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

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V.VN. T 91, 1 ." MATTING
tioiavio Aii*Ltil LOT OP
.181E13CO Nt."l" XIX>
A'NTO N "° MATTrNG-S.
Col t riAirime OP
14 6.4 and 6:4 = ii , ERTRA PARLOR."
:44 4.4 :nit 6-4 :BER9REps.
4;4 5.4,and 6:4 WRITE "MANNING."
.: 4.4 cuts* AND ANtiont do.
P:RI-CE • S- REDUCED.'
•BA.ILY & BROTHER.
. • • • • ••- ,• ,
• No. 920 CHESTNUT STREET.
ARPETING-S,
- :011,,OLOTAS AND
WOLFE„ - - WILSON, &
unsonettre,
No.; 32 .01138TMIT: )3TILENT,
; VELUM,
liftial PLY,
; :„ maktur, -7 - - •
,-•—
-00170 N, LIST, end Itila
bA;II,'PE-rkS.
Whiok we are rierefrieg Idiaintsettirero,
and ors prittsikrodlo Otter the trait onliheral terms.
Raring the Avner, 'tor some of the beet and moat tie.
idrabla!goodn, we eat Afar ladneeininta not heretofore
to be bad in Pkiladelpkia. All panda Bold at Mann
factisrer'e prices. .4:lrdere pFefully_ attended to.
Also} Agents , ton Black: and White Wadding, a
jar& supply of which we bare aonetantkron bend:
...pletu*iik 104 *ober libilero.
•;ALiPRILIA,' - 1859.
- "wi SILTS NOW °ram
- Fo'll S
. „ _ALE
oua .
NEW' AND !..14EGANX.
, . •- .
.:P'RI.NTS.
. .
•
Till •
W'A
M S. 'LT T A S
.jcpinaiuni-yis. - Ero TO' CALL • Tali AMTINTIOta
d- lhi rt,A1111... The beet deeignera and printers are
aajitippsi ;p4assoi ,tiisar - 9 imp's; Ord the great,
attaiidel2 the Ale of bar FAWN
TE 3 Sim tierolhinarin - pby:giviari the, WAMEItIy .
4.1111!0„ to the iatitio..,
04,(190 1 / 8 . WilknititlifllD Sail, the 822Lii9
Fl •
114 ', ll.;: tiVi ll , :*Ri lel i ts 7 Xe n loaliteli
. 011) 4 1(
-try, ~ F OR'EST."
ARMSTRONG; CU.;
•
80'and 82 CHAMBERS BTREBT,
.0 10 # - 7, • • •..• - -
11-4'
RSUB PART .:at3OF.MAIKER
N4 l . ctiati FOUATICAND RACE ti'rRENTB;
Pircum4n.ta r --- - - -
WHOLESALE' DRUGGISTB,
Ii t iINyIiFAOTURERECOP PAINTS IN OIL,
Fltialog,putTE-,
, G L, S
, LE , UMIII A3.I.OAN,,WI:NDOW GLUS.
" . •-
1 ;,',,, '. 334141itiEl
HP' NR I LT O,OHEN:
',.. , ..11100.11TARAWD limo= IN -
„ 1! ,
- 7-FOR,XIGN•;,tgDO IitESTIO
f 2-
..:;STATIQNERY.
ow amirnoesarir Num,
YABINTICAND,
AGINT NOR A.BNOLDIJ XNOLLIgiWBITLNO
111 .4 1 /1 ) . <
1501 . CHESTNUT STREET,
• Ni.42-si. OPPOSITi f WATS H 0178.11.
b ' - Blitibit a'nb.elyibte
I.J.NDS AND SHADES.
, • •
•• B. J. , WILLIAMS,.
- No 16 NORTH:SIXTH STREET,
toival mpor EXTINBTYS MANUFACTIIRNA OF
NkiNITIAN - BLINDS
• „
• • ; —-#lo,itAvatt - IN
, WINDOW SHADES
OF RVIRP V ARIRTI.
PURORAMMIIdI ore Invited to the BIM assortment
In tin'city;at the LOW/MT prime.
vivo* oEisois Immo iutid lettered,
IMPAIRING promptly attended to.
toarmal4M
th,N,F 6O / 0 ,
S,
ma BIAIITITVL ITTYLBT and TIMOR.
1§172f lIMBRE'LLA.S,
Licati; kaotta., APD JIXQUIBITTLY, MOUNTIID
TOR BABA AT LOW PRIORS,
•A. DROWN & 00.,
• -
240 „MARKET STREET.
- -
~ InatryincFp aqVon.
prO mow; 13LOOIVIS, &O.
',O , ABEEN & CO.,
•
-No. 20 NORTH - WATER STREET,
-No. 20S NORTH DELAWARE AVENUE,
PiIIir:DELPRIA,
aVillE FOX BALI
AMMAN ifOUNDRY AND DODGE
•
PIG IRON
• '• or Tar voLtairtro sairao, vtz:
,00ENWALL, DONADHINONN, '
' "2009 1 ,iIONIND,
' ELEST4W,RATAPTON,
• - xlrforoNi.
fiLAST
„_
'-..aiSAROOAL PIG IRON,
Iron :PURPOiSES.
iscia;mikPariiiiv.2ooloi;'
SOILEB AND ILUB flung,
'WATI3R & - CkAS- PIPES,
- ,T,4 - IRERIOAIif MASTER STEEL,
SALE LOW, TO OLOSE A CONSIGNYINT.
•
:590 WATER PIPES,
*ixi
_nor Lavra ani
„oir.Sur ;,.TWERTT ' ISORTS DIAMETER.
ArrAgootr for Watrooti Amboy Yin Bricks.
fiteambeat , tmes
moult - LINE.—
,"
osossa tit ,,w l tAs ior l AiOß RSPB= •frill,leame
bzoept Sandal%
NT' giternf.nelliWii• Obi, -I, l LOantlej ramistrovh
'sod Oltedert stlik,o , el9.ollc , P. ' 1,
lo
0! 14 naves
'Lam to'gtook.k. M. • , ;
oat nda
IM,11 10 6 01 !fOr Woodotor! lad StiageTau''
. po
Oriplemen'tc ittrnisliinT(Thoobt.
. 15T,13
GENTS , PATENT ENAMELLED
• CI 0 Li A RS.
FOB BALI BY ALL Tall
• 1..FL1NC11P.43.1, GOWN'S'S'
FURNISHING STORES
ca was
UNITED, STATES.
G. P. •E. C.
MEANS
GO PURCHASE
ESHLEMAN'S CRAVATS,
631 AIkIIESTNUT Street, below Seventh,
JAYNE'S HALL. -
nlyai-im
R. C. WALBORN & CO.,
(NOW) Na. 13 and T NORTH SIXTH STREET,
nseivL'RAOTUREES
OF
SHIRTS, WRAPPERS, DRESS STOOKS, ETO.
- Dealers In every article relating to the
GENT'S. FURNISHING BUSINESS.
niitgm -
33 . e4)ing Macbittes
WHEELER & WILSON
ZIANIMAOTOZING 0028
SEWING MACHINES
flupeidor to all others for general we, and for
paw MUMS, TAILORS, AND DiEBBBIAIIHRB
NEW STYLE ONLY FIFTY DOLLARS.
ontaae
SW °Visitant Street, Philadelphia
7 West State Street, Trenton, N. J.
Oyer John Titria , s Store, Minton, Penni
7 Nut gay Street, Weet Chester.
BUS AGENTS
EDWIN RORER SS, Moorestown, N. J.
WILLIAM PATTERSON, Salem, N. J.
Permanent, °Noes will be opened shortly, by me, in
Reading, Allentown, and Ladeseter, Penna.
' .
HENRY GOY, Agent.
myl-4m
HARRIS' , BOUDOIR, SEWING - lA
OHINI is offered to the 'public ae the most re.,
liable low•priord. Bowing Machine Inas!. It wtit sew
from six to Stitehoi to an bah, oa all kinds of
goods, 'mai *Doman Mi.:stag to the Unit cambcios. II
11, without *adoption, the simplest in its medical:deal
conetnactron ever made, and caw be ran and kept in ordcw
bychild - iitecdse ieeco age. The RIMASUATT of
illibi ' mratilag,' math" vALCITY 91 us, woes, am war.
ranted to - be unsurpantedby any other. Its spied ranges
trine three hundred to St on hundred Moho@ per mb.
anti, - The thread media takendircatly from the spools,
• imam T10U8 , 141 sinentined. in toot, it is 41
armobine that is waited by army family In the land, sal
Wei low pries' of
" TaIliTY - DOLLARS, ,
whleh they are mid ) kluge Mem within the meth , ol
altneet nif y ens: 11, D. BAUR, Agent, •
dal-dene W•now:gne '2O ARON 8:111.111T.
illetctiant
S MATTSON,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
11.26. 011F8TNUT BPREED,
Vara Boor .below Twelfth otioat,filouth side, Philado.
, 11:3 ° A full assortment of Seasonable GOODS hoW oh
hlhd.•_ hiylo4jyl
E -O. TA OMPSON.
. .
XERORA.NT - .T.AILOII,
iSr--E-00.1120151V SEVENTH AND WALNUT
STREETS;
OPPOSIT.II
Invitetransition to bli '4(4 pl/PABRISIO, suitable,
for the rinesent,eild •ennsteg semen, 'Waited to the
wants of all clones of choice custom, *Mots will be
nate;to order with penonattare and all necessary ob.
iieriaire of Mahlon:
N. B.—Particular attention given to tlt of PANT&
LOONS,. ayl2-tnth&B 26t
„Books, picturto, f4't
GREAT BARGINSI
SELLING OFF. AT BELOW OOST I!
' TUE ENTIRE STOOK OP
FOREIGN -ROOKS
PICTURES,
At thO old totabllated Store, ,
No. 33 South SIMI( STREET
The boat editions of the standard authors, Araldteo.
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Nor leakier information lustre on the premises of
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33 SOUTH SIXTH Si.
myl74uttute6o
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by their trench inlets. They silo continue to keep
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and others are invited to call and examine.
niyl9.6t-
toolitiik4s,laeseo. ,
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apl-tt I.III.IADEILPIIIA
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AND HOLY LAND BOBNBILY
COLORED AND ILLUMINATED GROUPS,
in Teti*.
EDWARD PARRISH,
inyl4 et&th•l2t 800 Arab drool
FULLAD,ELPHIA. ITO?' AY. ,MAY , '24. 1859. •
Ceiu -jnbiuc tions
T E
LATEST AND. BEST-H-;„i
At:amiss '
AIISTRIA'AED•OOIINT.BHOL.
NAPOLEON 111, of Frouoe. - •
001 INT 010701711 . , or Pat - dints.
DIMWIT AND PRIIDDI AN STASI:BUNN
THE ALPS. THE AHRTATIO.
• THE BRITISH ElttilElll.
'AMERICA, its resources soil capeb!litlem.
Will be found In
APPLETON'S
1W AMERICAN CYCLOPEDIA
JO,HIT hiciARLAN, Agent, • •
• ABOAD.II )10TIL
G. W. FAMMAN; Canvassing Agent,
my2l-t[ 29 North rpNTit Street
CHESS!!
EMMEN
THE EXPLOITS ANDTRIUMPHJ
Ettnona
or
' PAUL MORPH
' THE ORM OHAMPION.
Including 'an historical account of Globs, Biogrspbt.
cal ilketehee of Pamorus Players, and various I..,forma
Von and -.lneodotes relating to the noble 4IIMO of
Obese. By-Paul Morpby's late Seoretary. 1 volume,
I2mo. Cloth. 75 cents.
[Extract from the Work ]
, t Oboes may be a game. a pastime, a relaxation; but
Obese has, at times,
_absorbed the faculties of it:lamest
_lntellectual of_ every clime. 'numbera among Its
&materna the, greatest Lame of battle.lields. and
thrones; it tolls of warriors,
_node, painterts, sculptor",
statesmen, and divine's; it possesses a language and a
literature of It" own; and it bee Its temples on the
ocean, In the fortress, and by the fireside.' Paul Mar
phy bas yannutehed Paladins of the New and Old
Worlds, and vaulted into the very throne of Labour,
donnale and Philidor. As blew ad Maces stall last his
name will, be a boneehold word, and his deeds be held
in lasting memory.
CONTENTS:
MOUPII1( 2 8 FIRST GAMES.
THE' FIRST AMERICAN 0111188 CONGENER.
MORPHY PREPARED TO START FOR EUROPE.
0111188 IN ENGLAND.
MORPHY IN ENGLAND
THE STAUNTON AFFAIR.
MORPHY IN FRANOII
THE CAFE D LA mum.
TBE MATCH BETWEEN MORPHY AND HARR
WIVE
MORPITY , B ONNATEST BLINDVOLD'PNAT.
OGNTINUATION OT THE MATOH WITH RANH
WITZ
ItORPITir IN 8001 - ITY.
MORTHY AND TIIN /ANNUS AMATEUE3.
MORPHY 4NTB BEATEN.
MONTHT AND ANDERSBNN. '
BIONTGY'AND MON4REDIIIN.
T ADMIT'S.
VALNDINTORT. •
D. APPLETON k 00., Ne* Tort.
fPrbm the Loudon Timen.l
4 . Ma. Monegv, rite Ortega PLAXsa.—This gentle
men arrlied in London a few days ago from Paris, en.
route for his native city, New Orleans, Via Litartool.
Oa Tuesday week he played at the London Club, (ions
kill ; and in the evening at Herr LowenthaPs nett chess
elith St. :doses tall. A match was Mustily made up
for Wednesday, and came off at the London Olub—Mor
phy contending blindfold, against eight members of the
club, eight games elusultaneausly. This remarkable
feat of genius he bad before accomplished twice In En
rope, but the two eights of Birmingham and Paris were
both very Inferior to the eight of the London Club who
played against Murphy 'on the present occasion; and hie
task was proportionately Inereasell in dl ltnity. Mor
phy, in a separate ,room.. began hie solitary task
by proclaiming through limy Lowenthal, that be
opened with - RID& pawn two in each game A
crowd of scalene spectators and Chess celebrities
Were present. LOWentbal proclaimed the playerai
- 1:33(I1108 aloud, as made, and Morliby instantly called bat
his reply. To every two boards,was appilinted a Deere
taty, to take dean the moves., After six hoists. play
Mr.. Alfred /ones and Mr. Maudb were de'eated ; while,
of the remaining six, two. at least bad forced drawn
games. At past midnight the play was still prrogetling
on threaor forte boards, and then, by consent, tinge Mot
games were divide/led asArawn, the contest having
lasted over seven hours. The match ooncludlid by Mor
phy bolos declared to have on two games and nawn
lit. Ile Miirpby ciOnsidersdbis the toughest witch he
ever played of this description. Throughout this long In
timate never made one mistake. never proclaimed en
Impossible mote, and never forgot the situation of the
humblest pawn. It nosy be safely pronounced that no
greater ntentat feat was over aocomplished by, msg. , '
'•'D. APPLETON,A. 00 have also In Pre's. -
A NEW AND THOROUGH TRIATION ON MESS,
With Accurate Reports, and the most Pkilful Analyses
of all the Great Games of Peal Morphy i _Labourdoanals,
Philidor, Desohippelles, Hurwitz, - Andersson, It. •
Arrant, Staunton, and other Ramona Player'. By HEEL
LOWENTILILL:dheas Editor and Analyst.
Extract from PatilDforphyia .i,Note to the Deader,?'
"Many Mende, both in-Enropo soli America, have
frequently asked me to Arrange a dollodion of my
Games .which they bate assured Me wend met, with
a kindly reception from Obese Players generally. -Bat
°enflamed contests datingi the pdat tweite menthe_
would hate precluded thy nocedling to the flattering re-
Oast. had it alt been for the asSatance rendered ma
by my friend, Herr Lowenthal, The Copious nets, With
which this volume is entiehed are moiety due to him
well-earned reputation as an Anal at, and will'anSply
"P&P rfseal Pom onr.nobletisonet"'
num
London, AprlllB, 1859. - ""' tol2l-SC---
-SEW PUBLICATIONS.
A oommorr mar ON T H 9 GOSPIIL OP JOIIN.
By Auen4ps Tholaelt, D D. Svo . $2. 9 5.
A OOMMENTARY--Oritiottl, Expoolfory, and Prat).-
tidal—on the Dow! of Lake. By john J. Owen, D. D.
12mo. $l. -
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alized , 1 By Mrs. Alfred Oslty ..18mo. 60 sales
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WILLIAM S. et.' ALFRED MARTIAN,
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A REMARKABLE BOOK.
A
HINTS TOWARD PHYSICAL PERFECTION;
or,
The Philosophy of Human Beauty. Showing bow
to acquire end retain Bedily Frametry, Health, end
Vigor; ectore Long Life; and avoid the InOrmities
end Deformities of Age. By to. H. Jacques. New
York t FOWLER k WELLS, Publishers.
This is a scientific, practical, and Intebeating work,
and contains a chapter on the stag:tura of the human
body,' the telnperamehte, ' laws of configuration, men
tal Culture, moral. emotional, and soda influencee,
effect* of climate; physical culture, &o. Richly illus
trated. Bound in muslin. Price El.
For sale Wholesale end Retail, by
JOHN L. CAREN, at the Phrenological Cabinet,
1023.0bW31 922 CHESTNUT St., Phila., Pa.
PUBLISHED THIS DAY.
IGDBABIL; or, The Trite or Existence. By
Iles Tamed Ohallea.
. This is an original Poem, embracing themes of sur
passing interest end passages of stormier beauty and
eubltwily. The author has minted a wide range of
thought hitherto untouched, and which cannot fail to
roues the Imagination, cultivate the taste, and improve
the heart of the reader. It is printed on Duper o
tien
dered cream tinted paper, and is the finest spnimen of
typography ever issued In this country. P ice $l.OO.
LINDSAY & BIABISTON, Publishers.
26 South SIXTH Street, above Chestnut.
For sale by all Bookseller& my 21.31
PUBLISHED THIS DAY l—
ANNIVEMARY ADDRESS
ON MINISTERIAL UNION!
Delivered by revert of the "PRILADELPRIA
MINISTERIAL IINION,” in the Feneom•atrcet Bap.
tiet Oburoh, Msy 6, ISML By T. 11. STOORTON,
Price 10 Dente. For Mx copies, 59 cents; flPeen come,
Fl. T. U. STOCKTON,
my2l at B. W. corner BROAD and ORB eTNIIT.
DDSILVER's MAPS OF THE SEAT OF
WAR,
CONSISTING OF A COMPLIiTE MAP OF Bunorß,
Size 16 by 26g. Inehee.
A MAP OF TITS ATISTRItN EMPIRE, nith a plan
of LOMBARDY and VRtilolll.
1 bl 9 ladles.
AO a Oompleteßias
Map 4 of g
the Kingdom of SARDINIA.
81Ie 143 by 19 !Gabes.
Compiled and corrected from the latest Buropean
authorities, and forming the most , complete source of
information now to be attained.
The whole three maps, handsomely colored, are put
up in one volume, pooket form, and furnished at the low
price of 75 ovate. by - 011/5111i07 DRBILVRII,
714 011ESTNUT Street, Philadelphia.
COUNTRY PAPERS giving this a prominent Weer
lion, will receive a copy of the Mape, poet paid.
mylB-2w
OLD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS.
The undernlgned states that be has frequently for
sale books printed between the years 1470 and 1100•
early editlone of the Fathers of the Reformers and of
the Puritan Divines; in Law, Brewton, Lyttleton,
Pof
fendortr, Grattan, Puma, Coke, Bale, the Year Bootle,
Beports, ars., are often to be found upon los shelves;
Cyclopedia-a, Lexicons. °lanai° Authors, Dilatory, Poetry,
Philosophy, Science, Political Ecionomy, Government,
Architeature, Natural Ilintory. Treatises upon these
and other kindred subjects ara being continually dealt
in by him. Booire, In large and small quantities, pu -
chased et the Onstom-House moue Bookstall, ORBS%
NOP Street, above Fourth, Philadelphia.
toylB.6m JOHN 0 AMP BELL.
NOTICE TO BOOKBUYERS.
reepeotfolly auriouneen that be hes' thr
gratuitous dtkaibution ihn Oat/dooms of nix Valuable
Libraries, to be pold,by Audios' daring thin month, in
New York and Phil alelphia,
IMPORTATION OF OLD DOOM
J. S. will visit Europe this summer for the purpoee
Of purchasing old` books, and ventures to suggest to
Mut.lane and Bookbuyers, that au experience of over
twenty years In theirook business la Europe and Ame
rica. wilt enable Mai to Ad any orders with which he
maybe entrusted, to their entire satisfaction
m770-tiel 27 South 81X7.11 Street, Philadelphia
VENNIMORE COOPER'" SPLENDID
EDITION, ILLUBTRATED by P. 0. 0. DAR-
M. The ezoluelYe tgeaoy for Philadelphia is
B. fiIeEIENRY -
myl2-12t* 400 WALNUT Btreet.
WECItAGLES,
a.. 3 OP SOLD, HINZ% AND- ELASTIC SUM
FRAMES, with Pebble and dna Flint Olassua.
INBTRUBIENTa
for filatbenuitica and Survey! g.
Thermometers, Bohool Apparatna.
PSIOnOSOOPEI3,
made and for sale by •
3.A.81E8 W. QUEEN & CIO
924 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia.
ridged and Illustrated Catalogues sent by mall free
of obarse. inh4.410
FrHE Bpring businass at ZEIGLBIL &
Ja. SHIT WS, corner of SECOND and ORPIEN Streets,
Is opened with a superior dock of Drug'', White Lead,
Zinc Palate, Window Glass, and all other artistes
usually found in a Wholesale Drug, Paint, and Glass
establishment.
sic THOSE who are about to purchase
Drugs, Paints, White Lead, and Window elan,
we Urea, their attention to an nneurpassed and /elect
stook of such goods, which are to be foun tat the store
of zoloraß es , SMITH,
ap2B , df corner of RICIOND and GRIM Street'',
SUGAR. -250 Ws. low grade to prime
New Orleans SugJ AMBGRA HAM sa 1 1 e 0 b ,OO
~
a .24 - lioa. 20 and 22 LITITIA. BUM.
TUESDAY, MLY 5r1,:1868.,
_ .
,
, e , ,p Pot Pourri of Literature and Art: '
". WI advertisement in the- 41/temetim tt re
speCtfully announces to -the Literati of Eu
r 6 And America . ," the sale by auction; in
-tlnithlrd week of July; - ttist that Haunt of,Hal
,lolifd Memories, itydal Mount, AnsbleSide,
4:the, select library 'of the late' venerated
-,nt t -Taureate, William Wordsworth; -last, not
leagir, of the' line of Lake Minstrels.!'' Oen.
ehring that 'WordsWorth's collection of
. .be:iicil was very small; chiefly • consisting of
"pt ontation.copies of yoltunes'of poetry, by
i l
- a iiikbartia, - one may: • wonder whe're the'
‘`' 13rary " is to come from. - Ent thicis is an
ing eibna trick of- trade which, under the
s .., ow:of his great , name, may dispose 'of
turjial thousand volumes as having belonged
i T
ti:!,,,-, ordswerth, - though he they have never
see' !Atli of them.
.-
; --, 0.
ed Tennysdn ' s new volume of poems,
(Milt in number,)' entitled a Idylls of the
Kin4" , ,is nearly , printed, end will speedily be
mibllthed In London ;, of course, Ticknor &
Fie tkitt; 'of- Boston, •Will- simultaneously pro
' '''
' ' ''''T 'ft'''' f' these
drsekit- - -,here. -, he ero ,o Idylls is
Kine Arthur, the fabled - antilitity Monarch of
, .„, ~
e aria: :tau, , .. • '
Til,W;imtog Mph 'sale, in London,whichlo.,
chi* One hundred Unpublished letters, writ.
tettV Pope; the' poet; to Elijah •Broome,
who*eatly helped Pope and • Fenton in the
trination Of Homer; was purchased, for orie
bond, guineas, by John.llurray, the pub.
lisheriwbo 'is abbot bringing Otte. 'new edition
of Poke, with 'his 'Life and Correspondence.
Ho /V y possesses over three hundred rm.
publis
. ed - letters by Pope. The Collection
i tb
just • ' lishad. contained Pope's letters to
Bre°,
,e,Trona 1713 to 1724, putjip in a rough
parchMent-covered album, marked 1744, (the
year it,Pope's death) by- Bromne, who . con.
sidpre4 himself ill used by the poet.: -Broome
madolmether collection, f - Pope's letters
fifty.folir in ‘numbeir—vrhiat - Mr. Murray also.
purchatmdi some -years ago . . - As to the share
which'rope, Penton, and'Breomo had in, the
translation , called . ,cc Pope's Homer,"/ it is
known'that Fenton translated the first, fourth,
nineteenth,, and twentieth books; Broome the
secondi sixth, eighth,- eleventh, twelfth, six
teenth;: . eighteenth,- aid twenty-third; and
Pope the remaining twelve. EroOme incite
all the yotes: Lord Orrery declared that Fen
ton translated eight books instead of four, and
this maybe true, for Pope, who , paid £5OO to
Broome' for nine books, would scarcely have
paid £k() to Fenton for Jour.
Autograph Collectors, in this country, are
sometimes ignorant of the Selling-value of let
tars, signed-doctiniebts, ,and other MSS. of
eminent persons. , For; the most part, they
greatly, over-estimate -them. Here, to show
the relative value in London, Where competi
tion is great is - a priced list of some of the
mete valUablo in the Oollectlen front which
Mr.•fitarray obtained his Poper to Broome let
ters. Lot 44, Blackmore„ (Sir Richard), to
Rev. Mr. Bowden, £1 128.; 59, Boswell,
(James), letter of condolence to Dr. Adams,
on the death of Dr. Samuel Johnson, £llBs ;
88; Buena (Robert), autograph poetry, "To
Ferraughty, on his Birthday," 41 125.; 70,
Byron George Gordon (Lord), tollr. Hob
honso, 14 6s. ; 74, Campbell '(Thanes), to
Mr., Bleliaellson, £1 is.; 107, Coleridge
(Samuel Taylor) ) a long and interesting letter
in referenee to a dispute beefteen him and a
Mr. litoin, and the Rot. T. °Mile, contain-
lug 641 hitter remarks,l2 2s. ; 110, Con- '
'grove (William) to J. Kealy, Esq., £6 109. ;
110, Cowper (William), autograph poetry,
alp,AAtilth sluotatiOns from Pliny and Vol.
ta - 140/1 1 1,' I,lB...PrOglirel,l49Ayer)order
rproaariation of the 'goods of William
Baker fr0rn.1 , 1 : ...a.m-on paper, with seal and
Dignature of the
Drifter. Vohn) £7 10s. ; 282,. Franklin ( en
jamb)) to Dr. Percival, alluding to the various
and7differant experiments on the Fall of Rain,
£1;88. ; 267, Grenville (Lord George) to Lord,
Hertford,on the probable return of Lord Spen
cer Crom the Court of Vienna, and offering the
appointment to him, £3 178. ; 268, Hastings
(Warren) to Joseph Price, £1 125.; 808,
Johnson (Dr. Samuel) introducing to Dr..
Adams a learned Benedictine, who had shown
sumo civility to the Doctor when ho was in
France, £6 ss. ; 832, Locke - (John), Copy of
a Letter in his oWn hand to Sir John Banties,
Paris, August 28, 1677, endorsed by him, "J.
L. to Sir J. 8., 28 Aug., '77," with portrait,
also carefully drawn miniature from Sir God
frey Knelleryt painting, '‘ C. B. fecit, 1?41,"
£3,'89.; 357, Marlborough (Sohn Churchill
the great, Duke of,) Ih French, sending an
order for the release of the Baron de Pala
vicini, £8; 859, Marlborough (Sarah, Duchess
of,) Character of Queen Anne, in her auto
graph, and signed, £6 ; 862, Mather (Cotton),
anther of the Ecclesiastical History of New
England, and other works, to Richard Wal
ler, Secretary to the Royal Society, £4 25.;
808, Newton (Sir Isaac), Deed of Sale of
pertain farms in the county of Wilts, to Sir
William Willis and William Sloper, signed
by Sir Isaac Newton, £l, 20. ; 408, Oates
(Titus), deed of Sale of property situate in
the parish of St. Andrew of the .Wardrobe
(Doctors' Commons) between Titus Oates,
Doctor of Divinity, and Rebekah, his wile,
and John Weld, father of Rebekah Oates,
dated August 25, it 98, and signed by each of
the parties, £1 25.; 418,. Piozzi (Hester
Lynch), friend of Dr. Johnson, to Barta
lozzi, the engraver, £1 Vs.; 456, Scott (Sir
Wafter) Songs in the autograph of Sir Walter
Scott, sent to Lady Charlotte Campbell, signed
and dated January 16, 1801, £2 `24. ; 460,
Shenstone ( William), 23 autographletters and
notes to John Scott Hylton, Esq., £5 10s.;
481, Southey (Robert), to Thomas Smith,
Keswick, December 5, 1808, £1 55.; 527,
Watts (Dr. Isaac), £8 'as.; 645, Dramatic
autographs. An extensive series of the auto
graphs of the principal actors and actresses
of, the past and present' centuries, accom
panied with playbills, portraits,' scene and
(Mirada: prints, and other appropriate illus-
trations, £22 is.; 646, Royal, noble, literary,
and miscellaneous autographs (a collection of,)
£l4 55; 648, Chardin (Sir John), his corres
pondence, documents, accounts of expend'.
'tyre during his travels, journals, and other
papers, £7 6s.
Hero, by the way, the prices are capricious
in some cases. An autograph poem, by Re.
bort Burns, brought only one•thint of the
price of a letter from Lord Byron, and even
less than a letter from Coleridge. William
Cowper's autograph, which is scarce, went for
less than Burns. Dr. Johnson, a mere note
of introduction, brought $3l. Mather Cot
ton ranged higher than Isaac Watts. Sarah,
Duchess of Marlborough, was estimated at al
most double what her husband wont for. Sir
Walter Scott was as low as $ll, while Dryden
Glorious John"—brought nearly $4O.
The relief; passion strong in death was ex
emplified in poor old Lady Morgan's case.
She died in her eighty-third year, jest after
she bad revised, remodelled, and nearly re
written her old prose story of "The Mission
ary." It has just been published, under the
changed title of cc Lnxima."
Many of our Scottish readers, particularly
those whose'ancestors hailed dom "Aberdeen
awe'," will like to know that Mr. Reed, editor
of the Peterhead Sentinel, has collected into
a neat volume, with memoir, glossary, and
notes, all the Songs and Poems of the Roy.
John Skinner, author of ‘c Tullochgorum."
We see that the London reprint cf Noah
Webster's Dictionary, as edited by Professor
Goodrich, has got into the fifteenth edition.
rnow fortyvolnme edition of tho Waver
boy Novels, at about $ t. 25 cents per volume,
is announced by Messrs. Black, of Edinburgh.
It will contain the ninety-six steel-engravings
of Scott's own edition, with twelve hundred
Vood.cuts, from the famous Abbotsford edi
tion, printed•in with the typo.
We hear that Ticknor & Fields, of Boston,
have in preparation a household edition of
Lockhart's Life of SOO% to mntelt* their beau
,tiful edition of the Waverloy.N . ovels. • ,
Mr. William Sharpe, who vsvas nephew- to 1 illt,-MOSIs 14itirsporix hattAot, l yek,been
the 'poet, IS about publishing Recollections, ; 1 1 , 1b ro l ,"4" 1 -3 t v i i 4 , , a z 1 , , a d o , i t i r t tf‘
by Sirthenol Rogers, of Personal.andrOonversa., wbosaid , thist the Mortiredsae tuna ,he considered
tional Intercourse *with - .Charles James Fox,; 95099 d.2 H 9 t 1 9 1 19 9 -Yer, PrOinifilk s4 l 9tAktkohlid on'
Gratteri,' Poison, Horne .Tooke; Talleyrand, ; coinin g he,chooo-te flld 1 . 3a jF,fV1,!?A,7,7, 1, ,, L99 7 1 ' 3 r
Lord 'Erskine,Bir Waiter - Scott, Lord Gran-•I
Tff ' Edinburgh joarmilel "rittricitince' the
'vile, and the -Duke of Wellington, with a pre- i ; death of 'the Rev: Dr. 'Lee' Prineipalot the
fade.- • This promises better thari 'the rapid • varsity. ..Dr. k i ;: i ll s r e lt a i i f l/ Flitt r .la c t r i Pd o l ar ,t
and unsatisfactory volume '..oft Rogers' Table 1207, Hs y muc ti7 n , -- 0744 4 ii.;
all
Talk; pOblished brthe Rev. Alexander Dyce, classes In the lkottifil OsPital; :-;r, ,
-with great baste and small judgment, ammo— Maitarauxs, - !Bwrtre,r_ can ;Dxerae..—lA
stately after the poet's dealt'.
1858, the
population
le
a rearitlifi 9 9 2 l 7 ,, pi d t!
The London Critic', announces that Bnlweri . ;co ag ns ° married), 655:62V blithe (335,0e7 ma aria
the novelist, (Colonial Secretary of State in .320,609 females), ant 4 de,91.8;deatha,:(227.,939 of
the Derby Government,) was at Malvern; A i ni t a l, a :4 l l ,l:4l 9 ,: e r l e el g iA l e w ri li t g i lr e rfa ° 4 7 a u r git:
trying to recruit his health, ' and that the list of the year ( k own to eohool-boys as the " misera
news reported him not better, and with little ble"• quarter) than all the rest, sed.tbe same fact'
is noticeable in the records of 1857. The spring
prospect. of being able to mix in. :public life, 'again appears ;"to •
preferted 4 by lovers' for the '
or even to write, for some time to'come.' Re 'eonsummation;of ;, their „feltaity, to the summer
had been fe-elected - M. P. for Herta, without quarter ,
uile, taking an the first,
d I •
the iu m d° cetig i o l i J * ly y ;
opposition. ' , The rumor that .he was to 'Sue- J%guet, and • September.' - The 'fewest marriages
ceed Sir Edmund Read, as Goverrier-Vreneral- water in the winter quarter, (January; February;
of Canada, is premature—undeithette cirottm
titiLed March,)rei ttizeniarnyt ot ' lend i t, tiPlt e o d nit
stances. More likely is he to retire from pub- " Nivose," Pluviosa," s ad lientose," or, as
lia life, with a peerage. - • Sheridan happily translated them. "Snowy, flow
It was a mistake, into which the English as y,
blowy." The winter %tarter of 1858 was, on the
Other band, the 'most abrindant in deaths, while
well as the American ;press fell, on hearing strangely enough, it was 'also .most proliflo as re--
that Judge Halibtuton had been knighted, to garde births. . ; , .
Imagine that "Sam Slick,"; now Ilf; P. for
Ad A am - 8 8 , B or r ittston E ,' the ' e r . AtierneT e r i enef f ar for r
Launceston was the man. The real 'Simon the colony of Hong Ho ng, nw hiss ascended the sOol'al
Pare is not,Thomas Chandler Halibation, ex- male. to his present position- Sink Careisidistri -
Judge, but Brenton' lialiburton, the ectual, , Di Te r s o el p ;L t r o e r p."4l4ll i tfß rin dit ilt i e f i rk, t Zt t i Z i lt i =
and , Pneting Cbtef.JustiCu 'of' , -Nova &Natal ittorney , o4eartartTlferCle 4
Scotia. • . - wader our own eyes of what a ntsaii.withl_emnieta
The exhibition of- the •Royal Acad.3my; - t b a l y l"y aoc a o l p j fe f i ai i r , s t h h i g e 4 O „ d r, u s r a l ,L a gr i e a gl:
London; is said to exhibit a great'abeithee` of ZugLend of Ours.--ZiniolrisdireTisuis. ~‘ e
ability—though 'Frith, Egg, Phillip, Ward; TifEBE is:to-be a congreas - of,riinsical•erniz:
Stanfield, - Landseer, and Millais ire 'streng;: ajtalartifts? P li fkirictifrOlk . . ol9 .4 l ltqtetthe
Millais, the pre•Raphielitei has turned his 4th „f.' o 6,l n n e e i ;i7r . i7 4, l ,7, k iai n i i t;FrginZt2l,l
back on himself," as Lord Castlereagh would '•'Grand Mass" be produced ;. at the third the
.say, and abandoning minute detail, has gone mass of habastian Bach,
.• _
in so strongly for broad effect that the speCta: THE
"The gran d
Afrdielreaeocir.miseriial '.advertiser,
tor -must be several feet distant from his two s wYt E l i :-Lond h on i gy an an electric wire fhPrilt a t tl e
new pictures- (Nuns in the Churchyard arid realised, a ;portion of- tbe 001.0,100 "miles-in
Junketting in an .orehard)•totee what story r e n w gg i c : 22 l 4 l 7ti a c l a r e pi tt s r o e f 4 f a h r a T an ti ß ah. d hl w
ill
theytellt-I Ward's pictnie Of ' - a 4 rMarie Adel- be only a few hours 'virile - point id 'Brae."
nett.) listening. toe the' .6.01 of- AcculatiOn"
has as many admirers - as hostile Critics.' Thesis
last say the female figure is dimply "ti stoat
vi
rage,
What will the photographers do neat? • Itt.
Niopce de Bt. Victor has 'communicated to
the Academy of Science:rat Parite(Gaitgnani'
says) a process for obtaining photograpbs'of a
red, green, violet, or blue color.
The sum of 10,000 dollars has been offered„
and refused, for 'the marble statue of Venue,
lately discovered at Rome, and believed to,be
a duplicate, but in much, better condition, of
the far-famed Venus-do Itrodicis, the pride of
tho Tribune at-Florence:
The' Parisian frenzy about old Obina and
enamels continues • unabated. • A recently
sold'oollection, on which M. Rattier expended
100,000 franca, went off; at auction, lortve
times that amount. The .4thetieetim" says that
M. niers bought an enamel, grey in grey; by
John Pennicand, representing ' a bes Cent frOm
the Ciotti, after Schiavone, for 16,000 francs,
and similar sums were- paid for nearly all the
tlinoges enamels; 'called - “De
Henri II," - wore poi for with 0;000; 7,000;
10,000, and 124000 cranes. Sit tainiaturea Of
Catherine de 'Medic:is and her children, by
Monet, called Janet, fetched'l2,ooo franca.
Here, from General PIETRO °MEMOS
newly publiehed History of NaPles; is a curi
ous little aeocdote connected with tile build
ing of that great temple of the lyrical drama;
the Sartilarlos Theatre, at Naples i -
" Charles wished fora new theatre, as,the city
was only' PrOvidod with few, and those f a low
descriptien. To add wonder to, magnidoemos i be
°Hared that itch
i d be,thet largest in Harem
and built in the e pitestoselble time.; The de
sign obtaine from Mdranq, and, the, dare of
its exeoution confided tope Angeio.Ctardimith
man of low mien, who bad risen; to Jam by
geninsM erobiteeture, and by his
,bold arkd atm
pondouN worts. He Mooted ,'Who .site' neat the
palaCeaulled 'keen a:tgreat'utinl , liatteest-atd
added a vast 'extent of ground, so that When ' the
bank ofthe stage was laid open, wonderful repre
aentations of battles, chariots and hones might be
seen in the . dilstaiiice. He commenced his work in
t' - edth_Novertabei, diet on
first scenic representation was The interiq
of the theatre was covered, with glass mirrors. and
the retention of a multittole of ,candles produced ,
snob a flood of light as to realize the fable of
Olympus. A vast and eddy detonated compart
ment was assigned for the royal family; and •as
Charles entered the theatre, astonished at so great
and beautiful a work, he applauded the arobiteot,
'while the people gave the king the honor as the
originator of all this splendor. In the midst of
the univerhal delight, Charles sent for Carmelo
and, publicly commending him for his work, he
leaned his hand noon his shoulder as a sign of his
protection and favor. Carlisle, though not a
modest man, respectfully thanked the king by
'Word and action When this was ended, Charles
remarked that as the wall of the theatre adjoined
that of the palace, it 'would hate been more conve
nient for the royal family to have rinsed from
one building to the other by a private passage;
the architect oast down his eyes, and the • king,
adding, We will think about it,' dismissed him.
When the representation was over, he found Cara
aele waiting for him, with a request that he would
return to the palabo by
. the passage ho had • com
manded. In three hours' tits Oaten% had sem
<leaded, by pulling down great •walls, erecting
scaffolding of beams and lathe ' and concealing the
rudeness of the work by carpets and tapestry, and
with the assistance of drapery, mirrors, and lights,
to make a wane both beautiful and scenic in its
effect; this sight was almost more like enohant
meat, and more splendid than the fast presented
to the king."
It remain to be added that, with trueßour
bon gratitude, this courtly architect was left
to die, in prison, half-famished and half
broken-hearted.
• Rossini is coming into fashion again. At
the Italian Opera, Covent Garden, "La Gazza
Ladra" has been revived, with Madame Lotti
and
.Signor De Bassini, the new singers, as
Ninetta and Fernando, and Madame Nantier
Didiee as Pippo, and Ronconi as the Podesta.
A critic says i cc If the maestro was too care
less in accepting his stage subjects, no ono,
since Music began, has been so prOdigal in
decking them—if not with the resources of
science, with the treasures of genius. Tho
vein of Signor Rossini is the true vein, for it
is the vein of inexhaustible melody—not ex
chiding expression, not precluding science.
A time may come when every opera from his
pen will be hunted up and treasured, as
though it were so much old gold, or imperish
able jeimiri."
The second Italian Opera, at Drury Lane,
has commenced its season, with "La Son
aambula." Miss Victoria Balfo, the compo
ser's daughter, was the Amino, and Signora
Morgino the Etuira, with DAM as the Count.
Mr. Gyo writes to say that Madame Bosio's
death was chiefly caused by improper medical
treatment.
DITTIES OF UNITED STATES HAFNIUM—The
opinion of the Supreme Court o the United States
in the Wisconsin fugitive slave use has at length
been published. Though we have hitherto given
the substance of that part of it regarding the
powers of the Federal courts and the duties of the
Federal officers in cases arising under the Fede
ral laws, we subjoin, for the better Information of
the publto, a paragraph from, &he official copy of
the opinion :
" Although it is the duty of the marshal or
other person holding him to make known by a pro
per return the authority under which be detains
him, it is at the same tome imperatively his duty
to .ohey the process of the 'United States; to hold
the prisoner in custody ander it ; avd to refuse
obedience to the mandate or process of any
other Governsmmt. And consequently It is his
dutY not to take the prisoner, nor stiffer him to be'
taken, before a State judge or court upon a habeas
corpue issued under State authority. No State
judge or court, after they arejudicially in
formed that the party to imprisoned under
the authority of the United States, • has any
right to interfere with him, or to require him to
bo brought before them. And if the authority of
a State, in the form of a judicial process or other
wise, should attempt to control the marshal or
other authorized agent of the United States, in any
respect, in the custody of his prisoner, it would be
his duty to resist it, and to oat to his aid any force
that may be necessary to maintain the authority
of the law, against illegal interference. No ju
dicial process, whatever form it may assume can
have any lawful authority outside of the limits of
the jurisliotion of the court or judge by whom it is
issued ; and an attempt to force it beyond these
boundaries Is nothing less than lawless violence."
Grnnonet. Sumna, United Stales Senator
from Minnesota, on arriving at Hastings, on Sun
day, the Bth instant, found - himealf minus his
pocket-book, containing a draft on New York for
$2 000, and $5OO in nosh. It appears-that, having
taken his pocket-book out, he left It on the dock of
the Mesmer ' and somebody rewarded hie careless
ness by making way with it.
CArr. LEVY, commander of the Macedonian,
recently at Leghorn, hae gone to the bathe of
Lucoa for hie health. He left hie ship quite 111
with the inflammatory rheumatism: ,
TWO cgNTS• ,
ITEMS OF' FOREIGNF-NEWS.'.I
Neairi
:NeroLfox;lll. sailed fropt Mar z oit
the 11th inst. for Genoa ' attire he,.wari lc take
command of the Frenottforetia, and *here preps-
rations had been made to receive him irlth extra , "
ordinary, display
' THE Moniteur contains a decree authorizing
Austrian subjeots living in France to remain
during the war: if there be no reason to 'suspect
them of engaging in polities, at the same time de-
Glaring that no other subjects of Austria shall be
admitted into Prance unless for an. exceptional
reason; Austrian ships of Commerce iii.FrenoV
ports at the :time of the declaration' of:war, or
ships arrested upon the,hlgit seat, whoseenasters
shall not know of the declaration. of war between
the two countries,' are to' have six Weeks'timele
regain their country. ' 2 •: , •- - •
Iv wo may credit the report ofithe.Minister
of. Finance, the French tromps) , is in a flourishing
condition, and 'he can' apply 112,000,000 to the_
expenses of the war without encroaohing open the
funds requimd for gainer,* expenses, ••: .•
French fitoyemunent ban Orgaslized 'a•
special mail and telegraph service between Faris
and the' Seat of war, 'which will enable us :here to
he've the first official news of 'allevents'and Move;
'moots. that may be. published,: and -it la i certain
that, with • the system of censorship exercised In
and about thol'renoli'oatitp on publicity; it Is only
from Paris that reliablenews in to be obtained. ,, •
Tug /ifonifeur rde -PdlrrneCtinnettnees- that
the army of the Alps will henceforth be • dasignated
the Artntof Italy..
NErirtna English noritalginnatking_si part'
in the-war, wilt be . 41db:di - led the' Thiel
of the camp, ; IA fad, &whip the :Oriaseatrlerar
no correspondents even 9E „their nation , : were.
admitted Into the'Vrinoti and' 'Sardinian'. e . W . W5te,
and Michel likeir,that they will be
• Tan : Sardinian Govermsterit, -iit'Ordertd
Streit its deapoes, hew resorted- to •aa:' expedient
"similar to that odoptod
Beek has betel ilathoriakt to= - sitspend'soeehs refyil
meets. end iaSee.4loo,ooo . Irertied iditeetoshiling
notes; . endits poteaore khan fonder..
rehireit is' to adiertoe to - tlie - `Grr,ortanetit
Of £1,200,000 *hi& to to beir:twe per laint:' , lnte"
rest.' .1; r
• ,
Thß.Naep Archbishop , Vf;tViennt-lbatilis:
Amttonil lotto t',l4 whis ll oo 0144 010 t Tiel'•
moot find ambittone • Wean of Icepojeon 111
exuattnekoili and the =epini6ril,lovals • regM:thu t _
war is not .the greatest lot bat' tar:often it'
glorieno work , nocomplishod in the oars:toe ofegni•
• •
A TRLECISAPIIIO despatch from Madrid 'states
tgPy. army to - 100 , 000mm -
in order to protect tbe. neintrauyjr-ptiipp 90=aq ,
during the-wat ' 1
. •• • Y
' 'run Espana earl I learn that ,the
Government has- just reoelvedjs '',telegraphlo
despatch from. oar, Ainbasemior at lilaosc,:eapreso.
log the opinion that it is desirable to increase the
garrisons of the Balearic Islands 10,000 men,
in case the Pope, in the event of having to'iban--
don his capital by the spread of. the revolution in
Italy. should decide on establishing the seat of
the holy See in one of our Mediterianein
Islands."
LETTERS from the interior of European
Turkey speak of a sudden rise - in provisions, owing,
to a prevalent idea that tho Sultan is ablaut to
engage- in another war.
- A Vriunci letter speaks of a probable rising
of the Christian population in Turkey ; and such
an event is not unlikely in the present unsettled
state of Europe. ' . -
Tun journals of Athens, express their spin.
patty with Italy, and add their hope that the war
will also result in the triumph of nationalities"
in the East.
Or= the London Times, May 14
,1
The War. ,
There is a mooed of Minder sfar, ,
Storm in the South that darkens the day,
• itorm of battle and thunder of war,
Well, If it do not roll our way.
Storm! storm! Riflemen form!
Reedy, be reedy to meet the storm !
Riflemen, riflemen, riflemen form!
Be not deaf to the sound tbat warns !
Be not gu11 , 4 by a deseoVe plea!
Are fl:s of thistles, or grapes of thorns ?
How should a despot set men free? ,
FOITO I form! Riflemen form!
Ready, be ready to meet the storm !
Riflemen, riflemen, riflemen form!
Let year Reforms for 11, moment go,
Look to your butts and take good aims.
Better a rotten borough or so, :"
Thou a rotten fleet or a city in flames!
Form! form! Riflemen, form!
Ready, be ready to meet the storm;
Riflemen, riflemen, riflemen, form !
Form be ready to do or die;
Form in Freedom's name and the Dlmen'n!
True, that we have a faithful ally,
But may the Devil knows what he means.
Form ! form! Riflemen, form !
Reedy, be ready to meet the storm !-
Riflemen, riflemen, riflemen, form !
Napoleon Leaving rails.
[earls Letter in the N.Y. Times.]
I have just returned from seeing the Emperor's
departure for the seat of war. lie left the Tuile
ries at 51 o'clock, and with his departure com
mences a new era in hie eventful and. , &militia
life. When the Prince Louis Napoleon stood with
his back against the Napoleon - column at Bolongne,
10 1840, defending hlinself with his sword, and his
friends begged him to ,fly with them; he `said,
‘, No ! I hove-left France for Abe last time!"
Again, when he entered, in 1848. be used the same
language to his friends; and this time he stayed.
But now ho has left again, and although under
different circumstances, his mind must be crowded
with reflections that would crash the spirit of a
less oolleoted, a leas impassable man than he.
Never before in his life, however, did LollißNa
poleon see 811011 a day Pal WEL From the Tuileries
to the railway station beyond the Bastae was one
dense mass of human beings, and: frau; .different
points on thergute I boar the same report ;• not a
man or woman on the whole route but shouted
over and over again with frenzy, " Trine t'Enzpe
rout - ."' The military could not restrain the peo
ple who precipitated themselves against thehorsee
and the earring., waving their hats up to his Ma
jesty's face, and shouting like madmen. At the
station the cortege was arrested for some minu'es
by the crowd, which was so dense as to prevent
all further progress. The whole city was out
to greet him and wish him and the French army
success ,
His Majesty was dressed in a red fatigue cap,
blue freak undress coat, and red pantaloons with
the insignia of a general of division. He rode in
an open carriage with the Empress at bin side, and
one of his officers in the front of the carriage. He
was preceded and followed by a small detachment
of the Gent Gerdes, which witl remain in Paris to
do duty at the Tuileries, and by several other open
carriages, in which ware seated the offices who
accompany him, among whom were the Prince
Napoleon, Marshal Valliant, General Regnault
de St. Jean D'Angely, his aid-decamps, bin ord
nance officers, and the employes 6f his secretariat.
The menial part of, his clamp household left • two
hours earlier.
The Empress will accompany the Emperor as far
ae hiontereau, an hour's ride from town,'and will
then return again lb Paris, at eight o'clock. The
Emperor will not stop at Lyons, aa was at first in
tended; and Will reach Marseilles to-morrow after.
noon. From Marseilles the Imperial yacht,' the
Reine Hortense, will carry him direct to Genoa,
where he will arrive day after to-morrow, (Thurs
day, the 18th,) and where an-ovation awaits him,
such, perhaps, as no man ever received. On Fri
day, after having inspected, the French troops at
Genoa, Novi, and Alessandita, he will arrive in
the Ring's camp, at , Ban Belvedere, a few miles
from Alessandria, wattle road to Oaaale. We may
calculate then on offensive , movements on the
part of the silted, if they have not already taken
plane.
CHAKPION Val:minx, editor of the Leaven
worth Times, has fallen under the displeasure of
the fugitive law, being sued for the recovery of
$l,OOO, the sum provided by that, law as the
penalty for the loss of a slave, which Champion Is
mused of aiding to protect from reoapture by hie
alleged owner. The slave is gone.: -
==filf=eZ=Mi=:=:M=
- 2 VTlvit7°
--.ao a - -
Cottneiesti*Oern.;• w ill eseetiesee . - ;
in mini the *Dieing
eenunintket meet , irnesompenhei by tar
IMMO Of UM t e r iljefiffWflitilliii Li
the tibosiebbi , bie iii if of thininistf aboalCbe
' • -
Yrs;
rw..,-e.*.tai,it :Ai: - ,40,44 1 04,:q* -
44 7 t h e ir
the reacnireie of tieteezeonelist
of Population, or a* intet that will be Waved
lag kth. 4,440114 t4,41/11C,
eIBIf.BRU ;;NRWB.
A Qux# pAssAas.--frie yoterlititstaa
v"derbook.puda imvm-fion-soiat'
11.130 aampiiy fainamen.' t • ,
' The'pristrirotibeViriderbllt la a remarkably
'abort, One--4liel amaid. , l4Mutfasd=l6._
an abotraot of,Alle_log_oLillLUnited Btates`nint6,
st 8 P 1 11 1 11) Yaadetblf .oattrakr g• Wive, :
'her passegd Iroistr We Ireeolliai (role UllOO to •
Sandy' Hoek' lightship; • ' '
May /2-14 ft tke AMMAN at 7y. M. ;Hof ..aframe.3B6
May wind it south diiiinfoW 820
May 14—Li h t iiint it north '• e 831 -
11at.1,1-oele. • "—MIAOW* V&
Alsyl9 = Bfroag tires W_ Lid &Aimee=
lbw 17—Ligkt winds et - neftlietat diatom 331
May ra—Semargriare at N.May,ll abeam* WC-
Play 19—Ligint wind st-erat ai "r s 506
Way 20- 7 0elin sent r tipik fogs. Disteause 97
May 21 , 1 dglitniadolyitliflo& dietiinee 110
' Total aseaneie froiiiireedie , to lightelili "` -3,216
note to of BAUM, j la • iteasater.
• Tart -Mows, ilginutee.
Apparent time of pumice, ' 9 8
Add time ilandyßootrto York - - ' 1
diffeyenee of longitude
' t
Total ' ' - '9 ' 9 • ,
t 915
Thiel, eompstativelyas the' qtdelmit pamegs in
1 Now York, (difference .of time added) rills l be
seenby _the - following ; table -•r •
- _
tattiv, .znis S. ISO - -93
Persia, Idee 28 mar • -- ;at- . '‘ ' 29
Vaud() bill, June .15,1.1192 - -9 - ,20 - - -
VandarbUt,its 7 21,1259" '9 '9 25
The - Bahl,' and: Antes *sages were -made
from Liverpool to 'l2sw.York,*teilst the Vendor- -
biles passageserstrom theNesdies to New Yrrikos -
greater distance by 92 miltie thin thiedistittlist from;
Liversool. - orAis.diferesses of tihttenee, beats °
masthe`dednoted thesirjwiderfotit'slilies;:rfide-.
'shish* lit lnisitegir;l' deppirloOn „
banrs,49 utinntes - r•ovaitituniA
cßiWtsl+ssiliTh*ter, Atted:„. *Or_ 5, from -
Fountaindale, Winnebago oroanty, Illinois, has the
following information -
ie The crop Wheit;•tiOtWielie-itsi atring,
eiredititsit; 'and t very' *weird. , The
farmers are norl2o:tbroughy-phisitiet-eorn, - and •
manyrilitids ere siplettg,,,Wrowst very,distiretly,
,liverger, '. 63 4W-4, 14 brought;,
(nature: oVirinteiv arktisitthasf-aSesor-theliniotoran
%Jihad; smd ysking #fh3dm4yielt. s, l3ering
•whest, our main crop, Ism been sown in iiestan,7
and the fields_ are:beeesaing-heintifelli ghwn," •
Al:lather writer Bays that .notwithstanding the
early spriag irons wet anCootd‘,' the- anemia - newts
very forward. ' ' - ' -
The Iteeine (Wu) Advoiste sails; that thieve(
•Toodge and, colun,abia 4 siennthesmot a .foot
;Fated land seemed unplowed; and, I* Ooluxabls,„ -
00unti there nevasAtes been moserAground.son* to----
'',wEentAliiin • has 'boil mit - down' tlittleat --
Many Bien are' 1101Slir bent! /00 tiO , 406 1 410n11 OC
Tun CROP accounts fiom th43t r eiscusentinue
good. „Several -promknent haver
mithin a few daye pint; retanissi Ma Minute idth
the. moat positive :assassinate' on this 'fteldiat,„ -
Others have-. written - frintiludiaba toc
purport.TheiSt: Lents Republieavi - raVoiric: -
" A
,gentleman who hes,jasCreturned to thht
MO from' a Somewhat - entaitded tour ;thrOsigh ~
mai informs us that in Green,. JelleTi - Pass; &OW, ,
Pike, Maimapiniraltaa; and inirghborstsg
the Mops look very fine, Sid _that Ahem ix/
tering prospect tot:fruit-of all lands., ThoMpason
In those sections appear quite ,sietettehnl,tomaks
the Wit cif Aids fields, and hi theendyirorlipply,
lied the Ilhltiage Tribune asjs
be,prpeota,of an abundant.wiatervichot
crop in,all ;&uthont.and peatrat
, never - batter than at thisMoinent.,':l4,lo - ,doWn
as loneslmre the for A ,11 ;,
hetWesteic-arid-probelily - alma 'guild* last tp
the lot , of June , the Mimi - rut - will , begin: 4 111fe=ittre
told xi Pon; good authority thatllie,', aren-' gliWit't is
minsually laigi,thatthe stawl'-op thelpteltot - is
good, that the straw let of the proper.lisegthiftirT2,'
the largest yield, that the filileg of the bertf
oommetoed, and :that - 'ever/110'
favorable , as ctuldfba wisbed;""ltt Ilitilesifsei of
the fitate;' in
Mr, - a' !ems', 4cantity htririag'wheatif kW boa'
put and the - lireadth - Mfig_trend ithated-en ,
corn, is immeare.% The . ming . , rata
'coming- forward - Seely, - while aboaC ,- ,liptieithen''
mph of the oorititgenrki-ltheti, golf thetei tint
turfem." _ , q„,•
'Offietl;el - mei44e(
giOlieredibent` the :door";-..ot
stoma in thatyloinity;,iihd.;i4Witrinin_d_Oartor,','
witSO 4 ;*, lool o9fluillteo aaVand;williP4 l
of Molten; shaep : . ;Ast.reeeaibiedroi# Pen sheep
in &Me . ; %theme a "nniolf iutudls* Iliad, and thinner.;,'
:Insteid!, ot etid-Tenily;' have long hairy Ilipsimi,',geitn straight ; they,nest
differefityy,Oolqieli - and 'plaid ;:lkene.ameArroffA:='
Aid:bleak; others -
novelty befog a qtille deaf!' tewiiiplitinimatt WNW • -
'Off at 00p:tees. -„'
XrieliTe -(1-eVechntirt ,
tivelY, engaged; inAtherteringeoUlisfkiretitelfol'Or .
M. rate - of-itaigltteilairaleet Mahout naptc-telt: .-
InNteindim it 'is, saki 35rper.tos ie ofbireklbt.ser - - ,-
quantity. The coal to be taken: is to he delivered in" '
a port of tbe Medtterrtirtg'"
the time of eitillt
vier•rhlti.:•: - en " 's 9 r.
o about 2,000 tons_barden stein Is Jtalajlikowisa
wanted fora similar perpcmEt •
1.008 H. licerczicca: o:Prodigy/et*: Stett-_
ben tomb?, bought a tlidieten i thii EH. Inti]fri%i' . •
at New York; for •••• Reeltesirr:!-11• neiritarited. --
Godd fermis . daysonly.”., , After the expiration
of " six days," Mr, H. presented the ticket, he-
tweert Beth and Rochester. If wan refeced,,ad
he was skated from' the cent He commenc ed a
suit. which was - recently tried' before' referees de:
signets& by the Supreme Court, and they. have .
awarded the plaintiff slsO.damages.
• AMERICAN Samwma..—The-London. corre
spondent, of the Commercial Advert:Jor , says:
"
Owners of American ships at or en their waiter
the; Aus'rilian optimise are beginning to,oaleulate '
on the certainty of the shippers at Heikki - Me and'
elsewhere giving them a preference, sine In base
of war between ,Boglend end : Pratioetrar Snit and
heaviest loss would be sustained in the cutting off
of our gold ships." .
BismOr Par Timi, the Roman CathitliC Bishop
of Mobile, Ala., died last week. He bad resided
in this country since 1817. The Mobile Trebnits
says that he wee the founder of Spring Hld Col-
lega the Academy. edrthe. Visitation, the- Lee
schools which are now managed by the , . Christian -
Brothers,' and of the , - ,oatholiii Orphan Asylums,.
It was owing chiefly to hie exertions also. that the
beautiful Cathedral of that city was built." •
DSATIT OY °Ala..- Giso.' U. PAMPLL—Capt.
George H. Paige, of the Quartermaster's-Depart
ment, died at. Camp Floyd •on the 18th of April,,
of congestion of the, brain. . Capt. Paige -was.in
the prime ;of_his pities, being, st the - time of his
death. hut thirty-four yeabs of age.' :He was ana
tive-cf.Nasime,-.New Hampshire, his' family being
conrieeted by marriage with that of the late Da
alel-Webster. • ig A
111. Vams,-the black quack doctor who has
been rejeoted by,.the faculty at Paris in his alleged
cures of cancer, is likely to sell hianoatrum, what
ever it may be, to a society Which is to be organ
ized for-its furtherance and adoption by the public'
generally. _ _ _
Tits VsvAr.(lnd.) News gives an: account
of a lady who visited that town for the first time
on Thursday last, though. she has been. Hying
within four miles of it for the last forty-111 , 11,34mM ;
nor has she ever 'visited any other_ town, pity, or
village. -
Goss into Ilforntsitio.—LThe New Orleans
Bee (an-American) declares that the 'Ameriesa
poly in Louisiana 'shapelessly, irretrievably die
solved, and that any attempt to organize an oppo
sition to the D'emoaraoY will he unavailing.
A Fnurtou journal' a nnoun cesne that N. Ni
cholas .olary, a gentleman in possession of an in
come of IMMO a year, as angeted as a private
soldier, in cavalry regiment which Is about to
take the field.
Tait Empress of France wore on a recent
occasion a bonnet of white orape, with a small
humming bard placed on a spray of Mao..
A COLONY, numbering nearly a thousand
Norwegians and Swedes, are about removing from
Illinois to Minnesota.
THE 110 N. LS.IVILENCE 3f. KEITT, of South
Carolina. was recently married, - and, with his
bride, Sails for Europe in the Persia.
Oars.. Wu. E. SIMMS, of Bourbon county,
is the Democratic candidate in the VIIIth district
of Kentucky, lately represented by Jas. B. Clay.
VISCOUNT DE TEE =AHD, acting French
charge, is now in Baltimore, making °entreats
with clipper ships for his poiernment.
GEN. DODGE has written it letter declining
the Democratic nomination for Governor of lowa.
' Tun GortvasTlON.—The "Southern Con.
volition" - snoceeded .:yestirday in marking its Po
sition distinctly. It is al olearl a gathering of
disunionists, nullifiers, slave.trade law breakers;
as if. it had met for that purpose.. The speech of
Mr. Spratt, of South Carolina, abounded in bold
declarations of defiance to the, laws of the land,
which wero applauded by Southern - men—men
who would have indignantly denounced such sen
timents had they been uttered by lb Northern Abo
litionist in relation to the law for the rendition
of fugitives frcm labor. Yet' the two oases are
synonymous ; the Southern man is as much boind
by an unrepealed law, as the' Northern man, and
it is as much traitotoun Inoue an the other to noun
tenanoe its violation. ,
The.,wbolq tenor 'of the debate yesterday was
revolutionary,' without the manliness to proclaim
it. To•daY GOvernor Footis Intends speaking, and
that he win snake the "fur Sy" none who know
him , wAll doubt. During a running debate yes
terday an attempt was made to choke him off, but
.the perpetraters evidently didn'tknow their 'man.
He limbed them more severely than ever.
IV hen the motion was offered to have Mr.
ktpratt's speech PubiGlid) Gov. Foote rose and
objected, in language of great fervor and energy.
He spoke in the lottist.of mud' excitement, and
with a frankness and persevering boldness that
evidently took the sympathizers of Mr. Bprett:
and the participators in his dark and dangerous
views, by surprise. His effort abounded in dan
gerous and disorganizing doctrines, mischievous
in their character, and utterly destraotive - of - the
fundamental prinolpleiof our Governnteint. The
views of Mr. Sprott, if carried out to their legiti
mate result', would subject the misguided follow=
era of his counsel to the penaltiesef high treason.
The violation of the 'United States bons was
advised; 'and the violator* of the laws were Le
°garaged to believe that they would go unpunisb
ed through the perjury of bothers juries, The
Governor dwelt at some TieNl o2,- and With_ifst
force upon thiS postilion, - sad he pledged 'etimw elf
in his speech ter day to
't
in the war into Af
tioa."-,Yfcksburg' Wktig,lith fan; •