-1 , :-• ,,- ?filt...' - P 1 - 1 08A-': puBZINEVIi 48111iiiiii *I3LORPTISDd .t r' BY "4011.1q,F.ORNEY. 0 . /4 ICE, N tI7I,II.OT.NUT.STREST • , DAILY I , a4ss, -• twit.r, OUTS rea Wane, payable to the - 0/111T11121, Hailed to 13abecribera out of the Oltr at OM DOLIAXO PEI Aextne ; Fora Dottkaa roaAliour, Moerpo 1 , TOREB DOLLA as Ton tkr. etoeraa, Invade* in abut" ttr the time ordered. • i-WEEKI,st PRESS, Melted to actiss4boris *tit of fhi (lay' teas raa Alocrif, la advance.- • ltEllic.l.3e, rp:Ess.• • • Toe Wearti Pease will be POO . to Babeirribare by (par anntim, adrincei) at • Fe 00, Three Copies, - -" - - 6 00- Fire 00p104, " et AI 00 T. 94 Copies, _ 12 00 Twenty 0°1044 " -pee seeress).i $0 ,40 prentrOoplea,or qvikr; (t4l,lll4vessof each • a r o,6l * 640 4, ''' .. *3.3 v•• .. . 2 0 F r 1;01 dliteefary.sastcr-ovar, watrUl lend en - 'extra copy to the getter of the Math. rostcotteters..4lo,reqllo4o(l3o act ma Ageete Tue Witzuna Ritzsa• ' ' • -1 41.0011111A - 4,o4Sir. _ • timedV , YA4: fat the .ulLna. ttAik*efaci,...ll svia,v," • 1111722 04 Ctrgl of Undier_ ItteiT 4101411 6 411Paiaii 46 1 01111 . 01:4 Otaingiglitir 101 flat Ix& 'tar: •,••- -- WATCHES. - ; : eu4tiitly okluNpa. p nplendld etookat Sapticite 19ataitte ) . ' brall'Uattlelnateii::lFakain? •-•,‘ Neekleten, Atrsooletei - Btottobee, xsialaSe, - Itieget.and o Anti-, D therS rol a 1P the Diattand VAL. L.Fatojege of An din letlntide t ffett Qt enejrt for Aida ande tti inder.` • 0 4 314 - 100Attit: :L• 1 beintitut tenfortotent--of ati the-ntrr-atylee- of Tun' 3e re 'ea. YMatate, atom andlatell chine% 1 : 61 !tt._.• tf r ll - 1 1 1 4:: " ; fibtlifl7f44244 Il ii,dijr=4 - 3 4 Weiiiir Mao, Ikons* and listige-OLOOndefitedi--*: WAX odtirtoesioliti.g . I is 04,4-03rwilt, & 00., 4 plpear t rqo • Rasa issasevid s , ; rev atSilinges risif.etsllll. . - 4. Tewelsy s -Ohatelainiti Yea!, Chains. , , Splendid ifane,V.air,Plnti.;- .ftilttlauds;Sagar,Dankete: • Art Goode and Moser Masses r „ .... - _ ()Oral, end blosaio Sete. Sole yenta to - Philadelphia for the mite of Charles Frodeham'a LONDON TIMS=ICREPNES. dole SILVER WAREI-- , ' • WII,LIADI WILIION it EON. MANUFACTURERS OF SILVER WARS, ; (EBTABLISIIBD lillit,) .. - . . o. 10 MINER 1,15711 - AND 0115111 Y 5 . 0153111. A large aeeortment of STLVEIt W ABB," of every de: seription, constantly on hand, or msda to order to match toy yattorn decked..,• .••• • , Importers of Bhelield and Birmingham imported 0111111. 5080 dkwly • I B. /ARDEN. tc BRO. NAISIVACITIMIS Ann 11100.11.7111111 OP SILVEE.P/JATED W. 1.4.14 lie. 604 Chestnut Street, above Third, op stalrld - Philadelphia. Constantly on hand and for mei births Trade, TEA S}TB COMMONION SERVICE aim, ORES, PITOCIERB, GOBLETS, CUPS, WAITERS, BAS USW', CASTORS, KNIVES, SPOONS, !ORES, LADLES, &0., tilidtag and plating on ill kinds of meta ilasbmare. LVARDWARE.—The !subscribers, COM LI MISSION MERCHANTS for the sale of POREIGN AND DOMESTIC 'UNMANS, would respebtfullY cell the attention °rile trade to their stook, which they are offering at lowest rates. Oar aewortment con- Flees In part of— , • . . Chains, or kiuda—Trace, Log, Halter, Breast, Ox, Cow; Filth; Bach,' Wagon', Stage, Tongue, Lock, Ship, Mine, and Coil Chains. The celebrated Horse Nene ; Stone and Sledge Hamorere „ ESiiiMZlMMaiiiMil R3?ieMZa;il ".Niartits superior Piles end limps Screws. ~M arelelor Safety Fuse ; Wasting . Tubes, Coro, Grum, Brier Scythes ; Hay, Ooia, DO Straw -.Dives. Hay, Manna, Tannens', and Spading Forks.. Sakes and Hoes; Shovels and Spades, of all kinds. Tacks, Brads, Shoe, Clout, and Finishing Nails. Oastand Wrought Butt Hinges;Serawa, Locke of all kinds• Cutlery, Numand Pumps, Asa, Ilatohote, Ham mers, Fishes, and other Toole, &o. , &o. W. G. LEWIS fr. SON, No. 411 00111111 ROB Street. Coibing JOHN P. DOHERTY_ OHARLES ROTH, TAILORS, 614 CHESTNUTZTICERT, neve Just received some I{OII PATTERN COATS, Together with A LARGE ABBORTBIENT SERINO AND SUMMER G 0 ODS, Willett we will eell et moderate prices t ilt L. SHARP, TAILOR, 148 NORTH 'd.Jl • FOURTH Street, below 1t&010. Making and trimming Dram or„Prock Goats, $9. Making and trimming rentalOotui or •eats, $1.78. mbl3-bm 11.111 E B SHE RIDA N, MERCHANT TAILOR, Nos. 18 to.llB South NINTH- STREET, A330V8 CHESTNUT. ... - A large and well 'seleeted stock of CLOTHS and CAASIIISHEN &1 ye on hand, All Clothing inade at this Xstablistment will be of the beet quality, and in the most fashionable style. Partiettlar attention given to UNIFORM CLOTH ING. Moots anti' £11)ocs BOOTS AND; SHOES.—The subscriber hes us hands large and varied stock of BOOTS sod BROSS, which he will sell at the lowest prices. ' 080. W. TAYLOR, • no2l-1.7 S, corner MIR and MARKET Bits. S+PRING STOCK OF BOOTS AND StjOBS —JOBEPIL 11. THOMPSON Br. 00. No. 814 MAR- K= Street, okhd Nos. 8 and FRANKLIN PLAON, have now store 11. ledge and well-assorted stock of BOOTS and BHOEB, or City arid Eastern biannfaeture, which they offer for isle on the beet terms for Oath, or on the newel credit. • ' • • „ . BVets are Invited to call and ommloo their 'took oul-dtf 131 - nge anb gnemirale ROBERT - SHOEMAKER & CO., WHOLESALE- pauaisiyiTa, rdeanfaetslara and Dealer .PAINTS, VARNISHES, and WINDOW GLASS, Northeast corner 701.111 Ta and B. Streets, Philadelphia. - • • Sole Agents for the sale of the celebrated Ifloreffe Plate Giese. • mh23-tf 1 - ZIEGLER .I , c SAG WHOLES E DRUGGISTS, southwest corner of BECIOND and GREEN dtreetn, have in store, and atter to the trade in eta to suit purchasrs: Eng. Yen. Ted. Whiting. Gum Arable, plated and sorb , henna Alex. 011 Aniseed. Varia Graen:fftl Brand WHITE LEAD, ZINO PAINTS, &a.— v m We oiler to the public White Lead, Zino Palate, ()cline in Oil, Varnishes, ft..o. at such reduced prices that we inane the attention dir dealers and consumers ZIECILEII & SMITH, to our stock. S. W. coirr9econd and Green ete, WINDOW GLASS! WINDOW. GLABIi! !—We Invite the aggrition of the pub lie to our extensive stock of Fat& and American Window Glue. The large and well selected *lock of Monet eenetantly on hind enables us to fill all order,' with despatch, and as low as any other house in the city. .ZIBGLER & SMITH, Wholesale Druggists, S. W. corner of Second and Green etc CEbina, Vass an eueenountrz ('NINA AND GLASS. A.J DINNBR WARD. TEA AND TOILET SETS. 001.0 BAND, MID DEOOIRATAD !MON AND BOELEMIANiLABOWAIII, FANCY ARTICLES, &o. litla. ss GOLD, Ar TIM Lowsre rizose, AT bIiatEISEN k WITTX'S, ABONIO HALL, 118 OWTNIIT BTRENT N. 8.--floods loaned to parties at reasonable terms ihe•Y. VRENCH PLATE GLASS.—HAVING --heen'appointed by the t' Compagnie do Floreffe” the SOLE AGENTS for the sale of ;thele.GLASSin this city, We are prepared to offer to the trade or consu mers. from our stock on band POLISHED PLATE GLASS for Stores or Dwelling Fronts • Rough- Plate, for Floors and Skylights; and Silvered ' Plato, of 'large Mee; for Miriam The Glue will be sold at the lowest prim, and warranted siperlor, in every respect, to any other =ported'. ROBT. 11110SMAKERA 00., Plate and Window Glass Warehouse, N. Z. tor. of FOURTH and BMA Streets t0b.23-tf Philadelphia LIRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSEB. JAMES S. EARLE do SON Invite attention to. the 'very extensive assortment o LOOKING GIa,A.EittSICS now in store, suitable fur every poeltion, and of all sizes. MANTEL MIRRORS, Pier and Wall Mirrors, oval and square, Willi a variety id Tables, Drank°le, Consols, &c., all at unequaled prices The latest and standard English and French ENGRAVING._ Particular attention isgiven to the department of PICTURE PRAXES Ise, 'Frames for miniatures, photographs, portraits, &o lARLE's GALLERIES, jel - 81.8:0ItitftTNIIT Street. COMPOSITE IRON RAILING.-T. L. LITTLEVIELDiNo. 28 N. SIXTH Street, - Sole Agent fu: Rutchineon & WickershanVs- celebrated COMPOSITE RAILINGIb-woold call attention to his new patterns of Iron Italiffig;lirerandahl Balconies Carriage - ancl . .Fanir, cotes{ Sumnter,llonseli, eco., &c.i end he Is conedent.them wilLhe ,feund the best articles of the kind in the erarld: • sp2l-Bm* Alf)tremomtKr.A: 40 bbls. tg Biiritaid es" Mouougahat. Pureßye Whiskey; Just received and 1.0 046 U 7 _ ViLLIA.O PLYZATON, " deb • - - • 41613oarTRONT Street. •- .. • - . - . , . , , . . ~ . .... _.-,,, 1 ~,..':. " ___:......,....'':: , . . . ~.. , . . -•- : q . .., ~ • \Nrt 1 I i . , . ~ . . :, , •.-. -..: .. • - ~. b.., • \ A\ I i i ,/,./ / 2 . .-•-. SS. ' , . - • . •., -•- ~ • • •,, \,A O II /, , .:• .•••_,., . • - . - • . , . : . • . „.., • -„- .. ~.,... • , ~ , ,‘, ~,//./ di ,•,,, - 7 , ,j0:.... ....,... ;!. ....., 4. 4 ti , • • . ...,..._, 1ti '•,.: 44/ ,, •. ~,.,.............• • ___ ....,..‘,„,,,,,. ... ~. , . ....• „. • . ~(7.--... ~ e _ • ~.,„..,.„.„,,,. ..17., , ,---,..,0;•?--.-;, - . • :. 1 ..., -?..- ,!-...,, . - - '.,,„,.- , . ..x. - -;.4. - . • ~.,•.-;:-.' ••• Ni . :.' .- -'."-t, Lllill"" , •- ' 45 ) , i • p-- -- f • ):-.4 ,/ ' ;,-; • ~ .,, , ,...„,!,,, , ....,..','-',..„...,.,,,*-,........u5 , , ,. ,•,......... ~......,......,.......„., ~. .....' .. . . . , ~ _,.. - -p- ??, ...,„..,, • .. .-,.., , • - •,,, ,..A A ,....1 7 ,--,:.• ,, ,,,.:.4-,.... ••'. •;-. -- : - /.4 , —- ,,, ---_—_:._,.----- ' _ __....,...,..„ ----- -f7A '': - n ., ...A 402 ;., :'• - •" :-.. "-c . ' 4... - , '.: ".....':.. : ::4 '......-AN f':;.i': •:' . .."...","•"(40 0 k,1. ; ; " - -.!., , ...,:. - .r"'• .. 1.!:.,. i .•.::.•.,,,/,,• .7/1,...._,',„.• ; . ~, -- _.,...: —.__ i•..- --- --- ';'' ' ''''''''" . ."-:1111 -'•• . '. • '-' • ,„ .._ . ..„ I R ._.,....• . --- ..„ • - r . .. • , _-."-,,.- .-.•-t''''''''••"",,:,;:i_:::7-:es"-6-- _...z,,. , . ... = , : "•..'. , : • ._______ _ _._ .-- . . ...... ; ~ . • __„.. ....„. , ..1.........--,..._.1 2.,.., - -,. • e .• 00 r :,f; . , , .. - • • . - - - -.-- --..- . • . . .r. ••• ~ . . - - . -. • • a . 1 - • - . . . ,p,„ .. . _ . . .., • , . . . _ • 111311=1 .:C VOL. 276., lifttoincoo fEarbe. ; .SLOotrilt, DENTIST, 809 GREEN NJ. Strout, adjoining Gormaartowirßatirowl Depot. jell-attt TIR:' J. - UDLOW HAS REMOVED to then est aide a PENN SQUARE, fourth door norih of Alarketgrept, jel4-otit O. , THOMPSOR AND G. M. GONAR ALL!. 41/aV i - , OO34VBY.AIIONRIE • ‘ O - 0,24. UONikalto.lll, ATTOHNBY . AT TAW, No: 039 stieet, below Tenth. _ . I RTY, ATTORNEY OtiliAget l7 1.1 °134"4 11‘4 3" or 3 XGIITIL and LO. ITOnlybln. aul-]T CHARLES TETE, 00M1dISSION— MEE vv qff-a-Nle • and Importer HAVANA SEGAEB Yeti) 188 Wilma street deond dory. aol-I.Y rittAIKNE.NRFNOORE,FURNISH ;ritt'cittai l etpW6 A gittriiret 41t" " " t Mal *Zia thous od Mad.' " ' ' ' • •, • HAAN aurvm AND TVINIMAICER, RIP mar to 1.02,6 purayrm7 etspet, four 40ero be igE,,B•TRO USE, ATTORNEY AT Ippt,,Pott Vs. r.&047 4 1 .01 hr, Wog*. QEA BATHING—CAPE ISLAND.—NA ,a7.llol\nientivraptii."'l,44 of Board S 8 - 1,144.4ka4.• • woe. kaverdie*.: , t , •{ 2 ff „, Jct . . , . . pt9rSl , 7 111 " I 4 '105400.'014 6 uo i ytetup GAP :0311"118 S T.l'Wf ebar, of the St, Somprairoell.otel, - . Chestristitnprti litilaphia; LW lag brae. above popular iunrner.riisort of the bide -ploprbittorrleinee V•iPattore, - ini oPen'the moue for the reception of guerle on the 20th of Juno. Termi mode .rat9t :41140/91 • - Mount Holly Springs, fel&let* • ' - Cumberland cOunty, Pa: VASHINGTON: HOUSE, , CAPE ISLAND, NEW JERSEY: The'above lie open for the accommodation of vlsiters on the lst day of - dune. The oubecriber would call attention to the fact that he has fitted up the 4 g Washington ',I particularly for the early ?loiters. A small dinhig room has been added, Stoves are fitted up throughout the front house, a first CiaSAßAßtnitrant and Bar is now in operation, and every thing now in order for the comfort of the guests for the oar4ue ri tten. S. B. WOODMAN, Proprietor. MANSION ROUSE, MAUCH OOLINK.— ITA Thin elegant establishment, beautifully situated on the banks of the Lehigh, is now ready for the recep ffou'of Rummer visitors. There is no locality in Penn sylvania, nor, perhaps, In the United State,, which omit blues so many attractions RR tho valley of the Lehigh, and the above liotel will afford a most comfortable home to clatters desirous of viewing the magnificent scenery, Inexhaustible mines, or stupendous works of art of this Interesting reidon 3e4-ffm* T GEORGE lIOPPES, Proprietor IBE TE SULPHUR AND CIHALY BEATE BPRINGs, at DOUBLING GAP, Penn'a, are open, as usual, and are accessible in eight hours fromThiladelphia, by way of Harrisburg, thence on the Cumberland Valley Railroad to Netoille, thence in stages eight miles tolhe Springs, where you arrive at 5 o'clock the crone' evening.. • For particulars, inquire of blessrs. Morton Dichtichsol, Samuel Hart, Janice Stool, B. S. Janney, Jr., & Co., or Proprietors of Merchants' Hotel, Philadelphia. SCOTT COYLE, Proprietor, jel4m* Norville Post Office, Pa. SEA BATHING. . LONG BRANCH, N. J. HOWLAND'S HOTEL: This Establishment will be OPEN for the reception of vbitora on SATURDAY June 18th, 1868. Families wishing to make arrangements for the sea son can do so, by addressing H. HOWLAND, Proprietor, my2B-Im* Long Branch, N. J. aBEDFORD SPRINGS.-THIS well-known and delightful Bummer Resort will be opened for the reception of Visiters on the 18th of Juoe, and kept open until the let of October. The new and spacious Buildings erected bat year are now folly completed, and the whole establishment low been furnished in superior style, and the accommoda tions will be of a diameter not excelled in any part of the United States. The Hotel will be under the management of Mr. A. G. ALLEN, whose experience, courteous manners, and attention to his guests, give the amplest assurence of comfort and kind treatment. In addition ter the other means of acmes. It is deemed a rci.rr h to ri s d ta e t f e ro tr 4= e rl s ers g can reach Bedford by a d hf. Company have made extens . lye arrangements to supply dealers and uldividuals with Bedford 'Neter' , by the barrel, carboy, and in bottles, at the following prices, at the Springs, : For a barrel (mulbery) $4 00 Do. (oak) 300 X Do. (mulberry) 300 X Do. (oak) 200 Carboy, 10 galleon 2 25 Bottles, 1X pint, per dozen ' 1 00 The barrels aro carefully prepared, so that pur chasers may depend upon readying the Water fresh and sweet. ' All communications should be addressed to THE BEDFORD MINERAL SPRINGS 00. toyl2.tf Bedford Comity, 11a. EPHRATA MOUNTAIN SPRINGS, LANOASTIIII COUNTY, PA, Will open the eighth day of June for vialtore. Thin healthy 'summer resort has many advantages which re- COMlnendS ft to the publie;in search of s home place to - enjoy the mountain air during the hot Semen. It is elevated twelve hundred feet above water level. There are graded walks through dense forests, and shaded arbors*, by the way side are many springy of The tweet Soft water at, a temperature of 49 to 52 degrees of Faren heit. At the stumnikia an. observatory overlooking an area of 40Miles adnare;of farms in the highest state of - oultiVation t embracing the whole of Lancaster county, and points in ten other counties. The scenery fade. away in the boundary of mountains at the dis tance of 70 tidies. It is altogether one of the most grand and ext.:waive panoramic, view's to be met with in any country. No kind of epidemic has ever been known here at any Ammon of the year. Many beautiful drivea over - good road,. The hotel will accommodate com fortably 400 persons, Every variety of baths. All the modern Improvements now in use in firet.class watering places will be found here. All vegetables reused on the farm. The beet help employed in every department. The Proprietor flatters himself that he will bo able to give ample satisfaction to his guests. Good stable room. Good stock of livery. Homes and carriage's on hand. For further information and circulars call on JOSEPH B. MYERS, THIRD and VINE Street., JANES B. EARLE, • No. 816 CHESTNUT Street, And on the Proprietor JOSEPH KONlGhlitellEß, Ephrata Pont Office, Lancaster county, Pa. • mylT-d2ur iseat Va t POINT AIRY !-TIIIS PLEA SANT SUMMER RESORT be now thrown Ten to the publle, under the control of Col. THOS. I . WABAM and Major HARRY PEPPER During the arm Ileum our readers can enjoy balmy breezes, choice munie, fine bathing, with all the etceteras that conduce to creature comforts, at thie popular resort. :BOATS will leave the wharf, at SOUTH Street, every few minutes during the day ap27-dtf snnuncr excursions EMin - NORTH PENNSYL -w.e 1 . 7 :- -- 'VANIA RAILROAD FOR AWARE WATER-GAY, 111AUCli CHUNK, RAZLETON,AND TILE LEHIGH. COAL REGION.— Miters to the ahoy° popular pieces of Suwon Resonv will dud the Route offered by the North Feunaylvanin Railroad Company, in connection with the Lehigh Val ley and New.Jorney Central Railroad., n to be novel and agreenble,'pashing through conic of the richest and Must highly cultivatod counties In the State, and pet ',caged of comfortable accommodations, both on the road and at the ration,. towns through which it poses. FOR TILE WATER ti A P...+—Take 2.24 P. M. Express Train from Front tind Willow streets, pass the night at Bethlehem, and take care next morning. at 9 o'clock, through Easton to Now Hampton, where a close con. neetfon is made nith the Delaware, Lackalianna, and Western Railroad, and arrive at the Gap about noon. FOR MAUell 'CHUNK AND THE COAL RED lON. —Take 9' A. M. and 2.25 P. M. Expreea Trains from same Depot to Bethlehem ' where a close connection in made with the Lehigh Valley Railroad, through from Philadelphia to Mauch Chunk in b hour, A NEW AND - PLEASANT ROUTE TO NEW YORK ClTY.—Take 9 A. M. Express Train to Bethle hem, thence at 2.20 P. ht. via 1,. V. It. It. awl N. J. C. R. It. through Layton to F.lizabethport, thence by Steamer, awl arrive in New York atqual terpant 7 I'. N. Parties travelling North that have a few hours to spare, will find this a now and agreeable route. For further particulars, inquire of ELLIS CLARK, " ' Agent N. P. R. R., Front and IYIHow otleetg. PnttaoscrazA, Jail° 18, 1858. jol9-2in 165 E 1 1 FOR CAPE MAY AND NEW YORK. DAILY, at 93‘ o'clock A M. NNW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA BTEANI NA. VIGATION COMPANY . . The splendid ocean steauteng DELAW ARE, Captain Coins; BOSTON, Captain Sullen ; and KENNEBEC, Captnin Hand, form a dnily line between this city, Cnpo Nay, and New York, leaving from first pier below Spruce trot (Sundays excepted) nt 916 o'clock A, M. Return ing, leave Now York from pier 14 North River (Sundays excepted) nt 0 P. M. Returning, leave Cape Ala) , (Mondays excepted) at A. AI. Nate to Cape May (carriage biro included) '2 00 " for serrant 1 00 61 4. &learnt tickets (carriage hire ex tra) 800 ,‘ New York, cabin 2 00 ii " ateorage I 50 Freight taken at. low rate,. ror imago, state rooms, Szo., apply on board, or nt tha' Office, 314 and 316 SOUTH DELAWARE AVE JAMES ALLDERDICE, Jell-3m Agent. g FOR THE SEA SHORE. CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD. ONLY - TWO AND HALF HOURS TO TIER BRA MORE: On and after lilonday, June 7th, awl until further no tice, (Sundays excepted,) three trains daily to Atlantic City and return. First Passenger Train leaves Vine et. wharf 7.30 A. M. Second " • ii (i 400 P. N. Freight Train with Passenger Cur attached, 4.35 A. M. Accommodation Train to Weymouth, 6.35 I'. M. LEAVES ATLANTIC (JITY. First Passenger Train loaves 6.00 A. M. Second" 4.40 P. M. Freight . Train with Plisse:l:wear alleehed,ll.3o P. M. Accommodatien Train leaves Weymouth, 0.25 A. AL , HADDONFIELD TRAIN Leaves Cooper's Point, 11 A. M. M. and 2 P. 51. Haddonfield, . IP. . and 3P. M. All trains stop nt Haddonfield going and returning. Faro to Atlantic, when tickets are purchasal before entering the cam $l.BO. Persons wishing to go down to the Sea Shore and return the same day, can spend SIX HOURS ON THE DEACII. Tickets for the round trip, 82.50 Tickets to F. Own in the afternoon and return next mornin g , Or doyen on .Seturday afternoon and return on Monday morning, mso. . Monthly' will be sold at the following rates: For the month of June, $lO 1 For the month of Sept. $l5 o o July, 20 For three months, 45 t I .,, .August, 20 For four months, 50 Churches, Behinds, Lodges,Companica and Library Associations, wishing special trains, should mako early application. , Freight intisitlio delivered at"Coimer's Point by P.M. The Company will not be responsible for any goods until received and reccipted for by their Freight Agent at the Point.. D. FEAZEE, Secretary. . _ . OSIDULDERS:-50 hhds. Shoulders, in dry salt., for sale by C. 0. SADLER h CO., js4 9 North WATER New lanblicatiolls G REAT' SUMMER „BOOK.' ' TIIeAtItOBIOGRAPRVAND tuerumis LOLA MONTEZ. A handsome 12mo volume, elegantly bound In muldin 'with n superb steel portrait by Rogers. Price $l. CONTENTS: Autobiography, Part T. Heroines of History. Autobiography, Part 11. Bonito Alpert. Of Love. Beautiful Women. Wits and Women of Paris. allantry. Ronuinism. Thew lectures abound in the most spicy anecdotes and piquartV reminiscences: They choir. an acuteness of perceptionand an amount of &want editoction and re search ,which are ;rely surprising, the more striking from the highly moral tone shichrimsallthroughthem, and adds to their beauty, without detracting from their brilliance and art. • • . ' "As I usual with women of an aetive mind, Lola Montez is a great talker, but understands the art of con -carnation atifhelehtly never tobeneariserue."—Razer's Magazin'e., , " Let Lola•Moutez have credit for her talents, intel ligence, and her, support of popular rights. On foreign poll tles she hoe clear ideas; and es been treated by the pollticannen of the country as a substitutive power."— Stherican Leto Infernal , " Lola 3lontez is a woman of superior talents, of ex tensive roasting, of great. political • lufetsnatioit, an ex tensive travoller,'h fdrellito 'writer of Eriglisti, a better linguist than half the college .pedente, end, one of the most charming of couvereationlete.” , —"Bo'ston Daily . , This book will be sen t by mail, postage pats!, to any part of tho trnttpd States, on tho receipt of the price, $l. RIIDErdo OARLETQN,' "'-' ' 1 ' ' '-' '' • ' Publlsliers Slid itaikollin . , , i 4s22 , : tiithiet&Z 'No-i4lO-11-RORDWAY,-Ig'kyclik: IVA.4sl•4l'l)t • it4401144 - ` .101;Vg‘ P_UR;- , VIGLEST , BOA 11858:.-.Annfiel ;Digest Of the Law's. of-Pennsylvants, , for,-eseh-of -tho Jear51854,?,56; '3 4 3_, — 's7;:and Mune& frem3- 28 1 1 1-AIAY, 1853, to the plose`di the Session Of - 11358, together with some Lelia of nldir date. I nadverteritly matted in Per don's Digest, 1700 to 1863; marginal reference:lva...ll, geatoU syllabus of each title foot notes tollie Judicial Decisions ,• and a full and exhaustive inderOti which _the contents of all the Anounfldgests are ineorpomted in one alphabet, the whole emitpletiug fitrowl and Brightly's kurdonia Digest to the present time. By Frederick C. 'Brightly, Esq., anther .of " Digest Laws United States," , Equity Jurisprudence," " Law of 'Costs," &c., &c. itr . Thii Digest will contain tho new Militia Law; the Liquor Law, and the Amended Constitution, and is now rapidly progressing towards completion. KAY & BROTHER, Law Booksellers, Publishers, and Importers Jet-dtf 19, South SIXTH Street, Philadelphia. FEN MAGAZINE. 11 BRYANT & STRATTON'S "AMERICAN MER CHANT' , la now reedy, and may be had at all NEWS DEPOTS Their Agent, Capt. J. 11. Bell, Is canvassing this city for yearly rubscribere. Price ;2 per 'annum. Address BRYAST & STRATTON, Mercantile Collee, 8 E. corner BEYENTEI and CHESTNUT Streets, Phi ladelphia. my2B-ly , ACCOUNT BOOTS, MADE OF THE best stock, for city solos. Call and look over the stock at PERRY'S Blank Book Manufactory, FOUR= and RACE. DERRY'S BLANK BOOK' MANUFAC TORY.--Remember FOURTH and RAOE iu buying Account Books. I make all my stock of good material, and sell at fair prices. Je4-2m 17001000 ENVELOPES, EVERY atyle, aim, and price at O. r. PERM'S Stationery Establishment, jo4-2m FOURTH and RACE. BLANK BOORS, MADE IN ANY DE SIRED style of ruling and binding. A good as sortment of Papers for customers to select from, at ' PERRY'S Blank Book Manufactory, FOURTH and RACE. FAMILY PORTRAIT BIBLES, HAND SOMELY bound. Old Bible, rebound, to look and wear good u new. Call and look at the otylee, at PERRY'S Bookbindery, FOURTH. and RACE. ebtuational nRYANT & STRATTON'S GRAIN OF NATIONAL MERCANTILE COLLEGES. PM- ledelphla College, Southeast corner SEVENTII and CRESTNUT Streets. For inforinatien, call ar send for circular. jeltl-tf • CRITTENDEN'B PHILADELPHIA GOMBIEROILL ()SUSS'S, tortheaat corner of OEINSINUT and SEVENTH Streets. An Institution designod to fit young men for ACI TIVB BUSINESS. The whole building is occupied, aid Stied up in a etylo surpassing anything of the kind in this country. Thorough preparation for the counting-house. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. B. B, Comma, Brands Hoskins, George H. Stuart, David Milno, John Sperhawk, David 8. Drown, Isaac Hooker, A. Y. Parsons, D. B. Hinman, Frederick Drown, Joshua Lippincott. ap23.4f I_l°NG'S SPRING GARDEN ACADEMY, N.E. corner BIOUTD. and BUTTONWOOD Us. COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT.—Book-keeping in all its various forms; preparing Studen te thoroughly for situations in any branch et buseeeevi Plain end Orna mm4alWriting,• Oomnaerniel Calcnietine; Lev-aria ca.— respondence. No institution in the United Staten given a mere thoroggh and practical coeree. In this depart- Ment no teaching is done in classes, and is open DAY and EVENING. Time unlimited. MATILEMATIOA_L AND CLASSICAL DEPANT 61ENT.—qfleparate from the above,) Young lien and Boys are prepared for any grade of an English and Olaa steal Education, vie: Spelling, Beading, Writing, Gram mar, Geography, Arithmetic, Philosopy, &n , Ancient and Modem' Languages vrith all the' higher Collegiate Studies. Bmmions of le months commence September Ist, and February let. Pupils received at any time be fore or after these dates and charged accordingly. Cate loguee furnished gratis. mh26-tf P. DONLEAVY LONG. Principal. JOHN H. BELL, TEAOLIER OF NAVIGATION AND NAUTICAL. ASTRONOMY, - - At BRYANT A. STRATTON'S COMNIERCIAL COLLEGE. 8. E. corner SEVENTH and CHESTNUT Streets puma Scrips. PIANO FORTES. Jug, received, an elegant stock of RAVEN, BA ON, & 00., NUNNS & OLARR lIALLET, DAVIS & CO., and GALE & 00. /3 PIANOS. MELODEONS best quality, at J. E. GOULD'S, S. S. corner SEVENTH and. CHESTNUT eta. mhl9-y THE UNION PIANO MANUFAOTUR ING COMPANY, No. 1104 MARKET Street Philadelphia. The Union Companye re now prepared to offer to their friends, as well aa to the public generally, their Pianos as being unsurpassed by any others as regards beauty and fullness of tone, perfectness and durability 'Mien, quality of materials and finish. The Union Company being composed of persons who are all practical workmen, and who, having bad years of expenence manufactoties both of this country and Europe, are each perfect in their department; and, by their combined efforts, are enabled to offer to the public a firatelaas Plano at a much lower rate than any other manufactory, and at the same time, are sure of the quality of their Instruments, each part being made by one of the membera of the Company; and will therefore guarantee each instrn merit as having all the qualities claimed for it In this circular. if IV' Tuning and repairing attended to. Please call and examine, at ap7-3mo - 1101 MARKET STREET Eianinno ftnb QAPING FUND-FIVE PER CENT. 1N ),7 TEILEST—NATIONAL SAFETY TRUST COM PANY.—WALNUT STREET, SOUTEI-WEST OORNER OF THIRD, PRILADELPIIIA. IVOORFORATED HT TEM BUFF OF FINKBYLTASIA. Money le received in any awn, largo or mall, and in terest paid from the day of deposit to the day of with drawal. The dike is open every day from 9 o'clock in the morning till 5 o'clock in the evening, and On Monday and Thursday evenings till 8 o'clock. lION. EISNRY 1,. SWINT:It, President, ROBERT BEIRBIDGB, Vice Preeldent. Wag. 3. RIM, Secretary. inizoroas Ron. Henry L. Benner, P. Garrott Browder, Edward L. Carter, Joseph B. DIM Hobert Selfridge, Erancle Lb, kiami. K. Ashton, Joseph Tortes, 0. Landreth Monne, Henry Dlffenderffer. Money is received and payment, made daily. The investments are made in conformity with the provisions of the Charter, in REAL ESTATE MORT GAGES, GROUND RENTS, and ouch find class securi ties as will elweyst insure perfect security to the deposi tors, and which cannot fan to give permanency end sta bility to this Institution. N °. 88 (241) DOOR STREET.-FIVE PER OENT. STATE SAVINGS FUND. JO. 83 (241) DOCK STREET.— FIVE PEP. CENT. STATE SAVINGS FUND. N O. 88 (241 ) DOCK STREET.— FIVE PER CENT. STATE SAVINGS FUND. NO. 88 (241) DOCK STREET.— FIVE PER CENT. BTATIFSAVINGS FUND. ase/-/F Earpclings CARPETS. lJ We will commence TODAY CLOSING OCT Our entire Spring Stock of VELVET AND MUMS CARPETINGS, GREATLY REDUCED PRIORS. BALLY & BROTHER, N 0.020 CHESTNUT Street. Purchasers will please call and examine our large assortment. ap2o-tf TAPESTRY CARPETS.-JUST OPEN &D, a largo lot or superior Tapestry Carpets, to be sold at a low price. BAILY & BROTHER, CASH CARPET STORE * 920 CHESTNUT St SIIPERB THREE-PLY CARPE T S . A (comb aseortment of new patterns, at reduced prices, at DAILY & BROTHER'S, CASH CARPET STORE, 920 CHESTNUT Bt. J3ED ROOM OARPETS.-10,000 YDS. of superior Ingrain and Three-ply Carpets. of the beet makes nd styles, at all prices, from 60 cecte to $1.25 per yard. DAILY & BROTHER,. mhBl-ff No. 920 CHESTNUT Street. BEST HEAVY BRUSSELS.-A LARGE JJ lot of now patterno, in rest, chaste otyleo, et low orloeo.. BALLY & BROTHER, CHEAP CARPET STOE, 020 CHESTNUT St 1213cntiotrg. C A. KINGSBURY, M. D., DENTIST, ' Would Inform his friends (hot he has REMOVED to 1110 WALNUT Street, above Eleventh. jo2-3m WIIITE FISH.--5O BBLS. WHITE 001, for sale by C. ULME&w 0., .0,10 o Newt% IVIONONGAIIELA WHISKEY.-16 bbls. old Monongahela Whiskey, let store and for saloby WILLIAM U. YHIATON, et 210 80211 i TUESDAY, 1854. 11 .1 ~,41 TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1858 Tin= Firm rocnts. As' a relief to eternal politics, which rciem blo Aaron's rod in swallOwing up a groat ninny other topics, wo have, briefly to .mention a curious case, in which more than ono plagia rism might be imputed, on the prima fade evi dence of appearances, did not the personal character of the parties interested give their denial the fullest force a simple negative can have. .. • Our townsman, Mr. HARBISON HALL, 80111 e years ago,- published icSolections from tho Writings of Mrs. Sarah Hall, (his mother,) with a Memoir of.her Lite." He overlooked a striking poem, from her pen, published in .1825, in , c The'Pertfolio," to which able and Once popular periodical she - extensively con tributed; and of which ono of. her eons was editor for several years. In vol.P,nf "The JP ortfolto " is an Italian 'ioianet,, thus prefaced:, • • , ,J ; Had the same coincidence of:thotghtaixd mblah appear in the two followlog pieces, beettotelerre' , ..4 ip PfLlsrfftiogo of p/reni ..scottiCaM,Pholl, or Any - the „present favorltes, the grand„theaye, (4 ; 19004 1 would have been wroaderfullkagilapq I to, eF.Pcl,$.! thR plagiarist... The franalateft geutuit., le tr i p a Letups llagailuo of 1824, the othet vise - 404 proiloutO ff. the publication of the Magaslne, by a lady of Phthotel. phla, who certainly had never seen the original sondot : ITALIAN SONNET. There'll no God, the fool in secret said— There is no God that ruing on earth, or sky 1 1 Tear off the band that_ folde the wretch's head;` That God may burst upOn his faithless eye. 'Ye there no God ',—the etare in myriads spread, If he look up, the blasphemy deny, Whilst hie own features In the mirror read, Reflect the image of Divinity. Is there no God 9—the stream that silver flows, The air he breathes, the ground he treads, the trees, The flowers, the grass, the sands, eaoh wind that blowai All spe.tk of God ; throughout one TOM agrees, And eloquent his dread existence shows : - Blind to thyself, ah, see him, fool, in these. ' " As we have said, the lady in question was Mrs. SARAH HALL, author of a Conversations 'on the Bible," and, as her writings show, a very gifted woman. Her poem, written with out having seen the Sonnet, is as follows, and we have pleasure in reproducing it: LINES IVRITTUN IN A LADY'S ALBUM. " There is no God the fool bath said,"' ' The senseleiv ask, where le he? Who bath seen His glorious form? What space contains him? Ask not, but look around—not hero, not there, But ev'ry where he dwells, an all-pervading God! Dont thou not see, not hear I—creation spooks, Creation sings, in ono untiring anthem singe, The eternal being of efficient cause Sprang all this beanty,'ordsr, life from nought, Did intellect—that very intellect that moves The sceptic's daring soul to Impious thought— a Did that inform a mese of torpid clay Without superior energy to bid it live? All use the noble gift, all-adequate, and know Thy Benefactor ! on thy right he stands, And on thy left. He spread the teeming earth Beneath thy feet to minister and charm; And crown'd its glories with the vaulted sky. He rained the mountains from their lowly beds, Andes and Alps in either hemisphere, And taught them where to check their aspiring lambi Amidst the mantling donde. Hie hand conceal'd In their capacious treasuries the gem, And gave the latent lustre, and the hue. Trees, herbs, and Dowers, at His command, perform The work assiguld—put forth their leafy arms To tremb'e in the breeze, or rear on high Thal, 'fearieee heads to brave the reckless blast— Nourlah the healing balsam, or diffuse Toeir grateful fragrance through the recipient air. Vain art of man ! How limited, how weak ! Stan given to earth inanimate the seed; Thus far—no further can he go—his power is staid. Sends he the genial warmth, the eoft'aing dew, The early and the latter rain ?', Not Mat; : Omnipotence alone—the gifts are hie. He curves - the tendril, hangs the clustering - vine, ?double to infinity unnumbered forms, And tints all nature with nnnumb , red dyen. - could m.l—aura mustier, scamp one wondrous gulph The etore•bouso of the deep ? Power, nuareated power, Gplifts the pondrona waves, and bids them meet The impending cloud, whilst the pale mariner In trembling safety guides bin fragile bark, An atom in the elemental war In there a God ? Go ask whence order comes. Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter, take their rounds, They come—they pace—rsturn, each in his time, From that auspicious hour when chaos lied. Io there a God ? Who made that mass of light, Who placed it In the glowing heav'ne, and cuark , d His annual never•deviating couree ? Those other sparkling suns that cheer the night— Resplendent Skies, Rummel - Pi baleful star,. Orion and Arcturus, to beautify This lower sphere ; while thousands shine beyond, Far from the vulgar gaze, and scarcely found By searching science with her utmost aids ? There, order reigns, and harmony presides. Confusion never vielts thine bright realms, Though frightful comets bring their glaring trains Across the vast domain, and furious storms Would seem to war against the g'orions Mote. These aro His works ; their voice Intelligent Gore forth, and epochs, wherever man is found, The eternal being of Eilloient Canoe These, and much more than mortal eye can reach ! And all, for, far beyond the feeble grasp Of mortal intellect. But most of all, Thyself examine, proud, ungrateful man ! ‘‘ But little lower than the angels made :” And, if thou canst—withhold from God the praise. Mr. HARBISON HALL thus writes to us: "Recently, in looking over the poems of Mrs. Sigournoy, I was struck by the similarity of a few lines by her on the same subject. In reply to a note addressed to her, she says•: ' 'have never had the ploasuro of seeing the beautiful lines of your mother, on the being of a Clod, oxoopt in your own fair chirography. Your proposition to publish with them my own brief poem, on a rimilar theme, would bo pleaaingrto mo if you desire it.' Oblige me by now placing the three together, to forestall any one who may undertake to charge olihor lady with plagiarism, and in order to show how exactly two women of a superior order of intellect, may think alike end express themselves in nearly the same words." Wo here subjoin Mrs. SmoUrtNEY'S stanzas, suggested by the words in the 14th Psalm of DAVID, "The fool bath said in his heart, There is no God." NO GOD ! '' Vo Goa t'o Gott !" the simplest flower, Thnt on the wild in found, Shrinks, en It drink, Its cup of dew, And trembles at the round . No Gcd "—astonished Echo cries From out her cavern boar, And every wandering bird that flies Reproves the Athelat•lore. The solemn forest lifts its head, The Almighty to proclaim, Tho brooklet, on its crystal urn, Dinh leap to grave his name. How swells the deep and vengeful sea, Along bis billowy track, The red Vesuvius open his mouth To hurl the fablehood back. Th• paltn-troo, with its princely crest, The cocoa's loafs shade, The brbad•fruit bonding to its lord, in yen far-lelarid glade The winged seeds, thg. borne by winds, The roving sparrodif feed, The melon, on the deeert sands, Confute the scorner's creed. No God !" With indignation high The fervent Bun ix Mired, And the pale Moon turns paler still, At such an impious word : And from their burning thrones, the Eters Look down with angry eye, That thug a worm of duet should mock Eternnl majesty. There are coincidences of thought and lan guage in these poems--but each writer has put the stamp of her own idiosyncracy upon her own production. Mrs. HALL'S is a solemn and majestic strain, evidently emanating from a mind deeply imbued with strong religious feeling, and, at the same time, possessing the reasoning faculties in no ordinary degree. Mrs. SIGOURNt;Y runs into a lyrical and less concen trated form and expression. Both are highly poetical, for both are true, And Bong to but the eloquence of Truth." A correspondent of the New York Herald, who protonds to " know some horse," says that the following is all that comprises Mr Raroy's seorot of horse-taming: "Haring haltered your colt and caressed him, fasten his near fore foot with a strong strap round the pastern radius or fore arm; make him hop round on three legs until tired. When ho is tired, put a strap,with a noose round the off pastern ;. make him hop; then pull the strap that is round. the off pastern and he will cemO on his knees: When on his knees keep the strap tight. and ho 6111111ot get his foot slack to get up. Boarogainst the horse's shoulder with yours stead ily, When ho will lie down in a low minutes. 11 ben he is .down stroke him the way the hair lies ; ,take off the strap as soon as he ti down. You can now do anything with him you Wish, Or beat a drum on him, , without alarming him. Opts rate on your horse in this .manner as often as the ocnasienrequiree." cIIARLES. DICIS,EAS„ Within the last ton days,' statements, have appeared in several American papers, purport ing, to be Irons portions of their «London eorrespoAdence," to the • effect •that Mr. CHARLES DIOILEN.9 had separated from his wife,, under circumstances of aggravated immorality upon his part. Two actresses:were named, in connexion with this—viz: 31iss TERNAk and Miss SEIMINVICK, both of whOm have borne ; and continue to boar, good.private characters. We did , not republish these statements; nor even allude to them, from a suspicion (parti elderly as we had not seen any .nOtice en the . subject in the English papers) that they were wholly untrue, or, at any rate, much exagge rated. We know how s . • “ Folly loves the martyrdom Or Fains,” and suspected that• a molehill had been ma twilled into abountain. . How the case really stands Can best be learnt from the following statement from the It@ Number of Household Words : "A Cann snow Mn. timinitm Bicwwws.—Three and tiventyyears have passed slime' entered upon y present relations with the .publio. They be gan when I was so young that I rind them to hnve existed for nearly a quarter of a dentory. - " Through all that time I.bavo tried t$ be as .15ithful to the public no they have beenlo me. It VIM my duty never to trifle with :them or to de .6eive them, or to presume upon their fader, or do 1-aoything with it but work hard Landjostify naive always endeavored to discharge that duty. oomipiouous position hoe often Amadei me the Object of fabulous stories.'end "unaccountable statements. Occasionally snob things have,chafed me, or oven Wounded majut I have always ac cepted them ns the shadows I . nseparablii from the light of my notoriety anti success T hateinever obtruded any such personal rtheasinom of min? upon the generous aggregate or my snaience.. 'For the first time in my' life, and I believe for the last, I now deviate from the - principle I have so long observed, by presenting myself in my own journal; in my own private character ; and en• treating nil my brethren (as they deem that they hive recoil to think wall of me, and to know that I am a man who has ever been unaffectedly tom to our common calling) to lend their aid to the dis semination-of my present words. • • "Some domestic trouble of mine of longstanding, MI which I will make no further remark than that it claims to he respected as'behig of a sacredly pri vate nature, hoe lately been brought to an arrange ment which involves no anger or 111-will of any kind, trod the whole origin, progress and surround ing circumstances of which have been throughout within the knowledge of my °blithe)). It is ami cably composed, and its details have but now to be forgotten by these concerned in it. "By come means arising . out of wiekodness, or out of folly, or out of inconceivable wild chance, or out of all three, this trouble has been mndo the oc casion of misrepresentation most grossly false, retest' monstrous and most °mei—involving not only me, but innocent persona dear to my heart, end inno cent persons or whom I havo no knowledge, if in deed thoy have any existence—and so widely spread that' I doubt if one reader in a thousand will Teruo these lines by whom some Mush of t ite breath of thnso slanders will not have passed like an unwholesome air. "Those who know me and my nature need no assurance: under toy hand that such calumnies are as irrodonallable with mo as they aro, in this frantic inobliorenoe, with one another:- But there is a great multitude who know me- through - my writings, and who do not know me 9thoriviao; and eahnoebear that one of them should beleft hi doubt, or hazard of dclubt, through 'my pootly shrinking • from taking tho unusual: ,tooaps which r tiny resort of oiroulating,the truth., " r most soleninly declare, then- - --and this I do bath in my own name and tny wife's-.-that all the Wely whispered rumors Jonching the• trouble at which I have glanced ore abominably - false, and that whoever repeats one of them after - this - denial will lie as wilfully and as foully as it is possible for any tales witness to lie before Ileaven and earth. CHARLES DietikllB." The New York Times or yesterday gives the following, purporting to have been re l ceived from a well-informed and trust -worthy Correspondent in London. It probably states , the truth " LOXDON, Wednesday, '.ittrfe S. "You will find Dickens card in the Times of yesterday. , The whole affair is, a sad one. told me a week ago that ho had just been Dickens that morning In regard to the circu lation of stories to the discredit of D.'s domestic character. All London, you must know, had for Some time been rife with legends concerning Diokens and. an settees, with whom It was• after wards affirmed that the author of .I)etend Cop rerfistrl had - eloped to Boulogne. Of, these tortes it was that had shaken es Every body was speaking, noWier Ainsie: nor de= ...ring. but tino t a 7 yeptiating, antiit , wee to silence these stories that Dickens sent for hie friend last' week, end that ho' yesterday published his cord In the 27,8111 . 8. lle has indeed separated himself from his wife, but simply on the ground of an ancient and 'unconquerable incompatibility In their respective characters. For the future tho,young Mr. Diditens will act as the head of his mother's household, the daughters re maining with their father. Of the actress there Is no question, save as the over-open mouth of. ly- Ing rumor, "for slander's mark was even yet" the conspicuous, and aboiro all, the honorably con spicuous preachers of virtue, peace, and domestic order. Surely, however, in this ease, nothing is needed to quicken the pain which evorYlovor.of, , literature and every person' of common fooling must experience on learning that, after Bo inanyt years of unebtrusivk private life, an illustrious author, who has bestowed infinite pleasure upon his cotemmaries, and done the world witch true, good service, lies been- forced into making a public exposure of his most secret sorrows and of his most sacred misfortunes. Wherever the lying scandal , goes, however, I am sure that' all who value truth and justice will send the most unhappy realities of the ease in its company ; for If the case ie not thereby inuoh mended, something at least Will be saved to the many whose faith in •the wholesome lessons of Perkteick, Master Hum,- phrcy's Clock, and the Chi/stouts Stories, might else be shaken by the author's failure to - achieve id his own life the Ideas of pekoe and harmony whichle has painted. • • "There is a story that Mr. Dickens moans to go on the stage, but this I see ho idstsart 'to believe. In a case like hie; it Booms but natttral, that ho should sock a retirement and soolitston among his particular friends, even more conipleto than that in which he has for some years lived.P [For The Press ] Mn. EDITOR : Some men are evidently snore friendly to Gireat.Britain,,and " the late lamented Robert Peel," than to this country or, Ile indus trial population. "No Englishman regrets the adoption of free-trade," but every intelligent and patriotic American does—for his own country. In the adoption of free-trade in England, the poor or laboring classes were not., ,nrimarily, thought of ; they were the scape-goats -for the achievement; that is, popularity for the measure . was acquired by expressions of benevolence for the people. Mr. Cobden wished Cheap broad for the manufacturers, those he worked for, and for thus aiding them with competi-power they subse rviently enriched him. Sir Robert Pool, with the sagacity of a British statesman, saw the necessity and advocated the propriety of the landed in terest making an apparent sacrifice by adopting free-trade—such as it was—for the purpose of maintaining still longer the- oommeroial, manu facturing, and politioal pro-eminence of Great *Rain ; seeing that the United States, following in her footsteps, and advancing to perfection in -her polioy, would, if she were not deluded or amused by an ignis beans, force her in a few years to her culmination; and, hence, to the point of retrocession, with rapid strides . in that direction, to the condition of a third-class power on this earth. donsecutive protection, for any tifteon years since 1816, would have enabled us to have manufactured the bulk of our own cotton and wool, and to have occupied the open market of the world with our manufactures, to the exclusion of Groat Britain. But it has been tho work of the politician, not the statesman—and by misleading the people they have effected It—to keep the people in that condi tion of Industrial dependence and rnssalogo, - from which their forefathers extricated them by their patriotism, their fortunes, and their blood. We hare, as a people possessing every olomea of inde pendence, been the slaves of deception long enough, and it is time we comprehended that feet, and, also, that neither as a nation nor as individuals can we spend more than our earnings or income, for any groat length of time, without becoming bankrupt. Human orodulity has boon played upon by poli ticians in every shape and form, till the mind sickens at the national industrial .dogradation and misery, which aro the consequences. To sustain an unholy and unfeeling orunade against Ameri can labor for political ends, ovory tortuosity of the human mind has been brought into service, oven to the substitution of offcot for cause. Banks have boon dragged into the issue, as if they wore a cause and not an effect. Let us, as a nation, so arrange our policy as not to import more than we export—detaining al home the precious metals— and in a few years we shall need no banks of issue—every dollar of paper being, as at would ho, displaced by the sustitution of gold anti silver. It is only by reckless and contitmallnvolvement for what we could, and should, produce at home under a judicious policy; thfit we are compelled to resort to paper, with whioh•to bolster' up out cre dit, and avert, for the time being only, revulsion and insolvency. We, at the North, haVe submitted long enough to the dictation of the't§outh in regard to our gOvernmental 'policy.' We have, we hope had be lieve, made the last sacrifico of our economical rights and Interests—identical with' every other portion of our country, if like us, it will diversify its labor—for tho purpose of preserving a thew nay qua tbrium; or maintaining the relative political importance and power, in this Union, of those States wedded to nothing but slavery, and with which slavery is paramount to every other consi deration in the administration of the Federal government. Busazn • LETTER FROM PITTSRURGH.• (Comepondence of The Presc] • PITTSBURG'', Juno 13, ISSB. Mrs. Barron : With the exception of the pen of G. P. It. James, there is, nothing beneath the eon or moon more prolific than the glorious or, dial• greenifie weather. It is the old man's daily „ bread, and the old'dame'd Morning and evening tea; it is the traveller's thought, the invalid's hopo—:the wanderer's trust, the lover's openiag spieoh—and the beginning, middle, and end of all rational and irrational conversation. In addition to all this, my deer Colonel, fear my ,frequesit mention of it will lead you to think that it is my convenient lobby, but of late it has been such as to arrest the attention of every individual in our' midst During the past forty-eight • hours it has rained as it never reined since the' days of Noah. Itimses were unroofed, • and vessels driven from that' moorings; 'bridges were swept away, like straw:; avid gnarled' and 'knotted bake laid pro's trate 'with mother earib. ; Tho•injury done to out agricultural interesta - ia,very,,great., Should the present weather continuo—and there is every Dult cation of it—the, labors of the' husbandman will bo inadequately rewarded, and ,a limited supply Of food will inaugurate another winter of want and woo. Lest week a committee of throe from Plalladel• phia;virited Pittsburgh for the purpose of oonfer ring with our. City Councils-on the propriety and expediency of repealing .the tonnage tax - on -th6 Pennsylvania Railroad, - Our people and your poops agreed to disagree. Although the Nate' delphia committee failed to convince us of the propriety of repealing the tax, they spent a few days in ourimidst in a pleasant manner, and rot. turned to their homes delighted with the kindness, the attention, and the hospitality extended to them by the 'citizens of 'Pittsburgh. - An immense quantity of lumber has been sent from the upper Allegheny during the present sox eon. I lenrn froni the Chronicle that six millions three hundred and forty-eight thohsend 'feet 'of sawed lumber have Moon sent from Red Bank creek. The square timber sent from the sumo place this season amounts to 1,617,3313 feet, and is valued at $113,204. The vaine of the sawed and square stuff is upwards of two hundred thousand dollars—a considerable revenue for a place so ob scure as to have escapedthe attention of the geo grapher and historian, and 'whose very name is unknown by nine-tenths of this community The lumber from the Mahoning Is equal to that of Red Bank, while that annually carried off by the Cla rion river more than doubles in amount and value that of the other places I have named. Prom lumber to coal the transition is easy. Our operations in the latter business have bean so enormous that they almost stagger credulity. A pedantic) individual, of whom we have all rend or hoard, carried a brick in his band as a specimen of the house he wished to sell. I pretreat you with ono item In the coal line, as a mere strew, indica tive of tho extent of our operations in "black diamond." Sines the first of January, 1818 to the last part of May, a period of five months, there were shipped through the looks of the Monongahe la Navigation COmpany, in boat and' barges, 11,257;518, and in flats, 1,583.700, making a total of nearly thirteen millions bushels of the beat coal in the United Staten. These statements will 'give your renders a slight knowledge ofthe wealth and resources of this part of Pennsylvania. Viewing our good old Common wealth in every. light, we have abundant reason for pride and congratulation. With a length of three hundred end ten miles, and a breadth of one hundred spit sixty miles, and nn area of forty- ITOTOW thousand square Miles, or thirty millions o' sores of land, with' navigable 'streams, fertile and vast forests,' inexhaludible mineral wealth, and a patriotio, an intelligent, end enter prising population, our State must ever rennin the' Keystone of the Arefi. and, the most promi nent member of the groat North,Amerionn Union. Like a coy and modest damsel, Pennsyl vania has hitherto ehnnned, rather than court ed, •ebservation. It is time for her to as sert her, own importance, to cultivate a feeling of commendable State pride,. and make known her wealth and resources to - her sisters of the,Confederney. Nature has dOne wonders for her; intelligence and wisdom must do.the rest. We-must select good legislators, and thus Secure, Abe - paw:ago of good laws, justly administered. :Look at, our State Legislature. Throe-feurths,of its members aro unable to.draw up a bill in com 'mon English, and nine-tenths are as ignorant of 'the Science of government as of the language of the Choctaws. Look at our representatives at Washington. They are doubtless honest and pa triotic enough, hut too often their knowledge . is cabined, cribbed, confined, while their attempts at oratory are as laughable as a side-splitting farce, and as euecessful as the late efforts of the 'accomplished Billy 'Bowlegs. I would not wil lingly do injustice to our Senators and Congress men, but truth and candor compel ma to say that their intellectual superiors can be found in every workshop, counting-house, and harvest field In the Commonwealth: "Pigmies are pigmies still, -,Cry.se and IYErallllia. ELIV, pyramids in vales." Compared with, Sewer and Toombs, Benjamin arid Hattie, Crittenden 'and Quitman, they shrink into utter' Insignilleanee; and seem like babes in swaddling-clothes iii the presence of full-grown, educated; and intelleotlial statesmen. Pennsylvania, 'to be respected, must honer her sons, and the proper way to do so is to send them to Ilarrisimrg and Washington, the chosen and cherished representatives of, her groat interests: " • ' . lain happy to state that our firemen, molted by, the Divine spirit, and in view of their sinful state, have resolved to hold prayer 'meetings' and im plore thaguidanturand protection of Him , ".Who sees ltitli equal eye, se lord of all, A hero perleh, or a sparrow fall:" Thesfiricmeetitig, wig attended by about sixty of eta itekle;hearted rind devoted firemen. Daring tbo services 'the utmost seriousness - privailed. Eloquent words fell from eloquent lips, •dnd still more eloquent tears roiled down the cheeks of men all unused to the melting Mood. Gallant follows who had niwor quailed in the presence of earthly danger were appalled in view of the danger of their souls, and rugged men who had always doomed it a weakness to profess religion knelt in prayer with the meekness of Christian women and the humility of contrite sinners. Our firemen' have always been well behaved; still prayer will make them wiser, better, and happier. It strengthens the weak, determines the doubting, exalts the debased, and points to " Heaven, and lends the way " It purifies the heart, subdues the passions, dignifies life, marks our walk and conversation, and makes - a dying bed Peel loft as rowaf pillowe ere I trust the fitemon's meetings may be followed by the best consequences, and I humbly hope that the noble men who protect our lives and property may goon by sweet experienoe know that— Prayer is the simplest form of speech That Infant lips can try; Prayer the matrilineal strains that roach The Majesty on high. Prayer is the contrite sinner's voice 'Returning from hie ways, While angels in their songs rejoice, , And say "]Behold he prays " P The Grave of the Mother of Washington For Tho Prose.] Mn. EDITOR : Some years since I passed through the nnoiont town of Fredericksburg, Va., and on my way topped to visit the grave of the venerated mother of Washington, and was pained to find it in such a pitiable condition. An unfinished mon. umour, already apparently in ruins, marked the spot, but around it seemed to me a mere cow yard, and the whole pines wore an aspect of decay anti desolation unworthy the burial place of the mother of the " Pater Fatrie." On inquiry, only a few weeks slate. of a citizen of Fredericksburg, I learned that it is still in the some condition, but that Silas E. Burrows who cotnitteneed the monu ment, and is now in Japan, says that ho will finish it or direct in his will that his son should do so. It is the opinion in Fredericksburg that it will never be done. Now, I contend that no indivi dual man should•be honored by erecting a monu ment to the mothei of Washington • her character and her memory are tho property of the women of the United States, and to therh belongs the entire honor of erecting a monument worthy of her who gave birth and was the first to instil virtuous principles into him who was " first in war, first in ponce, and first in the hearts of his countrymen." I trust this hint will be sufficient to incite the ladies of the United States to some action on the subject. Let the women of the South and the women of the North join in erecting a durable and elegant monument over the remains of " Mary the mother of Washington," and it may bo a shrine where they may moot to honor the mother of him whose memory tho world delights to honor. O• PRILAD/WRIIIA, Juno 10, 1958. FROM CHESTER COUNTY. [Correspondence or Tho Press.] WEST CHESTER, Juno 21,185 S A Peoplo's meeting was hold at this place on the 15th, and delegates as follows, viz • Dr. J. T. Cuff . - man;William Baker, and Robert Parke, appointed to the State Convention. The delegates were in structed to support Joseph J. Lewis, Csq , for the Supreme Bench. The following resolution, drawn up by that gentleman, may be considered the most notable : Resolved, That wo recognise, assort, and will maintain, the right of, the people of every Terri tory of the United Stites to determine for them solves,when prepared to become a State, the form and haracter of their Constitution; and that every attempt, on the part of the Osmond Govern ment, to control their choice, or prevent in any way the free enjoyment of that right, is an irregu• lar anti illegitimate exercise of its authority, which deserves to be reprobated, and ought to be resisted by all constitutional means. The mooting was numerously attended. The following post•oflice drain relate to this State: Establi,hments.—Wheatland Mills, Lancaster county, Pa., John Mussolman, postmaster—on tho now route from Lancaster to Strasburg. Fertility, Lancaster county, Pa., James C Dunlap, post master—also on new route. Appointments.—Elam . Rakestraw, postmaster at filen Hope, Clearfield county, Pa , vice Wm. S. Dickinson Michael Shaugler, postmaster at lied Bonk Furnace, Armstrong county,.Pa., vioo John Hudson, resigned. TWO CENTS. STILL LATER. -FRQM • Arp,,THE - Arrival of the Stilt Silitteen Days Out,News from •4:untp .Ileast. to the 29111 of May. [Froni the St. 'Jqsepli'(illo r. .) :Journal, orthe 14th ' The Salt Lake midi" arrired :in this city yester day about noel': Wi are indebted to the' eon-. 4:actor, Mr, James E. Bromlef,,for the ;following particulars : The mail left damp'Scott on the" - 29tb *of May; Gov. Cumming had been escorted-into Salt 'Lake- Oity by the Mormons, -kindly treated,' and then escorted back to Gap. Johnston's, command. , was at Campßeott at the time the Mail left. The Mormons were moving their *omen:and children out of the city to Prue, about4s miles south, in the valley. The Mormons said they would sur render to'the civil officers, but the troopi should not enter. Seventy families of Mormons bad ar rived at Camp Scott, asking ,protection." Gen. Johnston received 'them kindly, and promised them an °sort into the 'States. Johnston's command had only two - days' rations in camp when the mail loft.. Tho men had been living on eight ounces of flour and one-half pound of beef per day for two • weeks :past: They had - attfflirisd , greatly through the winter both for: food ,ao',,ralment.• General Johnston intenda: entering, Salt .Lake City es aeon as Colonel Roffman- arrioid; leaving enough men to garrison . Fort Bridgers . Coming in the party met Captain Haws, of the second dra goons, with 250 bead of beef cattleat Hate's Fork, only fifteen mite's this side of Camp Scott •, met Lieutenant, Smith, second dragoons, on ' Greet 'river, fifty miles this side, ,travelling at thereto of forty-eight miles'por day; dna seventy-tbje thrtberon, at the east erottsiniaßig:Stilidy;trie Colonel ilofftesn's eommand pith, full- supplies, met Colonel Andrews, of the sixth infantry,, at the crossing of Sotith'Platto; Colonel Sumner, of 'the &at cavalry, att:lak-Grove, 'on - the Little Blue; Colonel May, at Big ,Blue, and the last troops, so: cord dragoons, at Nemaha. , Mr. 'Bromley, the conductor, reports thei read in ,an awful condition.. Several of thestreams were scarcely fordable. Grass good. 4. passenger came in from Fort Laramie. The only 'lndiens - heard of on the route was a war party oflorty-fiie Arra pahoes, on the Little Blue ,-The mail - party passed there in the night, and consequently, didnot, sea the Indians.' • Mi. Bronhey•reports that 'he 'met Col. Kane and a.party coming on as ho paeSedUile with the mail, two.hundred and , sixty miles this side of Camp Scott. Tits'ivenfoit ,to Crimp Scott; remained the whole of one day; and then returned; arriving only ono day, behind ,Col, , lltinernotwith-± standing he had, to lay bye day and travelled fire; hundred and twenty, Broteley,i coming in, aome - days travelled' an far - as eighty- 1 five miles, and averaged over siztyrfive sullen the: whole trip Baying come through from Fort Brid.' ger to this city, in precisely' sixteen days, which Is the quickest trip on record, he is:justly entitled to the reputation of being the Aubrey. pf the pre sent day. [Correspondence Or tho St. Louis Republican ] ' INnErzainnaca, Juno 14, 1858. By the arrival of Messrs. Knowles and Haller of this place, we have later news from Camp Scott Governor Cumming. was stilt in Salt Dike City, very well received, and, all the, civil officers re quested fo enter the city and attend to their re spective ditties. It is said that the records 'and papers still remain. untouched. The -troops at Camp Scott are still upon close ratioes, and fat mule meat was in' great requisition. Colonel Hoff man's command was met abotit ono hundred and ten milesfrom Camp Scott, progressing very slowly, in consequence of having lost so many of his stock. lie made only one hundred miles in twenty days. The peace commissioners were at Tort Laramie on the 20th, and expected to lave ip,a little while. Captain Marcy sent in an express • to Laramie, stating that hely:Mahout twenty-five Miles from that point, haring'been delayed by the snows and rains—his stook was in- pretty ; fair condition; and he 'was still Ititorinined . to try the Cherokee The first supply train of Buts°lL Majors !a Co., wasinet about one hundred miles..from_Laramie, and frbor that point trains and troops were mot - at intervals, very much interrupted by the rains and muddy,ronds. All the . , creeks and streams,-and even the }Mies in'the prairies Were • full of water so full that every person 'eroising the streams had to swim. , The outward .bound mails from - this place under John Jones, were pretty nearly up to Camp Scott, getting along very well. Those from St. Joseph were detained by high waters; and the first was mot at Laramie, eighteen days out ; the seeond.and third wore met at points this side, delayed also. Our informant, states that the roads were rendered almost impassable from Kearney to Leavenworth, and the trains made no better progress out of them, at. the wagons and oten mired down at every step of their progress FORT Lnaveirwonlii, JunelB, 1858. I will now proceed to give you an account of affairs at this post since my last. The most severe storm that hag occurred' in'this smitten of•hountry for years past visited us• last whek, flooding the country and doing much injury to the crops. All the small creeks halm overflowed, and egress from the fort toward Kearney and' Riley is stopped. The Missouri is ruing rapidly, all its tributaries pouring out full. The - sixth Column Utah forcer left this morning under command of Majoi:EtnerY,lirsteavalry The following troops compose ihis gallant column: Major PariPs company of the seventh infantry and Captains Wobd, iparradd Sturcis'compariles of the first cavalry, a company of mounted reorulta tinder Lt. Berry, first,dragetms, for the first r dragoons in Utah, and a Company of 'lnfantry 'recruits under Lieut. Brotherton of the fifth infantry. On the staff • are the following officers: Limit. Church, first cavalry, adjutant; Lieut. Iverson, second dragoons, quarter Master ; ' Cappt 'Turnley, dour mlesirry,- and •Dr. Smith, medical. officer. The Whole .presented a most_ imposing. appearance as they marched in review before Gen. Barney. Gen.' Harney hiaiself,-acChirinanied by'his'ataff, loaves to-morrow and travels express to Utah.. Thei following Officers are on his staff: Captains Pleas anton and Wheaton, aids ; Major Buell, adjutant general ; 'Colonel' Johnston, inspector general; Col. Grossman, chief portermaster, and Captain Hancock, assistant; surgeon Wright,' mellioat . 41. 1 rector. Interesting train St.Damingo. By, the brig:Wheaton, which arrived at New York on Sunday from St. Domingo, we aro in re °Ginter advices from Port Platte to thb Sd instant, and from Santiago do los Caballeros, the-republi can capital, to the Ist. . The operations against Baez continue to be pro secuted with all the vigor possible in the dilapi dated atm° of the country. • The torrwof Seinen% was captured, on the 4th of May, by a party of republican troops, and in consequence of this event the fleet of Baez, that was blookading Port Platte. abandoned the blockade on the oth. They. had been board from at Saone island, where they stopped to fill water, when a boat's ortNideserted to the other side. • General Santana was in command of the ropub• Goan forces before St. Domingo pity, numbering some 7,000 men, and was waiting the co-operation of the republican fleet, when a - general assault would be made on the town. The fleet had fitted out at Fort Platte, where a large quantity of shells, shot, a-Id other munition of war shipped from New York had been received. It consisted of six schooners, among which was the late American schooner Wing o 1 the Wind, which recently ran the blockade, and was purchased by, the Dominican Government for $6,000. They were armed with one eighteen and several twelve and six pound guns, manned by a mixed crew of all colors and nations, and commanded by Commodore Dickson, an English mulatto. A portion of this fleet was manned by volunteers, and it went to sea on the 26th May, but was still exercising off the port at our latest dates. It was thought that a decisive encounter might occur between the two fleets, and the political troubles of the country be settled for a time by a naval conflict. The Baez fleet consists of one barque and eight schooners, with an armament similar to that of the republicans; but two or three of the vessels were detailed from the squad ron, and were blockading Anna and other porlsron the south aide of the island. It is manned mostly by mullattoes and some Ilaytien negroes, and is commanded by Commodore Aybar, a mulatto from Ilayti. This fleet has taken the following prizes : The Danish packet schooner running between St. Thomas and Port Platte; the Danish schooner Crisis, of Curacoa; and the British schooner Crimea. The first two have been condemned, and theircar. goes, valued at from 500,000 to $50,000, bad been sold. as there was no Danish man-of-war to protect their flag. The English schooner had heen taken from the captors, and was lying under the guns of an English frigate in the harbor of St. Domingo. The condition of the country is of the most de pressed character. Provisions were scarce and dear. and the export trade low. There was little interest felt by the common people in the political struggle that wee going on—they eating only for quiet. A new constitution had been adopted, and the elections hold resulting in favor of Don Jose Val verde, President; Don Domingo Rojas. Vice Pre sident. The leading man of the Government is Don Pablo Pujol, Secretary of the Treasury. All. the republic, with the solo exception of St. Do mingo city, now acknowledges the new constitu tion. . . It is the policy of the Government to abandon St. Domingo city, and concentrate all the trade and activity of the island rit Santiago and Port Platte on the north side, as being nearer the pro duotive districts, and more advantageous to all interests. Tho new Government had called in all the old treasury'or Government paper, and issued new in its steed, in order to be able to reject the issue of the Baez Government at St. Domingo. The amount redeemed was about $28,000.000. The now issue forms the entiro circulation of the country, and its money value is one cent to the dollar. The old paper is still in use in the oity of St. Domingo. where its rotative value is $36,000 for a Spanish ounce, or $l6 American currency. Trade is beginning to concentrate at the new capi tal—Santiago do los Caballeros—which is in the interior, about ten leagues distant from Porto Platte, on the north side of the island. We hare no later news from the United States steam frigate Colorado, at St. Domingo, than the 24th ult. She had arrived there to demand re dress for the insults and injuries' inflicted on Americans in that city. A project is on foot to build a railroad on the west side of the river, to connect with tho Sun bury and Erie road at Lewisburg, and extend to opposite Dauphin, whore it will form a link with the designed extension of the Lebanon Valley Rail road. The objeot of the road is to endeavor to ob tain a large share of the groat trade that must eventually go over the Sunbury and Erie Rail road, over a lino that centres at Philadelphia, in stead of permitting it to go to Baltimore, as it otherwise Will, by the Northern Central road. The Selinsgrove Democrat is certain the road will be built. On Friday afternoon, at Deerfield, Ohio, as the wife of the notion master of the L. M. R. R. was stopping on the 6P. 111. Express train from the city, on that road, while tho oars were in mo tion, she Coll under the train, carrying with her a child which she had in her arms. Both were in stantly killed. The head of lb. woman was com pletely severed from her body. lOTME TO Oitilt.W.eirpleDENlTlM. `Cloreita.oneente !Or ul i iirPeetip" will pierce beer in mind the following riefeej - 3rery aommtuilostlon met be accompanied by the name otthe Znpider to indite ocirrectnese of the typography, but one side of e. sheet 'Maid be writ terinpon, We shall be greatly obliged to gentlemen in Pennell• Tanta and other States for contributions Hiring the oar• rent newanr the day In their partiotilar localities, the reeoareee of .the Suriontullni tioiiiitry, the increase of Poidatlon, or 'any information that will be interesting to Maffei:Lend reader. : ' 4E.2VERAL „NEWS. „ • At the meeting of the'old suriirois of the 1812, held in Wishington city On Friday Dist, at the ,City Hall, the , following renlcotione were made : . W. W, Seaton,' president; Jobe S: IVillidme , Brtb vico.prekdent; Gen. J. St. 'John Skinner, seenndyiee president; Capt. James A. Kennedy, treasurer; James Lawrenson, score •tary;- Col, William P.iYoung, Marshal; Dr. Wil l*” Tones .Burgeon. The executive committee ConsispOf „Major Edward Semmes and Peter Berg . . man. , Mr. Schenck, of Franklin, :Warren county, Ohio writes ,te pie Ohio Farmer that the grass hopers are making theieeppearanoe there invest numbere. lie says.: - " Last year we had millions of.them ; this yearly° have hundreds of millions." Fpr Ave years, he says, they bevo been increasing on his farealand be fears that, unrest some moans are discovered for their destruction, - they will to tally ruin his and hit neighbors' clover fields. The jury in the case of the "Bev. Daniel Downeyythe Catholic priest on trial for murder, at Staunton, Va., have been discharged, in cense :wpee of _being unable to agree • .two favored an acquittal, and one was for Involunlary manslaugh ter. Tlic prisoner was remanded. , Ile is charged with • the nitfrdet CriVni; Mullintt, in December ,; Jolui.W."Wathinsi Esq.', formerly 'a tobacco months:a. in Peterabuig, but for many years past a successful .farmer, In Barry, Va., known , aa ChosnatYirm,".situatedimmediately on James ' , River; i s ms brutally - usuitlired on the 15th inst. ~ Na- o ne is insPoeted of the 'murder. lle leaves a Afire-AM -81x ohildreis. - The'extiosive'flotu; mill of Bills, Thayer, ktreher,ln-thn'Stith wird, Troy, N. Y., was do stroycd VAT° ittau early boor on Sunday morn ing, with a large gnantity of flour and .grain. The loss is estimated froin $30.000 lo $lO,OOO. on which there was insurance for 327,000. - On Thursday night hot, or early - on Friday morning, a Oior soldier; named Thommi Lyons, committed , outside-.by hanging - himself on a tree in front of theAllitary Asylum, at Washington city: Unkind belongnd to the,asylum, but, booton- Ing liddiatedth'intlimpetanoe,was dismissed. , A kraiidfekatia came off on Saturday after noon on Charles river. Mass:, when' the, Harvard, six oars, manned - by the students of fia timid Col lege, wonthe first -prize, Making three miles ih pinoteen minutes and twenty spool:ids. • ,The trial at-Ne3i.Qrlenna of Herby, for the murder of 'Stan?, whom he, charged ,Itrith having ferlaced'hil daughter; has heeti brought to a close, and a verdict of acquit t al rendered. The crib *molted - flk& interest: • ' The United States sloop-of--war Portsmouth was to mil yesterday •from Norfolk for the Gulf of Mexion. Orders havo been received at• the Gosport (Va.) navy yard to fit out, :the John Mains. John .11ollins, a - second assistant engineer in'the navy, is reported to have died on the United States steamer Granada, on the 14th instant, on thw trip between Aspinwall and Havana. Preston S. :Turley, once a highly respecta ble man; and iminister of the Gospel, has been found guilty in Kanawha imuuty,. - Vnginia, of the murder of his wife. Senator Crittenden was to,have_a_gran4 re ception at' Cincinnati, on Saturday morning`. the evening he was to he escorted across the river to Covington, Ky., where he purposed delivering an address: - A daughter of General Ethan •Alien writes that the General was buried at .Bennington (not Burlington), and that his remains were never re, moved. „ , , 'The ,Demperats of New Hanover county, 'North Carolina,' have nominated Hoe. William S. Mlle as a cantlidato Jar election to the State Senate, , . „ public' • - - • A ,dinner has been tendered to Se nator Uammond, by the citizens of Beach Inland, South Carolina.. Charles Yrancis Adams is spoken of as tk candidate for Congress in the district in Alassachu eetbs now represented by , Mr. Damrell.' .Senato&.,Stpart, , of Michigan, Will; canvass .that fitato .this, summer, -taking , anti-Looomptorr groitri; and asking a re•eleetion: rigger, Was'itilledt at Charles-, .toit, S. C.,'oa ThfirsdaY, by falifrigeff ‘a ple4o of icnntling from a scaffold: • • ' All the fifteen midshipmen who graduated reoontly_at Annapolis have boon ordered on dot)' In the Gulf, - • , A. I. W. Jackson, for many years president of the Ballimote TyliographiCal Society, died In that city on Saturday, - at the age of 73. General Sam Houston tt;asin Harrisburg on Friday. In 'the evening he- was serenaded, and responded by making a speech. ' Au extensive business is done in Harrisburg in the selling of lottery tiokets. Shocking Calamity In ' Milwaukee— Four •r Five Persons Killed. (From the Milwaukee Democrat or Wedueedri/ J At about 4 o'clock this afternoon, without any premonition whatever, the large and new brick four-story wholesale grocery store of Joseph H. Cordes . i t, situato4, on Detroit street, south aide, between ITEst — Viiiter and- Main streets, fell, with a tremendous crash, partly out into Detroit street, and partly inward, the whole 'building being razed almost to the ground. At the time of the fall there were, as near as we - can learn amidst the great elcitement prevailing, ten persons in the building, five or sir of. whom escaped, and fon; or five wore overtaken by the falling ruins -and undoubtedly killed. Theta names, as wo get them, are as follows : Charles W. get partner in the firm, buried in : the ruins; Weiskirk, also partner. escaped ; Louie Ewe, clerk, In the ruins; Otto Ewe. partner, es caped ; Remond, Welskirk, clerk, in the' ruins; Anthony, and_flenry, Teinhe, supposed to be in the ruins; Jas. Soothe, clerk, supposed to be buried in,the ruins ;'1": A: Killer, 'clerk, escaped; a customer named Oallusch was in thestore at the • time it fell; but escaped. . . The building was filled from top td bottom, • which included four stories 'and a basement, with goods, After it fell, a quantity of matches . took • fire, which caused in alarm ; and the department was soon: out, hut 'of little"uto. The adjOining building,being also of-brick, was considerably in jured by the concussion ' and one pf the walls split from top to bottom, and part of the cornice on the • top knooked elf. None of the bodies had been bx trioated when we left, though a bole bad been out throtigh the adjoining building, and the groans of ode of the Wounded-were distinctly heard. Livr.n.--4t - 15 minutes peat E'. four of the bodies had been recovered, which are now supposed to bo all that wore in the ruins., Their names are— Charles W. 'Ewe, a partner, who le dead. Red mond Weiskerk, lower limbs badly oriiihed,reco very very doubtful. Lewis Ewe, clerk, considera bly hurt, but able to walk. Ilenry Tionhe, clerk, badly hurt. James Scoffin, and another clerk, es caped. The Sufferers by the Disaster to the Peunfirt• • [From the Memphis Avalanche of the lath . 1 Every thing that kindness could suggest has been done by our citizens to alleviate the suffer ings of the victims to the disaiter on the steamer Pennsylvania. We have little that is new'to re port this morning concerning them. Three deaths have occurred in addition to those already announced , as follows : Matthew Riley, of St: Louts ' • Philip Grauer, the barber to the boat ; and John Lodge, a native of England. We visited the Exchange buildings (In wiliest' thirty-two of the sufferers were pleced,) about 12 o'clock last night. They are generally doing well; better, indeed, than was to have been expected. Mr. Clemons, of St. Louis, one of the elerkr, who was not expected to survive, wile thought to be much better. • William•Roward and Wm. Ray, of Louisville, both of whom were dangerously injured, aro convalescing. Judge Harris, who was removed to his residence immediately after his arrival, was in a erltioal con dition last evening. • Among those who were missing immediately after the accident wee a young man by the name of Wm. Wootton!, of Louisville, the sl:flint the trea •surer of that city. His name woe incorrectly re ported as Woodruff Ile was doubtless killed. The sufferers at the Cayes° Rouse were all doing well last evening. Charles Stone, Esq., of Nash ville, will soon be restored to his wonted health, although his injuries were severe. • - Passengers by the A. T. Lacy, which arrived last evening, snot portions of the wreck of the Pennsyl vania, and saw several dead bodies floating down the river. An Amazon Arrested for liurdor. (From the Chicago Journal of the A woman about thirty-six years of age, named Carolina Fredericka Katrina Solawartz, was ar rested by Officer Kauffman, yesterday, on .the charge. laid in Buffalo, of poisoning a man with whom she was living as wile. Slid is a woman of good education, and appears to possess a history' tinc tured not a little with romance She states that her father held the military rank of Major General under the Duke of Baden-Bn den' that for font years she rode by his side,arrayed in the warlike garments of the other sex, in which unwomanly character she visited Rueain, Algiers, and many other places, and terminated her career of soldier by getting m ar rled and coming to America some ten years ago. She lived with her husband, Schwartz, near Danville, New York,for seven years, when a woman from Europeorith three children, made her appearance, and sot up a prior claim to the husband. The claim appearing to be well founded, Carolina left lf in, went to Now York, and made an arrange ment of convenience with another man, with whom she started for Chicago. At Buffalo, it is alleged, she poisoned him to obtain $6OO in money which he had with him. The name of the man is not known here. An officer from Bunk. came here lest week. sitice when search has been made for the ;moused. She was found and arrested as stated, yesterday. Military Excursions.—The Spring Garden Itlfles,intend making u grand excursion to Atlan tic City on the 21st of next month, where, among other sports and pastimes, they will contend for a prize-medal at target practice The National Artillery will also make an ex cursion to Atlantic City for target practice in the course of a few weeks. Sentenced.—The two " confidence men," recently arrested by Special Officer Carlin, were yesterday sentenced, as will be seen by our court reports, to eighteen months each in the Eastern Penitentiary. This arrest was most important, and the speedy punishment which has followed the conviction of these rogues we trust will be attended with many beneficial results. Th. , !. corner-stone of a new Episcopal Church will be laid at Media, the county town of Dela ware county, on the en:uing Fourth of July, with Buitab!e ceremonies. Bishop Bowman, of this State, and Bithop Lcc, of Delaware, are expected to be present on this gratifying ociaatqop;