The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 10, 1860, Image 1

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    4t/'-'- orftotim m.OBBBTXVT BTBBET.' '
Mi'v-v- ■- ''. '", —J-'s
' 7 4 J»AU.Y PHEM.
. tu«bl* to tte.CutMr •
;offt* citr atSußoium
Do«.ia*» Foa-KifttT, HoKxna;
jJUJfkI »p*.Bi* Moxtu—itwiaMj la id
' y ;,t»i.weeki,y «&*..;
fcb«rlb.r. outot a. W
VGOOIM. ; i
’¥'» r'OHESIKET B*BEEt ■*-
,Otfw toCity,W«*®ra,aaASwtl>*m Wholes* Bur
•t* *w*t wia'skt* ofßtftrirwrt Ftnajr - -
auM&Ksrnc,; w
BOWSCiKIBBKD HOmJBRY.AND ~ WCOLKN
i PSRXQOKtMG ASp VARfiS, X -
W*» ! th* b«t' aelscted. aad n«t: oouglsto. bn* of
t*»" «od« too h»Y»,« W offend. Md whloh sre suited
" f ‘hs Ktrlmt inprioe, soalltjr and stj)s»> '
SoleAgeuutußhlladelililsfor tho'
-WtrERVUeiT HOMERY 1 MERtM) AWD
irHtSBU#Y kI(WTtSO.c6/| wlh#HSb
»(^ii|sS|g.iurjSo4] I J BBs Hp’
■OXBHA,WACTU,UINGCO,i j
Wallaceaboics /sTEfet;spring
. OSBORNSAND CHRKBMAN’S.y ’ wiRTe.
> A&oA|«at9forue - 1
AMBfIICANAND fiOW£ JIN ,CO.’S PINS. -
jyy-¥tttth3aM.r -
& NEEDHAM.
•CH ARLES WEILM.
r -‘ OKRUANYOWN •
;p;' i slUS)^Rt: ; *4KWicitmfßS.' ■ /'
Wfivr.>t:liJc.n th 6 ipscial aUsutnn of Hosiery Bvtn
.Oar siietr'aod much-needed ini.'
.rowsus* ** CartDßSN’a and MISSUS’ TUCK
fIIBBED rap HOBtERTin-Btrlp*d«j.d High Colon:
",tPAX*ire APPUBBpOR,]
-i-.t-M-i,.,-,- At*#,..!-; r . ■-
' »• ,
...vi i nOQng, CLOAKS. TALMAS,
....', . SACKS, SONTaGS, HUBIAS,'
' ''' v '-'' ■■ Ao.y Ad.; Ac:, ' ■
•Oomvriaioif OVER 200 BTVLBS from thelaUitWd
nn aaFiik Ffon our own tong practical oxptrieotsel
sod. employing add*, hot: first eltarireohaaics, *» sro
wwoAtfteffiwjoSoAion Buyers* liao.of than goods
difcCd?! I) TO ?iONK nr point of workmanship, Stjlej,,
ot Prists, had retpoiilfidlr solloit thaptiranagedf the
Trado, ■ l 'si
. Solo Aeantsaro i,. -.i . , .
i'VV, KRUO & CO..
• ?yf:Stuih3ia
[DFAGTOEK
<3 <**#*£■: anOA K B.
V
%
• MANTILLAS,
.*!st=fcqANT <*ABMENTS,
, ISKOUUHT I’JWMXIIE ADJACIifIT
'V o kk- ii 6 o m s
iv’Kjir'sioaiiiHu.
JCOOPJEIR & GONAKD.
•, ANl> MARKET STREETS
SWakKT/abpwrfooUi,
:. HUGOS!) BTKBET, litluw Bpraß»,
fis * f 1
ifi- j
iiiMa£,*c;i he v
■ «■. >*: / - * -•- . '
& . - U.XUi’- -
T .■ r!<i,.V *
f ZtV*r,\ f,t- •-.
', i t&m w
ITS PKNTXKU TO ST CENT*.
.iias&sgi ■
iT» . - 1. »Q1 OatigTNUT 6t.
TEAVELLING GOODS. ■ ■
048 much ' ' - -i’ : - -
‘ WwaxLt-'ssmmrrHKits. ttai chkbtnut gr.
PtABEGE AND.ORGANDY ROBES.
iRES’OaLAWNS AND ORGANDIES.
:* SON ' -:t
Hiv»i»*d«.*NOTHßß BJSJDUCTIOK V ;
.*u?ure*'<?oonf.’ :
■ .brtvojfMkafJtnorto-K&siM.»a ion to tboir'
oo*t- Uian canrinf:
v , •■'■■;
Frown Laos Point*, ,
*' r
stilt H<u>ttlUsmoveryyonety*
Bnu Goods for ftasnsor,
< ptswaoodsfcttiio aouide,
BratsooodBfor4l|fl«oftsti7«. -
* - tirwOopd* forl&oUy t - '
below ccul.
% Prooofa usually as cent*. <
/' OQr .GOODS ,
'?1 AWNS.—Tip-top MaortmentfMtcolora
jP-i-.'SmiW LXW&tiai rioVBARBOES-.
yL}U£oij*n**^\ 1 , jHwtw Rotwo.,
.;* SjßOi*iiwHir -J j v Little Flounces* •
*i(\ Fink Lawns* . /Double*ktrt,
/ Brown Lowoa* . . > ’ ■ oayßtriw#
v. ? If aek Lawns,. Noaf^^**
. ,ouocols«iiwiu», ; JJiaok fiamoo*.
ttxo*llant*ftd dU*pMa6tuU BUM*
Mantles am Ihwtonr.’ k
liswjsase::: '»-.,■:
i^SSSMKSMBL'
BOYS’ WEAR, Cfotta,
r f xsgsjbfis^' =
■,U,i' •■; !-■;••“■' - cimwi-otiuiut,-■ ■ -■
'Alaueitaoltoftlie beat aniOitT. *o4 at cb»»»«r ratca
•than erer aold. ' CtMJPEtt *. OONARDT
W . 8. K-eomer »ISTH and MARKET.
■ ,- J
IRISH MNEN3. —A fire* invoice of
\ : mlwWkl exrrptij ■ for oorfcmltv
■;iS3®ye'
1 RHESISTIBtE INBtJCEMENTST 0
- Tso*MLKyTcsli!H kav# tUi< 4a? MtaMd Mr
,W “ , '®P« fo W. FBR CFNT. '
Vrwiei WePmn*« aod rieooionwuM,
• SauU«,
> »UcKolfcM«rt4UM, DttSUrt*&o.. &o*»
', Si.U.'Oaraw EIOUWk BKiNa™*auiiK,
k- J.OOKINU 6L.UIEB.
£/0 O K IN G»G LASSES,
ABD, PICTUAB 7BAXXB,
trrmBAVINOS. ..
4ABES S. EAHLK A. SUN, .
. JM£lMT£i(k\ M&NVt'JLCTVRBIIS, WHOLE
SA *‘ B / Ati P, P H)I jmmwmmt. ~
SABLES’ UALUCRIIB,
, it'B-ir
HAZARD,AHOTOHINBON,
:' ■; *o.n* aaorrmsT wr„ : / : :
. , opwnssipN ipHMJHAirni ,;'
■ '•'•“• r po* tub Bal*of vr-. 5
J*MinADELPHIAMAI>E
- • GOODS. :;:r-.
, CLABET I .:
ALBED O. ROBERTS.
’ WEAKER
iIn.JMJr..-:
S^fcVtiV; : ; : w»»y».
= TV
fiAßtVßii NKEDHAST,
3'i* CHESTNUT BTRBET.
3-1. HYATT,
aOS CH UKG H ALI.BV,
Bole and l'attnltn tor tliii citj
or TBK
PATENT PAPEK POX.
This Box exotia all others for beaalr* strength, and
tiiirabllilf. Souring: is dispensed with in its manuf&o
ttre,thus seonriiiK the groat desideratum of
STRONG CORNERS.
>#"' Ordors Solicited. J*J6-Jin
OHMTKTrT RKBEV, PURE OLD
OIL FAIHTIKGSi *«., kt,
rhllaielfU*.
JOL, 3H^290.
JgSHLEIIAN’S CRAVAT STORE
MOVED
- : 'IX) THE N, W. (Mu. OF SEVENTH AND
r , CHESTNUT.
.. OIU.VAT3, ioitos.ttjsa ;
PATENT ENAMELLED COLLARS i
GENTLEMEN’S FURNISHING
! GOODS; •
ALL KINDS UNDER WEAR;
shirts Made to order) -
6 FOR #9.
COB. SEVENTH AND CHESTNUT.
‘
J. W. SOOTT—lst* of tho Ann. of Win
• cheater k SoottsRJWTIjBMEN'S EURNISH
}fiAJHSR?..3?? SRIkT MANUFACTORY! 814
the Girard Hon,)
-MW.«in>*)< rameelMlraallthe attention at hit
»n*f cMOtiD* eod ftwndtDihii new atore, and !■ sre-
' HOVSE*rVIttrtBHIN6 GOODS.
gUPSIEIOR REFRIGERATORS,
Mo»t’lmpro7ed kind..
CHILDRENS’ O/GS AND CARRIAGES,
la Oreit Ytn.tr,
FUHNITURE LITERS,
, . Ve.ryueeiiil miiraadini Carnsta and Maltint.
WILLIAM YARN ALL’S
HOUSE FURNISHING STORE.
Ho. MM CHESTNUT STREET.
. lnwdiateir otmaite the Academy ol Fin* Art*.
PAPER HANGINGS-.
rjK> CLOSE BtfBINESS.
~: HART, XONTOOMERT, b 00.,
so: m chestnut mm,
WIHmII tnMhrtaththla winter and aeOtSUSt, their
lute eteek at
PAPER HANGINGS.
Milttiet el every yviety eenneeted with the bntinea,
AT GREATLY REDUCED FBICIS.
UUS FRENCH PAPERS AT N FER CENT. BE
• LOW COST. •
foraei* wanilu nth InM lT|Met,iu Hi mat
BARGAINS.
