Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, September 27, 1869, Image 5

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EiIitOPIEAN AFFAIRS:'
Cabe.t,
15tPAI•
• • It'nunteeltevointionnry.'Arriintion.:»ttiiii
Mors wnd frarricades===Runde; Sprn - tier'
• the Troops and InSurgreinis-neary Lo el
Lowniow, Sept. X, 18( I.—The news reports
to hand in this city froiri Spain ,to-daY'are,
an mciting, ever-alarming character. Pepik,
r%-lar disaffection and disloyalty to the existing
.government prevail very generally through=
`out the nation, and both have again been ex
;-. pressed in the shape of au armed counter
.reVolutiou..
There was an insurrectkmary•demonstratliirt
• made bv the volunteer troops in Barcelona
last higtt. .It was occasioned by the receipt
• of the overnment order commanding the . .
•. volunteers to disarm, and au attempt ou :the
•
: "part of the local authorities re enforce,it. The
' fact that, the volunteers of Tarragona who . had
refused.todisarm previously were. suffering
imprisonment for. the • oribuce . was ~inade; a
, ;','ittiuse•forj.in'additiontil excitement. hi a - shOrt
time live Barricades, one built by the public
cartmen, were thrown up. The eartmen's
barricade was assaulted by the regular troops,
'arid carried by a bayonet charge, after a very
desperate resistance on the part' of its de
... fenders:and a heavy loss of life. .' ••:
During the engagement the insurg,enta.hatl
twenty-four men • killed, a large number
wounded„rind seventy of their more , active
brethren made prisoners. •
hopir-hadtwo-r-tanmissioned—officer
killed`and several soldiers Wounded:
Order-was subsequently restored. , •
A radical republican democratic demonstra
tion is announced to be made. in. Madrid/dur
ing Wednesday, the Xth inst. More tronble
is anticipated on the occasion..
The .IFlghihilta re.elonee-.Ortier Ateritored
. -
on Sunday Morning . . • ,
BiticzLoltA, Sept. 2ti, via French Atlantic
Vable.--;•The'voinnteers in Tarragona assumed
a radical •reriublicanattitude When order - ell to
disarm by the -'government authorities.
Several battalions of ..the 'volunteers in Bar
. celonaialso refused to lay , . down their arms.
They. erected barricridei in the streets.
General ,Pierred, - a revolutionist,. having
been arrested by the troops,. was: taken to
Tarragona: o : • •
,At tea O'clock last night the government
troops .assailed the barricades and charged .
their defenders with the bayonet.
They-defeated the insurgents. '
P Order was restored about two o'clock this
(Sunday) inorning. •
Many persons were killed and wounded,
bath insurgents and troops of the line.
TUEKEY.
• The Gnind Vizier Against the Viceroy Of
Egypt—His Newspaper Expression—
'
Objections to a Great Powers Mediation.
CO, STA?.ITINOPLE, Sept. 25,18G7, via French
Atla.ntio. Cable..‘-The semi-offielal ,journal,
Turquie, of this city, publishes in its isSue to
• day a violent article against • . the :Viceroy of
Egypt for his action 'in resisting the terms of
arrangement with the Sultan embraced in the
second letter transmitted to his, Highness by
, the Turkish Government through, he Vizier,
and also for his .proposal to refer the whple
subject matter in dispute between his Imperial
Majesty and himself to the arbitranient of the
European great Powers.
The Grand Vizier?s newspaper organ ob
jects, in the name of the Sultan, to the propo
sitions of the Viceroy, and insists on the com
plete acceptance of the second letter the
latter. , , ;.;
The ,
runpie concludes this editorial attack
by recommending the. Porte government to
at once. dismiss - Ismail Pacha and appoint
'..Mustapha Tazyl Pacha Viceroy of Egypt,
THE BYRON . SCANDAL.
Letter from Wm.Howitt.
Mr. Wm. Howitt writes another, long letter
to the Daily News on the . Byron controversy,
in which he says t •
The great fundamental fact, all the
' dark and revolting, charges 'against - Lord
Byron are avowed to proceed from_ the very
person ,who ,before making them, took care
to destroy the evidence of the person against
whom they , are made. That is, Lady Byron,
during thelife of her husband, had sternly re
fused to make any explanation to hiM
or to the. public of •. the' • cause of her
separation.' 'lt' she had, any to make, the
proper time to do that was while her husband
was living, and, if not true; have re-'
butted them, She should 'have done this, or
foreverafter held her peace. But when her
husband' was dead; and died with the hundred
times repeated declaration of his ignorance of
her reasons for leaving him ; When she had
accomplished the destruction of her husband's
• statement of his side of ' the question,
and then written, as we are informed,
her own "representation of it; when
all those who knew him best,'who had his full
confidence, and could best defend him, had
followed mto the tOmb, we find her, in open
breach of her solemnly reiterated assertions
of an inviolable silence on the subject, coming
out., if Mrs. Stowe's story be true, with the
most damning calumnies Which it is possible
for a woman to utter against her husband,
beg to ask once more whether it be the opin
ion of the justice-loving British public that this
style of conduct can for a moment receive
its sanction? If- a 'practice of this kind
can be tolerated, then will no man's reputation
be safe-from " the wife of his bosom. Any
wife with a pique may, the moment that the
breath is ,out of her husband's body, rifle his
cabinets, overhaul the most sacred records of
his past life, and then, with impunity, proceed
to blacken his memory o with the most odious
pigments of hell. This, however, is pre
cisely what the zealous advocates of
Lady Byron's unwarranted proceeding
'recommend to us as admissible. 1,
asserting that it is a
p . toceeding as odious, as abhorrent - to every
right feeling, as opposed to and destructive of
every principle that is sacred in life, as it is
pre-eminently tin-English. I ,repeat it, that
the moment that Lady Byron caused to be de
stroyed the memoir .of tier husband she put
herself not of court on the question, and ren
dered it. impossible that it can ever he settled
except upon defective and fle parte evidence.
One more fact. The writers, English and
American, who claim for Mrs. Stowe the
peculiar and almost exclusive confidence of
Lady Byron on this subject, are dealing in
mere fudge. It is well known to a certain
number of persons that Lady Byron, with all
her affected strength of character, had the
weakness to make such confidantes of most of
• her lady friends ..of long standing. Most of
these ' 7 ladies :are - now - dead, and - prudently
"died and made no sign." But there is one at
least still living who possesses a series of let
terti from Lady Byron, containing not horrors
of the Beecher Stowe type, hut heavy charges
not only against her husbandjuit against her
• own daughter.
What are we to do with a person at once so
H. STEEL & SON,
NOS. 713 AND 715 NORTH TENTH STREET,
HAVE NOW OPEN A LA RUE STOCK OF
AT VERY LOW PRICES.
Black Gro Grain Silks, at $1 50. •
Black Gro Grains, 26 inches wide $1 75 $2, $2 25.
Black Gro Grains, superior qualities, $2 '6O to $9.
A GREAT BARGAIN.
• 1,000 YARDS $2 25 PLAID SILKS, WINTER COLORS, AT $1.25.
Colored Dress Silks, iif . every variety, $1 75 to $6. ,
STRIPED AMERICAN SILKS, NEW STYLES, AT $2 75.
NEW STYLES OF FALL AND WINTER SHAWLS.
Square Paisley Shawls, $l2 50 to $BO. '
Long riaSiey Shawls, $lB to $lOO.
Striped Broche Square Shawls at $l2, worth $lB.
LADY WASHINGTON_STRIPED_WOOLEN_SHAWLS,-NEW-STYLES.
Real Camel's Hair Striped Shawls. • •
Long and Square Blanket Shawls.
4,000 Shoukler Shaw ls, L
. at 80c. and $
:(ILK AND WOOL CORDEDEOVLINS, IN ALL THE NEW COLORS, $1 50, WORTH $2.
Silk and wckoi popthis, of every variety ' at low prices.
seg. .
i=3
..*%isi!f.::.':{°4?:~tik~?c;'~m. ~..,.`...nf_ `7'.',.-. aa'at":,h:. r~_v~*~.;;ie-r,'..
TR DAILY! PI'EIIfiI f0011;1017 14- 1' = MITARPiritiA, MON pkir,..,.EPTEPLIEBEtt 27,11869.
. virtnowl' , Atid vituperati4—sti saintly. to of
corner of her Mind, and harboting in anoth.6l
that which does not spare even her own .flesh
and ,blood What, are we to, say to the noble,
reticeno of n wife who destroys her dead psis
defence. Oktwitahis remaminefriendSi
' anti then furnishes; to ker . lady adherentiv-all
ronnd a sheaf of 'poisoned arrows, to be shot
oil'Nrhen not an opposing shield can be raised
against them? .1t ig the 'story of Orpheus
over again—torn to pieces. by :1, mob of tali ;
iiated:women ! , "
INDIAN TICOUBLEh.
. , , ,
Eight Between filooz and Pawnees.—
Figiri,with tinned Shiites Troops.
• The following, account of a recent Indian
outbreak, near Point of Rocks, we copy from .
. the' Cheyenne • Ledger, of Sunday, the 19th
instant : . . •
Quite au 'lndian. 'ci-elfenient wh.s gotten itp •
' west of here last night, near Point of Rocks.
A large band:of Sioux,' Cheyennes and Arra- •
pLihoe.4 . were: congregated at a place called
Vhisl.3 Gad; some miles from the pi/head,'
and were said to be on the . war path againiit*
•
tie ITtes. It a reported. however, that they
attacked a herd o(Government stoek some 30,
• miles from Jolt Steele,and killed eight horses
and two soldiers. •
A company •of cavalry wns
er sent *up from
Fort Sanders last night to look aft them.
A special despatch to the Omaha Republican
is as fcillows : • • • •
Cor,inanus,,Sent. 22.—yesterday afternoon
•abtint fifty Sioux Indians attacked and killed
d t oo) PGIAV flee 94 Ale - Yi ' e re—lier4llll
stock near the Pawnee village; twenty miles
from this city. The Sioux .captUred and ran
off alarge quantity of snick beloriging•to,the
Pawnees. , • • ' " . •
As soon, as the fact became known in. the
' Pa,wnee•village, the wildfist,excitement pre
vailed afro% the. Indians,, and preparations
were at Once miide for a vigorous pursuit of
the Siouxii'• • . • . .
Brevet-Major Henry E. Noyes, of the Sec
end Cavalry, with thirty -soldiers and one
hundred Pawnees, at once started iu pursuit.
• At 4' o?Clock.this:morning (the latest hour 'at
whichiwe hive information froth the pursuing
columns)' they were in sight of the retreating
Sioux; but had not succeeded in recapturing
the, stock or inflicting any punishment upon
the. Sioux:: . •
After the soldiers and Pawnees had left, it
was reported that about two hundred Sioux
warriors were seen in the vicinity of the Paw
nee village, and 'an attack upon the women
and children of the village was momentarily
expected.. - . - -
, . . LATER
We heitiila report last night that the Sioux
had attacked the village, and killed a namber
of Pawnee squaws and papooses; but on in
!lulu at the telegrapkoffice, could learn noth
ing ofa definite charter respecting the truth
of the rumor.
The greatest excitement prevails in the re
servations, and the Pawnees are frantic with
rage at this bold and daring onslaught ot; their
ancient
IN GENERAL.
A French physiologist has been experiment
ing. With theme and caffeine (the active princi
ples of tea and coffee) upon animals, and af
fords us the pleasing information that the lat
ter is twice as poisonous as the former; but
that, to compensate for its inferior viru
lence.: theine prodtices. "-convulsive move
ments of the limbs" which are not . observed
from the action of caffeine • so that we must
either confine . ourselves to 'half-cups-of coffee
pi• run the risk of becoming spasmodic. The
comforting assurance is given, hoivever, that
doses of many grammes may be taken by'man
with inapimity.
Labor. •
It has been calculated that, in actual waste
or tissue, one hour of mental labor is equiva
lent to four hours of , physical exertion. By
this Method of computation it is evident that
if the Harvard oarsmen had given their whole
minds:to their work they would only have
been beaten:, , by a second and a half. A more
important'application of the principle, how
ever, is that if the eight-hour movement Suc
ceeds; brain-workers, such as journalists, for
example, ,will have a logical claim to call two
hours a day's work..
quotations.
• To verify the Most familiar quOtations with
every repeated use of them is a necessary so
absolute that the general disinclination to that
labor is surprising. A forcible example of this
.necessity is furnished by so careful a scholar
as Mr. Matthew Arnold, in his published
es!4y "On Translating Homer." He there
illustrates the Value which he attaches, in a
question of diction, to the authority of the En
glish Bible, by saying that, when in
doubt lest "pre-eminent" was "too
bookish an expression" to be used in
translating-Homer, he found his English-Bible
to say "the right hand of the Lora hath the
pre-embience," and forthwith used "pre
eminent" "without scruple." Mr. Arnold's
Bible says uo such thing. It says,_"is exalted."
The Psalter of the Prayer Book has the other
version, but that is from the translation of
Tyndale and .Coverdale (15:ri), and.:Rogers,
(1:):17), revised by ()ratline]. (1539), and retained
for use a.S more tit for song, butby no means
having the authority, in a question of diction,
of the standard English Bible.—Worid.
Tight Lacing.
The London Lthicet is out on the subject of
tight. lacing; for it appears that "spider"
waists are again insisted on by' the canons of
fashion in England . as here. There are no new
arguments brought to bear upon the absurdi
ties of the practice in question and the evili
that result from it.. Some of the latter were-set
forth in very plain and unequivocal language,
some time ago, by Mrs. Dr. Lozier, who knows
all about the subject, in an address reported in
full by the •Worhd at the time. It is very doubt
ful, though, whether any amount of warning
can have a counteracting influence in matter:,
over which fashion reigns. Womans though
allowed by some thinkerS to be a rational
creature, is not a prospei...tive one. In
-spite of all that has been written, all that re
mains to he written, about the hygiene of
dress, woman persists in dressing " to kill."
Ala! she dresses to kill in more senses than
one. iii Making a spider of herself, to kill the
gaudy dies that buzz about her, she kills ber
self. A perambulating suicide is the My with
the spider waist. Some forlorn damsels have
done themselves to 'death by strangulation
with a garter. Paris green does the business
for others. It is common for " rashly impor
tunate" ones to jump oft bridges and ferry-
Loins, in the wildness of their. despair. But
he lady with the spicier waist has far more
-11141110 d i -her madness--than-.-any-of-these.
The instrument of death selected by her is the
stay-lace, and her suicide is gradual and lovely,
and a blessed martyr is she.
—Why are horses in cold weather like um
dlesome gossips? Because they are the heal
ers of idle tails.
CYirs"n''~^3
M=UMMMN
e , ' , " • '• '".i 4
TO AOU •
KEEPER TEL ErER
' ''.-•
` `L ~ '.i ~ - 'IS
-. ~ _ ....
LOUR LINEN DEPARTMENT
now imusually ftlll, and contains a large quantity of Goods
bought very ton from manufacturers , 0 tutplwabrOadi and *thick
are to be sold at prices far, below last season's. These goods are
all Or the most celebrated makes, and Include all the artleleS
neee.ssary to UotlSeke4illg•
HOMER, COLLADAY & CO.,
-42-AN-D 1414 CH-EST.NITT----STREET,
CLAN PLAIDS.
HOMER, COLLADAY & CO.
Would call special attention to their splendid assortment of
these FASHIONABLE GOODS for the present season, in various
grades.
NOVEL FABRICS.
HOMER, COLLADAY & CO.
Are now displaying a number of Novelties, both . ln texture 'and
deSign, just received from Paris, for
'WALKING 13] ESSES AND SUITS.
se27m w f Strip
NEW CARPETINGS.
J. F. & E. B._ORNE,
Mk 904 CHESTNUT STREET.
IMPOELTA.TIONS.
FRENCH MOQUETTE CARPETS,
Designed by the best Artists in Paris; for sale only by us, and at less prices than
ever before offered.
New and elegant original designs in S. Crossley's & Sons' 64 Velvets for Parlors,
Novelties in ENGLISH BRUSSELS CARPETS in the Louis XVI., Marie Antoinette, Per
elan, A/hart:llga, Illuminated, and•other styles, in entirely new and original drawings.
ENGLISH BRUSSELS FOR HALL AND STAIRS,
1,000 PIECES NEW TAPESTRIES ,
Just Opened 1,000 rlefestf all the New Styles of Tapestries for ,the season, at
J. F. & Fig B. ORNE,
NO. 904 •CHESTNUT ` STREET
au3o an w a limp
PERSONAL..
FITLER, WEAVER & CO.
FOR THE LADIES. , •
TIIENEW CORDAGE FACTORY
"608ME1 RIVE A LA . PODIPADOUit,"
for beautifying and preserving the complexion, and giv- NOW um_op_ERATION,
-ing it tho - frentmess-and-brillianey of - youth; complexion,
With=
out a rival.- Is perfectly free from any deleterious I No.. /WATER. street , and 23 N.DELAWABE avenne
minerale,and druge,.eild egicaeY is wenderful,,for • . • •
rendering th e skin soft; pur e s,
and beautiful. It hi the
true secret of beauty, and all, ladles should use it.
For sale by all dealers.
E. MIOUALSKI & OQ., •
see 3m rp§. No. 21 South Eighth °trout.
VI ARKIN° WIIII.INDELIBLE INS
Ali Embroidering, Braiding. Stamping, &e.
AI. A. TOISBY.X. IWO .Yilbert ntreat:
PHILADELPHIA.
6-4 VELVETS.
with borders to match,- exclusive patterns.
ENGLISH BRUSSELS.
ALSO,
All 'widths, with borders to match.
MODERATE PitICIEtS.
PHILADELPHIA.
IMMO
;H~Y.~S -7 ,~r, r-~
'4?'.+ ,Ih.,r
.. iy.;;r,'.~j ; iG;ii
•
•
og oia READ! READ( READ!' IM-
Portant to Ladies! Ease, Economy, Dura
bility sod Style!
0 you want oboes with all' tho abovo qualities for
TAadioe, Misece,oll/ldren and Youths.,
_you, can obtain
;km at WEti,Tli, No, a . Eloventliotroot: ne204140
MBE
RAWBRIDGE &
.
.
v, - .N.i . '* . ''' . "0' .. '' . . , ,`: . . , •'0 ... !,. - p . ' -. ; .. !, -- 'i. 2. ..;:•..''::.:. i . .. - : .:.:'A - *p .: ... : ,: .. ,.,:..i.:::,ri,.. :: :1,..,...., : .''.',..'.. , . - ... - "....... - .9....,0 : . ; 0p
st,
BLACK SILKS,
Maroon,
SILK 6
0,
SILKS,
lA - VK
BLACK SILKS,
ONE CASE. POULT DE SOLE. 52.00.
\ Embracing the New Shades in
IVlode,
Pearl,
ONE CASE POULT DE SOIE, $2 50
ONE CASE VERY WIDE AT $3 00
Same Goods sold recently at $3 SQ.
13LA.A.C.111. $1 S 7.
331_AA.CU 00.
SLACK SILLS, very cheap, tiNkf.t.
BLACK SILKS, *Mt Cio.
J3L ACID SILKS, $3 00.
STRIPED AMERICAN SILKS,
ONE VASE VELOUR POPLINS,
ONE CA SE VELOUR POPLINS
ONE CASE VERY RICH LYONS SILK POPLINS.
ALL-WOOL PLAID POPLINS.
All-Wool Plaids, 02.
All-Wool Plaidtg., 75.
All-Wool Plaids, S.
Rich:Diagonal Plaids, $1 00.
Blue and (ireeu
Black All-Wool Poplinag, B'7, 01. 00 9 $1 WS.
Afttir-Imanths of- preparation our, DltESSqops
.stpokisnowcom-
Diet°, and our patrons have the opportunity to select their Dress Fabrics,
from an unsurpassed assortment, the nrices now, as heretofore, being
always at the bottom of the market.
STRAWI3RIDGE & CLOTHIER,
CORNER DIGAUXIBI MARKET STREETS.
Cherry,
In all the New Shades.
TWENTY-FIVE PIECES
A. New Article, Very Desirable
In Entirely New Shades, $2 00
Entirely New Shades. $1 50
CENT] A.L, .AIII.ORI,If.JM,
CLOTHIER'S
SILKS;
SILKS,
FANCY SIUCS,
FANCY SILKS,
Lavender,
I'ink,
Eine,
SILKS
G , ree,n,
"./ 1631' MI