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

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    - . THE. PERBS,
k. - : -,, lr , ..77:•tririfill'iliiiririfiniiii ilar a ii z aar. ii r- D)
n ; 41 , - St liiielesfeekW..iditNile,.q ' -, ;ii
„. 9ificoi - : No. - 4.1.:7„ Cllefitßut I Street.
-3 , 1, .0., , ...- ; I ; ..- ... V VI 4 , - filtit n'tt o ' ,l ' • u - i
.. , :1r..x.,4 , - , epLl)•-• , -Az- ,, 5 ,,,, N-. , - , j ,,,, ,'
1-, , -- , _)^, 14.5 i , ' S'kl , -11 j4l: iIkPA/124.1AjritiaSel. 1 , ~, . ~,...
.1 , , ;, - 3 - ih{fliii ilO l . Cnn riajlriiii, payablioa cia aardars, .t:
sq. '1 , v;iip-,.. 4. 1 - - fleittOillatribmoulrolth• Cltr at ut DoU.4U
` - ' -, ' , "":'..f • * ' , "-- Vrig n lxTtVilui l irlil i , 16 1 8 70 49 t ti l ur T ablt lic r: l
, f
, A ,, ‘.',111---P , isiais frierkelima oiderad:-e 't ,, •-• ' , ti -”, . ," ~- - -
- - A , 471..1 ,, r... -fo 1 .!, 0- .i.h il i Tath,WßlCELleptiles.. ..t . ..:4,h , '....i. :1 ,
'k kklik? - k' 4' 4 :*4 1 iitailid 20 linbirilbirreorit at ilifdifelStirsiii *L.
, 1 • ; f 1: ,- -,k , . - :lollid Palit'lllllllll4 il% ithatloW. ~ 1 .L.,1•• .ir .h. 0r 1,1
- - , :i, >• ,TV -L- ,- - .4 % , ',, , 5 't_.l fIiVBX ELY #liElliii• , ,,,, 2. , .' I
• ' V.; , --' 0., ..‘, . ',Tut Watrixtm. Paint wilt bo`iirlit'te beeltbill''''
:-:- -, t''; 1- , ,-;.,,,,, N. 1 ., ..g_.A SPerlinsailp, thoivpws,)o..‘i.Nl. ~ ... . 12 ob
`. :, ~ - -f •C. , 11 1if e e 6 0 11"...,-,:f r Iv...:ol;frg: .. ,- 7 , •• .. ~ . • .1 , -.11.,, :IS ,
i t
q ,4 Teik` otZtek:i , - gi , =!.' -i - ( ~-c oul, -:•":i"..r-:?.:.4 . .:e......: WOO .
. , t ^-.1 t:, , Twenty Oopiao,!rg:,- ' , I '..'",' (211000 . ........... 'WOO4-
. , . ~, , Tyroakyr c ipptos,,or air, M , (tetaddrom ef look q at
milmoribtra e5ek....... .... .......elkk 0 .- 4,* .. • k 1 - 10
' ~r. %tor i'Cluli'of Twenty.p 4 i 'or:Pqr.i'lra Ara AND " an
'' , ' - 01, - , aztreaoa,i to Oa atitiokipor the rhab. , -- , hhi i'o • 'NI C ,
nj-,Postmairiers ere =visits& twact irt Aalator foe.
.i. !akilf l .4TiVraik# 6 ' , lt .I . 4 , tkif klet 1 0 i dig :r ass',
:. 1 » L , :! , k k k s 'kk Ir Y.k=1 ,14161, " 1114111 : 1 1 ',SI ~2.,, ~.3
' • .4 1 .aed,. +(k i t** .. - ",4•0ia01,to• . • calubmik
''''' "'Skt,•••i•ii.'
..,:.....p , l -....
_ ~,,-. :. ;37, .o%."4 , 22 ki riyii, , `-:,.....*-- ii, '', •1,,` - ',,,." ' 1
r:Vitg , T . "'..:,‘ ,
~ ,_' •2, ' ~
I.i ,:.;A:Pr01 1 ' I a/WRIT:EDF:2,IOO 1 oe. Eki , r.
„ C IOI DREI):IBTIIANVIIONNETS
f " '
• '., ( ICIOD MM.
. ~. ~ t,~~f'
-6,
aecit3:
Liao ,- 100'onioigstor
E N;0 tpliolsr,Eß,,S,'
•NBA,TITEItaijfiBBONEI,-
'4 4,
3
p? 0.--
‘Lurociiirriwo'op"
- .IS'BOTITIVERCIiriti Opting
1 - 1";:".1 . 1 4 ", f . •%. i
, ' ,4 l : 4 l l a Vont MotniCabove °WWI
• .
ewer;
noir opirnioe a eQlsndld ; •
=l.; , • f• r; • ••f site* i v. - r!1
, „I[ILL -G 0 0
of 1
' , RIBBONS, • ;- • f• '
RlTOo3ll3','"iusd
4 6 4 1 0. ir ig3T8 1 1 1 •44)
t ; 3 tt- •-• • • • - t
11 : 1 ;iP 1 4,4 1 19 1,I. 1)7 4 4217 ' ";• •
;A: ,R4O PPO I O II Pi *Oh 1 16.1'e • •
- 'rho indueoments we aHee to ii
1111311 : 0311010-211ifE;•:;144D
• • - • Atoirrnw litrY:l l / 1 .8 •
are *an Tismie4,bi iiiii.oth*,itittabltehmint LI •thiii
totnitry, „To introkialits,AuF,vlBl,tiog the oily; ire ex=
~tend if; ooklal to s oaltiii4 lito our
before .
thir " * 11 14 1 1 0 ;1 1 4 and stikri bee tiiion,
• - ' `! ( 1 1- API kl# l l.V4i AND 13)41.11!N0?1iii. 4
-3`
IMMi/111
El .": .t. ...4.
, SOUTH: :SECOND STRE4'. : 33
. Pu7Pn , . o ( f
' - :"
• •
:W in dudu l l -P r , k .l 9 :-Px.h l - I,,, ncqd oli t int4 4 end
elegant .. uoortmant ;
New Eltylee BIMNBT NAV/IRMO; i
RIBBONS, in lumens!. variety,
MINOR atuLAXIMIOAN i'LQWBBB
• t• - FRATHAROP BUORBIL fa.) age.
• - •
• • W. GO OD
' de;ilrableo6
- 1
ilted 4 #o 'nlll6Elll,,
,7,, , i tra iltOwit 1ig44"4 , ,
KINWEIN
, OVANctli, • -
LietiorlOalefi wo•Ilow . ' - '" 13 "" '
, PI7„OINT-.,10111 - .0188.
- t
i;o6 . s.74!;t4tOi;;;rl::i mlj - 31,4 b awaie
tbi eititleae, nth an•,le4bllehmelt, OUT OP
• BTHIziT , wUI benefit themselyee - • by a
Ylaikto • , •
A. 4,iloggxgtEnt & BRoci43,:'
- No: 33 Booth 810019 ENreet, above Clhestmit.
- „,jw HUJIMILJONESk •-••
- 'BolltOtriejidY, WoOt /UT".
••- • Ifiihiaillweasigiataty and Itoinilry 1,(444 ,
: 7 ,, stink of Um Obis- gootte,.st, •
, atilt E:x
• '•":" _
`", ::BElatifsnrm:,
• .. ,
MIMI
ti*snisirit)
=MEM
,
lAN BARRIALB AND.BAOII
Ai 110411811..1i01
La elm set be ink by
. . .
JOS: 7L. HANSON -& 004
~,11116.1110.Ziortk,WATER iltreati
'
- .0141‘,..;!:,.:,:,:. , :4- ! .. t: ,- .:• - ' , ,
Vigzrza - rac:inr,sox, • •
81111 , 11110120 ALL OTHBBB
• - iroz . 'l =
l i l iialli -- ,TAT loo )*****AX* PLANVIIR B f.
........... 10)4 11.14T0R11/6 •
',..,..OL.WOVitt.PABRIOO- - • 1 /` 7. „
Nvery Was 34rivellid
leatAioialr hi *Wet isj'aiiie 'at 1%4404
sab
Arab, sad Keya 4 4l oidffis:
• ' • HENRY,. bpi'', /tient
ifieditaTikit'ilfreitiPhpadlopbis,
-4i;et . #o tv•tt'ptiteiittivi!,
MEIN
, „
ETABRIS'Is BOUDOIR SEWING, - ILA- .
11 OHIVI Is offered to the ptddiene the moot mUs
ale few-priont BeirtemMaohtnitnee:': It will tow, f ram
Ids to ditrrnitekte tii. lath; iniallklndO oreoda;
from eeereest .he(stag. tar.th•linbitttainbrlpe. It le;
Intuit ateeptiin; the thespian In It. , nukkhanisel , one,
..attaettOnaverinaeotettan tnn and ) kept In orlon
by a child of ,tvelre yeetoofrors. l The! nonleu.tys of
We machine; ant , ther,doniarr or Ist Mold, are war•
restate be aneerpereed by osiy Om. Its .peed t *ogee
' front three hundred tfidftditrliodiel ititehei per: m's.
ate s ` . .thOOigiilitlitlatehin illreetlyfrom the Owls,
linuthrijawilecipl*tiriciiiriciura: In ftedgit le •
s fondly . Ll tht • lned,'end
the ItiviShiiet.. , :
.y=guitrif))o,biahm.s;
lit*t*,"'saplis their An**,
Quoit
jelltdam efteanim:_r_ 10 Montt EMU, &met: •
p ,- 3V4 , 1 . - rouire-sz . ; _
ETTNTALO*OBESi
11111 RUA OR ROHR, ; '
- .„
7 1VOiRALTH'S
• AIND ar Azios'onowx.,
,AO:nsa4natt'- -
. -
.- • 1 : ITIENITENT43OIICK)I,. - - HARTSVILLE'
EJP".z-• '
ors F.t_rr o oozisa
• •
c.- i;:;llirle,..nuni , commaitpss , sominaz A.
' - • .M. LONG
Liwid
peas:
1i Fatra.tia, , g on g
wilocibjew*
1' . .. 1319'HilliA DIIPH VA VANNING AND
--,.... ,_ --,-, ;qr% , ~A szet,D &.- WILSON, >
i, , - -, -- !:r - 1,-' .. ,F V' - / 111110Wilwoorr re S. A. iiMuilaoli. 1 '- ~
‘l l/111116 ax. onic old staid in Walnut valet
hoihri-k. a I , W0 , ,1010 • onzapruT Argot;
a forrdekire ,biloir / lhO Ate Tottfenae„ 'Hotel, where bur
oldfdiebb and piblid aro' reChn,y Invited to
tObunine our eabluffer do* - of arm rhir Wu
r .Ottekireultaugitti, Balie - Jtolleter, tenw Mu=
Mb** motile; Parlor Coel: finites, - h0,,-: hal We are
, Ow* Weirerhotering, 91111,80108" o.llLna Anil) PAT.
i nit:1104111:0041., tier 00116t111M4YrowtAom, the
aOoetzpirteerfil'Auld tobuomieal :Welter' stir inventedi'
lood.jfined to alLeleastwof balldluga,-, iiirr.-- - : , ,
4,'.aitte;';new :and beautiful ,patrarna.,ar ~,, Um , Do:. •
illsolo
- . iirid.Railor Ortal Orates of all alit • and pattern , '
riirilihrlitr iir7)l7 - Tr a iiiigirirf 44 Vinft:
reeirfor - fiteie:“ , Theie 2 bfitutele`_'ufeiu •- s i nu d e d a
1 1 31014L , ,PRIliffIUM ante altiltoeelsod lizAi.
f oft orMt _Mauldin Inentotte 'fir, Ads Lefty, f'ithe*
t=it *lithe too and beautiful drentoo *mum
t m ini Died .11y ltimokti Cool - Orrii Oa or , Acta i t .-
kjlif ire eole - Whdleitale - Obeli - atoll; !et .. onitOli lanyriss
Mitirifeitld. !Calketti sot shim' -,:-.,-= i ',:•. -1
reet --
- i AL.PIatTWILLI llorntoaleed.t- , , . >
lettla;itai4l;;ll4B—ap li .- ei ,:- • --
-
, r 1,1)
1 ;1
e
,r ,
MEM
--. ~,::c:-?i.Morkizzlsi.-., -
_-: ! '
__ 2 _' , ' •' - ~,
r : . ~.n
%
15-4:r.... ''' , ‘ l l- - .i.:,4i• - ,'.., Llllllllo.&Tuess 01111•1114 4 :: i''
~ . .7 3, ,,iii., , ,• ,i,, : : ,
~,,..._. . Ihespeshieereposellee-rsuinc_thieisee
:r,_ikk*. -_
.• : - i, • Aigirtm l ffliatr - P RAT°I
:' -' ,i-VA•rt 4: * Pet_ Asitiiikeleizimikei - ser:bikifeli,hi ill She
... eiv.W4161.,.' SI " 1 104W9miretter.iiMihklilANIIPAOTIIIIAR;
.. ;;*Vtioiik k 4, ~= ' : f•:iVil : l!.9iltk 'TIM X 419.; " ,sbrt ).
' . : --- '?•:4*.kt .
'-±i- -, :‘: - ... -- -•:::47,'
i:Aittft—
— ' 444 5"2 4 1 1 . „ , ,14d inritil,ll,ll4tstr4fs
,
....alillk,-+.los';bovisßeiltittier. :400ii
e kifalosii ***tom Antt
i,i rV,41,1 • ~i , •1 ,
-
..'
: 1 44.1giiii - g.:;N: , ,,lNlicf4flit i'l...c.s 5- ,4 "-- i l-- ,„
':4, 4 *V": 1 4 . 7"-AVV . : tl t — ve:s4 s,W l'''''''V f'' ' ' , Tka ; •ditlte4 4:
- 4..1.:rl . "4••-tt .
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C''''' , 'la €7. _ . ... o f ..........- _
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• _
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• ,-, • r -, ' ---"''' '•• 4 '..;....... - Iru. •-••••••--- • " ""•-• ' - ........ • ", 7 .. . . ,- -..
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>!:1.;
INEEMIN
"VOL 49:
am, &yobs , lobbent
IssB ,i.i..x, L . , ii.46.bs'. ; IBss
Trinientworibers ; beg,: leave .to inform their Mende ;
and oonatry merohanto generallY, alt their It4l* 9f
- •
_. GLOVES
DRAW3BB,
- WOOLLINS, and
, MALL WARBai
le,aow renoplete, comprising their ,useel assortmest,-
end.whith therwill ae 1 at the lowed mullet
TtierwoutteiPeclally oat athhitionlei their 'took of
; - ,„;:.:fitrOMIFIN•GLOYMBAND,frIITTAINB. •
r C... • Opoilirlaing the" , •
-UANOVER,, GDfiIiANVOWN, rJOHNBTOWN," AND
"-=' ;= OTIItiIt•DRIDRADVE DIAKAEI,
Wlfeh - theY hire iouthseed dlirmily from the imita
ted mtrie — foriMolt,
and AM now prepared to mall at
rained rates.
SHAFFNER, ZIEGLER, Ss 00.,
IMPOIV9NIIB *ND JcIATIBRA, ' • • •
'96 N. poplin! Orel,
Soar Hot iloreltents , Hotel
QIIIITTIN 0.91ATELT,1;41t,," ac 00.,
IMPONTBRO AND ZOBBARD
,ROUBRIr,
GLOVES, and
PANOY GOODS,
No. dit MAREBT STREET,
- licirt4east airner of FOURTH
estAosaLvosa,
anlll-2na
IF*4STPDX.IOI7I 0r..01111NG..
=., 0P1ie13,141113 aSON,
.;•
,-110:834,ASARKIT STRUT,
BOUTIIBIBT . 90g14111 10TIATH,
Have now In store W. large and splendid assortment
or NALL andMINTAB CLOTHING, =Annan:tared ex
prinsiy 'the Southern and Weiter,n 'Trade, which
~they niter Nit Aida on *8,140; tenni for Cluh; or on the
usual Credit. 1 • . - ,"
' '13#11111,8 are hiirited, to Gill and ailmine or them
anll2at
1858 - BILK GOODS. ' lB5B
ras-m, ROSS, c3= VgaTl-XXIIII3,
021 01.4.11.11 ET STREET, ,
•- /112:13001.011SACIE XTR REIN
.. PHILADHLPHIA.
Rive dole In store their eoznalete
IMPORTATION OF BILK AND FANOT GOODS,
Tomtit,* the attention of the TRADB Is Invited.
wl4-2m 6 -
GIBUTH, MURPHY, & 00.,
287:14iltKEIT 0T...11ND n 226 CHURCH ALLEY,
AOknow opening
.—,A,1111/313.14.
OTAPLB AND PANOr DRY GOODS, •
To which thiy Invite the' attention of -
OAHU AND PROMPT HUORT Trail BUYERS.
PZILADIILPHIA, AtIVUlt, 1868. an24-2m
RITE, & 00.>
/MPORTBRO
warrli. (mops, ,
••• -LIMIIIINO,
BMBROIDIRIEB.,
— 7.413)1 GOODS, et*.
x0.829 - 3wtmrT STREET, ,
YIIMLDELPtiti
STOOK,FALL - • •
04401? "AHOY '4OO DEL'
HERRING & OT T,-
If.
Corner or YOURTnt 'end MARICHT 8T8491111N ,
tOtr.44);*o - 1 02 0;-4XP -, 04 4 the 9 1 OODS
..r4)7 , 21111R
TM& the !Hate the`aitentionkf - • •
. • •
New: 411 MANX'S Street wad 18 OHUSANI Alley
ISIIVRiBIB AND 7QBIBBB
-DRY- G,0.0 DB, -
'Are now fillip prepared for Se
PALL' TRADE.
===
.Y~KIETY AND PBIOI3B,
WM. be, toend to -Adrantsied to buyers, unsur ,
, paired•by any other in thus eonntry. sull4ra
ALL STOOk.
.TOl6ilB, 00.,
n 0.115 MARKET STRiSST,
• :num
404 011IIROR ALLEY,
Nan now b stme a • -
OOMPLO.,TI 'STOOK
Or
SEASONABLE" DRY GOODS; -
To which they forth" the ittention of Moyers from
pert• of it ' . ' aulftdm
sIyER, t&N utmix, GLASS,
iMPORTXR3
LID
WHOLENALN DNALNIIB IN
lINSIEBY,
- GLOW'S, • •
/AMOY GOODS, ko,
428. MARKET STREET,'
ADops 70171trlf,
LEX&NDEB, & KNOWLES,
INH , OETREB AND WHOLESALE DEALERS
HOBLEBY, GLOVES ANI! NANCY GOODS,
(14111 - 111MOTID ?O)
4!0 MARKET 426 MERCHANT CTN.,
--Ana btu Just:opened • 'DEW AND 00312LATI
STOO OF 000 DB, oipteseli adapted to
" • 1A1(11, T WADI!,
Weddell the attention of their eoetomen and
' 01.6.80 BUYERS le Inylied.
salidtnovl
GRAFTER & ROBERTS,
. 210. 429 RABBI* BTRTIET,
_ - 1,1171121111111 AID 701PIt1 01
4011.111.11.1 r, GLOVXB,
BMAII WABE9,
003188, BRUMES,
TAILORS! TBDUUNGS,
. , LOOUNG•QLASBIB,
onamAN , AND 'PRINOU PANOY 'DODDS.
UnibtOatc,
.8 LEEPER - & : TENNER I
, PILMOINAOPIIRPRS OP
URBRELLAS• AND' PARASOLS,
No. $l6 MARKET STREET,
"INVITI THE, ATTENTIOPt OP BOYARS,
To Their
LARGE• AND VARIED RTOOR
DROWN & 00.,
'IIIIDRELLA AND 'PARASOL
MANtrieurIIRBRB,
No. 246 MARKET OTELEUIT,
- l ittge moortment oonstoligron hood, to which the
. 10,04401 . 4oaloro le ITM-ed. „ 6•318-110
'printing.
• .
A 'fIAOKEIQN, JOB - PRIOTER,
CHESTNUT AND 717TU STRNET.
'I7AOKSOH; JOB PRINTER,
•!• • - - CHESTNUT AND 1//iTH STEENT.
' 4/4/111011,41311 PRINTED,
, 0118STNUT .AND NINTH STREET,
, F s..74IONPA,N, 1014 PRINTER,
911118TEUT AND NEFTII,STRNET.
.:trEqcs-FRI.NtED BY'JAOKPON:
'IIrOTEBPRiNTED'HY JACKSON: I . '
PRINTED DY .1,1101/80N.
Pitt B7C iibilsotr •
fii)
...,---„,,. ...,,,,,..,,,„A.,••
i i i„. „ 50..,:,...,..ptintad .at sl.6o,.'per
• :. . • sigi, 4, _ 17,,iAOILSON ! , YIP= sal
'' EITIOrt - ' " - scl4lll,
. etuist . .:,A i.t.....i,:i. Li: .;,i. , . , ..i.', ' • ~ -. ‘ „ -.,
FOREIGN bND poms7lo GOODS.
P*Attips9N S. MITCHINSON,
„ NO. 112 Chestnut otreet,
Offers for ,
DRILLS, /DAN SHERTINGS, SHIRTING ,8
ARARINER STRIPES, OSNABURGHS, FLANNELS,
In
BROall WN,
dBLR'from AOI LIID,the AND ,OOLORED MUBLINB,
• withs
DALTIO MAN , G CO., BATES IdAN'H
NORTHVILLE DO. LOWELL • DO.. , •
ffA/RHILL DO.
AI WEST BOYLSTON Dp.
so,
_._
Templeton Mille Doeskins and itusei lanslmerea,
Woodward do. do. do.
• . Saxony MITI do. do. do.
, a tether trithalaige assortment of desirable Foreign
sepl-lm
TO DEALERS. IN OIL OLOTHS.
The Babeariber 'having eaperlor Csollitlea for Kann
redwing r• '
-noon TAILS, STAIR - , sod
oeicuLtqa, OIL ownna,
Is now prepared to offer great indnoentents to Buyers
from all parts of the country.
A large and choice Stook Constantly on hand.
Great'oare will be taken in selecting for Desloge who
order hymen.
weitsaqiisß; No. sae AROR Street, Phila.
an2B4l3n* THOMAS POTTER, bfanufsetarar.
BLABON , &
• IILiNUFACTURBBLI OP
OIL CLOTHS,
WAREHOUSE, 146 NORM THIRD STREET,
- MIII4DELP/Lll..
01711111 to the trade a fall stook of Floor Oil Clothe,
maitaal and extra quality enamelled Muslin i)rilltand
Dank. -
Table Oil Clothe; new styles ; green glued Oil Cloth
for window shades.
♦ eomplete assortment of Window Baden, trimmings,
ke. •
la•d We invite the attention of dealers to our atonic.
aalha
Qunivilt Okla./HILL, J's
RID( WAY, REIISSNER, & 00.,
OL9THB,
DOBBILINEI 3 and
OELBBItATED MANIIPAOTUREREI
ARID. BROKEN, (Little Tieket,)
W. A. JOHANNY,'Abhoe,
GIVERS & BOHMIDT, (8 and M Clothe ' )
ZAMBONA BROTHERS, (Panay Oiteelmeree,)
BROICH & LAMBERTS, (P and B Clothed
TOBMNIES &
P. G. HERRMAN & SON, (Meson Cloth)
HABELOPP B 00.
N. 908 CHESTNUT STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
H. W. RIDGWAY,
CHAS. }MUMMER.
1,200 PACK 4
BrownG
ES and Bleaobed
MEETINGS, SHIRTINGS, and DRILLINGS,
LACONIA, GREAT FALLS,
' HADLIY, PERKINS,
ILOSAOHHIHITTS, ' DWIGHT,
HABTLET, • and CABOT MILLS,
In which will,be found a Dirge and desirable assortment,
to whloh we beg to *all the attention of the trade.
- ROBISON INDIGO BLUE PRINTS, HAMPDEN
TWEEDS, STRIPES, TIOKINGS,
AND COTTONADES,
In, great variety.
SATINETS, FLANNELS, &0.,
FROTHINGHAM * WELLS, Ageata,
atie-Stailf 85 LETITIA St. and 84 8. PRONT St
RIMWIDSON'S LINENS,
i/ONSUALBILS of 11101CARDSON8 LININ 8, and thaw
desirous of obtaining the OBNUINR GOODS, Amid
see that the articles they purebase are sealed with the
fall name of the dna,
NICRARDSOic &' OWDEN,
As a ginarantee of the !madness and durability of the
This caution fs rendered essentially necessary as large
Quantities of inferior and defective Linens are prepared,
mason after sesabni and sealed with the name' of
-ILICiIABDIION by Irleh houses, who, regardless of the
Injury thus indicted alike, on the American commun.
and the manufacturers or, the genuine Goode, will not
readily abandon a bailor so profitable, while par
°haters' can be finpoeed on with fiends of a worthless
WITHERS Is PETERSON,
DROHDRS, .
-- f, r - Z i zeosifigVDlßD Street, (East Bide. 3
taring in tiZ or otter State;;PaDiftellit r ina^
parties advised innisediateiy on receipt of funds.
Drafts at sight or stew days to run, cashed at mode
rate rates.' ' .
Southern; Eastern,Weetern, and !enuaylranla State
Stoney bought at low figures.
Drafts drawn on all thoprlnolpal salsa lathe Union.
au2l,2in,
CHARLES E. BUCK,
REAL ESTATE BROKER AND AGENT,
-No. 814 M WALNUT STREET.
Beal Estate purch ased and sold. Houses rented.
Rents end Ground Rents collected. Money procured on
mortgage', ground rents, &o.
usynanarous. •
.Prederiek Prale7, ElOb I Wm. H. Lewis, E.
Morrie L. Hallowell, msq, Thos. P. Sparhawk, Req.,
James Dunlap, Bq., Caleb Jones, Esq. auBo Ira
A UGUST BELMONT,
BANKIIR,
TO BILA.W.IIII. STREET,
, NNW YORE,
Imes Letter of °Mit, available, to Trovelleiv, on all
pasts of the world. je3O.Um
CRONISE &
MOIR AND NXOHANGN HAWKINS,
No. 40 Booth THIRD littlest,
PHILADELPHIA.
, Refer to the MUM lad, BRANUM of Philadelphia.
011111. ring. W. It. SZOWN. Z. tuns:, 31 .
MANLEY, BROWN, & CO.,
DANZ-NORA, STOOK L AND .12CORANGH
'Elio
S.W. oorser of THIRD and EiHRSTNUT Otteeta,
Clolleeddons made, and Drafts drawn on all parts of the
United States and the Oanadae, on the moat favorable
times .
, Collection" made, and Drafts drawn on lin,gland and
reland.,Uncmrnent Bank Rotes bought . Land 'Warrants
bought and sold, Deem In Specie and Bullion. Loans
and Time Paper negotiated.
Stooks and Loans bought and cold on Clomulawon at
the Board of Brokers in Philadelphia and New York.
jel3-6m
PHILADELPHIA
EDWARD B. PARRY, . -7 ZARD R. PARRY,
Notary Public for olDommissloner for
Mnnesota. • Pennsylvania and
New Jersey.
IiDARRY & BRO - THER,
A. BROKERS & GENERAL Lap AGENTS and
CONYHYANOIIII£4
.FRONT STARRY', oboes HICKORY,
MANKATO, MINNESOTA,
Pay particular attention to loaning and investing
Money for riort-reddents and others, and collecting
Prete, Notes, &o. Any letters of aspotair or business
will realise prompt attention. Refer to
Wood Bacon; & Co., Philadelphia.
Dale, Rom, & Withers, Philadelphia.'
Sharp, Haines, & Co., Philadelphia.
Richard Randolph, Philadelphia.
Charles Bilis & Co., Philadelphia.
Parry & Randolph, Philadelohia. mytil-flm*
SHERRY WINE.-50 quarter caaka Har
mow' & Burden Sherry in bond, for male low by
ARNOLD & WOES,
aultSaut • 120 Walnut street.
Ifs MENEAII & FILS' ROOHELLE
A. • HBANKIIII.—Th• undersigned, having been
appointed Bole Asada in the State or Pennsylvania for
the 00)0 the above ealehrated Brandy, era prepared
to offer it to the trade at the lowest market rates, from
11.8. llendedWarehouses., AItNOLD &
an 2641 , 120 Walnut street,
WINES, LIQUORS, &C.
JOSEPH P. TOBIAS,
formerly
_ B.—TOBIAB & SON,
Foe, 200 and 208 IiODTLI yawn ,ant.opr, .
. (below Weluny
rometrotrittA,
INIPORTBR AND Of 1101,B0ALD DRALIIa.
BRANDIBO,
HOLLAND OINB,
And &II kinds
FORE/ON LIQUORS AND CORDIALS.
Agent for Jno. Ramsay's
"ISLAY MALT" SCOTCH WHISICHY.
Always on hand a large stook of
OTIOICE OLD RYE AND BOURDON WHISKEY,
To which the attention of Buyers Is particularly Invited
mat-I m
OitANDIES.—ac Pinet Oast!non," Mare%
ant other Oognaes of meow' vintagee, in ball
pipes and quarter oasts ; Pollevoisin Ikroballe Brandies,
pale and dark, in bat pipet, half oaks, and one.sigktli
oaks. Imported and for sale by
BBNRY BOHLEN & 00.,
" 221 sad 735 South /once street.
SOHRAOK'"
The attention of Dealera and oonenmera of Verniehea
da *Wetted to our
WiPRRIOR COACH AND FURNITIIRR VARNISH,
DRYING JAPANS,
IRON JAPANS,
MANTIC AND SPIRIT :VARNISHES.
We delta to be the Meet 'smith DisiutfeetetiAg
EstebPebillent
Our Yarniebes having now been In constant nee
OPBR FORTY YEARS,
sad are sdnated by competent judges to be
SUPERIOR TO, ANY OTHERS MADE IN THIII
, UNITED STATES.
AA w. sak t o fair trial, sad we ere unified the
merits of our Van:adios willbo rosy aislasi;isiati.
80HRAOK & 110:, •
OLD OitiltL4 - 1.1.611. Led Mid 11M Nor9i POURTII Egret
ei4421 - •
IMPORTERS OP
OASSIMERES,
NOM ►OE TEN /FOLLOW/AG
dlreot from
=LSI
d. BULLOOKE Bc , .T: B. LOCKE,
4133 Asitda. 66 tnittßOlT Strut: Now To*
:~3jnoti 1.,
C3311:11C11/1!
Wines an* iiQUOVS.
VARNISHES, JAPANS;
IN THIS COUNTRY,
PHILADELPHIA ; SEPTEMBER 27. 1858.
Nein publirafiaito.
TAREXELiS o01:114TElirltIT DETECTOR
-NJ for October is trow ready. Get it M mice. it is
published by PETBRSONS.
GET T HE BEST! IPETERSON'S
ILA 00IINTERTEIT DETECTOR AND BANK-NOTE
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the present day and times and no one that ever handles
bank notes should bewithout It. It points out and
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to this Detector. it guided by Its quotatlons,'rieed ever
be Imposed upon by worthless banks, or counterfeit or
broken bank bills.
The Preen everywhere is unanimous In their praise of
Petersons , Detector,", and over one thousand tiff.
fount editors, In their various papers, in different parts
orthe country, have already pronounced it the best,
mast perfect, reliable, and complete Detector that has
Seer been issued.
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for October is ready this day. Price 10e.
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911 HE TRIBUNE MERCANTILE AD=
"1 YERTIBER.—We pripose to hone on the At day
te October next the second number of THE TRIM:INX
MERCANTILE ADVERTISER, It will be Issued
monthly hereafter, and deemed exoluelYely to the
termite and twee of tho Mercantile Publle, on the follow
ing plea: •
- I. It will contain fall reports of the fdARRETB,-
with such other COMMERCIAL and MONEY INTEL
LIGENCE as shall hs deemed of special intermit to
Merchante.
11. It will be sent, without charge, by mail, poet.
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bay goods to New York, Philadelphia. Baltimore. or
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Iop & Wood, from those recorded on the books of their
Commercial Agency, and they guarantee that not less
than 60,000 shall be sent, this being the full number
of Country Merchants that they oonsider it desirable
thne to addresa.
111. The total expense will be defrayed by MER
CANTILE ADVERTISING, for which ONE DOLLAR
per line will be charged. Those who require their
advertisements to be displayed will make special bar
gains therefor.
It is believed that no equal opportunity for address
ing Country 'Merchants was ever offered in the United
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sheet is intended for Merchants alone, and will contain
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OILEBTNUT street. If by letter, address
/104AOS ORESLEY to 00,,
No. Ns4 Nassau it.
Now Yon, September, MM. p. 22 St
JAMES CHALLEN &. SON,
No. 2 SOUTH SIXTH EITIMET,
MAIM" TIIIB DAT A
'IN AND AROUND STAMBOUL.",
A captivating book on Constantinople.
BY AIM. B. RORDIDY.
This Is one of the most Interesting and fascinating
works on Oriental life ever Issued. Mrs. Hornby'hes
here presented' a graphic account of the Masks and
Mode of Worship, the Marano, the Sultan. the Valley
of Sweet Waters, the Scenery of the Bosphorus, the
Gardens, the Fouts and Pasts, the Schools, and the
Customs of the iast i also, of the Crimes, the Black
Sea, and Sebastopol, (Immediately after Its capture,)
and many other items of Information that can be found
in no other work extant.
. . .
The work is elegantly Issued, and contains 500 pages
Price, cloth, $1 25 per copy, postpaid.
'Leavy discount to agents and the trade.'
Nor sato by all Booksellers se24-3t=
ITALUABLE WORK ON OOLONL4L
V LAW-0/IAIMBRIP OPlNlONS.—Opinions of
eminent Lawyers on various points of English Juris
prudence, chiefly concerning the Colonies, /fisheries,
and Commerce of Great Britain: Collected andßigested
from the Originals in the Board of Trade and other De
positorles. By Ghouls Cm:minas, 800., NILS.,
ivol. !Ivo 811
Just reOelved and for sale by
EAT ik BBOTEHB , •
- Law Book sellers, Publishers, and Importer,,
IYJD• 19 South Sixth' street. •`
'Lionto; anti`l34"oeii::.l;:';-'..---:."
HENDRY & HARRIS,
MANUFACTURERS AND WEWLERIALB DRALNRS
.1 - L - yrf T • •
N..W. Corner THIRD and ARCH Streets,
au.2s4tra PHILADELPHIA.
FALL STOCK
3300M3 AO 1. ND 61101013.
JOSEPH H. THOMPSON as 00.,
No. 814 MARKET STREET,
AND
Noe. 8 and 8 FRANKLIN PLACE,
NAT/ NOW IN STOZM A LARON AND 'MILL ASSOATID
STOOK Or
BOOTS AND WOMB,
OF OITY AND MAI3TRRN MANUFACTURE
Whloh they offer for sale on the best terms for cub,
or on the usual credo. Bnyer► are invited to call and
examine their stook. li3/4f
BOOTS AND SHOES.—The aubeoriber
has on tumid a Luse and varied stook of BOOTS
and 13110118, whiok he Will sell at the lowest prices.
ORO. W. TAYLOR,
no2l-1, B. I. corner TYYTH and BURIUIT Sta.
Casings 'ifuntre.
THE STATE SAVINGS FUND,
No. D4l DOCK STREET,
NEXT DOOR TO THE POST MICE
INTEREST FIVE PER CENT
Money undyed Minr, and every MONDAY EVENING,
ON DNPOOIT,
IN )3131413 LAUGH AND SMALL,
PAID BACK DAILY,
PROM U O , OLOOK A. M. TO 3 O'CLOCK P. M
DRPOBITOBB OAN,DBAW 'MOIR MONEY BY oneols, AB
IX BANIC, IP DRSIIIND
OHO. IL HART, President
CHAR. G. INLAY, Treasurer
J. HENRY HAYS, Teller.
it HE SPRING GARDEN SAVING
KIND.
DT TIM LEGIBIATIIIII OP P110118TLTA1111.)
REEPBTUAL WARM.
PM PEB GENT. Interest allowed to Depoaltore,
and all Moneys Paid bank on Demand.
OPPIOR, 831 NORTH THIRD STREET,
(001110LIDATIO8 BANK BOILDIIIGA
Thum Institution is now open for the transaction of
eminent, and lathe only Ohartered Sarin Pond located
In the northern part of the oltr
The Office will be open (daily) from to 23,‘ coeval,
and also on MONDAYS and THURSDAYS, from 6 until
9 o'clock In the livening.
DLINA4IIII2I.
James B. Pringle,
Jacob Dock,
Joseph 2d Cowell,
George %shipper,
J Wesley Bray,
Robert B. Davidon,
P. 0. Ellmaker,
John P. Vorrce,
Cieorgo Enestit;
John Horn.
t JAMB B. PRIMUS.
howl. as2l-00
Frederick Klett,
Stephen Smith,
John P Levy,
Hon. Henry K. Strong,
'Daniel lintiorkotier,
Hon. Wm. Millward,
Frederick Stalks,
French; Hart,
Joseph P. LeOlere,
John Kessler, Jr..
Preelden
Osoretary, OBORGS T.
QAVING FUND.—UNITED STATES
TWEET COMPANY, corner of THIRD and OHRST
NET Etreete..
Large and small enma reeelved, and paid Dark on ds
mand, without notice, with I'M PER CENT INTER
IST from the day of deposit to the day of withdrawal.
015oa hours, from 9 until 6 o'clock every day, and os
SIONDAT 'EVENINGS from 7 until 9 o , olook.
DRARTE for sale on Ragland, Ireland, and Scotland.
from .£1 upwards.
PreindentllTllPlEEN R. ORARTORD
Truce:mos—PLlNY VIER.
Teller—JAMINI R. RUNT'S
QAVIDTG FUND—FIVE PER PENT. IN-
K, DEMIST—NATIONAL 131418 TY TP.IIST COM
PANY.—WALNUT STREIBT 8013TII-WISTOORIAISA
OP WIRD, PHILAD E LPHIA.
/11,001PCMATED DT TWI ST/TB OF PINNOTLVABIA.
Money is reeeived In any sum, large or email, and le.
Cutlet paid front the day of deposit to the day of with
drama.
The ono is open every day from 9 &elect In the
morning.till 6 Odeon in the evening, and on Monday
end Thursday eventual till 8 &dealt.
EON. RUNUP L. HENRI% President,
MUT 811LPOIDOO, Vino President.
WV. I. Bun,Eleeretery.
D 1110,01112 I
BOA. Henry L. Benner, 1. Oarron Drente, '
lidward L. Carter, Joseph B. Ban ,
Hobert Selfridge, lands Lee,
Muni. S. Ashton,' J oseph Yorke',"
0. Landreth M a n ce , ' Henry Diffenderffer.
Money is received and payamats made daily.
The investments are node to conformity with the
provisions et the Charter, in URAL 'ISTA.TiI MOST
GABBS, OBOLIND RENTS, and snob first elms semi
ties m will always Insure perfect security to the desi
tore, sad which cannot fail to give permanency and sta.
~tufty to this Institution. -
IVO. 88 (241) DOOR STREET.—FIVE
PIA SANT. BUPA SAMOS RAND.
Ivo. 88 (241) DOCK STREET.— FIVE
PIA OSIDIS. SPATS SAVINGS PDND.
MO. 88 (241) DOOR STREET.- FIVE
PAR WM. STAAB SAVINGS WAD.
IVO. 88 (241) DOOR STREET.—FIVE
PIB CIINT. sTATI AftVINGS WIND. inlay
PORK. -160 bbls Mess Fork; for sale by
C. O. SADISM & 00.,
s 2 Iltrist, 24 door obeys iroat.
t‘
4 I
-
NONDAY. UP UMBER 27, 1868.
Touching iiihe Weed:9,
40hacCe was notknown, in the Old World,
until after the discovery, of America. , But
thiatip:Cf something of the sort was general,
'ht some of the old countries, from a , very
eifly' time. ,For-example, in Dr. ABBOTT'S
t i k , gYPtian Nutienin, , at: New York—a most
it: tu r f! xll e p i e n tio n n e ' v o e f z ; a b n e tiq re u p lti la e c s ed ; w_h t i h ch er , e on a c ie e
:iioidited clay-Anti which were used as far
i
k ; ft-, the, time, of-the Psaaaons. , About
)lifftotWe oonncie, be'the slightest mistake or
ili:Obt. o,:Tlufile:xenerable piped w,ere takdn
filtli.:the :Mummiee, which abound In nearly
irlf,r, part afiltg'ypt..: For any thibg known
tVlie contrary, one of them-may have been
44 ty, Vilaspu ' hinaself, when ' , acting Vice
gbileliii 111 the 'lartd - sif Egypt.
IP ,
~, ere is ample report, traditional and his.
t ofca; liowgeiterally tobacco was used by the
aWginekotAtnerica. In the middle of • the
slOeentle century, ess than seventy Intarafrom i ,
,:
thd-tfirst voyage ,of Cotuttnus, 'IRAN Nloo2'i
French Ambassador to Portugal, sent home
seafthe tobacdo;plant. Fortunate man I to
h' e ' his ,came ' beaded down to posterity in
ccifijonetion with.'! the weed." Is it notlis
tntically knoWo, since his time, as it must be
foi the future, ; as the .Nicotiana tabcgcum 1
Ignorant-people fancy that it is called tobacco,
from the island of Tobago; but the fact is, that,
Ici gait!, where the Spaniards first landed, and
roost probably first saw "the. plant smoked, the
pipe has always borne the name of tobacco or
ta&ac. So gumnothrt says, adding that the
Spaniards called the thing smoked from the
vehicle in which it was'need.
Tobacco, brought over to Europe by the
Spaniards, was introduced into England later
than into France. Sir:WALTER RALEIGH, who
bad attempted to settle the colony of Vir-'
ginia, in 1686, brought over tobacco with him,
and 'its use rapidly spread. JA Las the First
endeavored to put it down, by proclamation
after proclamation, but failed. Then 'he
wrote a book about' It, nothing bpi than his
famous ce Counterblast against Tobacco." All
in vain, for smoking became yet more preys-
lent. Its cultivation in England was prohi
bited by successive sovereigns. Taxation
speedily laid its tenacious grasp upon cc the
weed." The first tax upon it, under Jamas I,
two hundred and fifty years ago, was over a
dollar and half per pound, actually equivalent
to some five or sixdollars of our present
money. "Ever since, it has been' a Subject for
Impost. The English duty is now about eighty
cents per pound, on unmanufactured tobacco,
and two dollars a pound on cigars. Con-
Idderlng that the price, in England, ranges
from nine cents a pound for ordinary and
'mixed Kentucky tobacco ;twenty cents for
titibevet Kentucky and Virginia, it must be
confessed that the tax Is a very, Leavy one---
semewhat about a thousand, per cent., on
eigqs, and on the raw article.
:The quantity of tobacco actually consumed in
the"rited Kingdom Is about 88,000,0,00 pounds
per maim: The duties thence accruing to
the Revenue aro about $28,000,000. The
amount paid to the United States - by Great,
Britain, one year with another, is about
$8,800,000. Thus,. including the 'duty, to
bacco Is smoked awar.or snuffed away, in the
United Kingdom, to the tune of $26,800,000
per annum. This is independent , of largo
quantities smuggled in, which pay no duty.
."Gn 'tite 'qiibition of smuggling, we remain_
'bet an anecdote.ottlie celebrated Joux Dux
milia,-afteirarahla Lord- ' , distattrayox,,a leading
meinbee'nethaUillitt c btiic in the :last den.'
tor3c. EaTly, in 6,130,
Driunma had little practice, ho was in
tho . where all Excise,
tried, and was assigned as Counsel to
a smuggler who had boon caught, flagrance
delicto, in the act of selling a pound of cigars.
The man was a noted character, who had long
baffled detection, and the Excise Officers
made a dead set against him. They had laid
numerous indictments, each charging him
with unlawfully possessing w one pound of
manufactured tobacco, commonly called ono
pound of cigars, on which the duty bad not
been paid, contrary to the statute in that
case made and provided," et cetera. The
penalty, in each case, would have been five
hundred dollars, or three months' imprison
ment, in default of payment. The evidence
in the first case was so strong that only one
result was anticipated. MINIUM} demanded
that the w one pound of cigars" should be
weighed in Court. The opposite side had ex
pected this, and the cigars unquestiona
bly turned the beam when placed in the
scale against a pound weight.. There was
barely over a pound, but there was certainly
that. In those days a straw used to bo in
serted in each cigar, to be used as a mouth
piece, partly to facilitate the operation of
smoking, partly to keep the rough tobacco
taste from the lips. Pulling out these straws,
one by ono, DUNNING required that the bundle
of cigars should again be weighed. It now
was less than the required , r one pound," and
the Judge, much delighted with Durearma's
ingenuity, directed the acquittal of the prise.
nor, as the proof had clearly failed in the im
portant point of weight, so expressly named in
the indictment. From that time, Mama
never wanted business; his character for
shrewdness and readiness was established,
and his knowledge of law enabled him to rise
to the head of his profession.
In Continental Europe tobacco adds ma
terially to the public revenue of every State
or Kingdom. At this moment it is an object
of Government monopoly in the following
thirteen States : Austria, France, Spain, Si
cily, Sardinia, Poland, the Papal States, Por
tugal, Tuscany, Modena, Parma, San Marino,
and Lichtenstein. The population of those
countries, thus supplied with tobacco by their
respective Governments, is 116,297,000 souls,
being 48.7 per cent. of the entire population
of Europe. Bat in every part of Europe it is
heavily taxed.
In England the tobacco trade is solely in
so2B-tJaul
the hands of private persons. When tobacco,
or any other article, confiscated for non-pay.
meat of the duties, is sold by suction, in any
of the British Custom-houses, for the benefit
of the officers who have seized it, there is a
sine quci non that it must realize the amount
of duty to which it would bo liable. Thus, a
pound of leaf tobacco must bring 80 cents,
and a pound of cigars must realize $2, which
are the respective duties. Whatever may be
realized, over this, is the officers' gain. But
If the tobacco does not bring the full amount
of duty, it is condemned, carted off to pro
mises expressly prepared for the purpose, and
ruthlessly burnt in a mighty furnace wit}l a
lefty chimney. This is the Queen's whole
sale tobacco-pipe,
Tobacco is largely cultivated in various
parts of Europe—say to tho extent of one-half
of the entire_ consumption. Prom an early
period, the cultivation of tobacco was forbid
den in England and Scotland. At the time of
such statutory prohibition, Ireland had aParlia
meet of her own, and it was not thought worth
while to pass a law enforcing the non-cultiva
tion of "the Nicotian weed" in the Emerald
Isle. In consequence, when some enterprising
man actually grew tobacco, in Ireland, in the
year 1779, (nearly a century later than its cul
ture had been forbade in England,) he was not
interfered with. But, owing to some ignorance
of the way of rearing the crop, it proved a total
failure, and that was the last, for a long time,
of Irish tobacco.
About the year 1829, as we have been told,
an Irishman named CAnnorm returned to his
native land, after many years residence in the
United States, where he had realized sufficient
moans to. purchase the estate in Tipperary,
upon which his forefathers had resided from
immemorial time, and which his grandfather
had lost, by a trifling legal accident called fore
closing of a mortgage. 14r. 04nnonn, who
wag an active•nminded ? spepulnt►yq man, had
lived In our Southern Statie for several yearn,
where he -bad made bimielf, familiar - With ill
relating to the growth, and treatment,'" and'
preparation of tobacco. - .He hail add , '
dentally"ascertained ' that • there, was no
law, prohibiting , : the' cultivation of the
plant in Accordingly, having briniglit
over with bim, by another accident; as much
cif the tobacco - deed as wo,uldsuffice t ier a fetv
• acres of land, he had the ! gronnitearefully pre
pared, and committed the :seed to p.-"poi-o
ting himself to weeding, hoeing, and all the
other requisites for success, he had the satis-:
faction, in due time, of sending into; the mar
ket, in Dublin and in Cork, sundry ;hogsheads
,of leaf tobacco, equal to the average quality
of that usually imported from the United
• States. He - put on it the Aineridan prices,
too, and got them. But the Excise of&
cars, soon acquainted with what be' bad
dime, " seized every pound of this Irish
tobacco, and Proceeded' to take ;the usual
steps to cc exchequer " him:. 1" They:" be,'
lieVed themselves very widitawaka,
their intended victim alone was in that situa
tion. In due time, the legal measures having'
reached maturity, Mr. Canaonn presented him
self to the Irish Attorney General,: informed
him that the tabacine prohibition did-not le-,
gaily' Anttend to • Ireland, and -readmmendid
him to Make a'virtne of necessity, 'and ,with."
draw all the Exchequer suite at law.; The At:_
terney General iveuld
,gladly hays 'done this;
as his own legal ignorannO, or,,earelessness
would have been publicly procitilmetad they,
proceeded. Bat shrewd Mr: liotko did not
stop with this. Ile exacted from the Irish
Government fall compensation for the da
' meg() ho had sustained,' in character and
purse, by the public seizure of : his pro,
duce, as smuggled—nor did ho pit a• small
estimate upon, his , damages. )Gtowever,
the money was paid, and the Excise Commis
sioners flattered themselves that 'they had
seen the last of Mr. OAIIEOLL. Not so; for
they had a letter from him, some six months
later, saying that be had put the whole of his
land into tobacco cultivation, and, as they
had paid him so well for the last crop, wished
to know whether they would purchase tho
forthcoming at the same rate. The result
was, the Excise'Board had to compromise,
and agreed to pay $lOO,OOO for Mr. Canam's
next tobacco crop, he undertaking not again
to go into that branch of agriculture. Final.
ly, in the year 1831, the Government had to
get an act of Parliament wholly prohibiting
tobacco-growing in Ireland, and, in March
1832, got a second act pissed, authorizing the
purchase of Irish-grown tobacco, with a view
to its being destroyed,
N. B.—Mr. °ARROW/8 neighbors declare to
this day that the sowin`g, ' and consequent
growing, of tobacce in the - second year, was
only one of his ingenious devices, and that
be really bad sown grain where the B,lceisemen
believed he bad placed tobacco-seed. , The
whole transaction put some $150,000 into this
amiable gentleman's pocket.
Schnilkill County.
Oorrespoodence of The Prem.]
SEPTEMBER 22, 1858.
The eleotion of Col. Joseph W. Cake, the popu
lar sovereignty candidate for Congress from this
district, is generally conceded hero by the know
ing ones.• The contest is batmen him and Camp
bell, the'Republioan. Hon. Wm. L. Dewart Is
considered " too weak in the knees" to effect
Much, and the whangdoodles have lost all hopes
of his election, but think that they had batter lot
him down easy. Besides the regular Dameratio
nomination of this county, Col. 'Cake has the
nomination of the WotkingMetfiCenvention; and'
will receive a very large vote. Tariff ,and 'popu
lar sovereignty will, through hi,M; be tOnmpliani
herd. 'Midtfieft oiliiisiCWltll,lEierilitir.• •
SCIIIITTLICILL COUNTY,
A, u, tlemeeratin Meeting.
In pursuance of , a oall; a meeting me held In
ihe'court:house, in the borough of Brookville, on
Titt i r r ige fe trapigg, l ,Bl6, 1858. The meeting
,Tresident—B. J. Illeholsoir;Biqz--- • _
Tice Presidents—John Ramsey, John Winter
leiter' James Painter, John Taylor, David Hen
notch, and Thomas Dougherty.
Secretaries—A. Boyle, 8. M. Phintroff, and 8. J.
Martin.
On motion of john Dougherty, a committee of
five was appointed to draft resolutions expressive
of the sense of the meeting, whereupon tho chair
appointed John Dougherty, Charles Barton, John
E. Carroll, Lorenzo Haskell, and B. J. Reid said
committee.
. .
On motion, Angtistne Boyle, Esq., opened the
meeting with a short address, introdtteing R.
McCormick, BR., of Venongo county, who ad
dressed the meeting in the absence of the com
mittee.
Pending the remarks of Mr. McCormick, the
committee returned, and through their chairman,
John Dougherty, announced they were ready to
report.
For the purpose of receiving the report of the
committee, Mr. McCormick suspended his remarks,
when the committee, through their secretary, B
J. Reid. Esq., reported a series of resolutions,
which wore adopted en masse, as follows :
Whereas, In the great contest of 1868, which result
ed in the election of James Buchanan to his present
high position, the Democracy throughout the Union
stood united to te man upon the fundamental principle
of popular sovereignty, u embodied In the Oincinnati
platform, and enforced with so much earnestness and so
much success in every Democratic press and from every
Democratic stump in the land
And whereas, The universal interpretation of that
doctrine, as applied to Kansas, was that the people
there should have guarantied to them the sacred right or
shaping their own institutions in their own way, and
of admitting or rejecting slavery according to their own
sovereign will, freely. fully and fairly expressed, with
out force or fraud, or any outside interference or dicta
tion whatever
And whereas, It is self-evident that, if the Demo
cracy had held any other doctrine than this in 1866, or
bail put any other Interpretation upon It. we would
have met with merited detest at the batlot•box. and
James Buchanan would never have been our President :
Therefore,
Resolved, That what was Democratic doctrine then
ehouid be Democratic doctrine now; and that, as De
mocrats. sincerely anxious for the welfare and perma
nent success of our party, we declare our unalterable
resolution to stand by our principles and pledges of
1868. let who will desert or betray them.
• • •
Resolved That we cordial!. approve of ,e.rid endorse
the Administration of James Buchanan the President
of our choice except only so far an regards the to
compton Onnetitution and English bill; and as to these,
we cannot but regard hie poltoy as an unfortunate de
parture from the fundamental principles to which he
and all of no etood committed in MO.
Resolved, That in President Buchanan's Inaugural
Addrees and instruction to Governor Walker, we re
cognise the sentiments of en enlightened patriot and
true Democrat. In these we behold the wheat without
the tares—the epontaneous expression of his genuine
Bret impulses before the evil counsels of false advisors
prevailed over hie better judgment. and induced him to
amumo the new and startling position disclosed in bin
epeeist message of the Id of Pebruary lest In this
we behold the tares which threaten to choke the good
seed, and, devoted etill to the President we all labored
so hard to elect, we CAD only say, more in morrow than
In anger, "some enemy bath done this."
Resolved, That the course of William P. Packer, at
the head of the Executive department of our State Go.
vernment, commends itself to our hearty and unquali
fied approval. He has proved himself an able statesman
and true Democrat.
, . .
Resolved, That in Stephen A. Douglas and John W.
Forney, each in his own sphere, we recognise Demo
crat, and patriots of great edity and heroic devotion to
principle. And in the fierce assaults made upon them
by paid melee and tirMeMireirig politicians, merely be
canto they stand firm and true to principle when others
falter and prevaricate, they have ourcordisi sympathies,
and must command the respect even of their tradneere.
Resolved, That the Democratic members of Congress
who, with their eyes open and their eeneee about them,
voted for the enforcement of the Lecompton Oonstitu
lion upon an unwilling people; and, when foiled in
that, followed it up by the even more odious iniquity of
the English bill—half tribe, half threat, more Insult
than injury to Eanasa—discriminating in the moat um
called-for manner in favor of slavery and against free
dom—did so In violation of their express and Implied
pledgee and the well-known principlee of the party, and
have thereby forfeited their claim to the confidence and
support or their conatituents.
Resolved, That the, re-election of those members of
Congress by the Democratic party of their respective
districts would be a ratification of all their acts, and a
direot endoreement of a fundamental weong. from the
consequences of which we, ad a party, never could
venni ; for impartial history would record it, and bring
it up in judgment against our posterity.
Resolved, That as the principles of our party are far
above its mere mach inert', and as the true and lasting in
terests of our party are paramount to the hopes or inte
rests of this or that man in it, our fidelity to those prin
ciples and those paramount interests repine of us, it
we would be true to opmelves and to our party, to repu
diate at the polls those who committed the wrong. It
Is only thus, by repudiating the wrong and its authors,
that we can vindicate the party, resters its integrity,
and save It from ultimate and total defeat.
• •
. Resqlred, That for the foregoing reaaone we cannot,
and we will not, support James L Milli, the present
Lecompton member of Congress from this district ) now
a candidate for ranleetion
On motion of John E. Carroll,
Resolved, That the pmeeedinge of this meeting be
pabiiehed is the 'Brookville Teffersonian and all the
Democratic papers in this Dongresstonal dietriet, and
in the Philadelphia Press.
[S[GNED BT TUB OFFICERS]
After the adoption of the resolutions, Mr. Mo-
Cormick continued his remarks, showing conclu
sively that Judgo Douglas, John W. Forney, and
those who act with them, are the true Democratic
party of the country. The ,speech of Mr. McCor
mick was one of the ablest of the campaign.
After the gonalusion of the speech of Mr. MeCor
miek, on motion of John Dougherty, it was
Resolved That the .tbanks of the meeting be tea•
dared to Mr McCormick for the able address with
which be had favored lie meeting
On motion, the meeting adjourned with three
cheers for ,
RUST.-A Canadian paper says that a gen.
tlema.n recently turned five horses into a field of
rusted oats, and they wore all found dead the next
morning. Rust is supposed to be caused by a very
minute insect, which lives on the juice of tho
straw, and the rust ie its poisonous secretions,
TWQ,CENTS.
•Spedch - 'l3VEdliri, Cr:Webb . , Esq 4 -
Deb:tiered at' Giant , Democratic Meeting,
11ele ,at iheCorner - of Second and Christian
IStreets,,on Th,ursitiro, Sept. 23d,'1.858.
Ata• PREEIIDINT' LSD TILLOIRLD6IIOOI63III' kimw
'of Mating that would give •me more pimiento, than to
be able. to address yins at, length upon the topiCii Which
now distract the country;' but T• am' adnionished, by a
Rations affection of the throatithatany,,remarkifwhioh.
I may be able to make this evening, mast of necessity
be brief—too brief; indeed; for my own • satiefsetion or
your edification: We have fallen uporiati). thnei— tiwea-
In whichit is demanded that the freemen of *instil=
shall surrender net only the. privilege: of thought, but
that they shall also forfeit their tight to manhood, and
thus become the anthem of their own abasement. - To •
Democratic ears like ours 'this is a startling require
ment. Row chill we meet hi Like men determined
to be RS free as our fathers were, or like the trembling
menial whbkieses the hand' that smiles him? .It may
be deemed schismatic in na to oppoie the wiekeddeeigns
Of Jamerlitichattan; bat no vulgar fidelity to party
leaders shall induce me to offer, myself a living victim
to the, convulsions of weakness that govern that matey
bletit old'man. In thefrantie paroxysm of adirefal
tuition he may believe that he has a mission to. Perform
in the matter of popular sovereignty, as Anderiktood by
hirnielf, or as given to him by those who desire . Pi 'de:• -
,base and destroy it; but so long as God permits me the
use of the facultiee balk, eyed me, will
them all agiingt arca - Moan interpretation. My own
convictions assure me, that all who are here aseembled
are bat One in eautfment.: have toot, therefore, to
administer a rebuke to deepotio !Whinny, andlito dui&
Use the penile conduct of a -lloentleue Representative,
_who ham debused Ilia :own inalthiAid, die 'graded the cha
'ranter of, his nitric .iltate.aied:inaulted the Prondbad
honest constituency that elevated_ him? WA position far
above tiliOrrerite Idemtallgaiditnie. •At I tfme when
oharitie confitaien particle* the Democratic' Organisation,
throughout the length and Breadth of,,thie great Con
',fedoras*, itmonld be rank hi:Mao:hoe in me to censure
in courtly phrases the althorn •of this wild said Mental
Anarchy. Upon the uncorrupted Demoorasy of this,
eaters there trip dards& the ilolemit duty .and
bubik.tif ?re/J*l64'oer te'. &rut 4 1 ' 0 0 Of
' pttritf.' MelliteP in this diriisitinit wilted* ta en by
a weak aid iiiidietitAPreddont, Who is now striting
bind the confidences of men with a Stronger Olga win
'gnome.) held Unit An' the superstitionaages of the
world's history. ."Bow down to_Geslar's cupmis BOW
the mandate from the White Monsain Washington ; but
an indignan t and onurageotie people - spnrn the maiodate,
on didthe herOlo firdse Of uld; and resolve to Preserve •
their liberties'. or pariah in .thit'attempt: f i,ilo.yoto
tente," - oh i Teriel, ,, new resounds through the nation.
What can be the object ofMr. Bachman IA setting up
this symbol of an tuturped authority? -Is it' tontaire
those under him feel the miseries and humilistion,of de.
pendenoe? Or does he wish to see them riot inthe(very ,
luxury of baseness,? I know that there are thousande
among his .followers who turn' away frost his acts of
despotism with shame sad anguish. who dare not utter
their thoughts.' They are so garotted that they Cannot
make sacriaces Without compensation, and tee have no
thing to give them but:patriotic emulation With des
perate levity or vindictive pleasure, Mr. Bntbanan may
entrage the opinions of society by insisting that en sac
of dexterotiq perfidy shall be made a test of Orthodoxy ,
but if we submit to such a decree, we must hereafter
accrue our own degeneracy rather than his lioentioneneas
I despise that Man whose tbooghts and words have
no connection with each other Nature designed him
or a villain who will - never hesitate at an oath when he
designs to seduce, nor feel the want of a pretext when he
ier inclined to betray. His villainies spring -from tlim'
coolest meditation, and not from the heat of blood or
the tenuity of unoontrolled`power ; for his passions
never forget -the discipline to which theyd:owe long
been accustomed His whole soul may be occupied with
the most complicated schemes of ambition, lyet hie as.
petit and lenguagewill exhibit nothing but philosciphia
moderation. Hatred and revenge may eat inte his heart,
yet every look be a cordial smile and every gesture a
familiar cams. Be does not scruple to dec , ive, because
he intends to destroy, and thinks it madness to declare
open hostilities against a rival whom be may stab in a
fond embrace, or poison in a consecrated wafer. Snob
men have lived se I here de-cribe, and doubtless the
Face isnot extinct Ileaveittoyoutoapplytheportrait
We may be abused with all the home or simulated
virtue, by the ready parasites that fatten"„tipon the
public treasury; but with the conviction that we are
sustaining a great principle. and only redeeming the
pledgee we save to the people in 1858,-w6 could not
now escape the hammy of a retiii ii t.-.We roast, third
fore, stand firm in defence of our priociplei,and yield'
nothing either to threats or persuasion . dot. Florence
may be bewildered by, the glare with which some are I
Illuminated; but he will yet have' to penetrate the '
shade into which others , will oonalgo him.' ; A subser
vient Representative may idebate his own character by
sets of omission and commission ; but the virtuous in:. I
tegrity of a deceived and insetted people will cry aloud
for justice and equality:
: Despotism and slavery are allies, linked tbgether
a chain of adamantine strength. But it cad be brokee
by men determined to be free: The dying patriot.
Robert Emmett, declared that it was his idtention to
make the lest entrenchment of liberty his grans. ' And
he found that liberty which his tyrants denied him in
,the republic of the dead, Rhein we break:the cursed
chain which now manacles thik limbs of many of our
friends, or shall we owe a common master, and quietly
submit to the most despotic discipline? By pursuing
the latter course,
we may be permitted to live in peace
within the limits of the President , / roily, despised
every honorable man , with the canker eating Into" onr"
own motile,
Ent who is this imperious old man, replete with office
and trcoluments, that is new setting np yew testier
Democracy, and new creeds for one acknowledgment?
He, like ourselves, is but a member of the Democratic
party, and not the absolute t exponent of its principles.
The platform establiehed at Cinch:nail is as binding
noon hint a. the poorest man amongst rut, and the creed
it embodies is the only legitimate teat uponlDemoorats
•until altered by the next National Convent*. •
- What iitthe Deutomattepatty ?. -It ix a eiambination
of citizens reeldlog in Stela of" this thiltilt, who
hive -a • similar•vloirlif' 'recoribiny,,or.whosa'
opinions have online approximation: These meet to
Bother every four years in convention, thn ugh dele
gates selected in varicatitway4siik after cOnsaltation i
and argument, and, a routnaloprrender of ounithirw,
determine upon a creed which is to revert the whole.
Party throughout the Union. All 'diversity of indivi. -
dual opinion is merged in this common platform. and
conformity with its doctrines is the only test of De.'
mroracy. The President, powerful as he is in patron
,Pan, has no autherityto erect teats outside
o f -t h e ?/. 91-6-. Cionfetrsor l _, •• , n sanction
attempt enforce, yproseripttrin, his own "n • • •
the opinions of other., is a tyranny of the worst de
aeription, and should be resisted. ;to the utmost of our
ability.
History teaches us that, as a general think, tyranny
is of gradual progress. It approaches by stealth, first
deprivli g the people of Some tutiMportanti privilege,
and then making that act a precedent for farther de
privation. This fact gave •birth to the axiom that
" eternal vigilance to the price of liberty." Look out
upon the Republics that have been swept grimy by the
hand of some unscrupulous ruler or marauding bandit
Senators and Representatives have been driven from
their belle, only to perish on the ecaffold, because they
stood between a tyrant and the people. This was a
summary process, and generally - an efficient one. to
stifle public repinings.. Our tyrant adopts the other
extreme, because it is safer to h's own person, and
equally effective. He will not only laminate all the
Congressmen in the Northern States, but be will also
have all our State Legislatures, and fill all our local
offices with the creatures of his policy. Is a constable
to be elected? The test IC Lecompton. Is% sheriff to
be nominated' The President has his candidate ' la
belled Lecompton, and all who refuse to support him
are out of the pale of the party. Wae the demoralisa
tion of the Democratic party ever so complete? Was
there ever a President ao cruelly exacting or so meanly
disposed? This demoralization began with Kansas.
then extended to our navy yard, and has since pervaded
the whole Union. Submit or starve re now made the
alternative even in the day-laborer who coins his sweat
and blood for a bare subsistence. Spies are set over his
actions. and every thoughtless word 'giant a creature
of the President, and every token of friendship for
those who differ with him, are made the pretext for die
missal When shall all this cease? Not while imagi
nation, in its decrepitude, and taste in its Watley, are
the only requirementa of public men. We must fill the
National Chamber with Representatives who think and
art like men, and who will not shun danger because
timidity In ceased to be shameful Such a Representa
tive you would have in Dr. Geo. IV. Nainger, the
fearless champion of the people's rights. In the very
wantoonees of exuberant vigor be would teach the
boisterous Hotspurs of the South that valor dwells as
plentifully north as south of Mason and Dixon's line
The lesson cannot be given too soon, for, with Southern
men, Northern cowardice seems to have grown into a
proverb of Infamy flow much Colonel Florence hoc
had to do in the establishment of this proverb, I will
leave you to determine.
But what or Col. Florence and the course be has
pursued? Measured by his own standard. he is the
greatest man in the nation Judged by his intrinsic
value, he is the mod worthless of Pennsylvania's Rep.
reaentatives He has neither dignity of character,
force of intellect, nor prestige arising from his nix
years , experience on the floor of Congress. Of what
Important committee has he ever been made chairman?
How often bra he been called to the chair as Speaker pro
tern? But once; and then the mortification of his
friends was so deep, that thee hung their head' in
silent humiliation at Ws perfect failure. It grieves
me tobe compelled to speak of him so truthfully; but
as he aggregates in himself all the merit of having
brought all the work to our navy yard and arsenal for
many years post. Ito must expect to be handled with
severity. " Brown's sac rk," as it was formerly
lets done in our city before this redoubtable Colocel
was born, and bad become a fixture long before he wee
known in politics. Here it would come almost of neces
sity, because, here we have all the appliances
and all the experience lu that sort of wo-k. He never
added a dollar's worth of work to the arsenal, and
could not, as be was totally destitute of influence at
Washington. both under the Pierce and foreportof the
present Administration He was treated there se &clever,
sociable gentleman. who talked a great, deal about every
thing without having a clear idea of anything. If he
were So potent at Washington In the affairs of the navy
yard, why was it necessary, a dezerilimes or mare, io
have influential Democrats travelling to the seat of Go
vernment, at their own expense, to induce the Navy
Department toned work to the yard? Why, gentle
men, they treated him as a child. and I saw Secretary
Tourey so treat him less than a' year ago. Men
of feeble intellects, in order to euetain them
soiree, are prone to lay claim to the merits of others,
and Youcey made this discovery on the first glance of
the gallant Colonel, and then conversed with him for
the next ten minutes with hie eyes olosed in the pre
sence of a committee of five from this neighborhood, as
if to convince them that he had looked right through
the Colonel, and to notify them that what he said was
of no account. But the President wanted votes to carry
through the grand swindle which was to rob the free
men in Kansas of their rights, and thus pave the way
to a farther demoralization of the nation. Florence had
a. vote, and wan known to be a weak man in every re
aped and so a sort of trade was gotten np between him
and the Secretary? It is aurprising haw cheap some men
held their honor. A laborer's berth in the 'navy yard
for his vote—master laborer, to be sure,
hut still a
labeler. It would have been better for him to have
given himself away than to have taken so paltry a re
muneration.
•• • • . • • ..
But Colonel Florence owns an evening paper, which
has been a mendicant ever since his connection with it
At its head. as editor, he has placed a wandering buf
foon, whose itinerant acts of legerdemain brought
money to his pocket, but no credit to his character.
From Virginia to blessachusetts, ho preached a doc
trine, for pay, that he did not believe, and practiced a
profession which he utterly disgraced. Denying in
theory that man has a soul to be saved, he preenmp
measly lectured upon the nature of the soul, and
sought, by psychological influence., to make all man
kind eubject to bin pony will And this is the man
that hue been selected to aasail, in the moat vitupera
tive terms, Col. nel Forney, Dr. a ebinger, and myself.
Why, gentlemen, the miserable sheet over which thin
mountebank preside'', was in its death-throes during
the Presidential campaign, and was only rescued from
inevitable death by the liberality of Colonel Forney,
Riebardson L Wright, Bag, and myself. And yet MI e
viper, if it were not polutlese 'and fangleas, would
sting two of us to death. It has attempted to create
th e impression that my support of Dr. Nebinger is in
eincere. and that my desire is to destroy him politically.
This sort of morality Is the predominant feature o
that journal and its connections; but when honorable
men plight their faith to each other, they mean to re
deem their pledge at every sacrifice, end through every
vicissitude of fortune. This Colonel Florence will toil
to be the cape in the content now waging against him.
Fellow-Democrats, I find my voice failin •, as I em
unaeoustomed to ;peak in the open air, and must now
draw my remarks to a close. The great battles for the
rights of mankind have to be fought in every age—
sometimea succesefully, but as often otherwise. The
noblest spirite in the past have been the chief actors
in
the conflict, and gallant hearts are now beating in
unison with our own. We must all, therefore. with
one heart and one mind, determine to overthrow the
r t.r . a i n u n t y i
0 :11 ,
t i
h ch a
t i s w c t ic h w
o b u e r l n b g ac e
k e t p o o ,
i v
fi e roods,
and in oura s t rg
fare
to o
to the foe, we will in battle leave no blot on our came ;
but, If need be, look proudly to heaven from the death.
Dog of foam
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS-
Correspondent, for it Too Pons" will plume bus I*
mlud_ the following rules
Meer) Oommunlesiden must be sooompaaled the
some of chi 'wilier. In cedar to Salt . I:4;eorrecrtasio of
tint *rsei47; but one aldS of the 'sheet should be
- -
written upon.
We shall be grfatly obliged to go:diem:it in ream'.
'viola sad Otherfltatee for efositibutiest giving the our.
rent new, of the day In - their particularlocalities, the
remove of the enerolnadiag:sountry, the footsies of
population, or any Information that will be Interesting
to thegeneral reader.'.
GENERAL •NEWS.
EXTRAORDINARY MURDER BY A PHYSICIAN,
, susen•Loogeonr.—A man by, the name of Philip
Hawking; 'a n old Peninsular 'soldier under Wel-
Hngton, was murdered in' Wilson; NisiEars county,
`on Tuesday last; under extrairdinarytand peculiar
circumstances: The Lockport (louder of Thais
day; morning says "that - Hawkbw-had been com
plaining, fpr seTeral days: when - Dr: John Cress
well was called to'viiit tam. 'The Pastor bad his -
Patientrienkiirred'to,the 'Ameifeatillitel, kept by
O. R:lifison, 'agreeing 'to pay tivii dollars per
week ithe lived, and-if he did not he was to pay
fen "dollars.. At about. seven ,o'elook P. M., the
'Doctor. caine - in and - gaie the' patient a dose of
something which'' made' him Worse, and in
fifteen! minute's' after 'the 'Doctor - administered
the", second- dose, which produced. the most
violent , . spasma -.end - awful agonies, which
. 0 0ntinued, increase in , violence „for an hour
and "thief* 'Minutes, • when,' the. pitient died.
-Hie sereamis' duririethi:ifiertiperio&he suffered
were terrible: AugdolonAiaving-Tbeeh'aroused, a
portion of the - same medieinewhich kad been left
in
the -tumbler wan insured, and ten drops were
administered tO a kitten, ; which died elwrva
minutes. Mini:lir Donde/II we/ India - to hold an
inquest ' o n the body, Tuesday nisonkAdoh lasted
until Wednesday night, The verdlotad' the jury
was that the deoeased acne to his depth by poison,
adminiatered by Dr..Tobn °renewal': A warrant
Was imniediately pleeei thi hands of Constable
Grisenthwaite, of Wilson,'who' sheeted the ac
cused Wednesday night, about twelve( o'clock, at
the Stevenson Home, Lookport, and placed him in
the look-up till ,Thursday morning, when be was
taken to Wilson for examination. ,
• -
' Aii'ExoriistO NOstin,LPluipg t he session
of thereduntl court;on Monde*, 'Jaya tkePurniville
dar ed
ITC)
the Journal.
intense an Incid exci en ttement: oeenried-lwh ,
It * ill ich pro;
Most be re
eolleeted that we noticed- the arraignment at the
.August court of ti.negro - boy, belonging. to Mr.
'Robert V. Davis, charged with in attempted out
rage upon the person of Airs. Grego*, residing
near ~ Prospeot Depot. When the court met on
-Monday,'the case came up, when, owing to the
absence of one of the prisoner's counsel, the court
.decided to continue agein„.whin Gregory, the
busband'of the Woman, sprung at the negro, and
.made a deeperate , "effort to • cut= iris - thorat. The'
knife, however, missed his- throat, - but inflicted a
fearful gash ton hie _oheek . ,.reaehing from the
mouth to the_ point of the ; jawbone nenr:the ear.
Gregory war inlinediately arrested, Mid the negro
was carried into-the 'Jell; where his wound was
dressed,' Gregory was permitted to give bail in
11,000 for his appearance next term. , s
FUNNY MATHIAIONUL Pa
terson•paper funny story of a matrimonial
adventure that occurred in New Jersey: We learn
that there is a report that a girl by the name of
Catharine Maria May was' tit' have been married
to Andrew E- Bush, at rewpough, Bergen county.
On Saturday night; the 4th inst. The company
was all assembled and the ceremony atria to take
place. The minister, and bride were waiting the
arrival of_ the happy, to-be-made youug'man. He
wasfioon espied 'coming toward the house dressed
.bir.the occasion, 'and arriiednt' the gate where he
was met by her father, who prevaliwkon him to
go, back, and would not allow him to enter the
horse ' After this the party sit down to supper,
after which the girl was - married to John Odell'
who bad been invited as one of the omits.
POHOOT Tas Betnr:—The Oxfiircl (La.)
illercurtells the following : One of opr sincere
went to Water Vnlley, Abe other:day. with his fa
mily: .After, paving respeota to-friends and no.
unaintancoa; they got 'on - the train,-end started
_home; on theibad„ onset the jilt". girlslaiddewn
and.welit toaleep, atutwstifsfeeping_soundly when
the, train arrived here. - ThegooVparents, in ta
king_their,effectsonter -the ears, overlOoked little
sleepy—the consequence which_'was,- she_was
safely transported to the jnuotien, - leavingttre pa
rental folks "feeling like they had let; a bird go.
The 'fatherpot out in the next train .after the lost
sprig, and met -her at Waterford;;Calaing down,
having had fine ride, which aho,enjoyed passing
N.A.nttOw ESOAPii:---On - Wedm3sdny evening
last; form 'young men of Trenton, N. J., started for
Bordentown in the 8 30 train.' In violation of the
rules of the railro'ompany,. they itook their
ctand,npon the plat form of the first passenger'ear.
One of them Ma been swinginghis leg from off the
oar several times. and when the train Was passing
a house near tho Whiksliorse bridge, his leg came
in contact with it, thereby tearing him from the
oars with griat- violates 'to -the ground. The
train was iminediately stopped and backed to the
spot where the young MISILIBy. not seriously hurt.
It was considered almost; a miracle that he was
mot Instantly killed, as the train pentad clogs to.
Piss's PR AK GOLD Mntite.---Tbe Wyan
dotte 'Commercial Gazette of Se ptember 18th
says that a small boy arrived - from Pike's Peak
with $l,OOO in gold,:whieb he says' he dug down
And fond; and thegittle fellow.sayahepan {tat all
he wants. The Statements'are reliable. Parties
- are daily returning for winter provisions. A Mr.
..lones, an old' niountainear, expended $l,OOO worth
of the shining dust in Independence last. week, far
his return outfit . .. Mr. Jones is well known in this
• Californian, his state
ments that the • :: - •
those of California man • - •
.
KEEPING LAGEB. BEER . 1.11.001E.-418 15 STS. •
Roemel h Leicht, at Washington villages, near
Hoboken, N. J., have. excavated from the solid
• • . it% bill overlooking the Hoboken marshes,
constmetton, T,,Thr to 4emig m ersl ya ine n =lhe i r. :
been taken out, and there is alum for some twelve
thousand barrels of lager at a time. The brewery
of kfessrit..R '.lt. L. is located over the intuits, and
has capaoky of turning ont about two hundred
barrels of beer per day, although the establish.
ment is . not yet fully completed.
A Wwita.—A whale was captured a few
days ago near the North river, in the Chesapeake
bay Its mouth when open measured thirteen
feet from the under to the upper part. The tongue
was as large as a common door, and as 'soft to the
foot as a feather-bed. The animal mesSures forty
three feet nine inches in length; twenty-seven feet
in circumference, nine feet through, and the tail
fin ten feet wide.
LADIES WANTED IA AUSTRALIA .—The latest
intelligenoe from Victoria contains a , statistical
return of no little interest to ladies. By the last
return of the register general of the colony we
perceive that the 'numerical 'preponderance of
men over women amounted to . the astounding
sum of 134,000 in a population of , 470.000. In
other words, there were only about 168 000 women
to 302,000 men.
TUE MP-MIMING BUSINESS continues dull
in Maine. Our correspondent at Bath writes
" There are about ten ships building in this place,
but not many hands at work, while the wages paid
are at quite a low figure. Four yearn ago, lam
informed, forty vessels were on the stocks at once.
and of course the business aspect here was more
BAIION HumsoLDT.—Baron Humboldt has
predicted his own death. A letter written by
him, lately rend in one of the Prussian law courts,
caused a sensation from its containing the declara
tion, "My death will take place in 1859." and
urging that it would be better to postpone a cer
tain publication of his works till then.
EACH MINER at Frazer river must procure a
license, which permits him to dig for gold three
months. For this ho pays twenty-one shillings,
(about five dollars our money). A single claim is
twelve feet square, or one hundred and forty-four
square feet, extending to low-water mark. Sunday
digging is not permitted.
DEAD TERRAPINS.—A gentleman who has
recently been over a part of our country that has
sustained a most unprecedented drought informs
us that he saw in all directions what is known as
the land terrapin, lying on their backs and dead—
the effect, it is supposed, of the dry weather. Not
a live one was seen.
-DIED ➢BOIL Sinotrrma.—At a meeting which
was held by the colored people, at a meetinghouse
called Little Wesley, about three miles from
Lewes, Delaware, on Saturday a week, a negro
woman, from fatigue and excess of shouting, fell
dead during the exercises.
FEMALES AND THE MINISTIIY.—At the Uni
versalist Convention, at Providence, a resolution
advising the admission of females to the ministry
was laid over 'to the next session, (to be held at
Rochester, N. Y.,) by a vote of fifteen to ten.
Tan TEA PLANT.—EIder Daniel Graves, in
Provo, Utah, has some Chinese tea plants growing
Tho seed was planted in July, 1856, and
the roots have thus far successfully withstood the
winter.
ERIE CANAL.—The raising of the canal
bridges to the required heightof twelve feet above
the water has been commenced on the western
section of the canal. Several have been so raised
near Lockport.
THE REV. Dn. BINNEr has rer!gned the
presidency of Columbia College, in the District of
Columbia, "from a deep conviction of his duty to
resume his labors of ipstractor among the Karens
in Burmah."
TILE GREAT FIREMEN'S MUSTER at Albany
will come off next Wednesday. The 'Albanians
have got up three new machines with which they
expect to beat the crowd, without competing for a
premium.
Menr."—This name, by a decree of Pio
Nono, can no longer be given to children, on pain
of excommunication. Re reserves .it hereafter,
exclusively for the Virgin of immaculate concep
tion.
DANIEL 'WEBSTER'S father made a cradle
for little Dan, oat out of a pine log, with an
axe and anger; and Lewis Cass was , rooked by his
mother in a second-hand auger trough.
RAILIVAYN.—Two of Senator Douglas's ne
groes are confined in Yazoo county (Miss ) jsi).
They ran away from his plantation in Washington
oounty. •
ARTESIAN NEIL.—The artesian well at
Louisville is two thousand and thirty-six feet deep,
and yields a stream of water large enough to turn
Several overshot mills.
Bois Wont.—The Memphis Bulletin says
the boll worm is making Pad havoc among the cot
ton in Lafayette county,
Tux COMET.—The comet is attracting con
siderable attention in England, where it is very -
clearly seen by the naked eye,
Ho° CHOLEBA.—It is statd that J. J. Al
ston, of Tipton county, Tenn., has lost NO bogs by
1 1 hog cholera."
A LITTLE GIRL, in Louisville, Ky., had her
nose bitten off by a horse, one ?day last week,
while passing tinder his bead in the stable.
A lIOTEL AND LIVEET•STADLE KEEPER at a
fashionable wa+ering-plaoe, advertises soolables fir
young people and sulkies for married fsiks.
MRS. JULIA DEAN HATER is playing in Bos
ton with Mr. and Bits E. L. Davenport.
Dan Rice, the well-kneiyp jester, is said tO
)4 ',ling dansetoualy ill akZateaville, Ohio,