VOLUME 'xxiv.-NO 'WEDDING CARDS, INVITATIONS for Parties, & 4 3. New styles. lilAtiON - es CO. 907 Otiestnrit street. ' ' • de.3ofmw , VIXED EARTH, CLOSETS ON ANY .1: floor, in or otteof doers, and PORTABLE EARTH (.111110PEti, for use in bed-chambers and elsewhere. Are absolutely free from Offence. Earth Otoset Com pany's office and salesroom at WM, GI, BROADS' No. 1221 Market street. ap2O:tf- DIED. FE , THEESTON.--On the 22d instant, Hannah Stille r relict,of Michael Feiliersion. The relatives And friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral. from her late residence. 1400 Flue street, on Saturday - morningo.sth Instant, at half-past 8 o'clock. Funeral service at St. Mary's °Much. It 3fI . I oHNSON.—At his residence,__Germntown, Sixth on t 22d, William N. Johnson ,M. D., hi the 61th year of his age. Funeral on the 25th Instant, at 4 o'clock P. M. •• LOWRY.—Smidenly, this morning, Elizabeth 11., wife of Benjamin Lowry, in the tilat year of her age. Interment from the residence ot her husband, 913 Sputh Seventh street. OD Second-day, 27th instant, at 10 treks* A. RI, at Friends,' Western Ground. .ll.ela. Ores and, friends of the family ere particularly limited to attend: SNOWDON —On Wedueedar, the 224 !nat., Theodore DI , eon of .Wllllant H. and Sarah R• Snowdon, aged 16 month.. The rtives and friends of the family aro respectfully invited to attend Ihe funeral, from the residence of his parents, N 0.2017 Mount Vernon street, this (Friday) af * ternoeu, at 4 o'clock. • T 1 ERS.—Einddenly, on the 22d inst., Arundins Tiers, In his 79th year. • The funeral will takeplace from the' residenee of Miss Maria Feting), 2044 Vine street, on Saturday morning. at 9 o 'clock. ' • W fIEELOCK .—On Wednesday morning, Mrs. Madgie Robertson Wheelock, wife of George G. Wheelock. M. R„ of the city of New York. end daughter of .the late Archibald goberteon. Req., of thin cItY. Interment on Saturday, at Laurel 11111. 400 ---- -400 ARCH STREET,_ ___ ---- L"WITIVIrdeLAND4I,L. fem DEPARTAIENT L A MES em 1870. CANVAS DRILLS. PADDED DRILLS, SCOTCH CHEVIOTS. CASSIMERE FOR SUITS. CORDU ROYS AND TOWELS. CIENUINE •MEDICINAL COD LIVER 'J UlL.—yOflN C. MA HER & Co., 7R Market et. BrECIAL I OTI(JEB, 00- N - 0 TI CT TRAVELERS. Everything belonging to Gentle r men's attire, neceseary to comfortln Summer traveling, can now be found in full variety at Mr. Wanamaker'a, Establiehment, Ohestnut Street: Together with Summer Suits, Dusters; Linen Overalls, &0., there is a large .assortment of Valises, Dressing Cases, Toilet Articles in traveling shape; and --Gepts' --Furniehing Goods generally, with many novelties of French and English - make. 818 and_B2o Chestnut St. June, 1870. 5 00:1. THE lIIIPHOVEVIENT or . __BROAD_ .ST_REET A GRAND mAes MEETING : OE THE CITIZENS OF EFILLADILPIIIA Favoring the IMPROVEMENT - OF BROAD STREET, Will be held under the auspices of the BROAD STREET IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE, And by authority of the Meeting of Citizens held on the 17th of - June, 150, AT THE ACADEMY OF MSIC, ON I'AUP3DAY EVENING, June 30tli, at 8 o'clock. All who appreciate the advantages that the thorough fare of Broad street, enjoys, to make it, with proper am m eii ntEST AND -MOST IMPOSING AVENUE IN TA% WORLD ; and all who take an honest pride in BEAUTIFYING AND-ADORNING OUR CITY, are cordially Invited to attend the meetine. By order of the BROAD STREET IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE. T. T. WOODRUFF, President DR. F. C. MELVILLE, Vice President GEO. S. GRAIEIABI. Secretary. JAMES W. HAVENS, Treasurer NO CURE, NO PAY ! Dr. G. LOVATT, the celebrated Indian Physician, has removed to the CONTINENTAL from the 'Girard; whore he will remain ono week. Consultation and ex amination FREE. Office hours from 9A.M. to ID. M., and 3to6P. M. Call and see the mammoth Tape Worm be has just removed from a prominent citizen of Phila delphia. Btep upon the Elevator and you can ride to his room. j(23 itrp*_ EL- Boardman's Third Annual Saturday AFTERNOON EXCURSION TO 'ATLANTIC CITY. - Saturday; Julie E 6, le/70. Last Boat leaves Ville street at 3.30 P. M. - Returning leaves Atlantic. Monday, 27th, at 7 A. 111, .ROUND TRLP, 83.00. : Tickets for Bale at Trenwith's 'Bazaar, Bi 4 Clheetnut .atreet, and at Vine Street Wharf: jell-12trA9 : 11 q - CONGRESSIONAL , CITIZENS OF THE FOURTH DISTRICT without illstinc . t m of party, firorablo to the election of Gen. WIL• JAM B. THOMAS, at the ensuing election, to repro , writ the Fourth Congressional District in Congress, are requested to meet at Green Bill Ball, Seventeenth-anti Bpplar streets, on FRIDAY EVENING,2Iith lust, at 8 • o c!ock. JOHN T. BAILY, HENRY R. HUMMER, COL. A. E. GRIFFITHS, WM. BRICE, SAMUEL GINGRICH, CHARLES'''. ABBVTT, LAMBERT THOMAS, W. J. HANNA, • EDWARD D. STOKES, EDWARD E. JONES, S. N. WINSLOW, B. E. MALONE, Committeg. j (.23' 2trpi ERSITY F PENNSYL FACULTY OF ARTS. TANI'IDATES FOR ADMISSION to -either of the •College courses will present thetneelves for examination on WEDNESDAY, Juno 29th, at half-past ten o'clock.. TUE REGULAR COURSE includes the AncientLan-, guages, with Sciences,and German ; the Mathematics and the Physical with an ELECTION of certain studies in the two last years. In the SCIENTIFIC COURSE, more extended studies in Mathematics, Physics. and the Modern Languages are substituted for the Ancient Languages. • Students may 111140 enter fin' a PARTIAL COURSE, including ouch studies as theyonay select and4vhiclif the Faculty may approve.' FRANCIS A. JACKSON, jot: Btrp§ Secretary of the Faculty. 11?. 1 , A y l a IVERSITY OF PENNSYL- FACULTY OF ARTS. The Annual Commencement, for conferring Degrees, ill be hold-on 'THURSDAY, June 30th, in the .e,,,tIA DEMY OF MUSH' at 10 o'clock A.M.- -The-Reverend Clergy, Judges of a City,d States and State Courts, the Mayor of the Select and%• Common Connolis, the Board of Directors and President of the Girard Col lege, the Principal of the Central High' School, the can didates for the Degree of Master of Arts, and other - Graduates of the University are. Invited to join the Faculty, in the - Foyer of the Academy, at a quarter be fore 10. ' FRANCIS A. JACKSON, je23-6trp§ • 'Eqs. NORTH _.. secretary. tA - RAH,: ROAD AND GREEN L A NE STATION.. • Pure Lehigh-Coal delivered to the residen iGer• mantown at reduced rates. DINES & SHEAFF, je6 - Im,rll§ Office, N 0.15 S. Seventh street. _EXCURSION -TO FORT. aware.— An excursion to Fort Delaware will take place July 7,1870,.under the auspices of the Mariner's Bethel Baptist Church. • (Special permission - to land at the Fort has been assured.) 'tickets, 60 cents; lo be obtained at the dtore of E. 2,1, BRUCE, 18 Nortlt_ tioyenth street-- „ . . ._. 'i t.-.•.,„ .., r•F f'-% - .', i .f ' "..,-' i'.. ''': , 4,;. , ; , , ,--v ; ', 4 -:!:. z ~...... .;,i, -.-: ..,.J' ''. C '' , l'llArr r ,- :. --t -“,'- r - ~ , . / i ,...., . r4 ; , •”. •.• . 1 rii ,- ', •4, (4. -" 3 ' ' I . . .'1 . • • 4 „ fi r' -4 - ' --' '' j • I: ' ',', , 111101. . 71 . • • ' ,` '• ,' : : , 7 ' 7 ' : ,' ' • : 'o.,•"„t" - -, -- -..-- ' '-. m . 0., Y . . - e- - -''' --- -1,2_ 7 ' .. , .: ; ~ - , ' . ~ . , , , • , . , , s ' ~.; ~i.'- i i' ' '.'.• f 1 ).•:'.. 1: t ,'. :: _ ., i' 4. t& o l ';7-7,4a; , 4 ,. , . ' • ' '."." . .= . :'.. - •frt .tv.k... '---- - - - .±l. - - - -- - .:- :-.-- -.:------ -.-- ---:.---- -;-'- - - , :r: -:-:-:747i , 2 -. ” 1 .- 7 - . - . 7 . - •:::::77 : : :E- --- --;•.. : --.. -- ' l -- 'l * -_----:' : 1 • - • - _ -- i ,- i - r7 ' : - 1 - t -'- . - i7l•' :--. --, •- • - , t A 4 4:".. -kel, ~, C l. ift 1i t? .. 34 7 1 ', •Ck'ry - tIA .% .. - ' - t' E--= 1 - _ - __; - 7 - __-- - • - • ' : ' - • ' ' - • ''' ' t fr 7,4,,... . , / •:::;,.-4.E.f.••7_ __:, -- :-• z.W1;(31114q,'" ''..----'' DENCE -‘ 7. • Nwid • . , From the Burlington (Vt.) Free Press, of Jr& 22.] The Fenian Gen. Donally, in Ins remarks at the reunion of the 2d Regiment, on Friday, evening, made the first official statement, so far as we are aware, 'of the plan df the late Fenian raid on Canada. It wassio brief, to cross the Canada line at Franklin with 1;500 men on Tuesday, to occupy a position, hold it on the defensive, compelling the Canadians to attack them-or. leave them uninolested ;in the meantime, tO march a-force, to '.the rail road, • Betzp a train, , and surprise St. 'Johns by ~ railrbad. Same, operation - u was to - have . been undertaken from Derby, and General Donally expressed his convictions that if their men had been on band they should certainly have taken St. Johns, and Richmond on the Grand Trunk.' -With so much of success to start with, he believed the entire body of Irish .Americans able to bear arms would haVe 'rushed to rein force them, and they would have taken Canada! The scheme failed, in his opinion, because, instead of 1,500 men, less than 100 were on hand-at the time set for the invasion. The attack on Eccles Hill; hi 6 said, failed ' ` because the men behaved badly. At the time be attributed this to cowardice ; but, on re:. flection, had come, to the conclusion ; that the men were disheartenSd by the fewness of their numbers and by the thought if captured they would probably by hung, and that their motiv was the natural .instinct of self-protection.' General Donally also undertook to answer the common objection brought against the Fenian operations on Canada, that they Gould not help the cause of Ireland.' He owned iri effect that they could not. He said that the Canadian' people bad done the Irish no wrong. ThO invasion, he said, was, not intended to in jure the Canadians.-- .It-wfts -a - Simple - attack against, British power. With that powerhe declared that ho and other Irishmen had alife long score to settle, and that they had simply undertaken to strike it at the nearest accessib,le • SPECIAL NOTICES. GRAND TEST EXRIBITION FOIL TWO WEEKS, Commencing MONDAY, June 13, 1870, at EDWARD J. WILLIAMS' Great Central Housefurnishlng Store, OIL MARKESTREET. In order to substantiate the eussertions we have made resealing the wonderful keepin Dower of - ..7nE DAMS" S REFRIGERATOR, and to convince onr cnstomers tired the public generally, that it wind° all that is claimed. weppropese to give a GRAND TEST EXHIBITION, commencing as per above date. Several hundred pounds of ice will benumb even" day. Solid frozen fish can be teen at all times: The tempera:turs far below freezing point. Beef, veal, !arab , poultry, berrl and vegetables will be placed in . the Nefrigerater on fiest. day of the exhibition, and the same kept in a perfect state of preservation during the full time (Two NVERKS). f `Como one, come all and see this wonderful Invention. EVERY ONE INVITED, • Full explanation will ,pheerfolly. be_ given to all visitors. Remember the 'AOC°. EDWARDJ. WILLIAMS, 918 Market street. J. S. WOMAN & CO., jell It _A avw f do§ - Proprietors and Mannfacturers. IC?. ON ._FREE C ARLES - BASEL TINE '8 ART, GALLERY , No. 1125 CHESTNUT street, Braunre famoite,All totvnea. from Paris, comprising Paintings, Drawings, Frescoes, Stalnary l of .the_ Railer/ea- of -PArfs,. Vienna,- Florence, Rome; fit Basle, Saxe Weimar, etc.. etc., amount ing. to 0,000 different subjects • also, 800 diverse views of European scenery and antiquities.- Particular attention is called to Moses," by Michael Aelo, never before exhibited. the new series from _Paintings by. Carlo Dole', Carlonf, SAO, -Guido Rent, etc., the whole col lection of Rousseau's landscapes, and the Rembrandt Collection of the Gallery of Cassel. je22 wf s rp3t4 -00'CENTRAL HIGH SOFIOOL—A new Close will be admitted on MONDAY, June 27,1870, at 9A. M. Zech student meat be a resident of Phitadelphia, must have been, for; one year, a pupil in nu. Public Schools of the city, and Must have palmed an exarninatiMrin the Senior Claim, or First Division of a Grammar School. orJ. the First Grammar Division of it Consolidated School. . G. I. RICHE,- rat. LEHIGH VALLEY wo , . Rom) COMPANY ticil4 uutti August let next. pay off at tar and accrued intoreit any- of. their 140, Anortgage bonds; due - tirlaffi; -- on - presentattott at their Office, N 0.303 WALNUT street. . L. CiIIi.dIB . F.IILAIN, Treasurer. - Jule Z, 1870. . . 03211 mi ved.Hovir. - 4, - .ED HOSPITAL, NUB. IblB and 1520 Lonehairdutreet, Dispensary . Department. = idal tfeatirient ied medicine furnished gratultoualli o the poor U4LtTICAL - IiOTICES: 10° :1870. - - 1870. : 7 Ski ER TF, Flt - . * r : WILLIAM . LEELOS; 0c12.1-P1 n- HEADQUARTERB ' UNION I-RE PUBLICAN CITY EX EVETII t. 3 SIM it ititreet..,To the Union Republi— Elecutive - ecannittes Elect of the- Twenty-eighth Ward In accordance With... the, ralem governing thn Union Republican Art}"a, you amsemtle At the LAMB TAVERN. on Vo EDNESDA 1 . EVENING ilex t, June at 8 o'clock. and organize. iII.OOI7I.I.Iii&TICM with the rides. repretentatice to the City Executii.e Committee. By order of ,elte. 'Union Ilepublicen City- Exeentrre. Cointnittm ' JOAN L. HlLL,"Pre,lderit , Jaw* AicCrt..l,ot:C,ll, - DI. C. BONG; BtrTCHEIFLIIES II CUBA.. Tlslhe Spanhth Press on Madridasscres, ...."ofragio troirersal of of June 7th,, publishes the following article, Under this cap tion': "The Shooting in 'Cuba —Though' n currlng the risk of herfugstigiriatized as one of the Lebertettes, which term does not belong to -tis r w e - no 3 .v=pronose--to-r-vpose-totlfaCe- o f the world the •unheard-of and repeated enor mities of which the Cubans, are victims in the land of their birth: ' • " There are facts which cannot be passed by without notice. • -More than this, there are facts which ought not to be .ignored by those who are on the side of justice. Vandal acts should be kticiwn of the whole ,world. because should they remain 'hidden from view 'their authors would be encouraged to pursue with more vigor the route which leads to destruc tion and the devastation' of human life. " We thus speak be.dause, upon reading a despatch from Cuba giving account of another feat performed by the' volunteers, the blood leaps in our :veins, indignation touches the extreme limit,' and 'shame covers our front. And wherefore not? Who can put on.enough serenity to calmly read this : 'Such an one has been garroted in the presence of 60,000 per-. sons? ) . Who can read with cold, blood this: '— has been shot; Caballero de Rotas is equal to the occasion, and is drawing toward himself universal regard?'. • • • "Alt thisi and much mere is daily sent to us . from the Antilles. On reading such a batch of infamous news, the Spanish papers, which are styled by their editors - very patrietie, even the papers which are called Demberatie, shut up their mouths as though their managers had already been banged.- .- • -••- " Well, in View of such thing's `(which's call up the good times of the Middle Ages) it is right that the voice of justice should be heard; it is altogether proper that the conscience of every honorable man should lift itself up indig nantly and say to the world : Did you . . sup. pose that the grorinuslimeS of tlie"halter and knife had passed by? Did you suppose that the day of confistati onii, that is to say; robbery, assassination ; and legally-organized devasta tion and ruin had.disappearedirm the earth? If so, you fell into a kreat error,'Look at Un happy Cuba, and you will see with paifi that which we have just recounted.' • " • " Quesque tandem ablifere Catalitia paticottia nostril ? To what point shall we consent that civilizittion shalt be 'stained by such crimes? How long shall'we reivain silent, and conteni.: plate such unjust acts.?'. • THE LATE PEI4IAIIT rusi. e Plan of the Rec e nt Fenian "Cain. P!t!4l l 2' DICKENS MEMORANDA Anecdotes and Gossip About the Great No yellst. The Ettlish papers brought by the Scotia are lull of articles suggested by the death of Charles Dickens. We make the following ex tracts : Dickens as an Actor. ," Some of his dearest and closest friends were actors, and from the time of Mr. Ma creeds. to that of Mr. Pechter, his, chosen inti mates included many of the chief lights of the . British stage. As an amateur actor he him self was unsurpassed and unsurpassable. Those who remember the performances on behalf of the 'UMW of Literature and Art; those given ,privately at k ravistock House about wdozen years ago ; and those held on behalf .of'the Douglas' Jerrold Memorial Fund;know that the dramatic readings which took the world by storm of late years were the ripened fruit of a longanctintensie admiration for and •leaning to the stager' " The most, powerful, and the most painful of Mr.Dickens'aimpersonatione'Fagin,' the . Bill Sikes,' the murderer, and his vie w:ll—had their germ in the delineation-of the lighthouse-keeper, in the drama Written by Mr. Wilkie Collins, expressly for his friend; and some of the most competent judges have declared that the English stage lost .an orna ment, which would have revived its brightest days, by Charles. Dickens succeeding as an author and making literature his profession. But Mr.• Dickens's earnestness was each that, he not only took upon his own shouldere..the, most: arduous tasks connected with- the , ama tear performanCes for charitable objects with which- he . = so often associated himself, but superintended - the - minuWst - deffill, and often worked with his own hands to insure what he held to be the necessary effect. The Last Book Unfinished. Concerning his recent novel, and et_ habits -of - compositioli;Ss *ell as liiii - invetition of names, a Writer in , the ,:yeies says ‘• The Mystery of Edwin `brood,' we are told, gave its author more trouble than any of his 'formee.works. He. complained of this, perhaps with a sad presage_of-the-- truth. He, had, he thought, told too much of the story in the early numbers, and his thoughts did not' flow so freely as of yore. It will remain in complete forever, and the fourth of the - . story already given' to the public, and another part in manuscript; are all that will be knoWn of the last set of original characters their att.; thor has introduced tethe, world. When Mr.DickenscOMpLainedofhis work giving him trouble; we may be sure that the cause prompting the remark - Was not - slight; for no writer Het_ beforq himself more labori ously the task of giving the public his very, best. - A' great artist, who once painted_ his portrait while be was in the act of writing one of the most popular of his stories, relates ; that he was- astonished at - the trouble Dickens Seemed to take over his work, at, the mutiber -of forms in- which-he would"wfite-dowia thooeht before he hit out the one which seemed to his fastidious fancy the bestpand at the comparative smallness of the amount of _manusixript-eaeh-day's-sttthyg-Seimaed to have produced. Those, too, who have seen the on manuscript of-Ins works, many of which Le had bound and kept at his residence at Gad's Hill, dese.ribe them as full of interlinea bons and alterations ; while it is well known shat-the: quaint surzratn. of his characters, coneeriaing which essays have been written, were the result of much painstaking. " Dickens, trust i ng enius Which might have justitied his it implicitly and solely, placed his - chief reliance on his own hard labor. It is said that when he saw a strange or odd name on a shop board, or in walking through a village or country town, he entered it in his pocket-book, and added it to his '-reserve list 'l'llen, , runs the story, when he wanted a strik ing surname for a - „new character, he had but to take the first half of one real name, and to add itto the second half of a,nother,to produce the exact effect upon eye and ear of the reader he desired." A Hymn by Dickens. To the writer in the News we are also in debted fora fact relating to the "Pictures from Italy, "and for a, hymn, both of which will be new to the majority of readers : " Some of our readers may not' be aware that the 'Pictures from Italy.' which are now in all editions of Charles Dickens's works, Were originally contributed to this newspa per, and that its early numbers were brought out under his editorship: In the first number of this joumal, in the Daily V. of January' 21, IR4ti, appeared No.l of Traveling Let ters,' written on the Road, by Charhis Dickens.' In the Daily News of Febniary,l4; of the sanie year, Mr. Dickens wrote the fol lowing verses--which will be new to many— elicited by a speech at one of the night meet ings - of ' the wives of' agricultural laborers in - Wiltshire, held to petition for free trade The Hymn at the Wiltshire Laborers. " '.Dop ou all think that we ha.ve a reat need o cr y tyo our. God to put it in the he g arts of our gFeaepus Queen and her members of Parlerment to grant us true bread !'-L u cy at.. 13 rein " Oh Giod, wbo by Thy Prophet's band Didst smite the rocky brake, Whence water came at Thy command; The people's thirst to slake: Strike, now, upon this granite wall, Stern, obdurate, and high, And let one drops .of pity fall For us who starve awl die! "The God, who &mit a little child And; et lath in the midst, And promised him His mercy mild, As, by Thy Son, Thou didst : Look down upon our children dear, So gaunt, go cold, so spare, And` let their hies appear Where Lords a d G entry are! " Oh God, teach them to feel how we; When our poor infants droop, Are Weakeneol in our trust in Thee, , And how our spirits stoop : ror, in Thy rest, so bright and fair, All tears and sorrow sleep And their young looks, so full of care, Would make l'hire angels weep! " The God, who with His finger drew. The Judgment coming on, Write for these men, what - must ensue, Ere many years be gone! Oh God, whose bow is in the sky, Let them not brave and dare, Until they look (too late) on'high. And see an Arrow there! "Oh God, remind them! In the bread They break upon the huee These sacred words May yet'be read, In memory , of Me'l On (I.o'cl, remin - d thorn of His sweet CompsSidon for the poor, • , And how. He gave them Bread to eat, And went from door to door." • Dickens's Personal Habits. L A writer in the Daily Tilegraph, in referrtrig to the familiarity of, ail classes of people -- with the person of ensiles Dickens, thus writes of his habits of pedestrianism: ", The towering stature, the snowy 10010,3, the glistening spectacles, - the—listless , slouching port; as that of tired giant, of William Make, peace Tbadlieray, were familiar enough like wise in London•a few years=-since, but, corn ' paratively speaking,onlYto a select few. - belonged to Club-land, and was only to be seen sauntering there or in. West End Squares, or on his road to bis beloved Kensington, or in the antique hall at Ch.arterhonse on Found ;ern' day, or on Eaton bridge on the fourth of :June, or sothetimes, haply, on the top of a Bichniond omnibus journeying to a brief fur loogh at Hose Cottage. Tbackeray in Hounds ditch, Thackeray in Bethnal Green or at Carndeh Town, woulsi(have appeared anomal ous,'; as well could we picture Carlyle at Cremorne or Tennyson at Garraway's ; but. Charles Dickens, when in town, was übiquit ous. "He was to be met. by those who knew him, everywhere.--and who did not know him? Who haci , not heardliim, and who had not seen his photograph in the shop windows? The omnibus conductors knew him, the street bays knew bim; and, perhaps the locality Where his recognition would have been least frequent---for all that he was a member of the ,Athenaturn Club—was Pall Mall. Elsewhere he would turn up in the oddest pi es, and in the most inclement of , weather; in Ratan' Highway, on Haverstock-hill; - on Camberwell green, in Gray's Inn-lane, in the Wandsworth road, at Hammersmith. Eeroadway, in Norton 'Folgate, and at,Hensal New Town. A ban som _whirled you by the Bell and Horns at Broropton, and ' there was Charles Dickens striding as with seven-leagueed boots -in the direction , of North End, Fulham. The Metropolitan. Railway. sent you forth at Lisson Grove, and you met Charles Dickens plodding speedily. ',award the Yorkshire Stingo. Ile was to be met rapidly . striding the grim brick wall of the - prison in Coldbath' Fields, cir trudging along the Seven Sisters road at Holloway, or bearing under a steady press of sail, underneath Highgate Arch Way, or pursuing the even tenor of his way up Vauxhall Bridge road. He seemed to. prefer the - lengthy-thoroughfares of our exterior boulevards to narrow and , intricate - , streets, 'They offerel, perhaps, a better opportunity - for-iair-and honest walking; thii—per formance of that self-appointed task of pedes trianism which' for so many years be had undertaken, and • which well-nigh undevi aUngly, and wherever he was—in London, at home atGadshill;-in France, in Italy, or in ,America—lie performed to its .last rood and furlong!' In:another portion of the article from which the foregoing- extract is taken there is this de scription of his rather foppislistyle of dress, a peculiarity that:appears conspicuously in Gur= ney's photographs of him, -taken during his last visit to the United states: " His - appearance in , walking dress,in the streets during his later yeara was decidedly odd' and almosteccentric, being Marked by strongly pronounced colors, and a- cat 'of the garments which had somewhat of a sporting and somewhat, of atheatrical .guise. To thoSe who did not know that he was Charles Dick ens be:might have - been some prcisperous sea el,ptain, home from_ a long voyage ; -some Western senator on a tour in Eat o , some tountry,gentleman, of Devon or of Y pt, orkshire, xvho now and then bred a colt or two,"andWan a cup; bat never betted.", • ' ' Dickens on , Death. CHNEVES DICKENS—Gied at hid residence, Gad's ; Hill, Kent, Thursday, June 9, 1870, aged 58 years. Dead, your Majesty. -Dead, my lords and gentlemen. Dead, Right Reverends and Wrong Reverends, of every order. Dead, men and women horn - with Heavenly Com passion in year hearts. And• dying thus around us every day."—Bleak House, Chapter "The golden ripple on the a wall came hack again, and nothing - else—stirred In the . room. The old, old fasliOri. The fashion that came in with (=first garments, and Will last tinchabg,ed until our race has, run its course, and the wide firmament is rolled up like a scroll. The old, old fashion—Death ! 0, thank God, all who seeit,for that older fashion yet of immortality ! And look upori us, angels of young children, ivith;regards not,quite estranged when the Swift - Inver bears us to the. Ocean."—Dombey, 'Chapter 17. "The spirit of the child, returning, innocent, and radiant, touched the old man with its band, and beckoned him away. "—C/ame.s, 2d quarter. " - The star had shown him the way to find the God of the poor i and through humility, and sorrow, and forgnieuess, he had gone to hiS Redeemer's rest."—llaril . Times, Book 3 , ChapterD. "- " A cricket sings upon the hearth-, a broken child's toyligs upon the ground, and nothing else remains. "--cricket on the He«rth, Chirp 3. " I felt for, inyold self as the dead may feel if they ever revisit these scenes. I was glad to be tenderly remembered, to be gently pitied, , not 'to '.be quite ~forgotten."—Bleak w ase,ChaPter 45. " From these garish lights I vanish now forevermore; with a bearttul, grateful, re s'pectful, and aflectionateTarewell—and I pray God bless "us - every one."—laSt . Reid/lig, Lon (Ion, March - 6, 1870. " When 7 - die, put near me something- that has loved the light and had the sky above it always."—Ota Guriosty6hop, Chapter 71. " Lord, keep my Memory Green !"—llaunted Man, Chapter d. 'Now,' he murmured, 'I am happy.' He fell into a light shimber, and waking smiled as before, then spoke of beautiful gardens, which, he said stretched • out before him, and were lied with figures of men, women,- and many children, all with light upon their faces, then whispered that, it was Eden—and so died."— Nickseiry, Chapter 58. —" died like a child that had gone to sleep." —Copperfiettl,'CltotEr 9. ' • and, bettan ihe.world—not this world 0, not this. l'he world that setsthis night."-- Bletik House, Chapter 65. —"grone before the father ; 'far . beyond the twilight judgments of this, world; high above its mists and Obscurities."—Littte Dovrite,./3,00k 2, Chapter 19. and lay at rest. The soletnu stillness was no marvel now."—Old Curiosity Shop, Chapter 71. , " It being high water, he went out with the tide.—Goppelyield, Chapter JO. A' WALT. STREET SENSATION. Edward B.'llietebium in a New Role. The Herald says : Tho, summer monotony of the Stock Ex, change was relieved ysterday, by a fresh sen sation of an old actor in thescene. At the _beginning of business a broker, acting as the agent of Edward B. Ketchum, announced his inability to fulfill his contracts—the formal way of stating that he had failed.' Subsequent investigation, showed that Young Ketchum since his return to' the street has • been again' speculating on a gigantic scale, his operations in gold lind-sckti reaching a tetal ef: about, ten millions odollars. As a stock speculator he •was , this time' successful, and' his good luck in this line Prevented disastrous results to his ventures' In gold. As it is, his broker' fails for',the . comparatively small , amount of only eighty thousand dollars,__ The _ mistake which Young Ketchum made was in en deavoring 'to "'bull " :gold, which his old ex perience bad led-, him to think was always bound to rise. He, made a mistake which, many others made who forgot that the warm over and that the country is steadily _returning to its : pristine prosperity. The immense cotton crops of the South and the financial success of the Government are constantly operating to wipe out the gold pre mium. . The defeat of the gold " halls" of 1870 -is onlyli naturatresult of the steady return of the country to Alpecie payments. Unless a' foreign war should embarrass us the resources - of the country will gradually and easily bring abotitalistimptiOn.-- • -- . . —A —A railroad conddetor in Maine has-met no accident in twenty years and 700,000 miles-of travel. AIVFIIL. * ACCIDENT Al' woßcasrza. , - Tremendous Explestornet Nitre-01 year: Inc.-One Ilan Vatted d3O Wounded... Twelve House* Lemuel Led and Others Badly. Shattered. Wonczerzn, June W.—At about 9:30 o'clock this morning a freight train from Boston came down to Worcester Junction on its way to lbany. At Worcester Junction the Nor wich, Providence and Springfield roads inter sect each other. The morning express from Boston for New York had passed the Junc tion about fifteen minutes before 'on the Springfield track; the express from Worces ter for Providence had moved on the Providence'track about two minutes before, and the freighttrain in question was stopped, according to regulations, before crossing the Norwich track. The stoppage was sharp, sudden, and violent, Shaken by the concus sion, a quantity of nitro-glycerine, With which the rear car. of the freight train was loaded, instantaneously exploded, with a soundwhich one of those who heard it likened, in describ-, ing the scene, to "thuner gone mad!e freight train was blown d bodily off the ' "tr T ac h k into - fragments,hurled into - the air, diSsipated, disseminated, to descent - "again on all sides 'in a shower of shattered wood and' twisted iron, the traces of which now. strew the hills =and dales ter nearly a mile around. This is no exacsara-, hon. A piece of solid car-wheel, weighing sev eral pounds, has just been found, not doorm i utes ago, imbedded firmly in the of a house more than half a mile from the Junction, on - the - slope of the hill just below the fine Roman Catholic college, whose pieturesque fagade makes a leading feature in the land scape here. In this .JR.oman Catholic col lege, also; two-thirds of the window-panes in the front facing towards the Junction are broken to pieces, many of them haying. -been - blown as - clean - eut - ertheir frames as •so.. , much oiled paper might have been. The like damage.has been done to another large build ing—a young ladies' seminary, which tands on a lull just, opposite _ the-Catholic, institution. -- Between these hills and the Junction a . long . valley intervenes, in which the explosion did but little harm. Nor did the Pioidderree train, advanced, a s . have said, but a little Way.on its track, suffer anythingwerse,than., the shattering of glass in tile rear windows of its rear car. The depot building at the Junction, being perhaps fifty -feet or so in front , of the freight train, likewise - escaped. , But the whole`line of buildings on the western elite - of the track .upon' which the exPlesiblf - 'occurred presents the appearance cifithe , pathWa,y of a tornado. Some of these buildings are quite large, and of brick, others of wood;.but all alike have been battered, twisted and literally " smashed."--R e ors were wrenched from their hinges, shutters turned upside down or torn oil; and dropped into the gullies below. A large bifilding, occupied as a - gun 'factory, has scarcely a pane of glass left in its whole ex tended front, while just under its len stands a nice and sizeable dwelling house, quite -unin jured. Some of the_walls, scraped and riddled with the flying fragments of the shattered train, looked if a battle had been-fought be fore them. - Upon_the most serious aspect of the case it isimpossible as yet tUget accurate , One man, a section hand, who waswalking by the side of the train at the moment of the explo sion, is known to have been killed, but only traces of his remains have been as yet r or-pro= bably ever will be, found. A_brakemati -- thinks-i he recognized a part of the poor fellow's hand in a, piece of torn and blackened flesh which was picked up at a distance of several rods from the road. In a hog-pen still further off was found the bod,y of-another man not yet, identified,' headless and sickeningly torn and disfigured. These two are the only persons as yet be lieved to have perished. The number of wounded is sadly larger. Eighteen have al ready been carried into the, police station, most of them quite seriously, and three or four, as it would seem, fatally injured. They were people of the vicinity, quietly occupied about their own affairs, in their own houses or workshops. More cases are likely to be re ported every moment as the que.st is the ruins goeS on. The damage done to property is roughly guessed at as amounting to 'half a million of dollars. Much valuable machinery has been destroyed in the "Ethan Alien Arms Fac tory," and in the other workshops hard by, and there has been wild wont with the house hold gods of not a few of these quiet little New England homes. The track has suffered no injury. It is fearful to imagine what a story it might have been my duty to send you bad the explosion occurred but two minutes earlier, when its full force would have been felt by the Providence express, then standing full of passengers within a few rods of the fatal car.— Wor/d. OETRAGE IN THE COAL REGIONS. Attempted Highway pe Robry...-4arrow • Esca. The Pottsville Journaliiay Another daring attempt 'at murder and highway robbery occurred near Middleport yesterday forenoon, the particulars df so far as we have beep , able to - ascertain, are substantially. as follows: A boy named Solon Koch, son pf William Koch; residing south of Sharp Mountain, took a load of Hour to Mid dleport, 'where he 'disposed of it and' started for borne. When near thejunction of the New Philadelphia road and the road leading across Sharp. Mountain 'he was fired upon from' ambush, two shots passing through his - hat. The mules became frightened.' and ran up the j3liarp Mountain road, when another shot, was, fired after him but missed its Limit, The . bo3r, then hurried up his tean, and though the' highwaymen pursued him the fleet-footedness of his mules' succeeded in making good his escape. No blue has yet been bad to the . guilty parties. It is evident, how .ever, that they were persons who knew that young Koch had gone to Middleport for the purpose of selling the flour, and that he would have a considerable sum of money on his return. It is strange that farmers will allow their sons—mere boys—to go on errands of this kind alone and without firearms, after the ter rible warnings they have had of the danger connected , with them. The murder of young Yohe, but a few weeks ago, near Shenandoah, Should have been a sufficient warning to all farmers in. the county that no man or boy should drive to market alone' ith anything to sell.. The roadsides throughout the county, it would seem; are 'lined with • hungry men, who; through desperation, are driven to this method of 'maintaining themselves. They are cowardly, -and will not attempt an open- handed •fight, but will shoot' down their vic tims in cold blood, from ambush, without, a moment's warning, for the sake of securing few Paltry_dollars. We can_ give our farmers no-better adVlce than tell them not to venture to market alone, but in , all cases let two or three - go- together, and - let' • them go -well armed and prepared to meet the assassins who lurk in ambush and wait for, their-prey. , THE COURTS. QUARTER SESSIONS—Ridge LULUOM--110L111- oide cases were again assigned for to-day, but the alisence of witnesses sent therii over until this afternoon. In the interim cases w COs were taken up, and ono involving a cross action for assault and battery and-larceny oc— cupied the attention of the Court all the morn ing, Withent.being concluded. —A .Cincinnati census taker, who was 040 'employed by the marshal in - 1860, hays many of the ladies have groWn younger during the past ten years. FACTS AND FANCIES; The Portrait of Eater AlleaProa, .p3: : 13A13A - 11( RFLEN WglT3tA.7* 19lowly 1 raised the purple folds concealing That. face, magnetic S the morning's beam; While' slumbering memory thrilled at, ite, revealing, Like Merl* n wakerung frmn hie ~mddrbleY dream. Again I saw the brow's translucent pallor, ' The dark hair floating o'er it like a ptatae . The sweet, imperious mouth, whose haughty valor Defied all portents of impending dOom. • Eyes planet calm, with something- in. their' • vision ti That seemed not of earth's I mortal'aditure", born,' Strange Strange mythic faiths and fantasie t g ElYidan• And far, sweet,dreams of "fairy lands forlorn ;" Unfathomable eyes, that held the eorrow- , Of vanished ages in their shadowy deeps, Lit by that prescience of a heavenly morrow Which in high hearts the immortal spirtpf • keeps. _ Oft has that pale, poetic prftence haunted — My lonely mustngs at the twilight hour, Transforming the dull, earth-life it enchanted; With marvel and with mystery find With power. . , Oft have I heard the sullen sea-wind moaning Its dirge-like requiems on the lonely shore„ Or listened to the autumn woods intoning , The wild, sweet legend - of the lost Lenore. Oft in some ashen evening in October Have stood entranced beside a monlderi.ng tomb, Hard by tbat visionary Lake,of Auber = Where sleepithe;shroudedforrif of I.llalurae-At Oft in chill, star-lit nights, have-, kiard'iluic‘ chiming . Of far-off, mellow belle on - the keen air, And felt their molten-golden inusic To the heart's, pulsessonswering unaware. Sweet, mournful eyes, long closed upon earth's Sleep restfully after life's fei , ered tiream f Sleepy wayward heart! till on some - rcool; bright morrow, • - -.• Thy soul, refreshed, shall bathe in morning's - • ~'-: , , , c - ,;1,) ,. .1 Jirlf Though oloud and sliadowreat upon thrt ~ , :•..11 / Arid rude hands lift the - . draP9rYP i t I Y-Pck ..? ‘, 13 Tim, as a birthright,'ahall restore t y gr , - , And heaven reltindle all the,. atatirthaer ' ,(r ke ~ • -i-ON aNckiff . lo.l ,!! : j . • —A gOlderr fleece IS suggested liii tiok crest of Fisk's new six-in-handdrag. —A Florida Indian "nine _ feet and a, halt/ tall, is evidently no refative ef "Lo." —The city 11119 got rid of things which Were ' -suppdsed to pertain. to Beethoven ;..but -wer ' " retain the oven part.-- , Nete YOrk Paper. , H , l „—A Kenosha (Wisconsin) fisherman lately , , took two thousand eight hundred pounds of ,-, trout and whitefish from his net at one lulu]. —lt seems too, bad that after all Theodore. Tilton has done for her sex that Red - Cloud's squaw wants his scalp forAdoor mat. ' i —A negroJustice ofthe Peace in Miss as ppt _ claims to-have been conjured full of bugs and lizards by another off-color patriot. _ , —Western Connecticut is building a rail-. road, and so eager are the inivibitants for its • use that they spend the evenings riding over the already completed section in - the dump - ears used by the workmen. —lt is reported that Carlyle will be Beecher's . . guest while in this country. The Con - mem/at u Advertiser thinks this " a clever. stratagem of - Carlyle's to ward off any posthumous attaaks upon his Christianity." ---- , ., . , —They have caged a burglar at tb,Q §raCtlse jail who did business. He kept' ala :account.' book, and gave' each man credit fortbe aid-` cle stolen. He informed the offiber that his ' was the system of double entry--once into !, your safe and again into his books, - .. . —A gentleman at Washington, D. C., has in his possession a Hebrew , Bible t which thetttle , page says was printed " in,the house of Bah, , Cafa, in Genf., Switzerland, in the year of the ; world 5378, " and "examined ,by ,lohanites. Casper." The book is conseqUently 252 Years', , ' old. ' ' —Ohio comes' up and puts in' its r the champion remarkable meinory. It claims that a man in Salem; in that 'State, can from memory the weather of any and every ' day since 1827—that he distinctly reinembean, whether any day was clear or clondy, warm or cold, rainy or snowy., • —A wedding in Bridgeport, Conn:, was terrupted for a moment the other day, by an apparently sane gentleman, who stepped up to the bridegroom at the altar, tapped him on; the shoulder, and said in an audible , ' " Before this little affair goes any furtbee,'l I would like to know one thing—who will the fires?„ • —The tithe to which an Indian mprderer betz- ' • • " longs is known by. the method .by which the victim is scalped. The eheyennes remove a piece, not larger than a silver dollar, from , piediately over the left ear ; the Airapahods take the same from over the right ear. Others _take from the crown, forehead, or nape of the neck. The fifes take the entire scalp, from ear to ear, and from forehead to nape of neck. ' —Dahte Gabriel Rossetti's portrait of Mrs. Morris; wife of the author of "The Early Paradise," is thus described It represents • ' a face of remarkable _perfectness of propor tion and nobility of intellectual character, but with a depth of meaning half told, questioning eyes and mute lips, which make it, once seen, never to be forgotten; and painted with a wealth of color and completeness of poWer unequaled by any modern work, so far as know." r • —The Queen's ruessage about Dickens was not sent to his family at all, but to the Clerk. of her Privy Council, Arthur -Helps.; The Pall Mall Gazette, with an unctuous touch of obsequiousness, says of this perfectly ordinary. telegram : . • "This feeling message was at. once trans, ,• , mitted to the family at Gad's Hill, and .wlll. doubtless tend more than any other expreSSion' • of human sympathy could possibly do to soothe them in their distress. [For the Philade'. Evening{ Bulletin.) 7 The SuppresSion of Gambling. andl Berating. We wish to advocate in this city the orgarii 7 zation of a society for the suppression of gambling and policy dealing, anti thus:fill : lyr, -- large field of practical usefulness:and.philan. ,'.l ' threpy, that as yet seems to.have attracted; very little public attention. There' are at tha • present time two hundred gambling and policy dealing shops in our city, and their ' influence and demoralizing effects are visible ' in the large class who foolishly and ignorantly patronize them. The law artd — M advocates , j seem powerless or indifferent to suppress these places, ami _a society of the kind--we suggest -- will, we believe, be found the only effectual;. means to close up these two hundred gambling. hells and - policy shops of Philadelphia:4lo.. , ave thousands of their deluded' habituos. Who of our philanthropists will move in thin ' matter ? T. F. June 22d,1870, i ~ ;}i7 =MEM