The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 02, 1858, Image 1

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•
THE ,- . PRESS,I
rumasom;minat, onfinwro Imo/IP:ADM
By — JOIFILIVFORD) iL r •
( ! 'irF C E; :,4111/0011irsT..-81.:a
' '• r ' :ihhiLif4ti_Lrift- ,','sr''',o„,ibsie.
"Of 6. •see "ohystle to ,fht : „, ,
Twila " #1 14 . 1*, , , ,i- -, ' " kAti it tat D T.:"?0
4
Millet watibambere out offh ,
~,_4 _ ,__,,,,,,,
_,_
ni , .A.yetigrziou'ii-Dothaes, iitt,_,,,x_ii..! i r Zr, s l
TURES DCVAlltik INSSA 74WREIt ui ., 7 4 '''' .* ""' .. . 7
for the tiza!L9t4eflgt,', ~.. a , z ... , .,•`;.; , ,, 6 i ;
'.l. a 3 ;,' If it .F.EA•J fir': ..°"- :7.f,
prEl,oiti Tului Doz.-
SAAB Ina .1411 - 1i1:116 iidrapeo.
WEEKLY PRE6IBV , •
Tge,,ThapiaxAtusaaiiillbczenttollabeoribere by
. malt (pat . attetio,4.2Myettoe,)at IE2 00,
Tkirei Oapheri' . •' • 6Ob
Ooplaq Z-41 '
800
Tee 0 0 1. 108 , - t,c 4 e; 33. . - • - ,12 00
CaPia6.•,: ", ( to.eae address). 4 20;06:
ritaray Ooplea; et (eh addeiaa of each'
...aehacciber,). - 20
rar a (nab or:Neaciy - tone el, over, wpwilt,Laiind: an
extra copy the'getter-opthe 010 -'. '"
Postinaattes rev:Leak& ttraot ialgaataitoi
TO?! if
,6F4 , f , f
. .
MAISFORNIA PRESSot t
• DOM, 1341;4449010,i,t4;tiniviori , tb4 ,011,1(toi4ii
Bteameia, •
laatclits, ; fit: is
AnaT.,,,k j 99.,, OgESWT:STR ,
py
;Q. lnefsaturete At i
' BBITIBI ET — B . I ieBILY2I weoo
..--._-,
°ahem& inspection' on the pretriteei ineln4ooki
Citizens and Stranger:axe Invitsd toii idt nit. =nn.:
:,*. leetory.o : t., „ • •
• • •IKAVOIOSSes ' • , ' ' ' ':_
• riurialli nn ltdeVAL itdeedfitetoerot-1ia1r3 6 4
• '..- • Wetchey . orta the'oeletirehxt mar. - 1
•.' -.' ' 1:,..._:- -• .,D - rAlled.bilk S.• .--
. 1 ' ' .
... tisokliosi Britislato, BirooOlioo, ' 311.-81.41, . 1 kit '
fling!, 44. all puler' irfiefi.i.til'l 4 , .. 1 14 lino.
... '; : biairke,or 2104V,DlaatinItlitin. to ,iiikai, , fric , ot ,
, t okarie torAlionowlsidne witicatado:-to otilaq ~,,
JZ
lOWOOLD 4WELRY. --
`- - A trunptl, sesortmint of MI IhoisiunrArloo aratine
.• ' Jojellsz,iinolt os Mato, Otiisoloa.oo,ll Oolatio, , , z
1
. --Nail, Clorsh• v Ciabonele:Kinnistta, ‘4 . 1 . 4 ,
~. te..oiki Vt_ i ii, attoitet ,
qi -,,,IisAIIPAIARMAIgapPrei ownotts r,
~.', i . AMPV OO 9I-klitilMoz , kt • -
1 4* i4eric . 4 -TweitiilitAillati* .„ -
~ , ,,ati k elif eft '` ,l 4eit Voit', 3
_,...,
...Sy,
S. SE DOSIES. SEMI .AXII4.OIO . IST BTIIII3TS. I- •
~,,!,klargeAssortreesit of MVER - 1? iLBE, of siery,
• 004Poo,00nstootly oraiM, or Mrd'e tO order 'to =44
potrora.dadrod. , - - • ' •
'lmpotfete ot` Miefeead 'AEA Birmingham finpaßid
.101 mi„ , , S.
104 •
• :'ObLVSJOPLVOIED'IaaIaff, -- ,_
No. 864 Oltutaid Blatt o t"," klaatO T . ,bitd i joi r
,stato,
' 4 ""•`
• • Conatantly an hand and . - fdr 14tlie
mo?.,oommuNiqmonviosfrastsc _
Bt*
, i - }4lrrottxuaelinLrovtotrpoewArrans, , vis- •
-741T0, corms_ L EfITVIIB 4 IIPOONAMAKEV . :
' LADxas ";reet a
iiil4lnifirkiAitiritt olairll of aietal. • ve4.ly.
LIALB.DWARE:—:The ' - 'stibscribtvs, 00M-
Jklk - XXXSEQN 1181W8ANT8 fOr the aafeorANNON
AID DOMIXTI.O" - 11ARDWA.R11, ,50u1.4.-reapoottolly
oall Ma:attention or - the - 014 to" theft elookorttleh,
tkerariallatilitet lonbetnatea. On: seriatme3t
;Mini in pikt
Ohalnikof,all kinds .Tries '64 .110.1,1 r, Sreaat
Cow ' Yirt4 ' S W% Wa g,F?l at-P l'h " rl PeksiihiPt.
Nine, and Oall site, , „ .
The colebrated fie.tle' Btooe'snit..didfre
Mourners
taut ottiei ti7rs y tsi 'Solt :Bore ipd < 'other
Shot kir4 handle FryParni;
„Tonna an'!k.,eilla'
kin eup,ri or Piles an& RarPii -Bed 11 ..erovic.
.g ilzaelrior Seat Yore; 131iAting "fut.orr -
Corn, satler,lihd•BrierEr`Ahdr r tkiraiiotta)3l;rsw•
Bakes
Manna, Tanners.. and - 8064 .
Sakes and Roes; Shovels and paa
d; of all land".; •
- - z Tanks, Brads, Shoe Olont, and 3Flnlahlng -
-Oast and Wrought butt -llinges, - Screirs, - Looks or all
Linda ; Outlay, Itatneaad .Stweper4es, Hatoliete, - 14nr,
mers;: - Plixtee, and other Toolit, ko.
• - • . ' TW: FLEWIB ItOtt;•
rahl•Y 411.001015U18 Street:.
QClutgiiig:
JOHN - P. DOHEIITY
OHA/I E S ,
TAILORS,
814 ORESTNUT STREET,
Have betreaelved Nome
14011 PI47IIiLIi.OO,AT,B,
ypgstber with
A LARAZ ASSORTKIENT
• SPRING AND- gly_Afie- 015 . 0 r• - ' - ' L,,- • - t -
Which we will all at moderatp prleee.. rah3l4
‘_l_ L. SHARP, .TAILOIt, 148 NORTH
1 01-• YOURTII gttnet,,bolow RACE.
Making and trimming Drees or ',rock Costa, $9.
idnicipg and trimm i ng Pantaloons or yew, SI,Y6.
IAMES BM ERICA N, MERCHANT
J
TAILOR N05.,•18 ant Routh NINTH STRUT,
euovz ogisnnrr..
A large and ' seleoteestoeit of 01:41TIIR and
OABSIMERRS always on hand. • • • - •
All Olothlng mode et this' Establislunent will be of
the but quality, and in the met AA:fumble style:
"Psztleultr 'attention given to I:walnut CLOTH.
IN aen.tf
becto auk 4,311j0r8
"won' AND SHOES.—The subkribor
.71-0 hsti on bind s-Jarge and 'need stook of BOOTS
And RIIOtO, whidilio will eon at the lowest prices.
- GEO. IV:. 'TAYLOR,
nO2l-17 . B. B. minor FIFTH arid ItliatEßT Bta.
QPIUNG STOCK OF SOOTS AND SHOES
..-11 !RSPB H. THOMPSON CO., No. 814 11611,
HST Steiet, end Not. 8 end 6 FRANKLIN' PLAOB
hare new In store a huge and well-suorted .took of
BOOTS tad SHOJIS, of City nod Sanborn nuinufaeture,
which they offer for cle on the beat terms for Onsh, or
on the *net credit. - •
Sayers are !netted ,to cell and examine their stock.
ant-dtt
igrugs :arib Chemicals.
ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO.,
WEPLESAL! DBUGGIBTB,
tiandfactenerearid - Dealei PAINTS, VARNISHES,
Arid WINDOW 'Northeast eoiner YOURTII and
ALOE Straits, Philadelphia. •
Bole Agents for the sale of the oelebrated 'Morale
Plate ' • sob23-tf
r7IEGLER SMITH, WHOLESALE
LI DRUGGISTS, sonthwast corner of SECOND and
GREEN-Streets - hare bit store, and offer to the trade In
ate to atilt purchasers :
Whitln g ; San. Red.
g: - •
Gam Arable, picked and aorta
Sensua-Alas.
Oil Aniseed.
-FALAI Often, Milian&
ITE, LEAD, zwo FAINTS, &o.—
Offirio the public White Lead, Zino Palate.,
CkdareAn olli'Varidehee,;te., reduced price"
that we Invite the.sttention of •deaters end consumers
to farretoelt.„ „ ZlErArma* alfll4l,
Whir IV' 6r. 9,000 d end Green eta.
lIATINI)OW (}.LASS! WIN.DU W
'V T " GLASS! !—We Intite.tho attention of the ;O-
M' to our 'entensire stock of Preach and American
Window Gliute.-_ The large and well selected stock of
Olasi constantly en hand enebles us to till all orders
with' deepa,ch r , and as low so any other house in the
oitri r - ZLEGLDIt d SALMI( ,
_ Wholesale Druggists,'
WailS S. W. corner of !Wooden,' Green Rte.
ebitta - Checcitswa
M C NA'
- AND GLASS.
'DINNBit WARN.
TEA AN.E TOILET.SETS,„
warn, ajiLn But. / Aim RBOORATID
raserns'ActiD AuIt4MIAIT OLLEIBWABIi,
340;61 AUTIOLES; ke. •
WILL DM BOLD ; LI 7211 LOWDIT PUBIB, Al
TIAILESSE h WITTE'S,
• MASONIC HALL, 713 CIIESTNUT STREIT
X. B..:4001111 loaned to puttee At remount& teams
Ad*/
lfiljtENOH PLATZ :GLASS.-=-HAVING
A' been Appointed by the 4 . Compnvtie de ,Floreffe ,,
the SOLE AGENTS for the rale of their GLASS in this
eity, we are prepared to offer to the trade or amen
mere, from ,or stock ou hand, POLISHED PLATE
GLASS for Stores or • Dwelling Pronto • Rough Plate,
for Coors and Skylights; and - Silvered 'Plate, of large
also, for Mirrors. Rho Ghee will be sold at the loireat
Wises, and warranted superior, in every respect, to any
itker imported. - .•
• HORT. SKORMAKER te00.,-- •
• Plate-and Window Glum Warehoneo,
N.B. our. of POIIRTII and RAGE Streete
mh2A4r - . Philadelphia
VRENCH PLATE LOOKING
a: GLASSES. , ,
JAMES S. MARLS k SON
. • „,
halts atteptloit !err
,I . 4auliNe assortment .of
.I.IOOICMC - *..4.831C9
now, in t,ors; 0,4f441;te lor ,every position, and ot all sites.
. --.--If/LI4VEL , MIRRORS, " -
yr;46, 1,
of Tabfei,..BreuAcets, Consols, &Q., all at unecitnatti
The Idteat add lretich •
,• : -
Parttr ittttin4, con to gi►en to the ti.ertment of
.IdR.
leo; Psudnedfor minldtaedei Pliot t ographs, portraits, &t.'
816 OiIETNUT street
40/'
COMPOSITE 7 JUIN- ILAILING..-1. L.
117,1Mnirjqns No 23 elxTa-Street, Sole
Agent,t.r. , xtatoonsorr 4t,„ Witska,phsoei. velAbrated.
00,110a14 : 1LtILINGti,,vtoild aaltAttentlon to h!s
new - 15 . 4te, 0140n_alattEig,V4024atiii`ltslionlek
Carrie 'Paritrlaitfiii; &it;
and es to aormlent they tnt Mita We' best aktielii
01 t,.`th.ll,tilld3Ps,l4ll#fk4:,tqC,::ta. 5,021.1bn0 •
XT.' id klonmetsheln Whiskey, in store and for sale by
WLW.IS I I U. IMIATI4,_
11;spcIthiTONT
; . ; -- --' : .• • _- , .. • •- ,-- , ~ _.. . , _ ....... .. -.. .. .. , , •
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,- , Ok.. •• • 4 : •• • : - ..,:- E. •-, .-.;.:...Q,', , 4 il 11 :/›..' 4 -' 1! 0 , ••-_- -.' 7 .-...1'..... ; -'....... ' teti:t?tt , .
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4 2£3,5.
Efumnier ilesoria.
fi .
UNTINGDON WARM SPRINGS:—
The Warm Springs at the base of Warrior's
'Ridge, five miles north of Huntingdon, overlooking
Standing Steno Crookiend onvironed by romantic hills
andovontilands, have, been, leased by the former pro
prietor of the Learner Hones. The extensive Motel
Beth Homiest &c., erected at great expense
, General A.J. Villson t the 'owner, have been ,
pltod and the groves have been, beautifully, laid out
anti adorned: The Hotel Parlors and. Chambers tire
;airy and comfortably furnished, and - the prospect from
the verandahs for beauty cannot be.oreelled, For half
eefittily,theso Springs have been, celebrated for their
triedicinal qualities, and the great rirtue of the Waters
in chronic:toff - cations. t The temperature of the water is
693 j degreos, and for bathing-hi - delightful 7 and inrlgo
, • rating. , In the woods and streams game and fish
!
Persons - In - pursuit of health or pleasure will find
this a runt delightful retreat; and its nearness to the
:Pennsylvania Railroad and its cheapneseglve It a decided
advantage over any watering - place in the State.- The
proprietor has lied yard of. experience In the business,
and no pains ortrouble-trill ho spared to make guests
comfortable. , - Haoks - tun .from Huntingdon to the
Springs on the arrival of the, different-Rallroad ;
fare -25 Oenta._'' Families acconiminlated at moderato
rates.- x. •
70111( R. HERD, Proprietor..
• •Waresearnrsot; neat , Hnittlngdon, Pa. -
IIIIATH-ALII3I SP It INGS'.—A DEL Val T
:LP: ItilL:SUittlall , RETltEdT IN THE' itiOllN-
AldiNg QV VIRGINIA, twetrq.hours from•wagbi.gton
tit); mut' Itichipond br tho Virginla Central Railroad.
-.Pagaengibs trent the Ittorth &We the Alexandria morning
'beat - at,'Warkhlrgtoli and.the• Alexandria and Orange
-RaliroaddoSiortionevtlie; thence by Central Railroad,
Il'ilitiritesof' idoitfee3lo; - the Univeraity s et Virginia,
a t o
r
.. .....,,,, : ii r .,...d,o ri „,,,..„r„ fit t
I 6 r: > grigri:tittiagel'of the liettit
' 6" ' at 0 alellift Lativrugihittrilittglltbttiol .
I ::, , . „ .t....•,- , .,10 agefigktittMlitOtt,`tivlettaiddotligiaM
t•-1 t tt -.70•;1 ' i.,,-..t", . • jinx that til twilit
' • Vont:e n : d.. , ~, ,i , „eiroVinhioiatortable
Pl/4 / 3 3 M
- I I r o g u t a qlr e i
Prentx,eltyi ther e 1i nO
ogeintheastttuluto 00th:wester)ea da„
n affe'l;exgOrairy,"ire,platkl, - well4Urnfehed
-
traThgiandxixl table Lave •slwaST 410tngaleha this'
11 1 : 6 ter 1 .1010. 4, " ,• - .1::.; , •: , .. Si ,- •, -• `‘--,, ~' -1 - • '-'
ThOnineral itatera (Alain and ehttlyptate) kiwi, been
-friOnenneed'lly,ilfellitsdlabWcfiinflets and physiciatus
.oqqall.progne,rospetteCdatirartale -hold • Invigorator,,
efteniikperfor ,to our, cletlrlAnAgring, while, the pure
niotintidlitrieateita aa nkt Ilk excelled and rarely
eviiilletticilitt rainy iiha mlubilty: • •
•.. .B '.1644116r.11644. - ..'t..,t.,......a.,...... '7 i• • •P i
ltdara 4 p6r month or Totir r3e11,1 , SO
irr Thel3onthernpaittengers must be Careful to' cOme-
AB , ,tlie _north:ilk Blehmendvand :there take the,Central
tutu at t °Weak ..k, M. _
_,
~L_ •„_'-, ,_'"
--" ''- . ' '': kIIA.ZiER & RANDOLt•II,'
Proprlatois,
Taddidij
. - - -
'Reterties,to..tite above
- schedule ot, route for the
Yo,rtlrruirrurel proughlVaphlngion s and for, Co much
of ihellolithernlraeet &aqui), cope, by Ake seaboard line
of railroads tVtiehuiditct, Iqe,add that the.eletier to pate
• illatiiiirlltteaietite 'eariat game point. M{llLoro! Dejmt,
ooacheaL
iroin '44 railroad
tb' e.• 'tl4l
4 , ,Er. TILE traveller fromSeertheidlOrAcky; TentiOstee,
• Northern Alabama , and Biltralleelppleltn procure fArekgh
firketi from any point in the South to the Rockbridge
Alum Springs by the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad
, forluEthrareirere raofterthat will baythom a through
ticket themeareet spring:to .them ,of this cluster of
.
- -
-- (lying their , ticket, therefore , they lose nothing
bygetting-I t-fon the , Ruckbridge.Alum Sprint, even if
Iheyturver use It. • The , mono ticket will, take them to
'any of the Other sprint*" They pass luirucdtatelyibp
;the-Pielorof Otter, and - eroirstho Natural Bridge:
The proprietor's announce, this. celebrate& resortsur
now open, and In better ,condition, for the due acconiro. ,
'dation of -- its cibvids of patrcins and friends and the public
at large than it has ever yet been. The.ihme unrensit.
tingattentibn &theretofore shall centlnurtto bo
this underelgnedkneall employ to secure the, coin
fort of the omits of the establishment. ' '
- :,1):7:4101;EDIAN ,4-11.01.7rER8 keep the water on sale,
[reek fromthe !Springs, ,„„- •
-1733:.--Pauipliletif sent by mill on ipplication. .
, .6110—Anrinto'rxiintloii in-regard to the aboin Springs, -
will in cheetfUll.Yalrerrhilleorlie,F. aorsionylo9 North
12106 nth . ••'
' = ' • *at: - vniiimt„
Je23-wftuetl.o-7 ; • .t rot theTioprietors.
-- • '
ts-7,DBLAWAILIC HOllBl, ;CAPE 'ISLAND;
Tide drat-clsas and . popular lions° Is now open for the
reception of 'lettere. - Yor health - recreation, or picae . -
nre - , unaurpaased by nnyJon the
Je3o-61r* JAM ItS MRCILAY,- Proprietor.'
'QM: , ttiO.NATIONAL HOUSE,
BRANCH, N. - well-known• &st
eams and popular Rouse. la now open for the reeeptiOn
'of vialteia. Terms, Ten Dollaris per. week. Persona
'wishing to engage Reecueeen de so by addreioing
- • - -WOOLSIAN trogs.P.s,
I.o.sti BRANCH.
Je20.2w,. -
EA-BA.TRLNO-- 00.gi.N Ho USE, 0 sPE
/414/111, K. . well-known and popular
llouse is agalu open to, xecalve visitors. It hat 11000
put in complpto °Moe, and ory attention will be given
to guivts toluike thefx` vi , it pleasant. The table will
be abundantly, supplied Id lb the luxuries of the season.
Chace!, moderate, to suit the times.
• je2.li* - • ' ISRAEL. t EAMING, Proprietor.
7 1t EXTON ONEIDA. ti UNY,
NEW
~YORK. The note) nt the above celebrated
plane-of - *sort is open for the Rouen, and cnn be
roached in a few hours from New . Yolk, at a
tuer small ex.
o
AWL an near. ht. AIUORI,
je23-'2wd&trw4twit Proprietor.
BATHING—CAPE ISLAND.—NA
TIONAL ROTEL h now open. Price or BoardiS
per week. Children and Serraule half price.
3019-Ow ; AARON OARRETSON, Proprietor.
MOUNT HOLLY SPRINGS HOTEL, 6
MILES PROM. JA.RLISLE, PA., AT THE GAP
OP TILE BOUTII MOUNTAIN.—The subscriber, of the
St. Lawrence hotel, Oheetnut street, Philadelphia, hav
ing leased the above popular summer resort of the late
proprietor, James W. Patton, a 111 open the same for the
reception of guests on the 20th of Juno. Terms mode
rate. Address A, MULLIN
MoMat Holly Sprinim,
Cumberland may, Pa.
jel&lm
VITASHINGTON HOUSE,
- vTT CAPE ISLAND, NEW JERSEY.
The above Nouse will be open fur the accommodation
of visitors on the let day of June.
The subscriber would call attention to the fart that
hp has fitted up the Washington" particularly for the
early visitors. A small dining room he.. been added,
Stoi es era fitted up throughout the front house, a first
clime Restaurant and liar in now In oporation, and every
thing now in order for the comfort of the guests for the
early season. S. R. WOOLMAN,
•
wt-lm Proprietor.
TIVIANSION HOUSE, MAUCH CFIUNIC.-
11A This elegant establishment, beautifully situated
on the banks of the Lehigh, is now ready for the recap
lien of nummor vielters. There Is no locality In Penn
cylyanla, nor, perhaps, In the United /Rates, which Dom
blare so many attractions as the valley of the Lehigh,
.and the above Hotel will afford a moat comfortable home
to Visiteis desirous of viewing the magnificent acencry,
inexhaustible mines, or stupendous works of art of this
interesting region.
joi-dm! OEORCIE IiOPPES, Proprietor.
