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NEW-YORK TRIBÜNE.TKE NK&V-YORK DAILi TRIBUNE IS PUB1JS1IEÜ
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IBW-YORK WKKKLY TIM III >:K,VERY LARGE PAPER, FOR THE COUNTRY.
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Tjfl E TR [BUNE,Repotted fol the Phil«. North American.
SPHECU OF IIOX. JOHN H. CLAYTONAt U»e Delaware Wltlf; Couvcntlou.
i/r.'d in t%'ilmiHgtvn, Onlurdnv, 1.1c ra..r.
.A vast concourse of the Whigs of Delaware,and many from adjacent counties ol u'.hrr Si ill s-,
net at Wilmington on Saturday. It was ami
cipaled lliat lion. John M. Clayton would.vjieak upon the Compromise Act, and irreal in¬terest was manifested in hear liim. The prc-Oedings generally, were of the most enthusiasticDafactcr. The following report ol Mr. Clay-
ton's speech comprehends the leading points, andoften the precise language which he used. Thedelivery occupied about three hoursHon. John M. Clayton presented himself t"
the meeting, and said.He ruse for llie purpostoi tendering them in the first instance his thankslor the honor they had done him in appointinghnn to preside "vcr so large and rcspt ctableun ¦<-
sernbl it'c of Wh g freemen here convened. WithMD<>lr exception, he had not witnessed, at ant
period of his political life, so great n Conventionof anv political party as he then saw before him.His chief object in attending the Convention t".
day v.ms f->r iiic purpose of endeavoring to brineback their attention and that of the country fromthe many distracting topics which now agitatedand disturbed the public mind,.to tlint greatestof all issues involved in the approaching Pres:,denttit! election. In his view, thai question was
c.'iool the highest and most important that couldengage the consideraiion of ilie country.
It wn-. a question whether wc should sur endt r
the protection of the Whig Tariff of 1642;whether wc should abandon that Act which hadextended to the laborer, lor the lirst limu in thelast ten years at least, that protection whichlairly bclonjjed to htm; whether we should return
th:tt Btate of colonial vassalage in which Ihi:counirv existed before the Whigs of the Annn.can (involution had achieved our liberty and independence by the i;r«'ut struggle ol the Kevolu.tionary War.Tins was mi vllurt of ricsigning politicians ol
the. opposite party to withdraw the attention i
the voters of the country, at this lime, from thiswhich was the true is.-tiu.the greatest, assuredlyof all the issues to l>c derided 'I hey wt re Con.
scions, as all intelligent men must be, that thenums in the United States at the present t:ino. ho
immense majority of ttie voters of the coui try ininvnr of the Tariff ol 1842, und opposed lo litdem d ictrine of Frcc-Tradc. But nil the
iihcr questions which the ingenious men of theopposite party could press into the canvass wen
now brought forward studiously and avowedly t"
be discussed, and for the express purpose olcovering, us with a mask, the groat questionupon which their happiness and true interestjrend. He would sty tlut they were aware of tin
consequence of the. decision on this issue. Ihlectured that this was u common trick of design-nj; [politicians to withdraw the people from thequestions which ihey dreaded, and lo presentothers, for the purpose of avoiding defeat, lieremembered an anecdote which was related Ui
him m the time the Sub.Treastiry Hill was pass* il[Here Mr. Clayton, after an apt illustration
of his jMiint, proceeded in a most humorousstrain to depict what was the condition of Tyler,and that ol" his instruments, in their efforts to ob¬tain the annexation of Texas to the Union. Hisportraiture of the functionaries of the presentAdtninislralion, und of the Loco-Foco candidatein reference to tiie Tex ts (|iicstion, drew forthrepeated bursts of laughter from the assembledthousands.]Mr. C. went on to eulogize Henry Clay, und
affirmed that if fairly dealt by, he must be our
ncit President. (Loud, long, reiterated and en-
thnsiastic cheering.lie would not predict the fate of James K.
Polk and his followers. He invoked the alien-ii'in of the meeting to Ute issue which must bedecided at the next election. If the elect;' n
joes against us, as a Republican he was wil itigtu submit to the majority of Ins countrymen, andhe would fit down with whatever of patienceand resignation lie could command. When, herepeated, that decision should have been made,then as a Republican ho would submit to it. lie,however, often thought he would be glad lo drivei bargain with the opposite party, in order thatwe should gel rid entirely mid for ever of theTariff question, indeed, in his opinion, such are
the prospects of the Whig party that he wi u!dbe willing to risk the final decision of the inat'er
oa the approaching election, lie had receivedmany communications from different parts ol theUnited States, inviting him to explain the fai ts
ia relation to the course pursued by Henry Clay>n" Kentucky, and Theodore Krelinghuyscn ol
Nlw-Jcrscy, in reference to the Act of the 2d ol
March, ls3.t, commonly called the Compromise.Sir.tnoe its it iniolil seem, these iriid Patriotsami able Statesmen had been charged by our oppatients with abandoning the Protective Policyof the country! He found it impossible to an¬
swer nil the Inters that be had received on the
ntbjcct; but if his fellow citizens would have pp.tience, he would attempt a reply lo all those m-
terrogatorics in what he was now about to say.He w.is a member of the Senate ol the United
Mao b at the tune of the passage of the Comproraise Act, and was also a member ol the Com-ntitice to which it was referred. He was o.Ithose who voted for it in all its stages, and ior its
passage ; and lie thought he had as great an <<i>pojrtunily of knowing the motives and objectsMr. Clsy and Mr. Frclinghuysen, as any otherman belonging to that honorable Iwdy ;.and hewould now .-ay bra sly before he pn ce :dcd farther,that the great objects they hau in view, were nol
ooly io save the honoi of ihc Stales then in dmi.ecr, but nlso to save the Protective Principle andthe Protective Policj itself. It was quite a com-tnon error, even among intelligent men, to sup¬pose that the act which these gentlemen votedlur, did, in some part of it, abandon the Protec¬tive Principle. It was by some supposed.in.deed, it was by many bsheved, that the act wasan uet to reduce the duties down io 2l) per cent.»l the end of nine years and lour months, undtfut the act contained a binding stipulation thaiafter the 3Ulli day ot June, J.-4X.', the dutiesshould not Ik- laid higher than twenty per run.. duty insullieienl for protection, and in fact in.SnfiCieat lor the purposes of revenue itself, lieknew thut in order that the meeting should underoiand the subject, they must accompany himthrough a dull detail of drowsy facts, but thequestion assumed an intenst it had never as-suiiud Ix-lore, and it was very important, nayabsolutely necessary, that it should be placed ,i,a proper light before the People, as well for tin ir^formation as in justice to the great Statesmanand I'atrtot whom the country delighted to honor.(L'real enthusiastic cheering )
It was not true tlmt the Act called the Com-promise Act was a b II to reduce dutii s merely atdie end of a stipulated period down to -'Ii per cent.The fir&t section of that Act provides for such a
reduction; but liic third section positively pro.»ide» that after the "Hjth uf Jtinr, 1842, su- ltduties only shall be laid as will raise suflicieiitrevenue for the economical administration of the^uvernrnen», and that those dunes shall be us.
Ksscd on the Home valuation and be made pay¬able in cash. Now the act, when fairly ex
plained, was an act to reduce the duties to 2U per<*nt. at the time specified, unless, at that time it
BY (i REE LEV & McELRA'
VOL. iv. ft'O. <>*.»
should I)" !u"nd that duties wen: insufficient forthe wains of the Government; and if they were,then th<- Act positively provided th tt duties shouldl>c laid t<> meet those wants, and farther, tint ihcyBhould he collected in the manner that he had justdescribed.
Observe, that according to the languageof the bill, which he had just quoted, allrevenue necessary fur the support <>i the Goverament must be derived from import duties,nod import duties alone, after the 3Uth ofJune, 1 > J'J. Well, how is the revenue de¬rived under the Act of 1832? Not from im.port duties alone, but from import duties und theproceeds ol the sales of the Public Lands : hut,simultaneously, he might say, with the passageof the Compromise Act, Congress passed a bill to
distribute the proceeds of the sales ol PublicLands, for a limited time; and il wa-. a part ofone gicat system of Finance and Revenue, dc.signed by those who voted for the Compromise,to withdraw the proceeds of the sales of thePublic Land--, from the General Revenue of theCountry for ever, to distribute them among theStates, and lor a certain period, winch he hadalready mentioned, to lny dmirs.sufficient du.tics.for the rapport of the Government, and iod< fray all the necessary expense of it. Accord,ing to the scheme and general system of theCompromise, the Lind Bill was as- much ;t pari. .I it as the Act ol l-'J.i itself. The understand¬ing was, that all revenue should l»e collected fromimports, and that so much should always be col.lectcd lor the economical administration of theGovernment. As Whigs,we wanted no extrava¬gant administration of iL General Jackson, inins previous Message, had said that the LandFond should t ease to he a source of revenue.
We took him at his word ; ami we paused a billui both IL.uses, having thai object in view. Itwas thin sent tn the President, at the time tiroCompromise Act was in ins hands, lie returnedthe Compromise Act with his approval ; but heretained the Land Bill. lie leiuiu'-tl it, too,utidcr circumstances which no means could jus.lify. He kept that bill in opposition to thatwhich he (Mr. C.) conceived was his duly, andthat w ar. to have returntd it to that branch inwhich it originated, in order io have ii passed, ilpossible, by a v-itu of two-üiirds. Having been
present at ihe time, he (Mr. C.) km w the fact,ihut iI Genera] Jackson lud returned the bill, itwould have become a law.for su.-li was the re¬
luming good will among the gentlemen of tin:South, ui consequence ol the Compromise ii.-riand such was the understanding of all in referenceto the great s,m> m ol Finance, thai ihcy informedUS. WltllOUt hesitation, llieV Would Vole to p-iSs thet*il| in spue ot the Vi to, which bill wc had jussedm the Senate by a vote oJ 25 lo 2Ü. But it w .->
r.ow said by gentlemen that sufficient firmnesswas not shown on lliat occasion ! Ii .Mr. I i.-.vand Mr. Frclinghuysen, say these gentlemen, hadshown a greater degree of lirinrn as, wc might havesaved the whole.wc might have a ivcd more thanwas saved at the lime. Now, he did not doubithe courage and manly bcarii g of the gentlemen,nut if tin-, had uct n in the position ol Mr. Clayand .Mr. Frelinghuyscn, he questioned whetherIhcy would have done differently. He must bepermitted to say, when he made these remarks,that they do nol understand what the concessionsmade by the b.ll were. And be was satisfied that,if it had Hot been for the passage of that Act at
lliat tune, the whole Protective policy of theCountry would have been crushed ten years ag...At the commencement ol the session of Con¬
gress of 1832-33, General Jackson, in Ins Mcs.sage, avowed himself 10 be in favor of a judiciousTuritf, und for Ihe first time proclaimed to thepeople of tins country that il was doubted whethergreater evils did not flow from this system of Pro.lection than relief.that no Si ttcsman had con-
lemplated perpetual Protection, and all that hadbeen contemplated was temporary Protection.'Tin se and similar remarks satistied us that hewould throw into the scale again.sl the ProtectivePolicy the whole influence of his gigantic Party.It was too late in the day to tell the people of thiscountry that General Jackson could not havecrushed the Tariff at that day. General Jacksoncame into power an advocate and friend.of theInternal Improvement System, yet promptly ve¬
toed i;ll Internal Improvement bill, and thesewho spoke against his Veto were turned out ofihe political church. Before he was President I
the United States, lie proclaimed no hostility to
the Hank; and while lie was in the Senate, hevoted for the most latiludinarian construction olthe Constitution in reference to Internal Improvements.and he " won golden opinions fioni tillsorts of men." His was a system of tactics themost extraordinary, ami developing results of themost extraordinary character. 11c was one ofthe greatest political Generals that ever existedin this or any other country. lie attacked allthe great Institutions of the country in detail.He would kill llicm oil*one by one.assailing theweakest first, und, aller sacrificing that, wouldassail the rest, until at length lie disposed ofthem all.
Mr. C. proceeded still farther to point out thegross inconsistencies which General Jackson h-idbeen guilty of when in public life, and then eon.
tinned:.Next came the attack on the Tariff! us
he had already described. Wc saw what mustbe its fate. As its friends, il was impossible toshut our eves to ihe gigantic influence which hewould bring to Ireitr against it Henry Clay,acting the part of :t true parent in relation to Ii s
favorite pokey, stretched out his hand to save it.He i,Mr. Clayton; knew, indeed lie should IICVI
forget, the responsibility thoy all incurred ai thetune they passed the Compromise AcL
Mr. C. alter relating some particulars of a eon.
versalion he had held with a friend in referenceto the passage ol the bill, said that while ii was
pendin» in the Senate, such was the rapid actionof General Jackson's party at that day In carryout his suggestions as contained in Ins Messageof the ltii ol December, 1S32, nun on the 23th ofDecember, "f the samt- year.iwenty-four daysaiier the Message was sent to Congress.Mr.Verplanck reported Irs bill in the House of Represeulattves. It was important that ihe Meetingshould know the contents of that bill, in order thaiihey might understand Mr. Polk of Tennessee.Mr. Clay h as Chairman of ihe t Committee on the
Compromise Act. Mr. Polk was at the tail ofthe Committee of Ways and .Means, who rc
potted thai bill lor the destruction of the bill re-
ducing the duties..Mr. Verplanck's bill laid a duly of but twenty
per cent, even on ready-made clothing. It, in
short, leveled a blow at every mechanical tradewithout exception. It proposed.(remember Jas.K. Poik. ye farmers, mechanics and others].aduiv of twenty per cent, on bacon, and beef wasio be protected by a duty of only fifteen per cent.
Let him vMr. C.) till the meeting that Mr. Polkis not a farmer, in the true sense of that word,and he has no sympathy for farmers.be is a
planter. That gentleman united in Mr. Wr-
planck's bill, ur.nl it was killed by the Compro¬mise Bill of Henry Clay, thank God! (Loudand reiterated cheers.) Among the list were du-iks as low as five and ten per cent, and twentyper cent was the highest.He undertook io say that if that act l.ad passed
it would have been more destructive to the Peopleof the United States than if a t- rnado had passedover the land fiom M.une to Louisiana. If ithad been a bill to set lire to all the manufactoriesand mechanics' shops in the Union, it would rot
have be en more fatal to the interests of the People..Now that was the character of the bill proposedby Mr. Poik; that was the bill, backed by theforce of the Executive ; that was the bill crushedby the rival measure ol Henry Clay.Now he would proceed to give a history of the
manner in which the bill was destroyed by HenryClay and Theodore Frelinghuyscn, on the 22d olFebruary, 1833, near the close of the session ot
Congress of that year. They would recollect itclosed on the 4th of March. Well, on the 22dofFebruary, Mr. Verplanck's bill had actually so
NEW-YOB
l »r progressed in its passage through the Houseas to have been reported fr<»m the Committee of'lie Wh-i'c on the State of the I'nion. and theHouse had decided "ti the passage of the bill..<):i that day Mr. Claj procured a vote on theCompn iiii.-c Act in the "senate, and it had passedby an overwhelrning vote: and on Monday, the.¦il'h of February, in the Bouse. Mr. Verplant k*sbill was taken up for consideration, and. 0:1 themotion oi Mr. Lctcher, the Compromise Act (vansubstituted iti lieu of it. The reason for thismovement was the opinion entertained by someSenators that the measure was unconstitutional,inasmuch as it proposed th'e raising of revenue.
Accordingly, the bill was delivered int«> theirhands, without undergoing any alteration wha'-ever, even to the dotting of an i <»r the crossing ofa I, and they passed it lor the sake of the manu¬
facturing interests ol the country and the peaceof ihc country. (Cheers.)
lie would now say a few words in regard to.Mr. Polk and his vies. In 1Ö32, Mr. Polk votedagaiost imposing duties on all articles, or nearlyall; pfidiiecd by the mechanics of this country.He itad not time to enumerate them, but he wouldBay that that gentleman had ruled against the in.terrsts of Pennsylvania in every shape in whichthat interest could be present* tl. lit- voted ag lini-'the duticson rolled iron, and Pennsylvania shouldremember him fur it. He (Mr. C.) won .1 sav
that, if the bill which Mr. Polk desired to havepassed in l>.'l.'l had become n law, no Slate inihi- Union would have suffered more than Penn¬sylvania. It was not necessary to refer to hera!>.nr. However, we should all have shared a
common fate.In 1 $34, within one year after the passage ol
ihe Compromise Act, on the 28th of February.Mr. Polk voted for a resolution introduced hv »
Mr. Flail, of North Carolina, to repeal the Com.promise Act, or to refer the whole subject to theCommittee of Ways and Means, with a viewits repeal, and under ihe pretext of reducing thewhole of the dntic.- down to what was Called tinnecessary wants of the Government. Six uniti <!with him oul of nine membi ro of the Committeeof \Vays and Means; but in lite House thcrewi re
in opposition one hundred and fifteen nays, Mr.t'. thought.; in sixty-nine yeas, am ing which he
j thought w.is Vir. Po'k.thus showing that Rea.»in had resinned her seat in the hearts of the b-gislatorsuf Ymcrica. They determined t<> standby trie Compromise of Henry Clay; and taut rr.
solution which, in the previous year, would havebeen adopted by an overwhelming majority, w is,
in consequence of the good 'ecling which hadthen In'- n restored through lime ami reflection,ii. feaied by a triumphant vote. But do noi forgetMr. Pnik because u was defeated He made an
ell'irt to strike down the interests of every laboring niuii in the community, and every lj'niriiii:man should remember him for it. (Great chc< r-
There was another citizen on tlie same tickeiwith Mr. 1 *. IK who merited a passing notice ui
ih.s lime: ho. referred t.. George M. Dollar, Hiucandidate for the Vice Presidency on the modernDemocratic ticket It Ins beeu saiil that Mr.Uallis is a Democrat, according to the modernacceptation of that term. Now that might be so,but he (Mr. C.) would like to know what tlie de.linition of" Democrat" is.'or when he and ihegentleman nrved in the Senate together thevwere virtually <>l ihe same party. Get rge. M.U.JIas sit in 1S32 with bim (Mr.CO in ibe Sen¬ate, and like all other good Whigs, the gentlemanwas in furor ol a II ink of ihe L ulled States..(Cheers and laughter) Why, George was iheFather <./ Ike Bonk Bill! (ito«r.s of laughter,with some expressions of astonishment.) V>r,continued Mr.C.) George came to us fn m Phil¬adelphia with a great memorial in bis pocket,amitold us he was going tointroduce it to the Senate,and that he was going lor ihe rechartcrof theDunk. He took the lead; we only followed inhis wake. He made a motion to refer it tu a Se¬lect Committee, and of course, as in mmol in aucheases, he was appointed Chairman. Well, he re¬
ported a bill, antl I thought it was a very gomlbill. 1 voted for it: but they say the thing whichhe brought forth on that occasion was n monster,(laughter).a monster ol iniquity: ami yet Georgeis a good Democrat, they sn.y. He not only re.
ported the bill, but lie ro'lcU for it at every st;i»o
of its passage. He advocated it in every in¬
stance. He ami others thought u was necessaryto speak, and he always spoke when he had anything /" say.and he sometimes hail.ami a bit.Icrcr Buiili man 1 nrcr taw than George teat!Renewed laughter.)Whenever an attack was made against the
Bunk, there stoid George M. Dallas ever readyto defend it. To use u very rough am! homelyphrase common in the West. he " locked horns"with Thomas II. Bcnton. (Continued laughter.As 1 have already said, George not only voted foril on all occasions, but he also, when ihe Pn si-rietlt sent il baelt with his Vein, voted against theVeto. And, when Mr. Corwin of Ohio, expressed,in it conversation wilh him. his apprehension thatthe Executive would Veto the bill, George de-dared that he dare not do it: Well, GeneralJackson did do so,and tin: next thing we know isthat Ge irge had come oul a thorough-going I lern,ueriit, " dyed in the wool," und opposed to a Bank.Great laughter.)Well, I must give you a little more about
George. He's a . lever fellow,and I like to t ilkii!'iiui him. Modem Democrats say that MrClavVbill to distribute the proceeds ol the PublicLands would corrupt the people. Now, 1 rem«ru¬
ber Ihat Jack Cade complained to Lord .Say thathe hid corrupted the people by establishing a
Grammar School! Well, ii there wi rc any i "r.
ruplion about it, Mr. Dallas voted for it in everystage of iis passage .' and I did not know a
warmer and mute sincere advocate ol it than that
gentleman.On the last night of the session of 1833, we
who were ihe friends of the Land Bill, were ingreat anxiety to know its fate.it being then inth- hands ol the President. The friends of the
Compromise saw il that bill was defeated, oncolthe chin ohp'ets of the Compromise would alsobe defeated.the land fund would remain a panof the revenue of the country, and consequentlythe wants of the Government would be suppliedfrom that source as well as from the duties on
imports, directly in the teeth of the stipulationsol the Compromise. For that reason, and manyothers I could assign, we fell alarmed lor the fateof the measure. We did not know what Gen.Jackson was going to do wilh the bill, hut we
took a list of ayes ami noes, and ascertained thaitwo thirds were ready to pass the bill, il he com-
[on ii with ihe requisition of the Constitution andreturned the hill to the House in which u origin¬ated. We went several limes.one or the otherof us.tu ihe White House, to learn. U we could,iis late. 1 think Mr. W ilkms went once, andui his rtluru I remarked, " Well, Dallas, thegentleman has returned,'' and he replied that hewas reailv to do battle against the Veto ihe mo-
ment it appeared. We remained ail night, not
only till the crowing of the cock, but the risingof the sun, hut the oill never came. Mr. Dallasprofessed l . be so warm, so urtlent, so Stiff an
advocate of the highest Tariff doctrine at thetime of the passage of the Compromise, that he
actually vuted against the bill, on the groundthat it was opposed to the dueirme of Protection ;
and now we next hear of htm as bei..inging to
that party which makes war on the Tanti' in ev¬
ery part of the United "states, and proclaimthemselves the great champions ol the prinei-nlcsol Mr. Polk of Tennessee. We see the g«n-ticman figuring us the opponent, as the bitter op-
pom nt tfl* Tariff, us much sj as the extreme
nulliricrs, or any others.Bui Henry Clay has never changed; and his
exertions in "the public councils, aided by his in-struetivc eloquence, has done more for the cause
of the laboring classes in this nition, and have
made more proselytes to the d'-ctrincs of the Pro¬tective Policy than all the efforts of any otherman in the country. At ihe time he commencedhis hbors m Congress to build up ihe American
OFFICE NO. ICO NASSAU-STREE'
K, TUESDAY MORNING, JIM
System, most of the young men of the nationwere educated in the Free Trade doctrines ofAdam Smtlhand the visionary theories of otherslike iiirrt, *hcSÖknowledge of Pouücal Economywas obtained in the closet, instead ".' toe councilchamber. I was one of tlrbsc who had io.-
bibed these.opinions; and if, for the last twen
ty years, I have been the steady friend ol protcc.trig American interests against foreign compcti-lion, it ha» been mainly owing t-> :hc convictionproduced on my mind by the perusal of tliuscmasterly specimens of argument and eloquence,with which he sustained lus favorite policy in thehalls of the capitol of < ur country.
I have trespassed t<»> eng. fellow citizen?)upon your patience: but allow me, in conclusion,by every consideration of what ss du- to theh uior and interest of v-air country, by every feel-ing which ought to warn-, and animate vourhearts as American citizens,anxious (br the pro¬tection of jour own industry and the welfare olall the laboring classes among us, to entreat younot to overlook the true is-su-; to be decided inNovember next, between Henry Clay, of Ken-tuck, and j.ones K. Pulk,of Tennessee. It i-nota question between men merely; it is not a
question about honors and officesand the rewardsof partisan service; it i- not a question about thepayment of the State debtor the acouisitibn uf|foreign territory; it rs, as I have said already; em-phatically a question ol BREAD .a qw slion whe-thcr we shall sink the mass of the laboring free¬men of the country, who now gain their breadby the sweat of lli.ir brows, to the levelol the European paupers, who labor for sixpencea day ami lind themselves. It is an axiom ofeternal truth in politics, that a nation complete,ly impoverished will soon be a nation completelyenslaved. If, by the abandonment of Protectionto Home l,ii>>r, we reduce hall a million ol votersat an i lection to a condition of as servile di pi n-
dencC and .1» abject poverty as our southern s um'-.
how long con we rationally expect to remain ;.
nation of freemen .' More than a hundred andlorlv years a»o lit: Treaty of Me'lnit-n,which was
one of the principal causes ol the beggary andw.mt of Portugal, reduced hi r to the condition oia dependency of England, struck down her na-
lional spirit, ami enslaved her people. By thattreaty .-he abandoned all right lo protect her ownui.lii.-try, anil agreed to admit English woollengoods oi all kinds without duly or restriction.
Nineteen hundred years ago, when Rome hadconquered the principal part of the world, andfreely admitted supplies from Syria and Egyptinto Ii ily, the industry 01 her own citizens was
paralyzed by the withdrawal ol Ihal protection 10
which.it was fairly entitled, poverty and want
reigned where plenty hml prevailed, and a race ofmen the bravest and the irei st that ever lived,were speedily converted into the subjects of a
despot. -\iid so keenly did Tacitus, one of thegravest and ne-si philosophical of her Insiori u.s.
feel the degradation of supplying her lesions fromthe industry of lorcign countries, that he has an¬
nounced with an oath of vexation and disgust,that deplorable change in her condition. Let us
lake warning from the rxv.inplt s of other nationsj Let us guard and protect the real, not inertly thenominal independence ofour country. The ever
fervent aspiration from every true Americanin-art will he tor the preservation of that inde¬pendence. Esto perpetuu." MAY LT BEEVERLASTING.
.Mr. Clavton having concluded his speech,resumed bis scat, amid the cheers of the asscm-
Wage. ___
ILj ' The amount collected in this country inaid of the Free I huri-h of Scotland, during May.amounted to §7,025 91. Amount previouslyreceived $30 843 92. Total, 337,869 -:i.The receipts of tin.- American Board of Com¬
missioners for Foreign .Mission.-, during May,amounted to 8701 10._
Fun Concord..The passenger trains willcommence running over the Fitehhurg Rail¬road regularly on Monday, June 17. to Concord,a distance of 20 miles. [Boston Mer. Jour.
TRIBUNE JOU PRINTING OFFICE,No. I« N VSSAU STREET.
All kinds 1 Jot, Printing, such 11 >MAjUMtmis-now Uillh1
CaTAL08DKS.. Itsm k-. 1 '..hps.Issi Kam it PoLtClXS,Hi 1.1.« us I..vpi.su,flit' ci..
LscTORi Rills,( Iomi krt Bills, I'loiii and
Fancy.Polrii al Bills,i'iio claxs, Ineati if.
Promptly executed il ibeOOiceof the Tribune, No, LUG Nassau¦t...oiN^ite 1i1- 1'iirk.
Great American Family Acws pa per.
THE NEW.YORKS A T U RD A Y E M PO i: I U M .
a wkkki.v MISCELLANEOUS JoURNaL okLITERATURE. IGRICULTIMtE. THE MECHANIC
A.\H PINK ARTS, POLITICAL El ONO.MV,CRITICISM. METRi ill il.ITA N LIKE!
UollEsTit \.\n Kl IREICNNEWS, POLITICAL V.N'I) COMMER-
ci \i. i\ it:li igknce, sr itisti« s>.TALES. poktiiy. Ml sic. i;m;|:.\\im.s, kc.XEUTHJiL LY POLITICS l.YU lit:Lirau.V.
Edited by ED31VXD IS. GREEN.The subscriber* have made arransTesnenU to publish, in the
City ofNew York, a Weekly Newspaper, under the utlenfthe "SaTURDAv l.Mi'/Kii m." It will lie pniuedonnIniin¦beet of Ihe largest rhmensömi, embracing THIRTiadumm ni reading m tier. The qua! ts oi the daper and thetypocraphicnl execuunn wtllheol Uie bw»i superior eharecter.
Tkt EIRSTJfl MBEIi will bt published Saturdap..'mi. SWA.
\-11 lull, cotnprebensire, niiscellan.newspaper, the Em¬porium »iiinl n"t !«.- -iiri"i--i-<l br nur other in the I nited Siuii-.Ii will embraceeveryUiinrj thai can be brouelit «iUtiutho rougenflbe NesrsgaUierer, dieLitttnUeur. thel*ller.wn(er.Üiel'oet,i'hilo-ophernml Critic. It mil present n daguerreotype viewil i.iic m. it is.Meu it- diey an.Mutter* nud Things as Uieyseem : ami nothing shall 1-c wanting 10 in ike a a desiiul.le
NEWssPAPEK FOR FAMILIES.As it dialllieuomceptiui able in .ill respects; It 1. intended t"
investitwith thai kind ofwell-wnlteii miscellany which willrender it eminend] calculated t-> toppljr tiir waiiUiof both tyunit roiinlry r'-ai'i-r>.iitl.-iilnii vi nsr«Mln,- run -n':' nl el.variety, with matter of a more ..>l>*s und important character,Tbeedltonal itcrmrlrnetit b placed in thermudsol aseuue
man whore abilitwa and experience at an .-.111- r hihI » nti-r newell koowu by tbe Amencan pnblie. In UächarsJne tue tlu.In- iiiiiitatr.! with dial lirimrtii.ti.t. ti«-»iil r'--eivH. mi.I mute»itIi hisown time and personal aUention, ibe an! ol >"me uftiie ben talent inthe country.ArraiujreinenU have lieeu nwdc lor an extensive Home and
Foreipn 1 'orr^-;-. tulcnce, and «riters "l eminence rue engaged1.ntribute in ibi« manner »ketchea ol men ami -»in-ieir. withportraiture- of all the variety ofeuatom and character lu belonnd in vanOo« partsofthe world,A -trilnc feature in tin- xsnentl ehaiacter "t the Saturday
Emporium, u ill !r? its bold anil craphicSKETCHES <«r METROPOLITAN LIFE.TheSo will appearfrnm time lo tnn^, illustratedby^eaerav
inn, and will form a new era in tin. ilevelopments ol »ocitty,i-ivil,social and dutuotic, politicaland public Ute. Theevihabouodins in ta>hiooabfe .iety will !>- unmarked, the deepdegradation of me nlrandooed made risible; ihe -innt ni beenUouaneas whkb prevails to an alarming e\tent in all .-l a.ofthe community; walking abroad :.t nooortai wUhabotl rr- ... t
ami unpudeot a r,« ill t>e retmkeil ami held up tin pubhc ia ra¬
tion : and, in line pubbc ab'utea ami pnvau ei i-. ol «luuevefname or nature, mil becontronicd an! expiited.and whateverma;, tend to promote tin1 public welfare .null receive cocour-iu-hji >¦::». anil .-.ipp.irt.The pubbsben will innre neither labor nor exprn-e in fitr.
nuhina the public with a pa -r which shall tie nneauajed. 111
any attainable ;.itof excolence, by any other similar publi¬cation 111 the workLrsiB-i-Hii-Tius.a'«o Dol ir- per year, m sdvanee.tj3~ Letter* on basinesi must be p-^'-uani in nrder '.¦> r^. eive
¦Uenrion. A.. WARD sr. COMPANY"._
JJ Ann stteet. N. V.
fX?" Editor- publishing the above, arid sending us a copy <.!their papers., marked, sliall rerene Ute Saturday Emponnm 111
i exchange.iZ3~ Express. Courier, Henld. Journal ofCommerce, Even-
ing l'o-t. Amencan and True Sain will rupy twice n_week. in.
aide, ar.il send tnil to the pubisbers. Je" lu«.iw
THREAD. NEE1U.E AND FANCY STORE. Broadway, between Tbineettb nn.l Eourteentn «treet... I be
attei tion of the public 1» respectfully invted tn tne new store
just opened a- abu\e It rontair»a.iext-ft,:vo8Stortmeiit ol smallart;.-:e- ..I daily u*e in the family.wrUi a variety ol tartergoods,iz 1.I'ins. .Ner-i;.->. Hnoki im! Eye«, -upenor Sewmk- Ctittoo.
,.i,d r-ilk. Butlous, Tapes, Bobbin. Purse I'wist, zen.'.yr \\ jr~-
r*ii. Canvass and Patterns, p*fbraled Bristol Board. Bibb rrs,Gkrres, Mitts, Lod.es Cravats and Caps, lleotletnea 1 Indian,Kotoms. Cloves. Ha.-Mker.-h«-!-. Su-i>ei-.de.-.. 6ir. Hos.ery.Manilla Gnus Cloth, India .Nauk-en. lairn.«ob). San Shades.School and Traveling U'alk-t.. Plain and Fancy Ita^ct..Wiu iiinl other llolls, üc. Hair, Nail an.! Teeih Brushes,Ivory and Sln.-il combs, I'l-un and Fan» Stationery, Note !'a-p«r. Envelopes, .-steel Pens. Gold und S.her Pencils. lWt'.sm-ry. Eancj- r-oap. Cueriai i.'j Sbartog I rexm. and ottier ch>..eearticles lor trie Toilet, iplendid Vtnaigretts, siineiinii Bottles,Stc Äic.Tb- stork im. been seteded «rhh sreni .-are. a.-irtwill be sold ut the luwest cash pneo, byjei; tf._C. BU M.
ASHIU tiTO.N LACES.C. Y. WEMPLE,
so. 13 .-EPvK. ost poor >k im kassac-st.
HAS just received a bandsoine osi.»ritiieiit ut A-hburto.aLace*, Lace Capes, I Cardinalsand ahawb, l-M ernl r.
Eelet Net Shawls, llarrcire Scarts and s-hawU. new style LuceCaps. Ruches Silk Bi.-nd liuilhnj and Footinr. col'd Crapesti.r BnnneL-. Ribbons,Gimps, Silks Hosiery. (Jl res nr,.i .MittsFans, Printed Lawns. Ba!znr:nef. ladies Cravats, Veils. LaceCoibtrs. lütntty CoUats. etc. rsic^_jerlFl |R SALE.A Itoul.^i'ourn ne K.-.m I>.k. Apt Ir
mtc>_t,. W. Ac J T TAI-SI :i rTT. 43 Perk slm
,_¦ FOR SALE..The fixtures and good in!! uf an old\rnS establishetl Butcher's Shop. Reason of sale.thepre
pnetor has another establishment. Apply atSt Mott--;;eet. je!7 Ä*
7r.
1$. IS!!.
Tbe Jtuüus rrnrt*.No. I. Th« Tust : or !'>u'..es Tried by their Arts,No. 11. Till Ct rlK*NtT.No. III. TukTaru-t.Nö. IV. I.ik or llrsav Ctxr..V.l. V. PoUTICAli Aa.iUTtO.I.>.. VL Demo« to r.
No. 711. Lipo« *"» iYnt-tl.No. Viii. Tits iv etfc L»m»*.
Price Reil«« Ms.
The Price ol Mr.- JINH'S TRACTS »t the President^Campaign will be ."y I."» n thousand.THE WnOtE SERIES. I-".».! utetiba. Comprrtüi: Iä
l«:.s. i« pabtöhed Hl $ I«».*. hui dred..Wir Ft**; April 3\ ISCK3" I »: fen must l>e accompanied with ea*h.
GREELEY JlcELR VI II.spSIStaw _PuMiWatn forth* Author.
CT" Tile Life nml Public Sen ices «f 11 ». .»-
rj Clnjrby Epks s,sj..k\r. nun beolitnincd el Redding <lc .
Cu,"s. BiKtnn: <C«iberac Co.'M. I'hitn.iV;; bta, a: .1 .-.t i'u«.img *c
i;r..i|.rr.-. Boitin» re. Tn:i Biography ;. ß:e fullest and noist
complete "I an* evei published >.f Mr. Clay, andi' ¦Ola a; :he
oi'coir.ni'mlr j.r .¦<¦. !'IJ', i-i-r:'« ;iit .'ci'y a- D<5iW
Price 0 i-» Cta..37 I-a t'i*. for 13 Cople».Ciin UifTp he ;i L-hnrcli ml\m\ a Bishop.'Coatrorern !«?;»..r.-i Rev. Dr*. Wsunwncbl nn.i Pol», jrow-nr iml ..i tin- iuciileutal itwcniou of in* iunnei that 'ThenCannot l«' ii Church without a Bishop."The above i *«.ntr..ver»y i* printed in a neat l^mipalet end
rfnne no with nrinted .-..»er». K.ir »n!- nt the Tribune Mffi.-e
03* s:.mr'-i Life [usiirnm-c Coii»jm\u> isi
Sew-1 isvlc..This Institution, during <be month o| Majhas esued thirty nine pola ie-. nrin Meitlnyntii and Traders.H To Clergymen.!
Manurac'.it.'iTi. . " rhr«ic-iaii-" t>rfc.. 4 " l.twi'r. I" CriM-er. I " Äudent.I.. Inkeepen. "! " Cusithin-House olnccr.. I" Mechanic. I " Druggist. '.' Farmen.- " Lady.j
".ii It,-i :i Total Li»e? Insured....S9f Or. PbliiucyN Knuulv Pill*
for sale b* \ 15. .v ry.SANDS.79 Pultun street, 273 It.way, itml 7T East Broadway. jej I m*
£3~.lamr« I'. Ilodge. wIhm* practically lainilinrw b
Mining operation* and the trucking of Ore» m tbe ITniU.ilskate* ami Cuba, may be consulted on the value of mtniitfland*, tire., nml mineral*. «t his room. No. Granite Building,cornet of Broadway an-l Clmmber* street.
He will aiiälyxc Minerals.Soil*. Waters, ami article* ofCom¬merce, a* Potash, Barilla. V. tote I.enJ. Aic. stuecniii'i.¦.I Minerab, ires ami liirtti- may lie icnt to bun from the r?miti
try. a ml le» will cither state their value and uses nt once, m
-uiitint them to au e\in t ntmlysts, ai may t>e required; and b .
charges will Nary accordinttly.Iteierence* Gtihnell. Mintum tic Co.. Prod. Revere. M.
I).. VV.C. Ib.Ii»!.!. i.-i.We have employed Mr. H.»b-e to pertbnn tome.chemical
analyse* t..r u., and from ti.xaet mannet in which ibejr uncexecuted, we run cheerfully recommeml in. aervicen to thoserenuirine »uch -v.,rk. A. Ii. SANDS ,t rn..New Vi.rk. .lone I. ISM. tcS . out!
{XT' Temperance lliiii»«-, :>'¦ \.y ^reet,nearilie\ ...r House..Mrs. P. M tons !ul- taken this üeh'ghtful situa-tu..1. .luil uders to her fnemis and tint public its various ad.vantage* on themost reasmiabfe terms.The house is neat an.l newly fumaheil.the liluation any,
pleasanl umi convenieni to business and lliestcaraboal lamlinc.A pure vegetable diet wr th..-.- who prelet it.warm and ... Wbaths tri-e. niji.li
iX-'I~ 'ITie nook.* of Subscription to the Capitalstiiwk ofthe New.York nn<l Erie Railroad t'... arc now open ..
Ihe lHrieeof tho Company. No. \'A Wall-street, betweeuthehour*of10amlS. WM. M. GOI LU.SecnKaryiN V .rk. \..-. Jjlli. l-ii_. j._
' i 'I L \ U 'i ER.S 'I lie Cmm l.il rarj ilc ol s ...
I I«. Horum, . i I'eekskill. u^eeaseil.c.Istoig ..t ats.Mii2Ü5 v. ,inn.. ..i RepsaU. I) ce»li and Elementar] «. tk- of thelatest Eiliiioos, in gm*l »nler and comlitmn. amung « hich nr.all tbe Reports ftbe Siipreme Court and Court ol Chaoccrjofthb ..stale.., offered for ale at n very law mie. Pot parti,eulars inquire ofGeo. Pi Nelson, No. 73 Codar-strcct, New-V..-L. .«t ofPnsst ll.Tti.T, an i VV. Ncbon, Peekskill, V. V.Peek.kni. June 8th, 1Mb jeUüw*
(lUEAP REAHIXC.The terms ol subscription to UseJ Bowery I "irculating Ijbrar* have been reduced one half,
via. Pormieyear from 40 to jj ;-|i»r six inonth*.rroma"3Mtu il 75; three mouth*, from rJt.ii!. forone monüi, iron
ii ui50cents.This Library nowcontain* 0.000 volumes inlhevai.la
partiuenUol literature, and Is constantly icreivins adtlioons oail thonew works, bigethct with the f..riM;ii and Americanpenodicals ». published.
1 'atakigues may be had al the IJbran. price I-" - rents._jet_ II. K S> RA\ Nl III, Tti Bowery.
ry*Q STATU INERS, BXRR w Kits ami PRINTER.".I Suiamoi Enamelhäl, Porcelain Ivory Surface white and
colored olauks. Cans* of every descripuou as manufacturedrn the .V* Vurk 1 nr.l Manufactory, i.>t »nie at reiluced pricesby I.. SMITH. US John street. ont>wite Chlf at. .,,1
GMRTI1 «t HALL. No. I Franklin Miliare, navo eonrni illsI on ham! an extensive assortnwtii Ml'SIC ami Ml Sit' if.INSfRUMENTSofall knals i'I A.N'i I'' iRTESofdilfetenlstyles and finish; GUITARS; Irotu the best Spanish pattei -.
Kh which .bey luae received premiumi from the Ainerican In-sthuta over aU other maken, nml are ofvenr superior ti.ne and>'yie ut tin ..Ii; PLUTES, ..full kiiei. ami hnish, Rn which Rimhavealsoreceiveu repeatedpiemiuna: CLARK liVETS. K ENIBUGLES,Cl iK.Mil'l.' INS, TRI »MBONES. etc, aliofÜMiown ntanufacture and warnmeil: iiniK.rter» iifMI SH' ami nilkindsofMUSICAL I.NSTKI IMENTS. N EW MUSICreuei«ed as soon n* pobliaheil. JUST PUBLISHED, all the songsthe HUTCHINSON FAMILY; also. BERT1NPS METH"Ii for the I'IA.N'i i; ahm. the IIRPHEI S GLEE II' N >K. I*
hut a ooHection .it gksai in tour mule voioea, with putno see.poniment; Mlected awl eismpiled fr..in tbe be.t tlorruan ami Enghsbauth..rs. i.y AI'.-TI.N I'llll.l.H'S I'ri.rtjOne Dollarpeitat. Merchants, and tint Musical community generally, am witwetfully invited to call. nihrkf
VrOCAL .Ml Ml' ANN i;i..« l Tl"> VKY .-1 ll.M i:.-
Mr. P. II. N ISH Im-!;, m.inted Prof. Banaawould respeetlully infssrni tlstsse desirous ofdeveloping awl '''il-livating ibeii Voices lor Smiting nml Speaking in 101 enV t.\.-
manner, ismmtut causing hoaisem.rexhaustion, thai I..' hasastablbbeil himselfat Nu.99 Porsyth street, in ÜwCity ..1 NeviYork, to instruct IndieUmMlt nna Small Chutu on reasoiwbio terms, lie will nl... instruct Ci.kk Cm ii. ami CilotRS;and cue PrithtU Inttrwctie* 111 nli ;nirt.- ofUse fit)-. Purpurticulars and rulerences, see Circular* at tlm Book ami MuaicSt..it-.. mi til lin*
l/NCLISH PRENCli \m> \ MERR \.N SHIPPINGI i VGENCY AT LIVERI1JUL..NOTICE..Iliivmswithdrawn our Afxncy entirdgfrom VIk..k.. IIvkmh.n ».
I'u., of Boston and New-York, wo hereby announce thaiMessrs. Auams it Co.. of No. 9 Coiiit-streel, Boston, a .17Wall unset. New York, nr- >>nr authorized Agent* li.r ilmUnited State* and Canada, who are fully empowered lu actlor u* as our Shipping and Porwanling \1ner1ca11 Agenls.To ensure tbe reception ofgoods in Liveipmsl, tin.: Ibefisr-
w .iril.t - *>t tbe aanie t.i any puit of England, France. «v»-. ai-*...< 1- a.nrv thai they llKaild ;ius. through tbe builds of ..in
.aid Acents, MESSRS. AHAMS .v CO.a' tinnr several offices, as followsNo. 9 Court.street, Rortim.No.7 Will! street, .N^.v V.irk.No. 85 rhesniil.dreet Philad.No, 1* SbetuckeUst,. Norwich;
.v.. 7 Light-street, Baltimorei'. iiii Avenue, iVastlungtou.No. S3 Pourth »1.. I'ittshurg.No. IMa 11 >t . t\ on ester.WILMER Ac SM l il.
Uverpool, Slay It', 1844.j.>i;, lw
1ITII.MER At SMITH takeüi - opportunitii nl stai nr t.
t f Merchants, Kridien, Impoiters, and Ubers resuteiii in
every part oftln Uuiun, that their Liven.I bouse 1.» peculiarly ailapted (01 ii.- instnnl and express ilÄpatch of package*, pared*;specie. <cc pasning through l.n»n.I tor t:.,..bso, new..York, and all theiabei cities its the Unitol Statesnml t 'anada.aod thai dial depnitmenl .>! their bmiisese Ii ¦. im,,nt am. rr.k.o.-. «1. 4ttkntiu.h or lilt musi tr»i.e.mi nl .asimis.
t\ ll.M lr & SMI1 il haremade ariangi menl. with Me>ADAMS 4c CO. by which nil n.nnl< passing Ihrmigli IbenLiverpool bouier fi»r Aimuiea. bjr 'be Steam Ship* and mhei>.Ii. will lime tbe immediate an.I punctual ettenst'ei >.t
ibi-r -aiil Agents. Messrs. Adam* Ac Co.. al Boaonund ..
|| ¦»!n.. nod »dl therdiy be tree tr.nii defav .1^" A.»r/i tkttrst*They .!«-in it necesmri it-r-1.. stale. Hint they liave 1. .. m.
nexwo srbatevi r «silli .Mr. E (I Tuck irman, .1 Ijren.1.i-l. I.
VVilllier 6t "»mit Ii"s. Kn^li-li täxprv»».ILMER U SMITH, wh hnveibr a series ..: yean runprivateexpresses to and from London with important
intelligence, frequently performing tin; entire journey.mile*. mSlA HOURS, olfer to the Amei.n Public ami!^eminent theu services forthe sal* and rapid tmnsmia*ion ofimrioitaiitdocument*, despatches, specie, bond*, bills, deeds,.v.-., which w ill. ..n .ill 11.Tn.n111-, be mutt faithfully deliveredby their own [»mite messenger, aud generally Imun n ;.itioice ..1 the Enghsh iiiail« t.< London. Mr. EDWARDWILSIER, wi.o - now im America. prepared to afford an}infortnit:..n upon'Uiis-subject, an.l give security tor Ine-diteterlormaoceoi ail such businesa n. may 1».- entrusted '.. bisl.iser|n».l est« .1.-1.iiifia._ jelolwV''' Ii' I- AH persoo» are nuuooed not to trust any ol the
i. 1 erew .if the *mp Arabuui Irnm Lirenwiol. ason debts oltheirconlractiug will be paid by the Captain ..r conkiane< -.
te|j_ IV. (. J T. T \rsijriX_KOBEH I II. GOFF,
Produce and General Comuission Merchant,Ü.-.. ¦. Nu. Is l.'ront-atreet.
V S. la i.N NELLY it* O..n0 Sb7 Grand areet, court olis . Allen, ti.n.- <m hunt! an estenme .r!iii~:i I of tbe lid-low as iaHissvkeeptng DRY GOuOä. to whschlhey iavile, theattentton ofpurchatssrs, via:
l*-4 t.i 14-4 Imperial and Marseiile* Quiltsotto 10-4 i.) 311 Diaper! r.nd I>un«..k T.ib.'e Cloths nil
Linen.ii 4. 8-4, 10 4 um! 1J4 lr.-h, Bamsley, Russia and £ile«ia
St-r-'ltli-s.Russia, sr.itrn und Irish Toweling Diapers.»¦8, 3 -I and 1-4 Diaperami Damask Napkins.Crasn. Huckalsack end Birdeye Diaper.4 4 and S 5 Shirt 1.. and I'.v-Case Lutea of all «juubtie»,4-1 he 1, I n, Unen.French Krr.lmv*c Cloth Taiile mi.! Piano (Soven.('..!.,red Cotton, Worsted and Linen TabteCloths.
And also an-vtens.ve assuctroenl of Cloths an.l CsMineres,Dmp D'Etes, Cambroom, Linen Drillings, and otn*r S'ap.eand Pane; Dry Cmxlv. mv-l
J1>SIT> LAID LEGER l\\l'i;iLS-fl.o^bsc7Ti-^."^eagents ..I the^ wcll-kinovn Patters, have now on hand as
follows, rinisbed bitUi with U* ltot-pre**ed mid sctiti surface,which adapt 'h-m f..r every class ol writers:supcrf.ne blue laid Super Royal, hot-pressed and satin surface
Co u'o Royal dododo do Medium Cododo hand-made am: w bite3Iediuin do dodo blue laid Demy dododo do and band-wove Flat Cap .!.>
Abo. a lull a«sortment ..I the .^her descriptions of Jeasup'smanufacture, embracing thin bid Polio Post, super olue l^idCut 1 ap. rirst class suoer blue laid letter, «upertinc do. lirstc!n>* hand-niiide white do, .upesh'nc do. &v.my31 E. B. CLAYTON St SONS. 84 John-it.
PORTABLE SHOWER BATHS of the best make is theworld, for sale wholeiafa and retail, by
U .M. WEST. 183 Hudson -trcct.A new Shower I'ath which every ttody oughtto have nttlie
low price of 50 cents each._n jblni
'T^IIE^iiT^TRY" NEWSPAPER ADVERTISINGX A.iknct or V. B. PaLXKR. extensively known throughoutthe L'mteii States as embracing most of the best Newspapenthe nrtncina towns in the Union, is established at HSu Nassau
1 tieet. iTnbune Builti:r.gs; oppostty City Hall, at ti e oalO.f.ce_m*_I VORIC LAMPS, for burning Comphene..^The** LampsareXJ simple m their construction, easily trimmed ami give a
very brilliant light at a co«t of one cent an bour. Abuiu.'he-turtni and fat stje, w holesaJe and retail, by
ÜIETZ. BROTHER & CO. No. 13 John-»t. New-York.14'..::.* and ä IDcJu-iU Broviuyn
FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR.
WHOLE NO. »«>:>.
Scientific A I m'!*«!! PublicationsThe following ralnablc works arc pul
lished at tlie Tribune i »iUcc. and may be »>i>uiucd from any of the Agents of the Tribune: öat Cincinnati from William II. Moore «V CoPtotAneuMir* fr>>:n Zeiber «f Co.; and it Bost«>\ from Redding <£ <V
Elements of \ni nraI Philosophy:Km'. .. iug the corral principle*of .fechaoics HydrOstair. Hydraulics, Poemn in>«, Acoastjir*, Optics, Electricityi'ii' iai»in. M..u-tt^m. and .YsiiOoomy IPvsizit-.l «. ri
rsl iniidred enrrarmsx By !. t ott tan D G*lx, M.ü . Professoi .1 U- Ii«; .1. ! Mineisf'cv in t..- I i»n-ir. ...
Ctti -i N>w-Ynik, ind Leettsr-ron ; tremtrtrj sndNatn .
Philosophy,. I hr above work is rltrBsirely intjssduced iitlir 1* »t School, und > mitssries Ihronghoot .'¦ f. r-i t j. >rt» ..
UV-Coiled M.tes. ind isc«oi4dereil the best Book extantfcpiivve it-unrrs. !'. Gate Being hiot»eif ¦ piacti<*«I Chemistind ins prole sional .lories '- I.e. turei requiring dim to im -.
coast mis.uid repealed e»|~riin-i.l> in all in 'trCX* . .¦; *...:.,
Philosophy, v»emTueaUy qualified lor t>>e tsskrof rttitmHich« woilt. Must ol" theothej publication* oa :a :¦-. ..
branches ?l Philo* phi* andCltetnist i ire no ecom ilarionm i.'r by hook m k*rs: hence the fieqnent failnrt « of .in lealin fh- t- .rrt mi", it \|s nnriit. While follow mi; th. diiTCUOiiicontained n these w..rk«. So sach difficult! will iithe as. et this work ol Dr. 0*1« P i utd ichers u
rr.;iiesrei| to eiamis* the wot*. Price i'J ccnti.
Leetnres mi Geoloffy.t.. l.»» i e's Lrrtn ti n.i GeoIotrr.tSecond Edition.) 1
cotiCains ... -mr. ivrj Frontispt*'e.rshibittns: an nie-»! «.<.;,oi
ol part ..; the Earth's liest, »il h exptaa toon Im.....:» i .ran «' Introduction to «5.I- -v not before pub Iis
peI.ibrarrs rhefollowins subject*: vni rgne, I.tiiae Period. Vutcaui Period Era twnofCosesjuiai.>Dot. Ucture 11. The Earth's Mr its. M irii « Strata, P. .,
im .cm Di.tu, t Sub-Aivruiu.*. tlooot JEio.l Lta..i-lit I phenril tod Sabsidi t Es th, > - t
¦tfSeeaiMs Mont* Ne-vu Li tstrc lv.l K ..
Idsnds. Lecture V. Origin of Coal; Lecture VT. K ...
Ifoot-ptinrs LeelvrtVU I« .I 1 ..¦ Kails ¦> Nra Lecture VIII. Ii mid. r. mJ Icebi iss.To ihe shore is il.w uMed in 'hi. edition, a Sketch .>f lb.
Leetu: ol i'r J,AirWsTi.ix Smith, delirend befdnLyceum of N .rn.s! y er the Deo mb> r «.t...
OirTereMllaxu if iL-. Price2Jceou; live cotiie* todnllwr.
D'l'oiineirs Irriiinil!A Memoir o.i Ireland; Naiire ind f*xon, (Secoud Edition.)by I'smkl O'l iism li i' with*likenessot"the \u*h-.
Price2ieeels; tivec« pn»fnr$l?'Orders lot am ol th- ibo»e:nainrd »mk, must I
,ii ... tu IsKEr i.E V .S. vi. i- LH »TJI.rribune tildiuKs, \ew-1
Usicful Books f or l.U« reoplc-Piiriiluim's inn eis.Ko. I. .Varels in the «Snrst'Wesieru Priiiries.lneAushnind Itocky Monutains, ^oi<! Urr<on Territniy; t>. TmomaiI. E.kmiam. r...j Priret)cents; five copies for Si. Il itrei'lv rrl..-hiui to fruui the perusel vt sueN a ralnablmil luterratins w'oik. Tlieieissueh i fuuuUinol fieabars.¦:.!Orijtinilirycums thioush rverj nsce.sucbacoa mo
.:ie..in uf »»it o.d an., ilote, dial one uoei mi.. sveai i
ilrinkiitcfromiuspiiklrnj;fiuiui " [Muh. isiper.".lu tiiesedaysof .Chrap Literature, »Iteii every kiud >.
u.iiiit.y.;.iiul.y trash is ttootled weekly froui th.' press, it
reallyrefreshingto rise from ihe pertual >.i mi h i < ilaa!hi.I luterutiust work. The writei ipiiears to ban .track on... lusnseil m entirely new pnlh, lud h.:.. ..i eutertained aw
atetspersed il with Uie gnreu leaves ut instructtou, and th'jiuht flowers of I». autitul imagery aud stirrimr. iuciin »r. th:.> i lot er of ii ttuie in it. «ilje..i ami in".i sublime leaclunuapreaeulaattracl.ssueh ... m oui opini.venTfevi wo -
the kind possess, fin n it »u< ;i ' fountain ol IreshneMi lie
isricinality gitshing throngb every page, such a coutinuaitxearn of wit.ind iiiei'dni '. tin: one nein bi-cnnieA weary ...
Iriukiug fromits sparkliug fnuut."[ Phil uklpbiaCitizen Snfii.
Ellsworth's Beport..No. II..TH- liuprorrmrnts in Agriculture, the Arts. s>«
ii t .-¦ United Sr.it.«. being ah sccounl ol reCeul ant! int|»>iint discoveries o.d imptOTrments in ihe mode of buildi.-ij
if.uses, laakingiFences, taising Graiu, mskiui Pork.disisuug ol Hugs, making Lard Oil. r»i»ii.* Silk, with eutci i>
i.eil Cloughsaudothei A. ...il ...... Imid'inrut»,s<<ttv Hon II L. ELLswoaTM, Commissionerof Kiteals.Tre itise on Agricullural t>. clotty Prii - ü cents; fire
pies for SI. "It is one ol the most valuable:aud intercaldot amenri we hare e» r |ieriiaed."Th"above valuable work contain* a <aai ami..'tut ..I tin
uii>sl important information to Farmers which hit ever bt
fore been presented it so cheap a rate. The contents of.v. k, In pan, Ate as follows:Tabular Estimate of tin- < Irops in each Stateof the ITnic-u,
ihowiug ri"- numbers of bushels aised in each State ol Wh» u,Barley, Uu.. Rye, Buckwheat, Corn, I'otatoes, poundsIii-., Fl is uid li.iiij.. Tobacco, Cnttou, Rii., >ilk, < locttomSu gar, . db.'Ui ol Wine, i.e.Rems ks in the foreuoiug. aud . Keviewofthe Ciop» ol
... Ii oi' ib.- ibove n ,in^.i uticb ., with import ml iiiggesliotuPn tress of Improvement.Cattscs ol Impit rement.itra-Sulk Sugar.Lard Oil, Ike. Eoreign Matksls.
Improved Mode of Ki ncing. Mode ol coustructing llu-j..,Railroads.Kti Surplua..Compaiisonol Eipoits snd lmpoita.Markets at riomt or Abroad.Prospei t of . Eoreign .\I uki t.Success id' Competition.Toni Laws of England.
i** The work also ctmtaias the following valuable Doc*men.*:
I. Letter from Hon. Jahn Tatinferru of Virginia, to MiEllsworth on '!i>-1 lolrure of Wheat
'. l.-i>r from Willi n.i W. t.l-..f Wilmington. I). I. ami Eltended Itemarks by tie* same gi utletoan ou UieMaoufactun n
'.ibs ."" I AI.K Sei.AH.3. Eaxncl from Anuales tie la Societ* Polytecl-i'iu.
Practinue, translated ai the Patent oilier and bighli couliruMtor> or Mr. Webb's Essay;.
i. Method nf crysuliriug ..rn Sinti.Utensils,Procesikc. Ice Bs J. J llapes, Em.
J, Blil löMCOU.V.M. tnodof I isiiimi.-. t .il.ir ni.Ii -.
resting, Scrnpiug, Machinery, Product, Value, Manul'actunpf Brooms. Miscellaneous.
S. Pot aud Pearl Ashes. Bv W. a. Dm. .<l Claartdaasj(lino.
7. .1.. do. By H. Work of Foil Waynet, LARD OIL..Converting Lard into Oil. ....I Uso inn
coucrep forms foi the maufaeture of Candles.Result ol t- .
iwrirnetirs. B> Harris, Stanwood ü Co. -t Boston, W«|Ri-iiiuk.on snie -..Hie subject. l!< CassraKLi. Monen >.i
PhiUdeli l.ia.Sand 10. Same subject discussed be vv. Milfosd «..d I. I.
Sutford ..f . leavdand, Ohio.ii. Mode of M.i ictunns Elaine -mJ Stearin* from Lard
Hr. B) lohn H. Smith of New-York.IS. Letter from A. Scott, Esq. of Erie, Pa. on r tie uses uu
i line of ItAi-e Seed.ii. Mode of Fencing uid Ditching, with eutsoi dia
rramsrepiesenting.I. TlieFeuce;!. Rails ihart-eued;i. An.in with Cutter*; 4. Hole» bored;». Post, Ditch uid E. itiieni. 6 mid 7. Viewt.,1 the Scraper; t on! ». Views of ihrI'lough; in Suit.i 'he ground; II. . lieap Wood .Mill.12 and u. End and Fiom viesv.; is. Pust-honnu Macima
ti. Lctterfroin II. W. Ellsworth ol Lafayette, ludiaua.oitht same subject.
Ii. I'l.ni ol'l.'lie.ipl nrr.ii.ejlo and IT. Duties on lm|>orU into Ihe Port of St.John's. L
i'.. from tli I uited Si ile*IS. On tlie subject ol Esiuiitiac Oel. I'oik, Ham*. Lartl
Cl., See. fmm die I mtr.l nt.-.t.» to England, ind the >|mode ofpreparing iha same.
:.ZJ~ In addition tothi foregointt, which ». *, pre|«aied n-
he Hou. H..L Ellsworth, and presented toCougres it illast Ses.ion, aud ton thousand copies ordered m be printed,ihe Publishers lutve connected wilh^ il i ralnoblt Trearisiitii.m^ Swine, aud lite best Metbtwls ul Fattening I'ork; byHenry I olmau ol M ....
\uu to r.let tire work .till more worth) the tteulion oFarm*rs, tliet Iwre ilso idded in invaluable Tre»iise oniJeoluiryas Con.:ted wilh Agrieelture. h , Willi» < is
lord,ol"OuonilagaCo ,N. .. This Trwrfse done .» cons.ideretlb) many practical farmers isworth twice thecost if tise«hole »ork.
Ur. Lardner's Lectures.III..Lardoer'scomplelt ' oarsr ..| hectare*, deli
at Niblo's haloon io tl* City ofNew-i ..k '! hi tu
embraced inthe Leetnres, are: Eteciuci .. rhe >.. o*Jrsnism. Th» Fised Sters.Magueiie Needl..LaiinulLnn^irod.Bleaching. r*uuii.tr.l'i i nlai Fallai ie.- I
.Falling St-trs.TeW|« rar) -r.-llisrori. .! Ikeich.ol *.*
troaomj.Dew.Sei.led i.. Art.Seienrifii Iiisr-_Sonud.Vibranou* ol llie Itetiua.Voll it Be-Steam Engine* nf England *nd America. This editiun oll)u '..i L<rduer's Let rures is iulnrdoced by a »k< tch olrrogre.s of t'bvsiesl ScieneA Prict fnrthe whol-. inclaLardtier's l.eri^.,. sy cenr* i-er .i-..-ie copy. Poslm*slrnin I oriiers es 111 receire firt copies i n SE
Chemistry and Piiilosuplty.Jto. IV ItemisU) of in- lour Ancient Elements.AiriJlir.Eatth nnä It »Ur~ Founded upon Lectio.lit.r.ibelortt Her Majesty die Queen. Ol Thomas fiuiFFiTH Leetan r i hemtsrry at Si Bardro{öwew's.Ho»pilal. Iliu I ite. l t»i upward, ofSeventy engtdsiiigs... .Tins Book ol I'hilie¦nphical btperirneJiia; illusaattng the piiuctpal fa Isandcunoils |dsessomeua oT Electricity, Gaivanisut, M>gneiisnt hemis \. i iptics, llejt. Ike uitn lutroduciut. ' Ibsen iinj a
>iu each St ienc-. and upu trds Ol JM Experiinents, B> J, SDai roMT-.is l-;-,-jiy oa tr»eCherrii»try ofthe FourAsit ieut Elcineuts
is chieti) intended foi il.o.e vviio list, not studied 'be icisi e.
Abscruse details and theories ire avoided, Bsefbl and interesiiug.inl'oiination.soppiied,aud instruction united witbeorer*t .¦ meat, Esplicil direirinni» sr- given respectiug the perlormance ..fili^ Eitierimeots." A per* ii w io Kerfonus an Esperimenrand ihoroughl]
iiuöVrstsuds theuanireol it, will Inn!!, erei fi rgel Mieprineiple it iUostj ties; It has been Ihe objet i Uie w rite- to in¬
troduce ..i.l, .io b esperimeats .» may ie- p. rfortM -I v» .-Ii »iin>p|, «i'|a: ttu*. Aj.d »ucii Ai iiiav Ie- «.uily Aud cheaply pro-cored." I'.j '"i. 'i f'-m iitr Prefn'.
(Ty-" Tl.- two books above named bare met with a rapidsi..! estensive tale in England,and continue lobe rer) popalarand m great demand, qOTwithswnding each one is sold si
About four tune, il,.- price of i!i- cost of both works togethelio edition piiaieuia the " ^'e/i,, ¦/ Useful lS "i., Jot totf. <<¦!.. -
'i be above work* ire c ul; printea on clear ni w type .» idib. ut l>i engravings, in I together a re ...|d '.: the rxceediugl)low price of Ii cents: five cpin tur $1.
Political Lrouomy.Ko. V...Principles ol Political Economy, or the Laws "
the ForinarJun of National Wealth, developettb] nsea » oittM Christian Law of Oorerument: being live »ut.siAnce ofacA*e J..itvr-.I ..» thel*tAnd.|r»ora Weavea' ConmiaatOD, bjWilliam ÄTXisrsorr. Wilh an Iriirodaetioa, Tieatiug ol'h- prejentstate -.1 trie Scienc- of I olitiesl Eeonoroy, >lii th,Adaptation of its Principles to the Condition ..f our owi
Couotrr. and ihe apbuildiun of iu Prosperity, by HoSacsiObkelkv. Price xj cents: Are copies for St.
ilistury of the Silk Culture:So. VI ..The Silk t'wlture in the United States: Em¬bracing complete acconnttol the jste.t sad mo*', approvedmoda oi Hatching, Rearing and Feeding; the Silkw rm,Managinf t Co«ooaairy, KeetinTi Spimiing and Manafseturing the Silk. &m Stc; wirJtvery inrerestiag Historj -.
of uie Silk Busm-ss, Na'u.mI History of the Silkworm. TheMulberry, sec. Illjirrttrd by numeroa* ec$n*ump( Ma.-. inen ti.4 fr.-cesses, and i Matiuil of th* Silk Lukure.-Price Si cents; Gre copies fortl. __
OUEELEY U McELKATILlnbone Botld «.»*.oppoji> i.ity Ha!1.
UZT- P.^.-TUUtert are authorizerl bs lw to trari-rtm money, lot
subscriptions 10 new sMil-ers. under tntar Irank. Ire.- ol i«niu:r.
rO" V.jiiL-, remiiust üitinj.'b Uie mail will beat tlie nSS oflh*PuMUsssa. Note»oI all .;-ecie-t>ayuig Banks in any State ot -,e
L'nton wul be rei eise.1 ai i*nr. G. It M
MACKIE &: LEVERETT,COMMISSIOX M E IC. C HANTS,
No. 11? Water fiTRChT,(Below Wall street.!
Jons F. MaCK». late Mnckie, <Inkiey tc Jenm-ion.) ». vJottun S. LevicKST-i. Lire l^verpt: k Thorn S
Dealers in eat and VVPou.-!.; Nad* and s«-. Ate». 1 -.
Plate.BancaTin.JLe«d.Copper. Zinc, Spelter. Wire, Ei.r-lidi, American ami Ru*»ia sheet Iron. Hoop Iron. Umisei,'Rods, Band-iron. .Vail and Spike Ko.:<, Shnteit. Spa.l 'i, Cnrf'tee!. Rnuls. Tarhs and SuarrowbilK. Bra.. Eeltl-M, Tiaiurt'
Scotch. English Sc. Amencaa I*!* Iron.s^c.Fire Proof sales and Ixua Cucsts of all sizes. tali la
'ITS DOLLARS REWARD..Vti r*t*r*Mi «*** "t-.. **- .A 'rrtifi'-al* 1.« thirtr »nare« of Yick-Jtirs Iw.ok
gh .-k m -ho name ofKuckb-y .* Pe-k, awl mimV-rt»! « «"
rawerol ksiorneyattachedwaslost ........i.t Mu w a* Nseltxssrl -n a letTrr an»! loaxoa tfa warjf to.I..v.- *m Ibe paid 1,>nTm( it at Thoni;«-o's ollic*. jSWati.trr* miu-i
IF MR- EDWARD W. WARD, a aarii* >».¦-..1 u.-'.-lir.-. m il»- Cotsatyof Northumberland. Bliebst«,oe bving, or any of ht» relative», h. SMsiyvog .r cne P.-J-i tstfaeWaifiinsUja. will receive a letter ..bliebt . ma*, which h..
theO I mm,--Mil tbs,,,. xhrm to p .ivin a* »«u
a* poaaibje. To be insertedm ail the .New jTort papen, aod..- .: each tu I»»»e:it u Miowa
To Mr. Hl.SJ \MIN W VXD.b Haifa i "..u !. N-wrmp »tivrt.
i'll _Sewcattle-on-T) tsc. «^htIssH. ;
W-Ol u u ) »\ \.N II! '. H_»"in* year*, at five per cent, mtereat. The rofstral wt'.l
¦e ^.i.il-ein aiiin.'i 'v .:.il panctuall] a obe Cay t. ken tine.\ ho« rxidrewMl C. F. H. ami left -it .No. U Wo'i-r -!r~i. »> I- uewted to Jy»
UrANTED A '...I I nod pan .¦ ura who mntttn-nd hand am! » well e»li!cn'.-.l. from It t.> It' >eor* of
.i". in a biwver'« oth.-e. *, pre*.'.... >«"n : mnc
leqsmedtor toe Law. A tmot: .-.m.i»ti.«t....i wi t tie allow..1 V- .-:r.re 2" Ib-ekmnn .\. -. up lite Court.jel73t*
\NTED-A luthl ree« .! hasd . no I r .. « tos u tt»ecther t< p. one ll^t hat nut lern u-ni a «real deal
\Sfpefsssu l»av***g'»uch an One. rpa) dispose ol* it by lenrm*;.in tt t:-e »>au:e. ot Trait) Place, f^rn-ei'v I .unit .."....it.
i >ARTNER W t N KD.-Wa':,te.l. a parttef with a ca.frI. cap I .! ..! i t.i lOMO lid r.'> m ti e f . m . Coop.'...;es- Toe aijit-riwi hi* a latTteaml -.rilua.-i.- ¦¦* 'i»tert*.,n .>s
I'tomen fron dilfcreni parts oftbe country. Address Kflee,l Uu* office. teUlff*'.*ii Mii.lJ-'.Kr" \ prai-tii ai MilwiCorTsus....!..!..**...*..I .. ¦.. raajj ..i a Mess hunt Mi I, ot hesssra* ;> .rtner. it
tier am \ <- aal t J I. .... Ib. *-U'.if 1«'\\'.\N n 1» I' i mi <.» p r
V V ment ¦--<"..iiv norse The m - T I city tssl\ line s.l lr^-^al to K K at this oftice. ttaimg v> bare t.i call. a...Jleft »i lie utii, e of tin. paper, wii!»- iiisnaatsatel) attended to.
itt |w«\ 4 * A.N'I Kl>-ln .a mv.. .' t n.il.-i !. :. «.linoii!. an
ill r\,*rier.ceii Saiesruan. l'nesceotiij! ^" nehsrecce»aJ.. capacity. Jkx.requiKtl. Address J f. W. Tt.burie oJii,%».je tl
?ARD.A famiiyora lew «i.teota f*oodniior.have b-..:.l . ... in a iirnatey tlesirahle bscatiim Ö fiiff street. House and!l .j irtsmta :...; :. /!» is. .
fwo«* tnr.vsinchtsrentlentesi eaü !.n. ii'uinio-.'i b«i< s:, bran»t.«.i ai..' ten m i prissiM Twinily
4icet, .... .. of Broadwft],ne. '.Iii.'
if--1 !
t.-nr
l;r. * s. mrjO lm
"FiltlST PllEMfi M r>AGI ERREOI'VPES.OJ.I'MBE DAGl/EKRlAS KALLER. r l'ATENT1 PREM1EM l\iJ.ORED f!«.i:1!'!!.'. ii\
,. ¦.._. Murrtu itreet, .\e>- V.mk.-Awarmsdilbs»sii- i raxMioi and HtABtttrr iio.toa. by Amcrrcan and
ikbn Imtituies, (ot the. most beautilul cororeq JUaaosyrrsxs..... ,'.^. *. \ 11 ledTltr?cstabli.hmefrt u .-. ;.. fiearii sreei)ami im.
imresi, by themldiuou ... neaily thi ul.f the er»t doorr.,iv .. Ilwtn.1. 'ii i'll'" !.. !..<« . » r I »S r t.» K
aparate aportuseuts. The scale upon which the biwmesa is
ooducted innires adeanfaces which are im wi reelse tu t«»
ret with: aod betioe the repiitntion which this coricorn has[ways enjoyed, a. hems the " bi t lU i1" :
"
" 1 bo »teanier Ca!e.kinia carried out a new ami improscdppamlus llu takii'.' Dnxtn rre i> Min iture«,orderssd bj «
lenniics-cntscn.auol Ediuburch, from the ostablis-hmeat.ofI'jumbe, it ts tar superior to any lost/in ent srver belirm
anitikctuTe.1.** illn» Slate DensocraLI'lumbe'sJ*reniium and Herman Apparatus, and li-'m.-ii. n
.' r,^. l äse«. tfc< ai biwest ratest. mi Im*
l>iill.! i. II"»N I * subscriber* areprt-pared lo luraishtj Ii, der Inn if first :i' " "r '". knj .,-
ions' ,il«i Ironsuitafrlj fisrl.mouses ai i'. a -m > I oi-
nolli i. nuuld »i Burel li**U Wotks. 11ie»li i Pa.mV:' miirSA'. ! I'.wn r.v CO « w......
. kW CARD.Joiiji M. Ht'irit'0!ofMvrcnsyj. oji< o-
tspi, »..!-mend i.. leeal busine** thai .....>' he couhttad h' hunntheCircuil Courts of Adam, awl the ii'ij.:-''' count^sv^umln the Superior Court*of the Slat. A fisimio.1* priile»siooalrimuecriooin Usuistana will enable him b.ulteootojfuaieeaaib., in the Parishes oflkat Suite, neu Nat.-bet. lie iwrsUi.Gnat <v Itarton, Van VrJnle. ChuUwtH] and
Itvb.Cocbiini. .; ;i-,r. ibr Utuwn, WanIt- .«ii'.i. Malcolm St t-anl.
Sam, i isrjirao, Henry Laverty.William Kala »loly
t > KM' 'V AI.-The' »llic* ami Salew-ib "i» ot tiie .N.-» ^ orkl\ i mil Manolactory t. removed troin 711 ultoo itreet to IOJluhn slseet. oupMite i ml street.AvniS mil tiui L. SMrrjE 103Jojm4L_pi EMOVAL..JOHN LOVEJÖV. Ik itist, i..-in,.,,!IV V Princettrcc! 1*638Broadway.twodoor»beb»w Bit* .et
.ItWCt.lllIJö'lll*
YrACiilNEPRESSE!»oAri >i am .: . >tv i, ,.. .'..;..Tamo, Wbnrreh Pitch; *Jt) barrets \\ ¦¦¦;.' n : luUktw'V Nf -. jo k.-i. S; .pat-.! Il.«t: .*... k... i. iP-ibei v.üialuilassHistment »I Ship i 'iuuaih In*.
t.-;M.O. lloBKiri11- We»i -u.'eL
\jirrM. i.i.-. i.i -.i vM i.ru u iTERTICIrT.t! t* Ul FIVE YEARS' WHICH IS FtiL'r YEARSLONGER THAN USUAL..ITie (uiwenben have msafuted a
iti'thiHi ^'eoveraut roofit with plain or rai*anired tin plate*...In. !. lh .>. guarantee to letnain unter ügni riv i yittBf, wheni.in irti i.y Iheni. The metal i- put on thai it oruinol I«
iilccti! I.y Hi... ¦blinking ..r swelling .if tbeiibuik. oC which it u
laaL or by iK* contraction or expansion uf the nieLalThe (drawing gentlemen have had tlwii dwtmmg huutcs and
.tore,'t-thisrily. c.oere.: b> tl.i- m. '.¦ b. 'r - it .Isr'imi;Uta ii Bievotl, Esq., <fivr: ut'Uh tsonue und '.all »t.
John S. Sei enrserlwini, E-.|. .S... i!I Bni ulw»>Dim.' Ao.iiii, Esc,. cor, "i l.v. !. 'i .'.- e and W iunun si.J Greeii Penmei Es*i.. Merclrants' Exchange; Wall-st.Geo, II. BuUer, K-i.. .N... -I .\ ¦¦¦mi .:.
Pram-H Burrilt, Emi tB linvul -.i
Notice is given that as the impnmxMnl b patented, ail per¬son* in tb" trade vvtsJiing lo cover riMt. i.y the wbscnbeti' plancan (dgain permission on mtalerait lenrts
mm ctP. NAYl,i iR .V i'' .". « l T> Broad .'.
COI iiil u> .v ,M-:\ ERS, :MJ Hkoai .v..
i/TANITPAlrrURERS "i LAMPS. GIRANDOLES,ill CANDELABRA. 4cc ad Denlei in Ii* SE-PUK-N1SHING lIOOllS generali) .Being cistinectrd wahoneoftlsa.ianxost mamifacttme* in n-e United Sinti»., they are ena¬
bled in olfei I^imiss. Candelabra \.. lor Churches, lialU, Ho>"i-. Private I Iwelliilgs. Slenml oats and Packets, on to,- mostrenssmable terms, uidof a.qualit) not to be lurpassed in this orim' outer counUy. Espoeml attenuon H wvitetl to *.».¦»
and Slim Lampe, m economy und light, Hipenedlng all istaera
..ll.icihr v»obc. Ktstos.1lttut.risv» ........ usd CWO (U.VICRaaosLshnve. within Um last seven years, .. .>
nanuiaetuMn im tnen*superioritytntbisela ..
public are r«i<ertfull,' invited to call and exam
UJr i oi m ai 'i'k.ioaii* »ui'pr<*i lor) .
^EAS - -.»., ii,-i,i-...,. n. .... a» ImlfchtsiUdo.
.\,..,'...-1'..,,..,.eJjH.- WI'
I boxi II,.IOJ cliesU Y'Mig ifysuu. -J*jgSO ball'ehm. .{...400 bests II....ii Skin.
." imii cltosii MperitM Gimpiiwder,hi do '.. Imperial.
Allemmtty packed and id hue imporlutaai.F..r«nieb) CRINNBLL. MINTI I'N gcOO.
ii7 tlnStjoüsuaeLis si iami Hii
l.fi il.. White Ten do.I.O0U do Ass.med ." lored Shoe do.
Porattkshr CVBI'S V\ PILI.Ii .!'.. .¦..,,. n'tfV\ \ M . P< iRTLs l t'ul sei beroflert fog¦ule an asaortmeoi ol RutewiMul and Mahog-
w-tr n -s.?. any Cottage and IlmigmiLal Piauu Forte* vt! ( '.' / I - ever) train**) ofpauern*. from -it t. i.-i,
lave*, with all tin.-ib-rii improvermn.is 'fhese imliu-meiitt me mad.' ofthe best seasoned niatei ah. * ilh the FrenchUrnnd Arn..ii, ..mi me « rrai t.-.i i>. >t*i .1 .. any climate. I'er--,,ii- »»pdnne to purchase ». ,..-..1 an.I cheau ii ttroment me m-.d to call ,N. B, ' dd Piano* taken in . (change.
JAMES 'l IIOMPSinV. lote ilinen a Kandel,j.i" Im* .N... 7 ll .iclaj -i. o,.!.. -1.'im-.\.t.,r bouse.
.- ] i I" W. v I-.-l lll.i:> liNPltl willL 5S__'. hrave NEV\ VOKK ... 1.in.., und¦>. >srj-.-' .:' Ii
.. ... s i. M. lor West Stockbridge via llousan. KaiDoadReturn leste West Stockbridge for N< Vori Tuesday undl-rdny Ibl ihe transpoll ,.l lioildle*, pal k.o., M.n.ey and
.-I... -. i trfice .No. 130 V\. .i Street i.;}i i;n,niOMPSti.N'.s 'IRi -.-l- n;t,- N... 13lieekman >i.t. About 9AI ..i Die bratpbyM..mi- nmlftuitroon* ol Mew Vork J..i»- eisen
eidei] preh " i.t.. tj. \,,. j ,/U cmhtt.inti il." pressure tn..-.ßfty pounds
mi the rupture, w ilboni a l.-. a pail, which .i.h-- ... rme h mjuiyUitbesonie. Alitiru rliie liestlesl .¦' tl luperiont**.it b applied ami. » .....».-' tnai given. mid if itiloo not rrtam!'... rupture, whib perlori ng every kind of i utrci.r eosis/h..'¦ ^.v perled ssiso; in « ii it mrt m'tttatrUrtTevery rmpesrt, the nstate) i» chtarnfully returned, aod lists la
i. mil) oudiUon '..i whliih rou shoulil I.i r..... A per-inanentciir.-n. I) .'.il.-nni whimu:. d, u o. turns uro
tbllowetlaI ... .. .eliding t-.i ihisTruas iieed >mi> ustmiä-n the side rop.
'..:.-i ami ti- ntrnson round die hips, as they can gnidiisilsiti'.' on ..in.-1. ,ijii ihi.ir case. Sold wholesale ..no leUul at IdBee).. ai. o,--i. , |.,
s*»»-.^ IH 1.1.- Till S>l .- -M.Me-et.. Kupturtstl Per-f .«. ton*..PennMik alllictetl wrth rupuira* ma) reiy
.Q g m.In rumei.l laidlitew-iirMajlord*.applicauoH ai the irllice, No 4 Vesej nrcet.'.. rciii-r "I the agents hi dtepruieipel town*
list! Uu «l rjuiie*. I'»- rmrefui :.. examine ti1»- back padofilnil'. Tru.us., i., mm it ihe) ai"/ eti>.or-^d I.y lb. Hull in wTatmc.N'oira aie genuine, or Pi !>e re.ieil ii,«.ii a. good, v. uliout Ins sig¬nature.Many persnns hare iimienaken r.-: üstämiorw of* Hull's
eeiebmted Trn.«~. and daouaands an- imposed upon in risnsflriiHmce, ITsese iinaations camsut be rebed upoo; tiscy am
made b) unskilful nsechfijaics, «iel nr.-.... »tu-r than the ordio-Trtsase*.
SoomsJmveboos fitted upul An 4 Vttsey street, exclusivelyit i.i.ii.-, having «tepwratoemrancefrom the busioemdepart*
a female ». m cnstioit a''eu.inii' <. i.. w.u i.^i Jo-ita it
*|'|| MERl II \N1 S, oi Dealer- ..¦ lto.ii.aivlShoes..TheJ oshstci "»-r- am prep .ml to - :! ll.e.U ami I.) liesCASK orfaJZEN. ALL KLNDS keiM countantJ) on hand
WIKiLESALING ... RETAHJNti al 170 Puttoo sr.Br.M.Kbti SiMrfH «te HAR'ISHOiNi: lot
I * It')' ibl. \ .N |:«VV|S AND sll'il-* I he -n'-ri'.-r*13 ..re no* luppl) ( themselves) will Lasts lor CiistitmeTIBoots aiid Shoes O itlemenand Indies can hare Lasts osadei.i tit'hem h> leasii./'He .iri;»- .r i...- r |> . t. at IJ.c Bueik lyuI.¦ |..nli: Store. Y.I) Fullull -tl«'--l
)Kt_SMITH it UARTSHI »KM:._I *AS'I ERN SHi iES..The suo~ ribenihavesm iunel a largotit sopiil) of Eastern llo.il> and shoe*, some .i w bsch are ;ar
.. 1-..'rn,r'.i tl..' ".Ne pius I Urn" I 'r. n-li ilin.ir." |..r -jik- in
.m«.rirson ..ne o.vek. in Pi hoc -(:>... Ill , oot gold thai3MPPH HARTSilOKNE,.,l ITOPultoo street, Brookjyis.
J| -T M.NISHED--I>raiit N- .. F'ir Hahi or.'mä-i£ nly lerrotssl Beaverial uWlow pnee ol i«; ¦ni^-nor
Atom» ihort nap of Prussian Molciki . j;. TltoeHatsara. .... j in durabdityaod iosue to tisosesold at %\. X:-. an ar-
tic'.- at Sä JJ. « eery neat.):««. Im:..,11 im* BROWN. Practical Ittttct. MS Canal it.
M ONOMY AND FASHION .The .bei üeduced his superior Isssitatsoo Moleskin liali on fur bo.
^ _.dies to t*.e extreme los* pfiee of ."j."*i'he alnve u.-k au elegant Dr,«. Hal, .', v, .1 compare ad-irantageomily »;t!i bats told at i.2sUinid t». Abo, ..uiariilyntanuuictunng Furand S.Ik ol the l*o*t qttatuy, iaa.t pi.tierm,and at ti.e low est prices.N. B. Country desdefl .uppbed bythe a«c as ow, if cot
lower than any other hou~: in Ihn tyJ. W. KKt.l.' *. ;. 133Canal»t
mh38 3m**_comer ofThompson »*.
WOODWORTH'S PLANING VlACillNCSU VK XRS experience, together wUs many sain
able im| itiisenti and addu isns to hit ten icrtooK"ii i! lubsersbei o. furnish, at rhort oo'iee. ai dc!it.rin,»' iMrrt'ectc..itstriirti..n,m.'.terinKaiAl w..rl»ninnship, la arhiise*tuelann wood tn a II in vantie*.si rha» plutiing or torTacingooly. or cutting ii,uuj(i.inc.- ,...
. Al-'. plt.riitii-.tiitiiriieiugacd-rr.ioveiris.^iiiiHiig,iorrabbettiag, and liming * 'lai ploant*.
"( Apl'!icat.. n ii-. '/ be made to the .u: vnber at his^eVnuiisiimei.t ,n Ftnfci to , orar li'.ofti. Corner ofi onene-.-0il and l^>wis slreet. Bütlton, w/n re Ma¬ch, t.e* may !# seen, and any ntormnrnvri relativ«Utthe sume. may I« ui.taii.n:. i; we. ..»..! JwiaitBlackwell* Co. .New-York.
1*Tt'.*n ofmere intni: ... if -i 1*9 post-paid. . , .
SAM! Kl. H 3CHENCK,Foxb-io . Ma**-, Apnl hi. 1S*J,
1,