The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 14, 1859, Image 1

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WALTORZIS JZWZLRY 'lc t
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GINVI:WURNISHING .BUSINESS:
INCHESTER ScOO:kGENTLEMEIVEt
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sani,T; ithlio7Aoi
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*fatal raparriaiata tartgair Ousting 'sad 'ttaaufastarlpt
4•0111Wiii1111. Onttre battle aelearated style or Saida
and Collar* allot at the shortest *Woe. Wholesale
tradesepslhel on Metal tiErauw, • -:17 17 ,
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CABLIWST AI D NIILLLUID
MOORED & .CJAMPION.
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sOissatitio with Osli lig:Was,
'are wow awastsesig LUP s superior artiste of
.AUtIA.A. TOW, • -
Mid II hi! shopyi diddled with'
11091MirOAMPION , 11
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oiiinowfititiliv, •
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Old lltinalaions • - ,•• • ,
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Over forty dllleititti arid' , styles; of the
"leftg# o2 .‘-OLh . O OII PAOVI Vogee and Too Pate are
sort" theinthateired 'TOrtng lased, our Dr HAU L of the
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sooliill_thoy Wl* aside], oceotaiethto use; and me oleo.
tided• aoowetateuyeivede , others They eels be ob.
taliooll3frofir brdayitt :tkrouilr any atorekeaper, or
Oil*" it_ * helearheeplas redoing,
a hr ..* l 4s ll erhe:have not received oar Trade
! 0 isitlog price!, Wino, trii„. will DOthin?rdlately
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PVICLIBIR 91(wininnos,-.
TENT AND' HAREM,
-NOT.IIO OP, AN 0111.111NTAL-TRIP,
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1 Volume,llmo 010th
'POPII7I4Aft. TAUB PRONE THE
By 610Boe Watat, DAssxy, DO.
2 14714 AN 'INTANDuoToinc. •Noskr.
1,25t0
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THE ROMAN gtrESTION,
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TRAYO3LATBb FROM TRH !MINIM BY H. 0.
0011P.B.
APiIiBTON &,oo.,:Publiehers,
20 and 8 8 18808DIV#7.
bitt•at
PART.T.N ckT
WE 6B: ALL PUBLISH,
BiTUEDAY
- KNITTINH ions:
♦ WEB OP MANY TEXTURES,
—BY—
D. P. SRILLABER, (MRS. PARTINGTON.)
, BiLAIIIIOMELY ILLI3BIIIATID,
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' 'AVGIISTT.I9:ItOP.PIN.
..... , ,
' - •In I-vol.-12mo, - Mee $125.
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N. Carolina .„. 18
. ..
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Tammemor "A.. 80 ," - IloormOttenT.,.. :Pk "
Teta. -- •02 " 1111noh, • TO if
Maryland la " Indians 20, At .
Kentuoky.....” TO ", Inv* • 22 .g
Alabama --120, " - :Maine • ' TO 4 C
Arkansas SO -• "
- Marbaohnastto... 80 11
Delatrira .. ,
TO ". ;',,•
bf10b1gan...,.... 111. "
• florid.' 85 " Miniissots ' 15 "
0508511 ''B ' " lihnhiolppt 88 It ..
LOA III / 1 66 1 .01•• - •• '7B .., maw Hampshire.. 8l ..
Illsestai ..... *.... - •90 - " , Now ZsiStiy • - ]O " '
Re* Y0nt....:. - ..gt i , , ' Ohio , 12; g'
Psistiqlssait,... 57 ' 4 %. Dlgiti3e Island..,. 7 ..
Parmont "8 " ~ Whimain 2y 11
2 somas , "2: - .e - - New Mexico .... 1 u
Nebraska, ...,1..' lA* * .
' IY: 1 ' ' - Mph ,4 It ,
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2781228i5r-óf PoatOillosi 'ant to In the flatted '
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PHILADELPITIA, THunsoAy. :14 1859.
gt 441!4,re55
finttitßDAY, JULY 14, 1888;
The Petlftierbton Minietrif—No. 4.
,
Fsi Moot parts of the civilised world, where
there it a Sovereign or any other recognised
Chief Magistrate, What' is called the Govern.
chant includes the executive, the legislatiie,
and the judicial polVers. In popular accepta
tion; however, it Amalfi! the Eitecittive Ontl,t)
the higherand morn • ilninediate' functions .4f
l i r/doh:are exorcised by the Cabinet—a selOt
body -in whom,. for the time- being; full aft
thority.he vested. The principal 'advisers of
European Sovereigns, as of the Preildent of
the United Statels, are beads of departreentfki
At Washington, the Cabinet consists of seren i ;
vie the Secrete ties of Stateareasuri,
Navy, and Interior, With the Postmasta*.
General and Attorney General: In England;
the number varies from tea to tureen. Lord
Daunt's late Cabinet consisted of thirteen
Lord raninicstou's includes sixteen.
The Cabinet, in England, invariably includes.,
the First Lord of the Treaturyi who is Conj.
nionly designated The !t rritne Minister or',
the t! Premier," brit whoini real title is f , the
bead of .her Majesty's Government;" the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, who is actually
the Minister of Finance ; thet Secretaries . of
State for the Home, Foreigh, Colonial; War;
and Indian Departments f the First Lord of
the Admiralty; the Lord . Ohaneellor ; the
Lord Preiddent of the Council) the Lord
Prilry Seal, and the President of the Board of:
ThefeiloWing (as fn the present Mi.'
nistry) are also soinetithes in the Cabinet:
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Presi
dent of the Poor Law Board, Chief Secretary
for Ireland, and Postmaster General. Ocna
aionallyi. lute - or other 'of the following fhnc
tionaries are admitted Into the Cabinet .:-Mas.
ter of the; Mint, President of the Board of
Works,. Paymaster-General of the . Forcei;
Judge - advocate General, and Master-General
of the .Ordhanee. OncaelonallY,' politicians
hate _been Cabinet Ministers, to strengthen
particular Administrations, trittiout holding
offiCe or receifing Salary. Thus,' the Deice of
Waraisuroa was in rzar,'s Cabinet without
dice, and the Marquis of TAMMUZ in
Pamisasron's late Cabinet.
Some doubt has existed as to the origin of
the word I( Cabinet. The generally recoiled
belief, from historical data, is that the name
originated from the practice, in the reign of.
CHARLES the rirst, of hie ministers assembling
in the piliate closet orcabinet of Open
xxarra Meats. !This: haughty lady, daughter
of Bissav the l'ourth of Erantie,' by Maar
na Mainers, his hecorsViriteiwaii extremely
fond - of Meddling in; affairs of §tato, and, in
truth; her toyal,teate; inler'haitcls, was very,
much, of a henpecked husband. • England, an=
knovin to itself, was ruled, in the firstyears of
bet rotldente, by a• petticoat 'goVernment,-
whereof Itaintirra lirkats was head, The
Execitive was supposed to consist then, as
no*, of the Sovereign and the heads of Car.
fain principal departments of State. But the
King's 'Om:Mentors, equivalent to the Privy
COnneil of the present time, claimed and'
often'exercised the privilege.of attending; and
oven assisting at thedeliberations of the King
and his resPeisible advisers. Te, prevent the
eonsequences of such interference as thls,, the:
Sieg's confidential employes wohld meet la
the Queen's cabinet or closet; befordar
the deliberations ha.questlen, arsi,there Melte
mat:lament& and arrive at conclusions
different .frore the.' more •APttblftiTie4iiills7'
fulness of 'tithe, when thld 74# 4 itiMiteKck:*
4 4 *t 03 04; 0. 1 0 e 4 10 . /*** 4944':•,:'_.;
' •
V'm;siVOW
axittrint
'the throne itself. ,
' Eiery . Cabinet Minister is an ex.officio mem
ber of the Privy Council—a distiaguisbed
body of advisers (who - dopot adviie) to the
Sovereign. It comfits of the '.reiponsible
ministers of the Crown, the majority of the
.Judges, numerous, diplomatists, and certain
eminent , peers and commoners, whose public
maniocs to the State 'Ar whose pelitical,influ
ence has glienthem a claim to the honors of
this assembly. The number is unlimited—at
present, it .consists Of
,abottt 250 members;
whom the . Sovereign Appoints and can dis
miss at win.' 'For, example, at a publicdin
ner, after the usual toast cf‘c The King," the
celebrated Coma a Itriss 'Fox, gambler and
politician, drank cc.'" be Majesty of the People,"
a sentiment which the Duke of Nonrom bad
first uttered, and Gamma the Third, in a fit of
Indignation which almost brought on an attack
of trusanity,' called for the Privy Council book,
and, with his own band, erased the name of
Fox, by 'drawing a pen across it. This was
in May. 1798, but, in February 1806, on the
death of PITT, it was found necessary to put
Fox Into' the Cabinet, as Foreign Secretary,
and he'was sworn in a second time, as'Privy
Councillor, in presence of Abe Monarch who
had so decidedly ejected him before. Truly,
as BYIIOI/ says, "Time at last sets all things,
eVen." .
Originally, there 'were only twelve - Privy
Councillors; vho ware, in fact, the Ministry.
In 1679, daring the relgrt 6f cl.tk*LEß the
Second, a law was passed limiting the number
to - thirty, of which fifteen were ex:officio mem
bers, aad the other half consisted of-ten peers
and five commoners, chosen by the King.
The present number is indefinite. Tho Queen's
verbal nomination is sufficient.' Notification
is made to the individual that "the Queen bas
been graciously pleased to appoint him of Her
Iliejosty'a Most Honorable ,Privy Council,"
and, at the next Council Meeting. attended by
the Queen, he attends, is' sworit in, takes his
seat for a few minutes, makes a bow and re
tires—walking backlvards, so that his face shall
invariably be presented to the Queen. No
patent of nomination or appointment is necea
tary. Any British subject is eligible. PT.=
merly the Privy Council was'dissolved by the
death of the Sovereign, which also ,dissolved
the PFliament, but , the statute which was
passed, allowed the existing Parliament to Mt
foe six months, if not sooner dissolved, ex
tended the duration of the Privy Connell to
the same time. In practice, the Privy Coun
cil of one Sovereign is continued by his suc
cessor. The MI; Council rarely assembles
en masse, save on the death of the monarch,
when they, assemble to meet, greet, acknow-'
ledge, and publicly proclaim his successor; on
the announcement of the intention to contract
a Royal marriage; or upon some other extra
) occasion.
In effect, therefore, the body called the
Privy Council of England is little more than
honorary, The members, as such, receive
neither tee nor reward, salary nor perquisite.
They take precedence, however, next to the
'nobility and some; of the high °Mere of State
—bative 'Knights of the Garter, who may be
commoners, (there have been none such since
Sir ROBERT WALPOLE, for Sir ROBERT PEEL
refused the dignity,) and the Chancellor of
the Exchequer, and above the Chief Justice of
England, and all the judges of inferior rank.
To be a Privy Councillor is a great distinction
in Englaid—particularly when it is conferred
s p e cially as a personal hOnor, in recognition
of eminent services. A member of the Privy
Council is called 4, Right . Honorable.", In
1828, when the late JOIIN "WILSON Caoxin
(the de slashing" Quarterly Revieiver) was
made a Privy Councillor, after twenty yearn'
.service is Secretary of the Admiralty, hie
friend Tom MOORE, who was under numerous
Obligtitlone to him, could
,not• resist the temp.
Wien of sneering at the neW Illight,Honora
ble " in his Diary and Letters,•thougb, at the
same time, be wrote a congratulatory letter to
him, in which praise was laid on very thickly,
on' the same occasion -
lin en a Ministry resigns, almost always'
in coniequetice of a hostile vote in the
House of Commons, the Premier, waits upon
the Queen, formally communicates to her,
what the newspapers as well as hie own
private despatches balm previously told
„ . .
her, that, in consequeece of want of , strength
in the- Commons,. he has: count it- ileetteisall
'to .pinee 'the resignation -of. his own - oil
fice;and also of the offices of his colleagnei,
softie edges, *filch
live:not Often _or:burred ? , the Sotereign tolls
his Minister thatAnSpito the stieh'ith pr this
tippesition Parilsment, he nistt. retain of
fice; z This was - the case in 1784, when Wri
tten:l , PlTT,'outvoted in the , Commons, in
forded Gsoaaa the Third that he felt it his
duty' to' riffle.. -The 'King,' bursting Into
tear; eacleimed, «I never tholfght that Mr.
jiafe deserted On this ap;
peal4:Yirr eatisentedto remain Otte iiead of
,the,49oiernment, and did so, with such
Arai* support from the Sing, that be finally
broklk down the Opposition, by baffling and
weariing , them,. and- continued in ,office for
thelOtenteeii.following 'Tests..
'Boinetimes,
~ivhisA the
,Bilnietry
parliamentary_ defeat, the Ph/A . :Minister ,
coniMunicates, as itboae,:witli theMOViireign,
suit instead of ,tOnliering his..resign'ation; re
finoats 'permission fg to- appeal to the oonn. ,
tr9'4,l)Y,alieneral Election. This has lately
b!3onAlonti on'two OtaßiOtß. In: it 61,149.
th t, 49..W..tr9T 0.9lx§111 01 1:1 milt'lale
r.‘ :Lord P4munstow' for having need
. (tisk plunged into a war with 'Chins;
,find, a
sicopettline, onlY .threo months agin' when
LorciPzunr , s Reform Mili being'ruled out, I*
a hoktiie majority of Elin'the'H:Onse:of Coin i
• monl,
_dissolved parliament; ,with; the
'Qaperi's,coneurrence; and the, - Croziers'. Elec.
tion-firMay. Increased his strength in the Cot=
xuorAi 7 ;-though not sufficiently to enable - him
fo conquer tfie'Uocilition,whica voted, on'tho
morning of 4ne; 11th, that the Dintnr
14 was not 'o`titithia to; and did not ii(kitiOiri,
the %ooptidohoo of the OothineziS, or - the
4ountry.
On the occasion of the recent break-up of the
Perbklilinistry, queen Vitironte, perhaps to
Om* her personal regret at being compelled to
iPirtibith tliem,Went out of the 'ordinary rou
ttno;hyLconferring loners upon * Lord . Diany
ityplome of his ebliestghei: She 4rule'bilm
kuAidght, Of• the Garter ) higbeat per'4o!“l4
hbnot she could bestoiy, and, theio being tio
iiicancy, had ' a _special Statute' of the ..Order
pulsed, in order to admit him; as in the ease
of 'Orincea of the Royal- Family and Foreign
Potentates. She give the Grand Crest of the'
Ofider of the Bath to Lord MALKSEIBLIB:f and
Sir ,Tourt F.prinor'orr, Who had respectively
been Foreign Secretary and First Lord of the
Adj. - 711V. She showed her ,gtiod optniini of
tk ,Aarl of-Laturoi, (he who . gave the cele
brated Tournament in Augnst,lBB€o by creat
inghim Earl of Wrprost, in the English.
Peerageihe having previously sat in the House
of Lords as an - EUgllsb Baron. -• ' '
Whether hai Igelesty will, give honor s
' fit* members t 6 the meereof 'the l'alniereten Min-
WV; When lte downfall shallJain?' plaCe, some'
day, 'remains Jo bo.aeen. • S ; lke,is acaresed.O?
having expressly told-LordTmatnaarork that,
on a9,acaaunt, would ahe admit Joan Banairr
into the Ministry;, crime ?—A democrat,
he: had priurnmed to declare, in his speeches,
that the British Aristocracy were ,mot eiactly
the - salt of the earth. ' ' '
'itStitiait
, , .
dlitartoo from the memorials last refer.
o£, the Most "conspionous objects that
large coped tomb of dadiali
'ffee!-,Weiti; indl- lry,'.l t ' tone hick ihe
the uniailyi and
' ii - OnunionCeinotedlir
' • ;IL I e . ,41 ijitafeifar SoltriAt
I:ref iiiiitffrO**ll in One Wens in oath ,
4,Cr`Tl,lulViAi - 74tti4ftik , ',:otsi4ztiiiiiiliv6iiia is
" •
At-Ig:AP: HIA 01 tit --barteis
With loriate - 'oential ,suppoitliff-the
oarvid arches above. - The 'whole -is
surmounted with a Seriee , 'of graCeful
Muffin; in perfect' harinony - with the rest of the
stanoture, and editing greatly to the affeot of the
work. It is about fifteen feat high, and in contrast
with the obrubbery around it, including anveril
oedate of Lebanon; presents; one of UM molt
striking features of the oomatory. -
Adjulant to the litter are Gut altar•tombs, in
the antique style, ereoted to tiny:memory of
Franklin Beebe Buena; Mary end Sarah Frank-,
lin, daughters of Williaria :Ellen, wife .
of B. Scattergood;. end Sally;;datighter of Charles
A short dietetic° eastward is . the'mo
'foment to - the mei:nod of , Caroline Berri% wife of
Henry Farnurn: The faultleis 'execution of this
memorial is also worthy of notice. Aare, too, are
'the monuments of George, Pepper, the costly op
tagon structure of Romulus feign and the beau
tiful now obelisk of Thomas Graham.
`o`~s~irons; greater' then
In ibis vicinity is a very curious memento,:
oommemerative of Barbara Schumacher. It eon-
Asia of a simple slob of white marble, laid flat
upon the earth, with the profile likeness' of Bar
bara chiselled upon it in relief. In naively any ,
other section in the 'entire grounds are there . 66
many recent improvements; in the way of come
tarifa sculpture, as in this through 'which we are
now pawing.' Prominent among these is the Hot
lowaYmonument, reared over the remains of the
late Thomas Holloway. This monument combines
In a high degree the ornate and the durable, and
is reellieseeuted in fine style."
The Coleman'lot is the next attractive feature of
this locality. The monument which adorns it was
erected to the memory of Isabel, daughter of
Thomas and Hannah Coleman, who died In 1849.
It is a massive and elegently.desigited work of
art, the monumental pedestal being surmounted
by a life•sise statue of a - female reclining upon
an urn. The figure Was executed in Italy, and is
'certainly an admirable piece of sculpture. Near
also, is the Yarrow monument,' consisting of an
enormoualetter Y ; mounted on a massive pedestal,
ornamented with a crow, the whole being inter
woven with running vines superbly chiselled. Im
inedietely opposite to this is the grabefui obelisk
erected over the remains of Dr. Peter Shoenber•
ger ; and passing on to the eastern margin of the
cemetery, overlooking the turnpike, (Ridge
"avenue ) ) is the tall' granite monument which
marine the grave of Cadet Henry Wilson, who died
while a papilat the United States Military Made
my, at West Point. The present substantial' tri
bute to his memory was crested by hie classmates
in 1841.
Proceeding in a right line trim the Wile= me
morial toward the Chapel, a short dietaries', the
visiter's attention is arrested by a tall; gracifel
movement that marks the vesting place of Eliza
Allen Shoemaker. It is a beautiful work of art
in the Gothic style, and is the tribute of surviving
children to their departed mother. Near at
hand is a magnificent headstone, richly embed.
fished with statuary in relief, ',rested to the
memory of Clayton B. Lamb. There is nothing
more chastely beautiful in the entire groan& than
the female figure Which adorns this tomb.
Adjacent to this is the elegantly-designed family
memorial in tho plot of Matthew W. Baldwin—
a handsome marble pedestal surmounted with
statuary—Weeny opposite to which are the
Splendid monuments of Peter Miller and Ell Gar
rison, and near the latter is the superb structure in
the lot, and to the memory of Daniel Fitter, (moo
sheriff of Philadelphia. The broken pitcher at the"
running fountain, which marks the latter, lea very
appropriate symbol of the broken
,vessele which
heriorovid anon our thoughts at every step amid
an unceasing stream of life, and is admirably eye-
Wed.
Near here alto Is the finely-wrought:monument
erected to the metnory of one of our well-known
citizens,' George W. :Watson, who died in 1857-
The lot in which it stands is in thidforniof a semi.
circle, which, with its artistic: decorations, gives
the spot a very novel, and byno means unattrao
tire appearance. In close proximity to this is the
large and boautifolly.derigned lot of Stephen 0.
Fotterall. An Imposing Gothic, structure adorns
the Centre of the grounds,
,whioh, addition, con•
taro six graves with marble surroundings to cor
respond with the monument.' Care has' alio been
had in locating the graves in such a manner as to
enhanoe the general egged. The sbrubbiry In and
around this lot is so luxuriant aa scarcely to admit
the Ingress of sunlight.
The sun, war nearlYset'when I reached this part
of the eitneterY: , The luxuriant tress
,wbioh so
peoullaily beautify title section wero casting their
lengthened shadows far across the anent beyond.
Easily, the' prospect was sublime. ' The effeat of
evening's golden light, 'throwing, AB it did, the
western faces of a hundred different *span monu
ments boldly into view, and hiding in dark con
trast their eastern surfaces, intermingled with the
grotesque profiles cut o'er shrub and tomb by a
thousand shadowy forms, I confess was one of rap
dtirous loveliness. I gased - ,npon it,nnd listened
to the 'earithirig rural sounds whtot Cake floating
on the evening air, with a straw faceinationi
s; troll through Lanrellllll—No. 5.
BY GRAYBEARD
almost forketful that my stroll was yet incomplete;
and that otitc, ,, points were 'till awaiting a - Rasing
-patio, from my pencil, before the Pall of night fell
,down upon this scene, amid the
,conlinosy4 the
anforsotteu dead. , I moved ieladtandy on; hut
wool d nut leave the region of the Votterall moan;
uantOldtfoint urging ell who visit' North Lancet
speed'a iunket at this partionlar locality.
• - Paisineeiward inward the Chapel, a short die
tance,ireet-orthireloote opposite the antrum, are
•twocitoble Marble shafts, rising -high. above evarY
iihTte4Urieuruliiig7oll tot: These are, the, Van
ftychle and Rerteog monuments., The former is a
Andy graceful:abolish, and preeents,- an aspeot of
strength and eadniatico. The latiet,is'apionir the
most OciatU and costly; in the orneterle,,eriarrin!rts
hstinolliact of a heuelMientrq "L'Atirt,
who, together with hid ilvfni rig* .
a More - hinierable and inderldg flan Ithee,
memory of both, in. their noble deedeAlatvpluttlift i
marble Column whiehtedorns tiabip_44lti="ttsefar
to Refer and AnnAertePt• Ihittltestfck*Puttli
'OhurohlaAmeritta has, ifelea
ring olfifgatiOnet to FA°, i ttttlt . °A til i s ' O t ° l *.•ll l 27, , if 6 r
her muniqcont. endowment of -the Teter, ortsok.
• Theelogioarttall; at ffew - Brinewley. 4 ' •t •
A shOredlitteruie frank 'this is : fh',"Koliiiitititi int;,
which ii literellY arbor"' id ebrithlierfOfittitft;
neat tacinfteintetwithin 4461*
ftwillkuubspelrill the dtzeotioufal.: the' entririee,,
-are the:tottbs Of altu'ge Atimberproati#•eal,Pial
-ladelphlway.:lll,o Apart - of igrederioic gok;',
-deolgestedhy a,hendecidketyle of, tophstonei ifs
,among tliese, Mr. 1 111 4 rai1, 1 9 1 41 thik.huati,ef Ono :
'of our *4ocm:win - and mostr'ssiisiltahle,Meriaixillii
heueithand the preetlge of hie iets i
by • hitt sakes:tors. Heti, ACo r , id : the - SOliaNy
Owned by Jaiioit Alter - - indr-
The two datightere of Idr. Alter-J.-ono the' vitiferof
Mr. liegeit,:the other the.wife of-Jarnei , G. -yin;
ley—are hero interred, both of whom died iheerlY
womanhood; the former In the:autumn, 18-4,
under ciroutnetancati.of affecting interest, and the
latter More, recently, having i _followed soon ; slier
her, devot e d husband,' aines
also burled inlhis pia.' 'The' latter was one of
the drat Men slier knew 'in l i hiladelphia.
was a man of generous itipuleee; find silignity 'of
oharnoter illy oaldulated tit "'buffet the rough "
the particular phase of a badness life In which his
lot was oast. Nobly he manned his enterprising
bark, and .long, till quite overcome with the storM
of disappointed hopes, and, health, sacrificed by
uridilet application, he calmly withdraw for a bribf
einien from Atte Add of iciiitqUited business
eirtoyed 'the vist,esiimated the 'folly, of human
'ambition, prepared with': the cdol fortitude of a
410. Christian to leave his beloied wifeand into- ,
resting-family of little ones, and, from a convey
cation had with him shortly:before his dissolution,
I,natty, add, awaited his dual hour as peacefully is
you ytay read this, record of his death. ,
At no great dlitanoi :from the grave of Ifinley
ieposo 'the - remains of one of his most intimate
friends in life•—•HathanP. 'the anolosnie
of his father indai, Henry 'Horne, a well-known,
an d'respected °Risen of Pfilladelphie;irka, together
with'. his wife" Ain, wasetriolren dOirn while 'in
the enjoyment of apparent health. Mr. Hall was
long and favorably known 'to a large olrole of our
merob ants,and by those who were called to mourn
his t i nntintely_loss if, remembered and ttuctted,
young_ beginners in mercantile life as ,a model of
Indnatiland 'entertries: Hia favored physique,
and, to all appearanne,,ixoillent constitution,
seamed, in the eyes of his friends, to disignate Moe
as a natural candidate for longevity. On'election
day, 1846, :probably 'one of the stormiest Phila.
delpl3la:Over witnessed; he 'was unavoidably ex
it:lotted to, a, drenching .raln • for sev.eral
Two hours afterward he went &gilds plane of bn: r
sineaa; 5i North lgeomad street, to .his residence,
205 Rade street, 'from witenoe he did not again
acme 'forth nntil ' borne to 'his, rosting.plaoe :at
Laurel
Near thle'point;also, are the handesnieMenior4
'ale :of John rVisughisn, , Francis Harrison,' ans
•OherleaGralf; :and in the same range is the stipple
iikeibikereoted to the memory of ,Walter r Holton;
phiplainuf Ate Visited States navy, and for some
`time prinsifial, editor of the IV:orlh , 4meriecosi
Front the position Of 'ohapiiaM he wait ottiled to th,
chief plvitmegistraey of Meriteray,,in isinoti.post
-fieslistingialiihedltimielf s afika for probKi liatt dl
those 'eiUdett Lind stir Sei," 1 .13 es and Bait
," , 'Xhrie Tains ' per,
laps 'hind 'Tlemeinbered. Returidiog toward the
' 45111, Pel again the; ainanler memento' of
anhertjdodatoT,SteorartA , -niongi tit guUti eresil'
AdiiiettidAdkaiv thelgra,eptfithef3atirAtdos , 4
Bood-7for ,eome,yeere a, 30n1Serl of the llospel i
'and until neir,, hie death editor of the Morning
Y i lniea,
neispiper, the latter hiving ettiiiverX
him but a fen months—and his:wife:4llde G., who`
died in 1847:
A. Plea from only one Portion of the y
[Tor The Press.]
I hardly wish to offer an argument against the
running of the Oars on Sunday, but it seems to me
that many ef thOse, who advocate their 'running;
and yet - profess to have a respect for the Bible and
:its dootrines, have forgetter' that tied blessed and ,
.hallowed tho Sabbath day, `and commanded that
wo should remember ' to' keep it holy. The cont
mandraent is so Mein, and stated in such explicit'
terms, that itleould puzzle many to put two con.:
struotiont upon It. , " Siz days shalt 'thou labor,"
"but the seventh daY.is the Sabbath of the Lord,;
thy God; on it thou shalt do tto manner of work;
thou, nor thy manservant; nor thy maid-servant,i
nor thy ox, nor tby ate, nor thy cattle."
In running the cars on Sunday, in bow manyl
-particulars is 'this commandment-broken? Let•
every man of judgment answer, and let him say.
whether, we are permitted by any passage in the :
Bible to violate one of,God's laws, because laws;
enacted by one Legislatures do rot compel the ob
servance of that lawL 7 or if they do, irt,so loose a
way'that they bad its well not.at all.
There is no argument in the'faot that loom
tivei and steamboats run an the Sabbath. We
aro sorry that they do, but, we don't want the
Sabbath desecrated more than it Is, at least.
Hop at the Island—Visitors...Eating
• • Houses, &c.
conesponeeeto of The Press.]
CAPS ISLAND, i'neaday, Ju1y_12,1849.
Under the direction of Prof. _Coda, everything
wai prepared, and with the grand marsh came
forth all that was bright and beautiful within the
'Wills of the old United States. The gorgeously fur-
Walked rooms, the beauty of the ladles, the moat
stirring MUM, all conspired to render it the Most
splendid and delightful hop that ever came off
upon the island. This ball, or hop, has been the
drat of the seasons and was well attended. Cola
nel,Bouston sent invitations to all the ladies. on
tho Island, and, along with his, assistants; did
everything in his power to,render them comforta
ble.
_ . .
Visitert 'are gathering fast. You can. estimate
the number at: strangers here ebaut peen him.
died. The hotels !tad , restattiants - are 'all doing
well. Among the eating houses, the _Kansans
and Morpby take the lead, and their receipts daily
would astonish houses of larger pretensions in our
great cities. _
The New York and Philadelphia steamers seem
to carry the majority of' Passengers to , thliplacr.
The fact is, they are &Tatou and comfortable, and
the mittens captains and gentlemanly olerks tend
in a great degree' to make it the most desirable
line. More anon. . ' Boar.
, A oorrespondent of the New. York Post; writing
from Sumner, gams, in regard to the Pike's Peak
gold Mince; says "The recent reports from.the
gold region have somewhat quickened the business
pulse of the Territory, and a scanty emigration is
one° more creeping westward from the river Iron-'
tier. Reliable advises indloste'the presence of
gold in paying deposits along the Bobtail" and
creeks of the hither elope of the Rooky Mono.
talus; but the people. have not yet reolivered
from the shook consequent to the disasters of April
and May, and nothing but the arrival of large re
mittances from the mines will restore,publio Confi
dence.
,-
• " 17p to the piettent time, reports of spitOnlatore
to the'ooritrisry notwithstanding, no duet has been
received meet magma ounces for exhibition in
brokers' windows. aam in receipt of private in-
Mitigate° of the latest dates from Denver City,
confirming the statements of Greeley, in his letter
to the Rocky Mountain Wows, in regard to the
large wages made in a_ few 'marmots during the
preceding month. .No nest discoveries bad been,
made, the emigration was slight, provielonasearee
and high, Mid confidence rather deolining.
"It is certain, that the geology of the' region
furnishes an argUnient hostile to its mineral rich
itees. Its prevalent atruoture is limestone, the
latest formation, and parent of the barer . metals.
Pike's Peek is a mass of gypsum, and this moun
tain ridges are but sparsely veined with that
primitive quarts with* is the, mother of gold and
gems."
• A CUSTOMER FILM PLISIC'S PEA .-A young
man, twenty Ilya years old, belonging In Lowell,
Mass., and who said he but jut re t u r ne d f rom
Plke'e yeak, applied to police station two, at Dos-,
ton, lad Tuesday, evenirg, for lodgings. -
started for the land el' supposed gold with $ 1 606 in
his pookete, add returns so poor that he last night
begged for a "crust of bread. He 'was fed 'and
lodged, and will be sent to Lowell - to-day. ' He
don't think a great deal of Plko'll Peak; except
that it ie s cruel deception.
!Tv, vO4IOENTs:
- ••• 4,"
nrirrEnoMEUROPEi-
THE
,EITEAMEtt,:4TNA AT' NEW YORK:
TOE BLIILC 8014rERINO.
The Preneh , Moser 1000 to 18,000'
AUSTUTATT %LOBS' ttNCESTAIN
Italian Regiments' Deserting eta 'law
• • • Prian 1 4 1 11 V. -
• . ,
Au 40noricgst-- Towel -,ProtAspillag
- • -Desavrets. ' •",
. ,
• The shlemobla frottuTititerpeel'oeft‘the
:imitent,..sarlyed akl,;tywAorit,yestsrday.,A,
•-; • thx erg lb,- gl4l,
the steamer' um:Leda, at
~ , TUE - 134TM ElitailZlNG. f
dt ?i , i4 It )lelffod iq ii6ll4fttlYrc.44
e e. , ,itinoWnted'
ti,*sbit e tia . to , eighhion: t theisiend -.Men;
• . ",
1
to 7,h1111.!
5.001/..
tt ddeilaitorrs •
' ftsiirObeit's
.t.,...1,000
leilde s s 'esintsit - leir in • the artillery an d epeeist:
The trench :people are asid'. to :be dissatisfied
with the seemliness of the delaillislet published ;
in the Moniteeto. • - - I
The Pattie
,sayii Nape:W - 1W an apatdot
.rbot
%Gm: Lien is iv/forted among the dead. •
The Austrians had seven or eight generals and
very many superior officers wounded. idenesal
Adroaclike washilled. ' 1
13or if s , thr
Jtll4 of, tne - . FranOh
nesrlyeoyo pteetia. _
nfrntry re~iment4,were
t
The Pledmatase suffered so severely'as to be in
oapable.of forming inline of battle.,
The Tferma emiespondent 40ga/ender' Timis;
Writing on the 28th. says that some days souk
elapse befpre.tbe munpleterro turns of the losses of
the Austrians could hiflrtlired• '
Thit name writer says that-the Italian regiments
in the Austrian. army shave bosom. - very difficult
to manage. •". •
' The men desert - by scores and fifties. In the
- neighborbOadof Ahiestit a whole battalion, had
raised the my in favor of Victor EmplanneL
A vessel on - the .00ast,..under Atm deserleanrieg, -
had been detected in the set of receiving the de
serters,on ten r i. after darip • :1
The people, et, Milan have Inede„threetening'
manifestations against the ' Jesuit ,, wbong public
rumor Rectums iitkeopirigup• seeret.oorrespon.
lenois Wills Austria, ••• •,•• •• -
municipal Th e b o dy of Vienne have,offered to
meintalo Timm and order, in 'nisi it was isoitiar?
to 'despatch the garrison at Vienna.l6 the seat of
war.
L'nee
.../112ji___../IiSEQS of Brerish - addiers streJnamie.
I ptiniardillganctrialgide 'and Want Beige. - 4
riapoledn wastinmerfeet_ health, and the sal
tary oondliion of . his -army was .excellent.:,,H
headquarters were at Welleato,„ whirs' Prince N
poison wee sigpettedleartiVinit the SOttittlt:
IS is • reported . that at. Scllerino: nearly SYS
onioar and man of the. artillery, attached to iii
Imperial Guard was,pitS' hors'ds eitribet. '
The Austrian facconntiof the , battle admit thel
lose taint twenty Altonean,4„ltilled, wonaded, eo
_
Twenty thousandporpt i es ire labile' hive' bee
buried—many wore yet lying in - 1U ditehee • an
corn lielda.-„,
The and 'Vienna biting ,-c'entallati
sneak of negotiations ' , hieing been - opened by
Prussia with England and Burin: for .the verpotti
of establishing, it possible, a, ha il s „for-oombirted
mediation. ' „ ,
.The military otontoisslon of -the Prankfort Diet
is sald, to have approved of the demand: to,, more
armysn of observation to the Ataxia., -- •
• " The Pictish aremaking Ruminate naritforePara ,
dons . - in the Adriatic. Alps of the linei
eight frigates, six, warsteamers,;, thirteen &adze
batteries, Jaime, gun boats ,, nine 400, „and. pre
'three-mated vesiels were at
have manylrodpi .tad' enormous
on, board. ,The.;Admiral.wea„abenst to epert his
Sealed orders. The real diffioulty theme le in get -t
tiog rid 'of she Auetrists withotit injury in 4
habitants of the city nf.Yeniee: = •
The Brest fleet is said to ." bet,eorapoied of nina
ships of the lite; tiro' hoary frigates and one float.
ing.beithiry -
' . Two of, the liOnaewpaPerestate , thatthere,hae r '
been ,a Meeting at Paria s efthe inferier.diplematid
agents, - ef.'Franne kther,Lei ant i - and -that theyt
have been despatobed to their pests — by , order' '
. from the Emperor., It Is presumed that, they have,
orders to n ed in the getting up of int,intturrirtion
ittluikey in that intentitptßeutele, " "
i
.4, l k_rts Sterihaldi this received ifirderalo etett.PY/
the ringer yelteline, and, wattestheetiedATorinot
' 46 4 kW° Ineni - and *hare" boo Pieditentre had
SkirmishesbeveAtikeri Amer Beittkiebe
tweets the Frenelfoorpe, of Valtedine ind'the Aus-i
triens guarding the 'filtelvik Pass: The Austrians,
number thirteen :Corispaniesuiif infantry - 'and two:
temptatioa of earbineare,.„ They oisouPY , Positione
betieeen Gleurus and Trate, a nd a battely,bas!
been Platted in poeition'to command the road to!
, Barricades have also beeiVerected; and;
there is greet fear of a descent by Garibaldi; ,
- The Swiss Federal C0n.2011 has decided in con- ;•
eint with the belligerents, ;that any Soldier seek-'
log shelter in Swiss territory' shall he sent back
to their country, their Governments, gaming not;
to emptoY them again in the present war. ,
The garrison of Laveno; and the soldiers of Garl
habit's corps, will eartaeguentlxise eenebook...
It is, said that the Austrian monarch ordered
the Tetras:me of thaqtrinsid in oppesition to
advice of Chmaral f Mesa. • - -'
The Austrian (deal report of the battle says :'
The right wing of the army °coupled Fowling°
Solferino, and/7abrlana . The left Wing 'matched
on the 24th to anidielolo and Caatel °Weed°, and
repulsed the , advanoing enemy on all, sides. As
- the Imperial army eontinned its advance towards
Mese, the :enemy, who bad also assumed the
offen3iVO with hie whole force, unshed: forward such
!ergo bodies of troops that there was a general en
gagement between the iirmlet at 'ten eolook,'or
thereabouts, on the morning of the 24th:
, right wing...which was formed pf -the Se-
Vend 'army, under Ceuta' Sitiliok, maintained the
position which it 'originally eminplea' in the
first line of the auntie. until' two unlock 'kV- the
afternoon, and the First army, left wing. under
Count Wimpifer, continually gained ground to the
direction of °Mese.
"Toward three o'olook the enemy.made a vehe
ment attack on Solimbo, and after several hours'
fighting obtained posseesion of the place, whiob
had been beiotaally defended by the Fifth corps
d'armho. - "
"An atteek.was then Made on Clevrlans, which
plate *as e'etirageoubly defended Until evening by
the . First and, Seventh' corps - d'armise, but was
eventually left in the hende of the enemy.
"While the Anvils for Seiferino and Mariana
Ives going on, the Eighth corps dtarmis ei;which was
on the outer dank; (right cwing;) advanced and
repulsed the Sardinian, troops opposed to it; lmt
this advantage did not enable the imperial army
to recover the positions that had been lest in the
centre. , ,•,'. -
"The Third and Ninth corps de armee, which
Were supported by the - Eleventh Corps, were-en
gaged on the left wing, and' the reserve cavalry
attached to tlits wing made several most brilliant
attacks ,
"The unusually lsivilotease;'and the het that
the left wing of the" First Arniy was unablelo
make progress; .on the-right liank, of ,the enemy,
(who divested' him main foreasii,the centre against
Volta), led to the retreat of the Imperial,Royal
Army. Ithigan late in the evening, ,during,e
very violentetorni," - .
The Correspondent of the London Herald says:
"to little did, the Frenelt'ektreet ekbattle, that:on
the previous night, a message Cron:Ohtani:lg, ail
ing for support in ease he (should 'attabkid,' was
metwith a refusal, on the 'ground 'that '
an attack
by the Austelittslege nOtProlMble. -At daybreak,
however,,thei corps of Marshal D'ailliers came in
sight of Solferino, and was :imMidilitely set upon
by a large Austrian foroe,.whiotCrthibed down the
bill, and fought with, the greatest fury. The. Mir
that resisted Curette& to the best of his power,
and sent off his aide-de-camp for support; but it
Wes not before three hours of frightful carnage had
elapsed that the corps of General Niel made its
appearantie.
" The Austrians were slowly drbien Rook, and
every now and then there, was a Priam, and the
Frenoh continued to gain ground—heaps of their
own and the enemy's corpses marking the fluctua
tions of the fight. _ .
" The Austrians were.thas slowly driven out of
Solferino. But, all of a sudden; they made a tre
mendous burst forward, , and the French were
driven down the hill. Bolegadmirably supported
by their artillery, however, they made a stand,
and oommenned , once more to , advance..lt ,ws.a
like a hall storm of bullets and balls, and whole
files were mowed down bye single, dtselpirge.
" In the meantime; at the right end left wing.
the Austrians were getting decidedly the best of it.
The Pledmentese were being slowly. Menu beak.
General Cartrobert's corps was also heavily pun.
ished,; and hod there been a. skilful general in
the 4 hustrian army, to oolleet mid concentrate their
forces against the weak point of the enency'ri
matters would-heve had a -very. dLifereist aspect.'
The - French commander; (to whoni- the credit of
the day is entirely' due, whether it be NMI, I
McMahon, or the Emperor hiniself), sent
_forward
the Imperial Guard and a strong division of the
infantry of the line against the 'Austrian 'maitre,
and succeeded for a time in breaking it- Instead
of bringing up their forams to repel this formidable
attack, the supports were Sent to the left and right
wings, which did not need them. -Desperate at
tqmpts were made to recapture Solferino, but the.
French strongly held it, and the bugles began to
sound a general retreat. - .
" An attempt was made by the cavalry to sme l ts
'them, which led to an encounter ;between ~the,
French ohassenrs and the Austrian in
which the former were rapidly ; pit "tes the i rigife
about. It is stated that not a etegle Ruingerien
regiment was allowed, to ' take Part, ha Umlaute,
and that the Italian , regiment hid atlbeen pre
viously sent to the
THE SARDINIAN AtiMOTINT,OF THE DATTLE.
The Sardinian account of the battle of Solferino
says:
• On the Pith , the'Emperor 'ordered the, Sardi
nian army to oottiref Posaelenge and invet -Fes
obierre, while the French cooupted - Solferino and'
Cavriana. - •
onexpeitted diet
" Murtha' D'Hillters Mat with
mantes, and the Piedmontem reoonnolsounCer also
MomOuntirea groat foram of the 'enemy. While
D'Hilliersperformedprodigies of valor at Bethel
no, the masses of the enemy continue d to advance
at Castiglione.
"The Emperor, perbeiving that hawse new con.
tending with tke came army of the enemy, de- -
ws POS .
ilAiggfr, :MOW
.atM*.kiel lOW Oa
O M " " 141 1 dge: ha elate retailer loisl .u,
ate mime e erretellit eitetifieie tease
ii o x*ittailittit wID bi
as 6 " 1 " •
i ploY_.o As Sorge efrifgehisis:hia and: *Milton
4
3 n WlT 3l 4ine tend q 0 trAroksiiia.repla with
Alif liKarlil fiu t ard. , •,;Xinii . hid, blare M.
:itrilee4d4 directed!' ' ' riforicsAwribeet noire
gleotectid,iloacirdlngir ordirld fignarals _Nett and
'Dollard lid Covey aildiorlirtlie Ifiensib: - General
Fond- kid' lankly' boiniin -- led illiCisibienieut to
hroassia,Tirlemiqbaliewrairrlved that tbeTrecori
noissancriof tballtitd-and Niftbarisions werein -
4sgre.ofibeitsgunt alipat.Dasessugoa Oullfdricil
e finnagmood Retafand ts Iredtle triode
Of - -Atiata:tO fettlfik'filtiinPV/, Jo. asts *pal&
- )liiiiiirtittiiibtl 11'111111er won &aerie° and
ofirohed"sheet Orrifinas ` l i'lle:W having
:bienisifoseted thtit, mawalisitinaireUlfitni and
Fifth-dirt/dens: Werestgagesti iVitiltnilarsult to
441174e5_ bsightt:of Sant lifirstinoinsTbel
King
ofdored.stipimmikattaelsrof thsse-disisktlis with
the Isigeaseef •ARettealihiss I l istkartion ,- onder
General
_Pepe Verunwe L asekthe hgdede: Or-Rled'
gat:* Iti - tpitenf We vlbleiirte Pwit - Credosel
Della Kamen assisted bie muse by Rosablenre,
end deasendavetarilaniddirW•batWeifittated
IMP, Molds of ;PerseiesigniAthellfesettia Just:
meat moving te: the. Ids, - Sepulaed ties, enemy,
Oartoldi great lemisexitblens gallery, : ,• at -gas
nit4 rail
_of' tlie detliiiiiiiiii 1)' 401114, ffeett.,
itiodiablibeleorpett AAA e - ;of Um
guides, the - Third and - - lfiffti • eigi !Maids
IfildlaiWard ettreffifirsintbf ' a ler *anion.
And,Us l'inatiter iietory'endedirtbli — eontest of
llibioluitlinr:Mililli Waelsustahleiswithl-harolo
Vaiiiiiii c as4 .4 . i .ei : 1 7 , - . & 4 1 1;
4 11sfollinnas seec;ruieonhe battbr in,the Mani;
tour. that deworibesit :
__ . -
-, . , .. 1- AVfivilifiloili tic lieieerialne-tile;illint Gimps,
ander blerslak Dltillierif 'begin thWiingiosement
before Solferino. The heights and rilloge' were
- 003 uPirld*Iiksi!ligullmi eiddthsrinig this
lic IteiCaratnd eorpt:d i s arnsayAlfatibil Molds,
hort i ldseltlikirecOn ites srgb't (ix ;hilitirst.eospe
in thelileinceLitiodeditiitt to s ills - 14E1016 No the
tolUilen , of . lUarelialiNiet; - *leloli lriul;roareidag
ins Eetprier bed &ken eteisfaied a tbeWhole
larmxt . Itialdrissty amid :the !infantry and ar
tillerstof,,theAttandito advancer sind•plase it em
raises. before the : Pipit end &mei corps andetrry
Elardisestatto-i. Then, ist:ordorlo wagons* rbis right
Of idallfthdiiierioninand, (wash mks w little tut-
Posed: In robsiquenee of thirdiatattse*hids sepa
rated them and the troops, of %vier Viet 11 his -
•biejesty•sonfall the cavalry of the Guard and twe
divisions of the First and Third: corps sip_' 41.nro
bert had been etuteged to , trateb the movements of
the Anstrionf•opeetsd.on the side of Meninx.
"Daring the whole:dee the/ fought,-adentising
slowly but alwaze fir gslue d eir,jap ems fornfts
up towards - ids& other . '-- •: ---------
, ii The First corm after,tahing vasomotor'. Of Sol
ferino, - seised all' the - positions,. one after the
other, in! - Tosselesigo - 7 -, night' atone Stopped their
-f':Thst Guard:Milled leinbsedstoliteCavriana
,withaetipsipst VAL AThe lest villeimmirearried
WiCh'great aping , under, the ergot ;4,4(mm:or,
who'htmseirdliseted th e shei.artilierT, _
..Thi ,Pketith 'MeV, Aridly:lll4sta ' Niel. ad
uncei lisp bater, ele'ersitalsingtronnd, There
was a time when, -to 00111 P. their retreat the Ans.
trianktnadaa desperate effort to place themselves
babieen the rinrth 'sad. %mond eorps., = Aire
Struggle waned= -The Infantry andTmlllierY teak
.part in -the millet; and this' esirsiry, - - by several
ehargesoloolded the systems:if the day, This was
the last sift of the,battle. r .• -
".The'instrlaris Wien eloriitbe
Tlihrietrest iris &fared by a . 'dreadful
stem: whiehissfed for more :than- au hour. The
thunder,. ball, - andfedad4rodneed , missy eltret
"that ncithingeenbilsedistimptiOed, °nabs field at
battle: When'the;*Sather impmied,the many
Tad disaYpiireif i cod the dlisetlin.thai tOak-wts
moreelved4hen their columns 'hid , attained sdnie
-dbitssee. - - -t
,74tatwtor . of • Mattis, who bill lodgeliat
! tow a rdsrf e "°120.4 1 111 at 49'0194 j .avi re Ural
•
•
Napattit *at tti "E
tome dagriit 9iiperidi ta kirk.
lean: etrery whareA• directing - the bat
tle. „-E7fairi.-,one. around- tzemblpd at ,IthosAaagars
naaasainily thtsattatil„ tam. He !dolt!
asetaattigaarsitt (Athena, ` . -,
• ENGLAILD.: ' ' '
It the Hausa of Louie; oti!ifettlat Laid Biatigh-:
•am aalled - ,attautioa to the watfaltaly; and 'eked
it diet' was. any triakta .tba report that the Go
, 4ariment intended ta„Tadiiis thellivlattimates,
Tba'Dalrittl`Baiaarstat,denleti'tka troth of that
report:'• • • •It -
• ...Hari Hardwick° ettiogiandthelaisillirrernma rit
for their afEirte , tonttengthen the nevy,:andlisre
various dinette° fkehowthaterert,yet Wye* not
what it ought ,
Had Etionboronghlfelly itoceknised' the; neceari
ty of pledingthe nary; int a proper isindttion; but
trnatedthatosonte attention would aloe be 'devoted
te.the armY• • -s , ."5 -• •
' In the Bonne ,of ComMOria, ,Tlittrode - y, -Lord
Talineriton albeit:Mid the 31Am:dicer °f-Abe new
litnistry.l47 pursue , • -polio) tf ittriot - nenliality
with' refermaselic Arai° -affairs. • :Hiv , also - sia
folug"Ailt. "SrOltak 441-wool ilortatiodgeed -
Uh"nielitatbly - ifter the mee ti ng of the next session
Of Parliament:"_ - -
Mr. Baxter' gave netlei "of=ait trite the
advisability of eintielling the contracts of theist°
qpxlinpx!4citorlth,tlweitlyray,lilie of- steamers.
• RE1114 1 4011",,,, ,
+be Taaeliee4,eure.4ls/ge,abye thettherieli"Hvi.
lish--)ifizilstry had addressed contisele Of metier* ,
4.16n.10 She fiernierStitee, eeitioning theta nzehiet
the demons of encouraging wpopiy - irbialvndlliki
lead to tageneral , war... - . •
• .
• -
44 , 9 1 4 • 1 ' .46* -. ftol:4 Bette' zip! that Ai. kederai
Connell had - Mide . nriiinidirendons to the Said!•
nian.Governapent; - on - the trubjeot of the' - ill treat
ment suffered by the Stites at Was.; he donut)
had. also .inatnatidihs; Bwlet diplomat3e agents
in rogland.`te enlighten Iniblte eelnionak "to the
nationality:of Viei tliretgen iseilimente lathe setiica
of • the Papa and Hine Of Neolett.'” , "
&BARCH
, - - •
• Runs, July I.—'l'he Boum opened gra. Ilantea
°lolled 'at '6,3f. 100-, a fraction ; Jiigher thin` yea. ,
torday. ' ' .
A telegram from the' seat of War eters' that ati
American named E. H Perkins, of Bolton,' tea
aether with. hie wife ,aod zibrod: ladies,. narrowly
aaanped being alasaaared at Perngin„
• A- letter from Jeddah "eays thaCrii going'
from JafFiCto 'Moos; with 200 Marealman PII-'
genie, bad'ldundered near Jeddah; and all on
hoard drowned. • = '
ExtraordinaryAttentat at Assastiaation.
toirz VILLAIN'S ILION?. ,
(From the Hoehhilmille (KS I Pre'a
A most remarkable incident oceurred inane of
the most public streets of-Elkton the other day,
and the causer are, as we have . been informed,
about as follows :
Some eighteen Months or .two years ago, Mr:
J. Parrish; of Todd oounty, a gentleman of good
family, who: stood .fair. and :who has heretofore
borne. the obi - meter of,, a ?.petureable, orderly
oltisep, paid, addremes: to :Mips , Alice Roy
bone, a young lady, of :beauty; inteljfilihon; toe
famiiy~:ond most , nnenoeptionable 'mending in
Ateintr in that? Detonative -plane- doubt;
less • reeeived,,mtellaregibg...amiles 'from ;his 'fair
enslaver, for,
,after, r the Rana. fiell , 7 l -"biltillgor
and 'procrastinations, Snot inappropriately_ con
adored tiessesevy sin soak occasions; he as
accented and they beetime- at eseid . But, as If
to illustrate -this old quotation—. the course 'of
true love never did'rno smooth,"--d I Maul Iles arose
net_ foregnm .by them The. inaidloue tougua of
Slander doubtless did rte, dreaontent,,
And fe °twine's ivarthe'oonsequenoe, yeltio,b; for a
ttme.Ceemad ta'have disposed of the matter with
out further parley: LoversVquarrele are ever
of duration short," and the breach was-healed, at
least apparently, fora time. Rtimor eaya his re
lations—for onuses not 'potion's/1y avowed, but
the lady's Issok . of fortune commensurate& with
his own. leaves: room , for suspecting the true
mace of dissetisfaction-robjeoted-to; the match:.
When their Objeoliou became knoyrn, to her, she,
withCharacterustio independenee. end 'causesjstl of riomin roomed:" for she
deemed sufficient, irrevocably broke off the engage-
mut Thu, matte. stood onthe.22llast , when_
the. arties _einondly met , late in the evening on.
Ettessivlllestreet, in Elkton. Miss ii, was walk,
ink down the street' aiostopanied `by an !Nostra
anise bf that plioe,'Mr. Sherwood: Mr: Parrish
aocompanied by a_friend, whose name.wi'did not.
learn, accosted Mire fh and helms] a conversation,
in which he asked If it was her purpose to persist,
in the determination or intention of discarding
him. ' She unhesitatingly responded,: s, c er t a i n ly
it is." - At this avowal_ he draw a - piefol. remark-:
fog as 'he. did - so—. Wells by madam, you
shall, never .have the pleurae of marrying
_any- ,
body else." With this hi levelortibe deadly mis- •
ells at her, and when Its muzzle was within a few
inches of her breast palled the trigger..
dentially, however, the cap exPloded without dis
charging the' pistol. So unprepared wall she for
any such a dreadful and unexaeoted assault, that
when the weapon was drawn,- sheto far mistook his
purpose, supposing, that .it - was his intention tn.
hand her something when he presented the In
-
ointment, that she reached out-her heed Riff to,
take it. „
- The unutterable astonishinent—the heart-sick
ening terror,r4hat , must have seized her, upon
divining his real' putpoie,...when indicated by acts
tifo, Unmistakably 'clear, can be better conceived
than expressed_ fihe.aprazig from him with the'.
most desperate effort to escape. In the act of-doing:
so, the pistol woo fir ed , the ball glanced near her
head, cutting away ' part of her bead dress, and
entering the door casomentin Mrs Wells', in front
of which they had arrived.ilia may be elpected,
she fell' fainting to 'the earth ; the' wall doubtless
'in the act of falling when Magnet ariadtichargad ;,
bar fall was in all probability-the easualty.whieh
"'lived her life. , -„
Parrish, doubtleen intpreesidWith the belief that,
he had consumtnatedins fdainnable'-ptuposi, pre.
;oipitately fled- leaving his saddled horse .at the
,hotel door of '
the town;
, - ,
•Tie bed not beenlietird'fioni when last we re'
coltedinformation from that locality. May he
'oath some upoterbere be may draw out the little
lingering of alitler life that remelt:la for him, in
!qttiet, , andlitilibed repentance of the wrongs he
".hatt, ao far as hisintenlioas were columned, tom.
aoitted'on the laws of both God andthe Common
;wealth.
.
m ynoza , s...t.trawtta,POugig.- 7 -4i murder
.was perpetrated on Tuesday night of fast week, ,
!sear she head of.OSSlfge'a. Ureekk. in VALIWhy. '
Count3s at the house of John .11c,rosy
gtePhehrldooltetind:John ' , ll - agernien *ant
up the creek from 1114.ders to help Returns% to
hoe, his oorn. l'Hey bed &jag, of whiskey,,,,Aftor
Supperttiey" Were all Arnett ; &general tplaarrel en-
011401; 7 and Hagerman: got Milli:LT Thigerman'a
bknitwaseleft,withanaxeintwoa'three"planes. -
The Kanawha ltePubUrait Honeyman — and
Rook. were, on Wednesday night, committed to
to await theirliig - beide the July County
bcart; r. - ns &so') . "
'
E .oh charged -the quarrel with Estgerstsim, upon_
the' other- lioneymen is about aryearsold' Roche
18'40 odd.,—botti have bad characters." This . de- -
gees .111 was peaceful in - hie habits.: = . - -
, ,
ANOTEEKR. near Lotdrylile ie set
for July 18th.-Thi• persons e)nbltionalst the bowie"
of :the prise ring are'" Birttdsghsm Pet'.' and Ma-
Carty. They wereAsoonds; thtlat• Apt, sh_d
the status are 00()..