' E ItESS • sr ,- dFI 7r - 011 rin #l* ' - ' l4 tatii!_oool:3lki „:Matted te - iihecilbeieCiat -thdati - ntilei•DOZni B B - Ps* "Sing kr :INK% 1)41441:1r0k1im0_m0,p 436 3 for As li mo olik.Ans ordO pen ;. 'Oiw Kokes”, arteMpt'• •, • „. 6 . 5 ;m 00 rod- icer in - I-WEEK : VT 'PIO I4 enhectibeidont " I tMtiree !bateau Dote - J44,Mt- 44001 11 , !IX *OPP*. y i • . / 1 .11 . 1441t, 16 . 11 1 11 - " Tr's' Wiisdix;',Riteli;ccitilickeene - to,Blifiecti*We by luta iprit advaliKat ' - • 02 00' Coo l os, "'- .. 800 VITO 00140%, " 4444 8 00 • ' Ten . 002dee,--V - , . ' .18 00 - Twenty thifded, 02,02,0„„r 20 00 - . Twenty 00pige, or ;lye% ":410etddreaqf ipecac sobiendber,) ettb • 2O roc a Chd• Twenty-ondlOi: °ear, we ' send at, — .Etre copy be the getterwP of the -• • • Err drosteceeters Ate keitsloo4.39aat aftenta Or' VRl.WeltdiT Yaese. - „ • - reityorti44. r Etteentere:,7 liptots, • , rano siiiit-koiekti, 'ziank tar Sha- 90 1 torta4 r • " ..• , - • • - . - ,84744 r; ; - -asinsifirtasutwavisi 17440: their ; .kurratios, Ora tkiblitsztj A mniinv '7/4P5i1a#4,400641/4 " • 6 _ 404. vbit tar * ' *• - i WATOMIS. - • kialA spleadli 1114.631 .11# , Atar.orAttk• oelt. -- a o4 * l -. 1 , 1 , 11 " • - --------------------------- Notactioir, limas* aripettai i e itri4c,4. 4l *lt'cia braiMri"t24*;• t /4 0 3 5 'cYARA, **4040,141/A? LVAPPI..A.MUkKAND •*, r rr . yeo itbututuo - I*Aid** ' )= gobiiitecuotroot, ‘ ,f' 4 ziIIIWASIOTQA.I4.4II3IATBI, **TEM, tan> W 0 P 1, 1 112 4 MOO MOM) a r ( 1 ,10 , Pr*.q*4lt 7 '. • at --'•w&w-17 4:0 - thalstutit Busk . ; • xtirkif.a o. ;paritaciukti, fhtfunyait- ' - Jewelry.; GhatelatueV - Vtett Ohtani. ' • - - • - aptaiddd Sam - gale - : T.:‘•Eit;lStatele;ttat gasket/: - /et Oriole and: ewer Vase*. ' • . . Coral; team and Maple Beta.:• -••- 7- • Sole' Agent* tro.t.hiled_ i_il.phte. for the ealaat,Obtalee readlebtaa' a,X.ON - DOti •TDal-KR.O.PRIta• - •. , , Matt. WilL/AZWltThigekt BON- OtAV . YFAOTIIRSZg OF "S.LIAEi lEsTA_Luagsp , doing. AttpOcritiltr 41 - large ossortooint of MOM W dllit t of evori di. • OiLdriloni eandtantiroo hood, oil:nods toordortomptob dikApotteM 401t0d. , • , • , ;'• amporlirp of _Stiotad)4 ?lAA •-infillingbial Imported - 11",'-;8. /ARDEN fk, 13R0:. --, ::,,,•,,,-.!,, , ay: - _ it.UltrtAtitiniked :AND Mi.&l4* 0, . - - er4TERISLATED Wh 118, .t . ~- , • --- • do: - SOG Ohed:not Street, "'UT.' Third s • ( nßz . Indife,) • Stdbidolplda,`l, - , • ~, ..',• - , - -,tionstinG., on hood no& for list: to thi Trade ' - , Si. oomannaos animals um. ti r mse, T GOBLETS, OURS,_IT LITERS, ESS. - , , • .., ..• „ F .: . B s .pd:BTOBB, mintrge, arooria,.spgroi . ." '"›,..:, " LLDLE_EI, &a., &a. . . ..... ~, .. •.-iStGdfnit and plating on sli klndo of limited: .1•1•17 •., . . • -.' '' - , •: - .rr„.1,1,,.,- • . - - . v, - ,- •.: - ......-.;.,..-! .. .Ak. '.- : e - '' ~..: • ' 4i i ntr a dtc , .-, 1. •• .. -. •,•: ;: • • - 4.IEARDITARE.—The r - subsertliers;r'ooll=, • .• kallBloSi atBBAHANTB forthe isle of 'mullets • , AND. 00110/211'10 IIARDWABB,, would respectfully. .1., call the " attention ' of the trod. 6 Abele stook; Which they %modeling et lowertrates 0 essortm - puts tn part, , • Chutes. ;of allitledle:—T‘ie; ent'e Oz, • w, Beck, 7agon';- Eltege, - Tongue, ooalti'lintlpy 0011.0balus, . •:ir aeletweted 4, noise Kens Stone' sod tales' Solld oau.eterothor Sborcaid long Ito itdllt"ln Pane; round and . 10 813ft:114 kAiriperter, illeaand gasps; 13•01 Screw: a.' ."Seat toter. 'A - Safety Vase j Eluting Tabu. 0071, Oran, andprieeSaythas Hay, (torn, and gttidt - llay,Mantite,l'attneri', and Spadingifoika. • • - 'lnk el and Rom; Shovels and Spades, of all kinds. `. Tietca, - Bradei'iltoe, OtotWand ifs:Oohing °lntend Wtollititt Batt' Mugu, Sareasi.Looki or. all ,Itindst ,ol 4 o llTUmnisiVantPt t i164 04'..1 14 ,q! 8 1# ,14- No: fa 001414E110N 5t44114:", QEluthtng. IRMO Cf . : 3)IABP :%WOW, 1413:'NORT11 lug -libutwit street t Arit: " • • - Mating' and trimming, cr ?rook Vont., $9, , _ , Making multrimminami ne,or.yedn , 11,71, ' TALK Ef4: - SHE RID AN, ItERCHELNT' . al? TAI6OII Noe. 16 sane Eon* 11:16TH,1031111T, W ily '' — ‘ .. . i -A CI Y E °lll.B O ' ;16 , V - aiifrei'qit illtkiiitlia , ' CAM • Solway/I on hand.— - ' - ---- 4--- ,-- , An 9 ' • • mean et,nde Nethi,lisimi4,iiiii U . oi , the belitnnali , catt in the Janet flahleiniMe glen. ' -.-: rettionles ratteallen given 66!1THIPOIthi OLATH. tia"oio I.IOOTS' AND 7 SHOEBTlitrisiosownter Mn on luknda buta andz.tstiod stock of BOOM and ch ?to VII sell at the lowest_Woot. ' ' " ega; W. Ird.oll, no9ll-1,. EL MI; corner 197T11 and MARRS': Ott. ' STOCHOESOOTS AND SHOES --108.881/ TIIOIMONk ,00:' No. 814 WM.- XXI' Street, and Nos. 8 and B,BB4NHISN PLACA, hare now storiKa • large-and wolidiaaorted-stoor 7/00TBoad mess, of Otty and ',Eastern rearforlatoro; which they 'offer for gala on3ho boat tonal for Oaati;Or .0o the ;mat credit. Bra *returned,- boal2 aad ` asamina thar stiAg• Etrisgs - aitti R9BERI7;BITQF4AItIII,e • WU 01.541:411'"" X! ,fitiool/37% noirteiatie,"' , PAIN Tl,3i "Vitiadanal aeLfirLff,D9W, 61,48, 4 14iatteeiet • iniaar hytiATEr itof 40 atmeiv i Plinodelphie: ' - - . • •, iota Agents for_the We of -the oelebrateit Vototto !.riP,LEGLER- -:& tr-4S DlSlXllolBTB;sontbwest" comes of,BECOND tad dtrnitts have In Aare; nst4 car to *a trade In dote inn fo.) t • - = r „114. tziult• • - _oap Assttioid and int& Banns nisnt. 0111.1Loisent: , iktmri!... o !*; 149,8x4n1. WHITE :LEAD, 'ZINO PAINTS; .&o.— • v v ...We orferrto ShOpublle White . Lead, Use Petite - Mill= Jaolls Varolehee, 100., at ascii: rodeos& prlees ttat wa invite the . ,atteation Cl dealers awl ocateemSts o our sto,cik, " ZIEGLI6B & )3aILTH, I ;• ; - 21310.8 %mond and Green *SC • D 0 4 ,i9,: r .•-•.v v.., 0/480!1--Re thee4teation onthawilb, lcr - par extweilie elciek el'ireiliih - wad - Americas. Window 431441::' Vie large' ead weft eeleeted itoek!of • Glare oonateztly re karat enablea , as to Oil all Weill!" with detpaleh, lad u low as 'ay other boots is the wkly.- /cIMITH, . ' ".• WholeelleDrogglate, „his - corm agyplond awl green ink! ( WIWI egaoCallb PitOrtsWire• 4^IRLN4 AND GLASS. • DILMIR39/181, , TB,A•AinksTillpETll,llTB, 111 9 P AIT,Pgq°"VID • IBZNOIL:ANio. 'ton ASTIOXMA,'&O. •••,,- c; "ILL U 111444)i 41 IU t:0,119111 . 7111011111, LIP • , • , ~ssuassic lawyers% -.-susonio sb,lb, TIB 1:11338TNIIT OTRIIET: • .15.--600dt looted tolartita it rsaagrolAkunkt. pIIENpEC PLS. - ,GL 8; e—arSVlliff - bun inipildtialirthi Lc - cramp' agiqevvriehyre) - 'IIN - iso4B,Aadopra fonts...4w theft:o/488 In this , ilatnint ore 'copng-An onTnrt. to tbet,trldn or .non.vu -gmr_etcinir,,,nn 'nand, 'POLISHAID RUTS 'GUM for Btoreeer Mr/felling .IrreoUL Mug% = Mere, , leorrioereeeo obiltgliteiv and Siltered . Plate; uise. - Jot*, a i forifirrori. The filass will be sold at the lowed Crinanid inipOlcra i>s /retie reepect,to any • • ' Piste end Wirexow 01W Warebooie.: NAL - 66r.!>fl9t7rrrt-oad RACK fitreetiei • inann-nr • -' 1 110*( 0 . ant : . BuiI:TDS iGARs- o' , FA - - ' selected u, ...V!,idai,r~rellitilrftetvectbt aTty BONE, I ; , • s t Elwin% In id* Orint• tha e tirg' "8°"4." OIGARS--6 - bas,4samo .ssoit 4 , plateau, t3lieds, - ; Zoletac t =- • , , Coloso ClonYezeilectee, , . 'COLA Aieerfewi t i ' throkio,-- Union Onbanzaee., Ate., in ,V,lO-5 and 140 ecl, of all oleos cod VAC. We, in stores and oesisteatly reociriw _and foileds levi, tq, Ys CHANLXB TNT • • , loew) - 1118 WALNUT 800% , below Beefed, err,4 st#ry • 8N04118:=-4' knew of thole oelebrited Instid4 on Vasil! brig sg Nem Itrzo? 'dopy e •_ziplierbed hood airp?t, sod for etole low, by ciasaua TAM - ; • Mr) IRlF4eint atz);Nolcilloorgli, ' • Ain*. 132;ta 'iiitsz' . cii<pi,.Pyr setniTMo , , 0 3 4rAg . F.AssEffis r end piaTtErt 111141420 -• _ _ 7 .1; %.• • -.7.- ' ,•:!. 4011138 ERE „ -A 03,6 OFLEUNtir Otre+t . :1 111141nt ri Okiii ir rii . ft /ii - T/tom s3lnfttpdfollitr by,thimitrieit !vita LE atitO Vt.. I r 4,94 . 61. YHBRIER & Erta IYIL t, • **lfs 1 04. - Rs ers Wipee, we; tic:* 44 1 121114TS'ibaoti 6. 324 0 1 40 1 . 1 46%.:•• • SIXPI4I ••N I • • • - - f •"- - . ',l,'" ot 1, • vett * A • . 7'74 • t . • 4..0i • • • . ~2 _ • , •. • • , .• ~,sL • • • • -- . • •- • • At A • • • *-W'•4= .":" 011 ,06, , '"--• • _ , _ ..• , , . . • V911.',1-N0... 30,2. Neia):Pitblicatiinto. ArEAr,IifAGAZINE.. ,ABYANT - BVR&TtOWS s ONIANT",te ilow:ieady, - end may. be lied. at. all NEWS DRPOTS . ThelvAient , 050..1; H. Bell, ti esuireeglitg thu - cltj for yetrly mbecribere: Brice S 2 per 41113[1133. Adereu BUYKAT & BTBdTTOI4, Idertantile College, corner SBlMStream NTR add OXIBSTNUT Strea Phi; . 1 4 118 44 11 ,•-; my2JOy •FQWLER, WELLS, & 922 • efit "OUBSTNIIV Street, keep - standard works on • , Phrenology, PhysiolOgy; Water.Oure,. and Pim. ,nography,- wholesale and 'retail. nrenologl. , sal lisioninatlon, with charts, end full wilt. ten &ea-lotions' of: character, - given day aid even. ing.Cabinet 'free to visitors. ;Orders by mall to be addressed to .Itowler; tc Co., 922 Chestnut street. .• . • - jeD-Smoltwky t sep 80 aotourriv •Bogy.s; IitAOE OF 'THE A. treat iltatki for, wi salsa.• ow aiA lo'ok 'Over the etoekaf '; 'Blank Book Manufactory' taiNtin, 4," • POMMEL , and BAUR,. PEBRIIs LANIt. 'BO.OicitAIitTFAC IS TORT - ...ll4imoinbni•BOUßTll ondIABB in b'aylog A.ndOint Books. I - Mahlon my amok sd good material, And sell at Ali Woos. •7' •• - • •• . , • - Jod.am 1: liKitHX) ERVELOPER, "- EVERY .'.. i , • a . stgthrO4sei sod prioN st , ~.' 0 .,.' 4N . #47101.te . 4iquery . .Bstabljahment,_ • , VecA 44 '-'' 1 ,... ,, :: - ; , ' 't- - - - - .7;;Y ° I P I TII 144 Ba d. t - '74 . . — rifre: A ; f :_f_ : . ~,. •44 f ,' ' % i',..ATilt* tt.„_ - ;• , t , - •--- 3 -'.2aufo 4 -Abis . , • '',i. ,--..'16.4-2=6 - 7 . '"'....- .._• ,- - , ', liivirr = ~ w rtuoV,- ; 1, VAMILY•TORTILM-MIBLE3,:IIA.IO- :80.S11.1;Tbmiiid: Old Slides tebound to-took and Weir gaCti as new.% gall lad look at the nylon, at. -•. . • ' - PSBR:Va. Bookbladoey,: ,14)4401 .„ .. BOORT)" and R/.019. , . - ' 011111110' t . • titStritEi. : rirRENTONFALLS; ONEIDA COUNTY, NEW YORIL—The Hotel et the above eehobreted plass of roeort is open for the !Season, and rant* reachod in a fair haws from New York, et s imeti ezpeasa, se s Baltroasl ~from:l4:ca( takes rlettere them within an hoo. ' fd..MOOlOl, 'l72l42trtitirkftwie - Proprietor. LEBDWE' S BOTr,L, • . -A•TLA•NTIO CITY, ~new anger, • Athe iernittiii - of the . BsShoed, on the let, beyond the Depot. ',Tide House le "SOW OPEN toe. l oarderiacd Tranalant Vielton, and odors acccan ..inopatlona aqui to any Rotel .1n Atlantic city. - ' TERMS MODERATE. try" ; Periled shoal keep their' arette , until the oars arrtrse, front , thit natal. The Milne ere eari riiiienehe•S-1 • Jr2o-1m E A —EA: T If IN Q.—THE MANSION 11.9 nouS loot 'of ,Toritutylunls Avenue, AT WATTC, 01 T 1( , ti .NOW OPEN for posts. Tor Oon 'sr,fitis4e or arrobiornenti Oontlgatti to Um beach, and sttroOtlveriore of tbs . , sajsoesit pounds, this Boise La The prtpriotor hit spared no palm In =akin We' Hetet all thel could be desired by visitors. • WHITE - 310IIIITALINS, •• . NEW HAMPSHIRE. 'This •. PROFILE 1i0178F,, • end FLUME HOUSE, in the FRANCONIA •NOTCLI, ere now.opon for visiters. These Rouses ire of the first class, and have become the resort oreceonipliehed twilight. They ere five miles apart, One, delightful roil, and situated amidst the boidescerei grandest of mountain scenery. The Profile is much the largestbouse at thuMountainc, now, end replete,withilie conveniencee of modem drettchuid hotels It commands the finest riew . of Mount Lafay ette, (ablehip bntlittle lower thin. Mount Washing .ton,) is-near Echo Like; and the Old Man of the Mountain. ' Tin I (FLIIME HOUBN," situated no e; lofty elevation, commands the grandest TIOW for 60 =ilea down the Parolgewneeett '}'lie Flume, the Crystal Cascade,, the. Pool, and the nealo, are• all' within a few minutes' walk of the •FLIIMX 1101118 R.,„ tauriark leafing Philadelphia at 10 A. M., tan roach .the pLons NOWA, via the Worcester and Nashua, end tho , Bolton , Concord, and Montreal Railroad to Plymouth, the next afternoon, (24 mike ny atom) or they may goiiiti the D.C. and Pd. liAllroad to Little ton, thanes:by-gage (only 11 miles) to the FitoPITA ,11011oE,, to stun me time. Malls arrive and dopart Poet-Mlles cadre's*, ,PROYIL 4 R HOUSE or FIAMIN HOUSE, graft : on county, N ' Junior DELL, Manager of the Pronto Moan. • , R. R. DIINTON, Manager of the Flume ]loses. Yor•the,Flume and Franconia Hotel Co. CZII3 The Warm Springs at the base of Warrior's Ridge 'Ave utile' north of Huntingdon, overlooking • Standing Stone Creek; and envirourd - by romantio hills 'aziat'wOodiands, have been leased by the' former pro •rietorof the' Leaner. Donee. "..the exterudve Hotel . . . • rdidingsi Bath Hoases, - ko., erected at great eipeues by General'A. o.lVilson, the owner, have been com pleted, and the grunt have been beautifully laid out and adorned, .The Hotel-Parlors mud Chambers ire %dis.:Ond comfortably furnished, and the prospect lb! lefor beauty cannot be excelled. a century those onnprnavo beau eelsonew - . ol ' -Vuedielnal qualities, and the greet virtue of the Vetere in chronic alfectioruo. - Tho tomporatuie of the water Is 0955 dogma, and for bathing to delightful and invigo. voting. und In the wood's- and streams ••genae and • deb abo . , , Keens in prumait of health- or pleasure will find this a-meetde_lightful retreat - end it s nearness to the refiniylirmia Railroad and it■ ebeapnees give it a decided advantage over any water/41)1one in the State. The proprietor has had yew; of expatiated In the briefness, and no pike; or trouble will be awed to make smeata comfortable.. Mocks run from Huntingdon' to the Springs on the arrival of the different Railroad trains i are. 26 cents. pato/Hee accommodated at moderate • , JOHN R, REAR, Proprietov. Siatxori. near Huntingdon; •- - Irlam _fp/RIGA:NT/NE HOITSE_, BRIGANTINE '.11.J. Beach, N.J. , JLENRY D. SMITH, Proprl etor. Thle ltdie elegantly located house le now open for the eseeptiou of Tieltore. Terms git per weak &SIM per day. Take ears of Camden and Atlantis Railroad {set cot at the inlet, - where a eomfortable boat (Copt Bet* Tanser,),will be in readiness to convoy them to the Natal. .t3l QEA "DELAWARO SOCBE; CAPE /BLAND, N. J. Ttilo Arat-elass'ani popular House Is now open for the ribeption or Asher... For buil% reerootloo, or pleas. ore, It Is tuuntrpaseed by any on the Island. je346w* , SISSCI • . JAMERAY, Proprietor. QEA43ATHING— OCEAN HOUSE,O &FE 16,-181.411D, N.: J.—This • irell-known sod portals, Nouse is again open to remise visitors. • It Imo been put In oompleto order and every attention will be given to guests to make their visit &moult. The table will be sbandently supplied with tbe luxuries of the season. Charges moderato, to snit the times. .1024-hree 18114.24 LEA:MIMI, Proprietor. - „ CILA-BATHING—GAPE• ISLA N MEAL HOTEL to now open.' Eden of Dowd $i per'weett. - °Miran and Somata half price. ejelo4l , MAON eAItItItTpON, Proprietor. . . ANSION HOUSE, BfA.UOII (MUNICH 1111 - This elegant • establishmimt, beautifully attested on the banks of the Lehigh, is now ready for the recap Lion of summer whiten. There is no locality in Penn sylviniC nor, perhaps, In the United gteteeorhichoom Wes eo Many attractions 116 the valley of the Lehigh, end the r nbove 'Hotel will afford a most comfortable home to vlsiteri desirous of viewing the magnificent sceneq, .inktutustible mines, or itupendone works of art of tWe Interesting region: -" Je4 gmto • • IfOPPES - rroprietor. frit& WHITE SULPIIIIIIAND CHALY i BRATIS SPRINGS, at DoIIIILING GAP, Peon's, are ovary's tonal/sod .ara 'aecearibla eightlomm from Phindelphlarby-way, of lianiebarg, theme on the oinabertiand Valley Railroad toliewrille, thence le eteates eight salleito the Rpringa r whero yen arrive at 6 o'clock the same *Timing. Yoe particular', inquire of Messrs. MollotikteHlebael, Baumel Hart, James Steel, B. B. Jaan*r, Jr.& 00., or Proprietors of Merchants' Hot el, Planate'' , • " MOTT; COYLE,. Proprietor, " Jr. - ; ' - Peat Gdns. Fa. B L DTI) al) SPRINGS , --VITS iseil-ktioenv mid delightful Summer Resort will bcppenial for the reasPthisiof - Vetter' on the Illth of Ynne i and kept open traut2 the latorOetober.• The new and 'parlous Building s erected lest jeer are .11011 r, fatly completed, and the whole establishment bee beep furnished In soperiorstyle,,and the aoentomoda; Was Alll be or a,caulikor Dot excelled in any pert of the Melted States. . The lintel will be aide? the management of Bfr; A. AL'hlls; whose egperlence,"eourtoonn manners,, and Atfeottorr to.life guests . gite the amplest asenranes of eomfert and hind treatment. - • • • • • In additlon.to ttieotherwmene of itooess, it is doomed proper tostati that pamougera • can reach Bedford by a daylight fide from Ths'Ooropf hare nude eatenalie arrangements to apply dealers end indleidnabi with it Bedford Wateril bf-the butel,Uszbilyi tad !rebottles, at the folluwthit 'rifts, at the Bpriets; bated. (modbery) , id 00 Do, (oak) 11 00 Doi (mulberry) 800 M Do. (oak) 400, Ohrh6y, 10 indica ' - 26 'Bottle*,l plot, per &men 150 The bezryls aye - carefully prepared, " that put_ °lissom may depend_ upon retelling t h e Water Much and sweet. . 411 eotemuileatlais Should be addressed to • 1 - • BID7OIID kLINZBAL 8P8.111418 I • til/ 19 4 1 : Bedford County, Fa. , raentpstrg. 'A. KINGSBURY, M., D., - •• DENTIST Vl'pjAd inform , hie filendoi` that' , he hie REMOVED to LID WALNUT Street, above Eleventh, 30241 m Itemondlo. - Aaltsozr, - :JOB PRINTER. Atm°Tedto -IFTIIAND, bIISBTIOT STREETS. . ._ , _ TAIIRETCHE. 8i OARSTAIR 8, No 202 it/ • and 204 Boith , PRONT Street, offer for eale the fol. lowing Goods, of their own importation: COGNR,C LIRANDIZEI, of the brands of "Gloria," s l Plailt. Cestilion,!' Martell, Central Vineyard { fce. 1 &e. , , • .ROCErrams..BILANDY, of thebrande of A.Beignette,- aid J:Lteatheia - - - - BOItDOSITIC BRANDY, J 1 I. Dupuy brand. ' . Oi.ARET, In and eases, Of the brands of fit. su. lien; , hilegitux,lient, Brion, Pouillee, &a. .• Clothll2PAGNßitf the brands of o Creme& Ilonzy, ,, Lallemano quoenNieteria, Violet, Ducal Grape, Cot , d0n,,1i0e,...s y Amperial t bcc:,Ac. ' ABM' TiiE, Of rem superior quality. . - 10, fo; which they are dole igthte in Philidalphia: . 1.1 ulll nu x Sardines, Latour Olive 011, ChealleafElperzn Candles, SC Martin Bay Row, and Fort Wine , of *Woo favorite brands. lyl7.Btef Eljt_',l:;rtso. FRIDAY, JULY 23, ,1858 LOUIS NAPOLEON-NO, It In August; 1840, after Leon NAPOLEON'S most bootless , attempt to obtain possession of, France, he was conveyed to Paris a prisoner, in company with Count illorrnotox and oth. era. This MimonoLoN was one of the faithful few who had adhered to the elder Harmon in his downfall, and had voluntarily shared his captivity at St. Helena. .After the Strasburg affair, in 1886, Louis ransom afraid of pun ishing a BO3APARTE, had quietly sent Loins NAPOLEON off to America. In 1840, however, it was resolved to have him tried by the Cham ber of - Peers on the charge, of nigh Treason. • The trial took place in the, House of Peers, at• Paris; many of this members of which had been ennobled by the great NiPotiost. Mr. liPpeitrod ;es ~Loma Nireratost's iecist#ol`,l l4 fut4tiftmdeti_Asins ,witts - i_courage C00444.05000t4:;* 1 4,10#400 / 4 1 1' AuPeliitAlf.Ot•:4ol4ralieltiOnfe,`, dyniaty, and,: itontly'ildirre fug ;thiat hs"):a "t<tie hea49 ( .0 4- , Imperial family, Was entireiyjnitlfied"fn seek leg to regain the eroten which -bis: unelebad lost, nat by fair battle, but by treachery." All was in vain. The Peers were compelled to convict Minim the evidence before them, as well as upon his own avowal. He was sen— tenced to perpetual imprisonment in a French fortress, and was , immediately removed •to Ham, where, a few years before Prince Pomo- NAo and- his political comatee had been con fined, after the Revolution of 1880; Here,, as we have already stated, Louis NAPOLEON passed some of the best years of his life. He read and wrote a great deal, - and was greatly indebted, for nearly everything beyond prison fare, to the liberality of Count /POnamr, and Lady BLESSINOTON, with occa• atonal assistance ftem his uncle JEROME, cu ffing of Westphalia, who, with the rest of the Bonaparte race, admitted Louis NAPOLEON to be the head of the family. In that recent and remarkable work, Loots BLANois et Historical Revelations," is an in teresting account of Loots NAPOLEON in pri son. It seems that while a captive in the Chateau de Ham, an -invitation was sent to Louis BLANo, then an influential Parisian editor, to giro ri visit of, a few days to Louts Napor.EoN, in his prison. Loom BLAIN says : He was survotanded at that time with the only prestige which a true Repnblicin may be willing to salute; he was unfortunate. His imperial pretensions bad, as it were, vanished in the smoke of a wretched adventure. Peo ple were looking round for his party, and he, bowed down, tried, condemned, denied by his partisans of that period, railed at by his ser vants of this day, was doomed to a lonely life in a gloomy fortress, with no other friend to whom he could unburden his heart than his physician, 1)r. CONNEA; and a chemist named AM. Rea sacra miser. With the request of the prisoner, not of the Prince, I complied; ho procured from the Home Min ister a permission for me to enter his prison, and I set off to Hans." • • As LoutsLano's book bats not been yet republished in this country, and is really fall of interesting revelations, we believe that our readers will thank its forgiving, in fnll, such portions of the description of the Imperial Captive, within ; font. walls; as will exactly show his position and personality at that time. Louts &Alio says "However, having repaired to the Chilean, I was ushered into a large, neatly•furniskod--- --4- vi5p ,,...„, ...at la re. where little teemed to be nuked for dontestie.,yt.-7 - ^"' at "" tno oredit of Louis Philippe -lot perceived prisoner was very kindly treated. Ho sat in a high-backed arm.ohatr, between the chimney and a table :spread with books and paper,. As I entered be rose, oarne forward to meet the ex pasted visiteri and shook hands with me with a mingled expression of cordiality and reserve. big impression was that for a moment be thought of assuming a Sort of stately countenanda; bat be was almost instantly sensible of the mistake, did his hest to appear easy and free, and we got into converse. tion. I had never seen him before ; nor was I en. abled, at that time, to remark how different he was in features. has manners, his deportment, from all the other members of Napoleon's family, whom I did not, know. 'But it strut* me that there was nothing in him of the Napoleonic type, that he spoke with a rather foreign ascent, and that he bad loss command of language than any man I had ever conversed with." The foreign accent is readily to be account ed for. Letts Naromsou had spent nearly twenty years almost wholly in, Siritaerland, where, of course, he acquired the for eign (literally Germania:S(l) pronunciation; of the , French language. Re left France in childhood, and had not been again allowed to return to it—not even to see his mother when she was dying. Here, to understand what follows, let it be remembered - that In the earliest of Louts NA romi's Writings - , called n Reveries Poll tiques," he lays down the dictum that France would be regenerated - only by moans Of one of the Nap:it-Eon family, as this dynasty alone could reconcile republican principles with the demands of the military spirit of the nation. Lome BLANC and 'be conversed freely _on the political condition and prospects of France. Both agreed that Louts PHILIPPE'S system must fall, - based as it was upon corrupt practices at home, and a permanent humilia tion, abroad. Then came—what system will follow? Loose NAPOLEON professed to be a "true Democrat"—to acknowledge, in full, the sovereignty of the people, and to think that this principle was to he' carried out threnglitihiversal Suffrage. The conversation proceeded thus "Well. then, it is not enough for you to ac• knowledge the sovereignty of the people and to bow passively to, universal suffrage. Ton must have, as a member of the whole, a clear notion of your intended initiative; you must have, beyond your worship of universal suffrage, a political creed.' . 6 Louie Bonaparte looked a little embarrassed ; but after a moment's eilenee. ' , My creed,' said be. is the Empire. Wee it not the Empire that raised the Fropoh, nation to the summit of greatness and glory? lam convinced that the destiny, of the Empire rests on the national will.' '• 'Bat the Empire involves, I suppose, the here ditary principle?' ," Tee ' . , " And how is it possible to reconcile the princi ple of the sovereignty of the people with the he reditary principle ? These are contradiotory terms. The latter is the negation of the former." A Democrat, said Louts BLANC, «is of ne cessity-opposed to any hereditary form of Government , whatever. The sovereignty ,of the people•is not, as a principle, to be confined to a' given period. How could the present generation be allowed to confiscate the right of all the generations to come? A compact of that, sort Is in its very essence null and void." He proceeds • " I had leave fora three days' stay. They were spent in marshalling all the various topics that had reference either to the general state of affairs or the particular situation of the prisoner. " Among the oiroutostances present to my memo• ry there hone which I think worth mentioning, as It serves to bring out into stronger relief the hard disposition that was evinced by his subs.). !pent conduct. One afternoon he was telling me the partionlars of his failure at Boulogne, when sodden his voice seemed to falter ; he stopped, struggled a moment to repress a sob, and burst into tears. "The next day we went out to take a walk over the narrow. rampart assigned to his melancholy promenade, which was watched, of courts, on all shies by eentinele. Methinks y gee him still, his bead reclining, walking with slow steps, and speaking in a low voice, as if fearful lest the wind should bear every word be uttered to the gaoler. The conversation now- was about the History of the Roman Emperors,' as written in a book, which Louis Bonaparte admired very much on ammeter the partiality shown by the author for those tyrants whom Taoltus branded with everlasting infamy. In Louis Bonaparte's opinion Tacitus was in the wrong and the modern author In the right. /had not read the book so, warmly praised, hut I was not at a loss to guess the secret reason why Louis Bonaparte praised it. Bo I took the opposite side er the question, id a somewhat exolted manner, which called forth on his part a recommendation I little anticipated. Pray speak low,' he whispered, and, turning round, he pointed to a man -who, wrapped up in a cloak, followed at a short die. lanes, without losing eight of no. Louis Bonaparte does not remember now, certainly but I do, that be availed himself, of the opportunity to expatiate on the wretchedness of Abet policy which needs a dark army of spies. takes root in the filthiest ceases of human nature, and glories in the very degradation et its' agents. - Loma Bietto's tints was nearly at an end. Ile dlitermined to ; give, his pilsoned Mend some good advice, and says it was communi cated thus s PHILADELPMA, FRIDAY. ; , 'JULY 23, 1858. • "My visit drawitig - near its Close, I thought it my duty to make a last appeal both to hie reason and to hie heart; said to him : , • " Remember, the Empire waq'the Emperor. Can-the Emperor rise again? The march of time has made for us a new condition of life. The of oar drive is no longer the France of fifty years slime. The idea of labor has outstepped the passion of battles. Other aspirations and other wants call for other institution and other heroes. People have ceased placing their ambition In blindly putting on a uniform to go to kill and die. The question is no longer to rule and amaze men, but to render them good and happy. No, no; Napo' loon, should he rue again would not repeat himself. Could arty one achieve with his -name what be, in our days, could not do with Cie genius? Were the Empire to revive it would only be in the shape of a bloody meteor. Under the sway of your uncle despotism was at least wrapt up in the purple mantle of military glory, and, even this onuld not so--well hide from the •nation the direful skeleton, but she became horrified. Remember that France let Napoleon fall because his power had grown too heavy to - be borne any longer. fled be -not been abandoned by France he would never have ,met his doom at Waterloo. Remember bow be died ; remember where be died ! Whether it be absolutely Immo-, Bible to baptise in blood 'Li newponereby, and to maintain it for a time by surrounding Paris with. soldiers; by smuggling spies everywhere, by, gag• king the press, by immersing France in the ob. jeet worship of the caehbox, and by restoring their worn•nut liieries to senatore -and valots„is More than I will , venture to ,they . ..,„. Bet wrist urenid slrelrrth-tioittlOth etioltoffsglisma, 4,41 otalife,4o4getht 'BIOO6 toitpt-Meprdille4rMcitt it be, tine to, the liepnbliisAe the only fit ,fferaromerit for a nation _in whose Mind thesrevo., Intimmry teaching, of lielf oentrozbas,riveted the principle. of equalitY".. -The Repitbliet is, the neoessery survivor of whatever.momentary,dispo,-- tiem eireamstanoes may beget. ;.t.liva up. then, that part " of a Pretender for which you leaks lenge. , Trust your aisle terestednese with the mire of yodr destiny.- Dare to benoine and :to declare Yourself a Republican. " Piot only did Lents. Bonaparte lend an air to this my language, but he seemed impressed , by it to a degree namely to be expected. Wherrt took my leave of him his eyes were moistened With' tears and lie clasped me in hie arme so eagerly. that I could not help being moved. , Eleseending. the stairente,.l. beard him err out, with a laugh, as be stood on the lending,' Ah ah I n'enbilee pss d'embrseeer pour moi Madame °ordeal anise we parted."- What Lova Bum° said 'wag common Sense,. but it fell upon ears to whom, such sotind,De' mocratic - doctrines were wholly unwelcome.' For, over since the death ,of _his elder brother in 1881, Louts Narovaox was impressed with, the one idea—that the Empire was to bo re; stored, and in his 6wn person. • In May.lB4B, in the disguise of a workman's dress, carrying out some planks *mil' his shoulder, and aided by his medical attendant, Dr. CONNALII, (now the Court physician,) Louis 11.1. m m: succeeded in bailing , his Jailors and guard, and effected hie escape. Crossing the frontier into Belgium; ho'fonce more found an asylum in England. Els Mis fortunes now Interested many who had pre• viously not cared to make or cultivate his ac: quaintance, and his society was sought , after, in the two following years, by some of the highest nobility of Britain. This phase in his life brings ns to the Prone' Revolution :of 1848, out of which the prisoner of Ham,' emerged—President, Dictator, Emperor:. lIUSIII •-•.-• HT SUM PllOOlOll "I can scarcely hear," she murmured, For my heart bade lend and fast, • lint surely, fu the far, fa• dietanee, I can hear a toned ►t tact " It is only the reapers ainglig, An they carry home their 'theme; And the evening breeze harken, And rustles the dying leeyee." !! Lleten ! there eve voices talking," , Calmly still the stroveke speak, ' Yet her voice grew &intend trembling, And the red Ilnehed in her cheek. IN only the children playing v• Below now their work Is done, And they laugh that thelrleyes are deaekt By the rays of the Sittlegeniti.". Fainter grew her r0t...," isnst - ssenser ' A . , —,siens oyes, she cried, wen the avenue of cheatnnts I can tear a horseman ride." "It was only the doer that were reaatall In a herd on the clover grass ; They were startled, and tied to the thicket As they snit the reaper, pm." Now the night arose in Mew's, Birds lay In Utair leafy nest, And the doer couched in the forest, And the children were at rent, There wall only a sound of weeping irons watchers around a bed, But rest to the weary spirit, Peace to the quiet deed The New Feature In the Commencement El• 'poises of the WO school—ls the Test or Boilable as It Is aloyelT—The best Criterion of Scholarly Merit. [For The Pres.' The excellent report of the recent Gemmel:me meut exercises, furnished in The Press of Friday, alludes approvingly to the now teat of Intellectual superiority, and scholarly excellence, to which those having the management of that school sub jected the late aompetttors for literary honors. That the measure was adopted with the beet in tentions, and that the awards were equitably dia• peneed, none acquainted with the high demotes' of the gentlemen concerned, either in the luggea tion of the test, or the 'adjudication of the prises, will for a moment d sputa. It can readily he un &Wood, also, that the new feature was altogether calculated to excite interest. Its very novelty would captivate many persona. The competition involved in the case would open an exalting scene. Those especially concerned for the credit of the school, which has already acquired so envi able a reputation, under the Presidency of Pro fester Hart and his effielent associates, would na turally be inclined to regard with peculiar para. silty a feature, the successful exhibition of which seems to be ao well calculated to elevate their Instltntion still higher in the public regard. But all this, and whatever else might be said in vindication of the entertaining novelty, renders It the more important that its true value, f..r the end professedly aimed at, should be carefully ex amined. As we have 110 personal interest. therefore, in the matter, excepting what every sincere friend of education should feel, not being even acquai'ited with a single young gentleman of the ten who competed for the honor of furnishing the boot—im provised composition, nor, indeed, that wo are aware of, with any of the entire graduating class, or their personal friends, the writer foals the more free in respectfully suggesting a few objectione to the particular trial of skill employed in this in stance. Let the nature of the test, then, be 'definitely Understood. On a public occasion, In the undst of a large and probably onthusiastio audience, a cer tain number of young men, with minds already agitated by the olreumstanoes of the hour, are to - improvise an essay upon a Babied arbitrarily as signed to them on the spot. Even the 'abject, as we understand it, is to be selected and proposed in an equally extemporaneous way, the gentleman who chooses it being allowed no time to make choice of a theme with any proper well•refleeted adapta tion of It to the peculiar taste or talents of those who engage in the competition. The issue is to determine which itt the brightest genius, the best scholar, and altogether the meet promising young man, and therefore entitled to the prize or honor to be awarded in the ease. Now, the most obvious objection to a toot like this is that it aets np no true criterion of actual Scholarship, of literary attainment, or even of na tural talent. If there aro ten competitors, there are ton ohances to one the theme assigned will be most to the taste of one of the number, and every. way the easiest for him to write upon, and corres pondingly unpropitious for the rest. Indeed, there might boa hundred other topics upon whieh either of the others could improvise a far bettor essay than the successful candidate. flow fallacious, therefore, to conclude that the victor in such a terary contest really surpasses his fellows In the respoota contemplated ! The fact is, that there are at least ten chances to one (the amount in his favor upon the other supposition) that he is the dolt of the class, But another point claims consideration here. The best soholare in a school, lade and young men of the closest application, of the largest attain ments, and of the brightest intellect, are, in the majority of oases, exceedingly modest and dill dent, and therefore likely to appear dleadvante geouely under oirourastanees calling for a good degree of self.oonfidenoe, and even boldness. A test,itowever, like that befere us, is ono in which almost everything dopends—not upon thorough scholarship, not upon native talent, but rather upon snob a degree of coolness and suportioial pertness, as had always better be lacking in the character of a youthful disciple. It is, of course, comparatively easy for wafts of quick wit and a dashing spirit to any or write something that will sound or read tolerably well, upon almost any theme which might be, at - the moment, proposed to them ; and the effect of the improvised effort might be as striking as when a certain young clergyman preached a learned discourse upon the blank piece of purr which was handed to him as a tail., or,'ae when - another basod a most con vincing appeal to the ooneoieneea of three merry rung men, who compelled him to bold forth ex teMperaneously, from a stump, upon the word bovi,maby of our beet whalers, young or, old; could compose an essay upon some un studied and, novel theme—take even that proposed, by Professor Coppeo upon the above occasion—in the midst of the oroitement of a pnbio exhibition of., fellow students, and, under the consciousness tbat r ,they were Dallied to thirty minutes or an hour of time? Tried and judged by such a rule, ninti.out of every_.ten, if not ninety.nine out o every hundred men, who in past times attained to high; iterary distinetion, would have been pro m/Wed but very Ordinary youth. The truth is, that in such a. trial the beet scholar will go most timidly to work, and would, probably, make We poorest display of skill. . Another objection to this measure is found in the encouragement it gives to the establishment of a false and an illusive standard of scholarly merit The'general public Is prone at any rate to be taken by sound and sheen, rather than by more substantial and realty meritorious things. ,But should an institution, the protested alto of which is to improve and elevate the literary charaoter and taste of the community which has roared and Witt* bee fostered it, cater to snob fondness for stard splendid sights—in the literary sphere we mean—or for merely captivating sounds 7 Yet this is dens by the adoption anti use of a test, whiob pr ropes the impression that your Smart, loqua z Pagan; off-band men, yOunk or mature, aro . rtittlly to be regaided as the men of the highest ability and moat laudable erudition; this is done -then such snowed improvisatores are exalted at WO expense of the credit of their more able com pardone. It is to be hoped, therefore, that the exempla -recently eat by the Iligh School (or rather seconded by it, for emnething droller, wtibelieve, - wes enact. • - ed at the closing exercises of a literary sOoleiy of this city. during the past epilog) will not be imi tated. It might, indeed, add to the more exciting interest of college commenoements, to hare a few extemporaneous essays written. cr oratione de. livered, though even this enjoyment should be 'very moderately indulged. But to melte such etforts a test of scholarship, or a criterion of intel lectual ability, and an omission of competition for literary prises or honors, must, upon mature re fleotion, be pronounced pernicious. Bather let our young men be encouraged to mietrust their Im prompt; powers, and convinced of the necessity of thinking twice before they speak or write. And li:tete/IA of disheartening the earnest, diligent, thoughtful student, by awarding praises and honors to some superfloisl, but lathing rival, let him randerstand that solidity, not show, thorough soholarship, not ehaneo, shall insure the profes sor the highest reward. LETTERS FROM A TRAVELLER-NO. I Oorretpondence of The Poem] Dsrue nest, Pc, July 17, 1858. ' Mr /un Stn: In commencing this series of lettere; ft may not be sages. at the outset, to state what your readers may in general look for in their contents. Starling from home to be absent some four weeks, in search otneoossary relaxation, a definite line of travel has been fixed on which will lead me to many places of interest, some of much resort, and others again but little visited. A tra veller, in order to profit by Ms journey, should have an observant eye, a ready ear for any who are able and willing to nommunioate information; and if he Pan now and then judielotudy bring into play an inquiring tongue, it will greatly aid him. If, as an incentive to a proper and diligent exercise Of whatever degree of these powers be may pos. sees, he has before him a promise to commit the results of hie experience to writing. to be ted for the perusal of others, he mtTst be dull 1 d if he does not make the most of every advantage and opportunity that comes in his way. How far your present correspondent shall show that he praollseS what he preaches the readers of The Press must judge. ." A Traveller," however, your readers may rest assured, has no idea of indulging them with an indiscriminate praise of 4 , mine host" at this place and the other; nor with fulsome recommends. Lions in meaningless generalities of the attractions lef different places es summer resorts. Politics, too, ! but it they natu rally fall in my way, are not to be - -rigidly ex. eluded. Pacts which fall under my own observe• tion, or may he learned from reliable informants, , with sketches of objects and places of interost,with perhaps an occasional indulgence in moralising or philosophising, will make up the substance of these letters. If I can carry my readers along with me in the pleasures, excitements, and relaxations of travel, while they are enjoying many a comfort in the quiet of their homes, for which a traveller looks in vain, I shall bo satisfied with these let ters, and I trust so will the readers of The Press. It is always well in travelling to take things as comfortably as possible, and, therefore, if you have a choice between starting in the morning and reaching your destination in the middle of the day, and starting so as to arrive at your proposed stopping place towards the cool of the evening, by all means take the fatter course. Acting upon this principle we took the afternoon train for this place in preference to the morning train, which gets, in about noon. The ride on the North Pennsylvania Railroad was delightful. The ears arecomfortable, the road well and solidly laid, so that there was but little jar, and there was scarcely any pereepti• blo duet. The absence of dust—which is one of the great annoyances of railroad travelling—was owing to the foot that the road throughout its en• tire length is ballasted with stone. The country through which the road passes Is of itself wail worthy of attention. The rich farms of Montgo mery and Bucks °matfett wore to be seen in all their beauty and perfeotion. The long•oontinned rains of the early summer had kept the scorching suns of the last few weeks from so parching the ground as to deprive vegetation of its verdure end beauty. the hay crop hod mostly been gathered ; but here and there a luxuriant field of clover lay green in the sunlight, the delicately tinted blossoms mellowing and adding richness to the general hue of the field. The broad acres of oats and wheat stood waving their golden and life-sustainin4 burden, ready for the reaper; or long rows of grain al ready ant and bound in sheaves awaited trans. ',creation to the ample barns. Numerous fields of corn in dark and glossy green strewed careful farming and a favoring season. It was a bright, clear afternoon. and the atmosphere without even a hese. Far off on the left as we passed through the lower part of Montgomery. the bills on the other side of_ the Sehuylkill stood out against the western sky, the distance giving a faint bluish tinge to their forest-orowned summits. A mile or two beyond Sellersville is the tunnel, twonty-one hundred and fifty feet long, out through Landis's Bldg*. The !road bed is here four hundred and thirty. three feet above the level of the sea. Still ascending as we advance, about ten miles beyond the tunnel we reach the summit at Same's Gap, five hundrisd and ninety-seven feet above tide water, and just on the boundary between Lehigh and Bucks. And now we begin to descend, follow- ing the valley of the Balloon °reek, still about two miles this side of Bethlehem, when the road takes a westerly,direation, and loon strikes the banks of the Lehigh, and keeping close along the river, tionneots with the Lehigh Valley Road at the Bethlehem station. Omnibuses aro in waiting to tako travellers to the different hotels. We • found our way to the Sun Rotel, whore we were speedily made own fortable ; and the sound of the tea-gong was not unwelcome' afccr our three-hours ride. ' Before saying anything further about our jeer. ney, there is ono foot that foil under my observa tion, which I could not account for, but perhapa some of your readers may. APpleton'a Railroad Quids hoe been my travelling companion for some years, whenever I have had occasion to leave home, and it has always been found reliable. Of course, before starting ou my present trip, the number for July, 1858..vras duly procured, part of the contents being " New Time Tables corrected to dote." The time of starting stated in Apple. ton, not according with the advertisement in The Press, I obtained from the conductor on the train a card, issued by the railroad company, con taining the time-table which bad boon in use since May 11th. Judge of my surprise when I found that Appleton a timetable corresponded with the card as to one train out of four, each way, only. A little further examination brought out tho fact also, that while the card gave the time-labia for eight trains each way daily, Appleton was con tented to give the time for only the through trains, omitting oven to mention the feet that there are four trains daily to and from Fort Washington, In addition to the through trains. Mad thin hap paned with regard to some distant, out-of- the-way, irregular, and but little used road, it Might have been excused; but it shakes one's confidence to find an error of this kind in respect to one of the principal roads loading out of Philadelphia. The visitor to Bethlehem enjoys the advantage of many a pleasant walk and ride through a beau tiful country, presenting many diversified features in its landscape ; and, even while reposing after the fatigue of healthful exercise, the eye is charmed and never wearied with looking out upon the mountain Bides covered with forests, and watching the changing abets of 'light and shade upon the dark eat foliage, as the newsy clouds, gently wafted through the blue sky above, oast their shadows over the sunny hill-sides. But, of Bethlehem, and its history and attractions, more in a future letter froth A Tamstms. Calvert liana and Frederick Lavi Olmsted— Central Park, New York—The Parkatßirketi- • The exhibition of the plans for the Central Park is now closed. Largo numbers of intelligent persons from all parts of the country visited New York to see this display of the skill, taste, and inge nuity of the arehiteets ana landsoape gardeners of America There were thirty-five plans, in cluding four prize plans. There were also several largo models in plaster upon which an immense amount of labor was bestowed. Tho competition brought forth an amount of ability truly astonish ing, oven to those who had for years made land scape gardening a . study. The first prize of 52 500 was awarded to Calvert Vaux and Fred Law Olmsted. Them gentlemen are widely known in the world of art. "'Villas and Cottages," the beautiful volume by Mr. Vaux. has carried his name into every rural residence, exhibiting an advance in taste and beauty. Mr: Olmsted is the author of the interesting book "Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England." Like Bayard Taylor, with a knapsack on his back, ho took views a-foot through El-gland, and in 1852 published two neat volumes descriptive of snob rustic and rural matters as fell under his ey e. At Birkenhead, Mr. Law entered a baker's shop, and while eating some buns, entered into a, oonversation about the relative qualities of French. English, and American dour. This obanoe acquaintance. led to a Visit to the park. Mr. Law's description of this place is so interesting that we transfer it to our columns The baker had begged of us not to leave Birk enhead without seeing their new park. and at hie suggerlon, we left our knapsacks with hirn,'and proceeded to it. As we approached the entrance we were met by women and girls, who, holding out a onp of milk, asked us : "Will you take a cup of milk, sirs? good, cool, sweet, tow's Milk, gentlemen. or right warns, from the ass!" 'And at the gate villa a herd of donkeys, some with cans of milk strapped to them, others saddled :indict+ died, to be let for ladies sod children to ride The gateway, which is about a mile and a 'half from thee ferry and quite back of the town, IS groat massive block of handsome lonic architec ture, standing alone, and um., ported by any thing else In the vicinity, and looking, nil think, heavy and awkward.. There lea sort of grandeur about it that the English are fond of, but which, when it to entirely separate from all other arobi teotural conetruotione, always strikes One unplea santly. It seems intended as an impressive prei. face toe great display of art within ; ,butliere ' ,as well as at Eaton Park and other places I liave sines seen, it's not followed up with great things. the grounds immediately within the grand en trance being very simple, and apparently rather overlooked by the gardener. There is a large archway for carriages and two miller ones for those on foot, and on either side and, over there are rooms which probably serve es convenient lodges for the laborers. No porter appears, and the gates aro Beefy open to the public. Walking a short dietaries up an avenue, we lissed through another light iron gate into a thick, uxuriant, and diversified garden Five minutes of admiration, and a few more spentin studying the manner in which art bad been employed to obtain from nature so much beauty, and I was readj , to admit that in democratic) America there was nothing to be thought of as comparable with 'thief People's Garden. Indeed, gardening had berg reached a perfection that I bad never before dreamedof. I cannot - undertake to describe the effect of eo much taste and skill as had evidently. been employed. I will only tell you, that we parsed, by winding ' .pathe over sores and acres, with a constant varying surface, where on all aides were growing every variety of shrubs and &were, with more than natural grace, all eat in borders of greenest, closest turf, and all kept with moat eon summit° neatness At a distance of a quarter of a tails from the gate, wo came to an open field, Olean, bright, green award, closely mown, on which a large teat was pitched, and a party of boys in one'part, and, a patty of gentlemen in another, were playing cricket. Beyond this was a large meadow wltb rich groups of trees, under which a flock of sheep were reposing, and girls and women, with Children, wore playing. W bile watching the cricketers, we were threat ened with a shower, and hastened back to look for shelter, which we found in a pagoda, en an Island approached by a Chinese bridge. It was Soon titled, so were the other ornamental buildings, by a crowd of those who, like outsidlies, had been overtaken in the grounds by the rain, and I Was glad to observe that the privileges of the garden were enjoyed about equally by all clams. There wore some who were attended by servants, and sent at once for their carriages, but a large pro• portion were of the common ranks, and a few women with ohildien, or suffering from ill-health, were evidently the wives of very humble laborers. There were a number of strangers, and some WO nbserverl with- - - note.hnnk , __end—r....AMCPP, - that teemed to have come from a distance to study Cram the garden. The slimmer housed, lodges, bridges, AO., were all well constructed and of an decaying materials. Ono of the bridges which we crossed was of our countryman, Bomingten's patent, an extremely light and graceful erection. I obtained most of the following lefotination from the head corking gardener: The site of the park and garden was, ten years ego, a flat, earth., (day farm. It was placed in the hands of Mr. Paxton in June, 1844, by whom it was laid out in its present form by Jane of the following year. Carriage roads, thirty:four feat wide, with borders of ten feet. and walks varying in width, were first drawn and made. The exca vation for a pond was also mode, and the earth obtained from these sburcea need for making mounds and to vary the surface, which has been done with much naturalness and taste. The whole ground was thoroughly under-drained, the miner drains of atone, the main of tile. By these sufficient water is obtained to fully supply the pond. °Hake, Re thereon It, which is from twenty to forty feet wide, and about three feet deep, and meanders fora long distance through the It is stocked with aquatic plants, gold Bch, and swans. The made .are macadamised. On each side of the carriage wa7 and of all the walks, pipes Etc arc laid, which communicate wit h deep main drains that run under the edge of all the mounds or flower beds. The walks are laid first with six inches of fine broken stone, then three inches of cinders, and the surface with six Indies of tine rolled gravel. All the stones in the ground which were not used for these purposes were laid in masses of rook-work, end mosses and reek- Vents attached to them, The mounds were then planted with shrubs, and heaths, and ferns, and the beds with dowering plants Between these and the walks and drives is everywhere a bolt of turf (which, by the way, it kept clone out, with qirt, broad mytims, and ahem and swept with fiairbroonte. as we saw). Then the rural lodges, temple. perillinn, bridges, orchestra for a band of imstrumental music, dm., were built. And so, in one year, the skeleton of this delightful garden was oomplete. But this is but a small part. Beside the cricket and archery ground. large valleys were made tier dant, extensive drives arranged, plantations, clumps, and avenues of trees formed, and a large park laid nut. And all this magnificent pleasure groped is entirely, unreservedly, and forever the people's own The • poorest British peasant is as free to enjoy it, in all its ports, as the British Queen. Moro than that, the baker of Birkenhead has the pride of an °wake in it. Is It not a grand good thing? But you are in quiring who paid fork. The honest owners—the most WIN) and worthy townspeopie of Birkenhead the same way that the New Yorkers pay for "the Tombs," and the hospital, and the cleaning (as they musingly say) of their streets. Of the farm which wee purchased. ono hundred and twenty acres have been disposed of In the way have di scribed The remaining sixty acres, en circling the park and garden, were reserved to be sold or rented, after being well graded, etreeted. end planted. for private building lots. Bevera fine manglers are already built on these (having private entrances to.the park,) and the rest now sell at $1,25 a clears yard. The whole concern cost the town 'between fi e and six hundred thou sand dollars. It gives employment, at present, to ten gardeners and laborers in summer, and to five in winter. The'generous spirit, anti fearlesi enterprise that have aceomplished thin have not been otherwise forgetful of the health and comfort of the poor. Among other things, I remember a public washing and bathing house for the town to provided. I should have mentioned, also, in connection with the market, that in the outskirts of the town there is a range of stone slaughter-houses, with stables, yards, pens, supplies of hot end cold water, and other arrangements and conveniences, that en lightened regard for health and decency would suggest. The consequence of all these sorts of things Is. that all about the, town, lands which a few years ago were almost worthless wastes have become of priceless value ; whore no sound was board but the bleating of goats, and braying of asses, complain ing of their pasturage. there is now the hasty ollek and ()latter of many hundred buoy trowels and hammers. You may drive through wide and thronged streets of stately ad fives, where were only a few smattered huts, surrounded by quagmires. Docks of unequalled size and grandeur are build ing. and a forest of masts grows along the shore; and there is no doubt that this young tome is to be not only remarkable as a most agreeable and healthy place of residence, but that it will soon ho distinguished for extensive and profitable com merce. It seems to mo to bo tho only town I over saw that bus been really built at all in accordance with the advanced POICITICO, taste, and enterprising spirit that are supposed to distinguish the nine teenth century. Ido not doubt it mightbo found to bare plenty of exceptions to its general oba raoter, but I did not inquire for these. nor did I happen to observe them. Oertainly, in What I have noticed, it is a model town, and may ho held up na on example, not only to philanthroplets and man of taste, but to speculators and men of bust- Del& When Mr. Law penned this, he little dreamed that in a few yeare he would be engaged in laying out a park on a ten-fold larger soale for an Ameri• esti city. The Oentral Park embraces 776 sores. Workmen aro now engaged in laying out the grounds, and In two years they will be thrown open to the people. In the centre will be formed a reservoir, covering shout 65 acres into which the whole body of the Oroton river will be poured. Thie will bo made to assume an irregular form, and present to the eye all the features of a beauti ful lake. The park will have a front on the Fifth avenue of two miles and a half. Ample provision Is made for play-ground, areherygronuds, parade grounds. &a. An extensive arboretum and a her tieultural garden will be formed. ' It is certainly I the great work of the age, and will stouter bless- Inge on millions. • Nebraska is our largest Territory. It wil snake about eight Statedae large 118 Now - Hemp shire, and is about one•sixth the also of Europe. TWO CENTS. LETTER FROM BALTIMORE. Correspondence of The Press 1 - ' Beurritorst, July T9Eh, 185 S It is exceedingly gratifying to the true DBllll9- °racy of this city, and every other part of Opole Sam's domain, to find your noble ally in a good • eause,,the Washington states, eo constantlyand persistently reminding the rulers and the mild of the Democratic party of Provident Buoluman'S Os tend Conferodco ISienifetiM, and the Cineinnati platform of Democracy at largo, and givink an admonition to all that our only hope of a pan: tinned political ascendancy is in adhering to and putting in practice the principles then - and there developed. No matter how many hundreds or thousands may desert those two cherished Plat forms of the progreeeive Democracy o f the coun try, let us prove faithful to them, and never doubt for a moment that, in the end, We will find all, the Democratic people cheering us with theft; appro ving voice. • Wherever you man point me Oct a Democratic newspaper published and edited by men wholbad. reached the years' of responsibility when /limes Monroe proclaimed this continent erased against European colonization. and Andrew Jattikent per mitted filibusters to organize and, arm, byl the hundreds, in all parts of the country, to go to the aid of Gen. Houston in his effort to pitatseee Texas from Mexico, I will oboe , you a loam-, paper th it advocates the taking of Mexico and Central America in , obarg_s at onto byl the United :States Government. , Prominent seurmitig: Democratic journale of the right stamp, permit me to name the Baltimore' Republican, a piper started at the earliest downing of Gen Inekson's political fortunes. and•edited; for same years iies• by that enthusiastic Jackson boy of 1824, Beale 111 Richards n. He and hie paper stand firmly byt the Gilead Confersnoe Manifesto, the Chioinnoti Oat forte, and Gott Jackson's endorsementoffilibmizig ing, and there is hope for our party and the ohm' try whilst snob journals are to bo found. 1 ' Like myself. the editor of the Baltimore Rtiub nenu.seras ,in favor of admitting. Kansas into the Union Under the Lacem Men 'Constitation,, as ire -s vided in the 'original bill, id eider to - - get ,the "vexed (was ism " out of Congress; brit-his regent declaration in favor of Senator Douglas, In ?the present poorest in Illinois, shoal that helendi no countenance to that proiariptive spirit which too many have manifested towardathesesssto den:kind ed for the people of Kansas a full and a Lair hearing ' Though I felt it my duty, as a goad Party disciplinarian, to give my approbation to the KloBB,B admission bill. we °apnea!) , .reported, I never pretended to deny that you, and DouiLis, and Wtse,swere on the true platform, and the only one on which the Demooratio party amid stand with safety. - t Wjthin the last six m e nthe we have bad another paper started bare, called The Daily Exchange It Is published and edited by two young gentle Men who are accessions to our ranks from the old-line Whigs. and I must do them the justice to soy, it is edited with marked -ability. The Exchange is said by its friends to be a formidable Democratic paper in embryo and. that its active political Oa meter has not yet been developed for yrudevitial reasons. lam a regular arid an admiring reader of the Exchange ' for the talent displayed in its columns, but, so far, I have not been able to die cover a glimmering of Democracy in any of its ildl- Serials It Ives the first paper in Maryland to sustain Great Britain in the authority she hasiex etched over American vessels in the Golf of Mex ico, and it was almost a week ahead •of .our anti- American newspaper, called the iimerscatc, in raising objeotions to the establishment of sen American control over the neighboring Stite4 of Mexico and Central America.. It bee- also taken strong ground against Gen. Walker's plan! of bringing Nicaragua under the control of our Pe ople, notwithstanding it had the sanction alien. Jackson, in the aid ho permitted to be sent from all parts of this country .to Gen. Houston when the latter was filibustering in Texas. -- i The Exchange is said to be a Wise and Doulas as well 118 a Democratic paper in embryo, an if / so, it seems very strange to end it opposing p in eiples which I and you know to be advooatedlity those true and unerring disciples of Andrew Jack son. I must conclude from these peculiar 'yrs of the editors of the Exehanre that they b ve not yet entirely shaken off that old fogyism olthe Whigs which defeated Henry Clay in 1844, and that they have yet to realize the fact that if we go, into the Presidential contest of 1860 with the pa tend Conference Manifesto and the Cinointlati platform both repudiated, we will enter it as Sam son did when, ho engaged in combat with the Philistines, "shorn of his looks," and sharla a similar fate Any party to succeed in the'next contest, must place itself en the Douglas platform, and that platform happens to be the one upon which Old Hickory proved so triumphant. Paral.ecd. THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE [For The Press] - 2n The PI4.18; - a few days ago, appeared a pira graph giving the state of the thermometer upon the 4th of July, 1776, " when the Declaration of Independence was signed." - The Declaration of Independence was not signed on that day, but on and after the 2d of Augtist, 1776, as appears from the letter of Governor bfo- Rean upon the subject, printed in the Appendix to the drab volume of the Laws of Pennsylvania. (Dallas's edition ) Owing to this delay, one who voted for the De claration (Ilenry Wiener, of New York) slid hot sign it, and six persons signed it who were hot members of Congress on the 4th of July, when it was adopted—namely, Matthew•Thorntort. Berija. min Rush, George Clymer, James Smith, George Taylor, and George Ross. Governor Moltian states that Matthew Thornton did not take his seat in Congress until the 4th of Nivember, 1776, four months after the adoption of the Declaration, and that the other named were not chosen =tim bers of Congress until the 20th of July. The whole latter of Governor McKean is very inte resting, and it would bo a good plan for the news papers to reprint it annually, on or about the 4th of July. • RISTORIOI7I3. The Riviere and Blain% Case—Hancke Tined and. imprisoned. [Prom the Nan York Rimless, July 22 The curtain fell; yesterday, mien the 'de Riviera scandal, at least until molt time as the " gallant Z 'nave" may turn up—if he ever does turn up. One of the eiders and abettesa (Innate) has re ceived the reward of his isomplloit4 in the abduc tion of Miss 'Blonnt—having. been sentenced to pay a fine of two hundred dollars, to be imprie oned twenty days in the county jail of Hudson, and on the expiration thereof, to be further im prisoned until the fine be paid. Judge Ogden re viewed the matter in a clear .and forcible manner, in a very able opinion. His Honor plainly said that while he would impose snob 'a sentence as would show that he would uphold the dig nity of tbo court, and teach people that they could not contemn its mandates with impunity, he would also teach them what it was to aid the Ma chinations of a foreign adventurer of questionable if not reckless character, In keeping a child from her parent, and in aiding a wife to rebel against the authority of her husband.' Such a decision, wo think, minuet fail to give general satisfaction. In regard to. the lawyer, Mulford,, it is indeed a sad state of things when we find a millibar of an honorable profession, apparently in good standing, guilty of subornation or perjury, aiding this ad- , venturer in xlibing a father of his.obild, and him self carrying that child in the company of a hotel keeper and his /militant, at the dead of night; to another city and among strangers. Judge Whiting, with the able assistance of Messrs J. B. Ransom and K. Brown, has cer tainly succeeded in laying bare and holding np to the public view a plot whieb may well bo said to -be unparalleled in the annals of crime. We congratulate Colonel' Blount on having ob tained possession of a daughter who, from her ap , penance on the witness-stand. on Tuesday, 'we should say. still - loves him with true filial erection, and only trust that the efforts of friends who have promised to persuade his wife to return to him may be successful. A young man named Albert 11 Eldridge, a resident of Toledo, committed eniolde hr jump ing overboard from the sorew steamer Horsham. Light, on her lest iris, down. The circumstances of the case are peouhar, end show to whet an ex tent the feelings may be wrought upon by that all. powerful sentiment—love Mr. Eldridge was in company with a pieaeure party who had roads the tourof Lake Superior. Among these wee 'a young lady from Cleveland, named Mina If—. daughter of a heavy forwarding merchant in that city. To this young lady. who w is everything - attraotive and interesting, the unfortnnete young man was devotedly attached. How long' the attachment had existed, ar to what extent it Wee recfproeated, we are not Tble to-say ; but his attentions were very assiduous during the early portion of the trip. He lived in the pure light of an undivided love, and wee most happy in being near its object —at Tenet so Isle undiegulsed and open actions indionted All went on happily until the re turn of the boat, when she received ee a passenger, a young men who became accmainsed with Miss ll—, and thenceforth devoted himself to her. She seems to have entered into the flirtation wilt a keen test; so keen. in fact. that her lover was driven into a most unmistakable fit of the blues. Hp spent his time in walking the upper deck wi h his hands in bin rockets. Fitting with his feet bang ing over the side. and leaning over the stern, geeing into the dark, troubled waters. that rivalled the commotion whieh that motet of all disappoint ments—a love derided—had stirred up mule own bosom At Mackinac the parte went ashore to basoeet the Wend, and wonted him to eccomeany them He moodily refused, saying that he woe not wanted Ilia conduct attracted the attention of everybody on board. which made his poor ease worse, for nobody has sympathy with the trouble of a lover, except those who tire board in the The Harrisburg Herald of Thursday tells same ties. Shortly after entering urn Lake the following story of " love to the cars:." Oae of Raton he wee swotted by his mistress as he sit by the employees on the Pennsylvania Railroad in- himself on the side of the boat. Bhe placed her forms ue of a singular adventure which occurred hand upon his shoulder and spoke to him in an ir on the passenger train of cars coming into this quiring tone He replied that he hod no desire to plaoe on Saturday evening last. In one of the mingle in the diversions of hit companions, but care a young gentleman was seated, app troutly would rather die at home.. She replied kindly, deeply °coupled in reading a book be held in his desiring him not to speak so, and requested him band, until he got to Lancaster. At that place a to come into the cabin. Instead of com Plying, very handsome young lady entered the oars, and be gave her one look, and, without a wor, took a scat opposite to him. Before she Ind pinnged overboard A Foram from the lady been long in the train, the Oyes of both met, brought the remainder of the company to the and they recognised ono soother as old itequaluts side He 'was seen te etrugsle for a fevernoments, antes when young, having been separated by and then to sink, never to rise. 'With the image of their parents moving apart—those of one to the his beloved before hie eyes, he sprang into the cold West. and of the other to Philadelphia • The two ' emlwric , of death without ah instant's thought or soon became enwrapt in earnest conversation, fell preparation. ardently in love with one another. and by the Re was a young man of good standing in Toledo, time they arrived In our borough, bad resolved to and barbeen engaged in business there for toms be united as man - and wife, and travel on theiryearn. The' lady is of one of thehest - familitis in journey to the lady's home together. Accordingly, Cleveland, and the event excited no little feeling. when the train arrived hero, they took lodgings c s Every eghrt was made to keep the affair All, tba a hotel, rent for a- minister, and were united in °Moors of the boat reperting that he fell overbberd the bonds of connubial bliss, and; taking the next asoidentally; but "we havie this ;above facts from train, were off on their bridal tour. Our. inform- paasengers who came siewn en the boat, who were ant says be IT acquainted with the parties, and cog..is int of the oireinnatanees from lusglanins tp that they both occupy high positions i s society." end.—Detroit free , Praia, July A Remarkable Woman Several very interesting incidents are related of Mrs. k:ather Harris, the wife of John Harris the first settler on the site of Harrisburg, AK proves her to have possessed remarkable courage and determinltion The following we find in Rupp's history of Dauphin county: " The Mans ion House, situated on the river bank, was surrounded by a stockade forsecnrity against the Indians, An English officer was one night at thobonse, when by accident, the gate of the etookado was left unfastened. The officer, clothed in his regimentals, was seated with Mr. Harris and his wife at the table. An Indian entered the gate of the stockade and thrust his rifle through one of the port-holes of the house, and, it is 'sup posed, pointed it at the officer. The night being damp, the gun simply flashed. Instantly Mrs. Harris blow out the candle, to prevent the Indian aiming a second time, and he retreated. • " It has been observed that John Harris kept ar ticles for trade with the Indians. At one period Mrs. Harris had an Trish girl in her employ. Oa one occasion she was sent up stairs for some pur pose, and she took with her a piece of lighted can dle without a candlestick. The girl soon earns down without the candle, and on Mrs. H. asking what she had done with it. she said she had stuck It into the barrel of flaxseed. This however, hap pened to ho a barrel•of powder. Mrs Harris in stantly rose, and without saying a word for fear of alarming the girl, went up stairs, and advancing to the barrel, cautiously placed. her bands under the candle and lifted it out, a nd th e n coo ll y re proved the girl for ber carelessness. These occur rences proved her to have been well fitted for the life of n pioneer." --- a 0100101.6 ciiiitutsakwinewts. Carredlenedento for write fuss" will pious bear le mind the following enlee : lihreirjeoromunloitiMi moat de ies'eceipanied by the name of the writer. In mem to Mena correctness De the typography, but one aide at a sheet should be writ. tenuPon. We shall be dreatlyobliged to gentlemen in Penally!. raids and other Statai for eentelbellazie &leg the cam rent nairs'of the day in their partienlai localities, the xmonlee of the surrounding roma-6 , , the lueseue of Population, or any Infoialation that will be Into reetitg Lathe general reader. • , - GENERAL NEWS. • Tile Eaetoq, (Pet.) dirges stynt, ri The Su preme Court OA Thursday last _announced its deci sion in'the Itoportant ease of Peter Miller's heirs Sauitiel Wilhelm, suitaining 'the rep in of the auditors This dieision . takes .about $70,000 from the pockets of Mr. Wilhelm, which win be divided between' ton heirs of Peter Miller, &erased. and Governor Reeder, who. was employed as conneet for the Millers' The dolletriion of this amount. it is said, will take all the peredeal • proi arty still held by Mr.•Wil helm, And a good share of bar rez.f. estate. • He holds two_ hundred shares of stook in the Easton Bank, (worth- about $14,0004 all of _which he will have to surrender. Notice was Overt to the batik, and alai to the preeant owners Of .several farms, not to - transfer the !Pock or pay anything on their farms until this CM woe settled. We believe the report also allows M. Hale Jones and Judge Porter each 83,500 - more than they re ceived:- There edema to be but little (Wetly) sym pathy felt in our community. for Mr. Wilhelm. This decision cuts dodo his share of the Miller estate to a comparatively small sum." The Pittsburgh Poe( of Wednesday Anya It te with 'pain that we announce this morning 'the death of the Wife of Florence Kramer, of the firm of Kramer 'd Rohm; bankera. of thliroity. Mrs. Kramer 'was `be 'daughter of William B. Englieb, wasigreatly beloved by slaw oirole of friends and aormaintanoes, who esteemed her moat highly .for .her amiable charmer and many virtues. 'The cause of her death Is a singu lar one. Some week's ego, in saving a pet rabbit flora Ldjury at, the: heads of 'a child who had he come posseased,of :adorning-needle, Mu Kremer was. accidentally wounded in the herd- by the needle: The injury, at first slight, inoreesid the band and arm swelled,' and ultimately the brain 'and the'rekole nervous system was so severely effected as teresult in - death; Cutoff in the epilog time of her years, she leaves a young huaband and einlif to mourn' her lolls. On Wednesday afternoon the Pittsburgh Mine made a descent on - eliogas - lottery conoern, end biptiired - one of its alleged proprietors, J. J. Wood. ' For some weeks bit* this and the adjoin- Jpg Statoslaye.been flooded with circulars gotten up In Pittsbnrgh, - and .purporting to set forth the robemelt (4 be drawn in the Cblumbla lottery, with the prizes in each. the day of drewing, de They were signed' 'by J. B. Yates - A - 00.. Pittsburgh, Pa.{ to whom alt orders for - tickets. ho., 'aria -di reoted to be addressed. Mood had an establish went, furnished, In, a style of - sumptuous [flak& fi. came, in one s 4 the new building. opposite the 'custom house . 'Every evidence of his oils was found on the - fireinises. default - of $2,600 bail be was oompitted . for the.present.- - A recent letter. !rem Sumner - , Kansas, says Great fields of golden'wheat end growitig torn are now seen along the prairie slopes; but in:moat eases the wheat has been out and stands in rich sheairea dpon the grourd. The' yield Is very heavy. Corn 'promises well; new potatceonr nips, eta., aro becoming plenty. The wet weather has put the grass forward, until in monypl ices it was already as tall the top of our car riage sent. In some instances the faimers were mowing. No fences interfered with their operations; the prairie was all-befee them where -to. choose They se. leafed the richest and highest - rass, and had con trusted to deliver the hay . six miles distant at VI per ton—w lucrative business for - this dull season. . We learn from ,the rayetteVille-"jearsai that a lady his filed petition in the cone, of a 'neighboring county; asking that trlbnear to inter 'pose and sever the betide that bind her le the'hut band of her early choke, whose. petition seta forth a new cease for divorce, as will be lean In the fol lowing estraot,'Which-therfournalseys is a literal copy„from her petition further charges that, as she is informed, the defesdartt Aber husband) is now in Cheatham county, and bee recently opened a grocery or retell liquor shop in dahland—and that no man who will' condescend to sell mean whiskey by the drink, has soul enough 'to entitle him to the enjoyment of the warm affect tions of a confiding wife." - The' veiled murderess, - Mrs. Robinson, of Troy. gives the keepers at Sing Sing a deal of trouble. Latterly she has become so troublesome that the officers are forced to confine her to her room a great portion of theilme. For an hour or two each day, while the other conviete are et:waged in the 'ehops, she is left at liberty. in the prison yard. Her universe employment there Is to hunt over the grass plat for" four-leafed clover " Four• leafed clover is an ingredient in her .imaginary cauldron, over _which she mutters incantations scarcely leas weird and . wild 'than the' 't eiders three." Mad, or not mad, she is a puzzle and-tor ment to these whose misfortune it is to have hpr IA their charge. The Clearfield (Pa.) Journal; of the 14th blatant. says: "Oa Monday night. the 12th lest, some scoundrel entered the post office, in 'Lathers hurg, Clearfield county, and 'enrrled off a gold watch, five silver watches, one Bet of lady's ear bobs, and about fifty coppers, which • IMO in a drawer.. The articles enumerated belonged to A. L. Bohm% and, as near is an be avattairied, are worth aboat $180.'? The Easton Times says that the net profits of the Warren foundry and reschine shop. for the month of June, amounted to tho snug s .no of $5 000. The directors, by way of expressing their grafi& °Alan at Ibis result, trea•od their 'hands, same eighty In number, to a banquet at their establish ment receutly, and made each man a prment of a gold dollar. On Tuesday' morning last, quite a serioni revolt and affray took place on board the schooner Lookout, Captain Morey. from Oblong. when a few miles from Berale. One of the crow. Charles Gilbert, made a desperate attempt severed times to murder the first and eeoond mate, and had nearly accomplished his object. Ee was,flastly ramrod, and sent to prison.. . We liarn from the Indiana Independent that Messrs. damiaw, tihryoalciandtrahnstonfhavo also °coded in obteimnt a contract, from the Navy -De partment, at Washington, for sapnlying the navy yards at. Philadelphia and Brooklyn 'with a large amount of lumber, to ho used in the oonatruotion and repair of navy Testate. Miss Susan itamiburit, of Frederick county, Maryland, tenuity deceased, bequeathed a por tion of her estate. emanating to about $lO,OOO, to the benevolent societies of the Pipe Creek and Jefferson circuits of the Methodist Protestant chinch, in trust for Home Missionary purposes. ' On Friday last the first locOmotive'and train of oars on the Gettysourg Railroad crossed the COTIOWBMO bridge.' The Comp:far states that the company are about to take meleures to erect pße.enger station and other necessary buildings at Gettysburg. An Insane man named Mr. Stamm attempt ed to commit, nitride on Sanday last, is several ways, near Wheeling, Virginia. lie had prey!. onsly amused himself by cutting savagely at a number of owe with a knife. A slave boy named Alfred; •aged fourteen years, was hung la Mobile on the /Bth Inst.. for the murder of a child aged four years. The youthful culprit ascended the rentreld with a firm and bold slap. It Is estimated that $20,000 worth of huckle berries nal be sent this. season from Monmouth, Ocean. rlington, and Camden counties to the Now York and Philadelphia markets. Thomas Clay, one of the inmates of the military asylum at Washington oity, died on Time. day last .1e had served twenty-one years In the United States army. The barn of Abraham Goodheart, at P3ltns town, York county, Pa.. was destroyed by fire on Wednesday week. It had just been filled witb grain. Monsieur Godard, the celebrated aeronaut, made a meet successful balloon ascension at Be talo.on Tuesday last. The wheat and oats crop througbottt Vir. ginle Is, represented tie most Unfavorable. Corn looks better. Gold is an idol worshipped in all climates without a single temple, and by. alt classes, with out asingle hypoorite • Whatever you may choose to give away, always be sum to keep your tompsr. Love, rilriation, Iraleuly, nod Suicide.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers