The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 05, 1858, Image 1

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    tfttß PBBSS,
n V? G&XZ'f'-*' U'vHfl. “I w- w“ ’ - /.
® »« rt?^A^li,^™ f Dp^ij,* h |o C »%i9«*'SSrtn|
ill ■■.:.'= VB««».I)dLi.W »o* St¥Udt*s£ hxrirujtir I»J»4*
H I. ttaKOrtteta. 5 '"'"’""• -"■ ■ • ~ r
.tcJ^ I t'>.!'* , 'i*W‘W*KKl.VHi*Ml'.’-' '■"-’ i : '
~-, a! *UH«l*>-eiitM<!tib«r« ent of tfc*CHty »tiiilut« Doi
,. ~..HyH»FjiJififci'BK,li»»4T w o»v,, ,M-. i *:< >“! v y
»««■.«»- ~M«Bnar.MUMK> *•>*«-'■' % »
,*»< £b» v W»W-T( E*«» »iu»b»; »»t to Buli4«<l>u«
»«■ §
• o ...rran OoJIM .f .li ■: '• ‘'J/.Vi..'.’•“.** i? £
, >; ti Twi l ߻j,OoplM l ff,i SO Of
j oyef., l t~;{to i ,iWW,°t wfc ■_ *
if lU', 6F3MrtSjty-on« of or«. w® will Mud ftfi
a - 7{ •xtr*tmtftt&«pf«tteivapof tSiOlub.- J ;:
flj- PosU&Mtora or© nqaMtod toMt uAgoatsfor
**’ XMned" s tbn*< forth® Oallfomli
: -Stia»der». «? -,-,.
1-' o—■——■■©■■———o—i——
;,r^^^Woli»*B.Jsiwlßb J ■■• •; : ;
. i tfij|..i,HO»LLNKRT GOODS of every de
-.((('■■tetteeß ?••-*■ ■>’• ■-> r (>' -- “ v- oof-st* J
Nf.» SKBNHEm & CO;, «• •- ,
*1 SOOTH 6EQOND STREET)
> ; •rf BHt MW'otikuu! * of ,l t
.?«»«•-rff •• - j
. »111 L LIWE KT GOOD S, !
» f * .<*) ; v » Ai-'t ■' ' •'
.'i'7i s < a■*-«’'> .i.»■ -5 OoaiUtlQf Of - *" -•
»JWBNOH*LOW®RB.
*•*'''.; ribbons, ('
"■ ■: injOHM.i
BONNET MATIRIAIB,
' Aiil'tltlier '
* '.U* *1
.MILUNBET GOODS.
•, v We addition* 44 picurS took
fy jfrom the different Auction S*ie» In-New Yotttod : ?hl--
iad«]ph(i,vM4rbm toatKsl lot of
« «•.urt v'-',s^-Rißio‘ifB’/ ; ; ; ;;■• * x
b-- *•>V* - * w ° r ih attention of the Trade. ,- r
Our 1 Btf?k r pf JLQWJ!E3 and f BATHERS I* ho*.
, v been .conilden bl/
Merchants are call at,
» ' H,n BSB N H »IM; 0 0 8. ,
-•’otl-lm';' 'No/Ji a£dp>(l> ttntj,
"jusx received; /ioo oases ; I
r COLORED ‘ STR AW; BONNETS,
MS'' n .' BTYUfS. ""
P3£OEO fROMSO OTa. UPWABM., ,
t
'iuo? loo' otiioii of I ',’
F B B3TO H r F LOWER S,
1-1,7 ' V -I' - - j
i ■ '.ISAWIBRB,- RIBBONS! u’ i • I
BILK, AHD '/KELTET. BONNETS,, *O.
LINOOJLir, .Mro,OD,; S 'NICHOLS, |
i - • « BOOTH SECOND BIBEBT,
r-* ;.V7 ! Jcvvt '-qr; i '-4.. • . ■
■ 4 > ’’Pour Doori4bot* OhMtmt;
*Sgfl. jSPUXK.SEGOMJf «
’ ‘ ! '“ k
i ,-{ /ps f 5« . ’ifir* :• ■—
- MILLINER! GOODS*. j
’' WiUfiad UB io' 4 «xhibit ( * moitoomjfiefc* aid
' Knr fitriM fiONKfer materials, : 1
u/ ih t l . *5- . •’ ,v *
; ln immwuwT*riety,-
‘ i, " ,/,s!t . i ’ > iiniMo/
■IBAIHBBa,aUOHSS,fto: ) '*o. !
',’ii Hi mi tic * i- - •>* -i ! >i *j"» <•
-Al»o.•beaatifttlStodcor , ■ „ . ,
‘ » :st'6 *>•'.} /i!iu .<-■/ -f
:).■ •> ; r BTBfiA'WvGOQDB, ,*~j
vofa FMCB®j‘)wMek''»»l»4 urftmlfortn, • »
gnidacted •*'**•" "‘ ‘ "
. xtfwJtiosT, :
i a „ : ,-o-.o . w ,
”t#PJB MSW/ 108 CASH. • 1 *•<•»
DBAXBBSfrom l9*7 not b« aw* „
of th«exi«teis2 Jf Weh OUT C t
, f UAfKST wiilb*neflt thomitiT^i^by
TMw'' 11
: . H. ' ROSENHEIM H BBOOKS,
'" M 33 boutli SJiCOftpStrW,
' Oj . tv * y.g».? - /.* /■-■•
■' f”;":
v v aumrAotvasm mwvoLKSiLi Dinn nr--
rm<ST STEAV BONWBto
;‘ IJ . " RiJOHig,
.**. <.v BOM FUE jiND WOOL HATS.
*■ /. .Tfc* attention of; dir and country duUrs I« larit
“to ft Urge and Viiritd itoek of the»boT* good*; at ‘
...,.„,. y , . j jagumUtyH.
t. r fettihyxa.,
taHOaiPHATIO GDANO, .. . ,
ii _yjv - Ui us •>*«'*• 5--4
. .u-.ixinr-r. f r-V I/r.'-'j-P. i.i- .?-i
« JUKMXB AND BAGS '
*’«»”*# *»tfBoWßß* A'm>'/'
wlMitbmfmAtlm'Mtr bf, ~.«t ax-.i i nf*M» «• •"
t ,JfeJM? korth' WwV ■'
*«J »vrdrtS<i*aiT4£iyr*/>* '
sa jf* «* Koftt DKiAiWABS Atrm.
t-7 -ix. isfc(» >-* •'g'l
. MnWS* 1 HMh
■ -'‘-‘-ft W»s f-ii ■=/
:■ WJtMfZ&to, 1 TAILOM, SBKfIfIMAKKM, JLAHTIBS,
.SHrifICMiNgRgj'ABH'ALL BTirCHIMO'
vmi >»»"“• •
_.,lnetjr„eonto-for mto*t *t,r*ctoTX.i»to«e.
V XglTOfthf KABM Oommlailon *. the Company: to Bali
xAgentojenlWerohenttpuroheeißgon.onlerey.. t»«
i m --.l -.ix ' ■' ‘ HKNRY'COY,' Agent,;
.*». .«- n.-.CMS OHBBTNUXStreeVPhlledelphto,
r:3- V> >h >AbOßov7 WeetSUteetr.it, Trenton,N./.
etiSSAm /
SEWING ' MA
U offend to the pdMlo «. themcet nlli
I <*tolo*-ptte«4 Seerlng tUohlno 1i«.,: IterUlemr fera
tiiitf#l«Mfc»tttAe«tto nninchfahriliktadeof goede
Sheet etmbrlee.'i.lt ii
:«n
be, mnendlkeptltt old*
ky # child of tfcnb»?eue of,**e-.-The, Draesiuß o
IW-nmtihtoiyrhT’h-' stutirr or- m wow, an «i
vM to bonnoarpMOit by ecyother;, Iteepoed mo**
i MltlSm bandied;to Aftten hundred etltehee pot min
■to. The threed needle token direetlyfrnmtheepople
wnaoot m nonu too nrrapi**./ Infect,it lo i
rnnklne the* Invented by emery femilylnthelend,>»
thatoV'P*toaa€ c it rs c-lif,
eterhlnh they: ..noVMrtoge thWNl.tbto to** o
*lmoe|WiWJffifd &» B<?•.SAW B -, Airotj.
ielwemerkyeowSin y,»»otoh;;E?3HTHßtreft.
■'■intarMrf'
- HCTFAIiO BOB®*, 1 ; ' '' 1 « *
BI THBNAL* ORBOBI, 11 ’f
iiv.ti* TEtniaii'S «»!*<'
t; i(“VJ ?-.ef«2»ijr/U*« *T
* ,= 080. iP. W OKB AT a S s
VJ* t>c - c ‘ { .v#v i-utl;;* !»kit v 've
d/,-1 JUn> *IUAKOH STREET. - v -
tftr-t f .-W -'i-f'■ • 3 1 '.-..- V . /: s'
ESablerg an& f arnesa gtunmingg.
S PETERSONj- »;*' ><••<-■
f yr is " :r?
lUfOETEBfi AND HANUYAOTUBIM
A * rt'Ji ,'!s?> V l 'tti .< r 'j.J :
’ CAABtACI, A
. . . - HARMBM IMMia^Og,'
. No. «B
it <}J. i|(aiUl>iLt*A
TitafiTg itnitratt
f’V.NO A
J&& ' .rr»il* j
,**,*l*9 n/n j-« T (
TOWBICB IHET INVITE THI ATTENTION 01
'*f T UNION# ilcv v-.!’ Niyt ,i<rs:.T
-’-'taMMmtoetMjji tern- 4s'v« f,3« v i«<w .1-
Cl * H." GABDEN^ wi »***
Aitoiot 4 Vim % mtt #**& u&0
•Jjf wH*»a J^APBr | iECaB?STOAWi 3900»8i«t\
JAHOT I tut and; JTR>N BONNJTB, ABTirl
.-..OStiIACJIWWJtEfIr-ACOBEf!,;*^*^*^!.^
.*« ktt'OlßV—'9iM.lCfi*o*K|^H£
•r : ! WS. , SW,'HIBEIBt NTBEET, 11! ‘
, ■mspxj.: 'ii> ntgLiMa^t. r
' *«i®ntltfjriASlß die* redjwdtfnlly frrtlted oaamlno
' T#&fW(fBK''* t" 1 :,A ’’ r '•' :r:! anli^ltn
J ' ni ■ -!:v-h ’■■!:• Jhbl'i-"
' -iic’; Y ' i-’Vii ii r. “i’l - !>■'(' *» «-v -j!:
j&.®Kld'-*! .? .1 -8*llJ>» >!*) ;w }..„
. jow»» ;
. ), l t 1 i 7 . 7 i 2,
.4;!t.i 4 i t il ;1 ":, * ' -" 4 ) I A ( 1?:aU, 14 -,\A, \ Are`,l/1 711 a'Pei. i** -- -4A4 4‘' , l_,lri :11, r:i .
.....f.,--„, or-, m.- - . - ,),‘VAi r iffj , , , ,, , ,,,,..,. ' 4 . 3
.„..., ' ' ~..-. - 1r0t .„ 4 „,
------------"-- PM •,. i -'''''W , VOZAMIrIi n, :' ,,, rVMMGV -0060.'"'"'_ .. ' p
•,,,::::::,:... ' . '',l, '...., ......: „... 5 , . 7 - ..<0.1/ , ' - _
--"' ' ---
(....... „, ~" ; : ,l' ~ .: 1-L 'i ' - - II..•-
• 1 11 PR ' I 111111 ft. raili Pr ~„>-• „
, 21 , ., ti ,
‘ ..
+drlo r.r,-, , , t , An ---''=- i 0 ., ,,
..i : :,F,.:
•`4.4 474 .1 1 , I, , I ft n ~i 04
, a A
..., _ • ,.,..
,„_..
, ~.. ~_ ... t __ , . , , ---.---- ..• -..,„ - , ,-..... ~- ,- 1• ,---..........----
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.
: __-•,-,__ „,----...,...,„
,
, •,,,
VOL. 2—NO. 56.
i > • ~
'4 ji- \ Prjj ©oobaJobbicra.
LSSB; FAII 1 O 0 O DS. 185£
j Tm Subscribers beg leave to inform their friends,
end country merchants generally, that their stock of
HOSIEBT,
|r-0 \ ...... ;
!:■ F iv shirta, • > ;
DRAWERS,
WOOLLENS, and
SHALL WARES,
la liow: Complete, comprising their usual assortment,
and which they will sell at the lowest market rato*.
i The/ would especially call attention to their stook of
’ BUCKSKIN GLOVES AND MITTENS. i
: ■ Comprising the
HANOVER, GERMANTOWN,-JOHNSTOWN, AND
; * OTHER DESIRABLE HAKES;
Ifhieh they have purchased directly from the Manu
facturers for cash, and are now prepared to soil at
rpdpoedjates.
SHAFFNER, ZIEGLER, Si 00.,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS, ‘
. 3BN.POURTH Street, Philadelphia, <
ees*2m Near the Merchants’ Hotel,
CAMPBELL, J*., & CO, #!
H IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
HOSIERY,
, , FANCY GOODS, 1
No. Ml MAUKET STREET,
• -'?■ Northeast Corner of POURTH.
H. A. SnACKatroiD, ' . <iuuim.OMcra>LL, Ja,
anl2-2xn - • \ ;
. JjIAU. BTOOK OFGLOTIIINO.
t! CHARLES HARKNESB A SON,
r; ' No. 888 MABKHT STBYBT,
SOUTHEAST CORNER OF FOURTH,
; HaVe no w 1 n sto rea largeaad splendid assortment
ofEAtL and WINTER CLOTHING, manufactured ex
priesly for the Southern and Western Trade, which
they offer for sale on the beet terms for. Oashj or on the
ttsaal Credit. , T
.jjfrTYElfcS are invited to.call and examine orthem
aUrm*--'-:Y ... anl2-2m "
1858 / BILK GOOlis. 1858
FALL IMTOBTATIONB.
r»Adtaß,:iio&is. awttKißS.
~, •-. til MARKET STREET, -
■*< ''•is- cohukkci iibbit,
PHILADELPHIA.
Have now in store their complete
IMTOBTItION OF BILK AND FANCY GOODS,
1 To urhifth Ui. itUntlon of the TRADE U lari ted.
gHITH.MUBPHY, & CO.,
,a»7.MABK*T Si'. AND 82* OHUBOH ALLEY,
BTAM.B AND FANO? DRY GOODS, ,
To whlchthej Inyite the attention of
CASH AND PBOMPT SHORT lIMB BtJYBBS.
Inumrni, Angiut, 1868. ' au24-2in
gJHAPLEIGH, BUB, k 00.,
WHITE GOODS,,
LINBNS, ■
EMBBOIDBBIEB,
■/., ilfL-jf W-. LAO* GOODS, Ae.
F,..>- .. fi "o '*■
No, 829VMAEKET. STREET,
PSIiiDELPHIA,
: MU-Sm
jpiAif STOOK *' ‘ t
•■ ! BILK AHD FAHOy dOpDS. ,
OTT,
N; W. Corner bf FQURTH and MARK* t STREETS,
Hart bow in store a splendid assortment of
SiLKs/BIBBONSj AND FANCY GOODS
;.‘ h £' OF.THEIR AWN IMTORi&TIOH,
To wUob they Sorito the attention of
l ; • \ ’ first-olabs/buters.
■ilS-fiO/ .; :
/Wrtl| *’ i
JT. WAT & 00.,
•s„ ■
; No*. BAREST' Btrwt and 10 CBCBOH Alloy.
- .- IMPORTEBB AND JOBBIBB
, 5 ... or .
i sJjRTI joO BS, :
. : Aft»°» fully ptoparod for tko
i»i :j,., • - r-.-EAti TRADE. -
.Tho-oamplotMioW'ot tholt StOOkJ both foo
,<u’.-4t .'■ , V.
Will 6o Rtlid.to. io lmyoro, nnior-
oonntry. ..,„ ~anil An'
-\.v. ,
■i<-’E M Hf AN,' JON B S‘, ; - A 00. ,
."'No;its MiHKET BTREST, .' , '
*n»olHni'*o..i ■ i"
N. 0., *O4 OHDEOH AIIII, I .
. Kay» mnrlnotort a'leO •■.
'.l'i > ■ OOMPIETB stock
»• ' .7-, , * 4.1 M 14
mi goods, * i
; TovUeh tkqrifnite Boyen fro'm
oft*fc»'Paiofr.• •• * - -t‘-'■■i'• '*Qlft.aA 1
CitNß, OOLIN, k. : GItAflS,
...i-.v'-V/ I '-'.‘iAN®■ v ' ■•" . - "1
. : . 17E0LEIALI BNAIiIBS IN
■OBIBBT, ■■-'■!■•- ■ !a
,s ■ it in; . . ■ cr.’n ‘PANOT ODOdS, Ao.
Noi 428 MABKET STBEBT, , ,
.'..if'.s .V.ABOVB FOOBTH,: ~
PHILADELPHIA.
aatt-Sa ~ y■ ■ ,-v-’-.' ■■•. ■■■
h KNOWLES,
IICPpRTIRg AND WHOLESALE DEALEBB
••;• .;'i« ,’; ■ ■'’ .
HOSIBRy, QLOVEB AND f PANOT SOODB,
-» .i 7. : '. (aiTn a»motid *o) .
jNot/.49O‘MXftNSX AND .435 MERCHANT BTB.i;
,A fir,# T .. w . >'J f. ' •l< ■ . ‘ *
AoA h*TP. jMt ,op«a©tf.A f NßW»Ain) OOMPLDTB
BTOOIT 09. GOODS, npnwly Adapted to (
t \/ail ibadh, 1 1 -
To whlofc the attention of thelr.'onatomere and FIBfIT
/ ; * GLASS ii Mted.
t _
gOHAFEiiR - & ROBERTS,
~. ,;'V- No-,H19 | KARKET street,
v,. i,. i .unoanTiaamo joim*bop
HOSUiRT, GLOVES, - v
"■- SMALL ■ ' '
' . ..COMBS, BRUSHES,
TAILORS’ TRIMMINGS, .
, t ' LOOKING-GLABBBS,
GEBKUO JkNB TaBNOH JANOr GOODB. ■ it
i *a£MyiiA n 1 A ‘ r> *
, Jatnigliinfl gcoba.
WSIINCHESTER & 00., GENTLEMEN’S
•V V ,rtBHISHIHG STORE
PATXNT) BHOCLDBR SRAM. SHIBT MANUPAC
. V 3,1- , TOBY, : , .•.
Attha 014Stondt.No. TOO CHESTNUT BTRBBTj oppo
aonal' nporrlalon to': the Catting and Manatutarlng
departmento, .Orient forhli. celebrated fltjle of/Shirt,
ahdCollare oiled at tha ehoiteat noUco. Wholeula
trvta rapplltd onliberal tonne.' - 1/24.1/
JW, SCOTT, (l*io of the Arm of Wnt
» (meslriin A Soon,) iOBNTLXMBN’S PUBNIBH
ING, BTOM- and!. SHUT HANUVAOTOBV;, 81*
CHESTNUT Street, (neuly oppoilto the Girard Hontoj)
mil the attention of hie
fonnerpetrorle end friende to hla’neif Store,' end li pre
aaredttoi'flll.ordere for SHIRTS at ahort notice. A
tt/feet St gnarantled. COUNTRY TBADB enpplle*
ftffi aIHBiBHIBTg and COLLABg, .-. ■ jyfftf
'»s tfl
■I JftttbriUft* ■ Otii faraaols.
FEITNER, ;
• >i,n. „• - I ; )) , : .manu»actukb i m ov . 1 _ 7
AND - PABASOLS;- ?
g ? Np. ?3« MARKET 8?®E8T,.....
, f JNVITB: THE,, ATTENTION pj BUVBBB,
r.* v .. -‘-- *•* - •- • •' ‘
Jr* - t fUtr -t-r* . To Theii 1 -i’”'.'
■ j-Jt r-1 I—*-' <: i ./ . ( *’ •
... LARGE AND VABIBD BTOOK.. ,
Hltlrn' V'l'V..; /. „ ,'v ,i 7 r. .{
ipIAJIPBELL»B?Di»iNG SALOON>.
%J OotnetefTHrUD Bt. and HARMONY, COUBT, j
.Hali bAetf f6f ielenVdayk pftati inprder to be
rejfelimted dirtnttrAlltd; It #ID be‘ opened en
IiONDAT; next, 20th loit., with improrenjeDW and al*
teiaumßHrhfeHwitldiitdnish thi towif/ The host has
thrown hli aonl ihto theta** of iron setfhAknd'we ttiinh
that bis efibrte'wiU moot with- hniiersal' approbation.
WhaDmwnriit'wiil be a‘uodel eatablishment.
*..» u w miv •: • '
?7 . .8.4. ,I .f.J, - 1 .
CALAD TffifcLt-j B6 , cjfees finest Tuscan Lynch
55 on, in <R«WfoTMi«iT':- r ~‘-
’ WILLIAM H. YBATON; 1
# »#Bdpt»»lWBI otre
GLOVEB, ud
Arenow openings
A.dBBSH STOCK
ro»
IMPOBTSRB
toljol£6iile IBrj] Otooba.
IjpO DEALERS IN OIL CLOTHS.
. The Subscriber taring superior facilities for Mann
factoring
FLOORjTABLE, STAIR, and ,
. / CARRIAGE OIL CLOTHS,
la now prepared to offer great inducements to Bayers
from all parts,of the’oountzy.
A large and choice Stock Constantly on hand.
Gnat care will bo taken in selecting for Dealers who
order by mail.
■ WAREHOUSE, No. 229 ARCH Street, Fhlla.
an23-8m» THOMAS POTTER, Manufacturer.
JJLABON & SMITH,
MANUFACTURERS OF
OIL CLOTHS.
WAREHOUSE, 146 NORTH THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
0»u to the trade a fall stook of Floor Oil Oloths.
mediant extra quality enamelled Moslls Drills and
. Table Oil Cloths, new styles; green glased Oil Cloth
for window shades.
A complete assortment of Window Shades, trimmings,
Ac. We invite the attention of dealers to our stook.
a*l&-2m
WEBSTER AND HAT JEWS CELE
BRATED speeches. ‘ \ \\ .
Jttflt Published in ohe large octavo volume V- 'J
T. B.' PETERSON & BROTBERS,^
No 306 OHEiTNUT Btrelt.
Col. HAYNE’S GREAT SPEECH in tho SENATE o
1630.' on Mr. Foot’s Resolution. ,
DANIEL WEBSTER’S GREAT SPEECH in refcly l
Col. Hayne, of South Carolina: . .
WEBSTER’S very interesting and learned SPfityit
in the Senate oflB6o, on the Slavery Compromise.* ' -
[Kxtraot from Webster’s Speech of 3830.1' !
“When my eyes shtll be turned to behold; fontht
last time, the sun in heaven, may I notsee him sfcfmnf
on the broken and dishonored fragments ('fa otiteghv
rious Union; on States dissevered, discordant, bdUge
rent; on a land rent with civil fends or drenohai i
may oe, in fraternal blood]” -‘Liberty and Unioh/noi,
and forever, one and inseparable.” W
. [From Col. H&yne’s Bpeech ] IT
“We ask nothing of our Northern brethren bttt icftt
us alone. Leave us ■to the undisturbed management!.
our domestic concerns, and thedirection of onr ovrnp*
dustry. and we will ask no more.” “Sir, thereifp
existed, In every age and every country, two fUstttt
oiden of men—the lovers of freedom, and the devoid
advocates of power ” ‘ u. -
Copies of the above Speeches will be sent to any ha
anywhere in the United States, postage paid, on rec£t
of Twonty-Bvo cents. ’ I,
Bond in your orders immediately to the Publisher)!
T. B. PET«RS )N Sc BROTHERS If’
* No. 800 CHESTNUT Btreej
JJIOHABDSOIPS IBISH LLNEN3, | IM W HUMOBOUS BOOK,
JJIDGWAY, HEUSSNBE, & 00.,
IMPORTERS OF
OLOTHfI,
DOESKINS, and
OABBIMSRES.
SOU AOIHTB'TOI 188 yOLLOWIBS
CELEBRATED MANUFACTURERS
FEED. EBOKENB, (Little Ticket,)
W. A. JOHANNY, Abhqo,
&SVERS A 80HMXDT, (S&ndM Cloths,) < -
ZAMBONA BROTHBRB} (Fanoy OftMimerea,)
BBOICH A LAMBERTS, (F and B Cloths,)
B. TOBNNIBB A 00., ’
F. O. HBBBMAN A SON, (Muon doth)
HASELOFF A 00.
No. 906' CHESTNUT STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
H. W. BIDQWAT,
CHAfI. HEUBSNER. .
r ►AMASIte, PXAPERS, Sco.
: ' 00N8UMfcR8 or RIOHABDBON’S LINENS, and those
dMiroos the GENUINE GOODS) should
see that the artioles they purchase are sealed with the
full name of the linn
RICHARDSON, SONS, , & OWDEN,
Ar a guarantee of the and durability of the
Goods.
This caution is rendered essentially necessary as large
quantities of inferior and defective Linens are prepared)
■eason after season, end sealed with the name of
RICHARDSON. by Irish bouses, who, regardless of the
injury thus inflicted alike on the American consumer
and the manufacturers of the ’genuine Goods, will not
readily abandon a business so profitable, while pdr
chasers can be imposed on with Goods of a worthless
character.
J. BtJLLOOKE & J. B. LOCKE,
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with an additional charge of One Dollar the Brat je&ri
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not In arrears are entitled to the nee of the
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minors. "They ;will also be entitled to.receive One
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The Ltctares of the Institute commence in Novem
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PBIYILBOK3 OF MINOBS.
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only
DRAWING SCHOOL,
For Instruction, Mechanical, and Architectural
Drawing and Designing, commences geptembt-r 20th,
and is continued on Tuesday, Thursday, and gaiurdaj
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Pupils under twenty-one years of age are entitled to
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‘ JOURNAL OP THE INSTITUTE,
Devoted to Mechanical and Physical Sciences, is pub
lished in monthly numbers, illustrated with Plates and
Wood Outs. Subscription Price. |fi psr annum.
THK bI'ATED MEETINGS
Are held on the third Thursday evening of eaoh
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. The members tickets, for the coming exhibition and
lectures are now ready for delivery.
Gentlemen wishing to become members can do so on
application, at.tho Mali, in Seventh street, below Mar
ket, to, ,/ WILLIAM HAMILTON,
- ep2o-.flt ■ Actuary.
Philadelphia "warming and
TEMTILATING WAREHOUSE.
ARNOLD & WILSON,
BUQOMBORB T* P. A. HAMI6O*. ' . ,
We have removed from cur old stand In Walnut street
to the LARGE STOKER No. 1010 CHESTNUT street,
a few doors below the St. Lawrence Hotel, where our
eld friends and the public -pro respectfully invited to
examine our extensive 'stock of warm' Air Furnkces.
Cooking Ranges, Bath Boilers, 'Registers. Enameled
Stone Mantels. Parlor Coal Grates, Ac. We are
Sowm»imfM<irlng OHn.BON’B OBLBBRATED PAT
me NSW OOAIfGAS CONSUMING FURNAOH. th*
most’ powerful Mid ecbnomleel HMtat «« ImnWi
Mid lotted to Ml eleeeee of buildings.
AlMj Mir end MoutlM'potterii* et t«w J»o.
firet*., tad Parlor Oo«l Gratae of oil «!«*< *nd Mttom
~ W» Bat*' ftUo eommenced ibe mdioMeturt 0.
ENAMELED STONE MANTELS from' Porno
tylvania Stono. ' Tma. Mantels 'wore awarded a
SPECIAL, PREMIUM ’at tho tali PWr and Exhi
bition of tho Erdnklin' Inotituto of Ihia city. They
repro.ent all tha ran and beantlfnl Aanoua HxasLis,
aro not Inland hr Smoko, coat Oas. Oil 6r Acids,
and ar. sold Ifboieiale ana Retail, at much loot pri co
than Marsh- Call and ... thorn.
o. "WOLD ft WILSON.
BSNJ.M. IBLTWNM., Bupertnt.nd.nl.
- FMiadoiahie.April.lBM—ap« It
mAW fc BEERS'
iUBRIOATINO QRKABK, •
the beet and cheapest compound for rroealnr the arise
S OMSWUBBSrOARBIAOBB, CASTB, dWb and
WAQONS. aid IiEAVY MACHINERY. ’
■uhr itkla in 'tin caiis. kegs, and barrels, by all the
DRUGGISTS In the dty fl f
*' v y No: IS fiOU?H WATER fltmet
■TIRENOH /WHITE ZINC, of the Vieille
P Monte gne, ground pare. It produoee a olear,
white, See gloMi and attains a firmness and eTenneM.of
gtlrface. Guarantied genuine. Por sale ny
.. ZIBBLBB A BMITH,
' enJB-dtf Bontkweit oor. Beoond and Steep
PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, IBsBv
Btero jpnblicationa
TO THE LEGAL PROFESSION.’: j
ELLIOTT'S DEBATES. £ J -
New Edition Just published. f ,
tbs heoatss ih the srtbral <1 ’
STATE OONVEN TlO N,
On th«* Adoption of . < • r * *
THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION,
Ar recommended bj the General Convention al Phili*
delphla, in 17b7. Together with the 't ' <
JOURNAL of th» FEDSRAL CONVENTION,
LTJTHKR MARTIN’S LETIBR, \ .
YATK’ft MINOT 158, • ■ 'A •
CONGRESSIONAL OPINIONS,M '>
Virginia and Krntookt Rrsolutions of ’Sp-’OO-'
and other Illustrations of the Constitution: A ; '
Including \ 1
THE MADISON PIPERS, -li
Containing the Debates on the Adoption a ’
THE FBDERAb CONSTITUTION, Jl *
, Tn the Convention held at Philadelphia in 187, \
With a DIARY of the Debates of V !
THE CONGRESS Of THE CONFEDERATION, ,
Aa Reported y ;
Br 3mm Madison. X
Published under the sanction of Congress’*’!
Bt JONATHAN BLLIOIT.,. . ]j
Complete in 5 volfi , BVo. Pri6es!s; 'I,
j. u. lippinoot? ic co:i\
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THE K. N. PEPPER PAPERS, . f
i ILLUSTRATED. [
One voltuno, bound in doth. Price $l. !
< BZTBAOI IBOM.OOUTMTB: 'i'i
Biographical.
OadonaWselborer—in2parts.
Conflict; Alegalterand Wotterßnaik.
Astronomy—A leotura. ■ ;
' - Solillquy : Adreat to A Berd on to'the fens.
Pprae; A noad to the Grek Slair. ■'
A LytelL Gosto oi Lewys Clarke. » ;
To the Aingei as is gone. Hanah Gane. <’
Fre nolle ov the Bevins. With painting.' i
On'the clatn. ;
To an eklipn. ; r
AGrateApik: Tirkle. ’ <i
Pete—ah avorlj pome (for length.) 1
A noad to the Comeck, 4 c , Ao., 4c., 4c*
The numerous laughter-provoking verses of this yri.
known humorous and sparkling American trriti
which, so widely copied, have so often convulsed 4
reader, are here collected’ in book form,'and hake
more attractive volume than hai been issued in mu
years. .. ■ |
Lewis Gaylord Clarke, of the ifntcker&odktr Magi
tint, says: “ The bones of those who have explodj
in the perusal of the verses of K. N. Pepper white
the soil of the United States, from the Rocky Moun
tiina on the east , to the extreme west. . * 4 noad to tk
Grek 'Blail) } is as Immortal’ as the Statoo which is
spired it.” <• - ’ p
Sold by all booksellers, and sent by mail to any pa
of the United Btates on receipt of price—sl. ■
BUDD 4 OARLBTON, !
Publishers and Booksellers, i
se2l.tu th s-tf No. 810 BROADWAY, New York.'
Frederic William “th'e'Great,” of Bran
denburg, lived to achieve the consolidation of
his dominions into a powerful State, which ho
transmitted to his successor, Fredericlll,
who in 1701 assumed the title of “King of
Frassia.’,’ The grandson of this last-named
prince was■ the celebrated- Frederic” the
Great,, whose, extraordinary ’ military genius
enabled him to hold'his ground against'the"
Combined assaults .of Austria,- Russia, - and
Franco. Since his time (1786) Prussia has
jpaintained her rank as one of-the leading
Powers of Europe, except during the brief
period of Napoleon’s wonderful career. It
IHIRD EDITION NOW BEADY*/. H has ever been tho desire of Austria to humble
tdblic and private HISTORY | and crush this rival and, obstacle to her su-
OF NAPOLEON THE THIRD, jpremacy in the Germftnio Confederation, and
aY SA ormo ( ‘sa M op fl ril , . 0 BR i iak A ' . ! ishe made extraof(iifiary u efforts (d ( i ,accomplish;
and Is quit# inUc«Urg.— thifii object in theyevon-years war (175G-17G3.)
‘ Mr. g«iaoker f B voittm® is & good one, and irtifijo failed, aho‘ turned her attention else
" 7 the majority of w»aeiA-pj. 8. Jperhsi, Whore, and both she and Prussia' joined with
’ It is the most complete blognphr of the Prtmoh Russia in the spoliation -of Poland, whereby
oto
ih« private and public uretr of the moit saccewiw ad* ‘ Grand Duchy of Ppsen, a very
Yeotajerofth'flftga—f'J.Y. Kr*ngellat. J mrutr+ant fl-nnlsiMnn ‘ • • >
It is a work of thrilling interest and great historical | „ 81 , D ‘
raiae —rAnhar’s HomeMegaaine. The first tFrench Revolution>gave anew
-[rhurnl‘,p. 0 "h f,lU ‘°' l ’ lmp> 'i u,ti,:e ‘» u *«y«t> r n to theaffairs ofiGennany. Thofeeble
Itusa ebly written wort. pdeeDtiDgafaiiand com- md'jll-cobdiicted interference of Prnßsia, on
Plete history of tho remertable crear of the French . , - T ’ y,,. . , _ ’
JSmperor—[Legal Intelligencer ' . Xvl, and Of royalty > roused
.., -*<mo*»r is a twit™ Arafttoaniiilijr of popular jesplrit of tbh'French, arid.the successes of
historical works: this Life or Napoleon 111 |g tervin* t'v; - 4 „ . . .
terestiDjr,—raiakam’sMagasine J tell 4 ' republican armies opened the eyes and
h i “mr l S±' l Lri“h i "o^rL«*y.”^L- r,M<,of ‘error to the souls of the intocrats of
it is oompiete, thorough, ani utistio —[Mohawk Oorope. Napoleon completed what Hoore,
"jfhVltrie U. model of elegant oompoeition—rphlla J,BTINE > I ’ IOnEOEt, > Jot,aDA * and Moreau
”>• „ 3d begun. Austria was stripped ofher’lta-
For sale at a. g, rvanB’ an Possessions, and “ the sun of Austorlitz”
gist-book BTOBB, feheld her at the conqueror’s feet. Prussia,
439 OdRSfNUT at. actuating as usual, next felt his powerful arm
s Jena, and accepted such torms as .he ehose
t> dictate. The Imperial Diet was dissolved,
did “ the Confederation of .the Rhino” was
tinned in 1807, under the protectorate of Na-
Wleos. Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, Wur
bmberg and Westphalia .were made into klng
cbms, and obligingly supplied with a king by
tbs « protector.” The war of liberation, in
185, broke this confederation. Austria
and Prussia tor a time forget their rivalry, and
appeared as (he two great German, brothers
fighting for tho freedom of the Fatherland—
froodoiL f rom the yoke of is, net
freedom in nobler sense, as it is under
stood and estafalu, e( j j n onr own - g roa t Repub
lic. • ■- -! - - '
On tho fall of Napoleon-congress of pleni
potentiaries from the differ,^. Emperors,
Kings, Princes, and Potentates; „ ( th which
Europe abounded, assembled at, Ylen, a
settle (as, far as lay in human power) i,-,
destinies, of Europo aa seemed best—not for
tho people whom thoy governed, but/or’Me
maintenance ,o/ their own authority One 61
their first acts, as regarded Germany, was to
make a now distribution of tho dominions of
tho'Gorman princes, and a confederation was
formed, consisting of thirty-eight States—a
few large, the. rest small, and rejoicing in a
variety of titles, such as kingdoms, princi
palities, duchies, and republics.- The Diet
was .remodelled, and tho right of representa
tion therein was distributed among the States
in such a manner as, to give the large majority
of votes to Austria and Prussia; the, former
being president, the'.latter vice president of
the congfoss. • Tho deadening influence of the
divine right of kings and -of “ tho Holy Al
liance ” (as it was profanely termed) was soon
felt, and Germany gradually sunk into a state
of torpor, ocoulbnaUy giving convulsive
throbs, like qjS|^jj6'lias' , .the nightmare and
dreams that hejaaif the weight of an enormous
standing stomach.
A second timirthe awakening came from
France. In 1818', the Germanic Confederation
was revolutionary move
ments, which, r 6»apating from that country
spread.rapidly-aTur Europe, and to which the
youth ot Gormany oagerly' rosponddd. An as
sociation, formod at signed a peti
tion for the’establishment of a national guard,
the absolute liberty of the press, and the im r
mediate convocation of a German Parliament.
Flfty-ono of tho most eminent .liberals took
upon tkomß'elvcs to summon a preliminary As
sembly,to organizethisNattonalCongress. On
tho 31st March, 1848, it met at Frankfprt, and
arranged the convocation of a German Farlia.
ment. As for tho Diet, it quietly withdrew
into obscurity until the revolutionary storm
should blowover. Tho King.ot -Prussia, who
had previously promisod to his people a sort
of shadow of a liberal Constitution, was now
obligod to promise one of a more thorough
going description. The Emperor of Aus
tria was fain to banish- his old and
faithful servant, Metterhioh, and to send
his brother, tho Archduke John, (the.most
liberal-minded of his family,) to preside over
the Parliament at Frankfort as vicar of tho
Empire. The Parliament wasted its timo in
theoretical discussions, and in tho promulga
tion ot a Constitution whioh had no vitality,
and when they offered the post df Chief of the
Empire to the King of. Prussia; he refused the
proffered honor. Austria' opposed tho’plan of
centralization proposed "by - the Representa
tives of the people, and suggested a Directory
of seven sovereign princes. During the long
and useless . .discussions which ensued the
princes gained timo, and made their prepara
tions for' crushing- tho revolutionary move
ment, and the German Parliament gradually
dwindled away, and finally disappeared.
The disappointed demagogues roso iu arms;
Sanguinary tumults desolated the, streets of
Frankfort, Berlin, Stuttgardt; Dresden, Leip
zig, and other cities, Were not put down
without great bloodshed.- Hungary and Italy,
at the same time, endeavored to throw off ttye
yoke of Austria.; .The former would have suc
ceeded but for the interference of .Bussia ;;the
latter succumbed; notwithstanding ‘ tile gal
lantry ot Charles Albert, of Sardinia, upon
00l- f s&tu th s
E W BOOKS
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Published Saturday, SepUmber 4th.
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Published Saturday, September 11th.
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• PubV h*d Saturday. September 18th, ‘
ORACLES. . daily. Scriptural t text-book on an en
tirely orig' jal plan. 32u.0., cloth.
' To be to. lowed on Saturday,' September 26 tl, by
GRACE TRIUMPHANT. A brief Momoir of John
Fleming. By a Teacher. 18mo., cloth. ,
t. ■’ - l r* On Saturday, October 2d. *
HOW TO LIVE. Illustrated in the Lives o! Preditck
Business, Gerhard Tei»teog&—
the Christian Laborer. James Montgonsry-Ahe
Christian Hfcn of Letters 12m0., cloth.
• i On Saturday, October 9th. v
HARRY SEYMOUR {'the Little Boy whosefeet would
runhome. JBmo., cloth.. - -
On Saturday, October 16th.
Mrs. COOPER’S bTORY; of, tho Golden Mushroom
' 18tno.. cloth.
On Saturday, October 23d. •
KITTY MAYNARD; or, «« To obey Is better than sac
rifleo.” By theauthor of ‘‘lrish Amy,” (‘Bead'
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On Saturday, November oth.
UNION NOTES ON THE GOdPKLB;
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AND JOHN. JcdltoU by Rev. Robert J. FarTii of
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On Saturday. November 13th.
ALLIS FAMILY: or. Scenesof Western Life. 18b«.,.
cloth. '
DAISY; or, The Lost Lamb. Beautifully lllustrKoA.*
On Saturday, NovemberSOth. 1
THE DRAMA OF DKDNKENNFSS; or, PlAesn
Scenes in the Drunkard’s Thoatre. 18mo., sloth ;
On Saturday, November 27th. , i >
OSHIBLLE: or, Missionary Life in Africa, lftni.,-
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Several other'books of great interest will be published
during the season, by the
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|.| A VAN A LEAF—lOO.Balea Haw Leaf
El Tobaeeo landing eg MsryH. Kendell. Voiale by
9 A. MKRIN,
ae9 liC South front roet.
Germany—its Past and Present—No. 3.
The antagonism between Austria, and the
North of Germany dates back from the days
of Luther. At that time the power' of the
■Empire had risen'to an unprecedented height.
The Emperor- Maximilian, by his marriage
with Mast of B.nrgondy, had annexed to his
dominions the wealthy provinces of Flanders
and what eho remained of the domains of the
famous Charles the Bold. • On, his death, his
grandson, Chables the Fifth, of Spain, was
elected Emperor, whereby the power and
i wealth of the Spanish dominions, both In tho
I Old and New World, were thrown Into the
scale,' and Ehrop£trembled for 1 its liberties in
the presence, of* the monarch who had at bis
command tho. resources of so many nations. ..
But LoTHBE and his bold coadjutors dared
to set' at def[anoe, not only tho temporal power
of OilAEiSsi hut the spiritual, power, of the
.Chnrchjof-Bdme, before whiofcthe greatest’
potentates had htimbjed themselves: a. storm,
tyas, raised which drenched Germany with
wo still. he hr tho royerperatiohg of
its thunder, sjtiotig after, Lutbkb had passed’
away, Jilsfle'ry preaching continued to act,on,
the heart of Saxon Germany, and eventuated
in',« The. Thirty-‘Tears ' War ohe'.ofr the *
moat terrible civil struggles recorded, in histo
ry. . During Its,progress wholo districts were
depopulated, denationalized, and. demoralised•,,
cities and ..villages disappeored; the face of
the country ,TVaa ;’permaneptly aitored, ,ahd
famine completed the deaciation which the fe
rocious solders of Had left incom
plete.
’lt wis this war which caused the .- rise of
I Prussia:.. Oh the death' of GEonoE 'William,'
Elector of Brandenburg, and Duke of Prussia,-
in 1640,his son and successor,Fisjoßnio
liau, joined the Protestant Alliance, and took
an active' part in the contest.. On its
tion by the peace of- WestphhUa iff ;1648, he,
was rewarded by tho acquisition”' of part of
Pomerania,, Minden, sagdqt)urg,uand other
districts. By that treaty, religiousliborty was
secured to the Protestants; tut ex
hausted by the long war, and Austria remained
the predominant Power, pmoDg the German
States.. i
JObEPH LEA,
TUESDAY, OOrOBEH 6, 1858,
V ' <•
whom fell the brant of the struggle/ and of its
{pnnißhmsnt. While' Austria was thins ’occu
pied/ Prussia busied herself by, forming' al
liances with the, smaller States of Germany;
Saxony and Hanover bound themselves to her
by treaty to aid in suppressing the'democratic
movement. The project of a liberal Constitu
tion was again flourished in the faces of
deceived ■ people; but as the liberal party in
Prussia loudly called for. larger concessions;
and the King-was’ doubtful a& to the reliance'
to be placed in his army, he was on the point
of yielding, when (in an evil hour' for the
people) he called intp his cooncila his uncle,
the Count of Brandenburg, who at once ad-.,
vised and. carried out tbe strongest measures
of' resistance and coercion. The popular as
sembly was.transferred from Berlin to Bran
denburg in November, 1848, and dissolved in'
December. Berlin was placed in a state of
siege, and ‘the Kiflg, supported' by'bayonets,
took time to framo a modiflQd ConstUution >
which was subnpitted to the,
deputies, in May, 1849, and, after much 'dis
cussion and opposition; accepted." ' ’ '
, Similar movomerits hEid taken place at Vi
. OBna, and for a brief JnteWal, even Austria re_
, oeivod a liberal Constitution; but the discord!
> 'ant' elements df which the Empire wag cpm
pbsed prevented Itt 1 'general''acfc'epfanc'e, and,
, finally the democrati’c'q j'vVreent 'was. crushed
out In. blood.At,the end of 1819,.the eitna
, Mon of Germany, In a constitutional polni of
view, wag’trtiy'slngniar: 'The federal iaw
‘ had dlsappeSied.' /The anpierit'trihnpal.of khe
Diet had expired by of;
July, 1848, and its substitute was merely it ,a
hypothetie'al statd.’ The' Staths 'had ne f leil®. •
lative,n'nlon'h^'^^en“t^dmß9lvos.,'Tfie’’4isam-''
ly. at If rankfort I wns. ,ppmpo sed pf ; visionaries,
who aimed at realizing theories withontiiegkrd'
to theddiosyndrasy and ' characteristics'of the
people) and they itasted their.’time iii attempts
to settlethe boundaries. ; of.tiie projected. tJbr
manic Emßire and ttie. privileges of its/,coin-,
ponent States. •, This ■ Assembly.' degenerated
into a-mere iclub; was rdradved to Stuttgartlt
and;flno.Hy'suppt'essba hyfeb’p.olieo'of .■Vrir-’’
‘temberg’-~
to arise frosj the, ef/afTairs, coni
vofceda new Parliament at Erfurt, whileAusfrja “
jealous ofPrnsaiai reablVed tolnaugurafe the re!,
stbra'tjpn of “purest simple’.”!
complications, and the Con
gress of princes,-assembled at 1 the snggestibn
of Prdsaia, at Berlin,’ differendes rbs'e to.Buch
a hoight that awar jiad noarly hrijkbn o.ut bp- 1
tween the ,two/great, parties.-, Prussia made
immense military preparation,, and her'troops
actually came’into colllfdon with the Bavarian
contingent.; l>ut to .her aiH,
and a,pacificatiqn was flnqUy brought about at!
Olmntz, In which the'triumph of> Atfstriawas
complete, and her rival Was fore’ed to abandon
all her pretenMoris. 1 * The)!'|bibmn’’reunion of
the ancient Federal Congress .took place at
Dresden,-in. 1851, and that ibody set to-work |o
reorganize the Confederation. The' principal
difficulty they h’ad to’corite'ftd.with.w’aa the de
band of Austria that all,. her,, non-Germanjc
States (Italian, Hungarian, Polish, Slavonian)
should,be admitted into'- the ’Confederation,
thereby ’ giving hOr an 1 ibmense
anoe, thecpnfrol.ef, ail Germany.
Against this England and-Franse protested,
while Prince - SoHWABTzzHDKHO, thO Austrian
minister, to counterbalance, thbirjipflaencq,
bonght and obtained fhe support’of, Russia. A.
serious European convulsion might have hem!.
the reanlt had not the Diot gOt' rid of (he quei-';
tion, by adjoilrning 1 ? the/ consideration of jt
sins' die. Ffniilly,' riiaftera! , .,were,! rbfdored'to
the alatu an<e,,.ipB,^x6op,ting sthat 5 that tw|>'
of the small Statoß, Hohenzollern andiHeoh
ingenyuhadt boeiij' mean-Whlle, absotbed’ into
Frussid". 'Yn this ptate matlers'jiqw'ptaSd v )'. !
THIBUTHTO
[For The Freaa.j n {
Still do I aeem to h'ar the too«* that fall, • '
Like gentle rein upon the thirsty earthy ,
From the!dntnb iostrameAt yoa made to swell ' 1
With varying melodies of song end mirth ;
And now it stands—a memory to tell! ’ '
How quickly yon were lost to all of earth.
I sever eoe it but-I think of thee; " T ■
I never hear it, but the treacherous s4a, "I
The fatal fire, the sudden shriek,-and all .•. ‘
The direful agonies that still Appal '> >
~ - ;The shuddering continents,'dieatii-Uke glide ' !
i- .Reforo'iue—a dread vliioii Lcould wish’to hide, 1
■But dare not.' My gifted friend ! No more ’ 1
i ,The dear ones of thy bearth—thy store - -- j
■ Of earthly bliss; the partner of t&yilifb, ~' ' a
Tby sweet, thy gentloyamfctby hapless wife, 1
(Now walticg tidiogs on a foreign strand?' 1 '
jLopglng to hear thy welcome to the land
Where thou hada’t made a fair and honest name,
Better aui brighter far than all the fame " -
■ That sprlegd too often from a nation’s shame:)' i
■' Nomore to thbse, that hpsband,'father,'friend, !
1 , wants to and carps attend, •
' l Will come, ableising in his constant smile, > -
s Filling their hours with ijoV, thelwhlle
He grew th<i master ip his noble toll. 1
Now far in s’pundlbg Ocfan’s secret deep, \
’ He sleepshisilast.andhapplestalcep.n
Earth had few pured in her tribes of men,
Nor can ’the insatiate sea again
Pluck to its weird ani wondrous grave ,
A friend more or a heart more brave. . ,
■♦Mr.TnoBBBOKB was A pianist of averyhlgh order of
mAny admirers in-Philadelphia. He
was Auitrla, while on hi* return to hi*
adopted rM txme his profession as a teacher;
in which he mayv* a&id to have j
- The Past of thte Q C e a n Telegraph.
Arthur Young’s V Tpur lreland” was
published originally in Lonow, t j n ifgo, jjj e
{C the Kingdom of h»^ n oe, ,, by tha
same author, was published in Dondwjn 1792.
Aseoend edition, was published, at
munds/in 1794. It was from the latter .“Tou«»>
that the extract (embodied in an editorial article"
published in The Press of Thursday) was taken,,
in.which reference was made to certain experi
ments of Moos. LosmOnd with regard to telegraph-,
ipg by eHotrloity. In the Philadelphia Library
.there-are two oopiqs of'the-work. ; The passage
alluded to occurs in the first edition, on thc'osth
page of the “ First Pari,” which contains the daily,
journal of the author’s travel. It may also be'
found in the Sept&nibor number of the l ' Antha
logia Hibornloa” for the year 1794. Mr. Seanlan,'
the intelligent .book-lover and book-dealer, in Fifth
street, below Chestnut, has a copy of the l( Autho-!
logi&M in fino condition. It is extremely rare,
and has acquirod a factitious value from contain
ing the very e&rliest published speoimens of Tho
mas Moore’s poetry. Ono of the editors of The
Press has a oopy of the ‘‘ Anthologia,” for which;
he paid $2O. ' ’ J L; ‘
A Glauce at New York Politics.
‘[Correspondence of The Prefis ]
■) -Nbw yonx, October 2, 1858.
- Tbe «lato of the' Damoiirstio '■ patty id this olty,
jg a surest of mnoh interest and anxiety to those ;
who have fought for year, after year under its vic
torious banners. Disguise it as you trill, there
never has been greater division of opinion or more:
antagonistic elements in tho party to consolidate
than exist this fall. To reafl the fulsome adula
tions poured out by the ■ leaders of both faotionsj
upon tho Administration, you would suppose that,
despite tho local trouble’, ail - wore united in its!
support. Thore is, in. Now York oity, nn element
which is denominated the shouting element. It,
forms part and paroel of every publio meeting and;
rejoioes in the opportunity! of strengthening its
lungs.'' From Jenny Lind to the Cable'it alike;
posses—its roar is just the sdine, It oheers alike
for , soldier and oivillan, Republican and Demo ;
orat, Christian and Pagan. It lends enthusiasm!
to.overy meeting. It assists in the snooess of ail
new tenors, and fills all spooohes with those do-!
lightful and pleasing assertions’[continued oheor
ing], [enthueiastio applause], [oheers], [immense
oheers J. ' ’
Let mo slato tho truth from knowledge and ob
servation. fi .‘;» 4
I, air, in combination with many millions; assist
ed in tbe election of Jades Buchanan, and at this I
moment do not believe there is any one will dis
pute 1 dy tight as a DSmdotat' ; .Yet I solemnly be-;
lievo that James Bdobanan deserves with greater
justice to bo stripped of hissurpHoe than he who
is now fighting bravely in-Illinois. At some future
time I shall be happy to enter more fuljy into a
disousslbn ofthe many questions inwhioh there is
suoh a oonfiiotion of opinion My objeot in writing
this is to assure Judge'Douglas, Mr. Baskin, ana
yourself, that there are thousands of brave heartß
who are ready .to.fight under the independent
banner; that many are waiting anxiously for the
results of tho'lllinols election, and that, 1 Sooner or
later, Mr. Buohanan and,his’advisers will find,
it were better he bad drawn his dogs off ere thoy,
were laid ignomialonaly in the dust. A. Jt. }
Singular,—A few weeks since, says the;
New Orleans Crescent , we mentioned, as a singular |
olroumstanoe, the marriage of a German widow, ih|
the Third district, to her fifth husband—no one of;
tWprevfo us four having outllved-his wedding a!
vear Well, a few days slnoe, the fifth husband
took the yellow fever, He died, *nd on Friday he
Wiw buried, ' . : ‘
TW^.CEINTS.:',
•'■ - FHOM MEXICO." 1 ;’
(From the New Orleans I’icsyilno of September 28,3 ,
By tho arrival of the : schooner Star, Captain
uammon, from VeraCrys/ wo this' mormng.re
cefyed late corrcspondonco'from Vera Crus, and.
tho oapital of Mexico: p i'r .: , ,v. : ‘i
•'„y“ arB °’ > t’6 e 4 a lßoto Dr. Billinga for prompt
to oonrtesies on hie arrivalin this oity,
a .^ otrl > 0^ d ,and somewhat exoiting, not tor
fl% V r,p from Mexico. Dr. Billings wont'
Ct a E . to , Hv ’ ani> > and thonoe l to Key
£l, mo’ 5°° k - P«s»go for, this port on tho
8t M m t r ’ P 8 our roaders know, ran
ashore, neap ,St. Marks, and Dr. Billinas had to,
mahe the best of his way hither from that point?
! l W a ' !, «* 0T0,, 5? d thtongh Florida; Georgia!
a “ d Alabatna, roaohingiNow.Grloans this mornhitf ■
from Mobile, oDr-Billings , hold a commissions!
B mm, £ tho Übfrai .army in Mex!co,uude r
General Comonfort. The Wakulla (Flo.) Times
of tho 233 publishes thi fdllowihgndtos ofinfor
m&tion obtained ' from ' him] and‘ which <hs al*o r
commiraioated to ns: xa>n <
He, bought despatcheSifrom Mr. Forsyth to our,
Government; he had also'despatches from .the lea
ders'of the’Liberal party, to Uomonfort. Hh Repre
sented'the Liberal oaura’as Rapidly gaining thV
asoendanoy. and expressedthe'opinlOn' that Ore
tbtsa deoifive Rattle place .between’ the i
two partioa. Dr. Billings’s in oonir I
ing to this country is tq purchaseMinfe'rifles for !
the Liberal lirmy, forwbieh purpose h'e "was well
supplied' 7 with' funds. I -The' 1 British Minister in
-Mexico aoted inoonoert with Mr. Forsyth in re-~
sisting the payment,by foreigners, of the forced
loan. The French Minister had been recalled for
advising’bis countrymen to' comply. ToeDootor
says that the Americans are much thought of by
the Liberal party* and ocoupy high' stations of l
trust.; .That party, generally,fayor*.an American
protectorate, though opposed to annexation.- They.'
frequently contrast the security r which they ;on«
joyed of 'life and ’property’during the war, when
Goneral Scott.'with'the Amerloan army, had pos-'
session Of theiGoveVbnfent/ttrthe rdbberles and
murders doily'committed by' their l own different
? obieftaini?|rhoiimay,happen .tojhayoj thOlasoen-
Dpotorjs of opinion*,thai| Sonora#]]) sLn
jbe Ceded to the United
1 The subjoined oommumehttofl is mtf’tfftlfable;i
Bouroe:* '! ti-yi ,".)■■ »j,/ yi-miT *
' *fX haye also; been informed, although
an official. souroe, that Mr. Foiey th, pur Minister
in'Mexico, had finally Closed the'legatidb, But not *
actually demanded his passports. He had gone to
Taeubaya,’intending to TetDalh ''there until the
latter part of Ootober.vlUs also asserted, and I
,b.e|iave„with .good .foundation,, that ..the British
Minister, in M9XIOO had orders from his ‘Govern
ment to protest 3 agatnBtthe forced lead, to*'rCBobi* ,:
mend-his countrymen to.rofase paying.-and gefie
rally to aotin the manner that Mr. Forsyth hhd
.acted. It,i*.!furthen,epi<Mh&i : Deßriac, the
.ff r ® D oh Mipister, had bqenu or was to be. recalled
lijiiiliGovernment:” 77 ’ |
: Dr. : Billibgs infttVmed ‘Hk thattbb b'ealtlr of t{ie
country was generally' good,’.except that atiYflra
Gruztbe yellow fever* was* 1
informant of reliability. tbaktbls
fact influenced Mr. Forsyth' his "detennlriatibn
’to remain in Mexico, not Wishing '{o’ expose htt fa
mily to the vomito.' ** All vesselsl’remfrinipg/ >
hero.’-’ saya the,writer fori bn* a
few days, become very unsafq. . Fever, invariably
attacks mauy befqrq and many aftqr sailing. ”fie
'adds the following information‘ - 1 ' ’ *' j
‘ I'havo talked with allthe ohiefs'aud many sol
diers of both' parties; ibutdneqonolusiou oatf pe
seen,that is< the Liberals.are daily drawiqgtigbtfer
,the already rawi,reins Juarpi J)irty
bold.,and soon the march ofal'ldetachuieiifc oftne
partly,'‘after beating' 6titeide n tßoops, wUlconeen
trfite upon tbe : 'capital,-!where* the‘'Liberals are
greatlyinthe majority. H. jc-vj u•• j .
Zuloaga, .seeing, bis. tell attempt
to set jianta, Anna back' .but FoTie^garv,bates;
Santa! Anna, ariifwtfT join tKeLThfeTafs'if Zulbaga;
does riofcbabk'ddti " Tnfs WoOld'end aJJiK- in*- 7
' The Liberals’ are i Forsyth’s being
sustained by,our Government-; and,particularly
are they, pleased that our gjlplqifyatiq relations &fe
at an end, airie die. • • - ,
I was' among and conversed 'with Roheagaryj’s
and Zamora’s troops the dayofthdc fight, on the
17th ult.,.near.Jalapft . j
The soldiers told me: “we aroopposed to fighting
our brothers; twmhata tbit airos (rerolation), aqd
*would ] go'over toMiy hlae tO-orrdxtfbut the Church
party we cannot ever join, 1 ’ The fight was pretty
serious ; Twe«i7}fjys .apd eighty on
the other, were allied. ‘ |
The Yera Crus Pfpsreso % of the 9th instant,'an-,
nounoes tbot.Gener.ri Efnaurricar died in toe'
oapital on' the^Hl'liislant; also, that General D.
Ellgl(y 'Rtteltarhad' been InomiTiated
Goyernon, tant.. ,Qqeretero f . and « CploniL
of 1
' qurbicle-. . . ,
. Vrom Qudrefarorof the’2Bfchi
the TrCntibr fotoes 'baAmoved from San Lnte 4tq
ward, that? place; /the main;body .remaining in
. Beportsbadbeen pnbiisbed in*tbe
of Guadalsjara, that, in an action at v Ao4tdbain,
the ConstltutionalisUhad had 500 men slain; hut
the Proqrwu -•Hdicdlea thls^and : affobteut6'ee£ib
tbo subsequent course of;theri ,
reason to believe iha^ayerjv,different reenlt iift^
la which 84nor Robles
on,his return thither, /after he had(va|uJj[|njffe#ivf
ored to laud nt Tampico, . A boat was rapt, from
tbo Spanish ship'Cortes to the Softnlsh' steamer
Clyde, and took thenceD.’ Mshucl'Roblcs PSsnfelal
: D. Jose R. de Csetrb.' a Senor Rspinopa, of the
.Mexican Legation et .'WaabiDgtopiiaud aMryant:
The reason of permission^to,.laud-being.,refused
them is said Jo oo that Senor Robles Is, qp&eldered
1 dangerous to'the rublio tranquillity, and that Bel
(tor de Oeiftro Is still under the ban of< a decne'of
expulsion for the same reason, tfhe Programaddf
that some of the fagifiyo obiefs from Tampico, wbp
were bn board tbe Clyde, bovine-endeavored, to
go with them to the Corteß, the offioej In command
of'thehoat refused to receive them* stating‘that
be had instruottons to receive,those named onlyi !
.Col. Oapistran.issaed a very, spirited; adders toi
the inhabitants of Tampico,, on,taking, possession;
of the oity, calling 'on them to go on undisturbed
with their'affairt, and escorting'thim tc‘6xer^
• theniselves-for the effeotidg of peaae T the securing
of guarantees, and general oonoUiatlon s .{, ! j
A letter, dated the 2d inst., from the capital, IB
1 stated, by the Progreso to make the .‘following an
nonno^ment: is 1 extremely ‘disgusted
1 with Echdagarayi and talks’seriously* df
ing a suoceB?or/t0 himn In'faot,’’ ho proposed to.
Partilla that he should- go, aad take command of
the troops; but bo roundly reused, and', on being
pressed, said that he Really did riot wish to fight
against the Yera Crozanba. Subsequently he is
said to have proposed to Miguel Negrete to go and
send Eoheagaray to the capital, promising him for.
this, servioe-.some thousands of;dollara and the
rank of full'general.” ~ . , >•* I
Several instanoes of shooting by the half dozen
of-prisoners taken by the reactionists are ! record-i
ed- . ■* ■ n 1
, A communication, dated,on : the 7th instant, on
board ‘ the British steamer Clyde, furnishes parti
culars'of interest, wbioh are subjoined. .They
are through Mr. Forsyth’s speolal bearer of de-;
spatches;> • ' r * ‘ ’ "' L, :
A long passage In a sailing man-of-war, at this
hurricane and vomito soason, are the ohief oWec
tions to our Minister’s ooming home on the Ply
mouth, which had not yet arrived, although duo
twenty dAys sinoe, according to orders. ’ ,
Zuloaga is lost- and the’only hope of his party;
is in tbe roturn of Santa A nna \ fln d this his own
generals (especially the chief,. Eoheagaray) posi
tively ri.dioule, because It would be fatal to them.'
was not permitted'to'land at Vera Cruz
from the British steamer Clyde, cn ; tho 23th ult.;,
.was tab.*® to Tampico, and just in time to be too
late, for vtwvajal would . not listen .to him there..
Ho ositne baolc io Yera Cruz, and op the morning!
of our departurc mabnged togetabbaid a Spanish!
veBsel-of-war lying Qvo mites off. People of sense!
tbiok he might have been reoalled. by Zuloaga to
take the reins pn his abdication, Robles being
p Th e success of the Liberals in all parts, save the
oapital and its environs, and there they but’ wait
opportunity, is a subject of daily discourse ■in al
most every oity or town, Still, inactivity r may
mar their hopes. .
Tbe commander of Tampico, Gen. Marin; and,
several officers (poor men with bandaged heads),
are aboard —for any port not in their own country.;
Great pecuniary trouble and much real distress,,
from deaths, hopelessness, mortification and dospair,
of peace, are visibly apparont.. _... i
Juarez is honest, Zamora enthusiastic, Eoheaga-:
ray foxy, wavering,'and silent; Nifcrete; as drill;
master, seems desirous to prepare troops to whip;
the Liberals, whom he so lately most dastardJy be
travedand deserted. - ‘
The hospitals are still pretty full. Out of eight;
bundted men (and a fine set of fellows, too) who
oame in a short time since, only about two hundred
remain. The saddest-effeot the mind • receives,
after all. comes from dreadful vomito’s silent but
fearful strength, marked in every vessel at all the
hospitals, and through the streets. Twenty-five
days in Yora Oruz thus impressed me;
On the day of my departure, the sth instant, a
foroe was preparing -to mar oh on Jalapa, Eohea
garay’s hoadaparters.. I think he will come over
to Zam6Ra v BViows.’ ! , ‘ '
• Nine’BOooessive stages were robbed) en route
up, and all are, in fact, if any prospOots of a
few dollars present. But few, therefore, either go
or como.
[Correspondence of the Picayune,]
Mexico, Sept 1, 1858.
The last mail from this country conveyed to you
a sod picture of our demoralized and anarohlzed
condition, and by this mail you Trill learn in ad
dition that this anarohy and this demoralization
continue, have produced many excesses that
must tax your credulity to believe. I regret to say
that our OiviVwar has of late produced evidence
that, if* it be continued, this country must
very soon,-become a heap of ruins, embellished by
an overgrowth of rapacity in all, its parasitical
forms. Bo,far. the contest has produced monstrous
disasters to the oountry. In brief, they may be
summed up as follows: . -
The desolation and abandonment of twenty or
th So from ttioir homes of at least
abandonment o( haolehdas;
The complete stagnation of all branches of trade
and industry; ’ . . ' t
The outraging of many females by the rabble
80 Th” useless employment of 50,000 persons In
beeping up oivil war, and their consequent demo
ralization;
The soorifioe of sloo.ooo,ooo>in money, animals,
food, olothing, grain; &o-, taken by foroe for the
m&iutenanoe of the oivil war, and in the pro
perty aotually destroyed la oonseauenoe of these
feuds.
These are already the proceeds of seven-months’
strife, and still the fires of civil discord burn, and
the'indications are that the flames bts but in a
state of infancy. The struggle that has so lens
been sustained on nominal political principles™
rapidly rohanglng, into a demoniac war oi
bastes, to carry with it the enactment Qf those to
cities which characterize the savage, and set
With, rales of olviltiedor hßlf-olvilI«dp«OT)!M.
Iboro can ho no mistake in saying that With,
notice to coititEspbarpjjENTs.
for “ Tns Paiss” will
Erery communloption must bo accosapoded
'iZUUiffe of/|he 1 .-; In order to insure correctne & o
bat-one alde/of the sheet should fc«/
written upon. ' l -
obliged to gentlemen In Penns/V
rsnfaton'd oinferistateß for'eoutrlbutfons'glvtng the cur-.
Jeat. n<sws<<fthed*y In their partfcolarlocaUtles, tin
rerfohroesroFthfßTtwottSdlng cotintryj the Increase o
po'pulatloMj‘ot r? K>7lnformation -that will he intereetfrg;
to thegerferil waddr.-* :
wont passions of the native Indians are bow being
worked upon* tv inettfe'them to make a relentless
war upon those jrrho have become tbelr'mastera,
JSJf* I fruitful folds tbeirold banting
ESS .* - • h?vfe seen ‘ lately several most fnfiam
matofy- proclamations circulated among their
n»u™; “the rightful owner*
of the soil, as they are pleased to call themselves,
*JJ. V'VW'I extirpate from-their lands
masters ? InndererB 4nd heartless task
r•'?!." >’
GWEM4-L NEWS.
~ 'i'Pf' , EOTs'op tiSHTjinfO.— Dnriqg a thunder
ft??" »?“£ ofm>'upatThomasvil!«, Qa., on Bnn
-8“y old Academy was struek
byrnMshaft of'lightning with most Monitor and
soroewhat - djasstrons effeots. iThs hoass la two
stories, and tho jower itory ooonpied at this time
’ “y MiBB Kellogg, as a rohool roflip,. The lightning
nijt Btrnok the top of the' ohlmney, knooalng off
& few of the top brio**. ' Froii thence It spoeare
' ■JS~ T 8 Bp J. Bad 8113 descended in some half-dosea
?”Js' Thr «f Ps.foar w«st down oatside.itenr
r d iS?m ' OO 9 l tha shingling on the roof and
eonaSuJus* 0 ?n? f ,118 weather-boarding on ths
S&^:ff^teasas=£
was not-Bet on fire,* and no mark of fire Is vfithu
Large seams are torn.sun and down the fannuAf
the house, in four, or fire places, both In and out
tbo.oooorrenoo did
Mi.il.? K- 8 B 9. 1 !? 01 hours, as manyof the
‘? 8 !, 8f ; pupils, es well at that of the
teacher,iwotadi harabeen endangered at nob a
■Wh?T 7'i, Hu', fy Vi'j
SWBIjS9,AWAT TH* LIVIB 0y Fm*
ts?t3B7 j 79 Satb his ows 2f»*.—
ILuSSit?? ? S®J^2 t^ e « Q lr Mri vF» Qn » oftQaUatla
*®2®v» ?R*» Burned 1 to. the ground andlier
of fourteen,'were odnrimied
wifh it. The position of Ihe bodlee-wbea found,
end the general belief-that-the Wilsons had oon-
SfcSS . • f 8 ‘? n<l ** lT er, no trace of
ft
oniflre after the taOrder ofth e' inmates:’• iA<ttort
.«me,siopp wmapf tho, people of;&*ltotto*odn»r
about toluUsghlm;- when
X prpiqUiDg, .to reveal ..the
names of his aooomplioos, implicating Peyton
NeWmin, .Henry l And, 1 ? three ruuned
Prei BisgWaw.aiMl ACoßrlde.an Irish
man, all of whom,, ezoept the lut, were .at once
a "“l«d. Shortly -after, BtZvnSrP rettaqUjrhls
statenient so:far '*s to exinlpatetoll th#abore-
Syft WfyfigWW'P**** Waouly.ejoaie for
■*(!tztotM
* ‘Gkrmaa-retidmW' of
.Olarenoof ErieloonntyvNetr Tork. went intoithe
<Sf B .Bsnsantwo.,or,ttreeinUes from the yil
ldge, the understanding being that there was to be
. adance there ! durinfe : the evening. Doting the
,eyemng .many oftljeiparij beoame noluy end rude,
.W 0 ! 'S e ™ i danpinc. about the room in whloh they
were drinking WE'snob I Toroe that hi broke
through the floor • > At tbls the man and woman of
the h°?.«P booamo.onraged, and ordered them-ont.
They wore alldrpnh, and the party were fbroiblv
put odbof doorß. and tbo door'closed. The party
attemptedftotinter. the' house eg Jn; and as one of
them, JMes Ogdispa hrt gotitbo door partially
open the woman I trued forth, with ah axe. ~ With
the edho 0f thia»tio4tAHK Ghraham a feaSfnl' blow
on thehead, puttingihrenghthesoalp tothesknli,
*
' "Moek : Mi4iof,*s;^The , Hey. , lfr. Marho,of
- atand BopldvMidhigan,' writes that while Father
tke Cross at Holy .Ohuroh. in the
pffe&nbc'of Bnlintaedw multitude, b solemn'ssd
fcStooidlliaryMvsn6j'4ooiurred~l rHe'ssys: » As
if dedicated and wu
a^tit ; b«lb|“rtUW, there appeared' on tbeblue
sky,'suftos6(J4a'by r a olusfer 'of’White clouds," a
.xegnlartjrfornied terga whita snd, weU-defined
moment thexnU
slortry artsi was stink into the'yr&hd. ' The whole
crowd present gazed with amazement at tbisrstri
•j i ?ILS p^SI AW^, Wid bear perspna, les#
croanTorfB, utter these words:. ‘Thisis more than
hatttfallft’ ts'j. .*u’t>if »2«jj j. .-.rd
r '* JnHPEP ‘ OVerboabd,!—Oil night
last Ihe btenner Connecticut, on berpaasage from
New I)Opdppj ~Conn., to Now York, had on board
fifteen paapere from the Btate rimsbouse f-at'Mon
aon, hy the fcuihoritlerf of'that State,
to be returned to tbeir native Irelands They
were to he taken .back ,a. sailing vessel .from
Hdtr ! ‘York. 1 ’while the steamer
, thropgh:Hur|Qate,'bub of them'suddCnlymshea
to the side, and before he could be preirentyl,
jumped into the water. He was' in a moment
the-.padileS, : and, ss is
stiratly‘killed! : a* 'he 1 did L not afterwards come up
ffae water. 0 hhfc- iank immediately.
lt. Chtohiclei. ' ‘ : ,;i ' “ ‘ r ~ - - '
■ ’ Tha''Danville (Va.)
“2to7w sr'ips tkjS ; informs us that an oo
irarw W^u^atTl(i*i«)u9ty J jqaihe tb k hia knowledge
make a swap Of an
propoaed id exchange Vives, but the
’^Jb^Twifethwmost likely woman, said he must
have something to-boot. .It was finally agreed
tnat I th6~oti*e should'give toe other'ftcro and a half
bvshtl# bf- jjdtdtoes\ ! and 1 the swap was made.
Death fbom the-Bite or A Shake.—A
-lad by the -name of Edward; Mulligan, whose pa
rent# reside in Bite hie .county, at Fetrolenm, on
thedforfowestern Virtflnl& rdad, came to his death
last week' freza of s-rattlesnake. - The
boy, was lying op .the floor.of. the house Hear the
bed of nfs father and mother.. Dariog the night
Mr. diFdoverdd! fhbf there was a shake
in thehedi.inSrbiob- hei was. Bleepizig, azid in the
attempt,to de?patqh;it> itmade its esoape, and fn
passing Boy struck him'with its Tangs. He
rarviTed, twenty-fourhouTS after he was bitten.
.The Piqeon iTocHhament.—The pigeon
tournament lnd., .oommenced.on
Monday t of Inst and closed ?n Saturday.
' W.-Krng! of L Fort Wayne, Ind.,' perhaps Ihe finest
shot-in Jihe oodntry, Whn)nearly all the matches.
.He won the matedk Shannon, _of Bt, Louis,
for $2OO 'a-side’, 15 double birds and 15 single
birds. In the first, King killed 24 out of'3d, : and
Shannon 22. Of the single birds, King killed IS
oat of 15, and:Shannon.lS out of 15. Total—
King 37, Shannon 35. King won 7 of the 10
matohes. j "• - ‘ '* -
A Man Shaved with an Adze.— Since
beards and razors were Invented, says the Abtog
don
or improvement upon the latter uhtU Tuesday last.
On the fevering of that raen in the neigh
borhood of< our depot, getting into! d fracas, one of
them Struck' at. the, other,with a loot adze, and
completely sbav4d bia ohln at one stroke,* without
materially injarlsg the meat. We learn that the
shaved man was the aggressor, and that tho other
shaved him in self defence.
Tornado at Ithioa.— At 4P. H., Ithica,
N. Y.,l*Bt Thursday, was visited by the most ee
vero tornado ever witnessed there.. Lent's mam
moth circus tents T were blown to the ground, but
no one wss injured. The lightning struck fn three
places,' destroying a 'large amount of property.
The barns ana outhouses of Allen. Hasen, a mile
and a half.eouth of the village, and the horn of
Mr.' John Vahbnskirk, two or three miles west,
were burnt, s - ‘‘
-The $lOO,OOO Prize.—Henry Mails, the
olerk; who; purchased the tioket that drew the
$lOO 000, prize in the Havana Lottery, oniy a day
or ’two before the arrival of the steamer, disposed
of fivo-eightha of his interest in the ticket, and
therefore he himself holds only three-eighths, or
equal to $37,500 ' The holders of the remaining
five-eighths are all poor people, and laborers, either
German or Frenoh. Some of them were almost
orazy. at their good fortune.
Cutting Tobacco.—The farmers of St.
Mary’s county, Md , have oommenced catting their
tobacco and semiring their blades. The Beacon
says the orop has suffered' considerably from the
worm, ezoept . whera the farmer was fortunate
enoo'gnto a good force of turkeys, which were
turned Into the'-fields and quickly devoured the
Insect# whenever they made their appearanoo.
■ Gen. Sutter* the man who first discovered
gold in California, owes 33.0Q0 grape vines In his
garden, whloh, besides, abounds in fig, nectarine,
peach, apricot, and almond trees. The general
once owned 145,000 acres of the rioheft land of
California, where Sacramento and Marysville now
stand. He is now proprietor of a little farm with
a very shaky tHU.
Egyptian Wheat.— Mr. P. Ladew, of Mc-
Lean lllinois, hoa raised this year half as
acre of wheat,, the original seed of which waa ob
tained from nn Egyptian mummy. It does not
mature till September. The stalk is as large to
wards the head of wheat as that of corn. Mr.
Ladow, when it has matured, will make the result
of his experiments known.
The Oldest Postmaster. —The Snow Hill
(Md.) Shield claims that Mr. Lemuel Sbowell. Ben.,
postmaster at St; Martins, in that county, ia the
oldest postmaster in the United States. Mr.
Sbowell was appoint®* to office under the Demo
oratie Administration of President Jefferson in
180 d, forty-eight years ago. He is still hale and
hearty.
Twelve cast iron columhs, said to be the
largest in the United States, are now in process of
construction At Oinoinnati. They are each 50 feet
in height, four feet two.inches in diameter, weigh
between 200 and 300 tons, end will oost about
$30,000. They are designed for the State House,
Madison;V[iß.! ■ .« -■
■ The i Greatest Freight.—A few nights
since the steamer New World took from New York
to Albany.the, largest lood of freight that one boat
hfts ever'taken'Up the Hudson river. It amount
ed, on the gross, to over five hundred and fifty tons.
She had also a very large number of passengers.
A Horse-Thief Killed. —Last Thursday
night a man named Locke, living in Adams county,
111 , while attempting to steal a horse from the
barn of Mr. Dutahe. at Barry, in the same county,
was shot and killed by Mr. Dutohe, who discovered
him.
The Crops.— Some of the farmers near Cor
dova, in Illinois, have set fire to and burned up
their entire wheat orops, believing them unlit to
harvest.
Comhenoieg Early.—Snow fell at Rutland,
Vermont, aa well, as in John Brown's tract, last
week. At the former plaoe there was a fine
sprinkling of feathery flakes.
Bronze Doors for the Capitol.—The
models for the bronze doors for the Capitol, by
Rogers, left Rome for Munioh on the 81st of July,
where they are to he cast.
The Yellow Fever is very prevalent at
Vioksburg, Mi&, and all business, except the
shipping ofbbitbn, was suspended.
, .'.UVv.t,