The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, March 24, 1859, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    24* ,
•-- ' ~,, -3.,,. , . 71;4410,-**tV!!'"'''iti'll,,Li-r'';" : : 1 4'
' "" - 2 ' - ' '''- I 4-'l'''F•lo*-- . 4 4 '; ,' . ' f" , i V '''' ! ''''",,'
l'''&,qpr-ft';'1,4;414:;°.''45 ,i'' 0tTi010604,9;'44,181)
, , , " r
- 4 , -. 1 - 4-04,,, •• - ,k1.5-.. • ,-- larti - Nts ,- -1,,,t 4 ~ Y , t-I t
- ~r ,„ , .., ,, z-t- , ...,-, •-, , ttp , -- 4 - ~..,.,,i
N f , , - ^4 .0., ~ \,' 4r,'•-•,.- ' •
4 ti. ' t ' ' .r.?4' ' 7'
:e ~ , ,: , i-4,•:an- .0,,,r....T.-‘1,..„.
..,>-,..;.T..4t i , vg • •-0 , ''''
, j , 1 ..::,
~.;, - 4. -I--4`
c ,.,- ti ,4ll,, .*:.'''Y '-e''',,-....j'1 ,'
.?' 44 V 4- '
- -7'l,zprtl, '';,...14,-•,-„WIA-AAkV.—'-r' -' ' ' ' -
..." „...,
~ ~k7° , - 4,11.441,,:"-I"jelititifiß, ~,-,';'''''
.''..10 f.,a14M.,.'=:7,,g''''.g40
':MbliP'-',-)!.,,,"°.*" ~A•ll't
,', . ..,..-or '''-,l'ir:.q.;-,t.',`..r6". '
, ~ ~flo44vl*Mni!./0:,40.4,,,,;,11..,-7:4:16,;:..r/1
o,ol,7•wiitie", •;- ~..4,3-N---'''' iiiotu.
-,-- • a , " 4 ' , ' ' -,'''..e, r . ,-- '''
,r , ?%.; 1 • - •, -, -.l,f'tri"..
,- A: , -
, 101 4, 00 k,
'` ,
-a .1 , -11V0Er444.A.Cki‘iN4444 1 1.' 4 V.: 4 ‘ 41 : 4 ;v 2 4
, „
ht
• ' ~••• AND.,
•-rz , "?. Ai!••0511,111k1k.314.7 Artillatte.v•
ROKEWit i l3lto,,',.;.lSll.o'l7s
~ n,4;y9 1.7 ,V^.
.. v - 1 , 4 '11;71'.1;T A ;, .‘ ; ' - -'l ' .3 4 : ,; e :C . ' -'l . t. •*`''' ' '' ' '
1 '-. •
~ - ~
er'n,,AJbP=',4,,i.s-11,4•-,
' '," - :- , -9 - _; ., 4 , -1- c'''' , . , ' - '. :L I .:- , 1 .4 ';' . 4 '';'i .4 'Y l '5 6 : l . .•' O .- ~';
-,,
0, ' , ', , • tIVP,`: 4 II-91 4 xotii.:;,' v,4l=e- ,, ui., ,, 4 , ‘. ; "'T ,
6 _ ~,.' -', 4 , i.' I,2?:. 4 ik4B*.lllllolSi k ta TRAIL
~,y, '''..i c... ~ - i, ~- .-- ~,,VV, 4 I. ',i - .1 , •, , , ,. - i ,i . , ,- , 74, 1 . , „ ' -...
4 _ ~ . t x frrk - : _,,,. 5 ztqA ,, ,, , , , _ ,-.,,,,..,--,,, .-.r, , ,!. , ...,•-• .„ , -
i'
- • -
•-- -
:1448,41**XinntnEWIPAIT.,
it) - 3 .54111 4-" x -
, WElMKr ita . at
-._ z,',: 11,4. •4-2-:'4:-.X.):-.;::.''''' - . -- ''',7l- -.-..1"...*
, ? ..,"Ill' -:t:'-'ll7l, ClagAlli.7.,,i,::si. ,: *'
, ~ ..,, , ,;:erfi-iiiv 1,-1, , ,‘.,'',"-'-'',.,';-"f--. _.,.. ~,-;,•.'...4 '
-: ',. ..., ; ' ~'C '--1,. - ' ,-'17"?;,1"'.i.ili L "`Z,l ' 0;•,;-, ~.=;.! . ...ir!' 44
''''. ,-(4.9, , 4 ` ar1....-410:';;;,,,. ,- , ' ••'' , 4,,,,,,,i ,-,,,,,,
' .-
'''':lle;';44.,ii-A,•;71,-Z,rl"llol:nurf ,-...tr 4'...,i-1,k,.. ~, -,
._ ...4„- , ,, ~ ~_:-..- - *.;- , -.-p.; •:,....,, ../ ,i.., , - '
~ ...,,,,'''''."7 ,' ''f r2As' 4 l.Z ; i,
—siol,f,iiiiiiii&6... „ ,:::„>:,:s_ ..-,.... : 4 ~.„
-' 2-, 1;2,1:.11' OTASIT:f
0.4.1.ii5./,-,.----',,,-,., - -..-- .!..,.,. ..
.1, ~.. .t....,,,mriwit4- ',f 4*',7,2.-..„,....J..
-vmo-isoik• , ......,.. a_:;:___:
-"...—r^- 0 liissiiik ""e.'6” aid,
....,, ...bildt4ol;f 64.1 A,,
. .
" ..4114411 ; 4- ;5!#tf
aHOE'
4 00,
.10 . 11 k - filAttkigo,4frO,thik e #l. et the
'''.
' -4Pititli ,o7 - 1 ,,, , ~-;(-, •-•w i '' , =.- -,---"iiii‘ ,7,14-,,,
~i ' ~ ;17-g..,'#•M', j.;'7 ~ e e.' a : :1 "‘"C / , t - '4 l ;
• --B ;,______,,, ~: -- -
*4l-
lsocii2=-4*04f,,•77_,,•---!t...1,
,bstige,"toil- isiilowit, --- iiiiii.DrAmp:xj,-5!„;
~•= . • ~,,,,,4 1. . •,. 011 • 11 00 , 41(0.440046 'it
' ''-'!*rlitveimiiitiWtieg#l " "T.7itivie.' 01`",
'?r
I,Z
IWi IiiMIGIOSI,,',
' -7--2007.1413 b ,k -
.:.'
,4_,5,0.4;44.,f.:,,: '":i
. &4 :iit#X l t . g.Al-.: , V3' ;:.•
-.;••-,•4,-:t.91-Armi,-.01*--;;plu s ow i tc. , -"
;_-`.- 1.414,www . .......,---?iiiiik4oll,..
-, I lei;,-,.. •• • •,,i;Arimip-er?,
- - 44iiiseisw*,,*-~ -'' *,ifitvr,"7l72-77
•••
'-" , lll;igL'Ait
"
•... ~
*l' 0 '"
-41:14;(7'11**1t:'.41:14504 ,;/
‘- -
- ‘ , O
0,- 4 0„0 Lys ,
4- 2
Ilia a In
It 4i '
2DNORTIV. THIRD iSTIEET - '
fr. - 4 , 4 - 4.4 - pokigoi pk.:, 04suotpoopt
eirestbirrairapysiimoi Taips otriove
,44,(Arri-,iCallieN. , DRY ROODS:
it lilt
iMPPiCe*fp laark.r..` W , l" , ` "
rit &P,
**Cf:?. WAY.:
:qi-srsx.tr - 8,59:
,44-13:e, _
10HO L IttrELPCkW4V
( 1 1 1 er51 1 "4 2 ! , 4 ,4 1.0 3 SITDRID & 00.9)
4 ' ~ t oto 0 D S
STAILIit
oisit*ichasiow
:--) 4 4 l ll l oN i 9LNW . ',Deilitirtio l GoODS4
iniereata of
4a. ll ;`,4 l WPODittr"SnotitaMinit . Wirgager
Elth l 4#l l itte 0 4,q u i 4811e f
trallei4 •
Ilt -1 fa 4 .tf*Loppdnty haw, pat *ram
lOU prompsrist the - - •
t 9 WE-1 1 4909 1 t , *PEAL
111" "!- 6
..t — • -
OILS - 151JULPORTATION11.-' , ;
l• ~s •
-and MAJULET , Sts
•,1 • LENDro, 'ObjdfilacTß -
1 , 4 . •
Blittli011)0,1164
, _
:17 ARD;GILIAIORS&CIO;,:
7 .Pr i ! 2
' ' ° ' l soo; . s4 .ll SO N li 3
; 441 0 13 . 1 ? 8 .!'-
i4: 46110 4 :0660 '. UV'S; Labitili
Rorr9PßlESili, • • •
-1 411,40763 ,, M1TT1rti SHAWLS.
410Cp . 4,914M5 WOVECIADE, .84 00.,
.1.4 - 40b*.a
usarimays, m44 ,l l 3,
ki.iN.Axp, Bars!. *EAR.
‘; sasaimumr trriem,
1 lito t r*ohlig
Itlsre 1311 1, 01 'I it! ro It
Vowit filmy inoitCtiosttostleo
. of ? ilmir customs%
dig of owr roods. f 01.20
.;,.;.>>
Jolißtlit
, •
1: 4 :1 1111110WANVIROAMMO'IW goorts; -
• - •• • - •
•
,„ •
glkOe• -
tt-t t
et.'.1447.3 - i;
'l 2ftr r 829 'imokurzzr NUNEZ'
iiiiateisA as iistatur•saa ,
by oarielvei, tko 71ashir:*521f!• lisvo
coml , - ' hbi•ain
'SOSINO - Ora r s4 9 .,
BP,OWN &
NO: Eli likAluc#
111 itxtaitio *ad motel, sleat.4
4 79 1 0 ,61 !N ~, Dar Goal,'
- 44. 1 "4. Itifti4 DC Pitiebilifore•
.
Aujitaa - PERMS
E.
.•
•
+ 4 7 7 *
4 . • - 3- •
?-1 10 - 4 11;46 ' ,
si x th
625iiai.1 1 1-1 M , . •
„ '
qsauA L. BA - 11,y,-;
naVain ROMA
•
7.1114-N , 44107 . D OM 318 TI
DRY , ,, 00011%
114)F,*!ylr,' T .
•`:.4.7': •
.4 I lirft4 0 011 1106 0 ,1 4, 04
, 1, &eft
catralro muAli.es , ADa. 4.,
,ni:.am
ck3f0.09-.!,•.',...,!= in,v,,,lT De 44"
.
:tr o ire.o- :::-. -, '=,7, 01 ":'.',': : ' -.... '-' ••
'
;--c,',-:
--1-
'4':, :,'',_•'
':-.':-,-;,\--,'-':, •,--' - - ''' . ~ '. ',
_- '-, ;:, • i',
~=',-
MING
:4.',:.''..4-,-77;"-:+.-,: W l- : „ ,: i..',::-' ()_l'_' s_' ."r:"iTßt, i -: -
.ri,,y.
n ,
a.
di.,V g •,_' i'
a
- ; 1793 1AB'E.taiiI)T A B ET; . •
olio_
~,...,„
~,j'' Olw,.)vniiiiiiAo 179-*".-
;-_ ii!,,,`,!;*'°-
.1,0,
.11-'4,' 1 4.
~., ':;,— '..,
`•l‘
..- T •`;
Tr-
'ii.„l9T!, -7
x.- 74.14-4*44'',,,
-,' -4-- ,'
MA '
z?',:''''-'•
859 ,
tram- notorialosp
B?:41 41 4 4 .; a, VFT l ', l4 olug.
""!mtlo.ldirret«4,6aids 0010011011 Streit,
I• r •
' -1 1111 LADIRStis : '
.101111 0 ORTEMS 1 10BIOUV"
, .
int= 4.2•1'3, ar.A.zycrr acorns.
litisibstrops. amputiliaaila wijiiitneyta.
,Y‘f'
;:KENT,-SANTEE,
' r
PittEita_
:Stilt 'l° .14 *A„ zi
- 74 , -
;VIZIVY ": t' = 4' • -
rASt. - Xife-10,110411f111.0.', •
SZ-t;';'. , 4„ , : • 0,-..-4 1 ,1110•11trown. ,
eio•
• ..2 - ; • 1 "
IPO,
4 401 r. "r• St ID ; B. ',WI ,
.
Ati)44:iinata' ' •
- SO
rvicy..'ao o ,
Aroviz , N.,92ll,7lClßD.s
itituas
• - • •
ier" , SPRING STO,OIC.
1.1 6sll.f4.lMPlatstfttitr. l4 4 tif 4oo4,
/VW, aerebiatfii; trotif pilte 'ot
ibr OW. p r ompAiirst# 6lo .! 4 - 4 ‘ ll ilik "
alliNi ft t ` , 1 *; •,, 100. So -
' '"
- ,
t 1 1 „I ' / d...' • -• ra .•a i, at,,, a.4“,.t t t, ~ , ,•• '• : 1 ,, , • - - „, ,
•
a...,.d. , ,,, ,, , ,, - . .. - 4:..44.1.4,..4 , „ 5 ,,, , ,, -- .',. -• _a --, , - , , t ... 4 ra l A t 'at —a ' A \\ •\ 1 ii,,, , ,,... , a 1 1 .0 1 , 1 04,,, •` a , .
-at - -:-.";" . ~,, . 41 ,
~i;,424,(,-. , ~,,„._, , ' .: 1 1,.. P • ~.
. ,
at% - -t-- - ,'-c : I.— .r" 0.1. , -.„---..., ,-- '-'-',...•:$011 1 "/1 , ;;;;;_pr„.. -- • tv , •,, , y ~
~.4 4:. , , ,
s , , -"...,,
' , - - --- ---- 1- . ..—'--- ---- 't.'' 4 ' ' —
}1 . ,, /. • • „A ' , , i.i '...: , . ,__,,1 , 1r#,i 114, , , fr
•‘.. - a '
'
•,,, • ; ' i •ai / 6 ia.V .. ,- . a ~t 4 _ , 'l3 .. ~. ' It " '' . '"'" - ,1 1 ,
~ -,'",7-4,,.. - 1 , . 1„ , , , ,
__: „. e 4 ..,_
.. , :, ,
~ .
',
, . , , 7 4 if ..,,,,
, x ~
\ - .r ..„ -,-
-,,,..
ef t :t;' , l-. '',...... - • • ..', - 1 ,
~..
h:' , o L:i...! - ‘1.... ,. : •
.1,
Jabbcre.
W tg, r t**-A104 3 ' ooen
t
efisina, onv4.is, BoXILLZIM,
'Agit
. -
We an P9 l ketaiktV , mee l vini -NOW Oooda from New
Ro l f4o.llo.4nottons, to witch we invite the
'attention of : feAl•tm7l
=
A.T•
:Dois' -01
AuailotuAND' Grimm,
roftmax , tnd DOEfgBtlo,l34;2",6looai
No 3'IIANA 13TREFIT'
• BehrOeil Nowa hod rilrd;below Ntarket.
ANSpAO.I-1, ItEED. & CO..
• • w,ltoubai r meraiiis
rt, • is •
DRY aoODS,,
so. 340, NORTH THIRD STREET,
(Aotitirsiyebrier 1144 - 604,cheil Ml,)
'1•616.205' •
RING - 0F1.859' , - "
ril*ONs„
pipoß,T=B ANDwaortimum 1018EA9 OP
S', . „
47.4.6747TE5; 410) VESIVGB,
Tolrblek tke a kli!.l . ,ktipa of DITIMUI
SILKS AND FANOT , GOODS.
"." ','•
ABBOTri.,.abI:NEs;&CO
.
88'9 jtA)1,31,/i,t. ST RE Eir ,
• , Are nay prioporea to ofd All4ll • '
• 7IX W ' 4 11 /i ." *TT4C I T#J I.
TEE -ATTIATIOIX
61.2 m
'.r• • • . •
s iAs. B.',OAMHPBtraI & 094
•
" — DR 1r .431. 0 0 7:38' •
iiR3USS -'! -
-
- , -.OABaINNISO;-• 7'
• •
No. 304 btaiitZBVSTBRE'f.
Afft.ikteg
FITHIAN; 40.NE% - &..(3Q4
•w DtAli.voca_
-
1240-'xAittigt - iff*xkir,
01491,-
NR - 06.14:E . 14;
• • ,700011.TElt AND DEALER - m
FOREIGN,' ,ANII'—DOMSSTIO _
= • WATIONERY: •
•miNutiosuasios linvELotizs Tfi lt,vsyrr ,
, • nar4tTOD•B7`l,riN,
[Er ASANV 10aAANOLD13 3INGLISEC !Ravine
507 CHESTNUT STREET,
n;nsi•im,
RING TRAJDE, 1859.
itazAß,p;' at, nuTdiuNON,
_ :,:na;ditasortyr - htsEkai,
•_Ar aari upping a Imp aaefacla4 stook of
LLWNS *s t *ams,ruNTiralia *that
' —k
,DRXOB,4ORYPei.
To which the atitaitionrOf Abe trade, is fnrtd Afro,
DOMESTIC 'GOODS,
Cloioirialog.Tairldl4 - 9•l34argi;74o94witri DOOOkbill
8i 43,6 $ 0 1100 tiAP: 16. 1 o. tr ti n ell 1 11 04 are $4 4 1. 81 . Dlta
Drills. TO* Tedaluo, &0.. &a. +
WAXAL PAPERS.
HOWiLL BO,IIRKE,
' - ' 19110WALA ,
WALL APIA WINDOW PAPER
WApal Mal t -
So. I'iIIOUTILBOUITII STRUT.
surf- - But Bib.
AUSTIN, BROWN,
wneumiaa Imam' IN
FLOOR OIL-CLOTHS,
21"`IRTRTVK IN
1 0 1 Ra A
NOI THIRD . t
mit4l-Imo Ir. 00111 lit of Ries, up stain.
ittitntnings.
SEEOL&LeNOTIOX.
- ACES:
H - ;
'''CHAS: a SOAR Ba, CO.,'
No. 6 PARK. alaing,„
NEW YORK
Wothl respoothilly rail the attention, °fee Pkf s.
dolphin trade to a splendid line or 1211611118, BLOND,
sal
other
.LACES, •
.11tet Undid from the Hew York Onstont-llonse, sad to
,
te seen in original packages at ,
No. 280 OLIISTNIIT STREET,
• - FP BTAlltlf.
ii.MT.TOUELL: totu22-8t
Be
• 33 SMITE( FOURTH STREET,
SmPotterd' dad liritidosido Doilenn .
'•
LADIES' pROS., „
cosi the anomad of tke Trade to their
eplandid ansortment of Illarfoll - POMPONNETTB,
out AlisturoAtt ' iabti. Titaium+,
SING R.Ottpd.NT- BUTTONS, arr..
aie prepared to execute Urge orders for 13111 and
Idaroonleo )rimes, Toonels, Cords, Buttons, Bse.;st oar
'owe !maw, _ -
„, . „ lON dm
-
ilibalcoak , ii. roam.
VNG.ERICH & SMITH,
= WIIOTABALII - -
G R 0 C R'-S
No; 48 NORTH ,rt HIRD, STREET,
22.i441n • pantatottitlA
Oroitfittionerv.
FONVILER. TOWNSETVS
/..±) Rapala '
opwirgOT,IONERY,
AED
- siXO7,IRE, „
91;6 — AUARKICT
. -Below Teeth, !loath
''''llertufooh;tios of Air Frost stud boot I:looteotleeeri t
tild dolma In tee& Imp rtad truth; mat Huta,- Order,
field the °metre or elselvilemptimptly otteci4ed to'
ictisclwitog'Quiiraied Oloths - and Doo
-41L1P,, skim, together with other 'drairetile melon • - ot .
Vkirzesim Woollens, lark samara and far asialw
z: •!SIIIPIX/;,11AZA.11,1), *III7I . OIIINSONI •
, 1•1411si 119 Pheetwei
.
, ft a*:,t
•
2 . L
* II . HU s DAY; ~M Anun - 859
ttait larg - ekrabe'i
EVANS ed
I-Z.A.V.IEV NOW' ,OPNIN". ;
FOR 'iiiirNiIPROTION of tholr ousromiao
: , •
THE K,Altaift6P4' "AND' HANZ/130*:B8.
kBPOPAANT OP
SPRING 43.003:*
THEY 114:IyHET . PEE OETEREp,t
nnisseonie
BILK AOBES,
TWO-FLOIRICED
ROBES LES,
OHENE SILKS,
Do. DA.T.&DEBESi..
PLAID, STIiIPED, V,
ALL THE NEWEST STYLES
IMPORTED TEM BEASON.
ORGA.thatzs,
Do. ROBES
ARGENTINES,
lig WIITTLE 1188IIE ROB*
19kRE(IE ROBES,
BAREGES,
GRENMRSES ,
IMBROIDARWA,_I4O23; outintk:
-,1.111#4154,111551,21tY, ORAYILTPE,I
• PARASOLS, UNSRILI;i6S, &a.; 144.
818 and 820 CHESTNUT ST.
LACE
MAN T I L L. A
REAL THREAD POINTS.
a.a.zammea 11. XR sz-coANvxds,
BEAUTIFII)L. ASSORTMENT
NOW OPEN
AT '
THOS. W. EVANS do CO.'S
818 and 820 CHESTNUT STREET,
SPRING
CLOAKS
MANTILLAS
0 3E O 3i3 2 , 3 - I N OF
AT THE
PARIS
MANTILLA EMPORIUM,
708 CI-IXISTIsTUT STIVEINIT,
TUESDAY, *axe!' 22.
J. W. PROCTOR
IiptLACK LYONS•SILICS..,
BROTHELS have revolved, by we.,
cent & Meth. a oroopletewerlety.ef lhe 'beat mantlfso•
tares of LIONS BLAOII TAMP TA -of ' rhfo and
Ewer LsEmma as well at Black -P0 DR POOH, OROS
DRAINS and AUM11108.• • .
ALSO—svnes CMOS DA'RHINTIO, le NI Willie and
waffles, ._of approved makes : *Welt are offered 'gbh
greet 'oenddinos, as regards pries and the =troef , of the,
falirlai:' • = ,•'•
BAYLDBIitiEI; STRIPAD AND wvpsialD BLiog
gnu; irpv,BI4I.Ief,OUSIORD BUM SILK 8080.
. • jIHERSLISS BEITHIBS,
ra 1t93 cIUNSTMIT 'end IRIORTH BCreeta.
VeiDE BAREGES A,NP
'l4 rad 84, o#loitel-wAitt. VOC,I-1 0 v
BAieb sad Manoui.
, - saixemia"inoTtigssi;
431(iSTNAT fwd Igtarli Stmts.
CORDS, TWINES, msnufactared
V sad for sok by & CO,, No, sOi
ti.wAtizo, foo-Aphok.wAnni.
,
tlrrt ,
.
4
~ ~..•,••:,, 4 , 7 , " , r " - i.- -,, 1t c 0 .C , ) ,,, - . ::: ,- :
!, , ' 2, ' '..;' ,C,.. "" 11' iii ,' '- . , "., ,';'s".,
After the'defeerot the Swope, lit thellattle
. .
of Poltava, (which began the epoch of Russian
'prosperity, and not .Prussian, as misprinted'
ou Tueeday,) PiTan the Great' undertook
'another tour through Europe.' , rrom Holland
be went to France. It is reported-that what'
'most 'astonistied' bin/ Ihare - wits the` security.
Yri which' f4 e irni and.; the Hoye!, faidly:
were Hiring,: Shrill:m(l94l)y the, attaolitifeptof,
tFse nOntilt4and 'Bll' the people, in, which there
Was something, generous , and noble._ . The
BusslanAntoorat euvletlthe Bourbon family,
‘lfyinglhathe would:give up his empire if he •
.otald belong to that tonne who was possessed ,
of the secret of making , Itself beloved. Yet,
ofer!)saii the deWall of that pleasant state
f,thinge;Saying, cc France, and particularly
!be Royal hardly, will periskihrough its eifenfl 7
pitOY and carelessness.??, ,
•Abovealli the respect and lave of the Caar
Os-.bestrivreeitpon. Cardinal Rierieuzir, to•
wheat he fellattrnetedyelmtlqity, in chiraci 7
fer lind the'deptli and grandeur of his plans.
He irssd to Say, $g would ibte one filth' of,my
Omit.° to that priest, if I could
_learn frOm
lgia the art of.governing the other half.' •
At his return to Russia, Pawns undertook,
still more 'actively; the continuation 'Of his
f,eforms, contriving to force into the nation
another life, contrary to the Shiverde nature.
SOOlug e,Senate 14 Sweden, he 'wanted ''to
Have-orie in Rnesia. 'But the Swedish Sena.
tors were rich ankperforful lords, respected by
the people, and able by their power to limit
the Royal will. - Sneh a degree of respecta
hility would , never be attained. by the blindly
Obeying servants, 'Whont Parsaroten lashed
With his own stick or'ordered to . be' tortured
in hislitisende. Under the Plnapons name
of the Senatethere:was formed in Russia,. an
4ssenkij'posseashig to this day scarcely as
nineh influence as the Turkish, Divan. There.
ie nothing more false than the -idea- of for,.
signers about this matter. The Russian Se
..riitte, which is scarcely heard of in Russia, is,,
so to say, a tofu& of the old generale and,
other old magistrates', fit for nettling - else I it
:doe's notlciern anything ; eau make no
kind ot.proposltlOns f e lt CIVELI433 only thO Or
ders of the Government and, puts
'tiros to Reports of , Procurators Genetali int
civil and criminal probesses—but about
,flO there is not, and,riust not be, the slightest'
mention in its 8088101111.,
Imitating the Atistrian administrative ar
rangements, Parnn the Great ,instituted
tielve DePartments,,viz ; War, Finance, etc.,
Which be locatedlin a largelmilding divided
Owelve separate parts. - That organization
was changed afterwards. In the 01411 Legis
lation all the care:of the Czar was to concen
trate the whole power in his owribauds. He
introduced monopolies for the sale of brandy,
tobacco, Mi, and did -not neglect to pro
mulgate 'an , ukase ordering smoking pipes,
hithettOnatirely unknown in Russia, and even'
loOlied et as sinful by-, some religions, se cta of
the EmPire.,
-14Ielibdy daret :to oppose Faxon, yet • he
•
:fottnd an unexpected opposition In the person
,efhis own Hen, Amtxvi. This straggle Is 1411 4
XY,lnteresting,being the last desperate fight of
the tire different Wean. The'Busslans ire at
„stest'entirely ignorant of that haste - history;
for, z i fti ticts oreeatefellY,bidden arid foreigners= ,
• , 1 : uttShirrefertn-..
`er;maieblackenen the ineinorY Of the unhap
,pyvdetim brrepresenting him asap Imbecile,
hilf-crazy simpleton, though he was really
i,sirsightforward Russian. The pions mother
or Aims, from the house of Lopuchin, In
ideated him from childhood with the love of
'the natioriatreligion..• Surrounded by the cler
gy, be woe 'taught by them in old national tra
ditions;-of which he was fond, and indeed of
all that was national and ancient. That sim
ple Slovenian soul trembled at the sight of all
it saw coming forth on all sides. litmus felt
always' an instinctive - fright wheneVer his fa
ther came near him., Pavia did not like the
monks; be always called them .goals-beards ;
he confiscated the prOperties of the clergy; he
abolished the dignity of Patriarch, for when,
alter the decease of the last Patriarch, the
Bishops went to him to ask his acceptance of
a successors t'ETEIL answered them, striking
his own broir,''w Here is your Patriarch, your
Pope, your God.” The young Prince, thun
derstruck, shut himself up with his mother
and wain° priests and Wept, over the fate of
Russia; but' his father did not leave him peace . ;
he ordered him to learn the drill and naviga
tion, to, Which the Prince had in aversion.
When all hopes of relief and leniency , were
Aaaxis made up his mind to fly. -By
secret way's he fled , to Germany, where he
placed himself under the protection of the
Emperor of Germany, and subsequently went
'to the Court of tbe King of Naples.
OHALLI 8 ,&e:
l'irrErt wrote him. very Sev'ere letters ex
plaining his views, and what he was expecting
froxplim ; but after a while be changed his
tune; he began to flatter him, to ask him
blandly to come back, promising him to par
don every thing, and - swearing by the name
of God and the Holy • Sacrament, that he
would not in the least hurt him. When the
poor Prince, deceived by these entreaties and
promises, returned to Russia, ho was immedl.
atoll , seized, and -put to judgment. The Czar
instituted a Commission of 1.80 dignitaries to
doom his son ; himself as Patriarch head of
the 'Church, presided to hear his confessions.
As a true Slovenian, patient and resigned like
his 'whole race, without individual energy,
'and brought up in religions seclusion, Mame
acknowledged the Patriarch in his father,
opened 'to him his most secret feelings and
thoughts, confessed that ho had sometimes
wishoii• hid father's death. This confession
brought the decree of death upon his head.
PETER commuted that decree into imprison.
mont. But the poor Prince died the next day,
from poison, and his friends and servants per
ished all by torture. The mother of Anima,
imprisoned in a monastery, survived not long,
and a great many persons suffered death on
mere suspicion of being her friends.
Though the Rnssi i att policy has absorbed
the Slovenian element in Russia, it wishes
to pass for Slovenian to personify, so to say,
the wishes and the longings of the whole Sla
vonian race, from the Adriatic and Black seas,
in the south, the Baltic and Polar seas, on the
north, the Elbo and Danube, on the west, and
the United States' and British American pos
sessions, to the east: From the beginning of
the seventeenth century, working steadily at
the disorganization of Poland, Russia tries to
insinuate herself as saviour and protector of
all the Slovenians, composing the large bulk
of the Austrian and Turkish Empires. 'We
must see whether it is qfialified for such' pre
tensions Whether the literary tendencies are
Russian; whether the productions of the mind
working tinder the Russian influence are really
Slavonic. .
We could very malty put forward a formula,
drawn Man innuinerablelacts of the old
tory, that, from the time of the foundation of
the capital M Moacow, (say 1288), the con-
stanfaim of these Princes was to confiscate all,
the vital forces of the provinces, to concentrate
them, at first in •the Duchy of Moskwa, and
then-in the person of the Autocrat. This gives
tholsey to all the phenomena of the philosophi
cal history and the growth of that all.absorbing
Colossusi
We return _ to historical facts to justify these
premisei. After the downfall •of separate
Principalities csay, in 1462)Ahe weight formed
from these rains, destroyed the previous -re
publican populations of Novgorod, Imer, and
pleskolf., The 'Boyars of the Czar governed
the conquered provinces in his name. The
turn of the Boyars followed closely, and they
were put down and destroyed with tho help of ,
theStrelitkes, Or the regular' imperial 'guards:
We have already -shown how the Strellizes
were destroyed by, an army composed of Rue
gins, 0003inanded by foreigners. These
' TIII7I2BDAI3.IIARGEI 24, 1869.
Gieati t -i;No; 2;
S.' ' 1
MOE
fopipeFOt,,Pvvog.Lgieir , existence s their in=
tq l * e f an , ft Ah o 4'4ooFetTreapects, solely to
the, Oita: bhple.if, entirely
big .99, ;49 ,ijpiltsus.tiie, aetionloVeetv , _
iragiing„wne,npyrematedepder Plaint - the
Pains, after thus having absorbed• the re
mains 'of, the national ; Mei. began to ex
, • paid over the iifeless spacelof• the country the.
produce ,of genies,,.to r uiltiply_ his own
being
. in the multitudes ,of, powers emanating ,
from his will. lie:created generals governors;.
.all rinks: of officers, ,and the „whole civil' and
, 'milit4y • hierarchy. The army. is .the ,right;
hand- 7 -om. /Kett , support of the Autocritey--
not Only in Anssia,,lept, elsewhere in , Etirope.•
The technical organization of this instrumentl
:may have no, pecuhariuterest , for us, but-we.
Mitat knoW the leading , idea the moral-force of.
Ithat, mass, animated by.-one thought; for ,the:
'Russian literaturehas taken its origin from it..
'BY their interference -the • so,called „ great
`sossian,dialeet has taken the place, of , the old,
Sussian, 40. national language.. - „: The. .litertul
nier(in Russia were• military men. ..Even,to,
:day
• the army constitutes the Russian- publlc,,
who read, judge, give
_the, turn to the ;Mark'
tare of the land ! The bistory.ef the Russian
army is therefore,, a very important
-item M
ille study of
. thetnedern Russian culture, ,
' generally• known that all armies in,
EurepeMek their beginning from the old chi- .
Vah7. ;Even; ;their diaelpline has ,beeu
bled the, remains, of- the, principles , and
'forms inherited,froMthe old orders of,knight.,
hood.. l The.idea of the chivehie bonor.iii, 6Q
to say, the last fragment of the chivalric Ideas
of that time; passing by tradition and custom
to the,. times of the, Thirty„ Years .Wars in
Europe. 'Weriarsersrpr i and some other
German chieftains, compelled to take'refuge
in the recruiting systenito'ffil 'np 'their ranks,
Changed the 'secular charaCter'of the idilitiirY
profession. Shice that' Sine, 'Ste efficerebor
gen to look - 'at thoinilitary eareer 'as Most
tin for their'tinibition; and the soldier lOoked
at it as a trade: ' ' '
' Prins. the Great, tainiinehliarniy vpoa
the German princifile, made it 'conform with'
the hereditari' terrorism "of the Czars,. of
The"Siaionlan; ineoiporated, in IM
ranks;' could not help ' trampling 'befdro the
gernian = Officer,. whole command was `obeyed,
by the Ciar' himeelf2=who;by:the movement
'of his sword; tarried right and left the ficisen'
of that 'terrible DlMiarch. This.'eneharding
- power" awakened - In the, midsfif that bltifi,le,
crowd a stiperstilioil i fear.' ttkiii
at epatilets; arme;'uniforin,' celoit:-Iwere for
him a novelty, something far superior . to Hid
familiaF ideas! peasant, Who did
not know what WoVon';6l.Oilk was, did not dire,
to touoh it With his' fingoin. lieduat'oined' na
ho was to lied gold and sil'ivr onlyln.the orna
ments Of the holylmages' in 'the Church, ie,
felt the deep* reverence thd glittering
uniform' of his - officer - . In one word,the bril
liant vittw of the imperial staff made upon him
such tin iiapresalon of awe as thO' Slghf . of a
religierui'preCeiiion May effeet Upon the mind
of a pleas min. When we addle It a meet-`
leis , and , pitiless r‘gplation; leaving tortures,
bodily purdihnients,'everi the 'life of the sol
dier, to the 'arbitrary will of the ofliCer, we;
will have the whole theory Of the militarynnt.
ebb:mu of Russia.
„ .
The army of Parza 'the' Great:Wad Origi
nay conipOsed of the inhahltenti'of the coun
try nearest tie , Moskwa, - a population:enalga 7 .
mated from different' elementS.,. The depots'
of ,differeirit regimmitaivere:afieniardS piished
towardaYetersburg, and the deficiencies fide
'from the Finnishpopalctien. The nuelous of
this armament was c.' great Russian,”"" which
*ea freni lifoskwa;Ttoigerati'' . .krehanieleir;'
etc. , " The' " great - ,pctopie dfetin-T
guishes' itself front thd
of Russia, by physical and moral peculiarities,
Tall, strong, and's:pare,' the 'great Russian is,
prominent by his smartness; and is perhaps,
in this respect, the first In the world: Be has
no heart 'and Only acold soul. He does not
like music, like the'sorithern Slavonian. His
eyes have a peculiar expression. If you look
in them-you see, like frozen drops, something
appalling, something like a fathomless abyss,
for the light reflects upon them but does not
burn in the Jens., It is. a clear, . piercing
glance, not a glance of a human being, nor of
an animal, but rather a glance of an insert.
To have a distinct idea of that glance you
must take under a microscope some insect
and examine its immobile, transparent, pierc
ing, and cold gaze ? ,
That people spoke a rich dialect, like all
the ;Slavonic languages, but lacking in mega
and'poetry: It has been no written language.
Only in Petersburg, where there wore no
other inhabitants but military, did it ever be
come general, written,
,and administrative.
PETER the Groat found an alphabet for it, (a
compound of *Greek and Latin letters,) and
promulgated it by an ukase. Thus, the great
Russian dialect became the official and legis
lative language of the whole Empire, having
only an official life in many provinces.
The southern Siavonians, from Little and
White-Russia, incorporated in the regiments,
accepted gradually the character of the Great-
Russians. A. soldier taken in the service for, a
space of twenty, twenty-flve, or thirty years,
perhaps for hislifetime, or without any prospect
or hope of ever again seeing his native place or
family, forced to acquire a difficult and com
plex drill or, to battle, forgot his family, his
domestic habits, his !tongs, and the traditions ,
of early youth. His regiment became every
thing for him; it became his native country,
house, society, which had its history, its own
traditions. The Russian differs from other Eu
ropean armies in this circumstance—that its
regiments are eternal. Every thing is to-day
different from what it has been since PETER
the Great. Who knows to-day the names of
the regiments under Lours XV? or the his
tory of, the French Legions of the Republic?
or, even of those famous demibrigades of
Haver:eau ?—But in Rnssia the 'regiments
formed by Paton 'the Great' bear always
the same names. Many of, them have
preserved the colors presented by him, and
even the detalls . of ancienrequipment, for the
Russian soldiers have been seen in many fields
of 'battle leaving the wounded, bat carefully
bearing away the helmets and swords. Those'
helniets, with' unmistakable' signs of bullets
on them, are worn by many generations' of
soldiers. ' The only organiz!ng force of such
an everlasting army Is terror. It amalgamates'
the otherwise incwi.patible principles, as the
bard Finnish nature, with the lively small-Rus
sian. /t makes excellent musicians from raw
recruits, in a comparably short time of in
struction, in which the stick and lash hold the
prominent place.
[To•morrow or next day, we shall publish
the third and dosing article upon Penn the
Great and Beelike policy, giving the Auto
crat's will, In compliance with the recom.
mendations of which, OATHEHINE II and
NICHOLAS I made their respective • inroads
upon Turkey.]
City Railways anti the Crossings.
(for The Press.]
A project was reoentlY before the City Connell!,
to compel the railway companies occupying the"
public streets to provido additional flagstone cross.
legs for pedestrians. This may all be very proper,
bat it would be best to begin by providing that the
railway companies shall-restore the present cross
ings to the same condition in whioh they wore be
fore the railways were laid down.
My, daily walks take me across the Tenth and
Eleventh-streets Dalkon!' at its crossings of Pine;
, Sprnee, Locust, and Walnut streets, and Almost
every one of these pressings has been Jointed by
railroad Immpany, which has' substittitesl gobble
stones for the flagstone crossings formerly existing.
' There mast be some public officer whose . duly it t
is to see that this evil is remedied ...tsuppose the
Commissioner of Highways, is the proper officer.
This railroad company, and any others who may
have olfehded in like manner, should be Galled
upon at alma to remove the cobble stones' which
they haveranhatltutod for the flagstones, and give
us baok the old arinliinge.. During the sloppy walk
ing, this winter; the crossings have been very bad.
After thin evil la remedied it will. be time enough
to consider whether more crossings are needed.
' A' PsitirAfirne.
TRIN=IIM%2MNIIIIINEEPPIIMMIMPIRMIIMIsm , M^T.
:'.. - -'..l',J,!WiY:Pts'l'.:',s"i,.-:
• - •
y The ifearitictXpetho t forApril? reeeived (roe,:
Mr. ;Pugh, is 'seiroilir , •aslarct en tocnr.preC
ding , numbers. fionte,Papatallterii,'Are; bOweeer,
of great Merit: ',Tor exeduplejasYer.ioiirlir to
"glirlii;;deriiritied "Odds -,and:Mods",fronithe
World 'something farther I(irioluiiiiieiti
amusing laugh.atc,Philodelphig,)4reuctite Nees !
Ser.' 'At - thaTll i etikfast .Tabla;. the contlimatica.l . o(
theistiO, «Balls and pears f and of Matt:
Striae'sa - vittaderch
lug lied-eater., but riot` very isejoit'reviiiir,'.of
'l9l.lson'l! Arievi`ltia tory Of'thefllonidiit Cf . ideit-
IWY."I3TBeI artioloi conveys
,dottablaiefonuatitra, • The ropening paper , oii
hdaiy,..to • a degree„; Therwalsiyitida
apterngtetsrorp reldrig,- preivesages of prose-:.
run-madd t althdrit, imagiustipluer IpllB.,
t” Two Bnlifd,' tuiserable exitibltiop. ,
the htiy,o:a"
hksvy'ititter,ly Way of ballast?to'rejjeit its tiim,
it stilltbould dschevr)idoli poideroatefei
are: glad do - learil, Dein Odd 'auttiority,lhat'the
'Artemis Mant els/ ,has a regular sale no* of loll*
thou/clad.; j 1,1
.4rOtirls ‘ ,.lrediss! -Rapt - Maga xbie. for, iprd
18,:crelkerrd4p,and, haude.orncly The
flewishaptere of yirgiala To"srisiacdfa
lied"'lirefali irikerest triaiee thC ittp:,timiata cad
foitettis'Of `a: YOMig ai;ltioress,_; wax, if T.
8: Aithir;iiiio Aida - eta:this migraine; bathe T.
8: Arthur who iriorinfactioreithe
4otrdaptit, we a weililai`a' double gebt . onus }be hli`
writings,• and: neat, because after' twelveinaddis ,
nonstarkt uso.ol: the coffee , pot it works es well now
el It 414 the .first wosk, may:ha-fused a•
60. rat is - ,its..simplioilrof.rioastruotiett and ie.'
Doti,/ , and the hest uollesk we have :ever:
The ' b l ebr,iery liumber of
,the Doudon Art.
tans M t geisr, eon
tat as 1: 3 / 4 5 , 0' beititifiiV . kingraviegalefter and
Gneroino,) front QuoeirViotorie's donee:ibis. and
sketch ,of ,yole'y's44ositrian'
liardinge, executed for , Oaloulta.i Thoriateialeo
numerous engravings onmeod, and a good deal of
Jestructivallettcr-press on, Moline Arts..
Thirty-pre peva!, in .4tooritit a- portrait
and eptogrftpi k literepyf.' ofPres-..
oiott, - tlie - Illipfiiiiin; has bean ated arytkextra.
number of the Ifirreriegi h thilig4artas, by Mr, - Di
atterdeod, 'opens
With' a bile notice, altar. MidlcigisPhical, 'Of Mr.
Prescott. Then follow' Virioui iddiaises, ;art 'the
oflossion .of his death, by. Debut , - O. ' Winthrop;
_George Ticknor, Jared Sparks, M.: L. Wrothing
him, 0. 0: Relton, Edward .Everott, Oharlie
som t Georgo,Baticroft,,,aad,,lieury, cmpin,- w ith
iiseolleCtions Els, fdrucer ,fleoretary t , ;the Jilt !
W. letter, .i.Publishedin the Prep,
ego;) Boston defies - piediaCts in the,
'Ndwrorit'Jdriietai of ‘Ceiwinetee,lh'elrhpreitsive"
Ode on Prenott's Ddath the" liostott Cossiisr; -
add a; letter froin Priaeotthiniself siring
oo'unt of the manner id Which; though neirlybibid,
he oontipeed to ktudy,•to',compose,,ttrAidate, and'
sometimes to write. This is a very acqoptatde oolt.
leition t of I'rertoulaaa., .Naicatecturcead ctt4 15 ,
print in Bvo, to bind
The best ailleide, In the naiia,nuMber v ot:ibe,
,Zr f rrth. reprinted Leq.; .
wird Soott, of - New York; anti headedtens by it:
B47,laber, of-B.Third •atrset,) r arti
In 'Theory and • Aiyaottee;-11he PhilotOph"Ytt
81 , : t age, Parliamentarylieform, Scottish Montt
dons, acid ,the ,Algerien,l4iteretdre of ,- Frenoe„,
Tliero hue not sues eo , pod. ninber•ot.thio stun,
dare pprilkdi t oallor I?ag time.
• _ . • •
t Letter , &ens Touchstone." •
211(ThrAiCAN JR THR .RILLD FOR 1880 - Btr6RB['s.
aspcnii , OX re:szas Brims maims •
(04rreelendor* Ot irrie;prtig.]
WABlpfEttOlig Mardi 2
.
X =dart/tend that me Butlnman: la' erioiedingli
eb4ed by tlitt'olghty4MrUttdr,Weeven*te de.;
vionnotricativernon - tad endorsing' bini
self. 'Me delight does - not merely compile what
he idioms a "'reliant viatory, but : expands tei the
&dating platforrit upon which the Obaileiton dew.'
Iketion will exhibittlte Amhara:l notaleoo(far
. Presidential _aneoessien. ; , Irpoi.reo,elptof
naps of, theOrlamph.le.„-,Peepsylyenta,- . _kAlir.t
a sfrom., l ! ) ko, l4l :, fM ,l ) 4 O.*_.: l W
deribted te•;lll3,tMeleAliqe
personal - atitr litilatata'frianifa prABl4 that :ha
,roeild 'ben 'candidate borer!! the'„Ohisilistdn Con=
vetaton ; that, in 'fact, :tie - hi& to 48 -41(o' thnoir
dereandedtt; the. DemooraoY needed , it, the cottri
try would not be content without:it, beaked as 'hi
wad by the united Democracy of• Pennsylvania.-
Moieover, be. expressed the - .beltsd, which, no
dr4dit,ln oonneotlon with the, Pennsylvania - rose,
lotions, seggeeted ttio Aimitit; that !hat
,with,
the persisteney of aisles nion, the crankiness of
Jefferson Davis, the indivldaellty , of TooMba, the
sootionality of Hammon - kin- Its's:wrens antsio
nista to Seward, and-all the other ideas and peo
ple tending to disrupt the party, he was the .only.
ono:litcely to snit the.tionventionoM a matter. of
necessity.
iron. John Nagent's report on his h'rsispritiver
Omanholonership—just . now published in evens°
by the Senate—explodes the golden glories, if any
yet remain in the brains of adventaresmite youths
who'pine after the "yellow earth the white man
worships -ao , a God." It is true' gold was found
almest everywhere, but found nowhere in 'snob
quantities as to repay the prospecting and dig;
ging. This , fast is patent by the,rasnit of the
labor from May to Ostobet, 1110108 Iva, -.wblob-.
amounted only to: about half a ,million dollars.
As the man in the - comedy says; ", It, wont, pay,
sir—no, sir;" moreaspeolallY when we consider the
immense number among whom the half Million
was to be divided. ' ' . f,
Some general idea of the rush to the Frazer
River diggings was ohronieled in the Impulse the
day, but Mr. Ntigent's report aondenses Into some
very interesting historical paragraphs the chief
•fifeturesef the, exodus. ,California-and the Terri,
tortes of Oregon and Washington were turned
completely topsy-turvy by tie, marvellous stories,
industriously circulated, about the gold mines of
Fearer River. Men in comfortable oirournstances,
who had ; after hard label., earned a tolerable own
potence and a hoUle, scattered' the fire on the
domestic hearth, and, but too truth - flung them-
selves into the ashes. Men of almost every status 1
in the professional and manual paths of life aban;
doned their occupations : miners sold their claims;
doctors sold their patients; lawyers ,sold their
oases; and all, kicking nitheir heels for the new
diggings, were miserably sold themselves When
they got there.
The vessels that left San Francisco for Motorist
were peeked like sardine boxes or herring bar;
refs—many of them carried three times the num-.
bar of passengers allowed by law.. Abourtwenty
three thousand left San Francisco, and some eight
thousand more went overland from_ the northern
counties of California, and' from Oregon and
Washington Territories, by way of the Bailee and
Fort Kamloops. Some estimate the number as
greater, but Mr. Nugent says It is rafts' to assert
that the emigration to :Vancouver's Island and
British Columbia during the excitement—the bulk
being in May, June, and July—was not under
thirty thousend,and may have reached thirty-three
thousand. ' Taking thirty thetisand asthe figure,
and the half a million as- the whole product for
di months, May to October, we see that each man
had sls.6Btfor the half year, or little more than
$2.75 per month. To men who on an average 'ex:
pended more than that sum for their daily living
—afters and drinks excluded—the prospect must
not have been pleasing, to nit a very mild,plwase.
I should not have been'astonished if our boys had
gotten up a revolution in "British Columbia," bat
the faetwae, and is, that the place was not, and is
not, worth fighting for. , ' .
It may be said that it did not get a fair trial,
but that is not exactly true' The great majority
of the emigrants had a thorough knowledge- of
mining by years of experience in California. , No
hardships or discomforts could or did deter swill
men
,from the prosecution of the park,* ' with
which they set out. They have penetrated into
ever/accessible portion of the gold fields, from the
mouth of the river up to the Canoe iountry, down
Thompson river, from Fort Raniloops to iti sleuth,
1 and up Bridge river nearly te its donne, and have
prospected every spot where gold is supposed to
exist. The result has hap as stated.' Some five
or six bare, between, Fort Rope and Fort. Yale,
were found productive; also, good digginge at two
or three point+) on Bridge, Fraser, and, Thompson
rivers. But, says Nugent ,. summing np;." but in
the whole region prospected there are not eligible
ptocers more than enough to give remunerative
employment to about fifteen hnitdredMinere."
In an agricultural point of view; the'Terrikry
is even leas attractive. A British army officer,
formerlY, in 'the Hudson's Bay Company's service,
and who had, traversed nearly the whole region,
told Mr. Nugent that there is no Part of the court. :
try, that will ever justify farming operations of.
any-magnitude. The face of the country is all
rocks and water, like the face of a hard featured
and ugly sinner, who, not thoroughly obtuse to
the opinion of the world, seeks its antfragee by
tears, and assumes a virtue, though It hie It not.
Independently of
,the grim prospects of the mi
ning and - agricultural operations, the early and
rapid abandonment of the colonies by Ametioani
was induced by the exactions and snarling annoy
ances to which they were ,subjected by the colonial
°Moore and the employees .ef the Hudson's B a y
1 Company. These exactions were imposed without
law, and levied with the assistanoiof arms.
If passengers had not means to pay mining li
cense,. head -mow, sad . stafferanato Ukt, tbeir
===
itirfor9F To - powiummi . TICo:- : ,„
5 •
44m & idiit5f&414 4" 41. h 0111441 9" .
foiicrirta's •
nomniunioatitiCaiest - bi r soooropaniedl by fha
msme ettke
the typogra illy, bit one . iiiiicA the ekeit-lait!o4 ba
We l all-t4 j l 4, 74 01 4 141 - to
.g ent ! maal P ,
Inr± lo o
faitabeopit•ii, soy' : 4 - . 6..ti4bailons. - stow om
!UZreiitiiewi• lois 4 7 .1 A their pattieulafteealittety
the resonioeli of Ow ststrotrottiseekritntiki fhb toe 7,t.
of population, or wj into!" *inn thettnrillbetii:.
e.r411:44r
seateheeipletole;kaliesihr other peiehhit effect..
-were Willa, pledge " *St.'
. ablei, - thebil#loll4ril,beans- OitireOffit'idieme
iodid`pievieleke,sf'or ‘ Ol.iitilied,;i . ft 4ttiteit; there
wee a datyof 19 perpo4,litojeivisealmpoled
ioode poiiedinto RLy itieeerAkeetcoantry—all
oti -totally airtwholly.witbout
the OutherltY of law.
froortho , . , friendly Intel:Me& ex.
Owed' by-the Biltlerr 'l:taverns:tint; leitd"th;e:iser- -
tlie,tratedp4itee
is paell'.ett Oejleeni:MottA:kindheii,-- do:',i_iiapire
heridid` Ile' In .-teleolog Governor -Dou
glee. of .Vezteeverie A03)10 Jalapa dor.
1)404 s That latiOtionarye however.
ilia : wog the interests of hie eompanYiiniore - than hie
oovernment,l heart] wee lint**
to he tegtettedz-thitt- be
liove.:-that neither thit'itietiiviiphi
the esirinief. able.
'ditegi'td...tiovertior
,the of ; tha, else
mppf, were eillqtioloo4.piaduAnig, mg, Alan thc'
partied'. "194 „lneenalditable AtiOdllleatione
thereof.
1 ;Mr. liagent's Terrintereithig
or three Chilly Brat, that the;Batieh ta'llie Vita ,
itortyerteJatat and'tbe tritsif.fttrior'regio4 *net
ladtaieg 'AnierieitiCeititiate,ky' - the 'meet !atm
iterlat;:elthei. tailiteea ":#l - Oytitii* . hiti*i; of
A l d„LlAPWl 4l o l l4 4 uflillist they
0 t15. .r43. - t,!?Puf!vat. l o l 4 - ; : he.; - raittea not=worth
AO/atipan eaterptieeLaad, - thirdly; that the - great
wham. which. Balwer,-as Oeleatat
tary, atatitoebuok ste vetattittaaylitatail;atitinied
reek -last :anminer, , 'Otgaing elitakatirea — f the
NorthAtaertala ebatinent; irsuateiptiiieenahldp.
Or the 'effaigerilii of a hegaillielter,:4)o.l:ah - -470,
Ihmhia hie 'fitiatil , 1„ -
• , 1 'Z. P. Shigher,`,:oftligYoriti le,eat4httakwigi
I,4anee T. - Brady in the . , dareatoefltr. Stehlesi sad
will-be hers atthiteleataLtheteeett,,,,
MMA=II
T.HE
AMIMMINTIt Irrpt2lo. •
ArnioAx thr Nvoio:r.lA , The •litchool for
Beendal Thar I ;IOI.,.INIOI . 9i9thARIOrf 4
rootlezi- , The Toith - who simr_,; - wonsan.M,
, Ntetoxii: Chicnie:=: o ,olodereltstetisiTe - Olrese
Compane—cs Boestrian, - evneetti; and Aerobstle:
bats 5 )
Wiiiine* CiAsis's
,Tasem•-,'
44 111nk Lear OCULt4 021Mrtr."'„
Toliiirr or lira Asee:LAterth'elominiiilififi is 'of
piziellie Lost; Oriliveßopentaat.,.
ItioDiNotrOphs: awnwi.-B•l4sficcis- tevii;
'iaoms fcom Open. 4:s?"lo.frahnes__ll.*l4l4l.
VennV abir OliessiANtra--
ZecentrialttosArsieser, atigini6 , 4l4 ,ts
dummy
-,• • -
'BUTTING OP. TEX 00111XXXX014"—Thenitridli'.
anntualesdan of the „Philadelphia' Continue* r
Methodist Rolsoimal Chunk opened yegterdayiebielne, '
'at lec_ lo bil„i 11 ! 0 1 0 )imanteliAtehes/a 4treati.einoek,•;
aborit'Tiintti. - •:lttatep Scott 'AN
. 01444 -
The, ,ot thereedier of feriplure
league, the • selectiCbeing frisfolthe lihrehsatar
of Ezekiel , and tkelletlfobapter-dYII Ostitithiena - The
hyOus beginning ?!1, - ,lcole TOY Itleixiele,Aerd,u,:treo. , ,
ming with Miceli Went, and 'ewe a moiresolemnprayte
• by,thw Ilidsopi , the Cop qui:melded to . buinese.
The galleries wsk.v,4onaltiY leveled eith+rladler;• ;Ittris+4
'roll being One; Mashed wed thirty ,-eeron tom
berm answered to their names: 'Theßef: ft."R. Pettir:i
ion wavuneabnedely sleeted , seeratary,eed•RAW:gs,
Coombe, 0. Lybrofka c Auxan,aor,Wiegtos, were ,-'•
chosen ea his antenatal. • , ' , •
The hoarser business "anirei Cited hind Bien
no RM. CAilgrilens lretiskiktActsit,
Hammel werilapppintid a, committee to prepare
the -
mipates afthiCordiurnee'for publicatien. mo-PrellA•
ere withintheansits of the Old eity proper -
001 1ewaleddiferlets ware,nonetituted lr Committee - on •
Public Worship' during the waslon of The body. -The
aubia,by which Ike last 'Conference were•goided were
reel apd adopted for the conduct of title Conference„
The Rev. Cooper moved that thexeparlefAl
of thesProesedingi of the body ho obligedto ealtponstis• „„
AVM to to do, and: eatate the names of theme:, for :"
whieli_they•reported,„, , • J,l • , 4 ".; :
The *matter led to &great des i t s or debate tonektutt,
thigh:reliant ?Modern of theirtele,Mie right of this Cone
venom to protect Streit and the +ltruperter- eseprison•a
ideas about mainittag %beaten Ist trite., attar riablett
the whole subjeot wiuf dropped: •
The presiding oldens - of tae sevemedlatriete ism eon.
atinited the Committee on lidiaidoint+withiii the betted* -•+-
kis morning, at 11 , aink; tea( *naiad' foi l Eie
'oat of the e'sereeile, , y - +. • +- - „t•• • -+•+, +.•
,Theorgintaation oftbetlontereetekhuilsgbtlettatteet. , ,,.
ed. mfshop snott, in Ai/Widener, with tbst canal oestons t
calla attention to•dhe wholikeiniedvice of Itelmie. --
P/ 14 °.Lt+gtobbufzalobilorlablemittnientaksidnefitimas ,
'The...ohne raid he had +heard ministate imay.,ib_ey-lha4,,+
I love ground, rel'gionAly; sr Conference.:' lie *se male- _
iltd`thatall ehotild be very in what they say,'
beltg moot aeresol not to,wound individual waseterre. •
Of O. brother'. heart. He was convinced that if , proper ;;
attention was paid to the admirable discipline. 'me to
the paella and .privete.devotlinial exercises, bretluen
would not lose ground, but, on the contrary_ ; would go
forth from the Onnferenoes refreshed and strengthened
for the race. and there woad teen ewer wftilmUolisee•
Con and deep regret at an kind or,andigratell ante; TAM,.
Bishop, at one wholiad growd up and the Conference. _
and who felt that be was feet approwhing the te rens ,
tine of his tenser. exhorted hit brethren to take heed
to thew Cilium. - Re alluded, with inset feeilingv Mae ,
neglect of the morning devotional , The •
members of the Conference sevinaliy Peel the blearier
or !leaven before mitering noon the &sties of she shy. •
it was expected that the president and, other r m era of
the Conference should be in their nests et Csier; anted
morning hoax end he earnestly entreated MI the mem-. -
bars to be as ponctusi as they. Matters or great weight
lad moment will oome up Wine he 0 Aliment+, < The
Biehop hoped,,tbat They oa're'd sit be met wtti astatine
rise dtgoity and Celt-posseitou—that there...lmnd be
no unkind feeling examined 'no Bingo 'or taunts of., - -
fared Ripply the day of these unpleasent - ihtess is
fast pricing away in all the Confatenoes. +Bishop • e
Armed this exhortation with some moat splogrnoot and
touching remarks, whine deeply moved the tetanus.
Berne diseassion took place open ILMOTIOVIDt tire." ,
consider the hours oC the daily opening and "fulJatum
ment of the Conference. Bome of the brethren
that 8 and 12 o'clock were too early. The Rev V.
Cooper, on the other band, +contended that the majority
of the minietens are early" risers, and that eny,bour •
iidiouroment.t.ter than 12 wrold seriously Lucoureni+,
ears A Majority of fendlies entertainhm the memberi..
The motion wee not reconaidered.
The Rev. Dr. Olmstead, of the Presbyterian Church,
was listrodneed to the body, and ee motion of thit
P. Coombe, all ministers 'of other deinomlnstions
"mg the Couterenee were - invited - to a seat wild:dohs
, bar of the Conference. , ' ' •
The hem. SUM& T.tiaott awl Mary 11: Mamma
wars hontiaaed ort:trial; Home aleatuialoa.took phloem <
the propriety of condoning ithe Arr. Wm. U Ware,
and a little debate the motion wu put t a$
Ware Ins not-coutinned:
Tint se•. Dr. Brainerd; of the Presbyterian Chinni
was Introdueed to the Conference. - -
The Rev. 8. L. Gistpty was coattateed on trial, Wig
excused from attend■nce by an +infertile ate *caldera,
aed the Rev. Geo:10D. MINSCMIIII auto, coattneed
The Rev. O. B. Lore, baring_ asked, after - deliberate
reflection, to be dlecOntinued, considerable dimufflort
arose ae to the peculiarity of his cam:omnd the matter
was finally held over for farther consideration.
Appdatments for various ontamittees were made, and
ft wee announced that,preschlng would be heard, in the
evening, in the following churches,
Bt. George's " by Rev. John T. Gram , .
by Rev. 7.P. Chaplin.
Twelfth - street .. ;.. Rev. 1. B linighea.„
Trinity fr. W. Tliomia.
Rbeneter by Rev F.D.. lgan.
The anniversary' of the Bedford street atiesion
which toot place Jut eventing, in Concert Bail, weeCO.
nounced, sad the speasbere of the Conference - ware in. '
vited to attend. .
• Tickets on the Fifth and Biath.etteeti Railroad were
gratuitously furnished members living on that route
by the piesident of the company, and the Mine oottr•
tesywan extended by the Tenth and 'Eleventh.'
attestsßao. „--
Adjourned with px:sler and the Christian doxology
.
Mks. Uunacnt has beei caught at last. Our
rigSlaat policemen hare been on the alert for this 1147
for the past week or two, and gat a New Yorker has
taken the laurel as they were about to grasp
,it: Saa
b leek, and It is not the drat time that polieeniee; after
having traced the game home tel its covert; have t o ad
the mortification of seeing their prey seized by an, olitt
alder. -We may well say here as elsewhere, that in
her police system, as Ina hundred - other things, Phila.
dolled& leads every. other. city in the Alcion„ It will
be a long 'while, or we are vastly tidataken, ere such
disc:dean& are undo• skint our pollee as bare been
brought to light in ,New Yore sod other cities. The
Trib.ll6 thus describes We. Hudson's arm; :
, c shout • week ago, Sergeant Van linen, while
passing up the Kightki events in Ids uniform, bad lota
attention drawn toward the, singular astione a fe
male, whom be met coming out of a store. She appeared
putty agitated, and, closely yelling her face, hurried
forward. The' aloe' , at once made up gda gut
something WAS wrong ; that the womailvrati tither In,
sane or bad been Stealing from, the store yrhenee she
had loot come out, aed feared arrest. Se followed her
to No. 300 Weet -Thirteenth street, where he subse
quently made iceniries en:tanning ber, but only learned
that she recently cams from Philadelphia, and bad
anted very strangely mince her arrival. These fade were
cemmunleated to the deputy enperintendent,- and it was
finally thought that she might be the Philadelphia
abortloolit.
C. A. close wash was kept upon her movimeats until
yesterday evening, when see was taken In custody, and
conveyed to police headquarters 'The Sergeant, upon
entering her room, sold; Z. not 7001 Dime Mame
' No,' she replied, my - name it Brown., • I know
better,' said the officer ; s end it's a wonder you don't
recollect me ; I've been on here two weeks looking for
you 7he accused immediately gave herself up, and
confessed everything connected with the affair.; She told
that she Was going on to Philadelphia, to give herself
up, but woe afraid that they would hang her. She also
confessed to other !same!' of 1m equally revolting
nature."
AT Alt EA.ELT, hour.yeatorday morning a
row tech place fn an alleged gambliog house In tho
neighborhood of Tenth and Chestnut streets, Paring
the equabble;one of the party ant the throat of another,
and one of tie men got his head gashed w:th a r billy. ,,
The injured persons were taken to a neighboring ding
;Mire, where the wellpas were dressed Tne ram who -
reCeiyea the gash in his throat was taken to the Tent •
itylvania nost.tal, where the out was piasters& up.
Neither of the n•n in dangerously bort.
Jacoa AEaTL was arrested at an early
hour yesterday morning, by Meer U Airtilin, on the
charge of stealing eight dollars , worth of herds - WO from
the store of. Alai:ilea Wanner, at Tenth and Hering
- Garden streefe. Ho la said to have been in the habit
vldung thnstoro every morning, and .bile ecgaged in
conversation with the attendant, jeurloi,ing small
tot Dine. Mr Wsooerdkgee that aebeeioetgoi.dete the
VI In. of $lOO, at d if Brent ,t 1 rate, within .the -Ilia% bur
tn. nets The seen ed wan takeeibefore alderman Con
row and bent hi 590 0 ball ,o master at 'court. - -
TLIEJuhT in the- case • ot•the child-whose'
death we pound yesterday, renaired a verdict of
dental death, the little one hulas fallen down Astaire
at the reaidence of. its , .cnnther, Twenty-mooed and
Onerty Meets. The name of the deceased, was Zinn
Colt.
Orman gllie arrested a roan named
ellen 3 eAtiirdsr, on tbo °taiga of Mit jarcenj ofs big
of osts, irbieh Is Is allows% to have stolen ftaso s.
esonntiy warn, at Xliiveotti and Market streets, Giles
:was ow:omitted
A DWELLING tiouss in Tenth street, above
Qom was entered at an tarty hourlestotolar moils
int and robed 9t stertil uttotos t '