The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 30, 1860, Image 2

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30," 1860
tkOr po ems; , ,Lettor from
Now Yolk Letter from, Ilarrleburg, 'Foreign.
bow. vil'olorso PAClL—Diegrtwi Intolligeooo ,Ltit
Or Letters.
enryP. 4
Depth 'of Lion
It to irldt"proftnind regint'tliat ‘is annOttnee
the demise, Of one- of .the Most_distingnlihed
citizens, Of 11111adelphld 77 - ,qpn. llsaar D.
G iim 44.4t i tey 'disnert cif ttoz:Ontied States ,
tinder the Administration of , Mr: FAY Bones:
Ile.'cliedyeitterdAy morning at hiii: , ,i . esideOe in
this city. This intelligence will Sendearrow
to thu hearts or thousands throughout 'the'
length , and breadth ;of " thef. , land!, In all the
relations of private and public life he was a
model: "As whnsband, ai r 'ns a citizen,
as a gentleinan,litiliad tie , superior. :Ingo
his retirement into private lie ho has devoted
Idruiehttrio . ntrnsivery iiits‘siente, of nil
proper chttralei, to
_the ; patronizing of ovary,
hudsblie-undertaking;: and: , to , disOttaing an
elegant;,bnt 'thmateutatiO4ts; - hospitality. To
the-wilt eirzt,* of rriendimrho fully appreciate
Lis ehar.toter,,his loss is irreparable.
Professor Espy..
It is with sincere tiorrowAve announce the
death of Jeans P. &MY; Ueuatly derionithated
" Titefiorst Fin." who died at CliMinnati on'
* the 28th inst. PrOfes46iEsmr,though one, of
be lu~et "obtrusive and ;MOO:diffident men in
this ciatttii,-•was utweitheleas one of- its great
men, and pe;seres to be embalmed in its ehe
'fished memories as'ot" those,who haie added
'to its fame throughoui the world, and promoted
Its substantial interests at home. • ' •
tOonio;thiity years ago, 41r. : Esi4 was an hunt•,
We schoolmaster in this city ! 'About that time
he began to.give gratifiteuS lectures before the
Franklin" Tnititute, of which lie was an active
member, on the gi 7'heory of Stormi:" A few,
Enid a
,very, foga, of, these who hcaid the lec
tures, or who heard • of Ahem, :believed his
theory; while the great:- mass of oar:people,
/pitied and IgnOtant, treated it'
,Witli ridi
cule, For many years it was only the theme
of ridicule tntough the • country', by editor; and
legislators; and even inen ofscieuco. At length,
after travelling and lecturing several years in
all the principal cities of.tho Union with little
or no suceess, ho went to Europe and made
his ig theories" known to the; scientific men
in 114 tinarter of the mOrld. There he
Was - more successful, and • particularly in
Ft.ince, where the,highest scientific trlbunal In
:the pronounced "itsffivor; From , this
time forwatd,his theory commanded reaped,
If not Confidence. The Government of the
united States - shortly after gave it ; its coun
tenance; and, with the exception of a short in-'
terve}, Mr. Earr has been connected with one
of its departments, collecting facts to prove
the soundness or test the' correctness of hls,
theory, which he has done beyond all cavil
or doubt.
' While peliticians'atlyashington have been :
agitating their countrymen dunng the last twen
ty years with thousands' of' hopes, and fears, :
:rant plans, and have sunk into oblivion,
two men there have been quietly and raiob
trusively doing great' thin ge for their country;
and the world —things tha(Will ',last While thq
world lists.:-and these two men are Lieute-i
runt Manny and Professor ESPY. - The #riq,
"bas gone down in the great deep," and
mapped..-not lts',shores, - but its' depths and
anihaiPointed.out to all who traverse
fts waters the paths , of safety and of danger.
The list has; at the same time, been is gather'
lug the winds in his fist," and; ban, as, may
Andy be said, found out "whither it blowethi
andwhera it listeth," and if be has not actuali
ly-u
ridden - an the whirlwind and directed the
abann," he has given us the means of-knowl
.lug its approach and guarding against its din+
Mr, Est! was, -Moreover,. a man of floc ,
general, literar sclerotic d selenc attainmenta . Ilia
private Wu /MS been 'one or Innocence and
kindness hiving'all mankind, be was in turr,
beloved 'IT all, and leaves the lierld nitheM
.nenty—he never had one. • - •
Wk; trait that, the Fratiklirt n :lnstltate,, at
some other of our'aeleittifte institutions,,vtly
fa 'alika due to our ! , 117,an , lute a , ono of
her ,everi:way so scalable and gOod it
_....ntlrattalfa—and who.hee datuirerchrgood Ker'
!Ica for, We world, should not 101161 Wed 15
go down to, tho gram rinnhonored or urr
eurag,"
Grand:Airy, Presentiment» ',
There are some , very suggestive points laa
the presentment which the Grand Jury of thi
Quarter; S.:anions made on Friday. l hey art
- worth arriaus attention. •
First or all Is the fact that, in the Decemi
bar term, 1859, extending into the year 1860
they disposed of 799 bills of indictnient,—beint
thrice as many es any Grand Jury for tho when.
,linty of Middlesex, In e4agland; Ancludine
-London, with three million inhabitants, usual))
have befera'thena; On like Occasions. Of thesi
858 were "true billsp .while as _many as 446
• were ignored. 'That is, the businesa of a Grand
Jai); being only to saceitatin Whelber, thero.bi
a prinsolade case, sufficient to•send the ad
' rinsed 01.611, have deCided that Considerabl y
more than half the indictments placed before
them ought not to have been r;relbrred. Whqt
has eatusedthis ? What has added'so much to
the labors of the Grand Jury, to the expenses
oin the city; to the costs of individuale4l
Simply that some Committing Maglstrateaare
either ignorant of-the ordinary principles of
law and jcstiab,:er artfdistitialliled; - hy bumf
` llcient - editcatloiland defective intellect, froM
properly applying 'them: ' The complaint,
- Which' IS'of long existence, has b,eetirepeat
eddy Mada by Grand Jurieti, backed up by th'e
, • press,' but • the - obvious - remedy has not yet
been provided. There, can he, but one roma
41-rnamely, a change or system. Commit
-
tang magistrates should be men possessing le
gal knOwledgi and adequate, intellect. We
mare not how they ha:appointed, so that the
• right man'in the right place be l arrived at, and.
when plitce,d there; he. should be retained
- during good conduct, - independent' of the ca
prices of elections and the indneneat's of party.
To, pay •respectible salaries to such persons
would be to bring' justice to - the doors of the
inhabitaete of this vast cit Y-i-to check the
,progress of grime --to secure soma certainty Ot
punishment to 'offenders—to' lessen' the °nor
, MOUS legal expenses ivhlch the: ignorance and
Carelessness -of Aldermen now entail upon the
taxpayers. ' •
- Tbe Grand Jury have, drawn attention to the
fatal accidents arising trom ignerance or care- .
leasness in apothecaries'- stores. Strictly
slenklfig, there are no apothecaries hero—we'
aneaeliono regalarlY 'educated to compoutyd
reedioltu.s, with the ezdatiee cluirge of doing
se. „As" one may Open a druggist's shop, and
°lmpound a physician'a,prescriptlon and, if
&ail' result, IC lead le6lently - treated as it an
scasttent;” that' eveethef offeridenflintaa In so'
carefully Ooneealed that very often It' ose not
get into the newspapers.
/4
saunaliis' our
4isdirs Hist ., the alsth : :stiniversary of this still.
newly-08,6g holc.ty ibill hei.obtervixl on Wednes
day evening next, at the blusteel Fund Bell. throb
of the huskers community es are not yet folly hi
formed of the workings of this Institution shout!
attend; not en rennith for the Outwore of listening:to
'the 'aietingulehed oppekent of !beaconing as to
. !earn the - truly benevolent character of the Mar
eltnnte°:Poritt—brrrentiprecletiie they eheulil be of
It us a profeseionsl Cherity r and hascdoserving tilt
'of the generous and kind regard of alt. , ; ,
• The NV whingtoooorroapondent of the Oleolona tt
,Elptirer telltale that tome 'sett:lent wee twee
_ 'atoned In I .!saoity 4 t there ••
-by the aepearanoe
Trehila of the dangtitera of the Aosylan
General Sons erleoline; A matinhoitar, &ea in
hobo). -bj, one of the diphinitto. corps; and
the wawa was crowded by persons erho had twitch'
_ „yet }taw : women Welted who wereleithoitt the g reat
-Wonders_ -
the President's last
'; hartioni . t, valued at $30,000:
.40inzitr• rms-Aperr -.The beettfol paint
'_..Potiarna,!! • - , llllse Fathiry
t g view at .pty 4tOen)l'
;:,of -.
1% he Arta; iirmoiioiv.
(*tin?* *tuns sip lake , theie place ibis week
o'ird • pilotitigo •aie 'admlratilti*itiotpilms of
.1114 , 11ritooll aid EnOti!lf :'•
•
' "'"
W,eeer..lTe7
.A. .V,gth ptorrbw, we beg
'eer yeelAers, .14 tbe lept ,d,ey on vbtoti
AWitti.littet ls,t7a, Fifth: and .eliestant,, inn re
eeleirubeirtpitone tombe Art Albion, the drawing
`ot.„,Wl464:ri4tl' take 'l3lser,"tbet:evertlbtg, 'et - New
' - ' •
_ .
I+ll Pr; pit ryas Aiq , ROP.IIO, MORSINo.
T:',:r' - '.ll._,Llecift; ;Aft, ati0004614: - 431 Ohlittatitioe;,s;;
Moithik. 4it_lol ivOlook;in stfiottinfit
fors, finoy analuralo robes, lo:; nolflipron
'of futalastloa. •
The Irritating Questions of the Day.
The fundamental basis of the whole structure
,of American civilization is a deop-seatod
41 unconquerable attachmentici'civil and
'glens liberty. 7 his feeling first peopled these'
once rude and haboepitatfits shame; this feel-,
Mg established our
,eXisting:ferna _of govern-
Meet, and has secured its perpetuation to the
present day; and in all national emergencies
the appeals to this feeling that have, under
roper auspices_and at proper times, been
made, have ,been answered by action worthy
Of a freelatid enlightened' nation. In our fa
vored land; efforts-have constantly beedinade
tc t render.clvil and religious liberty a living,
prettied, unmistakable thing;not merely to be
talked about in Fourth-of-July orations; not
Merely 'to bo thundered forth in Buncombe
tineeches from the stump or in the halls of
Congress—but to be actually enjoyed by Ame
rican citizens, at'sll thee and under all cir
cumstances. Yet, if we look around us at the
peculiar aspect of the country, and listen to
the loud 'threats whiali find utterance in many
portions of--it, we are almost led to doubt
'whether this really, is the Nineteenth cen
tury,'lsnd whether a politico-historical picture
which would faithfully delineate the current
feeling of the times,` wmfid not be more ap
plicable toe dark tied barbarous ago than to
.an enlightened period like, the present. We
'have the right to vote—to select our rulers by
popular suffrage—and no constitutional privi
lege, is dearer than this; no privilege is it
more necessary to place, -beyond the reach of
all improper 'influences, and especially of in
thealdation. If the deposits' in oar ballot
boxes are to be the expressions, not of those
who dii . posit them, but of other men who
possess a potent intimidating influence, the
quicker they are demollelied the better. The
rule of the - mejority, as decided by the result
of an election; derives itaeole validity and as
sumed sacredness from the presumptionthat it
flifiliftll reflection of the popular wishes
of a majority of'those who have cast such
ballots,
,But . threat Is now heard
thundering , in the Senate chamber, in the
Rouse % - of Representatives, and in hun
dee& of 'presses throughout the country,
that if Alio candidate of a certain party is
elected President of the United States, with
out Waiting tq ascertain what will be the cha
racter of his political conduct ; without giving
a fair trial to his Administration, the Union
will be summarily dissolved I--a throat which
alms at controlling, by terrorism, the verdict of
the popular tribunal. If intimidating expres
sions of this kind are allowed to exercise a
paramount inflame, and if men are deterred,
in consequence of them, from taking such po
litical action as they believe the welfare of
their country requires, our whole popular sys
tem will be virtually subverted, and our elec
tions might as well be held with a military
company at each ballot-box, ready to shoot
down, every man who did not vote in accord
ance with the dictations of its captain, as to
submit to such haughty and tyreenical dicta
tion. The men who Oils utterance to
these thoughts ' aro forever prating of
their devotion to the Corptitution of the
Mated Slates, stain while they threaten
that if a President ohneflous to them is
'elected in pursuance of the' plate previsions
of that tnefuntrat, they will not submit to the
popular decision. .Now, we are not prepared,
by any means, to favor the election of the in
dividual or individuals at whom these denim-,
eiations are !supposed to be particularly aimed;
hut the members of Congress from the North,
who have declared that in the event of the
constitutional election of any indiejtjapi to
the Presidency, whether he Is a special fayor-
Ito of the North or of the South, there will not
be found anywhere north of Nation and Dix
on's line ft corporal's guard to resift his pace
fancy of the Presidential chair, have butfaith e
rally expressed the sentiments of their cop
:fitments. If the benefits to be de k rived from
an exercise of the right of suffrage aro to be
.0 -diligent merely upon the degree of sp.:
provost or disapproval which a few individuals
choose to extend to the action of the =dotty
of the. Areerlean people, constitutionally ex
oressed;lhen of all the forms in the world of
selecting rulers, that based upon popular suf.
rraflu. 4 l.llll6 'chawieter, is the most absurd
ridiculous;ud and the political liberties
satich have se long been flip boast of our
Country will liana been virtually destroyed.
.„„
ties ere there eo many peen . .!:41iYialkei
of feeling as In these.which relateCo trade and
.tonatnered. As t general rule, the business
•nen''of iiinerica,,beth North and South, are
mite shrewd enough to manage their affairs
4kllfulty, interference from politicians,
Mita witritifeeling of friendship, founded upon
nutnal Interest ainrtong Interectirae, has been
.stabilaheri. Through their operations the
*4:1=91 convenience vt the whole body of the
tmerican people ' la' greatly advanced, and
material ,wants ministered to. 1 tae all
Wier American citizens, merchants have their
oolitical opinions; and OM proper occasions in
-140 in the luxury of expressing them. They
lave, also, their business to. properly manage,
and this receives a degree of attention cor.
r-ispendleg to their, bnainess talent and
tapacity.e It has generally bean supposed
'heretofore, that In the ordinary transac
tions of 'life there, was. a broad distluc.
iron bet Ween these two spheres of action,
Ind that men could buy and sell goods
on business principles without being necessa
rily obliged to eke opt the bargain one way or
the other :by any extra allowance of political
doctrine.' It has not been common, et the
eloia of an account current, to enter a certain
quantum of•Bnehanan Democracy as a charge
against a Southern merchant, or of ultra Re
publicanism as an item of a bill of goods pur
chased by a merchant from the Western Re
verse, in Ohio, or from the northern tier of
counties InPennsylvania. According to Some
oracles, however, the era is approaching when
political opinions will become as essential an
eleinent of .trade as the articles ordinarily
quoted In prick lists, and when a true report
of tho market should be as accurate in stating
how much per pound Americanians, Republi
canism; or Democracy sells for, as in quoting
the exact price of cotton, grain, dry goods, or
groceries: tfrider this system, when a store is
entered by 'e merchant from the South, it will
he incumbent upon hint not only to ettataino
the quality of the goods ho desires to purchase;
not' only to judge of the texture and the price
of cloth; the fashion, beauty, and durability
of female apparel; the quality of liquore7,but,
I as * preliminary to his purchases, he mutt
draw forth a political catechism, with a long
series 'of' test 'questions, and institute a coin-
Oete and accuratoinvestigation into the theo
ries and the predilections of the parties from
whom he proposes to purchase goods, with a
distinct understanding that if an unsound spot
is detected on any point, from the Resolutions
orinia,.dow : n to the secession doctrines of
1882; the latest resolves of Southern eotumor
etal
conventions, or the newest platforms
issued by fire-eating assemblages, the
goods, wares, and merchandise of such po
litically unsound individual must ,be sum
marily rejected, and en establishment sought
out, regardless of expense, where the propri
etor, being frilly booked up on all exciting Is
sues, Is toned to accord exactly with tto views
of his customer. It appears, by repent move
ments at Charleston, that oven a lull political
uniformity of sentiment is not quite auflicient
to answer the demands of that particular sec
den', for a mercantile firm in New 'York has
been completely tabooed because one of its
members was in the habit of attending the
church of Hexer WARD BREMER ; so that
this addition might not improperly be made to
the politico-sneccantjle catechism, and a setts.
factory account erected of the religious pro-
Allectione of merchants, as well as of [Belt po
litical stelnitlea, before their faithful and patel
:olle brethren of the South can be expected to
'favor:them' with their patronage. Now, the
American people are atradieg people, They
love commerce. They are full of enterprise.
'Their industry assumes a diversified character,
and buying andaelling is the great business of
the lives of a large portion of them. But
there is mingled with their devotion to com
merce—and there ever will be while they are
Worthy of the name of Americans, or of the
inheritance of, their latbera—a devotion to the
principles of civil and religious liberty, upon
which all site beasted material greatness of the
country is 'founded. In becoming mer
chants, they do not Cease to be Mindful of
the welfare of the country, or their duties
to their Maker. They are as anxious to secure
to the people of the South the full enjoyment of
theirjegitintam constitutional rights Wetly,
portion of the people of the South themselves
cary;.bq i, pat; Unless we greatly mistake the
tetAper of, both Southern and Northern mar.
chants, the former have entirely too much
good sense and liberal feeling to make their
business transaction's dependent upon mere
transient ebullitions of political feelings and
the latter cherish a lively recollectign , of the
fact that, notwithstanding their engagement in
trade,"tlioy enjoy the immunities, and should
discharge the duties, of patriotic American
citizens, by taking such action in.all political
emergencies as they believe the true welfare
and honor of the country require.
When wo look abroad over the Union, and
see not only the disorganized condition of the
Rouse of Representatives, but the repeated
throats of the dissolution of the Union in cer
tain contingencies, the action of some of the
Southern Legislatures to arm their respective
States, a secession commissioner sent from
South Carolina declaiming in the legislative
hall at Richmond, .and a wide-spread excite-
unlit prevailing throughout the country,we can-
not be blind to the threatening character of these
events, nor unmindful that a deep gloom per
vades the national atmosphere; but, at the
same time, we see no reason to doubt that these
clouds will' be dispelled at no distant day. The
patriotism, intelligence, and virtue of the Attie
rican people will find a corrective for present
as they have in former times for past evils.
The extreme
.measures of intimidation, the
resorts to personal violence, and the delibe
rate avowals of traitorous end secession senti
ments, will inflict more permanent harin upon
their authors than upon any other persons.
Those concerned in' efforts to destroy this
Republic might as well bay the moon as to
persevere in their-traitorous designs, and here
after they will:find their appropriate reward
le a rich harvest of Infamy and disgrace. Tho
great body of the conservative citizens of our
country, North and Smith, will stand firm by
the Union and its constitutional guarantees,
and those will suffer most who make them
selves ridiculous by a cowardly submission to
tyrannical threats, and those who are foolish
enough to utter' hem. '
Gas and Gas-meters,
A correspondent ofone °fele Sunday papers
repeats the suggestion which wo made, over
a year ago, that the Legislature should appoint
a Gas-meter liispector,la stand between the
public and the gas company. In New York,
not long ago, complaints wore made against the
two gas companies of that city, that more gas
was charged for than was consumed. Many
persons, who had gas pipes In their houses,
did not use gas at all, but burnt campheno or
oil, and yet were charged as if the§ bad been
burning gas all the time. On complaint, the
gas company declared, first, that it was im
possible for thein:to have made a mistake; and
next, when the parties put in affidavits of the
fact, that, if the error was committed, « there
waa,something wrong with the meter."
Such explanations were doomed so unsatis
factory that a confederacy of gas consumers
was organized h 1857, which applied to the
Legislature of Now York, and. after much op
position—for the gas companies' stock-hold
ers had money and influence—succeeded in
obtaining the creation of a State officer,
whose business It is to inspect the motors,
once a year, or when called upon, and test
their accuracy as •to the regiatrapon of the
gas consumed. It strikes us that gas comp ;
nies, who must be perpetually annoyed by
complaints of overcharges, - ought to bo as
anxious a; gas consumers to have a responsi
ble officer appointed i,y tale State, who would
always be at hand to examine the nwters.
This would save a world of trouble.
The weather has such a tendency to affect,
Impede, and mu ter the action of meters,
that the dry meter should unlyeguilly be used.
Fa New York, the Manhattui Gas Compass/
issue dpy vp!ors to all consumers who desire
to use them. 'The water meters are liable to
be frozen up, which oitep pgia tteip out of
repair, but the dry meters are unaffected by
any change pf weather or temperature. In
this city the water motera are used; they have
the disadyardago of being far Mess in re
gistration of Op roanqty of gas consumed
than the dry meters are,
At the slow rate of procedure In tht; eV,
when an evil is to be remedied, we may look
for a State Gaameter Inspector somewhere
ttbont the year 1870. If the consumers of gas
were properly make to their own Interests,
they wonld, eye' ju the preqept session, ob
tain the uecessary enactment from )Ips 410
Legislature. 3fesnw/311 6 ; ttlo llas'eolußa*P3
of course, will make no stir in the ma tiey, he
_ _ It. would make a great change
I 9 !hem.
Public Ansuegweplp,
During the past week we have been more mu
sical thin at any period slime ()elm, Patti, and
company left ne. An eroellent English Opera
Company drew large audiences to Walnobetreet
Theatre, and made each a favorable impression
that, in all probability, they will pay a rnuoh
longer visit, ere long. If they can only contrive
to go out of the beaten track of operas which we
have heard, in Italian and English, until we can
whistle almost every note of every Fong and chorus,
they will do very well.
At the Aoademy of Music , on two evenings, a
French opera ootnique treupe bed performances.
They had a crowded house on the first night, end a
pretty full attendance on the second. On the
whole, though Daroy is a good prima don.
na, the speculation did not succeed. That fine vo
nalist, Mad'ile Anna Wielder made her dila, on the
first evening. as Romeo, in an operetta scene, and
showed not only that she tiler well, but that die
can aleo not. Her Juliet, fur the nonce, Wm Miss
Wilke, of Walnut•etreet Theatre, who does not pos
sess one solitary qualification for soh a ?We. The
fair Juliet of Verona was Italian, and not
Irish, in feature and Form. The Juliet of
owe, should be able to eing—w4lgh bite
Wilke cannot do, beyond au ordinary bat
lad. Aikiie all , ehe should know Italian—which
Miss Wilke does not. Moreover, she sang out of
tune, In a language unknown to bar, commencing
in one key, and finishing In another. It was
abominable that a truo artist mob as hfaddle
Wielder is should be leepardited by mob an attempt
at singing and acting as lies Wilke made. We
plainly state onr opinion, becaum nothing but the
most self complacentansour propre could have in
dulled Miss Wilke to assume a character, In Ita
lian opera, for which she was so wretchedly in
competent. She is a lively theatrical !outwit m,
and there elm should teat.
At Walnut-street Theatre, this evening, Mr. J.
8. Roberts commences a week's engagement, as
Siehard the 'Third. We have repeatedly de
clared our opinion that Mr. 4qorto le nu artist of
ability and intellect and havo no doubt that he
will draw good houses in his native city. lie must
repeat the play of "Louis Xt." in which his whole
performance if ve,ry superior indeed.
At Arch-street Theatre, NiPs jape Coomtololli.
vertlsed as " talented and taccinating,"ooreceenopp
g short engagement this evening. She le a stranger
In this city, we believe, on which account we hope
that she may have ¢ good reception. The play of
"The hunchback '' will Lo pprfermed, with an
excellent cast: Helen, Mrs. John Drew; githa,
Mies Coombs; Str Thomas Clifford, Mr. Wheat.
loy; Mower Walter, Mr. John Gilbert; Lord
'Ansel, Mr. Stoddart; end Ilfodll4, Mr. Dolman.
This le, without exception, Au bent dietribu
(lon of parte we remember, end Miss Coonabit jp ex
tremely fortunate in having such accomplished
performers an the abwe named with bor.
Mr. and Mrs. Jlonry Orayten win this evening
oommonoe their performsnaee, called " Driryion's
Parlor operas ana Proverbs " They have fitted
tip Concert flail, Chestnut street, for this purpose.
The Isadore:lances, "Glob report ball greatly eulo
gised, era said to be almost unique in tkeir posh
nem, effect, ability, end dela)). Two operetae will
be performed each night, "sever judge by Ap
pearances," and Diamond Out Diaraend," this
evening, Senor Oliveira playing on the violin
between the pietas. /*betels pretty sure to btra full
house
Mrs. D. P. BOWAN' filuetrated Lecture, at on.
cell Ball, on Friday ever 4%, ior the benefit of till
Lawrence rutrerere, was delivered to ahout /me bun.
dyed peraone.-iilte a private and nonfidential an•
dienodritt feet.
The splendid show piece at the Mationed T,hea.
tro, called "The Magi', Ring," oontinues to draw
crowded houses. The artistic ektlt diiplayed in
the scenery, costumes, and appointments, and the
maryellone perfection of the mechanical appliances,
combine ta roger the ensemble brilliant to a
degree. The taste and Mot displayed by Mr. John
DAMN in the getting up of this piece stqclent
.viderme able fitness fur the responsible position
be occupies as spectacular manager—be being de
cidedly "the right man in the right place." On
gaturday, Tho Magic Ping" was given, for the
first time as a matinbe performance, to an audi
ence, the larger portion consisting of ladies, an
eompanted by the juvenile members of their
families. "The Magic Ring" will be repeated
every evening this week, and Saturday afternoon.
We understand that another Splendid spootaole Is
in active preparation, Mr. Dante having com
menced its details immediately on the production
of the " Magic Ring"—tit being the polioy of hie
department to produce novelty after noveitY in
rapid succession, and not satiate the public appe
Me with any one piece, however popular or at
tractive ; hence the present spectacle, which
might have been continued for a month or two to
Come, will be replaced in two weeks by another
equally gorgeona—more so would be Impeasiblo.
Every evening this week there will bo a double
performance at MoDonouglea Gaieties, Race street.
Plays, burlesques, singing, (lancing, ecoentrioltles,
Olympian sports, educated birde, gymnastics, and
THE PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1860.
ou, will form the s'arie of each evening's psr
fortuauce.
Signor Elite remain to hla Temple of •Wondgre,
N. E. corner of Tenth and Cheetnut. It is a dur•
prising Erna, with • bit learned carmine, Miran
toolebing Bobby," 14a automaton rope•raalter,
his ventriloqulan, and Ms Countless feats of parlor
tangle.
Grace Greenwood gave a lecture to the omelets
and viettera at the Ohio Penitentiary on Sunday
the 22d. About a thousand persons were in attend
ance, and her opening remarks about endearments
of home, fathers, mothers, brothers, and slaters,
were exceedingly affecting, moving many to pears.
She hold up to the admiration end wonder of her
hearers tho alternator And qualities of. heart of
lady Franklin, Florence Nightingale, Dr. Kane,
and many others, and retired from that singular
adieu() with blessings from those whose feelings
IMO wrought upon as only they men be touched
by a lady of Grace Greenwood's gifts.
Letter from " Occasional."
Correspondence of The Press.]
Since the adjournment of the House, after the
exciting nod intereating scene on Friday afternoon
and evening, there bat been an amount of oftneue
ing and canvassing, which pronalees to end in a
epeedy organization, The hotels and private
rooms of the members are bury with motet, of
preparation. Everybody will be leafletted when
the long and tedious struggle is over. The mo
ment an organisation is effeeted;upon whatever
basis, other banes will Spring up, and other dis
cussions will take the piece of that which hex so
long vexed the public counolle. The Administra
tion will make nothing by any movement. If they
should be 'able to combine upon Mr. Smith, of
North Carolina, they will find themselves In a
minority on all measures affecting their general
policy, and espenially in regard to forthcoming
investigations. Mr. Smith, from what I can hear
of him, made such a record in his canvass for Con
grese es to render it wholly impossible for him to
west in eogering up the Taring questionable
operations of Mr. Buchanan and his Cabinet. Bin
election' would have been oortaln on Friday if be
had not been eopposed to be Identified with the
proposition in fever of a code for the protection of
slavery in the Territories against the popular will.
Among the first business in order will, of course,
bo the passage of the appropriation hills already
referred to in one of my letters. After this will
come the question of our relations with Mateo,
which are destined to be of an absorbing charao
- Every day proven the necessity of certain le
gislation, in order to carry out the recommenda
tions of the President's message. Miramon, whom
our Government hes refused to recognise as the
President of Mexico, continues hie career of via
tory over the Liberals. It la not the design of the
Admielstration to precipitate hostilities with Mex.
leo nt the expense of difficulties with foreign Pow
ers; but if an arrangement 01111 be Made, by
which England and France will leave the case to
the United States, we shall then see molt au ad
juetment of Mexican affairs an the suffering people
of that fine country have long desired. There is
no evading the high duty whieh demands our ste
lion in reference to Mexico. Every interest will
conspire to compel prompt and vigorous action. A
large part of our Texan frontier is blazing with
conflagrations, while the manner in which our cal
nail's are (potted, and our commerce impeded, fur
niebee ap addittianal rens, for the strongest reme
dial tooasares. It given me groat pleasure to say
that, so far as the Mexican pestion is eoneerned,
the coupe of the Administration le highly credit
able and patriotic.
Mr. Buchanan is the only President of the United
States who baa undertaken to parcel out the pro
ee4i of the pane printing among the newspapers
that support his Onjoietration. No other Exelau
tire has ever ventured upon this 4segprous ex
periment. Tho profits of the printing are sup
posed to be so large, that it is not surprising that
the mouths of the different newspaper men through
,a3t the country, ehould water when they are re.
tarred to, and OM president, in attempting to
distribute them according to *own wishes, has
got himself into more than a peck of troubles. I
euspeet it will appear that, through Mr. Wendell
opt) others, he hes canoed to be paid out large StIM!
to cacti jounikip as ppdertook the ruinous muse of
supporting his keeorepten end other coneletenotee
and prosariptions. °c.c.s sumac,.
Jagr C. OALITIVOI Yaftr.Aq.—A. oorrcrponient
of the Allertrelprti 11"dic has cut from en annoy,
mous pamphlet no account of a dream of llfr. Cal.
bona, about the time t,t the atdrmy reo•lonel egt.
Wl= which preceded lho adoption of r/e C.mpro-
Wee !matures of 100
Nr. ' 0 , 1,161 . 11, 1t eeeme. wee ontatln l up a plan
1; W
for the dizeidetion or the on, w en, late at
night beltitc 'Very muoh'exhou*d, h fell aeleep
and had the . h,itowilk drittn, re related by him.
"At a late hour last night, ae r was silting in
my room writing. I war surprised at the very un
oeretnosinua entrance of a rieiter, who came in and
took a lent opposite me.
wee more annoyed, as I had given strict
oilers to the OW4,1;1 tbat I should on no add.rind.
be ditcurbeci;. • • •
'Themanner In which he el t uesLiziTrr, u ri
self-possesktiltakink•
word, Btl i t ' Z a g i ct U
r i p a :l l s7 ; 11.?'2 I Ott (Fin tr 4 t lo o. baiMB ili hen f i r th a ed i raised
m it
!lad to look at him over the ton of my shaded
Imo. I discovered that he was wrapped In a thin
cloak, sriaoh.lompletely bid his features from my
view; and, as I ra;ts,o g3y head, ho apace: .
'What are you writink,llentttor from Soothes,
tolina?' I did not,thlnk of his attiparttnonaa at
drat, but answered him involuntarily—. Ism draw.
lug up a plan fur the dissolution ol' the American
Tinton!' To this the Intruder replied in the cold.
eat manner possible :
"'Senator from South Carclina, will you allow
me to look at ' , Our right hand ?'
Ile arose, end as be did no the cloak fell. and
beheld-01111AT GOO! OttemEmEN ! I /166181.15
ITE rottir Or 1 1.4.96416. WAAOINOTON
" /86 though I hod no power to resist, I extended
my right band. I felt d strange ohill pervade me
at hit:touch—he grasped it and held it near the
light, thus affording me full Mlle to examlne'every
feature of Ms face, and particularly of hie penal.
It was the face of :Washington, and be was dreamd
in the uniform of the Fierolution. After holding
my hind for a moment, looking steadily at me, be
said, In a quiet way:
"'And with thie right hand, Senator from South
Caroline, you would sign your name to a paper de •
elating the Union dissolved?'
Yoe', kohl if *certain contingency mites
I linst at this moment a black blotch sp.
peered on the hack of my hand; I seem to ace It
even now! • What is that f'ericd lin slam, why
is that black wet on my band !'
" That,' lila he, dropping my hand, the
mark by which Itenedlot Arnold 'le knows In the
next world 1'
Ile said PO morn but draw from beneath his
cloak an object which he plated upon the table, on
the very piper on which I had been writing. The
object. gentlemen, wee a skeleton
"'There,' mad he, with emphasis, 'there aro
the bones of Isaac Bayne, who was hung b' the
Mash In Charleston. lle gave lice lip toe.na•
Met the Union. And when you 'lgo your name
toe declaration of dissolution, you may as well
have the bones of Isue Ilayne before you lie
was n South Oarcliglau. and so are you; bet no
6lotrh vim on his hand.'
{l9th therm words he left the room. 1" Alerted
from the c o nfeet trial the 4ead man'a boner and
awohe Qrervorn by labor t heir ral4n indeop
and been droll/9 11 g
Many other inatanots reoltod to show
that some of the moat Important e7ents to We that
hare 000urred since order was brought fbith from
chaos, and the Almighty rolled the phobia from
filo palm and set the spheres to 11101011, have been
more or lees connected with dreatns. May not
this ereant of Calhoun's have a happy influence
on the pettpatulty c a t' onr lierteus and happyTniont
Fires in New York.
THE NEW TORE LEDGER PRINTING PRL•!9 /IGOR,
AND W TNEOOP, I.IALLENBECE, AL CO.ll JOE PRINT•
IsO of rip,: DESTROYED.
About nne o'clook this merging a ere broke out
at No. .113 Fulton street, odbupied by rynkoop,
liallenbook, & Co., job printers, and Mr. Rtbert
Bonner, as the prose-room of the Le4zer.
The building extended through from Fulton to
Ann ptreet. and wee tilled with paper piessea and
other printing paterlels, steam anginal°. 'The
flames spread witi(feerfal rap'jity, tine entirely
baffled the exertions of the flicluten. 061 Ia the
apnea of an hour and a half the Inti!diet nod' its
vontenta were entirety destroyed.
.4.t. this time we write 1/fIqR,Ve no means of WOE.
Soloing the oeu4 the Die, or the smonnt of loss.
but the damage mast be considerable. •
rifle 1T PIER NO. 6 ROWER RIVEItt•IIERNIER Of
?LIR wrzaroor, I . lfR/IT.L , RIP doily .1 BOER--
Loall ON 7rlla CARGO AND DRIP ARTY $185,000
Between Aro and six o'elook yest-rdey morning
a frit Wee discovered in the hold of the. /hip John
J. Boyd ',ingot pier No. 6 North titer. From
appearanties It originated among tbe ooplon stowed
on the lover deep. ' An alewm wee pretitptly wren,
and the firemen seen arrived and potto work An
effort wee wade 19 get the veer clear tf the dock,
but the tide being low 4 Tess ~ n od teado to
4101 , 0 her. 4p attempt. wee . tien ]a nteo Pantile
her, and in 4 short time the wafer , was flow.
tog In pretty freely pp t i e sterkieeed side,
whip she careened over age nst the dock. The
firemen worked well and did all they eould to
prevent the spread of the Are, but nottrithttnnd
(forte. It Is feared nearly ill the cargo
will be destroyed. The ship bed atmoft enmplrted
iteresirgo. end was to 12!t for lilterpool in a few
days: The cotton , .ythich the die to prooriginated ,
ortglonted, had boon on issaf4 Only* few da.ra.
The followin NW of the greater Nrtlon of
her (largo :-5,0 g 0
Wee cotton, 1.700 barrels tosin,
532 do dour, 044 do. bent, 10,000 beibele grain,
OM 550 boxes bacon. It belongs to vartnut pot.
ties. and is estimated to be worth abo'utas,ooo
It le cold to be partly Insured. The vessel is
owned by 'Wiliam Tyson. It In valued at between
860,000 and 870.000, and is said to be insured for
$50.000. The owner, on being /TONI to for
infor
mation by our reporter, refused to give any ward.
Ware. The Op yes built in IRoS, and le 1.30
register. Thidemage to the yeetej will probably
ateount to about $16.000 The steams Ara engines
lifanbattan No. 8 and the Niagara were MOD at the
pier, and rendered good service.—S. Reread
of rairrday.
rp A proierniontai correspondent of 1117.fre
fipirir reye that Heenan is the victim of oonetitu
tlonal disease of the worst type, which will pre
vent hie winnitte the tight with Berm—that to, if
he subjects !dwelt to revere training. onerous
living keeps Its Orem down, but bard training
will develop It again. If be would train long
enough. It would perhaps oure him, bat the alter.
nate effect of a few weeks will only bring it to the
snake°. Finnegas fnrfolted to Botta last Bummer
from the name cause. Finnegae mild not endure
training, from the feet that the devil in his syrtem
would not be rooted out without a 'truces. The
"sooldent” wee orobille. For there two reasons the
Bpint correspondent believes Voonan cannot win,
and says, that unless he goes in on ' , half-train,"
and Belie Bayern fast, he Is doomed to dereaj.
lirestuNntow, Jan. 20,1880
THE LATEST NEWS
By TELEGRAPH.
The Rcpublican Caucus.
NO MICK OF CANDIDLTN.
Wasrunovoer. January 113 CaUOtle of the Rpoidi
non members of the r sum of Popreuntatives alto bold
at he Quito; at noon to-day. but after several hoarse
deliberation tin result wee attained Many o the mem
bers name away before the adjournment. lenvins the
others to dismiss 'n brief speeohee, the subject of a
tspenoarehip. In consequenceof thin non-aereernent
the Republicans will so an the Homo nn Monday with
out any partioninr candidate or agreement, as on the
first of the session
T ,era were one hundred and eleven members present
t the caucus.
Mr. Sherm an propood to withdraw his name an can
didateefor eside/. eeprsestni the hope that his friends
would consent to cut their votes In another direction.
No question was taken on receiving bus declension.
It in repres• Usti that the discussion wan marked with
much spirit and eat neatness. wail the request ma. mane
that the peettemen present wou ld not communicate to
the press the proneedines, which were o moldered In
the net ire of family laws.
About nine-tenths of the members ex d their in
tention to eupeort lion. William Pennington. Bern
sentmtve front reeve Jersey. for Punk... while the
other• remained anent. bun In fat or of Mr Pen
nineton reit on the retell of Mourn. admit end Rites,
of NeW Jamey, •nil Rey nn'tis of New Yore. "hich. Re-
COrdllll to their patent/mon. united with those who have
upended Mr SherMsh, Will airs the Raped can party
pi erilue• half of the tin-se.
Watilltsarcti. Jan. 29 —'l'hete have been m•ny pri
vate conferences te amone the no tubers of the dif
ferent t?atties , with the view of perfecting the arrenee.
meets for to morrow regarding the choice of Speaker
The
pi
ospeot is. if the Republicans ante all the
Sherman vote on Mr. Pennington tha' he will roceive
eeveral accession , front the Anti•beconinton Demo
orate including Messrs. Adrain of New Jersey, Ifni.
man and Davis, of Indiana. and Allen of Ohio. The
three dissenting Western Democrats have not yet
yielded to the persuasions nt their friends to vote ter
Pmith. of North Carolina. nor is it probehle that
they will. according to what Is believed to be reliable
information.
Since Fri. 4 ay some aantlemerl hay° been making epa
nta inventigation into the politieal antooedents of Idr
Smith with the design of damaging hte poaltioa se s
m.pilidate tor speaker.
There in no data for an a•eertion as to the result of
the rmstPat. further than that it promisee to be &aided
within the present week. and probably to-morrow.
The Ship John J. Boyd Burned at Now
York.
NEW YOIIK, Jan 46—The ship John J.Tloyd vestment
at her dock thin mor^int. She wee Willing for liver.
pool. and the following cargo had been stowed away in
her hold;
I 8001 , 14 naval mere. NO hales roam] ; POD harms
beef; 400 heroes bacon ; 200 hareem lard, and 16,000 burl+
ell grain
The ch ip Wes UpIA , MIII,O 1100 tone burden, fire years
old, and own.d by Wm. Tyson.
New • oak, Jan 23-IS' °Trask P. M.—The chip Tobll.
Hold had also 6OM barrel', o floor, and low tierces of
beef aboard. Fhb le still burster.
The oaro wail valued at 8190 and She shl p at 860,-
000, Ohs was insured on Wall street for 840,000.
Lati:r from Havana.
THE ISARFL AT CHARLESTON
Munn/rm. Jon. V.—The oroanihm limber, from
tinanne, hes errtred. with (IMPS VI the 23th init.
The nienm.htp Fmpire Mate from New Ofinena for
New York, went sailors neer the entrance of the her
hor of Havana, but was got off without meter's' 'U
MW 9.
The auger meTkat et Ravens wee quint t the arrival..
of new were tight; hturnoverlos /MN : Molneees
woe oleo quiet ; fretghts continued dull; billion New
York 3R4.
Excitement among the New York Pelt
At,PANY Jan. 24.—The neva received eventne
from Vira4inaton crrited an Maps. exeitement at the
canals]. herlnts Wet Ad Hen. J. If. Resnelde. and
ether prominent politicians, stetted for Washington
this et ening.
The Newspaper Patronage Incestiga
, "
WAttllNGTott. San. a—Tha special committee of the
Senate to investigate the char ea ol 'wirer eDer "Mule
are s.. orraniged to-dee. floprrnea for Meter,. Wen
d•ll and Arn'eton frlvo Raged, NO till WM gen
tlemen to nbeent Maine,
Maryland Louis Minn!.
PALTINIO/IP, January an.—The Btate Renate to-day
paroled Mlll of the Ltoltimorepolice trill. Their passage
in tho Hones will doubtless Pie consummated early neat
week.
The Savannah Democratic Meeting.
Savannah. Jan. 27.--A portion of the forme r despatch
In !elation to the late Dem,ratio tneetinx was /none.
on. At the kat nieetinv, at which Mr. Barton. the col
lentos; preaideidil r..lnekoon's mine make, but South
ern, resciAltlhAM WM Fr.•pryf. They. were putilitbeil In
full in the Republican of Tuesday
Making of a Weßtern Steamer.
CUM/ILAN°. OM.. JllO 2A—The eteam•r A. 11 Tr lar.
w,11% n cargo of NO tons. front CAnoinneti. bound to
New Orienne. sunkyesterday. 10 thirteen feet or water
er Clneinnato. The ee..l erne veluctl et 8 1 5
ml insured for $l5 000. The lees on the cargo wee
heavy.
Funeral ca• Prgr.;!Fr .
RARIT•Beim. 1111111 iii or P Janie
P. Erpr worn brnu+ta to this p ono yortnrdar Oar
noon from Cincinnati. and intarrmi In Mouct
Canisters. Ho was a brother of Jaws }.41.,
and no folmtoly ft Trydent of {Wright:l'r.
Arrival of the Ctrenssann and Fultnn.
girt Y J*”. 18.." Th. 0./ mihip Pont
Niivray...Trih s. N. F. tivinrri vnii Her 'Vivian.
Irate teetived front Bt. John, hr tAtimpli, a Week
Sir PP
The eframahly Fnknn. Pam Havre and Santharnetan.
with d,tea to the 11%. errt ed Her hew. has bean
anticipated by the Nnva Septum at Portland.
Non.Arrivol of the Amerioa.
'Po ton, Jen. 19 —A deseet . h from Allekvlii• this
mntnlnr concuneed th%t thr Rre , mehto meren.
,ie with Drertoobittes I the I4'b Inst., hod not been
it nof , d below, Thh evenin. the
Mown mita Calais. so Met no later information can be
otttainrol.
Man sentenced to be linen for assisting
the escape of a ►lave.
CTIAJILZI , TON. Jan. 12 —Frlneie •Mitehen. the pqrli , r
nr the ,trnmship Motrion, tram yeqqnrday sonlenoed tq
tun,t nn tro 23.Pf_mrtrolt. lq r eremt•ne el re to an
ha nip! t 6 I mem it titte rta bosterf tan iteamot.
Salting of the Steamer Edi tihnrgh.
R7.—The stonnishio dinburth ended
ter rivaitool ti ,0 010rqlqg with 93 omen! erg. She
took out 00 ow 01101. • "
The Parnengvan Embnsev.
14 1%1'1'41s iv , . mnot the rissenvere Wird
• 6 ..tmtpa4r Fultnn. arrived Mel night. W.TA hv mew
lairs orine en r:" . .. fir In Wave.. anneletin,nr en n ,
tit Evi: the &pseud envoy. mita 7". 11 tarie/ WI OP
or the 'Empire, City.
New' Vital. .41. 19 —The atnamthiv Empire City,
ernm Vas. 'Weans and Havana hit. arrived. lint date.
from Havana have been anti tioatail.
Marne Intelligence.
NEwOrLruc Jgn. sh ip The shtp abandoned Rat
ileann fell in with the Armed Hisr
rudd r hut been but.
. _
enarina .1, n. —Anil:NI in Hampton Rod& bark
Rival, Park from Johnnon I laland, ma Pernambuco
Dee. 131 a with foremast styrene t the winder Leander,
of %befit, wee M Pere ITINICO. lenkinc had
thecharced her narrn of nil on hoard the InheelnefOri•
ann. Itnentl to New York, Very tete Arn.ntlllA 'weasels
in port nt 1 ernanitono. Ptinr had tinolinntl.
Alan arm ed achnnner Seidl+ had been ashore, be
'ow rape nry. but WOK ant W.l the wrecknrn. ba
norm° 90a butt but the iron med. The rental to an
or , ttar enn/Itinn
Ii4LAI stoat, an. bb.—Below, Bark (hue, from Rio
do Janeiro.
Markets by Telegraph.
C:n6.1.6620', January YT.—Cotton firm t Wes to-day
2.910 bales
SAYAr4n All, January 27 —Cotton quiet and prints Un•
soldchanged.
.g 1 tto J. ga. January V.—Cotton unchanged 11,000 hales
Monts:. January V.—Salem of Cotton to•day. 4 602
leslas nt 101(01011 fn. wit'llnua eaten nt the week
22 600: 't6o Into 3:30Q 6.0.166. twunst ^ 2.60 Wei for 660
Fame work last year : the menial at - thie Port ars nnw
103 900 boles ahead of last , ear The ozporge far the
6866 week were V 1401.000. The stork of Csdton in
port la 217 3 1 10 holes. stsiling 3 :change 111 quoted at
7 4 161MnAtt, January 28.-191nur steads.. at ell 50 for
Howl ral lire.,. W
e.
Cor ot at el tor red and
,1 1 r 4.9 for white. Corn W. I.:: oinildtw no whit.
74+ , 76r PreST iiiinnl firm. at 117017,23 (or mean and
steads ist
00. 12 9
4.;fnr prime. flacon — aides Inc. Whiskey
e.
Mom.: Jan. 23.—Colton unchanged ; 2 000 bales sold
to dots.
144 v :CY kit. Jan.:B —Cotton quotations are Irregular
19W bale. sold .o-day.
Here is (Jeorge Augustus Sala's picture of Lord
Broutham :
"Standing in the I arrow Oothie, ralled.off space
reserved for the nOlio—the throne at the oppnaite
extremity of the Nouse—you may see on one of the
benches to the right, almost every afternoon, Sa
turday and Sunday excepted. during the sea•
el.n, a very old men with a white bead. and attired
in n simple Fronk and tresesers of shepherd's plaid
It is a leonine head, and the white locks are bushy
and profuse On, too, the eyebrows, penthouses to
eyes somewhat weak row, but that 0111:1 fiaeh fire
yet anon amnions 'The face is ploughed with
wrinkles. Pa well It may be, for the old men will
never see form more years again, ander these three.
more. at the very least, have been spent in study
and the hardest lobar. mental and physical. The
Dose is a marvel—protnberept, rugose, aggressive.
inquiring. and defiant unlovely, but intellectual.
There is a trumpet mouth, a belligerent mouth.
projecting and self.asaerting; largish ears, and on
chin or cheeks no vestige of bale Not a
beautifol man this on any theory of beauty.
lingarthesque. Resklnesque, Winelemaneeque, or
otherwise thither a shaggy. gnarled, bettered.
weather.heaten, - ugly, faithful. Scotricoolly type
Not tt soft, Imploring, yfelting flee. Rather
a tearing. mocking, pugnacious east of count..
Dance. The mouth is fashioned to the saying of
harsh, herd, Impertinent things,—not areal bat
downright; but c over to whisper compliments, or
Memoir hut plalltudes 4 nose, too, that can soorr
the battle afar off, and with dilated nostrils breathe
forth &glory that is sometimes terrible; lot net a
nom fora poun.et. bey, or a Covent Gorden bouquet.
nr eir, re of Frangipani Would not mere much
for trifles either. I think, or the delicate aroma of
spilling Moselle Would prefer onions. or etrong
ly infused malt aiol hops; something honest and
unsophisticated. Watch this old man narrowly.
yonng visitor to the Lords Scan his farrowed rt
sage Mark his old angular ware and geeturea.
passing uncouth. Now be crouches Tern do,4•llkft
on his crimson hench ; Mama one si•erherd'a plaid
leg in both filo hinds lintherem, Q C., is talking
nonsense, I think Now the legi are crossed, and
the huh& thrown behind ; now ho digs his elbow,. ,
Into the little Go'hio writing table before him, and 1
beriee the bends in that pniatent white hair of hip
The qtridditlea of Q C., are behind humor
patience. Than with a wrench, a wriggle. a shake
half tern end hell start up—still very doglike
hut of the Newfoundland rather—row, he asks
lawyer or a witnessequertion. Question very short
and to the point. not often mennlimentary ht
times. end Douched In that which Is neither
brood Nro . eh par Worthutnbrion hum hot a re
hallioutt mistime of the tag. Mork hint well, eye
him closely . yop hare not much time to lose
Aloe! the stiont is very oil ; though with frame
yet unenferbled, with intellect yet gloriously nn.
nionded lint the Annie are running, ever running
Wntch him, Roark him, eye him. Poore him on your
mind tablets; then home: and in a fte r years it
may be yOur lot tO tell your children, that once at
least you have seen whit 'Col own eyes the Ninon.
herd of Vans; once ustened t t the vole° that her
shaken thrones. er.JNode tyrants tremble; that
has heen'n bera'd of deliverance to millions pining
in slavery and daptivity; a voice that has given
utterance. In man's most eloquent word!, to heaven,
,nice that line been tromutit.sorimhog them eist
Tears post In defoo-e of Truth. and Hight, end Jut
advocacy of tho claims et' learning am
Industry. end of the liberties of the great Englid,
people, from whom ranks he rose; n voice the'
timid ho entitled to a heering in a Walhalla 0
via heroes, after Veneers of Vendee' and Isaac ut
Grtinthern . ti re ram of one who is worthily a lord
hut who will he yet rreqer remembered. and to el
time—remembered enthoinallcollv and affection
ntely—as the eirownplop of all geed, sod wire, and
beautiful human things—Harry Drougham."
Tin: Wouvea monis verttuNc Is now carried
to aslremas, as a notional question, and It Is higb
time tie eunter,vatlye eirinent of the cos should In
terrors to chock tits strungstuinderl miPerts of the
Confederaoy In 'their ornel efforts to Invalidate the
marriage contract, which our patrimio mother ,
and brrve fathers hold a.) seared. Ichat eon be
more cruel and nuworunnlike, or more repugnant
to our chivalry, than to hear Louisa Annaeontinu•
ally calling utrno her sirong•tninded slaters, ;111s,
Virginia, the Milan Carolina, Blips Snort, Stiaf
Mary Land, Attie llama, Georgia, an I r
few others, to dirs.rlve the Union, end 601110 n'
them even it:, far forgetting the dignity of their eel,
na to insult their venerable old itlantta Chusette
We barn been thiniclug all along that this woman',
rights business would make trouhlo aqiorig
ilea folks !—..rarrertsfer lirprq.
l'he Frew:lt Court at Campolgne—An
Et outug with Napoleon 111.
A correspondent sends from Psrin to the Liver-
Pool ..rn? Mid a dr,cription of pleat° imperiii
life at Compeigno, frmn a friend at anti, who
wes invited to be prrient at a dinner"
with the 'Emperor and Emprere, and it "Aw
%Kids"
lire dinner (says trey friend In his tenor) mu
most superb. The spirit of the old Bourbons meet
have rejoiced to behold that. let what will have
liminithed at the French Court, since their day,
the eating and drinking are more abundant and
coigne then ever; and really 1 mold tee at
once the reason why the Emperor is allowed by the
netters to rule the roast so entirely. for none could
enie it so well as lee. The dresses of the ladles. ton !
Every satisfaction was experienced by the le
holder—that of taste and admiration, in per.
Sealer, but that of curiosity above all! Tl
ffinnress Wes attired in a costume of the time
of Louis Seize. Why this toutinerade no ne e
could inform me. especially as the example
wee not followed hv any of her Taller The dress
suited her edreirehiv, but no explenalon could be
obtained for the whim, save that it wee her Meeks
tv's motor]] deity of an afternoon at Compelgne t •
vary her eertume ; for, tie the Emperor Is plover
hied for his love of change, It is just as well that be
Rode It united in the came person. Ws may be
the supposition of a mezernis plaieant, but I
give it you, never having been able to obtain
any other more eatisfaotory. After dinner
the oompeny adjourned to the salon. My arm
was adjudged to Mlle A., who teemed to a s.
tract much attention by her tone and dress. being
a epenimen of a species vet unknown amongst us,
end imported from England. the der/int:elle a la
mode. This young lade le on the moat pleemnt
terms with the Emperor, and in the morning I wee
told th ere had been a most miming match be
tween them on the terrace of the chateen—a
straight walk. blindfelded, from the statue of Phi
'enrollee to that of Menendez--which the youn g
lady won, the Emperor having reused great
laughter by having almost walked right through
the window of the council chamber, which cremes
upon the angle of the ferrule. The toffee taking
was a very pretty eight, the different groups in
sondem parts of the salon seemingly on the mot
easy end familiar terms. I Aimee. being es perfect
ateentrer to them all, stood aloof, looking on. ne r
thought. unobserved, when, to my great astonish.
ment. the Emperor, leaving the mantelenieee.
eceinet which he had been leaning while taking
his entree, 'walked streight across the room in the
direction where I stud. Mil Majesty walks
slowly, with lege much apart, having no
spring or elastioity in the hips: end I wen oh.
serving this awkward gait, when. 'es my further
surnrise. he approached, and called me by tome.
In that medlar voice, through the neat, try which
mush syllable Is rendered clear and distinct, as
from an empty vestal. "Monsieur de Saint M—.
have real your verses; they are very geed. On
on and prosper; you are very young. and have a
grand career before yon." Ile pulled up his
monsivehe with the left hand, leaving the left ene
ma. sticking UP, white the right was still dioning:
an I eat bowed, in answer to the gracinue commi
mont proceeded: "We have many authors or
celebrity here to-night. P. for instance.
ire you acquainted with him?" "No, sire," I r•-
turned sharply. for the qnestion displeased me en
tirely. His Majesty saw the client, and milled up
the right ride of his moustache, end again spoke
through his nose: "We are going to have ' ht
Tigre etc Berme& to-night; what is your opinion
of that plane?" "I think It very clever, sire.
but should have thought It rather theist for
representation here." lids Majesty raised Ida
eves, and looked me in the floe for the first time.
lie amiled—a guidons. grim, and meaning smile—
and, through his nose, once more replied : lam
quite of your opinion, de Sainte M—," then
walked luck again to the mentel-pieec where
he ideal alone until the company adjourned
to the theatre. Tho representation was gay
enough—none can ohoose but laugh at the poor Ti.
ger'a viciseitudes. After the play we (far by es
pule! favor I wag included in the private
Peneerbs") were admitted to the rnst .salon
—and here, for the first time. did I be
hold imperial grandeur en dishabille. One or
two proverbs were played with great street, and
really very cleverly done, loth in eompoSticee
and acting—M. de Toulongeon and M. Tales
rope displaying immense humor and talent
throughout. The hours wore on in Merriment
"until the belt of the moth" idled one," when
a proverb was proposed by Madame le Com
teem W---, in the performance of which it
was announced that the whole company were
to Join without knowing It. Some two or
three ladles and half a dozen gentlemen then
rose nod hem; to Jump atel dance In
the meat grnteeque manner, laughing the
while on heartily as to mime the audience to ditch
the ere'rth, and the eachinatione became general
Mad W—e was asked for a Veg. and, attending
up. she waved her erinellee, and sang Orates
area tong of "annul. genet?" with Bitch
humor that the whole company woe sore
liaised with laughter. and began ire look as each
o•her in ateeement to Issas the aMsera I bqg
lustreted. When Mid.% had sunk butt ex
hsuated into her ehalr, the Princess M-- we, celled
wenn for her centributinn. and. tiPint. she begirt in
e e , et ee of her pest tion, to be allowed to sing a dint*.
esalle 'eremite appropriate to thews:len .• Now
shat) we learn the solution ot the proverb I•' Paid
the oompany,' who nrepared to nay the greatest
'Suttee to the ditty The Princess is quite
rung. tall, and thin, with rather a melersholy cut
of enuntenanee. therefore the RIPOID•heIPet was
great when she, too, began to lump from ride t.
silo, with nee hand waving the fin above her head,
with the other Chapping to and fro her nrionline,
and busting forth with the Wigan diplomatic
ditty
"eeaar beett•ealeh—
ytamm.
°e de Kopereieh—
el hreeneta ohoohorkluel0.•
quat..
rm. epee et ‘teab o n.i n n,
Vont *Mee a Zdri h a c. " ete
and ao on for several mlontta, ST s U the New TIP .
merlons langhter of the omentoy, and the en
tiouitoement that the perforwanoo tieing over the
audience had nothing further to do than to vie.,
IM.prottrb ail this wild folly_wes meant. Ito thee.
elact• wo.s,wpw, were - mem.. but unenceees•
fol. and Cl lot the originator of the idea war
called on to nznlale, and gave the entwine cc
""1141 e 1 y ado row pl7 r s or r• t," en oid
proverb, which may he said to Snd its 1/teneh
egalralent In "the more the merrier." without it.
celtieh addition "the fewer the betrereheor " my in
torment of all theseray doings concluder ht, letter
by tayint none Neighed more merrily than himself
during thesoene, but when retired bible own room.
be wiliest:el with such a et nflatineva that. Instead
of Ipate, bed. hp eat dowp and wrote a trependon.
balled. to be called the Two liersituet. at Coin
rioting," the one being that given by Loot, Dix
Hull, escorted by the Allies—the other that of lan
week. France it, In both entice, watching on the
terreee beholding the shadows en then pace and re
pass before the window.. I will send you a copy
as soon as It is completed,
Rale of 71tennnorrh Property.
(From the New orte.os Dettn. Jan. 1.4
The tank noticeable Notate In loot) news yester•
icy wee the sale or A consi lareble quantity of land
belonging to the ectate of the late John IldcDoncgh,
by order and f , r account of the hfortoongh 84nol
Fund, city of New (Meant!. end under the euportn.
tendence of the Finance Committee of the Common
C noel!
The following Is a deloription of awe Fold end
the priers wulott than hmught :
A tract of lend 1.0 , 1 partly In the perish of
°deans and pertly In tb• parlehre nfJrtf•reon end
Plequernines. on the data bank of the river
tieelppl, In townships 13 end 14. S. R 21 E sn4
running pert of the plentation formerly he'orglng
•n Pierre (Neater, filtnate abut three miles from
ho city of New (Mean": bounded on the upper
Bide by the plantation formerly belonging to
Prosper Marigny, and on the lower dde 61 the
nlentatlon formerly of lion brothers, known as the
Csseler Place, sold at $34 20.
A oerttln parcel or Inert Pitcvaed In the parigh of
Orleer,. coonletlog of 78 52-100 ems, end 1.• trset
4.140 4 illlVollcd on rho left book of the ISfinflenlpol,
ho'ow the e't7, poneiring of f 50.160 sores, told fat
St 20 per acre.
Boren tracts of lend in the retieh of Plaque•
mines, on the right bank of the WlMission', about
alitysthree mike below the city of New Orleans,
divided into 135 iota, sold foe $ll2 171.
A tract of land rolled La Grand Cheolve. in the
pariah of Plaqoumines, about 13 leagues below the
city of New Orleans, on the right bank of the
elasippi, about sixty a rpents from the river It la
a narrow strip of land commenoing at Lake lit g•
mitage, or Petit Lao, and running down the bayou
leading to the Ray of Barataria on both P 11164
Title tract of land is wild to contain a large quan
tity of live risk, which alone makes it valuable. It
brought $1 110
The wolf , . hied half of a tract of land on the left
hank of the 31 issisAppi river, in the parish of
Plaquemine., nbout thirty miles below the city of
New Orleans, lying on both side. of the Riviera
tax Chem', commonly known en the Jean Tiaptiste
dandier tract, and containing OM acres The 320
Jews brought 371 email per sere, it being mostly
ewemp,
The saleyesterday close.' with Corea treats of
land on the left bank of the Mississippi, In the
parish of Plaquemine., on both aid es, of ihn Riviera
any Chinni Division No 1, containing ill b 3 1(0
acres', brought 31 30 per care; division No 2, con.
tal a ing 350 33•100 mitre, brought 31 25 nee *era :
division. No., 3 and 4, containing 304 51.100 come,
brought 14 par sere.
Tho total ■mount of Wes yArterJty roach ed
5155,000, or tboreihnnt
rir These ranters ehent arloaror a wereltnty In
thelltioelh are the moo who ere illrillejr fit mn•
t•rvarlve petty or both tee•lnns In or. column
her shnnt for the Union, and In soother Irlst nn
right that en part• Kerth eau es wdt !twain.
bet an Impartial public Ogee the guilt where It be
onus; let all the trouble and bloodshed 'list may
•nma rest on those who thrust an trtitetici tine
n the country
This slavery questlan by h.en settled settitni
`,l , the solemn ertgtg.a•nt or all pa-tl.s Nooth
they 'weal to a•k nn Inlerfrrrore or Copes...
rldh the people or the Trrritorlrt All oth.q.
,uortlone are settles!. all fir as the eotlo of the
•'..lloval Gor•rntesnt Is concerned ; and thir is set
led, if the South steeds to what she has httiolf
Inns.
Squatter aelereignty ! bellows the dernago i ree
rho wants nfltap . by pandering to &wth•rn erejo•
!iota. or who wants In make a little sal Ir."! f
oarty. Well, re demagogues. this that you call
quitter sovereignty id your own work; you pr•
he author. of it. All parties t , ruth made It WO
lesented it to the country as safe an I sound; and
tow you will engage Ina rulnona rnrEter •tednat
+our own work, and dissolve the Union If you can't
verthrow It. Ah ! but some will not di.solre the
Tilton; they will only there( an Irritating t oe .
rward between North and South; Magnet all
he Mende we here In the free States and
lave the whole field to our comics Whilst
'hey heap on fuel they pretend they want to
•etingutsh the are Ito that calla co C.•n,lreee
0 meddle with the tlarery rit,o4l.inu cell. for
he trrenressthle onolliet. lay that make• de
liandll that he know. will not he grunted• and
ries to Intlame the publio mini on Neoeunt bf It le
in Mend of the 1•nlon If he be honest, he thlnke
nore of hie toque than he does of the Cohn , and
no right to denounce others if they do tto too
We bare only to ray to all real friends or the Union
hat they can make their choice of two alternetiree
Nevin take what tr mired at as ({nailer lover.
dttnly and the Union farther. or they can take
'he Coins with the exoluoton el /Iwo , from every
'out of eoll Inoue territories by the Federal Coven:-
neut. They can take which altarnattva they
dense now, for the mutt It filed aft fats If they
rill hare neither, then let them go for a dirs•lution
the rnloa, make no moil mouths law It, and
don rallhigat !Of.— tntei,t ring Democrat'
ATTACK WV TUC SPATAX ep
tn
W l rpl T h s AmD
. Nfit
White ho.h reeMeWilnhfeWrWtPeyi en elthoe wr , sr
n
,nted
and taken be Alderman reil* an the ettt.
.` totem* eemmltted a Tinl nt moult end hatory on
Fel>atct Nene, the mile+ of Veirt , te end
rni.aeu.ee for tha county. The attn. kla edited he,.
boon ememittod eetw.en ea and inTI.3 1 . 1314 k on
Nturitir evening. in r lerenth ' , Feet be'ow
Tr (Neil DecarTned enneyierehle Xelterneet tD the
no hhorhoo.l. The neened, elter were
TOMmillnd to Moymninnitlng ►rlinn In dqoplt of WI,
to anowor the charge 4; the next term of fours.
THE CITY.
AXVOKMENTS THItl ETENING
Coecsrvr Ma , Chestnut street, shove Twelfth.—
Dr is? Wire Parlor Oat ru.
9 reLsre-ei.eiteri rWIATis. Wal.t,t WIC
Rietird 111"--" Leashing lirerh."
ftsviest. T.i.:64lTEt • 7611111% Ili /Wt. br:r . , :rten
; 1 7 ,
E. sta. 4..12 1410 e IP .1.1.01, Le
ensusttme Ci sleeve Alen •1111,XT T 1.11•1.-
Amb et, ,t , oire his th.--" The Bunehbuk My
Ikrei4h.er's Wife.
T. nweve. VAIIETISI, N. W. •oreer Fifth sad
POP". Dan es, Ferret," &e.
t nh enassoe's Es niairiox Hoots, isine's Onetmill
weh fiuulJ,ue , Chestnut street, &we Ealls.—Th!o
don's Museum of Mt.
MeDoNocouOsislize, Rae. etreet, bele, Tlvri.
Entertainments nigh ty.
Texieve or Worme. northeast toner Tenth W
Chestnut streets.—Stenor
IN VIII CIVIL COCltra. on Saturday, the fcAow
int was d'sposad oft
lath. Court of Ni. Prins JPstvw t.one direlasexed
motion. 'or a newV,.t is the mwe of Whits vi. Welsh
owl ovine re, mg• ep frot.ol,l Or St.O•orse Tucker
trothell. Charlet B.
Paoro w ir wee appointed estoriner
n take testimony in the ens • of the North Rraneh
twair Coo:pant Ira. Warm &avert; and
others.
Judah Elharewood d.eidecl, in the rue of Pudding As
equation vs. Lek.. that the inaufficlieut deecriptiori of a
WOO- rty tits Initeitistattr vas not Stowed for
es tine mid* a sheriff's s
Inn es. flolmea. .he vlllsjudt• don ded the where
a rri worn., wax the nweer o lot of stoned. and
her hushand erected b Wipes upon it. a hen filed
aminet him as owner or reputed owne. bound ...Ike wile'.
interest.
R anon vs. The insurance Co —ln aloe clam Jude.
• hove. nod decided tint with re • ard to the Insiaranne
of minwinol errserte.ll It be edeted to the LORDS of
or
it Inn ht concern there c•n he a ' , mare., na the
policy if the p• runt hod nn interest at the time the pon
, nate etlecited and that Intereat con:tuned up to the
lime of ban In an fiction on a now• pf inettrenae
broutht in the mitre or the onvenanteeowh 'effected
the Initi ranee '• for whom it wield concern." set off
inn, be p eaded of a deo• doe hr the minaret pountsit.
tithe policy as set out Is itself a sufficient notice of
inanity.
Cottager Pesos--Judge Ludlow —Drat ss The
City. (before repnrted,l This Airy in this cote. which
has Merle redronsolereble ntrennon ht in a ver
dict for el lend for ant J. Hubley Ashton 'ad Moo
de• lola plarntiff ; ii. W. Hellen, fric defend% te pe
nnon and recommendation of creditors or
the Germantown l'a•tenter Railway Comea_nv.
Reel. 'avenge thereof wee discharsed, and Charles C.
Lee lea•eglointerd in hi. place.
TarQUARTER R 6891040.-00 Setaelay , fiefere
Jed a Thomism,. the moti r a new trial in theca..
vetor Hobert 1. Dottelea. con rietnlof penury wax f or
ewe tallith he Benjamin H 13. earner. Esq . fnr tee
d feedlot Without de iliac the matter it wee one-ti
nned until E,,tord,iy first. Meters. A cud Pant Brown
at d Pole, E Brown rep earn:. the preoeciation.
wood swan. Mere a.. end Jacob PoPerd were elm. ed
with henna roan-anted an aeranidt sod battom tern.
Jo n Cos rove. ta•ern keener and the la
eherred with an magma and better. on fusee Pollard.
Cn.groie end Elwood Pollard were nvlcted by the
jar'• and the other defendaeds were aohnitted.
Judge , Ileoun se. lanced Devine Mo se ay. cone eta!
day or 'won.° of a • (line itenor •nadleg: A len with
menus. it without it license' o li o w i th •
s.
tie was septet:teed ODOR th• first bill to DST • Sae Of kg!
nrd the mete ol proseCellOn: lead noon the waned oal
to par a fine of SID and aileron an imertmumen
thirty dela ; and oron the third hill toots o fine of 020,
and order o tumnsonmens of thirty day..
hlarniadulte Rioter Rod Smiley Peterson, amionetiod of
selling board without a license. were ...Canoed to Int 7
tine of
, 11) noel gait,. John Donohue connoted 01
enoult an nod
was sentenced to rote a fine of nee
rent. the costs, end to tic f dom.
• bristran r erects we. sentreard 0 Pag a fine et ewe
clot and the met of piosecution, and 'lndere° en int.
oltonment of three month. in 'lie count) Ensue
Tan Stove% oil ens Wotan —The Grand
t shed nn lu"rtae". netlat Te e r b n i tr w tO i ti h e ir e e r Fl U e h f
fonts of deeling in Miter? noncom ;era there ran be no
better evidence of the serfdom to writ h the eaten.. ni
the wheel with its mince and I lark.. ere :intoned thon
the fact that men. whose names have been hold in bon.
arable reotve, are ammo( Mate who contribute their
mean, to spread the misery wh i ch tie inseenrably con
n icted with the lottery-Wiry memo I •rit week a
rimsh-lookine robed man. named John Johnsoo. was
concrete` in the Court of Quarter demon, for ye line •
row" or natpti•re, The erelOngf, in itootive Pry
lance. " weeded i' age the re-alt Iran t hat a tone Nil
ha. been retained acute t Mr Jacob C. Frown a mem
ber of toe tar and an ex member of the Boarded Geer
(finnan, the Poor. for coneetrint to IL* caned, or,
" locker," with said Jhnson to sell ttery police&
If Dome whom we eall o eyweetehle support a mantle
Massa of fraud diallers Okras the mmernble wretches
from Bedford onset whn with wiet oney is not mine
Dom them be the rolecn ' dealers in low Krnaggr es. in
yen the remit at their then or Dekker, is the 6.tiresot
which titer •• dream."
The oaten, of dealing in Jotter? policies t, ninth
more eztensive than thole who are moat !ado! se with
the wei)• and wectildrie” of city hr. amide (pea me.
Meet Imagine W then a fps Inn • from the Mate House,
in f ict under the ear *eves of the monde of !notice.
ere etitahl shed. whore stnters. behted high
desk.. sell to white and beck. mace sad female. end
where.tbroa prolate manioc sand up ...leap k stet r-
Vete enter men from a moat all pursuits in life. serer
• lib their edemas to the oh nee of a fumed solders,
who lunette!, to ruin A Int of those who des! to lat
ter, minims and tem moneyed men who sum a them.
would tie a very Interests's oubliestinit end tt Street
lU•tere were n reed rot In thole. !tete would be Mao.
.mit fame in the etinale el ones end name. lola the Dow
nano record which • °old fishtail a state of moral de
t'erllY telnfal to root/motets and d•..retired to the
lair mime f ritr. After ell. Juretee hnt a fi c kle
I oda nod etreeare to be snitsrsi Lora her 04
of nmeress an" b•indite's. tier myrresenn•
eke ad.,. tare of the lady's misfortunes. and thin• it
a I ;obey oeett•tonally to arrest pros ...nor, ii invent
his• Rant of Baker street. while they alley wealth to
rtioh out law and • trispeetettlity" te ererholenee lb.
whale. of mon • . If the thietlets be strict at entice to
their ....on dot et wontit melee •e arrows er n ,' man s .
' , roan this e Pa sal groorieig soil. much would be an
comtllohed to the way of the fences try reform.
Vi rimer Rricones."— In rho vicinity of Fair
tenon t or a le *fuller rellowe who relent. in Me en-
Ph• Meet. 'WO of ' .rinse." tom • wee e nee they
eve a roll at ell eh VIM their h• eht •ied egret.
holies they did as the big rains dos- „acrd until ('ter
seem wen nee men wet t to Melt h itee VIM bead•
elle., The of tee ball ettionetine in ell to
aortae, dal are, etre to be dine d among vvvvv i•••
tont,. era • per fore delithorn tool a d nmsarderabLe
depots oa wee r -waived that tea tom., should lire K.
en led In rine sor.noeen feet of the tarns litcel•
en thatthe rpt. ob. ht lel known of theystereow wen
in lb 'ratan' RI mad A moiler n(eiatee Were noted
and liter - 9i fi al) .tor-rap. 'Stens Tar se went well
Laht 'cwt. thoreyet the frees we , no they
woos td4tht pre edited a cheese of kreeity aeatem tee
rerellitil Millalat •11the t ape they ear, him ti nr
mon dollars [bey manoi.ed to ehotmet 'row moor au
de were • terela Liter sem or Mettle. Tat me rests
deriared eir innocence and hr titeoeme of tele Pa
rte • +ere-I the olerni,-, ao(o Hee Nog •Dwrt o ,,
NI 4.1 ;41„em whoa the crtee Ikon c Pod tomer'
The imner.teen, with city. tams sod clothes. Ti. tad
Povn,eeeoa Flute, sad talked an• t their
NJ , h Tench tintorance ea thou la they had I
been ird•Med for mat aau liter, I heir intent were
on hard ton; t•tot hi the tire. of e. angel and tie r o e.
•ert of Me eartlot no at .1.1•4. tt e lntitee ...evied
w thout an nt to tart Had it a before eb..un
I anal 'here could have been • ?ceps to mart parties
p-Ire. lone in the midst of the sitamelo Cult ma
nn. of bade me.
IBS t'4C7llltarr,l Le TIIR s4l7Alltel —MO eribrillO•
n Is Pa e-does Pre., in reel On to the ot • "a
t
(CO of Navel. in .Pte aquae” tee ee,,iteds van d.-1
• f of
ft .t serves ta etool. ow Si.
mintier, it will mimeo* tmy ttlatr.rllDl ru e retereets or
°mermen Mitarowit•. Another ontrespondetat seed* es a
communleatson In rent:lan to the squirrels, in which he
114)•I
I would melt would It not boo hinter to remove the
sem trate altogether: Are a° . aware 'whet wilt be the
relelt of the '13,0,111.'10n or these peter' Fro merly oar
sublen on arm were annually tie r. sort of ihsectieer
one lords who bit It it nears the ii. he of the
?reef erd led upon is. re eels tact preyed upon the
•• od apd pa k. nee/ the introenetion of the even
tete lain land.. of a urea Race distpreered and the in
• Sets reentenueentl umitere el to 0.-h en extent no to
threaten the destroetron of rot only the trees of the d f
rem,•r eau tree but of 'hide trees throne nut the <eel.
WOuld et n t b• It .11e r, therefore. to rein e the att.,-
reis • Lrett all persons !inns near the equitres eons.
o f A . a no e per/. Rid by electric suited le tool. for
pre'• en ni i,l.t cite" tree ,
.lora. the return of the
voila sire She sem • tree, rrorn deteructinn and r eC.
03 heart of the pasaiir wt h Meer aver-eme , orue
sier •
Tie gueetion of bench faint our pal , entletell, tend
inz e. th-y do to the bendy and health 0 our city
ler, note and itnrortect one. and we are glad So la d
it
carolling Inca sleep lutenist anhant cur citizen&
T. Mennen tit Jinn( 08P111.—Tate day bas
1.-en oft firtt , 10 ty Coon of 0) er and Terminer for
toe ❑talc }lobe t Thome. , n sexiest whom the brand
Jury ha'. return it a hell of endeeernse.t for the murder
of John Came who. it may le remembered was gon
e erted wrote t ranee nee yr the murder of Constosher
Scotto', sod by meting nt strong arpeeja tit *seers:am
ciemencr in hi. behalf Donne. d n ease'e the riet,
of the law Cop e Sr.. falai/awe from prune. with
l u ll eoreen^r. inn 1. remote, Red After an attempt at
retornesee• n required tells hems of iniocin and
habit. of meaup. t White gorn-rd en a riot in the
Inver Sortion vet the oily A bullet entrre4.l his he'd and
he dad •t the Pe•may Iv ima ii.., it .1 Thom, .on,
ha is silos et to here fired the fetal soot. us a
toting oen of int•llis ewe• a•d Is " try re.prre•
Mill concocted The pr (tete I run-in ',el at
him is erid to he Ghee an who bat a few ort•
lit ce wan in the rourkheiyui rrelf. Ctletrited With
the mileage. Or Jolla eCtieleie. 1 110010110 e all IlLedig IMI
oirrereelly protest• el he. ennOcenre and trees Alston
the notht or the homicide ha eat Shot In the side by
.time one 01 t owe Who chimed to be th• friends of
C lie is to he defendrd by IM *um Leiria C. Cal
tidy end F. C. wester. The proceed•n it% tlia rose
ilooDolenlat•raft en immense t cre•U•Se of peDa •
the tfoinity of meth and Chestnut onset*.
POLITICA!. —At the Meeting ••f the H•rntilleen
Chili held al tee nelLaweerlere &teeth end Caestaut
etreets on Refind•• erenim.•ddresses ia ere 'jet I
Meysv Wm 1.1 Bull and neer e A i'oefes, rnh n Ii
tuner, Fel presided Beealunnea were adopted Ur,-
int Upon Hen R Jot Boras, Hon IMO Ste beard.
ken John P. Verne and Hon, John Wed , the w e
din r elm: lira hem corms their •-ten for ice
Reerui•!lran n: mince fn. R.rooker and denlatia_ to•t
t.! nther Deere. ',armed by there Ror te
eerneerne we I
ete.etee • an at ardonnent of the prea-Isiet am let
thew Were Illeetedo anj to wh 01g they are wince y
• !edited
Toe Adornment. and the FereLds party ere nericel•
enaa• ea in rep/ince for th• aserne.r.),... w oo ,•oi w o.1
Carr you. he too' loregn nrettler nam
M• ted tri
connection wth e Democratic nem rarron fo or
•re Imelda a non. hag. Recorder of the ca.,. and e
M H
otor %Aut. Marne on,. Harry Conrad eelx
1,
Pinder d are 'paten of roe the toarOwelooe toe th•
l'eoules p•nr. Am exeitinr trine prior ty. Immo, t
of ta s rearoleat , eo o•Oen•ittn1111 mV he loot., for, The
elertmn foe Nf•tor will tate pines a woes eller tin
matinee of the Ch•rne•on Convention .
The ce'oraele 01 the Keno. ne Democratic C^:h ,
rre•r to fv.ht at their heententirt•rt Ins the ppurrw nf
Matte/ R rranrem•or• to "met Reled.ng and C....e l. extra,
cm 1114 orre•erre of the !tan sett Nat anal Canteen.
C..
istitw•lt awnitn Tilt Ponit•TtiTt% —et? &mil.
town ettizene wh." Lys in the ant Itlntlsnol nr sty?
Inqt .pd the cOsialf tM ae ars sodPi p• Paled annas
their e‘ps •I• 1•• pp. ,I•Npa Epp,' r„,,,pp.
th• rentrtl tlf , a.•s hoar the emit •ii
stoat loin to eedntailed Ganr 9:•re..llnst
ant,' sod exrijd ell.g•es Thor*, izatsel ler rsseak
*MI trAlsim. Tnint ill in•Ofl,7
rln'e th•. [VI be, run e l.l 11 .. .,4 1.4 ipry
ns hi nf these arm, p..101 , 111.th.•t
rot .'.low p•••tif.ll.l h, th•rwn.et.• •
or e 4 - 4 ,11 /1 - 0171 t•• C. two II r t$ A bus
ryn oin ni• I 1 hi fb , • it'on. trill CIA.:n 07 ' , ash to $.
r do to- tn. tl.ori i•tavevi• - •• tn,l h• roiy o•tl
chef indeed Who can, ni vre.rat lt donor •61•••iar , s
nit ht. OnowiAttcl, LI rit e .
tea V•ir • • •r* tray Vit es •41.• .• •.-. •••
ti r , ' , .•• inr , Ira It, %me o•Oc altnt .r..f •••
maw tn. • let .nry th• tiNft t - t .
M• 444,1ir.141 V. 14 t • $ 1 Mr, SLI4•I. pp I can toss 134
e+a ar w•hlit* I 14.4,:n
Rini Au , vvvvv L,'.. F. ;
ro,k fr• the , f3e*.sr the Cl 4 ,'• • • if
Minn. en Pnttill.l, f`11: tn• sit !Were o fet , 11. *,, ,, ,•et rents in -et ea A 5r4, 1 41 rr
Wn •
lee hi h • noil eremoire* to Ft* * pup I' 11.1 r
C , p• Pere4r,..ven
I e
n •i`n v ... •t1..#4 bek , re e• Meey+n rr• Finn, nitor •410.b11 , 0 ono re '.• n.. rf ear •••,10
. a • rue! , e..•• 1141111.15 t• 5141. l tte. co*. • ~•,
e PI son-• va• 19.4tt..••••
torn . ..note en ,, er the vat. 2 el Ihe coort 0 •eh
10 7 •re 1• , •*• te"11 ii*: n••re
1 ,, dto r ,• ••• •, , , h• 11 - :1711 , tt• 5, • trr. CS 'it
not N , rl not 1..21" rer was
thte1411.01,1, ,,, 111 e IV", 1 , 11 r #21.11 , •1,0 mu,
r.( the triir.oli:bucLese of Ott ersl,etta.
A Oe VIII tot .y fle.inntpn of
rid o ..h•Le •••1111,',1 • trs•t'n ~ , ... .‘rseltsdn• 1 , 111-
Inr far the rum , . banvnt ana •no•tin •.•
tinn the rt.l•tntnon TPI lllPtir• L yd
.•••4,111 xo.—er• estr• the •
B 'I hr. rat,.
(••••,1 • In the mtlePP•ll tn• rr.wene,•
tln Wnlnes.l4 , svialrii list. • Ern mast, net..
held. at hlr .
, I. 0•71 Duns pe5•143.4 i s min.
eons Illy thit th•l•snan ••4
Orshan, JAII•go% sa t T.
11. an .ml v•I new.- I • e•p.
n,nn e p en for lut fmn,tlnn. 4r r.• altnot.: at •ft
J..rre•lmes , .. ,. . In lb,• ww,••ven we 4,1, o e ,, e
ne`lll4 Attention I , ll.sk f.tc• entrn•ntlll na
t , • l'n[l.4l•lsh • W.aN•n it
• Anne /lyre ltr rir
flld•inte or r.,rsi.d Colls4o, ler h.s des. to cf 13• pr*
osotil inonurr.cat
Ft.nwitn MARKITe hurl t
p•nprov • et Mott an Rip , srop• , atir Cl
Inntnbl• focfampi for th• estetNagrafint •• hover
etarMtg •rJ 413 mutative or fr•rti. o •vt Nei aft
eAltra nursil , en , l 110 rat hoer. r/trot n - unit
fr..ht nr Th. itirdr•nt rohlot mue•ei—Wil•N.,,
Pre kin Hitter tt. Lose. , nr only re, them.
if more t •on•iJareJ a nnevemar• ere .one , hi to v.
well n. 1•14•1; tor lb. gorpotio. Tiro g luo
ant Wedneid V 4 , d , C.Jrd•v those. ba•Fint d
di'p ettof whether urowing i;laris or textual. ;
4.141•4 he mad po re havq. 14•Iro got nyprlrtn•lf
f• their 'tat *tie.- Frvatt the number o t
Vut don we in. etvautre At tee mrp•rs of INC
Great it pt...., eo•h n . w. to cll. ‘ . 04'..1
eof porn ei,ent and •nr•IT. no on • coed no,* • re'
to.ntop of A : , ,10 of itoarr,e, then eftittS LW* g
more reilibing In It. InIt,tILI73.
DailAfte Aline° the :••i,a atr.—Therit It ft
we ett,lille artterie amour Inn, / I••partetaag A r
n.en In n e. ,emMr•ni N. t•tee b.II I.:oh. }hero
IS• rismereAnt on fr,t to h n l'oaeenting fa t ', a t
WedeelAtly •N en ns. at Fireth Arra sires, , (or
the f uryoto of farm.at e,Ato of fulet . r I 'et Ana
to •neete tAo I avout et•the thew:lth. ut th. Stu.. TN,
MON @fatal la a r AI) (Mt" at end hete nee ' - test
wteltee. fAo e.sa t they NI ...Aid torte et.tee .1.
0Ijr• 0411' . irin I•Naf rot oat dser Art; 1A
men'.. The name fh•lonl.on We. in V. rutin n - u t
Iwo. ball. tell lii. Ate , ' tie there krig , cr to Io etot•
I .5. d,-,0 •.ea R.OVAin tail°o or keep ;to getted tetra
with wet thither apolhertry.
Tux WRITTIXII —We tra.t Furety say I W Ird
11hont thur toys ty veatd.r Isiqnr* mb. R, T •
Fobrrpttv ■ aynrracht4. We may Vok (nr fritst. 4n.!
(teasing far.v.:l, ?tiers troal4 not Gan Igto a rnO:
lively day than CFI Oniii or WWI 0* sou a few t tR II
aro i; e nos ivied. It was alert. aid. tinslX, ar.d bans
fit Th• wraiths yore throated w tbpose
ee
encitomeklet Poste Wane sad the ceolviat Wet
crowded nth silos Lee worshippers. Errant, llll
ea pitazefo: and Woe easel is so ectatatim • day Lad
clothing ta t in rolls ti; of {Ten •eig The da y
tat led the distinct:tea Wreak /sheers 'olio-
MILITARY M —A roes of +hit ad'
'hat
etinerarll /*port 'or ISA his bees lsid ere cm, Giv.oe.
rnmit we learn that the wen', eusitsr apes setee'
'Cr:weer sem pewee dunes ohs sm• s.tatted t - i :el
mussate lassie • rind insee-4 a afeilled swhe. too. t.
moinets. Tbe snots &we frs - es thsi &Ise -
Tat G"Tsrnnsent for liete, arrozom to an Ratihsr t poor
, ` 34 nrs fe new companies to set arms TO. soils as
iser of infective nolitisi in the tat* I . 341110.• "hi*
L.l'4) it. totiformed awed occsalsed tats relichuser
companies. Th. report is short. end coats:so is IRSP4-
o .l et
re cocumendstoott 'motet
in faro , of an enesnell ,
o•
na. Wiaeh i artrio Grays hare tonal their add arserkine
over to .en. Shies of the • eearct Briciida.te iessil
ane• with • teen aitice f ots use sidlotant f Puersl W.
gra end thew will sot be tate. aver NM onf
Th. roll re B. a.m. or the ''kind Br:. ere Fare
dopted a bsttslion cop for this G .- morph' , *it " ted
to
ib orgsn . tation It has a bleb eta I lestr. loAroor
a•owe conasersank teeth., sti help drawee
Mad Of bt sk leaner, .mead ihrt pees: Pout of an
Orally concave ; bent laelloot terosro sio ea to
hansom se nth tn. than. ill • bead The Stitleninal
are I. sill meta:—front a wreath and ;Soria a ,round.
in the 6:tire I; • nett ontan toted oets.s - In* Is.-
Lew the bey. , " et the ewe en '1 tin btekts o. the
b•ch • t it tots 1.. this PPE Pon Hack toe •.reL Iha
whnie preheats • n• at end twiner. eproueoed..
Th. Peon Lorca' consort!! sot. K t.4" , 4 -a ra t pie
2 of Febrei•re. to Forel lest. ie ths laths ef
use r+er
rf'tonsrat /he tuo , litrista to be sr. nod rirsrtoe rim
mints of this seven tire anon who fell la t`wi t
tion •ry war which pettiest ie gooTectiont bet been sets`
In tha CastAin , Ther'seS ibetnesen ilne.ll tt. Per
heron 11 Gentry. bintoelf a doh:sods& t o a so'ditc
of
the Revintun.
CLOT t TO ItentiOstr, AT 12 o'CLO.CIO—Tb. Leoli
of the Cosmopolitan An Associstisn. Foe ...en tee-.ter a member he nalmen os three dog - 711, VA eh tam well
anutle son to—
le The b antifal stool *orreries'. ••. halwatou,
hi• Friends' or the •• 1 3 :sokrizith "
2 . A copy of the eh/motif illistrsUld Art ;oar:., - (. coo
year.
3. A Fie. Acholistou to the Gsrentlal. To. Id
Ilrmidos•• N.Yr To . k.
in addition to watint iterate! hundred TA I -,1,10 son he
elect are cis ell In suhs...shars se_ promiaa.e erimeeisse
choice paint n• AntIISTII co'l Eel, hebe the ;rat Arcane.. sold fora ea artists coil rort• s;d eytuyar
o et E. H. bunt Co.'s.consor of PUN-hand Chest
oat streets
AT Tee PeNTSTLITATIA Vi iITTITAI, there Weft
'two 'euitysinps yort•rdst. Man Ann
reneteee roesieen is's Inc iesti apes,
ea
feriae from • (mew. of the lelt soils 1 , ••10. he resell
or a fall down stsirs at her resiitenze. in Fine stnet be
tween Drub sad Pi low at - eel .
John C se-ore. i etc an o.erdeee of tuidies:
li - his " fell last seen rat. st the e.wria• of P - yrititi
Ttsd'Orif strfeth and fractured ha Pr pe n o is rrifle
Jeh wors e d took hien to the basalt-al_ J sha loo•
lb. fin wear, A hi• des.•esFe ra ef •he ecr.'lezet,
lege romeerhnt etpusine. hisine an Wt.-rest •.,sonst.
o pit Eason vs/ (moods. f - r tie eq.Pe reammied ma
feneely of the who whoa 1.. oe the we. was
told lh•t the nie.e . der• was rere:, et
•No he-re " was the reslJ,"tbelncheds:sadtlslp
perr Places."
A it stionoZt TzansostaL —l4..ats Nrilftam
Trth.on h t on. soctlosest center rf Fifth. and Cherry
streets. lowing' lust tonanfotsred a vet or ohne ole
or.ne of a motor. pitcher. Weer e. mt. sotiteas. whirl"
t.aat , of dent. and perfe•tios of arm. hire rues
Ir hoes raeits ' , trended sea rift heal t •
enio'ntees of the Peen Worts to Titetea• Peinty.
on toe retirement hrm • f Rearm
00. The net eiree ta s s el of the eta otatios is wiriek
that ten !men is held by the vo•tm•c. Itr4k esi•b
itihtrent it , th which Mr. Ramey has been so tans ons•
nee of. The *Pre oe ran to seem kr a raw dais. at the
atom of the Mew,. Wllsoa.
• ' '
SLIGHT Fllttli —4l.at two o'clock yesterday
aftowtoon.thore wt. a whallt En ft the hose factory .
of Yr. Canteens r tars le Peen-11 street. below Artie.
The defence was very trrfl ox.
Lest erenne. &Tow spree o'clock. te eons of fro
wits t o
s s ed f . . 1 the burning of a chummy Rad street,
tr tow Market.
Deans an slytm of Sre, le tea oortinrevient tontioe,
of !b. ca.. on Rater:let 051.13 Re. a mooros of tee Re
ha-re Pause Comparty had kw foot creaked /tithe aa-
Dermas maniac over it
FATAL ACCIAENT on Tel BF 4D T.. RULSOOD
Patntlt reedy, kintek a Batmen: inttecte. tTas Tett .•rlr
of atordey oftentoon. by th- core oftbe Loden- Rao
rood at Penrawlrante ar -nue sod T - . - etry sevenik
twos:. rad tostant!, krl ed. He was tarty years cf
Ur coo tested elec. tine es* In 'reel Mr
Iteee B. Alen contorted the 'set of /erne* PentetemtTe
the Itepresecottil e from Mtn F 4 4 ,- •ateect! otet h‘e
Dern tertninated. Mr. Allen bait s , en ant Va to mnolLtat
etsim. and the ems:ninon int re 103 Se how of Mr.
Donnelly.
SCDDIrt PCATR afternton a man.
Farned Rnbort Florns at b. 4
airfax Mare. hnttee Clot tiara 1.17*.t. Compri new
VU nettied to t.rs'.B an lumen to eye.
enZam Oreten. colour
o r isconcests in the OitY of Perieditsee ter OA
. 0 4, me Janaary 23. at ft cdMoek. t o 331
Lam meek--
D•cressa.
i etas r.... -• • -..-•-• Altaas...
Pc u_.
Croa.. .. 7,
rns
....
Coeufaaaptina of Laura
roarth nee
f
Cheo s P•ass.a4.—
Name oßr •ta et
antsy . -
F *ye r. s•
t .•- • . • r
la dela cr_sti on. rbeaa... • I Phys. - -
a.
P.L n-
e.els szd Ik. 4
IP 'ft' eat . -•••- •
pnt3
%imams--
q.-Innsla
Ffr.re
T'nkn , •-a
WDOOlta€ Ccagh-
J. r•ser PON. *I:- . • • •-•- •
.. 4. Beano a 3 lad - 31
) at,
ArerarkA rOWPS.
—, Eiden.* Dikes. -
Otlktr dlotkuim....-
TattL _
eIIiA.NC IA I. AND (`fI*IIIEUC LA.L.
The nosey Market.
Pnreanitersna. /an. V. 1909.
The avidity with whisb all the reliable sad fa
vorite stock• ar.d blade are op at the Flout
Beard, and the pekes viirb rnth seratifaa
take Sr. fair 'Wastes of the 'Landsat* of the
ripply of 'covey le Ueda while lila atteel at al
doubtful loans and terry stocks eittany tb. t
(hoes *rho ban torney are not at ell sir ettaiii'vo,
awl that they sr, deteralired to run no este test
ordinary prudent* era stall. City ern of the
nee Lute have toothed 103 The rsUroad Irks
are is demand al Camden as Ant.cy Aar,
of 83 *Ad tn! Ed. Poonrylvosio Bottomd attevate
'aortae* deer soil top ail Wet ae EQ. Reading
dais of 43 at 94. and at Ed at 074 pneefrinsia
Railroad Agree are firm at 36f ; Fearer Meadow
; Lehi ;Is NlVrigitica at 41; }lands Canal at
49 ; Minehill at 3?(, and Lehigh Valley Rallr. , e. d
at 40e.
TEe Ers-ti Jovval says that abeet fear-If s
or the bondholders of the Cataaissa. Wiltutertiatt
and Erie itaftrold, bare seceded to alterate***
&loured some time awe, for th• reergamiaatkat ef
th• company. The Coosa:title, of the Client!
lif ,, rittar* bondholders a the WinLeampert sad
ElmiraCompsny have been m■kiez as ex nate.,
lion of the Kalil web, and rake It at SVI ANP,
ce rather more than fifty.ltte per etas_ w •he ri
enal coil gatheactery arrangeematt love beta
made, and it . 111 thought that a reoroattadoe ef
both companies, under the plan already pahlithad,
will loon be effected.
We have received tram Mears_ Imlay S2v.k-
Dell the follorktr, note:
i• We here this 'Leonia; detected a diatternto
Eve &title counterfeit Ente. 1411 . p3Itiai q b^ tha
true lame of lb* Mocha:es' Dealt. of New Bed-
font. mete. Vignette—a whaling erne; sin ma
d:alien on each cipprr corner. Pttnt.:l,TarW..
Wurrel and dicuard."
The ea:tot of Petorion's rountryilt Pofoc.far
hu kindly tarnished as eith the folloritgdriertp
tlon of the Nuaterfeit note o the Montt Holy
Wink, ttgainst 'IAA ire ealtiosed car readers la
this morning's Preis: The vignette ia the CaOle!
at Waittingtod, with a portrait of General Taylor
ott the tight. wad a female cc the loner acne;.
The attention of repass:lea It called to the ai•
verti«tracat of the Sec:vary of the Imam s of
the OTO per eeat. loan to he bid f,n co to Ile lltt
tan. The bidders hate its Option to tits either
vut<a or insorthr.l nook- The hue; tal F.—trey
^no. vlth moneyed sift mEI
Ithe'y to carry the We to a eliest premien.
COYVIIIrII or B ~,,, aa.—The fesikoeieg la a
statement of the exports from Saranash to ionise
v.rts for the year felts; litontcher SI. 1VAI:
I It 4sutet • rah at En Yana
" .• aka .14 .
.
ad " " Vp&te.s...ar
4tl 319: Govan:or
T.a.
Staten:tr..: at 1.2.7. rt. Ito ct
from eactatrlrk, fr , ;;lfo ;ear ',air; Di
eemlyr 31.
I.: ossrter es.tar. ttn ••- • • ilia:l4
•• " .. , ..... ...-..-.
• '• 6 It•Pls Isegatettet Is
" aLm tree etre r 110.,1:1
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