, r v y s ;l 4 •l 0x ,„ * ., 1 % ior A-,*7..,-;,,rAli-41X4Wrrc,iutr°1419$1F'` ' ,A, "tt. - P 1 61416t6 Oki /flog ieg NOWA tkisirboiabooiroir otietorrior - Otx • ril: 0 ,00 20 1 1 r NOrnr. k ...DOLralmtiriorWlsool: -140 / 018 1 4= n $43442 .4 10 X - Ati - * I ry# 4 ,!!` jutaitil* Totoataigictsemw. . milted it * l. pi(tit Tanippgin t 14.11 Stifiiitati 7 ligerikNe'r % t IP?%lOia r dpo24ll,lng.V.t-' TIM .i#14240.1 _r" Wei car irirelo# l •otillarg vlrri 4-140- ... I.: , • CIO' Tito 0 4 -=`• 4 s OO , oo - • Tye* go** rt 4 .; 4. ''.l *- rWilo trigrroo. 91 ` 00` , -Irwrirrr , ooolo% - oi ., ,,forirr , r (toe woo* or , 000 r, .-0002 01 0 4 24) 0 /040... . rol 2. , • • fors eit* oilwontr•oot or ordirLyir w il l Mal as #rtrojmor *0214 prterigr lb" Char., _ try. , ParWritort,tro *visited:2o 0 02,10402010 _Tairrirum Piano. 2410‘42- , Boorl4l2ogibly io=floes} foriAttio - 44:7,-e4' ~`A~~&~ , ~~Uatthßß:~efpall'g Vic:" _ -.- , •?/1.4112140.38TR1VT,P110,.. " otleuorY4ex .1444111-4, , J - 04.:d3 rikaiY -"'" 144 1641bAd1h We 620, • , e&s.ideilituttohiLONDOef - .KEEPE • 84M11"r4111- Cs EIILVBX *raiiiN4•3 l oN. , , . ir"jr" V awinvlits,l!,l, - • • • IAsTANLI •' a • Ir i i ii liKt4rusx Axii,crumr _ , it"..SILYBIC;WAS*, or Givig uaa n" , . tin limpid; itt,a, 441 ..i.Ard•e1• . `4l-VW. ~*.lllll ,:' , 5t 4 ,5 •, i 4 S- 't~GKoFiOrAifii~SilMrt ' 0 4114 , 113.1141,aLVED:WASKO = Dr* /11,434441 . 1 ,m4,‘ , StrolS - 41W.. A s kiraft 1101 # 11 ;10 - ' gl -41 NILVMIlinnOW11211 1 / 1 031141ETSORIIIIi , 3 : iii I OBLETIppOPipWAITIRS:II4I4tfrI , 1 44 M a:41116V - 4iki A „ rig ipa BLEZZIE EIRARLICS 4111.0.11al.NtttrAiO!ii, .. „ , „- -,,9o4jr,AlaiutilT9l Mee isad Nuel r eel& owes ren . ltentintel Offinn ants irelfet/erK:ll4linng , : • • ,t, ••• ; Prideriek "raw Wm,D,Leninonek.,,, _•` Vbar.1.,13000,14 •!alleo,l • •••• 3 iIIIZIOEINOW . thiletilonee; Esc - `lm , , • Voir ` - . 3 ' : lids - _ -- • 41(D:ZXCIWOlft. • . : 7 - 1 -'7, : ;iIkI O ,OO4AMID Meat, ; 71 - • leinaDai.nticr ,, , ,,,,, • ; , Itiforampilhir*trOiliCaataraislit i5741,1::€ i"l,lrr i a. .A.T.JVBANLNOTX;III,OOIK-';'IND . , ' • ,- - - 4,:iroxinerot istwana - aurritl7.ol:«l!, - • - _ 'ftn.s.usungta'ff - 9• Reins ikarxi:ini* 44104 —: • .Valtidst Ufa giasidigi;A:pe?tifeas davii sit 1010 swag. _ Collostto airie;liat , ‘ftifts , *lt • ' Lre/and.:.- • • .---' _ • <hi 4 ' Alamenent Ludt, Notes VOnat., Laid '1460E4 , • '•• knelt NA sold, Inlad . :1141low amiallas -Paper siiptiaSed,f. , .... , •-• Ittoekr Nig Lain bought NM - ticitchuturpn, 0 1 0 1 0 1 4 111 4 - Wha , . -,;•• • ..jawmplNl..Paiurt; - • Amur& :MU, X0.0r L 17,1111. ty. York> : - .451P-At-Ait4; /Cr . ; ii : :4*.HAr:/rnp` _,___-:411011011111-*AtINIILlkakiW AUNTS mit :•100JMUMBUIS Prcp'-• ••*. - • -4 1 WAVW *Aft oat Inv ng *42-r* 4-WlL 2 Wfithol l ' ad Vis im a - .llted.-InyAnttnrialaarai " • • Wag • -neekKreleigint Oientlinato ;47" ~ irobtuakcipit& Co4PAnadrolgtis4.- Loud 0111.0.1. 414,422 1 • skis, TILIMMUNItaGARDPN 1 1 4 1 / 2 0,, • `. Altnot..l,vo l ,ll - 0,- , t; --,.., : I ~,,, ~, -„ , ; ,togairWit-sr i glark t Mir i simOrs."o4o • ' 1 itritlaiummerghoostitztoweg_iiftomtisi4 - - Sailai}ltaisyslhiteMliiiiit_47ossisC= XOlll All" MPAMI, ThioNDAsealif, :1-. - '''' l'ilia=s 'lrtilli=rlWlenCet , A. ilisiskairoid Who 461141kritokt mwmf,. , ,thOlsiN, lid *Oho* Artily Awidt34s e.4.4 . .1. 4 1 •z , AP* (dalW,o4o ittg mailik~ ssitslio — MOM iimit, 2 0% &se 01/14, Ta r ..."3._s/044,4. 7 --*.V.g.-R-M,,M141101-4.4, ~,,,,,, ..4 1 P-• '- nIPINN IIO6II 4' ~,, ~, , :t. ,AzaimiLlobriN.,. , -,- i=r. ‘ ,.. lll mitillf4'A,- , .; br - iroti.ll4lllh . '` GlionPirodeaset - t ''' f Aualsilluoria oll kee, , v 4c• 4 7 :Wialierßni, a 0,, , - 110 L-Ingirairsd: , i - ittrt 114)4 ! • VNIIN '-'1014 ".14':- ; ',`,T041 P:Terres: f liapilelTlAGlirer:n' - ilihotifilaiiskti, -,,... ,-,, ''' .: ,ipai - oliriiiiidia ll r4o - 11.' - .141 Utt " ' AVI2O3 , AMINV. , 4 2 WPITSD 47 -Sztvrar tuncroMoiksigje,mcnin 11 WWIST" Err Bt_ ... mit;zy . . 4. ii Err lia , I p a idiel; mot A i i dil. •''` '' na larialtricitileiT"*, po ' %Mini WM ._-,- • AlerliiiiitiblitW il aldtto timidit owls -, wa, ; , e r , ~ ..i oisoruirroki. tantUil - *sleek iititily, as 4 igi - --' I, 4 ifttj, Wratietf**l l 4 l 4.o 0 1 4 9 0 . _-, r- - D it for iiiilirotibewi r ,tridouti, mid:nootimaii YPT::: , •-,,,,,,--.• -.— -,..... -.: nessitaitturrifr"oliv r...,-;_;:- - -'' ' • .=ffliTlMM'''lT''''' ' , l - '‘ ' ' ' . ~ _ ~ , ..- _ • -,---, 0,---- , , gelY-IYO . 464:132n'M1 - `.l l Xit. PENT , Ltr'• 1 ATIONAV -, 11AII11TR.111111ST: cox.' ' Witirmorasiis simmoioniTlMplins 1 , 90 . fmjim, , 4:1 )14=plizEi r sillitar lt A r . , r P - . - A m • . : a u. : nidiii:sni iiia or linislVaii. is: 1 • ; iislnt ir el ftolikikern:iit -,ifinsit 1011 1 11 - 4 .17 0 . , 1 , 19 1; : , 4 liii4illiiilS. g*" . sift 'dAy , hen. olds* in tin - ginongingllll4tot lo SU - spubin c , and, t . nn.SD:, , n• 4) '.:- , P AI -4 73 4" 4 —~ irgig, g l ir i t s l=ii 1144;ite ,at ''' ' 4' .''' l - *matseep, Mee: P r odanigi. i nv , .. !, • ....-Ziiiio:4` Aiggintiell . '7.T, - • , . , :k.;,,, .- ..- a . • ,r2•4=, ,, , , - •••,T, , ,f•=• , :.•...,,• — ••inziover - r. , ••• • .. A , ,r, y-Atiok' 14[64 ifseArwti . ;: , li'li',-OirrolClNlrliart ~ B. lan # •• •--,' 'v ' 0.- - WailmiiitlkiliirWr,',k•- , ,, 1 linstph . ',BaSnitOsiroW t'7: - •,• - ,i, , ,:glignoin loft ~. ~, ~,. ,- ~ lionlilir. Ankiint. ' ~_,,-, :Joseph Yokes, _ -• '' ..-- •-•,li , imalitginirni;' ',, '.: lingo' Didend•rihi . i. ; , ''- • ' - .. - 2 , l6lll2lo"relbeiThlt spirilyineartimillir &Or. _ ~, FAcirhoftrigiesenti :rift wads, Is itinformlty *tit IL. lit'' , f ti.)041,1 )la4tAtii MOM' , .•, -i i,MilittraC_liiiiii-ti,sig tokyihrtaggenginui.,: .Ws am trill shriMpingii want soNsinitz to - thi &pod., i• tavo, -aiititildelvelasiot fria , io Eh, pen!uada], sWe sta., -11014sit.st this Jai iisigidosi, ,, ,,•:s ••=•-•_ ,, ' ,-, :i%,•.,, , I . anl-17, •• ' -4 1 , 110141r(51014YDOIACISTRIZTi '‘" , x1."1110M mirrito.uresrasc'' , " • • o; -7 438;giillX)Olf' BTREE' rrvE _ "PAL . 4.ntasyntefrAnnwp: , _ N0.1424]. -- ) DOOK 'STREET; FIVE qiirevAiggij-aD4SOK,wBT}INET.f.•;- IP - riN , -1.1 , 1P11 ATM SAVlNOtTiltrikt SAftit*.ll4l**l - ; liAlOVAdyplplitS BARIAIrt, 4 3 .. -- 1 lag p 2741.1411,4 t101,'1414 ''" " /•/, " ~-.„ - EAVIAMI *A lirtallir ' • T • r a w --- `;1•0**141.01): , -- : t .‘;.! .. .,. 1 49/ 1 j# 1 .00 113 0; %; I-" • - - ayky • ar-M l 7 - ' 2 - ; - -4,-",,c1ir, 1 4,!;,,b.".ifir1 d gm*. irc l .-ty2,314, '4 - , 1,0 c',l".. NVF,444. 0 , -- _... , -3afr4TP4 . ~ . ...a.i- . ; 1 : SO' ili iiiiii i iii6' Irieli Oiset4i a Mo. le 4 s _,. 0 _ ,, t,, , . - ' ";-• - , ; ' , '.4.'/Z.:l - '' 4. f . - ..-lbarkiNa,,Grigs lijerjs, 2. - --,, , , , -- .-2•: , , , • . ' jr-' ` - '1146 itillibiliiroitirsat'`p* Prcpw: ' t'L' " --, -- 4q , ", , . i . 1•41;, - .- , itorthr iSDIAIP TAADEOIO-t ' ft. 'll. -=- ,/ k'' , ' ,, ft* itnrEo.vf..w-4 f. s 1 ~,,, = - . + 7-r -,:11.11,`44,1```N'11ti'',5.Y'..i',0",,..:-;-j '', .• 4'' ..• . ; 1 --1-4:1':". , ,Z - ":, S„:!4 ,- -4043;xpriaNTINTL, ii,..:,,, , ,,,,,, ...,) , ..-4'.:, , ,.•, -, -- . . ,, , , , g 7. • 77 , :.,',4 : 7 P r;„ . 1`,14... ,, 7 <. ,-' 1.e.',...:7 , - , !:.. 1- .; • „ :2: 5:1 , r , s Wii, It ur ith 4:IW - Ir. *1 j ~ _ , ,r.....„„4 ~...14,,,• . x ..„-,,- 1 -q,-,- ; , ,, ,"*w..., ~ , , ? ;;7. 1 .".,,-. -.4, , ,pL,C , 1 1 4.-: , i 1 SP."':, --- ':;.. ^W'' , "` :ll .'• 3611101,10'4tittptitrz iiiii 01 ''-',-, .1 ififz,r, i',..' , .:1:4.:'6.' Af.- ~,t,- 4 '. , -- , :r•-7 - I r . :, ~.', . .q--- , ,- -' :.% 1 - 2: v,, , :i . ~ iW 4 -- ` , , -, , - , orAßPUGlioiliniii IiANIP. '-‘ ....-. - ~ .1, , rv,:iri• V / I-P:62` . 4'4 . 44 i iiiii:a' *444,4 c m 1 'IP,' A'` , . l l..`A- 1, 4*,_,_,1i'.. ~. ~_,.- -.77 7 7..... i- • ; -'-, .4.; , ..i , .mi - .-,- ?....- - - - : 4- , - ,,5t1*!t,..;,,,...f!"!5 - g,i - - , ': , r'R-:..'4. ,, k'.._' , ,'-:' te; ; ,, , , ,-. I i.".4riVYtt,1..f1e.:411051441t1"3(1402"111"- r '' ..I ' ' ' ''' tl a '''' :i :`,4 7' - ` 4- ": :-( `?"'?''''' , " i i .02-.,4§,4-*.s..rt-1,7.11:4f., ~• &1 4 20rtfit*IF:PAI, 1.-- , '?3 , :.-. , :r i 4 ` . ;• - g'-AfFIVAX--c , .....4yot:l'esilti l leAt.4 , c , "; • '"?`, - 0 4' VAV-*A - ikAtAtriVt!. isitii = 7 4 l 9 l c o nairrAT,,,, A 44*** ' : 3 4 14 : 1 4,1 0 ' - ,li.- • a. A-ric4 - ..4voick‘oft , ittm , zi tioittl.so - Ru*_44 - .7,-,4t#l.,w,rw,ir#- r44-..,A5.t.::=,.-tt'- - -..-- .1.,.., : .: - '' •- -. •,- tzwr.t , ?.l.. vivirot ff,.434,11404; .74 11 ii ToAlait' , ??,-,.:1,-•:, ok, 4 1-:• - ir:z,;1,51.:,, ,, .. :, - ;k . : , :i . . 17.1%/i , .- .4_ . 1 " .`•' ;S s EldarktitaillUDA — i3':, 7 k 093 T.Ola 8 ; In►iq Getz Attehtto of -1 ed , to dear socket oniornams, RAGLANS, fro-, -t.e ‘'* i#o iiils.mAsynt.i. -AND 01,011{ EMP621172i. 0 11 8TrillT sTILIST, , innamptir.t. BROTECU§sre ROM*, Ykaribbh prlnted-Ato ;VA, of rich Oudimerep !Jets, !tryip,, sad -Boloa ‘. .od medium_de- . . BRUM dii•Pdne-tAidsif* de - *Oda "- :' OnigiTNtrr *n4.111011'111; , . TetisaS. - FRENCH OASS/MERES.— AL/P ixbolvit"law. tiositha, of ya- - inlatiaqualitied. 'Black' Trench Allothif..,'; New lifyiaa Auttiagiutat !Misr • •- • • - t—IIIIARELMBB BROTIEER_ 5i1284 4 nE - OSTBUT AIID-300111TIL, ,- .V.ALL - GOODS Orari,oo9 porde of mar Rumant foo/lIM !ki`A __ , ,-_ll , nesstaisy, a lo.11A81 , 1; -- -- b - ;roreN,lNlPPA'azialiPittfilli'AAßOAN Otreeti_, .-- Aetight for OAEOPand,ta lareold - only for 011311.1 eatieraddsittly &Sett that - the itbdre goods are so . shomi.thatinnAlisoin eau sate a tortio'- . por esatage by nr -)tinyinfr of - ,; - - • BLAONNILEIeaIinot heitailled on this Oonti lninfor Amarloal " ' We ehalbnngeeoseoinparlioni NoWDolat6Haf 4 boautifol ' - - Poli 0111Thoyrisillrobmolso,,aid Tioy.bitudoomo PIMP' fiat.; ondAtoiricon Obintisio. -- • - SUN' itharils,:(kapo OhearlsOlroolza Shawls; -Blanket ithawlikAoA - Asiz - ' • largo steak oCDomeitil i Nualins, Plannols; AlankatiObilts,ouuterpaussOte, - • j, .7" ',Abort gamily:Woof of our own Importation.. ' • !Pablo Piano„Covers, Stand * Corers, ,•= ' • • - -,Olotbs, Classicooreo...&•., , for Yea's and Boys , woar.. , rWo..boro.. datormined . . to keep ,The • bent Stork this Onson wo has*, ever Lad, and-to maintaiodr reputa tionuannooftbe Host Houma , in Philadelphia to Buy ; -- • " , Li!;•oor. - amoni& OPRING-OARDIN arida. NAVA ONLY ONA NEirrita4'6ooDß.. •• .-. • Aie Wati• riWiNviiii• • "olaptwo„itmoirtiniat* New Goods • '.•-•• -tor Nicir in toinalr_alm I ' iJ-oR.rlbts `lnman! svoil•Oion P!nit iliaotookt of oikse - p4Fters, ,7% . 0 itoritiaty, in Windy a Aglaia sild'onnOiloino at Aiwa, to any peal ima m. ykt lapaion ion Y ffititilitio4f,e tem' era: The Ate dtl * biiddell to by pai eteankeie arriving Fall; *,,igibinie ). F444noneirneen4 to Wive mint to them a tnileidien s itieny Nett geode WM& !sly:4lmm in Pala - • „. , - ( 1 -800"A21D'81.1 OffIIkiTNIIT OT `OO -fit . • 'IOIIA.NTALOON : 'STItTFFS:::r& Costansii, Testily% - - etodr appolally for BOW wear: iliaanrx cheap. ' r -- !./11.Bou - muobtrts • .1117114 +lllllill , Saki ii 1010; by rho yard or 14.otiot a email pollidt. bn thit Aglillttl primp prim. 4:100D11. - Irish Linens, fine and Shirk' - prowolq,Disp•trionifllottlz:l:. _,, e. WW I D'III43.IISBILLES' QUILTS: from sl.2lpilevinutto; , td - oloW; A. , (4.I4)tANT - ...,;;;;Ploill - Dulorals Tda,..:1,11.11i, do, 111.26 to 11.71. ' ,I; , .ll.oiltoo*alriiio..s2.6o to 43.511 '''.lhatiokfew. mai 1411i-Mintillos sod Ilium', Itlaitit wweill illeitlial4 a, gnat Otioda for lionamer and ion Troyonin.Dr9lloB,. llioniotiiko, jest 'kick • AstiltylitlL; ' -• dOOPSB Ik,CONABD 11:006ilir ,NINTH and,MASKOr, 1 . L ' -Ikaill sal4 y ' rigEAT-BARGAINS till , Septepitfer JUS'Aildtir and Cokiridlophin; 14 and 200. • aI .2isbeeldirsd•witffiNE 04146 112,407414ewheri, PAW Skitio:ls24o l 4 , 84 .'l3ll!corLinots•Trim*. bp'al heavleetoluetion. • :••-; ttr .1(4k;• MAXinel4. 8011,-• •••• 4 t. Nevi Ttimuiltig Ilton 'and' Pa410r35 '1114.141MM! B.E. Menet Ettrinth and elmatant - 0 - PEN - rmiklqw.par:;,GooDS- FOR AWDOpinitLitimiLDO AB LOW -Papaw. . -38,3140iXeall,6Noluitii: otsrdo tosiort:', bodo • •Olgoit‘aati,--, :--s•pials • Poll 6 ChOrted. PitifteindlifimehOltar Printed DilMooo, ';',O•fotyles to. for Wrappers. GarotyloikOioltmore Prints for SOO pm Itonti•tio; AmOrloati,'And ,Englloh CtilitiitclOtbs And - Alpacas, - ,L, - ;,OkosirrlagolrbUlkfoldrwlitths; liesilot IM Crimson palineo, erased with Blau* for ,• • , 'Atoo; • faltotoolif.- • " • - - DOMASVPAND ,If ITENISHING GOOD& • , CHARLES ADAMS, m 144 = • , and Arch streets. - ?-114ANTiLLA.13 I .!MANTILLAS 1 Ma IllatOrntspectfully invitee the Ladles to call and examine Mistook of Mantillas, embracing many styles not to be found elsewhere. Our stock is the forgot, ,ouripattems the latest styles, and our twice* so low that ;_wedefy competition. - - - yards Black and Fancy Bilks, writ, 44, 60, 66; rich; 02,t4; 69, 76 ; very rich, 81, 87V, 95, $l. - 10,006 yards Dabbles, Barnes, •Dtonds, at 10,12% " , IV& 12, 20, 22, , 26, 28, 81, 86, decidedly the cheapest - , 10009 j r artiiianeitenciLawns 10, lig, 2 0 , 26, Onemany of thinn,,B7.li to 62#, ye fine. One lot of , Oraper , worth lBo. '69oYardi idde.band Passimeres, 3731, worth $1; with .ny;rest variety of dedirable goods for men's and boys' _wear, leis than usual prices. „ 1,000 yards Marisilles Posting', st 11; worth 70. 1,000 yards new"style Ribbons, the cheapest to the city' - 1 4 000 inie french ffeedleworlrod "Collars, at 11, worth 19,000 yes& of Plain' and ; Plaid Itieoneta, Wes sad Goods; the greatest bittgainein the eityll Ribbohi' and- Fr inges Ind 'TrimmlePtlii, endless ye ;kehi than uait, the:usual ' " ' • -. Mo*LROY, .1 • 11 . 1onth NIN,PII Street. .UP.IN , 3 WIDE WHITE AND' BliAoll A-4 BABSON; lei . .. Shawls, Talmo, &s.; wholesale lid Storakeeperi supplied for sett cub. OHARL&B MUM. _ _ EIGTITII and A.llOll Streets. '.lllOl O lO - 4rib *043 LEVIOK, , EASIII,-&• CO., HARI4I3, • - ' U . L117.114 iV/10I,BOALN DBALIBB -BO' 9,' Corner THIRD and 1.110/I.Streets, ,Aut2s.2m , - RULLAABLPIIIA. - ." et L SAUNDERS, ' , , Mai '4IOOTIVAITD„NROBEI, • ,1,411,T1L1A sad 11011!4!IIKaaufat4iire. ALao;- - • mißiW.GOOpil AND liOrT RATS. OABH, , sad ,proarptiIIX4IONTNIS.BUTSBII will Sad a to their bitiwiat to amain. oaf Stook, - - "' • No,' 34 North atm& BOMi. & BROTHERS, • =ERE Show kink Sigtit;Olde, al/Nin „ PEILADOPRIA 01119 AN:p..an . , „ • 30$11P* AB9MPB(lit CO4 1/4 MARKET VI'RBIT, 144 o*, MID aigoilti • • •Mere AND IMONtir 41111 , 401111 R 14,1A#Uf4 (TITRE. 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".: „,,,..- - ." -:-.1 ,- , :: ,.. . : ' .j . ,1? - ..- '-, . - -,.. te l l- -_,,-- ...- ' . -' ' ':l-', -.-:.:. :-. -- "'" : :- O 'r ll ---..'--:', - '- ' - '' ..7-.N. . _ , - .. - f..F.1.-', - --, , , ..,.. • - • - -', - . . .-- -- -fi , , fia --.. . ~, . - • - . . • - . ,!. ~ 4 ' ;r _ fitj4tir*t_: .1.: d' 'OO IfooL . B2ALB' tii;Y 11 BOOT AND SHOE .WAREHOUSE, . MANUFACTORY, .; 1 010 6 , - **CET STREET, ' : - XORTff ME; pbr,ow arm, PHILADELPHIA WHOLSSALB DBATZBB MILIMIACITURBVI WROMBALAII,I,;aIItiI AffITY • AND BASTERN, NADB BOOTS AND SHOES, • jtos. 411 f AND 424 IiAIiKOT MINT, 3Ron, üblicationa 1011jET RENOWN VOT , NTERFEIT DETEO- '.l. VOIV,YOB. OBIDTEMBER is NOW BEADY. - tioximirXinitoEtt, one year. $l.OO BEMI-MONTIMY -14 u.OO attlatElturitasna' • - • - 10 riSTERSON'e COUNTE ' FFJ.T DETEC TORJor Begeanber 1 is now ready. Get It at ono*. (j_ ET TIE ,BEST DETECTOR—PETER SON,B is that one, 41 new Counterfeits. ' QTOREKEItriItS should have Peterson's DETEoTonalsarsat Slide , desk. DETERSON'S' DETEOTOR is published •IL twits a mouth, 012 the let end 16th." Price 10 coati. 31E Ai r ITN TERFEITS— PETER=, 8010 7 - 0 - 1 , 3 DETECTQR 11 - W Sept let Is now rowly. 4 AI NEW .. COIINTERFEITS—PETBR ex.:B.4OIIIA pu;ECTOR for Sept let le Row reedy. "PETERSON'S oounterfett Detector for eptembeillat $6 now ready. Get It at once. tTEIL SON'S - Counterfeit Detector for J1. 4 , 1125 13e .a pte t mber,ll . t 111 slow ready. Get !t onoe. . „ GREAT EVENT, OF THE AGE IN PR 8: - ' • AN AI7THENTIO HISTORY Or THE A.TLAN,T,IO,-,TELEGRA.PII, - Urge 12nr0., Idnelin. Price Sl: ABUNDANTLY AND,. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUS. TRATED, with numeromA wood-cuts, steel engravings, diagrame r and a %nperb folding colored maporbich. pr•- senta in a clear and intelligible manner, a plan of ,the Submarine Telegraph . , together with the relative slttons of Europe and America, nearly every Telegraph line In both countries, and Is, of itself, worth the price of the book. - Containing „a 'complete.lidOord of the Inception, Progress, and PinalBuoceee of that noble under , taking. , A; Geberil History of Land anti 0C4311 . ILO Telegraphs. Deicriptloner of Telegraphic Apparatus," and Me— . greppleal Sketches of the Prin. clpal Persons connected with - the Great Work. Dedicated to, and embellished with, a magnificent Steel Portrait of - • Owatnt W. Frau, ' Req., - To WhoielisdOmitable . energy and unfaltering parse- Marin the clytHied globe An indebted for the acoom plialtment of Oda triumphant enterprise. This book Wilt be sent',byrnall, postage paid, to any part of the United States,,on•recolpt of the price, $l. RDVDdr:O4IIII,I6TOM, gnblishers and Bookeelleno, - No. 810 BROADWAY, New York. N. B:— . :lnditeetninta will be offsredto Tautoairn and all other ACCIMTS who can procure enbacribere. au2.ltuth.kaattf - - • TAXES OHALLEN & SON, • No 25 SOUTH SIXTH STRBET, Publish TUE OITY OP ,TEE GREAT RlNG—tho mostsoperb work on Jenunelem eyiir issued. $0.50. ,HADJI. IN SYRIA 75 Cents. • CARPENTRY"MADE EASY. $3. - NEW JUVENILE 'LIBRARY. $2,50. ,DAVE or. mAentELAB. $l. „ GOSPEL-AND ITS ELEMENTS. 35 cents. MI/REUSS. 35 cents. • , iS PESOS. PALESTINE, PAST AND PRESENT. $3 SO. IN AND ARGUEP STAMBOUL." $1.24.• su2s.lmie lIST.I3IITI.NOW READY! I TEE a NATIONAL MEORANIO, ,, 'TEE GREAT.WORR/NOBIENI3 PAPER READ .11'1 READ: READ IT I ' It contains a large amount of matter of vital filtered to every One that oaths a livinctiy honest in dustry. To be had at the Wilco, No. Jog south Third Street, (tip - dila r AGENTS and ciataisno WANTED DMZ/n -/I.I'UL Ler/ ALUAB L E WORE ON COLONIAL V OPlNlONS.—Opinions of eminent Lawyers on rarloua potato of English Just& prudence, elegy concerning the Colonies, Maori ,es and Commerce of Great Collected and Digested from the Originals in the Board of Trade and other Da vomitories. By Gummi Ozwaute, Rag., P.E.g., B.A: /vol. deo, 816 perm Tustieceived and for sale by ' KAY & BROTHER, I.aw Book sellers, Publishers, and Importers, 7029 - . ; ,19 South Bath gigot. NEW - MAGAZINE. J. 11 BRYANEIe 'STRATTON'S ".AMBRIOAN NtER MEANT , ' isikent Nay, map b• had 'MNEWS DEPOTS; MlSrApeat, Nape, J, Nell; fa canvassing We idly for Pearly inthaeribbni.: Pries 112 per annum. /address BEAST k'STRATTON, • Mereaatile ooneke, 8. N:aerldirld!EFaied EHESTNET 'Streets, nil- Altillittera" , z gobs. e jNO. Q. PAL - 0151iElt & 726 010313TITUT STREET, , Mee now In store a eomplete assortment of SILESiIIIBRONS, VELVETS, FLOWERS, , • . FEATHERS, ind • MILLINERY GOODS GENERALLY, theriirai lu eaia F.rl4•G•m._ - _l_ an2s4m* 3 3 _SOUTH SECOND STREET. 33 Buyer% of MILIANZRY GOODS, will iind tis prepared to exhibit a matt ooleplete and elegant esiorfinent New 'Mae BONNET RIBBONS, In immense variety, _FRENCH And AMERICAN BLOWERS, PEATHERB, RIIORINI, &e., &a Aba, a beautiful Stocker STRAW GOODS, Comprising all the deolrable Otylea. Our PRIOEII, tali& are Axed _and• uniform, are graduated at a uncut= ADVANOR UPON 00111 T, Hedge. ',blot' we allow 73( PER CELT. RORIIII DEALERS from a eiletanee, who may not ba aware of tho 'exlitenee of snob an lleMbliahmsot, OUT OF RARE= STREET; will benefit ...themselves by whit, to A. H..ROSENHERI & BROOKS, No. SS south 211100 ND itireet, above Chouthut au2ll.ltourrl _ - - - 1858 : FALL STOOL. LINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS, NO. 46 SOUTH BROOND STREET, INPoRTy.Ris AND MANIIYACTIMERO STRAW ROODS, ' /RENON i'LOWERS, VELVET AND NILE BONNETS, TRIMMED BTBAW BONNETS, • RIBBONS, RUOHES, and MILLINERY MOODS GENERALLY. Patton Bonnets mado and trimmed to order. ,BOUTIIERN, AND WESTERN BUYERS Aro invited to fall and examine the • 'MOST COMARTERTOON.YO BE POUND IN TUE 'COUNTRY. aulo4m J. 'HILBURN JONES, _ • SIANONLOVINIII#BID WBOLNIALN DIVAN IN FANOY SILICAND 'STRAW BONNETS, ARTIVIOLAL /LOWEBB, RTTOBBIL 1301 T DM AND WOOL HATS. • The attention of eitrand country Sealers le (pellet/ to a large and varied Ora of the above geode, at 4.119 - BIAI/Xllllr STREET, ~nlB 8m - BELOW BIRTH. AII.GUET, 1858. We wenld' inilte 'the attention of Southern and Western flume to oar Pall Styled of SILK, TZLTZT, and FAGOT BONNETS, ARTITIO.7.AD BLOWERS, • SEATHDIIB, and MILLINERY GOODS, Now ready for the Trade at the lowed Market prlcal. STERN & IiftEEMAN, . , -72 d OGNSTNIIT Street. Ur NMI D,14101. 108 and 106 N. SECOND AA. Street, Manufacturer and Dealer in Fancy and Straw Bonnets, Ohenille and straw Trimmings. Also, Feathers and /lowers, all of which are • of the latest and most fashionable. styles. N, B.—Cash Buyers will flnd it to their advantage to glee as a call. • • außtlian Business ear7aa. 7. T. ADAM); C. A. JILAYiII. A BRANS. & MAYER, • ATTORNEYB AT LAW, LO,OIS. GAVSN, PA., , . Win attend promptly; to all professional business en trusted to them. Gpectal attention given to the collec tion of claims. , x nnnn aroma. Go*. WM. P. Packor,Harrisburg ; Pa. S. L. A. Mackey, President Lock Hewn Bank; General D. S. Jackmsn, ,-Logk.linven ; lion. A. White, Lock. Mean; Simon Scott; Lock Haven ; Bain to Hairtherne, Phlladel l'iaVterPlaiditl%;l?ir P M Price a ama rHon.A: VaiaofsiPplelphi; w ajrtCo sliailrrtm4 4a dytims?/ames Ilefonte, ;2; J. W. ggle, Esq.; Philadelphia. 26-tf ,O 4 HOMPSON AND G.M... CONAN- A.A.:: Bob, coNVBYAZIoggi, 020 ad, OCIWARROIL ATTOSINNY AT LAW, spe,7 ,No, AA= istrieT, below Tenth. (VIABLE& TETE * . COMMISSION MEE— ILI CHANT and - Importer of HAVANA BEGAS.I6 US w o uld etmeet; amps& 'tarp.' and-i 7 t . AIIMAIT,Ii'RABORS—: , imiortets'EOV:l4holosale Dealers tri WINEErw 8RAND7.313 4 WHISKEY GINS, and NANO!' 'LI QIJOItS No, lon Spilt, between Tenth end 'lllleventA defeat. ' ^-4 • • jam, W.,-„ , utnacic Or L ;CSS I : 1 11114 Do vr ~ .. . ,GLAN4I, I—We invite the ottonlio:n or the pnb— Ile to ..the ,extenstes stook ,of 711314 and *dmeliaan, Wlndow•Oloss. The largo, and well4eleotedlitook of Shwa. Isonsbatly en „Want enabled las total - 41 orders:. with- , &IMO** and so low an anrothir bowie in the. olty. , fr,,•• ~,-;. , ~ . UNGLBILA,IMIITH. - • - ' inploisde Druggists, • , • nett_ , .- 11. if, %nu gt ilimitiall 04 erns ot/o, -. PHIL • THITRSIDAY; AUGUST" 26, 1858. ElAt 4,llrtss4 TRUE AUGUST 26 0 : 1868., A variety of subjects frequently come un.,; der our notice, in conversation or In reading,' which are not worthy of being separately noticed or discussed at any • length, and yet, which'are rather too eukgestive to be, wholly neglected.. Of things in 4ournaliam;• about' : the most annoying to writer, as well as tW reader, is the, presumed necessity of sorne,,- timeafilling a certain quantity of apace, with; out regard to the quality of the material supplied. A glass of wine may be desirabl4: and even beneficial in certain cases,whei , taken in its natural state, but if it be thrown into a bucket-full of water,: through which would :receive an infinitesaimal dilution, - would be neither so pleasant nor so good—in; deed, very few could take it. Searching foil a needle In a brindle :ofhay, or for a grain of rice in a bushel of corn, is as profitless a puir-'7 suit as wading through a column or two 4, newspaper, print, in hope of finding the tary fact or principle which forms the actual germ of the article. We eschew every thin;* like this, and hiving noted down a 113w:fact'sA as we perused the English journals, just reer; ceived by the .firabia and dinglo-Saxon, !Mlle ! ' • determined to notice them in brief, instead CY , constructing a column of verbosity to "th,si elucidation of each, seriatim. First, then, we commence, as gallantly as type and priaiing ! i, ink wilfpermit, with the cry, - PLACE AEI DAMES. There is a belief, among men, that thetfili; sex, will, forgive everything but a reflection upon their youth and their beauty. Perhaa there may be some truth in that belief. Wi, decline giving an opinion. Just now, ln' Paris, a matter is'under discussion whiel;listi probably caused some annoyance . to the ErtiP , . press EUGENIE. D. is an aspersion upon itO , youth—an insinuation that she is several yeatil older than she has represented herself to .nitif:; Carlene inquireri, who have to consult I BURKE'S "Peerage," in which are given ig luminous details respecting the British arse= tocracy, must have noticed how, without single exception, while the day and year,Of each male child is given with minute accnraeyi. I not one female member—child, maiden, wit' mother, or widow—of any noble family credited-with credited-with her exact birth-date. , The's* tem• is literally to Burke almost every mint , ri S , and manner of fixing the exact age of strie4e, female member of the aristocracy. ' Itill4t the same in Franco—only that the PeeragOA ,.., " that country being very undetermined,X#r; tween new-and old nobles; no fac-simile.Ot tc Bunnx" has yet appeared there. Buf4l regards royalty, the Nonileur takes ollieltd: notice of age, and--duly announced, alftv weeks ago, that the Empress EUGENI' born on June the 4th, 1826, which would: her now at the still youthful age of thirt' But there are fact-seekers abroad ereAr ; where, and one of these has turned up a nitiof Spanish newspapers, of the year 1827,, ffiii tattling details of a curious, diVOrce suit..lt seems that, in 'lBlO, DON Joaaarm Di Ideri*i) married DONNA. X1.R.1.A. DZ PENANSANDZ- 2 - t f t;.' in -1818, while the parties were in Prance r , is marriage was annulled by a decree of divotrui ', ,- passed by the preneh law courts—that, 1.. quent to 1820, DON Joee fell in love ''' h his ex-wife, and prevailed upon' her to ye, with him again, which was the easier' qte, , I as the divorce was only known to her failly: and hie brothers—and that they did scOlin,, as man and wife, to the eye of the world,,, ii 1828, when the cavalier wstfkito' by a fall from his horse. _Now thli':,,lr• 17P STAIRS, rather . Empress Doom's. The galiantlfoniteur puts her birth in 1820, bat that Is Impossible, ether father died In 1823. The great probability Is that she was born in 1821, which would make her thirty-seven years' old. What curiously and 'even suspiciously complicates the matter is, that the French Gazette de Tribunaux of September 21, 1881, which contains a verbatim report of the divorce case, and subsequent proceedings on it, has been removed from the Hies of that journal kept In the reading-rooms for referenCe. This was done, it was said, by an Imperial ukase. THOttelND From the Empress EUGENIE to Mr. SAMUEL WABEEN, author, lawyer, and member of Par liament, is something of a downward step. WennErt's name has long boen known in this country. • Although he is only 51 years old, his "Diary of a late Physician" was commenced In Blackwood's Magazine, some 28 years ago. It has been the fashion to call him cc Doctor ' WARREN, because his best-known and earliest work related imaginaremedical experiences. But be had no claim to be so called until 1858, when he was made D. 0. L. of Oxford University. He bas been 21 years a lawyer, 7 years a Queen's Counsel, and has hold the Recordership of Hull, worth $3,000 a year, since 1852, when it was given to him by Lord DERBY as a reward for certain very onto gistic articles, in favor of the first Derby-Dis raeli Government, in Blackwood's Magazine. Mr. WARREN, -fired with political ambition, got returned to garliament in 1856, but has failed' In obtaining any official appointment from the present Ministry, with whose politics he generally coincides. Mr. WARREN, on 'politico-religions ques. tions, sides with the ultra-intolerant party, of whom Messrs, NEWDEOATE and SPOONER are the chiefs in the Commons. On the recent motion that Baron ROTHSCHILD ahould take his seat, without taking the Christian oath; the opposition was led by Mr. WARREN, who, not content with assailing the Jews;_also had a fling at the Dissenters. Now, in England, every man who does not belong to the Epis copal Church, ec as by law established," is act down as a Dissenter. Mr. WARREN'S OWII father, though now an Episcopal Clergyman, was a Methodist preacher for many years, and was considered an eloquent, able, and pious man. Mr. WARREN himself was brought np as a Methodist. In his "Ten Thousand a rear," while be has exalted the characters of those whom he has there represented as Pro testant Episcopalians, Mr. WARREN has mado a point of thilettllng those who profess a dif fer.ant faith. The caricatures of Dissenters, under the names of ic The Reverend Dismal Horror" and gi Mr. Tagrag,". are charcoal sketches, rudely and boldly drawn. His par liamentary abuse of Dissenters having caused hostile comment, Mr. WARREN has published a letter in the London papers, in which be says: 1858 " I must impress the pain I feel in having it sup• posed by any one that I am heartless enough to entertain disparaging views of Dissenters, when I refleet that th I rceme a i n h s o w f i th a b etloe ve d d e rn m e o s t s h e t r o whose memory which words cannot give utterance, repose almost side by side with those of John Wesley. While a devoted. member of that groat body of Christians who bear his honored name, she was also strongly attached to the Church of England, - and need often to tell me what were the sentiments on that subjeot of John Wesley himself." As to the portraits of Dissenters, so re markably unfavorable, in a Ten Thousand a Year," Mr. WAnnEN, declining to discuss the point, suffers judgment to go by default, but adds that his attention _having been called to Ithe matter, he had caused to be inserted in the preface to the people's edition, a paragraph_ disclaiming ever having been actuated by unjust- or un-Ohristian feelings towards Dis senters.—By the way, what a capital book "Ten Thousand a Year" might be made by carefully weeding out the moralities which its author-so largely infused into those portions treating of tlie Aubrey thirdly I Monism's Borns. A noticeable man has Just paid the debt of nature. This was ALaxis SOYER, who won his (gastronomic) spurs, as principal 'Cook at. the Reform Club, in London. He died on the sth of August, and We find in the English papers nothing pet the briefest and most an. satisfactory notice. Ho desdrved a detailed OgriTbbfor,lt eY4r c99k possessed pubis, Glances' at People. ...i OW. Ali XSOYEIt was thii'man.' By birth, training, and sympathy a Frenchman, his last twenty years wore spent in England, where he built up a gPeat and peculiar reputation. He was first known , about,lB4s, as presiding genius of the :Kitchen at the Reform Club, which was ac. tually his laboratory. But he had been in England, in the employ ; of private persons, several years before. He used to= tell ,strange stories. of his own antecedents—so strange, that his hearers - might doubt whether lie had not a right to some old title of nobility and a claim to some vast hereditary estates. He used to relate, very impressively, how the Revolution -of the Three Days of July, at Paris, in 1880, was brought to a success 'hi termination by his own unequalled tact, courage, and patriotism. He would denounce the mean jealousy of Lours Pnaraprz,which; ho said, had prevented his being decorated with the Cross of July. At times, he would even laugh at his own Bobadalisrn. SOYER married Miss EMMA JONES, a very accomplished artist, whose oil-paintings, gen erally rezeienting poverty and its victims, with pail accuracy, were miracles of art, and yet died far from pleasing.. Madame BOYER died about 1843, and her husband ex pended hie money and grief in the erection of a magnificent sarcophagus for her Green Cemetery. His private rooms in the Reform Club were bung round with his wife's pictures. He certainly was very fond of them. In those rooms,wheneier he invented a new 'dish, Sprits would assemble a jury of the most genial wits and poets, actors and drama tists, artists and journalists, of London, and their opinion was invited. On their sugges tion ho published his first wdrk; (not one word of which he actually wrote,) called cc The Gas tronomic. Regenerator, ' ,of which 30,000 copies wore sold at one guinea each. &Ve nt other culinary works wore issued under his name and revision, many of them at a low price. His latest, evidently from his own pen—so deeply is it imbued with his conver sational style—detailed his adventures during a culinary campaign in Turkey and the Cri mea, during the late war. He had been des patched to improve the military way of living, and most admirably accomplished that pur pose. • In 1846, he quitted the Reform Club, from which, in salary and half the premiums paid by his numerous pupils (the Club took the , other half,)-his annual income could not have been less than $lO,OOO. 'His successful an. thorship had puffed him so much up that he had latterly paid little attention to the cuisine 'at the Club. In 1847, when the Irish famine was spreading devastation all around, Emma was sent to Ireland to show the natives how to make nutritive soup out of bones. In this he Succeeded not a bit better than Count Ruzsonn had done, half a century ago made a capital soup, which had the slight 'drawback of being wholly unnourisbing. In 1861, he took Gore House, Kensington, (for merly the CircetMden of Lady . Birissurirrori,) and fitted it, up as a grand Restarirant for all Nations, during the Great Exhibition, but the speculation made him bankrupt. , However, he' had great recuperative power, and soon over-mastered his difficulties. From 1861 to 1865, when be went 'to the Crimea, Monsieur SORER was employed, as cuisinier, at most of ,the great public dinners in London. Personally, he was very popular. Ho was actually a bluff, greasy-faced Mau, always oVer.dressed, but cherished the idea that he was handsome and fascinating, and, therefore, scrupulously made a point of putting a highly flattered portrait of himself into. each of his many books, and upon the labels of .the various sauces and pleasant effervescing summer-drinks 'Which he bad invented. llls was harmless . ;vanity. Ho did more, in a few years, to Ifrove English 'cookery than all other to artists" - I ein a century, and when ho gave his -time, a • or, and] t w3•lfect - ru-niazithlielllbate, cunlnry consideration was his last and lightest thought. The Cruise of the Sau Jacinto. (from the New York Time.] A brief record of the cruise of the San Jacinto may be of interest, as it will give some idea of the vooatien of a United States steamer on the Bast India station; Upon commlting an abstract Log, kept by H. A. Greenough, of this ship, I fled we have successive. ly visited Madeira, Ascension, Simons Bay, Cape of Good Hope, Mauritius, Ceylon, Palo Penang, Singapore,Mouth of Meinam river, Siam, Hong Kong, Wh ampoa, Hong Kong, Simoda, Japan, Woosung, Shanghae, Woosung, Hong Kong, Ma- ORO, Whampoa - Hong Kong, Macao, Hong Kong, ' Macao Hong "Kong, Shanghae, Wimtmo_g, Hong Kong, Manila, Hong Kong, Shanghae, Woosung Hong Kong, Whampoa, Hong Kong, Batavia, Si mons Bay, St. Helena, and Ascension. We have touched at places occupied by Portuguese, Eng lish, Siamese, 'Chinese, Japanese, Spaniards, and Dutch. We have steamed, since leaving the States, 169 days, have sailed 101 days, have been at sea 260 days, in port 765 days, have consumed, of coal, 4,030 tons, at a coat of from $ll to $45 per ton. ' We have run in all. since leaving the States, per log, about 41,000 miles; the engines have wade 4,137,164 revolutions; the screw 8,865,351. Onr greatest expense for'one day's steaming, for coal alone, has been about $1,250; least $l9B. The whole expense of this trip, sines leaving the States, has been about $200,000. This item might have been made considerably less, had there not been an unnecessary expenditure of that costly article, coal, whilst on the station. There certainly is an• urgent sweetish) , for an explicit and positive regulation regarding the expenditure of coal on the vessels of the United States naval service. This, in common with many other matters, should never be left to the disoretioa of any naval eom mender, who is an individual clothed with irre sponsible power, who, though profestedly respon- sible, is in fact only nominally so. The wide latitude given to "discretionary power" war rants the grossest abuse of it, and calls for positive regulation even in the most minor mat tars. A summary of the events of the cruise of this ship would be a record of doings, some of which wore sensible, many absurd, and others most con temptible. Starting out from the United States es a " flag-ship," we have acted in that capacity almost without interruption, up to the time of our leaving Hong Kong on our return voyage home. For two years and near four months the ship car ried the broad pennant of Commodore James Ar mstrong ; far the remaining three months,that of Commodore Josiah Tatnall. The, San Jacinto served• during this time admirably St a pleasure yacht: At one time—with two interruptions of a few hours eaoh—we lay at - anehor in the harbor of Hong Kong for five Months and twenty-two days ; on another occasion we lay four montbe and ten days at Shanghae without once lifting our anchor, although our presence was most urgently needed elsewhere. The crowning acts of this adminlatra ties was the noted capture and destruotion of the Barrier Forts, and the seizure and conquest of Formosa. The details of these notions have been given to the world in days of yore. The last three and a half months of our stay in the East—during which time we carried the broad pennant of Commodore Tatnall—was prolific of greater usefulness by the ship, and more pleasure to all connected with the same, than the whole of the previous time we were on the station. Manila was visited, and its glories nude manifest. The hidden mysteries of -‘ 4 Canton within the walla " were laid open unto us, but oven with this pleasant episode, I must say that our cruise has been a most nauseous mixture. The witches' cauldron, spoken of in "Macbeth," was not filled with more disgusting ingredients than has been the East India cruise of the Ban Jacinto ; a very bell-broth has it been. But, let the dead past bury its dead. "Be ware the Thane of Fife. Dismiss me. Enough." The Ban Jacinto has on :this cruise proved that under'proper management she would be one of the moat efficient, if not the most efficient, of vessels in the navy. Her nailing and steaming rinaligee have been tried on this cruise, and she has not been found wanting. Provided with a hoisted up screw, and some alterations made in her internal arrangements, I think she could justly claim to be the most efficient of our naval vessels. Perhaps her star may be dimmed by some of the new sloops of-war now building We shall see. A PLEASANT WIPE TO LIVE WITII.—In in vestigation of the Valley Falls poisoning case, one of the witnesses testified that three or four years ago Mrs. Studloy intimated to her how she could dispose of her husband. The following was Mrs. Studley's (then Mrs. Jones) advioo : "Mrs. Jones then said, I would not boar it; he is not able to do anything, and if you are in danger, why do you put up with it? give him something to still him down, and don't lot your right hand know what „your loft hand dooth. never , let my right hand know what the left hand doeth ; by this course I could get along very well. Give him something that would still him down, you would not bo plagued with him but a little while—for it Ie nobody's business what we do. I should never get along so. If there are no friends of his here, so much the better—there would be nobody to question you.' I did not ask her what she meant by stilling him down."' The jury returned a verdict to the effect that Mr. Studioy came to hie death from poison ad ministered by his wife, and a warrant was imme diately issued for her arrest. ' George P. Blevins died a few days since near Selma, Ala. ,:from injuries received by being thrown from a buggy. He to said to have been one of the finest classical scholars in the South. His gifts as a writer wore first evinced while at Prince ton College, where he, with Charles G. Leland, and other talented young writers, edited the College 'Magazine In after years he was a favorite con tributor to the 10tickortveker. THE CAMPAIGN IN ILLINOIS. Great Dboussion Between Douglas and Lincoln. IMMENSE ENTHUSIASM THE LITTLE GIANT TRIUMPHANT 20,000 People Present. Epeeist Correspondence of The Preis.] The discussion between Judgo Donlan and Ron. A. Lincoln, the respective candidates for the United States Senate, - comthenced at Ottawa, on Saturday, the 21st instant. The meeting was the largest ever held in this part of the State, and the enthusiasm was unbounded. It is estimated that not less than 20,000 persons were present on this important occasion. The bare annonneement that the two candidates were to meet in open de bate winisufficient to bring together an immense crowd. A spacial train of fourteen paisienger cam , tilled to overflowing, came from Chicago.' Anolher train, composed of eleven cars, same from Peru and La Salle ; whilst delegations in wagons, carriages, and on hcirsebaok, came from altdireotiops, and aided to swell the great multitude. Gorgeous Sege and ensigns, beating appropriate inscriptions, unfurled to the 'Breese, whilst the rapid discharges of artillery reverberated on the air, and seemed to make the very earth tremble, Judge Douglas, the great champion, and the in vincible defender of the righttOlberties t and in stitutions of a free people, was El'et at the city of Peru, sixteen miles distant, by the _committee, in an elegant carriage drawn by four splendid horses, and brought to Ottawa. Four miles out he was met by a delegation oomposedAf several hundreds, bearing Sags and banners, ad escorted into the city amid the boOming of cannon, the shouts of thousands, and the strains of martial' music. As he neared the Geiger House, it was almost impossible for the carriages to force their way through the dense mass of ' liv ing beings that blocked up the streets, and clung to the carriage - containing the distinguished Senator, anxious to grasp him by the hand. The shouts and cheers that arose ort his approach were deafening. No conception can be formed of the enthusiasm that was manifested without having been present; and 'cannot command the language to render a proper description. He 'came like some great deliverer, some mighty 'champion, who bad covered himself with imperishable laurels, and saved a nation from ruin; ho came as the immortal Washington, or the patriotic Lafayette, with a nation ready to do him, ho mage. -Bat how 'different his deeds! They had distinguished themselves on the battleleld, whilst the statesman and Senator had reached the culminating point of his career in , the "coun cils of the nation, by beating back the tide of political tyranny, and gloriously establishing the doctrine of , popular sovereignty; andthe right of the people to make their own laws. - - When they reached theHeiger House, and the carriage halted in the street, there arose ono spontaneous about that seemed to rend the very air. Again and again did that shout, go up; as the distinguished Senator. stood 'ln the' open car riage with head uncovered, gracefully".bowing to the living mass of , humanity that surrounded him on all sides. As soon as sufficient order could be' restored, he was -welcomed in a reception speech by 11. W. H. Cushman, Esq., which was indeed an eloquent tribute of esteem and appreciation of his course in the Senate.' It was, undoubtedly, the finest, most' eh:giant, and eppropriate recep tion address delivered during this campaign. I will attempt no description of it—youUsmtt read it to appreciate it. Judge Douglas was deeply affected, and 'could scarcely restrain his emotion. .How different the enthusiasm manifested for his competitor, Mr: Lincoln; or, as he has termed himself, the living dog." As hisi procession passed the Gieger House. there was acutely a, cheer wont up. They marched along silently and sorrowfully, as if it were a funeral cortege follow ing him 'to the grave. It struck me as very ap- propriate, as Well as symbolical, of What would most assuredly come to pass nest_ November. They appeared to be following "a dead dog" to his political grave ; and had the bands played a mournful funeral dirge, the picture vcould have been complete. ' The discussion openettat 2 o'clock In . Lafayette Sutri i s.j g f tw ieorowd was so dense that tie speakers to the stand, which was filled with reporters and representatives of the press from ' all!seetions of the State. It was agreed that Judge Douglas should open the debate in a speech an hoar in length,, when Lincoln should follow in a reply an hour and a half, and Judge Douglas rejoin for thirty minutes. The opening speech was able and eloquent. The Little Giant seemed to surpass himself.. He put a number of pointed and leading questiOns to Lin coln, one of which was, whether, if he were elected to the Senate, be would vote to admit States with the privilege of making their own Constitutions, eubjeot to the will of the majority. He deemed it very important that the "living dog " should de fine his position, by answering this <ideation. If ho were a Republican be wanted to know it, and if he were an Abolitionist ho wanted to know that also. He wanted no more dodging. It was all-im portant that Lincoln should tell whether he was for Congress b say whether slavery should exist in a State or Territory, or whether the people should say eo. This is the key to the whole ques tion at issae, and it will put a different complexion on the oampaign. The remainder of Judge Douglass speech was particularly severe, as well as logical and power ful. I will attempt no further description of•it, as you - ean read It almost as soon as this When Lincoln commenced hie reply, be was evi dently laboring under great embarrassment. When he had spoken only twenty minutes, be turned round and asked the moderator - how near his 'time - was up! Poor fellow! he was writhing in the powerful grasp of an intellectual giant. His spec,* amounted to nothing. It will msde up with inch expressions as "I think it is so," " I may be mistaken," " I guess it was done," &e., &o. There were no straightforward assertions and logical ionolusions, such an fall from the lips of Douglas. Ho spent over half an hour reading from some old speech that he had previously made on Abolitionism. As he' eentinued reading,.there were numerous voices exclaiming : "What book is that 'Yon aro reading from?" Thin tended to inoreaae his con'fuslon,'and, after blundering and whining along, and endeavoring to tellanecdotes and nursery tales, he sat down at the end of one hour and fifteen minutes, a quarter of an hoar before the expiration of his time, with out alluding to one of the questions put to him by Judge Douglas.' He dodged them all, not daring to give an answer. But they will be put to him again, and there is co alternative now but to . - "face the music." When Judge Douglas rose to reply, his counten ance brightened up with that peculiar intellec tual and demolishing look that he is so famous for when be is about to make a great point. Ho electrified the crowd at once. Could you have soon those looks, and heard those binning words of sarcasm, as ho commenced to rend his antago.: niat to atoms, you would have been obliged to ad mit that it was the culminating period of his life. He poured forth - a torrent of login and sarcasm blended in one strain, that was astonishing. Turn ing round and facing Lincoln who was beginning to got very blue about his chops, he impaled him at once—then clutching him in his Intellectual grasp, ho held him up before the crowd as it were, in imagination, till you could Bee him like a cap tivated spider. He reiterated his questions, and informed him that there must be no more dodging, I and that he was " determined to screw an answer out of him " He reviewed Lincoln's political career, and showed how he had distinguished him- Self when in Congress by taking sides with the enemy, and how he voted against his country and her soldiers. The excoriation that he gave him was terrible. When he conoluded his thirty-minute broadside, ho left the stand immediately, for the oars were waiting. The crowd made one rush after him, and there arose a shout that reverberated for miles across the prairies. In front was the "Little Giant," swinging his hat from right to left, with thousands rushing after him. Bush unbOunded and electrical enthusiasm I never saw before. 'Fifteen minutes afterwards a orowd of about 150 proceeded up street, four of whom had shouldered Air. Lincoln, and were carrying him to his hotel. A sardonic grin wag on his countenance. It was decidedly the most laughable, as well as the most ridiculous, spectacle that I have beheld for•many a day. It excited much merriment on all sides. Lincoln is the worst-used-up man t in the United States, and be is driven almost to desperation. You will And that before be passes through this discussion, there will scarcely be anything left of him. Ile now exhibits the appearance of great mental and bodily suffering. lie has six appoint ments to meet Judge Douglas yet. I don't be lieve he will fill them all. The next one is at Freeport, on the 27th imt. The campaign in Illinois surpasses all others that have ever taken place. The contestin Penn. sylvania, in 1856, falls far behind it. There Is no doubt of the ultimate result.'" Judge Douglas will be returned to the United States Senate. There are fifty-one eoUntiesiouth of Springfield, embraolus all Piot tialitOrtSo gotuatt7 train the TWO- C'ENTS.. bash to the hilleisflippi, and dower to Cairmisually called Emt, Whore no Abolitionists have the pro sumption to olaiM a single one, or a'single can didate. The other fliti-one bounties constitute the battle-ground. 14i`ii4Ore than One-half of them the Democratic vote will he largely increased over that of 1856, and . several Democratic Repiesenta 7 tivea will be gained. This will give Judge Doug las a' handsome majority on joint ballot. Lincoln has killed himself by , his ultra Aboli tion-equality doctrine. Hie declaration that the negro is the equal of the white man, and that our laws should be 'Uniform throughont'the United States, has aroused the people and put them to . thinking. They now see thatauch'monetrona doc trines are repugnant -to the genius and spirit of our institutions, and pregnant With the moat dis astrous results, if carried into practical operation. He now sees the great error he committed, and is endeavoring to shape a new course, by denying that the negro is the equal of the .whits man. Judge Douglas is rapidly, gaining ground. The little opposition tlaat'lcas tirriyini•against him is rapidly melting away. - ' A few days since, the Peoria 'Union (the edit6r of which sold himself to the Lecomptonites for $ll7, and who has since gone by the =name of “ y our Hundred and Seven teen Dollare") %ceased ,exist, and a Douglas paper has been started with the regular nominees at its masthead... Long before the November ;Dec: tion, the little Danite band will have become ex tinct. The Derhooracy Of Illinois never were more united or better organised, andlhere cannot be a doubt as to the final remit. - lornr OP LANCASTER Eight Murderers •In.-VeurtThe Muti neers of4he Whaleship Junior. [Prom the Boehm Traveller.] - Glynis W . Plumer Jacob Wght, William Sam son, Joseph Brooks, , ri Oartha, Adam Con p- nell, Stanley, and William Herbert, the sailors who were engaged in the celebrated mutiny on board the wbedeship Junior; -from New Bedford ] were arraigned in thetinited States CommissiOn er's Court, before A. 13: Cashman, of New Bedford. commissioner; Immediately on their arrival in this, city, Saturday evening. J. HirdY Prince, Esq., appeared as their 'roan sel,-and they were remanded la jail, and yester day, at half-past, ten _o'clock% they were again brought before ,the commissioner, Charles •L - Woodbury; Es q., 11. S. District Attorney, appear ing in behalf of the Government. - The prisoners were brought into court heavily Ironed, and appeared unconcerned and careless, Much more so than when we saw them injail. They did not seem to. realize the enormity of' the offence they, are charged with, but 'lalghed 'and joked with each other until the - opening of the court. Plumer, - the ' ringleader; is of light com plexion, has a light Moustache and beard, and light hair, tolerably long. ; His personelle Is not by any means repulsive, and his' eyes do not gleam with that ferocity -which. his alleged. misdeeds would seem to imply that he possessed. He wore a blue woollen• shirt, with drab pants, in court. The -rest wore-coats. We understand that Since they have been in-jail they have slept soundly most of the time. . , „ No - judicial intamitiation was gone into this 'morning; but an informal investigation, for the purpose of, deciding what witnesses•to hold. • The examination was postponed till Wednesday next, but it is not -probable that - any examination of witnesses will then be had: The substance of this Information his already been published, but we presume the following full extract from the log-book, which we 000 Y, will be found interesting.: The entry was made by Henry Maion, one of the crew, at the dictation of William Nelson Provost; the first Officer; who was wounded - by the mutineers: It contains an explicit account ofthe affair, and. we publish it entire: . Lat. 98.58 S., lon. 18'57 E., Dee. '25, '57. Shortened sail for the night, and everything peered as metal, until 1 o clock Saturday morning, ;when the cabin was attacked by the' five-man aforesaid.' Cyrus Flamer shot the 'captain with a whaling gun- oontaining three large Valle. - The balls went in'at, his-left side and passed under his ribs, and entered into the • side of the shin. The captain sprang from his bed and said : Oh !my God, what Is this?" He was answered by Flamer : " God d—n you, it is me." He then seised the captain by the haliof the head l and at' the same time calling on his men to np - with their hateleti, and commenced cutting. him with hie hatchet. After be had struck him - three or four; times, he let him fall en the floOrjand then Plumor went on dcrk.f - The mate morale° shot by a -whaling gun. in the hands of, John Hall alias Wam.Payr.e. was fired upon at ,lls. time - the eaptaiM was -, the charge from the gun went so close to myle ft cheek as to take the'skin off, and entered my left should er; it 'stunned me ee that.l 'knew nothing, but when I - came - to 'myself sprang :from my berth, siolaiming " MY_Atir Ged l fsehat Is this?" at the same.ffimo .for.ematt one - to" some' , , - • , ' ' tom I s e aid, "'Steward, here; " the steward made haste to obey; but was met at the door by John Hall, with a. cooper's axe raised; ( .. hti n d . --a",peettlits gun,) and_ told him if he laid a word_ he would_outora, andl - sung 'out g,‘'imi; - -", the boy turned out ane7e - mw-,t and I told him to put' the -fire out in my berth; - when I went into the second mates berth, he was dressing himself; told him I was he an swered he was shot, too ; the third mate was out of his herth on the deokidying ; I left ihim, and went to the captain's room; I was barefooted, - not havidg time to dress myself; when -I _entered the room, -- I found I was treading In blood; I told the boy, " bring a light here ; " when the boy brought a light I saw the captain lying on the deck, dying ; I. raised him up, and he breathed his last; I then opened his chest, and took out his revolver, loaded three shots,' ainV determined terrlhoot . the ring leader; I then eent the• boy. to tell the second mate to come to me, butneither of them returned; I then blew the light oqt, and stopped - Mt , lens as I could without suffocation. - ; ' I then thought I'd 'leave, and., give them a chance to put the fire oat As I passed , through the steerage I sane , out" Cooper !" Heanswered, " Here I am." Then I sung out for several others,. to see how many 1 had to help'me ; but when I saw the ship on fire, I thought it no use ' to ask for help ; I then sung out to the men to pit the fire out; and I would not hurt them; as I passed by. I heard the second mate on deck asking for his life, and heard them say " Kill him !" as I thought. When the men heard me , sing out to quench the fire, they said : " You would like to get us down there, you son of a —; come up here, or I'll shoot you." I. felt faint, and being ; wounded, thought I would take a bung-borer and go down in the' hold to get some water, and also in the hopes of shooting the .ringleaders; but I was two days without getting any water or anything to eat. By that time my pistol was out of order, and my, thoughts were-all the time that the eeeond mate was -dead, and my-only hopes were that I might get into port; and if they undertook to sell the slip I would come out and take her. Bet, after I had been in the hold five days, they found me, and told me if I would come ,out they Would not hurt me, and I might have the ship; and so I passed my pistol up, when I found, to my surprise, the second mate alive, bat in irons. I was almost dead, but they took me aft, and waShed , . and dressed me. My shoulder' where I rwieliehot, had mortified, but they had iediressed. They told me' all they wanted of me was -to take them where they wanted to go, and I might have the ship. Bo I did to save my life and the ship. The third mate bad the boardineknife run throughthim several times by _Cornelia!! Barns, and ,after he had killed him, he was told toset - out of the way by Richard Cartha, and Cartha struck at the second mate with another boarding-knife, but it struck the berth board. He then struck at him again, and the second mate caught the blade and bent the point over the board. By that time I was out of my berth, hallooing. Cartha' then fired at the second mate with a pocket-plate', and shot him in the breast. All I saw before I took to the hold, was that the captain and third mate were dead, and that the second was wounded, end I sup posed he was killed after he went on deck. The remainder of the aforesaid testimony was told me after I was taken. The proceedings on deck, as I was told:- Be tween 1 and 2 o'clook, on Saturday morning, I, with all the foremost hands-not engaged in the mutiny, was awakened from a Sound sleep, and was told by one of the gang that the ship was taken, and that the captain and second and third mates were dead. They said the mate had stowed himself away. They made us come on deck, and compelled us ,to help them to put the fire out. We were then made to come on deck and were made to arm our selves with lances, harpoons, spades,. axes, and other things, and were made to stand at the fore, Man, and mizzen hatchways, watching for the mate. Just after I came on deck and had got to the try-works t the second mate oame on dock and was made prisoner by the gang. Flamer then bound him, sent him to the forecastle, and set a 841ot - watch over him. All hands, - except two at each hatoh,were made to come aft and work at pat- 1 ting out the fire. After we had'worked very hard for an hour or ao, we got the fire so much sub dued that we could venture below. A couple of men were 'then sent below into the cabin, and-bent a rope on the captain's ankle, and some of the men on deck hauled him up ; a heavy chain was then made fast to him, and he was thrown overboard on the larboard quartet:. After the the was put out, Flamer ordered the ship to head W. N. W., thinking he was steering for Cape Howe, but, instead of heading for Cape Howe, he wax beading a straight course for Lord Howe's Island. After I was found, I was told to steer for Cape Howe; Australia; I accordingly changed my course to S. W. by S. We made land on Sunday, January 3, 1858. The same morning all hands were made tc come on deck and throw the boat oraft, spades, spare w h a i l r i o n ns :. o a v n e d, in fact, everything pertaining tog r. board; then they broke mit thestops in the ship, and all her stores, and appropriated them to their own use, and hove casks of r-yee and other things overboard. After that they *eat below into the *Aide, and broke out everything they could find, liquors, tobacco, and everything else they could lay their hands on. All the stores, and in fact everything in the ship useful for a whaling voyage, were used or. destroyed, excepting bread an d water; the clothing and the articles on board to recruit the ship were destroyed. We take the following . extraot from the log which was written by Flamer. s orders: Lat. 37 58 S., lon. 66 67. Friday, Deoember 25, 1857. This is to certify-that we, Oyees Plumer, John Hall, Richard Cartha, Cornelius Burns, and William Harbert, did; on the night of the 26th of December last, take the ship Junior, and that all others in the ship are quite innocent of the deed. The captain and third mate were killed, and the second, mate was wounded and taken prisoner at the time. Tho mate was wounded in the shoulder with balls from a whaling gun, and at the time we fired we eat his bed on fire, and he was obliged, 'for fear of !suffocation, to take to the lower hold, where he remained until Wednesdal afternoon. We could not find him before, but we undertook' a strict search, and found him there, 1. • NOTICE TO COIEIRESPONTOPIT4 vilfpleirobaarb Mind the fieywfu ruled /leery eatomnoltatioti mut be eesoo**4•l ter lee name of the iriit.e. Litiker to Woe. ioeseohiiiiiat the typogisiky, hot one alas it the limit Anil be , - - Ma amine ireedy OARS hi pattemaa hi Pa lms. vazda eat other EH:lgal ta t, oo tittibutt*till!ini:- . 411 MD' !fat nowil of ctkik bkrattipartsi 1111. leion.reee - of the eittro.46. it the infirm el population, or law hircometien that wilt be atteresitai to the genirafreadei:, - - - , We' proinisedliim hie end: the Alto if he would.oome out and surrender iridium any trouble, end so he name out: =Slue he -has been in the ship, he has been a good offieer.Sad Ina kept his place. We agreed to leave him &greater part of the crew, and - we have pit hitit, under oath not to attempt to follow tuf; hut to go straight away and molest ns. We shall wsoi. aron foiseirizietime; and if he attempts to Anew, derstay arotind here we shall come on board ' nd sink the abb.-nit wiihad not found Mr: Nelson the -ship - Would have - b ee n lost. We have taken-two - hoots and ten men, and everything-we wanted ; we, didwet put Mr.'Nel son in irons, on aceountof his. being wounded, but ,we kept a strict guard over him all the time. We partieularly wish to my - that-all others in the ship :lint we five aforesaid 11.16/1 - are quite inno cent of any Part of the 'affair. (Sig ned) Cyrus Plumes, John Hall, Richard - earths,' Oar noting Burns, , WilliamlinrberV„ • ' Witnisitut.4lkith Doff, H IT. Lbrdi Berman SHIP JUNIOR, Nair ilidford,-.Massaebusetts. GENERAL :71TE WS. '• ' Es-President Fillmore, in hill 'epee& at NI. agars Falls on tit" recepthin of the messages of the President and 'Queen, referred to the period—he" being, chairman of the Committee oft Waye and Means in the House:-Of llepreaentatires—when Prigissor Morse fought aid from - Congress to teat the practicability of telegr.. l . l eft- - Yillmore made alaverable'repoit 'for am‘apprepristion of thirty thousand dollars. Itmaa receisimi with de rision by a 'Fargo: number of Congressmen, who scouted , the idea of talking b-telegrapli; aria' of fered all „Bortn of amendments'-to defeat_ the bill. The bill passed, arid - a 'line front_ WashingtOn - to Baltimore was soon ready for - operationli- Mr. Fill more remarked thithe looked babk with :of upon this incident the :early : history •of tele graphic enterprise s and_ihad - ever sham taken a great intereatin ita progress, and was moat happy to be ableto 'utinige, his congratulation' with the citizens of Niagara', Paill,wpoulthe success of the great enterprise of Modern tiptoe t: . - • • The Linidiiii - Lanist al'yti;that to .determine the period: - of life which -- fiutilshee !the -- greeted number of insina'parsons; it mentfteient to bring together the recor ds , made upander different dr eam/dermas. One' of thase,inadeiat,the Metre, Frame,- where; poor_ _men only. ere, rettelvedi an other at the Balpetriere,ahospltalforpeor,women; the third, an establishmentderotallo thewealthy, have been ellielbled, and Wane*, that ~the age wliioh furnblieCthe ,greatint siumbeepf Insane, la -for mozi - that &Om - thirty to - forty yeari; while - for women it is that: from "fifty-'to sixty years. The- ages whioh•furnlelf - the least, for both saws,• childhood, youth; and 'adralicatTalfc , ' &tont women, insanity appears earlieralian knot* men, indeed from-twenty to :thirty-yoga, stage.,' The rich are more subject insanitykproperUoti than the poor. , /n Leiria lOwnehip, - ,13 - larcennty - , says the I;afeyette'Xournal, , they,have a sort of foretaste of the ( Millennium. :bat : within its limits one hundred and seventylarailies, allwhite except one, - aiad 'they-keep dark abottkit., Thera are one hundred and sixty-Ave rotors, and during the last twenty,Years there has a light or i - iluarrelatiany eleation thirtownsEp • It contains 'seven school-house s ; seven road die.._ triots, seven - -bachelore,'. seren3large men - three chnrchee; three preaehertv three pairs - of; - twin boys, three fiddierstitreiaratwiniten,lhree• post-oiloes, three crazy Monier:id three men over seventy-,five „years 01d,'..? „ There ~Is,-,nata lawyer, doctor, or loafer in it—nor Irtitnmi t aor a pau per. A. better; - friendnei; happler;-,,populathra Is not to hi. found.in ' , records • The Madison Atiirsitl, a ro mantle Marks& at - Idasomaida,hi that county. The groom was a returned Calitbrilin; who left his wife for the auriferous - a:ldt aboutaersuyearg ago, Wad the bride . the' irifeettiannut. lea.. 'las hed heard of his death,: but totberootutintly 'hunt he was alive, • but did not intend toe - return, and therefore ,procured a divorce:. A short time since he returned, • arid...called on. former-wife.- .A courtship was "reopeneil; the' result of which was; he led-her to 'the altar-a% seOndjima: _ , „ , „ An old lad y preserlbeS ,the"fonorsing reme dy for diarrhoea: Take ladien'eriii;,Aasted and ground in the 'Meaner- of Coffee; or: doarse meal browned, -- and bailie' a saifialent qtnintity watt's to pkoduee a strong liquid; like eoffeei•end drink, a teacupful: wario,two, or, three times a!day- Ono day's practice, it is said, willbitinarily effects Tlaipr,4elik A.; :11.:Kroat;,..situatiil In Shiewslaery and - Hopewell toimshipt,•:York coun ty, Pa., consistingef sp, sores of land, a paper mill, with - a forty-horae engine,.and'all the machinery for malting -„ .paper, several - dwelling bonsai; °and _oilier - ontbuil&ngs, has been pur chased byld.r.lbseePry; for $4,8011: - ,.._.t • - Zebu Hicks haa been nonviet6l.lfifiraWford county., Pa.;, - ,of burglary,, - and;senterieed to the penitentiary, for six man named Henry . Shilleto, convicted in. the sante - county of ,man slaughter, was sentenced, to two years. in the pen - - The ethlet foie; seems be 'Offing with a good dial Of.ilolenoe. in the."npper of_Hucks °county, Pa., and Is particularly latalationg chil dren. Since the 16th of luty WilliamiVitman. of Hookamixon, - has lost-five ohlidrerr by this tlia• preparatbnis to aelebitite - Peny's .ilebiry on the 10th of September:: Thil only two surviving eta comet Perry' s fieetwill be in attendanow r Dapt. Champlin, o Baal° • and Dr. Usher Parsons, who was Perry's only, utt_rimn. „, We learn from the Sunbury (Pa.) Gazette, that last Week. the Trevorton Conipany . sent One -hundred cart of-their. coal to Elluirshlf. Y., Aa the Northeni Central, Sunbury and,Erte, and Wil- - Comport and Elmira Railroads.. This was that first shipment in'tkat dlreoUon.'. Boston has's' population of 162,910.' Like many othernities its monhave not increased Sot. a year past, bat, if any g , diminished. Tha assessors Mahe.: a report, tag a decrease of polls of 574; which would indicate a considerable loss of impulation—esii2,soo.:.• ICornelitis Fluke', Sr., ef East Llyeipool, 0., while at the railroad depot In thifeillage, dropped dead al the oars_ ere passing. He was .01115 of the oldest and most, respeoteble olttsens of the, vii. Dr. R. IfOntioinerkiiied'atXelila, Ohio, on the 15th instant, ailed about - years. The News says he was a man of iltie - literary attain ments, and-was atone time it regniar-contributor to Blackwood and other magalbses. Government having abandoned the attempt to improve Red river, two boats with the tackle, which oost 4130,000, have been sold for $2,485. Reuben J. Dawson has beennominated as the Democratic -candidate Zak .4,Mireas in the Tenth distilet'of Indians: ' - - A:eery-meeting Moundvt, ,e, ya. on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Wei attended by about ten thousand people on Sunday. Miss Helen Waterston, a granddaughter of the venerable Josiah Quinoy, of Boston, died a few weeks ago at Naples.; A. tire at Lebanon,. Fa.,, on . Friday lut, ,destroyed the barn of-Mr. ?dyers; a-number of home perished in ,the 'Santee. -Lose 1.10,000. An effort is making in. Arkinspa to induce the Legislature to compel the whole colored popu lation to leave the Stater: ' - The Bella (Md.) Agis nominates for the next Presidenoy, Hon:John o:Brenkinridge. The United States sloop-of-war CYane went in comnilesion on Saturday, at Norfolk. The Marriage of Miss Isabella Cass, Daughter of Gen. Cass. • [Prom the New York Harald.] STONINGTON, 08, -Aug. 23, -18582.—This usually somewhat quiet village was thrown into a state of unaccustomed excitement by the telegraphic an nouncement that the venerable Secretary of State had left Washington en route for Stonington, to attend the marriage of his daughter to the Minis ter of his Highness the King of the Netherlands. Unlike many of the utterances per telegraph from the national capital, the news in, this instance proved reliable ; anti this afternoon, having ob tained the - ertereito the church by fever of a friend of the parties, your correspondent had the gratifi cation of witnessing the ceremonies which united the fascinating • Miss Isabella Case to, his Excel lency Roast Van Limburg, Minister Resident, ,ito: Calvary Church (Episcopal,) in which the mar riage took place, is one of the most tasteful among the many religious edifices' in this - plane, and is built in the old English - style, of native granite, with Gothiewindows, .ko., presenting a unique and graceful appearance. Its rector,•Rev. Daniel C. Weston, who officiated on this occasion, is an ad mirable elocutionist, as Ma fine reading of the ma trimonial service amply attested. - The oetenionies, 'OM were strictly private, In accordance with the wishes of the parties, were commenced precisely at two o'olook - P. M., when the bride • entered -the church leaning upon the arm of her venerable and distinguished father, and followed by M. Van Limburg, Mrs. Canfield, and - Mre. Ledyard, (daughters of General Case,) Mr. Zimmerman, acting Consul-General for the Kingdom 'of the -Netherlands at New York, and Mr:Ledyard and family. The bride was plainly, but richly attired, in an ashes of roses silk travel ling dress, with mantilla to match, and a masarin -blue French hat of the latest style, and presented a charming appearance. M. Van Limburg also appeared to much advantage, and wore with much grace the ;various dicorations his eminent services - have deservedly won for him. He looked between thirty-five and forty years of age, and presented that indescribable air of happiness which gene rally characterizes more juvenile members of the community at such interesting moments, with, however, the self-possessed savoir fairs of the man of the world. The responses of the parties were exceedingly distinct, the bride, in particular, making her an swers in a tone low, but so clear as to be heard with thrillihg effect by all ; and the barrio', beau tiful and affecting as it generally is;.lost nothing by the admirable delivery of the officiating cler gyman. . Upon the conclusion of the ceremony the bridal party retired to the vestry for a few moments, probably for the purpose of duly attesting the marriage certificate, and soon after left the church, taking tho three o'cltiok train for. Providence, from whence the "happy pair" are to on to the cottage of M. Van Limburg, at Newpo go rt, where they will probably remain tiH the - °loseof the season. Immediately up(4l the departare-of the cortex. from the church a salute of fifty guns we. fired by Commodore ,m ge ~"I t. F. Loper, whose -celebrated yach , t, ors from truck dtherwraattetar'swiedthgefiagin4haonndors.b"aof the occasion. ascaoffinthel i barm Tho whole erairP ingly formed a pleasing and appropriate termination bride, to the young lady bollehood of the fascinating e, aa well as commencement to other trinutoll wan different anspicae in her future Ogg.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers