The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 16, 1859, Image 1

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..C.IIII , IOIIIIITBIL erl, hsretsforo, his per-
Axial Supsselidiss, Culthof mod ,fdanaftotartot
- iloppolosonts. Orders for hts oslebrstOtt Ogle or 0 1 + 1 1 1 5 1
,00d5:0011aro.Illiod Wilts - shortiof moticer Wholesale
efippliod SY24•4'
Cabinet-
taltaiSTlN rpl . l
kitslas tor Sabi*, sad OA, Wil7
,111411411*19,046117441terr.na119ur, style • •
, fitiaoviai 1) . 101 RAORs'
IML: 12 ". 13116 W •=-.so*-V'S'Olsr
--(ea/01mm few
tie •T.-HAMMITT.
T4/ I tD B:I'ABRT.
11.1121N11T tualaruar, AID BILLUIAM
QA PION.
SOUTEU,EOOND
la i . 114inlieetine with thein"ittaiiaivat Cabinet
ina Noy saanefaetneli Iperior inflate of
yov,p, ,; TABLUS
atlOba»egraaliwaa,tsolsowow ff u jejsed - witi
Rooms & imnpzows Ixf&Otip otranioNo,
&blab are ptontranee4;by ill
y ,
hoi hive 'OW them to be
,epparior to all **has: , • -
././e the geillti and Man of tkOos.lrablos the maim
,fietarsoo refer to tbaie nonuorotte patron. ,tbroughont
1641 , tfaton, , wlgi w Attalla, with tip obariotor of their
=ZIIIIIMII
NITATAIAISTgR'S;
728 ORESTNI7 -STREET.
IrfikOPPE: A G gD IPT:F O 4 2IIE ,
E B BrA T D
cdNTINENTAL
gaE P O. T
iditA!. Hai oil.➢orntiktag Mardi
liiii3ll4lliT ST,.
& 00.
:470,;„
- IXONtit . MEWING} RA.-
.4! . : Ciffrinta 4 40#4111111117 nee, Tattering purpose.,
Sadlfty, .k a.--Wariniated.to give bettor satusfaction
tkaskj479ll,ot tnerket, or Money refunded:
.wiateksr#o4olFtts'thri tty. ,
411.46401„: YINKLII fr.JNOW,
joit.tf BBOA:DWAV. X•rexia,
44V,TrifitlIT , COOK ;STOVE; ,for
:etass , sei of T Bhirets (of _Willa
I,l4tit Cook Stotts, ; from WO to s #B;
Vrodlo botltbsteOrodst,'l6 , 6ll bect Literal mot
.80r irons, as_ Jelro Kershaw's, No 1810 NI e MKT
18( ,'.?41,1r1 thoi:OWs for rerefetieli, -• A jilt.d64o •
''''VRIIP'IIIOI.4SASMIS:-L-261:11204 MAL,
sad PriliisiAtik Tor sae ble
MUNI 14110Lall dt, Ws 'AMU of len
t= _- 31Settbitdtidss.
I$lR- ,
'2MB SHALL PUBLISH,
. . . r JULY 93d,
INITi'ING WORM:
A - *BB of MANY THIETUNEB,
B. ii:,'REitrii,AßO;, (Mae. PARTIN(ITOR.)
• 'HilitB9!illfiq ILLIIdrBATADR
Ai7OI7.SII:IEVAIDPRIF;
• • -4-, Ire 1 vol. 19mo. %Pelce . sl26.
, 1 09VFNI ',TAppyap, &, - -onABE,
-•—• ; •
Jll3-tathitne - ~,• 1
CHAMBEIIEVa ENOYCALOPEVIAr_,L - '
-$lllOOlOl, mbitbly part& lb dents 01,:aaj ,
-.- 111111.;tga.VallPilato4ITT. :liter!, by
s—Vor.:Aprtaitow , s HEW A XIMICMITT
Ai° ADS Ho t Itli, CIiSsTN ay: aboye Sixth ,:jp4.tf
• *,Maned jr anparhere--if paid in adiAno.,
NE W -BOOKS. • . ,
STRAIGHT - FORWARD ; or.; in the
Light: ' gestorrfor ashoorgitto of ages, .13y Lucy
.11 . :Otternsey; atithor 07 , ..1rLth &a, Ro, lemo.
Illuitistsdr. TB manta:„ -• , -
HANNeII ',RE; or, Rest for the . Weary.
= . - - „,,”
THI hROBL OF TRU 3toznzae; end Other - 14011es.
I.lustrutiog ignintmona truths.. Deafened: ell ; elly for
roUltg.;' , Bylotr Todd. .16mo: •76 cents,
BUM) TOR';' , or, :=The, .Loot Found. .16nio„ 60
iNftsTa -AND; MOOR ;
Cousin Ksts. 16mo. 76 Gents • •„. •
-
FRB -WARS'OF TH11,B06g13;• or, Motes of the'
Struggle of York azol•Leuesater, By J. 11.•Rdger.
Itutrrated. 76ori: - - 60 oante. „
'TIIIIRRT7I4. Olf THU ATONZIIINT. Tr's:whited:
By , Wlhooii. 1.2m0. • 60 yenta.
B. di ifißift; MARTIDN,'
7712 • 606,011118TNIIT.8treet.
. .
SARNEST -AND ;TUOUGATFUL
11110P1310118 ',PRI - :11BOT: OF
TILN'BOOK - OF By:Bay. Wilharralewton.
12mo. 25 cents. , .
! ''!"" ° • •nifortoss'Or TEI Pales:
Vora fa 11 -warmth of tone ind feeling shoot Ode
book whisk will make it MA onsooeptable to a Jorge
oiler of Madan. Ita preotiosi. earnestness and rave•
micro of Spirit ere recommendations.—Banner of
MI those : - - • •
The yrdakae !mutates 'Meere and earnest ispOsltiOns
of proptegiss. 'The "mhos's TIOVIS are. IFOM. mt.
Moots, pastillas, wad - We trortWof , attention and con
,akieration.—!Aineriems-Presbytdrials. ', •
The book lathe product of a calm, thoughtful, ear
:niditrand reierentisi •inlad; and mey.he annulled with
, prat •:—Prilskrtimanlimitnir kid AM/agate, - •
/Mat priblishedty - • 7 , • , „ , • ,
111:14JAK 11.`t. LURED tfiliTnlN,
je26' ''• No. 606 011118TNOT,Eltmet.•
OLD - BOOKS—OLD , BOOKS+OLD BOOKS.
Thfiludeiriteied 'ltstei that he het fret iently foe
sale books_.prlnted ' : between the "yam 1470 and 1600
Mn, editions of tbn Vitheri, of Vhe'lleformete and of
the ParttitirDlvinet7 In Lkw, If/eaten, Lyttletonauf—
Warff, Bn4l - los,;l6olvet, Coke s Cale, the Year Books,
&ports, be., are often to,bi. toned upon 'km shelves;
Osolopettlap,losfeontAllesslontithire,Metory,Poettr,
Ptdlolll3pkY. ,Befitung Feemomy, Government,
4111130070 A, Treatises upciwthase
end other kindred - naivete are 1414 et manly dealt
in' by him. Bailin, in large And iinallgtusotities,pm
elasse4 et the Puotann-Blonso avenue 800k57411, O . BIBBS.
GGT_Atienst,e //MieVe.,Thiladelpfil - a. 1- •
- ,JOHN CIEGIPBWM,
Vela larg.Q3Dpba.
- .
iNEN TOWELINGL •
ALI. A M1'1141,07 of " • •
Bode& Luarr•Dliyirt.• of all witlthe..
Runts pram 0110 Diiperl. •
litrd Sole and Vitri Huokabaok, •
• .„
Very, wide sritor 'took pteee Towel.
]fringed Towers tolistoks sod Danoreir• "
Oolorid ar,idokoil floe Obarober Towele.
. . Veryroorth ItirOloorO4 lanolortroolc
' Tirrklib;Hrtlirsoft, ittol Wiry Towel. '
Utile Clash - and'Atirerioan thorn Ororh.
-'O/sart ToVAer Dialt Wiprio, rind Briar Creak.
- •, • . ; • , SHARP/ABB olunrassa,
jos-- aILIBILIWT,and„EIGEteII Street,
1859111
•
av, Woe Nrenotertreis Oteele et halt prioe !I !
We hove jttet closed oat, Trom ao Importer,
, , ,NOR 02.13 H, ,
"OProalitlts , of exeellent4Ods, " • ;
Wbleh • ,A''sljl sell et led than
CoNzaw , Taws asepplimi•plaoi
also, tke balance of ourregoler stoet of r
PAIROY .rEGlCO,;Betniatto, ‘co.oke.
iffelllt Tom I.lcoeloolloieo. ,
. • s hem* Lane Pole :,« matt Hand les.
• Otteettille Lice T.pecto; in greet moiety.
Wok !Meek gni tkesteri, very okeop •
- Travelling imete-e:Tediffereot'materlabi,
go.•torer 69. for iden , eart To
d.bo' weer.
- Llnsu o,3ll rLteinmesansassiters; Balk-tosrets?orowikal
Pisso-eovers; Tablagovess; Stendwovers, km, • -
and atoll stook of baskeetie.eoodo.'
T atokel I,X 1, a Oil
B. I. Corner 11Tolligi a SPEING eassgall.
17 2 .Wll BUY AND Slltif, OABII.
'FR Wit Et LACE BOURNOUS WITH
Capi4,, Pointe ma' Miatlllasi (Llama ' ) all at
nat.:ad prxe. to oboe the seuou.-at tee
SARIS MANTILLA 'IMPORIIIM.
108 OUNATNIIT Altre4l
' ?BMW LAOS BOUREOUB MITII,OAPEA, Pointe
and 'Keathley., (oambray,), in 13,4 'profusion, at re
duced prices, to close the season, at Of
_ - P,SEIR SI4NPILLa EMPORIUM,
• - • , 108 OFIRBTRUT Street.
BLAHA AND, WHITE B &RIGS OLOAXB ; AND
Durtersintiesocied prices ' to close the Stesekst the
- ALeNTILLA 'EMPORIUM,' •
~;, .• fOB,OHASTSIII' Street.,
SUMMER 01,0AH8 AND DUsTELIB, to e in infinite
sestet, at fibre . pt apeoced pria.e. et the ,
" "PARIS HANTILLAAMPORIIM, '
", • I'oB 01111FVSNIII , Street.,
The whole of 'our utak is nos, (Meng at redeOeS
prises, prspinstory to the close of the Offen.
- - 1.. w. rauvros st 'co.
- - ' . TOB 0111E11M 1 17S Street.
QBASONABL. ," -
Dames at drat coat, -
- 58: B.rsige sobesat
888$11ent, 25 Ceuta: Black aerages,
• 81 canto: „,81,:ok 01,epto blares worth 83..
• Thln - Diess Goods all reduoad;
cooTza ec _HON AHD,
1.28 • N. oorner NINTH sad: MABKET
SERV/OBABLE`•••.
Travel Lug Dross Grinds ridnood
, Cheap!, !discorso, Stripes,
..11sysderes; Browns, °holm Yikated,
Firet-rate 13% cent Leveling for 14 dent..
Badeßent Blsok Mani:ills Bilks. '
itylbe but nest and gee 12) oent Laing,
,
COUYBB. 007S/LNI.),
~ 3e20 . 8:I. aorner,NINTR and MARK BT
BRAITTIFITL—
'soIid idea ell k
Reel good genteel ttylea.
' Yemen end Chantilly Leas Beatles.
Leas Pointe. Barege Dusters.
- - ' t, 000P2B & OONARD,
je2B O. E. earner NINTH seatMABBOT Otis
VINSNS' FOE MEN - 13' WEAR;
Araeriern Linen Clonipsny's superior so Brown
Linin Ooitthign ; 7 % and Xi vaitoui r thatles ; Brown and
Bleached - Linen .9neks, variona styles; Brown Linen
DrWe.. A shofar issorlonont of the above Goods now
.on temple, and for ode by JOSRPII
dia-et'lss awl 180 aiIIiSTNTIT greet ,
D - E A S S
s .
DR. VON- MOSOEZISKER,
001:77...T.5T :ea..1•733 .41.171 , L18T.
Oen bee Datumlted on all Messes of the ATland RAZ
°ma No: On WALNUT OS ! , ULM UNTIL
. : 1. ARTI/101• Xing Inenann.
jtt..lte ' -"'
uktY.SA'S OBLZBEATED*A4E NA,
E 0111146 MIN9III, MlNtriE PUDDING, MEND
4 1 03101NG, BOILED Itt . ITARD, KOOK CREAM
lONCEL-AISI, PIES; °AEU, ave.'
MANEPACTORY—GLEN COVE, L. ISLAND.
We take greet pteasare in presenting to the public) our
MAIZINA, (which is put pp, in one pound packager!,
with directions for use on the wrapper), as being by far
the OHBAPART, 'swell as the most delicate - and whole•
'None article for. culinary use now extant, and is conce
ded to be, by the many thit hare tested fie delicate
most important addition to our national
•" .131.1 of Pare," particularly for desert. ,The article
la manufactured with the ',utmost care from the
choicest selected Pouthern Indian Corn, The wa
ter used in its mannlcture hi drawn from paranoia
Springs, and is remarkably pure and wholesome; no
water could be better fitted for the cleansing of a lab
steam designed to he used largely for food, and to ren
der it particularly adapted to the use of imrellde and
the mak room, it being equal, if not soperior, to the
befit Bermuda Arrow hoot. Partials in the Trade are
invited to call, when we will take_plessure in present•
tug them samples; ,
GLYN 00FP MANUFACTURING 00.
• ' JOSEPH R. TAYLOR,
,161 WALNUT STEM;
.Wimieseie'Agent for Philadelphia.
WM. DURYEA, General Agent,
166 PULTON RTRDIST, NSW YORK. '
ern the only parties in the world that
laiaufaatura PIAIZENA, we laving assured to our-
Ni►M the'aiolod►e right. ap2o•wekm sowam
MM ARAOAIBO COFFEE. —2OO bags Coffee
ITICnt , superior Alurilty, just receive, per bark
Irma and for lade low, by cla &awls " 4 ".
3,18:101 • 180 WALNUT Street,
_.itiAnepeiso -BIDES.-LBOO 'Dry Rides,
1.1 justreatival per buk Irmsokod fo.bale km by
'CHARLES TIME,'
j71840t 180 WALNUT Street
SIDEDLBUCKWHISA.T, 100 bushels ,Older
vissast (pWN) at 10 MARKS r street, beloli SE
COND, north Ade. ,W. R. HMO%
. ,
-
-DEFINED B UGAR.-1,600 bblg. Yellow
.I.ll+ - 0, 'A, and A gaffer, ottudted. sifted, esisl_Ptdver.
iced degas for obbi by SAM= GRAHAM dilJO., LE
VITT/1,10.44k, _
011.-7-2ZO bbls of Straits and
JR. Soak Oil, irtoio and for gala by
' - --, mnmiD,& sox,
o t -ito inn Riostb crbST
t 1, 4 TO BUY • OBBA.P:WATOBBS, go to
fortlrimit earner of 11100t1D and NNW swell
10
:„Alhi L .PREIORT OR ORA.RTER TO
1111 Ni (PISAN BRITAIN 011 Hotta OF BUROPB.
The fine bark ALIZ ABBTE7 7 'l3smint. now lying at Al.
,tnond streetwharr. Apply to BAWER 8R04.,
1,21.4fte- , 79g STBAWBBARF, Street.
14 OM( War prime quality. Ouba
Thiniii , per lake Gilellin, for WO by A; MN
BUICOII4IO *rots 11SONT Stritei, , lAA
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY. JULY 16. 1859.
. JJjE4tLUS:Z+
SATURDAY, JULY 'l6,
! The ertit altittetry. ,
--No. 5. y,
; It,hat been erroneously auPposed that he,-,
dance Iriscdunt' Px4murrox is an Irish
tie to also ,an Irish mad:,`,'On the contrary, he
*ns born at Broadlands, the familY 'seat.
Hampshire, England, on the 20tli'ot October,
1784. , -He : Claims descent froin the feirtieria
Oounteiiii GODWAi - ,Wlxo..freed , Ooveptry: ll 4,
the, heavy taxes placed upon It by her eieri
husband, Liovire, Earl eflferila`: Traditi4
tells the story—how he promised to repeal 1.114
tax, provided the 'Would tide 'nak'ed through
the town—ltoti She ,did it=and lacivf one Curia
0130 being; henceforth damned to 'eTerl4 B tieft
tame, under the sobriquet of Peepitig:loni :
ikt Coventry, ,„ , . „ .
• - ,ofieldw-aburloompat of IbtriVVse earth,;
• The fatal bytirord,of all pais Magma, '
• ,Boring '4. little etigef•hole in filer,
Peeped—int hie 'eyes, before they hid their wilt,
Were plain lled Into Millman in hie heed, . '„. ,
• And deopt before Mtn. ' •
• These are TiIIeNYAOR'S lines. Who that
read can - ever forgot, can ever''''wleh
, to
forget, how exquisitely he has deperflieti,
In his. peens 'of 'fg aodiya,"- 7 an epic of,
two pages I—what the peerless did, and'
how she did' it 9 ; Who does nbt rejoice that.;
the poet,c; waited for the train at Coveritry)!!
harigingiliont'with groonts'and porters on the'
bridge, to watch the three, tall spities, and as
he waited and mused,threir the old legend
into deathless song'? "
Let us—ah,let parlso a moment; amid
the muddle •of politics and i)oliticians,' and ,
'steal a few lines from this most charming of
;English lyric& 'Here we are told bow she un.
'robed' and, mounted her paifrei! ,
Then fled the tb hei , inmost power; and there
flnide'aped the Wedded eagles of her belt,
Tlrifflaa: Wart's tilt i but ever at a breath
phi liniofradjooklni Hie i 64mmer moon
,Ilelfdloped In cloud anon she etniak her head,
.dod !Powered the rigid ringlets iqlei knee;
thibled he'reelf in haste :.►down the etalr
ato'n on ; and like a creep; og stullmirg ell 4
Prom villa onto ptllir, gntll eke rereheel,
The gateriayi,"there she rotted her peirriy trait .
In purple blenoned with armorial , gold.
,What: an exquisite picture is :this I - The
beauty of the expression equals the .delieacy
_
of the thought. Notice bad been duly glient
all over CoVentry,
..that the Eady Gentva;
meant to'ride,.thus nnappareled, to free-the
city from ,oppression. Every door was, shut;
every window. barred. No one presumed 16'
linger op The streets. -
Then rode she forth, eirdbed
The deep sir liatened ionnd her as she rode,
And Minn; lor wind hardly breathed for 'fear.
.- The Milo trideononthed bes4s npori.the spent
Sad mining eyes' to nee : the barkinirenr„
' -
Made her cheek flame herpairrey feettallekot
Liam barrio thee' bir pkires 'the blind Valle
'Were fOll of 'chinks and holes; sod oscriltetd
Paataitto gablei, oipirding.'eticed : 'but she
Not lees through all bore ep, till, jut; she saw.
The white•dotreied eider thicket fivia tbelleld
Gleam through the Gott& mphwarr la t ie wall
From this peerless lady and the grim Earl,'
her husband, descended HENRY Joiur Ts raLE;'
third Viscount FatuzzavoN, now Prime Minis.;
ter of England. The elder branch of the,
family (Called' TEMPLE,' from their Manor of
Temple, near Bosworth, in Leicestershire) .
now hold the Dukedom of Buckingham. The'
junior .branch reckons among its', members
Sir Wzrmiezr TEMPLE, Secretary to Sir PHILIV;
&newt., who died in . his arms; Sir Jonze
Tzwrze, son of thieWfttrasr, who was Alas..;
ter of the Bolls in Ireland and wrote the his-'
tory of the Irlsh,Rebellion of 1.411 and, tt
:grazttliMeof Ulu biatialica, , .l,"
as Baron Tztietn, of,Mount-Temple, Cohntl
Sligo, and Viscount twizstreoft, of Palmer,-
sten,- near Dublin. When Ortaittspi LiavvA
edited , the Publin University Makazine, some
sixteen years' ago, he resided at Palmerston`
House, with a retinue of guests, horse's, car
riages, and servants much greater than itnY of
the noble ()inters of that mansion had•evef
there possessed.
The' present Viscount PALMERSTON suc
ceeded to the titles and estates, at the age of
18, on the death of his father in 1802. After
,having been at Harrow School for the usual
time, he wenfle the University of
,Edinbuigh
for one session, to study moral philosophy
under Dneatp' STETTART, a course subtle.
fluently adopted by Lord Join Buts[-Li and
finally • graduated in the University of Cam.
bridge. 'The, death of Mr. Per; early in
1806, caused a change of Ministry, and Lord
HENRY PETTY, the present Marquis ,Of Lans
downe, vacated his seat in the Commons, by
accepting the Chancellorship 'of the Exche
quer, and became a candidate, on liberal
principles, for the University of Cambridge.
PALMEESTON, who was a little more than 21
years old, and extremely popular, from admi
ration of his intelligence as well as regard for
his social qualities, was put forward, in oppo
sition, as the Tory candidate. Defeated, he
purchased the occupancy of a seat for the
venal borough of Bletehingly. In the autumn
of the pm year, when a General Election
took place, ho was retnrned for Newport,
which he represented until he was elected for
the University of Cambridge in 1811.
Iq -April 1807, in his twenty-third year,
PALMERSTON Was made a t miler Lord of the
Admiralty, in the Administration then formed
by the Duke of Poaztean. That accession
to office occurred over fifty-two years ago,
and with the most pliable principles—invaria
bly faithful to the ono . groat idea of self-ad.
vancement—Patmensvox has been in office
ever since, with the exception of a few in
tervals, respectively, of one, two, and five
years. To have held on, as a Minister, in
nearly fifty-three years, all that time except
eight years, shows wonderful tenacity of pur
pose, and , extraordinary flexibility of political
conscience. There can be no mistake about
U.—PALMERSTON" se a man of as much tact as '
talent. He has served under the following
Administrations ; from April 1807 to June
1809, Lord of the Admiralty, undeethe Duke
of PORTLAND'S Anti- Pathetic and Tory ; Secre
tary of War from 1809 'bail May 1828, under
'PErteivaz's Anti-Catholic and TOry ; Lord
LIVERPOOL'S Anti-Catholic and Tory ; Mr.
CANNING'S Pro-Catholic and Whig—Tory ;
Lord G)DERIOII'S Pro-Catholic and Whig;
and the Duke of WELLINGTON'S Anti-Catholic
and Tory, and finally Pro-Catholic, in which
change PALMERSTON turned round without a
murmur, voting as heartily for Catholic Eman
cipation as he had previously voted against it
for twenty-two years; as Foreign Secretary in
the GREY Ministry, Reforming and Radical
from 1830 to 188 t ; in Lord MEznotmez's, pro-
Catholic and Whig, from 1835 to 1841; in
Lord Joni; Russztt's Whig Ministry, from
1846 to 1851 ; in Lord Anzanzzlee Coalition
Ministry, as Home Secretary, from 1863 to
March 1866 ; then as Prime Minister from
March, 1855;to April, 1868; and now again
as Premier in , another .Coalition Cabinet.
These are changes, by one man, with a ven
geance. Yet, in .a political crisis, tho other
day, PALISERSTOIS - managed so cleverly that
the Queen, who dislikes him, was compelled
to place him at the bead of the new Adminis
tration I This, shows, what all the world ad
mits, that PALMERSTON really, is a wonderful
politician. Liable, to be sure, to be ridiculed
as a political weathercock, to have applied to
him BYRON'S bitter line;
lid turned his madam& would have turned his Skin.
He has been satirized, of course, in prose
and verse, for his want of consistenoy. Hero
Is an epigram which caused some smiles when
it first appeared
Butt many 4 Ministry I've seen, '
Per sow twice twenty years;
And still, whate'er the list has beau,
There Palmerston" appears
I wish to know, tot muck I Aim
Too galekly to condemn:
DM they sit rat to Palmerston,
•Or Palmerston to then; t
Here is another, somewhat better, upon the
-noble Lord's-
OONSISTENOT.
Temple throngh"eyery T 5.171141 creed has ranged,
Yet think*, perhaps, Ate principles unchanged
Bo seems it to the chaise borne traveller's eye
That ft , i stands still, while trees and towers rush by.
There is one excuse for ParsuasToit's per
petual clinging to office—whieh Implies such
• a mere tridinia politics that one would fain
not accept 'lt: "Loyd PALMERSTON,' for the•
greater part ofills; care*, has heen a needy
man—that is, his :worldly means' were not at
all-equal-to his worldly unlit. Until his Mar
riage with the Dowager Counteas COWPER, In
1889, ho was little more than a pauper peer.
Not only a poor peer,l3nt a poor Irish peer,
which was the abysm of poverty in English
aristocratical estimation.. All through the
_greateipart of hie public life the emoluments
osy office have been a decided 'object to him.
His property in, Hampshire is not large—
nierely a country seat. ; His estates In the
county Sligo were oftittliavalue until the late
Mr. Nnamii,opened roads through them, and
the family property near by Dublin. granted
to his ancestor 'by Oneitrais 11,.in 1666, was
sold' long ago to pay eff' his' father's family
debts. To a pate with 'only . $lO,OOO a year,
the -emoluments„of 'office, which doubled
idol sometimes more than, trebled his in
cisPle; - were acceptable. His marriage
With Lady COWPER, a rich -widow, (to
fesin he Was attached before her first
marriage, but was too poor then to woe and
wed,) brought Mm large, property, which has,
Since' been, greatly, increated by"ber subse-'
44.00.4-40taing44100silli nte rvW4iffrit ,%
prePerty•JOhiglng-ta Itlnuointsg, and
gp r otb l i f two brothers, all otwhora died.witli-,
'entleaVing male heirs. I l ord_Piratensroa : lB,
Pow a wealthy man; and continnance In- office
,of no objectto bim,-in a worldly point of
Itiair. He covets office, as he alwriYs did, as
Ito alisays will, bit it is simply beeause it gra
talcs his ambition, makes him the rifler of bin,
native land, and invests ,him with almost
Sovereign power. -
Patalterrost hi a ready, speaker, but rarely
attempts to be an eloquinit'one.. The oratory
"tif the Ilonso of Con:limns is chiefly conver
•iational;and the Man who would atternit to
;play the orator la that croWd;of well-educa
pd men geoid .Most certainly bp, latjglied:at,
'—unless he -were ono of the icknesileilged,
geed speakers, and:had a subjeet-Worthy•Of ii
display 'of 'eloquence. :Lord . PALMERSTOX
speaks In an Pari,chit-ehit, ordinary manner
On meat aceastonti.. The.eiceptiens are when ,
he has to make - a personal - attack, defence, or
explutation. Then, hi) will become earnest
'Oid impressive, though be rarely appears
.as if he had his heart really in the matter.
His information is great,' and his
memory remarkable. He, has not floated on,
the sea of politics for ever half a century for
nothing. He is an authority, in the House,
r en most subjects, and hence , exercises more
inflaenee' than his talents alone could give
He has no genius;, much •talent, and'
immense tact ! , Let .blip' alone, and' -he runs
riot, wounding the 'feelings of his 'party by
bill superciliousness. ThroVe him dew», and
he rebounds at once, with all his party rally.,
„Ing around him.
Painsarron, -at seventy-five, does not look
within twenty years of his age. He is well
preserved and. well dressed. At one tima,
the Time s. made a habit of speaking of him
Cupid -chiefly because be had greatly
airected to be a - man of gallantry, after the
bloom—the purpurea juventus —of manhood
bad departed. He looks like an ancient bean,
not'a little faded, bat stilt in fine preservation.
The drawings, in Punch, give a very accurate
idea of his feattires and figure.' Ho is child
less, and his title will be extinct at bit death.
If it be wondered that a Peer should sit in
the Home of Commons, we answer that while
every English Peer sits in the House of
Garde, only a. select number of Irish and
Scotch, Peers (those elected so to sit and
Ouch among them as have English titles,) have
priviiege,'Faid - rmsr--mr - Tristr-rv,..,lims,
PA'LMERSTON, is eligible' to represent a county,
city, or borough—provided it bo not in Ire
land. PALMERSTON represents the English
borough of Tiverton.
' Lord r4Lmmrroil might have been a man
of letters, perhaps, if ho bad not become a
min of politics. In 1819, when he was Tory
Secretary of War. PALMERSTON joined with
the late Sir ROBERT. PERI, and' a few other
young men, his colleagues or friends, and
produced a satire (or skit) on their leading
Parliamentary opponents. This, called The
New Whig Guide," was extremely well exe
cuted, and Much annoyed those at whom it
was directed.' 'We could point out the par
ticular articles respectively contributed by
Cnoitsn, Pass, and Piraisnsronbut there
is no occasion for doing so. Here, however,
to show the smartness of Paraisaavon, as a
write of satirical squibs, is a parody upon
MOORE'S Irish Melody, commencing " Believe
me, if all those endearing young charms.",
The satirist has inscribed it to the late PETER
Moons, a well-known member of the Opposi
tion in 1819, who sat in Parliament for Coven
try. The Mr. PONSONST, who is, alluded to at
the close, was a heavy speaker, who had'been
Chancellor of Ireland in 1806, and was Leader
of the Opposition in Parliament :
Bellows me, when all those ridiculous airs
Which you practices') pretty to-day,
uhall - vanish by age, and tby well•twirad halm,
Like my own be both scanty and grey, •
Thou wilt stilt boa goose, as a goose thou halt been,
(Though a fop and a nibble no mored
And the world which has laughed at the fool of Rich
teen.
Will laugh at the fool of three•aeore
Tie not, while you wear a short coat of light brown,
Tight breeches and neckcloth co fall,
That the absolute blank of a mind can be shown,
Which time will but render more dull i
Oh I the fool, who is truly no, never forgets,
Dot still fools It on to the aloe ;
As Pr NtIONDY leaves the debate, when he sate,
Just as dark as it was when he rose.
We have only to add that PALMERSTON'S
salary, as Prime Minister, is 525,000 a year—
the same as received by each of the five
Secretaries of State.
- Publications ileceived.
PPM! PETERSON 16 BROTHERS
The Betrothed. Being the new volume of Peter
eon's Brinier' of The Waverley Novels.
Popular Tales from tho Norse. By Georgo
Webbe Dasent, D. O. L Pp. 379. New York :
Appletons.
The Roman Question. By B. About. illustra
ted from tho Breach; by H. U. Coop.. Pp. 219.
New York : Appletons.
Tent and Harem : Notes of an Oriental Trip.
By Caroline Nike, Pp. 300. New York : Apple
tons.
Obambere's Encyclopedia, Part 3. New York
Aopletons. •
Guide Books to Niagara and the Hudson River
New York : Ross Toueey and A. Ilarthill.
From Atlantic City.
()ellen=lance or The ?Tees ]
UNITED STATES HOTEL.
ATLANTIC CITY, July 14, 1859.
I have been here far the last few days, at this
delightful watering place, enjoying the refreshing
breezes, with an 000asional •invigorating dip in
old ocean. After Bedford Springs—which Is now
so difficult of awes, but which I confess to a par
tiality for in common with the President of the
United States—l know of no summer resort equal
to this. For sea-bathing it will not lore by com
parison with Reliant, Newport, or Cape May, and
its accessibility is such, that it only requires a
pleasant ride of two hours and , a half over a care
folly managed railroad. Driving on the beach of
an evening, with the cool breeze fanning you as if
admirably tempered by an iceberg, is only
equalled in its deliolous effects by a plunge in the
briny turf. Either can be faintly imagined, but
never described. The cool weather, until a ,reek
past, has detained vielters at home, but they are
now beginning to come in an innumerable throng ;
the acoommodations are so extensive here, how
ever, that no one need fear of being crowded.
Your humble servant is stopping at the United
States, than which he will venture to say there is
rie better kept hotel, nor more attentive host, any
where, Among our guests are Rt. Rev. Bishop
Patter, whose health is atilt deplorable ; Rev, Chas.
Wadsworth, B. A. Fahnestook, NIA., Col. J. B.
Moorhead,,l. Damien Coleman, I. V. Massey, Esq.,
Col. W. 0, Patterson, together with a goodly num
ber of beautiful women, whose names I will leave
it to -"Jenkins " to record at the next " hop."
To all my friends who are wearied and worn out
with being cooped up in Philadelphia, I would stay
come to Atlantic City, and especially the United
States. Come and take a bath in our splendid surf.
It Will not, like the famous waters that Ponce de
Leon Nought for in vain, make youth perpetual;
but it will give you a new lease of life for at least
a twelve-montb, and a dyspeptic the appetite of
an oatrioh. I forgot to mention that our host has
had a railway track laid from his hotel to the
beach, on which runs a car conveying guests every
ten minutes to and from the bathing ground. This
le a great convenience. Yours,
itELIGIUUS TELLIGENCE.
Historical Sketch of the First Reformed
Retch Church ill this City. ' •
About fifty years Inve'olaimod:eltkoe the-oongre
gation now worshipping in the 'beautiful ohnroh
edifice, on the northwest corner of Seventh and
Spring garden streets; was formed, and, in conse
quence of Whiott; we learn that a sermon appro
priate to this aemi•oentennial &melon will be
preached in,that church tomorrow morning, July
nth, by the paitor,lter. A. EL:Willits.
. The 'foundera Or this 'church Aveiro originally
members.ot the Germari,Reforined Church, wor
shipping in the old edifice en Raoe street, below
'Fourth, (now Rev. Dr. Bomberger's,) where'servioe
wee performed altogether in tim German language.
A portion • desiring preaching irilhe Bnglish lan
guage ocattsionally, and not having their 'Wishes
gratitled%in - this respect; withdrew and, Organised
the GeOrluil RCP:wend' Association," - by 'which
name Ahoy. wirer. krytn . nritil, -- after their &tarter
was obtained.- This withdrawat,tooli Plain in the
month'of July, 1809,nrd may be regardedns the
'dati of the twlsin of the Church tow designated as
the' First Retailed Datoh." Thie- latter 'name
Was; however, not immediately adopted. Ia dnitti-'
cry, 1810;-they were ArmorPorated under the'nap e &
of - t,Rvangelleal Reformed Congregation of,the `.
Oity'aud - Vielnity of the'firsti
th• • ;10,kagi'Foorth street'; heloW
, . Avail supplied-'hy Rev.
JoleptigEsstbUrn;-
st,ln December of that year, Rev.
Jnmee K . Satoh,
,Presbyterian clergyman! from
'bratit,Ottrolina, ante rimong them
,as a mission
-o,l7,nisd on the 281 of July, 1810, assumed. the
'pestorat'obarge of the young congregation. On
thiCistli cif, May of the same year, the oorner- stone
of tho 'cliureh, in 'OrOwn street, above Race; was,
laid,,and on the . 29th of June , 1811., the church be
ing finished, it was formally dedicated.
'On the 14th of April, 1813 initiatory steps Were
taken for uniting with the Reformed Dutch dhnroh
in North America., The classes 'of New Brunt,
wick been aPpliegi to for' that puipese,
Reverends Livingston and Fichurenum were 'dale
gated tourganise and constitute a obureitin this
city, which they eubsequently did. Under the
new, „organisation, Rev. Jacob. Broadhead wee
elected pastor June 10th, 1813; in which capacity
lie °aliened to eerie them for. over thirteen
liertra.. 'Ai a meeting of the congregation held
I. l :olt,tnli.Y PA; 1814, th e title the.oharoleWas
, chehmad to that which it now bean, the'neciessary
aine:dmient to the oh'arter haiing received the
eignature . of Oa. Snyder on the 10th of NOVeth
"
ber followlea.
In September, 1818,1liy. Gilbert R. Livingston
was elected pager, and continued In that °Moe
until hie death on the lith:of,Maroli, 1834. On the
14th af, May ensuing, Rev. George W: Bithianel
wee called to maned Mr. Livingston, and Contin
ued as their pastor alxinttwo.yeara, when be re
signed for the, Purpose of establishing another
church of Alto same denOMlnetion in tide otty—,
the'ohurob now located On the corner of Tenth and
Filbert streets, of whiOh.the Rev. W. J. R. Taylor
iri pastor.
Sir. Bithune Wits suOceeded it the First Gbuidh,
Oatobar 18; 1836, by the Rai. James 8. Harden-'
Bergh; who wee their minister ier forty years
having, in bra, been sabseded by C. 0. Vonore
dale, on the Bth of March, 1841. Vanarsdale
occupied their pulpit during eight years, at which
time the congregation was left"Withoat a pastor
for a short period, until their present minister Wall
°looted, on the 9 . th ofAprll;lB4 . 9. '
For various reasons which presented'bermtelves
to the congregation and their pastor, Rev. A. A.
Willits, it was deemed advisable; in the lapse of a
"fort,yours,,to oreot a now edition , in a more north
ern part of the city, and in compliance with which
the corner stone of their present house, Seventh
and Spring Garden streets, was laid on Thursday,
Deoomber 15th, 1853, and on the 20th of April,
1855, it was solemnly dedioated to Divine service,
Rev. Dr. Bethune having preached the dedicatory
sermon on-the morning of that day.- In the after
noon, the pulpit ens oeutpied by Ohanoollor For
ria, of New York, and in the evening, In a very
aceeptabhkmanner, by Itsv Mr. Willits.
This congregation is at the present time in a
condition perhaps second to foci others in the city
In those vital features which give enduranceand
-0401.!!ey-tixs!,-„Chrls , Obiirgb,l6. 4 y pastor 0 . 1 41
people long oontinue-lo'fionor the truth in their
oomfortable hones, and exemplify it in their daily
walk and conveNation..
The services tomorrow morning will doubtless
be highly interesting, and many of the egad mem
bers, who have ordinarily been debarred from
attending public worship, will be likely to make
a special effort tote present on this occasion.
ES.7IVAL IXIIIITIUMBIL —Almost the last place
on earth in whiolo what is termed by, Christians a
revival of religion might be expeeted, one should
think would be the oity where the . Saviour was,
muffled ; and yet, from the .corrospondenoe of
Christian men now in Jerusalem, we are led to be
lieve that the same state of things which prevailed
in this community a year, ago is now being expe
rienoed in that memorable city of the East. Wri
ters from there express the opinion that the work
now in progress among the few Christian Jaws at
Jerusalem Is largely the result of impressions Made
upon their minds by the accounts of the revival in
America. e, Numerous meetings have been bald,
similar to those held in this and other cities, and
for some weeks past a daily prayer meeting has
been in progress. Many conversions are said to
have roomed.
PULPIT RIPATITEL—We have 3113 t heard of a
Tonnosseean preacher, Rov. Mr. Peters, who, on
seeing a yoing man about to leave the choral
before the former bad finished his sermon, stopped
preaching, and made the following remark :
" I will finish my discourse when that young
man gets out."
The pointed character of this rebuke indnoed
the fellow to change his mind, and he again
turned into a pew, but before taking his seat,
" snake load in meson" as follows :
"Then, air, it will be some time before you got
through!"
Suspecting that he was likely to receive more
than he had bargained for, the preaoher rejoined,
"A bad promise is better broken than kept," and
went on with his sermon.
This Is pulpit intelligence at least, if it is not
n religious."
DEMoNE7HATIONS IN INDIA. AGALNBT THE Gus
rst.—The Rev. G. Rail, writing to England from
Modula r gives an account of a gathering of some
ten thousand native; for the express purpose of
adopting a memorial to Lord Stanley, the Secreta
ry of State for India, praying that the propaga
tion of the Gospel in that country maybe prevent
ed. The memorial, in the Tamil language, wee
before the writer at the date of his letter. He'
adds, that for many years there has not been so
violent an opposition to the Gospel among that
people as at the present time, and which, it is be
lieved, has been mainly awakened by the recent
success of the missionaries in their preaohing of
the Word.
THE REVIVAL AMONG IRISH OPERATIVES.—" On
Friday," says a recent number of the Bel fast Mer
cury," the religions revival, was manifested in an
extraordinary manner. The females in Messrs
Ewarts' mill, some thirty, bosoms affected and so
much excited that it was deemattneeessary to stop
the mill. Thie occurred before 2 o'clock in the af
ternoon, and during the evening, after work was
resumed, several other persons were added to the
list. A crowded prayer meeting took place in Mr.
Bane's church at night, and the people were much
excited."
Won ;OR THE GENERAL EPISCOPAL CONVEM
TION.—The General Convention of the Protestant
Episcopal Church in the United States, to be held
at Richmond, Va , in October next, bids fair to
be a convocation of more than ordinary interest.
Among the labors of that body already prepared
is the consecration of four bishops elect, to wit :
Dr. Odenheimer, Bishop of New Jersey; Dr 13e
dell, Assistant Bishop of Ohio; Dr. Gregg, Bishcp
of Texas, and Bey. Dr. Whipple, Bishop, of Itliti
neeota.
Tsurzusatoi WITEOUT fol
lowing very just estimate of moral reforms that
are not founded in Christianity we find in the New
York Observer, and is the confession of Thomee
P. Bunt, the wellAnown temperance lecturer.
Mr. H. says : Of those who have signed the
pledge within a few years, none have remained
firm unless they took Jesus as their Prophet,
Priest, and King.
HAIR DYE...PI:WING MINISTRIIB.—A correspond
ent of a religious contemporary, referring to
twenty-five ministers whose names he had seen
appended to the "advertisement ora certain hair
dye; handles the fisemnd•twonty without gloves
for their weakness and Christian inoonsisteney
Verdict: Served them right.
PROTESTANT CHAPLAINS IN ITALY.—For the first
time Protestant ohaplains (four in number) have
been appointed for tho soldiers In Italy. Two of
these have been appointed by King Vlotor EMMA.
nuel. Marshal Randon, the third commander in
rank of the Prenoh troops In Sardinia, Is also a
Protestant.
Tau colored population are to hold it.great
union onmp.meeting, commencing Angnet 4th, in
Myers' Grove, two and a half miles from York,
Penna. •
Trio Jewish congregation in Fort Wayne
has purchased a lot and aro about to ergot asyr<a•
gogue upon it.
Mn. WM. S. Ow&, of Boston, has been
appointed professor of modern languages In the
Richmond (Va) College,
Two :mil's:,
rear The preesq -.
Labor, labor, °eatable!!! labor! let the wheel/ Of labor
Onward, 'oaward, never itercalrig—therea nollabbeih for
la 'one roriad, unbroken eyelo, let the Iron pinions
IOW; . •
leper 'stab° one-ajar banner, o'er t h e sdne of labor
Teri;
Od the reek, now &mined and fettered, let it emelt, and
'"bruise, and grind,
Till tbs.brato grows weak sad. witless, sod Ohs blood
- shot eyes grow blind,
And the prole forever sweating, tilt the weary Wraith
is iild . - ' - • • • • •
*hat care we for rest or respitef-41an Is - a forukon'
-
'Tie the reign of govareigu 'Laboi—glaistilke,hh; iron
• rule,
Let on obildree-boys and ' - milientitaterr Die.'
&mien oohed; 'r '• t Let the the merry- hearted brothers, and their sisters, fresh
Toiling,, sweetielS, et lit I di 12 g fretting ri t theswel-
- tering stew. , .
•
•
Let' their sunny •diii he darkened; winter foists'
through - mit they-ear, ,• • -
And the leaves and dowers of-vummer to the doet fell,.
. adept end seer.
planer ne or
Is till re ignf Vet the be
no
•
• Ikts tWinkoiniqrsini rear
Within the • z, -
ttby, then, greedy, Fruppw xu s gy,l4o thy het-terns,
tura omit
Is tio gr ilt tpo'n thjeonselenee, and ricorheine 'Rion
thy sheet; ' • - •
Snow tlsokElod'harms.de thy-brother 'with a gout more
priOaleas than . • ,
FLA :MIA tad wealth of all the nations of thi irorld4
peat minivan:
414 the ruin thou'hist plotted, and . the 41•11' thOu haft
- - epreid,
goon will faUorlth aline fury, on thy, heart and SOMIK,
And, the. ohains,whfah thou ,sit forging q4laly thou
UrCdtiomell to feel, - ' ' "
And-th'e injured rights of Seatlei will but edge hie het*
steel- •
pun. ant.rnik, Xl ll 7 / 6 ,d 85 P- r •
MORE ITEMS OF FOREIGN NEWS.
LORD "OAMPBOLL'9 FIRST ,APPOINTMEN.T.-WhO
Lis the new Judge VIAO i 8 to take the place of Ms.
i Jueiioe Erie ? ' We are'doW inforthed of lig '
'—he Is a certain Mr. Culin Bleokburn—bittieven
so. we are not mush further - forward. Everybody
hag been going about town'eskine his neighbor,',
•". Whole Mr. Ootin)3l44kburn ?!' The very ushera
in the courts shake-their heads,'and tell you: they
-"never hoard of eueh' a party."' Neither sn banco
nor In circuit, neither-in Parliamentary, in civil,
leer, in , criminal busineFs, has the name of this
:gentleman been 'lnmightbefore the public. '
• On referring to the Lew Lis: we fled that Mr •
• colin•Blaokburn was galled to the bar in the year
!1.838 and time-he is on northern cliguit, and
that le
,preetbes thd Liverpool serisi4na ; that'
is to 'say that the worth; "Northern Circuit, Li•
verpool.BesSions;" are attaohed to his name. .74%)r
aught we know, Mr., Colin Blackburn may be'
pre-emineatiden at the - Liverpool !Astons; bet
most assuredly neither as" advent., norms lawyer.
bb name known, to the world at large. -He Is
not a 'lateen's Cloungll:': The legal' eleibis thia
appointment stand at' a nitniumm•l'laffibe: , then.,
done any; service tto the Liberstl Petty: inlgarlia,
meat which; should,entitle him. at their,handEkto
snob:high honors and so lnoietiVe tipost?
rally none. - " • ' ' ." • ' •
. The only reason which can be aesigned.for this
strange freak of the Chancellor Is that this new
Palma Judge is a ficotohman: Noiv, no one can
affirm with justioc that there-is - any jealousy
among cur English lawyers when flootolmen are
retooled for the honors of the Bench„ No voice
has ever - been raised against' Lord Campbell him;
self; his elevation was witnessed with satisfaction
on all sides, for he had fairly earned the first posi
tion in hie profession. Surely, if Loa Campbell
was determined to have eßeotrbman on the-Bench,
he might have selected some one ,:who had Wail
tidied some little claim to the honor.—.Loradors
Timm . „
.„
Barman Rayststra.'.;.-Tbe :revenue returns ha. ..
been published, and show a very satisfaatory,re
milt. The Mantas° in enstoras, excise, the post.
Ace, assessed taxes, anorown_lande amounts to
nearly. two thirds sofa million
ort the quarter
Scamps have demowed t126;000. The 'redviced
inehnie.taa stows a loss of five millions on 'tbe
year ; but tba.inoreaee from the other. britAohas
of the revenue goes a goOd way to make up this
deficiency, and the net decrease is below a million
and aquarter;`.• 7 • ; - -'• • •
• Mr..flultito luteude to move for *copies of all
treaties and okomentleps,,yeltiolt stigma this noun,
trtto take up arms against any other Milton:
Mr. Maguire hair given, notraer.of 'a' Motion,
drawing attention to the neoessliy of granting a
charter to the Roman CaTfitlio University of lee.
land. _ - , -- „
- No time is yet fixed for Sir J Graham's motion
for an inqairy into, the administration of the army,
and the relations ef the Horse (lairds to the War
Department. -
Marshal Peßuler bas made arrangements with
the railway to convey 30,060 troops from Parts to
Strasburg in twelve hours, as that 300 000 men
maz bo assembled on the Rhine within thirty-six
hours. , ,
,
A Fannon OH &Nem BottentrN ,
Mori,ing
Herald's Paige correspondent atiyi that a quadron
now organizing at Oherboarg to to receive the ap
pella•lon of the•Ohennelsquad!on.
A Vienna and a Berlin letter both confidently
speak of negotiations for mediation having been
opened by Prussia with England and Banal&
Prince Marino Windiaabgratria reported killed
aE Solferino.
- It is reported 'that nt lite battle of Solferino
nearly every officer and man of the artillery of the
Imperial Guard was put tors de egmbat., •
The Emperor Napoleon, wisidag to conform to
the customs of the aid empire, bas deereed,thst
the regiments who partioctlarly distinguished'
themselves shall have their colors decorated 'The'
colors of the 2nd Zousves is the first of the army:
that has been so honored. It has been :decorated.
nith the arose of the Legion of Honor, and the{
E %le of the 2nd Zmavea"Was called upon to bej
" proud of ita soldiers."
TTIM EIMER= NAPOLI= AT SOLYKRIWO —The
P.:arts gives the following as a private despatch.:
dated Castiglione, June 24, seven, evening : "It'
was thought this morning that we - were about to'
have a simple affair of advanced posts. But the
enemy • anpeared in ,Immense, force, and , offered
battle. On arriving here at seven this morning
the Emperor hoard the sound of cannon' in all di:
reotionr. Hie Majesty, followed by the whole of
his staff, at once advanced towards the mane of
the combat The enemy defended his misitions
with the utmost energy ; but our troops, eleotrified
by the courage, and, we May .even ear, the temeriT
ty of the Emperor, speedily routed.him. '• At thd
moment when I write this desilstehfleien. eve=
Ding), we ire conquerors on the Whole line of bat.
tle. The Emperor never ceased to expose himself
daring the whole fight, and the soldiers, while
fearing the consequences of his noble-rashness;
were lost in admiration for their chief
At Paris it is believed in some quarteri that the
Pronoh losa on the dog o. Solferino ameanted to
from 16,000 to 18,000 men. 'divided is fellows:
Niel's amps 6 000 to 7 000 - ; Hillier's nearly 5 000,
MeMahon's 2 500, 04nrobert'a 1,000;" and there
are bookies the meanies in the artplery a'nd
epeolal corps.
The Vienna oorreeno . ndent of a morning panei
estimates the Morten loss in-killed, wounded,
And miming at 24,000, which is probably under
the mark, but even, this is an enormous loss. The
S irdiniantoonfess to have had 1,000 killed and the
same number wopaded, which is evidently a very
'eticide approaoh to the truth but, so far, no ap
nroximation has been made to the Prenob loss
It would not be an exaggeration to estimate the
killed and wounded in We deadly pass of arms at
fifty thousand man. Indeed, the carnage both
a: Magenta and Solferino has been horrible—so
far beyond the average of pitched battles, that the
svppressio yen; seems to be Instinctively the policy
of all cow:treed.
In the case of may other Power than Austria,
the result of so disastrous an notion would haie
been an approach to terms; but obstinacy forms
one of the chief characteristics of the Court of
Vienna. At the same time it must be admitted
that this very obstinacy has snore than once saved
the empire. The Austrians have now abandoned
the line of the Minolo and fallen bank, it is um.
imbed, on the heights of Monte Yenta,- and'the
road between Pesohiera and Verona, where, it is
alleged. they can take up a strong flanking pool !
tion, and act on the offensive or defensive, as sir
cumatances may warrant.
The death of General Niel is invested with the
most impressive cirourestanees. Before the battle
be had said to his friends' that In this notion he
area resolved to win the baton—the laurels won by
MoMahon at Magenta preventing him from sleep.
tog. After the battle he was nowhere to be found,
and for some time serious apprehensions were en
tertained that be had been taken away a prisoner,
or been buried beneath a bees of slain with the
chance of not being recognised. After a diligent
search the General was found lying insensible be.
teeth the dying charger which had conveyed him
through the combat, and whose expiring straggles
were pressing the small remnant of life ont of his
master's body. The General wee conveyed, still
insensible, to the ambulance, where it soon became
evident to the experienced eye of Ohampoullion
Oat no hope of salvation ?email:mi.
The Emperor was sent for in all baste. Not a
word passed between them, but the Emperor took
front his own neck the token of a marshal of the
empire. and laid it upon the dying warrior's bo
som. Even at this dread ,hour naturelose tuitions
quered, and claimed her sway,
The General started up suddenly, and, flinging
his arms- around the Emperor's neck, died in
the actual effort of expressing his 'gratitude
The baton and cordon of Marshal of France,baye
been his life•long dream, and he died in the full
tide of Joy which the accomplishment of all his
hopes produced. _
riareguay d'Hilliers seems to have been streak
down by a cannon ball, and died without a word
or exclamation.
Leered, another good general, is also among the
slain; while, strange to say, Gaston de la Roche.
lcueauld, who left the dlptematio career to join
the army in this campaign, is taken prisoner by
the Austrians, along with many others of the same
way of thinking. -
Two other generals have died of their wounds,
and at the. Tuileries this morning I assure you
that the most serious and dill:isn't consequences-at
present to be oversews were considered to be the
1 telling of the baleful disasters of this glorious
day.
Already does the cry go forth from the army to
tonsil Lamoriaiere, the man who never led the
Uneven t..) snob pale, nectar min victories as these,
but to terrible and onflicts, wherein the
enemy, Instead of retreating in good order, be
' cause the French were too much exhausted to pur
sue, was wont to flee in full dismay, pet to the rent
NOTICE TO COR 11 r TrO7t
COMSpoidentr. for, 4 .1k91-1 , 41.4.11'_,?r1it ,plooe*,
zt mind the followingrutes:-
7rery Coounanioation
_must tiCiesorapaater bY
name of the writer.. In Order to - insore orree*rw
tke typography, bet one Mil of tie : ghee
,
WO eel be greet Tot' ye clet yt
0-t-taertother. States, curireittibtlii:
e " * Pi-Pf.!UlAti is their pirSlVirkesl4,9,
• re eoum,e of the eurre6iotintry;tiei.iiiin:4lll
oI releillitiow,or airy inikwrostfixtistwin be teem*
tyg to the general iiiaret. 7 '
TThemosey, anCtolletissik nonireinainod.
e hitherto hs not posed - the. fortresses re main carried:en_yet. • - - •
Of yrhateervice
been fo thb mitt% it hairaitesisibly bieb meant
Sid ? The Bardiniau gavels, ottani no - lenger Vit
bee perished; Wei annihilated beneath-the-heavy
charges - of. thifokissitling:'--The 'Frees& cavalry
has likewise suffered - Severely,' and upon the whole
the cold and cautionernaturwet.the ballettris
-en.
flounces plainly, that nothirwhaeklbeee seaotn
pitshed. Not a, word has uver been'said about
the ansaccesafal attempt 'Antes reeolitera, which
tpok place tw o days before.: News; if_ not
Wholly bad, Invite •
poetised tate - glory; but when
it comes Marked - try 'defslsit; it' is igoored'ulto
gether,_
GENtitiL ATZWAY.
_
• - " "
GREAT OUTBACK , AT :TEREIf'4, , HADMI.4-11b ,
4 131 .41C-ItßprritEßET ~ .On---Saturday last 41.1enng
Irish girl, staste;aeventeen , yearitiot age,. --, watz
at
t*eked by a negro, BOMA ,threer.milim south,Pf the,
efity, who attempted tiktdelate her person, dreitlllB
AA knife And threatening her.#ll.lideathiGehnre..-
fated, 'Her reply, says this - -r‘ininit;:stanape her
es a heroine worthyof, Curt - array, I
gilt IneVili---'aublide.'-'-`--sha7Wifilig-erartizg-a
er
d evi lish.assallahVby.hir.: l 9. , l6lCrumbbaltroviliti_
4 0 1's 1 1 9, in - ft I .firrAb934l93r9i
toq bin octane. -; to„wattift#peteAjcnArsnsisq lad ed ' iAail.
On - Willi, inniningra iirigniiinw - dataleinbled in
400 1 .7 0f - theleitraLoverei--thith-0319,6titry-,411*...,
dented brealtintlAptsithsr...7asicd:lynehi
leg the black mandrel. The aberiT, Pa , ber De';
Marla, and D W.. Voorhees, ...Ese. exhorted the
exasperated multitude -. to respect the law He
can to. have bad a, preliminary examination at
anti o'olook, and AO mobhad--nrepared n WIDOWS
Co aside =him at - that hour 11nol , fling ham--noon it
the examination was waived - by .his counsel, - and
in default of $1,500. bail he was , fully committed.
We learn by a gentleman yrk - Oleft'Terie tante . -
at Sir o'elook •last" 't hat the wiser (shun
eels have prevailitd,f and that the feeling in favor
of lynching had-given, place to a determination to
let the, law , take its course.—,Ssattnil
SUICIDE. Is iidcititeliZlTT; cairgonnie. —AI-
len.S. Mechling isotninltted snieideion' the - 39th of •
May, arkorkvilln;Plaser counti; (where -he -has -
wo, brotherereelditutO-IY elmalinghimselitbrough
the head yrithe,,pfgtol. ,fle,was from lititleteoun- •
ly, Peiansylvonia.,lt,iippe i sre that Meettlintriati
laboring under sdnie 'heavy_ mental ixeitateent
at
lbe tinie:of 'hie killing himself, and wee , probably •
inset : The ;allowing lithatance of ri letter found -
on his person, says the Placer Press, may possibly
give some idea of the ammo of the suicide:
i IttOnEOE•01151%, Vlity, 25, 18:59.
; Annex Bar Let these ;linei inform` - int' that- •:
you 'have' wronged - tne,lini, Heald JOsey'S - -:-.•
Fe, never took,your,money, - -or knew, anything
hbout it.. You have mede,hini, mlserable,:ann
paused me to do as I have done: ' I have nothing
to be ashamed of—neither - of - My sate in thlk a no
try or at beme.'' But Ism wrongfully' smirked Et
many things that I am innocebt of, and which are .
,beyond human endurance. • „
Now, you cease blaming any more aliont yorit Me•
nay, for thue you have accused are innocent. Yon.'
have brought ruin on several, -and" you can never •
. e replace their happiness.; - and.you-ought to think
of - a hereafter -before -yon Antspiolon, without a
cause. I can forgive yon,, as _ ..I expect forth:l4,BBf,
beforp ajnat God., , Mnatianp.
LATEST -71/07L TEE
Itieharcison,Coriespondent - of the Edith° lfolow-a2; . •
Ireached this city hat - evening dirici front '
having left Dishier - city , on Itlie--80fit. of--
Vane... He, - it will 'bes'remeastbsiedi - wee
ivelling companion of Horace, OraelpY on- hilt -
to the gold mountains, and was one of,,the signers
:of, the first reltable;statement that reached the
'Statesof the richness of the Winged diggings.'
• Mr. Richardson brings' no 'special :newer,- He
'says there were about - threarbundred. entices run
,ning in the diggings when ho left, and all of theß,
paying—some of them finely and others mode ,
rately. The' miners wore atilt pushing ihrthir
into the mountains, ' , end prospecting ivith -- onsort."
raging success. - Mr:' Richardson' Ls :aceonipanled
by Mr. Irillard, who also recently
,frqn the -
mines, and bring : o4hp most fiatteringacoonnts.—
St. Louis Dortoclift-: , '
,
_ rag Sontheinionrnalo 'Urn diagnosing the
origin and signification of the iticird'..sieo/e.
there it a popular eerierthat 'the 'Weird ie bDPlietr
to - 6- pedal of European-7 and Airier - in bloat- Jr ,
should be remembered that Aare ik,no authority-
Corti., The word was originally newt todesignete
the children or Spanish - Taranto born in Spanish
colonies. In time it woe applied to' the "ohildien
of other - nations. 4 and people -talked - of French ,
creole's - and Dutch- (moles. , : The told . properly
oignifieo new that the Peron to whom it 'supplied
was born in_ a country originally colonized by
France or Spain, and deseended from - ancestors,
residing in that pert of - the 'country at in , ' before
the time of - its transfer to the ljnitett Stare
- THE GRAIN TIRADE ur 'THE -- NitRAT.4-09t ,
loglrithis-custont,thatimisrallettterepvres -
in the - Western-grain deipicts..-awd.,pardqulaziy to
Chicago, of selling grain not notnalli in" Kam, by
speculating warehouse owners who held in:their
stores a large amount of grain belonging to othet
parties, and who, - to Make good their contrasts.
when called upon to deliver were in• the , habit of
loaning; chipping, or borrowing the same on their
Own - account:, the ,Board of Trade Of Chicago
passed a series of resolutions at their fast mooting
strongly condemning the pristine. - -
-THERM has Veen an exercise tif lynch law at
Stamford, Liceolis chutity:i.Ketttucky. Sigh ty
Persons took Jasper_ Roney, who shot James Old•
ham in Milledgeville, last May, out of jell, and
left : him suspended by the fleet" upon a tree.
Emmy; a week ago last Monday, was - caught after
long and weary efforts to find bini , in a remote
corner' of Marion county, where he was the terror
of the neighborhood A small man pinioned hire
just as he had taken a watoh from a gantlet:lien.
Ile seemed ready to meet his fsto, and desired to
be killed at Lebanon, but the people there were
not prepared to be his mantioners. ' _
SHOCKING .6.001 - Dati7.—oll 'Saturday last a
little daughter of John 'Fap, at Albany,-New
York. woe dreadfully- scalded. by seising p3a
containing two or three quarts of boiling water,
and turning the contents upon her head 4rci
shoulders. dhe lingered until denday - morning,
when death imit - an end to her misery. - Eine was
but two years of age. - ,
Monsieur Blond's', the hero
,of the tight-Topa
walk over tho St. Lawrence, near Niagara Palls,
walked upon a tight-rope-from the stage of .the
Metropolitan Theatre, in Buffalo, to the third tier,
and back again to the stage, with Cal.' Lam
•Smith, a man-weighing one hundred and
five pounds, on his hack, on the night of the Bth inst. , , . -
DEATH FROIN SWALLOWING CHNIIII2 STONNI.
—A German named Berner.-was found, last Sion-
day evening, on the road side, near Newark, N.
S., in a dying condition Being_ conveyed to the
police station be received medical attention; - -but
shortly afterward expired. Oa examining - the
body his intestines were loadedwith cherrystones,
whioh-the deheased had swallowed. •
Suroing.—On the 28th nit., Jacob Snyder,
who lived near Ml'villa, Ohio, committed maid°
by shooting himself the evening before The only
catias assigned for therash aot ia that be bad- sold
'fifteen acres of land to a new turnpike company,
and be afterwards discovered that iteltiight have
received more for it than the company - paid MM..
LYNCH LAW IN lOWA.—Doctor Ellis, .who
was driven away from Greene county, lowa, by
thi Regulators, some time .since, returned a few
days ago on a visit his Ern•in•litir. The Regu,
latora, hearing of his return,' assembled in large
numbers, selsedhim, and, tying hint to a tree, ad
ministered to hint one hundred lashes.
- SINGULAR EFFECT OP A. FIT.--Mr. Joseph
Laws, au old citizen of Indianapolis, was taken
with a At ,on Saturday, tablet lasted about an
hour, since which he has been entirely blind, and
there are no hopes entertained of Me ever ro<
covering his eight. 'lt is a'slegalar case.
Horn Buawr.—The dwelling house of Mr.
Archibald Dunlap, residine in the vicinity of
Hook's Mills, Hampshire county, Va., wee totally
destroyed by fire on Sunday, the 3,3. inst. Loss two
thousand dollars. besides eight hundred dollars'
worth of notes of hand. '
.Itv Monday's St. Louth Republican there are
two &Odes oasis' recorded atrharing Occurred in
that city the Saturday previous. They were both
among the colored gentry—and in both cases the
gay Lotharlos were shot,,lint not unto death.
KIDNAPPING COOLIES —Advices from China
state that both at Canton and Whampos men de
tected in kidnapping have been se zed by the peo
ple and crucified.
[For The Press.] •
MR. EDITOR : 'While the little 22 one-hello'! po-
Minions of the North are furionsly raging and de
nouncing the South and her institutions, and
while the Name class of politiolans in -the South
are answering back in equally bitter terms, you,
must permit me to say. through your columns,
that I have been agreeably surprised to fled murk
good even in Nazareth. Fire-eaters irt my section
(the South) teach that ail mirth of Mason and
Dixon's line is but a hot-bed of Abolitionism, and
with this one Idea, they 06P.th not te
conjunetion with the sense ono idead Glass in the
North, for a dissolution of our glorious Thatou.
They have succeeded in, stirring up a commotion
—have got op a tempest in a tea-pot—bet while
it rages, I ilad the good people In both seotions
moving along the even tenor of their way, heed
ing not the sputtering of the narrow, contracted,
bigoted fanatics...
Durl did not sit down to write a polittoal
I only wish to boar testiesouy to the at
that there are -more good conservative peon's) in
the North thou Soniberoers are taught to believe,
and that in Philadelphia find the mass of the
intelligent people " all right." I must say that I
am g t olgidlys, emphatically. and hugely pleased
with your great and beautiful otty, and wilts no
good people in partioniar.. My few days' stunt
here will belong remembered. Your many eau.
Wet ptaoee of publio resort speak loudly in praise
of the taste and liberality of your citizens.
have visited them- all; and have received the
most oourteous treatment at tbe band s of those who
have them In charge. I Audi nap soon forger my
visit to old Indepaudenee Hall, at the mention of
which the heart of every tree American should
burn with emotion"; nor shall I forget the great
kindness shown me by the venerable gentleman
who has it in charge, Mr. Moran. I think your.
City Connell deaerve great credit for procuring
the services of a gentlemen so courteous and well
qualified to superintend a place so sacred to every
Anserioanyiat riot. In this public minter Ideates
to return' thanks-to Mr. M. for hie courtesy to me
and to the party who visited old Indepeodetee
Hall -with me ' May - he live long to receive and
oondoot visitors through the venerated edifice.
/ Vented love to'speatt more particularly of soma
other places of public, interest about Philadelphia,
and of the general clear and beautiful apttoar•
mice of your city, but will not trespass farthsr
upon your space. -
tiespeotrially,
A “d6114t