
- -2040 i
173