T tt4 • • " 0 /YlO . , Np .417-xusttar • • , '"D2ftX l lr tiotiof 'Ali *pig, kTob - :. varier's, . „Mailed to finbaggiboto 'aid of ilkiolo gm. tiout.mas rota - Detzato fon:EralET 140tVeRs yy TicesseiNtaatio sots Bci Mosioni `forarinblyin'odisna lipt tali time ordeso7- 1.1{,T: -"' ;... - 1 6 , ERie.fir' PRESS:, - ,Armied to oobscribem oat or the Oity 2,,Lais _„ Dot, • • am nut Aotrit, iit iktranoa: -• • • - Tai, * 4 001341. :071940 14014 :win to mat to,Bobaorlpers by . I tt wi IA iAmoei) ' $2 00 N2hree Ooplas, tt Rin,Cooplees, • t „• 4 • sc.*. 8 OO •'l2OO ' estyeopioai no addrea).: 20 00 reest/ Ooptes, or ,5t Ittad4raSsoreaoh-• * • anbaotabor,Vosoli Par a °tali or 'twenty-do •Over;;;;Imtlt ses&493 urea' oopy_ the gettatzip Or the 010: • ID'' Postmasters aro*ltosstem to sot lot dont' for • r .• Astliniaititt PRES* - Ista.ta igerriiiLitoiltillf ty n s ,for 13teamenr. t-• • a •01-: , -} , -„ 'Watt/08;1 Inuit* - „ . • . - 124.11E1t & 00 .;:tagntt#T'V.44ET, A..' • - litinufacattieota rs' „ , PIDTBDIC BURLING NATIBIKORII,,, , ' Mider their 11, ,lopeet,lo.**,**** pro:it:49e *Yob** ely Ottlionislyt fitrrgoti*loitd!* .1110.c!9p. rtitanv • Amory. . • , VA.II4IIOEII. .1 I • cultarali.sisi load. s sputum /Wang ; •• • ' Watktoeiviollikb*O!orsiodiookielit.' • - Bealsool, Brooke**, : Biot*keo,,,Xior-StraPst 7tlNK**., ark other Ortikat-tio ate* Marche' Ub e'. -Dnwhio;o lit kiihr MUGU, wilL be madel i r charge Am those wishinit • worltatado to abler. ' RIOR GOLD asv - Brarr., , 9473T0a,4ia.4.uthAviarasso to. 01.000, of ceired S t,/ C 4 OW.TICVP 2O 4 I % • frkV7DIKE r. -0 O. „•• , • s 4 • , '4int OIUSTIftI% &testi , flare reitstred;*psete annes,,tunr, styles Jewelry, Ilhatelsins; Veit Chatoti. , @Otdid Fans, 114frini: , ' . -• !tuft Stine% Eager Baskets . . Jet Goodsatid grower Vases. , Coral, Lava and Blass% Bets. Sots Agents in Pltilantanhts for the ale of Chutes ,frodshases LONDON VIMLEREPRRIT. den ' SILVER WA E:-- ' wn,l,Lua WILSON & eta,: MANUFA I.CTuRRRS OF,S.VER.*ARR, (RSZiDECERIRD im,) . W 00Z1128 , 1n1111 ASO OFIXIML • &lino oirortmeot , of OILVDR W OM,. of oretvii soripitoo; conatontly on had, or =de to order teimatob. an, lattrirn. : tteatrod.. - • • ' 42popirg of gitellTed :and Biratioghloax imported Ettg9 diWIT " A.4.nru7lilo7oltlolo . AAO lits4 , -TSA4I 01 1111MBH-PLATED - , ' so4lbAstast Street, re 7 . lltrA, bssitlisad• or We to VIA eNTB, COMMUNION BUNION 8808, 7 PITORIIti-1101t1.11111, CUES, 1VA1T3143, BAB. 'ILL'TAL, eShr.olts, Ht INES; liiP l 39lo3 7 YONITZi - • LACT,329; M., Waal/ a54.1 . 21a 1, 12,q,4114 . 45,0,115441. NU, ~a~~roure. W E.--110 - gabscribirs, Clolef-• :ALA MISSION hlBBOl7 &Writ Coelho IMO of rittinGif -AND DOfIIKBTIQ'NABDWARB went& aespeatrally - Milt the attention or the, tree to, their stook,' which they are offering at klwest valet,: One anortment ooze.' 'Mate in patter.- • " . " • (Maine, of 'icitrs-Trane, Leg, 1 1 .11tef, Dreast.; ll ; 'Vow, fifth,Tank, Wagon,' Spiv, To,txpe, Look, Billy,' ktine, and Ooirehaine; ' • - • - The celebrated ") Korea Mat I Stone end glee • 41 WilittPe? , And other Anion 041 W Box akrtd.• other Vices. . • -• , Libor' and letizekindle Fri Pawl; rors4 tad oral Disko Piaui. • , • • "Msre Ws" anOtlcre );flea aiid 1441140 Berewe. c'.ll3toelotor 0 - Beaty Huse; Blurting Table. Ooru, sod Briar Sothis; Hat, Oen, acid Bier,' • ~ • • .• •• • , • gay, alannra,Tannorsly and Bp,Ming Forks, • Bakes and Bassi . thoreli andßpsules, of all hinds. Turks, Braila; Wisoa, Olont, and Viaishing Goat and Wrought Batt Mips, 'Bourn, Looks or su kinds; 'Cutlery, haws 'and Vamps; Azad, Ilatohals, taste, Plans , sad othor Tool ; Ra. ts . ON, - tki. 411 001/41811011 Street. , -,griothing> L. BEflair,_ TAILOR, - ;4f NORTH • lOW= StrootikodoirltkON. ' ,l • - • Making and trimming Duos or /rook Coats; $11:1 • Afekklng szid trimming Pradsloon4; 4,r ybsta t irdriB-fmo • •• TAMES SHERID N;;KEIWELAITT so - WILD_ ,R Nod. 18 , 9,013 #onth print friplE,E; ABOVI4 CILESTKIT, A law_ 1924.' selooted moot of OLOTIII3 - sal 0.081,118RE8 always an hand. - . Mathias mail thrs 7.stataistont-wiii i th ; greite=4iffiNsa" en 1 . . a0 : 1 lio TOOTa Abil) SEIOERftr-The subscriber, has on hand*. large and welled stock of BOOTS ' And MOSS, which he will sell st the lowest prise*, GEO. TAYLOR, aso2l-1y B. 14:enr*Y1IFTEI and usual' sus. FRING STOOK OF IiOdTB AND SIVAS 1 , 7 -.IOdEPU U; TTIOMMONAOO:LNo. 814. MAR, I:V2 Street, end Nos.' 6 and 6 I suaLLlti PLLOR, have new In store 'a' lugs sod well.:aaaotted - ateok et BOOTS and SUORIVior (My and Mesta= saaaufaetare, which they odor for eels on - the best tat", for Meek ' or on the oust event,- .• Vera are Mined 10,611. and Aszarmad their 4041 . _ glvige anti 011.4tinicals. ROBERT sgotor kren 00., • WIAB9A.I;D DRUGGISTS, lispataatarots and Dealer - PAINTS; VAUNTER:IRS, LicI,WINDOW eldiES, Northeast corner EOtISTIT ard RAGS streets, ' 1401 . 0 Agents for iho sale,ot tbfk.o.olobrated Morella Plite Glue. "ZIEGLER Oc,, BkuTH,, - WHOLES/LLB DROGGESTa s notithweet corner of 81fOOND And OBLIDN titroott,luLye to state, ea otter to the trade in °to to dolt walnut t ti s. Von. SAL ti,cno amble, plokaiond aorta. Bonus Alex. Olt Attleoiol. part Green, J'A 1 Brand , _ %AMITE LEAD, ZINO PAINTS;4or, Y 9 Wa offer to the piddle Mine lrsd, Moe Pants- Colors to Oil, Vosnishes, &a., et *doh - Woe& plea thit ere iota, the otteuttoo of &ears sad comment to our itteck., %DAMES & SMITH, Intair B. 14i tor.. Second and preen ate. . WINDOW -GI. - 4 SS! WI I , T,D 0 NY: VII:. 'GLASS! !=-Are Invite the attention or The nib-, Go to our extensive stock of French and American Wtudovi Glam. The lane and vett selected stook of Glass constantly en hand enables us - to fill all - orders vile% despatch, and &s low AI any other house In the city, ZIEGIAIt A GIALTI3, Wholesale Grantee; entail S. W. earner of Woad and Green sta. (triptta, Taos arAptkernpuir:. CHINA NAND G! - • ~ • imonin way < swam SNIT Dbffiiith • ' . •. WILL wt Lownar Nizone, JT - • • --= 11411xemi r. FITTS'S, 1,13401 9 1 0 Alva ; 734 OUSSTNUT WRIEST ',..00e.i10 5 ap414 tti parties at reasonable term 1: 4 111..E.N011 .PLATE AII,ASS.- 1 -413AVING L ,hean,eppeln44 by Ws Comp:Wile de Florets" the SOLII9 AGEbtra for talents of their GLASS In this city, pa are prepared tb offer. -the -trade. - 4it merit, from- one stork-pa hand, POLLESIIRD PLATS MANI for, Stories*? Dyrelling , Pronts; Baugh Plate, for Floors And Skyllglitif; and Silvered Plate, of large she, to Sarralll; The eleme will be ee.ld at the lowest priced, and wirrinted auperlor ) in every , rgspilef i to any Saar ;reported. 11.011 P, attopa&KAß & , Plate"and Wlndow"Glare Wsiellonse, N. B. oil. of P01:111111 and RAMS Streets 131112841. - VRE . N4.3)I , PLATE .10:' GLASSES. .TAMT.E3 B. Bittic:s/ sox , ittrap,attpttou ..tfw, reify estenilre Wortsieut of. 1.-PreSiet* now Wirpoiii!QA, for 611 . ii p0p4, 9 ,.. 4 . Bxa 9r all ohm. walow," • stet and *on lifirkore, einieisVequire, with a yerietj , df Tgibl eo,Britakeke,ponsole, eeo.,sal otlll'ATUkeetpri , Fee. iihe lout and l eisishirdSlignah and Trench .• , • Particular atterittosle gluon to the departsientof • .• •• ,bl4- 3 101_ -• Iso c li ruse . " jot eiswises,VhwlogritiAis,sorttlittik• &e. pARLE'a 'GALL'ERIES, : ' ' street, Orobarkiir ater Cigars CIGARS, OF =FAVORITE ,': - BRANDS end anorted shoo t thrbfolly ivalooted by own bbusO at Mynas, la stoat, and reoolved over' , artbral from , ,• , ,VAIPUET tbl i T 4 t ,216,80r,t,b,,F10N'r *Sot, , rIiA.VANA,OIGAAS**/ I. blinagOlo l - .ILJI Ia sub is - "•••:' ' sro , P 'aitagocc Wax* to star ' , Cloloso, Clowressisatoth •' M'orrey - lepes, , Union Auteri4ua4 9TOSstf) 'lll4sis-04t4s.,Eccc, - , _ 1 / 8 0.i ,161-(118d1.10 boxisrof-8,11118,48nd Oita. 11a, IA dors trallate tly rsB•l•lB‘i_ittil tor sa3slbvtl by • '7.18L168, TV:8380 -, pow 188 WALNUT Strad, . . _,11e8,8384.04-8,0,8,1 FCitkAgOi-OABANAI34OIFt-E Atimo .11:0* ,1444,p dupla , hitor 081iibAtid • brawl+ ntott4 bighaldtireltai,v ybair eosisteattss. qw Efirmi,sp. Ikri j ' OONS OrMiri .7 - ( Nr03 46 Wgsot,A*l 4 . tOrir~d, ' Ol v z" ,. • k ;,4406e.:4-149iti g)tiß - 70. OVA! - ,LPIJit - E it awn; $1 per gallon u weirdo, and ilozpro u tik t4 4l ore. ; o 1111 eta 'Aterniosio , tnr, ' po I#p* 0 010* ,No 119 o+slll - 4 15aYttetir 04 , 6 et', - 9: V.. 214411 , . , . .-, • . • ~.,. , . .. „..- _..-, ,• ... ~, „ ' .....' \0i(( it • / -_ - -:7'.. •- -- 14 " w .' . 40'4. , •- - . , . .., ~__,......1 10Mi11. : , :::::'.: . •,., ~, . . . ' r;'" ' ?.jai.. - ...:.. . ' -.• '' '`'----...., '' 7,i Ir"4- s' 4 ' `:,\ % I i f//,'''/ - ie-:,,,, , •,', ...,-,•••,.-::::':',.'.' T::' , . * he ...- •• : -.' -J " - • • .•• .*-,., -,--- * i ..1'. 2 ..,1 4‘' !- ; ; - .1.--- . 0 - ;,;,.. . %;,......,.••• .' • , .1, ' / : ,'• , . - ,:, . : , , , , . , . • .. Alaiii -1 ;; -: =11 r. -.<' . . ..,,,. . ' ,!....... : :: ' Z• „?' •.;• ' .?.' • '-'''- ' ' ' ~• ' '1E.. , 1 '''''' .. . . , .., ..,... , . . , . .. - :L l._ ,7 .,.;,i:17.1 : , , , 7 f . -,, 2 ;: . t '4 '., ......-.: 7 "' ''rt.9 : 7',..- ` ,....'.7.,' .....:. "... NI . .;r,...;"' Ir•-•:...-'''..:',Vr-', -....... • ..,, . ~;•-• - " 1317 -zt - t•'-'.....1 . •':i/c , .;:,. ,1 • .. -?..'Nif . :kc'•*i , .. , '''-' , ..:•....'.... - ;,:-:;....F....:.. 1 4 . , :.. ,, .• ', - - '-: - Poli - .- -, :,..... ,, , , ,:-.,• :...,• .......- .• ••• •.•••••- •• - - --- - , , "'". , - .irme b „ : .:,,,,,, , - ~,,,!.,-,....,,!:. •ii- , :p.. , - , •• , ..--:-. , ••... , f0,-.••:•2: _•..,;'.:•i ••,•,:: • ~..,' Ir'., _,--.... , ..4-- -------.. ... N, •, I - . • , - - .7.7.-- -I ' . -,..'"-,, ~.•" 'lk ---•. 7, F - '4 , ..." -- 7 -.... " - ` ---........ " . 1 .- -al"--'-' , .. ... - !•,1.....,7.!! , ,'. :'f' .......^...!•-.---.- ...... - ,- , I ....- 1 • • ^-.•-•••••••• - , . •' - " . ^................ , ..„4= 0 , , , . , ..- . - . , , . ammormomm VOL. 1.-NO. 288. ItMillet' • a.ri t Nz FO -40 TTioHn E t o ALLE 2 GR ne E , - - "ma'TO rt - TIVI fint 'NEOII.*TAAN It...—THE PENRBYT, ARIA. 'RAILROAD CODIPANY f;xceat slam TiottErs 'during the iinannor . to A bTOONA and the MOUNTAIN "Louse., (Crefigon% fltation,) good for all dam Vivo to Altoona and return • AT 16 .4rO tOlinnotain linage and return 7 ge TllO9. MOORS, z. Agent Pennaylvania Railroad Company. _ _ ati ti P r LAI)ELPH'IA AND LIN E EAT L:II.IRA' RAILROAD , RERIJOTION. • PANE; 2O 'NU R. 4 'FALL V ONLY 55 00. Tralteoleave the Philadelpldra and Rending Railroad Depot, corner BROAD and VIDIR Streets, daily, (Sun daya excepted ) ) as follows: day.express. , • '8:06 P. night express. ' • Tickets can b procured. at the Depot, and also at the Generid"Offlee of the line, Northwest cornet SIX. 11( amt 011 - REYTNIIT Streets. • l'• • - ' CIIARLgS 8. TAPPER, . " •-• • (femoral Agent, !M!" L WATEIE NORTHP.ONNSYL •aiiiarNDELAWAEE vAtktrA. 'RAILROAD "FOR DAP* EtAIJC C111:151E, lIAZLETON,AND TRH LERIGU COAL ftEGION.— :Phnom to the aboxe c to At' places of SOSIXtIe REISORT crin and the 'Route e cr i gby the North Peoncriennin Relireed Cowpany, in connection With the Lehigh Val bey and New Jeremy Central BaNtoade, to be note/ ftriAtttna"L tetTailigiA 10E4 of admferlabliiifctatuni r editioris bOttfortthe'road 1 ,35 9.141t8e vatientlibatigh , whicit it 0.50., • •.•1115kvAB vitAT OAP.L-Talie 2.95 P. td: Express 'Train from-Prot and,Willowatreete, pass the night at Bethlehlud, Alltl take,cars next. morning at 9 o'clock, -thfo‘ighEe4tOli_tik , ow itetiopton,, where a AIABO con 'nection 'made' irith '„the Delawd - ro, Lackitwauna, and -Western Riliromi; and ffri-re at the Gap about noon.' .• FOR-MAXICR CIItIME AND TIIE COAL REGION. —Take 9 A; ?Land 2.25 P; M. 'Exprasi Trams front same Depot to Bethlehem where a close connection Is made with the Lehigh , Railrood, through front Philadelphia to Mauch Chunk In 5 home. • A 'AND" PLEASANT ROUTE TO NEW YORR - CITV..:.Talce 9 A, U. Express Train to Betlile. herd, thenci at 2.20 P. IL via L. v. R. B. and N. J. 0. 'R.- It. • through Basta - to Ellzabothport, , thonco by Stemmer, am! stare in NowYoritat quarter pest - parties- travelling North that , have a fow hours to gars ' will -find this a now andhgreoable route. ' Her IM•therpartteulars, inquire of • ' - R. ELLIS CLARK, - Agent N. P: R. A., Pront and Willow Areas.- ' Pilis.ontrzira, Jun 0,18,1859: , . '•'i • FOR CARE MAY AND NEW • YORK. , • — DAILY,. at o,lp o'clock A M, NEW YORK AND PUILADELPEI/A STEAM NI . - - YI4ATION COMPANY. ,The spiendid ocean steamers • DElkAßE,Osptaiu Copes; BOSTON, _Captain Sallow; ENNESEC, Captain Muni, torn; a daily Una betw is city Cape May, and Neteyork,leayinglsom Bret pier below Spruce street (Sundays akeepted) at OX e?cleek A. M. Return ing, learn New York from pier 14 North River,(Bundays 'excepted) at 6 , P. M. - Returning, isms° Cape May (Mondays okcoptod) at— /LPL, ,' • - - -gaze to papa Mar (carriage' hire Included) 22 00 , It for servants „ '1 60 " -"... Season tickets (wattage hire ex , , 800 0. • - Noli fork, cabin 200 , 160 Freight taken of low rates.' ' ' . Jtor pessace, state rooms, rates._ amity' onboard, or at the 0010 i 314 and 810 BUTII DELAWARE AYE yu.s. 43ra , _ JAMES ALLDERDIO.B) n , ‘.lOB . Avat, . . -EMPE.I- ...FOR THR,S - E4 SHORE. - ..." CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC i RAILROAD. ONLY TWO AND HALM /I.OIIIRB TO TRH SRA lutoaa. . . , . On and 'attar Monday, tune 7th; and until ,turther no tice, (Sunday' eacented,) throe trains daily to Atlantic 'City and return, t .itirat , Fa•eaugar Train leaves Vine it. wharf 7.80 A. M. Second - - 4.00 F. AL Freight 7. rain with Passenger Oar attached, 4.80 A. At. Accommodation Trull to Weymouth. 3.86 F. M. • ~Y4pp~no~.~ LI 49 tTLAYTIO O~TY Pint 8.00 A. M. Becorld {1 4: 4.40 P. AL Proight Traltrwith Plump,zer earattacheB. 11.30 P. 24, Accommodutitin Train .I.,4Ven }vermouth,' 5.26 A. m, HADDONYI.I3.,II TRAIN , . . . Lesvos Cooper's Point, - 11 A. Af. . and 2P. AI. iladdantield, • • 1 I'.lll. and SP. R. Pare ,to Atlantic, when tickets era purchased before ontoringthe care, $1 AO. - Pommy wishing to go down to the Sea Sheri and return the semo day ran spend • •. ^ ' SIX , 11011n8 ox illy3ll Aoll. Tickets for the round trip, $2.50 , Tickets to go down in the afternoon and return next Morning, or dop e . on Saturdnyafternoon and :Flora on Monday morning, $1.50. --' Monthly tickets:oll be sold at the following rates: Poi The ulenth of June, $lO For the month of Sept. $l5 -tt - ' " July, •• 20 Ford ree months, - 45 n (i August, 20 For ur menthe; 60 ..Ohl:melee, Behold,Lod gee 'Companies and Library Associations, wishin g special trains,' should make early application. ' ' . . -- - - Freight must be delivered at °Roper's Point by P. M. The Company wilt not be resPontiblo for any goods until received and receipted (or by their Freight Agent at the Point.. * __lts_niel.z , . , •o e etarpcting . 9. CARPET B. We 'rail cossunonee TODAY • • CLOSING OUT • Mir entire/ apling Stock of THLVST AND sausauLB OARPSTINGEIi GitIg&TLY immiaßß PRICES. - BALLY X 11BOTIIIIR, • • 'No. 920 00.E8T.NUT Btreot.. Pnroit%sirs trlll plemo,e4ll 414 oLuzline ma large ,aaeottment. 4.0.04.1 rrAPESTRE ' OAAPETS.--JUST OPEN -1 ID, a-lar g e lot of superior Tapestrs Carpets, to ,be, sold at sk low pries. DAILY" lc 141t0IB88, 1:1268H OASPXT i'ORB 920 OLIBSTNUT Bt. V n TIPERS TELREE-PLY 0A It FE TB. 1., A Nab assorttnesit of new patterns, at re4noeB prim, At DAILY se OABII OAAPP.T STORTI, PRO °AMA UT At. 'MD ROOM. CARPETS.-10,000 YDS. ,ILN of superior Ingrain and Three-ply Carpets. of tho best makes and Ptyles, at all prises, from No cents to St .25 por yard. BAILY h BROIVER, mhBl..iT No. 92:0 01118TNUT Btreet. nEST , REAVY BRUSSELS.-A LARGE 'lut of new pitteses, In test, sheets styles, at ilrg *rites. DAILY & BROTELSE, 011,81.2 OUtPET ST011:1§. o2OOHV.PRNftT St EffipittAt'Artftbs: 'SAVING FUND , -7-FIVE PER OENi.IN TRBBBT—HATIONAL' BAVETY Titian COM PANT.—WALNUT BTRZET 80TIT8•WEBTOOR..NIZA OP- zum, pazianunis. • • rasootrosaran wr Ina EYLU or PaStSTZTAXII. ihroney, ❑ renelred in any ma, large or mall, and In. Weaning from the day or deyoeit to the day or with draw& The aloe M open , every day from okneek In the sprang till 6 o'clock In the evening, and on Monday and Tharaday eTentligo tilt 8 o'clock. 210 M, JIMMY I BENNMR, Prealdent, BODBIIF 8ZOBID(1/1 3 Vloe Preeldant. . Ryan, flecrcetarr. Villiefo/611 Ron. Henry L. Benner, P. Carroll Sumter, Edward L. Carter, Joseph B. Ban. Robert Belfridge; ' !remote L. Band. Joseph Yerkee, 0. Idincireth atunne, Uenry Ditrondertfer. Money is rareired and payment/ made' daily. The Investment/ ere made in conformity with the provisions o f the Charter ,'ln Itral, RESTATE MORT 041.013, GROONIVIIIINTO, and such first Maas rectal -Um Id will always insure perfeot linearity to the elepoeL ton, and which cannot fail Were permanency and eta, b Lnetitntion. . , O. 88 (241 Domr. STREET.-FIVE LEI Fn. cum. B TAT BATINGB OUND. VO. 88 (241) DOOR. STREET.- FIVE J. Wes CWT. STATA BAVINW BUND. NO. 88 (241) DOOK, STRUT.— IFIVI emu CYMT:6TATABAVINUB VIND. NO; 'BB (241) DOOR BURET:— FIVE pxy. "STATX BAYOGfirtitip. sal-17 AM - Kg RABOUG-- R-4 kmportont end Wholeeele Bealere, In WINES BRANDIES, WIIISREY, tHNB, awl FANCY QUONZ, No. 1017-IVARKET Street, between Ten an ' Ullivaluth street*. • • 1e19.0 BIDSIECK OHAIIPAGNE.—PIPEIV e R. I X 41 faMUNOZ. genulne brixrd t 'ooruittintly on hand, reoeived from sole importers , snd for uto by A Ma:MK', Soto Agent fn t L (311 y, 4102 , 1 0 ,n tan South PILONT RtrikAt 401elo mar Viz#lattranto ZONES" V.CiTTSE, FIMIR , HJURG , ((Erected in 107.) BUPA ANTtit YURNISIIED. NOW OPEN TO VISITORS. r4yX.1.1 WELLS °OVERLY, Proprieter.• W .• ORRELL HOUSE, H: iP . cur. TFiLRO and tlablONT tIOURT. Tn.' anderslgned• Wee Omura' in Ainformins his friends end he putilie at lerga,•that he had opeord the above ghTdatfit.girktitil', and piedges himeeif to merit the patronage of hie, pstrOne, eery artie'e in of nye. nor quail y, holdup bran aeleotad without regard to pries, 0W441E3 WOLLUPJ.,L, Proprietor. liiOIIOLLS • otutorsart PLAN ) OANN DAY AND NINNY'. N 0.116 SOWN N 1.081% ONLOW OLIESTNIIT, 111.11.ADBODIA , This 110Ilex to tor.Perreanent and TlEMllielat Lodg ing. Avery effort will be rode b 3 the Proprietor, X. NIOLIOLLS, togive utisfaction to MA Patrons, This establishment le sheeted in the heart of the V.ty, centre of business, and convenient to all places areroconent. • The Mercantile aiid . Travelling community will tied it a deeirable place for comfort, desalt eoryand scone.' iny.; . - '= .• - furnished at all hours. Single Rooma„6o cents per night By the week 52.00 and r . • .niblie.tr _ _ ItikAORANTWAIOTAIii • iipat#r.t. t ro.Vi is mimeo ; • vlutaisathertze. • ltdedinglitt 'gm. eAoraf itf1214%,' olift'OSITL:11101t RAAINGI.--T. L. LiTTLEFIBBB,No. 28 N. awn oboes., &I. ant - lur antanzion Vickeinhauxia catenated . t cr hdPoBllll RAILINGS; would nal Attention to bin ' ; pat t erns, or Iron- BalUog, Verandahs, Baconian tievrianyt'andlato sum m er itoines, arm.; ito., ded ha iitonaasattloy *ill be 'faind the beet artinies kind httbe , worid: , e T.' .021.8,* V n LATE G. SLATE 11 BLAMEI---Rooting b."14.1:06;of 611 sloes, itualt6 Tay low rtes, kept 600.• 1411 4 1 . C011,44,,,,g1601;606 - • • . • _ . 41.000 ) - PCi r lri 'XOWIt VI ,D and T aDAtroo, it.4sVittittestiort oit tti bet ridismoViiiid rib PU0644%44 4 0 to. alma 1,604 ,1 4, co 7 uttimer HUTNhTeI,NvaGruD,C4I,sW,,AtRihMe of been lt I I I N , 4 G , „ S t n . Ridge live miles north of Huntingdon, overlooking Standing Stone Creek, and environed by romantic Milo and woodlands, have been leased by the former pro m-tutor of the Leaver House. The eatenotne Hotel Buildings, Bath /louses, &0., erected at great expense by General A. V. Wilson, the owner, have been com pleted, and the groves have been beautifully laid out and adorned. - The /fotel Parlors tied Chambers are airy and comfortably furnished, and the prospect from the verandahs for beauty cannot bo extolled. For ball a century those Springli trwe'been celebrated for their medicinal qualities, and the great virtue of the Waters in chest& affections. The temperedure of the water is diljf degrees.'and for bathing to delightful and invigo 'rating. tit the woods and. 'dreams game and' fish Abound.- Persons in pursuit of health or pleastiro will And this a most delightful retreat; and its nearness to the Pennsylvania Railroad end its cheapness give it a decided advantage over any watering place In the State. The proprietor has had years of experience in the business, and no pains or trouble will be spared to mile goesta comfortable. Hacks - run from Huntingdon to the Soprei n 2s s o c n e nthte a Pad oife s the dcoiffm e m re o n d t a tßeda ilarto admoderate rates. • 101.1 N n. //gRD, Proprietor. Wino SrrttNaa, near itunt.lngdon, Pa. jytlm S E D IL D2 3 A A iM I N I TONSE, CAPR ISLAND:N. .7. This Unst-elasa and popular Homo Is 1101 T open for the reception of vtaliere. For health - recreation, or pleas ure It Is by nnj on the Tatma„:.,,,,_______ . . ENA: , e , BATITING:44LI4I.OI9.I.. House; Kl , LONG BIZAPICIT,' X'. .7.—Tbls Well.knrwii first-• class eud popular House Is now open for the reception or visitors: Terms, .Ten. Dollars per week. Persons wishing to some alltnnu can do so by addressing WOOIZIAN STOKES LON* BRAN CU . HOUSE,OPLPE rBLAND," N. 3.=-Thee well-known and popular lionse is again open to receive visitors. It bee been put in complete order and every attention will be given to guests to make their visit pleasant. The table will be abundantly supplied with the luxuries of the season. Charges moderato, to suit the times. Je24l3w* . Proprietor. rriRENTON FALLS, ONEIDA 04)17NTY, NEW YORK ,—The rlotol at the above celebrated place of resort la open for the HOELOOLI, rani can be reached In a few hours from New York, et a mall ex pense, as a Railroad from Rhea takee richer,' there within an hour. M. MOORE, je2.l.2ved&trw-2to* Proprietor.. A. BANIITNI3—CAPE ISLAND.—NA TIONAL 110T.Ekle now. open. Price or Board $8 per week. Children end Servants halt price. jelD-Gw AARON GARRPTESON, p roprietor . lvi OTTNT HOLLY SPRINGS' ROTEL, 6 MILES FROM CABLIBLIII, PA., AT THE OAP OP TUB SOUTH. MOUNTAIN.—The subscriber of the Bt. Lawrence Hotel , Obwetnut etreet, Philadelphia, bav- Sug the above popular summer resort of the late proprietor, James W. Patton, mill open the same for The reception of goods on the 20th of June. Terme mode rate. Address A. G. IrPJLLIN, Mount Holly Springs, Cumberland county, pa. jel6-Ita iti ANSION HOUSE, MAUCEt ORUNR.— ILA. This elegant establishment, beautifully situated On the banks ef -the Lehigh, is now reedy for She recap fiat of summer visitors. There is no locality In Penn sylvanta, nor, perhaps, In the United States, which C , Ora bins so many attractions as the valley of the Lehigh, NA the above Hotel will afford a most comfortable home to viaitors desirous of viewing the magnificent scenery, inexhaustible mines, or etuperidous works of art of this interesting region. ,fed-Bm* . CiEOIIGE IIOPPES, Proprietor. 1 'IHE WHITE SULPHUR AND.C.HALT BEATE SPRINGS, at DOUBLING GAP, Penn'a, are open WI usual, and are accessible in eight hours from Philadelphia, by way of Harrisburg, thence op the Cumberland Valley Railroad to Newville, thence In stages eight miles to the Springs, where you arrive at b &clock the same evening. Per particular., Inquire of Moore. Morton Holiichael, Samuel Hart, James Steel, IL B. Janney, Jr., & Co., or Proprietors of Merchants' Hotel, Philadelphia. SCOTT COYLE, Proprietor, Nevrrille Post 011 ice, Pa. nATII DELIGRT- Lir FUL $1111131E13 RETREAT IN TICS EWEN TAINSOT VTR4INIA, twelve hours from Washington city and Richmond by the Virginia Central Railroad. Passengers from the !Korth tau the Alexandria morn' ng host at Washington and the Alexandria and Olange Railroad to tionloopille; thence by Central Retire/0, in full view of Monticello, the University of Virginia, per,Rlng through the blue Ridge at aucktAh,by tiAgrent State Tunnel, ((nearly one mile lu length,) creasing the Valley of Virginia, and entering the ranges of the North :Vaunt:tine et Buffalo Gan Leaving the care at Milthere' Depot, thenco by coach ea ten miles, CANT. s;aulooilt gradtS road, to Oath Alum berate Rundown. The proprietors feel warranted in saying that to fami lies. and others desiring %quiet, cool, and comfortable ltl from the lowlands or the city, there is not ono in the mountains of Virginiaogering greater induce ments; Large,' vary, well-ventilated, XiCtL-furnished rooms, and a good table, have always distlngulshou title watering-place. The mineral watere (Mum and ehilybeate) have been pronouncod hylliatinamiabriiev?•torrlto - nntr - inAgoial,o, Otleiritiprlor to our Itockbrldge Spring, while the pure mountain freoMone water cannot be excelled and rarely equalled for its purity and salubrity. Ward per week $lO Board per month of four weeks ... ... 20 11:r The Southern ismeengers must be careful to come as far north as Richmond, and there take the Central train at 1 o'clock A. DI. FRAZIER Ite RANDOI.PII, Proprietors. MeV:BRIDGE ALUM SPRINGS. Iteferting to the above for schedule of route for the Northern travel through 'Washington, and for on ranch of the Southern trarOlati shaft come by the seaboard tine of railroads to Richmond, we add that the vlslter to this plate will leave the ears nt same point, Millboro , Depot, and take the coaches, running mouth Irons the railroad fig miles, to these Springs. Math Alum is north of the road. 117- The traveller from Southern Kentucky, Tonneesee, Norther. Alabama, end Mississippi can procure through tickets from any point in the South to the Rockbridge Alum Springs by the Virginia and Tennessee railroad Indus. the 1441110 money that will buy,thena et through ticket to the nearest spring to them of this cluster of Apringa. In buying their ticket. therefore, they lose nothing by getting it for the Rockbridge Alum Springs, oven if they never use It. The same ticket will take them to any of the other springs. They pass immediately by the Peaks of Otter, and cross the Natural Bridge. The proprietors announce tithe celebrated resort as new open, and in better condition for the duo accommo dation of its crowds of patrons and friends and the public at large than it haft ever yet been. The name unremit ting attention as heretofore shall continuo to be paid by the undersigned and ail in his employ to secure the com fort of the guests of the establishment. • 117' COWMAN & ROOl3llB keep the crater on sale, froth from the Springs. N.B.—Pamphlets sent by mail no application. 110 - Any information In regard to the above Springs, trill be cheerfully given by Deorge V.Clordon,loti North Boveuth street, Philadelphia jontrftuat frig . ' BEDFORD SPRINGS.—THIS Ma well-known and delightful Bummer Revert will be opened for the reception of Visitors on the 10th of June, end kept open until the let of October. The new and wolves Buildings tweeted hat year are now folly completed, and the whole establishment bee bean furnished in superior etyle, and the smuntimods- Orme will be of a character not - excelled ha any pest of the United States. The Hotel will be coder the management of Mr.a.. 4. ALLAN, 'wham experience, courteous manners, and attention to his guests. give the amplest assurance of comfort and kind treatment. In addition to the other means of wine, it (esteemed proper to state that passengers can reach Bedford by a daylight ride from Chemberaburg. The Company have made extensive avrameeloonts to supply dealers and nodividuals with a Bedford Water" by the barrel, carboy, and to bottlers, at the following prima, at the Springs, via For a barrel ( (mulbery) $4 00 ooak) 5 • g P Po.. (mulberry) 8 0 00 0 3y Do. (oak) 200 Oarboy, 10 gallons 2 25 Bottles, 11{ pint, per deem 1 60 The barrels are carefully prepared, so that pur chasers may depend upon receiving the Water fresh and sweet. All commutations should be addressed to TUB IiBTIVOBD MINBB.AL SPRINGS CO., Myl9-tf Bedford County, "Pa. PHRATA. MOUNTAIN SPRINGS I Lb Will open the eighth day of June for visitors. ' Thle healthy summer resort has many advantages which re- command' It to the public, in search of a home plac) to enjoy the mountain air during the hot semen. It le elevated twelve hundred feet above water level There are graded walk* through donee (erects, and shaded 'arbors; by the way aide are many springs of the _pnrest soft Water at, a temperature of 49 to 92 degrees of Faze.- belt. At The summit le en observatory overlooking an area of 40 miles square, of farms in the 'highest mate of • cultivation embracing the whole of Lancaster county, end points in ten other countiee. The scenery Weil away In the boundary of mountain' at the dis tance of 70 miles It le altogether one of the most grand and exteosive minoianoto 'neva to be met with in any 001.11•17. N. kind of epidemic) hen ever boon known here at any season of the year. Many beautiful drives over good roads. The hotel will'itooommodate com fortably 400 persona. 'Every variety of bathe. 1 , 11 the modern improvements now in use in first-Wass waterlog plasm will be found hors. All vegetables raised on the farm. Tim beet help employed in every department. she proprietor Batters himself that he wallas able to give. ample malefaction to his snots. Good stable room. Good 'toot of hoary. 'Romeo and carriages on hand. For farther Information and olroulars call on JOBSI'II 13. MIMS, THIRD and VINE Etreets, JAMES B. EARLE, 190, 13/0 OiIItETHCIT Otreet, And on the Preprieter, JOSEPH IKONICIMAOHER, 'Ephrata Post Oihre, LAT/fallter county, Rh. myll.d2m . CONGRESS SPRINGS, BAILATOGA, April 12,186& A CARD TO THE PLIBLIO. During the lest semen an attempt NM made to de. oei're the public, by perilous offering what they eellel 00NORZSES WATER," from Fountains; and at the price of six cents per glass..' The WHOLESALE price of the OBNITINE CO14(111108 WATER, at New York, being about 7.,t( cents per gives. the imposition of thee 'pretending to sell at retail; for less than coot, and with out allowance fur Freight, Osrtage, and Breakage, in apparent ; but their probable cotton has been to empty ONE bottle of genuine tiougrenn Water Into a Bolin , thin, and thereby christening its total contents. We have NEVER sold Congress Water in Fountains nor In teasels of ANY OTHEE,DESOBLETIONS nun ordinarpeized - GLASS BOTTLES. •The cork of she bottle of the genuine to Mended "CONORY.SB vaTzti. -0.W.,u and if without these wattle and lettere, it in COLIN TEIIE/ITT. CLARK fc sp2B-19 t _Froptleters of Oongrese Spring, agriaPOINT AIRY t-THIS PLEA flktiT dtlidel Eft RESORT fa now thrown open to the public, under the control of Col. THOS. 4.-VARPOI and Maier HARRY piopgit Curing the - wenn - season ear 'Were C/In 'enjoy balmy' Imams, oholtt nitoile, doe bathlog, with all the etceteras that e,ondnee to creature oratorio; at this popular reeort., ' BOLTS will leaye the wharf, at 8010TH fittest, aim, sewininutee dutiug the day • ' spri;dtf „'' ARESII CONGRESS SPRING-WATER, . Irocebred' ant:My lon% ti's' lortut at Saintbos oinoyil on: hand, in Pint and. Quart.nottloo, and for solo by BROWN, Oberalobann Druggist • 14 • W. to "" SIAYONVTan d EMU EltrootO. pAlßO•ntli• too / PHILADELPHIA: WgDNESDAY. JULY 7, 1858. G REAT RIMIER BOOK. JIM OUT S - TUN AUTOBIOGRAVNY AND LROTURES Or ' -LOLA. MONTEZ. A handeomo 12mo volume, olegantly bound in Mlligin with a moped.. oteet portrait by Itogera. Price R. 001iTittiT13: . Autobiography, Part I. ' Ifertiines of Tilsti r tro ' ' Autobiography, Part 11. • Combs Aspect of ,1,04.'; i • Ileautiful It'omen. Wits and Women of YltrlD. Ganttntry. itottututton. These lectures abound In the mostapicy anecdotes and piquant reniniseenees. They chop an %cuteness of perception and an amount of careful reflection and re search which are truly surprising, the more'striklng from the highly moral tone whlehrune MI through them, and adds to their beauty lyithout detracting from their brilliance and art. . „ Is As to itousi with woinon of an active ualsat, Lais Monter la a great tabor, but undoraton4a thowrt of con versation ouillciently noser to be Irearispnae."—Frazetli M.gazine "Let Lola bfontez have credit for hor talentai, intel ligence, and her support of popular rights. ,1 1 / a ib r eign politics she has clear Ideas, and hos been treated by the political men of the country as a substantive peafti,t , -- American Law Journal "Lola Monter. is a woman or superior talents, of ex tensive reading, of great political information, en ex tonelvo traveller, a forcible writer of .15nglfalt, a better linguist than halt the, eallegt. nerlanta,appa a .1 the ....matt book vrilLbe :Bent' bri mailf - poetatto444Ptt part of the United/Rates, on the repeipt of the priels,4l., IMOD' & CARLETON, PUblishertend flookaellore,' Je22-iuths-tf No. 810 EIWADWA.Y. New refit: ripRE AMERICAN" AND EIIROP,EIikr .i. DitIIGGIEITEP DIREOTORY, containing ,tliq. c i x, NAMES and ADDRESS of ail the DIIIS(IGISTS I "lbe Gulled States, British America, Mexico, Central -e -rica, Wool Indies, South America, and the San containing Islands, and of the leading 'Wholesale Drug Dolmen in Groat Britian, - Franco, Germany, Russia, Beiginth, Holland, Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, and Italy ; also, of the English and Preach Possessions in ASIA, Attica, and Australia, will be issued on or about tho 15th of July proximo. A tew more advertisements will: be taken, parade. on delivery of the work. • For terms, ice., dr.c., aeldreee MICHELS SG ELDER,. , , ' Noe. 1155 P, 0., NEW YORE.; N. D. Mr. Michela will be In Philadelphia on the Sd,, 4th, 6th,tutd6thJetty, Address J. Michels, ItIOMPs Despatch. . Jyl4t. NEW MAGAZINE. „ BRYANT eu 13PRATTON , 13 "MdBRIOA.Ii XIS ozuNrt , is now remly, and play be had at ail NEWS DEPO'eld. Their Mont. flay.C.7:ll..p.ell i is canvassing this city for yearly sabsoribers. Price 12 per, anew. Addreas BUN A.AT to STRATTON , Mercantile °allege, El E. earner EIPNEWPII and OflBllPtildT Btresia, P. ladelphia. injP4-ly XS.A CCIOUNT BOOKS, MADE.DE boat stook, for city Wee. Oalt and look over atttek at PERItYI Blank Book Ilauniactory, 201.18,TU a,94 ; 1110DERRY'a BLANK BOOK mtaltrrAti. -a- TORY.--Itemetubor FOINITE and RAGE In Wag Account Books, I snake all coy stock of good sualatittl, and sell at felt prices. • kOui' ti ENVELOPES, EITBICt 1,700 1 000 style, site, and price, at O. . PEltltr , B Stationery Establishment, ja4-2m VollllTil and BitIOE. BLANK BOOKS, MADE IN ANT ntl SIRED style of ruling And binding. A weld ne; sortment of Papers for customers to select from at` PEREVE Blank Book Manufactory,- ;,-; POMITII and RACIB: VAMILY PORTRAIT BIBLES, 11A1(1) BOSIELY bound. Old Bibles rebouod, to loOk wear good ea new. Oall end look at the otyloo, et PERRY'S ltookbluadory, FOURTH and RAON. DIANO FORTES. Just ranelved, an /lewd stook of RAV RN, BA ON, & 00,, NUNNS & CLARA, BALM, DAVIS k 00., end GALS & CO. $ PIANOS. IdEDODZONS best quality, at D. GOULD'S, B. E. 4oraer FIDVSNIVI arid OILESTNUT eta, talflo-y /HE UNION PIANO ItANIIPAOTUR . - COMPANY, No. 1104 atattKNT Street Philadelphia, The Union Company s re now prepared to offer to their, Mende, as well as to the public generally, their Pianos as being unsurpassed by any other* as regards baanty and fullness of tone, perfeotneas and durability action, quality of materials and finish. The Union Ooropany being composed of persons who are all practical workmen, and who, /Maar bed - years of experience to mannfastorles both of this country and Murope, are each nstreat.,......ween.nderr-wr - OW "Art - phone - a — ant-ohm Plano at a mesh tower rate than ant other manufactory, end at the same time, are sure of the finality of their instruments, esoh pert being made by one of the members of the Company ; and will therefore guarantee each marts meat as haying all the qualities claimed for it in this circular. Mr - Tuning and repotting attended to. Please call and examine, at ap7-amo 1104 lidatiCitT STBMST liE-WORKS! FIRE-WORKS 11 FIRE-WORKS, 'STEWART & JOHNSON, WR. FRAZIER, For the Proprietors as 2-tu th eat-1m if Qi; L. FOWLER, • ATTORNEY AT LAW, XOtrITON, MMUS COUNTY, TEXAS. Twenty years resident In Text& Prompt attention paid to Land Basins OPYIGE OPPOSITE TILE OLD OAPIT , Raveae To—etagere. Davie & Dlrnay, PlLlted 'nth3-w-ly North American Review, No. otxxx, Tulp, 1858. Here Is a new tivraison or a popular quarterly ft contains several Artie/es of considerable merit. and Interest—one which will be ()avian to the many, anti one exhibiting very curious and strange- Ignorance. The best articles are those upon the Baguet; and their Country; the Phillips Family and Phillips Exeter Academy, (the graphic sketch of Dr. Benjamin Abbott redeems this, from the charge of being somewhat heavy;) contemporary French Literature; George Stepbeneon, Felber of Rallwayism, founded on Smiles' Life, which is one of the beet biographies In the language. In this latsevre find a singular error, Tbe Reviewer, speak leg of Stephenson's youth of penury and toil in a country where his father worked in a colliery and coal was to be bad lit rats„ 4. -- ,-`-' -- -w• -,-- Wrhlß ST !OUSS, ATTORNI g i, r , :u n a ,y 4,...uyir otio.rg.,, and - fire were too dear for the tan ra,VV. MIMI' dried. Pottsville. Pa. ~,., VI C. THOMPSON AND G. M. Ot NORI, CONVVYKNOIiItS. Cf&O.bi, GIONAItItn, ATTOMiIIt AT LAI 14.454 No. MB ANON street. below F&NIEI: DOUGHERTY, ATTU' AT LAW, Southeast Corner of MICHITEL OUST Btroots, t.bilodelphtz. CIELARLES TETE, COMMIES/ON , 4 1.1 MAIM and Importer of TIVJANA, ; acwwll9.6 virldnut wheat. aeoond dory. IV(fILLIAM HENRY MOORE, FUR ING lINDESTAKIII, No, 1426 Ml.Ol Iraat or Broad, late 01000 AllOll Street. Lead Onfina always ott band. R MOVAL.— 0. PASS'OIITT, HAM CUTTER AND Wife MASS, , Ilea removed to 1020 011118TMIrstreet, tour tow 121,11VEN111 InfARRIS BOUDOIR SE WIN el .11-.11- MILNE Is offered to the public ee the m hie low-priced, Sewing Machine , in use. It will six to misty etitchoo to an inch, on all Wilda from coarsest bagging to the finest cambric without exception, the, simplest in Ste merlon struction ever made, and can be run and kept by as child of twelve years of age The DORA this machine, and tiOa QOA.LITY or Ira WORK muted to be uoaurpoesed by any other. Ito apt from three hundred to fifteen hundred stitches uto. The thread used Is taken directly from t WITiTOO? Pll5 TROURLR OP HR WINDING IR f machine that is wanted by every family in the the low price of . VORTY 'DOLLARS, at which they ate Rohl, bring thera within ti almost every one. S. V BANNS., SelB-16m wlcy epwOni 20 Boutb LIMIT( °REAP SUMMER VUEL.—GAS Nt./ or excellent quality, is sold at the Ph Pure WORKS for the reduced pride o 4 bullet, and rosy be obtained in large or e tit) , by applying at the Gee moo, No; agyßNTit otreet. To purchmera 1p aboloeele It la eold at' to Fleet Ward, by the ton, at s puce Kt , Anthracite at $2.60 per ton. (Bigaed,) O. OFMBSON, phlioolnlytki• Gee Werke. Aux. /A. BLINDS AND SHADES, 01121 AP FOB CIAi • Of Ovary variety. He tile a line 'MA to be sold at liedrlai )313PP, sod all other Colors of Linen Ot whip, Fixtures, &0., &L OTOREI SHADFB Painted to order. ItSiAIRtbIG PROMPTLY ATTI4I WR TO. PLEAS Ht ERRINQS-800 bble. NO. 1' ' ' Hering; 800 bble e?,,tra Newfon 120 bie Potomac diy salted ditto, tovri • mile by ' - NO U. IiENNED • myl6 , Rea. lfln and Irsl N. ONONGAHELA WMBIO ' • LTA old liononignb4 n Witlakey, in gore linuttot Pa Tit MO ptatto Some. Sirctobrlce A full assortment of AT REDUCED TRIOBB STEPHEN P. WHITMAN, 1210 MABXIII' smear, West of Twolft', fauetneso earbo. INSURANCE AND NOTE 13 .RoicznEs. No. 108 South FOURTH Street getuing B. J. WILLIAMS, , No. 10 NORTII BIXTII STREISI /I the most extensive Msnefeettui WINDOW BLINDS, And Denier in WINDOW -.011A.DN0,1 ( t4t 41.1rtsz, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1868. EMPERORS-BLACK AND WHITE "Is not ono man as good as another r asked an enthusiastic orator. An excited Irishman promptly answered "Indeed ho is— and a great deal better I" In like manner, we ask, is not a blade as good as a 'white-faced Emperor? Compara- tively viewed, is not the Imperial dynasty of Ilayti as good as that of France Is not FAvirm Soitotiosm I. as good as NAPOLEON the Third ? For the matter of that, FAIISTIN Sotruniqtricihits had fpur iears the start of his Imperial "13rother""of the. Tuileries—seeing ' that he has been Emperor Since 1848, , whereas hr,trAnosi. did not obtala the Imperial dignity till late in 1852. Moreover, , Favams ' .80111,01 MM - `has - . been . regularly crowned ; postponed his an, mitt over iltitiaan#l; Pm@VII flid, over half a cellt4i7 4041:4 the eIder.NAPOLNON., • Naior.losi III; has the reputation of know ing how' to draw out art effective programme. His black brother of Hayti' aPpijara„to'he an adept in the same, -as we shall presently shOr. IstsroLumes income from' tr the State" ' is sonothing about $5,00(1,000 a Year l -the ebony rule- of Hayti , recel*es $15,000 a,year for him. seit.with less than,!ss;ooo' for his charcoal cpriplexioned Empress., Yet, , Faxerus has a learage—a Cabinet—a .State household. ,A.nong his peers are the Duke of LIMON/We, the Marquis .of Ctutaimir,r.v, the Count of Itilaititiiuk, and we have a document 'now l?tt• for. us', signed by,the Count Rip Tennis% wht, it seems, is tflitinister of the Interidr and Agriculture." Each Cabinet Minister, is pa 14660 a year. • .141031 g FUSTIN Sotmoncon's household, says his biographer in Men of the' 'Time, dc flame a grand almoner,a grand master of the paabr, a grand marshal of tho palace, a quar ter-faster, gentlemen of honor, governors of the eye!. palaces 'and castles, pages, masters of ,k,eremenies, heralds-at:armi, &e It seems, also, that the sable' Enipress (Anzisrk-by,name) has ' her own bousobe)4, c , wich' is composed .of a 'grand almoner, two ladis of honor, two tirowomenAfty-sla ladles of palace', - twenty-two ladles of the chapel, (all ochesses,. countesses, baronesses, ladles of highti or marchionesses,) chamberlains, pagagrooms,&c. , As the attendant house. holdslike • the Emperor and Empress': are all megrm, the Court must be very agreeable—in hot anther. Farm Sermons ans I. bas a Legislative As sembl, even as NAroixon 111. has. The die. "terem. Is, that the black ruler allows his ileum( Representatives to speak, vote, and ielibeate there are grand receptions, !peeces from the Throne, flattering iddressci Porn 'the Ilonse,"Just as in the regular roy hies. But the finest of all was a celebration of ray.day, , by the Haytlens, "after the manner ancient people, in honor of Ceres." It mmeticetVat daybreak, on the first of May,. th a salvo of twenty-one guns. Two hours sre allotted for the assemblage of it the Im wial Guard and the troops," the Imperial ispa of Artillery, the proprietary farmers, e Constitution -cm tri 0 ow wore to meet at the t,:erieJ Palace. The programme says "The Wed the country will be occupied by his ,A r esty, the Imperial Princesses, the Minis. ftz, the High Chancellor, the Grand Cham eirlsir, the Grand Butler, the Marshals of the lkspie, the President of the Senate, the Pro. <Motor the House of Representatives, and 10 =fibers of the Council of Notables." This is not all. The programme, Which ree he order of procession, informs us that lvann Soutotiout: has Horse Grenadiers ul Piot Guards, a College relatifs and Fri in'y ;cheeks, Generals attached and nn attlki, a Council of Notables, Judges, Ca hist Mnisters, Vice-Admiral and Lord Chan cehr, +tenate, and House of Representatives, I am so .)I).' The Count DE RED TERRIER I sits the programme, which was probably dravaup, with an eye to effect, by "Hie Ini perialMajesty." The Count, we perceive, made a very pretty Buncomb address to the farnics, at the close of the file, after which, says be Moniteue, (for Hayti actually has an " orgm " so named,) "the working farmers were solemnly crowned:" Except that the negro-Emperor appears to have f far more jolly time of it, freely trust ing Eniself among his "people," there seems not much difference between Imperial hum bug in Hayti and France. The balance 15 de cidedly in favor of the black sovereignty, for we do not hear of.internal machines specially invented to assassinate FAUSTIY Sono:men, and the cost is very trifling—inasmuch as the whole annual revenue of the Empire of Efayti is 0n1y51,070,000, or, a fifth of what NAPOLEON 111. condescends to accept from France, to support himself and family. .. Other readable papers are those upon the Mis souri Valley and Great Plaine, practical us moll au eminently scientific, and obartnivg articles on The Aquarium and on Ornamental Gardening. In the opening article, on Pierce's Analytic Meehan iCß, over twenty pages are devoted, in the hardest style of scientific writing, to the consideration of a didicult and abstruse system of Analytic Meehan toe. In a popular Review, It is to bo expected, at least : that each article shall be intelligible. Again, coven and twenty mortal pages are hero devoted to Lord Normanby's " Year of Revolution, from a Journal kept at Parts in 1848." Tho re viewer tru[y says this book "has, in every sense, made a great sensation upon the other aide of the Atlantic," but ho mis-states why. It was not be eause the poco-caranto novel-writing author was a Marquis and bad been all Ambassador, but sim ply because he hod filled nine hundred and twenty octavo pages with such a heap of incorrect state ments and apparently wilful misrepresentations, that it drew Tratu Louie Blau a volume called " 1848. Historical Revelations: inscribed to Lord Normanby," which at once ans•.vers and extin guishes the noble Lord's two volumes, which the reviewer accepts, praises. and endorses all through as " deserving of all commendation," beeauso its author " puts men and things in their true and proper places." The writer in tho North. Ameriean Revlon', apparently, has never heard of Louis Blames terrible annihilation of poor Lerd Nor ,nianby'a book. Yet it was reviewed to the extent of over four columns in the London Times of May 25, and luta been fully noticed in the elthenmuni, Literary Gazette, Critic, and other Lontloniour nu's, in April. Lot us hope that, in future, a little more care will bo used editorially, and a great deal more information laid in, critically, Were praising as authority a book which boa already been shelved for its palpable false statements. It is evident that tho reviewer bad never hoard of Louis book; in what remote village has ho lived, do prived of newspaper reading? • The Cape Way Ocean Wave gives an inter. eating account of a venerable father in the (Attach, ltev. Osborne; of "airfield; Cumberland county, who died on the first 'A' May. Ho was ono hundred years of age, and was pastor of the Fair field Presbyterian church for fifty-aix yenta. Ho proaehod ten thousand One hundred and sixty-four sermons, recolied six hundred persons into the church, and was ever reputed a devoted ahristlan, And bad grog obarlty towards unloving %Win. RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCE of the FOURTH. Speeches al RtYLlVlrasra. Chambers, Brantley, alannak t Barnes, Atiioad, Crowell, 'and Dr. Bryan. It is no exaggeration to say that ono of the most extraordinary occasions' ever witnessed in this pity sines our birth as an independent nation, took place in Jayne's Hall on the Mottling of the oth last: The announcement having Nen'mtule throigh the press, and. from many of the 'pulpits on the previous Sabbath, that a great — Union gather ing would be held at Jayne's Hall, - on. Mon day morning, at 10 o'olook, for the purp.iso of spending one hour (though the services were ex tended through two) in appropriate devotional exercises, and patriotio addresses oommemorative of the great event fin , whieh the day was set apart to be °Nerved, at the appointed hour that im mense ball was densely filled, not erupting the platfortdand the galleries over it, and a large number coming in later were obliged to Stand in the aisles daring the entire services. The ohalr was occupied by George H. Stuart, EN,; who, on taking his poet, briefly elated to the audience the °blot for which they were assembled ; after which, the Bar. George Duffield was desig nated to learrin`Orayer, 'Bitharlog oP Soidpturis---tbe 136th Tialm-Q-sate Mad- by the IteV. Dr. McDowell; when the 'Meeting: was fro nertiekeia o ell bre, ' a.". „ • - . • riae'the' irigaLb elettag SAN drießan,"AaSeel-, , atiorr —l ntiderldelailtiepteeti the iiieetibiliad beim ealliidathat, ao thine autdosible;alithe Sdetigelidar denominatiOna or Chßattens iti tide eity-taight be' represented itt 'the addresses made, it was desire; hie that but one of any single denomination should speak, and that the apelike:es , sliould innate* brevity. •:* The first meeker announced to the anditinee the Rev. John Chambers, who said that the prer_,, vions day had' been of no ordinary diameter —it; had been a twin-Sabbath, at euco gemmemorative of the trio grandest events in thd history of things,. human or divine. As the Christian Sabbath, it marked that glorious event when the hero of the skies had burst asunder the bands of death and hell, and triumphed over sin; and, as onr' N4- tianal Sabbath, it marked the' day whoa; tinder the guidance of God, our forefathers heti snapper], the bands of civil tyranny,: and tbeivbitrinettiit ted to unborn generations the ohoidist heritage ever voilehsafed teeny people on the feet, of Jahn- La_h'a footstool. But it was not merely to tne eTents of 1776, or that Immediate period, that we could trace our present liberties, but rather to:the earlier stages of our history—even to - the ' tinie when Bider Bradford, on leading the pilgrims forth fe'om thelfaralloWeri lind knelt down on Pli r mouth Rook, with' his open ',Bible, and amid the shriek of the ascending eagle and the yells of the eavtagee, lifted his 'oleo in supplication to the God of heaveo;in behalf of the refuge ihey . bad come to seek in the wilds of America. The open Bible was presented by Mr. Chambers as the only safeguard to our liberties; and no matter with bow much, he had almost said Medal trove reverence, - we--might - look - upon the picture 1 of Waahingtonnwevafter, ell, only loved , and 134 versa him inasmuch as ho loved and zerere4 his God and the Bible. Mr„ Chambers spoke for about twenty minutes , ,in , a strain of thrilling eloquence which, at oft-ropeated- inter: vale, was greeted with rapturous applause. The next speaker of the morning was : the Zen Dr. Brantley, of the Baptist Church. too,-rei cottaied eloquently the several leading Incideht4 of aux national history. The outatrotched banner which 'there greeted his vision, with its stare and stripes, reminded him of the Star of Bethlehem, which had neon in the Hest for man's redemptien4 and . these stripes, it setunea to hint, were noting - appropriately typical of the stripes whisk the Saviour bore for our offences. His,remarks with, reference to the groat miatlon of the Young Men's Christian Association were strikingly linproselmi Upon the whole, hie address pas a trolly felicitous l buret of true Bible patriotism. Before taking: leave of his handeomo speech, however, he:will' pardon us for taking the liberty of-making in it a single correction, for doing which we wish to be -OriliccoVeg Via^juigrgobttidel7lV,ViZi: of our departed ancestors. ,Mr - .Brantley said, - ht the opening of his speech, that John A.datne, in letter addressed to a friend ea the bth of July eighty-two years ago, had written that henceforth " the Fourth of July ought to be solemnized with getups, shows, pules, sports, guns," .ho.; but in this, the speaker conceived, John Adams had made a very important omission, : that he had Said nothing about its religions recognition; and he was glad to say to-day that, after a lapse of eighty-taro years, that 06/18t1i019 had on the present °consign been supplied by the Young Men's Christian Association of this city Now, if Mr. Brantley will take the pains of refer ring to the record again—John Adams's letter to his wife, dated July 6th, 17711—be will end this imaginary omission beautifully supplied in a sen tence standing in very close proximity to the. one quoted by him on the platform. The sentence we refer to is as follows : It ought to be comma- Waited as the day of deliverance, by solemn act; of elevation to Almighty God." This Is explicit 'enough, surely ; so that instead of supplying a want in the prophetic recommendation of that pillar of the Deolaration?' the Young Men's Christian Association can only claim the honor of being the first to put it in praotice ; and this it self is no mean laurel. The next speaker was Dr. Bryan. lie had been called upon to represent the layman on this in teresting ocoasion. Re had not much to say on the subject under discussion, as be knew hat little about it. The points thus far dleoussed had been patriotism and religion, and as be confessed to having but little of either, he mast be allowed to fall back on something with which he' was more familiar, via.: the Temperance reform. He was afraid thissubjeet was losing: ground, and in view of this ho wished to present two ideas: First, that the Young Mon's Association, which was accom plishing so much good, should take the temper ance movement in charge, and use their masa vore to revive it; and his second ((Nerves that" in union there le strength." With these two ideas pro. petty concentrated, Dr. Bryan thought the Young Mon's Christian Association could present a nut which the world couldn't amok ! Tho next speaker was the Rev. Mr. Matlock Rector of the (Episcopal) Church of the Nativity. Ho was glad to stand up on that occasion as the representative of the Protestant Episcopal Church. His brother of the Baptist Church had spoken of the divisions existing in nearly all Evangelical de *Comlnations—that there was virtually a Northern and Southern Presbyterian Church, for example, and so of nearly all the rest ; yet ho was glad to testify of the church which he had the honor to represent, that no snob division existed in it; it was harmonious and united all over the land, and so. because that oburob made it a rule to meddle 104.14.thbail6A 1 414 1 5trAlitrenrsualf. .thls em• braces the substance of the thought, though not exactly the language In which it was given by the epeaker. Rev. Albert Barnes, D D., of the Presbyterian Church, next addressed the congregation, which ho did in his usual thoughtful, unimpassioned style. He dwelt with special emphasis upon the i Christian character of Washington, remarking that if there was anything in the history of man at all comparable to the scene of our Saviour In Gethsemane on the eve of his erttoffixion—which there was not—it would be Washington in soli tary prayer at Valley Forge, overheard by the Q ua k er , who straightway went and told his wife that the American arms would be victorious, and so because he had soon Washington pleading I with his Father in heaven in their behalf. Mr. llamas closed with a hearty endorsement of 'Washington rrving's great Life of Washington, as deeidetily the best work thatlad over emanated from the author's pen, and the best book that had ever boon written on this most interesting subjoin., and (without intending to place tho booksellers under obligations for this gratuitous advertise mont) he desired that all who had not yet supplied themselves with it should do so at once. his seat, was succeeded Mr. BCITIICR., on taking by the Bev. Dr. Atwood, of the Methodist L'pisco pal Church. Ho also made an effective speech, in ,the course of which he demonstrated from history that many of the most important events that had ever occurred had come in direct opposition to the intended agency of man. • The adoption of Pro toqtantism in England, under the reign of Henry VIII, was ono of those results clearly attributable to an overruling Providence. The same was true of Tindal's translation of the Bible, and many other events, oven In our own history, the whys and wherefores were satisfactorily given by the speaker.. Mr. Atwood was followed in his remarks by a abort address from the Rev. ldr. Crowell, of the Presbyterian Church. • This address &mended,' the hour of 12 had arrived, at which time the noon-day Business Mon's Prayer Meetin . ga Were 'annottnoed to be resumed in that Hall. The ex ercises were interspersed throughout, at appropri ate intervals, with hymns of prime. The apealt , ors, one and ail, appeared to enter into the Fourth of July spirit with a hearty, patriot/4 relish, and. the marked approval of the audience was well at tested in their frequent applause. We have Omit fed to speak of the decorations of the Hail for this epevial occasion, and have only room to add that the twenty-seven conspicuously printed Scrip tural 09011 aUsßelie4 liens the sallerice i 94 ;; , • Peale's pioture of Washington on hie noble steed, occupying a place on the right of the platform; to. gather with several ensigns, ropatltut:ed„ l l graceful and happily oonceiveclifiatnio' in the ar rangements , ter the day and Ito preceedligs. Immediately at the close of this"raligic4tiltiotie demematration, the noon.darmeeting Was opinion; which continued until one o'clock; the cdrigrega= tion itimost entire remaining to the close.. In the course of thiesecond meeting, the Roy. Dr: *Rork, of the Lutheran Churob, rose and said that heirs, gretted exceedingly that in all of the liberty speeches that had beenrnade, not one word had been said of that class in bur land for wheat there' Was no liberty, and he desired that they should now; be made the subject of raver. These meetings will bo dontlnued there during the summer months. Thane' at twelve o'clock •yesterdey was preslded over by the Rev. Dr. Newton, rector of Lit. I'anpe (Episcopal) Church. - • • • LETTERS FROM PITTSBURAM Correepondenee etfiho Prem.) . ' PviTssumia, July, 3, 1858. " DRAM. CoLoatm: With the thermometer at"Line -sy-six, a remarkable dearth of news, and a, brain ton.dully be indaVeil int!? nativity, I SilmOldi die epai: at writing ooh a latter ae,wfl provaiiitereat: _ thistprishiltit *dab ..' 't - r l 7 , odi'..uldrie is , altn • t '" ' ' ''. ' pre.a. y •le roil.. Good ~,_,„,l_, , twitting leads eari - moir be botight, ahead pr - anispended: isnitinthlefbierrfillactrPtleaP`,niaivr *opted; nealy_ es amanita one eould Make rielal e Affellwr quadruPeda L atra•Paatinit f" . 11 'iaati v 4 ga' " ..'. ta.liParf TOrrit9o, and prOIIZCIPt It himself atth r : ./.tThs, men lthotkthettetotAanefl:r SI - I -.. 'GotrerntriiPrioe: ,To,give yoorreaders an idea BaranWore winter coatis d hoes ~. , , . •-• Of biwriti* fait& Min sometimes be bought, I will '•- - th sarithe ether' die -' ' ' `"' '., stataithat 'theta hte been SeveraViinimproeoi , _,., . „Goodiediihow 1101Iva:cep' !‘- ~.. P and sold recently idles thananootollars ea acre Excuse me,,dear,Autootat, of the Breakfast Tab a and wittithe miles slott,aspoa4 he found. ~ , fl,- f ittn; but ere you' sometimes tibrilak th e t eg e, / , monde of "a linadred aiidsixty,neres- for. three-handred dollatit'''llat I would not have you think . this was a ' I' '/I E+ dock the tail VE alpine "rtrust in r P"" °na Y " ~...r...• ,' ' -2 , . - 'the a i tia•lflldietani i &tit 11 duly when' men tied you williraTaan too rat" making al l. i ''''' .4 .o ' ,T", big moneyi-tiither than pay a high rate of inter• teration in your Spirited verse. '.' • ' Leonine° their. lands in order to w a - the AM/aortal pralevrtionting le stanito be held in required amounts. With everything lo ao it is 1 Pittsburgh, for thepurpopeof thankingProvideneo et 'present - flout at font and ,e quarter 41..hstrii, I for our national prosperity ant/imploring a pore- - potatoes at' fifty mints' a brothel, batter' 'prim tintianoo - of ' the Weavings with, which'si a people ty cents M pound; ./ ko* Of - ,no - relion why we have' hitherto al highly ,been , ,favored. All this ahould not ,he a faetable time for those creeds andoitioms,aro cordially-invitedte etre* seeking berries in the -Wed to talte -, „advantage of and participate In tba.prooeedhig* It will be ta - it Times' will nadoubtedly. dame, and -lands, fere and refreshing ipsobsifi tileffthaill Pinfaetin ," at least,'increase in dalue, ~, Catholio,. and-:Jew,lhe , eiralted , fodribeload , 1 - Sotto little excitement had recently - prevailed kneeling at *he same altsr„aoknowled,ging,the . among nit, from the toot of fragments!' of coal hay sinful * state, anditoplotinithe Giver of every goo tqg been found on 'the shores alba Blue Earth 'and perfect gift td give theta *Tidal andairtu andWatouiwan rivers, about twelve milesfrom this 1 . to save „ f rom thi bite, ce,„the,wildcodoountri os Of loirtt.' A Spotlit:nen was brought me by a man who the old world, and •ettaldblip the reign,ipeacti, ealdlieditgltont of the banksof the/atter named harmony, and Christiana, thresighont our rderd. river,•lindthat there appeared to belirge costal- The ,fire men's•ptayer7rdietingstairtratirgelj a 4. tieaof it remaining. /!expeet .to' go 'U erelong tended. A noel: , *pv*llo44l) peep,ticarieen I toe mine moreparticubirly into the matter, and minds •of 'men Who, until Alikpresentliro e bar 120 Pc - tklm - able to report favorablyat some future boon too Much-hi tfielfibit of tatefild#4 4 4'/lion -pride: _wit ihonlif be. font wa have good and ~,twhet obeli:I:do:0 imoavedfAispnow.th 4021). laout - eatinty, • With whet 'ood ;We have, earnest inquiry of,sinnerotettittingfrotathisite Iwhlch is verVabundant) It will be; as I bel eve it 4, woe. - - .• - mut le, the, most desirable sestiotr of tha.fhate for , OM. James A:. GISMO theinew •• , eolliebilt;Of-the the linnet. , port -of Plttaburghvbas entered , onthe dittice o - • "'A largepotteryhas bitenstarted in Morn widob is to otlioe. file ,appointment was made by.Presi 'turning out "Setae beautifier aton e ware, and pintai -1 dont Bubbarata withent• ailionittion - onlda pa Jsethidean &sloe:five bedews. 'The clap is of'a or that of Me friends, .and is lookedunen as dark blue color, mulls taken fromlbtrbanks CFOs compliment richly deaerrod by an old and devote river just below-town. -Airrick•yard bits also re friend. I are happy to learn that John Tisylorl aantly ' gOpts' into- operation, end the, Int gu n ty, Esq., has been retained an older 'clerk Iti the Mei bsinglurned and will be - opened in a few_days, tom Hoagie. , During the , loot tWelve, yoara• tb when an opportunity will be afforded for testing, General has filled this post with signal ability., the praoticability of nistinfaidurici brick advan- Iliseentinttance in' Oleo gives general satisfaml tageonsiy. •. -- . • , , , non, and is well Merited by his capacity, attention The wriatherldining the day baa been extremaiy and iotegrity.,, . •" r • ':. :- - thermometer. averaging about itt) de. Two - of mit independent politician help teen'. grata for the-pesewilek, withen, but in the even tried for, and found guilty of, Mortion. "They', Inge cool and pleasant, generally a breeze in are now in jail awaiting, their sentence, Which; mreniation,otherwiattthe heat would be ineupport will probably be snob as to effeatitally prevent{ able. Crops are looking well generally, although others from following their evil example. l "eomplaints are made by some of the farmers of tee , • Charles ,fhl'Enight, Ewe:, bas' purchased , the. gopher protest! animal, of adarkith,yeliow color, Pittsburgh Chronfe/e and will, in - future control'. and very mach *resembling iliii ground squirrel) Its editorial Columns Ile lea gentlemen of extols- , baring destroyed ooneiderable.eorn. I Wes sur 'Oive travel and due education, and bids fair to be prised, on. riding oat-into, the' cannery a few days OUr oil otEta an exoellentleornalist. ,• ' .' ' ago,' to none. the number of Amu that have been y, boasts of, seven daily papers --a large; font x ed ea e r n! placed 7 nadir cul Ovation minim this time -number, considering the'M extent of eurPoPulaa• ' k at and a most. nattering comnientaty on theintelli- • The prairies are 'abounding in Strawberries, - and illi gone?, taste, and habits of this pointatmity., With our +Athens haver been regalini„lhemselece with rare exceptions, they are conduoted with, modem.- the old Eastern dish of strawberries and cream. tion and-a preiza-warthy bpirit Of proptiety: The You eat we - are not entirely deprived of kucuries; gentlemen oTigagoilim them are, for tbo most part, and in such a 'favored country we have strong talented and . courteous, and in their political and grounds in hoping for more, literary effusions, seem to imitate' tho conduct of , Yoars, dor,' ' - P. him who never *rote ' "Orin engscerous. one unmanly thought." Nor one wordoirteg, he would wish to blot." A brief statemont ofilie_inexermenr population in Pittsburgh may interest some of your readers. . 5 In 1900, Pittsburgh' fontalr:Al I . s6 g4t. v y t i e -it l i! Arit attd.in Jas,o, 79453. .Estimated et the years ,'' rate - of itioreiao whiOtt triArkeattite,pest ten years,' our promaybpirlation ' la end Minified and thlrty-eight thousand flue hundred and thir ty-four._ For the above figures lam indebted .to an interesting publication entitled "Pittsburgh As It Is," by i}eo. R. Thurston: • ••• In my,/aat letter I amd—what will eventually prove true—that the nextDernecratict County Con vention of Allegltany Will bo strongly anti- Lecompton thesend that it will peas reeolullons damning ourse of the Administrationon.the Kansas question. For this I have beam ungener misty attacked by the editor of the (now) defunct Union—a gentleman who was supposed to posiess some talent until ho took charge of, a Panel'. He charges me with a weakness for scribbling. Ono year age his editorial Career commenced: Re purchased the Union, a paper said to be worth s ten thousand dollars. and twelve months his love of scribbling reduced it in value to twenty five hundred dollars. Then be was considered "a promising young men," on the principle that the blackest negro in a band of strolling min strels is invariably called Bnovrdrop. but I forbear, and, imitating l and o of my 'undo Toby, raise my window and release my ill natured fly, with the well-known ezolarnation, "Go, poor devil, go, there is room enough in the world for you and for me." On the ruins of the Union, a paper will be es tablished by your friend. John B. Kennedy, KN., late of the Chronicle. Mr. Kennedy is a practi cal printer, an experienced journalist, a good edi tor, and a successful publisher. Mr. Kennedy possesses ample means to establish a paPer, and, with hie tact, talent, and •indtistiy aided bySeve nil writers of acknowledged ability, the success of the Penny Press wilt soon be an admitted fact. The paper—the first number of which will be is sued on Wednesday, July the 7th—will be inde pendent tut respeots, relying for on an intelfigent, discriminating, andgenerous reading public. / repeat that, for the writing of which I have boon savagely attacked by the late editor of the late Union, the Democracy of Allegheny are un compromisingly opposed to the Leeompton Consti tution—they trill denounce it In County Conven tion, and more in sarrow than in anger rebuke all who assisted in securing the passage of the Eng lish bill. Failing to do so, they will prove false to themselves and their principles, and become the by-word and the jeer of every consistent and conscientious man PITTHIMEIGII, Alp 3,1856 (jorreapondence of Tho Prose.] • Anti-Leoompton has gained a great victory in Allegheny county, and, I may say, Western Penn sylvania. The Pittsburgh Union'-the organ of Governor Bigler and Lecompten—is dead; died beoause the Governor's puree was withheld and there was no party to support it. . The only Democratic daily newspaper now in existence In Western Pennsylvania is that Oar ling sheet, the Pittsburgh Post, edited and pub- Balled by James P. Barr, Esq. • Mr. Barr—deaf .dedly Leeompton and a firm supporter of Mr. Bu chanan's Administration—has been too far-seeing to be M . 2 , a the trap whieltgati o rWrit t o , Pu l ky—wore opposed to him on this question, and that to attempt to menufaotore public. opinion for them would be a death-blow to his pecuniary. and political prospects. The Union took a decided stand (as wee Its right), and violently opposed what we considered to be the leadingDamooratio feature in the Cincinnati platform—popular sovereignty. It denied to us the right of opinion on this leading tenet of our faith, and , out-Jehued Glancy Jonts in its syeophaney towards the President. It "Cracked the pregnant binges of the knee That thrift might follow fawning," But " thrift" did not "follow," and the Union is now beyond the hope of resurreotion. Mr. Barr, of the Post, has respected the optia. ions of hie party friends, and although sortie 'of ith rl bitsbed articles have savored too much , of Lecomptonism to suit the views of tho opponents of that faith, the respectful toren employed hi giving expression to his opinions have so won upon his readers as to male all klit friends and admirers. The paper is certainly popular, and is read•and recognised 84 the organ of the Do• mooraoy in ovary county west of the Allegheny mountains. Our emcee aro not yet disposed of, bat it is said they will be during this month. Colonel James A, albson's appointment (the custom-bones). gives great stitisfaation. I have not yet heard of a die. seating voice, though, doubtless, there are those who would havn preferred the appointment of Mr. 13ailay; fate of the deceased Union. I preferred Mr. Bailey, bitt hove no objection to the Colonel, I must not say preferred Mr. Bailey, I only believe that ho deserved it - and I believe that Mr. laerr, of the root, deserves the post MUD. Irsrafer him to any other; and knowing that his appointment would do more to conciliate the geeing friends of the President and restore harmony to the patty in this vicinity, I regret that my position Is snob that I can do him no service. Ho IS backed dv 'ninety- Wine hundredths of his party, (I am stating fasts,) while his opponent (I understand that Mr. Dann is his only formidable competitor) could not muster his "corporal ' s guard.' In the ',stint of Mr. Dares success, the people will be satisfied. If Mr. Buchanan will visit our city before making the appointment, or send any one of his numerous dia.:_ interested friends to .reconnoitre, he will very easily discover the truth of what I have written, Jun'. We mentioned a few days ago that a young married women of Hartford, Conn., bad eloped from her 'husband and two children with a brake man upon the Ifortford'and New HaVtin The sequel is given in the Now Haven Register . of Thursday : The poor woman who abandoned bet home and , family in Hartford, a few days aim), iu company with a brakeman, attempted to poison herself in this oily, yesterday, by taking arsenic. 'We understand that the fellow who se duced bar from the path of rectitude left her un provided for, and, In a paroxysm of grief and dis appointment, she resolved to put an end at once to her misery and shame, by death; bat an over-dose of the poison prevented tie effect, and, Nto believe, she is !KM at the hospital, under medical treat- TWO CENTS. /Sfaxwaro, Minnesota, June 22, 1556. I had not intended writing again so' soon after my,last letter; but having reoeived:l3olMl informa *tion this morning *CM a returned emigrant of apish Territory in s odrineotten , with the settle ment or that new country, and thinking it might be of interest to your readers. , I have , seated my self: for .the'purposti;Of imparting it. Sines the opening of springejarge traineof emigrant wagons .ImM Weed through this town, many of which were; bound -for _Diebtah. " - Attar-• arriving at the different pointsef their destination, the hardy pioneers commenced. building, their 'houses and otherwise ins prey/leg their- claims, the- In dians, jealous of the onward march of civilization, pot a stop to their labors and warned thorn off of she lands, rd- branatt -, ,0f the Sioux tribe, known as Yanktonsitold them theymust leave, and, after having broken up their settlements, set tire to their houses- should tot be stirprised if 'some of the whites, mere daring than the 'rest; would in sist on remaining, and bring troutde on themselves. as these Indians have been threatening for some time past, thatlf they-did not -leave they would essdp..theet.. , ; • .. • !"- > ItcntioipathsC,of these dB/faulting' we are ex . ...Peg 06,14},-.Alition,,to.eur, population- in Blab 1, 11 14 . ? .. kkltts tile Migrants newly alt travel r A young .man byy the name of Rudolf Cotton , r.ntert - try.a strolcriof lightning. on Mot Saar day, at the ,house of.widow McKay, in Indiana: opposite Carrollton, ilininoky;" The eleetrie tluid Angelea saylhe in the bande!tira petters_ rif`lll. Sy, • and gionoing along it entered the bat of Cotton; and passing through his body shivered a stone on which he was standing tato a thousand fragments. _Re fell dead. Two daughters of Mrs. Moßay were struck- insensible by the shook at 'the sa • time, and the ear-rings of ono of the - ladles were ;melted from her can,. -The girls are not expected recover. Cotton and one of the ladles were to ;have been, married shortly, • ; The Poughkeepaia,2?ttily :Press states -that on Wednesday eve.ning a. sailboat, in whiob were L. V. 'Wilkins, principal of the .Church-street 'Pougheepsie grammersehool. George:Wilson, and his youngest brother and two sisters, waa scolden- :tally run into by the steamer-Th=l(n/ Powall(and Mr. Wilk ins drowned . TheDaite Pres, earl far. • Wilkine Was •an Englishman by birth, about twenty-Rye years of age. He graduates! at Oxford University, England, and was a man of finished education. __.' oston Post publishes a letter from Fa . ver, which states that on the let inst., as the ggera of a well upon Pr. Durtee's estate, in the north part of tho city, were blasting. they 1 4 were surprised by a stream of water bursting forth, throwing a , jet some forty feet above the surface of the ground. The stream is olear as gyp'• tal, - and almost boiling hot. • What makes it more= singular is, that the spot is ono of the highest in - the oily. Edward Cole commuted suicide near St retar,-Miniattota, a few days eine% under. very , singular circumstances/ He took down his gun. when by acme accident; it wont off and killed his wife, lle wrote to has son informing him of the oircumstanoe, and telling Win what dismition to Make of his property. Ile said that -himself and .. wife had not Heed On - kriod terns, and that ea 'the Leou might be attnbirtml te design on Ida part, would prevent any further trouble by leaving the world. ; Senator Douglas and lady name up the river, says the Troy (N. ) 7Trkeg, in the CommodCre on Friday night. The boat was crowded to its utmost capacity, and it vrtsp_only with the utmost diflioulty that slate-rooms could be procured for distinguished Illinoitlan. ' The Senator made himself very agreeable to the passengers. .Tle went West on Saturday morning. - ;,, , A young 'girl, a daughter of Mr. Charles Thompson, formerly State agent on the West Chea ter oars, arose from her bed' as is supposed while asleep, and deliberately walkedont of the third- ' story window! She fell on the pavement below, - and was horribly crushed by the fall. The Re inehlican, r f yesterday, says there was no hope or - law recovery.- - 'Colonel James S. Wallace, - well known in • this city as an editor, and for some time past the manager of the Louisville Theatre, teak a,lsenegt in that city on Saturday lest, on Which' nonasital he. played Puff," in.Sheriden's_ fame of tba ' Critic." He played_ the same part here severed years before Toahua:commanded the Sun to stand eta 1 - - • The Democrats of Chester county will hold a grand mare meeting_lnWeat Cheater on Saturday - evening next. The Hon. Jilin Biellmonatttsits- VertiTilit'StielftilitiriVrtibirehester cavity. The jury in the case of the brothers,Devlin, charged with the murder of their, brother.in-law t Berry, tried at Washington city, on Setarday eve ning rendered a verdict of manslaughter' against' James P. Devlin, and acquitted John S. Devlin on the ground of insanity, ~ , ' ~ ~ , • " • • ' The St. Louis papers Mention two,cases of suicide. A Airs, Sehmtfeicwhose, - hoshand Is in. California, out her throat.: She - was' In easy cir cumstances. , Robert McAllister, proprietor of a pork-nsolcing establishment. while laboring under a fit of mania;a•potu, also out his throat. A young man named Alfred Browse, son of Mei: Amos - Blouse, of Tipper% lilscorigle, Carbon county, Pa., hung himself in the barn on Friday evening last. No cause is assigned for tbo mot. •.. The iron shops of Mr. Grundeland the .ware hedge of Messrs . . Haynes A Yates, in Oharloston,ll. , 0. were destroyed by fire on Thursday night last. Entire loss $20,000. • .', • A young man named W. J. Desha was tour. • dared in New Orleans on the, auk utt., by a coffee hoese keeper named Miobael Duffy. The neur. darer was arrested. A young man named William G.B. Beata committed Weide in Baltimore on Sunday even ing. Re leaves a wifo and two children... It is said that Ur. -Edwin Booth, the trage dian, and the sprightly littlo actress, flfite Maly Perlin, aro shortly to be married. , Ry the burning of' the steamer Galena, near Red Wing, Min., a whole family by the name cf Porter lost their lives, ' Michael McNamee, beat hisiwifa to death he ohicago,lli., on Friday lost. , lio was arrested and committed to prison. They are eating ripe PO'achea at N.emphis, at $3 por bushel. • Overcome by Heat —William Hennessey Was admitted into the Pennsylvania Hospital on non day evening, having been overcome b,f the heat on Sunday, while en his way to this eity-,.trom Row York, on a canal boat. - During the night he be came tediporarilyderenged, but be wee watch bet ter yesterday morning The suffetotis 'twenty yearsof age, and a boatman by profession, Michael - Coughlin, aged forty pears, plokea u p on Monday afternoon at - Twentieth and Fits water streets, in an insensible, condi lion, caused by the combined streets ofliquor end the heat, Re was taken to the Hospital. - Funeral - of Me: .71 4. Nettles.—The name of the stranger who died suddenly en Friday er en ing last at the Ptir.)rd House, has been- ascertained to be J A. Nettles. Ho was from East Baton Rouge, La. The deceased was about twonty-lira years of or. He was a wealthy planter, and ha leaves a wafo and one child The remains wilt be planed in a metallic cohlri and deposited in the receiving vault of the Pkilanth , opie etmetery thin afternoon at four &cLek The funeral our start from the undertaking establishment of 4r, When, Fif,ll and L. u/bartt gitreota. 1 . )1017C*11,0 , - giniltardiViDENTg. earrenoadsnis for it Tar Paso" ;a PAL , e beta to nand tho fonnwitiffieeii /her) stbasitnitostbin afoot be edeotoperod bT the =roe of the In order to frown wrrestoebs of the t yp o osity, k - trot ode lids s sheet sluinld be writ ten upon. • ;.: Pre ' aben be greatly obliged to gentlemen In Peomeit. root* and othei State ;for pordribationa giving the our. root news of the dal In thatapartiatdar looalitlae th► reuTrees of the ;in:rim/341ns countrri the lean"' of SO the P O Duletioei, or am Information that will be interesting Sonora' reader. IRTEREsTIPird PR Oat MINNESOTA. iconsapoadenee of TJas MINNESOTA. Pritga . GENERAL NEWS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers