The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 17, 1860, Image 1

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•' ' A ; §s2S££!&£ N Y**CY WOOUtNS, ’-/■' ' ' ! ‘
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«lUIU,K9 SAMtrKL MEKbHAII.
*.V’ GEJUtiAMTOWK -; f
HOSIEttriiANUPACTTOIBS.
■ jnrrwowjt.in SHMSM*™;
•;.:vV>'; .:v roiti
/-Vs VV/ S'AKcV, WOOtBH GOODS,
«'-•’•■•■ • • : HOOD*CtOAIB. TALBUB, , ■••'.■:'
Vv'.-;i ; >'; /':; 8 4 0 80WTAG8, JIUBUB,; i
r*" 1 ;!' ! ’ !’ .s $>•»» &Q*idfcs.j ■ ♦
• £.itMS!KN Otß* ’s» from & Uteaibad.
v 5 «?■*****• Waiiraotitkl lutZrinna
*; SSSSSB33»' “SSSPSKHKES
15 ' !l - '.™»««f«llr elicit of Us*
F. V. KRUa & 06..
'- »~-«tUthl« • t 333 CHKBTMUTSTRK|;T.
\y RBI7J* T O M .
;i«M mjBTSVT BIRBKT, .taw! TMth,
«• STRlit; j^ewjiriw^
i'*i .tiki . ’,[' ,!
,V »AK6K ABWKTMEMTPF ’ ‘ '',
OpiX>REO TABIiBTANS.
eor*nm
WLASSES, FRAMES, &0., fcc.,
,<r m«n
..tew ifl 13 CKM'fg PER YARD TO ST CKHTB,
AND-LAWKS,
’ girwU.
V? 7 TO BE SOLD ; THIS
1 - » '
0 MOSQtJtTOM AMD FLU
; °'P AN ASSORTMENT OF
, ■'■■*- -r'-- - |4AI CBBamtM.
CJ^'*«wiM*.A»MaK*MP«OTION
• • :“ : ;' ■
■sgggBpßg&&fc
SISEiiM-*''- 1 -
SUMilteißmnr'nrat;. - ;
jjjoatrlfrrattfrnytrT.
FUW«IBBIP#.WODB , -
WABiTwMiirfg.
r, 1 - AWNS.—Tip-top Msortment fast colors
ianßfißEr*
'‘ v Hfiß’S BOW' WBAB, Otoftfl,
" Bfeii
| IWWISTIBU: INDUOtMINTS TO
_ TOOO Mf*C*NT. .
; ,iui3w.lhiir**Mlljairr«o*»*; -
' ■ ;
- LOOKIHU GLAMES.
t OOKIKG-OUSSIg, :
;’:V"•
ENbMVINOS.
oiti rAintinea. *•« to.
JAWS S. KA&UMi SOW,
imranTSKa, aUNpVAcruitK&a, whole
MALB ANO HRTAIL DMALMHB,
BAKLK3’ GALLBEIXS,
''' *n aunmnt «t»kct,
FbilaMtUlk
COMMISSION HOUSES.
* HUTOHIIWOH,
. HO. lIS OBJOTMUT
OOJUUSSION BfBOBAMTS
?Oft THIS BAMS 07 ■
PHILADELPHIA-MADE
««. OPODS.
ALBERT
»*Alii* i'''
o\* f
3?
VOL. 3.—NO. 296.
r fcRWING MACHINES. ;
f P.(JHLINGBR^ai
'; SHUTTLE AMO. DOUBLBLOOP STITCH
FAMILY USE, Fo *
.=■l • TAILORS,
'!'. «!■: !.':-•■ *HOKMAKEHB,_ .! -
iz . i . , . ; SADDLERS, «rc„
No. .eas ARCH STREET.
I Prieebf SHUTTLE MACHINE, 81*.
«f PODgLB-L(K)P STttWB MACHINE fr«n
ow cotton, needles.
"T».*H-t.yygj»tiy,oa tm, . jr 4. aßt
H^W&a’BouDom
■ . SEWING- MAOi-lINE
■*’’’ C L ll irtX' ,i
& Whjsoin
SEWINQ machines.
> oarnnw* ttftgftr, skoohjd rtwju
.Otsjmtori, ob nir«to PriT*t«\Ffu&liiM,
* Minor'swc*f>- .
JJ I *!* H. J.
UtOKHTIA], RiDAKK, KAttoo, Ta.
lui-ta
w
. » 11.0 OX * GrtßS! BEWING MA-
.". CißfiTS* FURNISHING GOODS.
[SttLEMAN’S CRAVAT STORE:
MOVED
TO THfi N.W.COR. OF, SEVENTH AND
CHESI'NiIT.
CRAVATS, SCARFS, TIES;
PATENT ENAMELLED COLLARS’
GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING
GOODS; ,
’ ALL KINDS UNDER WEAR;
SHIRTS MADE TO ORDER;
6 FOR ®O.
, COR. SEVENTH AND CHESTNUT.
mys-ttatn-am
¥W. flOOXT—l»t» of the Ann of Win-
; HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS.
gUPKRIOR REFRIGERATORS,
Mart Improve! IdniU.
CHILDRENS’ GIGS AND CARRIAGES,
In Great V4ll.tr,
I FURNITURE LIFTERS,
V.rj u*rul IB eireadiaf Ceriot. and Malting.
VIIULiIAM YARNALL’S
HOUSE FURNISHING STORK.
Mb. 19M CHESTNUT STREET,
‘ let«adi»Wr crtoaiu the Academy of Fine Arm.
; a**-t(
PAPER HANGINGS.
:HBB, JEWKIiRY, to.
DIAMOND STUDS, BING?, AND
M3* mud w»re of «v«r^do
irPm aa Worth SIXTH Btrset
NEW YOBKADVERTISEMENTS.
BELMONT t (SO.,
, B ANKEBS.
v H«W TORE,
' |w Letter* at Credit to TtweUan awllaMa In
Abb PARTS Of TRR WORLD,
■ taaoaea n»
MESSRS. ROTHSCHILD,
AKW, lOHUOK, FRANKFORT, VIENNA,’ NA
-Jf&'tMp. THMltt eORRABPONDtiNTS
IfALI/S PATENT
PLATED lOE PITOHEi
Eatirelj dißereiitiß tbeiroonatraetion from another*
aad WABHANTRD to kee* tha lOE LONOKE than
aaj Fltohet no* ia «w at a temaerature of noveotr do-.
■noa FakrasheiV The above Pi token will kee, tha
water ooi* ktHH*ltt-/t*r keen. -
AaoeadeadehalPorioeinlhreefinteol water will
Mr worn inn eaßjt/lrA« ,• while the eaaio
eeaatitrinaaaeduMiretoaeaiteker.attheaame era
ea rate re, owlr laata two hoara and tttaen minutea!
- Pemoaa'aheeld net confound thaaa Fileken with
ihdadtaaaUraoM. hat iaaaira for
BALL’S PATENT
WM. WILSON & BON,
. Sola Aerate for the Manufacturer.
■ 8. Wi Comer FIFTH and CHERRY Street*.
■jM-tf ■ -
<YjTM. H. HYATT. |
Ml CHUBOK AUK!,
goto AUaufotarer &nd lor Uiit city
or TUI
PATENT PAPER BOX.
' Thia Box exoela all other! for heaulr. atrenith, and
da rebuilt. Boofinf ia diepeoaed wlthinita manofao
taea. this eeesrin« tha treat daaidaratam of
■V; STRONG CORNERS.
| Sar Ordera BoUeltad. laU-tai
pURE OLD
•‘GOVERNMENT JAVA”
COFFEE.
FUR SALK BY
0. H. MATTSON,
AKOU AWU 'fEHTH BTRBKTB.
OAST-STEEL BELLS.
FOR CHURCHES, FIRE ALARMS, Ac.,
roi.iuiu
i NAYLOR 400..
Jtf.lt 890 COMMERCE Street.
(k SHOEMAKER A 00.
,«LAH),IFAUrrS,
OILS AND VARNISHES.
Rmtheaat Cower FOURTH AND RACK Street*.
■rV-tm
WOBK’S ODOMETIE BAND COM
-o{th»
EXCURSIONS.
gJEA BATHINGh.
ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY.
1% HOURS FROM PHILADELPHIA,
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 6,000 VISITORS,
ATLARTXQ CITY ib now conoeded to be one of the
moat delightful £ea-alde retort* in the World. Its bath-'
ing ii tthßnrpaceed; it* beautiful unbroken beach (nine
mile* in length) 1* unequalled branr on the Continent,
anv* that of Galveston i its ait u remarkable for its
dmtttgj itettitiuiatid Mins facilities-are perfect;
%eil niniiihed, and as well kept'ae those
otJfewpbtt dr {Saratoga; while it* avenues and walks
are Meaner and-broador than (hose of Kir other Sea*
. bathms place in the country.
J-'*'" of t i"*.?AMDBN AND ATLAHTId BAIL
£?.“.^?: Vi K B ‘ STHKES WHARF, Philadelphia,
d* ll / 7JO A. M. sod 4P, M. H.tnm.be—riach Phil
•delpMa at 9A. M. and 7.45 P. M. Fat. ALSO. Hoand
tn» tickets, load for throe day., *9.50, to b« purohuad
or exchanged at tlia tioket office. only, aid not of or By
cnndnntore, Distance SI miles. Sunday train leave,
vine olroet at 850 A. M.; leave. Atlantio City atSAO
"* «I.“-KM>pping only for wood and water,. A telegraph
extend* the whole length of the road. ' JiW»tf
FOR CAPE MAY
NKW^fORK
“’l™ SPR UCE street (Bundsy eiceytod) at 9 X A. M.
leave New York fromvfjer*l4 NORTH
«UifJv M M ’ li “ Te °® r ® M*7 (Monday, exoept-
May(carriagehire included)....#l (0
Servant, do do do - ..:. 1 »
IS
j/COFf 1 an
? late Room Extra. “!1! ion
reights for Cans Mar and New VMi«n low
Ne#flßcwm be for
warded with deepatoh. free of Qommise'on.
. JAMES ALLDtiRUICK. Agent,
jyU-lm 314 and 310 South DELAWARE Avenue.
SHgEME PHILADELPHIA AND
iVIfS I ?S. , u U &Ve/^ l ;^^ic r n.'! 0t " : ' , folloWM touU ”
for »»•* M Ticket Offioe, Broad and CaliowhiU
streets.
■lo Niagara' Fall*and return Sldeo
To Soranton and return eao
To Lock Haven and return..— s M
’(>£.i/.i2tt •«« small bill., or awlr to
.li^u.^'tS 1 ot the Company.Brotui aJlSjowhiU
n’fgr FOR CAPE MAY—Tho swift
s'£Ug .HS .WreMSI.-th^fnf.lSo 1 -
P.ro.carrlaje hire included *uo' '
Fare,eervanu,carria.oniremoluded IK
SeMon notate, oarnare hire eatra. s 00
Howe., oatrleae. end frei.ht taken, ' Jra-lgio
J&BMB for THE SEA
"JHic“(Sf<jAIH 0R K - CAMDBN
On and the Oam
train (atoppmg only for wood and
Accon.mcd.Lcn D«n .5.54 A.M.
fi»ve Vine etreet at__ ,8 30 A. M.
_ „ ‘ Sto.pin. only for wood and water.
Mthe
' Mo*thl* IO d et -•*>•
m Si deUverVd atOooi«f , i Point By'lP.H.
■ghjsaa si i gs.Mti«x*
Atlaatio every Saturday afternoon tmtil fur
-o h !o k *4 bryant;” 1
; ■ ■ Agent
smmm To pleasure tbavel
»r» Wkiti MtmiilfJMrTfprtlwia, Bgstop, Bantus
;»tinn. aatlleifYoTk. vja.Laka Ontario,.Hirer St.
tWKiratl P*& A Treat JBlwta. tfilradid jrtnmar
taw«iT?r»«aj»S refer n to PhiSdel
sfeT. ar aini<o “ s ' rint *' tM
via Montreal, Saratoga B*nn#a.
*dsuf 8 ‘ W*#r
. • , " (fsunliin .
ghbStm
Jell-iai
MEDICINAL*
HBLMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUOfIXJ.
THIS GPEAT DIURETIC. ;
FOr
B^'%m d ra^Ty&m , «sir i * ttW
Amontwhlohwiu be found
r &n of
i OF
I 3 BVBTKM«, ~ .. .
Tl ““ »’ B S r L ‘Ss|»&K"i , a ( “i!f^ 0 u on - * hil!h
Inranablj removes. ..
rolbor Fajrg.PJ§U Wf dE,,le,tieFiU.
S’BOO OB E THEILEMKUY AT (JnOK,
iS f Hl DlUrel, °'!
* - Is the treat iHnretip, • . ..
And i* oertaiu to have the deaired efleol m the die-
I.»r t «ri^n«db Tp tUe»o.. iANBi
Certificate* of oarea of from one. month to twenty
I yearrirtaaainswill accompany theMedunne.ana evf-
I denoeofthemostreliable andreapoMiblecharacterU
I ©pep for iuapectioa.' Price 91 per .bottle, or ux for 96.
104 801,111 W
AIRB.WINSLOW,
i"A AN EXPERIENCED NUJUSB AND FEMALE
fkyMeiaß* vreeent* to the attention of mother* her
SOOTHING SYRUP «
fOK CHILDREN TEETHING,
whlob. *T»Ur fdeUitttw th» wocmb of tMtkin*. bf
Depend npon it t motherß.lt will site rest to yonnetvee
I *BEUBFABD.HKA[iTHTO YOU* IKFAHTB,
We have put npa&4 sold *
yean, andean ear. in cob P-
C
matter ‘‘what we do fc
eaeanenee<andpfedgeour r
pent of what we hare de **
Setanoewhere.theiafiukt P
exhaustion* relief will be t
mfi-mtea after the Syrup ie '
188
never-fiUincROMM in c
i ' inQ UuAKIId
I ftnot only relieve* the c
I TliontMtboatomKtiMio ;
I |
1 SowSS* (
I ;
I teetEnsorfromanyothei
| every mother who, haa a
I he foregoing complaint*,!
I ko| JgSriS^oß^j^
I ue of 8£ medicine. If
| ttona/or nuns inll aooom
J)YSfc>EFSIA REMEDY.
Dr. DARIUS HAM'S
AROMATIO INVIGORATING SPIRIT.
This Medicine has been used by the public Sot six years
with increasing favor, It is recommended to Cure
Dyspepsia, Nervousness, Heart-Bum, Colic
Pains, Wind «»the Stomach, or Pains in the
Bowels, Headache, Drowsiness, Kidney
Complaints, Low Spirits, Delirium
Tremens, Intemperance,
It Stimulates, Exhilarate*. Invigorates, but
will not Intoxicate or Stvprty.
Asa Medioine it it quick and.effkctualt curing the
moatagsmvatedcamsofDyspepsiaTKMney Corasjaiutf,
Red aflother derangement*of the ntomaoh and Bowels
i a speedy manner, , . , . . .
It will instantly revive the most melancholy and
drooping spirits, and restore, the weak, nervous, and
sidily to hsalth. strength, and vigor.
Persons who, from tne injudicious use ofhqupra. have
become delected .and their nervous systems shattered,
constitutions broken down, and subject to that horrible
ourseto humanity, the Delirium Tremens. will, al*
most immediately. feel the, happy and healthT invigo
rating efficacy Sf
Dose.—One wine guise full as often as* necessary.
One dose will remove aflßad Spirits.
One dote will core Heart-burn.
Three doses will cure Indigestion. ,
One doefl will give you a Good. Appetite. „
a One dose will stop the distressing pains of .Dyspepsia.
• One doee will remove the distressing and disagreeable
encts of Wind or Flatulence, and as Soon, as the
stomach receives the Invigorating, Spirit, the distress
ing loadaadajlpamfUlTeelinia wiU be removed.
One doee will remove the most distressing pains of
Colic, either in the stomaohor bowels. . _ .
Afew doses will remove all obstructions in the Kidney,
Bladder, or Urinary Organs.
; Arsons who are seriously amioted with any Kidney
Complaints arf assured of'speedy relief by a dose or
twobo “'"-
rerson*who,fromdis#tpating too much over night.
> and feelthe evil -effects o. poisonous lUuors, in violent
: headache*, sickness at stomach, weakness, giddiness,
i Ac.,wiUfindoneda«wHlnmoveaUbadfeelinss. .
, Ladies of weaxVid sioklf constitutions should take
the Invigorating Spirit three limesa day i it will make
them strong, healthy, and faaptr, remove all obstruo
-1 tlona and irragitentiMfromthe menstrual organs, and
Restore the bloom of health and beauty to the oarewom
. %ring pregnancy it will.be found an invaluable medi
elneto.removedisacreeable sensations at the stomach.
Ail ths proprietor asks is a trial, and to laduoe this, he
ha* put np the invigorating Spirit in pint battles at
"owSStf »&?«» WATER
Wholesale Agents in Philadelphia,
and for sals by all Druggists.
WELCH,
J»7-th»talT
TAVA OOWKK.—I,OOO pocket*, prims
lmtiSft&Sb?*' nl * kT * 00
Newstead Abbey.-3(liast Article.)
There werenuraorous. Monastic ' houses jji
Nottinghamshire; belonging to varioanonlcrs,
being known as Hospltalluk or tho Brothers of
§t. John of Jerusalem—Minorites, Carmelites,
Benedictines, Carthusians, Augustiniani, Fran
ciscans, and Gilbortincs. ,'Newatead 'i«s one
, of tho thirteen priories existing in Nottlng.
1 haushiro at tho time of the dissolution of the
Monasteries. It bolonged to tho ortjsf of St
■ Augustine.
Nowatead Abboy (the namo olVfjich ap
pears to bo Uqrivcd from its having riß#i>ray
been erected upon a piece of wasto Isod iii the
forest, hence 1 New Stedo or Placd) Was a
priory of Black Canons Regular, so .called,
(Fom wearing a black habit to comnn morale
the widowhood of the Blessed Virgin, It was
founded in the yoar 1170, nndejr the ixpress
sanction of Henry 11., tn ropdntasch ftw. his
share 1 in procuring the diLqiaitui lon "of
Thomas A ; Beckct. Lord jytoq appears
to havo coincided in this omnlifk
pressed in his lines in tiro “ ElogVpalf' iwntenif
Abbey:” fevil,;: i‘r
“ Now,toad! loot Jailing, ouco rw, 1 J
* . Keligum’s shrine! repentant Stub’s :
According to tho charter byjHenrj 11., it
dedicated to God and ijwfcr*
and its situation and character I
and poetically -depicted by she lat it Lord
Byron. In his « Don Juan ” fyswrftc t;
“ An oldt old monuterr ouoe, and notf n,. ■ <’
. Still older inansion—of a noli aa<t rare.
Mix’d Gothic, saoh as artist* *ll Allow •
Few specimens yet left us can oomadra ••
Withal; it lies perhaps a little lpw, J t
Beeauso the monks preferr’d a hiU.behind..
To shelter their devotion from the whtdo j 1
** It stood embosom’d in a happy vsJlert.'’ ! -lv
Crown’d by high woodlands where tab Braid oak
Stood like Caractns in sot to rally -s'* . .
His host, with broad arms ’gainst tMthnalf rstroks;;
And from beneath his boughs were smHl'tO billy 4 ft
The dappled foresters—as day awoim - i -
The braaohini stag ewest down wittfhilhia herd,
To quaff a brook, whioh murmur’d UkeibiAL
i “ Before the mansion lay a luoid lake, l.
Bioad as transparent, deep, andfrephly fed
By a river, whioh its soften’d way did fcUra !
In currents through the calmer water wtead
Around i the wild fowl nestled in the brake i
And sedges, brooding in their liquid ben ’s ;
The woods sloped downwards to its
With (heir green faces fixed opon the flood. I -
M The oatlet dashed into a deepoMcade, w f ‘ i
Spark ing with foam, until ag'in subsMllgi
Its shriller echoes, like an infant made I
Quiet, sank into softer njples, gliding tTfi* |
Like a rivulet; audw thus allay’d, ' ' f
* Pursue ita oourse, now gleaning, and aefjrjhiding,
Its windings through the woods; now clear; now blue,
Aooording as the skies their shadows thrkw.7
Thus stood Newstcad Abbcy, which, at the
dissolution, was estimated at the sum df £229.
It was granted, on the 28th of May,l|4o, (82 ;
Henry VIII.,) John of
Colewyko, whose uncle had rer.(l*wi-#rfcai
service to Henry VII. at the Battle nf jfaryWt *
Field: " .
upon Sir John Byron’s takinff pora&sion
of N ewstead Abbey, he converted it part Of tho
offices into a dwelling house, and incorporated
in tho apartments a portion of the South aisle
oi tho church. The Abbey was, Origlijaily de
corated by various figures of saints, £hus al
luded to by Lord Byron: ,
" Within a niohe, nigh to ita pinnacle,
Twelve aaiats had onee stood aanotified in stone;
But those had fallen, hot when the friar* All, -
But In the war which attack uharlaa worn his
throna, . 1 11
Whan eaoh house vras a fettalica-aa tall :
The anoal, of full meat a line undone — 1
The gallant oavalien, who fhoaht in vain 1 .
Bor thoaa who knew not to reaign or i»igni”' J ßTA«-
z*. 60. . .
A figure of tho Virgin and Child, hjowever,
still remains: ;., > .
“But in a bister mehft-alona, but crown'd.)
The Virgin mothe'rof-th.Ood-boraohildj ■
Wlqiharßon Jnh.rWaawdaroWitooh’dtdasd,
i • itand b, aotsa chano. whan all baaida wtgnioil’d;
Bha wad* tho aanh haliaw waaa holj ground,
wiwVy^a-^
, Althongr^'^g^-ri,,
decay, thore rortnitaurrJ**' Wbrnna ;to go to
and
and riclt carvings. Byron the
Abbey:
. 11 The mansion's aelf waa vaat and vanarable r
With mors of the monastic than haa been
* laawhCra ,reserved i the eloietere stUl were etabla,
The cells too, and refectory, I wean:
An exquulloeAan eheael had been able,
Stilt unimpaired to d coo rate the scene:
The reat had been’reform’d, repteoed, orennli,
And eVhkd more of tho heron than tho monk.”
Family differences, particularly during the
time of the filth Lord Byron, of oocentrio and
Unsocial manners, suffered, and even aided,
the dilapidations of time. Tho castellated
stableß and offices are, howovor, yet to be
seen ; and the interior, since tho time Colonel
Wildman became possessor, was will main
tained.
Tho groat ball is a lino specimen of antique
stylo—it was tho refectory and the draving
room, the dormitory being then llghtel by
small windows high up, betwoon tho spmdrils
ortho roof looking into tho cloister, theclois
ters at that time bolng no doubt archei over
with stone groins, ,&c., but those wire cut
away by the Byrons, and the presont galleries
formed over them, to give more convenient
access to tho chambers.
In the cloister court titer? stands the old
fountain. Tho Byrons had placed it ■in a
court they made in front, whioh doosnot now |
exist. Thus :
“ Amldit the court a Uotluo fountain play'd
Symmetrical, but deck’d with carving* niaint
gtrangc facet like to men in meetucradc,
And hero porhepe a monster, there aauit:
The spring gnghed through trim moutht of ganito made,
And sparkled into beams, where it spent
Its wild torrent* in a thousand hubbies, '
Like man’e vain glory and his vamer tronijes.”
Tho cloisters present a most voiorabie ap
pearance and resemblo those of "Westminster
Abbey, though upon a smaller stale. These
were of the ancient abboy, and tlero are still
tenants to bo found beneath the psvement, but
there are no sepulchral_slabs.
. The old cliapol is a "handsomi specimen of
Gothic style and spring of areios, and iB, In
fact, the old vaulted chapterhotso.
When Byron took possession of his ances
tral mansion, a melancholy prevailed over
him, and gave birth to his wollknown « Elegy
on Newstead Abbey.” He ws not blessed
with the means of putting Uinto proper re
pair, or dniy sustaining it; in could only re
store a few of tho apartments, and render
them habitable for liimseli aid his mother.
He parted withNewstcad with great regret.
It was put up at auction in 1812, and bought
in for £90,000. It was aforwards sold lor
£140,000 to Mr. Claughton but the purchase
was not completed. At this time, in bis
journal, he wrote thus: «It cost mo moro
than words to part with it, and to have parted
with it. What matters it what I do, or what
becomes of me?”
In 1817, Colonel Wildnan became purcha
ser, paying £180,000 for (hq Abboy and estate.
Golonel Wildman spent £200,000 in resto
ring Nowstead Abbey, Vith groat taste and
completeness, and did njit go one inch beyond
the original ground pint, and tho walls now
stand exactly npon tho old foundation. The
first Lord Byron made, alterations lor the re
ception of King Chariei 11. Ho built tho pre
sent library with tho gfuth aisle of tho chnrcli,
and ho added the boo-room and droßsing-room
called after tho moiarch, and which are of
that period. The three other bed-rooms,
called King Henry VJl.’s lodgings, wero no
doubt formerly en suite, and used as apart
monts for tho reception and lodging of guests
or travellers of distinction.
Lord Byron and Colonel Wildman, it must
be remarked, woretogethor at Harrow School,
and npon becom’ng -the purchaser of New
stead, the ColOnelreceived the following letter
from the dißtlugilabed poets which is not to
bo found in Moori’s Life of Byron:
“ Vsfficz, Nov. 18,1818.
“My D«ab WiLDHAK:-Mr. Henson is on tho
eve of his return, so that I .have only time to
retam a few inadtquate thsaka for your very kind
letter. I should rectot to trouble you with any re
quests of mine, in l regard to the preservation of
any signs of mr totally which J»*7 still exist at
Newstead,- and leave everything or that kind to
vour owri toelinp, present or fntare, upon the sno
jeot. The portrait which - yea flatter me by de
siring would nrtbe worth to you your trouble and
expense of snob an expadltlon, but you may rely
tht» Artiela for ovarton
Bdanoa and truth of;-
mmk\
we know an liuteuoe ol
who meed it. On the oon
wub lu operation. and
; know,” after ton Tara*
refutation for the fulfil- I
Blare In almoct every
laeufiennr from fain and
, loupdinfifaten or twenty |
| and haa been and with
1 bnt ln-1
bowels, oorreoU aoidltv,
; # oSJfW"THM
> COLIC and overcome oqn
a apeedly remedied* end In
2 Met Mid enreet remedy in
0 DYSENTERY 1 and DJAB 1
S whether Tt Mitts from
2 o&ttM. W# would nay to
* ohildenneiing from any of
t do not let your urmedioee,
others* etand between
i^MK
timely used. Full direo-
S
m too outfifde wrapyer.
Sggha-WJ*^'
TUESDAY,’JULY IT.IBM-
S^w!»! lng the fl l rt thM “"T h« painted,
1 worth yoaraefleptance. '
tE&t.Jfowfitead will, being your,, re
maln so, and that It wilt make you fin happy, a» I
J 5),J el 7 sure that yon will make your dependents;
JV*,. r *d a ‘! <1 fonnyiolf, yon may be sure that,
Whetherin the fourth, orMij or sixth form at Hat!
fow.orinthofluotpaiionaof afterlife, Ishall ,1.
way» reinember Mth regard my old schoolfellow,
< u » ai r iend J * na reoognife with re
«I»ot thegallent noldler who, with fil th# adkafi.
tagoa ot forttmo dnd allurements of youth to h life
of pleasure, doyoted himself to duties of a nobler
1 r®?“ lvo his reward In tho esteem
m i r « *!, of hie country. Ever your», most
truly and afleotlonately, “Btbox.”
A letter, from O- S. Skinner to his sister;
dated May 22, 1809, doscrlhes Byron at New
stood, a fow months aftor ho had completed
his twfnty-flrat year. Ho writes: «Ascend
thou, with mo, tho hall stops, that I may In
troduce yoil to iny lord, and his visitants. But
Imvo a care how you proceed; ho mindful to
SO there In broad daylight, and with your oyos
ial-out you.' t’or should you mak'o any blunder
—shpuld you go to tho right ol tho hall-stops,
you aro laid hold of by a hoar: and should'yoU
go to tho 1011, your case is still worse,dor yon
run Ml ugainst a woll'l Nor, when you have
attained tho door, is.your danger over j for tiro 5
hall boing decayed, and, thoroioro, standing in
neod-ol' repair, a bevy of. inmates are voiy
probably hauging at oho end of It with tholr
.plstpls; so that if you enter without giving
lend‘notice of your approach, you'have only
"escaped tllo wolf and tho boar to expire by tho
pistol'shots'of tiio merry’monks ofNcw
steall.”
; , Inthb) sltigu| a f maimer, and with many other
reckleps doings, did Byron pass much or his 1
tlpw at Newstesd, and Moore hasdoplotedbim
ftuly by saying that « ho combined in his own
nature some of tho best, and, perhaps, worst
qualities that lie Scattered through the various
characters of his generosity, 1
tho lovo of enterprise, tho high-ipindedness of
some of the better, spirits of his raco, with tiio
irregular passions, tho eccentricity and daring
reoklessness ol tho world’s opinion, that so’
much characterized others.”
Tho charter found, with other documents,
in tho interior of the largo brass eagle fished 1
oiit Of the Bake; in front of tho Abbey, in tho
time of tho fifth Lord Byron (whom the poot
succeeded) is - represented by Moore to haw
been “a grant of full pardon from Henry V.
of oycry possiblp crime, (and-here is a
tolerably long cataloguo enumerated,) which
the monks might* have committed previous to
tho Bth of December preceding: ‘Murdria,
por ipsos post decimlim nonum diem Novem
bris ultimo pneteritum perpetrates, si quee
lberint, exceptea.” It is only just to tho
memory ol the abbot and monks of Nowstead,
to .explain that tho charter was merely a genc
ral.pardon, by moans or which Henry V. ex
torted large sums of money from all religious
houses throughout tho kingdom, by com
pelling them to purchase Royal pardon lor
offences which had no foundation save in the
imagination of this unscrupulous monarch.
In August, 1852, when tho British Archaso
‘logical Society held its annual meeting at
Newark, In Nottinghamshire, tho Duko of
Newcastle and its other members, with several
newspaper writers, Were entertained at New
stead by Colonel Wildman, who showed them
.over tho mansion and grounds, ahd exhibited
tho Pardon in question, and pointed out how,
much Moore had mistaken Its character. Tno
writer of this article was present, and remem
bers the scene very distinctly.
We are enabled to conclude this final no
tico of Nowstead, with an interesting account
of a visit paid to it, in 1868, by a distinguished
American authoress, who cannot bo persuaded
to give her travel’s journal to the world. This
account is now published for the first time ;
“ On making a turn, oar path fed ns directly in
front of the fine old Abbey of Newßtead, The
dwelling haa Mpa restored by the present proprie
tor, 001. Wildman',' a'pertonal friend and sohool
mate of Lord Byron's, and a gentleman of great
taste, ju well as a fine scholar. Bnt tho rains of
the Abbey are as he fonnd them ; and for plo
twreaque beauty we give them the preference to
•any we have seen in England. Tho large gothio
of time. Ite beautiful and elaborateoarvings are
barely distinguishable, except in a few sheltered
of tUeohurob, toheHSnfWMrMfi?-fcMb fto&
I a beautiful grassy carpet has taken the plaoo
of the Mosaie pavement, and where once stood
the high altar is a monument which Lord
I Byron built for hts faithfnl dog, Boatswain, and
under which he now lies buried. Adjoining this
monument Byron built a tomb for himielf, but his
remains were placed in Huokncll Church besido
his mother, for whom he felt litUe respeot, and
who came far short of fulfilling her duty to nor
son. ,
<* We were shownßyron’sdining-room, dressing
room, end chamber, all of which aro kept nearly
as ho left them. They ate simply furnished, though
tasteful.
“ Bis ohamber is partially covored with Brus
sels carpet, tho border next the wall being covered
with 011-oloth. The bedstead and chairs aro gilt;
the bedstead is surmounted by gilt coronets, and
tho hsngiugs of tho bod and window are of green
ehlnbe, with a small red vino through It. Over
tho oanopy is a green silk hanging. The ohaira
1 are oovered with green damask. The only mirror
hangs over the chimney, which is in the corner ol
tho room, la front of which stands a small table,
and beside it a comfortable arm-ohalr, apparently
but just vacated. Tho window is large, and eom
-1 mandß a fine view of tho lßke, rs well as of the
“ Adjoining the chamber Is his dressing-room, on
the wall* of which Is a view of Harrow Ohurob,
also the portrait of his favorite servant, ‘ Old Joe
Murray . beside which we observed one said to be
that of Byron’sboxlng-master, [Jaokson.j His room
opens into one formerly ocouplod by Byron’s page*
which is said to be hauntod by the spirit of one of
the old monks; which story, some think, Byron
was sufficiently superstitions to believe.
u We wandered through numerous apartments,
all of which evinoed the tasto and wealth of the
present proprietor. In the drawing-room hangs
tho portrait of Byron, by Phillips, whioh is moro
expressive and beautiful than any likeness wo have
ever seen of tho poet.
“In the library we were shown a copy of the
first edition of Hours of Idioness, printed on coaroo
fcluo paper. It is bound very richly, forming a
strong oontrast with tho rude execution of the let
t6“!rhecelebratoddrinking-cup, madeoCahurann
skull, is shown to visitors. A broadbrim of silver
forms the edge, so that the lips need not come m
contact with tho bone. It stands on a pedestal oi
silver, on whioh are engraved Byron’s linos, On
a cup formed from a skull.’
“Lady Lovelace, Lord Byron’s daughter, about
two years before bor death, spent a few days at
Nowstoad, by Invitation from Colonel AVildman.
Knowing that she had boon educated by her mo
ther, and thereby prejndioed against hor father, ho
desired to make her acquainted with her father s
oharaoter, of whioh Bbe know nothing Hor mo
ther used to forbid tho servants mentioning Byron s
name, under pain of immediate dismissal; so that
Ada was almost wholly ignorant of her father shis-.
tery. As she advances in life, delloaoy forbade
her frionda from Bpeaking of him, as it was under
stood that she felt no respect for his momorv.
“ Such was tho state of affairs whon Col. Wild;
man mot Lady Lovelaoe at a soiree in London, and
Invited her to partake of hts hospitality. On bor
arrival at Nowstoad, Col. W. gaveher eome account
of hor fathor’a early history, whioh ho iound was
quite new to her. Bho had never scon Newstead
before, and, In faot, know so little of her father,
that whon Col. IV. proposed visiting Hucknell
Church, sho inquired what there was particularly
interesting there. Of course, she know hor father
waa buried thoro, bat her prejudices against him
were so Btrong that sho disliked to aoknowlodge she
knew any thing about him. By degrees she be
came interested v in her father, and on visiting his
tomb she wept. , _ . , . . .
“On her death-bed she requested to be buried
beside her father, flaying that they ehould never
moro be parted. She desired that, If at any future
time his remains should be removed to the tomb he
built for himself atNewstoad, hers might be placed
there too; thus proving that she must have been
convinced that her mother waa not wholly blame
less ”
“ It is but justioo to Col. Wildmsn to soy that
ovory oourtosy Is shown to Americans. Although
the apartments are only opon to visitors on certain
days of tho weok, thoro is an oxoeption in favor of
Americans, who sro admitted at all times."
A Song.
BY HZLBN MARION WALTON.
[For The Presa.l
Mat tout roses all bo thornless.
Life's lilies puro and white—
Mat jour sunshine have no shadow.
No oreeping attaHby night.
Should you tarry for a blessing
To wile life's weary hours.
Mat your sky be blue and otoudless,
Your pathway strewed with flowers.
And when time's golden sand* have run.
Being oounted softly o'er,
May you and I strike bands again
On the dint hereafter shore.
Sad. troubled hearts be known not,
Hope prove not all a dreamt
Where, flashing, glad, and beautiful.
God's sparkling lilies gleam.
A Palis letter states that a pistol boll was
toundlin on. of Prinos Jerome Bonaparte's lunge
altor death, whioh had been lodged there more
then fifty years ago In a duel with a brother of Mar
abal Davouat.
The Imperial ulcaso ol tho Rusaian Autocrat
Alexander, settling definitively tho question oi
the emancipation of serfs, It Is said, will appear
about tholast of Ootobor.or during the mohth of
November
Compliment* of the tHllce.holders.
Tho spirit with whioh the office-holders are raj.
lying to the Disunion flag, In all parts of (6e'
country, is one of the signs of the success of tho
efforts of Mr. Buchanan to destroy the organisation
of the Demooratio pasty. - The oompllmenta of
these laborious; hud conscientious journalists do
“Forney’s Pbbss” are so edifying that,we cannot
terrain the publication of several of .the riohost
specimens.
And first of all comes the Boston Post ;
Republican Press snoers at the grand
ratification meeting held In Washington.”
An apt comment upon this and other allusions to
Tits Press In the Pott is furnished In the follow-
Jng statistics, giving tho names of- the Disunion
papers in Massachusetts, and the' amount paid out
of tho Federal Treasury to sustain them:
saiary $4 000°' th * B °' ton FoH *• * nsTal officer;
offl?or; Miafygl.MO S " enl ‘ 5 * Dar “
to^'s.S^w.m* 1 ° ,r " 1 Alh : rrlU " i 8
i^°a Kwß,dta Tim " xt for.
-rFi* °£ ,*s?is no*}!'
master; salary $1,900; r , < * ~
*w # o«^^ or Democrat is posimaeior,
at 91(800. ~ •
The Greenfield Democrat Has a’man inthwcu“4
tom-house; at $l,BOO. ; . , 1 ,
The next on thia list Is fhe Harrisburg Patriot
amlVnten, conducted by. MoDowell, who holds
the plaoe.of clerk of. the Committee of Patents, of
Whiqh.the immaculate Senator Bigler is chairman,
salary about $l,BOO a.year., ,' i
M' lfr‘ programme of
disorgsniintlotl—let him Strike frmh the diet df
alootora appointed at Heading; thoae who wfnso to,
Mm oouyokea mate
l „ u! 00 nflenial spirits similar jto that
which assembled at tho oapftai In April, (if 18MI
lot them oOnooct a spurious electoral ticket-let the
Issue be made up between this bogus contrlvanec-'-
VJi^slin. 01 be a vote for 1 , Lincoln
and Hamlin—and the 1 regular ticket, which ftlonq;
oan defeat Ltnooln and, Hamllfi, add wo(will see
how many.Demoorals oan ha induced (e lied thtlr
Sohettfeß of the Her
:, -The Comment upon this paragraph ia to be found
1# the fact that no proposition emanating from aiiy
Committee, regular o,r.irregular, has been reoeivod
apoh unmlngled and intense disgust and in
dignation as that of the State Central .Committee
recommending the Domooraoy of Pennsylvania to
vote for the Breckinridge and Doughs ticket. The
objections to this trick come from every section of
theregutar Democracy, and it is so odious that
Slfe lb* tftiends of'Hrvokiaridga in "Washington
laugh at and repudiate it themselves. Mr. Bigler,
who invented it, baa subsided into utter silence
slnos hehasheard the “ thunder "of the people.
; Next on the list is the Lancaster Intelligencer
a«4 Journal, whioh enjoys the rare felioily of ad
vootting Mr, Buohanan’s Disunion polioy at his own
home, and displays its oonrage by raising both the
names of Breoklnrldgo and Douglas at its mast
head :
‘The Phdodelpbia Press, of the lth inst., is
very Indignant,because General Foster, the Domo
oratlo oandtdato for Governor, approves of the ac.
Con of the Btate Central Commlnee, and threatens
blip with the loss of fifty thousand voters at tho
October .election!. This kind of talk might pass
oqrrent, if lteame from a -Democratic paper! but
when It is fulminated through the ooTumns of a
journal whioh has been engaged lu the laudable
enterprise of distracting the Democratic party end
opposing its regular nominees (and thereby aiding
and abetting the Black BepubUoanperty) for the
lasttwoyeßrs or more,, and whose editor Is now
holding a high and Inoratlve office obtaiaod frem
the Black Kb publican Hons* Of Represen titlves, it'
becomes insufferably insolent as well as stfuremely
ridioulons!” *
The Intelligencer, of.oonrse, speaks for tho
President, having a membor of its firm in offloe in
Washington, and doubtless indulges expectations
of another slioe of patronage before the expira
tion of tho present dynasty.
Among others complimentary ot Ten Pbbss is
the postmaster at Norristown, who conduots tho
Dlßnnion paper ia that county: Getx of the Read
ing Gazette, and Democrat, deeply involved in
the shameful coal contract, and ao awfully exposed
In tho investigation into the corruptions of the
Navy Department, In tho last session of tho last
Congress; tho postmaster of -Bute, who is the
editor of the Brio Observer ; the Baltimore Rs/mi.
lican, condnotod by a man named Richardson,
who holds a valuable place in the custom house,
and others.
. All these stipendiaries of thaGenorai Administra
tion base their assaults upon Tni Pnass on tho
aoosmaUon that this journal Is anxious to debt Mr.'
Lincoln President of the United States. , Do they
not know that all their leaders, from the President
States down to Benjamin, of the
Senate, have declared that they prefer Lincoln to
Dongles, and that they are now engaged in a oon
*a?rrx}!lS£K?!L s i_ D0 * n P° n Lincoln, but upon Don
work they attribute to Tni*"l l HiissV’‘ , l‘ifs u .j..W. 25
has followed the line of polioy originally marked
out in its management. It has never deviated for
a moment. Dofeat may ensue in consequence of
tho distraction, in thoDemooratlo.party, produced
by Mr. Buchanan and his myrmidons, but if tbero
Is a vital and vigorous Demooraoy to be maintained
for tho future, it oan only be in that whioh is re
presented and supported by Thb Press. .The flag
raised against the Administration in 1857 by The
Pbbss, unfurled on ” the heights of Altoona" in
,1858, and nobly rallied around at Charleston and
Baltimore, by the friends of Stephen A. Douglas,
is still flying, and will be kept fiylng, no matter
what the result of tho present conflict may ho.
PERSONAL.
—Governor Buckingham, of Connecticut, is at
the Astor House, New York.
~ —Hampden Sydney Ooliogo has oonferretl the
degree of Doctor of Divinity on tho Rev. T. B.
Balob, of Prince William county, Va.
—Mr. Guild, librarian of Brown University, Is
writing the annals of that institution from 1754 to
the present time.
—Cornelius] Conway Fenton, tho now president
of Harvard College, will bo Inaugurated on Thurs
day, 10th inst,
—At tho commencement at ilaverford College,
Pennsylvania, on tho 11th tout,, John G- Whittier,
the Quaker poet, rcooivod tho honorarydogreo or
Master of Arta.
—Hon. Samuel Butterfield, a wall-known citizen
of New Hampshire, died at Conoord on Tuesday of
last week, at tho age of seventy years. He waa
president of tho State Capital Bank.
—President Buchanan and Mlsa Lano wore pre
sent at tho exhibition of tho Aoademy of the
Visitation, in Georgetown, D. C-, on Wednesday,
and tho former made tho presentation of premiums.
—The Orphans’ Court of Prince George's oounty,
Md., have awarded the scholarship in tho Balti
more Female Oolloge to Miss Elizabeth Ferrell, of
Bladonßburg distriot, daughter of the late Dennis
W. Ferrell. -
—Hon. W. It. Flint, of Anson, andfitophen
Weston, of Madison, Me., recently purchased in
Vermont thirty-three fall-blood .Spanish merino
sheep, for whioh they paid upwards of $l,lOO, or
about $3l a head.
—The celebrated German traveller, Dr. Vogel,
has boon murdered in Africa by tho King of Bar
gow. A demand has been made for the effeots of
the unfortunate traveller, and It is probable that
his papers will soon be obtainod.
—lt is said that the Emperor Napoleon is irre
concilably hostilo to Lord John Russell, and that
the prioe of his Imperial alliance with England
is Lord John’s retirement from effioe by the 24th
inst.
—Filz Edward Hall, Esq., a native ef Troy, New
York, and a graduate of Harvard College in tho
class of 1810, has received the honorary degree of
Doctor of Civil Law, from tho University of Oxford.
He has passed a dozen years in India, and has bo
oorno highly distinguished as an oriental scholar.
—On Tuesday evening, Hon. Saunders,
Jr., Mayor of Lawrenoo, reoeivod from tho citizens
of that place a magnificent service of silver, valued
at $032, as a token of their appreciation of the
manner in whioh ho discharged the arduous duties
that dovolved upon him by tho fall of tho Pember
ton Mills.
—SuaitT Old Ladv.—Mrs. Annor Hamblin, of
this town, celebrated her Fomth of July by taking
ahoreebaok ride, whioh she appeared to enjoy
very muoh. She is about eighty yoars of age, but
seems smarter and more vigorous than many of our
eighteen-year-old belles. We hope she will he
able to celebrate many more Independonoe days
in as happy a manner— Yarmouth Register.
—Hon. E. B. Washburns, upon his return to his
: home, in Galena, Illinois, last Ihursday, was re
ceived with rousing oheors, and then placed in a
carriage, and a procession formed, whioh marched
through the streets to the De Soto House. Berate
was welcomed on behalf of the people by CMonel
Ohetlaln, and thence escorted to tho portico of the
De Soto, where he addressed the ass«nbled multi
tude in fitting terms of acknowledgment.
—Hon. John Appleton, Unifid States minister
to Russia; Uenoral Halsey,''bearor of despatches
to Russia and France;'’Mr. Escalade, bpauish
I minister to Moxicor'Rev. Dr. C'heever, Messrs.
Ueorgo D. Phelps .'and family, and S. 6. Kellogg,
Bsq., sailed in the Adriatio for Liverpool on Satur
day. Dr. Chiever w»
! a large number of his friends, who chartered the
steamer May Queen for the purpose of making a
demonatratioD-
- It h etotod that Bovoral millions of Russian
serfs will be emancipated before the year doses.
Politic inßeading.
'H»jU)iso, : July 13,l8»o.
Olnh ' nailmt to o m '* tln * Bf Democratic City
SSL* 0,8 «*» <* «• st » i «
S,.'*’ etZkulr WM h,M * s H ‘ n oo
“ r ™*** to *»" you.a abort so
rt B » 1? l rd * r ovUt, ‘*od a#,exact posi
tioiiof matters hqre, letm, lkotoh , brlef ou J^ #
of antecedent events : _ * t)
Borne weeksafter the nomination 0 f Gen. Foster
for Governor,' a meeting wee celled to take ateoa
to form a Demoo ratio olnh; and in view of the
satisfactory and harmonious aetion of tha reoeat
State Convention, it Was expected, and, I heiieve
generally desired,, by all members of the party’
tbat.in the plub, organisation, a fair representa
tion yhonld lie accorded ;to thoee Democrats who
had opposed the election of J. Gianoy Jones, In
1858. The committee ‘having the matter in eharg*
accordingly agreed upon .a numMr'af snob ap
pointments, but this action not being agreeable to
certain Administration leaders,' the ebjectionatge
nailies were stricken off, with a single cxceptl*/
Thus was the “dob” controlled, at the'very dutsef,'
by a few political bigots, purged of its rebellions
toted* 1 * 1 ’ * n4 ' 1 P" B^**l ** l *^* l^ll taensubeii
conc|lialion
orgukaUim or the club Wm pMfsd,
not tftoout-prcdacing.vcty greet' ■"‘~*‘rn|iW
it adjewtndtte owaHitola. Acth>e-o( the Scfemal,
Convention, and on the oth it. was eaUadlontfcar
r, xqga; ? u ° 80f «»
'C^ter?
As the oLairwee tout jtotbxg toaqnfctioh, A. G,
graen, Esq.,, age, aDer . stating .tolt while
indre waa no dlsaraaoq of cplniotr Atnnj* Dmqo.
&‘»£SiaVs&
te
andJobnoosL i.Hetherefore moved.to .tocOd by
striking out the ffrsl reeolution and saUtltaUngtn
its place twditsbhrtlons—ona reeognlxinwlDeimlM
rad Jokasoa as tot reguUr nrtriiSa ofQUpSff
other endqndng ,toe action,of tbaTaßonai
Democratic Committee recommending the adob-
K°P ? c t P ur ' Douglas and'Johhson electoral
t c > tl > r Origiaalredolation eng.
gertwl that the. motion.lo.emend was out of order,
ea the meeting was only called to' tatlrif the no
oeedlngsof the Bute Committee; It via received
£°“7 “Wtlauto (a large foroe of JBnekintMge
men havingTmert. drammed Ktoether), add would
probably have been bo declared by the chair, had
not Mr. Seta, the editor of the Gazette, interposed
and tousled that tho, amendment was la
he, for one, was reedy to meet it. After acme
farther discussion between Meeen. Gets and
Green, the amended reealnUona were voted down
by nearly two to one, the chair rsfasing td order a
division, eltoongh iondly called tor hejorefthe vote
was declared. After this the gentleman who had
offered the amendment stated that the reaolatien in
favor of Judge Dongles having been voted down,
he and hla Mends would withdraw from tba club,
and announced that a Douglas, Johnson, ad Foe
tor olub would shortly be formed, which all
orats were invited to join. After the adoption of
toe original resolntioft and speeches frdm Otto.
Keim, one of the eleetore at large, and others, the
meeting adjourned. j .
Now, it might be seriously asked,' What ! oocasibn
wee there to endorse'toe action oftheStote Central
Committee at a time .when it was morally certain
that a jtare . Douglas electoral iioket wcnld be
tormrt? JLet me give you the aoHUoa. ,The two
papers to this; place, I mean
*.**!&*' Wj.«W%.attoffavor of
Breoklnndge.and Lane, and ae toe political oom
p*i«* of “a county was begifintog to wear e de
eidpdly Douglas aspect, it was aaeesaary to get toe.
Democratic City Club to sustain them, bydeSadag
in favor of the fusion, movement, a measdrawhick
both the above papers had lately espoused. As
soon, therefore, as an oaequivonai Doughs ticket
is presented, it will necessitate tha formation of a
•Breckinridge and Dane ticket, andhattoggot the
City olnb fully acmmUted to thesotioi of Die State
Committee, It will be easy to follow
gramme of transferring it evantnaUy into tbtosup
•pert of the Secession candidatosi' Whether this
iageuiouaMhemeeanbeeonanmmated,will depend
upon thsoonfidenoe .the.'members of-tlto tlnbre
pOse on the Breckinridge and Land organs. lam
“P.P7 to assure too Meads of Donbas, howevaf,
that in toe rural districts of “oldßtrke" therikhi
kind of spirit is showiug itself, and to all appear*
ances the Douglas eleotoral ticket will receive s
decided majority. ’ - g_
An, Appeal prom an. Old Democrat. '
[ForTheFr,ess.J ,
The following article I find in toe Penneylea
nian of toe llto inst., relative'to toe late action
oi toe Democratic State Committee:
J- IJe Yorlf QSiitte, editedTiy‘ tod Uea. Wat. H.
Welsh, Ohalnqsn of ■ the State Central Ccbimittoo,
takes occasion aomaof tha miaitatemnrtf
,of ft* Press of this city, wffh refenaoa to
the* notion of the nnmitteY ai Ite ilumTmml
ing. It says: ‘ The aUsyatios that
was entitled to mam bars of the commit
tee is also incorrect. The resolution adopted at
received t tedBBßUBPtei»-*°*^ o^*?| f «>»
phin and LebanODy with bat on# Senator, reeelvea
eight additional members. * * * The propo
sition to vote by districts, allowing each Senatorial
district to oast two .votes, although bht one momber
was present, was-ao., contrary to rule and pre
cedent in every deliberative nody r 4hatte-4U adi.
require much reflection on the part of the ohair
man to decide against it when a point of order
was raised upon the motion.' ”
. Mr. Welsh, in attempting td correot others, has
fallen into an error himself. When the motion was
made that no district should cast more than two
votes, Mr. Welsh asked the mover what he meant?
The latter stated that he wished the Vote taken by
districts, and that) from the inequality of the re
presentation, each Senatorial diatriot should give
two votes where two members wore present from
the game district. If there was but one, therefore
but one vote should be cast. He .also stated that if
the Beading Convention had supposed that the
State Committee would undertake to nominate a
candidate for President in opposition to the no
minee of the National Convention, an equal re
presentation would have been given to each dis
trict.
The inequality of representation was admitted,
and yot a rote by distriots refused! Notice should
have been given by Mr. Welsh of his intention, so
that all districts might be represented. The notion
of the committee was an arbitrary exeroise of
power, unauthorised by the Reading Convention
or the Democracy of Pennsylvania, and will dis
tract and divide the party in every county in tho
State (York inclusive) where they attempt to carry
It into efieot. Gentlemen who will not be governed
by rogular nominations have no just claims upon
the party to bo supported, if they succeed in get
ting a nomination.
Lot the members of the committee who agree
with Mr. Welsh withdraw their nominee, Mr.
Breckinridge, and the Democrats will next fall oany
fifteen or sixteen members oi Congress, a majority of
State Senators and Representatives, that will in
sure the election of a Democratic United States
Senator, and insure an equitable districting of the
State for Congress. If they persevere in keeping
tho double-headed monster in the field, inevitable
destruction awaits tho Democratic party, and tis
graoo will overwhelm tho authors of the scheme..
Oius ok the Committee.
[Mr. Welsh, the Chairman of the Democratic
Central Committee, who is now engaged *m trying
to rally the Democrats upon a Disunion candidate
for President, who is also a disorganiser, may read
the future In the above practical suggestions.—Ed.
The Press.]
MORTALIT* w DIFPEAEXT TRADES ASD PRO
FESSIONS. —The Edinburgh Review of a recent
date contains an artiele on the mortality in trades
and professions. The Sheffield grinders occupy a
conspicuous place among the artisans whose health
is destroyed by the employments that yield them
the means of subsistence; the. most deadly occu
pations pursued in Sheffield are fork-grinding and
stonc-raoing. The mortality is very large amonj
those who labor in the coal mines, and larger still
in the metaligerous mines. Consumption makes
tearful ravages among the tin. copper, and lead
mines of Cornwall and Derbyshire. The smooth sub
stance at the end of the luoifer match is the oauseof
intense suffering and slow death. This composi
tion Is composod of phosphorus, combined with
oxvmuriate of potash and glue, made iute a paste,
and kept liquid by being placed ofer a heatef
metal plate. The subtle vapor given off is eh*iff*d
with a poison that destroys the bones of tbsjw by
a succession of oancerous sores, reduces the opera
tor to a skeleton, unbinges his nervoqrfystem, and
produces ghastly paleness. BraarMelters
from attaoks of intermittenufcver j
smites the plumbers; fliers,* brass
smiths are subject to a-eSost '
their hair turning a Uvid gr«m Xh« morUlU,
by consumption V<i*ally ,aU " , >
bakers, and miilMrs, 41m by compositors.
TbfatmMt or Ceokp.— The Dublin Hospi
tal GaMtlt state, that Dr. Jodin, in a eommuni-
Acsdemy of Sciences, °n the nature
and treatment of the same, say,
.Jh.VS?« P rMeerchea hare led him to the following
„“”w 0 n»: First, that oroup andpsaedo-membra
are tnirely parasiUcardUetsea, dne to
thefonnatlon or fungi; second, that the treatment
of these affections requires noither general medica
tion nor inoendiaiy cauterisations, and that they
may be cured by simple parasitioid.l applications.
After enumerating the various therapeutical means
resorted to in this and analogous diseases, Mr. J odin
declares that ho, much prefers to thwe uncertain,
alarming, or dangerous remedies, the sasquichio
rlde of iron, which completely impregnates the
fungus, Monties its.action on tho surface only,
and may be absorbed without danger. This me
dicine destroys tho parasitio growth and also modi
lies favorably the hemorrhagfo condition constantly
observable <n the affected parts and thjir neigh
borhood : It farther induces expectoration, and
thus promotes tho rejsotion of tho false mem
' branes. .
Tm Boston Pilot estimates the number oi
Catholics in this country at 3,500,000.
the weekly ruintt
T Xn'7 BntT f *“ Writ to Mat to itoaankM to
;K2 '3SSFT
His « <• n
Ten •* « a*
Twenty ** .. i*-f?
Zwratv ov«r •* ■ ■ w —•—
»acHtoba»«itor,)«tolL. ( m
..For a Club of or ovvr.wo wia'^a.
extra copy to toagattor-na of toa dab, -
PcvtMatoira an niralrt to act aa lutohi
Tax WimThw,
CAUVOMNU PUM.
Iwnxd tkne liaw a Mcatk, ix bras fto too OalHbvala
Steamer*.
oenebal news.
Tag committee of New York gentlemen,
frienda of Mr. Fowler, who an bUh> And to
reimbono tha finnaatfcr htodShraßor. taro
* lr “dy oolleetod tWJOg, aed an«3daal c< ae
fubg to. whole nwT. aftoalmw
to whoa Mr. Fowler, lar-ftnrdm. MthtoSa
«umij of um^,vittMkta£|iai.ammi&
or writ tea atoaowtodgmaaLhava momlv aoraa
forward and into the haade
Ue too entira Mwra.u dap. It to rare that 7 Sf.
Soioc observation! of a
have lately been mad. opal.thcawStSttoi m.
mirkabl. and aaWU tha
kemboo riant if Aa IhtiliEJßSSiMa
a noviMsttli^Mlki
H -
T: * —Tljislifcnhfiaji
of on the Si. Latvicuea
Ino reared the trade on the BL [aMte vw
,dumber traae m ftertSSSwFW Su
MMU Ue Mtot», toltw!?
ss** “• singular anA rmkerilDtliMfkst.”
, Hdmei SuMHxn Sjxta l^K^r-ThaMoat
«.v.,UlBi«. T, J '
: Thk Lack Sprtaion . cMß i'
•tems.npow In tooLak. Santrtor MtotojUßall
they can do to aooom module tea «
the peril and teMisnaka&.
penor. Trit M f M jut
sMiteg flkritegh the fiMCSt XmSttMtSSSCi
* a saurticßlUiMfjdSr
and this yevlt Is thought that it will nmeh etevea
or twelve millions. " -
mya . that the harvest of
F r HB^ r PP iJ nol y mlddHag i« to. ftoat tow^Mas.
toaraar. Tbefrnitci^pixauJSJS
5 fihg anraee i>
that|heeitiseoeof Itagta taitoestMrttiamSS
oleetiona diiituk m* te
Ehos Allkx, an intemperabo IMA who 1M
in llolyok., took Mtoi'M iwfc toM
itroyed hit lib., Boomm twrai wSk’«
..ter, <£ '
|totoia inxUad, which cmaMdhi. dwthla idlU
»
wbele number «nreßed WorTteM and
$4-96ths. The averags tuimae of tha
is 90.64, which is about the same as thosa buflt tut
A xektihq has been held lately aft
apertis to eonrider tha question of the ilitwlm Ta
oroaee in the number of peeltively
•for-aotolng ycuMmaa. We ragnt to htor nob a
badaccoaat of YoUng America in tto WMt. MAd
ractmuaend to to. maatiu. too propvtoty of et
ganulng Young Mu’s Chmtlu ft ignmlaTliiiir
A. JoiKT-Srook. Fiaituia CoarttMT A
p^Kswsssas?:
lus* lt has snrafcaaM So f.rlMo.i
Mtsto, near Soargto, which contaiaa«,«M am tt
land, when it intend, fuatlag, dixtuiiaw. Ml ma
king, catUe feeding, .to..
Thk Ncw York Journal of Commerce ana
»» Atoay M eM|t xaita have been eotomraaad£r '
-StSaSS2Xsr^l*sf y *? rwk
nww ngiirtod Ocapoay Mabtot dM dmtaa.
tobtvMp t iealaal auiHant ito gekwvW
( o,er-^uawasMrattttod,oa too gnaad rfnS-
and inattentioß to their dntoa.
; • PpypiAiioji op EicHnojrn.—The Hichauad
(Va.) Whig eoaiiden that tha popnlatto of that
city, within Ito oorporato timitsTcMMarlv 4* alt
Ud that .-thw: feZfijm*
a,m mtn This year’, vatoatiu of xtafutoto
ta too city to (10,579,410—aa iaanauotraon **■—
.(4*0,000 over the appnleepi.nt of 1850.
We notice by. oar exchanges that moat, if
not all, this tobaeco-growing eoutiw ia the Btato
of Marylud have MM ■utlnii aad unoiatod
(MMiiia.tomCiaynWtoMtobaoeo
« Th.-<a,,to.
Additiosai. Rewabd.—The oxeemtora of
mnrdaraA ia fiaw Yttok,
’ - Tmt Pemberton mill at Lawraace wUnfiS
beoomptotod. 11 1. to be ona toory bighw thca ko
to re. It will maanfaetara eottoa aad wuOu
good!, and employ ooe thooxead hand! ' V. trad.
awfenraeon tacgnv by toa Uta dtoaatoe
will nbtbc lotrupcn
A Patbiotiu StnKiXßTion.—TbeMontgonan
tj Mail, in speaking of too reouband Afttonu at
Key West, says that they eonld ba. taku raey ,
easily by a tow datonaiacd ran, aad that “ toa
tot would be quite as manly as too Go nnawPH V
robbing of the first purchaser.” Is.
Thebe are published in this country and
Canada nearly three thousand newspapers. Men
than one-half are weeklies, the remainder an di
vided between semi-weeklies, tri-weeklies, and
dailies. These papers would men thaa reach
around the globe.
. AtjiKH?? to Fins Bububoto*.—The City
Councils, of. Burlington, lowa, so the ifsenisys
says, were informed a day or two rfnoe that an
attempt to fire the oity was in contemplation by a
gang of desperadoes, whose object, deubtlees, was
plunder. One of the gang is in jail.
A Gkjabtic Coirogt Im, — A new cotton
mill is about being erected by the Kaspkaag Com
pany at Salem. Massachusetts, with .thirty-two
housnnd seven hundred and sixty-wight- spindlas,
and six bandied and fifty looms.' Amount of sab
aeription called for to build the mill, (M 0,009.
*N ibett-thbee French paper-mabori hare
petitioned the Senate praying for a haavy duty oa
he exportation of rags, and in favor of reatrhmag
other nations from . participation, as far aa rags
are oonoernod, in the beneltaof the Commereul
Treaty with England.
The States of Ohio and Indiana recently
passed stringent game laws, as well as our owa
State, and a contemporary of Cincinnati says the
good effects of the law will be experieneed this fall
in the largely-increased number of quails.
Thb W-eatera-Dental Society, in session at
Springfield, Illinois, has voted to offer the sum of
two hundred dollars to any ohemist who would dis
cover or make a plastic compound that can be eub
etiittted for gold in filling tooth.
Missocbi Laed Culm.— A long-deferred
claim of the State of Missouri against the Federal
Government being for' two per cent, of the pro
ceeds of the publlo lands within the State, has been
allowed. It amounts to 9490,009.
Owiso to the large draft* on the Treaanry
last week, it is said that not much more thaa ‘
$2,000,000 remain as available balance. The re- f,
issue of *5,000,000 in treasury notes has, however, i
afforded relief.
Dunwo the week ending the 80th nit. the
Postmaster General established a post oßoeat
Frankfort, Leelanau county, Michigan, and dis
continued that at Arcadia, Lapeer oounty, Michi
gan.
The Chicago Tribunt says that there an
efforts making in that oity to oreot furnace# for
' manufacturing iron from the ore of Like Superior,
on a scale commensurate with the wants of the
Northwest.
.' Tub Quebec Gazelle says that informaiiOß
has been' received of important mineral discoveries
in the rear ef the district of Area Rivers. Aa
exploring party is fitting out to make further
search.
The imports of tho fiscal year at New York
are *233,718,718, of which 107,000,000 were la dry
coeds, 123,000,900 in general merohandiaa, he.
This is. by 13,000,000, the largest total ever im
ported,
Tait New York Dispatch. Bays that two of the
Japanese ambassadors aremembersof the Masonic
order, and that Masonry exists to a considerable
extent in the Japaneee empire.
Poih l.ltiox or Toledo.—The census shows
a population in this oity of 13,784. The number
of deaths during the year ending Jnne 1,1800, was
only 237, or 1 in 58, or about 17-10 par cent.
The competition of railways has not wholly
driven off the take steamers. The Amerioan line
ofsteamere ir taking large numbers of passengers
through the lake anaSt. Lawrence.
The Phmnix Iron Company, of Phoenix
ville, ate preparing to execute orders from Europe
for iron beams fifteen inohas deep and forty feet
long, tha largest over produced in any count^.
The entertainment given at the New York
Academy of Music, on Wednesday evening, te
raise funds for Garibaldi, realised fifteen hundred
dollars.
The Allentown (Pa.) Democrat says that
several horse# have recently died in Lehigh coun
ty, from a species of sore throat, which prevails
to a considerable extent.
N ewtos is put down as the richest town in
Massachusetts. Its valuation is *OOO,OOO greater
than that of the oily of Newburyport.
It is said that Minneaota will export more
grain this year than the total yield for four year*
past.
The city of Buffalo is in the market for
*BO,OOO. at six per cent.; bonds payable in three,
four, and fiva years.
Aetioch College, Ohio, has just graduated
its largeet class—twenty.four yoesg men and six
young women.
A laxqs: quantity of mackerel waa Mined
off Rockport, Mam., on Saturday week. One setae
obtained two Hundred and tweoty-fivebarrels.