• ,i , ii• -4011A*-- • ---..--- • ... ~ . ... , . . , ‘ ...„..... 7 , _ __,..... . . _ • ) . Ili . ift A. 1 r Lpii . , • ~,, .: ~ :. , •'.'t ',t 4', .. i 'AI . 1•• -'' ..,....t,•,`;' ifti — 1 l• •••••• , ,--a:- , : , ..."--.^- , , , . '. 7- ,---•---- :'- ''. ' "--' '"- 4 -- --•- - • • _ '•- ~=• - . - • -.4 .4\ 11 V,,...---_,„/..-..'-..-.-.'---- ,', .1 , ~' - '',"'i.) 710 , ' .„.. .: . . , -._i ', s-• ---- -.- _._ --,,,,, •• ' ..._....,.,.• ..?../._____‘ , .-__.......:L . ... 4..,.-.L.:4..__.2.1....._ .. - ,:l.„ ...... '*•;•_- - -J,4, , R..-,,N i ci , .., i _, ...q.------_:,_...:_:,..:_L..•.__................_'_,L.,_..... : _...t .:., - -.., ....._. ......_ ) _... ... .... ii.- •••• 1 i 5 , • , . ... __,..„. • .6.-.---- - --I- 4 - • `iiiir - . ' • a .• -...r_4i,•,,• __. .-,, _ ' . . . ... . . . . - • . • -•.-•• :c r_-:- :;,;- -.'''-' • * 1 . ••:- . • . 7 .',:,,, - .., -:, '''a:, , r - T 0 .), r , ._ ='-:- • i . . .... - --, .-, 7 . - ...,.,-, 10 .-- -.- - _es , -...--_- „..1 - - -:.: ' • . • , • -. , .'i i t,~' ',.~. ; + ; Y k ;'i a F~St MEE VQWW.XXMr. — gCs. 76. CIVIIMDING CARDS, INVITATIONS for Parties, &o. New styles. MASON & W eetaututreet. ' Moat* tri I' ED EARTH CLOSETS ON ANY floor, in or ont of doors, and PORTABLE Eeivrn COMMODEO, for use in bed-chambers and elsowhoro. Are absolutely free from offence. Earth Closet Own panes office and salerroom at WU. fl. BROADS', No.. 1221 Market street. an29-tfq DIED. MAGARICAT..—On Thursday evening, July 7th, An --thew R. klogarical. Due notice will be given of tho funeral. MORRIB.—On the evening of tho ftli lnst., Paschall Norris, Jr. Ms friends and those of the family are Invited to at tend his funontl, on Sixth•divy. the Eth instant, without further-notiee.---To-peeetjn-'l)elawarecountron the-.-ar riviti at hpring Hill Station of the. 2.110 tram from Thir ty-first and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia. Carriages will be. in waiting on Its-arrival, and also the 1.1u3 train from West Chowder. • ' * F Commodore - Robort It I. chic. C. S. N. SHOTWELL.—On the 7th inst., Rebecca W. f 4 botweit. Fier relatives"and.friends are invited' to attend her funeral, on Second day, the Iltb lust. ' at 1 o'clock, from .1.. r into residence, northwest corner of 'Franklin %nil Noble streets. , = TADIR.,-.on_the' afternoon of-tlmath instant; Mary- Ann J. %cif/lot .E. Taber, and daughter of the. .late , Johiskiton.,. The ililectivie*and frleude of the family v.reveepeatuDY' invited to attend the funeral, from the residonGe of her sbn I.d; No. Islo' Spring tinnier/ • street; this ( Friday) uffenrkoorr.-at 4 o'clock eIC - TAYLOR.—Suddenly., nt tim Everett Rouse, New York. on ZoffedfieedaY,..ll3lY 6th, Paymaatir I".",fdanton Tay lor, - liroted States Navy. 400' 7 EYRE & LAIIDELLi • WO. DEPARTMEN CANVAS DRILLS. P A DDED DRILLS. SOOTOR CHEVIOTS. CABBIMEUE BUR SUITS. CORDU , ROVES AHD TOWELS. . . B 'COD LIVLR - OIL, ClTltilit 2tl —l.—aguesta. 7 ollll ZIA EtBILA-PlTMlCtarket - SPECIALr NOTICEti. - - -- - Flannels, Tweeds, Cheviots, Drap d'Etee; !Crepe, Alpacas, Seer suckers Linens Ducks S UMMER SUITS S l'mr " R " 'SUIT St SUMMER S SUMMER E S UITS SUMMR S uris •QUMMER - S (TITS St-'%%" lEI SUIT S suits fcr Business, Dress Traveling Fishing,'qathing,` Boating, re a otilr-ft:qitit±rlight WANARA_I:ER's, _BlB-ama-820 OBESTNIIT STREET. ItrOCV4,PAVEIkiFN T bit new pm - ewe-0 for tild'ewalka,Go‘urt-yord.t. Pimp Cellar*, Flot.ri , Tor Breweries , 3talt Hormel, di;„ luta been very successfully tested in Now Turk, and id now teintz Mid on Green street, woOotgwentiAbird • /t is toth&ome - . - durnble. and cbeap. Property owner* are reeprectrugy roadested to ex • N..Y. STONE WORKS. Piii . c.4?--1/o L did &Tenth avonun iron hm lv a l'hiludelpilitColl.lco,i . . YALLE-Y RA IL -4.O.I3.O.IO)COItitANY until August Ist next, pay off at par and accrued interest any of their first mortgage bonds, due In 1873. on &vaunt:anon at their Office, No. .1.3 AvemiuT street. • • L. CLIAIIBERLAIN,:trineurer. JrNE IITO. Jen lamer !ZHOWARD HOSPITAL, , NUS. and 1520 Lombard street, Dispensary Department. ino!. treatment ad ai ddicine furnished gratuitottsl7 to the poor DIVIDEND NOTICES. freOFFICE' OF' 'Tay; UNION IM PROVEMENT COmPANy, NO, 353 WALNUT EET, . • ' . - "P3tn.anat.rtha - ,Jull`6, '4870: • The Board of Directors hive - this day declared a semi= .annual dividend of *IX PERCENT., payable on end af= ter the 15th inst. EDWARD ROBERTS, In., iY I4 -3tf Treasurer. E iZia - PHILAtikLPFILA. RA: AND EEiING RAILROAD COMPANY—OFFICE 227 SOUTH )IL -, RTII STJIEET..t PUILADErPIIIA., June 29, ISle. DIVIDEND NtiTRJE. The transfer book's ofthis Company' will be closed on' the 7th ofJnly next, and reopened on July 31. -- A Dividend of Five Pef - Cent. haiv-been declared on the preferred and common stock ;clear of National and State taxes, payable in cash on and after the 22d of July next.to the holders thereof, as they stand - routs te‘ss the rvd,otthe books of the Company at the clove of hitai. Je f -kj-•b—yl ' July next payable at - this office. • — ids must be witnessed and .etantped. All orders for end - 13: BRADFORD, jeV,lntrp - • Treasurer: r - OLIT - 1 - tiA - L NOTICES 1870. SHERIFF "WILLIAM H. 'LEEDS. jel6 H ocl2rp' • ' . BALDWIN _ , Fur a pleasa,nt . trir9 - Ino ama.:lo4o, go with' our Anntedi Fxoursion to Atlantio City, SEtturcfak, July 9th. Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railniad. NATIONAL CAMP MEETING AT OAKINGTON, BID., ' Commencing TUESDAY, Jilly'l2th OM, and continuing s. • Trains for Canip Grou ten nds ay will leave Philadelphia (Sunday excepted) at 8.30 and 11.15 A. DI., and 4.00 and 31 30 P. DI. • Pound trip tickets, at reduced rates, caa be purchased nt FIS CHESTNUT Street, or at Depot, BROAD Street and WASHINGTON Avenue._ jy7 12trp§ ....44=2% DELIGHTFUL DAILY, EX- Curator's to Gloncestor Polnt.Gardens. A iways n breeze at this quiet, cool and pleasant resort. Take or send the fetidly. Steamers with every comfort 4 ice-water, &c./,_ leave South street every .fow min utes. TO RENT. CAPE. MAY.-$3OO BENT: FOR DE f:trablei furnißlied Cottage: For full portioulurn inquire of TIIOMAS BITTINCf 924 Arch street, or .CREESE McOULLTIM, emu) Bray. •. it -11r} HANDSOME COTTAGE FOR RENT. . 1 The pareonige adjoining the Preabyterian Church, on Darby Level, 'vicar Darby, containing twelve room, will be rented low to a good tenant. Apply to . Dll.. HOOPES, Kingeoesing, Or S. MACHU 1232 Markot street. 8 Stw: WANTS• tal!! WANTED- TO RENT A STORE. Milk on south aide of Chestnut street, between ninth and Thirteenth streets. Address W. 0. 8., Jra 2t* • • BULLETIN OffiCe. .-'WANTED-:-BY' A. l . YOUNG MAN, - An situation as . Bookkeeper or Clerk. Has • had nevernLyears_p_mtical-c-xperience.--BeferenceaLgim._ ,Address .° 0. U.," Ms office, je24,rp tf,9 Library istreivit 1870. IVE * II. F. KENNEY, SW What They Aret h tZal :r: nd About Where c Rotherniel has gone to his farm tlte Fine of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, after painting at his great Gettysburg. plaint/0. mitt battled by the intense 'heat of last week. Shortly before leaving he had something ap-, proaching a sunstroke, while wosking at the' immense canvas upon a' ladder, in a pOsltion just below the large sky-light of ids studio. Inrtb&antainn - he - will - itturfrwitli - Wi eye re freshed for work, and then very quickly give the finishing strokekto his masterpiece. fom",the psi iclpt ' e of iei'con struction, a hot-house. Moscof those in Phila delphia are noliv completely, 'uninhabitable. Roberts lately asked a friend into iliti,:-.7lllmo derateiveather aLbower r ot. elegance and coin ' fort ; " Come into my refrigerator," said he soothingly. The mercury stood it 98. On escaping again into the street, where. the ther mometer only indibited . fl 5, 'the visitor ex claimed, ".How cool it is. outsider Roberts has just modeled with great snecess-4 portrait bust ef a lovely -child, hiltiN He has nowa, number of orders from persons of taste and cultivation, and we suppose that pretty soon a fashionable parlor will hardly be thought complete without the images of the propnctors from Ps — chisel, like the heads of ancestors in _An _Roman atrium. Mr. Roberts will leave for Long Branch this week. Reilly has been in town for a week, model ing a colossal figure of Commerce, to be cast in metal by Robert Wood & Co. Sheis eight feet high, and might affirie be taken for a lofty , Hope, as she leans upon an anchor and looks upward : but the other accessories ex plain. , Messrs. Wood & Co. have just moulded in bronze, with all theii wonted perfection, his Portrait of Mr. David A. Sayre, the wealthy banker of Lexington, Ky. It is astanding fig ure, fully life-size. As it stands in Messrs. Wood S Co.'s large Show wlndoW,near the sit ta llg figure ofT1" - W.llughes, Esq., el this city, we hardly know which to prefer in point - of clean modelitig, tasteful chasing, and rich coloi; perhaps..aftetall, the preference would be given by most to the brpnzo statuette of Grant, which is finished "like a jewel. - 111ey are all cast in the utmost beauty of the „.art. _The rime-accomplished ; = bronze-founders are expectin,,,,-soOn ther- - standing=tolessifs=lepre; - ,"citing Sh'ilrecpeare, indended.for the _W. I. Central Park, and unon which Ward has been laboring for about a year.' It will:be aliubject upon which Messrs. Wood & Co., will test Theirzucttle, - and, we - are-sure,-eritlarge - their reputation.: Bailly has progressed.:v6V--*fildly:- Washington, with his etihestriau itatae. The • I!nonnous horse is in attitude, and All that a steed should bare he does not lack Save - a proutTrider,on so•prOpt a hack." The portrait of Grant, - for this grimp, will prOgriiss during thesimmer and autumn,and, with Bailly!s unmatched celerity of execution, will he finished in a shorter time than could properly be-looked for: - = . - - - - 31 - 1:13: - B. Waugh, wilh pis talentel daughter, 31iss*Ida Wallet, is it Greensiiurg, Westruore land Co., Pa. Mr. Conarroe is at Salem, N. J. ; Ferris is on his farm near Merlon Square. K night,- leaving behind the large canvas on which he has commenced to Portray Liesde mona,•Brabantio, and the Moor of Venice, has tied to the retreat of -Altoona. He will paint some portraits bo. that neighborhood, thus combining a peculiarly successful bu - ttess a peculiarly genuine pleasure. Joseph John bas wandered to the banks of the Schuylkill, at Pluenixville. The chromo of his " Changed Cross," executed by Hoover, is certainly the best piece of- litliegraphio Ivork yet prothicedk .in 1 Philadelphia. 'The" first edition was exhausted directly, and the next ' will not be ready u.ntil September, when some improvement in the colors will be efli:eted, making it doubtless one of the most successful Printe , of the Fall The landscape artiSte ale scattered, seeking the • tp:lleC;ti:t of nature in,,hqx prinste. - Onlibe otni).Riehardfi remains 'having re ceived an order for a large Italian subject, he does not wish to spoil his eye by the conteru_ 'dation of,scenery and atmosphere of anther style. ' Hamilton, too'. just at Presen'6is in the city; meditating, however, fresh woods and pastures new. He occupies George Bensell's ,tudio, on 'Arch street, over Gihon's photo graph galleries. William ttt• T. Richards iS on the return from a lovely' nook on the New England coast, called, from „the „best, we can. learn,,-by the , caressing 'Pet-name of Cuddyhunk. There; in some congenial ;esthetic society,lxehasbeen analyzing. and dissecting- the sSad and,tiitter• „ Edward Moran has at last succeeded in sub letting his studio; and ig all ready . for a "hegira to New York. He will .b e 'gr "dal y dn iss ed here by many artistic and drainage friends., Thomas Moran is in his pretty country-plaCe'near Falls of Schuylkill. Pe s ter :Moran's health still gives the greatest anxiety to his friends. L. D. Lewis has, already made an excursion to Maryland, and now , contemplates an •ex ploratiall of the grearGlen *aniong. the White Mountains where Hill is now painting the his toric tragedy of he Willey Family's destruc tion by landslide. Mr. - Isaac Williams intends to repeat his profitable trip to Centre county, Rumor speaks of an incipient view in Fairmount Park, on a large scale, ordered from_his brush by high - piticial authority. • S. P: Dyke is painting scenery near: Pitts- . . Henry C. 13ispIngrkiefaktng a brief vacation from his New York studio labor; at Long lisanch. . ' • Alexander Lawrie , is finishing, seyeral. por qraits, and Will soon make a' sketching tour up the Hudson; Mr Lawrke expects . to spend the ,`months of September and qctotiOr in the ,Adir. ondacks. • . • —When Hawthorne was in En'gland he was told by Moue/3ton blilnes, from whose -lapds a portion of the Pilgrim lattices emigrated, that the 'next Voyage of the bfayfiewer, after she had landed the Pilgrims, was with a cargo of slayesfrotn-Afriea to, Vae We4t /Jadit3s. . THIE AprzleAttitis or itlkie Osi.Etairel , Opinions draw Pails Sourintaiii. The OrleanA 'Princes! letter of the' 19th' ultimo, deruamling rebsibilitatiOnr, receives, various comments iri the trench RreSs, of which we translate blew; • The Pays, by the petcof pad de Ostisaigna9, pronounces against tifeir reAdirtission, in a three-colcunn article, which terminates thus:. "If they wish, these Princes of the Honse of . Orieatui, to return as simple cliize*,aet- them tinCleistand'tbat the best prookt,ho can give of their patriotism is to stay where - they are. _lf_they_conte aikcandidatea-for-thOthromthey will find . the keys of , France:, in two,' cities, Strasboicrg and . Bottlogtte. 1145 w - if they choose,let them imitate the example' 9f that heroic lady whew their father: abused, and who oamo to challenge thethredie - liiiheThiii, on the verysoil of Pranco. -- lie - t•thein date - to look at Haul, at Bleye! " -- The Journal de France, in regard to the tame petition, has - littlekto say,, contents itself with asking the Orleans Princes , Whather the elder branch of their tmder ; _the reign - of Louii Philippe, was allorred enjciy 'the right which they axe now clairningfor them selves. ` On the other side the - Te mps and the obi, :-Moniteur-receive the — petithen - ve4=favorably. The National makes the _following oiltion7- tionii, which are doubtless correct,. !Op ; Iptrk pire doeinet feel itself strong enOpglile;Opett the door for aspirants to the throne: . " Itr it simply , on their Tightens Prenchtnen,. claiming the place which-belongs every son of the common country,: that: these- members 'of the Orleans fami ly have -reiirected then iffe mand far abOlishing-the _dentee.s restraining them? We would it were so,;, but tbese' are princes ; it i 5 a family of cauiiida.tes who pre sent thernselves. Their very letter does not' conceal tliis characteristic, for the signatures , over. which the request comes are not ar ranged in the natural order, which gene rally gives precedence. to age, a but in' the sequence fiired , - - by -- the hernditary principle used amongst Crowned RBRABRABILE OBITUARY. _ lrovi They farleveln - The following astonishing effusion accom panied a death notice in a recent, Milwaukee paper. A „little girl of that city had been drowned while playing - witlia pettleg_an — d; - schoolmates - err the - Tiver'g - hanir,arwhile her heart-broken parents and kindred wertrin,the sorest affliction aimetical friend of the family' sang.throngh thepress : '‘ 01 let her claim one Illeasant hour with young coinpanicaorgay ;- We See the song birds onward tour,-And-why should - she - not play? , With buoyant spirits on she walked, The pet dog followed near, And with her neighbors' children talked. in accents loud and clear. When,py.the Waterside they Stood, All joined a game of • ispy,' , With cheerful heart, in mirthful - m00d,, - Thelleg — chzied far and nigh. Just at tbat,nionient •M011ie; fell Into the'rip'. ?lingstrearn; , •While men;.stwero standing elosekfliy: With coward heafts, i ween. One • playmate ran and beggett'cif :Aida TO 'render 31ollie aid ; These wolves - dressed tn the garbs of Men, Were deaf to- alkalursaldy.' Twite; thrice; she rose, again, pgpan, The children cried aloud, ' Save' MOTlVT'hompson, do, good - men - 1 - ' --- No! no ! - the -moristers-vowedf----INser -3lollie stretched her snow white arm : Oh; mercy! save me, pray!' These men looked on without alarm, 'Then basely sne-aitv't4 ay, No' not an effort would they ~„. ' 9 4u .a, The children scream and run .Poor Moat /foist us all forsake Before the setting sun. The crowd soon now came around the spot, But not a glimpse was seen. is this the place?. Is that? or not? No mark was left, between. 'A !ant boy !plunged boldly in, To rescue, or to try. Too' late! too late! Oh, what, a sin! These feeling children cry. At, length one of earth's noble men, Brave Tompkins, is his mime, Heedless of clothes, or boots, or when, ;Dived headlong in the stream, and brought i'oor Mollies snow white snow face To urfaee of the .deep, Her hair confused ,ind putof place', Her eyelids closed is leep. The father at this time. ran wild, BewilderedAt .the. Sight; Unto his bagom Dressed his child, And homeward aped with 'night. "No pains were sparred to bring her around—Alas ! 'twos all in.vain ! Amish° was, wrapt within her shroud, No more" to play again: l'oor 3lollic's teachers heard the news, And flocked around her corse, The shock did e'V'ry Mikart confuse With anguish and re morse ;13 The scholars, tootiod bless them now !—ln sorrow looked disineyed; They strewed sweet flowers on her brow, And o'er the coffin prayed. And now, poor Mollie, in y shell, INTe'll bid, a last adieu, 0, may we meet in heaven to tell how one and all loved you! The parents and the family. For mercy rent the air ; With pangs—of sudden agony, They laid their bosoms bare." After this follows an elegiac acrostic ! - FANATICAL NUNS. The Sisters of St. Theresa. Ftim an article in the last number of -MI the Year Round we extract these items :"" The nuns of St. Theresa had to go barefoot. Blind obedience was their principal Jaw. A nun who made a.lvry face at bad bread was stripped, tied to ‘the crib of the donkey, and bad - to share for ten . days his oats and hay. Such barbarous severity entdreed the blindest - obedience. ;When a nun once asked St. The resa who was to sing on that day at the even ing mass, she ,was in a bad humor, and said, • The cat.' ' Therefore, the mm took the eat under her arm; went t,o•the altar, and, by pinching its tail, made it sing as well as it could, • " The nuns of St. Theresa slept on thorns, or in the snow; drank from spittoons, dipped their bread in rotten eggs, and pierced their tongues with pins if they broke silence. " Nearly a contemporary of St.„Theresa was au Italian, Catherine do Cardone. She lived in a, cave, wore a dress interlaced with thorns and wire, ate .grass like a beast without using her bands, and once fasted forty days. In this state she hved three years. St. Passidea, a , Cistercian nun of Sienna, beat herself with ib - Wis and washed NM wounds with vinegar, salt and pepper. She slept - on. cherry-stones and peas, wore a mailed coat of-sixty pounds weight, immersed herself in freezing ponds, anilonce'hung herself for a time, feet upper most, in a smoky chimney. 'St. Clara of Aniri lived very severely. In stead of a shift she wore a dog's skin, or a garment made:of horse-hair 1 and she was so humble 'she would kiss the feet of a dirty peasant girl without permitting her, to wash them first. And after she had 'sullied them by her kiss' (thou why; kiss them, one would ask?) she -washed them herself. 'When St. Clara died there were foiMil_in her heart all the instruments ofltlie - paSsion in miniature. There were also foundlirthe body three mys terious stones, each of the same weight, but of Vhich one was-a4iheayrah all three; two were not heavier than one, and the smallest was as heavy, as all three together."-, 'Phut kindnes§ is often misplaced is shown JR the case of a Milwaulxee • woman; who, be ink on the point of drowning, cried to her hustiand•to save bOr: 't He tried to do so, and she ulled him uzider i and both were drowned PitthAY, JULY 8,1876: prince Leopold Etienne Charles Atinidne Gustave Edouard, Thsaudlot or Ilobros zollern-librentaalispearc. : " It is a singular.factiltifAi all . the princes of Europe outside of ,France t he only onus vrith *beta the Emperor oft4aFrtinch is connected by ties of blood are Gerniana, and that those to,:whoha be is nearest' related are_ members ei h the.ouse of-41obenzolletail 'And further more, it is a faettliat such fatally connection is confined to thPißeaubarnais family, the: Bonaparte hou.se,,heing,•limited to France... The young ~princeVrhosn -candidature for the Spanish croWn . hat created so much ex citement in Europe:;"iendering the' relations of _ France and...lornada earciftedingly-grave, iS T in fait, an - own etiraiin; Of'Nappleon 'by his moat* side.. Mortenee land , Eugene de ' Beaidrarnais were, it scilk ; be,., borne •in mind, the children of Josophipe ,allersvards Empress of France, by her Arsebtaibmid,, ,Viscount krAftmander do - BeanbOundb. -- didimpele of the . Viacertnt Count' i) Beinbarnahr, Married the ..famous Conntess Fanny; by whotn he had Claude de 1 - 3eatiliarnas. , This 'nobleman filled.t.lus pesition of-ehevalier of Honor to the . Empress Maria Lonise. wife of 'branoleon I. One °lbis daughters, Step hanie i Louise. A,dri.: Mine, was the adopted d, of .the. Emperor. On the Bth of Aprll, ,-' . 1.800,- - - She- IMarried ' Charles Louis Frederick; Grand Duke of 'Da- . deri, by whom slanihad taro daughters, 'one iif whom, the Princess' Josophine , Frederidno ' Louise, was married - on. the Mst4Ot- •October,' 183-1, to Prince Charles, Antoine %a - trilobite Zenhyrin - Frederie--Mainradir7ibesd---of --the haus° of Holuenzolleirelligmaringen., It is noteworthy -that :' . tlifs*:.-prinen-- my - also-in- a measure connected with the Napoleon family by reason of his. mother, the Prinerns Antoi nette Marie'urat, being a sisters:lf Joachim - Murat, the great cavalry leader, who married Caroline Bonaparte and. whose children are now recognizedas hereditary, Trinees_ of the French•tmipiee.. '- The'mptner or the - ninoperor :Of, the French, - Thitterale_delleanhantais, hav-- ing been a blood eonsinto Stephanie de Beau harnais, the grandM other of the 'new candi date for the Spanish crown, it ' follows that Napoleon and Leopold are cousins also. . Scandal, which did not spare the name of -llortense f was not over I*re:fill of they fame of Stephanie, of whom some not ,very favorable stones are told.' She was, however, so com paratively obscure that but few persons at the present tame are mien aware - of her having been the adopted bhild - of 'the - great Corsicart. She lived to a ripe - old age—tseventy-one—and died on the 29th of January, 1860- Apropos of • Stephanie, hesgrandmother the 'Countess FetutY , Was one of the most ealented and dis soltite women of her She was a poetess m and roancer,' . ofrernark 4 able personal heauty,• and was notorious in Paris for her numerous lovers, to the - amoroils poems of some of • whom:she is said to- have signed her name; = Allegether,nnd - - - Inithitol-tell i ithelemales of -the-Br*tibitruaia-family have" never borne an unsullied reputation for morality, although it must be admitted that ,seireial of them have been distinguished far, the Pos,seSaion., of a high orderef Intellect: - It is curioua to notice that of all the princes.. "erected .- by the tirst-Napollion this`- family . have alone - made a stir in• the world since the fatal.aay of Waterloo. Already. a grandson .. of i Stephanie .bali . ascended _.l tbrett,e,the brother of. Prince ' 14e! r ip , old, _Prince Charles: ..F.Uel Frederick .2epli) )1 . ..Loula l -belitg--the • present'ruler of Romania. Having thus 'briefly sketched:the uncestry : of the- Prince, whesti'hatne headi this article, we arrive ~,at, .. a'',. eonsideratiOn_ o 1 . him.kelf.. lint little - can he skid aliOnt hirii - , for the reason that he has neyer ' before appeared, rood- . nently 'in Eufdriean polities.. He ,Is the eldest - -son - - - of, Prince ---Charles and was born Son the ..t2d of SPptern , __ liiir, -- 183.5. --- Alpliiimilt hei -- holds the rauic of lieutenant-colonel of the First regiment of Prussian Foot Chards. On the . 12th of Sep tember,lB4, be married the Princess A . ntoiae Marie Ferdinande Michaela Gabrielle Ra phaele dth.Mise Anne Gonzagne Silvine Julie Augeste de . Bragnace Ikea - hog; Duchess of Saxe, sister Of the reigning king of Portugal. The multiplicity of mamba belonging to this lady has not prevented her from becoming the mother of three children—all boys—to Prince Leopold, the oldest of whom, was born in 1861. This is about all that can be , said. of Prince Leopold. ' The political signithmuce of his candidature tor the crown of Spain lies in the fact that lie is a prince of the royal house of Prussia: In 1849 his father ceded his territories >to Prussia, abdicating in favor of King Withal]. In IMO, by a royal decree, the family were invested with the title of Highness, and with the pre rcieatives of princes of the royal family. In lriill his rank was increased by his investment with the title of Royal Highness. which, be ing hereditary, descends to his eldest son, the Pnnee Leopold. • Remote as is the probability of such a thing, it is nevertheless not impossi ble for the Sigmaringen branch of the Hohen zollern family, of which• the King of Prussia, is the head of all, to ascend the throne of Prussia. For the purpose of enabling the reader to perceive at a glance the relationship existing- , between the Emperor .Napoleon and l'rince Leopold,we Subjoin the following genealogical table : HEAD OF THE FAMILY. 4AROI'IS AND MARCHIONESS DR 13EA1 HAR ,--THEIII SONS MARQUIS DE BEADHAIINAIS ALEXANDER. First COUSiIIS. CLAUDE' HORTENSE. Second COUSiOS. STEPHANIE \Aroi.i.oN 111. Third COUSHIS. JOSEPHINE NAPOLEON M. 4111 cousins. PRINCE LEororu. The Princess, Us.already stated, married the Prince of Hohenzolleru-Sigmaringen, and is the mother of Prince Leopold. - She being a. third cousin of Napoleon M., her son con sequently a fourth cousin of the Emperor, as shown above. ;Guriously enough the succes sion from the male Beauharnais ceased with both branches „together, and was continued from the females, Hortense and Stephanie. And here_ it: is also interesting to note that while Hortense had none but male children, Stephanie . had none .but females.' That the French Emperor - should object to seeinghis cousimetertnan on the Spanish throne is un doubtedly hecauSe . the Prince happens to be a German cousin!- also, anct.a . PrusslaW one at —An enterprising phrenologiSt once wrote a polite noteilo•the late Charles Dickens ask ing permission to make an examination of his •cranium. Air. Dickens replied: " Dear Sir:— At this time I require the use of my skull, but as soon as it'shall,be , at leiaure I will willingly place it, at ytar'.disposal.',' • - _ —When does, Shakespeare give an instance' of t lie •curo'ot"consumptton? When the Duke. of Gloster step Denr,y's . THE SPANISH 431110*11.- Father of Father of Mother of ' WHO STOLE TVIAL T VIOirET? Theltobbery in the Motional Treasury-- The Mysterious Dissyypsatisnee 0r...-A2O,- eeo Irom the Issueus Par ty-off Five. Visitors Suspected...A muddle In Earnest. The mystery attending the robbery of the 820;000 in $lO notes from the issue-room in the Treasury Building at Washington, on the 11th of. June, appears to thicken as the iovestiga..' • tion proceed. -The supposition' that Charles H. Merriam, who deposited $1,500 of the sto len money in the Stuyvesant Bank, of this city, was directly implicated .in the robbely has been nearly removed, but he is still held ashaving hOgn a receiver of the money, knowing it to be stolen. No aocuratt account ' df 19.N...thisnienex_was first.-missed', *ow the- Treasury has heretofore been published! The Issue Department,. the manyy divisions of the Treasury Do 'partmeht there is a long room called! the ApartMentl 1881M9." The national' cur rent , as t -eotnenew- , from- th e - engt a v and printer's: department, is received in this room, where it is recorded; counted, and sent ott to the caShier's department. The depart- Lment ;of isaues,ls presided over. by -Mr. H. Cr. Root, who'is a very old and; trusted attache of the Treasury. His chief-assistant is. Miss Arabella ' ; ' {Tracy, who- has been in the Treasury eight years, and who is considered, one-Of theliest female experts in Mr. Spinner's whole division. .There are. about. 25 clerks to do the counting. Mr. Root's desk is in the centre of one end of the room, and the de posit table, - where Miss "Tracy sita r is on the sideof the room, at the_same end.- The clerks'' desks stand in a line down through the room, near the centre. _The money is first deposited on Miss Tracy's table, in bundles of two, ten, twenty, or a hundred thousand dollars each, according to the denomination of the notes that are being issued. • Miss Tracy takes a memorandum of the num ber of the bill on top of the bundle and ,of -the one on the bottom; divides 'the money up into smaller illiantities and _ -tributes it to the clerks to be counted, taking a receipt from each clerk for the amount of the package given him or her to count. When counted, the package is again done up and sent to the cashier's department, An Unlniky Visit. Visitors have always been allowed to enter Mr. Rootis , department, and when they come they are usually received by him and shown down the room. On the llth of June, five visitors-itwo men, two women and .a boy--en tered the department about 1 o'clock, and, after conversing with Mr. Root and p.lssing I through the room, went out. Miss. Tracy, it anpea rs, had just gone out to lunch, leaving the package,of 520,000 on her table. When she returned, which -was. after the visitors were gone, the money was mbising. It ap peared to, the . officers who investigated the case, ahnost impossible for -- Visiters — tii — katrectiv around him to Mi ß s -Tracy's-_tablerand-ztaire- whieh. made a bundle half_ as large as a Webster's unabridged_ dictionary; and leave_the rooni without being seen either by Mr. Root or 'one :of th'e. clerks, - • ILLore Contradictory Statements:., =Colonel Whitley, who has-been-workifile:llls - the • eaSe,-wae ,called in the examination of 31erriam yesterday, when be testified — that - at the time he iirstcalled on the defendant, who was keeping:a stable atll-1- Clinton place, he' did not deny haviag deposited the $1,500, and raid - he - tank - it 4roxu man, n&ni - Td -- Miltori - , in judginent for three horses. On being, asked if lie knew Niles; the man who deposited the rest of the money, he said he had known him for a year. _Be then refused to give any more informatiOri. Colo - no - I Whitley said-de:pri %iinees manner was nervous, and that his statements were contradictory. The exami nation-was again postponed.----IVortd. - - Exciting Adventure of an Aspirant for Aeronautic Glory: [From the Poughkeepsie Eagle, July 7.1 We have already spoken of the successful ascension, on the Fourth of July, of Byron Bird, a lad of fifteen years of age, of this city, hut as the occurrence was so unusual and has excited so much interest, we have thought proper to refer to it more at length. For tiffs -ipurpose we have had an interview with young Bird, and also with Prof. Squire, unaer whose direction the ascension was made. The boy ba.s ' had his thoughts turned toward bal loons for some time past.' When Prof. Squire made his first ascension from , here, in June, young Byron-wanted to accompany him, but there, was not suilicient ascending power, and he was left, behind. During all the process of preparing for the ascent, inflating the balloon, &c., he was present, and when it began to be be dolibtful whether there would beg s enough to carry up a man, lie proposed ,to make.- the ascension alone, which, after some hesitation, was agreed to. Young Bird said he stepped into the car with some feelings of trepidation, as was natural, but did not feel afraid. As the balloon was let go, he rose easily and gently over the heads of the multitude. He felt no rash of air,and no sensation whatever to show that he was in rapid motion, except' the sight Of the receding',.earth and the rapidly - widening prospect that , stretched out before' him on every Side: He describes the city'as looking much handsomer from the elevation reached,. as he passed over it, than he supposed it would, every street and Nquare being marked out as' on a map. As he passed'on to the eastward, and rose higher up, the hills and valleys scented to disappear, and all appeared as level as a floor. Scarcely, how ever,bad be began to enjoy the lookout around, when the balloon entered a cloud, and he was unable to' ee anything in any direction. In stead of going above this he pulled the valve cord and let off some of the gas, which soon brought him down within sigh* of terra firma again. — Putting his hand out over the ride of the car he judged from the rush of air that he was coming down toe - fast; And thrOW" out seine sand. This checked the descent,and he sailed on toward Pleasant Valley, until a place presented itself which looked favorable for alighting. Pulling the oord again,he came _toward_the- earth-rapi dlyr and - seeing - four men -- coming along the road, he called to them to H come and help him. e asserts that he was not frightened, but called for help because he feared he could not secure tho balloon without it. As he neared the ground•he found his mo "tion forward to be more rapid than he had allowed for, and that it was taking him Into a swamp. Accordingly, before getting too' fir • down, lie threw over his- remain- Mg ballast and went up again, clearing the swamp and going nearly a Mile further en par; . fore another place came in sight which,he liked. Finally, seeing a smooth meadowiTn the line of his progress, he pulled the oat+, agarr. and carne down. When the balloon striic t first it rebounded, but did -not jar. him ver much nor ~hurt him at all. The second c - tact with the ground caused the car to turn over, _and he ,partly partly jumped out. Nobody was near but a woman, who had come from a house •near bY; and when he called to her to. help hold the balloon she refused, saying 'she was alraid it would carry her up: Young Bird caught hold of the side of the car,but as the balloon rebounded it lifted his feet from the ground, and in the excitement and fright of the moment-for it all.occurred in. an.instaut,-, and there was hardly time think-lie let go, and the balloon_shot upward, swayibg to and' . fro and turning as -it went' till it disappeared in the distance. At Pleasant Valley, •lliessra Eastman and, Squire found him, greatly ez. - cited, hut .not at all hurt, and when the de spatch from Cornwall, Bridge, Conn., reached here, announcing that the balloon had been secured,.all rejoiced at the safe termination of the affair. The Young iieronaut saya he . means to keep' it and use it in aseensiens." In other words. ho is going into the balloon busi ness op his (IVVIIIIOk, "! Coura- Dr, BEAUHARNAIS Father of Father of Mother of M . other of A NOTING BALLOONIST. - rfac.:...:.:T.pi1E . E,i,C,ENT5.,...:,: - .,': - J_:, , '::::1 FA e's' AND rAniama. B,tlaata agitates a tire.alarat telegraph. • " —A bvaglaress of eight yeani is on trial • --4TOnnyjanausehek ha's coirie back; talidmg•' Elighlll , - .•,-+-Littly.Pranislin• has returned to Victoria *AM, .84hti. • - :--Pi•Ovalentjournaliitic comptaint--Rtunor- • • —Gladstone is said to harper bet on the 'WM* • horse at Epsom. ----A•"glariringsehool" is- to' be opened inM Otg l o/ . MY' A• l4 ' - 4 . - Mlitairtsiliarifc-,-Quartionruutter-Gerunrai-jEt' Sellirit tiOsig-Water in Texas. —niOave bees firing cannoom thrribeids near Paris to bring on a rain. • • —The Hing.of•Burmah is- about sending , air Oommissioner to the - Enropean - Courisi - 77 - , —A , steant , omnibus Ls now successilatikruw----- ,ning between Edinburgh and a suburbs —lt is a son of Douglas Jerrold, ands bats Cu ••• ; nephew, who-L4 wood - leanq ctrayerinacecT,9*---•;',•,• -A new portrait , of UM; Sons Ed:wardi Everett •is tobe placett iti - the BbSteMPutilic Library. . • .• ' • • ' —The census is to cost about ,six. cents a head for all the persons enrolled, or $2,'3,090 for the whole. • —A 35 0-pound•alhgator,. roken to . harness. furnisheB the team_fora:SouthiCarolina.pltust.---' er's ploughing. —Eighty-one dozen of eggs given to •a mitt: later in Illinois at a." donation visit" is called. 4 4 lay activity." —lt is said that Vinnie Rea Mis• on, her last bust, preparatory for leaving for home.. We hope she will come out all right,and reform. —Three Japanese boys, lead- the Classes. scholarship, drill and deportment-at the High land Military Acadesnyat-Worcester7MUis. —A-well-known English cricketer disid•the other day from concussion of the brain, caused[ by a blow from a cricketball delivered by the bowler. —A man in Decatur,' Ala., advertises for an. , w intelligent and respectable oman.to,become• a candidate for Congress in the Sixthidstrict of Alabama. —Two Missouri harvesters quarrelled;lately_ in the hay-field, and one drove his scythe. blade through the other's body, Cutting his heart in twain. —At,a funeral in the country, recently, the hearse was drawn by fine white horsalovith their manes and tails braided and tied , vrith. long crape streamers. - - - —The head chief of the Kansas POttawot tamies has deceased, aged 58, and". weighing- 4.96. - -116 was, a biginjun,-and-his words - had - great weight with-his tribe._ ___ • —A census collqctor in Newlyntpshire yaw' • told by a woman that she .was thirty years of' age, and her sons respectively Mee% twenty four, and twenty-eight years. has . ordertsd, , in i Eranee; - two ,,- * lirge iron liglithouses for the Egyptian , coast,. _ one 180 feet in height; to be, erected. at landand•theother, off'.7o M et, at Itas-Garib. . • —The practice of Kentucky, distillery lands r • of bathing after working hours in 'tile vats of whisky-- - not only refreshes - and - cleanses the , ' men, but adds to the "'body" ot-the ---A. New Qrlean.s fireman, sudd'enly aroused by dremning:of an alarm. rushed out clad in u red flannel feminine skirt, instead-of his= shirt. -of the - same.color, - and - rraty arrested for-Mas. querading. , , . . —One of the newspaper °thee-sof New York city - has - recently-had-volumes of 'dirt renioved - from - the --glass- of- i M—windows and - one4talf of the editors are now laid up with. severe • eolds.—Ex. —The - Emperor of Russia has resolved' not to carry out his intention of giving sixteen, thousand francs annually for division among the _French authors whoserworks are played at the Theatre_Michel. Accidents" are thus noted in Indiana: " We regret to learn that Mr. S. lost his wife, yesterday, through his own indiscretion.. He takes the children, and to-night, at 7 P: AS.,she • will become Mrs. 13., at St. Peter's."' —Two lowa boys of tender years lately started on a campaign against the Slotti, armed with a little brass pistol and, a bow and arrow. They were captured four miles from home and returned4o the maternal casti gation. —The Rev. Theodore Cuyler; in the full spirit of Christian meekness, :gays of the writings of Charles Dickens: .of the pages are rank with the odor's of the gin-bottle and punch-bowl." Did Cuyler read tkien)i just for the smell ?—Detroit P''ee Press.' —We recollect hearing quite lately of an in stance in which two disconsolate parents, hay , ing lost their. little boy, aged two years; pro posed to place the following inscription on the tombstone they erected to hie memory: I , There was one vacant harp in. Heaven, And 't was unto our darling given." —Thomas & 'Thomas, newspaper and Magazine publishers-at Boston; paid $5O and costs the other day for rejected and destroyed ; manuscripts, the Supreme - Court ruling that the manuscripts were the pronertr - of the author until - the_publishers paid for them, and that in neglecting to returu them to the auffier . they became liable fox' their yalue. —The Associated Tress now acknowledg&s that the missing steamship City' of Boston has not been heard of, and that there are no hopes of ever learning of her .whereabouts.. We can put the Associated Press on a better thing. A few years ago Noah's ark lit on a hill, over, yonder, and was wrecked.—/r.- —Sir John Trelawney, a member of Parlia ment* Is so skilful a short-hand reporter,.that on a recent 'occasion when. the galleries (in cluding the reporters') were cleared,Sir John - ftirnished'tlie Tones wits ti complete report of the proceedings. Thisseems to have been un objectionable to the House of 6ommons,,as . the clearance of the galleries WAS effected by a single old-fogy member, in accordance with an ancient rule. —We find in the Liberec , the last chapter in the lite of Lamartine, itself a tine and curious romance: " The great name orLamartine re sounds to-day in the arches of the Palace of Justice. To-day was sold, at auction in the +Exchange of Real Estate, that field of Mont coon, henceforward illustrious among the haunts over which the foot of genius has ',passed. At a quarter to Op°, this retreat, dear to the author of the Gwent/ins, was the property of another. The first lot mounted to 232,000 francs, the second to 153,000 francs,. after after some very lively bidding. The two pieces were knocked down to M. Leboue, the attorney representine. we are told, one ot Lam artine's most enthusiastic admiren," —The Saratogian gets off the following:," It is one of the most amusing sights in the world to watch -- a young and inexperienced - fly attempt to pbregrinate slautindicularly across the-head-of-one of -our- short haired-young - men. We mean one of those heads that has been scissored down, rasped, 'filed, audfi ished Off with sand paper and emery, so that tfie minutest phrenological "bump";stan , la out in'as bold relief as a hill of potatoes. ge (the Hy) travels so loosely, and mixes his feet up very much like a bashful bachelor learning to skate. No use trying to enjoy a serttiOre with one of those heads on an exact lino between you and the Preacher and an_ll timate fly on it essaying desperately. • neross•from the northwest to the 401 corgi' W see ,a friend." far 1 - " ,Lit I'l,l f ' ' e ,