" ( Tilt (r)ric (9botirret. \ I owiTicAL JouRNAL 13y B. F. SLOAN. , •,,pg imiliocriberk if paid In ulystiee tw seta to Oat for .t.kand , „ •••,. for larger dub.. se-11 , e1 (alit tllr to par within the prat, thit • 404 11 , . 110enUld Nude out it . r3r, and left with a proper °Meer for oF AI)VKRTISING : I rle,•,, i,ur.or Iron make I oquare.lili I - I „ . ..• ~. r.t, $ 74 Oar allure 3 months 13 00 , - 100 Oor - d " 660 ;,...,. •• 133 Oar " a " sTs . . • rr , IL Irillr, ebattptalde at pleasure, $lO. . ... "". 1,110, , 1 0 1 6 01 "11 1 0a4 $ 11 : 0 mouths, r 10 laiUltrea-66• year. sem, 6 month*, , •. i I". '.....1 . 0 , 1 .1 tt,a 11,0nraa Directory at $3 par ... st ..,. 04 for a Card, Orel" six., lisid adder I Aortal patine', 10 testa a line ; but 110 , ht . I nrerted among the Special Notion • /.... lollar. , A tits and others requiring frequent changes ~...t.epieut" will be allowed two square', paper, liaiditSolla)Ppfkee, the charge" will • *WI the deertliwituenta mart be strictly , itoosto laidiathess tb. advertiser. Pay - • 0 ,...pt adrertiainneeta required in advation.— ~.“ Ls «rtt•III K yell preownteel ludf-tearly. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ILI Itl. !4 41 RN IN IMPORTZD WINES AND I.IQCORti, I .l j l .! F ranch tinindiem titns Ate-, ChatopeAgge, Malaga, Sherry, Port,and all kind. alwo manufacturer of metaled Willa r li,urbon,*nuoneshela, ke , Revd Boon, on • •,I,Fnv i 91 it4ati.9 & CO.. t t. 191Aout I3f thwynxiss A ' , tr.,t, N 0 10 Hrown'• 1110elt. • 1 111.1 I i• AI. H.N1.4.1:, BLOM WWI( I.I4I.IITrAVITRICR, I ..t 4te,lertitnlit . • Flitkek, Itne, YR silk% IN I . 11. , ..11•4, I. t el A. 4 4 4 1 \•A! LOR A T ri • •••!r.. t, nen, U. 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Ilia t , tllrtr.wl , irt P.Tlr, ,/, LUIZ. `to ,esor 1.1 •trarart 4 •Nrartlarr,/ • • 1 ••• ..oil .11. 111.....1.41. truer .4 ...tn.. sit 4 1 • • ii•••• • 11.11.0.1.1•10.0 01.121pLeir• \VII I It %I ,11. Aw r 111.44 Ow 1..'h.4,1011.1.. I )414.101 tt, 111 N...4eN. ) 1 • 1t,".1.10` 41 I I,lhre in komp., • • 4 ' I • liolv I, 0tru.0,..• on the A Il.it - •t, I A 1.1., ‘ll.l • , 1,•• ti - sisd Territconr, M N'1C164131. • • \111.1 1.1. I , itl• $. 111 R. n• ei•S •• , lo•rth ol tity I prk, Priv, l't ‘l.l F'S 1. wive:. h ..Tl4 v . I, TllO PltAlll-000•0 10 Nei/ ••..l ua l 4 1 1. ' r... , 10.1 111. I'ol.lo - S• 101 0 -1., Km. I )1/1.1.10. 11EN:tic:1 t . , 1 • 4101 AIFA • I. Kant A 11. thAderi In !lard • a a»Ja..l.ller), No& 11 and It ••• ' , tato stm4A, grip. I 11 , _s liNhP.l .4114NNg)N. il.raty t ( Voir y All • • r E 11•111, tienstan and ACM. rintfl Ilardran 110 , 1 111., i Inv tip, 4.1*/ ..• I. I T 1.11,.. Af f . r AMOR, 111 11, 1,11.1111 1,4 - ..1111) Of 4 -111.111.41 I.V V 11A A lAA 4 'the. , A LF A n,*, the Short. Fl V •• 41 the RPtval 114•11.14. A/14/ 2..41 la• . Saver, 1.1a.k Noie4, r 4t4.44444,44. 4.f h-rrocit, kc. gieht rselisnr oil tbor pno • . c.,l.tatitlS rut Axle. I,OimrSo II IFtex.l ' yuyl., Erie ill r cuouk az 0 .1 il.motri and blauvfartnrvn of AAA MJ I) iftS1 , 11111:6 Pit 1 , 11 i;r1111, I. lour, Fruit*, NotA.Claos, Pad., Wooden, %Valor and ,tor s • Fl"ares, I. 1 . 1,,,s I 1. •IWT(gbl'• Block, -1,.. t 4 d....r..14.• the EriP, CEA,tTIIIII mr" I 4 1i ‘7,T4. rilint• (text) .11111••• „..ret Synaro. occupied by I 1 warranted. •It\l el 1 , 11210\11. “•01 Y. 11 I • RAW til4l A• •t I n IA I ~.4,41,1 rolk oi•,, . 4 1.4, Car, Ard , ..lv Fury, t••• • r-, t k,t‘rA, M I.lt, I• 11. N•.• tt••qtsell LAU• tin ,t. l's • •• 1.. , •1 F. F. F• 10141.1., - - I 1111‘ lIIf %RN d: of o W It PIM; and Clllllllliltiioll ilerAlAinta• ( a . Flour, I . l.ll.Arsal wait fur &daily In of , t.susorm, OotwlL. lirf.. l's I 1 111/lE 1., 311.1 RAU , I SI ANr Pa.n N gun of Q.teani Fngincit,nollets, '4l r,.an u l t. A gricul tura, 11;1;1.-111.ot% Rail -,, u4 Cum. • 'lc, V% it I'+w V. R. RI ttttt I • Pll lov ASIA DRUM Ig•L %Dil Arta Wilrlon'ot Selrtng Uftelline. }s lady's private correspond ence. I sat and thought a while. 'The in deftness of the advertisement either tells of woeful ignorance. or the prank of some one Of the fun-loving school r girls of New elrLiso no great harm could be done to ngs of the writer. loan only open ORNING, NOVFMRF.R 5, 1859. IT vantss us won.' H 1111.1.1 BY LItINAD - -ow -J. . S l4 l RV F l it, , 0 II them all, itaband book to the boy those of the other B, It was Smola o epa however —for the young ' stood gazing at me, as I sat with the t opened letter in my hand, and with all the others untouched beside me. I told it ail to him. what I proposed doing • 14 sweated, astonished that such a coinaidinu;e should have hap pened, even in diet place of queer doings, Union Square Poet-Office. I turned tomy ndenoe again ; the next was as a shout be, a business offer of rooms ; the next a matrimonial one, I had got about to the tenth of these alternate layers of matrimony and boarding-houses, when a lady entered the store. I have reason to remember her, and I think I can describe her appearance even at this time. She was of medium height, and this means five feet • two inches in women, with brown hair, worn, as a handsome one of the sex will always wear it, behind the ear ; a hazel eye, cheeks just tinged with rosy coloring, pciuty, yet inviting lips ; and her hand was ungloved, showing not the exquisite taper so much admired in ideal, yet seldom seen, but a charming chubbiness. Her foot (this I have learn ed since) was a pretty one, and expressed a s much by its tapping as the flashing of many a beauty's eyes. She wore --here I must stop ; I cannot recollect that. She was dressed with taste ; wheth er her bonnet was straw or silk, her dress green or gray, I can't say. Imagine what would be becoming such a one I have de scribed, and you have what she wore, pro vided you are a lady reader. It was a sort of a mischievous glance that she threw at me, as she pawed me perched on the high counter stool, with the pile of letters at my side ; but she stop ped not, and walking up to the pigeon -hole where letters are delivered, she asked the very same question I had asked ten min utes before—" Anything here for D. B. ?" The boy pushed his head from the zaseitoe, and turned two imploring, puzzled, quiz zical eyes on me. The lady turned also— I looked in vain for relief, and for two in stants---they seemed momenta then—three puzzled faces were gazing together. "Miss," I began, and I went through with an explanation. how I Waa "1). B. ;" that I had opened some letters, and now advised the opening of the remainder, ten dered an apology, etc., etc.,—in fact, stum bled through the best sort of an explanation my confused intellect would allow. I should like to see again the expression I saw in that face, as the color came and went; then abode there until the whole countenance was suffused with blushes ; and then the tears came, and the little foot patted hurriedly. I was prepared for embarrassments, for blushes, but for tears—no, not for them and I stood still like a convicted school boy. She remained standing, also ; a queer picture was it this side view in the great panorama of New York life. At last I offered the letters. "I don't wish them, sir. 1 was but jok ing—how foolish !" and she turned from the store. She went across the Park, op Broadway, '-• one of the We' • streets. I walk- IMES et, a ..ice me, she now me ; biit she was not romantic enough to consider the coincidence of two 'I). B.y a sufficient claim to an acquaintance." So we tallc.ed, or she did, and I congrakilated myself on obtaining evidence of her irnpression that I was a gentleman ; for, if not, why should she advance apologies for conduct of hers - 1 I left her at the door. I went home; I told Tom, and he sat back In his luxurious old rocking chair and laughed. "Well, will you find the mutual acquaint ance' and will you cultivate the acquaint ance of Miss D. B.? and will you—oh it is rich," and he relieved himself by more lta, ha's ! "Fine eyes ; yes. I see, only a joke a tze, —not foolish ' romantic--must have a knowledge of our antecedents—your fam ily—before sh will see you as an acquaint ance. Yes, . I . ; but don't she know that you will fi nd t e mutual acquaintance. Let me be seer an prophet for a time." Tom stood up and ' I at vacancy i in the or thodox, oracl style. "1 see n the dim future a castle--an airy one ; yet not all in the clouds, but resting on the more tangi ble foundation of terra ,Crata; in that castle sits a man and a woman—husband and wife ; material furniture is there, and in my increasing vision sees on a wall, in a room, in that aforesaid structure, a gilded frame, which encircles two advertisements —tile one asks for a room, the other for a husband ; the faces of the pair seem to sat , that the advertisements have been answer ed—that Daisy Bartlett has a husband, and Dudley Barnwell a room—room in Daisy's heart. What say you old fellow ?- Reader. if you will come up town. and see me---tts, I mean-1 will tell you how true a prophet Tom was ; tell you that I asked some one if there was "Anything there for I). 14.1 and how she answered.— Journal, Mg- A correspondent of the Chicago 71Int, relates the following joke at the ex pewit. of An editor of an agricultural pa per ; I was in the etas going to the Slate Fair at. Freeport some time ago, and uninten tionally overheard a conversation. The parties to the conversation wen• a farmer from Lake minty, and an agrieultural cor respondent. When near Nevada, - the member of the "iitin - was in the height of an anintattwl explanation of how "we" hail kenefitted the farming in temits hy having agents always traveling reporting the pros pects of crops. ac.; just at this moment a_ field of buckwheat in bloom attractcq his attention. "What a fine field of while beans that ia," exclaimed the traveling editor. "Heald!" Raid the farmer, "that is buck wheat." "Oh! what a beautiful white grain it has ; 1 must make a note of it, and write a letter from Freeport about it. Buckwheat like that is not to be found at the Ram ! The specimen I have been accustomed to see, produced a very dark flour." ".Why, of course; this buckwheat will produce a dark flour," rejoined the far mer ; "what you saw was not the (Men— that was the blossom!" ''Uhl Ah f" said the editor, who quickly closed his "notes on buckwheat," and shortly after went into the smoking car. A Luxuatotrs Coeen.—Beggana 'warts in China and their king livesat Pekin. They die by the roadside, and are forgotten. At Pekin there is a large ,house called "The House of -the Hens' Feathers ;" here the floor of an immense hall is strewn three feet deep with feathers; and into this wal gwing see of down, at a certain hour, all Imuseless vagabonds who apply for shelter are turned. At the beat of the tam tam, an immense tarpaulin counterpane conies down from the eeiling. unfurling and spreads over them all like the winip fabulous roc hatehing a neat full of eggs. The next morning at a similar beat., it i s again drawn up, end. thevagab dis pense to show their sores and collect onds aime. Magasise. $1,50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE. 161307411. Pinions Itiogro.Ploi of Years Alico• The article in Thursday's Pass, relative( to the Southampton tragedy of 1831, awak ens recollections of similar events, of a like - character. The following episode, connected with one which occurred at an earlier period, may not be without interest at this time _ About six years ago, it was discovered that, in the neighborhood of Richmond, Virginia, a plan had been devised by the colored people to spread slaughter and de vastation among the whites. Three negroes had been seen by their master riding out of his stable yard. This was sufficient to create alarm. On their return, the then absconding blacks were tried by the court of three planters. Though no direct evi dence was adduced, yet enough was elicited to induce the belief that there had been an extensive combination formed for dread ful purposes. The Oovetnor of Virginia offered the stun" of $lO,OOO and the gentle men of the city of Richmond $lO,OOO more, as a reward to any one who would give information •of the head of the project, but no one was tempted to betray the senret. A few days alter the SW,OOO reward was offered, a little African boy came into a grocery store, in Richmond, and asked for a quart of rum. The grocer asked him for whom he wanted it. He said for his uncle Gabriel. • That African. when twenty-one years of age,led asked his master how much he would take for him. His master replied. "Gabriel, no money would buy you.' "Rut," said GabOel, "should I buy my self ?" "In that ease," m►id the maater, "I woul4 Like five hundred dollant for you." "Then," said Gabriel, "I am ready to Pay." "Had I thought so," said the master, "I would not. have made the offer—but, as I have said it, I will not draw back." Gabriel was Lie then com menced the learning of the English lan guage, and in a short time learned reading, writing and arithmetic. He was intelli gent, sober and able. Allpeople who knew him esteemed him highly. He was twenty-live years of age when the reward was °tiered. Such was the man who sent his nephew for a jug of rum, which cost him his life. The grocer asked the boy where his uncle (iittlei was. .He replied,,in the Sally Ann, a vessel at thil dock, just ready to sail for St. Domingo. ,'The grocer told the boy to wait a little for his return. Notice was giv en to an offiabr, and Orabriel was appre hended and then put. upon his trial. He thought some one bad been tempted by the great reward to betray him, and he confessed the whole. - He said their plan was to fire the city at the end opposite the arsenal. Men were appointed to ring the fire bells, and while the citizens were drawn off to extinguish the fire, they in tended to seize the arsenal, rush into the city, and slaughter all indiscriutinatetys except, a few young ladies, who were se lected to 14+ the wives of some of the lead ers. All tL._ his own device. thoughts . Wit, he heti 651.Y3Q-14 E 3 places, dpl Court thai great min neighbor,h l / 4 . f , embled band could not pus, they would not, at that, flay. be sitting as his judges._ "But, Gabriel," said the Court, "we all esteem you. You have not been thought cruel. How could you devise a scheme Of filial almost indiscriminate bloodshed 1" Gabriel cooly replied, -It: is not that 1 delight in the shedding cf t he blood of men. But there is no other way of procuring our 1 love my nation. We have as good a right to be free from oppression as you had to be free from the tyranny of the king of England. I know my fate—you will take my life. ',offer it willingly, as a martyr to liberty. My example willtraise up a Gabriel, who will, Washington-like, lead on the Africans to freedom." - Gabriel was executed—dying without a murmur,vool, collected, in the faith that his death would not be in vain. Thee in cidents are embodied in a song called •'Ga briel's Defeat," and set to a tune of the same name, made also by a colored man.— The writer of this has heard the tune in Virginia, where it was a favorite air in the dances of the white people ; and it need not be added that the song. was; and per haps still is, popular among the colored population of the South. EXTRAVAG4XCi or rug Aug.—A shrewd writer, who is in the habit of telling home truths which go direct to the heart of the popitlar follies of the day, has the following in *Minn to the pernicious system of do me4ie edneatiou, so fatally prevalent at the.resent time : - "Lu the town of Somewhere. lives Mr. 3f a ny g i r l-. 11e is. a toilsome merchant, his wife a heel-working housekeeper. Once they were per, now they are ruinously rich. They have seven daughter. whom 014 train up in utter idlene. They spend mttith money, hut not in works of htiman ity 'not eVill in elegant aeromplishments -intinting, dancing, music, end the like, a ni so paying in spiritual beauty what they take in material mtvins. They never read nor sing ; they are know-nethine,(s, and otily in vain shots., as it:444(m as a ghost, and as ignorant as the blocks on which their bonnets are made. Now ? as these seven 'ladies,' as the newspaper call the poor things, so ignorant and helpless, are not only idle. eon earn nothing. but consume much. What a load of finery is on _their shoulders and heads and necks. Mr. Many girls hires many men and women 'to wait on his (laughter's idleness, and these ser- - rants are withdrawn from productive work in miming these seven grown up bobieS. "On the other .i.le of the way. the lion. Mr. Manysons has seven sons. who are the exact match for the merchant's daughters: rich, idle, some of them dissolute ; debau chery coming before their beard ; all use less, earning nothing, spending much. wasting more. The only labor to to kill time ; and in summer they emigrate from pond to pond, from lake to lake, having a fishing line with a worm at one end and a fool at the other. These are fast families in Somewhere. Their idleness Is counted pleamre. Six of these sons will marry, and Bye perhaps of Many girls' daughters, and what, families they will Panel to live on the toil of their grandfather's hones ; until a commercial crisis, and the wear a i l tear of time has dissipated_ their fortunes and they are forced reluctantly to toil. . Besides, there is an enormous waste of 1 . food, fuel, c °thing, of everything. We -are the least economical. civilized people on earth. o r course the poor are wasteful eierywhere, they do not know how to economize. and they have not the means. They must live from hand to mouth . , and ' half what is put. into the hand perishes be fore it. reaches the noon* Bo likewise are the rich wasteful who laveinhenled money, almost never such as have earned it, The great mass of the people are not eeonomi ai, hut wasteful. It is the habit of the whole country. 1 i ER NUMBER 22. walk 4 He let ma (Par' QM .• • • 4•' , Vabs' wild the CitntSiettfefifilf4r him in the side roo down, !ad I will tell you. 'Prim. l'ilp4eob Be-' !apart. was hereiwo nurtures scot' -4 • "I expressed my starOrise, of mares, . foe this was in when lit woo, 440411. Omit, Bonaparte to enter France. " 'Yes,' continued the Gleneral, Le' came with az:To:lit,. Re wishes to marry my tat, Clementine. init. the Repu s at=lll4 and trafkoWilisitt. and make himself Emperor and tnake my grand-daughter Empress I" "'And, if it be not a indecietttettestiow; I said, • *bet wax your maker, my • dear General?' " I told him,' said IA Yvette, that my family had the American notion on that subject, and chose husbands for them selves--that there wealth. young lades-he might go court her, sad if she liked hai. I had no objection.' Mr. Cooper did notfelltvalfor Of course he did not know) howlllibOtrince plied hi 4 wooing. nor why he WWI The hair Item *mane, who thus, possibly, lost her clamor of being an Empress. married M. de Benu• wont, and now represpnts her rejected 30 tnirer as the French Embassadress at the Court of Austria. Shortly sfkw' this visit to La Fayette, Mr. Cooper was in London, find mentioned to the Princess (tbo.widow or the elder brother of the President of Yrance) this venture of Prince Louis this the den of the Orlesinists. 'He' is- mead Y was the only reply." , "TIMM OP ra indimi."—A few monthaito; a limn who had been a'farnier from is early life, came to the city to buy Moves to sell again. Said he to the stove dealer, the weevil begins to infest the wheat and all things emisulered, tam 'tired 'or farm ing,' and to have sold' my farm." ..The stove dealer remarked, that lie thought within himself. that, just its likaaa not, the farmer would find a weevil in the heart of the new hushless---4nd so it proved, for when the day arrived on which the note was matured given for the stovea,i the old farmer, now turned, tradesman, ,custfesstal that he had not been able to sell his stoves —That he had maqt of them on hand. "Tire,' .4f farming," the most indepen dent business a man can engage in, because, forsooth, e f here are disapicintmenis, and perplexi es, and trials, and vexations, at tending t. Remember, you who are the tillers the soil, that , your cares and troubl and anxieties aril fessigind far be tween, .compared with thossuifered Ly commercial men. It your chances to be. come rich are not so inviting and profitable as those of the tradesman, bear to mind that the dangers if becoming very poor and destiktute are far leas. Famine, and abject poverty vehlolnovertate , the fnmier, or haunt him in their ghostly' vi'Slis. We lives on• the high table - la nd l of 'promise, - . , Ott anew the buaineee for whieh you isualoa trained, and which, if dillicentlY-f i geltd. will yield a good ruitply el ell the peeee saries and comforts of life: togethWr with opportunities Tor World and mentaleulture Swart or UNHAPPY Iloses.—W4Y goes forth that theft this Saturday evening from the roof under which his children live'-- Why turns he from the engaging 1%41e at tempts to detain 'him, and roughly mores them away, while he loves thestolosiLY Why sits another by his fire, sullen. discon tented, unwilling to speak the kindly Wind, while his heart isyearning for eorrrerse find enjoyment T Why thee the cruel speech to her for whom`the hosom'eattungest affec tion is nourished? And why, settrcli in to deep depths, why does Ma becolUe so often the tyrant; so often a criminal, In his home? Truth has to be told ; big ob.! list, en to it kindly, for it is hard to teil_ It is because woman does not truly appeeciate her mission in domestic life. Under the present conditions of existence, she hits be come weighed down by cares. . As a wile she is different lo what she was as a mis tress. She is ever employed in drudgery for children and househnlil, She neglect, her dress, she forgets her manners. Fier husband sees the change, doe* not per haps find suffieient excuse for it from the conditions she labors under. He files to the tavern and billiard table ; and she in creases in sourness and asperity ax she in creases in years. That much of this 14 ow ing to the present circumstances of social life is true ; but that much of it is clutrgt able ton sad submission to those eircum stances is also but too true. It is ?note or less in the power of woman to make then domestic life lion+ attractive to their bus. twain. and more holy in its dicipline tool ends than they now do. A great regulari ty in time---a great. simplieity in (fro,. n more determined adherence to that Wit kit is right in one's own eyes, rather than Olin which in well thought of in the eyes of oth era--an orderly apportioning of varioic• .• riot's for different occupations,—frontal make evenings: at home puts mato; reel differently to what. in the great nit jorit) of Canes, they am now doing UNPLSASA Ptort.a.—There is a class ul unpleasant propl.! often mot , with in the world. whose unpleamantiaessit%tilt t.,, assign the cause for. They are not neves verily unkind per.tts ; they are not angett emus ; and they do not apilear to talk ,a act. (rum any malice. t ut somehou of other they are mostly unfhrtunate in whit they say. They .tsk the wrong thing, Ai they omit to ask the right. They tiring fot ward the disagreeable reminiscence, the ludicrous anecdote about you which yntt would rather not hear repeated in a large company, the painful eireunniUmee which you wish was well buried and out, of sight. If )ou huge any misfortune they rush t.. prove to you that your own fblly was the cause. If you are betrayed, they knew it would be so. and remember that they have often told you so. They cannot iatagibe that the NOT , unfortunate man is not in a state just then to hear all this wisdom., In fact to use a metaphor. it seems as if they Itiol supernaturally large feet, Oh which they go stamping about. .and treading on other people's toes in all directions. 0gi..,410mf, years ago. a druggist, "up eountry," used to he grmt, on stunning wi vertisements of wonderfa panticerm bait would cure evreything "from the aurora borealis to a 'pimple." It was during the time when young follows about town were on the alert for any sort of a joke' 4 , and pile tlattday morning the good druggistesaw saN perided over the door of his place of , hue i - new s large black snake to which was alp pended a placard which read thus: t.Thi4 worn was removed from a el iltl four years of age. by two doses of Coma ock's Venni tusie.,l