mays 119. 417 arierfOr erltit VA% 4 , 114 44 '; ; 7,ibli_t4 eta Mier. Ats4loolliiit444ls , r.filf` o 4.. 404 ); 1 4 74 , 11.1 Pll ASUMAN: ieii1441.41411. Vol *MI* Tams DiLLiN atiorlitiz Nottraihisvairiabir vaisespr t,o.tivesor4oreil l - .a -a•.:1, - , ,‘ push: 111411i4lviiiehistillieistratof WI City Liam ' ' ' ' - =~ Y i S, q ' ~ILF Llg7l~ tiooliY: 30$ STRXVii balmy Opktee,'. Ha/16A rieelved a = ' 1% , - t LAILCiII AI. 4 BORTIIEX V T OF, COLO/M:10V ,3 ,TA:lttiglir4/40. (iLAISSES, &c hi - 1•14411,13,171NT6 PE YARD 29,87.041,44. FINN..., FA. ENOIX ~..-ottstiANtitES' ' . iii 4 ntii LAWNS-41w be assortment Irt.tba city. and whiokwilt WO -Aoki teas than of coat iptroytattos, to . d oss oat ladanoo of stook taw season. ' • Ahi.Wil 8111110111 00041 at wad Wow test, to make way fop oar Fallkiooda. • . _ .. , ••, plteatl4B .o:tete 6 ktßi. as .. ' '-' - " ' ' MITE ast, kit.n &me* IIARPI,AS BROTHE - 118 are deldiono of_ g Of the -remainder. of their Summer itoesle. liefortreheakes itt lir-Witness Wok, and ,lusee miniced , them strery i r'g r zt i. , Par• See. HA ' - • • • CVs i t r etst i etrs ' c i tis l e ts. hammer Metals. • • Bed Pointe,. atiessmakerisatiles, • " • : . auia..er ," ri ttiVs9VlFrind v , lollTif Streets. difitITARDS 4.4 FIGURED FRENUU surobased at a asontlos, to ba sold at Mayer yard, wain r ate tuerortieent, or Crape Collars past, received. Also. all faces the latastistrlas Collar* arid NIL at the &Avert Improved Spring Shuts eonstantli on hand. OHKIILL's 8 Ab&zen Ina - &Will% sad ARCH htreeti. SIIIIINOB', ' , AND ; BUNTINGS, . OF. aelnitieitrablehutte tad width. -- . • 4 i n, ...Verirtktran i dretteL ti nerti 0 . qatter ..ut Clot.. ' '' N - hi rote. toll aseethaestt. sat Towailiess.. --_-. _-_• NetTte T :t n treit ii i neWer e"-a. 6 ' a. ' -- - ,- - a hIMBR GOODS - ' , • As tow al the yen lowest sad - Wean at the Garrott =whet reeler; wittreViand it tlr. , fa odds and .2eda ditim i ttel k Al Chatha, itintlee. and Lae& G promo. , auS -It It iietnetiSnt _ . !CL LI N 11 , 0,F I 1 I I.: •_. , : . i l / 4 , -:,,-.-• rAiroz! y W . S ORK- I,!. I A G FEI!! - !' ' ' • THOPIN'Lf sk ;Hdokinow t 6 th 6 Mk , . V I Ti a Id,PTINGPHIGO., . , . - pap* tit* sad Points', - eUell uSsess slid Shalt's , • EISA* It Dawn, Bugg. Spies; &a , '-'• FeffOrflit:ClMPES OHLEG UNDefi. casr t , IMIII Hdk ko , Liu* fditls Frowsty sad atom. Ajmi'llsOld rs'lirr Ctnssinism sod Cloths. 'PER /Wirt HIM SILKS IN Tf u llk2lTY I. st , • HONNLEY 4 113/1. :N. E. Cfnmar 11MHTH & BPil 0 HaiDtaN. EitaldiNE OHAB,LES ADAMS* BOWS tat% Om** Adagio & &eel • !p: exptgialtkriutrAT:::: - am 81 : Elon:s 2. . 'iltzri kW Ames & Son Writ . Gooch. •ID atles.Adsamg & eon's Pili&Goodit. • anti;- MOWER and AMUR Welts. ' rEarumEnir: CR/T1A4 41 4' - - • fiziatimeßs.'.4l.6 IitPoRTERS; EAY 111110 1 72 D TO 'ITeIfrI3OUTB' 'burnt STREET., • rtVdioni MOOrtithim Snout O. ' k oe. ropes nuOtotialsi tootal& A &0.. um - orm or T. r ao• & o. (no - ` A sir ' Coostantat t.) and Awn luidodttllttiolr BO JO) to their own vividly. rib row noM eau for Um plant son. tpalstmtito moat nomolet• Ottottatont loon In this itosotry,:, • , - 13.111.to.nethe *Donation of -, , DR:U6 ( eiStV awkiek th eir owsk to_ noir Van 00aSpktai They Irk)) ns, spars no pla in their attentivo: to the wants or th ew outoomom Oita ttOlonttitinno SUM good ' , void,' or heir !FIINDANGO; 'o . ' - altf'oliTEitS AND , A DR LRitS 4N vI -*A#4O.lB, TATENT=LNALtzum,, , , ••• - GooDis,Farifireititar }No. s 3 spAri A; OO KINP , 141f010,P; Lb 0 Itt /*/ G LI'S 801 PORISAIT. ADTA. kali-am/MA=Bi ENGRAVINGS. 011,'PAINTIN616,*kc., !cc. JAIME S. EARLE ,St *SON, rmiTtErsits. MANUFACTURERS,'. WHOLE SALE AND RETAIL DEALERS. - FABLES'; GALLERIES, SIS CHESTNUT STREET. CROIOE HAVANA CIGARS. OF VARIOUS BRANDS. 0. H. MATTSON, AMIE AND TEN= Irrastre. spit:ammo AND "STILL 'OATAWBA - murvimmtrizt, s B , SkriksionAiiiul , sad io lots to it'd parobssers.bi 44,011..41 F. TAGGART, Sots Agog. - 631 At ARJERT Otssat. HAL.l.:_pt PATENT , • P.LATED'ION .PITCI.IIIIH - Entirstidifforone in theiroanswwwion siti L oom via wAkitaNtso to 'loin tits 108 LoNSAA , tbaa ass .Zitelow now in mist s tonnoniMore of wrowohi ds meoi The above Pastore will keep the - trateteold tot heestipleter hews. • . - , A svand auk& Miring) fa iott*pkom at won rill dart isiisitii , tsiodtv.ipviknestitsur ',whits the *no , tiontiti is Oa aolniw ntOnolitoitor,nt the mune ow: the wire! oil, hl4O Ire how mia *owl luno* l ' *wow okosin, Asa eotsfauii *PO. T# ( 4 10 i.1 114 0 Woo ainwily - _ • . "" - 11A110 II PATIN'S. S . O K„ .• „ ~• 4 , „• ” U. ) 4 ,0 14. a 0 ire CO4011r: Oki . 4 " =SAY ;Anita ' • ' ANDREWS.OI:3OII. NU_ N . K. irALISS, AND TRAVELLIS, HAG 81-A , 1%1 if It A CkTU R B BS, '11 .. /2 MEIOTM,IFP,M , /44"0101,; i:A IPAZTORY,. ; NO.AVAORXH - jyTT-11* „ tt. 4411 Apyrome - fro P€ tuts and ctylatry-t ., .JOY.,01>p ' & " 001. tritir a Nlitir t g r k a p ii 1,40. (15Ar4ti ,ASS 64,101 W,, Ykilliar;l4ll,llWMPl: • 171 4 11,1 4:,LO ,VBIUN GPO Cr' bast;i' 4 I yet.J4 tr 4 V,414 . HEELER ;:& ISEWINd'MACHINES. WRRE'i 3 . SECOND FLOOR. :Ix2B-3m • • . • L-4341'`F4Jyr, sTER; &•co:s._ iid'rttirvito SEWING,- MACHINES. ~*CE Viripps,D TO Iag:AND, UPWARDS., , hlWo , elalnt tkairo the. BIBS Wade ldiwhlne in the Arorld:and'onothat will do a greater range of work in pare satiefietortmannot. • • • ' ~Call and :ON or and for a Cireuler. • • - LADD,- WEBSTER, dD CO., antetnthlw u2O cIqBTN UT Street. E% (? 0 =s AND ppx•LOOP STITCH BV,WING 1441.011.1NE5. FAMILY pron ,o , 13i1ORMAKER8, - r BaDDLERS, iTeit No a 628 A.RO/4 STREET. Trio of.BIIIITTLE MACHINE. Sdo. Yeas of ,DOUBLE-LOOP BTITOII DIACIECIWE from 1416 dolma* , ; 'The onmpla:d and Mood • edloiont machined mann .fotured for ad Linda of in. I'. EL MACHINE 8L41f., .COTTON. NEEDLES. plfwato..sonideatly head. /71-dm . . HARRIE - BOUDOIR - SEWING. MACHINE. straw from' two . - without the trouble 'of re 24.1iito4,6:21snrititwital.littsllooi?ren.oliiisoirmet4h,..010,111.4:d WILOOX' tte GIBBS' SEWING MA OHINE:' Sew i ngatand Mareaidng demand for Wrlooteit Maeda° fa a guarantee ot its anomie' , eamMenee. Price Bye• For sale at F tr A , l Ideate ,VlTtirthetuts, Tag •VRESTNUT :10ij8g-kOgislsviiNd Goons. . . SIIPZUM..EKFR I IGERATONS, Mit Improved Pin* eII,PS AND' okiiRIMIES. - • • - In great Itarierr. 17RNITUILE LIFT/IIE. • ' Vere !mega, in , ePrendiPl,C4avita and Martins. WLIZIA.M:',72 7 4O4N.A.EL's ;. ,:11003E1 FELEMISHING.STIAL'• :Joho. 1111 Immedilitalv . m pe.i a the Alleademv et Fine Aid. ild"vt."`l — tu‘r - t'ku 4 .-‘ PORI& HANGINGS. TO .O.LOSE BUSINESS. ' nun itoiliVolautj k uo ito;-**Eennm OPPET , 'mien drat. t tidatriater and nazi aria:. tier . 'lvo sto o k of • PAPER HANGINGS. disittiniatinny vattetyradootalllll the baataitai, AT dt)LiATLY lit:/ADUOiD PRIO/42. /1111 i 71=4 Pi.niQ A 7 M Ai ranted 'ratios Matte Airseal Pawed. au to gnat ,BARGAINS. I.IIIDiBrIIatERAOT BtTCEIII. THE OMT, DIURETIC. . • for Dlecteaf A t i trpAr t ga s ea c e..rtx . !l, proper , antrerernttatiatir_of those orient experience Y ApNqdr„MyT9blB, Antecid W elt bek d Pain ' the k emir Ne ' rive. -Lam y l tretylt i ;itonity of Breathing. , 11:1 i'VEkin e t . .601ATACULAR r t !!! N TIM P Arit2M Ur' ar - hi" loon Mims 10 igromer i Tsiltip r i G Em lentli Fits: ' nh.......m. 1. -,PMPLIGY. AV iti oPlit ' . d Qt. viagr. __.• ~ -...,,,,,,,- -:, Ilirkerind•it um' ', l / 4 4,...prurvitray ,- •sirt i pity ' rgimi — e ,-- - ; ), lliimmint q gum - f from' one poonto to twenti y etanding inn' pooo o mnsmi thePdsMolus, and tryi tones f the most WWII* mid responeible ohmmeter is p a luesoctiaz. Ms* 21 mer bo a or six for St Etvered to any_edreee, Depot, 10a douth 2.EN A Id ' teed. below OHYStrYNUT. . •• , toss -tt, COST-STEEL BELLS. Pba CSITRCHSD, FIRE ALARMS, I•LB AST & CO.. 104. •, - .420 CONLAIBRCE Stmt. EIC,LIBiI :BROWN scordiceix, iN froinz ANO PLUS, BY 'THE CASE Oft DOZEN. •;Al;.l3Eir7! • .DIIA,VE FINE ,•GRoCERIES. son ELEVENTEtstnt -VINE Streets ?tubulelphis. OD 6ROOKECIES. - SWOPE. NO. 12011 itiA,B:l4gT STREET, , Throi doer* above EiroLOS. Rai opened, s well-selioted tosortment of 011.01011 FAMILY (MOO/MINS . . AND FINE TEAS, , Which he To• moored to tarclA et Vat LOWEST CASH PRiCbF. joilrtu4m SHOEMAKEIkt al lI.LAXL,PAINT/S , 0114 4. D VARNISHES. Rerthe eat Caron FOIALTR . ANDRAOR Streets: . 111111.4131 , VABENET iIIIINI:TDDE AND i3Di- Ltiuto TABLE& - IVIC)011,E & OAMPION, . i,Bl SOUTH SECOND STREET Tit worreWtion with their ostensive Caninet Busineae; GTO now manufacturing a superior article of • - • BILLIAB-ti glit _hairs now on hand s tun supply,ifinuthed with .-001 tel ClAratilfilid Ihttni +WED 0 iiPHIONS, Fa rtr i li l t i v o iel o r=r a l, by MI who hive need them, to • Arnie :unlit) , mid SOieb - of these Tables the mann fardiegiyil refer to their numerous nations througnout the llama, who're familiar with the character of their trod& au! 6m .. GoIfFEEII X . PATENT' . TENT C ' NTTING ISAMEO, YorPlain Etookhun o d VIM, Knitting ' Matiblons ' for Kin o rrir a t s tre . ere; Shirts, &0., ; itiOambipiepr) 631(1.1,2 Ind ~1 Sand 9. sad 9 and g-RiK, On KW Q taarr 4 der. . i Thaw kinehint. Iwo gin npluiti Spring Needle, yrapollEraerjrcia.7. a& and moat rapid ' ' e9gfini ridinif:Familp Knitting Mackin., for jetlv-404( Pkiiireareis tom, in a new and suoceseful fr.*. raviratione 9f th e us, and rank. 9 91i. Elul mop ana Wl' iiitiDADWAYjliew York. ' 1.1.4rn . ' ' - if SWIM' 0. GEE. Arent NEW YORK WIRT, - "bil . id ia. NELSON & RICHMOND, Maniteatuteie of, and ' Dealers in. W [l4 $ 01.ALL•DSS0RIPTION13. it jolt ic oOr Meek& y. wino!' wilt be fille4 Pilo i Slie 1. MALY disolltah. 9 9 :pu'hitt e th ii , Apoo l ar,l2L . Ist, or not 2 11111117-47:2t PVY note. omob'.o 44 EXAk. with strootloto of Ao'opo. 000 slow York, orp gor Omit. Vet% , tilith Elitist. 4 NEW you. - emboli/16411 John street, , 4117-ber . , 11)BILADELP'filii TERRA COTTA' MA- Ac,ibi l vtiftroyEfiriteatveytatvgq end' Mar' anlattOz4ities. hifi eionitainasii ,at ova Ka. linz 21 p tsp. o 090ty GUI OWV 040. MI AMMO °Au, Po attention or as parting matins ea tzildingz• Largo size soworaso nines or Oily drilnase. water sizes War ranted to stend 0441 , 01{0 oNwore. Wo venni , / prepared to ootrtrabt arab Alton or annotations for this Wink, in imp genstuy. *Me warrant our goods to be squad if not War to any Aker 'made in the' united iltates or - iurnanientst M oand ney , TON Oa -trde n telßr --- R = 11 : COAMONL UAL ROTATE BRO., 4.0. 0 XEIANDOONVEyoop. NORaIaTOWN, RA NZIVITORES, MILLS. mut /I.olEralt lalljnalausientirotatan d cigiaert. SZ,V2;I4 bir shown iriverties tees gi - -,24 4 11 4 Mortimer nogotimod Noi t t::! W EI e rr j a r ifur Z u st Ap ikr Zixtblinerld X. CO 00N, 1 ", ._ • - --' • • tionist,wia. Va. 4RTIN QtrATLE 2 8 Allpillifillr.y , ror„Airn i rAlWY GOODS ” 341 WA P L l tiOr f erritAET, jiGOW • • piii_AT.MUN Al l oßt. 4 . i Ostler im a titnmil l tktir exotbitut s i e % ibegaLgoitiarion” CIA= whitey.? itAt=ttl. , .looAlott 11 do n t. oil.oi: gam ogonto •ifilF o :& ttook mil ng teoni. nom ranted. li i r= i iitingelitightlnrooinje thetognat6 al int oit tont. or willbird 41 night tot t. fy, cents. ' X 4 lg. A. e . & 00, ' .1141-thifiti4jr . • no: • A Nen Tig RD ittroot.• VARNiBII, d -50. bbia.. , N for o, 7,1 Rhin Varnish, in store enls br,R OWLEY, A&BauRNER, & 16 onth WitttliVegi• !Oh . . . ' • - . . , 3 . , . , . ' , V - 1i '4, 111-,li I ; . r i ' .....,•. 4 .'' %. .t 7 .- , 'll . \ , / •,. • ' - r . , •-•-• ~,,,, • , i r ,.v. , ..• ; • ..+ ~ . . ''" \\ 1 ! / ' i i i//'i •, :"..*, • ' - ' . . „ , . '• , 41. . . „. Li , , -- '' . "'-'" '", ' ' ' ' • •''' ' ' - t I'r , ~,, ow," ,„i . 2,, ~.-- - r- ------. --:;:: ,;:::y-,:, 4"- . ``., r ''4...,•%:_ '' ''' '''' ' lV AIIIPFII' . trtx A , . , • -s -- ;:.1 - 4 - I#' ' ill" ..l W\ `W- --- '-'" . : • - '; ‘ %1 1014 :,- "' ' A.' 4 :- , . I t 4-14 ve , • h Is _,,,. ,„, ,r ...,,..„;;;.....,.,, , ...,,; -- 7 A,.: 4 ,: 4 4-.,....,._ . ... , - , . -,- , O . `k,.kr A ‘-‘-.:;:: '7 . p . ia11iw. ,,,,,..,.. . - -- -„fr i g4l -- 10 ' • , - I , ' .; • . ; ~,. ~ :t„.,. , ., ~ :- ~.. • , ..;,..1 4 ; '.li MI ''-' MI '.. 1 i rFI , I r, .. . -,- '4,-..S t -- , -ne, ~`' e >,- ~, ~..,.1-.:.. . 1 , ~. y ....7" ~ • , ~s . ..,,,, ..,,,, 1 siesi .f: 1 * .." • . —........-- - -...-.... e.......,.... .. ....,- , -4.14.. - -- , ..... t ., - . •---,.,...- ....—. , --- - • 7 . " -- , .••••• • 1,, r.. •+, .1 , . . • `......... . . ..•• ~,,,-, - ' ..• --".•, 'l' ''.. - .',..1'," ; i ,-. • . . , . . , . ' • ' . , , . ,• 1 , • : IgEOICINAL: NEW PUIIEICATIONB. SOWER4 , ,BARNEB. BOOISSEIZERS AND PIIttLIMERB, ,No 37 NORTH THIRD STREET, ' Lerman?, Abel Market Street s Phlladel~hia, Invite the attention efil9okeellere enn_oonotry mer ahanta to their very large stook of &boor Books, pub lished in this and other °Meg to with Miscallane , oug and Blank Books, Paper. and htationen generally. B: &Co.; are imbibe:Me -a ninny popillar works, =MT W llOllOlll3 renflenllt •.• ' • . THE CENTRAL 'HOLD - REGION, , . . BY. COL. WILLIAM GILPIN, (Late of the U. 8. Array.) ILLUBTRATED BY, NUMEBOUB MAPS. One vol., era, hoped in ninth., Price 'lan; and a berm • discount to t h e trade. This book is pronininced the most wonderful; scienti fic. and comprehensive treatises on the seag raphy of our continent ever published. SCHOOL, 'BOOKS: , 13ANDER6'IEnlES j::)k READERS. BROOKS' NORMAL PRIMARY ARITIIItIE TEL— • 15 ote. BROOKS' NORMAL MENTAL ARITRME BROOKS' KEY TO . MENTAL ARITHME TIC—.' . ....... . .....::....25 ote. BY R. BROOKS, A. M.; Professor Mathernatioe al in Peboo nneylvania State Nor m Pet. Liberal terms for introduoti.m. WHITE'S COPY-BOOKS, BY T. KIRK WHITE, President of Pe nrarylvania Oommeroial College, PELTON'S OUTLINE MAPS. This series of SIX SUPERB MAI'S is now adopted in almost every sohool of note in the Union where geo graphy is taught, and has no equal. Price $25 for full Oct ofsix maps, or 810 for get of hemtapt,ere maps alone. anB Sm - Bu; K BUYERS.—Gentlemen: I have 419 C HES T NU T B a S i t l r m e n w o e reewlhl il c de ti ph u a t ß obu k and cell (as 1 have heretofore done at the Custoni ham Avenue Book , stand)o'd and new Law and Idis— oellaneous Books. I have for sale upwards of 180 old blaok•lotter Hooke printed prior to the year 1491 Ale°, a copy of Brume ameba New Testament, 2 vols.. 4to. printed in Ma. Prom,s.39. I will also deal in Epsravings Bod Antokraphs . Persons' at'a distance 'wishing to nell aim, will dee be, their names. dates, sines, bindings, conditions, and prices. Pamphlet Laws of Pennsyl vania, and old Books upon America wanted. JOHN CAMPBELL. EXCURSIONS. SEA, BATHING. ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY. 1% HOURS FROM PHILADELPHIA. ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 0.000 VISITORS ATLANTIC CITY is now conceded to be one Of the most delightful Sea-aide resorts in the World. Its bath ing I. unsurpassed ; its beautiful unbroken beieb (nine Stales in length) it unequalled by any on the Continent, eat% that of Galveston; its air is remarkable for its dryness; its sailing and, futtung facilities are perfect; its hotels are well furnished. and so well kept as those of Newport or Saratoga ; while its avenees and walks are cleaner and broader than those of any other Rea bathing piece in the ednntn• Toeing of the CAMDSN AND ATLANTIC RAIL ROAD Iwo VINE-STREET WHARF, Philadelolua, daily at f. 30 A. hf, and 4 P. M. Returning—reach Phil adelphia at 9A. AL and 'Lig P. Id. Pare 11.e0. Round trip tickets, good for three days, 12 60, to be purchased or exchanged at the tioket oboes only, and not of or by conductors: Distance so. miles, Sunday train leaves Vino street at an A. M.; leaves Atlantic City at 9.60 P.i30.-stopping only for wood and water. Atelesraph • extends the wholelecath of the road. 1n29-of nxou To ßszoN,s • MAUCH 0111.IVI K. D ETA I ,RILEM, • ALI,ENTOWN, and EASTON. EXVlilrlOrl Tintonto the shore-named vent. f, , yel for three dem ,re maned hy the n, the WAWA RAILROAD COMPANY, flout OIL offigets t WILLOW Street and DESKS Street. to 11E/DLS REM daily. Soother !laces Sanders °nested. Ti ea MO 're Net1i10bap.,...'..4100 T Atleatesta . ITO Damon.— . .. *4O Partireira search Of ;be Amid and roaisatio. and de sirous of inhaling the Invigorating lineeses of he moon talne, cannot do better than volt mAUCH ..H and OA environs. whiei have ;tarty bensripkAie___ e ,,, FRONT -.mid wi l ow .51treets far Mesabi fihulk. at A. M.and P. . ; far Eamon, at 220 r.,144 for Bethlehem, at 6M A. ~ 30 4'. Al. anu P.' M. ON SUNDAYS, ONLY TRAIN For Bathlehem. at BA. M. Trains miss BeiRKS Street twenty moieties after leaving Willow *treat. No MAcunion Tickets sold on the cane. Cue 24t • ELLIS CLARK. Agent. adr oi t , - FOR GAPE MAY AND. NEW YORK. Daily at cepl.vk A. ' NEW Yogi. AN U pal incLelllA STEAM NAVI .. NATION COMPANy. The finereangagamnrs DIAWARE,Cept. CAN SO:4; Bo TON, Oslo. G . ROO ER. NW KENNEBEC. Cant.lOß 8014. form a DAILY LINE botwoon this Olt). Cape MAY. and Flew York, leaving from first Pier below ISYRUCE street (Sunday excepted, at 9,54 A. M, Returning. leave New York from Pier 14 NOW/11 RIV ER at aY. M. Leave Cape !day (Mondays except ed at 8 A. M. Tars to Cape May (carriage hire inoluded)..••6l 00 Servants do do do IRS Beason tioketsjcarriate hire extra)—...-. 800 Fere to New York, 2 PO :Dear ....... —... Ite State Room Extra.,_., 100 Freights fr Cape May and New Ylpaken at low natee. Goods destined' imfont 14 will bo for warded with despatch. free o commission. J AMES ALLD ER DICE, Agent, 'lyl3.lnt Rl4 and 316 South DELAWARE Avenue. gatt• V o IIL u tI a )ELPIITA AND EX(7.0.11.1310Nn.', On anilke i rgl A tr p reflA l V - , 9th; until further notore, the following routes will be open for excursions. Tiokets for , pale at Ticket Office, Broad and Callnarlail streets. To Niagara Faits and eo , To Scranton and return-. • • 80 To ,Look Haven and return,- B'sl Pop farther particulars' Dee •small bilis, or apply to TV Agent of the OoraPany. Broad and Callowhill etr or to fflo. F. BEATY, • Petrel _Agent h Beading Railroad, Phila. • 0.• A. tiIOtILL.S, Gate! Snoenntondent. Routing. &AraFOR CAPE - MAY,—,The swift and aomm s . l bay //Owner. G FORGE WARRINbaON. Cat• W. NS !eaves Amu ;Orr 'wharf every Tuesday, Thqrsdal mad • f3ator akterrieo o n internals Piireoexilage hire seryuntelvcisse tre g 1 tritail l iAtesifird s treat e i l itn. -- ire tam* Jl ° ol E . 11 C I A IE MD1N E .A I; 1 , A TIC _Re • , • - NuMMER ARRANGEMENT. On and slOr MONDAY. JULY 2, trains on the Cam dijuMand AtMlao Railroad will run as follows : in leaves Vino-shoot wharf . 7.5) press train (stopping only for wood and 4 v. WW l ' •• " """ if' •• • lti" ••• • • . N. 4 mitYlifi"rre.444.P.F4A - 0 - 770. Aooounuods on trot it,gLilathAer LNB. A, hi. Gus DAT TN 'lee Vine 'poet at ~.Fl4O fil. Leave Atlantic at ... - —*Re Y. Stopping only • Fare to gallium:, when trete d are before tierce da • e), asai`tosleAivotTedtiTga t :Z:niga'a at the ticket omoe only, w oof or by ...mote.. Plonth)r do. reiginwit be delivered at Cooper'! roint bj 3 Y.M. 410 any -will not he responsible for any " 'until reef gen ahrj melted for by their Agent at the Point, SPECIAL 110TICvr. ' The Accommodation Train to ER V Harbor will run tthrha ough to Atlantic. every Saturday afternoon until fur wig &lamas. ifleßhge checked at all boars of the day id Yine-istreet err,. O. G. BRYAN P. jelt-tt Agent. TO PLEASURE TRAVEL LERS.—Grand Expursion tom Philleulel- Dhiatg_Niagros Falls,. Montreal, quebee, River tiaguo- L Yr White Mountains, Portland, Boston, Saratoga pr l z i ngs. gy.d New York, via Lake Ontario. River St. _, Grand Trunk Railway. Splendid ateamar arE for New River, and return to Philadel- Vas via Portland and Boston or Saratoga Spring!. Fares or the round trip as follows': From Philadelphia via Quebec , . White Mountains, Ros eland New York ~_,:.• .•..........,..-.. . 6136.69 Prom htiattplphltt VA Montreal , Saratoga Spring's,' at New York... ....—. -- ......... moo From Quebec to llagnunay River. and return.,---.11.01 Fwm yhiltuielphis to Niagara Falls, and return, 16.00 tOr ik rta g u l lo l ii n Ti l ol= r dlil infMmatlon as to routa, kkaidy n il e t t ig e tr . oo 8. W th ir Ai nto r . 0,1,114.,11) , and • TAW-IW General Agent. FandIIANTS ' AND OTiItRR,ADVEIIr TIKE FOR FALI., TRADE IN BEST CITY AND COUNTRY NEW6PAPER 8. (at publinhers primed through J. WEHRTERN ADVERTI 4 ING AGENCY. P. W. Corner THIRD and ARCH &milt. UT Ca R or rend for I. 61 of Newswire* , 1014 f . . . IIANANA 010ABB.—A handsome ag ;eronent psi I:and, - lry receAt arrlyzila, pon.- yrialur — Cn.bantsx, . Parturyb novo. IIIpILLQ Mr Neytono, Black blew. . • Arouil:f. Zarsymns. Arloroolonr Arroyo Rondo, ko., &e., Of all sizes end guanaco', for gale low. by uIf_AHLI•O TETE, 08-180 l3O wAilluff Swot, RiPANISIi BAFRON.—For sale by WE. THERILL & Bll.oTll.Ejt,th 47 and 40 Nor VICCIOND Straat ' ' DEFINED fitTG.i.ES AND. FYRTAIS DOW/ HUE, 23 Bola WATER 11 , trnel. oßrs 'educed6 OM Min. steam refine l d Pinar nnd RrruP. prieee, for osso or approyed credit. nal,4•3L rUNIO MUO SUGAIC-45011thi10 — Ile- Mum and etylolly Prime giant,. for sale by ifF*l glgA HAM I.F.TIT/ • AVA 00Pkge.--I 4)90 pockets prime WitrantirWor sale by 90.1,80 1111,4401 k jaAttSAP itiL it'. Ilontlnnto, for stet by; WET9BRILL & BRO,THER, 47 and 49 Nnqn figQON Street 1101,1T08,-2,75' hArrt.js Pitch, store,' . and '• tomtit. by ROWLEY. AftUDIJANLR, & 1 10,. MI. Ift lentrlefl,WHlAß VP:pi „ &ute otiotir, - Anes lierkinlek county LI cheese, for We br 'O. O. SADLER & 00 ,„ No Miall Street, ',wad duo? SPOri MOM. , UP PHILADELPHIA,, TfIURSDAY, AUGUST. 16 4 1860. . r t' s ) 41 THURSDAY, AtirDU . ST'l6; 1860 - , - Adoption of the Cotitdito4°n' FIFTH. ARTi4i: • , Sovereignty is the people; inalienable and inviolable, is the master prluaiple,of the ATCIC-‘ rican mind. Jealousy of power Is its ruling passion. Our colonial and our fistßinal history are alike crowded with;the !turned against foreign domination, the pihiciple of self-government produc'ed the Revolution, and sustained its struggles; and the caution born of it postponed the completion .of the Con tinental Confederacy until the war ryas in of feat ended. The safe feeling that refused submission to a foreign Parliament*lthheld full confidence from the old Congress. It com pelled the compromise a of the Constitution, and almost prevented its adoption. The ma jority of the people wore - actually against it. Its friends were a minority. Its supporters overruled the masses. lithe second Congress the anti-Federalists, then,it ailed Republicans, had a majority in the Ii use of Representa tives. The fears and scrOtes whioh, restated the adoption of the Federal Constitutioni con tinued in the warfare upoit the c;onstruction of the powers granted in it, until the opponents got possession of the Administration. The Constitution, though . adopted and organized Perna the retirement of Washington, could scarcely be said to be finally established until Jefferson and his party were in power. By this time it had been worked and construed into quietude. It had been experimented and ex- pounded before Madison's election, to ascer tain its proper force and meaning, and that twenty years of trial hid barely sumced tti settle and limit its operation: The round of its experiences had by this time been ample for testing and ascertaining its caPabilitles, and adjusting them to the complex interests of the Union, and the Warring opinions of the parties which had arisen under it. The Ex ecutive office, with its departments, bad been organized ; the Judiciary established foreign treaties made ; foreign policy settled i'a Bank ; a Mint; an Excise; an election by the House; a foreign territory, equal in area to the °rig!. nal thirteen States,' purchased; the system of the public lands; the organization of the Territories; an embargo ; a domestic insurroc- Lion; a total change in the dominant par , t ( y in the - Government, and a hundred minor trial points had been settled; and three double terms of the Presidency in unbroken and tin; disturbed succession, in-the bands of the same party, followed, to assure the weild that the Republic was an understood and an worn plished fact. In the first twelve years of the Government, dissolution and secession were every day just as probable as the continuance of the Union. Before the end of his first term the only bond that held the Union together was Washington's personal influence, and he was more than once driven to extremities. Ho would have retired in 1793—a farewell address was written and ready for publication, but that would have un- done the work of his life- -and feeling , that his fame and the confederated republic must sur vive or perish together, ho breasted the storm until he conquered a peace, and secured the union of the States. Some idea 'of the strain upon his personal popularity may be inferred from the language of Jefferson, in a letter to Madison, of the 27th March, liTti—Jay's treaty being the sullied. Atter speaking of Wash ington as "the only honest man who has as sented to it," "I wish," be says, "that his honesty and his political erkors may not Mr nish a second nc.casion to exclaim curse on his virtues, they have undone his -I.44cre-tcr at Paris, ho._aa k . ott - Will have seen by their proceedings (Congress) the truth of what I always observed to you, that ens ion out weighs them all in influence over the people, who have supported his judgment against their own and that ()Ohm. representatives. Repub licanism mutt lie on its oars, resign the vessel to its pilot, and themselves to the course he thinks best for them." But we cannot better present Washington's agency and influence in overruling the turbu lence of the times, and the madness of the popular passions which threatened the re•enact- ment of the French Revolution in this coun try, than by an extract from an ellitorial in the Aurora, which appeared on the day that Washington retired from office, and John Adams was inaugurated : tt Every heart in unison with the freedom and happiness of the people ought to beat high with exultation that the name of Washington this day ceases to give currency to rorarteAt. INIQUITY and 'to legalize corruption. A new era is opening upon us--an era that promises much to the ,people, for public measures must now stand on their own merits, and NEFARIOUS imeizors can no longer be supported by a name. When a retrospect is taken of the Washington Admin istration for eight years, it is a subject of the greatest astonishment that a single individual Could have cankered the principles of repnilli7 canism in an enlightened people, and -should have carried his designs against the public liberty so far as to have put in jeopardy its very existence. Such, however, are the facts, and with these staring us in the face, this day Ought to be a day of jubilee in the United Rfates,ii Thee assaults upon " the man first in war, first in peace," prove as well as a nation's adulation, that ho was also it first In the I hearts of his countrymen," and still bettor prove that, in those days of terror, when the nations of Europe were smitten with insanity, and American liberty was still in its cradle, the sseety of the :Union and of republicanisni depentle4 upon that one min, who oniweigheq Congress, and c" parried the 'people vit.h him against their own jugiintent and that of their representatives, The opposition to the Constitution, exhi bited in the conventions called to consider the question of its adoption ; the arduous strug gles heti= the Parties in Congress who con strued and put it into operation I and all the hostility to the first three Federal Administra. tions, had its foundation in that jealousy of power, and distrust of official functionaries, which we have spoken of as the prevailing passion of the American people. It tri umphed under the name of Democracy, ever that conservatism which at first organized and energized our institutions, then and still called Federalism. The same spirit still rules in the minds of our people, and must be consulted and obeyed if,the Ifetoo is to be preserved: It is the instinct and the habitude of the Ile public, and corrected and restrained, as it is, by the solid substratum of practical common sense, and the native love of Mde'r and justice in the hearts of our people, it is the safety of our complex system of government, and the true barmoritzbr of our diverse sectional in terests. Those who had experienced the inefficiency of the old Confederacy, and thence feared the tendency of the times to disunion and anarchy, might he excused for overvaluing the import ance of a strong Vederal Government. Modi fien struggled for the Constitntiop ft Is, in the belief that the State governments were likely to absorb its powers, and usurp its ne cessary authority; and his associates in thifi en endeavor who rentainedPederallsts alter he took the name and attitude of a Democrat in the ear. ;Mit days of its operation, had the mine appro. Amnsions. They kr6 pistitleil in theit , deedp by ' 'their faith, and by the Providential fruits of their works also. Only ono of them seems to have clearly foreltecn the tendency that lay latent in the Executive Power end patronage to centralize tiro nation. Jefferson, Henry, Mason, Clinton, and Randolph, feared the 004ta'ace, without the form,' of monarchy in", the Tams vested tR the president as Executive of the potion, and in the treaty 'making power confided to him and the Se mate jointly. Hamilton believed 'the pro ' 'visions of the Constitution with refeicnee te the President and Sonato to to logically necessary to the legitimate supremacy of the Federal GoVernment ;` but ho foresaw ,aid Predicted, with wonderful Clearness, that the real danger of federal usurpation was to be found in the very precaution adopted by the other party to it. He apprehended that tho, interests of, the Etate and local governments would be most seriously invaded by the frequency of the Presidential election's and the re-eligibility of thd incumbent. As signing his reasons for preferring the election of the ).resident a diring.gend' bthavipr" to a short term, with re-eligibility, be .said they were dc an exclusion, as far as possible; of the influence of Executive patronage in the, chino of a thief magistrate, and n desire to avoid the incalculable znAchi/ . ovldch must relity ,Tro!ti the too frequent elections ohnat officer ' , You nor I, my friend, may not live to see the day, but most assuredly it wilfc.ome, when every vital interest of the Stntanwi.l Ilg merged in the all-absorbing queslicin of who shall be the 'nix' President ?" Curious it is that the meat Careful provision made to insure the respotsibility of, a Chil Magistrate, who is necessarily ontraided wiLlt the power and patronage of a great nation, should be liable to work directly contrary to the intention. Logically a short term of ser vices and re-eligibility, to Induce fidelity.--a day of reward and punishment fixed at the end of every fourth' . year—would seem to Con 9:.rni most accurately to the doctrinA of De tirocracy ; yet our most recent experience proves that it is readily perverted into a sys tem of corruption, and a means of escaping the proper penalties of maladministration. And it is surprising to us now to find the chief source of the abuses practised by the President in a construction of the Constitution carried in the' Senate by the casting vote of John Adams,. but cordially approved by Madison, and afterwards fully adopted and confirmed by the practice of Jefferson. Tho Constitution provides that the President shall nominate, and, by and with the advice and consent of two thirds of the Senate, shall appoint all officers of the United States, whose appointments are not therein otherwise_ provided for, and that he shall have power to fill ail vacancies that may happen during the recess of the Senate, by granting commissions which shall expire at the end of their next session. Hamilton had said in the 77th number of the Federalist : ct The consent of the Senate will be necessary to displace as well as to appoint:" - It - never occurred to him that the President might make.. vacancies in order to . fill them, either during the recess or the session of the Senate. His argument is : "Those who can best esti mate the value of a steady Administration will be moat disposed to prize a provision which connects the official existence of public men with the,approbation.or disapprobation:of that body, Which, from the greater perms; nency of its own composition, - will, in all probability; _be 'less .- subject 'to, inconstancy than any other member of the Government." This power of displacing by the President, independently of the Senate, has become the political guillotine of our Federal despotism. Held in terror over the heads of an army of office-holders, who, by force of their position, are mon of extensive influence, it has, in fact, concerted them into a horde of Executive janizaries, ten-fold more effective for the maintenance of their chief in his position than a standing army of equal numbers eould be. The jealousy of power has not always been happily directed. It established a guard for the public liberty in the Constitution which is made to betray the trust given to it; and it overlooked a source:of corruption and con straint. which is now the grand evil of .our system, The Conflagration in Salisbury. We publish below an appeal for relief, signed by a mamba" of ilkillAfding Citizens of Seliebury, The recent dusastrons contligiation has caused great distress and misery in thatilourtsbing town. The facts stated by the' committee should, and doubtless will, make a deep impression upon, and elicit a generous reiponse from, our readers. It should be remembered, too, that the people of Philadelphia can with great justice and propriety be coked for aid by the unfortunate sufferers. Salisbury has recently been brought into direct communication with our city by the extension of the Delaware Railroad, and thus its business lute. rests are closely identified with our own. If any other motive than a feeling of humanity is needed to incite na to proper action, this fact should furnish it, and create as strong a sympathizing interest in their misfortunes as if the fire had occurred in our immediate vicinity The appeal is as follows : To Via CITIZENR Or raILADELPatA It ia a right of the bereaved and the unfortunate to ap peal to the sympathies of their fellow-men—to set before thorn their sorrows, and ask for relief. The underalgoed, a committee appointed by a mass meeting of the citizens of this desolated 01. lege, propose to present to the friends of humanity a brief statement of an event which has bro. gin ruin to many a hearth-stone, and despair to many a heart. Tao town of Salisbury, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, was fired (it is supposed) by an incen diary -on the morning of the 9th inst. The Are origiiated in a clothing store, in the very centre of the business; and (n four hours'(the buildings being frame and rendered exceedingly inflamma ble by the long-continued drought) sixty houses wore in ashes, atter the almost superhuman efforts to arrest the progress of the flames. About forty families have been turned out of their homes ; and about twenty stores, among which were some of the moat extensive on the Shore, have been de stroyed. Large quantities cf goods have been de stroyed and lost, and the business of ono of the most enterprising towns on the peninsula has been arrested. ' Our condition is rendered still more distressing froin the fact we can expect very little aid from' the immediately surrounding country, the drought having to a great extent out off the core orop; and if relief be obtained at all, it must oomo from the neighboring cities and towna Isuch might lie urgO, by a detailed statement of the faote, but we think that the seine spirit which prompted relief to famishing Ireland—to unfortunate Lawrence--and to our Western towns, desolated by the recent tornadoes, still exists among our countrymen, and will exoito to render leg us speedy and liberal relief. These who feel disposed to render us help under this severe dispensation, elan do so by forwarding any amounts to either of the undersigned, by whom (in behalf of their suffering townsmen) it will be thankfully received and faithfully and im partially applied. We also , tespeotfdlly request the various news papers of Philadelphia and 'elsewhere to insert our appeal. And the editors will confer a groat favor by calling public attention to it. JAR. T U. Warm., VAtIOLIAN ROIMRT 11. Emmoon, G. W. Iluitennies, TIM 13. SMITH. EDWARD TODD, Salisbury, Md., Aug. 13, 1860 Letter from Lancaster. iCorreaPPPtleaffe Rf 7:Pp Preerfl Those persons hare who still adhere to the fallen fortunes of AD.. Boatman—such as Postmaster Swam his Oaths, the oensps takers, anti a few others—have very little trouble lis defending hips The fact is that the Republicans seem to bo averse to enter into any controversy about him. One of the knowing ones •of them told me the other day that they were indebted solely to Dlr. Buchanan for their present existence as a party; that if ho had carried opt faithfully the vlpolpieg of the tfin oinnati platform, there Would havolteen no party in the cenntry to oppose bhp to-day, and that be would have been re-elected President in spite of himself—Ws cold-blooded and troaeberoua treat ment of his old and true friends notwithstanding. slut the Opposition here arc generally willing to acknowledge the power and political influence of Nr. ppelipium in breaking up the Democratic party. MS few friends Miry are gory bitter against Judge Douglas—hence the low abuse of The Press by poor Sanderson," of the genter. Singularly enough, in this they have the sympathy of the Republioaus. - Why is this? Is it so elsewhere 7 4nd if sch is ft becaoso they feel that the principles of the gallant Senator lewd ul timately triumph in the country ? ' Knowing your disinterested, ardent, and life long devotion to the fortunes of Mr. Buchanan, eon your ceaseless and successful labors' for his political advancement, I sometimes regret that the duty of exposing the carruDtions of hill Adminfa gotten, and his base htitrayal of prinolple,' and his cold-blooded treachery to his true • spit tried Wade. Gird net devolved upon some one ohm. But you are fairly in for it •nolf, and you canno back down. Oo ahead. Truth and right mss; prcfnii.The 'dootrlpos of .fudge Douglas must triply!' in the earl . !Ilia friends bore consist of the true men of theparty—ferries, Independent, and dislutoreated. 411 they risk 19 to have a clean Dadalee ticket to Veto for: They soil put up retth no fission leith Secessionists or devanontas. Too politicians may succeed in running a fusion ticket [ but rest assured that not one Demise than so f woPtY Atli Ayer retteli It. • Wee us a than Dou glas Soltet or rigno„ ,Wltese is gels .1;1+41,7 2 The Seoessionists befd a meeting hero met week 14 ,t0 form a Tester OW,' and to Frusta n the plectaral ticket settled at Reading." It was en gineered by Postspos'er Swarr. I am informed that OW Wore hot twenty Socetwoniets present. A - IWA Mop. Tiacks oP Duninion Ilielciivfire . [Corresphydenee of Th• Praia.] BightA, De'swat . . to,, Pa.jAdg. 15,1860 Being among the Many pitroui of. The Pre'', which het quite a creditable ciroulation here, and being ono of tha t ronny, ,who, biro ,endorspd sour cants., alone, you ,ohoso to differ with the present oortupt Administrailon, and' refus'ed to 'fellow its "role or ruin '.'pollOy,and wataied lOW Pieido ' id 'yotir exposure Of rte iniquitoad'odnrse, I ttiOnglif line or two from Betels : ire County might' both° nit 'ie.:rentable, slue it will pliability be another , page added to the history of-the' Wrobgi have made the present ruler of this Oonfederacy, and his inyriddons a " bluing and,a by-word." As you are probably aware, for a number of years post there his beets no Detnooratio newt. paper published in' this oountY ; • all. our cards, advertisetuelds, have „been . , though the columns of - ,the Opposition papers, here published and for which 'we bevelled to' PI& like'sinnate." as is usual in all such oases , 7Bnt, tiwlng'An:tbn eutarprlse, and exertion of. Jr.' 8. , Mors/its( of asslited by a few prominent DVMO-' orate of thlatountY, * lie again, inlba fall of 1850, ed . nie into pots/lesion of , what wa lie-much needed, .ap organ.," ,The ,Up t atid Union. wap started, and Wll2..looo_per . Taile , ' 'strand and ' intelligeht young Derakiisi t koonnty, was ap• /pointed editor. , }ol4rlttiaesell% kat tigSttlb-al the paper been a " aueeees:" r ttie able an d Careful control of its industrious editor It basin creased steadily in oirculation t and everything proialsed for the paper a firm and settled establish ment. In this way things went on encouragingly—old differences were forgotten, and the Demonises , of °eel coutity, hitherto divided,,,wero, feet ,ralLeing togither under bee' bitneer, until the'reinilt of 'tho Dal imere Dohienition was known; when .(bat with. eril g influenee whiCh .has been seen end felt terciughout our country under,ite Present state of relsrulebegan to show itself among us. ' As Soon as it wea known that Mr. Douglas was the choice of the • Baltimore Cenlention, • tne editor of the Upland Union immediately endorsed his nomination as regular Lind legal, and Warmly ad vocated hid 'election ; and although he' was not omitted to hoist his name at Vie head oI the pa pir, because of outside Influences upon ,the, mind of the proprietor., yet, dt the garde time, it was his expressed determination to have it there sooner or later, and whether or not, the ,neme of Breokin, ridge never should go in while ho had charge of the paper. ' While the neuron of the editor met with the ap probation of the people, it brought down, upon him the censure and abuse of a few slimy political triekstere, who becieuetithey could not prevail upon him to lend himself to ,the " power " unto Whieh they had bowed with a dog-like Submission, sought every opportunity to lojere him. ' Theis imme diately set to work to effect his removal . by falsely representing to the peopeistor that he (Mr. T.) was not honestly representing the wishes of the Demo craoyof 'Delaware county ; but which Dr. M. knew at heart to be false, and having.tooldsh an appro. elation for the man .to be• influenced. by 8110k1 he immediately and constantly turned' a deaf eat to. The Democracy of this count* . have thus tar been truly represented and faithfully served by Mr. T. in spite of the efforts of afore to ,the Contrary, untii recently an event bee taken plate which has deprived the people' of that irepresentation,' and -placed the paper in the hands of. that faction who have yearned - to control it, and iransformeclit into the organ of becession and Disunion! About three or four weeks since Dr; Morwits disposed of his interest in the Pe , insylvantan to one John H. Brimner, a eustom-hOwse offieial, and informedditr.T.' of the tent, bet; at the same time gaye him to,understand thatthe paper over which he'(Mr. T.) had charge, was to, remain ss.it had been pursuing the same course With this under standing, on last Friday to week; Mr. T., as newel, took the "matter" to Philadelphia to have the papers otruok off, (the paper being printed at the office of the .Pennsylvanian,) when on arriving at the office he found that during ' that week the Upland Union had also passed into the hands of Mr. Brimnor, and that be intended hoisting the names of Broekinridgeand Lane at Its head im mediately. On hearing, therefere, that the man who had engaged him to °ended the Upland Union was rio longer the owner of that paper, but had passed into the bands of one who differed from Dr. M. in good eolith, as well as breeding, and from himself in polities, prefering the course of aeotion el secession to the true National Democracy, he at once expressed his determination to resign, feel ing that he could not consistently hare anything more to do with the paper under its present rule. To this Mr. Blamer demurred, and intimated that be would like Mr. T. to continue in charge of the paper until he could get some one to take his place. Mr. T. assured him that, as to being any longer editor of the paper under the present etate of things, ho never could agree, as he had never yet, in all his intercourse with the world, shown two fame," and would not now deceive his po titled friends, nor betray the trust of the party; yet, nevertheless,' if he wished him tocontinue on until he (Mr B.)eould make further arrangements, be would 000 sent to do en, provided he would have granted to him two " reasonable things," vls : To allow the paper to continue as before, baring the named netraitheasulklasWerierrdie-weliarretta , whioh;he assured Mr. IL, would be respectful to all parties concerned. To this Mr. B. partially eon. sented, and Mr. T., having but a few minutes al lowed him, eat down and wrote the following: lb the Readers of the Upland Union.--Just before going to press, .1 ascertained that Dr. filer wite was no longer proprietor of the Upland Union, having Bold his interest to John Li. Brim nor and that the new proprietor intends taking a 'different political course, via : to advocate the election of Breckinridge and Lane for President and Vita President, and intends hoisting their names at the head of the editorial column. This course not agreeing with my views of Democracy, and what j conscientiously believe to be right, I therefore withdraw from the editorial chair, and bid our readers an affectionate , farewell, thanking them for their support until the present time, and hope they will have ono more worthy of the post, tion, and better qualified to give them the informa tion desired through the columns of a newspaper. "Let who may - harealter have charge of the paper, I hope be will have as many true friends, less bitter enemies ' and less political embarrass ments than I have had the short time I have ocou pie, that important position If I had sufficient time, I would give the public the reasons for my preference to Douglas, which I firmly believe aro valid. Yours, forever, in truth, WM. COOPER TALLEY." This short article. Mr. B. would not permit to be published, notwithstanding that it was at his re quest that Mr. T. had written it, but sneeringly end insultingly said "he would neither allow Breokinridgen name to remote one week .out of the paper nor allow Mr. T. to publish his resigns. tion." and thought him "very ungentlemanly in not agreeing to remain until be (Mr. B ) could get some one to succeed him." As you may suppose, as soon as Mr. T. found what manner of man he had to deal with, be treated him with the contempt his conduct merited ; end, In reply,' told him that neither he nor Ms party had means sufficient to hire him to do such a thing, and if he (Mr B ) " would place the most venomous serpent and the paper side by side, under the circumstances, he would touch the !torrent first; he would 'lot bow to a hired tyrant in order that he might have the privilege of saying a word to the readers of a paper with which he had been connected sines its exist ance." Mr T. was, therefore, pecked out, and ' the roadeta of his paper left to guess the reason why. Thus has an editor been thrust from his position without the small privilege of saying' a parting word to his readers, merely because he dared to advocate the claims of Mr. Douglas in preferenoo to these of the standard-bearer of a section—the can didate of Disunion. But the effeet has been toopen the eyes of many to the true state of things as they really exist. The guillotine of executive ven geance, which has been In busy operation through. out our country, has never until now made its pre sence felt in our midst, and Many Wilro sfoli to be lieve in its existeope 4WD they jaw It used it the egeeutien of awe limpid to Dame by the nearest and dearest of social and party lies. -- Many that were before undecided turve now come out boldly,' and espoused the amulet/ Douglas, and, are warm in their encomiums of the noble-minded young editor who chose to suffer with the people rather then to eojey Alio audios of despoils ruler and ass base hirelings. - Depend upon it, Douglas bee the hearts of the Democracy of this county. Outside of a tow Federal efileetheiders, and a few " broken down" politicians; who have become so disgusted with the manner in which the party . has disposed of them, that they glory in the defeat of, everybody else— aside from these, Breckinridehas no show whrtt ever. The polltioians are against Douglas, but the people are with Wen i and the mirselings of execu tive favor may go on with *IT work of ostraeism, but the end is nut yet,. yours, A NATAOM DEROORAY. Committee Operations of a Polygamist. LFront the Worcester (Maas ) spy, August 11.] On the 16th of March last one Francis Kaye, of Cherry Valley, Leicester, Wag arraigned before the court for polygamy, and bound over in 81,610 to answer at the orimlqa` term of the buporior Court. This Premeds Kayo le aboht thirty years of age, a native, of Ration, in yorkthire, England. tie came to this nountry about coven years ago, stop ping gratin Bloomfield, New Jersey, where he was married in May; 1854, to Ann Disrobe'', a native of Sheffield, England, then about twenty years old, and good•lookmg,' who had also recently come over. She says they soon went to Woonsocket, It. I. ; thou returned to Bloomfield, N. J., where they stayed about ayear then t:fent to the west, retailing to variouc idefee4 in New York, Illinois, and Whiconim. . In June, DOT, they canto le Dedham is this fi tate. While living in Dedham they became acquainted with a woman named Caroline Thompson. At Dedham, Moe. Kayo's health tine poor, and they were In poor elrourestance% hnensialiy. Kaye in• duped ilia wife to MMtnint to go back to England to live with her parents or relatives, on the plea of poverty, while he was really plotting to get rid of her. Kaye went with his wife to Now "ork, and saw her depart in August, all, telling her he should go to linwrenue - and work in the tuolOry. tint inetead of going to iiatireuce s ho went to Ros ton, and then, with Caroline Thompson, came to Cherry Yallov, he:4 . 01,140re were 10 xuany persons ❑ I,awrencefrom Dedham, who knew 114 true I marital relations too well. 'lho two lived together In Cherry Valley from September, 18511, till Fob. rusty, 1800, cc which time the versatile limy° auddehly utenitested a htspositiou for atother change in fag affeetions, anti was found coquetting with it flips. Hague, to whom he made falso repre aentatuma, stating that he had never been reedited and that the woman ha had Intl thing , 4 0, trey not his wife. Irt 44 way ha _pet-blinded Dirs. neve to accompany blot to Noel Yotk,WhErelhey were married, February 18.1800 by Rev Frederick Ogleby, p p The newlyquarried pair returned to Cherry Valley. lire. Hague buried her husband in October, 1850 On ascertaining the fact of the previous marriage of her now husba ii, she took intirtediate measures for his arrest, un a charge of bigamy, and ho was bound over for trial, as before stated. Boon alter Kayo's arrest, and while in oon6ne• TWO CENTS in'ent, • littri. ' Osiollne Kaye," se abi sigaiet bait malt, wrotarts lettirt io l k e a. Jr/sabers to Ragland, enclosing a Aettor from Kaye sakinglor money to get him ottt o %ittion. ' Mr". C.•)C4e's" letter was iitidtesttedltiKaye'r brather it England. The lettere aeons itAci,tbei bands of •Kityg'k first wife, produeeit oomtpotrqn, !it'd _brought her back to alto coontr - Btl6 !Aided iii'Dletiork on the • last day of July, madame Inianedistely to Weitoes. otanretotouPireuandthtbeePritbecetufiti;il;MY b i th oi lli et WI children, PERSONAL ANb POLITWAE —The Congressional pleasure eictnionists, who are visiting, in:the schooner Treasure, various New England porte,twrived at Boston on the morn:lag of dotard ey, the 11th init. It will be remembered the!. they are under the command of Conimodere, theilion. George W. Scranton, member of Congress from Perinsylvarla ; that among the celebrities of the party:aret Messre Henry C. Carey,. Morton 'Mcidiebter, tditor of the /Verdi American, Louis L A. plailelyiligilltorts. G. A. Grow, John Woodruff, John 'P. 'Villrile, et tot. pares. Many of them took roos Jai the Revers House, where they were visited by Gov.l3aske, the - 11 0 a. Mr. - Bttrilottam*, and °Mord.: *tbereveados they were entertained ,by charting- W. Webster, &q., at his elegant °eatery reaidence In Dorcheeter. On Mondiy, the Treasure left for Plymouth, homeward bound. —Cardinal Wiseman bee been for some time dangerously 111. 'hilted,' 's report of his death gained currency and was repeated on this side Of f the Allende. According to the Tablet, however, his minsilee It renoverlng wriditill soon be able to res me his de11e5...., ' —About a mile Nal Conoord, N. IL, on the Mel ville road, 4 E4OO the epoi selected by ex - Preside:" Piers, for his fobure residence. The house Is to be erected upon a beautiful eminence overlooking the surrounding country, and encircled with stately pine and oak. Workmen are already busily en gaged in clearing away the broth and atones from the place, and a faced steno wall La to be built, which will sun four or fi ve hundred feet on the main street. , 1 --,..4ines 11, Scott Le the Breckinridge and Lane candidate for Congress In the Eleventh district Of Indiana. D. W. Voorhees is the Donglat,candi date, who will ho reumnherad for his plea in the case of Cook, who was engaged In the harper's Ferry affair. ' The lanolin (Tennessee) Tieurnat, George W. Joliet' home organ, has declared for Douglas, and, accordingly, it leas thrown its banner to Vie breeze. 7The condition of the "poor, old, blind, des. piled, and dying king" of Prussia grows daily more helpless and hopeless. The Sans Soues, of Bet lin, says that physical pains Isom, whieh his Maierty has Dien safferini have rather decreased, but the mental d l erangethenut has' beconte 'greater thrin ever before. Sometimet ist nighthe will start up from his couch, and addreetring the imaginary spirits around him, Will fill the 'air with-hie ariet; and then again,.at another time, he will tit tot' whiile days mid nights to a state of complete torpor, tatting no refreshment and uttering no sound. +-A. Douglas ratification meeting was held at Pihe Bluff, Arkanstu, on the 24th of July. The resolutions which Were adopted unanimously re cd g'nize Doirglii and icihnson as the ' regular bond) fleas of:the National-Democratic party; serial:nip deprecate the rooent disruption of the party; dte approving the coarse of th e elector, that warn ap• pointed by the tat Convention, who avow their: intention of supportingßreckinridge ; and ream-, mending a State Convention to appoint a new ticket. —Mrs. Gurney, the English lady who ran away, with her footman, is said to be at preSent in this (wintry, living at one or the fashionable waterlog places under an'assurued name. She is reported to bo,Worth 15,000,000 sterling In her own right. —Thu Hon. Henry A. Wise hits written a short leiter, which was real before the Jaokson Club of Boiston, on Monday night last. In it he sage he wt I support Ereekinridgo and Lane to his utmost. lld concludes thus : , •• God nicit that our eirorts be not in vair. I :ear they ha—that 13Iaek Itenublioanient 1, to in mon in' the coming_elei.tion ❑ to. I mean for ona to abide by and in the Llnant tafigal in it, nut our of it—aid in saving the cOUntrjf And,lta COUttltlktlOU •,* but not to gut:wait etib TnOthent, or to conned° one elugle item. to a Woman welion 'lull degrade mtand mute re that , coefeilemoy free and enoal &awe. -,The Hob. James Guthrie Toted ',plait , the Breckinridgo eandidato at the recent Kentucky el/cacti, LIG cut hie ballot for Ilopkins t au lade-, pebdent Ponglas candidate. So says tba New YorKpady GENERAL NEWS. FaoAt BERlinnA.—By the hark t 1123. Bares, w4lch arrived at - New York from Berninda, we have later intelligence from that island and seve ral of the West Tuttle,. Acerieus of _Bermuda was shortly to be taken. The weather was very hot, and rein was much needed The °Metals Of the island were prepating, for the reception of the Prince of Wale 3, who is ex_p iated to arrive there about the Ist of October. Froth llarbidee'we learn triht freqUetit Showers had saeceeded to the preal euely-reperted drought, The Legislature was In eeestou,Out vrawdeing nothing of moment. From Jamaica n . ° . learn that considerable excitement exists on the island consequent upon the dissolu tion of the noose of, Assembly,ancl the commence ment of the general' election. Returns' received at latest advittee were considerably in favor of the Government.. Three important bills were before tee Legislature of Detnarara—o, ne for a retiring allowance for superannuated pitiblla officers, another for appointing ant Auditor General for Public Ao vaunts, and tee third to reftaten the eortioration of the city of Georgetown. A movement was on foot to invite laborers from the United ctatee Into the colony, the coolies giving so much trouble as to make it desirable to get rid of them. Later ad vices are also received from Antigua and St. Vin cent, but there is nothing of Importanee to note. LORD BROIIORAM'S INSULT TO MR. DALLAS Rear TED or A Sciarllaltatit.—Judge Longetrect, of Georgia, has published an elaborate statement of hie ,reasons far withdrawing from the Statistical Congress, at London, to which he was a delegate, and which be haptepartiti before the' 'Apology of Lord Sloughed. Was ,publielted,• but which .the Judge conceived did.not weaken the force of the reasons by which he was governed id theta resent-• leg the Walt to Mr. Dallas. Judge Longstreet withdrew boo ms° of the approval et. the remarks mode by Lord Brougham, in the fret heat/woe, by the body itself; . by the' plaudits et tits eallociate3 in an assembly intended , to , represent the interests of matistical sclenoedgeneraily. He resolved not to take his ,Beat again, to which he wee invited, on this ground—thattheinimlt 'wen national. -' Whist rendered the affront more pointed than it - would otherwise have been in jiffs mind jf it had been un- I accompanied ty plaudits, was the fact that the tit- , terer remained anrettuked by the presiding officer, the Prince Consort. Judge Longsueet remindsthe Gritlsh publlo that the.only delegate, from the United 'States wad a Getirgism , a citizen of the same State with that' gallant •Tatnalt, whose _con duet bathe affair of the .I"eitio, In saving British life from destruotion, has received snob large en• comium from the Ehgbah prase and authorities. SVICILOC OF A :.IF..I.ISITIVF. YOUTH.—At Blairs town (N. young man named Dolma killed himself because the principal of a heardinspeohool found a love-letter addressed by hina to one of the female pupils and read it, atotict ''A 'letter saw i• The young men, it'seenis, had-taken a, fancy to, and,had been oorrespending cceastortally.wlar a young lady, in or near Bialrstown. The principal of the wheel, Mi.lehnSMl, halting wound this out, forbade the oorrerpoideuce, and even .wrote him self to the feting lady teehidding her ,to send the young man any more lettere. She, hciwever, con tinued to write, end it happened, a day dr two be fore the fatal occurrence, that the young men chanced to, drop one of her lettere, which letter was found nd carried to .lehnitou Instead of re turning the letter to the young man, with such kind admortitieles qs his Awn . good, lodgment ought to hay'? lettifie:lkil/s (hie foci, or knave, or both, had the tette % publiely:reed Ochre the sehooLiehloh so Romance in. Real Life. wrought open the young man', mind that he at once determined to put an end to his own existence. A LAD MSS AWAY FROU His Parrtun'S rinse The shame, as he thought )t, of such a public ex- .san IS Gosh snrala Tames. posurd Was more than het was able to bear." i [From the New York Daily News, yesterday.) Seven years age; 'a bright , intelligent, good- DURLEsQUE on the Japanese receptions l oohing boy, about ten yeurd old, the eon of Mr. recently took pia:dein Hartford,' The Timms up, I Harty Eytinge. who will, no doubt, be remembered euch a display of all that is odd, comical. 0 ) salute . xi s an actor of considerable ability, T away from our and qtare, 13 seldom witnessed. More than a hum , ma father's home , this city, ta ki ng . t ut r i th taut $2 , ' tired took part in the affair, and no two of them eared, were dressed , alike. Those .who personated the h s a a p g e ` t ! and placed in one cf meeribes,•a of the embasey. counterfeited the °harem 1, The father in ide diligent search, and used are ry ter in dress and appearance admirably. One wore , effort to - WAinfotmarton or whereabouts of tee a dress of feathers,' covering head and eon ; le know that youcgilarry was erratic, but Another tree oared in armor .01 osiers, with a hat after using every means" eon broad ad tot umbrella, end terminating in a peak I eluded that ho had.l and not finding him, gone to sea. ears rolled en, tiller) or four feet' high. Another personated a Phowever, and to rittirgs came; the-father at last wolf, in mask, I and furry, 'shaggy body-covering. I,' relactantly and sorrowfully gave up all hope of Lobster mama, goat fades , _satyrs, and all strange ever seeing his boy again, and mourned him as things were to ,be seen. Ali sqrts of incongruous dead. • and parti-culored articles made UP the 'dresses of , Last week, Mr. Barney - Williams ' who is living others. The carriage that bore the *ripen of the at his country seat at Bath, Long Island. erelmasy was weU furnished with large pit saws, j observed a young man in that village, who seemed formidable knives, in nives, aud other surgical implements t • to have business there machand who so mach of a gigantic else. The music of the band, con- its friend Marry Eyt inge,in leeks , manners, and tinned the mrs, must have been delightful to ;voice , that ha at once made up his mind to se barbarian ears.. As a whole, the affair was a sue- , quaint Mr. E of the tams. The fella r immediate mass. judging by the crowds it attraited,'aid the ly repaired to the, hotel at the plaza mentioned, ludicrous appearance of the procession.l where he was oveierhelatingly mondial' led by be lauzgula y b I N I G A IlusnaND.—,N: flpit and charming holding his own son behind the desk in the Moe. maiden, in Indiana, the' forlUttate •possessor of a Upon inquiry tee young man stated that he was not particularly pleased with the manner in which considerable property, became .ertgaged .ter mar not to a green, unattraetive, clumsy boy, of 18, his stepmother was conducting things at home, ao, years The day for the Welding was fixed, and taking with Wee his own money, he, in the Stet t he course' of rustle love wad running smoothly place, purchased agun, and went over near Bell. enough, " One day, the groom expectant appeared •ville,'New Jersey; and there Indulged his youth before hie mistress with wrinaled brow, quivering ful propensity for gaming by shooting email birds, olio, eyes filled with tears " Myfatber says I at the same time using mother earth for his 'Ag sheteti Marry, unless I first pay him for my time." iag piece, and such protection as the trees in the This was ell be said. The woman at mica sent him woods afforded for a covering. Getting tired to ,the sharp parent, with instrmitions to learn tau this he engaged himself to a farmer, and tried Sher lovieat rate of exchange at which the tittle eould be a spell ; being cf a roving dispoeidon, he shipped tiALstouted into money. 01 wi ll ce ll yen , " aa ld en hoard a vessel and went to [inning. the father, " for $2OO, and not a 000 L LeFfi." From here he went to different climes, end em I wilt buy you, returned the 'detest!, when the gaged in different occupations, bringing up, as we for was communicated to her. She paid the reel hare stated, at the Daub Rotel, in the capacity of nap, married the properly, and bee since to tARLi St v, , nd bodt-keeper. ...Inasmuch as his fattier w is duoualy eultivated it, that a groat improvement, 1.,,s 1, ! . bit of travelling a groat deal. youvg Ey pereonally, morally, and Intellectually hat taken tis d... 1 not krow exec:ly whets to apply to P • learn his whereebonta but mated that he shortly • intended to make An eff.,rt in that direction. Thus Oat Thursday last, a little girl name, Elise- a parent and child, are happily jdned again, after bath Boyle, at Norristown, Pa., through a child uh „tan years of estrangement and. anguish. whim, attempted to walk over the trestlework of a We are pleased that the father and von have railroad bridge, when she fell through and was egoin met, and that the - son, ifiliiii.x.tremo drowned. ' woo preserved from the many snares which A Mum MARY I.IA.RICIIM, at , now Irish prima lade of his age when away from a parent's w.stet.fet donna," is about to make her debut, in the modern care We, however, cannot soma:tend the c .ndoet Athena. The Ilesto;p Tronicrtpt says she is repro- of yonng Eytinge as meritorions or worthy ot tented to be A No.l ln the vocal line. copied by any of our youth. • SHE :s E Plr Tux "gt aau.T, time- fill, to 'meg jO. eallemitost by matt , pt.. annum. in sAlvarice.taZ--.0,-. 1 -• .52.00 Three COMO. " " tee Pity ts a• As 'Ape Tau " -....19.00 Twenty moss addresep4O.Oe TWelatY Coulea,or over " Itoadd(yae of each aubasribma) each LSO For a Club of Twenty -ode tr .ter, eo nIII. sled an ..iris 00 ” to the gettar-op of the Club MMiaga= CALIFOANIA PRIM. Issued three times a licmth, in dew for the Calitenua Eltasmart. Cants tv Exclimstn.--Selodirm e 'ITN the Boston Atlas, do we rewire war alas of to papers 'without andieg in these Mama simeidpg details of crime The -Leaden Tiiieece et the lit inst.. comes to us with • pert of one of the bloodiest deeds that ever applihrad In the annals of crime. Thp amount is 4 mom. nprnededa hn Gridley Yonngman, Who 'etaada charged wtir the wader of Elizabeth YotMgmae.Eis Mother; aged 46 ;!Thotass Youngman, aged 11; Baron Young. moo, aged 8, his brothers; and Mary Streeter, a young woman to wtiOm - WWia paying his ad dressee. When hrAAglftltaanrt.Toan&in: ins perfectly . self-posse s sed and indifferent. He ad mits that he killed his mother, but says that she • kilird them WI Met !tibial at - the. Nat lie wrenched the knife from hepgicssp•azd tilted her. Ho Oros ye-minded for GUI. The WWI paper 001:1. mina an account of • most shocking child murder by 4 mother, and another story of_ too murder of • lather IfOyelds ihatt. • Hniiopltonta ' CAT:Xidf.—The - raters:di G mai'? Idn says thit dutoffatraaj list: TI cows hare c•bibited ydrophdbia in the vicinity+ df the Two Bridstiki, °between- Litre Fall andiPatereett. Of these, 19 have dieel hitt thietber two. tiro not dead. Beeldiat Sheet, six eittle of Cornelius Van Nees, and I strange eow feeding with them, were 'MOM by the 'Mane dog 'that 'bit the 21 referred to ; but up to- Satunbayr Mr. - Taw Nuit's earns were Mill 'appereatty 'l l Mit bat ao• mentarily exported - to oAllidi of that fatal disease. The widow Smart, atm, -had item bitten by the same animal. The dog was Arun; killed by 4 11 fr. C. Van Russ, after hittag every cow he possessed. The destrttetlen eatiS*4 by this one dog in the neighborhood is estimated at an amount of $1,500. irartunetedy, no pe nom was bitten. Tux INTSANATIONAM HOLM Fat.--Moore's Rural New? Yorker has the following In regard to the impending fair; The international horse-fair to be held at saute on the last four days of this nmith, as announced in our advertising depart. melt, will probably pre7ve worth) - the attention and attendance, with their stock, of many breeders and owners of Are /memo throughout. wastage, Now York and Canada West. It will. be Interesting to coMpare the bestepecimeas of the e4eptien tine bleed', to common among cur Catedisn friemds,'9lth (be favorite lied and fleet roadsters (the /40 Morgens o te ,) of our western Nee York horsemen. Yet Canada, no doubt, has many light •‘ felt" horses, as we have not a few heavy draught animals. Saturday, September let, Is to be de voted to the 'purchase and mile of horsey, a want feature of the exhibition. . .. AN eccentric character died in the poor house in itiebmond, Vir., last week, who had Wl glared cazudderable notoriety .by his. 'natio con duct. die was a gardener •by Ire e, and boasted of hiving learned his trade on this totals of the Dalt, of - Eimeclengts, to Scotland. litsedoving to this country, he devoted Martell birTellfirnlathill, hinverses,"however, through the inftestui of alco hol, not being very good. Ones or twice be com posed a series of stanzas poseeettng considerable merit, but for years' be was evidently erasy, and by neglecting tha ,perstrit at his trade, do. generated into &loafer and abalone, buffoon. Ile was known by the title of the " Protot„jpo Bard," to Which be was accastomed to add, " and only living successor of Bhekapeare and Sums " ..trireicalr ' Holiins icin inn EXPI2OI or Feasts.—Mr: Menhir, the French minister, who is bow stopping at Newport, lately visited Amnon to lepprore the pareheae, by, a. well-known horse dealer, of dire superb Vermont bosses forties stables of the French Emperor, who already - possesses twenty-four specimens of the same breed. The neW horses ate fifteen hands high; haring • Ise lotion, ands speed of not leas than 2 50. They are of the Emptily's favorite color, a deep bay, as are nearly all the Emperor's stock of four hundred, end their tailit are of the natural length; - with one exception: The. cost' was between '22,064 and $OOO a pair. These bower toll be taken to Europa in One of the Vanderbiltsteasters. . , A MT3T18,101:73 Bo,n.„— The treasurer of Am herst College, _says the Springfield Rerudficon, has leaky received from Mr. _Daniel Sears, of BINUDD, a a l eretotore liberal bddefeetor of the college. a gin I and oarefollpseeted box, with tbeinstrnetten that it it not to be, opened for one hundred years, on pain of* forfeiture of the gift which it containa. Cpecul.ition is et fault as to the contents, end the relating for the accompanying condition. The shrewdest guess it that the box holds deeds of real esnete in Boston, now under !caroler one hundred years, but then to be transferred to the college. But let us be patient till 1980, and then we shall alltknow. , rATAL ACCMFICE Nida Tattaxtrris.--On Sun day afternoon a tdarester'employed in hauling lug gage from the river to the earstpgrorthd, near Ts reature,float hie life in a aing - atar manner.: 'While driving &load up to the campground, quits sapid ly,he was thrown cut, and falling a distance of ahnut sine feet ha struck a stump with jagged points, one of which entered beloW Ma peek aid ripped open hie cheat as far as the abdomen. Dr. i c Pe hment, who was on 111*i:snip-ground, was seat fo but before be arrived the man died ! haring Ell ived hie injuries scarcely fifteen minutes.— Psrtarbtrg Post. . Ort..—The,discoyeries of oil on the Naha niw, in the nitabboiticCod of Bastßrook,'arte eres ;;recn,iyitegv,-;41.17L..„0,,,,.r.„,;,..1bear: of no company in town taking a - lease yesterday, and we are informed that tbe surface' indleadons are fully equal to any in Venango county: The oil: procurediterefe very bee, end those who have lotiked into the matter have no doubt that it exists in pc great quantities in this county as anywhere. —Pittsburg Post. A. CORRESPONDENT, *riling from the, Sara tola Bprings;esys : "Beautiful women are here Intl:prodigious force Gray eyes that outshine the dawn, and tresses like the night; .gorgeous Moe sots from the rosebud gardens of guts awaiting tinklously to be plucked by some hand, gold gaunt le 1 fed andewelled ; iiiiine have a Mao aloe only, or I should-be gathering them right and left. The 4 ttering parterre Of ribboal and starts, of pert little summer hate, jaunty and lace-trunmed, to be seen at the spring in the morning, Is sufficient to in pi ge any well-regulated bachelor into th e most h ease dejection and melaudholy.” ORTON - LATnamr.The Boston Courier, which the Chicago Press and Tribune says is here after to be published In Latin, has published the following thesis: '' Johannes Tin tinnabulum et Ed wapitis Everett, erntat procul dublo Praeses et Vice Primes hnjos Itidpublica proximo' Idibus Blartil. J. Tintinneon lam est orator et satins !nee pstrise." The Chicago editors acknowledge the clessiciem of the paragra; h, but greatly doubt the justness of the conclusion However, they do say—k; Pluribus Ileum ! and will stick to it without fear or favor of any man. TnE New Orleans Della, In giving an ac count of a recent calamity near the: city, naively snore "An accident, by the earoleee action of one of the parties deliberately Igniting a keg partly fdll of gunpowder occurred, that nearly proved fall to twenty•five men." This is - good. , ' For man to'" deliberately" set fire to a krg of gun pewd er, around which twenty , are men were seated. to certainly a ticlicione style of carelessness. Lir ceurse, nobody would) think of punishing the hts• odorous gentlemen, to whom it was due that this re markable " accident" occurred. I Tux Monrnodtb, N. J., Inquirer slates that the body of Miss Van Brunt, of whom there were saspictons of her having been murdered shoat a year atria, was forted on &today &hurt:loon last, b.!? Mr. Mr. J. Reed, who was walking through a swamp, about a hundred • and fiftryards front the cabin where Cottrell and the woman lived. She was the mistress of Cottrell.- At the gime the wss mimed, Cottrell and a man named Runyon were arrested, upon snspicion of having disposed of her, but as hoer body could not be found, they were releesed• Tux Board of Representatives of American Israelites has been holding its annual session for two evenings at the Cooper Institute, New York. It was decided that all congregations shall have an equal representation and voters, the Besrd, and that the next meeting Than be bald in Phila delphia. The object of the Beard is to promote the general welfare of the Israelites of America. 1 EPISCOPALIAN STA.SLITICS.—It appears irons the statistics Presenfed at the recent annual con ',tendon of the Episcopal churches of Connecticut, that there are in the State 118 Episcopal perishes,- clergymen, - B,9(l37fainitia; 11,731 columned aunts, and the total 'contribdtions' for In objects last year were.sloB,l3o3. Da. HZL3I2, of Providence, proposes to as_ rindin a balloon from, that city on Tuesday, to the height of one thousand feet, and while at that al titude to tetra a bird's-eyo a±hrotype of the city.