The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 04, 1861, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE PRESS.
IMOD DAILY, (BONDAYB MOM TED')
DI JOriN we gOWWilro
8911180 V.. Of OICEEIDIUT LIMN
DAILY PRESS,
7wxLvE CT3TS PER WRIX, payable to the Carrier.
Mailed to Subeeribere out of the City et Six DOLbA as
1:R ANNUM, Fool DOLLARS TOR EIGIIT INONTHR,
klitliß 'MULES TOR Six hloirits--invariably in ad
snob for the time ordered.
!RI-WEEEILY PRESS,
Mailed to 9ubaoribera out of the City at 'rasing DoL
L•1111 Annum, in advance.
SUMMER REsORTS..<
WHITE SULPHUR SPEINOS HOTEL,
0AR1.1511, E. Cumitnrisnd (mint,. Pis.
The Proprietors tske roessure in announoing to the
ipubile that this magnifiosat establishment is now open
for visitors. Persons whining tinre mountain air, melt.'
moat wows. bathing, iishing..and good living, at rea
sonable prone, oxneOt do better than to try these
spring.. F og perttounars send for Gimlets to
WM. H,nnd of the eltv of New York,
D . 0. pm itNETTi. Proprietors.
all -t het u7t •
Qll'A BATHING,
BRIGANTINR BOUSR,
BRIGANTINE BKAGH, N. J.
ithit open for the season. The Bathing, Fish,ng,
'Otanlog, cod Ynehtine belong very superior. .
r Boat+ •Irllt await itueete at the WA. on arrive.' of
trams. Board ow week $B. P. o._Beldrese. At)entio
O•it. . hilTd.
JPS-2m Proprietor.
Lower end ofIVLASSACHUSETTS AVOZItt4i,
ATLANTirI CITY.
This hones Is located Immediete/y_on the •Bo&Oh. &rid
lirDrents every sosommodation for Visitors.
Terms modarate. WILLIAM WI:Mt-ROUSE,
Je26-em Proprietor.
SEA-BATIJING, SAILING, AND FIST:I
-ING,
ATLANTATCH IC' Rll I W
. WOUSE.
Near - Stonington, ann. •
Thiel oalobrated watering-plane hotel, where the
faoilittee for Kathins, Nailtuß, FleltillS, and the enjoy-.
meet of the beet quality of sea foo are superior to
any other in the United States, will be opened on the
20 t h of Juno, 18$1, U, S. spivicsit.
Proprietor.
URI.GGS HOUSE,
ogicacio, ILLINOIS.
The undersigned reepeotfullv announce to their
friends, patron,, and the travelling pnblio generally.
that owing to the stringency of the times, they
_have
reduced the pride of onard to TWO DOLLAAD per
• dal.
Thankful for the patronage no liberalll hestroWed.
on them, they TitsPOOtrialt ask for oertriou'uto"
the same, assuring their patrons that the " BRIGGS'
will be conducted on the'satne liberal plan that has
heretofore characterized their establishment.
- - WIVL TTICTKEII & COI
4
RITTATINT 1101313 E.
DELAWARE WATER OAP.
We favorite place to now oven, presenting' inoressod
attraotions, for the season.
Lesvos Kensington Snot at 7 o'olook A. M., and &t
-itre at the Gap at o'olook P. M.
rsazness.—Franklin Poste. Morton MoMiohseL
lonia! A. (ioday. Samuel C. Itemizer, and Charles
SOW. L. W. liftootiVAD.
jela-lm Proprietor.
H iy .31;HAMBE,A," ATLANIIO
L CITY, N. J. •
' • 'd NPLENDLI) NEW HOUSE,
• B.S. Corner of . Atlantio and hlasseehusetts Avenues,
l ow oven for the_reoeution of Boarders.he Rooms and Table of 'tt FIE .414,11..e.td.8RA" are
ni ng h erra l s by aitV!
.o_ e _.___ 'end Refreahment Fa
loon attached to the House. TOTIIIII Moderate.
0. DUBOIS /e. 8. J. YOUSG.
Proprietors.
g EA-B iTlllO:G.—The lINITICD STATES
- 16-7 HOTEL., ATLANTIC. N J., is now open for
vieitore. This Is the largest and hest. furnished Hotel
on the Islend, and being convenient to the beach and
surrounded by extensive and welt shaded grounds, is &
desirable House for fumilies. It is lighted with gas
end .well.eup t il l ied with pure water. rho Germania
Hoeiety wilt rni
sh the innate for the season. The
ogqro stop e door of the ' Hotel for the o , nvenienee
UV.,
J4sageeLeia
5 • YmntlitAT:
UBMIIII9gION HOUSER:
SSIPLIY, HAZARD, & HUTCHINSON,
NO. na OREMENUIF 87.,
OOMMISSION MERCHANTS,
FOR i3F. BALE OF
PHILADELPHIA-MADE
GOODS.
~rrn-cn
MILLINERY GOODS.
Oft WROLEBALE STOOK. AT RETAIL.
THOS. KENNEDY & BRO
749 011ZISTN09 Prost, below EI6HT3I,
464 oilig;i1;81, gtoa, of
IVENOiI FLOWERS,
AND STRAW GOODS.
OHETALL.
CHEAP FOR CASH.
11111 CKIIIWA.
• • ~„
,Tidy
v PA
iirsiDulti van
RURAL DISTRICTS,
lire are prepared, an heretofore, to covet/ families M
eke beir , Oeintry•ilesldenoessrith,overy , desorietwit-of .4,
ruin OkIROGILIIIO3. TEMS, &C., &a.
ALBERT O. ROBERTS
CORNEA EIIEVEXTrit AB 'VINE STREETS
vtllB
EXOEL.SIO.R. HAMS.
Jr. H. MICTI-LENER th 00.,
OF.X.EIA4 FIOVLOIO3 VE:OI.EII2.
AILD MOMS OF 410111
err%RukkiiraD
"EXCELSIOR"
131.11111-01IXED Juan.
IWI, itsa AND 144 1/01.11 1 , 11.0241
lietween Area and Sacs dtreetsd
PHILADELPHIA ,
IrJOAtud.li-oelcbrated Fsoelzior Ham ore ourod
n. k Co. tin a etile peculiar to tlieutoelvas), ex
pressly to r mt ly use t are of delicious flvor, free :rope
. isne.unpleaeant tasty or salt, and are proton:moat/. la eat
2.e.eree superior to sal now offered for ealet
LOOKING
LOOV.I:IIO 4 .3IJASSES.
oxhiintiun - and oompleting now and elo
isstOtylno of
LOOKING•GWBEB,
t3ombinln6 all the latest Improvements and facilities I
manufacture.
Great novelties in Walnut and Gold, and Rosewood
and Gold Frames for MIRRORS. •
most extensive and varied assortment inith
country.
- JAMES S. .F.1.13LF; 24:5015T
. NAlllo3lf s ' - 41 - A:L"L . E R . lll B,
Sla OffEWTNUT STREET,
BANKING.
Altai II 13 T -Ei L M-0 N T &00 . ,
B A'N•K'E-R.S,
50 WALL BTRZIT . NEW :YORK,
issue; Letters of erectit to travellers, available in all
'usrtiof Europe, through the Mears. itottutohild of Pa
Pie; London, Frankfort, Naples, Vienna, and tkeir oor
respondents.
• FINN 'WATCH •REPAIRINC.
• IopERSONS HAVINGI7.N.WWATOIDriti
that have - hitherto elven' nO:plittislneticin'te , the
1 wearep, are invited to brine-thera ago where
aeteote ono be remedied MI „laird_
wrlpen. and the.
- . 01114re satismonon.
t: Cloaks, Musical Sloiefeb.4:4olirefally oat . in
complete order..
FAR &
It varier' of Watehne.Morn 0113 oxes, Moot!, &en
a -era ^ 394 °He:67MP' Street. below Yourta.'
- -
. . . .
/1A331 24111 T IPITBN/TUBE 4 4 4.1) BUJ "
N 6.0 LIALD TAiIIiZIL:•-!:Ir * - 1 • • '
MOOR CIA:IYIPION. •
No. 5161 5011711 SECOND STREET.
In connection with their extent:lye ' . (labinet Thaxiness,
are now mannfixotorl superiosale of
. • BILL el Tit , tom
d b.IM 110 W on hap ll Napo
& AP! N' 1 toppt OLISAIONS,
oh are pronounced. by ell who hire need theta, to
Esparto? .to 411 oche •-L .F • •
.For the ;meaty and oh of these: Titbit)! r ivi mtaall•
leotttrers refer to th_ll gumernus patronL. 11 1 1 0 so
the inion. who are seminar With the 011111'000140 their
work. . . .• . .
BUTSINEBB• UARDS;tl;'''
•
TOIIN WELSH, r'PRAOTIOAL -SLATE
ROOFER., TRIAD Btroet ' snd GERMANTOWN
• Road, II PrePliled Wont on onleimount of Roofing. 9 0
the moot • Anodorato terms. Will guaranty to, awed
.ovol7 priding perzootty 'rater - sigh Orders promptly.
lit - Wade " nrr7,l7:
' l lO.llll ELLIOTT, WINE2--ind LlQUotgii .
; Nos. 317 ald 319 WALNUT atip,et.(t_matgaenl •
pr IL hird vat
„g r o r y i t o r=e , grat
aii=iihe'd 1305 9 . ; isso-4
, itA14:00,3 &
BO NICTIO
DER LESON, • •
lABINIst
• 641'014 hallOir. arrett,
sier.m. 4 14 ri kil i eltdi MINISUL
Art_gt .. ,1447#. 14/4X0540.
:. !FWD tilAtqffirALlTO.BY, .
••• 411 NErvir n'Y ,eui, ,
I'L. nig* and RAini2 il eyary. redo
• ''.4llUktit., made -0 in. 4r. at; 09 / 1 1 10 ,
..
~ ; n1i .:4 1
~ t.I. - • WiauLA, ALE An a_
jaanufaattalr's ' ' -*: '
• ..-- FAirattlnc i•DO in a ■anterior ■atinalrr• .
...W.X;IJ , 11,104:41411/ • ' ' . . -•
• .1 -L Salllii.
03 1 vair fre
::rr 013.14111VX MAITIVAOTQBY...; iTT:c. , .!' i __.,. .__ , L . ~_.
I
L T o B o7 4l:7 B 47 lii rrig. 7lp rore.rri p iak : v 7 ,o o las t: s _ ta li rio ,' ,4 l .6 , : ;oo 2 l:ll IVI
poorsgte ;A :ll !4 o9:23 B4 li ii ri N llre . itl i
n ii tti b e: U pp g . Li t i ,i;o , ...)rdr w
oipn ..: :r ii.R oiavmm % 4l o to N .li i ,
*. ' rot ti tho s " u t o n a ,l 4 wi aciat — O ., kis iar k illattdr iil i T,
.
VOL. 4.-NO. 288.
SUMMER RESORTS.
WOLOF'S HOTEL, ATLANTEO CITY,
-a-N
N. J.—At the terminus of the railroad, on the left,
beyond the derot. The Holtz, in now open for tio.srd
tree and Transient Visitors, and ofers sooornmodations
equal to any Hotel in Atlento City, Manages moderate.
UMW ten an I sor . ante half price.
lair Parties etou'd keep their Beats until the earn
a rive in front of the Ihrtel. )rl-1m
CONGRESS HALL,
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.
This apaoleitis Nouse. situated at Atlantic City, will
be timed onjhe Nth June , with every acoommodation
for visitors. -The Hones fronts the beach 120 feet. tying
a splendid vtew of the ciman, and is near the Fleeing
sad'S tlitr point. No pains will be spared to IMClare
the oomfort and oonvenienoe of stieste.
JeU-tset TROMA.4 C. GARRETT.
IGHT HOUSE COTTAGE, ATLANTIC
CITY, the nearest HOUSe to the safest part of the
beaoh, is now open for rLe 86111.013.
•
. • • ThlitB4B MODN.R (TR.
110 LIQUORS 1301 d) 0/i TALK PRF.AIIEtra.
JUIN WOOT CON, .
Proprietor. •
gr,Asipz HOUSE, ATLANTIC MAY,
K-7 14. J.
By DAVID 80ATTER 00 OD.
- A NEW PRIVATE BO oiR I:MG-HOUSE. beauti
fully situated at the foot of Pennsylvania Avenue
Now open for visitors for the season. Je24-2ra
SE A BATEI.ING:— , ( The r :Oltrendon,"
P.-7_( formerly Virginia Rouse.) VIRGINIA. AVENGE,
ATL ANTIaCITY, miaow open for the accommodation
of bearders. Aide flouse is situated immedtately.on
the Beaoh, and from every room affords a fine view of
the BOIL tell-fm] JAMES if:BRUM ht. D.
TAMMANY HOUSE NORTH (mac-
LINA AVENUE, Near the Depot, ATLANTIC
CITY.
'the subseriber takes pleasure in informing his former
patrons and the pubic that he has reopened the above
Honse,whers he will ba happy to please all who may'
favor him with a call.
Jen 3m ELIAS CLEAVER, Proprietor. .
QUICKER BO AR DI N G; ATLANTIC
CITY. N.J., AHILL hNI) HOUSE.
Corner of Pennsylvania Avenue and the Railroad,
Atlanta Avenue, •
Te NOW OPEN
For the reeeptaon of permanent or tranni eat txporders.
Je24 2m Joatr ts.sroKEs.
• VreatilaiS ' A iIVVV.4 ; I "P 5' 5 2 ' 111411'143
'WIT, t(, /,-110! no tram's Ttic,
h•IS the finest Et.thing Grow:A on the Bench. wiata
wtek, 8860. Batiiiqv Ore/mos troladod for lepo ly
boarders only. Board per day,B I GO. Eu3ol meals. au
eent.. . JOAN
Jell-2m Peoprietor. .
KENTUCKY HOUSE,
ATLANTIC CITY, N l.
This oomfortable and convenient new h 0036. located
on Kentucky avenue. opposite the durf Howie, boa been
fitted up for visitors, this eimon.
F. dr. V. ging TAY. Proprietors.
N. B.—Horses and Carriages to Binh je24.2ori
CENTRAL HOUSE,
ATLANTIC CITY, N.. 1.,
M. L AWLOR. Proprietor.
The above new house is open for Boardere.Rooms
equal to any on Vie beach, well ventilated, high oeil
lags. &o. Servants attentive and polite. APetexillette
to the Bathing grounds. •- Je94-2m •
RANKLIN 11013 SE, ATLAtt TIC CITY,
BY MART MAO DIKE% •
Tills House fronts the surf, and possesses the finest
Bathing Grounds on the beach. Bolrding $B2O per
'week; $l 2 O per day. Single meal 50 cents. - -
Bathing Dresses included for weekly boardere only.
elli-gra
09NSTITIITIONATi'HOUBE,
NI-1 • T 11 1! IC- CITY, N. J.,
Vgoosi to theltop000l,) . •
LIM I. lut
(On UiCilginit -
Sir Tho otkoioest branda)- - utovoirli ostd Cigna 13 148
&mod on the Island. • je24.2m
COLUMBIA HOUSE, Atlantic City,
N. J. EDWARD DOYLE. PrOnfietot.
ThtaHonesrelnthe immediate vicinity of the Surf
Bone., and within half a square of the beet Bathing
Unmande on the beach. The proprietor will nee every
effort to Enke hia guests oomfortable. ,Terms reason
able. Je24 2m
STAR HOTEL,
earls opsite the Milt ed tates Hotel)
2. LAN= CY . J. .
'SAMUEL ADAMS, Pro t pnetor,
Also CarritgeelLhiii: ....__.do
°anti":
ear Board= sooolomodsted on the most reasonable
ternle. •• je24 9m
Dinner—.
SOHOOLEY'S MOUNTAIN. SPRINGS;
NEW. JERSEY,
The'" HEATH HOUSE" will be opened for the re
cent:ono! Company Jurie 16th. having been extenlively
refitted and improved sines the, last deasou; eiltirding
additional comforts to visitors, and increasing the de
sirableness of the plane.
As a healthy, pleasant, P nd fashionable place of Sum
mer resort," tlehooley'a Mountain" bag but few equals.
and le surpassed by none. it is reached by a pleasant
railroad ride, and only seven hours -from Philadelphia.
Leave Philadelphia in the o'olook train for New
York, reset' Jersey Girl at 3 o'olook, thence by Morris
and P.ZIPAX Railroad to the Mountain. iteturning. leave
the Mountain at 6 a. M. and 1 P. M.. arriving in Phila
delphia at 1 and 8 o'olock V. M. Rooms can now lie en
g. Ned- CharsessmOderate. D. A. ORo WELL,
.. Proprietor.
•• •
S &Tal l /REV N*o l loiLir .11,411 14:
the" aheve-neimed finely' !mated estkbi !ohm ant Would
respectfully inform the thoneandirof tineive that have
heretofore visited hothouse. that. loonier to meet the
ssurpslths_limedb he
_ Eettlsihas, for the present les son. l4__3t2apyalrllW CWr ldAr.rams to ZlGid
age and servants half price. gitvirit7r
and ample TOOIIII for 700 POTZOILII•
Reform to .1. Van court2,l3•Areh stree_ ,t
je2l-21n Amcor( GARRETtiON, Proprietor,
WHITE SULPHUR AND (MALY
BEATE SPRINGS,
• AT
DOUBLING GAP.
These Syringe ere in Cumberland o , unty, Pa. thirty
miles west of Harrisburg. on the Cumberland'Vatter
Railroad, and we now open for the reception 01 visitors,
Board from five to eig hti dollars. accordlng to riras.
I , c rzo c r n rigur through tickets at the P6D11157 Wards Rail
,atit T tail:wed price et th•onth: • '
Call on B. 8. Janney, Jr.. & Co.. 605 Alerket street,
for information, cards. /to.
DOYLE, AHL, k RHAMER,
13,10 . -Im* • • Proprietors. •
QUM' 11013814•ATLAIITIO OITY, NEW'
JititsEy. . •
This HOTEL. with its first-obsas accommodations for
over 400gueats. will be opened on the 17th of Jane. • •
Signaled within Mkt,' yard' ol the Ocean, at a point
where the bathing is the best and batsmen the coast and
remarkable for an unusually dry end health, atmos
phere, the SURF no USN wilt be found one of the most
attractive places of summer retort near Philadelphia.
The Lable.wtU barmost , liberallv supplied. The hours
is lighted ;with gas ,and plentifully supplied with good
cistern water.
.
, A fine 'band of music and the services of s everal
ikert-sall.ug Yaeitte have been engaged, end on the pre
mises are Billiard Tablas. Bowl ng and a Bain
eient number of Bath }louses. The Fishing, Ganning,
and Sailing at Atlantio City °menet be surpassed.
All trains 'top at the BURP 11.1./USS, to land and take
up passengers..
For any • information. apply at ASBLAND HOUSE,
ARCH Street. Philadelphia, or address the Subscriber
at the Starr House.
H. S. BENSON. Proprietor.
H OWLAND'S 110TE4-. , -
• SEA BATlitt4G. LON BRANCH. It I.
'She sntleoribe6will men his hvtel for 111:
JSE EPT ni OF 18 1 rO •
on Eletordap ane 15, 1/54,
my.11.2m , . • . n. HOWLAND. Proprietor.
(' . 01;10 XBB HALL,
NZ/ , ' CAPE IdAY,cAPS 114.1. AND, It J.
Thu; welf•known first-ohms Hotel vrtll be opened for
the reception of siestaetATH HRBP A Y June IC
WRST & TROMPBON,
lel.l-dir . • • • . Propnetors.
•1101,11111BIAlIOUSS, Oape Jaland, N. J.
This celebrated house will be opened for the re
oeptlon of comets on June 26. 1861. •
l'he situation of this house is one of the moet heauti-
Rd on the Leland. oommanding an unobstructed view of
the ocean. •
A band of music hen been engaged exolusiveli for.
this house Tor t.e sensoo:
~A torte number of bath louses, are connected with
the 'estabbehment: amid 'stabling • for horses attached
to the prom'. es.
il.pelloations for rooms or other particulars will meet
..lettn prompt attentiebi
H. Ligriet
itll Prop in r i bt r r i . bee.
fell-toi - Cape island. N. J.
I,3 ACIHEWS HEAD HOTEL, GUILFORD; •
CONN.--The animator of thin well-known. first-.
Roomer patrons.
RUMMER- idOWBE would inform ita
Rioter patrons. and. the public generally, tbat he built
on three.hrindred heat Lot spring, making neventy- four.
new bed rooms, now • dirong-roont.lorty by one bun-.
'red. new parkin forty brew:amity. Every room in the
house is newly furnished, with new naivete and new
cottage furniture. The Hotel is of modern conetrno
ti on, built on an extensive scale, with norommorlatione
for four hundred guests; beautifully' looated on'-Long
Island Sound. fourteen miles eastof New Haven, on
the New -London and Btonharton Railroad ; taw bil
liard-room, with three new tables. two new ten-pin'
alloys, at a convenient distance from the house. and,
twelve new bathing-houses. Fishing is not eurraesed
on the Bound. A. new yacht 'of forty-five bane, avd
several- email 'sail-boats, , will be oonstantly: on hand,
ready for parties.
Going from New York to Sachem's Road, take the
B'A: M. train and 3 M. train ; check and tioket to
Itiohem's Bead direct, °banging care at New Haven
time through 334 hours. Prom New Haven to the Rea d
at TX A, M., 11, and dP. jrl.—tpree 40 minutes. At
the lase ems Read depot will be' found one of Cook's
best fonr-horso Omnibuses, new and °lean, to carry you
:direetto thebouse. • •- -
•
, A new Burn. one hundred by Aftr-twii feet, was initt
last spring, which will acoommodate tufty bor7es. Fi [-
-teen sores of land have been enclosed. and filled with
ornamental and Iran treiseor9ks,/ce.
bonze will be opened for the reoeptlon of icilla
liany on the 88th '
of June next, under the immediate
snagrintepdenee dr the owner.
R.—Matetutoes are never seen at the Read.
ell-Int - 11. LEK SCRANTON.
fe26-602"
,VRI43SON ' SPRINGS, CAMBRIA. • 00.,
la PA.—This delightful and popular pie o of summer
vesort.rted directly on the Una a t he. Pennsylvania
Rallro as the summit of the A Ilegbenr mountain',
twenty-throe hundred fest above the latrel Of the ocean.
will be open for goody the 20th of JUNE. Slues. last
season the s rounds have been greatly Improved. and
beautified, rendering Crewman one of the moat romantic
n 4 atersotive planes in the State. • The. furniture is
losing thoroughly renovated. Theeeeker of plasm/re,
and the eatforer from heat or disease,. will find *ran-.
lions hers, In a Bret-clam &
Livery Stabe,. B illi ard
Tables, Tenpin Alleys. Baths, a...together WI the
permit an and7ter, and the most magnifioent moan-
Min soensr7 to found in the °Gentry.
Tioketa good or the round trip from Philadelphia.
87.60; from Pittebtirg, aa.os.
For further information, address
0. W. MULLIN, •
Je4-2m Orereann Springs. Cambria Co.. Pa. ,
RP HR A TA. MOUNTAIN: BPRIMIS; !
-w-•••LANIIO),STER COUNTY PENNEYL,VANLB
' This celebrated' . Watering • Flan will -open Tor visi
tors on the 3d day of SUNE. with all the attracting of
! former season& : . .. ,_ .
I Situated on a mo untain 1,200 feet abovntld&-waterr
• overlooking , the riohest submittals( notary in the
world. the air sure and dry at all times, ren•
Airs it proverbially healthy. , . _ - ' •
Where are ample accommcidations for •400'visitors—
lane .graded walks 'through the forest to the various
:Tim and . etunmer:hoasee on the nioantain and to:
t 0 obeervatou,lrcee the top of whiob le presented to'
,t II 'eye one of the . hfleet and most extensive rano-.
'ramie views to be seen. A good
_lrvery ili Irel4, on the
plan= bair c i i tif t ‘tl i &v i r
( igui tin , i s hzt e ag a te&
o ttlp h a i. ,.
'Firtthia;)
. howtos &bail" an r g billiard iialoai., with
0, test improved tables. Large gardens attached to,
the--•placa, from Whloh all the:vegetables are taken
fresh_ for. the table, which, too, will be supplied from
th e ThllsAelphla 'andßalthnore Markets.' as wells:
hum the !Yob ocrionlicral country areund.• Clare.ul
ape ettealive servants. , .... ..
=Wel hull. annucted _with tho leyti4ish,MX !! ii
me ‘Stri IP' i i ir t "(11: r ;ra ;Willi shit e r
6.0111Y04 i 0 0 'l,lOl -, 000" 0 • o
ibUfally thittitvill be .0 onduated.• la every dotal ,
j . rneet s it s fOrrfifT popnaayray.
v llots to the Soria gm will take the oar' to Lancasz'
Aar,
,thence is ssi s t, maims over pleasant road, and
. Woks bnati 1:p try.: Throuitt HIV tall
the outwit, road Oboe, LliV EH as
ET Streets • ladelphia... .
,' .. or'fa rther rut% ato or otrollpj Lr i. l
ry ,
em to• 08. B. rd . 1 4 1a sorner._ . IN.
Fret% and. to Ja . BRY6O . No. Nor
4
0 A.M. ;litres!" I'm e ,iok n ad4ma - •
."' *— • -••-• ••• • •••11. - q. BLAYNLAXIAR.
Iniftellfitll'iv ' ••••!toter:pa Laeoaater oco., Pa.:
•• • •
\N . 11 f i lii .
.:,,-.. • ,--,
'','• \N ‘1 , I iii,
_ .
• -
---
1. .. - ..,..:-,. - - •.':;',. 2- •;lisx; *•.,`•‘‘',%,, 'lli/ ,•- . , "gt .• " 1 ""*" • ~.
• . .
- -
, ~.......:::.-...„•,- v-- '
•,,,, .- ~, . ...:1, , , , - ~
..
~, :i.ii - e . : 7 :: "...." 4. ,,,
,f<-. . . 1 \ g , i t 4,n 2:•. :: :, :-, i i 7 i . 1. •3 1' .- - --- it. ; •.'..... I n b • -•-•-`,.. 1, ......... ,.. . 1,, ---git . ‘ .. 4 .. • . 14 ' . ' •'• .-* ..... l „ 4-1 'et • :.,
-.. ,
.-- :•":-.1 ,
zt. - - - r• - •• -t,- - --,L , - .
—— - 4 - ' ^•• • - ' •"• ‘' ' '--- ' ' gi - --' ler - . _ ,„,, „ 40 6 ! - 7 - 1.,.0.- , :....- ..,.,
.., : ''' --i , .
.. :::
,_ : !li
.. ,1 .. :. . :..7
r i ... 11 ...:
:..... t it.
...,
,13.11..,.
~ :..I._
. Ili .
!Dr irk, . - . - Ai , 1, -, '• . • ITZAI-- (( - ':- 4,. ' "*-Ag";,. --
- -- 7 . ; - ; -- 'L - 11r4 - rt -- 1 - arg' 314 . ,Ki11A v
~
. ,
• ..
•
~..,
.litliTo•it:f.'.'v '4l-1, A t t i , 14 7 7 . ,, •••: -- ',- ,;,,-= - ,17' •,- if'.''- - • --
' • r7 i f - ME I . .
(14 _.• • / .. i ..(t.....1--1•:: . . - t . '''';'•' .
I fl 7-: .-- — / 1
- . 4 °..-: A • l _
i 1 '.i.;...,
'.i . ;..., 1....,,-i: ,'-‘•.,..1',..Fi1if5. .. ,;?
.. , 1",,\I! . i' 42 .P.,,,;', ~ .. A444.4v. , ;.,,' ‘•.•. ,, f .,i10 ' •,...-, iv- - -..it ,- -,,- L L ,..
7 ' 1149 !), 1 ' - i uu
"...-
-- ,, A34;7,AL.,..,,..q.,,..... 1 .'4 . '...••••-; 3 ,,,,, ....14e...
~.,,..,,, -!2. 1 ._ , •''....r . 5 . " -,. :- . 7 ';„,-,4-4` °r ":."; '-.a l . f. ,,. ; ,'`...-' - `' ° ' ,',, ~....,,,---------
- l 1 •
:.. . . ••'. . : " ." "' ariof- - *ZI3. i• -
.• ori• 1 • ••.„,..m. ••••• • .C. 1.1........„ '_‘....- -.- •.....•;,-- "....^,,Zi....
M • IND—
- . •
04.' ._ .
- .'.f.
s-
'' , ....r... .......... '-...„__...............
• ................
.___. ....:
..: . •
• - . •••••
OFFICIAL.
1119ROPO ,, ALS FOR' MATERIALS FOR
THE NAVY. - • -
NAYT DIPARTMENT
BUREAU Or CoNerauctioze, EQ111Y742 , 17, &C.,
'June 11, 1861.
Sealed proposals to fernieh . materlale 'or thane,' for
the areal 101 r eliding 30th June 1861 , will be received
at this-Bureau until o'clook P. ed. of the Bth July next.
These propoeals meet be endorsed " Proposals for Ma
teriels for the Navy. Bureau Or ColletrUODol3." &0.,
that they may be distinguished from other buetness
Inters. -
Tho materials and enrolee tomb:aced in the olewsiee
named are particulartr described in printed eohedulee,
any of which will be furnished to snob as deelre to of
fer, on it ppliontion to the commendante of the reepeotlVlS
yards, or to the Navy Agent nearest thereto and those
,of all the pude upon aupliestien to this BOWLS. This
division unto classes beetle for the oonvenienee of
dealers in each such trauma will be furnished as are
actually required for hide. The commandant and.nrivy
agent of each station will have a CODY of the schedules
of the other yards, for examination °ply, from which it
may be 'mired whethsr it well be desirable to make ap
ion for them.
iremmuet be made for the whole of the class at any
ySid upon one of the printed eohrdules, or in strict con
formity therewith, nr they will not be considered.
The contract will be awarded to the Lowest. bona Ma
bidder who r wee proper security fee its ulfilment The
United States rorerves tho tight to iejeut all the b.da
for any ote.e. if deemed exorbitant. .
All articles must be of the .very best quality, to be de.
livered In good, order,: and In suitable vessels and
packages, a • the Mae may be, at the expense and risk
of the contractor, nod In alt resew' subject to the in
spection, ineesuraieent, count, weight, , of the
yard where received, and to the entire satisfaction of
the commandant thereof.
lliddete are referred to the commandants of the re
creative yards for samples, inttruoticne, or jrarthattlar
deeoripuon of the &Moles ; aid, all other things being
equal, preference will be given to articles of 'Amerman
mannf totu
Avery offer, rut required by the law •of 10th August.
1515, meet be accompanied by a wriUen guarantee, the.
form of which Is herewith given.
These wily whose offers maybe accepted will be
notified. and the .contract will be forwarded ay soon
thereafter as practicable, which thee will be required
to exeoute within ten days otter tis receipt at the poet
office or navy agency named by them.
eureties ill the fall amount will -be required to eke
the contract, and their reap ineib lity mortified to by is
United States Mama Judie. United:nate; dietrict
attorney, oolleotor, or navy agent. Ae additional ea •
ourity, twenty per Genteel will be withheld from - the
amount of the leis until the contract sheik-have been
einmpleted; and eighty per centuin of each btU,ayproved
Is tripbe•to by the commandant. et the respective
yards, will be paid br' the navy - agent' at' the 'smuts of
Oiriveri 1111111 Om *riff ll! E51Pu1444914t0
41 :Atha's! at IF WWI be MID
by en - a Daniel of the tiritletrS in (111117CT1119 all or any or
the arttoles liner tioned in any ; eines bid form the eon
traot, or the au tlity . , and at We - hide and paces above
provided, then and tn that C 240 the contractor and his,
• !arouse will *orient and pay to the Unitedeltates a sum
of money not exceeding - twice the amount of el ass,
'which may be recovered from time to nine. aceord,ne
to the ant of Consresc in that case provided, approved
Marotta, 18.43,
Classes roe 1,2, 6. 8 . ; to be delivered one-fourth part
on or before thy lath or (Sal, one • fourth part on or be
bre the SVth of July. one-fourth per; on or before the
20th of September. and toe remaining fourth pact on or
before let of. December, 1E62.. Chimer; 3, 4. 7. and 9, the
whole ro be delivered by the 13th of bitty, 1862., 'she re
maining inhumes to be delivered , one-fourth part on or
before the let of eeptembernext, one fourth Part on or •
before tee -let of December next,• one-fourth part on or
before the let of A mil, anti the remainder an or .be fore
the 101 it of .11111 e; 1862. unless earlier required,wlth a no
tice of twelve dive, comprising at each uelivery to dne
proportion of each ai t; lass 10 and all following, if
additional quantities of any of the article! named
therein are demanded, they are "to be furnished on
like terms and oonditions previous to the centratloe of
the Meal year. upon receiving a notice of fifteen .daye
from the bureau, the commandant of the yard, or-navy
agent.
_brim of Offer. •
of-, in the butte of -, herebragreo
to tarnish and deliver, in the re attentive navy, yards, all
the articles named in the classes hereunto annexed,
'agreeably to the provisions of the 5. hedules therefor,
and in conform ty with the advertisement oldie Burnett
of , Construction, /co , of June Ili 1861. Should my offer
be accepted. I reaneet it to be addremnd at--, and
the contraot sent to the navy agent at—; or to-- e
i—z-zl. - mainct out nortl6llll. _
.
Fit 1:16116.
The scnedule whlob the bidder encloses must be
pasted to hie offer. anti each of them stetted or him.
tretaiatte each r.riloie in the schedule the price must be
Bet, the amount carrict out, the aggregate [ogled up for
each class, and the amount likewise written in wordi.
Form of Guarantee. -- •
Tne undersigned, of - in the
State of- and of in the
State of , hereby guarantee that in case the
foregoing bid of ---- for any of the °lessee
therein named be accepted. he or they will, within. ten
days alter the receipt of the contract at the poet office
named, or navy meant deitgnated. execute the contract
for the same with good and . sufFtoient sureties; and
in °see said -- shall fail to enter into oontract
re aforesaid. we guaratme to make good the difference
between the offer of the said , and that which
may be accepted.
-Signaturee of two guarantors, C. D.
Du , . . . . , •
• - WltlleCe.
i hereby certify that the above-named •,...—•••:. it
known to me al men of property and able to make good
their guarantee. . .
Date. Figna are '••
. .
.
••
To be signed by the United' States Digtriee•Juince.
United Stu a Diatriot "Attorney, Collector, or Navy
Agent. • •
~ .. .•
The following are the classes required at the respect
.
ries navy-Yards:
KITTERY, MAINE.
Class No. 1 Whits Oak Loss; No. 8. WhiterOsk Pro
miscuous Timt.r ; irce. S. Yellow Pine , Plank Stook'
Logs ; Pine Masts a d Spar Timber ; 1
10. White Pena; No. 11. auk and ; No. 12.
DMA vralant pad Mahogany ; No. 14. White dab Oars
SO. Haitian and
A111:1 b..0. 1 1_!.21it 11118.1//18 ' 11! ! GO. Be Jimmie i
N0.77i 11111118 bud oil NO' 125, Thig. li SUYO.II j No, z).
GOMA cAtiVai No. ao. Plea and Cotton TW•nO No.
96 t laza ; No. 82. Leather; No.. BE ninths': No. 93.
Bunting and Dry Goons; No. 37. Pitch. Tar, Roe ti ;
No. 38. Tallow, /Soap. 011; N 0.89. nap Chandlery;
40, Stationery ; 140. 41. Firs Word.
OHABLESTOWN, IHASSACRVSETTS.
Class N 0../. wait° oak !Anis i Nu. a. White Oak Pro
miscuous Timber; No. 8. Yellow Pine Plank. Stool(
Loge; No.lo. Whits Pine t No. rt. Ash suet est.:Asp. i
No. 12. ohmic Walnut and Cowr No. 14; White "Ash'
Oars and lieokot7 Butts ; No. 16. White Oak Staves std
nettling; N 0.21. Iron; Pio. 28. Spikes and Nails; No.
23. Lead, Zino, I'm • N 0.23. Hardware; no. 27. Paints,
Oils. &c •, No. 28' Beak Canvas; N 0.29. Cotton Canvas
No. &J. Flax and Cotton Twine ; No. Bl. Glass; No 38 ;
.
.I..eather; No. to Hose; N 0.34. Brushes; .149. Se. Bunt
ing and Dry Goode ; Pitch,. 'Jr, a Rimini No. 31.
Tallow, Soap, and Oil; No. 39. halt) Chandlery,' No. 40.
•.Stationery ; 'No. 41. Fire Wood ; N 0.42. Ox. Rides for
Rope.
BROOKLYN. NEW YORK.
Maas No; 1, White Oak Lore ; No: 2, White Oak
Plank; N 0.3 White Oak'Promisouous Timber; No. 4,
White Oak Keel rieeesl No: 6. Yellow Pine Plank
'Stook Logs ; No. 7. Yellow. Pine BUMS ; No. a. Yellow
Pine Mast and Hpar limber; No. 9, White Pine Mast
Timber . No.lo White Pine ; No. 11. Ash and C7jgress ;
No. 12, LI:solc Walratt Cherry. and Alnhogany ; NO. 14,
White toh 04is agd Hickory BM.; rt 0.15, White Oak
tuases and. ileachrias ; No. 16, Binok ennuis ; 0. 18.
Lisnainvitail No 21; ; No: 22, spikes and Nails;
. 1241.33,Leed. Zino, ; No 21, Pig Iron; N 0.12, Hard
ware; No. 27. Paints and Cils L No. 28, Flax .Cansas ;
go. 29. cutton Canvas N0.30. Flax And Cotton Twine •
o. 3i; Liam ; N 0.92. Leather; No. 33 Hos: • No. 34,
rushes ; No. 36, iinntin . g and Dry ' Goode; No. '36,
Lanterns ;No ; far. Rosin ;No 32, .Tallow.
EIMIDt ; N 0.38; ehip Chandlery ; No. 40, litationers ;
N 0.41, Fire WOOll.
•
rEtILADELPIIIA, PENNBYLVA til re.
Clr.se No. 2. White Oak Plank; N 0.4. White 04k Ketil
Pieries • No. 8.-Yellow Pine Plank htook Logs; N 0.7.
Yellow 'Pine Beams . No.B. Yellow Pine Matt and Spar
Timber 1:No: 10 White Pine; No. 11. t. eh and Cypress;
No. 12.' Black Walnut , Cherry, and_36ahOganl t . 140.14.
White Aeh• Oars an Hickory Bare; •Ne. 16. Macs
'Spruce,; No' /8. Lig ie nemtit ; No. 21. Iron ; 21.
Spikesand Nails; No. 23. Lead: Zirto.and Tin No Ht.
hardware; No. W. Paints and Oils ; No.sB. -.nix Can
vas ;-N0.:7, Cotton Canvas •: No. W.- Plait ,and Cotton
livride • •No St. Glass; No. 32: Leather ;* No. 33. Hose ;
No 34 . Brushes ; No.- 36 Banttng anct`l)ri Goods; No.
3'. Paoli. Tar, ROSSI, ; No. 311. tallow,l3oap, and 011;
N0;,39. Ship °banditry.; No: sa. Stationery ; 41.
Fire Wood.
- • ' WABRINGTON, -D. '
Class NO.IO. White Plant No. 21. Iron; No 22. Flpilgie
anti Nitta; No.- 23. Lead. Zino. and .Tin ; No, 24. Pig
Iron; N 0.26 ha , dware; No. 27. -and Oils; No.
•39.•/Ship_ Chandlery; N0.'41. Boller, Tank, and Galley
•Iron ; No. 44. Chain Irrin ; N 0.46. Ingot Copper - No. 47.
Bellows; Pilo. 48. ro;es. • - • • :halt-Mit
LE GAL.
.
TN - THE COURT*OF pouort: PLEAS - ‘
ros TAN CITY. ANI), FNMA
DF.LIO(III-: _9l - March Term. A. D,11311L .1 1 6, GO.
LOU1540LOIII.6:-by her next :friend:
au Ea. Ns.: LOU 111. •-
flint.,Tott,:will please. take notice that. the,Conrt; iu
caeThq . bove named .case;; has granted a rple to' chow
cause ',by 7 Divoree a ategulo matrtetenti'ehodld not
be 'decreed therein. Returnable'. July' 6. 1831 i. at 10.
o'olook A. M. derma of nottoe .of the:n.l2lo having.
Jailed on acoount of your absenoe. , '
CLINTOrt ` AU GE . Attorney 'for Libellant.
To HENRY Louis, Respondent. . • Jele-w&th4t.
N TflE/.OOIIRT .0".:00MMONi PLEAS
FOR TR& `OlrY AND COUNTY OF THII4-
- F i.URELICE MAC CARTBY ALICEAC
CA RI% y. Snob.' Div. A.- V M. Bent „No. 09,
Alm Aube. - Ince mbar T., MM. No. 64.; . •
• • MADAM : You , will please take notate that the Court
have granted lir ate on- the •Itespon'dent to chow tausa
wlly a decree of Dworce. A. V, M.,llloUld ADlnt te en
tered In-the.above, cue. - Returnable BATURDAY
July 6, 1631, at 10 o'clock' A- M. - •
To ALICE MAC CARTEY, Respondent. •
JACOIi•E. BOWERS,
Je16,210.4.j12,4* • Attorney for Llbstlant.
IN 'TER ORPHANS' COURT OF OHM
T R. COl.l Y. •
Estate or JANE DAWSON. late orthe township of
liadsbury, in the county of Chester, and State of Penn
ey Ivan's, dead. .
NO rich is hereby given to all versant interested in
the Estate of the slid JANE DAWSON, deed. and
also in the Estate of 'MARGARET DA W,nots, lisheer
of the said Jabs, at d of the same township. doted. that
the undersisatd has .been appointed by said Court Au
ditor to report distribution niche Instance tel.l.lll)tu the
hands ot Mat Rll%ll FORD, Executor, , of said .
JANE DAWSON, deo'd. t.) and amongst the parties
emitted to the same, and that he tall meet the said par.
ties at his office. iu the borough of Weet Cheater, sad
county aforeite'd, on the - twelfth day of JULY, A. St.
WI, at 10 o'cilool: A. M.
P. FRAZEILIIMITIF, •
Auditor.-
'Jo 22. 27, k.iy 4, 11
_ETTERS TESTAININTAICY TEE
„RESTATE cf . JOEX:II4 WHERlAR,:deeeased,
late grocer, Third and bombard streets, having hese.
granted to the undersigned. all persoruOitdebted to said
kataSeAre requested to make Prquee,ukeend all persons
having claims are requested to present - Mein to . • ,
CNA It Lgii. B. SMITH.
401 WALNUT threat...
JOBN.
313 UNION litretit.
NORMAN B. Virlir.BLEß. who% croutirmee tho dro
oery spd Ten ittudneta, southwest 'oorner of TH141.13
and Loot.BARA) • Streeta, deli authorized to receive
payment of debts due said EltrrtOi and sou ounte against
It luny he left With him
June 1. Mit.
:VSTATE 'or B fr, &TON BAIT ,D .
4 08.3.8 MD.
NOTIC e: is hereby given, tlytt kttors of admin'etra
tion on the estate of HEATON SMITH.. late of the
city of Phlindelphta, deceased. have been granted to
the undetsigned All persons, therefore. navtng Maims
or against egain the eatd. estate, are requested to
make them known to the administrator without delay.
t'. FRAZER small. Administrator.
Joll;thgt • West Cheater. Pa.
Ei L ATz d - . 911. sawn •EPARKS
Letters testamentary ta. to this lodate have ben
All
by the Register of Wi:bi to the underigned.
All pewee I ndebtea to. or hiving Maims evilest, Bald
estate, will present themLwohout delay, to
W ALN. &am. jrl. T. A..
len-that . . No. 702 WaLNU street.
(PAL DENTALLINA.—We speak from
-.-•• practical experience 'when saying that the OPAI,
EPratTAL,I,INA. made by Mr. 81111114, of BROAD and
RUC ti etreets le decidedly the nicest preparation
or the mooth an. i teeth that ere have ever weed. •We
Hove it:fulfils a that is claimed for it, and belay re
itomineptcled by the most eminent ttentizta - we eArlee eh
t4IITO , t le trial:—Pritetee. - • - • • • welt-ewe
111 , .UTTA 19111kOffiA. AXLIZA 8.111.1L11M,
e‘..it, or; Donee Grate rrOLaOtore..ll ewe DT°Letitia!!
. [merell d•nepnesi by peripplreticn.
&He n LA ituDELEIt Guuu 01 every desonntioa, Belt-
Eng, 'Peaking. Hose; and every article manufaot ured of
ludia•Rubher, of the heat material. Goode sold FOR
CalefliSTOrSUIT nuir.B.. the Gyeat India
Rubbor.otore. al t C8138:14 UT West. shove Third.,
north aide. , Army and Piave 4quipmeoro„_.
• • • Joliet TRORNVEY.
COTTON SAIL DUPIC.,.,anil ,VANVAtiI i,.
.
,ortill &umbers aqd brariti ir v.l.it.;. st ; :.% .' _.
.' It sweq'Aunok Awning Twi ca. nu summons, gag
Wen ns, - Awgnign,'"rrcuilts, euil ingoq_„”7:_.....
Ailoiy'spn MAnqualirgDiA;pl.2.f...,
Intl Wow ~ Sig/Jkairt. laps je l t r ",
i-If "• hi') iii AUDI
PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY, - JULY 4, 1861.
Eli :111155,
THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1861.
Books and Authors.
Holding that authors, whose writings at
once elevate and entertain the mind, are
world benefactors, surely it comes within the
scope of journalism sometimes to make a re •
cord of what they do. We have a few an
nouncements now to make, which cannot be
without interest to the reading public :
First, then, wo learn from Harper's Weekly
that Charles Dickens' new story, cc Great E
pectations," will bo completed, in that excel
lent and popular journal, in four weeks. It is
a tale of remarkable interest, more artistica]
than any of its great . author's former works;
with the plot evidently well considered from
the first, and the irieldents and situations,
albeit natural, wholly unexpected. Immedi
ately after its completion, we presume that
Peterson will hasten to include it in his al
ways-popular and eternally4riereasing editions
of Dickens. We hope, too, that it will appear
(like. Wilkie Collins' cs Woman in White'?)
with John McLerian's original Illustrations;
which have made the American reprint, in
Harper's Weekly, verylmperior to the origi
nal in 411 the Yeiti:Roind.
In the last-named publication' will b 6 com
.monced, ont.he 10th of August, cc A . &range
Story, t ' by • litilwer, to , be contiiikiidifloof
w voir. Mtn 0 12 ;:nelder.01: 4
he initilt9RY 34 )
third of A.ugnst.-4014611y a weakegrfiq;ll4o:
its alVecirance in iSteid4n. 'There'is gre l at
magic in money; as Messrs. - Harper have ro
peatiey'found, enabling therii, with respect
to Dickens,-Wilkie Collins, and Bulwer, to
tab Londbil publishers. Harfier's
Weekly Baps ce The • unrivalled merit of the
latest works of Sir Edward Lytton Ralwer
jqs
tilies:tko assertion that' his, pow nnyelist
is steadily -on the.increase r and warrants the
he:lief:that - his new tilezwilli s bereven more
thrillingly interesting-than g-What Will he do
With It,' or hly Novel'—both of which'weri
read by at least half a million of people in this
country." There is no eaggeration in this
estimate. - • `•
Many readers may remember Ida Pfeiffer,
the German tourist, who was the best female
cgdetid;hOlvl" ever known. In her last book,
;he took_ paine , to abuse all who dtd not lodge,
Azl,a-tVa. hay mawolYet6o Wialßilt dam;
a y. zl atr,AthiSSINSEIII,
her .very Last Travels," inclusive of a visit
46411adagascar, with a biography at The au
-
Minoan, completed from her own notes. •
' 7 11? -4 ,L oticion; - too, a : publisher announces,
elegantly 'printed by Whittingham, (a re
nowned typographer,) an, octavo volume of
4 ‘ Poems by Philip Freneau on Various Sub
jects, but chiefly Illtiatrative of th e 'Events
and Actors in the American War ,o 1 inde
pendence. Reprinted .from the rare\ edition
printed at Philadelphia in 1786, with a Pre
face." The publisher says of itPlutt excited
ingmlever-and witty, it I.ce' On
the shelf with the "Poetry of.the:Anti-J.ado
bin," the " Whig Guide," and icEejected
Addresses."
There is also published in London, in two
large volumes, with ten steel engr , avings and
a map, price $B, cc A Journey . tb7Great-Salt-'
Lake City, by Jules- Remy i •iiindv 'Julins
Brenchley, ; with a Sketch' of ibegisj
tort ? Religion, and Customs of
DIM
meat in the United States, uy JAR UPPDT , "
Charles Mackay, author of 4( Akiciod.Titue
Coming," and a great many otber,,popular
lyrics, announces a new weekly Journal, of
fact and fictien,:pfine foal nelitignisame as
.411 . A. Year Roiii'd;) to be commenced next
,Saturdiii ! "ltrwill be callentabbitdndfalloui.
The motto; "I'descry ; all dpne. be:
•nenth the Moon," is from /3en..lonsOn's
Robin Go odfellow,and •the prospectins runs
" Another new journal ! Why not ? The world
is wide, and there is room enough for every.one to
elbow his way to the platform, where he may ad
dress the people; oertain of an audience, if he oan
speak common ,sense good• Eugliah, and, keep
them in good humor. This is what the editor and
contributors of 'Robin Goodfellow aspire., to do:
They will avoid all politios‘--alt oontioversiei—
and all acerbities; and strive to .provide for the
reoreation and instruction. of their readers, the
best novels and tales—the ablest social essays—the
roiliest and most truthful sketchesOf life and man
ners that the literature of'the a s ., , e - orin produce, or
that the money of the proprietors oan purobase.
Like that shrewd „sprite ' honorably. .mentioned
by Shakepeare, Ben Jonson. and. Milton,
_from
whom the new journal:his borrowed name,
Robin Goodfellow will not invariably confine him
self to the amusement of hid readers,-but, upon as'
cution, will tuba hie hand to.useftd work. Though,
as Bhakapeare Inforins us, Robin Goodfellow , could
sport, he could, also, do hard work in ease of ne:
Oessity ; and, as Ben Janson states, would card
wool " grind at the mill;" . drisa hernp;! , ' spin
tow,' and p erform other 'meth' funationg for the
i
benefit of gworant or indolent humanity,' when
ever he was in the humor,„And our new. Robin
Goodfi llow will, in this - respebt, iMitate the ex
ample of his namesake; mid aid, wherever he can,
the:0110811 that needs help, without ever . loEing
tight of his other function of telling the tale, and
singing the song, end being the genial and welcome
friend a t.the fireside or study of every fatally' in
the Kingdom."
Several works , of fiction have appeared in a
London weekly, ,called Reynolds' Miscellany,
purporting tobave been.written or edited by
Lady Clara Cavendish. Some- of these . have
been republished in book.form . irt New York.
A new story, called." The : crkirt Page,"
do
clared fo'be "edited by 'LSO "Clara Caveri 7
that," has .just been commenced
MiscellanY. The curious part, of,the- matter
is that there positively does not exist any
scion of nobility bearing this lady's mune.
No doubt it was invented by Reynolds, wbo
probably' writesJ.lte' stories; t 0,% tempt his
readers with the idea' that u perion of rank
used her pen for thelr special_ amusement.
•
Tom Brown at Oiford," -by Thomas
Hughes, is - evidently oir the eve of compli....
tion; 'Jane
Magazine,- we notice -that-the 47th chto.fir
bears the winding-up title* 01 ".The Wedding,
Day."
• ,
Memoirs, Correspornlence, and unpublished
1
Writings of - Mt tp.rl,Tocquevillev:arithdr of
ts Democracy in . 4tneri&;' - ' . arti 'announced in
Paris. M. G:: .l ttit , /13eanincint' is the' u
thor. Great ivrftore ,make strange gips,
sometimes. De Tocipilpe, a few years
back, wrote a book on.thecaiise or the Fretich.
Revolution, . 1 414: never once mentioned, the
examPle,of . thO - UtAted States as one of these
causes.' -: . , i 17. f 7. .
We we r e afraid' ihat , Dr. Oro
historian, novelist, n critic, ' orator,
'proaCher,and• . jeurMilist. itl
7 Wonl not Vivi-a
biographer, :IVA see announce d a volume. of
perritrial . Etusolleotions of the litte:,_Rbv.
George Oroly, LL. D.; Rector of -St; -Ste
phen's,' Walbrook;- with Extracts from his
Speeches and-Writings.-By Richard -Herring,
'anther - of 'Paper and-Paper•Making,'
Croly's Comedy; ‘i P ride shall 4140 'a Fall,"
and his tragedy of " alleilinei; , would have
'
great success : now, we are 'sur e, if '
14-inth
Ris a Paris in 1816," ttGfiniff . .frtiui ihp.4kn
tique," zg Angel of the World," aid.rtBnhaa
tian," show him a true poet, while his notehi s
of "Marston ;" and gi Salathtel," as well as his
t( Lite ofTitt . "'show the variety and vidor
1 of
his -
' The:eleven* volume of Louis Blanc's Ms:
tori,of• theltrench Revolution has been pirb
lished in tires, and is devoted to Robespierre
and Vendee. The London Itlthencrum saki,
4 ,14 is full of that bright and fierce ano'cdote
which belongs to the history of revolnticks.
It• le:rich kr Valves.: IV is, above 'all, vivid
with original views, 'reflected. from criticism.,
M. Lents Blanc has many times proved hirnfelt
an iconoilait of Franck triiMu l *MP, as
"Rtatrihat
arugg intim EOM
&gee* tit the present eAsseg: 1401 1 thUßt
we liave a grand hlat trig-iieee in Which
Mdlle. de Sombrena. 2. 66 11.1,n;:5r1"nt - ' 3BB,
'quaffs a goblet, oi - elood,to mere Iher &Aber's
notnitffnendlng that Abeistory-bas been
'attedyntlitalpated. StUl'.aball we Bee,' in faML
, 1 41)Kii° &lOW die sainted elite enth Lints.
gobigiolkf roat;ibi Till rattan:, '•Wateitid
rogi&.polt:rooa until tied to, thithfie l dt.e
~,
o =Wt.thiqiiiter tbilfr,:and
•
the historian another, we may trust to' a jtuy
of generations."
It adds: et In a novel of Dumas, M. Quillo.
tin is made a luxurious amateur in the art of
execution. M. Louie Blanc, setting aaido the
old romantic materials, shows that the popu
lar notion of M. Gnißohn perishing by, the
knife he was suniosed to have brought into.
fashion arose from the circumstance :of p his;
having been imprisoned during the Repkr 4 4
. 1
Terror, the fact being that he survived;.,
Revolution, and died in hie bed in 1814.
not only deprives AL Guillotin of bid glory as ;
a martyr to the new engine of death, but of
the honor which appertains to an Inventor:
He did sketch a suggestion- ot such an instru
ment; but the first machine was 'actually fab..
ricated by K. Louts, Secretary to the College
of Surgeons." Here is an interesting pas-
sage on - the terrible instrument which bears
Dr. Guillotin's name •
Under the old regime it had been one - of thci
privileges of the noblesse, wbett.oondeoined to
death, to have their heads out off instead of being
hung; as was - the me with the commonalty.
From a desire to render the punishtnentrof - w 1
classes equal and similar, es well. as from an 1001-
nation to abridgo the sufforingsuf the patient,
arose the Guillotine, The problem submitted. On
the 10th of .ootober, 1789, to the ,aooatituent'Ae •
scrably, by Dr. Onillotte, one of Its meinbers, - Was
a .roblern which he flattered himself he had -.re-
so ved, and was "How to infilot °spited' punish
meztt in a uniform manner by =HMI .of a simple
machine " The discussion of the 'abject was-ad: .
journed until the Ist of Deeembt r, _when it . was'
dist of all objected by Abbe Maury that'the act of.
'decapitation might have the effoot of depraving
the people, by familiarizing them , with the sight
of blood ; upon which Grano:in exclaimed: " With.
my msobine could oat off your head in the..
twinkling of an eye, and : without giving yea the
Avast pain ", A .load burls of, laughter follifrqd'
thlti BiMaik,trattla labghtit f Whtil 41114'14A . 99ta,
'that the Itallhlilllol Mai hOTTIpI9
.R 8 yet, pad Rolston otinpo-wqr•martvc
to destroy the grealer•number of. thaw. whom it;
.eaused.to laugh t - And what is.nct leas tragic is,,
:that ,the joke spreading beyond,the wills of the
AsseMbly, caused Dr. Guillotin's ran/arks' to
come the souroe of innumerable pleasintriei. The
idea of . taking, of( a man's head In the twinkling of
an ars,:orii of pure philanthropy, no irresisti
ibly etratial . "*• . * Couplets were written on the
doctor and his machine, which it• Was thought only
-,right to baptise with a feminine form of big• own
name, Gaillotine; and : the remit was that, whilst
the instrument owed,ittforigin to a sentiment o
humanity, it derived its name from a ',song !
Pie W 'e'ditiOn:(the eighth) of 'the Ency
etojitidia Britonefia, published in Edinburgh,
was ' lately completed, and the magnitude of
tills litorary enterprise may, bo judged froin,
the following statistics of the money expended
On the i lieventh and eighth editions : Amount
Paid to contributors and editors, £40,070; cost
of paper, .£52,603; of printing and "atereo
typing, £36,708; of engraving and; plat?,
printing, £18,277; of binding, £22,6.18;,0f
tkilfOrti§ini 011 7 061, of miscellaneous 'tempi,
1.4.1130 ! 11111114 it WM otint sif
therte , tiio odllt af the EmeyslOpfedia Bois
aniiica there have been printed above 10,000.
copies. The amount of duty paid upon the.;
paper, caleniated'at three '.Conts a pound, was
L 8,578 ; but six cents per pound was paid on
a 'ecinsiderable part of the seventh edition.
. -
• The Rev. Patrick Bronte, vicar of . Haworth,
.
father- of Charlotte, Anne, and Emily Jane
,Bionte, known by book-readers as- Currer,
-Acton, and. Ellis Bell, died at his parsonage on ;
- June :7th, aged 83.. He was the last of his
family, - and Was born'in the north of Ireland„
' . #lt * at: Patrick's pay, in 1777. He was him 7
Alf . an anther, having published -se'verat'vo
*nes of poems and tales. His sop-in-law, the
1141. v. A..Niebolti; (who married, Charlotte
Bronts,) and whoduis acted as his curate for
some time,.was with Mr. Bronte when ho died...
Some : Som • weeks , a g o upon the faiticir an an:
!nowleement in'- the Illustrated News of = (het,
-";World, weViote a' notice of Charles Lovirrt
'1 Trish belie-4u,g that • he, had died
let Speeiht: WIN of_ Raba, *hum hi!
EAU. ihafgavintly..elf
thority of the New Yo'rk we gladlyl
contradicted Mr. Lever's deilb. b, Liver
pool paper of June 15th . (theEttrcisan Tiites)
piu trvOiy - auicoulavtsll - riViirsivirdttitti;7iiid gives
a sketch of his Life;willealist , ol his principal',
works of fiction.•-. Itappeadslo'this obituary,,
a notice that "the Duldin Evening Mail doubts,
the fact of Mr. Lever's death, and asserts that
a letter was received in Dublin . on the7th of
June from Mr. Lever."
.This is very singular. A man's death an
nounced alllt,lenied—the announcement re
peated three months later and again denied t•
Can there be Iwo public men named Charles
Lever ?-.lf so, has one of them lately departed.?
-In the lendert'Crtfie; a fortnight ago, we read
a notice' that Messrs. Southgate, the London
auctioneers, were about selling Mr Levees
library. Charles Lever, the novelist, bad no
library—unlet4 a few Guide-Books and a
.lo
of French novels merit the title.' Was there,
.
recently, a book -collecting, as well as tebook-,i
writing Charle.s Lever ? . • 1
•
Tha deatkof Mr. George Bishop, the astro ,
nomer, is reported, as haying taken place in
Regent's Ffk,,London, in his 77th,year. Bo
lurcatisively fr filled the officesof a Si , eretary and
Ireaintrer : 44l the l ßciyal Astronomical Society,
and was...electad..President,ioi. l that, body irt
1857. observatory which he maintained
in activity for_ nearly a quarter, o f a century,
has contributed, in addition to incidental work,
an extensive catalogue of double stars, 1I new
planets, two comets,:and upwards of 25 varia-.
ble stare to our list,ibealdes a remarkable star.
which j auddenly became 'visible in 1848, the
only one of its nature 'which has been seen
since ':the • year, 1670: The Tunes - says, cc He,
always evinced a deep interact in . the disseinfi_
nation of,Auftronominalo,knqwh'sdga, and inest 7.
riably walcohieit arwricitiorte.lda observatary e
who.might bellesirotwor a practical acquahttl:
anetr with bilf.faVoritelibience.-- His munifi
cence in the cause of astionithy is well
known, and Will ii;intrelilin's; prominent
and lasting place in ihkroll - cd wealthy ama:
tear scientists-4414 r of which this country
has just reason fa:6,13.94;P-
TAO 'of entioit.
, .
litc . .
The - London'Bconomiit ' has 'hiteFesting
sxtiple.in regard to the sFpply;ci.ishtfpn
whick , it. expr esses
theecfpikntsiinti iliat:tho,prinfnet pf.iho ii.edi
,erraneisq, East Indies and West Indies, will
very r4idly,inc,raase, and that thus muoh may
be donbo;siipplant. the American crop. The
tollowinglable is interesting
QUANTITIES OF RAW COTTON IMPORTED INTO TIM
UNCTAD KINGDOM IRON, VARIOUS COUNTRIES.
•11160—POUNDS.
—:
Unitid Statee=l... - 4.493. 6.1.111 • • 1,116 890.036
SU 749 983:: 7: ."- •:.17.286
Melatorronoan.—._. 18,931,414 • 41,036,608
British Egssessions Ie the '
'fast Indies. • ---,118,472,742
British West Indies and
' 8riti5h223.913
Other oouutri ex 2.090,898
Total:.
CG5,678,861
It will beseen:that, during the- last : decade,
the importationsit)out,all the•districts referred
to, except' Brazil; hOet=increased twith nearly
as much rapidityllttitl onegroin the United
States. The •EfettinOt fe even kind enough to
draw a hopet4lffiew tor the, Britlish cotton:in
terests frohietur present but lt I.
of such a character that, tie magnates of
Dixie's Lantiwill searcolyadmit the theory ad
vanced that,they,sre gradually _about to ruin
their pleadable monopoly, forever forilie bone.
fit of other nations.;-The negroes ate generally
aocused!.ot being very stupid, but they are
not often guilty 'of . acts of more stupendous
follpthin this: : The•Econonnat soya : •
it is •phssible--thongli 7 sulation on eo
shifting snd.involved a subj ,, ect" girth a bare speon
lation,-that the cmaseqnenoes of the present strug
gle' in , Wirviidoe' 'may, so far as the eroduotion of,
cotton is oonoerzied,?As exactly those tohtelt, { foi.
our. own interest ast,,..tho wtterest of;t4oeuvrlde
we ehoulat.sso,st tots r-Wo wish for jt,steddY high
price of Oaten—not sposulativ.l extravagant
price, but such h"Yriee as won _eve a healthy
sdainles to :Prodnotion oountries and
would draw oapital„.to ale plume
where ft is re
quired, and where it, use may be so °Creative. A
long pariodoiu.destruotive war, but of'dtrused
oottfuoion 4 ":4 Amertia—a period, not of annihi
latedtg.knbuottort, bat of straw/tee-nod and ham
,Ir r stf n t r h 7 en du w et e l° re m t e t =e ld r P w r ea u ce t
t e h i t i s n r pt i 4ius lg a : d o(
the cotton drop. is to us, and what the interior of
'the most prcidnotive slave State really ig, my
it assAlttall th,distotion and an the other'
4z;lll4.4Shielt 44109 Ma lota beyond flu Aft
Ztutto is at present ladott."
Arnval.of the Northern irght.
$Bll,OOO in GOLD
Nati Youx, July- V—The steamer Northern
Light has arrived 'from Aspinwall with the (tali•
bonito malls of. the lith ult. end $Bll,OOO
The news .froni the lethnius and booth America
is not important.. '
•''The Irreneh'eiploring expedition on thelethui'te
.',6lL'Datien7hati':returned to Franoio,:having been
unable to effeot their object owing to beavylrains.
They intend to try it a,sain next spring.
Thp •geat gonket,oPlStg.T
BY CIIIAMARTi
This will, !Matinees, be the appellation, in years
to come; of. the mighty stranger, which, unlmrald-.
ed,,novv waves hie hairy niane,so, majeaticapxi i n j
the northern eicy: The word Agtosnet!',
'Fe`i Ao me (hair); dcsaripqe; The f!..sirds.li,
nese of ite appearance, and titi:ex,tiaeldlite t ry:slie,
thitkOopet;'aici ali k e aciarkailk
• liefoiliTeeiday evening of . thiiikeekiMtlibigritid
•liven 'efheard of the Inezplloable atiangei;
irhiiih2.then:finddenly . appiarear the polewhe!t:
tons: ...ylhan no. attention ,was firotnallod,to
about; nine o'olook, !he ,he ad, or
~ r irtplois
comet-niko,!argostaztroost olearlytkoptod. to.tite
,naked sio,l,l!nt Vaireip ever seem-44: nth e
otOyitiion ;?,f - ,r(rfA*.iOr> I `44 l ‘t 11 44k)"'ip ' r
iseisikie l manic, sioth.iliirW'degrooti
nOyitinist liiighi snai ttiqi.DV:
lief, )1 04 alrilost'on' a direat•iffieWillilthat
. BtifAtioik, in. the some oonotellation=o point in
the hasyniss to.rosidonts in this degree! of
northtistitude, stars never, set. 'At that ,tirop: l
tralh„ortati• of ;the comet, extended clear to, the
zenith, the part approrimating the natuilia l lZOlng
intensely luminous. The nucleus,. sliglitlY yelled
is its misty envelope, appeaiSti:sizoitt:OnsfAcArii
the size of the moon,. and .briahiei than the most
brilliant star,
Osieiderini the vilible tartgostride of this sr
ratia fast Of . its apperistai iretifaingle
night le itieFplicable, uners it bialthist,
iatrietridaye the body of ihei• comet wie so iie l ar,
'the' ehn:as to avoid discovery: , Yet , ;-iupposlug
.prohable;•the !all could, hardly have clopped 'l6-1
tine.: Makiag no allowunoe for Emil.,stratAgit2 L
; Approsels, .nte ; abruptness
. cf.its appeloarr.uould
only tie accounted - for tiy supposing Its digit to
so ;gild, that a twenty. four or forty y; eigAittiotos
tidied atioristi bioi?glit . it - from
Alfalfa thi_tlwthminforillim intn
disk glalea!;•ili.eihieh. lt apneare a Mtn °Hunan,
propoeitias.l Rat al thiSli3D6theill would rfquH I ; _
a'ewiftliessof;motion unequalled in the veice4
•44 iseerilly, bodice; it is hardly. admissible. ..;1 4 7e7.
- .24l3l,itie r s: Afore, ;have to await thedirision of the
:learned in , the stars, for uie eiltition of this fads'
resting query` 6,fe*While, - ti few words , respecting'
the little that'is known &beat ttizse singular bodies=
may not be devoid of interest.
• It is not surprising Oar from time immemorial;
the advent of comets lies inspired a degree of awe
,
among 'the.people: They are mysterious liodirg
and: it' is .dilhoult in' any case wholly to;i4rrer f
the mysterious from the superstitious. 4.11...0gket:
hluyenlybiodies have rureiled lheir mystpAta '
she 'iron of, faience ; ant with comets, spetralitiiki
eo theorising ie ehont n l that has been
liextiziod the partial diacovary of the periads'of
Of' they are the " great' ankhairn'i
the physical heavenis, and from all that has bean,
/earned of their charaoter and periodoolty, it lir bg
no means certain that .vie have yet any pos!,iir:
knowledge, aoneorning either their constitution - ,
or mission. .
. .
....... *1 :* ...41.11 ( ZAF.i.i APAR at WWI litIlets_8111 ; TllBl
~...ill,ea 11 ......., 1...1,;.;i11ikk1i Lk!, itillitai A 01110:
I.iriiii' tempted ici leek 'll *i t . 14$ 1 !
port i as a poly:7 -
Wait; frith from the cradle of 011.1141,;,11Viii00111 1 0
'ill primitive' beet and steam; and:rolled foitle from;
:.the Omnitio hand of God, tottink:ania ilee,ranii co-,.
tate . through ages in its' erratic; - but :gradriatly.
phanging orbit, until , time shall'. fix its habits and :
bid it take rte steady course;among the worlds that..
gem ,the midnight aky. That stare--jizezi eiersi-.: -
, . . .. .. .. ~.
do come and .go, has been demonstrated ev.ento
• •
the' observation of our own youog world. .',B ql
whatever comets may became, it is very . eirtein.
they are not fired stars now. They are in 'Dior the
farthest poisible remove from them: Those visible.
to.thelahabitants of. earth, must] be =regarded lasi:
belonging. to our own solar evattm,lroiti the" feet, ox.
. their revolving round the saumeun.( There breonsei,
thing favoring their expertmental. eherructer,•if I - I
may 80 say, in the fact that , some,have,actually
-disappeared.", Instance the comet of 1.770,.Wki1Atl
'kter perfOrating a period whisk "was tiotightio)ii•
I''aitiblishid, beoamtrontaigled in the nioinoriii . a,:
rilpiter, and was lost !— probably dropped:ll44ft a;
heart, by a miss at its perihelion. L 'hell° T st. !
comet 'entering the Bun wonld scarcely DiriiVa spel l
!.on hIB din i ii If 9aiii fini:Daoro like a wheolbairPlE ,
Mill of.filal to Eltoi einifil ilailitui
.; :iii i 1 ;r t . !
TO .pfditdil 011011 e of these bodies aro eliiiior
. ......
of :
. a iength,..i.ileading beyond the age s of_ thei' -
'lVoiliiro ' ear t h ; 'oie.lee itiejp haw; Voila. itiori. ice='
scene at' a ' -later period. ' Ttse' comet of 1868', for
i'oliiiiple, 'kiiewil SS iDiinats'ii•frcirsi' the : J*l;l4g
tits F/orenirie dleceiterei, was- '-setin• letifoie ei
;at•least so eaid.astionceners..! " - ": ' l':'' 1 : 1.,..i;.
-...:•- The. theories .with respect to the' tails °flap!).
bodies' are . ; various; Some infer I that they: ire
trains of vapor, which, as the nuclei approaoh lie;
sun, in their orbits, beams luminous; otheiit; ; tiat:
- these hair-like appendages are , etreame of.'eleo
trioify evolved in their rapid flight through spice'.
That they transparent is plain enough teem:
'the stars belegiietble through them. They always
follow at tlitir approwshes to the sun, and go hefore_
In reeeding from it. • ' ' ••' • - •'•• :. i
i: 'Fears have been frequently expresied of the pro
' babilits of a ;oomet coming. in oellisien with our,
.earth, and some philosophers : have even en
ideavored to soothe the apprehenaiona of the timid
with soierttiffo aasatattoeethatopohan,event, - from
t tie . ethereal . nature, of ,09 . 141;te, would,nef.he lat
"terliftriiith. any serMus . oonsecineaces.' ' 'Fel:baps .
leititi v tiiiji the thing' were as easily done as said; I,
`for iste l fehould, under each eirournstenoes;•Prefer
ztakiriimi ticket; for °nether train. '-floiwe'ver, not
to mike myself ridiculous bifighting philosophirie;:,
espeobdly while there's fighting to de of more Lm=
portance, I wilLoonelude:with a paragraph on'the.
superslittous phase of the eubjeot.% .. .. "_ 1.)
Informer times, the "appearance of these eooentrio
Sidereal visitors was fraught with terror and alarm.
To the ignorant, (which, from history, Beanie to.
I have included everybody,) the comet was the hen;
binger of war, pestilence, famine, or some - other
public, calamity.• That religions people should
have imbibed this fear is not surprising, afteroiehit
%Pope Oalistue did on the appearance of theritirge
!,comet in - 1450. The belief was general that this:
comet was the herald of the Day of Judgment, and
that it would; destroy the earth ; arid, by a stripy,
- .ler colnoideoc•, this Turks at that time eitenhed:
..their viotorious arms Berries • the -Hellespont', end..,
teamed destined to' overrun all Ecerope - TO pre: •
pare Hie - world for this' double 'doom, tbe Pope or- t
rdered the Ave Marfa 'to be repeated three tiMair i
'E‘. day, instead of twice, and to whioh was adliect
the prayer, " Lord,-save us• from the - Tevii,ltirlisV
Turk, 'and the Comet."Vßel also ordrWed ithai
•charoh bolls to ringat-noon, Which waiietireir
the origin of that preetioe, now - sO common. •E At:
writers inform .us that a 'comet, visible; isrdat,i
light, to the naked eie, made its appearance imirt
dietely after the death of Julius Cron?, forty-tlirge„ .
:years before the birth of our SaViour, the Rimini'
believing it to be the metamorphosed seal of Cliiii 7
armed with fi re and vengeance . ~,• • ~:: q ...I
• The great comet 'of 1680 bad a . tall ;nlnetyreEr.
million miles in . length, and moved at the•rate:of,
one million' miles per hoar. Acaordingito t1A.,..3
Whiston, this comet came in 'contact with 'the :
earth in the time of Noah and caused the Fliaid.
This may not be impossible, but Dr: Whisten'e, ,
reputation I believe is better established: as an'
Ingenious theOrist- than a profeiond philosoph er`
The comet of 1811 is still remembered by . some:
who will read this, as is also the fact that hy some
persona it wee' religiously Vegirded as the' her-•
binger of oar. war with England, which 'TOM 'de
clared in the following spring. - • • •
What great event the present comet may herald
remains to be seen. That thia majtstio visitor:has, ,
come at an auspicious moment to be associated In:
the future with some mighty event in the'Vrorld'er
history, either by accident or otherwise, requires
no comment ; and, at the riak of being laughed at,-
I will bore say, that'Els, perhaps, not wise to lidi-)
onle the mere po'ssib'ility of God's diiecting.erieh
oorjanotions 17111 E-providence ; - •espeolally.al we.
are told in His sassed- 'Word . that certain: events
obeli be preceded by certain great signs andlop- j
seas—even',' that the stars shall fall fromHiarell,
(which they would do, optically, In case of ii . 9iiie!
sion,)' and that ttikpowers of thi,Heaveri ;shall be /
,
204.141.1118
1.066 781
8432,720
1,899,938,7a2
Tau °nor'; .tx Busivima - . oonavx —A our
respor.dent, linatingdon witty,
July 2, says : 4 :gbicroPt to the , valley aro as fine,
as. they osp.lii—in faet, they , never look s mie.bettei. l
The hay harvest is pretty well over; and.tlia,oo
b , ile'markably heavy. The :fields of
.truly rich, and almost , ready' for the
aradle," or grain -cutter," 'as the f:atiart
", in•-
oleo. do far, .we have had neither rust; Ay; wee.'
vil, nor smut, and an extra crop may hei expiated.:
So we shell have a superabundance, and Plemiy to
spar* for our distant soldieri. Recent rains have
helped the corn and 'oats along - fitTely." .
Proposed :Celebration in• Baltimore..-
A. rzary.:9o:llFmisseorinsaret eliset ;
. BAL . TlMCiliti:;slo: z 3..7.4ol3 rest preparailOns for
Celebration Ofetheßenitli are being made here,by .
the Union splendid Bllk natiotial tlegi'of
sailriasstil Au; has been prepared , by the oltik
zoos of 8a1a..,;.4 , 74 0401 . 1 i it,6
, .
obiset Ur • Regimentriir ,
163.615 tie ter the essitilt'
.
upori the regiment Icy the mob. • The stare are en
diroled' with - the', following insoriptten c ".. •
"The Loyal Citizens of Baltimore to the Sixth
Regiment of ,Jilaessolinsetts." Inside of this in
soription, are, in•another °feel°. the worde, Pratt . ,
.streets Baltimore,:April 19 lh,-18111.'' • --,,•••
tlt is designedto prevent this , fits to-morrow, if
rrala de alert ts oan.be . - •
soldiers are, Mill- on: guard .fit :the variosii
pointeJA :Ate: otty. .Theytreoltive many nourteelee
from the loyal oltisene.
TWO' CENTS.
:ail
Q.l~l I:t'• t ..: g ..~.
Q~
Qom}
Iid , ORTAIT PiPULAIL 00141/1111i6X—SAST TES
Sal DBMAINDe.: • • . :111/7•111AIII:..:BTATE , GOVSKA
. .
Untie Coniention met at
Grisenvflledn.Tnnely;lBol.. ,
Mon. 'Thomas A. B.
Johi'Williams," of
of Monroe, vioe prest-
Volegatea:worir'present rro'm the counties
'of Anderson; Bleda0; Blount, Bradley, Oautpbell,
-garter, , _Cooko,Silalborne,,.Curnberlund, °ruiner,
fkraerspizilueikliss,...BanCtick„„Aoh.prikJeffersou,
S.ll4,EMourop, Morgan, Hamilton, hlarion, Mo-
Meigs, Rhea, R'osite; SoOlt, Sevier,
Washingkin, Mid FizitiesS. •
` ` During the Convention Mr. Maynard, 'of Wash
ington: cfftired the following*: ' - ' • • •
t iteso/ved,;That,a3 far as we know, the people of
East" Tonnersee have, inbarpoied no obstacle to the
passige of troops and Munitions of-war thioUgh
Our:tiirritorj ; arid while_ we object; and hays( ever
mbjecteSilin puhlio and private , to any,violonoe to
:the iallr,coads,,yet* if the grievous , wrongslotlroted
by Soisiii•Of'tlie troops- are not ettipped; we•warn
all persons concerned, including the clhoers of Mild
Joadp,;thatjhere is a. point at ,which a population
~ 61300,01Y6 ptiOiileroUtiagtid*, - Irisulted, Ind trampled
cannot.be; Ind ought riot be•rest,,ratned.
:ia,The resolution wasiadopted without
+ -
divielon.
iv• After banoh disoussfon l tho declaration of
ie
vanos and resolutions . were - finally adopte d; es
I .:f o llo wl i:p , tt V:11.1 1.1 : : „ :
'7;;) • V:PROSIAB&MONEO?, GRIIty:ANCEII. ,
• We, the.. pbple of Bast Tennessee, again ate
ieenbiedAn' a ' C:inventlon' of oar delegatca,•matie
:the following dvlarationln - addition to that.here
;tofore promulgated .by us at Knox.rille, on the 30th
iand - 31aedaya of'lllaY fast,: , far as we :earl learn,
thejeletitten 2 Vord in;:thl:fitate on the Eltirday or
Itthepraent month was ;free, with ,but; few excel)-
! tiona,in no s , pert of the State, other. than. in Seat
4 1'enharase'-' larger •pirteef Middle "and
Vest' Tennessee. no ; speeches ofdiromfatima
in fa
;voe,of~the,.;Union;:were'l permittedr...Union:papeis
.iftire not, allowed lei circulate... :Meatures were
'Wren' in "snii • parts - of West ` T ennessee , _ defi
riaiieetor..the.'.:Coostittitlon and• laws; which allow
; folded Apical"; to have -the.ballot numbered, in each
fa iatioaa thillnlini WM'S
tliclialakll4lo,llll , lf killellll fillififil,lll IIT2IIIK
.thelfeaplattilvuta an open . t 101064 tleOlared toes a
takes a. pooket•book or effectis an. entrance
'fritif - 'forblddin - plifoas by stealthy ILIOSIIB'S tory,
in . ' voting; usually- adopts pretty. much-the same
'course of -prop:ive."' , Diaunionista, ,
places, charge: Of the , polls, and Union Men
`when voting;'were'cletiouncecl' Linoolnites and
odbolitioniats. •Thcimantmity of the motes in mani
.large counties, where, but
,a few weeks ago. the
'Cpton eentimont aralao strong ' , Proies beYorid doubt
.that Übion men were-overawed by the tyranny of
the military power,•and_thostill.greeter -..tyranny
of a corrupt and aubsidized press . .., In the city of
• Memphis; wheie 5;613 metes were' imr,"bbt five
• t freemen • hatt•the , •courage fo • vote•for -the Union,
- :and these were',.atigmatized the puifißE:preas se
l z sAgn,esa rn yit traltprs who oposed the populr edict."
- r ear eaeet *pestle ou r brethren im the a other di
rsisiontroftthe otatevis published , then only to a
, small extent, rind the members an . d.nfinato of those
aitti*eo.Voilignitiols. '
for , Well' the
-they - th ey' representidVitere ; •ivied, and
the effort made toimpress the minds of the people
that Beat sTaineasco -was favorable to secession.'
The Meniphia itiinserf,ti prominent Disunion paper,
- publislitid-lilalse Remount of our proceedings nn-•
de r; ithes- heed ' l . the. ,:trators in. counoi I,' ;and
styled who represented every county but
torri 'lll - EWA - TOllll/0:11111 . " little 'high of,
11111111111 TIC ifiiiiciff
Mae aunorlibire, .
Oar meeting was telegraphed to the New - cities=
Delia. and it was falsely cad that we , had remised
a. resolution reesommeridieg .submission: if:x.70,000
voter' ;were not -ceat ,Agaiost secession- -,The.de•
' spatoh added ihat*""thei Smithern rights Mee' are
• determined to hold Poise sdon of the State, though
:they should he in theminol ity.' • Volunteers were
allowed to . vote in ancrout of the State, In flagrant:
Yielotion of the' COnstitutioe Brom the - moment.
the 'election was ; over, • and :before • any _detailed :
, ; etaternent. , of . the vote •in the different counties
'had been published, aid botfere it 7Pli P;c4iible
• 'ascertain' the reiult, it was exatinglyproolamed
:that Sensration had ,been owned • by from. 50,000
,to 70 000 votes., This wile to :prepare, the public
mind 'to:. enable " the, lieliesmonists le hold pcs-„
session of the State, -though they shored be in a
' Minority!' The final result Is to be announced by
..a Disunion Givernor, • whose oxistanoe depends
- aped" the fitioaaB of seoelssion, - and no prevision 411
made by law for an examination of the:vote by
disinterested
_persone, of ',even ,for contesting the
, election, •For thess and other causes, we do
_not
'regard theresult of the election as expressive of
the will of 'a MajOrity of the fraemen:of Tenneesee.
11ad.the election everywhere been oop,einoted As; it
was in BasfTenicesiee, We Would" entertain e; dills-.
! fr'erif'Opitheln:• l lltsre; no- effort Was! Made to" sup;
:pima Secession:: papers; or •prevent -•/3ecession
speeches or yotes, although en oirerdrhethiing.niae•
- thee
. '.:21:44:1.1.:6 - .1g•=1,11.11 1 1147.811ii OSA falraatiffi OI
~.71Iltarysionipetiaies or obetrtlet • the transportation'
of armiee,,ey, to proems:ate those who violated. the.
'ttiitdof the United States and of -Tennessee against
'•• =Union men •of Bast ;Tennessee;:
• •emxle,oe tabs neutral in the contest ,- were content
to.
to_ wily
their own Opinion', , and to ale*, the;
: Uttnose latitude " of 'opinion' i land action' ter those
::who;:differsalt Worn -them.: :Ead:•the‘ sames" , •6:ll7:"
ration . in -other ; ports. of the State, 'wo
have no doubt that a majority of our people
would haveiroted 4 to remain in the Union.- But, if
this view' is, arrow:roue, wo, have)the same, and,- as
We, think, a ranch better tight ,remain in the
Goierninent of ' theUnited'States than the other
divisions'of Tennessee have to secede Ironi It: 1 We
prefer to, remainattached; to the ,Govprome,nt of
our fathers. The ConstitationOf the 'United State,
has done ns no wrong. The Congress of the United
States has passed no law to oppress .us.-:.17111.Pre
; sldent of the United States, has niadii_no. , threat
, againit the: law abiding people 'cif - Terniasiee
I •Under the Government of the United` Stites we
. have ; ex joyed as a: nation: more, of; civil:Awl re
ligions freedom than any other ; people under the
• whole heaven. We believe•there - is no oanseifor
rebellion or 'secession on the part of the people of •
Tennessee None was assigned by. the Legisi&
tare in their miscalled deatiratiee of inde,
• pond - ewe—No :adequate maths 'can! be assigned. •
The select, oonsonittee of that ; body., asserted a I
gross and 4 inexcrisable : falsehood in :their ad
dress to - the-'people'of Ternieitalie- 2 When • they : l
sdeelaied:l:•thet the: Government of '.the';Uni
tell-States Ass. made ; war upon them. ;Willi!
eesisieareausisliii - tline far been sustained b? dap
•
`caption end-faleahocid;'•by falsehoods as to thatalk,
,tiortofOongless;: by false despatches as to batt l es
'that
that, ; never fought,- and yictories
haver:woe; by'falso &am:tits:alto the purposenot
I therteiriffent ;16y , false 'represeutations as to he :
Miew.s.corthnnaten roan ; .and by,falee pretemeee as
' : the .facility, with Which the Secession „troops:
- would take.poseession 'of' the capital and oaptare
:clhelsighest officers of the GOvernment. Thee:aisle
; of Secession or rebellion has,no °harms for t ns, and
ltsprograili hAfb - ein married by the moat iiiatm
leg and:ilingerinie attacks open the public liberty.
1/nother.:l3tates,os well.as our owe; its whole cotirse
„threatene.tomenihilatethe lazt.vestige of treacle=
191111 . 03i . eiskt and "primerityltie blessed na the
•••
Government- of thelUnitexi • Statese, ( the fallowing
mnltilgt,enninerntodlnesome of the fruits of Bedell.:
510e.,,,. - 'wise rimed, Jorward, by, me:inhere! of
' Vonesewhii'irere sworn'tei support the memb ers
tntioni ofeLtheTnitedu States; and. were them telbill
a..P.PPartod-,,by :the .-9overnmentj was:effected .
with Ont iinnisultation 'With - ell lb. States interested
llialthekideverie
. triestioi4 aid-Jett/lent exhausting
;Phaosable;retnedien.;.: , ltt.has plunged the:country
into oivi/ war, paralyzed otir commerce, interfered
'vritlf!tliewlt'ole trade ind - busjneirs - of Cuecountry,
• , lessened the Calueof-atirProperly;:dastroyed many
of jOe t pursjitti endinge . fair tot nvolvethe
,whole,najlan,in.irrerrlevoldro. bank rtiptoy, and rile.:
• 11 liar Changed theentire"relatiens of States and.
iadopfedtooktatitutionewithout_imbutittilog themi to
a v.a.!Sraf 4 1 '°:Patlgap aali Thar° Li4Ph •-• a : vPta has
,boeia.atithialsed, nee Seca nion.lthe'
piecorlbed! by -of :Virginia, that
throe :who toted , this Union ticket "must leave pie
-13tete. ' P 1 ,hati„.. advocated: a _constitutional,
halahl, aiid'e'dicitator;and'ie, through Own
Riasinond t'Press; :at 'thie -moment recollimea.
leg t .to rheiConvenclons in Virginia ,a ,restrie:
tion of _thi„xjght of suffrage ' , and ," in 'levering
o ' onnection' with the Yankees thabolistr every ies,
Afgeof. reseniblanoe-to the.- inititutione of that" ;
•detested race"-, It has formed military leagelss,:l
'pasted military bills, and - opened the door for op,
pressSive taxation • Withait consulting the people ; I
and ,then,; In monkery of a free:election,.hasire',
glared thorn by_their- votes to .santitiop ,its nantra•
`Mae; under the penaltieeof Moral protoriptfon
:at the print of; the biyonet. It his offered a pre ;
;lawn for oriene z in,direotiog,the,diaohargeof vol
unteers from criminal ,proseintions„ and in reoinn:
minding the judges not in hold their court'' It has
stained -ouVotatutebook with the repudiation Of
skrortherpjlebafiand has Malitlyyiolatedthe Cousti- •
tntion, by 4*i:opting, through its milairfal Yxten.
'ion, to destroy this right of suffrage. It has calla:
nose the people% theiStateoffleorgla,and.roly aeon '
require, ,the people of:rem:tease°, te e
,pontribut all
ha
tt surplaa oottoit,:earn, 'wheat; hlfoon; beef,
to' the-support of-Pratended 4 Voieroments, alike
Asistilute ononeywrrtieradit: ....ft bee attempted
to destroy,theaocauntability of public servants to
the Peeps by vieretteghlathin, and set the oblige-
Um of anoalh.at . denance. Jibes passed laws de- .
clarinele treaso n to say or, do anything in favor-of
lles - Ooyernniefic Of the , 'gaited States , or against
`theydeafedersite Statee'ind Snob's fowls now be
•fore, and: 'we :apprehend: will soon: be' :paned; by
the Legisleture of Xennstesees. , • : /t has attempted
to ' :destroy, arid; we, real... boon, utterlylirostrate
the freedom of and of : the' rirees:•:ltl has
involved the Southern States irra war Whose ems
gess is hopeless, and which most ultimately lead
to the rill of the'PeOpler Iti bigoted, overbearing,
and :intolerant spirit 11as-alreadY.sutdeoted; the
people of East
. TallAapt) to many petty grievances;
'our
,peliPle - havo;lieen ; our flags have
' our - people,
fired upairand torn down;- our' housed base ;
bean rudely entered ; _our. families aubjeoted.to ia
sult ; lour peaceable -meetings interrupted ; :Our'
Weiner!: 'shot at' We meneUleu Ault;
'eliery; our towns pillaged ; our• eilizens: robbed.
and some of.them; . assasainated and:murdered. 1 No'
effort has beeespared .todeter, p U
m Union ,nice of!
Bast Tensiesiee - from the • expression of their free:
thoughts.-- The...penalUes of treason have been.
threatened against. hem, and murder and assaisi::
'tiaticin ) hire been •openlyincouraged• by leading
ttleoissioe journals.- As _Secession has been thus
; overbearing., and totolerant white In the minority ,
)11Iait - Tannoliiee, nothing better can be : eipeisted !
of the Pretended majority than wild', anoonstitri-;
~ ticinal, exd.:oppressive legislation ;•. an: utter 'eon
tempt. end, Disregard ot,"law l a daterznination
10101i1Vctl. Vairii !tacit lifibt §ilivi,Wilwlaft4 tbi
amapori - vrAreitagiiiiiilial ilv etkyis, tx - ylvist 617
money and property to. Itid.a clause he- detests,. and
to become the object of agora and derfelon,,as t .44ll:
as the victim of intolerable and'reletitlen opPitia-t
sion. In view of •these considerations, and of the:
fact that the people of East Tennessee have' i de,
aired their Milky to the Union by a majorilY'of
about- 20,000 Vitae i 'therefore, we de resolve
„
;declarer ir •
• • • • hll i a /RriC i aa•
That we do earnestly deelre therestorattOniif
peace to' out. whole country, and •most . espeolallt
that oar own settios of the State ofjennellniet
should not be involved in civil war.
THE WEEKLY PRESS.
elm 'Prima Paw will De seat I. inebssribers I,T
mail (per annum le aittanee,l at...- $2.0( 1
Three Copies. '• LOP
414
Five " 8.00
Ten It ea 1.2,00
It it% aidisal)llollft
PLA—. NA Wpm at
tam kinbearii;t3
Fora Club of Terence.-one or hvelr, yh gttU nee ea
extte copy to tha getter-ua of the Glob.
leir Postmaster. are requested to sot se Aconite for
Tee WitzeLY Pau..
cALIFORAILA PRESS,
Issued three times a Month, to time for the Ohliforala
&omen.
2. That the notion of our State Legislature, in
passing the so oallod Deolaration :of, Inde
pendence," and In forming the " Military League"
with the Confederate Statea, and,in adopting other
acts looking to a separation of the:Siete of Ten
nessee ffem the p 2 Overnment of the UnitettStatee,
is unconatitutional and illegal, and, therefore, not
binding upon no as loyal citizens.; • . •
3 That in order to avert • . conflict with our
brethren in other. parts of the. State end:desiring
that all constitutional means shall be restated to
for the preservation of fence:vie :do; , therefore.
constitute and appoint '0 P. Temple, - of RllO2
John Netherland, of Hawkins; and James P. Mc-
Dowell, of Greene, oommiasionere, whose duty it
shall. be , to : prepare , a memorial, and, cause the
same tO,be presented to the General Aisembly of
Tennessee, now in lession, asking itenonsent - that
the oountieg composing :Bast Tennessee, and snob
counties in ,Middle . Tennessee
,JlB de.l4lrpio go- °pa
rate with them may form and separate
State.
4Desiring, it'ghollfiftli, aulftltV General A3-
.
sembly 'will grant this our reasonable , rrquest, and
still ;claiming the right to determine our own des
tiny, we do further resolve that an election be held
in all the counties of East Tennessee, and" snob
other counties in Middle Tennessee adjacent there
to as may desire to !on' operate with us, 'for the
choice - of delegates to represent thom in a General
Convention,ito be held in the town of Kingston' at
snob time as the president of this Convention,' er,
in case of his absence or inability, any one of the
vine presidents, or, in like case with them, the
seoretary,of thia,COnvention may . designate; and
the alder so designiting the day 'for the MOM •
bling of said Convention obeli also fix the time for
holding the election herein provided for, and give
reasonable notice thereof.
5. In order to carry eat the foregoing resolution,
the sheriffs of the different counties are hereby re
quested to open and hold said election, or oause
the same to be so held, in the canal manner end at
the usual places of voing. as prescribed by law ;
and in the event the sheriff of any ocunty should
fail or reinse to open and hold said election
Or cause the same to be done, the coroner
of Ruth (county is requested Is do eo, and
should eueli coroner fail , or refuse, then any
constable of such county is hereby authorized to
open and hold said election or cause the same to be
done. And if in any comity, none of the above-
Auer hold ntd then IlD,y
Juliet of the Mei fttedlOiflbr In goon ouluiy t i
Whorl/ad to hold the same or ono ii tv
The officer or other person holding said 'election
shall certify the result to the President of this
Convention, or to such officer as may have directed
the same to be holden, at as early a day thereafter
'es 'practicable; 'anti the officer to whom , said
• Write ; may .: be made, 'shall open and compare the
polls and fame certificates to the delegates eleoted.
.6. hitela said Convention the 'several counties
shall be repiesented , as , follows C The county of
Knox _shall, elect three delegates, the counties of
Washington, Gieene, and Jefferson, two delegates
sash, and the remaining counties shall each elect
one delegate.• •
General McClellan and Gov. Blegothit.
The Iggle peptar,e,Oontain.the following :
.
• : b,;,-..Bsapoirairmine K. &ATM GUARD, I
17itilskrotiv, ' Snee'2B, 1861.
attention has been directed to the tot
deepatoh- from General ; McClellan in
reference to my interview with hiniinCineinnati:
' ' Gear-row, 1 71t4,'JUne 26.
•To•Cisisti.:W. Nelson, U. S: Navy : .;
117,2tterview with ; General Bueknoir.r.was par
.:tonal, not Offioial. . I was - solicited by him' morn
thad once. • .1-made ndstipurations on the part of
.the Grieral Oeyernerenti and regarded his premiss,
as attest. es.
laity t814A1%
• _ 016.11 aOuiLus.
Between General -MeCtellan - and myeelf. there
eta be nothing more than a Misapprehension se
to the reshlts Of 'theilterview: - the interview
was personal,-it-waszatoessatily officrial in tie re
sults. Neither be nor I ocutd, except in our offi
cial ospiaity;earry out any understanding This
position is neoessarily•ponoeded in the ;following
deapateh r ,addrersed not to, me personally, but to
the Gott b* Of Kentucky
"-; s , OrneINNATI, Jtiiie 11, 1861.
Govintamt , B..Manorrix I have teoetved in
formation that Tennessee troops are under orders
to"occupy lelabd No. 1, six mites below Cairo. In
- Mioordanoe with my understanding with General
:Buckner, I Oral npen you to prevent this step. Do
.you regard the islands in the Mississippi river
'above the Tennessee line as within• your juriedio
tion, and if ; ao,:;what ones? Respectfully,
. , B MaCnanLea,
Major General, U. 6. A.
. •
• I first saw ' th 'aboveb despatch, the same day I
received yours on:themmerubjeot, published in a
Memphis : paper, as -a ..gelegraphio despatch_ from
Cincinnati;_ hake seeing it"l had' already
-Sided in aecterdailisesiiitli my agreement and your
inatzuotions,-and,preventedthe oompation of Co
;l,tuxtbas by' 8,000 Tenneasee-troolis.-
' 'lt is'ffue that - lA*loe sought' an interview with
, 43eneral /t ID equally true that he had
.1311,0int11131 einfailld IBTODIL.WiIffitOI ale
NIMBI 1 IBM tilt lilt periivii 111111 Y titill."."r
'hbl dtty . io 'the , 'floirernmant Wawa ho serves witn
such fidelity, and ability. Ile knows that .my put -
lets was to make such arrangements with him as
would tied tO, presetire 'the pesoefal attitude oi
Kentucky.- The; objeots to-be attained - by either
party wore a sallioient2remon for seeking:or. de
siring an interview. .
My letter to' you of the 10th east 'presenti, in
my opinion, a concise and accurate report of what
" arrangempnt,", and Gen. MtsOlellan, in
big deipsech,Ri you, calle r = ." finderitinting," ro
'salting from - this interview. - The misapprehension
in , referenco that understanding, I amladsfied,
Ldoes not rest with me . ;
because my own opinion, as
tdthigheriticitifearinf My: a aaaaaaaaa a a Is fortified by
that 'of other gentletnen, -one of who'd wee present
at the interview,: andnhosejecolleotion oorres
ponds with mine. .
(len. McClellan , by . his deapatch,seems to regard
my "promise to drive.:dat the. Confederate troops
as the / only, result of,the ,Mterview." might,
-with eiltial reiaon; regard our exemption from the
'presence ofFederitlind Confederate troeps as the
only_resalk - of that interview.;,. , lf my , only object
.was,to announce, my,purpcsa,to.drive,out the uou
, fid'erate trodris;lt'irisfeedlesslo . 'nteet The
-result; Judgment. was the agreement report-
Ted in my. letter. of theAlltkisust. ; , r .
General McClellan elates _ he
.'" Made no
stipulations 'Cre't elates _ that
part - of ;the Genral Govern
.ment.,,,ln the Miners .deipetoh to Cap-
Itein,-,N,elsop ;reads, regazding the ; interview as
"forgone], net official," wriest: But
action'as in - officer Of the Goverrinteit
:easily binds; Itimmithlit'..:tholimits.of, the. ,agrees
Itints The nature and extent of, that
s agieement
tire Matti - it* atitedliany 'letter. eV" agree
meat" " underitanding" - reanithg'from " the
PeUry, which. he will Adopt towards Retituoky."
The right of Kentucky to claim the "poaition she
had essumed.gr'ria 'neither - °brooded nor dimmed,
hut was-'denied ;by General •MoCle.litn.. 'lt was
simply; the policy of. permitting Keutlintry to dc
what eh° has alwayi done heretofore, °lobate the
laws witialilerown Mate,- or tie iieltoyofithinst
-ing:iipon her a lneedlegi war,;J:,y.e.irent agreed as
that . folicyouid . the reimit -of timiLnoncord of
;opinion was the i'greement.refghted.- -` "
—Whatever view General:6lo)loin miyttike of
it, whether personal .or, tlrere l oan be nu
doubt that he will frilly ocmply,with the agreement
- 'entered into tetween ''The wisdein of his polloy
le sufficientlY'demonstintal,bithe peaceful results
- ; ; lshich hatrefollpigeti,& r -
; Tam, sir, vetry, FespeatfedlY;
-- -Iroar obedient ims rim) t,
. tz2 .8.31. Buckman;
?; , • • ; %Inspector General.
To his Zioeuenet Meaditi'lx; Frankfort, Ky. .
FINANCIAL 'AND COMMERCIAL
Tile Molter Market. _ •_.
_• • . : . Pau.sold.rma,. July 3, 1861.
_The Stook Board held bat. one Bela!on to : day,
and adj?urned over to Fr iday .
. The Oldness trans
acted was pielgre and ; unimportent.
,Prleilshow
ed no:change. • '
• The money market hi not altssisifirany of Its
teatriree. •' - • ' . •
'Tile rime Inn:francs Cointraly:,!of ibU'ogy. has
deolared a dividend of thratilist payable on
the lit proximo.: • r : • . •
• . .7`he following are the shipments of. coal by the
Barclay Railroad and Coal Company.
,For the weekending June 29,1E61
rreviona shipments.—
Same
for thOsetusou.—..
time dart
rnorease..; •.. .... ..
ie the itmotitit of coat' tiarieported
on ktlie '•Bliainokin Valley and Pottsville Railroad
for_the 'Weak ending .June 2fl. 1881
.
For theweek ending June 99.1891.-- 6.2.29 19 91 774 4i. - 1
Same time lam year_....._.__..:,.„:.:5.038 11. 80,10 la
Incnome— 3.141 08•^11,6"O 09
Philadelphia Steele Eichazige :
• ,
RIYOILTED DT a • E. alAnt aura, Iderobstte iS4ohadage.
. .
FLIST BO ARD.
I .. .
30 241 & 8,1 5t . R... - -'.....411 'lO Hazleton 'cosi:'— .SO
. 8.. do Z» ....:—.1...,..80?. :800 city 6s.X. • - - S
300 GAY 62 N ew.... 96- 25 Cot.ftwissa R Prof. 6
• • /00 do , —. ~.*-1. -9.5 - 1000 YU* & Ilinnb'y 78. 69g
8273.89 Pa lit atfr dirti , I .16 Aleahaaioa Bank— 2)::
'FTER
38 Morrir —"--
Philadelphia Markets.
' • Jelly 3—Evening.
there it no alteration in the Flour market, and
very little business doing in the way of bates: Tbo
penes are irregular, Bales inoludel2oo tibia West.
ern sorsped at $3 75z4 ; 150. bbls do sope - ifine at
$4 25a4 50 ; and SOO 'We kobil Pinneylvaois extra
.at $5'25 per.bb!,; Bales to the trade range at from
$42515 tor Wektern and
. Penna. superlinei_ $4 50s.
5 25 for extras, and from $550:16 50 FPI - extra fa-
Willy and fancy brandi,fteeordlng to qn@ily. Rye
.Flourta dull Land selling.in lets as wanted ACES 25
per.bbl... Penna.- flOrm.ilfeal is.soaroe, and fresh
g rhind;lr here; would bring 42 75 'pet bbl:'
.• Wintif•domekin slowly,, ' bit•bnyers_areholdlng
L ag; L abqumgtobtuthigi Bold at,ll2allBajor fair to
.prime,red, moStlY.the.latter rate foiNurrYlvaniu,
afloat,' and‘l2Sal3o3'-for whife.'''''Ele-Panusyl
:vania is in steady demand at 00o,zelloat-P:Corn
-The,efferinge,and rates are lightoind the,dgmar.d
limited - about 2,500 bashes yell* bays been
disposed.lif, mostly at 52/a stoat. .thati z "Viiatinue
_dull rand neglooted ; :4,oooLbaishalif_Piista 'Penn
sylvania sold at 29 ,ii pintAiern•ale z rilfiFlitcat 215 - 1.3,
without salvo., • •-
••; 'Runkle quiet i Lein, and
1/14.3ie. 1 ivicroltigiticady.MNl porffioa. Ya
_finalise ; Tanner 'sßark.
' 001 TON —Roldatie akie vePy ! l2Zm In elleir • views,
'hut' there -le no f latdrydrom: mini/Winters, and
atothing.dolog....; L.;lli. ,
0)10021,4as are.fictletkinet,irm, • and ,'We - heat of
'no " - •'; • " -'‘k• •••
--zPrioea are:without:Any .material
016 .! /, SI s POAS i liitql.1,4 1 A4 t 9 416 .". 1 1" " rd
11171IIIRIPAill. .
ling; • •
1-) iat Idle
1170 for barrels, aiklatin fo^prhie.Ohlorand Wald
at 16110, •
BOARDS
391 i