The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 25, 1860, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ™ v ■ % -- ■ - — — - r - ~ • ~ -
\ . ■#'•• < r, ' , ■
1 *
>«noapa,-i -? f-r
a r b oj* .
iw« (masmn BxaaUt tbon Twa,
.4,2; JV& . . :
, >•_ •■; .y r .
: >.,<K J- r- •*.*>•-:> '* <•.
‘ i;' t&ys.v-j.i ’..^,7?'—.<'\t‘4 o- ■,:> j'.j ft, ,- \
CJpXiQRED TARLETANB*
- .-rfWtfjw , -_ "^■*•'}» ,' B.rtcj. V'-V-'
■ ja'Wttft ST CBMTS..X '
f fl# - 1 , - -
■^B^aotsaqiia^saN;
jnHENE. AND
' d>
'• -m* ■ *■. K.^a«Mi^fffl36«ilffimSfe
> OOMIOMIOirMMIOHANTS -;
• p’ J - -,'4/- " 4;
OTTTT,AIr>Rf,I?»WTA-lVrAr>ia
OOODB.
‘.<4; 3 “j'-t '
MEN’S STRAW HATS.
* 1
HipY*» JBTRAW. HATS.
; V 'STRAW. '•'HAT
. KOW RKADY.
>n{.W_i -. ' k ,- -
y,?; 1 f;/ Vyg^.yaßCTwiT'a'tftrt.'
H. HYATT. .IvU• •
<• i* • S 6HUBGU ALL BS ’,
“ J ‘ £oi« SUatifiituirM' »nd P*t*nt«« (or Uut eltr
PATENT PAPER BOX.
4 TkiußtutMoelsiU ollljra for, ind
' ' ’imbilitt;- Baariagjin'ibiimtd vittiafl* irnifir
j-t •.. ' in
: PhATSOr.IOS PITOHS, !
' hemukotttn
.'’.‘'".Dllllmil^k*«*tk* 108 LOMU* tkia.
•-! aow l»iM»ta««»ti««T*9r«OT»atf <*-
-i- ’. Pitoi»r« will kMf tk*
ftk-MaJ<wia kiiJJ l eftea Sattwaalata ol intar will
1 <uU Mtv&tt mitatu ; wklla t*a '
■»- ; a*ntcr*i eifirlaaU sirtftwan »a* Bftaaa waste*! •■-
; . aot ooafoead lkw# Prtakan irlth
fcr /, : -
: /y
lq-ift V: - >
AW** mriwartW**
" ’;W"
f S <K'4> r,r
; ! ' BS**to^^rtiM,wwi»?»£wtt«Bi?llrro«>»'
v ■ ff£ ttV;
' J ''Wr- TilliiiTi i h»i
thrift.-,.,
~' "Wjj|l|Wßftli(|iFj<p!j!pyjjit fnrWiit ttm rmw Ijfras*.*1 j fras*.*
=Me
J onu
VOL. 278.
! ;pjEi»Tg»;gimWamWG;«OOPB. v >
I; T
LL&i'
•O.WOHBTHUTBTOHT,
- J-; -v ► < -
yrtUnU/cM! tlrouli till wi«u> ud awt nrtiu.UMU
wqmv;-
■|4‘, Uv c v*';,v£ ini vAnmn^a^m.
,\ t,, f. 7n-"r. : <ir v.'
buOßtlhiß, MAxffiiyUtb&SX's.'irUOLß
;p' !? BALE XND &XWitisjg*hXßß, '
j •;;"V
'! «• «MMT«irr sswssi,
/J';-
BLOWERS.
> '-.■' •! . ■»o ••, j
BTBAW BON NETS.
JutoftaW,* ~i
a srusHDU) absortmeht.
“Vi ifflQ3.]o!mEDt &BRO., :
JHU-lIIVERY GOODS,
| Kißo»ictV**«« ■ ’ o»;. V-5. •’ >,-'
i'MOiWuw^mnMKwtO*«itoh;Tt» latter for »I!
T “
•..... -] ;"s#(& I&SMmtiMU, ' :, '. '
; ;
•/-•. ! ; >; •": v: ; =. ; 'pin<A»KLPH[A, '' ".
j£jic^Srtu9i^ : ;iiLi.K ePoot.cotton, oil,
aßsPliEa. ftg ,c«urttoUjr on toad. - , itis-sm
i 'it;-; WILSON
v\'T f -. ; ’K.,'ViDiniiT‘«ji l Amt 1 -
• cKsixktot Bimafr, moohb itpaon,
Opwafew, on wato Private FamlUte.
jViS'.‘.-.<. .', aautcc omen: ~
rFwrtEAfr* BtraoL Trentoi. '«.• J, ■
•: > - IM CKHTKAL KMTAU, Buko, Pa. . ~
:'-■" ■; " - .'.-JalMte
SfEBICIKAX*
.TLf KLMBOLD’S IXTBACTBUCHU.
■*-*' THE GREAT DIURKTIO. ,
L<Mf» of Memory ;> - . Difficulty of Breathing.
UMVERBaCTaSSITUDE OP
> r BYS't'Hi. *• •
. Th^teMm^ l BT‘fl{fcE'u^,' whicll
V ’ J lnvariably removes,
R«» follow Fit.,
PROCURE THE REMEDY AT d*CE.
1 ' •' .Is the great Pmretio,
Ana ib certain to have the desired effect m the dis
eases enumerated. whether ansias-frem
HABITS OF DISSIPATION,
INDISCRETION; OR t/J HER EXCESSES,
uertificaiea of corn of from one month to twenty
Searr stasdiagwilt accompany tb© Medicine, and ovj
•nosi of the inoet reliable and responsible cbaraoter is
open tor inspection. Price JII per bottle, or six for SB.
ffrUvered to any address. Depot/104 South TENTH
Street. below CHESTNUT. ;c23-tf
JN. KLINE & 00;, 116 WALNUT ST.
• J. N. KLINE & CO., 110 WALNUT Street.
J. N. VLINE A CO., 11« WALNUT Street.
■ „ J. N.KLINE * CO.llO WALNUT Street.
AROMATIC, CORDIAL
DIGESTIVE
AROMATIC . CORDIAL
DIGESTIVE
.AROMATIC CORDIAL
, DIGESTIVE
AROMATIC. • CORDIAL
.... .. DIGESTIVE
WILL CURETHE DYSPEPSIA,
. WILL CURE THE HEARTBURN,
' WILL CURE CRAMP IN, THE STOMACH, So.
'Head th, following ofcrtlfioate from Hon. J,B. HOST,
U. S. Marshal. Eastern District of Pennsylvania:
, - Philadelphia, June 4, 1860,
J. N. Kline f Co.— Gentlsmen : A membor
ot my family, having suffered with the Dyspepsia for
severAl* years, wag lately reoemmecded by a friend to
try , your Cord.al: and lam happy to a&v ttjat before
using, the content* of one bottle she could enjoy her
Deals with a good Appetite, without feeling the least
oepayenienoe. 1 take s rest pleasure in reoommendmg
UtoaUwhoare afflicted. ' . „ _ „„
- J,_B Yosf.U. 8.- M. E, D, of Pa,
AEOMATiC DIGESTIVE CORDLA L «-*T his excel,
lent and agreeable preparation ts one of the beat means
improving the appetite, promoting digestion, and
giving strength and tone to the stomach* which hat iet
been offered to the public.
It man old German receipt, and has been in use for
many years in the families or the manufacturers, where
it has proved an invaluable remedy for DYSPEPSIA.
HEARTBURN. FLATULENCE, and CRAMPS IN
ilie .HTOMACHiarisin* from cold or indigestion. All
.'persons bating theleftst tendenoy to indigestion should
never be without it*' as a small wine-glass ful!, taken
hwill cxoiado the poewbillty of contracting
* It |B ooopowd of fifteen ingredients, Bitters and Aro
aaties.and only seeds to be tested to be approved and
T ra plsaaent; beverage, and may be used with
safety# rdoasore, and advantage by. invalids and by
' To be nadatatf the leading Druggists’ and Grocer*’,
Phtup in gnart bottles. Prioe one dollar.
Manu/ama/ed and for sale br __
. .. . J. N, KLINE & CO.,
J leiS-wfmSm 116 WALNUT Street.
WBB.WINBLOW,
jj* 4ff KXPKBIKXOKD NOME AND FEMALE
ftynlflUe, ortaentt to tboattontionof mother* her
SOOTHING SYRUP
r p BO HI LDREN,TEETHING,
•Uoh irbiUj fMilltwottba noaaaa of toethin*, br
mßp&&%ssss?
BHOB* twos ft, BiotWw.it will ti**i«tto youraeUaa
AStf-HEALTH TO JOUR INFAKTS.
' W*kamf«tmi«iißMMi * ittdi uttolf fot overtsn
Mr. in^oonj fit of^U,
6Mr dm! w wo know *o}
H—Haw™—■*«» tmair; whoaMuit, On the eon
te
H:S.BR/Ss?ttS
' U rnntstion for tie fiflSi
! m o'* l *. In altnoat even
10 lasoflanjwfrosi ipaln sod
■ u ™indiV!h*en ot twenty
S JJ ud hM Men M*d with
!#'
inr
asa of thiii Sadlowe, if fM
Vm&flUw Yoiir, f «*cfuH
wap
01»rifi6d Cider
OTIWARt® PAIBLBY B4ALT.-10 Pun
issi^»sas&r
‘{sXt r !- ,'-. ;')V
§BA BATHING.
ATLANTIC CITY,’NEW JEHSEY.
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 6,000 VISITORS.
ATLANTIO CITY u now conceded to be one of the
’iostdelirhtFalSen;tod©TMorU in the World. Its b&th
ifc hnin'rr^l; its beautiful unbroken beach (nine
in )en<o»);i* unequalled br any on the Continent,
we that 4 of.OalteatolU it* air it. remarkable ibritt
TjreeMrite oilitis and fl»bins faoiliti«s are perfect j,
ite hotels elre-weDftirnisiktd* and m well kept aethoep
ji Mewport’a i rSarato*a i while its avenues and walks
tJifta those of any other Sea
£&s&■AND ATI*ANTIC RAIL-
WHARF, Philadelphia,
. Sai^fadd 4P. M. Re.
.turjuni—reach %X», M» and 6.80 P. M.
lire fIAO. . Round for three,days,
‘•168.' -Dietaaoe 60 rallfcs. • the'
whole tecyih of the road../ ,fe|6-tf
f a—jjM B ..:TO;:;PI,EABIJKK' flfßAy*^-
=®PESPB , i’ **9ar*ion from Plytuje!-
r-"'. tic
RetureiM.tek;
ijSl&l
TRnEi4)BAOKSKS.-5,000 boics No. 1
i ' «oW->l.oj Fi,O.C,aok e j.for ™l.
JelS-ltt* : ■ No.»Mortli WATBR Btr«ct.
HUlwMyhia.
ptRKWOEKS 1 ’FIREWORKS !!
A LARGE AMD WEIii^BELECTED STOCK OF
' BRIMJANT FIREWORKS,
or the w&ttttfiohira of 18C0, in atoro and for,«ale,
i 'tVUolosala and Retai I, liy ‘
WHITMAN,
: }•> ii» £'.v,.y 1~: ’. mo market street. '
HOUSE-PirRNISIIING goods.
gUPRRIOK RPFBIQER4TOBB, ,
' Moat Improved kind*.
‘ : CHILDRENS' 0169 AMD CARRIAOL’S,
f ‘ In Ofaat Variate..
FURMITURK LIFTERS,
Very useful ir. eyraadina Carpet, and MaUin*.
WIIiLXAM YAHNA&L’S
HOUSE FURBISHING STORE.
, , Mo. UM CHESTNUT .STREET,
imeaduMiy anoaita tha Aoademy of Fina Arte,
. ayPtf -
SPALDING’S
PREPARED GL.IJEI
“ASTITCH IM TIME SAVKB NINB/’
KCOMOijilf! r g <fns . FIMCI'S I
'-V ■'■ " , ‘
: Aa ncttdtnli .rtiil. iiern, nut in mll-runiniUj
I* no «•*»«• to h»vo <onta QtMiMd
ipWWOiMtwlof j
meets allsuoh «Bprgssoies, and no household can afford
to W without it It if always ready and up to the Attain
ins point There is no looser a necessity for limping
obairs, splintered veneers, headless dolls, and broken
cradles* It re just the article for cone, shell, and otter
ornamental work, so popular with ladies of refinement
and tas(e. ;
_ This admirable preparation is used cold, being che
mically held in solution, and possessing all the valuable
qualities of the beet binet-makera’ glue. It may be
used n the plaoe of ordinary mooilage, being vastly
more aiheeiv*.
“ UBEFUL ilf EVERY HOUSE,"
tt. B. A brush accompanies saon bottle.
PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS.
Wholesale Repot No. 48 CEDAR Street, New York.
Address
Put op for Dealers in Cases containing four, eight,
and twelve dozen, abeautiful Lithographio Show-caud
aooompanymg eaoh package,
XT A single bottle of
t SPALDING’S PREP A RED GLUE
will save ten timee its colt annually to every household*
Sold by all promise! Stationers, Druggists, Hard
ware and Furniture Dealers, Grocers, and Fancy
Stores.
Country Merchants should make a note of
SPALDING'S PREPARED GXAJE,
•n making up their list.
IT WILL STAND ANY CLIMATE,
4M-rawf-y
NEW YOItK ADVERTISEMENTS.
BELMONT AGO.,
banks: kb.
, NEW YORK,
bn, li.tt.ii of Gmdit to Traveller. araHaM. Is
ALL PARTS OP TOR WORLD,
ninouoß tub
*HSRJ. HOTHSOJULD,
o,
ABIE, LONDON, FRANKFORT, VIENNA, NA
PLES, AND TUEIR CORRESPONDENTS
- MHn*
£<OX’S SPARKLING GELATINE,
ALBERT C. ROBERTS.
j«2l. Comet ELEVENTH and VINE Street.,
gLINDS AND SHADES.
B. J. WILLIAMS.
Ho. 1« NORTH SIXTH STBEET,
1. the moot oxteiudro manufaotuior of
VENETIAN BLINDS
AND
WINDOW SHADES.
The largest and finest eseortmont in the olty, at the
lowest priees.
STORE -SHADES made and lettered. Repairing
promptly attended to, , ap§~dJro
OAST STEKL BELLS.
FOR CHURCHES, FIRE ALARMS, &c„
FOZ O ALB, BY
NAYLOR & CO..
Je7-tf 820 COMMERCE Street.
MRS. STILL’S
If* ORYBTALINE LIQUID H*IR COLORER!
A preparation new to the public, but which baa long
been fn private use,.tor restoring Grar Hair to its natu
raipolor,nnpartjnstoitaglo»y appearance,and ren
dering it soft and silky.
it is eptu'alydiffsrent in its nature and effects from
any article now in use lor the same purpose, being a
oleanly guia, nearly as dear as,water, requiring no
Washmi before or after its application, free from tulphur
t any other objectionable Ingredient, mid applied as
asily as an ordinary Hair Oil.
Gan be ted of the following persons:
fW. Z. Harbertw corner Jumper and Pine streets.
. J Fennell, No. 26 North Eighth street. ,
hdmaeTswoaster .Spruce and Eighteenth streets,
Somes Weaver. Vine and Eighteenth streets,
ya-l Thompson. Ml. Vernon and Seventeenth st’s.
Edward GaiUard. Jr., Area, below Seoondstreot,
E. B. Garncues, Coates and Tenth streets.
Ge orge O. Sower, Vise and Bixth streets.
A. H. Bowman, Spruce and Seoond streets.
Oh arles Shivers, osrnoe and Seventh streets.
Ca leb It. Keeney. Arch and Sixteenth streets,
Fo r sale wholesale ana retail by
pyzs Cm • Philadelphia.
'i»tto
iowlfc oorrooti ttoiditr.
ffiOLlC mu) ovtroome oon
hyctemtefmoaiod, emlln
WkttMrlit *riN> from
tSdiAIKSrS
> BotSt roar MrtfßdioM,
ton*. atftno DOtWMA
a rebel-the t will be
? BURB-toJoo-sr the
mily Died, Fall dine-
SBjnmkm
tbs ouuldo vrwftr.
iltoittho. world. Printl-
WI,A JrlMr
4oi
otlu
w
Bnv
»an
vu lt
MACKEREL, SHAD. HERRING. &0.-
lf* 1008 bbts Nos. 1,2 and SlaTge and modfum'Mao
' kereLin assorted packages, of a vory oUoloo quality;
SO bbls. new No. 8 large Mackerel,
. fid half bbls new No. 3J i do,
so bblrnew No. 3 medium do.
fiO do„ new Eastern Mess Shad,
so half bbls new do do do.
WOO bbls new Eastpoifc No. 1 Herring*
860 do do Halifax No. 1 do,
aoo do new BostonNo.l do.
KO do do No. lsoaie Fish.
*fi do prime No.J Salmon. ,
. ttO quintals Grand Bank Codfish.
. 180 Boxes new Berkunsr county Cheese,
EXCURSIONS*
»H HOURS FROM PHILADELPHIA.
(*ttEd»y
t-nfß»lF»rrr... ... „„,7AO A* M.
¥a«Stffi§ggj
FIREWORKS.
PREPARED GLUE.
BPALDINO’H PREPARED SLUE
HENRY 0. IPALLING A CO.,
Box No. MO, Now York,
By the rrou, or BiliElo paokage.
DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES,
PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1860.
SUMMEttREHOiITS.
M ANSION HOUSE, < ATLANTIC 011%
pSsri«&fr“ IBAA ° *|f Houle,)
Tni. Boinse has beat vorr'Mn'oh tmlargea aid lm-
It i.lithtedthroushout wittUM.Newarid fine WaUm
have keeo laid to,the ooaaii,.*liiohwillboTftftt.dat
night, frnm the Hotel to th. witer, by splendidreflect
ing lamps. ; - ,j .1 :
Atteohed to the house (bat ieparats front the main
building) la a lane Hail foe. HTpa and Parties, with a
Sret-clMs loe Cream and Conftuionery attMhed, Oyer
the Hall there are forty ileepinirrootii.TorslaiilegenUe -
men.-Thote isaUa a.plafgtftmd for ohlfdrem well
shaded and onoloeed, with swlna, &d.
■Tpe oatoruig department wii he umlor my own et
peoial soperyfaioni and I trnetthat mj reputation is
snffioientfy established to aatiefy all Hint rty table will
-be unsurpassed. t , v * r
‘ Terms will bo $l2 per weok. :
Transient Hoard ere 08 per day, . -U
■.iCnrriagea attaohjdtotbo.Houit will tain Boarders to
the Ocean frenotoharai ijnrlng bafhln^hours.
«' LIGHT-HOUSE COTTAGE,' NEAR
rnL THE LiaHT-HOUSE. ATsANTIOOITy. Ji. J„
(the neare.t benee to the surf),» now open for the re
ception of Boarders. o o' -
'ffl&mmaszzi
TTNITEI) STATES HOTEL, i
: V.. MILLERSTOWN/ ; l)*IIWIf{ COtWTY.FA. :
.This iMiFknoirn KotejJiiU ban leased bj til® aub
newly furnished. Mtllersbnrg tsiituated Mane or tbe
Boat romantic, regions of-T'ennglvanTni the flusnne
hhnna river flows immediately fly the toe n, and sllorde
fine fishing s the mountain sooner; iaunsnrowed in the
State, Game abounds in great, flenty, afimlln*. fine
North Pennsylvania the town, and it is
Jndaibrooni'nunioaiion trlth Phihdalphie, Wtunore,
f nttsm^rrtir r * ll *•* ** ,ri «i»r»»
; Jnhe roTUM?
UUBEgfipSHtas
B»
TWS HOOijIE^A.I'U.NIIOpITY.
’.M&WPitfH wiiemjnentl* Hoo*e at
;ufnrfiat,mneetha dtaaisJNf lm f Mtoon» Dean
I, toEttedi - refunded, ,Md ;
*4 beitpartof Sfiftt
snettow convenient end decidedly tWp(»MdaV*at home
per Week;' 81.sb per
t H.L.FU&EYtSttparin^eylant. </ .?;/ • jell-lm
f-fEATKHOUSE, >, ; ... , -r <■
V*-- 1 „, r ■- ' mCHOOLEV’S BOJUNTAIN, N. }.,
Innowopsn forthereoephoßof ooßpMy. Cdmnmnt-
Satione by letter will bapifflrptlr etiaw to. ■
i jpSMme. , , ~? CAOWKLU, froprletnr.
BMWEATj
1 lleautilhlly sni oaßwntpnfr locitei at
' ATLANTIC J,
i Boariler, accomiumJatnd on y*a*>i&|H9 terms.
JeX?-3;n M. McCLKKg. Proprietor.
’•ONGRESS HALL—ATMNTIO CITY,
N.- J —Thl» roaoitm, bWit ad'at Atlantia
Cttjr. »iU be reoowied ■SrittL et>«ry maommodation for
visitor, on tha ttfch mktant, by th, aunaeriber. the
l i < K*”£ root 'Otn.bfaoh.ltlfMt, aivioa vartotjdid<rt»w
of lh« Oooan. and fa near tha Fiahfni an? Bafluie Point.
No paina wiU bo npared to accnre the eopfoit aba con-
T la»°»m° fgU *‘ U ' ' . iaoMAa'd.'OAHRUtT.
OTAR! HOTEL, ■? . ; .
OAHRIAOEb TO-bM OBNTB^
a^K.yaaaoaabla
OEfA*BITBING, CAM ISLAID.N- J.-
gORPHOCSE, “ATLANTIC! OITY,KJ.
ftoiii 6ml
r *»««»*«« V**“
* Anew wing.thrtslstarlei highan«i Aei in length,
with verandah luirouodmg It, has Men addraieoßlein
*»*« airy room*, aodextßadinc to Within 60
yard* of the ocean,* one pro*Rest is Afforded
frott almost every room in the house,
i “ in O, n t l^u6ert ' nto tneljaittinK',addltiraal
wH J sreotsd.and nStnermu other im
aud all possible oars wtU to exercised in thegsaeral ar
rangements of the house with a vfeW to the oomfort
andoonvenienpe ofgueits,
The Bathing at Atlantic u uniursamd. and the pure,
“tmoapber* huppovad totSpSSSiliily beuaSolal
i• • , . ~ *. ■ ,
pleas® addre**
the aubrarihor at the Serf Htfuth or at the AahJaad
House, Aroh street, Philadelphia, •
Jedrowfop- v , •- , , , , v v , g, g, BKNSOW.
'IWEMQNJ HOUSE, O»PE ISLAND, N. :
A MriM .SBTOwSISrSi
■utujiverir tftfimtlon will b« siil to
WHITE SULTOUR AND OHALfBE-
V T ATE SPRINGS, at DOUBLING OAF, FA. i
. These Springs are in Cumberland ooonty, 30 miles
;west of Karri ilrarf, andare accessible from ell the East
ern and ttouthern cities by railroad to Harrisburg,
isnee on the.Cumberiand Valley Railroad to NewviUe,
[e termfs * mi e> ,toff to £r ‘‘ n & ** Mfi oteobes, to
, Passengers leaving Philadelphia, Baltimore, or Wash
ington, in the morning oars, arrive at the Springs the
same evening at SP, H. ' .
This property has changed bauds, ted has undergone
a thorough repair; a targe building tea been ereoted. in
whioli are warm and cold Baths, andevery arrangement
has boon made for the comfort and convenience of vi
siters. .<• r • •
Newstabling bas been erectod : homes and carriages
will always be on hand for hire. Terms moderate.
Mails daily.
. For oirculars and[particulars, addrsss tho proprietors,
jeHLlm K£NAGaTk6BER, COYLE.& CO.
’ EBANON VALLEY HOUSE.
CHAS. W. KUHNLE, Proprieto?.° N ' PA '
Summer boarders taken. The house is new and com*
nodiogs. with grounds attached. Sarronndms country
wautiful and healthy-, Railroad communication with
theoitytwioeaday. Charges moderate. Jelfi Im*
The sea-shore-atlantic city.
McKIBBIN'B U. 8. HTEL.
The undersigned, propria-or of the above-named
house, being now prepares to receive guests, re
speotfuur eolioits a share of the public patron
tee. Since last summer taete has been added to
this hotel a four storied w/ng, HO fast in length, con
taining (beside the bed-rooms,} a suite of three Parlors,
for ladies, and two for gentlemenj also, a reception
com, wash-room, and spacious bar-room. Bowling
aldons, Billiard Rooms, and hot and cold Bait-water
lath Booms have been constructed, for the aooommo-
Lation of visitors, and the whole house will be lighted
w.Uh gas. The house hu been newly painted, and, for*
nißhed while theshadedgrounas' surrounding it'have
won putin complete order. Atwell-manned pleasure
yaoht,and an excellent Band of Music/have been en
gaged for the season. J. McKIBBIN.
, jeH-tf •
j COLUMBIA HOUSE, CAPE ISLAND—
• nrtitfi*®M^u 7 ’ New , Jersey.—This large, first-class
? VD te opened, fortho reception pf guests, on
the 25th June, 1840. The House has been completely
r ipaired and refurmsked. A new cooking ranee, ovens,
seam boilers, and every modern improvement added.
Extensive stabling attached to the premises
All letters addressed to the subscribers, Cape Island,
New Jersey, will be promptly attended to.
* ’ ' , LAIRD A WOOLMAN.
James H. Laird, late proprietor Franklin House,.Phila
delphia; 8. B. woolman, formerly proprietor Mount
Vernon Hotel, Cape Island, joia-dtm •
(CONGRESS HALL, CAPE ISLAND,
. MAY, N. J.—This well-known, first-olaes
I«teVWtt.M , i o»l , ga tor the recaption of guests on SA
TURDAY, tbe 10th tost.
fke Bowling Alleys have been removed, and new
sleeping rooms added, since last season.
Jell-gw WEST A THOMPSON, Proprietors.
TTNITED STATES HOTEL. LONG
BRANCH, N. J.«-The snbaoribor takes-this
method of infornilng h|s friends and Die public, that on
and after JUNE 80th his house will be open for the re
oeptionof guests, when every, effort will be made to
please those who may favor him. The house is plea
santly situated on a fine bluff, with lawn in froflt. A
ull yiew of the ocean, goon roods, stablicg, Aro., make
tas attractive As any houso in the country. The com
munication is acoessiblp by two daily lines from foot of
WaTnut-street wharf, viz. ; 6A. M.»and 2P, M. i
Referenoe-Grandy, Wardeu, A C0.,-289 chestnut
street. B. A, Bh6eMAKER,
jefi-am Proprietor.
SUMMER BOARDING.—OLD SAND
SPRING, near Womelsdorf, w erko county. Pa.
, ThB tarie and oommodVms HOTBu AND BOARD
INGHOUSE, at this delightful Summer Retreat, is
now completed, and will be opened forißasrders on the
16th ot JUNK, iB6O. .
tT Coipmumcation twice daily, from Philadelphia
afad.Harnsburg, by the Reading aniLJUmnoa.YaUejr
Railroads. .
tT Boarders received by the week or througli the
Season, on reasonable terms. _
ijeB-lm » JOHN MANPERBAOH* Proprietor.
CARLISLE Tho favorite resort for those
\j who Appreoiato Grand Boene,ry,
wMiTvnm pmm Pure.-Mountam Air, Invigonttms
™ SPRING s K Bathe. Large and Well-vontilated
Cumberland oo!; Ta. Good Society, and a Good
Acccmwcdarions/pr
« 300. ,'For particulars send for Clrou-
TXKMs low. lar.
OWEN, OLENDENIN. * VIBBOHER.
Je7-8m Carlisle Spring, Pa.
BEDFORD SPRINGS.—Thi B well-known
and delightful Summer Resort will be opened for
the reoeption of Visitors on the FIUBT OF JUNE,
and kept open tilt tho Ist of Ootober.
The Hotel will be under the management of Air. A.
G. ALLEN, whoso experience, courteous manners, and
attention to. his, guests, give the amplest assuranoo oi
comfort and kind treatment.
Parties wishing rooms, or any information in regard
to the-placo, will gddroes the subaonber,
- . JNOT P. RK.BD. fleo’r.ana Treasurer,
myltt-am Bedford Mjneral Borings Co.
pPHRATA MOUNTAIN SPRINGS,
*-2 .Lancaster County. Pennsylvania.—This estab
lishment will be open by the Jlth of June. The ad
vantages of this beautiful resort are; Mountain soenery,
pure air, and soft water; every variety of baths, and
amusements; a good stook of Uverr horses.and car
riages. For further particulars call on JOSEPH B,
MYERB, corner Third and Vine Streets; JAMES S.
EARLE, No. 810 Chestnut Street* Philadelphia, or to
til, uropnetor, JOSEPH KONIUMACHKR. Ephrata
Post Omoe, Lancaster Countr. Pa. mrSO-lm
1 ADIE3’ TRAVELLING BAGS
P -. HOMPP ’ IIB
CIOAR
„. , CASES, kONEY-BELTS,
Bwhalii ParBOB. Cakn., Ban>.r»’ Cjboi, Dressing
Cmm. wrlflnr Ds*k., Port-Folio., BiUfttot*. •
Jobbing promptly done- uT-gm
Burning fluid, alcohol, and
CAMPIIENEi In barrels anrt hair barrel*, mann
raotureil dajjr anil for aals.Jr SOWLEY. ABHBUR
WER. k CO.. Ho. Ifl SOUTH WHARVKS.
■OARIS GREEN—For Bale by WETHE
riII * BROTHER, 4T and 49’ Birth SECOND
Btr.at, . J. 22
OPIRITS bbls Spts
T. IQUORIOE—" fcnow's Italian,*’, for saTo
Cl AND CRUCIBLES^-For Hale by
ScOT'r.''# 1 ' * DROTHEH - 4T “* 49
'€\t f ress.
MONDAF JUNE 25.1800.
' Another Atlantic Cable.
, o®l. Taliavebbo F. Shavfner has sue
ceiiaiitl in interesting the British Govenuuont
in his projeot of establishing a telegraphic
eommunlcation from Scotland and Norway
respectively to the Faroo Isles, Iceland,
Greenland, and Labrador, the longest section,
oi cable required being six hundred miles.
Lord Palmeßsiok annouueod in the House oi
Gommons, the other day, that he had directed
a British ship to proceed and take such deep
soa soundings in the Northern waters as Col.
Shaffneb might require. Accordingly, Sir
Lionel McChntock, the most recent Arctic
Voyager, has boon appointed to the com
mand of the iulldog for that purposo.
At the samo time, the old Atlantic Tele
graph Company are ondoavoring to raise
their, now useless Cablo, in the hope of being
Able to repair, or at least sell it. They still
Blink that it is possible to carry the electric
current through eighteen hundred mlleß of.
cable. The thing certainly lias been done, as
every one' knows, during the fourteen days
.Which intervened between the successful
laying of the Cable and thp establishment of
■its. complete inutility. Col. Sn Airs lit, we
femember, published an elaborate article in the
Southern, Literary Messenger, when the At
lantic Telegraph was In its fullest operation,
denying the possibility of any message, evon
the brieleßt, being conveyablo through it. At
that very time, however, several messages bad
bpe'n transmitted. For.example, the English
sdht the American llifcclbrs, a congratulatory
tncßsago of thirty-one Words, (including the
jaddrosses -of senders and receivers,) which
Was transmitted In thirty-flvo minutes—the
{calculation was that twenty words a minute
{could bo sent. The message of Queen Vic
■tob’ia to President BOcdasas contained
inihety-nifad Words, and Was duly received. Hr.
!SaWabl>, Secretary of the Atlantic Telegraph
Company, announced that this message must
ihavo beon received in Newfoundland in sixty-
Iseven minutes,-tint the foot is that twenty
;hours elapsed before it arrived!
! ; Wo have no hopo that tho prosont Cablo will
•eYor bo of any uso. It was Inaugurated with
Ja Capital blunder which may ho tho cause of
its failure. Tho Company, ansious to loso as
;littt« time as possible, divided the making of
: the Cable between two manufacturing Arms,
! Which cleverly contrived to make the strands
of copper wire run in different directions.
When these were united, tho continuity of tho
i wires Was destroyed, and we altrlbtito the fail
iUhi mainly to that.
There is a proposal for a third Atlantic
Telegraph, Yifl the Capo do Verde Islands,
Saint' Paul’s, Reck, and Capo St. Roque, in
South America. A fourth has boon mentioned
—namely, from Franco to tho Aaore Islands,
and thence to the-United States. . For the
first of' these the longest' stretch of cabla
would'bo 1,000 . miles. '■ For • the second as
mnch us 1,400, Captain Sukbabd Osuoeh, a
popular author and able geographer, as well
as sailor, has addressed a long lettor to the
Tijnes, in which ho strongly advocates Col.
Shaffmbh’s North-about telegraph. He gives
it the preferencei “for although a little
longer in the whole course than a direct lino
Would Be, it had tho groat merit of being di
vided into four short stages, the longest of
which was only 060 miles j whereas on the
direct route there is' 6no long stretch of 2,000
miles'of. cable between Valeutia Harbor and
Trinity Bay. -I therefore r.joice to see that
tile energy of Col. SiurrHun is directed to
the'establishment of this North-about Trans-,
'atlantio : communlciation,.heiieving, as I do,;
without being learned in oceanic telegraphy, 1
that, evOn if tho direct line were open and in
a Working comlitioji to : day, it could never do
all tho work whlekthe public of'the Ameri
cans on the one side, qnd that of Europe upon
,tlio other, would call for.”
Captain Osbobs does not seo any reason, in
a nautical and physical point of view, why a
cable should not connect the Canadas or La
brador with England. He says:
“lam fully aware that ico streams down tho
coast of Greenland and Iceland; but Ido nttsoo
in what way that will affect a email oabte lying
upon the bottom of tho spa. 100 fields do not pre
vent tho Baltic being orosaod With elootrio cables;
ioo does not out off communloatlon aoroas American
lakes, or Russian rivors ; nor did it prevent a oable
being carried. round tho hoad of tho Bl&ok Sea,
where in the winter there is no laok of 100. Indeed,
why should it? Floe, or field ice, is the frozen sur
faoe of the [sea; so long as it is attaohed to tho
shore, it is far loss dangerous than surf or breakers
would bo. When it mores about it is afloat, and
whon afloat thoro Is always water enough beneath
it io allow a oable of half an inoh or more dia
meter to lie undisturbed on the bottom of tho sea.
“ Tbo dellcatn shells, woods, orustacoa, and other
animate and inanimate productions whioh oovor the
bottom of the Arotlo Sea In latitudes far north of
whoro it is propoeod this shall bo placed, afford the
best proof that the botto m of tho Northern Sea Is a
far safer and pleasanter place of sojourn than that
surface over which we Arotlo seamen have lately
so often sailed and labored. People, therefore,
when reading our adventures and halr-broadth
esjapos in wooden vessels upon that Arotio Sea,
should take care not to confound the top with tho
bottom of these ioe-enoumbered regions.”
Tho libnvy ico-drift along tho coast of Labra
dor indicates a generally water coast.
The main difficulty of the Sjxatfdkk route
seems to lio between tho point at which about
150 fathoms water will be found on that La
brador. shore, and so in to tho coast. But it
anywhere upon tho bottom of that submerged
shore of Labrador a lino of deep sen-soandiirga
can bo found, with a shallower bank to the
north of it, so as*to form a sort of trough run
ning in an east and west direction, there can
ho little doubt, as Colonel Shaffner says,
that the cable will lio thero as safe as it wfbuld
do across tho Straits of Dover. Captain Cto
noiiK then declares “a floating iceberg can
never hurt a submerged cable, and oven one
grating or pressing along the bottom may, nine
cases out of ten, fail to pick up a pieco of
rope embedded in the mod or sand; indeed,
tbo probabilities are the cable would be
only thrust still deeper into the bottom.
Iccborgs bavo not got claws or creepers, and
I believe the cables across the narrow seas
between England and Europe ruu fifty times
more risk from 'tho thousands of anchors,
creepers, and trawling nets over passing over
them than any cable could do under tho At-
lantic between Hamilton inlet and Green
land. Arctic storms are terrible $ tho clash
and destruction of icebergs may be awful in a
winter’s (lay off the shores of Labrador; but I
do not seo that they will harm a cable lying at
tho bottom of tho sea any more thau an aurora
borealis or any other Arctic bogio would do.”
"What Colonel Siiaffnkr wants England to
do is to' tell him accurately tho depths of tlio
ocean upon a route over which hundreds of
English vessels annually sail, in order that ho
may place a/Cable there which shall connect
Europo and America. Thu is what Sir Ll -
HEii MoCmntock has boon commissioned to.
do.
' Colonel SitAi-FNEit originated tho idea of a
sub-Atlantic Telegraph many years ago. As
far back as 1854, ho visited Europe with bis
present plan of a tclograph from Labrador to
Grcehland, to Iceland, to tho Faroe Islands*
and, with branches, to Norway and Scotland.
He obtainod a concession from the King of
Denmark for tho oxclusivo right te run a tele
graph over the above route for ono hundred
years. Ho also obtainod from
Norway and Sweden. From the earliest esta
blishment of Morse’s telegraph in this coun
ty Colonel Shaffnkr has been praotically
familiar with all tho operations involved in it,
and was tfio person who, in 1847, commenced
the construction of tbo first lino south of tho
Ohio river. Ho has* in fact, been an earnest
and ablo tolograpMst since 1844, and tho largo
earnings of his life aro invested in telegraph
stock. Ho has succeeded in deeply interest
ing tho mercantile interest of Great Britain in
his proposed northern line from Europo, and’
America, and their powerful infiuonco, no
doubt, has been brought to bear upon Lord
Palmerston.
Letter front New York.
oon oirr-poST-omcE SiTB matter finally dis
rosED or • six Thousand tickets issued foe
THE JAPANESE DADO— MISS J. U. DAVENPORT VS.
DION DOUCIOAULT—JHOVXHEKTS .OF THE FUNNY
THOMAS, OF JAPAN .* EE IS CLOTHED a la YANKEE
—ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT OF THE EPISCOPAL
TUXOLOOIOAL SEMINARY. ' ‘
1 Eorretpondonoo of Th»Jgr«Ml
. Mlw York, June 23,18 W.
All dlfneultiCß in rsfersnoo to our new post- office
are adjoatod. The questions relating to title
ajo settled, and the papers are In the handf
G° VBrll ment adrisers. Some' little
lime will be reqnirod for thoir formal exami
nation ; but ibis is merely a question of time,
and a few weeks will see it all disposed of. . Patties
who had largo interests to be affected favorably
by the removal of the office up town, decry th 6
preoont site as not being sufficiently large. In this
they are mistaken. The new edifloe will cover the
whole lot, instead of a little more than half of it
as at present, and will be the largest building in
the city. For all practical purposes, it will serve
the publlo amply for a hundred years to come, and.
by that time our postal system will, doubtless, have"
Undergone such changes as will render a larger
structure unnecessary.
’ Between six end Reten thousand tickets hare
been issued for the Japanese reception and ball,
tb be given on Monday evening neat; One him
drsd were sent to the Mayor, and fifty to eaoh of
the heads of departments. The oommittee pur
port to have saved ohly ten tickets for them
sclvos. Already they (the tickets) have assumed
a market price, ranging from $5 to *2O. At the
pate the committee have gone on In their expendi
tures, tho thirty thousand dollars voted by the
Cnnnoils will not begin to pay the shot; probably
thirty thousand more will be required to liquidate
all the bills. Why, my dear Hr. Press, the Le
jflnds have purchased six thousand lottles of
Breen Seal alone, to be gurgled down the parched
throati of the orowd who will be there. Barrels of
oysters, roosts of ohlokens, hecatombs of cattle, and
ioe oream by the hogshead, are In preparation for
the frolic. Bomo of you had better come orer and
soe it. It will be gor*di>ous I
The talt of Mias J. J&. Davenport against Dion
Boucioeult was tip in the Superior Court yester
day. Tour roaders will remember that, a few
months ago, Mr. Boucicault published a osrd that
Miss Davenport, who was then playing Bffie Deans
in Philadelphia, was an impostor, ana was playing
one of his plays. Miss I), thereupon sued for
libel. The defendant pleaded in justification that
was tbe author of tne play, and that the card
Published by him was a privileged publication.
he plaintiff objected to the answer as being too
general, and made a motion to compel Bouoicault
,to answer more specifically. The court yesterday
granted the motion, holding that the defendant
mast state what facts he relies upon to establish
his title to the drama, and insert what facts be
claims under the privilege of publication, with $lO
costs to abide the event.
Your young friend Thomss, of Japan, continues
to be made the objeot of many attentions, to which
the .youngster has no shadow of claim, excepting
that he Is good-natured, bright, and fond of fan.
This morning he went down to Brooke’clothing
warehouse, And was fitted out with a full suit of
• Yankee toggery, which be will not wear until he
returns home, Sobicguently he went to another
store where some proaigal citizen presented him
with a policeman’s club and belt.
The annual Commenoem ent of the General The
ological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal
Churoh will be held on Thursday next, in this
city, at St. Peter’s Church. Bishop Atkinson, of
North Carolina, will deliver the charge to the
seventeen graduating students. On Sunday. Jaly
la in Trinity Ohurob, Bishops Da Lanoey, Chase,
and Atkinson, will ordain their respective candi
dates. The annual sermon before the alumni will
be delivered on Thursday evening noxt, by the
Rev. Dr. Vinton.
Letter from Lake Superior*
[Correspondence ot The Press.!
Superior, Barb Superior, June 16, 1860.
Tbo export of lumber from the sawmills arouad
Superior goes' bravely on. Tho sohboner Fretta
has made three trips to Ontonagon. The schooners
Chippewa, Ford, and Sargeant, one each to Portage
Lake. The steamer North Star In two trips carried
away 400,000 shingles, 340 bhls. fish, 23 head of
oattle, bales of for, eto. Tho propoller Ogontz
now runs regularly betweon Superior and Portage
Lake. On her first trip she took down 130,000 feet
of lumber and 130,000 shingles for the mining
towns. The Captain intends, I believe, to lay up
this winter in'our harbor; if he does, it will be a'
great accommodation to the fanners of St. Paul aud
the Upper Mississippi, and prevent in a measure;
the Importation of oattle, grain, ground feed, eto., ■
from Illinois and Ohio. The Ogoutz charges only
five dollars from Superior Ito Portage Lake, over
300 The fare from Portage Leae to Dotroit'
and Cleveland (so great is the competition now) Is,'
I hear, from five to seven dollars; steerage pas
sengers are taken iaoob less. I oaanet, give the'
prioe of ileketf from Cleveland and Detroit around
Lake Superior daring the grand pleasure exour-'
sions. I presume tho boats will take families for.
Jrom twenty to tweuty-flve dollars a head, and,
probably loss. The trip will occupy ten days, dis
tance ovor 2,000 miles, tickets good for a month or
two.
It affords me great pleasure to state that present
appearances indloate an abundant harvest in re
compense for the efforts of the few farmers of this
plaoe. I trust (hat they may be able to supply a
number ef the mining towns this fall with a va
riety of articles. During the month of May, 1860,
the Bteamboats brought up to thesa towns 7,920
bushols of vegetables, 141 tons of hay, 4,419 bar*
rels of flour, 40,678 pounds of butter, 423 beads of
oattle, &0., besides merchandise worth $1,195,625,
(2,931 tons 500 pounds.) The canal finished its
principal repairs, and was opened May 11th.
Amount of tolls recelfed, $2,712 38 ; number of
passongers, 2,137 up to June Ist. Upon compari
son of tho items, I find that merchandise, provi
sions, Ap , do., to tho amount of $1,472,000, were
imported for the mines and towns of fhts lake, as
per tho official report for the month of May. White
the exports of Iron ore, pig iron, blooms and bars,
faidos, fish, peltry, furs, anil 1,210. tons 689 pounds
of copper amounted to about $735,918, showing a
balance against tho lake for May of $736,135. If
we could only havo a railroad from the upper Mis
sissippi or St. Paul to Superior, the quostlon would
soon bo derided whether Minnesota prodoco shall
supply Supericr or (hat of Illinois, Ohio,
and Mlohigan. Deport says that tho new directors
of the Saint Croix .and Lake Saporior Kallroad
Company will certainly visit Hudson this summer,
and decide upon their futuro coarse. It is evident
that thoy will not relinquish the million of aores
granted by Government. “North Shore.”
The Citv op Nauvoo— The Prophet Smith’s
Family. —A Chicago delegate returning to bis
homo, visited the rains of Naavoo city, and gives
tho following description of it:
A vast extont of ground is covorcd by tho ruins
of this city. Streets beautifully laid out, wide and
spacious, macadamized and in good order, afford
evidenoo of good tosto and systematic design.
Numbers of large briok houses, with doors gone,
windows brokon, and partially unroofed and use
less, in every senso of tne term. A large un
finished briok hotel, with marble cappings, is in
the centre of the city, a very picture of desolation
and destruction. The site of the town is unsur
passed by any on the river. It is most admirably
adapted for tbo wants of a large city; access to It
is etisy, by land and water ; tho oiimate is genial,
and the general condition of the place healthy.
Binoe tho departure of the Fronoh, the Germans
have flocked there in crowds, and now occupy the
greater portion of tho eity.
Young Joe Smith, the son of the prophet, is
twenty-sis years of age, and occupies the house in
which bis father first lived. He believes, os did bis
.father, in all the Mormon doctrines, except the one
whioh countenances the plurality of wives He is
a justice of tho peace, and ltve3 on his property.
His house resembles an old-fashioned, gable-ended
New England farm house, surrounded by a noat
Slot of ground, thickly studded with trees. In tho
rawing room hangs a portrait of the old prophet
himself, whioh looks just as he did, oow lick and
all, twonty ago. Mr. Smith, is highly;re
spected by his fellow-townsmen, on whom be dees
not attempt to obtrude his opinions. Bo does not
hold a groat deal of landed proporty here, though
he has available means elsowhero.
The rcliot of Prophet Smith some time sinoo
msrriod a Mr. Bialheimer, who. with her, occupies
the house from which tbo first husband was driven.
Ho is considerable of a man. and “ knows bow to
keep a hotel,” that beisg tho present occupation
of himself and all that remains to tell the mourn*
fal talc of old Smith, the defunct. Tho hotel in
which they entertain the travelling weary was for
merly the headquarters of tho faithful. The alarm
boll still hangs, though ropeless, in the belfry, and
the evidences of the Prophet’s love of style are
many and varied. A flno grapery is in full growth
at tho side of the bouse, and the only deoent or
chard I have soon sinoo leaving Chicago Is in the
rear. Tho lady is about sixty years of age. Bbo
has a fine figure, portly and fair, and is evidently
a kind-hearted and benevolent lady, who is tino
turod a little with the spirit of the traditional
Yankee, and who agrees with the Scriptures that
it is cot good for m an to live alone.
A Jaw Bomb Three Fret Long.— Tho Indiana
State Sentinel of tho 18th, says of an immense
jaw bone recently found in tho bod of Shawhoe
creek :
“ Tho bone, as wo before remarked, was found
in tho bed of tho Shawnoo creek. One of the tooth
was observed sticking above tho surfaoe of the
gravel by a boy, who dug it out And took it to Dr.
Marsh, of Attica, who purchased it of him. The
dootbr forwardod it to his brother-in-law, Attor
ney Genoral McDonald, $n whose offioe it now is.
It is evidently a section of the jaw (inferior maxil
lary ) It Boems to havd been broken off near the
symphisis mentor, or obin Near the broken end
is a fissure in tho bone, apparently tho sookot of ft
tusk. Tbo longth of tho bone is 36 inohes, 81
inohes wide, by about the same depth at the point
where the teeth aro sot, decreasing in volume both
ways. Thero Ate two teeth, loose in the sockets,
the first ;0 inches long by 4i wide, the other fit
inches long by 4} wido. The enamel upon the
teeth is perfect, and their aoutenoss convoys the
impresrion that tho subjeot was quite young. The
bona unquestionably belongs to the mastodon
family—a calf at that, and were it living to-day
would surely tako the premium at our State Fair.”
TWO CENTS,
Letter from Boston,
ißorrespondenoeof The Frem.) ,
s ~ , , . . Bostox, June 21,1860.
Ere this appears in your columns tho Baltimore
Convention mil probably have settled’thrqnestion
whether new life is.to be infused into the -Demo
cratio party, or whether Northern delegates mil
yield to tbo demands of tbe Administration co
horts,and thuf allow Mr. Lincoln to achieve an
espy victory.
Tho Convention has it in its power—by nomi
nating Dougin*—to arouse and animate the Demo
cratic forces of tbe country to a Contest that would
terminate in a brilliant victory
Let it. however, east him away; disregard the
wishes of the people; plaoe in 'nomination a quiet
man; ssonfico him whom we revereooe almost- to
adoration, to gratify the malice, tbe personal ha-,
tred, tho bitter malignity and envy Of Jamas Bu-'
ohanan, and It will send a chill through the vs ml
of every true and honest Democratic .breast,, and
place the cold band of death upon the vitals of tho
oboe great and invinoible Dsmooratlo party.''
; Tbe meetings that have beeU. held during tbe
past week in Lowell,Lypn, Natick. Townsend, and
other oitlea and .towns in. this Commonwealth,
havo but reaffirmed and’endorsed tbe sentiments'
expressed at the great .Douglas -detpoustratiou at
FanonUHall. The meeting held .in Lowell was
iuuoed a most flattering trinmph of ’prlneiple.
■c - resolutions paesed by the meeting were-of
the right port—firm,but without any spirit of Mus
ic v.yk®, re is one thing I regret more then any
atber, it is that of the defection of dsn. Butler. He
h»s many fine traits of character He has been
heretofore frank, manly, and generous. He has
always been ready to extend the hand of welcome
to all olssses. To him, we looked for fidelity to the
last. .In him we placed the utmorfc confidence, and
considered aim f < tree as steel.” But he fell into
the snare set for bis destruction, by tbe Tory men
with whom he how affiliates.
A* themeeting held several weeks ago at Lowell,
Mr. Butler, after giving an account of hia steward
lP*. delivered a very ingenious argument, in
which he Attempted to prove that it waabladuty (1)
to change hisvote from Bougies to Jeff*-Davis.
• After its delivery be choked off discussion, by
moving the previous question upon the resolutions
endorsing his action at Charleston, slid they were
put and declared adopted by tbe chairman of the
meeting. No chance was given to answer Mr. But
ler’S fallacious reasoning;
. At tbe meeting held last week, however, after,
theflon J. M. Kcvanneugh bed spoken in favor
of the' resolutions Submitted/ Mr. Butler was al
lowed the privilege of replying. ’
'But« facts are,stubborn things,’/ and those told by
Mr. Kayannaugh were too conclusive,' too evident,
to all unprejudiced men to be'met by such false’
views of expediency advanced by Mr Butler.. The
resolutions, as I said -, before, were adopted by al
most a unanimous vote. ’ Mr. Fessenden’s (bis
colleague’s) course was endorsed, and Mr. B. re.
quested to use alt honorable means to-secure the
nomination of the “ Little Giant.” It would be
a welcome task to' me to be able to chronicle his
return to Douglas at Baltimore.
. The Northern doughfaces, who are fed by Go
vernment pap, endeavor to gull the people by ex<
olaiming— {i What can we do in Massachusetts?”
“ Massachusetts oaonot east her electoral vote for
the Democratic nominee !” and other like phrases.
They argue that we should allowafewrfwwntoimr
to use the party a* a foot-ball, and dictate what
.they must have, because, at tbe last Presidential
election, tbo South cast more electoral votes than
.the North for James Buchanan. The absurdity of
this reasoning is too'apparent to eudeaTorto refute;
but, still, I am sorry to say that a few are misled
by this sophistry.
Ob! for tbe time when these political mounte
banks shall moot with their deserts, and be
spurned with contempt by the honest voters., The
, day »i approaching —tknr sands of life “ are near*
ly run oat.” 1
Were it not for them Masswhosfett* would- not
occupy tbe political position she now does* These,
men have racked the blood out of the Democratic
it small, and seem determined to make
it smaller; for, if they are tolerated muehJoßger,
tbe party will consist merely of the, postmasters,
collectors of customs, navy, agents, and their re ;
tainers. They will probably bold their Conventions
alternately; at Caleb Cushing’s law office* where
Caleb will, probably lay down the creed, in, the
shape of the latest India-rubber decision, end at
Dr. Boring's medical laboratory, where, I sup
pose, tho learned' M. D. will endeavor to purge
their - stomaoha .of the. filth collected during a
twelve-months’ service in tho political sewers.
It is gene rally admitted that Hon. John 'A. An
drew will be the; candidate of . the Republican
party- for Governor next fall. With such a radical
(but honest) John Brown sympathizer in nomina
tion; w ith the dissensions in the Republican party,
in regard; to the Chicago platform, and with the
Bell and Everett men. in the field, it was confi
denlly.hoped by thr sincere well-wishers of the Be
rn % ratio party that Dooglas.-might-get the somt-.
nation at Charleston. . With him bearing aloft our
banner, victory here, in Massachusetts, was almost
within our reach! -
In anticipation of .cosh * result, we have had
continual accessions to opr. ranks. * Many old
Whigs, and tbe conservative
who.believe with the Hon. Ell Thayer, of this
State, that slavery is a matter of climaU and profit,
and that the people, in, all oases, will decide, pud
should be allowed to decide, this and altothevmat-,
tetarfalaUag to their domecti* Affairs
wajv-woolo rally to tbesupport of Mr* Dqvum»u
nominated.' , ■
Jf wo couM Sot ohrry theStoto, at least eavariti
of our CongPMftiowri.dUtrictowuuki'.b*redaemad.
The FKtb, for instance, now represented by Hon.
Anson nurlingame, would be oerteirr to return a
Demooret zfoxt fall. Bat, unless we have Douglas,
whoever is nominated the Republicans wifi be
elooted- .. ' .
Mr. Burlingame would 1( walk right over the
course;” for, if Douglas is defeated at Baltimoreby
base tresobery, the enthusiastio. young Democracy
will flock to the banner of Burlingame, and re
eleot him. They will remember his defence of the
friends of Douglas in the last Congressional elec
tion, when the Administration were leagued with
the Republican leaders, endeavoring to erurh the
“ Little Giant” and his friends. Thatdefenoe se
cured his election, for many of the friends ot the
Illinois statesman would not lend a hand to defeat
one who so nobly oast away bis political prejudices
and spoke the truth in regard to the .honesty of
those who, in the hour of trial, stood by their lead
er. Of oourse, most of them voted for the regular
nominee, tbe Hon. John T. Hurd, who was con
sidered a Douglas man; but, Ahe did not come
right straight out , take off his ooat, and go to
work, the result was, after a hard fight, Mr. Bur
lingame got elected.
How is it now? These men that we sent to aid
in nominating the only man that can lead us to
viotory—the only man that can keep together the
party, and draw strength from the opposing par
ties—have, some of them, proved recreant to the
trust reposed in them. These traitors have kin
dled fires that will never consume. Difficulties
havo arisen between those who before were warm
friends. They have distracted tbe party, helped
the enemy, and disobeyed the will of their consti
tuents. There will bo a fearful reckoning for
these tricksters!
When the names of Buohanan, Cushing, Loring,
and Riley shall have sunk to oblivion—when (bey
will be remembered only with the same feelings
that we now remember Benedict Arnold—the
name of Douglas will gild the pages of history, be
revered by every patriot, and mentioned side
by lido with Jefferson, Jackson, Clay, and Web
ster!
I have read an abstract ef Dr. Loring’e speech
at Baltimore It is what might be expected 01 ono
who was formerly a ranting Abolitionist, then a
pretended Douglas man, now a traitor and a feeble
imitator of Caleb Cushing. I should think
Yancey would spurn such friends, for Mr. Yancey,
though misguided, is not a miserable doughface.
Ho avows himself a dUunionist, and is therefore
honest. _ Nestor.
Intelligence from Japan*
The Hartford Courant publishes the following
letter in relation to the reoentdiffionltiesin japan:
“ In these times of alarming rumors from Japan,
calculated to excite apprehensions of the most un
pleasant kind, especially in the minds of those
who have frionds residing there, any well authenti
cated information of a favorable kind from that
region seem 3 so desirable that I take tho liberty
of sending you for publication tho following letter,
ta-day received, by the overland mail via San
Francisco, from my brother-in-law, the Rev. S R
Brown, one of the missionaries of the Reformed
Dutch Church of NewTork, now residing at Kana
gawa. Mr. Brown, who has been at Kanagawa,
with his family and othor members of his party,
for six or eight months past, writes from that place
thus, under dato of April 14, 1860 :
“ ‘ You will hear through the papers, probably,
of the lato murders'*! Yokuhama. Two Dutch sea
captains wore brutally butohered by some unknown
Japanese in the most public street in Yokuhama,
just after dark, on the 2fith of February last. It
was a foarful pieco of butohery. They were quiet,,
inoffensive men, just going out for a stroll in the
street previous to putting off to their vessels. One
of them was sixty years old, and loft a family, con
sisting of a wife and five children, in Holland.
Since that, on the 26th of March, a murderous as-
I sault was mado on the Prince Regent, as he was
proceeding with his retinae from his own to tho
Emperor’s palaco. Several of the Prince’s men
wero cut down on tho spot by tho attacking party
of twenty-two men, and throe of their own num«-
ber were killed likewise by tho Prince’s fol
lowers.
Entertaining the Commissioners prom
tits old Thiiltbbb States.—Tho total amount ex
pended for tho entertainment of the commissioners
from tho old thirteen States, having in charge the
matter of tho erection of a monument in Indepen
dence Square, amounted only to $4OO. Councils ap
propriated $l,OOO for the purpose. The balance thus
left -will merge dnto the city treasury. This fs highly
creditable to the committee having the strangers
in charge.
Caps Mat.— lt will be gratifying to our
readers about visiting Cape Island to learn that
Cants. Whilldln and Taggart intend running their
daily line as usual this season. They have pur
chased, and placed in first-rate order, the steamer
Georgo Washington, and Trill run her and berooa
sort, the stoamer Balloon, tfi and from the Capes.
The first, trip will bo made-by the Washington, on
Saturday next, 30th inst., from Arch-street wharf,
! at 91 o’clock A. M.; returning, will leave the Cape
l on Monday.
| The Passinger Railway Track on
i Ma&kbt Stubs?.—The Weat Philadelphia Kail
: way Company have completed their new track
, from Eighth street to Third on Market street, and
I coihmenoed running on it on Thursday morning.'
! The same day they stripped tho rails from off the
woodwork of their aidlings between thoso points,
I and arc now using them between Third and front
streets. The whole of their alterations will be
completed during this week.
. Resigned their Commissions.—Captain
Robert E- Patterson has presented to the Ist com
rPany of Washington Blues his resignation as the
Commander of the corps. Lieut. Wat. H. Patter
son, of the 2d ootypany t has also presented bi 3 re
signation to' the Corps. Both resignations have
been aocepted by the companies, but hare not yet
been acton on by General Cadwalador*
More Hose for Steam Eire Engines.—
The Sbifilor Hose Company have ordered 800 feet
of 10-inch forcing'hose for steam-engine purposes,
j to be supplied with tho Bliss coupling. The Tivoli
; Hose Company have also ordered a cylinder of tho
I same description of hose.
tWon r CM™°Lons r»lan?'in°the Jffloflto Vm "" T!,e!,<i "3’ CVCl >j n ?; 46 *oma of tho Oon?
thion Con™, Long Manii, in mo tall os tM year. - gtMsm „n who will># in thin oily on their way
adds® toJto.&«, no thaUho rao/W & 'Vothington. A largo turnout ia anti
for $20,000. Pour mile heats is the test to whloh
these famous racers will hare to put their powers. BALLOON ASCENSION. - Professor Loire
The value of the stakes, and tho reputation of the will m*kb a’grand nseension in hls mammoth
horses engaged, combine to make this ono of the aerial ship nn Thursday next, from the Point
greatest raoos of modem times. IkaczoUas Works.
« ‘ Shota wero firod into’the Rogent’o norimor,
and ho was wounded in two places, but not mor
tally. In consequence of this affair, and of other
signs. of a conspiracy part of one of the
princes pf the royal blood, called the Prince of
Klito, against the present Government, occasioned
by the recent changes in the foreign policy of the
country, the Government has redoubled its vigi
lance to put a stop to the assassination of foreigners
as well as to proteot itself agalnstintcrnal enemios. ’
Last week I spont ten' days at Yeddo, at Mr.
Harris’ by Ms invitation, going up a* his chaplain,
and when I was thero honed.® guard of 20
YakunyingSy or armed officers at his bouse. Since
the attaok on the Regent, his guard has been
doubled, as well as that of all the foreign legations.,
Reside this, we aro honorod hore with a guard at
every foreign house e.vcopt one. •
“ ‘ The Government has put up a guard-house at
our front gate, and keeps five Ya&unyings there
night and day. When we go out at any time, we can
have an armed officer to accompany us, if wo choose.
A new official from Yeddo, with his suite, has paid
us a visit to-day, to see if our defences are all
right.’
“ Hoping that the above may have the effect to
allay the fears of semo of .your readers, who have
friends residing at Japan, I am*
“Yours rcapeotfully,
“D. E. Babtlett.
“ Asylum Hill, Hartford, June 19, 1800.”
, the weekly press.
Tax
■jmai! (t*t auato,
Ttoe Curie*," '* " - V ; A
Fire •* •* » - »II
Ten *• <• if'iMJ .
{ZStln , S'.-, (tease aggrto^Wff^M
aweutr CopJeg.orover”
eaohgHhffinHKr.) eanh ' • : ■ '
. For a Club of OVU.V* Viu irelm
•straw,,toti.tettes-oMlkoOhk, --
0- Postmutsip «• rsis—red toast HAmta far
Tan Wxkxlt Puaaa«.
cuvroKiuffini.
Issued S*ml-MontMT i» ttM ftr tk* eaHl«s
Steamer*. , " '/t
T HE CITY.
AMDiEMKirra THIS KVWHI*.
eSSrtSJSSSSf ■*»>•.Mkar-nw,-
Tetorte.^ 4 ' 4 - * bo '* ™«1 W
sbo™ Twriitin-
BgSTKUCTIVB Fiek dk Satubpax Apte*-
Hoex—Borxihg op a- Catholic Cacao*,—Un
®*i^ r day afternoon, about fijre o’clock, the Koman
Cptholio Church of the Holy Trinity, at the Worth-'
west corner of Sirih and Spruto streets, whs dis
covered to been fixe on the northeastern slope of the
roof, which w&g'of ootAgonaf tons. At the
v the fire was discovered, the Her. Mr. Carbon, the
pastor of the ohurch, was fqfb* confeasional bez
iaftd some six or eight persons were in the chnroli
attending service. One of the teachers In ffe ad
joining building, bearing the cry of Are,
into tbo church, and as he approached the altar,
in the eastern end of the building, the lamp whieh
was suspended from tte caiiing by a ropo Ml with
a crash; the', parting to the catling.
From this circumstance it.wa* discovered thattie
fire, which most have commenced in the roof, had
worked ltd way thrtugh the loft befbre ltwas sees.
Tbe firemen were' toon on the ground, hot -thw'*'
fi&mes had obtained-tueh headwav that it wee. •’
found impoeebieto eavefhe- touldlng. The roof ■
Ming old and dry, the flames spread rapidly, end '
the whole waa one vasE"sb»et'of flame. acdit was
with diffistdty thaflhe altaffarfiitfirwdHd efpotot- c
ments were removed before thV ceQmg began to
give way and fall in,heavy flak* of fire* A Urze
oil paintiog Ifl the rehr of the'alter wet ec€ toom
[the framh-end efisried'out uninjured, z The firemen
worked manfally, inside the building, and several
were injured by the faSUnf‘embers, bat, notwith
standing thlr t ’ they-stood their greuod/aad the po
lice, in some instance*; were compelled to
pipes out of the hands of the men in order to force*
: them out of danger. .:. .
The firo burnt vtubbomiy for nearly three hears
but it vu confined to the ehnrch and did not spread
to tio surrounding proj»rtr. ttithths dMtrestton
ot the ceiling of tae ehurok ms Imt tbe fie DMal
inguf the i-TriDitj/’in tbe centn. Tkls eelut
,iog, witb . ttie &eseo-work on tile side walls, cost
$2,200. ' - 1
The four stained : glass windows la the aastare I
end of the building wore imported from Eorope, ~
and cost originally about $5OO. ~ /
Strenuous efforts ware nude to save the omxif- '
but though it was not injured ranch by tfce
damage from: water will render the '
nearly valueless. „ , ' '
Nothing remains of the bufldtog but the bare
walls. ‘Tnexw was no insurance on .the pwintiims
and furnlinre, and.the less in this respect is eS
mated at about $6,000!
On the building there waa an insaraaee cf $19,-
000 in the. Pennsylvania Fire lawn ranee Company,
and this is. more than sufficient to jrestontae
church to.its former condition, except thepaintinca
andsiainedglfts*.’- '. *• r
The origin of the fire was the subject of mwah.
comment around the neighborhood, owing to the
foolishness of certain parties, who persisted in as
serting that the church had been Set on fire.
But the. cause can be traced-to tke uwof fire
works The neighbors and police had. during the ’
day, frequently driven away beys vfca weiw
amusing themselves by setting off. chaeara and
11 doubla-headed and up
doubt that some/portion of these erratic finwnrk*
had lodged on the roof, and slowly made-iia way
into the loft, directly over the altar, j*d ibdtdmit
make Itself known untU fanned by the diwughi,
and then the smoke came pouring out'adder me
eaves. Almoet at the same moment that tha aek*
was discovered, the rope hohiiag tho lamp ever the
altar gave, way, no doubt bring banted above.
Her. Mr.-Carbon was first ‘ apprised of the fire by
the falling of this lamp within a tow toetof Um,
, while he was in,tbe epotosrional boxt
6 Tho members of tbo.ehunh who were In or about'
tbe buildlcg at the time are Mtisfied that the fire
was not the work of derign.
- Tnis ohtuch U among the oldeat church edifices
in the city, the corner stone having been leM Octo
ber Bth, 1788. ' It has been wHt ae a plaee of wor*
ship by the German Catholic* from the the
buuding was finished down.to.the present r day,
without any interruption; except dunng a period
of about two yean and a half, (from Iftorto 1854,)
when there w«a difficulty between thf trustees .
The controversy was earned into court, and during
this time the ohurch was closed. ' All the matters
in dispute’were amicably aetlled. .
Ths Tsx Thousand Dollar Tavrwaua
Bail Cash.—Several months,ago. tho recognizance
of Gebhard Harris, who became nail ia
of $lO,OOO for Ephraim L. Snow, whe was charged
with receiving rtoien geeda, was forfeited, as Snow
did not appear, to stand his Utok. fiuhaaquatUy
• Snow was tried did oonvktad, and thea
Mr. Hairis-endriiTored to have - the rtocguisaaea
Thii. was raristod kyjtesssa. Harmaff,
Beaver, A Co , and others, whoaa staras had aeen
entered and robbed, and who elaiaed w-'fatamt
SiTbi fiaacf 9i« t o«b. -Thelaigeaiu the 7 Qaactar
SeatidgiMCatod tomtit* aasa weaMxriad
to Jhft jtapiems) Coiit n nfi* the actiea of the
QahrUf Be<riow'waa r «mißed,' arid Mr. Haarie
tonldMuwrif arthafikirpzaiipeet ef beiagmiaw
$lO,OOO, to-eay nothing of Ha. Mm a?
cation has been Israeli, and the sheriff ordered to
collect the money. {ht EuZßit, who
represented Messrt. HarordfUA Co., eame
.into the Quarter Seuiops and steted that the Dis
trict’Attorney bed ofireoted the sheriff to proceed,
and under the oireuastaatos Mr/Baltiit asked tor
a rule upon Mr. Mann, to sbeqr cause why his. (Mr.
Bullitt's) name should not be entered on the record.
The kale was made returnable Saturday next.
What it Takes to Feed Us.—Some idea
mepr be formed of the immense quantities of pro
visions required to feed the ix>habitants of a luge
city by examining the records of the amount of
provisions sold weekly in but one of the many ex
tensive market houses of our city. At the Waa tern
Market houie, corner of Sixteenth and Market
streets, there were sold by botchers, during the
week ending on Saturday last, 80 head of beef cat
tle,s39 sheep and lambs, 103 oalves, aud_ 132 hogs
—total 814, for.the butohers alone. In addition co
this, tbe farmers sold 127 sheep and lambs, 37
calves, and 17 roasting pigs, making a grand total
of 1025 head Of live stock alaughterra to meet the
demand of their customers.
Eke cattle slaughtered were of the finest quality,
and averaged BCO pounds per hand, making 64,600
pounds of beef. The sheep and lambs made, about
21,560 pounds, the 103 calves about 15,500 pounds,
the 122 hog 3 about 25,000 pounds, 17 roasting pigs
650 pounds—making a grand total of 127,369 pounds
of meats disposed of Betides this, there were
5150 pounds of meat sold which had been sent there
by the butehers of other markets. There waa a
corresponding amount of vegetables, and 5,608
pounds of butter, besides roll and lamp butter dis
posed of.
Proposal to close Drug Storks on Sun
pat.—On Friday evening, a meeting of druggists
and druggists’ clerksvraa held at the hall of the
College of Pbarmaov, Filbert street, above Seventh,
for tho purpose of discussing the propriety of clo3-
iog their drag stores on Sunday. No plea was
agreed upon, bat tbe general sentiment of tbe
meeting was strongly in favor of the measure. The
employing druggists expressed their readiness to
enter into any measuxfi that would relieve their
• clerks of part of the incessant confinement now
» undergone. It is probable an agreement will be
made to keep open only part of the day on Son
day.
The Parade Ground.— The improve
ment of the parade ground, in the rear of the
county prison, has been retarded by the owners of
ground adjacent to it refusing to accept the award
of damages assessed by the jury appointed by
court. Another jary has been appointed, who will
meet on Friday noxt, to decide upon the matter,
and their decision will be final. The object is to
square the lot with Eleventh and Thirteenth, and
Wharton and Reed streets As soon as the matter
of damages is settled, preparations will he com
menced immediately to improve the ground, pro
bably before the summer is over.
The .Annual Regatta of the Sohuyl-
KiLuffAvr The annual regatta for second and
third-class boats of the Schuylkill Navy, took place
on Saturday afternoon, above the Fainnount dam.
The first race between the four-oared boats (out
riggers) Intrepid and Lucifer resulted in the Lu
cifer being declared the victor. Time, 19 minutes
41 seconds The next race was between the six
oared barges Falcon, Irene, and Cygnet, which
was won by the Cygnet. A large number of spec
tators crowded tho heights of Fairmount Park, to
witness tho races.