YrHE WHITE sULPHUR AND CHALY
BE4yE SPRINGS, at DOUBLING GAP, Penn's,
are open, an usual, and are accessible in eight hours
from Philadelphia, by way of Harrisburg, thence on the
Cumberland ValleySallroad to Newvllle, thence In stages
eight miles to the Springs, whore you arrive at 6 o'clock
the name evening. For particulars, Inquire of Messrs.
Morton McMichael, Samuel , Hart, James Steel, D. S.
Janney, Jr., & Co., or Proprietors of Merchants' Hotel,
Philadelphia. SCOTT COYLE, Proprietor,
Newvillo Post Office, I.
gm BEDFORD SPRINGS.-THIS
MIL well-known and delightful Summer Resort will
:be opened for the reception of Visiters on tho 16th of
June, and kept open until the let of October.
' The new and *psalm; Buildinge erected lest year are
now folly completed, and the whole establishment km
been furnished in superior style, and the accommoda
tions will be of a character not excelled in any part of
the United States.
. . ,
The Hotel, will, be under the management of Mr. A.
01: ALLEN; *base experience, courteous manners, and
attention to big gdests. give the amplest assurance of
comfort and kind treatment.
liaddition to the other means of access. it le deemed
proper gh lo ri e d ta . t r e iv t in h that :T e n g o e: u s r
g o a reach Bedford by
da he Company have made extensive arrannemente to
supply dealers and individuals with " Bedford Water"
by the barrel. carboy, and in bottles, at the following
prices, at the Bpringe, vie :
Par a barrel(mulbery) $4 00
Do. (oak) 800
)i Do. mulberry) 800
Do. (
(oak) 200
Carboy, 10 panne 2 25
Bottles,lX pint, per dozen 1 60
The barrels are carefully prepared. so that pur
chasers may depend upon receiving the Water fresh
- and sweet,
All communications should be addressed to
TKO BXDPORD AIINDRAIi SPRINGS CO.,
myl9-tf - Bedford County, Pa.
_ E PHRATA MOUNTAIN' SPRINGS,
LANCASTER COUNTY, PA,
Will Open the elgbth day of June for visitors. This
healthy summer resort has many advantages which ro
onanfiends it to the.publle, in search of a home plsoe
to enjoy tie mountain air during the hot season. It le
elevated twelve hindred,feetabove water level There
are graded walks through dense Cordite, and shaded
atbonq by the way aide are many springs of the purest
soft Water et, a. temperature of 49 told degrees of Yaren
holt: At the enumitt is an observatory overlooking an
, area of 40 miles square, of farms in the .highest state
of cultivation, embracing the whole of Lancaster
county, sold'pOints In ton other countlem. The scenery
fades away In the boundaryof mountains at the dis
tance of 1p Mlles". It is altogether one of the most
grand and eatenalve panoramic views to be met with in
any country. No kind of epidemic has ever been known
here at any season of the year, Many beautiful drives
over good roads. The hotel will accommodate com
fortably AOO persons. Every' variety of bathe. all the
.modern Improvement , now to are In first-class watering
places will lee fraud bore All 'l, egetablea raised on the
farm. Nile beet help employed in every department.
The PrOprietor flattens himself that ho will be able
to give ample satisfaction to his silage. Good stable
reom.' Good stock of - livery Homes and carriages on
hand.
For further Information and circulars call on
JOSEPH IL MYERS,
THIRD and VINE Streets,
JAMES B. EARLE,
No. 810 CHESTNUT titzeet,
And on the Proprietor,JOSEPH NONIGUACHER,
Ephrataybet 0016 e, Lancaster county, Pa.
my1T.420
POINT AIRYI—THIS PLEA.
SatbitBl32ollllt REsowr , is now thrown
WWl public lrrtf 001 . PllOB.
I=dia°rlial4pl - During the
eatzi &mum our reader!,
can enjoy balmy breezea,
`cholcumuslo, flue bathing, with all 'the icrieras that
conduce to creature comforta f at Ws popular resort.
BOATS Wilkleate the wharf, at MTH Street every
fertrulzattee during the day. apt i.dtf
itlillinap q.oobo
IQ BEP'OOOL.
STRAW HATS.
LINCOLN: 400 D, da NIOEfOLS,
: 46 6O'iati:'B.E.'-13:0ND
Prtr dopro aboTe Okkeetout,
le 1141t41
(15.cut* . no._
rar - , OF JULY
fi-••:t
oxs
.RHOM PiIILADELPIIIA r w YORK,
By the Camden and Amboy and P • dm and Tren
- ton Corimenyis
Excursion Tickets wilibe sold on the ikl; 4th, and 6th
of July, for New York, good to return on or before
Wednesday the 7th of July • • ,
From Philadelphia on Saturday, Sd July, by the 6,8,
and.lo A. M., arid 2 P. M. lines . On the 4th, by the
rig P: 31., from Kensington Drit, and on.the 6th, by
Wee, 8, andlo A. AI. lime, from IS wharf.
With the privilege of returning from Now York on
the 6th July, by the 11 A, ht., 12 M., and 2 and 4P. M.
lines only. Also, 9n the 6th and 7th Ally, by any of the
trains from Now 'York.
Fare for t4E) Racursion, going and returning, . t .s4, 00
'
The M. and SP. M. lines from New Vork lenvo
pier No. 1 North River and the 8 and 11 A. M., 12 21.,
and 4 :Leda P. 14. linos 'from foot of - Courtlandt street.
je3o-6t WM. IV GATZMER, Agent.
'NORTH PENNS YL
VANIA RAILROAD.
7145tiRTLI OF JULY EXCURSIONS.
Excursion Tickets' to Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch
Chunk, Easton and Doylestown, GOOD FOR THREE
DAYS, will im Issued on SATURDAY, July 3d, at the
Ticket QMce of the North Pennsylvania Railroad,
FRONT - and WILLOW- Streote. •
Troine 'care for Bethlehem and L. V. R. R. at OA.
and 2:25 P. DI. '
• T rainss leave for - Doylestown at 8:30 A. M., and 5:30
P. M.
FARE FOR TUE EXCURSION.
To 11eth1eh0m........1 , -2 00-To Mauch Chunk...o 20
I
To Allentown 2 26 To Roston 2 20
To IThylentovrn .• • 126
These I,xauoniono will afford it fine opitorl,uniAr t at a,
small exponoo, forl'lowing ;014 :pletereseno ,scenery on
this NA , . 11: R. and the L. N.'ll -. It'. 2 or of . thapeeting
the - Atereatiog and stupendous operations in the
coal rogion. • - • ,•.•-• PUTS
roietha:VYA' _
, lAgentzlift
PTIILAD2LPHIA
nir •
°Sat AND ELMIRA RAILROAD .
- DI N E.—OR EAT DEDITOTION.
ONLY ES
,TO''NrAff ARA MALLS".OO.
-Trains leiiil.tho Philadelphia and Reading Railroad
Depot, corner,DROAD =4 VINE Streets, daily, (Sun
days eseepted,) as follows:
Tael A. St., day express:
`.0:30 P. M., night express.
' Ttakett can be procured at the Depot, and also at the
General Office of the line, Northweatcorner SIXTH and
OH r.STNUT Streets.
CHARLES S. TAPPEN,
General Agent
THE FOURTH OF
ag' " JULY AT THE BNA SHORE!
ONLY RuURS -TO TUN °ORAN i !
. ,
DISTANCE 60 MILES.
On 'SATURDAY, the 84, and on MONDAY, the 6th
'of July, Prattle on the CAMDEN and ATLANTIC
RAILROAD will run as follows :
PON TIIN SEA !BORE, JULY 3d.
-- Leave Vine wharf, Philadelphia, at 7 SO A. M.,
9.80 A. M., 4T, Id and 8 P• M.
, RETURNING ON SATURDAY.
itlantio City at 6 A. M., 4 40 P. Di., and 6.65
P. nt,
TOR TILE BRA SHORN, JULY 6th.
Leave - Ylne.ntrent wharf at 6 A. M.
7.80 A.M.
RETURNING ON THE 6th.
Leave Atlantic City at 6 A. M., 4.90 I'. M.,' and 6.35
P. N. .
- No Prolghi. Train frill be run on Saturday or Monday.
Tickets for the !wand trin,:good for any train down
on Saturday and Monday, and up on Saturday. Monday,
or Tuesday, 66.80. ' JhO. G. BRYANT,
je2B It _ • a gent.
. „... ~
-BAIDGETON, MILLEVILLE,
-PORT-ELIZABETH, Ice,, Ac.—The
iite.amer EXPRESS leaves first pier below 1011. Street
TUESDAYS, TRanstwys, and • SATURDAYS, at 133 e
'o'clock A. Id: Retunaing, leaves Bridgeton MONDAYS,
WEDNESDAYS,' and , FRIDAYS, at 8 o'clock t. N.;
touching at "New Oluttle, Delaware City, Greenwich,
-Mulford and Tyndale's,t i i4ig and retuning.
Through tickets, bye a connecting with the ~ Ex
prom," for the following iii acea, to wit :
Milleville.. 51 001 Port Elisabeth $1 23
Fairton or Cedarville. lb Newport 88
Dividing ,Oreek..... . 100 Meuricetown 1 26
All landings oli the onbanaey 76
'Delaware City or New Castle 50
' The Stages meet the boat punctually. No disappoint.
manta or delays need be anticipated._ Freight of ovary
description, taken at low rates. ' JoS.lmia
NORTH PENNSYL
VANIA RAILROAD FOR
DELAWARTMR-GAP, MAIICH CHUNK,
lIAZLETON;AND PRE LERIOU GOAL REGION.—
:Visitors to tho above popular places of Bosnian Renner
will And the Route offered by the North Pennsylvania
Railroad Company, in connection with the Lehigh Val
ley and New. Jersey Central Railroads, to be novel
and 'agreeable, passing through some of the richest and
meet highly cultivated Counties in the State, and pos.
armed of comfortable accommodations, both on the road
and at the various towns through which It passes.
FOR TUE WATER GAP.—tike 215 P. IL Empress
Train from Front and Willow greets, rule the night at
Bethlehem, and take care next morning at 9 o'clock,
through Easton to New Itampton, There II close con
nection Is made with the Delaware, Lackawanna, and
Western Railroad and arrive at the Gap about noon.
FOR MAUCH CHUNK AND TILE COAL REGION.
—Take 0 A. M. and 2.25 I'. M. Express Traula from
same Depot to Bethlehem, where a clone connection is
made with the Lehigh Valley Railroad, through from
Philadelphia to Munch Chunk in &hours.
A NEW AND PLEASANT ROUTE TO NEW
YORK ClTY.—Take 9 A. M. Eames Train to Bethle
hem, thence et 2.20 P. 111. via L. V. It. It. and N. J. 0.
It. It. through Buxton to Elizabethport, thence" kr
Steamer, and arrive in Ngw York at quarter past 7 P.M.
Parties travelling Nam t 1.04 have o f w hours to
Spate, wririara - trrEnrt new and agreeable route.
For further particulars, inquire of
• ELLIS CLARK,
. Agent N. P. R. R., Front and Willow streets.
PHILIDSLIIIIA, June 18, 1858. jol9-2m•
p ,.. 4 1. 11 FOR CAPE
ORMAY AND NEW
YK.
DAILY, at 1 . 94 o'clock A M.
NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA STEAM NA
VIGATION COMPANY.
The splendid ocean steamers DELAWARE, Captain
Copes; BOSTON, Captain Sellew ,• and KENNEBEC,
Captain nand, form a daily line between this city Capt,
May, and New York, leaving from first pier below Spruce
street (Sundays excepted) at OX o'clock A. M Return
ing, leave New Yolk from pier 14 North River (Sundays
excepted) at 5 I'. M.
Returning, leave Cape May (Mondays excepted) at
A. M.
Fare to Cape May (carriage hire included)
" for servants....
" &aeon Gaeta (carriage hire ox
tra) 8 00
New York, cabin 2 00
LI, ‘. steerage 1 60
Freight taken at low rate,,.
Par passage, state roma, &c., apply on board, or at
the Office, 114 and ,310 tiOUTli DELAWARE AVE
NUE. JAMES ALLDERDICE,
Jels-am Agent.
FOR THE SEA SHORE.
o_oo.q CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC
RAILROAD. ONLY TWO AND HALF HOURS TO
THE SEA 1311011 E.
Ou and after Monday, Juno 7th, and until further no
tic°, (Sundays excepted,) three trains daily to Atlantic
City and return.
First Passenger Train leaves VWe st. wharf 7.30 A. 11f.
Second " 11 " " " 4.00 P. M.
Freight Train with Passenger Car attached, 4.35 A. M.
Accommodation Train to Weymouth, 5.35 I'. N.
LEAVES ATLANTIC CITY.
Fleet Passenger Train leaves 8.00 A. M.
Second " 4.40 P. M.
Freight Train with Passenger car attached, 11.30 P. M.
Accommodation Train leaves Weymouth, 525 A. 51.
HADDONFIELD TRAIN
Leaves Cooper's Point, 11 A. M. and 2 P. M.
Haddonfield, 1 P.M. and 3 P. M.
Faro to Atlantic, when tickets are purchased before
entering the cars, $l.BO. Persons wishing to go down to
the Sea Shore end return the sa:ue day, can spend
SIX HOURS ON THE BEAM.
Tickets for the round trip, 52 50
Tickets to go down in the afternoon and return next
morning, or down ou Saturday afternoon and return on
Monday morning, $2.50.
Monthly tickets will be sold at the following rates:
For the month of June, $l.O I For the month of Sept. $l6
I' July, 20 For three months, 45
it " August, 20 For four months, 60
Churches, Schools, Lodges, Companies and Library
Associations, wishing special trains, should make early
application.
Freight must be delivered at Cooper's Point by P.M.
The Company will not be responsible for any goods until
received and recelpted for by their Freight Agent at the
Point. R. FRAZER,.liecretary.
Jer-tt
Carpeting°.
CARPETS.
We will commence TO-DAY
CLOSING OUT
Onr entire Spring Stock of
VELVET AND BRUSSELS OARPETINGB,
GREATLY REDUOED PRIORS.
DAILY A BROTHER,
No. WA CHESTNUT Street.
Purchasers will please call and examine our large
assortment. ap29.tr
ripAPESTRY CARPETS.—JUST OPEN
ED, a large lot of &superior Tapestry Carpets, to
be sold at a low price.
DAILY A BROTHER,
CASH CARPET STORE,
920 CHESTNUT Elt.
QIIPERB THREE-PLY OARPETS .-
1.3 A fresh assortment of new patterns, at reduced
priest, at BAILY BROTIIEB , B,
OABII OARPBT STORE, .
OtIEBTNITT Bt.
DED ROOM OARPRTS.-10,000 YDS.
of superior Ingrain and Three—ply Carpets. of the
beet makee and styles, at all' prices, from 60 cents to
$1.25 per yard. BAILY A BROTHER,
mh3l-ff , N0.,920 CHESTNUT Street.
R EST HEAVY BRUSSELS.-A LARGE
lot of new patterns, In I eat, chaste at lea, at low
DAILY & BROTHER,
CHEAP CARPET STORE,
020 CHESTNUT St
j3OQIt i3inberieo
TAWSON & NIOfIOLSON,
BOOKBINDERS,
No. 619 MINOR Street, below Sloth, between Market
and Chestnut Areas. jed-mitt
JAMES PAWBON• .?..klati B. 11101101A10.V.
1.08 QR. CASKS PORT WINE.
ilif, Pipes Alicante do
22 Qr. du do do.
20 Qr. do Sherry do.
11 Pipes Superior Pajarete Wine.
20 Qr. Pipes do do do.
40 X do do do do.
111 Bales ',mated Corks.
8/5 Begs Almonds.
26 do Filberts
Landing" from Brig Azrogante Brasile," and for sale
A. IS SR iNO,
my2T-tt 140 SOUTH FRONT Street.
..A.RdE NO. 3 MACKEREL—NOW IT
J_l More and landing, 300 bble No. 3 MACH.HREL
large 268 halves ditto, for Bale by
JNO. M. ICENNEDY & CO.,
Noe 130 and 184 N. WITARVNA.
ALE. -26 Casks Muir's, Younger's, and
Alleopp'a Sparkling Ale, in pinta, landing and for
We by WILOAAId U. tI4ATON,
lan 016 South FRONT Stretat
OTIEtSE. —196 boies 'Prime lierklmei
lJ county 3n06 Innding and for WO by
0, 0. BADLBR & 00.,
Ko. 9 tiort/4 Wan Meet.
PHILAbELPHIA. FRIDAY. - JULY 2. 1858.
Ntui ilublirationo
•
ritlE AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN
.1 DRUGGISTS' DIRECTORY„ containing , the
NAMES and_ADDIiESS of all the DRUGGISTS in the
United States, British America, Mexico,
Central Awe
rim, West Indies, Smith America, and the Sandwich
lolanda, and of the leading Wholesalo Dreg Muse* In
Great' Britian, France, GermanY, Bessie, Belgium,
Holland, • Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, and Italy ;
also, of the English and French Possessions in Asia,
Africa, and Australia, will be lemma on or about the
16th of July 'proxlMo.
. A few more advertisements will be taken, payablo on
delivery of the' work; .
For terms, Ac., &o.,addreas
MICIIELS & ELDER,
Noe. 3755 P. O. NEW YORK.
N. B. Mr. Michels will be in Philadelphia on,the
ad, dth, sth, and 6th July. Address J. Nichols, Blood'a
Despatch. , jyl4lt
ItJEW MAGAZINE.
BRYANT & STRATTON'S "AMERICAN Mi
CHANT" is now reedy, and may be had at all NEWS
DEPOTS Thelr Agent, Capt. J. Ht Bell le canvassing
Ws city for yearly subscribers. Price 82 per annum.
Address nye .4T & STRATTON„ Mercantile College,
8 E.'aerner SEVENTH and CHESTNUT Streets, -Phi
ladelphia. ' my2B-IT
A CCOUNT BOOKS; MADE OF THE
beet stock, for city sake. Call and look over the
stock at PERRY'S
Blank Book Manufactory,
FOURTIE and RA.C.B.
EDERRY's BLANK BOOK MANUFAO
TORY.—Itomember FOURTH and RAOE In buying
Account hooka. I make all my. stock of good material,
and poll atfatuylogal =
ENVELQFES;' EVERY
,rtile, 43)16 - 162ftlitee; at
0. Estabtlatrivit,
.900 . .ATA Nid 1140 E.
'ASK BOOKS, MADE 11 , V ANT DE-
Liu! anuip styli of ruing and" bludlng. A -. good as-
Sortment of Paprirs for' customers to select from, at'
BEIRRY , B Blank Book ISfatmfactory,
BOURTII Stijl RAOE.
L"AMILY PORTRAIT :BIBLES I , HAND
130MIELY bound. ' Old lllblee rebound to look and
wear good ea now.' Call and look at the etylee, at
PERRY'S Ilookbluderyl"
YOURTII - and RAOE.
j4-2m
53agiltrte
INLAYING FUND—FIVE PER CENT. IN.
TEREST—NATIONAL SAFETY TRUST COM.
PANZ.-"-WAtNIIT BTIMET 8017111.WROTOORNIM
or THIRD, Purceesar,vais.
iffeimosavee ier TER OUT" 07 P777OTLTAIIIIi.
Money le received In any sam, large or small, and In-
ternet paid from the day of deposit to the day of with-
drawal. - •
The °Moe it open ertery der front ce o'clock in the
morning till fi o'clock In the evening, aad on Monday
end Thoreday ereninge till 8 &clock.
HON - ILMI BY L. 11.11MIN11, Presidenti
BOBMRT BNLYRIME±M;' We Presiding:
Net. I. Dam, oa:rotary.
DIIOOIOI2I
Ron. Henry L. Benner, 1. Cairoll Brewster, *
Edward L. Outer, 7°50)&11. Raw ,
Robert Selfridge, !rands Les.,
Semi. K. Aelrton, Joseplx Yerkes
O. Landreth Simms, Henry Diffenderifer.
Money is received and payments made daily.
The inreetrxtente are made in conformity. with Uri
provisions of the Chanter, in REAL ESTATE MORT
GAGES, GROUND RENTS, and such first clams securi•
ties u will always inure perfect security to the &pod
tore and which cannot fa il to give permanency and eta.
billy to this Inetitution. aul-ly
N °.BB (241) DOOR STREET.—FIVE
PER CENT. STATE SAVINGS FUND.
IVO. 88 (241) DOCK STREET.—FIVE
PILB OHNT. STATB SAVINGS FUND.
NO. 88 (241) DOCK STREET.—FIVE
NPHH °ENT. STATN SAVINGS FUND.
NO. 88 (241) DOOR' STREET. —ME
111 Plat ONNT,IIVA'PIe SAVINGS FUND. au]
piano ,fortze.
PIANO FORTES.
Jturt resolved, an elegant stook of BAYEN, BA
ON, CO., BANNS A . CLARK, HALLET, DAVIS
It 00., and GALE It. CO. 8 21AN08. MEDD OBOES
beet quality, at J. B. GOULD'S,
8.
malP B. eoruer SEVENTH and CHESTNUT eta.
~
THE UNION PIANO MANUFAOTI7I3.
ING COMPANY, No. 1104 MARKET Street
Philadelphia.
The Union Company ere now prepared to offer to their
friends, as well as to the public generally, their Plana
as being unsurpassed by any others ae regards beauty
and fulLuess of tone, perfectness and durability
&alien quality of materials and finish.
The Union Company belbg composed of persons who
are all practical workmen, and who, haring bad years
of experience in manufactories both of this country
and Europe aro each perfect in their department;
and, by their combined efforts, are enabled to offer
to the public a first-class Piano at a much lower
rate than anr other manufactory, and at the same
time, are sure of the quality of their instrument!,
each part being made by oae of the members of the
Company; and will therefore guarantee each Imam
moot as having all the qualities claimed for it in
this circular.
owe- Tuning and repairing. attended t 4,
Please call and examine, at
atd-dma - - - - atm DIARBET
. . . . . .
,firtworks.
FE WORKS.—The undersigned, in addi
tion to his large stock of 'Works for the retail
trade, has just received from the factory a splendid as.
sortment of brilliant COLORED WORES, for private
and public exhibitions, manufactured by a pyrotechnist
of twenty-five years standing, the oldest and best In the
United States Among the list may be found:
Vertical Wheels, Polkas,
Illuminated Wheels, Masonic Blare,
Lance Stars, Mines,
Double Triangles, Globes,
Mad Wheels, Ouilloches,
Caudle Wheels, Thunder Wheels,
Caprices, Maroons,
Persian Jets, Colored Candles,
Jack iu the Box, Colored lleugolas,
Rengola Lighte, Batteries,
Colored Rockets, Open Triangles,
With molly other varieties not named.
N. R. Parties eta distance %ill please order their
Works as early as possible. Exhibitions, Irma %50 tv
$5OO, furnished at short notice.
JOSEPH D. RUSSIER 4
.10 SOUTH WHARVES.
FIRE -WORKS I FIRE-WORKS I
A full asnortmont of
FIRE-WORKS.
AT REDUCED PRIORS.
STEPHEN P. WHITMAN,
1210 MARKET BTREEIT,
jolt. West of Twelfth
Busineao 41Carbo.
IT O. THOMPSON AND G. M. (JONAH
• ROE, CONVEYANCERS.
GEO.ht. 00NARROB, ATTORNEY AT LAW,
aps-y No. 933 ARCH street, below' Tenth,
DANIEL DOUGHERTY, ATTORNEY
Al AT LAW, 'local:west, Oorner of IiIIGHTH and LO
OUST Strode, Philadelphia. and-1y
("TABLES TETE, COMMISSION MER
IL/ WANT and Importer of HAVANA BKHARB,
(Now) IM Walnut ntreet. eocond dory. , anl•ly
VVILLIAM HENRY MOORE, FURNISH
ING UNDERTAKER, No. 1416 AllOll Street
west of Broad, late of 404 ARCA Street
Lead Coffins always on band.
REMOVAL.-
0. FAWCETT,
HAIR CUTTER AND WHI MAKER,
Ilse removed to 1026 OHEBTNUT Street, four doors be
low ELEVENTH. 1e.24$
Y STROUBE, ATTORNEY. AT
LAW. 011NTRIB 11014 M. Pnttmills. P►. au4-17
Vt. X 'Winn,
Attorney at Law.
W E. BARBER & CO.,
• OF
DAVENPORT, lOWA,
Rare opened an Wilco in connection with their
WESTERN INVESTMENT AND COLLECTION AOHNOT,
No. 23 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA
FIFTEEN PER CENT. LOANS
The above firm are loaning money for Eastern parties,
upon the security of Cultivated llama in the vicinity
of Davenport /Own, and return FIPTEEN PRO VENT, per
annum, in Eastern par funds. The security is perfectly
safe, as no loans are made except upon unencumbered
Dual Estate, nor to an amount greater than UNE-7111BD
the lutrinalc value of the land. The money borrowed
is generally used In Improving the lassos, thus enhan
cing the value of the security. Tito securing instru
ment Ism DEED OF TRUST, by which the Trustee is Au
thorized to sell the land at public auction. without fur.
Ozer legal process, in twenty days after default in the
•payment of either principal or Interest. A full descrip
tion of the farm and improverneuts Is always sent to the
lender when the loan is effected.
LAND WARItANTS LOCATED.
They hove skilful persona employed in the different
Land Districts of the West in making selections of
choice lands. Nu locutions are Linde except from ac
tual insveciion. Some of the finest lands in lows are
Just coming into market, tinder the procimuntion of the
President
WESTERN LANDS SUPERINTENDED.
They take charge of Western lands owned by Eastern
parties, watch favorable opportunities fur selling them,
and PAC TASKS FOR SON-RRHIDRUTI3.
CLAIMS COLLECTED.
Owing to the location of their Western office nt n con
trot point on the Mississippi river, they have uneven
facilities for making collections throughout tho West
Proceeds remitted on the day of collection.
Capitalists and others interested In tbo West, nre
Vit.tl to call at their Milne to Ppihulelphts, %viten sec•
timed maps and StlltifitlCß of Weston, States may be
seen, and Information obtained as to thou Mlle of West•
ern lands, and the safety of Western securities.
ItFFERRNOF.H.
B. B Conlegys, Esq., Philadelphia Bank.
Messrs Boyd & Bates, Philadelphia.
Merin, Mtn rio & Jones & Co., Philadelphia.
Messrs. Hoopes & Townsend,
11. li. Houston, Esq.,
C. It. Coleman, Esq., Mechanics' Bank, Baltimore
I'. tit ibson, Eeg., Bonk of Baltimore,
Messrs. Leech & Male, Pittsburgh.
J. M. Ilughes, Esq., hunk of Missouri, St. Louis.
Messrs. Cook & Sargent, Bankers, Davenpeit
je2o.ltot
I AUMAN Ytt RABORG
. Imp - orient end Wholemle Deniers In WINF,S
SHANDIES, WHISKEY, INS, ttu,l FANCY LI
!WHIRS, No. 1017 MARKET Street, between Tenth an.
Elorontli streeti. Jel9-tf
ii[EIDSIECK CHAMPAGNE.—PIPER' n
IIEUSLISOK, genuine brand, constantly on lined,
received from coin Importers, and for Nato by
A MERINO, Bole Agent in this City,
ap2.2.-dam 1M RnT5l.ll Punwr fatti.t
VLARET WINE.—DE COURSEY, LA
IJ & CO., 835 MARKET street, bave
an Importation of Lafouroade's Pure Bordeaux Claret
Wine) Wahl: berieflobll for WAWA, )et/r4
Ctt si,lrtss
FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1868.
DOUGLAS JERMILD-VVIT, DRAMATIST
A hundred and torty- years ago ; if any 'ar
dent admirer of ADDISON or STEELE had made
a special pilgrimage to London, for the pur.
pose of reverently beholding the 'great moral
sage of "The Spectator," and' the lively wit
°fart The Tatter," ho would have probably en
countered them, as early as the hour of noon,
in BUTTON'S or Wm's Coffee-house—as was
the fashion of the' day. Droll STEBLE,truo to
the habits and instincts of his Irish nature,
Might be slightly ic flustered" after his second
flask of Burgundy; ADDISON, of a colder and
lesi genial temperament, would have imbibed
quite as much as his impulsive friend, but, not
having had enough to make him talkative,
would have carried off his liquor with a grave
and silent solidity, looking as wise and serious
atlAn owl. STEM? ? in a rollicking nianner,
would scarcely have gone away without chuck
ing the pretty bar-maid 'under the chin, (and
ahesvould not bo irretrievably offended with the
gallantry of the gay Irishman,) while ADDISON,
turning, up the - whites of his eyes, in a moral
(and somewhat maudlin) manner, and preserv
ing his perpendicular' by' wonderful efforts,
would have ellentlygot into Ns Chair, and.syl
labically ,given, the :Order, ft, la ?unready—
" To-a 1011-and-a Houae','- 7 -the residence of
that stately madam, la wife, Dowager-
Countess of Warwick, and (unless she lie
itity greatly maligned) a considerable shrew.
Finding his way into his study, he would have
gone, in all likelihood, to that cupboard inthe
wainscot where he kept his wine, and opened
a bottle of black strap .to solace himself—for
poor ADDISON was rather a solitary than a
social drinker—and, under thatadditional ex
citement, he might have taken pen in hand,
and, by the time the wine was finished, have
written a charming moral paper for the
"Spectator" or its successor, "The Guar
dian "—such a paper as would make the ad-
Fairing reader exclaim, w What a pity' it is that
good Mr. ADDISON is not in the Church." We
do not care to follow STEELE. He wore his
sodal vices on his sleeve; he delighted in
being a bon vivant ; he, too, if he did not fall
into bad company ere he reached home, would
probably sit down and write, and let his fine
animal spirits overflow on the page before him.
He was neither a solitary drinker nor a hypo
crite.,
In our own time, a great moral teacher
lived. in London—a social reformer—a bitter
enemy of Cant—an asserter of the rights of
,the People—a searching and sarcastic satirist,
with fwhom the pen became even like the sharp
dissecting knife in the hands of any:first-rate
anatomist. This man was Dermas JEnimm.
People not in cities, who rend Pinch, who
knew` that the " Candle Lectures" were
Jarman's; who fell into the common error of
ascribing every good thing in a journal to
some one man who writes for it ; who heard,
froni afar, what a tremendously smashing and
satirlOal wit he was ; who venerated him, at a
distance, as a sago, condescending to a sort
of ateetic pleasantry ;—these, and other peo
ple, ft ay have anxiously desired to have even
a look of this great writer—a reverential
glance of this caustic satirist. Booth to say,
had they beheld him, his appearance would
have somewhat awakened surprise (the jewel of
ten lies in an ill.shapen and ugly casket,) and
there was no difficulty whatever in gutting
more than a mere glance of him. For, with
all tie; condescension of genius, ho delighted
to frequent u.m.timiut the
-most extraordinary) haunts of common mor
tals; and this, not by fits and starts; not by
accidental slidings off the ordinary railway
track of every-day propriety, but, night after
night, for a series of years, the few interrup
tions being caused by his taking a week's
holidays at Margate or Ramsgate, or—which
he considered, as Cockneys always do,
" spending a fortnight on the Continent,"
which actually consisted in living at the Hotel
do Paris, at Boulogne, strolling on the ram
part which surrounds the higher town, reach
ing as far as the Colonne Napoleon, or pa
rading on the Pier, when the steamer from
Folkstono came in, and constantly dropping
in at way-side cabarets or estaminets, for fresh
caulkers—" the brandy being so cheap, my
boy, it is extravagance not to drink it!"
Any ourious person who happened to be in
The Cock, in Fleet street—the hostelrie made
immortal in TENNYSON'S lyric—might have wit
nessed the entrance of an odd-looking under
sized man, about the prandial hour of six P.M.
Low in stature ; freckled in complexion ;
with a nose like a beak; back so bent as to be
almost bunchy; thin hands and claw-like
fingers; feet capacious as those of GRANT
TIIORRURN a shock of sand-colored hair,
thickly sprinkled with gray, and thrown wildly
back over a brow at once broad and high (fhe
ono redeeming feature of his face), thick lips,
and large, staring eyes of a varying color, the
green predominating over the pale blue—
this was DOUGLAS JERROLD. Add that his
voice was extremely sharp and shrieking, that
he was always tied (by the neck, with a broad
black ribbon) to an extensive double eye
glass of gold, and that ho was accompanied
by a huge club, from which a large tassel was
over pensile and tremulous, and you realize
the man:
Ms portrait was published at , the ggPonch"
office in 1846, a most ludicrously and vil
lainously exact resemblance, and when it came
out, many who had never seen JEanoen
imagined it a more quiz—an, ingenious em
bodiment, in the mitigated form of every
day attire, of the groat Mr. Punch himself.
One of the London papers, which affected to
review it as a fancy-portrait of Punch, received
un indignant letter from JimnoLD, evidently
written under various excitements, angrily de
claring that it was himself, and none other.
Had this missive been published, it would
have set the town laughing at the satirist, but,
when he cooled down, ho earnestly and even
B. St. DABBER,
Notary Public
humbly entreated permission to withdraw it.
Withdrawn it was, as far as non-publishing it
was concerned, but the actual manuscript re
mained in the hands of the recipient, after it
had been seen by various literati, and happens
to be in America at this moment. -
All this time, Mr. JERROLD has been left,
at dinner, at one of the little tables of The
Cock." Having concluded that necessary and
not unpleasant operation, accompanied and
followed by what Mr. Richard Swiveller
used to call draughts of "the rosy," JERROLD
would stroll down the Strand, with tolerably
steady steps, passing St. Clement's Church,
(whore they still show where Dr. SAMUEL
JOURRON used to sit,) and, at a well-known
hostelrie, The Edinburgh Castle," again
take his ease in his inn. It . is in the neighbor
hood of numerous newspaper offices, and many
choice spirits (besides those the landlord
sells) haunt it, from dusk until long after they
hear the chimes at midnight. Here, (before
ho became a police magistrate, and had to
keep up a certain dignity,) would GIL
BERT ABBOT A'BECRETT imbibe modest
quencher," or two; hero would 1110 HARD
DOYLE resort, occasionally; here, MARK
Limon, the Jewish editor of ‘, Punch ;" here
Joni; LEACH, the artist, and, sometimes, even
the Fat Contributor himself—better known,
in these diggings, as Mr. THACRERAY. In
fact, all the as Punch" people regularly fre
quented the place, which was eminent for
whiskey toddy, gin twist, brown stout, pale
ale, mutton chops, devilled kidneys, and
Welsh rabbits.
Mr. Jnaitotn's tour, for the romainder of the
evening, need not be followed very particularly.
He would drop in at a theatre or two—waste
half an hour in the "Coal Hole, at Chief-
Baron NIOLIOLSON . I3 doubtful Judge and Jury
Society—call on his friend Ilnumso, at the
"Care do PEHrope," next. the Haymarket
Theatre, and always a grout resort of actors
and dramatists and newspaper men—amuse
bimself at #ie "Nell Gwyn Tavern," back of
AND SATIRIST.
the Adolph! Theatreand, Wherever else he
went, almost invariably wind up with' grilled
bones and punch at w Eventes',", near Covent
Garden. 'Wherever le was, he: would,•talk a
great deal. _lie had a way of jerking %out his
sentences, with, his voice in, all, which was
odd enough. He was a very. eager , talker,
with wonderfully rapid conception ot thought.
The general opinion is that hewas'addisted to
punning, but ho was a wit rather thaii a punster.
He did not Care to play upon words. Ho had,
to use the line of Moonz's :
"With the flesh of the gem, its solidity too "
In making mere bon mobs he did not care to
excel, though, when ho tried, he hit the white.
Thus, when one of the quasi men of letters,
who affect extreme gentility, and are ever in
debt—" Men about - Teviii;" with the loose
habits of Dick Swiveller, minus the generous
instincts whieh elevated that worthy after all,
. •
came up to a party in the Museum Club, and
announced that he had that day partaken of a
now sort of soup at dinner—" soup," said he,
"felicitously made from- calves' tails," out
burst JEanoml with the sententious remark,
"Extremes often meet !" But, for the most
part, hie wit Was' 'genuine, and 'he tinng' it
away among ,his cigar , and grog: acivaint
"inces.with absurd ,lavishment,..,With all thls
fecundity of wit, Jean= was bad, company.•
He would not be pleasant. He seemed
to be, like a tiger, ever ready for 'it
spring, and, when' the opportunity occurred,
could not resist the temptation , of saying the
witty, bitter thing.' Thies, when 'Mrs: Giovatt,
the great eomidienite; who had knOwn him,
from childhood; uttered a regret' over her
beautiful hair becoming thin and gray,,half
jestingly saying, "I think it.must be caused
by my damping my head, when it aches, with
the essence of lavender," JERROLD instantly
interjected the remark, "Rather say'the es
sence of Tme."" But those who play at
bowls must expect rubbers, says the proverb,
and JERROLD sometimes was paid back in
kind, much to his annoyance. • For example,
there was a greatlaugh among aliwho knew him,
when one of the London editors (the late Mr.
kronen of the Globe) announced the " severe
indisposition of Mr. DOUGLAS JERROLD," and,
contradicting it on - the following day, stated
that the report bad arisen from the fact of his
having been seen to put thOquftl, Instead of
the feather-end, of his pen into, his month,
and the lookers-on, knowing what venom he
wrote with, naturally believed that it had poi
soned him I Like all satirists, JERROLD was
himself very thin-skinned. -Any thing like a
hiss, during the early performances of one of
his new plays, would depress him into a fit of
cold shivers, and any thing less than unquali
fied eulogy in the critical notice of , any of his
writings 'would throw his mind off its balance
for some days.
From what has been said, it may be
judged that JERROLD was not quite qUali l
fled for the chair at a Temperance meeting.
In truth, he drank a great deal, but seldom,
if ever, before dinner, by which time his,day's
work was done. It was not so much from the
love of drinking, or from the love of society,
but from a distaste to being wholly,left to him
self. Therefore, to avoid his own sad com
pany, he gave himself very largely up to ge- -
neral society. It affected his health, of course,
for no man can thus freely indulge with Impu
pky ; but it will be remembered that, of' late
y rs, he had nothing to write except short
articles for " Punch" and " Lloyd's Weekly
Newspaper"—articles flung oft' on the spur of
the moment, each not taking half an hour to
compose. Latterly, too, a great many of
the editorials in "Lloyd's" were written by
the sub-editor—his own son, WILLIAM BLA N.
CHARD JERROLD, who has both succeeded him
as editorand collected his I,thor's " The Wit
and Opinions," and re-published in Boston
• 1 -^ --We home not Yet yeeFLIJAB
book, which onsla tr, s et,/ -
At this point, let us break off this pen-and
ink sketch, to resume and conclude it to-mor
row.
NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS
Sir Walter Scott, no we happen to know on his
own laughing confession, never could resist, the
temptation or reading anew novel. Bow ho found
time for suoh reading, amid all his writing, is a
wonder; bat the feet is that ho read every work
of Cotton, good or bad, which foil into his way.
Wo confess to a like weakness, with very little
loisure for indulging it. More, now, are four now
novels, and wo have read them all. We notice
them, in order of merit.
Mr. James is fortunate in his present publishers,
who have given his now romanoe every advantage
which it could receive from good illustrations and
beautiful typography, paper, and binding. It Is
enriched with a fine portrait of the author, taken
in 1846, and a vignette title-page. It opens for
the information of the public, with a biographical
account of Mr. James, antleipated from Alli
bone'e forthcoming critical Dictionary of Eng•
lish Literature. " Lord Montague's Page,"
is an historical romance, In which aro re
lated oortain events, chiefly occurring in
France, with certain love-passages, in - the life
of Edward Langdale, a young English cavalier.
Very prominently in the foreground, we have
Cardinal Richelieu, at about the age of forty: A
main part of the interest rests upon the develop
ment of this great man's character, which is exhi
bited in various phases. The celebrated Siege of
Rochelle, conducted by Richelieu, is elaborate
ly described. But the most attractive part of
this story certainly le that which brings tho
Page and hie sweetheart before us. Mr. James
excels in love-scenes, (on paper,) and has never
written more delicately, and at the same time
more artistically, than in this romance. Thire is
a sortof half-promise, at the close, that the thread
of the story will bo resumed, ere long, in another
volume We hope that the promiao will be fulfilled.
Very different, in almost every respect, is the
story called " A Poor Fellow." It is what is
known as a religions novel. With the exception
that the author runs too much into amplification,
the book is a good ono, writteb with excellent par
pose, and containing a story which poseesses con
siderable Interest. It ion very great improve
ment upon " Which," by the seine author, and is
altogether one of the best of its class.
Captain Mayne Reid is one of the most exhaust
less of modern romancers. Be has evidently stu
died Indian history, Indian oluiraoter, and Indian
manners, with close observation. From this, his
Indians are more truthfully drawn than those
which won so much celebrity for Fenimore Cooper.
"Osceola," the renowned Seminole leader, is the
hero of this new story, which is related, with much
spirit, in an autobiographical farm, by a oortain
George Randolph. There is a groat deal of wild
adventure, but historical troth is faithfully ad
hered to.
We know not who wrote "The Donner Elmore,"
but it must bo worth reading, if it be even half as
good as "Wildflower," the reprint of an English
novel, the incidents of which are out of the ordi
nary beaten truck. The story has many beautiful
scenes, and the heroine, a certain Avice Bern, is
a shamming, impulsive, loveable creature, in whose
well-doing the reader cannot fall to take much
interest. Wo cordially recommend "Wildflower"
as a good companion.
Fancifully attired in blue and gold, and embel
lished with several spirited wood engravings, here
we have a volume of satirical poetry called
Aquarelles or Summer Sketches; by Samuel
Sombre "—a pen-name, of course. Tho poetry,
which Is lively and sharp, as sooiety-satire ought
to be, discusses Life at Saratoga, at Newport, and
at Sharon. Discusses it saucily enough. The
Sharon " Confidences," in the shape of a dialogue
between a couple of Let/es, is by fur the heat thing
iu this volume—so good that we aro persuaded the
author will make a name, if he choose a suita
ble subject and throw his mind into its illustra
tion. With this eulogy we should gladly stop,
but that wo have to add a little censure. In a
word, then, we have never mot with so mans , bad
rhymes iu so few pages. So many and so curiously
bad, that it might be enpuesed a deaf person, who
could only see the word.) had perpetrated many of
them. Here are a few : Tresses and greases, better
and beat her, beans and gains, eyes and joys, does
and shows, extra nod perplexed her, test her and
Zendovesta, fable anti gabble, table and babble,
dear and hair, ajar and Ma, news and does, near
'and fair, twos() and use, plagues and logs, impres
sion and fashion, learn and burn, diction and
Crichton. (the word is really sounded Cri-ton,)
power and o'er, amuse and does, matter and better,
caprice and advice, o'er and hour, this and cease,
air anti ear, glass and grace, complete anti replete,
complete and estate, compete and appetite,
fumes and perfumes, beast and appetite, sense and
extents, vice anti caprice, caprice end device, sup
pose and duos, just and least, claims and pains,
passed and taste, too and skow, claims and dreams,
tires anti perseveres, squimkers and vapors, taste
and test, eehemos and claims, reward and applaud.
TWO CENTS."
- . ,
Now, all these .bad rhymcloctth many !Ore orNol!
ero.have not culled,,ire to , found 'in the single .
poem of 4, Ellirtiteia.'__ 7'heautbo may probably
plead".that many lief whit ate 'willed- allowahte,
'rhymes ;- but this reilliis;Thet eta, oat most two
- such thyines aft; all thit'ifiri•bdidlotred in suds a
limited space es he 'covers.- If •poetirtirofeisea to
*be rhymed, let tilesprofesslon be aokutup to. We
did not think ; that. the bad , rhymes, forced and
,cOokneyish, in Air. Butler's, ".Nothing Wear,",
could he equal, bat ,'! Sombre'? has them
'equally atlocloui and far more tiuMeroiti.
The took-premuiedWoletee'ef Lollitiontow' Leo-.
tures,' itioluding liar amusing Autobiography;
appeared, at last ; embellishe d With - an engraved
portrait, from a photograph; in whioßmuoh of tit;
peculiar expression itotnight,.-with the dhadiao
taw:, of making the lady oonelderably older than
she is. This is inevyablooyo suppose ; the eon ie
Rot only *letterer, but be setnetimea rude
at to add a feW years
_even to a charming face,
Thelitie-page' distigdreS :the . voitune; avoids punctuation, 4 ind'"inni thus - : "Lectures of.
.Lola "Monies '(Countess :ortanefiliV Inaludtrig
her Autobiography New York Rudd. Carleton,
310 - Broadway MDOCOLVth " This is unkram ;
matical, bad-looktng;and aftnetaßoas.' Turn we
to the book itself., We believe two. things, almost
1111fillidi LW we, believe :Any thief :girat, -that the .
main' point's In Lols'eAutothigraplijarenorreoy
'though the lighttrandsliadelbare'beitli z artiathial-'
ly need; to,bring out ionte anti softek-ileWil
and ileCondly, that pied line inthe hook,-all her -
leeturesure - here—waswritten bylierseir has
been the habit, betatieetheieleattireearnVerivtelf
written, to attribute, their authorship to bir..Burr,
whose brother was tale's travelling agent:
out disrespect for Mr. Burr's talents, (Which Make
him it better speaker than - author,) we. our
opinion that be rieyornottidheVe .irnitterteren i po.
lions or, this book. Lale's kora:mind kaa stamped
its impress on her Looturea, , in'a . most evidon(rtrok
unmistakable manner.' Her thoughts, Weilinguage,
and haiturn of °sprawl:ion; arepalpableeil through., ;
The book'isn very einusing one, and will probably
be in greatrequeat.all this Bummer; in. the coun
try, where entertainment
,and instruotioe are at .a
premium. ' _
- Blesektifood'3 Araiazene, the IslaW Mirk Po-.
simile reprint, has reached us, There are several
good artiolea: two orandia, twO'on Polltios,and a
large portion of Balwer's,neW nivel,are the *oat
noticeable.' : In the novel, the winding-up kali al
ready commenced, and we oan'antioipate the *ln-_
elusion. -
Hunt's Merchant's Alragazina has soMe , 4ry,
superior papere—the aeoount of Boston is portion
larly interesting. There is a long memoir, t4so,
with a finely engraved portrait of Sir lylillam
PePperrtill;BirC, the Merchant' warrior phi. t4iok,
Lewisburg: from the . .. French, Over a century ago.
The author describes Sir William as " the only na
tive Americitn", - ennobkd by the British Ciovern-,
meat for services rendered America." BA a Ba
ronetcy, which Pepperrell ricsivid,l3 not a title
of nobility, nor is its holder a nobleman.. ! .
~ The Eclectic Magazine, the articles; of 'which
are selected from. numoroni foreikn',pribliMitions
with mnoh taste, is enriched, foiJnl7 . ,` withi a.
finely-engraved likeness. of Sir Colin Carapbcdi,
Commander:ia•Chief in India: . It le an 'Ambits-,
bie and spirited portrait.
• ' 8008 RtCEIVED:: ,
ii
Life of Thomas Jefferson, by-Henry S. Vend I,
LL D.—Vol. 111, Bvo., pp. 731. New York : Dar y
k Jaokson. Philadelphia :J. 11.'81mon, . • i
Lord Montague's Page ; an Historiesd Roinanett,
b's G. P. It. lanies. 1 Tot, (illustrated), pp. 45t.
Philadelphia :i7hilds Jr. Petersen.. -.. • . -1-
A Poor Fellow; by the author of wWhieli : t
Right, or the' Left" -1 vol.; tip.'4Bo. Neir'For
Fitzgerald .k Dick. Philadelphia . : Petersons.
Oscoola the Seminole, or the' Red. Fawn:of the
Flower Land; by (laptaleMayne Reid — I.
(illustrated), pp. 5 5 4: New York :R. ltiLDe,Wit .
Wild Flower', by the author of "The House Of
Elmore." 1 'ol., pp. 206. Now York :
Witt. -
Actuarollts, or Summer Skiplanes, 14' Samniql
Sombre. 1 val. 12 "
-own;
—.,re. vol mo: (Illustrated), pp. 0p.., Ne
York :. Sandford St Debaser' — '
Lectures of Lola Mantes (Countess of Lands
foldt), including her autobiography. "1 v01..12m0.':,
pp. 292. New York : Rudd A: Carleton:. Philadel
phia: Potorsons. ' ' e
.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazino for- Jana ii
Runt's Merchant's Magazine for July ; The &len
til). Mar_azino_for_Jnizr--- 121 -a- 1 - 1 ..kia.:_..,5E, ,... &,
Ztobor.
- Annual Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania;
'from May 28, 1853, to May 28, 1858), ocaupletioi
Stroud & Brightly's Digest to the present•date ,
by Frederick 0. Brightly, Esq. Philadelphia ;
Kay tt. Brother. •
STATE POLITICS
LANCASTEn COUNTY.—The Union County Con-,
vention met in Fulton Hall, in Lancaster city, on . ,
Wednesday, and selected -the following named'
delegates to the State Convention, to meet at liar.;
risburg on the 14th : Dr. William H. Boone, Dr.
Samuel Kaneagy, G. W. Hensel, Dr. J. W. Dun-
lap, Henry Carter, and Philip Schreiner.
A resolution instructing the delegates to support
the Hon John M Read, of Philadelphia, for Judge
of the Supreme Court, wee passed unanimously.
The following iesolutions were then adopted,
'and the Convention adjourned sine die: ,
Revived, That we recognise the doctrine of
protection to American industry, and especially
to the great staples. of iron and coal, in which the
mechanics and laboring men of Pennsylvania have
anabsorbing interest, as the leading article in the
•platform of the People's party, and that, having
Laid aside those ruinous issues which have here,
tofore divided la, into different organisations, we
pledge Ourselves to unite upon a common cause,
and labor assiduously until we see the country
redeemed from the profligacy and tyranny which
have characterized the National Administration
Resolved, 'ghat we fully endorse: the eoursic of
the Republioan and Amerioan membors of Congress
who, with Ron. Stephen A Douglas and hie noble
band of Democrats, stood shoulder to shoulder in
opposition to the olorta of theAdrainistrition and
Its renegades from principle, to force upon the
citizens of Kansas a Constitution whioh was abhor
red by a large majority of a people determined to
be Rao.' „
Resolved, That we this day di:deli:nine to em
inence the canvass of 1860 OA tho broad platform
of American protection and popular sovereignty,
and invite all who favor our principles, in what
ever party they may be found, to unite with no in
redeeming.our glorious country from the bands of
the party who have betrayed the trust committed
to them in 1858.
. .
READING AND SO-FORTH
!For The Ptess
Your paper of the 23d instant had an article
under the above heading, in which were landed'
the beautiful scenery in and about this famous
old town, the healthiness, pleasures, and "01
lUxuries of this plane, and recommending, those
Who have never shaped 'their course thitberward,
to stop and try the comfortable quartere of the
Mansion house, kept by that prince of landlords,
Mr. W . L. de Bourbon. • .
Now, Mr. Editor, the genial and appreciative
editoi of the - Germantown Telegraph lives at one
end of a rallroad'which affords him an opportunity
of coming into anti retaining from the city every
half hour during the day and until midnight, and,
no doubt, supposes Reading to be somewhat simi
larly favored. But such Is not the fact, although it
contains over 12,000 inhabitants, loon a great rail
road, and only two and a half hours' journey from
the great city.
No businesa man can reside in Reading and do
business in this city, because, singular to say, the
Reading Railroad ropey despises the passenger
traffic—the most profitable of all traffic to a rail
road—and would sooner carry one hundred and
twenty toned coal from Pottsville to Portßiehmond
for $1.25 per ton, requiring the nee of forty oars for
two whole days, and producing an income of only
m
fifty dolle-rather then sixteen tons of passengers,
in two oars, riding an average of forty miles, at th
rate of two and a half cents per milo for each
passenger, or one dollar sash, producing at one
hundred passengers each trip, and four trips in
two days, the sum of four hundred dollars, or
eight times the amount of money in the same
time.
This being the polloy of a great company—which
don't grow rich because of the superior wisdom of
its managers, who started out in the beginning to
carry coal only, and means to do so for ever,
whether it pays or not; and rotas° to carry pas
sengers except as a secondary consideration, and
at inconvenient hours—what inducement is there.
for a business man to rosido at Reading, Pottstown,
Phoenixville, Valley Forgo. Port Kennedy, or any
other pleasant town, as hundreds would like, and
might be induced to do, could they hays the op
portunity of getting into the oily by nine o'clock
in the morning, and leaving at five o'clock in the
afternoon ? If the Reading people wish their com
fortable town to increase iu population and wealth,
lot them demand another train of oars to be placed
on thu lino, to leave Reading at 61 o'clock, and re
turn at five o'olook.
The Reading Railroad Company has no right to
ignore the foot that railroad companies .are ex
pected to accommodate the people who wish to ,
travel at proper and convenient hours, end with
frequent trains. The Legislature in granting spe
cial privileges to companies to snoopy lands owned
by others, contemplates a corresponding conve
nience to be enjoyed by the dispossossed citizens,
and but for this,
it would boa tyranny which no
people ought to tolerate.
As it is now, a citizen of Reading may arrive in
the city at 12 o'clock, and return at 31 P., M.
No business can be transacted in this short space
of time. One has barely time to eat ahasty meal
botwoon these hours, much lees get through any
business.
Thorefore, how touch eoever one might wish to
avail of the pleasures in residing at so beautiful a
locality as Reading, it is quite impossible until the
lordly corporation alluded to provides better ac
commodations to the travell
G er.
"A. RANT ET" TO READING.
Dietrich Heilman fell dead from sunstroke
in the harvest fold, near Columbia, Pa., on Mon
day.
ommissniswErtis.
Ocarailioadonts
,t0i,. 4 Tara Paso" win plum bear to
DAM the following rules
nrery conimaniretlon most be sooompenied by the
luupkof the writer. la order to lour, Wwwwitiou at
ifie crpogrophy, bat One We of a sheet &wild be writ
:ten, Yr?' -
eWe Shill be greatly - obligati to kentlimen In Pump.
Tanta and other States for oontriblithini giring the ours
rent name of the
. lay In their particular localities, thee
mattress or arrounding eountrh the inereue of
PoPlilifien, or any informatlU that will be Interesting
to thejeneral render:
GENERAL._ NEWS.
Captain :111a/cy, in a Private letter to his
b b
NeW Sprhigorlitch is located
about twentyaniles from - . Oamp, On Fontaine qui
It ispa ll ed tha ,1 1'onnthin that Bolls,"
and he fouid It to be one,, of the, Neatest natural
curiosities he bad' - Our nisi wit . There is a
very round atidsmooth 'rtink, - eleva ett several feet
„aboye•the earth; with an-dvil toil, - aid <Greatly
upon ,the top is a round:Wein, - llki• an artificial
fountain, into which comes from-the, bottom a
stream of water" as large as a ruan's - arm, with as
InnOhifentesate Artitioivn by a Ste-engine. The
basin remains filled , constantly , but does not run
over t having a.enbterranciesul 'outlet. On tasting
this water, much to hivastortishment, be found it
Very kinder to . Congress * water, only,. much more
- pleasant.' He dranklarge,otiaritities of it, and he
amyl, it produced-a delfgbtfureensation.
Mho •Noiv York - 2Y.Mii; iii giving the follow
aglooldetit,ehOws' thist -1 ‘ truth is stranger than
lotion :„" '1 A few days - ago we recorded the faot
that a girl 14 years old attempted to take her own
life by swallowing a dose„of, laudanum, and—this
'not having tha • destradreffeoh—attempted to drown
'herself- at • Taompion Dock." 'She ' nuide another
attempt : upon her life - laat.Bunday - - ,This-preoo
-010113 young Miss of 14 summers, was,.on Tuesday
42
g ye m r a s r o r f i e a d e b : y
Th ß h e u s s .
bManrd. J
r o e h s n idsoens to a man
in Boston
and , builifd his Mat wife about five weeks ago. He
„visited Brooklyn,bringing with him' an infant, and
.bis_present , ..wife to take care of it on tho - trip,
promising to send her, holt to ler parents by the
ratafn boat."'
Ite.; lee y . tLo Harritihuyg.iferfad that the
'portrait 'of 'Gov. PaOkiii, executed by.the distin
guished 'artist; Mr Canarral,,of Philadelphia, ar
rived-On Tat sdayafternoon, and - hits nein placed
in the position arranged-Awl it, against the'south
wall .of ititel Executive. reception -room: Of the
Obief Executives of thiaState.whose portraits are
- Ms* delineated; the folloviing have hold office sine.
the adoption of the Constitution of 1790: Thomas
Thomas fdeßean, 'Simon Snyder, William
•Findlay„ Joseph,Hiester, ,John :Andrew Shultz.
George Walf,,loseph Ritner t David E. - Porter, F.
Ahutik, Wm: 1 0 . Johnston, Wm. Eisler, Jamul
'Pollookiand Writ. F. Padkar. Only six dale& are
now living, via': Ritner, Porter, - Johniton; Bigler,
Pollock, and Packer. - ' - •
handbill having been posted iniliehmond,
Va., calling a meeting of the citizens for this eve
ning, to-form , a vigilance,. committee _to suppress
‘ci3rtain'aeoro movements among the colored pope-
Intim:Wand to atop outrages on ,private property,
• Governor-. Wise addressed - a:fetter to Meyer Mayo,
calling, is attention to the•movementy and adding
that he would use force.in prohibiting such meet
ing, from being held on the Capitol Square.. The
mayer, in reply, statesthat knowing the author of
the handbill -to be one of - the few rowdies in - that
eity, he. considers himaelf'commit
tee enough for him and his comreden, - and, there
fore, deems it fo r
to adopt any unusual
Measures against the proposed movement.
'Near the mouth of - the Ohio are,two rival
elate, which sometimes manage to Aeon their
beads ebtiie° , watef."Theediters of both towns
have been tellingworne queer Radio-about the late
" entnerge." - kfound :City 'Emporium is
xespansii>lo, :for, the aubjoined dry joke on a wet
subject:'*' The - steamer Manchester has been en
gaged, inside the levees at Cairo during a con
siderable'portiOn of the past week towing houses
from one point .to anether, - and , getting 'drift out
of the town. The report Mot shorans partef• her
batons, oil by running over the top of the Taylor
House is without fotindation."
„
Mrs. Elizabeth Parker, the oldest person in
Maine, died in Durham”' Coniberland county, on
the 22d She was born in 1743, thirty-tbrre years
before the Deolaratien of independence: Till she
Was about 110 she „Remind - bodily -ilgor
snffi
eient to enable her to work in,the garden, Ito< fgh•
ployniifnt she fieolegroiet idelight, in., . •
The AtlietinitteiliOdlift Ohnieli of the United
States; wiiich is of recent date, already numbers
30,000 members, - and 300 min - Were. It owns Wil
berforce university, 'Zen!: Melia; 'Ohio, *hero
Bishop Paye.e,the_heedl.ofthe'ehtathireeidee.: The
buildings havo,east $ 85 ,000. • • '
• •
,
4 The peke6mmiasionna .arrived, at Camp
&Kitt on tbal9th of Itfai. .Is stated. that at no
tima-o'cliariint'the tipiible "were Urn) more than
2.600 Mormana'nndar'arina; anti a ratter portion
determiped-.t0.-dasett " whenever an opportunity
liffe*l•: ' "
The Terre Haute (Ind.) Union - says that thG
raritieraM, the - .ebash bottom!, 4r-that region,
_ Ntr
idea planting ISDY earn tbis
season. ' Thertntend to crop their Jandamith tur•
, nips' awirtotatoes, 'Whin the flea inbsidea.
The Memphis paphis . announce the det4h
of three more of the itounded of the Pennsylvania -
This makes the number that have died in Mersphia
seventeen... On - of theta was-Frank B. Jones, a
banter - of Mobile. „
,
The Nora lowaian ielis tut that the gold
digging excitement in the southern part of,that
State is in full blast. A chap has opened an assay
°Moe 1n Wintersett, Madisdn county, and offers the
highest,price for gold.'-
The .diatitlery of George Curry, with three
adio , ir , lligldldings, three miles
, b:locrCovlngton,
•
Sumner cars 'have been •introduced on the
New York passenger railways. They are open on
the sides, and the roof is supported by light iron
pate.
Mayor Wayne, who recently died at Savan
nah, was a graduate of the Philadelphia Medioal
College.
' James 11, Gould, aged twenty, -has been
conviCted or manslaughter, in Boiton, In killing
Wm. It. Chapman.'
The population of Harrisburg, Pa., is sup
posed to be about 16,000. The population tweniy
eight years ago was 4,301.
Fig,bt between 'Tim Sayets and Paddock ter
£2OO A Side.
Prone the Landed Advertiser, June 1B J
This event, that so long has excited Intereat,
from the position and standing of the combatants,
took place yesterday. Sayers' last appearance
within the ropes, prior to the making of Ito pre
sent Match, was when he met Bill Benjamin,
who made a mere exhibition of bimsolf. After
the i.sene of that event, the only . man deemod
liktitzr to contend successfully against the chess=
tab was Tom Paddock—a man not only well
known to the patrons of the ring, but whose
previous battles had been suott,as to gain for
him the reputation of bell* one of the gamest
and most indomitable "spirits" of the fistle fra
ternity.
Paddock, who was born in 1824, stands dye feet
ten 'and' one-half inches. and, was stated to be es
bear as possible his 'usual fighting weight, livelist
stone.
Sayers le two years younger, inches shorter,
and in weight did not kick the beam at morethan
eleven stone.
A special oonvekance bad been seonred for the
accommodation of the belligerents and their
friends - Arrangements were made for an early
start—the men and their partisans taking their
departure from the metropolis before 7 o'clock
AM. The price was. remarkably '• stiff,"'but
this was thi moans of keeping away those whose
'company is not at any time desirable. When the
'chosen spot had been reached. the commissary"
lost no time in getting the ring in readiness, and.
the combatants entered the arena. The inner
'ring on the occasion was well arranged.
Paddock, on entering witkin the rupee had be-.
hind him Jemmy Massey and Jack deDonald,
',while the "counsel" retained for the champion
were Bill Hayes and Harry Brunton. The betting
was of an animated description, Sayers being
banked to win in fifties at - the current odds, five to
four. :- -
' By half-pasteleven o'elook the belligerents were .
ieft to begin the contest.
On placing themselves in position, they stood in
brtistio form, Sayers baying all that light springi
nen in his movements for which be has become ce
lebrated. Paddock, though he bad a emilingooun
tenanCe, was cautions, evidently not being at all,
Inolined to throw the least possible chance away.
After some little manceuvring the ball was opened
in earnest.
It soon became apparent that Sayers was im
mensely superior in quickness to his opponent,
for, though Paddock repeatedly got home, still his
blows locked that force for which he was once f.t.
mons The champion, who is really a surprising
man, was. as in his contest with the Tipton, here,
there, and away again, with an agility that quite
put Paddock's teams at defiance. Paddock re
peatedly triad to follow his man up with a rush, but
ho gained nothing by it, as the champion was al
ways able, to outmanceavre him.
Tho rounds, though long, were not by any means
tedious, for the champion was always varying his
tseties, and Paddock, like a game and resolute fel
lbw, though he found himself beingoompletoly out
fought and out-generalled, was always trying to be
one with him.
From an early period of the mutest the champi
on took a prominent lead, his left always being on
tho " mark, " and this towards the finish of the
contest he amed up with heavy thwacks from
his effeotivo right.
In the whole twenty-one rounds were fought, oo
copying one hour and forty minutes. In the last
of these bouts Sayers got home in ouch an effective
manner that Paddock was all abroad, dropped hie
arms, and put his hand out as an intimation that
ho was defeated. While Paddock was doing this,
Sayers was in the act of putting in a blow with his
right, but he _generously drew at back, and thus
withheld what must, from the defenceless position
of Paddock, have been a heavy hit. This manly
forbearance on his part was much applauded—a
generous action towards a beaten opponent meet
ing. as it always will, its proper recognition.
Paddock, on retiring from the arena, was mush
punished, and we may briefly say thaeSayera has
proved himself to be a man of extraordinary quali
fications as a boxer, and being now ripe in his mill
ing prime, we know not the man who can wrest
from him the title of Champion of England.
. Marine Disasters.
[From the N. E. Courier and Enquirer of yestenlay.]
We publish below our monthly table of marine
leases for the past month, showing an aggregate of
twenty-two vessels, of which five were ships. one a
barque, five wore 'brigs, ten were schooners, and
ono a steamship. The total value of property lost
was eight hundred and fourteen thousand four bun
w fired and one dollars. As compared with the month
, of Jane, 1857, the above shows a decrease in the
value of the property lost of five thousand and
ninety-one dollars.
The vessels reported in this list aro chiefly Ame
rican, although some foreign are included—when
bound t 6 or from a United States port, or known
to be insured in this country :
Vessels. Value.
Total losses for January 35 433.500
1 do for February 13 1,182.300
do for Marsh 33 513,5001
do for April (eorre'd).33 054,040
do for May 33 714.000
do for June 22 814,401
Total for six months 109 $4 HS 741
flame period in 1857 364 10,232,64