WATCHES, JEWEEKY, Ac.
gETS OF JEWELRY,
CF THE NEWEST AND
, MOST ELEGANT STYLES-.
LADIES’ WATCHES,
Ju*t received.
THOMAS O. GARRETT.
Jyl-St TIS CHESTNUT STREET.
JJ, DIAMOND STUDS, KINGS, AND
-&e<i©Aa&l to coin; Also; rated Ware of every do
sqnatwn. ; - >' . r . G. RUSSELL,
- r. , - , .ifgKonh SIXTg Street.
MACHINES.
ryp. UHONGER * CO.’S
SHUTTLE AMD uouble-loof stitch
sewing MACHINES,
FAMILY. USB.
- ’-z - ' - s^w^ EH 5.«0.,
No. 6SB ARCH STREET.
TrWa of SHU'm.K MACHINE. *M,' ■
Trio* of PQUBLE-LOOB WITCH MACHINE from
EMapwuSo,' --- "• . -
Tfi* nrittot and moat cfligient maohlues manu-,
firctargd for alt kinds of cm. I
P. 8. —MACHINE SILK, COTTON, NEEULES.
OIL, eto., conatantlr on band. jr!-3m
JJARRIS’ 801J33018
* SEWING MACHINE.,
, SoVra ftom,.two '«poolg witliout the trouble of ro
vnadinx; tana vith ilttlaor no noise.
-FarMilast No. : TSQ ABOH Btreat. PhibiUolphia, and
No>73 BALTIMORE Btreeti BaltmiorOiMd. ■ JjS-Jpi
& WIESON
SEWING ;; MACHINES.
V. HENKT OOY, Agast,
m C&EBTNUT BTEEEI, SECOND FLOOIt,
Maa>l»«a, with OMraton. on nirotql’riTat* FasUiiaa.
f West STATE Street, Trenton, N. 1,
IM CENT UAL SttVAXE, Eaaton, Fa.
• ' ’ - jall-far
WILCOX & GIBBS’SEWING MA
, GHINN--c:Tbp mat aad inenaaina demand for
Wlfool A Oibba* Sewlni.Maohmo la a guarantee ot ita
iwr.^ R -
I NEWYORK ADVERTISEMENTS.
BELMONT ft 00.,
BANKERS.
* DBF YORK)
I<hm Letters of Credit to Traveller* available 1*
, V ; ALL PARTS OP THB WORLD,
• - ' 9BSOYMI VHX - •
MESSRS. EOTHSCfIILR.
'* ' * ' • - 09 ■
ARIStLONDON, FRANKFORT* ft BUNA, HA'
'• PL£S t AND TUMID CORRESPONDENTS
• jaflMbi* •- ,
HAUL’S PATENT
PLATED 10K PITCH EO
. Entirely different in their construction from all others -
end WARRANTED to keep the ICE LONGER than
any,Pitcher now in use at a temperature of seventy de
crees Fahrenheit* The above Pitoher* will keep the
water eold for twuiy-fsur hours,
: A pound aud a half of ice in three pints o( water will
. tatt scvtn hours and fifty-five minutes ,* while the same
tuaoUty in ad ordinary stone pitoher f at the same cw
eerstore* only lasts two hours aud fifteennuautsa!
Persons should not confound these Pitchers with
th&se usually sold* but inquire for
HALL’S PATEN*
WM. WILSON & SON.
Sola Aunt. fur Uia ManufaoUrrr,
8. W. Corner FIFTH anil CHERRY StreeU.
nrlt-tr
‘"GOVERNMENT JAVA”
COFFEE.
FOB BALK Hi'
0. H. MATTSON,
ARCH AND TENTH STREETS,
(JABT-BTEEL BELLS.
FOB CHURCHES, FIRE ALARMS, Ac.,
Jfo K B AfcK BV
Baylor & go., ~
IW-tf r ’ • *3O COMMERCE Street.
VyOBK’S • ODOMETER BAND COM
*▼ V i»avy, Hartford, Copo.. Hitmafacture WORK’S
PAI*ST OW)«ETER CARRIAGE BANDS, which
.art aaia&n. ohta* aaoMuiiMiti neunnat with uner
riSK MMtM. apydiatacpa jpiaead over by th» v«hio.c
towmphtkny araattMhad. l'EaenextYa-finiahed Banda
ana than inlanor baixia without tba
Hfe
MARTIN* QPAYLE’B
%a*BHar~“
r-U-.T
f»APEB, PAPER—NOTE, LETTER,
l-fK.i iPA?* l iC P*it'l B4 W DRAWING, SERMON,
udiu ouw kM< VJtiOMot «ali,.at low jrioM.bj
lrtHm
‘ l\ ( , ’ ’
~ EXCURSION
{§ BA BATHING.
ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY,
»« HOURS FROM PHILADELPHIA.
ACCOMMGDATP'fIG FOR 0,000 VISITORS.
ATLANTIC CITY t* now conceded to be one of the
most doliithtful Sea-side resorts in the World. Its bath
ing is unsurpassed; its beautiful unbroken beach (nine
miles in length! is unequsll&tf fer aaj- on the Continent,
save that of GAlvebton; its air is remarkable for its
ttfrnew; its sailing ami fishing facilities ore perfect}
its hotels are veil furnished, and as veil kept as those
of Newport or Saratoga j vhilo its avonues and walks
are oleaner and broader than those of any other Sea
bathing pl&oe in the oountrv* - , !A • *
Trains of the CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAIL
ROAD leave VINE-STREET WHARF, Philadelphia,
daily at 7.50 A. M. and 4P. M. Returning—reach Phil
adelphia at 9A. M. and 7AS P. Rl. Fare SIAO. - Round
trip tiokett, rood for three days, s*lo, to be purchased
or exchanged a't the ticket offices only, and not of or by
conductors. D.etauoe ($6 mile’s. Sunday train leaves
Vipe street at S.SO A.' M.; leaves Atlantic City at 6.90
P. M,—slopping only for wood and water, A telegraph
extends the whole length of the read. JeSO-tf
MMm SUNDAY TRAIN
FOR THE SEA SHORE.
Lorn; Vino stroot at S 30 A. M.
Loavo Atlantic at. G.BO P, hi.
This Train Till stop at HtHdouSoM, Waterforil, Ham
niofttatt. tM& Has Harbor City, jy7-I2t
fiii■!ns— i for the sea-
SWSS HO BE.-CAMDEN AND
'On ana a^»W«a T on tho Cam
uenasd Atlantia Railroad wiU run as follows *
Mail tram leaves Vine-etreot vhart,, . .7,30 A.M.
Express train (stopping only for wood and
-water;. .....4.00 P. M.
p ' “•
Mail tram.. __.4.45p. M.
Express-train A. 15 a. M.
Accommodation from Egg Harbor 6MA, M.
T SUNDAY TRAINS.
Leave Vine street at™. £.30 A, M.
. Leave At&ntio at. .»•. 0.30 P, M.
Stopping only for wood and water,
faro to Atfamiu when tiokets are purohased before
entering the oars, SLBO. Round trip tiokets (good for
threefota), 53.60, to. 1m purchased orexchanged at tho
ticket office only, and pot of or by conductors. ,
Season tickets...,
„ Monthly do, ip.
Freight must be delivered at Cooper’s Point by 9 p.M.
Tire, Company will not bo responsible for any goods
until rooelvea and receipted for by their Acentatthe
Point. • JNO. G. BRYANT,
• Agent,
MW TO PLEASURE TRAVEL
LERS.—Grand Excursion from Philadel
phia to Niasarabolls. AJoatreal. Qcebeo, River Sague
nay, White Mountains, Portland, Boston, Saratoga
Bpmua, and Nov York, via. Lake Ontario. River St.
Lawrence, Grand Trunk Railway. Splendid uteamer
MAGNET for Saguenay River, and return to Philadel
phia via Portland and Boston or Saratoga Springe. Fares
for the round trip as fellows:
Prom Philadelphia, via Quebec, White Mountaius.Boa
ton. and Now 1 ork. sSdAO
From Philadelphia via Montreal, Saratoga Springs,
and New York 31A0
From ifucboo to Saeueuay Hirer, and return.-—.U.00
Tickets good until October 15.1W0.
■. For Exounion Tickets and all information as to routs,
§&festev&s® 00 8 -
JelJ-2ra , General Agen
OYS REMEDY.
Dr. DARIUS HAM'S
INVIGORATING SPIRIT.
Thii Medicini jUia beat used by the public for six years
withincreasing favor* It is recommended to Cure
'Dyspcpsi<r,\.Ncrvotitntt** Heart* B*m, Colic
Pains, Windinthc Stomach* or Pains in the
Bonds, Headache,' Drowsiness, Kidney
Oaniplaints, Lots hpirits, Delirium
' ' Tremens, Intemperance.
[T SIIMUHTES* ExniLABATSg, IXVISOXATBSi BVI
wiLL.noY iNXQxicATK oB,Brvfnrr. ,
As a hlediolne it is'quick and effectual, curing tbo
mostoggravatadeoeesof Dyspooftia, Kidney Complaint*,
fr.d alf other derangemants of the stomach and Bowels
uiasjwedy naaneer.
. It vilL irstantly revive the moat melancholy and
drooping spirits, and restore the weak, nervous, and
sickly to health; strength, and vigor, -
, Persons who, from the injudicious ose of liquors, have
become dejected, and their nervous systems shattorod.
constitutions broken down, and subject to thAt horrible
onrse.to humanity, the DgLimPR TKSMB.Vb, will, al
most immediatohr, feel the happy and healthy invigo
rating efficacy ofur. Ham's Invigorating Spirit.
WHAT IT WILL DO.
Doss.—One wine glass lull as often as ncoCßWwy.
One dose will remove all Bad Spiiits.*
One dose will core Heart-burn.
Three dose* wiU cnra indigestion.
One done thll give you a Good Appetite.
Onedoee wilt stop the distreHing paisa of Dyspopsio.
- One dose will remove the distressing and disagreeable
effects of Wind or flatulence, and ae toon &s the
stomach receives the Invigorating Spirit, the distress
ing load oedftll painful feelings will be removed.
-One dcse toilrrettiove the meat distressing pains of
Colio, «ith«r m the stomach or bowels. •
•A few doees wiUiemoveaU obstructions in the Kidnor,
Bladder, or Unnavy; Organs,
Persons who are seriously afflicted with any Kidboy
Complaints are assured ofspeedy relief by a dose or
two, w.,i. tvo mu ' B -
Persons who, from dumpstlng too iquoli over night,
And feel the evil effeotso. poisonous liquors, in violent
headaobes, sickness at stomach, weakness, giddiness,
&o*» wiU find ootiloee will i unovo all bad feelings.
Lad>6B of weaZwcd sinkly constitutions should toko
the Invigorating. Spirit three umosaday; it will make
them strong, healthy, and hapi y» remove all obstruc
tions and irregularities from the menstrual organs, and'
restore the bloom of health and beauty to the careworn
face. ,
During pregnanoy it will be found an invaluable medi
cine to remove oissgreeabl* sensations at the stomach.'
, All the proprietor asks is a trial, and to induo* this, he
bah put up the Imvioohatino Spirit iapmt battles at
60 cents, quarts $l.
General Depot, 48 WATER Street, New York.
, , DYOfTABONS,
Wholesale Agents iu Philadelphia,
and for sale by all Druggists.
Je7-tkstuir
,VIRS. WINSLOW,
i’ X ANBXFBHIENqKD AUftSE AND FEMALE
rhysician, cre*enU to the attention or mothers her
SOOTHING SYRUP
TOK CHILDREN TEETHING,
•yoh. neatly facilitate* the BrooMM of teethlnr* by
iqfianunfttion; will aJ
myALLPAIK anti co&Eihoaio action, and it
_ BURK Tp KEttULATE THIv BOWEUL
Itaptsd ttpoa itt mother*,it will give rest to yonnelrM
RELIEF AND HEALTH TO ¥OUJt INK AMTS.
We have sat up and soldi
reant and can «&y.in con
sgjgggmkH
fthif arliolß for over ten
fida&oe and truth of:
able to *ay of any otbor
FAlLfeii..io/a eiri
ttmelv pied* Never did a* ire know an instance of
dratimsationbr tutg one J" who.usedit. Ontheoon
trwT,iflU are delighted CQ with its operations, and
•peufbtenna of highest oommendationofltsmagU
00l eceot* and medical vir w met. we apeak intuit
Barter <r wfaat ,we do fc snow.” after ten genre’
Mperleno*,andpledge«nr r* reputation for the fulfil
gent of what we hpre de f? clare In almost every
ratance where the infant {q issuflenngfrom pain ana
exhaustion* relief will be a* foundiniiueen or twenty
minutes alter the Syrup is administered. ,
•Jiisvwoabw preparation O is tfieoreionction of one
i tttftivWMiU ®% PE . ai ; O bnced and skilful
.. and hat bees wed with
nevei-fftUmituoceM n w .
ffc . /Thousands of oases,
• ttnot onlv relieves the » ghitd from paJn, but in
vigorates thevtoxnaoh and •» bowels, oor reals aoiditv*
and gives tone and energy te to the whole system. It
flOWliho AND WIND © COLIC*nd overcome con
if/ not j speedily remedied, end in
teetUng or from angler jfj would* sajrbi
e very mother who has a £ phMtufTenpg from any of
he foregoingcpmplainu, fe ao qwf I*6 roar prejudice*,
to r tho prejucfices of others, stand between
tow suffering ohildjand •* the. Telief >that wilt be
JjUKE-yM. ABSOLUTE qq 5V BURJS-to follow the
»ie of this medicine, If T, timely used. Fall direo
ens for using wUlacoom « pany each .bottler None
rnttvshoWz fa*
Triacl -
Fnoo Scents a bottle. ■ jySs*lg
A s TOR house.
GREAT EASTERN.
The city cars, conveying passengers to tlie immediate
neighborhood of tho Groat Eastern, leavo the Actor
House every two minutes during tho day,
« Notr Vork, July 3-tuthlm
AND .OLAM SOUP served
SaTb75 r /i3^i°Sfe:X''^s^»
Street.
W. B. Dinoare from 13 to 3 oVlook
1 ADIES’ TBAVELLINQ BAGS
sad forsUe bi 0. F. IUIMPP, 118
NortIiFOUHTH street, above Aroli, '
„„_wmlmBw and retail ounnliMbiNr of
Jobbing promptly done. n7-lh>
CiyRtJP MOLASSES, &c.—500 hhds and
Barrels LOVEHINO’S No Plus Ultra, Golden By
rup, and extra Golden. Also, Bnear-houso, Musco*
vado. and Porto Bioo Molasses in Wshoads and bar
telt,- for sate by JAMES GRAHAM A, Co„ LETITIA
street.
DICK.- 200 Tierces Prime Retailing
f'co., C t , KTVn^?t'a for Balo bj ,AMES ORAHA,S
HAVANA cigars, of dif
vyVjVW ferent brand*, all sixes and prioea,
in store, or recent arrivals, and for sale by ’
JeM-Sw . CRARLKB TJSTIS, 130 WALNUT Street.
HAMS! HAMS! HAMS!
Prime new Sugar Cured
Ham* lOoeoUper lb,, (warranted.)
„ w OHAd. SMITH & BRO u
N. W. corner SIXTH and Plffts,
OPIRITS TURPENTINE.—I7S bbls. Sots.
Ttiroiotine* in «toro and for sale by ROWLEY*
ASHfrURN SR, fcQQ.,Mo, 16 80UTfl. Wh ARVEB .
PORTO RICO SUGAR.—2SO hhds me
dium and strictly prime finality, for sale by
JAMES GRAHAM & CO., LBTLTIft rtreet.
O TEW ART’S PAISLEY MALT.—Iu Pun-
ohecrai of thin’, WH/SKEY-Jart racaived and for
•ala in bond ny OBQKQg 'ff hitkl.^v
mjM-tm IS« aoVTR RROftTitTMt .
PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JULY
TUESDAY, JULY 10. 1860.
Loti itecon. 1 '
it Would be percolvc-ti, by a uotice in yo -
lerday’s Press, that Brown & Taggart, tiio
BtfStog publishers, will not bring out their
now. and complete edition of tho Works of
Francis Bacon, whom , Pope has designated,
“ The wisest, greatest,'meanest of mankind, 1 '
UAtil September. The. publication was to have
commenced this month, bat will bo delayed in
order to introduce valuable additional tj'Jtqt
and eorrcetlobs, by Mr. Speeding, the English
editor of tho work, which will much increase
ita value and interest. '. .
This mention of Francis Bacon reminds
us of the ordinary, but incorrect, practice of
calling him “ Lord” Bacon, which wo (The
Frcsu) have strenuously objected to, as
viOy do to, a fiddler dr a balloonist, being
vulgarly -and ighotatitly dubbed “ froico
sor.” In Thomas Moore’s Diary ho records
a dinnor at Murray's, the publisher, whereat
Sir Janies Mackintosh, Sir Thomas Lawrence,
■Washington Irving, Lockhart, the Somer
villes, ahd Mr. Miller, an ablo writer on law,
wero all present. He says: Miller “ mentioned
the clrcumstauco ot, Coko being called Lori
Coke, though with no right to it- Xerdßauon,
too, a misnomers ought to bo called Lord Vc
rulam. Jndgt Blackstone a vulgarism.”
Sit EdwaW Coko was only a knight, and
not entitled to bo called Lord Coke, though,
as Chief Justice, ho was “My Lord ” ami
“ Tour Lordship,” on the Boncli. Francis
Bacon waß.ono of two hundred and thirty.
seven persons who wore knighted Bliortly aiter
fhO ebjcossion of James I. In 1617 ho was
maffo kcopcT o’f the Great Seal; in January,
1618, he was appointed Lord Chancellor,- and
in the July following was created Baron Vc ru
lam. In* 1020 ho was created Viscount St,
Albans. Ho was, thorofbre, Lord Vorulam
first, and next Lord St. Albans, but never
“Lord” Bacon.
What was he called in Us life-timo I We
can answer the question. Mr. Joseph N. Mo
reau, one of our compositors, has a taste for
Curious old books, and in his collection is one
which ho has lent us. It is entitled “ Via
Kocta ad Vitam Longam; Or, A Plains Philo-*
sophical Discovrso of the Nature, Faculties,
and Effects of all such Things, as by way uf
Nourishments and Dietcticall' Obseruatious
inako for tho presoruatibn of Health, wilU
their iust applications vnt'o cuery ago, consti
tution of bodlo, and time olyeare; By To;
Vennor, Doctor ef Physicke, at Bathe in - Utd
Spring and Fall, and at other times on tho Bitr
rough of North-Petherton, noero to tho ancieut.
Hauon-Towno of • Bridgewater, in Somerset f
shire.” This titlo, by the way; shows that Hie;
.use ot tbo word Fall as a synonymo for -4uf urns, 1
so commos in this country, and so-much ridi
culed as au Auioricanism in England, actaally
was thoroughly English long before tho Pil.
grim -Fathers introduced it into New Kug-i
land.
Worthy Doctor Tobias Vernier, whoso book
was published in 1620, (tho imprint runi
“London,, Printed by Edward Griffin, for
ltichard Moore, ahd aroto be sold at his shop,
in St. - Dunstau’s , Church-yard, in Flcol
street,”)- dedicated it, iir-» highly eulogistic
preface, not to “Lord” Bacon, which the
man was not, but “The Bight Honorable,
FrancisJ Lord Vervlam, Lord High Cbancgli
lor of England, &c.” At tho time tho book
was printed, Bacon was only LordVernlam,
though, ho was elevated to the rank of Vis
count St. Albans in the same year.
Nothing seems atTonger than tho presump
tion that Bacon, as always has been customa
ry, was spokon to and spoken of, in the fui- ■
ness of bis fame and honors, by the title which
ho had won , and not by ono which did not
exul. Suppose that instead of giving a ba
ronetcy to Walter Scott, George the Fourth
had created him Baron Abbotsford. How
would Ac have been called! No doubt bo
would invariably bo addressod, personally, o 3
Lord Abbotsford. Many would- continue to
speak of him, familiarly, as “ Scott” —but, as
suredly, nobody would dream of mentioning
him as “ Lord Scott.” Again, thero is little
doubt that, whenever he pleasos to ask for it,
Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton will bo elevated to
tho Perage—it is understood that he is un
willing to accept it, whilo biß wifo lives, not
wishing to placo a coronet upon tho bold brow
of one who lmd unsoxed herself, and devoted
whatever talents shq possessed to the constant
abuse of himself and bis noarost relations.
(Sbo is in rude bodily health, by tho way, and
very likely to outiivo her hUßband!) Say,
-however, that taking his titlo from his estate
in Hertfordshire, Bulwer should be made
Baron Knebworth. Surely, nobody would
think of speaking to him, or of him, ns Lord
Bulwer !
Tho cases of Scott and Bulwer, which wo
put hypothetically, run parallel with tho case
of Francis Bacon, Baron Vorulam, and Vis
count St. Albans—particularly as, in the par
liamentary inquiry into bis venality as a judge,
ho is invariably mentioned as Viscount St.
Albans, and nover once as Lord Bacon. To
miscall him ho has grown into a habit—but uso
does not mako right what is radically wrong.
North American Review*
NO. OLXXXVXII.
This 1b by far tfio oldest of living Auioricau
periodicals, having bsea cstabliahod nearly forty
six years ago. It has often exhibited marked
ability, and has boon undoviatingly respectable,
as to talent and tone. Tho Number just issued
has several exoollent papers. BuoU 13 the perso
nal and oriUoalnotico of Perelval tho poet, whoro
Jyrioal compositions were published in two volumes,
at Boston, last yoar. Snob, with evident know
ledge of the question in all its points, is tho ablo
paper upon slavery In Borne. Suoh, inn still dif
ferent line, Is the essay upon landsoapo gardening,
happily welldimed, as well as able, now when Non-
York has got a Central Park of her own, and Phi
ladelphia, Baltimore, and other groat cltios are
about following so good an example. Tho disser
tation on tho Iniluonoo of Political Eoonomy on Le
gislation is indeed a history of the now science.
Thoro are papers on tho new odition of tho Septua
glntand upon Strauss and the mythic tboory,—also
upon the Charities of Boston, which curiously
claims, as a Boston contribution, {because it was
“ collootod in various parts of tho United States,
by the labors of a Boston patriot and scholar,”)
the sum of $70,000 raised for the Mount Vornon
Ladles 7 Association, not the Washington Memo
rial, by Mr. Everott. A thoughtful and gonial
artiolo is that upon Ugo Foscolo, and in a lighter
voin is tho criticism upon Becont Fronob Litora
turo. "Wo notico, with admiration, tho dotonuini l .-
tion to do justice to tho private oharaotor of Thor.
Jefferson: —tho letters published hero corroborate
tho notions, on that head, of Mr. llandall, tho
latest and best of Jefferson’s biographers.
The notice of Dr. Francis L. Hawks’ History of
North Carolina cannot establish a oharaotor for a
weak and wordy book, and wo might havo beon
spared any further dissertation upon Margaret
Fullor, whoso literary reputation appoare to b&vn
grown out of commiseration for hor untimely
death.
From tho paper upon Landscape Gardenings wo
extract tho following sonsiblo remarks upon the
transplantation and acclimatization oftrocs There
are many villa residenoos. with pretty pleasure
grounds, the owners of wbioh may profit by theso
- hints:
Wo must bo permitted, howoror, to protest
against the hasty introduction of trees, evergreen
or deciduous from southern olim&tos into northern.
That suoh trees sometimes live and flourish
is undoubtedly true. For example,.the yellow
'wood from Tennessee, the horaobhestnut from
Oontral Asia, Austrian and Oembtari pines from
Contra! Europe, and tho Laroh pine from Corsiaa,
thrlvo well fn the ollmate of our Northern States.
Vegetable physiology shows that all trees possess
tho property, in a oortain degree, of adapting
themselves to solls~and latitudes different from
those in which they are Indigenous. Art also oan
assist in the process of acclimatisation. If, for
a young treo bo transferred from Georgia
to New York; and reoeivd no protection the first
winter, it will nndoobtedlyt perishi . whereas, if
nursed a little during the severest) sold of a few
years, it may at length become' eoffioioptly
hardened to take oare of itself. All that the .ten
der sapling needs, we are told, iejthne enough to
form several layers of wood and bark to proteot
the ocntral .portions frpm.tbe effeots of frost. Mr.
Sargent has removed'taq Tomya jqsnfblia from
Florida to bis own estate on the Hudson, and, by a
winter covering, diminished from year to year, has
inured U to bear tlrer severest ooid of our climate
without lojury._se.also. mentions other Conifers
of,frolicj
k*JtttiUulej 5 At MonlpeDidr. in France, tbo ;
Fndo of Tyborj young, ?ja;“ destroyed by *.
njoucra'o tleffreo of cold; bat if protected until it
attains aorno sico, U will eudaro in tho gardens of
Genova on ihtotndty of frost fout times an severo as
hilled tno yonng plunt in the South of
,i ratio© »> Southern trooa can be rendered more
lobuat, if, oi) being transferred to tho North* they
are planted whore the summers are hot and dry,
and whore the spll U les3 humid than that of their
S*J\7o habitats. - This provonte the formation of
.endor, rfjootitaxlt bfanolics,-om! ripena off the woetU
beloro th© approach of oold rfeatner. The
will not endnr© the wlntor climate of Faria, yet It
hoare that of •!Peking, wliero tho cold is much
more severe, \trad this solely because in "the Ut*
tor cad© th© -autmaor is hotter and tho soil
drlor. trees may sometimes bo safaly
removed to the North, If they are planted near the
sea, whore the ellmate is soltened. and keptppm
paratlvely uniform by the profoucuipf that vast
cqualljor of heat, Tho r satno restilt may bi'at
toiaed. In a by sotting tender trees in tho
s p«l*sr °f fidrffitindliJg foftsstfl, Whofe the ifactua
tions of tompUAiture are Icii eovoro than iu tho
opeu plain. 1 ■
WI»U a knottledge of such facte, it ia
that zsaloutf ahould sack to ©oriel*
their ooileotfons with epooimons from other latk
tudes. - There fa hardly a more pleasurable ex*
OjUnioui thahthat of watoblng the aooUmatiza
tion of a tree} and If the work is successful, it
13 no vulgar delight to eoo tho strange follege
waving nt*i(d the dative and familiar trees ot one’s
own ptomlfds. It raises the ground at once above
the tomrion ffoidd df thd neighborhood, and stamps
thora as tho abode of intelilgendo and tufa© Yet
it roust bt»' admitted that tho nooUmatizatlon of
tender tree* is nbt genoraliy as suoeoepful in prac
tico as theory would load na to suppose. Many un«
rojsi’on contingencies Intervene to blast the plant
er’s hopss. This work should be undertaken only
by tho intelligent fonr, and those who have abun
dant tirao ana moans at their disposal. Let ama
teurs olid lmrsorymon blanket their shivering
foreigners, aud humor their caprices, for several
yoara, before introducing thorn into general aooloty;
and lat the poople at large satisfy themselves with
those trsc« which long trial has proved to bo really
riahly. /
Letter front IJenver City
|Coru**jN>{|ijonoo of Tho Press.)
Dcxvbji, K. T., Juno 2J.
After a long and titedaffle journey of about five
j sWoeks from Loavcnwurtli, X havo arrived safe in
the great city of tbo West, called Denver. This
placo is as yot lu ‘Ha infancy, but if It continues
will erelong bo'a great city—tbero being about
jjOOO houses, 8,000 .population, ami 1,000 floating
population. Easiness hero is passably active, the
busy season not yet having commenced. This is
Owing to tho thWando that hare, left and sought
the mountain district to prospect fbr gold, and will
lio doubt return to this pi Oca in about two months
to got a winter supply. Wo find here most every
thing in the provision lino as in the States, except
ing vegetables, but at co naidor&blo higher prico
than in yoqrolty. flour is quoted at $l5
dred, bacon 23 cents per pound, eager and ooffoo
25. and< 30 oontsf per pound, good beef 12$ cents-
The country through which I passed after leaving
the Missouri jjVjtf vrjw very .different from what X
had antioip&tod, finding it all the way to tbo I'laUo
rivor constant rise-:, and Ihon descending totu deep
ravines, which mado tbo travel much more difficult
and tedious. To ono unaccustomed to frontier life
tho woucry and business oonnooted with travel, to*
gothor with camp life and exposuro of lying on tho
ground, with nothing to cheer you but the horrlings
of the wild beasts of tho forest, arc very different
you know to what I, a Pennsylvanian, havo been
accustomed to. Aftor thirteen days travol X ar
rived at Tort Kearney, a Government station ou
the most beautiful plain X ever beheld This is a
very important post,’trailer tho command of Col.
.May, who forces the Indians to rospcct tbo Terri
torial laws, and U a safeguard to tbo Western emi
grant. I now wend my way over tbo long-oxtond
od meadow# of tbo Piatto, tho beauty of which
often boggara description; covered over with tali
grass, and fntorsporfied with many Mlvory little
lakes. Hero t would eay Nature bao dono moro
fir a public highway than any othor jdaco in the
Union, thoro being nothing to mar the traveller
but occasionally a Handbill and largo quantities of
alkali water. On tho hills tho wild cactus pre
sents an appearance, though wild, of being culti
vated in the States. The Torritoricc cf Kansas
and Nebraska arc not entirely destitute of agri
cuUnrcK-thc-h’xnd of tho enterprising fanner ißjnst
making an inroad upon tho wilds of tho forest, for
come 209 miles after leaving Dcavenworth there are
to bo seen log houses and fences, aud heru we find'
moro or lose tbo land cultivated—this ib partied*,
larly tho case twenty to forty miles from Denvor.
Tbo largo emigration and high prico of grain will
aUmulato men to enter ibis kind of burinosa, com
being worth 12 , potatoos $3, and hay $2OO per ton.
Tho great diffloalty in forming is tho want of water,
as It docs not rain boro at times for threo months,
consequently it requires a great doal of labor to
irrlgatp the land, it Is astonishing to see tho great
number of Indian tribes roving over what they
call their beautiful country ; and to see tho thou
sands of fine stock owned by them, dill tho most
b/mrummato beggars in tho world, filthy in (heir
tiring, and indolent in their habits. I havo had a
good opportunity of loarniug thoir ways, having
.Visited their trading post* all along tho r»ad.
AYhilo one portion trado and bunt, tho other por
tionwago war with some othor tribo. Amongst
some of tho tribes I passed—namely, Pawnees,
tsioar, .Cheyennes, and Itapahooco—tho Indians
and vhito men aro oonstautiy pilfering. I loarnt
that by s&d oxpcrlenoo, as thousands of others,
having had my stock stolen once, and this will con-
Inno tho caso until they have a State law to pro
toot tho emigrant From the heat information I
can gather, I think the emigration will bo 75,000
to the Territories, and 25.000 tho overland route
to California. £ w 0.3 andor tho impression that
wild game was very plenty, but was vory rauoh
disappolu-ed at finding but little. The principal
game here is buffalo, deer, and antelope, tho latter
being the most abundant. The scarcity arises from
tho oraigntion and the Indian hunters, who drivo
thorn baci boyond the ronoli of tho whites.
I only wish I coaid do justice to lulewtiption of tho
scenery—wild, picturesque, and lovoly—along tho
line of travel; bat that dwindles into insigniftoanoo
when coopered with tho sublimity of tho moun
tain sconery—it is awo-iuspiring. When my eye
first fell on tho far-off snow-clad ranges, it filled my
mind with attornato hopes und fears, and to pass
over the mountains unaffcotod by or indiiforont to
the ohanns of such beauties of Nature is impos
sible.
On Thursday of last neck a thrilling scone
occurred here, vii: An altercation took place be
tween two teamsters, and ono received it fatal
wound ia his body, infilctod by a bowio knife In
the bands of tho other. The murderer waa ar
rested tic same day, a judge soleoted by tbo pco
pio, attorneys appointed, and jury aworu in by
tho same. All tho witnesses uot being present,
tho ease was postponed until tho nuxt day at ten
o’clock. This I witnesaod, desirous to get tho
particulars, and cco tho manner in' which the
case was conducted, knowing that no criminal
code existed bore. What a novel eight presented
itself as i strolled out to an eminence scar the
town, to bohold a thousand portions or more, in the
middle of tho day, under a wido spread cotton
wood tree, which belpod to hide tho rays of old tfu[
by its green follago. Wbon I arrived, I discovered
it was tho criminal court in session ; the examina
tion of witnesses had just closod, and tho prosecu
tor for Iho people tbon addressed the judge and
court in a stylo that would have done credit to
como of your city attorneys, and dosed with a de
sire tbit tho unfortunato victim might havo juaUcoJ
that ho did not wish 'to punish the innocent, but
bring tho guilty to justice. Then followed the
counsel for tho defcnco. His general demoanor, as
ho rose, was indicative of great labor to uhiold bis
client from that doom that soujus so goon to await
him. Ho examined tho witnesses Qlosdy, and his
speech was eloquent and impressive; and a few re
marks wore made by auothor counsel, after wliioh
the jury retirod, and returned a verdict of murder
in the first degree ; and bis execution lakes place
to-day, between two and four o’clock. This is tho
treatment murderer* reoeßo hero in ono day’s
time.
♦or brethren ut Washington have not forgotten
us, f see. Mr. McClure, the rccontly-nppolntod
postaaatdr,‘ia erecting a fino brick building for
a post-ofiico, and cro long wo shnll have all tbo ad
vantages of tho United States postal laws. At this
tim« it is a heavy tax on tbooituJns, having to pay
tweity-five oenta foreaoh letter recoivod, and tho
cams for those going to the States This is, I be
liovt, a company arrangement. In a few days I
expect to leavo for a two-montha’ jourhoy ovor the
different ranges of tho Kooky Mountains, and at
eomo point will give you a description of my tra
vels. By the by, X bad nearly forgotten to tell
you that tho oolobratod Kit Carson bas paid us n
visit, to ransom four Uto Indians, and has now
returned to Mexico. Tearing I have already tros
pafsed on your kindnoa* with my long letter,
I remain, yours truly , M.
In I’tßtdTiNG Kklic.—There is now in tho
library at West Point, folded around tho likeness
of Gen. Scott, tho idontioal flag which was first
hoisted on tho lUo Grande during tho interview of
General* Worth and La Vega, on the 28th of
Msrob, J.B4G, and whiejb was again floating from
th* Natiooal Palaoo in tho oity of Mexico, on tho
day whon Gon. Worth turned over the oity to Gen.
L& Vega, and tho United States force* finally
evaou&tod the place. The coincidence Is quite
mtewnrtby that tho same flag and the samo geno*
n\ officers wero thus conspicuous in both tho
opening and the closing of tho war. This relio has
therefore a three-fold interest, and it is extremely
gratifying that it is thus carefully preserved.
Decrease of Population in Ohio. —Tho
Cleveland Democrat says : “ From tho returns al
ready In, it ig feared that the population of Ohio,
i&Btead of advancing, has slightly decreased within
tho last ton yearn, Vv oinigruUon or olherwl**.”
10, I 860;
•xi
;jf t E It sOM A L,
has been elected mayor of Mem
' I--;a £ -i -
—Mr.-TEm-ghiyAifoi', m of, John Jfteyb
of Now said to .be worth .at
$25,000,090,1 s r ;>
has j
rweived thejM|pt«idßinor:bf.an ©lection footbe |
Imperial uf-Auftris. ■ )
! “Sa’ll6 beonidhrried to the \
Prince'
,3001* unknown f OOO reSefli. -.~t v. t :j
i - ; arrived ■
i Cleveland; tiTTT7T|w|flir i li'll thehoroe
,of his obndhbod; prior to wliilliWig i to his const!- 5
■ I :*'Afs’*Jolai (i M>.l , rico, u living In!
*Hi©hinona,'l3"ifiMpi{ from homo. m&nfSlt'aeenr |
bo had between and $3OO in money
- pornou.: u I
llepuUiosn for Gover
nor, delivered, the address before the-Westminster
Colleger Ntfw Pa Wednesday
week. 1 -- - ua *• .
—A'rftbog these who have engaged rooms at New
port, K ‘lyar* Senator-Douglas, Gen’Lane, Col.
Orr, of Sobth hnd JKrastiia Coming, of
Albany.* . y' ‘
'-ktfeneral Shieldd irf recrdltlng his hoalth in Sao
Antonio, Texas. At last accounts ho was enllght
6nlt)g the pooplo‘bydeclares on the present oondi
tiod of Spain.
—Mr. George F. Train, formerly of Boston, has
closed a o'/nfraot for constructing tlio first city
railroad, in ' England, with tho authorities of tho
town of Birkenhead, opposite Liverpool.
—At the Idto commencement of Genesee, tho de
gree of D.,li. wda-conferred on tho Bov. Fitch
Rood, of Ithaca, and on tho Itev. James Richard
son, Bishop of tho Methodist Episcopal Church of
CanadA.
—Napoleon Wood, ono of tho most distinguished
of the Lynn, strikers, lias commented a suit for
false imprisonment against tho officer who arrested
him for riotous demonstrations during tho disturb
ances last spring.
—Albort Dlaisdell, E&i., has stcurod lor the firm
of BlaUdell <t Kmorson, of Boston, of whioh ho is
senior partner, the oontraot for building a new
oustom house at Galveston, Texas, and will remove
his family to that oity in about three months.
—Nabneebahweequay (Mrs. Catharine B. Sut
ton) and Robert and Cbrlstlno Alsop, accompanied
by Mr. Bright, M. I’., had an interview with the
Buko of Newcastle on the loth of June, at the Co
lonial Office, London, on the subject of the Cana
dian Indian lands.
—During tho past year Mr. J. B. Gough doli
\ orod 174 of hi 3 addresses in tho provinces of Eng
land, 14 in Exeter Jlnll, and 10 in theatres, halls,
and chapels of L udou. In tho provinces it is esti
mated tluU over idO,OUO listened to hi* argument*
and appeal?, and over 4,000 signed the pledge ul
total abstlrtenoo.
, ourioua coincidouco id conneotod >fith
the death of tho Isto Ms damo L'aiilio Ztilousky
Kossuth, which took place in Brooklyn on thd
29ch of Judo last. It Looms that In 1851 Madame]
Zulonsky, with too sisters,, Mcsdamoa Mcsrlenyi*
and Itutikal, arrived in New York city and wont
into tho lace and embroidery bueinoss. In tin
spring ef 1804 Madame Mostlenyi folia victim t<
eonsnmption, and died un tho of Juno, in th<
samo year, at her residence, 105 Ninth atroot, k
that city. It is a singular coincidence that hot!
eiatora died on tho samo day of the month, anc
there te also something remarkable in the ages a
whioh they died—ono being thirty-four and tht
other forty-three—tho figures being hut transpoA
tiona of each other.
T»u New Market ( Virginia; Spirit of Be
i:io<.;acy thinks it tho duty of e<*ory Southern X'o
moernt to aupport tho Breckinridge ticket.
’ Con, W« W. SI2ATON, of tho National Intel ■
lxgtiictii\ spoke briefly ata 801 l and Everett meet
ing iu Washington, a few crcnioga since. i
' Tho Hartford Times says-that there* is n]>
truth in the story that Mr, Toueey, Secretary qf
, tho Navy, is favorable to Douglas for tho Press
denoy. 7
The Concord Patriot is satisfied that th*
Democratic party in Noy liompshiro i 3 very nearly
a unit In support of the nomination of Douglas anfl
Johnwn. *■ j
lar Tenncasco sixteeu Democratic papers
have run up tho Breokinridgo ticket; twobavß
indicated a proferoncofor Douglac?. Eleven othera
are yot uudocidod. 1
The Bell and Everott party iu Connecticut
are about to call a State Convention, to meet in
New Haven on tbo lat of August, to nominatecart
didates for Presidential electors. <
Hon. W. L. Tancev is laboring with tho
South Carolina Democracy. Ho spok© in Ander
son on the 30’b nit., extolling tho wisdom outl
moderalion of tho delegation from South Carolina
to Charleston. > j
Senator Skwari* bus already anuouuccd 4i|»
determination to take tho stump in Michigan. Tqo
Troy Ttxncs states that be will also stump tho States
of Pennsylvania, New York, and Illinois for Lin
coln and Hamlin. 1
Hon. A. H. Stephens, of Georgia, lias tele
graphed that he will tako tho field in favor of the
election ef Dougla?. Ho will not confine his efforts
to Georgia, but will go into all tho Southern
States. i
.Mn.B. B. Douglas, ouo of tho Virginia elefc
tors, finds himself unable to canvass his district
until ho is informed authoritatively who are the
nominees of the National Democracy. If left to
himself, he shall support Mr. Breokinridgo.
A Texan friend, writing to tho editor of tho
Augusta (Oa) Chroniclejxnd Advertiser , informs
him that Gov. Houston has declared bis preforoepe
for Bell and Everett, as being the only national
tiokot before the pooplo. {
A difficulty Ims arisen among tho .stockhold
ers of the Kentucky Statesman, tho Domocratio
organ at Loxingtou. The majority of them ore
for Douglas, but Ihe editor is supporting Breokin*
rid go. They aro to moot and deoldo what shall }jq
dono. ,
Hon. Alexander 11. Sxepiikvs, of Georgia,
will, it is said, shortly discloso bis preference for
Breckinridge and l.ano, although be will take no
active part in tho Presidential election. It is only
necessary to say that this statement is in tho New
York Ift raid. |
The Vuiends of Messrs. Bell and Evorotljin
Now Jersey have issued a call lor a Stato Conven
tion to nominate an doctoral ticket, to bo held at
Trenton on tho 25th. This action Is significant, In
asmuch as the Democratic Convention is to meet
at the same tluio and place.
The Washington 1 correspondent of tho X.
Y. 'Tribune'says that “there Is bo foundation
whatever for the report that Mr Crittenden moans
to support Mr Brcckinrldgo 110 was ohairioan
of the Union Committee and organized tho Con
vention which nominated Messrs. Bell oud Kyo*
rctfc. To abandon that ticket now would imply a
weakness of Which Air; Crittenden bas not been
suspected ” ’ t
Lincoln on Douglas.- A corrcspondout of
tho Tribunes peaking of a recent intoiview with
Lioooln, describe* tho opinion of that gentleman
about Mr, Dougina, and says : “ Mr. Lmooln, re
lated many pleasant incident* connected with! bis
contest with Douglas. Ho tcld mo, that he spoke,
1n ail! sixty-four limes, nine or ten times face to
faco with bid antagonist. His estimate of jthe
4 Llttlo Giant ’ is generous. Ho .concedes to him
groat hardihood, pertinacity, ak& magnetic
power.”
A correspondent sends us tui account of a
mas* mooting of the Deaooraoy held nt Retina
grove, on tbo evening of July 2. Tho spirit of tho
meeting was expressed in tbo following resolution:
“iit’jc/mf. That wo, the National Democracy of
tho borough of Solln?grov«\ arc alike opposed to
fusion or coalition with tbo Abolitionists of tho
North or tbo Seooasionhts of the South, and that wo
aro in favor of sustaining Democratic usages and
tho regular nominees ol the party, for President
Btopbon A. Douglas, and 11. V. Johnson for Vico
President, and Henry D. Poster for Governor.”
The Ailegkd “Insult to Gen. Cass.”—
The Dotroit Ficc Dress puts at rest tho silly story
that General Cas3 waa wantonly insulted by»ho
Democratic Stato Convention whichyuet In Detroit
Tho I'tee Press saya :
Tho simple facts regarding tho resolution, as wo
understand thorn, aro those: Tho resolution was
oftored without general consultation with members,
and while iho convention did not, as they could
not, doubt where Gonoral C«a3 >tand* in tho pre
sent crisis, they presumed that, en account 01 his
official position, It would not be agreeable to him
to “ address tho convention on the politioal topics
of tho day”. They Uioroforo laid' tho resolution
on the table. That was all there was of tho matter
with roferoucc to whioh. wo will venture to say,
Gen. Cass has not felt tbo faintest suspicion that
bo was. “insulted.” On the contrary, doubtless
ho thanks tho convention that tkoy did not pass
the resolution.
Thb paper mill of William aud John Ho- i
bertson, and the grist and flouring mill of Hollis
Tiylor, at Hinsdalo, N. D., woro destroyed by fire
onSunday morning. Loss on paper mill §ll,OOO,
insured for $3,000 in the -'Kina office, Hartford: on
gri3t mill $l,OOO, insured foY $l,OOO In tho Homo
Company, New Haven.
Fatal Accident at a Rroatta.— A and ac
cident oecunod at the oloso of tbo College regatta,
in New ilavon harbor, on Friday. Two saibboftlH
wero upset by tho high winds. From oneoi them
a Mrs. gporry, of Meriden, was drowned. Her
body was soon recovered. Tho boat - contained
nearly a dozen persons. .
Sanitary Measure.—We see that Mayor
Borrot, t>( Washington city, boiGg satisfied from
complaints that tho contractors Tor doaning tho
gutters, do., have utterly failed to perform their
duties, has annulled all of their contracts, and has
, resolved to bavo tho remaining work dono by day
A HUSBAND STABBED IS THE PRESENCE 01’ HIS | labor.
Horrible Murder iu New Orleans.
Tho True Velio- of tho 2d publishes tho particu
lars of a brutal murder which transpired in Now
Orleans lately ;
About half past oight o’clock Might before lait,
at tho cornor of Tonti and Lapoyroueo streets, in
tho roar of tho Third district, George bouwogge
was a tabbed by John Honk, from tho effect of whioh
ho died at 11 o’clock yesterday morning.
About half past eight o’olook Sehwagge was sit
ting before his door, with bis wifo, when Rook ap- :
proaohed, and, with the manner that oan well bo
imagined, exolaimed, “ Thero’s ono ot my wives, j
alluding to Mrs. Sehwsggo. The husband leaps to .
his foot instantly, of cc-urso, utters word,
and slaps the ruffian in the face. Ihe fellow was |
not disabled by tho assault; he drew a bpwle-knife,
and pluuged ft into.tho side of tho Unfortuualo
“The wound was fatal. Sohwaggo lingered until
simo fifteen hours, and then expired. Tho ooro*
not’d investigation will take puce to-day. i
Tbo deceased was a member of that efficient ,
company, Oreole No. 9. Ho will bo interred to-J
day, and his remains will ho brought to their las.t
resting-place with all the rospeat which can he
<»ivnu%y tho company to which be belonged.
P U L. ITTOAI
TWO CENTS.
r HEWb.
Coloring, of "Wink l ;.—ai*
■thougheuny oxpOrittiiiu laea iDSlUu , ea by
chMitatefor*>» «*■>*« °t th. ooloriog mattere
0 E( , „ to lu able to
diatlnguiau tie tr»e Wan the veTy toeuiye
results have yot been attired at, beoauso the color
icE jtaelf lebaagM with oge . 4n4 bo .
■cause; tbo, Baffle colors oAn pf imitated by rations
!sub3laocci, air of ‘irhtiih'’ fbnees nearly the same
elements echos anklyzoto: liie ueliored that come
of [thqjfsheep,claret triees contain alunl asdenl
pbnrlo, aotd, and the chemist Xuealgne has lately
called attention to the addition of nbont .0 33 per
WJfflofaolphnrio acid which he had deteeteit.{hnt
wJfU in French clarets. .An. easy
moUtoa orJetectlng alofii, soide, lOgwood. cider,
te&tiit^lndFtittdr uiatbrds used in the adulteration
ofviMtjMfcd&atd&aidQratun); chemists have not
y^jt^j^e^J^corery,— Scientific Atnetlcan,
p.vrrrALs—A correspondent
OX, fafConertgationahii says, that at the' late
(Hdmt'CKttfatdßoe of Maine, it sms TOted te deop
tteifejlDcisat,Only in oaUlnnidhau Mb hnti.fn«n
diptoinafribf&poeSet. ■ This is amofofc tltoiight
direction,' • And,a* this iejthoieemmencement sea
spDjXetiw hope that okr colleges will profit by the
suggestion, and beware, as Mr. Baytii ' says, of
patting the guinea’s stamp on anything but tie real
gold, vf onr New England college.veren
within tbqlaat few,years, itia.to be feared, hava
boon injudicious tn this xespect, end in Mice cases
have bestowed degrees ;where the Only
effect has been to disparage the University and
make ridiculous the recipient of the emp'y ho^or
Tub first of tho great monolithic marble
shafts for’tbo'Capitol extension at ! Washington,
from Connolly’s quarried, nefir the Northern Cen
tral KailroaU, in Baltimore oouniy, Md., has been
completed. The contract Is Tor ono hundred at
$1,530 A piece, delivered in Washington. This is
reported to be the only Instance, in thia oountry,
of so. large, a piece of marble having been got oat
of a quarry of ouch quality and purity as would fit
it for a column. 1 Hitherto granite has been easily
obtained of even greater dimensions; iqch, for in
stahee, aro the shafts used, in the Treasury build
ing at Washington, hut odr marble quarries are
supposed inadequate to the demand.,
- HEALfn op Kbit True Delta
oi tbo 80th ult/ says that the health of -New Or
leans and port is uncommonly good, notwithstand
ing the advanced season of a hot summer. It is
informed that tho cases of-yellow fever are few,
and not ot a virulent character, mad thus far there
have not boon many with a fatal result. The im
prudence of cea- faring men, visiting that port in
tho Hummer months, tho abaso of spirituous drinks, ■
(which are very cheap,) unripe fruit, and other
improper diet, briugs on, in most cases, disease
which ultimately takes -the character of the black
vomit. ’ i .
MOHTBEAt TeSTIMOKUA FOa S.iYEttS.—The
Montreal Jleraid saje: “Thecitizenaof Montreal
have been getting up a testimonial for Sayers. It
consists of a' richly embossed covered silver quart
tankard. 1 Tho design is ohaste and handsome.
The, base of the tankard is ornamented with a
wreath of oak leaves,' tho middle with one of ma
plo leaves, and tho Upper portion with vise leaves
and branches of grapes. On the cover is a beaver
seated on u map]© branch, in high relief. Tho
handlo h formed of twfctod vine stalks. ‘ The
' Uukard beard tho following inscription: I To Tom
Sayers, from a few admirers of Eoglish pluck/ ”
Ovkrlanu TEtEouApn.—Although several
woeka have elapsed siDce tbo passagp ,of the bill
authorising tho Secretary of the Treasury to ad
vertise for proposal!‘ to borfd an efectrio telegraph
to the Pacific, yet> no ateps hare hoes taken, tbaa
far, to oxocuto the law. It xequires tho adrertiao
muut to be for sixty days from the passage of tbo
law, and, as there aro parties waiting to bid, it is
hoped Secretary Cobb- will movo in the matter
without further idday The old grantees, I under-*
stand, will bid, bot will > name the maximnm pro-*
vidod by the terms of tho law.— Cor. N Y. Toms:
_ Almost an Atvair of HojcoW.—Tho Geor-*
gia Chrotiide and Sentivsl of tho Ist Inst, says t
11 We learn that & couplo of representatives of *the
editorial corps of Atlanta were to have a hostile
meeting to cettlo a personal difficulty at Shultz’s
Hill, Hamburg, yesterday, and quite a numbor of
the ouribus in saolrmatters repaired to tho spot ty
‘eoeitpnt/ The-arrest of one of ■ tbo principals]
and his consequent non-appearance, prevented the
oconrrcnoe'of anything serious.' ! Whether the mat
tor will progress further, we are not advised/’ !•
■ The Cattle Disease m Illinois .-fTho Chi
cago JPmss and Tribunt is informed that a disease
has broken out.among tho cattle at Bh'&bbona
Grove, Do Kaltr county, which is causing stone
aland. Wo moutiou tho rnihor to CsU tbo atten
tion oi' tho State commiKrionors to the samo. Onb
informant says the malady is of the eamo type a a
the Massachusetts disease, and originated among
cattle brought from Now England. Though wo do
not_givathtq full oredonco, we think it may bo wod
to havo the mattor investigated ‘ \
Pabaot?At Claims.-2. The clainianfs 1 against
Paraguay, I understand, have askedtimo to seni
to Paraguay for .additional testimony.
bo accorded to them, as tho .commissioners deiirb
to afford every opportunity (o catablishi lf posribld,
fomo part ox* all of thoir extraordinary
In tho moantimo tho tParaguay Oommieaiopor k
preparing and arranging his rebutting bvUenod,
which will afford ’an amnsibg history of Yankee
operations abroach .. ;
Display Yorn Hunting on Sunday.—:At
tention has been called (o the neglect of many per-,
tons in chargo of onr vossels in port fo observe the
custom of sbowiog their colors on Sundays and holi
days, and tho New York' Chamber, of Commerce
passod the following resolution in relation, to it: j
That tne Chamber of Coinmerod re
commend that masters of vessels in thqportof New
York hoist thoir flags on . Sundays and holidays,
ns a mark of respeot to tho day and to the nation.
The , entire private stock anti theatrical
wardrobo. stage properties, music and manuscript
ploys of tne late Wm. E. Barton, aro announced to
be cMd to-uiorrbw and'on Wednesday, by Messrs.
Sabin d Co. Tho wardrobo is,one of. tho.roost
valuable and complete in tho country, including
evory variety of costume, from the most ordinary
to the most costly. The Bale will be one of great
interest, and will, undoubtedly, he largely at
tended.
Plroxyd of Iron for Purifying Gas.—ln
Denmark, a nativo poroxyd of (ron-*% brown by
driatfcd bos ore—is used in all the gas .works for
purifying tho gas It is employed in tho form of a
coarso powdor, and is said to be superior to any
other substance to romo vo nlf traces of sulphur from
the gas. . It would be well for some of our coal gas
companies to try this substance, especially those
who use the Pittsburg or common Liverpool or Pic
touconl. - '
. Charges of the Post Express.—For the
information of tbo mercantile community, we take
pleasure in publishing the following scale of rates
for the transmission, by the Pony Express, of let
ters to California:
Lettois not o:tc«cdinff Xoz.
“ over?**'*, notexceedingl oz.«~
** loz. •* *• l^aOZ...
" “ WoZi“ “ 2oza, MM .
Airways to bo pro'paid.
Reunion op tue “Chi Per” Soois*Y.&4The
Chi-Psi Society, which, inoludes Chaptersrin our
principal colleges, will eolebrate a Reunion at
Hamilton'College on tho 17lh inst. The public
exorcises will consist of ad oration by the Key. C.
D. llelmer, of Milwaukee, end a poem by W. YT.
Howe, of New York. It ia expected that a large
number of graduate members of the society will
be present.
Steam ox the Can An.—Tho .digus and Mas
remarks that tho practicability of running, with
profit, steam tags on tho canal, is being slowly hut
surely demonstrated. Last woek ono of the tugs
brought down 515 tons of freight, making the trip
from Buffalo in six days running time. The es
pouse of bringing down tho amount of freight was
$lOO. Had the towing:been done by hordes tbo
cost would have been $2-10
National Boiler.—The steamer llli jois, oc
her last trip up, brought for thcNationai Company
a tubular boiler weighing 0 tons, 1,708- pounds! of
Pittsburg manufacture, and is designed,' wo be
lieve, to take the place of one now in uao for stamp
ing, sawing, and hoisting purposes It was re
sbipped for the mino ou, Thursday morning, and
will he put in place immediately.
The cotton mill of Messrs. Mayal), destroyed
by lire on the 22d nit , situated midway betwoen
Manchester and Huddersfield, waa one of the most
oxtonsive spinning mills in England, having 120,000
spindles, mostly with tho latest Improvements, rind
a quality of yarn was spun In.it which generally
comwaodod a good* market. The loss h* estimated
at 5600,000 to .$750,000. !
A IStatiiticaii ConuuksSj to be helduudor
tho auspioca of the English Government, will meet
in London ou the 10tb. Judge Longstreet and Mr.
Lawrence hove boon chosen as delegates on tho
part of tho United States Government, and Hr.
Wayune and Mr. Shepherd Hotnens as tho repre
sentatives of tho American Geographical and Sta
tistical Sooiety.
Thk Arabian Housk^ —The Arabian horses
presented to Governor Seward will, after their
arrival, bo left to recruit upon the farm of the lion.
Gary V Saokott, at Soneoa Falls. Two other
horses liavo been purchased, oue ler the Hon
Simon Oamoron and the other for Mr. lYtfsh. of
Harrisburg, Pa.
_\ Valuable Stud or Horses.—Tho stud of
tho luto Lord Lonncßborough was recently sold by
tbo famed Tattorsatl, and the forty animals realized
the extraordinary sum of $105,000. In tho lot were
three stallions, ono of . which brought $2O 000,
another $16,000, and tho third upwards of s3*ooo
But $25,000 were appropriated for the fort
at Clark’s Point, though. Capt Culluin recom
mended SICHVOO , Still, it will enable the work to
be prosecuted till another season.
.The treasury' of tho Slate of Michigan U
bankrupt There is not a dollar in it with
to meet the most ordinary demands.
ACorrsspondknt states that (3 #9*
does the heaviest grocery buriuesi 'Tanyjrtace be- l
tweon Mobile and Kiohmond. _ '**;*//■ j
The Gorman popnlafton
'«llranM M 7 509.600 -
«*>,u f sfiif
; the weekly press.
Ta* Wimr Pan, *,,1 Mnt to by
4 TSaiS,
EEE!:?
Iw^Sty* 4 '• *• (tO 00* Addlftß >90.00
rweatyCopiMyorover** <to«d4re«of
cuii anb»jriber,'<?ftcb... v , -
t lor » Club of Twinty-000 or oit. w« ▼iU '»«i4 *p
I *itra copy to the geiUr-cp of th« Chib.
> Portnufen «re : rorowted to act u Amta foi
j Ti»* Wx»xlt pnas c
CAUFOBSU rKUS
Is J u*d three time* * Month, In time' for the California
Steamers.
A convict has escaped from the Icrmett
jrtii. in Scotland,, by jcmeving a lbs from the cell
dour, digging down eight feet to the foundatlec,
and then tunnelling op to the surface on the ont
side. Ue had removed'about two cart-loads of
aoil, and his fools conflated only of a pewter e*u
•er, the leg of hi* table, and trowssrs, in whlab
he carried the fffsrtJ r ttvny'
The Hartford Timet, gays that three partiea,
engaged in fishing at Keeney’s core, P/aU’siarry,
on the Conneotfoet river, have, this reason, caught
and sout to market, 'exclusive of shad and other
fi-'h, a boat IJSOtf barrels of alewires, bringing, on
an averages $4 -per barrel, end xoakioxtao eotut
*um;of $4,800. _ .
At-,a meeting <Jf Hi 't in-epotere of the bar and
the officers of the court, of Varrea county, held in
Warren, on the evening of the 16th nH, a series of
c *presaiv# of. respect for flon Jelrn
; Galbraith, deceased, were unanimously adopted.
They were offered by S.P. Johnson, B*j.
i Weekly Mortalitt.—Oi the 88 <*•**>»■ |q
Boston the pastwheh, 44 were under 6 years of
age, and.one mu 90. In Ward 6, there was one
d^etMin- WMda JtO and i* thirties wash, and in
Ward 5-twelTe-death#.-- TWre are efefatm fetal
case* of consumption, and fire of small pox.
Tap Aarvmvtot Clwsox.—A small brere
cannon has btM foattd ttfe* bottom o I a deep
well o<tbeC&Btle deClaey, in Fnmoe. with
date of 1258 upon it. The date of the Invention
of cannon has historically been assigned to the
year 1324—sUty-six y—re later.
Thb WntDr §fAsOf.trTh*yewlB?o-wailje
far jcbtj to cams rendered memorable far the
storms and tornsdoes. Sea reel, he* a mek passed
we.karr, as, beta
eslled upon to chronicle 1 * “ trtghtfal stdtm.” or a
disastrous tontfdo/f.'•• - : i* -
Rich a tin Hn.t>AtraicK, of Angitaty, Bracken
county, Ivy., believing himself to be cr tbe bat
mao on earth,” challenges John C. Hernia to fight
at any point in- ttoUhi&d'StMes Jife may derif,
nete, and at any.-time, for th* sum-of $lO to
$20,400.' - -> ,
Reward for riitf DisfioVEßY orras Mua
unafcii of Walton.—Mayor" Wood has tamed a
proclamation offering* reword of $540 for the dis
covery and apprvbecttQßtof the perpetrator of the
murder of John Walton and John W. Matthews. .
- , A kins*. Swan, formerly of Hartford, was
lately lOutxsged and robbod by a rnan ’in disguise,
while'on 'a' visit* in He made
an attempt to stab her, bat the dogger struck tho
steel bask of her core«s,and her lire was saved.
:New York corpo
ration attoWey declarer the sew lair In relation to
unsafe buildings 'unconstitutional, as it autho
riicH the destination ofprivaW property Without
just compenaation'to tbe owners;-
BonstrosiTy,—Wo learn from the Gfcarlea*
ton Mercttry Bachman, of that city, has
rageived the eanwg of a pig from BrasehviUe, in
that State, which bad. two bodies, eight legs,
but a singlo bead.
The Orand podgo "of Free which
closed their labors at New York bn Saturday, the
10th ult., adopted' a resolution <{ condemning the
E rootle* of- putting Masonic on atone and
usiue® cards.” - /
Ths flour loilln At AleaHtdria, Ya., capable
of turning out 1,00(1 . barrels of flour * d»v, will
again go llito uperation About the 15 li of Jnfj,' un
der .the oh&rge or (h Y. Wortblegton, of Baltimore..
Is tlw parish register at Gianuais there is
tho. following edrlouS entry, dated 1076; “Hao
proabhlug karw tkia Lord'd D*ye-th. minister be-
Ing at witch.”.
Sour of the business meu of . Bavenpori,
lowa, propose to establish ia that city a ootton fac
tory, to coat some s2o,Cooi to-run 1.000 spindles,
and employ bo persons. * r '
Tnii New Haven City" Director this' year
contains 11,673 names, which is ah iacrtaao of
1,260 over' last year. The Hartford Directory for
1800 has 5,5&0 names. '
Mr. Sam Colter, who claims to be- the
ehaiopion o£-Pulaski county, Ky., offers to fight
the- Beneoia Boy for any amount from $1,009 to
$20,090.
A tornado , swept through .Clarir county,
Ohio, on- tho ,30th ult, unroofing ten or filteen
houses, and destroying several.* No lives ware
lost. » t : . - f-.
IT is estimated that oVcr To,ood barrels of
oil are now ready for market In the oil region of
Northwestern Pennsylvania,
Yachting-—Theru- was an exciting yacht
race in New Haven on tho 4th, which resulted in
Yale’s faking two prises. - -
Affairs in Mexico.
VBTFEAT. AND CAPIUP.E OF MIBAXQH.
The New Orleans Picayune, of July 3d, rays:
The U. 8. mail steamship Ari'sosa, b arrived
at this port yesterday, brifrge, to one -of ear raost
prominentaod’ best-informed Mexican reside&ta,
the important nows that oeu. Miromon had been
defeated at Salamasea,'asd made prisoner byOen.
Ziro^oia, 1 of the Lfbe'ralatni'r. Thonew* is brought
in o private -letter * from Monterey to Mataraoree,
and Was received just before* the steamer, ea&ad.
Xt sroaldsppear to.be. every. way r reliable. oen.
XXfraciou heau.of the whple reactionary
fpfoe recently obliected in thc'vfdhtty ofQuerebfoa,
and Gen. Zaragoia', of the Gonsdtuliobal amy,
since rihe defeat of Gen. Urega, ai; Ooadala/ars.
Of, the bstUtLwa have no .particulars, but pmaappe
it .nps a general ongagemest.. defeitondcap
ture of Hlramon 'alone, however, would be a bnl*
iiimtVictory c Thoplace of (holmtUewastkeiamo
in which Gen Parodi was formerly, routed- We
learn, also, by the same source, that.Gocaales Or
tega, at tho-head of .the. Constitutional forces of
had .inct, and routed the reactionary
General, Itnmim- This news was received at
Monterey on the 22d, by express fsoa fian I*ui3,
and is believed:to be reliable; - ~,
Tho Picayune comments on this intelligence as
follows: - _
In itself ', the news is very probable. - Alter
their disastrous repulse from Guadalajara, the Li
berals retired to one of the strongest positions in
the vicinity, whore they were said to number some
ten thousand men. Gen. Uraga having been wound
ed, tho command devolved on Gen. Zaragcza, an
experienced officer ot more than ordinary pntdenoe,
who would be as likely as any other to lead the re
pulsed army to victory. .
On the other hand, Gen. Miramon, at the head
of about the same number of Reactionists, would
not be likely to move with the greatest caution.
Personally, he is said 'to be a reoklesa man, and,
in view of his remarkably brilliantcareer, it weald
not be unnatural for him to indulge in overween
ing self-confidence and contempt for bis enemy.
Many of his troops, moreover, had just come cut
of the successful engagement at Guadalajara, and
would' ba quite likely to share the sentiments of
thoir general* especially in the excitement of
pursuit.
f&jUnder. these circumstances, then, the two armies
met at or near the city of balsmanca, in the State
of Guanajuato. Tbo Reactionists, if we afe to be
lieve the account boforo us, have been utterly
routed, and the Liberals remained masters of an
already historic field Th* invincible” General
Mxramon also fell ittlo the hands of the enemy,
and is now 'a prisoner. This is a great victory;
for it was only the tact and prestige of this remark*
ablo mac that has the last twelve months his
party from crumbling to pieces, Their money is
gone, they arc divided among themselves, the sen
timosts of the people are against thorn, and It is
only the almost unbroken career of victory he has
run thathas thus far kept them together. ---
The news from Zacatecas also is -rsvy probable in
itself, and comes to us ou tho same excellent au-
Gov. Ortega has the reputation of being a
very prudent officer, and furthermore eomnfafided
•what might be called thahome army or national
guards of bis State., Tho first imprudent move
ment would therefore very probably be on the
part < f the ltamirez. who would not be
likely to be at the head of a Very strong force,
though ha would naturally share the overweening
confidence of his superior officer,, Miramon. _ He
was defeated, the account says, and his army
two thousand in from the State.
From the extreme northern States we learn that
Gov. Vidaurri, ef New Leon and Coahuila, had put
bimsolf at the head of a movomont which had for
its objeot the return of Gen. Comonfort to tho Pre
sidency. And in this he was seconded by Gens.
Doblado and Traconis, who, we are given to un
derstand, has already issued proclamations or pro
nunciamtcntos to that effect. Those proclama
tions have not yot reached us, but the nows Is not
altogether improbable.
. For a long limo, now, thero has been a highly
respectable party in Mexico who, tired of tho rule
of Church oligarchy, and hopeless of any relief
from tho extreme radicals, havo turned their at
tention to this, the most moderate, influential and
really respected Presidont the Ropublic has had
since tho revolution. And yot. Gen. Comoufort is
by no means a oonccssiomst ora trimmer. He ia
out-spoken in favor of the liberal cause and the
Constitution of 1857r8, which waa framed under
his administration, but ho is at the same time a re
specter of vested rights, and opposed to proscrip
tion of ahy kind.-
..,.$5 00
moo
.-—-....•.is oo
so oo
• This, we understand, is tho real basis of tbo now
movement in Mexico, and to whioh, it is now said,
Gen. Vidaurri, of the State of Now Leon and Coa
huiia, has' given his adhesion. Tho only danger is
that be himself, who is by do means without ambi
tion, or some other successful general, may have
the means and tact to got himself preferred for the
Presidency of a Republic which usually confers
that honor upon the last most successful general.
Seven Persons Poisoned.
f Tbo Boston Traveller says: For several days
i past there have been rumors that a whole family
bad been poisoned,-in Charlestown, and that seve
ral bad died... After diligent inquiries we hare
obtained th‘e following facts: On the morning of
; tho 4th al portion ot the iaaiily of Mr, Jonas Foe
ter, residing at No. 32 .William street, parcook of
milk punch.** which, ' they state, c&xftained no
thing btit mils and sugar, though- ft-- is probable
that thoro was some liquor in ;) n: .&oven iff tho
family drank it.. Soon after they wero all taken
ill, and commenced to Vetch and votnit Viol* ntiy.
Ono of the number,’ named HajatuFoeter, a girl
ataput ten years of age, was t*kyn..iU, at about a
o’clock ia tho forenoon, and a’tsih*the afternoon
she died Tho remainder©!’ however,
soon after began to Jpprove,iaaA.'haye ft ©ou com
pletely recovered* mil£. was., purchased of
Mr E L. Bruce,. grocer, vfho states" that U was
good, as the remalzrorfto&Hifosametaa'ifagsoid
to bis other custonutsf f ?om whom- ho ibas had no
complaint. jr
The foots knowb' to 'CoWner B.
Dearborn, effequaet.: They
viewed the body qfvhogift-st last
wiourned to Friday nexf, when
a thoroflgtt isvcitigatroii dßdac affair WilTbe had.
In thmoactima Dr.iLxtf* haw taken-eharge of the
.of Owitomaah
%nd viscira. it staled that m6te are sua
!(mB»ns'W learn ftat they
vai^irevtißid^asyymmt*y*& ;:-v.
Those of who did not'nartake of the
1 “ troubled; and it wasevi
i'detrf, in tha
fitter jnryrji
.faff tw»V? tit; H /vnatsf *-!*> ~.-r
ad wv-