The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, February 01, 1858, Image 1

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1ttp43*t,,A10,(811i4)47 - 6:. 4riedirsp;) - ;
BY 40BEN. Kr. , tOBBBY. • •
it lt d io 417
i 0 AO4 SP— ,
poi#fo ' the. 'euelete•
Moiled to Butsioillhl i mS the it Six Dow.sis
PLe Jtaltogi Pool *Pt IS TVs Zion Dorn* 'THUM
DOLLARS POE a:100 ik,..lnTortably in Miriam for the
time ordarad;- ,, ' : - "• ' • • •
r z parse,
' MIRO AtibiodbOix out of thl Ony AA - Timms Doh,
lass r/0 hisostila tultarie. .„ • " • , •
11V-.E,EIII:„Y r16E1116.„ •
ThO: - ,Wints:6 - Ortsk: - witUbs nut to atiloorlbers
roads o,ozlVu . ? ll X o rin .... it 00
'Ttlrge 0000* • '”
....... ,6 00‘
VivelloOtes, 'tt • ..... 800
Te0:00161, 12 00
Twootr. copies, (c4toon6 adAteo)... 20 00
Voreeti 40014., or Om, a (to,o44riso of 'soh
le* eithe-01ekh I'2o
o WWI of Tw e nty-one or oriiri we la Send •ah,
titrhohpi to the gotter•up of tbs ChM.
irx.rodukmon,m , i n uwea to aot a *goats 10r•
TAB yaITLY
2%, :tate.
NVAgratiON IB, IiaMI.T.ABLE
V 1 ,, = y r , as
irt. Tlll6 11r.D
- GENTAMIIPAOT
**WA detail 11114 1:11 I Id&
'4k
Viatif 1 411101tr e lt i lg e t:BILT.T u r i .
• 0601#4.6 Ira . " incited call - and tozazalne. '
0640- , • ' Aso olowsriur street
';TAIRRA.rotWe PLATFORM SOALES.
FAIRBANKS & ZWING,
MASONIC' _FULL, tls' anssrxur arta sr,
1a26•3m 'MUMMA: ' •
tUatites, letatirn, &c.
/ IDAILEY & 00., ORESTADT STREET,
Msnufsetarers , -
1311.1T101 Bunn% BILTIII WAS",
Vaer their tospsottose oo !Maui , •I
u =" 1411 1 1,41 "9 6 rt,
C l / 4 41140144 / Aofft I ,4 2l o, B feeikeiVelki -
WM*oo;ofja ituf_eitfikaitfid
D/4010/013,, - -
Ifantlym, woo** . zwlasai, Mery
lithe, tot Web* worm to tho , Inameo
Dwane of Mill IMAM* b• adds fade, of
airys for those rrishjsg waft made to ardor-
RICH GOLD JEWELRY.
A bosaThrl sofortruizzi efall tii 'NW style/ of Tine
dywery, mole as klosaio, Stone and' insoll Como,'
, Paul, Coral; carlntoolOiorysfil4k
Lan,.
easintuum OAS ma; BASH" worm,
Aino, Brum saCktsibt, 141,30101, of 'insist - 'Vitt,
oral of sapirfor
-E. At]) LL" , , , kl)
er • - ABS OTISSTIAIT "
Have received, per linemen. new eirlos
Jewell'', Chatelaine; Teat
Splendid Wane, flair Pine.
- ihnit stands, pew liaaketc.y
Jet Goode end Slower
Cerel, Lena and Tdcriale Set*. -
Sala Agents 4n Plilladelpida tor tbe tale ofOharles
trodraram , PLONDON T..1 . M.11-1411/1 4 1111, • .., dela
QLLVER WARE.—= , '
WILLIAM Wii;BoN 4 gOir., •
.P.IANUFACTUEERS -OP *MYRA WARN,
.ofarini , lBllE# • ,
- e.
,00111111L7Z/Z/i'AND Mier aflggri.
- A law esoortment of SlVirSrf, W4lll, of every-de
. 6tiplon, connate, at banil, or tads to'ordelt tolostar
any pattern
Importers of Shelnek! and iihroinghasa tmiurrtid
asSO-d&wly
71' B. 'ARDEN BRO. . •
a. • IllillfrfiPAClM4lllll AYD lIIIPORTM or. '
PILVSIL-PLATED WARE,
Cbootatit Otrest, *bone Third, op otars,)
• _Phthullelpkts.
' , .l)9olrtantly on hand and for ale to ike,Tradi ,
• :VISA BATS, 00151.10N10N SUWON BETS, yam
• PITOMRB, GOBLBTEI 06P8, MAITILBB,_ KU.
- 118113, CASTORS,--411/48, SPOONS, 10810,
LAD ita.ote.
eatifoir And Plating on *A ,
VIAN of ip*aa.
frloneg.
A:I4,ERIOA.N _GOLD''
:tißw -yong;
- BALTruoas, `'" -
• "" EX.OII4NOES,---
Boaglid'asad sold by
B. W. T/NOLBY k 00. t
87 Bon% THIRD knot
1167-atleb2
A lif.pllo,AN GOLD,• ' ••,
NNW YOI%K-8X68.1.11G8
walla -,
111(111EBT Ott
NT BATES,
-1.--, 2 0110t10E 00. L
. G' BAOKBRS.____ L *,
ilfagati , • sorra plasm' or
elatittnqn.
111010itit'BOOKS AND STANIONEItY.
AuP 'DliVilrbt,; 3300 AN, Blank Book Manufacturer,
atetipier aipalgiater, 100 , WAXN UT Btraet, More
wed "Sig Aimed to .furnieh,:4lther Avid the ibiiired
or ,p4.,, r 0k0k. of ..ererY. daistiptioal entrable
for 11Mtlo4 MOM, Marlon* and othere, oftka
beet goad! of Afigliati or Mori= noir; end bound
subm styled, in the most eubetantbd manner.
' Ordarm for 3013 Via-WM* of emery description.
&graying bud. Llthogrephineemacritod with neatness
and despatch .
I fgeneraliesurgmentrdlinglish, 'midland Arnold
earißtationeq. , ..-
Oproeraing Mr. Mogan , a oontributlon to the lreuldin
fuitittite;the Committee any—‘ l This display of blank
boobs fok banking and meraintile use is_the best la the
trhibitlon.iLlbe selection of the material is good, the
ircilmenehip - zoost !argonaut, and their dulah and ap
onerenoe neat and app - DOW
~ t 7o Copartnerships.
lIELEROFARTRE R SFLIP ERR TOFORE
&lilting between :the subscribers, under the Arai
el IIdIiDkLUIS...IaIiZDITII„ !trials day dissolved Ill'
routes' consult.-
SAMUEL J, BLNDALT, i OW, roakhorhed to ileitis
the Inuttionuttit /.01 South IRANI' almost.
- W. ISEWAIID'ItA.NDAIi,
B. A...IIEttEDITH,
J,titANDA,LL,
P . AI LOsirtttii-Titn. it6;111613.,
S. A. ItLEAZDITH will continue the Coal business on
his own sesoust, at 161. South • 11,101iT, above Wataut
street. •• , • , ' ja2T-dim
the sp - eoal pirtßarnhip, between BURY — T.
STANDBRIDGE And HENRY ELDER, is resewed,
tad cootlinied fox three zeal* from January let, 1808.
HENRY TATANDBEIDIaIrE,
General Plainer.
• HENRY L. ELDER,
- - Special Partner.
roweirethi, Anti* , 1, 1868:
jel-law6w
rIPHE UNDERSIGNED HAVE, IN PUB
suiltoz of Act or Assembly,: located a, limited
copartnership under the name' of LEBI•RY M. MOR
ROW, in'-the Coal butluise,da the city of PhibiZeia,
abstain MUM id. MORROW-is tira gement sr,
111.1 GM MORROW Wag special psztuer, and ea Cull.
tributesi 0'011;61ot fifteen hundred Mims to capital
to the common stock ; said 'partnership to continue tire
yeah from the Bth dal:Mazy, 1858.-
LIDIT4I4 -O. MORROW
-31-14-lawBlo _
' AVON MORROW.
Cr
11 1 NE S IP NO - CE.—The un
-/ dendgned have entered into a copartnership, under
the name of ALTENCS h COZENS, for the *mutation
of i Yoreiga Del Goode Commileolt Business, at lie.
24.1 01128THII1 street.
GECIAGS W. Ata".nitre,
WIS. B. N. 00ZDN8.
1858. - - - -
N. B hgenta for tho moot celebrated make of
Linen G oak' in the trettedffitetee, we would pectieulerly
twit* the attention of the trade. 1a284t0,
IaiDWARTI B. LADD will have charge of
one Wetness Jo this city from this date, at No. 820
ONNITNUT Street. RUNT; WEBOTEB,'&• CO.,
- - ifona4otutor9 of Sowing llootetoos.
=way 1,108. • ja.4.,
publications:
IDHYBICIANES' -POCKET -, .DAY-BOOK
SON 1868.--Jest published - and for" este by
- • • 0. rtuom & cm„
No; NJ South MTN Street, alms Chestnut,
.The Day-Book contains an Alumnae Table' of com
parative liedicinal Doses, Pelee", adthelr Antidotes,
British and Yrenoh nal Measures, Atomic
Weights and Combining Proportiont, Artistes or - Diet,
Compelitite Thermopiettia Beau, fats—diteet• and
kftelleinsl, Tabled of Doses of all he. prinelpal pre
parattens of the Vhartuacople, Visiting List and Index,
Blanks ' for' Monstery 'Engagements, Sauk- Account,
Nunes' Addrepies ,Acootuite &eked for, Vac.-
einationand Obstetric Nnrigeaiente,',Suglishi Prenqh, -
and American Medical Perim:Beale, Ao„ eke; - • -
Being prepared with the co•operstion' ward
eminent, members of the Profession, the Publisher/
trust that this little Manual. will fill. *want hitherto
utteupplfed, and with a vidir,icr its future tuiproyereent,
will be happy to helot*e day suggestions respecting
smendatiene t additions, ke.
Tha above are weltered for 26 end 5•16 patients, and
bound in 'various styles. - Jet
iIIEATRICE OZNOL--,
•.
A- 4, •
lAltlBB L• *ATttli
17114, 0,3121,
ON JANITKRY 2804
The beautiful' -
- ttitzAvaisiz , oxnex;-'
MiPING, ON TN EVE 01 MN INUOUTION.)
11188 ELABEIST ROWER.
AISIMON, TWNNTY-iIVB OENTIL
AMOS'S °Amass,
- 816 011138TNttT EITERBT,
PHILAMELPIIIA,
f ja9A '
5,000 WAS, WIIALL' OIL,
1,000 gall. 13Iephant Olt, •
bbla. No.l Lard 011, far eeleby
OROASDALR,I , BISOB, & 00.,
Nn. 104 N. Dalawara /MOWS
VERY summit N 0.40 TWO-THREAD
r Immo TWIIPk fist rezeirlid ind forst& by
*Me 3 i o ' 43 N•444SliVia2l27,ll4ittnit.
QIVEAGE on SECOND' and . PE IR D
1140118 bba lb bad 4119140 t% Water stmt.
/mat to "[AMIN' & MACIALIBTXR, bon
Cr Da I AND AMERICAN TARRED
1- 110 VOilDge ntiiinfaator•
illAybr Oaf br - 14114V1L1lir7Imm 4 Op.,
WO -11.*:111111 - sireted!irki CC Wloraves
_ .
9tilf.MY: BiabilYTA-UNITED VINE-
Vrapriitighe 6d vintage, in haivatlquarterof
sad fen: 00 . 1117: . . • . MEKNOi ,
- - 7_, ' 140 South nom
Ik":Firrati3L 4 :4IIATAEABLE IRON
1 1 :414 . 1. 1 • 111 ' s446 „- ~Viltritliatet , T ,Qr
i•so.gthw 4totor - irmntr,stret.:
rfr: - ohNifitte,'T .1 77 7
„O. ,F ' • ' = mans 61,
WOMB. , „Bli FISB.
1411610;0 1 tgs2ll.ol - 411iLhd 1 61
o 0 a. !atB,llnk
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VOL. 1.-NO. 155.
Noticed.
WRELIANCE MUTUAL INSIT
NW:4 COMPANY OP PHILLDDLPIIIA, office
No. 308 WALNIIT.-street.
J 1110167 10,1886.
The following 'statement of the affairs of this Com.
peep, on the 21st of Deoember, 1867, is published' fn
pursuance of the tharter, viz:,
To Capital Steak $170,900 00
'Certificates of profit, convert.
' Ode Into stook 1,020 00
WA:2O 00
To'Couthigent Account for Premiums.
- :On Piro Risks outstanding
Deo. 81, 1860 65,00 22
T o Vire Mara ref:mired, net, in
1E37 63,546 15
108,824 ST
Tn /Meant Account, _net, re
ceived in UGT 14,719 11
To Poll ales, Tr/meters, and
other profits 1,e12 65
- 16,891 77 .
3302,642 It
, 5l and loss, December 31,
5,6* 77
ilt for losses In 1861, on
- 2 receivable 2,618 82
sby 81re paid in 1857.. 31,075 13
*mules, Ineludingsgencies
taxes 21,309 80
itexchttting with the Company.. • ........ • 42 4 8412 82
1 1 1 1 -
*blab Is landed as follows, wls :
In Pint Mortgages on City Property $120,20 00
In Peposylriatle, Ball:owl Ca.'s Opel' Cent.
Wean* Lose, 80,000, coat 20,600 00
itattlrytheny Uotintie par r teat. Pexutsyl.
.leshtj[teattied.Leitt,: .
4AllekitelfthehiltitUfraibto. i e Medi'
Attliteek.
_See* for -*Owlet d the Ile. -
Ratite Wind reauisseie 00 /0,1 1 50 00
In.Ornintylltelardrecee 00,1 atoek...'.. 1,000 00
InSarlp in amide, Inantance Corapantia.., 426 00
Intifia Beeeloable, baudneu paper 64,410 07
In Book Amounts, accrued interact, 2,014 04
In Coati en hand 10,602 61
ornosas Or VW 00/03 1 11. '
CUM MULCT, President.
. • MAMMAS.
Clam Tinley, . - George M. Stroud,
Wm. B. T hompson, Joht B. Worrell,
Marzscel Clapham, Benj. W. Tingley,
George W. Carpenter, Z. Lothrop,
Cobol Stee n .--- U. L. Damon,
Charles B. Wood; • • • - Robert Toland,
Harebell Hill, - • Cornelius Stevenson,
lseob T. Crusting, , Charles Leland, s.
Williarahlnaser, Wm. U.Berople,Plttab's
laddansrflOtif B. M. HINCIItdANi deeratary.
IThITIOE OF , THE NEPTIJNE INSU;
NJ , NANO& COMPANY, 414 WALNUT street.
P.IIILAVII.PRIA, lan. 28,1858.
• STATSSI.I3NT of the bwiness and condition of the
Neptune Inaosatece Company Deo. 31, 1857, in num
&nos of section 15 of the General Insurance Law, ap
proved Apri12,1555
AIITIII3/IIZND CAPITAL, 8600,000.
Subscribed and paid-up capital 1100,000 00
Premiums on Policies 'media 1857 35,001 SS
'Merest received In 1167 , 3,347 II
• • LOMAS, EXPENSES, &o.
Lcuiess i Ate-Insuranoelteturn Pre
mium and Commissions paid.. 59,038 64.
Sslariesi ' fient, Printing, Adverti
sing, Otationery, and Oflice
Ez
penees 3,297 39
Mi=l
Ronde and mortgages ...... .4 ....$82,600 00
Btocks.and Donde 23,000 00
Dille Receivable 28,219 90,
Oath on band, due from agents,
and Outstanding Promirdne..,. 10,223 28
$128,973 28
LIABILITYRS.
8695,874 47
Amount at, r10k...
Vnpaktlollllo. (not duel
Sundry ......
$3,609 00
2811'07
$3.887 67
RICHARD SHIELDS, President.
GEORRE MINSTER, Vice President.
DIRECTORS.
Richard Shields, Edward McClain,
George Minster, Gustavus V. Town,
Theodore N. Town, Thomas Reath,
'W. 0. Enoteaboxy, , D. Sherwood,
0.0. Butler, George Stott
Ja39•lm GEORGE 000TT, Secretary
'TIRE QUAKER CITY INSURANCE
0011DANT.-001ce 408 WALNUT Street.
STATEMENT of the P to% A n n eo l" itl co " n n 011ito l o 8 rtile
Quaker City Insurance Company for. the year ending
December 814,1887 :
Capital and Surplus 8177,046 86
Supine, January 1, 1867 131.871 78
WWI'S for Premiums daring
the year 1801 ' 182,807 93
faterect received 11,786 10
Salvage and Itethitllallat 8,881 48
LOBBEB, EXPENB23, ato.
,
Longo paid 311,816 45
JX513524455413t0mi5i10da paid. , 33,835 32
,1141a4uriussextglietogatemlurnit 22,04 i, 46 t
Itturti Saltirleo, Taxes. Advert.
'Ong, iind Office Espouses 11,126 11
. . AMTS.
Bonds and Mortgages, Oround
Rents, Coupon Bonds, Dank
smoso
'and other Stocks 00
Negotiable Rale iloseltable ' 166,173 33
Cash In Ihnk and Due from Asia. 22,442 62
-5277,606 66
This Compsny continues to make insurances against
FMB and MARINE Risks,
OFFICERS.
Preetdeat—GEOßGE U. VEIT.
Ttee-Prepident--E: P. R 8
Beoreutry and Treasurer— . R 00048RALL
Assistant Seeretsry-8. )1: BUTLER.
Gems IT., Bart, E. W. Batley,
E. P. Ross, Andrew B. Chambers,
a. G. Cartel], J. L. Pomeroy,
Joaaph Edwards, Charles 0. Imlay,
Joint B. Dale, - B. B- Coating!,
Poster B. Perkins,amuel Jones,
' -a. ht. Yeller.
Jels H. B. 00008 HALL, Secretary
INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH
AMERIOA.
MARINE, PINE AND INLAN) TRANSPOR
TATION INSURANCE.
OPTICS 1 , 7 n. 2.32 WALNUT STREET,
South Bide, east of Third street:
The properties of this Complus' ate well Invested,
sal furnhih an available fuLd for the ample Indemnity
of all persons who desire to be protected by Insurance.
MARINE AISLES taken on Veneta, Freights, and
C
AND TRANSPORTATION alma on Merchandise
s .
per Rattroode, Canals, and Steamboats.
/IRE RISES on Merchandise, rprniture, and Build
ings, in City and County.
INCORPORATED IN Mt CAPITAL IbOB,ooo,
ALL PAID IN - AND SECURELY INVESTED.
TOTAL PROPERTIES $1,007,8t5.20.
PAAPErOLL OILLATIR,
DIRECTORS,
kiln% 4.ooltia, Wtt.t.sait Wites,
Bosun W. Jointe, WILLIAM E. Dowins,
Jolla A.. flaws, Jimas N. Dicuceos,
aIrAIDIL P. Bunn, S. Moan's WALS,
CHABLIS TAYLOS, JONI MAHON,
AHDROSIS WHIVA, OIORDI b. Unmoor,
Joao B. Nm, Fusels B. COPI.
RIODAHD D. WOOD, EDWARD H. TROTT/R
ANTRIM 4. 00BVIN, President.
EMILY D. BRERRERD, Beerstary. „iald-tt
VANE MUTUAL INSURANCE COM-
A: PLNY.—Oglee No 411,011ESTNUT Street..
PRILADXLPIII , 4, /UMW, 7, 1868.
TUB BOARD OP DIRECTORS have this day declared
*Dividend of SOUR PER GENT. on the pald up Capital,
payable on and alter the that proximo
jado.eedtrel TllOB. S. MARTlN,Secretary.
gT 3cenee in Holy and Linable Lands, in n
courseyf 8/x LECTURES, by Rev WILLIAM BACON
UMW% 11. D.. at CONCERT MAIL.
That Lecturej.-On TUESDAY EVENING, January
12th—Subject: "Jerusalem under four monarcbien,"
Second Lecture—On MONDAY EVENING, January
18th—Subject: "Bethlehem, Nazareth, and their Le
genda."
Third Lecture-0n TUESDAY EVENING. January
Mb—Subject The Baena Witten of the Holy Land."
Fourth , Lecture—On TUESDAY INDIUM Febru
ary fd—dubject : " The Orwzaders In the Het i Land." a
141 i Lecture—MONDAY EVENING, ebruary
Bth—Bubjebt : The Acropolle and the Areopague of
Athene
Stath Lecture—On MONDAY EVENING, Febra•
ary 15th—Subject: " The Throne and the Palace of the
Omni,"
Tickets $1 for the course. lectures to commence
st 7ti o'clock. '
• The rooted' for the benefit of the " Northern Home
for Yriendleas Children. jell-roth tfele it
A T A. MEETING OF THE HOLDERS
AT
of FIRST MORTGAGE DOlOB of the PHILA..
D.ELPRIA AND SUNBURY. RAILROAD COMPANY,
held on the lath that., prinuent to publie advertise-
Meat, Mr. 0. D. ROSENGARTEN was called to the
Chair; and Mr. d. MOBS Was appointed Secretary.
The Committee of holders of the Second Mortgage
Bonds, who have now become the proprietors of the
Road, having laid before the meeting Deent condi
tion and prospects, it wag resolved the in order to
aid the p More in equipping the Rood, the holdere
of the First rop
Mortgage Bonds should agree to accept fur
their couni due August Ist, 1861, and Februarl
1865, obligations of the Company, payable on or before
the aspiration of aveyeare, (at the option of the Com
petty,/ bearing interest from Ist February, 1858, and
convertible luta Stock, at the option of the holders;
interest payable thereon semi-annually on let August
and Ist February.
The. holders Ot Pint Mortgage Ronda are requested
to eaU at the Office of Messrs. B. S. WIIRLICN & CO.,
end sign the agreement to carry out such an arrange.
1 meat. Jel44awf tfebl
'UrFICE ANTHRACITE INSURANCE
COMPANY, No, all WALNUT Street, Jemmy 4,
U6B.
Notice id hereby given, that in pursuance of a resolu
tion of the Board or Directors, a rotund Instalment of
YIPS DOLLARS per share on the 'took, notes, and
subaorlption to the capital stook of the Company, to re.
coked to be pald et the ales of the Company on or be.
fore MONDAY, the dot day of Ifebruiry,lB6B.
' 19,6-eodtYabl W. ft tieore(ary.
' lIB.LIO L AMPS .-TRE PBBLIO IB
respectfally Informed that °dices have been opened
by the Markt Hoperintendents of Public Lighting, at
which citizens are regneated to give information respect.
10$ aeoldetile which may happen tothe PablieLampg, or
of any failure in lighting or extinguishing them at the
=time.; or if not properly cleaned and in good
fug condition. The Nooks will be kept by Joseph
,Half!!, No. 808 Wharton - wt., Prat Ward; Oharles °arty,
Sopt. of 24 district, No. 3 Haines st. above Birth; iltrarr
G. Kirk, No. 820 NOM' Birth at., alum Brown, Twelfth
'Nardi M. W. Neilson& No. 2281th:odes greet, Fifteenth
Ward,• Thos.V.Bostiby,GasOfile,e Tnenty•FmarthWard,
(West Phlladttlithla;) IL H. hi %olden, bas Waco,
TwentrO•cond Word, (Germantown;) Wm. N. Market,
Rea MO*, Twenty-Third Ward (Frankford,) and at the
Gus Olhot to Eleventh street, below Market.
Ny order of the Trustee§ of the Philadelphia Nee
Works: - A. 1. NITS,
. griperintandent of Distribtitkm.
cifTICE or_ THE PERTSYLVANIA.
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' - PataannOnt,.o Zannery lltb, 18811.
NOTIOR TO BIOOLOOLDORI.—The Annul Meet
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C4t‘',l,lrtss4
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1868
At a mating of the Demooratio State Commit•
tee, held et Buehler's' Hotel, Harrisburg, January
19,1858, it wee
Resolved, That th next Demooratio State Con-
Tention be bold et Harrisburg, on the 4th day of
March next.
Pursuant to said resolution, delegates from the
several Senatorial and Roprecentative distriots of
the State will convene in the Hall of the House of
Reartmentatives, at the Capitol, on THURSDAY,
kfARCH 4, 1858 at 10 o'olook A. IC, to nominate
candidates for Judge of the Supreme Court-and
Canal Commissioner, and for the transaction of
such other business as pertains to the authority of
euoh Convention.
.
0. R. BUOICALEW, Chairman
J. N. MITC.RIN"N, i Seoretarlos.
X. J. HALDZILAI,I
Considerable dissatisfaction is felt, and
loudly expressed in England, in consequence
of the rather cavalier manner in which the
late General HAVEGOOX has been mentioned,
by the, Indian Government, in their.despatches
to the East India Company and the Board of
Control. The Calcutta correspondent of the
London Times says:
11;1,000 00
4,000 la
"The lose has created a most painful impression
in Calcutta. We are all a little hardened here.
We have seen so many generals tall, have become
so accustomed to misfortune, have learnt so com
pletely to expect mismanagement, that nothing
moves us now. Yet even here a Government
telegram announcing, All going on well at
Abambagb; General Havelock died two days ago,'
excites a little disgust. The press darn not coin.
plain under penalty of oonfisoation, but the public
voice is pretty audible. We have now but two
generals left in whom the public have any confi
dence whatever—Sir 0. Campbell, and Brigadier
Cotton, of Poshawur. Should au accident happen
to the former, who has a habit of planing himself
in the hottest of the tire, our prospects will be
poor indeed. Neill is dead, and Wilson, of Delhi,
18 sick unto death, Sir Henry Havelock'we are
now mourning. Sir James Outrara would not sup
ply his place, General Windham is under a cloud,
Sir Hugh Rose is wanted at Bombay, and the
many young men equal to tho oacasioll have not
sufficient rank."
$248,112 82
The tame authority pays this graceful tribute
to the memory of the departed hero :
"The deceased General," be says, has been a
prominent character in Indian history for nearly
twenty years. He was one of the few who passed
through the Affghau campaigns with added repu
tation. In the first Punjaub war ho was Lord
Hardinge's most treated friend. A slight, spare
man, about five feet five Inches in height, with an
emaciated face and an eagle eye, he belonged em
phatically, to the class who have never to contend
with disobedience or mutiny. As a general, he
was the beet tactician we have bad In India; and
as an officer, though stern, and sometimes exacting,
his antique heroism made him the idol of his men.
Re was, indeed, perhaps tho bravest man in his
own army, and was never so, chatty or agreeable
as under fire. Like most of our Indian statesmen
and soldiers, the Lawrenees, Edwards, Nicholson,
Montgomery, ant! many others, ho was a Christian
of the' old stamp; a strong, God-fearing Puritan
roan, who thought often in Soriptural phrase. and
deemed it no shame to teach his soldiers to pray.
'Turn out the saints,' said Lord Gough on-one
occasion, when he anticipated desperate work;
'Havelock never blunders, and his man are never
drunk.' "
$182,809 21
As might be expected, the famous Circum
locution Office, whose business is not to do a
thing, has been busy in HAVELOCK'S affairs.
On the 27th of November, General HAVELOCK
was duly and officially announced, in the Lon
don Gazette, as having been made a Baronet
by Queen Vitrroauk's orders, as Sir Mclver
IfAvEmme, of Lucknow. He did not survive
to learn that this hereditary dignity had been
conferred upon him—his death taking place
two days before the date of his Baronetcy.
Some discussion has taken place in the Eng
lish journals as to whether General HAVELOCK,
having been a dead man before the Baronetcy
was conferred, could legally be, considered
as Its recipient, and, therefore, whether Cap
tain BAvnLocg, his eldest son, had any right
to assume the title. This has been solved by
a curious disclosure--namely, that though
the Baronetcy was granted on the 27th of
November, the patent conferring ft had ac
tually not been made out and engrossed np to
the 15th of January. In other wards, the
Circumlocution Office had let seven weeks
pass without taking any step whatever to carry
Into legal effect the wishes of the Chief Ma
gistrate of the country. Queen VICTORIA,
who has a fiery temper of her own, is not likely
to take this neglect very quietly, but the Cir
cumlocution Office will care very little for her
Majesty's anger. The lowest clerk In that ve
nerable and worse than useless establishment
Is so connected with the high nobility by blood
and association, that the idea of dismissing
any of the troupe, for neglect of duty, would
be contemptuously smiled down as prepos
terous.
214,496 24
136,830 89
As the letters :patent were never put in hand,
it is now determined to antedate them about
five weeks, so as to make the Baronetcy be
granted from the day on which Sir HENRY
HAVELOCK relieved the garrison of Luck
now. This will place his son's succession be
yond doubt.
Another point merits notice : HAVELOCK
has died in rather distressed circumstances.
After having undergone much labor, many
privations, and occasional losses, during forty
three years of military service, he has not
been able to leave anything like a provision
for his widow, daughters, and sons. Parlia
ment, no doubt, will carry out the intention of
settling £l,OOO a year upon Lady llamocx
and the family. lint this is a small sum
among several persons, especially as they aro
now elevated to a position which is in
compatible with contracted means. We
notice a proposition, in some Of the
London journals, to commence subscriptions
for a Havelock Fund, the intention being to
raise a sufficiency for the respectable support
of the family of the hero of Lucknow. A dis
cussion has arisen, whether the subscriptions
should be limited to a guinea or a shilling; but,
whatever the restriction, If the suggestion be
worked out in a proper manner, at least 420,-
000 can readily be obtained. Not meet, is to
be expected from the high nobility and aristo
cracy of England, for HAVELOOK obtained his
renown wholly by merit and not at all by fit-
mily connexion. But the matter wou:d bo ar
dently taken up by the People. Hsystecx
was, most emphatically, one of the People.
Do sprang from the Middle Class, and he has
belonged to it all his life. Whatever honors
he obtained—and they were tardily and be
grudgingly bestowed—be won them solely by
his sword and his brain. Neither money nor
family connexion pushed him forward. ile
was a self-made man—one of the Democracy
&his native land.
There is a report that, bad Sir HENRY HAVE
LOCK lived to return to England, It was the
intention of Queen VICTORIA LO have made
him a* Peer. We believe that Queen Vie-
TORIA, even if such were her desire, has very
little power to carry it out. Her Ministry alone
have the ability to confer titles of rank and
honor, and very capriciously exercise it, seeing
how, a few weeks ago, they cb anged Mr. Ca
vsnersit into d , Baroll CIIESHAH," simply be
cause ho possessed wealth, because he had
voted for the Whig party in the HOUBO of Com
mons, and because be was one of the numer
ous cousins of the Duke of DEVONSHIRE.
HAVELOCK has not survived to receive a
peerage. There are precedents for conferring
that honor on his family. Ono very much to
the point was the case of Sir RALPH ABER
onovar, who expired, like WOLFE, in the
arms of victory, after having defeated the
French at Alexandria in Egypt. His widow
was created Baroness Aasnonomay, in her
own right, and, on her death in 1821, her
eldest son succeeded to the peerage, which is
now held by her grandson,Lord AREROROMBT.
Again, in October, 1805, when Lord NELSON
was killed at Trafalgar, having left no male
child to succeed him, the "Viscounty was ele
vated into an Earldom, and conferred upon
his brother, as next of kin. Later yet, when
Mr. CANNING died in harness, as Prime Min
ister, his widow was created Viscountess
CABNINO, with succession to her son, who is
the present incapable Viceroy of India. There
are precedents enough, therefore, for con
ferring posthumous honors on the dead,
through the living; but as HAVELOCK did not
belong to the "Upper-Ten" of British society,
wn do not expect that any thing extraordinary
STATE CONTENTION
HAVELOCK.
PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 1. 1858.
w ill be done to render special honor or con
fer special advantages upon his family.
We have discussed this question, though
purely a British one, because, in the whole
course of our experience, wo do not recollect
so much interest created, in this country, re
specting any foreigner—except LAFAYETTE,
whom wo count as a fellow-citizen end compa
triot; LAMARTME, when ho waved his hand
over the surges of Anarchy, in 1848, and the
angry billows were stilled ; and Louis Kosstrrni
when lie visited us, a few years ago, and capti •
vated thousands by his wondrous eloquence.
The interest felt in ILivnioox is as intense as
in each of these instances, with the probable
exception of LAFAYETTE, who had faught and
bled in the battles for our Nationanndepon
dance.
The Adm Liston of Kansas nude? the Lecomp.
ton Constitution, and its Probable Effect on
the Future of the Democracy.
(From the Washington Daily States
Kansas, it would seem, is still decreed by fate to
fresh phases of difficulty to the politician who so
lately thought he bad reason to bid the subject a
hearty adieu. It comes before us now in the least
questionable shape, hut in so opposite a manner to
that we so lately deemed unquestionable, that it
demands a consideration, more for our self-defence
as Democrats then for any settlement of its Oen
' Vox They, it would appear, are settled by the
people of Kansas for themselves. '
Governor Denver's proclamation to the Pee°
' of the Territory, showing that there Is a majority
of ten thousand of the bona fide voters of the
Territory against the Leoompton Constitution, is
the first well-authenticated evidence we have that
the people of Kansas are almost unanimously op.
posed to It. We have had plenty of newspaper
statements to that effect, and no lack of their en-.
doreement by politicians ; but we never have had
the facts presented to us as they now are. They
come to us as the offioial votes of the citizens of
Kansas, endorsed by the signature of the Federal
°Chalet governing the Territory; and we cannot
but recognise their full bearing and Importance.
We remarked on Saturday that the result of
Governor Denver's returnsgivea an entirely new.
aspect to the Kansas question; and it is a matte?
for thoughtful consider:WM whether Kansas ought
to be taken into the Union with the Lecompien
Constitution, and a majority of three to ono against
it. Wo have persistently refused to bo led by the
statements of stultified letter-writers, and swimm
ing or speculative politicians ; representing or mis
representing each and every side of this Kansas
controversy. We have always argued for n sim
plification, and not a complication of the facts of
the case; Advised our readers to wait patiently for
Ketch eimplifieation, and not to he deluded by the
excel° 8 of demargnes in search of petition) capi
tal; end who, hoping to bless their own stars, have
bounteously cursed Rensasby their interference.
We have now to take decided action on the
question. In a few days the reprosentatit, es of the
entire people will be put to the test or sustaining
the doctrine of non-Intervention and State rights,
on the principle that the people have a right to
form their own Constitution ; or that a Constitu
tion condemned by three-fourths of the people of
Kansas shall Isis forced upon them by the National
Congress.
Wo cannot too earnestly beg of the Democratic
Senators and members, from tho North and the
South, to give to this vital question all the honest
consideration such a fundamental question es this
of State rights demands, and especially for its
present relation to Kansas. We beg of them to
consider the question in all its bearings—its gains,
its losses, and its final results. Noisy deolemation
on the one band, or bland sophistry on the other,
must not defraud their convictions of the truth.
Lot them rot like reasonable reasoning mon,
honest to themselves by being honest to those
principlesof State rights Democracy by which their
constituents pent them to Congress.
It is beyond doubt that a large majority at the
Northern Democracy is opposed to the Lecompton
Constitution, on the ground that the people of Kan
sas who have a right to choose their own institu
tione aro opposed to it. The press of the Demoora
oy tell us so; and Democratic Legislatures, In a
number of instanoes, have instructed their Sena
tors and members of Congress to oppose It. Oa the
other hand, the South ere almost unanimous in its
favor. Now, the qttestion is, 0101111 i 010 South
press the Northern Democracy to vote for the re
ception of the Lecompton Constitution at any sacri
fice ?
The nWonal Democracy of the North have al
ways fought end always will fight, edit by side
with the united South, on any question belching
the aggrandizement or safety of the Union The
Northern Democracy have stood by the South in
the acquisition of territory heretofore, and it Is
prepared to stand by the South in the acquisition
of territory hereafter. The knowledge of these
facts ought to make the South careful how it perils
the strength of the North, by forcing it to a vote
which, In all 'probability, might esoritiots its post-
Hon in the councils of the nation, and break up
the party power of the Democracy in the North.
The facts, on all sides, warn us of such danger
On the other hand, how the South to bo benefited
by such a sacrifice of the North 7 Let us see.
The admission of Kansas, in defiarsie of the ex
pressed will of its people, will, according to the
reported returns, bring into the Senate of the
United States two Black Itepublioan Senators,
which will weaken the South two votes In that
body. If we are to draw any inferences from the
prevailing opinion nt the North, the Democracy
there must be prostrated for some years by the ad
mission oft Kansas under such eircutostances If
our Southern friends have overlooked the effect of
a defeat of the Northern Democracy for the next
two or three years, we will refresh their memories
to the following facts :
In the Senate of the United States, parties now
stand-37 Democrats, 25 Opposition. From elec
tions whioh have already taken place, there will
be aueseions of Democratic Senators from Tennes
see, Kentucky, Minnesota, and Texas, which will
snake parties stand 42 Democrats, 22 Opposition.
Within the next two years Senators are to be
eleoted in nine Northern States in the place of the
present incumbents; and those already elected,
who ire Democrats, vie: Allen of Rhode Island,
Wright of Now Jersey, Bigler of Penney's&
nia, Pugh of Ohio, Stuart of Michigan, Fitch of
Indiana, Douglas of Illinois, Jones of lows, and
one of the Sena tore from Wisconsin ; besides Bright,
of Indiana, may lose his sent on account of ilia-
gality, and a Plug Ugly may be sent from Mary
land in place of 'Mr. Penrco—in all eleven seats
will need occupants. Some of these States, whose
Senators' terms will expire, may already be classed
as Black Republican, and the reception of the
Lecompton Constitution by a Detnooratio Congress
may result in the entire defeat of the Democracy
in the States now Democratic. Thus, in all pro
bability, eleven additional Senators will stand on
the Black Republican side of the United States
Senate, making parties stand thus: Numerate,
31; Opposition, including Kansas, 33. Majority
for Opposition, 2.
This Is not an encouraging picture to look upon.
But politicians, if they will, can males the prospect
pleasanter. We do not think we exaggerate the
difficulties to be apprehended at the North by the
reception of „the Lecompton Constitution by a
Democratic Congress. With Governor Denver's
proclamation before us, endorsing the people of
Kansas in the protest against the Constitution, we
cannot ace how a Democratic Senator or member
of Congress could face his constituents in the North,
If he voted for its acceptance. The South not only
positively gains nothing, but loses much by
making the acceptance of the Locompton Genet
station a test with the Northern Democracy. It
will only help to drive it out of Congress, and
drive the Northern ,Democratic Senators oat of
Congress, who would stand by the South in bring
ing in Arizona as a slave State, or securing to us
Cuba, Nicaragua, or Mexico.
It is not our desire to dictate what the South or
the North should do In this emergency ; but we do
desire to see the national Democracy united and
strengthened, and believe It our duty to fearlessly
present to that great party such facts as may tend
to warn it against destruction. This is the more
particularly needful now, in view of the new is
sues which must arise within a few years, and
which must be the means of securing wealth,
power, and an extension of our institutions eolith
ward, if our statesmen now look calmly at the
facto before they plunge the North, with the South.
Into this Lecompton maelstrom. They should eel.
tiler saorifice the North nor South for Kansas ; es
pecially when there is such incontrovertible rca
cone (as given by Governor Denver) for letting
Kansas alone.
A Monument to the Into (Mouth Alden Purl•
ridge.
For The Preis 3
When good nod distinguished mon die, an obli
gation seems to rest upon the surviving friends to
perpetuate their memory by some visible memo
rial. This obligation is particularly binding whoa
the deceased, in his life-time, had conferred great
benefit upon the whole or part of tho people. This
was particularly the case with the late Captain Al
den Partridge, of Vermont. Ito spent a long life
in teaching wisdom to the young men of the United
States, and endeavoring to prepare the citizen sol
diers of our country for a proper discharge of time
important duties the Constitution and laws impono
upon them In this reepeot holm done more than
all other instructors together, to establish a proper
military espy du corps among our volunteers,
and raise higher the standard of discipline ; and
the volunteers of Philadelphia owe him n debt of
gratitude.
In consideration of the distinguished service! of
Captain Partridge to the citizen soldiery of our
country, the writer is of opinion they should unite
in an effort to roles some fitting monumental stone
over his last resting place, to perpetuate his good
deeds and many vlrtuod. They will bo Joined
cheerfully in thin duty by his former pupils, who
are scattered throughout the country, and who re
member their good old preceptor with Mini efleo•
Lion. A email sum, only, will be required to ac
complish this work ; and let It not be said that
those who have received and profited by his instruc-
tion are unmindful of the duty they owe his me
mory. A few years ago, the military of the city
and county of Philadelphia, wore se sensible of the
obligations they were under to Captain Partridge,
that they presented him a handsome sword which
eat would seem to designate those gentlemen as
the proper persons to take the lead In the erection
of a monument to his memory.
An OLD CADET.
JANUARY 28th, 1858.
Vessels in Port .—Tbore were In port yee
ten's) , four steamsbips, six ships, seven barques
Woo brigs, and twenty-alx aoboonere.
Governor Wfse—lffe Pe/Wow Before the
Country.
Mont the Richmond linquirer of lea. pst.)
There are but few men in the nation whose po
litioal career has been 'characterized with more
signal mew than that of the present Governor
of Virginia. There is no man in the country who
has a attouger hold upon the admiration, esteem,
and affeetion of bin State. It is not his advocacy
of the itamodlato 'interests of their peculiar locali
ties that ettaohea the people of any county or sec
tion of Virginia to him;NOe is now, and has al
ways been, devoted to the whole State, regardless
of whatever prejudices may have existed, or may
still WA in the East against legislation for the
benefit of the West, or in the West against
legislation for the benefit of the East. As a
" white basis " man be woe triumphantly
elected:to the last reform Convection, from
a drat let bounded by the ocean. As an
" internal Improvement" man ho Is ap
plauded; in "tide - water," as well as in the re
cesses cif the mountains. Although the originator
and terdOes supporter of his favorite "tandem"
achereqoyeter-eatera andoyster-catchers alike in
Eastern Virginia, still confide in hire, admire him,
find defend him. Ills Tammany letter, it is true,
was as unacceptable as it Was unexpected to many
of his Mende, among the staid Democracy of the
Ohl DoCainion. 'Rut it has not thriven them from
him. j 6 has not shaken their sonfidonee in his
fidelltqo the Smith. It hem not induced a distrust
of his,derotion to the Democratic party. Some
of ourNuthern cotemperaries of the press, be
yond
tho limita of Virldrile, may ask bow it is,
why tn4s, that Henry - A. Wise to so omnipotent
in hie State that even Zs letter to the Tammany
,80010;n 4 ,, in which they see so much of treason,
,041431. 0 *teen hies down from the emieenoo he
aneeinno In the largest elareholding State in the
.ths'on-l' We will anticipate the question and
angler s( in a few words. It in because the people
know the man. Because he has the
beart`qT a patriot,. the head of a statesman, and
the spirit of a hero. Because his views on all
q*sththe, whether of local, State, or Federal
Palle/Are never contraoted, but always compre
hensive, and generally original and practical.
Becrutisl be (Moho fox himself, without waiting fur
the wind-vane of popular sentiment to direct him.
Beeatt,p) his allegloinee to the South is based
Ullo4' rtmvietions of Pater., and right; and
because, that Tirmarany letter preelaima a pried•
pie open the maintenance of, which the equality
and seinrity of the slave States in the Union
depeed:° When the letter appeared in the public
prints, we expressed the opinion that it was calcu
lated to embarrass the Democratic party, or that
portion_pf it, at leant, which concurred with the
AdmieFitration in favor of the acceptance of the
Looomplon Constitution without further condi
tions. Westin think so. ' But no have never dis
sented from the views it announced en the abstract
prinelphs—that in this oountry the rtopte alone
are Sovereign and euprome. And no man can dis
pute that principle,without rendering himself liable
to be charged with being a monarchist Governor
lVine has always been a sealou3 define dor of popular
rights. And in no instance has he ever morn
boldly declared hie sentiments on any subject than
on the Kansas question, in bin Tammany etter.
He may he assailed in the &milt and applauded
in the Nortn, but no right-minded mon In either
'motion will ever really doubt that ho still the
same hold vindicator of Southern rights, the same
p_atriutio champion of the Constitution and the
Brian, the same " fearless tribune of the people"
that he has ever been clime the early commence
ment of. his political career. For fairness, fear
lessness, energy and genius, the American people
can point to no man in the nation superior to
Henry A. Wise. lie stands before the country in
a proud position. As a Southern man ho nays to
the North, we will not encroach upon your rights,
and you must not encroach upon ours. Wo con
tend for principlen, for fairness, justice, and
equality. We demand thorn of you, and we will
concede them to you. You shell not defraud us,
and we will take no unfair .advantage of you.
Such Is his attitude regardless of the clamor of his
enemies.
The Explosion and Total Burning of the
is Penny Fern"-Several Perseus Killed—
A large number Scalded and Missing—Pains
fatly Exciting Narrative.
prom the Otheinneti Commercial of Saturday.)
Tho steamer Fanny Fern, Captain IYoottward ,
burst one of her boilers yesterday, producing a
terrible catastrophe. It appears that she was on
her way from St. Louis to Pittsburgh, with a fair
load of freight, anti some fifty or sixty passengers,
Passengers on board have informed us that, when
the beat left Lewrenoehurg, on her way up, she
woe considerably lifted to one side, to which is
partially Attribute , ' the etisualty.
When uppoelte (travel Pit, a few miles above
Lawrenceburg, and a few miles, also, below North
Bend. the burst one of her boilers,scattertngdeath
nod, dastruction all around. Wo conversed last
°vetting with some of the passengers who were on
bte.r,a, and also with one of the stewards of the
hoeL
They say that the eaphision was terrific, and
that, as a matter of course, great confusion pro.
trailed, each one of the many passengers trying
to save him or herself. It was tiioll4ht at first
that from thirteen to fifteen were killed. but,
frost what- we can learn, there Is not so groat a
number.
The boat wee is command of Captain Ben Wood
ward, and 0.3 he wee standing near the piletanoase
at the time, and was among the missing when
everybody saved got ashore, it is pretty certain
that he must be among the killed. T'reelerk. Mr.
Alfred Rome, is very badly welded, and last
evening, when we called at the Broadway Hotel,
where be had been taken, fears were entertained
that his recovery was doubtful
Ono of the stewards informed us that it Mr. J.
Harrison, who hails from New York, was blown up
from the deck and alighted in the river, and that
a skiff, that happened to bent the shore, woe sent
to hit rescue. The propellers of the skiff euceeeded
not only In picking up Mr Harrison, but they took
his lady out of her stateroom, and deposited her
safely on shore.
John F. Meader, front Baltimore, was is state
room No. 5, and was blown up with the rest ; he
was pretty badly welded in the face and hands.
The second clerk, Mr. Henry Drum, was also
badly scalded. The steward, A. J. Kirkpatrick,
was scalded on the am and left side, Two of the
firemen wore Instantly killed ; we did not got their
ARMOR.
Moses Scott, the chief pilot, mai ed uninjured ;
but Wesley Jacobs, the rocond pilot, was slightly
welded.
One lady, whose name we could not learn,
jumped overboard with a child in her arms, and
wan aired by ono of the cabin boys, who was after
ward drowned. Ills name was James Cavanaugh,
who resided in Allegheny city
As it happened, the cars of the Ohio and Miesis.
sippi Railroad had run off the track at Gravel Pit,
where the casualty occurred, and the wounded, as
well as the uninjured, were brought up to the city
on board.
It is hardly possible to calculate the amount of
damage done to property, or the loss of life sus
tained. By acne of the passengers the cause of
the accident is attributed to one thing, and by
others to another; some think that the engineer
was in fault, and others that it was owing to the
way the boat was loaded. We shall probably hear
further particulars to-morrow.
Capt. Woodward was standing upon the dam
board guard talking with Mr. Thompson, the mate,
and wee blown by the explosion into the river, and
has nut slime been seen. Ho was undoubtedly
drowned, Thereat° was thrown against the rail
ing, to which he held on until lie recovered from
tho concussion, and immediately got out tho life
boat nod made an effort to save the passengers, in
which he was fortunately successful.
The first clerk, Alfred J. Rogers, and the second
clerk, Harvey Drum, both of Pittsburgh. were in
the office over the boilers, and both were thrown is
distance of about 60 yards into the river and were
pinked up by the lifeboat and convoyed to the In
diana shore. Mr. Rogers had his facie, hands and
feet very severely scalded, and Dr. Fishhook, who
attends him at the Broadway Hotel, thinks he is
injured internally. Mr. Drum was scalded on the
face, hands and arms, but less severely. Ile is
also at the Broadway.
A widow lady and child, whose name to not
known, on her way from St. Louis to some lilacs
about fifty-six miles back of Maysville, who came
on board at Louisville, wort, drowned. After the
boat was in flames, the mother rushed to the stern
of the boat, fastened the child to her person, and
jumped, into the river. She hod been deserted
by her husband in Missouri, and bad boon given
a free passage to enable her to reach her
friends. Both mother anti child sank and were
noon no MOM
Tho chambermaid, Hannah Thomas, from Al
legheny, Pa., was blown out of the boat with a
part of the cabin a considerable distance Into the
air, and wait seen to fall into the river, and was
drowned.
A Mr. and Etre. Murphy, of Pennsylvania, a new
married couple, on their way to their residence,
were both drowned. Mrs. Al. was been upon tho
stern of the boat, terribly frightened and uncon
trollable, and finally jumped Into the river. Her
husband, who was standing by her side, followed
to rescue her, but in the effoit to secure a floating
plank both sunk to the bottom, locked in each
other's arms.
Andrew J. Kirkpatrick, a cabin passenger, was
slightly welded on the back or the neck and right
arm, but is able to walk about. Ito is at the
13roatlisay.
W. Scott, the pilot at the wheel at the time of
the expitsion,,,felt amongst the ruins of the wheel
house to the lower deck, but escaped with but
slight injertaa.
Mr. Wilson, a leek passenger an Englishman,
en hie way to Canada, was blown into the river and
drowned.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison, cabin passengers, from
Tennessee, were thrown into the river, but were
saved by the life-boat.
David Miller and John King, two of the crew,
were thrown into the river by the explosion, but
were saved
John Hull, the carpenter of the boat, was blown
overboard, but received no injuries. Ile succeeded
in reaching a floating door, and wits successful in
mil:tuning ashore.
Joints Maley, Michael Donahue and John --,
(the letter boarded et widow Motors. in Pitts
burgh,) all deck hands, aro supposed to be drown
ed, as nothing has been heard of them eine° tho
explosion.
The porter of the boat, Janice Anderson, aged
about 24 years, from Xenia, is also missing, as is
the pantryman, James Zavaneugh, from Pitts
burgh.
Two firemen, both colored, Thomas Walker and
Robert Riddle, are known to be lost, Walker
was drowned, and Riddle killed by the explosion.
Roswell Beach, a watchman, was standing on the
starboard side of the boat, and wan thrown over
board, but subsequently made his way to the
'here.
All the portent who are known to be saved from
the wreak were conveyed to the Indiana shore,
and the train of the Ohl and Mississippi Railroad
coming along soon after, the injured, scalded, and
escaped !owners and crew were conveyed to this
city, and properly oared for. Many of the deck
passengers who, fortunately were uninjured, took
passage on board the Hanel Dell, to their varloul
points of destination. Others remained In the
ally, in charge of friends, or as public charities
THE SCALDED AT THE Coo , fElet HOSPIt tL
One of our reporters visited the Commercial lto.
pital last evening, and found therein four of the
mangers of the unfortunate Fanny Fern. The
first was henry Id. Casey, of Philadelphia, where
his wife resides, who was a cabin passenger;
scalded pretty severely.
John Flynn, on his way from Bt. Louis to Phila
delphia, a shoemaker by trade, aged about 2.5
lucre; hands and face badly scalded
Wut. Paul, a cabin passengt r on the Fern, a re
sident of Canada West, on his way to Cincinnati
from St. Louis. Ile was in his srate-room, dress
ing, nod in no instant found himself among the
wreck and rubbish. Ito suciretled in gaining the
shore, badly scalded.
John W.'Kerr, a ennui boatman from Allegheny
Pennsylvania, got on board at Louisville to go to
Pittsburgh ; his friends reside at Braddoc k 's
He wee sitting in the cabin talking to another gen.
tleman, and had jest remarked that it seemed as
though the steamer was getting_ pretty hot, when
the explosion occurred. Ile is horribly scalded All
over the body, bead, and face, and presents a most
painful appearance. There la barely a possible
chance for him to survive his injuries.
Henry W. Casey was lying in his berth in the
cabin, on the upper deck, at the time of the explo
eion. In an instant after he found himself on the
boiler deck, surrounded nod partly covered with
the ruins of the cabin. Ile managed to extricate
hitnself and succeeded in getting into-a beat.
which conveyed him to the shore. Ile wee scalded
all over the body, feet, face, and bead ; his eye
brows were badly burned, and a severe wound In.
Meted upon his head.
The explosion of the boilers scattered the firs
from the furnace, and in a few minutes the boat
was in flames. The passengers who were uninjured
ran wlldlyabout, and several jumped overboard and
were drowned, while others were picked up by the
entail boats and convoyed to the shore. Those who
wore saved desoribe the scene as one of great con
sternation, the passengers who were not thrown
overboard running about shrieking and summing
in the wildest manner.
. FOREIGN MISCELLANIES.
• It in paid that there will be a larger number
of marriages in England on the bridal dsy of Ike
Princess Hopei than was ever known to be cola•
brated in one day before.
THE ANNUITY TO TILE PRINCKSOI ROYAL.—
The sot of Parliament (20th and 21st Victoria. cap
2) to enable Queen Victoria to settle an annuity on
the Princess Royal was passed on the 20th of June
last. She is empowered, by letters patent, to gin
and grant unto the Princess Royal, or to such per
sons to she shall think fit, for the use of her Royal
highness, an annuity of £B,OOO for her life, to
commence from the date of the marriage with
Prince Frederick William of Pruooie. to be free
from all taxes, an,esaments, and charges, and to be
paid quarterly, on the sth of January, Ith of
April, the sth of July, and the 10th of October
The proportionate Aare in to be paid on the next
next quarter day after the marriage. Tho annuity
is to be charged nod payable out of the Coneolf•
dated Fund of the United Kingdom. The annuity
will therefore commence on the 25th iust
Emu ALnatts.—The Court Circular thinks
the time to Come when the Prince Consort's posi.
tion should bo .• rectified," and that be should ro•
come the etylo of Xing. It informs its resident
tbnt "his right to that bonornrystyle does not reit
with the volition of Stinisters or with the plea
sure of the people. It to the law of England since
the days of Henry YIII, that the husband of
peeress In her own right shall, if ho has 134110 by
hor, be tenant by courtesy of her barony, earldom,
An. This rule, it is said, applies not by right, but
.by grace,' to the spouse of the reigning sovereign:
but the law of grace is just its potent in a question
of this nature as is the hew of right. It is clearly
within the persona) prerogative of the Sovereign
to order and command that the Consort of the
Crown shall, in all ouch things as title, place, and
precedency, hare and enjoy the attributes of troy.
atty."
An Antwerp paper mentions that Queen
Victoria, who has of late devoted much time and
displayed great talent in the art or photography
has lately sent the Mantels Eugenie, as a New
Year's present, a charming album full of photo.
graphs taken by herself. On the leave, of this
very unique work are to be found portraits of the
Royal children in the costunicsa variou. vbakspe•
elan characters, the portrait of Prince Albert,
gather with views of Windsor Castle, Balmoral.
and Osborne-house.
ASTONISHING rEftroHHANox.—OH the 13th
January, at Windsor, Mr J. Harry, from the
united States of America, had the honor of exhi•
biting before her Majesty. the Prince Coneert. an 1
the royal family and suite. In the riding.house.
his miraculous power over the horse. goveral ani
mate were selected as subjects of his experiment.
He commenced with a wild colt. eighteen menthe
old, belonging to the Prinz.° Consort, which wee
brought from Shaer Farm, and "dwelt had noeer
been handled except by halter. and had been
chosen by Col heal for the occasion After being
alone with the suhual forabout an hour and a half.
the royal party ontere47and found Mr Rarity kit
ting On Its back, without . holding the rein, the
horse standing perfectly quiet. Mr. Rarey then
wade IL few reworks in regard to bin great experi
ence In the treatment of thin noble animal ; a drum
was afterwards handed to Mr. 'Carey, which he
bv-nf w:th fury while, sitting en the horse's back.,
without the colt exttibitrisw any alma fear The
royal party afterwards withdrew for a rew minutee,
end on their return found the animal lying down
and Mr Rimy knocking its hind legs together,
one of which 110 put against his face.
Afterwards a restive horse, from Mr. Ander
eon's mettle., in London. which Mr Larry PALI he
had before handled, was placed at one end of the
riding-honey alone Z•lr. Storey wont to the other
end, and at his coramaltd the horse walked quietly
up to him He then nit , le the horse Hatton!) in the
presence of the QueeC, when Mr Remy ermeled
between Lie hind lege, and over him in satiew.
ways Mr. Harry then rolled the burets ort hie beck
The horse wile afterwards placed in norms re,
Aliens, in which it stood without hnlaing, and
without a bridle. A third horse, eolecterl by Mr.
Meyers, the riding master, ite a very nervous
animal, wan then brought in, and in a few minutes
afterwarda it was made by Mr Ramey to do all
which had been done by the other horses. At the
conclusion of this exhibition of Mr Rarey's won
derful power iiver the horse, his Royal nighties..
the Ponce Consort expron4ed to Mr Itntey his
gratification and thanks. The accent has been en
trusted to Major-tionerril Richard Airey, in confi
dence, who has pronounced that there in nothing in
the treatment but what any horseman would op.
prove of. Ttfo secret will be made known when a
sidlluientnumbrr of subscriber.] have been obtained.
The English Conservative patty, who have
ticon in a state of torpor for several years past, are
about to take advantage of the chapter of nui
dents. Thoy are about to organise a course of tac•
tics during the coming ses , iou in order to oust Lord
Palmerston's Government. A meeting of the op
position leaders iu both houses has by en held du
ring the last few days, and when Parliament meets
next month all the followers who have seats in that
&monthly will be summoned to Lord Derby's pri•
sato mansion to decide on a course of action the
most likely to effect the and In view. The chances
of success rest on the possible break•down of the
forthcoming Reform Dill and the sow Indian
Scheme—measures sufficient to teat the strength of
the strongest Government.
COST OP PRINTING TOR PARLIAMENT.—A
return presented to Parliament shows that the
total amount of the cost for printing for the vari
ous Government offices (paper. printing, and
binding) during the session of is:o3, o tooon t o d to
£13,462 Tho Irish-oflico figures for £f 415, tho
119rue:office for .0,951, the Foreign for 11,401, the
Colonial for .4.1,331, the Treasury for .0,5119, the
Board of Trade for 12,371, the War Department
for 41,70, and the India Board for ..C2,01.9 The
Admiralty only figural for .4341 These sums are
exclusive of the cost of printing ordered by the two
Houses of Parliament theruseli es, and job:work
printing. The number of copies of oath plprr
printed Scaled from 1,750 to 1,750.
DLOISI 1L COIVAGE.—A blue book, just pub
lished, contains questions communicated by Lord
Ovorstone to the Deeitual Coinage Commissioners.
with answers thereto. The questions, of course,
are efa vary minute character, and pm ely scientific.
while the answers inelu.le a number of paperlt et
great value and interest, from the pens of tho most
eminent of out ~rean,, ouch as Profegser Airy,
Professor Do Morgan, Dean Peacock. F. r ' iv. It
Hamilton, Mr. Julius Page, Professor Miller, Sir
J. F. Mr. Herschel, Dr Gray, Roe P. T. Ouvry,
Mr. J. Patterson, of Albany, (United States.) Mr.
Snowden, the director of the United States Mint,
Mr. J H. M'Cutlocb, unit others.
The credit system at Oxford University has
reed% ed another melancholy illustration. Mr
Edward Seville!). who had been an undergraduate
at Oxford, had run a career of folly and disidpst
tion, fallen into the hands of uneeplenders. and
altogether contracted debts to the extent of 1:05,-
000. Ile came before the London 'molt en! Court
on Monday, the I th, and, there being nu oppnsi•
lion, he was discharged.
On Saturday, the thlt of January, the doors
of the Ecclesiastical Courts throughout the king
dom closed to open no more, after hating existed
for nearly 800 yearn.
An American journal, or rather a journal
advocating the interests of the United States, is
about to be established in London.
The Globe underitsnds that the Government
of India has ordered an inquiry. for the purpose
of ascertaining whether the statements made by
the Frtend of Indio. as to the treatment of the
King of Delhi and his son, are true
THE INPIA Globe states that the
India Bill is still under the consideration of the
Cabinet. For years to come the Indian army must
he composed ton great extent of Englidnen, and
the anthill of the Boise Guards must proportion
ately extend The Globe dtabelteree the report
that the Minister for India must be a Peer. Min
isters dealt°, both on this point glut in reference to
patronage generally, to secure the best materials
for the Government of India
There is a ruttier in London that Lord Elf
' inerston is dleposed to offer the tetetof Secretary of
:Mate fir India to Sir James anthem Lord John
Russell being unwilling to undertake the heavy
ditties which will be connected with the depart
ment.
By accounts from the departments it ap
pears that the cold has been very severe all over
France.
The correspondent of a London paper says:
" Some two months past you were informed that
the Countess Lebon, who bad long lived on terms
of groat Intimacy with the Count de Morey, bad
put in a claim for restitution of large sums of
money which she alleged to have entrusted to him
This claim was made immediately after the Count's
marriage, and as the lady bad full confidence in
the Emperor's `incorruptible integrity,' she ap
plied to him to examine her claim. His Majesty
aocepted the Mace of arbitrator, and decided that
the Count de Horny war indebted to the Counters
do Lehon several millions of francs. The Count
do Horny, not being in a position to comply with
TWO CENTS.
the exigencies of this dechtion, baa as yet made no
payment, and the affair is likely to come before
the tribunal,"
Two high functionaries in Paris are to be
tried on a serious charge. They Cr. 'ceased of
embezzling three hundred thousand francs out of
the stores from the Crimes. It is needless to add
that the case excites much interest in the French
capital.
The Princess de Solmee, a daughter of
Madame Bonaparte W 730, is about starting a
newspaper et the fashionable watering place of
Aix lea Salsa.
The King of Portugal's marriage is to take
pipe at the end of April. Oreal prepuatlons are
making for the ceremony.
A Vienna letter states that the reductions
in the Austrian army hare been more considerable
then had been contemplated, 50000 men having
been already discharged, whereby a saving of
12.000,000 &rine has been effected ; and It adds
that other reductions are to be made.
CONVENT 3 PayssLA—According to It re
cent statistical return, there exist in the Catholics
proof upes of Prussia 89 convents and religious tom
ruunittes. comprising 976 members, of whom about
three-flfths are females They are principally Ur
sulines and Sisters of Chanty.
The Egyptian Government by every means
in its power is facilitating the transit of English
troops across the Isthmus The railway stops at
twenty-tive miles on this side of Sues, and up
wards of eleven hundred asses enable the troops
to perform the remainder of the distance. The
Viceroy of Egypt has gone further than this—be
has authorized the purchase of twelves hundred
horses ‘,l" the country for the cavalry of India.
The want of cavalry at the preeent time IS stately
felt in India. Uorees are scarce. and dear ; an
animal a hich in Eintismi would not command 110
Is worth upwards of £lOO there. In fact, as scarce
aro horses that orders have been sent to Australia
for their tervirtatton into India.
The detailed accounts from India are full of in
terest. They throw light on many transactions
which were previously obscure. The blundering
of General 11 indham. which was subsequenymra
trieved by the ekill and teat of Sir Colin Cam 11,
the commenderin-chief, and the graphic etch
by Brigadier Inglis, respecting the defence cf
Lucknow, throw a painful interest around events
the 'lake.] facts of which were previously known
through the medium of the electric' telegraph. Sir
Colin, considering his advanced years, has obown
extraordinary energy throughout this campaign.
Within twenty days he travelled more thou nine
hundred miles, fought several pitched battles, and
in every instance succeeded la defeagmg the ene
my. But the revolt, it is clear, is lei from being
suppressed. One Indian ne wspeper declares "that
the rebellious spirit of the country is up, and it
will nerd expenditure of troops and time to put it
down " Another journal from, the scene of the
rebellion 13 equally deeponding—" The mutiny
seems interminable; no sooner is it put down in
one district than it breaks out in another " More
troop, more patience, more money, are wanted to
crush out this tnrrible revolt.
TILE CITY.
Fatat accident to Col. R. B. Jones, Jr.—
Oa morning, about half-past ten o'clock.
shooking*ident happened to Col. Richard B.
Jones at Mt confectionary and Teetantant, Arch
street, below Eighth. A girl, who was In the kit
chen. (which is in the upper part of the building.)
saw Mr. Jones sitting on the seat of a third-story
window in the rear, which opens upon the stair
way. He appeared to be doing something to the
sash Her attention was attracted in another di
rection, and a moment after, Mr J. felt to the
ground in the yea striking the left ride of his
head upon the edge of a marble step.
ft is believed that he was reaching up teethe
purpose of pulling down the upper stub. when he
lost his balance and fell to the ground Mr. Jones
was picked up bleeding and insensible, and tarried
into the house. Several plusioians were soon in
attendance, but the injuries of the sufferer were
beyond their skill, and he lingered in an ineensibte
condition until three o'clock. when he died The
intelligence of the melancholy eyent spread TM
rapidly and until the time of the death of the an
fortunate man hundreds of persons •alled at the
house to inquire concerning his condition The de
cen•ed was about thi rty-flve years of age. He left
a wife and two young children
Few men were better known in the basins part
of the city than Colonel R B Jones, and none
probably had more friends and fewer enemies. 11
cams to this country from England when a boy.
and he was fir s one time engaged in the hotel of
Charles Bender, in Dock street When quite a
young man, Mr Jones started the Exchange Hotel,
in partnership with Daniel Coped.. Mr. Copple
afterwards retired from the concern, and the de
ceased continued the Imainess on his own account
with great tact and tweet., A few months nine/
Mr Jones difrOged tf his interest in the hotel to
his brother-in-law
On the let of July last, Mr. Jones opened the
restaurant and confectionary estahllinmeat in
Arch street, which was the scene of the sad *vent
which deprived the proprietor of bis life. Before
the consolidation of the city and districts, Mr
Jones was elected a member of Common Council
from Walnut ward. Re *erred is Council for a
min4le term, with credit to himself and advantage
to hit coast i went., Store that time he has taken
no active part in politic. The funeral of Mr
Jones will take place on Wednesday afternoon, and
pr...eeel to Laurel Hill Cemetery
hr.:s.--Abont slz o'clock on - Saturday
evening a destructive fire broke out in the store of
John W Harmer, formerly iliffegas A Manner,
No 110 North Third street. near Race. The
building in five stories high, with an iron front,
and belong , . to ("harlot 0 Sower. The house con
tained str,ck of auction dry goods, netiona do
valued at 1.18 000 The hooks were eared, and the
goods in the tint story rtmoved by the police amd the
Bremen The fire commenced in the second s'ory,
where the destruction of the goods was awrap/ata.
The contents or the upper stories suffered prinei
pilly dy water ILe building was considerably
damaged in the interior. The ha.chen had been
left open, and the thine, ascended through them
to the top story The tin nn the sue:tore is
fully covered by thew-Ince The flames were first,
seen bursting out of the:ccond-atory wind.•ws, both
ba-k and front. There wan en immense may. of
fire in thin story The store had been chased about
three-quarters of An hour The origin of the fire
in singular and mysterious. There was an in
surance ..f 310.000 upon the property.
The Philadelphia Hose Cowpony pat their new
'team engine in service at this fire for the tint
tune. There was some delay in getting the appa
ratus in sell ice, in consequence of the forcing hose
having been given to en engine cot:Tiny before
the arrival of the steam engine upon the ground
Between nine and ten o'clock on Saturday night
the roof of a dwelling iu Charlotte etreet, above
Brown, woe slightly damaged by fire
~flteged Misdemeanor in Office.--On Satur
day morning, Alderman George W. Williams, of
the Eleventh ward, was before Alderman Ogle, on
the charge of having committed Wallace II ante/
to answer the charge of arson without hearing any
witnesses pi sustain the accusation Mr. Webster
c trried the ease to the Court of Quarter Sessions
on a writ of habeas corpus. and the court dis
charged the defendant from custody. Mr Web
ster has now brought suit against Ald. William.,
to test the legality 4 thin alleged high•bandrd Oct
Mr Earle, the counsel for the defendant, asked for
a continuance of the ease, which request was grant
ed. The hearing is arranged to take place to-mor
row afternoon at four o'clock.
The doting exerrius of an Olney Night
School, tssentyeeeoud section. took piece on FA
lay night lust A report of the 'ch.!, f.r the
three mue,the it has been opep, was reel by John
Roberta. Esq , the visiting direoter, and, resolutions
if thanks to their toachera-111. ilea- F. Chris-
tine and Mini Emilie Eiverson— , were read and
adopted by the pupils. Appropriate and spirited
addre.nes were then made by Famed C. Ford and
John Crocker White. EN.I. The exercises were
inteisperned with sumo tiny good mush,. The
principal cloned in a touching and beautiful
speech The large room was filled to irierilowing.
and the nudience testified their pleasure in the
most unequivocal manner.
Rough Trialment.—Consirlorable excitement
wee created in Vine street, below Eighth. on
Saturday evening. in consequence of oho violent
ejection of an individual from a lager beer saloon.
the ejected had imbibed beer and refaced to pay
for it. and the indignant landlord pitched him
head foremost into the street. The bead of the
man came in violent contact with Borne object,
causing the blood to flow pretty freely. The dam
aged beer-drinker was carried to a neighboring
drug store, where his wounds were dreesed, amt a
warrant wan issued for the Arrest if the publican
Drowning Cute.—On Saturday afternoon
the body of John D. Ford was found denting in
the hkhuyikill. near Race street wharf The de
ceased left bin home in Rittenhouse street, near
Fifteenth. fire weeks •inee, while partially de
ranged. Ile wan maty-fire years at age, and has
left a family. Coroner Fenner held an inquest in
the cane A verdict of found drowned was ren
dered.
Death from fate inperanrc.—A. woman named
Susan Stearn, who lived in West Philadelphia,
drank three half-pinta of villainous rum, on Fri.
day night. and went to bed About eleven o'clock
at night she was found dead Coroner Fenner
held an invest in the case on Saturday A ver
dict of "death from intemperance" was rendered
Recaptured.—lligh Conatablo Trefta on Sa
turday captured a man known 33 .• Whitey Thaek
era " Thackura is a fo4ittve (tan justice from
Easton, where he broke jolt about ate weeks since,
in company with several others lie was commit
ted to await .1 requi,iti•m from the authorities of
Northampton county.
.lecelent at the Ifechaethal Bakery.— A
Frenchman, who was employed at the Me
chanical Fakery, at the corner of Broad an d Vine
streets, had two angers of ht-t right hand taken
off by the machinery of the kneading.tr..ugh.
early on Saturday morning
.11 three o'clock on Saturday afternoon Mr.
Elwood Haines, while purchasing a ticket fir tier.
mantown, at the depot at Ninth and t: veers streets,
had his pocket book. containing flfty-seven dollars
and several valuable papers, stolen from his pocket.
Death front Seglect.—Margaset Herrick
elxtv-eight years of age, died on :istnrday, at No
110 Water Rtreet, from sheer want of attendance
Coroner Fenner held an inquest.
A correspondent of the Missouri Republican
writes that lest summer he was at Nauvoo, and
conversed with Mr. Ilitorusn, who is mauled to
,100 1 4 mith's widow. Ile mys: "1 vat at the table
with the family, cona;sting of Mr Bitumen and
wife, and throe sons of Jet &pith, the eldest 'boat
twenty-throe or twenty-four, the second about
twenty, and the third a lad of some twelve or thir
teen years From Mr. Bitoman I learned that
not one of the family believed In Mormonism, and
that his wife—formerly Mrs. Smith—bed always
boon opposed to it, an well as the boys. Mrs. Bits
man is • msazuline, intelligent-looking lady, of
forty-five or forty-seven year.. She lea ware of
Now York."
NOTICIC Ile COII.ILXIINPMDMITIL
OoeTtippeoriesli tee Sa hamar , mill plasm *oar ha
mead tits toikrein Hies
Every easeeeeidattas matt be seeanstraied by the
newt of the 'nit:. L enter le Wars ternetteelia
Use tylegrtyky, bat ems aide et it &lust aboaltt b.
eTittta apoza.
Re obail to* gristly oblivid to gestlassa Is Pesssrl.
nada sal other Ststa Ps eostribstioso shin the ear
rem 114111 at the 4y is their porttestar Insolnisa, the
motion or the sonsusdiss amby, ih• imam at
popadlos, asd sal isibmslies Zia sill be botreteacqg
lo the metal radar.
GENERAL NEWS.
The Providence (R. I.) Joental &TS Sumo
excellent suggestions on how to lire cheaply. The
editor says teat conspicuous among the tM to
which they beat all ereatioe, it the macaw to
erbkh the American people vast, their Red. The
waste of en American kitchen utakd feed
family of equal site sad equal statism In tai i tt
Loring men threw away in extraregand i =
the means of making old age lade
comfortable, and men of larger isms:see mute be
proportion. At the present prime, alumi n a:
cent! I week, judiciously tipmpled, will •
strong laboring 0111 With a railleteney of
some and palatable food auk as Wien areal,
pork, beans, salt Lab and moat soup. which pre
pftly varied and Fewrly °oohed, an gond Girona*
ror anybody in hard times Half the better that
is is eat only unwholesome, bat, weft trot the
appetite perverted by the mutant we of it, would
be di/agreeable to the taste. Was get aorlatitswet
to it as the: do tobacco and nue
The /Liberia Messenger gives an anotatint Cif*
recent murder of • Mr. Barka, is Decatar tow,-
thip, Wubington eonoty, Ohio. Hs lett bow on
the 15th sit., and 1111 afterward Santa by the
rotdside some distance oast of his beam. His
death appeared to kiss been mud bye fall span
the gvoiand, and the body Mu basted within
abort time after. Lima oxsaltuatioll of hie :Writ
at the bank, it was discovered that be had drawn
some six hundred dollen in cash, only about on.
hundred of whieh was fosod upon his person. The
discovy - ceased an biteable into Probelde
manse of his death, and his friends exhumed the
laud', now dale buried, and an /squat wee
kola. A verdict lIMB retuned that death bad been
canted by a blew stroek byelaw penes with a
sillersbet, and by twittinjg the neck hair mad.
so as to sever the joint. No Moe has been had to
the perpetrator of the murder_
Thereis a society in Hostas for the imp- •
Lratession of enanterfeiting istiopuod of debarking
ersity. There are two btuadtedind lifty-osie
ite connected with ft, mart of them Sew San
land imititatioue there Memo Anterybesitia basic
enitnotted with it. one in New Tat, sad on. in
Canada. The segriOzr kat procand the casvietket
of on. bundled mid dirty-orroliperuse dubs; the
Ave years ending the 31st or Deenstea kW. Illie
moiety receiver from tlie State $2.,560 persairma,
conditional upon a censie expenditare by the ea
societies. Hitherto. all attempts to puma seen
terfeiting by tinted inkahara Whet. The amsda
lion considers it impoafOle to purest H, hutniach
as what man does can be imitated imeemetheily-
Their only hope is is Memel watettfabiem.
Philip Hawkins, the negro wbe wit cos
rioted of the mtuder of another imam ass some
months sinee, was cremated at Frederick, Md., on
Friday last, at 20 minutes put 12 eekelt, In the
preeeoee of an immense multitude, probablyma
boring tweaty thousand. The body bang for 25
minutes MS neck we; instantly broken ley the
fall. and animation was extinct in 6 nsiante• 13e
fore hie execution he addressed the flit analtitade
in a calm and clear TOiCe. betraying no amotios,
but looked pleasantly on every one, and maintain
ed the firtnnesa of a hero to the last. He kr made
a confertivn. in which •he acknowledges the mu
der, bat was drank at the time.
The New York Central Railroad, if reduced
to a single track, 'paid meatus eight Imadzed
and riityd,wo mile; the New York sad Ent /era
hundred and eighty-one. The former wet twenty
seven millions et dollen: the Latter tbirty-tkree
millions Three =Micas+ of this latter wow they
received from the State. the number et emplayear,
averaging for the year, wag : Central, 4.112; New
York and Erie, 4,000 The average east pee mile
of the whole road has bean: for tha Ceatral, 152„-
0,34 , New York and Erie, $72,132. Awenege eat
pet mile of track was: Ceatral, Merl; Lau
York and Erie. $43.303.
Gen. David Fulluood, whose death we uses
tioued iu " The Pricia" of 6etarday„ sae a resi
dent of Greensburg, Weenztorelend toasty, is (hie
State. His death wee caused b 77 At an
early age he entered upon pablie 11 e, and moved
the county in some of her matt important trouts.
haying filled the cams of duel' and arethemetszy.
At the time of his death ha was telleeter silent at
Johtatona. to which parities he wee bat recently,
te-appoiateS. Ili was eeteenteel mad itelerud
his large citrle of arptainbanem. He hero s
widow and largo family_
The correspondent of he New Weasel
Pi cry 0, ue sends to that paper some of she ustbse-
Dy taken In Chief Jsitke Ceart la retard
to the burning of the Gaited States trains 1011111 r
ing to the Utah expedition Several 'itemise
stated explicitly that the plendering pertly were
under commend of Mermen/ wheat they tat: w
enually. and whom Amass are gimlet mad tley
also say that the!, men told them that they ears
entered by Brigham Tsang to tarn the trains sad
cripple the limy In every way possible
After mach trouble, Manus county, 1111-
sUs. has et tut received Dos the Secretary of tear
listeri , n the patents for the swamp loads lj'tsg to
that r , :onty The sale cr these land, u now agree.
USA for the 6th of February. Their average sp
praitement is $6 Per sere_ They lie meth Is an
roue...sit and ea parte of the enemy. and the
Avirszraph. says, " comprise a gne4 Amoy trine
which are muorpented as farming heads is Me
lean •
A re.ocrable relic of a curious character wan
dug up liter the Her.keemet Rivas. a few days
tree It was apparentl• of oak. carved Cato the
eintilitede of a eow. with its drier. sad bee pro
bably been intended for the vedette' of seam
Ile di en divinity, or other art:els. Tlte ihnriottry
of rata relit eel:silts in the interior being excavated
Into hollow apartroirsrse,--et say apparent
dots in tie wood, or any risible messier Ennis;
at the interior without teeth Joint
As the prospects of the ice crop this *SOON
are dubious. it stay to sateresting to state that
there are in stereliousea at Bemis Pnati : sear
Lowell. Mew reocarding to the rer royals—
where it has barn lying ft% r bum
deeds et tact et Ibis article. It la tweed by
company of Laren sal Salsa gestlessea. It
could all be sold to-day at a price tint wwM
corer stomp sod interest added to fret Celt
Mrs. Marble, who was captured by the In
diana tt Spirit Lake is Mareh lam. when her hus
band and forty other' wire brutally maidued mud
all their property destroyed or carried away, is
D3ll at Et Louis- Fhe Is a feeble health *Miter
mind al..vion distracted frau the intbseritahie hor
rors, fatigues. and rho at: ex}eriersoed at the
dreadful ma Lucre, and daring ten nessikt sad
half captivity.
A mechanical bakery is building in Boston.
The insrbinery hat hoes pot opts a six-storied
edifiee known as itosecil's beibitag. serenty.lir•
feet by one bemired and ta i foot deep tieariy
one-half the two lest tousled of the Idea is onto
pied by the ovens, engine. ete.. bat it is expected
thst the whole tnilatu i c will be used for naming
on the baking business when the concern jets tato
full operation
Mn. Robinson, the "veiled murderess," is
employed in kni ['lug stookirm at Sing Sing prune,
New 1011. On T . L 4 itt re entenng the mom in which
,be it engaged at work, the inrariably endearers
to tarn her fats into, opp., , eitt direetwn. as if she
was the ebeertect of an obeereers." - old ive
and confinement begin to leave their tram of de—
coy on her one* beautiful eourownante
Ship Oxford, of Freeport, Maine, which
mite) from Leghorn, September alb, for Boston,
with • cargo of marble. among which was the,
statue of Daniel IT ,boner, .ta abandoned at mat
in November. Cspi „Minot and craw took to the
Mats, and were fallen In will by slip 3fary awe!
'Martha, Cartain Extol, bound from Boston for
Trieste Alt hind, were fared. and landed at
tt,brattar.
A Boston paper says that there has been
stored in the United State* werakoases at that pert
for a year or too put a large tat s( saltpetre. for
which the owner some time mice retied as ofer
of about sixteen cents per poem& holding out far
an additional cent At the present tints the mar
ket price is not much OTIIS tit Hiatt per F. -UAL the
original met being about ten or eleven cent=
Mr. Fillmore Follett, son or Josepb Follett,
of Conewango township, Warren esnoty.aa . was
badly walled by the bursting of the :quint boiler
attached to King A IT atton r tannery - . in Colum
bus- on Wednesday, the 131 i lag , which ternai•
rated in ht• death on the Sacday fellowir.g A
wife and three children arc left to mourn his Saes.
Thecholera has carried off a large number
of victim. to Honduras—in the department of
Gracia' over 5,040 persons haring d,od. The
greater part of these were attacked after th•
opening of the graves of !Otte persons who died of
cholera :vole twenty years ago *
American seamen are dying at Port an.
Prince, of yellow fever, at the rate cdtra per day,
and those of other nationt In proportion to their
numbers There are NJ it,rpitals., and the sick ars
crowded into miter - able huts. •hart they ars not
cared for, or attended by any except eases
Albert Sanford, one of the most active and
capable bosintas men nt Whitirghtet Vermont.
was a few day, tince tem , red to an mane a/yin=
—a ietiat of the .4J-called stint - aalllllaifesuitioto.
Ile has a brother. In another saylrna, alto* La
sanity was ccoasi , nel by sintdar caawrs
The Wool-Growers' Reporter states the
decrease of the w , -,1 er , 2p in Obi.) in 1F T, as tnn
pared with M.& to be zr. 373 sbe.q• or 11.3
lbs The ehr. of 15.545 was 10 .511 azi that
of 1 , 157, 9 A..". 9 "4.7) lb..
Mr. Kincaid. toil-keeper on the t.idge at
Augarte, says this is the fest minter f'r thirtr
three year= in eth , :h learnt here e:t ercnned tie
Kennebec riser en the ice et that plate by the In
of Jet:vary
William McDonali, a heave painter. 3ied
stuitlenly to Newark, N J 1131 -t k. He Ins
abort forty Are yesri cf agt. as.i lesTes s info
sm i ors ct-.0 , 11 , c In tienitatecirructitswes
Ex-President Tyler is lying very iii at his
re.fltr,e. t•titr wood Foreet. Cnartcp Coy coun
ty. Virgo‘i% H. has been .116"rior, for wend
week• past with a ftTere damn...at:3 , k
J u s c ph Lonc, a firnPer reSiiiJg near
Beidget , n. N J , we: poled to death by a pair Oir
13111105, last week
Kite Stlngeon, an scr.ols3pliSh.:llyOtng
eighteen tears r( died suddenly at the resi
dence of her fareeto in Baltim:re., en fri.3.yoorn
g.
lu
Sailrrisker Win. Bennett. Parser Ijohn, and
licatswarn John 3feKialey. Wirt been ordered re
the United States rtaas frigate Colorado.
On Tuesday and Wednesday 15,e00 beabels
of corn were sold at Norfolk, at .STeente for whits
and 60 cents ter yellow.
The President has officia Hy recognised
Adolph Range as rice eon/Wei tie Netherlands
for the State of Georgia.
Mr. Abel Leivellen, an old citizen of Nor
folk Va. died on Monday.
•
Lieut. E. Fairfax Gray, gaited Stales Ottay ,
las reaped his somtala&a.
Stockett, a patio@ officer of Sa
more, died is thateity oa Thunday bat.