■ *s&ii±3Z% , -&'&& V;^t^. cl'—i ~l*ih*i% , cl—— u.wcHrmrr. & • 1 Vi .- > IV*. -!5»*r«; ;>^.>‘{f-S-..f> 1 j r j” \'. £ . '". ***** Afcsjj&tf h‘4afttirt%#«feift^rffc 4 iT ’ V.;\ I' h ,,„, s A*'&»;*-*.*o.vK’ ' S «T> •ish?M»<^-^-VV -,^-? :' VS-;-S i-V i - J | •;•": . - I : ;>. Viiiiai»»«iw<*ii%^»_wtf»e>towti-- -- .j)nfe^'.\tV->'»W»*l(Wi'« tMZm £---■"*' jlftiamttiiiiifculrpiii -at «*■*•» b*Mwi «MtaHrtM»i*tk*«i«nMln«ai. -- > •J_viV - |! ■ - \ : ; t z # <®£*tr ifXNTfi stmt;. ..JJABKGK AlfGtAIS* MANTLIS*/ ■ - I, - ■..‘,»KiLil.»-.-'.-'A.s a* fc«* MUTTHOrMt. . j&'iiMTjiM ira"o«T of impomatioh, ; ; . - vFiNE aoooai - ' ‘'^r<^;^'? / yf^'“"V^’ ? ':^ :f ’ ir ' ; t.' ; -‘'' Tr '--“ ' vV-, r',"'. ; .! AMkOAIN W '4 * -fSKNGHLAt® PI«X)tOMINIS, r FftENCHLACE MANTLES, ißg(imHi) ri BmiEr. :; '"' : ttfeCrtiMMßS) fusi b*owved by the • city of , - * BrABHnwfoi», ' ••' A.XfA.MS_FXOCKOF . ■ BoU FUkaUSeM HM»M; vklok viU MmU M ii'-. vntTi/mPKion, by- -' THOMAS 6; GARRETT. mtnia t W*T t> .OHMTmJT BTBBKT PCBE PORT WINE FOR INVALIDS. _~jy ,j ,~,r~ gtINDSANDHHADIS. B.J. WILLIAMS. "' " ; n«< ic kobW kxik rrun. ? ■; -.alyßiii i'wirtii—ihinnnf WINDOWSHADES. : '■ 'no hntHtmittnibnirtmntln a* «ltr. atlb» THOMAS C. GARRETT. pSHOEMAKER&Oo. ;Ci ' { ; C';'- -: OIL* AND VARNISHRI NatOUM OotMf FOURTH AM) RACE I . ? r\' •■; ■' OM^lM^:^l.#«^iß : ffflS tt»l* 'TO'NofltoUft Aafc>*M«iM iwiiWi - : Ti» OAMjraOl ATKO yniTHXT to » w«Ma^ it' k»bM* l»wu«fc**t*to7k»4»»Ul» K v*,rtik« bM.feudM>«Ttolk>«(k«MtM«te4Mf«*M. ••••'••X hn*N« at FAEiwpf muuum, - ■ . wMf -iv'r- •. - --.■ Jf -XtiMiimM'mn* to wiAvmfA^^.AinrMorimMim fcfr-DL>-,aV C. H. MATTBOK, AXOEAND TRUTH WWUTTB. v-- . . 'I , . ' gfe^^p.-"-^-^" '"""'• V ' : '--'- ; - PHILAP' ‘ ' ' '“ ' >«Biajitinm<jooD». «*■ jgjy •••'■-■‘ mntHAH^INGS. •ptOWB ' BUSINESS. -”--^;A^to^|lOH»^in»T,'-.fc;00.,' _ , t • •;• ;• ; , : '»p.‘ tt'amKorat muon, . .■'., WDmII Mk« tfcrauh Ula irlmtor ud next orioCt IMlr ••■'l_’r'>'- '. 'iWJPER HANOINQBv ' JMtoiic 0(mi? WiM>>MUceMyitk Ito MIH, v: : At 9RIATLY BIDIIOKD WOXS. ! : gt.WMWO* >*!»»> A» W PE*! WOT. «■ jmoon- :.:; -/., - *">■» ■»»«*** tttfr Kmmm «a *«» nut '--.i- m tv:-? --u-'-.-.- --■--»-•■*!■■ pAPEK HANGINGS. ' ! ilrtitt tht jirtilSitiu’irf to S^»"'S^r£S£ Mk«ilpf : tte;.arinMt aW bf>t Wj3m, rciubl. to eity OTMttiqr, if, _HpWEtt * BCmilKB, KA’Ognm PWKTK &C 4 KiUKT Btmtfa ud ITRcthFOTJETH gtrxit. mmrijina.,; mjM-lp . i"JLOOKIK6 CUBISS.’: LOOK INB.Q.IASS* 8 , " AMO KbIUIUI fAAMKS, : ;, ENGRAVINGS. 3 on. Kumrnras, fSOir,. imraittna, KASuncici*as, wholm - BAIK AND DETAIL DXALMKB.' ■ABUS' SAIJJBBDSS, -, ', x : ]mammnmsmoom ; nwiitu*. r MERCHANT TAIIiORS. fTHOMPSON. K. ,7' : ./.vs* ' M.' K box,BKVmTH AHP WAIiWUTrrKEKTB. : to mjmsjiW. : AViMfitotk of Ibwriali *lny> on hud. • friVftttnomirn .irttitiu' the Citymee eolicited to tew* tlnii auutw.,... ■ ' wtMm' -IP:.riAtT:o , o,.';',l - ',:i • ■■;;•-! 'J, iiw'Ja-r; “‘fcwpv ■••• -••■'■'■ ; s^ ; 4a^;;B ; Q NNEir&j /.»»=■, ;.. - /- • r-'l 5 ?? -AMMuimp assojUmknt. ;. T :^ Y „f^cßoasisyTAinßjvipilow,.-i fee*; o—tfigi IMmI ud^uallai- iipicnru. MRB. WINBLOW. ,i SOOTHING SYRUP rOBOBILDBEN TBBt'HIHQ, Wr‘ airopflurk HPHiMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUOHtT. n Tint o«B*T nyftßTlo. uuuold’s BXT«*crgsc£rc?~_ JBJS_9BJSAT DIUSBTIC. IKUUOtM KXTKACT BUCHU. = iiii;- , _jPB6®&AT biuietiC. " ,ooaf °kEM, -WOMEW. Ojt CHIMHEW-,. | : ;'.:jgS^SSt^ t J ' ',.' FIREWORKS. jpiBEWOBKS ! FIREWORKS!! - ALABOB AND WBLL-BBLBCTBD STOCK OT I, BRILLIANT FIREWORKS, U>£ the.ttabtt&otar* of IMOi in store and for ttlei I Whol»«*la and flelali, by STEPHEN P. WHITMAN. I ' lia in . , ~"" _ 1310 MARKKT STREET. PATENT lOE PITCHERS. KEEP lOE 13 HOURS* T.EWIS LADOMUB & Co.. MS CHKBTN UT STRKKT. JIJLY IST. 1860. NNWMBMS AND CHANOBS. 1 MBB SSV ,T * Ifr rjurr °* «■*•« BOOKS cn £• «n»»U»n ftora a Terr wterlor aawtarat mtde from Limb (took, or and* to order. w““»w*itiew«icß.. V*- *V MUBPHY * SON’S i -V-S'.'-'' • M UtUirPrMß Priattra ’ aros o» »aa tansaa. No. IM CHESTNUT Street. [.lljdwNff W »OGU*T * SOKB, '<• < r > CLOTHING. * vjjoifs*; CLOTHING. ROCKHILL & WILSON. No, 803 AITO 80* OHESTNuIWIiBKT, An oH»n»» to thepublic, ;in eanuaUdn wish.. lU«lr rfljnl*r bMEAM of ; 1 MEN’S CLOTHING, A' roperior etookof BOYS’ CLOTHING. Of the tefarrt Bgria£ Good*, and made in the MOST FASHIONABLE MANNER. Meeurea taton and Garments made' to order at the V * * ■ . ’ , . ' ■ BHOETEgT NOTICE, ntti-im CJLOTHINGI AT LKBS THAN WHOLESALE PRICES! CHARLES HARKNESS. *BB MARKET STREET) Soatheut ooraer of Fourth Stmt. WILL CLOSE OUT AT RETAIL, until; july at, ' Tk* r,nuittd.t of tho ElaruitKtook of SPRING AND/SUMMER CLOTHING, uaiutaetaredfoir thU xuott’i Wkoltnle Trade ; N. 8,-—Porohooors will dod it to tboir advaataf* to auk* th*ir«*l*otioai(ißUttOdi»Ulr. CHARLES HARKNESS. ■m-i* ■ ■ yyALTER EVANS & OQVB JBOAB’3-HEAD SIX-CdBU . SPOOL COTTON, rior to a&r ever imeortedf In atrength* Bmoothnen* - efawgoitfrfornoehlMoriusdittvteff LENGTHS WARRANTED. 0. CARVILLeI Geanal ArMrt/N»w Yortc. J. B. HOWELL, As*at for PUl&Mrhlt, “Ty.-gffgiP. gtOPLEy, HAZARD, t HUTCHINSON, -HO. iIS OHBSTNUT ST, . COEMISBION HEKOHAETS 1 ' POX THE SALE OP *' PHILADELPHIA-MADE tk'. 1 :: GOODS. HOTJSJK-FCKJf ISHIXG GOODS. gUPERIOB ROfRIQEBATOBS, , Me*tlrorartd Had*, t„ . ■ CHILDRENS’ GIGS AND CARRIAGES, ta|Bw*tVwiotT. ; , * “ . FURNITURE UTTERS,' roW«Mhi u*n**diu Cwt*i*«a*MkMii(. jj^ljTAhjp' YAR^ALL^ ; OTQRI, -’ No. ;ioi»8 ■ '' la«MduMy**tc*it*tk*A«d*arofYl** Aiw, A™^tm*®£&<.^i •—*- ; •' B 4.N J CJB ' M ; „ ifinr tobk, - iaM L*tt*n «f pMit to Trmlian anMM* ia :nwin nuin, TH» WOBEP. HUB, LONDON, PRAHKPORT, YIBNNJi, Hi- PLKB, AND THBIR CORRESPONDENTS WH>* jgPALiDIN (FS PREFARED GLUE! "A STITCH IN TIME SAVES DINE.” ECONOMY: gAyE TBJS rsscss! DISPATCH! M auUMt w<U l*m*i hm <» tnll-nialtm fanUiUtUlM tot deeiraN* toheraeome oheapeid oooveaint way foe romiriac Fanutaro. Tore. Crook* rr. fco. . SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE meets ell seek emergences, and no household ean afford to be without it. It is always ready end op to ths strok ing point. There is no longer a necessity for limping ohairs* splintered Teasers* heedless dells* and broken moles. It is Jut the artiele for eons, shell* and other ornamental work* so popular with ladies of refinement and taste. This admirable preparation is need oold* being ehe .mioalif held in eolation* and possessing all the valuable lualities of the best binet-makere* gine* It may be us# a the place of ordinary mnellage* being vastly more aahssive. « USEFUL IN EVERY HOUSE." ft, & A brush accompanies eaoh bottle, PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. Wholesale Depot* No. 48 CEDAR Street* New York* Address Pat up for Deafen in Cases oontolwng four, eight* •ad twelve doaen, a beautiful Lithographio Show-oam •ooompanyug each package. W " A^ps!lDltia? B PREPARED GMJS will save ten times its oost annully to every household* Sold hr all prommet Stationer*, Drnggis&r* Hard ware and Furniture Dealers, Grocers, and Fancy Stores. * Country Merchant* should make a note of SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUI* •n «n»irfnf up their list. IT WILL STAND ANY CLIMATE. M-mvf-r |JATSI HATSI HATS I MEN’S STRAW HATS. BOY’S STRAW HATS. EVERY DESIRABLE STYLE OF NOW READY. WOOD. A NICHOLS; r|K) FAMILIES RESIDING IN THE RURAL DISTRICTS. W. H. prepared, u heretofore, to supply Famllree at their country meidenow with every de#ori*tion of An. GROCERIES. TEAS. &o. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, ■yt-tf Cor. ELEVENTH and VINK straata. J # E. McOLEES, PHILADELPHIA PHOTOGRAPH ES TABLISHHENT, No. 910 CHESTNUT ST.. (Over Xobiiuea’.Lookiaf-GlMi Store.) IP Ivorytyf«. eotortd and plain Fhototfayfe,. Da iaarraotypaa, aad Ambrotyeoe, styM-Im Burning fluid, alcohol, and OAMPHSNB, in barrels and half barrel*^menu- IVKW LARGE NO. 3 MACKEREL— IV no bW» ludinc ftMtstMiitwXf toaxtoaiMM for COMMISSION HOUSES. PREPARED GLUE. HENRY 0. kPALDIRG A 00., Box No. MOO, New York. STRAW HAT LINCOLN. T9* CHESTNUT Street. : 13, 1 1860. J-' 1 ssfaftr thflwh' JMjA'lTto Boose nMurfg^jeftirßiehed . A sev eSSkifcg ra&^oTeoli.i WffS^sßsaewaS^T^- jnosrtu HAI/Ij," OAM ■ ISWWtt, 4,^9'ftfwlitt* fll*I» have been (SlMriliij?rooms ftddpa. iinoa tail MtiUi. \ <- >Nni Jall.fly WEST k THOMPattJE V ronnetore. TTNITUD STATES HOTJBb, 10N» MRtly iritaaUd'onafine bloff, within* is7m>ft& A fnlt'view of. the ocean. Rood road*, etaturf, iko., stake it a« attractive ananr house mtbe otraim. Th# oem' nuißtoation it aocMmblf • by two daily liiawma fodt of Wataut»atreet; wharf, via.: 6a. M.,andl P. JaT n. . et ,Br ? ' S’ i CUMMBR BOARDING.- SPRING ieir Womet*dorfV°erk* now oomplntedjjwd willba opened for .. i *rlCommanioatjoß, twioe dAj]/, freer. afidHarriiburf ,br the Reading *ad Leti RAjlrpAd*. , 7^l ' S®* Boarder* received by the ifeeW oh Benson, on reasonable term*. Jefrlm , ,■ • JOHN MANDBJLBAQ7 Carlisle w “<MkS bue |SMSSnSSI#te CumbarfimUolf!. SSgJSlfc o4 ?" 4ccommdifattof»s/or ‘ 300. 'FotfvsrnenUnai TXBM9 Z/owv - lar. ,•- ' J , „ ,Owl!N, CLENDENLN. * ’ Je7-3m ,forii CmyWJDUSE, ATLsntjc . >w. J: th A* h&tanfc ol *° e<l for ,he 'HWW ,S»n«n-o» AneimwinK. three atarlee hish and 9J {Up lh f Wnsth, withmmMM'aanrnindlM itfhaASen tdde.£»nteini ins 49 large and airs room*, and exlandiu .towfdun St Tarda of the ocean, a Ada eroepeatorwileh 'u afforded from almost averr room id thehonee.' ! < One u hems infrodnoed into'dhe badiiu,additional bath honaaa, will be ereoted,and mimerooa other im-, proyementa made, it bains the aim of tha prepnator to make the 6UkP HOUSE one bf the irJt attnicM* plaoea of rtmmor reaort near PhlladelpMs. ?■" The table will be au»p had in the,moat liberal manner, and ail soaaibfaoarp will beeneroiifd intlta senaral ar. ranumenta of the hmue with • viewio the abmfort andbonednianoa of sneata. - i <r : “Sti’r .* Partly* wwhlng to enttjftjte. rooms willyl**** *ddr«*» eatwriber at the Serf Houie. cr at theJUMwid tfonte, Arch itrees, Philadelphia. . —•v. Jegmyf-2m ,I_H*AA«9SPK* > HJOTINT HOLLY SPBINGS HOTEL, Thir firoAi and dalirttfiil gy»ft!Bß.'*Bao»T, Six. Mite* from-CMli*ler,Cßmb*rießFeo«ty» i*aow ys epare atmoephere, rtoaßtain ai* and w4<ietV;% r i&' the beaatifal drive* and walk*, andotaer attraetioah which are-eo well knows* wake Ita TnrjniwiTatiVi fotFaiwlleii to spepdthe Stunner... , -x farther particular*, addre** uitert, rl-. W ' ISAAC &UMSCMS. Jaaed. im. . ■ v Jedift WJUJRENOE HEIQIITS HOTKt.-TK« 'eiitiiujye lintel will be owneifor Sn:rece»tion of vlnton on the. 10th of JnnOt ~ ■. , < The table aTr*nB»menU'irillbeß*dertb*diMotioa<>£ that eminent oelenr, THOMAS, jTl>osflKVi of ffie fbc-Hin, dad other Partita bn (he lam. trill have'cV peeial MteeUoe. without intradini aventhe imraejofi rexalarboaedera, . *, ■ .The.nubmriber raajr be, foond at theHoUl. to Make Uwownorr ieHW ■ ;B. jROfiB/KS.Fioiieoe, MnrJener. 'EDfOBD SPRINGS.—This well-known »M Mopn till the I<t of October. 7 ' \ - .Bowl Will be anderthe uiwiMe! of Hr. A, <>a AU^iKn, wksM exeeneaoe. enlirthiwe iD'ium and sttkM essap' oi . ;EM?hkat a Mountain t~t~ - _nnrrrl-|-rn tii~ - TTriiilff-i rirtii-r. ' ■- • ;;• : excursions. »JIHE SEA SHORE In order to five the Strangera sow is the City an op portunity of seeing the Ooesn and vnitinf the beeau- ATIiANTIG. the fere from PHILADELPHIA to ATLANTIC CITY will be redoeed one half, on Monday afternoon. T»es day, and Wednesday. TICKETS FOR THE ROUND TRIP, $1.26, GOOD FOR THREE DAYS. . Tjckets cold on Wednesday will be good to return with V %a£a l >«nx VINE-STREET, WHARF *t K A. M. and i r. M. Returning, reach Philadelphia at 9.10 A.M. and 0.90P.M. Distance 60 miles. . jell-3t. JNO G. BRYANT, Agent. FOR THE SEA- MpJMWW m AND ATL ANT IQ RAILROAD. Two trains duly, (Sunday axoapted,) for ATLANTIC CITY. „ Mail train leaves Vine-street Ferry -.7.30 A. M. Returning,leaves Atlantic*City... ...AIOP.M. Exprese train leaves Vine street Ferry....... 4.opp. M. Returning leaves Atlantic City.. 6 00 A. M. The above trains stop at all Stations. _ Fare to Atlantic «.... $1 ® Round trip tiokets (good for three da*i)..._ 280 Freight must be delivered at Cooper’s Pout by S P.M. ; The Company will not-be responsible foi any gooes until received and receipted forty their Agent at the Point. JNO. G. BRYANT, j jeß-tf Agent. Rg,n—; Excursion tick- RTS to the Demooatlo Cos- WILMINGTON, iND BAL TIMOwK RAIL u OAD COMPANY will isme Hound Trie Tiokete to the above Convention at 94 »aoh, com mencing on BATU.iIDAY.JaneIMb. Three tiokete will not be good to return 411 on and after the adjournment of the Convention. Jea-lOt 8. M. FhLTON, President. SEWING MACHINES. yy P. UHLINGER & CO.. M&XUPACTtTRSRS OP SEWING MACHINES. Akins the Loop and Shuttle Stitoh. The Utter for all Einde of manufacturing purpose*, pnoe 960. The others are from 93d upwards, OFFICE AND BALKBHOOM, 628 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. P. B.—MACHINE BILK* SPOOL COTTON, OIL* NEEDLES, Sco * constantly on hand. jell-Sm & WILSON SEWING MACHINES. HENRY COY, Arm!, m CHESTNUT STREET, SECOND FLOOR, UachinM. Trith Operator., on tin to Private Families naan on oincuei y Weet STATE Street. Trenton, N. J. rn CENTRAL SQUARE, Eeeton, Pa. lalf-fca WILOOX A GIBBS’ SEWING MA CHINE.—The treat and Inoreaeim domand for Wilcox A’Oiohe’Sewinr,Machine ie a iriaranteeof He m{*nprexoeU*noe. •». 'For ea e at FAIR BANK^’ SoxI. Wsrehonee.ni CHESTNUT Street, IJALL’S PATENT PLATED ICE PITO HE Entirely different in their oonstrnotion from kll other* and WARRANTED to keep the 10G LONGER than any Pitcher sow in oie at a temperature of seventy de gree* Fahrenheit The above Pitohera will, keep the water sold for twenty-four hours, , A pound and a half of loe In three pinto of Water will last seven hours andAfty-five minutes / while the same Quantity in an ordinary atone pitcher, at the tame tem perature, only lasts two hours and fifteen minutes! Persons should not oonfonnd these Pitchers with thoee usually sold, but inwire for HALL’S PATENT. WM. WILSON & SON. Solo Aienta for the Manufacturer, S. W. Comer FIFTH and CHEERY Street., ■yM-tf ' ROOKING RANGES. CHILSON’S PATENT ELEVATED DOUBLE-OVEN COOKING RANOE. ' Something new and deoidedlr the best and most com plete Cooking JUuge ever offered to the Publfo, war ranted to give aatwfaotion in all eaeee. Colt and see them, ARNOLD & WILSON. 1010 CHESTNUT STREET. B. MeFuiiTWKtL. Buitt. ' * mhlT-*AwSm AST-STEEL BELLS. FOR CHURCHES. FIRE ALARMS, Ac., fox >ll.l XV NAYLOR & CO.. 890 COMMERCE Street, ILLUMINATORS. ara makiuj 9&0 a week telling them, more wanted. s ¥he°Be* Lam it *4^l» me*)* fee) eenoro for I o.stMltoar.orvntttgf^n^^^^ wM-Ut*A»dy Nd. 8* South TRIAD Btr»»t. tflk.:* ■■■ ! - } ,mx;r,\' C|t|)Hss. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1860, Oweu Meredith's New Poem.# npyw* Browning,lias revived, not, invented, as ijoßw critics have affirmed, the novel fat verso. Bfr Walter Scott’s, leading poemsj greaitly yOpuUr onee and almost forgotten- IStiged: to: (his class. So, though the exam ples wore less diffuse, did Byron’s romantic stories, “The Corssir,” “ Lsra,” and others. , Browning’s “ Aurora Leigh,” which .would be greatly improved by being cut down at least one third, is the longest novel in verse in' onr language. Next to it, In quantity, comes «Lucile,” by Owen Meredith. . - *’ Moat of our readers wbo have literary tastes ipjqw who,Owen Meredith is. The writer wbo •ssmies this name—probably becattfohe traces hit ’deBeenrfrBin'Oto r King of, Narthlfales, over a thousand years sgp, and, a fqw centuries lator, from onp of tpe .daughters of Miuloo ap Mtrtdsth, Prince of Fowls—is Edward Robert Bulwer-Lytton, bottron November’B,lBBl, only son and heir of Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, the great no velist, and nephew of Sir Henry Boiwer, for merly British Minister at Washington. , The previous productions of this writer, who is not long before the world, were republished hew,.as tho.prcsont poem is, as one of Tick, nor fc Fields’ charming “ bine and gold” se ries, and have excited no small degree of ad miration on this side of the Atiantio. Ta^&akd jutTMUia rfft&ghtkft Mpl «Lucile,” as we have said, is a nove] in verse:—rhymed, whereas “Aurora Leigh” was in blank, sometimes vary blank verse. TbCdedlcation, to the author’s father, is in (dimple and expressive prose. There is ten derness, as well as pride, in this Dedication, in which the poet fondly; dwells upon the gen tle oriticism exercised by his father upon his childish manuscripts, which, he says, « X have created ah Identity of feeling among them, and lead mo once more to seek assurance from tho grasp of that hand which has hitherto been my guide and comfort through the life I owe to you.” He thus concludes, “As in child hood, when existence had no toil beyond tie .day’s simple lesson, no ambition beyond the neighboring approval of the night, I brought to you the morning’s task for the evening’s sanction, so now-I bring to you this self-ap pointed task-work of maturer years; less con fident indoed of your approval, but not less confident of your love; and anxious only to realizS your presence between myself and the public, and to mingle with those soveror to whose final sentence I submit my mork, the beloved, and-gracious accents of pwn.” ’ - . The heroine of this poem, Lucile, a woman of great physical and intellectual beauty, who liw been The belle of all places in which she was seen, - TUo belle or all Pari* lant winter; last wring The belle of all Baden f and is described . 'An pale as an evening in autumn—with hair Neither bleek.aor yet brown* but that tinge Whioh the , Tft]£*e ftt ere in September, when night Hager# Jon# iThrongh a vineyard, from beameof aglow-setting tun— bail' heart and hope footed between two lovers, one French, /the other English.” JShe herself is a French countess, with a, strong dash oi passionate East Indian blood in her veins. She weds neither of her lovers, one of whom ■ marries somebody else, in pique: the jiiherflTing on, to middle age, acynic athirst for yengCaßoe..,. )Preqtiectly..{he rivals’ meet. Lucile, constantly iutor- j feres to proteCt 'them" from ■■•MtUshman lases his fortune, thrmity, . of his b&nker.a saiw”"— rogue. 1 Thof his amour propre in family pride, and, - os is the fashion of his nation, in successful military adventure. The Englishman’s son- and the Frenchman’s daughter fall in lovo, hift are s pirated, and forbidden even to think'of each other. The young man goes, in the Britisli army, to the Crimea, is'desperately wounded, is tended by a Sister of Charity, (Sister Seraphlne, the Lu cile of the story,) and,ihrongh her means, the old rivalry la flung away, the rivals’ children are united, and Lucile, the ministering angel, retires (Tom the scene, still to perform, with even more than woman’s zeal, the highest ol woman’s humanitarian duties. The” closing canto of this poom will bring tears of sympathy and sorrow into many bright eyes, in many lands. Lucile’s scene with the Due do Envois, in which she induces him to consent to the marriage, is as touching as poet or novelist ever wrote. Although wo do not like the metre of this Poem—which constrnntly reminds us of the tripping measure of Hiss Biddy Fudge’s opis tles in « The Fudge Family in Paris”—tho passionate power and great skill of the poet make us soon forgot that error—ior such it is. Here is a description oi a tempest, not un worthy of comparison with Byron’s hurricane among the Alps in “ Childe Harold Ere loos, Thiok darkness deßoonded the mountain* among 5 And a vivid* vindiotive, and serpentine flash Gored the darkness* and ehoro it aoroas with a gash. The rain fell in large heavy drops. And anon Broke the thunder. ****** And the storm is abroad in the mountains ! He fills The orouoh'd hallows and all the oracular hills With dread voice* of power. A roused million or more Of wild eohoea reluctantly rise from their hoar immemorial ambush* and roll in the wake Of the oload. whose reflection leaves livid the lake. And the wind* that wild roboer, for plunder descends From invisible lands, o'er those black mountain ends; He howls a* he hounds down his prey; and his luh Tears the hair of the timorous wild mountain ask* That olings to the rooks, with her garments all torn. Like a woman in fear; then he blows his hoarse horn. And is off. the fieroe guide of destruction and terror/ Up the desolate heights, 'mid an intricate error Of mountain and mist. There is war in the skies. Lo 1 the blaok-winged legions of tempest arise O'er those sharp, splinter'd rooks that are gleaming below In the soft light* so fair and so fatal, as though Bbme seraph burn'd through them* the thunderbolt searching Which tho blaok cloud unbosom'd just now. Lo! the lurching And shivering pine-trees* like phantoms* that seem To waver above, in the dark; and yon stream* How it hurries and roars* on its way t* the white And paralysed lake there, appall'd at the eight Of the thinge seen in heaven! And here, by way of contrast, is a bit re minding us of Byron's flippancy in “ Don Juan,” especially when he speaks of tho din ner-bell as tbo tocsin of tbo soul; Oh* hour of all hours, the most bless'd upon earth* Blessed hour of our dinners] The land of his birth; The faoe of bis first love * the bills that he owes; The twaddle of his friends* and the venom of his foess The sermon be heard when to ohuroh he last went; The money he borrow'd, the money he spent— All of these things a man, I believe, may forget, And not be the worse for forgetting; bnt yet Never* never, oh* never! earth's luckiest sinner Hath unpunlsh'd forgotten thg hour of his dinner! Indigestion* that 00* science of every had stomach, Bball relentlessly gnaw and pursue him withsome aohe Or some pain ; and trouble* remorseless* his best ease, As the Furies once troubled the sleep of Orestes. We may live without poetry, musio, and art; We may live without conscience,and live without heart; We may live without friends; we may live without books; . , But oivilised man cannot live without cooks. He may live without books,—what is knowledge but grieving? He may live without hope,—what is hope but deoeiving ? He may live without lovewhat is pass.on but pining f But where is the man who oan live without dining ? We would add a beautlfbl lyric, worthy of being married to immortal music,—by this time, no doubt, Balfe or W a H ft co have per formed tho ceremony: How many thoughts I give thee! Come hither on the grass* And if thou'lt eount unfailing The green blades as we pass: Or the leaves that sigh and tremble To the sweet wind of the west, Or the ripples of the river. Or the sunbeams on its breast, I'll count the thoughts I give thee. My beantifu), my best. How many joys I owe thee! Come sit where seas run high. And eount the heaving billows That break on the shore and die— Or the grams of sandtbey fondle, When the storms are overblown, Or the pearls in the deep-sea caverns, Or the stays in zone. And I’ll count the" jsysjl owe thee, My beautiful; myowd. ': W« must give alarge extract, to show the * Lueile. Bt Owen Meredith* author of 41 The Wah derer,” “Gljtemneatr*,”atc, ?tmo. Boston* Tickler & Fields. Philadelphia >. J. B. LippifioOtt & go* l 1 ttittkoT’a power. The 'person here introduced is the French lover, after Lnclle, who rejects liis love, leaves him to his own sad thoughts : t Noword The sharpest that ever was edged like a sword, Could have pierced to his heart with suoh keen aoonsa - tion • ,' As the silence, the sudden piofoimdisolation ■ In which be remain’d. “ 0 return; I repent!" , He exclaim’d; but no sound through the stillness was sent, Save the roar of the water, in answer to him,” And the beetle that, .sleeping, yet bomm’d her night* . hymn r An indistmot anthem, that troubled the air 'With a searching, And wUtfhl, and questioning prayer. “ Return,” snug the wandering insect. The roar Of.the waters replied, “ Nevermore! nevermore !" He walk’d to the window. The spray do his brow Was dang odd from the whirlpools of water below i The frail wooden baloony shook In tbesqinnd Of the torrent. The mountains gtocm’dsnHsuty round, A candle one ray from a olosed oaasmeatflaug? ■ . O’er tUadim balustrade allbewilder’d%ehang, • Vaguely watching the broken"sndsi mmering blink Of the stars on the veering and vitredhs brink Of that snake-like prone column ofwstbfj and listing Aloofo'er the languor* ofair the persisting • Sharp horns of the grey gnat. Before he reUevtuaii’d' Bis nnoonseious^mployjnent, . Wheels, qt last, from the inn-door aroused him. 'He ran ‘ ‘ 1 * ‘ Down.the stairs,'reached, tbs entrance,' A*ekt ktaJM*. mad / ' - - rxrj.C* Was lighting his pipe in the doorway aloe*. ' ‘ Dowd the mountain ; that niotnfttfc fmW yiWiiM* He oou Id hear it, already too distant to see, ’ He turh’dto the groom there— " 11 1 ' '* “ Madame e»i Pariii,” ' U He sprang from the doorstep! he Toah’d oat but Whither • He knew not—on into the dark cloudy weather— The midnight—the mountain*—on, over the shelf Of theprbolpide—on, still—hway from himself! Till exhausted, he sank'mid the dead leave* and moM At the month of the forest. Aglimmeringei'oaa' Ofgrey stoeestoodforprayerby the woodrids. He hank f rayerless, powerless, down at its base, ’mid the dank Weeds And grasses; his face hid araoagst them. He knew That the night had divided his whole life in two. * * * * So he lay there, like Luoifer, fre»h from the sight Of a heaven scaled and lost; in the wide arms of night O’er the howling abysses of nothingness! There As he lay. Nature’s deep voioe was teaching him prayer 1 Bntwhathad he to pray to? The wind* m the woods, The voioes abroad o’erthose vast solitudes. Were in commune all ronnd with the invisible Power That walk'd the dim world by Himself at that hoar. Hut their language he had not yet learn’d—in despite Of the muoh he had learn’d—or forgotten it quite, With its onoe native accents. Alas! what had he To add to that deep-toned sublime symphony Of thanksgiving ?. .A fiery finger was still Scorohing into his heart some dread ssntenoe. His will, Liko a wind that is put to no purroso, was wild At its work of destruction within him. The ohild Of an infidel age, he had boen bis own god, His own devil. He sat on the damp mountain sod, And stared sullenly up at the dark sky. The olouds Had heap’d themselves over the bare west in crowds Of misshapen, incongruous portents. A green Streak of dreary, cold lucrinout ether, between The base of their black barricades, and the ridge Of the grim world gleam’d ghastly, as under some bridge, Cyclop sized, in a city of ruins o’erthrown By sieges forgotten, some river, unknown And unnamed, widens on into desolate lands. Whilo he gaged that oloud-oity invisible hands Dismantled and rent > and reveal'd through a loop In the breach’d dark, the blemish’d and half-broken hoop Of the moon, which soon silently sank; and aeon The who’e supernatural pageant was gone, The wide night, discomforted, conscious of loss, Darken’d round him. One objeot alone—that grey oross— Glimmer’d faint on the dark. Gazing up, he descried Through the void air, its desolate arms outstretch’d wide, As though to embrace him. He turned from the sight, Set hie face to the darkness, and fled. A few linos more, and we have done. Here, in reply to the remark that << Those who have gifts owe something to the State, 1 ” an art-dreamer proudly answers, in the fine spirit of Michel Angelo’s saying that Art was a jeal ous mistress Ay, ay 1 yet oannot all men serve the Bute .In the same Cashtau? He who writes a book Brimful of noble thoughts, doth be sot serve ? And be who rings a song which elevates The poor man’s heart; amt makes It throb with Joy, Kalb he done nothing ? He who cartes a stone Into immortal beauty, is not he .Assreat and ifoble as the man who talks On Opposition About his budget or his inoome tax, < And his five farthings on the prun'd rtf 'tea? ’Ti« well, no doubt, to be a senator, ’- To make the laws of Knglend, and direot Great policy to rightful aims aad ends. Or thwart great polioy when it is wrong; But the*e things are not all. A nation’s weal Cannot be made by Aotsof Parliament; And some roust write, some sing, some dance, some paint, Some teach, soma preach, or else the manners fade, And aII the pith of nations shrivels up, And sapless realms go down to their decay. My oalling’s Art; and ’twill suffice my soul. We part with « Lucile,” feeling that he who wrote it is a mau of genius. A better metri cal workman cannot he found. He has not only much book learning, considerable know ledge of the world, a keen appreciation of the Beautiful in nature and art, a bright creative intellect, and a delicate yet passionate nature, but surprising command over the apparently insuperable difficulties of a metre which few could adapt, like him, for the highest class of emotional feeling and character. Master of his art indeed, Owen Meredith has wholly con quered the despotism of rhyme. Sindmg’s History of Scandinavia, Pudney & Russell, of New York, have published a third edition of “The History of Scandinavia, from the earliest times of the Northmen and Vi kings to the Present Day.” This book wm writ ten by the Rev. Paul 0. Binding, of Copenhagen, Professor of Scandinavian Language and Litera ture in the University of the City of New York. We gather, from the preface, that Mr. Binding was only two years in this country when he wrote this volume, in which he shows great acquaintance with our language. Indeed, no one oould judge, from his writing, that English was not his native tongue. His book amply fulfils the promise of its title-page. It brings Scandinavian history from the earliest records and traditions, long before the commence ment of the Christian era, down to the present reign of Ferdinand VII, of Denmark, and telle us more about the bold Northmen oi old than we ever knew before. One part, which is only too brief, will be of eapeoial Interest In this country, for It relates how, as early as the middle of the tenth century, this continent of Amerioa was discovered by Bjarne Herjnlfsen, on bis voyage from Iceland | to Greenland, whioh the Northmen had visited three years before. At a subsequent period Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and New England were visited by th'e Northmen, who subsequently went to the coun tries now known as North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. The first visit of the Northmen hither was 500 years before Columbns re-discovered this continent. Professor 0. Rahn, of Copenhagen, has published an elaborate work on this subject. In The History of Bcandinavia, pub lished over twenty years since in the Edinburgh Cabinet Library , considerable use was made of the materials «whioh the research and ability of Mr. Rahn had discovered and digested: Mr. Sin* ding’s book is a welcome addition to our literature. He might haveoonslderably Improved it, with little trouble to himself, by appending a good analytical indox- History and biography especially require an Index, to facilitate ready reference. In afuture^di- tfoDj Mr. Binding should supply this necessary ad junot. Whoever desires for a more detailed work on the same subject may read the “ Histolre des Etats Bcandln&ves, par A. Geoffrey,” reoentlypub lishedby Haohetto, of Foils. Snnbury and Erie Railroad* We are informed that theSunbury and Erie Railroad Company Trill run their own road from Sanbury to Wbetam, a distance of eighty-three miles, on and after the first day of July next. The intention of the company Is not to furnish the roll ing atook, but merely to supply the motive power wherewith to haul the oars of the Northern Cen tral Railroad Company. *At Look Haven, commo dious machine shops and-depots have been erected. A sufficient number of Iflbomotives are now building to aooommodate the traffic. That portion of the 6unbury and Erie Railroad between Lock Haven and Sunbuiy is in excellent order. The western division, under the fuperJntendcnoy of Samuel A. Black, Esq., has been inefficient operation sinoo the first of the year, and is delng & heavy freight business from the oil region of Pennsylvania. On the first of July next, the Snnbury and Erie Com pany will have one hundred and forty-nine miles of their own road in use. and with upwards of ten miles additional almost in working order. A good d«al of rivalry seems to exist between the 1 Pennsylvania and Baltimore and Ohie Railroads in their efforts to secure the stock-carrying trade of southern Obi#. The Cincinnati Commercial, after alluding to the improved accommodations ot the former roAd, says: “ The Central route is making groat efforts to seeure Us sharo of the business. The Fort Wayne road contracts at Chioago at very low figures, and all along the route efforts are making to establish good stations. The Pennsyl vania road has bought or leased one hundred and sixty-five acres near Harrisburg for feeding lots. The shortness of the route and the excellence of the accommodations are securing to the Pennsyl vania road a large share of the cattle transporta tion.. Nearly 5,000 head passed over the road last week, of which nearly half t°°k the Lebanon Val ley road at Harrisburg, for New York.— Pittsburg Post. Whim is Mb. Fowlsb?— The New York Sun day Mercury asserts that Mr. Fowler has apt gone to Havana or elsewhere; that he has not left the State of New York, is In the city almost dally, and has no idea ot self-expatriation. TWO CENTS. TH E fPXjp i x. Sermon on; Foreign mggtons. ar rev. ORABLXS HAOMirv, or ronansxrKK (Retorted for The Prem.} i r ‘ , />. Tbe annual sarmon on Foreign Missions, before the Synod of the Reformed Dtttoh Chvrch; bow in session in this city, was delivered in the Chimb, Seventh and Spring Garden oh Mon* day evening, the 21th Inst., by the Rtv.Ch'arles Hagtfnan, of Poughkeepsie, New York/' ='lhe*#ol lowing was selected as bis text for the occasion :’') “ Not' by might, nor by power, bnfc by my Spirit* saifh the Lord of hosts.”—Zachabia* rv-«.' - The bihjeirt'of .Foreign Missions It one whtoh nowyhidretienat »ny former period in tha world’s history, hr engaging the earnest attention of Christians of elf denominations; end henna, every well -digest'd ddistSOarae on this' theme ia fraught witha'mehe-than ordinary degree of internet. " Mr Hegemon opened by allnding to.the htaterio olronmstafcnes Which gave rise to the Tonga age of his text. The Seventy years of Judah’s eaptivity? suii.be, had atlast been ended. Thelawdri^Hoeif of thelstaelltei were nombre heard. IbrTSejtrtfbo? tidfilje hadcdmeto’Zsrh'ftabel that’they^sert to • »dt iney ehouTd ye. ..umph—tn». --ecmpleUtm of tiio work Ml oertain; adding, however, Unit it wonlA: not be “ by strength, 'nor by power, bat by. thh Spirit of the Lord.” ' Bit, said the speaker, th (slanguage wee not for the Jews only,. It wu to be.rjiabgolied u equally ap- ! PiipoM* tbo Church. This, tMtt,bfsogfithi* prppntlyto tbs enunciation of ms THiwa—Tint «p«rr or eon. i ' Ke .would remark, la tbs' fint place, tbit tbs missionary work contemplated by tbs Church Was essentially of such a nature as to require the power of God to effect Its consummation. Tbs objeot of the Bilsslonary irasnpt to coerce or compel men to abandon error and receive the troth, bat to per suade and lead men by benevolent means. Its object wu to carry the Gospel to every oreatnre, and to lift the curse from off the world, and this man, unaided by the Spirit of God, conld never aecom pllih. In these respeots Christianity differed from all other Systems of religion: it wu diemotrleally opposed to all tbs earnal tastes of men, and in its very nature refrained from employ lag force in se curing its ends. It even invited end provoked re bellion and opposition by Its unyielding honssiy, and in consequence of this, it wu apparent that Divine aid alone could be availing. The changes in man’s heart desired were beyond the power of man to aohieve; and benoe.all efforts to reform men, and to oonvert them, without » sole reliance upon the Spirit of God, must always fell. Tbs second dirltion ofhisdlrooarw wu deroted to th« eossideretioa of the following proportion: That the' meaiis necessary to carry on this work I could only be procured by the Holy STpiriVand these means were men. and money. In this light men were £ ‘ co-workers with God;” they were Christ’s embassadors to go to heathen lands. The first great want was men. Bren now the cry was coming from many a foreign laid tip* Uto the bar* vest, “ Gome orer and help us !” but few were the responses to this cry. Too mpny passed this ery by unheeded amid' the pursuits of business, and pleasure and honors and from these pursuits It was not in the power of human elequence.to attract them. Men might be enlisted in the. defence of their country by having their patriotism appealed to by martial strains; they might be induced to forsake friends and home for the of the sea,'ln the hope! of obtaining wealth, and,even tempted io penetrate to the toy T poles, altered by fame, but neither, nor all, of these could more npontho heart of man to make him a missionary > of the Cross to heathen lands, where there was ne prospeet before him but the reward Asrsq/tsrv.Ho,- the Spirit of God was alone adequate to this species of enlistment, and in hu hands it eoild easily be accomplished. Bat, besides men, money was needed. And he might ask, in this connection, for what was money not needed? The speaker here proceeded to show lIIIK O^.-—... I j'l I -- ‘ ■ ~ .But here again, -it required- more than, human might ‘or power to open the heart and hands of < even many of tho professed dktitples of Christ. God alone oould unlock the grasp of'the miser, and j pour his wealth into the Divine treasury. It was i the Bpint above that could make a man feel that * what he has is ?iot his own, and this, he said, had | been most strikingly exemplified in the very morn- j ing of Christianity, when, as it is said, “ they had j all thtagain common.” He was now ready to take up the third division of his theme, viz : That the qualification* of the i Church for this work were alone the work of'the j Spirit. First, the Church needed to be indued ' with sympathy with the heathen, that she might : not in any case like, the priest and the Levits, “ pass by on the other aide.” Then, also, she needed to have sympathy with the missionaries \ hut more than all, with Christ. She needed to feel that it was His cause they wore subserving; she needed in short, that sympathy whieh the Saviour felt when He wept over Jerusalem, and the Spirit of God alone could soften the heart and arouse its sympathies for this work. There was, however, still another need, and that was the Spirit of Prayer. That prayer had power with God was undoubted; but It must be the earnest prayer of faith, such ae Abraham of fered for Sodom, (or rather for the righteous -men in it, if there were any,) that faith whioh removed mountains; as it is said, the faith in God (or more properly, the faith of God); and* this faith, it must be ever remembered, was alone the gift of God. Surely in all this we bad sufficient confirmation of the text, that it is “ sot by might, nor by power, {human, of course,} but by mj Spirit, lilth the Lord.” This truth was strikingly illustrated in the past history of the Church. The wrath of man, like an angry sea, had been dashed against it; Judaism had done its utmost te crush it, and numerous other untold and unnumbered means had united to oppose and destroy it, yet without raoeess. The Cross of Christ had triumphed. : In this confllot of ages the Church had measured arms with colossal Rome. The latter bad subdued people* and con quered nations, but with all her fiendish machina tions had been unable to crash by persecution the Spirit of the Lord in his saints. In leas than fifty years from its commencement, Christianity had a foothold In that mighty metropolis of the world, and four hundred years bad net elapsed before it was tho acknowledged religion of ihe empire! By some, Christianity has been stigmatised as a “failure.” Impossible! said the speaker. As soon might we expeot to (fee the columns of the mediatorial throne fell, as that the Religion o? Jesus Christ should fail of Its grand elm and object, i No! to*day, gatesof empire, long closed, were being thrown open for the reception of the truth of God. Never, in fact, had the noon-day son of Christiani ty been ee near Its meridian splendor as now: In the fourthi and last place, the final and universal triumph of the Church «u considered as the work of God’s Spirit. To redeem the world 5 to make “ the desort blossom as the roseV’ and change every heathen temple into a house of God, the speaker boldly declared, was the mission of the Church of Christ. Nor did he regard the conver sion of the heathen, and the substitution of the Cross for the Crescent, as the most difficult field to be won in this great missionary battle. Rather was It among the nations of Europe, where Ration alism, and infidelity, studied and deep-rooted, in their worst forms, were gathering millions under their defiant banner, that the most appalling bar rier was presented. He admitted that to render this mighty host of the enemy tributary to God, through their conversion, was toe great a work for man. Nevertheless, he said, its accomplishment was sure, for God had spoken it. [The speaker did not explicitly state whether he' believed that this final triumph of Christianity would be accomplished by the conversion of Christ’s enemies, through missionary agenoy; er by the Lord at his Second coming to devour his enemies and make them “ his footstool,” when, it is said, “ all kindreds of the earth shall be cause of him.” The former, or conversion riew, was, however, left to be Inferred.— Reporter.} The oonoTnifonof this discourse was eloquent and impressive, and worthy of the presence In which it was spoken. Jesus, be said, was our Zerubbabei, who had undertaken the bnUdiag of the great spi ritual temple, of which that on Moriah was but the type. He It was who had laid its foundations, and In due time the cap-stone would be laid upon it by the aaxno omnipotent Architect, when the ban ner of the Cross shall float gracefully over all na tions and peoples, and from every tongue shall ge up the joyous shout, “Hallelujah! for the Lord. GodOmnlpotent reigneth!” -j Q the mean time, however, we must expect to hear of wars and ru mors of wars; yet we might rest assured that the Spirit of the Lord was in them, and overruling them for His own purposes and plans. He oloeed with a brief reference to the encouragements which the Church has of its ultimate triumph, and by urging all who heard him to remember that whUe was indeed theirs, the glory and the success belonged to God. _ _ A Gloucester (hf»to) teaoh«r hM bfeen fined $lO and costs fear: CBO of Ms pupils wi*b » ruler and M* 4**. hB H .mi to B»6oern»t« fit* •* «,•. •• ' — T*n,- . *■ 2 WmMMhM T F»»fcrOo*Jo,,ofOT»r" fliHiiirnt • •Mkfclmrftur.) i,*o For . Clab of Tvwtr-oaa <* onr.v* *n HUi •ctnootr to tfcOfott.r-.pof U. Ctab. ■r fMaiimin imM toMt iMCfcmto.k, TiaWwrFw,' =EN - I y to Hm* tor. tofSfMU^kk Tfce Richmond Convention—The Pint of the Seceders. ' (Correerosdesee ot The ■ ' Bicajtosro, June 10,1*40. , The meeting of the Seeedera hen fat Convention to-morro* will createlittle wnuttoa; not half as moeh u the « Grand Entry” into theelty of. D«« Bio* with hia “ parferaiio* elaphaeta,” and « edn oatedneaiee,’' h«« created often, the ponied Biehmond,. outnideof the hotol-keepoii, tefeebo utenet la the (nighty effeir, alhelt iti iaauie pro jwtor* »e«n t* consider It “ big frith the fete of natioM.” The fereo trer opened lot Right by a UMtiag at Metropolitan Hall, at whieh Mr. Bohext O'.'fieott’ef Alebatah, formerly «#' thl* etty,' wu the 1 piooitirat aotnr, ■ Rntwhi' lßdlgnttt and (KWfnfWihy tome, overthepSetar* which kindle- ftew.gf a» wrw*«iaJUet«4 flhMitamfaa, Be wee fcl- I . < ?yS*ufe y l?HsM ,, 'F; s£•*►#; dnoome(,wW by-famdtag from th 4 Cottrentloa .after the ~ ocVhWhewedea>^njher,hn4 i^Tiowy 1 ittd tMi4p foUowoni Hlffn EMUi ban-gained, «f (owan, an cndabla (titorMyamoaghin hHeW.mwif.sirtr, inaaawh bhit.BeanVJUahiMMaadhfcstae ,»»prid| I U-,Ktr. PUKa eomplSmante, and vote to admit tbasaotmiongaagisto theCea- Temtjon at B*ltImor«. Why shentdtkey not? What light bare you Northern Dapooerate to My “ no’ ’ to as y demand of the Southern antremtate ? Wba t righthaveyou UMS any opihidd.ot euppdrfany candidate, except bj> leave of year Ifcqtfaehimaa- Uri? So, geutteman delegaUa'ctftbe'Nartkwaet, of New York, of Peanayivaate; <glfew Jersey, and Now England—you who ware tna.jat-OMa te tha Democracy and to your own manhood at Chariaa ton.you willbo expected at Baltimore, hat la hand, tomake an humble bow totheYeaeeyitne; to ask. , their forgiveness, with downbeat eyaa and ooct rite heart*, and conduct them to Kata la As Cotrvan tlon, notes your ajhafemerafy, bat a* yoar battan. Snob oraTena fiWer la bit poekst u tbs prfassf feb Irtsfimj , rock toMftiTCTt u Hi ocllesgns, OiM C«Aii|; whoM nstare it i* to to £Um vhmrer ipOot««y loski hojMfal to him; sad snob ptlsss dsres ss Collator Baker* may sad will stoop to this dfrs , datioa. The true moa of the North, kovsrsT, cm*- jteioai of the right, snd firm ia its j*Ut nevtr Barnbdtr. They sill trfeap atebaek-. ward. TO change front wotCd overwhelm them with Infhmy at heme, and eahad then tobeenfver i sally despised at the South. -Sraa tta 9eeaaoiim lists, who demand tbflr dbfcaaor aw tha plea of feUoarfhipi would .dospiw tha Northern Pemocraey if they were base enough to yield, and. than aaaii 'flee with themselves the National framoerata of tha [South also. •, . There will be no nomination made bare, aa tbara seem to be hoadvocatesof that line of polfeyont-. of 'the South Carolina delegation.. The pro-* gramma it, and it will undoubtedly he carried oat * dost a* the Administration and the signer* of the 1 j“'Boatkarn-Address” neoaunended, to affaarn • hence to Baltimore, -and seek admissive ihta the : ■regular Conrentlon. Ifadmiaaloa be rafaaed there, tho Secessionists wilVimmediately rrgaaisaa sepu- ■ Jrate Convention, and nominate candidate*, for tba IPreaidenoyand.ViceFreeideney., If the} should :be aidmlttad, iba Beeeedoniats will demand a new jplatform aooeptaßla to them, and. be that ie re fused, they wfpjfecfrda again, as at Charleston, and jtetup for IhMnftJvo#. I Wasthere erCr knob cooi/bare-faced, and yet shallow impudence t Why,'these men must sap-' pose that the Convention is oompoeed of (dolts, and cowards, and and nothing aba. ■They most suppose thkt tba stern, triad, tad faith-'■ Tnl band they enooßntered at, Qbuteetss, *Ao, JwMlotbey “.asked nothing bat.what - wan; right, ■ ‘would submit to nothing that waa wrung,’’..have bean, changed suddenly into truckling, tendiam I inch as Blldell and Bright plotted up hern and . there topeek their dirty Unan. "Ulifilkilniila -■ I bondesoeualan withal, '• sad'" hoir emblematic of - ■., —How odotoua Aa arhola'tbtng is ranrirua ciim>:ry WMA iaWiibouf ;» aUio atidv ebove reproach! How marical the proposal soands! It apnoet vanishes with its •sweetness. j Seriously, what do the BobadUe Quattlebums snob aline of policy? They hot trifle E'th themselves, and waste time- Nay, more— ey waste that b/eath which, hot with wrath, when ey find their sew esfcme of disorganisation jbaffled, as baffled it will be, wQliedl into load, disoordant notes for disunion. Not that all the followers of Bhett and Yancey are per se Diaunion asts—by no iqeafis; bat as evil assoeiations oor jrupt good manners, so the misguided followers of .these head conspirators will, by the force of dr icumstances, step by step,.march onward to the [work of precipitating, if they can be precipitated, •“the cotton States into a revolution. 1 ’ They are .now only engaged in firing the Southern mind, j It is significant of public opinion in Virginia that none of the leading Democrats of the State, except ijames A. Sqpdon and Edmund Ruffin, both of [whom are of the extreme extremists, seem to sym pathise with or give countenance to the disturbers of Democratic harmony. At least, I have wot eh* served any evidence of sneh sympathy, and, mask as his opponents may deelatm to the contrary, X am confident that Virginia will vote tor Judge Douglas if he be nominated, as even the Secesrioa* ists predict that he will be at Baltimore. I mast close for to-night, with the remark that I *hJ} send no telegrams unless there be something to telegraph about. Terrible Domestic Tragedy in New AN INJURED HUSBAHD TAXES THE LAW INTO HIS OWE HANDS, AND IS HELD TO HAYS ACTED JUSTLY. [From the New Orleans Delta. June 7.) We mentioned yesterday that Joseph WUUans, charged with the killing of George 8. Howe, the night olerk of the Fourth-district station-house, baa been discharged by Recorder Summers. The following Is the statement made in writing to the ooort: STATEMENT OF JOSEPH C. WTLX4A3|p. I have suspected George Howe, for more than a year, of having designs upon my wife, and X have been convinced for fonr months past that he was carrying on a criminal intercourse with her. He met her at several places, visited my house daring toy absence, and was seen coming out of it at 4 o’clock in the morning. . I forbade him my house, and warned him never to ge there again. He repeatedly retained, and was invariably warned to cease his visits. On Friday, before my arrest, I had Along talk with him, and he pledged himself never to come to my boose again, and spoke in tKe highest terms of my wife’s character. I took a drink with him and then parted, he renewing the promise never te visit my wife. I felt quite unhappy, but did sot know what farther to do About 0 o’clock that night I undressed to go to bed, when a knock was heard at the front door. My wife went to the door, and I asked who was there. I heard Howe say, I want to tea Mr. Wil liams, the d—d rasoml. I then came out into my parlor, and Howe abused rue and cursed me, shook a oano at ms, and said I had been speaking about him and my wife, and that I was ad—d lying-—. He repeated the oath, and, placing his hand be hind his back, took hold of a pistol. I then went back Into my ohamber and got toe revolver I al ways carry with me when travelling. I raid to him, when I came hack, “ Go out, I will tiv with you outside.” He refused to leave—renewed his onrse, and presented his pistol.■ He was beside himself with rage, and was on the point of shoot* lag me down in my own house when I fired at him. My wife immediately seised my arm, and my pistol was twice discharged In the straggle. I noted altogether in self-defonee, against a man who had first seduced my wife, and then come to my domicile to soek a quarrel, and murder me be fore that wife and my Innocent children. I am very sorry to have been obliged to act in this man ner’, and to have been driven to the necessity of sheading human blood; audit weighs heavily upon my heart. But before ibis court and before my country, and In the presence of God, I declare that I was obliged to do It for my own preservation. A man undergoing imprisonment in the prison of Bpulogne-sur-Mer tor robbery, under the name of Aaron, had been reoognhed as'one o£> very des perate band of burglars, seventeen in number, who were arrested in the south of France in 2551, bat all of whom, singular to relate, succeeded in escap ing. This Aaron, who effected his escape from the prison at Pan, was sent back there, recently he was brought to trial before the Court of Assises of the Basse s-Pyreness for robbery and burglary. In answer to the President, he stated that he had passed by the different names of Alexander, Hen ri, Dofoar, Leon, Jacob, and Aaron, bat tb&t his real name is David; also, that he had re presented himself to be a Belgian and a Roman Cathollo, but that he is really a Frenchman and a jew. He said also that he had been condemned In elmoet every one of these names; and that after bis escape ia 1851 he went to Brussels, where he was condemned to four yean imprisonment for rob* beiy, whiob he underwent; that then be went to Germany and to England; and that on returning from England he had stopped at Boulogne, and had there been condemned. Proof was then given of several robberies and burglaries committed by him in 1850 and 1851 ; and among them were these : At Libourne, where he resided some little time, he passed himself off as a corn-cutter, and by af fecting to be a rigid Jew obtained the confidence of a rich Israelite trader, named Delireira. He ended by robbing him of 30,000 f. worth of goods. At Batonne, he brokejßto the shops of a watch maker and Iftcemakar, and stole from one goods to thevalue of 12,000£ t and from the other, 10,000 r. It wes stated to the court that the prisoner had extraordinary skill in disguising himself, and that be spoke several languages with facility. Thejozy declared the men guHfr fthd condemned him to twenty years hard labor- CALIFORNIA HUUS. , Orleans.
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