The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 21, 1858, Image 1

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    lt ) RES.,
,1 1/1(: • 16 # 1 0Vrt , YORrit l
NO: 4 VT CjiaSTNIFT
.441 - 41/
Waaa, peyabla:to. Thal:ante,
lfailO,AO,Oq'aieribersoot of tho,Oity at Brs DOLLARS
• -:rsi 'AjUtou; YOuu vox, Emu, own, I
"anew roa Moans, !lira, risibly &dram ,
finttheliOle orderVl: , ,:`
1101196 tO * B6luxtibora'Out, olr.t4tuOily
-- 'Age ria "Auirtri: 10 advance
- • ,W r EE L „,P,B,E*E 4 • i •
',Witisxx.i , 'Purim' mill no sent - to Subeei:lbere by
mull' (pet. annum in U•lcaueo,) at, - 42 00
"T;ireo COpiee, " • ...... ••4.- 600
V•u - o Coulee, • ; "B 00
" " I. 42 00
rv""/- 00 1 ,1 04 " ' ( to one addrese).. 20 00
Tvrevay Copier , or overi ( to addreu of elleh
" eubseriber,) eieh t.. 60
rofa Club ~or,broal-one or, over, we allb le, rive
- tarrar,o_at to thb gutter,up of Ow Mut), • '
to- Postreaetirs are regoesto,A, W. Mot ea Atm, for
TanCWavarir Youria,-
`• • ' - • cALratrolotta PRES%
' Isittrar CieOat:Monthly in. tlio for tie ctaworow
QYC~jts~,Jew&Q, . fitJ
'9 411 8,
oven ,
-BRITP3II
tiziat tbeir jampbotp `IL" WM&
mum , „rta ,1 on the 1 114 * 1 01 cud:tali - WY
iclo7, man.
.0014 off kook: a 'splendid stalk of eupoplof
Watolcia, of all thO oolobrited
1
" 1 • 0101 0 , 11:4 3 i 1 .4 01 0ti; PtO o Obedi -BeainP
totbar artiolon in the"
:,:lynningo of- kiliW-DRSIGNB will mad, ties bt
, oltang•;'-• 'for than *tithing itiado to otdat.
' l ' , Ezintliko.l4):ASW4l4:k.
:wca.Vsio;:ol'igviiiii, , xiii'stiu. or Nisi .
!ED* as t
Oing,l:thr*4.lbrazioWli - "
&0., /to. - ‘' " •
aintrivl'6Aeionil,liAsszwro',_ wain*, ke
Aliovilrongenng mum, or.pOlufiief neinl -1 . 1 ..;
, of guiltlgN'-',1:471-4.-C-'-011/4alilevii7,
' ‘,.4B2.4IDISTNITT 'Mint;
. nee rsoitived, ateithsers 'nee" .ties • ,
' Tewaln Olu.tetains, Tut bhi4na. ,
Spin= Fans, Hairpins:: • •
' , ttaaris t ßusir Baskets. •
Cio6dalist4 Plower. Vaned.
Corst, Lan m(1140444 Seta.
• taole Aortal in' Ptilli4Ophi6 for the uls ofjOiarlel
Irraeheza , a LONDON Tr.-TiItDRIITtB. 4•10
iVILVZ - R , NTAR.E.;z-- ;
• m•IVAAN WILSON BON. •
B.)
IitriNVFACTURBAS OF SILPRB , W4RE,
(.101TAILIBILED:1814,)'. ,
boassn,lll.7ll Liu missy entiris.
A714)70 asiortment of BELIIIIk of &err de.
kulptkota, oonatazitly ouhatt! t or pasil•o cater tomato:4
ii} pntterr destra..L I
ream of; 81ir414 - MA' t w parted
„
- - 3.BaDEN - & BRO:- r.
;:ssineAutvaasi‘artn:utrattlia
_ - - BELVRB,-PLATSD WA WI;
11106 OaltOnjont Street, z obovo.Mtird, lop itiara . j.
• •
- uonningir on Rend and_ for gale to the Trade
.4 , ITOITE R , 3 GOBLETS' CUPS W ,
Ana NOS' maw:mll sErivicAITERS HA& acarra, URNS,
;• ,
• - uTs; oAsToas; -- Krirvse,.eroom, NO MA,
_ LADLYA, &0., k 0: -
,ell4tot Ond plains on fantod, of toga. oeilay .
Acutrtnau.
LTARDWARE.—The subscribers QOM-,
'JILL Id:LOMB 241111Cfli ANTS for the - Weer FOREIGN
`AND - 1301dEBTIO,
..111.11DWAIII, *could respectfully
mat the attention of the „trash*, their etociquitieh
the} ire offering at lowest ratio.' -Our assortment eon
•etata in part of— . ; - •
Chaim; of All ktoda:LTrace, Log, Esher, Breast, 01,
low. Back, Wagon, Stage, T Ol2 O O , Loa, HIMP,
Mine, and OW Maine. ; . , •
The celebrated«L" goraeNWei Stone end Sledge
B/1111110 •
i t g i V e Ysigkra sad other ; Sidle Box and other
Short and long handle. gry,Ports ; iticiad a nd oral
Baka Pons. = • - - • • •
bierteikin Buporier Niles sad Buys; Bad BMWS.
. 1 13xce - 'dor Safety Fuse; Bleatlng Tubes„ _ -
Ckini, Gran; end Brier,l3eythes ; Hay, Goris;stit Btritw
and Spading 'forks.
Nikes And Roes; Shovels aid Spades, of l , kSadr. '
•
:Take: - Bridef, - 13hbel'016tit, ltirdelnlig Nails.
•' .Gsat Wroight Plitt 15.19e5; flamers, Looks of. sat
Wads; Outlet?, Bouissid Pumys,Altes,lietehett, Rim. lnfra, Mere, 9d other Tools, &a,' tro. -
.. WI G. - Lavin:, & 80N ,.
No. 411, 0014112 Hos. Streot. '
QClat,',ll
es L. sakit,"e, TAILOR" ;
148' N 942.11
u....__ 961 : 21 R.".4treet, balbw 11&014-
- ,
trimming Dress or Proek Conte; - •
and trimming Pantalooncor Vents, SLT6.
=1 ::"t-Eon • ;
AltiEB SHER IDANOIERCHA.NT,
&JP
TAILOR N0c..18 undlB South NUMB STRAIT,'
- ABOVE OPOOST it UT.
largo aid well 5010064 dock of MIMI sit
aussruzrits always ost hood,
All Ulothlog mahle it this Ettablishuumit be of
the bold quality, tuft in the moat tiohlonabla
Particular attention rinot to UNTPOiIId CLOPS—
INS . suis-tt
000/6 • War
1114 . 00 TS 'AND SHOES.—The embacaber
°whoa largeseiti Warle4 *took of BOOTS
and IMES, whleli he will mat et the lowest prises. -
- ; . - TAYLOR,
soll.kr ;A./. oOrner /111T11 onaldhltilliT Sta..
jPRING STOOK OF BOOTS AND SHOES
—7OS.EPH .tt: THOMPSON & 814 HAS.
KliT Street, and. Nos: iLand 1 , FRANKLIN, PLot.OS,
have new in stare a larke, and welt-mortal skink o f
DOOM and 811088, ol City and Aletern auktodattuts,
'which they offer for sale on.the beat terms for Oaeh, or
en the neon) drat.- .
EMiIiMM=MI
lOrtim (utb-gEtiemicalo.
RCBEILT: B#OBILPLEA, & CO.,
volorzismai DIIIIGGIBTS,
Mongol Omni ALDO, Dolor • • PAINTS, VLIGTAIEREI;
mod W'11D011!: ,G 14,114, portOooot °mot retrltTE and
ACH skies Philadelphi4• ••
.
aide Agana' tot Of ode of t he otdobtitid Ylototri
. _ - .
;PlateWoos:, • _ 10h254(
FZIEGLEL' ITIIOLESALE
DittIOGIBTS; sotithweit earner of iIEIVND, and
GSZKit Stroeta, bate in storsiand offer to tit trade la
cta to Alit paratuumai c '
- Red.
litun Arable, picked and PAN
Alex.
;04.1 Asiltoott.
Parint3roen, ISI, Brand
ME LEAD . , PA L:=
INTS; sit:_
WrlVe offer to the public. 'White teluf;2lhe Paiute.
002 ors In 01437antieherylcci, at , eueh reduced iricee
tbat we /Delta the attention of dealers end consumers•
to ear stool.- - ZrEGLER4a 8111THL '
mhls 8. W, oor. "eland and Green eta.
. .
JINDUW G 'L.A. 81. N (if %1
fILA881!—W0 Itivitsthe attention or thiilth
NIA* onr attentive stook of Preseh' and antariesn
Window Gll/611. , The large and well lielisbted 'stook of
Siena nonstnivity so band er.ablip as to all all Order',
.with divot*, and as kw St any other 'honor in the
*c: .. 7 %BIGLER 1. SHIT%
Wholeials Drissiatai
WWI " B. W. nornsr-of &mond SSW Greta '
CEtiitta,,elges anb Clutenstoare:
catitt 4Lp
. 44tikg8.
'
GOLIPDASP, 4ID DEGORMI7II
num AND ! ( MA IMAli' 9 4ll3l * l -Pf .
ho.- ! `':;
BOLD, ;is Tais.Lowsat 111201110lIf
' - '":41/316 - = •
“XiS6IIECFTWITODifiLaW miner.
13,—Cfoods laced to ¢artier A rise
_42111°*"111.4
been PLATE -GLASS:-=-HATING
sea aFFSipWrby - the comiriknir de Floreffe”
Nee SOLD AGSNTS for the sale dr their GLASS in this
INV, we are propirod
,001.' tD tbo trade 'ol' done*.
matey, from' our srtock oh haddi POLPEUM PLA.TH
ISMAIVI for Stores or Dwelling Fronts; Rough Plate,
!Or Floors and Skylitts; and Silvered Plate,- of , large
We faerarrora. o Glees will be Sold at the lowest
tia it trz r Zril listed superior, is leery respect, to say
r
• RonTHOEMAIIIIR & 00.,
Plate and Window Glass Warehouse, •
N. 001. of POURTH end DADS Streets
rnbaaar - • - Philadelphia
gobritto a Cigars.
CIGARS, OF FAVORITE,: ERANDS ,
and assorted Rhea, carefully selected by own bona)
at fiatlink in store, and received by every arrival from
likat port. , &- gtoNs,
43.2-3ta • IN South /MONT atreet.
AVAITEL OIGILES-4 luNidtome 8804.
ment, eaatt Y— "
Tt "' re= 1.4
-Jhpiter: '
001050, •; ClOnterelaat.ii; ' - •
Torrey Loper, „ Ifoloo Americans,' • "
groloo, • 'lora Onbons,tto.,
'lto., 1n g, )1,1-5 and 140 nos, of all - films and quail:
In store andzonstintlyrnoolOngfAnd tOr sale low,
t/T . , , . _CHABLYB T&2.11,
• 014)188 WALNUT Btrcoi t '
5a14.1 • - below lloinint;stemul. story
fikkAB:P:PABANAS AND P.0.TA4348
- 88041 4.—A. oboice Inadoe of tfiese.celebrated
. kAmMtle bthratriti Pla AMP 111114 t expected from
MOW, Nadler Ow, by , ° HAULM TETSi
-
tnew).4a l )-31/elon!. street, belo* Second,
Seance nor
. ~A~LE:'g
'4 l E it A LI,EitY
1* . M1N,(16;
LOOKING•OLA88E8,
4.4
,
.PORTRAIT,
'and ruiTTIRP vaATOB,
=SEM
Td offivaiff;ty. , , •
,- 4tl/611118 3; - /littLEL
, 816.0189V111T Rtreet,
9144 PLCIPLa %MO.
MC=
tr . . f , pram 4:11,4134•g z • s: MARET
iz; 'hot fro) .
tom I ilifdat by — V.
fstaanitis-Vriviunl4' < Rotar-Uslerit- whim,
//e-AtitiVateAktiMitroot, EP
Cesuir &nano; " i:4410-44*
„, „
-
_ .
..,, , . ,
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......
, ~••• ,„„.,... f,,r : ... . s . „I I 1 ‘
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Al- ~......
KOIPTIA) 7 ' - _ V - 1 i (:-:' \'-'. , nil - . '',-----------_-% 'Th , 0 1 !.(',....4, 0 1 - 1r r -, ,,v Al- - f•l'l' -:',4' tote'. A .
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'4” ~, tA,9, 'V' ...--••• ../. 7 : ',
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:01iliilj.i.,41::Zit:76,i04140t-gifll7lll4.ll(4lllllJl4si.it'tigoV7!7::: • ::: •-•
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VOL.- L-NO. 300.
EDiOolutterts aria Qtapartitcrehipt;
TOILE' 'UNDERSIGNED TUVE FARMED
a ooputnership under the style of FROTHING lIAM
de "WELLS, for the transaction of a 01:N1M/a DRY
GOODS COMMISSION BUSINESS, and hope Piton the
store No. 84 South FRONT Street, and 35 LETITIA
Street.' THEODORE FROTHIN
- KIRK B. WELLS.
JllllB let, 1858. ;Je2.2.lit
T'rE SUBSCRIBERS 11AVE , .THIS
DAY entered Into a limited partnership. , agreea
bly to the provisions of the Act of Amembly of the
Couttoonwealth'of Seunvireute, approved Aturch 21,
1838. untitled An Act rotative to ['hotbed Partner
elnd,the supplement thereto; and we do hereby
certify: '
1. That the name of the fl , m, under which such part
neialttpla to be conducted, is J . Ic, ec E. 11 ORNE.
• 2. The general nature of the business intended to be
transacted it the purchase and sale of Uarpeting iu the
"city of Philadelphia. -
'6. The name of the general partners are JOIJN F.
ORNE' raiding at the northwest corner of A rch and
Twenty-first street, -la the city of rhiladelphia•, met
EDWAItD D. ORNE. residing on the north side of
Arch street, abere Twenty-first street, in the 'said city
4. The name of the special partner is 111.1NJA AIM
OIINE. residing at 266 North Ninth street. in tho. city
Philadelphia,^erho.as such special partner, has con
tributed to the commqn stock of the said Hun the auto
of twenty-llva thensand dollars in cash
- 6, 1 he Bald partnership COMIUMUCCS July 14, A. D.
1868, and will terminate on the 14th day of July, A. D.
1861. ' • - ;BENJAMIN ORNE,
JOIIN F ORNE.
EDWABD D. DANE,
• PIIILID6L2IIIA,•YuIy 14,1668. - jyl6.6w
CROP 'TURNIP ,of
8111114.
^ t •• - ' •sPeNtilairk.k tiltia.A22;
. 4714 No. 827 MARKET Stroiii. below Seventh
• _G RAI IV CRADLES,' SCYTHES,
oWs Bake', Forks) Manure Drage, Bramble 18e3rthee,
,SPANGLBia & tiltaEleat.
jyld •;; No: OS7 aI&RICEIT Street. below Seventh.
ROASE POWERS, THRESHERS,
Bepaistors i Grain Fans, &c., of all tho most
,
BPANGI,IIII. & GRAHAM,
3i14 - No 8= MARKET Street, below Seventh.
Moileite %tittles.
MORE TO . BE ADMIRED THAN THE
R/ONE.S , T .D.IADEM
WORN BY KINGS OR EMPERORS
WHAT ? WHY, A BEAUTIFUL HBAD OP HAIR.
Because it is the ornament Gathimself provided for
ill our . race. Reader, although the roes may bloom
ever' ro brightly In the glowing cheek, the eye be ever
so sparkling, the teeth be those of pearls, If the head
he bereft•of its covering, or the hair be snarled and
shrivelled, harsh and dry, et worse still, If sprinkled
with gray, nature will lose more than half her charms.
Prof. Wood's Heir Restorative, if used two or three
times, a week, will regal* and permanently statue to
all snob an ornament. Bead the following and Judge,
The welter of the Arst is the uldraied pianist. Thai.
brie t'
New Yost, April 10,1868.
- Woon Dear Ste—Permit me to express to you
the obligations I am under for the entire restoration of
niy hair to Its original color;- about the time of .my sr
rival in, the United W ate ' it wu rapidly becoming gray,
batsman the application of your" Iles Restorative , ' it
soon recovered Its original hue. I consider your Re
etorative as a very wonderful invention, Vine efficacious
as well an agreeable.
- I am, dear sir, yours truly, 8. TRALBERI3.
Dryoh err ovryliedydet."
• WELSH NiairapArma OrefOli,
' 18 Nacean st., April 12, 1868. S
Peer., 0. 3. WOOD: Dear Sir—Some month or six
weeks ago I received a bottle of your Hair Restorative
and gave ft my'wffe, who concluded to try it on her
lair, little thinking, at - the time that it would restore
.the grey hair to lie original color; bat to her, as well
-ae my surprise,' after a few weeks trial it has performed
that wonderful effect, by turning ail the gray hairs to •
dark brown, at the same time beautifying and thicken
lag the hair. I @Dangly recommend the ahoy, Rego
ranee to all Persons in want of ouch a change - of their
- 011AltLlid OARDZW
New Unit. July 26, 1867.
Pxor. 0.3. WOoD confidence do I recommerd
Tourllair Reetorative as being the moat efficacious ar
ticle I ever saw. Blue using your Hair Restorative
my hair and"whiakers, which were almost white, bare
gradually grown dark ; and I now feel confident that a
few more appliutions will restore them to their nein
ral color. It also relieved me of all dandruff and un
pleasant itching, so common among parsons who per.
spire freely. J. 0. RILBY
Pao,. WOOD :'—About two yeare ago my hair com
menced -falling off and - turning gray; I wee feat be
taming bald, and had tried many remedies to no effect
I commenced using your Restomtive• in January last.
A. few applications fastened my heir firmly, It legan
to ell up, grow out and turned back to Ste former color
(black). , At this time it to fully restored to ire original
color, health; and appearance, and I cheerfully ream
mead ita use to ail. J. D. 11088.
. .
Chicago, 11l May 1,1%1.
The Restorative is put up in bottles of three slaw, Tit
largo, medium, and small. The small holds ball a pint
and retails for one dollar per bottle; the medium holdr
at least twenty per cent more In proportion than the
small, retail. for two dollars parantae; the large bold,
a quArt, forty per oent. more In proportion, mad retails
for three dollars.
0 J. WOOD & 004 Proprietors, 312 BROADWAY,
N. Y. the great N. Y. Wire Rallingllstabliahment,)
and 114 AIARRST Street, St 'Louie, Mo.,
And sold by. all good Druggists and Haney Goode
'Dealers . mrlil.wfm-3m & sow In wltyillm
CARXETS.
we will commence TODAY
OLOSINO OUT
Our entire Boring Stoat or
VELVET AND ND
CARPETINGS,
At
GREATLY REDUCED MODS.
GAILY tr BROTHER,
No. 920 CHESTNUT Street.
Porehseera will please call and exiunine our large
seeortment. . • 5p20.11-
TtgESTRY CARPETS.--JUST OPEN
os line lot of ottperior Tapoistry Corpoto, to
bo odd at a low price.
DAILY
BROTHER
• , CARR CARPET BTdBll,
athol.4l: ' O2O OREBTNUT Bt.
QIIP,ERB THREE-NAY 0 Ek.ft PE T S
A fresh 990ortmont of now patterns, at redacte d
prioee, prioes, at ' DAILY a, BROTHER%
CABH CARPET STORE,
inhat-tf 920 Off HaTNUT Bt,
RED ROOM OARPET B .-10,000 YDS.
of inperlor Ingrain - and Three.-ply Carpets, of the
but metes and styles, at all toeless, from 60 cents to
$1.25 per yard., DAILY & OROTHOR,
No. 020 OH HST NOT street
IRl.a Y HEAVY Bit USSELFS.—A LAIiGE
LP lot of new pattern, in foist, chaste styles, at low
orloeo. DAILY & 0110TfIER,
GUM' °ARM iffo)o,
;c 6 . 104 . 1 -: 020 CRUTISCIT Bt
*.• Simians Cabo.
L. FOWLER,
•' ATTORNEY AT - LAW,
HO us ro , ffir,
H1R9113 000N17, Titus.
Twenty years real dent in Team.
Prompt otttiltion paid to Land Business.
' °IMMO OPPOSITE THE OW OAPITOL.
‘IIUPIIIIII Dole* Inrush Philadelphia
la O. THOMPSON AND G. M. DONAU-
Itop CONVEYANCERS.
4150.14. 065tAliltek ATTORNST AT LAW,
aph-y ", No. 538 AltOtt shoat. below Tooth.
nANTR.L DOUGRERTT, ATTORNEY
ATLAW,f3outhaut OofiLow et NORTH arid . LO
011#,V, Stysets. Pktladelplds.:
, t iOE LES VETE, COMMISSION MEE
}MAIM :and Importer, of IiAVANA BEGAN,
Minrll2B yfillatO 04'014. teepad fitory. auIAY
EMOVAL.=-
. • • 'Cr. 14 WORT
HAIR CUTTER AND WIU MAKER,
Ilia removed to 1028 OHNSTNUT street, row doors be
low IILII I /SINTH. Isd-tr
fil YER BTRO ÜBE, ATTORNEY AT
' , AA LAW. Olitriaistwat,Pottairille. Pa. saA-li
,
UN - lUD' STidES - GOVEnNME NT
• LAND L9CATING AOENCY,
CHICAUO, ILL.
The subscriber; having had Much practical experi
ence In selecting awl locating laude in the various Land
Loistricti ti the Western B'ate, hoe unusual facilities
for making valuable selections for
LAND WARRANTS OR CAM.
Haying ormyors conolootty in the field to make
arsenal examination; he can always make the most
udfcrlduieloestiong,
- - ,
Lands unsurpassed for fertility — of soil and salubrity
of climate; near the line of railroads, may now ho had
lOWA AND . WISCONSIN.
Ba threaten , references given when rrquired.
Ire* Money . invested in Kansas and Nebraeks, awl
any Or the Wotan Btotes.
. - 8. SAT-I9BUILY,
ii/413,11 _ 49 OX,A,RKV 8tn30!., Chicago.
108 • •
OrtiSKS . I".O4T WINE.
NE.
111 all. Pipe/Allearkte do.
• 22 Qr,' do - do ' do,
20 Qr. do' Bberry , do.
Piped Soperior,Ptqatete Wino ,
20 Qt.:Pipe/do • • do.
_ , dD .1( do. do do do.
•
Zelda Ateortod Oorks.
816 Jag Almonds.
,25 ltlberte.
Lending from Brill! , Annotate .Eraello, ,, and for eta
.by A. MERINO,
iitip2742 - - ,140 BOUTI.I IRON? 2trdet.
$10; 1 )00
I I L 43 .; ° B??::Bro A rtli!:e. of City
ty. • Apply to ' A. B. On RVER &
• .1.0.54t* -EL W-. corner and FILBERT.
PURE BONE - DUST, GROUND FINE.—
A retry superior artiele. For isle in large or smell
tote, by _ 0/40AHDALI, POl/103, & CO.,
toy,. ' 104 North Oolowera.avonno.
CHEESE. —195 boxes 'Prim() Herkimer
county, ,inst landing and (or Bale by
0. 0. SADLVII. & 00.,'
Oft Din oNnrtb Wallow atraat.
VoOFT.ICRITDE TURPENTINE.--Just re
k7.lteived a email , lot of Soft Crude Turpentine, of
Bowl And for sale by. • . •
„ W ELVER, & CO,
J.7A° • lebi WATER St, and 22 N. WHARVES
'I.VH OldAotiongsb.,
ii — ONOIOOELA bble.
* Whiskey, Initore and for sale by
• ' • ' • 1.1"1
F1811. , ..;1b half bble. of the cola
y.y •tiraf.4d Detroit Mier 'White Pleb. Nnt received
'end-forsaliby 0.0. RADLER it Co.,
0 Newt)) W A TRR Rtrapt.
MotIONGATIOLA.-18- bide. Burnside's
•• - ; :bla• monivaleis_p_uro Wblelley, just reculved
iuld. Mr by ' ,wlllLial h. t a oN
ik. 1 4, 1 , •:33 , r, . Ana Odtab PROM . _ Bt;
9tgrirniturai
earpetings.
New thlblicatione.
NEW MAGAZINE. .
BRYANT & STRATTON'S 4 ' AMERICAN HER
CHANT' , to now ready, and may be bed at all NEWS
DEPOTS. Their Agent, Capta. H. Dell, le ramming
this city for ye al) mlbserlbers, Price $2 per annum.
Addreen DRYA-4T & STRATTON, elereantllo College,
S E. corner SEVENTH and CHESTNUT Streets,
Phi
ladelphia. my2S-ly
,
' A ()COUNT BOONS, MADE OV TILE
211- bast stock, for city sales. -Call and look over the
stock at PERRY'S
Blank Book Manufabtorl,
joi-2m POURTII and !RAWL
•
DERRY'S BLA_NR. BOOK MAUFAO
- TORY.—Remembor FOURTH and tiAoEdn buying
Account Books. I mnko all my BtOCIG of good material,
and meant fair priced. Je4-2u2
11700000 ENVELOPES, EVERY
style, size, and price. at
O. r. PEERY% Btetionery Establishment.
je4-2m .801JR111 and RAM
BLANK BOOKS, 111/11)B IN ANY DE
YD style of ruling and binding. good as
sortment of Papers for customers to select from, at
Pialltni Blank Book Manufactory,
je4-2,n ' FOURTH and BAO.B.
JAMILY PORTRAIT BIBLES, II AND
BOMBLY bound. Old Bibles rebound, to look end
wear good as new. call and look at the etylei o at
PERRY'S Bookbindery, •
sa4-2nr YOUBTRanditAOS.
FOWLER, WELLS, & 00 , 922
kti'l CHESTNUT titre I. keep etarelard 'm 0
'mks • n
re
Phnology, Phystefogy, Water ()are, end Pho
:fttography, aholusede old setai. Phrettologt•
callrmarnination,.. with charte, and full writ.
tea deeerlptions of character, given day and: even
ing. Cabinet free to visitors. Orders by mail to be
addressed to Yowler, Weill, & CO., 022 Chestnut
'street. JO-await-why t cep $0
Summer Resorts.
110TEI.,
.BEDLOE't 3
ATLANTIC CITY,
NEW Jousgr,
At the terminus of the Railroad, on the left, beyond
the Depot. This House is
NOW OPMN
for Boardora and Tramfont Visitors, and offers accoin
raopationa equal to any llotol in Atlantic City'.
TERMS MODERATE
ttr Partite should keep their Belt] until the care
arrive In front of the natal. Tho signs are con
rptcuoua. Jy2o-1m
QEA BATITING.-Triu MANSION
'," MUM foot of Pennsylvania Avenue. A'P
LANTIO CIF} 5 10 NOW OPEN for guests. For con.
venienco of arrangement. contiguity to the beach, and
attractiveness of tho iutiareut grounda, this House ie
unrivalled. The proprietor bun spared no pains in
making this Unto! all that could bo oceired by vlsiteta.
jyl.lo-110 h. LEE.
AITRiTE
The PROFILE HOUSE, and FLUME 110L'SE, in
the FRA.NCONIA NOTCH, are now open for risitere.
These Houses are of the Orat class, and have :become
the resort of accomplinhed tourinta. They are five
miles apart, on a delightful road, and situated amidat
the boldest and grandest of mountain scenery. The
Profile i a much the 'argent houne at the Mountal no. new,
and replete with the conventencen of modern Piet-clasp
hotels It commends the finest view of Mount Lafay
ette, (which is but little lower than Mount Washing.
ton,) to near Echo Lake, and the Old Man of the
Mountain.
THE "FLUME EOUSE."
situated on s lofty el.vatlon. commands the grande.t
rimier 50 miles down the Pemigewassett Valley. 7he
Plume, the Crystal Cascade-, the Pool, and tho Pasin,
are all within a few minutes , walk of the PLUlctil
HOUSE.
Touristy leaving Phi!adapter' at 10 A. M., can reach
the PLUMB HOUSE, via the Worcester and Na.shun,
awl the Roston, Concord, and Montreal Railroad to
Plymouth, the neat, afternoon, (24 miles 'by atage.) or
they may go vie the IL C. and M. Railroad to Little.
ton. thence by Ave (only 11 miles) to the 'PROFILE
DOUSE, lu the same time. Malls arrive and depart
daily.
Posbofilce address, PROFILE HOUSE or PLUME
HOUSE, Grafton county, N 11
• HIRAM DELL,
Manager of the Profile Muse.
R. H. DUNTON,
Manager of the Flume House.
Par the Flume and Prtunocia Hotel Co.
jy14.411m
fiIINTINGDON WARN SPRINGS.-
The Warm Springs at the base of Warrior's
Ridge, See miles north of Liuntimlon, overlooking
Standing Stone Creek. and environed by romantic hills
and woodlands, have been leased by the former pro
prietor of the L eamer Rouse. The extensive Hotel
Bath [louses, &c., erected at great expense
by General A. P. Wilson, the owner, have been com
pleted, and the groves have been beautifully laid out
and adorned. Tho hotel Parlors and Chambers are
airy and comfortably furnished, and the prospect from
t.ic verandahs for beauty cannot De veoett..d For half
Century these Springs have been celebrated for their
intelicinal qualities, and the great virtue of the Waters
in chronic affections. The temperature of the water is
C 4,4 degrees, and for bathing la delightful and invigo•
rating. In the woods and strewn; game and Soh
abound,
Famous in pursuit of health or pleasure still find
this a mostAlightful retreat ; and its nearness to the
PeroutylvaniMilroeul and its cheapness give it a dscided
advantage over any watering place in the State. The
proprietor boa hod years of experience In the business.
endue pales or trouble will be spared to make guests
comfortable. Hacks run from Uuntiogdon to the
Springs on the arrival of the different Railroad talus ;
fare 25 cents. Families accommodated at moderato
rates.
JOHN It. lIERD, Proprietor.
Went[ Bramas, near I.l.untAnzion, Pa. jyl.lm
BIOANTINE HOUSE, lIRIGAN'IIisTE
Beach, el. J., HENRY D. 13511T11, Proprietor. Thin
large afal elegantly located house in now open for the
reception of visitors.
Terms VI per week or 11.25 per day.
Take care of Camden and Atlantic Railroad ; get out
at the Inlet, where a comfortable boat (Capt Benj.
Turner) will be In reedineal to convey them to the
hotel. Jig
litEA BATHING.*
0 . 7 DELAWARE HOUSE, CAPE ISLAND, N. J.
Thin tinit•eituts and popular House la now open for the
reception of visitor°. Yor health recreation, or pleas
ure, it la unsurpassed by any ou the Inland.
je3o-sw* JAMES AItCRAY, Proprietor.
SEA.-BA.TIIING— OCEAN lIOUSE,OAXE
KY ISLAND, N. J.—Th's welLknorzt" and popular
Hones la again open to receive visitors. It has beau
put in complete order and ovary attention will be given
to guests to make their visit pleasant. The .ttibte will
he abundantly supplied with the luxuries of the ifeLso/1.
Charget toodbiate, to suit the listen.
Jet -owIsMANI, LHAMING, Proprietor.
BATHING,-CAPE ISLAND.-N A•
TIONAL 110TBL in now open. ^Price of Board $8
per week. Children and Bervente half price.
jel943w AARON GARBSTBON, Proprietor.
MANSION HOUSE, DIAUCH CHUNK.—
LTA This elegant establishment, beautifully situated
on the banks at the Lehigh, is now ready for the ramp
tion of summer visitors. There le no locality in Penn
sylvania, nor, perhaps, In the United States, which corn
bins co many attractions as the valley of the Lehigh,
sod 'the above hotel will afford ambSi comfortable borne
to visitors dentinal; of viewing the magnificent scenery,
Inexhaustible mines, or stupendous works of art of this
interesting region.
jet4m* GEOBGB lIOPPEE, Proprietor.
WHITE SULPHUR AND CHALY-
A- BEATE SPRINGS, at DOUBLING GAP, Penn's,
are open as usual, and are. accessible in eight hours
from Philadelphia, by way of narrisburg, thence db the
Cumberland Valley Railroad to fibMille, thence in stages
eight miles to the !brine', whore you arrive at 6 o'clock
the amnia evening. For partleulere, inquire of Manor.,
Morton McMichael, Baronet dart, Jame Wel, B. B.
Janney, Jr , Co., or Proprietors of Merchants' Motel,
Philadelphia. 600/7 COPLB, Proprietor,
jelaml NewTille Post Office, Pa.
,- BEDFORD SPRINGS.-TEUS
woll-linowo, snit delightful Bummer Resort win
be •opened for the reception of Visitors on the 10th of
itine, and kept open until the let of Ootobor.
The new and spentous Buildings erected hat year are
now' fully donipletrd, and the whole establishment har
neon furnished in superior style, awl the accommods.
Mo' will be of a character not excelled in any put of
the United States.
The Hotel will be finder the management of Mr. A
a. ALLEffi Whose experience, courteous mannore, and
attention to hie guests. give the amplest asettrance of
Comfort and kind treatment.
In addition to the other meauc of *deem it le deemed
r y te g r h r
ri tat f e rc y m hagra m me b r t s wg can react: Bedford by
The Company have made eateneive arrangements to
0 11 Pnly dealers and individuals with ‘ 1 Bedford Water' ,
by the , barrel, carboy, and in bottles, at the following
prices, at the Springs, viz :
• Nor a barrel (molbery) $4 00
Do.(oak) 1... 800
).; Do. (mulberry) 800
X Do. (oak) 2SO
Carhop, 10 gallons 2 25
Bottles, .I,ti pint, per down I CO
The barrels are carefully prepared, so that pur
obao:rs may depend upon receiving the Water fresh
and sweet.
All communications should be addressed to
THB B.IDDYOBD MINIMAL /WRINGS UO.,
mylo-tf Bedford County, Pa.
brokers.
A UGUST BELMONT,
RANKIIR,
70 DEAVER STREET,
NM YORK,
Tams Lettere of Credit, avallablo to Travellorn, on all
parte of the world. - leao-thn
nIiONIBE & CO.,
SPECIE AND EXCHANGE DROHEDI3,
•
No. 40 fiouth.TDIND Btroot,
rIttLLUICLPIIIA.
Bator to tho Ems and !Manna of naiad°lphis
.107-1.7
CAA B. MANIAST. W. BROWN. R. braLIMB?, .111
'MANLEY, BROWN, & CO.,
Iva DANA-NOTII,
~BT9AII, AND EXODANGD
DRoleatii,
N. W. corner of THIRD and MIESTNUT Streets,
PIIILADELrIIIA.
Collections made, and Drafts drawn on all parts of the
United States and the Canades, on the moot favorable
terms.
Collections mad° and Drafts drawn on England and
Ireland.
Uneurrent Bank Notes bought. Land Warrants
bought and sold. Dealers in Specie and Bullion. Loans
and Time Paper negotiated.
Stocks and Loans bought and sold on Commission at
the Maud of Brokers in Philadelphia and New York.
jeB-dm
EDWARD R. PARRY, RICHARD IL PARRY,
Notary Publin fOr Commissioner for
Minnesota. Penneylrani& and
New Jersey.
PARRY & BROTHER,
BRWIERB k, GENERAL LAND AGENTS and
OONYPX&NORRB,
FRONT ,STREB7', Ohs HICISORY,
MANKATO, IdINNEBO,I%,
Pay particular attention to losnlog and tweeting
Money for non-residents arid others, and oollaothir
Drafts. Roth &o. Any letters of suornac or bualnesa
ylli, nears prompt attention. Refer to
Wood boon, & 00, Philadelphia.
Dale, Rose, A Maple Phladolphia.
Sharp', Baines:lc Go.. Philadelphia.
Richard Raridolph,Philadolphia.
• Charles Rills & Co, Philadelphia.
Parry A Randolph, Pblladolobia.. suntan*
1 7 1.11LADELPHIA, ' WEDNESDAY. JULY 21, 1858.
Cile I,l,lress.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 21,1858
TORIEIN NIBS IN A:VIENNA:
"It is a common remark that foreigfiera Come
among us, partake of our hospitality, and go
home and abuse us. Certainly it has been the
case with many of those who have published
their experiences; we may say, with the ex
ception of MISS MARTINEAU. ALEXANDER
MACKAY, TYRONE POWER, and JAMES STUART,
universally so. English and French, Germans
and Russians, have alike joined in the cry of
dislike to Americans and AMerican manners.
Let us see What justice there is in these com
plaints against us; for. if it should - turn out
that we are in the wrong, it will be 'our duty
and our interest to reform f but it otherwise,
we shall at least be 'satisfied with ourselves,
eves if our soli Justification produce no effect
on our detractors.
' Our remarks apply principally to the taiu.
cated classes of emigrants and travellers,from
the Old World ; for it would be wasiirg - the
timo of an intelligent reader to dwell
the errors into which the uneducated
and mechanics of Europe are led by tticir
ignorance. Roared mostly in an atmosphere
of squalid poverty and oppression, the • !WM.
'picture to themselves a paradise in We New
World, to which, if they could only escape,
they would realize competence and happiness
at a bound; forgetful or ignorant that the law
of God, if In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou
eat bread," applies as much to the West as to
the East—to mankind wherever found; the
principal difference between the two hemis
pheres being that here a man Is unrestricted
in his movements, may turn his hand to what
ever occupation he pleases, and may carry his
labor to such market as be can find, or thinks
best; while In the Old World, his movements
aro cramped and fettered by law, or custom,
or tyranny, and his moans are kept down by
demands on his purse for taxes, or on his
muscles tiir Military service.
We 'allude, here, more to France and Ger
many than to England, where The latter evil
does not exist. No wonder that when an
ignorant laborer arrives here, and finds that
there aro thousands of other laborers corn
hating with him, and that, to save himself and
his family from starvation, he must take , such
work as he can get, he begins to think be has
not much bettered his state, and that ho might
as well have remained at home. Complaints
of this description in reality amount to nothing
more than a proof that he had not taken the
trouble of previously informing himself of the
state of the labor market here—the demand
and the supply, which regulate the price of
labor. It may also happen that he complains of
a want of his accustomed beer and gin, or light.
sour wine, which our country does not pro.
duce; or he may not have his places of cheap ,.
amusement. Spell! this is no fault of ours
we never prothssed to give him these things;
and we are not sure it would be fur his bentflt
if we could.
The titans found with us by educated foreign.
era are of a different description. According
to some, the system of our civil polity is a Cull
um, and will break down on the first realls
rough trial. Others praise our institutions,
and say they "are excellent in theory, but de.
Teetiv6l4 hen reduced to practice ; that the stuff
tog of ballot-boxes wore than comp. mates for
the license and liberty °fuer( t voting; that the
best men are not elected to tili the brat oftlees it
they "VD" to dtf idxto lid cal
the majority; and that, although religious
liberty is the law of the Lind, yet there exists
tyranny in public opinion which practically
tabooes many sects and excludes them from
society." Another class of observers say
‘‘ that it is not our political but our social furs
tern that they end fault with; that our man
ners are pretentious and vulgar, our women
bold and indelicate, our knowledge superficial)
and our souls engrossed in the pursuit of dol
lars and cents; that crimes go unpunished.
add that there Is little protection for life or
property."
To these and many other complaints a se
parate answer might be given in each case.
and certainly If we are behind the western na
tions of Europe in external polish and in
general acconiplishments and refinement, we
are far ahead of them in other points. We
are not yet overwhelmed with a huge National
Debt that causes the price of everything to be
increased one holf, in order that the interest
on it may be paid. We have no wholesale ap
propriations of the soil by an Aristocracy
whose title to It has been founded In fkawl,
violence, or licentiousness, and under whose
gt cold shadow" the aspirations of those less
fortunate than themselves wither. Every man
is a free voter, and if he does not choose to
be honest, it is the fault of himself and not
of our institutions. The crimes for which we
are pointed at are, In a great measure, the
acts of foreigners and not of Americans.
And if our police bo not quite so expert as
that of France, at least we hate ho etganitt.d
system of spying and prying into a man's do.
mestic and private concerns, his trunks and
drawers, nay his very letters. Nor are our
newspapers clipped and distorted to suit the
dictates of an arbitrary Government, or sud
denly extinguished by the flat elan imperial
Autocrat, or the thivath and bullying of a if.
contious brotherhood of military men.
We can soy what we like, here; ge where we
like, without having to procures license hi
the shape of a passport, wherein we are care
fully describqd, and the motive of our journey
specified—do what we like within the scope et
laws enacted by ourselves for our own guidance
"and government—and profess what religion
we like, without running the risk of tine or im
prisonment, rack or inquisition.
