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THE EYEjSriNG POST: HEW YORKi FRIDAY. DECEMBER 30. 1853. jgSBW IiH IH e POST. g B m A Y ’ B Y i y i y g ^ DECaOCgBB 80. ^ ‘x '‘j^ a ^ J i I ,- •'JIU AHMCA. ikOported Victories. I igllCiU!n«IOFWB:»PALl«BglOS. " ~ rPer»ia Joining Ru^ia. ' tie tteeoiUp Afijct, Ctpi Htrriion. trrhed Uiic J’^^arniig.hMwisgh&XArerpoolmf^ Theio- 3 l^ 'g « c e K Inlewifing and important. TBe etetxoAip Qiasgpw, on isKving Glasgow, while > tm in g dam tiieSay, came in contact with a achoos' er, snd |:sd to retoTD. She would saQ on the 17 th. Lord Palmerston hat ledgied his place as 8«sre- tsiy cS stale &r Home Allaira, nommally oa the nmd of oppciition to a sew reform bill, bat more Ij. an Boma d3Saenoe with Aberdeen oa the eaai- Onr reporta from the Beat of war are, aa usual, sy shoi ArmpTii.n frontier, the taking of the impo the Turke, the ac quite contradictory, i them into a consis nite contradictory, but as far as we are able to digest Tictoiy gained by the Bassisns at Achalrik, istent account, they show a iportant for- tress of Alexaadropolis by the Turks, the accession of Fereia to the Russian side, and the morement of the combined fleets into the Black Sea. Wa subjoin the details: The news of the disaster at Sinopt is efaeially con- firmed, end reached the porte on the 8d December. two steam-frigates from the combined squadrons to Sinepe, and two other steam-frigates to Tama, for the purpose of procuring precise- intelligence. Upon the return of these vessels it was thought probable that the combined fleets would receive orders to enter the Black Sea. to prevent, if possible, any further naval collision between the Russian and Turkish naval forces. It is stated by the Russian accounts that the Tur- Idsh squadron, subsequently destroyed at Sinope, was engaged in Conveying forces to attack Souchum Kalch,and that it was pursued into the port of Sinope by the Russian fleet. If this account of the circum- stances preceding the engagement be correct, it give a Ecmewt at dtSereut character to the at- ___lch,and that it was pursued into the port of Sinope by the Russian fleet. If this account of the circum- stances preceding the engagement be correct, it •would give a semewt at dtSerent character to the at- tack, as the Russian forces might be justilied in m'er- -eepting a convov which was destined to invade a por- tion of their own territory. The destination of the army stands in need of bo It is further repdned, that the British charge d’af- fairesat Teheran had suspended his diplomatic rela- tions with the Persian government, in consequence of that power having resolved, ss It is said, to take part s.'ss of Persia had for some time been apprehended, as his relations with Turkey were such as to induce him to take advantage of the increasing difficulties which -encompass the Ottoman empire. The intelligence, however, still requires posl’ive confirmation. Riots have taken place at Gala's between '.he Wal- lachian m'litia and the Rnssian troops. A baU-alion of the Wallachiana refused to obey the orders of a Russian general. The battalion in question and four -Companies of Wallachians were eousigied t" wiiza. lato adjutant EiaLi-v, Dec. 10.—The P m s iia n Correxp-mdetux, in a eemi-oU-C’al article, tays: The basis of the new jno inienlion of meddling in the difference itself, as Indeed Ihey have no right to do. Such oondnet •wonld be improper towards the Turkish govern- i;ji& “Ssl it wonld be completely absurd towards the Rjs- Sian empire, the dignity and position of which as a atate, represented by a distinguished sovereign, aad tbe patriotism of a powerful nation, form an essen- tial basis of European equilibrium and social order. "Whenthe Russian consul in Servia reached Semlin, ho dispatched Jeffers to bis goverement, in which he close to the Servian frontier. VtssNA, Dec. IS.—The KUtyd state^ that at the i fort of Safa, near Shef ka il,bytl tbe Russians lost 400 killed. The same journal, aod with it the Os^-DeuUche Post, announces that in the xenewbd attack on Shef kati on the 17th, the Rnsstans were repulsed, with kesvy loss. Tbe attempt was BBde to land troops, but the men, in number I,S0P, •were compelled to return to their ships, leavine: 400 ......... * ’ed, and one gun. .......................... ing in conce^ w* . _____ ther.and taking t ________ their line of mareb. Prince Woronroff was surround- ed at Tifiis, and his retreat waa cut off Tbe UoyiT$ dispatch states, that the large and i portant fortress of Alexandropolis, or Gumri, r besieged by the Turks; and the 0»t-I)tuUa\e Post BBnouDces its actual capture. The latter journal adds, that Redout-Kaleh, on the Black Sea coast, i Ki^lar, had been taken fcy the Turki Yo» ka, Thursday morning, 16th.—The Russian General Andronikoff has totally defeated the Turks in a battle at Akha-'zik, on the borders of Turkish Armenia. The Turks left 4,000 slain on the field. A Russian Bulleiln. The following bulletin was post Odessa on the 5th of December: letin was posted on the Bourse at eet, composed of 18 ships—two- ers, friga'es, corvettes, together with two steam____ 500 horse power, and two others of 300 horse-power. ............................n.i«m.aiTeD. I i i : i :::: ibonsand prisoners, so been lake esd French 1710 Batde of Siuope. The Times of the 16th has the following article on the late Rnssian victory, which, if its conjectures are correct, show the romored battle to have been rather re still left to conjecture what was the precise amount and character of the Turkish naval force destroyed at SinopA The excitement produced in Constantinople by the news precludes the idea that it was a mere cuavoy of transports or the hulks in tjie port, and it is described by the Turks as “ a flotilla.” Yet, it does not appear that more than two or three Turkish frigstrs were on that station at the timA It is remarkablA too, that, ■with the exception ot Osman Pasha’s own ship, which toundered on the passage to ioebsstopol, no mention is made of any captures. All tae other vessels are stated to have been destroved, and it is added that “ the carnage was frightful.” If itsbonid turn out that six ships-of-the-line direct- ed their fire on transports, crowded with troops, and wholly incapable of dtfjccA and thus slaughtered these unfortunate wretches, whom it would have been easy to take piisouers of war, the Russians wonld stand convicted of an act of singular atrocity, and .the victory of which they boast would cover them with disgracA The news of tbe battle was brought to Constantinople on the 3d by a Turkish steamer, which succeeded in effsotine its escape. A&cording to her report, the Russians began the at- tack by an sfempt to rut out the Turkish flotilla with the boats of Adariral Nachimoa'a squadron; bat, not having accnmplfehfd this operation, they brought the line of batile ships into action. The Turkish vessels. it is alsostated, were unable to return the fire with much ef^ct, aud the Kusa'ana suffered principally from the fire of a battery recently constructed for the protection of the harbor. This account wonld seem to confirm our impres- sion that the vessels attacked were chiefly transports, wholly nnable to fight an acdon with line of batde i^ p a ; buf, whether they were chased at sea and pursued into the harbour, or whether they were at- tacked when at anchor there, stilt remains to be seen. It appears that the Russians terminated the engage- ment by burning the vessels they had not already ennkt^ their fir& Bedgnation of Lord Palmenton. trrem the London Tunes of Dec. 16thJ 7almerston has n wn. Upon the receipt of a coramunicatiou from Ltnfi Falmqrston, annonneiug the resolution he had 1>e^ Jed to form, the Prime Uinister left town for Oabome House yesterday, for the purpose of lay- ing the resignation of the Home Secretary before the Qneen. 'Whatever may be the surprise announcemen ir may be the surprise _________ _________ jment may erci'e in the pidllic mind, that surprise will be considerably ------ mted, when, the causa which has induced Lord rsten fo withdraw irem the present administra- j accnratelT iitowa. That cause, we may confl- denOj stete, imnconnectod. with the foreign policy of ------ vemipent.it bas-not arisen out of the diSical- 'r lt true that differ- t have nmnife^ed -the j^vemiioent,it has-not arisen out of the disical- ties of the lastem qucBtiop, nor id it true that differ- m of a p w ^ oa that subject have M uil have totallj defeated the Torks in a battle at Acha'- xik, on the borders of Turkish Armenia. The Turks 3eftd,00ff*Iam oa the field. The i?a% JITstJS, how- lever, states thst tbe result was the other way, while other accounts say the loss of the Turks is greatly Tbe Schab of Persia has declared war against Tur- key, and a aombined Persian and Russian force is tc invade tbe eastern frontiers of the Porte. On the other hand, several severe skirmishes, in vrhieh the Tnrks came off masters, are reported. reform was no seeret^ be wss placed os commit tee, in order that he might nave ample opportoni- ties for considering th% provitions of the ^ Sed aiaRng hia objections fo tbeou Lord Palmerston. BO -donbt^ gave fo that eOmmlftea the ahla and vigorooa atstifanee and attanfion. which he ia aeeastomsd ia devote to pnblio aSunt bat it s e ^ fiom the teialf, ftat hia olgecaona to tha ^ e q ite 6f the measaie wore not io.be diminished or overemne. H%-i^ted them to hia eoUeagneiS in a manly and stfrfightforward mannkr^ bat it appeared that no meainre of parltehienta^ reform, aseh as wonld meet the ezpeetationa of theeonatry, wailike- ly to o b t^ Lord EilmllriitoB’J n p p « t. It mar b« necesttxx to stale ^Xst^eiljv tor tbe'info33Bai^ii of that ifacMOTHo p^Mcians^ho hate fire- five o f their own opinion^ that hteohjectmn to tbe measorahow in eoBlemplaiidn iflnotthaftheproTi- tiosa of the bni are too restricted, or the amount Of refofln ininfflcienfc Oa the contrary, Lord Pal- merston, like Ur. Canning and other slatesmen of the sebeoJ of Mr. Pitt to which ha belongs by tbe iraditioQs of bis whole political life, ia not a parliamenla>7 reformer, and, altboagb be bore a part in Lord Grey’a great reform of 1881, no statesman of the present day has ahown lees disposition to alter that settlement of the ques- tioD, to extend tbe franchise, to disfranchiae the small boroti^ha, or to muiVe those concessioos which the liberal par^ have never cessed to demand. K is the more necemary to be perfectly explieii on this point, becacso it is commonly supposed, both in this coun- try u d abroad, that tbe active aympatby professed by Lord Palmerston for extreme liberal opinions in some foreign countries is combined with an equal zeal for liberal measures at homA No greater fallacy esn be eotertained as to uny public man, and hia re- firexBeot from cfiSce oa tbo present occasion, rather than accede to Lord J. Bussell’s scheme of reform, is a conclusive demonatration on that point. We repeat, it is npon this ground expressly and alone, that Lord Palmerston has retired from the cabi- net, aod not upon any question of foreign policy. ' not affect to disguise the regret with which we to avow that there never was a time at which her Majesty’s government could leas aSord to lose the advantage of bis great abilities and experiencA nor was there ever a time when it was more essential to the government Lord Palmerston has, not only proved himself; as Home Secretary, a most effi -dent adminis- the important questions of foreign policy which the last twelvemomh has brought under the oonsidera-jon of the ministers of the crown. That Lud Palmers- ton was .known to be a party to it was unqoesiiona- bly an additional pledge to the couulry.that the poli- cy of the government in tbe E'lat was to be firm and honorable. To impugn and misrepre-ent that policy, those divisions have, nnhappily, at length occurred, but not, as was erroneously represented, on tbe course to be pur ued towards Turkey and RassiA hot on the measure of reform to be applied to the electoral fran- chise and to the close boroughA It would, however, be a great and mischievous error, if it were believed that the voluntary retire- ment of Lord Palmei^ton from office on another question wonld in any degree lower tha tone or relax the energy on foreign affairs of the cabinet to which he has till now belonged. It does, nnfortana'ely, tend to impair the influence which this country may sxercise in Europe, that a ministry is exposed to a secession of this kind at the very moment when it would be most essential for ns to be acting as one man to avert or prosecute a war; and such an occar- recce is the more strange when it is attributable to a cause distinctly foreseen at the formation of a cab- inet. But, beyond this we are satisfied that the course which the governmenJ are prepared to adopt in the east, will suffer no change or abatement from the withdrawal of Lord Palmerston. The news of Lord Palmerston’s resignation will be received with different emotions 'in many diUerent quarters-in some with astonishment—in soma with incredulity—in some with exultation—in many mire with regret. The meeting of ParJiameut can alone statemen's we have made. Lord Palmerston will then vindicate his eenduct and explain his motives ; but we can conceive no motive short of the most im- perious dictates of conscience and of duty which would justify a minister of the crown in retiring frrm its service at a moment of so much importance to the interests of the nation and of the world. EFrom the Lendon M. mine Chronicle of 16th.1 It was rumored last night, and we fear with too much truth, that Lord Palmerston has taken a step which will cxcile the deepest regret on tbe part both of his colleagues and of the public. That disiin- guished statesman has, it ia reported, tendered hia resignation of the office which he has S) ably filled sirce the tormation of Lord Aberdeen’s admmistra- tirn; atd it is stated that the Premier’s present visit to Osborne has reference to the lamented withdrawal of one of the most popular members of his cabinet. Conjecture will doubtless be busy in endeavora to explain the retirement of so eminent a man as Lord PalmerstoD from a government which he has adorneJ. by his arcomplishments, and strengthed bv hia official knowledge.judgment and experience. We balievs, from the statemer ta which were last night ourren'. Che noble lord’s resignation, from all that we have ■n able to ascertaii, ia in no way connected with r difierence of opiuioa between himself and hia I.o..noo on ihe Easter" ........... The Busiilsns ere said to have loat twooFthdr Itrgeet lessels tt SiicpA The town w u totally de- ErssiA AMD T o m r.—A tetter fiom .Conitenti- noplA dated December 1, has the fblloirthC *>.to the Btaie of opinion in tbit c i^ on the qnettion of peace fineatal w ar: It ia a curioua fact colleagues cn the Eastern question, or, indeed, o ing the interests and the honor of this o.'un'tty abmad, and, with one exception, on all matters of domestic policy, his lordship’s views are, we believe, in har- mony with those of the government. The exception to which we allude is the important qaestion of Par- aentary Reform. causi--and, so far as it is known, the exclusive cauae —of the decision which his lordship hat, we Rar, de- finitively adopted. We acknowledge that this reav lu’ion sarprt.-es us, as the general impression is that the new reform will fall rather below than exceed the expectations of the majority of reformers. The sincere regret with which the c-ountry will learn that it is about to lose the officiil services of so eminent a statesman, will, wa are convinced, ba fully shared bv the government. From all that is known. Lord Palmerston, from the formation of the present ministry, has uniformly acted towards his colleagues with that perfect cordiality which natu- rally characterizes the intercourss of honorable of great and peculiar difficulty, he has steadily co- operated with the other members of the cabinet, will greatly add to the sorrow with which they must re- gard the severance of their official connection. [Prom theaiobeof thelSth.] Lord Pslmerston’s sadden resignation must appear, until explained, still more mysterious in connection with the present aspect cf foreign than home aflura. We have no doubt the stalemen: will turn out per- fectly accurate, tlmt it has not been occjsioned by the noble lord’s desire for energetic action exceeding that of his collegueA We have, for our own part, never been of the opinion which poor tremblers like Count Ficquelmont on the one hand, ant san- guine popular partisans on the qiher, have accredit- dispatches and paTliamentary speeches were of eh abuudantiy provoking to absolutist continental poliiicians—he always helped opinion to find the raw* 00their fiaoka—and he was in the habit of telling S," iss bnrgh. But we can find nothing like reckless and hazardous action in the external policy of L ird Pal- merston, and nothing like unedieulaUd abruptness or or cosfineatel w ar: It is a ettrioni fact that aR per- sons coming from Europe eren bow talk of peaee as _highly_pri^^^ This opinion bjr ao spite’ofnoteSi and d rS s of noteSi teat heel pn^pered by European diplomsgr, the eutt ofsSan, sBTiewedhere, look* bte«. Th* T«lu were Id tee Bec&iihr Btoch incuned to coaeiliatfon; now tter sre etetedbj the lueoi* tter tare fained, Md will not hear df any ferzsS which are not fonaded upon teerehnaatioBOfall the pretensions pnt for- ward by. and Ik* im m ^ te erdcostioa of I StTrioit tawed Uui^ *t the a d of Iiat month, e Tnrkl«h'’bris-of-w«r. which bad been driven by con- trary weather to tee Serpent’s Island, between tbe Sniina mootli of Ute Oasube and Odessi, where tha main force cf the Bnasian fleet hapitened to be, was attacked by them, and, after sutaining a fierce com- bat, was Anally Btsk, and everr sdul lost. Three ateamers of the Tarkiah squadron came in contact with a larjfe Bniiiaii force in the Black Sea. A se- vere engagement ensued. TWo ef tbs steamers suc- ceeded in making their escape; the third, au Egyp- tian, was Mown np hy the captain, who rsfuaed to surrender. Lhc Turkish fleet are uader orders for the Black Sea/ A dispatch dated Jassy, December S, says there is no news of any ImportanCA Tbe Bu^riau Consulate ’assy has been broken np. Tb» Uonsni General, de Giers, has accompanied Boron Badberg to tsy on ebpyrii^t; a pteaaant serial, named Siege- CoMh Stonesf and tha tanal editorial notes, Tbe Tpnaieal jgrfcf tbess notes isalways written wiiha Jheajiiira^liion offhe adl^eet, andinaaprlglttyjiad 'sgrBsebteVmn. .With tea present soniba a saw Tolomtof eOmnaoea, aad it it an exsellent tims for teoie who ire not yet acquainted with its mirits, to h^ds their ■obscTipUons. ________________ - Tbe Beow Btora In the K u t The snow atorm hia been lerere in the Laib A dispatch firain Boston, dated tee morning of Decem- ber S9Cb, itatc^ that the a now was a foot deip ther^ that the eight o’clock train for Hew York started with two eoginea bnt made rery slow process. Nothing t trains due that had been heard of the sieamhc morning. At a later honr in the day the snow ia re- ported to have increased to a depth of eighteen inches, end tee drifte were in places ten feet deep. The raO- rood tracks were blocked up, and none of the ateaa- b«at tr^B doe had arrivld. No steamboat train left Beston for Hew York on tee evening of December Sfllh, The marine lele^ph was not working, and of conrse, there was no intelligence of tha vessels in the enter bay. A violent snow storm commenced in Portland, , on the morning of December 29th, and continued vind fror Me., on the morning c all day, accompanied Bnebarest. vice-president o A letter from __ occompi___ _____ Colonel Zuebowski, tbe newly-appoinl nt of Moldavia, is exoected at Jassy. Widdin, dated Hovember 80, gives the state of affairs in that locali— by a high had been ;h wind from the north- done to the vessels in the fellowtng as the state of affairs in that locality at that date: The. bridge is finished, and, unleas hard frost should set in, -will enable all the boats aod barges to ply between Widdin and the island. Supplies of wood are be^nhiug to come in in sufficient quanti- tieA Two regiments of cavalry, (1 8 "" -----borseA) commanded by Mozher PachA chid Pacha,) Mere yesterday and today br->ughl this side of 'he river, as no advance is contemplated into Little Wallachia at present, and stable accomm> datioD being more abundant here, they are, of course, within the fortifications of Ealafat Tbe Turkish steamers, with arms aod ammunition for tbe Caucasus, safely returned to Gonstontinople on the 28th November. They landed their cargoes in safety. An engagement took place on their way to tbe east of Abaca between these steamers and a Russian frigate and a brig, but the latter withdrew in a very dismantled state to tbe roadstead of Sohound. An English and a French steamer has gone to Constantinople. Two others were to follow, with a French admiral on board, sailing in company with a Turkish fleet. Tte Circrssions were moving down from their fast- The reports of the Turkish loss at Aka'sik, are thought to be great exaggerations. It was reported that, at Chefkatin, a Russian naval division, with 6000 tronps on board, was repulsed with great loss. Ooe steamer was knocked to pieces, a frigate dismasted, and the Russian loss reported A naval division of ten powerful steamers, un- Turkish Pasha, left the Bosphorus on the afier of the 2d. The Extraaltlon Commi/sloner Nelson yesterday rendered a decision in the case of Heilbonn, committing the p: the face of Justice Mitcbell’a opinion and oi discharge. Hia decision refers mainly to the law of ha, (so™ Rm^ qoMtii ►day br-'Ught to Tbe Gebmaxt.