The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, August 27, 1858, Image 1

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MAIMPAOTORS Al'o "ElLr2Aclrll4:'
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abifily Itmittaikkor AILYILMAILA 0 or;I:7-
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BOT III, COMMUNION , BEILVTOBIET/I; URNS
- prfottaks, oostxTs; oursorAT.rsitezialp
KETS,i .
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iihraaume rea.
Giaind keine eallOist. - :**4 **ea p•
Priwerriek , Wr lej , Eaqt., • - I Lim%
Morris L. lallowpll, lrec, Thos,.P, Apartumk,
toianualsAlSof., Esq:Jl2B
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Colloottoiutinutts,
Aragerigat • soak .Notea'aaa s sti wit4atai
wastage,' gos....ptelota epiolo 9424 Banytil?` t*Sil
-Xsad TinmaiiwtogiAtitedP- -•-
Stoats and bought and go* au' 001tordid oat at
'4llholkt m
iogiflifoktiitiu.:Phltugulph.htsed•NottTork..
kaltltirC 40.0g4IDAt:PA1101r;
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Sin really* proppt attentliks:tt Heir
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• Itichstr4 Undolpla; Plt o 44o4Pkbh•
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Oise Avis 0 amtil.sAutolaikeireri day, sad at
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atad7nrtritess: CENT. 114::
.v. US= ittenONatii„: lIANNEV-,ISOIIVVIPW
1 1 .A1M-W 'V 11T5SEV, SOUTIVIVIST 00140
'tol VADIN PEPVLADBLPHIA.:
toritoootnumeo—n yid eoliths iii .4- PVilvoiiii.. ,•
...i. Mew lit viloiTstt in lostaits,Tille oill, lilt la.:
lend 1.0410414.10,467 ekillopedeitiidt day. Tat with:
,_-%f. . _ _.. - -
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ialete!'' 'l.ldee.elaSie l i;Veleolt ia Ai
' - i,: 111 9M V ' ' 11W , Veatieb;,iiiei - **** 7 '
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- "`ltrop _lbild.:: - --• AP Cigna ihewriee - f
4 7 '4 =owl p:Oseter, v.-_,i;--•:',- - 1004 PhikillifAis4;..;,'
*-7 :. 11 5 61 ) 6 13 1 5 6 4 1 . Ati; .;,' ,a;:t. ;',i hie# ol . :
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Wi t lul k rowte 4 u 4 iiirnfOlitil 5nAd4(0,11,.. - ..'4., , :
The
_vereentia ate , male' le"- - egsfonalty• with. ila
.greArealca9harte4itriL ATA Imt 6ZWA T seen .;
sap Az itvsys wimp piefeet iieeiff#l4 the de
- topk, yid witlek" moat. foil to day
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peelemeseArma sta.; -
:_bMsr, $41,00 41 1, 1utl• ""-", ' , AlO4-7 '
1V'0:1-811.: (241) t DOW: STUMM% VItTIVII
NIB OINViSTALTX a14IN681111ND; • • •
ND: 88 , ,'(2111) DOCK' STSEETii = rink
T:i _PMc,Watrarv,riVE
via wag . ttANL f4VIVOS .
01 1 -:(24O•DOCIK__'IMMIT.,:-. / P M
• Ptuturr HATIMSIggrk
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fflitire.4 . " l ) ; lettinnitiOni•
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$4 , ,101,41: - T7114.34,1, b BON, -
ltrir 7 .4f0519 4 / B §/ 11 * - .5194 8 ,:.
jt0..110 86nthrIONT•ltrOi,bilfrorMh44tauS.
-;
;1.4, „Jim tl,l PIDI4IN,rtADI9, I
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MINEE
=AHTHMH DRESS __Gpops:. =SHARP
LEsa imotrilizts site oistupw Ytendh prlited de
-104 afriatitashmete qtyles, itmall e alt an d tim de ;
Oa , Bobed 4 d> taide.tt r Robesd
10.4111'.‘“'
;Vint !GOODS_ YOB 18581
14 1 -'":9.0111,06d jaids of IdEWBILKS, Just received by
oaNL sor ,oni am• , ,
4...8..ent. EIGHTH and . EPRING. GARDEN Street..
. • Bought f0r.13/4/1 and to be *old oily for OABII !,
We can acieddentlyasaert that. the Admire goods are eb
sleep that .pnrchasen can sate a large per cantage by
buying of , • • • •
0 BLADE SHER cannot b e excelled on We Conti.
nearer America! - -. • , • ,•
cladlange • taiiiparbsSn. - -
- ifetc Detainee eif-laantifil design,. •
Petit de.Oheries,,Yelsielae, and , handsome Beg
lick, !mak, and American Chintzes. •
, New Bhawlei - .Crape, &hawk s , BroelMEßiawls,
ehawle, Ao.oice. •
A very-large.etosk, of: Domeatie edualine,, Flannels,
Blan kete , AlalltiligmmtsrPaa",*o.
Nandlyldnenent our own importation.
-Table` Clothe,- Table Coven, Piano Covers, stand
Cloths, Dead meres, its.; ler Illen's and Boys , wear.
We have _determined. to keep, the bind Stook Ibis
season Wok hare ever" had,end - ,to maintain our repute
alon armee of BM-Bost NOUNS in ,Philadelphia to Buy
at.. - - • -
0-Itll OJT Bbi ,•
B. B. Dor. MIRTH ft.-iiPIUNG GARDEN 130 Mets.
gi WE HAVE ONLY-A/NH /WOE."
• 3410-13
NE PA U; 0004. -
Are now ijwlilog i ' ottobio ,;isoorbooot of Now Goals
Ta iutattigi ti ihitr Orin importotfone;thep offer ihlo
Irons iihoqioittoioake etoW et other Importiro.
'wholieell4tioirfit follye4hOn rraietp;lO bienty
ortoaga ind oioellerwoof Mae, 4 any put lemon:
The imperil=
.4,/,:irrlYeiai well is retail eerier:earoil. goo,
to - b, all 4 . 16 atitazaers iirr! vine tbla Pall,
ae bay lure e . srranyegwte. to big:4 lint
silearlorretAriteli9oodii Which may appear lu Paris
fate,le,lll64maii : '
81,1;01111EITITUT BT.'
PANTALOON- STUFFS. • -•- •
Coatings; Wattage, and Croadelo tli a. ; ' •
- • *Moods apasially for Boys' , weas.- • -
~ .-ittmtaerTant Staffs, aelliogeheap. ,
••• •
PItEBH-111181IN8 • = '
In tli• basement ; of gOod 'make, by the Ara or
place, at ailnuti4et ant; an the - Aginstis package pica,
_ •
ilnassallessvy. • • -
-:gbirt Besonssi Table Linens: _ •
.„•,,Tasrela,.,Distaera and.tiaybirni4 : • -- • ;
• -ifiebiage and Peannele.. - •••••• • :
MinglLLlll3 QUILTS:
from it llbb pilt-pkir'op:witia.'
anminsraprsadrballiateh u p. , = - -
-a
2 - -tiPtata Mutters 141631 - tatedledo, $1:25 ti. SI.TI:
pasitsraleati 112.00 , t0 $3:50. -
,Butai Coulson Silk Mantillas and Dostirs, - whielt
are will slime eat ata iffead• ' t
Coeds dnaintar and siall'polu L ag
neat - said du*: new_ Myles. -
• 000PRIt
- L, l -,:f - -__;l:l3:,4.*Yis . e041.0;11..a0i is,AP-Tcg7,;:
yirrirps2 NFL, QK ,WEITE .41 4 1D, SLAVS:
Ace s , wacop4,
110,1110! , 14;:= 4 ;Ors,41morzirikappliod ;
!li
~006 0 1 1n 11
- „--roar. AND EINON weitinOtrEis,
" NADDIACTORIii
itAiupt - gitetET,
- sonTa'aror BELOW ti/XTEC _
• '&11-11-imi--':
lIENDRY'kiWnt/ 8,-
#WAlii,TItgEB'.4.Nii:7llOLEO44, pampa,
- Si-14JES,
ARCS Streets,
•,- PHILADELPHIA:.
-- • -
' •
••:" •
D It, '1?
r „
I , :tot-r6It.OIII4IXIA:andRAIITIIIIN
I‘. 'gr4 . ** 9l)3‘ 8011` #4 l q2.- .
c f ,,ClAßil f l Wrozipt sii.mormis 11IIY.BRO will
wpw—l!w N.. $4 North Forma l Street.
ItOKEIS le BROTHERS,
'MAXTI7.IIOTiniBM
Win:VW:kW - Eli/1
OITY.- AND_ B.AOTBRN '
7BDOTS -AND :SHOES, - : 7/
412 4NP . - ) 44 *A1647 - slttiair,
4mo. Plttlii Saila Mae; -
PAILADBLPHIL
FALL -STOOlt: •
spp.ani
Boa sow-zit proura , ctuas /MD MILL 111801VID
•"e*.ror,
' 1100111111D,1111101111;‘ •
- 614: Orii 'AND_ `iteinilini44ussfiTtraß.
7 'lllllor #ter offer for sII 913 5 , RIO terms for oahj
or ea the mma;edit. Buyers -are invited to roll and
=die th•l`'
'ftllooll3, lOW 43HOE8.—The Ambeerilier
li-r , z l no on band. lirge'and!vitied ettetk - of BOOTS
asko/10.1111, whieb bd wRt asii ittthe lowert?Dr:
sonar B. iriighjitittirwx Ate.
I~aILAD3LPHL&.
ErF/P4ilp
I I4OBES;
B
-BY.THZ BALM ciR 110.1%
GE o'.• '` , /v dir'B l l3
ub 426 4i7
- tE r iM 24 ;- PAir/Pg" , :'
`• " 1 49* BtaLDANO+ NVeggiTEXPT,
• • Oros door *bore Petit&
. •
4 )110+11111 ,
iutrums.; - • - •
NEENOR , EIb c
CONCIEBAB WEBB
=.- - • ' TOILET 'SLIPPERS UP 'PAR%
suppinj 140E111, &e. nth •.m.
ow ' , ftriminommois 10".
Fl4COPifATlg,:filtrANo'.
In N•or,'Od,for sac by
**eii*Oll;liitlii. :
inIA :ADAMS MMPSSSO? CO.; OPIUM
=• 890 VIMITNIIT 'STRATI = totwai lim Nitamite
, irmnua imumnumaza, s _ mow irom. mad
R15..CM,1 A t itias=taill i atreaeation
rtaetpq
WM4, thortto swiss,
vg i tt 11 A4 1 ORD
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p . irttes, kepi con
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--- • - I- , - I:Titify*:'.'& o
i•grate itteACioliCon of, LiAlioi'io'th'elr,BtoOk of
• - o/.9.exa,oißaituuts, , DAOLA 2 fEr, too
:
NV, 3El'.43wrA,
'At the
, PARDS , a2ANTILLA' AND CLOAK EMPORIUM
'lol(o,ll,llST#llTjtilitt; .
",L'HILADELPHIA:,
IapAOICP,RENpEiIIiSSIICLRES t -,
X.P.,Nfroharii,Tery am:Anent
,Blaik 'Doeskin", or Tn
ribtiiquAllUei." Black French (Notbs. N!inr ylea,of
4"2"9414444 1tt a rga5S twirgEß,a
CHESTNUT, ANHEIGHTII.
; , LEVY
AUTUMN' MALEiI
HOOTS spxoos.
,
JOSEPH,T.II,OIOI3ON & CO.,
Ito. 814 bro4RIIRT 8111B&T;
'
Rel. 1 . 40i1 & 718,11INITIf PLLCS,
4'4414 Pt.
Shoe :Armbingi
- eezLootio;
PATIENT LEA . VILER,
;RAGA
spit DRaito
Ais. nArriiirrit `qo,
ltl6"Nalli
I No. 100 North DBLANIABB Avenue
ir_ENTRAL INSTITVTE—ENGLISH AND
SOROOL.—WIII be re-opened MON
DAY, September Bth. TIMM and SPRING GARDEN
Blateta: • H. G, MOOIIIRN. A. M.. -
an23-6w* Principal.
IVIRS. WM:TIRE'S BOARDING AND DAY
8011001, FOIL YOUNG LADIES, 1050 SPRING
GARDEN Street, - will be re•opened MONDAY, Pep.
teintier etic - - W2B-3w*
• DUFF & CO.'S MERCAN
• TILE , OULLEGE," Southeast corner
. ERHITH end. CHESTNUT Streets :
(established in 1840, and incorporated by the Legisla
ture or Pennsylvania.) ip this well-known Institution
the
COUNTING lIIMSE COURSE
nt Practical, Slagle, and Doable Entry
• • BOOKKEEPING,
it;luding all the AuxittAay Boot% COMMEACRAL CAL
ottLATIoss, and
BUSINESS WRITING,
is taught lathe moat eluiciendal and nattafactory style
W G. E. AGNEW'S INSTITUTE YOH
• V 0, .7011NG LADIES, 1711 NINE Street, will,
en MONDAY, September eth, re-open its twenty-ninth
nation. For circulars containing terms &a.. please
1 5 ) 4 1 .7 to W. G. E. AGNEW, Principal,
au23.lm* , ' - _ 1711 'VINE Street.
ST.
- MARK'S EPISCOPAL .ACADEMY,
LOCUST LOCUST Street, west of Sixteenth, will be re
opened for the Fall Session on hiONDAY, September
8, 1858. .The _Principal twill be at the Academy on
Thursday the fid, and Friday the 8d of September, from
9A. M. until 1211., to furnish. Circulars and receive
applications for admission.
J. ANDREWS HARRIS,
. au2B.nortcfr3t* Principal.'
RITTENBOUSE ACADEMY--The Eighth
Session of this Institution for Boys will com
mence WEDNESDAY, September 1, 1858. Rooms
Northeast corner of CHESTNUT and EIGHTEENTH
Streets. Entrance on Eighteenth street.
sun -in - VON*, Principle
WEST POINT AND COLLEGE
, MATHEhiATIOIL—Private leneenn in any por
tion of Mathematical and Mechanical oedema, and that
special inetructlcn which will Intact) excellence in chum
exercise, end the attainment of the bleier Academic
hectare. may be obtalnal of P. STEWART. Institute
108 FOURTH St., below CHESTNUT. an2l-ot*
YOUNG LADIES' INSTITUTE,-
8. W. Corner of ARCH and TENTH Streets.
- The pupils In this institution are institioted lo all the
branclpa of a thorough Engliob education, and every
faculty for the acquirement o: knowledge provided for
them. French, Painting, and Drawing taught at code-
rate charges. 7 The Fall term will 0,1110 , 1308 eept. lat.'
„aulg.l.ot* HARRIET .BROWN, Principal.
fIOMMEROIAL AND CLASSICAL IN—
STITUTE. at 1802 FILBERT Strest.Tbis School
will open MONDAY, 6th of September. Alt English
"branchei, Mathematics, the alassice, and Modern Leal
guliges, taught bye method with& insures accurate and
khermigh knowledge
For testimonials of suttees terms, and other particn-
WS: see the Circular, which maybe had at 619 ORM
NUT; or 1802 FILBE RT Streit. "-
Dr 0. SEIDENSTIORER, late of Brooklyn, L. I.
References..L.Rev. J. A.Yeoghatt, Mei: William H.
Furness, Rev, Mann, Bev. J. H. A. Bomberger,
Rev Th. Stork, Prof. John B. Hart, Prof. H. Vethake,
Benjamin Gerhard, Esq.,Oharles Vestn, Esq , 0. F.
Hagedorn, Esq., Hey. H. W. Beecher, Brooklyn; Rev.
G.' W Bethune Biooklyn ; Theodore Sedgwick, Esq., N.
Y.; Prof. 0.0. ' Dalton, Cambridge:" . anl9-Im*
AOADEPIY OP THE PROTESTANT
rEL EPISOOPAL LOOT and JUNIPER
Straits.
The autumnal Seeslon of this Institution will open
'on MONDAY, September 6th, at S o'clock A. M.
The'Ephstopal,ArAdemy.preseute peculiar advents
goll,heth for the moral Ana' tutelleotual training, end
for the OLT steal development of the youth ` oommitted
to Its care. - The retiree of infraction ie thorough, and
no pales will be spared to perfect the pupils in the va—
rious studies which from time to time they mil pur
sue
The moms of the Academy Building are numerous,
lofty; and well iritutilatAd, sad the pupils dnr'ng re
- ens enjoy the advantages of an enclosed play , troand,
And an ample gymnassium.
BOys'abls to read, and not leis than eight years of
Cgs,ars received As "soon as they hive begun to write
and cipher, and are conducted through the various
'clause of the Academy with eirapld,ty proportioned to
their ability. ' -
The tuition fee for thossin the lowest Oast is $6O
per asinine, for ill others 4V6 per annum; Payable half
yearly; in Advance. „Besides thie fee, there aro no other
shargeas -'Drawing, the Prenelt language, and the use
of.the (Ijmuusitun being included in the, above
mentioned. , - ,
•Appliention tot Mioiiationpaay Da =Moto tie Princi
pal, at the PlaadempOlally ,after , nnicitat betwOil
Elea Unto n(lo aryl I.9"o'NoiLair . .k: M. -• .. • •
anl.o-to f-4w - - -
DGEHILL
Jua NRwlsnairr..::-Initiotobootreititsip.f 0 - 040
wbdix - - -
IMtts:criter--.2.0
ildirldEetakeliiithytte fel
'Crar,puplertkoroiithltiiisater entscieotarprinelplas,
-Marto forte ibliesehablia of *ought *bleb will louder
CCM* kind bleier attalsiromitiltapWatid May; Paola
motion: Composition; mid Rome are practised in the
Edigsdull literary, Society, which ireirracee aR the pu
pils of lids Mod; for particulars, terms, Rci„ ad
dreas _ REV. lams I: BILE, or
anll•2m nay.
rirlHE MISSES AERTSEN will RE-OPEN
their SCHOOL ROB, YOUNG LADIES on MON
DAY, the 6th of September, nt their residence, ROWE
Street, Germentown.
surt-lmoi,
HISSES. CASEY AND MRS. BEEBE'S
LTA' BOARDING AND DAY SORuOL •WOR YOUNG
LADIES, N 0.1703 WALNUT Street, welt of ERVEN
TEENTII,4PhRadeIphie, will -be re-opened on WED
;NESDAY,,the Bth of Septembei. an2,2no*
rip I T NDB N 9 AD L PIII.A.
0031:61NRCIAL OOLLEGE,"•oortheort. coma of
,CI4IIBTNIIT sod !INVENTS Stmts. ,
' Au Inetttution 'designed to, Ai young ono for • ♦0•
TIME BUSINESS. ,
The whole building ke occupled, sad Atted up in
idyls nupsseing anything of the
Tho • / on f kind i g n - this
county.
rough prepßOtMolhßUTElß.honso.
B. B. Comm, Brunole Dockina, -
George B. Stuart, David .1.11.1n0
- John Bparhawk, - David B. Brown,
Isaac Hac ker, - - 4. V. Parsons,
.
D. B. Hinman, - Broderick Brown,
Joahus,L ppliacott. ' ap2841
ff
_ONG'S SPRING GARDEN ACADEMY,
A-d N. B. nornerNIOUTU and BUTTONWOOD Stn.
COMAUCEOLM DIPARThiENT.—Book-keeping in
all its various forint preparing Students +horoughly for
siltation' in any branch of bulimia.; Plain and Orna.
mental Writisigi Commercial , Caloulitintu Law and Oor
respondeinie.. No institution in the 'United States gives
a more thorough and practical course. In this depart.
melt no teaching is done In eisasea, and is open - DAY
and EVENING. Time unlimited.
MATIIIMATIOAL AND, CLABI3IOAIi DEPANT
BIENT.-=(Separate from the above,) Young Men and
Boys are prepared for any grade of an 2:cellst' and Olu.
deal Educationais : Spelling, Beading, Writing, Gram-
Mir Geography, Arithmetic, Philoeophy,'dco ; Ancient
and ' Modern Languages, with all the higher Collegiate
Stad.lei., Santoro, of , months *eminence September
let,
e nd February let. 'Pupils receiced at any time be
fore or after thesedates and ebarged eccordingly. Oats
fovea furnished cage.
rogii.tt DONLEAVY LONG, krincipal.
URFANT & STRATTON'S CHAIN OF
NATIONAL MEROANTILE COLLEGES. Phi
ladelphia College, floutbesgt corner SEVENTH and
CHESTNUT Streets. , Nor iurormation, cell or send for
circular. 1.3164 f
- EVENING SESSIONS MANE COMMENCED.
WILL - RE-OPEN ON THE FIRST
, • IF MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER, for the Seholantto
psz.Oonaisting of ten montbi,
INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG LADIES,
'-, No. 1628 WALNUT Street,
Ths system of tuition is based on that adopted in the
beet Seminaries in Europe ; 40 comprises thorough in.
etrtiction In the Zuglidf, French, and Latin languages t
sPotial attention Is also pad to the for:nation' of an ele:
pat style of composition, and to the cultivation of a:
taste for polite_' literature. The Gonne of study will
embrace every branch Of education. ..
A limited number of pupils admitted lute the family.
Their religious and moral training Is under the sPecial
are of lire. Bead, who has bad many years , experience,
and 'deference will be paid to the feelings and wishes of
theliparents In thine matters. The health and comfort
of the young ladies is also carefully attended to by her.
Weekly boarding pupils, from Monday till Friday, re.
waved at proportionate rates.
# week , / vacation at Christmas and At Taster.
TERMS.
(Paysble half In advance, and half at the expiration of
tire months.)
Nos tuition in the regular courao of study sloo 00
N.B.—A Junior aka" will be formed.
German, Bpanith, Italian, and other laignageo,
(Todd and instrnmental,) Drawing and Painting, (In
oil and water olors,) a 4 Profeuors , charge'.
llee of Plano, • per annum $ 20 00
.
- •
For Boarding 250 00
Walking at - 50 dents per dozen.
. Each boarding pupil id requital to bring her own tow
-ebb gilder fork and spoon. _
. rex rent at cost. ,
TESTIMONIALS.
. .
It iffords me pleasure to state that Mr. J. J. Reed is '
recommended by racial testimonials of diatinguished
gentlemenin London. From personal acquaintance with
biro, I emineost cheerfully recommend him as an ac
come pu pli blished scholar* and gentleman to
A. CON the conddence of:
thc'. • AVERSE.
The selmoriber takes great, pleasure in , uniting with
Dr. Converse in the above recommendation. Brom per
sonal acquaintance with Mr. Reed, as well as (rain hie
,distingnished testimoniale, I am confident of his emi
nentabbtlltlesasagentle man and scholar.
CIDARLEB WAMBWORTR.
We are happy to hear that Mr. 1. J. Reed, a gen-
Daman of oonsiderable literary attainment', and who
hascontributed to Drahom's many excellent et etches on
eminent persons i hue re.opened hie Institute for Young
Ladies, at 1623 Ws.lnut street, one of the most admira
ble localities in the city. Mre. Reed is is lady who has
had many years' experience in tuition, and bean a high
reputation forma-eels in training her pupilei both mo
rally And mentally. Mr. Reed. from .his knowledge of
Enroseailingtmgcs, and from having gredeated in the
tor, colleges in Buglend, imparts the advantage', of the
European systems of education; and particular at.
ant 'ion la paid jo the "tidy of -English Composithia and
fonAlLitenltUre. - - We would lay-come 'trees. on- this
It.• 'fact, eineagenenr literary. information and out.,
'tough farthe mod distitgatehing Mans of ilk.
bile "id and retine.dednestion, are on the whole, far
grer. -Rested in moat ochoole Mid colleges than any
Athol- bee ,adnes.--Jiditor of graham's Malaefn4 for
Nay,
PREF VINGL
01 111e1311
4 11 010 ., 44 1ry . ta'
:et ' : ita
L., iil D. ' , 1 ; 45 ro v
foes ßt• OS °l b t f il t d h l:r e 't'' P l h T Y " st i o t :l
I!e 16 .30 1 i Ali i r' ./ S, t° o; LL. D., Professor of , Aweleilt Lee.
arc r a .1114.
' ''-''
2;:oo l.l ht l i. n . . te, ii ii i i , ili w s°l . , l'oiner, edA l L
o . r of 'The Yr' its:
P a k ell i n M . if edit '
, 0. idond, Esq., editor of GtakowN Mega-
, Rey.. W_ illiftlal :1- Stevens, D. D.l nectar; Of St. An
drew's., ..
. • .ne. keg
CDO':Cssus Cknreee, D. D.,teittoy of the Christian
bserttr. •
aic ` llO vre4Bwisix, D. / 11 .1 Arai-Street Presby
terian Ohara: ‘.
Josepla x , text, Rage, West Philadelphia. ,
TSwesi,;o3. :year oak., West VaDatliODlA.
.; . .
V i SE—Eteinentary, and Anishink
.11a4.0;PUlakeil hnipl mild; No. ]628
-WALNUT -- . - ant4za
eb'ucittional.
M. ROOM% priumpabi.
P. EDWARDS,
Ma. B B EIISTON, Pello3llll
x 49, Q. FAJ.,CONEIi Sf - 00,,
" 725 CUIPT2iIIT- - triiiin
1 50, 0 * . ..**OMPljrie*Ortuiein - fot , s •
J. J. REND%
itEvErenttons
ell 4 I 4 ft I; Y. AUGUST 27. 1858.
Wow publications.
PETERSON'S COPNTERFEIT
TOR FOR 'SEPTEMBER. IS NOW NEADY:i
.TERMS.:
MONTHLY'NUDIDER, - onoroir O/iOO
SEMI-MONTHLY ):CO
SINGLE NUMBERS
11111)ETERSON's COUNTERFEIT DET
JL TOR for September 1 is now ready. Set It at Mice.
GET THE BEST DETECTOR—PETP-
Bows is that ono. 81 new Counterfalta = •
STOREKEEPERS
DETECTOR always at their desk. •
IIDETERSON'S DETECTOR is published
twice %month, on the lot and lath. Price 10 c4nto.
31 NEW C 0 UNTERFEITS—PETEW
BOWE DETECTOR for Sept let to now roAdy4
31. NEW COUNTERFEITS—PETER
80N'8 DETECTOR for Sept let Di now ready'
PETERSON'S Couqorfeit, Detector for
Beptember let le now Teddy. Get It at once. •
DE T E R SON'S Counterfeit Detector fOr
September let is now ready. Get it at once. ,
au2 , 5-St
J)YING CHARGE OF REV. DUDLEY
A. TYNG.
• READY THIS DAY.
' STAND UP FOR JESUS.
- CONTENTS: - -
FRONTISPIECE! Portrait Or RAT. D A 'TYR G.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH of Bev. D. A. TYNGI
NEDITIAN BALLAD: APPLYING THE CHARGE:-
STANZA I. THE CHRISTIAN : Illustrated.
STANZA. 11. THE FAMILY : Illustrated.
STANZA 111 THE F aTHER Illustrate&
STANZA IV. THE MINISTRY : Illustrated.
Sraszt V. CHURCH OF THE OovutiAtias
trated.
STANZA VI. YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN A 138001;
ATION: Illustrated
STANZA VII. HOLY CHURCH UNIVERSAL:
trated.
STANZA VIII. WHOLE HUMAN RAGE: Illustrated.
osio—by Emerson, Bradbury, and Bower.
ADDITIONAL POEMO—By author of the Ballad.
CHRISTIAN UNlON—Choice extracts -
• Price 60 cents, cloth ;40 cents, paper. By mall,
poet free.
Churches, Sunday Fohoopff, Bible Claims, &0., cup
plied with packages at wholesale prtcee.
Neatly, and,tastefully got up; contents attractive in
an eminent degree."—{North American and United ,
State,' Gazette.
Out, of the neatest and most attractive little works
ever issued.”—{The Press.
T. H. STOCKTON,
an 26 Stn. S. W. corner Broad and Chestnut etc
JAMES MALLEN & SON.
No. 25 SOUTH SIXTH STREET,
Publish HE CITY OF THE GREAT RlNG—the
most superb work on Jerusalem ever Issued. $8.50.
HADJI IN SYRIA 76 canto.
CARPENTRY MADE EASY. $3.
NEW JUVENILE LIBRARY. $2.60.
CAVE OP HACKMAN. $l.
GOSPEL AND ITS ELEMENTS. 55 cents.
OFISIcTIAN BVIDENOES. 85 cents.
IX PRIEIB.
PALESTINE, PAST AND PRESENT. $5BO.
IN AND AROUND STAMBOUL. $1.25. au2s.lm*
JUST OUT! NOW READY! I
THE " NATIONAL mgcumno,"
THE GREAT WORKINGMEN'S' PA PER I
RhAD IT! MEAD! READ IT!
ljj• It contains a large amount or matter of vital
Interest to every one that carol a living by honest In
dustry. To ba hod at the Office, No. mix South Third
Street, (up stairs )
AGENTS and DABBLERS WANTED IMMEDI
ATELY. aul7
VALUAB LE WORK ON COLONIAL
• LAW-01fALBIRRB' OPlNlol4B.—Opiniorou of
eminent Lawyers on various points ei Englah Juris
prudence, chiefly concerning the Colonies, Fisheries,
and Commerce of Great Britain : Collected and Digested
from the Originate in the Board of Trade and other De
positories. By 0808.01 Quinine, Esq., 1.8.8., B.A.
vol. Bvo, 815 pages.
Just received and for sale by
KAY & BROTHER,
Law Book sellers, Publishere, and Import e r s ,
'JY2B 10 Booth Sixth street.
NEW MAGAZINE:
I BRYANT'& STRATTON'S "AMERIOAN MIR
CHANT , ' is now ready, and may be had at all NEWB
MOOTS. Their Agent, Ospt. J. 11. Bell le canvassing
this city for yearly onbearibers. Price s i - per annum.
Address BATA iT I STRATTON, Mercantile College,
S B. corner SEVENTH and ORBBTNUT litzeilts, Phi
ladelphia.
atillinera tgooos.
==M
_ -•-•
• , Z.l , •L
MILLINERY 000D5 GENERALLY,
To which they Invite the attentiOn of the trade
an26.lm* - .
33 .SOUTH SECOND STREET. 33
Buyers of
MILLINERY GOODS,
Will find us prepared 'to exhibit • most complete and
elegant assortment, of e
New II Wei BONNET MATERIALS,
RIBBONS, In immense titzlety,
FRENCH luul AMERICAN raiwans,
FBATHERiI, RUCHES, &e., &o
Also, it beautiful Stook of
STRAW GOODS,
Comprising all the desirable Styles.
Ottr PRICES ; 'Wok In flied SD titttfotn, oss
gruttutted at a
MINIMUM ADVANOB UPON COiT,
Besides width wo allow
TX PER CENT. Pon CASH
DEALERS from a distance, who may not be aware
of the existence of such an Establishment, OUT OF
hfAREET STREET, will benetlt themselves by a
vLeit to
A. H. ROSENHBIN & BROOKS,
No. 112 South SECOND Street, above Chestnut
au.23,dtnool
1858 FALL STOCK. 1858
LINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS, .
NO. 45 BORTH SECOND STREET,
IMPORTEREI AND MA.NDPAOTURBREI
STRAW GOODS,
FRENCH FLOWERS,
VELVET AND SILK BONNETS,
TRIMMED STRAW BONNETS,
RIBBONS,
RUCHES, and
MILLINERY GOODS GENERALLY.
Pattern Bonnets made and trimmed to order.
SOUTLIERN AND WESTERN BUYERS
Are invited to sail and examine the
MOST COMPLETE-STOCK TO BB FOUND IN
THE COUNTRY.
HILBORN JONES,
GP •
UINUNICTDANS AND WUOLIDIALNDNALNAIN
FANCY SILK AND STRAW BONNETS,
ARTIFICIAL BLOWERS, RUCHES, Ice.
8017 FUR AND WOOL BATS.
The attention of *Hy and country dealers Is Invited
to Li largo and varied ntook of the above goods, at
432 MARKET STREET,
anl3.3nt BELOW FIRTH.
AUGUST, 1868.
We would Invite The attention of ' Southern and
Western Buyers to oar Ball Styles of
BIM, 'VELVET, and
PANOT BONNETS,
AET/E/OTAL FLOWERS,
PEATEIEBS, and
MILLINERY GOODS,
Now ready for the Trade at the lowest Market prices.
STERN & SEEM AN,
an7:lm 726 CHESTNUT Street.
ILWARD. N oti. 103 and 105 N. SECOND
• Street, Manufacturer and Dealer in Penny and
Straw Bunneta, Chenille and Straw Trimmings. Also,
Panthers and Flowers, all of which are of the latest
and most fashionable styles
N. 8.--Cash Buyers mil find It to their advantage to
give ne a call.
Business Carba
T. T. 10111/.101. 0. A. MUTTS.
ABRAMS & MAYER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
LOCK HAVEN, Ps.,
Will attend promptly to all professional business en
trusted to them. Special attention given to the collec
tion of claims.
ILEVB1111(01111.
Gov. Wm. P. Packer, Harrisburg, Pa. •, L. A. Mackey,
President Look Haven Bank ; General D. H. Jackmtus,
Lock .Haven ,• lion. A. White, Lock Caren ,• Simon
Scott, Lock laveni Dullitt lc Fairthorne, Philadel
phia ,• McFarland, Frans,'At Co. Philadelphia; Evans
& Watson; Philadelphia; Philli M. Price, Philadel•
phis; Hon A. V. Parsons, Phil adelphia;
Taylor, & Co., Philadelphia • Tenor dc Davie, Phila.
delphis ; Hon. James Burnable, Bellefonte, Pa.; J. W.
Anises. Esq., Philadelphia. jy . 264,
IT O.' THOMPSON AND a. M. OONAR-
A- 0 - 0 NNE, OONVETANONES.
0110.11. OONABUON, ATTORNEY AT LAW,
'.* 08.4 • No. 988 ARCH street, below Tenth.
CHARLES TETE, COMMISSION MEE
WANT and Importer of HAVANA BGAN!)
11Poirl IRB Walnut street: Raeond lOory sul-ly
L4311,AN & RABORG—
Importers and Wholesale Dealers In WINES,
DRANDIKS, WHISKEY, GINS, and FANCY LI
QIIHRS, No. 1011 MARKST Street, between Tenth and
illavAntb Ftrepta. ielft.tf
tiVINDOW- GLASS! WINDOW,
1 11 lf I GLASS: !--We invite the attention of the eel.
Window
oG la xt . e T t h v e
la ito e k
and
w renh e lan mocrkib ion
Glass constantly en hand enables no to All all orders
with deepateh, and M low as any other house In the
any.Zl➢!GLali & SMITH,
Wholesale Druggists.,
G. W. earner of Second and Green eta, •
ABRAN BLAOK'S ENGRAVING, DIE
Sinking, awl Nmborged Printing, Envelope, and
Pe
'Phi al loolol Pramphito, Manntsatory, No. 1 South SIXTH Street,
oulS•Sot
•
E4it
FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1868.
66 CAN DO NO WRONG.
Sitewsrhanz wrote "There's a divinity doth
hedge a King."- No doubt, he derived his
•idea from the unwritten law of nations, that
"a King can do no wrong." This, .if taken
politically, may be true to a certain extent.
It is hot, and it cannot be altogether true,
even In that" sense, as England and France
practically showed—by the trial and execu
tion of CIIARLES the First and Louts the
Eighteenth.
The idea is that reigning royalty governs
but does not rule=that it is nothing, consti
tutionally, but the month Piece and the band
of the Ministry—that it is a King's advisers
who should be bold "responsible for what
they make their nominal master do. It
is their policy, not his, that governs the King
dom. They decide on the measures, and he
has to all sw them to,be. executed in hisnamo.
If he disapprove of any measure, his Ministry
resign of ice,:but his own idea has to be car
ried out by some responsible ,party. Of
course, where the Government is absolute, as
in Russia and France, where Ataxerenzn
supervise every thing, provide for
, every thing, organize every thing, -and do
I precisely- as they desire, the ruler, not the
nominal Ministry, would' be the responsible
party., In 1880, when °Halms X pro
fessed to , govern France under the char
ter, when the Revolution of July broke
.out, and the incapable monarch took to flight,
Frarice'held Prince POLIGN . AO, M. PETRONNET,
'and the rest of the Cabinet Ministers, ,as the
:accountable parties for misgovernment, tried
!them for high treason, and sentenced them to
perpetnal imprisonment in the prison -fortress
pf Ram. They, not their master, were held le
gaily responsible, and treated accordingly.
Azzaarmss of Russia, and NAPOLEON of
France, rule with absolute'power,and therefore
f circumstances overturned these monarchs,
their Ministers, who are little more than re
cording Secretaries, would not be accounta
ble.
In point of tact, if the British Monarchy be
n under consideration, Queen VICTORIA ,
.as only the semblance of power. It is very
ethat honors, dignities, emoluments, acts of
.nrilshment and of, grace, appointments, pre.
quanta, and all which are supposed to in&
ate regal power, run in her name. Every one
f these acts nominally emanates from "Her
Most Gracious Majesty, VICTORIA, by the
race of God, Queen ,of Great Britain and
/eland, Defenders
s of the Faith," , and so
ortb. But she - Can scarcely do any thing
.1 her .own free will—not even , such a
rifle as dis Charging a 'Lord-in-Waiting,
.r a Lady of the Bed Chamber, can the
seen db of her own - accord. These are
. " appoiritments, Ministerial loaves
nd fishes, With which Royalty -must not
nterferd. If she want to raise any well
eserving or favorite subject ore in the Peer,
It cannot be done waken*. permission
: rioted by her Prime Minister.'" If there be a
vacant clerkship -of $4OO, in. any public de
. ar*ent, her nomination to it would be use
thel)oliticai,head of each department
,01etiOstif#0 4 0?**, , oivhpSrtiMiler
4
•••: •
nm d n 777,li u r"trrmilAiiilairVM7 - 1;
much more out of my private•fortune. There.;
forej insist on enjoying the full patronage of
my loflice, to provide' for my connexions, and
to reward my supporter's. The chance is, that,
on a vacancy, if the Queen were to intimate
her desire that ;rich or such a person should be
,appointed, her Minister would express his re
gret at being compelled to refuse, but circum
stances rendered it necessary to appoint
another person. The Queen knows this sys
tem so well, that she does not ask for any such
favors. ,
Notwithstanding our awn republican form
of Goiernmept, the President of the
United States positively exercises more
power, by a great deal, than the Queen
of England does. It is he who performs
all the thnetions of Government, such
as are delegated to the Prime Minister in
England, with infinitely more actual power—
namely, the power of dismissing from office as
many persons as ho pleases, without any bad
deserving on their part, any harm done, any
thing wrongly thought of. With the exception
of some flay or sixty changes, on the break-up
of an Administration, every public appoint
ment in England is held w quamdiu bone so
gesseret"—so long as be conducts himself
properly—anl neither caprice, power, nor
tyranny can turn a Government employee out
of office, so long as he properly performs its
duties. If the most lowly-salaried Government
clerk wore dismissed, by arbitrary power,
without his actual misconduct in office, it
would immediately become a subject of Parlia
mentary inquiry and censure, and the chance
is that the Minister who had done this wrong
to the individual would himself have to resign.
Therefore, when the Earl of Ewa:, at Wash
ington, declared that w after all, the President
of America was but a fec-simile of the Eng
lishfremier," he was not quite correct, as the
President can dismiss without cause, while the
Premier cannot. We wonder when it will
become a fixed constitutional maxim with
us, that the President can do no wrong ?
We venture to surmise that our ex-clerical
friend, the remarkable isnu G., (commonly
called TONES,) would hilly endorse that, during
the present reign, with only one exception,
and that in the culinary line. For example,
he would hold the getting only a middling din
' ner at the White House to be an unpardona
ble Presidential offence.
It would be a nice constitutional point, even
for a Philadelphia lawyer to decide what, per
aonal violation of the law would bring a king
under the; ban of the law, of which he is pre
sumed to be the fountain. Wo recollect
one peculiar case,—that of CURISTIANA,
Queen of Sweden, who, after her abdi
cation, bad MONALDESCIII, her equerry,
murdered at her residence in Paris, before
her own eyes. Ho was an Italian, and not
her subject, though in her service. This foul
deed occurred in one of the palaces of Louis
XIV, and the King remonstrated—but she
pleaded her royal right, even though she had
resigned the crown, to act with queenly power
of life and death in her own house, and the
end was that she was allowed to leave Paris
without any punishment for what really was a
foul assassination.
We have been led into the considera
tion of this subject by seeing it stated
in a foreign journal that WILLIAM In . ,
King of Holland, was about resigning his
crown in Nvor •of his son. The journals do
not mention why he should do this, but lice
are informed that the theta are as follow
His Majesty is now 41 years old, and married
the Princess SoPura of Wurtemburg, at the
age of 22. He has been a bad husband—so
bad, indeed, that ho oven gave apartments to
a favorite, in the same palace with his wife.
Suspicious that his favorite was frail as she
was fhir, he went into her chamber nnexpvct
edly, and found her enjoying the society of
one of his nobles, who also held rank in the
Dutch army. Further, it is reported that, in
a sudden paroxysm of rage and jealousy,
the King drew his sword and plunged it in the
heart of his more favored rival. Since that
period, It is said that the Queen has been
wholly seprrated from him, and that the anger
of the people as well as of the nobility, on ac
count of his foul deed, has culminated to that
point where, to prevent being.deposed; he has
consented to abdicate. In Holland, it would
seem, there is an idea that the King can do
wrong.
All tho Republican Congressional Conven
tions in Indiana for this year have been hold. The
Indianapolis Journal says " every Republioan
eleoted in 1856 has been renominated."
A Dinner in the Harem.
We - extract the following article from advanced
etiolate of Mrs. Hornhy's piquant and interesting
work on Constantinople—" In and about Stam
boul." It will bo issued in a few days in elegant
style by Messrs. James Mallen dr. Sons, of this
oity ;,
"At the entrance of the dining-room stood two
Arab slaves, richly attired. To each lady, as he
entered, one of these held a beautiful silver bowl,
while the other poured roaewater over her hands
from a vase of the same richly-ohased material.
Two little slave-girls 'presented 'flee napkins, the
ends embroidered in gold, on Which me each shook
the rosewater from our Angers. The dining-room
Was a most luxurious apartment, olosely latticed,
for it looked into the streets -of Stamboul, but
oheerful, and rich In crimson- divans and carved
and painted flowers on walls and ceiling. All had
been done to make the cage bearable. Rica Pa
she's harem is, I am told, one of the meet "fash
ionable," whioh accounted for seeing a European
table, adorned-wilti a handsome centre-piece and
four beautiful vases of flowers and fruit, after the
French fashion. The dinner service was of rare
and beautiful china ;• the elver knives mid forks
were extremely handsome; the serwettedelicately
fine ; the flowers exquisitely arranged, and min
gled with oranges and lemons, in the Eastern
fashion; the 'slaves were - standing round, three
or four deep, awaiting-our slightest sign,: we felt
still more in ,the- land of dreams. First of all,
they placed to each guest a sparkling water-bottle
and glass. Then a fine china plate Containing a
flat roll of a kind of rye broad, called semeet,
quite • new and - , warm, and c,ovored.witka small
seed, which, not being a canary or a linnet, I ob
jected to: - Theft seep was served—a great novelty
in a harem :.it- was most excellent—chicken and
vermicelli. Theneame a dish of pilipaf, of chicken
and rice,"done brown. I sat next to the chief-wife,
on her - right hand; as the save • lield.the dish,
she pointed out the liken pleoehibegglng me to
take them. The -fair Circassian sat o pposite to
me., I was'eurious to see if'they really teemed to
like the modern innovation of- knives and forks.
For the first few-minutes they used them—evi
dently to do as we did ; but the Circassian beauty,
failing to 'secure the particular piece of chicken
she coveted, with • a troublesome fork: and spoon,
threw those incompetent auxiliaries down, and
grubbed successfully, and to her entire satisfao
tion, with her fingers. 'She then iodised at me and -
laughed, and showed , me how to taktia,pleee,of
bread between my, Angela:, b egging us to eat ei la
novae, which - they were- all - - doing themselves,'
fast and furious;-and" to - pietism tlatrin,‘we,aeliord
ingly picked a few chicken bones with our Angers.
We had all three been . 'enehanted 'with the, fair
Circassian, as I have told you-4ith her beauty,
her winning, yet - lofty, manners, and exquieitis
grace; we had seen her smoke, and , admired her
still ; we, had even fergivert. her for 'loving the
'barbaron noi s e s in the concert of made ;" : brit
to see her lick her fingers up to the last joint after
each dish—to see her lick her favorite tortoise
shell spoon bright, after' truocettsite and never-to- •
be-believed enorsionsplatefuls of sweet 'pancaked,
daubed with honey, ami tarts; too luscious for the
Knave of Hearts—this was too much for - Venus
herself to have dodo with imtinnity; we were
perfectly disenchanted long before the feast was
over. The rest were not so bad, (excepting Mad.
Liston, who might as well have had a trough at
once ;) but we began to feel rather sick after
the first few dishes were despatched ; and the ani
mal passions of some of the ladies began to be
roused by their favorite sweets and jellies, which
*they tore to -.pieces with their Angers, and threw
down their, throats in large lumps. The jester
waited at table, presenting the principal dishes
with jokes which caused bursts of laughter from
the ladies and.the slaves in attendance, who seem
perfectly at home, and on very free and easy terms
with their mietresses, notwithstanding their com
plete submission to them.. The- jester was a wild
and most extraordinary-looking woman, with 8:12,
immensity of broad humor and drollery in her
boa. We thought It quite as well that we could
not understand the jokes at which the fair Circas
sian, between the intervals of licking her fingers
and spoon, and' popping titbits on our plates,
laughed so complacently, and which sometimes
obliged the Arabs and eunuchs at the door to dive
under the arras to conceal their uncontrollable fits
of mirth."
“The Commercial Advantages of Phi
ladelphia.”
(Hoe The Prees.J
Mn. EDITOR : In reading over the columns' of
Die Press, this morninx, I was much 'streak with
your remarks about " The Commercial advantages
of Philadelphia," and yam `refereace to al,oak
lately
,"published,
'advantagepf. , anct
.wortit'iratelsikitordl47,
•
P sdelphis c of ico)
. -
'qtioince; thisir own 'pfoipe
@date thousands of Oros
and West, send. them .4 arid
place them in 'the hotels, steamboats, pars, and'
everywhere that ,they could be seen and road by
the dealers in all commodities manufactured and
for sale here, and, like "bread upon the
_wa
ters," it may "oome back after many - days"
in an agreeable foinsi vie: inoreased busi
ness; and, finally, make our city what
she once was " the principal city in the
Union," and which proud title she lost by the ex
cessive modesty of our business men in not posting
the world up as to the advantages of our city, as
other cities have done about themselves. Let any
one travel over the United States and find how
seldom the name of Philadelphia is mentioned,
and bow seldom 'one of our papers is found, and
how often we hoar of our great rival and see New'
York papers, till one is almost led to believe that
"great is the United States, and New York is its
prophet." Is it right that it should be so? No!
assuredly not. Therefore, let our business men
circulate widely a book devoted to their interests.
The author, no doubt, will make the pricereasona
ble to large purchasers in order to circulate his
work. Of this fact I have no knowledge, however,
not being acquainted with the author personally,
and, in fact, have not read the work, but judge of
it from the copious extracts made by the Press
and its cotemporaries, and from an intimate ac
quaintance with the previous efforts of the same
author which I have studied, I may say, fre
quently. Yours, Donn SPOND.II27 T.
August 20, 1858.
From Washington.
(Correspondence of The Press.]
WASHINGTON, ALlglig 24, 1858.
In your issue of yesterday you touch upon the
purchase of Scotch iron for the water-pipes in this
city, and throw the blame upon those upon whom
it 'should properly rest—the Representatives in
Congress. For weeks past many of the papers
have teemed with articles attributing fault in this
respect to the Superintendent of the Aqueduct
Coustruotion—some ignorantly; others, not at a
very great distance, and who should know better,
from apparent. motives of speculative interest. I
was glad, therefore, to see so well-informed and
prominent a sheetas The Press setting public sen
timent right in this respect.
There is no law (unless it bo in relation to some
special article) requiring that public supplies shall
be of domestio manufacture., The nearest ap
proximation to this manifestly , wise policy that
oanbe made by any public office, in advertising for
proposals to furnish Government with supplies, is
to say that it is desirable that the articles should
bo of domestic manufaoture. Tho absence of
posi
tive statute, and the established rule for accepting
proposals—viz : those of the lowest responsible
bidder—would, it Is thought, render the decision
of a Government officer illegal, that discriminated
between the rights of two classes of our Minns,
the manufacturers and the importers, to the pre
judice of either.
Without entering into the discussion of free
trade or a protective tariff, may it not be safely
adopted as a sound, national policy, that all Gov
ernment supplies should be procured or made at
home when it' is possible to do so, even though
the same article may be procured more cheaply
abroad ? Would there not be sufficient competi
tion among our own people to prevent anything
like a fraudulent speculation on the Government?
And is it not the duty of Government, in a com
mon-sense point of view, to foster, so far as its
own wants are, concerned. the resources whence
those needs may be supplied, that In exigency we
may be above the pressure of war or foreign in
fluences ? If this be correct reasoning, and Con
gress being the only power that can supply the
remedy, the people must look to is themselves
that their Representatives fulfil their wishes. W.
[Correspondence of The Presa ]
HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa., Aug. 23,1838
In your notice of the Demooratio candidates for
the Congressional nomination in this district, you
say that Blair county presents Thaddeus Banks,
Esq. Blair eounty Ana not presented a candidate
as yet. Her convention meets on the 15th of Sep-
tember. The contest lies between Col. J. R.
Crawford and Thaddeus Banks. A warm canvass
is going on between the parties. - Yours, ao.,
Bram.
A fearful tragedy took place on the 21st in.
stant. A Bohemian carpenter, named John Ne
hayal, arrived in °Mango about four weeks ago,
with his, family—a wife, a daughter, seven years
old, and an infant—and took rooms in the rear of
a torment building. The infant died on the night
of the 20th, and the father next day set to work
to make its 00ffi.a. About eleven o'clock he
living
daughter
the room where tho dead child and the living
daughter were, having in his hand the heavy
post-axe be had been using while at work. The
.nother heard heavy blows, and ran in time to see
him draw the weapon from the cloven skull of his
only child. She gave the alarm—he dropped the I
axe, escaped down ,the stairs, and started out of
the city towards the prairies, was overtaken, aid,
after a hearing, was committed to' answer for the
murder. The unfortunate mother, rendered 'al
most insane, ran down to the lake and attempted
to drown herself, but was prevented. The family
were poor, but not in want, The fatherhad failed
to obtain employment, and was probably nearly
Insane In eonsectnesore. . • -
TWO - CENTS.
Voyage 'of the.Aptmemnon.
From the,Cork Examiner we take the fol
lowing interesting .narrative, from• the pen of
one of her naval officers, of the voyage of the
4gamemnon, when laying the Telegraph
R. M. 13. j V,Xoitons,
Vane:writ, August' 3; 1858.
Sin : Being, I think, the only °Older 'connected
with the ships on this expedition, who May feel an
interest in your local paper, I .liooten 4 send you
a hurried sketch of this, our last 'and euceessful
attempt to lay down th 6 -Atlantic' telegraph, In
company with her Majesty's steamship Agamem
non. Being the fire intimation of the trip you
probably have received, it may not be devoid of
interest to some few of your readers, ,though you
will, doubtless, beforemany days, have more mi
nute information on the eubjeot. ,
M S. Gorgon and. Valorous left 'Queenstown
in the early part of Saturday, 17th July ult.
We (Valorous) reached the rendezvous, let. 62
deg. 6 min. N., long. 32 deg. 42 min. W., on the
24th.
The Niagara. Gorgon,, and Agamemnon arrived
on the 25th, 26th, and 28th respeotively. The Ni-
agars . having sailed from Cork' harbor on the
evening of the same day ' that we left, the Aga
memnon at 3A.M. on the 18th. , •
Our boats haviriconvoyed the end of the Cable
from Niagara to anieinnen thei29th, it was
spliced and tonere into the " deptha_of ocean"' at
1.6 (observ. time,) the ships steaming apart at 1.23
P.M.
'lt was found, on board the Agamemnon, that it
was necessary to stop at 80 P. M., murder to di
minish as much as possible the tension on a weak
portion of the cable, whirl was allowed to run
easily out in:safety. • - •:: •
An announcement bad been ,made to the effeet
that should the cable pait before one hundred and
fifty - nautical miles bad been run out from both the
'Niagara 'and ~ Agatnemnon; sie were ,all to, return
to rendesyous, and an intense anxiety, was aecord=
ingly felt - as the critical time 'was - anemic:thing.
That, however , was passed, to the • comfort of all,
when, at 2 15-P. M.-, on the-30th, the Agamemnon
signalled that her allotted portion had been paid
out in safety; a similar 'result' being 'obtained at
2.30 P. M. on the Niagara. , -
Hitherto ,nothing could have been more gratij
Eying than the calm state of the sea and weathe
and all ware sanguine of success to a high , degree,
when towards evening on.the 30th the mind com
menced to freshen, and before midnight - it blew
half a gale from - S s.n., every heavy swell get=
Gag up, and cawing vielcint pitching motion to
the ship. ,
Great fears were entertained for.' the safety of
the Wife all night ; the morning it was'
still secure, having bravelY' withstood a heart
etrain. ~Tbis
,etrain continued until 3d August;
when it oommenced to, diminish and to be les,
'felt, as the windahifted to S.W . .'on the day before,
and was 'now favorable. t ' -
We passed fromtherieep into the shoal water,
I. e., from 1,775 fathoms of soundings into 550 f*
theme at seven P. M., on the 3tl inst., let 52 deg.
27 min. N., ion. 18 deg. 7 min. W., and at noon
yesterday, (Wednesday, 4th,) we were in 451 ft
thorns, 86} miles distant from Valeatia.
Last night at nine o'clock, being less than forty
miles off; we left the Agamemnon, proceeding 50 as
to make the land before her in the morning. We
made it soon, and anchored after- daylight, the
Agamemnon coming up at six o'clock this morre•
tog. ,
We anchored in Doulris Bay, outside Valentia
harbor, and the cable was' landed by our boats,
under -the eommand of Lieutenant Richmond
Moore, (senior lieutenant of het_ ktajeaty's ship
Valorous,) at White Strand Bay, Mr Conine Bay,
in the forenoon, amidst the greetings andlfo/00Meb
of all who were assembled_ to .receive it.- - There
were not, however, very many, printout, as 04.
arrivaleould not, of course, have been antioipar
ted.
- Thus, the end- of an unparalleled undertakinic
has at last been attained, after many a combat
with storm and sea, and bard struggling against
apparently ineurmenntabla obstacles, However.
this satisfactory .resnit r erell repays the greatest
expenditure of energy in its achievement.
The cable half been laid done' of - the season r -
commended by Lieutenant hianry;LL. D., though
the weather at the end of Jane. when the last at
tempts were Made; was decidedly the'most favot
able, and it - evidently would have sneeeeded had
there not been mechanical defeats in, the, cable
itself. . -
With regard to the per amine of Cable laid
out over the distance gene, •the greatest amou t
was 48.73, but this was only ,on
__one; maiden d
ring the heavy swell on the alirt of Jdly, in 2.2
fathoms soundingo, riatk.withlialf gala from 8.
.•- _ • -
ried notes, not yet irranited, I ballieto in We
mainly correot ; but Should you find any'sliglit
difference between them and those which will be
duly and officially published, and consequently
with more minuteness, yoii will, I am pure, kindly
make allowance.
Here, by,the simple lot of man, are hemispesbes
bound together—the old world now materially
united to the new, and thil communion is effeet3d
through the extraordinary medium of a slender .
thread laid beneath the all but unfathomable
depths of the great Atlantic! Hoping, then, that
that material union, with our social and political
ones alse. - may long continue firm, and =drained,
and wishing every future stomas to an undaunted
and enterprising cordnany, by whose unmitigated
perseverance and assiduity it bas been established,
Tam, PIERCE MANSFIELD, B. A., M. R. C. S.,
Assistant Surgeon, H. N.
Proceedings of City 'Councils.
Reported for The Press.]
SELIIOT 0011110 IL
Yesterday afternoton was the regular day for holding
the meetings of Councils. &quorum was present, at
three o'clock, but the Democratic members mainly de.
evrted the Chamber a few minutes afterwards. The
reason for this step was an understanding that the'corU ,
mittee to contest the seat of George Williams, member
from the Twentieth ward, was about to report that his
election was the result of fraud. '
. . .
At four o'elook the roll was called, and with the fol
lowing result
- Present—Messrs. Brioghoret, Cornman,Davis,Enos,
Ford, Leidy, Mclntyre, Neal, Parker, Bead, Thompson,
Wharton, President.
Mr. Onyler eat in his seat, but refused to answer to
his name.
There beim, therefore, but twelve members officially
present. no quorum existed. • -
Mr. Commas stated that there was very important
husinees to be transacted. 'Various communisations
had been sent to the chamber from the Watering De
partment.
idr. Common. I merely rise to say, Mr. President,
thetvery important businees awaits the cotton of ithis
chamber. We have communications from the Water
Department to take into consideration, and' unless an
appropriation is made, the works will, be greatly em
barrassed, it not partially stopped. There wails quorum
in this chamber, sir, some time ago, but as fast as I
could obtain that quotnne, the marchers would go out
again.
Mr. Leidy. I would ask, Mr. Chairman, whether a
member (referring to Mr. Copier, who refined answer
ing to his name) has a right to remain silent in his seat,
or if he does so, whether he cannot be included in the
roll. and a quorum thus obtained.
The President. The Chair clarinet take cognizance of
any gentleman, as officially present, until he answer to
his name.
Mr. Mclntyre If the motion is in order, I move that
the sergeant-at-arms request absent members to come
from the ante-room into the chamber.
The President. We have no sergeant-at-arms. We
have a messenger, who can invite members to take the it
seats, if he can find them.
Twenty minutes meanwhile •elmiled. Mr. Oarmtnan
said : It is now obvious that no quorum con be ob
tained, as Mr. Cuyier dill sits in his seat, and will not
answer to hie name. I suppose that some members
are waiting In hope of making a compromise with , the
committee. This cannot be done. The committee
will repudiate anything in the form of a compromise.
I am not on that commute, but the gentlemen com
posing it will net sacrifice principle. That report
will be mode at some time or other, and it may's well
be made now as then. Besides this, we have a com.
municstion from the Chief Engineer of the Watering
Department, showing that. unless an appropriation Is
made at once, the city will lose a very large sum of
money through sheer neglect, And we also have s
communication from the Chief Ooramissiener of High
ways notifying the Chamber that Girard avenue bridge
is in danger of falling into the Schuylkill, and that ac-
Den is at once needed. The Aet of Assembly in the
matter is so strict that a public officer cannot spend
money, except by direct appropriation. We have
hoard that telegraphic despatches have been inter
changed by the sovereign of England hod the sore
reign of this country, by the Atlantic cable, and a day
has been fixed for a general Celebration. Now, I
nigh—
Mr. Neal. Do I understand that the gentleman from
the Fourteenth desires a quorum, in order that en se
proprietion may be made for the celebration? Councils
have already taken action with reference to this matter,
and have not made any appropriation. This snits my
views exactly.
Mr. Oornmen. The gentlemen from the Thirteenth
io not quite correct in his premises An appropriation
should meet certainly be made for this purpose. -
Mr. Onyler. 1 should like to say a word in reference
to the views of the—
Mr. Leidy. I ries, sir, to a point of order. Can a
I gentleman who has refueed to answer to his name be
permitted to addrem the ehair
The President. Ile cannot. The gentleman from
the Eighth is not m order.
Mr. Neal. I move we adjourn.
Mr. Demmer'. I move we take a receee.
The President. The motion to adjourn is in order.
The question wee taken. bat lost.
Mr. Coruman. I move, Mr. President, that a com
mittee of three be appointed to bring in the absent
members.
The President. That motion in not In order.
a. hear irCoron. Then I move that we take a recess of
half
The President. That motion ie not in order.
Mr Coltman. Then I move that we adjourn to meet,
again at 6 o'clock
his was agreed to.
At 6 o'clock the roll was again called. Mr. Cluyler
meanwhile had taken lea r ve, a e
nd there still helm; no
quorum, the chemberpe forc adjourned,
0031110 X COUNCIL.
This body met at three o'clock, President Trego in
the chair.
Communications being first to order, a number were
received and appropriately referred
Hacker moved that the special resolutions with
reference to the successful laying of the Atlantle cable
be taken up, which was agreed to. The resolutions had
been laid over from last council. Mr. Hacker, from the
best light which be had been able to gate on the sub
ject, thought it inexpedient to make any appropriatirn
for the Purpose contemplated in the resolutione. He
was In favor of subscriptions for the purpose of defray
ing the expennesof a proper celebration of the event,
to be collected from the citieene of our city. This
view was In accordance with the action of the Board of
Trade, to which the 00-operation of Council was in
vited.
Baring the consideration nt the resolutiorm several
conflicting opinions of members were presented
The resolution providing for the appointment of a
committee of five, by each branch of Councils, to make
the necessary arrangements for a proper celebration of
the great telegraphic achievement, was egre a number
ed to. -
Petitions and memorial* being in - order,
were received, read, and referred.
' The Committee on Finance presented a petition elk
lag for tito Worm of the families of R. &Meet, We
NOT/CE 7'O COBHE6POIfDEIfT~.
iiiiiiiiiiiiii
nand tie folknring roles :-- - -
Neely iireir4doetion latut tv aeomnpioged 44,
minis of the writer. In order to trams moreeki i ii g et
the typography, but one dde of the shoot ohoidd.
b s
written upon.
We Wallin greatly obliged to Triable:mu *IN Wage.
elide and other States for contribution" giving Ikit
qy
rent news of thi,day . tri their Terldenhie Itto
resoirou et the surrounding eountry,:the Inseam or
Population, or any information that wilt be intereetlag
to the remit reader.. _
superintendent of the 'City vallroads, which ' Paned to a
A
second reading. From cuma,,Aod other commit
tees, several reports ,And p_etitoret„ ware, ',anted,
hich were rearcetirely sie4d;uporri , Or, post-
Oommenicatiore . from Ake- chief -engineer iilli_ cur'
YeTor of highways was received, embodying the state
ment that, unless the Girard avenue bridge - wire epee.
illy Completed, lose, to a large amount, tangt
rily accrue to the city. Accompanying these wall au
ordinance which asked for a further, appropriator, - of
$22,000 for the proposed work, • - . - - ~,,_ ~.- • ,
A motion was made that the - ordinance '..prooramito a
second reading"; but some opposition being manifested,
statements were made by. the chairman of the Commit
tee on Highways and other members, that , delay to the
matter mutt result in_peenniary los e to the" city—the
precarious condition of the bridge rendering immediate
work necessary to save that which -had already been
done. Twenty-four home delay, -it was alleged, might
'occasion a lose of the original foundation, is wel l ea the
expenditures already made by the city, since the act of
coreolidatien. amounting.' to some $19,000. ...It hadlal.
ready cost the city about $lOO,OOO, and it wiesentended
that it wasthe course of prudence to make the farther
sliPtorirlatitin 60 122,000, caked for by the ordinance.
rather than delay action, thereby subjecting the entire
bridge to destruction.'. - '
The ordinance passed to emend reading; and upon the
motion to suspend the rules which prohibits the second
and third reading of bills on the same day, the yeas and
nays were called, which resulted, you 61; nays 9 i'SIV
the ordinance proceeded to third reading, and was dually
A resolution was o ff ered pondeing•tar. cleaning and
other repairs to that - portion of the dock attheloot of
Spruce street, ate cost not exceeding 6200. Prised.:
A communication was received from the Mayor. with
reference to•the injuries received by te' pelicenißeers,
by the premature discharge 'of cannon, when - firing a
Allots in honor. of the successful laying of the Atlantic
cable :and , reemmostliag such ,an appro priation for
their relief as Council may dee r op er. -. • - -•••--: •
Referred to the Committee of Piaanea, , with instruc
tion/ to report an ordinance
„making, an appropriation
of $5OO lo each of the.se ff ereiti. - '' .- •
•The Wire - arid Trust.oMixatkeieffeeir li , citi,
providing for the muter of this' ''Boudtito L l M4;'-' 'to.
cited. in Centre county, helonging fo the city, and do.
"nathig the sum of $BOO. - for the simpleymentef a 'proper
person to perform that duty.
_The resolution was postponed thdeilnitely. ,-,
* The Chairuian hare announced th'e coinmittee,enth
half•of - this brand of Con nel l, tOniake arrangencerite
fer the celebration of -the iinoceasfel laYinit of Met
Atlantle cable. They are Mend. Dennls,-Willie, IM--
tber, binary. mid Harmer. : -
• - :The Committee on Olaima.rePorted_arkeidineskei for
the payment of sundry claims.. .Not agreed to. -, -;... .-•
ldr. Masher pieseeted an ordinance I'mi - the amint
metitof a transcribing clerk for the'Cloniman' Council.
Mr. Gordon presented an ordinance for the selection
of a location for a new City Hall: • - - •• - •
Resolutions relative to the repairing of Certain Streets
Were offered and laid over: • , ' . - ,-,
.2dr. bleacher called up the ordinance_ to regulate the
travel on Passenger-Railroads. - -
Two other *Minnie, relative to this - Saute subject
were called up-eis amendments to thetirskill of w hich
were referred to thei.Commitree on Railroads. - -
An ordinaries for the construction" of a bridge scram
the river-Schuylkill, at Chestnut street; wee celled Op.
which, after some amendment and debate, was passed
to third reading. -
An ordinance paasedby Select Oduricifth change the
Ames of certain aireettomurtisad alleyaj was celled
up. and passed third reeding: ; -,,_.- ~., . : . ...f..•,-_...,,, ,, • - •
A motion trim made to premed to the Setiond main g
of an ordinenewof Select Cloculell, reeking an appropria
tion of $17,067.85 to the Water department. -Concur
red in.
After the transaction of some other unimportant boil
ness Connell adjourned. ,
GENERAL NEWS,
On Monday morni ng, abOttt two - o'clock;
fire broke out in the Stewards= Burnam* OrilliK.:2'dcr, 3 '
by Mr.. Alexander-Langhlin, and-, situatekn
the Allegheny river; shout eleven Miles
hoy
tanning; and all effirtieto stay lie priirlrisis't
fruitless until the engine.horiery casting athi
houses,vrere,totallreorunneed: 'A. man. named'
Donnelly,' who slept llf the, mill, was -burned to -
death; ail:efforts to sten him balsa of no &yogi' In
making--the attempt; hie brother.was caught in the
dames,. and severely burned. The fire was war
stoned by a sudden fall irstook tree' ht.'the
far
naee; foreing the melted Metal thirugh:'theritler:' -
The loartis supposed-to be about sio,pop;_ *hide is
partly, covered by insurance . •. „- - - , '
On the 12th instant "grand bailientte. tint •
ven at Crayttinvilli; S.'S.; in honor artbialin.
James L. Orr, Speaker of the Howe? it4tpieteni
ultras. In -the course of. hie speechythe vow
Rion' be took bold and decided ground 'against ; the
proposition to re-open the slave trade,' as a
the-interests as the:poliey'ef - ern
and commented upon thefollyof gto agitates _
Conimerolal Convention'i the' dm
the "subject. - - He al area'. that
-test in Illino seii_Docalsalrt,
finite ; and. dosed '"a teelitia_ zhoita. -
fhtrin favor of the pittlerir . -
On Monday night lest fire was
reified in -the State prison at Sing Sing. name*
proceeded from the weaving factory, adjoining,the
carpet - lactory. They • spread rapidly; and ma.
little: .
The carpefi.faciery narrowly'Autagetifelrarltwjia.,
Zytioxiiiitagiation. - .... lorsoll,reefr.,hat-tho--21.1tc.‘fla
D~'•
~~
pip teiCli~LVAf
lhe'mu a 4
into JIM ew irlntee: itu-ilierscor
sheets theta as the crowd azOind:the ltght3 : ~ is
skins are sold at r esents:enok;itidniekeiluerery.
beet boots. The eil, - tnake, and !Lida' of theserfour.{.s7,,k).
hundred captured animals havirmittedlhOeptes
$560 In three months,
.
Brigham _Young is d4rposea,,to:. makk-is
good thing out of the Mormon war. ,Though,- It
has cost some millions of dollars to bring that res.
peotable prophet to a' 'ewe of the duty, ho
the Government he lives under he - has the
impudence to present a bill aga inst, the War
Department of two -thousand - dollars - 'for- - for:- the
tust,of the gl church pasture" for the army horses.
. We learn from. the Williamsport (Pa.) In
dependent Preis that the ground aeleeted for the
Encampment, which is to be held at that plies
September 7th, contains one . hundred andllti .- G rty
acres, and is on the farm of Hon, B. orier,
about ono mile west of Williamsport: It is gene
rally believed that this will be the largest Emmet,-
ment ever held in the United States.
On the 16th - Inst., $50,000 worth - of pro
perty was destroyed by tire at Joseph, -Mts.
soon. The following are the principal sufferers:
T. W. Oran* .t Co., dry - goods -meiohants'; 'O.
Hyatt, wholesale grocer, loss - heavy ; 11. - W.
Welch, turner; Fremont Bowling Saloon; J.L.
MoLanghlin's and D.'.l. Heaton's buildings.
On the Whitewater, a branch' of the'Arlinn
ass, one hundred and thirty - five mites seta - West
of Topeka, in Kansas, the pearl mode has been
discovered, and some five thousand pearls have
been gathered, varying in 0128 from a pin-head' to
a large pea. _
The Daily Wisconsin of the 17th sayathat
a man named Win. Wells, hailing from Chicago,
jumped from the garret window of the Atetnimonee
House, Milwaukee, in a fit of drunkenness. "The
fellow was scratched and braised , badly,'but not a
bone in his body was broken. ,
Harrison Winters, of Wayne township, Int
forson county, Ohio, was run over by. the express
train on the Steubenville and Indiana Railroad,
on Saturday morning, near Mingo station. Ho
was taken to Steubenville, and died shortly after
wards.
Recent letters from Sava la Grande In
form us that the health of that 'place is not So bad
as of other points on the Cuba coast. The United
States brig•of-war Dolphin, Captain Militia, was
in the harbor, and a large merchant fleet loading
with sugar. ,
Mr. John Gemmil, a native of Westmoreland
county, Pa., and for sixteen or seventeen years an
oreployee in the Merchants' and Manufacturers'
Bank of Pittsburgh, died at the residence of Judge
J. Williams, Fort Soott, Kansas, on the Stir of
August. ' 4
M. Parks, a valuable citizen of. Armstrong
county, Pa. died at his residence in Allegheny
township on Thursday, the 19th instant, at the ad
vanced age of ninety years. The deceased we;
ono of the early settlers of that county. .
A murder was committed at Enterprise,
fdiss., on Wednesday week. Col. Wm. P. Hud
nall, while discussing warmly at the dintier-table
with one J. M. Steele, was stabbed by the latter
with a bowie knife.
The corner-stone of the Mission Institute
will be laid at Selingrove, Pa., on the let of -Sep
tember. Among the speakers who are to be pre
sent are Hon. James Pollock, and Rev. T. Stork
of this city.
The Harrisburg Patriot and Union and Key
sttone have been united. The Daily Herald has
been bought out by the same establisbment, whioh
will commenoe the publication of a new daily
about the first of September.
The value of slave property in Mississippi is
$229,000.200. Each slave in the parish of St.
Mary, Louisiana, netts his master $175 a year,
almost thirty-three per cent. of his assessed value.
Dr. John Getty, of Hollidaysburg, Pa., died
at Bloody Run, Bedford county, 011ie zeddepice
of his son-in-law, on Friday last, 20tH inst. .7:7
was well known throughout the State.
A new lodge of the Sons of Malta has been
chartered in It is styled "Fornication
Lodge, No. 5." There are now five Working
lodges, in good condition, in that city. • •
Isaac Fisher, Esq., an old and prominent
member of the Huntingdon county (Pa.) bar, died
at his residence, In Huntingdon, on Thursday
week.
John Spence, convicted at Chambersbnrg,
pa , of rape, has been sentenced to five years im
prisonment In the penitentiary.
There was a slight fall of snow at Franklin,
N. H., en Monday last.
DISPUTE ABOUT A Cow—A DOUBLE TDENTITI
OATION.—A curious ease relative to the identifica
tion of a cow is troubling one of our magistrates.
It seams that about a month ago Attorney Raton,
who has a suburban residence, lost his cow. About
the same time an Irishman named Finn sold a cow
to a dairyman named Bruner, who resides near
this
city. in Some months after, Eaton's SODS saw
cow Bruuer's pasture, and identified her as
the long-lost one, and, without further ado, drove
her home. The entire family identified the cow
upon her return, and Eaton retained her. Bruner
attempted to replevin the animal, bye suit brought
before Esquire Joseph, of Milloreek township. Tho
evidence produced in the case induced the magic.
trate to decide in Eaton's favor. Bruner, having
thus lost the cow, entered suit 'before Esquire
Bowekamp against Finn for the recovery of the
money paid for the cow.
The case was tried on Saturday. Finn brought
in a number of witnesses from Warren county, who
identified the cow as one born and raised in their
locality, and who testified as toher ownership from
the time of her birth up to her purchase by Finn,
a short time previous to his selling her to Bruner.
On the other hand, an abundance of testimony was
adduced to prove that the cow in question was
Eaten's, and had never been in Warren - county !
The magistrate seems to be much punted as to his
decision, and has reserved the case. for fall con
sideration.—Cincinnati Timm;