The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, December 25, 1857, Image 1

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./..." : - th iggi
st e ' 2l.
itopo Z t
"'' ' T
- 7 • : ::'C '- 's* '— 114 : : : 41:41 :74- -.1 ', :14* /,441::: :
-.Rini f' , fig` -, Tri.4 ., . , . ktiiii .
41.- - - s ~ ..&-itaithmi,;-,:m
.: 44,,,,,,..,.,,,,,, M 40410110,04001 (
-i' .. - " '''' " 41 ' - : ' ~
- -," talliillWOO4o,
-, - a r - - , • - t.• 4.,
•••-
‘•.• • cv , • 5 4 .
•
v it
• • , , ..... , ,
4oliba 015if41.--
EiLENDID- HOOKS.. -1"0.1t. :THE PROLI7
tjAiro.—Tbe fattordar,Boolo-mtpaoatta at un•
- neeelly low, prim, nink • OM, worth frouthOnento to
' 111 " k 10 4 " 0 00-eyer/ now pow Persona join:hailing
'Ahem wplthnegefttro - ratitable PrflOGlte for the same
lutnninnef nronmlorl - nlech they tO4hl' pnro:ntio• one
itiewhete ' - •
, •
• 1,15 T. -
ViittVii,keepWee;;4l retTet' o2o- ms 11 60
.11tveulle Tonget-tee-' , ~ .Triend, h lpie Offering 1 60
not . Isietidotap'e Token.-:.140
Tht<Pet 7 Asuptisly. .Itri6ixislitp , o t Go
alft of 4Heetion.:...-1. 60
Bud '" 1 25 Mattes' Wreath" • 1 50
. ThollnOsologgist.-;r2ft_flantss' iterapliookl..- 1 60
riitonVor Gift; • - 160
' . ken or Frioadthipi4;6os ,The 0.4.4iniaN41,..... 1 60
.The Passion Thilinew Flake.;... 1 60
The t01fit41.41,...it rot . lila moon 114*(444..11 50 .
• Illte; Imblom "1 ThePbslo}eies 140
,The 4040U4 I 60 - The Vsostooson's
The Ohtiotian Seepov , ; noel ,:t...1 60
1-60 The Ilepteolla , 1 60
bli irc hrussour)..,, Golden gift.;.... 2 00'
Wth'ef the ~,,,,,,,,,,, fa. bond!toondli: bound IA
ilsofneool,frill gilt, 04 ilptstratsd svithnolore4 4110 fins
11001 glotts: ' - -- • •
itiookli; alot/I; sits* gilt • • 26 oo
4'- • -.‘." -Torkey.,•snt 000
4041164 thelotlcs, 8-so, cloth, eotta - gilt ' 600
-Tarko7, ant. -
isi ' 00
. 11i4Dosero. MOION10; full gilt • 4 00
4 00
204 nook of the Bendeii. . "4 00
.Thttllialt of Beauty ' -It ' 400
!rtliatrAK4loofruhlflielt,eflittll -
''''' '''
' ~ 4 60'
'?lth LeolrittitT, stiorevo ‘ ‘. - 11 00
'214 Attts 4404 4 / 1 010 10 . 11 . 4 3 7
, • - ti.„ • F 1r „ 4 . 00,
5 . 00
'''' ''' 00.
' 2 .1:T4/. 4 ),P. m tb4 l Paitts.f. 4 -711":t7'f•”" M
41": 13i i t3•4 ' ":
Wreath ' lath ilt " a 00,
er'" 4 0 14 '
ant 6-00
1114111Sigsaitn i `intil Elfd,'olotb;glll, '" • 241:
t• „ .
600
1000 4inuele ercentlrely tm,epleadhlly 11-.1
leilltatso - With steel engiosingo, selected, With - groat
.ints4fsinis the' beet editions leibliehed Itithe - thtileo"l
litotes.
, ...,--, ,• .: LkDIEV ALBUIDI - . • .
IThe PitAibiiip,.,. t .44 00 Lib - Osyttriosida.bio,gtlo'
TAM itspir l BIM • I._ LOAM/ tif 'A treatibu..'l. 76'
J - -Album ' ' ~• i'oo -rho railcipeetiadiltnitii 114
TlioSudbeath Annum, I'oo Tbkati Of V6i , #):Vs. i .4;1%16
Ths. 1,,1mp Altium, •.. ,L.l: WV • tAlblioi. oft %resit.: I. 2AO ,
,TbOttestbud Aitbuoo.il At , 4144r,..5.p.411tti0ui... , 100.
'Tbe 01.0Mbatali:J.i •li.oo, lbricuit); Album-Apo
41bitli,pfxgy0:,,, I . A . 1'755! Albjuu or Momozy. - ...2 00„
'A11t9,1•54 , 1*. ••„_ -. ISOnreikir•Wikitti.. 4. 2 DO
-` * -"..",.-fi -,,,,,.• :1.76 PoondAthip Alltfaio.,:" 2'oo
'PketraVri,
.bilinbi vi ffrtrciantlfti)lllllibtiutul 'with
.4661 Ant ' liie.talOfbd', 7 ll.lultelo , loa, AO b l ow
4
-.„,,,.... ~..,:„....:,-. ,„ .-.. g _.;
~„.,,,..„,,...... . - /- "it 2 6
..i: '.. '4l_ .
._ A t lr, t . IVin lte r i. , . i ."..• - .1 ... .2 V.l. 60.
,' -1 Wign:0 11 tiimkittor, ) Impostluity.bouud - aud
-• - .. A lt6 Aturr.ftit — ti - ;koala., l'eo - . ,
4 *All s9lo)f '.la4tH;Fitlilliltrita tatOiMeed'
~
nirjaiittr.”';l4;t#Kl:F°9 4 .. / 5,01 -. 1 ° 0 ! 40 "
" - lkfuildtui it kili;iiitiVeirleihii my lithe 0.104 4itini- -
as atlliki iirltl , be faikiebed with -them by: ft , xp:esit or
-1011k611" thelrraigttiti the Oleo. : ^ ' ' , . ,
-.il•Torapitsol"ring 6 ant by ;ail !MI setae gent
Vitt,_€04,11 0,1 0.,f 6 4 - ,4bl.:)l4olEor9trt ST. q ;tp NA ,
4
~....,....,....,...,.„, sooo,thau Ott omouut.: ~,
g oviokfiipiol,".+ , ..t.. .... ~ .. . (I. Whits, ':.),
4110411#406,f, , 40606,1001f it,out;llol6l4lAila'
40.11"1 1 100.t.iftt*.!ig`lkOLTD.A.FYS,.
86111 HA uinoir
sass . • .„-
-'. •
•
•4
rox
OHILDREN- AND Y,OUTII;
I , ll,eing. not
LARGEST COLLECTION IN TRN COUNTRY,
..•<•,.z, - alrstiety -of -
iißvotslictv ions
•-•
)44diterwsitssitailis enwraps& MAY
7r ,beitivOlittit4cl4iiiiibfaiiiiylng at - •
-- !*•o l 4 o oo l * li s i TA 4 P4 o o 4 o 4l
4#ll-Aisilint
GREAnit REpIIRED'II.RI(MS.
.q!. ;Apostle:A 4Refiga
firlitas i i i ttt,423a c c! t
°BEAT VARIETY,
Attk Nfrrittot
0111SnitMSTBSsza,
it" l ll2, o l,Atip 3
EDP/64
'te
ff -
t•
' tuaz°
• lis i m isitt o t s voofi l 110/4,3, ,
411 -VONNT3BIALTB/. -
31, /041,1 OASSO, •
SAZOR STROP/I,
c i A LF l 9r ti/[ 14 } 3 4 1
lo g ibarbing.
P 0.160 00113E6, -k
^ 4 kiwilitago- Rama t _
~,- ; 1 . - calm SOASDR3 •
11 2. vt , ,r. :21114C1A1al Allan BOARXT,
, fiagggi &a
- 000 time wad
4•1 1 ;;e " 11 - A*l) 8"4,11 1 ,1 ;1 4° . itg sEs :
. 1r aoAkir IrOttß l ripmA vitrermlT sup
CHRISTMAS PRVIENTR.—
Litozoircaliolt inns TU*
tlO,-TIMIES; , '
Int
- '
•
1 Bg.y9oN;
,Baza,,e.vttsvot.
.ciur.atispomieut litooi.tft
-"FiIIet.ARrOLVA,
wteluss.aiitt.niostvgn
d:NpWANTIVIII, ARTICLES,
, DONAU - Al ,
' ,' SDANDT2D AND ADAPTED
toe •
ttoLiftetlf
. • dc WRIGHT,
• - • 85•800 th FOURTH Street
L4F-ING GLASSES,
ViL:P-irtfTINGO,
011SIBTMAI PARBENTB
JAMES'S. NAELB
, tho RoisOit Soiortroeut of Cie stove,
st the LOWEST PRICES 113110 1011104 is the ally,
pA)lllllllbeautiful IIL B.ATIONS of ,
• • SI A R A.
' dslB.3m
• ' ' MELVIWAS
t if A N 1
01. VT ,Bl3ok
333 031231N11T LIBEET,
tibtriskyis!
'opt lioolo
: - AMAY01i,7,14.1101414411. del94w
./FT•S - YOW -1101,1 D -A YE!, I
• " lwm .
• • Ail. ' "
-•.; 'miaow Jelf,'o,Bio 011.13T1111; .• -_
• ' Haracpa4ed wither large oisortment of French Em
` , l4,olderies and lace 41033, lit hat. their dine. ' •
, 'EmbrolairiS 61110;14 23 watt, worth 811. cents.
•' , • - ianit price $t• 12 34,*
:46; " „'dO; • •
Tritich 3161t0 BOto,ll7ji oto;-
/Ai; from $l.
Aorsch Jlearwr 01palit„ •
.450 BEAVER clad - 614mi, at $5,
.. former price PO.
ZAT BARGAINS
• oußrOxial Aso 14a - isA
TBEMnf .. •
disAgi§:
/4 r: Vrtr o 1 . 4 .1 , 1 / 1 ' •
- -IN-PRioss :
10 , 41t011s Turlittsoi. •
tr, 430,, '
00o; 430.
-1441 onßETsvrit6i
ME=
.9, - A; tyr otc
• - STEPHEN P, WHITMAN,
tentir, typo
ii4444'.3.1/MPRfB. - POUND
'
SiOtI . BOI4B
ifisommotiNt,l}l o PpßiD;p aax
VOIt
'pr 101,10K„S.NAOKI3 FOg, int
•-; 1 2 ''i 40/11DAtfil 40/04W
TLIDAY - PRESENTS:
- ~-.,.---- ..,.* . " ...,... ":.1 . ..
g *O4
f; ,gokrtillittiothrr(lTAW.44-kq - --
."I,Pit - rr s tlll2.lh2relllt A tßill
r —BOW. ajitrAxPriiya,' Pe n t or-iikObio. Tel
~WOodirok.-Botito izi WritiotbilskiN Obipiand
.._. Ann Tiontßolao ind .110#13to, Building A D 0 Block),
idin#lloßredk Blusto, Work Stands, l'iowor Stondo,
'BNON . . BNABBilt*ldjßlotrorOjili the Bnporree%
7?--Wilial444.ll4.lkniik BBOONP.94POIP • '
:C. , : r•t-ta4;i:ci - 4-#4;,99Nky*#,,,,.: ~,,. q!).loiir
VINE. WATINIU:' j• ..
4Wpopip *CAI sod oiebrated London and
:5.45:W"1"4644,010.14d1td. • , •••,:i , )
4401P 11 • 0 0f4i!gAltilikkEiTir444 ist Peen It"
alifWS 1 00101414 1 rno" Am. ba 6111141411 q , ,
.', .' 4 ' , . A • , ,''' , d”'^l• ,s ~ ,• ,
-,' • 30a4te e yrie. 0 260 ,978 ace aonars.
pa*
~ " Frio Ii 20; ad s 276 dollars.
IidILNY It. CO.
W 051144110 OS WinlNThdt.
. ,-, .. . ...
ENORAVINGB,
. tiun
010:13,NSIF,A 0
9i6 ORESTSUT Street
=EM7=I
TIOLIDAIti '
161TTLETON COKE VERSUS FLORA Mc.
FLIMSEY:
kr vim Daub mi wawa HALT.:
'"
' (C0)1161111d:):
have done with Alter Flora, I drop - her in"etintei
With otheruacquainted I leave per in Caret
and hoilng regents warmed up for a cantor,.
'Shop. ride hidit'ne WOW' with ti nothing re tOtar.' ,
Dut Arm th the toddle Intro° Joakoy
.Tho apor my heel, and the whip ply hand-
If makinigood tline;l shall labk for a smile
Prom myreadere r {hejudgoe, in pmishig the slOnd.
1:) avoid miseoncontion qbibeetTeliould Mention--
.It May save some conjecture and throe idle talk-
To stag you a song fe my earnest intention,
' Of Littleton Coke, of the city of Near Turk.. ,
".Ir. Littleton Coke wan among thefitsirnal,
'And headed thellot of tho proud upper too"-
Ills pockets wore lined, - "anil Ids Coffers were felt
From playing on Walt street the port of n
Mho° the i• Beurs,!, , badly pushed, had, their tildee
In awn,
And trouble witihretiqpg, the length of hie born
WWI thrust In the old *lsom. poor etrickori_Pitenei
That wounded and bleeding went beak to Its lair:,
du for many'Syear , Wee our lierocortinted; •
''Tlll lsimdreils of thOusands . his wealth „wag COM ,
,puted
Then,quiving "converted the hbriM of the "BIM" '
Into corniicoplu,toople Cud Cani—
ne made up his mind for the rest of hie Jiro
Me would not engage }n a, business strife,
Bat; ePenditg his monoy,
_ , would lire at hie ease,
Would go whore he winked, and would come when be
„Mensal ;.
Ho botight an estate on the Fifth Avenue-
-The point of my 'tory - Viol:winging to view ;
'I slog of the man who had nothing to do.
-Nothing to dote the theme of , my lay.
Andillinahave Ilatelitel4headdid sad ray •
Wbielt /*moat to he whibh ode ofilie ,two
1 , .f100k for i verdict imps atundlilK-O
II? Idttidtiwittoto - Who hattnothing
Or Flortalif oFi himelor 't nothing to wear::
lir. Littleton Poke, as before I was telling,
On eigollulat avenue purchased a dwelling :
1 *ildwiteili, house, or Oe home if you pleats. •• •
And'il you're not suited. ith Julys( those- • • •
It tt‘e.."..Lieuie, Sweet Home' , of our early yearn
Are wordstoo common for delieete auk- ,„ ,
I ("they anist.'be dreppektiOnithe Dictionary,
'Kicked out of our own vocalnitary,
‘Wily, than the mothettungthiNeetp,theldn-: •
Idttlettin Coke lead•purehated a'" mansion.,'
Ile furnithettititoo,front top to-toit -• • -
-The, too of a house !-Is that proper and meet?
Nen,qt twit ;tett when. yousenme to know.
,Timt upon the, avenue, or the etre, t,
tondtipnit fifty feet." - '
Nhir,bn dray feet, there ore mos* or leas tune; '•'
Avid the this I have went loard.was one,orthe /pt
trliebtlate, pertilipS oroClose,
Idayi cause lug to stumble, and tritin my plot. •
Trig horny ;daft Ah !..thasl net/ • •
Having etartect is earnest, W
'with some th ing, in view,
I Shell not lie a tittle or jet,' '
Of!ewoewe.fiomgrypnrpoao,lnyattingltthrough.•-
Perhap.",iii,eonie plebe of,the Utopia of Fame, -
The Oaths I may Utter, in totems:ma rhyme,,
liar Itrif In•their glorrtb bober'my name,
tindimmed,h,y,the dust and the.rabblelt of time,
Or' what Is tnor,o likely to happen, perchance,
-dome mitio`maffun Suo'cleanthreltith with efonce;
4,1 4 . wt I from Pemba dishonored herthroWni
Vatdie of my.winiade s and ; tYna ninth Unknown,
yelealmrysed th66ght,, but, In case It prove true,
Withtlibliontilee of Ilferilhavotuithing
Nothing to do-alawonhkfitly spoken-
Ivrea getting erratic ; the charm la now broken :
Allturtker digramion I hereby eschew,
And return to the man on,tbe girth Arenuo
!dr. Littloton Coke who had" nothing to do."
[Tuba souttoued.j
z , And teeny re,vlir 04' hiApittiza"Uetween the Shop-,
tam beau get lull pittitcOlirs, arid 'Stan giist bova'rui
iu °lathing, et'lleseurni Towel Him. CLOillllO
111auf Btteet, south side, between firth
:Loth
o)4ban Oifta.
. ,
SEFUL 'PRESENTS FOR , THE SEA
, BON. ,: °WARR, ,
ND:DRESS CrOp Da.
iirellow'aeliing Onr stbaleiir these GMode at "
0111RATLY' HXDOCEP PRIM!.
••• IN OUR CLOAK DEPARTMENT -
Will be fauna, a great vailety of entirely new and beam
4ealgne,which we particularly invite the at
tenon of pyqia,xers
JESSE WILLIAMS & CO.,
d02.1-Iw No. 208, SECOND Stroot, WI MARKET.
A BEAUVFUL
PRESEN2'
A . wirs,
pe.paltrEs,
1318TER r oil
ONE-OP
GROYSit,VB44.SR , S
IANtLi -
SEWiNQ
, Id.SO3.IINSS,
tom sum
21217tja. No.'lBo CRESTNILIt Street
HICISTALAS
L. y. LEVI' Br. CO.
'hire now In store a very choloo sissortment of .
ISSINVICIDEIUSS,
• : REAL LACE SETS,
ULACR CH &EMU
Klima CAMELS' HAIR SHAWLS, •
yvvx.Na, AND -.IIWAIENADE DRESSES,
VELVET OLOAHS; „
REAL IRLSEE POPLI NS,
Virenplip DRESSES, An.,
with the usual : iarletY of Goods, which they offer at
tble season of the year at low prices.
401143 t 423 CHESTNUT Street.
- AND HOLIDAY GOODS.
D. GLENN, N0.'24 - South YOUR= Street,
offers to dealers and the publlo a
' VERY LARGE VARIETY OP FANCY GOODS •
Suitable for the Holiday season. 'Deng entirely of Ms
OWN TAIPORTATION. ' •
The assortment erobssees all the ,
' NNWEST SPUR%
AND AT 'FURY-REDUCED PlIlOlll3.
• Among it will be found—
PapetAtaahe Work Boxes; Desks, Portfolios,' &o.
&adios' &bee and Traveling Bag.. ,
Port,e Mounties, Purees and Pocket BOoks, in great
-variety,
Pearl Card Oases, beautiful styles, ,
Bohemian Oilier Toilet Bottles, richly decorated.
• Odor Boxes and Olove Boxes.
Pettey Bronze letislittide, Thermometers, &o.
Backgammon aad•Ohes' Boards, Ohetsnum.
, Sloe Bagllsh Scissors, In sets.
Fancy Cigar Stands and Cigar Oases.
Scotch Wood Snuff Boxes and Bsooy Articles.
Medallions In plastic Ivory.
Aleinoranduna and Ball Tablets, In pearl sod Ivory.
Together with numerous other articles In the line.
„
LADIES , FURS
POR
OURIEMAS PHEEVENTI3.
The moot tunable &Melo for the Hoildays t and
BO PERT 01.1EAP,
At OARTORD'a,
de2l43t 1321'0111t8TNUT, below Eleventh strest,
OAKFORD'S
HOLIDAY HATS
the most beautiful style ever offered.
No. CHESTNUT Street, below SEVENTH
Beryl-Bt
OAXFORD'S
LLAiI 114.T8
Are the beet In the Country..
No. 624 OUNSTNIPS,
de2l.6t - - below SEVEN'2II Street
oIIRTSTAVAS PRESENTS.—
N., Writing Desks, 4ortfatios, Portemonutdes, Puma,
Bags, Card Oases, Pocket Balkan, Backgammon Boards,
Chessmen, fine Letter Paper, and, Statiouery cf every
dractigHan, at grAly
4 RBDUct.ED PnioEs.
_ J. D. JOHNSON,
de17,41031* No. d North mourn Street.
CALL AND SEE,
The Greatest
VAIIIITY 01
HOLIDAY PRESENTS
Seer exhibited in .
TOM OITT OP
PIMAbEIMITA,
INA Will be ;old at edingly
LOW exce
PRIORS
AT ,
M! B]CBBN tc•WITTIsti,
MASONIC , HLL;
8
dl4l MCRESTN A
lIT 1 ,
.
Monet.
WR . lqiiT &CO.,
BANKSRS
T.V
. EXCKANOE ° BROKERS;
* Old No. 37 South TRlRirStFeet, boAr OFIESTNUT
PAIXIDM PAID 0140011 D, DIX,VaII, AND raw YODK
• EXONANOE.
' 01,ty, Warrants !fought at the lowest retie.
de22,,t)t
•
SCULL, OXMBLeiS,
BANKERS, •
No. ato synth Third !Wee!.
The hlghertiroialtim laid for
AMERICAN GOLD
' :NNW YQB. EXCHANCII6,
lanonironi ltundm bought and mold, '
Nooks bought and mold on eounnimnou only, nolo.2m*
AMERICAN GOLII•. - ,
AND
~NRW YORK EXCHANGE
•
MINTED ,
' • AT lITOUEST CURRENT RATES,
BY'
CRONISE k 06,
spscrE .13110K.IiRS; •
0424-dti , 2 ' 40 SOUTH TEITEB 8T
BTINGLEY & CO" , BANKERS,
• No. dr &nth TRIAD Street, Philadelphia.
= COLLECTIONS promptly made on ell acoeardele points
in the United State and °anode, • ..
ritooka, Weds; ko /knight and Bold on Oominisalon,
Uneurrent Bank Wotan, Checks, dm, bought at tha
torrent rates.
Depoeita repaired and interest allowed, as par agree.:
wont. ,no2-11ro
Valitital•
in l ol REGISTER OF WILLS—
Nu, `lo...soooms,
- tivatis* aubriertr'Zeirtolgrallanihtlis.
40R 8,4,41471,Ti1E0RUE11001111i;
flubjcet to rietiloer:til v at u tee " l • notatqo
M 101; SHERIFF—
AA.B.t.Iatr intIBON,'
TWSNIII-3200ND WARD;
: - Opbject Deinocratis iMeN, tp3o.6m*
CARRIERS' ADDRESSES prepared by
an eryerleaced writer, at Ne.1;09 11. ELEVENTH
Street, itbeve Wend. dot;
' - ,1 -:8 ig,:eifa . ~ :,,F,lo":t4topoilgit,'; 5; , 1857.
g i ...• i.„, , '• $1',43,..,;tti
:16, f. .e
~., . , •
1 NI
'FRIDA7k, DECKMBER 24,`1867/(,4
eitayttEs'ltiextata , CitRIOITMAIa STONY '
,YTl!fa , Perils otOertain Angliiili Pylione, ,„
forMlng the Olirletrtitis Ntimber'of "lOWA oilt
W4;rds, Ind !r,evut)listie,l4‘ here ' fl itik - PsOitt, * .,k '.,
does not allude, as •NVas expected nom ,d,'
Stle,,, to .the,'selidylitatncont'of . 'thO Pligllsll l
Prisoner's '- in • India.;• ' l4 . 4illter . .t,ho Xinil,',9t- '
,Sellil •nor' Neiui Sahib is /moo alluded; to.?
'Cho story is dated 'as faribabk as 194 ;' th 4:
,cc perils".were encountered in South America-I,
the narrator is' Gilf• Savie,• it private in the
Royal Marines: '' ' , , ;
~
the Story is supposed to be related bY-thla: ,
holiest, brain; trtut.heirted, humble.minde'd` i's
loan—taken down from his dictation, by a lady; t
t great many years after the'hvents aresuppk, ,
4'd:to have
,occurred, : ' Gill Siv'is.,eala oeither, ,
i
'read nor wrie, arttlflto lady merely transcribe '
his spoken worde v '
,Plain theyare,
,pot tp„tp * O . ' ,
purbotte also =— often alsingi.froin trutlifut.eart '
tintindsit it ibittet4ll4.terY,lllte. 0 : 1 0, 1 4. 0 ,,,, ' n'ers
There is a aliAdakh Or i*tueil 1 .44 1 394**g; '
til.uty.utuo - rararoickyilion these adventures:
i aor.,'-p'` ( *p..i4iii Speak, ertherd ha' ktali)
Gil) ;Davis - Dspins his. " tOngit'yarn", IWO:very
sailbrlilte 'Manner:: 'Whitt. a number of new
uh4eteUrs`,l,ii exhibits t' Glimpsek ‘ or'sonies,
MThlengths of others. There is Ltarrybbarli4:
eV, ,born cOnslia; - to' Mi. - Joh'n'lluneby;' well'
kticiwillo the;ro4ers 91' !! Pi4bOY anti .61"•':',
There is Christian -George King, who neatly
meets with,his deserts, T herd is•ldrs. Beiltot,-
here Is her Pieter() :, k 1 • - '' ' '
",When we had totted about us, and were get
ting sheepish, through famine ww were' trouble-
sane, she turned us over to a yeung woman. Ent ;
lisp' born ,but. West India hrod, who oorred her as
barmaid. ' This young troman'tvas the widow of
non-commissioned otlloor in a regiment 9f the line,
She bad got 'married arty widowed at Vincent.
With only a few Months - between the two events.
Shat was a little saucy *Oman, with a bright pairof
eyek rathe'r a neat little fait and figure, and rather
neat little, turned.up nose:, The son at young wo.,
- Maujoonsldered at the 'alumni* id ,
quedte' On "la give' her a kist i and tabo vona
Nava slapped yonr Pie if you aetipted the bud-,
tertian.", .
Tido last touch la In tho old spirit of a Boz."
Next*,ts a direct ancestor, we 'aro sore; of Mi.
O 3
Tlitroaclo : : •
~iMr.• Commissioner Pordago kept inn red and
black Jammed box, like a family lumn•sutrar hei;
eomo document of other'whleh some Samba chief
or other had got drunk and spilt some ink over,
(es well as I could understand the matter,) and•by
that means hadgiven up lawful possession of the
island. Through having :hold of this box, Mr.
Petdage gob his title of Commissioner. Us Was
styled Cotunil, too ; and 'spoke ',himself as 'OO.
vol'4'llooo •- •
woeq stiff•jointed,high.nosed old gentleman,
without an omit , e of fat on him, of a very • angry
tenipor 'and s very yellow 40Mplezion. • Mr,. Com
&damns Pdrdage, making 'allowanie for 'ditto . .
redoe cif sex, wits much thotemer 'MO, Kitten, a
einill,lotingtah;'bald, botanical,- and minerelogi;
eargentioman; also eonneitted with the mina—Mit
everybody there was that, more orless--twas seine
times "dallcd by Mr.' Oommissioner Pordage, his
Vies-Commissioner, and Sometimes his Deputy ,
Conan). Or sometimes he spoke 'of Mr. 'Kitten,
merely as being tinder government.'
Tide num who wanted every thing done
"regular," and always would bo official, to
•the length of putting on his diphatiatic coat,
when. he , had toAransact bitsiness--og a blue
cloth, ono, gold laced, , and -with' a crown on
the button"--is representailVe 4i the stiff ,
backed British. official- of other days, a genus
not yot extinct. There is Mrs. Pordage who
(c had sow , curious ideas about,,the British
respectability of her nightcap (which had:as
many !tills to it, groWing In layers ono Inside
another, aS if it was a white vegetable of the
artichokb sort), , and .she wouldn't' take the,
nlghtesir-qtr; 'Mod Would haLantrty.whaii:lt.goi
, crushet4 by the other ladles who were handing
thihis about." Thera' are Torn Packer, and,
Sergeant Drooe.e, and the Pirate Captain t :
Here is the last : •
FINALE VRIINA
By notion, he Was a Portuguese; and, by
name, he was amorally spoken of mod/ his men
as :The, Dom Be was a 'little, active, reason,
monkey-faced man, dressed in the brightest colors
and the Anest•niade clothes I over saw. His
three-cornered hat ,witismaitly .cooked on one
side. Ills cot-skirts IMO sti ff ened and Muck out,
like the &Ids of the 'dandies in the Mall in Lon
don. When the dance was given at the island, I
saw no Snob lace on any lady s dress there is I :paw
on, his cravat and ruffles. Round his neck he
wore a thick gold ohalp, with, a diamond cross
banging from It. His lean, wiry, brown angers
were covered with rings. .Over' his shoulders, and
Falling down in front to below his waist, he wore a
aorta sling of broad scarlet cloth, embroidered
with beads and little feathers, and holding, at the
lower, port, four loaded plate* two on a side, lying
ready to either band. Idle face was mere skin and
bone, and one of big -wrinkled cheeks bad a blue,
soar running all across it, which drew up that part
of his face, end showed his white shining teeth en
that side of his mouth. An uglier, meaner, weaker,
man-monkey to look at, I never saw ; a nd y e t
there was not one of his mew, ftum his mate to his
cabin boy, who"did not obey hint as if he had been
the greatest monarch in the world."
But we do not mean to go through the whole
gallery, and steadfastly' resist the temptation
of writing about the true heroine of the ,tale,
Marion Maryon. Why need we ? •By this
time,huudreds of our readers have got through
the book. It was published in good thee, to
be rim!' and talked about on Christmas Day.
In good time, too, for Christmas Presents,
aro PETEBNON'S reprints Of DICKENS' works.
Be has published' heady-lane different editions
of these, from a cheapiesuo in 14 volumes, at
half el:dollar oath, or five dollars for the act,
to the 12tno, illustrated edition, complete In
25 volumes, (upon which $45,000 have been
expended,) with over 600 engravings. There
are_.numerous intermediateeditions, of all
sorts and sizes, all bindings and shapes, sold
at reduced prices, adapted for the table of the
artisan or the costly walunt.faced bookshelves
in the rich , man's dwelling. DICKENS lids
become a household necessity.
AbIEttIOAN DIAAWING•IIOOK—A Manual for the
/mitten?, 41:kd buds of study for the Protesstousl Sr
tlst. ItyJ, C. Cezermem, A. N A. 1 vol., dtu :
364. J. S. Redfield, New York.
The author of this work, intended and emi
nently adapted for the use of public and pri
vate schools, as well as for home instruction,
is Chapman, the distinguished artist; who has
resided Jo Italy_ for severe) years, and trans
mitted the manuscript thence, together with
the bloeks on which, drawn with hie own pen
cil, the illustrations were ready for the graver.'
It is doubtfidwhether any artist of the present
time so well, qualified for the perfect per
forman'eo Of such a 'book as this—certainly
none better. Intimate knowledge Of his sub
ject,. with rare executive ability as an artist,
and complete mastery of composition us *man
"of letters, are,",liir. Chapman's leading qualift.
cations.
Then we recollect what a difficult task
learning to drat ) used to be—hopeless, in
deedeto roost young peopteL--we almost won
derrifthe, first line in this book: Any one
who' can learn' to write can learn to draw."
Here is 'sounded the key-note of the whole
work. As those who are not destined to be
come authors, *fern writing ? , so these who do
not intend to become profbosiOnal artists
should learn, to draw. The ease with which
the art • of -drawing can be acquired is first
dwelt upon. Then follow primary instructions
in drawing, rudiments of drawing the human
head and_ figure; rudiments •otdrawing
ale
meets of geometry, and perspective, ; studying
and sketching *or nature; ' painting, etching,
and engraving ; modellingand composition.
Heroin is 'composed the whole curriculum of
the art. Step by step, the student is shown
how to advance, the labor becoming less dittl
cultrts it progresses, for it is the property of
learning to make each successive conquest
more easy. •
Mr. Chapnian's clear style is another great
advantage here., It arises from two sources.
First, from a natural thoughtfulness of mind,
and next from such • a thorough knowledge of,
apd interest its, his sidled that to writeincidly
about it became almost ' a thing of course.
Hem are no dry and dull Pages of heavy in
struotiom, but a reason for evdry theory ad
`danced, for every Practice recommended, and
mitrierens Illustrative anecdotes and refer
ekes, historical, personal f and literary.
The illUstratiens Maude not only numerous
diagrams anddrawlngs bylFfr. mown, but
many specimens from the great inaatera--such
as Raphael, Rembrand‘Alstan, Wilkie, Collet,
Paul Potter, Berghere, Salvator Rosa, Carucci,
Guerchie, StaiartiCole; Titian, Orairtbrd (the
sculptery,and - othep:, v• •
,'Dpon the whole,Troni the celebrity of the
author, the practictil value of his bOok; the
beatify and merit of, the' illitstratitme, and the
extremely low price of the volume, We are
fairly justified in declaring the American
Drawing nook to be the beat yet published.
NEW PVNLICATION,
gy,ita oldlanity ability:and apptlea.
tion,any one can taieb idnieelf honr to' draw..
lIIiiIIiONAIPP'•TNAVZI.N AND 'RNSEAHOIIEB 'IN
'BOIPI'II APRIOA...I(r Ram. larntaiross, U.. D 4
'O., 14.4 otith Portrait, „Alape,by Arrowerolth i and
4 ' ll 4 l witout .1110.1trati4ni, 1
„. va
. t l a rge B r o. t
p. 112.
,c Eel*: 4 •Brothits New York; W.,1, 21e6sr,VilOnlpga, ,
, alit is;a!fac-fi ,
mile „republication
of the
liatogit:npopttlar ' book' published in England
thlring tile peesent year. So greatly was expo°.
lation. On the'etivites respecting it, that, at the
rtritde4Sl6,liefore it was !salted 'by Mr. Murray,
!Ai; London publisher, over2o,ooo copies were
iot
4tubserilied for. :T,he.A.uterican publishers' will
probabirdispoim .of .100,000, copies, at about
half the English price. They have done every
.:iORO ,ittS the book • by• tbe, handsome Manner
ll Which. they have gotit up. In conjunction
;with Dr. 'Barth Ps - African' Travels; (also repub
lialted,Ay
,'ll.oBlio. "Ilatpor,)' 'we 'have now,
*lndira,' tew morithi, More reliable Informa
ion •about ~ Aftica,' Its people, :climate, •and,
:prodgeo, , that hats ',been supplied by all• the.
writent - frera'Brute to 'Duncan. , 1 ' - •
l':`:The lirst,Chapter ppens with Dr: Living.
itli*tii's alit:tibtorY,',.a ' highly, Intcretiting:
' Aelt,Trinn A -w.o. legril 64 bre Wei the apt(
*,.s , hunthie: 000 itt EatiONM 7 o - 0 4 4 6 1 t4- •
r.tittlf !commenced 4iiis,3eltlict , yet , a: hey' , as '..it
I? ids eAtton.mill. By his earninga t the
olitaittetrii gnild'obissiCal, edicatitmoittr
,, trtnedifido,' iris admitted a namiber of the-
Cony of tittrgeous and Phyalelana, cherish ,
.tio,islit,l4 going ' Jo China as a medical
L' ' listotgl - irvturkii,lll4 ftioUglitso 4trict,
, ittee, ived t Ma 0041 OW niug fl'om• the Leinieh
1/1 810 / 21 7 SO4 l O/Yt.!an4 'itnlilly, woe, pent to
ea, in 1840, by that Society. Ilti says, ii I
arked for _Men in - 1840, and after a voy
t
,pf t ,tltre,e,`Mitliths, reached Cape Towe.
pending but 's short' time there, I started for
.. etinterior by going round to'Algoa Bay, and
tinottpreeedded inland; and have spent the fol.
Ipunagsixteen years of Iny'lifb, namely from'
, 1"840te 1850,1 n medical and ntissicinary labors
,:vatitont etest'to theinhabitants."
r
, . his book; then i lls' an 'account of Dr. Li.
f
ytti stone's residenechithe interior of Africa,
:Am his travels frorn.the Cape, of Good Hope
•td oanda, on the West Coast I thence across
'the Continent, and down the River Zambesi to
fitOEststerp - clecan.. That is, from South At.
4 9 * 0 Central, and all across the Continent in
:40therditeoJion, from east to west. '
•,,
p it
~ i r.. Livingstone, it-haa been truly remarked,
, ini ~ tilened away ,for civilization, and has
v that the interior of Africa is not Inae
oeind tele those Who; With calm courage and
43 1
pirate enterprise, resolve to penetrate It.
'cr
ties !thorns that that . great tract 'of land
It Orte'niarkett .i Irstcsown't is neither an
lidiespitable sterile desert, nor is it occupied
hypit Mind dos, nor Is it inhabited by people
sorttavage that they, will -bear no contact with
ati e
t, white •man. •By .his excellent conduct
ug 'them, and the liberality of his views,
Bier political , or religions,
_Dr. Living,
must have given to these Children_ of
re a very favorable Idea of the English
c
in
cter, which, It is 'sincerely to be hoped,
I judicious explorers will-not hereafter ,dia
pe Ills observations upon facts ' connectedwi natitmlbistory bavo'also largely added to
thd Mock of .human knowledge in ouch mat
'tll!and, lit a commercial-point of , view, his
aispleverlusuounot: Out. be, productivo of the
mostadvantageous results, for ho has pointed
i i
o# Rex elan nobs, wherehy trade arid friendly In
to °arse may be safely carried on with the I
• I
1ia,...,W•' t , -. • , - " .• ' • .• •
'fnese.
are Important results,
,communicated
in 2 most unambitious manner. From' not
bating spoken the English language for many
ye re, • Dr.' Livingstone . almost forgot it.
Hence, even novi,' a peculiarity of diction
which , strikes the redder oddly, now and then.
But his descriptions,lf not ornate and elabo.
raid, , are flesh, an -graphic, and he almost
makes. the reader, a spectator, as it were, of
the ,scenes in, which, he had himself been a '
leading actor. -
Rare aro a few extracts, which show. the
'verb* character of Dr. Livingstone's descrip.
tons; '
-.... , _ • _.... .. . .
FAiiR 'kI)FACE*ITFI A LlON.—{Shen a lion is
.truitid the deytinie, a circumstance by no means
nedn i
nerd to travellers in these parts, if pre
.o6tiec 'fadltediensedoenot. lead theta to expert
setae log very !, noble," ..or ." majestic," ' they
'till stienterely an;'aninlid somewhat larger than
thd,l3l . t deg they ever BM' and Waking very
et te r , , Vir ,- the*anine toile ea; the facie is not
,* ee i ' ' , ' . , , 'ot Ali, lieu, - ill, .' AC
be , e' pro ,i • teetn . o f
. e. i
out paintera -* a it, though they might earn
better at the .Z. , logioill Gardens; their ideas of
tria3osty tieing usnagy shown by making their
]top's frees Oki old women in nightcape. When
encountered in tlie daytime, the lion stands a se
tend or two gardleg, then turns slowly round, and
Welke as slowly away for a, dozen paces, looking
over his shoulder ; then begins to trot, and, when
he thinke himself out of sight, bound, of like a
grtyhound. . ,
stemma° IX THE AFRICAN DESERT.--When
under weigh our taunt procedure le this: We lest
up a little before - five in the morning ; it is then
beginning to dawn. White lam dressing coffee Is
made; and, having filled my pannikin, the re
mainder is handed to my companions, who eagerly
partake of the refreshing beverage. The servants
are busy, loading the cancer, white the principal
men are sipping the coffee, and, that being aeon
over, we embark. 'The next two hours are the
most pleasant part of the day's call. The man
paddle away most vigorously; the Berets°, being
a tribe of boatmen, have large, deeply-developed
chests and shoulders, with indifferent loner extre
mitten. They often engage in loud enabling of
each other, in order to relieve the tedium of
their work. About eleven we land, and Sat any
meat which may have remained from the pre
views evening meal, or a biscuit with honey, and
drink water. After an hour's rest wo again em
bark and cower under an umbrella, The heat is
oppressive, and, being weak from the last attack
~of. fever, I ohnnot `land, and keep the camp sup-
Plied with flesh. The men; being quite uncovered
in the run, perspire profuse ly, and in the afternoon
begin to atop, as if waiting for the eanoes which
have been left behind. Sometimes we reach a
sleeping-place 'two hours before sunset, and, all
being troubled with languor, we gladly remain for
the night. Coffee again, and a biscuit, or a piece
of nearer bread made of maize meal, or that of the
native corn, made up the bill of fare for the even
ing, unless we have been fortunate enough to kill
something, when we boil a potful effaced. This is
done by cutting it up into long strips and pouring
in water till it is covered. When that is Lolled
dry, the meat Is considered ready,
AFRICAN IDEAS OF MANUFACTURER. When
crossing at the confluence of the Liebe and Ma
kende, one of toy men pinked up a bit of a stool
watok-chain of English manufacture, and we were
informed that this was the spot where the Mambari
cross in coming to Maelko. Their visits explain
why the. Sekelenke kept his teaks so carefully.
These Member' are very enterprising merchants :
when they moan to trade with a town, they delibe
rately begin the affair by building huts, as if they
knew that little business could be transacted with
out a liberal-allowance of palaver. They bring
Mancheeter goode into the heart of Africa; these
cotton prlnts,leek no wonderful that the Makololo
could not believe there to bo the work of mortal
hands. On' questioning the Member', they were
answered that English manufactures came out of
the sea, and beads were gathered on its shore. To
Africans our cotton mills aro fairy dreams. "How
can the irons spin weave, and print eo beauti
fully?" Our ovary is Li ke what Taproleane was
to our anoestors—a strange realm of light, whence
came the diamond, muslin, and peacocks. An at-
tempt at explanation of our manufactures usually
elicits the expression, "Truly, ye are gods!"
Tux TAMPAN.—When sleeping in the house of
the commandant, an insect, well known In the
sontherneonntry by the Lame of teleran, bit my
foot. It is a kind of tick, and chooses by prefer
ence the ports betireme the fingers and toes for in
flicting its bite. It is seen from the size of a pin's
head to that of a pea, and Is common in all the
native huta in this country. It rocks the blood
until quite full, and is then of a dark-blue color,
and Ite skin la so tough and yielding, that it Is im
possible to burst it by any amount of squeezing
With the fingers.' I had felt the effects of its bite
in former pate, and eschewed all native bets ever
after, but as I was here again assailed in a Euro
pean house, I shall detail the effects of the bite.
These are, ai tingling sensation of mingled pain
and Itching, which innumencee ascending the limb
until the poison imbibed trochee the abdomen,
where it soon causes violent vomiting and purging.
Where these' effects do not follow, as we found
' afterwards at Tote, fever eats in; and I was as
sured by intelligent Portuguese there, that death
has sometimes been tbo result of this fever. The
anxiety my friends et Teto manifested to 'keep my
loan out of the reach of the tampane of the vil
lage made It evident that they bad seen eause to
1 dreed Able insignificant Insect. The only incon
venience I pflerwards suffered from this bite was
i the continuance of the tingling sensation lei the
point bitten for about a week.
AFRICAN Asrm—.These Rag are frequently met
with in numbers, like a small army. At a little
distance they, appear ee a brownish-red hand, two
or three Inches wide, stretched aorom the path, all
eagerly prating on in one direction. If a person
happens to trend upon one of them, they rush up
his lo ge and bite with surprisiug vigor. Tho first
I
time encountered ,hie by no wane contemptible
enemy was near Cassaugo. My atteution being
taken up hi viewing the distant landscape. I acci
dentally Blepped upon one of their nests. Not an
instant seemed to elapso before a simultaneous At
tack 'Wail made on various unprotected parts, up
the trousers, from below, and on my ueek and
breast above. The bites of these furies were like
sparks of fire; and there was no retreat. I
jumped about for a nowt or two, then in des
peration tore off all my clothing,. and rubbed and
picked them off seriatim as quickly as possible.
Ugh! they would Leeks the molt lethargic tor
ts,' look, alive. Fortunately, no one observed
Chit eencontre, , or word might have been taken
book to the !]hags that I had become mad.
These extracts will show how entertaining
this bookie--indeed, it has ,a vitality in it
which no hack writer.could attain. The illus
trations, too, which are numeross and well
engrav,ed,pdd much to the value of the work,
for they palpably realise the descriptions
in tie text. AVe repeat, it is the book of 1867.
• It is stated that the Subscription to Agassis's
forthcoming Soiontiflo work already exceeds a
mii
liou and n quarter of dollars. This Is silliest un
paralleled In the history of modern literature.
Baltimore, like Philadelphia, is infested with
a gang of notorious young pickpockets,
CORRESPONDENCE.'
LETTER FROM ORE elf THE SAILORS
, ,ON TREI4INIIRSOTA,.
[Coirespondersee of the Piess.l
U. S. Situ)! FRIGATE itrinarsom,
'Cape' Town, S. A., September 15, -1857.
At length, after a long and tedious passage
of sixty-eight days from Hampton Roads, we
have come to anchor off this place, having
arrived here on the 7th instant.. This delay'
was occasioned principally by our experiencing
nothing but light or head winds for the first
forty days out, and otw engines not working
es well as was expected, owing not only to the
dateadnery being 'new, but also, in a much
greater degree, to the fact of mach of it being
found, upon Ida], to be very defective; so
much so '
-that until near the latter part of the
cruise, rho, engines were never, put to work
for over twenty-four consecutive hours before
some part er the other would give Ivey, leaving
us to trust to our hemp and canvas' to get
along as best we could, until the engineer, his
assistants, and men -had repaired damages, so
as to be able to set the .kettles a boiling once
more.'. This happened not ,o eke, but over
and over -again, keepth -men employed
about, the "engines bu at 'work, day and
night;'Without' in ,
tiasittin I ins' that ! •tbr at
hniat the' first- o-thirds of the cruise; our
ship between decks • seemed -more like an
engine-factory. or machine- shop than a Arst
class inan-ef-war., However, as the engines are
pow beginning to work tolerably easy and fair,
they mayyetprove of some assistance in propel
ling us to the various straits and narrow page
sages through which we shall have to thread our
way ingoing from this port to China. As to the,
sailing qualities of this vessel, I wish I could,
with. justice, say onehalf as muck in favbr of
her steam propelling power. In geed stiff
breezes, notwithstanding the drawback ' oc
casioned' by having the propeller under her
sterd end the dead water occasioned thereby,
she has run off her sixteen full knots an hour;
add some to spare, and that, toe, without car
rying any extra spread of eanvall he fact, her
running-rigging would not permit it. How It
happened I do not pretend to say, but it can
not be disputed that the running-gear in the
fitting out of. the Minnesota has been all rove
too small—so much so, as to be scarcely stout
enough for a first-class sloop-of-war, and the
consequence of reeving such thread, on as
heavy a sparred frigate as the, Minnesota has
been the parting of sheets, braces, &c.,endan
gering the lives of the men 'sent aloft, and in
one instance sacrificing that of one of the
crew to their insecurity. The Minnesota is a
noble ship in regard to her sailing qualifica
tions; would that I could say as much in re
spect to her steam-propelling properties.
Take her engines out, relieve her of the pro
peller attached to the stern, and thus give her
a clean run, from forward to aft, and the fastest
built clipper-ship afloat would have to crick
on all the canvas she could spread, to try to
keep up with her, and then most likely be
dropped astern. The life lost, as above alluded
to, was that of John Davis, 2d captain of the
main-top. The topsail sheet having stranded,
he and two other bands were sant aloft to
clap a stopper on it, when a squall striking the
vessel, the sheet parted and they were knocked
off the.yard; two of the men escaped with but
little injury, while Davis did not live more
than two or three hours after, being carded
below. I mention this case in particular, as
there is another John Davis (second) (whose
proper Christian name, however, is Jerome)
onboard, who hails from Philadelphia, and It
is for the purpbse of setting at rest the minds
of his friends, as be is now alive and well, and
doing well. The state of the country hero
does not appear to be in a very settled state,
owing to the revolt of the Sepoys in British
India. The two regiments stationed here have
been transported thither, leaving the 'defence
of the frontier in charge of what Is called the
Dutch Legion, numbering in all about 8,000
men—a email quota, indeed, when taking into
consideration the extent of territory to be
prOtected, not only from the Innumerable
hordes of Canoe, who threaten it, but also
from several gangs of regularly organized
bands of, brigands, or banditti, who make fre
quent and mostly successful forays from their
fastnesses, upon the settlers in the interior.
On the day,previons to our arrival here no
teas thin thirteen British men-of-war sailed.
*obi Simon's Bay, about twenty over-_
janittepa:berg, for India. The iteechworth ).
on board for Australia, stopped in here,
and bad her destination changed to the
same station, for which she sailed a
few days ago.,There are 'a couple of
vessels expected to arrive here in
few weeks, having on board a rather strange
sort of cargo, consisting of nothing less
than some five hundred, in each vessel, of
buxom Irish damsels, who are intended to be
taken as wives by such of the Dutch Legion
who may be of an uxorious disposition, and
whose purses Or pay can afford the luxury of
keeping a wile.
A horrid murder was perpetrated hero a few
weeks prior to our arrival. A young woman,
of easy virtueovaa found ono morning lying
in her bed, with her throat cut from ear to
ear, and, as yet, although a reward of fifty
pounds has been offered by the Government,
no trace has been discovered of the murderers.
We shall leave here on Monday next for Hong
Kong, stopping at New Bay, near Batavia, for
the purpose of taking in coal, wood, and wa
ter. Last, though not least, lam pleased to
Inform you that the health of all on board is
excellent, and that there are very few, and
none of them of a serious nature, on the sick
list. Yours, truly, KRFF.
N. B.—No signs of the Flying Dutchman
off the Cape !
REMARKS OF SENATOR DOUGLAS,
In Re . ply to the Speech of Senator Fitch, in Se.
:rate, Wednesday, Dec. 23;1857.
Mr. DOUGLAS. Mr. President, I ask pardon of
the Senator from Michigan for occupying a few
momenta of the time properly belonging to him.
1 regret that, as the Senator from Indiana spoke
by the courtesy of the Senator from Michigan, he
should have deemed it necessary to say anything
that demanded a reply from me at the expense of
the Senator who is entitled to the floor. I under
stand the Senator's argument to rest upon the
proposition, which be argues at some length, that
the object, the only object, of that portion of the
Kansas-Nebraska bill which repealed the Missouri
restriction was to place the slavery question on
the same footing with each and every other local
and domestic question, as had been done from the
beginning of the Government. I do not misun
derstand him on that point.
Mr. PITCH. No, sir.
Mr. DOUGLAS. I am glad to find that on the
very hasisfor his argument he and I agree. It
was tiro object of repealing the Missouri Compro
mise, to put the slavery question on the same foot
ing with each and every other domestic question
in the Territories and new States; that is, to leave
the people perfectly free to form and regulate all
their domestic institutions, slavery included, to
suit themselves.' Oa this point, however, be dif
fers with the President of the United States; for
the President tells us that the Thjeat was to make
slavery an exception and submit that by itself,
but not submit the other questions.
I was sorry to see the Senator taking issue with
the President of the United States upon a ques
tion of that kind, and, at the same time, arraign
ing ins for having done the ssme thing. The
whole heed and front of my offending consists in
the fact, that r dissented from that part of the ,
President'e message whitish declared that the sla
very question was an exception, and argued to
prove that the object of the Kansas-Nebraska hill
Poo to exclude that exception and put the slavery
question on the same footing with every other
question which was local and not national, State
and not Federal. The Senator from Indiana now
agrees with use that the President was wrong In
that part of his message, and that I Urll3 right.
There is no avoiding this conclusion. Ile re
pented
the proposition a dozen times in theconise
of his speech. I am glad to find that ho and I
agree thus far. I hope he will not consider that
be is outside the pale of a healthy organization ; '
that be ts abandoning the President, and engaging
in en ambitious scheme to break down the Ad-
ministration, because he differs with the Presi
dent on the same point that I do.
lie soya I have come out in favor of a general
rule, novel in the history of the Government, that,
hereafter, every Constitution formed by a new
State coining into the Union must be submitted to
the people before it is sent here. The Senator
argues against the general rule as being a novel
and revolutionary principle, which ought not to be
fastened on the country at this day. use be rend
the President's message on that point'? In the
message the President of the United States tells
us that the exempla of the Minnesota bill, in re
quiring the Constitution to be submitted to the
people, is a noble example, and should be fol
lowed in all melee hereafter to arise. The Sena
tor is arraigning the general rule of the President
in regard to the submission of Constitutions to the
people for ratification. I stand with the President
in behalf of that general rule.
I am a little at a loss to see upon what ground it is
that the Senator utters vague inuendoesabout men
putting themselves in a factious position towards
the party, dividing and distracting its councils to
such an extent that they ought to be considered
outside of the party. Ile differs with the Pres!-
, dent on two points: I on one. The President says
the slavery question is treated by the lianas-Ne
braska hill as an exception. The Senator says
that by that bill, and by the Cincinnati platform,
the slavery question is put on the same footing
with all other questions, without any exception
On that point, an I. have said, the Senator from ID*
diana and myself agree, both differing from the
President. he differs from the President in re
gard to the general rule that the Constitution
ought tabs submitted to the people. On that
point I agree with the President. If to differ from
the President is faction then the Senator has just
doable the amount of faction to his position that I
have in mine.
Then what Is tbo Issue between Vie Senator
from Indiums and myself? Agreeing that the
object of the Kansas-Nebraska bill was • to place
the shivery question on an equal footing with all
other local and domestic institutions, and leave
the people free to deft e the whole, he taken the
TWO CENTS.
ground that be Will not submit those 'qUeotiOns to
the people, and L take the, ground that they
eheuld. 1,0 submitted ,to the people. That is the
simple point of difference. :On that point the sea
coast* 0 the .Presidebt is with me, for he says
that by The torts of the Nebraska bill, it was in
ettmbent spoil' the Dartmouth: party to insist that
the slavery 'potion Should'be submitted to the
people for their decision ; and if rho Senator from
Imi t a te be in right baying that by the Nebraska
bill the slavery question was put on the same foot
ing with all others,:thett it ha agrees with the
President, be direr that the Whole Constitution
should be submitted to the people for 'their ratifi
cation.
Thus lie find the gentleman in ; conflict with the
President of the United States at :all points, and
in confliot with the President upon' the very re
commendations he makes in regard to the Terri
tories which are about to become States, to wit :
the general rule of submission. The Senator trims
Indiana will not °taint, like the Senator from
Pennsylvania, that he ban "other emcees of In
formation " than the message. He will not olefin
that there are sources of information whlob au
thorise him to'deny the propoiltiona laid down in
the message. If he will, I. should like to know
who Is the , friend, and who ie the enemy, of the
President of the tfnite4 States.
.The Senator frortandiene, cannot lailintain Mai
position. without rebelling "against a large pref.:kit
of the message, en the Kansas Indigo. Jut I
-hold that he has a right to differ from the • PresV
dent: OW forbid that Ishanid ever surrender
my right to differ, from a Presidslit orthe:Onlied
States of ; uty.own.eheiee ! have Out become' the,
mere - Servile toot bf 'any Presideht,' so thatl aus
bound to take every reoommendation he-Makes, •
without examining and ascertaining whether it
meals the approval of myludgment or not''' . I
.know that the President would not respect ma
I should thus resolve a eltrittia : from any anther,-
ity
contrary to. my Judgment...
Again, yesterday; Itried to 'ascertain if there
was aprons Senator 'on this.iloor who was pre
pared to yield obedietwo to the President's recom
mendation in his message, without exception
fastened the Neill,' littliroad,ribtwbankroft
the, tari ff ; and many other questions, and could
notget a response front any one man who endorses
the whole, or is prepared to carry it out.' 'All
other men Are permitted to dissent but me
factious in me to dissent! It I dissent, it disturbs'
the harmony of the Democratio party ! I tell the
Senator that If be will stand faithful by the
Cie
cianeti platform, which affirmed the right of the
people to decide all their local and domestic insti
tutions for themselves, there will be harmony
between him and me; and if each member of the
party will !tend by that.platform, there will be
harmony in the whole party. Why not stand
there? Oh, It Is factions! It is intimated, not
charged, that there is something fearful, some
thing terrible in this thing of a man daring to be
true and faithful to his principles, when other mon
do pot desire that he should be. • - '•
Allusions are Made to men whose names are
known—to Burr and Van Buren—as if they came
from sourcesthat would read ma out bf the Dem
ocratic, party. I should like them who are arraign
ing my course here, to compare records with me In
toy devotion and service to the party for the four-
teen years that I have been In Congress. The as
sumption is, that I wilt not bow the knee to power,
when that power itself does not recommend it, and
the Insinuation is that I ant factious. Sir, call it
faction ; earl it what yon please; I intend teethed
by the Nebraska bill, by the Cincinnati platform,
by the organisation and principles of. the party,
and I defy opposition from whatever quarter It
cornea,
I prediot that sixty days shall notover any
head before Isbell be in harmony with go
those who
are now most relied upon to crush melted the
principle of the Nebraska bill, by the admission of
the Lecompton Constitution. I shall be mistaken
if, In sixty days, you come here unanimously
demanding the endorsement of the Lectimptort
Constitution as a test of faith. The pro-edavery
clause stricken out may make popular soverOgnty I
look v'eq.-different in gentlemen's eyes !rem what
it would- if it were in. The pro-slavery obtuse
in, with the exception of the Senator front UM-
Ana, the merits of that Ooriveetiori may husk very
differently to some gentlemen from what they
would if %verb out. With pee CaSLUII4IO no
difference., I regardthe result of that Convention
as a Wok, a fraud upon the rights at the people;
and come with slavery or •without slivery, I am
apposed to the whole of it.
But we are told we must force tho.Leeottipton
Constitution down the throats of the people for
the sake of pales - '
for the sake of looalizinethe
quarrel. How is that to be done? By-passing
an net of Congress forcing a Constitution on the
people of Kansas against the -will of that people !
'What next? When yeti find the stubborn, fac
tions majority resisting the government that you
have imposed on them, the-President will be called
upon to use the army and the navy to put down
insurrection; and inasmuch as this Lecompton
faction is only eomposed.of perhaps one-tenth or
one-twentieth of the whole people, and there la
not a man of them who dares stay there a day
without' the' United States army to protect him,
.we should' have a special message from the Peed
dent reaommending inerimee of ,the army, and
the calling oat of ,voinnieme to lurch to Kansas
V .
eredeasit the frise#AnitletK, andre wattirtela
oeffitinittitltbatife Iwo eleinte
of the Jbayenet, •Tal Is the allthr to b yen
are going to looaliee'the lenses quarrel—by call
ing troops from Tirginia and 'hem Wiseonsin,
from Illinois , and front South Carolina, from Meg'
sachasetta and from Mississippi, and stationing
those volunteers around the city of Leempton to
protest the Courtier whom you impose 'rpm that
people against their will! - Then I suppose there
will be perfect peace and harmony among them
all. You will reatoro peace in that way, and I
localize the Kansas diffiaulty ! No ; sir. The
moment you impose a Constitution on that people
against their remonstrance and protest, you have
nationalized this difficulty, and pledged yourselves I
to maintain that Govensment at the point of the
bayonet. and with all the power at your coal
mend. You have legalised eivil war instead of
localising the; Kansas quarrel. These are my eon
viations. I believe that such will be the con- ,
sequences, if we proceed in this mad career of
forcing a Constitution on a people against their
will. I hope I may be mistaken, and that such
consequences will not result; but, while such are
my convictions, I must be permitted to express
them. if nip doing so brings down assaults on
ino, from whatever quarter, high or low, from my
own section or an opposite section, I must repel
those assaults ; but I do , not choose to go into any ,
oriminatlon or recrimination in regard to consist
ency on former phasesef this question. lem trill
ing that my consistency shall be judged of by the
public. I think my course is pretty well known,
and I am willing that the people shall judge of it
If the course of the Senator from Indiana Is equal
ly well-known, let the people judge of it by that
knowledge. If it is not as well known, I have no
desire, no disposition, to hunt up old speeches and
old records and old letters to show his inconsistency.
Consistency has very little to do with this ques
tion. The great point is, is it right to force a Con
stitution upon a people against their will? Am I
not right in my opposition to that act of power and
oppression? I would rather argue that question
than go into any controversies with political
friends or even political opponents. I would pre
fer that they should consider me so bumble an in
dividual that my history of fifteen years is not
necessary to be discussed, inasmuch es during
the whole fifteen years I have found them
loud In praise of my course as to the political int
quities which they now propose to bring in judg
ment against me.
But. sir, I ask no mercy in relation to this mat
ter. I will not provoke controversy with any
body. I shall not shrink from the avowal of my
opinions, and the vindication of my character,
whenever I choose to do it. I may not reply to
all. It may be an object to worry out my strength
by these constant attacks from day to day. When
ever I find It failing I will reserve myselr, and
then come back and take a raking fire at the
whole group. But whenever I shall feel inclined,
I will repel the blow at the time it is 'truck.
IMPORTANT FROM KANSAS
[From the :M. Loots Democrat of the diet.]
Passengers who coins down on the ears from Jef
ferson City last night, bring somewhat later advi
ees from Kansas, although their statements are
rather vague and contradictory, The moat direct
and specific, en far as we can gather, arc from Le•
compton, to Wednesday the 111th inst.
The Legislature was still In session, and actively
making preparations in regard to the election to
be held to-day. General Denver had arrived at
the territorial seat of government, but bad not,
nut yet, superseded Stanton. The fraudulently
elected pro-slavery members from Leavenworth
and Atchison counties bed been displaced, and
their free-State competitors admitted. On Tues
day the Legislature bad pealed a bill coiling out
the militia to preserve peace on the Mat, and
had provided for a major-general and nine briga
dier-generals to command the troops. They
were likewise reported as having passed an set
stibmitting the whole constitution to a vote of
the people on the 21st, and also the Topeka
constitution—the one receiving a majority of
all the votes east to be sent to Congress. They
had also passed an election law making it felony
to return fraudulent votes, (punishable by fine and
imprisonment,) and containingother guarantees to
secure a full and free expression of the people. It
would be inferred from this that the Calhoun
jades of election had not been superseded, but
we incline to doubt it. These laws were said to
have been sent in to Secretary Stanton for approval
on Tuesday evening; but our informant had it
from sources in which he placed confidence, that
ho would veto them on IYednesday. The free-
State men had, however, full control of both
houses, and could pass them over his bead. It
was thought that the Legislature would adjourn
the next day, unless difficulties in regard to their
action were interposed.
There was much excitement at Leoompton. Men
had gathered there from all parts of the Territory.
Lane was present with a volunteer force of five or
six hundred man. Denver, it was said, would,
when he took Stanton's place, Gall out the United
States troops. Wo have given the enhstanee of
the various report, above, without attaching to
them any explicit faith. Our regular advises did
not come to hand last evening, owing to some un
accountable delay. Readers can form their own
opinions.
The venerable Judge. Henry Potter, of the
United States District Court in North Carolina,
died near Fayetteville on Sunday last, at the ad
voneed age of ninety-twoyears. Judge Potter
was born in Mecklenburg, 'Va., in FM, was ap
pointed district judge by Mr. Jefferson in PM,
And was long associated in the discharge of hie
duties, with Chief Justice Marshall. Judge Pot
ter was in Philadelphia, and was present and
beard General Washington deliver his first mes
sage to the Congress that convened after his ale •-
den to the Presidency. Ile was also familiar with
the presence of Ilamllton, Madison, Adorns, Jef
ferson, Lee, Wayne, Carroll, Pinckney, Randolph,
King, and others.
A man by the name of Smith was recently
convicted, by the Lexington (Mies.) Circuit court,
of whipping a negro woman to death, atd was innt
towed therefor to thirty years' labor and imprison•
peal in the penitentiary,
lunivirtTo imaitafr,mnt:*lll,f
Correspondents for Ts' Ptutte'l witlplinue bees bs
mind the following. rules : -
Every cornrow:acatlike' =wit be secouspenlid bla hs -
name of tie writer. In order to immure' OOirs - tiec t r
the t.Yrogrophy: but oue - -ade of a abed. gonad 34
ler , itten upon.
. .
yr° shall be greatly obliged togentlemect liflxiittof.:
vanti and other Stated for eontrfbuttozosgirl* iltei#OO,
rent mar of the day to - theft loilkilsikaillftlei,ithi
renames of theentroorellog multi", the• iscolani of
po palatlon, end A* information that will bo'tfte teiiicg
to the general reader.
A VISIT FROM' itiAiNjr
BY CLEVIECT R. 1/100EX:I.
'Twee the atgli before Chiistoree, When all threaghthe .
Note creature was stirring, not even &rime i ~ - ,
The stockings were hang by tki chimney With an, '
In hopes that St. Nicholas soon WOrild liw- *WO
The, children were neatledell sang la theft bal ls. -,
While vitions ot trugsr-plums diluted tallith. heads; '
And mamma in her rkerthier, 04,1.14otritsp, 2 : '
Had just settled our Diens for I.loblyriwilles =Fs -
Whets ant on the lawn there aroseileal" -a - Velettiw, • ' ' ", -
r solute from the bed to sesartme Aim theissisettfv; -,i s,
Ally to the window r !Jawlike a Hash, ,
Tor open the shatters snit threw up the - eadr. '•
'-' t - '• -=
Themoon on the breast of the new.dialsosetet, l- '
Davis the lustre of mid-day to oliecta Delete,' "' -
When, What to my wonderiseayee shoold assest, - •
Bute miniature sleigh, and sight ilpy reindo i- -
With a little old driver, NO lively sad quick,ar, il
'•"'• ' • ' •
I knew in a moment It must be St Nick::: , '"•3 •: - •
More rapid thee eagles, his coarsen theyeattee,, . ---
Aud he irlastiee, and abooted,Wnd collet them bi.karo4 - '
ti Nbv, Dasher I new, Dancer t mow, 'Pima: taw ,
• ?Out' ! .
oaoCoatat! on Cupid! on, bonder and IfittaiMi" "
Toilustop of the porch I, to the top of wait', .
No dish away ! deals away ! dash sway all !
Au rylieree aid beers the and isurriewne Sy; , '
'. •"
When they aseetorith se obstacle, meant to thelacy, 1
So up to the liduse=tiop the coursers they See •" '
With the ate/eh fill arts" and St. Nickolas tuna t
Al then ,- to a tart•kliagi I heard on ilia roof . ,
Th. prancing Mid pawing Or oliels little hoof= ' ' -
As drawls my beediaodwas tandagarottlid; -- I =
Doeurthe alum", St. Iflpholite.pacas ;with,. bottlbl , ; ,
Ile el as desisted idithrfur fromliltheid to latest ` : ' •
Abit doll es wareaNtarolideed wittreehaelitel &let* 4 ~ -
Ay itir
- of toys he had dung ow Itiahletkii,"et-,li.A;
hili ookedilks alesiklaeloakopeh isimk- -
Ms Aults*OefelOr klitt beW..rTP-:,
Ills salts witralike moire hie nedialllon geArgz. ,:-
lila roll little inouth-warretraira liplike - I herlf,7-' ",--.• - - . 't
An the Imard-Of Ida ehla_was ea white nallmiwroW t„s t- .
Th stump of a pipit Its lleld light in la IP'
And tam, smoke it manireled hie heed3lha isivireitlit .-- '
Ue Dad a Iwouifees and a little nand 1be1.41. -,_ ." -.
That shook When he isugbal, Aka a beam orlidly. '
ttaSes shell and'plucap,s.right jelly old elf, , -.-- .. - -
An 5 I laugh' whim I saw lam, In spite of inylielf, i i' -
A rad his bye and staid of his head; ' ' - -'--- '
goose post silo to know I had aoll!log te - So4t • ' '
Ho looks not a word, hut went straight to'hie work, -
AO ailed ill the itteckiage: then tOrnia Witt* -jerk,'
An. laying hie fiegerraktrof,hlanoses, , s' '.'..i -s .- .. , ;
,Andsiring si nod , rep the thicaely he rasa; -
it. forme.* his sleigh, to his team gave s - whiettei, - , t '. --.
duNd sway they ell flew Meths down et Athiallsti mit ,
--
hut;l heard him latish*. are he droll tertisfil - ' ---
" Happy airistinas to
,alt,aupi 0 pllikcoartng/EV)... .
I -
G ENERAL NEWS. ••• " -
l'he Court of Pardons, Bitting - at Trenton,'
aft* a most patient consideration for tiro days, mit
Tuesday evening denied the connentation or par.
dosiof Jabses P. Donnelly, for the murderer Al
der S. Moses, at the-Sea-view Ileums, on the Ist of .
August last. The shook fell with tremandoes •-•
force upon the father of Donnelly, who, with 'eve-- -
ral members of the family, were •in Trento*, - He
wept like a child. The °mention of,Dorinally — edU -
tak place at Freehold on theBth of Jminary.., .
_. . .
. F. Crese, aged - twenty - Ere years, m
ph' ed in a distillery on Federal Hill, Baltimor e,
me with a horrible accident onlifedneaday. White
working shout the machinery he was eought end
drawn up into the cogs. One leg was torn of at
thethigh, and literally ground up by the =kohl
nevt • the other eras off at the knee, a few tandem -
se ;wing the =mkt wint;ther_body.. Be lived
buys few - 'noura ,
.
eW. Warren, Postma s ter at Elkhorn,
et N ebraska ' Territory, writes that a young ' 4
ma fro m Newburyport, named Was. Pander, w e e'
'fro en to diath in the hot week of October:near , •
the mouth of Wood river where it empties into
the Platte. 'He was bunting with three others. '
sib n he bessame bewildered In *mew Worm and.
The New Yoris.Tinses says that the schooner.
Jelin L. !Waiver, - estate , OProlike solithsa
wit p. 200 tons - of coal; lias bad liar doelui brava . '
in by the sea, and her masts are gone. She also is
a total wreck. She was built at lifil . rians,•.
Det, in December, 1851; was 192 tons
and owned by Kr. Miller and others of :.• - •
l'be cars on • the Wilmington and Weldon
ral.koad were thrown from the trash on the niOt
of he 21st instant, and turned bottom upw ar d.'
On of two hundred 'and sixty pease white
an. colored, only a gentleman Stallings -
we seriously Mimed. Conductor liforrinet.
set eel others were coriddirobly braised - • . ' .
tekael Plagraw;flrem'en on the Battkuore
an. Ohio railroad, wai instantly Mod ou Tuft
da was angsseet in coupling **angina to
thttonnage train, vhen by a sudden motion of the,
care he We caught between thearm and the
gra! car. • His body was horribly ad and mu
tilated, -
.
he Rev. Dr. Duncan Racfartert, ritintittal '
of e
University of Glasigoli, Scotland, Itho died
b at city on the let instant, was 89 years of age,
an 4 the oldetteterslynal in, the Church of Boot,
bra. tbaving„,sarnved nearly two! generatiorrast:,
theitnialatern at the &trek, . - - - -
''' ti 4 the "' ii ded - e ' -- fiiiitillit'
or.
' - *Ftikr - tiftigkiiktlir.' 4l W
•• tstfattrlu rre-resehenthans. 4- Aher,
• off_on . Bloodyistutti, tad, ftftlo.A . WOOL. , '
re for the East.
,
• pplitations are to be made to the i;
Ist of New jetsey, at its coming tondos, foe
ehattets for ten new basks, representkra dspital
of #1,7•50,00.
04 Mitchel is to dolisor..ssi address la
Jackson, Idissisainpi, early in January, upon the
enbject of tha "gullet in
The Baton Itoirge (La.) 4droorate estimates
the{ damage done to the sugar crop - by the fete
traits at MAO hogeheade.
The celebrated Gaines case is now before
the 11. S. Circuit court,•in. New Orients, Judge
McCaleb presiding.
NEWS ‘ FROIII THE PLAINS
(Fr'pm the Weston (31o.)Argus, Dec. 4.j
We extract the following from a letter from Mr.
E. !IL Perry, to his brother, of this city, dated
Hidn'a Fork, October 21,1857 :
hir. Perry states that he left the trains of mer
chandise, with some of Messrs. Russell' and Wad
dell's, ender protection of Colonel Johnston, with
whom Governor Ctuuming was travelling. The
number of men accompanying Colonel Johnston, he
suiipoeed to be about two hundred beloing to
Government service, and its many more - beidegi ag
to different trains. •dudging from.thelast accounts
he had, they were, at the date' ofhie letter, about
thirty miles (dm Colonel Aleiander's camp. end
are expected to reach that point in two or three
days.
Mr. Perry was aecompanied from the Sweet
Water to dam's Fork by Mr. Alexander, SOD of
Col. Alexander, and Mr. Blasingame. He bad
besid of the hostility of the Mormons, and the
burning of Messrs. It .k W.'s trains before he left
his party; but did not believe the retort Out it did
not, as ha conceived, come from a reliable source)
until he arrived at the spot where they were de
stroyed. After spending a few moments in looking
around, he started on, and on reaching a. little
eminence he discovered animals about a mile from
the road, and supposed they were the cattle be
longing to the burnt trains; but in a very- short
time he was convinced to the contrary, as be saw
several men mount horses and approach him, who
were Mormons. They came up and questioned
hint very closely, supposing his was an express
party going to Col. Alexander. They wanted to
knOw what number of troops were behind, also the
number of trains, do. 31r. P. says that they
seemed to be satisfied with his story as being cor
rect, but it differed very widely from a true state
of things.
CITY POLlCE—DEcratna 24
[Reported rot The Preen ]
'Mienlst eAlritldkN swiss to ex flexesat.—
A short, full-faced individual, named liliehatil Car
rigan, was charged with stealing a hat from the
office of H. F. Dimsdale, M. D., a young physician
who has just commenced praetiee in :North Sizth
street. The whole atmosphere of the court-room
became redolent of musk and patcbuls, when
the complainant, Dr. D., entered. The Doctor
carried his aiim person so erectly as to seem in
danger of becoming "crooked the other way:'
The arrangement of his hair and moustache would
have deserved the first premium at an exhibition
of capillary art, and his coat, pantaloons, and vest
were as nicely fitted, and as well adapted to his
person as his own skin.
Dr. Dimsdale had advertised for a young men
to take care of his office, brush his clothes,
de.; and Mr. Carrigan presented himself as a
candidate for the situation ; but his appearance
and manners not suiting the Doctor's fastidious
taste, Dr. D. constructed various excuses for not
accepting him. Finding that Michael was, or
affected to he, remarkably obtuse in taking a hint,
the Doctor at length observed, by way of a "set
tler :"
" Well, my friend, the fact is, I have an twit
mountable objection to you, and that is—you are
not genteel."
Gintale, is it?" exclaimed Michael, turning
up his eyes in amazement; " faix, I'll handle
sbileleb, toes off a pint of whiskey, or split the
floor-boards dancing a jig with any man betwixt
this and Kilcaraiock, barring it's your honor's
self; and you're the first man that ever hinted
that I was not gintale. I'd like to know what
there is ungintalo shout toe."
"Every thing," replied the disdainful Dims
dale; "your dress, for instance. Irby, such •
hat as that actually makes me shudder."
Finding that an attempt at expostulation only
made the Doctor more impatient, Carrigan gave it
up, and took his departure. La be passed out
through the hall, he perceived, bunging on a stand,
Dr. Dirnsdale's_best bat, black and glossy as the
tresses of a brunette beauty. Carrigan pawed—
took of his own bead-piece, (a " shocking" one, in
deed,}—viewed it fora moment, and forthwith re
solved that it should no more be urged as an objec
tion to his gentility. Be bung it up in the place of
the Doo tor's beaver, placed the latter on his head,
and stopped into the street with the air at a man
who considers himself fitted to enter the first cir
cles. Bat be bad not proceeded more than half a
mum*, and enjoyed the gale of a More or two of
passengers,' when Dimsesie disdovered his loss.
and rushed out bare-headed in pursuit of the thief.
• Michael, when brought into court, did not deny
the taking of the hat, but laid ail the blame to the
Doctor himself, who had made him believe that
there could be no gentilitir tete:oaf • vrellgoudi.
Wt