—Tbe union of the three courts of Aus- tria, Bavaria and Saxony ia about to be closely ce- mented by the intermarriage of a Saxon prince with a sister of the Emperor of Austria’s fiancee, a daugh- ter of Duke Maximilian, of Bavaria and of a son of latter with a Saxon princess. It is probable that fiancailUs will take place this month, when the Emperor of Austria will be in Bavaria to spend his Christmas with his future empress. Greece.—The Russian manifesto of the lat No- vember has caused a great sensation in Athens, and so roused tbe imagination of the people that they are much iDclined to beueve that a hundred thousand Russians are already in Adrianople. and that the next Easter festival will be celebrated la .St. Sophia. The precautionary measures of the Greek govern- ment are now so severe that private persona experi- ence considerable difficulty in obtaining permissioa to cross the Irontier into the Turkish province The Laihara Prize. Odb to LiBSRTr.—The following letter, occasioned by the decision of the committee appointed to award the Latham Prize, has been left with us by the writer for publication : It was addressed to the news- New Fobk, December 22, 28.5.3. Mr. Editor : The article in your paper of yesterday, icquirtng, “ Is there a Poet amongst us,” 1 will en- deavor to answer. J, as one of the oompolit.ors, and one whose piece has received the critio.il approbation of such gdnlleraen as .lames W. Gerard, Eiq .Judge Kinnie, Rev. Doctor Higbee, Professors Curtis, Niwh, Bnetow, Ju lieo, Mujor Bloomtield, Noli, .Shelton, General Hall, &o, ikc., can well, 1 think, hold my bead up in spite ot any '• fog ” anicle that may ap- pear either here or elsewhere; aad if you will look critically at the note upon the decision, you will find that the names of the cemmitte* are not memiont 1. The names attached to the note say, “ that the com- mittee report, Ac., not they.” Now, .Ur. Editor, you wiU readily perceive that there is something behind the scenes, and that they are bound to give the Professor Nash and others have prononneed my piece superior to Hail Columbia, in their estimation— they like it better than Hail Colnmbia ; and one per- son remarked that it would supersede Hail Colum- bia; and another, that when it was published, and became known, it would be to this country as the Marseilles is to France. James W. Gerard, Esq., says 1 can use bis name, as it is ‘ practical.’ When published, (as I purpose so doing as soon as I can,) I shall send copies to Kossuth, Muzz oi, Lamar- ti»e, &c., for tbe piece is not ocIt hat is fkbigtitd to haxo U9f£\ct in Earugeand €Ui'oUre, I ugh to satisfy me and a great many make use of this if von please. &c.. JoDM McChrsnst, Grand at., Ne-v Yoik. and air will sui receiyed tests e olherA You can i erally approvi o be withheld A ooropo.n'ion which is so generi the “ Ode to Liberty,” ought not to the pubi'c. ft should be made a part of some grand public concert. Will not JuUien, to whom ihe author cf the ede refers, bring it out, or must wo wait for-- some more patriotic anti public-spirited master of tha musical ait? We understand that some of the one hundred and fifty pcefs who wrote for the Latham pr’zs, are not well plecsed with tbe decision of the committee, which iP, that none of the compositions de-erved it. It ia well urged that this was not tbe question submitted to them. They were to award tha live hundred dollars to the author of the best composition presented. One of tbe hundred and ,nd a^ty is, th locey. Mr. Latham gets yithout paying fore, fairly entitled to the i the credit of munificence, without paying a penny from hia pocket. With regard to the committee who made the deci- sion, and who were members of Congress, there is one consideration which should reconoile the hun- dred and fifty poets to the slight put upon them. Members of Congress are not chosen to the places they fill, on account of their capacity to judge of poetry. We doubt whether, in any instance, since ndation of tha was required or even expectec their constituents. It is only sd of any one of them by lything ev light of a f 1 epics, and member of Congress knows tics. It ia possible, therefore, tee were bewildered with the dred and fifty odes, anthems and whole of th Another Koszts ACfair, From the Missouri lUpubUoin of December 24th, we learn that the govevnment is likely to have an- other 'Koszta case to dispose of. A Mr. C. Muegge, a citizen of the Dnited S'a'es, and a resident of St. Louis, was travelling in Germany, and while at Dres- den, he was arrested by the police, the rooms at his hotel invaded and his tranks searched, and ha de- nstody, oi ness of h chad, at the pel: tbe American consul. Nobody can apeak down Lord Palmeri______ himself; and we trust to his own recollections of his own reasops for supporting Lord Grey’s Raform bill, to save hin. from the mistake of “ tfiinking that public opinion can be made to bend to individual will, or that it is a power which may be safely thrown out of account in calculating the workings of that lomplicated machine, the government of a country.” The Sun Snd Standard are of opinion that foreign politics are the cause. The Commercial DiUy L'tst olice, u tlished iciiiu, oiiu ucuictuua lua pvi/beotiou ui IhS got sent of which he is a citizen. This letter is aci i passport was eiiablished by Ha resents this indignity in a long letter to the Minister of the United perilling the existence of the ministry, at such a oi cal period, were he not actuated by higher moil than those assigned for his withdrawal, so fecei after the announcement that negotiations wo ” continued by this country, and the almost simi ous arrival of the news of decided Russian snee sea and land, strengthened the idea that dis meat with the eastern policy of the government true cause of the resignation. panied by one to Colonel Benton, which makes a gen- eral statement, an extract from which is given below. From the whole statement, it would seem th it there ras-nothing in the conduct of lluegge to iustify the insulting treatment which he received. H8 was there. peaceful pursuit of the object which took him . i ccunlry, offending no one, and doing nothii to make him obnoxions to'bthe government. rraa suipected because his name bad been associated with that of Kossuth—he had taken a letter of recom- mendation to a man in Paris, who had been impli- cated,” and in which i» wa* stated that he was “ trust- worthy ’’—and, possibly, some mischief-making coun- tryman of his, had sent back iafonr.uioa thst he a great admirer of Kossu'h, aad had entertained hospitably while on hie vis ' the insulting government of Berlin ti c. hcxgges lhttbr Ti only be taken in the event of his death being report- ed, or Ell search proving fruitless; for, so long as older captains are retained on the bookA his age (67) cannot be considered a disqualification. But no such report has been made; and even the .searches now making by Betsher to the east and Colli asou to the west are not yet concluded. Indeed the latter, as wa leam from ihe Amp*hitrite, had net been beard of by any one of the ships sent to deposite prorisions, 4c., last autumn, in hia supposed homeward track. It is not the intention to abandon Collinson'thus prema- tnrelv without further seareh, and in seeking him we may hep. also to discover^some survivors «f Frank- lin’S company. ____ FRANCE. French Intervention. A French cabinet courier left Paris on Wednesday, the 14th inst, with dispatches to the Ambassador at Constantinople. He received orders to proceed by the shortest ronte, tbe employ the most rapid means of conveyance at the disposal of the traveller, and to rest neither night nor day till he arrives at his desti- nation. It is scarcely necessary to say that the dis- patches he bears most be of the highest impartancA and they are believed to contain instructions for the milita^ Ambassador at the Sublime Porte, suited to the exigency of the moment. Their purpsrt has not B^Ired, bnt it is very naturally surmised that the nirals aro erjoioed to cany into exeention the the Turkish fiects aud the Asiatic coast from aggres- sion, and, if aggression be committed, to punish the perpetrator, or avenge what they could not prevent. GERMA.\T. again causing some uneasiness agents of the governraent in ? tha Austrian monarchy are cal GER.>IA.\T. Panslavism is again e—“ — - Vienna, and tee agents Eonteern parte of the Austrian monarchy are called to exercise redeubled vigilance. At Agram, in Croa- tia, Louis Gaj, editor of a paper, has baan arrested ana brought toVienuA Servia it is feared, may make nve of her position end appeal to Panslaviatic Bjapathies. ____ THE LATEST. [By Eectrio Telegraph to Liverpool 1 Lord John B n^U is spoken of as suceessor to Lord Falmerstor risoner is tens in the c sbal of the United States, who refuses to dissharge from the federal magiatratei le custody e prisoner, in d order for his him without an order from the federal The counsel for prisoner will. It is said, bi habias corpus now before one of the j United States Court, to prevent his sun question of jurisdiction can be tried, and also enter a suit for penalty against the marshal under the state law, who will probably pat in a demnrrer, when the '-^CaDBad^Uaute wBhianri exooBtiaDarreserTaflcb tee y e a beM Berts steins tee ikiB, reqnins DO diyios in tee son. ao t m ^ ... -----------I. itAUt telAIsS SBd UIiT 'Hluxn. swuuu •» ut. —---jOTWoMteteiBihedlalxsatory. «TW slkerj*g^gtf The Great BesMraffvik-lt k sdiGMiid-w eertiflcaies frotnlnEadreaaeroiir best known etezresohow— that nospo- dfie hM erer bem oOMred m ibe>p9Hc,orsqiu)T«lw snd '* db. BLAKm AEOJtATKrBrmaa. These edtented “ Bltters'i seldom. If ever. fsO to eoata lasCizvr^ef spoo«a Mn aiBicted -miOiXdvar diseasoBa DvtpepHa, OoiUmeu, InMantion, la n m r, 0 AirsMta, SeaersU DsbUUv. ^ Thousands In this d ty can srecempoiedof ritHolo tagredlcitj, snd are .... ---------------- T t « « e ^ a o ^ l e t o t e ^ ^ ^ . n ^ ^ Bilious G .Mp ind h— tojataablo spm^ a __ ___ ______ ________________ Of sH prevalent ^i«T^S*Division street, and 68 Boutt street, corner ot ^«Tr^Jn3vL188A _ THOMAS BLABS. »- and -Wells, Phk et New York, near th e judges of tl lurrender’till tl BOOK MOTIOBS. new Proofs that the Dauphin Q. P. PUTNAM « CO. on an appeal. case will be Tbb True Freemans JocRVAt,.—The first num- ber of a weekly paper with this title has been issued in this city. It is a Protestant paper, aad claims to do ba'tle for the Protestant camp generally, without regarding the difftrences which divide the Protestant denominationA It is one of the products of i citement against popery which nowagita’esthe com- munity. ilDR to prove Iden'Ity of Louis XVII. of France ler WilUams. Missionary DrKiGA.Ns’ Booxstor*.—The establishment Dunigan 4 Brothers, No. 151 Fulton street, is the headquarters of Catholic learning, and abcn.ils in all the most valuable pnblica'ions of press, Eogli the most pot the Catholic Ipaniah and II nnular school books to the finest editions of tbe fathers, their shelves will furnish you speci- mens, in durable as well as elegant bindings. Their series of " Manuals ” for devotion embraces variety cf style?, from the plainest to the mos Readers who hav present’s should look in at Dauigana’, isaryto the formtttcn of he «o ably handles. We Charles Heidsieck Cuampaqvb.—Mjssrs. T. W. Bajfiud & Co., of No. 100 Pearl Btredt, are tha impor lets of this popular and delicious wine, which altkct'gh lately introduced under its present name, has been long in vogue in this country as the best wine of its class. Mr. Charles Heidsieck, who has given bis name to the brand, is the senior partner of the well-known firm; and we may be assured by reputation that only wines of pure quality and quisite flavor will be allowed to reioh his customers. It is said that more Heidsieck is s.nld in this coua than of any other Champagne, while the demand it is constantly increasing. By Rev. J. H. Hansen. 1 vol. iSmr.. with three portraits. »1 25. “ On the vexed qnestion of the death of the Daanhin tha woik (Beanchesne's) in reality thi-ows no new liKht: our deci' et Dmust still be as heretofore, that, however probable it mty be that the unfortunate prince d led In the Temple, the fact U not proved.’’-[JfrfAodisf QuarUrrlu Bectew Independent of the question ot the Identity ot Rev. Eleazer wnnami with Louis XVII., which this b-iok very fully dis- cusses; the work will be found one of great Interest, which is never permitted to fla«. The design of the author to the reader all the elements neoess opinion on the historical point which 1 may consider the book more tlaborat-!y hereafter : at present we have only time and space to say. that the evUenoo addaced appears clearly to establish the fast that Louis XVIL d'd not die, as Is usnally supposed, in the Templa In 17'5- Amass of direct and circumstantial testimony Is also colleo'.ed, on the point of Identity, which certainly forces the impartial and un- prrjudlci d mind toward the cono'.ualon that Mr. Williams la inderd the anfortunate Daopbln Bnt the book must be oar„'uHy read ii or ler to form any Just Idea of the nature of the te3*imony, which is so invol/ed and varied, and united togethT by so many delicate links, that It Is qui'e Impossibly in a brief space, to give any thing Iikea fair ijnopsis of it. Apart altogether from the Interest exdtvd by the main ques- tion (f Idenlity, the book will be foqnd full of important his- torical inO rmation, gathered from numerous sources, com- bined With DOmUo Skill, and mode attractive by the enthusL asm of the author. It furnishes, likewise, an ouUine of the bi. ography of Mr. Williams, which, we think, caunot tail to inter eslthe reader.-[/’ufnam’s JfontUi/. TO BOOK BUYERS. rich and cht A rich and choice collection of ELtPANT GIFT BOOKS FOR 1S3L May be found at the Establishment of o. p. pur.\AM A- ro., 16 Park place, (a few doors from Broilway.) BSLECTIOSS FRIIMT: PitFSENTS FOR TBB New Ykar.—The si.sterB of the great Huugarian, ilesdames R jtkaj-K tssuth ai Kussulh-Meszlenyi, offer at their store, 761 Broadway, the largest variety ever imported, of Brussels and Cbanlilly laces, of the finest quality and newest terns just imported trom Europe. There is pnat gaze, guipuere en point, a ruigullo, guipuere euplu'. Valenciennes, and other choice aud valuable laces, with veils, handkerchiefs, collars, etc. etc. of the latest 8'jle, and exquisitely finished. The place ia indeed a dei6t offashton, and it Is an advant-age to the purchaser that the smallest possible profits are made on the manufecturerB, prices. The convention of clafsical teachers in Albanv adjourned on Wednesday, December 2S, to next Au- gust, after having passed vari.'us resolulirns to the following eflecl: Reommeudlng to academics pro- portionate advaccemeat in the standard of require* meals. A hrarty approval of free education. In favor of the effort to separate the offi:e of Secretary of state from Saperintcndenl of Common .Schools. F,>r leacbers’department in academies. For t'lo miinta- nance of the Normal School. Opp tsed to a sectarian division of school m-tneys; and favorable to in- nations in atd ABBOTSFORD EDITION OF WAt di My illustrated. 13 vols. 8vo. Full JV NOVELS, solan, xra. (Enitlah bind- 13 vols. calf extra. »30 fcilfextra 6i4. 8tro. half calf antique. Philadelphia Edition of the sat on Edition, in 27 toI a 12mo half c- [ DEAMATl BOHN’S STANDARD LIBRARY. 81 vols. 12mo, half caff extra antique (F.nalish bind.na). P. r vol. »t 75, BOHN’S bCIENTIFlO LIBRARY 22 vols. half calf antique. Per vol. S2. NL'ITaLL and MIJHAUX'3 SYLVA Numerous colored plaios. 6 vote ?vo, mor, extra. 655. riCTOIlIAL III.STORV OF E.7GLAND. Numi'rom ilius- Irattoui, complete BnijlLh edition, in 8 vote. 8V), half Russia. WILKES’S I.XPLOkl.NG EXPEUiriJN. 5 vrU rjyal 4:o half Russia. t75. WILKEd’.-! E.XPLORIKG EXPEDITION. In o vole. 8vo. halT IBE'rCOTT’S HISTORICAL WORKS, 8 vol-. 8vo , fu'l calf antique 630. hCSE'S BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARV, 12 vols. 3vo., calf LURKE’8 PHILOSOrniCAL WORKf.8 Tola, half calf ex- DAI LAM’S WORKS, oemptete In 8 vote.. 8vo., half calf an BRITISH ESSAYI.STA « vole, half calf antifi.'. »50. TFRNON GALLERY, (splendid ergravingi.) folio morocco ITALY ILLUSTRATED,(JplendiJ eneravinRS,) folio, moroc- of colleges, acidcraiea WILKIE GALLERY, (.pk-ndid cmtraTtogaJ B ook JloyicgSe. SBikBcx lexsir TALMABLB GTAJKOjUBO AKto iU i WORKS « •» w rtsl^. U-- OBAS. a. XRAS0I3 i Oo.. 11*BROADWAY. BARDNIAT. HAT.IB AND PIOtUBI^UX IDOIOICS Of XNOLANB. IvcAdto. ROYAL 6 1 ^ fBOU THX 6ALLEB1K8 Of lUROP*. **^ lT .T - j fr.AWtTOAT., HI3IOBIOAL U d FlOIU SISaU a. Ytaely Btustrated. XHX WILEIX GALLERY. ASelecttoo Crom the Workf of this Halter. 4(a CABTILB AND AND BoKitJfiillyllQffrated. THE TEBKON - *.iLCi^BJixxa TBX WSITUteS O f SIR WALTfiS SOOIT—Novsls *nd Foem»-*3 Toil. Beaton ediflon, half antique calf. halfmor. edltioOe 19 vols-—Sialf ma ECOTTB POETICAL WOREE12 vol* h: EDGEWOBZHta WOBKS—Sine edition. IKUSXHOVEIB. Anthi kalfmor. stbicelakd'S'livis oytbb qdesss or England EDgUsh editibn-half calF MILTON—^ k e r ln a ’Ssuperb edition. S vote. calL BOSWELL’S JOHNSON—Best edition. 13 vote. Hair calf. llCjlt Ltkewlas in vols.—half calf. WEBSTER, PIOTOEIll PENNY CTO -Best edition. 13 vols. hair cal HIBTORY OP ENGLAND. 10 toN.-IhH c )IA. complete, 16 vols.—half mor. :qs of washingk EVERETT. PRESCOTT, In fine THE HETOKIANS-GIBBON, HUME, ROLLIN, io. ic.~ in fine bindings. ' SHAKSPEARB-KNIGHT'S PIOTORIAL EOIXIO.X 6 vols- MOORE’S WORKS. 10 vote-half calf. SOUTHEY’S LIFE AND WORKS OP OOWPBS, l i vote- **iIIlff0N, COWPER. THOMSON, Byron. Goldsmith. Dry- den. Pope, Tenneyson, Lonefellow and other Standard Poeta in variona sizes and styles of bindinc. A large aasortment of ILLUSTRATED WORKS, suitable for BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, and the CHURCH 6ERV1CE in velvet and morocco. JUVENILE BOOKS—American and Englteh. a great variety JUVENILE UBRARIES, PORTFOLIOS, Ac. dec3l CHA8. S. FRANCIS i CO- 233 Broadway. Xondon lydillons of Standard Works, in Fine Bindings. The Aldine Poets. 98 v-ils. ISmo.foU catt Thiers’ French Revolution. 6 vote 8vo-. illus Mrs. Strickland’s Queens of Kngla ed. full caif. ids Roman Empire. 8 vote- 8 vo.. fall oi Btrated, full calf. Byron’s Life and Works 1( Valpy’e Shaktpea' e. 16 vol . Austin's Works, .re’s Worka 19 vol vois. 12mo.. full colt Umo.. illostrsted. full oalt 0., full calf ex Mrs. Edgeworth’s WorkE 10 vote 12mo. full calf. (List to be continued.) ROE LOCKWOOD 4 SON, gpiciididly Flluitrai Books, *atcd MoUdiay IS ELEOIST MOKOCOOASD ClLf BlStlHaS. AT THE BIBLE HOUSE BOOK STORB. J. H. WATSON, 8 & 10 BIBLE HOUSE, ASTOS PLACE. The WiLKiB Gallebt;The VBasoN Gaxlxrt; Pi.xdess Tableai-x; Booarth's Tableaux; Turshrs Rivsr Fra. ncr: I ilgriiiaoes to jhiOLisa SnaiSBJ Ballads; Poetrv calf; Gold miths . Lakdok' s W or ni'ucccoanUcljth; Uerocies o» Shaksprare 8vo., mirucci. Homescf AiikricakStatesmbx, morocco, cloth gilt, cloth ; Do. or Auerican Aitboes,8to..morocco, cloth gdt, cloth; Sc.iTiAs BAR113.8VO.. morocco, cloth gilt, cloth: Spectatoh, 6 vote., half cat.cloth; GoLOSMira's MijOELLiguous Works. 4 vols., calf andhalf calf; Floralpeuixu; Boobor Exono Birds; Flow- Kll8 FROMSTIlAiyORD OS AVOs; GBUS F5B THE DRAWISG KOOM How IN tub Cloud, morrocco and cloth, gilt: AurusB UoMa by Mrs. Kirkland 8vo, morrooco and cloth. TOExolisb Shrines; B oj TEB Year; Cooks V otajss, 2 vote., UMATEO Nature. 3 vote„ calf and cloth: rORES,3 vote calf: Wordswoste's Grebib, 8t Ucl ith; Heroines or Sn akspeare S ; anStatesmen, morocco, cloth. LOUD, morrocco and cloth, gilt: Aoruss U [land. 8vo, morrooco and cloth, gilt: La- xi iDAOE. morocco and cloth, gilt: Womenof EarlvObhistian- ITT, morocco do, colored oiates; Bb- aoties or tub Court ofCearles IL morocco; Bh- xyans PiLORt-M’s Pr- oorbss, 8vo morocco. Ulostrated; Grays Eleoy. m wooco. cloth, gilt; Na- tionalPortrait Gallery, 3 vote: Historical Library, 4 vote, half calf; Hkiibfp.t'b Poems and Remains, 2 vote, morocco; Taylor's Holt Livi. no and Dtino. 3 vols, morooco; Cabinet OF Modern Art; Lbafleis of Msmjrv; tub Weitb Veil; A Bridal Gift-, KkblebC hristianYear. Svo. morocco, iUus- Irated; Irish Fea Mo-ISE s, in shells, 3 kinds; Reveries or a Bachelor, morocco and cloth, gilt, Svo, illustrated ; Wild E o»nks andSf-NO Birds. The Standard Porte In elegant bindings—English and An erican editions, with and without illustrations, octavo. dn> I. and other sizes. In morocco, calf. halfoalC and other gs. —Fhakspearb, Hazlsttt Moorb, 10 volumes, ctlf am Svo., da 3 vote. 13mo, calf; C(.Wfervo.. do. 3 vote. ISm deeimo. and other sizes. In morocco, IngB. —FhaKSPEAKR. HaZLBUT 'S SniKSPBARS, Btroh, RB , 10 volumes, Ctlf and cloth: SiuTHSv, Soirr, Milto.y , Burns, Svo.do.3 vols. I8mo-i ite., calf; W '. TksSTAIN. ItRTAYT, SUEL- DSWCRTE ORAT, SPE.NCSR, 5 VOlS., u's'Bamsa Posts. 3 vote.; Bat- TL“HDKAVA-nSTS io. Bibles and Prater Books in great variety. Usefnl and Fancy Ai tides-Writing desks, retionles. work- texea portfolios, solid gold extension cases, gold pencils and too.h pick?. bllYcr and fancy pen haulers and pencils, porte- mennaies, card c-hses, s'lver fruit knlvea thimbles, fancy work bafkcU tcllet articles and petfum-ry, gentlemon’s dressing cases, Ac lnUptanda fancy cutlery and paper knives, chess men, batkeammon boards, and numerous other articles suita- ble ft r presems. Juveniles—Aselect and extensive stock of all the n«w and old faTcri'es, children’s toy books games, writing desks, Ac., mi’y be fourd at the Bible Hou.se Bookstore. Nos 8 and Id Bible ler of Ponrth ave: iBue and Astor ptece- J. H. WAT60B, book! CITY I.YTKI.HUE,\(’K. Aeefst pf CorKTtUFKiTEEs.—Dr. Edwird B nw a ras arrested yesterday by Deputy Marshal D’An les and tflicer Hubber, of Brooklya, od a charge manafaclttring counterfeit gold doHars. It appears that a woman named Surah S. Calbroi^b uua recently ar- rested in Boston, on suspicion o\ passing counterfeit gold dollars, and frim her it was ascertained that Brown was engaged In the manufacture of spurious- money at acertain le in the city of Bro< ed by DJi Alms Hot; bail by tbe United Slates marshal ia the suoi of Tbe Lotteby Law— Sujtpreislon of Ihe Gift Urprise*.—In our legal record will be found the ceedings of the Court ot Common I’leas relative to Uerbam’s lottery scheme. The complaint was enter- idward C. West, one of tbe Governors of the louse, and Judge VVojdruff issued an order for the arrest of Mr. I’orham, who was hel 1 to bail in the sum of |;o0,00i). It seems tdat, up to yesterday, Mr. rerhsm hud sold e ghty Iho-osand tickets, a d< liar each. J. Wesley Jones, of the California gift exhibition, was held to bail in ^dO.OoO. It u said that measures have been taken to arrtst Jollie and Do iworth, who ate also engaged in the same kind of gift lottery speculations. __ Five Points Gospel UgioN Mission.—The fifth a niversary of this mission was held last evening, the Oliver street Baptist church. There was a larj congregation present, and the children took part the exercises. Chancellor Ferris delivered an el quent address, and a collection was taken for tbe The eld t'avoYitu lilolttlay Resort, STRING Ell 4 T O W N S E N D ’S UNDER BARNU’l'.t MUSEUM. 8. 4 T. re?pcrtful ly submit to tbetr numerous Fri.’uJa anJ Piitroof. their Annual no!l<l.-iy f’ata’OKueof VAluab.d f lustratsJ standard and elegant gift books. BUITAllLE FOR CHRISTM.i6 AND NKW YEAR’S PRESENI-J, which may be obtalced at their counter. No. 323 BroaitWAy; aud Blit ough enumeiatlDg onlyaportlon of their EXTilNSIVE S'aWaC.will be found to embrac; very many OHOtOE and ATrEiyriVE works, prepared with care, for tlielr conve- FOR THEIR JUVENILE FRIEND) They have an abun-lant “ STORBHOD.8E " of AN-VDALa I ' GIFT BOOK?, J l’YENILE8.ALBUMS.0 8ME),TOY.B00KA | PORTFOLIOS. *c. Ac. Their assortment io this department rrmaini new, aa heretofore, without a rival Toeir seiec- ^ ° ELEGANT STANDARD LTTERATrRE. Kn,bracirg History, Biography, Novels. Ac., adapted for Pre- sentation Gifu for the Library or Centre Table, is unprace- det led in its elegant and snbstantlal blndlRg, beauty of typo- graphy and variety of subjects. Under this head thsr would direct attenUon to their now and beautiful edition of the KOVELS OF COOPER, Complete in Thirty Three Volumes. A ra superb National Souvenir for the Araerloan’s Iloras Li - l rar.v. <I. gantly bound In all the newest s’ylea N. B. No better resort can be found during the holilays than at their old favorite eetabllshmeut Their prices lisve always proved to be l- iwsr than contemporary houses, as well as 11eir assortment of goods unrivalled. They w.ll still keep till- reputati'm. as the "nimble sixpence is better than the Blow iliilllnE.” They say to one and all, before miking your call at tbe will-en iwk Two Rfw Juvei&iles FOR THE HOLIDAYS. THE WlND-SriRIT AND THE HAIN-GODDESS; Trans- lated from the German, of SchlimtWr.. With ninety four en- graviiiea. l. mo. Price. 6-2Mcents, “ llie ergravir.go are amusing and spirited. The book must He."- (Adcerii^cr. I proveatevoril ’ Tbechlldri ' Wind Spiri;: how they wii ' g.-ddffs; bow much they will be interested in the progress of I’eterkln; how much tliey will be araus-il with the stupid.ty of Peter, and the subtle cunning cf his pratUingwife? POFULAL LEGENDS OP BRITTANY. An English version ofSonvcs'lea "Foyer Brtton,"froro ihe German of Hearlch Bode. With Sixteen Engravings. Idmo. Price. 75 cei.te ’•A kind of literature which has always been popular, and this volume is one of the most attractive of i'A class.”—[R«y- “Of great celei-rity in France, snd have been rendered into Pngu-gco; Europe."— [/!Has. .....tif.illy prlnUd with a prolusion of illustrations, and which enlistB the attention at once.”—[Abr- Pseksges will be delivered threughout the iterprise at the Five Points. It has a library of children who are instrudted by ten tedo ed and twenty five books, and tha attendance at the Echool ia between fifty ai address, appeal- resents this indignity in States at and demands tbe protection of the ( Mrs. Kbma E. Cob, of Buffalo, 'vill leotnre this (Friday) evening, at the Tabernacle, at 7 1-2 o’clock, ot the “ Rights of Man.” Mrs. Ooe is said to be at eloquent lecturer.________________ BIJSWES#^IVOTICHS. J ames M. Millsb & Co. will sell TO-MOEROW. f.’atnrday.) December 31, 1833. at 13 o’ftlock. at I'le Mu-chan'.»' lEschange. without retefTe, to the highest uilder, *be w i» bum modern Dwelliag House, known as No. 184 fli; itredt, near the First aveuufj’ __ XjKDER-GAaMBKTS, GlOTEB AND HOSIItRr LiDtxs, Gentlbmknand CmiDsior. An extensive assortment of the above Goods, at the lowest price* for which they can '.-e purchased in this country, will U.wiaN Adamss Hosiery and Under Garment Manof^tory, CHEAP BOOK EMPORIUM. ;r the Americ-in Mmcuai. ciiy, free of ISookc for the Slolidays. WINTER IN .tPrrZDERGEN. A Bo ,k f >r Touth. By Rev. C. Hddcbrapdt. THE FINLAND FAMILY; OR FAV0IB8 TASBV FOR FACTS. By Mrs. Susan P. Cornwall- THE POOK OF POETRY, For children and youth, with aa Inirodnrtion by T. Edwards, D. D. STt’RlFS OF ROME. ByF. W, Ricord- HEllOES OP PURITAN TIMES. By John Stoughton. DR JOSEPit ALDEN’S JUVENILE?. SOVEREIGNS OP THE BIBLB. By Mr«. B. R. s; largely illustrated, and one of the most atUactive book Toath In tbe market. A NEW MEMOIR OP HANNAH MORS. By Mrs. 0 H. Knight. Censidtred the best presenta ion of Mrs. Mores e is to be found. riUfx in a style M lemocrai. Published by CROSBY. mcYV Eisglisli ISooIii§ Just received from lion ioa. TBK THREE PRESIDENCIES OP INDIA-A History of tbe Rise and Progreea of the British Indian Possessions Ac., Ac. By John Capper. F.R.A.8. Hlui'trateJ London Li- 1'0 PE’S LIFE AND WORKS-Vol 2. NUional Illustrated ^UFE^ OF EDMUND BURKE. National lUustrated Li- BLANCHE THE HUGUENOT. Illustrated Family Novelist BARNARD’S HANDBOOK OF FOLIAGE AND PORE- GHound drawing, ri.nstrated. VICTOR HUGO’S RBINE-To which is added a Guide for THE ADVe ' nTURKS OF MR VERDANT GREEN-AnOx. ford Frost man. Py Culbbcrt Bede. B. .A. Paper. FIT/.' LWYN-The First Lord Mayor. A Tale of the Dra p u ’s C'crrp.nry Fancy boards or cloth. •IHE MUTINY OF THE BOU.NTY. Svo., paper. BREMER’S NEIGHBORS. 8vo„ paper. ItlTSON’S ROBIN HOOD. Svo. paper. Alto, several elegant sets of the STAUNTON CHESSMEN, with Ihe Carton Pierre Box. The trade and oihers suppli GUIDE 7 y Ne-wcom CHABACTEtL By Harvey Nesveomb. A work that ha» no superdf r of tl.c kind. WORLD’S LACONICS: OR TfIF. BEST THOUGHTS IB -BEST AUTHORS, Witlf, an Introduction by Wm. ►rfguo. D D. to tbe ai B.Bprrguo. D D. r- atfilition to tbe abov flWrtmeDtof Jittractive JU VKNILE WORKS m Miscel'a AUFfiNOirC TO THE PROSE TR^NSt.ATIO^^ OP JESCSY- LL'S- BtiDiT the new readin*:s contained in Hermann’s Posthu BCQs edilkn of iEschylus. cnasiicii? Librar, Attention BOOK3.il ,ve' >’haracter. In extra bin IIoct M.UdTrkTED Ityl4a suit- (llBiNtrated. BOUND RrLIGIOU'v JCVEMLE BOOtl 1 eraturr, and w,jrk M. W. DODD, Brick Obarch Chapel. CICERO ON THE NATURE OP THE G( r- • - ths RrDuhlic.Ihe i tfil»lilb. Clarsical Library. Jufct received end for sale bj deci.8 teedFrA.?*i3t Standing Cor tne BANGS, BROTHER AGO. logi'cuatly MT8UELLANEOUS ANI FOR PRESENTS. Opposite MetrapoUtan HoteL fiendsbip for Kossuth was, no doubt, tbe exciting cause of tbe insnltiog coarse of the police, and the visit to St. Louis, oubt, thi I dare to defend thair tbe cenmeeness of my passport, ta oar consul as Lsip- 81C, 1 was takea to Leipaic in company witB a police groundlessnesa of the impotationa against me, and declared to answer for tne in every respect, I was noi set at liberty, but in spite of all protests on mj part, was transported back to Dresden as a prisoner, oa the same day, where I was indebted to the nnnsuil ol police^ there^ with^a few i^gnificanl eipreatiion; Putnatn’a Macazlne. This periodical, for January, was promptly issued, and we were about to write oar usual commendation of it, when we found the following notice in the ITaca Berald. It expresses much that we wished to say: To THE Bixevolknt—Holiday P besbsts fob t Peon.—NotlheJunketing of aChrlitmas or New-YeAr dinner, but the lasting comfort b-slowed by covering the .coU feet, and the shivering body with warm and serviceable HOSE AND UNDBR-OI DTHING ; oomfort that will teat not for tha hour only, but be renewed, day by day. the cold winter through, ever filling the heart of U,e poor friendlesa with joy and th4n’ifulne,s. SuebboUday presents weitre prepared to forniah at tbe very lowest pricei- JAMES a RAY. decS02tnp* Taylor A HOGG. American Art L'nion. THE LARGE T AND J103T BEAUTIFUL COLLECTION e BorlJ is tow open at the ES«ohs for the Holiday Season. A. D. F. RANDOLPH. 683 Broadway, upper corner ot Amity Street, invites attetition to hislarj^e assortment of RSUGI0U3, eTANDAr.D.ancI JUVEVXLE BOOKS, Bultabie for Gifjj at tlie scproachicj: Holi'iay sea.‘«>D, comprbiax THE NEU' ILLUSTRATED WOiK^*o..&o . Ac. ELEGANT EDITIOSS OF THE POE CSr in silt find library bindiDj??. No. 103 Bowery, near Grand alreet. endid Rosewood Pianos, new P iaso-Foktss.—S plendi and eecond-hnnd. at the lowest JOHN P, WAKE A 00., MannfictarerJ, OC39 no No. 58 Barclay st„ opposite College place. Chiiatmai Present* at Retnil.—Odor and Work BoxS3 Latdies’ Jewelry CasAet?. Pearl and Porte SlOQales and Card Cases of every description. Alia genUemin’s Dreulag Cases, at CHAPMAN’S Razor Strop Dbpot. 102 WUliam street. Stationery—yet ever going, te of Rich A LoPTasL are famiaar, ut to the general pnblio. They are ---------".-•’-neniof this city, and le that they cannot T irsha, Fkidat Etkisg, Dec. 16.—The Tnrkish embasqr has received advices warranting the con- elusion thst the combined fleets hare entered Tea to prevent further hostilities, x, Dec. H th.—Official advices state Black Sea to prevent farther , _ nth.—Official advices state that the Bnsstons attacked the Tnrkish. entreaobmsats at members of isunonuon ex ihq ane aens^ oi 'i^anuc i>aua~ f New York.’ Then we have a political essay, crammed fall of flgnref, under tbe caption of *National Inventory,’ on the beela of which foUew a brace of eleveily-writUn adventsre^ons articles, seconded by a love of a little.Foem, worthy of Anacreon—withont the Greek; then a couple of stories, (the scene of one of which is laid in and about Utica,} and then—n ‘ wilderness ot sweets' beyond. ' “We are sincerely rejoiced et the prosperity of this truly national monthly. Ia »ta anccesa we discover at the leart the germ of a better—higher—mental taste. It [frorea that gjnnine liters^ excellence can, onder proper nuudsgemenl, work ia way into dis- tiaction by the mere force of ia inherent worth; and in a community, toe, where literaiy freebootezy ia le- galiied, and clap-trap a nniversal resort. In the fact cf the scccess cf a pmddieal having solely its own merita to rely upon, withont eminent names to baay it np, or Self-actiag nnffety to inflate it into cansnicaons proportions—trading upon its own capital, offering for inspection it* own ware*, ptyinjr for its itock o-at of Its own txeasniy-in fact living a life of strict Uter- T “ of theincoew ofanch a pe> uodical^mencan seholat* have ample cause to re« joice. vre are promiecd that ite fnture shall exssad It* past m Mcellence. This i* a rather ambiUoia Hm^tTo^ftSaP^ The poeaLreferred to above we shall ascribe to Mr. Bayard Taylor, and in the ontside of flii* sheet copy another poem, called the “ ConqneroFs Gfave,” to wUch ire also give * urn*. dJ;-“affirThS|‘aU ex« Gesflemen’s Ktd of Fngravings evtr made In the w American Art ITcion. Broadway. The EDEi^vicira were selected and imported by W. SOI and will be eold at private sale, at the luwent wholesale Open day and evening. Holidiay «ift AUDUBON’S BIRDS OF AMFSICA 4 vote, elegant folio, l.alf Ruaaia. Ttite Is 8 magnificent work and In remarkabiy fine order, it in 21 rote (OUo, ®SCHlDLCRaFT’S great work on the INDIANS. ^MILTON’S WORKS, complete. 8 vr-te., 8vo, half bound ®^STOBICAL COLLECnnjfS OF VARIOUS STATES.— HuidsomeTy bound tn half calf, idlt. A valuable pregeni to libraries : aOMhii OF AWKRIOAN gTATESMlCN Dlnstrated. MEA J/MESON’d CBARACTERlcl'iCS Ob' WDMEN.- UoyilSra. morocro HOME» OF AMERICAN AUTHORS. 4to plates. ^BSAUTIES OF THE COURT OF OHARLES UO. Morocco, ^ WEBBm g AND STANDARD BOOKS, ia calf and m complete aaiortmen' ? and prayer books. great vaiie'y cfrich mf.rocco and velvet binltugA American and English JUVE-tlLE B30K3. in va-j vari.ty. ciLbracing the puhlicitiors of THE AMERICAN S S. UNION. AVEBIOA.N TRACT SOCISTY- liEBIOA.N TRJ large selecUona from the be above are sold at down 3furrtiiibedt ANI!0.v'’ d. F. RANDOLPH Worka 8 vote; Buake England. * vote, Ac.. POETRY . Lrickiand’a Qneens of Britiih Eaiteda Christmas with the Lyrics of the Heart, Shellej ’ABLE BOOl Poets, Poetry ot the JWurksofL. E.L, Bi Gloves, for 50 cents a pair, snd Jouvio’s, may be bad at Hrronooox A ------------------ , lemen wm also Bcarte Cravati Splendid Silks ai 5s. a yard, the cheapest good* ever seen fn ttus markeL are dost opene<l *t Hrrcaoocr A Leau- BKATER^and any lady who wants an elegant dress for a v ny Email sum. will do well to look after them eariy. for - thaw W .1I go eff at the rate of Eeveral hundred dresses* day. M.A L. have ateo a splendid stock of DeLaines a t Is, and ihcTSTy beatafl wool FrenchDetainesalls. RetoickBi^eyi HOLY HOURS WITH THE BBS! AUTHORS. EOSIANCE OF AKYESTDRK. Togetherwith a fine asxortmen! of American Javaniles. For sale at low prices by CHARLES a N.yRTOS. decIV Irvhig Bock Store. No. 71 Ciuunbers st. Feathered Favorites. Flowers The Floral Offering. Gatherini rabies of onr Lord, a trnlj 1 Beauties. Exotic B ip’s Fablea Tbomson’s Lessons, Lays of JIacanlay. Sylvan Mueings, Robinson Crusoe, Wordsworth’s Greece, Tamer’s Rivers of Prance, Lofting’s Field Book of the Revolution. Hero- oly magnifleent book; Gar- Birds, A Summer at Badea Baden, Lessons, Lays of JIacanlay. Sylvan ines of fchakspeare, ’ Christianity. Selectic Women of the Testament, Women ofEa ity.Selectiona from British Poets, Banyan’s Pilgrim’s A fflLtivry C'lirisliua* aud a Mappy WewYear, a t CKOWEN’S E O O K ^R E , 53S BROADWAY. BOOKS,STATIONERY, FANCY ARTICLES, GAMES. BIBLEa, PRAYERS. ANNUALS. P0E33. HISTORY. FICTION. Ac. moon—nwe voxue- n s ^ n ihe evening, id avery Wednealay aod of Jaly next, GSSiJ one this stige. maldsga run A laenry Chziftoiusiiid a happy New Year, I beg io inform you, w ^ soon be here : Ilmreaseleefltmt^ cholitegifts, made easy to an 'WhowIBcfonieihe&var of making a call: .R«osddhtmsle8k.FHcboI*i,oreT6D.oId Snooks; a**aibew!IU>eln.v* 9 3 3 . BATCHELOR,’! ’Afiira » Bhotoesetectiottto thsM whoesflin lime. I|teTe»g06a*itaoidmrei«f JoreoBewaiiagwes, • Upon Irhirii the XittUeBoibhaTBTnyvtTOoK^l^ GiTfcgpereBteanA&ieMs lUthey oosfMaifc lW ti!«ai«flBtyof*dtoigtt,^ . . Andtoytlends.Baiimis,*i>daB.llbitetosay.<iifli Fleasa doBn Asgst OBQWiao*; Broadway. « •, «ec« • - The whole of the works tion of books, bonnd in tion and prcservalion. to New Yttr. The advertiser does not pretend to arrest the attention of the public by any announcement cf “ immense” or “ unrival- led " EBSortment; but, by presenting the opportonSty of pnr- chaMng a good book where it ean be quietly examined, remov- ed from the din and crawd of oown-town, hopes to receive • share of the patronage of book-buyers. Very many TalBshle books elneidating Amfriean htstsiy -have recently been added to the stock. , FEASOIS HORSTALL, No. T77 Broadway. 4ecl2t« hctreeatUikaduaiitieett, fo catalogass of various Pub- All tbe above are sold at down town pricea Calaicgues famished on application. d(-c22 ijanl 6S3 Broadway, upper o F in e Slliz<sri-a.tecl B o o R s. Ibe Vernon Gallery. The Wilkie Gallery, Beauties of Moore. Italy. Ac.. Ac. BOOK ZfOTlCES. NEW YORK. DEOIMBEE 37TH. IBS*. On Saturday’s tbe 3l«t tnstants w ah a s I’UBzuaaxn. with nhutVatidlulL LittorcmttentaofKo.I. Tol.Lt, ^ p. - Camochan on Restoration ot thf UiFar 1 ^ Bowditeh bn Taracenteiii 'ntoracls. Reviewof Boltend on Dieease'of th> CBlCaoKS. Bilffibgrswbi Soltend on Dieease'of the Longs from Jlsohani. IbgTSwbicail HoUees. JExteided Bescisj of American and IhrelcB Jfedicise. Bbepital Records. -.Salnut TBE BEST STOCK OB Et,EGiiaHT£.br Illustrated and Standard BadlLi, AZU7EBD Torn. CBMeUAS SXD WMWT^lK^-PSaBUtTS. ^ De A m W O N 4 00., MO Bro^idwiy, Beir tounTitd the atiuition of t h ^ friends and boyers to their tmeq^edrtoclK of Books, In every department of Uteratore and the Arts, all bonnd in the best and mon tsstefa! styles of calf, morocco, &c. Aznonk tbe collections vifl ba toond: /. lLLr3TRATE£> WOBKO* THB WILKIfi GALLEET-THE VIBNON GALLEET- parables of^ dr ^ e^ ^ POPE. 8 vol-v-HEMANP. 6 vote-BURNS, 8 vols,-S00TT. 12 volB>-WOODWORTH. 7 vote.—Ac., Aa deoSO Beautiful Holiday Gift. [HE KITTT BROWN BSBIES ILLUSTB By the author of ”8uhny ffida® LLUSTRATBD. *^hilshed b: ITdone for the Little Kitties of n Sunday Sohool Union, and for J. C. MEEKS, No. 147Nassau st. llaud^oIIlely Illastra.led a.ud Bound breach Book^« Suitable for Gifts. Nouveaux Vryages en Zig Zag. Par Topfer. Jerncalem et la Terre Bainle. La Noblesse de France box Croisades. Voyage a mafenetre. Par Houasaye. JardiB des Plantes. 2 vols. Begin Voyage en Suisse. Chansons Popnlaires de la France. 3vote Beranger, Chansoi Mosenm d’Histoire Natarelle. Par Cap. Le Tlroir dn Dlable. LesAnlmaux. Par Grandrille. 2 vote. Bruyeres, 1* Phrenologie, Bufibn de la Jeunesse. The above is a selection from the stock of H. BAILLIES 290 EECaDWAY, (nearly opposite the Irving HouseJ wh( many others of a similar character may be found. declS The Work, of the Sea^ou. The Illustrated Magazine of Art for 1853. KOWOOMPLBT3, AND BOUNDIN I On 3 VOLUMES. THE ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF ART FOR 1853. This is a splendid work for the centre table or library, or as a gift book. An analysis of the work will show its literary and pictorial riches. There are 45 Engra-rings on separate plates lags and the letter-press exceed anything in the market. The work may be had in two vote, plain edges M. or gilt edges 64 50; in 1 vcl., gilt edge. 64 25. HISTORY OF HUNGARY AND THS MAGYARS, richly it- lastrated, complete in 1 vol., elegantly bound. 61 60. This is an unique work. THE LADIES’ DRAWING ROOM AND WORK BOOK, in lER MONTGOMERY. No. 17 Spruce street. 1 voL, richly bound. 6 ALEXANDER MONl M rs. M irklanet’s Mew and Blegaut Gift Bonk. iS5Sa-£Sa-Sa“ = ”*rhe” Dgravirgs are illustrative and admirably well done.” j tsaCRE^^ hr lvoL8vo.,and temo.. wi,h eiegarn i'c^yiR. 'S'Ue MSoaie Jtutcaiil S&r 1854. A PAPER FOR YOUR FAHILY. In consequence of the great and increasing demand for this popular Family Newspaper, we have, heretofora been able to furnish (he back numbers to only a very limited extent. To avoid this dlsapprintmen’ . in future, we shall, on tbe second of January. 1814, print such an increased edition as will euable us to supply new subscribers fiom that data. Besides the original produc.icns of ihe Eiiiore—the Foreign aad Domestic Gorrespundence cf a large list of oontributors-the spice of the El.ropean Magazines— the selections (f the ra-ost interest- ing puliiicatioDS of the day—the brief novels—the piquint sto- ries—the »arkling wit and amusing aneodole—the news and gossip of tlie Pariaiao papers— the pe. sonal sketchea of public characters— the stirring scenes of the worlJ we live in—the chrcnicleof the news tor ladies— the ftshions and fashiona'ile gossip—tbe facts and outlines of news—the pick of English in- formatlnn-the wit, humor and pathos of the times—the essays on life, literatnrA society and morals, an 1 the usual variety of CEri-ful ebtosiegs from the wilderness of Cnglish periodical literature. criiici.sm, p'etT. elc.-several new and attractive features ot remaikabie interest will enrich and give value to the new series of the work. Tkrms—For cue copy. 62; for three copies, 65, or for one copy for three years, 65—always iu advance CLUBBING WITH THE MAGAZINES. The Homs J cpbnal, and either tbe Knicherboaker Maoa- cine, Sarper's Magazine, or Putnam's Monthly, (pub. li,hed in this city.) for one year, for................................. 64 The Home Journal, and either Oodey's Lady's Book Ot Graham's ilagacine, (pnblished in PhiladdphlaJ for one Orders enclosing the amount, ad Iresaed to Moaais k Wiixis, 107 Fulton street, will receive prompt attention. The two pe- riodicals ordered will be sent to different addresses, if desired. F-y an arrangi ment with the Editors of the Home JonaNiL, tlie proprietors of the aboTe-namM works, will furnish sub- •ibers with them as soon as they receive directions to do so 11 is es abli Subscribe wiili bout delay. MORRIS 4 WILLI3, N tW AOLCAIgS OF BtfHVs LiBUAUIKH. THE Hl.'TuRY OP MORAL HENflMENTi. By A fmitb.L. L. D 1vol. Standard Library. COMTE’S PHILOSOPHY OF THE SCIENCES. Being aa Eiposit.on of the Principles of the Cours de Pnilosophie Posi- t.\e rf August Comte. 1vol. Scientific Library. ! CF.D£i:lCU8 VITALIS’S ECCLEflASTICAL HISIORY 0 ? j ENGLAND AND NORMANDY. First voL Antiquarian U- A Ecaiiliftil Ciiri^’^inas Juveaiile. THE PRETTY PLATE. A Christmas Juvenile. By John Vincent. Peauilfully illtffii rated by Darley. lOino., cloth. 50 cents: ex- gilt, gilt edges. 7.5cents. COlIJF.R'S bHAKSPEARS. s & p i i l f p p s * DREAM. AND. Ao. By Caroline Cbesebro’. 12mo„ doth. * dro‘20**' ** '*■ J. S. REDFIELD, 110 A 112 Nassau sL Mew Bcoki Isom^i Stuamcr from variety of richly Uitutrated Medical and foaybehadcnan^at^^_^^_^^^_ <5ecS2 ‘251 Pearl street Xbe CbolceM a.a<i fflosi ly flllwetrated Gsft Sooks of Jiie §ea«oji. OTiHtaoKAGi; .A d t o i r e M a v O T ; ForeigB Dry Goods, ----------- TIBTRY OAfiPma,;*n4 .t 7 FANCY ARTICLED ..aw* fo, It or Mai^ictuxiis-lb’an, ot whfch the is isspeetfrillj requested. iswesreln thb ci Importastto .Bi^dta-biiti \mOLSSALI BDYXR3 lariicakr deefdtHy nnfiu&Ianible-^is Important to My. thal our at tfU ■'Ag. and REBIOTM i. HugheSi J9upuy 9 Crthanges Importers and Wholesale Dealers FRENCH FAWCY GOODS, Bennved frem 73 Wffliam street to thete New Warehouse, 87 HAIDEK LAKE, up stairs, w mtRje they ART! PKEPARED TO OFFER TO THB A COMPLETE AND WELL S ^ E C IID ASSOBIHXNT OF SDSPEN OF IHS» OWK lUiniTACnjR.. WATCH GUARDS. FOB AND VEST CHAINS, YIOLH STBIllVGS, IMITAHOS JBWELBY. &Ce« 4 a , 4Ce Paris Fancy Ceoods, ADAFTED TO TBE SPBIXQ TBADE, TO WHICH THEY WOCID RESPECTFULLY CALL THE ATTENTION OP BUYERS. OI^E-taiLLING DE LAINE, Right rrom eluction. GSEAT BAEGAIKS. The rheapeet Goods ever seen in this Sfarket. HlTCjaCOdli. & Wo. 347 Broadway, from auction ths cheapest lot ot goods CORNER OF LEONARD ined from auction tho che THE B01.IDAT^S. CHARLES SCRIBNER. No. 145 Nasjsau stre< iRS,—The American Aboriginal Portfo.Uo, JUVENILES. JUVENILES. JUVENILEi-ThS Selection is so mtecellaneous, comprising Boolis for all ages from the AI" phabet and First Book, that no attempt is made to enumerate hem. In adding to the stock the best have been in view. FRENCH BOOKS—Lstlre de SAvignO. avec ses SIdmnirs parle Baron Walckenaer, 11 vote : Victor Hugo, De Matetre, Dela-vigne, Ecuvestre, Fenelon. Moliere. Racine, Lamartine, ondits et Eestanration, Lesage, Manzonl, B8iattoe.De- ionuine. Bossauet Bern I Reformation. 5 vote ; MnsscLBarante.DeTigny,8atote-Beuve, Ciegny, Villenuto, GntecLThierry. Oapefigue,Gasperin. Charles Nodier, Girar- n, Mignet Ac.. Aa, with a Urge assortment ks impossible to reeapltniate in the limits i ks named above form a unique colleo- th« first sty le of binding, in fine condi- jrceervalion. Daily additions will be received prior Cfcoicc C«l!ecli»!a of ISooxAS. EVANS A BEITTAN. 6‘7 Broadway, next to the corner of Ponrth street Would invite tl e attention of those who appreciate the BEST EDITIONS OF standard WORKS, to thesplendid cofiection they bave jost received. Tneir stock is. tfeey believe, equal to any in the dty. It comprises not only all th^ bsst editions of the moFt favorite anthers that are to be fouid io the city, bat many works that cannot be found in any oth^r store; a*l boond in the roost Eumptucrtis styles. The books are worthy of tbe brnding and the blndini; worth of the book3. As it is impossible to particularise them, an efctmtoation is Booksellers and feiporteri, dec’9 eod np tial 697 Broadway, next to Ponrth street. Office ISO. 16 W all Street. WEtlaS, FAKGO Jk CO.’S SFMI-JIONTHLY California, Oregon and the Sandwich Islands 8. Jaail Sdxpress, VIA PANAMA AND NICARAGUA EOUTEB, On THCB6D.4V, Janunry 5th, I>»54j ^ OUR NEXT REGULAR EXPRESS wiB be ifopatched in charge of Special Messengers, who go through to destiaa- Uon, by the V. S. SUa steamer I L envois, VIA PANAMA, at 2 o’clock, r w. And by the steamer 2VORTB33S.1V ZstGOT, dock T.v.oa the '*^o'cl^gefiy our line forcustom-honse fere or consular oeN dSO fJan4 ’WELLS. FARGO & CO-, 16 WaU sL K IO O R R ’S Patfint Gas Regulator', THIS TALUfl^LB MACHINE Saves per Cent, of the Cost of Gas, Aim rmmvra a BEnrmt ught . Call at No. 262 Sroad’way* Courte of Europe. ____ WATCHES, OF ALL, THE CELEBaATED MAKEUS OP ESGLAUD, PEANCE. GERMANY AND SWITZERLAND. F.ajrci:' G ooos OF EVERY VAEIErY. A LARGE ASSORTMENT. BROKZES, A WRY BEAUTIFUL AND RICH COLLECTION, among which are borne very tastefuily armoged for gas. CLOCKS* VERY CHOICE PIECES OP M.-aKBIxE ISTATUAK-F, OIL PAINTINGS. B A LL, BLA CK Sc C ® ., SIGN OF THE GOLD EAGLE, 247 Broadway, decIT tjal SOUTH CORNER MURRAY STREET. RICH HOLIDAY GIFTS ! JFine Gold and Silver WATCHES, Siamoads and other Jewelry; STEISI.1KG feBLiVER-WAKE, Of E.ates£ S»atterns. ASSORTMENT OF GOODS IN HI3 LINE, WHICH.HB OF PEES FOE SALE AT MUCH LESS THAN USDADJ^EICES affording persons desirous of making presentations of choice Holiday Gifts, an unequalled stock to select from. Among the mary articles cf bijouterie will be found the foUowing. which he offers wholesale and retail: Jules Jargensen Waicbea, Warranted perfect time-keepers, from.......... 6150 to 6250 Cooper Watches, Duplex and Leverairom........................... 6135 to 8275 lndependat.t Second And quarter-second Watchea, for timing ^ jaSO t bronumeters. Splendid Pocket Ctoroncmetera perfect time- keepers.............................................. 6125 to 6250 Eishf-Cay Watchee. W lic h to eight days with once wiading.... 6140 to 6185 Enamel Watches, For tedfes. some to hunttog cases................ 633 to 6100 tJismoad We tehee. For ladies, some in magic cases................... 655 to 6300 •Which change into three different watches.. 6100 to 6175 And turn the hands without a key............... 685 to 140 All kinds of Waiohesni very low Prices. four holes jeweled................QttS iiiyudScB:::;::;::::::::::::::: i? riiver ratent nevers, as low as............ ........................ 16 ’EkEl’iiiias; PiKd................ * * uiSffifVS’isriBK’r s ’Bf"'* “ •'*" g S p S r E ::||||i S|gpi-.-;;:EEE.fo.-' !i k ’IH ^ v ................. .........s II g i s l i i l !i George C. Alien, lisporie?, Wholesale & Retail, 11 W a ll Sti-eet, deelStial np Second Floor. nearBroa-Iway. Urns, Tea fiefe, Castors, 9c. Said Mrs. John Smith to her “ desr.* “ If you’ll buy inea Bariing silp Urn, I -wUl poor out your coffee so clear! And your steak shaU be dons to a turn.* TOOL ejHBS^ FOB »OF% . - 390 Brdrtiteyv . . . rnwams B elidag _Goo4$t~i J. A . 0. SGKBUH , 601 lid invite the attention of thHr eastomm and tha sobBs aaHy.toanunnsnaBy Large and Varied Assortment Useful anil Ojruamenfal ARTXCM a E S, In addition to the many Usefnl and Beantifil Novelties that have b^n famished by their regular agenti abrogd. ! FOR THIS 8E&SO.T, they have oBt^ed from other partiei fuito a Tariety of ABTUXB9 Ithe nature of Ijthe above, It )ove, Itembnoeserety- HOLIDAY GOODS. TO J>EadJLJEH3 IJfT WATCHES, JEWELRY, FANCY GOODS. y, J. MAG n It T & GUEBIN, 15 Maiden lane, (UP STAIRS.) OFFER FOB SALE A RICH ASSORTMENT OP Ci£!!9£VA €K>05>S, RECEIVED PER LAST ARRIVALS, AND COSSISTIKQ OP RiCH ENAMELLED WATCHES, DO. DO. SET WITH DIAMONDS. DO. DO. WITH CHATELAINEa OF “ALL STYLE& BRACELETS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, WiTH OR WITHOUT WATCHES. GOLD PORTEMOSNAIES AND CARD CASES ENAMELLED. DO. DO. SET WITH DIAMONDS. DO. DO. WITH WATCHES. VEST, FOB AND GUARD CHAINS, of the latest pattema, and a general assortment of GOLD WATCHES, in open face, hunting and magic cases, the whc)“ of which is i 8 carat gold, and of our BEST GENE- VA MANUPACTURB. deel9 2w np ! unacquainted wonld isy. that fn addil thing deeirable in SilveT«Plated W are,. CBTLERX, HOirSEKEEPING HARDWARE, JAPAjrJTERY, " German Silver, Albata and Bri- tannia Ware. • Cooiposiliou. Enamelled dc Iron BoUow W are, Bronzed, Copper and B raa^ Goods, Tin, WiUow, and Wopd^ares, BATHIRG AFFLATUS, BRUSHES, MATS, BASKETS, M ^^A F B S , RE- FRIGERATORS, RUSTIC FURNITURl^ BRONZED AND PAINTED IRON FURNIT^] dec247tnp AC m4p.. *0. r i t B 8 M JTT8 CHRISTMAS NEW YEAR! J. TAYLOR, 365. 36? ann555BR.OAl»WAT; IMPORTED FOE THE PRESENT SEASON AN IN- Every article offered for sale is entirely new and of olegauit , and for variety has neverbefore been equalled, aa also now ready a handsome show of ORNaUENTCD , POUND. ALMOND and CITRON CAKES. PXR*. DS. BASKETS. ORNAMBNT8, &c. V PICKLED OYSTERS, BONED TURKEYS, OHKIKIK SALADS. ORNAMENTED HAMS and TONGUES se tirely new and elegant assortme BOXES and smat. t. artt----- MAS TREES. LDS.OENJ SUES sent to any decaa tisninw rESTJfV'adtC M e£T, leaky” & CO., elstor Bouse, Broadteayff Leaders and Imrodvcets of Fashlen. ON TUESDAY, the 20th Instant, will ba issued tba JANUARY STYLE Of Gentlen M O LIBelT GOOBS ! ! BALL, BLACK & CO., 247 BROADWAY, HAVING ADDED LARGELY TO THEIR ALREA- DY EXTENSIVE STOCK, BY RECENT ARRIVALS, are now prepared to offer to tho public ONE OP THE MOST EXTENSIVE AND BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENTS OF RICH GOODS, suitable for the approaching Holidays, ever before offered in this market, —OOKPEtSISG— * GOLD AND SILVER WARE, PLATED WARE, DIAMONDS, PEARLS, RUBIES, And every variety of Eicli Je-welry those just re tion with on Hoildaya HOLIDAY PRESENTS. SAM. W. ^W EMCT, 5 Wall Street, PMB.VT OP EVERT DESORIPTIOir, Suitable for Holiday Presents. -ALSO, ON HAND- A Large Assortment ot SIJLT'JSR SPOOJTS, CHINA AND GLA^-WABE For Cliristmas and j(|aw Yaaris. •Ta. 447 Mv*ou^tvayt^ KKAS aiEAND St gJEEtV^ HAS NOW ON HAND a larjze Tarlet? of Artide* nK iIite fior the cominK season—aa gs g“o ll K i - ’?grEfETS.! BEQansaDCMfc Also, some of these ne-wand beautiful HANGING FLOWER POTS. Particular attention is •olicited to the verycosipteta atoci: 'ZASAfromt TERRA AND LAVA WAI unnerattof l>avi!4 Collamore, Broadway, near Grand street. N. B .-BLUB CANTON CHINA PLATES. Ac, Ac. dec9 tialnp 675 Broadway. L,AFAB.GI1 BOTEL,. Messrs. Eertfi, Brother & Lowiti HE PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCH at they have opened their J ABOTO but devoted excl lALH ESTABLISHMENT, to 311 BroodtvBr, ilusively to tbq DETAIL Tl 2, Cases, Papier M ache gooda, Etationery, Ao,Ac. uec6 fjan! np T-CBE OisB~BelL.JlI SOAR, FOB CBAPPEB MAHB9, Tlie Face, Bafh Use & Cliildren. MEW PATES. Terrlns de foiea gras, from Stratbourg; an Invoice oftMil delidouB food, in terrines and porcelain vaies, TaTiounaua- bera. landing ex steamship Asia. ENGLISH CHEE3R Etiltcn an - Cheddar, in canisters and eases, landlnc oc American O ogress. For sale by decl7np JOHN DUNCAN A SONS. 407Broadwy. 1 me IsiqMciirs, etc, Duto’ r nracea. red and white. Anisette. Mara»cblno de Zara. Kirsciienwasser de NeurhateL Cherry Cordial. Cherry Bitters. Brandy CTeraies^. Batavia Arrack. ySj 5tl Biandyand Jamgioa Spirite, And a general assortment of XhoUe BTinei nes, Segars, ctCsf FOB fiiL-E BY AXDaSW G. Hlt%IXSES^ Ko. 55 W arren Btwut, 14 Itcpp_____Sole Agent for T-«my7rorth*3 Obio Wlns«- CM A m .E S li£!XJDSi£C& CliAlSSFAeJXE. leattealtaiiOfdeA- —eritsofthis snyenor nt lately introduced, nndw its imlnattojt public.t »rj alretidy d and apyraved wig.. Of Every * .” f t o * Feasmceet. K W in es, B r a n d ie s, T eats, S e £ a , AsOa

THE EYEjSriNG POST: HEW YORKi FRIDAY. DECEMBER 30. 1853 ...nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030384/1853-12-30/ed-1/seq-2.pdfthat power having resolved, ss It is said, to take parts.'ss

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THE EYEjSriNG POST: HEW YORKi FRIDAY. DECEMBER 30. 1853.j g S B W I iH I H e POST.

g B m A Y ’ BY iy iy g ^ DECaOCgBB 80.

‘x '‘j ^ a ^ J i I , - • ' J I U AHMCA.

ikOported Victories.I ig l lC iU ! n « IO F W B :» P A L l« B g lO S .

" ~ rPer»ia Joining Ru^ia.' t i e tte eo iU p A fijct, C tp i H trriion . t r r h e d UiicJ’^^arn iig .hM w isgh& X A rerpoolm f^ T heio-3l ^ 'g « c e K Inlewifing and important.” TBe etetxoAip Qiasgpw, on isKving Glasgow, while> tm i n g d a m tiieSay, came in contact with a achoos'er, snd |:sd to retoTD. She would saQ on the 17 th.

Lord Palmerston h a t le d g ied h is place as 8«sre-t s i y cS s ta le & r Home Allaira, nommally oa the

nmd o f oppciition to a sew reform bill, b a t moreIj. an Boma d3Saenoe w ith Aberdeen oa the eaai-

Onr reporta from the Beat of war are, aa usual,

sy shoi

ArmpTii.n frontier, the taking of the impo the Turke, the ac

quite contradictory, ithem into a consis

nite contradictory, but as far as we are able to digest

Tictoiy gained by the Bassisns at Achalrik,istent account, they show a

iportant for­tress of Alexaadropolis by the Turks, the accession of Fereia to the Russian side, and the morement of the combined fleets into the Black Sea. Wa subjoin the de tails:

The news of the disaster at Sinopt is efaeially con­firmed, end reached the porte on the 8d December.

two steam-frigates from the combined squadrons to Sinepe, and two other steam-frigates to Tama, for the purpose of procuring precise- intelligence. Upon the return of these vessels it was thought probable tha t the combined fleets would receive orders to enter the Black Sea. to prevent, if possible, any further naval collision between the Russian and Turkish naval forces.

I t is stated by the Russian accounts that the Tur- Idsh squadron, subsequently destroyed at Sinope, was engaged in Conveying forces to attack Souchum Kalch,and that it was pursued into the port of Sinope by the Russian fleet. If this account of the circum­stances preceding the engagement be correct, it

give a Ecmewt at dtSereut character to the at-

___lch,and that it was pursued into the port of Sinope by the Russian fleet. If this account of the circum­stances preceding the engagement be correct, it •would give a semewt at dtSerent character to the at­tack, as the Russian forces might be justilied in m'er- -eepting a convov which was destined to invade a por­tion of their own territory. The destination of the

arm y stands in need of boI t is further repdned, that the British charge d’af-

fa iresat Teheran had suspended his diplomatic rela­tions with the Persian government, in consequence of tha t power having resolved, ss It is said, to take part

s.'ssof Persia had for some time been apprehended, as his relations with Turkey were such as to induce him to take advantage of the increasing difficulties which -encompass the Ottoman empire. The intelligence, however, still requires posl’ive confirmation.

Riots have taken place at Gala's between '.he Wal- lachian m 'litia and the Rnssian troops. A baU-alion of the Wallachiana refused to obey the orders of a Russian general. The battalion in question and four -Companies of Wallachians were eousigied t"

wiiza. lato adjutant

EiaLi-v, Dec. 10.—The P m siian Correxp-mdetux, in a eemi-oU-C’al article, tays: The basis of the new

jno inienlion of meddling in the difference itself, as Indeed Ihey have no right to do. Such oondnet •wonld be improper towards the Turkish govern-

i;ji& “Ssli t wonld be completely absurd towards the R js- Sian empire, the dignity and position of which as a atate, represented by a distinguished sovereign, aad tbe patriotism of a powerful nation, form an essen­tial basis of European equilibrium and social order.

"Whenthe Russian consul in Servia reached Semlin, ho dispatched Jeffers to bis goverement, in which he

close to the Servian frontier.VtssNA, Dec. IS.—The KUtyd state^ that a t the i

fort of Safa, near Shef ka i l ,b y t ltbe Russians lost 400 killed. The same journal, aod with it the Os^-DeuUche Post, announces that in the xenewbd attack on Shef kati on the 17th, the Rnsstanswere repulsed, with kesvy loss. Tbe attempt wasBBde to land troops, but the men, in number I,S0P,•were compelled to return to their ships, leavine: 400......... * ’ed, and one gun. ..........................

ing in conce^ w*. _____ „ ther.and taking t ________their line of mareb. Prince Woronroff was surround­ed a t Tifiis, and his retreat waa cut off

Tbe UoyiT$ dispatch states, that the large and i portant fortress of Alexandropolis, or Gumri, r besieged by the Turks; and the 0»t-I)tuUa\e Post BBnouDces its actual capture. The latter journal adds, that Redout-Kaleh, on the Black Sea coast, i Ki^lar, had been taken fcy the T u rk i

Y o» ka, Thursday morning, 16th.—The Russian General Andronikoff has totally defeated the Turks in a battle at Akha-'zik, on the borders of Turkish Armenia. The Turks left 4,000 slain on the field.

A Russian Bulleiln.The following bulletin was post

Odessa on the 5th of December:letin was posted on the Bourse at

eet, composed of 18 ships—two-ers, friga'es, corvettes, together with two steam____500 horse power, and two others of 300 horse-power.

............................n.i«m.aiTeD.

I i i : i ::::

ibonsand prisoners, so been lake e sd French

1710 Batde of Siuope.The Times of the 16th has the following article on

the late Rnssian victory, which, if its conjectures are correct, show the romored battle to have been rather

re still left to conjecture what was the precise amount and character of the Turkish naval force destroyed at SinopA

The excitement produced in Constantinople by the news precludes the idea that it was a mere cuavoy of transports or the hulks in tjie port, and it is described by the Turks as “ a flotilla.” Yet, i t does not appear th a t more than two or three Turkish frigstrs were on tha t station a t the timA I t is remarkablA too, that, ■with the exception ot Osman Pasha’s own ship, which toundered on the passage to ioebsstopol, no mention is made of any captures. All tae other vessels are stated to have been destroved, and it is added that “ the carnage was frightful.”

I f itsbonid turn out that six ships-of-the-line direct­ed their fire on transports, crowded with troops, and wholly incapable of dtfjccA and thus slaughtered these unfortunate wretches, whom it would have been easy to take piisouers of war, the Russians wonld stand convicted of an act of singular atrocity, and .the victory of which they boast would cover them with disgracA The news of tbe battle was brought toConstantinople on the 3d by a Turkish steamer,which succeeded in effsotine its escape.

A&cording to her report, the Russians began the at­tack by an sfem pt to ru t out the Turkish flotilla with the boats of Adariral Nachimoa'a squadron; bat, not having accnmplfehfd this operation, they brought theline of batile ships into action. The Turkish vessels.i t is alsostated, were unable to return the fire withmuch ef^ct, aud the Kusa'ana suffered principally from the fire of a battery recently constructed for the protection of the harbor.

This account wonld seem to confirm our impres­sion that the vessels attacked were chiefly transports, wholly nnable to fight an acdon with line of batde i ^ p a ; buf, whether they were chased at sea and pursued into the harbour, or whether they were at­tacked when at anchor there, stilt remains to be seen. I t appears that the Russians terminated the engage­m ent by burning the vessels they had not already e n n k t^ their fir&

Bedgnation of Lord Palmenton. trrem the London Tunes of Dec. 16thJ

7almerston has n ‘

wn. Upon the receipt of a coramunicatiou from Ltnfi Falmqrston, annonneiug the resolution he had 1>e^ Jed to form, the Prim e Uinister left town for Oabome House yesterday, for the purpose of lay­in g the resignation of the Home Secretary before th e Qneen. 'Whatever may be the surprise

announcemenir may be the surprise

_________ _________ jment may erc i'e in thepidllic m ind, tha t surprise will be considerably------ mted, when, the causa which has induced Lord

rsten f o withdraw irem the present administra- j accnratelT iitow a. T hat cause, we may confl-

denO j stete, imnconnectod. with the foreign policy of ------ vem ipent.it bas-not arisen out of the diSical-

■ ■ ' r l t true tha t differ-t have nmnife^ed

-the j^vem iioent,it has-not arisen out of the disical-tie s o f the la s te m qucBtiop, nor id it true tha t differ-

m o f a p w ^ oa th a t subject have M uil

have to ta llj defeated the Torks in a battle at Acha'- xik, on the borders of Turkish Armenia. The Turks 3eftd,00ff*Iam oa the field. The i? a % JITstJS, how- lever, states thst tbe result was the other way, while other accounts say the loss of the Turks is greatly

Tbe Schab of Persia has declared war against Tur­key, and a aombined Persian and Russian force is tc invade tbe eastern frontiers of the Porte.

On the other hand, several severe skirmishes, in vrhieh the Tnrks came off masters, are reported.

reform was no seeret^ be w ss placed o s com m ittee, in order tha t he might nave ample opportoni- ties for considering th% provitions o f the ^ Sed aiaRng hia objections fo tbeou Lord Palmerston. BO -donbt^ gave fo tha t eOmmlftea th e ahla and vigorooa atstifanee and attanfion. which h e ia aeeastomsd ia devote to pnblio a S u n t b a t it s e ^ fiom the te ia lf, f t a t hia olgecaona to tha ^ e q i t e 6f the measaie wore not io.be diminished or overemne. H % -i^ted them to hia eoUeagneiS in a manly and stfrfightforward mannkr^ ba t i t appeared th a t no meainre o f parltehienta^ reform, aseh as wonld meet the ezpeetationa o f theeonatry, w ailike- ly to o b t ^ Lord EilmllriitoB’J n p p « t . I t m ar b«necesttxx to stale Xst^eiljv to r tbe'info33Bai^iio f that ifacMOTHo p^M cians^ho ha te fire-

five o f their own opinion^ tha t hteohjectmn to tbemeasorahow in eoBlemplaiidn iflnotthaftheproT i-tiosa o f the bni are too restricted, o r the amountOf refofln ininfflcienfc Oa the contrary, Lord Pal­merston, like Ur. Canning and other slatesmen of the sebeoJ of Mr. P i t t to which ha belongs by tbe iraditioQs of b is whole politicallife, ia not a parliamenla>7 reformer, and,altboagb be bore a part in Lord Grey’a great reform of 1881, no statesman o f the present day has ahown lees disposition to alter that settlement of the ques-tioD, to extend tbe franchise, to disfranchiae the smallboroti^ha, or to muiVe those concessioos which theliberal p a r^ have never cessed to demand. K is the more necemary to be perfectly explieii on this point,becacso it is commonly supposed, both in this coun­try u d abroad, that tbe active aympatby professed by Lord Palmerston for extreme liberal opinions in some foreign countries is combined with an equal zeal for liberal measures at homA No greater fallacyesn be eotertained as to uny public man, and hia re- firexBeot from cfiSce oa tbo present occasion, rather than accede to Lord J . Bussell’s scheme of reform, is a conclusive demonatration on that point.

W e repeat, it is npon this ground expressly and alone, that Lord Palmerston has retired from the cabi­net, aod not upon any question of foreign policy.

' not affect to disguise the regret with which we

to avow that there never was a time at which her Majesty’s government could leas aSord to lose the advantage of bis great abilities and experiencA nor was there ever a time when it was more essential to the

government Lord Palmerston has, not only proved himself; as Home Secretary, a most effi -dent adminis-

the important questions of foreign policy which the last twelvemomh has brought under the oonsidera-jon of the ministers of the crown. That L u d Palmers­ton was .known to be a party to it was unqoesiiona- bly an additional pledge to the couulry.that the poli­cy of the government in tbe E'lat was to be firm and honorable. To impugn and misrepre-ent that policy,

those divisions have, nnhappily, at length occurred, but not, as was erroneously represented, on tbe course to be pur ued towards Turkey and RassiA hot on the measure of reform to be applied to the electoral fran­chise and to the close boroughA

It would, however, be a great and mischievous error, if it were believed that the voluntary retire­ment of Lord Palmei^ton from office on another question wonld in any degree lower tha tone or relax the energy on foreign affairs of the cabinet to which he has till now belonged. It does, nnfortana'ely, tend to impair the influence which this country may sxercise in Europe, that a ministry is exposed to a secession of this kind at the very moment when it would be most essential for ns to be acting as one man to avert or prosecute a war; and such an occar- recce is the more strange when it is attributable to a cause distinctly foreseen at the formation of a cab­inet. But, beyond this we are satisfied that the course which the governmenJ are prepared to adopt in the east, will suffer no change or abatement from the withdrawal of Lord Palmerston.

The news of Lord Palmerston’s resignation will bereceived with different emotions 'in many diUerent quarters-in some with astonishment—in soma with incredulity—in some with exultation—in many m ire with regret. The meeting of ParJiameut can alone

statemen's we have made. Lord Palmerston will then vindicate his eenduct and explain his motives ; but we can conceive no motive short of the most im­perious dictates of conscience and of duty which would justify a minister of the crown in retiring frrm its service at a moment of so much importance to the interests of the nation and of the world.

EFrom the Lendon M. mine Chronicle of 16th.1It was rumored last night, and we fear with too

much truth, that Lord Palmerston has taken a step which will cxcile the deepest regret on tbe part both of his colleagues and of the public. That disiin- guished statesman has, it ia reported, tendered hia resignation of the office which he has S) ably filled sirce the tormation of Lord Aberdeen’s admmistra- t irn ; a td it is stated that the Premier’s present visit to Osborne has reference to the lamented withdrawal of one of the most popular members of his cabinet.

Conjecture will doubtless be busy in endeavora to explain the retirement of so eminent a man as Lord PalmerstoD from a government which he has adorneJ. by his arcomplishments, and strengthed bv hia official knowledge.judgment and experience. We balievs, from the statemer ta which were last night ourren'.

Che noble lord’s resignation, from all that we have ■n able to ascertaii, ia in no way connected with r difierence of opiuioa between himself and hia I.o..noo on ihe Easter" ...........

The Busiilsns ere said to have loat tw o o F th d r Itrgeet lessels t t S iicpA The town w u totally de-

ErssiA AMD T o m r .—A tetter fiom .Conitenti- noplA dated December 1, has the fblloirthC *>.to the Btaie of opinion in tb i t c i^ on the qnettion of peace

fineatal w a r : I t ia a curioua fact

colleagues cn the Eastern question, or, indeed, o

ing the interests and the honor of this o.'un'tty abmad, and, with one exception, on all matters of domestic policy, his lordship’s views are, we believe, in har­mony with those of the government. The exception to which we allude is the important qaestion of Par-

aentary Reform.

causi--and, so far as it is known, the exclusive cauae —of the decision which his lordship hat, we Rar, de­finitively adopted. We acknowledge that this reav lu’ion sarprt.-es us, as the general impression is that the new reform will fall rather below than exceed the expectations of the majority of reformers.

The sincere regret with which the c-ountry will learn that it is about to lose the officiil services of so eminent a statesman, will, wa are convinced, ba fully shared bv the government. From all that is known. Lord Palmerston, from the formation of the present ministry, has uniformly acted towards his colleagues with that perfect cordiality which natu­rally characterizes the intercourss of honorable

of great and peculiar difficulty, he has steadily co­operated with the other members of the cabinet, will greatly add to the sorrow with which they must re­gard the severance of their official connection.

[Prom theaiobeof thelSth.]Lord Pslmerston’s sadden resignation must appear,

until explained, still more mysterious in connectionwith the present aspect cf foreign than home aflura.We have no doubt the stalemen: will turn out per­fectly accurate, tlmt it has not been occjsioned by the noble lord’s desire for energetic action exceeding that of his collegueA We have, for our own part, never been of the opinion which poor tremblers like Count Ficquelmont on the one hand, a n t san­guine popular partisans on the qiher, have accredit-

dispatches and paTliamentary speeches were of eh abuudantiy provoking to absolutist continental poliiicians—he always helped opinion to find the raw* 00 their fiaoka—and he was in the habit of telling

S," issbnrgh. But we can find nothing like reckless and hazardous action in the external policy of L ird Pal­merston, and nothing like unedieulaUd abruptness or

or cosfineatel w a r : I t is a ettrioni fact tha t aR per- sons coming from Europe eren bow talk of peaee as

_ h ig h ly _ p r i^ ^ ^ This opinion bjr ao

spite’ofnoteSi and d r S s of noteSi te a t h eel pn^pered by European diplomsgr, the e u t t o fs S a n , sBTiewedhere, look* b te « . Th* T « lu wereId tee Bec&iihr Btoch incuned to coaeiliatfon; nowt t e r sre e te te d b j the lu e o i* t t e r t a re fained, M d will not hear df any ferzsS which are not fonaded upon te ereh n a atio B O fall the pretensions pnt for­ward by. and Ik* i m m ^ t e erdcostioa of

I S tT r io i t ta w e d Uui^ *t the a d of Iiat month, e Tnrkl«h'’bris-of-w«r. which bad been driven by con­trary weather to tee Serpent’s Island, between tbeSniina mootli of Ute Oasube and Odessi, where thamain force c f the Bnasian fleet hapitened to be, was attacked by them, and, after su ta in ing a fierce com­bat, was Anally Btsk, and everr sdul lost. Threeateamers of the Tarkiah squadron came in contactwith a larjfe Bniiiaii force in the Black Sea. A se­vere engagement ensued. TWo e f tbs steamers suc­ceeded in making their escape; the third, au Egyp­tian, was Mown np hy the captain, who rsfuaed tosurrender. Lhc Turkish fleet are uader orders forthe Black Sea/

A dispatch dated Jassy, December S, says there is no news o f any ImportanCA Tbe Bu^riau Consulate

’assy has been broken np. Tb» Uonsni General,de Giers, has accompanied Boron Badberg to

tsy on e b p y rii^ t; a pteaaant serial, named Siege- CoMh Stonesf and tha ta n a l editorial notes, Tbe Tpnaieal jg r f c f tbess notes isalw ays written w iih aJh eajiiira^ liion o ffhe adl^eet, and in aa p rlg ltty jiad'sgrBsebteVmn.

.With tea present so n ib a a saw Tolomtof eOm naoea, aad i t i t an exsellent tim s for teoie who ir e not yet acquainted with its m irits, to h ^ d s their ■obscTipUons. ________________

- Tbe Beow Btora In the K u tThe snow atorm h ia been lerere in the L aib A

dispatch firain Boston, dated tee morning of Decem­ber S9Cb, ita tc^ that the a now was a foot de ip the r^ that the eight o’clock train for Hew Y ork started with two eoginea bnt made rery slow p ro ce ss . Nothing

t trains due thathad been heard of the sieamhc morning. At a later honr in the day the snow ia re­ported to have increased to a depth of eighteen inches, end tee drifte were in places ten feet deep. The raO- rood tracks were blocked up, and none of the a teaa- b«at t r ^ B doe had arriv ld . No steamboat train left Beston for Hew York on tee evening of December Sfllh, The marine l e l e ^ p h was not working, and of conrse, there was no intelligence of tha vessels in the enter bay.

A violent snow storm commenced in Portland, , on the morning of December 29th, and continued

vind frorMe., on the morning c all day, accompanied

Bnebarest. vice-president o

A letter from

__ occompi___ _____Colonel Zuebowski, tbe newly-appoinl nt of Moldavia, is exoected at Jassy.

Widdin, dated Hovember 80, gives the state of affairs in that locali— ‘

by a highhad been

;h wind from the north- done to the vessels in

the fellowtng as the state of affairs in that locality at that da te : The. bridge is finished, and, unleas hard frost should set in, -will enable all the boats aod barges to ply between Widdin and the island. Supplies of wood are be^nhiug to come in in sufficient quanti-tieA Two regiments of cavalry, ( 1 8 " " -----—borseA) commanded by Mozher PachAchid Pacha,) Mere yesterday and today br->ughl this side of 'he river, as no advance is contemplated into Little Wallachia a t present, and stable accomm> datioD being more abundant here, they are, of course, within the fortifications of E alafat

Tbe Turkish steamers, with arms aod ammunition for tbe Caucasus, safely returned to Gonstontinople on the 28th November. They landed their cargoes in safety. An engagement took place on their way to tbe east of Abaca between these steamers and a Russian frigate and a brig, but the latter withdrew in a very dismantled state to tbe roadstead of Sohound.

An English and a French steamer has gone to Constantinople. Two others were to follow, with a French admiral on board, sailing in company with a Turkish fleet.

T te Circrssions were moving down from their fast-

The reports of the Turkish loss at Aka'sik, are thought to be great exaggerations.

It was reported that, at Chefkatin, a Russian naval division, with 6000 tronps on board, was repulsed with great loss. Ooe steamer was knocked to pieces, a frigate dismasted, and the Russian loss reported

A naval division of ten powerful steamers, un- Turkish Pasha, left the Bosphorus on the afier of the 2d.

The ExtraaltlonCommi/sloner Nelson yesterday rendered a decision

in the case of Heilbonn, committing the p: the face of Justice Mitcbell’a opinion and oi discharge. Hia decision refers mainly to the law of

ha, (so™ Rm qoMtii►day br-'Ught to Tbe

Gebmaxt.—Tbe union of the three courts of Aus­tria, Bavaria and Saxony ia about to be closely ce­mented by the intermarriage of a Saxon prince with a sister of the Emperor of Austria’s fiancee, a daugh­ter of Duke Maximilian, of Bavaria and of a son of

latter with a Saxon princess. It is probable that fiancailUs will take place this month, when the

Emperor of Austria will be in Bavaria to spend hisChristmas with his future empress.

Greece. —The Russian manifesto of the la t No­vember has caused a great sensation in Athens, and so roused tbe imagination of the people that they are much iDclined to beueve that a hundred thousand Russians are already in Adrianople. and that the next Easter festival will be celebrated la .St. Sophia. The precautionary measures of the Greek govern­ment are now so severe that private persona experi­ence considerable difficulty in obtaining permissioa to cross the Irontier into the Turkish province

The Laihara Prize.Odb to LiBSRTr.—The following letter, occasioned

by the decision of the committee appointed to awardthe Latham Prize, has been left with us by the writer for publication : It was addressed to the news-

N ew Fobk, December 22, 2 8.5.3. Mr. Editor : The article in your paper of yesterday,

icquirtng, “ Is there a Poet amongst us,” 1 will en­deavor to answer. J, as one of the oompolit.ors, and one whose piece has received the critio.il approbation of such gdnlleraen as .lames W. Gerard, Eiq .Judge Kinnie, Rev. Doctor Higbee, Professors Curtis, Niwh, Bnetow, Ju lieo, Mujor Bloomtield, Noli, .Shelton, General Hall, &o, ikc., can well, 1 think, hold my bead up in spite ot any '• fog ” anicle that may ap­pear either here or elsewhere; aad if you will lookcritically at the note upon the decision, you will find that the names of the cemmitte* are not memiont 1. The names attached to the note say, “ that the com­mittee report, Ac., not they.” Now, .Ur. Editor, you wiU readily perceive that there is something behind the scenes, and that they are bound to give the

Professor Nash and others have prononneed mypiece superior to Hail Columbia, in their estimation—they like it better than Hail Colnmbia ; and one per­son remarked that it would supersede Hail Colum­bia; and another, that when it was published, and became known, it would be to this country as the Marseilles is to France. James W. Gerard, Esq., says 1 can use bis name, as it is ‘ practical.’

When published, (as I purpose so doing as soon as I can,) I shall send copies to Kossuth, Muzz oi, Lamar-ti»e, &c., for tbe piece is not ocIt hat isfkbigtitd to haxo U9f£\ct in Earugeand €Ui'oUre, I

ugh to satisfy me and a great many make use of this if von please.

&c.. JoDM McChrsnst,Grand at., Ne-v Yoik.

and air will suireceiyed tests eolherA You can i

erally approvi o be withheld

A ooropo.n'ion which is so generi the “ Ode to Liberty,” ought not to the pubi'c. ft should be made a part of some grand public concert. Will not JuUien, to whom ihe author c f the ede refers, bring it out, or must wo wait for-- some more patriotic anti public-spirited master of tha musical a it?

We understand that some of the one hundred and fifty pcefs who wrote for the Latham p r’zs, are not well plecsed with tbe decision of the committee, which iP, that none of the compositions de-erved it. It ia well urged that this was not tbe question submitted to them. They were to award tha live hundred dollars to the author of the best composition presented. One of tbe hundred and,nd a^ty is, th

locey. Mr. Latham gets yithout paying

fore, fairly entitled to the ithe credit of munificence, without paying a penny from hia pocket.

With regard to the committee who made the deci­sion, and who were members of Congress, there is one consideration which should reconoile the hun­dred and fifty poets to the slight put upon them.

Members of Congress are not chosen to the places they fill, on account of their capacity to judge of poetry. We doubt whether, in any instance, since

ndation of tha was required or even expectec their constituents. It is only

sd of any one of them by

lything ev

light of a f 1 epics, and

member of Congress knows tics. It ia possible, therefore, tee were bewildered with the dred and fifty odes, anthems and

whole of th

Another Koszts ACfair,From the Missouri lUpubUoin of December 24th,

we learn that the govevnment is likely to have an­other 'Koszta case to dispose of. A Mr. C. Muegge, a citizen of the Dnited S'a'es, and a resident of St. Louis, was travelling in Germany, and while at Dres­den, he was arrested by the police, the rooms at his hotel invaded and his tranks searched, and ha de-

nstody, oi ness of h

chad, at the pel:

tbe American consul.

Nobody can apeak down Lord Palm eri______himself; and we trust to his own recollections of his own reasops for supporting Lord Grey’s Raform bill, to save hin. from the mistake of “ tfiinking that public opinion can be made to bend to individual will, or that it is a power which may be safely thrown out of account in calculating the workings of that lomplicated machine, the government of a country.”

The Sun Snd Standard are of opinion that foreign politics are the cause. The Commercial DiUy L'tst

olice, u tlished

iciiiu, oiiu ucuictuua lua pvi/beotiou ui IhS got sent of which he is a citizen. This letter is aci

i passport was eiiablished by Ha resents this indignity in

a long letter to the Minister of the United

perilling the existence of the ministry, at such a oi cal period, were he not actuated by higher moil than those assigned for his withdrawal, so fecei after the announcement that negotiations wo ” continued by this country, and the almost simi ous arrival of the news of decided Russian snee sea and land, strengthened the idea that dis meat with the eastern policy of the government true cause of the resignation.

panied by one to Colonel Benton, which makes a gen­eral statement, an extract from which is given below.

From the whole statement, it would seem th it there ras-nothing in the conduct o f lluegge to iustify the

insulting treatment which he received. H8 was there. peaceful pursuit of the object which took him

. i ccunlry, offending no one, and doing nothiito make him obnoxions to'bthe government. rraa suipected because his name bad been associated with that of Kossuth—he had taken a letter of recom­mendation to a man in Paris, who had been “ impli­cated,” and in which i» wa* stated that he was “ trust­worthy ’’—and, possibly, some mischief-making coun­tryman of his, had sent back iafonr.uioa thst he

a great admirer of Kossu'h, aad had entertained hospitably while on hie vis

' the insulting government of Berlin

ti c. hcxgge’s lhttbr Ti

only be taken in the event of his death being report­ed, or Ell search proving fruitless; for, so long as older captains are retained on the bookA his age (67) cannot be considered a disqualification. But no such report has been m ade; and even the .searches now making by Betsher to the east and Colli asou to the west are not yet concluded. Indeed the latter, as waleam from ihe Amp*hitrite, had net been beard of byany one of the ships sent to deposite prorisions, 4c.,last autumn, in hia supposed homeward track. It is not the intention to abandon Collinson'thus prema- tnrelv without further seareh, and in seeking him we may hep. also to discover^some survivors «f Frank­lin’S company. ____

FRANCE.French Intervention.

A French cabinet courier left Paris on Wednesday, the 14th in st, with dispatches to the Ambassador at Constantinople. He received orders to proceed by the shortest ronte, tbe employ the most rapid means of conveyance at the disposal of the traveller, and to rest neither night nor day till he arrives a t his desti­nation. I t is scarcely necessary to say that the dis­patches he bears most be of the highest impartancA and they are believed to contain instructions for the m ilita^ Ambassador a t the Sublime Porte, suited to the exigency of the moment. Their purpsrt has not

B^Ired, bnt it is very naturally surmised that the nirals aro erjoioed to c an y into exeention the

the Turkish fiects aud the Asiatic coast from aggres­sion, and, if aggression be committed, to punish the perpetrator, or avenge w hat they could not prevent.

GERMA.\T.again causing some uneasiness agents of the governraent in

? tha Austrian monarchy are cal

GER.>IA.\T.Panslavism is again e—“ — -

Vienna, and te e agentsEonteern parte of the Austrian monarchy are called to exercise redeubled vigilance. At Agram, in Croa­tia, Louis Gaj, editor of a paper, has baan arrested ana brought toVienuA Servia it is feared, may make nve of her position end appeal to PanslaviaticBjapathies. ____

THE LATEST.[By Eectrio Telegraph to Liverpool 1

Lord John B n ^ U is spoken of as suceessor to Lord Falmerstor

risoner is tens in the c sbal of the United States, who refuses to dissharge

from the federal magiatratei

le custody

e prisoner, in d order for his

him without an order from the federal The counsel for prisoner will. It is said, bi habias corpus now before one of the j United States Court, to prevent his sun question of jurisdiction can be tried, and also enter asuit for penalty against the marshal under the state law, who will probably pat in a demnrrer, when the

'-^CaDBad^UautewBhianri exooBtiaDarreserTaflcb tee y e a beM

Berts steins tee ikiB, reqnins DO diyios in tee son. ao t m ^. . . -----------—

I. itAUt telAIsS SBd UIiT 'H luxn. swuuu •» ut. —---jOTWoMteteiBihedlalxsatory. «T W slkerj*g^gtf

The Great BesMraffvik-lt k sdiGMiid-w eertiflcaiesfrotnlnEadreaaeroiir best known etezresohow—that nospo-dfie hM erer bem oOMred m ibe>p9Hc,orsqiu)T«lw snd

' * d b . BLAKm AEOJtATKrBrmaa.These edtented “ Bltters'i seldom. If ever. fsO to eoata

lasCizvr^ef spoo«a Mn aiBicted -miOiXdvar diseasoBaDvtpepHa, OoiUmeu, InMantion, l a n m r , 0AirsMta, SeaersU DsbUUv. Thousands In this d ty can

srecempoiedof ritHolo tagredlcitj, snd are. . . . ---------------- T t « « e ^ a o ^ l e t o t e ^ ^ ^ .n ^ ^

Bilious G.Mp ind h—

tojataablo spm^ a

__ ___ ______ ________________ Of sH prevalent^i«T^S*Division street, and 68 Boutt street, corner ot

^ « T r^ Jn 3 v L 1 8 8 A _ THOMAS BLABS.

»- and -Wells, Phk et New York, near th

e judges of tl lurrender’till tl

B O O K M O T I O B S .n e w P r o o f s t h a t t h e D a u p h i n

Q. P. PUTNAM « CO.

on an appeal.case will be

T bb T rue Freeman’s JocRVAt,.—The first num­ber of a weekly paper with this title has been issued in this city. I t is a Protestant paper, aad claims to do ba'tle for the Protestant camp generally, without regarding the difftrences which divide the Protestant denominationA It is one of the products of i citement against popery which now agita’esthe com­munity.

ilDR to prove Iden'Ity of Louis XVII. of France ler WilUams. Missionary

DrKiGA.Ns’ Booxstor*.—The establishment Dunigan 4 Brothers, No. 151 Fulton street, is the headquarters of Catholic learning, and abcn.ils in all the most valuable pnblica'ions ofpress, Eogli the most pot

the CatholicIpaniah and II

nnular school books to the finest editions of tbe fathers, their shelves will furnish you speci­mens, in durable as well as elegant bindings. Their series of " Manuals ” for devotion embraces variety cf style?, from the plainest to the mos Readers who havpresent’s should look in at Dauigana’,

isaryto the formtttcn of he «o ably handles. We

Charles Heidsieck Cuampaqvb.—Mjssrs. T. W. Bajfiud & Co., of No. 100 Pearl Btredt, are tha impor lets of this popular and delicious wine, which altkct'gh lately introduced under its present name, has been long in vogue in this country as the best wine of its class. Mr. Charles Heidsieck, who has given bis name to the brand, is the senior partner of the well-known firm; and we may be assured by reputation that only wines of pure quality and quisite flavor will be allowed to reioh his customers. It is said that more Heidsieck is s.nld in this coua than of any other Champagne, while the demand it is constantly increasing.

By Rev. J. H. Hansen.1 vol. iSmr.. with three portraits. »1 25.

“ On the vexed qnestion of the death of the Daanhin tha woik (Beanchesne's) in reality thi-ows no new liKht: our deci' et D must still be as heretofore, that, however probable it mty be that the unfortunate prince d led In the Temple, the fact U not proved.’’-[JfrfAodisf QuarUrrlu Bectew

Independent of the question ot the Identity ot Rev. Eleazer wnnami with Louis XVII., which this b-iok very fully dis­cusses; the work will be found one of great Interest, which is never permitted to fla«. The design of the author to the reader all the elements neoess opinion on the historical point which 1 may consider the book more tlaborat-!y hereafter : at present we have only time and space to say. that the evUenoo addaced appears clearly to establish the fast that Louis XVIL d'd not die, as Is usnally supposed, in the Templa In 17'5- Amass of direct and circumstantial testimony Is also colleo'.ed, on the point of Identity, which certainly forces the impartial and un- prrjudlci d mind toward the cono'.ualon that Mr. Williams la inderd the anfortunate Daopbln

Bnt the book must be oar„'uHy read ii or ler to form any Just Idea of the nature of the te3*imony, which is so invol/ed and varied, and united togethT by so many delicate links, that It Is qui'e Impossibly in a brief space, to give any thing Iikea fair ijnopsis of it.

Apart altogether from the Interest exdtvd by the main ques­tion (f Idenlity, the book will be foqnd full of important his­torical inO rmation, gathered from numerous sources, com­bined With DO mUo Skill, and mode attractive by the enthusL asm of the author. It furnishes, likewise, an ouUine of the bi. ography of Mr. Williams, which, we think, caunot tail to inter eslthe reader.-[/’ufnam’s JfontUi/.

TO BOOK BUYERS.rich and chtA rich and choice collection of

ELtPANT GIFT BOOKS FOR 1S3L May be found at the Establishment of

o . p . pur.\A M A- r o . ,16 Park place, (a few doors from Broilway.)

BSLECTIOSS FRIIM T:

PitFSENTS FOR TBB New Y kar.—The si.sterB of the great Huugarian, ilesdames R jtkaj-K tssuth ai Kussulh-Meszlenyi, offer at their store, 761 Broadway, the largest variety ever imported, of Brussels and Cbanlilly laces, of the finest quality and newest terns just imported trom Europe. There is pn a t gaze, guipuere en point, a ruigullo, guipuere euplu'. Valenciennes, and other choice aud valuable laces, with veils, handkerchiefs, collars, etc. etc. of the latest 8'jle , and exquisitely finished. The place ia indeed a de i6 t offashton, and it Is an advant-age to the purchaser that the smallest possible profits are made on the manufecturerB, prices.

The convention of clafsical teachers in Albanv adjourned on Wednesday, December 2S, to next Au­gust, after having passed vari.'us resolulirns to the following eflecl: Reommeudlng to academics pro­portionate advaccemeat in the standard of require* meals. A hrarty approval of free education. In favor of the effort to separate the offi:e of Secretary of sta te from Saperintcndenl of Common .Schools. F,>r leacbers’department in academies. For t'lo miinta- nance of the Normal School. Opp tsed to a sectarian division of school m-tneys; and favorable to in-

nations in atd

ABBOTSFORD EDITION OF WAt di My illustrated. 13 vols. 8vo. Full

JV NOVELS, solan, xra. (Enitlah bind-

13 vols. calf extra. »30 fcilfextra 6i4.8tro. half calf antique.

Philadelphia Edition of the saton Edition, in 27 toIa 12mo half c-

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BOHN’S STANDARD LIBRARY. 81 vols. 12mo, half caff extra antique (F.nalish bind.na). P. r vol. »t 75,

BOHN’S bCIENTIFlO LIBRARY 22 vols. half calf antique. Per vol. S2.

NL'ITaLL and MIJHAUX'3 SYLVA Numerous colored plaios. 6 vote ?vo, mor, extra. 655.

riCTOIlIAL III.STORV OF E.7GLAND. Numi'rom ilius- Irattoui, complete BnijlLh edition, in 8 vote. 8 V), half Russia.

WILKES’S I.XPLOkl.NG EXPEUiriJN. 5 vrU rjyal 4:o half Russia. t75.

WILKEd’.-! E.XPLORIKG EXPEDITION. In o vole. 8vo. halT

IBE'rCOTT’S HISTORICAL WORKS, 8 vol-. 8vo , fu'l calf antique 630.

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halfmor.edltioOe 19 vols-—Sialf ma

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stbicelakd 'S'l iv is o ytbb qdesss o r England EDgUsh editibn-half calF

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:qs of w a shingk EVERETT. PRESCOTT, In fine

THE HETOKIANS-GIBBON, HUME, ROLLIN, io. ic .~ in fine bindings. '

SHAKSPEARB-KNIGHT'S PIOTORIAL EOIXIO.X 6 vols-

MOORE’S WORKS. 10 vote-half calf.SOUTHEY’S LIFE AND WORKS OP OOWPBS, l i vote-

**iIIlff0N, COWPER. THOMSON, Byron. Goldsmith. Dry- den. Pope, Tenneyson, Lonefellow and other Standard Poeta in variona sizes and styles of bindinc.

A large aasortment of ILLUSTRATED WORKS, suitable for

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dec3l CHA8. S. FRANCIS i CO- 233 Broadway.

X ondon lydillons o f S tandard W orks, in F in e B indings.

The Aldine Poets. 98 v-ils. ISmo.foU catt Thiers’ French Revolution. 6 vote 8vo-. illus Mrs. Strickland’s Queens of Kngla

ed. full caif.id’s Roman Empire. 8 vote- 8 vo.. fall oi

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Byron’s Life and Works 1( Valpy’e Shaktpea' e. 16 vol

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vois. 12mo.. full colt Umo.. illostrsted. full oalt

0., full calf exMrs. Edgeworth’s WorkE 10 vote 12mo. full calf.

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Juveniles—A select and extensive stock of all the n«w and old faTcri'es, children’s toy books games, writing desks, Ac., mi’y be fourd at the Bible Hou.se Bookstore. Nos 8 and Id Bible

ler of Ponrth ave:iBue and Astor ptece- J. H. WAT60B, book!

CITY I.YTKI.HUE,\(’K.

A eefst pf CorKTtUFKiTEEs.—Dr. Edwird Bnw a ras arrested yesterday by Deputy Marshal D’An

les and tflicer Hubber, of Brooklya, od a charge manafaclttring counterfeit gold doHars. It appears that a woman named Surah S. Calbroi^b uua recently ar­rested in Boston, on suspicion o\ passing counterfeit gold dollars, and frim her it was ascertained that Brown was engaged In the manufacture of spurious-money at acertain le in the city of Bro<

ed by DJi Alms Hot;

bail by tbe United Slates marshal ia the suoi of

T be Lotteby Law— Sujtpreislon o f Ihe GiftUrprise*.—In our legal record will be found the ceedings of the Court ot Common I’leas relative to Uerbam’s lottery scheme. The complaint was enter-

idward C. West, one of tbe Governors of the louse, and Judge VVojdruff issued an order

for the arrest of Mr. I’orham, who was hel 1 to bail in the sum of |;o0,00i). It seems tdat, up to yesterday, Mr. rerhsm hud sold e ghty Iho-osand tickets, a d< liar each.

J. Wesley Jones, of the California gift exhibition, was held to bail in ^dO.OoO. It u said that measures have been taken to arrtst Jollie and Do iworth, who ate also engaged in the same kind of gift lotteryspeculations. __

F ive Points Gospel UgioN Mission.—The fifth a niversary of this mission was held last evening, the Oliver street Baptist church. There was a larj congregation present, and the children took part the exercises. Chancellor Ferris delivered an el quent address, and a collection was taken for tbe

T h e e ld t'avoYitu lilolttlay R esort,

S T R I N G El l 4 T O W N S E N D ’S UNDER BARNU’l'.t MUSEUM.

8. 4 T. re?pcrtful ly submit to tbetr numerous Fri.’uJa anJ Piitroof. their Annual no!l<l.-iy f’ata’OKueof VAluab.d f lustratsJ

standard and elegant gift books.BUITAllLE FOR

CHRISTM.i6 AND NKW YEAR’S PRESENI-J,which may be obtalced at their counter. No. 323 BroaitWAy; aud Blit ough enumeiatlDg onlyaportlon of their EXTilNSIVE S'aWaC.will be found to embrac; very many OHOtOE and ATrEiyriVE works, prepared with care, for tlielr conve-

FOR THEIR JUVENILE FRIEND)They have an abun-lant “ STORBHOD.8E " of AN-VDALa I ' GIFT BOOK?, J l’YENILE8.ALBUMS.0 8ME),TOY.B00KA | PORTFOLIOS. *c. Ac. Their assortment io this department rrmaini new, aa heretofore, without a rival Toeir seiec- ° ELEGANT STANDARD LTTERATrRE.

Kn,bracirg History, Biography, Novels. Ac., adapted for Pre­sentation Gifu for the Library or Centre Table, is unprace- det led in its elegant and snbstantlal blndlRg, beauty of typo­graphy and variety of subjects. Under this head thsr would direct attenUon to their now and beautiful edition of the

KOVELS OF COOPER,Complete in Thirty Three Volumes.

Ar a superb National Souvenir for the Araerloan’s Iloras Li - l rar.v. < I. gantly bound In all the newest s’ylea

N. B. No better resort can be found during the holilays than at their old favorite eetabllshmeut Their prices lisve always proved to be l-iwsr than contemporary houses, as well as 11 eir assortment of goods unrivalled. They w.ll still keep till- reputati'm. as the "nimble sixpence is better than the Blow iliilllnE.” They say to one and all, before miking your

call at tbe will-en iwk

T w o R f w J u v e i & i l e s FOR THE HOLIDAYS.

THE WlND-SriRIT AND THE HAIN-GODDESS; Trans­lated from the German, of SchlimtWr.. With ninety four en- graviiiea. l. mo. Price. 6-2M cents,

“ llie ergravir.go are amusing and spirited. The book must He."- (Adcerii^cr.I proveatevoril

’ Tbechlldri' Wind Spiri;: how they wii ' g.-ddffs; bow much they will be interested in the progress of

I’eterkln; how much tliey will be araus-il with the stupid.ty of Peter, and the subtle cunning cf his pratUingwife?

POFULAL LEGENDS OP BRITTANY. An English version ofSonvcs'lea "Foyer Brtton,"froro ihe German of Hearlch Bode. With Sixteen Engravings. Idmo. Price. 75 cei.te

’• A kind of literature which has always been popular, and this volume is one of the most attractive of i'A class.”—[R«y-

“Of great celei-rity in France, snd have been rendered into Pngu-gco; Europe."—[/!Has......tif.illy prlnUd with a prolusion of illustrations, and

which enlistB the attention at once.”—[Abr-

Pseksges will be delivered threughout the

iterprise at the Five Points. It has a library of

children who are instrudted by ten tedo

ed and twenty five books, and tha attendance at the Echool ia between fifty ai

address, appeal-

resents this indignity in States at

and demands tbe protection of the (

Mrs. Kbma E. Cob, of Buffalo, 'vill leotnre this (Friday) evening, at the Tabernacle, at 7 1-2 o’clock, ot the “ Rights of Man.” Mrs. Ooe is said to be ateloquent lecturer.________________

BIJSWES#^ IVOTICHS.J ames M. Millsb & Co. will sell TO-MOEROW.

f.’atnrday.) December 31, 1833. at 13 o’ftlock. at I'le Mu-chan'.»' lEschange. without retefTe, to the highest uilder, *be w i» bum modern Dwelliag House, known as No. 184 fli;itredt, near the First aveuufj’__

XjKDER-GAaMBKTS, GlOTEB AND HOSIItRr

LiDtxs, Gentlbmkn and CmiDsior.An extensive assortment of the above Goods, at the lowest

price* for which they can '.-e purchased in this country, will

U.wiaN Adams’sHosiery and Under Garment Manof^tory,

CHEAP BOOK EMPORIUM.;r the Americ-in Mmcuai.

ciiy, free of

I S o o k c f o r t h e S l o l i d a y s .WINTER IN .tPrrZDERGEN. A Bo ,k f >r Touth. By Rev.

C. Hddcbrapdt.THE FINLAND FAMILY; OR FAV0IB8 TASBV FOR

FACTS. By Mrs. Susan P. Cornwall- THE POOK OF POETRY, For children and youth, with aa

Inirodnrtion by T. Edwards, D. D.STt’RlFS OF ROME. ByF. W, Ricord-HEllOES OP PURITAN TIMES. By John Stoughton.DR JOSEPit ALDEN’S JUVENILE?.SOVEREIGNS OP THE BIBLB. By Mr«. B. R. s;

largely illustrated, and one of the most atUactive book Toath In tbe market.

A NEW MEMOIR OP HANNAH MORS. By Mrs. 0 H. Knight. Censidtred the best presenta ion of Mrs. Mores

e is to be found.

riUfx in a style M lemocrai. Published by

CROSBY.

mcYV E i s g l i s l i IS o o I ii§Just received from lion ioa.

TBK THR EE PRESIDENCIES OP IN D IA -A History oftbe Rise and Progreea of the British Indian Possessions Ac., Ac. By John Capper. F.R.A.8. Hlui'trateJ London Li-

1'0 PE’S LIFE AND W O R K S -Vol 2. NUional Illustrated

^UFE^ OF EDMUND BURKE. National lUustrated Li-

BLANCHE THE HUGUENOT. Illustrated Family Novelist

BARNARD’S HANDBOOK OF FOLIAGE AND PORE- GHound draw ing, ri.nstrated.

VICTOR HUGO’S RBINE-To which is added a Guide for

THE ADVe'nTURKS OF MR VERDANT GREEN-AnOx.ford Frost man. Py Culbbcrt Bede. B. .A. Paper.

FIT/.' LWYN-The First Lord Mayor. A Tale of the Dra pu ’s C'crrp.nry Fancy boards or cloth.

•IHE MUTINY OF THE BOU.NTY. Svo., paper. BREMER’S NEIGHBORS. 8vo„ paper.ItlTSON’S ROBIN HOOD. Svo. paper.Alto, several elegant sets of the STAUNTON CHESSMEN,

with Ihe Carton Pierre Box.The trade and oihers suppli

GUIDE 7 y Ne-wcomCHABACTEtL By Harvey Nesveomb. A work that ha» no

superdf r of tl.c kind.WORLD’S LACONICS: OR TfIF. BEST THOUGHTS

IB -BEST AUTHORS, Witlf, an Introduction by Wm. ►rfguo. D D.

to tbe aiB.Bprrguo. D D.

r- atfilition to tbe abov flWrtmeDtof Jittractive JU VKNILE WORKS m Miscel'a

AUFfiNOirC TO THE PROSE TR^NSt.ATIO^^ OP JESCSY- LL'S- BtiDiT the new readin*:s contained in Hermann’s Posthu BCQs edilkn of iEschylus. cnasiicii? Librar,

AttentionBOOK3.il

,ve' >’haracter. In extra bin IIoct

M.UdTrkTED

Ityl4a suit-

( l l B i N t r a t e d .BOUND RrLIGIOU'v

JCVEMLE BOOtl

1 eraturr, and w,jrk

M. W. DODD, Brick Obarch Chapel.

CICERO ON THE NATURE OP THE G(r- • - ths RrDuhlic.Ihe itfil»lilb. Clarsical Library.

Jufct received end for sale bj deci.8 teedFrA.?*i3t

Standing Cor tne

BANGS, BROTHER AGO.

lo g i 'c u a tlyMT8UELLANEOUS ANI

FOR PRESENTS.

Opposite MetrapoUtan HoteL

fiendsbip for Kossuth was, no doubt, tbe exciting cause of tbe insnltiog coarse of the police, and the

visit to St. Louis, oubt, thi

I dare to defend thair

tbe cenmeeness of my passport, ta oar consul as Lsip- 81C, 1 was takea to Leipaic in company witB a police

groundlessnesa of the impotationa against me, and declared to answer for tne in every respect, I was noiset at liberty, but in spite of all protests on mj part,was transported back to Dresden as a prisoner, oathe same day, where I was indebted to the nnnsuil

ol police there^ with^a few i^gnificanl eipreatiion;

Putnatn’a Macazlne.This periodical, for January, was promptly issued,

and we were about to write oar usual commendation of it, when we found the following notice in the ITaca Berald. It expresses much that we wished to say:

To THE Bixevolknt—Holiday P besbsts fob t Peon.—NotlheJunketing of aChrlitmas or New-YeAr dinner, but the lasting comfort b-slowed by covering the . coU feet, and the shivering body with warm and serviceable

HOSE AND UNDBR-OI DTHING ; oomfort that will teat not for tha hour only, but be renewed, day by day. the cold winter through, ever filling the heart of U,e poor friendlesa with joy and th4n’ifulne,s. SuebboUday presents weitre prepared to forniah at tbe very lowest pricei-

JAMES a RAY.

decS02tnp* Taylor A HOGG.

A m e r i c a n A r t L 'n i o n .

THE LARGE T AND J103T BEAUTIFUL COLLECTION e BorlJ is tow open at the

E S « o h s f o r t h e H o l i d a y S e a s o n .

A. D. F. RANDOLPH. 683 Broadway, upper corner ot Amity Street, invites attetition to hislarj e assortment of RSUGI0U3, eTANDAr.D.ancI JUVEVXLE BOOKS, Bultabie for Gifjj at tlie scproachicj: Holi'iay sea.‘«>D, comprbiax

THE NEU' ILLUSTRATED WOiK^*o..&o . Ac. ELEGANT EDITIOSS OF THE POE CSr in silt find library

bindiDj??.

No. 103 Bowery, near Grand alreet.

endid Rosewood Pianos, newP iaso-Foktss.—S plendiand eecond-hnnd. at the lowest

JOHN P, WAKE A 00., MannfictarerJ,OC39 no No. 58 Barclay st„ opposite College place.

Chiiatmai Present* at Retnil.—Odor and Work BoxS3Latdies’ Jewelry CasAet?. Pearl and Porte SlOQales andCard Cases of every description. Alia genUemin’s DreulagCases, at CHAPMAN’S Razor Strop Dbpot. 102 WUliam street.

— Stationery—yet ever going, te of Rich A LoPTasL are famiaar, ut to the general pnblio. They are---------".-•’-neniof this city, andle that they cannot

T irsha, F kidat Et k is g , Dec. 16.—The Tnrkish embasqr has received advices warranting the con- elusion th st the combined fleets hare entered

■ Tea to prevent further hostilities, x, Dec. H th .—Official advices state

Black Sea to prevent farther, _ n th .—Official advices state that the

Bnsstons attacked the Tnrkish. entreaobm sats at

members of

isunonuon ex ihq ane aens^ oi 'i^anuc i>aua~f New York.’ Then we have a political essay,

crammed fall of flgnref, under tbe caption of * National Inventory,’ on the beela of which foUew a brace of eleveily-writUn adventsre^ons articles, seconded by a love of a little.Foem, worthy of Anacreon—withont the Greek; then a couple of stories, (the scene of one of which is laid in and about Utica,} and then—n ‘ wilderness ot sweets' beyond. '

“ We are sincerely rejoiced e t the prosperity of this truly national monthly. Ia »ta anccesa we discover at the leart the germ of a better—higher—mental taste. I t [frorea that gjnnine li te r s ^ excellence can, onder proper nuudsgemenl, work i a way into dis- tiaction by the mere force of i a inherent worth; and in a community, toe, where literaiy freebootezy ia le- galiied, and clap-trap a nniversal resort. In the fact c f the scccess c f a pm ddieal having solely its own merita to rely upon, withont eminent names to baay it np, or Self-actiag nnffety to inflate it into cansnicaons proportions—trading upon its own capital, offeringfor inspection it* own ware*, ptyinjr for its itock o-at of Its own txeasn iy-in fact living a life o f strict Uter- “ T “ of theincoew ofanch a pe>uod ical^m encan seholat* have ample cause to re« joice. vre are promiecd that ite fnture shall exssad It* past m Mcellence. This i* a rather ambiUoia

Hm^tTo^ftSaP “The poeaLreferred to above we shall ascribe to Mr.

Bayard Taylor, and in the ontside of flii* sheet copy another poem, called the “ ConqneroFs Gfave,” towUch ire also give * urn*.

dJ;-“a ffirT hS |‘ aU ex«

Gesflemen’s Ktd

of Fngravings evtr made In the w American Art ITcion. Broadway.

The EDEi^vicira were selected and imported by W. SOI and will be eold at private sale, at the luwent wholesale Open day and evening.

H o l i d i a y « i f t AUDUBON’S BIRDS OF AMFSICA

4 vote, elegant folio, l.alf Ruaaia.Ttite Is 8 magnificent work and In remarkabiy fine order, it

in 21 rote (OUo,

® SCHlDLCRaFT’S great work on the INDIANS. ^MILTON’S WORKS, complete. 8 vr-te., 8vo, half bound®^STOBICAL COLLECnnjfS OF VARIOUS STATES.— HuidsomeTy bound tn half calf, idlt.

A valuable pregeni to libraries :aOMhii OF AWKRIOAN gTATESMlCN Dlnstrated.MEA J/MESON’d CBARACTERlcl'iCS Ob' WDMEN.-

UoyilSra. morocroHOME» OF AMERICAN AUTHORS. 4to plates.

^BSAUTIES OF THE COURT OF OH ARLES UO. Morocco,^ WEBBm g

AND STANDARD BOOKS, ia calf and m

complete aaiortmen'? and prayer books.

great vaiie'y cfrich mf.rocco and velvet binltugA American and English JUVE-tlLE B30K3. in va-j

vari.ty. ciLbracing the puhlicitiors of THE AMERICAN S S. UNION.AVEBIOA.N TRACT SOCISTY-liEBIOA.N TRJ

large selecUona from the

be above are sold at down 3 furrtiiibedt

ANI!0.v'’d . F. RANDOLPH

Worka 8 vote; Buake England. * vote, Ac..

POETRY .

Lrickiand’a Qneens of

Britiih Eaiteda Christmas with the Lyrics of the Heart, Shellej

’ABLE BOOl

Poets, Poetry ot the JWurksofL. E.L, Bi

Gloves, for 50 cents a pair, snd ■ Jouvio’s, may be bad at Hrronooox A

------------------ , lemen wm alsoBcarte Cravati

Splendid Silks ai 5s. a yard, the cheapest good*ever seen fn ttus markeL are dost opene<l *t Hrrcaoocr A Leau- BKATER^and any lady who wants an elegant dress for a vny Email sum. will do well to look after them eariy. for - thaw W.1I go eff at the rate of Eeveral hundred dresses* day. M .A L. have ateo a splendid stock of DeLaines at Is, and ihcTSTy beatafl wool FrenchDetainesalls. •

R etoickB i^eyi

HOLY HOURS WITH THE BBS! AUTHORS. EOSIANCE OF AKYESTDRK.Togetherwith a fine asxortmen! of American Javaniles.

For sale at low prices byCHARLES a N.yRTOS.

decIV Irvhig Bock Store. No. 71 Ciuunbers st.

Feathered Favorites. Flowers The Floral Offering. Gatherini rabies of onr Lord, a trnlj

1 Beauties. Exotic B ip’s Fablea Tbomson’s Lessons, Lays of JIacanlay. Sylvan

Mueings, Robinson Crusoe, Wordsworth’s Greece, Tamer’s Rivers of Prance, Lofting’s Field Book of the Revolution. Hero-

oly magnifleent book; Gar- Birds, A Summer at Badea Baden,

Lessons, Lays of JIacanlay. Sylvan

ines of fchakspeare, ’ Christianity. Selectic

Women of the Testament, Women of Ea ity.Selectiona from British Poets, Banyan’s Pilgrim’s

A fflLtivry C'lirisliua* a u d a MappyW e w Y e a r ,

at CKOWEN’S EOOK^RE, 53S BROADWAY.

BOOKS,STATIONERY, FANCY ARTICLES, GAMES. BIBLEa, PRAYERS. ANNUALS.

P0E33. HISTORY. FICTION. Ac.

moon—nwe voxue-n s ^ n ihe evening,

id avery Wednealay aod of Jaly next, GSSiJ one this stige. maldsga run

A laenry Chziftoiusiiid a happy New Year,I beg io inform you, w ^ soon be here :Ilmreaseleefltmt^ cholitegifts, made easy to an 'WhowIBcfonieihe&var of making a call:

.R«osddhtmsle8k.FHcboI*i,oreT6D.oId Snooks;a**aibew!IU>eln.v*

9 3 3 . BATCHELOR,’! ’Afiira » Bhotoesetectiottto thsM whoesflin lime.■ I|teTe»g06a*itaoidmrei«f JoreoBewaiiagwes,• Upon Irhirii the XittUeBoibhaTBTnyvtTOoK^l^GiTfcgpereBteanA&ieMs lUthey oosfMaifc lW ti! « a i« f lB ty o f * d to ig t t ,^ .

. Andtoytlends.Baiimis,*i>daB.llbitetosay.<iifli Fleasa doBn Asgst OBQWiao*; Broadway. « • ,

«ec« • -

The whole of the works tion of books, bonnd in tion and prcservalion. to New Yttr.

The advertiser does not pretend to arrest the attention of the public by any announcement cf “ immense” or “ unrival­led " EBSortment; but, by presenting the opportonSty of pnr- chaMng a good book where it ean be quietly examined, remov­ed from the din and crawd of oown-town, hopes to receive • share of the patronage of book-buyers.

Very many TalBshle books elneidating Amfriean htstsiy -have recently been added to the stock.

, FEASOIS HORSTALL, No. T77 Broadway.4ecl2t« hctreeatU ikaduaiitieett,

— f o

catalogass of various Pub-

All tbe above are sold at down town pricea Calaicgues famished on application.

d(-c22 ijanl 6S3 Broadway, upper o

F i n e S l liz < sr i-a .te c l B o o R s .

Ibe Vernon Gallery. The Wilkie Gallery, Beauties of Moore. Italy. Ac.. Ac.

BOOK ZfOTlCES.NEW YORK. DEOIMBEE 37TH. IBS*.

On Saturday’s tb e 3l«t tnstantswah as I’UBzuaaxn.

with nhutVatidlulL LittorcmttentaofKo.I. Tol.Lt, p. - Camochan on Restoration ot thf UiFar 1 ^ Bowditeh bn Taracenteiii 'ntoracls.Review of Boltend on Dieease'of th>

CBlCaoKS.Bilffibgrswbi

Soltend on Dieease'of the Longs from Jlsohani.

IbgTSwbicail HoUees.JExteided Bescis j of American and IhrelcB Jfedicise.Bbepital Records.

-.Salnut

TBE BEST STOCK OB Et,EGiiaHT£.brI l l u s t r a t e d a n d S t a n d a r d B a d l L i ,

AZU7EBD Torn. CBMeUAS SXD WMW T lK -PSaBUtTS. ^De A m W O N 4 00., MO Bro^idwiy,

Beir tounTitd the atiuition of t h ^ friends and boyers to their tmeq^edrtoclK of Books, In every department of Uteratoreand the Arts, all bonnd in the best and mon tsstefa! styles ofcalf, morocco, &c. Aznonk tbe collections vifl ba toond:

/. lLLr3TRATE£> WOBKO*THB WILKIfi GALLEET-THE VIBNON GALLEET-

parables of^ d r ^ e^ ^

POPE. 8 vol-v-HEMANP. 6 vote-BURNS, 8 vols,-S00TT. 12 volB>-WOODWORTH. 7 vote.—Ac., Aa deoSO

B eau tifu l H oliday Gift.[HE KITTT BROWN BSBIES ILLUSTB

By the author of ”8uhny ffida®LLUSTRATBD.

*^hilshed b:

IT done for the Little Kitties of

n Sunday Sohool Union, and for J. C. MEEKS, No. 147 Nassau st.

l l a u d ^ o I I l e l y I l l a s t r a . l e d a . u dBound b re a c h Book^« Suitable

for Gifts.Nouveaux Vryages en Zig Zag. Par Topfer.Jerncalem et la Terre Bainle.La Noblesse de France box Croisades.Voyage a mafenetre. Par Houasaye.JardiB des Plantes. 2 vols.Begin Voyage en Suisse.Chansons Popnlaires de la France. 3 voteBeranger, ChansoiMosenm d’Histoire Natarelle. Par Cap.Le Tlroir dn Dlable.LesAnlmaux. Par Grandrille. 2 vote.Bruyeres, 1* Phrenologie,Bufibn de la Jeunesse.The above is a selection from the stock of H. BAILLIES

290 EECaDWAY, (nearly opposite the Irving HouseJ wh( many others of a similar character may be found. declS

The Work, of the Sea^ou.The Illustrated Magazine of Art for 1853.

KOW OOMPLBT3, AND BOUND IN I On 3 VOLUMES.THE ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF ART FOR 1853.

This is a splendid work for the centre table or library, or as a gift book. An analysis of the work will show its literary and pictorial riches. There are 45 Engra-rings on separate plates

lags and the letter-press exceed anything in the market. The work may be had in two vote, plain edges M. or gilt edges 64 50; in 1 vcl., gilt edge. 64 25.

HISTORY OF HUNGARY AND THS MAGYARS, richly it- lastrated, complete in 1 vol., elegantly bound. 61 60. This is an unique work.

THE LADIES’ DRAWING ROOM AND WORK BOOK, in

lER MONTGOMERY.No. 17 Spruce street.

1 voL, richly bound. 6ALEXANDER MONl

M r s . M i r k l a n e t ’s M e w a n d B l e g a u tG ift Bonk.

iS 5 S a - £ S a - S a “ =

”*rhe” Dgravirgs are illustrative and admirably well done.”

j !®t“ saCRE^^ hr lvoL8vo.,andtemo.. wi,h eiegarn

i 'c ^ y iR .

'S 'U e M S o a ie J t u t c a i i l S & r 1 8 5 4 .

A PAPER FOR YOUR FAHILY.In consequence of the great and increasing demand for this

popular Family Newspaper, we have, heretofora been able to furnish (he back numbers to only a very limited extent. To avoid this dlsapprintmen’. in future, we shall, on tbe second of January. 1814, print such an increased edition as will euable us to supply new subscribers fiom that data. Besides the original produc.icns of ihe Eiiiore—the Foreign aad Domestic Gorrespundence cf a large list of oontributors-the spice of the El.ropean Magazines—the selections (f the ra-ost interest­ing puliiicatioDS of the day—the brief novels—the piquint sto­ries—the »arkling wit and amusing aneodole—the news and gossip of tlie Pariaiao papers—the pe. sonal sketchea of public characters—the stirring scenes of the worlJ we live in—the chrcnicleof the news tor ladies—the ftshions and fashiona'ile gossip—tbe facts and outlines of news—the pick of English in- formatlnn-the wit, humor and pathos of the times—the essays on life, literatnr A society and morals, an 1 the usual variety of CEri-ful ebtosiegs from the wilderness of Cnglish periodical literature. criiici.sm, p'e tT. elc.-several new and attractive features ot remaikabie interest will enrich and give value to the new series of the work.

Tkrms—For cue copy. 62; for three copies, 65, or for one copy for three years, 65—always iu advance

CLUBBING WITH THE MAGAZINES.The Homs Jcpbnal, and either tbe Knicherboaker Maoa-

cine, Sarper's Magazine, or Putnam's Monthly, (pub.li,hed in this city.) for one year, for................................. 64

The Home Journal, and either Oodey's Lady's Book Ot Graham's ilagacine, (pnblished in PhiladdphlaJ for one

Orders enclosing the amount, ad Iresaed to Moaais k Wiixis, 107 Fulton street, will receive prompt attention. The two pe­riodicals ordered will be sent to different addresses, if desired. F-y an arrangi ment with the Editors of the Home JonaNiL, tlie proprietors of the aboTe-namM works, will furnish sub-

•ibers with them as soon as they receive directions to do so11 is es abli

Subscribe wiilibout delay.MORRIS 4 WILLI3,

N tW A OLCAIgS OF BtfHVs LiBUAUIKH.THE Hl.'TuRY OP MORAL HENflMENTi. By A

fmitb.L. L. D 1vol. Standard Library.COMTE’S PHILOSOPHY OF THE SCIENCES. Being aa

Eiposit.on of the Principles of the Cours de Pnilosophie Posi- t.\e rf August Comte. 1vol. Scientific Library.

! CF.D£i:lCU8 VITALIS’S ECCLEflASTICAL HISIORY 0? j ENGLAND AND NORMANDY. First voL Antiquarian U-

A E c a i i l i f t i l C i i r i ^ ’ i n a s J u v e a i i l e .

THE PRETTY PLATE. A Christmas Juvenile. By John Vincent. Peauilfully illtffii rated by Darley. lOino., cloth. 50 cents: ex- gilt, gilt edges. 7.5 cents.

COlIJF.R'S bHAKSPEARS.

s & p i i l f p p s

* DREAM. AND. Ao. By Caroline Cbesebro’. 12mo„ doth.* dro‘20**' ** '*■ J. S. REDFIELD, 110 A 112 Nassau sL

M e w B c o k iI s o m ^ i

S t u a m c r f r o m

variety of richly Uitutrated Medical andf o a y b e h a d c n a n ^ a t^ ^ _ ^ ^ _ ^ ^ ^ _

<5ecS2 ‘251 Pearl street

X b e C b o l c e M a .a < i f f l o s il y f l l l w e t r a t e d G s f t S o o k s

o f J i i e § e a « o j i .

O T iH ta o K A G i;.A d t o i r e M a v O T ;

ForeigB Dry Goods,----------- TIBTRY OAfiPma,;*n4

. t 7

F A N C Y A R T IC L E D. .a w * fo,

It or M ai^ictuxiis-lb’an, ot whfch the

is isspeetfrillj requested.isw esre ln thb ci

Importastto .Bi^dta-biiti

\mOLSSALI BDYXR3

lariicakr deefdtHy nnfiu&Ianible-^is Important to My. thal our a t tfU

■'Ag. and

REBIOTMi.HugheSi J9upuy 9 Crthanges

Importers and Wholesale Dealers

F R E N C H FAW CY G O O D S,

Bennved frem 73 Wffliam street to thete New Warehouse,87 HAIDEK LAKE, up stairs,

w mtRje they ART! PKEPARED TO OFFER TO THB

A COMPLETE AND WELL S^ECIID ASSOBIHXNT OF

SDSPEN

OF IHS» OWK lUiniTACnjR..WATCH GUARDS. FOB AND VEST CHAINS, YIOLH

STBIllVGS, IMITAHOS JBWELBY. &Ce« 4a, 4Ce

P a r i s F a n c y Ceoods,ADAFTED TO TBE SPBIXQ TBADE,

TO WHICH THEY WOCIDRESPECTFULLY CALL THE ATTENTION OP BUYERS.

OI^E-taiLLING DE LAINE,R i g h t r r o m e l u c t i o n .

GSEAT BAEGAIKS.The rheapeet Goods ever seen in this Sfarket.

H l T C j a C O d l i . &Wo. 347 Broadw ay,

from auction ths cheapest lot ot goodsCORNER OF LEONARD ined from auction tho che

T H E B 0 1 . I D A T ^ S .

CHARLES SCRIBNER. No. 145 Nasjsau stre<

iRS,—The American Aboriginal Portfo.Uo,

JUVENILES. JUVENILES. JUVENILEi-ThS Selection is so mtecellaneous, comprising Boolis for all ages from the AI" phabet and First Book, that no attempt is made to enumerate hem. In adding to the stock the best have been in view. FRENCH BOOKS—Lstlre de SAvignO. avec ses SIdmnirs

parle Baron Walckenaer, 11 vote : Victor Hugo, De Matetre, Dela-vigne, Ecuvestre, Fenelon. Moliere. Racine, Lamartine,

ondits et Eestanration, Lesage, Manzonl, B8iattoe.De- ionuine. Bossauet Bern I Reformation. 5 vote ;

MnsscLBarante.DeTigny,8atote-Beuve, Ciegny, Villenuto, GntecLThierry. Oapefigue,Gasperin. Charles Nodier, Girar-

n, Mignet Ac.. Aa, with a Urge assortment ks impossible to reeapltniate in the limits i

ks named above form a unique colleo- th« first sty le of binding, in fine condi-

jrceervalion. Daily additions will be received prior

Cfcoicc C«l!ecli»!a o f ISooxAS.EVANS A BEITTAN.

6‘7 Broadway, next to the corner of Ponrth street Would invite tl e attention of those who appreciate the BEST

EDITIONS OF standard WORKS, to thesplendid cofiectionthey bave jost received. Tneir stock is. tfeey believe, equal toany in the dty. It comprises not only all th bsst editions ofthe moFt favorite anthers that are to be fouid io the city, batmany works that cannot be found in any oth^r store; a*lboond in the roost Eumptucrtis styles. The books are worthy of tbe brnding and the blndini; worth of the book3.

As it is impossible to particularise them, an efctmtoation is

Booksellers and feiporteri,dec’ 9 eod np tial 697 Broadway, next to Ponrth street.

O ffice ISO. 16 W a ll Street.

W EtlaS, FAKGO Jk CO.’SSFMI-JIONTHLY

California, Oregon and the Sandwich Islands

8 . J a a i l S d x p r e s s ,VIA PANAMA AND NICARAGUA EOUTEB,On THCB6D.4V, Janunry 5th, I>»54j

^ OUR NEXT REGULAR EXPRESS wiB be ifopatched in charge of Special Messengers, who go through to destiaa- Uon, by the V. S. SUa steamer

I L e n v o i s ,VIA PANAMA, at 2 o’clock, r w.

And by the steamer2VORTB33S.1V ZstGOT,

dock T.v.oa the '*^o'cl^gefiy our line forcustom-honse fere or consular oeN

dSO fJan4 ’WELLS. FARGO & CO-, 16 WaU sL

K I O O R R ’SP a t f i n t G a s R e g u l a t o r ' ,

TH IS TA LUfl^LB MACHINE

Saves per Cent, of the Cost of Gas,

A im r m m v r a a B E n r m t u g h t . C all a t No. 262 S r o a d ’way*

Courte of Europe. ____

W A T C H E S,OF ALL, THE CELEBaATED MAKEUS OP

ESGLAUD, PEANCE. GERMANY AND SWITZERLAND.F . a j r c i : ' G o o o s

OF EVERY VAEIErY. A LARGE ASSORTMENT.

B R O K Z E S ,A WRY BEAUTIFUL AND RICH COLLECTION, among which are borne very tastefuily armoged for gas.

C L O C K S *

VERY CHOICE PIECES OPM . - a K B I x E I S T A T U A K - F ,

OIL P A IN T IN G S.

B A L L , B L A C K S c C ® . ,SIGN OF THE GOLD EAGLE,

247 Broadway,decIT tjal SOUTH CORNER MURRAY STREET.

RICH HOLIDAY GIFTS !J F i n e G o l d a n d S i l v e r

W A T C H E S,Siamoads and other Jewelry;

S T E I S I . 1 K G f e B L i V E R - W A K E , O f E . a t e s £ S » a t t e r n s .

ASSORTMENT OF GOODS IN HI3 LINE, WHICH.HB OF PEES FOE SALE AT MUCH LESS THAN USDADJ^EICES affording persons desirous of making presentations of choice Holiday Gifts, an unequalled stock to select from. Among the mary articles cf bijouterie will be found the foUowing. which he offers wholesale and retail:

Jules Jargensen Waicbea,Warranted perfect time-keepers, from.......... 6150 to 6250

Cooper Watches,Duplex and Leverairom........................... 6135 to 8275

lndependat.t SecondAnd quarter-second Watchea, for timing jaSO

t bronumeters.Splendid Pocket Ctoroncmetera perfect time­

keepers.............................................. 6125 to 6250Eishf-Cay Watchee.

W lich to eight days with once wiading.... 6140 to 6185 Enamel Watches,

For tedfes. some to hunttog cases................ 633 to 6100tJismoad We tehee.

For ladies, some in magic cases................... 655 to 6300

•Which change into three different watches.. 6100 to 6175

And turn the hands without a key............... 685 to 1 40All kinds of W aiohesni very low Prices.

four holes jeweled................QttSiiiyudScB:::;::;::::::::::::::: i ?

riiver ratent nevers, as low as............ ........................ 16’EkEl’i i i ia s ; PiKd................ * *

uiSffifVS’isriBK’r s ’Bf"'* “ •'*"g S p S r E : : | | | | i

S|gpi-.-;;:EEE.fo.-' !i k ’IH

^ • v .................

■.........s I I

g i s l i i l ! i

George C. Alien, lisporie?, Wholesale & Retail,

1 1 W a l l S t i - e e t ,deelStial np Second Floor. nearBroa-Iway.

U r n s , T e a f ie f e , C a s t o r s , 9 c .

Said Mrs. John Smith to her “ desr.*“ If you’ll buy inea Bariing silp Urn,

I -wUl poor out your coffee so clear!And your steak shaU be dons to a turn.*

TOOL ejH B S^ FOB »OF% .

-390 Brdrtiteyv . . .

rnwams

B e l id a g _ G o o 4 $ t~ iJ. A. 0. SGKBUH,

6 0 1lid invite the attention of thHr eastomm and tha sobBs aaHy.toanunnsnaBy

Large and Varied AssortmentUseful anil Ojruamenfal

A R T X C M a E S ,

In addition to the many

Usefnl and Beantifil Noveltiesthat have b^n famished by their regular agenti abrogd.

! FOR THIS 8E&SO.T, they have oBt^ed from other partiei fuito a Tariety of

ABTUXB9

I the nature of Ijthe above, It)ove, Itembnoeserety-

H O LID A Y GOODS.T O J > E a d J L J E H 3 I J fT

W A T C H E S , J E W E L R Y ,

F A N C Y G O O DS.

y, J. MAGnItT & GUEBIN,15 Maiden lane,

(UP STAIRS.)OFFER FOB SALE A RICH ASSORTMENT OP

C i£ ! ! 9 £ V A € K > 0 5 > S ,RECEIVED PER LAST ARRIVALS, AND

COSSISTIKQ OP

RiCH ENAMELLED WATCHES,DO. DO. SET WITH DIAMONDS.DO. DO. WITH CHATELAINEa OF

“ALL STYLE&

B R A C E L E T SOF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, WiTH OR WITHOUT

WATCHES.GOLD PORTEMOSNAIES AND CARD CASES

ENAMELLED.DO. DO. SET WITH DIAMONDS.DO. DO. WITH WATCHES.

VEST, FOB AND GUARD CHAINS, of the latest pattema, and a general assortment of

GOLD WATCHES, in open face, hunting and magic cases, the whc)“ of which is i 8 carat gold, and of our BEST GENE­VA MANUPACTURB. deel9 2w np

! unacquainted wonld isy. that fn addil thing deeirable in

SilveT«Plated W a re ,.C B T L E R X ,

HOirSEKEEPING HARDWARE,J A P A j r J T E R Y , "

German Silver, Albata and Bri­tannia Ware. •

C o o i p o s i l i o u . E n a m e l l e d d c I r o n B o U o w W a r e ,

B r o n z e d , C o p p e r a n d B r a a ^ G o o d s ,

Tin, WiUow, and Wopd^ares,B A T H IR G A F F L A T U S ,

BRUSHES, MATS, BASKETS, M ^ ^ A F B S , RE­FRIGERATORS,

RUSTIC FURNITURl^BRONZED AND PAINTED IRON FURNIT^]

dec247tnp ACm 4p.. *0.

r i t B 8 M J T T 8

CHRISTMAS NEW YEAR! J. TAYLOR,

3 6 5 . 3 6 ? a n n 5 5 5 B R . O A l » W A T ; IMPORTED FOE THE PRESENT SEASON AN IN-

Every article offered for sale is entirely new and of olegauit , and for variety has neverbefore been equalled, aa also now ready a handsome show of ORNaUENTCD , POUND. ALMOND and CITRON CAKES. PXR*.

DS. BASKETS. ORNAMBNT8, &c.V PICKLED OYSTERS, BONED TURKEYS, OHKIKIK

SALADS. ORNAMENTED HAMS and TONGUES se

tirely new and elegant assortmeBOXES and smat.t. artt-----MAS TREES.

LDS.OENJ SUES sent to any decaa tisninw

r E S T J f V ' a d t C M e £ T ,

leaky” & CO.,e l s t o r B o u s e , B r o a d t e a y f f

Leaders and Imrodvcets of Fashlen.ON TUESDAY, the 20th Instant, will ba issued tba

JANUARY STYLE Of Gentlen

M O L I B e l T G O O B S ! !

BALL, BLACK & CO., 2 4 7 BRO AD W AY,

HAVING ADDED LARGELY TO THEIR ALREA­DY EXTENSIVE STOCK, BY RECENT ARRIVALS, are now prepared to offer to tho public ONE OP THE MOST EXTENSIVE AND BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENTS OF RICH GOODS, suitable for the approaching Holidays, ever before offered in this market,

—OOKPEtSISG— *

GOLD AND SILVER WARE, P L A T E D W ARE,

DIAMONDS, PEARLS, RUBIES, And every variety of Eicli Je-welry

those just retion with on Hoildaya

HOLIDAY PRESENTS.S A M . W . ^ W E M C T ,

5 Wall Street,PMB.VT OP

E V E R T D E S O R I P T I O i r ,Suitable for Holiday Presents.

-ALSO, ON HAND- A Large Assortment ot

S I J L T ' J S R S P O O J T S ,

CHINA AND GLA^-WABE For Cliristmas and j(|aw Yaaris.

• T a . 4 4 7 M v * o u ^ tv a y t ^KKAS aiEAND St gJEEtV

HAS NOW ON HAND a larjze Tarlet? of Artide* nKiIite fior the cominK season—aa

gs g“o

l l K i - ’?grEfETS.! BEQansaDCMfcAlso, some of these ne-w and beautiful

HANGING FLOWER POTS.Particular attention is •olicited to the verycosipteta atoci:

'ZASAfromt

TERRA AND LAVA WAI unnerattof

l>avi!4 C ollam ore,Broadway, near Grand street.

N. B .-BLUB CANTON CHINA PLATES. Ac, Ac. dec9 tialnp

675 B road w ay .L , A F A B . G I 1 B O T E L , .

Messrs. Eertfi, Brother & LowitiHE PLEASURE TO ANNOUNCH at they have opened their

J ABOTO

but devoted excl

lALH ESTABLISHMENT, to 311 BroodtvBr,

ilusively to tbq DETAIL Tl

2, Cases,Papier M ache gooda, Etationery, Ao,Ac.

uec6 fjan! np

T - C B E O i s B ~ B e l L . J l I S O A R , F O B C B A P P E B MAHB9,

Tlie Face, B afh Use & C liildren.

MEW PATES.Terrlns de foiea gras, from Stratbourg; an Invoice oftMil

delidouB food, in terrines and porcelain vaies, TaTiounaua- bera. landing ex steamship Asia.

ENGLISH CHEE3R Etiltcn an - Cheddar, in canisters and eases, landlnc oc

American O ogress. For sale by decl7np JOHN DUNCAN A SONS. 407Broadwy.

1 me IsiqMciirs, etc,Duto’ r n race a. red and white.

“ Anisette.Mara»cblno de Zara.Kirsciienwasser de NeurhateL Cherry Cordial. Cherry Bitters.Brandy CTeraies^. Batavia Arrack.y S j 5tl Biandyand Jamgioa Spirite,

And a general assortment o fX h o U e B T i n e in e s , S e g a r s , c tC sf

FOB fiiL-E BY A X D aSW G. Hlt%IXSES^

Ko. 55 W arren Btwut, •14 Itcpp_____Sole Agent for T-«my7rorth*3 Obio Wlns«-

C M A m . E S l i £ ! X J D S i £ C &C liA lS S F A eJ X E .

leattealtaiiOfdeA- —eritsofthis snyenor nt lately introduced, nndw its imlnattojt public.t »rj alretidy d and apyraved wig..

Of Every* . ” f t o * Feasmceet. K

W i n e s , B r a n d i e s , T e a t s , S e £ a j » , AsOa