! ;J:stfieri . BjUlt 'taukttt” v Wu*. *««!>** to OmA? • SUi *4 talhhMri Wnoat «f <*• «»««** OmjaM Ms SUnan; ton Miiu’ n» Kn«t MaKttti TUmtn n>> Si*' ta;*^ ~ ,;-^r. :f -,V ■ BtiuMtoßaUariboamisf tin O-.tj »t Temxl JJW> •uay .y-b ? •*. -wst *w -TUlti \<-J .. .\S' » S': - ioot oMstinrr Wsuitn,, . ;; ? .7r AAAA . j;T-U * A ■ ‘ ~«W s^sii u ; • . Vi;.:. - yi-.; : •-- iiwiß ftmawatror i•> "^./V; 1 COLORED TARUBTANR S 1. •- /■ ■,.■■: MASSES, FBAHES, fce* iko., .'v ; : li ’* <> ■ . ; -V ; . vv vk' iWHB PB* YARD T 0 8T eBNTjt; i ■P i'N '- OHJANMBS AND LAWNS,i . . »: .»--. CBAIL - 8 *OA<(B AJWSi,' i , ~ QBTg» d MU>H ; AJUM'iK tOoiH '-TO B< BuLD Tills! «oa h, lor «noo<h ♦omtfifj al|. it'' - i-.v }- ' CdARLfreADAUS *!*>!***. .• ‘ • .«. : i -,.KW*TH A^caflw—i RBKP tO«M*D.£LtBS 0«l* bof Hotting. and Bobbin* tt. at ■ _ IGHTt* tod Afts*t eU*ott.; } A rt <,OOU an aSSjKTMENT OF ■ i* »Wt*«twat».o«b« &?***«*,, * so », f If. 1 RY-i. DltaJ’, ENTLSuaS'3, ;|'.as»N , . ; k * 6K<noi.BiE^;;uooaih; Jyll ' f ; ' iCHWti. i jni.O*Y Sit & <*oPfcL^ t $; 7 •-:„! VKLL'JNUtiOODS. . M»! IWplWdpOj. s>’>‘iV -,.- ‘ i . ■a f» |Kito<« l Aj!f f #iOBO%WD. 8' BES’ 'j gferw. I *iiK- oif L i WS» AW> OKS »SDIK9. jUwfa«d«AWgttgt»|B fBpVCTICfX - ; ’ ■ TOPUROKASERB. i - yrTtuSSirmo^cf- PORHIB- ino good* .>> -_ j assortment flwtoolore sect - - i f it :;■ weak ?. * - ~ . \ Sink M. t_" NMtKtrlM,, ‘ ff. R-«*« , »HW>ni l S»Ocod.M11 IsW ”?a& -ff ~ : ..S-K. i Hiss’s wjsae, ’• JttWßai;'•.;'; . A Ivte (taatpfU* bein««JiU'. »ort u jlMmr nu* IRRBSMtiW B IKDDCEMBNTS’T « obem gujtsßß.aoors 11 ■ ■ MfCUBILKf, HPuBFTPIU LAOS OOOOSIi.' I . • o*l ft Ut V i(3B Uiii hare UtfailajlUiUKtdthali TOBO »B« CJ-SlTi : - .-r .‘ ,~Uftda»,tMir oaaal Low rati. - ... Z* W* •*•*!»» BttißDaon to oqp ■* -* IWMt! Lsea/Vograon sbd tn««nMf - ; ,n. fe o<vm«T RiflSfnfifc^iN P-KPAKKII JgPALDINtiFH PREPARED GlitJEI * A STITCH JH TIME SAVES WINE." BAVB TB* P« 0B9 / I,IBrATCH1 il imMi will togsi, set* *e mU-niutoui rhmeiUt, :t ts very desirable to bare some cheap and ooevsaleat ww far repoirku Furniture, Toys, Crock*' ’trek*!;. - , - , BPAI.DINa'P PBIH’ARTO aUrB; , masts an seek cmsrsnnoise, and no bows*bold oan afford ls atwsrs ready aad up to Ilis stiok «« petal Theretoso tooirer a necessity, tbrlimpint 'ckilu [ tothntered veoeera, bend [see dolls, and broken metes. It te jest tbs article for cone, shell, and other ornaMSntal srerir, eo poealar with ladles of reUbeniesl and taste. , v '- : , ' Thto adMUtoble yrepantion te atod .oOtd, belm ehe mieuy held in eolaubn. dad pcscesslaz nil the valuable soalitiee of tbe. beet - binet-makert’ ataa; It may be need ’ tlto tiaoe of ordinary. sneiUce, bein* raetly more *jhetov» . ‘ “ USBFtTL IH EVEJtY HOCBE.”! . - A A brush atppmpanlee 'eaba bottlri.. Fates TWENTY-FIVE OKHTB. -' Whttoeeleßeyot.No.sa OKI)A* ItreetvNew Vorfc r -AdiM«e-;i r ■...,-T - ) HANEY O. iFALDINQ A 00., . .; - ' Bex Ne.MM. Mew York. neeoißyenTiits.eeehDMfcaee.' ■ -* PKBFAAED SLUE ■ :/' will tarv tea tlasM Itteose eaaaaiir to every bswmboid. heid bjr.ail ptemifft’ feaU'beeini, Ormtnsto'. gard tonte a« FotmUnw BesJera, Qrootra, ttod Fancy •torse, .MfelilOMlf gPALDOia’S PKEPAMI) M.BH, «B&aki«i **«rtir U*f. ■I L!? mUj - *.OOmHCCtA*SE«. jr ookina<6it is $ is s; ; ' £NGIBAy£NQB, , '. ', / ; ,:;.'6itpinmK(a,to..; ike. JAMES SeijiALß ft BOH, ' tUIfUFACTCfJItSS, WHOLE • - 1 ' -FA-'-* AND tIETiIL DXJULSKBi- ' SABLES' GAUMBIESz. ' •WONKSTNCT BTKEBV, , .'■hWAC ' • - rhitadetahlk. ;'[%,; :.o.dMMiSsiuif HOUSKti. BASAItD, HUTCHD OOEMISSIQH MIROHANTS ... -\;>A?j&tar*nuii>w ;• j ‘ i»Hrt*AJDELPHIA-MAX>E . . t- r 'r r . 1 1 ALUMINA TOR**. -- v '; - \ • ';;: iSfijtaniiß WPiWwwwiSß •‘- -,'t * -•■ «■? a 1 ‘ r •> '-•-■» - FAiHB ANKS’PIiATFpHMSOAtkS; r;.r*.i' .»*. ..•: ~» -.„r.i:.»U I- WE, JLif IKR, BPgWPSBafWtWMre*, Vol* 301. SfcWING MACHINES. CO.’S and sfiWa.. ; : -;eEW|NO;;MApHIKES. -, STREET. PtiM.ofi SHUTTLE HAG BINR.WO. , S»oLDOVBLE-U>OF|STITOa MACHINE from • BdpiMt ftiid bom flßoiant machines nun- fw.ali klß.'aof oa*.. ; A’-MADtfINK All*, COTTON, NEBOtES, OIL, ate., oowtM'lj on hanS, ( r J,«-Sra ... ;,' . ;.SE.W.f'WO MACIFINR. ..fftvt froratwnspoola without thetronb’e of re* Windiogf run* with little or no notes ■ . - «/ ri. o.o* * , GIBBS' SEWING MA fIJ. - **99* increasing demand for *Wlkite 7 fcwbli*ffewii§g Ktoliineln a guarantee of its jqggrans&a’bfipft.&ssr’ HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS. §OP*BK>R BmUGSRATOBS, */ ■; •;>. --fllittiMMM'lttik.. . CNiLPiKwa 1 eio» amp oarhiabha. • v la Ohm Tuimf. FOKNITUE&LIFTBBA, ' - Tatr itaafol in aamadina Cutiata and MAttla*. '• WIUuIAM YAKNAEL’B ! . UOUBK FUBHISiaKG 8T0B& «o. iQ»a qHBBTm(T street, ': ißßadutabr aaaoaito lh* Arademj Fica Art*, . aa»tr ■ • PAPER HANGINGS. , pp olohe Business, ■; BART. ■ONTOORERT, fc CO., NO. ta OHNSTNUT BTRMT, ■ WlOaill aaLtkMuktUavlaWraaAsaMwrtatitkaif *• '^slwakiakar-/ 1 ■■ PAPER HANGINGS. , nMMti, WwwrWiflr •*»••*•* Witfc tk* IbMmw, A*BB*ATLTBII)U(J*I>I«IC*A ' Oft FRENCH PAPHAA AT M PK* SENT. BEi um ooerw, 1 - i ♦aaaiai waatlaa Ikatr Miaaaa F«»aia4,aia «*t«nQ BAHOAINH. . ■ ; WATCHEH* JEWELRY, drc. jis dumond mmt, ring-, and ‘Xul. Hne; QoH Jewelry in a treat variety of styles, .^^■GoWN»ek aaa Vest Chains. Silverb»oon», Fork*, motion* " ' ‘ i O. ttUßSßol*,' i iff-m ■; \ - M KorthSIXTH Street, j NEW VORK ADVEKTtSRHENTS, i BELMONT A 00.. BiNKGBB. : HHWVOBK, ~ Law Lattara ft Cradit to Trarellera kaalltH* !a .. " , ALL PABTB Of THB,WOM», nwu AOTKaamu, ASIA, LONDON, FRANM.FORT, TIBtiNA, If A PAjPg. AtW THBIB COR&BBPONDBNTB * THIRION.^raSft.LARD, & GO.. No. 144 CHESTNUT STREET. The attention cf-bcyettis called (o the onucualu «om'|i T 6WTiVg3k i of'' • MBfUM'SANDCAAHMB&ED’ETOSSF. • VEIL* BARE GEB ANO GRENADINES, WOU3.DE LAIN EH, SHAWL* Ac, Ao. Forests by F. W. MELIZET & Co . No. 19i CHESTNUT STBEET. bW gfmtf . , , • « |^ E W BUB Y POB T’ M JSBH MACKE R E L, VERY- LARGE AND WHITE. C. H. MATTSON* IIH-tf , ABCB AND TKfTTH STREETS. ]\r?W SPICED AND SMOKID SAL. is mon. Ff.ihovery fewdsrt. ALBERT O. ROBERTS. SEALER » 1 FINE GROCERIES. JfM Cnratr KLFVSNTH lunl VINE Str/mU |JAJLL’» PATENT PL ATED lOE PIT 011 E l ‘ Entirely different in their ooastruotion from ail other* wd WARRANTED to keep the lOK LONGER than W Pitohar now tn use at a temperature of seventy do crook Fahrenheit. -The above Pitcher* will keep the water eoM for ftseaxy /ear kewt, ’ A pouad aod a half of lo* In three pints of yrater will ' tout imm A carl mndA/fvAvt mmvtss; while the same iuadtitf In an ordinary stone pltohsr, at the lams eni parature.only lute two hoars and fifteen i Persons should not oonfooad thee# Pitchers with those usually sold, bat inquire for HA L L ’B P A TIN T . WM. WILSON * SON. , <ol» Aunt. for tti» MmufiaftiraT,, ' • fc W. Owasr FIFTH US CHKBH7 StrMla. |yM. H. HYATT. $Ol CHUBOH ALLEY, ftefo tto&ufeetnm'oed Patentee (or this city psr in* PATENT PAPER BOX. Thie Box excels ell other* for boost?* etrn&tfifc* o«A durability. Sooting is dispensed with tnits tourafoo tate, thus seonriai fh» greet desideratum of , STRONG CORNERS. J9r'6nl»n.Botloil»L/ XUh | BELLS. FOR CHUAOIIiSi FIRK ALARMS. Ac.. { tO* «*IS BT ’ . NAT?LOH *' COh RT-tf - r , SgQCOMMBRfIKatWBt. SHOEMAKER it Co. ' RLASKFAIMTB, ’ ' ■ V-' / ' OILS AND VARJNISREB. : HwthwM dcracr FOURTH AMD RACE Street.. «riMa -’v.' fJOIFEK’S PATENT ■ **^^ B ?*. ** . SMrt. Ac.. ■lb fj wij udS-JLb, Nutting Machine, for fmmbw uHtii e tmir. end ssoceMful yftii*^ 0011 ? ne, end ranks lA/OHK’B ODOMKTbK BAND COM. StCfiibM BBM. Ml eßount. nwertrin, wtthon.r., -qoiCJm!? trju bkk. ttiu ißfertor Cuub intiwut th* [”? , In all part. irfUi.’ »r , * *ft»"«»»'» . , : »iti* ;;. >i • < tm wjSiStn^itmy, w ?Mjfel££ '~ ti.*^l^oo : Bamih ia-i J tftftMd; tan* ftisd fioe pulreniwl..; EXCURSIONS. giSA, BATHING. ' atlaStio city, mw jbbsst. IK HOURS FROM PHILADELPHIA, ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 6,000 VISITORS. - ATLaNTIC CITY ta now, bonoeded to be one of the maetdeliBh!fnLBfla,‘fide'Teenrtsm the Its bath but is nnsnrpMsed t its nobroken ben'-hintne miles in length) is by any on the Cor.t nrnt, oAvathni-of Ga’vest on; itf> sir is remarkable for it* drynesa; i*»*n|Uoc6nd fiah ne fnoiltties are perfeot; its Jio ois are wel 1 famished, and ae well kept nefhoee of Newport or Saratoga; while its avenues and walk* ore cleaner and broader than those of any other Se/v -barhuig piaoo ju tuo country. - • Trains of the OAMD y W ANT» ATLANTIC RAIL ROaDleave YINF.-STREET WHARF.Fhiladelohta, daily at 7.50 A. Af.and4P.Rl* Petaming—roooh Pnil adelphia at 9A.M, a ad 7.45 P. M. Fare $l.BO. Round trip tiokets, good for three days, §2 w, to be purchased or exchanged at the ticket offices only, and not of or by conductor'*. D stance €0 mile*.. Sunday tr«in leave* .Vine streetnt 8 it) A. M.; leaves Atlantic City atfiSO P. M.—stopping only for » ood and water, A telerrapb extend* the whole la’ gth of the road. Je22*’f POtt OAPJ3 MAY Kf.w a ?ork. NEW YORK •I’eLPH lASTE4M NAVI „ ' ■■■ • GATIOW COMPANY. „Tbo fine (Mean alaamer, DE* AWABE. Covt. CAN NON l-H'lk 11 <>N, CAM. OHOOKER. m,d KPfiWpßEa. Uapt. JOHNSON, form a TIAILY LINK between’ this city. Cape Mav. and New York, leavm* from fir*t Pier .below Br£Uoßstreetibunday excepted) at 9H A. M. Bejpriiine.- leave New York from Pier 14 NO.,T H HIV KR at A P.-M. Leave Cape May f*\lond&ye except ed) at 6 A ' AI. • Faro to Cape Mayfoamagebir* inoludcd)....9l ro Servants do >, do* do .... i % . Season ti ket*(oarriase hire extra)- 8 00 Fare to New York, Cabin-- t oo proa. ico B&tftßown Kxtra---- too Freights for Cane May and Naw Yqrfc taken at low fates.^oeda(destined beyond N'tr Tori: will be for warded with deepatoh free of comraiss-on. ..1 ' k-A ! J'MKH ALLDhRMice, Agent, . JrH'ta.,3l4and 316 foiitli DKLAW a Avenue, , fig PHU- A DSLPIP A AND fISdHHSKHRi reawngra lro*d. de if'rHTJ|7l* kX-. U*uTroh«*'iObMd ofter MONDAY. Jt'LY.ftrfc, until further notice, the lolloving routes mil pa open for escuruinns. _ _ Tiotrtte for sale at Ticket Office, Broad and Callo^hill To Niagara Fall* &ad return. 91000 To Scranton rnd rater* ■ Bio - „To Look Haven and rotorn 85i ’For fo'tber particulars see small bill*, of appir to Tiokst Acent of the Company.-Bmcd and CallcmhiU straats. or to . .JNO. F. BEATY, i Ganaral AgantPhila-Jkßabdmß ftnllmad, Philo. G. A.fUCOLLa, Gen’l Superintendent, Readme. 1 jjll-tf CAPE MAY.—The swift steamer, OKUROE can w. Vlulid.n* leaves Arch* atrMt wfcatf *rery Tu**ay, Tburaday, and Bator- *t B>4 o’oloar, returning on the interrne Fare,carriage hire ituladed ...» ..... ► are, •erantti.CArr.iag e.mre included. Season ticket*, eam&ge oire extra.... florae*, oyrlagea and freight taken* '£& ■arfiKßMn *ok. the ska* ffiHSMSKA? 0 * E -° AMDEN On and »ne?®N 8 3 A^/VtAJv o *?'tulnaon ths Cam den anu Atlantio Hat road wiU ran a« follow*: Mail train leave* Vine-atreet wharf... .7AO A. M. Extra** train (atoppinc only for wood and wateri...... .4 00P.M. Hail tr.in...... 4.49 P. M. <s£: fr. . Leave Leave Atlanticat..— <J3O P, M. „ Stopping only for wood and water. . Fare to Atlanta when ticket* are pu ohwd before entering the c*>a, $lBO. Round trip ticket* (good tor thru rail, f ISO. to be purchased or exchanged at tbe tioket office onlv, and not of or by conductors. - 5ea50nu05et5...^......... *.380. Month!* do. jfl. Freight most he delivered at Cooper** Point b| 8 P.M The. Company will not be responsible for any coots until received and receipted for by ineir Agent at the point. ; rL n The' thrtugb.to attantio every Saturday afternoon until fur ther notice.' • < , 4 ..Through baggage checked atall hour* of toe day at Vifte-etreefe ferry. JNO. G. BRYAN < / Agent. „ , „ CAMP-RIFKTfVG. ATJACK’OV, On.the Jine i f<ho r< aniO' > n a d Atl ntoßa'lrosd.oom* faencnv 4‘n M-ndet< Jnl'S3 ending Juh 23. PxoursioQ lokctsTd oxme rnod-on all trains ego otiagthHVx* Traine leave Viiit-o reet Ferry at A M and An amusing Incident took place daring their rrmoVal from town, a large hamper of glass snd ohloabad arrived from town by the carrier one mornit)g, ftnd tbe conCfcore, being nrpnoked, were taredlnto the wall, end when ell this weigitwas* pnt on it, of coarse It came suddenly down with an alarming craeh My fither. wbo was witblu bear* lug. s«oji ctijuo to tho scene of action, or rather fraction, and, after coolly surveying thp damago, very qmetly sent l|ie maid t«» her mispress vita the message ‘that the china which oeme vp in the morning. bad come down in the evening ’ This, to his great amusement, brought my mother, in a Btato of ntter mysHUoai|i»n> to tpe soeqo of the oatastropho They were, however' both obeerful people, and tho breakage <nres borne with tolerable philosophy on both rides M Like Scott and Wordsworth, ho had no ear for music, Tho only song he ever attempted was picked up from an «ld sea-lieutenant. Quaint and iharucteristlc enough it was. It ran somehow in this fashion: *'' the mackerel, "With hi* Ftriped baoi;— Ea»s he. ttetf in tho nnuna'l, and haul on the tack, For it’swind> wea'her— It’a s'ormy wo»ther— And when the wind l>!e.*a pipe a 1 hands together, For, upon my word, it is wind? weather!’ ” His daughter says': “ This Is the only verse that remaius as a family tradition of tho song, but, if I remember rightly, it brought in tho suggestions of the various fishes for sailing tho vessel. Now, my father, curiously enough, with the most delicate perception of the Rhythm and melody of versifying, and tho most acute instinct for any jirrlng syllable or word, and peculiarly happy in the musical cadence of his own poetry, had yet not tho slightest ear for music. He could not sing a tune through cor rectly, and was rather aroused by the defect than otherwise, especially when a phrenologist once told him his organs of time and tune wore very deficient. My father used to say on tho Very rare occasions on which he was ever to sing, that ho chose this particular song because if he may out of tpne no ocp could detect him, especially as he mado a point of refusing all ffreortf.” fpien twitted with havlogno musical enthusiasm, by one who had delivered hlmeelf a rhapsody on tho « concord pf sweet sounds,” Hood retorted, “Ob, yes, I do know It—it's like turtle-soup—fbr every pint of real, you meet with gallons of mock, with calves 1 heads in proportion.” One dis covery he did rpako \n tpuaic, lyblph was that you cannot play no the black keys of a piano without producing q Scotch tnqo, op wba* will very well pass for ono. As fond of practical jokes as oven Theo dore Hook himself, Tom Hood was often caught in his own net, but usually gave a gufd pro giro. His daughter thus chronicles one: uu another occasion two or three friends came down for a day’s shooting, am}, as they often did. in the evening they rowed out Into the middles! the little lake in uu old rant They were fall ©l .spirits, and had played off one or mo practical jokes ou their host, dll ou getting out of the boat, leaving him last, one of them gavo It a pa+h, aflu ; out went my father Into the water. Fortunately, jit i was the Undlog-plaoe, and the water was not deep bat he was net through. It was playing with edged tools to venture on sush trluks with him, ami he Quietly determined to turn the.tabloe. Accordingly bo presently began to complain ol oramps and etitohes, and at last went io-doors Ilia friends getting rather ashamed of their rough : fuo, persuad'd blip to go to had. which he immedi ately did His groans and coroplhjnts increased so alatmmgly, thauhey wore aimustat their wit’s end? what to do. My mother bad, received a quiet bln', and wus therefore not alarmed, though roaotr amused at tho terrified efforts and pte*orlpUons of the repentant j >ker». There wus no doctor to be bad for miles, and all sorts of queer remedies were suggest<d end administered, my fhther shaking with laughing, while they supposed bo had goi ague or lever. One rtuhed dp w|»h a tea-kettle oi Jmfljpg pn'Fpr bapging on pis dim, another fettered nrdor a tin bath, umT a thud brought the tsnstnrd. My lirther ut loigth, ts will as he couV speuk. guvp 04tip p rtpuldiral voice that ho wn? sura he wua dying, and detailed state most absurd direo tlona for hie will, which were all too fright eutd to see the fun if At last he could stand Ut o longer, and, after hearing tho penitent offbudere beg bitn to forgivo tbtro fi.rtbeir tintnrtunsie joke, and beseech him ro believe In their remora*. he buret into a perfect shout of laughing, which they thought at first wusdelirbrns fren;y, but which uhi maVaiy betrayed tpe j-qte. Another of fils jokes, on his wife, as record ed by herpelf, in a lotttr to England, is papb tab She §ajfn i ' f “1 mutt low tell yen my story about the Christ mas puddirg. The Lieutenant was with ua on Cbrlsimas dey, and e>.Jf.jed my plum pudding to that 1 promised to make onb for him. liood l(upKU»td lu play eqoo irloks with it—either, to pop ip bpll.lB oMeppepnj nail,; et,d I notehed over By fojk with ghat Ogllaoc.,ip that it was put in to boll wiibout any nmfortui.p • » I ffpnt to hod early, telling Gradlo to put it, when done, into the drowlrg-roctu till the morn ing. Ilood was writing, and says, It was put down smoking under bis very no*p, and t»>p pfisebief was l pad bought a groseben's worth of #iJ.AB OTL —fOO gals. On* 0.1 for making oju them a little shorter than the pudding’s dl#*' ' Asuparlor snide, »p B tore nnd ms’sr. end poked th«m in aororsand across in iww*VvV» ** 19 *H dlrepiiuLS, so peatly, that I never perceived PvIUS OULKM—Oioumi in Oil, atari for I pwumted by lX* DaujfEtor/wuii tt C^rslao?*and rß bo r f» salebv WKTBERILL fc UKOTHfiA.dt and 49' l 'h« hU Hon. Illustrated with copies lrom bis own iHortsiBk.CCKPßtr«t, ’ Jjll • oketches. In two volumes. Boston t Tioinor k Fields. 'To; Pi BAM7RE TfUVRL aSBSSMsr LKRS.--Grand Fxonreioa Oom Philadel phia to Niayam Falls* Montrea- Qoebeo. River Sa*u*- "ftte iwm TSlWreaos, Grand Trank Railway. Splendid steamsi ffAGirWfrStSajiaenft Rirer.and return to Philadel phia via ForWami and Boston or Saratoga Springs. Fares Hoeuso* Whit# Mflsjj Bos ton and New Yo-k „ fSfcW From Philadelphia via Montreal, Saratoga Spnnga. andWfwVork .......... 81JW FramQueheo to Sagnenayßiver.andreturn... lifn From Philadelphia to Niagara Pal’s and return.. 16.00 Ticket*good until{Jetobpr IA. W» - For Ekoore ion Tiokets and a'l tnjhrtnation as reroute, aMs«tfs&sr B - w dissp£ o tJS«li.“ J l-U-iro ; Aon MEDICINAL. JN. KLINE & 00., 116 WALNUT ST. • J. N. KM*E A CO., I 6 WALNUT Street. I N. r LiNb A CO., Jl« Walnut ‘•treet. J. N KLiNK (c C0..U6 W'AL.NUT Hhreet. AROMATIC WOH|jIVJS ’ CORDIAL AROMATIC BIOEBTIVB WM AROMATIC DJQEgTIVE CORDIAL arcmatu digestivk oordial WILL CURE THE DySPKPSIA, WILL CURE THE HEARTBURN, WILL CURB CRAMP IN THE STOMACH, Ac. Read the following certificate from Hon. J. S. \ OST, V. S. Marshal, Eastern D-smot of Pennsylvania: ■ Philadelphia, June 4.1W0. Messrs, J JV. Kline <f Co,—Or ntlemon: A member of my family, bavins euSered witb the Dyspeptic Tor several years- wap lately recvmmendfd by a friend tu try your Cord al i and i aai Danpv w eabt.iu usin/t tlie contents of one bottle she could enjoy her meats with a good appetite without feeling the (east inconvenience, i take treat pleasure in reoommending it to all who are afflicted. J. 8 Yost. U. 8. M. E. I>. of Pa, AROMATIC DIGE'T-VE CORDIAL 1 nia etorl- Jent and agreeable preparation none of the bes* means <if improving the appetite promoting digestion, and giving strength and tone to the stomach, whiolt bos yet beenofferfdtothe publio. . ... it is an old ’terman receipt, and has been in use for many y> a»s in the families of the manufootor-ie, where it nasproved an iovsluable remedy for LVfcPi* HBIA, HFARTBUKN FLATUI.BNdK, and OR IWPS lW THE m TOMAOH, arising from cola orindLesDon. All fras baviflK ’he least tendency to indigestion sboulil »r to without it, u a sfuail wine-glass fait, taken r mhaTs, will e?clgd* the of contracting dyspepsia. ■ U is eorapoeed of fifteen inrredients. Bitter* and Aro matics. and pnly seeds to bo tested to be approved and appreciated, it ie a pteesont beverage, and may be used with safety, pleasure, and advantage py invalids and br those in bealtb. To be hid at all the leading DracKists’ and Grooers’, put up in quart bottles. Price one dollar. Masuwo'iirfd and for sale bv 1 * - c 0 JelS-wfm.la W*LNIJT 1. HLjLMBOLD’S IXTBAOT BUCtitT. THE GPEAT DIURETIC For Disease of tbs Bladder. Kidneys. Gravel, Dropsy ORGANIC WEAKNESS, Ac , Ac. Sufferers with diseaaea of those organs experience 4r MANY ALARMING B^MPTOMB, AmOTfe whjpfc will be found Pain in the Rook, Weak Nerves, Lose of smnrr. Difficulty of Breathing, Dimness of vision. _ JJtnguor. UNIVERSAL LASSITUDE OF TIIE MUSCULAR TheM iismasTO whloh In .ariably removes, goon follow LW (j Pow.r,| g t»lt fe , i?f d EpiLptloFit.. PROOUbE TbE BBMKDY AT O^CE. pi,e“i^waTvwii^^clirinreho la the treat - iuretio, And is oert&ln to have the desired effeotln thedis- AfiiM emuueratsd wbeiherarnins fwm XNDiso jt D l’fl&fiiKxdEaaEi!. And no matter of bow (oncjtandinc. FELMiToLD’M EXTRACT BUCHU Is presoribed and used bv the most ' EMINENT PHYd OIANS. Certlfipa'Ss pf pares of from one month tn twenty Jaarr etanding wif accompany the Med orae, and svi enee of the most reliable and responsible ohsraoter is' open for inspection. Pnue §} per bpt*le. or six for BS. foliveredtoMyaddrgs^-Depot, 104 South Tfcw*H »Faet. below OH KbTNUT. * fegg tf L|Kri. tVINSLOW, M WSMIi AHD FBM4I.K PkrsioQk&f ervsscts to the attention of mo the: S hsr efOOTHING SYRUP 808 CHILDREN TEETHING, which greatly fooilitatasthe srooees of teething* by ' radßoie| all foßammation t wlu af "■HLlEf' AHD HEALTH To VOVRIHFAIITB. Wft hftT* mtttf Ud Bold »n year*, wtf aw *ai» in oob a* ErwjffiS: ffiffliso witter •‘wniit we do {* r* ss»; •xhAOstiop, relief will be t oalTnriltvef 5? * rifontMtfieKoaueli »Hd miVHton*end enrrn to p§fe l»»tEa« er fiem eprotljefl „ •▼err mother war hue" ho Cireioini eoieehußtedh nor the ereiiuflqee ofl^ wsßmt •aSSJEHEK this article for over ten &deune and troth of r nwK n kaowan miunot of »hpa»Jit. Onthßoon with it* oMtafini*. anil rw* know,” after tan yeara’ refutation for the fulfil* olare In almost evert imfipnns frotn pain and bundiu fifteen cr twenty administered.' gsd hv bpou urn with !SuPtrm?Vain, but In rT£i p \K? r fe wjijiitji [feveG 11 ?ik ?? Il* ’tH K <"OLIC and overcome 000 sseedili remedied, end in Bwm* -. ariMc from t-MW. , p , | Ifi BURK- to follow the , bmclj OKed, Full djrpo ; wjrwmm ■. the outside wrapper, rarhoatthe world, Pilaal trf pt, flair York;. % • * fffjhp • PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JULY 23, 1860. € 1 1 || ns s\ MONDAY JULY 23. 1860. Thomas Article.) Very imperfectly Indeed have we carried out onr desire,'.of‘ini?re»tlpg..our readers In the « Memorials of! homus-IIood.” (byhisson and daughter,)' 11 Our article about the famous au thor of “ The Song of the Shirt” did not create a craving for farther extracts from the book. - What especially has awakened our attention Is the continuous good feeling and grateful af fection of Hood for his wife. Hero, for ex ample, is a passage from ono of his letters tf> her which fully shows this: “ X never wn s anything, dearest, till I knew you—and I hav6 been a letter, happier, and more prosperous man ever since. Lay by that truth in laven dor, sweetest, and remind me of it when I fall. X am Writing warmly and fondly j bat not with out good cause. First, your own affectionate letter, lately received—next, iho remembrances of our dear, children, pledges—what darling ones I—of our old familiar love—then a deli cious impulse to pour out the ovoiflowirgs t.f, my heart into, yours t and last, not least, the knowledge that your dear eyes will read what my baud is now Writing. Perhaps there Is ah alter-thought that, whatever may beta! me, the wifo of my bosom will have this acknowledge ment of her tenderness, worth, excellence—- all that is wifely or womanly, from my pen.”' In 1841, when poor Hood was not far from tho closo of his career, ho thus wrote to hih wife i “ But ■ for tho ‘ world’s gear,’ how happy could Xbe Inspito of 111 health I I half' suspect the sickness of my heart has been from hope defetred. But time and tho tide woar through tho ronghest dayj so pluck np your spirits, dear one, and let us hope still i it Is hotter, at all events, than despairing. If you were but as near as you are dear to me, X think I should Sad little tilling. If It bat please God to spare me, you, and my bairns sound and well, I will not repine at the rest.V The daily beauty of this poet’s life, filled with struggles as It was, Is pleasant to oonteraplate'. In versb, too, as well as in prose, did hp declare how deeply he loved the true heart so long and tenderly linked to his own, in wedded life, Here is a lyric addressed to his wife: Those eyes that wars so brisht, levs, Have nows dionier ehinfl.— hut all tr.ey’ve lost m Heir, love, Wj« what they sav« to mine: BotsttU those nibs riSe’et, iove* The beams o’ former hours, — That ripen’d all my Joys, ruy love, And tinted all my dowers! 9l so 1 20 -U.. 8 Oil J*9-lroo Those looks were brown to see love, 'year now are tnraod so star,— But tjie years were Spent with me, love, That erole their hue awar. Thv look* no looser shjtro, love, Tho i olden plow of or on But I’te sc* n Ih- worid look fair, my love, When slivered by the moon! That brow woe smooth and fair, love, 'I hat looks so, haded now,— But for me u bore tbs oare love, That spoiled a bonny brow. A t d ti oii.-h no Ipuper there, love, The stosßithad of yore,— Ktilt Alemor, 1 oks and dotes, my love, Where Hope ndniir.d before! Hood’s first- book was the “ Whims and Od dities,” which ho dedicated to tho Reviewers, in this epigram : *• 'Whftt Is ft irodern Poet’sCita i 1o write liia ihoughtßupon n»Ute: The < rltto spite on whnt le done, ; Gi»es it a wioe—nrd ell is jo» e! Whon Hood, recently married, moved from London to resido in a cottage in the snbuibii, at a place which then was rural, his daughter tells us: of them when I packed and aaaled it up’ fur D» Franck’s man to carry over’to BbrtntrHtafelo. Be cams to thank me, and towtMd U blftbty,. I find that while I wftfl out of the tootn. Hood atked him If it was not well tro*wd, and he answered * Y«* eo smvely tbar Heod thought he meditated some Joke in retails* »Wn, end WOB on his guard. At the ball the truth came out—b* actually thought it was some new method of making piam-pnddfngs, and gave me credit for the woodwotk. Be hud invited two of - hi, brother rfßrers to lnneh upon it, and Rood 1 "" n " d ,. *®. persuade me that the < Oetdlnal ’ uffioer bed Swallowed one -of the skewers 1 Now, - Whs not thie an abominable trick ?” X German manners and customs did not win a 1 way Into Hood’s liking. In ono of his letters iVom Coblentz be mentions this little dinner display. <‘ At tho table d’hote, the English are fond of copying foreign customs and man ners. First pull oat tho crumb ol your roll, about half of which roll up, and work between your fingers (if snuffy the better) Into little balls as big as marbles. They will not look exactly like Wordsworth's ‘White Dough,’ ■but rather dirty putty. » hen you have used jour quill toothpick, stick it up, bolt upright, in ono of these dirty balls, a little flattened -beneath, as you may have seen candles stuck .In extempore elay candlesticks at an illumina ition. Should it (the toothpick) want cleaning, .tUTblsh it up with one or the other dirty .bread balls; (ben it will be ready lor fur ther use ! This I should think a very, polite i piece of manners, for I had It from a gentle man who wears a black velvet great coat and >a ribbon at his bntton-hole, and who evidently i does not think small beer ot himself, or vin - ordinaire, as I ought to say hero.” Neither did he Std the Germans indisposed to cheat him. , At the hotels there were three prices, for JEnglish, French, and natives., He wrote homo “ tho good honest Germans are as great cheats as nnjr, though I confess they look honest, they are so stupid like, and per haps honesty is stupidity. 1 bad some shirts made hero, and they not only changed the Oloth I had bought of them, but sent mo home some shirts so laughably short, I could only make shift with them; this was. a respectable shop.” ; Dilke, editor of tho London Mhenceum, (that wet-blanket, of literature which almost always abuses American hooks apd hates to recognize a writer’s merit until he has become famous,) WM a person to whom Hood ottsn wrote lrom Germany. Once upon a timo, Dilke had his hair cut, such an unusual Operation for him that he took cold. Hood said « What an epi taph must I have written, it he had diet through that little outbreak of personal vanity i ” Bars ties Dilke, tho notim to a whim. Who went to have hie hair oat bat the air cut him.” Here is an impromptu quoted by Hood (most probably his own) on the death of William IV.: “*T‘e death of kinrs is easily exp’ained- - And thue It rateht open hie tomb he chiselled— • As loos as Will the Fourth could refftt he reientd, And then he mixzhd ” Another on Bripce Albert’s breaking in through the ico when skating, Her Majesty pulling him out with her own royal hands: ** Bcnx life and hard frosts to the fortunate Prince, And for mans a skating mar Providence spare him; For eurely hie accident served to convince That the Queen dearly loved, Iho’ the loe couldn’t bear him ” Dr. Elliot, bis physician, bad a party on ,ilay 23. 1844, Hood, dangerously ill at tho time, wrote; “ A pleasant party to you. To-day le my birth day— fatty fire—but I can’t tell you how old 1 foot ; enough to be your grandfather, at least, and give you advice! viz.: don'tover-polka yourself.” xpionAM on nn. kobsrt smor. 'Whatever Doo'or Hubert's skill be worth* On* hope with in roe a ill is stoat ana hearty, He vroald not kill me till th< 21 b. For fear of my appearing at bn party! Yetanoihor: XPtOIMH. tf y heart’s wound up just like a watch, Aa far aa splinse will take: ’ itwaute but oue in’le evil tarn. And ihentb- cords will b Oak! Very Utile of a-politician, and notbing Of n party man, Hood, bod rational ideas about tho proper mode of governing England, Xhe es sence ot a hundred leading articles is in tho ruIIOWIIIg-JUtre f'-.Wi.,-. .. . _ .... , 11 For my part, I say, hang party! There wants a true country party to look singly to the good oi England—rutronoh and ceonotn|;e, fpdtltP ta?oS, rind make it possible to live aB cheap at home as abroad. There would be patriotism, instead of o' mete struggle of Ins and Outa for places and pelf Common sense stems the great desideratum for go vornon whether of kingdom or family I suspect the principles that ought to gnldo a private family would bear a pretty dose application to the great publlo ooo; theip evils are much of the same na* tare —extravaganoe, luxury, debt, Ac.” Bis sense of the ridiculous usually made him joke upon most things. His English engravtr, a gentleman named Wright, had a large num ber of male children, and at last was presented with a gill. Hood wrote, <■ Take pare of her, now you have got her at last, Some Infants aro tquatted on, like tho * spoiled child.’ Mind, and whenever Mrs. Wright looks fa tigued and sedentary, taao care to hand hor a chair. Now and then, a child is turned up with a bedstead, but that conld not happen if the maids slept in hammocks. Mind how you nurse her yourself. Never toss her up unless you are quite certain of catohing her j a hutter fiogered father might become wretched for life in a moment. Don’t let her go up in your study, among the wild young men. What do' you thiuk of her for our Tom f Don't givo her a precocious taste for lots o’ daffy, or a box at the Opera.” Then ho sensibly adds, “ I never knew a daten brothers but one sister managed to ty rannize ever ’em nil. Have you got adictlona ry name yet ? If I might propose, I should say christen hor ‘Mary Wolistonecralt,’ as the supporter of female righto /” 4 Iriepd presented Mrs! Jlood with a band sq me set of sables, and Hood wrote back,' *• They are very handsome, hut no thanka to you on my part, considering a hint that I have had, that it is a dress only lit lor aearriage I I don’t mean, however, to ga so fur as to set up a wheelbarrow.” Upon Dickens, in 1839, then in tho “ purpurea juvimtus” of bis j>Qp ulartty, Hood’s criticism plain and *cor w^i “ His morale is better than bis material, though that Is olten very good ; His wAolesome reading: the drift is natural along loith the great human currents, and not against thtvt His purpose sound, with that bunuse independence of thinking which is the constant adjunot of true-beartednesa recognition good in low plaoes, and evil in high ones; in short, a manly assertion of Truth as Tram Compared with suoh merits, his defects of over* painting, and the like, are but spots on the t>un. “For these merits alone, he deserves all the suaeeweß he has obtained, and long may he eij»y them! As for Jack Sheppard, the test of its value is furnished by the thieves and blackguards that yell their apptanso at Its slang eougs, in the Adol* phi Can the penny theatres, so unceremoniously routed produce any tff ota more degrading and demoralizing? From what l have heard ot their pieces, they were comparatively absurdities to suoh positive moral nuisances.” T7o had hoped to have douo with those vo lumes in-two notices. But they aro exhauetless in their readability ou4 quotabllity, (two words invented for the occasion,) and we must even run the risk of Tioknor At Fields {poking gravo, “more in sorrow than in anger” at tho ex teut to which we draw upon their publication. Wo conclude, for to-day, with this quaint frag, ment by Hood, probably written during ill- ness : *‘l’m sick of rruel anil the dietetics. I’m Hiok of pi\l», ami stoker or emot ra, I’m B’Ok of pulsra’ tardinw»s or auiokneSß, I'm • ok of Hood, its tim ners or its thickne-a— In short, within a word, I'm aiok eiaki.e*a *” United States Agricultural Fair.—Ar raig-intnlfl for the National Fair, which is to bo bo a on the grounds ot tho Trotting Park, at Cin cinnati, Ohio, In (September, aro bring urged for waid with a good deal of vigor. Cuummuioutuins are bring eriaitfgtd to all parts of the Union; men have been engaged to c< muienco at a day’s warn* lng at erecting tho halls, stalls, Ao , on tbu grounds. 'Sufficient steam power has already been engogtd and cuntrooter) for, and there is money in Iho trenMiry. and pledged, to put the thing through in handsome style. The committee Intend making H the most attractive National Kxhthittofi over held in this oopntry, in, they will bo aided by tho ftbeudauceor crops of every dusorlp tlon throughout the land ■Tub Censusßureau at WAawnaTON.—This buteuu. wMoh la graauriiy getting 10 wotk, has rooms fitted up in fine stylo In the Interior L- apart ment, and unurual care is being taken to copcinot everything relating to it in the most expeditious manner. The mathematical portion of the census will be placed in competent hands, irrespective of political prelerenoya. Theremin* are cmuiDgln slowly from some of tho States, and aro col lated end arranged. Sotpe of the returns ore be ing published where they are taken, to a condensed form, but the detail will not be allowed to bo made public until ordered hy the Cantus Bureau. Not withstanding that tbo positions in thin office rt quire more than ordinary olorioal talent, large numbers of applications have been made for the clerkships. They average about twenty for each office. New PaLlications. r In a 12mo volume of 495 pages,.published by I. W. Bradley, of thlsoiry, and entitled ” Teachings of Patriots and .Statehnen; or, the Founders of tbe r Republio oil Slavery,Mr • lira B fchase, of ‘Wilkesbarre. has done good service to the cause of political knowledge. Id England, the name-are’ not political They submit to be governed by as oligarchy, pay tboir taxes with some grumbling and throw up their bats whenover Queen Victoria dashes by In one of borgilded chariots. , Here, on (hecon trary. a oitisen cannot help being h, politician,'.and very olten descends into.mere partisanship; writing, in newspapers and ,specifying in public without! adequate knowledge of the great subjects at whfeh' he throws himself. One of these Is'Slavery, add Mr. Chkse has cbHeoted, In the l volume ufader notice, what the meat distinguished' patriots and' statesmen have said, written, and aqted-on that) engrossing topio. Be commences, by.giving! Jtfferson’s Notes,of the debates in the Con gress of the Confederation, which relate almost' exclusively to the Slavery question; next, the debates in toe Convention' to form the pro; sent Constitution of' this country ; then * the discussions bn the ratification of tho Constitution la various States-; than follows Col Peter Force’s History of the Ordinance of 1787, which contained the first restriction upon the spread of slavery eve* adopted by these tlutes--the first action of Can-1 gress, in 1700, upon tho rubjoat of slavery, on tiU memorial of the Pennsylvania Abolition Society upon the slave trade—Madison and JeffersonM Vlr] glriia and Kentucky Re solutions of 1798—the Con] gressional debates on (he question when Missouri fought admission into the Union in successive phases of slavery agitation from IBtol including the. Bred Scott deoisiOD, down to tho present time, .with a history of the Kansas-Noj bmka bill—the Inaugural addresses of Washing] ion, Adams, Jtfferson, and Madison—the farewell addresses of Washington and Jackson and the platforms ol the various parties on the subjeot o\ slavery from 1848 to 1880. ' ! Mr. Chase has shown industry, tact, and fmparf tlftlity In this dompilati n ‘ which is full and To! struotive, without being tedious or bulky. "The reader has, in a single volume, 1 the views for and against Slavery of the leading lights of this coun try. from the formation of the Constitution. At this crisis, .when political, exoltement rnos higic suoh a work as this is almost invaluable. ,We would suggest that, to facilitate reference, a good analytical Index be appended to future editions;' < MORE OF. THE MAGAZINES. ' ! The Atlantic Monthly , whioh We reviewed aomt days ago from advance shoots, has rbeohed "xu through Mr. T. B. Pugh, cornerof Sixth and Chest nut. • The August.number of Harper's Magazine, whiofi we, have from Callender A Co. as well as from T. B. .Peteaon A' is remarkably brilliant. , The biography .ot Daviess, of Kentucky, by fr’F'.Oblemen/is exactly what suoh a sketch ought to be—showing the man as he was, in life aud deato. Thomas Bunn Bum lish, despite a few bad rhymes; gives a splendl?, spirit-slirriug ballad of Vermont, on the snbject of the Battle of Bennington, by Qeneral Johi Stark-Mh? tide when he told his men tha£ they most win the victory or Mary > Stark would be a Widow; a finer saying, we submit than Nelson's “ Westminster Abbey, or a peer’ age.” A well written, unsatisfactory, story, by Rose Terry, called "Before Breakfast,” a very agreeable American love-talo, eocne. /Saratoga, by Anthony Trollop?, a powerful story of passion ana crime called ” Black Tarn,” a digest of the Japt] note part of O.liphant's recent work on China 'an d Japan, a lively editor’s Tableland the oommeuoei ment of an Illustrated series, (by Menton Marble,} “ To Red River and Beyond,” are the other prln • cipal articles here Worth especial notioo—we .may also include the poem, albeit a little diffuse, en titled “Two Portraits,” and the first of Thacke ray's Lectures on the Four Georges. Tojum ufi, we pronouuco this to, bo by fir .the best number .of Harper yet published. It is a flue combination literature and art The Illustrations of the Red R ver article are superb in design, engraving, and printing. The Eclectic Mttgazine, a popular New Yorkei;* which 1 we hate received' from W B. 2leber, bos Crtplut portraits, with memoirs, of the Ute Sir Ro bert-Peel nod'the Prinoe of Wales Its letter* press* oonsUta of-liberal and jadiqioaa selections from the leading British poriudloals. | Oodey'o Eady'r Booi for August l« uaforiun&to In a frontispiece called “ Blowing Bubble*,” do riodloai. The stpel piste of fashions is very we} l drawn, engraved, and colored, and tho work 1 Ip crowded with wood-engravings.' The prose and verse are much as usual. r home ontediluviah, Ut terly ignorant of modern llteraturo, asserts, in the editorial part of this magazine, that “ Thac/ceray 4 ? Magazine (the Oorohill?;. in L-mdou, paid the poet laureate of England, Tennyson, sixteen hun dred dollars for a po m” thirty-two Hoes long This is a torrible blunder, which Mr Godey, acute as be is, Bhould not have allowed to piss Tenny son did not get near $1,600 for his poem, ijs length was a great dc.il more than five times thirty-two Hues, and tbo sum paid for it is tre mendously exaggerated. , Letters from Washington* [Correspondence of The Prebs 1 WAsn.NOTON, July 20, 1800. The care of Ellts B Schuahle, fori assault and battery on Major- General George W. Bowman, come up tc : dny. An application was made oil affidavit of defend ant for a postponement of the trial. The reasons given are the absence of certain witnesses, such as Governor 'Winslow, of North Carolina, Represents tive Robinson, of Illinois, John Oov.>de, of Penn-' sylvania, Loring Waldo, of Connecticut, and Hon. Henry May, of Baltimore—tbo latter of whom I 9 to prove thit nttoruey-General Black denied to him the existence of the Walker letter in tho same lao . guago he dented it to Bohnahlc. It is set forth that it can be proven, that a conppirßoy oxista, gotten up and fomented lor plitimil ends; that a conspi racy exists to prevent tbo Goanablein the present exciting political Campaign. The District Attorney, Pobert Ould, Esq., with hie usual placid force, oppo&od tho epplioatiou, aqd Joseph II Bradley, the oonr.vel for Mr. FohnsWe, pressed it with great legal acumen and ptrUnaaß?- After a most protracted qpd dUcuaston, betifftsa ahle legal geptlomen, with thoM.-lst anco ad vitenm of Judge Orawford, it was finally derided in favor of the Bo that the oase la postponed tJU the next term of the oonrf. Dr.riug the pendency of the question, the vene rable and impartial Judge gtv? sorrowful expres sion to his vlews—la 4 brluftnanner—on the state of the press. He said that its present licentious ness more than overbalanced Its freedom. The deputy marshal, Mr. Phillips, anticipated applause by crying “sllenoe. 1 ’ This evening’s States and Union contains a letter from John Savage to Hod Henry A. Wise, on tho Oynthlana (Know-Nothing) speeoh of Mr- Breckinridge, and the support of the latter by Humphrey Marshall, the noted Know-Notbiog ex-represeniatlve from Louisville, Ky. Mr. 6avage suggests that Mr Wise, .who declared he never *ould hold compromise, parley, or terms with the Know-Nothings, had better interrogate Mr. Breck inridge before ho takes up hU advocacy. [Correspondence of The Preis.] Washington, July 110. Tho speech of Daniel S, Dickinson, at the Cooper InflltQto, night before last, baa infused now Ufo into our Breckinridge, or rather, Slidell- Buobauan moo. Last night, when the New York papers arrived, there was a great deal of r«j rioisg at their headquarters. They now hopo to bo suc cessful, not la eleotlog Breeklorldgc, but in kill ing Douglas for the benefit of Lloooln. They praleo Mr. Buchanan for the actire part he takes la this campaign; bis letter to tho New York meeting vr*a highly commenttd upon.’ Dickinson will now be the distributor of the patronage of the Administration In New Votk. His speech has removed tho last obstoole, and the President, who told Mayor Wood that he intended not to make New York a “ slaughter house” of his friends, having f »uud the right kind of a man, will appoint the <*age of Binghamton the cbt«f bu'cher of the Democracy of the F.inplto State, While thus the Democracy In t&o North Is ep gagol in cutting each other's throtta, their breth ren in theSmth amuse tbemselves in a similar taauuor. In Virginia two Stato Conventions baro been called for the purpose of nominating tao dis tlnot electoral tlckots. C, >reruor Letcher ie ra ther in favor of Douglas Ercn if bo would, he does not dare to oppose him, as tho iiamocraoy of his Coogresslonal district is almost unanimously in favor of the “ Little Giant ” A writer loan ©ven- Itg paper, opposed to Dougla*. saya : “The position of Governor Letcher, about which there has been a good deal of speculation, I can furnDh you on iho best authcrl’y He Is not for Douglas or against him, and so us to Breckioridge. Toat is to say, he is not, thus far, committed for or against either. He Is engaged in a strenuous eff-rt to heal the kreach In the Democratic party, and to give the Democratic vote such a direction j a3 w ii) Q}»st tend to the defeat of tho Black Re publican party. This he proposes to aooompluh by running a ringU ticket In Virginia, with tho ] UQgeretanding that the electors on the successful ■ tloket shall bdhi liberty to'oast thdr votes la the electoral college In that way that Shall be most likely to defeat Lincoln. A patriotic con- TWO CENT?. Mfctloh. mrdy; hnt will the Dongles men consent 7 ‘There la the rob.’”. The Cbioago ?juavea are to be yeeeived. tertelned while here by the Washington llghtli fantry, M*jprJ V. Daria commanding, ani this Ve teran corps la duSrons of. entertaining them In' a manner creditable to our city. The Pension Office, haring been removed to the Patent Offioe, is now, aflat* tome delay e.nsed br the properly arranging of the nttaerona papers bt longing to the burean, ready for the transaction of buetocsß.. . tow**. » Agreeably to ordara from the Beoretary of Wei, «rera detachments of reeralU for the Uniter BUtts ermy, amounting to abont six hundred men, l ° do P lrt > eß ,'' rd *T (o' Wow Mexico. .They will, after haring arrived at Port Leavenworth, be united In one corps/ each detachment recelrfe 2 officers belonging to Its rtspeotlre 'regiment; and nnder command of Colonel Crittenden, will ores* the plains to New Mexico, Brevet Colonel John son will Anally insect them,, and inperintend the on'flt qf their ambolanoeiand provision wagons'at Leavenworth., r lallUoo s there are nftwty-one Democratic partera for Douglaß and two (Daniteg) for Breckinridge, la Michigan every one of the thirty-nine Demo cratic papers is for Douglas. lie Indiana there are ■Uty.four for Douglaß, and five either for Breeki*- ridge or neutrals In Ohio seventy-five paper* are for Douglas, and four. for Breckinridge. In flow Hampshire only one out of the eleven Demooratio papers is agaioit, the rest for Dpuglaa, . .The Douglas and Breckinridge.forces, in Balt! „moro ? Aro fighting like a couple of Kilkenny cats Last night resolutions, were paswd by Mr. Doo* gW friends to issue a call for 4 State Convention' which Is to meet on the Ifiih of August, to nomi-- cate an electoral ticket. jf ox , ; lietter.firom Graybeard. fCorrespondence of The free* 1 , , Elmira, July 17/1860 | Dkar Colokel : Without entering into dsUvlft with whloh you are already familiar, I have the happiness to state that ‘‘our party;** Mr. B. and myself, after a delightful vide through our glo+ ribus old State, arrived here safely at a seasosahle hour last evening, via the, Reading,,Catawftw, and, Williamsport ; and -Elmira railroads. The variety and grandeur of the scenery, along thir route mast be seen to be appreciated." Prom Port Clinton, north; over the CaUwi ass road, the paw] iog panorama is one. of the wildest imaginable] Nowhere in the annals of railroading have the'Ob stacles ot Nature bfcen more boldly defied by thi engineer's skill than on the line of the road lead log from the eoat fields of Camaqaa to the North Branch of the Susquehanna. ■ ■ Forthirty.two miles after leaving Port Clinton’; the up-grade Is heavy, amounting for a short di* tanoe before reaohtog tfie Summit to sixty fautb the mile. This is equal to the descOnt of the Nbi gsra river, one mile above the Palls The prospect as we fly through' tunnels, along steep hUNsldejL and across ravines, ft picturesque, and frigid fully grand by' turns.' Such a thing as -a dead level among these primeval hills of carbon and. metallic treasures was evidently not in Nature's programme in forming the earth, a ad, •< bringing forth the mountains." At one moment wo are winding arouod the steep side of a mountain, and the next hurled, with the mad Impetuosity of our iron steed across an immenso ravine over a lofty causeway of solid masonry. Here and there a clomp of cultivated fields bursts into view, on the surrounding slopes and plateaus of wheatfields, now “Crowned with the siokl* udthego'densheaf. 1 ' 1 But the most noted and thrlUlog feature d thU roadie its tressel-work bridges Some.of these are really stupendous, though, I must confess,’ after passing over them, they are less fearfut to contem plate than might be supposed. The largest of these structures (there are some seven la >11) |s one hundred and thirty seven feet high, and twelvn hundred feet lung In orossiog, the more curious of oar excursionists stood upon the platform, which <ve could look down through this alpine skeleton of massive Umbers upon the valley "be low. ’ The constant vlgiUnoo with which all the tim bers are watohed and tested, and-the almost irj* cessant addition of new ones, (the bridges bciog so constructed as to admit of this renovating process without- interfering with the trains.) render this road as s&fe as any o’her. Several additions td the railroading facilities of this pjrticn of our State have been recently com!* rteted Tho Lsokawacna ahd Bfoomsbarg roa^ : iks' boon eKHsuded /nim Rupert's S aties toNo/> thumbeTlaadr'rwbich f* an important link f*r the coalirom theLukawa&at Veliev >oinw. At Milton, on“tho Jruncb, wo strike the Sunbury and Erie road Williamsport. Toft, by the way,'go‘far as come plated, is one ot the most admirably constructed railroads in the (state, and when finished will oeb tainly be one of the most important to the interests of her metropolis. The advantages to Philadel phia of consummating this direot connexion with the Northwest can, iu fact, hardly be over-estima ted. and our merchants, and all who are interested In the ootot&erco of our olty, will promote their in terest in hastening this connexion as much as pos sible. A large portion of the road is already con structed from both its termini, and the vrotk is ra pidly going forward. Tho mnjjr pare ot it, over which we rode yesterday, between Mil ton and Williamsport, is through a fine agri cultural region. From Williamsport north 10 Elmira the country is monnUinous, tho Alleghenies belDg crossed in this interval. We arrived here at ten last evening, having travelled two bund rod *nd ninety miles, aod after leaving the rural confines of our own city, passed through pans ot Mont gomery, Chester, Berks, hehujlkill, Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, Lycoming, Tioga, and Bradford oountles. We din«d at Tatuaqaa, tupped at Williamsport find having etj*yed a grateful night's rest in this beautiful inund town, on the Chemung river, on the southern border of the Empire mate, we shall be ready after breakfast ing to pursue our journey to tho water-wonder ot the Western world. 1 must not close, however, without acknowledging the courtesies extended to us by the conductors on the toad in affjrdUig as the tallest information upon &U prints of interest; Among the passengers in the train there was a unanimous expression of satiefectios, nnd tnanv. oompliments Wore paid to the Reading Railroad Company for having devised the excursion ad vertised in your columns, no less than to John d. iftllea, £-q , the efficient general ageut ef the road, for the manner in which it has heea arranged, in order to afford excursionists the largest amount of travelling comforts From Niagara next. Gratbaabd. Letter from Capo Island* tCorrespondence of Tbe Prcw,| Caps Island, July 10,1800. Although the eclipse did not arrive, aooordlng to promise, X bare, and it is snore in sorrow tbnb. la aogor that I am forced into the conclusion that there are some things more oertalh' than eclipses and astronomers. Having left Philadelphia In charge of Captain Johnson, of the staunch old Kennebec, we all arrived in good condition, with uo occasion for a quarantine anchorage. People whe go down to the i«mk in ships, and don’t want to get shaky, had better try the .Becky Ann, as no matter how strong It may be, she won’t roll, and that’s more than can be said of some people. There was quite a number on board booked for the Great Eastern. and one cannot dense a pleasanter way Of going to New York than by a trip round *• o’er the summer sea.” On our arrival we were whirled over the road In a duster, an Invention of Mr Blanchard, of Philadelphia, in the shape of a four* in-hand Jersey team, which succeeded most effec tually in dustiog the turnplko. The first sound? that greeted our ears after crossing tho old brl dge were the familiar tones of Hasslere full band, ute courilog sweet music In the porch at Congress Hall. I mention this fact lo order to oorreo’ (by authority) the statement of an A'lantlo City Hotel, which ad vertises Hauler's band a* eogiged at their boose. If the brothers Hastier were übiqulrous this might be true, but as th«*y are cot, we assert that they are hero, und nowhere eleo The second hop of the season was given last eve ning at Congress Hall. As Xam out of tho books, I did not attend, but being, favored wltna view' through one of the windows, I oaa give you all in* points, and your readers, who are well versed in «U these things, can fill up the blanks to suit them selves: Beauty—grace loveliness fashion - dance mares—waltz—M’ss X , Queen——, Mlsa Z , magnificent— brunette—blonde—whisky —men—poor—-good— excellent— lemonade—oakec —claret— managers—delightful exquisite Kis*. l f y’a—gallopade, £3 , £O., £O. I may bare left out one->r two point*, tut as they can be easily supplied, It makes no material dlfisrenoe. The Columbia House, under the management of Messrs Laird £ Wor'.man, Is winning praises from all parties, and is deservedly well patronised We question whether tho btatei, at Saratoga, or the Bellevno. at Newport, could produce a soet«ry squat in weal'b, go-d breeding, and intelligence, laklog the two hotels, Colombia and Cuu ress Hall together, one may venture to s*y that' a finer set of people do not vidt any other two hotels <f any waterlog place iu the Union. At the Colombia H-nse. Southern so*leij predumlmmd, BDd it u obaracterijtd by all the geulality, warmth, and j UDustenUitiouaneS* of the true hearted sons and daughters ot the South. Not fin-eaters, mark y«! for wheu you meet a man who la so unoon-clous of innate dignity as to bo continually thrusting I hli supeilority on everybody he meets, yon can set : it down for a fact that he does not representthe bestsocio'y of tho South. Thero Is nobody who oan inspire moro love, honor, and reSpvot than a Southern gentleman: none more dirgnst than a Southern fire-eater You oan tel! him by bis bray.' The ladies, good bleSsthoo.! sometimes talk politics, but wh»n they do, they onty betray a heau'ifjl j weakness they have of reversing Thomas J.fferion’s maxim of “ Principles, not men,” In harmony with 1 tbeir prluclplo of men—not principle*. They are almost to a man in favor of Bel! aba Everett. Hero. I have been all this time talking without saying a word ah nt the sea. Well \ it is no bigger than It was last year, the waves aro no stronger and no more salty, the beaob is no mare sandy, but, In the expressive language of Daddy Biggs, “its a whaler ” Mr Risley has established a depot at each of the houses. Congress Hall and Columbia House, ior the sale of newspapera. periodicals, Ac. TbU u* con venience that realization cun only appreciate. It is with pleasure that T can state that Th * Trtst isalwaysonhand, and far exceeds all ofaer pencil bom Philadelphia in Us sale. r THE WBKKLV A'KESS. Tb* to!! bS aett to aabeenbere IV M.M iflres Cop-ei, '• •' rive •* « b.m Ten « « . T».st7t. „ <mo«esddrtoaj»#.'#* twenty Coptavor owr “ ftn sddifM af eacaeaheonber.r—«h . . rr , , , |jff For.a Club of Twyntj-one or .rer.nvCl mmdma • ttra oop, to tii. gmtn-it ot tfe. CM. PoMaaMra »re re,u««l to aat a. i.lt* fo *UB WnurPitt*. cfiiaimiiu nm Umat«Monti, in tin. for &« CaUforato P E K SO NAL. P Bei> j’toln h«« oponwj »n IntoUlcaeM of- Oooon Union B(UUr.,N„ To.t s ' -a.Mfaa Dir i. in N.w Brighton, Fa ortnitono into tho condition of fhofaotoriM'aore' »ar:s;»™rrS i.i3^^ ta ' 7 ' T ° ue * !J ’ u *** [c am offioo. "* 7 00ga ** d *“ Uw ardoona dotiaa W hia Hie Rev, Dr, Chapin takes a mm t». ~-=; F r 1)011 Gabriel Taaaaia, ih. olnto . ter. fooi’out to Visit Got. S«»ard, Mth who® bo will spend several days. B»lnrday aftoraoon, at ih» i DIUaC() of aprirato party vho paid him $2OO. P “ —TBo air of Waahiugldn Territorr- baa ' ,h 8 h “ lth of Qov - Oitolaoa. toil to about to return to Kentucky. Pr7o^! liUm BlTe! ’ uta ■o'nittor at th, French curt sy hiBfjmi|jj the Brileruo House, Newport -Rtv. Chnrle, H-‘*o«arDnL; orßiohnond, Va„ Itt now in NevTork on hi, way to Scotland! expeoting t. be ablaut till Oo'dhor. 7 f -Prof B«en. formerly of the Miehlgur'SiaU nnTer,lty l h.a been eleoted prerident of the Northwestern Unirertity er ETenaton, 111 CaiUoiil*. had the degree dr Doctor of Divinlty (D D ) conferred opon hta by the Ingham Uelreraity, Le Boy. New York, at ito lain oemmeneement. —Sonloaqne, the ex Emperor of Haytl, lire, b tb» oity of Kmgaton, J.maioa, in a style 0 f mean , wr *toi>td poTerty, and eparifoueoet of bU On In ambling with a few low H.yC^rVn'.gtto, 0.7 .'.v konl v“ ,T' XT ’‘ tt ‘’ Eor B oon denttol. nnd one of the phyetei.na to the hcsaehold of th.- fbfol!?, B i Per °„ r ’ 13 OT hi. relations in foX n £/ H# 10 Jtehb "* daekaiow, the Chinaman charged with the mnrderof theerewof the orator aioop Bmj r»- 'oainalnepn$ B ement,-at the EwxJ.U,Newark, and enjoyx excellent health. Bia trial will toko piatie in September. Since the exeektlon of Bieka P a b l!L?- I^”s° d b dlrMt » 4 to Jeekaiow. who to oaniged with an oSeaoa ?iaflar to Uut of Oiaka. T —the Eeporor, and Empreaa, and Pritoo Imp*, rial of Pranoo lefiJPontalnbiaan Jnly sth, for SaUt Clood, where It to laid the, win remain oatil aftar thufetuof the.l&'h of August. Thocrthey-wIH oarpront their projected tour amerg their sow enbjoota toSaToy. nnd Niee, nnd afterward pay a wiait to, Algeria end Contca, returning la time to go to Oompiegno fop tho hunting season.. —Bsyitd Taylor seems to have shaken o$ the old ana notion lotting for frarel, end-'to enter., taming some Germanfrfondi at hla MtiTetovnJn Cheater oonnty, Pennaytoania. He to jut eom. ploting a eUtely country mat on ground! adjoining hto birth-place. In laying the eorncr-atone last fall, he depotitnd in the box a copy of hie Brrt work, “ Views a Foot,” on the fly-leaf of which he wrote •' Ihto to the real foundation stone of this edifice." •" n . '1 John Johnson, of CiarinuMl, now in tuo BS:h year of hla age. ft probably tho oldest ireo Mason in Amsrioa. Ha baa been a member in good standing for eixt.-fireyears, and aat in the lodge presided over by Washington ” We copy the’ above from a Western paper, and beg to add an inoident in tha history of the vs ns* table gentleman whioh may be worth mentioning, Mid which we, at’least; may be excused for ol dog,- He has been a regular subscriber to ihe Rational Intelligencer tor fifty-nine year). - We had the pleasure to receive a letter fkom him on the dth instant, remitting bis fir. j-ninth year’s subscrip tion, and oloring with the followtog land story re mark, which, coming from such a sontce. wo con fers onr gralifloation at, and hope to bo excufsd fir repeating to our readera; “ J was glad to seethe old end faithful Rational lntcthgtnur stilldme to Its principles, in approving tho nomination cf Hail and Everett.” —Rational Intelligencer. ~ GENERAL NEWS. ■The New Jersey peaches, it is said,, will bo Ufiu?u*liy abucdaui ibis season The number ot visitors at Old Point, Yi., now fall* out littla abort of 1 OQO. A haiUtonn parsed over Alcxaudriacotraty, Virgiui»,ou Xawdu. la*;h.«iQi.9|i . Tha newmiiU at. New Bedfotd wiii be«sk "iloflTUßn _«{V| qdl Wj sod Wdl cost The stroatnH of Rhode Isltnd are so dry that in scrae places the tnanuibotcxits have to swu work Eastebs papers are saggeating* the idea of introduoit g military drill amorg tho boja in cur common Fchf.t.ft, Foreioj? letter-writers say that a deep mi wide-spread plot exists at present against tne Ifo of the Austrian Emperor After tin library of Humboldt is soil, the remnindci ot his property is 1o be dh.pc.jod of at auction; the catalogue ft soon to appear. The. Governor of Mar)Lind has contracted with a Northern firm for the supply of arms for which the last Legislature appropriated $7 000 Sevastopol.—-Sevastopol, which, beloretho aies» , had a popularity U 40 COO e<oJ.«, irw num bers but 10,900 inhabitants, ot whtm 8 000 are men. ' The comet was Been at Cambridge Observa. tory on Tuesday nlgat, probably for ihe last time, ai it was very ftiut and quite low in tho fiJtxth west. The iron interest of Lake Superior region ft verj fl .arftbipg Tho ehipoieDta tor Jols «ro more than double the amount sent forward ia the same time list year The census returns already received at Washington, trom Illinois, clearly Indf'e’e tho total population of that State to be 1 800 00.) agniost 851,000 in 18W. The celebrated yacht Wanderer has been purchased bv Adams A Jordan of Galveston, end ordered to Rio for c<>flVe. Her name has been changed to the Charles H. Jordan. Thb number of persons who visited the Pa lais Royal to see Prinoe Jerome lying in B.Me is, a* near as can be calculated, not less than 300,000 It is ?udcos«J ’bat 80 000 went on Sunday and 90 900 the day after. The monster gun recently madoat Pittaborg and forwarded to lomega Monroe, will, 1q about a week, te mounted on tbe oartlage wbioh Is being constructed for l f > and placed la the portion per* macently arsigued to it. Tax capital invested In tbo coal lands of Pennsylvania is e*id to he nearly $334.000 000. The oanala and slack water connected with tbe an* thraolto coal trade measure 815 miles In length, and co,t $4O 000 000. Jcdoe Ingraham, of tho Now York Sn preme Court, has granted an Itjuaotlon kgslnst the grantees of the. even*b avtDue, or ’Broadway Parallel Railroad.” otherwise known ss the Grid iron Bill. The order is returnable on the Js:h. TsionoEß Parser's Library.—'The execu tors ol tbe will have notified tb*'rt»y of Boston that the books of Mr. Porker will be ready for de livers, according to the will, by December Than are between lfi 000 and 17.000 volumes, and have been appraised ac $2O 000 Tun Japanese Present to the Police.— The- General Fopertnterdent rf »he New York Police on Friday received a ehe:k fur $l3 750. the sum appropriated by the Japanese priucea to the Xftv York ciiy police force. The tnm Is to be equally divided among the force, and eech man will receive about £?Q. A Horsed Snake.—Oq Friday, the 6th In stant, Mr Ruinhard of Z-iglorrviUa, this conn'j, killed a horned snake, three eet lorg. In a meadow on bia premises Ten years *gv», Mr. 'Keeler billed o n e of the came kind. Tneee ssakea are very rare In this section of country. They have perfect borr a on or near tbe tall, and are very poisonous —Alontgvmsnr Ledger The census re’oms from Cincinnati do not promUw as <r»et « number of ioh«b*unts as rop-d for. Tbe population will hardly be over oae hun dred and eighty thousand. . Tbe Northern and mi Idle States will be found not to have Increased as much lo copulation as w«a expected. Tbe increase at tbe West is beyond all expectation. Tnn Cattle Disease on the Tliwoii.—The New York AVer says that theftut di’Ci>e:->cAt:le the pl*nrn pneumn*!*—has made I*a «fp^artr** in several of the counties i.u the Ha)*>o At Van'* Gate.Orangoroanty.ro l«ss tb-'U twolve LesJ > f cattle, have died wiihln tbe U«t lev d*v*; «od Mr. JacoH Htonax, of tfoatheost. Parana eoan'y bos lost seven «*<•»* within the last two w*»ks. 0 l»er person* in Carmel, in that county, have al*o lost several. Yisrr or tiie Prince to Boston.—cuuuTT itand thti the U»l«s and retihuowiil visit t-otno tlice in the mmtb of September next Ho come* this wayat the uvitatiua ot if*r varJ Poiv-rrS y, xnpiy avid: lnstitaMon. President Felton will proeeeJ to M»oir**al in*few weeks, to pay bis reaped* to tbe Prince Ashe will probably accept tho proffored k*wpirati?le» of theeuynf Boston wo trust that ample srr«rg«. men’s will bs made for hla entertainment.—Cou rier. Cattle is Texas.— A breed of cattle has been di.-c< v-red in l«x«s emirrly t u.inet fmnj any of the breeds in tbis conttry. They are de scribed us «f unirotm color—a black brown. »p -proacbtng hi ck ; short, glossy heir, beautifully turned homf, lar.e in size, with broad oheuatd bodies, well-rounded quarters, and generally ex hlbi ing excellent form*for beef ai d drsnght The oalf-breed fully sustain* this drscriptiou, »nd is nut oplv a valuable Witk ox tut when fat would reik as first class beef. It is saggvsttd hat tbeae cattle nraqjTutuhlj the remains ot the stock introdaetd by tne’ Spaniard* in the very **trl»w»*Rt* of the o->untry, which soon ran wild, both In Nor*k and B'>uth Aaensn l*nr orrgm «*-n‘♦ *■ »re««l through Spain to the Moon and tho North af Africa. They were quu» * oiauaat vanety fret* tho cattle In the noith of Europe.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers