8 THE DATLY EVENING TBLEQRAPII riULAfifiLf'HIA, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 18G0. riEV gQRIIISLlg. Vein Our 0cn Corrtsmnamt. . Nkw York. Jnly IB. I Borne months ago, a philanthropic German who ' de cidedly objected to the bad hat.lt some Pla bad got Into of pronouncing people dead when iniir animation In only suspended, hl,,,tf lT'bl0(1 catalepsy comn, In which he was M-Wla ,.-m.rHfthiramc up alive m m 11 unTTt PTlt, trial soon ceanett to Mtrart." " vain The announced himself in Hobokcn, nrorThThMamted one. or com. up a little w?e or ha'l to be dragged out, he might have Rained ,1 .imin-ra. But he invariably came np to time, tm .PPearanco at the top of the wooden SXtiat conducted from the surface of the cnunniy u wlth a pun(.tUality S?SUSl!SlSrS. Tense of duration He and nis catXsy coffin have long Blncc vanlshcl from e reTim of New York amusement. Another wwSo competitor U now in the field, however. This gentleman is Mr. In.. Pfeliter, of Copenhagen, Md hSnwnMonUicallorta "Vitalmcter." A "pri vate" exhibition is to be given to-morrow night at Tinnm No. 24. Cooper I'nlon, and an ante-private ex hibition has already been Riven, at which Mr. prettier was burled with great success. Though engaged in such a mortuary business, Mr. rrelirer is a live news paper man. Ah he himself says, he has been re ncatedly bmicd alive, and with the happiest rssults, and he anticipates that ere long no corpse will be without its corresponding vitalmcter. Mayor A. Oakey Hall is a funny man a very funny man So tickled was he with the idea of the yacht Jtountleits crossing the ocean in less t..an thirteen ilars that he ordered a salute of one hundred guns to be llrcd in the park. There they were bla.ing away all the afternoon, stunning the ears or busi ness men, and setting every one wondering what was the matter. An international affair, truly, and well worthy the waste of all that powder. The Sun newspaper, too, which lately threatened young Mr. Bennett because it believed him to be the lustlgator Of stabs given the Sun in the columns of the Evening 'Jtlegram, has come out glaringly descriptive of his triumphs, and halls the achievements the Daunt less as worth v to be compared with tho submarine cable or the Union Paclllc Railroad. The Telegram., by-thc-bv, is very much scandalized by the attaches of the Ileratd. These interesting young gentlemen vow that tlicy are engaged to work for the latter paper only, and that they are compelled to work for both or ti lose their situa tions. The Telegram, is the Herald pet child, and whatever is prepared for the latter paper by its re porters and is crowded from Its columns, makes Its way sooner or later luto the columns of the former. Special correspondence, and reports of a special na ture, for which separate contracts were made, are often written for the Uerald and crowded out In stead of finding their way.int') the waste-basket, they find their way Into tho Erening Telegram, and the indignant reporter is annoyed to discover that he Is working for two papers and receiving a salary rrora only one. In short, the Trfejram is a sort or waste pipe leading off from the Herald establishment. Whatever runs off from the big paper trickles into the little one, and sometimes the water in the waste pipe is very dirty Indeed. The House of Detention for witnesses is one of the hnmbuggiest isms or the city. It is, as its name implies, a place or abode for witnesses, whose pres ence at the required time it is necessary to make certain. Those thus detained are treated little better than prisoners. Sometimes they are kept for weeks, eoinetimcs to months, compelled to associate with the garbage of the city people who, If they are not criminals themselves, have dwelt among criminals, and whose language and manners belong to the etiquette of the hulks. To decent men and women and it occasionally happens that decent people are compelled to this companionship such an ordeal is but little better than the experience of the chain pangs abroad, in which, as at the frightful bain at Brest, a criminal of culture and relluement, con demned to the travaux force for life, is coupled with some rufllan Hercules who tortures him with the despotism of an obscene tyrant. Only, in the case of the luckless man or women retained as a witness in our House of Detention, there Is no criminality to justify such as sociation. A gentleman has just been .Iberated from that semi-prison who declares that jivhile there he was treated like a felon for doing his duty, that the weals are positively not lit to eat, and that there is not even enough of what is provided. Then, on the other hand, the keeper of the House of Detention might aver, with a good deal of truth, that most or the characters boarded and lodged there are very rough" Indeed. Tho women, in too many cases, are "no better than they should be," and the men are Infinitely worse. The sexes, it is true, are sepa rated rrora each other; but the promiscuous manner In which the young and old or the same sex are forced to herd together, without other means or pass ing the time than gossip and the work which Satan finds for Idle hands, produces some or the very worst results. Hence the House or Detention, as at pre sent managed, is not a success. "Wash me In the r teep-down gulfs of liquid flame !' exclaimed ''Othello" after be had rumpled "Desde rnona"with the pillow; and the most expeditious way of doing this would have been to put him in a tenement-house and immediately set Ore to it. Oh, those tenement-houses! However low down I may pet in the world, grant that I may be kept out or a New Yerk tenement-house. I don't ask to die In a brown-stone front, surrounded by the regality or Fifth avenue or Murray Hill, but I do ask that my last breath may not be drawn In the "Barracks," or the "Colony," or "Babble Kow," or "Cockroach Hall" all tenement-houses of the first water. These localities are bad enough, but there is a worse lo cality still, and that Is on the east side of Sixth avenue, between Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth streets. What is It? you will ask. It is an Immense tenement house, I aiiBwer, six stories high, and furnishing "homes" for nearly two hundred people. In fact, it Is a human honeycombed hell, where "poverty, hun ger and dirt," starvation, nukedncss, and misery, are the devilish little bees stinging one another with perpetual torment The cellars are crypts of rubbish, where rats hold court and every variety of tilth is generated. The ground floor is a liquor saloon, where instalments of spontaneous combustion are laid in with every tumbler of ben zlne that is swallowed. Tho dark and narrow stair ways are rather spirals leading up what looks like a murky wooden wall. The stairs are so rotten that they wear away piecemetil as tho foot ascends. In every two rooms a family is crowded, and ror most or these two rooms fourteen dollars a month are paid. The upper rooms are not provided with water and the sinks In the lower rooms diffuse the smell or death when death conies loathsomely. Reaching the top floor, the exit to ttio roof is by a rickety ladder whose slender rungs would scarcely bear a hundred pounds' weight. A tenement-house like this Is nothing but tinder-wood, and its inhabitants are unrecoguiacd martyrs at the stake, n burns and shrinks up some fine night, anil two hundred human souls are numbered with the dead and dying while culpable building inspectors, like modern Ncros, least and fool their time away before the flames. There are those who are fond of announcing, as a fact known only to themselves and a few others, that Mr. Raymond's death has materially diminished tho circulation of the dally Times. Mr. Raymond's loss Is felt, or course relt upon the newspaper no less than in the society or which he was so brilliant and influential a mercber. But, in a world like this. no man is indispensable, be his position what it may; ar.a u.e time having arrived ror Mr. Raymond to be wuhdrawu from these scenes, his decease will of course, in time, channel a way for the right man. It is understood that George William Curtis was offered the position, and that he refused it. Although he nas nan an abundance of newspaper experience. Mr. Curtis is a too puroly literary man to be fitted lor tne editorship or a newspaper like the Timet. Jjis intellect w cast in too refined a mould, and ills long eonncctlon with monthly and weekly i publications ha, of course, engendered habit of thought and action that are not precisely those of the live Journalist. He la, besides, of too poetic and sympathetic a nature to uteer, with satisfaction to himself, through the thousand and one roughnesses which beset the responsible editor of a big dally. It requires a coarser and more robust intellect, and more "cheek." It Is very rarely that you meet with the artistic and the practical man-of-buslness tem perament united in the same nature. Mr. Curtis possesses the first or those, but not the last, and knowing probably both his weakness and his strength, has done well in remaining in the position which he has graced so long. ali Baba. HA1LR0ADS IX THE FAR WEST. The rollowlng letter was received by Jay Cooke A Co. from W. Mllnor Roberts, a prominent civil engt- necr.and one or the oomm'ssion sent out by Jay Cooke A Co. to examine a route for the Northern raciflo Railroad Company eastward from Pugct Sound. In passing over the Union Pacific Railroad, he makes the following flattering report: Salt Lakh City, June 1SC9. Messrs. Jay Cooke A co Uentlcmen: We arrived hero yesterday morning by stage, twenty-right miles from the rail road station "Deseret,'' changed the day we left Omaha to "Wiutah, ' after a prominent range oi snow mountains, in sight of which we were nearly all day of the 10th. Thu view of these snow-clad summits, standing at an elevation of eleven or twelve thousand feet above the sea, is both beautiful ml grand. The railroad from Omaha to Cheyenne, 51(1 miles, Is equal, in all respect, to Hie best of our llrst-elins Hustcrn roads, ami superior to most of them on ac count of its easy grades. On this whole distance the road is remarkably smooin, bo mailt is easier to write as the cars are going than on any railroad I know of. Nearly the whole of it is ballasted with fine gravelly material. It is all prairie land, and all the way iu the valley of the Platte river or its branches. At "North Platte," 21 tulles from Omaha, the line takes the valley or the South Platte, and runs on the north fide or it to '.Julesburg,'' H7 1 miles from Omaha. Thence it follows the "loilae- pole"' rorkor the South Platte to "Pine Bluffs," 4i'3 miles rrom oinoiia. it men passes across an easy divide'' over to tho waters of "Crow creek." another tributary of the South Platte, and descends to Clie- yenr.e, oio miles irom iniiina. unialia, tie Martina point, is 760 feet above the sea: Cheyenne is 6021 feet above the sea; so that the total rlso is 4'JCI feet in 610 miles, or an average or 9 0-10 feet fier mile; the maximum rise ror short distances icing 36 reet per inile, excepting that In getting out from Omaha there is at present a grade of 02 feet per mile, which, however, on the completion of the bridge across the Missouri at Omaha, now In progress, will be reduced to about 4i) feet per mile, ana which, occurring at an important city. Is not or much moment. Practically, the rail road from Omaha to Clu-venne Is a straight line for 616 miles, with ruling prudes below 30 feet per mile, ano averaging aoout 10 n et per mne. This entire distance Is a grass country, but most of the way it may be cultivated, and produce spring wheat, corn, viiiivvo) vu i .. u iioin,uv am u n a ill nvii. ranged over by antelopes, occasional Indians and emigrants, and latterly by the railroad, and now dotted with railroad villages about every fifteen potatoes, oats, etc ai prssent it is virgin sou miles, these villages as yet depending wholly on the railroad employes and the travel by rail, no local trade existing along the route till we reach Cheyenne, where the stage road runs to ''Denver,'' nu nines on. As far as Cheyenne wo were honored with the company or ex-Sccretury Seward and his family. At Cheyenne he was welcomed by a crowd and a band or music; and here he bade our party farewell, in tending to proceed to Denver, and afterwards to the Pacific. Chevcnne bears somewhat the same relation to the passage of the Black Hills range of tho Rocky Moun tains that Altoona bears to the Allegheny range on the Pennsylvania Central Road: ouly, however, in this, that at Cheyenne the grade increases, and con tinues gradually Increasing to the pass of the moun tain at the summit at Sherman; the highest point attained by the railroad anywhere between the At lantic and the Paciilo Ocean Sherman being 6235 feet above the sea. But here the resemblance ceases. The ascent of the Black Hills, from Cheyenne to Sherman, a dis tance of 83 miles, is entirely different from that on the Allegheny Rlope. In the 33 mtleB the rise is 2314 feet, or an average of 70 feet per mile, and tne iuS3 imuiu at any point 86 feet per mile. But in attaining this easy ascent there is no heavy crest, no deep HHP, the deepest cuts only about 20 reet-, and no tun nels, and on the very top, at Sherman, it so happens that there is a slight depression, requiring an em bankment about four feet high, I watched this portion of the sne critically all the way, although it was by moonlight, in company with Dr. Claxton, looking from tUc hind platform of the hinder car, and I was particularly struck with the fact that there is little more work on these 33 miles than on the route approaching Cheyenne from the Fast, and no appearance of a mountain ascent. Such is this remarkable pass. In fact, it was not necopsary that even this summit should be passed by the railroad, for the Laramie Fork, as well as the main North Fork of the Platte, cuts through the Black Hills, and could have been followed with regularly ascending grades, though on more circuitous and more costly routes. Where the line now crosses the Laramie west of the Black Hills, it is 7123 feet above the sea, or 1112 reet lower than the Sherman summit; and at the crossing or the North Platte, west or the Black Hills, it is only 6477 reet above the sea, or lti'i.S reet below Sherman. These features are not generally understood bv our people in the East. On the entire distance, 6il miles from Omaha to Sherman, on tho highest summit passed between the two oceans, the work is abso lutely trifling, the curves of the easiest kind, and the grades are as above stated. From the Sherman summit, descending the slopes or the Black Hills, the work is heavier and the grades somewhat undulating, the maximum descending grade being 86 reet per mile ror about ten miles Into the valley or the Laramie. The general range or the height of grade above the sea, from the Laramie, crossing 23V miles west or Sherman to Green river, is from 7000 to cooo reet iu a distance or 274 miles. between Laramie and (ireen river, with no very heavy work at any point, At Green river the grade is 6112 reet above the sea, and at the Asnen summit. 92Jtf miles rurther west, it is 7463 reet. Aspen is the second highest summit on the Union Pacific Road, and it is 7.2 reet lower than Sherman, at a Doint 939 miles rrom Omaha. At Deseret, or Wintah now, we left the cars to go over to Salt Lake City, 23 miles south or the railroad, by siage over a tolerably good road, which we passed in a little less than six hours, between 1 and 7 o'clock, on the morning or Thurs day, June li. I will not take time to write a description or this curious city, or of the li'tle incidents attending our Journey and stay here mice yesterday morning. I prefer to generalize a little In connection with the Union Pacific Railroad, us far as we have passed over it. It is a good, well-In cated and well-constrneted railroad in most of thu distance from Omaha to M'intah, 1024 miles. From Piedmont west for about o miles the track was hastily laid during the winter, ami at anumoer oi pout's irestie-worK still supplies the place of the more permanent bridge structures which are in process of erection; but it will require only a short time and no large expenditure of money to make it as good as the best in the country. We mane very goon nine over even tne worst parts of it, with no extraordinary motion of the cars. I could take notes comfortably on the very roughest por tions. I can have no doubt, therefore (having been over all excepting t'o miles of the Union Pacific), that me noie 104 nines win, in a very snort time, be equal throughout to the best roads In tho East. Kcsriectinir the bimineKR In 1a lnna nn thnon nnu thousand anil eighty-four miles, It is obvious that it iiiiiHi oe almost wholly throwih travel and transpor tation. There can be no local trade oj travel except ing what may come iu from Denver, at cheyente, and from Salt Lake City, at Wiutah, or that vi'cinitv. ...miLii ituirunuB win ne at once constructed to both Denver and Bait Lake City. At all other points the only business must be su :h as arises from the work ing of the road, nothing more. After some years tho country between Omaha an'1 Cheyenne will be s-tth .l and cultivated, and thu ?,,!; ."A",0"1 ,,U81tli"'s: l beyond Chcyenno the na ..un ith!isri'0l."",1"4 H'"'u UM verv 1U1I(! settlement th u f I)late'11 :tll; Poseur, nKe a Urge portion ol i'ni..Ir."ce.bL'lr!K K"-13 ,lp8l'rt a,1(1 ttl1"" I'" w Z ",8.l lli through trade and travel I am not yet prepared to speuk. have un ' !"-v ,'l'n'n Is, from the best data 1 he II Z -u ini ' C-,"',:Uat the snow diillcuUy u. tl "e nenftne'J' 7 Bn,,,"-V exaggerated li able ohoJm o Vl ! ,,, r WllH- However, a favor- il E?. '?'' ,U '' ami the railroad m ere. hit .i'1 H'1' s','v,'i-1 Wl'ek,t: bl 'l to be eon wiiit. l?t!lV!':uW iMdng al.l in tho dead n.RrnH,,h,,,t,l'''l',MVM8 not tlnl0 Perfect al, reninvf, l?8 for K""'"i'g against the suow or for lelL ti '"f't'rom Hie ems. There will be more or l Jeoi 111 "ow every winter, doubtless; but h . r"tol enn-.e to the conclusion that, tii lim. """w-ploiiFlm and good management i .on I. v T ,.rom ow between Omaha and Pro "'."Pir7 Pliit will j,e mile) if anv greater than on noiiltj Ul 'ie New KllBlnnil rjllrnuilu All nnr nirli Itri fI Prfe,,tiy harmonious. Very truly yourn, w. All ILNOR ROBEHT8, CITY lUTELIilUEJICE Sptcihb by Dbowkino. ijmt evening one of the iiariHir pollcetfonnd an unknown woman drownPd in the HehiiylklU at Olrard avenne bridge. Mho is 6 feet 6 Inches in height, black hair; had nn a plaid reTP,ril'n dreae; brown hat, trimmed wHh Hetnh pisifi ; red and white bow around the neck ; hymn rvT ln the pocket of herdrew.,wit.h the Inscription: Bertha orowel! to Mary rrowell." On her left hand Jf8? " Plain gold ring with tho Initials, "A. K. 1). to .. M bracelet was also on her left wrist, ine policeman's attention was attracted to tho spot oy the deceased woman's shoea, hoop-skirt, and stock ngB on the bank of tho river. The body wai fully identified this morning as that of Miss Mary V?0,, '' "pfi' ''ghteen yearn, who l-ft her home on vvallace street, above Ninth, about two weeks ago, since which time she had been residing on Eighth street, below Walnut. Military Kncampmkkt at Atlantic City. The Board of Oftlcera of the Philadelphia Klre Zouaves held a meeting at their headquarters, at Eighth and vine streets, last evening. The committee reported favorably upon tho regiment leaving the city for one week's encampment at Atlantic City. The date of departure Is July 81st, ami the proposition is to re main In camp for one week. There will be a grand military hop on August id, at the United States Hotel, given ln honor of the Zouaves. Attackkd on Faikmount Basin Horace Rnrk- hardt, sixteen years of age, living at No. 2129 llraudy wlnc street, last evening was attacked on the Fair mount basin by a fellow who Indicted live stabs about his body. The In lured boy succeeded in escaping from his assaulter by rolling down the hill. He then proceeded to a neighboring drug store, where he had his wounds dressed. Fortunately, none of them were dangerous. He imagines that he was mistaken for another party Tub Mercantile Library.- This afternoon at 3 o'clock the new building of the Mercantile Library, on Tenth street, north of chesnut, will open for private Inspection by those to whom Invitations have been sent for that purpose. Some fifteen hundred of these were distributed, each admitting ladles in company with the holders, and consequently a bril liant assemblage may be anticipated. His Honor Mayor Fox will be present, and preside over what ever proceedings take place; Card. We have been requested to pnbllsh the fol lowing acknowledgment: Tho unriersiKncd thankfully Acknowledges the receipt, "lor thp w and amuMMiient of tho boys at the Orph ina' IlomoFtend at ietlvburp." of the hade bull cans, but. am. en. is, prunnnu-a b; d liv member of the Athletic b.mo llr.ll Club of rhihulehiiii, O. I KANIMN HOUUN.S, General Secretur , etc. I'hilnila., July 15, Stoi.k a Cari-kt-bao. Last evening, John Smith went into a drinklng-saloon, at Sixth and Lombard streets, with a carpet-bag, containing some wearing apparel. Isaac Tysen (colored) took advantage of the temporary absence of Smith and ran off with the carpet-bag. iBaao was captured and subsequently iichi uy Aiuerumn t arpenier iar trial. BOARPiNO-iiovsB KoiiBEO Tho boardlntr-hoiise or Mr. Henry Kerner, No. 2008 Coates street, wa9 robbed yesterday morning by a boarder of a silver waicn, wiin tne initials "U. P. ' on the case, a coat, a pair of pants, and a vest which had been taken from the trunk of a rellow boarder. Tho supposed unci icit me nouse very mysreriousiy. Fell kkom a Window Edward Morrow, rorty years or age. living at Thirty second and Ludlow streets, roll out or a third-story winilow this morn- uig, aim was injured so oaoiy tnat nia lire is des paired or. He is lying at the hospital, where he was taken. It Is supposed that he was asleep at the Found Adrift. A large skiff, nalnted white out side, lead color Inside, wilh a red water-line, with a portion of the stern disabled, was picked up last night by the Harbor police in the Delaware. An owner is wanted at the police station at Front and Noble streets. Into Camp. To-morrow the Grey Reserves Regi ment of this city go to Cape May, to encamp there for eight days. Colonel James N. lAtta will com. mami tnem. on Moinj ay evening next a grand hop will le given in their honor. They go iu their full Birciigui. A Safe Found Broken Open A small iron safe was found In Latimer street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets, this morning. It had been broken open, and is supposed to have been rifled or its contents. It is at the Fifth District Station await ing nn owner. A Shoe Thief William Gritlln (colored) was itiirnii-n laui. iuml lor utc larceny oi iwo pairs oi slices rrom the Baltimore steamer' lying at Chesnut Burci mum. no wim i-aKcn oeiore ueoorucr uivin, t, ;;o nciu nun in iouu oau ior trial. Political. Sara Cary positively rerused to accent tho Lieu tenant-Governorship, which was teudored him as a compromise. He wanted the Governorship or no thing, lie got nothing. tsart smitn. or Hamilton cotintv. indignantly withdrew his name as a candidate for Attorney General rrom the Democratic State Convention of Ohio, as soon as General Rosecrans was nominated for Governor. Smith threatens to bolt the nomina tion. The New York Democrat praises the house car penters for inserting the word "white" In their con slltution, thus excluding negroes from their tra le organization. The Demoerafu party should amend the first chapter of Genesis thus: "So God created ivmre man in nis own image." Tne committee annotated bv tne late nc y xorit State Temperance.Convention met in the Crescent House, Saratoga, Monday last, and announced their Intention of demanding from the next Legislature a law which will enable the majority of the legal voters of any town, city, village, or ward to prohibit the sale or intoxicating liquors thcrain. 'i lie irienus oi senator Cameron ami nis son-in- law, Mr. Wayne McVeigh, assert that tiielr recent visit to asinngton was not for tne purpose oi per suading President Grant to otfer the Attorney-Generalship to Mr. McVeigh; and that during tho brier In terview with President Grant, the only matter dis cussed was the probability of the President's visit to Long jiraiicn, and the best route to go irom more to the West (of course tho Pennsylvania Railroad was recommended), and the future of the Pennsylvania fall elections. No allusion, they assert, was mlo to Mr. B. H. Brewster, or to any or tho President's Cabinet. X. V. Hun. The Norfolk Va. Journal says or tno uv.e elec tion: "The enemy is routed; but the articles peace are not signed. Prudence! caution! silence! If we would gather the fruits or this victory, we must evince tne wisdom of serpents and the hannlessness of doves. Shout your pieans until your throats grow sore but nothing more ! At 'the convenient season' we can rectify mistakes, correct abuses, and appor tion to every man his due. We are not yet in the Union. While our leaders are settling the terms of peace and receiving the enemy's surrender, it be comes the rank and lile ti stand by their guns, and in silence await tuo word of command. An im prudent word now may cost years of trouble. in:i. (For atlilltUwil liemlli neeflfih pan.) HUNTKR. On the 14tb instant, of inllammation of th brain, ANNA 11. IIKNSON, infant daughwr of James K. and Antoinette Hunter. w ,q.a Interment from the residence of her PrnUj i?1 Oilord street, on Salnrday afternoon at 6 o oloca. 8i W E B D I NGlTN V IT AT IONsTENG RAVED IN ?Y the newest aud best manner. LOUIS DRKKA U&WsML JMMESSE SUCCESS. 4000 SOLD THIS SEAS0X. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. The moat valuable invention of the ace, THE DAVIS REFRIGERATOR, (patei ted June 16, and September 15, 1WS). will ',:, hoa nuliil iff. its temperature can be reuulnted to cither above or below the Irce.inR point. "Th i" -'.V"r w,1j produce a colder dopree of temperature and i , ice than any refrinerator ever made. In any one or all of the combined ehalltnw thruorhi to produce its equal. It diners from all others in construction, cirou la , ion of air, ami manner of applying the ice. I he cur rent of pure, cold, dry air m'nt". "I1??,? tlieintn.)uc-tionof external air , and therefore requires no artificial appliancef such as are uel fn refrigerators devoid of the necessary cold atmoaphore. No one thing par. takes of the odor of the oilier, bruit, poultry, and game have been compleiely preserved in it, without freezing, for Uy ;'. and upwarils. Its temperature is colder by hlteen to twenty degrees than any other (an enormous line rnnce). the uir in ulmlh, t, u,h moisture bei ng frozen. It is in daily workiug order, and the public are invited u, it ' (the freomng in cluded) all that is promised for it. J. S. WORHAX & CO., . . Proprietors. 60LB DEPOT AT WILLIAMS & WOODWARD'S, No. O-fi CJLESNUT HTREET. 71thstul6tfp PHILADELPHIA. THIRD EDITION N12W Y O Xfc It. Capture of a Gang of Counterfeiters Another Cuban Filibustering Ex pedition Fitting Out United States Attorney Pierre pont to Thwart it. SENATOR GRIMES' EASTERN TOUR FROM JVEW YORK. C'nntnreof Counterfeiter. Nfw Yohk, July inMr. Merrltt, of Klmlra. while travelling between Chevenne ami Omaha. ir. week fell in with a counterfeiter, who attempted to pans a bogus fM) bill on him. Merrltt subsequently obtained the t ontlflnnen rtf t.hn rnnntarfnlln. n.l , V. n ,A.nll was his capture near Madison, vvlaconsin, of two notoriously dangerons counterfeiters, tho selzme or a largo quantity or bogus notes, plates, dies, presses, etc. 1 ho counterfeiters were sent to. Wosh- Inglon, and the detectives are after the rest of thu pimps. These arrests and seizures are said to be the most important made Ior several years. Committed Sotclde. John Williams, who applied lart evening at tho t'entrai roiice btatton ior ion nines, committed urn clde by cutting his throat some time during the nignt. n is not Known Whence ne came. Another Cuban Expedition Pitting Out. Despatch to The Evening Telegraph. Nkw York, July 18 District Attorney Plcrrepont received a special despatch this A. M. Irom Wash ington, in which it Is stated that the War D apart ment nas received positive information tnat an. other Cuban expedition is being rapidlv fitted out In this city, and that a vessel at present lying In one of tne urooKiyn docks nas been chartered by tne in snrgents. The despatch Is accompanied by a special commis sion irom tne president to .Mr. riorrepont, under tne eighth section of the neutrality act, empowering him to act m the matter as he deems best, and placing the whole of the naval and military forces of the city under his orders. Judge Pierrepont is taking active measures to discover the rendezvous of the Insurgents, and has communicated with the commander of the Navy Yard at Brooklyn. Mar shal Harlow has also received a special despatch containing instructions in the matter. FROM THE WEST. New from Senntor Jrlinen Ills) Health Itml lie Necks Un Recovery in Europe Chicago' ltitnnliHlic Trouble. C'niCAoo, July 15 A private letter received in town yesterday, dated Paris, June 13, says the hea'th or Senator Urimes Is not so much improved as his rriends hoped. He was about to start on a tour, hoping the chance or air would restore him. A short time since the vestrymen or Trinity Church, in this city, invited the Right Rev. Dr. Cnm- mings, Assistant jnsnop oi iteniucKy, to prcacn On Sunday before last he preached an anti-rituaiisti sermon, in which he is said to have charged the present tronmes in the Episcopal t'hurcn to the in traduction of Cathedral worship. This remark was considered a reflection on the Bishop of this dio cese, and he called upon Mr. Wright, the Junior warden or J rinity C hurch, and advised him not to anow ur. Liimmings to occupy tne pulpit, Tlic Weallici- at tlie Sen-Kliorc Cape May, July 159 A. M Wind southeast. roggy. Tnennonieter u. Long Branch. Southeast. Cloudy. Atlantic City. Kast. Clear. Thermometer 72. I.atCKt Itf arkets ly TcIesrrnpH. New York, July 15. Cotton quiet; 500 bales sold at 4'.,i 94 wc. t lour ueciining.out is without decided change; sales oi 7000 barrels. Wheat easier, and prices favor buyers ; sales of 26,000 bushels No. 8 at l-4Srfl-49; red Western at Jl-50; white Western, (i-u; anti red nnuincrn, jivi. corn nrmer an active; sales of 75,000 bushels mixed Western at 92(rf95!c. Oats heavy ; sales of 4,S,(MK) hushnls West ern at 80 V(S 61. Beef qniet. Pork dull ; new mess, .vi-i l.ard dull, and quotations are nominal. vtiusKynrm at roc. PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCIIANOE SALES. Reported by Do Haven A Bro., No. 40 S. Third street. BETWEEN BOARDS. 1 1000 W. Jersey 6s 200 sh Niagara Oil.. bl(iilat..2 3-14 100 sh Read K.bS.47 8-10 100 o....2d.47 3-ltf 100 do c.47 8-16 100 (10.....C.47 8-ld 100 do.... ad. 47 3-10 Monday.... 00 J1300 Leh Con Lu.b5 80 liooo Pa 6s,3 se.cAp.106 $2000 C ft A in 6s,b9. 93 11000 Leh gold 1.. .. 90 200 sh McClintock O 35 Bli Or & Coats St $8 SECOND BOARD. 12200 City 6s,Ncw Is. i 10 sh Del DiV 50 caAh..l00V tshWest Ilk 70 13000 Bel A D 3m 6s 80 100 Bh 8ch N Pf . .05. 21 11000 C& A 6s, '89... 85,V 100 Bh Read K. 830.47 3-16 12000 Read 6s. '44-80 8S)tf 1 sh Penna R 67 60 sh Leh V.cAp.o. 60 I THEATRICAL INFELICITIES. How Mr. Tnvleure Attempted lo Macerate Mr. lloininick IHurrny. To the Editor or the New York TM-?f. Sir: There are two sides to every story; and as Mr. Tayleure has by this time fully ventilated Am version of this "wretched piece d'absurdite," I trust, In fair ness, you will permit me to promulgate mine. The real racts or the case are simply these: On Tuesday last, while Btanding alone in the vestibule or Niblo's Theatre, I was accosted by Mr. Tayleure, who requested me to step aside Into a corner rool Ishly I did so. He then demanded or me an apology ror having written him what he terms an insulting letter Irom England. I repUed that whatever my letter might have been, it was rally Justified by his cruel treatment or my wire, and very nuletlv, but very emphatically, declined to apologize. Whereupon, no witnesses being present, he suddenly seized me round the neck and tried not only to butt my race with his head, but also at tempted to gouge me ; ln short, he meant to Inflict upon me a serious Injury. 1 contrived, however (by this time some twenty people being assembled), to escape from his grasp unharmed, excepting a slightly braised eye, and asked him to stand out of the corner and light ralr a pro ceeding he neither understood nor ap preciated, as he adjourned to Jell'erson Mar ketrr Police Courtldiiquire or the clerk thereoOi and sought to obtain a warrant against me ror haviug ar gaulted him. You may conceive, therefore, my sur prise and anrusement upon reading yesterday, for the first time, his grandiloquent card, in which he very naively admits having assaulted me, a clear proof that his ethics upon the subject of assaults are aiiout as consistent as those he recently applied to theatrical management. In conclusion, I solemnly deny ever having sought, threatened, or menaced Mr. Tayleure, either directly or indirectly, ln any way whatsoever. Mr. Tayleure complains of my letter written to him at a distance of three thousand miles (why not publish the letter?) ; but when I assert and can fully prove that he has maliciously attempted to damage the private and professional reputation of an unof fending lady, my wife, who, trusting to his honor and integrity as a gentleman, had journeyed the said three thousand miles to fulfil au engagement denbe ratcly proposed and entered Into by him, 1 think I may with satiety trust my own and my wife's cause to the verdict of the public, and ask whether any husband possessing one spark of feeling would, under such circumstances and in the face of such a wrong, have written more temperately than I did? If so, I will own I was in error and ought to have held my peace. But I am convinced no such man exists. 1 must apologize ror having troubled your readers bv reverting to this utterlv contemptible business, and I should never have done so were It not that I should be sorry to think that any or my friends or the public, misled by tho wildly exaggerated and wholly perverted reports that have been so freely circulated, might for a moment imagine 1 had all at once been transformed into a blackguard. Yours, etc., DO.MISICK MfKKAY. Niblo's Theatre, July 12. ICoclicfort. M. Henri Rochefort has writ en the following letter to the editor of the Jlcftmne: "My Dear Colleague: 1 am Informed at one and the same time that I am to be prosecuted for caus ing the Introduction of the Lantern into Prance, and that several lawyers are willing to take up my defense. I am much obliged, but I shall not defend myself. A man was employed to write against me iu tho J 'at r ie. He now represents himself as my agen', and has got 80 worth of lanterne, which he has'sold in Paris. He Is an agent of Oovernment; but the whole affair Is so transparent so clearly contrived to keep mo out of the Chamber that I will not notice it save by the silence of disdain. This way of getting rid of a deputy of whom they are afraid Is so honorable, delicate, and brave, that I wonder theOovcrumeut has not employed It against all CPPOBillou members. It has plenty of police. "JUKBI lt,OOU.T0nT., FOUIITII EDITION DOMESTIC AFFAIRS. The President's l.ong Branch Visit Dedication of the Boston Pea body Institute The Vir ginia Senatorship The Yerger Case. FROM WASJIljSOTOX. Arm Order. Drojiflf. A fo the AmncUUcd frcM. Washinotok, July 15. The following general or der has been issued to-day from the head-quarters of the army: First. By direction of the President, the following iruiimern, kj nn vacancies in the infantry arm, aro lieieuj ummiiiireil : As Captains Wm. L. Heldt, late of 8d Infantry, to Ha B.l l..n..M. f IP LT . .......... n.l . ... I. . . .in. v.. mtuuM j . v. r. nrui, miriii oi 1 111 tun rjr,w iiiu 3d Infantry ; J. 8. Poland, late or Bd Infantry, to the oiu niittin.ry; r woourun, late or 7tn Infantry, to the 12th Infantry; W. tl. Hankln, late of 81st Infun- iry, to mciiiin jnrantrv: A. W. Brown, late of 2lt i Infantry, to the 13th Infantry ; O. II. HiKbee, late of ineiun inmntry, to the 13th Inrantry ; .1. II. Brad ford, late of 2it.h Infantrv. to the 22d Infantry : J. L. Smyth, late of the loth Infantry, to the 23d Infantrv. As First Lieutenants lf U. Heiner, late of the 29th Infantrv. to the 1st Infantry: James Kernlne- ton.Jate of the llth Infantry, to the 6th Infantry; W. II. Male, lute of th Htith Infantry, to the Mil Infantry; O. Passett, Jr., late of the 2tlth Infantrv, to the nub Infantry; J. Wagner, late of the ih Infantry, to the lath; J. p. story, Jr., late of BUh lnlantry, to the Pith: J. H. Mulllken, late of the m iniaiiiry, 10 me uin ; l. n. inutile, late ot the liid Infantry, to the lath; K. II. Totten, late or the 3Uh lufantry, to the 13th; William Waterburv. late of the luth Infantry, to the 13th ; T. K. Lawson, late of the 21st Infantry, to the 13th ; O. M. Hascom, late oi me inn iniantry, 10 tne tain, vice uouiliug, re lieved at hla own request: William O. McCaskev. Int. nfllin Oilfl Tnlimlitir h.. miiK. T L'ill.. 1..... or 2!2d Infantry, to th 2oth ; W. T. Dodge, late of the 7th Infantrv. to the 21st: T. J. Dunn, late of tho llth lufantry, to the Md ; P. W. Ootid, late of the 6tli, to me vu ; it. j-. curong, late 01 the itn, to tne Bain ; it. M. Fleming, late of the llth, to the 26th; Jacob ramus, mre oi me aatu, to the mil, vice Urimes, re llevcd at his own request. Ab Second Lieutenants:.!. Sturamel. late of 13d Infantry to 8d ; S. II. Bogardus, 4th to 4th ; N. Bur- ions, iiuin 10 Din; v. u. uisiey, 42d to otn ; c. K Canuibcll. 42d to 4th : A. li. Kirhert. Slut t.n Nth .1 (J. King, 81st to 1 8th ; J. C. Comer, 21st to 12th ; W, II. Sloan, lHh to 12th ; C. II. Leonard. 81st to 13th : W. A. Newton, 8th to 13th; W. II. Bower, 46th to lath ; P. Fitzpotrick, 43d to 13th ; T. W. Lord, 43d to tn; v. a. l ecKiey, 44tn to zotn ; .lonn uannister, 43d to 20th; E. Trcnuock, 19th to 20th: T. II. K. Eb- steen, 18th to 21st; J. K. Marlln, 8lst io22d; Charles lioy, aiitn to 23d ; J. w. ralrfleld, 17th to 23d ; p. T, jiruuncK, mm 10 aau ; l . 'jay ior, aa to win. Second. Bv direction of the President tho follow ing named Second Lieutenant or Inrantry, now awaiting assignments, are hereby transferred to the cavalry and artillery arms: To the Cavalry Frank W. Robinson, late or lflth Infantry, to 2Uh Cavalry; Wm. P. Hull, of lath Inr., to 6th Cav. ; P. P. Barnard, or 4th Inr., to 6tU t av. ; u. ue juhuo, or 2d inr., to itn uav. ; w . u Ledgerwood, or 18th Inr.. to 6th Cav.: Thomas 15, Peed, or 29th Inr., to 9th Cav. ; D. O. Swain, or 84th ini., to nun i a v. To the Artillery John Pope, Jr., late or 20th Int., to the 1st Art. ; J. A. A. Robinson, of 17th Inf., to ist Art. ; .amaniei on, oi a-un ini., to an Art. ; a. W. (ireelv. of f4th Inr.. to 2d Art. : Adalbert Fell. or 21st Inf., to 2d Art, ; A. T. Abbott, of 28th Int., to 3d Art. ; Lharu s ueiner, oi an inr., to Bii Art. ; a. u. Imin.iHru t.t Clol I n f n Q.l Art If 17 A n.lnruAii or 6th Inf., to 4th Art. ; George M. Harris, or loth inr., to 4tn Art, ; ueorge a. agc,itn inf., tooth Ariinery. Third. The officers herein-named will report with out delay, by letter, to the colonels or their regi ments, anu tnose not now on uuty win join tneir posts. Those who aro assigned to temporary duty will be ordered to their companies by the comman ders of the departments in which they are serving, when they can be relieved without prejudice to the service. Those on signal duty will bo at once re lieved, and will Join their companies without delay. Personal. Judge Richardson, Assistant Secrefary of the Treasury, returned to Washington this morning. Ct nimlsaioner Delano will return on Monday next. YlMllIng the President' Mnnnlon. A large number of the attendants at the Baltimore Gei man Singing Festival are here to-day visiting the Executive Mansion and other places of In tel est. Off Tor I.ona Branch. The President and his faintly leave the capital at 6 o'clt ck this arternoon for Long Branch. They will otcui y the suite of rooms prepared for the occasion at SU tson's. Appointment. I Michael Vidal, of Louisiana, has been appointed eon.niisBioneron the part or the United Statcs,iinder the convention with Peru or December 4, lstw, ror the adjustment or claims of citizens or either country. The I.onff Branch Party. Special Dcupatch to The Evening Telegraph. Washington, July 18. Ex-Secretary Borie, who arrived here last evening ror that purpose, will ac company the President ln the steamer Tallapoosa, this evening, to Long Branch. It is understood that the President will be the guest or Mr. Borie.wliile at Long Branch. The Yiralnia Senatorship. The attempt to make Doctor Sharpe, Grant's brother-in-law, Senator rrom Virginia, is not likely to succeed, hharpe took a deep interest In tho Wells party, and thereby Incurred the bitter hostility or the Walker men. Some or the Federal oillce holders ln Virginia are urging Sharpe for the Sen atorship, because it Is understood his election would please the President The members elect of the Legislature now here say he has no chance. CommlHaloner Delano, who has been absent for a week, will return on Monday. Several important vacancies which have occurred during his absence are all held ln abeyance until his return. The Decision of Chief Justice Chase ln the application for a writ of habeas corpus in the Georgia case is expected to he announced this week. Yerger's counsel are con fident of a favorable decision. FROM NEW YORK. . Afore PuftlliHiu. Despatch to The Evening I'cleffraph, New York, July IS. Information or the fight be tween Blake and Uoodman has been received here. It took place near Port Jervls, N. Y., was stubbornly contested throughout the twenty-three rounds, last ing one hour and forty minutes, and' ended liiGood uiau winning. The stakes were 1250 a side. A V'etmel Ken tiled on the I. a ken. Buffalo, July 15. Two of the crew or the schooner Garrjowen, grounded near Cleveland on the 1st or July, are niaKlng allldavits before 11. W. Uemans, British Consul, that the vessel was scut tled by the captain. As the vessel and cargo were Insured, the under writers have been put on their guard pending the, result or the Investigation before the consul. Sad Accident. New Yohk, July 1R. Yesterday arternoon Miss Rnssell attempted to rescue a baby that had lallen in the water at Little Neck Bay, Long islmd Sound, and both were drowned. An old lady, Mrs. Russell, the mother, also Jumped overboard, but was rescued, and now lies in a critical situation. FROM BALTIMORE. The I.nwt Pay of the (Ireat HiriiHorfciit. Baltimore, July 18. With to-day closes the grand Sa'iigeifist in the amusements at Scheutzen Park, (juite a number or the members or the different singing foctclicB are still here, but many left for their vunousj homes this morning. Not a lew visited Washington this forenoon, and will return this eve ning, joining their comrades homeward. No serious accident has occurred during the visit of the great crowd, and nothing of au unpleasant character. From the commencement on Saturday evening last until now, the Sa-ngerfest has been a continued loundvf social and musical entertainment. Pemonnl. Among the passengers on the Berlin yesterday af ternoon, from this port for Southampton, were Henry Howard and family, of the British Legation at Wash ington; Mr. Kalnals, British Consul at this port; and Rev. Dr. Rankin, or St. Luke's Episcopal Church. Stock Quotation by Telearanh. 3 P. ill. Glendluuing, Davis A Co. report through their New York house the following: N. Y. Central R. 213V Toledo and Wabash. . 76V Ph. and Rea R. Vi'i MIL and St. Paul R. o. 77 stf Mich. S. and N. I.R..107V Mil. and St Paul R, p. 87 Clo. and Pitt R. K 84 Adams Express. 69 Chi. and N. W. com.. 8I.I4' Wells, Fargo. iX Chi. and N. W. prof.. 88 United SUtes 71 Chi. and R. I. R H7tf Tennessee as, New... 60 Pitta K. W. ft Chi. IU62 Gold 130 PacfucM. s Market strong. I West, pnlon Tel 87,'.'' FROM NEW ENGLAND. Meeting of ih In'.rrtlnllntinl Young .Tien' Vrtriauan aciiioii. Dtpatch to Tht Evening Telegraph. rrmrt inn tm.. July IB The International Yonnn; Men's Christian Association Convention is largely attended to-day, some four hundred organlr.atlond being represented. Tne repon 01 me iuwuuh Commute was niado this morning. Among other facta It was stated by the agent that he had travelled WOO mile during the past year, and had visited 669 associations. Thirteen associations hold property valued at f l,7oo,ooo. Conversions, 8,804: member ship, 80,000. The chief object of the convention is to devise measures ror more efficient labor ln the future. Reform In Harvard Vnlvertdty. Dfpateh to Tht livening Telegraph. iiosTOM, .inly in Among his reform at Harvard University President Eliot has permitted women to attend the 1'nlverslty courses of instruction. It la probable that the whole academical course will be thrown open to them. Pen body Inntltate Dedicated. The Peabody Institute, established mainly by thft bounty, arid named In honor of (loorfro Peabody, was dedicated yesterday In the town of Peabody. The dedicatory address was made by 'Key. J. W Fletcher. In briefly responding Mr. Peabody said he would now add 4B,ooo to his original bequest to the Institute, making tho total of his gift $100,000. Tlie IVentlier In the Mountain. CiiFssoN SraiNOR, July 18. Weather clear. Ther mometer at a P. M 80. THOMAS AND SHERIDAN. Cenernlllnllrck Tell Why General Thoma no Relieved at Nulivlllc-slierldati'N Last Hide. ( Corresptmae nee of the Cincinnati Oazeite. Cincinn ati, July K As a general thing one wonld expect to learn of the secret acts of tho War De paitment durlug the Rebellion Washington rather than California. But the occasion of ueneral Hal leck s departure from tho Paciilo coast for the Kist has accidentally brouaht to light the facts connected with the order relieving General George H. Thomas. St, Kme huad f h,s army' ttna bcfore u, Among a number of friends who had called in San rranciscoto say good-bye to General Halleck he was asked concerning his part in that transaction when he gave the following history or It: President Lincoln, Secretary Stanton, and himseir all had the greatest faith In General Thomas. They wero anxious to have him move, but trusted hia judgment Implicitly, as he was on the ground. One morning, a few days before the battle of Nashville the President received a request from General Grant that Generul Thomas should bo Immediately re. moved. J The Presitlent took the note over to Mr. Stanton, saying that it was a very had business, that he deeply regretted the step, and but for disregarding a direct request of the General-in-Chier ho would not con sent to it Mr. Stanton was equally decided as to the Impolicy or the step. General Halleck was called ln and opposed the measure very earnestly Finally Mr. Lincoln said he did not reel at liberty to Interfere, but he would like to have the order show that he was not the llrst mover In the matter. Gene- ral Halleck then drew au order covering the case though not placing the entire responsibility upon General Grant. . I ron seeing this Mr. Stanton directed it to be changed, to read so as to show that it was tlone by the special request of the General-in-Chief, and neither Mr. Lincoln nor Mr. Stanton were willing to go before the country on anything less than that General Halleck felt that a great military mistake and outrage wus being committed, and that ln some way, It should be prevented. The couierence over the matter was a long and earnest one. At length General Halleck asked Mr. Stanton if he would report him for disobedience of orders if he should delay the publication of this par ticular one for a rew days. Mr. Stanton said he would not General Halleck pocketed the order. A rew days after, General Thomas had completed his preparations, moved upon the Rebels, and defeated them disastrously. As it is well known, the order, so jnueh talked of since, was never Issued. It has been the received opinion that General Logan was the officer designated by General Grant to super sede General Thomas. This It seems Is a mistake. According to General Halleck, the request of Gene ral Grant also specified General Schofield as the suc cessor, and the order"as tlnally written did designate him for the place. The name or General Logan did not at any time come up ln connection with the change, either on the part or Grant or or the autho rities in Washington, nor was General Schofield aware or the request made by Grant General Thomas' army of rriends larger now by many times than the great army he commanded will read this with Interest ANOTHER BIDE BY SHERIDAN. Since General Sheridan rode down to Winchester, it is doubtlul whether he has ridden raster than when he was driven ln a special stage a rew days since from Deseret, on the railroad, to Salt Lake City. With three members of hlB staff and Governor Camp bell of Wyoming, he had met the party or Mr. Wade and Senator Conkling, and both parties, each making a stage load, started for Salt Lake. The distance was twenty-eight miles, the day hot, the road half mountainous, half plain, all rough, ami tor the most part dusty. Wells, Fargo A Co. send out their stages under orders. Tho trips are to occupy ex actly so much time. And no express train la more regular, perils of mountains and ditches, of course, excepted. Mr. Wade's party started first The second stage was not quite ready. -The orders as to time were to come with it Meantime our driver was to push matters. He pushed them. The first three hundred yards was over a held now hard as Btone, but once furrowed by the plow. The route, it may with propriety be said, lay directly across the waves. How that good stage rode them It is hard to relate, though it Is Impossible to forget We had thus bounded over plain, had crossed moun tain spurs, had swooped down to the plain again, and were . hair way to Salt Lake City, when Sheridan's stage came np it would be more accurate to say, dropped down upon ns. They had been delayed hair the time we had been driving. They had not ridden slow. All the signs were against that If there was any spot rrom the roretop or the leading horse, back over all the rest, over officers, Governor and alike, not covered with mud, It was not discernible. We met at a relay house, and rresh horses were attached. Then came the start. The time rrom Deseret to the city was to be three hours and a quarter. The usual time la five hours, and deemed short at that Off they dashed, those noted gentlemen, in mud, the General on top, where he could see the ground, hold his own, and watch the column, the other in side, where they sat, almost beyond recognition, awaiting a second coating. In live minutes they were moving in a whirlwind or dust, which ror them was occasionally relieved by a dash ol water, as they plunged through the brooks. Our party rollowed. We, too, were enveloped ln cloud, and always when least expected there came to us, too, through windows which must be open, the same splash or mud and dash of water. It would he unfair to tell who ortenest bounced to the rool, or how hard onr experience showed heads to be, or v hose heads they were. Mr. Greeley has the copyright ror all such descriptions. He would change it now, if he had been with us. Mor mons stopped work In the fields to see, stopped teams in the road to look back, crowded to doors and win dows, or rose np rrom seats under cool porches, to see what all this rush or Gentiles meant Anu so Sheridan rode down to Salt Lake. It must be con fessed that he came out ahead. We attributed it to the lact that he sat on the box and directed the movements. The driver made his time, and reported at the stage office in three hours and a quarter. (craping:. Troy has co-operative laundries. There Is an American school in Sitka Illinois has a school fund of f I0,oo0,0u0. A new Iron pleasure steam yacht Is now plying on Lake Meniphremagog. The Annapolis students have to study on Sun day the same as on other days. Willard's Hotel, at Washington, Is to be enlarged and rebuilt English "ladles" cut dewn the silk curtains in railway coaches and make aprons or thorn. A train is to be put on between Su Louis and New York 10 go through in thirty-nine hours. In London rushionable society American ladles, are very much snubbed or late.t 715 OIESNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA IOim FARNUM & CO., COMMISSION MER J t rlitnta and Manufacturers of Oonectoca Tick-in. etc 1 ho. 23.CUESNl)T Sweet. PiiUadelyUia. M mm 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers