The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 23, 1859, Image 1

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, AlllO4 STAMM. - _ „
90141aTTEE ; OR FLORAL FAIR.
Geo. amino, Olemia: Zosireii
Bushy ifeptyflEll, ; WILLIAM ALLEN, ,
Ti.7Dot/GUICIVIT, , CIBIPL23 ,8 boot,
R. Witiez.ga, 4c4tti,iip, it. T),
Ciwryi IL , 01111.,Tt4, . ,
/Arts H; 7.*•Of
' Er P9OOllllllO TO'litlftD A, TIINOMINT TO
WASUIVICITO /Di bIT 3: 08 iLtrraiirhenis.
_. , :: < ~jlxcsciriiiiig;`.3axe, Yom'#
tioREET,g,VING —JARS.
rOTTSIV &" .BODINE'S
IQHT'
„
Ii‘EIthINITIOILLLT piimxp,lflcEfirr FRIIITB, Bf.e
Ski. b 7 dealers in Glgni' and 01w and:illoon
. /washing Goodg..
Till VitAbillitlePLlßD-BY
POTTEA:
ioz
' , Our der harlot been
_tested to the eatfejoction of
St u :7 4 ld f preseutlt to the
o We rrivo i 3 - attention to toe
liartortty of oar orlAolo ofot'ffroso On& gotta pereh
or Imo In plies of semept for the', guttit
fruporiou'stroug aird'inforfous flavor to tko fruit, be
-04" biliiiottiorwlsodotootfri, • .; .
P: d; ti:nir.isoisiiioutUeturo supsrtai. iniseriil Intermit! •
furter bottlers, auk alt Mods of goon' gum
" lUanilfs!
• .....4-‘.,f.`14...44';;;,;;,•:-,1,:t.i, •
yr #svipxo.
tivx:7o. arzlas-
Irkey inirrunisntind to anis at bait 'Thirty Por Cent.
lit tad, will balm unielnar. . and mare uniform Man guy
tither Pottorn of *am *Joe hail:o%mM iri thte want.
BALL' WhOVILSALI AND IMAM
CHARLES WILLIAMS,
1182 MARKET ST,
(LAT.II DAKAR & WILLIAM.)
jeflana • . -
tiemanale;
E IVY' 0, V - A: II
32%., si. ivsnor, . ao.
Neve ramoielfroin the N. E. Goma of
PP.OZIT 4ND All,Oll STREET
To their NNW STORK
No, 116 ARCH. STREnT,
The eiglith,bhildliforeet of!rout Street.
gelait ißrg Goobg
igPRING: - AND 'I3IIMMEt. CLOAKS and
7•J MANTILLAS at Wand plate at the
RANTS MANTILLA. NMPORIUM.
.• ,_•• • ~TOS OBBSTSTPT Streit.
• SOLID SIM INANTILLAS rtdaaad', pecan., at the.
.1 , ..M.S MAN rim.A.Atdcrautit i 7o9 liewilitti , street.
.41113LK MANTILLAS, filth ride Lusa Floturtaga, at
ltaanaaciprloaa, at the
PATNA MANTILLA Etrionrrim,
703 - 011SSTNTIT Street.
TESNON LAOS MANTILLAS, Soulaotta Totuta,
,
taatuastptiONl, at the
RARLS MANTiLLA. 211P0101724,
708 011.103TNUT Stmt.
IV. PRoOTOR. , &. CO.
NOICTIEBTNTIT Street.
IFISENOR LACE MANTLES. ,
OWL lioogosiroms,A, 26 pp,
1,149 Pointe and !teepee.
Stook 1,1 complete,. spa pales 41414 3 the pritee suit
styles . Wes Wreathe, •
6240 . & tIONAItD,
J•l6 L. E. eorner,XXlMl sod 11ARIL0ritte: -
CLOTES•AND OASSIMERES. '
Light Cobra and tlne.lllsok Moths.
Light4nsiey ttreeintersszonobss4aost. •
Wklt. Linen Dnek'and DtJllL
' itstseitlistlestings, rims assortment.
• 'r - •t• 7r COOPIE & OONARD,
016 , B. B. earner ISINTII sad MARXIT
AXEGS ROBMS, Rig piu g.Ep.
, 41.0;Ba - st4; dmitd• - muktom i teg&e. •
&largo thottepolt,fipm:yeralou , Waist* Oat last"
maw - • ' , COOP.OR & 00D4 /MD.-
)9I egi,' "elor4er N INTII ind• IkSAIIKET,
INTIOREBTING, AND ,IMPORTANT I I
IL GMAT 0111bUNd-OP LAOX GOODE! !! !•
IsloloB,3ll.tiall FROM ~16. TO PO !
TILL GOODS I N PittLARIMPELI,
VIRMV.IOII AItO , StiVOICNVaTTLAB!'
sotraviction, WAR TEAM •TEE IMPORTEt 1
- Wren& Lao filuorlai.
/reach Imo Palates. ,
ItiaqlaLaaa,Talmea. -
Trench Laos atsiatillsi. "
•
Vary Mak Ohaatilla Mantillas.
'plain Bilk Duatays, gatila Trimialog, Zoo. .
Rad Loop Do, ha. &o.
- Also, lb tarp ;Got of, • . , ,
-ELAM( SILKS—VERY SIDUP !
KERRY r, -- sassass; 'LWNS, &or, &., at
REI - LEl'• ODIS/E'S. ;
CIortOIiIORTEI SPRING GASIMIN.,
it 0 0 D,;DOAIi, AND KINDLING,
v, WOOD. _
J A 4 ,1,14 E it 'X 111 G 111 R,•
00AT194intle1rr WHARF, • •
Him constaottion hand et large and superior artioie
cot PINK, OAK-, sba nioitowir WOOD ? and, baring
Cesplegad.onr arrangements, are row prepared to saw ,
the WOOD BT , 0111401;POWAR. We_ bare 'leo on
bard, f4
a superior quality of Llial.oll. 00AL, of all ,
Have_ with care .. Dialers arid Oonenniers will:
Bud it greatly tO their advantage to purchase Kindling l
Wadi! of m. , lee-Bat
F/NE• O t7 CONSOLER and Funny Ferri
011W111(1,,T911A1190, sossinfootiroa by Barbaro
?Omit, Co., lien sod' for IWO by IttfBBlBl. de,
WOODUITIT, IfolelLgooto, 'No. 18 N. THIRD Street;
Phllodapbia.. This Tabor a° is put op in plotages, fronB
8 11181 /PIPO/ 1 1 10 110 1 844 boxes ind.lB entirely free (tom
any IA anstare ol deletexiotui iinbitanaeL jogr..otar
~,_linn, fra RUPTURE.—Thq
ircention of persons thus afflicted is ear,
invited to - - ~ •
N . FRITWif PAVINT Ifflll4§l
entirely: stearin prlsoiple, sod differing radically from
all others.,lt combings many now and Valuable W 1 24
of groat' importance, sod it retaliate:landed f.r Its dm
eldetenor, sad the sue with which it le fitted
and worn.: We behaved that more positive eaves ma??
*Mooted, with ItAtan with soy Troll in nee. 0.
NISEDIMIS, 8. W. eorner of %VDU/Tit and BIOS
litreeta. la the spat' for their tali and 'adjustment.
' 'oll.+Vitt If • ,
EOEIVED. per late arrivals 20a12
Jul. PLATZ•GLABB, eatable for Dognorrmityploti.
Immo , by
~ A. HANLINE & SONS i
.018 8l 4E4 /MOH' Street.
'H . ()HEY.-40 :bble. prime.. quility Cuba
*LS 01:40IT pee sobs GH ULtt
(!4, eat° !'Y
01121.721vt-741;,ailne4d, Inirgiorti
mew am weirs DO Oetnoillt, L 61011191.101 Cl 6 o l r.i
0, Sib ; • arses 1.47.1p30, f
op, *or
igt . , p 011.—Batigattrp1W-Attartsi . v
ma. by WXT‘gilsu.z. is-szurraigui
PIIILAbigLPHIA.
nmmer feearts.
•
TRENTON
-• , NEAR UTICA, NEAV — YORIti
- The Selesorittir Worms the traiolliog entllo thet WO'
1301 EL at the above plane 11 tipoo ter the reeeptlen of
Vietters, end can be reached' Ram Elide within in hone,
by idtfmad.
The' onlone and tocsaritio minor,' of these late le.
so onlvereraly known that the nnderalfa#d deem!' It tintr
totoeleery to assure his enesta thet the entablhhed re.'
.putatlon of hie bowie will to ernetatoed: ae.lt has here!,
itirpte been for the last twenty fite_vlate r e. - • •
• `. '"c '; • AL IdOORB, Firsoprietorf ,
,1415421,1 , . , ' '
. . .
assfp about Rooks and Authors.
ithtfa,nf the - meet influential, powerful, and
eilg*al Matting thelivjng authors of France is
404 Mrounnir, the historian. Several years
agovai book of his; called "Priests, Women,
'Odd ~-P aniilloa ". strongly antagonistic to the
„Jests 8, excited great attention In this country,
-atitiril' as throughout:Europe. • Leaf January
-hi
,•Plibllshed a volume called - (;L'Amonr,"
Width instantly obtained notoriety and fame in
~liallee. A translation, by Dr.-J. W. Petuxn,
et New York, has just heon published by Stem
*fatitrrox, andla - stirring , the dry leaves of
Mtibism, favorable , and adverse, throughout
; the-#tilon. We, too, desire to say our say
1
trpeitiiit, but shall not do this until tomorrow,
wliefr, in-a _biographical notice of .M. Macao,
•i. ill - literary and social career, we -eau most
;fitlykreVlete his latest mad, whataome may call,
‘1 ie.?iietAlidartnitik-booki,,--14..Xthe greatest`,
iyr-o6kut i tionil work of the decade, fell'iar-,edo,
) - iiionee, paradoxes, and'truths.
- .; The .last' -chapter of, 4 1 Tho Virginians,"s
,4,---, - .
dattlniblished in Ilarper'sFATagazOle fur-Lily,.
Ater :educes Dr. JOHNSON; in the year 1760-1,,
iiiii iliesent at an -entertainment. This is a,
stike: BoswgraYslayii that - Joni-nem did not,
*004) the title of -Doetor Of Laws until 1765,
~,r , ...the, Uniiierilty- of-Dublin conferred it
;-, ;--
-, 11 on, him, and his own Alma Mater, Oxford,
. , „ ,
''.,llittfilat 'make ' him , Dockir of Civil - Law until
~ 11,7,gi _ p.... adds, ;by the way; that ho
4iivol. misnined the title, and wo know (from'
13piiiiiii.t.) that when ho had to write in the
{hind person; it was always as " Mr. Johnson."
~- Mr.::4 l ; o Bctenriv, therefore,, errs hi calling
,Ijita t , Pocter Johnson I've years before' he
",;,j4d fiiy, right fe the title. Letting this pass;
, Oe - p)i'ayeslo Show how
,Mt. Titiciftnitke has
wilway,,, COUNTY,w,grox rs - pgiNoi;, ; ,:it!ade,7oinetieri el:Anna three grammatical mis:
.i r tid beetiedu
,j., Ps., willoyen on, the eih:or-d-11706; 1666 , 4R16 , f'.4444, - J ,IR i s tito inceeeding seetences: - One Mr:
Owe 'being lemma ea the betake or•shermeals orenk , ,- 4 , .. ,• . ' -
a beautiful stream or pure Spring retet z -and it effordli "0 441 3-AN/ .an , I r ish' aFt°ll wife
- Steil ill Trinity College. Dublin:lC(lla JOHN:-
tine - amusement In riding In. home and defog; end , Itige
mainety,ii not to - be 'eurriehilad in'the Ste% •- 'Witt lie: --..1 • , . , 1 •- . -- , • - 1 • • -
beenttfarmeriatetae that sm•rened us 4 l.litereseelsolie; ' - . o9er,,aftettlinner, and is time answered by the
of tlie•moet `healthy !Petitions in Pennaybranin, being ' - l'eut Wan '-, " Sir, you arc rude!" bawls the
teitiraly free from any epidemics Its waters trawl -,_ :,,_ ,
be eurpmpod-Jor :ba th ing, srrwellee drinking. 'l'l2;* -Dotter. c , - You nro unaccjitainted with- the
see' meeeeE'; ePe f elge 'or dtB,er kinds.--th 6 'N'ir't Alist principlei of Polltenesa Which is courtesy;
springs, being of gruel ectereperetereateet te more, ,„ •E . - , , , . r
eke heating et Aster for Hie in A si delicate, persons, its. „t ladies. Raving received a Universjty 'edn:
caliper/Aura being 67 degrees. 'Hestedlisths iiirtirg •;-,-,
.;i '• , , •:-, .• '• ,
rn iHß e4 ,„ L e fflll rid s i n ia t c; p n ri t 's bl 'ed of :t p li i t i t i t iic y' n o e u s ' s. h „ ave N.l i: w o ,, t
P had oole lt er '"4 •ln ni flol . .X. T ne h l e tter. h ile ing pl i ritto unft il s on li s d i ' s P fo l , ,_ d r,"7.lf '
dies , and Gentlemen . -All permute ,leating-,rhiled*.i. i., .•.- . , .
Wear Baltimore in the morning tnips,endisamlng to 1-.., 'is, pturpl nominative cannot agree with a
ifarriaburgrtkenaa to ; Car li sle, arrive ;Deb* by ti} , --
8 ular .verb, Jjamstix 'could 'net have said
o'clock, and there take
,etagea, to the Springs, satiric t l / 4
.„-, . ~ . , , i , ~.... , . „ , ,
14 time lee tea, A fine band of inttsl,l 'bee, ibien,ln 17 0 prat princims, Is. .ei eXt ;he filhonld
W4E1, 4 11; 1 4; t o tag u r ta e Zta d b'i l i h .';',l' l ,r ° ": 13 :- , -.;. thave need the werds 'd a University," but
t
'driller 'sweater/ 41011 pleats ern on the _reformat**. "! -.. 4 4 , " - l oft ,. ii,,
as Well ' ell other4ininsaments. . Any 'pilaf' wishing. -ff,iiiu Univeraity."" Lastly, JOHNSON would not
doubtincas TuAtakiiiiir does for
eetow;oredtbrosi the.undersigned.• dlorAdlog,,,g7 , ger 4
weak; (Mildred lad o•7 7 eutil lis!r Pride. , ' f• ',"' ' '4• ita; whether Maass' or himself had been '
, .
H. n •Irrisit:4 -., -- •'t • : • •
- - : ii ii m i - mcoxs ~ •
~, . - ~,..1..! ..;pAtO . at, f' a
_lln!versity." These three
f taxenex NORTON; E 54 .4 Ille : 404-Routh'7l.l7 T ll 4 4tklegs of Prisclatep head occur in four
Street'
ter J. L 80111221ILY; 8. W. corner exciptrp ui, ,'..ooCiitivo lines I
'W . Pi ll.B.neirits,oeNew York announce Save
xna,ow innate: • . ' 1 •.l -;
. Mr. I. A. OititBWALL; 728 WALLACE 'Street. • ~: !- . 2 ir Th e ,. . , ~,
!Music P. SEMLER &11110THEII,114 Nett& &XL*: .112) interns nog works for ulna ediato publication.
Street. , , , • - - ' ,- J018.11 3 - ;, 4 - idong these are The Preach Revolution of
'•,'-'7`fiffi,asilowed.in - the light Of Republican In:
istitktions, by Jona S.eatt Q. Anson: Some
Ylhlipters of this; ithistrate , have appeared in
1 414,per's Aiagazile; Amer Wit and 1
Mu
-6t,-, illustrated by. J. Ifillareix ; the 'first
-lcilume of the' Life Of Talina,,ifianting, D. D.,
yids son ; Dr. CHARLES MACKAY'S 'MIA , and
-• (Orly in America, or Sketches of a Tour in
''.o United States., and ; Canada in 1857-8;
..''`after The - matey, or.A' Peep at the Past, by.
1 ' fila, 41e of "Allen Prescott ;" The Ordeal of'
141C-Feverel, by Owen Meredith (Ito
aticliWaii; son ,- of ' the greet noVellet) I .
Olifiel'-Hoek,
.itt-'colleetion of Tales,' by
-...:„,..-" -,-, ' ~,„‘ ;,.,,.:-:;,--4-4,.w.r-,:,
.::''ir- , . ill:: : -.-- a:'-'. --- Alieen'a :History of
flibpej,from the, fall of NAronson, in 1815,
ti>' , ilie - fieetesiolbelfiLtims NAmMsott, In 1852,
with a copious Index to• the four foltimes;
rikildeti 'contiln the whole Comprised in 'the
agthitt edition of eight volumes' octavo;
•airily, a new edition of Amami's History 'of
t
Propel, first aeries, with Analytical Index.
; The same publishers have just issued a ii
'bran; edition, illustrated by Morris, of Miss
Minima's' i , John Halifax, Gentleman." It
would pay, we think,,to reproduce the whole
lof her, novels in the ' same . acceptable form.
They have published, complete in three large
Eio. volatiles, Or. CODLARD'S famous 'Dic
tionary of - Practical Medicine, edited by
Dr. fliaancs A-. LEA, which is a cycloprudia
of Medical' Science' and Practice; the con:
eluding volume of AGNES STRICKLAND'S
Qtmens of Scotland; Aramitn*s Greek Testa:
'pent, vol. 1, containing the Fou,r Gospels;
and new editidris of Dr. THOMPSON'S admira
ble, book on Syria and- Palestine, entitled
"The Land and the Book," and of CARLTLE's
Frederick the Great.
PETERSON & BROTHERS have published the
,"two ,last novels of G. P. R. JAMES :—:', Lord
Montagia's Page," in which Cardinal RICHE-
;LIU figures-largely, and Meeh more favorably
thin noveiists and historians usually represent ,
`111th; and:" The Cavalier," In which the Page,
lof the former Story is brought hack to Bug
;lish ground, during the, Civil War, and Caou: ,
;WELL, the Proteotor, is brought in, also more
ladvantageously than usual. The battle of
Worcester', Which made CROMWELL Mister Of
lEnkland, is spiritedly sketched. On thewhole,
'these two novels are far above ' the common
;nil ? aid UDR among the best over written by .
JAMEN. _ •
VVBITE . MOUNTAINS, NET RAMP=
BOWL
The PRUITILIO - HOUS/1. , and. IJLUMIII EOTTh
In the IIRANOONI& b10T011,.. are now open for Vlet
itigne Wow-are of the Bret elan, and hhint
become the revolt of aooompllshed inarlste. They ern
Bee toffee epert, on a ; delightful: road, and attuged
amidst the boldeet and grandest of mountain ieerforY.,
They commend the flneat'ilewe ni,refonste LAVAY.
.STT.II, iqry, CANNON', ind hilfiVirego
oWit; and fifty mile,' dowo r theYilley." ZOIEW LAltle;
PRDPILII LASE; - the PLUME, the POOL; the .11.0 I N,
the Oftl OPAL On.l3CAMilonnEthe- COLOSS PRO-
IaL/11,` or OLD Mate Or TUB MOUNVAIN,,,{* 4I 4_
,within a few mina*.
,
The oaten=' of, She mountain!, passe?, the
,cfrice,.i:
; And
_gorgtia, the exturstimi setittil
• '
rijandet
of acfate FiCirill; RC fair oafs 'dooline *kat'
ibliantfoiiiton: • '•r •
The Hotels ate kept' by gentlemen itteat.SlOrt• •
enee - hdiesping , arst.ehise himeen,lind who
no;pflpgifit ettentlotri td theft gueete. 4ottilitt htiTist:
Piilltdoiphislo"*. if 4 eta retell • thi-11.14411 ,
1,01381 ifs the "Wilieeitei ~
end U4'1161,1014
r qopeetiondlifontreel Italtratklai PAmenth,.the reit
aftereoqa (6611740t - 1F tailee by ai4l,e),
-O. & dlailroad ' Littleton, 004
liti.go(only eleven miles) to the ra0P.04101181;
the - - lame Mee: From ritegvii rst/e, ids 'BroPY * 4‘ .
QOebsoi, and Durham, to the Alpine Glen, and Gibbets,
notate ; It is a plessent dale Marrone Gibbs , / to thaw ]
tomes. Malls strive' and depst,tdai)yt
Past Office addreen, ,PROIILS 1.1.011811 pr,,P011111.11,'.
1.10th8ll;F itAFT9II County, N. U. ,
' HIRAM HELL, lif ensger,ot the Pipfty, gritnli - r t
.11101 MID TOT; Maneger•otlitePlanyollon444 l
Yon the, gLUMEI and 711A140014AcIf0 1111..0.:,
10101. co. . . • , •
MOUNT HOLLY SPRINGS HOTEL, ; ,a
411017 NT MOLLY
i The sobieriber, lets of , the " Mauston lionee, , .! Mt;
emoreepeetridly Infertile lila. Monde, and tbe„ PyUI
generally, ,that he, has leeett the 114T,1.4110,41.
H lb? otel, et popular
• - )211gORT:-Y, • -
actuated at the gap of shofrotl .
tram filarthele, Prams. , : ' R '2? • ! , ,P
Woo of climate, pure dry ittooliphets,..A44 ,
elear, sort spring water. tiObitiT n A
oL4x-nuakes
oanteat he *smiled; Its water Is elloslobly adept¢d far
bathing. and the peculiarly, invigorating ,Itinospbarie
rend mitt highly heoeflolet to lossalds
The romantic; &tree and wales( or pis
siaoaivaln rOrsliffirtipegimplot
It tit tif- soivenlezitiiixiiiiii from , Baltisiteni, Plitterdil;•
We, end other points, tett there are,dallt, Falb • trek .
look of ibwie plales - - • -
Thetlonee Nes, opeued on-the leth r ' ILLY lietrood,'
odottoutiopestdurio% the 'esti notitag*
¢e wilt( 04 !Art °tilt* pnipitetqr;,,t4,enell
}Lo mitt' Womb* rat t pi+k thsigitifijkl6:l_
nip* nn.srrinl i cle, miff Osi t
10 - 017ctiefiliita$ to the $ prism . ' 6 .
AAdreas,PAM:AO), 6.1
lambi Itoily Ppiings, CakaliErbad
TRUM—Board by thcinniglo..day, $1 28 t. Board, by.
the week, V L Ohildrea and Nails', halt . „:
1515.1.2 t
1859.
OHIO WRITE SULPHgIi
OPEN TO VISITERR BEBEINO REALM toR'PLEX:'
13M1N . , PRO t alum/ UT TO. 00TOBEE
,ACCOMMODATIONS SOS °VAR GOO V10X1748-.
TEM OHIO WITTE fitTLYITUR sentiies
red in Delaware °Minty, ISmiles north of °Mambas,
(the capital or Ohloa on the &WM river, 10 palm from
Delaware, 6 miles from the White 6alptsur station, oa
the Npringdeld, Mt. Vent:ea, aid Pittsburg Railroad,
Sod 10 miles from Moment Valley . or Springs station,
on the Columbus, Piqua, said Indiana Railroad.
The medicinal qualities of them Sinless are tumnr
teased by those of soy other Mineral Waters In the
lifted States.
lioritonni t or other Information, eadrass
aNDIIIIW -WILSON .7a
White Hulphor byrioge, Ohio.
"W , Init 817GeflUE AMD
BRATS SPRINGS. at DOIIBLING GAP, PA ,
are' now open, and are *my of team via Gerrfeburg;
theme on the Cumberland Valley Road, to Newrille ;
.thence 8 milea staging to the Springs, where you et•
rive at 6P. fit same day. Bray arrangement le emu
'plots for Velum: , Board per west, por day, 61.26.
Iteduetton for families. ,References—San. Steel, Dior.
:ton altddiohard, Bandon & CO., EV. Janney, Jr.,
Co' ,„
Reference to the Acetysto of tits Waters, Jas. ,0
Booth, Aurdittent Professor of tJ 8. Mint.
Address riewirttle P. 0., 80OPT da' 001ALR,
'3.7.30* . •Proprietors.
I NITED STATES HOTEL,' Lb tr
....../.11AANOH,` N. J.—The snbeiriber takes this
.method of 'informingbia friends and nie public, that on,
and efter,JUNll 20th hie house will be opou for the
reception of sruesti,.when every stf..•rt will be 'made ter
:please those who may favor him. , The bongo is plea.
gently situated on it tine bluff, with ; lawn in front., A
`full 'lowa the mean. good roads, staidlop, &e., make
it as attractive as any house to the L eollotry. The COIr;
mtinication is accessible by two daily lines from foot of
Watuut.street wharf, cre: 6A. AL, nod 2P, 31. ,
Referance—Grendy, Warden, 4. Co , 209 .Obettscit,
Bisset. D . 'OWN idANEII4
Jet-2mit Proprietor:
QE A MA. T Et I N MANSION
N.." POI:1E10, foot of Pennsylvania areoub, ATLANTIC
CITY, is NOW OPEN for guests, -Poe convenience of
arraogemenr, contiguity the „be a ch, aunt ittraotive
uses of the adjacent gronnba; thla LIAM is , tunivallefl.
The proprietor • hae spared' no Feiss In meting
,thLe
Hotel ail that could. be desired by rattan. -
jel-bot " N. LE .
CA. ILI* SLE w.HIT E SULPHUR
}Wattled, 011610 . ERGAND 00., PA. ' •
This favorite and fashionable Watering Plane, plea.;
eantl.e lasted near the hue of the D ine Motintalu,.
fodr miles from Carlisle. Pa., will be open for slaters
the 20th of JUNE The vatiite of these Oellogc
highly linpiegnated with Minerals, and ferdrinking
And bathing are not surpiened by any Einiihur Springs
In the country. The.bundinge ate gell ventilated, aut
era aurrotindod by 1,200 feet of baideniec • The scenery
leaf the grandest Itituliand the acoommodatlons for the
reereation, health, and comfort of vieltera atirtmeire
uptionable. aped fare, :'pleaseet drivati,llatr music,
billiard', bowling saloon; and other games, anthlrtims
amusements tonally found at Watering Plane ran be en,
Joyed hue. Visitors leaving Philadelphia of thiltintoia
In the morning train arrive at the Spline at Splits%
P. M. Daily mall. ger further Information edam%
4 410
OARLIELH BPRINOF, pa:
Daralikacies.—John O. D 6 Costa, itq Wiliam A.
Rhodes, Rag , Thomas C. Percival, , Phlisaelpbla;
IClFkland, lasq „R. B. Hulling, lialtimoie; 7topob
Gideon, Req., Itlattard Wallaak, Wask B icpf4c,
D. C • t0v0.161
THE.., UNITED STATES nong.,,' SAT
ATL&NTIO CirCY, be opened fdr the re.
teptloxt of Thrltera on the let of JUNII. Tito lion 4
hie been
_thoroughly, renovated and improved, and It
atipplied with all the epplienees and OondOrtel or rif,dret
cleat lintel. 'ln addition to other improyeinOte, a
railroad bee been oonetntoted to the beaoh t ntileh
the anent; will be conveyed free of . Oars. during
bathing' hbure.
• my2o.lni CONRAD - & - JEU NKM •
r"IIIRATA 3110IINTAIN - SPRINGS,
'
tANO&OTpI6 COUNT , rEtitiA: -
This levoratetatabliallnent will be opened lby the
ant, of JUNIA Minded on the Ilphrata Ridge, 60
Juliet Neat or Phliadeiphir, 18 eolith Of Reading, 13
north of huiniaster, 40 wort of Harrisburg, kid having
the advantage of the purest soft water, every, variety
of baths, the site elevated to 1,200 feet *bole water
level, with graded and shady walks i n dense, - forests,
and the most extensive landaspe scenery Su the Union, •
It is not stir passed as a summer residence,
Acoorcriodatione for 400 perards,'lns'proved Stabling,
and good carriage houses ; also a good .took of livery
homes and carriages, with - amneemente, A good band
of music, billiard tables, ten pm alley. It le easy of
access from all the above points by ralM,Md and coaches •
Who proprietor spares nothing to make it a home
place for comfort and health.
Woo farther particulars, see circular*, to be had i by
applylog to Joseph B. Myers . Third, amt Wine streets;
JIM& 0, Rade, He Chestnut street ,• or to the Prude.
tor • •
JOSEPH SotuGuAonsn;
Xpbrati Post Office,
mylB.3m Lancaster County, Penna.
SPRINGS.—The under
signed takes pleasure In turtiounitlng that elm ban
rented from the proprietors these celebrated gptings,
and,trants that, trona her tong experience, and baring
seriurrd the service': of Mr A. W: ROY/ AVM, and with
prompt attention' totpew her gusaho will
eathfaatlon rll
with their patronage. Her terms are very low J and, In
thus reducing the'prien'of boarding, elie hopes to plane
it Within the power of coop eurnnumesorter to again
Indulge in their usual recreation. -Persons leaving the
,city by the. morning triton wilt be enabled to arrive At
the springs the same day;•by the May Gettysburg or
Ohemboiebarg, where coaches wilVha: in Attendance to
*pussy passengers to the Springs. The Beeson will
commence on the Ist of Ague . The taunt are as fol
low.:'
26
: Hoard per day, - , sl ...
4 ,Do .. - week . , 3 01
Waldron under 12 years, and eiltvsats; bill' pries
-All cosoiduialoations addressed to the undersigned, - im
dauwbersborg , will meet with prompt Mtintion,
- - toy 12'thetnyir '' * HANNAH 31, DOODAD.
TO3BESE. , =-410 boson' gorkinaer•Connty
osemoe in dors.- 0.,0. OADLIO & 00., AWE'
Pmttemot 4 09 g 0 0 T. tteaf, , . So: •
JOE 23. 1.849.
P.VIIIIRSDAY, JANE 23, 1859.
WO notice that "The Battles of America
'by /Sea and Laud," written by Dr. RORElt:r
fTortga, illustrated by ALONZO OLIAPPEL, (this
!printed °RAPIN on the cover,) and published
tby YIRTUR, EDRONS, , ,,St c0., -- of New York,
;has reached the fifth number: It is an accu
rate as well as a well-got-up work, and
opens a Wide field to the talents of author
god artist.
'ln blue and. gold, we have the Poetical
Writhe of EMMA ALLAN Pon, with a portrait,
published by REDFIRLD, of New York. There
in a - brief memoir of this unfortunate and un
it:l:fated-Man of genius, which gives, not at nil
forbearingly, the leading incidents of his per
;Muni and literary career. Ile left behind him,
'are told, the amplesAmaterials for the none
positiott-of his own re
qtimit theitirremnants of his existence were
Cain:Mid toDoctor Cthisivorm, a gentleman(?),
with whom he had quarreled, and bad iam
peened. In his lectures. Doctor GRISWOLD in
a generous spirit accepted the charge, and
produced, Iront the papers entrusted' to him,
the best biography of the strange being, that
has been published." 1 his statement conveys
a - wrong Impress - len. The very reverse of
generous" was the spirit in which GRISWOLD
°goaded his memoir of Poe—ll much better
"man than himself, in ninety-nine points out of
a hundred. If over Gassworm's life be writ
ten, in such " a generous - spirit" as his
own, when damning P.m moral character'
of POE, it Will be a book to . --slnulder at.
This edition of Peg's poetical works is
neatly got up, and "the pbrtrait is aline like
ness. But we doubt whether, strictly speak
ing Poe can be considered a Poet. Of English
prose he was thorough master, using the lan
guage with
, wonderful acuteness, skill, and
force. Bnt, among all the verses which ho
.wrote, only four are entitled to bo called
Poetry, These are that remarkable lyric
called "The Bells," in which the sound so
curiously and felicitously assists and developes
the sense : the quaintly-nnanufactured ballad
of "The Raven," which' is as mechanically
as poetically constructed ; and the two poems„,
dissimilar in their passionate expression, gc To
Helen" and "Annabel Leo. " One swallow ,
does not make a summer, and four small can
ticles in a volume do not make a Poet. Mr.
Poe's ill-natured biographer, in this volume,
says that a false rhyme 4 i threw him into en
ecataoy of passion." Yet Pon's verses aro
crowded with bad, even with Cockney rhymes I
Ile makes " The Twins of Leeds " rhyme with
cc every reader." Ile makes linger rhyme with
sink her : he has kissed her and vista : he
has valleys and palace;- rode and God:; and so
on.,
,MOreover, Poe disfigured his verses by
pedantically coining' high-sounding words,
when the common English', which Was good
enoughfor SumgeSgAng and JEREMY TAILOR )
DittON and goaritayi afforded him all that
'needed for the fullest expression. l'et;with
all: these shortcomings, "The Bells," "An
nabel ,Lee," and "The Haven," will long
float upon the broad and swelling waters of
literature. In all future collections of
fugitive poetry, these
.lyrics must always
have a place. We cannot close this volume
without condemning, in the strongest terms,
the hostile and bitter spirit in which the Me.
moir of Pon, within its pages, has been writ
ten. It out-Gaiswens Garswoxn—which is
saying much. Not content with ungenerously
assailing POE ; reminding us how the living dog
insulted the dead lion, this writer goes out of
his way to insult a profession as liberal and
moral as his own—if, indeed, such a stabber of
th;s . d,ead can be called professional. He says'
ofPoe, that c! though (Wended from a family
oe great respectability; his inimediatOtiaients
.were dissolateli their , Morals; and Members
of a profession which 'Aiw.!..itr.begeti•irregli
larify of habits.'' We ask is the Stage worthy
of such wholesale . coxideinhation by the eulo
gist of, pure and amiable Gartman? fWe'say
that actors" and actreases;'•Witheitliaradier
their good deeds, ekercise: as intieiCCharity;
mental arid pecuniary, ad •the Members of
any Other profession'—the clerlialmot except='
tTri. ^ Theirregnlarify of a few doca not war:
rant the condemnation of a Ririe and bard-
IMr.ltzneratm ought not have
I.M:dished such an unprivoked and gratuitous
attack as thilh It was written, we know, by a
pereeicateninily witirPon, Willie living. Pen's
sketch of.him, in f r 'l'he Literati," wah rather
complimentary than othorWiSe, for he had no
just claims to a Melia in that temple of
criticism. . .
Letter, from New York.
rstraisivo SALES OP REAL ESTATE—THE CIERMANS
AND lIDEBOLDT-111R. BROUGRAM'S NEW DRAMA
- "IRE FOCIRTR"—GENERAL WALKER—ItE , PREA.
, DENTS AND EX•OOVP•ENOES AT ALBANY...RENE.
TOLENT PROJECTS FOR THE FIVE POINTS—NEW
STRAP FIRE•ENOINE—STRWART'S 400 CLERKS—
' PIIILAN AND . Tin TINCILIBII. IlfhladltD MAN—ITNI•
YEESITY COMMENCEMENT. •
dorieepotidetwie . orThe Prem.]'
' , '
• I , ,Tinv , Yortx,•Jgne 21, 1859
Real estate ()outlines to.he the point of atten
tion, with, ospitatiete, who distrust the,oonstantly
flootuating value of stooks, A sale of an unusual
character was made by 'nuoti4 last Week t iir
the estateof a wealthy bachelor, 'Jelin Crihvring,
whci lieu a fc:tobuying enter Idle, na nat
ter where loafed; and was Indifferent as to whe
ther they were improved or not. It , is estimated
that his estate' has •quadrupled in value since he
began purohasing„. and this figuree I give you,be
lqw show that real estate was pavers° high in New
York as now, and, the eagerness to boy never,
greater than Is witnessed daily' at the real estat e
sales at theXerohants' zeharge, It Will; per.
baps, 'interest some qt,*our iirotertY•hoiders to see
the figures brought at'the Thwlng sale :
corner of - Second avenue and Fourteenth
street; $9,800 ; a email lot on Third avenue, (22x
45), near Twenty-first, street, $4,250; a lot. on
Third avenue, - near Trenty-second street (22 Or
100), $5.000 ; a corner of Tenth avenue and T Wen
ty-third street, (24 8x100),- $6,1Q0; a „corner of
Third avant!) and Twenty:ninth street. (24.8/x95),
$O,lOO a 'earner of Tenth ittentte 'and Thirty-se-.
coed street, (18 feet wide )by 100 'deep), $2.900; a
corner of-Third avenue and Fortieth street, (248,
x 100), $8,000; a corner of Eleventh avenue - and'
Forty fifth street. (25 I/1100)33.150; a corner of
Third avenue and Fortyeighth invest, (25 4:90 3),
and an adjoining lot on the Third avenue, (not
a corner), $6.000 each • a eorner lot 'of Third
avenne and Fortyninth street; (23x100)„$0,-,
101); two oorners of Seventh- evenue „ end,
Fifty fourth etrnet, (25.52100) ,$5 054, each; a
lot corner of Fourth 'avenue and "Flftyaitireb th
street, $3,800;:a corner orNinth avenue andFifty
fourth atreet, woo ; Inside lots on Ninth avenue,
52,025; a corner of Third avenue and Sixty:aeon/1
street; s4,6oo—inside lots, $2,850 each ; a corner
lilt on Third avenue and Eighty-fifth street,(fork
ville,) ss,oso—inside lots, $3,050 ; lots on NinotY
second and Ninety-third emote, between Fourth
and Fifth avenues, from $1,200 to $1,353 each ;
Amite A iota at Harlem, between One Hundred
and Seventeenth and Ono Hundred and Eighteenth
streets, (less than: full sise,) from $575 to $215
gjaat ' '
t. a none nNln avenue and fitxtv.ilret,
selling for $50,000, and ten lots on Eighty-first
Street, near Broadway, for $20,000,
The Germans are making arrangements for
honoring the memory of Humboldt on - the 11th of
July. It is to be done on a very large scale.
A large and intellectual audienee assisted last
evening at the production of Mr. Brougham's new
drams of ‘, Art and Artifice,” 'wherein -was
sketched 'the upshot of Quentin Matey's aban
donment of the blacksmithing business and be
coming a painter, for the purpose of winning the
daughter of On old - Butch burghera humbnrgber
—named Von Twill, who took it into his bead that
she should only be wed by the beet.painter of Ant
werp The play is full of beautiful thoughts-and
beautiful language, and was received with the
trarmeat expressions of approval. I. think this is
the eighty-ninth successful play Mr. Brougham
baa put upon the stage.
The municipal fathers have resolved that the
oily shall stand $5,000 expense in the way of fire
works and other patriotic combustibles for " the
day we celebrate."
General Walker, the "man of destiny with gray
eyes," is still sejonrning quietly up-town. The
quitnunos are exercised as to what he is about,
and profess to snuff blood in the dietance. she
latest rumor is that he has drummed up a new
tinny, and wit be off for Nicaragua again next
week. '
Ex-President Van Baran, ex Oov. Seymour, and
-a few other ,palltioal notabilities, aro at Albady.
Of oolirso, there's nothing going en.
I learn from a publio-spirited and benevolent
'gentleman residing in the Forth. ward, (Five
,Pointe,) that the extent to which drunkenness pre
vails in that locality can scarcely - be' believed.
'lt has been easertlthied that there le one grog-shop
'for, every four men resident in the ward. There
are over five handred,places where drunkenness'
'and the brothel hold out their arms-to entice the
youth, who, from force of circumstances, are
obliged to live in Its alleys and dens. Efforts are
making, headed by Mr. Appleton, the publisher,
'Mr.' Beach, of tbetTan, Mr. Brace, the philanthro
pist, and several wealthy merchants, to open a so
cial room, provided with a library and reading
*rem!' under the charge of a superintendent, who
will able sell oeffee and-other slight refreshments.
Lectures and entertainments are also contemplated.
A new steam fire-engine was .sneeessfelly ex
perimented •with on Monday last, showing - the
:vest advantage of steam- over - hand machines
for contending against fire. This machine was
manufactured by the Manhattan Company, and
her performance bee never been equalled by any
engine ; of double her weight, which _ii 5,000
pounds. She discharged 600 gallons of water 'per
minute. Steam was raised in. eight minutes; and
she-threw a stream 206 feet high. The machine
is eleven 'feet In_ length. will be, run without
horses, brie one of Lee A Lartied's patent annular
boilers, giving 225 feet of fire outface; with only
1.30 pounds weight, and an effective force of up
wards of 40 borse-power.
An article in one of the Sunday papers, devoted
to Stewart's great dry goodsery, states that four
hundred men and boys are employed to run that
groat machine.
Among Men of the man and one there is high
confab relative to the proposed , $20,000: billiard
match between Phelan and the laments English
player, Roberta. The,preliminaries are now toeing
nrranged.:i Mr.- Phelan's'friends are -understood
to he prepared tp bank him as freelyrts ,they, dAd
in the -match with .§oerattor. The friends of
Robnrtsletb said to' be equally plucky, and ready
wltenn indefinite amount of silver and, gold.
The Commencement at the New York Culver-
City opens on Sunday evening, when the' sermon
'before the Youtsg ' Men's Christine Association of
the University ,will, be preached by Dr. Clarke.
Cn th'e everiintof the 27th the anniversary of tthe
EnclelanSimiety will be held, at which the Rev.
Dr. Theiffpson will orateo and Prof. Piero., of
Rutgers Institute, will posate. On the 29th, the
Phi Beta Kappa will anniversary, and be address
ed by' Dr. Hickok, irioe president. of .Union Col
lege, and on the -same the Commencement exert.
'oleos will by hobrat Niblo's Saloon, at 101 A.'hl.
The Rights of Naturalized Citizens.
A correspondent of the National Intelligeneer,
who is befogged in the discussion on this subject,
writes to that paper in the folloWing strain :
I. have rend with attention the brief letter of .
Mr. Secretary Cass to-Mr. Le Clare, on the tub•
jeot of the rights of naturalized citizens of the •
United States in revisits to their native countries,
also your ,interesting historical editorial on the,
subject tome two days since; and, further. the ex-,
planatory pieta in the official paper of this morn-!
ing, with the accompanying letter of the Seoretary•
of State to a gentleman in Now Orleans. Not
withstanding all the light I have thus sought, I
am still puzzled to understand how a man shall
not be a oitizen of the United States in Paris or•
Vienna, though he bo •at Now York, Loudon, and
Petersburg; nor how a citizen of the United
States can anywhere be premed Into a foreign ml-'
litary service • nor why a citizen of the United
States cannot Iraverse the world in that capacity
with all the privileges and respoot that belong to
it ; ner how a man can owe allegiance—or, to be
prooteo, military servico—to two countries at the
same time; nor how a temporary change of habl•
tation can affect the Mama of a person in the
country where he is domioiliated, and is a citizen
or subjoot ; nor how ono can be a citizen, yet not
a citizen; citizen for 8011115 purposes, and not for
all ;in one place, and not in all places. No doubt
it is all right. It must bo so, since so many able
pens assert it. But west tro fi n for ,
PLAIN JOHN SMITH.
The Italians in Paris are in the highest spirits
at the allied snooess. Those, says a correspondent,
with whom I have conversed etpress themselves
thoroughly Whined about the disinterestedness of y
tbo French Emperor in his present ardrus Under
taking. Theyfeel no,uneasiness about the stories
which impute to him,intentions to carve out thrones'
for Prince Napoleon and Murat. I have been told.
that the former before he left Paris repeatedly as•
eared several Italian's,. in the most unmistakable
terms, that nothing would Induce him . % eauVssa
for or to accept the government of. arty, Italian
State, and that. it. was his -firm determination to
live to Frai3ors and remain a Frenohlaire. •
TWO CENTS.
THE BATTLE OF MAGENTA,
In addition ta the accounts Vora Italy, which
we published yesterday,. we now append the
official reports of the truffle Of Magenta contained
in the foreign journals received by the Persia.
They contain a great deal of iiiportint in
formation :
OFFICIAL ACCOUNTS: -
[From the Paris Monitenr, rune 10 J -
IIEADVAntEng OP SAN Malmo, June 5.
The French army, assembled around Alessan
driae had before itgreat obstacles to overcome. If
it had matched on Piacenza, it would have had to
lay siege to that place, and to oven for itself, by
main force the passage of the Po, which at this
spode no t-lees - than 900 metres wide, and this
most difficult _operation was to be executed in
presence of an enemy's army of more than 200,000
men
If the, Fauperor crossed the river at Valentla,
he would find the enemy concentrated on the left
bank at Mortara, and he could not, attack him Ott
this petition unless by separate ,columns, rumen
wiring in the midst of a country intersected by.
canals and rise grounds.. There was, therefore,_
on both sides an almost insurmodtitabid obstacle ;-
the Emperor resolved to turn it, and he deceived
the Austrians by concentrating his army on the
right. and cawing it te occupy Casteggio, and even
Bobbie on the Treble.
On-the 31st °May, the,army received-the order
to marohdo the left, and orossed.the Po at Casale,.
the bridge of which had remained ircotir'posies
ion. It , immedlefely: took.. the. Vercelli , road,
where the passage'. of, the - ,Sesia' was effeoted to
Prated and rover our rapid marsh on Novara.
The efforts of the 'army were directed-to the right
on Rabbio; and two combat,. glorious, for ,the
Sardinian troops, fought on this ,side, tied also
the effect of induoing the enemy to believe , that
we were mantling on Mortara: Bat einring.this
time the French army _had, proceeded towards
Novara, and bad taken up there a'ppmtton on the
same ground Where' the Rink aharlie Albert
had foright ten years - before -There it could
make head against the enemy should he make his
appearance.
Thus this bold march bad been ioroteoted
100,000 men • eneatoped on, our right flank at
Olengo ,in front of Novara. Under these eirsum •
stances, it was therefore to the feserio that the
Emperor wee to'confide the execution of the move-
ment that took plate in the rear of the •line•of
battle.
On the 2.1 of June a division of the raiperial
_Guard•was directed to Turbigo onthe 'Ticino: and
meeting with no resistatee there it, threw across,
three bridges. . "
The Emperor, -- having- chileot s ed qfothiee that
agreed Ireabotiung hiin•that the enemy was re
tiring on the loft bank-of the river, canoed
oboe to be passed at `this spot by the army corps of
Gen. McM - ahon, %Mired next"day by.st divielon of
the-Sardinian army. - •
liardly had our troops taken• possession on the
Lombard bank when they were attnoked by an
Austrian craw 'sent - from Milan. by the - railway. -
They .repulsed _it viebarionslyAtuder the eyes of
the Emperor. ' ' • ' ' •
On the same day;Junts 2; the - division of.Eopi.
name having advanced hy the .Novera, road to
wards Milan as far as, Trecate, whence it threat
ened the bridge-head Butfalora, 'the "isnemY
eructated precipitously the entrenchment/bland
thrown up on this point, and fell hark on the left
bank. after blowing yp the stone ,bridge *renting
the titer at this spot. -, Nniertheiess.lhe etriot of •
his mining -chambers was, not 'complete, and the
two arches he' had intended, to _destroy having
merely Fnbsided, without falling to - pieties, the
thoroughfare was not interrupted.J
•The day of the 4th bed heen fired upon by the
.Emperor for talriug definitive possession of the loft
blink of the Tioino The army coitseof General
MeMahon, reinforeet by the voltigene divisiottof
the Imperial Guard, and followed by the whole
army of the King of Sardinia, was to proceed from
Turbigo to Buff-Sore and Magenta; whilst the - gps ,
nadier division of theimperial Guard *mid seine
the bridgehead of Buffalora on the left bank. and
the. army corps of Marshal .eaarobert woUld' ad
viince on the right•bankt, to pass the Thane at the
Same point The mention of this plan of -opera
tions was disturbed by some of those incidents that
in warfare muse be taken into ticeount.' The
King's army was 'retarded - itt its postage or the
river, and only one of its divisions could follow. at
a distance, the corps of Gen. Made:ton. .
The march' of' the Espinaase division sled met
with =delays, and on 'the other hand.. When - the
corps of Marshal Canrobert left Novara to-rejoin
the -Emperor. who had personally gone' to the
bridge-head of:Buffaloes, this corps found the road
so eneumbered that it could on)yreach the Ticino
rinite late, •
.
Suoh was the situation of things, and the , Em=
peter wan wilting, not without anxiety, for the
signal of the arrival of 'General MoMabon's
eorpa at Buffalora, when, about .two o'clock, he
beard, on this le_xerglusa.• • firth: of small. arms
- It -wae , the moment to imstain - it' byrtzusrobing.
on Magenta. The Emperor. immediately' des
patched Wiropffen's brigade against the formid
able positions held by the Austriane in front of
'the bridge; the brigade of.Cler followed the move
ment. The heights bordering the‘Naviglio pa large
canal) and the village or Baffaiora wero promptly
'Carried hr the spirit of out troops ; hut they then
found themselves confronting considerable muses.
whom theY could not drive back, and who arrested
their progress.
• Inithe i meantime, Marshal Canrobert's army
corps di net, appear, and, on the other hand,
the cannonade and musketry fire that had signaled
the maitre' of .General MeMahon had,completely
dossed. Nod the general's column been repulsed.,
and had the grenadier division' of the guard- to ll
Sustain' itself alone against the entire effort of the
enemy?.
It is here the proper time for explaining_the
manoeuire effected by the Austrians. When they
learned on the night of June 2d, that the French
army had surprised the passage of, the Ticino at
Turotgo, they had rapidly sent across that river,
at Vigevano. three of the tinny corps,whieh burnt
the bridges behind them 'oa the morning of the
4th they went before the Emperor to the number
of 12.5,000. men, and it was against these disPro
petticoats [weer that the grenadier division 'of
the guard, with whom was the Emperor, had singly
to contend.
In these oriticalcircumetances, G enerat Rognaud
de saint Jean d'Anaely gave proof of the utmost
energy, es also did the generals oommanding un
der big orders. The General of Division, litelli-,
net, bad two horses killed under him. General
filer fell:mortally wounded. General Witopflim
was wounded in the Lend The Commander,
Desme.and hiaudhay,, of Ilia Grenadiers, were
killed. The Zona:vas lest 200 'mein, end•the Gre•
nadlers sustained a loss molest' ennsiderable, - -
. . ,
, "At length, aftema struggle of four hours, during
whloh,Mellinet's division suf f ered without flinch
ing the attaoks of the enemy, Pleard's brigade.
'with Oanrobert atits.bead, arrived on ,the field of
battle. Shortly after appeared Vinooff 8 division.
from General Noll's norm trblohllio Emreror hnd
sent. for, end finally Begnanit'a and_Troeha's diviu
'stone of Marshal Oanzobert's eoros
. At the same time. General-Moldaboren cannon
,Were again heard in the distance._ The General's
carpe, retarded in ita march,' an lean numerous
then it ahonid have been, - bad advanced in-two'
columns on Magenta and Hoffslorn. - .
The enemy having attempted to advance be
tween these two ',limning, for the purpCse of, out
dug them off, Ode: McMahon -bad rallied the
right, with the -left towards; Magenta, and this
explains why the firing had ceased at the begin
ning et the action - on the; side - at Butralora. In
fact, the Austrians, aeeing themselves pressed en
their front and left, had evacuated the village of
Batralora; and advanced with the grenteepart of
their forces againat Moltialiort, in front of
Magenta. The
_forty:fifth regiment of .the line
rushed intrepidly to %track, the farm of ' Calcine
Nueva, which is before the village, and Which was
defended by two Hungarian regiments. Fifteen
hundred men of the enemy there laid down their
anal, and the flag Was taken from the dead body
of the cadonel, •
In the meantime Motterouge's division, was
Pressed hard by oonsiderable forces that, threaten
ed to separate it from Espinesse'sdivialeo— Gene ,
cal Mohiahomb ad drawn wpin'theseeend line the
thirteen battalions of the,voltigu,srs of the guard,
under the command of the brave Generat,Cameu,
wire, advancing' to this first line; suitained at the
centre the efforts of the enemy, and enabled the
divisions of-La Motterouge and Espionage to re
some vigorously the offensive.
At this moment of. a 'general attack, General
Anger, commanding the artillery of the second
earns, placed, in battery on the line of the rail
way forty fiel&pleceg, whioh; taking the Austrians;
as they were defiling in Oast disorder, in' flank
and athwart, made a frightful carnage, amongst
Plenty .
I The combat at Ilthsenta was terrible. The one"-
' my defended this:viiiage with obstinacy. On both
sides
• itOwears tr fe o l o t p t s h
t a o t o
w h a o ' ns t e h l7Y ke h y ob o s f e,
tlinedpopsalt
more than 10 000 Austrians' ho'Cs de combat
General McMahon made about ,5.000 prisoners,
among whom were an entire regiment, the Second
Chaereurs u Pled, commanded by Oolonel Harmer.
glut the General's corps itself suffered much ; 1,500
of his men were killed or, wounded. In the at
tack on the village, General Egpinasse and Lieu
tenant Proldefend fell mortally wounded:' Like
them, Colonel' Drouhot, of the sixty-fifth of the
line,. and Colonel Chabriere, of the *mond Foreign
Regtment, fell at the head of their troopa.
On the other side, the divisiOna Tinoy and
vaultße
a performed prodigies of valor, under the
orders of Marshal Caurobert and General Niel.
Viney's division, which left Novara in the morn
lag, had only just arrived at Treoate, whore it
was to bivouac, when it was sent for by the Em
peror. It advanced (ti pas de course) as
far as Pont of Magenta;: driving the enemy from
his positions and taking more than1;000 prisoners;
but, becoming, engaged with superior forces, at
,austained severe loss; eleven of its officers were
killed and fifty ivotinded ; 650 sub-officers and
soldiers were put hers. de rembat. The 85th of
.the line especially auffered ; its commanding °filar
was killed fighting bravely at 'the head of his re-,
iiment,' and the other superior' officers were
wounded. General 'Martimprey was struck by a
ball as he was loading his brigade.
The troops of Mantel Canrobert also enstained
'r mretable loss. ColOnel de .Sennevllle, the chief
of his staff, was killed at his side:Co lonel Char-
Her, of the Ninetieth, fell; Mortally Wounded,
struck by five Valhi, and several officers of Re
nault's division were placed'; hors de corailad,
while the villageof Petite di Magenta was taken
eaten times In suet:medal.
Finally; about half past' eight in the evening,
the. Prenoll'army remained molter of the field of
, battle,- and the enemy withdrew, leaving in our
hands four guns, of which two
two were nby the
- Grenadiers ir the Guard, liege,ta ke
.and seven
l'aeosand —prisoners.' The number of Austrians
- Wooed hors de combat may be eatimated - Jit
about
.21000. On the held of battle 12 000 mnsketsand
4.1,000 knapsacks have been pioked up
'•The Abortion • - corps engaged agair at were
• those o f oh m ,bel, , ,Sohwartrenberg cud
vonteestein. Field Marshal Gyulai commanded
In chief. '
Taus army nays. after leaving Atessandriath
rlllied haa delivered three 94109,1%m
Nonfat TO CORRXSPONUENIFS,
„OoniesixtftV *-'l3f.
to pled the folleistinirtilatt ”
eonEveryunnuieatton Tenet 'be Isiourpirdid by Mr
. . ,
=tie of the writer. ' In Order:l4'lmM ecteretineektu
the tYPograPhi, but`ene side ofthe sheet ehnuld be
written upon.
We shall be greetli r obiived to gentlemen hi 'WSW'
nate, sad other States, for eoatrlbeitioas efsfili eat.
currant news orpie fLv la their parthmla loeaUtls i s
the resources 4*lthie idiTottading Gauntry, the iseseeM •
of popolation, of say tieoraultioa that wilt betateieet
.
lie to the peers], roeder. - . ,
I battle. cleared Piedmont of the 'Aitetritanit,
sad
opened the gates of Milan.. dine the battlerof
Montebello the Austrians have . lost 20,000 meta,
killed or wounded, 10,000 Prism/0M and IT guns.
' = AUSTRIAN, ACCOUNT- - -
The following,teleumu, bag been reeelsend
Vienna from Count Von Granne,Fint Adjutant--
Generr.l of the Emperor of,Anstina: _
Yterine, Monda.T;4 4ll6 0- 1 0 'f o P.
The battle fought in the neighborhood of Ma
genta, on the 4th inst., was exceedingly fierce and
tabiody, and lasted until dusk: - 'The attack' of the
enemy, which was Made in the forenoon at Turbi
bo and Buffalora, -Was at first directed against two
rigades of the let army corps, under Lieutenent.
General Count Clate.- The bet/saes in.questien
were subsequently reinforced by three hrigideiref
the 2a (Prince E. Lieektenstelier)'and,Reiedianh'e
division of thejtli (Baron Zobel's) armycorpr. • In'
the afternoon of the 14 Prince.. Schwarsenherg'a
army corps came into aeffon. - ad-the bridges at
Butralora and the village °Magenta, Were some
trines in the enemy's binds andeometimmaimours.
,In the meaning of the oth - oar left wing was ••
again engaged In the neighborhood of Magenta,
but detailed reports on the gabject are still want.
The enemy made no-further. prcorest .(d.„.row-e7
nail loafer- nor) and. our, army took.np :Hang
potation - (Rierhiera-Stelltng) between Abblate
Grasso and Binasco ' The IMO of the battle Which
was going on being doubtfil, - Count
orders that efilati should becompletelrevacnated.
The Orb.' Count Stadionsiand the 43th, Baron - von
Benedek's army corns, were at a considerable dis
tance, from the' field of battle, and were not en- - -
gaged: _
Numerqus French prisoners are in our bands.
The loss on both- ablea de great, bet ,LIKA. cache(
returns on the.sub*tare still. wanting.;' Accord
ing to tne' preliminary reports. Lieutenant Gene
ral Baron Kalmbach and Illsjipr Generals voir'Burz
dins, ion Mead, slid-ibis i lydeiterii Aire Wound- - f• 7
ad, as are Colonel Hubittsolielr,'Lleatenaet Colonel
Btromfeld, - and Major Markt, 'of the. regiment
"Hartmann ;" Lieutenant Colonelneffernudille,
jor Walter,-of the, regiment King ~of tke. Pa
glans and Major Morena, of, _the., riglulittil
" Count Wimptfen." __Major..Krageld,"nr . !itin4
of:prn.i." husearr, was killed; and Lieutenant
Colopellanbaissenifiti a24dMsjorliaaai; of the Sip;
oold'llenat Borderltecorneist, are Mastiff ' '
At'fbeiathe tlfueirith This motwdeteired written
intelligence will befdespatcbed;•. As tha_wires are
bridrenlmtwesu Milattil'aviarandtVerona,,ltwlll
not, 'for -the momanatr be possible t.o. , reoeive s an t
Mantic telegraphic reports faun, the-seems of cos
thin. :When news-does arrive,,itiill,be immtadi:
-suety and consoientiously comthunioated . th„the
public. .
RP.ORPTION ON TULL lIEWEi - VP - PARIS. = -
A le Deiem in boner of the viatOry of-hisgenta
was Celebrated at Notre 'Dame, JOIIO 6. _one Era, - -
pre* and all the authorities were present -
Oatienans's Messenger. bag- the -
the celebration et - tbe^rietetief bliegentraid Paris -
and other French -
Placerde 'announcing the,•_idetortiiire - foiled- 1
u•P everywhere- Oief Patti - yeitiraliiy" iatelt - O L OP,
indlhe whOte poptalationreetrived the gatelitgenoe
With the greatest .asstbattisem:
_At...ate:A -the -
evening the gate_ from- the -Invalitia4: thundered
fotth a earvo in hontir of the event and sit night - -
'the public eMcee, theatres, and a great number bP
private houses were- illundneted, The Empress
and the Princess (flotildit. r - between nine and -ten,
'went alodg the Boulevards snd theataideltifrotir
in:awojurit carriage,- and wilte_eirtnywlsivereetat
with most • enthusiastic miss of nue
rear!'{ WWI 1' Ilipetatrici Zert•
ease Ctoitidal:: ' - - • .
The horsespouldintlyroittedit the Vei7 sloWast
walking pace, so enormous wi* the crawdmitioh
surrounded the. imperial carriage, :The-people ,
were under the very_ wheels pf the,vehiele f andln ,
their delight teemed Quito, regardless of theirairn
safety. 'liar biejeits a progresi was, in feet, a
complete OCation. The Boaliiards and - other - .
prinoipal thomtsghfares wet* -crowded; tor,a late •
liriur; and the elly presentO•the amaranee of. a
,• - ,
The naves Of the viothrY wasir ' 6iiiediately trans
mitted by the Minister of the Interior -tot ail the
Piefeetv of Densurtments.. It was everywhere
coined with extraordinary enthusiasm; All the -
'dispatches , resolved .announce that - the- people
wire all en j ite ; that lite louses *era inudedi.
ately dressed out with ditga,hnd that peeparatimas •
were being everywhere made for illuminations.
The Emprosaftegen6reeetved, on the filkin_the.,
palace of tit. cloud, on-the occult* of her recent .
arrival in that residsatio, the mayors, =inkiest
ovntoitiors, and °tees of the-hommicnes Of
Ciond and 'Boulogne, the. (await of the -third bst-I - • ,
tam of the National Guardef thatiteine. and the
°tapers of the infantry and eavairyof theilinperlat •
Guard in, garrison at , st. , Mud. The - :imperial
Prince was present at the reception'. - -
The news that - Generals Espicasee asd. Oler • •
Ware killed at the battle - of Magenta isootalitmed. -
- 13
The ,-dy of Chsneral Espleasse haw been embalm._ -
ea, and will be brought home to Prance. -.Most
of the evening papers ray that Mantel bailie-. -
bort was wounded, - but• - 1 - have leard this' after -'
MOOD that thelidipress'has contradicted this dews,-
rVSSB oa • . tbai.6l
Wall wounded Feriiitialy: NA news fiord` thethee
lresof wai has beeii•ninde pnbtle today; and' ocfn
ei;derable, surprise hi Mast the delay in +mummer
tog the entry of the Alliesitrte, TPA feet
that the pannioipality of Milan welted upon the
Xing of Sardinia at headquarters, to inform hini,
in the proionce of the linstotor.- that theyluul'prol
°tainted the annexation of Lombardi to Bardiula
shows 'almost, conclusively that there; cam military no
thing to prevent the Allies from taking reilltary
possession of the eapttid... - .
- Letter from Lebanonv
dommmiztolltop yak i.Rocitrosnies OP T
ANNUAL SESSION OP THE GERMAN' KyANGELICAL
LUTHERAN NINISTERIVII OF PENNSYLVANIA AND
TEN ADJACENT STATES. ' - •
LEBANON, Pa', Suite 2T, 1859:
, Synod opened its exercises with singiag, anti a.
prayer by Rev. P. W. fleiesenhainer.• Rev. Dr.
Demme, Reya..Relohert, Trntalieuer, Polite,
Yaeger- and others, we're expo - Sea for nort-attend-
Owe. Rev Wunderiing, - of the hlorsylan dumb,
was introduced and' admitted -to - a—seat. Bev.-
Wempole, of Rest PendayiYartiet•Dyned, was re
delved *slut adtdaoryjnember.
The report presented yesterday,billey. 0. W
Schaeffer, fornitddog e..plan for the - support of
destitute widows and Orphans tot deceased 'minis
ters, woo considered. The details were taken up,
variously modified, 'and - then adopted : Rays:
Mann, Voirellmoh, IL Reiter, Baer, Witukel, and
D.' W. Subaeffer, were constitUted a beard, to
whom the subject shall be permanently Com
mitted. .
Rev. J Keller, the beloved and efficient general
agent of the Lutheran Pubßonded .Sootety, ad
dressed. the Synod.. in, hehalt of the interests of
that enterprise The 'ettatte of the eoclety4tee
prevad very aucceicful. A publication bouts has
been pnrohnsed In Philadelphia. on. Tenth street,
',between Arch and ,Market. On motion of nee.
B. Sehmtesker, Spited expremed itd &maned In
Sorest In tho . operations of the Board of Publoo
Sion. • • -
ittv.'H. Vossoler;' formerly :of Wilkerbarre;
;having taken charge of a Clamart oburoh at Clum
erland, Md , announced his removal, there, but
requests permission to remain with this Synod - . •
Tao request was opposed by Revs Sadtler, 0. W.
Schaeffer B. M. 'Bohmuolrer, and Dr. Morris It
Wad resolved that Hr. Voeseler be advised to at
tach himself to tho Maryland Synod,.within whose
bounda he now labors, ao4 that the president grant
him a letter of honorable aistrasal. •
Rev. G. W. Man, haring located at Chamber& -
burg, was dismiesed to the West Pennsylvania.,
. -
Synod. Al.ntheran °berth, organised at Womeirderf.
was resolved Iran conneotion with this Synod. -
A committee, consisting of" Rave 331 Keller
Peiseto, C. ?. Schaffer; and Minn, was appointed
'to - draft resolutions in reference to the.deatb of.
'Dr. Baker, Rev. Steinmann, ; and J. 'Clemens.
The emcee:, 'of _ Synod wart; appointed to ta ka
charge of all vacant eangregitions, and it wag ,
mode their duty to supply them with preaching.
Rev. Julius Ehrhart, from the committee te
whom was referred, the presidenytt, mart, intro
,..
duoed a - series,. cf Lroseintlans to the - effetttlluit
Rideirapresses its continued allegiance to -the
symbols and confessions of the church, as handed'
down from the fathers. The resolutions, aloe, bind
all the ministers and students who may hereafter
dome into connection with the Syria, to uneondi;
ttonsl subscrimion to the uriatterad" Augiberg
Confession arid Luther's Shortereateithism.ahey.
also prohibit them from teaching-anything con
trary to the doctrines declared, to these _church.
confessions. :This subject, one 'et much Import- .
ante, which has' greatly agitated - the ehrtroh,
elicited an animated and protracted disonselon, in.
which many members of Spied participated. The
debate allotted an almost universal expression of,
attachment to the symbols, but the reiterated
avowal' of that attachment was by many damned
superfluous. This view was especially taken by
Dr Mann, Revs .Rrotel, Schmuelter, - .4e.
Rev. G. J - .Mars, of Harrisburg, former mis
sionary to lrdia, addressed an eloquent appeal to,
Synod for liberty of conscience.
Finally, Rev. C. IV. Shaeffer moved - that inas
much as it is Biondi clearly understood that alt
ministers; formally received - into connection. with
this Synod, are required to ettbsoribe to theatecton-,
fessions, the entire subject be laid on the, table.
The motion of Mr. Schae ff er was carriedirY a large
_
vote. -
Salem's Church, Columbia, Pa , recebted per
mission to collect funds. The same privilege was
grunted to the church at. W ilmington, Delaware.
Rev. Mr. Kramlich was received on letter of
honorable dismission from the president of the
West Pennsylvania Synod.
Dr. 0. F Schaeffer presented and read his re
port as German Professor at Gettysburg. Rev. o'.
W. Schaeffer presented' and reed a report of the
directors of this Synod in the seminary. Dr. Mor
ris read a statement ofthe history of the German
professorship, its origin,
.progress, Su. These
three papers ware referred to& special committee,
consisting of Revs. R Keller, Dr. Mann, and Dr.
C. W. Schaeffer.
Rev. Mr. Barrett, ngent of the American Tract
Spciet-Y. on leave given, addressed , the Synod in
behalf of that interest.
Rev. at. Officer' a :oolong minister of the Mt-
Aberati Church in Ohio; who seems to have come ,
crated his all to the establishment of eAntheran
mission in Western Africa, on leave given, ad,
dressed Synod in tegard to that object.- Rev. M.
Officer and his cause were recommended to the
pastors and churches of Synod.
EvENING EXERGIBIO3.—The anniversary set.
vices of the Foreign and Herne Missionary Socie
ties were hold this evening.. The ; annual report
was road by Rev. Mr. Schantz, followed by an Ad
dress by Rev. Mr. Rees, returned missionary 'to
India, in German,' and Rev. - B. M.'Schniiteket hi
English.
P. B.—Tbe spectator of the proseadinge,of all
the Lutheran Synods, North and South, does not
fail to remark .one foot, which happily distin
guishes them, from the easiesitiatied assemblages
of nearly !Matt other deribuilnethm in'thir eons
try It is theVlvid and-aponteneons nalusinn of
the." everlasting'!- slavery question. Our Lathe
rims are a too,;praotionl, common-sense PooPlo to
suffer themseives,' by any visionary schemes of
" hila utiltOPY)" te , be' moved from their pro
piety,