New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY) 1843-09-02.€¦ · resume Ins n

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«kw-yokk tribüne. nrNB\V-YOBK DAILY TRIBUNE IS PUBLISHED EVERV MOttNlNC, SL'.M'AV EXCEPTED, ! hw-.ii t" ' iij Subscribers fei NINE I ENTSpei orwbtu they ; refer, thrj n i ... m ».!.. mc« at the nV'i'or ,lt monllu, or a year at I le same rate. Sin;!- JSesTWO CENTS. .Mail Sabscnbers Si per ami n in, uivanre; and the \ :>.\»* iu n<» case continued buyondth* ^ for which it is paid. Subscriptions taken for Six Vodiuc'ience allowed on Daily Exchanges with dir; other ^u Terms of Advertising. fji.N LINES or less, (<>\ ;-r Si v,) Firstiti:- rtion... SO Cent*. " for each subsequent insertion.2j " h " for Six insertions,or ouewreek... $1 SO " m '* for Twestv-Fivk insertions.sco " r*ry Locitcr Advertisemeuts -.t e ;n all \ favorable rates. THE NEW-YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE A Very Laritr Paper; f'>r the Country, It rDBLISHKD evrby satokday sioemko Atihelow price of TWO DOLLAKSDer annum, in adv xnce jJsaaiacKs, Rkliciovs md F: rkrja. Nonet:*,notes crfuiX liv« !"".«¦ i'> '..«."..*._ "The tribhine. Arrival of the Steamship Hurgaret] Five Days Later. tQ- We are indebted in Messrs. Haruden & Co. f.>r a copy of the Boston Daily Mail Extra containing the follow¬ er brief summary of the Foreign News received by ile- iieaaiship Margaret, being lite d.»ys later than our previous adricei: The steamci Margaret arrived at Halifax lasl Sunday from Liverpool, which place she left on the 9th, making her passage iu 17 days. Wr received from Air. Cunnabcl, oJ the Mali- fax Mornin«* Post, a few items from the latest English papers, b) the St. John boat and Gunni- son's Express, which arrived hereabout i o'clock A great meeting ol pitmen engaged in the col¬ lieries was held on the Oth at Black Fell, about (burmUes from Newcastle, for the purpose ol Jonning a union to protect the rates of wages.. More than 20,000 were present. There is no news of special importance. Lord Wei hi Lr tun bad declared in hisplaceinParliamcnt, in answer to a speech from Lord Roden, that the British Government were fully prepared to main¬ tain peace in Ireland, forcibly if they must, pi ace- ably ii' they could. Uur Halifax correspondent writes that there was no important change in the state of the mar¬ kets. Trade, if any thing, was improving. The nuptials of Lady Charlotte Hilr, daughter ofthc Marquis and Marchioness of Downshirc, and Mr. George Chetwynd, eldest sun of Sir George Chctwynd, Bart., were solemnized on the 6th. A sumptuous dejeuner was to he given by the No¬ ble Marquis at the family residence in Hanover square. There have been serious commotions at Lubcc, originating in the discontent of some soldiers with the clothes supplied to them by the contractors. The'Senate was obliged to resort to severe mea¬ sures of repression, and peace was restored. The Duke of Wellington had given a grand concert of vocal and instrumental music at Aj>s. Icy House. There were at least 700 ofthc lead- my nobility present. Laurence Dorgan alias Joseph Hayncs, the lad vbo effected his escape from Carlisle Jail iu such a daring and extraordinary manner, v.:u recaptured at Manchester and x-iii back to in - old i|Uarl< rs. It is stated in the Times, that in some parts of Wales, at a distance from the limekilns, :h-' farmers have tu pay for every jCö's worth of lime for manure, £G in lurii- .jikal The conservative nobility in the north of Ire- land have had a meeting at Belfast, and passed stroug resolu- tions against Repeal. 'Che Repeal cause does not make much progress in the north. Among the |>olitical rumors is one that Lord Brougliam i-s busily intriguing ami very painfully anxious to resume Ins n<-at upon the woolsack. Father Matthew appears to be pursuing his temperance career almost as triumphantly in England as he. did iu Ireland. Thousands heretofore votaries of Bacchus, nave iigiii «1 the pledge. The South of Wales continues in a disturbed state: toll-bouses and lull-gates are const intly coining under die uew regime of * Rebecca and her Daughters/ and the Government seems to possess no energy iu maiutaiuing the taw s. Sogreal is the animosity of the Welsh peopl against the metropolitan police sent among them, that, it is proposed t>> withdraw them entirely and substitute Welch conscripts iu tlieir place. From Sierra Leone..By the British brig James Hay, C'apt. Wiseman, we. have the Sierra Leone Watchman of July 1st. The Brazilian bark Oonfideucia, was brought iuto that port ou the 20lh Juue;havihgbeeii captured on the 17th of 'March by H. ii. M. ship Lilly, off Quiilcmuue river, iu Mo umlnijue Ciianucl. She had a plenty of slave irons on Wird, but no slaves. June \I'.'d, was br.'ii^tiL into Sierra Leone the Bra/.iliau sckuouer Bs|ierance, captured by it. 15. M, brig Spy, off Po- po, on the 2*Jtli May. She also was luily equipped as a sha¬ rer, out liad uo slaves on board. B.nli tLe.abuve vessels wire coudctuued : also two oilier Ktioouers, aud the brig Gen. Warren, o) L'hiludelphia. 'flic rainy season had comtneuced it Sierra Leone in good tamest "The thunder storms of the present season,'1 says die Watchman, "have en terrific in tl.xtreme. A long resident iu the Colony -aae^ that never, since IS31, have loose great wonders ol Cod been known so awful." (in the 19th of June, St. George's church at Freetown was struck 3' die electric fluid, and very seriously damaged. The ock was torn from it.-, place, .ami a part of the spire rem inn top to bottom. Other damage was done in die town, and much property destroyi d. [Jour. Commerce. CT An instance of rare rascality occurred at Rochester on the night of the ..'^tli ult., in the exploit of a young fellow, who left hi* own dwelling in the night, mounted to the roof of a linter of the next adjoining, passing into the sleeping room of three young ladies, through a kuiuow, which was open. They beiug awakened, made a callfortheii father, ..!! which the youngster deenmped as he taste, üe was, however, overtaken, carried to the watch- liouse .md committed. H7* Rochester sei ms to be greatly infested with tartars; scarcely a uight passes th it one or more efforts are Mtmadetorob. On Monday night last ou the < ity Trea- »ater'« Office-no go. On the same uight Mr. Bond's Con- fectiouery stoie on Buffalo-street, had one of its doors forced, a small amount in cents and candy takeu.the wh.de not imoantiugto ihe ».lue of the tools left by the burgl irs. ID3 On Sunday evening last, a boy, about 15 ?«rs old, fell ,.\, rboard from a scow boat .pun'; from Buffa- »to Albany and was drowned. Nothing is known about l|w lad, except that he was called John, and that his moüiec bve^iu Buffalo. A man was fomid near Concwaga Creel;. Loadundeiry township, IV, on üic'ilst ulfc in a dying cou- iuion, much wu'ileu, and his garments much stained with blood. Uewas yet sensible when discovered ; a ihre« bla- ^d knife lay by him Ojien, with which il is presumed In .>*dcui the veiu in his left aim, which w.,s severed.. H< b»d bfen let out of the afternoou cars going east, at his re- Vesti about half a mile north of tin bridge, aud his truuk was t ih-u ..in at il.- Railroad Hotel at ElizabeUilowu/aboul fbor miles below the bridgo, which, on being opened, was found to[coutain;a considerable quantity of various kinds of BWhing, and a leuer addressed to RichaKo M6tt«a»i New¬ ark, which is supposed to be the name of tie deceased. Toe sum ol $36 52,a si!w watch aud siiectacles, were found on his person, which, together with his clothing, were watered in a schedule iu the presence of the m i"hbors of Mr. Baehenoerger 5 and the body w.u decenll) interred, without Mholdiug oi an modest, I ram the circumstance that Esu hyuch. th. only Justice of the Pe ice in town, was ab» u:. B The Buflalo and Niagara Falls Railroad, t^etlicc with ihe real c-st.-ite, car-houses, is.c. was vdd a few <h«since at public auction iu Buffalo. The public will be in ,i measure to judge <>f the great worth and safety of «* rn.»d, when it is stated, tliat after being adveitined forsiv k'riu iu Erie aud Ni igara counties, the concern brought but v*j200! The road is 22 miles in length, aid is said have 0"giaaHy c «t $100,000. Dreaoki l Accident..John Spiccr, scm of °*hus Spicer of Kendall, Orleans county, while engaged at t*ft«t near a threshing machine on Tuesday of la^: week, jhpped into the machine from a scaffold and was so dread- 'illy maiiflrd that he died three hours after. One of his leg« **» amputated jU .t brfot- his death. The dec-.seil was s:\- jearsold. [Rochester D A circular has been left at the Merchants' ^?**Room, Boston; addressed to Lkm Lincoln, late C>.I- ?2*r®fthePort, expressing the warm and entireaptuoba* r?» of the signers (m'ercliants and oth-as interested in the commerce ofum port.) of Mr. LV official course. !: has ^ uiead y h numb r of signatures; 23* The Dedhara silk Factory establishrai nt, I'iedr l'! ^' ^" ^'^ ' ^''T1")'» which has been uuoccu- l 0f *e»>ral years, haj recently been re-opened and is"now drH'l,<r*t,on' ^'"'"l'1"^' manufacture about i ue hun- ^pounds daily, and the mill, when iu full operation, will lru<M" tea times that amount. cax^/f1 convic,« named Codfrcy made his escape Won"h^" ^f0m.lhc »toue-yard of.the House of Conection, hauuisf \ jumi''"S overboard and swimming outside of the ^icILm. iri*°U' IU* Wfts l<ul S'v " k'& bair fof bl Ctw Ti iT0£lK'r Pnsout,r mttJ,! ll»e attempt but was seta BY GREELEY & McELRATfi. VOL. III. NO. 125. Letters from 3fr. VTced.No. XIV. Correspondence of tJw Albany Evening Journal. L'i.vno\, July 'JJ, 1<13. The last intelligence from America is exerting a benign influence here. The improvement in American Stocks at home tells well abroad. The increased disposition to pay, wliich capitalists discover, is having" a salutary effect The fact that a new United States Loan was taken by »n;r own people, is the occasion of much congratula¬ tion, to-day, in and about the Bank of Enrrland. rJ'ltc shock to American cr< ditwas not oci asiom d half so much by the inability of Illinois and In. j diana, as tiir.- Repudiation ol Mississippi, and the iiidifiercncc of Pennsylvania. The insol vency of 1 the Rank of the United States, and the robberies committed by the .North American and other Trust Companies, though swallowing up millions j of English capital, would have had no injurious cflc'-t upon our pecuniary character as a Kation, so long as the State Governments preserved 'h^ir I faith and asserted their integrity: Nor is the money vye owe them wanted or required; They only ask that, like Bassaniu, we should evince a determination to < orhe fairly oil' from the greatdebts it in. Something too prodigal', nine hath left as gaged.' I had heard so much of the Bjtmsn Museum, from those who had seen it. and read >>> nmcJi about it from Tourists and Travelers, that I had come to regard it as a Ncw-^ ork or Alhany Mu¬ seum, upon a large scale; and went then- to-day because it was one ul the many London Lions. not< xpectingto be particularly interested. Those, therefore, w ho have been through tins institution, can judge of my amazement when its wonders were revealed to nie. " I! nth and Ocean" have been literally " plundered" to make up this end¬ less collection of all that walks, or swims, or fih s, or creeps, or crawls. Yon have here an epitome ofall, and more than all, that .Noah received into the Ark. 1 shall not, of course, lie absurd enough to attempt to describe what I saw ; but I do want to give you some inkling.some faint notion.of w hat this Empire has, by extraordinary munifi- cence, gathered together for the gratuitous in¬ struction and gratification of visitors. Rut the attempt will he lame and impotent, for 1 could not even procure the various catalogues short of an expense of forty-three pounds sterling, or! $215! The catalogucof printed books alone, in the library, published by Longman & Co. costs .1 pounds ti shillings. There arc 31 cases of " Rapacious Beasts," containing from one to fifty different animal -; of this species. There arc thirty eases containing '' Hoofed Beasts," each with from five to fiflhy specimens, while those of the species too large for cases, arc arranged upon the floor in front. There are 30 cases of" Birds of Prey," each con. tailling from an hundred to an hundred and fifty specimens. Of this number there are over forty different species of the Eagle. Of "Nocturnal Birds," mostly of the owl and bat species, there are five large easts, and over four hundred speci¬ mens. Of other birds, embracing, I should inter, every known variety, t hi re, arc 13-1 cases, each containing from one hundred to three, hundred specimens. (>f,l .Shells" there are forty-one caa upon the tahles, with specimens too various and top numerous to he even estimated. Upon the walls, over the cases, hang the portraits of llti Monarchs, Noblemen, Artists, or persons dis¬ tinguished for their loarning or virtue, ull by omi- nent artists, among which aie two line pictures of Cromwell, two of Mary Queen of Scots, Queen Elizabeth, Sir Hans Sloane, Sir l^a.n- Newton, Martin Luther, vtc. 6ic. In another gallery arc 19 casts containing more t J j .-in a thousand specimens of " Reptiles." The.,; arc also 22 eases filled with ..Handed Beasts," embracing every species of ape, monkey and baboon, of which there are between two and three hundred. There is such an approximation bo. tween the highest order of this tribe, and the low¬ est species of the human race, that the organ of speech is alone wauling to form a connecting link. The finny tribe, in all their varieties, are J arranged in cases which fill a gallery an hundred feet long. England, you know, abounds in minerals, minute and beautiful specimens of which arc displayed here. Sixty eases are de¬ voted tomineralogical collections, arranged in the same manner as in our State Geological Museum. This collection., however, in several respects, is not as complete as that obtained by our indefati- gable Geologists. There arc 1105 different spe¬ cimens of minerals, with labels describing their properties. 1 But the Gallery of Antiquities attracts most attention, and excites the highest admiration. 11 had only an hour where days would not suffice, Two large Galleries are filled with ancient (.'reek and Roman statuary. Among these is a bust of Trajan, a head of Apollo, a statute of Thalia, a head of Marcus Aurclius, heads of Paris and Helen/a group of Bacchanalians, a bust ofSevc- rus, a head of Nero, a bust of Marcellus, with an inscription, Priam supplicating Achilles to dc- liver to him the body of Hector; Hercules, with a club, sitting upon a rock, Ac &c. There are four more spacious Galleries devoted to Greek and Roman sculptures, and two others to British Antiquities. These Galleries contain many thou¬ sand curious specimens of the arts, when the"! world, many centuries past, was peopled by rt now buried race of semi-barbarians. 1 have, in this hasty, imperfect glance, passed without notice half a dozen galleries, each con¬ taining innumerable objects of exceeding interest, The cilleries vary in length from one to three hundred ft ct. And now, when enough to amaze and bewil¬ der has been seen, the great treasure-house Ql Learning and Knowledge was opened to us. The j Library of the Museum is only shown to visitors who obtain an order from a trustee or a letter to j its most indefatigable librarian, the Rev. Dr. Horner, who has devoted IT years, not to the reading, but to the arrangement and classification of the hooks. YVe attempted nothing, of course, bill to walk through this long vista, wallet] up on cither side with volumes. The Librarian, to whom we had h letter from Mr. VViCGlN, gave his time to us until we had gone quite through j his vast literary domain. The hooks are placed on shelves in "galleries thirty feet high, access to j which is by stairs to the room of iron balustrades. I know not how to give you an idea of the ex- tent of this Library better than to say that there arc shelves filled with books, on both sides uf the room, thirtv feet between the floor and the cell¬ ing, extending at least u quarter of a mile. One ol these, from BO to LOO feet Ion?;, contains the Library of Sir Joseph Banks, which he bequeathed to the Museum. Another, still larger, contains the Library of George the Third, many of the! works in which cost from one to three hundred pounds a volume. There is one gallery three hundred feet m length. The apartment for an- eient manuscripts is from forty to fifty feet square, in winch we were shown exceedingly well pre. served volumes of manuscripts a thousand years old. Tkc hooks in this library, if placed. a*» they stand upon the shelves, upon the ground, would, I should think, cover an area of more than two acres. The number of volumes is not ex¬ actly known, the catalogues being yet incomplete, but Dr. Horner informed us that there were at least three hundred thousand 1 The British Museum was founded in 1753, by Sir Hans Sloane, an eminent Physician, who bequeathed a valuable library of books and man-! OFFICE NO. 160 I ffEW-YORK, SATURDAY MOS uscripts, and an extensive collection of works of art and objects in Natural History- Its acces¬ sions have been by donations or bequests from enlightened individuals, liberally aided by Par¬ liamentary endowment. There were 547,415 visitors to the British Museum in 1642. From the Museum wc repaired to the Nation¬ al Gallery, where the eye and the imagination wander and wonder, with constantly increasing admiration and emotion at the excellence ami power of art and genius. Here are the efforts of the great M isters, ancient and modern. Here are (lie productions of Claude, Titian. Corregio, Michael Angelo, Guido, Murjllo, Raphael, Ku¬ li« ns, Rembrandt, Vandyck, Salvatcr Rosa : and of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Hogarth, Copley, YVilkic, Sir Thomas Lawrence, Benjamin West, Beau¬ mont, and a host of other Artists, less known, hut of irreal merit. The Pictures upon which i dwell witii most interest were West's truly divine rep¬ resentation of * Christ Healing the Siek,' .Mi en.. t.o's 4 Holy Family,' and 4 The Infant St. John, with the Lamb,' than which it seem., impossible lor brush and canvass to accomplish more. ' Connected with the National Gallery ;s tin- ex¬ hibition of the Roval Acadeaiv, through which wc were ton e.l to pass in a single hour. Here no Paintings are admitted that have been before pub¬ licly exhibited,, and originals only are received. The Academy now contains I3ö5 Paintings, by more than 10 different Artists. There are. also, over two hundred works in Sculpture, by some seventy different Artists. Among the pictures is a splendid one by C. II. Leslie, of the Queen re¬ ceiving the Sacrament, as a concluding part of the Coronation, *tt< nded by the royal retinue, all full-lengths, and judging from the portraits ofthc Duke of Wellington and Lord Morpcth, whom I have seen, all admirable likenesses. There is a striking picture by Ward, of Dr. Johnson perusing the manuscript of Goldsmith's Vicar <u VJake- field : tod a beautiful illustration, bv W.Cope, of that scene in Burns' " Cotter's Saturday Night," where :. " But hark ! a rap com-.- gently at the floor; Jenny, wha liens the meaning the same, Tells how it neebor lad cam o'er the moor, To do some errands, and convoy In-r hame." There is, too, a glorious group by Claxton, en¬ titled '* Sir Joshua Reynolds and his friends.". These " Friends,*' of whom there are admirable full length portraits, are no less personages than Edmund Burke. Horace Walpolc, Dr. Mudgc, Benjamin West, Sir W. Chambers, Sir George Beaumont, Alderman Beydell, Lord Mulgrave, Sir William Hamilton, David Garrick, Richard Cumberland, Admiral Kcppcll, James Boswcll, L<:rd Burglierzh, Dr. Johnson, with .Mrs. Mon¬ tague, .Mrs. Sid dons, Marchioness Thormond, j 'Sir .1. B.'s mice. Mrs. Cholmondcley, Angelica IvaurTtnan, Mrs.ThraIc, and Fanny Burncy ! \\ e went to Chelsea, where you know the Hos¬ pital for old and disabled soldiers is situated, on Sunday, and alter the Church service was over, wc were allowed, und indeed invited by the old veterans 'many of whom went stumping it along with wooden legs) to walk tlirough their apart¬ ment. Here are admirable quarters for men who have worn themselves out in Ihe armies of Film¬ land, hot the hospital is far less extensive than tliat for old sailors at Greenwich, ami but very few of the lens of thousands who are " broken and bruised" in hallte « vir lind their way to Chelsea. We saw the pensioners at dinner, which was .excellent in quality and profuse in quantity. They all speak with strong feelings oi gratitude of their.enjoyments and luxuries. Most of the pensioners hen- have goncthrough the Peninsular wars. 1 talked for some time with one who was at Corunna .with Sir John Moore. There were, they saui, two or three pensioners .among them who were in Canada during our late war with Eng. land, hu! 1 did n"t find them. They invariably and voluntarily spoke with strong ami indignant abhorrence ol the Puke of Wellington, who. it si em?-, though i was nol aware of it, when Pre¬ mier, endeavored to break up and discontinue the Chelsea Hospital. I do nol know what Ids mo¬ tives or reasons were, but if he designed to cast these war-worn veterans, who dealt and received the hard blows which secured him fame and for¬ tune, upon the cold world, homeless and house¬ less, there is a refinement of cruelty and ingrati- lüde in his nature that should cause the prcst nt generation to detest his character, and posterity to loathe bis memory. The Dining-Hall of Chelsea Hospital is hung with trophy Colors and Standards, from the Duke of Marlborough's victorious battle of Blenheim, to the inglorious butcheries of the British Army in China. Among these emblems of British va- lor, arc the sanguinary evidences thai England has been at war with almost all the Nations of; the. Earth. There arc three stands of American Colors displayed in this Hall. I >ne was taken at Washington. I could not learn the history ofthc other two, but an old veteran who heard ine in¬ quiring, came up and remarked that he had heard a Pensioner who was in the li^ht when one of them was taken, say."that the Yankee Eagle cost more British blood than any other Slum/ of] Colorsin ihr Hall" There is nothing very mor¬ tifying in seeing two or three captive American Eagles, with " E.pluribus Unum" in a scroll sus- pended from their talons, provided there is neither dishonor nor cowardice united with their capture. And if it were otherwise, 1 should be indemnified by the reflection that in the way of trophies, we can display ten times the -number of British Co¬ lors, Flags, Cannon and Ships of War, as evid¬ ences of American valor and prowess. 1 have had but little leisure, and no facilities i but such as are ripen to all, for obtaining political information here. I infer, however, from the course of the debates in Parliament, and from the newspapers, that the power ofthc Tory Mm- is try is upon the wane. The Whig Peers and Press evidently feel stronger, and some «<ld rats who retreated in the flush of Sir Robert Peel's triumph now begin to put then heads cautiously out of their holes. If, as I apprehend, the facul¬ ties of the Duke of Wellington are failing him, not only the Tory Administration, but the Brit- ish Empire, must be prepared tor a terrible shock With him crumbles one of the main pillars that upholds this gigantic structure. He has been a tower of strength to England nol only in the Field but in the Cabinet. Intellectual Progress in tue PresentCen- turv..The same a«re which witnessed the mili¬ tary glory of Wellington and .Napoleon, beheld the completion of astronomical investigation by Laplace, the hidden recesses of the heart unfolded by Sir Walter Scott Earth told the history of its revolutions through the remains buried in its bosom, and the secrets, even of material compo¬ sition, yielded to the power of philosophical ana- iv.a.-. Sculpture, revived from its ashes, under the taste of < 'anova. and the genius of Thorwaldi sen, again charmed the world by the fascination of design : arcMtecturc displayed*its splendor in the embellishments ofthc French metropolis, and the ri-im: capital of Russia united to tu«: solidity of Egyptian materials the delicacy of Grecian taste. Even the rugged ridges of the Alps yielded to the force of scientific enterprise, and the bar¬ riers of nature were smoothed by the efforts oi hu¬ man perseverance. [Alison's History of Europe. [LT The eriiTunal proceedinus entered into against L. J. Papiaeau, E. B. O'Callaghan. and Thomas Stoir.-w Brown, in consequence of die events ol 1»3<, weri? withdrawn yesterday, on three separate motions made by Mr. Buchanan, U C, oil behalf of use Hon. Auoraey-G-scexal LaroutAine, md a milt prosequi entered. [ilouttaal Jtaald, 290i Aug- il. N'ASSAU-STREET. tifWfO, SEPXE3ÄBER ä, 184:?. I'm M.oi: ÜMMKi, < \KLi3. IrtsUKASCK POLICIES, BlLXs OK LxDIKG', ClBCl i.Alu, HT The Rochester Democrat says it is re- quested to mention that a number of spirited farmers of Liv¬ ingston County propose jq shew u u yoke t,f working oxen at the Fair of the State Agricultural Society to be held in that Citj "n th- 10th, -o*.!i and 2lst of Sept. acrainst ine.joal- nnmber from any other Count* in this State. The campe :i'.rs from each County to pay twentv-fiye dollars, to go to the winners. The money from Livingston County is de¬ posited «vidi the Assistant Secretary^of the Society, and the fanners of Western New-York are invited the competition; [LT Two men named Lewis Miller and Charles Connard were drowned in the Croton Reservoir, Westches- wc Co. on Friday of last weefc Thev were in a boat with four Others, «dl excit-d by 1 i.^t.»r. v. hen they ft 11 to scuttling, overturned their boat, and the above two were drowned. J A Mrs; L. F. Ardrcy lost her Life ut Natchitocheä, La., on the 9th, by jumping from a cirnag* of whicli the horses had .taken fright. She survived but a few hours. * ,! .' A Mr. Neil was killed by "tie Henry Gee at Gainesville, Al u, a few d back. Neil, w.u, stabbed savagel) that he di*d in a few minutes. Gee is in jail. TRIBUNE JOB PRIiN flNG OFFICE, No. loo NASSAU-STREET. All kmds o Job Prutting:, such as iMi-mi i. : i MaMMuMI Show UlLLs, LtiCTunK Bills, Co.NCBm Bills, Vl.ua and Fancy, POLIl II iL niLi..<, i iKl'VLAt!!, (tieftt) >tC. Promptly eirijiited üie Office of The Tribune, No. It>0 Nis sau Lre< .. .. Ii.-- Park. THE TRIBUNE BOOK-BINDERY, No. 7 Spruce-street, Tribune Buildings. JAMES PRINGLE respectfullj informs hi* (riendsaud the public u-ii-oillv tint lie Ins ,;oiiiiiieuced hiiMii'-.ts \\ il!i h deteiuiiiiattoii to ilo justice to his customers, both u> toqn ility of w orkmausbip anil sc lie of charges. He is prepared to e xe- cnte Binding In -ill its branches. Jobs of au\ kind ip|iertaiiiing tothe business solicited. Or¬ ders left at So. 7 Spruce-street will Its thankfully received and faithfuilv attended to._ j v 12 tl" Eleven Hundred Pages for si 00. To the Friends of Mr. Clay. Lot am) SrRECMES of Hemkv Clay..The publish era ul this work are now prepared to execute ,)iders to anj extent. The work is compri* d in two octavo volumes, con- taiiiiiig in tlie whole upwards of 1,100 |iages, and is illus¬ trated by a splendid steel Portrait ofJNtr. . lav, a View ol his Biiili place in Virginia, and a Fee Simile of one of his letters.the whole for One. Dollar .' It is believed to be the cheapest work eW-i published in America. These Speeches form an important portion of the History of our C'mi!i;r\ for the last thirty years, and are interesting to all classes of readers, without reference to politics. PRICES. Wtlliont up in stion* flexible covers, in the French style: Single copy, -1 vofs. octavo, npwardaof 11"0 pages.. .$1 <>0 Twelve copies for.I» 00 Twenty-fivo copies for.M 00 I One hundred copies for.SO (10 i lion ml with t !«>th Bucks & Gilt Lcttcriiiar. Single copy.$1 Twelve copies for.U 00 Twenty-five copies for.00 One hundred copies for.9,i no : None sent on < ommission. Terms Casn. On!- rs must üe addressed to GREELEY & M< EL RATH, N< w-Ydrk. Cheap and Valuable Itooks: (TT* The Ibllowiug works are for sale at the ofiicebftfte New-York Tribune, Nassau-street, opjiosite the t icy !I.»H, in theCity.of New-York. A liber .1 discount from the retail prices made to pi rsons who purch se to sell again. Life and Speeches of Henry I laj. 2 vols. of upwards of 1100 panes,and 3engraving*. SI no Amern *n Laborer, I vol. octavo. 1 00 The Test : or l'iriie, tried by their Acts, by Juuius; $¦» .'in p-r ion copies; or 1.000 copies for. 2t> 00 The Currency, by Juuius : S2 50 per 100 copies, or 1000 conies for.20 00 ! The Tariff1, by Juiiiüs t $2 50 per 100 copies, oi (000 copies for. 20 00 Travels in (»i gou, ftoi ky Mount uns, \... by Farnli im Iii fclllsworüi'scelebrated Reporrou Agriculture, Arts, &c > Larducr's Lectures on Aatronpmy. 26 Chemistry and Exjieriments in Philosophy, by (iiiiTirh and L> dtoil. 2-'j Political Economy, by Atkinsou, wiüi Introduc¬ tion by II. Greeley. 2j S.tisaur": Life cf Henry Cbiy,single copies 01 cents.-0 conies for SI, or 100 copies for. 3 00 Gale's Elements of Philosophy. 374 ! Lectures on Geology; bj Doctor Lyell, 2d edition. 25 Beauties of Wesley, being selections from his Works... M "Whiz Almanac for 18-13.: ... 121 ALMANACS.Fanner's Almanac for the different Meridians, bv the inn. 150: Temperance do.;i hy the mo. l 5o [ Pet-r Simple, by Maixyatt. 2.'» i J mob Faithfuliby Marryatt. 2j 1 .\ full account of the Corners Vituny witli Dtagrairu, Stc, and all i!«» Documents. 12i I Family Magazine, to be completed m 16 Numbers, each Number. 25 I O'Conuell's Memoir on Ireland; with u Portrait. 25 Sir. t :l ly's S|ieechou retiriug from Üie U. S. Senate and at Lexington, Ky.r-Pamphlel.'.. Pleadings and Argument in the case-or J". Fenimore i ooper vs. Horai .. I <¦¦¦ and Thorn i> McEtratb, with ii ii in nc ( ommcntaries on lh« Law of Libel... ti Lecture on Magnetism and Astronomy, by Richard Adam« Locke. 6i Speeches of Hon. T. F. Marshall, oh Alcohol and In- teiniieriuiceoud Fashionable Wine Drinking. 6i PTT^ Orders u\u^ be accomp mied by the cashi and addressed to GREELEV St McELRATH, New-York. ". " .John HnnlcII, I'-im-r. ts removed from CO Chambers-street, (where he lias kept his ;ofhce the last ten years,) to ¦>;!. Broadway. conierofFranklui-streetrone block above the Broadway Tabernacle. sl'Jt* ~- Sylvaiilu Association..flffice No. 25 Pin« third stoi Oj.u from 0 to l'J A M. and from 3 to I I'. M. Information cheerfully given. The Constitution given. jylOU German Langnagc».Private persons and in¬ stitution, wishing to employ a native of Gennany of literary atl dnments is Tutor for the initial or higher study of the Ger¬ man Language; *r<- requested apply at die. office of the Gei¬ lnau parier,' t?«:hii»-lIp<>*ri Sprncest. au2D2tis3to -a - rx7» A library for the People of Color has heeu established <r No. 161 Duanestrewt in this city; it con- i tins upwards of Twelve Hundred volumes ,principally con- tnbiitr-.l by the New-York Philomatheaii and tie- Ladies' Lit¬ er try S.-.i-iwi-s mid- r the direction of which it has been opened dunns the past year. . A^ tie supply of li""k-i is not suffu lent to meet the increas- inc intellectual wants ofthe Colored People, this method is; adopted res|>ectfuliy to solicit die aid of the friends of their improvement. Don itions 15" iks, Monev, «ieological and Mineralogie il Specimens and Philosophical Apparatus may be sent to the Library. Room,. No IGI Du.treet, which is opened every Wednesday.,evening from 7till 10 o'clock. The subscribers are authorized to wait on the fro nds of the mental improve¬ ment, and nolicit donations for th.- Library, which is entitled the .Vtir-l'oiJissociale Library. PHILIP A. BELL, GEORGE T. DOWNING, ALBRO LV ONS; Jaw3mW&S J VMES M.( ANE SMITH. - Orphans Bencflt;.CASTLE GARDEN- POSTPONED..In conserjii nee of the threatening appear¬ ance of the Weather on Monday evening; the 23th instant, the benefit to the Oniban; Asyl um (Prince street) Ills been i«ost- noned until Monday * vening next. tth of Seotember. 1 JAMES B. O'DONNELL, Secretary. io2 It TK>>i_ Health, (^ulet. and Comfort..The Gra¬ ham House. 63 Barclay-strent, New-York, proffers advantages i.i ,:.-i.,.-.-r» ppin- . lew ibv< or we. ks tu the city, sucrcas irr rarely offeie«i. It ijeligibly located »u n clean and airy street; very hear the busiuesa part of tlie city, and iti tlie irw mediate ricinitv of the principal itramboat landingsi Jtt .its irt ci nvi nicht and neat, while it-subk is supplied with the best Vegetables and Fruio ih il can ns procjirertj ex- clui'inc nitirelv Animal Food and stimulants of all kinds. Chargesmoderate, md n-r. effort nude to render Boarders comfortable. Shower Batlia free. Remember, C3 Barclay- stn-er. ; cl B|.;\.l A.\ii\ HAKDINGE, who lectured In die V olid, to the entir- saüsfaction of his audience, upon the Oiiiin and Process of die Art of Sjieech, P»ych<igraphy, Ste- reographing ideas; Embodiment of Thought, Stc &c , has taken rooms at the Park Place l! >uje, where be will teach Sn- reoffraphy^s Mnemonical Epttome^andw irrant hispunila sn< h perfection in tie- w t a.^ to en ibl -tiiem tofollow t s;>e.iKer with¬ out hesitation. It is only by tlw r-c-nt improvements of Mr. H-thattbis low; »oa^ht desideratum cau be e&rily accom- plisbed: ... , ,. ,. , For reference to men of tue first class m Lrudition and whos« statements ire from the .! ...ntaneous results ol practical experiment, see circulars._;tu!2 lm PATENT PORTABLE FORGE AND BEL- LOWS Thi Subscriber offers! to the public a: a consider- able reduction from former prices, the above article; which has beeu thoroughly tested, and pronounced t-> le- the most perfect article e\er offered to the public. Its small bnlkjand'complete- ur.JS (not bavins; i,j build a chimney) U one of its br>t recom- rnendadons : you can set it any where, and make your fire at once, and you are ready for w.irk. There are four sires for light or b. ivy work. A io rsale.very low, cast iron-Well Pnllies and O^en Mouths ; and >. »ui».-rii,r aiticle of 1 mch stove nuts. SAML. it. SPELMAN, .t:I2 eodlm 230 Water-sQvet. I"^OR~ THE LADIES ALONE..S. ALLE X, (late with Lane, r- r .--.J) nronld reinm hi- iincere-thanki to the Lailies of N'-w-l .,rk ^ml its vicinity for the very liber¬ al patronagecqniexred on him at his Lailie-' Shoe «tablisli- menr, No.70Lisi^nard-streec, ind begs leave to still ass'ire :;,ein rbat every eSortshnU t^evHrt^d to combine elegance with drrrabflity, and reude.- bis .toie the cheapest in the city, (ana ^i j^r c-at. beiort- the tjaahJjwquently.iih ertised by meieuor- ices.) S. A need not usform the Ladies that his store ia the most fashionable in the city,-and that hisarticlei and work- inanship cannot be surpassed Wy any. The Ladies' patronage heretofore is in ample pledge for the future. .. Forgetting up the article of Ladies' Shoes and Gaiter Boots we always umsidered Mr. Allen far superior to any oth¬ er man we ever had in our emiiloyroent." . ... f hos. La.-«E & Sos, (reUre.5.) No. 70 Lisj>euard-s:, ona street below Canal-sL, N- * ., whole- *. *ale and retail._ au7 eoi.rj P^uNGEES.12 cases White Pongees 30 yards. 10 da do do Hd'kfs. f«ured. OaLN.NEU.. M1STUBS» CO^ FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR. WHOLE IVO. 71«. QCHOOL VVANTED..Any person having a 0 so.vit School to dispose of will find i purchaser by anply- .net-A. HUVT, 1S6 Eu: Broadway*. Peraale school pre- ferred._au31 6t M" RS. AND MISS P1ERCY will resunn "heir Srb.>cl-or yoons Ladies; at 121 Spring street, on Mon¬ day, September tth._ au392w« ¦VTlSS GRAM'S Boarding and Day School tor a.*-*- t bamj Ladies, -v% ilI be reopened on Monday, September KttvatK.Hammoad atrrrt, formerly the residence of Aid. wenfield._ ..,2:5 X [RS M. W: MASON'S School foi Young La- ATX dies Will bcreK>pened on Mond u\ September 4th, K No J Second-street, opposite Bond, the fourth dooi from ttu B*!2»*2:_si it* jVPSS '<. A. DEVEREÜX Lnfonns uernati as u,dthe publicthat!,« Boarding tad Day School. acM Dona-it. wiil re-open on Sept. tth. VToung Ladies are requested to be puncto it on the day of it- t*i,"1'""'e- au30 [tw ? PRIVATE TUITION.The 1,'tv. J, lTlur, J- A. iL, will ou Monday, tlie Ith of September resume bis 1 ws.. I it-the instiuction ula limited namber ofbovsiu Clas¬ sical and Mathematical Study; Hour, from 9 A M. to I V V 1 Wfci.KTH-sTBEKT.betw.eeii.6thand7thAvrnuo<. ajl if OELECT SCHOOL FOR BOYS, 17 AjuY-sl. lO This School will be n^opeued on Monday die 4th Sept. 'insisting .it on! .1 limited utunber of pupils; its design is to offer to parents the means of giving their sous a tlwr ugh | re- [.arntury education which sliall qualify diem for either the counting house or college. »I tf RH IIA KD P. JENKS, Teacher: \} K.S SPRAGLJE'S SCHOOL FOR Y.OI N'G - LADIES, L'-\s Fourth street, op|K>»it« Washington Square, Mill re-open en Monday, the 11th of September. Pafeuts^wisliinr to procure for th. n d tughter ¦ a thorough .Ii-. cipline in ill the solid ind ornamental branches ofedui atiou are respectful I \ iarited to call and exnraiue the system and method of teaching pursued iii this Institution, The French. Spanish and Italian mi:-.i i_. a i night mid spokiii in tie family. au3) S* VOTJNG LADIES' BOARDING ÄND DAY X SCHOOL..Mrs. BAILEY respectfully informs her pa- troiis.and th< public thai she will re-open her Seminary, at V. 10 Carroll Place; Bleecker-street,ou Thursday, th iti of September next. The same system of Instruction is pursued as formerly, ind the same teacher* employed, aided by oth¬ ers nt similar ability. Mr*. Bailey solicits the patronage of tliose whoare dbposed togive tlieir daughters solid and -.e- complished eiluc itioo. A F rench Governess wanted. Apply as above, au2S Im * f] VV. PKEKS* C.LASSU AND KNtTLlSH vy. S< HOOLv&tO Broadway (near Stuyvesaut Institute) m ill i»- re-opened ou Mon.tav, uh September. EcicHEas..C. E. Washburn. A. M. (lately i tutor in Vmhersi i ollegej Latin and Greek; A. Pestiaut, French-, K. Purcell. Drawing; W. Davison, Peuinanship: W. B. Brad- bury' v c.tl Music. Th- English and Mathematical Deitartments will be under the .supeiintendeuce of the Principal. C ircul irs, com lining terms, Xe. may be had ou application to Mr.~Br laut, 6-15 BroaiI way. ,irto the Principal._au311 f MKS. S. C. REID/S BOARDING AND DAY SCIIUOI.. 1") K'-uiili-rrptft, near the Washington square;.wi|l;re-open on. the first Monday in September, Pa- rents will please hr.ir in mind the importance of their children being punctualin attendance <m rh u day, that they ina\ he present at the organization of i!»- das les. M rs. l!.-i<! will he .it home fnun the 1st of S ptember the '!¦!. I'r.1(1 o'clock A. M. until L' P. M., mid from 3 P. M. until'". !'. M.. to reci ive those parents who-may wisb to confer with Mrs; IL relative to her institution. \!r>. K.will be.happy to explain her mo«le of instruction and h-r terms chose parents who may wish to place their daughter* uuiler her charge. au2-l Uw HTM IK STJBSCR-1BEI? proposes to rake Into his A. family ,i lew lads tu due ii" in « thorough manner. itliet for the I liversit). diecoiintiugr-room, an agricultural life, '<r a< teachers. Afrer fifteen years experience in tlie ornl method of instructiont he (eelssome confidence in seeking the jmhlic patronage. Iiis residence if Walpole, N, II ,on the innec- ticut river, i> ><r.f of the inosl moral; Ii»- ilthy; .(iii»-t and beanri- ful villages in New England, and can be reaciieil in 36 hours from the city of New York. Term*; im luding board, tuition, washing, &c,S200 i >--u. V'^ry few hi>'"il»s mjiiiied. For farther particulars, appl) to Rev. Ilenn W. Bellows, No. 30 r»iou h ice. New \ »rk. JOHN N. BELLOWS. Walpo! .. N. 11 . nth Al::r:. _.m:il_lm.I- pLASSICAL FRENCH a N D ENGLISH V^si HOOL, lVo. t Broadway, opposite Ast.«r Plac«.1 PERR1NE & FOIGXET, PrinciiKils, (Iat. Petibeau & Perrine. Mr. PE11KIXE U ive to inform his friends ind^the public generally, that in consequence of the decease of his late associate, Moa. Petiheau, hw has entered into copartner shipwitli Möns- FOIGNET, Professor of the French lan¬ guage, at St. Thomas Hall, Flushing, L. I., from lliecom- meuceinentof that Ittstitiitiou, and that the school will re- 051*11 mi the iir-,1 Monday in September. Messrs, P. Sc F. respectfully add, th.it the French will ¦..till be exclusively taught and spoken three hours a day; and that the most untiring i-lTort.s will be made tQ rendei pupils »t home in every branch of a French education. Mane^ca^sjOräl .¦.y-.r-m r\ ¦!! be folloW?d fur thftVa whole pareulsniay d«->iir ir. Boys are received at at any stage of education and thoroughly prep ;ir-d lor college <>r bu nness. hoi terms, references, see Ciieulars with Messrs; Be- rardaiul Mondou, 36 Conrllandt street, S. J. Crowen. No Broadway, unt .;t the school. au'JU liu*' "WINDOW 5ILADES7^The greatest variety of » . Shades to be found at niiystore is ai Nu. 7 Sprucs-st., prices \ trying from fi i" Sj>j. Shades shown with tlie cre.ir- est of pleasure and:nocharge made. Persons buying Shades of us jntvi great advantage 01 er other places -\> all our patterns are originnl, and weare addingto tlie stock everyday. Signs and Banuers painted to order. si tin BATtTOL St DE MAUKY. QnAABÄKRELS.OF LIME, ol th« besi quaj"- Ov/.V/V/ity, will be delivered for, or any part of it, during the coming seasou, aud »oi>.l city.bouds and mortgages re- ceii'-.l in iiavment. A-I.Ir--si" Lime." Tribune Office, 9f tf HYDRAULIC LIME.Orders left at J. D. Mil¬ ler's Drv Goods Store. 121 Broadway, will receive prompt attention. Price SI i'crr,t..k ol :«iulba. 91 tf AB IJ AH SMITH, tlw only manufacturer. \ CASKS OF LIME, of good quality; *30 OUU casks ol Norlli Rivet Linn-. 120 barrels of good Hydraulic Cement. inn hlids. of unsl icked Lime, P.-r manure. Any p-iit of a will be sohl ur exchanged for groceries, dry goods, crorkery, hardware, bollow-ware. carpets, furniture, so.iji. caudb j "<r [inn isions. Address BARTER, -U 'lie office of Wie Tribune. _iftf i COMMISSION PAPER WARKHOL'SE, NO 43 JOHN-STB EET; "PLLIOT, BÜRNAP & BABCQCK are con- JT_i stantly supplied with ä large and .'eiicral assortment of PAPERS, suit"! to 'ill departments of the rn.l-. among which aie the followiug: Hubbard's roloivd Papers, _in great variety ; Boston Copperplate Papers, of suj^ii^r quality; Biiok and News Printing; Cap, Letter, Folio Post and Blank Book Papers; Printers', Clothiers'and Carpet- makers' Press-Boards; Druggists', Hardware and Cloth Pa- pen: Binders'and Trunk Boards; Sheathing and Wrapping Papers, itc. Sec. Paper-makerrsupiili-d widi all kinds of stock and mate rials._ _je3Qtl MAGNETISM APPLIED TO DISEASE.. Mr. JOHNSON, who has been experimenting for tlie last few years, in il most every |iart of the XTnited States, up- on Hi-.subject of Animal Magnetism, respectfully announces to his numerous friends that lie ins takeu an office, .it H'.i ChambersMtreet, New-York, where be will apply this agent to th* removal ofalmost every varietyol disease, and eileet. he btdies'es, a s|>eedy cure, as b«- h u already done in setrr.il hundreds of butancta. He has also secured me services ol clairvoyant; who will examine tlie nature of the dise-Lw of any individual, and prescribe a remedy while under the magnetic intlueuce; Those who have diseases of long standing, and who have Le-^ii rre-t.'d by physicians to no i.uri>ose are invited t.. call. Terms reasonable auli ::m . WASHINGTON KLIXIK.-A pure v»-gi-tahle compound.." Nature*.! God Ims secreted in the vege¬ table kingdom, sale; sure ..,¦! ipeedy remedies for .t!!_<lisua»e.i j toaearchforand discover these, is apart of man's allotted toil.'' Tins well kuoivii usertion of Dioscorides; one of the nmat profound of the ancient philosophers, has received another ev ideuce of its trutlj ami m iN.|>;m, :u the discovery '.t' the Washington F.livir, which, for its many virtu-*, may t<< i-iü-ii .1 God-send to the afflicted ! It is only neceasary t" say of it. thathnndreds of our best citizens can attest its ilmost in power in thoroughly curing thai most intolerable ofall diseases. FEVER AND AGUE..The Washington Klixir ü equal- lyeffii icious in tlie cure of Cholera Morbus, Bilious ( hohe, Diarriicea and Dysentery, Worms and Dy*|ie|>sia. The Washington; Elixar beiug composed entirely of Vegetable substances, is. of course, perfectly simple and harmless, though unequalled for tiie rapidityand vigor with which it compels die stomach to perform the peculiar (unctious 1-- quiieuin effecting a^radical cure of the above mentioned dis¬ ease*.one do»e having, not uufr« quently, caused * permanent cure. The Washington F.liair, in envelopes containing ch ir;sim nie and precise directions for Its iise, may be obtained 01 Lit. E. M GÜION, VS! Bowery; cok Grand-it.; and of It. E; Muss, cor. Grand ami ( innon-sts.; J. Weodover, III Eighth Avenue ; A. W. Gabanden,6l Sixth Avenue ; Dr. K. Leggett; cor. A venu- D >el ).) str-i : I). H. Burtu«rt. .--.r-Tt-J .Av-nue and3thstreet; Dr. U.A. FieId,.cor. Broadway and 12üi»t.; Guinness, 122 3d Avenue, cor. tub street; Ed. Chessteaey cor. Bowery md Broome-sc; J J. Coddington, rr, Hudson st. ; E. L. Cotton, 2ti'j Bleecker-st.; Oliv-r Deromas St Co., 39Chatham-st.; Dr. Wm. Cecil. VorkvUIe;A. L. Louns- bury, Manhattanville; Dr. W. G. Wood. Harlem, si jm ORISON'S VEG ETA 11L K 11N1V E R SA L -MEDICrNES.*.Caution to the People of America.. We hereby certify, that M*s*rs. FIKTH&, HALL,oI Frank liu Square, New York, are oar ouly GENERAL AGENTS for tlie United States ofAmerica; md thit neither Horatio SitEFHKajao Moat nprGcoacK TarLoa, onr late Agrats, ire in my way authorised to \-ud Morisou's Vegetable !. ne venwl Medicines. As many imitations *re m circulatiou, this Caution becomes highly necessary. All persons sellinir/mi Medicia« in the United States must have the authority ol the befiire-nainvd Messrs. F11 h Si Ham (Sign-!) MORISON.MOAT kCo., HygeisU. British ' oUegeof Health, N. *i Road. London, lan.12«. The above ceti/ten, emanating from tlie "Briti ih CoUese ol Health, London,'' will b- hailedwith the warmest enthusi¬ asm by the rrieuds of the Hygetan System, inasmuch is 11 ;- ::.) 1 to rrt>nsc and oppose th* u?ortltl«%\ COVMtttJtiL* whien have b*eo extensively circulated by those who .vre a.« destitute ofmoral principle; as they are ignorant of rl>e ftheaungart. Theinvaluable medicines of the British College may be on- tame.! in their original pnrinrof several gentlemen who taken agi ncic in s»v< ral ol the different States, mioss names w-l! be-found 1:1 ti e .* .v Voik fVourier and Ku-inlr^r. - T be 1 m be bad also in the original packages of th« totiow- ihgsub-Agents, viz: Messrs. Paul Poo St < 0. 96 John st- 44 H. H. Schieffelin it Co. 104 and 1P6 John st. J. C Whitmnre. Esq. 45 South st. .* Isaac Suell. 190 Greenwich st- .* Pew Hsmptou, 190 r'anal it., New 1 ork city. M-«rs. Post & Lewis, Jerjcno, L. I. '. il d. Bardwell, Aioy, ^»ew lOlk. Mes. Good I iff. Urica. do Mr. W. H. Bar.«. Rochester. do Messrs- Coraw-11 Sc Botler, Pokeepsie, £*,*¦ ». W. J. Styles, Rhinebeck, do a4tf FIRTH k JiALJ*. Grnexal AgmU,l F«aküa sqtiaie. M' i B 1Cy"AiNTED-pRe^>ectable families and the pub- * " .teibenratll) imfi rm»d that they can always be sup¬ plied with American, English. Irish ijroowfiat. Scotch. Uer- 1 ... Cln lurntsh saaslacton city i. r-... e,, ,t No. 123 Broadway. M door Mow Howard-st, -:' "1*_T. ELLIOTT, rroptWtor. YXTAN !':.''¦-A situation as waiter bv a very ! cit%tnT* v '>unc Inani vrasesnot nn ob-'ect. Fleas* tnply it 271 Mulberry street. anjl $t» A PA R TN ER WANTED La h pleasant'office 1 V isiness worth $ 1200 jet annum. A business m m with % u aa interest, Apply u 35 Libery street. aa29 1 w*_¦_ l^ANTED.As Clerk in a Jeweler's Store, a V V young man »h.> h is badexperienceia thebnahaeas,'and r . refer t.» 1i> «>: employers, None others needapply.' Ad* dress J- Weletl at ibis office. st Je* PK IVATE WATCHMAN..A steady, expert, enced Man .v wtsemplovnaent as Private Watchman; best "references. l::.;uiiv at 16 B>vnJ-»r. au29Iw + N K A! LING..Wanted, "about 13 teofof [r >n Railing from S :o lu feet hieb« «Lo, about 20 feet not mor> than5 fee highs Address*' 1M3," Tribune . :ficc. 30ai» 01 O () n WANTED.ForT\vc~fiSt^:e^nd ^-LOv/v/ uid M.'rrT.iK'"*.pr«>i>*rtv wor'h nearly double rin ant. ».pplyti Gerrit Smith. 57 Liberty st. au3l Iw* \A R D .A lew gentlemen cau he accommoda¬ te.! with e tod Board, on r-.-A-maable terms, at 12 John at. a7 1m ._ "OOÄRDLNG .Good Board and very pleasant 1j It. outs, furnished oi auforajshetl, foi ifcndetnen and their wiv.x. or siuKlegentlemen, may be obtained at No. 80 East Bri id w i. Ii. d references given and required. si lw* PMPOKTÜKl OF CHININ GLASS, *\6C..Tho -* - h ipeal md grelle» t variety of China, Glass and Earth- en VV ire that can be found in the city, is at No. 7 Sixth ave- uue, opposite Amiry-street, Purchwers wishing to supply til . ¦ ' i . ii-»p rate will meet with polite atlentiou and >f ware; but pricers. or person* wtro go about kilUafl him, aie requested not to call. N. U. \ [ioici i ihctiou of Plants in bloom for sale. si 2vv *_ TUIE O L'AJtXXERgUIP heretofore exhuin* 1 twee tin subscribers, under the fum ofWORTHING. '1'ON St PpRTElt. is.tliisda) dissolved b\ mutual consent. Ml persons indebted to theabove firm are requested to make moliati paymentto \, D PORTER, who is auUvoriisd to EDWARD WOKT1ÜNGTON. Sept. :. isi» A. D. PORTER. 'i In mbsi riher will coutinue the Tailoring Business on his ,.' it No.67 Kiitt.'i: street, w bere the foi mer nations ol the establishment are respectfullj in* ire.1 to call. A. I>. PORTER. MF »« SALE OR EXCHANGE, a.cottaee |;;jtj| built House and Stable, with six lotsattached on tit* w-r«3».N hwe»t corner of 5th avenue and 125th st. Apply at 13 Courtlandt st. corner of-Greenwich st, auto tf Ii' I,KT- He-second story ot t!i»> M'ribuiie Buildings. Possession ^ t v eu immediately, and rent .moderate. Apply to tf T. McELRATH. Tribune Office. F< »Ii SALE or K ENT, tor a term of years. One half or more ofa large Factory Building.now er- ful Wheel.two Housi >, md on one of the best Water .ttes in this pad of the country. For farther informa¬ tion, ado., ss die subscriber on the premises, or call and view for yourselves. D. II. ELLIS,Montgomery P.O. au3l iweodj Orange County, N. Y. MFO'li SALE; (>K TO ß KNT..ThtvlPrelnT- um Mills, w eb. it i.i 15run of stones, with all of its extensive machinery, situated a: ar two miles from New Rochelle, Wesi Chestei county, and State of New York, «nd in immediate pn simity t.> tl.e city >'i New York, now in or- dei r ..! extensivebusiness in llour, and can grind and pack Ot 150 bai reis each day, or could be most advantageously employed for any other purpose which might require extensive water power. The reputation for the p<*t 35 years enjoyed by the Premium Mills, and their proximity to New York, with the facility of transportation afforded immediately adja- ceut, by w u ol the navigati. ? .lie-ct to the Mills from any p< rendei tin facilities foi business unexceptionable to d. tiritis* inch in establuhment. Apply to HENRY PARTRIDGE KELLOGG Esq., New RocheUe, N. Y., Ki llourt Vil e ; or to SILAS WOOD, Esq., N*. 59 Broad ^iir.-r, New \ ork, Nt w Rochelle, Auzust 23, lf.!3. au2S I0t* t*ftfc.'.\l.l AliLE I'KtM'KKTlES FGK SALE. *£<V&» I. A Faun of 100 acres in die township of Shrewsbu- - a.. i,. vloinnoutl] ("... N .). 2 miles from Red Bank Land 1 hi is a I irge Pi u h Orchard; now full of fine pewhea. Comt and tet thtni. Possession may be h id in October. 2. A Farm ul 3ufl icres 5 miles from Middletown Point, N. J iOO acres ire in wood now lit to cur. Possession April 1st, .Si t, There are good buildings on Ik.ih tbe.v farms. 3. A 2 STOR1 r.'tK K HOUSE on a lot JO bv 150 iuCon- ^r.-^v st, Paterson, lately occupied by the People's Bank. Pos- ion May 1st, w.u. Inquire of WM. BLOOMFIELD, Esq. 21 VV dl »t, orof JOHN CROES, Keyport, N. Jereey. jy!7 2m-_'_ (.> -AGRES OF MOUNTAIN LAND J ^iv"'" FOR SALE.Lying in Orange and Rock- o<d (lountics, Stare of Ne-.> York, n5 miles from the city.. The New i oik and Erie Kailioad, OraiiKe Turnpike and tho . Ramapo River running nearly through the'eentre of it. It is welL^atocked with wood of 25 years growth and upwards. A considerable part ol it might bu made arable. There is a mountain ol limestone, said to possess k'natstreriKdi, and *e- v. i.il n.m 'nines, one of which has lately been opened and proi ed to In ol first quality; There is also very exteusive wa¬ ter power with i number of falls on the Kamripo River.. Tnxeto Lake two miles long and one mile wide, lies in one part of the tract, the scenery of which is beautiful, it is three miles above Pierson's Works, and is known h* the Augusta. Tract. Access r»n be had U) irin threeor four hours by the N. \. a Ei us Railroad, or in live or six hours by tho way of Hackens u h. and Orange Turnpike, or by the way of Nyack or H li rsl raw . It will be sold in parts if an offer is made for a considerable trier, bin. u ire at 12 Chadiain street, where a map can be seen and other particulars ascertained relative to the above premi- _auU 3m» THOMPSON'S TRUSSES.-.Office removed to 13 Beekman street About 200 of the first physicians mid surgvous of New York bale given their decidtd iirefertnoe to this Truss, as you can graduate the pressure from 1 tu j!i pounds on the rupture without a back pad, which does so min Ii injury to the spine. A lair trial being the best test of its iiipr: i..ni) it i< applied and six days trial given, and if it does not retain the, rupture, while p< Hönning every kind of exer- ci ie ... coughing, and gi»«- perfect east..in a word, if it is not satisfactory in i»«r> respect, the inoiifryis cheerfulIv returned, and. this is die only comlition on which you should buyany truss. A perm uient cine i; easily effected, and warranted if directions aie follow ed. IfGces are fitted up at No. I:: Beekman street, one door from Nassau*, exclusively foi applying this truss, and all are invited 1.1 cine Old ny lor I eillsel Vt:s._ati7 Ire* I i FLL'STRUSSES..Notice to Rup- tured Persons..Persons alllicted with raptuies may rely upon the best instrumental aid the. wurld affords, on application at the office, No. 1 Vesey-street, or to eith.,r of the agents in the principal towns in die United States. Be careful to examine the back pad of Hull's Trusses, to see if they art' endorsed by Dr. Hull in wn- ting. None are genuine, or to be relied upou as gr.cd, with! out his signature, ... Many persons have undertaken to vend imitations of Hall t celebrated Trusses and thousands are imposed upon in conse- quence. These imitations.cannot be relied unou; they ar* made by uiisUiltut mechanics, and are no better than the ordin- ary Trusses. .... . -. Rooms have been fitted up at No. 4 Vesey street, exclusively for !<dis, hiving a ... parate entrance from die business depart¬ ment, where a female is in constant attendance to wait upon fe¬ male patient-_»211( r-PMHAMERICAN COOPERS' TOOLS ä <.>.~if9 ft ,..] TOOLS in general, can be obtained in all their variety, at WHOLESALE and RVTAI1 at 33 FTJLTON-STKEETj NEW-YORK, of inmost celebrated Manufacturers, (warranted Cast Steel,) ALBERTSON'S, CpNGERS, BARTON & SMITH'S, HORTON'S GIFFORtiS, and other makers. \Uo am K1-'\n' IKON RIVETS., COOPERS' TRUSS HOOPS HEAD AND STAVE JtHNTF.HS, STOCK HOWELL AND CROZE'S BRACES, DOW- FI ! N G BIT T S Si EC K IRONS, TAP AND BUNG BORERS, COMPASSES, to-to. A liberal diacounton Edge *^g^^-^ jyl3m* CHARLES S. LITTLE. ä^^SSXPlAN^ > F< >RTES TUNEDibr F1F- 8s^--tc==*8 TV ' EN TS.-W. C. HAYNER tunes J t V i 1* Pianos in any nartof the city for,50 cents.. .\l., gives Instruction on the Pi mo. Organ and in Singing, on mod. rate 'rms Apt lv through the Despatch Post, or pei- aonall). it Iiis resid sni e, 22 Fir.t avenue. si lin* saJOI-LN GALER~ (formerly with J. V. ^5 Tilyou).LADIES' BOOT AND SHOE STORE. 55 Chatham-street.. it op<-ninx the above new store. ei tfiillj to win it the attention «f his friends and the ii1 lie t>> l.is choice assortment of LADIES', MISSES'AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS AND SHOES, . . of City Manufacture, beingof the most approved style, ana at prices corresponding with the rimes, _ II..had M'veral years'experience u the business, he can co/ifideuil r i u re to pun h isers the b-.t description ol work¬ man shij. -September. 1313. _*JL£L_. A-S-a '.' K.MC'VA I.-.-INOIA RUBBER ««=&ss^rsii<.:-.s AND OVERSHOES-Just received from our facton foi fall liade, a large assortment of India Rubber shoes, consi ting of plain and figured Imed and lonjro Rubbers, Gents' Elastic Upper Ovcrahoes, Ladies ElasticMP i^rSawlaU, leiatherand rubbei soles? LadieafuTand rjDOOU i).,u:, I <;r-.-: in, mid Buskins, ladies elastic quilted silauver- shoes, new style: Goloe Shoes, and various *y{e*(°rrf2^S and Children.. Si.», which we offer at theJatest re/luocd Pr2f)So pairs Ladies and me,,* Rubber Sh^./'Kured and plnin.byi .r trimmed and cleaned bythe 00l«tt. 5.ivi«i pairs L idie-i lined and fur bound Rubbers. * Men bänts i t requested toexamme the stock alter sepurui bei t, it our new store,No.25 jjav. Successor to Roxbury lRWj,M au28 Im until September 1st at 15 ^deniUne-, f\ HI iRSE-SHOESrr-Warranted wpnmxja V .^_. m .n. heretofore used. al about the f 'ice it Co., N-w-York; Lh«l*» srn«fy » Baltimore B. W. Jones, Ph'l-^ll'!''s-^ £'Lfon rhe »ubjeri. where farther ir.iormatwn m*/ *. ""j^NRY BURDEN. Troy Iron and Nail Factory mi21 tf" .a T,-<TF-M-iilEl»-EK'anr Nutru bur Hats (.,rdi.ci;»v 'e"f^PfUl,Iau Moleskin at $3. These ,...or . .ort na^ d u> ^ M $, H»« .ue . i" , ;..rv wardress Hat. ak- w ; " "bROWN, PraerTcal Hatter, 146 Oanal-st, .iiijij Im' ^ .-_- frsA ECONOMY AND FASHION..To those \ whostndy economy..The sub*crib»-r, iu accordanc* ^äfeyiaii, the times, has reduced his superior imitation Melesxi" Hats on fur b<jdie», to the extreme low price of «2 25 The abova ire an eleeant dress Hat, and will compare idtautig- Ottsl. w iih hats sold in this city et $2 50 and J3. *aA vearrante.i td e.ve utisfaction. Also, constantly manufactur¬ ing lur and silk hau of die best quality, latest V»tJ«^n-'J' V th-- lowest city prices for cash. An assortment olVv?iI£h Cloth Ca;>j coosUiitly *n hand. J. W. KLLLOGO, au 15 im» No. 132 tand-tt. comer of Thompson^ Di A PERS.60 Bales Rusoa Diapers foi; salejby ORINNELL. M1NTURN it CO. 78 SouUVstreet. 1VTEW HOPE DEL. BRDX5E CO. NOTES au»\w»Cd at 1 lKZ CCBt* ^JORN DEANE,« Wtil *

Transcript of New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY) 1843-09-02.€¦ · resume Ins n

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THE NEW-YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNEA Very Laritr Paper; f'>r the Country,

It rDBLISHKD evrby satokday sioemkoAtihelow price ofTWO DOLLAKSDerannum, in adv xnce

jJsaaiacKs, Rkliciovs md F: rkrja. Nonet:*,notescrfuiX liv« !"".«¦ i'> '..«."..*._

"The tribhine.Arrival of the Steamship Hurgaret]

Five Days Later.tQ- We are indebted in Messrs. Haruden & Co. f.>r a

copy of the Boston Daily Mail Extra containing the follow¬

er brief summary of the Foreign News received by ile-

iieaaiship Margaret, being lite d.»ys later than our previousadricei:The steamci Margaret arrived at Halifax lasl

Sunday from Liverpool, which place she left on

the 9th, making her passage iu 17 days.Wr received from Air. Cunnabcl, oJ the Mali-

fax Mornin«* Post, a few items from the latestEnglish papers, b) the St. John boat and Gunni-son's Express, which arrived hereabout i o'clockA great meeting ol pitmen engaged in the col¬

lieries was held on the Oth at Black Fell, about(burmUes from Newcastle, for the purpose olJonning a union to protect the rates of wages..More than 20,000 were present.There is no news of special importance. Lord

Wei hi Lr tun bad declared in hisplaceinParliamcnt,in answer to a speech from Lord Roden, that theBritish Government were fully prepared to main¬tain peace in Ireland, forcibly if they must, pi ace-

ably ii' they could.Uur Halifax correspondent writes that there

was no important change in the state of the mar¬

kets. Trade, if any thing, was improving.The nuptials of Lady Charlotte Hilr, daughter

ofthc Marquis and Marchioness ofDownshirc, andMr. George Chetwynd, eldest sun of Sir GeorgeChctwynd, Bart., were solemnized on the 6th. Asumptuous dejeuner was to he given by the No¬ble Marquis at the family residence in Hanoversquare.There have been serious commotions at Lubcc,

originating in the discontent of some soldiers withthe clothes supplied to them by the contractors.The'Senate was obliged to resort to severe mea¬

sures of repression, and peace was restored.The Duke of Wellington had given a grand

concert of vocal and instrumental music at Aj>s.Icy House. There were at least 700 ofthc lead-my nobility present.Laurence Dorgan alias Joseph Hayncs, the lad

vbo effected his escape from Carlisle Jail iu such a daringand extraordinary manner, v.:u recaptured at Manchester andx-iii back to in - old i|Uarl< rs.

It is stated in the Times, that in some parts ofWales, at a distance from the limekilns, :h-' farmers have tu

pay for every jCö's worth of lime for manure, £G in lurii-

.jikalThe conservative nobility in the north of Ire-

land have had a meeting at Belfast, and passed stroug resolu-tions against Repeal. 'Che Repeal cause does not make muchprogress in the north.Among the |>olitical rumors is one that Lord

Brougliam i-s busily intriguing ami very painfully anxious toresume Ins n<-at upon the woolsack.Father Matthew appears to be pursuing his

temperance career almost as triumphantly in England as he.did iu Ireland. Thousands heretofore votaries of Bacchus,nave iigiii «1 the pledge.The South of Wales continues in a disturbed

state: toll-bouses and lull-gates are const intly coining underdie uew regime of * Rebecca and her Daughters/ and theGovernment seems to possess no energy iu maiutaiuing thetaw s.

Sogreal is the animosity of the Welsh peopl against themetropolitan police sent among them, that, it is proposed t>>

withdraw them entirelyand substitute Welch conscripts iutlieir place.From Sierra Leone..By the British brig

James Hay, C'apt. Wiseman, we. have the SierraLeone Watchman of July 1st.The Brazilian bark Oonfideucia, was brought iuto that

port ou the 20lh Juue;havihgbeeii captured on the 17th of'March by H. ii. M. ship Lilly, off Quiilcmuue river, iu Moumlnijue Ciianucl. She had a plenty of slave irons on

Wird, but no slaves.June \I'.'d, was br.'ii^tiL into Sierra Leone the Bra/.iliau

sckuouer Bs|ierance, captured by it. 15. M, brig Spy, off Po-po, on the 2*Jtli May. She also was luily equipped as a sha¬rer, out liad uo slaves on board.B.nli tLe.abuve vessels wire coudctuued : also two oilier

Ktioouers, aud the brig Gen. Warren, o) L'hiludelphia.'flic rainy season had comtneuced it Sierra Leone in good

tamest "The thunder storms of the present season,'1 saysdie Watchman, "have en terrific in tl.xtreme. A longresident iu the Colony -aae^ that never, since IS31, haveloose great wonders ol Cod been known so awful." (in the19th of June, St. George's church at Freetown was struck

3' die electric fluid, and very seriously damaged. Theock was torn from it.-, place, .ami a part of the spire rem

inn top to bottom. Other damage was done in die town,and much property destroyi d. [Jour. Commerce.

CT An instance of rare rascality occurred atRochester on the night of the ..'^tli ult., in the exploit of a

young fellow, who left hi* own dwelling in the night,mounted to the roof of a linter of the next adjoining, passinginto the sleeping room of three young ladies, through a

kuiuow, which was open. They beiug awakened, made a

callfortheii father, ..!! which the youngster deenmped as hetaste, üe was, however, overtaken, carried to the watch-liouse .md committed.H7* Rochester sei ms to be greatly infested with

tartars; scarcely a uight passes th it one or more efforts are

Mtmadetorob. On Monday night last ou the < ity Trea-»ater'« Office-no go. On the same uight Mr. Bond's Con-fectiouery stoie on Buffalo-street, had one of its doors forced,

a small amount in cents and candy takeu.the wh.de not

imoantiugto ihe ».lue of the tools left by the burgl irs.

ID3 On Sunday evening last, a boy, about 15?«rs old, fell ,.\, rboard from a scow boat .pun'; from Buffa-»to Albany and was drowned. Nothing is known aboutl|w lad, except that he was called John, and that his moüiecbve^iu Buffalo.

A man was fomid near Concwaga Creel;.Loadundeiry township, IV, on üic'ilst ulfc in a dying cou-

iuion, much wu'ileu, and his garments much stained withblood. Uewas yet sensible when discovered ; a ihre« bla-^d knife lay by him Ojien, with which il is presumed In.>*dcui the veiu in his left aim, which w.,s severed.. H<b»d bfen let out of the afternoou cars going east, at his re-Vesti about half a mile north of tin bridge, aud his truukwas t ih-u ..in at il.- Railroad Hotel at ElizabeUilowu/aboulfbor miles below the bridgo, which, on being opened, wasfound to[coutain;a considerable quantity of various kinds ofBWhing, and a leuer addressed to RichaKo M6tt«a»i New¬ark, which is supposed to be the name of tie deceased.Toe sum ol $36 52,a si!w watch aud siiectacles, werefound on his person, which, together with his clothing, werewatered in a schedule iu the presence of the m i"hbors of Mr.Baehenoerger 5 and the body w.u decenll) interred, withoutMholdiug oi an modest, Iram the circumstance that Esuhyuch. th. only Justice of the Pe ice in town, was ab» u:.

B The Buflalo and Niagara Falls Railroad,t^etlicc with ihe real c-st.-ite, car-houses, is.c. was vdd a few<h«since at public auction iu Buffalo. The public will be

in ,i measure to judge <>f the great worth and safety of«* rn.»d, when it is stated, tliat after being adveitined forsivk'riu iu Erie aud Ni igara counties, the concern brought butv*j200! The road is 22 miles in length, aid is said have0"giaaHy c «t $100,000.Dreaoki l Accident..John Spiccr, scm of

°*hus Spicer of Kendall, Orleans county, while engaged att*ft«t near a threshing machine on Tuesday of la^: week,jhpped into the machine from a scaffold and was so dread-'illy maiiflrd that he died three hours after. One of his leg«**» amputated jU .t brfot- his death. The dec-.seil was s:\-

jearsold. [Rochester DA circular has been left at the Merchants'

^?**Room, Boston; addressed to Lkm Lincoln, late C>.I-?2*r®fthePort, expressing the warm and entireaptuoba*r?» of the signers (m'ercliants and oth-as interested in thecommerce ofum port.) of Mr. LV official course. !: has

^uiead y h numb r ofsignatures;23* The Dedhara silk Factory establishrai nt,

I'iedr l'! ^' ^" ^'^ ' ^''T1")'» which has been uuoccu-l 0f *e»>ral years, haj recently been re-opened and is"nowdrH'l,<r*t,on' ^'"'"l'1"^' manufacture about i ue hun-^pounds daily, and the mill, when iu full operation, willlru<M" tea times that amount.

cax^/f1 convic,« named Codfrcy made his escapeWon"h^" ^f0m.lhc »toue-yard of.the House of Conection,hauuisf \ jumi''"S overboard and swimming outside of the^icILm. iri*°U' IU* Wfts l<ul S'v " k'& bair fofbl Ctw Ti iT0£lK'r Pnsout,r mttJ,! ll»e attempt but was seta

BY GREELEY & McELRATfi.

VOL. III. NO. 125.

Letters from 3fr. VTced.No. XIV.Correspondence of tJw Albany Evening Journal.

L'i.vno\, July 'JJ, 1<13.

The last intelligence from America is exertinga benign influence here. The improvement inAmerican Stocks at home tells well abroad.The increased disposition to pay, wliich capitalistsdiscover, is having" a salutary effect The factthat a new United States Loan was taken by »n;r

own people, is the occasion of much congratula¬tion, to-day, in and about the Bank of Enrrland.rJ'ltc shock to American cr< ditwas not oci asiom dhalf so much by the inability of Illinois and In.

j diana, as tiir.- Repudiation ol Mississippi, and theiiidifiercncc of Pennsylvania. The insolvency of

1 the Rank of the United States, and the robberiescommitted by the .North American and otherTrust Companies, though swallowing up millions

j of English capital, would have had no injuriouscflc'-t upon our pecuniary character as a Kation,so long as the State Governments preserved 'h^ir

I faith and asserted their integrity: Nor is themoney vye owe them wanted or required; Theyonly ask that, like Bassaniu, we should evince a

determination to< orhe fairly oil' from the greatdebts \» it r« in.Something too prodigal', nine hath left as gaged.'

I had heard so much of the Bjtmsn Museum,from those who had seen it. and read >>> nmcJiabout it from Tourists and Travelers, that I hadcome to regard it as a Ncw-^ ork or Alhany Mu¬seum, upon a large scale; and went then- to-daybecause it was one ul the many London Lions.not< xpectingto be particularly interested. Those,therefore, w ho have been through tins institution,can judge of my amazement when its wonderswere revealed to nie. " I! nth and Ocean" havebeen literally " plundered" to make up this end¬less collection of all that walks, or swims, or fih s,or creeps, or crawls. Yon have here an epitomeofall, and more than all, that .Noah received intothe Ark. 1 shall not, of course, lie absurd enoughto attempt to describe what I saw ; but I do wantto give you some inkling.some faint notion.ofw hat this Empire has, by extraordinary munifi-cence, gathered together for the gratuitous in¬struction and gratification of visitors. Rut theattempt will he lame and impotent, for 1 couldnot even procure the various catalogues short ofan expense of forty-three pounds sterling, or!

$215! The catalogucof printed books alone, inthe library, published by Longman & Co. costs.1 pounds ti shillings.There arc 31 cases of " Rapacious Beasts,"

containing from one to fifty different animal -; ofthis species. There arc thirty eases containing'' Hoofed Beasts," each with from five to fiflhyspecimens, while those of the species too largefor cases, arc arranged upon the floor in front.There are 30 cases of" Birds of Prey," each con.

tailling from an hundred to an hundred and fiftyspecimens. Of this number there are over fortydifferent species of the Eagle. Of "NocturnalBirds," mostly of the owl and bat species, thereare five large easts, and over four hundred speci¬mens. Of other birds, embracing, I should inter,every known variety, t hi re, arc 13-1 cases, eachcontaining from one hundred to three, hundredspecimens. (>f,l .Shells" there are forty-one caaupon the tahles, with specimens too various andtop numerous to he even estimated. Upon thewalls, over the cases, hang the portraits of lltiMonarchs, Noblemen, Artists, or persons dis¬tinguished for their loarning or virtue, ull by omi-nent artists, among which aie two line picturesof Cromwell, two of Mary Queen of Scots,Queen Elizabeth, Sir Hans Sloane, Sir l^a.n-Newton, Martin Luther, vtc. 6ic.

In another gallery arc 19 casts containing moret J j .-in a thousand specimens of " Reptiles." The.,;arc also 22 eases filled with ..Handed Beasts,"embracing every species of ape, monkey andbaboon, of which there are between two and threehundred. There is such an approximation bo.tween the highest order of this tribe, and the low¬est species of the human race, that the organ ofspeech is alone wauling to form a connectinglink. The finny tribe, in all their varieties, are Jarranged in cases which fill a gallery an hundredfeet long. England, you know, abounds inminerals, minute and beautiful specimens ofwhich arc displayed here. Sixty eases are de¬voted tomineralogical collections, arranged in thesame manner as in our State Geological Museum.This collection., however, in several respects, isnot as complete as that obtained by our indefati-gable Geologists. There arc 1105 different spe¬cimens of minerals, with labels describing theirproperties. 1

But the Gallery of Antiquities attracts most

attention, and excites the highest admiration. 11had only an hour where days would not suffice,Two large Galleries are filled with ancient (.'reekand Roman statuary. Among these is a bust ofTrajan, a head of Apollo, a statute of Thalia,a head of Marcus Aurclius, heads of Paris andHelen/a group of Bacchanalians, a bust ofSevc-rus, a head of Nero, a bust of Marcellus, withan inscription, Priam supplicating Achilles to dc-liver to him the body of Hector; Hercules, with a

club, sitting upon a rock, Ac &c. There are

four more spacious Galleries devoted to Greekand Roman sculptures, and two others to BritishAntiquities. These Galleries contain many thou¬sand curious specimens of the arts, when the"!world, many centuries past, was peopled by rt

now buried race of semi-barbarians.1 have, in this hasty, imperfect glance, passed

without notice half a dozen galleries, each con¬

taining innumerable objects of exceeding interest,The cilleries vary in length from one to threehundred ft ct.And now, when enough to amaze and bewil¬

der has been seen, the great treasure-house Ql

Learning and Knowledge was opened to us. The jLibrary of the Museum is only shown to visitorswho obtain an order from a trustee or a letter to jits most indefatigable librarian, the Rev. Dr.Horner, who has devoted IT years, not to thereading, but to the arrangement and classificationof the hooks. YVe attempted nothing, of course,bill to walk through this long vista, wallet] up on

cither side with volumes. The Librarian, to

whom we had h letter from Mr. VViCGlN, gavehis time to us until we had gone quite through jhis vast literary domain. The hooks are placedon shelves in "galleries thirty feet high, access to jwhich is by stairs to the room of iron balustrades.I know not how to give you an idea of the ex-

tent of this Library better than to say that therearc shelves filled with books, on both sides uf theroom, thirtv feet between the floor and the cell¬

ing, extending at least u quarter of a mile. Oneol these, from BO to LOO feet Ion?;, contains theLibrary of Sir Joseph Banks, which he bequeathedto the Museum. Another, still larger, containsthe Library of George the Third, many of the!works in which cost from one to three hundredpounds a volume. There is one gallery threehundred feet m length. The apartment for an-

eient manuscripts is from forty to fifty feet square,in winch we were shown exceedingly well pre.served volumes of manuscripts a thousand yearsold. Tkc hooks in this library, if placed. a*»

they stand upon the shelves, upon the ground,would, I should think, cover an area of more thantwo acres. The number of volumes is not ex¬

actly known, the catalogues being yet incomplete,but Dr. Horner informed us that there were atleast three hundred thousand 1The British Museum was founded in 1753, by

Sir Hans Sloane, an eminent Physician, whobequeathed a valuable library of books and man-!

OFFICE NO. 160 I

ffEW-YORK, SATURDAY MOS

uscripts, and an extensive collection of works ofart and objects in Natural History- Its acces¬sions have been by donations or bequests fromenlightened individuals, liberally aided by Par¬liamentary endowment. There were 547,415visitors to the British Museum in 1642.

From the Museum wc repaired to the Nation¬al Gallery, where the eye and theimaginationwander and wonder, with constantly increasingadmiration and emotion at the excellence amipower of art and genius. Here are the efforts ofthe great M isters, ancient and modern. Hereare (lie productions of Claude, Titian. Corregio,Michael Angelo, Guido, Murjllo, Raphael, Ku¬li« ns, Rembrandt, Vandyck, Salvatcr Rosa : andof Sir Joshua Reynolds, Hogarth, Copley, YVilkic,Sir Thomas Lawrence, Benjamin West, Beau¬mont, and a host of other Artists, less known, hutof irreal merit. The Pictures upon which i dwellwitii most interest were West's truly divine rep¬resentation of * Christ Healing the Siek,' .Mi en..

t.o's 4 Holy Family,' and 4 The Infant St. John,with the Lamb,' than which it seem., impossiblelor brush and canvass to accomplish more.

' Connected with the National Gallery ;s tin- ex¬hibition of the Roval Acadeaiv, through whichwc were ton e.l to pass in a single hour. Here no

Paintings are admitted that have been before pub¬licly exhibited,, and originals only are received.The Academy now contains I3ö5 Paintings, bymore than 10 different Artists. There are. also,over two hundred works in Sculpture, by some

seventy different Artists. Among the pictures isa splendid one by C. II. Leslie, of the Queen re¬

ceiving the Sacrament, as a concluding part ofthe Coronation, *tt< nded by the royal retinue, allfull-lengths, and judging from the portraits ofthcDuke of Wellington and Lord Morpcth, whom Ihave seen, all admirable likenesses. There is a

striking picture by Ward, of Dr. Johnson perusingthe manuscript of Goldsmith's Vicar <u VJake-field : tod a beautiful illustration, bv W.Cope, ofthat scene in Burns' " Cotter's Saturday Night,"where :.

" But hark ! a rap com-.- gently at the floor;Jenny, wha liens the meaning the same,

Tells how it neebor lad cam o'er the moor,To do some errands, and convoy In-r hame."

There is, too, a glorious group by Claxton, en¬titled '* Sir Joshua Reynolds and his friends.".These " Friends,*' of whom there are admirablefull length portraits, are no less personages thanEdmund Burke. Horace Walpolc, Dr. Mudgc,Benjamin West, Sir W. Chambers, Sir GeorgeBeaumont, Alderman Beydell, Lord Mulgrave,Sir William Hamilton, David Garrick, RichardCumberland, Admiral Kcppcll, James Boswcll,L<:rd Burglierzh, Dr. Johnson, with .Mrs. Mon¬tague, .Mrs. Siddons, Marchioness Thormond, j'Sir .1. B.'s mice. Mrs. Cholmondcley, AngelicaIvaurTtnan, Mrs.ThraIc, and Fanny Burncy !

\\ e went to Chelsea, where you know the Hos¬pital for old and disabled soldiers is situated, on

Sunday, and alter the Church service was over,

wc were allowed, und indeed invited by the oldveterans 'many of whom went stumping it alongwith wooden legs) to walk tlirough their apart¬ment. Here are admirable quarters for men whohave worn themselves out in Ihe armies of Film¬land, hot the hospital is far less extensive thantliat for old sailors at Greenwich, ami but veryfew of the lens of thousands who are " brokenand bruised" in hallte « vir lind their way toChelsea. We saw the pensioners at dinner, whichwas .excellent in quality and profuse in quantity.They all speak with strong feelings oi gratitudeof their.enjoyments and luxuries. Most of thepensioners hen- have goncthrough the Peninsularwars. 1 talked for some time with one who was

at Corunna .with Sir John Moore. There were,they saui, two or three pensioners .among themwho were in Canada during our late war with Eng.land, hu! 1 did n"t find them. They invariablyand voluntarily spoke with strong ami indignantabhorrence ol the Puke of Wellington, who. itsi em?-, though i was nol aware of it, when Pre¬mier, endeavored to break up and discontinue theChelsea Hospital. I do nol know what Ids mo¬tives or reasons were, but if he designed to castthese war-worn veterans, who dealt and receivedthe hard blows which secured him fame and for¬tune, upon the cold world, homeless and house¬less, there is a refinement of cruelty and ingrati-lüde in his nature that should cause the prcst ntgeneration to detest his character, and posterityto loathe bis memory.The Dining-Hall of Chelsea Hospital is hung

with trophy Colors and Standards, from the Dukeof Marlborough's victorious battle of Blenheim,to the inglorious butcheries of the British Armyin China. Among these emblems of British va-

lor, arc the sanguinary evidences thai Englandhas been at war with almost all the Nations of;the. Earth. There arc three stands of AmericanColors displayed in this Hall. I >ne was taken at

Washington. I could not learn the history ofthcother two, but an old veteran who heard ine in¬quiring, came up and remarked that he had hearda Pensioner who was in the li^ht when one ofthem was taken, say."that the Yankee Eaglecost more British blood than any other Slum/ of]Colorsin ihr Hall" There is nothing very mor¬

tifying in seeing two or three captive AmericanEagles, with " E.pluribus Unum" in a scroll sus-

pended from their talons, provided there is neitherdishonor nor cowardice united with their capture.And if it were otherwise, 1 should be indemnifiedby the reflection that in the way of trophies, wecan display ten times the -number of British Co¬lors, Flags, Cannon and Ships of War, as evid¬ences of American valor and prowess.

1 have had but little leisure, and no facilities ibut such as are ripen to all, for obtaining politicalinformation here. I infer, however, from thecourse of the debates in Parliament, and fromthe newspapers, that the power ofthc Tory Mm-istry is upon the wane. The Whig Peers andPress evidently feel stronger, and some «<ld rats

who retreated in the flush of Sir Robert Peel'striumph now begin to put then heads cautiouslyout of their holes. If, as I apprehend, the facul¬ties of the Duke of Wellington are failing him,not only the Tory Administration, but the Brit-ish Empire, must be prepared tor a terrible shockWith him crumbles one of the main pillars thatupholds this gigantic structure. He has been a

tower of strength to England nol only in theField but in the Cabinet.

Intellectual Progress in tue PresentCen-turv..The same a«re which witnessed the mili¬tary glory of Wellington and .Napoleon, beheldthe completion of astronomical investigation byLaplace, the hidden recesses of the heart unfoldedby Sir Walter Scott Earth told the history ofits revolutions through the remains buried in its

bosom, and the secrets, even of material compo¬sition, yielded to the power of philosophical ana-

iv.a.-. Sculpture, revived from its ashes, underthe taste of < 'anova. and the genius of Thorwaldisen, again charmed the world by the fascinationof design : arcMtecturc displayed*its splendor inthe embellishments ofthc French metropolis, andthe ri-im: capital of Russia united to tu«: solidityof Egyptian materials the delicacy of Greciantaste. Even the rugged ridges of the Alps yieldedto the force of scientific enterprise, and the bar¬riers of nature were smoothed by the efforts oi hu¬man perseverance. [Alison's History of Europe.

[LT The eriiTunal proceedinus entered intoagainst L. J. Papiaeau, E. B. O'Callaghan. and Thomas

Stoir.-w Brown, in consequence of die events ol 1»3<, weri?

withdrawn yesterday, on three separate motions made by Mr.

Buchanan, U C, oil behalf of use Hon. Auoraey-G-scexalLaroutAine, md a milt prosequi entered.

[ilouttaal Jtaald, 290i Aug-

il.N'ASSAU-STREET.

tifWfO, SEPXE3ÄBER ä, 184:?.

I'm M.oi:

ÜMMKi, < \KLi3.IrtsUKASCK POLICIES,BlLXs OK LxDIKG',ClBCl i.Alu,

HT The Rochester Democrat says it is re-

quested to mention that a number of spirited farmers ofLiv¬ingston County propose jq shew u u yoke t,f working oxenat the Fair of the State Agricultural Society to be held inthat Citj "n th- 10th, -o*.!i and 2lst of Sept. acrainst ine.joal-nnmber from any other Count* in this State. The campe:i'.rs from each County to pay twentv-fiye dollars, to go tothe winners. The money from Livingston County is de¬posited «vidi the Assistant Secretary^of the Society, and thefannersof Western New-York are invited t« the competition;

[LT Two men named Lewis Miller and CharlesConnard were drowned in the Croton Reservoir, Westches-wc Co. on Friday of last weefc Thev were in a boat withfour Others, «dl excit-d by 1 i.^t.»r. v. hen they ft 11 to scuttling,overturned their boat, and the above two were drowned.

J A Mrs; L. F. Ardrcy lost her Life utNatchitocheä, La., on the 9th, by jumping from a cirnag*ofwhicli the horses had .taken fright. She survived but a

few hours.*

,! .' A Mr. Neil was killed by "tie Henry Geeat Gainesville, Al u, a few d back. Neil, w.u, stabbedsavagel) that he di*d in a few minutes. Gee is in jail.

TRIBUNE JOB PRIiN flNG OFFICE,No. loo NASSAU-STREET.

All kmds o Job Prutting:, such asiMi-mi i. : i MaMMuMI Show UlLLs,

LtiCTunK Bills,Co.NCBm Bills, Vl.ua andFancy,

POLIl II iL niLi..<,i iKl'VLAt!!, (tieftt) >tC.

Promptly eirijiited üie Office of The Tribune, No. It>0 Nissau Lre< .. .. Ii.-- Park.

THE TRIBUNE BOOK-BINDERY,No. 7 Spruce-street, Tribune Buildings.

JAMES PRINGLE respectfullj informs hi* (riendsaudthe public u-ii-oillv tint lie Ins ,;oiiiiiieuced hiiMii'-.ts \\ il!i hdeteiuiiiiattoii to ilo justice to his customers, both u> toqn ilityof w orkmausbip anil sc lie of charges. He is prepared to e xe-cnte Binding In -ill its branches.Jobs ofau\ kind ip|iertaiiiing tothe business solicited. Or¬

ders left at So. 7 Spruce-street will Its thankfully receivedand faithfuilv attended to._ j v 12 tl"

Eleven Hundred Pages for si 00.To the Friends of Mr. Clay.

Lot am) SrRECMES of Hemkv Clay..The publishera ul this work are now prepared to execute ,)iders to anjextent. The work is compri* d in two octavo volumes, con-

taiiiiiig in tlie whole upwards of 1,100 |iages, and is illus¬trated by a splendid steel Portrait ofJNtr. . lav, a View olhis Biiili place in Virginia, and a Fee Simile of one of hisletters.the whole for One. Dollar .' It is believed to be thecheapest work eW-i published in America. These Speechesform an important portion of the History of our C'mi!i;r\ forthe last thirty years, and are interesting to all classes ofreaders, without reference to politics.PRICES. Wtlliont up in stion* flexible covers, in

the French style:Single copy, -1 vofs. octavo, npwardaof 11"0 pages.. .$1 <>0Twelve copies for.I» 00Twenty-fivo copies for.M 00 IOne hundred copies for.SO (10 ilion ml with t !«>th Bucks & Gilt Lcttcriiiar.Single copy.$1 5ßTwelve copies for.U 00Twenty-five copies for.00One hundred copies for.9,i no :

None sent on < ommission. Terms Casn. On!- rs must üeaddressed to GREELEY & M< ELRATH, N< w-Ydrk.

Cheap and Valuable Itooks:(TT* The Ibllowiug works are for sale at the ofiicebftfte

New-York Tribune, Nassau-street, opjiosite the t icy !I.»H, intheCity.of New-York. A liber .1 discount from the retailprices made to pi rsons who purch se to sell again.Life and Speeches of Henry I laj. 2 vols. of upwards of

1100 panes,and 3engraving*. SI noAmern *n Laborer, I vol. octavo. 1 00The Test : or l'iriie, tried by their Acts, by Juuius;

$¦» .'in p-r ion copies; or 1.000 copies for. 2t> 00The Currency, by Juuius : S2 50 per 100 copies, or 1000

conies for.20 00 !The Tariff1, by Juiiiüs t $2 50 per 100 copies, oi (000

copies for. 20 00Travels in (»i gou, ftoi ky Mount uns, \... by Farnli im Iiifclllsworüi'scelebrated Reporrou Agriculture, Arts, &c '£ >

Larducr's Lectures on Aatronpmy. 26Chemistry and Exjieriments in Philosophy, by (iiiiTirh

and L> dtoil. 2-'jPolitical Economy, by Atkinsou, wiüi Introduc¬

tion by II. Greeley. 2jS.tisaur": Life cf Henry Cbiy,single copies 01 cents.-0

conies for SI, or 100 copies for. 3 00Gale's Elements of Philosophy. 374 !Lectures on Geology; bj Doctor Lyell, 2d edition. 25Beauties of Wesley, being selections from his Works... M"Whiz Almanac for 18-13.: ... 121ALMANACS.Fanner's Almanac for the different

Meridians, bv the inn. 150:Temperance do.;i hy the mo. l 5o [Pet-r Simple, by Maixyatt. 2.'» iJ mob Faithfuliby Marryatt. 2j 1

.\ full account of the Corners Vituny witli Dtagrairu,Stc, and all i!«» Documents. 12i I

Family Magazine, to be completed m 16 Numbers, eachNumber. 25 I

O'Conuell's Memoir on Ireland; with u Portrait. 25Sir. t :l ly's S|ieechou retiriug from Üie U. S. Senate and

at Lexington, Ky.r-Pamphlel.'..6«Pleadings and Argument in the case-orJ". Fenimore

i ooper vs. Horai .. I <¦¦¦ and Thorn i> McEtratb,with ii ii in nc ( ommcntaries on lh« Law of Libel... ti

Lecture on Magnetism and Astronomy, by RichardAdam« Locke. 6i

Speeches of Hon. T. F. Marshall, oh Alcohol and In-teiniieriuiceoud FashionableWine Drinking. 6iPTT^ Orders u\u^ be accomp mied by the cashi and addressed

to GREELEV St McELRATH, New-York.". " .John HnnlcII, I'-im-r. ts removed from CO

Chambers-street, (where he lias kept his ;ofhce the last tenyears,) to ¦>;!. Broadway. conierofFranklui-streetrone blockabove the Broadway Tabernacle. sl'Jt*

~- Sylvaiilu Association..flffice No. 25Pin« third stoi Oj.u from 0 to l'J A M. and from 3 toI I'. M. Information cheerfully given. The Constitutiongiven. jylOU

German Langnagc».Private persons and in¬stitution, wishing to employ a native of Gennany of literaryatl dnments is Tutor for the initial or higher study of the Ger¬man Language; *r<- requested apply at die. office of the Gei¬lnau parier,' t?«:hii»-lIp<>*ri Sprncest. au2D2tis3to

-a -

rx7» A library for the People of Color hasheeu established <r No. 161 Duanestrewt in this city; it con-

i tins upwards of Twelve Hundred volumes ,principally con-tnbiitr-.l by the New-York Philomatheaii and tie- Ladies' Lit¬er try S.-.i-iwi-s mid- r the direction of which it has been openeddunns the past year. .

A^ tie supply of li""k-i is not suffu lent to meet the increas-inc intellectual wants ofthe Colored People, this method is;adopted res|>ectfuliy to solicit die aid of the friends of theirimprovement.Don itions 15" iks, Monev, «ieological and Mineralogie il

Specimens and Philosophical Apparatus may be sent to theLibrary. Room,.No IGI Du.treet, which is opened everyWednesday.,evening from 7till 10 o'clock. The subscribersare authorized to wait on the fro nds of the mental improve¬ment, and nolicit donations for th.- Library, which is entitledthe .Vtir-l'oiJissociale Library.

PHILIP A. BELL,GEORGE T. DOWNING,ALBRO LV ONS;

Jaw3mW&S J VMES M.( ANE SMITH.- Orphans Bencflt;.CASTLE GARDEN-

POSTPONED..In conserjii nee of the threatening appear¬ance of the Weather on Monday evening; the 23th instant, thebenefit to the Oniban;Asylum (Prince street) Ills been i«ost-noned until Monday * vening next. tth of Seotember.1JAMES B. O'DONNELL, Secretary.

io2 It TK>>i_Health, (^ulet. and Comfort..The Gra¬

ham House. 63 Barclay-strent, New-York, proffers advantagesi.i ,:.-i.,.-.-r» ppin- . lew ibv< or we. ks tu the city, sucrcas

irr rarely offeie«i. It ijeligibly located »u n clean and airystreet; very hear the busiuesa part of tlie city, and iti tlie irw

mediate ricinitv of the principal itramboat landingsi Jtt.its irt ci nvi nicht and neat, while it-subk is supplied

with the best Vegetables and Fruio ih il can ns procjirertj ex-

clui'inc nitirelv Animal Food and stimulants of all kinds.Chargesmoderate, md n-r. effort nude to render Boarderscomfortable. Shower Batlia free. Remember, C3 Barclay-stn-er. ; cl

B|.;\.l A.\ii\ HAKDINGE, who lectured In dieV olid, to the entir- saüsfaction of his audience, upon the

Oiiiin and Process of die Art of Sjieech, P»ych<igraphy, Ste-reographing ideas; Embodiment of Thought, Stc &c , hastaken rooms at the Park Place l! >uje, where be will teach Sn-reoffraphy^s Mnemonical Epttome^andw irrant hispunila sn< hperfection in tie- w t a.^ to en ibl -tiiem tofollow t s;>e.iKer with¬out hesitation. It is only by tlw r-c-nt improvements of Mr.H-thattbis low; »oa^ht desideratum cau be e&rily accom-

plisbed: ... , ,. ,. ,For reference to men of tue first class m Lrudition and

whos« statements ire from the .! ...ntaneous results ol practicalexperiment, see circulars._;tu!2 lm

PATENT PORTABLE FORGE AND BEL-LOWS Thi Subscriber offers! to the public a: a consider-

ablereduction from former prices, theabove article; which hasbeeu thoroughly tested, and pronounced t-> le- the most perfectarticle e\er offered to the public. Its small bnlkjand'complete-ur.JS (not bavins; i,j build a chimney) U one of its br>t recom-rnendadons : you can set it any where, and make your fire at

once, and you are ready for w.irk. There are four sires forlight or b. ivy work.A io rsale.very low, cast iron-Well Pnllies and O^en

Mouths ; and >. »ui».-rii,r aiticle of 1 mch stove nuts.SAML. it. SPELMAN,

.t:I2 eodlm 230 Water-sQvet.

I"^OR~THE LADIES ALONE..S. ALLEX,(late with Lane, r- r .--.J) nronld reinm hi- iincere-thanki

to the Lailies of N'-w-l .,rk ^ml its vicinity for the very liber¬al patronagecqniexred on him at his Lailie-' Shoe «tablisli-menr, No.70Lisi^nard-streec, ind begs leave to still ass'ire

:;,ein rbat every eSortshnU t^evHrt^d to combine elegance withdrrrabflity, and reude.- bis .toie the cheapest in the city, (ana^i j^r c-at. beiort- the tjaahJjwquently.iih ertised by meieuor-

ices.) S. A need not usform the Ladies that his store ia themost fashionable in the city,-and that hisarticlei and work-inanship cannot be surpassed Wy any. The Ladies' patronageheretofore is in ample pledge for the future.

.. Forgetting up the article of Ladies' Shoes and GaiterBoots we always umsidered Mr. Allen far superior to any oth¬er man we ever had in our emiiloyroent." . ...f hos. La.-«E & Sos, (reUre.5.)No. 70 Lisj>euard-s:, ona street below Canal-sL, N- * ., whole-*. *ale and retail._ au7 eoi.rj

P^uNGEES.12 cases White Pongees 30 yards.10 da do do Hd'kfs. f«ured.

OaLN.NEU.. M1STUBS» CO^

FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR.

WHOLE IVO. 71«.

QCHOOL VVANTED..Any person having a0 so.vit School to dispose ofwill find i purchaser by anply-.net-A. HUVT, 1S6 Eu: Broadway*. Peraale school pre-

ferred._au31 6t

M"RS. AND MISS P1ERCY will resunn "heirSrb.>cl-or yoons Ladies; at 121 Spring street, on Mon¬

day, September tth._ au392w«¦VTlSS GRAM'S Boarding and Day School tora.*-*- t bamj Ladies, -v% ilI be reopened on Monday, SeptemberKttvatK.Hammoad atrrrt, formerly the residence of Aid.wenfield._ ..,2:5

X [RS M. W: MASON'S School foi Young La-ATX dies Will bcreK>pened on Mond u\ September 4th, K NoJ Second-street, opposite Bond, the fourth dooi from ttuB*!2»*2:_si it*

jVPSS '<. A. DEVEREÜX Lnfonns uernati asu,dthe publicthat!,« Boarding tad Day School. acM

Dona-it. wiil re-open on Sept. tth.VToung Ladies are requested to be puncto it on the day of it-

t*i,"1'""'e- au30 [tw ?

PRIVATE TUITION.The 1,'tv. J, lTlur,J- A. iL, will ou Monday, tlie Ith ofSeptember resume bis1 ws.. I it-the instiuction ula limited namber ofbovsiu Clas¬sical and Mathematical Study; Hour, from 9 A M. to I V V1 Wfci.KTH-sTBEKT.betw.eeii.6thand7thAvrnuo<. ajl if

OELECT SCHOOL FOR BOYS, 17 AjuY-sl.lO This School will be n^opeued on Monday die 4th Sept.'insisting .it on! >¦ .1 limited utunber of pupils; its design is to

offer to parents the means of giving their sous a tlwr ugh | re-[.arntury educationwhich sliall qualify diem for either thecounting house or college.

»I tfRH IIA KD P. JENKS, Teacher:

\} K.S SPRAGLJE'S SCHOOL FOR Y.OI N'G- LADIES, L'-\s Fourth street, op|K>»it« WashingtonSquare, Mill re-open en Monday, the 11th of September.Pafeuts^wisliinr to procure for th. n d tughter ¦ a thorough .Ii-.cipline in ill the solid ind ornamental branches ofedui atiouare respectful I \ iarited to call and exnraiue the system andmethod of teaching pursued iii this Institution,The French. Spanish and Italian mi:-.i i_.a i night mid

spokiii in tie family. au3) S*

VOTJNG LADIES' BOARDING ÄND DAYX SCHOOL..Mrs. BAILEY respectfully informs her pa-

troiis.and th< public thai she will re-open her Seminary, atV. 10 Carroll Place; Bleecker-street,ou Thursday, th iti ofSeptember next. The same system of Instruction is pursuedas formerly, ind the same teacher* employed, aided by oth¬ers ntsimilar ability. Mr*. Bailey solicits the patronage oftliose whoare dbposed togive tlieir daughters solid and -.e-

complished eiluc itioo.A F rench Governess wanted. Apply as above, au2S Im *

f] VV. PKEKS* C.LASSU AND KNtTLlSHvy. S< HOOLv&tO Broadway (near Stuyvesaut Institute)m ill i»- re-opened ou Mon.tav, uh September.EcicHEas..C. E. Washburn. A. M. (lately i tutor inVmhersi i ollegej Latin and Greek; A. Pestiaut, French-, K.Purcell. Drawing; W. Davison, Peuinanship: W. B. Brad-bury' v c.tl Music.Th- English and Mathematical Deitartments will be under

the .supeiintendeuce of the Principal.C ircul irs, com lining terms, Xe. may be had ou application

to Mr.~Br laut, 6-15 BroaiI way. ,irto the Principal._au311 f

MKS. S. C. REID/S BOARDING AND DAYSCIIUOI.. 1") K'-uiili-rrptft, near the Washington

square;.wi|l;re-open on.the first Monday in September, Pa-rents will please hr.ir in mind the importance of their childrenbeing punctualin attendance <m rh u day, that they ina\ hepresent at the organization of i!»- das les. M rs. l!.-i<! will he.it home fnun the 1st of S ptember the '!¦!. I'r.1(1 o'clockA. M. until L' P. M., mid from 3 P. M. until'". !'. M.. to reci ivethose parents who-may wisb to confer with Mrs; IL relativeto her institution. \!r>. K.will be.happy to explain her mo«leof instruction and h-r terms chose parents who may wish to

place their daughter* uuiler her charge. au2-l Uw

HTM IK STJBSCR-1BEI? proposes to rake Into hisA. family ,i lew lads tu due ii" in « thorough manner. itlietfor the I liversit). diecoiintiugr-room, an agricultural life, '<r

a< teachers. Afrer fifteen years experience in tlie ornl methodof instructiont he (eelssome confidence in seeking the jmhlicpatronage. Iiis residence if Walpole, N, II ,on the innec-ticut river, i> ><r.f ofthe inosl moral; Ii»- ilthy; .(iii»-t and beanri-ful villages in New England, and can be reaciieil in 36 hoursfrom the city of New York. Term*; im luding board, tuition,washing, &c,S200 i >--u. V'^ry few hi>'"il»s mjiiiied. Forfarther particulars, appl) to Rev. Ilenn W. Bellows, No. 30r»iou h ice. New \ »rk. JOHN N. BELLOWS.

Walpo!.. N. 11 . nth Al::r:._.m:il_lm.I-pLASSICAL FRENCH a N D ENGLISHV^si HOOL, lVo. t Broadway, opposite Ast.«r Plac«.1PERR1NE & FOIGXET, PrinciiKils, (Iat. Petibeau &Perrine.Mr. PE11KIXE U ive to inform his friends ind^the

public generally, that in consequence of the decease of hislate associate, Moa. Petiheau, hw has entered into copartnershipwitli Möns- FOIGNET, Professor of the French lan¬guage, at St. Thomas Hall, Flushing, L. I., from lliecom-meuceinentof that Ittstitiitiou, and that the school will re-

051*11 mi the iir-,1 Monday in September.Messrs, P. Sc F. respectfully add, th.it the French will ¦..till

be exclusively taught and spoken three hours a day; and thatthe most untiring i-lTort.s will be made tQ rendei pupils »t

home in every branch of a French education. Mane^ca^sjOräl.¦.y-.r-m r\ ¦!! be folloW?d fur thftVa whole pareulsniay d«->iir ir.Boys are received at at any stage of education and thoroughlyprep ;ir-d lor college <>r bu nness.

hoi terms, references, see Ciieulars with Messrs; Be-rardaiul Mondou, 36 Conrllandt street, S. J. Crowen. NoBroadway, unt .;t the school. au'JU liu*'

"WINDOW 5ILADES7^The greatest variety of» . Shades to be found at niiystore is ai Nu. 7 Sprucs-st.,

prices \ trying from fi i" Sj>j. Shades shown with tlie cre.ir-est of pleasure and:nocharge made. Persons buying Shadesof us jntvi great advantage 01 er other places -\> all our patternsare originnl, and weare addingto tlie stock everyday. Signsand Banuers painted to order.

si tin BATtTOL St DE MAUKY.

QnAABÄKRELS.OF LIME, ol th« besi quaj"-Ov/.V/V/ity, will be delivered for, or any part of it, duringthe coming seasou, aud »oi>.l city.bouds and mortgages re-

ceii'-.l in iiavment. A-I.Ir--si" Lime." Tribune Office, 9f tf

HYDRAULIC LIME.Orders left at J. D. Mil¬ler's Drv Goods Store. 121 Broadway, will receive prompt

attention. Price SI i'crr,t..k ol :«iulba.91 tf AB IJAH SMITH, tlw only manufacturer.

\ CASKS OF LIME, of good quality; *30OUU casks ol Norlli Rivet Linn-.

120 barrels of good Hydraulic Cement.inn hlids. of unsl icked Lime, P.-r manure.Any p-iit of a will be sohl ur exchanged for groceries, dry

goods, crorkery, hardware, bollow-ware. carpets, furniture,so.iji. caudb j "<r [inn isions. Address BARTER, -U 'lie officeof Wie Tribune. _iftfi COMMISSION PAPER WARKHOL'SE,

NO 43 JOHN-STB EET;"PLLIOT, BÜRNAP & BABCQCK are con-JT_i stantly supplied with ä large and .'eiicral assortment ofPAPERS, suit"! to 'ill departments of the rn.l-. amongwhich aie the followiug: Hubbard's roloivd Papers, _ingreat variety ; Boston Copperplate Papers, of suj^ii^rquality; Biiok and News Printing; Cap, Letter, FolioPost and Blank Book Papers; Printers', Clothiers'and Carpet-makers' Press-Boards; Druggists', Hardware and Cloth Pa-pen: Binders'and Trunk Boards; Sheathing and WrappingPapers, itc. Sec.

Paper-makerrsupiili-d widi all kinds of stock and mate

rials._ _je3QtlMAGNETISM APPLIED TO DISEASE..

Mr. JOHNSON, who has been experimenting for tlielast few years, in ilmost every |iart of the XTnited States, up-on Hi-.subject of Animal Magnetism, respectfully announces

to his numerous friends that lie ins takeu an office, .it H'.i

ChambersMtreet, New-York, where be will apply this agentto th* removal ofalmost every varietyol disease, and eileet.

he btdies'es, a s|>eedy cure, as b«- h u already done in setrr.ilhundreds of butancta. He has also secured me services olclairvoyant; who will examine tlie nature of the dise-Lw ofanyindividual, and prescribe a remedy whileunder the magneticintlueuce;Those who have diseases of long standing, and who have

Le-^ii rre-t.'d by physicians to no i.uri>ose are invited t.. call.Terms reasonable auli ::m .

WASHINGTON KLIXIK.-A pure v»-gi-tahlecompound.." Nature*.! God Ims secreted in the vege¬

table kingdom, sale; sure ..,¦! ipeedy remedies for .t!!_<lisua»e.i jtoaearchforand discover these, is apart of man's allottedtoil.'' Tins well kuoivii usertion of Dioscorides; one of thenmat profound of the ancient philosophers, has receivedanother ev ideuce of its trutlj ami m iN.|>;m, :u the discovery '.t'the Washington F.livir, which, for its many virtu-*, may t<<i-iü-ii .1 God-send to the afflicted ! It is only neceasary t" sayof it. thathnndreds ofour best citizens can attest its ilmostin power in thoroughly curing thai most intolerable ofalldiseases.FEVER AND AGUE..The Washington Klixir ü equal-

lyeffii icious in tlie cure of Cholera Morbus, Bilious ( hohe,Diarriicea and Dysentery, Worms and Dy*|ie|>sia. TheWashington; Elixar beiug composed entirely of Vegetablesubstances, is. of course, perfectly simple and harmless,though unequalled for tiie rapidityand vigor with which it

compels die stomach to perform the peculiar (unctious 1--

quiieuin effecting a^radical cure of the above mentioned dis¬ease*.one do»e having, not uufr« quently, caused * permanentcure.The Washington F.liair, in envelopes containing ch ir;sim

nie and precise directions for Its iise, may be obtained 01 Lit.E. M GÜION, VS! Bowery; cok Grand-it.; and of It. E;Muss, cor. Grand ami ( innon-sts.; J. Weodover, III EighthAvenue ; A. W. Gabanden,6l Sixth Avenue ; Dr. K. Leggett;cor. A venu- D >el ).) str-i : I). H. Burtu«rt. .--.r-Tt-J .Av-nueand3thstreet; Dr. U.A. FieId,.cor. Broadway and 12üi»t.;Guinness, 122 3d Avenue, cor. tub street; Ed. Chessteaeycor. Bowery md Broome-sc; J J. Coddington, rr, Hudsonst. ; E. L. Cotton, 2ti'j Bleecker-st.; Oliv-r Deromas St Co.,39Chatham-st.; Dr. Wm. Cecil. VorkvUIe;A. L. Louns-bury, Manhattanville; Dr. W. G. Wood. Harlem, si jm

ORISON'S VEG ETA 11LK 11N1V E R SA L-MEDICrNES.*.Caution to the People of America..We hereby certify, that M*s*rs. FIKTH&, HALL,oI Frankliu Square, New York, are oar ouly GENERAL AGENTSfor tlie United States ofAmerica; md thit neither HoratioSitEFHKajao Moat nprGcoacK TarLoa, onr late Agrats,ire in my way authorised to \-ud Morisou's Vegetable !. nevenwl Medicines. As many imitations *re m circulatiou, thisCaution becomes highly necessary. All persons sellinir/miMedicia« in the United States must have the authority ol thebefiire-nainvd Messrs. F11 "» h Si Ham

(Sign-!) MORISON.MOAT kCo., HygeisU.British ' oUegeofHealth, N. *i Road. London, lan.12«.The above ceti/ten, emanating from tlie "Briti ih CoUese ol

Health, London,'' will b- hailedwith the warmest enthusi¬asm by the rrieuds of the Hygetan System, inasmuch is 11

;- ::.) 1 to rrt>nsc and oppose th* u?ortltl«%\ COVMtttJtiL* whienhave b*eo extensively circulated by those who .vre a.« destituteofmoral principle; as they are ignorant of rl>e ftheaungart.Theinvaluable medicines of the British College may be on-

tame.! in their original pnrinrofseveral gentlemen whotaken agi ncic in s»v< ral ol the different States, mioss names

w-l! be-found 1:1 ti e .* N« .v Voik fVourier and Ku-inlr^r. -

T be 1 '¦ m be bad also in the original packages of th« totiow-

ihgsub-Agents, viz:Messrs. Paul Poo St < 0. 96 John st-

44 H. H. Schieffelin it Co. 104 and 1P6 John st.

J. C Whitmnre. Esq. 45 South st..* Isaac Suell. 190 Greenwich st-.* Pew Hsmptou, 190 r'anal it., New 1 ork city.

M-«rs. Post & Lewis, Jerjcno, L. I.'. il d. Bardwell, Aioy, ^»ew lOlk.

Mes. Good I iff. Urica. doMr. W. H. Bar.«. Rochester. doMessrs- Coraw-11 Sc Botler, Pokeepsie, £*,*¦

». W. J. Styles, Rhinebeck, do

a4tf FIRTH kJiALJ*. Grnexal AgmU,l F«aküa sqtiaie.

M'

i

B

1Cy"AiNTED-pRe^>ectable families and the pub-*" '¦ .teibenratll) imfi rm»d that they can always be sup¬plied with American, English. Irish ijroowfiat. Scotch. Uer-

1... Cln lurntsh saaslacton cityi. r-... e,, ,t No. 123 Broadway. M door Mow Howard-st,-:' "1*_T. ELLIOTT, rroptWtor.

YXTAN !':.''¦-A situation as waiter bv a very! cit%tnT* v '>unc Inani vrasesnot nn ob-'ect. Fleas*tnply it 271 Mulberry street. anjl $t»A PA R TN ER WANTED La h pleasant'office1 V isiness worth $ 1200 jet annum. A business mm with%u aa interest, Apply u 35 Libery street.aa29 1 w*_¦_l^ANTED.As Clerk in a Jeweler's Store, aV V young man »h.> h is badexperienceia thebnahaeas,'andr . refer t.» 1i> «>: employers, None others needapply.' Ad*dress J- Weletl at ibis office. st Je*

PK IVATE WATCHMAN..A steady, expert,enced Man .v wtsemplovnaent as Private Watchman; best"references. l::.;uiiv at 16 B>vnJ-»r. au29Iw+

N K A! LING..Wanted, "about 13 teofof[r >n Railing from S :o lu feet hieb« «Lo, about 20 feet not

mor> than5 fee highs Address*' 1M3," Tribune . :ficc. 30ai»

01 O ()n WANTED.ForT\vc~fiSt^:e^nd^-LOv/v/ uid M.'rrT.iK'"*.pr«>i>*rtv wor'h nearly doublerin ant. ».pplyti Gerrit Smith. 57 Liberty st. au3l Iw*

\A R D .A lew gentlemen cau he accommoda¬te.! with e tod Board, on r-.-A-maable terms, at 12 John at.

a7 1m ._"OOÄRDLNG .Good Board and very pleasant1j It. outs, furnished oi auforajshetl, foi ifcndetnen and theirwiv.x. or siuKlegentlemen, may be obtained at No. 80 EastBri id w i. Ii. d references given and required. si lw*

PMPOKTÜKl OF CHININ GLASS, *\6C..Tho-* - h ipeal md grelle» t variety of China, Glass and Earth-en VV ire that can be found in the city, is at No. 7 Sixth ave-uue, opposite Amiry-street, Purchwers wishing to supplytil . ¦

'i . ii-»p rate will meet with polite atlentiou and

>f ware; but pricers. or person* wtro go about kilUaflhim, aie requested not to call.N. U. \ [ioici i ihctiou of Plants in bloom for sale.

si 2vv *_TUIE O L'AJtXXERgUIP heretofore exhuin*1 twee tin subscribers, under the fum ofWORTHING.'1'ON St PpRTElt. is.tliisda) dissolved b\ mutual consent.Ml persons indebted to theabove firm are requested to make

moliati paymentto \, D PORTER, who is auUvoriisd toEDWARD WOKT1ÜNGTON.

Sept. :. isi» A. D. PORTER.'i In mbsi riher will coutinue the Tailoring Business on his,.' it No.67 Kiitt.'i: street, w bere the foi mer nations

ol the establishment are respectfullj in* ire.1 to call.A. I>. PORTER.

MF »« SALE OR EXCHANGE, a.cottaee|;;jtj| built House and Stable, with six lotsattached on tit*w-r«3».N hwe»t corner of5th avenue and 125th st. Applyat13 Courtlandt st. corner of-Greenwich st, auto tf

Ii' I,KT- He-second story ot t!i»> M'ribuiieBuildings. Possession ^ t v eu immediately, and rent

.moderate. Apply totf T. McELRATH. Tribune Office.

F< »Ii SALE or K ENT, tor a term of years.One half or more ofa large Factory Building.now er-ful Wheel.two Housi >, md on one of the best Water

.ttes in this pad of the country. For farther informa¬tion, ado., ss die subscriber on the premises, or call and viewfor yourselves. D. II. ELLIS,Montgomery P.O.au3l iweodj Orange County, N. Y.

MFO'li SALE; (>K TO ß KNT..ThtvlPrelnT-um Mills, w eb. it i.i 15run of stones, with all of itsextensive machinery, situated a: ar two miles from New

Rochelle, Wesi Chestei county, and State ofNew York, «ndin immediate pn simity t.> tl.e city >'i New York, now in or-dei r ..! extensivebusiness in llour, and can grind and packOt 150 bai reis each day, or could be most advantageouslyemployed for any other purpose which might require extensive

water power. The reputation for the p<*t 35 years enjoyedby the Premium Mills, and their proximity to New York,with the facility of transportation afforded immediately adja-ceut, by w u ol the navigati. ? .lie-ct to the Mills from anyp< rendei tin facilities foi business unexceptionable to

d. tiritis* inch in establuhment. Apply to HENRYPARTRIDGE KELLOGG Esq., New RocheUe, N. Y.,Ki llourt Vil e ; or to SILAS WOOD, Esq., N*. 59 Broad^iir.-r, New \ ork,Nt w Rochelle, Auzust 23, lf.!3. au2S I0t*

t*ftfc.'.\l.l AliLE I'KtM'KKTlES FGK SALE.*£<V&» I. A Faun of 100 acres in die township of Shrewsbu-- a.. i,. vloinnoutl] ("... N .). 2 miles from Red Bank Land

1 hi is a I irge Pi u h Orchard; now full of fine pewhea.Comt and tet thtni. Possession may be h id in October.2. A Farm ul 3ufl icres 5 miles from Middletown Point, N.J iOO acres ire in wood now lit to cur. Possession April 1st,.Si t, There are good buildings on Ik.ih tbe.v farms.3. A 2 STOR1 r.'tK K HOUSE on a lot JO bv 150 iuCon-

^r.-^v st, Paterson, lately occupied by the People's Bank. Pos-ion May 1st, w.u. Inquire of WM. BLOOMFIELD,Esq. 21 VV dl »t, orof JOHN CROES, Keyport, N. Jereey.jy!7 2m-_'_

(.> -AGRES OF MOUNTAIN LANDJ ^iv"'" FOR SALE.Lying in Orange and Rock-o<d (lountics, Stare of Ne-.> York, n5 miles from the city..The New i oik and Erie Kailioad, OraiiKe Turnpike and tho .

Ramapo River running nearly through the'eentre of it. It iswelL^atocked with wood of 25 years growth and upwards. Aconsiderable part ol it might bu made arable. There is amountain ol limestone, said to possess k'natstreriKdi, and *e-v. i.il n.m 'nines, one of which has lately been opened andproi ed to In ol first quality; There is also very exteusive wa¬ter power with i number of falls on the Kamripo River..Tnxeto Lake two miles long and one mile wide, lies in onepart of the tract, the scenery of which is beautiful, it is threemiles above Pierson's Works, and is known h* the Augusta.Tract. Access r»n be had U) irin threeor four hours by theN. \. a Ei us Railroad, or in live or six hours by tho way ofHackens u h. and Orange Turnpike, or by the way of Nyackor H li rsl raw .

It will be sold in parts if an offer is made for a considerabletrier, bin.uire at 12 Chadiain street, where a map can be seenand other particulars ascertained relative to the above premi-

_auU 3m»THOMPSON'S TRUSSES.-.Officeremoved to 13 Beekman street About 200 ofthe first physicians mid surgvous of New Yorkbale given their decidtd iirefertnoe to thisTruss, as you can graduate the pressure from 1

tu j!i pounds on the rupture without a back pad, which does somin Ii injury to the spine. A lair trial being the best test of itsiiipr: i..ni) it i< applied and six days trial given, and if it doesnot retain the, rupture, while p< Hönning every kind of exer-ci ie ... coughing, and gi»«- perfect east..in a word, if it is notsatisfactory in i»«r> respect, the inoiifryis cheerfulIv returned,and. this is die only comlition on which you should buyanytruss. A perm uient cine i; easily effected, and warranted ifdirections aie follow ed.

IfGces are fitted up at No. I:: Beekman street, one door fromNassau*, exclusively foi applying this truss, and all are invited1.1 cine Old ny lor I eillsel Vt:s._ati7 Ire*

I i FLL'STRUSSES..Notice to Rup-tured Persons..Persons alllicted with raptuiesmay rely upon the best instrumental aid the.wurld affords, on application at the office, No.

1 Vesey-street, or to eith.,r of the agents in the principal townsin die United States. Be careful to examine the back pad ofHull's Trusses, to see if they art' endorsed by Dr. Hull in wn-ting. None are genuine, or to be relied upou as gr.cd, with!out his signature, ...

Many persons have undertaken to vend imitations of Hall tcelebrated Trusses and thousands are imposed upon in conse-

quence. These imitations.cannot be relied unou; they ar*made by uiisUiltut mechanics, and are no better than the ordin-ary Trusses. .....-.Rooms have been fitted up at No. 4 Vesey street, exclusivelyfor !<dis, hiving a ... parate entrance from die business depart¬ment, where a female is in constant attendance to wait upon fe¬male patient-_»211(r-PMHAMERICAN COOPERS' TOOLSä <.>.~if9 ft ,..] TOOLS in general, can be obtained in

all their variety, at WHOLESALE andRVTAI1 at 33 FTJLTON-STKEETj NEW-YORK, ofinmost celebrated Manufacturers, (warranted Cast Steel,)

ALBERTSON'S, CpNGERS, BARTON & SMITH'S,HORTON'S GIFFORtiS, and other makers.

\Uo am K1-'\n' IKON RIVETS., COOPERS'TRUSS HOOPS HEAD AND STAVE JtHNTF.HS,STOCK HOWELL AND CROZE'S BRACES, DOW-FI ! N G BITT S Si EC K IRONS, TAP AND BUNGBORERS, COMPASSES, to-to.A liberal diacounton Edge *^g^^-^jyl3m* CHARLES S. LITTLE.

ä^^SSXPlAN^ > F< >RTES TUNEDibr F1F-8s^--tc==*8 TV ' ENTS.-W. C. HAYNER tunesJ t V i 1* Pianos in any nartof the city for,50 cents...\l., gives Instruction on the Pi mo. Organ and in Singing,on mod. rate 'rms Apt lv through the Despatch Post, or pei-aonall). it Iiis resid sni e, 22 Fir.t avenue. si lin*

saJOI-LN GALER~ (formerly with J. V.^5 Tilyou).LADIES' BOOT AND SHOE

STORE. 55 Chatham-street.. it op<-ninx the above new store.ei tfiillj to win it the attention «f his friends and the

ii1 lie t>> l.is choice assortment ofLADIES', MISSES'AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS AND

SHOES, . .

of City Manufacture, beingof the most approved style, anaat prices corresponding with the rimes,

_

II..had M'veral years'experience u the business, he can

co/ifideuil r i u re to pun h isers the b-.t description ol work¬man shij. -September. 1313. _*JL£L_.

A-S-a '.' K.MC'VA I.-.-INOIA RUBBER««=&ss^rsii<.:-.s AND OVERSHOES-Just receivedfrom our facton foi fall liade, a large assortment of IndiaRubber shoes, consi ting of plain and figured Imed and lonjroRubbers, Gents' Elastic Upper Ovcrahoes, Ladies ElasticMPi^rSawlaU, leiatherand rubbei soles? LadieafuTand rjDOOUi).,u:, I <;r-.-: in, mid Buskins, ladies elastic quilted silauver-shoes, new style: Goloe Shoes, and various *y{e*(°rrf2^Sand Children.. Si.», which we offer at theJatest re/luocd

Pr2f)So pairs Ladies and me,,* Rubber Sh^./'Kured andplnin.byi .r trimmed and cleaned bythe 00l«tt.

5.ivi«i pairs L idie-i lined and fur bound Rubbers. *

Men bänts i t requested toexamme the stock alter sepuruibei t, it our new store,No.25 jjav.

Successor to Roxbury lRWj,Mau28 Im until September 1st at 15 ^deniUne-,f\ HI iRSE-SHOESrr-Warranted wpnmxjaV.^_. m .n. heretofore used. al about the f 'ice

it Co., N-w-York; Lh«l*» srn«fy » BaltimoreB. W. Jones, Ph'l-^ll'!''s-^ £'Lfon rhe »ubjeri.where farther ir.iormatwn m*/ *. ""j^NRY BURDEN.Troy Iron and Nail Factory

mi21 tf".a T,-<TF-M-iilEl»-EK'anr Nutru bur Hats

(.,rdi.ci;»v 'e"f^PfUl,Iau Moleskin at $3. These,...or . .ort na^ du> ^ M $,

H»« .ue . i" , ;..rv wardress Hat.ak- w ; " "bROWN, PraerTcal Hatter, 146 Oanal-st,

.iiijij Im' ^ .-_-

frsA ECONOMY AND FASHION..To those\ whostndy economy..The sub*crib»-r, iu accordanc*^äfeyiaii, the times, has reduced his superior imitationMelesxi" Hats on fur b<jdie», to the extreme low price of«2 25 The abova ire an eleeant dress Hat, and will compareidtautig- Ottsl. w iih hats sold in this city et $2 50 and J3. *aAvearrante.i td e.ve utisfaction. Also, constantly manufactur¬ing lur and silk hau of die best quality, latest V»tJ«^n-'J' Vth-- lowest city prices for cash. An assortment olVv?iI£hCloth Ca;>j coosUiitly *n hand. J. W. KLLLOGO,au 15 im» No. 132 tand-tt. comer of Thompson^

Di A PERS.60 Bales Rusoa Diapers foi; salejbyORINNELL. M1NTURN it CO. 78 SouUVstreet.

1VTEW HOPE DEL. BRDX5E CO. NOTES

au»\w»Cd at 1 lKZ CCBt* ^JORN DEANE,« Wtil*