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'ilactstpetem : it* - „ GN PLAIN ANA DANorrwraiwrima, „_, BOOK% 1‘ f , TPV PRG r a s PAPU BooRbu., „ , ` - i3l ) i g u t a l is ; P: ',iiti:g4lo dr P,VglitEMßOlLik ' 1 1 1 : 0S, '• "„. .34% 1 liiso - nA2Hlo3,,sielks i ` n:, 110,4 „ , 1.) :- go ~ r, zr i l k' It 6iy , , ' • gir!!!B7 , RA . Airei ' ~ i"l'''', ,';',. ~,1,1 : .,1 ~ ' 1 '- 421°*2 ' i h i 11 ' ' "- --;'.'..,•=s'iaiii:sl';l4llll:ciOn °'Cllle.' %FUT , 1 le -i' '' Attlig 4 llM •- a ' r 01BarE, w il l 111 Or° , , ' ito 4 IT 9 11 1 4 71 1 , --- , ; ..,- seid,u • fte,fh •)-,- :,., , - - -- i. ' atua;uoi,i,. , ~ , , „ , A A Itt .170 , 5 .. 41.- tt'i:f—'O ... it , 2I:LiTITIAYISTIARET • ' lizAziecitexamte - , 41., us* . , , ITALIAN ~ O LOTHSS +lliiiiitetnitinlolllsli;:riterini; IDA rtJR;G C l'jr4 - dis..-44.***1. 1 tirOu.Alii , trnituir) • ` 4 l l " l ;ftr t . 714 1 A::AIR9* 1 4 , 410 0 !„ - • Wit*, - • 1 , *GLOVBBI . AND BU WA LL NES, WWI; -1 • * ;;*, IggrztowzglAmkgio go , BOiliEllitli7laiD•Sotripvirx . otißN;-TEADF. -••• • • - -• • 'N. 411 ' 44 ICX: O 4 , I ' - t ."2. , 4l...uormAlcokoriptiri Imo Marble „eif Atpat otbiluiroti '1,446 lt-,I4IARD2N-li-BRO 4 - - lissup.ornants Amu ImpOurizia (ir w-- , i - SILVELPLATSID Piing • 2 - Irot.W, OitlariUt fritt‘laiva 1 040 • P lonsetarrestamilliika^m , Prado,. rilliriANOWlTlAlON.,lll,wmalLops,imus, ' to ,OOIItIIMAMpa.MAXT/111/9 ,111,411-, _ t:410 11 T4 1 1 41041 " ''.119i4 gtatimus 14 k4A*1.0 ii , k A ' L 1 41 1,: gr : 444 4 , 9 4 1, *: 4 :;:Y 014INES , I tar 'emeriti We, sad foe , ' • MitilkitAxiisk ATICOrI#7I"PrONLYTIFZr: Dotwats. • I• • ANL Obilleatalcooti - PstuatolPkill'o - tlfasiltria SlariV m 'noitons 2f, 0 10r4sha"A v ',Mao geMalk! , 1 / 11- 0 4 est !`,' • .;;'.fir 1 rettli 4 1 4' ' acenvsp,/11.,g,', 4 I,lq l , 1 1. ..,447P 11 940 111 . 1 4 ;,bY rl l2l 71ilug ' 0-4 -: -Z*4 11,03 . 1 0 11 , , C140t13.1051:fAntt,.;,::: W inignlßAlxx . essriAlitraps rum ONOULDELBIIABI MIZT IMISIMPAO. h,i20111 , 1r. 40 - 0401/141$0041:itiLlq6 CRISTW ina OT Opp*. ". *7 liar si=shigkitioilo.l , '' - " • it.krotorotit, smir. 4 14141kil Willie AM 'lliairfaertitring LAlNl•ritiorlitiadoinlissd gene of liktrto -.th,Alleatifora9Cias4;Mbet•asj• I# l .4,o ol 44. ll k l Pgint !‘q.4 4 - tigir/Y -14 -n --7-14 kOMETERS' " tt' • -;-• ".;; • °:A r. L - ti S 728'011168TN,171` TREBol,l4ogbrOr.,-RCIA 'Tag pqn.oursx.o. 111 iMOIRRT. - :TOY .'4O I co..' - Ots-ALrivris's.. - - t _1?; 14;Arg9110134:04 /Zap . iigiililll64ll444 thi Aid 314 2 1 ' 611**41"FALT*1141*4. ; A.TivniadlAL Argo, Xisotainto. ..Ca "..' ' '" • -- - ~ tAliilltiT MUM= - AFD amussw ot,tima rE ~.- „Woo ArOAMPION,, 1 •* e Nun Aillaitli Man' IN:j ittomde die lamed tiiiiwlim' i 1, 1 , .. , t , ~. .. ,„, 1 mi . kr ,„ (2 a 0 „: .. ididliiiiiiiit es loots 4141 iisars -,a044 *ilk ~ 4 1, 0 1W ou lAlfirrt =lO OtriatlOSS6 Wit ' "A ki,ll theta! tO 7 +1£1 4 ,‘ ,- ` ''' •s) , ' ' 1,? , itliiiittaltr va huakee umikiioiso as A misi,4- 44ifirifirtialstAbilorimmo tzeoi, 02'00 00 el Mies, *Moo - iimillio wk . , _oitoifiabr or *air orlir' • --' ~..;—., ,-,_.,,z. ' '= rks' --- yt - ilitikilllaND A RISKtivt4AUL. g - AviHA-44.45 '..;invi_ k atii ,-,,,,,,,, r 1 -.. FA rhillolitiOL t ak , rusel- ;1 7 '777 :1 1 1firill +'`. - . '64 ,14 0 1441 0 16 .1 , 4itY'r, k' ►=, t.freliftillii"; •.: ' 4 4i, * ' ''' . '5, 4 q% •)Prillalll WlTilrenniall c: _ qt.t, ' 1100,10 . 0 .- ViV: 1 :: , :,# 4 , l4titk i l=i ,_, i n 10 04triate end" „-, • - "':'':',X , t*,-!.-I)ll' l .4iCatiP. l ll. liitf:wittto..lolooEßPE, ' "S T KR7:I I7 A - P E - R S " THE INDEkeENDENT, EVEitY - 4BEIL -64org thO zafiarois otheiCkintribotors toils °alum!, rift , e;"ifiasite;,l33llo)l3lt STOWS, BoT.::020,41. ONSEVSS - , - as/L.4011N O..WILITTISBt , • -iirmg—Tso Nolfsri.ia*, nblLha at No. 6 BEER USN ara;sr, and for /ale by ALI, NRWS ALGAINTS. - Jal.4-talkwata.:-.: • • - a , . „ . . ROME AND TME d %FIT -141)1f TH - 4:40? : 4AN 9T/AS T/ON,' • 411104.sitti Tacit-run Faust sr H. 0 aours. 14 ' orAgioresie.-,01:tr.V4.' The, 11.Onain Qaestion raosbinigent, pithy and opfgrarotantleffiliteb if the Clourt of Rome that bas appeared, 10 eciderirtbodio hire bewWwritten In' the confidence:and under the' patronage or Zonis Napoleon. althOuchiyieldidg toearpedlenoyi ha afterwards ordered Its suppression.. Tay TllOl7BANce conies of 1$ were taken letwltelY byfittf Prises Napoleon for pnwralflistribn• • Aboithiroself says. - • 'Pardon me eartain;vivieltias, - of style, which Y hid not time to cogreot;Find plistige boldlriftto the heart of the book:;-Yon Wnifluesomethhog there. , 11t bt fairly, and in IcoJd. faith: Pd.,. not pretend• to`haee judged the foesof.lnly Vincent passion; MAI hate'caluggtiated Woe of them.- -_.• • hare Fought a publisher iBßwrsashi,while'l bad dillimniint. 'MOP ~ianot bulimic.' Awl aayniarntott %hi mai:alai of the segulatiorts of our pries, Or the aeyerity of Otis tribitnala; but inittii Pope , hat a long arm.whieh might reach Biliatiee,l bays gone littigeonit of the irertcitell hl the plain truth' uoti t4ild thiqcgalk is •%.'natitattr oFISIONS. • • ; tt Onto(' the twist ptingant productions of thaday • ti.,-, Vines,. Mau •-••-" ' • - Intater4ojr, Find). nterallettlY 'trattful.”•••- '.oad,lw Aw - • "US.- A,QoutdFstands into the dirkiame; and. seises open 'the "of this 'national , Yromethens."— Atheitarton May 14 - -- D. APPLBTON & 00 , Pallehen,, : ' • - 1148 amine Broadway. EVAN'S', 13001 E„ ALL Boolp*Teseitatik.low.st prliod;sidak 1610- sow" gift AS Oven with own jinceintee.. 4 " JORT.TO.II BOOKS - - ..- "- .." c " year To *sib. ""- 'POW° , AN?'- PRIVATD , DISTORT' Ow .14APOTACOIC - VIE TURD. With Etegintplikel Sketches of dieting - 40ot Gainicinc , sod -31evorites. by, Sixonet: Bianaker/1.1,D.. - PRoe Rl LS, . Lo v A . -.o„,. 2 ,idatriw' to. Toieh if M. pkelet.:!franiilated b t. Is D.' Price RI.. TAD speatito,woßAsw 'collection of iiciitineeketclies— Agentleinin -fecuteol int e go ; Ditis,U,Ria °Call &onto. -Price . - • irm..7 AND- fll WAR. Of 1859—8 y Ifielante ,•-,, DIONTSTI •AKRODO i TRIS OR -PTA !lilt. epee add amouße.at sd naiiiisr,,Trfoo lateit pin be Nand I. • !' • , /041413 1 11 • - -+- 4 • = • ! Gift 'flo'on!litore - • " • 810Z439" CBES MDT street: CgLAIiBERB O I.•ENOTOLPPEDIA.,.'' .I , (To bani eiTbtlMOOtkly rote. lb 'onto elsoh) Bevisrly supploal to sofadkreie, by' • . Jogs ..k.orAlEtbaN, Agent • . „ Dor .aeriditoi , e . Now, AIIiNtIOALI 010i.OPIDT.C.• , ljtakbraorktkrcgaidlatrit oboes BLitW jytal•tt Milled ft , seYwheriy.;-if paid to adeacce. I - MEW BOOS& • • •• • 2. .11TRAI.Girr FORWARD; or. *sating la the TAAL story for aohten Om of all ages. By Lucy Onorrisay,nttßor of !, Irish nig?, eco.,eco, 16no. - _ ' , OAFS age) lui_y t eit forth! :Teary.' TztorAsgarLAnitits toarame; end other 'today, ,Idlistrit.lOgrit±tit Mont tiettlis, -Designed , oblefly for Vonag. , By lobs Todd. Igno..' 16,0entil -. • ; T01[;,- ,0r,02k0 Lttst , -.lcousil,•l6mii. 41.11INNIITEU.,AND:111/6111 or, Bilf. By, ' , 47.otuilla 'Oa% mate .203 M'ARD OF TE111,110,32,04 or, ftoriei of - the fitraggli of, roil' I,uld'ltitemiter.' By 3. !.'3ldgar.."- 11.*Orated.'leinti . '6O debit ,?. , stritair‘ix -, ow TUB ATORADCCHT. , Translated. Vataiin. , rim*: 60 eent,c , . _ IMAM 0. • k".111117.1111IMARTInt, , „SNOW, citiagatrg fitrelito Np3T rexxv Ir4ornifyipout. ~IIOOIC-' ; Llatrizsig TUB piny TWO- ttelOttli ON Tin -ZOOK- .011 1 YE•para. , . - By it•v:lll4lsestiewtois Vol?, vt, , i-,.11921001 0/..4112 , Thera it s yrornth sti Vero, Ask to• g - *bent 'yds ,botikrwbleds ertikieSkilt nstirnsseistablyt..,tb , 'S lasts bleu olt-tinetrite., l j.tefitsetlyyr , sabeitbetas but : 4 0 00 07144 mOblebthatels.-4terater, of 2 Thefrolime ebb:emend esreera aped * tkaa propisOpire-Thop' wnlioem artinrel - err;‘,lll , seise ye.,, ipeesiteejibet,lte,bretthir44 , looktuocepa see. 04AtabiliiitittNirtts#0,.,:,-A. • Irthe prOltnes et triasitator‘VL lkostVl4,4.***Rilit lid may be a`salte!2 ., ryttli .--Priabytertitt tlasuter sea Adfooste Jut eribbeked,by 10.4,i1t B. - AIMIND ' $66 _ - GOO 01111811CCIT Wisest: ftLD 80010-CiELDS(joES-00 NJ , The undersigned , Matra Wet be hie frequently for aide b 404 11 printed',betweaa t the, pears 1410 and 1600 ; early *Mow of the tethers of, tke,lieformere ,11;nd tkaPasitan Pleinea, 4410;*40441; 141 414 1 , 4 11 , flatcar, Wollner Pcilmtc 9 0 k 0 J / 01 .1 . Vas Peak B ooks, arc -46 0,4 are °Paolo be Maud upon- has obelese; lopedialjaMincei, Oland° AuthOre, *Wary, Poetry - , tolcasoe; Political ,/loonaray, caoverawant, Atebiteatircwriatuta aletory. Treatises upon times and oikirricladred subleete era being coachman dealt In4by hint. Beam, in-law and smell quaaltiee; pot okatedat tke itierrtom-lito cup arauwalookacal, coon nut strost,,sho.:,,tsupe - ,ll4Thelelphili' " 4 '01,111 , 4311 ~ „, "romi 6431P*111.1. Ittudi 'PM flobo• IN.EN:VOWELINGS. - " 141, - Afall supply Of - Blotch ',Linen Dupers , "of all widths. , • _Blotch pattern fine Diapers. - • . Bird Bye sad Salsa filaokatisek. , , Wert wiling* stack piece Towels.' - • Prlaged - Towels ho Molts sad Damask. Colored Bordered flaw Chamber Towols.. -ViarroaSh Medicated lloolfab'es& - Tartish Belk soft aakirlfy Toledo.' • " " • Basel* Oral& aild'Atiserleasi Linea Crash:. Oleo Towel; Dist liflpessiandßtale Coot. , r• , ' - IMARPLIBB BROTRIBI3, • JAB: ,- - • ORIBTNUT.sibiI•BIGHTB atreeta. . . . , . I.FL• 7 t, .1859111 ,- 1, - , •, I • !_ 'z'rlio•itr•iieli Dolls Meade at to' price i - 7 ; ,WitAiiire just eiosild'out.i' from an Impute; .. los 0...- . IkeVeralloto of excellent geode, . . ' . Whit& we trill sell it less than - ‘ ' ' .....''' ,Vilitiall4l.&.Tfiliftt ItEGULAU PRIOR! 4 ..faso) tliii betimes of our regular stoat of " ' - - - YA1(01 , kfIag, , BLUNGIIB,/co., &c. .. '_,',itikatille Lice Picauteminis*. • -- ' --, - item% Lave Pototeeload lefautillee. . : 2 - itlitatatillai toilet Goodi1;10 great variety. , , - Such Meek Ulla Dusteoi. very &Reap Travollivaptieteve. In differect uteteriala. Elueouter.Ovaide.for 111001 and Eoyai, wiu. ' ' ' .I.lseaa,,liicat Ilaiiditereblete, Beili-tovrels. &0., &0.. - plaao t ooVere, Tablemoiere, steu&oovent; &0., 'WI &till stook of , Doieestie Goode: ,' .... . ' Titillt lii'4.lO.Y -.4 OR illißi_ L : VI: 1: 'tforair iteurrn &PORl:tie Osamiut. Ira - i c, vex BUTPAND FIETA ,POIt 0A13“... . „ , d7REAP D DEslitAßLE'Ditp,rooODS 114-1 , ,!. 614 ADAIIB , 0/INtital, BTO/1.. , „ 411CilyCli sad ,a33R etrtata. Rabia t all illattoed y ' , ' Prlat.a Lawas,sed uniandr. ” - , Han!trapoNid. Frinred - Pr, Clients and Pintlarilleo. - %unrolling Dreanidatorials - • 'Weal Prilalnel and . TialinTentourilweiand Crape - Bleak liaorrldastles and Pointe. Wide White and push Belem rveBhirlit..laintlea,, Blatant Dlaeheille. ' •-• ' Yornistring (1.0414 to vost•ty. Batas Or Weffis gnat". Lannastelann Allendale do, Angela Plantrelai Twilled and Plain. ' • - -watianivals 40., -- • ' • JrildrLittene, Bosoms, he. Roved Bidets, to greet variety. finumiF Goode dread vat 11•13'• Tray/4W* &o, - jylB Ira to th-tf VIER N OIL LACE BOLIEECYJE • 14 - .I.TH Oetiee.; Pointe end' Mantillas, (Atenoon,) all at std prices to close the 8616011. et the RAHIAMANTiiit.A.AtooartiL ' 70843EINOTNUT' Street. -PRIEM LAOR .BOIRNOUS WITH °APR 3 3 Point! sad. Mootlilse; (Ospbreyd to, s7o4t profkopu j et r e.. 60(4 prices, to close the Beeson, et the ' RABIN lIANTIPLA. EMPORIUM; ' 108 OftRBTNUT Stieet: ELAOE AND WHITE -, BAHIGN - :OLOAKIJ• AND Dietetei'et remitted prices, sloes the **Wily SE the - PAIM.B MANTILLA EMPORIUM, - 1 '7, • 708 ORISTNUT Otteet. NUMMI It CLOAKS AND DWITEBN.,ht en infinite 'varlet, of :Wm, et redacted piece, at the TAMA MANTILLA IMPOBIUM, • `lOB OHIMTNUT Street. , Ths+bole o! on! Moot ii=now offtelta , et , tedueed rlooll,,Ploietretory to the close of the eesson.'• J.' , PHOOTOR 410 GO. 6 ' • - 708 OffigBTBTUT. QEASONAIILE—:- , Bassos* Oticoost; - "Birar /10.04,6; ~" NiCOMoit, 26 Centi, /MA Betagell ' 1:81. oeott:' 1311 1 6atOrape thirsts Worth 881 Vain Ditir , Gbiriii all reduced. . 000 PAR A CON alB 1,28' = I!. t: comer ;Ulna shad IdinlCE'r 1109 1 7.1 0 :38A8LE=. 4 •-• " ~ 'frivolling Drina thirds in:lmnd. gilaldi,9hooko, Ilayadores t ilrowno, Ohone flgursd, ' Pint-rate leg *out Lwrellas rot 14 contr. - Ixeollont Blank MantUls ea style* WO neat and gov 111 f Cen t Lawrup , •,‘ CO/18 O O NAIM 4 JOS; „MIL bonier OP arid T. /I.I4AV,Ta - • - • • , Solid glaek 1111 k Mantilla/Le ' • - ' 4 •lteal rests& stylee. $4,26. • ObanttllrLale Mantles. - • , Lase !slate.. Morse Masters: ;.-. . „ ac. .ointint ' „jai . I.l;„«,rnsi!:NlNT.n sad puma& 86. i ArloEss_pn. itzlea-wr. !iiiiitirOnsikVoicipany , ii Int at itYlilliown yaw* Claa 81 tiaratan. and 61 , 4014,,Tatioity Brown Ltpen 'brlllll 4 etiolimi-ivrartment of the , above Good* note' tris Umpl*, owl far Silt byy, ,losna um, ' •rA114.01r0irr,F1T,0,?%004,.- 111.040.4.1BO , COFFEE.— , 20Q'bilis Cloffde 17-ftta"trisMorb i ) ,l'v, i • ult at e res " , ige g kalk ;1 30 IltAPIllirlit".11. 'VI A.15A0A340 BlptS,-800' Dry—Hides ; 21 ;""11°i411 ' "k igh il s =31 1 117 .11 150 WaldlpT 051505, I,:e. PAILADELPHIA. TUp.SIMY.: 'JULY 19. 1859. t_., 41, TUESDAY S 'JULY. Ip,. 1859. The relfeterstou'lnintstiy.-1 1 6. 5., ' THE LORD OUANOELLOR. ' . . . _ , Lord PALUEBAT9N, mast`beve been very much peeled, when he removed Lord 041,4 i-, near from the' Chief Justiceshiji of the Court of Queen's Bench to place him on the Teel each, as Lord Chancellor of England. -Two, reasons "fol. ;this, singelar appointment , have been -stated: ',The, Mane - eller ; if ho .nerve, only a' single: day, receives - a , pension'. of $25,000 for life,' ea- the plea 'that .. as no, pap_ ever returns to practice at a lawyer , after- bei; • int once sat , on the Bench; no lowYer - wity any thing'of a professional Manes eouldre 7 , ilagnish it for an office, the continuance of which, festiever honorable and „ lucrative ; de- - ponds solely upon the politidul lottery of party tilleCoifi or defeat To encourage an able yer to,become_ Chancellor; not even 'ayper , age and yearly salary of $50,000 is sufficient. There mast ,bowliorewithal to' i!maintala the •' _dignity Of,the peerage,'-'.=that is, tii'maleafhe po(bolL; after retiring from • Oiltoo. For ox- , ample, Sir Enwerip Svonsii;yrith the, title of Lord StsLeonardS, was 'ply _tint Months in, I offiee; , Us, , Lord 'Chancellor. Sir • Vispzurpg, Trizsionn, its Lord Chelmsford, filled the Baum office, which he_ has , ,lately;quitted; : f or only . ] fifteen mouths. Each has his retiring life-pen-• elan of $25,000. - So lUtie Lords Lysrinunirr; 8800011.01, • and oi4nworrn. Out of these_ five ex-Chancellors, whOse pensions amount to $125,000 a.y oar, three are Tories, anti , theree, fore, not qualified to join such a Whig-Railieo, Government as Piaasaneros is.aow head of:- Eaoranag, independent of his inacceptabilitY, ae a capricious partisan albeit a - liberal - politl- plan, would not answer on account of his ad., vaned cakivreayn, who ward Chancellor under:L:ord Annanian's -and Lord PiLllBl.SlCiTelil punier Breeders*, Was a fail- ttra--thongh he had [dude a capital Tice Chan-, 'calor when' Sir - R., M. 'Rom. Besides; he showed a strong antipathy to lair-reform. wasproper, man te hai , e been now appointed Was 'Sir - Ilk:3141w Emma - one of the best :equity.lawyers in England. He is 59 years old,' and was BCliCitot-Oeneral tinder Lord- Ansannsii, and itiothey-,Oeneral Under Lord IPAmisaftrox, who' has mengaged hitn , fti, like 'capiseitY.:• Aceording to custom lie iaentitled to the Chancellorship,- and Ma, apPointment would have given satisfaction to the bar and to the public. Bat he is too livid a Parliamen tary debater to be spared, just noW,-bi Lord iPALMEESTON, BO Lord astintionn has been put in, as Chancellor, to be iocrn * ns lenens, 'Berner, can be spared from the House 'of Commons. Whenever Lord -Clairmont. re= tires he, also, will be pensloned—bat he would ,be entitled to nearly as mach on quitting the• ,Qamin's Bench, *bleb ho could ; not have oc cupied much-longer. So,-in his eighty Arse year, Jo is CAMPBELL, who 'probably never held • five ,EquitY , briefs, finds .himself Lord Chancellor of England. -•• It is stated, in Don'S Peerage," the arti cles .Ia which lain corrected by the: Parties themselves, that • Lord dararnamn was bosh at Springthibli,'Beetland, In 1779, The same date' is repeated in the Peerage Portion of Dien"r , ,u , Parliamentary Companion," an en inialpithikation;,hi 'Which it -bas been so re corded and repeated since 1.862, and constant lq the :daily notice -of • every- - one c.enceina... , :Lastly, , ,idelititar diteT„is given in M. Vaysnhaels, oDictionzudre deiCentejnprintins,s) published, Pa. ria,"atew Months, ago:: The fait that LOrd 'Cittensti is 81 Is-certain. • - 'The father, of the tie* Obancellormas a' fie ottleti` alergireari. In 1800,,,the,h,tiventi tinelyears cold Joust Cankhanr. don,: antrolieffilTifiiirettnie parliamentary re- Porter and. theatrical critic on the 21braing Chronicle, owned , by JAMES.PEREY, also a, Seq. - Careful 'and shreird, Job Cesspit', saved, enoiigh money to pay the expense of , becoming a law student. Ho was called to the.bar In 1806, aged twenty.seven, and soon acquired repntation and practice as, a Nisi 'Freak, advocate. ' Owing - to his liberal poli tics,, which displeased Lord Chancellor nom, the-incarnation of Tory intolerance, be, was not • made Sing's Counsel until 1827; though he had for some time biota -a leader of the Oxford Circuit when Lord IirEDEWBET conferred that honor upon him. In 1821, be married Hiss SCARLET; (daughter of the great lawyer, afterwards Lord Among ) ) and this escapade—it being a runaway match—caused much surprise among the friends of the staid and solid lawyer. He has seven children, and his domestic life has been extremely happy. Mr: O.OIPB '`.LL did net , enter Parliament until he.was'over fifty years old. This was in 1880, 71ton lie:was cleated for Stafford, a borough whose electors have generally been 'accessiblelo Re so strongly sup ported the Reform Bill, tbat he was appointed Solicitor -General to Lord Gitav's Govern= Merit; early in 18112 0 'and finally was Attorney- General, from February 1834 (with a short recess during PEEL'S short Ministry) until June 1841, when, Lord MELBOURNE'S Govern ment bang nearly hors de eombui, he ac cepted a Peerage and the Chancellorship of Ireland, , Great was the dissatisfaction at this job--; for it was that. In the' Commons, Sir Jam dastrottax,,(he was knighted on becoming So licltor•General ) was an ultra-radical, MI. culiag rank. On the hustings at Edinburgh, which city he represented for seven years, be had-ostentatiously declared that to be called "'plain Joas CAMPBELL" was what most gra. titled his Democratic tastes. Yet, in 1886, at his urgent solicitation,,his wife was created a Yeeress in her own right, as Baroness STRATEIRDEN, and again, in June 1841, he 'cepted a Peerage for himself, as Baron CAMP BELL. , - . • Nor• was this all. Without .any practice in Equity, he became Lord Chancellor of Ire land, with annual salary, of $40,000, the re. tiring pension being $20,000 a year. There was no vacancy. Lord PLUMMET, one of the greatest equity lawyers Ireland ever produced, had been Chancellor for several years, to the satisfaction of the public and the bar, and this venerable judge was ordered to resign, In order that Ciamrnsrm might take his place. Puninwr demurred; whereupon he was threatened with dismissal, if be continued obstinate, and actually stated the whole case, tears rolling down his cheeks. as' be spoke, when, taking leave of the bar, be protested against the in dignity which bad been put upon him. It was no use. ;Lord CAMPBELL, a Scetchman, was placed at the head of the law in Ireland ; and I in the Court of ' Chancery, without having ever held an Equity brief. Fortunately for the ends of justice, this new Chancellor bad to resign in leas than three months, when his friends of the Melbourne ministry were turned out ; of office ; and his whole sittings on the Chaneery bench, occupied only six hours I But this gave him a quarter's salary, and one bourse holding of the' office entitled him to the pension. • . 0n this termination of a shabby fob, Lord (Warm& remained some 'years without taking much Tart in politica. He_employed his,lellure, most profitably for the public, upon o biographical etudiei, and his it Litres of ' the Lord 'Chancellors Of England," followed by his "Lives welt as Chief Justices," attest his ability, as welt as his Wintry. They aro readable books,sornetimes lively and generally iiistree.tii , e. Their 'accuraey'has been' often challenged,;hnt..Lord Hauenarit. has silently iinade'seeh corrections, in successive editions, ;as lialio'ireiroyed' dearly all of these. ' Miss -Aims STRICKLAND preferred a charge against 'tied "iit %haying gc conveyed" whole. pages from her ce queens of Eigland,",and there is no doubt that be might have more minutely acknowledged his 'obligations to her and to other racidern,authors. But, with all draw backs; Lord Ofintensm.'s - ci Lives" are plea .' sant' resiii4;pd have „already - their stand 1 among , the standaid blogranhiee .of England. 94 fir feign of the whip to °Aloe, isi . „ . „ .. „ 1816, Lord OAMPBELL bad a seat in the Pahl net, and, on the resignation of Lord Darnall, in 1810, sticdeeded . him se Objet Justice of England. He was seventy-one years old when! Jul.:assumed. this-. position. •He. has -shown as much ability, as a Nisi"Pririljudge, at was expected' from him. But,, from the .very first, 'he-exhibited a tendency, to. garru. lity, which the strong comments of the news. papers itave not alti•ay's restrained. Re COCO initted himself, in several instances, from an :exaggerated idea of his own personal and jtt : - "dreier -Importance. • Thus, lei - fined a High NSheriff 8100, because •be bad gone, in his State-carriage, to the Catholic .church which , be. had usnally attended. Tho imputed offence was that Protestanthim being the Rett giori by ,law established" in :England, the :Sheriff, who represented the Queen, had no right to give Catholicity the seeming at official i recognitiorii ,Tho.„fine was remitted by tbe . „ Crown, r of _course. 'Another time, when a 05y did.not agree, Lord CAMPBELL had them.• all retneVed, in aeart, toiheiroetieV•orthe. "tigintrA and - literally !spilled. . out_" Into. a 41Itch' which made the boundary. The jury liiieatoned. to _bring actions, - -and : were, with difficult , . persuaded to.remain quiet. In he' very lest session of Bariament, the law: , bliirds delivered a positive s opiMon against ;; _illelegalify ofcarting juries out of the county, Lord: - oAronamm had to submit. In the L‘l,,s o .„Kcar ( ', T. 4 Enwxen, he charged so ',lstroligly, and with evident prtjudloe, against thii.defejidant, that The ,Tirars took him ee., Nrelylniask,,and- hie chaige W e inade' the , r gretind of a" motion for' a new 'trial.- , In tho ,case &unman v. beisiirtman, tried at Staf ford in 1848, he insisted, at midnight, (the having' lready lasted fifteen' consecutive 'iliatire,) that the defendant's counsel should ;their commence his speech, in order to-save tlio tromblif of prolonging the trial to a second • • .` r.;llpiitis the whole, hoirover, though vastly diforior to Lord Amato, who was the finest . • , .-netitutional Chief justice einoe Lord Itittais ron injlord: O.OIPBBLI. may - be said to 'have p: iven satiefaption. But the newspapers were' stantly.oa the look-out for his ecoentriel.. ' fiea r aed ridiculed him and them, withont'heat tatiou fear. , , 'That such a man, at' tho ago of 81, should fiecinite Lord Chancellor, chiefly, we presume; .to'have it said that he had filled this office, would appear strange, did not human nature exhibit various 'phases In which Vanity de l lights to ahow.itselfoso . Matter what the age. Lord' 64,),Onn,tr.'s Chancery experience coq aists of having sat for six hours .in Ireland, bearing what are called teruotions of coerce." With nioreviod sense than many would have given him credit for, he lately stated, when taking hie seat in ; the Court of Chancery, that he Would have so rauch"to do, In hearing ap peals,-with tile other law-lords, in Parliament, that he would leave the Chancery business of the COurt to the Master of the Rolls, the three Vice 'Chancellors, and the two Lord Justices of Appeals. In Parliament itself, he bad scarcely been fonvand-twenty hours on the Woolsack before .1, he put hisefoot in, it." A vacancy had oc mirred among the Judges of the Court 'of Qnbeit's Bench, by the promotion of Sir,Wm, mcit. Elam, to' the Chief Justiceship of the Common Pleas. For some time past the cestott has been to _place upon the . , judicial bench the ablest laWyer practiiing at the bar who worild accept the office.' The Lord Chan. Cepor appnints,the Prime Minister not inter= Tering. *Abe surprise of, the English bar, "Ber:Citiilittr, appointed hfr. - Coratt &Aux ntritg, te,,he the new Judge. Nobody bad testrdl. of' ibis ,gentleman before. The Law wis.connulted, and , gave ,the information that Meßiiemstraw wan called to the ,bar in. 1888; , that ho is on the Northern Circuit; h‘het. Practices at this LiVerpool SeiSIODS; smell:tat .ifi.-not - even e Qseen's Counsel. to tbia appointrtiOnt;"nofo London Tiniesisays, "stand at a 'minimum. The ~onlysreason which ,can be assigned for this strange freak of the Chancellor is that this now Feistier Judge is a Seotchman: We, cannot but look upon this appointment as a moat unfortunate one, and a grievous mistake.- Lord COPLIEVL has in this I nstance pushed national prejudiceslsomewbat too far. A na tionallob is worse than a family job, becatse the tno):ler of any man's relatives must be -limited; but of hia countrymen there is no ' end." -- The result was, that on the second day of Lord CAMPBELL'S occupancy of the Wool. sack, in the Lords, as Chancellor, he bad to defend this unfortunate appointment, and did so in a clumsy and unsatisfactory manner. He has Commenced with a blunder, which Tanury- . sewn says is sometimes as bad as a crime. Lord PALMERSTON weakened his reputation for sagacity` by admitting Lord Onersaresarinn into his Cabinet, In December, 185'7, and ho is not fortunate in his Chancellor's first act being ono at which the bar reahnably have taken exception. Sunday Railroad Travel. For ThoPronsl The reason given for running the passenger ears on Sunday is, that the laboring man may have the opportunity of taking a ride. It is pro posell that the whole of the roads, not one or two' may hold out induaemente to the working people to enjoy the leisure of that clay, in that manner. 'The companies will not ran their care unless they are'paid and make a profit. The poor man must * pay for hie ride. It was stated in the ,Ledger, or the 6th instant, that the whole of the companies in the city took $7,687 on the Fourth of July, and if thiy should take only 'one-foitrtb of that sum, on an average, for thirty out of fifty-two weeks in a year, it would amount to over $57.000. This mosey would go into the pockets of the owners of the railways, and they, who would 'reap the profit and advantage of the project, are oertainly not the poor. But it Is the benefit of the poor that is urged upon the sense of the community, and they would raise and pay, odt of the:remnant of their weekly earnings, after their families are supplied,' this large amount of money.' The proposition look§ very much like a business project, by which those who are not' poor may make money out of those who are, on the plea of giving them an op portunity for recreation The ivorking mon is engaged Finder in the week, making a'proflt for his.employer. Big earnings are for the support of himself and family; but it is probable that he win have some surplus, and to get that from him, he is to be invited to take a ride on Sunday at his own expense. Say that the cost is but•small, only five cents each way ; still, there are fifty-two Sun days in a year, and the aggregate drawn from the whole body of the poor would probably reaoh $60,000, or more, per annum. No legislator or counollman would venture to impose so onerous a tax on the poor of the community, for the purpose of giving them publlo rides on Sunday, nor for any other pretext of kindness whatever, It is to be tweed that the poor will not bo deluded by pre tenses, need to persuade them, after six dale' toil for the profit of one portion of oapitalists, that it is for their benefit to give up their Sundays and their savings for the profit of another. T. N. 'ATTEMPTED MURDER AND SDIOIDE.-011 Wednesday morning the painful news was brought to this place that a murder had been committed in the town of Benton, Yates county. It appears that a men by the name of Majcr Haloemb, a far mer, residing In the town of Benton, had shot his wife, the charge taking effect in the groin,catudng a most frightful wound. A son of the would-be murderer caught hold of him, and another charge remaining in the gun went off without doing any injury. After the gun was disoharged, lialeomb sassed it by the barrel and streak hie wife two or three heavy blows, breaking the stook from the barrel with the first blow, and with the seohnd bending tbeharrel a good deal out of shape. The man then disappeared toward a piece of wood near by, and was not pursued until some time after ward. This all occurred at about 7 o'olook in the morning. Pursuit was made in the afternoon, and he was found in a wheat field, near by, with his throat out in a horrible manner, but yet alive, as he had not severed the jugular vein. What would seem the strangest part of the whole, the woman was; alive last Saturday, and hopes were entertained of her recovery. The man was also alive on Saturday, but was not doing so well. Jealousy is said to be the oasts° of this horrible attamnt at murder and suiolde.—Penn Yon .De macros. JEWISU Orrrocas IN TUN FuENCili The Jewish, Chrome says: "The names and ranks of one hundred and forty Jewish'offloers, now 'serving In the Frank army in Italy, have been publiiiblid. This is an extraordinary num ber, and yet the catalogue is incomplete, and a `supplementary list is promised. As in Prance pro motion depends entirely upon individual merit, we consider this number of, easels as a most honorable testimony to Jewish bravery, chill, and. morality, especially when it is borne in mind that; the whole Jewish population of France does not exceed one hundred thousand' souls. Those sol diers are found In alt regitrionls i from the Guards 'to the baggage 4•4ltt.'" • Route of. the -Pitth 'Lind Sixth• Street Railroad. TRH PHILOSOPHICAL SOCINTY-THEI PUILADBLPHIA There le one bupding,on IndependentrSquire to which we lave not yet alluded—that orthei Philosophical Society, situated on - Fifth lariat, eolith of, the ',-Elayer's office. ," Amerlean Philosophical Society for Promoting Ileafto Know ledge" woe formed by the :ConeolidatiOkor two earlier nocietiesone the Amerloatt. , Pliiihmphleal Sodeth fronded in 1743 ; the otherilhe films to, or, So:Oily: for Promoting KbOwleidge," dating from, , about tie yearl73if.' T't I littainotuf: a different organizatien ,-fre e nol473"aaio retindeit by. Franklin in 1727 far as be tells na In his memoirs.., rt,Was to Ibis that Franklin allinlea hi' a letter.to-a. frioud,in 1735, when urging attendance at its meeting.-, says ; tat 'neat still tin ;the - evening , of Win anent. Toe le)9 boars are a l ways the moat joyene: When 'tre:oart stay notatiger,lk fit Oita ehOugh *hid eaoh other goo 4 oight t 'artparate; 7 altit 'g6 'to" ,This early_ associatiMLFOtiNfirfAk-WilW !' American Philasaphical here of this, mentioned by Franklin in; kie letter to Cadwallader Calder, - Apritfitb, 17i4pwere Themes - WW I es physician ;;Mr.-,Tobn Bartrame ashotaajetl. Mr. Thomas otifroY,- aa mathemati.? clan ; Mr::Ssiourd Ithedes; as mechanician; Mr: William parsons, 718 'gedgtapher ; 'Dr. 'Phintiaa` Bond, as general natural philospither; Mr. Thomas" Hopkinson, president; Mr. William Coleman, treasurer; B. ,F.--, secretary.'.' To, Whore' there had then lately been added ",,Mr. Altman; der, of Now York ; Mr.- Morrie, Hh. qustipe ,of the Semis • 24r. Hope; • &weary ; Sohn "Core, of Trenton and•gartyzi, of the same placel""' &Ararat of these were 'pr oem, of muohdistinotion: • as he eignif himself, is too well known to need an intioduation. Thomas Hopkinson, the first president of the moolety, was father of Francis Hopkinson, a signer of the Declaration, and a distinguished citizen of Philadelphia. Dr. Thomas Bond was the first to prvore the PennsylvanimHospital, and one of its most active supporters.' For fifty years he was at the bead of his: profession in this city. phloem Bond was hie Brother, a men of eralnenceiri the came calling, and an, early and firm friend of the' College, now the University, 'of Pennsylvania' Thos. flodfrey is well known as the inventor of the - , quadrant. Ho was born near fiermantoin, in 1704. The eon of a farmer, himself a glazier, he was so interested in mathematioal science that, having read inch works on the subject - be he could' obtain' In Bogltsh, he studied 'Latin, in order to gad works on his favorite Study in that language ; also. It Is said that the discoVert whfeh has im'• mortalizsd his_ name was due, like Niiipll'e; to an accident. He was inserting a „Pane bf glass hi' &window on the north aide of Aroh street, when he. . °Coed the retteetion.of the suq grit into a bucket of water whiehstood on the sidewalk. It otmarred to him that an Instrument might be constructed whiehi by refleotion,' would determine the sun's altitude in' the heavens. Tyquadtanti whieh he' had made from a woe* Model contracted by himself, snewered its pnrpode - a'denteably. ; ...„_ 'John Hadley, a Vice President of thisllciYal se:' olety of, Wand, is supposed to havee,en either the instrument itself, or a description 01.11, and abtalued a patent for it , in.Bagiand.. , Though, tut asserted by James Ltigan, Godfrey's discovery was two years prioitothat of Hadley's, (auliAldrei the latter to have been an inventor of it at all, the quadrant generally bears- the name of Hadley: - The Royal Society sent Godfrey a present 0.206, and decoded that both yrere entitled to the liontri of the Invention, John Bertram was milled by; Linnams "the greatest natural , tootanist-.lCthse world." Ho held until Ms death,4,1777,' irt 'the seventy-sixth year of hie ago, the a ppointment of Botanist to the Ring of Dagland. liisliouee Is still standing jest below Strity'eferii; on the op- , posste side of the Schuylkill, near "Bertram Hall," the place of A. M. Eastwiek,...Esq,, which is so called bemuse it 48 built on the grenade where Bertram had his botanical gardens. In December 1788,' the two philosophioal.,St ofeties were united—L.-being at *thatlitne — of aeariy equal numbers and importanee-r-the American Philosophical. Society having one hundred, and twenty-seven members, the Junto, or American floolety,for promoting useful knowledge number ing seventy - sight 'fellows and sixty-nine oontri biting members., ,The name of the joint satiety is (Impounded of those of the other two. Frank , 'lin was its first President. It was ineorporated bathe Legislature is:l'l7Bop . • In 1781, John Hyacinth de Magellan, (or .Me gelhaens), a Portugueee ecclesiastic, member of the Royal Scolety, and 'other learned bodiee-for many years before his death a resident of London —made a donation to !be society of 200,guiness, from,the interest of which prizes 'were to be given annually of an oval plate of gold, with a suitable device, worth ten guineas. Competition for this prise, which is for the best discovery, or most nee ful dieoovery in navigation; astronomy, Or natu ral philosophy (mere natural history excluded.) is open to all nations. Itbeing one of the conditions of the prize that it is notto -.be given where the' invention hes in other ways been rewarded, our inventors prefer applying to the Patent oMoe, and; consequently there has no award been made for, twenty years or more, and . in many cases, when granted, it was for matters, of little or no ha- . portanoe. • It is contemplated at present to snake some: change in the application of the trust. Some time' previous to the Revolution, the library company; and the Philosophical Society applied for a grant from the Assembly for ground, one in Indepon., dense Square, one on Sixth street, and the other, on Fifth, for the erection on them of buildings; for their several purposes., The application was Up successful at that time, but in 1786 a lot was vest-' ed in the Philosophical Soolety, with the proviso' that it should be -applied to no other use but that I of erecting buildings for the accommodation of, the Society. Their present buiidingwas put up 1789. The raising of silk attraoted much atten-: Coil in this city many years ago, and a soeietyi was formed to encourage its production and mann, facture. In 1782, the property and'moneys of the: Silk Sudety were transferred to the Philosophical Society, who were to redeliver the came when re-' quested to do so by a majority of the members of the other Society, in order, to its revival. Peale's' Museum for a time occupied this building, previous ; to its removal to the upper part of the State House in 1802, and here our fellow-citizen, Rembrandt Peale, painted his likeness of Washington. The Motorboat Society. of Penney Ivania was for., merly'a committee 'of this Society. Among its earlier Presidents were Franklin, Rittenhouse,', Jefferson, Wietar, Patterson, Tilghman, and Du.: nommen. From one cause or other the institution:, for many years, has not been in a very flourishing, condition, but there is reason to expect a renewal of its former prosperity at an early day. The Sacietilme a good collection of Meriden, Indian; and other relies and curiosities; tine paintings of former members and °tillers, and. Jefferson's man uscript of the Deolaration of Independence. The Philosophical building is occupied in part by 01-, oars connected with the treited States Courts. The building was some years-since purchased by I 1& 'vernment for $78,000. Thera are come difficulties 'in the way of its title, which interfere with the United Stittea disposing of it as desired. . A lot on the east side of Fifth street, from Wal nut to a line a few feet north of the southern line of Library street, and tiftyone feet deep, was con' located during the Revolution as the propoity; of Andrew Allen , a loyalist. Allen succeeded Ohaw as Chie f Justice of Pennsylvania,' (his father had been Chief Justine before Ohew,),,and was 'at one time a member of the Continental Congress. In the latter pert of 1716, he, put himself under the ,protection of Howe, then at Trenton. By a dome° of the Legislature, hie estate; together with,these of many Others who had attached themselves to the Royal cause, was forfeited. At the sale, it wee bought by the , University of Pennsylvania. A house on the Ho B. corner of ,Walnut and Fifth streets, Wall, , Da Watson informs us, thought to be haunted, and on that account long lay idle. A man had killed his wife there and given the pro. party to Hamilton, the Attorney General, as fee for defending him. • The Philadelphia Dispensary was founded in 1786—the °evilest in- the United States—end was chartered 1786. Their Oboe was for some time in Lodge alley, but in 1800 they were enabled to purchase the lot and put up the build ing they occupy at present in Fifth street. The design of this charity is to provide competent me dical attendance to the ,poor. Members become each either by yearly subscription of live &Data, or by a payment at one time of fifty dollars, enti tling to life membership. hiembero have the right to recommend deserving persons to the care of the physicians connoted with the establish. mont.. All armee, whether route, chronic, surgical, -or obatetrioal, are, promptly attended to,,ooming recommended by a contributor, or making proper application to the Dispensary. Those who Cannot come are - attended at their homes, it being understood that its services ,aris only for the necessitous. There le , a board of twelve managers cleated annually, by the con tributors. The managers eleottsix attending and four consulting physicians -and surgen's; and en apothecary. This last officer wades Intim build : ing.' Many 'theasands of oases 'are attended to yearly by this institution. 'Reid 'of usefulness; lis unbounded, but rte benefits "rust be limited by the Ando at Its ociaman4, • TWO, '_CBNT.':-,;i: , . 'Otis' Sesieslde COrreepiondenots: : , J , , ~, , (Corresmdeneeof The ben.] - • • • • -• •- '. ' , _ SORB Howni, Atlantis ; July 18i-11359. ' - . The tido of travel to thin oaeart-home appears to !lava itlistitattained ha highest point. :Tha; num, Ifer ofiiisiteri tit' the. different tboteli-liess been largely . augmented-within the - lett leyr days, and, the sone at 'the regular bathing-hour' grk4"Akt;), has increased lsorrespondlisgly, in , intereet., T In faot,. , ,the animation and enthusiasm' of the pants remind drinaf r e -L aPiMayinitilinoit brilliant 4 easone. • The surf fi'not e 0 h'elvii nor the shore as shelving 'se' it'Crilie island, - and - the bathing is ' dorionnently' - midi `safer? - ' °Oolitic the field lictistithe - alipe - af thb land seseleard II to goal ie that L the:decked - eati aWireety'be obeervid, ! Tlieisi is oneaotioeibio feature intitnarriiala:- that the whose names . aie•registered are., almost without exoeptiots from , Philadelphia..,-It really ~ceame-,aait Atbootio Ci/Yi. by means pf its qtdok,ocroceetione with your city, and by the very yw.,faresi on the Camd e n and • Atlentia-Reirresidi ad domplitely lined the travel WhiefilfOrmerly atfrom Philadelphia:to - Cepa Island at midsnoc, Mar: 09 whereZeltwill'rM7°ll-"Trt fm41141- philedelphia fauen,,Audi e k'aelaflre 7 1,:ew . i ttrangeakfrWaiia:' - flallinterrawid l'O orle hie' but'inArly - resiraientlid:f_thougholkis la ;trier Otter; Louisville; -01fielimistrinad itit‘; Lout.'. have ant a fair contingent. -.,.. 'zri :A =::- '.-- ..-,..: - 47' - • " The reign, of fashion. d 44,nresentseitiou as relaxed Its ordnottry'istoi*---.'attli6thli"l rid thPrlßri leek to hate liseiieciOtntitad' fin,' proveinent.' There-1S aisfultereditaityefver3' , little' oVer•dressitig,', and very,flitkiaAof„lsiveraess, Indoed,-the:contrast. be ..' ; -of ‘-, lif and.,A,V Untie City, in them two -,,,,, ...11_, •-' 0 Mitited:' i Here. even &tanner,* j7s' it: ~1' , tie a perliftot FaritY,bighlueokektfltuise:.d4 , 4lii . • - retell fa its r+irlletsr; • la 'the - Sty .. -:. 1,..„. - lerbsleAntali nrclemonetrative tintaand.t ,', ~ " ". --- .'ruled supreme, The. age of 4 ! stunning" meriting , wrappers anti_ flaring dining-,dresses appears to have passed:lf/ Indeed, it has ever been inaugu rated' here: ',Young jellies' go about Irv - perfect! mi.ely:Witbett belief , ;theirforrinea ticketed on'theitbaeltelitilifelma" mammas go to their slumbers swat!-front thesSeer !that. their interesting charges nosy be carried dr by some whiskered C ount" Of l'hisie ffiviii,tealtohl.• ;The coisnetry of the art of pleating I'. fensaleisili , - ;tame at , pears hereto make •the coiffure ' thevispe. 'alai objet it,, fantaisie, and there to to end to the 'resources of female ingenuity In this- regard. To' 'venture a critique upon the fair visiters at the Mort louse, I aid free to' declare, that, if the brains -beneath are as neatly and thoroughly arranged as ,the head- draftee above,.thin the ,ladies here, are ladies of the most exquisite taste and judgmeptits, the whole country. - ~,. 1, In addition to the.grand attraction of the ever 'exhilarating surf, there lane lack of atinisiniapte :here.'-'The drives along the beaoh,whioh- il hued -, ;and almost level, are well. patronized, the oupply ;of the nondescript ," Jersey-tragic% ".. being frilly 'equal to the demand. The lighthensa (one of the Ivery finest ever 'emoted by the Lighthouse' Board) iis an objeot of daily visit. - Tneinlet*slied ‘f. Ali.: aeoom Inlet" on the maps, Is well pr tided with ;small craft to tempt "land lubbers "set inttc.the ',briny deep, and sociable parties are4Mistnntir, made up to enjoy the `niessiares bflOs'elr - 4 or, ',fishing, too,' is _mo a t titan ' :5 , fishermen's luck," to judge by.the -numb/ , the tinornatives whieh_thervirlottelemtbo, ties bring ashore • Fa Oa Sunday, the Rev. - 1k "Charles Warorth !preached' RCM.' Presbyterian' Church ,' , - ,modest building, very reeetitly etelotede , . rot !Rev. Mr •Biwytt, of the ffpiseopol faith , vt:red e 110TR10111 in the parlor of the "., Untied Shititil i : ./ 'hadthe pleasurelnisterdne to thee : ; of : f the former divine, and *Me stvitelk"-Ir liberality of tone' ' .Thewery. etichtAt ia-, 'in its grand subliinity - appears to one* , `asp stendini and enlarge the heart:, Pr.:. - Swot - :took' the proper ground that relighin *AI' 'Sir ~. 'mit of pleasure troughout, and - not a ' viand 'et pharisaic,- oeremotivand gloom - ,The . ..,' ditty:, of everybody who comes to -the seashore, (tp l . e get . himself heartily in innocent amusementoossvery o fprolly,Set firth. The sermon wee for thktlitle 'and Platte, - eneeedinity ',appropriate, anil -- • - VMeed [ nets say, - .was cordially. appreolitedev. l Mr: Elwyn; the iiipiatiopal olergymen, le norover iwoutsktwo years. of -axe, I hear,. and from ,all . acconnes. his addles' on Sunday _Mcirriing„wea `lrtatted by very decided ability, giving , 40 promies for the fakirs - ' ''. • • -"•• , The onmpany at present et the flartilolleit nen ' hers I should think, between three and; four hun dred. At least three hundreddined there on Rim clay at the principal dinner•bolti The ' nestion, - as I [ Ito which is the most fashionable houseiewannly oontosted t _opinians varying according b the per- sonal feelings of those who ohne:inlets' each:; peril- , order one. Judging from- my own experienee, I can cordially commend the Surf flow. - tinder the oonduot of Mr. Benson„the peontlePsrof•-the 'well known - "Aehland - Ifouse " - .,isitlic.th4 ,debt tit; aid of.hilconiteons asabitantl, _Midsize: Davi:sand. .Blair, the comforts _of ,the guests „are. mast 'abundantly oared for .. . - L. ' The Utah Fitter Contract: • , Weenurarow, WedneisdiY,:j COY 13, 4 1859 4 . [Correspondence of the liew Tod/Timis ) - Several correspondents for the press„.laboring under a total mieeoncerptiort - of all • the 'feats eur rounding the late "Flout Contract" With 'Messrs Ruaell,llejers. and Waddall,4marte'bythe„Secre tari of 'War," biddli -Oh sited . ' Millt , Allettri . - guished oftlaial with malfeasanceAn:offiee, end published to the country that be is a partyto,s, monatmuS fraud: neon the Publie trenentY, A despatch " from Washington," reiterating tbis charge, appeared in:the chin - nine of tharTimes of July 6, 'during- the temporary. abuinew. of yens correepondent , Aal have possessed myself of the facto touching this mneh- abused -"Blau! Contract," in, Simple jirstioe - to ' Parties Con cerned I lay thent before myreederse It must be recollected that Messes Russell; Ma jors, and Waddell obtained the eontdiet some two years ago for the • transportation of tedialetenee and all other articles required by our army'ln Utah. By that contract it wag agreed that' these 'parties, on receiving notice,' should, Without' de lay, provide the necessary means of transporta tion' for, any quantity of subsistence named by the Government ; but, should the Government -after wiids not furnish the freight as per 'notice. given, then the contractors were to be inottoznifrd to the' full amount •of their outlay in making the preparation.' Under th!s provision of theoontraet the parties had already expended $145,000 for teams, ,wagons, kc . for . which amount the Go vernment was liable,: if eutisistence was net fur nished for transportation. ' • - It had also been asoertained, by experiment, that dour could not be transported across the pitons in the month of April 'without a large ,portion of it' becoming Spoiled and baked, so as terendet it un fit for food for either Man or beast. This rendered the supplies for the army, very uncertain ,. for al though the bur` mighthe eondenmed,,and the i 0913 fall on the eastern - oontrietor. nevertheless 'the troops would absiolutely surer frOm ,, the Anomie of a good article, et far food.; The-condemnation of therspoiled article was a spume of bat little man , fort, to the famished soldier. Under melt circumstances it became an object of; importance to the Government le' avoid paying; transportation on spoiled flour, and to secure a. fresh merchantable article for the army, Alezars ; Russell, Majors, A;Waddell, who held the trans.; portation contrite, which the Government ionlei! not annul, come forward with the following pro-' position; To furnish a superior article of holt! and sweet superfine flour to the army in ;Melt juiW as it might be wanted, and eubjeet to inspection by, the proper °Mears.. For it they. would charge thel Government the St. lonia price for the same ar ts ole, with the present Mies of transportation 'ad-; 'dad, as fixed by the existing contract; They wettldi also release the Government from'anyliability for; indemnity or loss, and would deliver. the tour in camp at their own risk. This was the proposition of Masers. Russell, Majors, Waddell, which be ing aubinitted to the venerable chief of the Qaar-i termaster• General's -Office. General Themes S.' Jesup. received the following endersement—from that able and prudent officer : ; When troops are in -the field they Would be, supplied by Government' traletti-bet wheti - posts ; have been established permanently, their ward sons should bo supplied smith snbaiatence. and all ether articles. (readily damaged by thi weather,)' by contract for the season, as - a contractor Who; is at the risk, of himself will fnroish a better arti-, ale. - By the measure propbsed, the' public; will save at least the lose of all damaged supplies as well as the transportation on them." , This endorsement bears date April 8;.1859, and: on the 23d day of the same month. Secretary Floyd emotions the views of Gen. Jetup.in these words C " As this proposition wilt result in a certain andi large ,saving to the United. States, to ,wit-the amount of all damages to flour and the price of; 'transportation on damaged stores—it ismceepted.'l -- Bader this arrangement. Messrs Russell, Ma jors, A. Waddell !waive precisely Abe same cam ; palmation secured them under the previously ex': ;sting contract, while the Government avoids all losses resulting from damaged supplies or useless transportation. It is oharged that other nertieS were willing to furnish filer for the army (830 MI pounds, and not 2,000 OW pounds, as stated by a Camp Floyd correspondent) at a mash less pries This may be very true, but the ease was notone of ordinary contract, to be let to GM lowest bidder; but rather a - compromise with parties holding a valid Contract—and altompromise so favorable to the Government as to induce General Jesupto commend its acceptance, and to Say " the public , would save at least the loss of all damag ed stip plies', as well as the transportation on them " It was this recommendation of the Quartermaster General-which, Governor Floyd approved, and which; haa t induced ill-advised ;correspondents to charge fraud and corruption upon the able and distinguished Secretary of War. It is only neon' eery to become acquainted with the 'fasts of the ease to satisfy any honorable mind that Govereoe Floyd and his subordinates have been grievously wronged by.these grave oharges--ktherges *rightly tang, I am vitiated, in a mlsoonoeption of the tree character of the transaction.`' -` ' SAD TRAGEDY AT JAMAICA SOUTH-4140 1 TIIBR Daiwa's HERRULP AND Oussm.-7-04,Tbural day last Coroner Canell, of queens held an inqoest upon the bodies of 'a, Women minted Jane Winters' and her little - dasithter, 'aged ON yearki, who Vlore found drowned in' a creek neat the residence of Thoines _Wakefield. at Jamaime South. '.lt appears that some two years since Mrs; Wintern husband i f h - 0 - I, AE for some cause and went to the West Soon later thebirtfs of her child she followed him, butsooti after returned without him and.toek up kir residence with the family of Mri Wakefield, -.onWednesday she was observed to be more ,than nielsneholy, Ana Ante at nighterassobierved kgWakefield to go otifof the holies; and after walking a short 'distance rai turned. She left the house in this manner several timenduring the zight,innd finally,retired to hei ROOM. Thursday she Went out in the morning. taking her little daughter with her, as if for a walk: : Not returning at noon; searoh - was made for her. when/ On the bank of a oreeknear the house, her hat and shawl were found. A few steps further-her Walesa body and that of her child were fotind' in'the nrae tare of the , creek:face downward; she' having thi Malt shaped in tor finale _ NOTICE TO CORREINOATORNTS. , Correspondents for (4 11 s Pitmen 'will plion _ n Wad the following flaw_ - - - Bri!rtoott orpg r ams,ll4.4t.b.aeoiiiiitolyikagtOn WIMP or the oyd#lFooo.o.s.ll3 the t/Poirslifq, bat 4044 -110 • Wo dna be ' Poi* Olitott .1/41.41 Tula; aid case ittstet,,foi eistelbOkom -00 3 0 21 0 meant news to lad: int** 4,..wmiti tka movs?". - 4s; 1 7.0 P°NdatiMtaiMiriafaM4aftl —1440: ,to the moral seeler. - 4:1"v:' •-' ' GE.WBRA.t 14 1 .I WA5r: • ResialwAntle t • Cake or Mars -CAtivels 'SY 1113 A.T.—Oormiltiliiiie "iiiierderi W ellid` hold an inquest Isar. or.Tameelroyle, at blaoksmith's "striker" •- • deatk•asettrxar about 3 o l oloclristeterday , suorninta ‘sraa' art extremelyathletle person in aniallpilie% ataLwas: oonsidered by his - fillna-Weldnram:aaposeess4 $ remarkable ,degree of strength - and hadilyrigor.- On 'lhnialay lie work'llin the stop agxitaa,..al2,...ta. ilei o t ' l a t l istros"t e t n ' Allefterinlittspe--19'ir ir-4,o9‘ll4lit'edjor extreme heat, sild'eentintred to aelapladn=rintifl2 ol'elook, when he'went to= bid. Atthiee - seeloole ip the morning hie rohm.arate •awoire‘liserfound.-' him breathinglislasto.-' 4 A post wriest examination renealed nounusuat appearano of She body, eneepkartararkable,lank u nunia -gnaittliY,of adipose."lOW- .'B.2'4)Ter't Work And the heat of the day: fie was l iterally breit4l dorms. - -The'dermier's JurYlilinidakda le - . be the cane of his death.--Chicago Tivets,lol7ro, instant, I Martmarer TO Lwr Tint,(fwastrisrint Cost- ; inerrort BMus.—The Athens (Tennessee) Parr gives ourrenoy to the folio rig ruudir.: ,u%Bn mere** edoetto4lo" - et there will shortly be `a meeting of si t r it terit , lialacierals.refridreisi- Inas Mlcallialeel, V ;ItlabiuderGiairgia,. aml tiouth Carolina, to to s‘' brained ulna - the tkra thet,art7i aa, , Ptisdieenee the enredlepeyof letting thee harleitari uonveitticin go by -default: The party in the free States ; become-se thoroughly fressollised that their WWI." deaf - lair of electing a am a d6D0 P 0 Mq%444 0 .144 regard union with the , Bentham 12;sposition end - the Conservative monat-therliouWastsairPt only means of defeating the Meek Republioans in the Presidential co:Net - Of" thi , apitreaching year fit in said the mesomerit enlyAwsita s the ra x miee, on of the elections.% Tennessee and Kentucky{ Bhould 'the Opposition harry litestetrio'-'States,qt 'Weir there is now buhliktle dash* it s platelT go ferrarVZ. • - j TWO Lane - OrrT24liTeiliterist land Herald of Wednesday area* nays thee -] et: t e $1415 have been-readvadlathateity, announcing' the arrival of two lake veseels which loaded at Mtit city, andlifi oritheiriviyaga about thedath ; 'Thissoboonerk,,,j,.. Z.W.eviterarriveCat.;" Cork, Ana 17,, having medethetrip Ova Qtrehisitir aithha twent y one Oaf*, ifiliehtlithe;', - ! two dart after waTde, the ishooneir Ifertiars-! arrived at Corir, after a iinef twenty-env:l4i asis;' Whiolvis also a remarkably qiilek trip.- The .1; G., Deshler had not arrived...These . vessel' -Mil the ;Ant which ,Itaal arrived iri Burma Writhe lakes ..t his 'season. Tirseitrge of the Warner has heat "ladd in Glasgow, and a rattan trip of Beritelvphe iron engaged for Moreland. Blur wilbrall op bar rattail as speedilyasPoisible , The' dared the fiarmanwould probablybeisold anlverposg:,t -- Tilts% Gnarls' Taanw.