THE tiIIt.ESEL 008010 DAILY, (SUBDAYB UOZIPTIID,) BY JOSH FOBNIrr. - °TKOS rW. 4/7 CHBEITNIFT 'STREET RAILY PRESS. Vi MUM to the Carrier. . una ; lo g Subsoriberit Vi n yl la s City at arx DOLLARS ro Loom. F 017.11 DOLLA3.II FOR Melts Moulin; vas DOLL/am ion Six Morrile—ineariably in RA - is po for the hoe ordered. 7RI-WESILLY PREss. oile d to Subscribers oat oithe City at Teams Dor, IV Mum x. adeemee. WO CONNISSIODI ROUSES. 6 11,AY FLANNELS. BLOR-ORAY FLAMM& GRAY FLANNELS. iILUE-MIXRD FLANNEL% THE CIIMPROT IN THE iLfIRICET. O•RAY FLANNELS. M. 'AIM BY FIEOR OR BALI.. FOR GASH, JOSHUA PT L. BA_TLY. mfR 110. 1113MANYET mom. ----------- SIIIPIAT, HAZARD, & HUTCHINSON, DIU its WIEMILF7 87. OWINISS/ON NEROUANTS, FM THE WILE OF pHLEADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. 0011-41,. MILLINBRY GOODS. ft F RIGNou FRAMES. FRENCH FLO WERS, STRAW GOODS: exE LATEST STYLES CONSTANTLY IE CETVING. 10S. KTINNEDY & BRO. IW. TOO CHESTNUT !Street, below EIGHTH, spe3m MERCHANT TAILOR N . 0. TITOMPSON, yturtCTTANT TA TT OR, p.&- MANES WALNUT AND SIMENTIT sT. Announoss x Kew Stook of ?In OPRU4O AfU BUMMER MATERIALS. FOE eStrileVarEara WEaR. CCICIIIIIIIIII 111 part of very damnable styler of super Froth and English Melton CLOTHS, COATINGS. Ao.. *cleated with especial cam and r em% W the ir sun of ,a DISCRIMINATING AND FDITIDIOIDIcupIem . Ile anal the folloiiina mdnoenienti for your Pa ummage : Good Material," a Parfent Garment, and Pootualitr and Precision In the =maim of al ;MIL • INSPECTION IR INBFECTFULLY ucirrtsp. aplS-tittits4m CARPETIN,GS. &WEIN OANTON MATTING. L J. F. &• E. B. ORNE. 01".POILITH MATE ROMS& Mabee now epee their optiiNG IMPORTATION Si OF DOUBL =MA IINFILIILSI, waren, FiXPLE, sat ARO GEMMED DANTON MATTING. IA ALL I'lE DIFFFAEIt7 WIDTH& Me MODERATE PRICES 3. F. & E. B. ORNE, sy7r fm OPPOISFIE SLUE HO MO- GROCEBIZS. T o rAmTurra B.I6BIDING IN THE RURAb Dr /mar% w. us prepared, az heretofore, to supply wallies ex irc Country Residencei with every description of FINE SZOCIZZLEe. TEAS, Zte., ko. ALBERT O. ROBERTS 111131M11 ELSTEMYZ AIM VINE STREETS. EXCELSIOR HAMS. 114101-I,F.NER & 00.. muunt.u k rzovunoif DEALEsii: UD mums or CIRLEDRILIED "EXOELSIOR" otraaat-ctotßat RAMA. 14. 144 AbID 144 RORTilt PROI(7 (Between Arch and lane atreata.) 2.IIII.ADELPRIA. The imatly.selebrated Roosbnito Ramo ars mad by t. H. M. fr. Co. (in a style popubst to themselves). ex otody for/sandy soot 6111 Ot dehoiona flavor. boo from rhe =pleaant toots oisatt, and are pronounced by epi- HIM aepettor tie any now offered for male. apl3-Sm LOOKING GLASSES. LOOKINGrOLASSES. lavOily *Alba= init iimetslstinc ti, alul slum miss of LOOKUPG-G.E.4ss.gs, dantbisuag all tits Wad improyeniento and fasilititut is nsandsatare. *mat novelties in Walnut and told and Itserwast mai Gold Plaines for MIRR.O.P.W. Wks most aztanaivt sad varied issertiasst is tits 'h airy. - • • JAM 33 3. /SABLE & SON, ;ARL6►E.' art-st conlimint SUI V' BANNING: VIM BILMONT:* Co.; BA NK.E,RS. 60 WALL iTNENT, NNW TORN, tam viten at anniza ie trarraana aarallataal in al MIK tioarepo, ;breath the Moor& Istheisklld a no, lain. Friaddarti Vienna, awl their wr mimmilenia. JEWELRY, &c. PATENT gimps! PATEKI' STUDS! ~,,%I...reved Patent Lever itelnd apliusenryr gl+ GM. and the Patent PEA, Gag nA. Wm* teen th oroughly tatted, and - epeeerring edvantanee aver *ter7 other invention. are being very generally edvetad tat Gentlemen of tang. EN Whalen!' sail ROMA QNLIT by ELI HOLDEN, 708 MAIM= STREET, Importer of Clocks, Watches, and swain tollitatnal PINE WATCH REPAIRING PERSONS HAVING FEN& WATOHES that have hitherto given no satiefimition to the *amen. are invited to brinj them to oar store where 411 doreota m.O remedied bT thoroughly eldltul and .4 41 4 9 war au f sou the -wretch .snouted to give Man!, eetilefetanne. Bientel Moho, Maidoal Boxes, &e.. oareffely snit in 'ougente order. • F.ILEA-ik , BROTRE.R, ; 11 MAITT of Wa G tc an ff rr ti tre nßo . e e. t iolot. oh ewe a., CABINET YVRNITVRE. C o -&BIM FININITURN AND Bite 4 i oOreita CAMPION. No. 961 BOUM BECOND FERRET, 0 91inootiot wlth ttioir ortionain Calnat "way monalaotonng anainor DOM , el Bade W+ BILLLLED TABLES, & l e fty ° uow hand a fall onoolyuthod ft u .,th & Cenplowe IinFROYED CUB one. ons Tannonnoed. t,. an 'who have used them. to F7Purlur to all others. tbn quality and 6.1.1 i of dome Tables the MAl ',Villa_ra refer to thoir. amerced patrons thringsoill —` nion. w.bo WV IMAM' with all *baronet of their telS-Mai BROWN'S ThAENON. OE' JAM QI huh 11.—FREDERIQX BROWN, oliendat and 'O4 n rtheest oornerof Martha and Fifth ate.. sole flatecterer of glecronP• Besenee or er,whioh is reoosaised and presonbed tor RW7451 family of =2the IF, a ed Statend has become She elaadsni Mar i mv; Essence is a ampagalion of nrournal regoenanoe. Luiry diarrhea. yerojeveat droll/is. in shievt, in all mostrataou of the digestive fonotionsot u of „7, a toriebhp value. Dlling the grevalanoe of eerdendo kir %lad summe r 00111,111i1114= 11 1 n . at t r a i T P:Odi 111"1/gritrano i4m .. lir. ater 10E ,T o in v en t mu valuable Eutaw from counterfeited, a now steel eagraeing, egarated at Dr at Con. Win be found oa theondade of tha wrap -1.0 order to guard the purehaler berm mi med nee by orortta.... lohilikiaaa.— 1 1 asare4 lads FILICD=IOI BROWN; arid for rNi t ehu brag aid obardeal wors t X. oo rof 1.11 4 " C i pstinetreoub =ohm, and at s eK xo aaee • aid Cheroot! tom! a a t i .e i onlor,.. of zriaib' ‘ad atroets. VOL ritdedsdalita._ _Alio for cab anciAs intim waited Pada& nryk ...%" -- 1-7. 'f — ff i .. . _ ... _ _ . .. .._. . . .... _ ——= i • - :--..- - --- ' —'' - • • - - —. . , II i - ''' I " V l i ' ' '' • ' . . ', A - I •• ..„., , , ../ a) - . , ~,, N. : • , i I-, 1 I ../ • ••.'", . t, A.. .: •2. . . . • _.. . . . ..:,%.—',...-. .. ,' - • /..• ' ••%-A.. ..`Ol l ft, - - 0 rte,.„,.• •• • ~ . • . ~..• ::-.. .• • , ..... :-':-.%-:"' .- ` ' ~,'.. A, .' ' 1 : <0.- 14 I •,- - -:-' ' '''.4. ‘ ..: ':. 1 W-•7r -"4- . , . . . -•. , - ...„ - --F,'.f' , ..-',-'--- 1,-.,77,11 1 / 4 .'1 . 1L '. .-...% ,- - ..,!,..,---,.-... , z.-4 , ;, - -- 7- - f , ~ ---- , . __:--'---;.' ;41,F , ../: -, ' - - --, . / ~..."----- —, . ..'. . ;....-alr: ..., . .... x . 1--, • . -...., , : 3 7-7 -::::,, - - -1 .- , 0 ,- ( . 7 e ; .' .' . ..•.:5:.' , ,..,.,...,...:,, , ... • ;: - .,:.: . ,, • 'lli ••:• "- ', - • 'f: .1 . : Lail -. . . , ..• . - ._ ,n _ . .... 1.: 37,-. - . . 7 , -.....- ' "......,:i r ''. .:. :4 7 0 13it ' -." . It 2 ." , i , 4 '.. ..:-.--.--.--. ..... -- . _ :„. • .44,, , ' d 'it,..." ....- '' -. -.z_-,.'"''''`', .'-,_--,...------ ' . . • .....---_....x......,_ --............-........, - f• ---...-- .-....-..-", " (....-- ..- '.......... , . I . , .. ... r '...' , .. f. ---- ' ... '""" 7 ... ' ' . .ar- .. . . . . . VOL. 27 L .RUTAIL DRY GOODS. WHOLESALE STOCK HOSIERY, HOSIERY, HOSIERY, HOSIERY, TRIMMINGS AND FANCY GOODS, TRIMMINGS AND FANCY. GOODS, TRIMMINGS AND. FANCY GOODS, TRIMMINGS AND FANCY GOODS, TRIMMINGS AND FANCY GOODS, TRIMMINGS AND FANCY GOODS, FOR SAT 3 AT RETAIL, FOR CASH. AT RETAIL FOR CASH, AT RETAIL FOR CASH, AT RETAIL FOR CASH, AT RETAIL FOE CASH. The Subearibers offer for sale, on and after THURSDAY, 6th. INST., •T THEIR STOES, NO. 409 MARKET EURE,ET, WORTH BIDE, NO. 409 MARKET STREET. NORTH SIDE. NO. 409 MARKET STREET, NORTH SIDE. NO. 409 MARKET STREET, NORTE SID le, FROM 9 A. M. TO 5 P. M. TIME STOCK OF GOODS FOR CASH, RETAIL, AT LESS THAR WHOLESALE PRICES. AU kinds of COTTON HOSIERY, NEEDLES, .PINS, eLoVaa. mooll.B AND EVP.I3, LACE Alf 'UM SKIRT DRAWS, ZEPHYRS, TAPER, BRAIDS, SHETLAND WOOL, COMBS, BRUSHES, SPOOL COTTONS, PERYLINEFRY, BUTTONS, UPIDLEFEILIML (Of all Description!) Wilk, Merino, U.) Alan, a Full duortment of Drees Trimminze, BURNET F, SEXTON. & SWEARING-EN, Je44m NM 409 MARKET STREET. SPRING CLOAKS, IN EVERY NEW attle.at WENS', nu 31-1 m No. 93 8. Ninth street. SPRIN(I CLOAKS, IN ENDLESS VA nary, at, WENS'. m731-1= saPRING °MAIO, THE CHEAPEST 1.- 7 ever seen, m IVENEI', m731-1m No. 93 8. Ninth street. NEW STYLE CLOAKS, EVERY NEW style, every new material, at _pnoes that astonish everyone, at the' large store. Pi. E. aoraer of Eighth and Walnut 'streets. iny3l-1m CITY CLOAK STORE, No. 142 N. Eighth street, above Cherry.are now selling every new style of the lesion. superb quainter, In every new shade of color, °heaver than any other store in the city. myst-ism LINENS AT COST POR CASH ONLY ! Damask Table Cloths. for cash, Irish Linens at cost for sash. Linen Damasks at cost, for Gash. Towels at oust. for soak. Pheeting, Pillow and Butcher's Linens. NAptchul. Doylies, l.lrAfrib Cloths. ket.. ko. Conitainng OW entire ma Linens , AT COOT FOR CASH, commeamins to day, the 4th inst. Our stook is large, cheap. and fresh. and wilt prEsemat many unusual bar gains, even in these times, of extraordinary cheap geed& 090PHR & COL RD leia. E. oor. twr and MARKET. fIiPENING ‘--OF THE ARCH-STREET MANTILLA 15TORE, N. W. corner TENTH and ARCH. ALL kgar GOODS- Ruth Lyorut Bilk Ciroulats. Rioh Lyons Silk Eacquee. Cambria and rusher Lace Pointe Do. do. do. Marmites. Cloth and Tweed Ciroulars. Summer Cloaks. ko. Purchased under the influence of the War, panic, and to be sold at less than the cost of importation anti manufacture: , Lades are invited io inspeot this stock, without re servei before surchaeing elsewhere. ImJACOB HORBFALL, Prop'r. Q,UMMEIt GOODS-- NJ Reduced Grenadine Demme& idrosh t :, ven low Price°. Rich 011indiea and Lawns. Farrah W.tord *tura, Bargges. Gray Travelling Goods. Raisins!. Foulards. Drioals. Bernanis. hiasainbreues. !KWh's, Farm Silks. Silk Robes. Grenadine, and Organdy: Robes. Chad Shawls, Brooke, and Stella,. SHARPLESS BROTH._ regal CrEFEWrNITY and. El tltraets SPECIAL NIuseOTICE i Il_d after this date TROxycLET & HAU willw offer EVERY POSSIBLE INDUCEMENT TO CARR PURCHASERS OF DRY GOODS! Beies_Aatemmeed to paws aitr Stock they will rifle Geed Hareems !! Deautiftil Fano,' thlte for TS cants worth 1111.12 RRearfilch Fancy Bias for well worth sl.ss. gans/Wm arid Berme Goode. about one half their ve. • A t ieY Nixed Om BI ni DTOfr Tariesl9 tram a °enterer SO 024101114 LAGY. SILK.% RIOU AND LUSTROUS, VERY - CR itekt Bleak Brocade Mik E a double faced,!to" jta, De Llalloll, Calicoes, CaLumeres, Glots, vesticusw, &O. Linear. Idestins, Flannels., Chults. Covers Pre,. &a. lIKAWL AND CLOAR-ROhl French Lace Mantles. Potutee. Shawl", Eugene!. Cambria Lace Mantles, Cheatials Laos (foods, zt. Bleak BIDE Coats . Mantles. no., in every style, At TILORNLEY C 11181441 W. IL e.rilit RISME, & MERINO 111. .I.tf ALIT, ALIT,, preparing for the Travelling dawn, are i nvited to examine oar aseortmentor Tourist brat Drees Hoods. Shepherds' Asa Drees Goods. &Wafter AIMS, Gloves. ao. NYSE & LAN Mad.. FOURTH and ARCH. CLOAKS.—Wholesale Merchants are in "rhea to , inspect the stook at No. n Beath - NINTH Street, corner of Jayne et. 11731 - lut Between Market and Chestnut,. A DAUS It SOV'S STOOK to bo closed -via- pet git LOWEST WITOLESALN Cheaper than if a discount were-=taken off' after the sale Inca made. 1011111 AND ISM m 729 - - A DAMS & SON'S STOCK TO be closed -4-34- SLOWEST WHOLESALE PRICES, Cheaper than if a MAMMA Were taken off ti,ft 2 e. r . ttwoille was made. EIGRTH taw AK 12509 MANTLES—DUSTERS. Mantle room. Beoond door, abonwle iu handsome Coate, MAME% Dusters. tho. Thin .IJusterai. I' _or Ladies and Mime. Frenoti Leoe 600ds, at coat. • COOPVT. CONARD. joi E. E. Corner NIETO. and MARKET. A TJAKB it 5011'd MACK to b. dosed oat at Lowest Wheless'. Prices. CHEAPEN THAN IF -A DIROOUNT WERE TAKEN OFF after the sale was made. BLOHTE. AND ARCH. . WOAD ADAMS & SOWS STOOK to be closed out et Lowest Wholesale AKEN Price' CatiA.PER THAN lF ODFF IeCOUNT , WERE after the sale was math xatitarst AND ARCO. Z/09 NEW PLAID INDIA SILKS -- J. j U lt roo olVed, i;or Fising Seed. Prom Seurien. two MAAR of Plaid India Ellks. extra Warranted to yeah well, and serviceable For tituntuer Dresses. Also. one ease of Brown sod WO hidia E l ating . Yellow Pongees, for Summer Dustere. White Pouteee. for under wear. altvLb.B3 BROTHERS. CHESTNUT and EIOHTH Streets. PARTIOULAR ATTENTION IS RE quested to our tom scoot or ORDANDIES, FENN LAwNO, AND SILK CRAY - LIES, Which, in committal:toe of the times. will be dbroteed of at yearifieed rata.. MEAS. ADAMS t, 8011, totl9 _ MOUTH ADD ARO. TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES. DO you WANT WITIHKKRBI DO YOV WANT WNIBXE.II DO YOl/ WADI • 6101UVIACIM/ DO YOU WANT A MOIMAOIE BELLINGHAM'S GELSBRATED STIMULATING tOkiek IS+ll4 rOl, TIE WIIIIXERS ♦ND ItAkA The enbsoribers tale pleasure in suatiunoing to the citizens of the United Staten that they tome obtained the Alen, for. and are now enabled to offor to the Amerman public the above instlymetebnitod and worbi-renowned article. THE STIMULATING °MOURN'S Z. prepared by Dr. C. 1.. 11P.LLINOTIALM, sa ,dmillallt phytioian of London, and is warranted to Imo/ out a thick set of WHISKERS. OR A KW/STAMM In from three to six weeks. Tine article is the only env of the kind used - by the Prenah. and la Laadsa and Palls it is in universal use. it 12 a beentilni, soonomisal, soothing, yet stimula ting compound, noting es if by twin 112011 the roots, can a beautiful growth of luxuriant hair, if BP- Shed to the scalp it will cure baldness, and: cause to aortae Ito US the pie.ee of . the bald seots_a fi ne growth of new hair. Applied Wording to directions, n will turn ipso, or xowx hair tusk, an restore trai hair to its original oolor leaving it eon, smooth. and nexibie. The ONG UNDID' to an induspensable article is ever, gentleman's toilet, and after one week's use they would limb tor iSrLY 0 00sideettion. be without it. The schsenbers are the only Agent for the ortiolv .ip . Lbit United Stater, to whom all orders noun be a.l - eiollar a box; for sale by_all, Orr:taints and Peeler, ;i eta box of the oNeuzr47, warranted to awns Abe desired effect_ will be sent to any who desire it,by mail, direot. 2611214114 packed, on TIMM; of pries and postage, 41.19. Apply to. or address ItOXACE, SiEGEMAN & Co., Druggists, &du, Ntraat Now York. DYOTT ab OA" Ho. SSA North SECOND Stroll. sislphis Agrala. sahib OPAL D&NTALIINA.—We speak from rA n fare, av rz u tveac."),, ,a e av ita P p. ll 4 RUC etreete, is e deahlecity the siesit ß erepar tae zl e the month an teetti.thet hems vim need. a W e believe it WM' Withal Is claimed for it. and being re =Wind by the • vet eminent dentists we advise all Ott triaL—Dol4 B 69. 40334111. SUMMER RESORTS. guilty HOUBE. ATLANTIO CITY, NEW JF.RBEY. This HOTEL, with its first-alass mierommodationa for over 400 ruests,.will be opened on the Uth of J un e. sibie,ed edible slatyyards of the Oman, at a point where the bathing is the best end West on the ooaat and remarkable for an unusually dr.r and wealth+ atmos phere, the SUSI HOUSIt will be found one of the most attractive places or rummer resort nea r Philadelphia. ' , he table will be moat liberally impelled. The house is lighted with gas and eletitlfellir supplied with good cistern water. A fine hand or muoio and the services of several fest-nine lig Yachts have lissea engaged. and on the pre mises are Billiard Tables. Bowl ng lied a train ment number of Bath Houses, The Fishing, Gunning, and Bailing at Atlantic City cannot be surpassed. All train, atop at the SURF SOUS E, land an d lake riprinsenicarn. For any information. apply at ASHLAND ROUSE, A fti !II Street, Philadelphia. . iel7 set 11 , S. BENSON, Proprietor. C ONGRICSII HALL,- CAPE MAY, CAPE ISLAND, N. S. This well known first elan Hotel will he opened far the reception of - guests on THURSDAY, June M. WEST & THOMPSON, Proprietors. COLUMBIA HOUSE, Cape Island. N. J. This celebrated houee will he opened for the re am:dim of guest. on June 25. 1861. he saltation of this house is one of the most beauti ful e n the Island. commanding an unobstructed view of the ocean. A bdhd of music has been engaged exclusively for this house for t e season. A large number of bathhouses ere connected with the estabbahment. Good stabling for heroes attaohed to the Pieffil , es. A on'ications for rooms or other partionlan mill meet with prompt attention by addreiwing the eminrcri Dar. JAL". H. LAIRD, Proltrieter. Jell-tm Cepa gland. N. .1. TONTINE HOTEL NEW HAVEN, CONNRCTICUT.—The Rubeonber refurnished this fashionable first-o n asS Hotel entire last Siring. re modeled the old Dining Room, added a new l-adies , ordinary, and pot in complete order hie diVieird and Bath Rooms. Families can have suites of . Roams at ei-her Hones as low fie at sue first-eiase House in the country. Baarders aan go to and from the TONTINE to the READ, three times a day. by rail, and take their meals at either House, without extra ()barge. Having puratu,sad cad skoeited lama Farm at So/Mamie Hied this spring. the two houses will be furnished with Meals, Poultr Milk, Butter. Vegeteb'es. and Fruit, duly, from t he Farm. A Telegraph Line hug been put nod Baohem's Head and at the Tontine. at the Proprietor's own expense, which connects with all the lines the United States. H. LF.F. SCRANTON. iel•lm QA.(IIIEN'9 HEAD HOTEL, 13IIILFORD, . CONN.—The propnetor of chi. well-known. first -O.BLII, felluepable U Mfd. H.R• 0 aid b; would inform its former patrons. and the puhlisi genefelly. that he built on three hundred feet lest came. making seventy lour new bed rooms. new dinmg-room, fort, by .one hun dred. new ptrior. torte byte -enty. Every room in the house is newly furnished. with new carpets and new &lane furniture. The Hotel is of modern construe -00 an extensive scale. with no , ommodatione for f o ur hundred•soeserrbeentaully located on-Long Inland Sound. fourteen miles_east of New Haven on the Bear London and Eitonington Railroad; new bit hard-room, with - three new abase; two new ten-pin ells r, eta convenient distance from the house, and twelve new bathing. houses. - Fishing -is not cur-cued on the Sound- A new selo,lli of forty-fire tone. sod several small sail-beats, will be constantly on hand, ready for parties. Going from Nei York to Remhem's Head, take the 8 a. M. _train and S P. M. train ; oheek and ticket to Sachem's Head direct, changing oars at flew Haven; lone through SX, hours. Prom New Haven to the /lean mini, A. M., it e, ILL.. dude P. AL --time* minutes. ..At the i•itobem's Head depot will be found one of . Cook's best four-horse Omnibuses, new and clean, to carry you - - direot to the house. A new Barn. one hundred by fifty-two feet, wars built lest opting, which will nooorneieeete home. Fi teen auras of land have been enclosed, and filled with ornamental and fruit trees, walks, Ste. Who, house' will be opened for the reception of com pany on the 95th das of June next, under the immediate merman , endenoe of the owner. N. B.—Moccuitoite are never seen at the Head. ice-lm H. LBE SCRANTON, /PRESSOR SPRINGS, CAMBRIA. 00., PA.—This delightful and copular *ice of suratner resort. located directly on the line of the Pennsylvania Railroad, on the summit of the A lleg h any mountains; twenty-these hundred hyalites& the level of the wean will be open for guests the 10th of JUR E. Elmo) leer season the grounds have been greatly improved end beautified. rendering Cresson one of the most romantm and attractivesown in the State. The furniture ai being thoroughly renovated. The seeker ofptomain), and the tearer from beet or disease, will find attrac tions here, in a ffrat-elaaq Lavery Stable ' Sillidrd Tables, Tenpin Alleys, Bathe. Ace. together with the gayest sir and water, and the moat magnificent moan taineoenery to be found in the country. _ Tickets good for the roma trap from Philadelphia, SUM ; from Pittsburg s3o6. For , or further information, addreas G. W. MULLIN, Cresson Springs, Cambria, Co., Pa. HOWLAND'S HOTEL.- BEA BATHING, LONG BRANCH. N. J The eubseriber will open hie hotel for the - RUCEPTION OF VISITORS on eatordaz, June 16, 1861. m731-ara IL ROWLAND, Proprietor. EP H RATA MOUNTAIN SPRINGS. LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA. - This celebrated Watering Place will open for via- . to on the Sd day or JUNE. with all the attractions of former seasons. Situated on a mountain 1.211 feet above tide-water, overlooking the richest agricultural Oilutary al the world. the air perfeotag pure and dry at all times, Tan dem it proverbially healthy. there are ample aceonamodstiocui for ILO vigitonr— Brie graded was through the forest to the. various springs and summer-houses on the isolintain and to the observatory. from the top of which is presented to the eye one of the finest and most extenalve pano ramic views to be seen. A good livery is kept on the Tibiae. and beautiful drives around ; hot and Gold baths a splendid land of Music. (from the Germania, of Pm loulelphiu!) howlins alleys and billiard saloon) t With the latest unProveu tables. Darin gardens attained to the place, from which.all the vegetables are taken fresh for the table, which, too,will be supplied from the Philadelphia and Baltimore markets, as well as from the rich eirricaltaral country around. Careful and attentive servant&_ - Hams mien connected wit h - tae. ertablianner @t d some years with the larepreprietor, th e unders i gned assures the olsi patrons of the place and the plibild geterellythat 'twill be_o °adulated, - in every &wort meut, its former traveler war. Visitors to the Syringe will take the care to Lancas ter, thecae 13 miles otasiog over pleasant reads and through a beautiful , country. Through tickets blued at the Pennsylvania Railroad office, PAIRViegITH and MARKET Streets ! Philadelphia. ,- For further parttoulare or circulars 'the proprietor refers to JO3. B. MYRRS,_oorner THIRD and VINE Streets. and. to WS .14,. BRYSON. No. 2 North SIXTH Street. Philadelphia ; or, address B. C. siieThliaigigH, 'my:J-2m if Ephrata P. 0., Lancaster cc., Pe. TeEDMED SPRINGS. A. G. ALLEN J l - 1, respectfully inform:the 1/411113 ttga tin; well este blished and popular watering place is now open for the reception and tuseommodation of stators, and will be kept open until the first of Oatober. Persons wishing Bedford Mineral 41r,e4er, will be iggi plied at the tepruigs at the following prioes,vis : pot Mil (WO_ 00 " X " ve .. (oak) --- 200 . Mottles, 3f, pint, Per- -1 00 Parties wishuig rooms, or any information inregard to the place, will address the Bedford Mineral Benno Company, Xegfar4, Pennsylvania. MIS-511 WRVS' HOTEL, - - HARRISBURG, FL. The management of-. this welt known Hotel haying been leased br Messrs: GOY tiE # REHR, the' p'reternit aroeristisys bar leave to inform the piLtihn Mat the Rouse is DOW batzLttnirollally RBNOVATt'D* 1 l 15 " FITTIX and I Pdrx.o v:614 with a view to the proper and com fortable-accommodation - of Aimee who may favor the establiebment with their custom. Guests will receive due attention and conrtesv, sad no ex- Hniie will Morena that may tiondnee to maintain the otel Ina Erst-alass attic Families and others desiring to so o ars Hartle burg during the summer months wi find pleasant swirling and large and well-vent il ated Room s at our establishment, upon moderate terms. fiCOTT COYLE. mir27-1m J. VILLOsitT tteatit,ls LEGAL. INTHE 0013.11 T Or COMMON PLEAB4 , PIM TEM (IVY AND COUNTY OP PIMA DELPHIA. WILLIAM MoILVAIN vu. MANS P. MOILVALN. No. 11. Mareh Term.lB9t. In lhvoree. And now. June, mt, IeAL the Court grants a rale upon the respondent to ahowoeuse why a dmoroe.avinonlJ ffinatimortit, should not I. decreed. _Theturnighltlit. PA. TaRLPAY, 'June 2! 1161 , atlo chlocat, A. M. Yn MARY 2.- MelbY 1N— Yon are hereby notified of above rule. service of no tine of the same having jailed on account of your ab iejloe, G ORGE H. EARLE, jele-Nreetbit• 'Attorney for Libellant. IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOIL TIM CITY AND COUNTY OF PfIILA- Dlit,Pll//i. rtuctoo t. berebyevo.thet the he* apPlisol by _petition to the Court of Common Pleas for the City and County of Philadelphia for a final- &Ethane under the provieione of the Insolvent laws of this Common wealth. which application will be heard by the said Court, at the Court ROM, in the middle building .of the Mato House, nate, e I sada, at 10 A. !Com the 'l oth day of JUNE, a. 1). MIL when and where all creditors of the undersigned may attend. if the think proper. ice theta-et JULIUS &LIMN. 1 TT RS TESTAMENTARY TO THE . 1 - 41 ESTATE of JOHN H.:WHEELE IL deoessed. late grocer, Third and Lombard streets, having been granted to the undersigned. all persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make payment, and all persona having clams etc tequeeted to present them te • GILARLIng 0, AMITE, 407 WALNUT Street. JOHN CASSIN 313 UNON Street. NORMAN 6. WIIRELER, who eontiniite the Ora tleri bob Tea plabilibbltt southwest corner and -LOi4BARD streets. Is duly authorized to receive payment of debts due said Estate, and amounts against it may be left with him. June I, 10$1. leS-nithigt ARMY AND NAVY SUPPLIES. pROPOSALB FOB AMIS. Sealed Proposals trill be received at Alreifigfiald. now, on or liefore the twelfth (121h)day of dune next, at noon. by the undersigned commissioners on the part of the State of Illinois. for furnishing, delivered sit Springfield, Illinois, the following arms and. equip. Ciente: Twerro 8-lbe brass gram. mass(. Six (8)33-lbs braes howitzers, rifled. Twelve (12) °Mesons for 6.1 b rune. Six (6) oedemas for 12-lb howitzers. Three (0) ;ravelling forges. Three (3) battery wagons. Three (I) opal* Inn euLtringat. One hundred and ninety eight (198) fats of fittingly harness, with ail the implements and equipments, for three companies of light arrillery oowsleus, corres ponding in all respects with the emu and equipments usesl by the United States, and to be subjected to the *ems teaks. One thousand (1,000) cavalry sabres. One thousand (Lone) pairs cavalry pi tole (revolvers.) One thoneand (1.000) carbines- One thousand (1,000) holsters. One thonaand (1,000) belts. To correspond in all respeete to the like arms and an. pendages used in the germs of the United Staten, and of the nearest and moat approved style and finish, and go be subjected to the same taste. The commissioners reserve the rlght to reject any proemial not satisfactory. The teems of moment under lair. flighty per 0013 , on delivery, twenty per CULT. on completion or aggitmot, Address eoninnrnonere for euraheee of arms, &a., Springfield, Humus. JA.& R. BTOKEB,( JOoN TILLOOsi, Commissioners. mf34-11)t W SHEYBARD. R aowNis IMPROVED DANDELION COFFEE. Et it e nellk soo. CeKined o a tt o , rn coo +Oel m r W e Of the Dietnet Court of the U. t 3., in and for the Eastern Dis triet of Pennsylvania ft7- flatware of immitions. .it is strongly recommended by the Faculty as a supe rior heeritteas bevera g e for el:morel Oetetitr Droestr sta. Disease ' of the Liver, Billion affections:and irri table oondthon of the Stomas. The many thousands who have been reluctantly, owneebed to abandon the use of Coffee, owing to the incur y done to their health, will find this superior to the best Java Coffee, to say no thin, of its treat and acknowledged medical benefits. Wherever known it taxes the piece of all other Coffee, and costs outy one-half the price of the best Java. A supply constant"?' tor sale et FRE ERIoK RitOWN'S Drugand Chemical More, Northeast cork of' EIFTkt and °HULCE UT %rests. Ebtridelphia. And for sale atsoat FRED ERltia. DoOW N. Ja.'s, Drug and Chemical Ettore. Continental Note!, oor. of DINXEL and OAEBTNUT .green. yeti-itutheg* PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1861. rb:VitsS. WILTBSDAY, AINE 13, 186 L Notices of New Books. The pew edition of Cooper's Novels, Illustrated .by parley, and published ly W. A. Townsend, Of . New York, rapidly approaches Its conclusion. The last volume, just issued contains the whole of "Miles Wallingford," which is the sequel of L 4 Ashore end Afloat " The .aetion in this tale is direct and downright. The.hero, feeling that the course of true, love does not r i rait smoothly for him, goes to sea in a merchant.ship of his own, bound for Hemburgh, baling invested moat of his peon. niary means in loading her with a large and 'valu able cargo. This ship. ThelDaton, is seised by an English war-frigate, and..the greater , part of the book relates the escape of-l'lse Daum, and the subgeqtlent wreck. It IS a narrative of consider able power, crowded with thosefine towbar and small details whiob, as a eeamitist„Coimar so well knew how to throw in, to enhance tbe fidelity and interest of the picture. The illustrations, in Doy ley's best manner, and flnely . elegraved,rere worth minute examination. In conxection with this edition of Cooper, got up with so much taste, there nay be Refaced Dar loy2s Cooper Vignettes, Using to IfVraisons or parts, earth containing eizteetOgnettes, whereof one balt-are engraved on steel : andAight on wood. Parte V. and VI. have lost come nail er our no- tine, and we need only say that thejiguettes on steel ,are artist f iproofs on India paper. These are acoompanied with surtoient letter prose to ex plain dm story of each. ongr'irotot. These Vig nettes, by barley and the bo at engrarore in the country, may fairly be presented as fine !pooh:sena of American art: We natio& that the English critics, Clough namely able to rltalise the feat that American art does east, have' handaomely and warmly praised these beautiful,' able, and charac teristic' illustrations of by far our best *Titer of fiction. Cooper's Novels and *see Vignettes are supplied to subsorlbers by. S. lifolienry, 400 Wal nut street, sole agent for these works in Philadel phia. The eighth;end concluding iolnree of the History of Latin Christianity, by the Nov Dr. Minion, Dean of St. Paul* Lyndon, has'been published by Sheldon 4 Co., New Tbrk. It carries 'the narra. tire of *yenta down to the year 14.5 d, when Pope Nioolas V. died. -Book 41V., which occupies the greater part of this volume, is full of varied in. West It surveys the condition of the clergy and laity in the fifteenth century; enelyosis the details of btlief in Latin Christianity; ohowa the state of Latin literature; traces 'the Itiommenoentent of Christian letters in the new laagutigte of Europe, (our Doglhall Chewer had written nearly a um tuty before Pope Nioolas died;) showa what the Teutonic or German tongue was: doting ; and treats of Christian artshitectuiti;-serilpiare; and painting. The aultable close of a work•like this, which has already taken a high plaits among modern standard literature, is a good Thhilast voltune bag an Index of fifty 'pages, small type in double columns, which le worthy of all eemmenadion. as indeed completing 'a great work, by rendering its contents most atniesslide. - " Nieholle Nickleby," the reined of Diakona l works of fiation, followed pretty closely upon Pickwick." The publication was commenced twenty three years ago, end we havelest read odd chapters in this story, with Ai* as maeltpica sure as when drat they came befOre we, In the fa miliar, green cover, with illustrations by ". Phis." In every one of Dickens' stories, some great social alme or wrong is smiled, is "co,"lVOknih and subsequently in "Little Dorrit," It was Imprison ment for Debt. In ,"Nicholas Niokleby," it was the abominable nuisance of cheap boarding schools in yorkshire and other parts of the north of Brig land. Parents—and especially step parents—were tempted by advertisemente that boyar could be edu cated and fed for twenty pounds a year. There ware avow& of such peendo-rehoolmasters as Mr. Wackford Squeeze. It may truly be asserted that "Nicholas Ninkleby" suppressed that whole race of swindlers and scoundrels. No ,suan, with the least regard for Ida charaeter, now think of sending his Children, step ehildrenior, wards to one of the Yorkshire 'ohestp schools, and, if he actually were willing to risk them, hit chalice of finding ROIL a seminary would be scanty indeed. The &erecters in, " Nicholas Niokleby" are among the best -ever drawn by Dickens The Brothers i/bettryble actual portraits of ?men with whom the writer of this notice was personally aegasintedhand oat as the truest gentlemen Over drsiwn by the novelist. John Browdy, the gigantic 'Yorkshire pallier, with a heart propor tionably large, in another original, and surely Mrs. Nickleby, Miss La Groovy, and immortal Tim Linkinwater, are also new i and good. The whole of the theatrical company, wit!, the Crummles family, and that gin-and-trater Phenomenon, are drawn from life , evidently Mr. Nickleby, Ar thur Gride, Mantiitni, and the .fashionable folks, (the rook of a Baronet and the pigeon of a Lord,) are comparative failures. -Newman•Nogge, albeit oserdrawn r ia-so -good that we could scarcely de alt.° to see him„altered. ; The Swam family, though with a dash of extravagance in ,he lot, are also very Aatural ; indeed, Fanny &mem ip her way, (which .is not a good one,] is,: perfect. We have been lad into these remarks by the-re ceipt, (from Mr !John MoWarlan, Z south Bigth street, agent for Pennsylvania and Delaware,] of " Nicholas, .Niehleby," in four volumes, 16mo, forming the third issue of the Household Edition of the Works of Charles Dickens, by those enter prising publishers, W. A. Townsend and-Co., New York. A beautiful edition it is, in all respects. It has four , vignette Illustrations, on steel. The -Ant, by I:barley, represent/A the interview between Nickleby and Snake, at Dotheboy's ; the se cond, artist's name not given, but the , sketch very spirited, represents the reheatsal at the - theatre, where the Infant Phenomenon and Mr. Yolair go through the ballet "Utterly*, of the Indian Sa vage and the Maiden ; the .third, by Silbert, shows Equeers entibitiag his well-fed boy to the elder NiCkleby i and the laid, by Parley, and one of the most effective, shows Frank Cheeryble and Newman .Noggs surprising Sqneeri and Mistress Peg Sliderkin hi the sot 0 dealing with the will wide bequeathed a fortune to Madeline bray. From T. B. Petersonand Brothers, we have, now complete in one tent volume, the late Beverly Tucker's Scoessionist romance, I. The Partisan Leader," which we have, already noticed, as a somewhat rsmarkable work. Secretly printed by Bulrldrooni et Wastdagtou l rn no, with the date of 1856 on its imprint, it shadows out the whole anti-Union Conspiracy of 1860-61, and the argu ments in defence of treaeon, then contemplated and now songs, therein pat into the mouths of imaginary rebel leaders, are precisely the same as actual traitors are no* giving utterance to by tongue and pan. We have to acknowledge a pamphlet of 60 pager, compiled by Joseph N. Moreau, (formerly a core pouter in the Mae of TM .Fress,) ounigitlog of "I Testimonials to the Merits of Thomas Pains " There is no doubt that the Author of "Common Santis" and, " The Oriels" was the ablest political writer of his time. It would have been fortunate had be never beoome tbe assailant of Revealed Religion. In the twelfth volume of Appleton'. new hmea-Zeara Cyalorealica, (Jost prddlehed, and supplied to itubsoribers by Mr. MeFarlan, 3.lBouth Sixth street,) there is a biography of Rains, coon pying over three pages large Svc, which is the fullest as to faote and the fairest in tom of any we have yet read. This ii by Mr. Moreau, coin- piler of the "Testimonials." - - ' Few periodicals are more 11000ptable than the Historical _Magazine, Of which we have received the number for June. It combines the best fee tures of two leading English publications—the Canasexan's _Magazine and Notes and Queries. Nome on the State of Sonora open the present number, and contain no small amount of local anti hlitorical information. We have a further portion or thirgeeri Waldoia Diary, kept at Valley Forge, 1777-1778. Here is a little bit out of it : " The Marquis De le Fayette, a Volunteer in Our Army—A he who gave three Ship. to Congress, is very agreeable in his poroon and great in Me Cha racter ; being made a Major General—Brigadier Conway, an Irish Colonel from Franco , took um brage thereat, and resigned—bnt is now made In spector General of the Army—he ie a great Cha r:inter—he wore a GQlllliiiineWil the E r oa,olt Berries when he was but ten years old. Major General Lord Stirling, la a man of a very noble presence,—and the most martial Appearance of any General in the Service—be much resembles the Marquis of lareeby—by hie bald head—te the make of his feoe—and figure of his Body—He is mild in his private Conversation, and Vociferous in the Field ;—but be bee annoys been unfortunate in Actions. Count Pulaski—General of She Horse, is a Man of hardly middling iltature—sharp Coon tenance—and lively air;—fie contended a long time with his Uncle the present king of Poland for the Crown—but being overcome he fled to France —sad has now joined the American Army, where be is greatly respeoted do admired for Ma Martial bkill, Courage h Intrepidity. Gen. Green A Gen. 'Sullivan are greatly. esteemed. Baron Be itelb, aliejor General, is another very remarkable Ohs rffilaar, and a Onottoman mush esteemed." The Woodhill Dimond= le wooed, with a letter from S. Fenimore Cooper. The proosedinge of soel o ti es comes next, followed by a great many nom, gums, and rope', Among *con we Awl a notioe of the Pitcher Portrait of Wallington. We believe that C. L _Ward, log., of Towanda, Bradford eollniy, Pa boo me of *eft Pitcher Portraits, neatly framed, whioh he prises, not only for Ito rarity, but beoarao a capital like ness of the Pother of hie Country. We alsO find here, two additional verses to Home, Sweet Home," written by Howard 'Finns himself, and p. (resented, in 1833 or 1834, to an American lady, wife of as eminent busker in London. They run thus : To us, in despite of the absence of years, How tartest the rennurtbranos of home atilt appears ; From allnreinents abroad, which bat flatter the eye, The unsatisfied heart turas, and sap with a sigh, Rome, home, sweet, sweet home! . There's no plaza likehonie " There'r no plane like hymn! Your exile fa bleat with all fate:nan beat p le, But nuns bee been okeeker'd wititinerig a-won Yet though different our fortunetynur , _thoughts are . the same. And both, u wa think of Columbfa i Rome. home, mallet, owlet • . There's no plane like home!. There's no place like homol In addition to those already neitioed;we have seonived" the following perhalleals for Tune : The Denial cosmos and the journal of Ai Fran institute. The Habeas-Corpus C4ge. EASTON, June IA 1881 Wormg:.4Efort • Cr pus ,P . sasse: Enclosed -I senclyou for puhlfoiticsn'sCoopyoe a: lettef ' to the Sserstary of Mir, embodying ray . views 'the lea : begs corpus- difficulty.' I think it presents a legal solution of the question, anti Will satisfy the Minds of many man who wish to believe that thbi resist anew of :judicial - - authority was right and find difilenity doing o." If you think it is a commit solutitn of the question in a legal point of view, will yon do me the fevor to endftise and ipprove it? Yours truly, EASTON, Pa., June 7, 1861. Bost Biafora eastimon, 600rsta27 or War. Dan but ; The 00111sitine between the Oivil and Military authorities at Bt. boobs and Baltimore, besides their intrintio interest to all our °Maul, have to lawyere an additional and spatial. interest, because of the professional charaoter - of the ques tions involVed.' Al ilioiyar, I have had some de aided' opinions in respect to them ever eines they oecutred, which I have freely expressed to friends, who suggested that I should communicate them to you. Atter some hesitation, '1 hive oontiluded that there would be no improprietyin doing so. It oc curs to me that the apparent ; technica l advantage which has accrued to the civil tribunals in.the mat ter is due not at all to the actual or legal Morita of their positron; bat,l on the contrary, to' the er roneous and defective shape inwhieh the othefaida of the due was brought into court, and put on the record. Every lawyer Anows.that inylefendant in' a behead!' corpus may bo.put in the:wapiti; the strong point of his case is not well jet forth in the return, with all the necessary inetaining aver manta, which, I submit, was not done la'either of the oases referred to Almost every layman has an instinctive conviction that the military autho rities were right, and'yet, on reading the cue, is at a loss to toll upon- what-prineiple or for what legal reason. It only needs a correct return to de velop it, and I have drawn the following form for that purports. It has been drawn hastily, and npon the careful analysis and digestion which it should have_ before being used, is doubtless sea eeptible of improvement, butit nevertheless pre, sentethe lam allegation that - the party detained is belt ea a prisoner'of war; and' also' oontains the " o r /flou ts necessary.te show that the defendant bee the right to siege/re and detain prileseri ef war: Boom of these avertgents are suet as the magistrate would probably be bound to know jit- Moistly, without their being astforth,"but it is wall to Include them all, eepeoiallybefore a judge given to eaeilling in the ease. It is easily altered to nit the case of a writ directed to the enooessor or in ferior °Moor of the commander under, whom the arrest was made. YOH CY RITUAL " To the lion. Roger B. Taney, Chief htstice of the Supreme Court Of the United States : The undersigned, to whom is direoted the within writ, in -;obedience thereto makes the following return : 'Xhat the said J. U., in said writ mentioned, is in the custody and keeping of this defendant, and is restrained of his liberty, as in laid writ set forth, , for the following oatuae---to wit That when the said J. M. - was first restrained of his liberty as aforesaid, and from thence hitherto, a war has exhrted between the Government of the United States and a Government called the Confederate States of America; that hostile armies were, and still are, in the field on either able, between whom engagements have already , taken place ; that when the said J. M- first came into the onstody of this defendant; and from theme hitherto, this defendant was tt brigadier general in one of said hostile arnalea—to wit : -in the arvoy.of the Iraitekilgtittes--- and lit the actual ootexpart4 of a portion of said army, ena of the militery department as created and deitied by the President of the.. United' Bini9l9 ihroigh the Doperiniellt of WitT that inc within named 1. DI, has not been arrested or detained und er any civil,. propose, or pretence of civil jprones 1,". or for the purpose 'of committal into the hands of the clvii tribunals for trial, but that, being frbindly to and connected with the hostile army, be Was engage*. IA satiating their hostile operations against the army of the United States, and for that reason was captured in the said military department- under 'IN/ tg, , ,mmand, by the trooiss under my emaroz,nd, as a prisoner of war, and he ie hehrand.detainad by me in my capacity of brigadier general, so a prisoner of war of the army of the- United States." A return spbstantiilly of this tenor (whilst it would not at all prevent the handing Alves of Mr. I. M. to the-courts for trial for treaton or any other offence ' when the Government was ready to do soy would, it seems to me, at once paralyse the judge for the further action on the habeas corpus, and put en end to the oentroverey. Who opiaion of the Chief Justice, which, with rowali plausibility, a vails the summary aation of a military commander in arresting and detaining a eitiaen without pro cots, for the commiasion of an °genes indlotable in the courts, would become so inalpricatle that he *odd be attuned to nee it, for the point presented for his decision would be entirely changed. No judge could gainpay or controvert the force of snob te rotate, it seems to me, ezoept upon absurd and aateyable Feeede. Me would be compelled to thrust his judicial authority into the,oamp of a fighting army and dispute with the conimander the - ] right to decide who are and who are not . prover prisoners of fo war ; and, he nhavi mustrped the power to judgti lhat question, then, open etri• dense given before him, decide that J. M. had not committed `any act to justify his being captured and detained as a prisoner of wale. All this he must do before he owald aaespe the force of the facts stated in t4e rotqrn i and he would be wrong at every step. Writ, (to reverse the order in which I have stated these points,) the return is true in dealt noting J. M. as a prisoner of war. To put a man in that category, is needs not that be be captured in fight. A sentinel, a scout, a picket, a spy, a party building or destroying a bridge or road for the benefft of a hostile army, or providing means of subsistence or transportation, or faellWee of attack or defence, or in any way giving aid and comfort to the enemy, being captured, is as legiti mately a prisoner of was as if stricken down in the thiolt of tha dglft. ge may. or may. net, in doing this be o traitor, but if he Is, thet, of oorirse, auntiet ezempt him from militarroapture as an enemy, Secondly, whether the civil magistrate does or does not consider hint a proper._prisoner of war is lof no sort of ootaiscquenoe. /iv is not the judge of that volition, and' cannot inquire into it. It is enough for him to know that the proper military authority has passed upon it, and he must treat it sus a r reusi'lliteaketln. When an tinimeetienable return informs him that a military commander, In time of war. In tfighting army, in presence of the enemy, has acted in thb case with& the bounds of his military jarlailletiou and authority, and parsed upon the merits, the function of the judge is ended, the return is Sendoff's's, and the law says to him 6, hands off " There can be no divided empire between the general and the judge in passing upon AIM merits, set east sledge Intim the army and hear appeals from the general's captures and de cisions. The - latter must have the exoludvit control of his prisoners, Re may find it noose- sary to hang , them eft spies, to release them on parole, to hold ..theit NO hostages, wake ea change. with the enemy, or execute mein in re prisal. If a civil magistrate is allowed to super vise and restrain thin nniversally-conceded entho rity aid oentrol, the power of the general Ii broken, his command disorganiast, - and the oamp becomes the Gomm of puerile absurdities. If civil magistrates have mush a right, it extimdi, of course, t. all prisoners of war ; and to.test it by the argu ment 64 csorwrolion, lot us suppose that Jeff. Davis, Gen. Beauregard, and a thousand others, (traitors as well as enemies like T. b 1.,) are oaptured in a. fight, and that akidge in the wake of the army is- , Loos a habeas corpus, and is informed, by the rt . turn that they are prisoners of war, will any mane man hold that he, hat a right to inquire into the merits, and, if he deem them improperly held, set them...at liberty? and if be cannot do this, why Tr the rlahlrti Is conelusive upon Malin the one cane, why not in the other? I cannot be lieve that a judge could be found who would he hardy enough to go behind the return to commit so grows an sot of naked usurpation , or an executive Pricer silly enough to 'gaunter . his write, Ie titer should attempt it there is a way to deal with them quite effeotive, and quite within the bounds of the 'Law. Respeotfully yours, Another Barrel Mystery. BODY O A BIIPPOSBD ICORDERID MAN POUND IN ;MICA [From - [From Chicago Tribune, McWm.] Yesterday . , (Sunday morning,) as two Soototunen were rowing a - boat in the Illinois Central rail road basin ' they found a half submerged barrel floating in the water, After tasting it, thor found it to contain something of weight, and it was taken ashore. The men then hawked the head in, and were horrified at finding the dismembered remains of a man. The barrel was a common flour barrel, with the brand 14 Riohmond It bad evidently been fastened to weights, the rope lashing: of which had worn loose. . . The remains were much decomposed, but were believed to ha asiAbllahad AA these of a fall•grown man. The droll we fractured. The trunk' showed a bullet hole in the breast. Both legs were tint off, this roughly done, and by no expert. Coroner James, whose attention was , immediate. ly Galled to the matter, took charge of the/Soma" and will notlimezioe a rigid examination to-day. It is namely possible but that Nome fearful crime has thus been brought to light. 4 / 1 221 "" ScOTT °6 BUCTII-DAX— COUSCITIViCi,-/t 18 a singular oeinoidenso that ThuradaY, the I.3ch instant, which Is to be ob served sea day of finning and prayer in the rebel States, if the anniversary of the-birthday of Qen. &Ott. The lime day, therefore. might very properly be observed in the loyal States ass day of thanksalving mad praise- General Soett 711 bornin t llB4). • ROUND ABOUT WASHINGTON. The Wanderings, Pondoriage, and Outof-the r way Loitering of a Ravin Yankee. We have had a storm—so fine a storm (to quote the language of the old , players) as you'll see on a summer's day, my masters. If in this magnificent national humbug, this abominably . fascinating Federal capital; this rigorously patrlotic".village of geometrical -ir reconcilabilities, we cannot manage to .cg keep a hotel," (still further to draw upon dramatic phraseology, but more modernly,) we cam con. hive to accomplish two little feats, Which ex hibit to an illimitable extent the resources of the metropolis—a grand squall of dust, a per feet sand-quake, and :a shower.of rain, which; 'for velocity,. impetnosith,ferocity, and °mitt nirenityrean compare favorably with the most celebrated squalls, ancient or modern, foreign or domestic. In fact, this city is one great egnalh Squalling children through the streets, squalid boom every Where, and, over all and above all, a never-ending squall, either of dust or rain. If it is sunshiny, the air is filled with a mist of golden sands, which glitter before your eyes, darn up your nose, daub up, your' linen, and sprinkle yon miseellaneensly-froin , head to, foot.. On ,the ether hand; ib may. take a sudden._ Action to, shower, when the whole aspect of street and avenue is that of a running series of raging canals. Am I quizzing you 7 'son my conscience; you cannot imagine the. extent of it• until yon have had a practical sight of it. If the dust isn't half way up your knees the mud is, which makes up the difference, and is very delightful besides, you know. On the: dip el ; laded to, I saw two - gusts of dust and two` squalls of rain, the last of which was a regulaF tilt, and fairly opened the senses of the unini. fisted. It poured, it hailed, it blew—noW in great drops, acquiline bomb-shells, bursting in great pools; now in steady missiles, pious ly perpendicular ; and now in sheets of water, dashing against window-panes, driving against honse-tops, and whirling in eddies and whirl pools twenty feet up in the air. Such soughs of' water can only be imagined when they en. velop the ont-door passer-by in their drown ing folds. Ugh I Only think of a poor.devil swimming and floundering in a Christian street, among gutter-frogs, sewer.rats, cats, and pup pies, and other poor devils, like himself, jostled about like so much driftwood. Think of thelnaddy water one has to swallow,.and the tiocOngenial, acquaintances one must pick up. Nobody can understand it who has not taken a dive into it. It is equal to Colonel Walton'' adventure with the pirates. They whipped him until he was utterly disgusted. It soaks you until you are perfectly disgusted —one of these June squalls, 'od rot 'em 1 While the storm was raging I stood in the southeast angle of' Willard's Hotel. (It is the hotel which you have doubtless heard is to be attuched to the army, because it charges so finely I) This angle overlooks the avenue and adjacent streets for a great distance. It com mends a view of Fourteenth etreet to the canal, the President's rear grounds, and the little plot of ground known as Union Place. But little was to be seen except a sea of water below, and a blinding fall above. The gutters 090 A overflowed, lunnaating aka streets:. The rivers of water which the tin-drains emptied from the roofs gradually augmented the I depth until every pavement was half foot deep. Suddenly, an explosion was heard. The grand sewer had burst. In a moment a flood of water broke upon the scene in great billows, dashing against doors and windows, sweeping all before it. The Avenue roared like the sea. In many places it was ten to twelve feet deep on the south side, while at any point 'a steamer of light tonnage might have moved. Indeed, the intense shower had scarcely passed when the boys were men. 'miring a yawl from the canal up Fourteenth street around Willard's corner, and thence to the President's gate, amid the oud shouts of the lookers on. The sight was both novel and comical. A. U. RWlireElt. At last •the rain oeaacd, the clouds broke asunder, and isles of blue, spri kled With sun. shine, began to edge themselves through the solid sheet of zink overhead. A party of us sallied out on the upper pavement. The gut ters and streets were still running in broad, deep streams, bearing all manner 01 odds.and• ends, upon their bosom. 'lore a chicken coop,lhere market-basket, not tn . " Mention one or more articles of female wearing appa rel of. the lower class, servant.girls, perhaps, I spied, too, a pipe and tobacco-box, two 4ecks of playing-cards, and 'a tamborine, with a hole in its head. As we were passing up Fourteenth street, near G, we came upon three Men, or rather two men, in the act of 'Wales a being, whoae-aspect was that neither of man nor beast, he was so waddled together. His dress,wis meanly cut, and altogether seedy. He - irore no hat, and his hair bristled on its ends like the quills of a porcupine, or, at least, like the descriptions of those imple ments, for I cannot say I ever saw the originals myanif. His nose was sky-blue, and his eyes scarlet, and his demeanor entirely unruly. "Let him go!" said one of his attendants, as we approached. The man shook himself, like a half-drowned dog. "Let him go!" repeated the first. Just then the restrained individual broke loose, the water pouring from him. ce Come boys!" roared he, f$ let's have another swim and he plunged into - the foaming get ter, head and ears, and struck out boldly. cc Ah, ha," murmured one of our party," only drunk!" So we passed on, leaving the trio to the agreeable sport—the one of swimming in the gutter, the others to drag him out. I expect the poor devil needed cold water, and the bath may not do him much harm. It is bright now. The sun stares down with an intensity which surprises the white fences— —the white door-steps—the white 4, small houses" in the outskirts, into a, mete glare of wonder. It is prodigiously warm. Alas, the poor soldier! Knapsack and marching are not the most comfortable ideas these days. AAA TRINOUARD. WASHINGTON, JUNO 12, 1861. Our Country forever. [A. Proposed National Anthem. I Ons COUNTRY ronnvan ! on the folds of her flag This motto of freeman Is blazoned full high : Roo up the proud ensign, from the loftiest crag Of Liberty's sleep let it float to the sky. gloat freely forever, Our banner of stare; Wave, wave on the breath Of freemen's Imam. Our Country forever, let time tell the story : Our Country forever, unending her glory, Mazza! bursa! huzzal Otis COMITET 7011.2va1l the Hogan of battle, When ealled to defend our attars and homes; Th' artillery's roar and rausketry'o rattle Shall echo thelheme in conquering tones, yukt feebly forever, Oar banner of gaze: Wave, wave , on the breath Of freemen's hurzaa. Our Country forever, let time tell the story : Our Country forover, anevaing her glory. iluzSto hazes'. henna! Ova Cowmen , : vonnvin ! when peace pipes its lay, And the soft dultwt notes are putting the air, With wide we will blocs thee, with gratitada yrs) , That millions unborn in thy blessinge may share. Float freely forever, Oar banner of stars ; Wave, wave en the breath Of freemen's! hassle. - Oar Country forever, let time tell the story: Our Country forever, unending her glory, Hasse I hnssa! hum ! Ova COMMIX FORIVIR ! glad voice of the nation, Whose liberty east the rich ransom of blood ; Reav'n hasten the day of the world's liberation, When Freedom shall triumph on field and on Float freely forever, Our banner of stars; Wave, wave on the breath Of freemen's hams. Onr Country forever, let time tell the story Our Country forever, unending her glory, Hum bona! hoses OUR COTIATRT TM wear ineath the blue, Thy DIMS aid thy Roma bright and options Shall be, Thine honor we'll guard-hearts and hands ever true, °Amble. ! we nue all and give all to thee. Pleat freed* forever, Our banner of stare; Wave, wave on the breath Of freeman's buzzes. Oar Coniiirx f6itAyst, let Tines tell the dal" .! Our Country forever, unending her glory. fluzza ! hums hum! A. EL REIM ROPILIFAOPIIItZ OF HEAVY oft.DNANOP.—At tbo fdoctls Deacon Iron Voundry over two hundred operatives are now employed in manufaoturing heavy ordnance and projectiles for the Governmenc. At tbil foundry are now nicking not only twelve and thirteen-int% Shell for Mortars, but shell for ten•lnoh oolumbiads, and shot and sun and six -pounders, with canister and grape. From, two to three hundred or shot and shell are made per day, and about twelve guns per week. Many r e.ooe sappbte that marten and heavy ordnanoe are east hollow, ready, after finishing, for use. This is a mistake. The gun is east solid and then bored. The Government inspection is of the most rigid ohev.tor t and for the slightest deviation, even the thousandth part of an Melt, the gun is rejected . We sew one heavy nine-inch Dahlgren navy gun which was ent in three pieces for the furnace, sim ply because, in finishing the outside, where it could net be turned , the workman bad chipped Off whit of iron u big only as a tea cent piece. The gun waxiest as geed as any one that had been made, but tin imirotor lad rejected it. NO. VII.--THE STOILM. —" dwellers_ nethcfplaesa, may be cellars." TWO CENTS. The Causes of Secession. or Ttio PrinONl The true causes of secession-what are ;they? The last nuraber of the Edinburgh Review gives the following anSwer, which I copy for your valuable paper - The free States of the eountry, notwith ,standing their disadvantages of soil and cli mate„'were prospering, while the slave States' were not advancing .in a corresponding de gree. The North was absorbing all the vigo. roes voluntary labor of emigration; it was rich; it was covered with profitable railroads; it was full of schools and'general intelligenee, while the South was poor, and frequently obliged to pledge its coming crop for the necessaries of the present year. Certain' disagreeable facts became increasingly pro minent. In 1791 the population of the. slave States was larger than that of the trek by. 66,007 persona. In 1860 the number of square miles possessed by the. South largely exceeded that of the North ; but Northern population was ahead of Southern by 5,440,- 870 persons. The rate at , which population (owing, of course, in great measure, to im migration) increased in the free States; in the last ten.years, was forty-oneper cent.; in the stoma States, twenty-rdne, Per . cent. The only; decrease In city population 'which the. 'hust, feettNlNVidtao2wlta' of 0;000 soul& in rharleti-. ton. Virginia, which, in 1790, had the first place In population, had sank to the fifth in 1860. Of eight States which contained over a million of inhabitants, only two were slave `States; and of twenty-one cities containing over 40,000 inhabtants, only five were Southern cities. The imports into the States south of Mary land, in 1859, amounted to 13,000,000, or one twordieth only of the , whole importation of the country. A revenue was derived from the post offices in the free States, while in the slave States the expenditure exceeded the receipti annually by $3,500,000. The total agricultural and manufactured products of the North were sixty per cent. in value above those of the south. The North contAbuted five-sixths of the Federal revenue; even including cotton, the exports of the South wore $22,000,000 below those of the North, and the imports of the free States exceeded those of the slave States by $216,000,000. The improved lands of the South were only es ten per cent. against fifteen peecent. in the North, and land thus occupied was worth six dollars per acre in the slave • States, and nineteen dollars in the free States. When we add to these considerations that the proportional representation gives the free States 160 Representatives and the slave States only 84, and that the economic exigen cies of slavery require new territory to re place the overrun and exhausted lands of its reckless and nomadic cotton cultivation, we can understand how the South, groaning un der these disabilities and wilfully blind to their cause, adopted the Idea that the North was the vampyre which lived upon it and sucked its blood, and that connexion with the North was the fatal incubus which pressed it to the ground. . In' the list of grievances put forward the Seceders have not been honest with them. delves or the country. They raise false issues and conceal the true ones. They go out to gratify the mad_ ambition of their party lead ers, who, because they have lost the control of the Union, seek its destruction, that they may rule a fragment of it—the avarice of their commercial men, who gloat over the richest to be poured into their coffers by free trade—and the craving demands of their planters for new territory and fertile soil. They go out to rid themselves of the moral coercion of Northern sentiment, to pursue that brilliant 411,17 s /duos of. 'a-tropical destiny which forever floats before .:the eyes of their politicians, and to foapc fal,e/apire of which sla - very shall be the distinctive characteristic and controlling in terest." From Arizona. HORRIBLE INDIAN MASSACRE AT STILLS'S PEAS— TWO AMIRICANS ICILLID, AND SST'S altalitttG— THlC SAVAGES TORTURE THEIR VICTIIIB—A TRAIN ATTACHED, AND 3IOHTBBN BULBS STOLEN. (From the Manna vunee.) Au express reaohed. Attesilla on the evening of the Bth from the Western division of the overland mail route, bringing most appalling intelligence and details of recent Indian outrages in the neigh. borhood or litoin'e Porta, Arizona. Cadillac., who was reported to have been killed - in Sonora, bee retained with. hie braves to the scene of his former operations, determined to wage wax to the knife. The eomparetive quiet of the last two months his evidently been ocoasioned by the absence of the Indiana in some part of Mexico, where they have undoubtedly removed their women and children, that they might be in security while they carried on their warfare. The unfortunate removal of the overland mail at a time when a difficulty with these Indians was rife, has no doubt served greatly to embolden the Indians—they undoubtedly attri buting the abandonment of the route entirely to their forays. Nine men are missing, and it is feared have all been massacred, although there exists a hope that some of them may be retained as prisoners. The savages inflicted , upon some of their victims a hor rible torture, and exhibited a refinement of cruelty unparalleled in the catalogue of Indian barbarities. From the expressman, Mr. Pride, we gather the following particulars : A nrovision wagon left Tanks station on April 231, 'Edward Donnelly and Patricia Irontone in charge, to get a load of dour at the Ban Oilstone station. They started on their letarn, but never reached the Tanks. The next day two express man, Messrs Paige and O'Brien, left the Tanks westward bound, and never reached the fian s Cl. mono station, and have not since beeraheard of. Oo the 27th a coach left the Tanks for the'West, in whit& were five persons—Mr. J. J. Giddings, su perintendent of the Ban Antonio and San Diego Mail Company, Michael riles, road agent, and Anthony Alder, Samuel Neely, and Mr. Brim), employees of the Overland Mail Company. Two of the mules which left in the coach returned to the Tanks sta tion ' badly imbed, and had evidently been in a severe straggle: This ninny:estates aroused the suspicions of all, and our informant went the next day to Fort McLane and applied for an escort of troops to investigate the matter. A lieutenant and sixteen men were deapatched, who on Monday, near .Stein's -Peak, met a train of W. S. Grant, army contractor, who gave them information of their having a fight with Outlines' and his braves, and eon. - firmation of the fears that the coach had been oriptared by the Indians at or near Doubtful Pass. Etts train had been attacked the day previous, ten miles east of the San Climate station ; the mules had bean stampeded_ -A running fight occurred in pursuit of the Indians, in which one Indian was killed and two mortally wounded, and all the mules but eighteen recovered. The train reached Stein's Peak about dark: They found scattered along the ravine nowa r arsr• and attar Midi matter, pieces of harness, &a. The roof of the station (which was same time since abandoned had been burnt, the corral-wall had benii thrown down, and the Indians had formed a breastwork Of it around the spring. Near the station the bodies of two men were found, tied by the feet to trees, their heads reaohingwithin eighteen inches of the ground, their arms extended, and fastened to pickets, and the ovtloncor of a slew lea tinder their heads. The bodies had been pierced with arrows and lances. They were sa disfigured as to render recognition impossible. They were buried by the employees of the train. Fearing an attack from the Indians, the train was immediately pushed ahead in the night, without being able to make farther examinations. Oar informant, on meeting the train, returned and brought -to Meath. the intelligense, and the pointers kept on together, with an emigrant train travelling with them for protection, to tee scene of the difficulties. The soldiers will remove the men and stook at San Cimone and Apache Pass stations to Dragooa Springs, and °snort the emigrants to that place From New Mexico. [From the Mieeouri Republican 6eres 1&, May 20. To day ends the armistice with the rascally Na y/goes. During its continuance they did not con duct themselves even passably well, and they should not, therefore, again be placed upon trial netil they are made to know that retribution will surely follow close upon the heels of their misdeed.. The commissioner of Indian affairs and Cla , tain Wainwright, of the II R. Army, returned to Banta Po on Feiclatleat, fr om the OaManithe country, whither they bad been for the put tan days " holding a talk " with those Bedouins of the prairie. They were met in council by six of the principal diets, who proposed a treaty of peaoa, but their White brothers thought it beet, before trusting them so far, to teak their friendship by an armistice of three months, which was accordingly entered into. on the 7th the Apeehes attaoked three Awed onus, on the road between Fort Stanton and boo Cruses, on their return from the latter plaos with a oart load of provisions. The Ameruiana made their elscape, and the Indians appropriated the inures and doundiehed the *art. In the neighborhood of Stein's Peak and Pine Alto, they have reoently been trying their hand against the persons of the whites, and stealing their property. The citizens of Meanie held coast ing. on the evenings of the 100 t and /Uh l for the Purpose of organizing a company of ranges to take the field ageinat them. It is to be hoped that they may soon be in the saddles, and *crane the 'wadi fury ssoundrele to their hiding-Niece, and inniot upon them sanguinary punishment. The Smi Jnan minas thus far have been profit less, and from present indloations are net likely to improve. A few Billing east of this plane there has been an abundance of rain, extending over a large area of country. The earth has been thoroughlY soak ed to the depth of fourteen inchea—a God-send to an arid country like New Mexioo. Polities tioieseeet—l wish yen could MI 118 =Mph. NAZARETH M. E. Cutmou.—The ladies of tigo J, tf, Alday pastor, sent four hnndrad haTelooks last w." to the Twenty third Pennsylvania regiment, stationed at 7ittehingten *city. The facility with which this work was executed iodinates auftiofectly the enthasissm of the donors . They received inHmattoa of The Reed et the havelocks on sfiturday evening. On Tuesday the cow i ng o perations were commenced, and on Pride; the entire four hundred havelooks ' made of the best material, And a Um most sahaMistki manner, were on their way to camp. Ar Alday gave every assistance in his power to the charitable enter prise, which rodaota 'credit upon Ids church, PP' WEEKLY PRESS. Ilizniur Paw will Ira lost iralliMPOre *id (par amnia in 'saris's.) at ight. 1 3• Ines, - Lie Tweet! Twenty Copier, or erir soak sabooriber,) lutok— For a Chat of Tweatr-ono or won, ors wilt mai se litakoory to the rettrettes of ilt• Chi. Nl' Postmasters areiriesestod to sot as *LOAM for Ter Weimar Peresi CALIPOitII" banta4 tares finial Month, is tine f tulluraie /Heathers. Ma, DAYTON'S Itgeirrlatt AT TIEN- TOILICRINS. ;From the Faris Correspondent Mlle N.Y.Deraid.l Ponta, May 24. The publication of the, new minister's instruc tions, accredited by the Government of-Weehing ton to the Court of the Tuileries, has scarcely, pro duesd a lees beneficial effect here than with you. Mr. Dayton's formal reception at the p a l e*e was a species of ovation. You are aware that on snob 000itS.OWS it is usual for a suite of court earring's, with the servants in State livery, to placed at the disposition of thl minister and his attaches. In this instance 'only the customary forms wore complied with. Mr. Dayton bad a carriage and four, and the various members of ;the legation fol lowed in imperial carriages and pairs. that the Mr a agistanaoo wore appals!, pad the interest , widen sur rounded the Men almost recalled' to mind the memorable embassy of Franklin; when - Amides had jest vindicated its right to a places among.the. nations of the world. Crowds of persons: followed the cortege to t es palace gate*, and during the receptteb tha Pil6ll. :du Carousel wad half full of parties aonverdniffn' ;the most • animated tones on the vigorous , ' polder .; which it was now understood was to be pursued, / • with the traitore and, rebels across the Atlantis. ' • independent of - his 'public; • audience ton - hal hid a private oni3with the.ikUperor, and, (though what passes te the, Imperial closet !knot, • for vulgar ears, enough has oozed out toi - make It' evident that a veryditierent opinicinvfothi•ntatir afrainsin 4saa'tioanow.prevails frook#944l/14 . *slated befare.. It is known that the:Ampere, ; dot sairuple eipress bid approbation of-deb :mashy, and thoroughly uncomoronnst.ng spirit: ozkihiceot by all drosses- of the North, and that he, was at no pains to conceal his regret that a dank should ever fora' moment have ventaltheinif•the Polley of the-Administration at Washingtoo. • 7 Among the eitisans.of Paris—always en the gess: 'Vivo at the smell of gunpowder-the snot - of the' publication of Mr. Beward'a Inetrnetioes u extiieW ordinary. All the belies eanneeted with the•trade: of North America have been beset with applica tions from those - desiring - to bear arms in• the cause. I have myself re :deed several lettere, - as your wslikitewn cerrespondent, inquiring whether , a French/legion would b• permitted to,do service in a cause - which is connected with freedom' all' over the world. Of course, but one answer has been given7-namely, that the Goveramentouf the, United States is strong enough in men and nioneY to chastise its rebellious States without any othnt aid than its own right arm, but, that itaannotfail. to be affected by the sympathy of a friendly :Mile& like PranO9 Had the contents of Mr. Eleward'S letter to Mr. 7 Dayton been known earlier, it is probable thai Mr Sandford, at whose instigation and it whodi apartments a meeting of the citizens of the North took place last Friday, would not. SS minister ; of the Crated States to the Court of Itrassele,.baVil thought It necessary tcy summon it In ettolvhdle and•oorner fashion that many -who tjwietadl hive been glad to have had an opportunity of piaci:kW- Z Inhibitingl their sympathy were exoluded r ei 'i i : all events, prevented from attending. The saaillOW assigned for making no public announireasent - .of , the intended meeting is, that in Paris there , are many resident Southerners who might have mini- . tired with It, In addition to the - thirty-Ave thoit: , Sand francs immediately collected for the ps!irobraali. of war ersafertei. I understand that- a furtheesurn, of 15,000 franca has been °ciliated, and that - this' sum may Noon be expeoted to be infinitely largo, now that. the tiol'orlizaent of Washington .hai spoken out as a strong man should Speak, when bib temperance and general forh'earanoe are manifest;' lypat upon. It • whs, however, no wonder that in France„.llll elsewhere, people WM illepossai to think the - North but half in earnest'when a emarant of the .teclivein-• meat sets about getting up a meeting of its °Mauna abroad in this miserable manner, for feat of of-, fending certain gentle eympathizers in trine hideous' rebellion. Every Autortoerreorreepoudeut, as every American citizen, blot ...sight to lump_ notice of such a meeting, ;Whether ha chose:CO, ail tend it or not, and r ant sorry 'to say that - stierip remarks are being male that any officer of the euvernment should have flinched from the most public appeal in a cameo from which se few would be found wanting. - Some curiosity is expressed respecting the greet . anniversary of the Fourth of July. Will the meeting on that oecasion be also got up hole•and= corner fashion for fear of offending some rich Vir ginia gentleman - a ? To be sure, these "gentlemen. keep splendid equipagea, feed oonsiderably, and have *it cumghters to dispose of ; but, for all that, I, for one, hope to IMO the great anniversary of the United State , held this year more whitely, more ceremoniously, and, if possible, with greater ex tent than on any previous occasion, that all :France may know that, a mighty and puiseant within, built on the eternal root of liberty ,for all the pie of of God, is both able and resolved to hold its own against all comers, whether from within or without. Mr. Dayton has also just had the honor of being publicly reeelved by Prince Napoleon and the Princess Clothilde. Thu morning's Moxisteur announces that, in oensequenoe of the state of affairs in America, the Bmporor has thought it necessary to at:agates the Preach naval station at the Antllliis by gate, a gunboat, and two despatch boats. The Conetituttonstsf seeing to opine that the di plomatiete of Europe Will, alter all, have to step In to settle the American diffioulty—" Int-verges Bitted." Without referring to diplomaoy, this I may with perfect truth affirm, that there le no moiety of thinking, well-informed persons that does not up, hold the cause of the North against the South as simply one of common sense. A Sußscuissa. Despatches from our Ministers Abroad. (From the Washington Correspondent of the Bow York He liressusiarots, Jane 21, 1861. The Government received this morning volumi nous despatches from several of out ministers in Europe. Mr. Sanford, minister to Be lgium, had arrived at his post, and had had a most satisfac tory interview with that Government respecting American affairs. It appears that the Belgian Cl.reromeot takes the dement interest in the struggle now going on in the United States between the sections, and unhesitatingly declares its strong sympathy with the North . Nearly every Govern. ment in Europe, both great and small, excepting Great-Britain, is with the North in their present contest. It farther appears that the Southern commis sioners are rather shabbily treated. They bays not, as yet, succeeded in any partionlu in their negotiations ()Mille of Great Britain they have been unable to aecomplieli anything. They de. snatched enb agents to several of the European Governments, to purchase arms and minima/ of war, but the agents had returned, having tailed in their mission. Lettere have been received from Mr. Adams, our minister to England, in whiob he gives a detailed acoount of interview he had with Lord John Rue sell. The present condition el this country' was fully dileuseed. Mr. Adams direoted his restarts to the position assumed by Lord John Rumen, with refereed,a to a recognition of the rebel Government in the Southern States, and desired to have a clearer interpretation f his SPLIWS. Lord John Burnell said he had tattered no sentiment that. he supposed could be taken as an expression against the Government of the United States, or in sym pathy with any attempt tending to overthrow that; Government. A prepaid= was blade by ens et the parties to put their interview in writing; but ob jection was made to this, and for satisraotory resume was not urged. "Asa enbstitutefor this, Lopi John =lured Mr, Adams that he would Mauna 'ord Lyons to have an interview with Secret:xi, ille:eieed, and he expressed to Mr. Adams the earnest belief and hope that the result would be perfectly satis factory to the President of the United Static. I am assured authoritatively that the ten.. of the English Government, by the last advises, received to.d.y, is ranch more decided towards our Govern ment and against the rebellion, and Lord John Ramiro rebuke, administered to Mr. Gregory in Parliament, to taken - ae one oyid..o. .4 Gat_ There are other private and strong reasons which will appear in the official correepondence.. The proposition of oar Government, of in &Cie 's:ion to the dealasattses of the Parte - Conferentli, was still before Lord John Russell. _Before an answer can be received by our Government. the other European Governments; who are :parties to the treaty, will have to be heard from. It's stated that Lord John ituasoli 11.4 itirea47lhOiielli thaw, and wan anxiously awaiting their replies. ma GRAPE' Or SENaron Doer orai.—The leago Tribune says.:':"Throughout yesterday rkmen were preparing at Cottage arove,..the tioipated homestead of Judge Donglaa, s Valle for the reception of his remains; the naive* Itottire appropriated for all the living, in place of the home where he bed hoped to peep the even hog a n kle days. An excavation seven feet in dePtEchas teen Made in a reddish, gravelly soil, a brick flooring has 'been laid, and the sides walled up with brick, and arched over about three feat in height. nie L of crates, will form but a temporary tomb. The . sr 'salon could not be better, and is especially ap propriate, as the site was a favorite one with Senator Douglas, and wee seleolted blip ae frbo spot for Me future residence. It Is iteinadittely adjacent to the spot where his permanent.ttanikand monument will be reared, to mark the spot, This tomb is being erected upon a high . .hnoll some three acres of Cleared ground ' bounded on i1i0 4, 4 4 and north by heavy vane, on the ear by the lake, and on the south by the Langley estate, in which direction the funeral cortege will probably enter." DisITRICT COMM. Ma Ballo—Judged Share- Weed' Strand s and . Hero —The court, to gaged With the argument Nit to les Sad !alibi,. QUARTER, SESSlons—Judgo Allison - liam Young, s lad, pleaded guilty to a charge =of stealing a ham. He took it from a store door, end SFraitjg the act. , nors t *O'Neal pleaded piny - to oluiteita earrying a concealed deadly weapon. A warallea knocked down in Baker Street, and a polleemin, 'who came upon the spot, took O'Neal ac th - 5 . man wnv ea u earemitted the assaults and, - mum learch. bur him, found a " billy. " - William J. Murray was charged with committing an assaults and battery upon his father and' sister. The evidence showed that the assented wee subject to ...nooks of insanity:. was for Mlle that'll/ an inmate of the Insane Asylum, and while there big insanity took the lormrd enmity toward MOM bars of his family. The District Attorney submitted the bill, and rtiu'atod a verdict of not a nilty, on the ground of iusanity. John O'Donnell was charged with oommitting an assault and battery with Intent to k£R, and the inn convicted him of the supple assault aid. hat. James Loney was convicted of a olterga of ',troop . • • - - THZ lATJ FRANCIS PSTRItS.--77110, remAltte of the lota Mr. Franoie reterip.l4ey9 I;i9.4s.ht to this eity from Pirill t whim.- be , died on, tlia letat of May. The femoral ef the :deceased - J*3U take ? boa this afternoon, from pi, residenott. pf olote=s, No 2011 Walnut street. 'The MUMMA will be at Chrbt Obtrah buidit.gratind,:laita and Stroh streebt. 5 05 —......—. a OA. MiMaiiii Important Irani France. LEGAL INTELLI6ErfcB.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers