The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, May 31, 1861, Image 1

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    THE PRESS,
010110 DAltit, (0714DAVE1 .111101 FIND,)
BY Joalsr W. FORNEY,
, v vr, (;F: :1;0 417 CEBSTNUT .57KBST
AILY Pf.tES,C,
r WBF-a,;9s.yabia to the Carrier.
oat , *,
32b:ur7 tem out of the City at am Dow.eue
:
1 1 % . FOUR JOLLATSS Yob: Mesa /formica,
Pcti.s.ns Boa
Six MoNTEB—ilrfB7in/4 tD /4-
74,1i0;;.!ie tiroe ...Mara&
TRI-VIV.IfiLLY PRESS.
used to Serena -era out of the City at Tsars Dot_
. PSA A:Cir 31, in advance.
011.,1.1..N81TC1 GOOD*.
; 111` ;k I'M MILLINERY GOODS.
L ft
0 ITU ENTIRE STOCK
and Fuliionable Wide,
ax
ITICFS TO SUET THE TIMES,
LINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS.
4-fiAIV HATS-SPECIAL NOTICE.-
c o I,OC r. of 9 C RAW and PALM-LEAF HATS,
fiCd üßf iA r B ARG/tins. in &nimble goods. at
L INCOLN, WOOD, & I,,TIGELOLS,
Tu. S 2 CHESTNUT Street.
. _
git
FRAMES.
10.,1N CH FLOWERS,
STRAW GOODS.
is s LAT.r.s7 STYLES CONSTANTLY ILN
GEWING.
T ip-
0. 719 CRETYPIUT Street, below IN GIIT.R.
... . .
J.OOl4kiNG GLASSES.
b OOJUN&GLASSES.
ow oily a zhib.+lr.w sad setattletins new and sterant
LOOKING-GLsISSES,
An the latest imetavetseula and lanintied iJI
$ .1.:,-ufsemre ,
roveßies in Walnut and Gold and Somme's
Gold FI/llTitta. tot MIRRORS.
Fui r.ett estsamve and varied amortment au tks
alert.
lAANS EL EARLE Er BON,
i s A R. L GALLERIA:CB,
SI6 011281tXtrie 611LEKT.
CA_RPETINEIS.
FIUME 4:1.1115TON MATTING..
ET. P. & E. B. 011 NE,,
cri*Vo6.ll'l , BTArE lamals.
Rays 13ir open their
SPRING IMPOWTATIONti
OF
DOUBLE ICETRA IMPERIAL
WEITZ
rrAFLE. Aud
KED 013.Euicra)
CANTON MATTING.
ITi ALL, THE DIFFERENT RUMEX, AT
MODERATE PRICES.
J. F. it E. 13. C)RNE,
Eous-sm orposyri3 VTATE HOOD.E .
. ,
GROCERIES.
TO FAbIILIES B.F.SiDING Lti THE
RURAL DISTRICTS.
We are prepared, as heretofore, to randy farcilieS St
ttezr country Reeideriees with every description Dr
EINE SIROC'EII.eO, TEAS, /to., ao.
ALBERT a ROBERTS
CORNEA EL:EVENTS AND VIP'S. STREET&
nrlS
EXCELSIOR HAMS.
J. H. MlOl-IENER de
tuimERAL pRoWsiON "WALRUS.
AND OVBEBP OP =X
CELEBRATED
"E S I 0 R
nrititAX-CURED KAMA,
Pa, ISS AND 144 rsortx.C. FRONT SPIER"
;Itctween Aroh and Race Arrest*,)
PRILADVIr.nrjA.
The justly-celebrated ‘ Excelloor firm/ are cured by
J. R. M. & co. (in a aty..e peaultar to themselves). ex
;leanly tosfantily use ; are of delicious flavor, free from
tbe implement tas4e of salt, and are pronounced by agl
eam supersor to any nos offered for side. aplS-Am
BANKL.NO,
T r-!XLiff)I4T ZE . -
Ns - ;,-
au WILLI, STREET, DTFW YQR:a
elers ai coedit tr. travelers. essaiatde, in
ligtrFAos I . ;froros, Wawa' the Itothßohad. of Pal
:I. London, Frankfort, riapies, Vie nee, and their cor-
dd de
JEWELRY, &c.
BEST' OROIOE YET OFFERED.
EW GOODS.
NEW STORE.
NEW STYLES.
GREAT METROPOLITAN
JEWELRY DEPOT,
Fault THIRTY-TWO CHESTNUT STREET.
GREAT SACRIFICE. TO INSURE QUICK SALES
1 have opened. et the stove store, one of the finest
sad beet-assorted etoote ofJeweiry,Stlver- plated ware.
!Ma Fano/ Goods. eve, before offered to the public.
I will guaranty to give perfect eatiefootion to every
p urch aser.
cad and examine MY stook and you will find a elm of
:Dods equal to any in the aity.
OBSERVE THE PRICES:
anal... Enameled Cameo, Lan, Gold
stone, and Onyx seta, for* . grs, usnaiprice $3
Colmincle Enameled 10., Enamelled
frilly, lionnnet. k. 0., do-- -81 do. 83
fears. Jet, Lava, Carbuncle, Tor
_flame, Brinisaan do.-- ----- $2 do. ao
Wilma% Garbiranle, Gold Clni .. ter,
Fa bbon Twist do ..... _- -el do- ag
Feiraved and Chased Gold -- nann
9rscelete 11 do. 114
Very Rich Engraved and Chased do- ell do. .16
% err Etch Carbuncle and Gold Ches
ter do._ __..- ---- ...........2 do. 6
11' 1 464 1 31161613. - - - .. —8 .., 01 do , 3
Maser Necklaces, dr:eat variety_l do.
Do. do. with Medallion ..._
i0n...-. 1 do. 3
I
Medallions, great vanety..... 1 do 3
Do. 'with Double BMes... - 1 do. 3
!t of Stade and Eleeve Buttolis,
great variety, ~—.
' ....-- es do. $1
Sea of Studs andbleevelluttons, 4::Itr
: snot% Enamelled. &a-- „.. - I do. 4
Wu& Chatelain Clliaina-___ —_ 2 do. 6
681 111' Vest Cosine— - _ ---- ......- 2 do. 6
1)0. do. do. - ~ I do. 5
Ladies' Earrings.— -• • •-• . - ---.. 43 do. 6
po.
_. do. "L'l do. . 4
` 1 450 to 3
Do. Sleeve Buttos. sDeto 81. uISII3?PrI6C aL6p to
'i-nn' 00. do. Me to do. I.do to
Also._ Gold Pens and Pencils. Tooth Picks, Watch
Keys, Belt Sldes, Chain Pins, Crosses, &a., ke.
have a small lot of FlotE GOLD APIA SILVER
WATCHEB.whioh 1 will sell at equally low prices.
*ads sent by Mail or Exprese to all parts of the
United States and Canada free of coat.
W. fa. ltrUtTlel. Agent,
as, -terwf3m fp 432 CHESTNUT Street.
FINE WATCH REPAIRINO
VERSONS HAVING FINE WATCHES
tb m have hitherto Given
no eatiaraotion to the
wearers, are invited to bring them to our store where
defesta can be remedied by thoroughly annul find
e 7 iennflo workmen, and the watch warranted to glVe
tZure entinfeetion.
Mantel Cloaks, Musical Boxes, &0., careful!, put to
70 welete order.
FA iIJESEPL,
itvvorters of Waichee. Musseß o x e s °looks. ese.,
toe-I,n age CittgT.4l7l' Street. below Fourth.
CABINET FURNITURE.
CA.III ;: 7 3 TI I 3I4NITIJNE AND BIL-
N10()RE & CAMPION.
tie. 261 01. ML SECOND STREET,
IlL'ataect,an xlth their extensive Cabinet BLVlthallit
" ZOV U!&nufacturing a slimmer article of.
.
ttr.d have now cn hvnd M su A pply. BLEfl finished with
& (14...mriows Ibir ROVED CCSAlons,
et prenounoed. by all who have need them, to
" 43 uste-nr to al' b y
p a , ot" _ _
tue quality and finish or these Tables the mann-
Cinuniin -tier u, their numerous patrons throughout
116 "• = a--- -1 * wa f h the character a of their
t.
-a=
FREIGHT NOTICES.
l'olloß TO ,sHlperaB Or FREIGHT.
enrenanee of notice from the reular antheri
h/ 11 rondo forwarded by way of the rHI LAYML-
A AND HEADING HAILRUAD,to the States of
Is 11 8t.:OURI. KENTUCKY,
TELINNESSEE,
marked
VIRGINIA
,r de t na be dialect' , marked " Not Contratylind," and.
hit elth time Weide, the Mine of the Kopper. The
'la Kl 4" Receipt meet also be maraca at above. And
?ou;h or any deeoription wi ll be forwarded to Staten
of the above named
r3l44ol ASA WHITNEY, Preeldent.
I/
We a no&wN D L n E d DG d B aRe
ProAuPERS.—
or , ' e a ph Moun n tllr , P n per r Kiln. uvunung
I° , n t WRITING AND LEDGER PAPERS,
color and quality, are not excelled by any
• weir in the United States.
e 7 ,061 Cali attention to a new artiole or Pape*
l 4l .idlelorld na, 8... d now for aide. called Bneilleal
,`
, Fr.Vf.4lct.: has been gotten no to meet the went* of
N r 'illett urn and others, who object to Commercial
• au, tett
berr4 barTOW. and do not wish to use part
e•
t,,`",overcce,oo ! fr oth e h . above Gbrestions ; is a per
pJre vivre Gate &Asti ruled on One Ede i
terp, •
T e r e-ez*rr - :cute , c.p:cute from beet son,
hem aqui It- , •the •03: - rtellgt Reat boxes.
w"en_ Jut for qpi,
the nave a raper rshnti tmaa Letter, *limier to
rta 'sr`ei except it ins bat hall the number of ban
ae aa to allow a printedhlack or headmaxabove,
KEMPTON &
Wont Roily Erinaga,Cumberland . re.,
tlfdollre ropers ma be had of Meagre. B. Co,,Ll
ea, & atid ItTEGARGEK BR OTILERBs
1 44 DECATUR Street. mbil4bet
VOL. 4.-NO. 260.
DRY-00011S JOBBERS.
SPRING OPENING
CLOTHS, CASSZAIERES, VRSTINGS,
LADIES' CLOAKINGS,
Aud all gouda auited to
MICH AND 8011,' WiStati
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
At
C. SOMERS & SON'S,
eke untzwass Street, under JAyrtwo UAL&
mho-snt
SP i=-3
WAY 4100_,
F. va /wring 111 ID SetEisle
IRIPORTNAB AND JOBDIKB
I SRY GOODS..
STOOIL lIMINVAILLY IRAMIE AMP
1861.
DALE, 'ROSS, Se 00. i.
HALE, Ross, & WITHERS,
No_ 521 MARKET STREET,
Howe now open their 11111
SPRING. IMPORTATIONS
FANCY DRESS GOODS.
"lila Atlantan of CABS atvrzits i. evenoinuy
COALAIISSION HOUSES.
GRAY FLANNELS-2
BLUE—GRAY FLANNELS..
GRAY FLANNELS..
SLUE—MIXED FLANNELS,
THE CHE✓IPEST IN THE MAREE'T.
GRAY FLANNELS.
TO& SALE
•
SY THE PIECE OR BALE,
FOR CASH,
Int 1?:••
JOSHUA L. .BAILY,
m736—tf NO. 213 IstARKET STREET
A . & W. SPRAGLITES'
ONION PRINTS.
HOYT, SPR AGUES is CO.,
PIO. 233 ORESTNUT STREET.
apl9-tf
W ETA JINC*.
COFFIN. & 00..
ORESTNITT STREET,
AGENTS FOR THE SALE UP
DUN/YELL MFG. Ce. , . Pallas AND LAWN&
•PPENE MPO. 00)1 TWMERY RIED AND 117AVIR
PRINT.
Fine Bleached Cottons.
4ONSDALB HOPE. BLACKBTONS. afairEits
YLULE ) 3IOI.6STOWN, RED BANG ORRIVIE,
uraccri. AND BBLVIDEJLE.
Brown Cottons.
e-ToLfug ALLEY, MT. HOPE. FREDONIAN, Slr-
TRICK. OHIO. GROTON. VIRGINIA. FAMILY
AND MECHANICS' AND FARMERS'.
42. A F7Oll, SLATEREVILLE, AND JEWETT CITY
DENIMN AND. STRIPES.
LONSDALE CO.'S NANKEENS AND 011,1551A1L
GLASGOW CORSET JEANS.
BOTTOMLErS BLACK AND GLENEAM CO: ti
FANCY MIXED CLOTHS.
SWARMS AND SAXTON'S MYER CASHMERE&
GREENFIELD CO.'S BLACK DOESKIN&
RODMAN'S FINE I EAN3, DOUBLE AND TWISTED
CASHMERES, NEGRO CLOTHE, Ac.
MINOT, saw RIVER, CRYSTAL aPRIIIeBeCRE
RIME. BRIDGEWATER, AND BRISTOL
SATINET& reW-tI
STITPLZY, HAZARD, & HUTOMNRON,
NO. /12 CREISTNITT
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
FOR THE SALE OF
FIIIIAADELPHIA-MAIDE
ffig-ihm .
GOODS.
rah7l-6m
W PUBLICATIONS.
Tllig DOCTRINE AND POLICY
PROTECTION,
WITH TUN
HISTORY OF OUR TARIFFS,
THOM TIM
ORBANIZATION OP TEE FEDERAL GOVERN
MENT TO THE PRESENT TIME.
BY DR. WILLIAM ELDER.
Now that 8 desperate aseanli ie being made upon the
new Tariff to prejudice the pnblic in advance against it,
and. if possible, to have it roweled, it is important that
its friends should be prepared to combat the sr:scions;
arguments of its antagoniste. Nothing will better
serve this purpose than the circulation of the pamphlet
whose title le quoted above, which IS one of the ablest
and most interesting documents that have ever appeared
in support of the true American policy of fostering the
great industrial interests of our country. It will be
forwarded by mail or express for 10 cents per , single
copy ;76 cents per dozen ; 6rb per hundred. Address
RINGWALT & BROWN,
apt-tf No. 3t SOUTH THIRD Street, Philadelphia.
SOOll.B, LAW AND MISOILLANNOUS,
new and nld, bought, sold„ and exchanged, at th e
PHILADELPHIA-BANK BOOK STORE, Ito. 419
CHESTNUT Street. Libraries at &distance purchased.
have having Books to eell. if at a distance, will grate
their name., Aiken, bindinge,_datea, editions , pnope.
and nonaltion.. IVAlkTfill—Hooks printed bY MM.
nun Franklin, as Well as early BOOM rlted
.1D and
America ;t or:ed. al 1 P e tiltgat r=7"c o a l le r :
in cress, lent tree. Librartekaggraised by
tedlt-tf .110 Mt Cmarron.L.
TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES.
DO IOt37ANT WHISKERS?
pc) yov WANT WHIZIERS
W) YOV 'WANT A MObSTACKE!
BELLINGTIA.M I B
CELEBRATED STIMULATING
ONGUENT,
FOX •X! WHISKER! AND !AIL
The 'subscriber, take elesaure ID announcing to the
citizens of the 'United State. that they have obtained
the Agency , for, and are now enabled to offer to the
Amencan public the above Jurtly-oelebrated and
world-renowned article.
TEM STIMULATING Q? VENN
is prepared by Dr. C. P. BELLINGHAM, an salinent
physician of London, and is warranted to bring out a
thick set of
WHISKERS. OR A MOUSTACHE
In from three to ins weeks. This anion is the only
one of the kind used by the Prenoh, and in London and
Paris it is in mavens% use.
It is a beautiful economical , soothing , get stimula
ting compound , whin as if by magio aeon the roots.
causing a beautiful growth of lugunant hair. if ap
plied to the scalp it will cure baldrems and cause to
spring in the plea, of the bald spots aline myth of
new hair. Applied according to directions, Kinn tarn
RED or TOW? hair BA.RIL, and restore gray hair to its
original color leaving it soft, smooth, and 'flexible.
The " ONG LIENT- , is an indispensable article in every
gentleman'', toilet. and after one week's use they would
not, for any oonuideration. be withont it.
The subscribers are the out,. Agents for the art i c l e
in the United States, to whom all orders must be ad
dressed.
Puce one dowar a box; for sale by.all Druggists and
Dealers • or a box of the " OrtellEetT," warranted to
have the ' desired effect. will be sent to any who des i re
It,by mall, direct. securely packed, on receipt of prise
eel Pestare. SUB. Apply to, or address
• J 4 WILLI:UK Street. Nov York..
DYVYR &431J...N0. 232 North SECOND Street, Phi
1 14Pati4ht Agents. cones-gm
OPAL DENTALLINA.—We speak from
ursotiosieneerienoe when saying that the OPAL
DENTA,LLINA made b 7 Mr. BR.Ir. of BROAD end
RPRUCh Etreeta, is decidedly the town Preparation
for the mouth and teeth that Ire have ever used. We
believe it Salta* ell that is shunted for it, and beige re
commended by the most eminent dentists we edema an
to rive it a trial.—Yeatista, atat.lble*
81111 LT ItIMITIFA.I7.I'OII.Y.-4. W.
SCOT? 1314 - 011EMUT - tittiedi It kw 41420 "
below the c , genfinental.” - The attention of -wholesale
Dealaiir =trivet to his 1/4PROVED gim OF
ant , asetator wake, sad . material. pal
aid Ss ester at etorteet melte%
• • .
~ .
... , • t.Vt Ii i /-"' ••
-..` N. 'NMI' i I fi t ''''--
. .
~. 'it , 1.- - .',. - 4 r. - , 4*.t x .
.. - ,
.....
.-- / --- '• • s N.' , il ' 1;Z / I " - - ;,..,..-••• '' ' •
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0 .„ i ..;-- ', -• 1'41. , . -. 7 , .H:!' : „.... 1,-,... , _...-._ ,-,,, 91t ; ....._.
_: ‘:•‘...1.!e ," :„.4 0
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_4 1 .1 .7 17ei :.. ?..- ,c,,:,v -7,- ) . ::: ,., 4* 11
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.: ... :-:,...,K1 , : - .1.:411.11111_,,,74H1PP-"1:7-1—,r,..--I'l.,::;-:73:0:. -i":'-. ---"::: :-..- , 1 , '':' r : l4 ..ty ..
.„,.._:,..-,.,yifisL4efr 4,:_`.,*lA 1r614 7Y"'
'"""'"- -5 -40W1J.-;‘,..:. ,
_ , , , ,_;2_1,:,-_,A044 , v , z , , .. ~ ,,,,,...,:”;,: : :,-, x . . -pik7. 4 x..,4 , .: .:.. T:.- its" • ...- -': • • . •., : • • 4-, - . .1df...:.•:.' , : '' . :; .— : .: '' '. '-
-'-'
.. 0 15.„.... - • • • :
. - -.•-
irgpi11 . . ,44;. 4
.....„ 4..:....
...... ... . , ....
" 7 .._ _•_______ ._ ,_. ... -....._--_,..--...,. --,_ -...... :.--,-,...
- --. ---,4-- -.-ws _---.......--, -'---—...- .......1g... ''''
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.........._,,..1,111! .....-"—....
. .
1861.
COMPIXTFB
SILKS
PILINTS.
DO YOU w.oun A MUUN'SACEEt
OORACE L. & MEGEMAN Ete..
Drugista, a..
MEDICINAL,
EIELNCBOLD'S
GENUINE PREPARATION.
HELM BOLD' R-HELNIPOLDT-HEL ?A PO LiP'P
HELM bobtrtA-ItEL,ml3obirs-iiEbm acyLnns
BEL solar a--14 EL act,D , S—H ELEKROL. Dos
01,1:1 , 1 4 -11 ELMBOL 13 , 8-11ELMBOL WS
HF.Lm ROL,WB—HELMBoLDT—H ELMBOLIDT
011301,11%—ii KLmßoulym—H num tyznarts
HEI,MOW.D7B—RELMROMPR—HELMBOLD'S
tinLms ,, Lres—nuLmBOI.IIOS—MMLMHOUVEI
.118LMR0LIAS—RELMBOLD%—MELMBOLUT
BELmBOLIVE—HTIABOWS—HEUMBoLDT
RELABoLDT—HELMBOLD , P—HILmBOLD's
RELMBOWNI—HEIMpoutre—HELMBWAVS
impumbIvs—RELmFOuw—HELMBOLIVIS
RELmsotars—IiELMOoLD%—tIRLUDOLDM
tIELMBOLDB—HELMBOIAT-4ELMBOLIAS
EXTRACT DUCH U
EXTRACT BUCHU.
EEXTT RACT
RUCBU
EXTR ACT B UUHU
EXTR CT BUCHU
EXTRACT BU 'HU
EXTR ACT BuCHU
EXTRACT BU-'NU
F.XI R ACT ti I CHU
EXTRACT BUC HU
.EX "'Reel BUOBT7
EX TRACT B UMW
EXTRACT BUCHU
EXTRACT BUCRU
TELE GREAT DIURETIC
TEE GREAT DIURKTIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
THE DK EAT DIURETIC.
TUB !GREAT DIURETIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIa.
TIER GREAT DURETIC.
THE GREAT D I URETIC
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
TDB GREAT DIURETIC.
THE G
GREAT DIURETIC.
THE DIURETIC.
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIvE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITHF; AN 0 F 5 PEeffre
APPOSITIVE AND SPEOPIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE: AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A PO - ITYV P. AND SPECIFIC
A _POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND F
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A posrrivE AND SPECIPTC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
FOR DISEASE'S OF TAB'
BLADDER, RIDNEYs, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS. GRAVEL. .1111{0P , SY4
BLADDER, HIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDE I. KIDNEYS, ORAvEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY.
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY_,
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DiszAsies
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL Dis.EAsßs
AND
ALL DISEASES
ARISING FROM
A KIA !NG FRO M
ARISING M
AMINO FROM
ARISING FRO M
ARISiNti PP OM
ARISING FROM
ARISING FROM
ARISING FROM
ARISING
FROM ARISING M
ARISING FROM
ARISING FROM.
ARISING FROM
ARISING FROM
IMPURITIES OF TEE BLOOD, 40.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, tto.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, Pm
IMPURITIES OFT og RLOOD, eto.
IMPURITP , t3 OF THE BLOOD, &e.
IM.rURITIES OF THE BLOOD, .ko.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, &e...
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD. Ike.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, ho.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLoOD,
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD.d e
co/c
IMP URITIES 8 l ux, t o.
liangis O I; F
THE BLOOD,
IMPURITIES OF THE 151,00.0,
NERVOUS DISEASES.
CONSUMPTION,
EPILEPTIC PIS,
Iltuversel Lassitude or the Muscleler System.
DMMBS OF VISION,
INSANITY,
PALLID COUriTENABOIs,
SOUR STOMALII,
HIELMBOLD'S EXTRACT lITICIIV
PIO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT.
MO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT
Prepared according to
PHARMACY AND CEEMISTRY:
PANSCRIBND AND Deno DT
The moat eminent !bran:owe ; endorsed and recom
mended br distinguished thentrmen, Governors of
States, Jungea, the Press, and all mho use it—everr
where—evidence of the most reliable and responsible
ohmmeter oven for inspeotion. IT 18 NO PATENT
NOSTRUM. It le advertised liberally', and its basis' is
merit tr and depending . upan that, we offer our ri4VSlll
time to the afflicted and suffering linfnanitr with entire
confidende.
THE PROPEKTIEN OF THE LIOSAIA OHENATA
Were known as far beak d. two hundred years, and ite
peculiar effect/ on the Mental and Physical Powers are
spoken of in the highest terms by the most eminent
authors of the preteens and ancient date, among whom
will be found fihakeirite6M, Syron, and other',
From this feat has proved eminently successful in
those symptoms of a nervous temperament, arising
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SO MUCH DRSIRSIi.
sal bats
1 ,1 itss.
Botd•9poken Journalism.
Paraphrasing the hackniod line of old Bot•
honk's, (cr Tempera mntantur, et nos mnta
rnur in illis,") Lord Byron philosophically
declared that nothing was certain but uncer
tainty, all things suffering constant change.
The times arc changed, especially in Byron's
own fatherland, so far as the Press is con
cerned. Newspapers now-a-days write, as a
matter of course, what, half a century ago,
would have doomed them to persecution and
prosecution, and nobody, except some antedi-
truth told.
Take the ease of Leigh and John Hunt, for
example. The first edited and the other pub-,
lished a weekly newspaper in London, called
The Exafniner. A little befoie the Prince of
Wales became Regent—that is Ring of Eng
land in all but name—there was a change of
Ministry. As a political journal, The Exami
ner made remarks upon such an event. Al
luding to the expected Regency, and the pre
sinned liberal opinions of the Prince, Leigh
Runt particularly said that it probably would
benefit Ireland, by inducing a relaxation of
oppressive rule, and concluded with this sen
tence ; "Of all monarchs, indeed, since the
Revolution, the successor of George the'
Third will have the finest opportunity of be
coming nobly popular." The Morning Chroni
cle, then edited by James Perry, and a great
power half a century ago, republished the Ex
arniner's article, and was prosecuted by the
Crown for seditious libel The Examiner
was prosecuted also. Mr. Perry, whose trial
came on first, defended himself, and, though
he pleaded his own cause, in defiance of the
aphorism that he who does so has a fool for
his client, was acquitted. Of course, the snit
against the Examiner fell to the ground, as
did some other prosecutions upon equally
shallow pretences. .
On the St. Patrick's Day Dinner, in Lon
don, in 1812, the name of the Prince of
Wales, which used to be the reigning and
rapturous toast, because the Irish thought him
their greatest ally---and particularly friendly
to what was called Catholic Ematelpation---
Was received with hisses. As Prince Regent,
he showed a sort of passive resistance to the
Catholic Claims, and had retained his father's
Tory Ministers. The Examiner, commenting
on the proceedings at this Irish festival, and,
temperately enough, described them—not
omitting the fact that " the health of the Prince
Regent," when proposed from the Chair,
"was drunk with partial ,applause, and loud
and reiterated hisses." It also gave Mr.
Sheridan's speech, in which the company
were scolded for "the sulky coldness and
surly discontent with which they had that
evening drunk the health of the Prince Re
gent "—a rating so unpalatable to the company
that they would not allow Sheridan to pro
ceed. Further, the Aforning Post, having
abused the diners for not treating the Regent's
name with adequate respect, the Examiner
said that, at any rate, his Royal Highness had
adequate adulation from the Morning Post,
which said to him " You are the Glory of
the people "--" You are the
_Protector of the
Arts"--"Yon are the Mmeenus of - the age "
You inspire the Grates "--cs Yew
Adonis in loveliness." The Examiner's com
ment was that this " Adonis in loveliness"
was a corpulent of fifty Prosecuted
for this, the Bunts were convicted, and
punished with two years' imprisonment and a
fine of a thousand pounda. George the
could not forgive the allusion to his 'ciirpn , ;
tem' At a subsequent period, John Runt
was - convicted of having published Byron's
Vision of Judgment," in which the poet had
ridiculed Southey's apotheosis of George the
Third. It was then held that a writer must
not be satirical, even if truthful, upon the cha
racter of dead princes,
Tempora mntantur i—the times are changed.
Here we have a London paper of the 11th of
May, in which not only living nobles, but
dead princes, are justly held np to scorn and
ridicule !
SIIfNDY
LANGUOR.
NER - vousxEss
SICK HEADACHE.
HECTIC FLUSH. Pa
ON NO
PHILADELPHIA. FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1861.
FRIDAY. MAY 31, 1861
uvian old Tory, sees any wrong in haling the
Viscount Forth, born in 1834, is eldest son
of the Earl of Perth and Melfort, who also
bears the titles of Lord Drummond. of Carpi,
Lord Drummond of Stobhall and Montifex,
Viscount Itelfort and Forth, and Lord Drum
mond of Blekertown, eastlemaine, and Gals•
town, in the Peerage of Scotland; also, Due
de NelfOrt and Comte de Lussans in France.
The head of the house of Drummond, enjoy
ing these titles, had been attainted by the
Scottish Parliament, in 1695, for adhering to
James IL, and the present representative of
that line, succeeding to the French titles, by
the death of his uncle, in 1840, petitioned
Queen Victoria for a restoration of the for
feited Scottish titles, which was granted, by
act of Parliament, in 1858. Thus it appears
that Viscount Forth is a man of high position.
Viscount Forth, born in 1834, married Miss
Capri, niece of the Earl of Eases, in 1855, and
had two children by her. ,Lately, his wife
instituted a snit against him in the Divorce
Court, and the Daily Telegraph speaks of it
and him, as follows:
.c What, for instance, can we say about the
wretched young nobleman, who has lately taken
up so much at the time of the Court for Divorce
and Matrimonial Cowes? Wee there ever a pro
fligate who more fully deserved public exposure
than this scion of a noble hem, who, returning
from the Crimea with a more th an dam agedl repu
tation' as having been guilty of pusillanimity, for
which hie own sergeant was very near bl ow i ng bi n
brains ont, that hada a career of almost unex
ampled vim) and debauchery upon the town, and
then marries a revocable young woman, whom be
subjects to almost every conceivable variety of
brutality ? This young soavenger of the Peerage
calls himself a lord; be le the son of an earl ; we
dare say that there are some tradesmen, and some
hotel waiters, who would yet bow and My lord'
him before his face; yet we may reasonably
venture to say that no misereant out of Drury-lane
er Whiteobapel, who has been sent to the tread
mill far cis menthe for jumping on his wife. has
been guilty of more atrocious cruet ty than this Sprig
of aristocracy, who one day may wear the scarlet
and ermine of a peer, and be samatonad to the'
Roan of Lords to legislate for honest men. Why
did not hie outraged lady take heart of grace and
have the young brute up before a magistrate?
Six month.' hard labor prior to a citation in the
Divorce Court, so far from doing him any harm,
might, in his case, have effected an appreciable
amount of good ; for, at least, he could not have
got drunk in the House of Correction, and drunk
°nue,. appear. to have boon the prtmum mobile
of his conduct. Incessant drinking, culminating,
at last, in ohrortie delirium tremens, made him, to
hie wife and family, a being who &iodated be
tween the condition of a painted Bever and a
wild beast. To drink, we suppose, unless the in.
eplratioa was due to innate- depravity, must be at
tributed all his beatings, kicking., end dragging
about of a defenceless woman, all his maniacal
howling' and Dedlamito threats to out his own and
other people's throats, all his font and scurrilous
bairns. Collusion has been spoken of in this
affair and eome amount of moral criminality
charged to the unfortunate lady who has been
married to this young Caliban. If any collation
in obtaining a divorce ban been committed, it is
doubtiera the duty of the law °Moore of the Crown
to interfere ; but the evidence is no less patent
that the lady has been the victim of the- most
atrocious ruffianism, and that the lonpostabltsbod
reputation of her lord Is of the very worst possible
ammeter."
The allusion above to Lord Forth's conduct
in the Crimea is the unkindest cut of any. His
Lordsldp, being an officer in Queen Victoria's
service, accompanied his regiment to the
Crimea. On one occasion, be was ordered to
go into the trenches, and, with much noncha
lance, told the Sergeant who delivered the
command that he would not go. The Sergeant
vainly remonstrated, and then reported to the
officer in command that Lord Forth would not
go Into the trenches, adding that he believed
his Lordship was afraid Afraid!" said the
Colonel, fc if he is, he deserves to be shot
through the head." The matter-of. fact Ser-
geant, eagerly cocking his pistol, exclaimed,
cfSholt I do it ?" The noble and cowardly
Viscount, instead of being drummed oni of
the army, was allowed to *ell his commission..
4 7`he Daily Telegraph declares that, lu show
ing out the leading points of this noble sinner's
case, it does so out of no hatred of the aristo
cracy, but because the facts are before the
public. It pays, We are, to a certain ex
tent, the guardians of public morality, and. the
censors of the impudent vice which occasion
ally insists on thrusting itself into the light of
day. So long as the rogues keep in the back
ground, we will give them quite as wide a
berth as Dogberry advised his subordinates to
do ; but when they come before the public, it
is our bounden duty to scourge them, to clap
them in the pillory, to set them in the stocks,
and to nail them to this sheet as bats were went
to be nailed to a barn-door."
Thue free in ite COMMON on the living, we
find tho writer equally free upon the vices of
the dead. It concludes thus
" With the experienoe of the Georgian era before
N. with the Chrettigu(Sernulalezue of the lives
led by the sons of George 111 scarcely closed,
with the histories not , yet forgotten of one Royal
Duke who allowed his mistress to drive a trade in
army commissions; of another whose adultery
With the wife of a acbleman clootht the betrayed
.husband to self-warder; of another who lived on
the earnings of an aotress, and left her, in the de
cay of her beauty, to etarre, while, with due royal
pride ) he ennobled Ms bastards.;
and of - another,
nay, more, of a prince, of a king,, who wee drunk
on his wedding night, who was as false to his mis
tress ae to his wife, and whose whole life was one
gross and shameless lie—with all these examples
before us of proflizacy in the highest places, and
profligacy which could scarcely fail to contaminate
the earroundiag court, we may well be pardoned
far some anxiety as to the moral status of the aria•
grayly, and , for, the e ofoomo indignation
wb slobleir"dßeace"l emeelves, tors aspselisiti
Alk** *S riniernitsetliitfrou; 'the ranks of this
aristocracy will be taken the ootirtiers end the
companions of the glorious lads'who are now grew
ifli up among no, of the boy•priooca Who mint
eventually quit - the calm and virtuous home in
which they nave been reared, of the children who
are our hope and our pride, the sons of the .good
Queen Victoria."
• This is pretty tranchent. It was the Duke
of York who allowed Mrs. Mary Ann Clark,
his mistress, to barter army-commissions • for
money. It was the Duke of Cumberland, af
terwards King of Hanover, whose criminal
conversation with Lady Graves caused her
tepd to commit suicide, It was the Duke of
Clarence, afterwards William IV., who drew
the salary of Kra. Jordan, the actress, cast her
off to starve, and finally made peers and peer
esses of their illegitimate children. It was the
Ptince of Wales, afterwards George IV., who,
all Lord Maltriesbnry relates in his "Diary," was
diank on hill wedding night, and was equally
fable to Mrs.ritzherbert audio Princess Caro
line of -Brrmswick. All these ac Illustrious"
nd " royal" phanem were Q 40911 YietoriVii
uncles! Times are changed when a bold
journalist with impunity can refer to their de
linquencies to "point a moral." Poor Leigh
Hunt Wrus unfortibiate, not so much in what ha
wrote, as in the time when he wrote it.
• Letter from "Aga Trenehard.”
Gerftwondencie or Tim rreood
WAJOHNGTON, May 29, 1861.
Mr. Thomas Seaton Donoho, a poet, whom
The Press some tune ago introduced to the
readers in a lengthy critique, has put some
very popular words, apropos of the time, to
our much-loved and always inspiring cc Yan
kee Doodle." The Words, which have been
printed on a block-letter sheet for general cir
culation, were dedieated to the gr. Glee Club
of the Pennsylvania Regiment," that is, the
Fourth Regiment. This club, which is com
posed of members of Company 0, from Nor
ristown, is as follows; Freeman S. Davis, S.
W. Cloward, John H. Bond, M. Williamson,
L. B. Neil, and John R. Fleck. In response
to !the compliment, the just -named soldiers
called at Mr. Donoho's (" Ivywall") on last
evening, and gave him a delightful serenade,
after which, of course, hospitalities were dis
pensed by the hero of the occasion, who, be
sides being a poet of .‘ most excellent fancy,"
is a gentleman ot , genial manners. The little
affair was peculiarly agreeable. The singing
of the club was very tine, and the patriotism
of the company sincere and hearty. Of course
Mr. Donoho's ecYankee Doodle" was sang,
and at the verse,
To fight is not a pleasant game,
But If we must, we'll do it ;
When Yankee Doodle' onoe begins,
The Yankee boys go through it,"
there responded the liveliest applause from all
lu testlinonTof the well-expressed sen
timent.
"As you cross the Long Bridge you may no
tice a by-path diverging from the public road,
which leads over the bills to Fork- Seward,
the n&Wiparceted fortification on Arlington
heights. If, Instead of pursuing the main
route, you will turn into this obscure lane, it
will bring you by a nearer way through the
woods to an ancient dwelling, hid among old
trees. Around it you hear the busy work
men on the battlements being erected on the
hill ; just about its immediate recluse a chill
ing, sadly, suggestive silence prevail& You
inquire naturally what manner of habitation it
can be. It strikes yon, how yon know not ;
it has an air something akin to that mysterious
influence which arises in the very atmosphere
in the vicinity of a haunted house. Indeeds
the place is half-way haunted—
" A jolly plasm in days of old,
Bat something ails it now ; the spot isonrst."
You goon rightly, when you anticipate me,
in recognizing the mansion of Arlington, the
by-gone home of the Waithingtons, the present
estate of the commander of the Virginia
forces, It is in a sad old age. Its walls, the
overhanging eves, the windows, the doors,
the grounds, gateways, and fences are all in
the threadbare suit of decrepitude and ne
glect, 4; the way of life has fallen into the
sear, the yellow leaf." Arlington—the Ai._
lington of by-gone days, when dancing lights
glittered within the halls, and tripping foot
steps glided over the floors, when music and
mirth swept out of every chink and crevice,
and the round, rotundity of its well-kept re
tinue bespoke the flush times of chivalry, (and
germane chivalry!)—when fine gentlemen and
gay Mice,
"Like marigold. with the son's eye,"
nobbed and hob-nobbed in its ample saloons,
and its genial old host—knee-breeches and
buckles to the last—did the honors;`knight
hearted and venerable Crud's, last of his line—
then in these halcyon days of Arlington of
yore-rwas it , a place for the visitor in the ca
pital to seek with buoyant expectation. It is
so no longer. The pride and dockage of out
ward show have gone. The sleek attendants,
in suited livery, have gone. Plenty, with its
easy train, has gone. Music and dancing, the
gay laugh and winsome joke, have gone.
" The host himself no longer shall be found,
Careful to See the mantling bliss go round."
Cnstis has gone. And, like him, the master
—all things pleaaant and prosperous have
gone—leaving the dreary, moody pict ure of
decayed grandeur, the too oft spectacle of
the ancient and honorable homes in the Old
Dominion. Sad fate ! A volume is yet to be
written, of mournful but warning interest,
open the rise and fall of what once was the
moat splendid domain, and the bravest and
boldest colonist, in the new world—a chec
querod history truly, but a history full of
counsel to Stats.craft, and the votaries of
State-craft. '
shall give you in my next an account of
'Fort Seward—just being erected by the Sixty
ninth—on Arlington Heights. My letter of
last week, referring to the route to Alexan
dria, has posted you in regard to the lay of
the ground. An allusion to Arlington man
!AM, hard-by to the new works, was of course
necessary to a complete diagrams Perhaps
we may take a more minute stroll through the
old place hereafter.
We are looking daily for a neat. My char
coal etchings upon the humbugging susceptl
bllities of all of us, continue to hold good. I
could fill a whole aide of The Press with such
idle canards as pass current during the day.
What jolly farces might be written on some of
them! Yea, roaring, langh•inspiring tames,
but for one thing—they may all be turned into
tragedy. We don't know. Our smiles may
all turn Into sorrows at any moment. Who
knows? ABA. TRENCIIABIL
Hints to Volunteers.
ILYNP TOUR /MOBS FAST.
A soldier needs, besidea his soldierly drill
let. Good feet.
2d. A good stomnoli.
3d. And after these come the good head and
the good heart.
Bat good feet are distinctly the first thing.
Without them you cannot get to your duty. If a
comrade, or a Dern, or a locomotive take* you on
its bank to the field you are useless there. And
when the field is lost you cannot retire, run away,
and save your bacon: '
Good shoes and plenty of walking make good
feet. A man who pretends to belong to an In
fantry company ought always to keep himself in
training, so that at any moment be can morph
twenty or thirty miles Without feeling a pang, or
raising a blister. Was this the cue with even a
dooimation of the army who rushed to defend
Washington? Were you so trained, my comrades
of the Seventh?
A oaptain of a company who will let his men
march with such shoes as I have seen on the feet
of some poor fellows in this war ought to be gar
roted with shoe strioge ' or at least compellod to
play Pope, and wash the feat of the whole army of
the apostles of liberty.
If yen find a foot soldier lying beat out by the
roadside, desperate as a sea-siok man, Ave to one
his heels are too high, or his soles too narrow or
too thin, or his shoe is not made straight on the in
side, so that the great toe osn spread Into ltS place
as he treads.
I am an old walker over Alp tuiross the water,
and over Cordilleras, /herrn, deserts and prairies
at home ; I have done my near sixty miles a day
withont discomfort; and speaking from large ea
perienoo, and withpainfal recollections of the suf
fering and deaths I have known for want of good
feet on the march, I say to every volunteer :
Trust in God, but keep your shoes easy !—At•
/anus Monthly for Juror.
Letter from " Occasional."
[Correspondonee or The Press.]
WAMINGTON, May 29.
At all periods of our national troubles, and even
in the midst of the Woods that have gathered
around oar beloved ovary, I hove confidently re-
lied upon the belief and Lope that we tenet
emerge from thin struggle triumphant, and far
stronger than whets. .we entered upon ft. If this
was not to —if, in fact, the principles now at issue
between the friends and the enemies of the Repub
lic did not prove stronger than the pernicious here
ales of the aonthern conspirators, the very table of
liberty would soon be obliterated, and mankind be
made everywhere the easy prey of remorseless op
pressers. But it is undoubted that before - lambing
tho end ea mush destred—before ere are enabled to
realize the fact that we have a Government—a
powerful, irresistible Government—many a fearful
danger must be overcome, many a hurtful and
Plausible theory disposed of. Probably new re
straints and new checks must be inserted into the
Constitution to render it more effiment to carry out
the purpolee of its foundere,
Two somewhat unexpected difficulties menace
the true friends of the Government : First, the
possibility of a conflict between the highest Wl
dal officer of the United States and the dell an
thorities, headed by the President himself; and,
second, the growing probability of a demonstration
on the part of the two leading European Powers)
either to recognize the Southern Confederacy, or
looking to the assertion of such a neutrality in the
war between the United States and these traitors
as will be hardly leer vexatious and threatening.
In regard to the position assumed by (Met J 45.
ties Taney, in the case of Merriman, still unde
cided at Baltimore, much could be said if it were
wise to say it. But that which will create the most
painful surprise will be the apparent readiness at
that high functionary to screen men attainted with
treason in the city of Baltimore, from the punish
ment they deserve at the hands of the military au
thorities, by committing their oases to the doubtful
bate of a trial in a community whioh is becoming
more and more disaffected every day. I have lately
been assured that the venerable Chief Justice sym
pathizes with the Southern traitors, but I oannot
believe that he who stuntmen to be, and in feet is,
the expounder at the Federal COnelltatioti, and
who, in the ease of MerriMan, just referred to,
takes the ground that the President of the United
States cannot, in snob times as these, interfere with
the right+, of av eitisen (who is himself more than
suspected of being the enemy of the Republie r )
would in any way, either by silence, by preoept or
example, aid or enoeurage those who are doing all
they can to destroy the Conetitutien.
The position of England and Fromm will of
course, give great joy to Mr. Davis and hie con
federates, and may extend the theatre of war so as
to Involve the whole civilized world- Those are
the new troubles that are bending the heroic men
now offering their lives and their fortunes to the
Adminietration for the purpose of preserving the
Government from ruin, and of rescuing the liberties
of the people from destruction.
But there are other dangers. The exciting scenes
vrtfleh have taken plum in the last ten dye in the
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, in
the city of Philadelphia, in which, after a long de
bate, the true principles of the Constitution were
suet/met furnishes an additional evidence that
the virus of secession and treason has been infused
into every class, affiasting - not merely the judiciary,
the army, the navy, and society itself, but that
Ohttreh founded upon the wise teachings of the
Bible, and supposed to be inspired by the example
of Jesus Christ. These lessons admonish us of the
overruling necessity of a permanent and effeotnal
adjustment of the issues involved in the present
contest for free institutions. There can be no com
promise except such as must be proonred by the
sword or by the surrender to the truth of those who
are arrayed against it. I care not whether the of
fender is a venerable judge, or an influential cc
olesisatio, or a President, or a Senator, or an officer
of the army or the navy—it Ise:efficient for all pur
poses that he who believes in the jatttoo of the
Southern treason should be excluded from the be
nefits of our laws, and in faot from all association
with those who sustain them.
This country belongs to the people the Coned
tntion is intended for the protection of all, and the
laws made in pursuance thereof have received the
sanction of all. Those who believe that it can be
divided, and that men should be authorized to set
Up what Is neither more nor loss than a despotism,
intent upon the annihilation of the vital spark by
which the Government is made a reality, are them
selves as guilty as those for whom they plead.
,B nighind and Pranoe may argue on the aide of the
Southern traitors, the leaders of finance and com
mons, misguided preachers and statesmen, and
soldiers may plead for recognition or separation,
bat ths men arrayed under the eiar-spangied
banner, and now marshalling to maintain the laws,
will never be intimidated or stayed until the work
has been completed. If the European monarchs
are so enamored of the Eleuthera Oonfederaey,
why do they not invite the leaders of that Confe
deracy and their sympathizers, wherever they may
be found in this country, to take np their abode in
their own coagenial slimes? Rest assured, now
that the omnipotent arm of authority has been
stretched forward, now that the sword of justice
has been drawn, now that the millions of free peo
ple of the United Stales are ready to take the
there will be no holding back until either the
canoe of oar fathers or the canoe of the traitors of
the South shall prevail.
I have paid, two ',tette to the Old Domtniott
'Within the last two days, one on the evening of
Monday, and the other yesterday afternoon. Ob•
tattling a pass, we crossed the Long Bridge, and
ibUttliOLlllloll , oll in the midst of a vast camp, ex
tending over many miles, even to Alexandria.
The military wagons, troops on foot and horseback,
the Bongs and shouts of the soldiers, the lighta in
the tents and the oamrfires, formed a lively menet,
while in the beautiful sunshine of the succeeding
day we had the opportunity of inspecting the for-
Mentions that era going up on every side on the
farms of the Virginia gentlemen. After a abort
ride, we entered the noble domain oolong occupied
by George Washington Parke Cast's, and for years
pad by the husband of his granddaughter, Robert
Edward Lee, the present Major General and
Commander of the Virginia traitor forces,
who, after having been educated and maintained
,at the public expense for thirty-two years, re
signed his commission and joined the enemies of
his country. Amore lovely spot U is Impossible
to conceive. Ido not know, near Philadelphia or
New York, a more lordly and aristocratic retreat.
It has the appearance of the seat of an English
nobleman. Stately and venerable trees, velvet
Sward, grottoes, and mounds, a commanding situa
tion, high and healthy, the house itself built of
heavy gray Stone, and constructed so as to pro
mote the Cate and cemfort of a wealthy fa.
miry, fine roads leading to the different parts
of the vast plantation, the Potomao in the
near diadem); and immediately within can
non-shot the city of Washington, with the
President's hones, and the Capitol, boldly re
vealed, I lingered and loitered about the grounds
for more than an hour ; and if my duties
bad not celled me beck, would have gladly staid,
to enjoy the remainder of the day. I did not ask
permission to enter the house which was guarded
by sentinels, because I had no wish to invade the ,
sanctity of a home which, netil the tempter trea
son entered it, had been the residence of patriotio
men and women. For years, this lovely spot has
been the favorite resort of the connections of the
Father of Ms Country, and thousands have come
from a distance to enjoy the natural beantiee of
the place, and the refined and generous hospitali
ties of its owners and occupants. I fancied as I
looked into the residence, through the open win-
dews, how many oostly entertainments had been
spread, how many beautiful ladies had flaunted in
its gay saloons, how many brave and gallant sol
diers had congregated there, how many senti
ments to the Union and the Constitution had been
proposed and drank, and how, as the gay compa
ny looked out upon the glorious landscape and saw
Washington, and the Capitol, and the White
Rouse and the public buildings in the dietaries,
they rejoiced at the prosperity of a nation In
which they indulged a double pride, bemuse
many of them were remotely connected with the
Father of his Country, and were permitted to
live near to the city honored by his Illustrious
name. The family of the traitor Leo have
left, and I perceived that they had taken with
them all the old pictures, leaving the empty
irtarteri suspended against the wails. Some of the
colored servants remained behind, by no means
unhappy, it seemed, at the departure of their
masters and mistresses I fancied, too, the heart
breaking scenes that must have taken place when
these latter were compelled to take up their line
of march tor Richmond, and tow Lee himself
must have struggled with his own heart and con
science, and his seneibilities as a soldier and a
gentleman, (for he was one of the last to leave the
flag ) ) before severing his connection with the Go
vernment. The Eighth New York Regiment—
& splendid corps—had only previously arrived,
and were putting up their tents in the venerable
old woods surrounding the mansion. It was " a
champagne day," and they seemed to enjoy it,
as they unpacked their boxes, drove in their tent
pins, spread out their beds, and began to prepare
for their eampaign. They looked like gentlemen,
Bed, I have no doubt, are ready for all the hard
ships of the melee that are before them. After
Seward,
where
thegdformore Sixty-ninth thanmile, we reached. Camp
Regiment, Colonel
Comm' commanding, have just emtesnolied
TWO CENTS.
themselves. They are not. co pleasantly located
Is the Eighth, hut they were in tine opiate and in
excellent disolpline. General Mani eld has 10-
oated this courageous and admirable regiment on
the high and lofty farm lately owned by the
acceneed father in-law of ex-Marshal J. D.
Hoover, which overlooks the Potomac and
Georgetown. Colonel Corcoran is a laborious
and energetic otTicer, and pays striot attention to
the oomforte Of hie mon, exacting, at the same
time, obedience and alacrity in the performance of
all their duties. I observed- that his soldiers were
careful int to dicturb' Ithy of the property, and
particularly the flowers, shrubbery, and early
vegetables, by which his quarters were surrounded.
This regiment is nearly fourteen hundred strong,
and lean parade over twelve hundred musket at a
moment's warning. Au the day was rapidly ad
vancing, I was compelled to abandon the idea of
prosecuting my journey through this part of the
Old Dominion, and so, discharging our hank, we
proceeded on foot over the aqueduct, and took an
omnibus from Georgetown, and returned home.
Not a few of my acquaintances were surprised at
my temerity in venturing through a region where
secession is still undoubtedly strong, and where a
stray bullet from a copse or a hedge might soon
prevent yorir correspondent from rending you regu
larly those letters which, for years past, he has been
signing with the misnomer of OcceareaeL.
111011 WEWIRRN VIRGINIA.
The Advance of Federal Troops.
[Froii-the Wheeling intelligeneerp 29th inetsnt•)
The passage of troops which loft the depot Mon
day morning was one perfeat ovation. We went
down on the train oonveying the troops from Camp
Carlisle, the Ohio troops coming noon after. The
parting scaner_ware touching , the way Out
through Marshall the ntMest slithuslaam was
awakenid by the appearance of the soldiers. They
had - not. known them to be coming, but they di
vined at ONO their mission, and the moat joyful
excitement wee everywhere exhibited. Owing to
the-alarming reports of the night before, rumors
that Southern troops were approaching, we found
crowds at every napping place, who cheered the
traits am they paned with wild vehemence. At
Glen Easton we found a company of 25 to 38 rifle.
men, and farther on passed another company of
them, numbering perhaps 90, all marching towards
Cameron, which they heard was to be attacked and
burnt by State troops. At Cameron we found a
crowd assembled of some 300, perhaps, who insisted
on Mending out in a pelting rain and cheering the
soldiers nearly all the time they were there. The re
port of the advance of the Southern troops had been
received the night before, and a hundred riflemen
had been under arms, guarding the town all night;
and at this time mon with rifles on their shoulders
were coming in from all directions, word having
been sent oat the night before It really leaked
just like what we read of as having taken plane in
the days of '76, when men left the plough standing
in the furrow, dropped the uplifted hammer, and
rushed to the defence of their country.. At every
station and every house people greeted the soldiers
with cheering and the waving of hats and hand
kerchiefs, and the women and girls when they had
no handkerchiefs waved their bonnets and aprons.
The men returned all the salutations, enjoying the
demonstration immensely.
Oar trains reached Mannington a little after
noon, and the appearance of the troops there, as
everywhere else, took the pimple completely by
surprise. As the trains rolled in, they displayed
the American flag, and with that and the gleaming
of a thousand bayonets, the people almost went
wild with enthusiasm. In a very few minutes
the whole town was there, and the gladest set of
people a men ever laid eyes on. Their joy name
ly new any bounds. Hardly had the soldiers been
there five minutes till they had arrested and under
guard as many Secessionists, viz: A tavern.keep
er, named Wells;
Mr. Knott., Kno a merchant ; Chas.
Matthews, super intendent on that notion of tne
Baltimore and Ohlultallroad ; Dr. Grant, defeated
Secession candidate for the Legislature, and one
Zeke Snodgrass, a constable, who tried very hard
to!give log-bail, but didn't snomied quite suffiolent
ly'to save his boon. These man all seemed to
expect nothing short of execution right on the
'BOA. They were arraigned before Colonel Kelley,
who released Wells, Knolls, and Grant, on their
taking the oath of fidelity, but retained Matthews
and Snodgrass.
Who Aram soon after moved on down to the first
bitrned bridge, where the men disembarked, and
paraded . in a meadow. Col. Kelley then detailed
al companies, and started for Farmington, a no
lo ions Secession nest, some three miles boiow,
from which, it was said, the men who burnt the
bridges had come, and where, it was stated, some
fifty armed Secession troops were stationed. Mean.
'Mile, the remainer of the troops stacked arms,
after throwing out pickets and mention the neigh
.boring hills, with orders to bring in any persons
they might find. In less than ten minutes after
their arrival they brought in six, some of whom,
it was positively asserted by some Union men from
the country around, were accessory to the deettno
tion of the bridges. Squelch of men continued to
go oat in different directions, and to bring in pri
soners, until they must have had at least a dozen
under guard at once. Several of them were re
leased after an examination by the officers, but at
least six or eight were retained until the return of
Col. Kelley. It was rather exciting to 800 the
scouts, or " Snake Huntere," as they style them
selves, on a trail. As certainly as they would spy
a man anywhere in eight a squad of them would
seize their guns and start after him on a run, and
before very long would bring him in ; for they
were sure of their game if theygot eyes on it. The
prisoners wore all treated with the utmost cow ,
tasy, but, nevertheless, some of them looked ter
ribly frightened.
In the evening the companies returned from
Farmington, bringing with them several prisoners,
and reporting that their scouts had killed one fie
eessiontst and wounded another. Whoa they got
to 'Farmington they found it almost entirely de
serted, the Secessionists having got wind of their
approach through the goad offioee of one Joliffe,
who, when the trams entered Mannington,
mounted a horse and galloped off in hot haste to
Farmington, to warn the Secessionists of their
danger. Finding the town deserted, Col. Kelley
ordered his men to scour the woods surrounding it,
and it was not long until they had unearthed
several of the ingitivee, most of whom they eap.
tared. The men who were shot were running
from their pursuers, who called out to them to sur
render. Not heeding this, they were told that
they would be shot unless they did. No attention
was paid to the command and several shots were
fired, killing one instantly and wounding another.
Their names at this time are not known.
I have not learned at this writing what was done
with the prisoners. The impression in camp was
that they would be tried by a court-martial.
/Spinet some of them there is very strong positive
evidence that they sot fire to the bridges, and it is
expected that it will prove a Serious business with
some of them. It seems to be pretty generally be
lieved that a gang of IhielleiOniets, sating under
orders of CoL Thompson and Col. IV. J. Willey,
(half brother of Waltham T,), were the incendi
aries, and that nearly all the beeeselonists around
there were accessory. Thera was a great anxiety
to 'eater Willey, but he was reported to be at Oral
ten, safe enough, as he supposes, but maybe not
quite so sate as he thinks.
The two bridges burned were over Buffalo oreek,
and were common open 'railroad pier bridges, all
iron except the sills and the cross-ties of the track,
both of which were consumed. The upper one is
about four miles below Mannington,
and the other
some qearter of a mile below it It is feared that
others are destroyed between there and liiraften.
The anxiety about the splendid iron bridge over
the Monongahela is especially very great. It was
said in fdannington that the Union men of Fair
mount were guarding it, and it is to be hoped they
will do so. Sunday night several bridges between
Maanington and Glover's Gap were guarded by
the citizens of the former place. At the same time
they had need of guarding their town, for the gang
at' Farmington had threatened to buys it tot the
ground, and there were various rumors afloat about
accessions to their numbers.
_ .
The Ohio regiment reached ManningtOn Mon•
day evening, just at dark, having felt their way
over the road, examining all the bridges to see that
they had not been injured. The whole town as
sembled to receive them. They paraded in the
street, in front of Houghl Hotel, while their bend,
a superior one, played the Star-Spangled Banner
and other airs. At the conclusion the crowd gave
three cheers for Ohio, which compliment was re
turned by the Ohio men, who gave three for the
oittsene of Kennington. The eitisone then prof
fered their houses for quarters for the soldiers.
Some were put in the church, some in the Odd
Follows' Hall, others et the hotel, others in private
houses until they were all provided for, the peo
ple all Manifesting the most cordial feeling for
them.
This morning the Ohio men will go down to the
camp at the burnt bridge. It is expected that all
hoods will go to work rebuilding the bridges, so
that the trains will be enabled to go on in a day or
two. /Imre aro now more than tire thousand men
at Mannington and the camp below. There is no
doubt that they will push through to Grafton as soon
as ipreotioable. Colonel Kelley was heard to say
yesterday that he was desirous of paying his re
speota to that place and to Fetterman at as early . a
day as possible. An experienced telegrapher ac
companies the troops, to repair the lines and keep
up communication with Wheeling.
At Cameron, yesterday, they hauled up some
SeeecitlanistS, and made them swear to support the
Constitution of the United States. To.day that
place was fall of men, armed Squads of them
were going out to bring in some more of the same
stripe intending to make them take the seine oath
also.
The Secessionista drove the people out of their
houses at Grafton, in order to make room for the
troops, early on Sunday morning. There was the
greatest scene of terror imaginable. Women and
children were running in all direotions, with
dishevelled hair end halt naked persons. The
omoers were all drunk, and there was nothing like
order or discipline among , the men. They had
about 1,200 men at Grafton, among whom was a
single company of cavalry. There was not a single
piece of artillery to be seen, and the officers did
not know how to go about fortifying their poslifoo•
xxorraialtv u CANIRON.
A report came to Cameron, in Marshall county,
oa Monday morning, that the Secessionists were
coming down there from Farmington, to burn the
bridges. Messengers were sent in all directions
to alarm the Union men, who continue to pour into
the village; all day, armed with all sorts of wea
pons, midi they numbered six or seven hundred.
The sudden appearance,
_however, of the troops
from Wheeling, /81181011/ 01,1 the Omens, and all
sorts of delnonetretlone of joy were made when the
Wheeling boys were followed by Col. /[vin's Qom
mend. The ladies of the town got out all their sup.
plies, provisions, and confections, and treated the
soldiers, and the MOM were not behind their mat&
imitations of kindness and good will.
In the ovoids% • party went out to the residence
of John Martin. a brother of the United States
marshal, and brought him into town, and made
him take an oath to support the Constitution of the
United States.
THE WEEKLY PRESS.
Wits Wiin'r rives will he eat 1i nbeeriberi
mail (per ealllllll in ailvanee,) at----- 5 2 . 00
'lnure Copses, gi 11 1.00
Five --- LIAO
Ton " 17.00
Twenty " " " (to one addreu) 00.00
Twenty COPiel, or over (tv oestrous cr
nob 01110(lbero) each. 11.00. •••••••• ••••••• LA ,
For a Club of Twenty-one or over, we will mewl al
eutgaeopy to the getter-up of the Club.
liP" Pedometers are reevectesi to ect ae Accuse lc r
Tie WIIRIIIT Pew.
CALIFORNIA PRESS,
Limed three times a Moutk,m time for the Calitoteie
ateramenk
army Clothing.
(For The Frees,)
Much dissatisfaction hae been occasioned by
the poor quality of clothing delivered to our
troops. Knowing partly the cause, and not
having seen any explanation, I give it to you.
The cupidity of manufacturers is,susli, that
to counteract the high price of wool, and to
please purchasers with heavy cloth at a low
price, extensive rag-pickers have been in
troduced that will tear up old woollen clothes,
and convert them into a very short staple wool
called shoddy, looking like fine wool, with
short staple anti ne
strength. This is eaten
;lively mixed with wool and woven into cloth
with cotton chain, which makes it strong
lengthways. The cloth is well fulled ; and its
strength depends on the quantity of shoddy
used, and so much is used that the wear of the
fabric is almost useless. Added to this is an
article called flocks which, in the manufacture
of fine cloth, is sheared off. This is still
shorter than shoddy; mid after the cloth f
made as described above of wool and shoddy,
this flocks is thrown into the cloth when
fulling, so that when finished it has the ap
peal:sum of thick heavy cloth of the most de
ceptive character. It has little strength; a
small strain will part it.
.Theit . articles -- woollen rags unpicked,
shoddy, and flocks -- are extensively fin
ported froth , Europe, where they have once
performed their duty as a covering for man,
and are now made up here to cover our troops
and laborers, and as far as wear is concerned
are generally thoroughly worthless.
The investigation made at Harrisburg into
the supply to our State troops reported all
right. But though these cloths are often
made extremely deceptive, I cannot conceive
the probability that those who supplied the
cloth for our soldiers' clothes were not as fatly
aware of its quality as I am-
To show how extensively this fraud is prac
tised, I refer your readers to the jackets made fit
for Oaptain Coppee's cadets of the University
Of Pennsylvania. There you will see a regu
lar shoddy cloth, cotton chain and all.
May 26, 1861. F.
AFFAIRS IN THE SOUTH.
lINIZURAIS AT TIEW OBLZAN3
From the New thlemte Flettytme of may halo
AU vessels belonging to the Coifed Mates, which
arrived in this port after the 6th instant, ware
formally seised yesterday . , by. the Confederate
State Marshal, in conform ity with the ant of Con.
gross in relation to privateering, which gave thirty
days for all vessels in Southern ports to leave, but
made no provision for vessels arriving after its
passage
MOIL J. 2. 11.321.1021'
Hon. J. E Bottligny, member of the last Con
gress from New Orleans, has sumiumbed to the
pressure of circumstanoes, and aided with the
rehab. He remained a good Union man until
Tory roosnuy.
SOUTHERN Gintrownza,.
The Chattanooga Advertzser : Messrs. G.
W. Rue, John W. Anderson, and John D. Bonn
have, leased the celebrated Santa Cave, fa Jack
son county, Alabama, and are making extensive
preparaliona for tho production of nitre on a large
(male. It ia also the retention of these gentlemen
to extend their operations to intliPti 4 P ft, MN
future of powder. The powder•mill near Nadi
yille is in vigorona operation.
THN COTTON NXPORTATION
The New Orleans papers discuss the route of the
new cotton crop, in vase it takes any route at ail,
and decide peremptorily that it shall never COMO
through the Northern btates. They say that an
embargo, with death and confiscation as the penal
ties for disregarding it, will prevent any traitors
from sending out a bale of cotton by the overland
route, " to aid and comfort the abolitionieta."
The New Orleans Crescent gives another reason
for keeping the cotton at home on the plantation—
the danger of fire, in case it is coffered to accumu
late in the commercial cities. If large fires should
scour, says the Crescent, the 4, insurance compa
nies of the earth would not be able to make good
the policies on so vast a property."
" WEAK POLICY,"
The Charleston Mercury thus pathetically la
manta tha loss of General Harney by the " weak
policy" of Governor Letahor
A Wale POLICY —We have lost Baltimore, ilia
now we have lost Bt. Louis by the act of General
Harney. Bore is the fruit of our weak polio,' in
releasing him, when we fairly had him our pri
soner.
The Union men of Emit Tennessee have called a
Convention, which was to have met at Knoxville
on the 30th. Parson Brownlow describes the Con
dition of things there as little less horrible then in
the tiOPFy of the Proneh Revolution. The traitors
are ruling the unarmed patriots, with a rod of Iron.
CONVENTION Or SOUTHERN TUNIC 6
The Legislature of Tennessee have adopted a
joint resolution for a Convention or Congress of all
the banks in the Confederate States, to be held at
Atlanta, Georgia, on the 31 of Jape next, ".to
confer and adopt mob line of policy as will best
promote the general welfare, and insure a oar•
renoy of uniform value throughout the South."
"NICKS, SCOTT, AND SAMMY."
The New Orleans Delta says that "the three
greatest villains and traitors which the present
war has prodnood are, beyond , all doubt, Mahe,
Stott, and Harney." Beattregard, Twigge, end
Hardee, we infer, are angel! by this time.
MARTIABB.
The New Orleans Bee gives up Maryland, and
thinks that the 0P19493ate states sitenld rejOlce
at the prospect of her remaining in the Union, be
cause she allows the Federal troops to rtmain
within her border.
AN ARKANSAS . FORT
The Aritto2ses ooton2lBBonerB have seleoiell
spot at Bentfield's Point, Mississippi county, Ar
kansas, fifteen miles south of the Missouri line, as
a proper spot for a fort.
CONFEDERATE COM
Dies for the new coin of the Confederate Staten
have been reoeived at Dahionega, at the branch
mint, and the superintendent has received orders
from headquarters not to strike off any more United
States own, but to reserve the bullion.
Tzzuras BSA
The Nashville Patriot says that " Tennessee
does not propose to accede from the Union. She
stands ripen her right to be free, and intends to
declare herself Independent, as our rovolutionary
ancestors did."
Proposals are invited for building a battery of
earthwork near Memphis, at the mouth of Wolf
river.
The people of Memphis are in a state of anxiety
at a report that some 15,000 or 20,000 troops are
soon to march upon that city from Illinois.
GENERAL. NEWS.
GOSSIP ABOUT Gov. SPRAGUE . , or RHODE
Ifitctrui.—The newspapers havel with their usual
sagacity, and nice souse of propriety, been discus
sing the pros and tong of Gov. Sprague's probable
marriage with Miss Cameron, and one of your eon
temporaries gravely and officially announced that
the affair would speedily be consummated. In
order that no further diaeussien may be deemed
desirable, I will state that the youthful Governor
is affianced to Miss Kate Chase. the eldest dough
ter of the present Secretary of the Treasury. The
Governor is not yet thirty years of age and is re
puted to be worth not far from .1110,000,1100.—Cor
respondence N. Ir. Tones.
OUR news from Northern Mexico, dated the
Mt inst., reports that the lately united liberal
party were divided into throe or four factions,
each clamorous foe its favorite. One of these
parties declares for Comonfort, who has, appa.
rently, been sent for by his friends. In the mean
time, the church party seem to have no notion of
giving up. but grow bolder every day. The de
teat of (ion. Doblado, by the notorious MOB and
Marques, has been confirmed —N. r. Herald.
LiEnT. SLIMMER has arrived at Washington,
from Port Pickens. He reports the officers and
men in the highest spirits, and able to hold the
fertross against any force that will be bronaht
against it. The garrison numbers about 1,000,
and the rebel formes, under General Bragg, be esti
mates at about 6,000. The courage and fidelity of
Lieutenant Mammas make him an objeot of gene
ral attention.
THE VALUE OF THE PORTRAIT OF Vamp-
TON, in the Senate Chamber, is not generally
known. It le an original portrait by Stuart, and
is one of the three which he painted of the Fattier
'of hie Country. One of the others is at Boston,
and one at Newport. The picture in Washington
has a European reputation, and would readily
sell for $lO,OOO in London to-day.
WHEN the Vermont Regiment entered and
took possession of Hampton, Va., the other day,
many of the citizens cautiously came out and fur
tively waved their handkerohiefs in token of wel
oome, though they were hardly sure enough of the
position 01 affairs to express their sentiments
boldly.
GOVERNMENT has ordered 10,000 of the
muskets stored in the arsenal at Augusta, Me., to
be forwarded to Philadelphia. It is probable that
the arsenal will 80017 be mod for the manufacture
of shot, shells, ho., now that Harper's Ferry and
3osport are in the hands of the rebels. This could
be Bona at comparatively Email expense.
TEE Cape May (N. 3.) Wave represents the
prospeots of the fruit crop as remarkably grid.
peach trees look finer than for manyyaare apples,
pears, and cherries unoommonly prosperous, and
strawberries abundant.
CAPT. BLANDOWSSI, who was slot by the
Seeessionists at the surrender of Camp Jaoltses,
near St, jourie, has beau obliged to enbmit to am•
potation of the wounded leg.
A NEST LEVY of 100,000 men has been made
by the Government, the details of which will be
shortly announced.
Panama Attle.e.LwAxe P A ratorto.—lt hi es^
Ciliated that not lase than five thousand printers
have volunteered to defend the Stare and Stripes.
Tan Toronto Globe scouts the story that the
British Government intend to sand out a fleet of
gun-boats far the Canadian lakes,
MAJOR Sraeounp One of the army officers
eaptured by Cot. Van Darn in Teams, has return
ed to hie home in Albany.
Ton Boston &thence= contains the largest
Military library in the Gnitel States.
Tow 'ffheeling (Va.) Union, a strong Semi
eon paper, has died for the want of patronage.
TIMM are now 10,208 soldiers in Camp
Dintniaan. Ohio.