---00 the. lOth'Ofr lEr7 - lest standard spiting wheat was, sallies ,here.st $1 27, and corn at"77' cent., `a - difference ~of:so' - cents Would'any ene base then believed that:by ) the 18th of July tam and wisest weeld he selling') at the same price ?... Yet. sach. has preyed "alo the faot. Since that Periatithe priee ofiebiat'har , kleolined, not Steedily,-taitspasesodicsallyiveroiddrr int stn certain gears fora essaskor o test elpyrwte, ime,' and thee in a . sleighs &ayinmpipg:Aiown r temeents, Vridle eons his rernahled rehhetrifiblf htoady. Yesterday etandardtwfusataednorhimith's. old at 89a89 rants n /tie allearytutratstralatate of things. The Wheat market era 'Yeidisiday, hed•• the 'Sales:did ruSteniaid'2s,ollo'buslielsCht Ogee Ante forrefanderd `..eprizit tAierwssee ta t aiiive demand , eel nAeeshrerealWerieeperici teal , Avery Over"4o 000 MAIO fold at liaatLeettts. - ,t---Vhieago . .; j The Troy Times of tfie I4th instant rays t “Twod Fml l , 3ll3 kPb l P-foat. re rslevezlAPl-01L , 011-AltdbPPite Ging ,Courskyinterday, Tirol) tniiikpa, ramie& ith'snd .Bennett,'atebstillberataliar'sr weixharedred-milla within;thirteen boarci During, gle,Jna,rning the ntwairtarstweevesi enitry,audr amnalOury, at teo elock,,elcad at ninety:At !grilse lie the , isiids. ,44 2TeverfhelesS, -, {WAN eatee , waited in the race, and ran tWantYelightlta ht#l l l,,whott Bennett gava,out l fear leg his,rival o acoOmplish this feat aleall , The flit fiftrlntliet !were rant hyginitanin,Wermilhaitrilandretwittlyt, 'four second.. Be conttpueds-to their these milerrwhau,hie Arsit, beeajlt s elkilltkllt4 t he was almost unitdrintaralt. arithesporsi !racer• The 'time settertiltidnby ansitimftr. ,ux yes .routvitillea'wal.,?tine-hcaztv r f e ellre - Ain° VOW fund furry. nine aseopds-,..,7ktip_riekter%, t he, I diltance, on record:" • - • ct= Arreltar ion. ; lireittratialtribi a'ateatinis held in the Charles street Methodist .B`pissopal Ohurok.Ballimere, on,theeltkinet.4% :consider, the Propriety or itteblisithig - iatAiylarc • for' Inebria tes ,, inttlatitaityr Dunbar) atatod that there was etrohan •inatitutiows. Droleoted at the ,florth t at4 4'0,24400 parestros, had applied lartigisltthafie felt.''''Ar the WM' • innaWibirtatininntiAarar disease. end illitlPeet. Altabliehmantnt hospitalTer. raelreattnent of ste*es. Britten 'Aiivis::.z•-lrieing - ini a shaftior - poW - near Wesley (illy; a deptiof l Bg feetlifid' been - resched , on`theiforenant oftebe litktristanto when the surrounding earth suddenly carei,:bu rying }workmen 'beneath the'mass„ Several milli were instantly let to viork; - tearewitie follow - leg day they reaohed the - buried outul'whom thee' 1 , found; entirely ,ueinjured. _foam 0, the 4urbin Pi bad got ' mpled' *boil tiro feet abbie hie bead,' and Completely pretested , klm fritiatAhlt Ming atone* and earth.- :1-6-72 , :-e'rf.l4-9e"-- ,Vansent, Of . county, Maryland, was lest week engaged in thrashing wheetby won.- The IleatAnos - Says: "A gentleman who has wituelsecllbropevatfortain forms• us, that, it, works , admirably, &ed. upraise's the opinion that in time it will be more generally tuned - It requiresi tiro feeders and. about thirty Made, and thrashes and fans from 600 to 800 bush- P" T.T.r rit • - Tho 0, °wig named 'Moors have been ordered to - the 'United. States steamer• Eleginaw,' being Inrilt it • Mara Island, (Miami:a, and which is bound for, the .Bast , Indies: Conan ander,,J. • Pinta) , Schenck; Lieutenants, W. C. Bryant. Janet J. Waddell; Passed Midshipman,"lll. o.' Campbell;'.Master, Ca J. Mofongen ;= Purser, James Pullen, MURDER OF A OA-VTAIN e.7The revenue. ciitr ter John Appleton arrived at Irv% West; 11 4 ; few, days ElllOO, with four of the ereir'of , thersetkr. Enterprise, who were arrested at Cape Florida for the murder of • Captain Mormstes,• the commander of the vessel. The Murder was a most brital one, and the wretches afterwards; it is alleged, robbed the vessel of $l,OOO in motley- I' ArAL ' RISTAXII.; OF -AN - AporrmoanT. , .-t- Richard E v a eon of R. H. hillier, Esq ,pf Mel*- Ole. Tenn , lost ht's life nnderpainfol orronmelen era" The little fellow, - only fear years of age, had been afflicted vrith chills - , and Er. 1. applied to an _apothecary for quinine, and received morphine in steml. morphine proted fatal. EPPEtiTig• or mros , Nran.-:=lt ;is 'Mated - from Paris that large Onantitias of diamonds sot other valuables are finding their way Into that market, chiefly from Austria - and other parts of Germariy, and that there is a 'oonalditiablii- aaportatioh. of five franc pieces la return., ; - THLOhio. grape- crop--promises a: juicy_ re. turn. One cultivator thinks ,he will have -about 6,000 gallons 'of pure - wine in the -- fall,`' and another antiolpatas ileld of - 1,000 -gallons to the ante. • , • , , Dopms co aors.—TheSt. Loula,Repishitesta save that lion. Augunbis Carter Dodie'aeoepts the netnination of the Demoeratio Convention of-Tows tor - Governor - u. • , - A YOUNCI LADY. 'wined Cellists •RoldpOn, daughter of A. It obirkeou j of eonthweS. Oswego, N. Y „WIN kiltadby l!ghtu!ng the I4tti July. „ lif r eiTzu.:Hmi§ Ovir o , *., - it,chbarg,, ha's been appointed unifeitiqed POnch in the Yfr9i nio Military Itstittitii.:' , ' • nig Baptists•of Western Virginia' have - de- Aermineid to establish an academy at the,Bins - Sul phur Springs, in Greenbrier nonnt7.— s , CsaEn JONES, formerly U. S. consul at _Poo- Chew Foe, China, _ died in Sandal entinty, last 'weak: , . The Franklin itallroa_le nearly relaid - from Chambersbarg, to Greenmail, Pa. ' A Mystery in Lanettiter Conity. A MAN AND WOMAN FOUND DEAD IA gag DUD. EFrOm the Lanosater_Xxeritee of 'Julyl6 j" 7 Yesterday afterneon, about five o'clock, as Mi. Metzger, of Millersville,•was driving through the by.road 4 leading. from, the Millersville to the Co lumbia turnpike, three, miles „west of thin city, and when within abaut sio hundred Yet& Of the latter, he discovered two dead bildicalyingin the road. They.were-,those of a man and woman, the former, apparently, between fifty and sixty, and the latter shout forty-five years' cit age: - :Mr. Metzger informed' Deputy Coroner Dillow of-the circumstance, when he ,repaired, to the spot, in connection with Dr - A - .• T. Carpenter,' about nine o'cliwik • last ;night,' when: a juiy wati sums - toned, and the following foots brought to light : , The; pantos of „the man and 'woman were tim knoWir to any person' Present; though they bad been seen in the neighborhood for- Beveial days past, and were last seen alive some time Yesterday morning. In the examination no outward marks of violence could be dlecovereeon thiperion'of either, which makie itheoase „one, ot; pisonlisr mystery. , The bodies were about, ten feet apart, the man lyhig lefigthishe bfoad "rut; and the woman across the rut. Your small dogs, which were Been to :accompany them for several days past, were lying on and; molted the bodies. and were -with math difficulty driven away.. Aoamp kettle was found-by the side,of the road. in which there was a large flialf, about one-third fall of 'whiskey. 'As no•tharks of 'violence - could ba discovered 'on - the bodiee, it was thought Ethel had - been poisoned, ,and Dr. Carpenter at the request-of the coroner, .reatoied the itomaehs for the purpose of analyzing 'their contents . There wad not a particle of feed iv the stomachs, nor the evidence that ,they had partaken bffood for several days., A small quan tity of moons matter was all that thettomatths or Dowels containetti - --One of tbe,witnesses at .the inquest stated that In the morning be saw a yoing man sitting beside therioman, and the'min famed dead some di - stance frem {hem, but be ebuld hot identify As the ,aboye. were, about all the J 4 0, 300 tea last night, the jury reserved their verdiot until 'died, learn the_ result , Of the 301t=mortem oral:al nation. 'Three men were Arrested late.% the eve ,ning et Getz; is tavern, a phorOispimiq from, where ;the bodies were, foiind, 'on "sualgolon of batik' in. sonie' way oomteated With theraffairVand-are now in "-the look-upawskiting a hearing. • - - From what vre,were enabled te. gather from dif ferent sonioqt, we - aro lekto tbelinie - that the 'rause - of death eras not violinist, but en overdose of the vinaMono,oempound in the flask: -The sto machs being - empty, itybuid . roil:area very large dose of stryotiainettleadink ingredient "of the Whiiltelle pindttoe death, thoughlt seems a little remarkebler,that- both should die_atabout ,theasme time.• The bodies were tahen 'to' the tleor4muse early this'meiningi wiling, they will b 4 : r , f -,-- • 7-z ~ ..~i ./ -- i' o 1 +,. ,' A ,:,1• , ; .:vi,-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers