The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 06, 1861, Image 1

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    THE PRESS.
00 0800 DAILY, 01IIEDAT6XIMr1iy
For 31)Ilfr W. PORNIDIr.
.91(Ig MI ;Li CUIERINCPY MERE=
DAILY.PRES
no vo Corag Fla Wrx, Payable to ay Curiae.
/0 solooriboro out of the City it Mx Dori- .71, 5
17010 OS , ox,. DoLL.Lim V EMIT MONTHS.
DOL FOR Six Moiro olt
o—invariiblyin
ra oo time (mimed.
T avorszpuor PRESS:
poi 0 BONO bor. eat at !ha City it Mil DOL.
AMon, m coiyamos.
COIVIISSION HOUSES.
B . AY FLANNELS.
pi,FE-GRAY FLANNELS.
RAY FLANNELS.
31,VE- 311 XED FLANNELS.
r fig CHEAPEST IN THE MARKET.
610:Y FLANNELS.
PDX sus
. -
BY THE. PIECE OR BALE.
FOE GASH,
BY
JOSH JAL RAILY.,
ort i N 0.313 MARKET STREET
COFFIN &
Doti CHESTNUT STREET,
NIZNTS NOR TUB BALE Ul
o priat. sie. MINTS AND LAWNS.
ior ;v r
130. 1 1411SILKEY KED AND MULE
raucts.
Fine Blenched Cottons.
I MPALE HOPE, BLACKSTONE, 81,11rbius
JAISIKSTOWN. RED BANE. GREENE.
vs ion. AND BELVIDEIE.
Brown Cottons.
Att.P.N. MT_ ROPE. PEI DONIAII. ICT
nicat. ORIG. GROTON. VIROIiIIA.FAMILY
jw MECRANIDY AND FARMERS'.
anus, SLATERKVII.LIR. AND rEwriforry
DENIM AND STRIFES:
0141 ALE CO.'S NANKEENS AND SILEILAA
O%OW CORSET JEANS.
sdirOASLEi r 'S BLACK AND BLENBASI eu..a
PINOY MIXED GLOTDA.
iIiATEN S AND SAXTON'S RIVES. CASSIDIEtri:a.
losn-rFax CO.'S BLACK DOEKKINB.
IJIJNAIea FINS JEA246, DOUBLE AND TW ESTE&
O.IISIIIDIES, NEGRO OLOTRB. Ac,
SASS _RIVER, CRYSTAL SPRINSVORN
guiRE, BRIDGEWATER. •ND BRISTOL
gATIBK2'S. 00E-t!
gIIPLKY, EULZABD, &- lIUTOLITN9OIq,
NO. 122 OBITI'KUT IT..
comMISMON MEROHANTS,
FOR THE .SALE OF
FHLLA.DELPT-TT_A-MADE
GOODS-
GROCERIES.
ihrfLIES VOIDING- IN THE
RURAL DISTRICTS.
-.attar/NI. as Napoleon, to zanily familiar at
eit NWT? Itaaidenoaa with every dmaripoort of
ruth fIiROCKII-11Z, TSAR, ac., &c.
ALBERT 0. ROBEBTS
GOENEN. ELEVEN'S!! ♦ND VINE STREETS
.7.!13
EXtikALSIOR - HEMS.
1. H. MICIIENER Ba 00..
ettegßAL PROVI3IOII
AID COURAO OF TIM
CELEBIWIIia)
-EXCELSIOR—
vims,-zyscso luaus,
sa lig AND 144 NOATU FROPM ISTOEET
lEerween Arab cad Xace Street:3o
2RILADELIIII.a.
te:talt-oslebrated Exteastor flaws are oared by
CO. (in a style peculiar. to themselves), ex
rfa: jimay ass are of debuts= flavor, free from
cort:ment taste of Pat end are pronounced by epi
gai lomat to SAT now on's:se for seder. sple-im
LOOKING GLASSES.
LOOKING -car ASSES.
an NW RAO b, tins and eompleting -new end elegant
inlet el
LOOKING-VLISRRS,
pause: all the ;&tat improvements bud flailid/dd
essifsozare.
treat novelties ID Walnut. sad Cisid NIS Itenewsst
sA Gold Frames for ItIIREOIR.
hi mold attentive and varied assortment Is tae
MGM
JADES S. SARLE, it SON, -
ISARLAN' GALLERIRS,
of-tt Ste CENTINVW 151.111 YET
BANICINg.
jICHENER & Co..
BANKERS,
No. SO SOUTH THIRD STREET.
TIME PAPER. NEGOTIATED.
m.LECTIONB MADE ON ALL AOCRBEBLE
POINTS IN TEE UNION.
mrse AND Donna BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION
Uheattent U ut Mee Whitt at the lowest
- tee of putsrunt.
:nits for sale on England and Ireland. IwB•ratethlm
SELVONT & 00.,
a N_WERS.
60 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
H 1 mar 91 S 1 It traveller,, available in al
cm of Rowse, through the Rears. Rothschild et PO
rA. Unarm. Frankfort. MOM VitMM. And their ear-
'inetil At.
JEWELRY, &c.
PATENT STUDS! A l
PATENT STUDS! gidat
Daunt Lever noted Minter lIAPPaP
4121 / 5 . and the Patent PEARL CENTRE, Mein:ten :ten thorougbly tested, and peesessing advantages over
~,5 17 other invention. are being very generally adopted
Gentlemen of taste.
Said Wholesale and Retail. ONLY by
ELI HOLDEN,
705 - MARKET STREET.
Imparter of Cleats, Watches. and ewelry.
ttla 'Whim
FINE WATCH REPAIRING. 1
PEP.SONS HAVING PINE WATCHES
that have hitherto Oven no satisfaction to the
Z7Z:l;:a re (10WetZ07 to
rgl r il l yWifhl r l i Tlll
menthe workmen. a u nt] the Watch Tenanted Sr give
Mantel SllU3llo. Clocks, hlusical.Boxem, &0., carefully pet In
loCiplete order.
FARS Er. BROTHEL,
limner* of Watches. Mumoal.Boxes. Clocks. ta
Ihktrs set OIur,STWEIT Street, below Fourth.
BUSDISSR CAMDI•
13 13:1 ` 'SS 11 • 3:Wtorarc_9lokiprel
in the Best Neinavoro of City and °want "' al
ts 0111,3 e. of
JOY, COE, & Co-.
k C HEST NUT S TREETS.
NIS and CHESTNUT STREETS. Philadelphia
TRIBUNE BUILDING. New York. spiT tf
H 0. uLL Id AN, ATTOILNKT-AT
,.I ~ LAW. TP.RMET IRON& Paumulvaria.
tak
w4l-I° L ll womotly made in Glutton and Litemuns
M en
r , L W3fter & Eanb i gia.lll
t p 4ip e rl ie Shore - Marra. t, H. Hum".
L Per. / Ca. phijAT FlGhr Pitilads.
nth it CO
3&d..
ilawdadeusiTilvirr.gpo ir iti k l ,R o lV dr en op : , Y e rd ima. , eilm olo orp
, • Mulkey
Phtlada. fisUl4m
EL CAL ELATE
101:1N wKI, PRAOn
„mAi4Towb
AdUlltß, THIRD ;street mud ay 7if Roof i ng . on
; .. thd, re prepared to vat AnWiirrin may to
I T%
atevi paodersie
.v.2l_ . o rders tr;) ,_
6"17
Waler
44u
JUAN ELLIOTT, WINS!? and LIQUORS,
7:4°. - 317 gird WALNUT Street, (basement
te!irea,tetrreen Third had Fort.rth. north Indio rhiia
-42 3.—Fino Old Whuehea always cpn kand.
datved LBUI.) n3O-1,
1410110 LEON,
BLWJXBINDERB L
1141.419 and 6911 MAW( Strew*,
detwaan
t. •at d Catestaant argots.
PitaNkLPRIA.
tplE 3 rjoarson, JAL 116 1111011MAM.
LS. ftjtiUlT & SONS,
IMPORTEXII OF 7LAVAILA
itiom No. 216 &path PION' Street
la t 1111111 W, inli amattautut el datable 111 ,
;ful ;z i t gaol sea 7 at Istr maw tior itaalutry.
Jowls
MANUPAOTOILY.
I Fall NEW STREET.
- mut Rim
_cif Ait vory deinnation. "al
awe to run , etk NVIO
al WRous e Ls and n-wiAllo
ma
triatOret's prickes.
4••• to • ausamer maaart.
J. J 3. MM.
DIRT NAPTUFAUTOKL-4.
rw_ !Cort i i 514 The n clute mmeig, & &MVO
Da?. " Uontinentak." anent= of W.Wials
till% 1.4 iwrite.d. to his IMPROVED • C or
inpenor atomic.. sact lasterial. T a rr
4 *fur at Melee Mir&
VOL A.-NO. 285.
DIZY.GOODS JOBBERS.
SPRING OPENING
o•
MTN% WatiVIDIERZO, VESTRititEl l
LADIES' CLOARINGS.
And all goods suited to
MEN AND BOYS' WEAK
WHOLESALE AND DETAIL.
AT
0. SOMERS ifc SON'S,
606 CHESTNUT Street, under JAYNE'S HALL.
Mkg - SAI _
CURTAIN - GOODS
POSITIVE REDUCTION.
-- • •
W. T-TFINRY PATTEN,
630 OREST.NIIT STREET,
Atiammees to the eubho that from this day his whole
lane Ispditiegutlysplected stook of
CURTAIN GOODS,
WINDOW SHADES,
PURNITITHE COVERINGS,
TRIMMINOB, 4tc.,
WILL RI SOLD AT
WHOLESALE PRICES,
_POSITIVELY
BELOW THE COST
_Op
IMPORTATION
AND -
MANUFACTURE.
les-4c
MILLINERY GOODS.
STRAW AND MILLINBRY GOODS.-
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
seasonable and Faebionable spin.
.
PRICES TO SUIT TILE TIMMS,
LINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS
STRAW HATS-SPEOIAL NOME.-
Cash bayora of STRAW and PALM-LEAF HATE,
IH find GRIST BAIGAIHEI, in desirable goods, at
LINCOLN, WOOD, Sr NICHOLS,
FRE:NOB 121
FRAMES.
FRENCH FLOWERS,
STRAW GOODS.
iris LATEST STYLES CONSTANTLY 1t.F.%.
CEIVING,
KENNEDY & BRO.
NO. 7 CILESTN UT street, below NI GIITIL
eiP7-81n
C/LBFETINGS.
FREBB IiABTON M ATTINO
•F. & E.B. ORN E,
OPPOSITE OVATE ROUSE
ittor* awl" ...v.we
SPRING IMPORTJsTIONS
- OF
DOIJDILN BXTXt.a.
WNITE
RED CRECIFJP
CANTON NI A.TTING.
EN ALL TILE DIFFERENT WIDTIss. AT
'MODERATE PRICES.
J. F. de E. B. -ORNE,
laus-sm OPPOSITE STATE HOUSE-
MERCHANT TAIL OR
E . 0, THOMPSON,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
N. E. CORNER WALNUT AND SEVENTH BT.,
Announces a New Stook of
FINE SPRING AND SUMMER MATERIALS, FOR
GENTLEMEN'S WEAR,
Convicting in part of very desirable styles of super
rumen Nue Bugll.l. Melt.. CLOTHO. COATINGS.
OASSIMERES, Ac., eeleoted with (myopia! care and
reference to the weans of a DISCRIMINATING AND
FASTIDIOUS CUSTOM.
Ee offers the following indimementa for your Ps
tronage : Good Material, a Perfect Garwrout, and
Punctuality and Precision in the execution of al
orders.
INSPECTION IS RESPECTFULLY INVITE%
syM-Laths-arn
CABINET FURNITURE.
CABINET FURNITURE AND BD.-
mh.• LUSO TA.131,8e.
MOORE dit. CAMPION
No. 961 !SOUTH SECOND STREET,
wrineetioe -with their exteci l lde Cabala! Dueineat.
are now manufadfirios a sztimnor tertiola of
BILLIARD TAB S,
And have now on hand full aunty. fimalied with
MORE & CAMPION'S IMPROVED CUSHIONS,
Mott b 7 all who have limed them, to
Lo savor or to tilt other,.
For the quality and finish of these Tables the mann
eanies).* refer to their numerous patrons throushout
the Ve.kon. who are familiar with this oharsoterof their
TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES.
BO YOU WANT WHISKERS!
DO YOD WI WAIDIERIS
DO YOW WANT • MOUSTACHE?
D 6 VOU WANT 1 MOTHITAILINN
BELLINGITAM'S
fen4ms
OZLIEBRATED STIMULATING
ONGIJENT,
BON TNE WHISICEILN AND HAII.
The sub/era:am take pleasure is shuotwomr to the
citizen of the United States that they have obtained
the Agency for, and are now enabled to oiler to the
Amertaan labile the above justly-celebrated and
world-renowned article.
THE STIMULATING UNGUENT
ta prepared b, Dr. O. P. BELLINGHAM. ell eminent
pbyaanan of London, and is, warranted to brie out a
thick set of
WIELD/CERS. OR A RIOURTACHE
IA hem three to six weeks. This article is the only
one of Inv Wail =at DT LAO Freston, *33.1 in London and
Paris it in in nzurersal use.
It II a beautiful, eoonoinioal, soothing, yet *lmam
thug pomponnd, mount as if by magic upon the root,.
cumin a beautiful growth or luxuriant hair. If ap
plied to the Beale it will aura haldress. and canes to
spring op in the place of the bald spots a 0110 growth of
new bear. Applied according to directions, it will tern
tan or TOW! hair Deng% and.restore gray hair to its
original oolor, leaving soft . smooth , and flexible.
The "UNGUENT" van indispensable artiole in every
gentian:ma'. toilet. and after one wesleta one they would
not, for any consideration, be without it.
Tile subscribers are the only Agt , for the article
in the United Staten, to whom ail orders must be ad
dressed.
Price one dollar a box; for aale by_ all Druggists and
Dealers or a box of the ...UNGUENT," warranted, to
have the desired effect. will be sent to any Who desire
it.by mail, direct. securely packed, on receipt o• pries
and acetate. *LIB. Apply to. or address
I.OIACE L. REGEMAN & Co..
Pruniatn,
94 WILLIAM Street, New York
DYOI7 & CO.. No. 939 North SECOND Street, Pk
edelehis Amite. tob9l-191
OPAL DENTALLIVA.— fie speak from
raotioal experience when Ewing that the OPAL
DBBTALLINA made by Mr. SHINN. of BROAD and
4PRUCK Etrests, is decidedly the nicest preparation
TOT the Meath and teeth that We have ever need. We
believe it rosin all th..t ts claimed for it, and being re
commended by the mood eminent dentists we adYhte all
to rive it a trial.--Bsitr•iist anti-am.
Fro CONTRACTORS FOR SUPPLIES.—
we hereby rive notice to all those who may be
contrac ti n g to formals supplies to the Wale. under the
recent appreprlation of three millions, that having re
(leaved the power under tbat ant of appointing Mayen
owe or all supplies, and other power also in reference
to de settlement ol Mame; which was nut delegated to
cc under the previous AM of epnl 12, we shall-hold
every contractor to the most rigid ecamostanility in the
settlement or his claims; and the icspeotion of hie sup
plies must be of that character which shaft prevent any
imposition upon the Btete, and protect the Volunteers
w ho h a ve so nobly responded to its cell; and no sue.
plies Will be paid for until tney have been Inspected by
officers Who abaft have been duly appointed for that
KB RY MOON K. elate Treasurer.
Pv ires: E. COCHRAN. Auditor General zor2kl2t
WRITINI4 AND LEDUER PAPI,
~ • We have now on hand. and are unumfaottiring
to order, at the Mount Holly raper Alai, evert eis
ffieription of WHITING .4/41) LEDGER PAYEBe,
which for color and quality, are not encoded by any
other in the 'Muted BMW,
e wesm can attention to a new ark:lola of Pager
mantifsetered by oe, and now for aele. called Rumen
Letter. which has been gotten up to meet the want* of
Mainsail men and others. who object to Commerobsl
NOW am 104111:16 too narrow, and do not wish to one part
of mai letter sheet.
This overoomee both the above objection/ : ii a lAN
feat sheet. pore .01re Plata ; ruled on one side ;
stamped m E a so rs near the top ; made from best ma
terial. pee adulteration , and put : up m neat boxes.
eonvenient we.
We &ißli have a riper called Bank Letter, eimilar to
the aboye, except It has bat half the number of lines
ugh NO ail to allows emoted bleak or heading. above
if 1 0 1 OTON re M'Ll.ailt,
Mount Roily Spring.. Cumberland Go., ra.
riSteA V L 7 P3r 2 : 1 17 tagillara l aWk l itt
Neu. lad IhnuATIV Street. rattans .
,
. ..
ti VI 1 I 1 41.,,t - .
.....
riK ;4 - .^.: ' :k,....,.., 7::.---,''.:,‘‘„`ktir //, I_,- , '•;_ ~
.... trt: tt . , ...„
_.. ~.
\i••• • *A:, - - - - - ' - :,.. .. '1 1111 ,...";,-,-. - --,;.;.•--; -, .. i.i._r--...n-- 1 7... ,. : ; :` , 4% :- .:
. 4 ..3.1,-''o4.
. r . 11 , 1 , 11 '''
'
.. . _
....•.....,;-.. „ . - - -.... -... .
....,...,
„„,...:,L,.. .
_•,.:.. ,!
iz z I
7......„.. . .
,'•
?! .
„-.-.,. ......,.....:_4.__
-4 .__ __............: , 4 ,
_..........,•.,,., .
, 1
...._..,,.,„,,.-_„-•_, (~,,,i- , -(_2_,.;...:/•__._
,-( _ 2 _ , .; . ..: /• __._ ~.:..__...__._.-„____-„-.•
_•..; _...
.•....•..._. „.._....... .. --
.--_-_-_
_.-_._._._.:. a_
. .
, . .
. ......., .• _ r
I: •
- . , -•- -.............,.... k... .e.0 0
; .
Ivo. 824 CHESTNUT Street.
PITS.PLE. and
RETAIL DRY GOODS;
HARPER'S FERRY,
FORTRESS MONROE,
ALEXANDRIA,
MANASSAS JUNCTION,
And other places now
IN THE BANDS OF SECESSIONISTS,
Are doubtless 00101 M of special interest to
OUR 1311 AVE SOLDIERS,
And the male portion of the community generally ; but
THE SPECIAL POINT OF
INTEREST TO LADTRS
I . No 507 CH 'oTel UT Street, where the WHOLE
SALE STOCK OF. PRICE, FEhRtEI, Bc. CO., is selling
off at Retail. and where -
FOR 31 YOU CAN BUY THE VALUE OF SP.
We therefore here that the well-Iniewe milittry spirit
of the Lades of Philadelphia will be sufficiently aroused
l
to „ 'realty ,
SO7 CHES TNUT ST., WITH ALL ITS CONTENTS.
Vlore especially as it can be done
PEACEABLY FOR CASH_
ALL KINDS OP LINEN. WHITE GOODS.
LACES. EAIBHOIDEELES.
N. 8.-500 LACE POINTES AND MAN.I'LES: at a
further reduction of Z 6 per oat
300 repar TAtl.t.E.Toris t ail mums ? et to 004
°ante per 'yard, for Goner= mirror.. chan
delier.,
200 PCS. SOFT FINISH LINENS, entirely
Without dressing, manufactured expreaeli
for Wm Under Wear,
bcrr or.ADY-MAD.I3 CHEadfdES. em
broidered and lace trimmed.
115? - 11 I Fi ' .2:f dogit.l.CoftirtilliTGYogdii." , -1m
caIIEPPARD, VAN HARLINGEN,
'k.77 BISON. t.
1008 CHESTNUT ST.,
Invite the attention of purchaser' to their UMIZZY
ilrge tad well-leinted stook - of
LINEN AND HOUSE-PURNISHING
DRY CFOODS.
CURTAINS AND CURTAIN MATERIALS,
110SIERY, EISIDNOLDERIES,
CAMBRIC lIANDKERCRIEFB, ETC.,
which, having been imported under the old tariff. can
beeold much below the present market rata.
They hoF toovo el.o to inform their oustomera and the
fr u iV i g Zillyglortiotjultistit DEDUCT
Paid for on delivers.
R PECIA.Ib NOTIOE!
N- 3 On and after ORS date
isTIORPILEY la ClitISM will otter_
EVERY POSSIBLE' INDUCENLEN7
I 0
CASH PURCHASERS OF DRY GOODS!
Betne.detarmined to radura riatir Sled they VOL five Goad Bargains I !
Beautiful Fanny Slam for 76 oeote, worth9l.ll
Boon MIA Fancy Billie for SL well forth Vie.
Grenadine and Saone Goods, about one half their
value.
Grey PaLmed Co-ads, ha over, vertal.T, from g 81Sta11 per
yard to 50 cents.
BLACK BILKS, RICH .t..ND LusTitoua, VERY
CHEAP.
Neat Illaog Brocade Bilks. double figleds &11 , * at).
De Lainee, Caliooes, Cauuukeree, Clow, Vesting.,
i,inene, lduahns, Flannel",utitb y eariri, &a
BRAWL AND CLOAK - R OO M Ul l -s /Om
French Lace Mantles, Pointe!, Shawls, lingenes.
Cambria Lace Mantles, Chanti l ly Lace (kinds, &a.
flack Coats Mantles,o., every style,
At Tleilaiir 011113M . 8
Leiner . Lner awn a crams rakatutaw.
t•
HSTEEL & SON,
. North TENTH Street above Mateo.
Will rionsoo
BALANCE OP THEIR STOCK OF
NEW AND DESIRABLE DRESS GOODS
At atlll greater reductions in prices than they lowe
ever before rued . ..arid at
_ MUCH LOWER PRICE 4
than any RETAILIWHOLEBALE fibUdE 1.11 the oily,
Fancy awl roulara Mike, vdrY cheap.
Very oneap and good B lack Bilker
ilolo6 Dress Goode of every 'variety.
Films Jaconet and Organdie Lawns at 13)i,
LACE MAN rliEB, YOINTES, Boyßri OTIS.
sitar AND CLOTtI COAT% AND MANTLE/if.
jet GREATLY UNDER COST PRICER. -
RMALL-PLAID SILKS.
N-7 Mr , and White Frenah Bilks.
ISkelt and 'Whits Fraziatt SHIM.
Brown and White Freseth
Glean and White French Mika.
Flaple and White French Silks.
50 doz. Efilkss. at el 50 nor doz.
00 doz. White Gloves. 23a. per pair
ylaaT soads reduced vats Ls*. La MOM cut. At
JO.Oll H. STOKES',
Jab 702 *KOH 'Street.
AVISQUITO CURTAINS AND GLASS
111 COVERING. _
WHITE AND COLORED BODLNETS.
The subscribers have now on hand a full assortment
of White and Colored 13opmets. of different widths,
suitable for mirror and mature coverings.
FLY NETS AND NIO•QUITO BARS.
They are prepared to *over chtmdsliers. sae Symms.
glasses; .ko.. and to make !dosage° Onttainn
far bads aud tribe. in the most approved manner, and
at the shortest notice. _
VAN /keIt:LING. - EN & ADDISON,
Importers and Dealers in Curtain re mamas, Elutes,
No. inOS CHESTNUT Street.
LINENS AT COST FOR CASEI ONLY!
Damask Table Cloths. for flash.
Irish Lingua at coat for Pub.
Linen Damasks at owl, for oaphi
Towels at cost. for cash.
Sheeting. Pillow and Butcher's Linens.
Napkins. Doylies. crumb Cloths, so„ &o.
Comprising our entire stoek Linens,
AT COST FOR CABII.
ooromenoing to day. the 4th Inst. Our stook. I. /urge.
cheap, and fresh. and lOU present =any unusual bar
'Mire eveo in these Moos, of extraordinary cheap
goa. OOPER /t. CUNARD,
ie4 S. E. co t. PUNT)! and MARKET.
WHOLESALE STOOK OF HOSIERY,
TRIM WINGS. AND FANCY GOODS FOR
SALE AT RETAII. FOR VASE.
Theaulue_ribers offer for sale, on Ltd after TR URS
DAY . , 6th ton t , 'at their store, No. 409 MARKET
Wrest. north 0.0.• tram 9 A.. M. to SP. M.. their stook
Cl Goods,: AT LESS THAN WHOLESALE PEICEE EOE
CASH.
AS kinds of Cotton Hosiery, Gloves, Laos Nine,
Zephyrs . of all loads, Shetland Wool. Spool Cotton.,
Ituttonsi:of all deseriplions, rteertlehrinis Kooks sod
ttraidn, apes, Braids, Gemtm, Drushea,
FerflllnelY, Under Shinto, Silk, Merino. lko. Also,
fall assortment of Dress Trimmings. -
BURNET'S, SEXTON, & SWEARINGEN.
je3 tf 400 MARKEN Stook
OENING OF THE ARGII-ETBEET
MANTILLA STORE, N. W. corner TENTH and
ARGIL
_
ALL NEW GOODS.
Rash Lyons Bilk Circulars. -
Rich Lraim Silk Reactoot-
Cantbrur. and Pusher Lae. Points.
DO. do. do. Mantillas.
Cloth and Tweed Circulars.
Summer Cloaks. &c.
Purchase. under the influenoe of the War. panic
acd to be held at lass than the cost of Importation and
wannfooture.
Ladies are invited to mama this stook, without re
serve. before awakening elsewhere._
ma 27 Im JACOB HOILIFALL. Froier.
MIPCS. PRRNOiI RUMORS , for malt
this morning, I2K COWL
- Dress Goods, marked down.
Gray Goods , down.
Idozambienes, marked down to 183i_oents.
EYRE & LANDELLI
m,l FOIT.IVEIt Dam ARCH,.
t'aitMEß. GOODS—
P- 7 Reduced to very low prises.
6/Bowline Baregew liro3/ow
Rion Orpindina and larvrom
Fano) Wooded Stuffs, Borates.
Gray Travelling Goods.
Detainee.
Foulard..
Da ilu. lierearde. Erdareblur..
Pim/18rib, Ffinty Silk Robes.
Barege. Grenadine, and Org an dy Robes.
Okally Shawls, Broohe, and Steno..
SR ARPLESS BROTHERS,
my3l. OILEISTNUT and ELOWSH. Streets
ADAMS it SOWS STOOK to bt closed
A-A , - out at
LOWEST WHOLESALE PRICES.
Cheaper than if a discount were taken off after the sale
Vali mada. EIGHTH AND AItCH.
mrSti
A A POLKA SPOT FRENCH LAWNS,
—6 'i for sale at 1234 pane.
Rufl Grounds White l'olks spots.
Mode Grounds 'White folks spots. -
Those are first quality French.
EYRE & LANDELL t:
taria FOURTH and ARuH.
- m ANTLES-DITSTERB.
Mantle room. second floor, abounds hi handsome
Coots. !donnas. Dozers. &a.
Thin Ousters, for Ladiea and Manes.
French Lao° Goode, at coat-
CVOPEP, & CONARD,_
iel I. E. Corn NINTH and MARKET.
HEAP DRY GOODS.—WELL M
r—, SORTED STOCK. to be sokt Low.
Black tinge, Fancy Silks..and Foulards.
Chstiei. MRaintuques. and Oral Coeds.
Anottor Fopiszts and nakreige
Bareges. Lawns. and Organdies,
Men and Boys' Wear. Gloves and Hendry.
Shetland Shawls. GREAT SACRIFICE.
SOHN STOKES.
no 26 En, 702 48,C1E Street.
A DAME & SOWS STOOK to be closed
-A- AL-
out et Lowest Wholess'e Priam
CHEAYER THAN IF A DIPCOUNT WERE
TAKEN OFF
after the sale was made. EIGHTH AND ARCH.
nrytil
ADAMS & SON'S STOOK to be closed
out at Lowest Wholesale Prioes,
CEIAAPER TRACI I F A DIPICOUNT WERE
TAKtill OFF
after the sale wee made. LIGHTD AND ARCH.
myl9
Nxiv PLAID INDIA SILKS—
Ioci received, 16151. Kati, Send,
From Canton, two oases of
Plain India Silks, extra quality,
Warranted to wash well, and servieeable
For bummer Dresses.
Also, one ease of
Brown and brab India Patine
Yellow Pongees, for summer Dusters.
re bite Pongees, for under wear.
fi AAR /1.,b88 BROTHER/3,
m 731 efibtiTivillr and ziewrit Street..
CIRAY GOODS OF THE PARSZNT
satoN.—
OaSB Gray nlodepas,l2% tents.
cure Graz morello. 12.4 cen t..
ease Gray y roplins,,lB,4 cents. -
1 0.0 0 -Gra &tat Baffin
lean 84 bray fiare4e .408.14a44,
BYRKdo LANDELI..
jet FOIWITH and ARCH.
•
T{ VE YR & LANDELL, FOURTH told
Alm, ~ red to sett familia l with ati 1611-
sortineer of g oad s nr 7asslap ' ted to their sans.
Coloredlks. 'superior grade,.
bilks. ordered °home shade..
Full One staple Household Goods;
Goods adapted to bore' wear.
Coed Cloth.. Meeks Arta colors.
Beat makes of fd oolong.
Table Linens and Toweling.. Jel
g'ILOAELS AND MANTILLAS,— CAII
IJ am cautioned SCRIM the Mari
one Statements of persons formerly ut our employ, and
now in the employ of other parties, who represent
themselves " to be cooneeted" 'grab tie. and their es
tablishments to be " braeohes of the Paris himinibs,
Emporium.' Saes statements are Sinselif inerAVTEs,
wail to failtate and chip:4los nmonsocsuil.
We hare po other store thanthe_one we have omor
fed these et.X. years. at RS CH
. ESTNUT Street.
•WPROOTOR. & co..
Ariel Mantilla EralrOetalb.
AsIaDAMS SON'S STOOK to be closed
• tatioorairt Viritamaile
coLZEIL.TILAN 11P A. DINOONT WERE
- • - - •TAT I O4 OFF
after theists was made. EIGHT/E AND ARCH.
myls -
PHLLADELPHfA, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1861.
MEDICINAL.
Er.m.n OLD'S,
GENUINE PREPARATION.
HELM BOLD'S- HU M HOLIPS-H ELMBO LOIS
BEL BE BO WA -HEIL tEI 18drat i ttinU m '
ff P.LNIBOI,0 1 8
HHLMBI/L D'S-HELM DOL•D'fi-H ELM DOLD'U
KL,MBOLD'S-H KLMBOLIPB-HELEABOILD'A
HE I .MBOLD'S-REL M SOL 0 9 8-HE LMBOL
HELKIVILD'W-Er ELM BOL DoS-EIEL Arl BOLD'S
HELMBOLD , B -HELM BOLD'S-14 ELEBOL /113
11 LASOLOB-.HELMBO 1.011-11ELMHOLP'111
HELM BOLDS -11ELM1301.4re - ii B wavy - x.o'e
HELM BOLD 4 I-HELM BOLD'S-HELM BOLD'S
FIEGMBOLD , S-11 h:Ltut HOLIPILE LAI HOLD'S
RELMBOLD'S-HELM BOLD'S-HEE, MBOLD'S
HELMBOLD B-LIELMEOLD'S-lil3lol HOLD'S
EXTRACT 1311010
EXTRACT Eccgu
RUCH LI
EXTRACT !MOW!
EXTRACT BUCEII
FXTR • CT WU GNU
EXTRACT BU - !11111
KAOlr Ducat,
EXTRACT Wll'llll
EX, RACT B I'CBU
E XT R AC T
R U CR C
EXTRACT MIMIC
A SUCRE
EXTRACT BUCUD
THE gREAT DIRRELIC
TRE GREAT DIG R
HGREAT DIURET C.
GREAT
DIURET C.
RE GREAT DIURETIC.
HE GREAT DIURETIC.
TRE GREAT DIURETC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
T T HE G REAT
DIWDRi E E T T I C O C : .
THE GREAT D IURETIC.
THE GREAT-DIURETIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC •
A POSITIVE. AND onsciew
A POSITIVE ANn SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVV AND SPECIFIC
rl POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
4 POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE ANC SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
FOR :DIA 4V4RES OF THE
BLADDER, EzINVETP, ORAVEL, DROPS V
BLADDR K IDNEYS , GRAVEL. DROPSY:
BLADDER;
KIDNEYS. GRAIL, DROPSY. LADDER, KIDNE Y S. GRAY L, DROpsy,
LADDER, KIDNEYS, GRA Y L. DROPSY,
BLADDER, EIDNEYR, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADOSR, AIDLICEra, cinayEz., 40ROPSV.
BLADDER, KIDNEYS. GRAVEL, DROPSY.
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, ORAYEL, DROPSY.
'BLADDER. KIDNEyS, GRAYS!. DR OPSY,
BLADDER.- KIDNEYS, GRATEL, DRoPsY, •
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DRDP. , y, _
DLADia , It, KIDNEYS. GRAVEL. DROPSY,
BLADDR. KIDNEYS, GRA V EL,E ROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, DROPSY,
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASEs
ANp ALL DISEASES
AND Af.i. DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEA.SES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
ARISING FROM
A man [NG FROM
ARISING G
ARSIN FROM
FROM
ARNO' G FROM
ARNIM, FROM
ARISING FROM
ARISI NG FROM
ARISING FROM
AM I SI
ARSIN FR
Ng r EIIO O M
M
ARGUN FROM
ARISING FROM
ARISING FROM
ARISING FROM
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, &o.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, &o.
faaprmys OF THE BLOOD, •ko.
IMPURITIES OF TAE shunt; U.
/MP BATIKS OF THE BLOOD,' &o.
irtieDRITISS OP THE BLOOD. Jo.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, k.e.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOW), k.e.l
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, s.c.,
IMPURITIES or THE BLOOD, &a. l
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD. ,to.:
IMPURITIES OF TEE BLOOD, 6u.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD. ,100.
IMPURITIESOF THE BLOOD, &.o.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOW/. dm
NERVOUS DISEASES,
coreemPTloN,
EPILEPTIC FITE,
Mavens! Lamitodo of the [gladiolilar Bretton,:
Dirdai9it3 OrIFLOLUti,
INSANITY.
PALLID COUNTENANCE, ,
SOUR STOYL&C.II,
SICK HEADACHE.
RELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCEU
NO FAMILY SUMO DR WITHOUT IT.
NO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT.
Propmett aocordinz to
PHARMACY AND CHEMISTIV ;
ITASCRIBED AND lISED HY
The most entitling flogioutus ; endorsed and MOM
mended by Afetinguished Clergymen, Governors of
States. lodges, the Prem, and all who use it—toterf ,
where—evidence of the most reliable and responsible
character open for ioepeotion. le NO , PATHNI
NOSTRUM. It.is advertised liberally, and its basis it
merit ; and depending upon that, we offer our mope*
tion to the afiLioted and entering Humanity with entire
oonfidenoit.
THE PEOPERTIES OF THE I3IVSNA co.EHATA
Were known as far back as two hundred yeare, and its
tweedier *Teets on the Mental and rhYlllOlll powers arli
spoken of in the highest terms by the most mime
authors of the present and ancient date, among whoa
will be found Shakespeare. Byron, and others:
From this fact it has proved eminently gneoessful ta
thesesymptee. of a ncroons temperament. arising;
front sedentary habits and protracted application to
holiness. literary pursuits, and oonfinement from the
open air, and is taken by
MEN, WODIEITI AND CHILD,A.Fht
RRIASBOGD'S EXTRACT BUCRU
Id piedmont in rid taste and odor, and immediate In its
action, and free from ail lnluriou,Prenmrtiem. Cute'
at Little Expense.
LITTLE OR NO ORANGE IN DIM.
LITTLE OR NO ORANGE IN PIET.
If TOU are euifering, mend or call for the remedy at
once. Explicit direction. accompany. Prise ONE
DOLL AR per bottle, or six for 'FIVE DOLLARS, de
livered to any name, initial, hotel, post, express office,
or store.
TRY ONE BO TTL E.
TRY ONE BOTTLE.
RELMBOLD S GENUINE PREPARATIONS,
RELMBOLD'S GENUINE PREPARATIONS,
EXTRACT IMICHU,
EXTRACT OANZAPARILLA.
PHYSICIANS, PLEASE NOTICE :
We make no secret of ingredient& The Compound
lleehe in composed of Flucbue, Cabebs, and Juniper
Berne& selected by bcompetent Druggist, and are of
the best quality.
PREPARED, In Tatum
H. T. nEEmßor,n,
PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMIST
SOLD AT
HELKBOLD'S MEDICAL DEPOT.
NO. 104 sou= TENTH STREET,
BELOW CHESTNUT.
Where all Lettere mast be addreseed,
BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS.
ASE FOR " HELMBOLD'SP
TAKE NO OTHER.
storo.—Depot Ho.llll South Tenth street. Bend's:4lh
or write at owe. The medicine, adapted to each and
ovary case. WILL BB PREPARED. if neeemam en
titling the patient to the benefit of idvloe. and awed,*
and permanent cure,
THE END
SO MUCH DZSISED.
iitatatirta
,firtss.
We have a reliable communication from
England, dated May 17th, which we prefer
giving,tollay, in preference to venturing any
further speculations upon a subject which may
present a new phase in a few days, cited Mr.
Adams' despatches arrive from London. Our
correspondent, we beg to state, is a merchant
Wholly „unconnected with politted end the
press
Lonna!, May 17, 1861.—Wbile ourinformation
from Einierioa wee yet scant*, it woo eeey to an•
tioipate that on, Ministry would preserve a mailer.
ly .inaetivity as long as they could, waiting, like
Blioawber, for something 'to, turn up That was
Pahneriton'a strong advice, said to amount nearly
to a oolnmand, to Lord Jahn Russell, who, molt
unforhulately for all interests—those of humanity
included—now happens to be Foreign Minister,
with the slightest panible knowledge of foreilin
affairs, and a pervading impression that he .really
knowwle affairs, policy, and history of all nation!,
like ' a damned native," ::a Mantillui would say.
When Jos _Ewalt the meniher for Liverpool, asked
Zord Je6 v w hat England meant to do, in the mat
ter of Vail; American Rebellion,' 'the , vafx 4 prper
repty rA, that he did not know, but would leaszi .
the hui , of thii-eass from the law officers of the
Crown.
These_ are Sir lt iohard•Bethel, &jolly old-sexe•
il ooo ris Who is an admirable Chancery lawyer,
and taipory ismai r vait yr temper, feat now, bteaose,
Lord Campbell, now in his eighty third year, will
not resign the Chancellorship, to whioh he (Bethel)
would "then he appointid, with a peerage. The
other is Sir William Atherton, Bolloitor•Genoral,
five years younger than tiethel, and very good at
ori m nal azi.l : 001r1 DJ OD law. •
Bethel and Atherton, it is said,'differ about the
4niericin question. Bethel, of an old Welsh
family, likes the aristocracy of the South, while
Atherton, non of a Methodist preacher, has all the
106114 or th e Moil...nets es regard' Sieve-lieldleg,
firmly believtis in "Undo Tom's Cabin," and ie
strongly for the North. It is said, too, that Sir
W. Atherton eeznonstrated against admitting the
nowtherl,'i Moto., benze,ereni*. HeleriVal., Be
thel carried the point, and put the unfortunate
1' belligerent" sentence into Lord John Russell's
month, `., Oiaoo Uttered, Johnny is the man to stick
to it, right or wreak. Already, the Vontlnentak
journals have dropped down upon him, tied ask
whether British policy is that rebels, In arms, shall
be rtoognieed as "belligerents" in America only.
The opirdoe of ooMmerelal people here is that
this is.not a cotton question, though it will, aociele
rate the production of cotton out of the 'United
States. but that it must be looked an as a great
rook ahead, which , yoar helmsmen can avoid, and
must. The unity of the North, east, and West has
astonished our politicians here, who really believed
k wiaai Atm South away. of--that they
.‘• could Whip the North." Omni it is soon that you
can hold your own, by yourselves, the British Gto
vernment will even aid yon, - 'if , ybn wish—though,
iv he Imre, they Lessen"- hate the freedom of Arne'
risen institutions. I asy, the rulers—not the ride&
who are ail with the North.
If the Government at Washington can limner
.i/talefy raise the sinews of ear, we think that the
rebellion must be crashed. The South, as I hap
pen to know, having beep applied to, cannot raise
Money i n
. Barope by loan. On the other hand, let
Mr. Lincoln be authorieed by your Parliament—
Congress, you call it—to borrow a hundred million
dollars, at five per cent., he can get it all In a
week hero is London. For we know right well
that, though some of your Staten did repudiate,
the- National Debt of the 'United States always
paid the promised interest. Indeed, the complaint
of those WhO invested their money was that the
United States went to the length of pitying elf the
Debt my 'good sir, of smell capitalists
getting jigs per cent. on nited States Bonds, when
our own National Debt barely pays arse ! Fight
on, if possible, until you are authorised to borrow
a hundred millions from us, and the stook will all
be taken hero, et pa, The liouth will not nosey
a crooked /sixpence, out of us, for we believe the
South, like Spain and Mexico, are too lofty-minded
to pay.
There is no punitive knewiedge of the feeling of
Queen Victoria upon this exciting American topic,
but there are countless reports Poe thing es
known, however, that Prince Albert, son of te petty
tlerman Duke, whose dominions you might easily
traverse, in a one-horse chaise, in three hours,
on any fine day, is decidedly antagonistic to the
liberal system adopted by the Americana after they
- bad obtained full recognition, frotp' all the world,
of their independence and nationality. The Prince
is understood to believe that there is no hope for a
coootv 7 without a Sovereign, a peerage, a large
national debt, and a large endowment, out of the
public, purse, for every member of the Royal Fa
mily, without question or exception. You know
that his own allow/mom are over moon a year—
from all sources—that he actually pockets $1,500
o year, as constable of Windsor Castle—and that,
not content with quartering his eldest daughter
upon the tazpaying public, three years ago, he
has just had a Parliamentary grant, for his se
cond daughter, about to marry a beggarly German
Prince, of PlOO,OOO paid dawn on, the nail, and
00.000 a year during the remainder of her life.
Prince Albert is believed to.hold—with Prussia,
with Austria, with Russia, and with France—that
the ilespnblioan is the worst form of Idovernment,
and that the welfare of mankind requires it to be
put down, when practicable. Judge, then, what
he must feel now—on whioh side of the American
'tripe his firitios wont be. No doubt_ he shares
the common belief here that, if a Southern Con
federacy really could be established, it would be
cone a monarchy in a couple of years.
Oa the other hand, it is here believed that gee=
Victoria is as liberal a woman at heart as her posi
tion would allow her to be She has taken mune
rota reseasionn of showing particular Courtesy tO•
warily Americans who have been presented to her,
or have partaken of her hcispitality. Finally, her
Majesty was really very much . impressed with the
great kindness shown to her chichi KM, when he
visited the United States ; at which time, by some
odd casualty, the only persons by , whom he was
treated with disrespect were the Orannemen of
her' own Canada, and "the drat fomihes I , at
Rielunond, Virginia.
Rely upon it, that Qaeen Victoria will never
throw the weight of her inflame Into the Beale
against the Northern States, if she is allowed a
chance of manifesting any personal feeling. As a
Sovereign, she has very little power, for it is the
Ministry who are responsible fey what hi done, not
the Monarch. At the same time, no Ministry
would, run, directly counter to the known wishes
of the Sovereign.
The North have just lost one very influential
friend at Court. Of all the personal friends of the
Queen Me greatest was the Dnehess of Sutherland,
_ . _
REMEDY
LANGUOR,
NERVOUSNTS.
JLEOTIU FLITH/Fil OSvr
(for many yeari the handsomest woman at Court))
sister to Lord Carlisle, who visited Amorloa
twenty years ago as Lord Morpeth, and happens
to be the most ill-looking of all the British Aria
tmsaay--eltremely like what Liston, the eater,
t4od to be in the oharaotor of Paul Pry The
Qmsen is greatly attached to this lady, who, though
wife of one of the wealthieet of the British Peerage,
for many years has held Ike eglea of Mistress of
the Robes to her Majesty. But the Duke of Suth
erland died a few weeks ago, and the Duchess has
resigned her Moe at Court, and in a manner re
tired from the world. bbe has boon succeeded by
the Daohess of Wellington—that exquisitely lovely
statue of Patience en a Monument. The Duchess
at Sutherland, who extensively patronized all
Abolition Amerleans, from Mrs. Stowe to "the
Black Swan," certainly impressed the Queen's
mind considerably in the same way. Were she
atm a member of the Royal Household, she would
as certainly keep the Queen up to the mark on
this head, just now.
The caveat mention I have here made of Mrs.
Stowe retnindame of the Teat impression which her
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" made upon the public mind
here, some nine years ago. I recollect that, in
September,lBs2, aa I was oakbing it down to the
London Bridge station, to go by rail to Irolkatone,
en routs for Paris, etti Boulogne, I saw a book
seller'e shop•window covered with a great number
of greemeovered duodeditaoB. Wanting 00nething
to read In the railway earriage, I jumped out s
threw down my shilling, and picked , up a cheap
reprint of " Coale Tom's Cabin," the perusal of
which occupied a good deal of my time ' before I
reached Paris. It turned out that mine was ao•
Wally the fleet copy of the book which had reaohed
Paris, and a friend, who begged it from sue, was no
much struck with it that he gave it to the altar
of one of the daily papere, who had it iransland,
without delay, and printed it, with equal alacrity,
as efettaleten in his journal. Immediately, other
papers did the lame, and tranntstione to book
form were soon published, not only in Peril, but in
Belgium, Germany, and Italy. When I returned
to London, after a fortnight's absence, I found
"Uncle Tone' in every person's hands. Over
60(1,000 copies ware sold in "the Vatted Kingdom
of Great Britain and Ireland," and dramatic ver
sions of it were performed at the principal thee
tree in town enCeountry.
The other day, finding my eldest boy deep In
" Unole Tom's Cabin," 1 took it up, and; to b.
OA NO 1.41 r.
THURSDAY, JUNE G. 11861
English Opinions.
candid. found it very indifferent—the feeling
exaggerated, the incidents improbable, the charac
ters midtown. But the book him been as mush
read, during the last nine years, as any volume In
our language, exoept "Robinson Crusoe," and it
hail impressed the British public with a most un
ctuestionedat. Anti-Iglevery feeling, That the sym
pathy of the said British public, at this tizne, , is
almost wholly with the North, , ia.to be attributed,
I think, to the impression which Mrs. Stowe's
book, almost Wow criticism as a literary compo
sition, has made upon the mind of young and old.
'lave heard that Queen Victoria was wrought up
to a pitch'of fearfeexaltement when she first read
" Uncle Tom."
There is not much general news here of inte
rest—certainly none which the newspapers cannot
tell you more fully'than myself. The only really
striking things are, the prospect of ,Lord Pad
merstonlB ministry being overthrown, in sons&
guano° of opposition to Mr. Gladstone's financial
measures, (he insists on ricluidng the duty on pa
per, and or retaining the duty on tea,) and the
smash of Edwin James, the lawyer. •
Aa for the Brat, if Gladstone and Russell should
be driven oat of aloe, Palmerston will be able to
reoonstruot his tTabiaot without them. Toughing
Mr. James, there is not. the slightest foundation
for the report that he had committed some fraud
which had compelled him to voluntary exile in
Franoe Jibe had, the French doiernmeist would
speedili give him up. - The foot le , EdWin James
has simply been an improvident fool and spend
thrift in money matters, and got into the hands of
the bili•disoonoters several years ago. Lie bee
been earning at least 18,000 a year at"the bar,
being in good advocate with ;wanly knowledge of
the 411. of this money was absorbed by
money-lending bloOd makers, with the exception
,of a bare £1,500 a year, which they have allowed
him, to live on. Ile has, at-last, determined
to get rid of his pecuniary nightmares, by
taking advantage of a particular Statute of Bank
ruptcy, called " The Gentleman's Aot," which
Lord Brougham got passed, several years ago, to
allow Mr. Spalding, hie step-eon, to become bank
rupt, in a private manner, with the Moat possible
exposure. The Daily Telegraph of this morning,
makes this announcement: " The public will
probably be interested to Icons that Mr, Edwin
James, Q. 0., has been induced by his advisers to
seek the protection of the Bankruptcy Court, in
order that he might give undivided attention to
hie profeseional duties. This decision has, we be-
Lieve, met with the approbation of an overwhelm
ing majority - of his creditors. It is expected that
by thia arrangement Mr. James will be able very
shortly'to satisfy in frill every just debt tor which
he is liable."
Until this protection was given, Mr. James was
-liable to eitt6AkOdtd, therefore, kept himself close
This was called " going to Boulogne," liis jus4 debte
are very small, and the Bankruptcy Court will not
deal very mildly with bills, promissory notes, and
acceptances, on whloh the holders have boon re
ceiving interest, for years, at the rate of 60 per
cent. per annum. Mr, James has given aphis fine
heave in Belgrave Slime ; and now occupies cham
bers; in pr. Johnson's Building!, in the Temple.
Is Somewhat about fifty years old, and will
probably be a rich man in ten years—if' lie re•
liaquieh big habits of expense, and bo IMO ooloot
in big acquaintances. A LORDON MIROITMIT.
Shakepeare on the Times.
THE 11,ATIVIC AT rallarrl.
Beene —Rebel Camp.
ist Gen —'Tie better that. the enemy seek us
Bo shall he waste his moans, weary his soldiers,
Doing himself bffenee whilst um, lying still,
Are full of rest, defence, and nimbleness.
2d gen.—good reasons must, of force, give
place to better,
The people 4wixt Philippi and this ground,
Do stand but lo a forced affection ,
For they have grudg'd us contribution
The enemy, marching along by them,
By them shall trait* a fuller number up,
Code en refreshed, new , added, and encoded ;
From which advantage shall we out him off,
If at Philippi we do faee him there,
These people at our back.
let Gen.—Rear me, good brother
2 , 1 Con —Under ,you.r pardon. You musk note
beside,
That we have try'd the utmost of oar friends. - -
Oar legions are brimfull , our - ctuae -- se ripe
The enemy inoreaseth every day,
We, at the height are ready to decline.
to Gen —Then, with your will go on
We'll along ourselves and meet:them at Philippi.
(Exeunt.)
PEnzar.rt .Dirinott wept of the field.
Enter let G - 64 —O, loch, look, the villains fly
Myself love to mine own turned enemy :
This ensign hereof mine was turning back ;
I slew the coward, and did take it from him,
Enter Soldier.
Soldier.—Fly farther off, my lord, fly farther
- off; •
The enemy is am your tents, my lord
Fly, therefore, noble general, fly far off.
lit Gen.—.le this bill far enough!
4 le *
REM OOLDITaI TO En GYNURAT...
You said the enemy would not come d91 , 7?i,
But keep the hills and upper regions.
It proves not eo their battles are at hand;
They mean to warn us here at Philipps,
Answering before we do 4711444 of them,
Julius cream-.
The Second Sepoy Rebellion.
I For The Pima) -
Since the annals of history commenced, were
there ever two revolts so much resembling each
other as the Indian Soppy rebellion and the Ante
rioan &pay rebellion ? The Indian Sepoys, armed
by the British Government, Whiah they were
sworn to support, turned their arms and military
discipline against the hand that had fostered
them : the Amerioan SepoYa stand in the same. re
lotion toward the Government of the United
States.. Our Sepoys should claim some precedence,
however, over their more swarthy, yet less black
beerted, bteihren of Hindustan, for their arms
were obtained through theft, and treachery. The
similarity of these two rebellious hordes has not
yet• ended ; for, as ihe power of Groat Britain
ultimately graphed the itydrwhead of a rebellion
whioh, at one time, threatened the lose of one of
her richest dependencies, so will our own Govern
ment, its loyal people rising superior to the party
fends wbieh have so long divided them, finally
and effectually plunk the fangs from the snarling
jaws of that dragon vvlkieh it has so long nurtured
in Its bosom. T. td. K.
Movements in Northwestern Virginia.
The following is an extract from the letter
or an Ohio volunteer to a friend here, show
ing plainly the rapid and sure movement to
wards Harper's Ferry. It is dated Parkers
burg, May 30;
Colonel Kelley, in command of the West
ern Virginia - Union Volunteers from the Fan
handle,' came . down from Wheeling on the
sapper branch of the Ohio Railroad, and,'lMp
ported by two Ohio regiments, took Grafton
today without firing a. gun—Secessionists re
tired. Colonel Stedman and Captain Moe,
in charge our advance guard—Fourteenth
Ohio Regiment—are entitled to great credit
for their promptness and energy.
A Union citizen was mortally wounded
last night, 29th, by two Secessionists, at
Clayevillo, six miles from here, and within
half a mile of our line. The Secessionists
are numerous all through these counties, no
matter what is said to the contrary. There is
a cluster of them only fifteen' miles from
here I'd like to help catch. Many Unionists
are not over-cordial in welcoming our troops;
others, again, express intense satisfaction.
Even the negro children seem to thrill with
the great political movement going on. One
poor little devil, not over eight years, called
to me, as I redo past, and gave me two roses,
and disappeared. Whatwaa it emblematic of?
A poetic blessing on our cause from the race ?
Who can tell? Col. F. W. Lander is on the line
from Parkeraburg to Grafton, superintending
the reconstruction of the burnt bridges. He
has had gangs of one hundred men working
night and day for the last four days, and the
road is now open to within twenty miles of
Grafton. Artillery and two regiments over
the line already; five companies here, and
more expected. The Colonel told me the
men had worked as hard and subsisted as
badly as the Eighth Massachusetts on their
march from Annapolis ; in fact, had accom
plished more work on, if possible, less food.
All the troops fare alike, our rations consist.
ing of bread (when we can get it) and water.
However, the prospect begins to look better
for the future. The Eighteenth Ohio Regi
ment, now here and up the Mid, are without
uniforms; one hundred of the men without
arms, until three hundred muskets were seized
and given them. The clothing and blankete
supplied the troops are of the most miserable
description. The State contractors and in
spectors must know the blessings heaped
upon them.'
n Our General McClellan is a groat com
mander. He had troops on the hue of rail
road transportation, seized telegraph opera.
tors and engine men, mechanics and engineers,
all up and ready at the very hour they were
needed. And, but for the curse on the com •
missary's and quartermaster's departments
(the same, I understand, on all the volunteer
movements except the Rhode bland) ) all
would have been well.
This permitting speculators to prey on
the lite-blood of our men is a disgrace to the
country."
Muzrany men have discovered a new reme
dy for intozioation, wbioh, we believe, is "not
down in the books•" It is nothing more the,u raw
potatose, willOh are out up in 1111003 and eaten
without mit. An ordinary • inurpby," it is pm,
will cure the most obstinate ease in half au limy,
TWO. CENTS.
ROUND ABOUT WASHINGTON.
Tlui Wanderings, Pondering% and Ont4Pthe
way Laitarings of a Roving Yankee.
Corregreondenoe of The Preen.]
O. 111.-DI MEIFORTAN.
Wisuraoron, .Tune 5, 1881.
Frail though it be, I must be allowed to
drop my cypress-leaf upon the bier of the
statesman, the orator, and the patriot. Peace
be to his ashes!
Amid this season of revolution—of faction—
of feud—when the bloody eagles of civil war
scream through a horizon red with - the.thuu.
ders of battle, and blackened by the clouds of
war; when treason, alike to God and man,
uplifts its horrid visage among the elements,
and would,: with ruthless hands destroy our
liberties, dethrone our laws, and debauch the
spirit of our fair; free, republican system;
and when we have poured forth, girt with the
armor of conscience and the Constitution, fel
lOwod by the uprising payers irom hamlet
and home all over the loyal land, our souse is
shocked, and our heart is sickened, by a low
wail, which floats across the prairies of the
West, and announces to us the death of Dou
glas.
Anticipated, yet not looked for, the tidings,
still hoped against, though hope itself had fled,
appal us in a manner, which is but feebly do.
scribed as nearly touching our tenderest feel
ings of personal kindness and affection. •
He was a man abounding in more ot those
qualities whieh arrest our fancy, attach our
regard, and arouse our enthusiasm, than any
one of his Senatorial compeers. The earnest.
ness of spirit, talitch made him an orator, was
in him, and, it made him equally a man, The
genial freshness end glowing i warmth senti
ment ,which• animated him, Whilst, before r an '
audience never - deserted him when frpoitorri
the excitement of' the hoin. -He was, front.
, , „
first to lantfat `all timge anwm,napleveis i
home-hearted companion, who drew you to
him instinctively, by his gerierealtY of,ffisposi-,
Hon, his liberality of idea, and his'frank, i
bane sincerity of address, whietinevoi j failed'
appealing at once to thespnrestleelings:of Our
nature. There was the env, considerate, cour
teous gentleman in:street or saloon, whom
friends and I'm have never disputa an admit:-
ting him, in bis Senatorial intercourse, Beldoin
provoked into even a momentary ill-humor
himself, he was over thonghtffil"of the feelings
or others. Net molly Cll'tmded himself r and
readiest to accept apology or explanation, he
was first to, proffer the hand of friendship,
when the offence lay upon* his, own side. " No
man can say there was a grain of vindictive
ness in his charaeter. He carried in lite to a
seeming fault that which in death is most.
noble to contemplate, a spirit of conciliation
and kindness toward his low, personal, - tozd .
many partisan enemies. He hated no Mali i
he seemed to love all men. Repossessed the
rare power of commanding the kindleelings of
all who knew him, though they might differ
with him upon every question of publio policy
with partisan intensity, and even rancor.
There was in him and around him such a
bright exhalation of the charity'of life, that no I
one who was biought into personal • contact
with him could tail to be influenced by his cor
dial, unaffected bearing, and impressed by his
splendid endowments of mind and manhood.
He was truly a great rnah. I hive known,
and sometimes intimately, within the last few
years, most of the leading statesmen of Con
gress. Generalat for hours and
ing to Houston talk of Texas,while
he whittled his little, block of wood, in his own
room. I have heard illr. Seward on national
law in his own library'. 'I have taken moon
light drives alone with that singular genius,
Alexander H. Stephenif. Ent never have
felt the consciousness of being in the presence
of supreme genius so fully, as when in that
plain litt/e sitting-room I have heard for an
entire half day the sagacity, the wisdom, and
the learning which flowed in a broad, pbwerfnl
stream from the lips of Stephen A. Douglas,
Ho was truly immense. It was the irrepres
sible vigor of a gigantic mind, clothed in all
the fascinations of a genial manner. He was
not a sermonizer, still less a pedant, in his'
speech. It - was-give and take with choir
,e.Ncery 005.
Ms eulogy cannot be .written now. Years
must roll by before we shall be able to fitly
apostrophize his memory, his works, and
worth. We can speak now but of his per
sonal traits, which are 'so fresh upon our re
collection. But a little while ago—it seems
but yesterday—l spent an evening with hint—
s quiet, delightful evening. His spirits were
not, then buoyant. Our national troubles
preyed riadlY-upon' ldm: His view otthem
was firm, but far Irom rancorous. Patriotism
with him was a vital principle, not a partisan
spark ; and he—who of. all other men had
most reason to feel a personal bitterness
towards the Southern rebel leaders—regarded
the coming conflict with more regret than
anger. He was essentially a philosopher, and
he justly made a wide distinction between the
loyal, honest people ot the South, who had
been precipitated , into revolution against their
will, and those corrupt leaders who had be
trayed their brothers and their country for a
mess of..porridge. He
. viewed the conflict
like a national sistesman, as he was.
I may be' permitted to insert hers a few
weak vataati 3 for whose sincerity of spirit only
I wish to claim the ear of my reader. it is
all the offering I can make with the tributes
which are rising from all over the land—from
poets and orators, able heads and loving
hearts.
Beneath the lily and the mould,
And ivy-green and myrtle brown—
BonautL tae willowe lavallizsty itcnTla
Over the graves of heroes hold--
Statesman, whose story hath been told—
Low lie his ashes : Where are sown,
O'er one broad canopy of hearts our9Ued 7
Deeds of fair renown,
ills spirit, like a bright encircling fold
Of light, twines round the tablet old.
U.
Forever cold the Doric form
That stcod against a world of woe,
That wrestled nobly with the foe,
That amid not numb the heart.held arm,
Nor chill the true blood ever warm
About his heart : Forever low
The massive head that rose amid the storm
Dimm'd the zealous glow
Of patriotic} aro; The Loud alarm,
Forever silent witlrthat forth.
TIL
Meal awootiy from tie alkorrera and sod,
Ye Wald:dal dodder, pearly white,
Above the alom'bring lone, and light
The radiant air above the low abode,
Pure measeDgers a God !
Aye—aye—aye—bloom ever the fair flowers
above his new-made grave, and be they also
symbols of the too tardy justice of all who
respect virtue, revere patriotism, and love
that -which is true and perpetual, as is his
fame. That can never die. It will live as
long as the Constitution be defended, and the
Union, for which he battled so manfully. Its
lustre will shine unfit the last star fades from
our national disk:ol bine. -And his memory—
party spleen and current arrogance buried in
the grave—will stand close by the side of
Jackson, and Clay, and Webster, all of whom
recognized in his early career the promise
which gave such mellow fruit in his later life.
Pe1340 to his ashes I Tall every bell in honor
of the illustrious dead. Long ere we see his
like again ! Every true heart is °raped for
him ; and every true man deplores his loss.
Thus closes the life of the first orator and
statesman of his day. AsA TRENCHAP.D.
Correspondence of The Presi.]
U S. Biqt4II2IIPIWNIEIE, June 1, 1881
I will endeavor to give you a alight sketch of
oar engagement with the batteries at Acquia
Creek. We began at 11.30 A. 14 1., in concert with
the A01)141411 Yankee, Thomas Freeborn,' and
Anacostia. They began the ball from the batte
ries by firing through our rigging. We opened di
rectly on them, but ware considerably out of
range—Our guns being smooth•bore, except one
small rifle-but we soon got farther in, so that we
made it so hot for them in a very short time that
sileneed their batteries in several please and
dislodged them from several positions The officers
and men behaved admirably, although their shot
toldon our hull and rigging in many places. Tao
muds praise cannot be given to Captain Bann,
First Lieutenant R. B. Lowrey, Mr. Chapin, and,
in fact, all our officers. The captain's clerk had a
hole put through his Gap from their rifle, but 'no
one was hart here, yet the Paumas Bel are to eve
rything that was within reaob of her rue. There
were over 360 shot and obeli fired from this ship
idone—in faot,iho did most of what was done. She
was hit in several plaoes by rifle shot, one wont
through the miliselkin&lt hood, One in the Muth
one in the quarter-deck, and another through the
forecastle r inlaot, I do not know how many. Still,
we are as goad as ever. They fired altogether at
the Pawnee. They have not forgotten Norfolk,
nor we Sumpter. You must excuse the appearance
of this sheet, as my hands us fall of powder and
dirt. Yours respectfully. N.
Camp Seward.
The Washington Mir of last eveuing eayl
"The New ye l l girty.ninth .Regiment are
working gallantly at their fortilloationsi and have
madeireat pregrees towards completing f
at'shesfety
Of their position. t'severel hundred are wort
cutting and hawing heavy loge together and heap.
log up the rue of earth works, which already en
close several sores. A ditch, about twelve feet
lids, and from four to six feet deep, surrounds the
breastworks, rendering it almost impossible' for an
ene my to mount them. On the inside they are
f aoe g up in tine style, and look as it they could
amid a pall with pretty heavy guns. Other fait
goadons are going up down at Meade of the canal,
near the equednet, and through the woods in the
vicinity." -
WEEKLY PRESS.
hs Weeutav nom will be nee le nbeerlbere
sell (For Mum la ailvaneed "Lot
Lir,. eon
Five 9.00
Wen " 12.00
boyar, " " (to one addroaa) 60.00
Irwentv Melee, er ever (to eddreuer
nab enbeariberd waore Lie
For a Club of Twenty-ato or over, IMO VW Omit st
illini.ooDY to the getter-le of the Club.
esT Poetmaatera are roottortoi to age le Luau for
"111.2 WIIIILT Puma.
CALIFORNIA. PREIOL
hunted three times a Math.= time far. Re OadiZi
Steamers.
Colonel Morehead's Regimelit.
(porrespondonee of The Preael
BALTIMORZ, Jane 2, 1861.
.I have undorstood that you have done much to
wards calling the attention of the "powers that
be," in Pennsylvania, to the bad condition of the
troops coming Mau your Btato, and / can lost to
believe that yon will do 411 in your power to make
them more oomfortable
Acting on this belief, I would inform you of the
romorki made here concerning the bail olotbing,
oboes, ,to., of your regiments stationed here.
Their shoes are of mush -mieerable quality that
many of the men ore now nearly harefooted. Many
of them, I learn, are saffaring much /loin AM
feet. Cannot something be done to relieve them I
Another thing : many of the man are without
stookings, and very low have been supplied with
1.v.,16tha and other messages which have heell
furnished in your and other cities by the ladiet.
I speak especially of the command of Colonel
Morehead. They need the articles named, and 1.
hope the hates of Philadelphia will not deem me
impertinent in suggesting that their noble efForte
can be well directed in this quarter.
From all I can learn, the ladies of Philadelphia
have eeppllea the ieirthibiiir of ediethtlit Lyle end
Lewis with havelooks, and the other little nenea
series for the knapsacks, to a great extent.
The ladies of our city are busily engaged in
their ondeavore to fornioh time reennonti or Mit
Stitte with the necessaries for the campaign, but it
has so far been an up-hill business, as ixiany.per
sons amoautions in letting their. Union sentiments
be known by tketr woika. Vot they hope to fat,
nish the two regiments, now nearly completed, hi
a few days.
=Secession still shows quite a bold front h ere,and.
.
lb kept candor 941 y by the ~ strcTa. ,I:rsuulexitil 11 of
General Cadwalader.
.I hbpo you will not doom this an intrtudon on
3f - bit7 piii , livi.: -lOur course towards our noble
voluntsers • has - emboldened law to :take , .lisle
ll ert+ ,'iand I hope you teal think well ofit,,aztd:
call—the attention of your" patriotio women" to
this Ohjsot of philanthropy. and true partiotism,
r'oe4 .it were in our power to attend to these
wants. int snob is our situation that We eartnist ;
and.lbueri'by what I saw in Philadelitlibt several
weeloiawo that but to inention the need trillid
• r
the demand answered:'
With iziwiti respitrit,
i•citor from ilestoli.
lUorreepondeneo of The l'realh)
"Election day," that time-honored " institti
eke " or Dosfort, Is cotebret,ted to-ato, %rhea the
Governor takes his seat on the Common, encl . /sem-
Missions tho officers of the AnCient and Honorable
Artillery for the oncuing •year. Thisis the 2231
snail/emery of the Ancients, as they were organized
only 19-years after the landing of the Pilgrims at
Plymouth, in 1620. It is a very disagreeable day,
being cold and rainy, hat the weather seems to be
of little moment to them. They turned out three
hundred strong when the Hue was formed, under
oommand.of General John S. Tyler. They are eel
commuted by the Boston Bran Baml s Weapons
pieces. .
The line vom formed at eleven - o'claok ; they.
then escorted the Governor to the church in
Channoy street, and listened to it lemon by tbo
Rev. Dt. EI H. Lothrop. After the eermom they
took up their line of march to If &unit Hall, where
dinner was served up. After the dinner the before
mentioned ceremony will take place on the Com
mon,
The three military companies which left here on
Friday for Brooklyn, to join a regiment ready to
leave for Washington, arrived there onßaturday;
and found the muoh.talked-of rtgament contained
only /00 MIL Doing indignant at smelt troe,tutent,
several of the Gibers returned home ibis morning,
and made arrangements with the Governor to
have them return immediately, and proceed to
Fort Warren, in Boston harbor.
Arrangements have been made at beadquarfera
to form Are new Massaohnsetts regiments ; to be
composed of companies now organized in different
parts of the State, but who have never been at
taohod to ani regiment.
First Regiment went into camp.near Cam.
bridge on Saturday. They have named thetplace
Camp Ellsworth, in honer ef that noble yoting
°atonal.
sll,.
at the navy yard, in Charlstown, to-day, when
Commodore Eidson formally delivered her over to
her commander, Captain Theodore Bailey. Her
man are all on board, but she wilt not sail for about
a week, on amount of some delay in getting her
ammunition.
An effigy of Jeff. Davis was found sfaspendeal to
a building, in Fort Warren, this morning. it was
cat down, toad carried to the ward-titotao, by 61416!
of Major Tiloston. NELsox.
From VVestern Virginia.
Ptoel the Wheelie,: Intelligence: of Tassday..l
We learn from a gentleman who left. Philippi
at 9 o'clock yesterday morning, Mid arrived here•
last night at 11, that the Seoessionists were routed
about daylight yesterday reornOg• they were,
not expecting an atteolt, They worn first fired
upon from a battery attaohed to an Indiana regi
ment. They fired one shot in return, ami. fled,
leaving all their arms, horses, provisions, ammu
nition, he. Colonel Kelley, with his command,
was on the opposite side of the town from where
the fire commenced. Only two of the Seiessionists
were killed, and not more than half a dozen taken
taken prisoners, among'whom is Willey, who was
captured In the woods by Copt_ George Robinson.
After the Secessionist& fled, and Colonel Kelley
was marching into town at the bead of his oozn
mend, he was approached by a. desperado named
Mart Johnson, of Pruntytown, who shot •him with
a revolver, the ball taking effect in his breast,
Johnson was immediately seised, and would have
been instantly pinioned to the.earth by a hundred
bayonets but that the magnanimous Colonel or+
dosed the man to spare him. It is thought that,
had the Indiana repined delayed fifteen minutes
longer in opening the fire, the whole 1,690 Seces
sionists could have been captured.
It was first announced that Colonel Kelley was
mortally wvuadod, but at a Lao+ bone the grati
fying intelligence was received that he wee not
so badly injured as was at first supposed, and that
Willey, the incendiary, was among the prisoners.
Although the deopet9b stated that none of the
Federal troops were hurt, it was by no moue
satisfactory to those of our citizens who ham
brothers, sons, and husbands in the field. Dr.
Frissell, of this city, was sent for at the instance
of Calomel Kelley's Month. As it ix some fifteen
miles from. Grafton to Philippi, intelligence is apt
to lose much of its reliability in going down to
Grafton, and we shall have to await the arrival of
the trains for full sod truthful particulars.
The Last Hours of Senator Douglas.
[Frond the Chicago Journal of hicinday evening.]
The sad event of the morning has thrown a sha
dow of profound gloom over the entire city. lgen.
Stephen A. Douglas expired this morning, after
lingering weeks of illness, of alternate hope and'
fear, at eleven minutes past nine. . -
The early bulletin at the Tremont House en.
nounoed that there were no hopes of his fel:feebly;
a second, "Judge Douglas is dying ;" as we now .
write, the. third, the simple announcement, _ ."
dead," finds a mournful responsive echo in every
heart. • •
Fora week past the lamented deceased has been
only semi-conscious. Though recognising his
friends he has been unable to locate them, and
his mind gave out confused fragments of the great
thoughts with which his giant intellect wee wont
to grapple.
,The last week was an anxious one of hopes and
fears, and, es we went to press on Saturday aye;
Ding, more favorable symptoms inspired the belief
in his friends that he had passed the elide, and
that be would again be spared in this hour 'when
his country so Inuolt needed hie strong arm and his
experienced amumele,
Ills physicians, man of experience and skill,
used every resource of their profession to take ad
vantage of these favorable symptoms, but in vain.
At twelve o'clock last night he failed to recognise
his most intimate Mende, and bosom!' totally nth
conscious ; at three o'oloek he commenced rapidly
to fail, and his unwilling physioians pronounced
him beyond hops. Their only duty left was the
mournful one of easing his dying hours.
HQ gradually failed, seemingly sail:mat We,
until eleven minutes past nine, when the lamp of
life Was extinguished without a sigh or a struggle.
Hie devoted and kroinaperife remained with hherto
th e lees samisens, solacing him as bast she could,
batted under the weight of the deep affliction..
Madison Cutts. his brother.in.law, Miss Youn g; of
the Tremont House. B. a. Caulfield, and Dr. nay,
were also present. . .
His death woe peaceful and tranquil as tits> melt
ing away of a summer cloud at evening and the
mourning watchers were alone 'with all that was
earthy of Stephen A. Douglas.
CHICAGO, Jane 4.—At a meeting of various com
mittees, consisting of the State and loaded Pal au "
thoritles and others, held this morning, a 00111-
mittes was appointed to present t 9 the family. of
Judge Douglas the unanimous with or the penate
of Illinois, that Me remains should be permitted
to remain-in this State for interment.
Colonel Richardson as the organ of this nom=
mittee, performed the ' demote duty of oouimtutV
grating to the family the wishes of the committing,
and at a general meeting here, Mr. J. D. Oaten
reported that an affecting interview bad taken
rues batmen coigne) Richardson 'a nd Mrs. - Dou
glee, the result of which was, dint izz anv appre
eiatien of the spontaneous expression of %be wish..
of the people of Illinois, that the remains of the
Illustrious dead should be interregna this State r
that she yielded with pain ' , but itot.with r.Swet
aooB,
It hi the desire of Mrs. Douglaithat his remains
be interred at Cottage Grove, near the lake shore,
so that she may be enabled.to reside in the imam
diets vicinity. N. more appropriate place could
be selected. There is shindy a monument there,
erected by himself, of enduring honor, in the msg.
nideent institution of learning built by hie Db.-
:silty.
The report of 'Mr. Caton wait acoeptod, anti a
meeting was immediately held to mike the Iseeeg—F"
sexy arrangements for the funeral, which will tats
plane, at 10 o'clock on Friday next.. ,
A Bra SwowBANIC.- - Abont two 74111 is fierth.
egg of Phillips Village there Is new a enow
not Ism than fifteen feet deep, and extending Nevo
rag rods in length and width. ;It . is? formed by
the ridjoining brook a
deep l r n a ‘i v ir in b e,thro g ughwhishlbspatitling trout brook
d as her along among the rooks; known by the bold
name of
Coddle. B rook ." It frequently
“.
takes a
July eon wipe out the last vestige of old winter
d ?WU here.—Bangor Cotarier.
BOSTON, June 3,486.1_