.a:&g}S*-‘A'-ani- l '‘ i, ~ '■ ’• ' ■ .OFJJ^K^ t «T ;i pHEaNV*.: STREET, - ' yo#hic£p!M!&>■•*■ --*'- "--'T ■'»/•? -4 •'.;!• ~i • ;, ■ : .;- 's:',S r 's'lpA.')tXX'-)?^:BSs V:-/. - ■ niu*mSabMrlboraoutut-tlio £Itj-:ats«DotxAHS wpAiiit*; Joua Dolli*B>or Eight Mokthh ; Tallin,. ■JDoI.I.iAs roaSit MoSTHß.iorarljibly ia Aflvancorortlje ■ 'Vrtf ;, t an-'-nn -'; : 'r.- ‘f- '- > -‘> -i’ L - ,-.•: * ; ! BailAlta'fcubiWribers outbf the OitVj at THBMi Doi,. X-.; V.J :.ii .; b ’hit h» .Wj(i,*i.T-Bisa« .frill *e ; :s■''«• :■ =-- j'W : 'EttnCophi,, 11 : ■.jljjj •. ,y.;i.'ls,(B *»<"‘Br.S'>»j?r, v,i- ‘t (tuone addre««);...'2o.oo si, will send aa, _ . .«tra^^ih^Her%ofWcidk-, i; ' ' ’ tpfe? -«a ?r*£ttaateii s to 1 ' Ect" «4‘X«hW for SfWjnnj OTEAM BETWEEN-NEW YORK’'AND . >3 CIIiaWW.—KDINBUBO, 2,500 toni.f. WtlUilf CilMxur.CoainmndOTl NEW YORK, 2.l6Q.tpn«. Itoeeas, Olio;; Catum B ide SL teA6BO W, I,W w jp»s rioi oxs, Cotamsmlijr;: ‘*h» aid Now ioirklteim •Mp Coanmay intend to!lh)tf powerful ■ m follower; ■•.•■■ ' j :« eilOMKKir, touk.. r - . „ J ' r ! NewToAi'giiuHaj-.luua'io, 12iioon. - ' '■■-■ Jolrll. la nooi). ’ ! lV'i>lae3fl&y, Aug, 5, 1-nooji; : ; ■' WWJW. Betatdojr, „.Bept, jt. 12 upon. > ■.,!..".;»*Mi'ol'xeaow, ‘ ;;r ’ l.JHldgtmtg. Juno 17', ; 'f I (llwgowi July 8: ,0 . ( ’ c ■->#'. : Bdlnptlrg, Aug. 8. , wpt.'s. : •: <"!!-Vvf:'f.;*e«a v ■ * wJUi coolcod'Pto ' }£? Burgoo a attached toeacb ••\ iHror freight or puaiuto' J,OIiN;Mc9Y - BROADWAIVNeTV- York city Mlbfqtgoid , fr’ft^isage. W ;'aq ifolm >' -'|^^'®ffiiNte'ANDFBANdE;iBs7i-^ ‘A . ;$«» w* tod Ham Steamship Company.—The ■ tßlted StalW .MjiU StdimahlM, 41U004 2,5f10.t0p5, -.SsT-SilßWj* OTfimatWOT.and phtlTON; 2^oa. J ’toM, £amM;A,Wotton, fomnrandeio-V>m-Jnm Kerr' York, B*T r ® tod Southampton, tor IM years 1657 tod ’SS. op ■otto ,•&'■. :>-• - 'dBfT.“‘' •'-’■JB5B:- 1 » Falkm, a*ta/tiaj^lAar. 23 Arago;' Saturday; •Jm‘. 9 Ango, do, ■ _ Bept,l9 do,:„i: Jtebf-6' Volton, do', Oct. „17 Arago,, ~ do* , Marc&tf. Not, M Fultriu, r do., April, 0 niton,' ,> do.' <'*■ JJoe. 12 Aragd. ' sl 'do ■ - 'iur 1 ' v. Fulton; • / tSAyiSOPIEAJIPIOS. r ■ " iwt:-' 1 ".-; ' J iBs7?v . Arwo/Tueadar, Aug.'2s ■ AHuto; I Wedric«day , JA'uir'2Q Fulton, do. Jitopt. 22 Fulfoo, ‘ do. " .25 inn r ., d 0,.; 0ct..29 . Arago, .- • .>/' /. . ..-.a»,V 4 ? > Frbe* New York toßoutharanton.orL Ha,rre—First, Second Cabin, - /-Jfrdta'tferre-or* Southampton to'New York—First CaWn^SWfwe;SecondOeMn^SOOfranca. ! WIM.IAM ISBLW, “ • mne. ; .' <.OgOBKS® JtflO,”i ■ '«•.**, "« ! Bonth>Wni .tAKSMCAS : BDKOEEAN); ; Si A VANN AH AN H CHARLESTON ' PBErSHTa V ~ f ,Tha veil known flrefr itfaaa Mda, wrheel Steamship*, S&7£tOlfß St ATS and STATE OFQBORGIA,; now , form a Weekly Line/orthe South and ; Southveti, bne . Of SATCfIBAY, at 10 o'clock; ' . V -*-.. :yo'R- 8 - A yi N^A H; ' L ‘ j' : *V*HB STEAMSHIP' SEYSxONIS STATE. ? d , /CKABLXSP.rMAasinuH, Commander. “j - - . ' ' V- .WHlrecaplfoAfrelght-on.THUBSPAY,>Sept. - Bd , and > ’-i THE STEAMStriP STATE 6FGt3ottftU, V! - .o-rf Oanra* GAmmhndervt' sju /•' V'< irwhlrewvw&elght on THURSDAY, September JOtb, UKyAYj Septem- ArtbtlrlHSrfeiteri'a'tKi Savaiinitlrthew zWp* connect witfcateiwerB,fbr;TloihiA and Havana; and’ with rail-: 'joadff (or all place* In the South audSoMthveßfc,; v * No freight receded on Saturday morning, "" ‘ NphSlbof ladUg signed after thophlphae ‘i . - Jtor freight; or passage apply to . Vl n- t.i; .•* ' ‘ AJHJEBON, Jr.,BtNorthWH&ttm, !, . Agitate afcCharleetbn.T. 8. &T. ,} j*• ‘ Tni BAtiTIO, Capt, Joseph Coma lock, - >,2 . ;-Mw>DBIAHp, . - M*ed tiliHf hare been built by contract, bjtprttabrftr' - RWWMMA*eertieejr» ■.-■ «OMtt«etlon, aa aWo ta thejrcngioM, toensure atrengUi ; iodfpetd, audthclr accommodatlone for pusaangete are »B»Qaelled for eiegoneo and cmofiirt. . MeAJffreni New York tiT.lrcfpoolr tn'irat' eaiin;*lsPj:iu second do., *75; frod LlvortKioL to Now', Tody 30 .aw 20 guineas... tip borttw aeaured,nnU*e talil - • thipaof thig lipe haye 1 improved ji^terrtlgbt : ' HNliiy , * W =2 <) *li ; fROU LiIaBPOOL, ' ~ , a>4PHBu>6.»,7,.U6T Wednesday; JnneSt, .1857, k *; ' .1857 Wedneadaf; Idly 8; 1857 f Saturday, July 18, 1857 Wednesday, July 22, * 1857' Sctorday.Aug. 1, 1867 Wedneedt.y, Aire. 6, 1857 Saturday, Aug. 15, '.1867 IVednesdoyj Aiur.lS, 1857 Baturday, gept. 12, 1857 Wcdueeday,gept. 3, 1857 gatutaa/ t gept..2o, 1867 Wedneaday, gcpt.3o, 1857 gattMiy-Oet: 10, -'1867 We&eaday Oof. 14? '1857' ■afanday, Oct. 24 1657 Wedneaday, Oct, 28, 1867 ■ fctoHayj Norf 7, - .1657 WedlCadiy, N0»:m: '11857* Saturday, tier. 21, 1857 WednesdayyltoT. *B,l 1867: RatwdM, JOee. 6, 1867 W& ncaday.Dep.- 9,..1657. ' ’ - ..L Wednesday, 1867' forfr»l|[ht'orpwsage,aeulTto .... . IJDWABD JC; COLUStf, No, 66 Walletreet'.'NVY',’ .< oo.,MTerpool,r. OTSPIIEN KKNNABD A , CO., 27, Austin liters, . Louden. - ■•'- ,».o:WAitmßKlHr*co.,rarfe, -> J, ' £ -'-' ■ *h*MW»t*oftb6M»hij»TfiUn«tWa€o6!mnt*blefor ' goli, lily«, Imlllohi specie, jewclry.p * ecloua «toM* or awtalf, wjlOTOUtepf Jading^.-j ned- therefor, and . ttt nCuf tfrercof cspreaeJ therein • / tul.tf ' - ZZZZ, \" IJIRE PE RIC K BRO3VE,-CHEMIST J/ HAOT'IiaCOOIST.'DOrth-eMt-mrtior MMH'rfnd CHMTNET Street*, Phfladelpbla. -sole Minntactarer of l ;MOWH’fl SSaaSCB Oti JAMAICA .GINGiBj, ttblcli Jji reoofnleed oui pteecrUxKl bj,the Medical Boi 'V - '*fcMKlh»«fcii irApreparailon'of urituraal' excollen ca.- ’* Ihttiwr the Summer months,, no. farm hr crtrareuor > ahotiu be ,without it,. In xolasatton of the bowels, in, . aadaeaj and p&rtiealarly’in sea sickneM, it Ja an Retire '•Bdaafe.ai well aa a pleasant and efficient remedy. " .CAUNGNl—Persons dellring an' 'article that can be ‘, WU««W>.'prepared solely.froa*,pure JAMAICA. GIN- ask-for J.rag iradTObetn'lM ' . corner otraTHAncU CHESTNUT ' fineu, PWlsdelphia j, and by all the?cspectablo »rog l listeMri Apothecaries in She P/gfotea. abl^Sm^ /prMDt & BRENNER-7-COMM.ISSION: , Jd" MBftcnANTS'snd Doalersln'-Fcreltfn and ‘Arne- Tleaa HABDWABB andOtITLEEY. N0a.23,25 and 27 ' JforthllFXHStreetjXaat Coulnmrcefltreet, - PklUAtlfhi.,. jg.jr..., v.:: - • cui-tf,’ pHAHIiES’TETE, COMMISSION - HER- Ayon4Hi:'»»4:iitiporfefor'U'AVANA''eEffAßa, (Stk) IMWulaut Iteeet. Mcomlitory.- ‘ ■ • aul-ly •. ! £fStJ^SC^IBERS > KESPECT fUtht inform their friends, and the trade gener ally, thli they Hare made arrangements for orie'of their' wfe#" inOatbly-for the French' and 'German WwlKtajof i/w-? ;-\'i ~-r .*t V.lwm nUay yeara>, experience/ the pertinent re?l- Farts or, two- of, the -firm,,and au abundant dffhr abwhil facilities for THE] PUR rjGSA&E ON OOMMISSIOff In any -Of 'thw B ~J -• /;£■ Watches.;;:'.^ t ponatoetljr on Mnil. a aplnrrliil Block ol Superior (iol'l k: : ; Watches, of *U the celebrated makers, / •"• , , AW*WWW.a«AV.\wv^vti handgoiao assort "■ PartigM,■ •• . s‘v »•?*.*■<; .—Baltena, , t - ~v • . Gloria, 'Jupiter," " „ :.-.-:Oolp»# - ‘ -Converciontes, '**'4''?-' -.tfnioa .-American*, - * > j,si-.*A *, *lp» Cubans, tcc., &c., Sc4fi jti Xt'k*yA »iz« and qnallo "iSifj InHore aid ccnstaotl/V§^Wng, j ami rot efale loir, , - .W)WAiNU^Street, . -?O4Hw r- 1 - " Trtloir Second, epc^n^'afory -mpjitRO^CABANAS'^Mir^TAGAS 'y -. ■ ', ~ • SecMd story. i M fc ft*i i, >‘inftr4 *in rfinanMif nl I RftvS H tfßllgra) 'MERCHANT KW\irtU I «'e]e^’^tf4'ribli<)'TJiSiSd ißjßJJirtwttysbn'hftndr - . iji of p£FftWufte&- give fa 2 ( TK)BM r GLOT n * 4 • ? ;.*jUQ.If -’. ' irtj ni Le.... Ytt i i •! in : > cl' 4 »'f >- i fj. . v 1 r • . , i;- ■<■'2 V, :;4<„ » '.r.ifif.;'. '., '• M j ■.kor f the',beheatof.at?anMtß*ud.©theift , i)r.Uo,9my &$-, Droto yisiVaay of. our public >untltutioo9, publish the aunexoa,list. *». « -if*.,. ’ - ' ‘. . ' 7 PjmUO PLAGKO OV AXUSBWKSV.' ' Academy, of Music, (Operatic,)wrner, of, Bre&dand Locust streets. *«■ i ■ • - : ' Arch Street TheatrerATCh/fcbovto'6th street. »-* Parkiusoa’aGarden, Chestnut, abovfe Tenth. , -National Theatre and ©lren** Walnut)- above B Ighth. • BandfordfsOpemHouso,(Ethiopian,) Eleventh,below; Market, ,i. * • ,'j| Tt ( > . ( , / ,j Walnut Street Theatre,.northeast comer Ninth and Walnut/V; • ‘ ThotheuPa Tarietles, Chestnuts ’ I'/Thotna&’s Opera House, Arch, below Seventh. - <* ’ :j*> • \ * :i n ' u '‘ s ,ll!; ARTS JXD'SOtIHQIg.** ..Academy; of Natural Sciences/ corner of Broad and George streets.-,;'r .. • / ■ ; ; "Academy of flneArta,.Chestnut, above. Tenth. . above Tenth. , , :■ FranUUu sst,itute, No. 9 South Seventh street,, ‘ * Jjßttfevoy&T iKstrtuTiosu., ' . ’ Almshouse, west of Schuylkill, opposite South 'street. ■* ' - -/Ahiahotfiß./FriendtfJyWalirot street, above Third.' ABSoclatidn'for.'the Employment 61 Poor Womed, No. s '(.*>*.; t. . for, ; Lost,, C hildren , No. * 30,. North Seventh Ipteeet,. I.,; f * I j /t. ,< ; v, • -.Blind As/ltfm, Race, new Twentieth steeet, < Christ Church Hospital, 1 No. js Cherry 1 street. Clarkson’sHall. No. 163 CEerry street. -• - Chestnut street-. ' . : ( Female Society for the Relief and Employment of the Poox, No: 73 North Seventh street. . , ” Guardians ofthe Poor, office N0.,68 North Seventh ».r, Gorman Society: itall; No, BtothSoventlfstreet., , i.Hohio - for/Friendless' Children, cottier Twenty-third and Bh>wn'wrdett,.'' i ’-' , '-'' : ‘ : ; ■/- i . 1 ■ feutd^*hfa» < th' treot I ° ?I * WOm6^,Sß^ Clety ’ .1 above > . : . i tMaslalfln- l Asjtmn,.qonser .streets,.,)../* ~ i v,,-.. f i . , , ; -Northern Dispensary, No. l Spring Carden street. 1 Asyluin/ (colored,) Thirteenth street, hear -CalloWhiHi’r’, ’ ' a * >,r ■ .OddTeUofrs’Hall, Sixth andHalJieSstreet. 11 • <-BOv' - do. B.BtCbtrierßroiMiand Spring Ger , # , ;r‘ den streets/- i , ~ ; ' 80.,-; > r do...Tenth^ndBouthstreets., ! - v Do*.. f . do,; Third and Brown streets. .5 * ; /Pp.\ , .-do-' Ridge Road,.below Wallace. Pennsylvania'Hospital.Tine street, between Eighth 'Mfad Ninth.*" ' 1 ' Pennsylvania Institute for tholna traction of theßlind, corner Race, and Twentieth street. 1 ;, , ; Pennsylvania Society for Alleviating the Miseries of .Public Prisons/Sixth and Adelphi streets. ' ‘Pennsylvania Tuning School for Idiotic and Peeble jMihded; Children/ School House Xane, Germantown, • officeNo?lo2WalnutstOet. ' , : BhHadelphiA:Oiphaos > Asylum, northeast cor. High* toehtU ana Cherry. ; R :B, '' 3^^ on ‘^^^^ Nloe- Sti Joseph’s Hospital, Girard avenue, between Pif teeuthandßlAWonth.l ’* Episcopal Hospital, Front street, between Hunting »don and Lehigh avenues/, ~ Philadelphia- Hospital- for Diseases of the Chest, 8. W. corner of'Cheetaut streets, West Philadel phia.'-' 7 *i i -••• •• . . ■,/.. /. -i.‘, - .MIBiO BpILOIKOg... - * Custom Bouse, Chestnut street, above Fourth 4 County Prison, Passyu'nk road, below Reed, f Si - Tobacco. Warehouse; Dock and Spruce streets. City Controller’s Office, Girard Bank, second story. CommlfiSiodet of Property/office, Qitard'Bank, ■sebond story. . City Treasurer’s Office; Girard Bank, second story. City,Commissioner’s Office, State House. pittrSdUiitor’s Office, Fifth, below Walnut. Watering Coiumlttea’s OfficS, Southwest corner Tifthundpheiwut.i' s ' •> ' , » ' oirard'TrustTreasarer> Office, Jifth.abore Chestnut. Hp.uso of Industry, Catharine, above Seventh. • / House of Industry, SeventhV above'Arch street. ■ 1 House of Refuge, (white,) Parrish, between Twenty sepond-andTwenty-third-strflct. ; . . Homo of Refuge/ (colored,) Twenty-fourth, between PartUU and poplar streets.. , . Health Office, corner of Sixth andpansora. , House of Correction. Bush lllil. ' , Marine' Hospital,' Gray’s Ferry road, below South 'Street. ' Uartfc’ft 6ffice,. a: W. eoracr i Fifth- ahd Ohestnufc - street, between Twenty fi«t aid Twenty-secondstreets. ,X*TT'YaM/on the Delaware, corner Front and Primo' ■ '>V'S.y . >. * Northem-Wbirtlea Gaa Worki, MaUan, below Front i' 'i i • Post QEEcs y ; Na. 237 pack, attaet. oppc*!ta the Y.s cbanjre,;. , t ..... , ' KeiKißgton, Queen atreot, below Shaoka maion atfest.' ; ; ' ", • llarden. Twenty-fourth alreetantT x» 0 P c»r m * ich ‘ sge ’ corner -Third, Walnut and : pw Works,Twentieth and Market; o2ce, Ko. BS, X , t . » , ° r '~~ ' Dear and Bnmb, Brpad and )'Beach, abbve Hanover corner-Broad and Green /eant, above Ninth, vto Honfe, east wjn*,t s , ■ , it, between FJftb and Bixth >,.hear Sixth street, ,' mor’a Hall, Byring Garden ' Christian, 1 above Ninth of Chestnut and Juniper Hoad, near Fede lytklil, near Sooth street, rthing Equipage, corner of .United - States QoiteferiiaMter'a. Office,. corner of .Twelfth and ■ / , ’i Pn-vi r • , v , ’ OoUegf ofPlwtuacy, Zanejrtreet, above Seventh. . > Eclectic Med}ral College, uatneihtroet, vest of Sixth. • Girard College. Bfdge road and College Avenue. • College, Filbert street, above EleVcntHi- h ”•* j■* ' - ' ’ . { Jefferson Medical College, Tenth street, below George. ' Polytechnic College, comer'Market and West Fenn Square*,'-,.-. JFennsylrania.lledicaX. College; Ninth street, belotr EOCUSt, • ■. College, Flta etrjel, Moir ; Oollcge, 2» Arch street. • , UmvfiwHy of t’cnnsjlyanis, ninth street, between Marketand Chestnut. . ■, i , ' J i °J re ® Medicine and-Popular Knowledge, ! No. fis.Areh.ssreet. f . . r ’ : \ ~ : ;r- j--> LOOATIO* OF COPBTB., oi X? alfc wd.DwlrlQt Oourti, No. 24 Firth street, bclow.Oliestnut. Hanreme'Court of Pemwrlrania, Fifth and Chestnut streets. ’ j ' ■ Oohtf of Common Pleas, Independence HaU. District Courts,- Nos.. 1 and 2, corner of Sixth and Cheatput streets* .. ' Court j>f Quarter Sessions, corner of Sixth and Chest* nutstreetsi.. - t - / BBLIdIODS ISBTITOTIOXS. ' ■American Baptist Publication Society, No. 118 Arch stree-t.- - ■ ’ ' American and Foreign Christian Union* No. 144 Chest* nut street- - - r a ‘, - *. ■ . '; . • ’ : A'moricui BaniUr School Union, (new). No. 1122 Chestnut street. ' . i Aw#W Tract Society,* new No. 922 Chestnut. - AJwro street, "below CoUowhill street. Dlbl ° bhMtoiffSeot 0 ”*" 1 ° f J ’ uWll!lt,o ”> (new) No. 821 PubHcation House, No. 1334 Chestnut ,Chrißtim ; (Association, No, 162 Chestnut . PhnWlphiA Bible, Tract, and Periodical Office (T. :N0*,655 Arch street, first house below .Sixth street, north ride; • - 7 j 1 !,;' ;J ; ;j ifflttnidtet^6 J -; ' ~C . UAILROAp LINES.™ r f" ln “' cspot,Sley«iitli ui Market, '?A-*'■ “4 tae Wert. »vm > u P V?:', ?i tl%« f« Jltteiargh artd the Wert. ;2 80'1*; Mij/or Hamsborg ami Colombia. *•3O Pi M.-t Accommodation Train for Lancaster, il P. M-.ikapnaeMallfor Sittalmrjh eel the Weet. oa . 5, f*»«PO‘» hrovt and Vine, 7J»A. M-, Ejtpreea Twin for SotteyUle, Wimameport. ~ Elmira and Niagara Palls. il A. M.e from Kprisingtoa, rid Jersey City. J ■ 0 A. Mi, from Carnlen, Accommodation Train. 7‘A. My from Camden. via Jersey City. Mall. » * rom Walnut street wharf. Via Jersey city. 2 *| <.M. rja Camden and Amboy, Express. 3 P. M., via Camden, Accommodation Train* 4Pr M.,,via Camden.and jersey City.'.Maii. ‘ 0 P.Mf, via Camden ftpd'AUlboy, Accommodation. i:;.‘L ' ! i : w ' ' 0 A.Mi,rrom Walnntettwtwharr, forßeWdere.Kaflton, :•» •-■ • V Water Qap, Scranton, Ac. 6A..&L,fof Freehold. j: *•; , 7 Ai M. ( for Mottnt HolJy, feow Walnut street wharf. 2 P.M„ for freehold. - r_ o IV Holly* Bristol, Trenton, Ac. i tt‘ ® nc^S^>tt » Bordentown, Ac. 4 f; M., for DeWlJera, Ewtou/ Ac,, from Walnut ateect ® for Mount Holly, BurHngton, Ac. « a Depot, Broad and Prime.' fA. M; T for Baltimore, Wilmington, New Castle, 3114- *' •dwtown,Borer,and geaford. ss“^S5S37«»“. W’. M.j for JfenyVUle; Past Prelght. ll'P.-Ji.', for Baltimore and Wilmington mrtk'PtnhsfflMnin R. ft.—Depot,'Pront and Willow 0,36 A. Jf., for Bethlehem, Baslon. Mauch Chunrt&fe 8.46 A. il>, lor Dovlestown, Accommodation. ’ ,' 2.15 P.M., for Bethlehem, Easton, Manch Chuirir A « 41*. Jl.TforDoylestown.Uccommodation. ’ 6.35 1», M., for Gwynedd,'Accommodation. • Cnmfiin aiid Atldntit R. J2.~Ylnc street w (urf. A.Sf.j fof Atlantic City. 10.45 A. if., for Haddonflold. ‘4 P* 11.4 for-Atlantic City. ’} 4.46 P. Jf., for Haddonfleld. •r. K ~7.. v. For Vfigtcktaur. , '„jßy. Columbia R. R, and Westchester B ranch. Prom Market street, south side, abore Eighteenth. Loare PhiladelphiaT A: Mr, and 4-P. M. “ Westchester 6.80 A. M., and 3P. M. y- ’ '' Oh Bos 10j ftnd Jli3o. A. MMftud2, 4,-e, *** fl f.jj: /.j/M.for.CbestoutMUlv * | . r ;®> °j' 10.10, andU,3o| A. M., and l.v 34 g 6,7. M, and 11.80 P. M, T for bermam’tnin' CftsVler Leave Philadelphia 0 A. Af. Mid Leave Downingtown A. M; and IP. 81. .iSto'cktop, for' Bordeutowza, frsm -",i- wharf,* " .T.VV" < t A. ',_ In--. ’ ton and Bristol, fromWalnht street wharf, 1 »; 'A 1 Delaware,Btfston;andKenfiebec,’fs.rCape &'LV'*2 street, -i: ; « 7.30 A, M., and 2, 8, and 6 P. M,. JohU A. ' 1? Aa Morgan, for Brlsto 1, Buf-; j-rf«ss.4ge»fa^)ini Art! MOW if Bm it Af«*% SrtfcrtWrt'.wWrt, ’ ■■■ ’’ " . '• .‘JMi ‘1 ■MJ Sr 3i’ J i i ;,, i;r..i .riwiriis, I '., ■.' . ' s . • . THE WEEKLY PRESS, The Cheapest and Best Weekly Newspaper in ■‘i -s m ,ths Country. Great Inducements to Clubs* ,i ,o|t the 35th of August the first number of Tn* Wkbk- PresswlH be Issued from the City of Philadelphia. It,HiU be published every Saturday. Tbb'Weekly Pbsss srlll be conducted upon National principles; and will uphold the rights of the States. It Will resist fanaticism in every shape; and will be devo ted to conservative doctrines, as the true foundation of public prosperity and social order. Suoh a weekly jour nal has long been desired In the 'United States, and it is to gratUV this want that Tan Weekly Press will be published. The Weekly Press will be printed ou excellent white psipw l , clear, new typo, and in quarto form, for binding. It will contain the nows of the day; Correspondence from the Old World and the New; Domestic Intelli gence ; Boports of tho various Markets; Literary Re views ; Miscellaneous Selections; the progress of Agrl- Vhilturein all its various departments, Ac. t fD* Terms invariably in advance.. •Tub Weekly Pbess will be sent to subscribers, , by mail, per annum, at.*.,' $2 00 Threo copies for 5 09 Five copies -for * 800 Ten copies for .. 12 00 Twenty copies, when sent to one address .20 00 Twenty copies, or ovor, to address of each subscrl- •ber, per auuum. * w * 120 ' For a club oT twehty-one, or over, we *lll send an extra copy to the getter-up of the Club. Post Masters are requested to act as agents for Thb Weekly Press. ;, , , JOHN W. FORNEY, ' ' , Editor and Proprietor. 'Publication Office of The Weekly Pbsss, N 0.417 Cheßtunt street, Philadelphia. Clp f rtss. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1857. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. . FOR GOVERNOR, WILLIAM F. PACKER, or Lvoouiaa ooustv. FOR JUDGES OF THE SUPREME COURT, WILLIAM STRONG, or asaxs enemy. JAMES THOMPSON, OF KKIH COl'.Hr. FOR CANAI, COMMISSIONER, NIMROD STRICKLAND, or onssisa ootott PITIABLE POVERTY The present Bishop of London will not live, it is said, at Fulham. The small, though fixed, income' of the see will not allow of a houso in St. Jnmos’ square and n palace at Fulham.— lllustrated Lon don News. Tho will of tho Right Hon. and Right Rev: Charles James Lord Bishop Blomfield has boon sworn under £60,000 personalty.— lbid. Woajtli and poverty are comparative. Tho Marquis of Westminster, with a daily incomo of $7,000, looks down with pity,.we presume, on Lord LvsDnunsT—American boro, by tho way—who has nothing to live upon except the $25, pObaycarwithwhiehEngland has gratefully pensioned him off, as Ex-Chancellor, an office Which lie held under four Administrations, anti finally declined to accept, a fifth time, when pressed on him by Lord Dkhiiv in 1852. The Dukes of Devonshire, Bnccleugh, Port land, Athol, Sutherland, and Bedford, whoso 'annual incomes respectively amount front $1,600,000 to $1,750,000 may pityingly con template tho hard lot of aueh poor devils ns Lords Brnos, Eastons,' Dunoannox, Gifpobd, and KingsXle, none of whom possess as mnclr as $25,000 a year, indeed, Lord Kixosale, whoso peerage dates from tho year 1181, is really so poof, that ho can live only in a small country houso, on some $2,000 per annum, with tho satisfaction of knowing that (if the cost of a proper suit of clothos would not nearly ruin him,) ho might go to Court, and wear his hat in the presence, of Queen Victoria. This was. a. privilege granted to tho first peer 700 years ago, by King Jons, —a similar hereditary right was conferred, by Henry VIII, on an ancestor of tho present Lord Forester. There is a pleasant story on record of the enforcement of this right on tho part of Lord Kdkisale. It was soon after tho accession of George if, who, n German by birth, and bred upwith grandhotions of etiquette, was astound ed end angry, at beholding a tail Milesian walk into his public Drawing Boom, liat on bead, as independent as if UoownedSt. James’s Palace. The matter was explained. The monarch sa luted his hatted subject, tliorcby acknowledg ing the claim. Lord Kinosalk, his privi lege conceded,■should have uncovered his head. He declined doing so until Lord Ches terfield, tlio most polite man of the time, courteously accosting him, stated that per-’ haps ho woe unaware that he was covered. “It is my privilege,” said tho haughty Irish man. “Wo know that,” answered Chester field. “You may wear your hat before tho King, but —before the ladies ?” ]j,ord Kixa sale blushed, as much os his Milesian blood would allow, and instantly took off his hat,with an apologetic bow to the fair demoiselles who were present. Enough of this gossip. Wo come back to our theme. Tho Illustrated London News is the property of a man of largo wealth—Mr. Herbert Ikorah, M.P. for Boston, nhd pro prietor of the quack medicine called “Parr’s Life Fills,”—who, contrasting his own abun dance with clerical poverty, speaks witlis ym pathy ■ and commiseration of the poverty of tho Bishop of London. Disguiso it as ono may, Poverty is a bitter draught. Dr. Tait, the liierareh of London, .was formerly a schoolmaster, and then, wo believe, not nearly ao well provided for in the way of income as he is at present. At one time, as wo know, ho was only a curate, doing hard duty in a rural parish, on an income of $3OO per annum. He lias known, thcreforo, what a small salary meins. Knowing it, one would wonder at Ids self-sacrifice in accepting tho mitre, witii the title of “ My Lord,” a seat in the Honso of Lords, and the “small, through fixed incomo” attached to tho bishopric. How much is that incomo, tho limited amount of which saddens tho sympathetic spirit of the Illustrated News ? In the first place, there is a mansion in st. James’s square, London, tho ront of which may be $lO,OOO a year.. Next, the 1 “small, though fixed” income of tho bish opric is exactly s6B,6oo,—total, $08,600. Too small an amount for a clergyman to live re spectably upon,—so small, that tiro present Bishop hits to. givo up Ids suburban retreat, that humblo dwelling called “Tho Palace of Fulham,” cbanningly situated on tho bonks of the Tliamos. The lata Bishop, Dr. Blompikid, did not labor under the disadvantage of a “small, though fixed incomo.” For nearly thirty years lie was acting and actual head of the Church of England, in London. A groat part of the north-west, end of London happens to belong to the sec, and the amiable Bishop lmd tlio pleasure of seeing most of it built upon In Ills time, —with the agrcoablo result, (from fines, leases, and renewals,) of throwing between s2so,oooand $400,000 perannunilnto his purso. The amount fluctuated, and therefore was not “fixed, *• but, on the other hand, it was not “ small.” St. Paul, wo are sure, would have opened hla eyes, in wonder, at the magnitude of tho amount. ■ Tho incomo of tho present Bishop of Lon don ($68,000 a year) would supply tho salaries of a round dozen of Bishops in tho United States. Yot the hierarchy in this country, of whatever denomination, is not inferior, wc be lieve, in piety, learning, zeal, morals and prac tical goodness. Tlio Bishop who would com plain of $68,600 por annum being a “ Small, though fixed incomo,” deserves to bo remitted back to his pristine condition of curato, with 8300 per annum. There arc now some 16,000 clergymen of tho Church of England, and a third of these do hot roceivo $5OO por annum eaob; while another third do ; uot average $1,400. ‘ We do not see that the Bishop of ibpdon is so very much to be pitied, because, •yn $68,600 a yearj he cannot have “ a house irt, St. James's Square,' and a palace at Ful receive not tho truth, the fault is cloarly with ourselves. Having aimed to present a connected synopsis of Hr. May’s discourse, rather than nt preserving tho rhotorient roundness of his copious sentences, tho reader will, of courso, recoive tho above more as a typo of his reasoning, than as a faithful delineation of his stylo. SABBATH READING. HEAVEN. As distnnt lands beyond tho soa, ' When friends go thence, draw nigh, So Heaven, when friends havo thithor gone, Draws nearer from tho sky. And os those lands tho dearer grow, When friends nro long away. . So heaven itself, through loved ones dead, ’ Grdws nearor day by day. ( - Heaven ia not far from those who see* With tho pure spirit’s right, But near, and in the very nourts Of those who see aright. As (hero is no brlghtor feature in tho logfley left to. us hy tho oxnmplo of our groat men, than that which establishes their rogard and reverence for Divine things, wo subjoin the following lottcrs of Clay and Webster, on the observance of the Chris* tian Sabbath : . , , Ashland, Mnrch 7,1845. Dear Sin I havo rccoivod your obligiug lot tof, informing - ino that, by tho contributions by two ladies of Baltimore, of tho requisite sum for tho put pose, T havo been made a member for life of tiio Baltimore Sabbath Association.' As you do not inform mo of tho names of tho ladies, I must requeat’you to bo my organ to’communicale to thorn my respectful Acknowledgments for this proof of their valued' regard and esteem; ami to assuro tiffin that I share with them, in sentiments of pro found reverence for the Sabbath as a religious insti tution; and that X fervently hope that aft laud a bio endeavors to inculcate tho proper observance of it may bo orowned with success. I am, with high respect, your friend and obedient servant, Signed, H. Olay ToCuaulks W. lUnor.LY, Esq., Ac, Washington, Maroh 3, 1845. Dear Sin : X feel groatly honorod by your com munication, which I received on my return to this city from tho North, on Saturday; ami am sincere ly obliged to my friond, ill*. Williaiqs, for causing lqu to bo mado a me mb or of tho Baltimore Sabbath Association., Tho longer X live, tho moro highly do I estimate • the importance of a propor observance of tho Chris tian Subbath, and tho moie grateful do I fcol toward thoso who take pains to impress a sonso «of this importance on tho community. Tho Lord's day is tho day on which tho (lospol is preached! it is tho day of public worship throughout the Christian world. Aud although wo live in A rend ing ago, and iu a reading community, yot the preaching of tho Gospel is tho form in which hu ipan agency has been, uml still i 3, most oflicnciously : employed for tho spiritual improvement of men. •Tbat the poor had tho llospol preached to them, Was an evidence of his mission, which the Author of Christianity himself proclaimed. And to tho public uoishipof tho Deity, and tho nreuohingof die Gospel, tue observance of tho Sabbath is obvi ously essential. I am. dear sir, with much regard, yourbbedient servant. , (Signed) Daniel Webster. To Charles W. Ridglky. Modern Appearance op Athens.—Rov. Dr. King, iu n lottor from Athens, dated July, 1857, gives n most graphic and thrilliug descrip tion of that famous ancient city of learning Jlo Writes: Fotv of tho places of antiquity so com pletely retain the outline of their history in their geography. The hills of Romo nro comparatively fndwtinguishubJe. The sacred placosof Jerusalem are the subject of discussion. But about tho locali ties of Athens there can bo nodisputo. Tho school boy oven realizes nu Identity which it it impossible to deny or overlook. * # * * . * t Perhaps no spot known exorcises tho same indo eeribablc power as tho Pnyx, with its stiil smooth and statoly plain, and tho ltamn, from which Pori clos and Demosthenes addressed the gutherod crowds of Athens. Hero everything remains in its original shape. Thoro is an artificial plain on tho hill-top, back of the Areopagus, which would contain annudicncoof fivo thousand persons, and tv stone platform, with steps out in tho rook ou side, with itafaco perpendicularly resting on Kiiue two or three long stone stejm-or terraeos, such ns wo havo seen imitated a score of times in tho platform of some modern American pulpit. Here too orators of Greece stood. The gtorios of t the Acropolis aro on their right in full view. The beautiful son behind. The plains of Athens nro spread outboforo. Never wa3 there such a spat boride; and its wonderful preservation in its origi nal iorui aud aspect scorns to givo one of the most rcmarkublo records of Athenian habits and Athe nian greatness. Immediately In front is the Areopagus, with the Agora between. Paul’s dis putes in tho Agora with the inquiring and objecting philosophers ot Athens led to his required public appearance before tho pcoplo as a body on Mats Hill. There stands the rocky eminence, with Us ascending stops out in the f.ioo of tho rock, whoro tho Apostle stood, “in the midst of Mat* lliil. n What a pluco it is to read his noble address! RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. American Clergymen Abroad.— Quito a num ber of American clorgymon aro rusticating upon tho Continent of Europe, prominent among whom nro Rev. Doctors Nowton and Slovens, of this city, and Rov. Thomas L. Cuyler and Dr. Tyng, of New York. As tv poof of tlioir oonxtnnoy to tho homo of their child hood and tho incuibors of their flock*, they havo boon assiduous in regaling us, through our loligious eotomporaries mainly, with correspondence descriptive of their travels, amt highly interesting in many respects. From ono of Mr. Cuyler’a letters from Borne, Switzerland, under dato of August Oth, pub’ishod in tho C/uis tian Intelligencer , wo glean tho following : “Our tea was nerved in real Swiss style, and consisted of bread, apricots, cherries, tea, and claret wine. Tbo common wino of tho country is generally drank here, aud I soo but little intoxica tion. * * . * * Tho wine crop promises well this year. But precious little •puro juice of tho grape’will reach our country, bowovor. In America, all our drinks are villain ously adulterated with poisons. * * # I hero Baw, for tho first time iu Europe, tho long American railway car. In Franoo aud England small oars, to hold six or oight in each apartmont, are need. “Conservative Britaiii holds on to confined cars, stovo-pipe hats, and a Governmental Church. In these throe particulars she might learn something from her Yankee daughter. It is very pleasant to moot as oft hat, with a thin, sharp faco under it, for you may generally tako tho owner of them to bo an American. Our countrymen abound on tho conti nent. They generally stay at the first hotels, rule in the ‘coupo* of the ailigonccs. see all tho Hons, climb tho mountains ‘alcotlo taller up* than any body else, and smoko cigars abominably. On the whole, iv good impression is mado through Europe In regard to our laud and its wide-awake represen tatives.” In tho courso of tho proceedings of tho Now School Presbyterian Convention, wnich closod its deliberations at Richmond, Va., at 1 o’clock on Wednesday morning of tbo present week, tho Rov. Dr. Ross, whoso writings upon tho subject of slavery havo recently excited so muoli attention, suggested, among other things, as a basis of union botween tho Old and New Sohool, that the Old School must adopt tho viowsof their body on tho slavory question, ond on which there wero but three theories: 1. Tho Bin Thoory; 2. ThoToloru* tion Theory; 8. Tho Ordained Theory. Tho first was tho theory of tho Abolitionists, and maintains that slavery is contrury to tho eternal principles of right and wrong aa laid down in tho Ditto. The answer to which was. that there is no principle of right and wrong apart from tho will of God. Tho second theory was, that slavery is not a sin in itself, but always ft condition of natural evil, not approved, but only tolerated of God, and Mint ail unuor it should relievo themselves as soon as possible. Tho Doctor said ho would defy any man to provo from tho Bible that God only tolerates slavery. Tho third viow was, that slavery U oidaincd of God. as a good in hU l’rovldcneo, to tho master, to tho slave and to tho community, so long us Jio , continues it; and according to which theory tho master was not an outoast nor a subject of pity, but tho representative of God in a groat work of boneviilenoc. Tho toleration viow abovo named was tho Old School theory; but until its oigumzntlon main* tained the ordination view, hu did not wish to join them, nor ad\ocuto a union between the two bodies. • Mu. Siu'uokon.— Tlio Zion's Advocate and Eastern Watchman— a Baptist papor—in speak ing of Mr. Spurgeon's preaching, says : “Tho coin cidence between tlvo opiuious of a Baptist and a Presbyterian is interesting. Tho greatest opjwsi tion to Mr. Spurgeon bus come from thoMcthodisla and extrema advocates of the Established Church. ” To vvhioh tho Western Christian Advocate , in a somowlmt keen rcsjionso, recommends Mr. S., ns a young man, to oonfino his discourse to subjects which ho understands; and adds, that ho certainly did not understand the Calvanhtio controversy— admitting, however, that ho may bo and is a good man and a successful pronchor, notwithstanding. Nbw Lutheran Citntcii.—On tho 2d inst., says tho Lutheran Observer , tho now “Mt. Pleasant” ohurch, in Bedford county, Pa., was consecrated to the service of God. Tho dedication sermon was pronchod by Bov. Ur. Schmuolcor, who was spe cially invited for tho occasion. It was huilt and paid for chiefly by afow noble-minded Lutherans, all brothers of one family—tho Foltons. Tho church belongs to tho Bloody Hun charge, which has given a oull to Mr. Probut, of the Gettysburg Seminary, who was also prosunt and officiated in the aftornoon. Episcopal Pastors ih Kansas.— For the fol lowing list of Episcopal pastors in Kansas wo aro indebted to a writer in tho Episcopal Recorder. Leavenworth, undortho ehnrgoof Kov Mr. Stone; Topoka, of tho Itcv. Mr. Callaway; Atchison, of tho Bov. Mr. Points; Teoumsoh, of the Rov. Mr. Ellis; and Wyandott. of tholtov. Mr. Porinohiof. Lawronco has given tno Rov. Charles Reynolds, of Columbus, a call, though it is not yet known wbothor ho has acecpteii. CONGREGATIONAL CIIUItCHES AND MINISTERS IN Connecticut.— From tho minutes of tho General Association of Conaeotiout. recently published, it appears that tho number of ohurohos is 283; pas tors, 199; stated supplies, 45; vacantclmrches, 89—* seven less than the year previous. The number of yatjnben reported is' nearly 3,500 loss than last your; tho whole numbor at present being estimated at 43,000. The Bible Vlhsipikd.— I The Boatou eorrespon dontofthoN. Y. Evening .Post, says: “I am told that a ploua bou3e carpontor of this elty has recently completed a motrical version of the entire Holy Bible, which it is his purpose to print. The idea was suggested to him by a vision, in which a portion of this version was made known to him.” Sabbath, School Teachers’ Convention.— Iroin n notice in the New York Olsetver, we learn that a Convention of Sabbath School Teachers, of the State of New York, is to be held In the oily of Rochester, on Tuesday, Sept. 15, to which each Evangelical Sabbath School in the State is re quested to send at least ono delegate. The now church edifice of tho First Associate Reformed Church will bo ro-oponod to-morrow Tho paster, tbo Rov. J. B. Doles, will n roM h at 10} o’olock, A, M.; the Rev Dr. Cooper, at 3} P. M . and the Rov. J. Proatloy, of Now York, at 7} o’clook in tho ovening. ’ The Rev Newton Heston will preaoh|La the church corner of Eleventh and Wood streets, to morrow morning and evening. Mr.' Heston is a fluent and eloquent speaker. His subject iu the morning will be “The Glory of Heaven.!’ Tho Rev. 8. Roberts, of Danbrynmnlr, Wales, delivered n sermon last evening, at 74 o’clock, to tho Welsh, in tho hall usually oorupied by them,' southwest corner of Twelfth and Filbert fetyerta. The Rev. A< A. WilUfcts, of, this city, has been invited to assist in laying t(ie„ corner stone of a new Presbyterian church at Christiana, Dola* ware, on Tuesday next, September Bth f IMPORTANT FROM MEXICO* Seizure of another■ Amen can Vessel at Ma zatlan-—lmpoverished Condition of the Trees sury—A new Treaty'.ami Loan from the United States—ltisult to ihi British Flag. [From the Mexican Extraordinary, August o.] Tho nows of tho country is interesting and fore boding to foroign rosidonts.’ Wo should'be sorry to create unnecessary alarm. But certainly ft tighter rein will require to be kept over tbo de pendents and under-administrative officers of this government, or ft genera! row with foreign nations must Fiom Mazatlan wo learn that the late acls against the United States Consul have boon followed by a seizure of tho captain and crew of tho schooner Ada, and thoir precipitate eject ment over tho aides of the vessel. The flag of tho United States has been torn to piocos, and other nets committed iu violence to tbo orders of the United State* Consul, who was in tho discharge of the duties of his office. The outrage upon tho residence of hor Britannic Majesty’s Cbargo is Another oaso that creates fears in the minds of those who wish the good understanding of Mexico with othor powors. .Wo bcsooch tho Govornmont of Mexico ,tbat no time be lost in manifesting tho proper disposition in those two coses. Tho first has soVeral similar on record in this country, but tho latter, fortu nately, has not. With a true devotion (o the wol fiuo of Moxico, we hope theso may bo the last of tho kind, and that President Comonfort will dircot the propor measures in those and previous cases. Tho impoverished condition of the national trea sury is now confessed by tho official organ. Tbo fact has Ipng boon a glaring quo to thoso who havo had tho misfortune to hold orders on the Treasury. Tho fact may he regarded n 6 alarming in tho pro sent entangled condition of relations with Spain. Rut it 13 not the affair of a good business muu to quietly throw himself down and lament an empty exohoquer so long as thoro is a chance to replenish it. Mexico is at present short of ready money. Can she escape this disagrecahlo position ? And if so, how ? How, wo ask, is she to raise money 7 We know it does not savor of Iho present sentiment of Moxico, but wo will answer in the voice of every thinking man in Moxico, “By making a treaty with the United- States.’ 1 ''The lUnitou States is tho only country that will lend motioy to Mexioo. Epgiund or English capitalists will not lend, for the reason that the English policy has for a long time been to withdraw th* capital alrcadv too per manently invested hero. , Will Fnjqoo lend ? j No; for tho reason that she has no intwost in lending money to Mexico.’ Civn money be raised irom Spain? We think thoro is not a negative suffi ciently strong in tho English language to answer thial Well, then, can Mexico raise money from hor own resources, by an enlightened direot aud indirect taxation, to defray her current govern mental expenaor, and pay her just dobts? In the past it ban not been so; at the present it Is not so; and wo fear that in tho future it cannot bo so; with the disordered condition of commerce, internally and externally. In this condition of affairs it scorns to be oertsin that monoymust come from thoso who will lend, and ergo, the United States must replenish tho present empty troasary of Mexico. Mexico must havo money, but “at what priceevery loyal Moxican should ask. IVe be lieve toe have good authority for saying that the United States Govern mail is non* about of fering a loan to Mexico , bat, on the best autho rity wo say it, without asking anything that will bo derogatory to tho dignity of Msxioo to grant. 1 Tho instruction* to Mr. Forsyth from his Govern ment are now on their way from Vera Crux to Uib city. Wo aro informed by telegraph that tho ngent of ono of the unsettled questions between the United States and Mexico has arrived at Vera Cruz, and will in a few days bo in this capital. He is accoinpaniod by othor parties interested in Mexi can affairs, and in a week more we may oxpcct to soo tbo ball commonco to roll, which shall, in !ta revolutions, bring money to the relief of Moxtoo. Outrage upon tub British Flag.—l,ast Sun day, during tho absence of Mr. Leltsom, her Bri tannic Majesty’s Charge to Mexico, from his rosi denoo at Taoubaya, an attempt was made by somo drunken officers or soldiers of the National Guard, to tear down tho British flag that was floating at thoTimo above the residence. The attempts of these persons were frustrated by the servants of tho houso, who barred the doors in time. Fortu nately for tho sktns-of those who made this dls- f raceful attemp’, no rosponslblo person was in tho ouhq at tho tn < 3. Horrible Tragedy at the York Hospital one of me Patients mortally Stabbed by a Lunatic. [From the Tribune oT Kept. 4.] Ycstorday aftornoon, about 3 o’clock, a horrible tragedy ocerrred at tho Now York Hospital. Kearney Rogers Wagner, a patient in tho institu tion, was stabbed by John Mead, u lunatic under treatment in tho hospital. Tho oircumatances of tho bloody affair nio as follow: John Mead, a powerfully built man, a sailor by occupation, who recently arrived in this oity on hoard tho French steamor Arago, was scut to tho Now York Hospital on Wednesday last, from the Custom House, to be placed undor troutmont for delirium’ tremens. Mead went to tho hospital unaccompaniod, and was assigned a bed in tho “delirium tremens ward.” As ho appeared rational and mild in his behavior, no particular vraloh was kopt upon his movomonts, and he received treatment from tho physicians soon aftor boiug placed in tho ward. At tho hour abovo mentioned, Mead was seized with a fit of delirium, and becoming suddenly dosporftte, seized a large earving-knifo used for outtlng bread in the ward, which ho brandished about, to tho consternation of his fellow-patients. In a momont aftor he ran toward Thomas Walkor, tho nurso, threatening to out him in pioces. Walker seized a stiok and parried off tho thrusts mado by Mead, ut the same time toward tho door, upou reaching which, he ran into tho hall, and thence to his room, followed by tho lunatic, who yelled like a demon. Mead was close upon him, but Walkor hud just time to reach his private apartment and lock the door, as tho infuriated man camo up. During tho en counter in tho ward, Walker rcooivod a cut iu tho fleshy part of tho arm, but tho wound is not sorious. , Doing thwarted in his purpose, Mead returned to his ward and pitched into afollow-pationt, n sailor, who was nearly cured, threatening to “oarvo him : iu small plooos.” Tho lattor sofzodaobalr and drove Mood from tho room; but ho had no sooner reached tho hnll than ho darted book again, and running to a bed upon which Mr. Kearney Rogers Wagner lay asleep, proceeded in tho coolest man* nor to dispatch liia victim. Tho first thrust made by Muad tho blada of tho carving-knife nonetrated tho right broast, just above tho oollar-boue, and, taking a downward oourso, inflicted a deep and ghastly wound. Again ho mado another lunee with tuo knifo, tho biudo entering between the third nud fourth Hbs, and, withdrawing it, instaut ly plunged it into tho breast near tho rightnipple. A fourth, fifth and sixth timo hostruokat tb’o help less man, lofliotiug at each blow wounds on tho arm, ohoek and throat. The Infliction of theso frightful wounds was tho work of but afow moments. At tho time Mend commenced tho savago attack on Wagner, the upothccary’s boy and three convalescent patients wore in the ward and gavo tho alarm, which soon biought Darr&ch, tho Snporindendont, with eoyorul physicians and a numberof tho inalo nurses to tho spot, but not till the horrible work above do tailed had been completed. Mead iustautly bo enrno quiot and permitted bimsclf to be takou to u place of confinement in the basement of the institu tion. All tho necessary medical and surgionl aid was xondorod tho unfortunate Wagnor, buttliero is roarcely a hopo entertained of bis recovery, his injuries boing of so serious a nature. Wflguor, who is of rospeotablo parentage, was in tho hospital umi»r treatment for temporary de lirium. l|o resides in New York, and had but re* eontly nnived from Charleston, 8. C., where he hud boon on a visit. Jlh mothor, now in Baltimore, ami relatives in othor parts of tho country, have boon notified of the unfortunate affair by telegraph; but it is extremely doubtful whether they can ar rive in timo to see him alive. Information of the matter boiug given at the Tombs, Justico Connolly prepared a commitment for Mead, and Into m the evening tho lunatic was convoyed to prison and looked up. Fatal Duel, A correspondent of tho Now York Tiibuue writing from Napo, (Eciador, 8. A.) undor date of June 23, details an account of a fatal duel, fought betwoon Professors W. K ilooro and K C. Fran ois, both of lowa, and attached to the Western Scientific Exploring Expedition. Tho olromnstancei woru as follows; On the arri val of tho party at Santa Rosa, on the Nopo rivor, Professor Moore brought charges against Professor Francis of having deceived him iu point of his soionlillc acquirements, mid therefore had imposed on his confidence, insulted the Govornmeut of Ecuador, and had provod a disgriwo to his adopted State. Thifllod to achollango on tho part Of Pro fessor Franois, which was readily accepted by Pro fossor Moore, and their weapons (doublo-barrollcd fowling pieces) were hoavily loaded with buck shot, and the distance agreed upon was five rods. Friends interfered, but of no avail—the parties wero dotormined to sottlo their difficulties with powder. Accordingly on tho 20th of April, thoy exchanged shots, and the result was the death of Professor Francis. Tho ehnrgo of Professor Moor© took effect just below tho region of tho heart, while that of Professor Franoia merely grased the head of hU antagonist. Thus ended one of the most savago duels ever known in this country. The application for a writ of error by the counsel of Charlotto Jones, Fifo and Stewart, con victed of tho Wilson murder at Pittsburgh, has boon argued before Judge Lowrle, and the result was the grsatfug 9? t|» writ of error, TWO CENTS. HIGHLY IMPORTANT POSTAL TREATY. POSTAL CONVENTION BETWEEN THE UNITED STATEN AND HAMBURG. The undesigned, being duly authorized for that purpose, have agreed upon the following art Mes providing for tho reciprocal exchange of mails be tweon tho Upited States and the Hanseatio Re public of Hamburg, to wit: Article I. The post-office of fNew York shall be the United States office of exchange, and Ham burg the offico of exchange of that Republic, for all mails transmitted under this arrangement. 4Rt’ic r LB ll.—The international correspondence, conveyed either by United States or by Hamburg steamers, as hereinafter stated, between the United States, or its territories, and Hamburg, will be subject to the following postage charges, vis: Pottage on each loiter or packet not ex* ’ deeding half an ounce in weight - 30 cents. Above ha)f an ounco, and not over one ouncO. ’- ' - ' - - - - 20 Above one opnc?, but not.exceeding two Ounces, - - -' ' . . . 40 “ And the postage will increase in this scale of pro* grtutorf* tv wit: Additional twenty oents for eaeh additional ounce, or fraction of an ounce. Payment in advance shall be optional In either country. It shall hot, however, be permitted to pay teas than the whole rate;- and no account shall th't *to ° f 010 pw-paymenVof any fraouon of XnTKxe lir: Alt the States belonging to 'the Qerman-Anstria Foetal Union, reeneoffvefy, are to h»TO the advantage of tho rate 0 f too oenU eetab liahod by the preceding article, (2d,) whenever thoir postago to and from Hamburg, for lettera to and from, the .United Staten,shelf;bo redneed to thb uniform rate ot five ooii&Vr Mr. On all cor respondence for or from snch of said States as uhall ndt ra redaub (heir rates, the charge between the united States and Hamburg, by either of. the two lines, wlll'bo fifteen' gents the* single rate.■ And optional pre-payment, a regular progrestive Boalc. de., upon the same principles as in article 2d, shall bo admitted and observed. jAiiTiCLB 1V.—4)11 till loiters originating and posted in other countries boyond the United States, and mailed to, and deliverable'in, Hamburg; or originating and posted in countries beyond Ham burg, ana mailed to, and deliverable in, the Unitod • States, or its territories, the foreign postago (other than that of Hamburg, and other than that of tho United States) is to be added to tho postage stated in artiole second or third, as tho Qftso may be. And the two Poat-Offioe De partments are mutually to furnish each other with lists stating tho foreign countries, or plaocs in foreign countries, to which tho foreign postage, and the amount thereof, must be ab solutely . prepaid,. or . must be left unpaid. And untiPauch lists are duly furnished, neither country is to mail to the other any letter from for eign countries boyond it, or for foreign countries beyond tho country to which (bo mail is sent. lit is further understood and agreed that no cor respondence for or from oaantne* beyond Ham burg shall be oxchanged uudor this arrangement) unless the rates of postago to and from such conn trios, via Hamburg, are identically the same as the rates charged via Dromon, under the Unitod States and .Bremen postal arrangement. Article 1 .—Newspapers, not weighing more than throe ounces each, mailed in toe United States and destined to Hamburg, or mailed in Ham burg and destined for the United States, may bo sent by the United States and Hamburg steamers, when the wholo postage ol two cunts is prepaid thereon at the mailing office; and newspapers of liko weight done up singly, may ho sent to any part of the German Postal Union, via Hamburg, on pre-pay ment of three cents each at the office of the United States, which shall bo in full «f tho postage to des tination ; the German postage beyond Hamburg to be one cent eaoh in addition to the two cents ohargeablo to Hamburg. The postago on pamphlets apd magazines per ounce, or a fraction or an ounce, shall be one cent, pro-payment of which shall like vjiao beyequired in both countries. Said newspa pers, pamphlets and magazines aro to bo subject to tho laws and regulations of each country, respect ively, in regard to their liability to be ratod with lotter postago when containing written matter, or tor any t ptber cause specified in said laws and regu lations. They must bo sent in narrow bauds, open at the sides or ends. j Ahticlk Vl.—The postago for which the United States and Hamburg fpost-offices shall reciprocally account to each other upon lotters which shall bo exchanged between them, shall be established, letter by letter, according to the scales of progres sion determined by the preceding 2d and 3d arti ticles, as follows, viz. The Hamburg office shall pay to the United States offioe, for each unpaid letter weighing half an ounce, or less, originating in the United States and destined for Hamburg, as well as for each lotter of like weight prepaid in Hamburg anddes tinod for the United States, whon conveyed, under article 2d, byltotfSH States steamer, • 9 cents. And when by Hamburg steamer, * “ (Yhenoonveyed, under article 3d, by ■United States steamer, - - .14 •« And when by Hamburg steamer, - - b‘ 11 The United States office shall pay to the Hamburg bffice tor each unpaid letter weighing half an ounce) or less, originating in Hamburg and destined for the United: States, as well as for each lotter of like weight prepaid in tho United States and defined for Hamburg, when conveyed, under article 2d, by United States steamer .... x cent And when by Hamburg steamer 5 « When conveyed, under article 3d, by Uni ted States steamer • . - . 1 « And when by Hamburg steamer - - 10 u Respecting tho postage for newspapers, pamphlets and magazines received in oither country, tho whole is to be paid to the United States offioe when the same are sent by United States steamers, aod one-half to the United States, and the other naif to the Hamburg office, when sent by Hamburg steamers. Letter bills and acknowledgments, as well as forms of aocount, shall be made to conform to these articles. Article Vll.—The accounts between the two departments shall he dosed at the expiration of each quarter of the calendar year, by quarterly statements'ftix! accounts prepared by the General Post-ofHco in Washington; and, haring boco ex* amiusd, compared and settled by the Post-office of Hamburg, the balance shall be paid, without de lay, by that department which shall be found in debted to the other. If the balance is in favor of Hamburg, it shall bo paid over by tho United States at Hamburg; and if in favor of tho United States, it shall bo paid over by Hamburg at Wash ington, or to the General Post-offioo at London, to the credit of tho United States, as the Postmaster- General of tho Unitod States shall direot. Neither offico is to chargo to tho othor any commissions upon any postage it may collect. Article Vlll.—Thosteamorsof either govern ment plying between Now York and Hamburg shall bo required to convey all dead and returned letters, and tho official communications of the ro spectivo PostDepartmontsof tho United States and Hamburg, free of charge. Article IX.—Tho sailing days of tho steamors carrying tho mail bot Ween Now York and Ham* burgh under this arrangement, shall bo so ar ranged as uot to confliot with the schedule days of sailing of the United States mail steamers plying botween New York and Bremen, and between New York and Havre; and also of tbo Bremen mail steamers plying between New York and Brc* men; and shall, as near as practicable, alternate at regular intervals with the days of sailing of the steamers conveying tho mail to and from Bremen and Havro. Article X.—This arrangement is to go into cffoct on the first day of July, 1857, and it w to be continued in forco uutil annulled by mutual con sent, or by either Post Department, after tho ex pirutlon of three months’ previous notice to the othor; and it may cease wueuever nil tho direct itoaraers botween New York and Hamburg cease rnnning. Done in duplicate, and signed at Washington on tho 12th day of Juno, and atNcwYorkonthe 30th day of Juue, ono thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven. Horatio King. Furdixand Karck, Comnus. for the Hanseatic Rep . of Hamburg, Approved: Aaron V. Brown, P. AT. Gen't U. S. This Gouvontiovi is ratified with the advice and consent of tho Sonato of Hamburg. G. H. Merck, LL. D , Member of the Senate and President of the Post Office Department. Hamburg, August 7, 1857. Rates of Postage ttpon Letters to Foreign conn /r*M f> /brirs Prussia «• , *25 Russia #->9 Saxony, (Kingdom of) *25 Saxe-Allenburg # l5 Sardinia, Alessandria, Geuoa, Ntiza’ Pmerolfc, Turin, &c #3O (DuV-‘ --- - Saxony, (Dukedom* 0f)...,.,..,*,**'. #•» Schwarxburft Principalities *22 opaiu and Portugal via Franc' 30 4*2 Sweden *33 Swi tmland #27 Sicily, Bari, Foggia, Glrgenti, Mes alna, Palermo, Reggio, Trapaul, ice., paid to Austria frontier #22 Tuscany, Island of Elba, Flownco, Livorni, Pisa, Siena, &c #2B Turkey #32 Wurtemtmrjf, Kingdom of #22. The rfttos to ell the above named places are tho same by the New York and Bremen line, except that to Hamburg by that line, the rate la 15 eenta, and to firemen 10 eentc, aoTicxTocoK^Uroiwuif*. Cemspaadsats for “Yn Pupa” wffl plaaia biar'ift odad the following rules: > J: £rery cooamslcatioa must be Mcoapcq!*& If the oanebr the writer. *£a onto to tgnre the typography, but on* rid* of a sheet should bag written upea. jsfl We shall be greatly obliged to geatUmsu vaala and other States tor contributions gfii rout news of the day la their particular KMimdglhe resources of the surrounding country, the increase of population, and any liformatJaa that will be into sating to the general reader. GENERAL NEWS. Eighteen years ago, E. B. Ward, the mfl- Jiopalreof Chicago, asiled a small schooner on the lakes. In 1845 he took command of a craft of three hundred and>«ixtr tons, which was the com mencement of “ Ward's Lake Superior Lina. M Within the last sixteen rears he has paid to ship builders and other mechanics, to employers and laborers, more than two and a half millions of dd lan. In the brief period oF sixteen years, he has accumulated, over and above all liabilities, a for -a a quarter. For aome years -Vlf &n< * complicated business connee iJJJiTrH 1 .Michigan Central railroad, involr ing millions of dollars, and the transactions were '* y° rba i Agreement between Mr. Brooks, theSupenctendant of that road, and him !i J’ , t to ? contract ever existed between them, each relied on the honor and Integrity of the other, and neither wore disappointed. During the last four years, Mr. Ward has contributed to pri vate and public charities, to the cause of education, and to promote the diffusion of the principles of freedom upwards of $26,000. Here is an item that ought to be interesting, to the Smith family. It appears from statistics, ore pared with care, and which are perfect!J - relia ble, that in England and Wales, “every year fire thousand five hundred and eighty-eight Smithsare born, four thousand and forty-four Smiths die and three thousand and five Smiths, determined to* pre serve tho Smith family from extinction, do mar ry.’! Tho regular annual increase of Smiths in those countries is, therefore, at present, one thou sand five hundred and forty-four. Allowing the ratio of increase, in proportion to the whole num ber, to continue the same, and granting that there arc as many Smiths in this country agin England and Wales, and that they aro inoreating with equal rapidity, we may conclude that, at the end of a few Qeuturies, the Smith family will have- become a multitude that no man can number, and that the world wilf be quite ovor-run with Smiths. On Saturday last an appalling tragedy oc curred at White Rock in Westerly, R. I. Charles Babcock, the principal actor, came home, found his wife absent, and sent tor her. They ate dinner together, and about Fout o’clock in the afternoon, ait down to the table to partake of a water-melon. An altercation is supposed to have occurred. Bab cock chased his wife out of the bouse, struek her on the arm with a knife, and sa she passed round the eorcor of the house, he felled her to the earth with a fatal blow from an axe—the axe striking her on the bead. He then entered the house, and with a knife cot his own throat, before the alarm had brought any ond to the gronnd. Soma old people lived in the house but could do nothing except call for help. Babcock was an intemperate and had been bo from his vouth up. At Springfield, lUinois, on Thursday week, tho great sale of stock imported from Great Britain and Ireland, in duly last, by the Illinois Importing Association, came off. The Company derived a profit of eleven thousand dollars by the specula tion. The horse Young Bamton, half brother to the great English racer Fandango, which' cost $2,152, was sold for $5,050. Bayiock, a Cleveland bay, brought $1,600. Defender, a roan boll, and Admiral, a red, which cost about $l,OOO each, sold for $2,000 each. Rachel, a rich roan eov pur chased f0r51,776, brought $3,025. Emeral, a young heifer,' brought $2,125. On Thursday night, Martin Glenn, an Irish laborer, who had been working on a gravel train on tbe'Ohio and Mississippi Railway, was ran over by the cats, in 8 tom township, near Cincinnati, and literally torn to pieces. His head was found ea one side of the road, and' his mangled body «y>»» the track, while portions of his limbs and Uetrated flesh, together with his intestines, were strewn over the ground. And stranger and more horrible still, his heart' was picked up at a rflrfawiw of eighty feet from his shattered and decapitated body. A brutal cowhiding affair took place re cently in St. Paul, Minnesota. David A. Wright, one of the editors of the St. Pan! Erprets, was at tacked, while at a hotel dinner table, by a ruffian named Charles E. Hill, who, it appears, took anon himself the quarrel of a man named WQtso. Wright, in the affray, drew first a revolver and then a bowie knife, but suffered both to be taken from him, and was most bloodily beaten with » whalebone horsewhip, not one of too on-lookers in terfering. On* Tuesday, the treat foot-walk of Wallace street Railroad bridge. ai New Haven, fell a dis tance of some twenty feet upon the track below. Five persons, four girls and n man, were upon it at* tho time, and were carried down with it, r*»mr among the broken timbers. One of them had her collar-bone broken, and the other was hurt badly upon the bead. The man had his legs badly jammed t and Is in a critical condition. Another- girl re ceived some contusions upon the head. A Rockville (2nd) paper tolls' of a robber who entered the bedroom of a Tory aleepy-baaded damsel, in Parke eonuty, and, after ptaweritix si much aa he conld, proceeded very coolly to rteal the ear-ringi cat of the ear. cf t£, drowsy h.„ty. Not con teut with this deitroo, exploit, he polled the ringe off her fingers, and then, to complete tho robbery, aetnally «,«ell tk.kax,of oiJobuif .v he "“‘’“Wished it all without waking the girt. . Pitbburgk Chronicle of Ttauad&y even yonouaces the deith of Jndge P. ITKcnax. Hia death resolted from an attack of apoplexy, a diaeasa to wnlch he had bees aubjeet for before. The Judge was an hoiest and upright c iieo, and enjejed the confidence and esteem of all who knew him. Ho mu a natiee of the north fire attained the ripe age of sixty* Four men have been arrested, at Buffalo, on a charge of stealing a carpet-bag, checks and o/uwv** 11 *^ 0 P*por* to the amoont of some SlO,- °-„ C - Don * ,u - »fi«ot Of the r•. °H,P enor Mrnrng Company, at present in De troit. These men were farmers, in the emnloy of the company at the mines. The bag to Ukela on Saturday or Sunday, The Grand Jury of Monmouth county, N. J., came into court on Wednesday with twenty* soren indie. menta— three for murder, one for for remainder fur larceny, and assault ana battery, do. The murder eases are Donnelly for the murder of Moses; Jane Steward, charged with drowning her infant, and Elizabeth Bennett, for poisoning her child, * Hansford Daniel, who stood charged with committing a foal outrage upon the person of his VULfrP?; p ™oilU Wei, aged Uyears, was conucted before the Circuit Court of Roanoke county last Thursday, Judge R. M. Hudson preaid ing, and sentenced to fifteen year* confinement in the Penitentiary. The Saginaw Enitrprist loams that a fisher man was murdered at Au Sable river, a few days ago, by a negro, who formerly lived in Saginaw city. He was attacked and murdered by the negro while sleeping in a fish-house, and robbed of some twenty dollars in money. It is said that millions of dollars' worth of sugar and molasses, held on foreign account, for speculating purposes, are stored in Boston. Three aores of South Boston wharf are completely covered with molasses hogsheads, the leakage from which, it is stated, amounts to forty thousand gallons a There exist in Paris the mins of a palace brnlt by Julian the ApoaUte. From demolition* of houses which have recently taken place, them interesting rams have become quite isolated; and it has been discovered that a subterranean naasa?# runs from them toward* the Seine On the 81st nit., Micbadl Gleason escaped from the Missouri penitentiary, to which he was sentenced for a term of fifty years, on conviction ot rape, at the St. Louis Criminal Court. He ins placed in tho penitentiary on July 23th, 1857. George TV. Cox, Esq., a well known and respected oitisen of this city, died at the Eutaw House, Baltimore, on Wednesday night last, from congestion of the brain, after an Ulnees of one week. A fanner at Oxford, Mass., hung his vest opon tho fence a few days since, with $205 inona of tho pockets. A pet calf oime alone and ate op pooket, money aoa all. That animal thought more of the private than the public meal. M. de Gabriac, the French Charge d’Af faires in Mexico, is to be appointed to a similar position in another of the South American btates. J. N. Huntington, author of « Lady Alice,” “Alban,” and other popnUr norels, has retired from the editorship of the St. Lotiis Lender. Mrs. Abigail Gardner is on trial at Ply mouth, Moss., for tho murder of her husband by poison. ' qritiKß uitr Madame Parodi is rusticating at Lake George, and rowing and fishing for her daily amusement. v The wife of ex-President Pierce is said to contiouo in very ill health. Mr. P. was never in better health. A destructive fire occurred in Fall River on Thursday morning. Loss from 312,000 to $15,000. A portion of the hands in cotton mill No. 3, at Lancaster, Pa., have struek'agaiust 20 per cent, reduction in their wages. The investigation by the Coroner into tho death of Mr. Jobs, of Bordentown, N. J., has re sulted in a verdict of “ accidental drowning-” The Cataract City Bank at Patterson, after a bea\y run on it, bas succeeded in safely meeting all demands, and u regaining public confidence. An addition of $3,000 to the Clay nionn ment fund was received at Lexington, Ky.. from New lorkafew dayssince. In an affray at Mt, Washington, Ky., on Saturday, Dr. I. I. H. Hall shot and killed Wm. Hall, a merchant. Loeftier, who murdered his wife and Mr. Horton, in Cincinnati, is now rarlag mad, or pre tends to be. Mr Hedges, residing near Norfolk, has a stalk of sugar caue 131 feet high, grown on bis furm. The vote on joint ballot in the Texas Legis lature will stand Houston 13. anti-Houston 110. Upwards of ss,ofto worth of blackberries were shipped from Madison, Ind., this season A lot of new tobacco has been sold at Pe tersburg, Va., at $4 per cwt. A daring attempt has been made to rob the Catholic Church at Trenton. Qcahter Sessions—Judge Conrad—Mary Toor noy was charged with an assault and battery on Catherine Burns. Verdict “not guilty,” and pro secutor to pay the costs. Thomas Carlton pleaded guilty to an assault and battery on Michael Tighe. Edwin Lenta was oharged with an assault and battery on Margaret Billmore. Verdict not guilty, and prosooutor to pay cost*. Richard Cushing was charged with the larceny watch, the property of Captain Warrington, THE COURTS.