The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, May 04, 1859, Image 1

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Egtail,`frj ocbi -`.'
ILK, AND ; STA"Ff DRT G o oP 3 ' . '
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Havenbir oton a °holes usortment be ,
NEW': SPRINO -0 ( : ), ODS
:Obligkr of anti -own:ltoportatlon,iihfoli they nif44 at
Antloorint prices stnlitalt pods of 41mihr.delcrIption
'Ai* iii.l4fis mai a t j .
• ,
PonsIVARTETY , OP
PABXB D4seisAoora",-; ; • • - •
-840, itagesmtess„ ,
- outativise, I.A.WfiBpOIfINT74IB,
- - asiwts, - Ltoitsinobtsair,
1 . 1 4 1003 0 01, Prefik,8, , ,..
• '
Win be found In eomplate ajQ fnll Iniortment:
809 and 81r0H1081141T13TREET.
AlitajtC3:•;-:Y t , ,
0 u - R-D s .
WE; SAVE JUST REMELTED
-; -C3weS'iill,3l4B
D ROB
NEW AND:RIOIL DESIGNS
THQS. W. - EVA:NS & 00.,
atkei37l3:oHESTNt7ii 4TOWP;
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N0N.TH'4143.11171 131111LEZ
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' Are acrippoi44,"sid will °maim to mtelYoi
NSW AND,DIAIITI/111, EITYLDS•
, .
'"' LADIXO'OS;
,
LJ794 TRI prapia,sAtics.,- . , • , ,
400 N 1 S "
1., - Apirr9. taus tistiriiminiiad. zipars STORM;
voinina's, MITE( AND 011NRRY;
o.r.xou4rnoTios _
, ,;THODNI.IT & gglass ,
2- " - " DAY
To • Is* otook - Al. --
~ ..,211.1N0R-LIIOIIANDAGANANITGLA GOODS!
- -RLAIN;OLOTS DIIATESBI. • ,
" LIONY - fiILIVRAGIANA I
TRAYSLMAG CLOAKS AND DURTSBO, &O ,
ALLONATALSA:SEMINI,LBLAOS n •-
OIL.BO/111D:OLLDS: , • ~
WOG /ANDY SGLES AND DRNBS GOODS.
PLAIN - AND AMBROIDARIDORAYA BRAWLS, &A.
ViIOIINUBr '9.111811 , 13,
Ocasei WORTH & APRZNO *MADAN.'
'VMS MOST :BMA.OTIFOL „assortment
of 04.1941:001iill'aisi foind ataftELBOVE,
wnera &pada style la 'nait44' with' inidnosay in
- . .
prim
Poilnda Ohenas,dilkildidana,tatin !doh ,airi Oheok
diPori4. odd &Ms Sons styles of Spring Goods.
SLOW and Pairoyfilliva efattparied styles and pill?
ismismio indAgsmt igiortinsit Stepii Shame
Alf-v#3 , 44w ptieso ; •
it sploadid a50i , 60,4 är
Mean sev.itioikiiii_oitrOpriegeOloste 'ad Mantfilise,
ifirt7,llloll ll oitilei qktlrely new.; '
OtOtlatj O s inimeres, and fahtliiets; Shirting Lad Table
;LiskinKoo3leop, ltorns, Shlrthut sud,Slieet
;44rAftlinneake.:, "- 'WONLADY;
Ito; 11 faith 'NOVI' Street.
N. 11'..ThOlyixt . ree4ipt or bingo tr4Q:AuOm
_lll OFXAN/1 HOSIERYL , STM.—The
ALA undersigned lloonttobtloii ot Widnes and
:Wtte An'clAlss:llTool - 0 , 1106/111111, -UNDIUMFAIL
lll;Ditdf.and:,goodl /anima/ 4 lPP.rtandrin -- to'the
Vpolm Winona; nfe - Lodlosl, Gento,7 ant Oltdidlen's
*Ur Upon examlnitlOn stoolo/111 t» foundutpe,
luklunalaNit feclizt•trbY any o th er, In 'Mr "OW and ,
lila snot "oda" on those oranyinnlorkonio.-
;;Z) Rooms:tare
Noith. 4il34lllM , Ettxtet. -
3 QM9 WE ILEE.NOW- - Qtr,O
'LW 4 dizunre 911 s Enna *pi
inn* Ow Attention of ; •
_ • SOUTHERN AND •WiSTERD
OEM
INFANIVFOR 'VEAL; •
ALA Jklberiean Thum Coritika, 1 " 1 - 8 = 1 7Z w irwn
X and various ,• and
51sinkedl-Miadia-Dia oitt , .mbriosta
atrami - Linea`
llrlly.;A ehole l aboortonentnt yol -abov* floods now
oa am pnr, oultratallab7• ", JOINT% DIA;
*CM OMISTISIT
1101jitleki,v,il:(artc,‘
i~IINf'ETiIC3Fi` fie; :SMITH.
,
..: 2 44f00 eitTRENT,
• •••-: •
=ERZ
icy IRON; BLOOM 3,, &C.
EE 'N
CO.,
209'NOILTN WATZR STREET,
N 0.208 NORTH; DELAWARE AVENUE,'
PHILADELPHIA,
°roma sox BALM
- A.MBRIOAbt•NOLINDRT AND BORON
PIG, IRON,_.
or vas ?pitOwnmo zoiloo,
OnNivin; nctriaitgolas, '
r°°" il° Lt U ND ß O '
0 11, HAMPTON,
KEYSTONE.
ALSO, COLD BLAST
CHARCOAIi PIG IRON,
CIAR , VELEEL PURPOSES.
BOILBR.AND WIRE BLOOMS, :
DOTLED. AID ILITB IRON,
WATER, & GAS PIPES,
AMBBICIANIILISTE4 STEEL, ao., duo.;
ilos BALI Lovt, - To .otAisst A OONSIGNMINT.
- 500 WATER PIPES,
RINI IMIBT LONG AND
ap224lm TWISTY MODES DIANSTBR.
inf•Ageota for Watoon , s Amboy lire Betas.
EW,YORK
B K E T S.
& 00.,
CLOTHS,
HAN,PIeERCHIBES,
IMEINEINI
1 3,0,0. 33 mt. 3:2 W.. A. NE 3,
14.23 12t • '
j IUOILENZA& 904,
t , ROVisioNs
`-• 011.QICE MMArrs;
w#'l , .4 too. aad, , , and Odd X. non at.
/131141: 0 11.PMA A '
1001111t1111t,'"OXI,WM , and an saeortinend of
FACIYINF/Oxld ridaisalt,' Winans % Mau, WIXOM'S,
antiginia'Aullie both OXI tattlfStan,
4 0 - $ 4 W 0 0 14014 i
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,1,08 , 43111111TN11T Biros!
I N-D lAN
(00ViRNMIXT CONVIAOTORSj
orran von Ewa
TEN THOUSAND PAIRS.
BAO - AD,OLOTHS,
BTROUDA,
ttcl4 - .1434, AO.
- grapislqg 'Uot!set.
11 . 06ti0-
CITY HOUSE.
REMOVAL AND REOPENING.
rrSOOLIsI, WOOD, 1410HOLS,
LATI AT 45 SOUTH SROOND STRUT,
Rave opened thilir new Riles Room
725 ODESTNOT STREET, North Side,
TWO Irtoritie ABOYeI 1eA50:26.0
TDB FIRST FLOOR of thin nmitone handing in de
voted exprecuily to the RAWL TRPiDIi ; mid In imp
piled with ry oeIifIGYANNET GOODS.
embracing UNTRIMMED VIGRORNS, HAIR, TI581:12
dad BTDAW BONNATO, from 25 mita to B 0 dollars;
SiNOT and TRIRSI.IID BONNETS, of all prices and
qualities, reedy-made and made to order ;
RIBBONS, FLO ?MRS, DITOEIRS, Laze, /co., for
-Bennet Tclinmlnge, nnavv,paasad in variety, style, or
ouiLiquiivail&TA, CAPS. PLAITS, .700KIES, too.
MADAME MAY,
iongima Well known In this city In the MILVJNBRY
TRADE, is now connected with na in tble Department,
and, will. be happy to one all her former frlondie and pa—
trons at our•doze.
LINCOLN; WOOD, St" NICILOLS,
725 ORESTei UT STREET,
EirwaiN ONVINTH AND EIGHTH.
aplls-fmw
j- • HITAA3ORN JONES.
- • i•tp•itet end Monntiotexer
- ,
ASP' STAAW - Bolattrtfi;
LEOHOR* and PANAMA. HATE,'
FLOWERS, itlOOlniat &O.
' To WA it
le ntiOn of City And oountryDealesi
polkaed:
- N01:432 . MARKET 'ST.,: -
; Below VI r T 11. fel.l4lm
STRAIT AND , MILLINERY GOODS.
-I. S. - CUSTER„
MANINAOMINA AND WHOLIFIALD DIALID IN
IST.IIA.Vir
MILLINERY GOODS.
607 NORTH SECOND STREET,'
_ PEITGADELPRIA
METROPOLITAN. lI,IBBON ROUSE.
SLBBONSy• •
RIBBONS,
RIBBONS,
AND
MILLINERY GOODS *
Of every Seuttelptiom. CHAPES, BONNET SILKS,
MINOR YLOWEBS and SPRIGS, SHORES, do.
J. 0. 'ea W. E. TABER,
No. 25 South SECOND Street,
PHILADELPHIA. mbl•Sm
431 MARKET STREET.
We are offering for side,
AT A SMALL ADVANON UPON COST,
A moat entenelMs Mid complete sesortment of
RIBBONS of every deileriptlon,
BONNET MATERIALS, in Silk and Crape,
FRENCH and AMERICAN FLOWERS,
Rooms, TARLATANS,
BLOND Lad
, Es,
. .
And other Millinery Goode.
ALSO OP
,
S' ItrA Nlt Gfto DS ,
04prieing eieiy posalblei variety in BONNETS,
JZOONEBS, SLATS, MISSNIP - AND OffILDIONMI
NATO, BEARER' HOODS, and THIMIdINGB.
OaU and
--Rdf3ENREIM, BROOKS, & CO.,
, d7l NAHUM STUNT,
fe'bl4-3m .. (Formerly No, 88 South Second Ft.)
J 859 mil""" 1859
STRAW' GOODS.
New and• °caplets iesortoteat of
MLHB, *Estoril); 'Lomita,
.01#,APF6, Rl:Man, LAOIS,
AM every other article tri that bac
STRAW BONNETS
STIi:4L 9T TIC
llmtasetng in 'all' an assortment tinegitalled in this
city, and to which we' invite the attention of buyers,
Mono parehealni for eseb, or on short time, will do
well to give us a call before sainting oliewbere.
N. BERNE:EDI !!‘ 00.,
fe24-2m No: 2t SOUTH 11100 ND STREET
1859
STR4W GOODSJIOUSE.
THOMPSON & 4ENKINS,
. No. 528 MARKET STREET,
Invite the attention of buyers to their extensive stook
of WW I Straw and Bilk Bonnets, Mime& Bids end
Bloemers; kien , s,• Boys', and Ohlliten's Hats! ArtlA•
oval Blowers, snehea, Trimmings, lie.
Being exclusively engaged In this, branch of badness,
Purchasers will find it to their interest to examine our
dock before ptiralaming." -
TIEOi. It. TBdtfl, (fatherly "ot I,9lloeck, ItogerS,
& Yraley,) now engaged with the Moose hoe" solleits
from his friends an examination of the stook of Messrs.
Thompson & Jenkins. • febillant
A GOOD ASSORTMENT
or
STRAW, GOODS,
kitTivicaki, ',LOWERS. DOOMS, AND STRAW
• TRINALINOS, -
Of every variety, are now open, and for male, at &pall
advance Upon Ant cod, for Garb, at
H. WARD'S, •
•
Nos 103, 105, and 107
NORTH SBOOND STREET,
o ; 3m ' Abire Arch, Nast aide.
Oboe SW:lingo.
WM. JOHNS & SON.
(Bcieeeeeor to the late roe. T. Johne,)
Importer and Dealers
IN
13E1011 BTIINNEI and Tannusen,
Lunn's, •
GALLOONS,
LACIZTS, &a., &a.
AT , THE OLD STAND,
Northeast corner of 110131iTHI sad Altoll Meets
febl-ttm
LAING & MAGINNIS,
' No. 80 NORTE THIRD STREET,
imporiare or, sod Hosiers hi,
SHOE MANUFACTURERS' GOODS,
And all kinds of nos Tools,
TIPPIELD , B PATENT BOOT TREES.
onmetNG MACHINES.
LEATHER RQOLTNG
azwitta mecam4m Kum •
THREADS, sad
NXIDI4IIB.
JINGLY/3'2,1=8H, and AMBRICAN OICOZ TUMULI*
fa& tmayl2
EDWIN W. PAYNE.
_
Importer and Dealer
rer
BOOT,' 808, and, GAITERVATERIALS,
Iron Building, N. W. ommer ARM and 20138TH atm
LAST/NOS,
*.. ,GALLOONS, •
' BREETINGS
PEEN= RID,
, - • - 'PATENT LEATHER
CONGRESS WEB, TOILET SLIPPER WPM,
febl-Sm] SHOE TRESSES. LAOES; arar .
NEWArtK
ROSENDALE
PLASTER.
RETAIL, BY
3. ORESSON BRADFORD,
1120-Ira*
PWLAMIRMA,WED,SgSpAY; 'MAY'
CANTOI4 MATTINGS.
R 3iii BIX X ILEP 0 T 3EI 3:)
C ANTON MATTIN GS,
4.4 5.4 apd 6.4, "EXTRA PARLOR."
4-4 5-4 and-6-4 BED OHMIC.
4-4 5-4 and 6.4 WHITE "AN1L124."
4-4 CRENN AND PANO:Z do.
BAILY & BROTHER,
No., 920 CriESMUT STREET.,
mj3•dtje4 -
NEW CARPETING.
~.„
ORRSTNIIT, •BRLOW fiRVENTI4: -, ..„
Ifsereoelved i 14 • 2 - •
• FROM - -EIIROFEy•:.
. _
A. fall assortment, of New Styles • - ,
CANTON ..MATTING,
A large virletiof all ' spff.lm
CARPETING - 0.
BOLE AGiiNOY.Lti
feitl.2m.
With all grades of WOOL WOOL AND - 001701 , 1 i
ALL-OOTTON INGRAINO,
ATWOOD, RALSTON,
ii[ANTOYAOTURZINV AGENTS,
'tiOD
STAIR ROD MANUFACTORY.
WILE & MOSS;
225 BOUTS FIFTH BTRitT,
BELOW WALNUT. sp4•lm
STAIR ROD MANUFACTORY
WILER & MOSS,
226 130IITH-TIFTiLSTREET,
' BELOW WALNUT. . 6,14-Im.
.
w - nousmx moTiazre
GO Itl S .
No.- 41i MARREi-STREET,
irebl-Bin kILIUDILPHIA.
MOORE, HENS - 2:EY Ba CO.;
7 : • , : :" ' 4^ r = ~ ‘,..'3,
Pi-IMADELPHIA,
,Keep caudally on and • laze took -
,
•
HARDWA.RE,
CDUBBY, QIINO ) &0.,
Whielseire offered to BUYERS en Liberal Tani (
feb2B4o
Cl_ :,.
H. 8c GEO. ABBOTT
No. 18 North FOURTH STREET,
' IMPOUTBISS AND DBALXISB IN
HARDWARE, 'CUTLEY, GUNS, ETC,
ALSO, NAILS, CASTINGS, ko.,
AU of which ,are offered to Buyers on the moat farm:-
able tuna. " ' iner2B.2en
1859
TRUITT BROTHER Sa CO.,
IMPORTERS AND IiffIOLISALI DEALERS
HAIM WARE,
CUTLERY,
GUNS,
620 ' nsToLs, so., •
MARKET STREET, 629
MOW BIRTH, NORTH UDR,
POILADELPIIIA, fe2l.Bza
1859 iviEkbr , sini#V,;',", Q
LK
BOYD 8c STItOXID '
INPOSTBNB AND .TOBBIRS,
Have now on hand a complete stick of
/HONOR AND ENGLISH ' ' "
GLASSWARE,
'ln AND QUEENSWARE,
(At their old staid)
No. 82 NORTH FOURTH STREET,
(roar doors below Merchants' Hote l,)
To which they invite the attention of
,WIIOLBSALN fell-ihn
ROBERT SHOEMAKER
N. E. DOR. FOURTH. AND RACE STREAM
DIANUFAOTUIVERS OF PAINTS IN OIL )
IMPORT A OP PRINCE PLATE
WINDOW GLASS.
DILLERB IN ANNII WAN WINDQW GLASS.
sp2l-9m
LOOKING GLASSES.
Vow is store the most extensive and elegant assort
omit of
LOOKING GLASSES,
Yor every owe end every position and at the moat
moderate priced
LOOKING CIL dads 3
In the meet elaborate and the moat simple frame
• LOOKING GLASSES .
Premed h the 'beet tee* end in the moat mtbetantial
LOOSING GLAEOINiI
r =dam' bras, ere manufsobared by ovutelwoO In 0111
own netablbatnent.
LOOKING , CLAIMS
In MAIIOCIANY and WALNUT frames for Country
841 es.
816 CHESTNUT STREET,
so.ll' IHIL/OEIMM
“METROPOLITAN TEA STORE.”
TEAS ! TEAS! TEAS !
A obotolfieleotion of
GEEEN.AND BLAOK. TEAS,
OP REOINT IMPORTATION.
ALSO,
' COFFEE,
ROASTED AND GROUND DAILY,
STBANI 6 IINGINE
- "YOUNG AMERICA."
ORARLES SMITH,
2 Non 913 and 9115 MAIM , STREET
CEMENT,
CALC3INED
H . A.JV I S 1 HAMS! HAMS I
nriiiie and iregar•enzed Haw,
10 MINTS P3ll POUND.
Also, new enger•oured Elhonldere •
- AT 8 0381T8 PE3 POUND. '
OEARLES SMITH,
3#1.44113 Nog. 918 and 918 MART 8T31111T;
WHOLESALE AND
WI!AII9S113
QLan ungL
MST RECEIVED - ANOTHER LOT• 011
CONESitiTING OF
PRICES R-EDUCED.
AUBlattr. mEZE•PAYO,,; .
SUPEIREMS,
ANl3#ll/.1;
maltarialnzmn„lir
JOSIAH BARBER,
COlioleo9lv cOottnng.
Iljotpatt.
Whina met (ttutensuiar.
80 CO.,
PILIL&DILPHIA,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
JAMES S. EARLE fr. SON,
~;
a►
W.EDNESD.&Y,,MA.X 4, 1849
1- ; 4llickeni , :s 4 ( Tate of Two Cities."
,'That a sudcessful book should be highly re.
.`sAierative to author and publisher need not
4thipriso any One. ,That writers should "put
Intey in their purse," as Signor, Rormsrao
vi
i t
recommended to do, appears only natural,
W . n'we'recollect, how'much the' quantity, of
re ere has latterly increased. Room, Er.
a 4, ,and Neoax, Drentsi, Antsirearrt, , and
'i'itonant.Porhave respectively made conside
n*fortunes by their pen:, In this country,
Li*ature hits not been less fortunate. Look
at.{ ie vast circulation of the writings of (‘ Pe.
terl,Parley ;" of Losttaxir.ovißoinns, and
Octrun : of," UneieToin'istialitn:" of HaNT'L
ilidgirE t PRESCOTT, and BANCROFT ; , of the
WO
10
" :of. Annani Banns; Itairaticiron In.
VI. i and others) :of tor..Kasn's " A rctic
...
li'44 . l6rattinia,;" and of inuneions- ether Publi.,
`patisns of meritand popularity. ' Assuredly,
-,., anth'ors must, have been, born, is AO
- , . r is, each "with a silver spoon - in bid
.., th." Before their successes, Grub-street
fad away into a dim obscurity; Dr., Joan
'ion7eating his eleerimaynary plate et:victuals;
beitid
,a* screen et Ennuin oAnn'ti, appears'
Idaniat a fiction;
_and OLIVER GOLDSRITR'S.
itll4 In , Green -Arbortr.conit, — (where be
afra4gled with poverty exactly a century ago,
are- :et he had written the immortal o Vicar
of I, akefteld,") seems far too mythical ever to
hav' been a2realitY.
‘ ' Td American publishers, a larger pecuniary
tlebtAS due by English authors than is gene.
ral admitted. Gramma has confessed that
tie': ' r . st amount , worth - mentioning, which his
win* had yielded him waft supplied ,by his
shaitlin the ;profits of .an American edition.
Da:. Airmail' has 'repeatedly made the same
grateMackaoWledgineutto Tullman 8c rims*,
of, ,
11l
On, Who not only collected his widely.
seat : ed writings, but :have liberally allowed
him tparticipate in the profits. The HARPERS
have ' shaved so'very handsomely to BITIASrEnj
Tana r,, a nd DIOX.ENS, that their Ameti.
can rents figure largely on
,the credit
sida,of the, 'account. .
lb*, any , , publis h er , however, should pay
ss;iMinerely for the privilege of republishing
a singe story by Dionnis, to be continued
weido for MI or eight. months, 'Would seem
itupointhle, if it were not known to be a fact.
TheiHasrans pay this money for the new
eteri,hich Pthress has just commenced,
aral'ea this great payment gives them only
the permission to issue that story in Harper's
ifroe!cfp simultaneensly with its issue in the
American reprint of "AU the Year Round.",
We May be - very sure that HARPER & Bao.
irtainildo not make such a bargain as this,
without closely calculating the probable. re.
sults'. s; At the same time, Mr. G. W. Gun-,
TIS'S,REPT story, cs Triunps" will also appear
in Haryara TireeCly—the combination of two
such.riters making a -very unusual ,attrac.
tion.-,',0 .. ' • ~, •
' Thil very day, the now story by DIOZENS is
commenced in Ifarperls Weekly. It Is called
ci Ai Vale of Tirq Cities," and will appear In
three:‘lioolts, of which'the first its called " Re.
ealliatto Life."—ln the 'Weekly, it Is embel.
lishedi ,with wig* illnatiations. , !,Thci.-first
44
-potoi -of the.storY"eontains three blialiters,
, ~ ~, ...
Seve .:,Ipktil#34 Tile raitoti, 'ha Mon t and
)••
, L ' ~,`
Thtftrierlog, , , , itiAse:r iar - p7fi, , when ge there
,w*. likelippii,isril:3o,4oa queen with
4 0., 1 15 - Nlmi*„fOr s ß. o ,#. l .' , A. o.o.land; there
,AtAriti,sl:le!c",
both etmintiettcit was: oleam than erysti4
the !Okla Of: the State preserves of loaves and
fishes that' ‘thltigs in general were settled for
ever." : ,
- :The Oentrast between the two countries, at
thiS epeelf,lif finely sketched, and particular
Mention is Made of the insecurity of life'and
property in England, at that time. , Thus
In Englund there ;was scarcely an amount of
order and nroteetion to justify much national
boasting. Daring burglaries by armed men, and
highway robberies, took plate in the °spina it
self every ,night families were publicly mid
i Honed not to go out of town without removing
their furniture to upholsterers' warehouses" for
security ; the highwayman in the dark was a
city tradesman in the• light, and being meg- 1
nixed and challenged by his fellow-tradesman
whom ho stopped in his character of " the Cap
lain," gallantly shot him through the head and
rode away ; the mall was waylaid by seven rob
bers,'and the guard shot three dead, and then
got shot dead - himself by the other four, "in
consequence of the failure of his ammunition,"
after which the mail was robbed In peace; that
magnificent potentate, the ,Lord Mayor of Lon
don, was made to stand and deliver on Turn-:
ham Green, by one highwayman, who despoiled
the IllustriOnsereature in sight of all his retinue ;
prisonera in:London jells fought battle with their
turnkeys, and-the majesty of the law fired blun
derbusses in among them, loaded with rounds of
shot and ball; thieves Snipped off diamond crosses
from the neeka of noble lords at Court drawl
rooms ; musketeers went into St: Gile's to searel
for contraband goods, 'and the mob fired on the
musketeers, and the musketeers fired on the mob ;
and nobody thought any of these recurrences mush
out of the common Way._ In. the. midst of them,
the hangman, ever busy and ever Womb than toe
less, was is constant rettuisition I now stringing
up long • rows of miseelleneous 'criminals; now
hanging a hence-breeker. on Saturday who had
been taken on Tuesday; now burning people in,
the hand at Newgato by and now burn
ing pamphlets atthe; door. Of 'Westminster ;
tetday,taking the life° :ari atrocious murderer,
and to-inorrow4f- oti lilfcror who bad
rolit4slarriattt once.
Thihis prerstrat actual commence
ment of the narrative, in this wise
litt was the Dover road that lay,'n a FridaY
' bt lite, in November, before the first of the
arsons with - alma; thigh/Story has business. The
over road lay, as to him, beyond the Dover mail,
as it lumbered up Shooter's bill. He walked up
hill, In the mire, by the side of the mail, as the
rest or the passengers did; not because they had
the least relish for - walking, ecterolfm, under the
circumstances, but bonnie the bill, and the har
ness, and the nail and the mail were all so heavy
that the horses had three times already come to a
stop, besides once drawing the coach across the
'road, with the mutinous intent of taking it back
to Blackhe'ath.. Reins, and Whip;Mia coachman,
and guard; howeitet, itt combination, had read
that article of war which forbade a purpose other
wise s trongly in favor of the .ergatnent.that some
brute animals are endued with-reason;
and the
team had capitulated and returned to their duty.
With drooping heads and tremulous tails they
mashed their .way through the thick mud, floun
dering and stumbling between whiles as if they
were Jelling to phases at the larger joints. As
often as the driver rested them and brotight them
to a stand, with a Wary "Wo-lto ! so-ho, then !"
the near leader violently shook his bead and
everything upon it—like an unusually emphatic
horse, denying that the coach could be got up 'the
hill. Whenever the leader made this rattle, the
passenger started, as a nervous Fastener might,
and was disturbed in mind.
There was a steaming mist in all the hollows,
and it roamed in Its forlornness up the hill, like an
evil spirit, seeking rekt and finding none. A clam
my and. inteneely . cold mist, it made its slow way
through the air 111 ripples that visibly followed
and overspread one another, as the waves of an
unwholesome sea might do. It was dense enough
to shut out everything from the light of the coach
lamps but these its own workings, and a few yards
of road' and the reek of the laboring horses
steamed into it as if they had made it all.
Two other passengers, besides the one, were
plodding up the hill by tho side of the mail. All
three were wrapped to the check-bones and over
the ears, and wore jack-boots. Not one of the
three could have said, from anything he saw, what
either of the other two woe like; and eachwas hid
den under almost as many wrappers from the eyes of
the mind, as from the eyes ofthe body, of his two
companions. In those days travellers were Sery shy
of being confidential on a short notice, for any
body on the rood might be a robber or in league
with robbers. As to the latter, when every posting.
house and ale-house could produce somebody in
"the Captain's" pay, ranging from the landlord
to the lowest stable nondescript, it was the likeliest
thing upon the crude. So the guard of the Do.
vet. mail thought to himself that Friday night in
November, one thousand wen hundred and seven
ty-five, lumbering up Shooter's 11111 as he ,stood
on his own particular perch behind themail, beat.
hag his fera l and keeping an eye and a hand on
the arm.oheat before him, where eluded blunder
buss lay at the top of six or, eight loaded horse.
pistols, deposited on a substratum of cutlass.
The Dover mail was in its usual genial position
that, the guard suspected the passengers, the pas
sengers suspected one another-and the guard. they
all suspected everybody else; and the coachman
wee sure of nothing tint tho horses; as to which
oattle he - oould,with a clear conscience, have taken
his oath on the two Testaments that they were net
fit for the journey. -
" Wee ho !" said the cottelnian. "Bo then ! One
more pull and you're at the top, and be damned
to you, for I have hid trouble enough to get yon to
it !--Job -
'"Hallos'!" the guard replied.
"What o'clock do you make it, Toe ?"
"Ten minutes good, past eleven."
"My blood !" ejaculated the vexed coachman,
arainot Woof Shooter's yet ! Tot! WI! Get
on with you!" '
The emphatic hone, TA short by the whip 11?,
. „
most decided negative, made asorainhle for it, and
the'three other horses followed salt. Once more
the Dover mail struggled on, with the jack:boots
or its • passengers squashing along by its aide.
They had /topped when the aotieli stoppid, and
they, kept close, company. with it. .T.f,any one
of the three had ;had the ,hardihood to propose
"tb another to walk On ' a little ahead into the
mist and darkness, - he would have pat himself in
a fair may, efletting, shot instantly_ as a high
wayman.
'The last burst carried the =ail to 'the summit of
the hill. The hontesetood atilt to breathe again,
and the guard got down to skid the wheel for. the
descent, and the coach door to let the passen
gers in;
" Tot ! Jae !" oried the ooaahman, in a warnipg
.voice, looking down from his box. -
"What do you ny, Tom?"
- They both listened. ' " •
"-I say a horse at a canter ooming up, Joe."
•"/,say a horse at a gallop, Tom," returned the
guard, leaving his hold of the door, and mounting
nimbly to his place. " Gentlemen! In the King's
name, all of you!" • ,
With 'this hurried' adjuration, he, 000ked hie
blunderbuss and stood on the defensive. -
f/The,passenger booked, by-this history was on
the ooaoh step getting in ; Abe two other rumen
gore were behind him, and silent to follow.
He remained on the Tsten, half in the comb and
half out. of ; they remained,,in the road below
him. They aillooked from the, coachman to the
guard, and find the gnird. to Abe coachman,and
listened. The ;Coachman. -looked back , an . the
guard looked baok,- ; and even the emphatic leader
pricked up his ears and looked back, without con
tradiolinv • , • , - •
The stillness consequent on the cessation of. the
Fumbling and laboring of the coach , added-to the
stillness of the night, made it 'very quiet indeed.
Tho,,panting of the horses eommunioated iz tremn-
Jona motion to the;ooach, as if it• were in a state
of 'agitation. The hearts of the passengers beat
-loud enough perbapi to beheard ; but at any rate,
the quiet pause was audibly etpressive of people
out of breath, and holding the breath, and having
the pal* quickened by, expectation, ,
The sound of a horse at:a gallop oame fist'aMi
furiously up the hill. • ,
" SO-ho !" the guard sang out, as loud aa lsu
could roar, Yo , there ! 'Stand ! I Shall fire
Menace was suddenly Checked, and with much
splashing and floundering, a man's votes ,called
from the mist,," Is-that the Dover mail ?C'
"Never you mind what it is !" the guard re
torted.'
" What are you?"
" that the Dover mail?"
" Why do you want to know?"
" I want a passenger, if it is."
"What passenger ?"
" Mr. Jarvis Lorry."
Our booked passenger showed in a moment that
it was his name. The guard, the coachman. and
the two other passengers eyed him distrustfully.
" Hem where you ate," the guard called' to the
voice in the - mist, "because if I should - Make a
mistake, it could never be set right in your life
time. ;Gentleman , of the name; of Lorry answer
straight." . , .
"What is the matter ?" asked the - passenger,
then, with mildly quavering speech. " Who
wants me? Is it Jerry ?"
("I don't like Jerry's - voice, if it is Jerry,"
growled the guard to 'himself. "lie's hoarser
than suits me,. is Jerry.")
• "Yes, Mr. Lorry."
" What is the matter ?"
"A dispatch sent after yon from over yonder.
T. and Co."
"I know this messenger, - goon'," said
Lorry, getting down into the road—assisted from
behind more swiftly than , politely by the other
two passengere,:who. immediately scrambled into
the 'mach. abut the door, and 'pulled up the win
dow. "lie may' come obese; there's - nothing
wrong."
"I hope there ain't, but I don't make so 'nation
sure of that," said the guard;in gruff soliloquy.
"Hallo you
" Well I And hallo yeti!" said Jerry, more
hoarsely than before. ,
"Coma on at a footpaoe ; d'ye mind me Vf And
if you've got holsters _ to that saddle o' yours,
don't let me see ypuie hand , go nigh 'em. For
I'm a devil at a gawk mistake, and when I make
ono it takes the form of lead.. So now let's look,
at you." '
The figures 'of a horse and rider name slowly
through the eddying mist; and , seine to the side
of the mail, where the passenger
,etood. the rider
stooped, and. casting up his eyes at the guard,"
handed ,the Passenger a small folded paper. th
rider's horse was blown, andloth horse and rider
were covered with mud, from the hoofs of the horse
to the. hat of the man. "
• Guard I" said the passenger, ins tone of qui°
business confidence..
The watchful guard, with hie right hand at the
stook of Ms raised blunderbius, his loft at the bar
rel, and him° thehorsemau, ansWorsd curtly,
"Sir." . -
"There is nothing to apprehend. I belong to
Telbsdn'S Bank. • ;'lon 'must know Tellson's Bank
in Lorolon.. lam going, to •I'aris on-business. A-
Crown to drink I mayriad Able?" ,
"If so be as you're quiolt; Sir." ,
op,ened it in the ligbtof the oosolf-lamp:en
;iltat , slelty'-aull'Lreid- 7 .llrets-ta
not long, you see, gir. 7ere7, ifiay 'fgtsay
answer wail, O.COALLED TO LIPS
Jerry started in his saddle. "That's a Blazing
strange answer, too," said he, at his hoarsest.
" Take that message batik, and they will know
that I received' this, as well as if I wrote. Make
the best of. your way. Clood•night ' •
With those words the passenger opened the
coach door and got in ; not at all assisted by his
fellow-passengers, who had expeditiously secreted
their watches and purses in their boots and were
now making a general pretence of ' being asleep,
with no more definite purpose than to escape the
hazard of originating any other kind of notion.
We shall not proceed further, but refer our
readers to Harper's Weekly, published to-day,
and containing three Chapters of this story.
Indeed, considering what a high price was paid
for %perhaps we have copied teo liberally. But
we desired to give'an inkling of the author's
manner and matter, and think that the artist
Will be recognised by his peculiar touches.
The two cities of this story evidently are
London And Paris, and, as evidently, the in
terest mainly turns upon the incident—Com-
Men enough under the - old. and bad French
monarchy—of a man, (we'think, a father), se
cretly imprisoned for a number of years, final
ly liberated, and bewildered by his unaccus
tomed freedom. We. should not wonder,
either, if our own struggle for Independence
be incidentally introduced into this tale.
The Washington Family in England
tfrota the last number of the Mount Ver
non Record, published monthly in this city, we
take the following interesting account of the
Wasurnaron family, in "the Old Country."
The article is headed with a fine engraving of
Cave Castle, Yorkshire , the last seat of the
family, front an original drawing.]—En. Panes.
Little mere than two hundred years ago, John
Washington, with his brother, residing at Cave
Castle, - north of the river Number, in the Rest
Riding of Yorkshire, England, sought and found
an asylum in the distankaolony of Virginia. The
star Of Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Common
wealth of England, was then in the ascendant; and
• many a gallant cavalier, despairing of the (muse of
the Stuarts, sought freedom Qf notion and speech in
the Now World. So, in 1657, the brothers Wash
ington also transferred their Pantiles hither—not
overitooked with gold,'perhaps, for the heiress of
the family had bestowed her hand and fortune
upon Sir William Tempest, of Studley Royal. Her
estates were adjacent in the East Riding, and the
property, never reverting to the Washingtons) has
passed through various hands, until it finally VMS
vested in MU Laurence, of Studley Royal; who
died not long ago, bequeathing it to the late Earl
-of Ripon, her relative, whose eldest eon now pos
sesses it. The cadets of the Washington re cc re
tained some smaller portions of the estate; one
descendant, as we shall show, obtained a royal
grant of property, in the middle of England. But
time and- change, and, above all, confiscation
during the Civil War, had much diminished the
possessions of the Waahingtons, though they con
tinued to hold Cave Castle. Still enough was left
to those loyal brothers, true Cavaliers; to pur
obese lands in Westmoreland county, Virginia, on
a narrow nook between the rivers Potomac and
Rappahannosk. •
George Washington, the immortal Bather of
his Country" was great-grandson of John, the
elder brother. The house in whioh he was born,
at Bridges Creek. has so utterly passed away,
though only ono hundred and twenty-seven years
have elai sad since that event, that not a ves
tige remains. A few decayed trees, stunted
shrubs, and wild vines, alone attest
“ Where once a garden mallet”
A stone marks where the homestead once stood, and
a simple inscription upon it tells that there George
Washington was born. Far more fortunate has
been Mount Vernon, which George Washington in
herited ; to which he brought home his fair young
bride, whom he had wooed and won to bo " a help
meet unto him;" from which, at his country's call,
he issued forth, in =hair years, to win hie coun
try's freedom; to which , he returned, the vits tory
achieved, as willingly as comes back a lover to
the side of his betrothed • and. where, at last,
having served his country ' by his counsel as well
as with his swordezin this Presidential chair no
less than in the dangers of the camp-he finally
'sought quietude of repose, after over twenty
years of as great difficulties, in• war and In peace,
as ever mortal man had to meet, to baffle, and to
Subdue.
Par mere fortunate, we repeat, his Mount Ver
non been, thin the homestead in whioh the pa
tea- warrior drow the'first breath of mortal being.
That remains, a shrine to whioh, in years to come
as in years past, the pilgrims , of humanity will
love to come, and give the eageiglanoe of admira
tion and the thoughtful mead of meditation to the
ground which has been eanotified by the daily pre
sande of-the Great Man—which, for many a year,'
was the scene of hie serene demesne happiness—
and where, " after ilfe'sfflfal fever he sleeps well."
Yes, the Home and Grave of Washington will be
preserved, by the natural and generous justice of
his countrymen, for all future time—preserved,
With anxious and affectionate oars—and tMe will be
owing to the energy, seal, and patriotism of those
fair - daughters of America, "The Mount Vernon
Ladies' Association."
Washington never was tempted to visit England,
the , hems of his forefathers, where, to this very
day, his blood rubs in the veins of some of her
proudest nobles, aa they boast. The Washington
pedigree shows descents, from English as well as'
Scottish royalty. Even the famous Neville, Earl
of Wendell, surnamed the Ring-malmr, was
among Washington's ancestors. One applied him.-
self to bestow crowns and sceptres, as wilco or
interest prompted. 'The greater glory of the Other
was to free Me country frem oppressive kingly
TWO CENTS
yoke and , the Ameri can co entee haloes Nye
reign' Union gniatior then diedeni or IrCeptre evei ,
cover* • : •
,Without very numb taeking the tesagixtttion,,we
can trace the route Which - Washington wOuld have
taken; bad he visited Ritgland. Firet,•'te - • the
County-Palatleate of Durham,,wheriVilliaut the
Conqueror appropriated estates to .his Homan
Knight, William de Her tburn; *hetet &lolly; iseeta
tery later, exchanged thedrvillageollfertbarn on
, the Tees, for the manor and of ,Wessyngioni
altering their surname it the same time.. in•th
Ray War, under Richard de Omer de
battles of the Barons, when the banner of St, Outhe
bert was raised on the side of HenryLll. , and the
head of this knightlYiace was 'made a prisoner in
the 'battle of Lewee-Lon the inroads 'upon' Soot'
land made by the Edwards-wherever loyalty an
chivalry Called, the De Weseyngtoris were to bd
found, - faithful and bold: in Meese of-thee; to,
family became „distributed over, varione4arts' of
England-and, the boldest warriors, the most
learned churchmen,and the moat sagsoieutt Jaer.i
yore, were supplied from this deck'. • •
One of the, latter,-;Laureate. Washington,' e
Gray's In* London, received from: Henry, VIII
a grant of minor of Sktlifere, in'Herthainp.l
tortehire, collimated timid once imion t ting_tera'moi
nastery A female . descendant of is,Latteetrq
Washington,married Robert Shirley, arlperrers4
and Washington has, ever since, been a baptismal
name in that noble - farniy-the ninth. Earl, who;
died only the other day, being calla Washington; , .
Bewails Shirley. • f
Once on' English soil, our Washington, -
after
visiting Herat/an and Weesyngeone th•Pala-;
'Gnat. of Durham, would have turned his pi -karat
'steps to Sulgrave. • There, thOugh the glory of Gusi
manor.house has 'departed,' thnoreat - of :Washing.'
ton is to be seen to this day, on - Isteined - gleare In
one of the old windows* and there, let into the
pavement in the Parish t ohuroh; atilt remainPlatia.
of braes on *hitt aregraVen the Axles% of Litf;
rence Washington and his wife.- • •
But the" Washingtoes parted
-grave shertly 'before - Charles I' became
king, ; after , - having_poesenied - it, 'for ten
ter,. In , the Civil Were, two, of-the, family,
each of' whom Wes a Knight Banneret,
-fought gallantly for the'reyal'eause, - partionlaily
at the storming of Bristol, and this pertinacious
defence of-Worcester. The Washington brothers,
who emigrated to` Virginia during the. Protecto
rate, were . persecuted bee - the Croniwillitee,'-no
doubt. as eiatignants, and may have -found - their
residenoe at South
„Cave, near-the 'Umber, eo -un
pleasant or unsafe as to make them desire to
emi
grate to this country.
Of course our hero would have visited gave
Castle-nearer to the thriving _market tows of
Howden than to South Cave, whence its' name
may be derived, and adjacent to-the once state-
Iv palace of _ the Count-Bishons of, „Durham
This castle ' belonged in Washington's , time,
as 'if , still does,' to - the ' faintly of Barnard.
From, this former.resldeneei of • hie rgreitleand:
father, Washington might have seen, jest where
the 'rive* Trent -and Ouieunite to poor. their ;
waters into the great estuary of 'the liumfper;
stately vessels gliding to and, fro-light :boats
skimming the waters-woods, and hills, and fertile
pabtrirages• to the north, anti on the op site
shores-of Lincolnshire; and many a fate - deli-
(listed to religion, each tall spire pointing, with. - a
silent finger, up to heaven. A stately place it
was, and is 2 Vritlf its Gothic Miens, buttresses; and
battlements; its lofty halls,; its!' ornate pleasure
grounds ; and, above all, its noble gallery,efla
mily and other paintings. Not unmindful ,of the
real 'Paladinof the Weibingten line, the Bairiiiiis
have an- original of. GilbertAtuart's renowned
portrait of the, American hero in • this collection, ;
and show it; with no knell degree of pride, as the
most- authentio resemblance ever taken' of our
great chieftain. -•- •- ' • • :
Had Washington taken. snob a pilgrimage es
this, he would probably - have' noticed that the
great rule of action in the minds of his forefathers
was to combat, legally, for. what they- esteemed
the truth anti right. It was this which made
them" battler - for Normen - William-4O heldiend
the borderland against the inoureions of _the
Scots-to `
follow Richard Plantagenet in the Om
sade-to side with - Hem 7 in the civil war -4o
serve under the Edwards-to upheld Charles Sm
art when he was opposed by his Parliament...this
self same loyalty, whieh made Washington such a
gallant aid.deoamp' to Braddock, burned with- a
yet brighter flame when, having to theme between
obedience to tyrannio- power and his country's
claim to be free, he risked fortune, fame, -and life,
to' win the independence of-America.- -lied he
visited the land• ot his - English :foesfathere, he
would have returnedlome, we doubt not, with no
elation of mind at their, prowess--hue,:mern than
ever would have bugged Glom to his heart ..of
hearts that ever-enduring truth of the old family
motto, 'Virtu Mies ;whines." • ,
- Trim Lycoming ctitinty t
Clarrespondenee of The Preii.j
-. • .Winntaxe!our; April / SO._ ,
Oar April term of-oonit-adjoarned. af'Mr
sitting for two weeks, - but_ Without - attending to
;any of , tbe civil satin pending:: Tiiia - Wei bibs*,
faot that itiOQuartariirealone
O k : Viii :4ArA P, t# 9lo4 . ; 1.44-A4
'wealth vs, Abraham Updegroif, itlitni;lastmil eight
'days, and froOtie reSponsible *Won of this par
ties implicated, excited Inerti,interest here titan
any case tried for years: It was a suit forlibel,
- brought by Clinton Lloyd„Eaff.;
• the DistrietAt
torney for Lyooniing :county; against Abraham
Ihdegtoif, a Wealthy inerehant and miii-oWner r
who has heretofore maintained an- influetitierpa:
sition in society.- - • • ' ^ -
Mr. Lloyd has proved himself to be' one of the
moat able, fearless, and honest presenting officers
that we have ever had; has been a terror to evil
doers generally; and, has been particularly sac;
easeful le bringing to justice a gang ,of counter
feiting rascals who have for years infested this
region, flooding the country with begat Coln and
notes which were snob a good iniitation that 'the
unsophisticated could not distinguish them from
tho genuine article He had also a certain Chas..
Miller and others arrested,Oonyloted, and sent to
the penitentiary for conspiracy to rob. ,
ler's conviction be made' disclosures to the prase
outing attorney and sheriff implioating tipaegroff
and Winegardner. L. A. Ainsworth, and a couple
of men named Steller, living at the mouth of the
Sinnemahoning, as persons suspected of being con
cerned in the counterfeiting of money.
Mr. Lloyd, on inquiry, finding Miller's state
ment corroborated in-many particulars, had him
Pardoned by the Governor, and he was brought
home on the Saturday previous to the meeting
of the United States Circuit Court, at Williams
port, last June., That day,and the-following
Sunday he was seen 'in company with_ eouple
of men, in Ainsworth's employ, who nianifested s
great deal of interest in keepinghlai
port; but the same night he was ferried aerate the
river by one of them, and accompanied te the bank
of the Stuviehanna by another.
The next we heard of Miller he turned up in
liamilton City, Canada West, where, in room No.
lloyaillotel, he makes an affidavit of a villain
ously libellous character against Mr, Lloyd, which
was taken down,by , Leonard Ullmer, a Justice of
the peace at Williamsport, who had gone there for
that purpose. This Ulinierbrought home, osten
sibly to give to - Ainsworth, but really :gave. it to
Updegroff, who eXhibited it to a number of per
eons, calling some in off the street to show it to
them, and reading it to others who visited his store.
The above were the facts elicited - on the trial of
the snit, whioh was tried by the _lron. Alexander
Jordan, an impartial and able jarist.
The Commonwealth was represented by Samuel
C. Wingard, Esq., of Pittsburg, Legrand Bancroft,
Esq., of Pottsville, George F. Miller, Erg , of Lew.
isburg,lind George White, Esq.. of Williamsport.
The defence by Tien. James Armstrong, Waldo
Willard, Em , C. W. Suttee, Beq . , and William
Armstrong, Er , all of this place. .
The trial, as before stated, lasted 'eight - dirt,
and after the jury had been out nearly,two days
they were discharged on representing their Ina
bility to'agree. - I learn from a juror that upon
retiring to their room and 'taking a ballot they
stood eleven for conviction to one for acquittal.
the dissentient furor being a Mr.' Carpenter, of
Jersey Shore. Unless the case is satisfactorily set
tled, I pregame it will again be before the (marts.
"Tanya."
SUOT BY A WOHArt.—M.I3. ,ROWland, a lady
residing in Manchester, Pa., &hot' a man named
Oberlee MoTernans, on Saturday afternoon, under
the following circumstances Mr. John -Rowland
occupies a house and lot near the eerier of Ohio
and Ohartiere etreets, in Manchester, and on, the
adjoining lot Mr. Wheeler H. Phelps has in course
of construction a now building, 'which is yet in
charge of tho contractor, Thomas Watson, of this
city. The wall of tide house toughies the' line of
Mr. Rowland's yard, and the workmen, it is said,
have repeatedly and grievously annoyed Mm:
Rowland by removing part of the tante; treading
upon her flowers, erecting scaffoldings. strewing
dirt and shavings about, etc. She - had expostn•
lated with them fro:Neatly, and; finally warned
thorn of the oonseuenoes if they sought to annoy
her any more. - On - Saturday, however, MeTiernan,
who is an apprentice of Mr. Watson's, made some
remarks which highly insulted - the lady, when,
taking down a gun; she discharged it at him, tart
of the contents entering his head, inflicting a slight
wound. Information, for assault and battery with
intent to kill was made against her before" Squire
Sampson, and a warrant Issued for - her' arrest.
She gave bail to appear tit court, and here, for the
time being, the matter rests.
OATASTROPriII ON THE PIINNSTLYANLL Ram
noen—'fannz MEN Hix,nen —A catastrophe of a,
moat appalling nature occurred. this morning on
the Pennsylvania 'Railroad, in the vicinity of
Greensburg. it appears that the ballaSt train was
in service as usual, and that while on its way
east, and within a short distance of Greensburg,
the locomotive exploded with a tremendous report,
killing three men and' shatterilif the engine to
pieces. John Dodds, the en neer, and Mr.
Woods, the conductor, were kil led instantly, and
Jos. bpselman, engaged as fireman on the train,-
injured to an extent that he died ilk& few minutes.
The engine,, as ire, have stated, was blown to
pieces, and so great was the force of thiaexplosion,
that parts of it were sent whirling in the air
dreds of feet from the scene' of the 'disaster.=
Pittsburg Evisning Chronscla, .Monday,
GOOD Booze IN DawArim—T.The literary taste
of American society is iniprovieg If the quality
of the books whioh. find the readiest sale can be
accepted as a test.
: Good books , litirary, eat,
entitle, or religious 'obartaiter, are in demand, and
have a rapid and remunerative sale. We learn
that our friends - Gould-A; Lincoln published Able
week n'large edition of Hugh Miller's ," Popular
Geology," but, were unable to fill all their orders;
amfeven the second edition, reedy in alew days,
Is likely to prove insufficient. The first edition of
Mansol'e " Limits of Religious Thought," to be
roadyon Monday, is 8180 taken up in advance, and
a seoondndition is already on the press. Ryan so
large a work as Masson's -" Life of Milton" findi a
numerous circle of readers, and in little more then
a month has reached a second edition.—Bostors
Journal. ,
NOTICE TO (41.11,11111201711-.
C61411616,1114i117-i
to tobut folio MOO
leery eoe»taiEbt tal•
creme of the
the tykraphi, 146:60 1044 ilit r iiiiisboot is
Wit tri greavirouget tiosulapitiremil*"
twit, sztl otbor !Woo, tat opsdapMyrke prim 10011
emtant now, at tbs d'Y la gt.,ti 1°4°41446i
the rosoiteed Of tlie wooonotiog the Immo
of populaUoa;or blkifiltfoo vat Is
taa to th• ritail readily js ‘;
-
GEN-PAL,;ARWA
SinTaximFrini--414110i'ch7g
tire a very (where doh, Whieh was taken ey3aoute . '
natives who were fields' far ehrimpe,-It le Of a dark
color, about lifilniffeilent'tWo hieing thick, and
about:lour - iiiebee - frogifteter46o the flu Witte
book to, the bottom of itsAtelly p ...o has a remarka
bly large head; and four -feet': of darns whit*
enable tt to creep Oil
:pride. , When pieced: IkbergeSit wkitarrs
Ant quite a streamfrom enderitestelett each Imo
of Its body,llten took- ii - cirecilViiittud &shuck - et
by olinging to 'the sidesoind eralkingsepparently
with great pride Thefeet resemble somewhat the
paws of a bear. •
GPSTwas rands to the Baltimore Pa
triot a Besot thernassiteretvemals lost at sea by
Great Britain daring her lost warstrith. the Voitad
States, independent of lossis.hy tiepin - feint,
were as follows :.1n.181.2. -twenty-one vessels, with
three hundred and thirty-three ,gana . .,1813, six
teen vestals, with three hundredlad tenolilogna.
hi 1814, 'thirteen' vane% - withAitiellinirfred 'and
fifty- guns ; inlBls, nine *owls, :With. onolitin
drat, and' forty-eight guns, - Toted, lifty-nine'rvet
sey, with nine hundred and forty-throegur
A. -008TLY 1364.--The - .oirmilt Court, of
'Kent County, Maryland , was 'coitupled - fciur days
lest week in the trial ono appeal elute of lkOro
W. Copper vs,'-William bleCentey,' t6 - /litotes- a
"dab.'" - _TheiChestertoire Watts
states that over lifty-witneeses.wereexamie4stud
the estimated coat of- the. easels* "..bilidrOidol
' This is a round lint to ee Open! in litigation
where only twenty dollars Were - involved. , n•
jury gave a-verdiot for the Appellee, with 01111 cant
, .
Mareu.strriket--The -.stemer
din, Captain Kirivaa *titre&
having - ote board - twenty;threa - ookralper,
eons, six of whom arentales, theremejm*wemsm
and children. They have been, manumitted' by -
Mr. Burgess, of Xorthimption uounty,
and will , taker partite tbatiolonisstion ship,
Mary Caroline... Stevens, on her *um : trip, about
the 10th instant, for Monrovia.
. „
Makwart San - ,•••••The Now Oileaba Pfca,Viine
has examined. paniel of Brixton Ole. *towel
from ; the .Ifithmas of , Tohaantepoo,
Is -mulatto prodnot :of Southern, Mexioo,, and
growl On one of the•moit beautiful lad' majestic
treat. of those' thillaitsbloldresta.'' , ltia'stivag is
fibre, and firm in maap*aa the silk worrea•tbready
whit& In appearance fit mach:innop4diab:s34 :104-
derfull*itoft to theilotioh:' " - • ' -
'Liorrnors; s la- week:trance a roartiviiit
arrested for breaking a dagnerreotyge of his wife;
which he had .vainly requested Ute'.etast , tu re
move from the show casein -- which it wit ' exhf•
bited. Thoebuit, decided - that theilefindsirt kid
'certainly reason to be angty, , but.-ea- he auki,no
right to destroy ,the, exhibitoes prcperty : ess.tha,
aascsint,'flited hint 'tine:guinea: - , _
Tam Parriviriori - -THEatooseaa' BBWINA.zz
closed iti long Sessielibf eight inonthe tni TUteday
'fut. - ,Prevtitcarto that, a week wee spent::
in -the
'usual eximinations before .committee elected
'-from the board - of dirpotors,"consiating `of Dr.
'Krebs, of Now Ycirk; Dr. Backus, - of
Bnodgrom, of
,kjew York ;_ and Pr.,Alurray, of
;Elisabeth. _
MUTH' Ali 'ACIToIi. A:ND rAllgp...-:-.3151
iter died' isoston uww Week'.
•Thiwas known ekertmetora -B
nd paints: : llisaidef
work wean penorains- of f sweelage aerate the -At
corniiiiied With *pease irp - thislthini, by
:the eihibitiosfof 'which, in this; country mind ;En
' .rope, he realized a handsome competency:
THe freight on a' laxrettlf atittr from
Din
cinneti to New York ; by lake, and railway. is now
1 ,0n1y70 cents. Laid year the prkits was 110 mutts.
' 'The freight of flour trent Chicago to New Tort,
:all rail, 05a70 delitS; by lake and neruel; 50 Oats:
T 4.1180 are far - below the ratimof hat
ILE•vir -.D•eitecuts.—ln the United :Stated
!Circuit Court at St. Louis, - on'Wedneeday,
!Wells, of • - •the Olivmstreet line ofoninli n teee,:was
:mutated in tke sum tifl4,o,oo`tisuniges, conement,
_upon tine Of his omnibuses, seine menthe lance,
running over an old French lady; named Veronica
Want.
t Truklams BionuntaTtio Buffalo Daily
.14spress rays it mowlalmott ceitsit4 the
'boats of, both the geAtral AndAnrithent lined will
lie idle MIN session. 'IT iieltablebeits can be °hai
-1 toted, -they "will bit' pladid; &titivate -4iteipties,
,oA the rente - between Detroit and Algae. '
[- A Him SPEOIILATIOI.-A speculatorLitt
Para is - ertgajredlit tonyine sip''talleAtaid geese
.robes whloh- have hems ;worn. , and discarded, end
twill& he ,irowts cad Balls to the natives' of. the
Caribbean - -
- Mae. 16:f1DalsoN, art
,accomplishedlady,of
London, C. W., insmed her lifelor $5,000 for thir
!benefit of her-song who last week - admlnlitered
!stryehnini to his =ether, frottirthirelfeete ofirhicti
Taw rafamilton (lima) Freed-Ms` 'lays
!friend of ours lately saw over one bemired MMus
lfilatlng on encofi prairie ponds 4414.044'f
hairrelde fif Wall Xiske. . ,
17'itir o lump 3r:, 4. i• • •s- •
teamerseeieh•so;ooo tout - of etsitAikeessett. l .' •
'Hole Mint BorD,-DemocrethreituAidate 'foe
Lieutenant Governor 14 4 Kintadm'b , repiiiented,
r, sinking rapidly, under dishiest,. , •
,Ties St. LOUIE Direotoey.for this yeartjust:
uheislied. ging -the,:populaktlon :of that city at'
Seemly 190,000. , • - ' •
Mis.)3zookept, otbNigisted costum*saW
iiety, has' namely late; her iiii*Ster at
Poutioll Bluffs,
iteligions Fanaticism and ilitleder—d.,
Father. Kids - - his Daughter.' - '
fgrom the Troy Times; ktay 3••• - - - -•— ••
i The quiet Cabbed:llW broken in upon yesterday ,
by the commission of a horrid nauder_in the town'
itf Bandlake, about fourteen mild from Troy, ota
daughter by her father, and only enrviving parent,
it man about sixty years'of age, named - John
The Of the Model& is about four idles
rot of &Refs tavern, and near - Mesta= saw.mill •
n the Bandlake read, .Tbe partiwilived ine. little
uee, in which the hither earned *livelihood f, r
himself and daughter by, following the trade of a'
Shoemaker. The daughter's name was Christina.
She is about nineteen years of age, - and. de-
Scribed by the neighbors as a quiet. and. well-le,
!laved girl. She bad been unlvell for some time, ,
and. It is said, bad been under the care of alemale
dootress residing in Berlin, in this County, named _
Weaver.. Her mind, it appears; was somewhat af
tooted, but whether from religious excitement or
from some other cause, we are unable to say. She -
labored under. the impression that the devil bad
possessed her, and need to prey very frequently for
- deliverance from his' 'grasp. A day or two before
the minder; the old man and :dauglitir went over
ththe henna David Horton, who resided opposite
e Beldings. when .Christina said
„she had taken
Medicine of Mrs.- - Weaver, - Sid it
r ude her feel ea
if " the devil was in her, and she would Earatoh
him off; but that she had thrown the 'medicine
away, and drove the devil- away, too." The'old
man had not done much work recently, as it af
fected the 'girl's bead, and it is Supposed that in
Consequence of Wear. of her, want o f sleep, do.,
his awn mind had become temporarily affeoted, and
while nadar the delusion that "Dena," as he calls
her, was the devil, he killed her. • • ,•
! The account which Belding gives of the affair
is, that he fa* the devil lying on the bed and he
struck it in the face. The girl, it appears, was
lying down in the back room. Belding followed
her from that room to- the front road, in which
the murder was committed. with,. shoemaker's
hammer. Her eked was completely smashed - to
pieces. Portions of the hair were roatterisd about
the room, and pieces of the skull were - lying over
the floor. -Her faqe, too, was considerably bruised .
and disfigured, but no minks of =dolma* were dis
covered on the other „rids 'of her Belding,
ems he thought the was the - devfftliat eh e ar.
iteared to him to be four themes large as '"Dena " -
—that her foie; was the large for "-Dens"—and
from his previous. and subsequent condaet there
Can Scarcely be a doubt that the old man imagines
he had a fight with the devil, or, as be expresses
it, with." three devils, and be had all he could do
to kill them." They lived alone in dietaries. It
is supposed -the murder was committed , about
twelve and a half o'clock -yesterday afternoon.
The first parson who discovered the murder. was
Nicolas Ryermiller, who first saw the old man out
dde the have. Re appehred very nmeh exeited; --
end told Ryermiller that he had "killed diadem% -
and it was lying is there"--pointing to his house.
Ryermiller looked - in and - disfavored , the. dead
body of UM daughter, He asked 'the old man if
it was hot '" Dena" that be had killed? Bel- -
ding replied that he did not think it was. Bel
ding's lands and shirt sleeves were covered with
blood. ' Ryermiller testified before, the coroner's
jury that the father and daughter hadliv,ectwith ,
him about nix months priiriously to their ridding
in the house where the the murder was committed,
and that they always appeared happy together,
apd, as the witness expremed "neve r had any
obey times " Christie* was a Aufee,"good girl.
Coroner Madden, of _this city, was notified 'of the
murder, and at 6 o'clock lad evening proceeded to •
the scene of the tragedy. He nand the neighbor- -
hood in great excitement. Belding was raving' ,
like a Manisa when the coroner arrived. • Coroner
Madden summoned a jury—Joel B. Peek, foreman
'and-proceeded to investigate the case.• Bevird
witnesses were examined—their 'testimony: being
in effect as above given—and the jury rendered a
verdict that,' "In their opinion, said Christina
Belding came to her death on fluidly, May 1,1859,
from fractures of the skull ; and said injuries were
inflicted with a hammer in the bands of her father,
John Bolding=le at the time laboring under tem.
porary aberration of mind." Coroner Madden
placed Balding under arrest, and late last night
arrived with Mai in this oity and plead him in jail
bore: A dose of ' morphine uieted the nerves of -
the old man, and .- rendered - - hie conveyance hero
comparatively easy and safe.. -
The grand Jury sit - to day. The evidence - in:
the case will be handed over to 'them for their an
thill at onto.-'They 'will probably sethorire a
commission to investigate the sanity of ',the Mur
derer, and if he is declared inlets, will send him
to' the lunatic asylum ; - or they will indict him for =
murder, as in their opinion the evideneawarrants.:
w an t :M e 7so reagl e be dli r u ifn h o d;
h e
l t h u d e t
n 33 iia di k 4 . m an w th a s •
Dr.
Barber,of
Poestenkill, believes it to have been cannl,
his incessant care and : attention _to ' hid sick
s i o an m rdT: e hierli o s a a tuse bediligs?lbii e a ri r: er gili th rse.
daughter.
Tits number of arrests" in this city
the ram% a' April it stated to be 2,80. They' are Si.
vided among the raveral pollee diet:iota . rallnegr.
Hirst, 207 ; amend, 415 ; tblrdi ireorekille;
816 Caixtti," 98 ; ;Wreath. MI; 4004 Bffrittalb,-70;
tenth, 142; eleventh 102; twelfth, 102; thirteenth,
; fourteenth , 84; nnetath, ;- entteesth, 110, and
by reserve corps /U.
CANDEI is beginning 141 i as Lis a
new penny. Her streetil,pet*lntirli;ns kept dean
is peeler. This is es Wilteeki The trit *tap
towel& the proeuniba - bt' paten Vaal tb Wean
the Mee% and- the daaniadpailaatkoritee et- mot
den, - ,lntoates l 3a art ierapadoua in tke pera•mm
acme of Ole, duty.W;wish la, oesl4 Iv as annh at
rigladelphi*,