The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 19, 1859, Image 2

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

    •-• , :- ;.. --, •' , .:-. 1, _-t.:5;;7 ':, • . -..•-.
,- - --.,----,P,.,-,•-'-'6-Aii4A*,,---- - - 1., =•-•: ,- - _z;,,, , : , .. .: ,-,
a - ,7,,, 4. ' : Q..-='''.;•''',-,gtr'ziMl.,--rr..:.;-.•,,•-•-•••., p4}, • = ,-- 2 -
i- —,- -•-:- ••..4.,4,.
~i r.,-, - , Ne 4,. ..c.s - c-o—,-. -- - -
,/„.,„- - •_,,,.•-:.- 4,z,g,,4W,TA,,,t,i -- J'• - J. , , ,,,, !•--i , - ''
,'•1Y,7,•!,•,fi,f.i-:-2,-',•-k•g•j,-. q6,--- _ . „.,..,..-.,,,,,i4i-tig,''o,:r.,..-.;
It-lifS:...',u;to4;l'-'--;:ii, :,',4;H:•"°.--.''Ltj .fl
6,41: --. :;? - •'•-::',f:f:; - „ , vh:r - e: si i i .4;T -- -
::-.4 '.' ,4 ' ,. ' r •-, ,•,--',,,-.• iiiiii64l:'lo,g-i.,,,,,,,7-',..,•1:-",;-,
~'?. •:-: ,: •: g -• s : , 5 ,, F ,- : ,_ ,:'•,•;,-,;- ~•:,'.f .l-•',Tv::,;; -;.,Lilftii-„lo'—f4 ,„„-,,.,c_„ m,-
x 4,.c,f_
4ij,•a 2 ,, - , i , i , , * ,i3Oil*oie-tiiiuMiiltlilr 444 ., - ! 4 ,4..--r4l4etll--1-1-,- 4 r 1 ,., i * Ir,.n :,etrr4- .i: tl,•.t 1
',,',;,, •
r,k' S , ~
Y,=, - ,
1
! % ,11-0
4 .',-
''' '. --•'''' ~ * ''', • ' -1 0#0 1I ' ' " ' 64",i'-- '4*
!' : ' ' 't, -?*- :" •--o'•''''' - r. - faj -- ' "
.1411)14,*Alfriflifewi,:::: - 4 : - . P.
.4a -. C ; ; , ; , '" , .. - 4 . • - • j „ .
~.,,,, ' . -J..- , leffikre,
•-441iiiii:,;1?-5::::`1,'9-,,, -.`;"
' ;V:3. - ''.', ~ ';'.,•4i-: 771: " ! '.---, ' - 'Orikelltt--k-,440107 es' • .'j ''''
'-,•'-''E';'6:','",•nt - . s- - - ' , . 141;0 " 4 . -',., t 4" -- _.4liiiitiAlqr-'7" -,;'• ' - * iji,ts:!•
'3.::;-'•'?].•fl:',lA.k., leSik,S,., - , r"5776k1,. 1it,..44),-,,,,..!',::.
-:',-.-.;;':•,• , i; , _::,, 1- 1,,,,,_
trtisl..;,
,:•.,..-...,:—.*„,,.41.44--,,--:,,,,
--,,,6-40.1"r„—*:03,0:4,=.4t,14 - -Tior;o,tli:-iKkt,,
iii#, - •-. i*o4l#o.f:',"-?
14,, -,--^-,0001-fivioy,;-4.--•<,4--
•%-.':' • , 4
-
-Z,T, ' ,-.2* • -, !%'''..;..""` ***. " -
71 4 12
.
---111100111611611-- '140141110/14.-t'
- SAG 114 1 1.10641.
s .le."`A*-Il d f .61) • 6,7,
1: 1 :::;; ,, =, , : - ..;;:: ,, ,': • -_,,-,-,._.*...,—,...,,,.:7,7.,,,-.--,-.-.-r- ,114440.'f-.?,,'-',"-cifo-'#.-'.:*„...,
~ ,, - . ?:: „ •;,,, , f_1i", , . , , . .„ ? I -
i„. „ . , 2 1 4 ,,, t , ..;_j 5c , 1 tAtilt,:--,,,,
,;zl, ~_ ~_
.., i , ~...-,, f ,'tt.l
0 5 4
;. m .1 ,;4, - 0 t A , :l i fl-:- ,,, V1 - •
, rAI"„
'- ' ., _' 3 ' - i - V.tiitgAPP.l.,..44-, , Ai , E , - -„,,,:,; / •-- ,
„fito I . : 41010o „,fiViA,—, ,
I
1-1 7 f N,,, , t , ,,, , k, , ,,,„ g 5 .,,,i;
1011,-4f; ,v,-,-, itfel fß v ,, ,'• • ~,. v 3 k
**4...*04 . 4ii,:it4 - mo-Aihtr:
4' ii 4 :Ls i° 4 i ft.t.,- ''? , g-1
.7"ol4lB''ail
'';''.-, --, ,-4. A., ~,,:-...---,- , . t___,____...' ','-'• "":,.,,,`I - ,P,..' , ... , ';'`.- ~ '... d'',l,. :,',' °' , . i”
...1: 4 V .." ,P,,;
4r,i aftitv - ff-Ati , e0 , ,{ , 41V , , ,, r,.4 , '"- , -.:.- . '-. ~..:0 ' 6..
`-',.-, 2-Tikioi , l - AWlll.:Paliffisealdintstry, , a; • ,
' , jlVilliiiitliiiiiii.t.itit,pti4 -11 titdst, IMO:,
' iiii - '" - t- , prn)eie4 l :Blitttiii- ill 'fitipt4iirlis!!':
' , ''' ' i 401: 4 ''' 4 " ' ' ..e" " 4-jr- 11 . " . ''''' r Tbe'
Mokal.avri4v—moft i fi ,1,,, 1 , ,
fftwlit - 4% . :§ra.04 -- 1114 -Mrproo7s,-,,:;frik :
lt•iill-TtiPlafilf I T' 4 . 3 . 11 : 1 M I t':', raWA , 11 . ,
'firt..'411:,....*WAir3,7461,4 1 0.0.'i,8 6 • 1 10 1 ; 0 .40t;
4,4 4
„ 1 0 ' - . 1 A..,r. $4 1 4? it Xeltot'A i t i - 4 0 1 -
..
~, ,
" -, d t i . ii, pf
..3-,-iilloioe . ~.:,..y
,_ ,- -I'ibic-iiiiillßN-- -, firitrki`"., .
-0-)'-'41,1114-%*,',.--iiiiirAg" Her al d4M/41
Vilf2,lr-,7 ,1444.0.!•'7aiiiiiiiti
,oflb,
- 'Ettot.,",o7?-4-wiritk!.drsisiott-, L.,
'''''7
6iinis".
'''''
litsn ''' -os ,
....,;•.,-:-,-,:**1....,4_,,,,.- ~..Aiwora
?,-, iiihar.is7, •,.
011474.'
~,w oa- , 44:tratisies -=_i(,,,i,-,
„ b itb- .„, .„,,,i,io,3:l!rt!° -•i‘-riat eit, l'"'-''t' tA-2‘,
. ~,,------ii.:•,,e, ,0 , ,1 T1, i t.b1e
~ -,3,^ t..,:.-`iii VA*
,E,dit-4-4.40,-,Flaku.4,',l4ing9
.-., -,- tigplewir
..s.-1-•:-:11**kaix-1104";.I.-*1:64;a lilt
'- - ---', ei-'li:lll.l.*'oiif*i-0411-70i10#94;+-111"P34 ;''
c
'""-
"YMl'l'il:-:0010f"P' 'o ';'''"s-'-'i;i'''-'il'i'
04411' i*liiklrreiiiii-cit,016;',"..-ita,t-'144;
iid!l9-04°540,*-Xkjii,fliltiit 44"*--7-46.
~51ii:Atcl!,, Liiiii,t4f 4.g.F. ,);i:,.'auhk.".9-f°7! 1;44
-. -'
--'-:.• -,--iikitAttEgie4-`,7.4/tiiii:',4"3:°'-'44,14:014-4" iiiiii':-
• ' : 'l--'44'1.1-ItilitOtk`,4loo- '-.11-i4:i44,.749',.-_,---,.
-it*P'.--,7w--'-"-:!-4-iiiiRnArN.,,,.:.,;,7-::::--.,:-----ii,1
. . ,=....-iffitrefr,t •,-.;•--;., J., -;'..,-,, c,-. ::,.1., -of the 10„ ~
....-'..'-,',•-•,,',.:".;-..,111T.%..,,4.1-,,,,),51,,,ALivfie*,,49,Ly,,,,, •- , . e , iiiiA,,,,,
•-‘l',.
~• ii,,,,,,,,„;,;-oiiiiitOt o.,,,t',,V3AiiatiMifl,FLt iiiiiiiir
~,...%, ,--' ,;-' -,;:r,ri?•!fri ','l--- ':*tiF,!.NV.,_4.'rd6lti,e,.„4-niiiiiir•.:
7 :•-;,,,,--**!,llM2.le'''' '" ill!.:4T_'-•,,'-ItiOtt'n'; the
''...-•,;"'-:-: '-c- f--il4O-„tititd- It..l!wor, thellr-'7`.--"' i5i411.14.-- a..
- '''''''
OA ft4.li-iii,•illt 4,1!"24,-.,--ko:?.il''.l-,-.--„
1.':.: ~-,, .:, ",:lreer:-. -,36eii*:,l!sl-,,i1-htlii,l-fv.,,
_.,'=,?_!=;4,?;i•littitsi
r , ' - : ,- .f , ":•r ~ -',;"PF,.,4_,=".9ti,Egiintr tad "- •!:: iiiii..--`,TOT..cI-1!t:1;0-Api,
,:-.,,-,.-',,,: -iiii,gf-r.,l„.„•,itiriiil4,def,,s,.
_riain4ke,..ger
~,,,,,
f
~.-;---;-',,---- i. ''-,';,:2,1,..`-';',l,,e-r7ciii.i.i;..cle.lo.!:tc_,.-oz-- -I .',-. : iit :
P3-1f:-3;,''i-,,,,:04*14.:4A7tiiiiiiiit," '',:'iiiiiiiii:l(.lol7 -
F--..4,iii,P`- 4 :'jzi---iinsiiitAli...q., t ,36-I,44l:atii he-„:iiiiiipgl4!„op,tl
-,,,..,,,3).;5,4-43r - -- v*,,,,,---- • rthe,ll,,, ~7rrPtis]
f11:•;'Lg1741-tillii101/efe;;P-''. '''.'',4o*)l'WeliO'''
':',-,-'''.-',"::':l4.i•g,',4lllr4.,l___,.ltl:lii'iiiiiiiiiiiitri.o*;,-.,P4'.l''''',ll:'
.-:'Til,VP*.ititi,-4411*-Pr ,fo„lif;=*l4tifml---eil,,
,-‘-,''Atsiilsiot...._....----iihAttorf:,..„,,,i.ioitt;ki.3l.."Ti ;,-i
:' -'„-;,.'',"',-;'.4.....4.- iiiii3,sr7,k.: iiicritfamell!,433elfert;T:,
,4;!!:.,i,*.t,i-,,,4:-74,*(:75.,033' , ;tj0ti11,"..3
• rh ;.:--4.-40iiiqrti,o-4:4:0,47..ii;;ii4,.t.*;
~,,:--,;----::::--',•
--tt",,,, ' . iiA*ol r -4tW'*,4l-,`Oliiii:Al
'"-'',-ff.:1i.,''''4600140'rn.1464-10,1111*,,,1,,1ie1i:i..t•
'...-,21i-atir :tiiiiwitfec.7#lT,,,-.*TitZ''.f !-.2....,,,,..- ii
irt
:fitt*Titw-iiiii.00!!41!,,,,iiiiit",4,,,-;_Tuti
,-,-..,449„.ii*emtaft-e%viiipitfiisml,w
-,_itiltib,:tit.-A.-Aiia4rin&-,'irnvtikt!„°=i;,
-?.:4- ...;, - - -0- 011,10 elk , , -.- "„Ili 707 1 : 9 .. „ ''" _go p,, -:
-:. •• 04'.;i'""filliktP%14"iia 1 4 I.'e!!f.-1),ir.,,,,:7i--,l'i
41-taiiiimik,,,,,t,..i,,,,,,----,:,-,,,,,y,.i„;-..iii,*
o,v,.! w • , :v.,:,(o•3,mvw.ptizibiti,-f.54-"..-: ti t ',
'--
4-.-i33,-,-I„iititr:-.P,,r.i.,"itaksig;,--, ;-',
'''iiiiiiltaT- • ' '-' sir- ..,41k iiiieflete• :'-;::',;2b 4..:,01,1,iiit flit_riart-ilifil7Bl y7l , I lk
/i6OftripiO4JNal ) . rigpo'oo- c l y , ;;
.:iiiiwj4 l, l6l*istc-rnl, 41,." -toot illitr,
-' -•
-c,_. itii i*q d. ..",,' Altifbi9l#l,l,o!q.fra
-611:0,D1M,M141-iiiNoft:: 77m:,•i.f_i,,',1:-t';-:---Oe
Ai**;i"lPA:t:rz:;'-''''.'' ,i-(11-1;ii:ilidtT:'
,4104C09
.r.t-',.ife,:stifijr:'ot"l4ilitii*ll4;,'
••ji..,"•-;•„4.1*-1!'8-1-w,k-ra*t tlizi4itc4ed4s•F.'
,•1.-... -,.:444=-L'afip!.firg'l.oil iwr ic -':-..f. , 144 b i, th4,
. 7- ' el.:•:litit' '''''-'4,ii*Y.'igf° '9 ;tilitiee't444
• ' '' lM ~,...„ iiiittiO#A„' "--' • poiraili*;-) ' fr iii'eS
- ,-- (~..,:!_ ,-" '1 6,1%kh0n,g.....,,,,F.,-fetther.),!l,3#l,
,--7 --:'''' 'CI _hiii44:lf lestlr,"A„,-3. -te„ivight 3!.!
._',
. tr.a,, lzw
fi1k..,5,...v.t.: ~,..„---- :Aim.;
..--
~d that
,-4Orkt )s,lti iii!fp.,l4l,7ll)eiiirtii(i-,8,1 ' ~. ii:,
'-'--"'--e-ilailtik!lel4;iiii4l34.* --fia
_Niir'S :1:91,-,
' :.,- 3 . '606 r 1.,,," -P- eip'eit( , ) ~ , WC-- '',C
'----"-......1.:':
~5-,....6.410 411,,,,,,,----,,,,,,-,„4,-,,,
„3, • t4ii :
"--"- -tkgoiti,ll!4-,^ ,?,l'iltanw,” 1., er ., noM
-; - ' 1,4 ~..c,-"iNkiiiiitkl, '-', -; the • saute - .''''-0r
,;,1Z: 14i)04'7'-'7%, i;'' Lai-6i% /11:. iiibiptifta4"4:ll'
~-,..774ri11inktr..L40,44-4-it 4,0: #,:oe-,
t r g
.';.-•,:,_•.• '-- 1=_,,4*4(4147!!,•:,..iiii.iii44diei
, ,',;-,•••• 11°1;2,- - i4te;**Fir,744,,, ~ ,3:ict54n:,,,,,,,,-03,641-
, .--- . ~#34-otwar.j!!l”.--Iftii,:fionilkt.',,o',...
'• .T ' : '7' ', ~'- 134h-41**ItIrt:" itlifle?!1"`": *444161
nlen
'---":!‘' - -i7444L'liiiitiiii6*#.4,:
-- -••, '.;_,'-.=; .:_.:4olSia(lraV,779%fihilifogoirix.,„.l
~t,.144wiy13,.
•-::.-..•:',',-..'":-- ',:--.: -"r-jiliko7,ofi,---4,Lr..i Ili 'l,iiiil/431
l't,.,:'"'-;-:' -; :::(;I.i ',-/Inti4StregOl"-tiP' i4littt,Prli . of. iii
,:i.*: .--,'',:,;-VlR,ltall_,46.*:;' ~' '''-'4111014-'4-I,!'-t = i:' ei:
, '-,,,L''..-';P,..•,•.*puhißki-,Tiviit. it V er?,..' ,44 the'4l„g. „,'
--.1- f-k',:cl .'.s,'""l'h*.itioek;',-
.. --,•'i,.!.,bilkuvrY,, ."#WEferl!F---.
':•-'h'''.:71-.',- --. 4 -'',41,,A.1,4*--,11(445*;1147i,-1010x4..g - t,' titiii tit':
~:f.-,,,,P;iyi',.„-T11*•`,"•,719j70111 1i,A,i)f.4119 ,4.,. '-"`(.,'!
'-,1';'iTit4,,..,_..--,4,-iv, ot. OP 7.1,- ',vitsted /0 1 a... ri
j I
-„3-r-T:-' ita-theL,Prf - -=',liis 0 1 F.'
~.. .1.-ift'l-fi1i?1,14..'l
le7.lit4i'lll6•l-I"'ii4 filet: --'••'``'' Wioifig'Pll::
E:4741,:i0. 41,4144:i i.10 14 1 ,-,,,,,-;*,p„,0,P,1
th — it,.*** i _l_o-17-, iiiiiiiiiKi4c4M,ll,4iiii i'inilliaKy I
:.-.,
~-....--a.ittio*..-_,. : --,:-.*Owlik ,' , - "'"0,; - . 1
•:,„,-,;'':,."..,"1"44,k.,11114 kg : 4014741A,,, rolififek44,%; '',.*ititi
- "•':::,
~.:,,litf,.-'7 tiikifoop.,°-, ii**q""' i 1
,',kaoL_.___.fe:x,Vii3Oili:,tun' 1 4.--'11;;;P1!!!4, - 4
‘ • ''''Ww-a!!-Tilr7 - 410 taooll-4-.,‘,4-44 iitiOiln,
'.-- • - ,f7•,,,,--i.,,-4,-41u10,1'.1!,'z4 `iiiiniier 1477,zi- ligiti'butui4
7,Lfiliktit f?..',._,-q- 3,lfileflrffiti47:3,--liiiize4, s',,-i;-.1
`ti-10%t-rl'lll4 '*ili gin, , v!,4,4w,,!. . 1
.-....: ,, ,,: i7 .,.....,5 14 . 5 „.10.,,,,,-„r, p;:ter,ft 4!,-
,k -L, *set
..-.440,5, • s.iiitiArst I.AP- fieSlolo--111'-' ab.l
..,if4i_Olt *'
''' f0‘4104)3",814,1b1.tr11%i
'iii,oolf -bAke:isflCl,!-, igi,oilief t4l)
,q
' '''-ksaie lat.
ifill - ' zu, 404,,, Ilk bisqg„- " --- 4 - i
trtone4ll,44:oot7irliiii,4-*O4OO- 4
140tIttig-' -k"e:'i;Aii*,o,' -,-*****"'
••'::;:::::::;.31:ieiseilf -:a!ii.Pt %1ik,i 4 0 . f .- 11,14,-.)5 otli' 'Ai r '•
--4':,,--Y-;:)1-f-;--'' ''
iil6olt,,t,.?"7lLodtiliii-Lt 'lleiroo46l4ttil',
-,--,:..,iivi-hrok7,.••,„f-pnlalr.-,.1::.-awcolrii.kk.. - 44 , 1 I
''-,1,E;:-.771i(%
~.." ,atiti! ' '-'oi..lolf,tbi't-71,;70:14, fia„-470`1#4104-,**7;,;.i.
.-•,'!. •„;_,• orilizrz,zllit:_...„7 •:- ~,l, .-46....- -.,40-,-04,1f,d4
:::!ki-
,''"4443ll•liieliktvittliiiii:pri
'''-'' -.-1- ' ' '"ift - iti-i- - 4*-01 , ir licc*.t .;
._ , , ,
r=l,';';,,,,a,.N,__Y • - • .-toi- d6or- _:,-.- --, - - , =
'''."-"T---• - ifid t r rubel: :..,,.,==••• fc filet
,9-,-i--'";1' biesyglit i .. 4,4 .Iwg-tiq .... 3...-ieitiali-,,won •• 3
•,,,,-;,_..-;:-..,-, ',-'.!;---' ;---, 4isit.t. 7ii ~.,,it , filiiie,, • ‘, .-1,-"liiihil' ,s,si.
.--4?-..,.:'',.--,-!,=:":,'":LPlr-.• tT.,311,10!"-•14=X41d,, f. •v- wr' !tat,
P''''-/-:''''.•' ,'. ''' I t tAV I - zg 'Z-60,--itt?? --'' - iItSIPAIT''-' i
6,. , ;;;=!.-2.!'.c,=,.A4
_Ailtl:-Ar:l-40147'.10.*"-Z
--=`.,;;-i.,"-sl**oEl"-,1,4,*)
--."',•Q''"''',--'...iiiiiot#l4loPl(o: 4 3.,-.-' iii.:44ol'i'' -5
,11lit .2r#1.1 410:4".,,, 1 iii''Wlib.ro2l,litt
(
4•'':ii:iiiiiii*- 7thmtr-''g'„.':-Hi1i*,7.4i."1-iiio"'Pl:l
- itr..'24-o.atiltA l lir .. ,,,,tl4l6l'ii.il,fre7-70i1i,.,45i91,4'
: 2 - ;.'/'-:.'' . 1,-..qtimitwA. )i,,iiiyiliit.).l4ltl'",tiliiigioiiil,-,.,t
[
f:-..,_,,,J:4,,,.:..4-104-6,ez., : - : k i!miiii - 04 , - - -ilivu ttfijofivo .," :
~,,,,,;.. -.:1-'7::-,-;Itoeie-iy-,.4140.44.4,1-.'`it,,..:4*1
f. 4 -- - :.,'..-.. . - filii*A-V.-i--,7itiw4.4% 1 ii 10319
f.;--rc4,ZAoiiii4-/i3.--400.!,`ti!1,6AL„ii -
ir•:''' , .‘' ,:7 ''Nr - q1,1140,1AftVie•14.4"191;11
~-t'sr'-'4i4 '''''Aitt,';44(.4l/772-41-1...R 4VP,-.t.,-,:31.d
----,-,„.,i,-,,-- • , ---,-„,..•,, „ •
;;•,%,%A.:,i ti . ,' , -.;• -- .', - -- i.
=''-'=,''tt"-L.,- -45,i,.--gt.;*,,,,4.1;•:,,,,,e7,e4.,/.l4,Asig#te,
;-''',. ' --t-2-,
iiiiifell
p,„•::: ..-: : .:'• -.: - ,T,..,,,irkgr.A.,„,iv,..--ifjek,4*,, • - iimimtPl3...i., - -
t ighor
•:iiik-09,
._?-477,"1114.*41Y.77,-„W, -07d4..*Ati:11#1.
';'.70:4!1.,-.ate--044-;',Cp-A41ig..,.:).04..,,901
~,;;---,-.:„...•.11,"?.4;;; -
,?:::;.4y22,fill.nAti,.o.!:M'Lli: - •
4J,-4-z4._.....
• ?:
~ ~ \
(2:
~ /
~»
,
ipi
WeetWeather;Obeatiown. "
subjoin a eonininnleatioiOrrini
Minder, Natiis6V
.eprfattiry;Vishington, to whitish wiStaitirletoe
liidrits: attention. What is any one's
bust
wesa is nobody's business, gays the proverb,
this iethe, only. thing to
413,0014:441:16:1. It le:tieiirablethat ear ,
tai' pbdeivtttiode on the weather be, made, in
hVii,'ll.l4diii`'ltinr_''oolt:-Elititeiiwittra--yiew of
firiestigailpg thelaw, of storms and other phe
nomena concerning the'Weatiter; in an ef 'about
'Ojti,Vtp#l44)osiic piCan. Thlo *,
will be.thine
„joint Atheilean,and,Engllsh'itidia:, ter , pub
_
cl':11. 1 .? 0 .4 - and Ave , htipa it may, be well. donb.
.][c:- Scum's own researchesinto the currents
4etheweititd-of the ocean have prepared the
OheervaPoris *bleb will be blame
4ititelf,C,nniMantied on ittene shores:
:4.2'Prllo,lolleit ot.ica iviskruhi ter„lnit 'ATLANTIC
At-the instarPi oi:the,„Eoyal ..800lety And. the,
British Assocdatiorifor the advancement of eolenee,
the Thitiah governinent.ii just tura. 'commencing
arise iitchsereetioos in and around thONorth
lantic 00ean, for the,purpose of L investigeling' the
fseizof atom; anti other phenomena oonoetelli
the, l iseither lind.shont that lnman. ; '
T'he;frotatter Welt bnett'pleeed in charge of Admi
tallitiP) l 44:4; the 1046i/0410AI pert:itmint of,
thelThillid'Of (and `Arda'aietty), Londo n , .who
salts ion shipint see; sa . willtr. as pinions. on whore,.
iiertilA*7l;kticin: The , Aiiirvidttina' sip, to eon:.
infistilkrtit,ao;444l eMittonenntil September,
$69 ';,,,nelbni•reikie..:piinelpitlii to , tifod.ard
taacker:;..- thong observations with in. ,
tornments t fn atf,dfrion to those of the eye;'on the'
iiirection;and farici' of the wind ind . the.ohareWer
of ths . ; i reather, : aye Alpo " ;n: yet the es ,
sista:lee .he -Tendered* thotre , who will keepSe
Sentreatilitylisig,aiiiPly the, force and- direotion of
the wtni slid the of the, ie4ther,;tiviee
W. ' (sj:
faither:ierearicaTthat :Mat eioin need:
fai,yeeilrbi-litgbly'loaportent and thankfriiii re.,‘
hOiii'-'6l,oliBer.vOin being :Om& b
.e
tyrilsOteinwpita, , wilf
fe;Tigaithiiiit',2 P.6efetiiid P. M. for New
*Wm' hi; almitt4f:foi.Georgia and Florida, &boat
;:for Pidiedelphia , about 4, and for Eastport;
l• ebouti SO - A:.; lf. , end '
-A I,pliplkitiit iiiOb*inktiifein of our 'coining yea.
ca• ts 46::013servation.on wind
'iutWeatheiraleo, that the fishermen - will do the
ysoli;7#4l] , laiitiititeintit i not lanit t the fainters.
k. ; ; ; ;9ooliitifgftnifroi: , iiii" fun:Moliseme "‘ With:a
inOliiit; 1 00'1,014; 1 4 103 , 1 f:tdini ti : :13 P ni O v i
all pa,Alentere; and .giving;dalidied,instreltions
• - times who ' , arid: , to obeervo, a copy or whloh
'di be hippy to furnish to any one who will
Tbi~te.abenetloent and - arts in ,• fraught with
,advantages alike to all on:botb sides of the Ation
;t16;11101. I hope sir fillow:eitiseni will 'give it the
,and‘ that
tiro press generally , will ;a ooogd ' this appeal by Pub . ;
thaabOie - and Oblige„ .
"„Reepactfally,
' M. P. bleralr:
July Id. 1850: ' '
ifthATIGEIT WAIL
Oerisipirideiseivflki(Preaal: - • • r:
:",".14swittscroie, , faly 1,:1859 4
Mr. Appleton , AEalitadt Booririary of State Som. •
ollai s tirf tenthly that iti•Ja ooropelled., , to discharge
.i„ ,l4 l4.l 64 (iiirdittlart of the:StateDepartment:wird'
Can itookibtimig: fiathoicith" a very
I:4lloWoritt44l,'ltfid. oat, ,dtemed to speak, hi. real
pirreallar rioneefOrri, 4t ; is nimieta-_
tbitt.he'regardi (Irene rat 70ass as somewhat
of-fn'itiorustibranire:',Thir work Is too inrush 'for
il4f;..44ll4iitoft;'and no O iiritralli be more gratified
:if the Secretary , ot'.,Btate Wotild , ratio or'- rel:lre
rthichbraccoroplithed and-faithful.aldstait. , '
The railihtatittent Sortagar, - of Innowiter:
i itabinitei'Dreidriii - la
belonia to an ot_dbemngo ratlo family
141;arcoatteriliadlitm glad Was* that:the TAT:
'3lllllllq men yin Washtagtos are "'haired that , the
`Ain - ghat - 1 2 • -
of to sij!, dui Coarse of A
itiWN4ri; "farjiiic k l'Ao:,thi 'attariteofAiheit 'bier
„
" , ted!eorovinvairow,:tha- venerable :143.iirellitY of
acd am phials& .to addlhai
hlcif reirolsed` , tOstondi.4 his
igottiot alfaiipotorti., •; „
4;' , DwitwethVibildatio of the ixteative Mitts" Will
Kn'it's # land-11x11 ' • no toadies will bov,o, , noliaay•
'lrta*Oaniiiixllo4 Viethird to pte'
- 4;4 grrangad iiat*iary.impoqatl matter,
,tt,4l,Pktisttieat B,Jdfard..
to 13421 ti'itorq.the `de,iittetwooti
kithhat oodeont, • - No t a Omit it
14:16111M121dreelthang•td ,*,_or.:,piwatotect, 'Oaring
foyll,,rdrroa i 6 sidioooe
otooiat t boor
?%.1 Aril I* 'Wit to ;Jenkins, bat Jenks.
10,11**Aiiii:§t,ii,oitilittrfersi:atitipese 1 allude to so
:0041014-dientetaie; hit4ite fa' tiOt` SO. speak
4,' , " IV; teaV , lltett. andrbload,ittiott4;-- Mr. 'Dude!
asetteiy;• its 0(4 a representative
tstatt'o(hle4liiteiXilitt 11,0eoof Itfr
Buobariine waiktiesseiln inOte`ieepeitts disci one:
and itilinegh.these is Some iurprise that tiePrest
deriVihould 'bete 'shah , s ittiaknesi,'yet - Jenks ft
ttrisisetctittusidetts eideetilldeitt!oftbe feet that.the'
Nesidencti ; uffeetitin,
your...hand :fthied•Cif,,,the
o*ll,lo - 0 2 mictiired,'Ilain Downing, (en , tease-,
'ke i rpsAtiiiiitit4 birder td ridicule cld Tatkam,
=!iiitry§llciljeioil9iietrfend; thointnin, of the Nett
bin
og i ot k ,lsputation by,hls inclining;; but ,
104,44 his the advantage _ over 411 theso exam.
111 , 116: A*: i4ootV , loptco; pot 'bitty origleal,
goK4ltotpotl Doe stiottoist a thorough fdts
Pittiogton, bullet; and-Jenks Is a teal coati:
'OCCALSIONAt....
- L Wee, ffos,:,!v!flrfkililp tigo",,
coi:roirm44liiliofiti44"mo,H
BniiiroiOBfriiisoi; 47, 1859.
* m00n44; after , a sound ;
'end
refreshing
~elsep and s quiet earsatir.tlirough;
te bilautlfal ground'of this famous planner resort.]
lothildt. tap pro:nava - 0 lending' . si
Plrit..nr, nit let 7 ils tig/ 011
Amy, T: reitobed,kerO,,,,Teklnt tliniaidof the Penn.;
fisiliatele Central :at 11th and,.. Market: streets at!
11."AA . .1it, , fliturday'tasl x T . found. myself at:
AiiiihigOoi:`i 'disteppe
. r ai• 202 - . miles, and'after a
liji.#7,4, "14, 44aillil!th'egPtel;,took the train for?
?Mopavellf.oesif, * UM Ifopeereli. genres d ; where, 1'
?nibs& ishoMniodiMOstage;• driven by an asoommo.=
(feitl(lit: fire: liedter d - end - nada a.‘ plea/loot ,
"3:144 - pf: s,!:loTaf fn;
-Okanai'diktrif.a,SheaullfiStintMedightas ever, flooded'
thler'aventfulglobe, , tA,Temi of the visiters were;
abotit';ilM:grounds hut 'sleep bad!
JlialkthemSWOf.lhOmet.; It is,imPosible by de.'
#thapPiarsumeOfTledf,ord in the allielKe ff al-'
;;ends ratite moon, The air was delialong. *All seem-*,
iapcsle,ldava thOmitreasing play of the=
'the'spillogii mattbig
.0144,014 Apteo:ibbt,:ais 4 i4:9liiiiithat .11:•:iet,y . ; spot,
elerk,giria we is thasenithiy good, room, and f_
rdidaillesitnalready duly dorniolliated; The crowd
'iapbtgflot:allysy al thonghTreoogaissi a OMAN',
ntfPfpillir .i ttee,S;;ationg4ll6re rosy; mention
Geoigei EtharsyrooP
ft and , „4.ole,eiseentrie,,,egiEnreer,
thelblirgion;q:whose -aroh Psis atwayi
,isehe'l,s . ! tiis4st T e . .ste:lss ig afiii *e f t.
.''*-10- 41430 ; 1 41 0- 1tii: g.itfAfe4,ahont hitie imad
oaf soot* of .ihnlowinf liedfori; ins narrow and
betWeeh'polistltutlon Hill on the
- slaiti:#l4)frdeial'lllltteiV the . west :'
4 . okf .. iviCie . p,is Ktdlittinptovitniati hive been inede!*
Sagami new and apaolonaiilldlnia, loathe aiboomi
modattimotirlsitere i hare been *reeled , north o(
11tpa main ; liotdi~ ` snit the , krounda `have , boor(
p r eapit,sitiil4e(rss4oiajeatp!ell: not'dai
- 01414 jrat!ir-4this is
islrendi iesinblistradT nor :the', unsurpaseed °Old I
nosthe , iterpentle
*lligi),the 5111 i':riMftkegsliglstilts +slew' from the
iiitild;bi'Oltrioe•told tile.' But
yots.„iliat,the sistabllshMents
Isliftrierllent bandrothd , that Mr. A 2 4. Allen;
fli,i(ll*Vaitea'§gate4 am,o, who though
enuothig and
epheivialk conaponi, b eoatttred Eo.gfre general
IntlatiatiOn:'3 Tb. 'house is not 41 full ae I haTO
•pi ea7t at this l esson, but' 4anit any 1 0 arriving 41
and-Virgiele
aa,fersi srestern,..Ond atfddf6 Perinsylvai
431#1 - , and !before' tijec present:week . sae expired,
, tialtrotik te cinochf•the , gay est. and =meet
• {
~ •
z,l l s l o l l o . 64*.t.'50 expecte d ' , 'b 6 o l ?v ,
:bittn4q or laistitei.:-; .
I)ibak taken, I
tifldfirra,- foe, eight 11r. ten„ , 'A good' deal of gessip
mriismsli where Otero., flu nothing *to do
'iluiffir!lailit and' , 'ensign, reed> and _think,
* t .o74iji"l(„,,,trlindi'itetiiiisfßol*nli,' will, of enures,
-#l l : o • lo .,;:ti 4 a44so(erorsekeifkilntee: I will
aaa,Prnnigiii;4s)l) you
gioti!dia Ilkdbit{oriajaiant days have els4sed. ,
:'*? , s-'!A , .*.;,',-=`! -Myr , Occiaionz.
11.F . :49- ,•,, •-.:, , ,‘1- , ;Molifek,zinee, x ,„-,' ~,.. ,
f40 , 4,i'4..! , -Palilits , :41f ale Aririp maim, of
11414 :16 W„thiil t 9/kri,7 , '4o Wonstater of Mt
.
*ficio,if ttiOnoilf?,'„ifo SiOoifi,iir:iho'!itiopoitili- .
I . o . 44Cifititeilii:okii '''g - ,, sisiktki#,. toofte e ;,' ! Apa ,
litiiii#o4,4iititMAt'Olif f itigii:‘,l6 will Ion"
TO tft, , AO his , yal Oil Ole Oa:
:i10±144414t*-,lFois, ,
„of , gr,po,ligo„ Jo „the -* 'AI ~.,
,01001443**7/,*804,104( 0 14,0 ) 14i . ifj#Foilori.:
00143 ,1 10024finlotme.offGoefoili;,£schei .1:64'
IfitY-Y.o": 4o44 **iitiOgr: , .', , Ttie'Aiteiher's ,
11 4 ,00,:pii:Itil l iti iiretioteligilivfo l t. i There,
)1 6 444t*.!;* 1 14i .1400 . :filgiikeireio - -
eliik,4llbroirlietii,son Ato3 4 l,s,?fifo, : ortik. k ore
'4,, ~,Tir k ioo';- K i t t ; the s sto*l - ittantuop of : oillenol
'lTlMOsiii' ' =, A:,voir7 - good, lambi)! of a very
10 elegant, ink
,propertygor Bele this
1 . 11 At 914441411400, tct,AL Thoui,As kens.
N,ew Year;
RDE SI-ACALEIBB TUE
xmcicattnocxua, T i ng AVLAiiIo,A I CD *NO WOO T HI
114417-ERR;BROGWIE, TBS . BT/VD:ABE . 4
TER TBORELEY," BRIGHT RT REVEHIir — NSW'
BOOKS IN BREW; BY THE ApPLRIONS—RISFIOP•
, "BLUM 01 4 TEES— V &TRW& CIII.NIQUL BOAERI)-
GoLn GOING OUT: GOODS ooluNG IN--EPISCOPAL
ORMATIONS—OPERATIC AND THEATRICAL ITEMS
01 4 A , PETRI:AB JOCKEY; -
10ortespoodOnco of 'rho Proatnt
Nov Your. loly 38.1850.
'llarPerfs Idgesainei for August, lo_mostly,pricaYil.
It mil Its reedy foe ,the people about theooth. Its
circulation,' le eteidlly'_on the thereat., and is con.
'close onto 190 000 eoplei fronthlii. The drat paper la
the raitiltataitlg IMO er le, The Cruise of , the "Scae,x,' ,
and is by Dr. Robert Tomes, the editor 'Oeflocrciiidore
'Perrylewock., on Japan—(ll illustrations) ; Second, A
Poreat Story. the Hunting:Grounds oVthe datenso;
_
by' T. 'AMMO; Ittoliards—(l3 Illustratlons);
,TheMtialcians of Oar *Midis, by M'S Charlotte Taylor,
'One of the most iteiompliebed toteroediiplats, and one
of the itereat °however. of enders to WO itonvitry-ri2s
ilinstratione) ; Vourth; My Wife, byßose TerCYJ 1 1111 .
Whettil Ton Drink? by J.:W. Watson—a: temperance
doeurmat" of the most watery sort; Watt., A Ballid
—tnonyntone; eventh,. Visitors, by Dr.,
(le old=an
entertaining, and vet* Orgerd-y paper; Ethhtla, Reis.
Milt.'" titYetuester., by:J'..R. Thompson, Nig., editor
of. the tenths)* '..Literary Meenenger *lsabel
Pernardfe aoti,•hy Itfro. Anne M. Saleyer f Tooth,
Legal Wit-4MenjoietrT Eleventh, Margaret' Stuart,
ty Was H. 0 'Nehein"; , Twelfth, The .Virginians.
f fertine, the visual Departmental Miscellany, which,
t think you. pronounce a little more racy and
readab'a than ttfnal. • '
„, The Knickerbocker, for August, is also corded up on
the broad tableent thepolvnthero, and wilt be sentout
iaboutlhe middle of the West. It eontaing: 1. Cepe
May, by T.4ddisorltler,gedo, a timely and readable it
with ten graplite ilinetratlons; The
gte'rin,'s prim M' MI St George Cooke; Et A Strait ,
ger to Gottiam,, be Br. J"O Noyea,arlth, engravings of_
deeirromicent' churches; 4, The Omnibus Driver, by,
'l4. de Cordova—it very. obaraeterietle letter from one or,
the engineers of aalireadwerOaltilline Metaphor of,
;Birth awl Death ; 0. Poliney. the, Potter. bY.Dr..I. 0.
;Boyce., (10 ilinstratione); Marcos Antontus, a poem
nine lines by T. B Aldrish ; 8 Wolin:ince and 'Beall.
ty, a rim_ of the prior mill, 'by that genial, "glorious,
girl; , Phelps Carey ; :0. The . Rionsuce of a Poor *dune
Barri kaltnerfe Marble lifedallione,hy •Mtss Mary
',Dre.;•• 11 The Heart History Of a Heartier.'" Woman, by
'Mrs. Et P. Ring .12 ' A. Pony; 18 • The Civilization of
;Algeria; by M. I.' Errand ;1.1.. Literacy ;Notices; IL
.liditorfo Table. he "GOR e lp "ooftsinit, among other
;things, an exeeedingly eel; paragraph relative to the
iLiterary 'Minor of, The Pl eat. , ,
And now the At/antic, with the fregh - infaslon of
vint, foot, end 'cleverness obseriable eines the soceofilocr
of Dr. J. W'Palmerlo its editorial deparicient. The
lloetoAr'vnieolon, "lb that 'regard," will be to itaited
Ocessic; to hunt up alt sorts 'of new
,tafent, to tin the "Breton." with which it bats iron
,very math troubled, and lit some of that run out The
'ripening ,piper In theh c ilognet number, from the pea of
the Rev. Sylvester told. author of P Margaret." is on
The Dramatic Element in the Bible is which the wri
: ter shows that • 'Millar transparency of motive
ant purpose, or individual tra its sod epontaneous
'action, to not more palpable 'in Obahspeare than
;to the bible The grandeur' of Portia, the spright.
liiiaes of Rosalind, the passion or Joliet, the deli.
'Ailey of bpbana, are not micro effective•in dearnatte
payer than the Pythian greatnees of Miriam, the cheer.
fal brapitalify of Sarah. the heroism of Behsb, the de.
vot , on of Mary. Lelyntabetb might be eet off with
lea bel, and Cleopatra with Delilah Bat fotonot plop
; the
,wholo article, Powever, to crowded with
l ent ccrogiartiona. sad Is altogether Orkinal ant charm
oantsihntes a ebiraotariitio 'pcem
•:Thet Ned, of P.11.' Min !aim' A Trip to
'Gobs: , describing the 'Toren! features or the island
broil a iregy point Of view Dr. I. QV
Efoilandi editor of the , Voris:totted Roubbcas, an.
author of '(Bitter Sweet," Tarnished a two-toga poem
, entitled Mauled Gray. a tomb, Riad old fellow, whoa°
Mite and adventures you will, be liable to ferule and
*irate*. Longfellow eoinesirt with „Rneellados, a, g'o,
stone poem, which T would coey Were not 'poetry te.
booed in the 4 ' Letter from He* Tech.' , Toilowlog
thiS to an arti*le nn Tbs Z mores, millet; by an Arise
Main in Parts, and -Mailed there on the4alsof gene.
, It tie guiphinetetch oitbess saugniotry e`epe. Nezt,
ato puke, by
_These: with Maw Heroin(
Stowe'* Minister's IVoolng, and Holme's Dreektsit ,ir
rangsmeat, ;peke up lt; number of unmet Variety and
brilltanny. . „ „. •
.Walter the pew petrel Jut publtsbed by
the Harpers, le, oironmetwomta tonsidered, a aoliewhet
simarkablo prodnetion. It Is written by kr!: Plolg:
lank, the amities of 711 nodal gengssienz, - Icq.; a dietln
gd6bed lawyer and publlo man of this oltk. Mre. Tel t.
wink ie sarong yearn old. but ac freoh cad ylgorette in
leer latent's,* as :he wee at thirty. I wee shown ter
manusotipt,tbbi inorrArly, at Diapers, 'wed I eau& with.
oat romanc ing wheel pronouns* It thejgclat
elegant specimen of aellenapty,l ever balpeld:rthe
-ter' ea clearly and perfectly formed ai if they)tad been
out by - fhoo held of an engraver.. , -
- Ike At:Mitetons biro in preen; Otoskspeirele Winks
ad *nitre neiieditton, edited by Very Deaden Olathe ;
'A New History or the United States, by Profanely
paen;- rat ,the Irfratut by Thomas-W[lB*nm; A
%fennel et Naval 2Teotlee 'by Otpleta Weed, V 8: N;
Goes auLtio t ln. by Denyba Al Os; The lett. Georges'
by Bmweeterr The, Pall' that led,. a Lawyer. to The
OW - utile Dbureir and Rea 406,
Memoranda, and Letteri Anion ;ones en Milne!.
nations, by rA Dilere dee'llotemontit Behest Yeaghsn'so
Itevoldttons In lingliitc-Rialory. , vol lettevolailost at
Rate; Goose, Mil-lhe kfleinscope ; Boolle'a
Abe ffer. - Alexander Oren of pheraw,D. 0 ;Bishop
sleet of Touts, Is among the ggeyte, at the Astor
- ifettier Mitnlqui bee exPorieneed the morfniiitioi of
a reedier vendee.-o•tur At - theeneettny at Cooper In.
ititusa, celled by his •I' et, wbiob it era* hoped
Sign 'amid bo•Ptieed fe rar off the mortgage on his'
ohnrob la 'lllinois, after 000 bad -been, 4n ably nib
aorlbed,somogentleman anoonneud that Hr Douglopo,
westthyand trelf.brorern, becevaleat mootlemen, who
ltd already cootribute& 1250, mother $l,OOO.
On, Monday, ,the .! pater pioeeeded fo the
Oooetriobovero fde. D:, at Plashing to. lcreslise,"
and Was lbere ftforrieddhst Mr: D bad Intherieof no
inch 'subicilutloo. and knew toOtblig dolt - noir In.
to - 11;304 •by - Me. Ohlnlynt. • The quastmu UMW -is, who
was the ittslefteter 'Who 'opened hie otenth and ppn/t 4 s
- theahnotand 2. • •.• - -
Two mithoos of , dollars wore shipped, to-Europe lest
: wash, from this atty. The impartettin4 • during the
came period, were about are mlilloos, of which (oar
All:Ilona were dry genie. - ,
Prom the 121 of January to the 4th of Tunti,"loso,
seventeen tiessions cad forty-two peyote were ordained
In the givers' dioceete of the Bpissopal (Marais id tbti
Uniaid Mites." Of 'this number, fatten were or
-tithed in Conmeetlent, *blob, - in proportion _to- its
, plpulatlon, 10 the most flourleiting4kmesse to the Rinse
eopareiterobe
among Shasta= engaged for the next operatic sea
son by Tillman lb atrakoseh win have jelnel Niue, 11
tfetllnt, one of the" iery best tenon yip Imported Into
America. .Mis recent enrgement at Havana was it
the rate of three thousand dollars per month. '
Idwin Booth le' to perforici at fltblels Alertly, In en
>ntraonttnary entetteenmenti to ba • got up •neainly to
enable hint to capon Tsgo It Is isle that beldam not
intesdlo .accept Any engagements gestalt the ocoolog
Earn Laird, thi trtquer of ffashlon, Monmouth. nod
ltcltpae, died on,Hrldny !tat, age§ leyecity-tbraa yeari•
MO eon, Jos Laird, was the rider of Publon in' her
Plat Matches.
'Tin 'lleuvisr."—Froin every seotion;of .the
cauntry'bighly tattering accounts reach us re.
spading the crops: Not only is the yield muob
larger than for many years past, but the quality,
too, r,iti said to
,he - vary superior.' 'The croakers
during the Beason . !ere harping on - the damage
done by the frost, brit vie see many saeounts
most positively that the frost. go far from In.
juring the crop; promoted a better'yield, „and by
killing the inmate oared it from the ravages of the
ay.: The result of the eztratddinery proanotive
nese le that grain, in every emotion of the country
is rapidly declining, so that the statT,of live clan
be parchased - at low rates.- Letns be thankful,
Am Dramoitinr, 180.—Mr, idoßlroy's stayer.
tieenient, in another column, eats forth his Wen
tins to publish; at the usual time, his Philadelphia
• Oity ,Direotory,. ily additional exertion and in
'mewled ratre;in addition to Melons experlen'oe in
the oompilation.of• this very difficult work, he
hopes to sermounbthe hindrances he hes had to
**tinter for the two tact y6aTii . and, thereby ge
nre the oontinned confidence sail patronage of
his friendi an& patrons; as heretofore extended to
E*Cllll,BlOllB
, • Til,TllB, ALLEGHENY MOIINTAINC.—
T 9 'the .liberal mansierueot Of the rennsylranla
Railroad Collhlay our old - aeon are Indebted fur a
oheaio equifortablo impieyanoe to one of the
.ronsl,bealthfil and retriariifo aeottbria of our iithte.
The,Oeuipahasue'tiokeisfor an tiourston't4 the
mountains at, very low. price of saran and a
,haltdollara,: . irbiels are good' for ten days; thus at
for several days anjoUrn in that beau
tiful ;Neon. See - adiartisarnent in another oo
luinnt",
From Washington..
pi!Arions or' Tin - PliiBol4ll` • rOlt DIMPODD
SPIIINGR —LIAR CAnt OP (AS. OULLOU
Weensserox..July- 18 —Tee Plesiden , tiooom
, panted by Mrs Feoretary Thompson and Miss Lane,
left this afternoon for Hod (Ord Siftings, ' •
General Oullom, Who hr indiated fee alleged
malfessesee 'while clerk of the lions° of RPpre-
Sentatisei, to day demanded Wel, in the Ortmeal
Oaart,-but this .was postponed ,till the next term,
bwing to the eteenee of a material witness for the
United. fitaieS.
' The• Death of tar. Choate.
BOSTON, JUT" 18:••••.1i10 committee appointed at
the meetlrg of the Suffolk bar , will report relsolu•
devote-morrow in ietation to
,the death of hir,
Choate-it le underlined that there will bee public fit.
neva,' end that Hon. Oaleb . ,Onabing n will deliver
the eulogy. :•
The fifteitinnhip Cantado.
.—/loston, ;lily 18 —The rayal mall atrataaliip
,tlinadahaa bean taken info the dry•dark for ex.
animation of flit irprieit'she received 17. anoonn
lerlidarilfielfarg on bar-last voyaza:
FOR 2ttilLitifai—ahose of oUr citizette who
3 lboe'thersett i lt.briny bath, a s;rolf -on the beast,
•atel 4he. pleasures of ta,day by the side, of the
ooeste i elsout4, net_ forgot, that bi-triorrber the
thaweese Assorittlon 'of Red Moo will make a'
hand istinirsiiin to Atiaelle City. Ae will be seen
1.1 the'nentinnoetnent In the proper column, the
*bete are. but o•tripatatively a trills A, more
&lnae oeu:d not be allerttad of viewing
the," mboulight oa the waves."'
. •
Mlivetri Maitizra --Bogota are In demand—a
slight decline in prices was anticipated,' MiIMP*.
does worn quoted at 7 , ,8 Oats, Common to mod
Molasses dull at 31s3k flats for Cloyed, and 4.111
rials for Muscovado Freights were dull Ex
change had deollned ; Sterling( was quoted at 13a
14 per cent. premium, and Northern at US per
vent ! premium, at sixty days.
PRESS.-PMLADELPIRA, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1859.
THE LATEST NE W
BY TEL
ONE DAY -LATER PROM EUROPE.
Arrival of the City of 'Wasbington
AT NEW YORK.
The Next Battle Expected on the
Adige. . -
BRITIM MAIL STEAMERS TO CARRY
ARMAMENT. ' ,
THE LATEST FROM THE SEAT OF WAR.
RepOited Defeat . cif the Tyrolese, and Invasion
:of Tyrol by Garibaldi's Corps,
Proclamation of Kossuth to the Hungarians
COTCON ACTIVE AND 'ADVANCING.
NEW Your, July 18 —The . steamship, City of
Washington, from Liverpool on the Bth inet,and
Qneenstown on the 7th, arrived at this port thio
afternoon;
libufurolehes London and, Liverpool advices to
the 7th inst., received, at Queenstown by tole•
graph.
It was expected that the mixt battle batwam
the Atittriansand the Allied' forcoi would: talus
place on the river Adige. -
It
•
wee reported that the British mail steamer
service had been reqtteked by the Government to
prepare to carry armament.
Aniiona had b¢.1,1 arohlred in a state of siege.
LITT,TOIAGRAPIi PROW LONDON TO QIIHONSTOWN I
Imanoa s .lota 7th —The Psis earreepondent of.
'the 'London, Timms says: ‘..The Minister of War
and, Marshal Pelletier have had 'andther confer
'epee, for the' purpose "of concerting measures to
complete the organisation of the army of. the
East.. An Nighth division is in coarse of nrcaniac•
tint' at Lynne. to reinforce the army of Italy"
lelegrain from'Trieste. dated today, eaye'ad.
aloes from.Nnples to, the 28 It alt. announce that
legal proceedings have been 'tahen - againet a secret
political meaty at Messina, and Several arrests
had been made., .• -
Advices have also been received from Anoons
to the 40th of An.. _General Oaltermatten had'
taken command of the town, and declared it in a
state of 'lege. A general disarming of the citizens
bad been ordered An addrees s of the Bodleian
Admiral to the'people of Messina bad been tamed.
The Paris' aorrespondeot of the london'Tintes
says that letterafrOal the headquarters of,Pringe
Napoleon state that another great battle 'Wee ex
peeted to tajse place on the berths of the `Adige.
The Austrians ire:belleved to have 200,000 men
In the Um •
A fresh battalion Wag organising at Pada.
Reliable information bad readied Vienna that
Garibaldi's men bad violated Tyrol .by entering
the Tanale otos.
•
Prime Windierfhgota has heen sent to:Berlin to'
aoquatnt the Prussian Government with -this feat.
A Frankfort letter ennonnoes•that the Austrian
Government, having been compelled by the battle
of Sciferino to despatch to the theatre of war
troops whioh it bad held. to reserve in the Tyrol.
end that previous boing consequently menaced
by invasion by GarlbeldPs corps, it intends to
proem to the Diet. in virtue of the treaty of
Venice, .sthich requires German States to guar ,
entee each other's German territory, to send a
German army into Tyrol.
• Noiruth - bee issued a proolamatlon, calling the
Hungarian nation to arms to struggle for libertv,,
nod announces- that he - would son be among
them''
ahe'inveflifs Russet dimities thepossible cons
pitoatiortof the war. ernesle,it sap, hal called
ant an army of 500,000 'men Sableh will 'be rein.
forded by the Federal Contingent of 150,000 more,
tind it Is with snob en enormous display of, force
that she proposea to offn. bar mediation to France
and to beaten the "oohoinsiOn of peace. Bit snob
an armed mediation Constitutes taper! of the
matinn , Is not Franoe entitled to reply that the
oonditinne et, peace ought ta 'toe proposed by all
the great Powers coejslutly,' and not 'by Prussia
alone? And that etteh en mined medletlon made
by a single Power Is equivalent to a neolaration of
war. Hut. when, to maintain the Austrian pe
rsistent!. In fluty, a Go;rmon army of a million men
skill be put On , motion*. attach Frisco.. eon the
Palmerston• Russell Adminititration remain indif
ferent speotatore of a now confederation? The
po g lielt Ministry will most, certainly not allow te
new war to Win. without pat exhausting alt its
powers of persuasion.
PLUMMY' .Tnly 0 —lt is stated that the pro.
.posale mode by Itruade on the extraordinary sit.
dog of the Federal Diet on the 4th wee the fol.
lowing : . •
'Plyst. The fiMetitin of the ninth and tenth corps
d'armee to rho Pres Ilati army.
•Ssoond The, appointment to the oomnand in
chief of thO • foer :nowrrussian and non•Anstrian
:ewer d'armee - • '
Third. The awing of all The. reserve eonthe r
gent; force In readirlent to mereb.
PAnNe July 8 —News has been reeelied "from
ileqmlo, that a oorps of 8,000 to 5 OM' Tyrolese'
Chtsseurs had been threatening the 'yaltelline,
but that several ohtuurne of garlheldi's and 91(4
dint's owns had repulsed them frria O,feeee, MA
driven them: es fee as the first, canton and the
Stelvie pets It le sold that the Tyrollee suffered
arvareiv to ilte
,arkego.nteat
loss was tenneverelr wonlided y and
eteldirdle three IFilled toil four wounded.
...A telegram from Tvieete pp Tgeolor-sate au
Anstrlen Prise Oadrt bar bags established at
Terre, the appeal - troewerhical Ii fo t ote 13rourt qt
Trieste- - Gen• lham.Uellas, aornreender- - 4r , the
corps d'armee, lies arrived at Tileatcfrom Ve
rona,
TOE LONTInbi DAlLY sags' drir ARTiOtii
LONDON. Wednesday eyeetng,—The fends were
drill in dey, and closed at a reduction of Cer
tain edict was prodnoed by L'irl Lisndhurst's
speeoh which seems also to have - winged a dentine
nu the, parit _Bourn, at the onosineootinent of
busineSs II TA thia qtjor'inarkets, ponsidersble bust
rest onntinues t o prevail, isotwr listaniirini the
languor,' Tbere was a good &Nand for money, -
and the business at the bank wits ton moderate
extent, althiomb g,OOll bills were discounted in the'
open matket as low as 21.-per cent. There were
no gold transpositions at the hank to day., The
Dundee A: IC W. railway tenni., returns show,ttits ,
weak. an Inorease of f. 3 591 ; the Great Wertiterit
An inoreare i„.9 the Great Western en
Mores,. ,of £8.982; the, London S. W. an
Inorease of 14 922
TEM THIES' orrr
,Lottpotr, Wednesday evening—Tae debate of
last evening on the stational defenses alnpled
with Abe general tenor of foreign aseounts; es••
rectally as regards the naval movements in the'
Mediterranean and Adriatic', caused the rands to
open with a slight' reaction• ' '
In - the Amelerdate• ii aim, to:day, there has
been a further fall of 3 per cent la the Austrian
Stooks. -
The feeling of anxiety and gloom Is announced,
,to have increased today in all the German tittles.
It It reported that the various Otman Mail Steam
Companies aro ordered to prepare for the chum
in the contracts—which stipulates that they shall
carry armaments—being put in forge. The net:
eels are directed to take heavy gone, and alit no
title le said to have therefore met with some re
nianetrance
A numerous deputotion welted on Lord Palmer
ston to-day, to recommend hillford as the part of
departure, for the new steam reseal service to Aue
trails via Panama. •
The °aro of the Alma, wrecked in the Red sea,
ineludeo 600 bake of silk, 160 . estimsted at
£2O 000 value. Ono half of the lose, on the cargo
will fallonthe Lloyds .
Landon dock Stook was purohased today at 014,
the market having been earlOnely deprerned oboe
the meeting of the stockholders and the redkotion
of the tbree•per-oent. per annum The piton at
.the beginning of the year, when the dividend was
reduced to four,per cent was 91, and in the pre.
c.eding December it via% tOl. !
There has again been a fair demand at the bank
for discount, but as the payments of the dividends
will commence to morrow, there to an aptiorpalion
in some quarters that the rate will be twined to.
morrow to 2 per cent The expectation 14 gene.
rat that , any ease, the step ' will ot be deferred
beyond the ensutrizoourt day. i
The railway market la , again very dull, and
,huelness hat been altnotit at a Maud.
The Latent Cornmovnint Intelligenoe,
I,4OYDOw MONVY Itteltli&T, Tilly 7 —Clourele are
quan-d at 033(ralrnx:
• LIVERPOOL 00 TTON hl URA', July —Tbe
market to aottre and hl her 16 CO3 biles el Cotton
were-aokt yeeterdar. nearly all to the trade, at's Might
Missies on .11 rinalltlas. The aisles to-dar are esti
mate,. at 8 (00 bates , tbee market alnaltir lirm; -
T4V2RPOOL BRIatiSTOPPR .RKEI'I-11read•
staflYgerierally are doll. and the quolatloNt tiorn'nal.
Corn is steady, and there Is an, increased doornail for
yellow i
PanyielOile generally tontines dull. .
?swans le uncharged
Leaman, ,Til as r—j. p, t —Mineola for money and ie
oonot 9330; new Threat 91.11 i met '
Llysaroot., 'Tune 4.—Cott at market quiet at yester•
day's adrsoos•,'Falos probably, shwa 7 00) , b a l e s
more. 43pertil, 1,J.41; previously thii week, 01,603
bale). t
NEW °WEANS, July' 18 —The malls leoeived
by the steamship Tennessee furnish the following
additional Intelligence :
The demand or Minister MoLane for the surren
der of the conducts of five millions id said to
have alone saved it— Afe v hours later, Babies re
calved reremprory erdere from Illirsmon, seconded
by the English and If ranch ministers, 0, way and"
Galas°, not to allow the
,00nduota to enter Vera
Oms.
, Itoblos had oaptured Piaci!lsiah from the Lib
arms. .
Gen Marquee had pronounced in favk of him•
self at Guadalajara.
President Juarress decree eonflemiting the
church proper! yocuslete of twenty-five articles,
and le signed by all his ministers.
Adviees from Tampico to-the 23 of July sta's
that the organisation of the Liberal, forces in
nbrtbern Melte° in broken up.
The Miramoniote are acting with renewed vigor,.
and are not only threatening Ban Lute Potosi. but
an expedition five Groomed strong, against Tam•
pie°, to bring organised under General Koren°.
Artillery, men end ammunition, have arrived at
Tampiev, from 'Vera Cruz
A large friendly of nswder had also been re-.
oared there front New Orleans.
, lI . STOIi, July 18 —Mr. William Heihnis and wire,
of New Orleans, who are now stopping at Pay.
mouth, were served with a writ of habeas corpus
to-day, requiring them 'to deliver op a female
slave,
named Maria Haskins The hearing of the
case bee been assigned for tomorrow. Martha
hair been brought m - this city.• Her chief com
plaint is that she has to enj,y less liberty at, the
North than vtheo. she Was, in No Orleans:
The Southern Pacific Railway Company.
Kim Onbenno, Jai' , 18 —44 1,108 5 From MOT.
shall, Texts, to the 8% bast , orate that the Die:
trtot Atteeney has riholally 7 notified the Pacifist
Beltway Company that he will dismiss the !irate
soit:opon the payment of the nest instalmeat or
;50,00, ns provided ;tor in the compromise with
the new company. .
New York Hank Stntemeht. „
Nnw YORK, July IS —The bank atatement , foi
be past week shows the following mantis:
Deurasee in loans $1.012.000
Dsorease of oiroulation 344 000
Inorosee of spool° 7b2.000
inoroaan of dokbaka. 738,000
THE IL
,4178,T.
Further from Mexico.
Slave Case at Boston•
The "Expatriation 'Question.
- Orirtit 4 ';ll OF 4TTOthigY aIiNSRAL BLACK
„
bas; in
o J . niz i ll.,— th k e t r t e o ci rn u el et G o e f ae th ra e l
p rcl o a s e i k .
dentaf the 'Gaited States, rendered an opinion in
th e e ase of cheistian F,-net, a native of Hanover,
and who emigrated to this oountry id. 1.01, when
he was Maio nineteen years of age.
This sui‘jiot was reoently made the bola of a
communiort , lon to our minister at Berlin, who was
- instructed to demand the release of Mr. Brest. -
• ~ It appears that he was naturalised lot February,
and inidareh, after primaries a reguiar4asspert.,'
he went bask to Hanover on- a teteporary visit,
Me had been In the village where be - wee-born,
about three weeks, when be was arrested, oar
•ried.to the nearest military station, forced into the
Renovation army, and thare'he is at the present
time, unable to return lit me to his family and be
guess, bat compelled tiptoed his will to perform
military service.
', The Attorney General says that this is a oase
which makes It necessary-for the Government t f
the United States to interfere promptly and deol•
sively, or acknowledge that we have* no power to
protect 'naturalised oitieene when they return to
their native country under any circumstances
whatever. What you will do ranit•ef coarse de•
pend anon the law of oprown'countrY, as control •
led•and modified by the law of nations the-Con
stitution of the hotted Bfates, and the note of Oen:
great. ,
The 'naturel ' rtitlat of every free,-person-who
owes no deh!ts, and is not guilty of any crime, to
leave the country of his birth, and in good faith,
and en hailed parpnbe-nike privilege of throw.
ing off his natural allnklanoci and fuhati eating All.'
-other allegiance in its placel-the general right.
ip one word, of mthatriation, is ineouteatable.
know that the common I.w of England denies it,
that thh judicial decisions of that country - are op
posed ti it and that some of our own cools, mis
led by British authority, have etpressed (though
not 'very decisively) 'the same opinion.' Bat all
this is very far frees settling the question. The
Mast othel code of England is not one of the sources
from, which we darters our knowledge of interne.
tional law. We take it from natural ration and
jostling, from writers of known wisdom, and from
the sweetie” of civilised nations.
All these are opposed' to the 'doetrite of pertie.
tool allegiance:- It is too injurious to. the general
interests of mankind to be tollerated.• Justice de.
ales that men should either be confined to their
native soil or driven' away from it againat'their
own will' A moo may be either exiled or.freprise.
oned reran actual amide against the law of his
country,, but being born in it is not a crime for
wide' either punishment can' be justly infliet
ed Among writers. on public law, the prepon
deem', In- weight of authority, as well as the
majority number,'.,coneare with • Cicero, who
declares that 'the' right of eipatriation is the
firmest foundetten ,of human freedom, and
with Byokerehock, who utterly denies that the
'territory of a State is the prison of her people
In pilotless", fie nation , on -earth walks, or ever
,did walk, by , the mile, of the oommen law.
-.411, the countries Of 'Earepe ,have received end
adopted and naturalleed 'the °Risen of one ano
ther They hive all encouraged the immigration
of foreigners' Into their territories._ and many, of
them have aided Oils emigration of their own OS..
pie. The German States have conceded the exis
tence of the right, by making laws to regulate its
, exeroise. Spain and the Spaeiah-Amerioan States'
'have alwitem recognised It. Ilegland, by a recent
statute (tils 8 Vie ), has established a pernianent
, syst e eo of naturalization in the very teeth of her
common-law rale. Prance had done the same, and
besidis that, has declared in the node Napoleon
(ArVIT) that the quality of a Prenohatan will ha,
loet by naturalisation in A foteign,oouatry. There,
, la ne goverment in Vamp , . or Aperioa which
negotiant!) , denies the right. Here,' in the United
States, the 'thought of giving ,it up cannot be
entertained for a moment. goon that principle
this country was Populated. We owe to it our ex '
leteeets ass nation.. Ever since our independence
we have upheld and maintained it by every, form
nf, words and eats. We bave'constantly promised
fall and complete protection to all potent who
should come here and seek it by renouncing their_
natural alleglanoo and.tratteferriog their fealty to
"We Stand pledged fo it in the foes of the
whole worlds Ti on the faith of that pledge mil-
Senior persons have staked their most important
interests .If we repudiate it now, or spare bee
Mein Of the power whirs% may be necessary to re
deem it, we shelties guilty of perfidy so gross that
no American; eon witness it without a feeling cf 4
intelerahle shame.
gxpairlefloa logiudee not 'only emigraiian'out ,
of one's. natural' eountry, but natoralispian an
the country adopted era future reside!' es. When
we prove the right of a matt to expatriate himself,'
we establish the lawful authority of the country in,
whieh he settles, tit naturalise him, if the Govern
ment pleases What, then, is naturalization?
There is en 'dispute about the meaning of it.'
The derivation of the word alone maker it plain.
All lexleographere and all jurists dada° it ,one
way. In its popular otvmolegioal and 'lawful
geese It Pignifieg as vat of adoptinir is foreigner
and clothane him wish all the privilege; etf
ljelSille CLeiT67l or Jul fort.
There eat' be no doubt that naturalization does,
prof.eto; place the native and adopted citizen in
Prudealiethe Some relations with the Government
under which they live, except no far as the ex
press anti positive law of the country has made a
distinetion in favor of ern or the ethos In some
oonntriet itomigratioti lute been so encouraged by
'giving to edopted citizens certain immunities and
privileges not erjoyed by nativee. In most, how
ever, polltioel favors bays gone the 'other way. ,
Bare, none Mita native eau be President., In
some of our States f trelen•born °Weans are Inell
gible to the Mitre of governor, an iin one f them
they contact even'vide far two veareafter tbsiarii.
paturalmed. Bat if these restrietimm lead not heed
expressly 'made by pesitive enactment they per
minty wonid.nethave existed. •
In regard, to the preiteolion +or mit aitisenedn
their rights at home and abroad.- we have. no law
'bleb divide, Omni Into,olesses, or Makes arty dit
format vtleataver between them. A native and a
naterallesiWaerioin_thiY, therefore, go forth with
equal Emmy toyer ,everfaciiimr 'through every
I sad under heaved !minding the cormerYin whiatt
'the tatter iris bora; Either of them may betoken
up under a debt contracted, or a crime committed
by.blinself ; but both are absolutely free from all
,political ob sigh:Aisne to every coed try but their own
They are both of them American eitisane, and their
,exclusive allegiance is due to the Government of
the United States.. One of them never did owe
fealty elsewhere, and the other, at the time of hie
neturaliestion,' isotopia:Hy ritet rightfully, ip pup
_emerge flr ohne'igyFl ant} mughtipal regulation
threr reumineed, and abjured tomer. all elle
glance to every foreign pritee, pe`entate, State",
and sovereignty whatsoever, ant especially to that
sovereign Whose subject be bad previously been
If this did not work a solution of every political
116 which bound him to his native country, theh
our naturatis Won /awe area bitter mookery, and
the oath we administer to foreigners Is a delusion
and a snare. '
•
" • 'I here have been, and are now, persons of a very
high reputation, who hold that a naturalist.' cid
manner to be pretested by the Government of his
adopted eotintry everywhere except In the einntry
s of his birth; but if he goes there, •or 'is naught
within the penal of Ws-native sovereign, Isis sot
of neteralis Mon may be treated as a mere nnility,
and he will immediately cease to have the rights
of an American °lumen. .Thisoantiot be true. It
•
has no foundation to rest upon (and its advocates
do not pretend that it has any) exaeot the degree
'which denies altogether' the right of expatriation '
without the consent of big native sovereign—and
that la untenable. as I think I have, already'
.shown,
Nei - h - er to this vie supported by the prootioe
of the world. I need not say that our nebstaila
tion laws are opposed M It in their whole apirit as
well as their pqpress words.. Tile qtatps pa
reps arnithuipraolleally committed against it. Ni
ilovernment would allow one of its own subjects
to divide his allegiance between It and another
sovereign; for they all know that no man on
nerve• two masters -In Europe, as well as bore
the allegiance demanded of a naturalisal real
dent must have been always understood as exolu.'
sive. There are not many oases on record, but
what few, we dull-are uniform and clear.
Qat) -a , Frenohman, naturalled,hore,
went bank" and was arrested fir an offenee against'
the military I ter, which none meet a Fleet sub
Piet doubt commit; bat, he was disoharged when ,
his national character, as an American oltistn,:
wat 'hewn.
• A Mr. Amther, a native Bavarian, alter being
naturalip id in ii.merlca,,and living here for many
years, determined topon returning to his native'
o Innen', and resuming bill oregipaPpoll tioat status
The Bavarian Government, so far from ignoring
his naturalikation, expressed a doubt whether be,
souk/ be readopted there. Bat, this most 'dai
sies Tat which history records is the course Of
the British and. American G..vornments during
the war of 1812 'The Prince Regent proclaimed
it •as hie deterMination, that every native: Apra
subfeet of the British Grown, taken prisoner
'hile- serving s in the American, ranks should
be tried and executed as a traitor, to his lawful
sovereign, Tbla Wei undoubtedly - 'right, accord-.
ing to the Ceremon.lase doctrine. The King of
England bad not given his assent to the expatria
don of, those people. If the Prince Regent nod a
right o arrest naturallud Englishmen, gootot•
men, or Irishmen. in Canada (as the Rtog of Bun
over arrested ,Mr. Brest on hie dun inions) and
compel them to fight for him, he certainly bad - a
right to hang them for fighting against him, But
Mr. Mailson denied We whole dootrino and all its
consequences.. Us immediately !owned a counter
pralamation, declaring diet if any naturalie.d
pen of the United States should be put to death on
the pretense That he- was AM a Ilritleh mohject,
- two,Roglisti prisoners should suffer in like manner
by way of rotaimown, The Prince Regent's pro
clamation was never enforced in a single Instance
A -principle which our Government sueoessfully
realeted,under such circumstances will scarcely be
euhmttted to now.
.The application•of these prineiples to the ease of
any naturalized citizen who returns to his native
country is simple and easy enough. lie is liable,
like.aoy body else, to be arrested for a debt or a
crime. but he cannot rightfully be punlebed for
the son-performance of a duty. whiett is supposes
to grow out of that allegiance which he bee al lured
and renounced. if ho Was a deserter from the
army, he may be punished when he goes book, be•
canoe desertion it a crime. On the other, band, it
he was not actually in the army at the time of hie
emigration, but merely liable like other members
of the State, to be celled on for hie share of
tare du'y which he did not perform, beoautui he
left the o4untry before the time for its performance
came round, be cannot Justly be molested Any
arrest or detention of htm on that account ought
to be regarded no a grave offence to hie adopted
,s,neetry What hors are fleetest* , to make him
part of the army—trbat' constitutes the crime of
military desertion—whe,her a person drafted, eon.
wined, or notified, bat not actually serving, 11111 V
he called adestrter If be fslhe to repsrt himself?
These etc ipiestione with need not be disousied
until they arise „
But it may be said that the (40V0fInnent, bf Ha
never bee a right to make her own laws and etre•
auto' them in nor owrr way , This is strictly true
of all laws whioh are intended to enforce the obli
gations and punish ,the offences of her own' people
But law Which 'operates oa the ihterests and
rights of. other States or pooplos, must, be made
and executed o acoording to the lasi of !Indiana. A
sovereign who tramples upon the poblio lased the
world cannot exense himself by pointing to Pro.
vision in his Own n/U4i O IPSi.9OCIO. • The muniainel
code of each country is the offspring of its own
sovereign's 0111, and public law must be para.
mount to lobo! .latv'in every queation Where local
laws are in conflict. If Ifahnver would make a
legislative, dome, forbidding her people to emt
grate or Axpatrlate themasivae up m pain of death',
dhat'sronld not take. away the right of errpattia
tion, an,d,au attempt to execute Ruch a law ap
one yip has already become an Auterloaa oitiken
wnuid. and ought to be , lust by very prOmpt recta ,
matron. ,
_Hanover piobably has some miudeiparregola
tints of her own by whioiwtho right of courts.
lion is denied to *hose of her people who fell to
comply with certain conditions, Assumin; that
such a regulation existed In 1851; and amazing,
also, that it was violated by Mr. Ernst when be
oaMe_ away; the question will then arlee whether
the' tiallawfainese of Ma emigration makes his tot
of natuialisisticip void as against the Ifing of lien.
over -rammer, no-certainly-not. Ile la an
American 'citizen by our law ,- If be violated the
law. of Hanover which forbade him to tranefer.his
allegiance to ue, then the laws of the two oduntrles
are in Conflict, and the law of nations steps in to
deolde the question upon principles and rules of
its own. B 3 the public, law of the World we have
the uod.oubted right to naturalize a foreigner,
- whether hie-natural sovereign consented_ to his
emigration or not, In my opinion, the Hand.verian Government cannot justify the arrest of
Mr- Brad, by-.ohowing, that he emigrated con
trary to the laws of that 000ttry, unless - it - 'can
also be proved that the original right of expatria
tion depends on thi:riebsent - of the natural sove
reign. Thin latter proposition, lam cure, no man
can estabibh
THE
.CITY:
THE SUNDAY OAR QUESTION.O-HEAMNO OP
THE ARRESTED Papules Barone ALDSPIAN
RUTCHINSON.—The office of Alderman Intohinson,
at No' 1416 Coates street, was crowded at -eleven
o'olook yesterday morning by persons who, bad
been attracted thither, by the announcement that
the conductor and driver arrested on Sunday would
have a hearth& ' • •
She Green and Coates•streer Company was re
presented by William L Hirst and William 0;
Kline, Elva, and WilliamS. Price, )3)-q-, appear
ed on behalf of the proseoutton.—
Officer James A. McLaughlin was sworn, arid
testified thet he arrested a contitio'or on the first
oar, by order of Sergeant Orr ; he' (the sliddnotor)
was standing en the platform; the oar was stand
ing (at thelince of the arrest) with horses in it;
there were persona its the ear.
Cross.examined—The oar was standing still ; the
people in ,it were orderly and - quiet ;"I heard no
bells on the, horses*, ,I board to More- noiae 'than
usual ;, there _was a large crowd ; don't say what
collected the crowd ;- there was no ; the not
of running was agaihst the ordinance of the Sun
day law; I beard no quarreling.
Mr. Hirst insisted that the witness should state
what the conductor was doing which constituted's
breach of the, penes? The witness replied that
"It was a violation of the ordinance."
A note from Mayor Maury was exhibited. vthiph
instrnotat the Chief of Police to prevent the pas-'
sage of•ears through the built-up portioned tire,
city on Sunday, as suchrunning Is necemarily
breach of the pesos. ' •
• Mr. - Price suggested the propriety of having a
fiber hearing, SE Sergeant Qrr,- who was not
present, ordered the arrest ' - -
-Mr. Hirst hoped_ not; *OIE4I attended for the
purpose of hearing what was said, but, not, to talk
himself. His desire was to , bring the Matter'
promptly before the Supreme Court; but the only
question was, whether be, the magistrate,' could
find thilloient evidence to hold the defendant
Mr. Pries urged that there should be a further
hearing, SO as to nive:we the evidettee of other
-witnesses. He thought mere light could fie thrown
neon the subjeat, - mad that a More *lona breach
of the peace would be proved to have existedi than
-had thus far been proved.
Mr. Hirst thought 'it could be' proved that
the crowd was collected by the communication of
the Mayor, which bad been published without the
reply of the preaident of the cemparty, and he
could not consent that the company should be
charged with the coneednences of the ants of others
4t this stage of 'the proceedings, Sergeant Orr
Cana inn, and having been sworn he testified as
I directed the atreatot the conductor of
the first oar on Sunday ;-.I watt standing in front
of the first car, before the horses; a gentleman
made his appearance on the front platform and
said he would like to see the, man who would ar
rest. him ; told him / would arrest hint; be said
be was the conductor; this was at Twenty-second
and Coatel streets; the oar was stopped, at the
'time ; I was one of the perions'who stopped the
'oar; the driver went away like a gentleman ;t the
concluder wanted to see my warrant; I told him
'one was not necessary; be wet the only man,-in
the employ of the company who wee not orderly"
sofer as I saw ; there were no hellion - Wattle - es;
'there were ' two bolls, without clappers, on the
tongue. ' ,
Oress•examinett by Mr. Hirst ,
had no war
;rant'; my-star was my warrant; / am the Judge of
what Is a breath of, the 1W ; I was by my
lieutenant on Saturday night to stop the ears; the
Men were there for that purpose; all the night
men, about twenty-alx, wet/Ohara; I commanded
the driver to stop ; be complied, and made tbe
Hum fast to the 'handle of the brake; I think
there was more noise than an ordleary , earriage
wield niake, - but no - noise except thw running of
the wheels; the passengers cheated as thatoweet
by the station-house,-and they afterwards sang
semething to the tune of II Old Hundred," which
wet appropriate under the eiratunstanoes; I don't
know »het tamed the cheering; I have no belief
j as to - what - bawled them to pheer and slag; this
noise was after the oar - seas stopped ; there wall no
noise or diaturbande at the time t stopped the oar,,
except the cheering among the passengers •
'Examination Jin chief, resumed.—There. - are
places of public worship in Green. and Goatee
streets; I saw.no persons on the street looking to
see. the oars run' ' -, •
Crete *stamina& - There is sachem* on Twenty-
Second street,- near Coates; a Sunday school - wee
ring is at the time' the school to two huddred
and fifty feet from Coates street; the people
gathered when the ear was stopped t, one man put
ais arm out of the oar-window, and waved it and
oheerei i I heard other vetoes in the oar; I will
s ty,helf &eke to make a incepich of it.
09leer Stringer sworn went out to stop the
Brit ear; :Sergeant Ore tea use :to - arieSt
driver; I did so; "he Made no restatenee ; I heard.
men engin; one man put his arm oat of the
window and said, o Go away yea,— —."
Orotet-erstnined.—t was on Twenty Roma
street when i wap,tqld to etop the oar It- bad
lust rounded the curve i • there- wee ealee -Inside ;
one men in pertioalar was noisy; the, wheels'
made avails.
The - evidence here closed. Mr -Hirst said' that
Iran illegal arrest bad been made, the parties who
made'lt were responsible tor the consequences of
it- There Wile throttle to stop the oars, and an ab.
solute stemma of them, and those who caused' It
are responsible for'any breach of 'the tease which
Might grow oat of theet r -
Liiistridiegled t he idea that the raneing of
rallwaY car ehonid Mora 4 broach of the
ewe then the' riving along of env other voliiole,
If Sergeant Orr, he Said, displayed the same teas=
per yesterday as he had exhibited, on tho 'witness
attend- today, It was no matter for surprise that
people became angry and provoked. Re.wou'd
admit that udder the law of 1794 the - drtrer and
conductor might be liable to a Seel but certainly
not to a criminal prenatal:lZ Mr H cited neve.
rat oases to prove that the mere following of a
harmless occupation upon the Sabbath did not
constitute a breath of the peabe.
Mr. Price said the defendants were olpfigad with
following a worldly 'oettupatiou, and - the question
' now is whether there was ,e brattish of thesettete
with it. It, was in evidence that tbe,pare were not
only runntrg, lent that they were, filled with die.
orderly people, who had , resisted the °Moen ; the
conductor bed openly, defied them, and-it was idle
to say that thiidoes not constitute a bteaah'of the
Peace. There bad Witte del:tithe in the Opurt of
Quarter Sees - lone theta newsboy stopping a,person
in the street on Sunday , to sell him sprier coned.tuted a breath of the peace. kairs running die.
turb a plaita of-worehie, they broke the peace in
the eye of the law. Mr. Pries urged that the evil
had only commenced when It was checked gulden
day, abd had it continued, it most have been-ak
tended With disturbanee He contended that a
prima facie owe bad been made out.
Mr. Hint contended that if he was pursuing a
quiet ) worldly hotness. and somebody else cheered
when he was disturbed; he
,Oould - riot be re
sponsible for tbo noise. Stipp:ate somebody had
cheered yesterday when the alderman was doing
the illegal sot of tearing a ease on the Sabbath.
would he, the aldermen, -be' responsible for it?
The idea was absurd. He could see no distillation
between running a ear and a hackney oosah on
fleaday, 'mad certainly there was - none between
ruining a passeogeit oar and a oar on theAermitn
town Rath , ad, or beats on the rivers Will you
torture - the Sunday laws so as to make every man
a 'pertioipant in a breath of the peace *he reads
a newspaper, on' Monday, which everybody knows
.le, set up ripen Eitindej? „
The mere sterting'iir 'a ear le tot a Meath or the
Doges, and there would have been no breach of
the pieechad'it not been for the unwarrantable
terference of the authorities., Mr Price sod he'
bad often ridden past rhumbas upon 'Sunday, and
neither of them had thought of committing a
bread' of the pease
Mr. Hirst conoladed by saying that if these
sumptuary laws were to be en?oreed In all their
1040440141, they would be as intolerable as the
M ;machete.' te laws. which every Monday morning',
punished half a dram) amorous husbands for kiss -
ing their wives on Sunday, and the effeCt mould be
disastrous to the cause of Christianity, _
The alderman said that the sue was too tumor-.
tent to ho hastily bolded, and he would thereby.' '
reserve his &Wan until eleven -o'clock this
morning.
The following, letter was sent to the Mayor, its
reply to hie letter published in yesterday's Preas,,
by the Hen. James Cooper, President of the Green
and Coatee-atreets Railway
Jonry 16th, 1859.
To 'the Ilenornble Alexander Ifetwit, Mayor of
the Cif; of Philadelphia.
DZAR IR Your oommunleatlon. bearing date,
of the 15th' bet ' informing me that complaint
bad been made "in behalf of the congregation of
the Green street Methodist Episcopal Oharoh, lot
sated in Green, above Tenth•street, that on Sun•
day last, their religious observanoes were disturb:
ee by the' canning of the oars of the Green and
Coates-streets Passenger Railway. and that a like
annoyance is anriaipated oq the carping Sunday,"
was drily received and respeetfully eonsidered. -•
Your tiommualoation likewise states, that
arrest of one of the driver(' in the employment of
the company was made on the ground - that the
running of a railway ear. on Sunday' t. wee, under
the aireumataneet of the mils ' a breach of the
peace " I have been instructed by the board of
directors to say, in reply to your communication,
that 'ld- running a portion of their care on' one
linnet:, of their road, on Sunday-last, nothing was
further from their intention than to dieutb the
1 congregations having °beechen or pieces of worship
Re the route of their road, or to commit a breach
et the , peace. - On the contrary - , it was eei deed
oa the tuperintenden is, conductors, and drivers,
that the cars of the. entnpiny* should not
pass any church er place of worship faster
t lan a walk, and that trriot oars should
be taken not to interrupt or- disturb in any
way the eenttlelOtions wnrittiPßlqii let gush Pla4a
It wee also erj)itieci en them net to make sir per
mit noise or 411tIrrhatee t.f aby hind, and ounce
they written luetruellons to that effect bays been
platted in the bands of each driver and - conductor,'
and put up in every oar. I have 'alio been directed
by the board to say, further, that while they have
been instructed by their emote! that the orderly
and peaceable routing of their canon Sunday Is
not a breasts of the peace, they are nevertheless
disposed, through - respect for - you personally, as
well as Chief Magistrate of' the city,'-to drler to
suggestions, contained in your let ter,' tm far as net
to permit their oars to be run until after the eiptra.'
Gen of the morning service In the Several oburCheo
Teo board ale, desire that I should avail myself
of the opportunity which the reply to your commu
nication affords; to state that they would regret to
do any act at variance with the views of any large
sod WBll6OOllO class of their fellow.eiGsene, ex
oept at the call of what they suppottid to odmprise
evastmajwity of, the potato. The board has no
Wish undue intention ta'disturb the public peace,
nor to .dui anything that would be likely ta pretest
subversive, of the publio morals.
Oa the' Contrary, while they are the advocates
.tolevation, they are at the same time as mesh
the friends of 'tabula order, sound morality; and
enlightened Christianity as any of the few who , ,
have denoueoed them,
Thanking; 'on for Oho illopodt/on you bEW
evlneed diseharge . the'duttee of your °Mee with
eourtepy, beg larva to eobserihe myself,
Yours t reepeetfally,
JimEs Coorin,
Prot, G f eetiand Coates Ratlroali Co.
BpeOial meetihis of , ,both , brinehee of Coutteihr
were - held 7esterdsy., ,tiii.„rcoults will he !men
•
SIMEON OVONCIL.
Mr. Ceyler presented a protest against the
meeting. on the ground that it was irregular.
W,otherill moved that Commits agree to the
'consideration OFthe bilrmakinearcappropriation
to the City Controller and Lams missloneya,./a
eluding the payment' of *the _publication .43f..the
Controller's vat nablootaternenkofpnenal finances,,
amounting to $5,481i • - - ' - •
Mr. Drayton inquired why:go large an amount
Was necessary, in addition to the appropriation of
'151,350 already made: ; •
After some disotteilon;Mi: aiipeistatod thistle
had been informed by Mr., Alexander Onmetingo,
when the appropriation was made, that $1.,350 was
sufficient to pay for.thefpubiloatiort- oV, the report
in the Bullettn anditro other pttperi. -
Mr.,Leidy said
,that after • the protest, by Mr.
(kyle?, the passage's& the ordinates would lie - of
doubtful expedients,.
Mr. Coyler moved fo idjoUrn.' '
Mr. Common. then declared _Council adj warned
until the second Thursday invert September.
COMMON BRANCH
In the absence of the president, Mr. nieker
was stalled to the chair. - •; „ :;•: -
The oral of the meeting was read, when Mr.
Dennis offered a protest against-any special meet
frig being held. unless called by the Mayor, snob
it course, tater Vie' resolution of ad lourn moot, be.
lug irregular and out of order. Mr Dennis de
sired that the prated, which W9B signed by hie:l
-tself and ovens; other Morahan, be entered on the
journal.
The ordinance dissenting from the application
of the West Philadelphia Railroad Company to
lay t traok in Logan and other, streets. in the
Twenty-fourth ward, was read by the title.
Mr. Riley wonted- to ;elute Committee of the
Whole.-In order that it might he amendet
nnariiinone consent, Mr •Riley's amendment
was ho'roduostd._ tt,was to change the-title of the
bitt to " An ant Sibroneroving the extension; eta."
Upon putting thebill to vote, there were ,ayes
34, nava 2. It requiring"4s" to .- malica - quotum,
the bill was not passed, • • -- .
A number of gentlemen' b - eing - priOnt, and not
voting, of the .honse - , was: made, which
showed that 44 persons were present.
A member stated that three gentlemen bad
hurried out ,of the room-Messrs. Cromwell, Ward,
and another—when theetillizig -of this - house was
• After a long_ recess. a motion' toisij;turn was
made and lost. and the messenger was dospiitelted
for the atiientilea, but without off.ot, and the Chums:
bar adjourned..-,, • _ :; ,";
COMMISSIONERS ••p Foon.—The Board of
Commiesloners of Poor root yesterday, afternoon,'
at three o'clock. Mr. geyser in the chair. -
The minutes et the last It:netting were read and
adopted. -
The bones agent reported, lbe.orliolit number in
/muse, at noon on 8 4turdaylo.t, 2,284; same time
last year, 2,252 ;: loonies., 31'r adinitted within
last two weeks, 222 ; births, 21;, deaths, 21..„; dis-
Obarged.llB ; eloped,'so. . • =
' Tte standing nonamlttees were 211111011tClea, ea
follows :
Ahll.l4lol3lE—Diokiriaiii, 111bbIns, and Ea):ter.
01 Oldldran's Asylstm—Millitimity-Nsher, avd
Mirka.
,
Oa Support Oates and Oolleations--Server,
Marko. Cresson, Evans. and Marie.
On Hospital and Lunatic' Assinnut-7Marks, Rob•
bins. Dickinson, Leonard linrj•Ering.- - •
Oa Manufttotures=Dinitinsou Rotating and
Lantz " •
'On Parma-1W Garden—Evans, Lents, end E theS,
0o Accounlailaria. oreseon.sind Streer:- -
Marshall Renner, the steward, reported,haiin
paid to Mr Server, the tresaarcrof the new -Beard,
the atom- of $182.„
Mr Selby, reported haviiie.ent;seted pknaibond
and support eases the esti of $586.25
A number of reports were received, and appro
priately referred. - -
. The ocimmittee SiPpoitited - te"siamlna into the
rootlets of abolishing the office of chief resident
obysioian presented, thionkh their ishateinan, a
lergthy report; arguing, du faSer-of.theibedition
of ,the office., One . plan was , suggested lu lien of
the Prisent;wbieh was, the establiehnient oY o'
medical board, with ',pewee' to rot on the cams in
the hospital.` - The Matter abet:brim entrusted not
to'Oriti head, la toirailiticensinent praetitinnere,
as in the cue its the other hospitals of Philadel
phia. The plan worked. admirably wherever it
was adopted , The report had the followlog reap
lotion annexed :- '
, Resolved; That on and after the let• of August
nest, the albs of Chief Resident-Physician of
the Blookiey Almshouse and Hospital be ah;i4..
;ishod.
, The report wee signel byMessrs. Maria, Marks,
:and Linnord.
- There was ,a roinoritirrinnrt from the same coat- ,
tables, signed by Mr R E,EVADII a•gofng aratnet
•the proposition for abillfshing the office of Chief
'Resident Physician.
After a little. debate. the ohnelderation of ,the
matter was Plsrpolie'd Until next Wednesday week,
when it would bo disonssed„
The committee appointed to audit the, account°
et 'the'laie trcamnrer recanted 11 iaport, which free
read, and 'widen the table. —, =
Mr Server presented the following resolution
firieitted, Thattheltalarles and 'perquisites of
all racers of thie.bOardhe.andremiin the Sanwa.
, has heretofore been paid bys-the preceding board
until otherwise ordered. -
The repointiou was adopted. • - .
Mr tolokineoe moved that the searetary,be in.
struoted- to - advertim - for all ',claim, against- th,,,
Board of Soardtens.= - Agreed to: •
Mr. Williams presented filename of Henry Dark;
ringer as one of tfis:seiraritietia the place of Alex.
ander ()laminae Accepted
. Oa motion of Mr. leniu r the Doer& went into an
eleotion for Visitor of Poor for First district --
Daniel Mansfield- , :wea ,unartimousifieleated. in
plane of Samuel Gelatin. - _
The requisition of the Amain* for supplies to
the House, Wait raid; aniipted; and referred to the
Committee, on House Supplies. -
' Sche r afore& a reloluilmi; direeting tie
secretary to advertise for preposils_fOr turnishieg
beef and , mutton,- -
Oa motion. the secretary giros` directed to con
tinue the auditor's aoccient'apAti the latofJuly ,
Oa motion; the Board adjturnadito meet at the
AlmehOuse on Wednesday,nito.' - "
Ta_g SUNDAY. TaawiL QUESTION.—Last-eve
ning. pursuant' tootice,lhere- was •a meeting - of
the Young Man's Christian Assoalation to expres.
the opinionuf the - uteushersoif that Assissiatton as
to the proposed movement - of: the - Passenger Rail
ways in.:waning the Joists on.the .Sabhath;in .the
Baptist Oburoh on Eansom street below - Ninth'
The meeting was rather thinly attended, a °imam
dance- attributed - to the extreme heat of the
. . .
weather. Rev W J R. Taylor presided. Are
solution in favor of petitioning the Legislature for
a law prohibiting the running of oars on Sunday
was laid on the table, on the ground that there
ware too few nres t ant,to discuss it.: -
A committee was„ appointed to retire aurdraft
resolutions, 'During the abienie of the committee
the assembly indulged. In derotioniti exeroties,
several members - leading, In prayer.• The cons
mittee, on returning, reported' a aeries 'of
resslu
iinns condemning the movement, thanking the
Mayor for his courageous. camas, -and - sustaining
the observance of the Sabbath , getierally.‘ The
resolutions 'were 'adopted afteesonais debste,'when
the meeting adliurned; .
Illmr.aogp Horrprnalicit.—;-TwO merchants,
named IT Samuel and B •S. =Lainley. arrived in
this ci.y on Sunday evening from Yazoo City.
Sites,, and stopped at the National Hotel, in Rant
street, above Third: They had been engaged in
business together for mme years Past, and viiitad
this city for the Purpote of laying in a stook of
goods preparatory-to opening a snore in St. Louis
Tney slept in the aame,oheraber,_ and ,Ltinler
areas about 4 o'oioek yesterdtr Morning and ab.
stracted; $450 from the , -trunk;-.after. wbinli. he
vamoied; His partner,es cerisiderahlyeurpilsed
upon finding that his Blond had - served him so
cavalierly. , , .„
SITIOIDE.—Oscar panders, a boy 113 years of
age;g committedlulolde on Sunday night by bikini
an immense.dore of:stryohnine whiob mussed his
death . almost , instantly., Me hal been emoloyed
for some time past in the drog-slore of Mr. ~ r una
in Eisootid etreet,•belorrUnion. .This was ble third
attempt to take his life.• A letter was found in
his picket whit% stated thatteerag led to com nit
the sot in mull:nice of the refusal of his fa ,
ther to Bend him to theeettotry, and other trivial
causes. His parents reside la the upper part of
the pity. The coroner held an inquest yesterday
and rendered a eerdiet, in atmordanoe with the
faa'a.
STICAIIBIEf/P KETEITONN STATE.—This oak ,
'waled khlp 'Aailed for -Charleston,' 8 0, on
Irednsaday lost, at; eight' o'clook AS M. °eased
Cape May, Inward bound, at two o'olook P. M ,
yesterday; and will sail hence, for Charleston, to.
marrow ligednesday),morning, at eight o'olook
Thus meliitig the roundtilf. I • a Week; ;shish we
learn it Is the kart:aloe of the ooronany,te eenti
nue—at least, during the bueiness season. ' •
The -steamship State of Georglislor Savannah.
will nommenee making three ttips per month on
the 30th inst, sailing bones On the 10th, 20th,
and 30th August.
FATAL A WARM, --At 2 o'clock P. M., yes ,
terday, a man by - the name of 'Patriot Burke wa ,
run over by a coal train on the ResdlnOL Inroad.
at the coal Wharves at Richmond Hw tees were
both ono bed in a chocking manner. and be wan
othe rooVe Injured. Hi, was aoniteyed In a dying con
dition to the Epcooopal Respite!, where be died at
half post four o Cloak DeceaSed was a sailor on'
board a coal 10 howler lying at tbe wbatf was minor
tied man; and leaves a wife and family to Bangor
Maine.
SOWlDE.—loirei. Mary, Yeager, aged , thirty
years, died at two o'clock yesterday sae:enema,'
from the effects of a dose of laudanum she had
taken on Sunday night She bad bsen indispoqed
fir acme time past, and thin, added to a depreasion
of spirits, hoossioned by pecuniary troubles. led tc
the commission °Elbe act. Sbe had' previously
attesipted to terminate her exißlenee, but waq
prevented liy'ber friends She leaves a husband
and three children, residing ia...Shelbark street,
near Juniper and Thirteenth greats.
Accrosrm.--Patrick Hughes was kicked on
the head by a vicious horse, at an early hour yet
terday morning. and so badly irjorsd that hie lift
to despaired of. The ecoldent happened at a stable
on Poneynnk road,_ below Dlokerson atraak. -He
was taken to the hospital.
.11Naisk 'Faurr.-rToo much care
- cannot be
taken reenacting diet during the - " heated term."
We neclerstand that much euuthair sickness pre.
Valhi in the city, in most oases - produced by limpets
dense in eating unripe- fruit and vegetables.
nottnetteepers are adinotindied to be careful. .
- .110 I gots CAPE Ma - V,—Tbe Htentner Bal
loon, Capt. Whilltlin, left her wharf yesterday
morning Sit , Sipe May, having over two hundred
passeegetn on board. Title morning the- Arici
leaven for Cape May.
A Goon Potar.—A. gentleman, travellher on
Sunday, was obliged to stop in order to replace
one of his horse's snore. The blackamito wet.'
at church, but a villager Mgge/deli that if be
went on to Jim flarrison'e forge, he would
probably be found at home. This proved to
be true, when the rustic who bad led the haw
to the spot ; exclaimed ; ViA, I roust say
that for:Tina-I*er it's the only good point alma
him—he never goes to church!" -'
A Goop R arr.v.—ct There goes a torti-Oost.".
cried, a politician, not long' go; Irvin inside a
'store to a farmer wbo.was passiigAtbe.titne
in a loadgd wagon. it .What would Yreilletvee&
tsPlied' the' farmer; "would you have amain.
wear his coat the wrong side out all day 4
cause he happened to put it on no in the Mottl
ing?"
P AU PR 4 Tf B 4 ) *X.Hifr°. TW4 I ," RI"
rczooc.—The roliowl4 1( thilfatof 1,1.._;
theGlrllHlgti Feiotil
atilexott.and the,Nolsaols fFotc!, , Flo4 . eroiala ,
001100 t, :ads
I.. Kate Peters - 7.:4 7 4 -- • 'BB
2.. Hate 8 •Pyasrd • , 'Model" 847
8 -54 5 0 , 1 1 . 1 /Derdel, - Borthesat.... 84.4
4..1.de1a .„ . . ... 11‘
' ' 51.4411.; - ..% ... .............
6.;0/sre.l2 Darr tiffersen ' - 82 9
- - Motet 'Vernon 32 9
6-1111seheth J. Dales Ilmumelt .......
9..211a ...... 822 ; "
10..L0u14s ' ' Model - :_'':.: 9 20; -
11. - .Blissbeth Mirskall . - 'Northwest. -'
Balkh • , M0d.!.. .617
,18..Wfary P. Hubbaid j .; . ;; f •Nortbast "'917
.Wars lisforro 9. 1.. . ... 80 1
'..; - 408
16 -Ainas It Mohler . rti5414,,e14,4 , 79
Arodid • - 7917
.141011*1013 ...: Model •
19 :Mingle .131beop • Rittenhouse -
20...,Vectortair Waolse.,,Norttervat„.., .. ..... 363';
• &MO
02.,dannie Atkins! Modal ' ' 18.4'
as_ Juaq•Wspvor Madison 74 2
24. .Huddle Moidimitek.7.....lifovis - • - 78.2
I,2s...Henrietta GaliVe- Dentist , - 781
26. Xenselt. ' -- Jefferson ' " " 77 6
27..Margsrat. Preen Harris - 7 7 d
-28..1dary Mcßee* Bardeen , , 77
29.. Emma L. Walker ••• - -lobe'Qu3ney'Adams.77 4
- 90. - „Lfisiellarzton • • 3.frdel . „, - . 7 7 3
111..11eoey Benetert Mt Vernon. "772. -
Amelia Ireland ....Model - • 769 s
inejoav„ .
Hallegher ' Locust - 76 9 ,
Dougharty::::'.‘...7llngeold - 7i A
' - - - 78 2
ai.. away aravain ..... •- - ' .762c'
81- Agule Steel • • .atoms - 761
- • Maisaell • - - '740
4 1 . - . Mary D. Cramp Morrie 16 0
. 76 9
42„na-ah Letterer ' - ALiereyersci...„, . „.75 8
43..beeste Longetreth" - .:... 75
, 44-37e , y.; Wye- - - Vunet , -- 70,4,
45.. Henrietta Wagner ' 4 ..5.1'15 6 -
4N., titArlaDerer - Bloggoid a 750
47-floal, Hushes . 7 4.1 ,
- 48... Rate "Graci_ Baena& 74 4
49..I.eeshine Helens Northwest , „748
50.' .1111613°1ton -' Model
11..Rebeces Z ............. 0
• '52-.Jana Adams • - " 78 7 7 . _
' 48..Maw,,Msapt " 1414.1 'IR 6 '
44: 4 .4.ivea Palmer.. Mode - 78 6 " 55-oarrY Yfiaigy" - '
• 56 .:1 1 bres Behell ' " ,„ - ..1170 . 31ire5t ' 73 8
• 67 -Emma Lops
73 4
22 - 57 errinle0olIidai' - 11ini:oek "- 73 4
70 . 374 .10 1 1 Hergealseliner .;.RittenhOdre - 741
60..6e11ne, a .. ... ; 72
61-Pelena Detre ' - 'l9Miltares:t - 7^7 -
82 -H**7 Clark ILl4pl '213:
63..Bmtna Darker - Motel -" '72'6"
8t.:6444r ‘`. Rlttenhoivie - - 716'
46, dello 17 /oboist/I' ' Morrie 725
A nye "White ' ' :...;4t5"
67:".111 1 mhath• Yerlree„.„... resets. " 714 ,
1 t.Jiserbizie• WhowaNi - 'Model •- -" 1 2
- 69';,tiary , A..
70..914ry• 1r Oder ' , ''Lo4.list - 7 2.2
71..Vssie ... 7 ' /
, 71-1411iiMoore" • 721
7 6„Arrnalllaekburn •" ' : Weleur ' 74 0
74;.Gartn44 D' Payne ' .7earoiyaest 729
76, :Miami ' Motej.„.. ' ' '7l 9
end th ' - . , x,.,,71
. 77 -5411117 Maituire ; 11#4opylle -
78 ..AmonTrotter..... . - 712
19-loltat Thatcher - T•frerarK.' ' - 711
80-Vl . giola W. Brans " - Mount Vernon 70 7
tiberlotts Conney.„;Ztne ............
N 0.41446 . ' - .;.• • ••.7 - 66 -
:83 :;: r itbff .
' 9 6.":7lMen.L:ldurphi„ .... 5 -'
Ofibtog ' :.•:;;111917•1 ,--,
,86..Vmma Daniels .... Model • 10 4
137.„Beeily Ashman • "Loon.. - 704
Poull .........,...N0v7077
- 89-2mma 1. Turner' ' 'l.ll adarea.„...„.i. - 70 3
90-Tillie Meth • - 'Monde- 7011
9 1 ,Arma Utryt - - MC. - 2
. 62 ..HenelettalVdnesy • - Model - " 702 .
93„Marsra ra 13 •• ' -Northwest 70 2'-
94-Arride Moesal y an " , -
95-01ara Pl.ber . .
...........699 t
sa -t °9175 Tan/ ffirotn • -119 9 ,
',91..E1ta4 Worm. -Moiefe •o= 4 69 8- -
25 . -M 57 1--T • 'Pieties -` -
;99_ &tufo' A. ChristoyheY.,: - .104W - -
lon.. sits Thorikei •
1 9 1-.snitsoalrl - " Itsecooshe. ................ 7 , "
102-7 7 sta Bt. Olate "- ' - Mennalreissonr - ' 69 1 ,
103.-Rafe atiabrolos;.:. - „.'l.Zteest , eat.:::".:„„ , :B9 6
101...M.re B Barnett
Weer
105 .. 4 44T0. - 61
-•• = • • - ,".64 4
107..6818e verif6r.'. - , - 4, - .to 4
308-Llisie Smith Mona Velifeis
169.',Sital *taken* •‘
110. Rate . . "" 44
1.3:. • - i Z Las ..Test. - 69_2
112, Mare -Sleockton ant stmt.
116.,L1zale Rohm' ' Model, • - 61 P
1 1 4-Margaret Lea Wright-- M asayank; ..... ........ fid
7 1 5..Marr Laminates " 7 4;a-sold -•- 689
Ily..tdary ' • - 'del
117 .Mary Lehman 2me street :„.,68
its..Leadote Hareems Yeast -
179_1 all • J, d• 1 - -.1493
4:0.,14mms V.L...l4Yette ... ...........
121-B.llt. B. D. .14•161 - Wale ,
13 ,1 -Martha 'W. Pedrick.... Model- •:. 44 - 0
4...4Embiostkpond - 'Northwest. ..............
121..Eratly Tom Brunt " - I, , Must 1;,,:8' 0
47 8..P0ral Jan. . ..
4onal. IdelTamara - Model ' ' • 01 3 T.
IM-Lonlea . 61,9
1 611114' "
,120..1145ry Dorsal.- ' ...... 7.""
13 7 .41'etteRnssell 37 3-
13 1 ,:altirt ~.::....M0d.). . ... ..::; 1 711
1"9..?&11 , 91 1 -_,I-steton • Model
133 ,Barah,l6ollroY - MonntVoritett.",4„. l l74;
184...Letttle -Adam*ith
-131...61tacRowee - - %Wel - - 56
'l 9 '..Anal. Oopetand "Mount ',Vgrzioti ' - 0 6 8'
137_54-Ms meat --.lids! ".
136..1490t .. ,Model.„ 6 -
' l3l - 14001 . 11 ,?eott "
.140- Annie.r...lobroion ' -
:141.,3053gir0 .. .
Maryi".3` TrenerittC ' ' Rlnesold; €lll'
.14.1. 1 11 1 6u„Vaney Duly, ..... 86 '
.145,..7anny.81end: - ' '
1 - 9091 1 Clitarr .........
'l47:„Mary l
Speereivelt.,.: ..
.
.
1150 Mn!'....i""'.6 ,11'_
3 1 51"..7!imaii x
..
6R6_
'St. : Hata Ter , itle
.. larrsfen.,4": 1166
.153,7senv o Aseats -.%adrls - vca
4106 .•/ o. nb lo 6 .l " l iietOn,
mant.tihmindokizAism.mx.. ..,466
51.
Kate Rotera,; . . 65
179 -. 734 heltaßosera Mrdef els
teo..Kste anotor ...... ~ :11941.,0 64 1 1
161..20e Binthsreet 67 5
183.. Merton Brahma* ' Zane street. ... . ...84 It• -
, 611..ttoxars Dooms •- Medl •-• --• '' - 64.6
164 ..1nseltra R ; Stont......Vorti. east - 0.4.6
165_71351< ineeold , - 848
168.:211 'Kennedy „ • „Kt: - Vernon.....-_,,.64 6.
167...7n114 Leary Beerou t. .
161-Este Predertek " ' ' a
169..1 avian nell - Deneeels •••• 1 84 t -1
170..Dattle Weird Zane street 641
171„Oartle .1, Gunner - orthelet €4 0
172..nemia Select lt
... ...
171..lenalle H. Tatar Motel
174-11sry ... :47,rtet 636 -
/IL ALl'arar ... ... :BRAM - • "62
176_7 nlls A. Thomason Etenooch - • - ok-k.
17 7 -earrip Dorian " Vorbeast 63 4
1 76..JollaW1doter . .... . . , ..... „. - .„.,63 a
, 70..K0te Bloomers "Hinwsold - "
tso..D.odls 'roar Model ........... a
181..Mery - 7 Q. Adam. 03 8
164...13a,r01tne /lurks 2 me street 631
1 83-IKate, Dealin .100(0141 flB 2
184..Katis Meld erity .
„„..83 0
`13. 4 ..115te Henderson - - Walnut .treat 32 - 0
tB4..YatNle,Ltoyd .:
.... wilthseekV " fit 4
117. ,Marthe.Pinsahty - Z weer/eat ~. 62 3
188, ‘ llmma Lontenbach - agnate* 62.1
1 6 0.. 4onte Bering • • - Hierlion •
'el 0
1 90-14srgie Part Minkel! 61 0
t9l..eallie 511n*En. - Itsneoeh 61,0'
'9 l :.Rsbeece nom, Mansynnk 61 5
197 . •Th±spo n. • nroa, - •• - 61 5
194.. Margie thempion.. Model - RI R
195.. A DM/ alms: - - . .
196-Z l Mmalt Grigg Pine -
197-1 C anti:6mb Newton - 810
198..adery alltson Model - PO 8
190.. Annie .Warwick 60 6
'ol..(Traie Dtterson" ' Monroe '' " • -61 6
201_111 , s +both 71t0N010.0,11 60 3
2 0 2-6mab Otero • - 1111111111138 - 802
203-Emma B Worn ....Dean. 602
NOMBITIt IDMlrrio r14011,1110t1 801100 L : •
Model Pelrool - - 64 North-ereat......„ IT
Zme /Hetet, 16 Illeirsp:d 11
Monet Vernon ' - 10' JRlfarlati 1 0
M , rete 9 Banco*
No , th-east 9 - Hard.*
Lonna Btreet Mannyntdr...-.•
1 Q. Adam. 4 Madison
, Imrtnn 9 Rittembouee...
Walont 2 -Penn
Hirskal) 2 Payette
1 University ....
South-west . • ' 1 Monroe;
Fashions for Sitly.
[Prom "the •
It Tiln this trinsmings of dresses that the great
est °Wagner:ire exhibited this semn. There is a
prevailing taste for introducing binolt 4ith almost
avers color -in ,trimmings, whether for,dytises or
bonnets. This faihion, which Obtained that year,
has been 'revive I; and revivals .of much, older
fashions than this are now observable—for In
staroe. feathsilon Legli.lisi Whisks, and oapots of
lace. lined with pink or lilacs
Wide ribhons at its, wait are Itesiain rairae.
end 'they msy ba worn either with morning or
evening costumes bit mustiest to procare plaid
or plain ribb nits for demi-toilette, ani tsnay.trils
bon for WI dress , -
.
The materials 1.11 fivor artalmonet, barege,,api.
mohair. which is:now made deliottely fl ni , and
thin. Mantles and yells we of the ARMS material
as the dress are fashionable.: The pelitsa is trimmed
either with a tlartow - flounce or ruche of ribbon.
When Chinese or Bilk tonalins are wont they are
ornamented with numerous flounces. - The titebion
able taffetas are In the chine patron* Us narrow
strides, or in Email checks, erntoielly .black and
The gitet !Indy hes displaced the jaoket, which
is now discarded.
.The eleove hag not undergone any striking at
teratlen • It may be want full Wilt, MAU trim
med with b.,u llonnev.to the elbow. _ The ,bgdy
may be made 'high and plain. buttoned dOw - ri the
middle with fanny buttons. The low hedy, mint
high timber, or a tippet formed of - alternate
rows of lase and ribbons, to also ft to mode. The
pagoda sleeve, trimmed with lows of black velvet,
hut a stylish effeat. Bettoes ate also used ss trim
mings for sleeves, ind. for the jockey,. will Web
limo bo dies are Betake(' off behind
For walking costae:le we recommend the Alga
rien shawls; and the white or light colored striped
burnous are now de bon gout -
• In bonnets. Lo born and fancy straws are much
worn' For a Leghorn bonnet feathers furnish tile
craftiest trimming, but for other kinds of bonnets
flowers are more in request than feathers Wreaths
of chaffed violets, ivy, lilies of the valley, OM
linwerf.tand hynolnths are all in request The
vreaths are placed flat across the front. and in
, bouquete attso`c aide, or ales fasten behind and
roll to erds over the curtain 'Round bouquets
m ty be placed q tingat_tbe front edge, meeting the
compete in the nip; or a bunch of flowers pressed
very closely - together and mixed with different
kinds of grass. falling on each aide, may serve as
inside trimming, the bouquet reposing .. 11 the fore
bead- Bunches of berries, elder, .field4hwere,
cherries, branohea of strawberries, with - the flowers
and fruit, and apple and apricot-blossoms, ,fernlels
In bonnet trimmings sualoient variety ,to suit all
tastes. - , - _
iltoTtitHATro,ti IpgA Or •EONOR.—A inda
ate of a certain college gave 'another the lie,
and followed: 'The mathematical
tutor of the college beard' o ond
sent for-the youth s who told him inuat fight.
"Why?" inquired the mathematician :;- f• lie
g . roe, the Very weillet-him pro 4 fo
le - 4 If h4piol7BB %, you did . Ile 'arid ithe-„dos , s
not proven; ho,likia." IV hy ahotird yettlilmot
04 . 0 another 7. Let him prove _
. . ... ..
~. The Bielifiiiid..Rdeirer;lim'ofher , iiii Nat Its
ejob'anges, . in yntinto.lnfermntion-iiniows
tbe'dt!iri liithai §tiVe thls'yoisi-4.littio NIA very
- good,, mid 'file yiela' iit n,i • Nnoll "=yei74 044,14..i , ,The
Milwan be Wtsconstn, espi hint in thettate the
wheat , crop will ba greater il.' IA iiiiiil3l
203