The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, May 23, 1860, Image 1

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FAtiniLPW, THE COOT OP negitTATlon.
No.' RIB
mr9-0
QUILTS.
ALLENDALE,• r- PATES,
LANCASTER, suarcO f Out,
AND '
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MARSEILLES tat*A r Ms
- AIL STUN, •
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JOSHUA L. BAIL If f
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Sim Twit as bird a lam sad inill , ieliodiedtaiody
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trims. -'", radian"
IIifiLLTER EVANS •irgiao,7ll
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SPOOL COTT'ON.
riot to airy nee iriver*P. orri
stairtigkr, rut asarkdaspe bakikmrias,
zirsario . „
MCLIIOi(47a. ,
0. QAXVILLE, Omni Amt. No! York,
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SEUPLEY, HAZARD. & -Limnimeorit
• No. 111 criumpvcirr fr.. •
001111188101‘ NEWHAM
701 THE EALE Oir ,
PHLTAADELPHIA-NLADE
GOODS.
W ELLING.
COFFIN, & Co.,
11. CHESTNUT BTRIIT,
Oder by the Paakage. the following ilseertraosts a
ei.MERIOAN GOODS
Otniandard ms4cne and in iron& variety
PAINTS OF STAPLE AND FANCY STYLES.
!BLEACHED AND BROWN NHEETINOR
eWIBTINQLL AND DRiLL4I.
OEINABUR6II SMALL ANJ 'WPM
OOREIET JEANS. BILESIAS, AND NAMIBIA'
CANTON FLANNELS Ana FILMED LIRMGII.
LINENS, KINTUDICY MANN. AND 007-
TONADEE.
ALL-WOOL AND VNION OLOTHIL
BLACK AND FANCY OABBIKKREII.
SLACK AND MIXED DOESKIN&
ATINETS AND UNION OABOIDIERDS
abiltelyal TWEEDS. OARIOURETO. k... 441,
ENAMELLED
-SLATE MANTELS,
elinufeetured from Pisansylvaaut lillatp Stone , and
enamelled sad marbleised in Indianon of the richest and
blest rare Bliptian.apeatah. Yard Antique. fileptii t 4 sad
other desira•• Mar b les. T he are 111010' polished , , anu
'not stain or d soolor by Oils, aids. OMs, or Smoke, are
ita times u Mel % la mer an d are lad ( mak
rep e t a ireent e l 'h, 'tropie n firr the l a
forty ye r iirs o , r w t itt
increased zatmation. Arnbit•ots. nnlidfire. end 1111 in
lit of piantals, should not fail to swami them. Plana-
Actured and ferule by
ARNOLD & WILSON;
1010 CHESTNUT STREET,
B. H. PII.TW2LZ, SW!. Philadelphia.
'•
PIRLADELMA WA R MIN G AND
Ar,. VENTILATING WAREHOUSE.
NEW GAS-CIONSIIMING
CONE FURNACE.
-This Worm-Air Femme has now been in nee in this
city cud puts of she Mottled Stases; and, geese four
revs trial, they have pro ved to. be the ;realest Neon°.
hewers of sad a '
POWERFUL HEATERS
seer need, es hundreds of ?cretonnes will NOM Oral
sod me them, at
ARNOLD & WILSON'S.
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COOKING RANGES. •
CRILEION93 PATENT ELEVATED DOUBLE-OVEN
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Something new and decidedly the best and WA
pletadecita, tam= goad to tb . • Pa
ran atm.
ARNOLD 6a WILSON,
1010 CRERTNUT STAKED.
B. M.Pwaywnm. Sac's. . mieltadtwint
THOMAS & MARTIN,
117 CHESTNUT STREET,
Jur, irox SALII
'OH
APAQUAG
SEAMLESS BAQS
, til %um ,
.j E. MeOLEEB.
pHILAHELPHIA. PHOTOGRAPH
' TABLISIOCENT,
No. 910 CHES i l i Ntrt ST..
(Over Dobissmes,lst-Disal 9tero
~ / a/ Ivorytyses, esters* WI plots Phatostsshs. Ds
tususst7,oll MQ Atobistnris. IsYN-Dit
';'‘M,)NESDAy, 'MAY 23, 1860.
C t s
4 it Jrtss,
720NMSDAY,, MAY 23, 1880
•
Heap Brammell—No. 2.
BrtunruelPS fittherj'died when the son was .
In his tenth year. The lad had then been
four it Eton, where—the title of
Aoci Whig in rdroyiume and that of dandy not
• rwrerhst4-his taste, In 'dress obtained him the
sobrige4cifilliuckllimnmell.” The young gen
tlemen' aPeßato,have bad an natural instinct
Redress 4:-.4urd as little Piccolontini, the eau
s daughter of Sienna, was dubbed
prineesa" by Mr. N. P. Willis, so,
we truth, might Brtimmell hive been
wised as a born dandy.
thin, though be exldiolted no talents,
le , application, and carefully avoided
icipation in tir athlatiC sports of ball
." cricket, and heating; so much in
-14 there, George prtinamell was decl.
very' popular' , oritir, The masters
and petted him, partly because he was
;petrol and polite:to them, but chiefly be
- was proverbially frank and honest.
11 had one great instinct of a gentle
always told the truth. If be was
'also was not a little saucy, and, how
the fist, exhibited 'that readiness at repartee
Wldcia he Mr weettir ttiti ids reign.
alirmittdag odd, quaint, and original
ahoitt 'the lat. which was attractive, and he
,exerclied sm. - Mich 'ascendancy among the
icibtioßkie of , Etanss be attereardti did in the
World, of„ London,
iton : with the leixitatiOn of being a sharp;
over lad, *turbid not made the most of his
opportenibles, and still was not to bo consi
'dared ignorant. In making Latin verses, ono
the..ooo iikopqmpli o t ß ent o . Of the time,
lie 10 tg Imre acquired
,corisiderable
1.11, his latter years, at Calais, when a
illsorawned itoe; he returned to this amuse.
!sink und2 haiiidessly whiled away snug; with
the longs laid 'hots of this iipeolem of corn
i=Mil
'Faun NUM he went to Oxford, entering
himself • as a member 'of Oriel Collage,
Where he speedily„: changed his manners
and his system, abandoning his winning frank
pees for studied excluidreness. Re made
bleeds With men of ratik and teatime, and with
these alone that is, it the truth must be told—
he became it tub-bunter. Re neglected study,
but condescended to write for the Newdyate
prise, (Z5O for the best short boom upon a
stated subject, Heber's cifaleatine" was of
this digt,) and his verses were declared to be
,the second best of his year. Ills friends de-
Waved that they were the best, but that, from
hia carelessness in omitting to co4nt the lines,
ha had not written the hill number required,
AB the squibs and satires of the University
were attributed' to him, and every practical
joke . was sifillated , npon him also. One of
these, which nearly caused his expulsion, was
his putting a pair of white bands round the
nook of statue donkey, and turning the animal
intolhe quadrangle of Brazenness College, to
parody the Principal, a Amy dull and heavy
`pedant.
ilo a social point, Brumnaell was very sue
owidtd, introducing * sort of dignified gravity
Into his very fun,even when most s 4 fast. and
lirrlorts," and m aking a point of never
at his own sallies, not even when most humor-
reputation travelled from Oxford
i .lootadon, and even the Prince of !Wee had
00 0 07 the stories told .
Mime% useit to - say thre„
hoist BUM, he had attracted the' notice Of th . e
Prince, who , =haft:molly recognised him In
London, At all events, BrummellWai intro
duced to the Prince, at a_ party of exclusives,
whom the embryo Beau treated yrilh ouch ar
rogintsteschatasee, despite of their rank, that
the Prince was Aerated; 'WC presented
the impudent young fellow with iicornetcy in
the Tenth Hussars, his own regiment, which
Brownell condescended to accept. At this
time,he had obtained the mature age of six
teen 1 . Of he then left the University.
This occurred at the close of 1794, when the
Prince of Wales, le the observed Of all ob
servers," was thirty-two years old.
What manner of man George Prince of
Wales was at this period, Byron has recorded
in "Don Juan,'.' when ho describes what his
hero saw in London, about the year 1796 :
There, too, he my (whate' er he may be now)
A Prince, the prim* of princes at the time,
With taselastion in Me very bow,
Atd fall of promise, sr the spring of prune I
Though royalty wee written on his brow.
Es had then the MCC too, rare in every olime,
Of betas, mahout Wel of foo or beau,
..a Anishod HOUDIN, from too to toe.
Brunimell was singularly lucky in winning
the !hirer of the Prince, so as to obtain a com
mission in his regiment. it introduced him,
as the Prince's constant companion, to the
highest and most select circles of fashion, and
placed him side by side with some of the most
rising young men of the time—for there was a
general desire to belong to the Prince's regi
ment.
The Prince had a great craving for excite
ment, and thus cultivated the acquaintance of
various men, for various . qualities. Thus,
Sheridan for his wit; Fox for his social na
ture; George Hanger for his bluntness; Lord
Barrymore for his downright wickedness ; Lord
Camelford for his eccentricity; and Brum
melt for his originality, imperturbable assu
rance, and cutting repartee. Very soon, the
Bean and the Prince were on the most inti:
mate terms—a connexion the mystery of which
is that it lasted so long.
Drammen, as a military officer, was ex.
tremely. inefficient. The Prince could not
spare him to be taught his duties. He was
almost always late for drill, and did not al.
ways know his own troop. Notwithstanding,
the Prince's favor pushed him on, and ho was
Captain, before he had boon two years,in the
regiment. Two years later, (early in 1798,
when he was only twenty,) he resigned hts
coinmission.
One duty wttieh he performed, while Lieu-
tenant, was . his attendance on the Prince, on
his marriage with Catharine of Brunswick.
He accompanied "the happy couple" .to
Windsor, and . subsequently described the
youpg people as Mutually pleased with each
other—which accohnt materially.difrers from
all others.
Various causes were assigned for Brom
mell's leaving the army, but the most probe-.
ble . was that his military duties, badly as ho
attended to them, interfered with his inde
pendence of action. - The reason assigned by
himself was; that when his regiment was or
dered from Brighton, a fashionable watering
place, to Manchester, the Pittsburg of Eng
land, he went to the Prince and said, "I. can
not go to such a provincial place, especially
as it will remove me from you." The Prince
allowed him to sell his commission, and so
Bnimmell quitted the army.
The following year (1799) Brummell came
into possession of his fortune, a clear $BO,OOO,
with which capital he set up ahandsome bache
lor's establishment in the West End, compe
ting with men of high rank, who had for their
annual Incomes thrice the amount of his whole
fortune.
Invested in the funds, at that time, Brum
melPs capital would bring in, at 4 per cent.,
only an Income of £1,20il a year. Brummell
took a house in May Pair, then the fashiona
ble quarter, and famished it neatly rather thin►
expensively. His entertainments were snug
dinner's to the Prince and his friends. lint his
living was not expensive. Ile kept only a
pair of riding horses, for himself and groom,
to enable him to show off in the Pirk, trust
ing to his friends, who were only too glad to
be so honored, for the use of a carriage. His
chief outlay was for dress. He said, in, the
midst of his career, that a gentleman in good
society In London could not ' properly dress
under .0100,is yeas , --exactly two-thirds of the
Beau's income.
B 4 game was 44:1 run the chance of winning
money at the gaining-table, to which risk he
did not resort until near the close of his ca
reer, Or to marry an heiress. His personal
appearatioe was &Ovid , thongkhe wasnot
what" the t fair sex call ca a, handsome xoin.
Figure, very good; air , light-J*4n ; whir
kers, sandy; forehead, high'; nose, a little
disarranged, on the bridge, by a fall from his
charger; 'eyes, gray; face, long; general ex
pression, sarcastic, with a comic infusion:
His features had , great mobility, which ena,
bled him to give great.effect to .his words,
When he Wished to be pointed, impudent, or
severe.
His tsepa in dress obtained him the title of
"Beau" • and It was reported that, 'lit ids aux.
iety to be perfectly Ivell7fitted, be employed
two orbits -ol hie, gloves—one to cut the
thumbs, the other to execute the other 'fin
gers! ' Really, he was.the best-dressed man in
London. • Every garment was of the best ma
terial; made by the best tradeametf,tand fitted
him admirably.He was quiet ' rather than
showy in his attire; and, perhaps, his greatest
fault was the great extent of his wardrObe—
for he was, perpetually getting new clothes.
But he had eonsunmutte taste .In-dress--es
chewing Contrasts, (what would sie*.be
loud,) and Studyinglarnway Of colors. In this
he diftbred•greatly from the late Count D'Or.•
sey, who his been seen to walk down 'Bond
street in a sky-blue frock, pink necktie, oriOti
vest, plum-colored pantsl°97Es; bid . Primrose
hued gloves! • •
r ~Orat gMat innovation of Brantmell's ought
-have immortalized him. When his reign corn_
menced, tbe fashion was to wrap the neck
cloth round a pad, or in thick :folds 'which
made the muslin either bag °atilt front Or get
mussed up - tuillprihfretilre into'n :"•Brustf;
melt abollatiedAte pad, and 'wore his neck;
cloths slightly stiffened, so that the weight of
the head did not Crash theta' .up .Into a. roll.
How this was done, •he never would disclose,-
but rumor runsthat, when he, fled from Eng
land, to avoid arrest for debt, he left , a memo
randum upon his table, " Starch makes the
man!" The sbffenoi neckcloths then became
common. Brummell's ris is spoken of as
something wonderfully neat. It was the result
of great practice, and if not hit upon at the
first effort, another neckcloth was tried. Hill
valet was met oti the stairs, one day, with some
'two' dozen , neckcloths, perfectly clean but
slightly crumpled, upon his arm, and, when
asked what they were, solemnly replied,
ec only our failures." No doubt, Brummell's
taste in dress was one canoe of the .Prince's
liking him, for George the Fourth had a groat
desire to be a beau—in his way. At hie death,
his Majesty's wardrobe sold by auction for
415,000.
Lord Byron defined &ammoll's style of dress
to be.simplicity of ,tho most studied kind ; ce a
certain extjuisite propriety of dress." Brum
mell himself said
,the essentials were "No
perfumes, but fine linen, plenty of it, and
country, Washing."
Brummoll's con*ereatiori could sanely be
called witty, though it was sarcastic. had
great dexterity Of Leninage.: He drew pretty
Well, had sOmeknowledge of muitc, donee' ate
gently, and had a knack of writing verses. Ha ,
bad neglected French, While at Eton, and sob.
sequently'lonhd it so very difficult' to obtain:a
knowledge of the language, that Byron said:
like 'Napoleon's progress in Russia, Brnm
mell's progress In French had been 'stepped by
the elem'ents. He spoke aid wrote French pas
sably enough, however, in his retreat at Calais.
Here, having fairly seen Bean Brummell
placed upon the throne of Fashion, we may
leave him • for the' present. We' yet to
give specimens of the saucy repartees whoa
his subjects submitted to for mays long year.
. , The Empire of Japan. .
t,ltrstearbsterssit tome pf our .readeast to ;
whit it Included nyder theithiso of, theft*, .
of /span, witch now, for the first tills, smi
anEmbissy to s distant nation, sad that nation,
which is the more 'temathable, the yonorest in
the great family of nations. Japan proper
consisf.e of three large islands, Nippon, Riu-siu,
!ipil.Sikold. Of these, Nippon is the largest,
and contains thecapital of the Empire, Todd°.
These are surrounded by a vast number of
smaller islands—most of which little or nothing
is known_ of--estimated by somirat 7,000, and
again, by others, at 6,000. The dimensions of
the Enipire are about 171,000 square miles—a
little larger than the six New England SMteil k
and Now York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey,
together. The population is variously esti
mated at from 15,000,000 to 50,000,000, and
does not, probably, fall short of 80,000,000.
The country Is mountainous and volcanic,
and the Fucbti Jamma, which is some twelve
thtiusand feet high, is covered with perpetual
snow. The climate is extremely various, it is
said. In the north the winters are sometimes
intensely cold, and in the south it is about as
mild as the south of France. Rain is frequent
all the year round, but prevails mostly in June
and July. The climate is much milder, how
ever, than the latitude would indicate.
Japan is rich in metals and mineral wealth.
Gold and silver are abundant, and so are cop
per, lead, and cinnabar. Tin of the finest
quality has been found, and coal and sulphur
in inexhaustible supply. Of Iron, which is
found in three provinces in ore of excellent
quality, there is sald'M be sufficient for all the
wants of the Empire. Cornelians and agates
and jaspers of rare beauty are met with, but,
as the Japanese are -ignorant of lapidary, the
country has been imperfectly prospected for
such hidden treasures as the diamond and
other gems.
Japan is truly an agricultural country, for
every foot of available land; even to steep hill
sides, is earellilly tilled. And where the sides
of the hills aro too steep to use oxen to the
plough, it is drawn by men. The soil is gene
rally thin, but labor, irrigation, and the judi
cious application of manure are rewarded
with large crops. The chief crop is rice, next
in importance to which is the tea plant.' Cot
ton, corn,,and the, sugar cane are ; also,, culti.
vatod, but not largely,. and the mulberry tree
very extensively.
The principal articles of manufacture are
silk goods, paper, porcelain, glees, steel, and
lacquer ware. All the metals produced in the
country; but chiefly gold, silver, copper, and
Iron, are worked With skill, and the Japanese
understand 'combining metals, such as gold
and copper, with most beautiful effect, in a
mode unknown to others. In tine, in the
strict seclusion in which they have lived for
centuries, the Japanese have produced all and
manufactured all they wanted. The portals of
commerce once opened, Japan will produce,
as well as require from abroad; a thou
sand things to which the people have
heretofore been strangers. They will
want leather, and boots and shoes, cotton and
woollen cloths, improved' agricultural imple
ments, better clocks, knives and forks and
spoons as a substitute for chopsticks, and nu
merous other 4 1 tryiee' such as people need
when they first set up house-keeping. Better
than all, the Japanese will want the steam
engine, the steamboat and the steatnear, and
the electric' telegraph. All or the most of
those indispensables to a proper civilization
Yankee ingenuity can supply, and Yankee en
terprise must supply, or the Japanese Embassy,
much as we make of it now, will be of small
consequence in the end to the commercial and
industrial interests of our country.
A CORRIOTION COBBISCTED —We stated, lame
time ago, that on several occasions 200,000 sepias
of the London Times had been printed and sold—
via in 1821, when it contained, Queen Carolina's
celebrated letter to her husband ; in 1829, when it
had a report of reel's speech, introducing Catholic
maucipation ; and, in 1848, when it published
Peel's speech introducing the Repeal of 'the Corn
Laws. The Nei York Herald, passing over the
two tut instances, says: With the imperfect
press arrangements existing In the year 1891 it'
would
,have Ulm* twentydays to print the 200,-
000 copies stated tohave been waited off in e single
day by the'Lendon Ticies.° Our reply is, that
previous to 1814,3 he Times was printed by hind,
at the common press, it the rate of 8,000 sheets an
hour, printed on one 'idde, and that in November
Ail; 1814, KWitell steam printing machine was in-,
vented, it sad for the Tomes Mae, and 'm011144;1
2,000 espies an hour, printed on both midge Tim
Tiotae, containing the Queen's letter was on 444
theta presses,—for nearly Ave : days, because stases
dole not tire, and the whole insprearion of 200,000
was sold within a week; Now,' 200,00 copes
could be printed in towboat.
moo: CENTS.
, T. ~; i i .1 . J • • '
The xn agra4tairdi thicTen mmkaoldusf
Amato= !mii.v polik with a laildeolu "-
iimiof , i a PoesospßlEL,lldetp," verynms
idnil, we e apy , only tit . do poi . take the joke
nor eatoh e fan. Tina: n.lll other ppm% 1011 , -
ever, into intelligible; among Width tire 'foremost
r fa gen
piece should be' awarded l l ; ffeeibmi itaindt, 's ao•
Want; graph) btit 'rather epos out' by eriesesive
quotation, iof his visits to Newstend Abbey find'
Annesleyall. In the . Rditorial • bistadealskenet-..".
tire of /Cfrioterbooter; liandsomo ; afetulkl
merited Uccle taken of Ohm* G. , Lislasur,..
4
oontributicina. : The Gossip with Readern and Corr,
respondent Is very, rioy, this, month—when li lt
not? , " ,
Godey'a iLatly's Book has one of its neatest
frontispisebo="Oldlifiri gnthering Water•llliee-=
with fashions, pattorns;Prawie, 'and Other inisbep
lisionsate.! monit the literature, • thli soosithAhe
additional !chapter) of " Illisn Bilsinteme' Boartiiiik.
home,: including a partioularly original poem,
merlin the !paha—thank thalelddaskt of blm!rdliiiS
and makinig lore to a female drosesdup.as a asess
lea little tbo eitrivigant, even for hlias iliblinsiiii.
In the ‘*lWir td110," il, MI Mronsouly lite•
espied-that Madame Beeensier - "walked mi• If
throve an ordeal of Ire, we r ,.
even by thil ernokk, ., ' '-' "-• : - - . 'et
public' Iloritiviiißiplitlil • .. Lit:3 Really,
we did idler- tajd *him ROMA lA* knew "r
MOWS' tairUelety etch set be ignorant of
Madams soma/cies notorious and long-enduring
parson with Ohateembriand. It lo olSolii7 ibserd
to hold up such a woman is a model Of innirMAck
and prig,. ,
.. ,
• 4
Loe tufo of the New City :
fFer,The Thad , • • ' • r.
NIL 4911LPSIA, 41..17..22., 1880. • • ,
, -
• MR. ? . E nos Math T hat, bee said in re
gard'te a roperlocisdien for a new .c Citified]."
Bowe doer are with such nate* sight u mftest
ots ends of Tuderirittenoe Stiiarig for the' Ovens:
'Mists ridioulots; the pity doernot want two lent:
narrow, market-holm etreetatrucone half, on olio
street, am the remairider.;on the other, with 150
feet distance belsessen Aim 4 -Molds* of ersoting
;nub Odor, sod ulnas; thestiAns new City Ha/l,
would only mite the **We and, attire of
'Unger], and be a lieting dlsgraw . to the ;say of
Philadelphia.
' Wei n a vote taken to:morrew, we believe two-.
Wide of the people of Philadelphia would be op_
Paired to any farther piles of brisk and mortar'
upon Independence • Square ; but : tear doWn the ,
old, rickety Wilding!, that now deface it, except
ing, of 'couse, - Independenee Hall, and leaving an
open, sodded seaare, for all coating non, ar a
public prepmenadf , ,
' In regard, now, to a proper location for a City
Hall, an edifice that would be an 'ornament and a
pride to Philadelphia, and help to relieve is from
'the beggekly penalty of line municipal "trona,'
we think the spot most anitablix one retaining:all
the advantage' of the Chtettait-street one, is the
north aidt of Washington fileare, on Walnut street,:
extendin g t from Sixth, to Washington pilule, and
down me street as fir ea May be necessary,
Now, here Is abientiful hint of over 340 hat—
e clear, unnumbered spire of ground, one central
and leading thoroughfare-4in considerably /ssi
miss thin in Chestnut street, making it better
adapted for court knows, which should, in nay
opinion, and In the opinion of munitrowr ohne*
with whom I have ecerversed, at once decide the,
question Sy those locating the building.
The &plan would be mach mete improved and
vhdted iiltb,snob en eimpnt attiaetion then it is
now or ever will be—the ocintemplatid ismountrat
to WM:l44;ton being also an additional attraction.
Hoping the committee who lave this important
matter now in charge will exhibit an enterprising
and 'liberal energy _in this matter, And give this
view some attention in their coming decision,
remain,
14etter Prone Superior City, ' •
011orreeneruhnioe of The Prwril '
" • Surimioa, Lake Superior, May 0,1860:
The ealmonit Fritter sailid this moving, with a
fair wide, for Ontonagon, about 160 miles below us,
on the Like. Her cargo consisted of SIMI feed
of heab4r, 32,000 shine* lA* • laths, be., be.
AIN *AM Are 'eettle Semi *Alteks,`,Miameseeaf
.eard• :WOO Misseeedans fres St. Peal; Ariekit,'
Meiblist rad
Ae. r ia sum* et wit* ai ihrs: isiPoisw
minen.• the seinen Ladd Bigkarit ClAShipp
or Min e I Stook, wintered here; it • wild WE'
been an easy matter Mr' our friends ert•the:lippei
Main' lag to have loaded them both WitheetUe
grain, provitions; Aii. 'Bad the toad Nei 18aperkr;
to Lake km. Leci,•beenln good order, We abeidd
have had dirtraMdfltedlatver fee cute And Mann
from Steens, Benton; Morrison, Monroe; sad other
counties of hilinimora. The , cattle and produce of
the other eounthinill reieli Superior via the mili
tary read. The 'Superior Rose was well Aired
last . wilik with Strangers from' Upper Minima*:
and reminded me of the good times of 1856. From
all accounts I believe' that the' pleasure travel
from the East will be very large this season. A
number of travelling parties are expected in July,
at the Superior House, froM New York and Phila
delphia. •
In the late canvass, the Republicans,
Abo
litionists, and Whir were badly beaten in this
township, arid the entire Dementia ticket elected.
Messrs: Dean. bheridan; and J. S. Bitable were
elected orpervieon, by thirty majority. Douglas
county gave Judge Dixon a majority of over one
hundred votes. Prom a late newspaper I
learn that although the canvassers threw out
2,000 of his votes on account of informality, yet his
majority throughout the State was about 150.
This Is certainly a great triumph over fanaticism.
Judge Dixon, you will recalleoi, refused to issue a
habeas carpus and interfere with the - Chiliad
States Supreme Court. For this he was repudiated
and lost his renomination by the Republicans. He
was then taken up by the Democracy, and tri
umphantly eleoted. The new Goiernor ef Whims
ehi was elected to , a Republican majority of nearly
8,000 votes. So that Judge Dixon's election shows
that we can carry Wisconsin in November. •
Letter from John C. Heenan.
From Wilkes' Spirit of The Times.,
LONDON, May 5,1880
DIUR SPIRIT: I am happy to inform you that I
am very well, and that the little soar I got under
the eye is almost entirely gone. In a week or more
no one would suppose for a moment that I had ever
been hit at all. I need not say anything to you
about the manner in whieh the light was brought
to a conclusion—only this, I have no fault-with
Bayerz for anything that-aras done. It was natural
that he should avail himself of every opportu
aity that offered to save his belt and his bard
earned trePtitation ; but there lire others whom
I hold responsible for depriving me of what
I earned, and all that I am sorry for is, that
there ,is no earthly way in which I can get
redress, I am- entirely in the 'hands of the
referee, and he ,says Sayers had a right to
be relieved when I got him 4 . in chancery,' so he
gavo,iiim'twO months to get his wind and come is
time. Rather a long spell ! This, I think, should
be the newest of what is called the new rules of the
ring. • I am glad to say, however, that through the
determination of Mr. W., I have got a day set for a
new battle, but I oannot mention it at present, as
it would come back here in time to interrupt the
mooting. In the meantime, I think I shall go
over to Ireland to train, or to some place, at
any tate, where I shall not be harassed as I was
before. They gave me a pretty rough time of it
with their warrants and notices to quit, and I want
no more of that kind of exercise. I must say,
however, that I have but little faith in being
able to get the belt, though I have the most por
tent eonfidence in being able to wilt tttn law than
half an hour. The 'persons who Were willing to
bet 100 to 40 against me before will not let me have
it under any circumstances, and it must not be for
gotten that Mr. Dowling, who showed me so much
favor at the last light, is looked up to by the boxers
here as the natural protector of the trophy of Old
England. There are a hundred difficulties in the
way, and the lighting part le, ro far ail sins emir-
corned, the least one of all. They now say that
the Government will surely Interfere to prevent us
if we attempt tomcat again, and in addition to this,
they threaten to prosecute us both 'for what we
have already done. Rather tight on the American
people that ! as the boys_ say at home; and,
to tell you the tenth, I am a little uneasy that they
may keep their word. Under this state of things,
I shouldn't mush winder now to see Bayern arrested
for the Bret time; and If that course, is taken, and
he is bound over in a heavy sum, I shall be-told
that it is not his fault he cannot meet me, and the
stakes will be drawn, and he will keep the belt, for
hie term is out sometime in. June. To become
champion after that I should have to wait till a
new belt is sabieribedlor, and then I would have
to fight for it with plenty of the 100-te.4o fellows
around to,help me to win it. flowerer, I shall
stick to my point long as I can, and get a new
melting out of floyeke ifposeible. 80, if Ida not
bring over the belt, nobody shall sa_y that I did not
takbsrresy fair chance to get it. But I mot bold
hove, for I have now written the longest letter
alMoit that I ever wrote in my life. '
' Please give Iv !evade to all my Mends, and
believe me, Trull yours, 'J. O. Haug.
, P. B.—We will have no , splealation In the next
light, in the way of railroad trains or tbseestdoea
saes. There will be nteselia
. vasty of twenty
dte a side—seconds, princlpabospiotitors„ and all
told—and then I buyer and Lida,- that the best
men may win: : • J. O. SC •
, Piens Frederick (Nal, one of the body
gond of Rcloieolt A died, at the residence of his
eott•in-law, Joseph Pierson, tri Newark, op the
18M, at the age of 71 reeri . Re sewed sa an 'M
eer under Napoleon - during" mat of tkellaisdan
*spigo t and wan ;detained as a prisoner of war
ottokotsht ibr three pars.. filorogookt rammed
Prainti, - after" the campaka; nonlicidrin bat
seventeen members NO was a Free and Aoceptad
• *WI, and for moendyeswe war tar-W. - Nintor or
Venerable of Plialett intneoloo
New Yoritaity. After retiring to to life he"
took stoat interest itithe gablie solools, and wen a
wen advocate for any messaree whieb would ad-
Tanta the ewe of iodisation.
THE WEEKLyPRESS.
Ariz-Thirnity win b. - Nice
in sakessag.)nr.......,..;_ .82.041 ,
Tine Cog*, " “1- ". ~ • •
Five df .1 4 , • • LOG
Tea 14 ; .41
wady. i 44 ltaceoudiresoNo.9o
Twenty COpliwor over " (theatregoer
shaiNebeillibet,) seek 1.20
Polattallo of TwsitY4tee,et'oeerMtt sjU ond ee
titre eoiy la the getter-tie of the Math
log," r r. aro ru dientaa to act so Areal. for
Tree - „
Wlturrznar.,
cALITORNIA 141,1111111;
/ NW 15 4a1-latrnatal7 ii 'ass for the California
items's:
' -• •
- Tie Defeht - of hewed.
A, /mil " PAAI " " 4 -easocuar sap, DISAPPOINTIED
Mr• +stip Dellik Editor of the - Albany
Ramo" ournal, Michtroser.
CmeAsno. may 19, Nao.
AtiapPromottstion iois *Moved fts work. - The
uggg/ lin g-• i ngd es* lush! snewmalMd, to threats
'shit Denvessione,
To. please, s few thousand mien
aid faltering faith, millions'
of • hearts fete - hien:iiehlome_ - The; reeog- '
etanderd-beerer of SlOZOpllblikoll Pent bu
been seerilleed upon the. sites fsneied avails- .
Thh aliker-oreht aboi -surshie ficy . •
SY hie ' kilts . row, party ;hes
*MO( Oise whi.' twin* , Imo ofo=
pure et the Boat pertY i Or ,Pe
mean Items far tionbigh amok f or watch ,
its - tribunal has deetaved-bire, unworthy,
His platforie fs tkaf of the Reputilleato Party; and
was before Weriaithe than Ley other '
Bated the principles , which ad* It into- befog, -
awl whieh gave and' . eripahstW' gives It ell its
Wily., No tothetutlifill died petty em-
Wise thegyead idelitadiklolhatergetterthey those
ett eitemoWVlselibillian
Wien; and' ,eserarp - aghle yea '
oonamett sad the fj
wan Waged the
southiatioa as 'Pending
4 41 7 11 Umwelletitsio Imes rithrophi: The intlezi4
the aaswersiog illeteltit7e the b e rate„..
erniirege, tie poibued seigacity, and tbe ekalteu
statesausiship which' eideand MID. to the eleople,
isteistftitid des shambling , Meek Wad 'sock at or-
fines” to' the tCouventitio., • Be. was daamert too •
my, toe eoridatpgt, foo, heroic, tom wise, and: .
thoroughly aid bin olealfiermit - isly habered Wi th the -
,toottiee /I.Peddiaanism le "wiled.
)toes hearterarbeat
newsmen to the tirf Tea of. thit' Wariblioaa
tirtk i zbe n eoQn 'Mod to ifo so, wiliilet
eisisit•he; anettlioed. -Launder where
Rims saver had vitelity woo. to breathe -
wary ; 'meted: add a
ttainable,r th e effort, to ,
nobler/a what ts ;unae %Obese Seward
ISO sacrificed._ States whom reprureetatives have
aster yet inhaled etififeient ef the free spirit of itiq -
polities/lisps to satothe dium.Wed the
urolation and they wire gentight.- Love of- Ott- • •
sittolof, admiration fora loagmlifesi derotioa to
freedom, and s hereto potpies to stand or, fall by
the noblest eilloodiment of *titillated - nod undefiled "
prineiple, luni-tosuseemb to fancied expedieoey
and hitter hate. - , • _ -
The result is Ills e' defeat of William Bewarl
than a triamptiof his personal enemies. The sin. •
bestir which- mahatmas& is ; his rejection was
Wetly mannfeeitured by U1{0417411* dislike of the
wan
t w e s. n - f - l fared , m aadsvahnce o bun tlp tihleri l r ove for hie
Monlettal
at the king%
some, hy einiiga
gate
th . and,hy feedbag** dembh of _-
l e apprehenskumyr, Others, and.
by the induittioni attendee Of nihrepresantatiout
Wall, they- have, - like Bohn • indent 'prototype'. '
serimingly attained the end they have JO irdaatly
oersted; and secured the disoomfitnee of those who
have; for long yeah, looked and hcipid forth. cow
lug day when William U. BMW' ikollitLlttlitOtita
',Kenai position, for ,which no man_ liviv
worthy. I 'know very wall that 'many of Blase by,
whose luindslhinimniolatlon wee actually 'mania- -
sated did not char in the ephitotesity inghatail -
but slough did to turn the seek, until have no
wish to withhold from theta this &tupelodimes%
of their right 'to' .the hommungationi iihkh they
will covet hum those who„ ere: eympetly frith ,
,
them. , _
Bettor none of this wort' of eredntt& lograti:
tads aidnialAty , is Abram ;Unholy, or his
im
mediate fri respondble. - Thine who wars .
most sago, In eir malign labors, aid moat
'dostrken rind dryades in their *tidied 'panor
ama, had no love
diet
the eaessufalaandidate. Mos
was neither their first nor their second choice, ,
Others wens preferred prefiled before 'him;
bat it Is. because those Others *ern lan imbued
with Ihe pare - prinuiplen of Itapubliataisuo, sad
war. deemed more ofensive to Mr. Seward'*
friends, then beimme tithe to whom I refer were
not to•aeeept - Mr. Lincoln or - any other
man, as an internment for. the. arisomplhhiseat of
their primary purples. Mr. Lineoln is a bold,
gallant, and nyeemprotellideeliepahlieen.
-
hinlocowerver, owesuothing lb: Bewimi's im
mediate Mende., -They. labored earnestly, to pro
vent his ritheitatkon. They:"lteemid. him greatly
the inferior, In every hayc'of; their 11 - hint-Bite. 'Aid
they said
,so kindly, • bat with emphasis. It the
real Induced b unbounded affeetion, by' life- losg
devotion; and by a settled conviction that the gdw •
of thecount:7lon trinahrh fend., - dePendeif -
allow the uosamatitot of Mr Seward, Gould have ;-
prevented the tiotaination at : W. Lioooto, itmeeld
beau beenjerfnmetwi. ' He, Mingo ,re byes his Sue.
ass to other men sal to other inilnemoe. The
Men aid irtillPassette width Neared bia. nomiaation
col, all of them,. labor with equal, seal and ef 7 .
f 'to 'semi Meition. • - - - -;
•, Bat upon them devolves the rat zibility of the •
eialedireti.did, seisieselte4.-Wa ,in 6.• bat.
ohs, upon Chins 'ditholver i like; ; dlriitiestL':"
the Adwdels
liumegmeopiat, and asserose of tration
wideSt he , !;,/lir.l;ihrhosera
Maio lOW *oil* lteeiheAf'thtk-;
party, e' ham 'l4 isitlenioru, ear'
esoyea kluiver soothed" 1110 - ~werliter , - - : , "
W isree nt i enhslihnefie-Abiliarukelti lounikt
as is every battle which itert - litt , ,lies, firgo ll fot
freedom, dolleyeeman nrierrloo„
In all that-I hart this writtay, desire rhea .t
readers of the Tourist to hold n ute individually het,
alone responsible. Although with him at Chicago
seer the niesinitien• was made, I had ms heart to
mee* advise from, or in any way to wanted with. -
Mr Weed. believe he will deem some thiMpt I
have written ill-timed alittibjedielosin Bat I have
neither hie forimaftnedo, emptily, She 'dieirelles. •
In this epistle therefore, -I 'peak my own lend
meats, regardless of what my associates may think
or say, and quite indifferent to all consequences
personal to myself:, fly chief regret he, that
there in any justification for what I have said, and
that hundreds and thousands of true Republicans
have already thought all and more than I have
EL D.
6, limrapaum."
The Great Railroad Racing Match. .
[From the Cmilenati Gazette:l
The glut raotfor 'hue' nothing eh .between
the North and South Shore lines from Bottle and
Chicago is exciting considerable intereat r and the
result is highly sadsfaetory to ,the Wends of the
Beath Blame or Cleveland line. The North Shore
train left liuspencion Bridge, and the Smith Shore
train left Buffalo hi the same time—,-iiz o'clock—
Tuesday morning. The Shore train - had the ad
vantage of twenty-four mike the distance' from
Bespeosion,Bridge to Chicago, being _that number
ofnailee shorter than from Buffalo to Chicago. Both
trains were marked OM fast-time cards, but, having
the right of the road as against all other trains, it
was well understood that the hoar of reaching Chi
cago would be determined more by the speed of
the losomotives than by the time fixed on tbecardr.
[Erma the Cieviiiand Bersirtr
We are not &drilled of the time at interm edial e
into on the North Shore train, but it arrived is
CbMe►go at 9.40 P. M., hiving performed the' dis
tanee-513 mdse—in 15 hours, 40 minnies,ot about
3E/ mfiesper.hour, Wilding stops.- The South
Shore, train arrived in Chive s° at, 015 P. M
twenty-Sve Inilatites ahead of its comp e titor,_ having
gone over 533 miles in 15 hours, 15 minutes; cr
355 miles per hour, including stops •
The rem from Buffalo to Erie, 8.6. nil les, was made
in 2 hours and 23'minutes Erie to Cleveland, PS
miles, 2 hours and 23 minutes; Cleveland to Tole..
d 0,112 miles, 2 hours 57 whittles. The run from
Goehon, on the M. S. B. to Chicago Junotioo,
104 miles, was made in 2 bones 23 minutes, in
cluding steps, or 41 miles per hour. fled the
pumps Of tho locomotive not givon out, the dis
tance from Toledo to Chicago, 213 miles would have
been done in six hours. The by this mishap
wee 42 minutes. , : - - '
"NORTH SHORR:"
. -
This South Shore line from Buffalo to Chienga has
won the limo, and is entitled to the belt."
, The Ogden Poisoning ease.
rFrom the Foeheater ['aim. May 79.]
SENTENCE or drartuo Lewin.—At two and
half o'clock this afternoon the court convened, Baal
Idea. Lewis was brought up for senteoce. She ari
peered to bequite nutreolue when she reaohed th e
ocurt-teom.. She was sworn .as to her age, duo.
She was born in Penneyivatda is forty-three years
of age' unmet write, but rem 'reed scale; hes had
no tel l oett ednoation.• - " •
She 14 she was not guilty—ii accused wrung
fully. She 1,10 there that night—had toll nil she
knew oithe eta: • [She spoke 1.1 low that the rest
of her marks were lost,l
Judge Hhumasero then proceeded to otitireFA the
prieenei en the case, and talked to tier Tor fifteen
minutee.- We have not lime to wrt.e, out his re
marks in-full. He expreeeed his belief in the jm
tine of the verdict, and pronounced the orinie
of the most revolting that had over corns before
thin court. lie urger_the - prisoner to - repent.
Thank j Gott that her, purpoao. wee not conthin
meta, and if guilty to eginesfs oft: that others T.llO
had been stigmatised might be relieved of all f LI-
pioion -
In conclusion. he said the court would protounee
the severest rentence In ifs power, and that it te,s
not at 'aTh adequate to thh crime. She was sen
tenced to Sing -wing State Prison for tun years
Wain the Manttoznery (Ala.) Confederation i
Massns Rely:ins : We had a funny de monstret:
tton.oh, a) yesterday, being omo of Ike g r and e ,g a „,/
*tog supr that we have over had the good'
ha
tune th gaze open. Men, women, and ehild,en
were aroused yesterday morning from their qci-t
slumbers by the astounding announce went that tit r
'veneer would arrive on the twelve o'clock train,
and expected to receive the honors of the city for
the gigantic efforts he made in C a arlastott to break.
up the Union. Four white horscs and a fine pb.e
ton (for the hearee Was employe-1) beside 3 the
braes beta of the city, were all secured for title re.
eeptdmi. , • . ,
At the boar of 12 precisely the card arrived, and
so did Mr.: Yancey. Me was immediately seized
by twq or three of his friends, who are young gen
thnast4 In this city, and invited to take a seat in
the phaeton. Mr. Yancey stammered—looked blank
-•-womgetrid where all of those friends were that
had written and promised to him a grand demon
stration. Alas they wore gone. Only two re
mained to escort the great Apollo to his residence,
and one of these two—the gentleman that sat
closely by him in the phaeton--being a young man
seareeily, reaching the age of twenty-four summers.
Now, Meatus Aditors, this Is entirely too bad.
You should have entertained Mum feelings of kind
ness abut sympathy for the two gentlemen, who
looked so forlorn and - disooneerted, as they passed
through the otty,drawn by those four white horses,
andgene, and sulked permission to have occupied
timbers remaining vacant seats ; or if yen had felt
dtilinicy, dolegthis, you ought certainly to have
r , Led propriety of doing tt to seine MMUS
. .
We tope, for the good name of our city and the
reputation of- our people; that whenever another
dateMnration ii coatemplated, itwill notbe
tam eit was the one on yesterday.
=
We are , oureelves fond of endittoratkrus, demon'-
time; and snob' things,liut •we eau never
wrej to mon any, m. that - hen bet any more
taends than the one we atm as yetterday. Women
sk little inclined to meal=bete, re we saw Me at
tempted demonstration; but naive here tented to
be one at'Ake - rankest Union men that the world
ever saw.. , Bwrn Qin Not. ,