That considerable sensibility on the subject
of religious belief should exist in this coun
try is not surprising when we take into account
the lengths to which speculation in such Mat . -
ters has been carried, so that ono sometimes
cannot say with certainty whether this or that
sect are Christians or not. That our political
system is a failure remains to be proved—we
confideutly predict that it will not bo found
wanting in the hour of trial. That there are
defects in tho administration of it we admit;
but we should be glad to know what human in
stitutions are without faults, or can be main
tamed without blemish. Where, and in what
age, have perfect Institutions ever existed ?
At all events, there is nothing defective in ours
that cannot ho remedied by ourselves, If we
choose, which we make bold to say cannot be
done elsewhere without a revolution.
The alleged shortcomings of our social
system demand a longer notice than wo can
at present bestow on them. We would make
ono general remark, in conclusion, and in de
precation of hostile criticism. It Is simply
this : the refinement of the upper classes of
Europe (we say nothing about their tnor /lily)
is the growth of centuries. It is but eighty
years since wo became an independent nation,
and not half that time since we ceased fighting
the Indian and clearing the cores in these
Western States. La our detractors reflect on
this. But we will not admit that in the ele
ments which unite to make manly politeness
and true refinement the natives of this coun
try are at all deficient. Wherever there is
true manliness of character there will be found
native courtesy, which protects and upholds
all within its reach, and particul a rly
takes the part of woman. • In Europe,
where there is such a boast of refinement,
whore Chivalry and Romance once invested
the fair sex with all claims to a respect which
almost partook of personal devotion, what
have we beheld 7 Women laboring with tho
spade in the field—women holding the plough
—women officiating as grooms in the stables—
women employed in the' most disgusting labor
of spreading manure with pitchforks over the
roughly-ploughed field—women sowing tho seed
in these flolds—women harrowing the newly
sowed grotifid—women cutting down the grass
or the grain, making the hay or harvesting
the corn. Were our eighty-two years of na-
tionality to bo multiplied by twenty, so as to
make us even more ancient and feudal than
the 0141 , 55 t European countries are, Americans
would never be p•rmittod thus to pi y the
role of miserable serfs or half. starved hinds.
The higher quality of European travellers
in this country invariably give a good report
of us. They depart with favorable impres
sions of us, and they often show, in after lite,
that they were thus impressed. Take Lord
DERBY, tbr example, the present Primo Minis
ter of England. He made a pretty extensive
tour through the Uuit.d States. years ago,
When he was a young man, and he has invari
ably been wail affected towards us, p.ditically
and socially, during the whole Period of his
public life, covering a epee of more than
thirty years. When the recent cloud arose
between America and England. what mainly
contributed to its dispersion? Lord DERBY'S
intimate knowledge of this country, its re
sources, its people. the knew (no one bet
ter) that our institutions exactly fitted us to
be deadly enemies or useful friends. He pre
ferred that concession which would conciliate,
but PALMERSTON and RUSSELL ; who knew no
thing of us, would rather have bad recourse
to war.
The higher the status of intellect and rink
of those who visit us, the more favorable their
estimate. Good manners aro mach the same
everywhere, and the Duke of Davonsulan's
son, who is now in this country, will proba
bly admit, if ever be get a night's hospitality
in a log-cabin in the "Far West," that the
true courtesy of humanity is to be found
there, while it is vainly looked for in the
gilded drawing-roomy of Arietocricy and Roy
alty. Plain, democratic cimericans as'we aro,
we do not shrink from the severest criti
cism which properly-gm:Med persons may
conscientiously make. We believe that our
nature/ tttlnement far surpasses the artificial
refinement of the highest European society.
CURIOUS NEWS FROAI FRANCE.
[Correspondence of The Press 1
PAVAN, AII ()RAND VOTEL Du LOryltlC,
Jim) 17, 18.58.
To the student of history and observer of cur
rent events it is daily growing more and more ma
n'fest that Eu.ope is verging upon a continental
annvuleon. Whilst the saeondary Powers are en•
grossed in their customary avocation, of industri.
°ugly robbing their respective people. those of th,
first clams are erg mining a robbery of their neigh
b ire, by a grand, wholesale, and tremendous raz
sta. The portents of the political firmament, in
my judgment, are not to be mistaken. &Hellen
with prophetic misgivings, at the date of the Ira.
perial trite-a•ldte at S'uttgardt lest year, I bays,
witnessed nothing since then whioh has not con
tributed largely to confirm and fortify them
Emperors, be assured, do not meet for trivial pur
poses—something more POSIOUS is to be trantinc'el
than dining or riding on horsebaok. It will b.
remembered, also, when Count de Morn, returned
from St Petersburgh. after having prevailed upon
the Cc•tr to bold this conference, shot lonia Nap).
loon gave him a dota'ion Of two millions of franca.
and the richest service of plate over bestowed upon
an ambassador!
This alone, as an expreseion of Imperial exalts
tion, wan eminently symptomatic, and should hue,
,wakened the gravest 81111131ECS on the part. of Et.•
repeals state-mon. In point of fact, it passed with
out eliciting the slightest hoed.
The Interview between these monarchs appeared
to have been harmonious. If it were to, then, de
pond Islam it, a compact, of no ordinary import Into
entered into. the results of which may largely and
, erre-meetly lovelyo the prefoundeet interests ~ t
ihe civilized world. This compeer, al'bough touch•
•rg the only question which could adequately it •
.dace or explain so remarkable an interview, is.
h terror. not a new one. Looking book to the
rimes of liiapoleon I, we can readily discover the
to•lalt
hoes fidelity with which his plies , is being re.
enacted by Napoleon 111.
In 181/7 on the raft of the Niemen, the E,nperor.
of the tam^ P..•wers held a similar conference. A
dmilar covenant was struck, but which. from it
3.l3lTaletalloll of subeequent events, led at that time
to no conelusions. Now, however, (being utrus
barrweed by any visible canoes to mar its execu
tion.) it pi eatises not only en early and
ids, maturity, but has already made prodigious pr.-
term. In July of the present year, with en cello
that will amaze the ,rOll.l, it will, in all proba
bility. attain its eonsumum .
This subterranean and unsuspected misohlefie too
,thor than a simultaneous descent by France and
Rosh upon their respective neighbors; England
being the obj=et of attack on the one hand, anti
Turkey on the other. Neither event could moue
independently ; they are twin atrocities, and MOP,
live or die together. In view of the Europear
balancoof power, they aro mutually a prim) and
compensation for each other.
For two hundred years Russia has been anxiously
struggling fora frontier upon a summer see, whore
her maritime interests might expand, and her
commercial relations with the civilized world be
profitably cultivated, Her vest material resource,.
are at present, for six menthe together, locked up
',tad congealed within her arctic harbors, so on
plastically to bo almost useless The Meek sea is
but a fish pond. home insignificant merobantmen.
o ith a few marines on board, are all the ambiance,
of a navy whioh ehe euetains upon its waters It
to the joalotte and domineering selfishness' or tog
land (who.io flag ridee trintephently over every
see) which bas mainly reduced her to this condi
tion, anti which atilt confirm it. Hence the rooted
tntagenism between these two Powers, and hence.
also, the intelligible account of the first conference
between the Preisoit and Russian Emperors, at
given by Allison. in his History of the Promsh Re
volution. In chapter xxxiv he says:
France had nothing to demand of Russia, ex
cept that she should close her pores against Eng
end; Russia, nothing to ask of France- hut that
she should wi•hdt aw her armies from Poland, end
emetic the Emperor to pursue his tong-eherieerd
p' -ejects of contjuesta iii Turkey " *
- When the interview occurred, "I hare the Eng
list)," acid Alexander, "as much as you do, anti
am ready to second you in all your •enterprises
Nga i ne t them." "In that vise," said Napoleon,
"everything will be easily arranged, and peace is
already mode."
Ilore the whole subject Is ha a nut-shell! The
301.1filteillea at Stuttgardt last year was nothing
else than a resuscitation of this drama, destined,
probably, to bo darker in its consequences then
the darkest plot of any tragedy. Look also at itF
late results. First, the East Indian insurrection.
;jointly insligated by Palm and Russia,) to dress
off nearly every practised soldier, and half the
g eota f England; then, (to diyide her attention
and loop betimes employed,) biakeringsbetWeen
the English and the natives at Sierra Leone and
the Qapo of Good Rope; then, the rupture with
Chins having the same offset; then, turbulent
irritations all over Ireland, (the prelude to a
general commotion); then, as soon as the late
ness af the Russian spring permits, the marclitaw
of en7rmorts bodees of her troops towaerts South
',A Russia, and into Poland, under the ilpeolous
guiseof trouble with Ciroassin, or in the Danubian
Ptincipalitios, Over all this, us a general mask.
on the part of Russia, is thrown the convenient
cover of the agitation attending the pretended
liberation of her serfs, whilst simultaneously (by
sonata strange but felicitous contingency) nth
moud Poch t, the only naval °Meer of Turkey, with
I knowledge of his profession, is spirited away to
the 'Gaited States!
Ou the port of France, things are leis visibly bu'
more industriously Accelerated. She has now,
wider arms, perhaps the best-appointed army that
Samoa has ever witto sod, of unknown numbers.
but offoially admitted to amount to full five hun
dred thousand man! Every fort in France, by
general orders, has lately been dismantled of it ,
Artillery, professedly in order to repine() it with
be'ter but in feet to cover tho transfer of enor
mous thatetiall to those points from which they
could be most expeditiously convoyed to England
A movable railway, for counpmrtillery use, has oleo
been brought into ploy. With the aoldtors it is a
subj••ot of daily practice, end can bo taken np and
Laid down again—wilco in length—in the inttrvol
of a few minutes. At the same time, every dock
yard in the empire resounds with preparation,
and the navy in put upon a war footing. In the
month tfJulY, moreover, the Enver°, risir . r fi n /.
s an d an d Brittany, and holds a cc/ebration at
ClierbOarg—wherobv bangs a tale ! But England
perceives not this; it bon no meaning for her
That sash should be the foot can scarcely, perhaps,
ocoasion tartish astonishment, when her incredible
obtuseness tipot another subjrct is considered,
which is not only remarkable for its plenitude of
meaning, but which is likewise the rot incitation
of an ominous event of the first Empire, bearing
with full and formidable significance directly upon
her fate.
Those who know how to read, and have oven a
limited turn for politico, 11 remember the al
leged attempt, in the year 1800, at the assassina
tion of Napoleon 1, by an explosion of powder in
the streets of Paris. They will remember. also,
that the agents and actors in this attempt remain
ed forever hidden in impenetrable mystery.
The Government openly proolalmod that all the
efforts of their pollee had been in vain, no olue
to the 488488111E1 having ever transpired'. The
Emperor was g dog to the opera, through the Rue
Nicaise ; an overturned veldt's obstructed the
way. Ills coachman contrived to pass it, when
immediately afterwards a fearful dotoration was
heard, and forty-six houses were damag•td by a
furious exploeion. Eight persons were killed.
twenty-eight wounded, and a general consterna
tion &Muted throughout the oity.
Aeperimtly, this was a diabolical attlek upon'
thu existence of the Emperor. In point of feet, it
wen nothing else than a more ton,' d'etat, au
floriz,d Ay hinttef, anti contrived by Fount - it, his
Chief of Police No circumstances are wanting to
demonstrate the troth of this seemingly extrava
gant assertion. Yet even the British Govern
ment treated the trans lotion as a real event The
simplicity of the inexperienced might naturally
demur to the possibility of eredlting such a dam
nable atreoby on the part of the Govornment or
Er ince: but that the British Parliament and the
British Ministry should not have known Netter, is
certainly a marvellous display of political inge
nuousness. No stories of human depsavity ever ap
proximate(' to the dismal infamy which stains the
history of the French police. Psrjury, assassina
tion, the most perfidious treacheries—these are their
daily and hourly nets—compared with many of
which, such a coup d'e - nt (murderous though it he)
is little short of an angelic virtue. But look at
the fmsta Fouehis sus Minister of Police—a
wretch in whose inhuman bosom all that in fml in
human turpitude attained to its uttermost putri
dity ; truth, juctice, morality, humanity itself, all
were gone; nothing remained with him hut Inexo
rable selfishness. lie it was that uttered that im
mortal infamy, that the judioial murder of the
Doke D'Engbien'•was coarse than a crime—it mac
a blunder."
Avoor.ling to Allison, when the courtiers (after
this gunpowder-plot) surrounded Napoleon I, at
the Tuileries, ho exclaimed.: ' This Is the work
of the Jacobins. Neither the nobles, priests, nor
ohouarm had any hand in it. I know on what to
form my opinion, and it is in vain to .se‘k to make
me alter it--it is the vtembrisers," ho
A general a:astern at summary arrests, imprison
ment., executions, and transportations w is imme
diately decided upon. and lists of the proscribed
Atere laid baforo the Imperial Council for appm
mil. Napoleon said to them, " This step - is
grounded upon considerations independent of the
'ate event. It only furnished the occasion far
outting them in foroo. Those who ore included
in the lists will bo transported for their %hare in
the massneres in the prisons en S2ptember :21; for
their amtalon to the Jacobin remit on the slot or
Map ; for the consoiraoy of Dibmuf, and all that
they have done since that time. Snob a step would
h tee been necessary wifhont the ron.spirary, but
, ve mat avail ourselves of the enthusiasm it has
excited to carry it into execution! !" Alt this
infernal wickedness was managed and exeouted by
Fouche, and made him Duke Of Otranto.
That an English historian should have noted
these events; that Euglleh students and states
men should hove perused them, and that the sub•
ject should have stood before the world for over
half a century, and that yet not a solitary En
lishman should have been able to detect their
n spare n t meaning, is certainly the most mar•
vollous indication of simplicity to be found on
record
The signill rant language of the Emperor in
Council is insusceptible of misconstruction. It is
the unqualified assertion that this so-called oon
rpiraoy was a political bena tof the first close, and
that ho would tolerate no interpretation of it but
:hat which was dictated by himself, "that it was
the Jacobins," ,to.
It supplied the warrant be so much needed, of
weeding out of France, under the spot:into name of
outer, humanity, tend law, every bold, restless,
:lead turbulent intellect, which had pronounocd at
the polls against the institution of the Empire-;
ter be it remembered that the voting in Franca is
viva men, and the meowelope voter against ty
ramp is thus caused to record his own condemna
tion upon the very lists that registered his vote.
Atl this Imperial villainy has been reproduced
to-day. The affair of Orsini—the moo...lied: opera
;louse conspiracy, of January last—was titer mere
.ontrivrinee of the Government. It was so care
adjasted as to have placed all personal risk
- id - the p.,rt of the Emperor, as a matter of c-arsc,
andrely out of the qmstion. Indeed, his rh,er
vegeta in the Imperial bra, at the opera, imme
diately afterwards, to Pietrl, the Prefect of Police.
and which were subsequently heralded with studied
eormality in the illoniteur, only too plainly be
tray the mendacity of the omoial accounts. and
that the entire affair was were acting. When
Pietri was detailing the various circumstances,
that they bad arrested Radio in possession of
a shell ; that in a few minutes more they would
have anticipated the disaster," etc., ota—t•ln other
words," interrupted the Emperor, " The police of
P iris, is by far the poorest of any city mon the
Continent "
I. is scarcely necessary to say that this remark
`57,1 , a ontuoioug, premeditated, and abject fal-e
-hood, uttered for political i.ffiet, and with the
certain knowledge that no city in the world has
ever had, or probably ever will have, a body of
police so vigilant, ao wicked, or so awfully ver-ed in
the sinuous relies of kingereft, as the city of Paris.
The propagation of the falsehood, however, was
deemed necessary, and it was acoording'y dissemi•
noted with itligense throughout the press of the
Empire and the world.
The victims of the guillotine in this pretended
scene have, moreover, never been authentic zted•as
the veritable Orsini and Piorri, who were the
nominal actors in it. The time of the exeoutioa
was day-break; the conviots were veiled, the
itublio kept far aloof by a cordon onilitairo, and
the few second/1 intervenieg between the unveiling,
mei the execution too brief to allow of the posah
bility of their identitlaatioa. As a final and colt
elusive demonatintion that this was a pure con
trivance of the Government, the ranee of the vic
tims (most probably convicts) were disfigured with
,ulphuria acid after death, in order (at the pretence
was) to defeat attempts to daguerreotype them,
test they should become objects of exalting in
terest with the rpulace t ! In short, official re
porta, by the participro criminis themselves, ore
all the light the pubro have been ablo.to obtain
But to doubt that the French police are 'capable of
imorruities like these implies a hitherto Unfa
miliarity with their recorded history. To the in
credulous, however, the memoirs of Vidocii, late
chief of pollee of the city of Paris. (and wife, on
his own showing, bad boon condemned for nearly
every oTitne known to the laws,) es also the " Dix
Ans " of Louis Blom are at rennously COM mend,d
The Inhuman and toity of this coup d'etat i f r ee I
term the pretended assassination of the Rue le Pel le
tier)was applied by Louis Napoleon to the same poli
tical ends whiob had been comutumated by Napo
leon I. Innumerable proseriptior s, arreste, impel
-onments, transportations, and executions were im
mediately enforced throughout the Empire; and--
tronebery of treacheries—his old republican con
stituents were the vietime! itepoblioanlarn west:mir
ed, collared, and incarcerated ; and so far as the
strength of Coo Government could go, was not only
stigmatised with the assassination, liitt Ms literally
annihilated. The occasion was also employed fee
it had been by Napoleon I) ass pretext for bully
ing his neighbors, particularly England ; for get
ting up en imposing State trial there ; for malign
ing them as a nest of conspirators and asseasing ;
for disseminating throughout his army an ineradi
cable rancor 'spinet that psoplo, as a much-desired
and indispensable preitubotry to an organized
attack upon theta.
In the midst of all this. the sceptered assassin
amuses the English with the empty scheme of
Thome: de Osmond, for tunnelling the British
ghannel—a Pollens° whiciiiin the end, will prove to
bo more genuine gammon than the notes of the
learned Theban who is said to have proposed it.
And yet, to the unspeakable amazement of men of
aenae hero, the English Government takes up this
canard and eensidera it in EOTIOUB earnest
To crown all. and to demonstrate that the Eng
lish are certainly smitten with judicial blindness,
comes their late suicidal nosertion of the right of
search. Myriads of stoves. captured by Prance in
her recent military operations in the Kong Moun
tains of Africa, aro shipped ,o America, under the
title of epprentines." A few of these ore intro
delete!, by daring apeoulators. into the State of Mis
sissippi. Proofs of the fact (systemtvically pro•
vided) are adroitly fnrnielted to the British
Government, accompanied by a resolution to re
open the slave trade, read by stratagem before the
Legislature of Louisiana. England. absurdly sen
sitive upon this point, and prepsred to credit any
thing, is then assured that the slave-Erode in the
Southern States, on en enormous scale, is actually
going on She falls into the trap, and believes it
all ! Upon such a subjoet, mere suspicion is enough.
cruisers ore forthwith commended to arrest
and search every American vowel in those waters
Henan, the clamor whioh has smung up in " the
Sates" in that connection, and whieh must lead
(as it wag Intended to load) to the total alienation
of our eympathtes from her, at this most critical
juncture in her affairs. But the ancient adage
seems now to ho inscribed on her escutcheon,
" Quern Dens vult pordere,prius dementat "
Before the ides of August the world will ring
with startling none. Turkey will have disappear
ed. Ireland will be in open insurreotion. Three
hundred thousand Frenchmen, with war cries of
Waterloo and St. Helena, will be busy in the seek
of London, and her glory of a thousand years will
he pushed to the brink of ruin, and possibly may
pass away. Should not this fetal bolt belaunched
at her soon, halt naked as she stands before her most
redoubtable antagonist, the puisaant atm of Pro
vidence itself mutt be visibly outstretched for her
protection, I am yours, reepeotftely,
VITERBO.
TWO CENTS.
FROM ATLANTIC WTI'.
[From our OorresponOut, GlraYbcardA
AVANTie emir, 4db , 19, 1858
It is with less intention of A - Staling a model,
than of furnishing
. an incentive fine . the uninitiated
realer. that I here wpm, delineating. in brief,
the more prominent; features of in; short trip to this
'pleasant see-side resort. in company - with about
four hundred and rtinetyozinmother Philadelphians
in general, and a few select personal friends In
particular, I left the f.etiof Vineistreet wharf on
Saturday at 4 P. M., via a ate imbruit. whiob
brought up en a 8.1.nd-bur in the Delaware on . her
way over, affording tfio crowd of passengers on
hoard a rare bit, of steamboating experience, and
detaining them in their presage about one minute
'anti thirty seconds.
Bonn tiro were all comfortably seated in a train
cent-attain; no leas than nine wall-filled passenger
rare, on tine way over the Camden and Atlantic
Riilroad, passing - one of the sixty-mile pi•sts
along the route about every three minutes. It is
a fret, which a wise, and ilisorizninating commu
nity, as ours emphatically is, will not foil to ap
preciate, that In the management of this' road the
entire safety of' poop's:rpm' is consulted, rather
than the debiting advantages that. might result
fr m attaining an incline speed. To any one
acquainted with the topography and agrieeltural
revalues of New Jersey, the fact is apparent
enough that the laying out of this road was noi
intended to exhibit to very flattering advant.tg
the character of our glorious little .sweet.potate.
pooch, and water-melon sister State. Still, not
withstanding the road Passel; mainly thriergh the
sarab:wood and huckleberry regions, there are nit
wattling some 'points of pleasing interest to the
traveller; in making this flying trip across the
Jersey sands. Woodbury. Weymouth, and other
points along the line, are among 'the pleasantest
country villager in the land; and if evefone.bilf
of the grand aspirations of the embryo,' "Great
Egg Ilarbtx City," with its imaginary,avenu.s
cutting at right-angles an incaloulable number of
equate miles, is realized, the Camden and Annuli°
R ,ilroad may yet be destined to pass cientraitt
through the meet wonderful metropolis of the
Weste,u world, with New York and Philadelpith
among the most respectable of its suburban ere
virona
Everyone parsing over the read at this writing.
and moat likely for several days to come, trill not
fail to appreciate the advantages of railroading
through a huckleberry country. The Obit to
which I refer partioularly is the statian where
the 'halting train becomes suddenly inhndated
With rill , od of juveniles of either sex. hearing in
their baeketo choice speoimens of the berry afore
said, neatly done Up iii little paper sacks contain
ing less than half a pint each, and left open at the
top to make the exhibition as seductive .to the
palate as possible. In the few minutes allowed,
this youthful gang of fruit mereltaiiti Sid time
to make a complete tour of the train, annonno.
ing their object euphoniously as they trot along;
in the 61t•ropeated interrogatory, " Buy lnehuekle
berry ?—five cents a paper." The next minute the
train is on its way, and not the least of tlni, advise
ta,tes of thin huckleberry episode is found in the
material for conversational comment it bite afforded
the passengers as they discuss the oontentsiof their
little sacks. In most oases, the finest berries are
found at the top. a circumatance which one of the
arching, on being questioned, sagaciously attributed
to the fact that the "big berries were always the
last to ripen 1" The incident here described oc
curred near the " Longaeoming" station, although
I may add that the train is not so long in 66ming
to it from Philadelphia as vice versa.
The hotels here on Bairerday evening were
crowded to overtlowing—so)nuch so, indeed, that
Graybeard was by no means the onlydistinguished
individual obliged to make the four of:nearly
all the houses on the Island before finding ecooln
meclations—l any island, my only authority for
doing so being, that upon an expedition it die
()every I found it to be surrounded - by water. We
aro now comfortably, snugly, and wholesomely
,quartered at Bedloe's, in the upper part iof the
town, and fiad "mine boat" a moat obliging - and
substantial caterer for keen, salt-air appetites;
wo expect to return to the city by the train this
evening. Oar 19etlo party have
.enjoyed the
etweizinipiring - sight of old ocean, his briny
embrace, and big invigorating breath ama
zingly, and are resolved that an occasional trip
to Atlantic City rhall in future bo set down
as a constitutional necessity. • Contrasting this
place wish Cape May as resorts merely, the rela
tive moil's of each, if weighed in our bedtime,
would fall in favor of the latter, although there
ere isolated features here which are in themselves
superior. Elpecialiy is this true in point of Shrub
bery, and the blissful absence hitherto of mos
quitoes When, however. we take into account
the relative facilities of quick access to these two
popular points, Cape Island does now, and Always
will. full behind in the race, se far as regards cur
own people. Thus far, what I have seen bf At
lantiO City irdpresses me favorably. The rhudne
it enjoyment and pastime is relatively more than
usually rational.
There is loss excessive drinking—less disgusting
familiarity between the sexes—less disgraceful
night carousing—loss exhausting and oontanii
n.aing fastionablenessof all sorts, and muchtmore
sensible devotion to the health-giving sport*, pro
=tient among whieh I may name robing and
sailing. Yesterday, being the Sabbath,. was
passed with a degree of proper recognition oP the
sanctity of the day, quite beyond what in My ex.
parieisoo has been usual under similar &num-,
states*. The churches were :all filled, morning
and evening, and the daily nrayer-meetinge ishich
profes,ing Christians have had the faititfttlnes
end courage to bring here with them, are being
well sustained by our most respeotable merchants
and professional men— Between this spiritual
salt, tho savor of labial is thus bning,preseyved,
and that all-important antiseptic quality 4 old
Neptune the sojourners at Atlantis City ought,
one should think, to experience a very general
and harmonious recuperation in every respect, and
which the writer trusts may be their lot.
FRONI 131.41tt COUNTY.
Correnpoodonco or Th. Presol
HOLLIDAYSBURG, July 19 1868
Among the many newstetters il'oh I havo rend
in your paper, I don't know that I have seen any
from-this portion of the country; and it is certain.
ly too valuable and interesting a portion a' the
State for Philadelphians to remain ignorant Of.
I have not bone in Hollidaysburg since 1.848,
when the packet-boats were in use; since then
there have been many changes, both in town and
country. The town now lies about six miles senth
of Altoona, and is connected therewith by
yail
road; time, twenty minutes; fare, twenty-five
cents; and when the company so alters the road as
to enter Altoona above the town, the time will be
reduced to fourteen minutes. Having spent ileum
time at the AileghenylKoun tan lleultle Institute,.
at Cresson, I determined, in my return to Altoona,
to go over to Hollidaysburg. Altoona is the amiss
depot of the Pennsylvania railroad, and Is inhabi
ted principally by dikes of the company, wink
men in the shops, aid such tradesmen and shop
keepers as are necessary for the convenience of
those classes of people. With the exception of the
hotel, with Mr. Miller, Ungentlemanly proprietor,
and the shops, the town presents few objects of in
to-est.
On approaching HJllidaysburg, however, (the
county sent.) there is quite a change in the tip
pomace of things. The country (pane oat beau
tifully, lacking the sterile, uncultivated appear
once of the neighborhood of Altoona; the eye is
greeted by fine farms, green hills, yellow grain
fields, and enure , farm houses. The palatial resi
dences of Elias Baker and James McClellan, Esqs.,
as seen from the cars, also give evidences of; the
tipproaoh to an older settlement, and of refined
taste.
As you approach the town you are attracted by
the glare of the furnaces, and hundreds of auk°
ovens; you aro told that they are coke furnaces;
that they each tarn out over a hundred tons of me-
tattala week; and that. notwithstanding the hard
times, they hove continued to make non during
the entire financial revulsion, only stopping for
necatstiry repairs.
An you walk up the street toyour hotel, you are
surprised to see that the burgheiS U3O gas You
'alto a room at the " Exchange," eat a hearty
supper, and shortly retire to a clean, well-furnish
ed chamber, and sleep—sleep well. undisturbed by
noise, heat, morquitoca---and awake thoroughly re
frothed.
Why is it, Mr Press, that in all your not-ces of
pletwant pieces for summer visiting, in sue good
oil State, you hove all omitted to locution Belli
' daysburg? I have been here a week, and a more
delightful ono I have seldom ever spent. It has
nOrnetions that few other towns in this past of the
State have. It is situated a short digs] , ea from
the eastern elope of the Alleghenies, on the Juniata.
It enjoys a very pure air, and itt remnrkable f r
Its healthful effects upon invalids who sojourn het e
for any length of time. The drives out of town are
truly splendid One can live h.s choice of two
plank roads, or two macadtaniand roads, besides
pleas.ant country roads. The rood which lends to
the Allegheny mountain is very ti.se, shoundieg
in all that is romantic and plotarelue. This road
lends directly to Cresson , and to god all the way
About half way, or seven miles from llollidays
burg, in the house of Mr John Fees a well-kept
house. The mountains tower up grardly on each
side. In the yard is a trout pond, v,ith feudal, g
playing, and the speckled beauties sporting in tho
clear waters. This place is fa moss for its oof at
mosphere, cold mountain water, end treat suppers.
Another magnifieent drive is over the 's)ulk road.
to Leouceravilte, also famous for gnat hot suppers
This rood 0r00 . 04 and winds along the side of it
ritbre, havirg the veservoir, a large ar, e,
on iho loft. The scenery aloha this raid is t•x_osi
site. I know of no more beautlful drive lu Central
Pennsylvnnia, and the Hollidaysburgers may well
be proud of it.
There are also other delightful drives, such as
M0,f1, 6 6 TU VOItisrepONISWITAI.
CtOrupOide f its for 1 MB! Pius" illtplosse beer tel
Wed the hillceiing tithe
livery tommaideation most be setoropanied by the
name of the writer. In order to ininre aorreetnesa of
the tylemo ns pography, but one aide of a sheet Awed be writ. '
As be grsatlyObllged h . ...gentlemen in Penneyhe
- vanheatuf opts, States for contributions gi - vlng the co*
rent news of the day in their particular looalltiee, thei
rasoarees of the surrounding country, the increase of
population, or anrinforination that will be interesting
to thOgensral reader.
that to Fling's spring, in the Cove, through a
beautiful section of country ; also tone Williams
burg Springs, or to Martinsburg, where is looa'ed
the County Normal School,•or to Altoona, over rho
plank mad. or along the Jun:ata, Any cf them
driver would be a most delightful and Ltealthfut
exeursion to sojourners at Conidsysburg.
Why is it that the Pennsylvania Railroad do rot
inette their excursion tickets to this point. as the
railroad terminus of the route to Bedford ? There
is a fine road from here to Bedford. and fide facili
ties Tor making the ride ',hank by way of good
coaches or carriages front the extensive stables of
Johnston & Gibbs, whom I SA to be very kind
and obliging There
have been several parties
who have gone to Bedford this summer from Pitt
burgh, who have preferred this route. because of
the high and dangerous trestle work on the Moth
tingdon anti Broad Top nonfood. Once travelling
over it has satisiled.the writer.
The _population of Hollidaysburg is about flee
'housand, and no writer, during his enjourn hum,
has found the society to be' large, and of a mo 4
pies sing chanoter, and, as S general thing, a high
degree of intelligence prevails_ -The lathes are
numerous, word looking, and accomplished. M my
of them are good singers and tine performers on
the piano; and, by the way, Mi. Editor. I was
never in a town of itis sin in my life that bad
so many pianos In it - ao this, nor of such excellent
quality.
There is also considerable enterprise. They ha'r
two large firunee, two ext.:Man founaries. wOrffie
fir 'manufaistnring ita-eninee; aswork, a
large steam.grist-mill, e with m an g other g in proce s te of
emotion which will nee Clark ' s new inven
tion, which I reconeet seeing in Pemberton wart,
Philudettibla also, fmtones for matuf. , eturing
b irrele, brooms, ropes, paper, iron Merril:unto,
rho., 'As They do a heavy businses in pig metal,
iron ore, coal, grain, fientrAumber. ko 'They have
two offices of discount and, deonet., and • he Cen
tral Bonk of Pennsylvania. recot,tly put c in • pers
tion, is located bere. lb short, when 'ern's" nee
'Told. it is a very thriving town, and Philadelphia.
provtaliste could not do better, when im
e, then tarntheir attention to the rein urns
of thisinighborhood.
What nail I sap for the polities of Blatt. county?'
A large portion of tha'lletnocraey are theithdly
onti.Lecorrititrin, and the course of Douglas, Win,
Forney, and others, meets with their teeny op
proval. The nominations of the People's Concern.
tion have gives general satiefeetion hero is, tit it
patty, and - I tun, indeed, fearful of the "We of , mr•
use) , in this State next fall,- unless nue Mir g be
done in time. -
There are.several aspirants for the Democrat 6
nomination fa. Congressman In this district It is
said' to ' lia between Mi. Pershing: of Caulk*
Judge Itimtnell, of Somerset, (relative of Jud g e
Blacb,) and Mr. Hanka, of this town, all of wh• se
proclivities, it, is said. are Lessompton, except tee
former, who is decidedly .antl-Lecomplen The
opposition candidates for neminatien any M Cot
via and Mr. Blair, Republicans, and hr lott - dle,
:rho is raid to be a oonservative Whig. asti-Lt
oompton, end a tarifitrnen. They are all eitIL.LB
of this place. This district is composed of
Huntingdon. Cambria, and Somerset. Blair it
said, is untitled to do nomination.
But, Mr. Press I fear I am trespassing upon
your space; and I would not have done a, 7 1 . 1. did
net wish to tell Philadelphians hrtir much pleased
I wee widt nollidaysbutg and her citizens; and
have not told yt n the half of the Interesting nb
jeetsof this locality. Thelegend of Chheney Reek
alone (s'favorite, resort here for pie -nice) would
afford material enough for' a 'isharming romantic
talltyand the traditions concerning the unexplored
cave near town, are delightfully entertaining.
' As en item of interest to 'mueiciatte, I must not
forgot to say that the.young men here have or
ganised a new brass hand, with Mr. H.S. Pantries
as leader (a musician of -Wine distinction in this
port of the State.) They have about twelve or
fif
-teen Germtin silver instruinenta made to order by
the celebrated firm of ffithe & Company, Massa
ohnsotta. •
In &few days I will return to Cresson; and, with
n week there, will return to the city of Brotherly
lovo. Neat year put me down for a month in this
neighborhood, and whoever mimes to Holliday"-
burg, though there are plenty of accomuoations
at 'the Other hotels, be will nevertheless find
Russell Wingate, of the "Exchange," a most cle
ver and obliging landlord. Yours very truly,
PiiiteDit.rata.
GENERAL .NEWS.
A horrible nmrder has, been' recently dove.
loped at °nitro, a malt town in Central
A man, mimed Taloon, was engaged 'in fanning
operations laat fall, wirh *Mx. Stanley, from Port
land, Me. &Brley disappeared some time in Sep-
Weber. end it was reported by Talcott-that he had
pme to Chicago, and ,englgod In business. His
eentirine.d absence, coupled with the fact that Tal
cott hat appropriated to himself all of. Stanley's
nrsporty. even to his clothing. eroueed suspicion.
Ileteotivas were put on The track: and Parch made
for Stanley's body, whiolt woe found buried in a
slough, near' the cabin forMerly. occupied by the
parties. Tateett ban been unbend; and has con
fessed the murder. Stanley was evidently zhot„
and afterwards beaten on the hild, his"skull being
broken in several places Talcott assigns no cause
for the act, except that his victim .bld called hint
a "liar," and ho would tint' brook such an
Wo see by the Wilmington (Delaware)
Repvblieae that several horses have d ed the pest
month from effeetion of the head, canna by a
secretion of matter which finally filled up the pus
sage of the throat so as to prevent 8 , 7'1110%111g
either food or water. The disease is one that h.tt;
firs the skill of the best farriers. Red the hooka
are consulted In vath for a remedy. We bey,
ard of but one horse recovering which ants
all:toted with this disease.. Within theorist month
George W. Monde) , and George Lodge, of Brent
dyw , ne Efut.dred, havcseach lost a horse from this
disease; J: mss Morrow. of Wiltnington, ,ono.
and James (Peanden, of New Castle punched, his
pair of carriage horses.
Charles King, wbo bad been aentonoed to
eighteen pears imprisonment for an assault with
intent to kill a policeman, owapel from the Myy
kud poitontiarr on Sunday right. The convict
is now twenty six. years
.of age, and of genteel
appearance. lle was born in Oneida county. Now
)(ark, is five feet nine inches high. with fair com
plexion, dark hair, hazel eyes, and his face id
slightly marked—the effect of rmall•pox, He is
an expert burglar, and'a desperate man when Ha
ble to be iitte7ted.
The dwelling house of Dr. George W. Hal
deman. in Liverpool, th 4 e.dlector of State and
county 'axes for Manchester townsltlp, York
eranty, Pa., was broken into on the night of ti a
14th ,risr , nd robbed of al 500 in bank bit's. a
ot•erk for t2Ol ort,tbe York. Bark drnwn by Jobn
Brit linger in favor of George W. Haldeman, sod
a silver witob
In Quarryville, Ulster county, N. Y , a
analmota, name OUTIVD1)1101' l{e{ib9Tstc4 o
sto.t James Clary'defel, z ePor, teniinding him or
iome 'pre iew"d,f nlrr bet4oin them. There
ofwore whuarry isper. , of iynobing Lawless Nitheleople
Q
GnArrealD
Rev. W. C. Barnett. a nntive of Chamhern
,wg, Pa , died recently - et Itnnhernia, °bin, in the
75rb year of We are. the reverend g , ntlemar ?
NI/$64 reared in Virginia, and served ne a volunteee
in Capt. Manneran a cranpany at the defence of
Cm thive, In 1814
The Northern Central Railway Company
hna constructed a new midge across the Sns g ne_
hanna, nine, miles above fisreisbarg. It is 3,814
feet long, and divided into nineteen spans. 1 , is
built on the prineiple of McCallum's inflexible
arched truss.
A petition to tin) Postmaster General ban
been got up at Knoxville. Tcnnca•co, reque•q. , g
him to discontinue the Sunday moil through But
Tennessee Similar petitions are said to be on foot
between Richmond and Ne v o , laana. •
An affray occurred at Maryville, Blount
county, Tema.; daring whioh sevotwi persone were
'wounded, and a man Domed Calot VISI killed.
Two men, named Barnes lima Young, were arroste4
for the homiolde, '
The military spirit in Washington city has
been revived. Colonel liirkey kap undertaken the
rejuvenation of tbo military of the DWriot of
Colombia. '
The Nth annual exhibition of the Virgi
nia Meehanioa' Invitnte will take place on the
20th of Oetoh.•r. at Warlord.
Wm. Costello, an old merchant of St.
Paul. and n uprnbar of the Minnesota Legislature,
was drowned a few clqyq Ago. while bathing
The slaveholders of Chestertown, Md., bavo
held a meeting for tbo rnrp ss of tatting. measnrut
to prevent the eseaps of their chattels.
During a tight in M riOn county, Florida,
James end Wet. (1410-,om were shot dead, and Wm.
titnndley mo• tally wounded.
Profcrnor Bron Wow is expected in this city
on the ith or set tember to dismiss the slavery
ques'ion.
On the Gth lust., Lawrence Kling commit
tal cuiedeln Cederus t.wnehie. York county, Pa.
T,lt.graph compan'es are being organized
h toughou t Rams
T,ETTETt PROM A GOVERNMENT OFFICER IN
ITTAn.—A Gwer nr.nt °Flour in Thai writes to
Wacicn<eu, Jute 11th, item Salt Lake City, as
fOloW9:
h•tl the pre MO of meeting this evening
Brigham Young. II toball, and others. Young is
no o moron teen. i my opinion. lie has complete
control over his ptcp'e Governor Cumming is
moot, esteem d. and tecozn 115 Governor, and
had the ri ffi•ntrie. , really fouled before the peace
comm'sdeuers come Iw s inritel to the connoil
evonirnr with (3 ,yrrt or Cumming and the
o+mmi-siorere on the pltt of the Government.
Yourg out sure of his le4.lers called on us at four
tvul remai-rd till nine. There was friendly inter
°Purse. I fed co fiion• ectrything is being sada
fac.„-tly 'Pr , ' iVA4. however, some
middlit g rough talk, not by Young, but by some
of his inc man. It we rent, great diffionity I
aounl for pass unanswered mean allusions end
urg at Mr. tm•a •t., . We shall meet again to
„„,„„ ck. My impression is the
p nplo Will commence moving back in less than a
week.
CA.LITORRIA LETTER WRITINGAA returned
Californian reer.ity to'd to an amusing story of
lo:ter writing Be sad ninny of the miners are
tßicrre, ant to n rite n latter is unite a formida
ble task 01 one erasion a young man in
eros4ng mountain had tmoome lost and perished
in the suoy. The Quota, an animal of that vi•
trinity, attacked the body, and when found the
heed bad entirely been eaten off. A friend of the
young man, who knew hie tamely. was told by the
other miner= that it was We dqty to write to the
lather of the deceased an account of hie death.
After some oljo.c.ions, for wont of practice in such
undertakings, he concluded to devote the next
' afternoon to it At night he Produced his letter,
, .801 , 1114 - ho had don 7th e be ts he could, and thought
It told the story. ie letirr was as follows :
I' bear bujor—The kiotashavo eat your son's head
09
Yellin, • Henry Booober.