' " /'f ■ • ,^-uii ..... MUMW. -,..,,. MgwfeMatoiatoiiV -.v iu* WT«maiiop: ; ji ? '"'•MA NTILLAB; , ;;Wu BK>a-H B.vS T .O-C. K ,-•« hx.'; • • " :-r. jfVOF, y. -y ~ \-V-:: ‘ ■ i CLOAKSASB MAKTILLAS, REDUCED !,• : -j ‘ ■' ' niratcis. r flirt* *al Bhfut'Awptiamt to ' “ ■■mgbM*,. -•••-. ~. 118* omjWWCT «T*BBT. ■JiJA’NrrililL.AS. •• ." aiOB. VVLL; BLACK SUiK ; MANTILLAS£S.«B. \ ,V*Rr*JtOH,|T.»v If** JUCB : AND BIUTV.«». ;,r .. ttkWterblMrtlltttbMtf M eauotM«atl- MalwvtoHHatWsitnMiirtW. • • "IVES-N.S./' ’ i , ! a» Boatt WtWTH gtraat. ' -I' £AOE MAN'CLEU. , ■" TW (mtait Buxaiu im mm, *•* ux*nrjm' * rlfc ** ' ' I VESTS*. ■ Mlm* NIHTBStnM. * JNOLAtSB MANTLES, ‘ Ib BirtiM* Y*H*ty, »t #MB to tSJfc Tk» me* mparb la tto tilr- ’ ' POINTS AND MANTILLAS. Air ties thamthk cost ofimmetatiok, : ,>;To stats o«i tt»h(luM ofu mortmtio*, FINE PABia <3001)8; TUbiUi* limn Aval #».»• to A BAA6AIH IN ' FRENCH LACE POINTS, FRENCH LACK PIOOOLOMINIS, FRENCH LAOE MANTLSS, W A RBOKTON * H ■ UXMOHIBTNOT BXBBSX, :WR BOOTH 9ROOHP BTRBRI. JvAW*S> DMSB TBIMIONGB. NEW GOODS. •AiitW nnitrlM anvotn, iudooutuUr r***iTlK ■T*r7aortftr. ■■ * 1 ' fLAITBDOOWW, ALL COLOJ& ' OtltKß KIftTTINS BALLS. ; ": KiaritOIDKKBD CUSHIONS. KNBIOIDBSKD SUJ>PMA 1 BHT ttUALIT? BHBTLAND WOOL. 6ILX BAUDS, TABSBLB>AND COBDB. ' SON’S ' mmUHOS AKD DePßy K STOBI, - . ooytgi'ui'iaoHTHAWP cheuiVstkbbi*. OIiOTHS, cabsimeres. H MBortsmt of thi ibora Rt SNODGRASS A STEELMAN’S H*. H Boat* « BOOKS StlMt, atom OHKSTNUT. WAlao. MOJK wt BTBIPBD CIiOTU for Ul- OIirOCOdUU. ■ • •; jpl FANCY OASSDOEBBS. fcj»Sff H>x3»f'k* %tii ft mrr’mtw'&i£S ■jtf *: -\ ! V> ; * i?ral««™S4l»r; ‘ A ftta& ihroiat of (tart jtate jSSHMfiiitiMiiMl mwilt for, m. lulli mew rotXAbr *hti»e«*kts r BANKERS. tom,' ■ ■ " ’>•' Mi* f«111 jtf <Mbt:t.Tnn>ton wMM> lt autabw or ZD WOU9, .' ;T J KSnU. VnBKHOA, v amis, loitoow, nlitxroKT, nsittu, jri jLxb. AHD TBMOL VOUBABrOXDttm ' I, i-f J # E. McOUEEB. : v ■■' " Pfl ILADW.PHIA PHOTOGBAPH ES ' tabushment, v " : No. 910 CHESTNUT ST.. . (Oi»r Looltiu-6tua Mon.) ! . wt iTuntj yw, oatowd nd « vrtnotnm. nA JadbretnxM. - J '. Wtni.,- 1 ' JJAEI>S PATENT S i S l jj[- PLA T B D ; i ’o < ; . P. I.TOH S M< WAKKUan IA unilttn Mr KftMfrAoy M Mr** frMraraiMb ttMataM'FittMif wilt kM» a* - - / s J " k ? I -, * *T. | j' :'Atont i*i•>Mr«^io*i*tkn*»uu«i v»ui*iu /*Mi ;^«*:*wir«»»*;W»-A*>«»Wi«(M .wJiitotM im ’ iMMllfl* u »rAiUrr *<«#• »rtj*rt.U«i» '(MB* «*■- (tntfuf. (£»i» »51nS» VuntM !..' Met'. HwSMS»6?i"' AAMwultr «aM<Wi iM*tr# &r, V ' v '- -. tW : H» rmitfMwof'',;- ’»' ;= ’--- turn U«r»- ■t&iSl&f trntut ■ IVENS. ■- ■ - ■ ai gomtk KINTH Strett. VEBTINGB. COIfJSIM Blow MO PBKB ■ -. ■ ' YV ALTER EVANS & CO.’S BOAR’StHBADSIX-CORD! SFOOIi COTTON, lim to aor vltt usportsd, is itronttk; tmoothnett, tltrtloitt. for BwUMor kasd tOttin*. ’ LENGTHSWARRANTED. O.OAItVILLE, Omni Atast,Ntw York. . ' , Hr- ■■. J.B.HOWBI.L. , - . ■' r r , Attst for FhUddstaus, A&gMsjLrega? fcCTn<g g&sp HAAABD, A HUTOIttNSON, HO. 1M CHEBTNUT St., V -A COMMISSION MERCHANTS , FOB THE BALE OF : PHri/AJDETjPMIA-MAUE oopps. i m*M« .. .. '|WE»T, PRIOR, A 00., »*» MiIIKT ITUBI, ' mtoanu ixs'' ottus or OLOTHS.CAB MERES, to., ■ Kata mow ocaaao mrs* mod traU-aateotadatook, ktok tksrars trataradto t*U at tli* loarsat market triWtt '-‘-i,-: ■ • ; rahd-tm ; PKEPAEEP GLUM. gPALsDING’S PREPARED GLUEI •• A STITCH IK TIME SAVBS NIKE," BOONOMT! urji THE hmcms, m9PATom At undmH- will iw«i mt <» wll-nnltltl fnmiHu, it it vwt dtairablt to hart tome cheat And eosttsisst ww for rtrairist PtrtuUrt, Tojt, crocks rr. M. >, ■ o' . ■ v - aPALOiffa’S PKBPAKSO etui MOtailloMhoaufMOieo. tad abhosoohoMooß Afford Dbowithoottt.lt i» >M*r> roodr ond so to the etiek twfoiht. There Uoo tester a iieml» for limpiet chtin,niu>tered Teuen.heedUoedolte.tnd broken erealee. It Or foot tkl ortielf fbr oboe.'obeli. nd other ‘ wsrk> eo samlet with ledieo of refiner Mot aha* mtatßt kill la aolauoa, and rwu all tin rtteaMa tulittMof tk* but OAbioatnalma?- eta* . Itmarba MM tba gkm.at wdtauyaaacilaaa, baina laatlr i DOCS-VthtiiTS* ' - “USEFUL 111 BVKRYHOUSB." H. B. A bmli iWnaiMlnmt bottla. , MUOB TWKWTY-yrire CBHTB. Wholaaala Payrt,Wo.aaOßPA3t Stmt, Haw York. ' r. Addrrta HENRY a. i-PALDING * 00., ■ BnxNo.lMl, Naw York, ; F»t»* for Daalsrs is Cists eostaiiumf foor, tight, tad ftnihra dusts,* fcSMtuW Idlbsmstas kuttm toooBCtBTiU wekiseuts. - ; PRHPABED SLUR Will aaya tea ti« Mitt eoct aantiUy (o arary houMhold. SoU W all yromiaat Btatiosan, Dp***!**, Bard wmr* and Familara ])•«««• Groeara, and Fancy ftona. '•- • i • Delator MarehintiikoildmikiinoUof SPALDING’S PREPARID GLUE, ' —" BatWr lim. m * lakd a * y olimatk. CLOTHING. (QIsOTHINGI AT LEW THAN WHOLESALE FKICKB! ] Charles" - harkness. |W Bostksast aorsirsfFoarth f rFnjfc,OM« OUT AT RETAIL, >%,.?. PRTijt,' idly »*, v i ' Tbs ratisdtt ofths Statist Stook of . i SFBiHO AKA BOMItkAfILOTHIItG, ■iM&dtm*t<far tkl* 'dMMsVWlrolMal* 'Trod* | K. »F«takil»ni' will dial It to tkcir adraoUte to inU tkti,aaleatio«iuiadt*tal;. - OHARItES HAIRKNESS- ! SBWllie MACHINES. & WILSON SEWING- MACHINES. ' HENRY 00Y, Aftat, : ■m OHESTNUTSTRBET, SECOND FLOOR, finuhineu. withOferatore, on nin to Private FanlUw. , WAKm option,: ' .i S > West STATE Street, Truntoß. H. J, ■ IMORNTRAL NViIS, Baeton. Ik. >:-■ ~ ■ ' • i-i.': . lag- UfTILOOX * GIBBS’ SEWIHG MA- smith,* 00., ; ; CHINA, CLASS, AND HUEENSWARB. PITTSBURG AGENCY. ; fM.tdrilTtnd frCNtt ttuitAOtOTT/ Y AT MAM&FAOTUAHIUr PRIOKB.♦ fiNITK. BUILDING.Ro, * North FIFTH Street, rtof v/PHILAPBLPHiA-. fATS! HATS I HATS 1 MEN’S STRAW HATS. BbY'S S.TRAW HATS. KVKAY DESIRABLE BTYLB OF STRAW HAT NOW HEADY. UNOOLN. WOOD, St NICHOLS. TM CHESTNUT Street. lOE PITCHERS. KEEP lOE 13 HOURS. LEWIS LADOMUS * 00., : street.; mj2Mf gLINHS ANp ; SHADES. B. J. WILLIAMS. Ho, UHORTHSIXTH STRUT, -y,- : lk the moat extensive naasfXetam of VENETIAN BLINDS AND ... - rHaHeS.' kergeat 'aad gneet gee.tlmeat la toeeity, at the - «*«WB. SHADES, made aad letter*!. Repairing WHetlir M»i4H to. «*•» nUifaUUSUX «uuus, JPRENGH MONTUERB. Am '' STR A W BONNETS. Jut oraned, a ■ L ' A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT. TUOB. KENNEDY & BKO., mj7-3m . Mo. rag CHEgyHUT STREET. GENTS’’ FIJHNISHING-, GOODS. PROCLAMATION >111 ,INQ Business,lAalhts departments, at their OLD S rAND, and -intern >to continue 'there forever, or at least until due notice )■ given to the contrary. - ;Thi* an nouncement remade in order that our numerous pa* trou m thw oitr and elwwhere nay know that their or daw, adddriaaed aa abort; anil blartj a reach ui. arheth ar thej hapaaa to aba,-oar advcrUunient t» anaa ntgen ftho Hmeboin., or not. rieaaa out thii out and >aata It in your mem random hoe*.’ ■ • . ■ - , rorl-tf JW. SOOIT—Ut* of the fina_of Win ■ ohaatar t goott-SKNTLBMEN’OuiWlßH j^^^^^n’tmt.lnear&oowjtetha'i^^^uSi *J. raoeetftiDr, pall. the attantiod of.hla former tairon* and mendiTto.hu new store, andis art* oared to'fill orders for SHIRTS at short notioe.- A KnttfiWWfi* 4 * WhoMwie Trade ssffUed triS e Bfairts and Pollan, ; . iTfl-lr . Looking glasses. GLASSES, . PORTRAIT AND PICTURE PRANKS, ENGRAVINGS, . : OIL PAINTINGS, Ao., to, JANES 8. EARLE k SON, IMPORTERS' MANUFACTURERS, WHOLE BALE AND RETAIL DEALERS, EARLES’ GALLERIES, 816 CUKBTMUT STREET, HARDWARE. & NEFF, NO. 808 WORTH THIRD STRJBBT, Have now in store a most oomplete .took of HARDWARE. of late importation, and Amerioan manufaotnre, which tber oder to the HEAR TRAPS on the nrj best terms. apS-lm PAPER HANGINGS; Ac. r JX) CLOSE BUSINESS. HAST, MONTGOKKKY, & 00., : so. m chestnut street, 1 win sell eat, thronth this winter and next sprint, their Ihrte stook of ! PAPER HANGINGS, ■ sesistin* of overr rarletr eoanedted with the business, AT 9RKATLY REDUCED PRICKS. I WE FRENCH PAPERS AT N PER CENT. BE ; EOW COST. foresee weatis, their Honsee Papered, ew ttt neat . BARGAINS. u-t* MERCHANT ' TAILORS. ■JB. O. THOMPSON. TAILOR. ». E. COR. SEVENTH AND WALNUT STREETS. Clothing made TO ORDER onlr. A Fin Btoo Sc of Materials alwayt on hand. - N. B,—Btraagera TiaitUt the Citr are! eoliolted to ieave thr.r taeanret, avflt-trm MEDICINAL. I,VfBS. WINSLOW, 1 AN EXPERIENCED NURSE AND FEMALE ]tt>E°»^ge» B to^,u»atten®Y§ ,^‘g» ll "' FOB ,0 HI LOBE N TEHTHISTG, greatly boUitatea'tha yrooec* of teething, by ' D*»end usoa It, motherajt will give rest to yourselveo Wtell Never did a, we wow an inetaaoe of dfieafiefietiim winy one *7 who need it. Oi) the oon :traryvaU are dellihttd W with Tie operative, and -Itotoh in tonae of higheet eommandauonofrumari- HdHiMtytodmdiMlnr © tnee. Weinaah In tSle •wrieDoeAadeledgeonr Jj t?e?i3S- Sftttolwhat woherefi 2 olaro In atmoet every aetanoe where the input (q issuflerini from pain and fanrtion. relielwi!! be r. foondiu fifteen or twenty utee after the 87ro» i. adminuterod. , S’* § fc^fi u s°ii&?£ £ud hasboon mod wifi .THguSXim OP OASES, vfy^wt^eetoinaohand " Sowell, oorrerte aoiditrl fIQWKU AND WIND 9 COLICand ova rcome oon if mot j speedily remedied, end in « Mmpffl S AHQEAIW CHILDRBR, fag whether it ftriNt tram « wirSissi KINS.N*WSQoti* J* on Se wraoer* pRINCE IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE, FROM DB VENOSE A CO., KPERNAY. FRANCE. Sold by ell Reeyeotable Dealere throughout the oonntry. Thig fine brud of CKAMPAONE, which unUi the jeetyeer wee oongned eieluelvoly to the beet tabiei of the Confluent of Europe, hue now obtained the ni.wt demand M enormoae and oo&eUmtlr Inereaem*. Our an>B*ementi are mioh as to ioeare the fuaUtj of the •WineJbeing, maminmed at its vreeent high randarde BBKVES k DEAL, : suhllntfe SO4 MARKET Street 0 # H. MATTESON e prepared to forniab his CUSTOMERS AND FAMILIES Residing in the oountry,' with* CHOICE SELECTION OP PIKE GROCERIES AND TEAS, ARCH AND TENTH STREETS. ' mjSS rjK> FAMILIES RESIDING IN THE RURAL DISTRICTS. W« sre pnpared, as heretofore, to eupply Famihee at their country rendenoea with every deaoription of fine GROCERIES, TEAS. &c ALBERT 0. ROBERTS, Cor. ELEVENTH and VINE BtraOto. pLATED ICE PITCHBR9, OF THE MOST APPROVED KIND. For tale by THOMAS O. GARRETT. No. fia CHESTNUT BTRBET, g SHOEMAKER & Co. GLASS,’ PAINTS, ,OILB AND VARNISHES. Northern Corner FOURTH AND RACK gtreets, mjrW-6m Me SHEW &Oo PHOTOGRAPH FRAMB DEPOT, No, 89 SOUTH EIGHTH Street, Above Cheetnotp Thie if the only eatablifhment in the oity devoted' •nelnfively to PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. A greater PunetT of OVAL GILT FRAMES on hand than nan be fodnd in any one ectabUihment in the United State*, mid tiloea lover. ' t ■Mr Bring yonr Fhototrayhf, and have them fitted 1 without extroharge' mhf>ta’ fJAEDEN ANBPAKtOR VABES, STA - >J-*i.Wdry» Founminf. Ornamented Flower Pot*, sColte ' manufMhnef “' j nvt B ‘ A ‘SAo^SatNUTBt. |J OSIN.-600 bbls. No. 1 Soap-m»kers> T IQUORlOE—“fcnow’slUliau’’ fopsfile tofiSISSM * BROTHER, 4T .^9 PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, iB6O. -- _ ■ ■ 1 1 : I ■ . : WEW^PtftiLICATjOWB.- i!i ' ! | ' : ‘ i ,'- J 1 ’ TMPORTANT BOOK FOR EVERY ONE -8- WHO VALUES'HBALTHh' KOW BIAIiV THE AVOIDABLB CAUaJgfeOF DI3EABE* 7 ~ , ~ - BIJpBi»ELUB7M.D.j, J Professor of the Principles and Fraotioe of Medicine in ■ -, the. We **e ra Medmal College of Cleveland, Ohio. . ~ Unto. Stowes. O&th; Ptieeil. , , In this voiame lir, Kills explains in a olear, simple manner, the various oauses of disease, with theconai tioijs,' habits, and nreoantions necessary to thspreser vatioaof health. The aim hue been to impart practical information; soon as will be useful to every one, and to embody the best results in this important matter which science has reached. Technicalities have, as for as possible, been avoided, and the boo); will be round of genuine and permanent value in every family, to adults and children* - To parents especially, it is commended, at affording timely information ana oounsdl. Itlsa th ° on “’WbMWr/®- ; mrBf»t.-, -N9e.fi end T MERCER at. New.,York. Business guide of the BALTI MORE AND OHIO RAILWAY, oonteining <jcim iPmtejmd.accuratelisMofalllmsiness and professional men between Baltimore and Wheeling, and alto on tna Parksbqnr and Washington' branch**, inciadinr-ith* cities of WTieeling and P&rkflbare, es well .a* tho*? of, the town# in the vicinity • of the - Great Railway Line; For sale,by, . Mr A. McBLROY, , Way • assonasixM^mr.. ;-OUY ,YOUR BOOKS AT EVANS’GIFT 1 ■ " o< i ! | T Pk K «>o 4 p ' ‘ gift Book store. No: 439 Ohertnut ttiMt. ' Hook More. No *39Cheetanteireet ■ 1 O'fV Bookstore.-N0.*.9 OhaetiutWreet. ; Book, .tore, ALE THE NEW ‘BOOKBAB SOON AS PUBLISHED, IP YOU ARE IN OF'ANY KIND, boors in e^er.4 < depaKthknt of ’ • ■ i*tT£nATC/As ■ And you have the advantage of receiving a Gift with eaoh Bookthat you purchase., t • - * Gitt «*, Sfirf on* irtai i HU tusur* you thnt, th* but fine* in tk* city when you thoulttnutekan Books if f 1 . Strahget* visiting the city are retpeotfuuy'mvi ted to call and examine he large collection ofßookiu and get a Catalogue, my®-tr* WAiSfiINdTON I&VltfG'S COMPLETE "▼ WORKS.’’ . u NATIONAL EDITION. An entirely new and beautiful edition, complete in *l' Tolnmes.'printed on exquisitely-tinted and prepared paper, with illustrations on Steel and Wocd, at simper volant#. ' . • ! l . . FOR, BVBBCIUBERS ONLY* ■ Thia day is ready— VOLUMB OffK Of THE LIFE OF WASHINGTON, Heins the .second volume of the works as published, and to be had with the previous volaroe, H ’ ' „ . THE SKETCH BOOK/ ; On subscribing for the whole set at the Bookstore of 'Also, in Unifor SAi t^isiiis r iff. 6bov *’ br Philadelphia. IRVING A PAULDING. mj»-Bt-ttas I HATBAND OAFS'. , ipOB BUMMER WEAR. WAEBURTON’S ** POR O U S'” HAT S. IN lIOHT3JBSB, AS TftE JtEPHYB ; IN COOLNESB. AS THE NORTH WIND. HOUSE-FURNISHING goods. !§UPJSBIOR REFRIGERATORS, Mott Imjroved kind*. ! CHILDRENS* Olds AND CARRIAGES, • la Great Variety, FURNITURE LIFTERS, , - Verr MotW in oreadibg CarpeU aad Matthu, ! WILLIAM YARNALL’B FURNISHINCf StOBE. No. lego CHESTNUT STREET, ' -joeiitUly owoalte ti>» Aauitat otfaiitTUi£ '" pURE AND CHEAP BREAD, MANUFACTURED BY THE MECHANICAL BAKERY. •Alt XI OBTAIRID AT THX JOI'tOWUM PLACES! MECHANICAL BAKERY, S. W< corner of Broad ft&d <O;M. CLARK. *~-Po^t^rVtf eet, below Hi MoNEIL-«« corner Sixth and JATHO * SON, .rS?StelfiJS^fUi«rw6. JOHN. G, MOXEY ——.No. IBS Visa etreet. Te P. SMITH,e_ ——No. 115 North Fifth street. S. BoOY^w—.e- E. corner Fifth and W, W. MATHEWS SsfJfwnM l?&entb and D. KNIGHT,— Wal- GEORGE GARVIN .No. I4l> Ixmibard atreet D.COURTNEY,-v-«,_„__n. W. oorner Sixteenth WM. COURTNEY N*S IM^Srth^elfth S* R*WANAMAXSH»_ MM *1 etreet* above 8. LENTZ~~— Corner South Fourth and L. HOLLAND,—«H^W^oorne?iixte'enthon DAVID SADDLER—Nof » Eleventh J.WEIGHTMAN—-——.Thirteenth street, below 0, fl, TOMKINS, —No. i’K 10 ?!' ofth Front H BROOKS.*,—ww— WM .B. oflSeventh F, MORRIS an E. B. TURNER, No. ffii B oul h Front SH -USTER —.B. Broad and THOS. T. BLEST! CiSpifStoMth street B. B. BOWN__ _N^.te V S?SSk. M « J. MoINTYKE—- ab. ALEX. FULLERTON. CoraerofFifth and Chris tian. MRS, Ei RAMBLER. Noi HfilCoatet street D* F» k, T i W. WOLF. 633 Gir&rd avenue. 1 WM. McCRACKEN sxa H&milton.*t;eeta R. R.BEAZLY .•>—*.- ,N. W. comer of Twelfth JVLIVB KLEgi Mr.°of r Thi'rtMnth rf wfDDoo and Parrish street. M. NIPFBS^—.....^,Ne E. oorner of Fourth MRS. F; ELLIOTT W. Corner‘Tenth and J. Li' HICKS. store 119 C. H. RAINIER. West pSiffieiphia, Mth at. N. L. YARNELL ro6 d* JOHN Tremoat and Pine Grove GKO. B. TOWNSEND wirt Chester, Fenna ' M. MoCLBES:—,. Atleutio City, N./. D. HORTON— :—FJorence.N.T, 8. F’ EBERLBIN —™_ Columbia, P*. jes-tx W- NEILL & Go., YARD. 8. E. Corner BROAD and CALLOWHILL, Superior WHITE ASHTtaMARUA, end LEHIGH C )OALB. r ITS?d^ k «MB« tion. - - ■ ■ • astt-fias MACHINEKY AND IKON, •AMXXL 7. XXXXIOK, J, TAVOBAJf MMMMSVM, sevTßw&%%frrmr ‘ FIFTH AND WASHINGTON STREETS, mißffoW&Nft; „ , ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS, Bt **“ KD “ n "' Boiler., Oa*ip«ter., Tanka, Iron Boat., Ao.; Casting, ofatl tooUe, either Iron orßraa,’ . RrMfe for Gta Works, Work Shops, Rail- and 1 Oh of to. lato* end mo,, i„- proved oonstmotipii, - pAPER HANGINGS, We invite the attention of all persons who wish to decorate their Houses, targe and - extensive stock of PAPER HANGINGS, at either. OfTour ertablUh menu, all of the newest And best,ifrles,, suitable for store# pt dwellings, and pot up in the oity or eountry, by oareful men. ' HOWELL & BOURKE, N.E. Cornet FOURTH ani :MARK K * Stre«te, and 17 Sontb FOURTH Street, FhiMelphu, , mjU lm TDST ■. RECEIVED BY THI! OF . WASHINGTON,,' ; ' A LARGE STOOK OF JET BRACELETS, Both Plain and Golil Mounted, whioh,wilU» sold at ' VERYLbw,PRioES.BY THOMAS, OiGABRETT, myto-lm No. 719 OItESiN'UT' STREET. 81PliBMA0BTl!r-S0,boxWillpfiwi,<3#p(Ues ) fML liEMON— Qt»ss;' for:a»lo by WE ttHJSRIM, k BROTHBRa. ;4T, abd' 49 Kdrth • ' j- i.fy. PATENT 430 CHESTNUT STREET,' BREAD COAL, C|e |)ress. JUNE 1, iB6O - , 1 [The Gnilldfuo Agmu ut Work in Phila j . [ delphia; . . { B&OWMK AS JACK KBTCH. [For The rr«*.] : . j ,• PmiiADKLCHU, May 29,18(50. , j . 9°Kspondent of the Irish - Tieujs.ln. this <iUy, a atauuhDeniMrath paper,- held b, a clerk ship in' thefobat Offioe,. Hehasnobly advooated oaufe oifienator Douglas. A letter of bis, which appigfeji in last Saturday’® lißuo/Dontatiu the following peftgraphr Which X herein enclose to you. Y-esterdqyhtwasofcergedwitlt being the author by the postoaibr. Be said ho was, the remit of whloh was that hejru discharged 1 thia morning. Knowing ypu, to be.ihe opponent' of such base acU of ty jranny, noWsttekbywbom oomtnitted, indiwee me to make yotaequbiated > I enclose the piiijpftpb,' hoping yo& will publish Um an actgtjastlto'tosrarufl* the injured party} ma&io\si\\sk independent cUUettiuf this city see what tyranny (enrftctteed on men -because they teU the truth. V' ' « •> [■, j The extwet to, is as follows, and tolls .entirely tftithi tohuti the Mioite , Bead-. :blHUejofdirJßiperialm«teW: 1 '* “DaAO/“D*ad. 55 —A weok or two ago, it mattershotwhloh; there wbs'A. “ rambling of an earthquake’South;Third street, the shook of which itSdlatretefugly felt at the “ White .House/ 5 Washington, D/C. The l&to organ of J 8., owned (by (a Hutch’ dootor and edited' by -an jeminent departed, this life in the most mys<* jteflouß said that it was starved; to. death, hoc getting bne\dollar of Government pay during tim lost month ;' others say that this Bakef* fell ad##& and. the tmdg v wae done so Browne aorottifcfe street; that it never returned to ltd na tural cfltoptexion again; Be that ,w it may,-cer .tain it la that J, B stands without an old. or new Ifriend U this oity at present. These hirelings who ktoed this man’s feet now turn away in dfi- Sort; awn his tools, trho were delegates from this teie, it. the Charleston Conventioc, naw thru .aside ani shriok at the .sight of their own mean ness. Xa no part ot.the Uhlpn had the “Little Ojaut” ‘warmer friends, in his darkest hour, than in this Quaker City. Since the memorable day ’when the friends of Douglas were ousted from their berths.juider the Federal Governments the De mocracy of thla otty or;,State did nothin one sin gle victory* In 1858; notwithstandug that there were thousands of dollars used to fcwjuretbe re* elMUdn of MewM-^andy. Jones, Phillips, and Florence to the* House of. Representatives, yetthbn men who oteyed the mandate of J. B. and disre garded the wishes of their constituents in the mfte oftwUtieil filth from which they can .never hope to rite. Florence was the only on who reoelved a certificate of .re-elec one of them all resolved a greater eoouiging than did the 5“ widow’s epn." All the isms from pauperism to Mortnonlflts were brought out to his support; every v&fe he gotooSt five hundred dollars ; yet he was not eleotel but by the most stupendous frauds. Well, well* let pa hope that the fate of J. B. and his organs will be a warning to tyrants In days .to- oome. And who will , condole with « nan' who would discharge an Irish 77km frOi* the * offioe of master laborer in the navy - y*ftl| rbectmta be was an Xriahman in prinou iplO as as in name—not a paltry poltroon who (would, Ajablicly boast, that he would sell > tfie honor, of his mother for place, as some .vfco 'wore there -Said. Well, well, the organ is not buried; the proprietor wtt forcod ;by public opinion and the want of Oovemment . u pap/ 5 to send the Bakers , Brownes, and other kindred spirits to work at something more conge nial to their nature, and to employ one of the “ ro betscue of Douglas * most stannoh friends; a man who sever deserted him or his: principles of non-intervention for a moment during the time the !“ Little Gfe&t” was proscribed by theselfoonsUtu jted teuers of the great Democrats party. So mnoh for things in general. ■ \ Public Sentiment in Delaware. 1 Correspondence of The Pre*#. I | } Wilmisotoh, Del,May29,lBBo. A message sent from this plaoe has been pub lished la the varions papers of your city of this ’date, which purports to contain, in 'snbetanoe, the proceeding* of a county meeting held at Hew Cas tle U«t, Saturday, JC therefore take this method, ;and ask.tho benefit of yout extensive circulation toriatoiCoie facts connected with that meeting, and whkh do not appear in the despatch alluded . a _Homo*ratlo Convention of .this county,, duly organised, chose John Merritt {Chairman, and elected Messrs. Bayard and White ley delegates to Charleston, passed a series of ro solutions, and adjourned tint die, Thore was soaroely any opposition, to their election—no con test whatever. After the secession of those gen tlemen from the Charleston Convention, a large and enthusiastic meeting of the friends of Mr. Douglas was held In the City ilv.il lore, at which a number of resolutions, passed, ono of which con damned the course of Bayard and WMtoloy, and another requested the ohairman of tho last ,oounty meeting to call a county meeting, for the purpose of taking into consideration their course, &o. In oomplianee with that request, Mr. Blihu Jefferson called a oounty meeting, for last Saturday,- at Hew Castle. Shortly af. torwards John Merritt, the defunct chairman of :tbe defunct Convention of February, published a card calling the members of that body togethor on ‘the same day. he call was generally laughed at. Ho one, for a moment, supposed that mon occupy ing prominent positions in our ooiroty would coun tenance such an unheard-of usurpation of powor, and such an attempt to prevent expression of pub* Uo opinion. On Saturday, at tho hour appointed, a large number of oltitens met in New Castle, waited one hour tor the ohairman (Mr. Jefferson) to appear and oall the meeting to order, when Mr. John Lagan— a man over whose head have passed the snows of sixty winters—moved that Abraham Boys, the only .Democratic Senator in this county in the last Le gislature, sot as ohairman. Then ensued a scene of the wildest oxbltement. Mr. Logan was thrown from the stand, but his friends soon put him hack, when he put the question to the meeting, who de clared, by a majority, their wish to have Mr. Boy* preside. The Bayard men, during the melee, sent for Mr. Jefferson, who olaimed that he held over until September, and had a right to presido at all county meetings until then. It had been arranged, so we understand, to eject another gentleman to preside, but their -calculations woro defeatod by the friqnds of Mr. Douglas. Mr. Jefferson did not intend to have appeared at all. Alter the settlement of preliminaries, Mr. Ba yard commenced his speeoh, and spoko a very long time. His speech mainly consisted in ex plaining tho Dred Scott decision, and in denuncia tion of the Hew York delegation, whom he de nominated “ a lot of jugglers.” When Mr. B. concluded Whitoloy wasoslled for ; ho ascended the stand. When he commenced to speak thero wore loud pries for Gordon and hisses of Whiteley. The audienco would not hear Mr. White ley until Mr. Gordon arose and asked all of his friends to give a patient hearing to Mr. Whiteley,, as bo should bo allowed to excuse himself if he oonld. Mr. Whiteloy merely reaffirmed what Mr. Bayard said. Neither said anything about the pregnant foot that they went into the bolters* Con*, vention, until Mr. Gordon condemned course. Then Mr. Bayard made a very lame excuse. When the speakers concluded, John Merritt ascended the stand end presented two resolutions, wbloh, had beeh carefully prepared, which endorsed the coarse of our representatives, and requested them to re present us at Baltimore, provided all of the se oeding States send delegates thore. Mr. Merritt declared that the County Convention had just passed them by a vote of 49 tel, and asked tho oonourrenoe of the meeting. It was put to vote and declared “adopted.*'.. The meeting then ad journed. Suoh is the way our representatives were endorsed. Their friends had a meeting on an un seasonable day, it being markot and pay day, and in a one-horse town some diitanoe from anywhere. They refused the people tho privilege of aotlsg on the matter, but galvanised a dead convention, had a packed meeting,'and, to cap the wholo, refused to allow tho people to organize the meeting. On Friday night of next week there will be an outpouring of the Demooratio masses to take this matter into consideration, and to elect two then to represent us at Baltimore unconditionally, whether any or all of the seoeders return. The gentlemen selected will present their credentials,^and upon a statement of the facts as they 1 exist will he ad mitted. Indiana County Speaks.— A large and enthu siastic Democratic meeting was held in the Court House, in Indiana, on the 14th ult. H. W. Wier, one of the delegatee to Charleston from this dis trict, addressed the meeting And (gave a history of the proceedings at Charleston, and particularly of the doings of the Pennsylvania delegation, after vrhioh tho following resolutions were unanimously adopted: ' Resolved, That the Democracy of Indiana county are deeply gratified-at the nation of the Charleston Convention in adopting tho minority platform, believing,.as r is; therein stated,' that Democratic principles are, unchangeable when ap plied to the same subject-matter " Resolved, That the oourse of H» W. Wier, Esq , 1 and I. Painter, Esq,, the delegates from this dfs* i trictfo the Demooratlo National Convention, meets! with our entire approbation. ■ Resolved, That when the Democratic Conven - tion shall reassemble atßaltlmore,if any eflfert be 1 made to reconsider the vote upon which the mi nority platform was adopted, our delegates to said Convention are hereby instructed to vote against said reconsideration. . Another Counterfeit. —Counterfeit 3s } on tboJ?hllHpBburg Bank, N. J.,havq made their! appearanw in. New York, and they will doubtless And their wajf to this olty. ;A Voice from Monroe, the' j 1 Conutyo” '' ° r ! TAB THSTH LB(HON WIDB AWAKi^ lAt a Democratic meeting held in.the court-house in Stroudsburg, Monroe county, Fa., May 28th, |IBOO, lion. Abraham Edingor presiding, the fol lowing resolutions were unanimously passed!;' ' , i Resolved , That toe are unalterably and uncom ■promisingly opnosed to, and hereby repudiate \and renounce,'the dangerous ’political heresy o f [Congressional- intervention as regards the sub ject of, slavery *» the-Territories of the United .whether.it bo interpolated by the .Republi cans and Abolitionists of the North or the’ Seses ’sioniats of the South. | Resolved, That the great principle enunoiated In the Compromise measures of 1860, affirmed by the National Democratid Convention at Baltimore in 1852, recognized in the Kansas and Nebraska acts of 1854, Incorporated In the Cincinnati plat form in 1858, and recently re-enacted 1 at the De moßratto National Convention atGhariefton, histo rically illustrates, the position ef the national De mocracy upon the subject of slavery, in tho, Terri tories viz: that the peoplw tljoreof shall bo left jperfeotly free to form and rftgaltfto their institn jtionfl in their owniwayv'wbjobF only'to the Cousti (tution of the .United States, j Resolved, That we regret the secession of a Kirtiouof the Southern delegates from the Charles n Convention, thereby rendering an adjaurmnent meoeeiAry, but’obv vtgreU aroeomewhat released 1 ' thhir< potojazseyby the hope that their sestein the approaching .Baltimore. Convention. mill .be futed by wiser nkni whose patriotism and party ■ftalfy 'tpul 7}ot le_ siit>s6rvitrll td jhelr 'political aspirations', add toho 'setll -not jedpara the Ds* Imooiatieparty and its'orgasujtati'on, -or tmpbril -Ithe Union'of.the States, bythe foolish <iftd itiogi* pal,agitation of miserable political abstractions. j Kesolved, That Stephen A.‘Douglas'has*been jfof nearly a quarter «f ! sV century the bold and fearlew ehoinpion* of all 'tMe carainal principles bad measures of ihd Dtfmooratlo patty. Thus his predominant statesmanship, indomit&ble mend prowess, and his fast bold upon the great popular heart, stamps him as the man to* bear the Demo cratic standard in the approaching Presidential Contest, AHD WSHBRUBr INSTBbcfe omt niLUOAIIS the Baltimore Convention that convenes on the 18th of next month : to give to Judge Douglas their sordial and united support. Resolved, That we rally endorse the nomination of General Henry D. Foster, as the Democratic bomineo for Governor of the Commonwealth qf Pennsylvania, and pledge. ourselves to use all honorable means to secure his triumphant election. 1 Monroe is aroused, and nine-tenths of the Demo braoy are for the “ Little, Giant;” and any other jnan in the Demooratic ranks would not get more than three-fourtba of them at the. most. Dbkocbat. . Slidell and Mr* Douglas.' . the New York Expreit.J \ The Louisiana Senator Is Out .in a long letter, once more, against his oompeer in the United States Senate. The substance of his refrain now is, that the Democratic (Southern) States are to have a candidate foroed upon them by the anti-Demoorat lc Northorn States. ; The Senator from Ohio, Mr. Pngh, pretty well pnswered all that, the other day, In the Senate, when tho Senators generally were engaged in the business of Preside&t-making—the substanoe of bis argument being that there were Demooratic States in the North prior to Mr. Buehanan’s Administra tion. ; Another reply to Mr. Slidell would be, that the Way the Southern sectional Democracy, in interpo sing new (slave) planks on old platforms, .goes on, there will be no “Democracy 55 any where, certainly not in the North, and by perversion only in the South—for the white man there is to be ignored, as well ashore. The reason why the Northern De* inodracy ceased to exist, as represented in the States, is, the Southern Dehteoratio impositions upon (hem, and the exclusive Southern Democratic administration of the Government in the matter of- Slavery. ! Tho Southern so-called Democracy has been sec ttonalissing itself, and making of itself a mere seo tlonal party, and the' consequence is, it dan have no Northern allies, save such as are after pap and spoils. And it is a curious fact, too, in the South, that the smallest slaveholders make the most noise about slaves and slavery. They who have nothing to lose by disoord, disorder, or revolution, cry the fondest for mere abstractions on “ negroes. 55 ; If the Northern Democracy will only make up their minds to take oar&of themselves, their own States, their own oounties, their own cities and Tillages, then tho Southern Union* men, them jolvm, unaided, will, soon whip out the Southern secessionists. These secessionists are very few in numbers, South, but as they fail in numbers, they make up in noise. The South is oertelnly in earnest to ba 11 let alone 55 on slavery; but this Uowory of l{ don't let ths South alone," as yot interests onlytb’e politicians who ride the negro to get into; or to keep in, office- But, at any rate, now more than ever is the time for Northern •Democrats to toll Southern so-called Democrats, “ Thus far, and no farther , on negroes .” “We have had enough of the darkeys in platforms." Your negro plank has lost ns not only States, bat nearly all our oitles and villages, our franchises, the oare and oustody of our local institutions, members of Congress, pne after another, and we aro done with the negro mania" The Richmond Convention* [From tho Riohmond Enquirer.] The evidence is almost conclusive that the.Rioh* . mood Convention of June 11th will adjourn over, ; and await the final action of the Baltimore Con vention. On this point wo oite'the conclusion of a recent speeoh of William L. Yanoey, Esq , at Ma rion, Perry county,, Alabama The Montgomery AdvtriUet oorreots an error, which ha# been en tertained by fiome, “ that the seceding delegates at Charleston did not provide for the co-operation of the Worth with the Southern Democracy in the Democratic Convention which iasoon to assomblein Richmond. The seceding delegates withdrew from the Convention because it refused to affirm the car dinal doctrine of equality and protection is the Territories, which had been solemnly announced, not only by-lbe fifteen Democratic States of the. South, but also by California and Oregon, amajority of tho Pennsylvania delegation, and quite a respeota-. ble number of delegates from New Jersey and other Northern States. It was upon this principle, and under these circumstances, that the seceding dele* 4 gates rooommended a Convention at Richmond of tho Democratic party of the JJnited States, fa vorable to the platform approved by the majority of Democratic States. Of oourse, all Northern Democratic delegations responding to this invita tion, will bo oordially welcomed by the South to the Richmond Convention- The principles upon which the Convention at Richmond will be based .aro as broad as tho Constitution itself—broad enough to hold every loyal Demoer&t in the Union. Audit is sincerely hopod that the patriotic Democracy of the North will he yrel 1 represented in that Convention. To prevent further misapprehension on this subject, we herewith append the'resolution adopted by the seceding delegates at Charleston; “ Resolved. That the Demooratio party of tu’e United States, who are in favor of the platform of pnnoipleo recommended by the majority of States In the Charles ton Convention, he invited to tend delegates to a Con vention to bo held in Richmond on the second Monday in June next, and that the b&eis of representation be the same as that upon which the States .have been re presented in tho Charleston Convention, T Tho Now York Day Book understands that New Jersey will seed delegates td Richmond, and justly, sees no reason why all Northern Democrats, who repudiate u squatter sovereignty,” should hot do the same. The Death-bed of a Lion.— Every one may not be scientific; but every one may at least be a dole observor of nature animate and nature Inani mate. If plain people, with good eyes and open hearts, would bat keop a note-book for thoir ori ginal observations, and jot down in a few words the simple facts of life among God’s lower creatures, the great men of the day would always have a good store of fine materials to fieal with. The philoso pher would stand at east* on the grand platform of truth, and build with stones readily hewn to bis hand, instead of having to -send his thoughts wide over the land in search of straw wherewith to make bricks for tho house of his wisdom, or-perhaps to gather osiers for the waddled wigwam of a nomadic theory. ' “Do animals understand what death is? Do they reoqgnize its oomifig signs?” asks the uninitia ted. No,” says a gifted philosopher of our ac - quaintanoo, “ you never see animals apprehending the meaning ot death.” Very well, then, hero is a fact: '' The writer onoe strayed into a menagerie in the north of England, which had camped for a day or two in a little mountain metropolis. A large, el*, derly lion was making an involuntary tour of the country, in company with hisw|fe and a fine family of young people. What an insult to put the desert monarch into such a vulgar clap-trap travelling carriage as this! But wb&t is the matter with that grand old lion? He is in pain; surely he is in pain. His breathing is short, and is drawn with effort; his nostrils are spread wide, lips drawn back, and that great, snaggy chest heaves uneasily. ’He is suffering from bronchitis, for ha evidently cannot bear the keen air, of the north. He is oouohant; but ndw he lifts hia bead high, and looks round and round tho show into the hundred faces of that unfeeling crowd, as if searching for sympathy. But no; they cannot read his eye of mute appeal; ho Is nothing to them bat a great, tawny lion, with a shaggy mane,and tufted tail. Suddenly he rears himself up to his full stature, throws back Msgrand hoAd, utters a tremendous defart roar, ana falls down heavily on his side—dead. Dead; but with an imperial gesture, snob as C&sar’s, when he fell. Look at the widow! She has been taking short and stately tarns.up and down the den—a very „<Judo in her gait, and in her temper too. But she stops,- looks Inquiringly at the prostrate fignre, draws nearer, bends her head with an anxious, bewildered look, and then, as if at last receiving tho groat idea, she throws herself down upon the deadmonaroh with great abandonment. Presently up oomes the heir; crown prince he Was—he is the youtig' king now. Ho stops short, in a fierce, brusque attitudo, spreads-his nostrils, flashes his eyes, and snorts aloud: That was a long < and searching gaie, truly. But at hist he,-too,‘'flings himself down with a-mat sounding Jton .upon the dead body of the old lion. TJp comes' the coarse* looking keeper, and dogs away the Widow and the son. But they, watch their opportunity, and stalk forward again, and throw themselves down in the same attitude of grief. Again tfca hateful whip, and again they spring tothebtber end of tho room, with a short, impatient roar, "Three times did this take place, and three tim« did they return to the same position,' abandoning themselves to the same eloquent symbol* of grief. . Not many can say that they have .beep present at the death-bed of a lion; and nsvor Can the wetie, so touohing and yet so gtand.b* forgotten. • Bibs at Shahokin, Pa^—On the night of tho 28th ult, a destructive fire ooonrred at this plaoe, which totally destroyed a ooal-breaker of the Big Mountain Improvement Company, together with a large quantity of opal., Loss, fifteen thousand dol lars, upon whioh there was an insurance ef *8,750, in the following offioes, vis: of Hartford $3,750; Equitable, of Philadelphia, $3,750: an< $1,250 in the Lyoomlng Mutual Company. The fire is supposed to be the work of an incendiary. ' TWO CENTS. Garib^di’alfXjp^^ 4^ oll * I From the X.ondon TiraeSi May. .lij - , . . ; A man like ,GaribaldiJi reps'to do soajethiDg' worthy'of note'-; if-'iibf SUbOessfcf, hewilhet least, be heroic; if he does ioi subvert, he will shake a a throne*; if the Sicilians, do notxeanember him as a deliverer, they will cherish his'memory as a martyr.' ! < wul' neither stieek? out of Ms enter prise likp a Spanish Bourbon,.nor wW he carry, it on in a manner to insure the destruction of himself aud his followers, like John Brown. He may fail, hul-ha will have carried-terror do the heart of the worst Government ip Europe—he/will have; lighted. a csndlo in the South .of which will never be Sut out—and,'"though he may v not live to see the ay, yet the, liberation of-.the whole peninsula from, that thraldom.wbfod'fte,North has already thrown off will bei principally jus work'- • The great excite ment which has been caused by his expedition is a proof ;of , the conficleooe.whieb i the world baa in his powers, and its.oonyfotion of the rottenness of the Hedpolitan'Gdverhment. 1 Were Garibaldi acorn mon man, ain Ortega; laboring-under the hallucina tion that his, causa :*had> idjowers, #r a . Smith O'Brien, fanoying. that, Heaven .had endowed him with ’influence bret ndankind, the Bourses of the continental .(fitieS would' net be affected by the sai{ftg of.the .Genera,! and. bis little band from Genoa. / Were he /even - merely a. brave. soldier, iftr should" look' : With ahziety. and pity oh ; his proceedings, and remember how. the brilliant Murat found a grave.in those-very regions, and on the same errand-of .dethroning the House of Bourbon. * 9t&t«Ulg*tio* it ii'pttbkjiiOt.l-M to indulge and not only ifceiilaad.-btifr also 1 Calabria amt theAbni«V. grate much as Ibllows : On the night Of tbo sth .Instant, tb® expedition setroht'fbr Genoa; 'Garibaldi having snUed tWo.ateameri belonging bo <& private' com pany., The, force-amuqnled, it if said, to xpen, and after making,,it .wouldseem, somewhat qf edOtOttr to criviserif, it reached the oOaflt of: Sicily, and-; landed at Marsala on the Ilth,-pnshing; op to Celata J?lmi and, Al-- cam 6, where the insurgents are concentrated. The repots oohneotM with thAlanding are } vw y fitei-' tradiijtory. -An official despatch from Borne, dated; May,H,says that,two.Neapolitan frigate* have, sunk rhe etoamerlombarda'and captured the Fieifiehto, while from’Turin if Is* reported,’ under' 4ate,oftiio;loth) tha* the [Piemonte -bad not been captured, : It. seems likely,.; however,„ that theca two steamers nras’t have fallen' into’ the hands of the Boyalistr, and.‘lndeed, it'ls that Gdri bsljdl will { look with ; uocqncejn. pp suoh event. He, of, course, merely used them to get'to' the islandjthei 1 notion - of- sending- them' baefc for reinforcements M abaurd.Garibaldiand hiaftOPOmpp which the insurrectionary levy ol th,® island is to be gathered; hef mbit have’madC up bis mind-to depend wholly on native assistance, and to. conquer the Bourbons -by the .aid of their- own. subjects, pOrhaps of thelr own What concerns us more is the course d erate'in the Island- itself; and here the General saems-to he doing aa well u ova bp expected. . No one qanioraet the military genfas which Garibaldi exhibited at Rome’, 1 and* hia firmness in defensive warfare bas> been more than equalled, fry .the dash, and spirit of his cam paign against the Austrians. 1 This time twelve month, when it teas announced that Garibaldi was rushing islon the'Austrian territory with -a hand ful of mep. tbo uqiywal feeling- WW-that, what ever might be the nraei of the ycr, the foolhardy lender’would bi crushed by the masses of the ene» my whieh werp ooßoentrated afrout the lakes. But be was not crashed,,, With incredible rapidity he madO'hW tray from point to point, avoiding com bats;'except where he 'fought ‘at something like in equality of numbers, attacking the Austrians when they thought him at * distance, and' inflict ing on them, if not great lotaes, at least shameful and provoking defeats- r i • . Garibaldi may .very we)l be expected te do some thing of the same kind now. Ills clear that the Insurrection is in full : progrtese,' and that the royal troops,bate, as yet; beeo uDible tO do more than hold their own. -If this was the caee before the ar rival of Garibaldi; It may be p?«aanied r that the prospects of the Sfotilans Will be wonderfully prisntened by his presence, by the vigor which he will infuse into their and by the die* oouragement he wtil infiiot bri their enemies. The despatches ' of' the 1 Neapolitan 'Government are ominous by their vagueness^, When a potentate (ike King Francis merely announces ,in general terms that “ all goes wen,” that h&v troops have in flicted serious losaonthelnsurgents, and whenh* continues these day; after day, it is fair to believe.that th'eohanoes pre pretty eyenly ha landed: The flourish of the royal trumpets would •be louder, longer, and more joyous if &oy real ad !' an tags had been official des talQh, dated May 15,‘fete tMgeffect; “Garibaldi Sin Sicily, at the head or theefllibusters. The ioyel troops are marching to meft them. Ho movements whatever place iu the fro-, tintfes.” The'first two portionir of this message We well betievel- '■ Whether it be true that no movement has takes place in the pro vincas is more doubtful. - , 1 From hi! aides we learn that the effect of the ex pedition in Southern Italy has been most remark able. ink ferment;and tbo Paint says that an insurrection in Calabria and another in the Abrussl are spoken bf as having commenced Into the probabilities of such, a movement we ean !it enter. If, however, these provinces do at mpt to shake off the toy at yoke, the assistance the Sicilians wiU be great' indeed. But the ost important, question la ; tho behavior of the eapolitan troops,. The cause of the King de mas on their fidelity) yet they are Italians, and adenow what Italian’soldiers aid in Florence and odena. It may well be that the army is not un iting to fraternize with the most eminent Italian Idler of the age, one who’ has recently borne a eat part in delivering his country from a .foreign yoke, and who is even now in the servioe of the most patriotic of Italian Kings. 1 Landimo ox GArlbaldi at MabsaijA.—We have been favored, by Messrs, jQ’Byf&e; of Adelphi ter iace, the navy agents, with .the following partiou ar# of the‘ landing bf Garibaldi' at Marsala, ex ranted from a private letter' While 6n shore to iay, about 2.30 or 3 in tho afternoon, w« entered a afa. In a few minute| soVeral fellows entered— some in. red, others~Tn*~plain clothes, all armed With muskets and bayonets. Every one around seemed favorable to them. We at once asked What was Uie matter, and were told that it was a, oaso of Vtv'a and Garibaldi had landed. We immediately took a walk round the town and' found the soldiers (patriots) had possession. We Wanted to so' towards the country, but the officer meommana, a fine-looking fellow, told us we oould not pass without an order from General Garibaldi. We therefore returned to the mole for the purpose pf getting on board, and met more soldiers coming Jo. At tbe mole-gate we were again stopped ana there detained until a pass from the General was procured for us. We ‘wore informed that some ft,ooo had been thrown into the town and that more would soon follow, the only thing they Wished for being that they might meet the Neapo litans. They all appeared fine, athletic fellows— just the sort to make short work of a dish of mae paroni. They landed from two steamers dose un der the noses of the Neapolitans, who, with two Steamers and a sallingfrlgate, had been constantly .Watching the coast. The smallest of these vessels ponld oasily bavof prevented tbo landing, but she was too oautious to attempt it. After, the.soldiers, however, were safe on shore, the Neapolitans olosed in and fired on the town, or rather at a few strag glers on the mole—a mere waste of powder, for toany of the shots fell short, and those that did reach terra firma merely ploughed the earth that Iho enemy had passed over. There Is no doubt whatever but that one at least of Garibaldßs ves- eels, particularly the feannost, could have been out joff, but, no. they, were afraid to try it on. , After, [these had keen abandoned by the Italians they' Wore taken possession of atG.SOP. H., by the Neapo litans. who, however,* displayed much hesitation, evidently deeming ‘ discretion the better part of valor.’ At this moment, as we are in the aet of leaving for Malta, a steamer and ifrigate are open ing on the town, but the fire receives so return. Whether they have artillery or not, we are unable to stato. We oan only remark that wo saw none. The people in the town received Garibaldi and his. followers with open arms, appearing as if they had been long expecting them. .At > the time of the General’s arrival there were no Neapolitan troops lin tho town. Owipg to tho shallowness of the wa iter their large snips could not approach.”— .Qlobe. ' Lord Palmerston ojj. the Fight.—ln the House iof Commons, on the 17th ult., Lord Loraine, upon ja motion for tho publication of correspondence In l the Home Office relative to the recent fight, Id. jdulged in some reflections on the scene, and espe. eially upon the ruffianism and lawlessness of the spectators. Lord Palmorston, In reply, said: Ido not iytend to offer any objection to the motion, and I will only just enter a sort of protest* against this exaggera tion [hear, hear] in' whioh the noble lord has indulged. He has attacked this railway company, for having brought down 2,000 or 3,000 ruffians, and launched them in a moment upon a quiet neighbor hood. One would havo imagined from his descrip tion that thoße persons' were' a 1 set of banditti [laughter], robbing and plundering, and seeking to ravish the «ountiy- = nro?lJffring persons, burning houses, and committing oroty ftotof atrocity. [Hear, hoar.] Technically* a fight between two persens, though not fighting from any enmity, is t ’ a breach of - tne.peaoe, and, being a breach of the peaoe, is clearly an act Which is subject to proseou tion.: But the persohs who go to those places, j though they znay be technically open to a charge of ] breach of the peace, are harmless and commit no breach of the peace;, they-stay looking at what passes, whioh are! exhibitions of manly, oourage, characteristics of the oharnoter of the people of this country. [Hear, hear.] It waAonly the other day a French newspaper, speaking of this fight, described it asa typeof thu national character— endurance and patience under suffering, and-rather bolding it np as a specimen of the admirable quali ties of tho British race. [Hear, hear.] However, that is a matter of opinion; hut setting Wide the leading technicalities of the case, Ido not'foe that’ any number of persons who assemble tomitness a prUe fight are more guilty pf a broach of the peace than persons who go to witness a balloon ascent. [Laughter.J They go to see a fight, and, that over, they return without having done harm to anybody; and as to the danger to those persons who engage in those fights, I oontfder the danger to those who go np in a balloon is much neater. [Hear, hear, and a ladgb!] Therefore, I think there should be a medium in all things, and mode ration in all opinions* Sftd thongh it may be de sirable to prevent those fights; yet I do not think any advantage .is to, be* gained; or good to the morals of the. people is to be promoted, by. tbe ex aggerations of .the noble lord. At the same time, the motion Is one to whioh I any objec tion, and I shall not, therefore, refuse to produce the correspondence. [Cheers.] Ratlwat A'cdlBENT.—A 'woman, named Bosan Fleleeh, tedding on Trenton avenue, near the Reading Railroad, was instantly killed about eight o’olook yesterday morning, by being run over by the New York train of care, near the Reusing' lob depot. The coroner yras notlfled. THE WEEKLY FKESS % Th* Trill jf« Ml Sr ■ ■'*,j... r 4y«*y; '• ' ?iT« “ “ ; 9 '*; Ten ** «* «« ' , . 18. W Twenty" " “ ' a '"(tooMiddrMi)M*M Twenty Coyles,< ttoaMxjeiff ‘ • —eh gabeoriber,) eaoh ~■■«, —»«■—— ; For,a Clab of Twenty -on# or oraywe will send am extra coyy to the Eetter««v of the Cfab. . W- fortmMttrt tn iwmti'd to «t lilMliit X«i Vnnrha, curnsnu mu>i . tawd Mml-Moßihlr. in (is* for. tko CeUforai* I ’ ' ' ' 1 ' J ~ i : .. j 1 7 Counterfoil Coutf, . .... [Krcm York: Joiimilof C<wiia.ro*.l r ■ The whole country is flooded with ododterfeiti of, gold sod silrer coin, end, nnleto mufHtag U do»»‘ ~ » arrest thegrowlng will eoon hare it aH thetr;oirnfws(yv; Jonßerly, a pair of: •»•!•# and a bottle of nltrio acid war* all that waa see**-. •ary to enable any reeefrefoi money to deteet tie bogdr eoln; ttllelui'tonwr, wonld. wparate &• gennlne from, the ooosteruit jb» tie rery teach and . ringoftbdpieoe, Solende and aiUTher*' ebaosed all that; <md how the 'ajrperti 'kre M feian*rr*s at' - &ult; wilt* _U« oeraindD pecjde )an aHegftier at to aSSe^peri^ffi^Srt'SSipi^f^Sfii dr- ' cjulatibn war made’ froat 'a gemlia* die, flttad to strike qaartor-eagl<a, wUeh-w|k eteMn from H>» i mint at.lfew,Orleans... Itboie.the.dateof 18M.,1f *e remember rightly; and tbe nledes were made of Oompojltlonm*taf,l»naietoely p)«Ud, and retailJ»- this stolon die.,' i ill»t waa Mowed Jbjf,t*» jwaatiea, - again. Then came the sawiDg intatharadjpiffV . Tbelataal »nd*K»l«kl!M oft tien freads tsyarnne- - iwo'odßddblsSbßk 'mutator <Llttlai?nUm an » pary tad frsnodi* sen tie. if is laUkr.i* UnUUmi *j&* bferngifemOioa aadTuadjoaely ptato*. Hili the l’ the ©beat. 4i«iri*4ritafe9lM»MfeMUMMMofc> ' zß«3tJqAf« about; $$,M of il»,xqid, a* rwilii Mt good for general circulation. Tko fist tkui * tpwisdone ataliyaKd the operation AhfljikaifkP A OroofrttKt ft*- the, m—himgy, ui »• akin sad . . science ncceseanr to sUccms! could hot be croft tably oniployed excctrtin' 6b oriraaefOf an exte—lre bif- 'ardifeJl weigh*, asdesMft.. through the iKOodOffal justinet of a*r»,*ad,tbere * . rare export. t th4f .cannot m detected, Ms'they ejohrft nil te*i* IniU dd \nb£&TOliieth* bftakUg the mast be, at this mo-, niept,; a large nomberof. tMmjm. depots in ov bxbks, ahTin’almeei! of eiyftflVbig'cf coin* oneor - mods otherjiiafler fraud!,' «uy he die* : eo?eztd, while tha emaber of,bed pieces offered it i the Sab-Treaeory Ipu {ttmetimes iusqnoted to fifty! ihsefogfe pdohegeoT fire thow '■hfidJ-rr/ia n^-.. mi;. ■. ' axd ffaudaiept silrer eoins ere Mio iiiereexthff. .Th? gyeuy or soft eoopoei* tfow daw **y« deteet; 'Wnd d ■ )»jrt|»e £/.4he b*d hatf-dcHxgS: xre:oC;tbe eii&e - stamp., Bpt more recenUr, a ooopoeitioß'pieoe hxslyttiß uttered,' dmih ‘tisfir well, do« not W4l suboUrto the tooeb, 4dd'e«a be det«ited bj >. o'ereOlrMisg. apkaowo, . weight u mue ap by, cent* , "FrhflfjoufcWMl ebcadSaowaf tbe iiß* tho facility, with which . , these eperetiozd are xormerlff, if a ofem p st&lM» UTdD ITefiht; wttb bo i»- ‘ creMetif «iie J :the'ftir ififereoce wes thetitaort * be gspeioe. aee »s>out the , middle of the lan eeatary, beiax f oasd ra eofistdew rpbU'qtmntitles Of S6dft Aaie r&< iarnds* it bad elfo'beeß diseorered ie.Basrip-eid^eibprparteef - the world. In oolor it nearly ndemblee sue, bat ~ it is beerier than gold, its spoelfie greriiy being 21.5irt»ilwifold is onJr 19.3 r % fibouwte thwifi* dervUnding of this - Mbjeet, we t aey. reeserh .that.. in addition to these two meUif, Ui« others nsaellj employed Sb the<eedlhig» T op»niaoat‘iri —iwaiy Which lewd copper. 9,.fadsinoabod;g; thetlfi the metal qispla'eejr that hnmberbf'timed of its bwp wsighr of%ater.' ItlXiMUy to see thPtsspUtiAfciewoftb- ieM.theh gM, while ite apertftf.giaTity i* - greater, it is owrtpun to be employed in eu meow .. ftil fradds, where the ln waff terfms of silver, ! it Is aomettans added Is mutt t anti ties to give both wiflgfrfc aadegniiitfwey. Sined these new ftipds are so dufienl t of aeuetion when tmcb 7 tbe coln islndrenlitfob, Kroliows ihat the o&ly iqeceartnt. method of dealing / with them :• mapvfaetnxers it r { the,crtahHabmeafc.. dhihco they are first'fsroed, end to Uke pomes', rion of the fttttieir bonl; This is aH, ihe> deafer fteA the nanemitias of the ease, af snob;elaborate work-opnnqthe done , ih a'eomer. To mike .H worth while fef <t- detectives to movil ia thW ; Bikttar, ihey - Sosbhaee a ereaier sthaubas to;enrtion than 12m ere hope of beoocmng pnhUo beaetactors. Former-. t iy the sereraf tftdjrfteipaldui mereial oeatree a&thorised to< At rewards fbr the deteetion of ooagterfiiiteiVi bntlha prae^ea., has fallen Into disuse* It ia the work of weeks to follow the most skilful ntterets' of bogus coin tp»Qk to-the establishment where the artist has > hM homej aa not, onfrenoently the pass uirougn perpral hands before.they make their public appearanCir, andihe secret of the wexlufebp : isbarefttUyguarded'. Maks it an object, however, : aojl the dqteetiTe will do and the reward Atold. 0e saficrdnt’to keep a number of the best of these, shadows always on the look-out. Within a fair daye the hanks hare become a. CiUs: startled hy. j finding a sprinkling pf these pieces inside their . faults, and public attention is likely Id be arotxSed to a serious effort' to abate the neisance. We eas* not doubt the hearer coroncration ef- the Cloverng ment in a matter of snob importance. TinODOBi PIBSSB.—The an extract from a private letter to (rotator 2#aw- -; mao, of'England, dated Vtorenee, May: 11, 1860. It appears in the London News of the lstfe last.: j u I hare sad news to oommunioote. Oor dear, suffering friend, Theodore Parker, died yeeterdaj qyenlhg. Tei there was net or an easier end to a life hat lately fall of. rigor. I- saw him about . thtt* houti before he lying calmly, while, life was ebbing away unconsciously to himselT fie left writtenAlreotions lor Ida funeral, limiting to fiVe -persona the attending him to the greyed whotaXam one., ManvAmericanahere are ef- . pressing' their wish to appear aS'Shbnrners; but' hiM thought right to abide byfcU iontrmjtionM. Be deeirtd the. eleyen,first yersee of th,f yermon on the . mount-(the htessingsof Jesus) to be read, over, his dihyb, atid tbitaplaiii gray stone, with his namb- 1 and kge*, and nothiegfarther of inscription. . Mr. -• Canßingham,> Boetoa UniUriin minister,, will, read the passage. He is a sincere friend aha ad-. . halref-of Mri’ Parked*W* ; hope 1 iOket a east > taken of Mr. Parker to-day* ) mtt,: Parker, his/ poop, gentlo wife, has hitherto borne op well, husa Stevenson, who has'so lodg'reskted with them, wkf ilso'with him to the last. She feea tk*‘ peculiar tenderness of his manner yesterday, that , he knew he waa dying, fie had been, dreamy-. ior some days, and 1 talked "* ramblingly of wo Theodore Parkers, one here and one laoted, who; would; finish his work; . erhape fktrae thought, only mystically expreseed ._ imohg his last well-connected 1 words were these t * 'Ofi'ooaraei yon.know l l am safraid to die, iboaghl wished to liyaopd .finish much work which ; t longed to do.. 1 had great' powers committed' to tie, and : ThaVebhfhaif nSeathattu* - ‘ 1 • ‘ !Sinoeiwriting this Ihara seen him lying, oh, so peacefully! I. have never seen death under a ferm, so devoid of terror \ The hectic color, remains on’ his cheek, and ft* Is hard to pcMuadd oneself he has b&ssed away. • He oeased to - breathe without the. least struggle. the New 'York Evening PQ&t.' 1 ; The Slav* Traps,™ Naw.Yqax.—The increase, yf tho slave trade, And the vessels- t engaged therein appear to have cleared out of the New-lYork,, begin to attract attention at Washington and in otli'er quarters.' It' pan hardly. be conceived thattf the lfiw, charged ’ yrllh the drit f of pretttrting the°departuro of all' vessels bound 1 oh Illegal' errand s, did their duty'; ouTiport would aotbe di*graced;as it now is, by being made .to .rank as the grand depot of the trade. That they 1 hatre not done their duty in all’oases has been lately proved; and that they have neglected their duty for corrupt cofisidera tions has been put on record by. the dismissal o£ ;two deputy United'States marshals on proved' charges to that effeet. Rut we believx that we do the ,matter in announcing that an, iaverage of two vessels each weelc dear out of our harbor bohni for Afnoi arid A‘human catgo; and ; wft.,have rweived infqrmati6n, which we shall [verify and publish as soon as poraible, to the effect that the prtcefor the. clearance of a slaver is as , veil known to those in the trade as the price of a barrel of pork. -...! ' xt is said that a certain amount of gold is placed ’ in' a looker in the cabin; the officers board the' ship and Commence a search for materials krguthgtbe intention of.the ve«elto cany slaves-. Theyaeareh all the lookers .especially, and suddenly find the, particular one in wbiob the nmg ing from to SljOOD; aeaoeding to the siseef the vessel—is concealed. This, the inference being that It isat least part of & sum' designed to pur ohase iiegrberfrbm'the'Eiiig bf Dahomey, the offi cirs at onse proceed. to ; eonfiaeate; but railing to find snv other evidenoe of,a slave-trading purple ;onboard, they merely remove the treasure ana of fer no farther reristano'e to tbe departure of Urn ahju, '.This was the course said to have-, .been fol lowed by the Deputy U. 8. marshals, who h*ve [ b&n dismissed; hat of coursd nohe of those Still re^ !Lined could pweibly be snspeeted of palWint like course- Xatus hope that Marshal Isaiahßyn aers, now that his eyes have been opened, will pe 'more active amTenergetio In seeing-that his subor-' dinatea more faithfully discharge their duties.— f jV. T. Leader. . n An Hirii-Ijooir—The Hartford Covrant of May 24thsays :An umbrella, at least fifty yean old, in perfect repair, and worth a dozen of out modern umbrellas, yu left in our office some time ago, by a ; gentreni*ti lt from his stater, who carried itc fofcfiftyyeaifc, and dying at the age of eighW-two.doft it as an'heir-loom to her brother, j The old'gehtleman,'forgetting that he had .been in I the counting room.'Searched everywhere that he eould think of. for,hits lost reiio, in wain -He was dfelightcd the QthW:daji,9P dropping in. to look over the bichat'geß, ‘to md mi old friend, the' am brella, quietly^awsittoghim* .. • .The Society* i Boston, May 31.—The forty-sixth anniversary, of the' American Tract Society was held here to day. Ex-Governor Brinks presided; The expenditures o‘the year were $67,000; .the receipts $63,000. .... ~ • * The meeting was hennonioui. prospects of the, eoelety-are considered moet flattering. '■ ‘ Governor , Briggs, ?ras reelected . (resident. Among the vfee president* are. Rev. Stephen fi«, !T»ng;Rbv. Albert Bkrnes, 8. 8. Snmdt.k, 'and Hon. Wja Jeisup. : Post-officeßobber, at Easton. ’ Kastok, M»y3i.—The post oficoowM b rob an into lastnfgbt, and the l.ftera opotwd and their osrot.ats sMtteredorsr .ho floor!»' Is:b.H»W* that no mon.T t >,»» foobd.ip^boosT' : The m»!l-bj*fl woro not disturbed. All.tb, dr,wars wfiw.TAß' PUflkfd, and about $1 ■fn«ipp«rs irark tak»n. ' So vorAl atores in 'thOTtoinlty ir«n alao bmken Into I daring the. night. , - •• r ’ The Keystone Hose. Comp.nT, of Boston. left bore this morning on 'k visltto the Firtr Depart, meat .of Reading. : > ’■ ■ i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers