The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, May 06, 1859, Image 1

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, - MBE QIDERIES,, &e •
HOSiIaiIri9I4OV.SSc,MITTI3Ak,SHA.WPS,
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I.llBridoibis tanimisiion *incite.
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AUSTIN:I3UO,Wisj, : •
";•- cj
,civtteLlOnur:lataLlali
a..an - 4144AA.F .
,JlKyvA.. Ivy ,PIituADBLPHIA
, JOit ; TIE,III"ARD STRUT,
~AplkBool, Ail. W.; odiier of Rule, up Maim
*RPETJ/S1: 1 5:,
OIL ern,4l 6 ) AND,
. 141 ico
Virt•EFE;Ng
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001:114188IONid3411011AliTd,
No. I.329HIBTNUT •STREET,
:Agents for •
TAPESTRY VELVET, •
TElltßil PLY,
IN4/Wl 4 l, • •
'VENETIAN, =lO,
• coiTomi LIST, and SAG „
- CA.RPETS'i"P
Whleb, we are neerlug dallifrom.the Hanafrotarera,
ander, prepared to offer the trodo on liberal:tame.
Having the Agencitar some of the beet end moat de
elniblegoode, we can offer.iattbililenta not heretofire
Was had in Philadelphia. All geode cold et Mann
factnieria peen. Orders carefully attended to.
• D” AbekAgente for. Black and White Wadding, a
largekllPPlirf whiCh t; hare conetantly on hand.;
TAI4I3OD *ANIMACTO!itY.
-VfttEit widss,
.:'44 . 42:5 407 T TIT T R
PRINTS,
D9ALLI:III - • •
- CIARPTIkA.NURAO"TURIORS.,
GLEI GERktANTOVI,T.
A.voo
INPONTIBD AND DNALEBB IA
ClAAPtitikta,
)* CLOTHS, -
- , - MATTING,
RUQB,
WAREHOUSE; sob ORESTNITT.STSIET,
4 - 021'081TR ,THI - STATS 1101781:
. ,
-'Mi have now on tend an extensive steep of.. 0 4 ovpet.
fat, of own end other makes, to which we invite
the attention Welkin end lkintitern bnyire; fe2l-2m
I.titglike.Y,-ECII_SSNE4;.e Co., -
Imiortiro of WOOLLOS,
t000lving•foll (applies of • . ,
SUPERIOA, CLOTHS.
Arwutre; , .• - • • •
egtli3OTS_; : ' -
• •
. SANOY OLISIMIRIL wee.
Iron! the Eilloriot ,
_Olotirstott ourcofacturero--
1110 LENS Ticii!Pt•) •
loniotonr AmEtox. - •
• ornate it fIOOKIDT XMlothi.)
zsmotit BROTH39B.
00. E and others.
..::febl-Bes . - 206 01128TNUT Street.
FAIMELL &'MOREIIS.
MIMI
oLayas, Doisairmizivo
• ,232 CHESTNUT STREET,
, . , -
feblAlm , - Philadelphia
SPRIN.O.,TRADThi , IBS9. ,
4147141 r., .14ZAAD,
- 112' 01H11EriNIIT 1104 , : ,
ar bow opening sleep and siiiiekidoek or
c ! Awars ) .cice,Taaus, - psniqa, ir!dother„y
, ,DAIOO Goon!,
To 'Mich th• attoniSGO:9l, Pap CO 1$ WOiled . Mao,
000Dss, ,
Cliioiirgs - ,*.WOodrAird Depakto,
BLIMP lAtritingiandEltlirthiP, Bt•zinall' SW**, Bins
p""L-'7"1"*PTO•1!"!•-qte•
• ipopOCKFISEI- SHESTMOS--.1 net received
-JUL I‘ **bib/ - " - 1
ARID. fc-IitiTOLMNBON, -
.....:191P/OrFt obmtptit
;111180 OriolasL Op**stood Cloths anellDoe
-ALP 614,0 Ileititible' utak"' of
German Woollens jut reedreit %Ili for pap ))Y •
BEUttaiiri.ILIZABO, & 'HUTOILUNSON,
.E44-11.m . OhoNtnnt atm
1111RILT.Et BRIETINGSPOR EXPORT.
MOWN,' BLZAOHZD, & BLUE DBUXL
.—.;IIIA.VZ.& LIGET SHOZTINGII,
lIAOTIL
- Poltabbs. tor Zzoort
ENGEtildt for oat b 7.
- ,
". gala WONT sr., - ra11,L.F2:127X St.
VllllOlO4. Pkhit
, k lllatt e; JiuJtkV. disc.
j'ELIVLES, WATSON,
-IIiPORTSS
WAT,OII.IB, IEIVELkr, &a.,
Oceitu4l7 we hookas tali salortcpeat of Vaoheron
jloistasithi*Oes. rea-Am
BAILEY & 00.,
Jar • .
/O! 111 Y
• 1 , 7 AMILEY & 114TOHEN,
Elise removed to their eel: Ere-proof, White hterble
819 OffIgiTNIIT 13TRRECT,
Solna KM; BUM- THE 01.ftWID HOWL%
NO* .ppett their Nall Oh* Of
neon= TEpItLYT, PLATED . IYASBA, AND
• tANOTOOODO,
- To'whish they hien, the attention of the publle. .
tittOtBtiVhBl; Whialtith, aumoips, AND
It riousaisi'aup ItltAIL.
„ .
SAOO.l3B s '
626 -AROff 'STREET,.
lisididslisid sad for , eats atoll assortment of all the
eacieVreielen2i !Wee of ' - ' -
:t/AitRIA: I 3I : ES.
Alio, gretiq variety of desirable 811CIOND. LUND
Ohaftl4ollB, thatharebeen bat very little used, which
-will be sold low. - mardi-Sm
ocOtckrimr. WATSON'S
91411iLdGE EgrOSIORY,
:N0e.'1217, 1219, and 1221
:- - )13119111TNUT B•TREET.
ARRI • GES
C
. 07 TAN MAIMAIMIIp OF
WILLIAM - D. ' ROGERS.
REPOSITORY,
11'109' , - 13112811013 T BTll.lkr - 1011
100lesale vn torero.
VIsTGERICH do SMITH,
G,ROCERS,
No: dB, 'ZIHRTH THIRD STRUT;
ji ~
~rl~~ ,
t4.-lamoraf &,OQ.
MLtTYAQTURU A WII0I;118ALI Drum
HATS. OAPS,
BILK AND - - BTRAWODONNETS AND , STRAW
t•-‘ • - t , LDOODS, •-• ,
litronms,
Nir 69!jeiti6litirtgliVrrErri
BXTEIITBIVE BTOCA t BEST TERMS,
-'LOWEST
G' tilliliESs 1859.
AGAR'? 8a- CO.;
t-',; , 4:11 , 211 - t BEA, ICK B T ST T
.;:,40
ro ,4AtimAug),i io /INTIO I lOW
.44 lgetiagoo"or
usTai puha, lgruvr 00015,
likWitriiii'ihi*i447ort, tk• and mat.
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BELOW WALNUT
"O0KIIIRTI)!4 )1111SOIUSMS,
x A:. nir 30 8
No., 3!atE34 . STREET
.11r,imi!t.igli;
WHIPLESALt
PIILLAD,ELPHIA,
*lto anti Qiapo.
trairvetings:
:CA'Ser:°N MATTI.NCIS.
- . -
• #.IBT 0 HIVED iNOTNAR LOT OP
- - pxtmai4x-m• - xut,PoxtT'mri
OA' N•T 0 N , MATTINOS,
• • COZOLUTINO OP.
44 5.4 ind 2 o.4 g.NXINA
4 : 4 5.4 and s -0.4 .RED ONEOK. „
444 , 4 10 0-4. WHITE: "MANNDia. ,,
4-4 01";* AND #ANOY do.
. , .
P 'REDUCED.
•
EC 4.1,ut,73t0: 1 -13 0 TH. R,
No. 920 1 043:13TNUT STREET.,
3 - , .•
NEW CARPETING.
94E.STNITAtOVASEVENTIty
guireoel,ed i bb late leols
FROM EUROtg . ,
A. fall sesortnient of New gtylee
OARPET/NG.
CANTON MATTING.
A largo variety of all widths and colors. ap94m
CARPETINGS.
, 20LE AMOY IN THIS CITY
' OF TIM '
AUBURN TBRIMPLYS,
BIIPERFINEEI,
AND VANPTIANIS,
, , El A X V V A O. I' D
ax
SARBEI)
Wit/161.i grades of WOOL: WOOL AND VOTTOII and
ALL•00thN114014INII.
ATWOOD, 'RALSTON, &
11.1141?1 , 4011111.11411 1 AMMO,
SO9IIAIIUIT • STRUT.
STAIR ROD, MANUFACTORY.
WILER ik MOSS,
225 SOUTH FIFiRRTRIIIIT;
• MOW WALNUT. sp4•lip
STAIR
.HOD HARD Agggy.y.
*FILER & MOSS,
226 LOUTH FIFTH OTREBT,
- • MOW isreLier.
03404 sate flit4o4.
. _
4. T. LANE. , 4.
WHOLESALE CLOTHING
IKAREROOM'S.,,
so.' 410 tiIARKEI 13111,EiT,
f!bil4, PUEGADILPHIA.
garbware.
31O914E;41:ENSZraY*06:
Ma. 427 MAIiKET, aria ud 0 . 0131111801 Banana.
PHILADELPHIA,
Yap combo* cm load a lee pax*
OP
HARDWARE,
CUTLERY, GUM, ito.,
Witok are °Mired to ByVillia on Llboril Tarns!.
feta 341 m
C . 41: & (31E0. 'ABBOTT.
No. 18 North FOURTH STREET,
lIIIPOIITERS AND DNALIIRS IN
HARE:FLEE, ounEy,, GUNS, ETC.
ALSO, NAILS, CASTINGS, &0.,
MI of nthbah ste offered to Buying on the moot favor-
Ale terms. ' nkar2B-2in
TRUITT BROTHER & CO.,
IMPORTEDA AND WIIOLISALIN MILLERS
-IN
HARDWARP,
CUTLERY,.
GUNS, ' •
PISTOLS, so.,
629 MARKET STREET, 629
BILOW Sum, NORTH 81D1,
THILADIELPHII. A021,8m
China unit fir. tertaware.
1859- ,QUEENSWARE. 1859
- BOYD & STRO.TJD.
IMPoitTBRS AND .10131111E8,
lince now on bend e complete etoek of
FRENCH AND ENGLISH
CHINA, GLASSWARE,
. . AND .QUNDNSWARE,
(At their old 'toed)
No. 82 NORTH FOURTH STREET,
(Pour doors below - Bresobsuts , Hotel,)
To wash they Witte the attentioh of
WHOLES/4AS BUYERS. - (021-81 n
ROBERT' SI-lOEMAKER
CO„
N. IL 00E. FOURTH AND NAGE STRNSTS,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
MANUPAOTURERS OF PAINTS IN OIL,
IMPORTIRS OP PRINCE PLATE
t/ip
WINDOW GLASS.
DULLARD IN AMDBIOAN WINDOW GLAOB.
ap2l-Bin
LOOKING 'GLASSES.
EES=I=IEZM
• - L-OOKING GLarIBEINIEV,
For every owe mid every positron, and at the molt
moderate prloee ••
' • LOOKING (.116.8880
In the Most elaborate 'end the Most simple
LOOSING GLASSES
Premed in the best teete, and In the moat eubetantlel
Wiener. - -
• . • -LOOKING GLMONN •
aralahed by to, are manufactured by oureelven In our
own 004011'1=0M.,
, • . LOOKING GLASOBEI
Ia MAHOGANY sad 'WALNUT tramp, for Country
Woe,
' • JAMES B. HANLE 9s BON,
818 - ORESTNUT STREET,
•PI•a• PHILADELPHIA.
OMETEOPOLITAN TEA. STORE."
TEAS! TEAS TEAS !
A chigoe solleotlon of
GREEN AND NLACIR. TEAS,
OP DROSSY IMPOSTAP/ON.
AI4O,
COFFEE,
• BOASTED 'AND ODODPID DAILY,
• .
DT:
STEAM ENGINE' -
• " YcoIITNG:
• ' ' OILMEN 'SMITH,
Nos. 913 and 915,1dASEET STRUT.
HAMS I HAMS HAMS I
Prime and sugar-pared Rawl
10 O.INTO PER POUND.
AUG, rutni angar.enred Ohoulders
:, AT 8 MINTS PE POUND.
• - CHARLES SKITH,
30144 m woo; 0/63 pad Nig #411437 Velum.
PHILADELPHIA. FRIDAY. AtAY '6. 1854.
Althinnal,
HIIMPUREYS'
• • 8 IEI 9 i..v‘x 9-,
HOXICEOPATBIO REMEDIES.,
06 CirißilillT Street, (Agiatt.)
r
-.'• THESE INVALUABLE PREPARATIONS U. ex
elusively prepared by PROF. P. numatagio, Well
known for his contriblatione to lioncreonathio Were
tare, and as former PROFESSOR OW TITEOItr and
P ah.OT ICE in the Hornropoth 4 c .dfrifical College
in Phi/ode/Van, ant who has made - these iliecifie
Remedies a special study for eight - years, ' .His
SPECIFICS have now been before the public four
- yearn, and are in use icy thousands, is every part of the
country, with the most uniform and satisfactory re
sults. Pages of testimonials can be exhibited, showing
the general satisfaction given, and the many very-grave
and noxious, and' often lcnwstanding, diseases which
have been - cured by their vise. No class of remedies
has thus far ever been known which hate given-the
pobile such uniform eetistaction, or hale produced
aush'brilltant and wonderful cures.
They-are alike 'cornered from the poisonous, danger
ous, and repulsive doses of quackery or old-school
practice, the ;inconvenience of water-cure, or the: in
tricate and perplS,Xleg obscurities of the aerial Etotrec
pathic ' bOoka mad medicines. Coisisting of .al yAry
specifics for the v. flees diseasen to which they are re •
lat,d, put up in the form of simple auger .. pellete, and
prepared of ingre 'tsars neither dangerous nor disgast
ing. they form at once the reedy resource of the parent
or some, and are the comfort of the 'complaining o 1,141..'
Invalid. ,
They Timms these poiltive advantages : They '
a 4 EMLATEI—zic Injury cap _ arise from their,une ; y'
are onsets- you always know what to take and heto
take it; they are aorayserner--you can give the pr pet
finger Pill at a moment ' s warning, without bienta ii
or delay ; they *re EM , lOlllNT—in thousands of a es
dhiCilhe Ili tweeted at ones:and' the • mite cares at e
moment, that the pound could not afterwards have Ve-
I
'loved. .3,..
'
LIST OF SPECIFIC REMEDIES. ,:.
No.l. Fever Pills—For Fever; Congestion, and itt.,
defamation of all Mode.
No S. Wgrin Pills—For Worm Fever, Worm Collo,
Wetting the Bed..
No. 3 Baby'/ Pills—For Collo, Crying, Teithitig,
and Wakefulness of infants and fterVottealeal Of Olt,'
No. 4. Dlorrhcca Pills—Per Diarrhoea Cholera -,;
Bantam, and Sommer Complaint. a. --, .
No: 5. Dysentery Pills-,For Colic, Ottploga,Bytleit!
tory, and Bloody Flux.
No. O. Cholera Pills—For Cholera, Cholera lfforbiti,
and Vomiting.- .
. . .
N 0.7. Cough ri ll s—For Coughs, Oidds; Hoiraenefej
Intlueoza, and Sore Throat.
No 8 Toothache .POta--Poe Toothache Faceaoha s
and Neurahas. .
No. 0. Headache Pills—For Headache, Vertigo,
Heat, and Fulness or the Head. "
No. 10. Dyspepsia Pills—For Weak and Deranged
Stomenha, Constipation, and liver Ccimplainte.-•.,i.
No. 11. Per Female Irregularities — Scanty , PAIRS!,
or Suppressed Periods • ;
No. 12. Female Pills—For Lettoorrhoes, Profttee
blarisee, and Bearing Down. - - ,i,
No 18 Croup Pilis—Tor Croup, Hoarse Clough; lad
BreethinF.
- - Bpi'
No• 12._ Salt Shalom Pills-„Vor" Erysipelas' p-
Rocs, Pimplem on the Paoli - )
No. 15. Nheutrultic Pals—Por Pains ' Laments/I,*
Soreness in th e Chest, Back, Loins, or Limbs. ' •,--,
Old
4,—por
Fever A vr an d Ague, Chlll lever, Dumb, Agit*
ge.
P.—For Piles{ Pnind or Bleeding, Internal or 10-
tern").
0.-For Sore, Sore, tSesk, or Inflamed Eye and liyell4e,
Yelling, Weak, or Blurred Sight.
o.—For Catarrh, or long standing or recant, pillar
with obeincetlee or ;Tanga discharge.
W. o.—Tor Whooping Cough, atatang lie TlOleilek
and shortening its course.. 4, 1
la all •01/115 DTBSAI4IIS.. much ea re . fera, /11011111141111.
Moo., Dlerrhosact, Dyeentery, Croup, Rhaumatimmiend
oath eruptive diseases as Scarlet Serer, Measles, a 4
Erysipelas. the advantage of giving the proper rowed t
as
ro
pmptly is'obvlorta , and in all math omen the speolli a
ant like a charm. The entire disease le nitenerreettl
at once, and in all eaeee the violence of the atteclotle
moderated, the diseatte shortened 'and rendered real
dangerous. Bran should a physician afterwards hare
to be called, he will take the case at decided advantage
frog the previous treatment. _
lir Ali daimon Diticearc, ettont as Thvapepvia,Weik
Stomach, Oonatlpstlen . , Lifer Doipplaint,^Diles,Replate
Debility and Irregularities, old Headache, Sore orWeek
Dyes, Olitairh, Salt Rheum, and other, old eruptions
the case has epeoltice whose proper Implication wilt.
afford A cure in almost every Instance. Often the tins
of a elogle chronic, difficulty, each at Drapepela; Pate,
g Operrh,
'the cone
or Female Weakneelli ha , more
Fr paid for e cone tan Cum ever,
'3.EdiEglint,
That thousands of the , mat gifted and intelligent
utinde to this country and Xurope hive Ding since given
ip their adherence to Homoeopathy; and employ it ass
einelirrlF in 111 papal of 4leease for therasolves and
!milled ' - , • . ,
REIMS 1111111—That theseSpecilice are entirely basse t '
Isla in all induces. end la all epee, Babies tale.thetai
children use them, the aged. infirm, orinvalld use thigh
witboutdenger and with benefit •
ItEhIEUDIITI—That not .only in long-etandlng Old
"oroidnitits, but In resent and violent diseases ot the
061 dangerous onirso.c., -15 " 1401071 ."-P"7' m . -
• opeeforl le , to any other sYslani In repeated ,
1/1114148)111—Tbet onanopathy Is 'sustained 'ant
from its tbsorrei sod lostrlries. lint 17044. V delbiehads
tararlrstissess Wont - 14 the Eleirmit firrUllbg , dlataidel
Jaen{ tIBER-.That It. , Is the little Ills Atin4o,.. ,
great ones; and' It Is little atlmentalhatl. net
lead to greys sod serious diseases, ' ' • ' 1 :
lIBBIRmBER.--Thet you have it - your-0:: weo,
promptly and pleasantly to remote sash comp { ' '
the besionlog, and en prevent grave dleiases.' • ,
Ifumphreyai system of Ro
pathio Speellies direets the private praotloe of
tem of all perplexity and %trier : ay, So that evetlitely.
Mew them with' adVantsipti -
lIRDSRAIRER—That'the dere of a tingle ehronie oil-
Went, each as Piles,'Ostarrli; Headache, or Salt Rhoden,
will more than ten timelpsy for the coat or a full ease.
REMBUDER—That two or five 'dollars Invested in
a ease of lipeeltio Remedies will return many times Ite
valno to you every year, he freedom from anxiety, pre
vention of disease, and absolute relief.
OASES AND CURES.
DYSPEPSIA.
A young lady of twenty/Ix had been troubled with
indigestion for Bernal months, so as to render great
care necessary in the Retraction of her food. After eat.
log the stomach became acid, food rising in her month
up water, and an unpleasant, heavy, lead like reuse.
flan In her stomaph, continuing some home ; frequent
headache; bowel* conettpatyd, and Oa, drncased mental
condition. She Commencediaking the Dyspepsia Pine,
One morning and night, and in lees than • week every
symptom of her disease had vanished, and she felt like
a new being.
A gentleman eomewhat advanced 111 years. etrong,
rebut ounititution had lately been a good deal affect, d
with Indigestion. weak atomaeb, coated tongue, bad
facto lit the month, and a,ttended with a peculiar ver
tigo and whirling in the hohd:•o mneh to as to render
his riding In a carriage, or even mounting an eminence,
quite daegerone. After trying (mem( things ineffectu•
ally, be fell upon the Dyspepsia pike, which afforded
prompt relief. A pill every night and morning werkel
like *charm, relieving all his vertigo and other un
pleasant symptom ,
COUGH AND BRONCHITIS,
Bed adds neglected or frequently repeated often lay
the foundation of i..onsumption, Bronobit's and prema
ture decline Though there are many remedies adver-
tised as prompt and speedy cures, yet none so safely
and yet media , and surely effect a oars as this. Men
pill, taken at night, has entirely relieved the
splint of a tiering and threOening sold by the morning.
Moons Lieu onDa.—A gentleman, a public reatneer,
took a severe cold the latter part of last month. while
travelling and lecturing in northern Pennsylvania,
though addressing public' andienees ever► evening, yet
in two days, by the aid of the Specific, he was entirely
recovered, and enabled to purane hie calling without
inconvenience. No public speaker should be without
them.
Bab CoLn.—A married ledy of 40 bad taken a violent
cold. which settled on her lunge. canning severe cough,
pain in the side, and considerable fever and hosraenesa.
Such colds were usually very lasting and troublesome,
bet by taking the SpecKG Cough Pills four Uinta per
day, In three days she vas entirely well.
A. young man of 20 had enough and hoarseness for I.
teen months. Dming cob weather Ws yoloe was lost so
as only to speak in whispers, Iran induced on coughing,
cough dry, or raising only a trite in the morning,
finite feeble and emaciated. Hod taken several medi.
0111011, with but little or no benelit. He oommeneed with
the Cough Pills—one pill three times a day—and noon
found himself improviug, his cough milder and softer,
hoarseness passed off, strength and appetite improved,
and in a few weeks was entirely well, having taken no
other medicines.
A clergyman of the Baptist Church, well known In
llCools, writing to tie, nays: I have been for come
time serionely afflicted ,with bleeding piles, and have
regarded mynas° as a severe one ; at one time, indeed,
4opelera ; but I have used your medicine (Pile Spe
eded *edam cared. I have no doubt you are laying
the world tinder great and luting obligations.'l:
A gentleman of fifty yearn, Well and favorably known
at Delhi Delaware county, •Ilew Yoilt, bad been a
martyr to the plbs for twenty years. demetlinee, fiont
excessive hemorrhage, pain, and suffering. he was re
duced to the verge of the grave. For years he bad
dragged out a miserable spitence, a condrmed Invalid,
disqualified for any business, ant fire almost a bririlep.,
It la needless to add that be bad tried all aorta of rev
medics, from all aorta of &tame, to little purpose lle
consulted me two years ago, and I recommended our
Pile Specific, with occaalooally a Dyspepsia Pill. Prom
this he began to improve, and since has never bad a
serious turn of Melt. Prom the diet month, np to •
year past, he bad occsalonally symptoms of his old
complaint but a few donee of the Pile Pill, would die
parse it alt, and for more than a year past he hag been
entirely well of the piles. & more brilliant cure is
Pasroely to be found In the annals of medicine.
CATARRH. •
Thin elan of dkaease, so is well known, Is of very
frequent and almost universal 'prev:Oenps, and the
ehronie forum are especially Obetioafe. Ordinary be.
mediae are of very little se•Tice in erecting a cure,
nor Is the boasted Inhalation any better.
This simple remedy, on takmg a Hagar Pill morning
and night, promptly mires the slighter Twee, and Its
persevering we has not rolled to relieve the worst forms
of ebrenie Catarrh, even when no far advanced as to
have lost; In a groat degree, - the nere 4 of smolt.
ti,erawatt.—a: c errgythap, aged er had long collared
with catarrh, whist} had not only born a Bonne of an
noyance, but began to excite uneloiness in regard tolls
tams upon his general health. There was a fiequent
and sometimes profuse discharge from his head, frequent
snoesing, and en el moat entire loss of smell. Ile pro
eared a boy of our flpepifie Oatorrh Pills, sod was en
tirely mired, even to oh re.urn of bln senile of smPur to
the course or a few weeks.
Price of tangle WM. 50 unto.
PRIOES
Pull sot, 20 large vials in morocco ease and book. .05 00
101 l set, 20 large 'stale plain case and book 4 00
Ones of 35 numbered boxes, and book 2 OD
Oases of any 6 numbered boxes nod book 1 00
Slagle numbrred bores, with direction 25
Single lettered boxes, with directions 50
Large plantation, or phyalelanle ease, 1 and 2 oz.
vials 15 00
OUR REMEDIES BY MAID
Look over the liet, make up a case of what kind you
choose, and enclose the amount in a current note or
stamps by loan tp our Wraps at No 60? lim.s.dwaYi
New 'Kirk, and the meditinee will he duly returned by
mall or express, free of charge.
No family should be without those Invaluable cora,
byes. They are the only remedies perfeetly adapted
for domeatio" and private ose. With them the parent is
armed and prepared against the Brat approach of die,
ease, and can meet it at the threshold and keep it at
hay. A trine of medicine, rightly directed in the first
hoard of disease, perfectly mires that which, by delay,
can only be relieved by long and tedlotie hours of auffer-
Ing, if at alt. With these at hand, yen are nOtobitiod
to await the cooling of that often distant, es well BO
atipentivelUZUry, a dnotor ; nor to be drugged or poi.
aimed, or bbatered. or bled, bat may yourself adrairds.
ter the simple specific), and restore the ruddy ourrent of
life again to health and joy. There cannot only no in—
jury arise to any ease from their tee, bqt the Mor a
influence upon the conatitution, beyond all question, is
most beneficial.
AGENTS WANTED.
We desire an active, efficient agent for the sale of
our remedies in every town 'r community in the Uni-
ted Btatee. Addren, 1. d:00.
No. 602 Broadway, New York.
Bold by "L' B. PRTlllll3Oki fr. Dal Th., ea OIIRSTNICIT
knot, Ykiao4olphlit. foiA•Bm
tkt
Vrtss
FRIDAY, M 6, 1869.
Tin.' Stuart, the Actor.
Some years ago; as very many people on
tbls Western continent can testify—for the
matt With well known In and out of his profes
sion—there flourished, in the town of Liver
pool, Some three, thousand miles across the
water, a play-actor named Thomas Stuart. A
man of education and intellect, it was in
tended' to have-made a lawyer of him, but
falling into the idle habit of many attorneys'
clerks, who pen' a stanza when they should
engross, he took to writing plays, and, from
writing, went,to, the length of noting 'them
This waxin , London, whore there is no lack of
public ,or private, theatres, and in fulness of
time, (which meant a couple of years in his
caso,)this legal ,young gentleman, after figu
ring en amateur, in various characters at-seve
ral private establishments for the propagation
Aflistrionleartototnally was engaged is one
of tite strick . .34,4n*44, l itkregnlar Ma
4.iiitgemenCo: t 'heavy fathers et, the*
drama- , wha trotad play the Romeos.and the
Toting Womb, because he had been playing
Own for the last forty years. As a prelimina
.ry to thus assuming the buskin—for he rarely
'attempted comedy, and then only in the .To
-seph Sitrface line'—this dramatic asPirant
held tr, council of war in his own mind, and'
the nuanimerts
,opinion was, that it was' in
dispensable ihr him to' change his ournaine.
F.or, be it known _to all men, his real patroni
vale was Strrftt, which would unfortunately re_
mind' the ,pnblie of Mr. Manager Strutt,
mortalized to comic song, and of Shakapeare's
familiar Hires' 'Zeit the poor player who struts
his hour upilfr 4 o6 stage, and then is heard no
More. - easy metatnerp,host3, Thomas
Sirtitt;twis drainitleally altered into Thomas
Stuart, by which name our hero is known to
this very- dap-for ho continues upon the
stage, and has been attached to the Haymar
ket Theatre, in London, for.a score of years.
We may add that Mr. Stuart has brought up a
large, fatnilyp ft highly respeetable manner,
that lie:gtwe twit arid all of them an excellent
gdneatifith I.tid 'that his eldest daughter dis
playojd.selpe.t&lept foy the stage. Wp saw her
iday--.D,eStrerniva to the Othello of Mr. Gustaf
yrs , -Hrookes, When he made his great hit' in
London, some twelve years ago, and she per
formed Very well. Hat, as she then was as
tiEin an a whipping-poet, being still in her
teens, her figure was decidedly egatnst her
success,
There is scarcely an instance, in the whole
history of' the modern drama, of any distin:
gitished p4former, male or female, having
obtained metropolitan celebrity without pro.
viously roughing it, more or less severely, in
country theatres. Playgoers in this country,
who havar %PIA at the bad acting of a Mimi
Mary Agues; or a Miss Fanny Witt;
have Welted to become ic stars," without
provions,'pectice in the country, whore they
might lettrxt‘ how to act, may scarcely under
stared Ant they well remember 'heir
Edwin and' Ottieniniri, and
others whciinOW hold undeniable rank, as first
rate perfeitnere, have Ivorited hard in ti l olf
youth, “*
,I 4 ave laboriously devoted them
eaves to,:aoAntre a , ltaowlrdso of aptltig; It
lii:the 681,0:14RO other:things—no' man be
comes a great general; alreat painter, a great
preecher, - **reet musician, a great lawyer; a
1 -. " - P 4 4- I .tY :Jo; IZ,teat singer, a great writer,
Iti b Len' ,
en. J e-4 rolletti reale!) and
erfcn tO-;iO 4 ,i t ialsepetion In any
146/044f David Oar-'
Pat , riy4emble.!Bat
before Gar
pearell-on,a4fendon stage, he wort al
1 - for a whalb* :tidttioii'ats the little theatre
-of 'lpswich, and Panty:,femble, though she
mosOssed - tae intalitrooe of genius, in a re
arkable manner, had been familiar with
theatricals from her childhood, and had lite
rally been brought Op at the feet of her aunt,
Mrs; Siddons, the" greatest performer of her
age, who; lived,' to witness the triumphant
VOW Miti,"-poiltinning success of her gifted
young
Mr. SCtrwilieugh • a jndicions never be
came an 'eminent performer. Ho bad a habit
of emphatically gasping out his words, when
energy was required, which made him seem,
on such occasions, as if hie breath caught in
his throat. He was always " letter•perfect"
in his part, steady in his habits, well costumed,
and possessed full knowledge of the manner
in which every character of a play should be
acted. In a word, he was a very good teen in
a company—not as leader, but e,ll .qconci.
He gradually worked his way up in the pro.
fesslon, until he finally reached that seventh
heaven of evenr.actor's expectation, a trial.
engagement in one of the London Theatres.
Ho did not absolutely not succeed, but he did
not set the Thames on fire. He played second
to Kean, Young, Ward°, Macready, and some
others, in a most respectable manner, and our
own private opinion is that his lago : (to For
rest's Othello, in 1886,) was as" complete an
impersonation of that difficult character as we
have ever seen.
Mr. Stuart's opinion of himself was Very
favorable. Two anecdotes are related anti
which testify this. On one occasion, after
what Burns calls "the ama' hours" bad set
in, Stuart, who lived on the Surrey aide of the
Thames, (as many theatrical people did, and
do, because it is more economical,) made a
detour, which brought him in front of Drury-
Lane Theatre. Casting his Spanish cloak
over his shoulder, in the manner of stage
villains, from immemorial time, be stood for
some minutes steadily gazing at the colonade
entrance. By this time his friends had come
within hearing, and listened to his solemn ad
juration, as ho stretched his •hand out to the
subject of his contemplation : " Theatre !
recognise your future master I"
Another time, when Macready, whb was
announced to play Hamlet, became so sud
denly ill that it • was too late to change the
play, Stuart was requested to ago on" for
that character. Now it happened that Hamlet
bad been repeatedly played by Mr. Stuart in
the Country, and was a character which might
almost be considered one of his specialties.
He rejoiced, of course, in the chance of
eclipsing Macready, whose angular and me
chanical acting he disliked as much as we
did. Ho was walking behind the scenes, at
the.very back of the house, with the play of
((Hamlet" ,in his hand, refreshing his me
mory. As hp paced up and down, reading
his part,—pmetirpes in an undertone, and
sometimes in a louder voice—ho was heard oc
casionally to soliloquize, curiously blending
the words of Shakspeare with his own. The
double diatogne la said to have run on some
what in this manner :
To be or not to to
At last I have a chance. Now shall I show
'em such a Hamlet as Shakspoare imagined
when hp drew thp pbilosophfc Dane.
4( That is"—to be sure it is—" the ques
tion." No question that Bill Macready, with
his skeleton figure, and sunk oyes, and proms•
nent chin, and apology for a nose, and straight
lips, and bowed legs, and husky voice, can play
Hamlet ne more than he can play Imogon.
Yes,
cg That is the question :
tt Whether 'tis nohlet in the mind to Kilroy
fc The slings and arrows of outrageous for-
Charley Kean, "the young puppy, always
calls it /nor -chimp, and thinks be is as fine a
player as his father because ho hisses his
words out ;
Ig Or to take arms agalust a sea of trouble,
And by opposing end them."
Aye, they shall be ended Prom this night
will date the regeneration of the drama I s For
long have I been kept under.-,-I, a fettered
lion, beating against the bars which prison
me I But I will break down tho barriers, 'I
must,
"And, b . y opposing, end tboin."
That's the punctuation. They shall be
ended, and henceforth Thomas Stuart will
reign supreme ,In the mighty realm }Bich
Shakepeare has consecrated for great minds
in this earthly•sphero
Unfortunately, Stuart did not make a de
cided impression In flamiet, on that evening,
and, therefore, he still remains s; a.fettered
lion beating against the. bare which prison
him."
When Mr. Vanderibeff seceded, about 1834,
from the Liverpool Theatre, In which he long
had held first position, he was succeeded by
Mr. Waldron, a far inferior actor. After hire,
in the next season, came Mr. Stuart, who
madfi "troops of friends" by hie prefeisional
ability and social character. He continued
some years in this position, until be went to
the Haymarket Theatre, in London, as second,
leading man.
Like many, other, educated actors, Mr:
I Stuart was, under strong religions-influences'.
Without making any of that Pharisaical dis
play which is truly disgusting, be ,really was
an earnest, honest, God-seeking, and,•. as
far as in him lay, God-serving Christian.
His acquaintance with the Holy Bible Was
very intimate, and 'there was a - et daily beau
ty" in the life•of 'this
-bard-worked, struggling
achar„lvilleitit4ny thundering preaChers might
have • advantageously imitated. 'He' 'was , a
member of the Church. of England; and,a very
constant and acceptable teacher in the Sunday
School. Ilehad a pew in St. Anne's Church,
Liverpool, whiire he constantly attended DI.
yine , Worship, .with his family., About this
pew we have to relate a well-known *pent. ,
Once upon a timo,,Mr. Benwell, a member
of the sto.ik-munpany at Liverpool Theatre,
was dangerously ill, and Mr. Stuart, , com
pany with another actor, started to pay him a
visit, after the evening's perfOrmanas wore•
ended, being the only time, which—between
studying, rehearsing, and playing—these hum
ble Samaritans could spare. Eenwell liye4
great way oil', all the way ,oUt itt Toxteth
Sark—Which is much the same as if one of
the Walnut-street or Arch-street company
were to mild() in Qnr Twenty-fourth Ward.' It'
was one o'clock in the morning, when Stuart
and his friend reached the sick than, arid It
was two hours-later when they, quitted him.
Footsore and weary, the two actors walked ) I
along and first reached the resilience of Stu
art'sirlend. Alas I the poor man hn4 no latch
key, and was locked ont;at nearly four o'clock
in the morning. All thQ.ringing and rapping
in the world seemed incapable of awakening
the alumberers in that lodging-house. So Mr.
punningham (that was his name), abandoned
the attempt, asSopeless, and sadly walked on
with Sturat, who liyed farther on, and 'was Tin
able, from want of rem, to O'er, his friend,
even the makeshift of " a shakedown" in
She parlor, two of his own sons occupying the
sofa there. _
As the two friends walked on, they reached
St." Anne's street, and a bright thought came
into Stuart's head : we should have previously
remarked that Stuart, who "had obtained a
lay large pow eta very small rent, was not a
irttle protid:of it; and, having also a very 'high
opinion of the clergyman who regularly
preached there, was fn the habit of asking his
friendu to sit in his pew, and hear his preacher.
In fact, his friends, knowing his little weak
ness on this pOlnt, would ammotlckett draw him
out, very atintsingly and (on his part) very,
unconsciously, on this pow-seyito point.
Traveraing St. Anne's street and arriving at
St, Anne's Church, exactly opposite to which
resided the sexton, whoso wife was , pew
owner, a bright thought felicitously came into
Stuart's mind. ce My dear fellow," said he,
giving Cunningham , a friendly slap on tllo,
back, "it is all right. lierels St. 4nneka
phurah, and there - fs 'the •sextor and pear.'
opener's door. I shall run across and 7ako
him UP,' that the lshnrcli may be opened; ind•
then you can comfortably sleep anti( bioak
fast-tline— try pow V 1
The story got 'abroad, • and during• the re
mainder of his residence in Liverpool, Mr.
Stuart was constantly made merry with, in,
relation to cc my pew." Ade bore it very
well, hat the incident is still freshly remem
bered, after a lapse of over twenty years.
The Mississippi Flood—lts Effects at
New Orleans.
(From the New Orleans Crescent of April 29th 3
The Mississippi being now higher in front of
this city than ever-before known, and being evi
dently hungry for a frolic through our streets, the
condition and behavior of the said famous "In
land sea" is naturally the chief tepid of town,
talk The river having spilled Over the levee ha
different parts of the etty, and aronsed a general
state of
,apprehenaion, we yesterday took a ride
along the salty front and notes of the general ap
pearance of things Our route of observation be
gan at the Stook landing, in Jefferson oily, and
ended below the barracks, in the Third district.
At the Stock landing, or opposite Louisiana ave
nue, 4 heavy encromahment of the river had been
stopped by a barricade of planks, with dirt walled
in behind. The overflow at this point amounted
to a small crevasse, until stopped in the manner
aforesaid. The water was still oozing through the
earth, and keeping the neighborhood miry From
that point all along down the water was oozing up
through the earth; at some places trickling in
little streamlete across the levee, and at Others
soakine through new embankments of dirt. Op
posite Washington avenue was another place over
which the river had sent a heavy stream, but
which was fortified by a barricade of plank@ and
, dirt. Opposite Laraparu street (where a land
slide last year eporoaghed to the middle of the
street) another bayou had boon nipped in the bud,
and the river bluffed off with planks and dirt.
Prom Josephine to St. Mary street, a continuous
embankment of dirt—a narrow and low and soft
embankment—ems all that kept the river back.
From that down to the steamship landing in the
First.distriet, the new dirt-works appeared at the
heeding of nearly every dock or basin, From
Nana street to Celeste the dirt-banks looked very
preoarioua, heipg made of ballast stones, gravel,
and Sand, and allowing the waters to trickle
through freely. The street was miry the whole
way, from the water reaching it either thmogh
the solid part of the levee or the new dirt bard
eades. In several places we noticed that piles of
ballast, coal and staves, on the edge of the levee,
formed links in the chain of dirt-work, hut very '
ineffective links, as the water bubbled through
them easily and freely.
At Market street was another bad place, the
sloppy neighborhood and the new dirt-works show
ing that the river had been crawling over freely.
At Robin street the levee , woe also very bad, and
the neighborhood sloppy. At this point the water
barricades were made mostly of manure. Down to
Magna° street, things looked very bad ; the dirt
ridges being composed of all sorts of stuff—mud,
manure, ballast, sand, and 61.10 k-dust—anything
that came heady. in the hurry of making them.
opposite the Orleans Cotton Press, the inner
ends of the wharves' were entirely under water.
The wharf heads were all high enough above
water, but wadingwas necessary to reach them.
The inner end of every dock had its dirt-ridges to
keep the water from crossing the levee. At dif- ,
ferent points we found laborers at work carting
dirt_ to the low spots and batting it into little
ridges with their spades.
The steamboat landing, from Jolla street down
to Toulouse, appeared to be in a fair condition.
The water was on the platform in some sunken
spent, and triokied up through the levee, here and
there, in almost imperceptible streams, The
steamboat landings appeared to be the driest and
best parts of the whole city front. At the.ferry
landing, font of St. Ann, the water wag running
over in a mall stream without impediment. Ba
lmy that, for some distance, were now dirt works,
showing where the river had lashed over too freely.
The next point where we found the water get
ting over was at the Third district ferry landing,
foot of 'Elysian Fields greet. Them woo no em
bankment, be the streem was a very Orly one.
The last point at which the river asserted itself
higher than the lefee, was at the foot of Mande
ville street, where a little stream was naming
across. Prom that point down to and beyond the
harraoke, there was but ono point whore a new
ridge had to bp raised to keep the water bank,
This VMS directly opposite the convent. The hay
cicada was a stout one ' with a facing of plank.
Le, though the levee for the whole distance from
Mandeville 'street down had brow enough for a
foot or two more of water, and looked remarkably
firm and solid, the water oozed up through the
street all along, leaving a dry spot hero and there,
bat as n general thing converting the street into
a slough of . mud. This shows that the under
part of the levee is very spongy, and will doubt
less subject it to serious etic,' on the subsidence
of the thaod.
All alobg the lower part of the Third district the I
levee, though high, is narrow and steep, with the
street at its base. The banquettes down there,
though only fifty or sixty feet from the water, are
about fire feet below the water's 'surface . . A break I
down there would be truly disastrous; but there
appears to be no danger of such a thing. - From
the fdovernment wharves down, the levee has a
stout feeing or comb of plank work; most of it
placed there last year, and the rest this year
From the barracks down below, as far as we went,
'
the road was muddy, the river being so nearly
over the brow of the levee that the waves of a
steamboat would wash the water over
-
The result of our whole observation was, that
the Fourth was the distriot which was most se
riouy menaced by overflow ; the upper part of
the First district almost as bad ; the Second dis
trict less menaced than either of the first named ;
and the Third district menaced loast of all.
Tho surveyor's gangs of laborers are hard at
work, raising dirt ridges wherever the tieing waters
soonest call for them. A rise of one foot more in
the river would overrun not only three-fourths of
the whole city front, but the dirt-ridges now made
and being made.
We understand that on Wednesday the levee
TWO CENTS.
broke` at the' liiaro plautation, ta on,toi OW o ci
ty,
and , for a time--threatened an extensive crevasse;
but that the sonfghboringnegroes were put to work
et it, and were working with strong, probabilitlei
of 0110008,9. Another crimasse 'on-, , ther other side
of the river, twelve mimed !below idlgierS,..is re
po us, bet ,we havea• no". parCoulat's eon
owning 4t, '• •,• _ .
The threatened crevasse, at Heillidai's,' , above
Carrollton, le not so •threalening now as it.was.
Gentlemen. Who were up there yesterday, inform
us that the levee had Veen to ail apnearanoti tondo
strong enough to hold its, ground, and'that the
alerrouurmind there had considerably subsided:
.Teatety,thousand feet of ,lumber was Shipped up
theta yesterdayoon • a steamer, by Mayor Stith;
and that'will find the 'Work Of seaming the levee,
so far' as bums id can avail. -It is distinotly
stated up there; tat but for. the limber left from
the 'work at Sanves, there would have been a cre
vasse as disastrous to the city as the Sanyo ere
vaeee. was in 1849. -
,
GENERAL ,NEWS.
Andirres Foram —=On the 28th of March, a
fierce shower of afrolito ocourred -in Harrison
county, Ind. - One poor wight, when
_the stones
(1;1)2n , whistling through the airi in great terror
.fell flat with his faaa upon the grosind,- doubtless
expecting his final end approaching. Two other
gentlemen were mit in the woods, and Were startled
at the attend of the stories falling through the trees.
Numerous other stories were rife in the.neighbor
hood ', There seemed to be suoh a•superstitious
,dreatl'ittaohed to thir ixiantienor(that no:attempt'
*se nritde until-recently to , recover the stones: It
is now said, however, that three have been found.
At tbe'house of Mr.-John Lamb several fell in the
yard: A little boy saw one of them fall, and deg
-it ont of the ground ere Its projectile had
burled it. It was three intihos in length, of an ob
long shape. Another, Tonnd elsewhere, weighed
one pound and thrahonnoesavoirdnpois, But as all
were buried deep in the ground 0r417 a few have
been oolleeted. • -
Exygronyn t —/t was &covered:in Detroit,
recently, that eight servant girls, belonging tome
of - the large hotels of that city, had beep for same
titre in the habit of stealing hams, legs of mut- ,
ton, glass and crockery ware, bed clothibg, table
- linen, provisions, and no end of mnall trumpery.
and conveying them from the house under cover of
their petticoatc, by means of large bags attached
to Atli. hoops. In a receiving shop they had no
cumulated a large quantity of abstracted pro
perly, and one of the girls confessed to an attempt
to oarrY out a half barrel of beer in the above
manner, but failed for want of a ascend half bar
rel to balance her patent extension" on the
other aide.
A,*rer f t., Pox PASTO.—Dr. J.J. Boa Well,
nf - Colunibus, Ga:, recently proceeded' to Oolnm
i.
Ala.: together with several nurses, for the
p3ser oft of attending to certain small patients.
At Port Gaines, he says, he sueeeeded in purcha
sing a batteau, which, with his two assistants, he
roved about sixty miles down the river Tho peo
ple whom he met on' his trip were much frighten
ed, lest the small pox would spread over the
country, and in 'some localities ged from - his own
appearance as from a- ieihl beast of prey. In
fact, the ridges nre takes up in some plates to
prevent the passage of persons through.the corm-
VV. ^
A - LAM'S O r IiAUT4N(ItO 1;0 A' PLOUGHING.
MATCII.—The IVOTOlfater :(6111a5.) Spy relates• the
following anecdote of a young lady in Sutton, of.
that State : 4, A few weeks elnoe a young lady in
Sutton ohallenged - a onieleal gentleman of that
town to a ploughing match in a geld - near by. The
gentleman wanted the, challenge, not thinking
he would be called upon to fulfil the conditions •
but on the 28th tat the young lady called him out,
and be was obliged to hold the 'plough for an hour
or two while the young ladY rode the born, to the
admiration of a large number who collected to
witness the sport." . „
ROBBERY AT WILMINGTON, DEL.— Qn Sunday
night last the counting.house of S. A. M. Pennock,
at Wilmington, was burglarionsly entered. The
robbers obtained 'Recess by means of a crowbar.
and , the same implement was need to force open_
the tlre proof safe, from which their took about
$1;200 in money. The sate was thought to be so
unusually strong one, costing about sBoo' but the
Mime. by Immo!: the crowbar, literally beat to
pieces the outer door over the bolts. Two of the
belts wore bent and draWithUt
•
THE LANgEsi , VorrlN Evai MADE IN KEN-
Ttregy —The undertaking house, corner of. Jeffer
son and Seventh streets, was the, observed of all
obServers It contained the coffin of James D.
Porter', Eq., the Rentneky giant. The coffin Ares
nine feet one inch' in length, and three feet norm
the breast. It was covered with black &loth and
lined with white satin. It is ttmlargest coffin ever
made in this oltlcand attrliisted' more attention
than anything of. the kind tNitt ever etudosed the
lifeless remains of one of our
(4.) Courier. - .
.
7itAY.—Ori 'BUnotty last a
young woman, nomad Pgrooli, residing near Mar
liyksborg,.Vo„,. taft-kit. , xo.4 4, l*s„mersepaireti, to
the bowie of a Mr. George Pirie ,, for the purpose
of ranting away and. getting •marrieei. • She law ,
pn,rsned by.her nnole, Mr. !durance' Purcell, and
her two brothers, wt„aa as affray enaned r in which
Mr. Pine was knooked down with a (dub, and
Mr. Mordecai Purcell wounded by a allot from
vne'e revolver. •
THIRTY-MOOT friel4e of M. Alex. Dumas
gave him a dinner, - at six dollars apiece, in Veuil
lemot's restaurant, the other day. Among the
dishes served up were a soup sex Mobidans, par.
tri&e.s, a la 31,5111 . 1 M, eels a la Christine,pullets
a la Monte Ohristo, orate a la Dumas. salads a la
d'Artsgnan, vase d'Aramia, bombe a la Dame de
Monaoreac. The company were so , mud' pleased
with the Veuillemot's cooking that they carried
him round the room on their shoulders In triumph.
Haan TIDIES zY lorvA letter from
Chickasaw, lowa, states that there is not enough,
broadstutls la the country to sustain the people
until harvest. Flour is SI per hundred ; earn
meal $1 75 ; corn $1 per bushel; oats CO Bents;
potatoes $4 ; pork 10 cents a pound, and no wheat
to be had.
A Mr. ()Tom, of Crane creek, El., loft a sick
wife and six children, and ran away with his ser
vant girl. The boys of Bath, where the eloping
couple were waiting fort Lost, rode him on a rail,
took his money and gave it to the girl to go home
with, and sent him Mt in another direction.
Oa' Tuesday evening the citizens of Staten
Island, N. Y., bad a grand illumination and re
view in boner of the recent action of the Legisla
ture, which will cause a speedy removal of the
Quarantine from Richmond county.
JUDGE Sunaxack, of Kentucky,-was lodged
in jail at Newport, on Friday, on a charge of
felony. in aiding a prisoner to CZ3:l3p.
A NORWEGLIai ehoetualter, living in Minne
sota, hoc obtained $l7-,000 for a piece of land near
Chicago, which he bought eleven years ago, for
the sum of $2O.
A PAIILLY, consisting of a man and his wife,
named Aiken, were recently found lost in a swamp
in St. Francis county, Ark., having been three
weeks with no food, sere persimmons and acorns.
Seduction aid Death,
tYrom the Troy Times, May 4
The quiet village of North Adams, Mass., was
thrown into a state of unusual excitement on Sun
day and Monday last, by develepements of the
most painful charaoter, and involving parties who
moved in the meet respectable circles there.
It seems that some year and a half ago a Mr.
Littlefield, on the recommendation of •the Bank
Commissioners of Massachusetts, was assigned the
clerkship of the North AdaMs Bank, and with his
family took up his residence in that village. His
,position, respectable relatives, and attendance to
church duties, won for him at ones the confidence
of the community. He'early became conspicuous
as a member of the choir in one of thi amebas
Among the female members of the choir was the
daughter of a very respectable North Adams mer
chant. She was between sixteen and reventesn
years of age, and said to have been beautiful
as she was youthful. An Intimacy between Little.
field and the young lady followed a short acquaint
ance, but it was never suspected to exceed the
bounds of propriety. Late last week she was
taken violently ill, and on Saturday died. Before
her death she revealed the fast that she had been
seduced by Littlefield, and that very recently she
made known to bias the ciroumstanee that It would
be impossible for her long to bide the evidence of,
her guilt. On this, Reseeding to her statement,
Lititefteld proposed that she should take medicine
that he would procure for her, which be said
would end all her troubles with out barns ; to her
self or making bee condition known to others. To
this she gladly assented, and soon afterwards took
medicine which be procured. The result was b@r
d angewm o illness, subsequent revelation to her
parents, and death late on Saturday night.
Oa Sunday a meeting Uf the directors of the
wllnk wee held at North Adamtkl, at which Little
field ryas present. He was in groat distress of
mind, and at times nearly frantic. lie assured
the directors that his difficulty in this matter was
the sole one resting on his mind ; that bis account
with the beak would be found perfectly correct,
and be tendered them the keys, and gave thorn
full information in regard to all bank affairs Up
to this time the public had little knowledge of
what had transpired, all having been kept secret.
It is supposed Littlefield loft North Adams on
Sunday night.
Oa Monday the whole story was current in the
village, and the parties being veiledly well
known, It created great exeitement. if Little
field had been found by the villagers on that day
bewouldave beenlynotted. On the part of the pa
rents and intimate friends of the young lady there
is no disposition to pursue the author of their grief
and desolation. While his victim has been laid
in the grave, they would consign the reducer to
no worse punishment thgn thoeommunion of his
own thoughts.
SIM& this above was written, we have been in.
formed that Littlefield acknowledged to the bank
direetero to havink reduced the young lady, but
positively denied' that he procured for her medi.
eine, or advised bar to have resource to inch a
rented
TIM MISSING MAN RBTURNB.D.—On Wed
neaclay morning a bat was found in tte vessel .7,s ph
Bed, lying at Spruce street wharf, which wan !dentin, d
as the one which had been wens by Christopher Robin
son, a boatman. Search was made for the owner, but
In vain, and ai blood 'Was found on the railing, and
hand-marks on the aide of the venal it was the gene
ral opinion that he had been fenny dealt with. Com
plaint wan made at the Central Station, sod during the
deg a mao wat tiken into onstiwtr
on suspicion a bay
ing been the perpetrator of the deed. Yesterday morn
ing. Iv-waver, Obr'stopher made bin appearance at the
statism, aid stated thet be wee still in the land of the
living, but rather severely bruhod. According to his
statement it appears that he was smutted on Tuesday
night, by Some wrens or pen oos nntnown, on board
the Joseph Bell, and that attar bin assailants lan, be
Crawled to the lompital where he remained until yester
day morning. Ile appears to have been handled rather
roughly.
KAA.WArrIIIO AN OWNER.—Yesterday morning
two men, named John L. Cranston iuri.Tho mu Brad I y,
ware arrested at White Hall, near the Arsenal, baring
in their possession a set a harness, supposed to Ds
stolen Tao harness was taken to the Central station
house. Alderman gillot committed the two men' to
'muter the Male at Colwt,
moms To comuiliPortusins.
, .
" Oe rreepondeatt - tar_Xies;l4eeett,..erliLpplieee bear
le Mkt/ the follerving • •
_ •
syeiy mospzugoidloi.ifirlit be bea0m.1404.-bithe
cum?! of the wit: ter: In order it:, fliFre 00yrAirte,eto
the typogriphy, oils elde'df tjui abiai
abonid.bs
written !pop..
Wattle'" bo,ly obliged to oxlttamin In Pa mir.
vanis i otlest iftstm; rot iontrifigL . mous twins tbs
marmot nein eg-tbit dstiu their puttemlit
of tlio4firouidlogiiintittly;tki. tivireas
of popolation j . of any fpfbrisMPyil that will Wantons t.
lag
to_tke timers' •=-•
TER CITY,
AMPIESKINTB TIM*
, PIIICIISYLVATIL AOMMILIVOO mrs *ma .Ansa.—.ll.l..
•Whitton of PMittingestad Statuary.
0160Esstior ayartayr- I rMentairy, ;MALI, and Venus,
. _
' Now sgsm CorIC
iruisriail Mnmdmit.:-;" amulet ".- 47 The
Lartybiri,Tyenio
P+ltlllrta7 e: ClazinVO ARCHAITI/111? z7 l / 1 141716 . :.
" Merchant or Yank. sl--lr Landon AsSusavat The,
Bolicolfor So.ndal!'—" EMS .11#111„"--l'Arlie
Wife VethlleßeM
AOADILMY of Mirsza.—"Martha."'
BAN VORD'il Ormstafotrst.—Htudlera Minstrels.
MoDeuovan'n -- Mmensti,.--43elastions from Pis" -
Clams from 0. - psas,, Pantomimes, Donning, and Singing
.
"• ' , itit , cifttiiefig: _ -
, . .
Bothbranotiee of CODO - Oile Id'iheir efajtf. meetings yesterday afterzio6 - n: -- ,- ''' -' - • -
- ansmar oonsenr.. • f
• This body met at three, &Mock IP. M., Mr. Wharton
in the chair.
,Thelollowing cononiniestiOns andidatrUeire were re
ceived sad appropriatoly retorted
-- One -from the City Solicitor, relatlie to the Wing of
rails by the GermantownTscsempsr•Railway Comps-ay.
One from the Tea Receiver asking confirmation of
the nomittalione of William ,r. Hamm, in theplace of
Malrory,'deciatlest . ; and .Itiocliaßride, in place of
Mr: Harm, promoted, for clerks - 1n t,hat' department,
,which was agreed to - - -
The usual number of petitioras, faktug for the laying
of water.pipes and erection' of gan-lamp posts laxliffer
. eat parts of the city, ward received. - -
Mr. Rline reported an ordinanite authorizing the Re
ceiver of Tease to collect registered taxes:rand repeal
ing the ordinanne_which anthorirldMin Citv-Seliciter
to appoint s'elerk for that p pare, AdOpied .
-Mt. COrnman, , from the , COlunitfeer, .- , neiffiitor; re ,
Ported's resolution soiliotitibillie Obßif tegineer iO
- pipe in emend etreett in thaffifinenth ward.
Agreed
Mr. Crtylei, 'ferns, :the Conimitten 'on City Property,
offered a reap - lotion that' - the DigliwarDepartment be
requested to squirt to Cannella the - reason why certain
cqutraatora for eleanaing the streetado not perform the
workaacording to agreement. Adopted,.; - 1 • 'W.
Mr, Onyler also offered a ea/elution empowering the
West Philadelphia Pa/Menge? Railway - Company to ex
tend their nosd in the • , Twenty-fourth witeLqindar cer
tai
rne a n provis J
greed o. ione r in accordance with their chaster, which
On motion - of Mr. Bradford: the .liooinelikei on Ti
tillate wini dlinharmidfrdit'thelitker eonilderation of
an ordinance milting as appropriation foe extra ser
vices, mid primeeded to_thet moutidoration of
the tame.
Mr. Coyler moved to amend by Striking all , nit or the
ordinance, so as to read as tenons t 'To MAC Martin,
$250; U. G. lelsenring, $200; H 3", Pongorr; 5100;
(twice Moore , clerk of the - Water Department, S2CO
Slimes 'Aim:lawman 5100 ; T. Hall: MOO; S. R. Har
ding, $200; W. $ 2O O. The - secticn; Wier
being amended -by awarding $2OO to Dalai P. - Batter
for- services, as-messenger in Common ConinelicialBb7
- MtdlBs- was agree 2 10 .
, A mothm to suspend the rales,,,and promwd tolt third
'reading, 'wail lost by title vote, a Motion of this charac
ter requiring ai two-thirds vote.
, An ordinance, providing for the revision-of Mate on
A•oh street, between Pifteenth'and Twentieth streets,
wed passed
An ordinance. providing that the SonthwiWk Railway
Jompany shell construotproper cross-gutters on Wash.
Iguana avenue, raised a second reading "
Tbe regointirn authorizing the Oitinolleitor to enter
satisfaction on the bonde.of Mr. 'Lamb . 1/Ell".ealustared
in.
_
A hill rsoeived from - omM= °Medi; Malthigin ap
propriation to ray entail obilms,,was cosennedi
An ordinate was. offered, to pay_Menry_ .T.'peusgery
8100 for extro entices as messenger.
An amendotient - was ..offered that the amount 'asked
for be paid by the members of Select Oonacil.- Lost
On motion of- Mr. Onyler, the ordinance watt .further
amended by appropriating s2l to' H. - M. 'Martha, as..
Client clerk. - ,
Mr Neal Moved farther to amnia, that $2OO he ap.
propriat.d to Ciao. Memo, elark in the Water Depart
ment. Agreed to. _ •
Mr- Copier moved to emend, by adding that be
.9PrOPPinted to H. Ci. Leigennag, Chief clerk of deleot
Ofrinc4l.. Agreed to.
The bill passed by a vote of 12 to T.
A bill t rom Common Council, relative to the weighing ,
of coal, passed without diecuaalon. -
Oa motion Of Mr. Bradford:lke ordinance-gioriding
for the lighting of 110-city:fres talent% and.paseed
Really as it tame from the other thanker _-• -
The bill in reference to the 'min of the - klebrisa to t
ma received fr cm OMMOn Omani with an amendment
10116 was concurred in.
Mr. Leidy read In' place a - bill anibiefoing the Com
'aliMlODerli of litarkele torrent the stalls of tbernarkat
h. nsea ma Market Week. fronr Proat to Eighth street,
from the first of April entil the drat of October next.
The revenue &rived from thli entree would be $1.879
in the 7th section $2 428 in the Bth: ruche oth,
$1,421 in the 10Ib, $1,494 in the 11th, and to the 12the
$1 7 432, making a total of $11.772 Jae promoted thin
• tilt under the impression that the new, market hewers
would not be ready for occupants until the-fret of 06-
tober. 'Laid liver.
The bill cleating a loara for the emotion of public
sehiol.honsea wit Ent ureddereil- P
eage the bill was lost by a vote of oto 0 - a two-thl'A
vote being required for the purpose of nesting k lien,
Thetell making an appropriation for the interdiction
of fire alarm telegraph beans in o certain engine bowies
wan taken up end considered siightty , whoa the farthei
coaelderatlon of the hill, on motiorrof Oormaine
A mot aka to discharge the committee oierianielafroto
the - alderation of a bill - .
amdiilerilion of . la, bill providing forbailling a
grammar label the Yiftecath s ward ems *penal
Mr. Mclntyre caned a sesobitten tanderligraiote et_
Mantra-ha 4 3.11.: Merton; fir' thei;ll - Saktaisogtjaafir.
th *Mak he ban disehargidithe datint - cit,the
, 081 d. of president _or this . _ Clhandbae i had tbitiin.r.-
wiggly= tr,Ahde 4.antekairiticiaifisiiihmiono l iot
thb Members for his furore manumit/ sad L .► pp'igneta,=
The reaointiormaa adopted omin:wadi% -
, Mr. , lftutrhp.reat'onded in a brier and appropriate
spunk ,
A resolution tendering a vote of !bathe to the re
tiring clerk. was alio paned ananimously, and the
Chamber adjonrned.
- - 00eXIX nonSOIL. - -
' A eemmunieetion was received front Mt Bolin tor,
etatiog that the Garmultonn BAllrovi C oineeeZ b it"
flied to his °MCI the bond required by these% of in
corporation, and had permission be that , et of the Le.
gleiet are to lay dome their wi thout the - cement a
commit.. - -
?dr Redly "Omitted s petition , from the. Vigilant
unse Company asking for a fire.alarm end telegraph
boX In their house. Referred to the Committee on
Troste nod Tire Companlei
Ur. backer celled no a resolation releasing the en
ormities of Wilgus, Lamb, ax Commisonee of
OR the payment 033 ; 060 Into the city treasury. Agreed
• ,
Mr Whiter enhinitted a report adverse to tensing the
Remington Gill to the Northern Liberties ass Com ,-
putt,. •
Mr. Dennis, of the Committee et Claims, enbmittel
a bill app ropriating
d 2 653 45 to 111,131 in fa Towne, for
printing amazement lists, and 5254 St for other par
poses
Mr. Bather moved to strike cut $66 St for Pollee
Magistrate Dallas , salary, as that magistrate has nos.
paid over to the treasurer his reedits— Agreed to, and
the bill pa sod.
Mr. Potters flared the report of a srelial committee
on the paid fire department, and asked that the Wm
mitten be discharged, which wag agreed to.
Mr. Junes cifsred a resolation providing for the re
pairs of Levering street, from Pinar at set to Ridge
avenue. It was agreed to
A retaliation auttorising the Committee on Wa'ar
Works to inquire into the orsaticability of erecting
public hydrants to the highways for the n e of pedes
trians was agreed to.
An ordinance to provide for the wrigh , ng of stone
ocat purchased for the nee cf the city was called op on
the third reading,
Mr. Blucher denounced the bill as a scheme to bene
fit one man at the expense of the city. sad Emend to in
definitely Pwtporte it; which motion was lost.
The qaeation recurring on the final wears, the yeas
and DAPS ware called, and the bill passed—yeas 46,
nays 17
A message was received from the Mayor vetoing a re
solution consolidating and admitting the Resolution
and United Rose f!empanies Into service The ques
tion rafting on the final passage of the bill, notwith
standing the veto, it Ited 'Olt—treat 26, nays ES -
Another message was received from the Mayor veto
ing an ordinance making an appropriation to the noel tie
Association The question arising on panting the ordi
nance_ , notw.thetane Mg the veto, itwas not agreed I . o—
ad, nays 27—two.toirds not voting. -
A resolution from the Be'eot Council authorizing- the
McCrea lot to be sold it public sale was called up •
Mr. Kelly offered an amendment appropriating 13,000
of the purchase money for the erection of two squares
of market-hoaxes on South - Eleventh 'street. With
drawn. -
The resolution, after some debate, sou agreed to.
Mr Meter called up the ordinance maid Irr ep appro
priation of $239,0 0 to the trustees of the gas works.
for tasking gee repairs and lighting the lamps for the
year 1859. Agreed to.
Mr. Moyer called up an =nuance appropriating
94,975 for the farther er tenni° r of the fire-alarm tele
graph.
Mr. Hiram Miller moved to refer the matter hack to
. . . .
the committee, with ins tracbons to report an °Aimee
erecting• Are-alarm boxes in all the the oompanies'
b cases.
The yeast and nays were called ecd the motdo . 7 trAa
not agreed to—Jess 38, nava 33
Some debate arose on the motion to rm. -Means,
Masoher, McDonough Kelly, Si-onion. supported and
Messrs Potter, Bullock, Cooley, and others opposed
& motion woe made to porpone indsflnitely, which
was not agreed to
The ordinance finally passed
Mr. Wainer offered • resolution antho rising the
paving of certain streets to the Sixteenth ward; whicti,
was agreed to.
Mr. ()Well celled tip en ordinance from the Select
Council, authorizing the extension of the West Phila•
delphis Papenger Railway Comps...ay
Mr Bullock offered an amendment. confining the
extenaion to the laying of a 'third rail; which was
agreed to.
Mr. Day called up en ordinance from the Select Coon
ell mating extra appropriations to the clerks and met.
seniors of both branches of Connell, and to certain
clerics in the departments. _
A motion wee made to postpone, which led to soma
debate, and was finally lost.
Ur. Wildey moved tom A. W. Green, a alert. in the
Highway Department, for extra services, 1202. Not
agreed to
Mr. Manlier moved to strike oat the appropriatirn io
George Moore, chief clerk in the Water Department;
wh oh was not agreed to.
Mr- Drennan mooed to appropriate $lOO to Maim
Butter and aligner, messestgen of the last Domicile.
Not tweet to.
Mr. Barker moved to Ries Mr. Lylis, janitor er the
court room, Efto Not agreed to.
A motion wag made to give Wilms. Miler and
clerks of lest Cannella, the Bum of vs°. Not
agreed to.
Sir Wibley oterred an amendment to pay the report
ers of the press $lOO, which wee withirawn.
The question belrg on the eareasion of the Wee,
Mr. R'etheilli opposed it strenuously. It was uniriet to
the city,
Mr. Botcher thought that as these gentlemen hod
egieed to' terve for a salary, they ought to be contented
with it, - and not cry for en advents. - The people
would osmium it, and he would vote against it.
On motion, the yeas and nays were called, and the
motion wee agreed ic...yeas 48 nays 18
Mr Brennen offered a reeo talon requeeting the Soli
citor of the city to forward to the Governor the facts of
the care attending the recent suit against the Chestnut
end Walnut streets Passeager Hallwey, and requesting
him to direct the Attorney General to Inane a writ cf
gee warrant°, to test the validity of the charter.
Agreed to.
Mr. Member offered a vote of thanks to Mr. Tree°,
the president of the Commits Oonnoil, and supported it
in a short and eloquent speech
Mr Hardy seeonded the resolution very eloquently.
Mr. McDonough spoke in high terms of Mr. Tragols
conduct
Mr ,Dente moire with much feeling of the patting.
He forgot the unpleasant feelings calmed by the pretext
parting ID the dellgatfulrecolleinmnp of tte last
Mr. Gordon, being one of the retiring members, cor
diallyendorsed all that Mennen said in regard to Mr.
Trego'sconduct a: an eMeer and a gentleman.
Elme:thee were made by a few other _gentlemen, and
the resolution was unanimously adopted. - Adpurned.
SUCCESSOR APPOIATE.D.—Mr. William_ P.
Ifsmat has been appointed chief clerk in the Receiver
of Tales department, in place at Robert McCrory, de
ceased. The Receiver adopted a novel plan In filling
the vacancy. The privilege of naming a eneeessor to
Mr. McCrory was given to the clerks In the Milts, with
the rlderstand.ng that he was to be taken from
among their ten number. The neanimone cholas fell
upon Di^. Winter° P. Hamm, who wet aneoldiagli , ap.
pointed, •