for you must know, if you know anything, that there is a plan on foot to break up the Senate by a mob, and thus prevent the declara tion of the election of Lincoln and Hamlin.-- You should not sit-atill and suffer this to be done, as Mr. Secretary Floyd, though warned In time, suffered the John Brown raid to be put In execution. March up to your duty, and de liver the government intact to your successor, and posterity will forgive you your many and heinous sins against your manifest duty, as Chief Magistrate of this great Republic. Will you do it? Or, will you, like Erostra- Aus, put a torch to the temple of our liberties, and go down to history, execrated as a traitor to freedom ? The time is short. You must an swer at once, not only to your own conscience, but to your countrymen,.and to the still more awful bar of the King of Kings. Your pro clamation, calling on the nation to fast and -Mb -after the deed of disruption is done, will not save you. Wake up from the dangers that nnw threaten to logulf, not only the country, but the traitors with it, and put on the ormor of Federal authority, and send forth the shout .from end of the land to the other, that "The Federal Union mutt and shall be preserved 1" and it will be done. When this is done, then the Government can consider the complaints of the people, and adjust them upon the basis of right, and in peace and quiet—Balt. Patriot. aiip Etitgrapb. HARRISBURG y Afternoon, Deeember 19,1580. More Outrages in the South. A,aeounts reach us every day of violent punishments inflicted upon Northern. men by self-constituted "Vigilance Commit tees," and other irresponsible organiza tions, pvetendinoto represent the interests of the South. A prominent citizen of Chicago, a member of the Board of Trade, went to New Orleans recently on busi ness, but was waited upon at midnight at his hotel by members of the "Southern Protection Society," and ordered to leave town immediately, Re had not said a word 'about slavery, and the only excuse his ,petseoutors gave him for their conduct was that they had been informed by some body that he had a brother in Missouri who is an active Republican. Another gentleman, a citizen of Cincinnati, who had gone down to New Orleans with half a million of dollars to buy sugar, was in like manner waited on ind compelled to leave, because, as they were informed by same person, he had a son who is in some way connected with the Cincinnati Ga zette, a "Rim* Republican" sheet.' A gentleman on his way .northward through Mississippi, saw two dead men hanging on a tree, and the people there*. ,b,oute being asked what it meent,,they re plied that they ' , had been talking-to nig gitos;" and on being asked why they did not bury them, replied they "wouldn't bury any d—d abolitionists on their soil —would rather see 'em rot." Prof. 0. B. Mitchell, the astronomer, narrowly escaped lynching while riding in the cars through Jackson, Miss., having exasperated a drunken Southerner by saying that he thought Lincoln would do no injustice to the South, When the train halted at Jackson the Southerner jumped to the platform and shouted to thp crowd about the stations "There's a d—d Abolitionist on the train 1 Lynch idm I Lynch him !" Instantly at least fifty men jumped on and commenced a search for the offensive specimen of Northern opinion; but before the Profes sor could be pointed out, the conductor, seeing the danger, pulled his cord-bell and the cars moved off, and with them the Professor with a whole skin. An Irishman named Richard Lisson was placed in the look-up in New Orleans, who had been tarred and feathered and ridden on a rail in the town of Handboro,' Miss., by the Vigilance Committee there, who have already hung a suspected Abo litionist named Macintosh, and have in jell soother named David Magner. The committee sent Limon on from Mississippi, by the steamer Creole, consigned to the New Orleans police, with the request that lut be passed on northward. Lisson, who is a gardener, says he never thought of interfering with the slaves, and that he less arrested because he expressed in digeetion at the arrest of Magner. A system of black-mail is carried on in New Orleans by scoundrels who have taken ad ulators of the timorousness of certain persons, both residents and strangers, by threatening to denounce them as abolition hits, these rascals have fraudulently rep- resented themselves to be members of the Southern Vigilance Committee, andUre be lieved to have raised considerable money. The St. Charles Hotel, at New Orleans, seems to be the especial headq,usiters of a 44i of. desperadsos who embrace every upporA unity like the present to curtail their liquor expenses, apd add to their unenviable notoriety. rt is said the St. Markel is continually haunted by noiay, mi-intoxicated men, whose- principal business in these times of civil commotion is to watch the register, and scent out Madan vietimp fur abuse and outrage. Bit the following; from the Memphbi am pl e of Dettribor i lOU show that New Orleans is in great danger of losing the laurels of which, we thought a fety days ago, it would be almost im possible to deprive her. There is a post office village in Coehoma county, Mis sisippi, called Friar's Point, which is rap. idly looming into first class importance : Intense Abolition Excitement at Friar's Point, Mississippi FOURTEEN GIN HOUSES BUSIED IN SIX WEEKS-AC TION OF THE VIGILANCE COMMITTEE-THREE NOR THERN MECHANICS HUNG AND BURNED - CONFIR- MATION OF THE BARREL STATEMENT PUBLISHED A FEW DATE SINCE-NORTHERN MEN BRANDED AND SENT OP THE RIVER-SWORN VENGEANCE OP THE ''VIGILANCE cominTrzE.'' The following letter from Friar's Point, writ ten by Mr. Samuel J. Halle, of the firm of Ber lin & Halle, clothiers, on Front Row, in this city, fully explains itself : FRIAR'S Pourr, Miss., Dec. 11, 1860. 25 the Editor of the Daily Argus : There is great: excitement in this community. The people are in arms against the Northern men who have been in the country but a few months. On yesterday evening two gins and a negro quarter were fired simultaneously, doubt less by the procurement of these wretches. The night was lit up for miles around. The Vigil ance Committee were soon under arms, and proceeded to the room of three carpenters, one by the name of Hamlin, the others unknown, and took them and hung them to the first tree, and afterward cut them down and burned them! The town is now. under arms, the military are parading the streets, and all is excitement and alarm. This morning the remainder of the Northern men were sent up the river on the steamer Peytona ; some of them were branded with the letters, G. B. (gin burners.) before shipped. Fourteen gins have been burned in this county during the last six weeks, and the people have determined to stop it. An Abolitionist was hanged, barrelled up and rolled into the river at this point last week, and it was probably to avenge his death that the last gins were fired. A negro implicated the men who were hung. The Vigilance Committee have sworn to hang every Northern man who comes here from this time until the fourth of March, and all such had better be in h-1 than Friar's Point. SAMUEL J. HALLS. This document seems to be well au thenticated, and exhibits a condition of affairs frightful to contemplate. The South has much cause for complaint, but will such steps as these effect the desired ends ? Will they not, on the contrary, provoke a spirit of revenge ? Barreling men and rolling them into the river savors of barbarism and brutal ferocity. The hanging and burning of three mechanics on the testimony of a frightened negro is something worthy the careful considera tion of *our Southern friends. Persever eine in such a course as this will certainly leacl to retaliation, and a feeling of hostil- ' ity betwien Northern and Southern men would 'be engendered exceeding in bitter ness that existing between the people of Venice and the Austrian soldiery. No thing is so horrible as the utter absence of lair. A mob May_occasionally redress some great grievance; bat, in ninety-nine cases out emir) , liiindied, it inflicts irre parable injury upon the community in which it occurs. What are termed "Vigilance Committees" are generally in the hands ,of the very men least calculated to decide the questions submitted to them for adjudication. The law often operates as a hardship, but it is almost invariably a positive blessing when compared with the philosophy of a reckless mob. The Union-Saving Meeting. The Committee of Thirty-Three, ap pointed by the late preliminary "Union Meeting," meet to-night to prepare row inflow. We commend to their considera tion an article on the first page of this paper, addressed "To, JAMES EVORRNAN ) PRESIDENT OE THE UNITED STATES," which embodies the right kind of senti ments. Instead of attempting to save the Union by making humiliating concessions •to insolent Southern dictators and traitors, let the meeting to be held to-morrow eve ning call upon the President to perform ma duty, and take measures to crush out the disunion traitors who are now in open rebellion against the government. So far as the Republicans of the North are con cerned they have no concessions to make; and timid "dirt-eaters" who attempt to lower the Republican standard, or muti-- late the Chicago Platform„will subject themselves to the scorn and contempt of every honest man in our ranks. CUERO! or TUN UNITED Sueres.--The total pop ulation of tbe United States, as indicated by full returns of the - census received at Washing. ton, is 81,000,000, an increase since the census of 1860 of upwards of 7,900,000 persons. The new ratio of representation in the House of Representatives, rendered necessary by the in crease of population, will be about one member to . every 188,000 inhabitants. It will be the duty of the Secretary of the Interior, when the census is fully completed, to divide the whole number of free persons, together with two thirds of the slaves, by two hundred and thirty. three, the present number of members, and the preduct shall be the ratio for a member. The Secretary shall then proceed in the same man ner to ascertain the population of each State, the free and two-thirds the slave, and divide the same by the ratio required for a single Representative, as at first ascertained, and the product shall be the number of Representatives to which a State shall be entitled—so far disre garding the fractions. There( will be a loss of several members in this mode of oomputation, caused by the fractions, and these are to be di vided among the States having the largest frac tions wail the number is . made up to two hundred and thirty-three. Ammar* Tar Fornurn or Jun.—The Le ghlature at South Carolina is considering a bill to abolish' the observance pf the 4th of July as a holiday. , speatee ).00,'!„!4# 4 ,und*C - Vii io' tie Pennopluania Mailv (.1 eltgraph, 1136neobap 'Afternoon, Member 19, 1860. FROM THE FEDERAL CAPITAL. Corn. initet.c.: of the Telegraph.] There are more strange things and mysteri ous events in the history of this country, than is presented by any other nation in the short space of fine eu yt ars less than three-quarters of a century. Calculating from the enunciation of the Declaration if independence, July 4, , 177 G, the 'Lipid glides e have made in pupu lather and the expamion of our territory, are unprecedented in the history of any laud, since Belshazzar was startled by the ominous hand writing on the walls of his bacchanalian palace. Going back from 177 G to that frosty trimming when the Pilgrim Fathers kneeled on the roll rock of Plymouth, and from then tracing our history forward to the battle of Lexington, there is a fund of melancholy truth and ominous warning in even the early transactions of our Pilgrim Fathers which looms up now to reproach tho nation for its intolerance and its crimes.— The first act of the earliest settlers on this con tinent, was the corruption, degradation and ex termination of the aboriginies. The Spaniards in the South, fired with a lust for gold, made short work of their part of this abominable plan, while the Puritans at the North, inflarnefl with a religious zeal that engendered a passion equally as fierce as the lust for gold, coznmenc ed the work of exterminating the red, as they perfected their arrangements for the enslaving, brutalization and oppression of the black man. The most careless reader of history has not for gotten how generously we treated the Indian— how we partook of the rude hospitality of his wig-wam, bought his 'land and paid for it in whisky, and when the whisky had aroused his passions, then Puiitanical indignation and re seutment were also aroused, and the red mart became a savage, a demon, worthy only- of the cold steel and hot lead of some fanatical Miles Standish. The poor Indian has been driven from his hunting grounds, and swept into the Pacific. From being made a demon by Puritan fire water he has become as useless as an idiot by the influence and training of civilization. To all intents and purposes he has been extermi nsted. Those who are -left of his race, can scarcely repeat the legendary lore of the red man's powers or the beauty of his squaw. , In their stead we have multiplied another iace on this continent, not warriors, hunters, medicine men and orators, but of alms. And all this has been done in little less than a century for its full de velopment, and not altogether two centuries from the commencement of the introduction of the African and the extermination of the Indian. One race enslaved and brutalized and another extinguished by a nation yet in its infancy, is a work of atrocity which certainly cannot go on without the interference and notice of the AL mighty—and yet in these days of modern im provement, chivalry and resentments, it is deemed fanatical to insist that there is a God who notices the armies of nations as well as men, and who will punish both as certain 'labia inflexible justice . predominates in Heaven as well as on earth 1 One of the consoling arguments with which the South bolsters up its courage to proceed in this 'present work of destroying the 'Union, is the immense value of their cotton crop. They depend on this cotton to supply all their wants, to support all their machinery of government, in case they erect a government of their own, and finally to make them the wealthiest people in the world. In the first place, it is a notori ous fact that from the very influence of slavery alone the people of the South do not-under stand the mysteries of either financial, commer cial or mechanical fineness. The white man is taught from his infancy to despise labor, so that he grows np, a dependent being in every respect. But leaving these facts for the exami nation of the power which the cotton crops be stow on the people of the South in a financial sense, we arrive at the following figures and conclusions The last census shows a population of 4,000,- 000 slaves at the South, which number, at an average cost of $25 per head per year, require $100,900,000 for their support for one year.— Of the white population there are only 400,000 taxables, who at an average of $5OO per year, would require $200,000,000 for their support— amounting for whites and blacks, is one year, just $800,000,00Q--while the value of this boasted cotton crop is only $250,000,000. Where does this balance against the South, of $50,000,000 come from, and who makes up the deficiency ? There-is no enterprise or busi ness in the South to supply this deficiency—no business even to support the mail routes thro' their territory,—and, therefore this deficieney of $50,000,600 must come from the free: white labor of 'the North in various ways, and thro` channels which have been pouring vigor and strength into every southern community since -he Union was formed. And yet the politi cians of the South talk of severing their con nection with a confederacy in which-is reposed not only their political existence but their busi ness and social safety. _ ...01pALninG's PRZBARKD GLUE IS - designed for reeedrlng furniture in all cases where cabinet-makers' glue Mused. It is excellent Mr Mending backs, retest alfig the loosened leaves and covers edidltlyond /t is put up In a bottle or g'ass glue : pot,' with a brush, and will become indispensable to the hourekeeper. deol9-dawlm GRANT'S CITY HALL ! MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY DYE'S, EURCERIBER Rath, 25th and 26th. HOLIDAY TREAT! PROFESSOR J. H. ANDERSON, JR., the Wizard or the World, Cosmopolitan Monarch of Magicians, and Cyclogeotio Thanmaturgist, to his elabor ately GRAND ENTERTAINMENT. - TWO PERFORMANCES ON CHRISTMAS D AY, AFTERNOON AND EVENING. ALSO, ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON & EVENING 12 THREE AND QUARTM4 OP 313K8P O'CLOCK. Admission Twenty-Five Cents. Children Fifteen Cents. Doors open at I o'clock. lb commence at a quarter before 8. 1410-13 t) E. J. JORDAN, Agent; FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. A NEW INVOICE Portfolioa and Writing JOIL Cues. The beet essoirtment in the city-jest re (Wired at MtithlEß'S CIICARBOOI4 ato - WASHINGTON, Dec. 17, 1860 Prom the New York Examiner, Atis4ll 25, 1859. Dttst Ettegrapil. SPECIAL DISPATCHES TO THZ DAILY TELEGE APS. Accident to a Steamer. Nsw Yost, December 19 The steamer Commonwealth, of the Stoning ton line, met with an accident when • ff Throg's Neck this morning. Her starboard straw shim ney exploded. Seven passengers were scalded, four of whom were severely injured. Arrival of the Steamer Atlantic. New YORK, Dee. 19. The steamship Atlantic has arrived. Her dates are to the sth inst., and have been antici pakd. Her specie list amounts to $850,000, with large quantities of watches and jewelry, and 800 tons of French merchandise. She brings sixty-three passengers. ' . The New Secretary of State. WastinaroN, Dec. 19 Mr. Black the, new Secretary of State, was this morning introduced to the clerks of the State Department by Gen. Cass, his predecessor, who-expressed' his regret in parting with the gentlemen who had materially assisted him in the performance of his official duties and with whom his istercoorse had been of pleasant a character. He had no doubt that this would be continued under the administration of his friend, Mr. Black. According to the usual etiquette the Foreign Ministers will be informed of the latter's appointment. The Assistant Secretary of State, Mr. Treseott, has been dis charging the duties of that position up to the present time, his resignation being prospective and soon to go into effect. CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. Housa.—Mr. Waaasuans; (III.,) offered a resolution declaring, with the concurrence of the Senate, that-when Congrese adjourned to morrow, it be to meet on the 7th of January. Mr, Faintruixs, (Tenn.,) moved to lay the resolution on the table. Agreed to by 8 ma jority. The consideration of Territorial business was postponed. --• Mr. BEIXELVAN, MO from the Committee on Ways and Means, reported a bill making appropriations for Legislative, Executive and Judicial expenditures, for the year ending June 1862. Mr. SHERYIN also offered a resolution, which was adopted, instructing the committee on public lands to inquire whether any officers connected with the Surveyor General's offices can be dispensed with. • The House then went into committee on the whole on the state of the Union ou the deft ciency appropriation bill. The South Carolina Convention. SECOND DAY'S PROCEEDINGS CHARLESTON, S. C. Dec. 18.—P. M. The Convention met at 4 o'clock, P. M., in the Institute Hall. About one hundred and fifty members were present. The galleries were crowded, the spectators numbering about seven hundred. The proceedings were. opened with prayer by Rev. M. Irurian. Mr. Rhett offered a resolution - that a commit tee of six be appointed to prepaie an address to the people of the Southern States. The re aotfitiOrrists . A.. .1" I AL2.U.W.U.,11 . tee consist of seven, and was then adopted. Mr. Hutson offered a resolution that four Standing Committees be appointed, each con sisting of seven members for the following pur poses : _ First—A Committee on Relations with the Slaveholdiog States of North America. Sec ond—A committee on Foreign Relations. Third—A Committee on Commercial relations. Fourth—A Committee on the Constitution of the State. Mr. Richardson moved that the resolution be printed, and its consideration made the order of the day to-morrow, at 10 o'clock. Carried. Mr. Magrath offered a resolution that so much of the Message of the President of the United States as relates to what he designates the property of the 'United States in South Carolina, be referred to a committee of members, to report of what such property con sists, how it was.acquired, and whether the purposes for which it was so acquired, and whether the purposes' for which it was so ac quired can be enjoyed by the United States af ter the State of South Carolina shall have se ceded, consistent with the dignity and safety of the State, and that the said committee further more report the value of the property of the United States not in South Carolina, and the value of the share thereof to which South Carolina would be entitled, upon an equal di vision thereof among the States. (A pplause in the galleries.) Mr. Moore moved that it be the special order for one o'clock tc-motrnw. Carried. The chair stated that he had recieved a doc ument after the adjournment yesterday, ptir pprting to be an address from a portion of the Georgia Legislature to this Convention. The document was laid on the table. The President named the Committee on Mr. inglis's resolution of yesterday. He also named the committee on the resolution to prepare an address to the people of the Sontherh States. ' A resolution declaring that it is expedient that a council of five citizens, consisting of five citizens of the State, to act with the Governor as councilors and advisers, to be called a Coun cil of Safety, be forthwith appointed, and it be referred to the Convention to report thereon by ordinance or otherwise. Mr. Orr moved to postpone till to-morrow, at 1 o'clock. Carried. A motion to read the Georgia address, and an amendment by Mr. Inglis, to refer It to the Committee on Foreign Relations,. were lost, and the addrese was laid on the table. After the several committees were requested to remain in the ball, the Convention adjourned at 5 o'clock to meet at 11 o'clock to-morrow. Numerous demonstrations artAage through out the city. Freshly planted Palmetto trees are seen in the streets, and cockades and Pal metto flags are numerous. To the left of the Merchant's Hotel is a splendid pole and white flag, with a Palmetto tree and a red star bear ing the inscription—" Animus opibas que ID December JAM Omme infant son ofJobn F. and:Anna B. Witham% , 'The relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral from the residence of his. parents, tc morrow (lburad ity) morning at 1.0 o'cloott; to - proceed to the Harris Free Cemetery.] Nnu 2tbratisentents. CHAMPAGNE WINES. Doc Ds Moonoun o, Ham a= & Co. Caaauee H Gruare.n exonoß—Eicusar. Mousmax, ~ Mani= Saaaam, - - itastat - drects, . laltoro sail ralibr JOHN atzewt • dig • Irffirketlitr4 DI em 2lbvertisemtnts. ' CHR/STMAI3 PRESENTS ! ft I cHILOREN'S, LADIES' and GENTLE AIM'S CHAIRS, end a great variety a ceniNrr F til CUSH b uitable tor HOLIDAY GIFTS at reduced prices. Alio a new lot of COTTAGE FURNITURE In cc t 4, or by the .legle price at JAMES R. BOYD & SON, i519.2wil 29 South Second Street BUY BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS! t $ they are the most appropriate, Sc. etrable and endurable present that can be inside, fur the iiotidayeeLsou now approaching. The largest as sortment of BOOKS of all kinds, for all ages and persons at all prices, will be round at IM9tONER'S CHEAP BOOKSTORS, dl9 61 Market Street. CHEAP JOHN'S BALM IN GILEAD OIL can be bad at D. W. MILES' Drug Store, Mar. ketEtre. t below Fifth. della TAX-PAYERS 01 Tall FIRST AND SECOND WARDS, TAKE NOTICE! THAT if the City, School and Water Tax le not paid on or before the TWENTY•NINTEI that there will be an ADDITION OF FIVE PERCENT. added, and the Water shut off without delay . . By order of the Committee. 0. 0. ZIMMERMAN, Collector. dl7 Office No. 28 South Second dtreet. PROGRAMME No.'9. LOOS 89C LAMES' 8110 W WIDOW, "JONES' STORE," THURSDAY DEC: 20 1 1860. FOR THE HOLIDAYS! WE have the largest and best assort ment of PE •FUMEitY, and botepleasant would be the remittal' of a bottle of fine perfume or box of nice Foap. We Lave a few &UNDID DREBEIhe CAM, Potrarnme, CAW, New and Fashionable Emma., Thavatme gamut, LAD= Consamome, All er the very best manufacture the market allbrds.— These will make elegant and abolcepreeen We have also& flee variety of CHOICE COSPECIIONARY, OMAR CAM, PORTMONNAIEN, • LADIES Puma, CID Cana, FANCY NAM!, BAND kfIREOs4, Gmr BALLS, WATISI COLOR PAINTS, OILNIRDres EPIANDJD Poem Comsat AND BUM, A 690 D LINE or YANCIr POWDEX, Poore AND Bona, ALL BIRDS OF BRUSHES. In fact 11 Is Impossible w enumerate au the artlotee agitaf and small"' that would make aultable presents fur the weeks festive season, therefore we Invite -tied* • • elhit.„us.sag uatavxamlue elvesod- - ' 'Vb. et Street, dlB KELLER'S DRUG AND FANMY STORE. NOTICE:- THE`HCOMMITTEE OF THIRTY-THREE appointed at the preliminary meeting held last Saturday evening will meet, at the Court House, on WIDEN:OIT Evume next at 7 o'clock. likh imt. 2t J. C. JETINKLE, Chairman. ATTRACTIONS FOR CHRISTMAS I REDUCTION IN PRICES! DRY GOODS, FURS, HOSIERY, GLOVES , &c., &c. , AT GREAT BARGAINS. G received large additions to our ll stock, at greatly reducalprirer, our onstonters and tun public will find it to their interest to purohase from uly viz : BLANKET Shawis; of every description EQUATAI SHANirs, NNW Orlin ALI Woos very cheap. £QCARE BRCCA :NANA Bargains. LONG " Au. Linz AND Wool" every price. F R S Every kind L all prices, lower than ever. Large stock FANCr SIIIRI, ?trim Elt" BLACK -Faun Erin= MGM= -AND PLAIN DZIALVIS, at 12% cents. FANCY. AND Puns Monson AND Csannsans, great variety, Evirannura Dwilw lit Lam Doses Goon% Tim Bier 6% CALICOS AND MINIM MANYIRACTURRD. General Set ck of Runnels. Ginghams, Checks, Tiokings, Blankets and all Domestic geed& 7ite larger! astorbnentits Meet y. MOURNING"G 0 0 DS OF EVERY DFSORIPTION. Hoisery, Gloves, Ganiletia, is largo qua Mattes. Great assortment of Embroideries. Ladies underwear, different sizes and quality.. Gentlemen's 'do do do Idleaes , do do do Boys' do do do Cloths, Callen:mere, Satinets, Jeans, And everything for men and Boys wear. Gentlnmens' Shawls. goods, Without distinction to style or %panty, will be sold at a very .alight advance, and lass than cost of importation. CATHCART & BROTHER, Next door to the Harrisburg Bank, dl7 ' Market Square. FURS 1 FURS! l FURS! 11 A LARGE LOT OF ALL RINDS, at very ja, low prices, received this morning at CATHCART'S, NOM to the Harrisburg Bank, Market Square. • GENTLEMEN'S WEAR. UNDERSHIRTS, all kinds. GENTINtlFtt$' DRAWERS, all kinds. SPIANDID:LOT OF EmenitY, all kinds. A LARGE - STOCK OF DENTS GLOVES, all kinds. GENTLFMEWS SHAWLS, all kinds. CRAVATS AND SUSPENDERS, all kinds. HANDFINEtCHIETS, SILK AND LINEN, all kinds. CLOTHS AND CASMIERES, in great variety, For good'and cheap Goods in "RENS' WEAR," call at • CATHCART'S, del Next to the Harrisburg Bank. JUST RECEIVED, A;, LARGE AND SELECTED STOCK - or commi.k. or. PINEY, CASTIT.LION & CO. BISQI.IgI', TRICOCHE & CO. JANDaI HENNESSY & CO. - OTARD, DUPUY & CO. • " J. & P. HARTLE. JULES ROBIN & CO.• • ' HARETT f & C O . _ For sale 'Si, JOHN H. ZLIGIZR,' 17 r 3 Marker areal. NaTIOE TO fPERSON who ,can give atorile and saitafactory reference of character an& qualifica tions in the best establishments in Philadelphia, In which he has been engaged as Cutter, hotly at , anutwie r and Retail trade, is desixons of Imnrwcthic m i n e r with a 'Patine already total:Make* witinfiqrins liartnerahm wljh tome person 'arias funds and energy to establish a Pan_ it la Rarldabitrgi having aim acquaint . • 1 40.1 1 04 11 ! 1 _ ..oan Wirt themselves in his , .Biorancea requhed: --Par !tubber fn ttinnalior k "ddan a . „ .jmusm:, tififisvo ear - Thoirtwitit, nag 1,. Ntm tAbrertisenients HO, FOR THE HOLIDAY CHRISTMAS AND NEW 1E SRS GIFTS! IN THE GREATEST VARIETY AT BERGNER'S CHAP BOOKSTORE, 51 MARKET STREET, Comprising the largest and best selected stu, ILLUSTRATED AND STANDARD RELIGIOUS, HISTORICAL, POETICAL, SCIENTIFIC, AND MISCELLANEOUS BOOK CHILDREN'S BOOKS, TOY BOOKS, (Linen and Paper Games and Puzzles, Innumerable in quantities and kit FANiItY BIBLES THE LOOM AND BEST ASSORTIII EVER OFFERED IN THE CITY AT ALL PRICES POCKET BIBLES, PRATEX, and HYMN BOOKS, Suitable for all Denominations, in all Sizes and Kinds of Bindings from the most common to the finest Velvet Bound. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF DRESSING CASES, LADIES TRAVELING and SHOPPING BA US, PORTFOLIOS, WRITING DESKS and CASES MONEY PURSES, POCKET BOOKS, &0., &c Mathematical Instruments, Oall Bells, Fine Pooket Cutlery, Pearl'and Ivory Paper Cutters and Tablets, Fine Gold and Silver fens and Penoil Cases, ,ptinite in number, Style and Finish. A GREAT VARIETY IN SIZE AND PRICE OF Checker Boards and Neu, Dominoes, Chessmen, ch. GIJAI TOYS, EN GREAT VARIETY PARLOR and BAT BALLS, MOLLY COLORED lm 3Et. mr 3X M.. 1 POMADES, EXTRACTS. &c., Of all the favorite kinds Hair and Cloth Brushes The above consists in part of the articles which have been selected za,: purchased expressly , for their appropri.tt character for the approaching HOLIDAY SEASON, and will form a large and choice fiz,s'Tt ment from which to select 011.BISTMAS M NEW YEARS PR3MSMa'TS. For, price and assortment of Good> ie cur line, we feel confident that we cannot be surpassed by any house lc the oi; ,, and for a proof of what we say, we invite one and all to'Call and look at tie great variety at - BERGNER'S BOOKSTORE , . , 51 ALBION STREET. ihiglillekkihettibbtcleso. sti CABAb,