RATES OF ADVERTISING• Four lines or less constitute half a square. Ten lines more thou four, Constitute A square. Half sq. 7 one day..— $0 ao one oq.. me da.V...+- e° 80 " one week.... 120 " v i e week.... 202 " one month.. 300 " one month.. 800 " three months 500 cc three months 10 00 " six months.. 800 " six months.. 15 00 1 " one year—. —l2 00 c , one year..._. 2003 J3' Btalineas notices inserted in the 'moat. aoLtria, or bet. &Ts marriages and deaths. TEN CENTS PEE LINE for each Lisartion. To merchants and others advertising by the year, liberal terms will be offered. - ICP" The number of insertions must be designated on he advertisement. (Er Marriages and Deaths will beinserted at the same 111,08 as regular advertisements. Bustitso eats. ROBERT SNGDGRASS I ATTORNEY AT LAW, Wee North Third arca; thud door above Mar ket, fiarriaburff, Pa. N. B.—Pension, Bounty and Military claims of all kinds prosecuted and collected. Refer to mono John 0. Kunkel, David 'Mamma, Jr., and IL d. Latnberton. myll-d&went M. H. MILLER, AND R. E. FERGUSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW . OFFICE IN SRO EMAKER'S BUILDINGS . 1 SECOND STREET, BETWEEN WALNUT and MARKET SQUARE, sp294l.tir Heaily opposite the Buehler Howe. T HOS. C. MAODOWELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. °Ace is the Ex-change, Walnut at, (Up Maim) Having formed a uunuestion with voile* 14. Wtok ington City, wno are reliable business men, any bulgi ness connected with any of the Departments will meet with immediate and careful attention. m6-y DR. 0. WEICHEL, SURGEON AND OCULIST,. RESIDENCE THIRD PINAR NORTH STUNT. Re Is now fully piepared w attend promptly -te tk. duties of proftesion in an it# t 4 tikekas- A LONG AND TILT ailoorsePuL WIDIOAL enernarsnos justifies bin' in promising full and ample satisfaction tc ail who mayfavor himulth a cnil,bsthedisesseOhronit or any ether nature. miltddcwls 8 "LAB WARD. NO. 11. 7 NORTH THIRD ST, HAHRINNIING. STEINWAY'S PIA.IIIOB, KIi'LODZONS, VIOLINS, OIIITANS, Banjos, .Flutes, Fifes, Drums, liccordeoss antrsos, swear Aso ROOK. MUSIC, &0., he., PHOTOGRAPH FRA.DIE S, ALBUMS, Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors, Square and Oval of everydeseriptioa made to order..Begnilding don,. Agency for Howe , ' Sewing Machines. Ur Sheet Music sent by Mail. ectl-1 JOHN W. GLOTE,R, MERCUANT TAILOR: Has just received froin New York, an assort went: of SEASONABLE GOODS, which he offers to his customers and the public at nov22) MODERATE PRICES. dtt HARRY WILLIAMS, CILLAL3C3I O I ..A.G-MMT I I I 9 402 WALNUT STRUT, PHTLADRLPHI&. General Claims for Soldiers promptly collected, State Claims adjusted, &c., &c. mar2o-dlm SMITH & EWING, ATTOENEYS-AT-LAW, THIRD STREET, Harrisburg, tract - Ica is it 0tt44 1 Qmirtn of Dauphin eolmt7- Col. lectiona made promptly. A. 0. WITH, J. B. EWING. jCOOK, Merchant Tailor , „ S 7 CIINIMIT ST., between Second and Front, gas just returned from the city with an assortment of CLOTHS, CASSIXERES AND TESTINGS, Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to order, and, also, an assortment of BRADY MAIM • Clothing and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods: n0v2.1-Iyd DENTIST itY. B. L GILDER, B. D. S., 440 NO. 119 MARKET STREET, EBY & KUNKEL'S BTOTADING, UP STAIRS. jaaS4f RELIGIOUS BOOK STORE, rum AND SITIIDAT suirook - DSPOSITORY, E. S. GERMAN. ff SCUM SZOOND ISTREXT, ABOVB OHLIBNIM 111111N18817Z6, PA. Depot for the sale of litereoscopes,Stereoscopioiriews, lanais and Musical Instruments. Also, subscriptions 'taken for religious publications. nollo-dl. % TORN G. W. - MARTIN, FASHIONABLE CARD WRITER, BBBWS HOTEL, HARRISBURG, PA. All manner of VISITING, WEDDING AND BTISI HESS CARDS executed in the moat artistic styles and moat reasonable forma. deol44tf "UNION ROTEL Ridge Avenue, comer of Broad greet, HARRISBURG, PA. The undersigned informs the public that he has re cently renovated and refitted his well-known " Union. Hotel" on Ridge avenue, near the Round House, and is prepared to accommodate citizens, strangers and travel are in the heat style, at moderate rates. His table will be supplied with the beet the maskets afford, and at his bar will be found superior brands of liquors and malt beverages. The very best accoinme &alone for railroaders employed at tbs phopa in this vicinity. fal4 dtfJ HENRY BOST(i•Eht. FRANKLIN HOUSE, BALTIMOBI, MD. This pleasant said commodious Hotel has been no roughly re-fitted and re-hirnished. It is pleasantly titutted on Borth West corner of Howard and Fran Min streets, a few doors wenrt a the Marcher*. Central way Depot. Avery attention paid to the comfort of hie guests_ G. IffillSENAttiff, Proprietor, icl2-tr (Late of Wins Grove. Pa.) T HE°. F. SOIFEFFER I BOOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER, NO. 18 HAMM STRUM, HARRIBBITRO. Er Particular attention paid to printlog, ruling Lad =gof Railroad Blanks, Manifests, Inittranedßoli recks, BM-Heads, &o. Wedding, Visiting and Business Cards priptedst viL7 Loy prices and in the best style. jean' MESSRS. CHICKERING & 00. HATE AGAIN OBTAINED THE GOLD 111- EDA.L! AT THE - ME II AIT FAIR, "STOW, mum TAK resClinfta 0 PULE BIXi'Y 09.11PET1TOR,sj Wareroom for the CHIEKERING PIANOS, atMarris burg, at 9 2 Market street, 0e93-tf W. KNOOMPS MUSIC STORE. T ADIES I YOU KNOW WERE YOU a can get fine Note Paper, Envelopes,- 'nailing end. Wedding Cards -At SORPFFER 3 S BOOKSTORE. UPERTOR STOCK OF LIQII4 DOCK, Js., & 00., are now able to offer to their exudonieril &M the public at large, a stook of the purest 1.140181% aver imported into this market, compri sing in part the following varietiea : W itl2ll. -IRISH,. SCOT° H 2 OLD BOURBON. WINE-PORT, SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA. OTARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY. JAMICA SPIRITS PRIME NEW ENGLAND RUM: DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS. --- - - - These Diluent can all be warranted; and In addition to these, Dock & Co. have on hand a large variety of Wines, Whisky and Brandy, to which they 'Wit.) the par/len - tar attention Of the pilafs_ VOTIONS.--Quite a variety of =offal aid entertaining artialeeL-aheagrat SOLIBBPILWO BOOKOTOO. _. .. _ ... __.. .. . _.. . .. . . . . . - , - ;-‘?.' 7 7'i - • 41.7 ' - . '-':':.: r . ~= ... ..,0 . .....=.----"-- Union, ~__, •. „ , ~,i ~.,.... r 9: 4 .-.. , . .. . VOL. 5.--NO, 260 Alebiral. *** DR. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT THE GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY, FOR RHEUMATISM, - GOUT, NEURALGIA, LUMBAGO, STIFF NECK. AND JOINTS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, OUTS & WOUNDS, PILES, HEADACHE, and ALL RHEEL NIATIC and NERVOUS DISORDERS For all of which it is a speedy and certain remedy, and never fails. This Liniment is 'prepared from the recipe of Dr Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, the fa mous bone setter, and has been used in his practice for more than twenty years with the most astonishing suc cess. AS AN ALLEVIATOR OF PAIN, it is unrivaled by any preparation before the public, of which the most skeptical may be convinced by a single trial. This Liniment win core rapidly and radically. 11/IZU MATIO DIIIO.IIDITAS of every kind, and in theasecais of mutes where it has been used it has never been known to fall. FOR NEI7II4LGI4, it will afford immediate relief in everrease, however distressing. It will relieve the worst eases of HEADACHE in three minutes and is warranted to do it. TOOTHACHE also *ill it cure instantly FOR NERVOUS DEBILITY AND GENERAL LASNIVIDE, arising from imprudence or excess, this Liniment is a moat happy and info - 1114m, relivear. Act ing directly upon the nervous tissues, it strengthens and revivifies the system, and restores it to elasticity and vigor. FOR PILES.—AB an external remedy, we claim that it is the beat known, and we challenge the world to pro. duce an equal. Every victim of this distressing com plaint shouldgive it a trial, for it will not fail to afford immediate relief, and in a majority of cases will effect a radical cure. Qv - I - Amy awl SORE THROAT are mometimes ex. tremely malignant and dangerous, but a timely appliam tion of this Liniment will never fail to care. SPRAINS are sometimes very obstinate, and enlarge ment of, the joints is liable to occur if neglected. The worst case may be conquered by this Liniment in two or three days. BRUISES. CUTS, WOUNDS, SORES, ULCERS, BURNS and SCALDS, yield readily to the wonderful healing properties of DR: SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT, when used accordion' to directione. Mee. CHILBLAINS. FRIISTED FEET, and INSECT BITES and STINGS. EVERY HORSE OWNER shereld have this re M ed,y at band, for its !timely 111f19 at the find appearance °flamenco; will effectually pre• vent those formidable diseases to which all horses are liable and which render so many otherwise valuable horses nearly worthless. Over four hundred vUluntarYteatimonials to the wori. derful curative properties, of this Liniment have been received within the last two years, and many of them front persons in the highest ranks of life. • C Al lITIO To avoid irepoutit - on, observe the Signature and Like ness or Dr. Stephen - Sweet on every label, and also " Stephen Sweet'e Infallible Liniment" blown •in the glass of each bottle, without which none are genuine. ItIORARDSON & 00 4 Sole Proprietors, Norwich, Ct. For sale by all dealers. splleow-d&w WHITE SIILPHITR AND CHALYBEATE SPRINGS, At Doubling Gap, Penn. JAMES D. HENDLEY, PioimisToa, Late of Kirkwood House, Washington. SEASON OPENS 15th JUNE, 1863. These Springs are in Cumberland county. Peruiya, 30 miles west of Harrisburg. They are accessible from all the principal cities by railroad to Harrisbuig„ thence by the Cumberland Talley railroad to Newville from Neuronic. 8 miles good staging to the Springs. The stage is always in waiting upon the arrival of the cars at Newville. gaseengerg leaving Philadelphia, Baltimore or Wash ington in the morning tan arrive at the giitifsgs ths same evening at five o 'c lock. i The Hotel s commodious and comfortable, with Hot and Cold Baths attached, and extensive grounds for _walks and amusement. The long experience of the present Proprietor (for Many years past st the Ilirkwool Honse in Washington, D. ~) enableitirn to say, that it will be conducted in a manner to please all Vial+ ors. T ISSMB :—s2 per day; $l2 per week; 4 weeks $4O Children and servants half price. je9.d2m HAMSIIII 20,000, lbs. Composed of the following Brands just received: NEWBOLD'S—Celebrated. NEW JERSEY—SeIect. EVANS do SWIFT'S.-SuPeriOr. MICHINER'S EXCELSlOR—Canvassed. MICHINER'S EXCELSIOR—Not canvassed. IRON ClTY—Canvassed. IRON CITY—Not canvassed. PLAIN HAMS—Strictly prime. ORDINARY HAMS—Ver7 good.' 117' Every Ram sold will be guaranteed ihti febeeSell ted. WM. DOCK. jr., .dc CO. MORTON'S UNRIVALLED GOLD -1.12.. TER.-FIRST QUALITY WARRANTED. NONE BETTER IN THE WHOLE. WORLD. A GREAT LUXURY! PIBBONS in want of a superior and really good GOLD PIN will find with me a large assortment to select from, and have the privilege to exchange the Pens 'until their hand is perfectly suited. And if by !Mr amine the Dia mond ;invite break off dtithig twill% months, the pny= chaser shall have the privilege to select a new one, without any charge. I have very good Gold Pens, wade by Mr. Morton, not warranted, in strong silver-plated oases, for $l, $1.26, $1.50, $2.00 For sale at 80HIPPNIV8 BOOKEITORN, No.lB Market Street, Harrisburg, Pa 11T. BABBITT'S, Concentrated, Con. . 4 donned, or Pulverised Soft Soap. Three gallons of handsome white soft soap made in five minutes. No grease required. ' Discorions :—Dissolve one pound of the soap in one gallon boitiog water then laid two gallons warm, when cool you will have three gallons HANDSOME WHIT'S 801IFT'80AP. Ten pounds will make one barrel of 'soft soap. The soap thus-made ix an excellont waqh for spetegg, shrubs and plants of all kinds. • For Kale by my 2- WM. DOCK, Jr, & CO. HEALTH, MONEY 1 HAPPINESS 11 AA Ude season oftear, when BO much sielmeee prevails, every one, should .provide himself with DB. HUM PH/01PB HOMEOPATHIC wiranonao, and prevent disease in its begihning. A. fresh supply always on hand at SCHDPFDII , 2 DOOR-STOILN, merle Harrisburg. A • SPLENDID A S SOR TMENT OF THO GRAPHS, Formerly retailed at from $3 to $5, ere now offered at 50 and 95 cents, and $1 and $1 60--rublished by the Ar Union, and formerly retailed by them. Splendid Photographic Album Pictures of all distin guished men and Generals of the army, at only 10 eta. For sale at SOBEFFFIVB Bookstore, 18 Market •etreet, Harrisburg. WWHITE BRANDY !! !—FOR PRESKILV- Into PURPOSE:S.—i very superior article, (strictly pure) juat received and for sale by ittlyl WM. DOCK, Jr., & Co. WANTEIL---67 5 A MONTI( ! I want to hire Agents in every county at $75 a month expenses paid, to Be n my idaehines. Address, new cheap Family Sewing a. MADISON, m54:13m Alfred, Maine. • ANTED $6O A MONT H ! We v v - wait Agents at $6O a month, expenses psi& to sell our Everlasting Pencils, Oriental 'Burners, and thirteen other new, useful and curious articles. Fifteen circulars sent free: Address, inft-Ont SHAW & CLASH. Biddeford, Blidlut• • WAR I WAR ! - - BRADY, No- 62 Market Ateet, below Third, has itteired ft lens .aewrtmenc or Swoops, gauge NA BELTI, Which he will sell very low. an2o dti HARRISBURG, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1863 Bank Not-km LEGISLATIVE BANK NOTICE.- Notice is hereby given that application will be made to the legislative authority of Pennsylvania, at the next session of the General Assembly thereof. eom • menoing the first Tuesday of January, A. D, 1864. for the incorporation of it Back haying toMiking and dien touetleg Iptitilegee, With a capital of one million Dot lark, by the name and style of The Oil City Bank," and to be located at. Oil City, Venango county, Penn sylvania. O. V. OU.L.VBR. June 29th, 1863-81 n , NOTlCE.—Notice is hereby given that "The Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania "intend to apply to the Legislature of Pennsylvania at theirnex session, for a renewal of their charter. Said bank ii lo- Gated in the City of Philadelphia, with an authorised dapitld or one million of dollars, a renewal of - which will be asked for, with the usual banking By order of the Board. 8.. C. PALMBIi, Cashier. PHILADELPHIA, June 22,1868-8 m ' "VOUCH .—Notice is hereby given that .111' application will be made to the .Legialsture of Pennsylvania at their next session, for a renewal of the charter of The Farmers , Bank of Schujlkill County, located in Pottsville, in the county of Schuylkill, with the present capital of one hundred thousand dollars, and with the usual banking privileges. T. W. CAKE, Cashier. Inns 18,1888.-7 m BANK. NOTlCE.—Notioe.hs hereby given that the undersigned have formed an associa tion and prepared a cititificate for the purpose of estab lishing a Bank of Issue, Discount and Deposit,nnder the provisions of the act entitled "A supplement to an act to establish a system of Free 13ankinx.in Pennsyl vania; and to secure the public against loss from Insol vent Banks, ,, approved the first day of May,Anno Domini eighteen hundred and arty-one. The cad Bank to be sailed DIE FAMOUS' BANK OF MOUNT JOY, tt) be located in the botetigh of Montt soy, to consist of a capital stock of One Hundred Thousand Dollar*, in shares of Fifty Dollars each, with the privilege of in creasing the same to any amount not exceeding Three Hundred Thousand Dollars in all.' J. Hoffman Hershey, John M. Hershey, Martin B. Pater, Jacob M. Stauffer, Reuben Gerber, John.M. Bear. jan2l3-d6mosw* VOTTO.E.—Notipe is hereby given of an .0 intention to establish a Bank of Discount, Deposit and Circulation. under the provisions of an act, entitled "An Act to establish a sydtem of free banking in Penn sylvania," dcc oand the supplement thereto; said Bank to be called THE eiAIiErFAC'PUBERS , BANE," to be located in the borough of Columbia, Lancaster county, Pa., with Acapital of One Hundred Thousand Dollars, to be divided into two thousand shares of Fifty Dollars each. deo4-6md ALLENTOWN BANK. jimalgeews Barr, Jane 20,1868. Both* is hereby given, that will be made to the Legislature of Pennsylvania' at ite next' Reasion, for an increase of the capital of said Bank to the amount of $200,000 in addition to that authorised by thei present Charter; and also for an , extension of the Charter of said, Ban for twenty year's from the expiration of the present Charter. By order of the Board of Directors. je2o-dtml OHARbEEI W. COOPER, Cashier. BANS NOTICE 1--11 Stockholders of the PaBMW' AND DROVERS' BANK OR WAYNESBURG, in Green county, Pa., will apply to the next Legislature or the .State, for an extension of charter, for the term of fifteen years *from the expire Lion of ts present term The location, corporate name and privileges, and amount of capital stock, to wit: one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to be the slime as under its present charter. By order of the Board. .7- LAZEAR, Cashier. Waynesburg,. Green co., Pa., Junels, 1868—je2Osdtml VOTlCE.—Notiee is hereby given, in . eonformity with the adt of Assimblr, that the , stookholdere of the, ftssic. at Mositgelsteir~7 . ixialre an appliiiation to the next Legislature of Penn- Fal 'the mime amount 'of cagital ("our Hundred Phones*: Dollars) as under the present Charter, to continue its present name and location. By order of the Board of Directors. W. H. SLINOLUPP, Cashier. • Norristown. Pa., Tune 20,1868.=6m Tc- OTICE.—The Miners' Bank of Potts ville' in the county of Schuylkill, hereby give notice that they 1114Ild to apply to the Legislatore of Pennsylvania at their next session fora renewal of their charter. Said Bank is located in the borough of Potts ville, in the county of Schuylkill, with an authorized capital of Five Hundred Thousand Dollars—a renewal of Which will be asked:without any extension of privileges. By order of the Board. . ORA. LOESEI4 Cashier. Pottsville, Tune 20, 11303.-6md Opting. M F. WATSON, T MASTIC WORKER AND PRACTICAL CEMENTER, IM prepared to Cement the exterior of Buildings with he New Perk ;improved Water-Proof Mastic Cement. This Material. is different from all other. Cements. It forms a solid, durable adhesiveness to any surface, imperishable by the action of water or frost. Every good building should be coated with this Cement; it is a perfect preserver to the walla, and topes a beautiful, fine finish, equal to Beater's brown sandstone, or any color desired. Araswg ethers kr vas.= I have applied the Mastic Cement, I refer to the following gentlemen : T. Bissell, residence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished live years. J. H. Shoenberger, residence, Lawrenceville, finished five years. James M'Candlaes, residence, Allegheny Oity,flnished five years. Calvin Adams, residence, Third et set finished four years. A. Roeveler, residence, Lawrenceville, finished four years. J. D. M'Cord, Penn street, finished four years. Hon. Thomas Irwin, Diamond stoat, finished four years. St Charles Hotel and Girard Reuse finished Aso years. Kittanning Court House and Bank, for Barr & Moser, Architects, Pittsburg, finished five years. Orders received at the cilice of B M'Eldowney, Paint Shop, SO Seventh street, or please address T. F. WATSON, mayle-tf P. 0. Box 111,6. Pittsburg, Pa. CHARLES F. VOLLMEB, - UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street. four doors above Second, (Qrpoityn We'sztircivon Hoge Holism.) Is prepared to furnish to order, in the very beet style 91 workmanship, Spring and Hair Mattresses, Window Owtains, tains, Lounges, and au other articles of Furniture in his line, on short notice and moderate terms. Haying ex perience in the business, he feels warranted in asking ei share of public' patronage, confident of his ability to give satisfaction. . janl7-dtf • JAPANESE TEA.—A choice lot of this celebrated Tea just received. It is of the first cargo ever imported, and is much superior to the Wa nes° Teas in quality, strength and fragrance, and is also entirely free of adulteration coloring or mixturtier any band. It is the natural leaf of the Japanese Tea Plant. For sale by W31. 4 1100K, jr., & Co. Ett 'A atrial FRIDAY MORNING, J LILY 3. 1863 EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE, A SUNDAY IN PARIS-VINCENNES - ST. DENIS-THE TOMB OF NAPOLEON BO NAPORTE-CHAMPS ELYREE-THE CA. SING. ETC., ETC. Special Correspondence of the Patriot and Union. Pasts; Jima 17th, 1868. Tho young Diet of Harrisburg who are anx ious to escape the draft. will naturally inqUire, what shall - - do in Sundal when we have tikid_tql led' ) t o Piris. It is not' a view to the gratification of those, but simply to re mind your olivistian readers of the behavior of 'the - outdid& and, ' therefore, heathenish world, that I enter in brief upon the expert ehoes of a Sabbath' in Paris. You awake at or after—probably after—the usual hour, say nine o'clock. You have been awakened by the somewhat demonstrative courtship of elate in eft *boot yew Window, and your first movement is to hurl a bootjack at your comrade. Having begged his pardon and dressed, you cross the Seine from the Latin Quarter, and take an omnibus at the "Bourse." The latter i 3 a building composed mainly of pillars. Money transactions take place within it, and it is the Wall street of France. As you go toward the Chemin dsfer du Nord, yoo muse upon the instability of human-appetite. A few moons ago you could not walk to the , corner without your breakfast, but at present you ex pece to get your defunct* at St. Denis, several miles away, and feel no doubt about your abil ity to hold out. The Chemin de fer du Nord's ie a magnificent depot, built of white free stone, and dotted with statues, allegori cal to a bewildering degree. It Will be, when completed, the ,finest railway house in the world, and larger than any pal ace in Europe. Railway is a potent king. Within you - seek the " intepreter," known by that word being stamped upon his hat, and it is astonishing how many languages he knows badly. He will direct you in the politest En glieb, and epeak Spapish to another man at . your elbow, whom you thought to be deat and dumb by the motions he made. As he probably had the same opinion of you, both can be chari table. The "Interpreter" conveys the idea that you are to keep your eye upon a certain hole till the slide is withdrawn, *ten you are to go in immediately—and be floored. Beware of be ing oat of line. Those cavalrymen—Heaven knows what police duty Cavalrymen can do here, except to overtake the ttain!--those cavalrymen are here with the especial purpose of seeing that you wait your turn. Otherwise they will turn you out. You get in line; therefore, and come to the ticket 'office with 'less than a thobsand people upon your heels, and say "Saint Denis." The ticket man looks in blank astonishment: He never heard of such a place in his lifee But by poking a piece 'of paper, ao laisciabed, toward him, he,cemerisaerids yon, , arid-replies **Waft Neste" ' You reach the twit atter a • idle; A r nie geefr-ern5 6 0 4 414.. totite siairit,' tinder . a tunnel, and' . tip efiiiris again to the town level. You behold a paltry town of, say five*„thousand . inhabitant s,--the houses low, the site flat, marshes upot one side, and an oozy canal in the middle—Mid you see above the general demureness an old, cross-shaped church, looking greyly skyward and stretching up a palmy, wrinkled tower. While you breakfast at the cafe opposite, you remark said church and think over its assoCia tions. It has been the burial place of the, kings of France from the time of Dagobert, who lived in the sixth century, to the yester day of Louis•XVIII. Formerly it was a state ly abbey, and it has been "restored"—a word which generally means, ruined. See from your window the chime of bells hung away up in the air, to be tapped by the rain-drops. Now and then they strike, to the awakening of the multitude of song birds whose nests the good architect cut in the beginning in the stone tableaux over the arches. They lure the birds to them in this way, and their grimy edifices are always vocal with the grateful melodists. Down' the steps of the church come Sundry people—here a priest, with a book un der his arm, to whom the cripples and the very old women bow reverently—here a nun or a sister of charityln a hood of virginal white and a face worn with thought and trial— here a long procession of girls , and urchins, unruly in France ati in Pennsylvania, mimick ing and dancing as they file off bareheaded. There comes a mighty crowd at length, whose mission you can ill determine. Slow to pain fulness, reverent to wonder, grotesqUe but stately—see the grenadiers in front with fixed bayonets, the chasseura behind uncovered, the hundred and one little children robed in white who strew rose* and sing. Four priests hurl four brazen - censers forever aloft; under a gilded canopy walk grave ministers in sacer dotal garb, reading as they advance, and be• hind follow the villagers uncovered. The streets down which they pace are bountifully. wreathed. This, an old man tells yoit, is the Fete Dieu, or Festival of God. You stand in the abbey of St. Denis. A very large and uniformed person, whose nose looks like a red nutmeg grater, and who walks goo tily, commences his description by hinting that a franc put in the palm of his hand'always helps his voice. lie shows you a stained win dow thirteen centuries old, an effigy from the tomb of Charlemagne; he thrusts you into the brazen chair of Dagobert, and describes certain cunning models of scenes in the life of Christ. Half of these were 'broken by the Jacobins, at the time when , they upset the coffins of the kings, strewing all the neighboring ditches with their skulls. These skulls were collected by. Bonaparte and Louis XVIII, who thought fit, in commemoration thereof, to have the deed painted in stained glass, to the disfigurement of the transept. Half of the adornments rep resent the glories of St. Louis, one of the Kings, whose, piety canonized him. His life was a godsend to sculptor's and painters. At last you stand upon the altar, and under your feet lie the relics of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI. Beyond you is the tomb of Catharine de Medicis, beneath the marble sarcophagus of Cherie magne,and lines of kingly monuments. St. Denis does not compare in any of these respects with Westminster Abbey. The tombs are not nearly so fine, the restoration is better, but the original edifice was paltry compared with the fine old fane of England. There are many churches of France to which St. Denis would scarcely make &worthy chapel. You hear a mass or two, if you like, and take a voiture for Vincennes. It is a great donjon, standing firm as a mountain in a level - field, with a modern for tress around it, and a far forest encircling all. Its gateway is equally old, and, is itself, e respectable castle, with a - finely preserved feu dal drawbridge. Sit yourself iu the adjacent brasserie at one of those cosy tables, order a bottle of Strausbourg beer from the plump, glib little hostess, and tendering a mug thereof to the politest soldier in the world, tell him to narrate to you the story of the donjon. Keep your aye upon it as he doe's se, that yon, may drink in the histery and the scene. Bee the blue PRICE TWO CENTS. sky behind those sharply cut turrets—each groove and angle standing out so greyly, as if finished yesterday. See the barred window of each turret., the grated gallery without, and the deep moat below. Seventeen feet in thick ness are those stones, and God help the cap tive who sleeps behind them, as many sore hearts used to do. A century and a half be fore America was discovered the donjon stood fie now. Here the infamous Louis 'XI held his bloody orgies, straining the sinews and crack ing the joints of his enemies in the caves be neath, and all these oaks and locusts that fling their shade upon you, were hideous with the corpses of his victims. They swung in chains to feed the crows and kites and underneath lay pits ancl4oan-traps to catch and rend intru ders. Here fled the Ninth Charles remorseful, with the sheeted spectres of Saint B.atthole mew, to strangle his prayers at the lips: The good Prince of. Conde and fiery Mirobeau lay here unhappy, the fifth Henry of England expired 'within its precincts,, and the poor Duke D'Enghein „was carried here to fall by the hands of NaVoleon Bonaparte. Is not this alone worth all the voyage to Ftance ? Touch this - old spike and rattle the scarred chain, ,and you.have touched the hand-prints of the great departed and* hold the palms of five centuries at once. But the beer is sweet and the landlady is looking at you funnily . through the window, and if you must be senti mental take themes present rather than things past, and so—make your game ! Enough of the country, though you may as well turn aside, as you return to Paris to see the cemetery of Pere is Mane, where lie 60=0 of Napoleon's Marshal=, and with the rest in trepid "Ney," whose very name is crisp as vic tor/. He has no monument, but the flowers grow very beautifully there, as over some spent volcano, and you look over the rail which the ivy is clasping, to wonder how quiet is the re me of so fiery a heart. The tomb of Abelard and Heloise is here, with their effigies lying together under' a gothic canopy, and ; the in scription added, "I hey are united in the grave." They were a sinful couple, but their passion has deified them. He . was learned, but more learned men are forgotten ; it was his loie that consecrated his life. “Immortelles" and roses lie upon their tomb perpetually, tossed there by worshippers, and all the graves around look happier because of their grand companion ship_ We are at the'tOirtb of Napoleon Bonaparte. You may know it long ere you approach ; for it has the highest dome in Paris, and at the gate stand many white haired giants—men who fought in his armies. They are pensioners of the adjoining Hdtel des Invalides, and they look foolishly proud as old men do in their do tage, and are very anxious to be recognized, as they how patronisingly. You weed many; steps, cross a shapely portico, remove your bat at the threshold, and press forward to the tomb. It lietrbelow your feet, in an enormous vault, which you see through an enclosed aper ture in the marble floor. It is a massive block of polished porphyry, weighing 135,000 pounds, resting upon a gleaming pedestal of granite. The names of his twelve great victories, encirel ed by a wreath of laurel, in green mosaic, sur round the tomb. and twelve statues or pure " 11044."4 : 1 P 11 0 1 7: 1 ~4 1 mrl t airstrie -21 NO •by lie his sword and golden crown, and over :all, flooding the repose of the deal with a de luge, of mellow light, looks a gilded Jesus, from a high crucifix, with profuse ornaments be neath and over it. Tlba effect of the whole is grand beyond remembrance. Of all the many tombs_ by which the tourist stands, this only seems worthy of the man. The graves of Wel lington and Nelson are the finest in England, but neither of them is worthy to stand in the transept of this. Iceommemorates one of the weakest and most successful of men. ' The day has been well spent for my Dauphin friend. He has seen too much to recollect any thing well, and may be allowed to dine. By this time he has tired of the Palais Royale din ners, as they lead to dyspepsia and there are too many radishes, castors and spoons for the quantity of viands, Ile therefore goes to Dut• vale—a butcher worthy of the days of the guillotine, who slays his hundreds of cattle weekly, and having messed substantially, if not ornamentally, saunters across to the Tuileries garden, where there are thousands of people. If you wish to sit and smoke there are arm chairs for a sons, or you can look at these fine old statues, gathered from the cin ders of Rome and Athens—as beautiful and as unveiled as the ancient's could shape them :-- here a Prometheus prone, with the horrible vulture satiated at his side, and his eyes turned in unutterable despair to the sparkle of the fountain near by ; there a Spartacus nude, with buckler and blade, glaring defiance at the abashed young woman who looked up at him *tad wishes she hadn't. So you go through the pleasant shade trees, where the boys are playing prisoner's base, and across the Place de la Concorde, where now towers the mottled obelisk of Luxor, but where once stood the reeking guillotine which cut off the head of a Queen and a King. The world has shed many tears over said Queen and King, though I could never discover that they did much for which we should regret them, and it is very certain that every body so decapitated in the French Revolution was not a saint. But here at last is the Champs Elysee with the Arabs de Triomphe standing at the head of the hill, and the pleas antly wooded fields on either aide, with the cream-colored palace of the Permanent Exhi bition to the lett, and the avenue in front, filled with stylish equipages. Shows of all kinds are going on here ; music as of invisible armies overhead is throbbing and sobbing; yonder is Mr. Punch murdering Judy, and here a cafe concert, where five peerless creatures sing ex cruciatingly. All 'about you are laughable things, and you can scatter the eons if you like in fifty directions, but they will be sure to fall to some mountebank. Everybody is drinking, jesting, smoking, and laughing. Soldiers of all conceivable costumes wind in and out, and when' the' darkness clOses in, and soft lamps are set like pearls amid the flowers and arbors, the Ominous call up their cheerful sinners, and the dances are of a kind that would speedily shock one-half of your population and amaze the other half. To describe them is not the province of this modest Pharisee, though he will admit that such acrobatio feats were never perpetrated by ladies before. Gracefel they are, passionate beyond poetry, and poetical beyond measure. The violins draw ones heart to his ears and the mistiness drive it back again, pulsing and throbbing, till the blood gushes in a purple rill to the cheeks and temples, the eyes shine like maniacy, the feet slip and leap, and the whole man iS the creature of the dance, as mastered by some wild magnetism. So passeth Sunday—Dimanche, they call it here— but is this Sunday the Sabbath ? Is it the same day which our good old mothers are eels. brating across the sea, with their Bibles upon their knees, listening to the call of the Church belle Do they read of the Prodigal; in ano ther world—as far to their simple thought as the moon or Jupiter—add lose the grimtext in the Asia which drown thiir eyes, so that they can only mutter his name with a sob, which is better than a prayer'? 'Geld help and forgive us ail l ' Paris is a faii_ place to live in, but is bad plaile; I Wean, to din Yoars truly, Itotrr ia.,17.1LL1. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, SUNDAYS 112(011PTED, BY 0. BABRETT & CO Tie MLitt Limier ARID trittollMill be Mesa to inta' scribers residing la the Borough for Inn ORSITh !RR wills, payible to the Carrier. Mail oubsoribers,sits' oLLARS SDI LINUX. Tan Wssurx PAW°, ARID USION is publlebeil se TWO DOLLARS PUR ARMOR, invariably in 'drams. Ten (sepia to one addreekfpleen dollars Cennected-wfth this establielimens 2 eXtensive TOB CMOS, containing a variety of plain and fancy type unequalled by any establishment in the interior of the state, for which the patronage of the public is so licited. READ AND JUDGE FOR YOURSELVES. . . The following articles- from the New York Journal of Commerce will strike every sensible, considerate man. They are sound and at this time precisely to the point : Tar. New Comminnia.—The removal of Gen. Hooker from the oonimand of the Army - of the Potomac "at his own request," was not with out good and immediate (mufti The neeoloity for•the step was only too insnifest to- those Who were aware of the Taos. Unusual ad Sal a step is in the midst of such important move ments, in the present case it would have been criminal, under the circumstances, for the ad ministration longer to withhold the order ; and the only regret in connection with the matter is that a was delayed so long. Gen. Meade enters on his position under cir cumstances of the , most painful responsibility, and is therefore entitled to, as he doubtless receives, the sympathy as well as the prayers of the whole people. His duty is like that which devolved on Gen. M'Clellan a year ago, when recalled to command the army for the de fence of the capital. Hooker has permitted the enemy to gain every advantage of position, and to riot for a long time in the richness of Southern Pennsylvania. He doubtless leads a s pi r it e d, well fed and comfortable host. They move on as if to the certainty of victory. tin der these circumstances, if Gen. Meade fails, he will by no means deserve censure or loss of confidence, for he is now called to do a work which will task every energy, every nerve, and in which we CM only hope that he will do his duty, and we must leave the rest to a higher power than men can control. An evening pa per, with the most profound blindness to the true state of affairs, warns him not to do as M'Clellan did at Antietam. We shall•be con tent, jubilant, if he will do as much, and send Zee back with his defeated hosts across the Potomac. Let us hope for that much. The hour id one of deep anxiety. The fate of the nation may hang on the result. It bec omes all to be earnest, patient and hopeful. MAKE READY.—There was never an hour when it became the duty of the people of the several States to look so closely to the power of their several State governments as now.— We have had a great dial of discussion about Federal and State rights, a vast amount of talk about 'the independence ofrStates, and the temptation to reject the doctrine of State sover eignty hap been very great. - But now, in all directions, the people of the North are looking to their State authorities for the protection from a common enemy which the Federal gov ernment has failed to afford, and no man is so rash as to deny the importance as well as the right of every State to arm itself in view of the emergency. The Constitution of the Uni ted States, in conferring the war power on the General Government; made an express excep tion. Any State may "make war" in case of invasion or of imminent danger of invasion.— This power no one denies. But there is now a necessity equally within the view of the Con stitution, not dependent on. this power. The principle of our government is one of federal dependence on State action to a great extent. The true principle on which a volunteer force is to be raised in this country is the power of Avea,tiza militia,• to be famished to - the General Government en call. The Con scription Bill ignored this principle, and brought up the question of the power of the General Government to "raise armies" by com pelling the service of the citizens directly, without the intervention of State authority.— But the pressing nature of the demand created by the invasion ~of Pennsylvania brought to view the noble system on which our Constitu tion Wee founded; and the President called on the States for militia, and militia sprang at once to arms on the call of their respective Governors. AU men now recognize the supe riority of this system, in every manner in which it is viewed. Is shows the beautiful machinery of the American Constitution, working in a time of great peril, and working to the purpose. It raises no questions of right, since all ac knowledge the duty and the way in which it is demanded. know becomes us to be ready for a still fur ther demand. The State of New York ought to be fully ready for any event. We should have our entire militia disciplined, drilled and armed without delay. Every man should do his duty as a member of the military force of his State, ready to take arms at the proper moment, or ready to harslet' 4 filabistitete and to show him how to do the work required. We trust that the militia of the State will be thor oughly organized at once, with as little delay as possible, and that New York may stand ready as a sovereign State, either to make war on her own account, if that should be, by a remote contingency, made necessary, or to an swer any cello that •may be made on her on be half of her sister States. Gov. Seymour has done nobly in sustaining the honor and exhibi ting the power of the Empire State. She is the Empire State, and the dependence of the whole Union is greatly on her and on her ex ample. THE PROSPEETE.—We have never known, so soon after a coni , ention, so good a feeling to prevail among the Democracy as has followed the action of our State Convention.. The names of Woodward and Lowrie have struck a sympathetic chord in the popular heart. and from every quarter of the State comes up one universal exclamation of satisfaction. Even the opposition press have been . awed almost into silence by the high character of the Demo emetic candidates and the conviction that has already settled upon them of their undoubted success. The people see in the nomination of Judge Woodward for Governor a return to the purer days of the Republic. For years past we have been accustomed to witness strife and contention among politicians for the spoils of office, preceding a nomination.; bat in the present instance, the office sought Mite man among the purest, the most distinguished and most worthy in the State. The wise selection of the Convention, therefore, gives assurance that public confidence has not been. isplaced, With Judge Woodward in the Executive chair, public virtue will have an adi , ocate and sup port. The people know this, and hence they are rallying to his support with a unanimity we have rarely ever witnessed. Wegive else where extracts from several of our exchanges to 'show how the nomination is regarded in other quarters of the State. We might fill our entire columns with these expressions of the Democratic press, but want of room com pels us to give but a few at a time.—Lux. Union. Tun Easton Argue says : A man who was a sound Black Republican until quite recently complained the other day that "the whole country was overrun with government officiate. The one has hardly gone before the other makes his appearance. Tbe ono wants to know how many eggs your shanghai chicken° laid in 1862 and how many they hatched out;' the other comes to enroll the name° ut eons, while a third comes for tax, y - G—d it is no wonder the womett , threitetto' throw boil , ing water on them. They are a pest and a nuisanoe."—There.was much truth in the gen t tlemares remarks—it is bad enough, but shoal man who voted'foilincoln growl and swear keird. by Irlie Tote to bring illibentjuet °tote Of ,Illtligr° hB.. now condemns ,