4 *^llSSf& KKABoMY GOODS. If ' . i i sfecisTl'^Hoi'^'i- y -'* T -,;"-'j, r .> ‘’*‘-1' : ~ \ f ' ■• •" . . i» i ' : Vj j/-‘*AiOTC';)HU| MANmtiAfl./T/j. ] ■'■•'- ''-‘'.’-r; garments.: r. ’wimaTFiwat the aiwaowtt 3 WORK-R 6 O MB -. :.• sraar irojurara. 'i;, ’ /, POOPER & OONABD. ' num I W ARB tJ K T O N . : i in _ '•.'. . -• 1 MS 80UTI1 BSOORD STAIST, Mnr Bprwa, j ''BaaJohnMaifiia ': ; ; / : 'i Cfetbß®) TARXETANB. F«»aaa»tii*,>'. - '■■ i - - CLASSES, nLUICS, kc.ifcc.,, -. _ .„v?'.' i .'; l a l i»«V'. .' . iaJMti ta CENTS PBK YAkp to st gents. ; | MSB LINENS.—A fresh inroiMof I’gsaaa INDUCEMENTS T 0 */M*JwQK’’P'U£B! * u m*FS 0001 si; 1 HH&m* •i3feM r . ' GENT«> FVKnSHI!(« HOODS, QEORQE SPENCER. JR, , 01B!B’ftnunSHOta, GOODS , . no.bs* chestnut stkkkt, < 4 *“s'" l *» Sbuui omitn Oninnnn 'ln ahran. la Stain a Jana atawk of '■‘7-fine ffitts,-'.,lr ■r ,: ‘\ ties, ..- 00LU4IS. ~ STOCKS, .TOPE! SKINTS, ’. .- HOBJEMY, iDNAJjSjgfc .V- OLOVBS, JMo ' ' - r **mi| sliliaaartlolala Faraiakia* lias,er tks U *NJ*»ggJ*fcaaia» itaaLOWESTFEIGNS. - JJSHLKMAN’S CKAVAT STOBK V ; MOVED '/ v ’ TOTHKN.W.OOI.OFSBVEHTHKHD CHESTNUT. , '’'CNAWJS.'WSWS.TUKir jUUEXitDCOIiLAIB ; -: GKHTLBJIKirs FVSHISHINB ' - •••'•sewisf •• ’ " ■ ' ■ v '■' iu. Kotos-unm* ••'. . 6FpR^9. ; v coiu SEVENTH jSRD CHESTNUT, >”V" ' ; 1 \ PROCLAMATION 1 U ;; J.TT. SOOOT^^^^^^ina- coxsmioit aouiEs. grannr, HAuptD, * hutchhiboh,, ... , wo,mcigmiiT n., . nowinsaioir hkkobutts . wobt*b«al»of • phila •; OOODB. ■kHn [|ATH! HATH! HATH! ; MEN’S STRAW Mats. | BOY’S STRAW HATS, j KVSftY DEs[iuß(.K STYLE OF : ! STRAW HAT > WOWEE4DY, ; TJNOOIiN, ■ ; ; :' WOOD. A NIOHOIB; ; mm-k . m okmtwdt stmt. j HYATT. . * 0H tfBOH ALLSI, -! i ■< .•*o!a: IbuHtfMtam/uU PWtntoa lor tfcjs oftr \ v ;L’ , ot yn ‘ \j ■ ! -V *W t*Wtr. "treWUi, uf wltk la (tar aMairfa*- la»a.tlKaa*«iiia«tMafitat4aaMannua<>t ■-£?■; STRONG CORNERS. i ; WpOittea ««#ti' J«M»; Kf.. 'mw J tm''Jm£a9iai'.. MBICKAirrSIK WAWTOFBUNIC BOOKBoaa ! Saaaf»B»a ftaai * fry aaaanor aaaotttacnt meda from LlMa«tm*,btaW«(i<*mr. • • WASBAfftn At to W PKlimt. •' .rm. f. Mtmrffir * «w>a <■>. IWWffOEE, .. Btatbninr UtMfrMknti *a* Lattar-Fma Fiinteta v ; rtssoaTita latwia. ■ -v . . , " •_ .• Hoi MJ OMBTMUT Stmt.". ' BELU3. ■/{ Ftifc <6IVUIH l Htt* ill ASMS, . to., -' NAYL.OB A CO* S3* OOtnORCIS SMM. .ft FIREWORKS, JgRIULJANT " fi»ej-wo bkb •• or ! - ■ - ~, BDPBBIOR QtAlISr, FRENCH, . .. , ; . AMERICAN, AND . BKY.ROCKBTS. CHINESE “ : 'MOAN Candler, . J COLORED STARS, WHEELS,-' »n■ ntiiii i. ~ - - FLYERS, ROSETTES, ... ... • FIREMEN’S TORCHES, ' , TORPEDOES, FANCY PIECES. ETC. - .i -H9 OUSELM, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, BY E. & WHITMAN & CO., . BEOOND AND CHESTNUT BTREKTB. ; piMwuans i Fireworks m ; ALARMS ANDWSLL-SBLECTED STOCK OF BRILLIANT FIREWORKS, i Of the naunlaoture of isto, in •tore and for sole, Whbleexle ead Retail, by j STEPHEN F. WHITMAN. i •■-rtSPAlato MARKET street. HOI'SE.FI'RSISHBG GOODS. gUPKBIOR REFRIGERATORS, MoetlmtroTfdklndf, CHILDRENS’ eies AMD OARRUORH, lu Gr»at Vanstr, FURNITURE LIFTERS; Veriaeefsl in Siraading Gtneta aud Mama*. WILLIAMYARNALL’S HOUSE FURNISHING STORM. He. INO. CHESXNVT STREET, Immediately omrita the Academy of Fisa Arts* apgfrtf ~ PAPER BANGINGS. YQ CLOSE BUSINESS. HART, KONTGOHEHT, ROO., ■O. ns CaHREKCT STEER, iriUWH •u.ttnahfUivtßtaiaMßaxlainrlßi.tlMlr ••-T ' ImiMtaf PAPES HANGINGS. ■Meting of every vxrletreouiieeMd with the bneinMe, AX'SRKATLrKKDUCKDFBICIS. m frenomfapemaT m per cent, be c ! LOW COST. Mm, naßu Mr«iM ltem«ia crtsnM bargains. .. - , iwf. LOOKING GLASSES. Looking-glasses, PORTRAIT AND PICTURE FRAMES, ENGRAVINGS, OIL PAINTINGS, Ac., fce, FAXES 8. EARLE A SON, IUTORTSRS, MANUFACTURERS, WHOLt . BALRAtW RXTAIL DEALER®, BASLEB’ GALLERIES, - »*• CHESTNUT STREET, .. / ; „ , Fhilx^elyhlfc MILLINERY GOODS. pKJENOHFLOWER^. ■ STWA s^^S|iNyi' T S.- laatOWMl,* r A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT. : THOE. KENNEDY A BRO„ Upl-Ma ; No. 7U, CyBSTBUTBTRIZKT. p ! -V SEWING MACHINES. . JJABRIS* BOUpOXR v SEWING MACHINE. Saw* fidln two nools without the, troob'e of re* wijrfinjn runa with little or ao note*. yyHEELRR ft WILSON : SEWIND MACHINES. , JUSBY 00Y, Afoot, M CDENNOTSTREET, SECOND FLOOR, Itoohioofl,vltk Orerotoro, on lire to Frir»te Famitloo. jnun oyyicoti 1 Wait RATE UnM. Trento*. 11. J. . M OKNYRAL BQ.VASB, Bootes, F» ... . 1 »!»-*■ Utf\l L 6 O X GIBBS' SEWING MA- CHESTNUT Street, PKEPARED GLUE. gJPALJDINO’S PREPARED GLUE! •■A STITCH IH TIME SAVES MIKE." .• n r i V:«« n» ‘urnm*. UIBPATCH! ii «cci4ni« «<U haprmt mm to otli-niHtelil remtltM.it to roty dooireblo to k»ve tome obe.y and oo*TMie*t w»F lot reyoiiliw Formlore, Tor*. Crooke IT. to, SPAEDHSa’B PREPARED SLUE oMOto all muli noriaMioo, and no howohold ore offotd toholrittwflt It. It i. alw.j. r.s4y tad Of to th. «tiok~ too yoiot. Tk.re it no lomor o noonoity for Umyi&o okolre, oylistirod vonooro, hoodloaodoUi, and broken imdlaa. It la loot too article (or oono.ih.U.onilothor otaoi—mol troth oo ooyular irith lad/e. of refinement oaStoata. ' WoadairebUoreoaration lo mod oold, boins cbe- MMoUr hold In oototiofl, oad ooaooooinc ell tba rateable IMlitiM of the boot, bineb-nrekoto’ clno. It mar be flood; the flora of otdinuy OMeiioco, boino raotlr ■ore aahooiTO. • ■ «, USEFUL IH EVERY HOUSE.” N.B. Abrnikuoomyasiooeaeobottle. PSJC®' TWENTY-FIVE OEMS, Wkoiooate Doyot, No.it CEDAX street. Now Y»tk. ' - Adtteao henry o. lpauukq a co., Box No. MOf.New York* Pot no for Dealore In Ohm con totems fonr.eicht, aad twolva doaon.abeootiTnl Intnot raphio Show-cabo 'aoeoaotoliTiat float toeSoce. ■■ *^ - A §p!L t PUPA BED HLUI *IH MVe tontimflfl tta ooot aanaoUr to evory hoamhold. SoU by all yroininot Btotlonere. Dreniott, Bard varfl and Fonutere Doaloio, Srooore, and Fancy Cun*. Ooonter tfeiehaata ohoeld mako a note of . BPAMINO’S PREPARED GLUB, « matter. eytbfllr Hit. . HEW YORK ADVERTISEMENTS. BELMONT * 00., BANKERS. MV YORK, tan* MW* if Credit to TiavaUflra ayallflbia la AJiL PARTS OV THE WORLD, nobflflß nn ' MESSRS. ROTHSCHILD, dtUB, LONDON, rSAMMroBT, VIENNA, NA jjffgjb AND THEIR COHBBBPONDS»TS rjgftE GENUINE *• NEWBOIiID” HAM, FOR SALK BY 0. H. MATTSON, ARCH AND TENTH BTRRBTBO WOWS OOOMETSB »AND COM nttaltoWuM in »U MAM Oft *-qaAYLBS ifJLoTatio^j^^ ffooM EXCURSIONS. SEABATHING. ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY. W HOURS PROM PHILADELPHIA, ACCOMMODATIONS FOR e.OOO VISITORS, ' ATLANTIC CITY w dorr coneeded to be ons of the Bx»* delightful Bea-iide reaoria m the "’oild. Ita bath ins i* anrarfanad; it, beautiful unbroken beach (nina milai in les,th) ia unequalled by an, on the Coitheut, save that of Oa'vestons lta air Ik remarVAbla for ita drjnaaa; ita sailing and fishing faoilitias are perfect! Its bo a,a'are well farniahod, and aa srellkept satbete of Navrorrtor Saratoga; while its Avenues and walks ara oieaaerand broader than those of an, otherSea batlung ylaoe in tao oouotry; Trains of the-OAMDHN<AND ATLANTIC RAIL ROAD leave VINE-STREET WHARF,Philadelphia, dail, I Banda,a exoepted) at 730 A -M.andlP.M. Re turning—reaoh Philadelphia at aA. M. and 7M P. M. Pare 91.80, Round trip tickets, good for three days, 9tMi to be pure based or exohsnged at the tioket offices only, and not of or .by conductors. D.stance to’miles. A telegraph extends the whole le. gib of the road. Je»->f fißl’aMMß for the sea &zM^tEjadu 08 E - OAMI)EN and « . ARRANGEMENT. On and after MONO AX'. JULY a, trains on tUe Cam den and Aflantlq wtifruh arfoliowa ) Mail train leave* Vine-street wharf..? Jo A. M. Exweta train dloppiog only forWAi - water*.. j..... 400P.M U P. M. Mail tr.ln... <.«p. M. kxprtsi tram .r,:.............6ie A'.M. Aooomraodation from Harlmr 521 AM. , Fare io Atlantic when tickets are purchased before entehnf the ca*s. flfiO. Rrmndtriptiokete (Foodfor /Aws oa si, $l4O. to be purohssed or exchanged at the ticket office pal* a anq not of or by conductors. Season tioietg. _sso. • _,Montbl* iio. tfi. Freight must be ,delivered at Cooner’e Point b, » P.M. The Company will not bo responsible for any goors until received 'And receipted for bv tneir a sent at the Point*, ■ • JKO. G. BJIYA^T, - J*»- cf Agent. fts—S nun FOURTH OP JULY AND GRANp MILITARY ENCAMPMENT-- TO BP.THIiEHhM, via bO«TK PKHNSYLVANIA RAILROAD-txoa - Bionticke* to,BethlehemOOOj) F0R„TBjl«:E OaVB. Jforo tnonjlDx of da; ‘of purehMe, will be issued from the sd, of Juft until the 14thjjf July, from th* tioket omors of the Company, at Willow street and Berks ** V* ra 0P l ?. e Excartion ®2. - These exearsions will afionl an excellent opportunity to parties cesirous of spending the’Fourth of-Juiy in-the plexsantand in teresting town of bsthleljem, with ite mstorio essooia ttons and beautiful soen.ery.or ofvirtting the military encampment of toe National Guardi, or this oily, whion oorpe intends to oampont on the sth of July, in the hu omil the * od reraa ‘ n 10 oarap TRAINS BOod °*'a*T of the THREE THROUGH Leave Philadelphia at 6 SO A. P M. f andsP. M. Leave Bethlehem at ».S3 A M. 920 A M.,anu622 if* 6t - - SLblB CLARK, Agent. TsSlgmsmaamatt ! FOR A DIP IK THE BREAKRRS!-3RAND AN; UAL bX URSIONrf the AMKMIUaN ABBOCI- AripN. tbo BHIFPLKR HOSK ATIsANTIC CISU t on THURSDAY, Julv 6th, 1899 * Penniylvama Cornet Band is engaged for the occasion, r.obet. 61 25 Csn bs J. G. Clothier. Prank ford road, opposite the Vou P«un II tse House; Foster. Beoond nno Mead-streets; J. Pnecor, Fifth, above Chestnut street;'lliomas Mason, teoond and Washing ton st>ee s; uhiffler Hose Hoase. Reerf street, below ge oondp rAlsog at Vine-street wharf on the morning ofthe exnrsion. . The last boat leaves the Vine-street wharf atfio’olook A. M. precisely. - Jy9Bt* oaaaim T() pleasure travel- Eiour.ion fiom Pbiiadel phiato Niagara Falls, Montreal Qnebeo. River Sague nay. White Mountains. Portland,-Boston, Saratoga Springs, and New York. .vfit. Lake .Outarm. Rmr St. Lawrenoe. Grand Trank-Railway. Splendid steamer MaGN ET for flagnena* River, and return to Philadel phia via Portland and Boston or Saratoga Springs. Fares tor the round trip as follows: From Philadelphia via ttuebeo, White Mouaiains. Bos _ ton and New Yo‘k -.A55J0 via Montreal, Saratoga Springs, , 88 . For Exounion Tiokets and VllnfermsHnn as to route, febSnttllSE™ «®M S> W. ooruer of SIXTH aud CHRBTNDTStreets., , CHAB. 8. TAPPEN, jsl3.gi . General Aceut. MEDICINAL. J -N, KLINE & CO., 116 WALNUT ST, • J. N.KLI-E It CO., I*6 WALIkUT Street. J. N. . LINK fc 00. n« WALNUT atreet! ■ j. N HLtNE k CO., tie WALNUT Street. ovmnrnt - 00KDliL AROMATIC DIOEBIIVE . . CORDIAL AROMATIC WBJamvE CORDIAL AROMATIC ' - CORDIAL. WILL CURB THE DYSPEPSIA, . WILL CURB THE HEARTBURN, WILL CURB CRAMP IN.THE STOMACH, &o. Readtha followin g from Hon. J. 8. i OST, U* S. Marshal, Lastern District of Pennsylvania: . .. m ’ Philadelphia, Jane 4.18®). Messrs. J. N. KUnet&jCo.— Gentlemen: A member of my,family, bavins Buffered with the Dyspepsia for several years. vu lately recommended by a friend to try your Cord al; and I am happy to i&t tuat before ÜBiiiir theooatenU of on«> bottle-«he could enjoy her weal* with-a good appetite, without feeling tbe leaat noonvenience. i take meat pleasure in reoommendmg t to all who are afflicted. J. 8 Yost. U. 8. M. K. D. of Pa. AROMATIC DIGEST-VB* CORDIAL-~' f his excel lent and agreeable prepaf&tion u one of tbe bear meant of improving the appetite, promoting digeetioni and giving atrena tb and tone to tbe atomaoh. wluoh haa y et been offered to tbe public. It is an old German receipt, and has been in uee for many y< are in tbe families of the manufacturers, where it naeproved an invaluable remedy for DrbPrPSiA. bkaßtburk, Flatulence, and cramps irf THB 'TOMApH, arisimrD’om cold or indigestion, All persons having the least tendenoy to indigestion should never be without it. as a smalt wine-glass full, taken alter meals, will exolnde~the-possibility of contracting the dyspepsia. - It is composed of fifteen ingredients, Bitters and Aro matics. and only needs to be tested to ue approved aud appreciated, • Tt is a pleasant beverage, and may be used with safety, pleasure, and advantage by invalids and by those 111 health. To be had stall the leading Druggists* and Grocers’, put up m quart bottles. Price one dollar. Manufooturfed and for sale b* . - J. N. KLJNK & CO., JelS-wfmSm 110 WALNUT Street HRLMBHLD’S extract Buoau. -THE GFEir mtmSTJO for Disease of Ih* Bladder. Kidneys. Gravel, Dropsy ORGANIC WISaKNI-88, Ac , Ac. Sufferers -with diseases of thoee oresna experience MAN? ALARMING SIMFTOMB, Among which wjU be found Pam in the Book, Weak Nerves, Loss of cmorr. Difficulty of Breathing, UMVEMAI'IaBSITU&K OF Tili°lS.'ueCUi,Aß 8V8I"M. Thwe diceam or trmptomß, &Ho»ed to ten no, which H&LMBi.Id'B EXl f KAOT BUOHU - .. • . lii • ftriabir rajnove*. Boon followJgyg (,Vawy. Fit.. ■ p oocu »'e tmb « SmVdv at"<s * ok. Diseases of these oraatu require the aid of a Diuretic. KEuMBuLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU „ la the Rreat t iuretic, And is certain to bare the desired eSeotln the dis eases enumerated whether ansina from v _„ HABITS OF DISSIPATION. INDISORE HON, OR O’) HEE EXCESSES, And no matter of now lnnjLitandms. EXTBACT BUCJttJ Is prescribed indusarf Vr the most „ * K^UNt*NT PHYSICIANS. ' Certifio&'es of euros of from one month to twenty years’ standing wilt aooorapany the Med cine, and evi dence of the most reliable and responsible character 1* open for inspection. Price 81 per bottle, or six lor $5. Delivered to any address. Depot, 104 South Th.ff l H Street, below CHESTNUT. 0 jt23 tf M KB. WINSLOW, W* AH EXPERIENCED KXtKSK ANP FEMALE ttrnoian, ereeente to the attention of mothera her dOOTHING SIBUP 108 OHUSSEN TEETHING, Vfeteii, fTMtir facilitate. lh« process of teciiiinr, lir -Wte&lni thunm..leduoinrall inflammation; nlQftr- Depend upon it* mothers, it will sire reft to yourselves *JtELIEFAND HEALTH TO YOUR INFANTS. We have vatu*and sold • this artiole for over tea jMtra* and outer* in cod m fidenoe and truth of ; tUneir seed. Never-did ire know tin instance of dfittusfohcoby any one £ who used It, On the con trary* all art delighted TO with its oper&tioiw, and •peak in terms of highest eonunoqdaiionofiUmagi -o*l effects and medical vir ® toe*. We spe&k in this nattey “whit t# do ha know,” after ten years’. ■Cpenenoe*andpledgeonr r? reputation for the fulfil' «ent of what we here de r* olare In almost every fastanoe where the infant pq msuflering from pain and exhaustion, relief will be *4 foundin fifteen or twenty minutes after the Byrne Is ■*? administered, , 1 smSf TSffiSfe g NURSES in rTewEngiand and has been used with “•“BK* It not only relieves the TO vigpratea the stomach and * and give* tone and energy wifi almost Inttaatjy re- BOWELS AND WIND , ralsions. which, if not death. We believe it the the world, in all oases of RHOBA In CHILDREN, teething or froaanyother every mother who hoe a he foregoing complaints, hor the ,prejudices of ronr suffering child and BUREryes. ABSOLUTE tree of tliis medicine, if Rons for using will aocoro . gennlne unless the lao si- KINS* New York* le on , «TJold by Draggiateth sal No. ISCEDAR Pricelraents a bottle. OF CASES, child from pain, but In. boirele, corrects aoiditr to thectrhalo system. I lieveOlUFlNtf IN THE COLIC and overcome oon speodtiy remedied, end in best and surest romedy in DYSENTERY and DIAR whether)! ariees from oanse. we would ear to ohild enfrering from any of do not let your prejudices, others, etend between the relief that will be L,Y SUIIE-to fo low the timely need. Full direo nany each bottle, None mile of CURTIS x PER. the outside wrappor. uthouttho. world, Frinol reet. New York. Jjtt-lT QHOIOE CLARET WINES. ALBERT O. ROBERTS, DEALER is FINE GROCERIES. Comer ELEVENTH and VINE Streets. HAVANA CIGARS.—Just received, per talk Ann Elizabeth) a !& so and varied assort ment, comprising several no-.v brands, together with others of toe most ceiobrfttea— «- Black Hen,” Ador»oion, Ftearo, Neptuno, Cabana*, Partagas. . ■ DgUoingr Arroyo Hondo, Arqaell«. Pmebes® fto, &0.. Of all the ftegaha, Conoha. Opera, Londrei. Millar, Fluurmei, and pressed sizes—now in store, and tor tale Inw. dt OHARLi' i* TKTE, 1 ieiolw 130 WALNUT Street, ruin OHO HAVANA cigars, of dif uUvtvvU ferent brand., ell sizes and prices, in store, by resent arnvsls. and l<lr oalo.by °»)3» UnARLKS TKTk, 130 WALNUT Street, PARIS GREEN—For sale bv WETHE jtiLL fc BROTHER, *T and *9 North SECOND 8tl„t. . PfftLApjELPHltk WBIfNESDAY, JULY 4, 188(>. - * tt; 1 Qs\, .■ ' ■ !' r : ta.UlMoiaia hodjslnco 1709, addi «?j p£L tioual jijfiop a;year 4o ter, ita ‘t (V rr fr : + shajw ef a pension from tho Crowil. She died 1811, soon after Byron’s, return ftom the i-' IjwV.' In.Noyember, 1808, Byron was sail At . where hit dog Boatswain died.! In ~ .. tt-* 1 the sloie of this yeat, atid la tlio early.part Of thto *Sft-rf b the Byronftogj, hat f> at R N « w “ tea,l ; 0 “ ttlileh Wan / “ "Ji ft English Bards apd Scotch-Baviewers;’’on bV birthday he' drained iho te- Jnne i wall tho ,. P .?" C '? n the gentry, but his Own ro derod itt sale A ieiai and bacon aiid a bottle oi alo. itKA \%r* t**' : after he tettirnod- to London, ttl r “ USt m ,«!!WWN through the press, declared his f? 8 ’!? 0 . t ‘ mber l ? D tb®. eaUto; n*d intention, of .never selling ttewsteadj took ills £4 ’ 76 ® , fo , tbfe ftamitu*®—thepiotares, library, seat and spoke in the House ofLordsysueceM and arttolM of virtu, to be taken Or not;tt frilly published « Engljishßaids,” and returned; BmaU 0Be ’ oons !? th £ t? the Abbey,.in May, to entertain a party of ° f , 3 ’ 2^ ' J c . r . eSj dnelnding, 618 'acres .of jits friends, before his departure oil those, tra* woodland, plantations, park,. Jakes, find the .¥?tafldiih «Chiide Harold" hasimmortaiteed; P 9 antiquity .oi this last is gttqt, ee In CM biography,, by Moqto.ds a letteb|fo^n: it was endowed by Semy 11, m expiation nf. C&yrtes ’S^ibnprrMatthewfl.fgjirw, ftrii 1 the part/ho took in permitting the murder* '^Thfm4er^ I Thomasa Beckett. '• holiday and festival. .'€olonoi : 'Wildmau>ho was Byron's schpoi. - ,l n July, 1809, Byron went abroad, where he fellow, gave £lBO,OOO for the Abbey, estate,, twnptuad for two years. Immediately after furniture, &<k He Had left it tahehss he found his tfefttrd;'hls mother died ; At. ife*ates(L V it) eicept that,.on ropairing ond enlargingthe : ihre. be could roaoh her. At this time ho Was Abber (the'square tower at tho\ right-hand igd .enough, and made a will bequeathing corner, as you look from.tho.Lake, belngen- KewstesdAbboy, to be entailed on-'Captain Urely au.-additlon.o(hisown) and cortainly-be? heir-at-law—tho present Lord Byi I stowed greaicare andtasteln its reparation.' ronj'alao directing to be burled in the same Every relic .which has the slightest connection’ Vanltwithhis dog, at Howstead—the penalty with the poet was very carefully preserved.,' dfremoving his body being that Howstead , The fountain, so well described in “Don; should pass to Bis sister i . Juan,"'was entirely restored, the terrace. was" . Until his marriage in 1816,.8yr0n lived a repaired; the little fort in the lake was mounted: gopd'deal at Newstoad. His wife resided: with gnns, the cloisters were who)Jy . cleared yd'thMnm there, a, abort time in tho autumn of ont, and, above all, Byron’s bed chamber was that .’year. In I'ebruary, 181 G, Lady Byron allowed to rest exactly as he had left, with: its separated'from'-him—in a manner, to say the old-fasbioned square bed.Btead, each tester ieait'ot it, capricious and unjustifiable. Throe surmounted by a B won’s coronet, tho view-'of motiths later, Byron fi'ad again Jell England— Trinity College, Cambridge, the print of-Jagtei idt’ever. We haVe yot tp WHto an artiolo son, tho pngllist, arid the three-quarter oil- Spoil the quarrel'between Lady Byron and her portrait of stout old Hurl-ay, his valet, Which tnsGarid; and therefore only glaneo at tho fact hung, we think, over tho very small and shabby lero.' ’'• ■ ' fireplace. All things in this chamber, even ; --In ; jBlB, Colonel Wildman' bought New'- down to the rieketty Pembroke writing-table aeadj as already state!.' placed near the oriel window, were kept as I ' Wfeen Madame Guiccloli (now tiioMarchion- Byren lelt them. . fes'-'rfe'Bolssy, at Paris,'ihd still blooming,) Wildman spent over.£BBo,ooo bn the pur- lifts first in England, she wentto Nottingham ohaso and reparation of this property ofNeWf See' Nowstoad ‘Abbey, but‘Colonel stead. This money, at 4 per cent., which- is thldtfan, a strong moralist, ’ refhsed to admit rather more than it would bring, on good a£ lii.4l.ady Lovelace,' Byron’s « Ada,” was enrity, in England, represents an anmud fn- Her wedding trip concluded come of, £16,200. But.it was stated at the to Newstead and a sad and pas sale that the actual value—including the 'rtijl stonate.pilgrimage te her lather’s grave at of tho house, tho land In cultivation, the woods, HuetoaH the game, &c.—was estimated at only’£4;iB6, ftS *-c —. «■ . or nearly two-thirds.less than the interest;AT u-F/V: Aid for Garibaldi, the money.invested. Colonel Wildman,had • Oriccriponatime,on Iriah'bricklftyer, work paid dearly for his whistle. ' iog in 'London, saw a child In imminent danger The first bid, at the auction was of Being run overby a brewer’s cart, in the £90,000, which did notincinde timber or fhrni: toots. Throwing down his hod utterly tute. The.highest of eleven following bids was toeless of what became of its thereby scat £l2l,ooo. . There being no chance of an ad. t'wediload of bricks, Paddy rushed to the vance, tho property was bought in at the re- rdsoue, and grasping tho child by Us little served bidding of £lBO,OOO, which included irpdc, snatched it from under the heavily-tired tho timber. wheel which, but for him, would have crashed «:|g WEDNESDAY JULY '4, i 860; Ncwstoad Abbey, theiefore, continues Intke possession of Colonel TVildman’s representai tivos, for the present. Lord Byron never saw Newstcad until 1798, when he was nearly eleven years old. He was born in London, in 1788, and lost his rake helly father, Captain Byron, when he was three or four years old, and was then living in Aber deen, with his mother, whose pecuniary means were very limited. She had been a Scotch heiress, bnt her dissolute linsbaud had made away with all her property —land, houses', tlm-' ber, 'blink-shores, fisheries, cash. At last, ! ali that was left to her was $16,000, which yielded an tacome of $760 per annum. The Itnpo-, yeriahcd woman, a'lineal descendant of the royal house of Stuart, had been Miss' Gordon? of (light, la Aberdeenshire, and the late Earl of Aberdeen, himself a Gordon, ■purchased !!]?, ' . Byron’s lhther was eldest son of the cele brated Admiral Byron, .commonly called « FouUweather Jack,’? from having frequently been wrecked at sea. When a youth, he was midshipman on board the Wager, one oi Lord Anson’s circumnavigating squadron, which vessel was cast away upon a desolate island in the South Sea, and alter enduring five years, of great hardships there, was rescued, return ed to England, and, m 1768, published the well-known Narrative,” which Byron al ludes to in << Don Juan,” when he makes big hero suffer hardships at sea— " Comparative To those related in my sraod-rad’e Narrative.” - Admiral Byron diod in 1786, Iwo years be fore the death of his grandson, the poet. The Admiral’s elder brother, William, became sth Lord Byron in 1730, killed his neighbor and relative in a duel in 1765, was convicted of manslaughter by the' House of Lords, but claimed the benefit of the Peerage, (under a statute passed in the time of Edward VI,) was discharged on payment of his fees, and retired to solitude and remorse, with occasional bursts of wild living in Newstead Abbey. On the death, in Corsica, in 1794, of «tho Wicked Lord Byron’s” only grandson, the little boy who lived with his mother in Aberdeen) became he'W'p return p five to tho title—notheir apparent; for the old Lord, then 72 years old, was a widower, who by a second marriage might have a son of his own, who would be boir-apparont. Just as Queen Victoria’s eldest son is heir-apparent to tho throne of England, whereas, bad she no children, her cousin, the King oflHanover, would be heir-presumptive. The Wicked Lord Byron, as he was called, had an undisguised antipathy to his nephew, Captain John Byron, the poet’s dissolute! father. When Captain William Byron died,, the old Lord transferred his dislike to his son, tho future poot, and immediately commenced! impoverishing the estate, by cutting down and selling the fine timber upon it. He also sold the family eetato in Rochdale, Lancashire, (the, title is « Baron Byron, of Rochdale,”) though he know that ho could not give a legal title to the vendors. They worked out' as much as they conld of tho coal'which made it valuable, and thus drew from it, ere the law compelled them to restore it to the poet, thrice the value of what they had paid for it. ' In his eleventh year, tho late Lord Byron, then newly come to his title, first entered Newstead Abbey. While he was at school, 1 first in London and afterwards at Harrow, and' during his stay at the University of Cambridge) Newstead had Lord Grey do Ruthin for its tenant. So much attached to Newstead was Byron, that before ho became acquainted with Lord Grey, ho used to leave Nottingham where bis mother lived, walk over to New stoad, wander about tho land by day, and sleep at night at a little place called «The Hut,” opposite the main entranco to the es tato, actually on the right hand as you go from, Nottingham to Mansfield. Tho Hut, since Byron’s ownership made Newstoad remarkable, has been considerably enlarged, it* rural cha racter preserved, and is dow one of the neatest of English country taverns—famous, above all, for Us ham, poached eggs, home-made wheaten bread, and home-brewed “ etnnnlng ale.” This last worthy of Robin Hood him solf, who, by tho way, may often have feasted in that locality, for Tho Hut is on tho verge of what was Sherwood Forest, many noble trees of which Btillremain,,giganticmomorials of a by-gono timo. Alter becoming intimate with Lord Grey de- Ruthin, a bed-room in the Abbey was always set apart for Byron—tho same little room ho occupied to the last—and bis time in the coun try was passed between Newstead and Annes loy, where livod the Chaworth family, whoso acquaintance he had made in London. Mary Ann Chaworth, sole daughter and heiress, was two years older than himself. He fell In love with her, was treated as a«lamo. hoy,”and the yonng lady married rough John Musters, the fox-hunter, with whom she was very un happy, and finally died out of.her mind. Byron' attained his majority on January 22; 1809, at which time'he was occupying Newstead Abbey, possession of which had been surrendered to him by his poble tenant in the preceding autumn. It was in a terribly ruinoils condition, and ho immediately proceeded to fit up some of the rooms for his mother's use, his avowed inten j tlon being to secure her possession of the ab bey and manor for life, With a sufficient Income the life e at of it in another moment. Jn do* ing this, Paddy slipped, the wheel passed over Ms foot) and crashed it in a fearftil manner. The'poor" Irishman fainted, from excess of prio,an<t his words on recovering conations* “ls the child safe V 9 Oa receiv ing an affirmative answer, he cried, «Thank God i I don't mind what has happened to my self.” By this time a crowd collected—of all places in the world, crowds do collect most in stantaneously in London—and a policeman sent to tho*hearest hospital, at once, for a litter on whicli poor Pat could be conveyed thither. Several wdl-drepsod persons among the of; them, a clergyman, said ‘f ljrhis poor man will be out of employment for several weeks. I feel for him and his fa mily-ufor, being an Irishman, he has a wife andjcffildren, of course.” Next this clergyman stood close*shaved L and plainly-ritlred man, wearing the - single coat collar ana broad-brimmed bat, peculiar to tho ipembeirs of the, Society of Friends. Laying his hand, gently, upon the clergyman's arm, ho said << Friend! thou dost feel for this poor man? How much dost thou feel V 9 Opening his purse, he deliberately counted out ten golden sovereigns, ($50,) and said, « Be thou tho JrealmrGr. I live away from London, and may, not remain over this day. I feel ten pounds for this poor uian—let us see how much do others feel V 9 The clergyman warmly grasped tho Quaker's hand, and added five pounds more to his ten. The crowd added to the contribution, more or less, according to the tneans or the benevolence of each, and when poor Pat was removed to the hospital, to which the clergyman and Quaker accom panied him,' over a hundred dollars woro raised on the spot to support his family while he was Out of work. This anecdote is not now, hut it is hero re lated es applicable to the maimer in which the British people ore manifesting their sympathy with Garibaldi. They proceed, in a great number of localities, wholly upon the Friend’s principle, involved in tho question « How much dost thou feel ?” Subscriptions in aid of the cause of Liberty In Sicily have been very largely entered into in London, and various other largo cities in England and Scotland. Garioaldi and his ex pedition are evidently at a discount in Ireland, for not a shilling has been raised there. InXondon, where the feeling for Garibaldi is -decided, it may bo safely estimated that not less than $350,000 will be subscribed. Liver pool, Bristol, Birmingham, Sheffield, Leeds, Salford, Huddersfield, Hull, Bradford, New castle,; Wolverhampton, Coventry, Worces ter, Bath, Brighton, and other populous places, are also “up and stirring” in this cause. In a single week $5,000 were col lected In Edinburgh; $l,OOO in Aberdeen, and as much more in Glasgow. The feeling is awake, and will not be expended in mere! words. When John Bull is in oarnest he puts his hand into his brcechos-pockot—where it is generally supposed that his heart usually lies,* embedded in Bank-of-England notes. Honest John does not make orations about a matter, but simply fulfils Dean Swllt’s demand of '* Down with tho dust I” It may ho asked, “ What does the British Government think of material aid being sup plied, in this manner, to tho leader of an ex-’ pedition avowedly intended to detach Sicily; irom tho Kingdom of Naples?”—A very rational question It is, considering that, in the, eyes of Europe, Ireland has long been con sidered, in her relations to Great Britain, as closely resembling tho quasi connection of Sicily with Naples. In Manchester, Mr. Fairbairn, well known as an engineer of groat wealth and influence, '.published a notice' in one of tho local journals on Saturday, Juno Dth ; that, ns ho had unex pected means of communicating direotly with Garibaldi, lie would receive and forward any earns of money offered in aid of Garibaldi’s herolc-oxertibns, which should reach hi 3 hands before the next "Wednesday evening. In the four days ho received various sums, amount ing to $2,2G0, and also numerous letters, in which tho writers offered to join Garibaldi, in Sicily, if ho wanted fighting men—a natural supposition, seeing that tho whole force with which Garibaldi Invaded Sicily was less than 1,100 men, not half of whom had over before smelt powder. In tho town of Sheffield, not very remote from Manchester, dwells an eccentric lawyer, whose name is Ironside, a louder in the Peace Society. When he read Mr. Fairbatm’s let ter, offering to receive subscriptions for Garibaldi, this Ironside appealed to the local magistracy and also to Sir George C. Lewis, tho Homo Secretary, Jo put a stop to all sub stantial expressions of sympathy with Gari baldi in Manchester, Sheffield, and other places. 3he local magistrates declined acting upon his information, and tho Home Secretary cavalierly informed him that “tho British Government do not Intend to interfere with the generous impulses of the people.” This is remarkably good for England,— usually so undemonstrative. With us, in tho United States, there is a great sympathy with Garibaldi, —in the newspapers and occasionally in private circles. With tho exception of a small subscription In New York, wo are hot aWaro that any thing has yet been done to show thuoirfotfnf ofiAniefleMi sympathy with Garibfeldi,und.the great- cause of,,National Liberty of W&Uih bo is the champion in Italy, If England,-** is expected, sends not lessthan $i,000,000 to Garibaldi, ought free . America he less liberal 7 Lot us not waste our sympathy iit iuere words, written or spoken, v bnt follow the ’ example , of. the . worthy. and practical Quaker* and put down onrmosey, for,the good cause, according to our means and feelings,, Letters from the Lehigh—Xo. 3* . ’ ' Icorrssyoadence.of Tbs Prew.l ' MAirck OftUNk; OAbbon Codsty,‘Pa/ The name of Carbon (from cat bo) oounfy is-'de ecriptive of its geological bbfirdeter. r A Urge ffor tion of its four hundred square milerf is ah in exhaustible carboniferous bed*. Mauoh. Obqnkj itj oapital, is pootrally located,* in one of the wildest .inouMalu gorges on the Lehigh twenty-nine wiles noribweafc "of > *rldo‘bfere fro in the iafcter* Is flill of iiiiyrcjst, Soon after leatiDg Allentgwn station, We* pass several'icicn'6Dw l ‘ffoii-ore i *beds,‘and ‘ the smoking furnaces Vrhldl' are Seen' iii 'SHrfrdX* rectlon indicate the industry :snd fehfsi'pifed ttf jftS people. l The town ofCataaauqua; almost a suburb of Allentown, now containu a population of thred thousand) Shd* boa sprHng ppwithin a few years Wajniy.from, ihepi£OD( interest here .concentrated. Tojtkq of .ohr fctate fnffilsiss a ,rfeh held of iesoaroh. The .rook formation; fn many places exposed on the, surface, abounds in novelties. At due or two pblnWoh the margin’of the riVef these lihmebse stones have (be appear ance of glistening masses of molten metal congealed while in course of precipitous descent. . The broad, agntulturtil yalley of the Lehigh is brought abruptly to a close as the train enters the Gap, eighteen miles from Allentown, or ,thirty five from Easton, the eastern terminus of the road When we from the western month of tbiasub* lime chasm in ,the Bine Mountain, we are in Carbofi county, and the prospect in every direction takes in b&d moubtftln ranges. Eleven miles morS, and we are at Matioh Chunk, (an Indian name, signify ing Btar Mountain ,) where the railroad crosses the Lehigh, and rounding an abrupt angle at the base of the mountain which here, forms the east bank of the river, we seem to have entered a deep, narrow spot, embracing in its lap the rapid Lehigh, the canal, a vast array of ooal-sbipping machinery, and the town, all literally surrounded with a lofty mountain fortification. Here, at least, is one spot in our country,' no matter how rapid may ft* the strides of civilization and refinement,' that must forover remain a wild moantaln home. > The town is built In a sharp ravine, affording barely room tor,a stogie street, the bouses of which are In some oases built even with an almost perpendicular mountain in the rear, rising to ton Hues their alti tude This contracted situation, however, does not em brace the wljple extent of Mauoh Chunk. A level on the top of the hill, called Upper Mauoh OhnDlt, has, within the last few years',' been densely bull# up, .and another available spot on the ea&t bank of the river bas been similarly appropriated, called East Mauoh Chunk. The total population at the presont time is about fire thousand. The vlew from the towering eminences around, barring the Im provements, is one of true aboriginal Sublimity. As the curtain of night drops upon the setae, and all voices are bnshod but the wild roar, as of yore, of the dashfog Lehigh, there Is something awfully sublime in this mountain retreat.. Slnoe the discovery of ooal here, in 1791, and the organized operations, which were commenced as early as 1614, although not brought to a successful issue until nearly twenty years later, (and even then the aggregate of coal shipped did not numbe r a tenth of tßVtooncgo it has since attained,! this locality has been'a point of poonliar'intercet to capitalists and others, and thousands every year oome here to see the mines in operation,'and the glgentlo machinery which, at a cost of millions of dollars, has been erected to facilitate the shipment and transportation of their p;oduo,ts. -Tho sublime scenery , the excellent hotel Accommodations, (tho Mansion Hbusej by Mr. George Hoppes, being of the largest and house's In the State,} arid the cool mountain air, have also oombineef to render Mauoh Chunk a popular place'Of resort; though, over arid above all this, the renowned “Switch-back" railroad Is a wonder almost-as worthy a trip across the Atlantic, as Niagara itself. This road leads to, and makes a zigzag, up-and down grade tour,of the coal mountains, back of the town. To describe tho ride over It, so as to convey an adequate idea of its unique grandeurto the reader who has not made the trip, must io reserved for a tnoro skilful pen; nevertheless, if this plain state ment of figures will Induce any to avail themselves of a ride over it, I shall have done thorn -a real aervlco. At eight o’clock every morning the stage Tor tho Switchback leaves the hotels. Arriving at tho foot of the mountain, passengers land, gaze with delight up the scene around below, and then, with some solicitude, upon tho steep inolined plane lead ing to the top of Mt. Pißgah. Tho thought of trac ing one’s life to suoh & magnificent chance of being dashed to pieces, which arises In contemplating the fearful ascent, is soon dissipated by an exami nation of the ingenious and unfailing safeguards with which the oars are provided. We are seated In a light, open oar, and in a mo* ment, by tho workiog of the stationary engine on the top of the mountain, the endless Iron bands commenoo moving over the wooden pulleys between the tracks; tho oars are in motion, and we are ra pidly moving up an inolinedplane 2,300 feet long, and six hundred and sixty-six feet in height. In a few minutes the ascent Is made, and we step from, the oar to take a view from the lofty summit of Mt. Pisgah. Wo are now a thousand feet above the level of the Lehigh The scene all around is one of wild sublimity. Some twelve miles southeast, the Lehigh water gap opens a distant view of Schooley'a Mountain, in Morris county, New Jersey. Tho vast improvements made by the ! Lehigh Navigation Company, at this point, at a cost of many millions, are everywhere, visible., Yonder, to the northeast, on the west bank, near the river's edge, our oourteous guide' and careful. conductor, Mr. Stuart Line, points out tons a di minutive frame structure, which has the notoriety of having, in 1836, been the resldonoe of George- Lsw, Esq., tho Now York millionaire. To'those i who aro not aware of the fact it may he interesting' to mention that Law was at that time a railroad, canal, and lock-hullding contractor, in bumble oir* oumatanoes. It was here that be laid tho founda tion of his immense fortune The look adjacent to the Uttlo frame above roforred to was built by him,; and is still designated rs tho George Law Look. 1 But not to digress: the two airy oars, in which our, little party, (oumberlng among others, Messrs.! Morton MoMiohael and Louis A. Godey, of yourj city, with several members of their families,) hav-i ing asoended tho first plane,, noted for being tho heaviest grade of any railroad piano in the world, are now ready to proceed. The brakes are with drawn, and away wo go, propelled by gravitation,j down a plane sevon miles in length, which brings us to the foot of Mt. Jefferson. In this distance; we havo mado an actual descent of throe hundred | fett, and are now, by the Stationary-engine pro cess already spoken of, to ascend a plane twenty ono hundred feet long, tho altitude of which is four hundred and sixty-two feet, or one hundred and sixty-two feet higher than tho top of Mt. Pis 1 gab. Having accomplished this ascent, we are on the summit of Mt. Jefferson. Around us, piled in majestic attitudes, are what havo beon not inappro priately styled “ the Alps of Amorica.” Summit) Hill, a coal settlement, is hore located, and num' hers about two thousand inhabitants. The town itself is owned by the Lehigh Navigation Company> and the people are employed in its service. r J houi sands of minors, deep buried in the mountains over whioh wo pass, aro hore engaged tho yoar round. In sight, within a short distance, is the spot where oosl was first discovered in this region, and the mine which was first worked. A moment's pause at the Summit, and again wo aro off, with unaided gravitation for our motive power, down a steep grade, iuoTonslng in velocity, performing a curve as wb progress, and from the foroo of this accele- rated speed actually make a slight ascent up a ravine, from whloh, however, wo soon recede, and by means of a self-acting switch commence another abort but rapid desoont in an opposite direotion. This process is twice repoated, forming something llko the letter 7, on the side of the mountain, when wo* ate at longth brought to the foot of Panther Creek Plane No. 2. Here we are hurled swiftly up an inollnod plane to an elevation of two hundred and seventy feet, when we again descend by gravitation one mile, to the foot of Panther Greok Plain, No, 1. Here we are to oommenae onr ; last ascent. A powerful engine, on the hill before i us, will swoop ns to the top with almost the swift ness of nn aerial oar, when we shall again be at Summit Hill, tho place from which wo started an hour ago. Threo quarters of an hour are here al lotted for visitors to examine the mines. Within a few hnndrod yards of this point Is a mine which has boon burning for more than two years. I *p pioaobed near enough to one of its mouths, In tho side of the mountain, to feel its hot breath, see a short distance within Its fiery Jaws, and hoar the muttering of the subterranean flames fl nd I confess that the most brilliant desoripti oo °f hell that ever emanated from a poet's hrain conveys but a tamo idea of the Infernal regions compared with this. It win probably not ho long before tho baked mountain top will suddenly bo engulfed in tho |)u plug )oko boncatb. There is no tense ot safety, I assure yon, in standing near It even now, so thet tho sdvtoo of “ cautious Teuton, In our oompany , TWO;,’CENTS. the ether day, to “rtind a teetle nearer off !” lhay be well taken by,visitojs generally” J have omit ted to state. that*the:, loeusU have, made, their appoarance in these f mou&- tdns in myriads,. and .their ceaseless’‘‘Pharo symphony” was distinctly heard a boro jb 8 noise of the cart along the entire route.' Buj we are now”to Tetum from the summit of Mount Jeffetron to our place of starting. “A nearly straight road of-nine' miles; making, in sll,'s de. soent of eight hundred and ten feet, will bring Us to fljaocb Chunk.' Down, down we-oomerrthe pejrer of the Almfghty, as manifested in his law of gravi tation, for our engine, and the mountain air, made doubly, exhilarating by thenqveltyof eur convey anoe t cnd the rapidity of 6ur flight—until we a fight a shetf of upland near the towh be low,from whence wi started about'lhree acdahalf hours beforoi and having performed a ride of twenty; seven miles, pronounced Tellers to be the most novel in the world--A* a piece of-'complex. Bolepti&Qr engineering.- ffilsyoad (called ;the switch-baokv from the ; switching back process whi.oh I haye .endeavored to without a .parallel. The. attzaotlons of this tnoyp-i tain trip,alone^sko^ld'i-and*rS«uch J Chqok:^a' i palarjJiace of resort:* /lo'aAditicm tolfld%*nrfou Uousd, already motion «d, the'M4est#7Wftbrifa, to elsoprtpewfrto %4deHahS luaiifl'er boarder*. • t •, : '* :r f? wte r Tbe,crops,throughout tW'agricutinrai -pgrte r** (erred fq in thesa letten whenever more promts leg. The winter cereals, whlo)k.ftidpg uriqnt., . The iay ,crop, ; n?vr-' their complexion fqr l|ie sfoiriffirllr nguj lhgi'ls also unusually heavy^'Whilst'the Tflifc <jata'j^ve'ertdto6lr<ft'ih : ftr low rands where/ from Hii4 of Wfe ,* corn'was plaatedlate *&ndflrri.i6uti4faelrii£fl*ok regular and healthy,efid, With,fevoribtacirmia- Btaocea, may yet produoe well., The oats are fee* from ru6t, ai4 also, promise Abundantly, and, .the same may be said'of the potato orop, Judging, the Bilie and vigor of the plants. $ GENE!*AL -NEWS, ' r . AfFAins ik Japan.—A correspondent of the Tribune, writing from Japan, says:, . The alarms created bv the’assaifisstion of the Regent have subsided. To foreign eyes, the con' ditidu of the empire iB one of quiet; yet we know not what is beneath the surface. ~The Government intermit Coca of tb,© precautions taken at first/but bnve rather mortafsd’’their guards’and systema tized their defences - The guard-houses have been increased and enlarged: Imagine ifieraun de frieze thrown across Broadway, at* short distances apart,.With gateways Hanked by a guard-house, with six or ten soldiers, With muskets, bayonets, and swords; extend this to every street;-place a guard at every boat-landing; block every ave nue to the city with guarded gates, apd you will have some idea of tbe oourse pursued here. Every Japanese entering Yrituhama is'duddr es pionage, and must, if not known, give a satisfactory aooount for bis being there.. ‘‘Tho Japanwehave token advantage of this time to persuade the consuls of foreign Powers resident at Kanngawa Jo leave that.place, under the plea ; that their lives were more’endangered there, and • go to Yokohama, where ‘they doufa be easily pro tected, Baring succeeded in diverting-ell'tbe foreign trade to Yokuhem*,, they hoped in .this , manner to olear Kan&gawa of - all foreigners. The consuls would not go, and the Japanese are* pro • teoting them where they are, by throwing'high fences around their grounds. It is impossible to : learn the exact Condition of affairs as respects the Government and Prince Mlto. It is knows that Mito fled to his own. principality, the province of Pitatsl, to the northeast of Yeddo. Its capital oity, Mito, is laid down on any good map of these islands., flis resources are large,! blafollowers nu merous, and it is supposed that he would arm against the ruling powers. “ There have been some collisions between small . partice of Mito’s men and those of the late Regent, i Qne of these took place at Kauasaki, ten miles dis : tant, resultisg in the death of three or four.' 'They were chance collisions; such as are bom Of drunken brawls. Then we hear .that an envoy,of the Em peror, sent to Mito with a desire to a peaceful ter mination of the existing feud, was exeonted by Mito without V moment’s parley. The Emperor would send another ambassador upon the same con ciliatory errand, but naturally Sods no one ambi tious of the place. Such Is the latest rumor,' but, as I have hinted' before; it to impossible for those moat iu communication the Japanese-. to de , tor mine where, the falsehood ends and'the, truth begins. Through Japanese sources I hear to-day tbav a new Regent bad been appointed. Hetosaid : to be the late Prime Minister, who .-was removed some months since to give place to the present iu oambeot. If so, the' foreign representatives will have but little, joy fn {bechance. AS Prime Minis ter he' was particularly obnoxious, being of the de rided anti-foreign party ” Horticulture nr Japaw -A correspondent of the Tribune, writing from Japan, says : - “ As in China, so here, the people have a great fondness for dwarf flowering trees It is a matter of considerable trade among themselves. In nearly every shop and bonse r pota of beautiful trees or flowers are to be seen. No one appears to be too poor to deny himself so simple a pleasure. The cborry troaje so exceedingly thrifty in Japan that it seems, a great pity that the care that hes been bestowed upon its blossoms, bad not been used to ward bringing its fruit to perfection. I am satis fied an eatable cherry is not produoed ln Japan, ft is otherwise with the peaoh, plum, and apnoot< The first are said to be very good., PJnms dried, and peaches preserved in a most abominable salt pickle, I hare repeatedly seen. This people have a great love farjriokled fruits and vegetables. “ The variety of wild flowers is not large. Among them are familiar faces like the'dandelion, wood violets forget-me-nots, lupines, and others.' The pyrus japonioa reddened the grassy banks with its shiny blossoms, ihs heavy raoemesof the Wistaria, white and purple, have a size and beauty I have seen nowhere else. Tho purple and red r and whito azaleas, fill the forest air with fragrance- The shrub is taller than tho swamp pink of America, and the blossom larger. The cultivated varieties produce flowers equal to yoar green house speci mens, growing out of doors without protection. Both the white and purple magnolia are here, though I have seen but few. u While this advanced stage of growth is ex hibited In grain aid garden vegetables, deciduous trees, like the oak, walnut, and chestnut, are as bare and leafless os in New York at this season. The maplta are just now putting ont their gtugg leaves, red aa their autumnal tints in New England. Others as golden yellow.” Woman nr a New Sphbhk.—A contractor on the Formartin aod 'Buchan Nallway, Scotland, has enlarged the sphere of female usefulness, by employing a large number of women as workmen, or, rather, work-women. The sight of these bux om oreaturc?, each with a broad-brim hat on to preserve her complexion, wheeling their barrows loaded with earth, is said to be quite novel. The Aberdeen Herald says that “it opens up at once a vast new. region, both hotpe and abroad, for tho outflow of labor from its own effeminate channels; and it is confidentially to be hoped that a monu ment of superannuated needles, crochet hooks, thimbles, and other female implements irrelevant to social progress, may toward tho genius which . struck out this great discovery.” Telegrami Link fuom Carroll Parish to New Orleahs —The Ouaohita Register of the 23d, informs ns : “ That a proposition is on foot to extend south ward the new telegraphic line now completed frost; Lake Providence down to Vicksburg on the west-' era bank of the Mississippi. The proposition is t»' ask some little aid in money from the planters' along the route, and extend It down bv St Jo-| seph, Waterproof, Vldalia, Bed River Landing, | the populous villages of Point Coupee. West Baton* Rouge, And so on to Now Orleans. Portions of tbisj route will undoubtedly pay well; others are too! sparsely .Inhabited, and have their business and! post offices on tho opposite ehoro. j Mass Meetixo or. Italians.—At Cincinnati' lately, a meeting of those who sympathise with Garibaldi, mostly Italians, was held. The follow ing officers were chosen : President. Joseph Glon ninl; vice president. Gletro Cafferate; sooretary, Joseph Albino; cashier, Antonio Arrico. Commit tee men: Joseph Res*o, Pledro Gandolfo, B.Fasri, F. Pedretti, J Garibaldi, V Arsldo, G. Morelli, J. Farrar!. Several speeohes were made, andj were reoeived with much enthusiasm An ad-i mooting will bo held shortly, and mea-j eures taken to forward relief to the Italian hero. j Wine Statistics. —An official return, justi published, shows that the number of bottles champagne sont to foreign countries from the de partment of tho Marne from the Ist of April, 1859, to, the Ist of April; 1860, was 8.265,395; and tho number sont to dealers and private consumers id France during the same period ‘was 3 039,63 b The total was, consequently, 11.305,016 The re-! turn adds that tho stock in collar aon the Ist of April of the present year was 38,648,324 bottle?! Revenue of Cuda. —Tho Havana Gazeiti (official paper) gives the total revenue of tbe royat treasury of Cuba for tho first four months of tha present year as $8,583,751. which is a slight in* crease over the year 1859 Of this amount. $4 383 a G 35 is classed “ marine rovonues.” and $2 220 11<5 “land revenues.” The probability is-now that tbe total receipts into tho royal treasury from both sources, during the present year, will reach the enormous and unprecedented sum of $2O 900 000. An excellent opportunity to purchase dia monds may be found by visiting Constantinople. It is stated in a letter from that oily that, owing to tho distress whioh now provails, » general salo of these stones is making by Turkish families, and that tho consequonce is n depreciation of forty per cent, in the gems. A National Difficulty. —Tho consus takore, it Is Said, find great difficulty In ascertain- , lug the ages of girls, a large majority of tbem being only sixteen. In one family, in an Eastern State there were found to be twelve girls between ten and sixteen years of ago! Col. Gowen, the American employed at Se bastopol in raising tbo sunken Russian ships, statofcin a letter to tbe London Times, that he has cauaed soveral hundred cypress and other trees to bo placed wirhin and around the English oemete ries In the Crimea. A convict named John Urban, while beiug conveyed to the Mtahigan Btate Penitentiary via Detroit, on the steamer Illinois, threw himself overboard at tbe Saut, all bound and shackled as he wae, and was drowned.. Two hundred ladies in Syracuse are regular patrons of a billiard saloon there, kept by the lata sergoant-at-erms of tbe Stata Senate, who devote! td them two afternoons In the week Thebe were fine displays of the auroral light at Providence on Friday and Saturday nights. On tbe 17th ultimo, at night, there was a slight shook of an earthquake at St. Jago de Cuba. THE WEEKLY PRESS. Tm Wmilt fra.. aill b. „ It to KbKnVr. * Tn»'-“ " » " “ ... “S'S Ton •• •• *• 7_" Twratr- “ “; . OboixuMbw)**!*, Tw.ntr Copie.,or Mr-,' ‘ . - ,ul iu>»orib3r,>ftwb.. .......l. Bo For a Glob of or or«r t WB Trill Mod »n extra enejr to the getter-up of the Oub. KT Foatnuetei* ere' reoeete* to eet M Aceetafor Tee Wmim frier. ’ CAMFOKMIA FItKAS. . Jeeued three tiraee i Meath, in tin. for tho California Bteamsfe, •' ■ ' . GaiTirnha IttcsueE.—The eoel trade of the Cleveland led Pittrtrarg’ railroad fcwhwMMd during the preamt jeemr is the Meet .xtree'diiiry maoser. The .imount of cod Oirrfed it, M«t by this road was 130,000 tone, &Mliv foor ttae, the amount carried ftj M.y last rear. Tho feerlica of JBSO will usdoshtedlF Aow an Immense inr rales over 3859. The . intoml from sunrise to sun set i, now more than fifteen hours. Add to tha dap tho twi light. and the earlj daybreak, which oeenrs needy. two honrß before sunrise, and the night is redeesd " within a compass of fire Or six boars. - . Cheibtiajiitt n Afiica.—lt was ascertain ed, at the time of taking tha omana of Start* L.one, Arnca, that out Of the pnpofetinref 44,501. over 30 000 had renounced idoletry and become attendants tfpen CUristiwn wUrabtpb • v 1 SraaDLAßAociPKrr.—The Mayor ofCos-inf ton, a few days since, while epdeasoring te paiss a boisterous indHidwei, ae.identa))y thadW ohargo of-ai pistol in his hreechcs-pockst, tho ball of which passed between Ms toes, nseUvtrimaaing out a corn. Casixe TFAiirg*, ofTerrigboggh, Vt., hang himself last break, 1 on Ttwsday. Net returning homo whan expected, see rob wssicade. and hfl body was found hanging by shatter from a' ttae te his pasture, so low that his knaas raatad ea the graund., ...... Thußoran Courier stelae/that .Hunt. JtPelle proposes, on the Fourth of July, to lamp trees the tWhf; the-;jllt at SabckUote . gethi to; tbs stater beaaath, st of aAgrry.3oo fed. , 3 HAkM,YP*OIABL*.—Ajj muAmmmwsi that aMU has 1 ' heart introdaoed iaM tbs bSwneMy nt Alahems for traiiportlaghU nsgroeaoomriated of Capital oflanoes to bfeasaohnaatte. ' ■ ' T«* PitirocWj iVdirfcOßt, gold ainw are Jttetdtew ngwhl pn<L ~Oa Skadar IM,- thrre man dng $5O worth, and they iTaran gK to |sonerd«y.' r : ,V:.7 '.’O', ; ;j -TintSun Fraaciaeo SniUtmh** boatload f'rSOiOTOdatistgmTOT'eaUlDg a lawyer Burin ■ - , v/, a,.-i i Jjisrin plefiHf r ljaTo lnKentrin gton^r t,.and agjplnlitg'lpwnj, reoently.andsefiaftt! cabs hire haaU oarfght. 1 -' ’ - - r 1 ■ ... Jobepji Hephpsth d)«i, in Korfolk, Va., rseontiy. and.hia,' physloiaaiaatribod hla limit to the habit of wearing tight boots. .... Og Eriday ,taominjg. f r mea.eAßad.TMer. Runnels was killed, afSast }fewerk,S. J., by being run orer hyp Vwemptlao.. >'- ' i ■ PERSON A‘E . Mbs. Gobe, tho novelist, whOforboine ti&M p%st has been afflicted 'with bliudoeo, has Idfcvly undergone an opezstios which, it is hoped, will t»- - Hon. Anson Bdelinoamk, of Masitchnaatts, is to d«ltvevth«-ahau»l oration btfora the litanay sxietto of Rochester University, oo Tncsday *re niog. July-lQthw ,- { , Ai .Havana, on- the evening of. the 17th ul timo, 4-youoK taTy-atmed’ Isabel Qrimtera, daagh ter '6f- tbe PiMri Attorney G«u«r»Y, w*s bvthiag her perron'with rum, wbra tha spirits emight ftfo, and sho was burned- to dcath. . We bbobzt to hear that Mr. LiseoWs yoniigost child, a' remarkably bright-hoy of six years of age, Tslvingill attirt'priator death,'wtth scarlet f«w«r. The parent is superior to tho poli tician; Mr. Lincoln has sot barir seen' oetrido of hto house, snr In It except at th«' bedside of bis child,.rince Fridsy last.— Chic. Pr*&*. Appointkskt to. Japan- —John Hndlay, . for many years oue of .the head workmen of the W’&shlngton'Arseb&Chas been" appointed by the Government to go to Japan with the rotaniag Embassy, and raperiute&d theputtiagtip tb"vul* oas articles of machinery presented hy the United Stateeaqd her citizeoa. ; Hon. Ghablbs Suhneb hM conaented. to deliver the- opening lecture of the Fraternity course, at the approaehlnr season. By the will of Rev. Theodore Parker, Mr. Boomer .reeeives ltfs onlleotion of Parllemeutary history and debates. Wendell Phitilptf haa his English’ state and Mrs. Paricerjuch hooka as she chooses to select P O LIT I.OAL Secretarv Floyd is said to he oat for Rouglss. The Southern Jrgus, Va., hears the follow ing Inroription at the head of its columns: “ For President, Benry A: Wise, of Ylrginia, subject to . the derision of a National Conven tion.” Rxnominatxd.—The Democracy of the Fifth Congressional district of Indiana, iu Coavention, lastTharzday. nominated for rr election tp Con gresa Hon. William CHbJaiaij, tbe prtsest in cumbent. But two billots were had, the woond bring unanimous. Jaxxs S. Thayxb, whom the Arena, of Troy, describes as one of the most brilliant of tbe boat of old Whig campaigners of three Preeide&tUl contests, and of whom it says. “ we have seen an audience of five thousand In tbe Vsuxhall Gardens, crowd Seward from the rostrum, by impatient manifestations .for. the appearance of Thayer,** it is said, will ere loDg, take the stump for Douglas. A toung Democrat, six. years old, son of George Johnson, of Bradford. Massachusetts, dele gate to tbe Baltimore Convention, got his father’s gun to have a patriotic over the nomina tions, end fired it, when tbe guu split*, and wag blownto pieces down to within; a foot of'the look, and kioked so hard as break bir orilsr bone'; otherwise the little Democrat escaped without ia jury. Qcaerel Between the President and i Senator Gwjn.— A correspondent of The World | says : Senator Gwin, of California, and President Buchanan had a private logomachy on Saturday, which may result in public consequences. The war of words became very violent, and during the alteroation Senator Gwin denounced Mr Buofcanan. in not very accurately measured language, and concluded by telling the old gentleman that Be wou'd never darken the doors of his mansion again ” Down to 1828, every President had been taken from the old thirteen States. Now, of the nine rival candidates for President or Vice Presi dent, bat one (Mr Everett, of Massaeburetts) is a citizen of an original State. All five of th* candi dates for President—Lloooln, Douglas, Breckin ridge, Bell, and Houltan—lire in- the Mississippi valley, or near its borders. The total ages of the five Pfesideutial candi dates—Bell, Breckinridge, Douglas, Houston, and Lincoln—is 265 years, making an average of 53 years. Mr. Bell, who is in Me 94th year, is the eldest man of the four regularly nominated- Mr. Breckinridge the youngest is 40; Mr. Douglas Is 48; Mr. Linooln 51; and Mr. Houston 62. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC It is said that Miss Charlotte Cushman will visit California rhortly. The Minstrels hate all been doing well, inoluling the Hooley and Campbell Troupe at the ranch Theatre. Ma. Southern has been the recipient of a complimentary benefit in Buffalo He played The Ktnch*n and Sir Charles Coldstream. Gow, the actor, who threw vitriol over bis wife's face, has beon sentenced to tho penitentiary for oup year. At Laura Keene’s, O’Brien’s burlesque, The Tycoon, an adaptation of Comaralzaman andßa doitra, waa'produoed ou Monday night. An alarm of fire occurred at the Winter Garden the other night, caused by the burning of some dresses iu the property-room. Great panic prevailed for soot* moments, and <he performance vu suspended. The fire was readily extinguished. Mb, Bouoicault and Miss Agnes Robertson commenced an engagement at the Winter Garden on Monday night,- when “Jessie Brown” was re vived. These performances will he the farewell of Mr and Mrs. BouclcauU, prior to their departure f jr Europe. Adelina Patti lately sang In the great Ohioago Wigwam, where she was assisted by over one hundred voices in chorus and a full orchestra and band—iu all one hundred and fifty performers. Patti, Junca, BrigooH, and Madam Strakosoh are the artists constituting the troupe, with Strakosoh as manager. The Shakspeare controversy is to be re newed. Mr. Hamilton of tho British Museum being engaged in preparing a rejoinder to Mr. OolHer’s defence, with the result of further investigations. It is also likely that In a very short time the Dul wich documents will he submitted to tbe scrutiny of a competent tribunal. Speech of Senator Donglas in New At the serenade to Judge Dovg'&r, on Monday evening, the Judge made tbe following speeob, In response to the caffs of the multitude: “Fellow-citizens: I return to you my most sincere thanks for this manifestation of your good* feeling. It ia gratifying to me to know that the united Democracy of the city of New York feel the importance of tbe great contest now pending before the American peoplo. There ia no place on the American continent whose citizens ought, from their position, to be so enthusiastic in favor of those great politioal principles whioh should be proclaimed alike in every State of the Union, as in the Empire Stato of New York. (Cheers ] While every other Stato is, iu semo degree, local in its character, having a peculiar circle for its own trade, New York reaches to the furthermost ends of the continent, and across the whole world, wherever bor fltg may wave over American soil and over American ships The whole country is the theatre of your commerce, your interest, and your influence, and you ought to sympathize with the people of the distant portions of the Republic 88 with tnose who come Into more immediate con tact with you. Henee, bt friends, I expect to find the Democracy of New York standing a unit in favor of those great political principles which re ' cognize tho rights and property of the citizens of ' every State, and yet leave every State perfectly i free to manage its own affairs, mind its own buii -1 ness, sod which leaves its neighbors alone. [Cheers and ones of ‘That’s right. 1 j j (( My friends. I made my appearanoe on this bal ( oosy to-night for ibe purpose of acknowledging the ! compllmontyou now pay me, and not to enter into political discussion upon any of the political tonics of tbe day. It is tbe first time in my life I have been placed in the position to look on and see. a fight witboat taking a hand in it. [Cheers and laushter.j I shall, however, feel no less interest in this ereat politic*! struggle, for I believe that the well-being of this country and the popularity Of the Union depend upon maintaining intact and inviolate tßctse gfttt otrtNttil principles fqrvrhich the Deinooratic party coir, as in former time*, sre pledged by that platform and organisation. [Oheers.l I renew to you my sino'era tnanks for yoar kiDoneesupon this occasion." [Loud applause, during which Mr. Douglas retired from the baloony.j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers