Daily patriot and union. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1858-1868, July 31, 1863, Image 1

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    RATES Of Wir.Eolsll .l 6 l.
Sour lines or inn sloasigte hslf spume. Ten li nes
Awe than font, 00aIlltaisis squire.
sibs 000 -Int) be One sq., MN &Ky.... 4 SO 8 °
one week.... 190 II one week. —. 200
.4 one mouth.. 800 " one month.. 600
4. threementhe 600 4 4 three months 10 00
4 . six mastitis— 800 " six months.. 16 00
4 IWO yew —.12 00 4, one year 20 00
fa' Dulness notices inserted in the LOCAL GOMM,
mr Mi.:* marriages end deaths, Tal owns sea lass fo
eh issertion. To merchants and ot Advertising
T the year, liberal terms will
!!.% offered.her*
117. The number of insertions mast be designated 011
he advertisement.
Cr learriages and Deaths will be inserted at the same
"so as regular advertisements.
Businegri 'Labe.
SILAS NVA.RD:
NO. 11, NORIA =IRO ST..,
STEINWAY'S PIANOS,
ALE LODNONS, VIOLINS, GIIITARS,
B a tips, Puiea, Fifisir, Drams, 4dakrddoith
STRINGS, SKINT AND 1001 WM*. &0., &en
PHOTOGRAPH •FRAMES. ALBUMS,
Large Pier and Mantleadirrors, Square and Oval-Pramat
of everydeseripticin made to order. Regnilding done.
AZeiter for Howe's Sewinglnathines.
113 Slat Miele sent by Mail. oetl-1
JOHN W. GLOVE - Bp
DIERCIIANT TAILOR
Hu jest received from New York, an assort•
ment of
SEASONABLE GOODS,
which he Ohl to big ciwoctere and the public at
'noV/21 MODERATE PR ICES. Ira
WHARRY WILLIAMS;
•
IDINALINIE
402 WALNUT ..isT Egg V.
PHTLADZLPIII4,
Genesal Maims for Soldiers ptomptly eatrectec, Mats
Claim adjusted. &c., &c. inar2o-dba
SMITH &- EWING,
AT TDRNEYS—AT-L AW,
THIRD STREET, Harrisburg, .
Practice in the several Courts of Danpikin county. Cel
li/4pm made promptly. A. 0, SMITH,
7, B. EWING_
GOOK, Merchant Tailor,
27 CECININITT ST, between Second and Trout,
Has just returned from the city with an assortment of
CLOTHS, CASSIMERE:S - ' AND TESTINGS,
Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to
order; and, also, an assortmentof BEADY WADI
gothlag arid Goatleaments Varnlabing; Goads.
n0w21.-lyd
DENTISTRY.
B. IL GEM, D. B. S.,
NO . /1 9 ItIARKS.T STREET,
a KUNKEL'S BUILDING, .
RELIGIOUS BOOK STORE,
!RAM AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY,
E. S. GERMAN,
!Cr swim SEWED BPKUT, ESOI4
zmuuestria, L.
Dapot &Walesa* of Bteroosoopee,BteroosoopisThwa,
'Music and Musical Instruments. Also, subsoriptioni
taken for religious publications. noBo-d7
11BY a KITNICITA BUILDING, TIP STAIRS.
_janti4f
JOHN G. W. MAILTIN,_
PASHIONABDE T
CARD WRITER,
BRIMS HOTEL, HARRISBURG, PA.
!Mummer of FISITINq, WEDDING AN. 13 rISI-
NESS CARDS executed in the most artistic styles and
most reasonable terms. deals dt[
'UNION HOTEL ,
•
Ridge Menne, corner of Broad street,
•
HARRISBURG, PA.
The =de/signed informs the public that he has re
cently renovated and refitted his well-known " Union
I3ot41" on Ridge avenue, near the Round Rads% and le
prepared to accommodate oitisOnl, at'llitgsP4nd ll 7 7ol
era in the seat tittle, at moderate rites.
Ills table will be supplied with the best the maskets
afford, and. at his bey will be found_ superior brands of
Uglier* and men beverages. Tfie voty best aficoduno.
&Alone for railroaders employed at the shops in this
vicuitir. r 574 HENRY BOSTORN.
FRANKLIN HOUSE,
DALTIMORII, D.
This pleasant sad commodious Hotel leas been Deo
roughly re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleasantly
situated on North West corner of Howard and Franklin
Ands, a few doors west of the Northern u Central Rail
way Depot. 'serf attention paid to thercoinfort of his
gunsts.. LslffilliDl7lo, Proprietor,,
(Late et Salton Grove. Pe.)
T HE O. F. BOHEFFER,.
.
BOOK, CARD AND JOB - PRINTER,
tie' 18 MetitasT STEXIIT, HARRIBBIIP.G.
•fig , Paratealar ationtios paint) printing, ruling mid
*Wine Railroad Blanket, Iffsmdfosta, immune Poll
alteaka,pill-litada, &a.
oddiggiTlßiting and linalnem Carib, printed at vaqr
Ulf risen and in Liu laid #719. - Joan
ROBERT SNODG.T.i,ASS
ATTORNEY Ar 'LAW,
-ojrcee North Third street, third door above
kat, Iltirrisiony; F. -
N. B.—Pension, Bounty and Military claims of all
kinds prosecut.d and collected. _
Refer to Eons. John 0. Rooks ], DavidMarnma, Jr.,
and R. lamberton. riayliAlficwBm
WM. H. MILLER,
LXD
R. E. FERGITOQN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
OFFICE IN
SHOEMAKER'S BUILDINGS
SECOND STREET,
BETWEEN WALNUT and MARKET SQUARE,
ap-29w&d Nearly opposite . the'Biudder House.
T ROB. O. 11AODOWELL 7
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT 4G-BBT.
Office a the Bzchange, Walnut at., (Up Stairs.)
Hawing formed a:convection with parties in Wash
ington Oity, wno are reliable Widnes, weer, any busi
ness connected with any of the Departments will meet
with immediate and earefnl attention. • ' 114-y
B. C. WE - ICHEL,
• - SURGEON AND ocvLisr, •
BAVIDANOS THIRD Naas MATH BTABITk
Reis new folly prepared to attend promptly to Un
duties ef profession in all its _
A LONG AND TZILT HIIOOIBBIPIM oxpixtuora
jestilea blot in promising fall mg 4 11 97 10 gathira"ml tc
all rho mayravor kilned* a ealhbe thediorieeo3rook
or sty 'Alter nature.' OadFdltarlY
. ,
. , ,
TAILORING.
43—M . A. 1:7 3SC
The subscriber is ready at NO. 94, MARKET
fbur doors below Fourth street s to zu .k.
NIEN'H AND BOY'S CLOTHING
In any desired style, end with skill and promptness.
Persons wishing cutting done can have it done at the
shortest notice ap27-dly
CHARLES F. VOLLMER )
UPHOLSTERER,
Chestnut street. four doors above Second,
(OPPOSITE WASHINGTON 110S2 1101181,)
Is prepared to furnishto order, in the very beet stY l * of
workmanship. Spring and Hair Mattresses, Window Our.
tains, Lounges, and all other articles of furniture intie
line, on short notice and moderate terms. Having ex
perience in the business, he feels warranted in asidng a
abase of public patronage, eonidentof kinability to give
satiefurtton. janll-dtf
MILITARY CLAIMS AND PEN
-111 SIONS.
The undersigned have entered into an assoeiation for
the collection of Military claims and the smiting of-
Pendell for wounded and disabled soldiers, . :• •
Mister-in end Muster-ent Rolls, officers' Pay Rolle,
Ordnance and Olothiwgreturns. and all papers !NNW&
leg to the 'Winery penile will be made out properly
and expeditiously -
Onus in - the 'Exchange Buildings, Walnut between
Penrod and Third streets, near Omit's Hotel. Haub.
lure, Pa. THOS 0 MAODOWI.LI.,
tab Of THOMAS A. maw:rm.
. . • .
. . .
, .
• . .
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•
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t __ _ ...,.. ~......„_....
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VOL. 5.-NO. 284
filtithat.
4- Alf- ist•
DR. • SWEET'S
INFALLIBLE LINIMENT
IMCI
GREAT. EXTERNAL REMEDY,
FOR RREUMATISM, GOUT, NEURALGIA,
Lumpaao, STIFF NECK AND JOINTS,
SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUTS WOUNDS,
PILES, HEADACHE, IFS ALL -RHEIL.,
MATIC and NERVOUS DISORDERS.
Por all of which it is a speedy and certain remedy,
and never fails. This Liniment is preiiired from the
recipe of Dr Stephen Sweaty of Connecticdt, the fe
mme bone setter, and hag been used in his practice for
iiii!d4 than twenty rare with the most astonishing Sin
cam:
AS AN ALLEVIATOR OF PAIN, it is unrivaled
by any preparation before the'puhlic, of which the most
skeptical may be convinced by a singe trial.
This Liniment will core rapid.lzand radically; RHEU
MATIC DISORDERS of every kind, and in thousands
of cases where it has been used it has never beeriknown
to fait
FOR NEURALGIA, it will afford letnieditle relief
in every case, however distressing.
It will relieve the worst cases o f HEdbACHE L
three minutes and Is warranted to do it.
TOOTHACHE also will , it =re instantly.
FOR NERVOUS DEBILITY AND . O.ENERAL
LASSITUDE, arising frinillitifoindeneiror excess, this
Liniment it amont happy and unfailing remedy. Act
ing directly upon the nervous tissues, it strengthens and
revivifies the system, and restores it to elasticity and
vier_
FOR Anretierriel remedy, we claim that
it is the best known, and we challenge the-world to:prqt- -
duce an equal. Every victim of this distressing com
plaint should give it a trial, for it will not fail to afford
immediate relief, and In a majority of =sec, will ,effect
a radical cure.
QUINSY and SORE TEROIT are sometimes en—
tremely malignant and dangerous, but* timelyapplicar
tion of this Liniment will never fail to cure.
- SPRAINS are sometimes very obstinate and enlarge.'
seekt of the joints is Bahia - to occur if neglected,' The
worst case may be conquered by this , Linimeit to two or
three days
BRUISES, 'curs, wouND*,soitro, ULCERS,
BVllNg , and SCALDS, yield readily to the :wonderful
healing properties of DE. SWEET'S-INFALLIBLE
LINIIINNT, when used according to directions: Also,
CEITLDLAINs, FROSTED FEET, -and INSECT
BIM% aid stuGs.
EVERT HORSE OWNER
sherd& have this remedy-at hand, for its timely use it
the brat appearance of loanenese will effecitually pre
vent those formidable diseases to which all horses are
liable and which tender ko Many otherwise valuable
horses nearly worthless. -
Over four nundred voluntary testimonials to tbdiwon
nerfial curative properties of this Liniment have been
raosivad - within the last two Yearn , and many of thorn
from persont in the Mewl, make of life.
CAUTION. • •
To avoid imposition, observe the Signature and Like
ness of Dr. Stephen Sweet on every label, and also
" Stephen Sweet's Infallible Liniment " blown in the
glass of each .bottle, without which none are genuine:
RICHARDSON *. CO., • • '
• - 80/04COPIMON4rivorwich, Ct.
FevSale dealers. apileow-d&w
lEtveing.
A. LL WORK PROMiBED IN
ONE WERE.'
1 0 -4i
PBFINSYLVANIA
=Am DYEING. .ESTABLISHMENT,
104 MARKIT STRUT,
BETWEEN FOvi.arx AND FIFTR,
HABit•IABURG, PA.,
Where °MY dmiplion of Lapse and fillataomeskis
ilflOOSl4, glees ito.i are , Cloemead, and
'Mahal ilatbe lost manner sad at IK 41 aharteat made*:
•aaft-ditvily • DODOB I 00.. Proprietors.
TF. WA.TS_ON,
s
MASTIC WORKER
AND
PRACTICAL CEMENTER
LA prepared to Cement the exterior of Batld;agis With
he New York Improved
Water-Proof Mastic Cement.
This Material is different from all other, Cements.
It forms a solid, dnrCble adhesiveness to any surface
linpbrinhable b 7 the 1144102 4F water or frost. Byeri
good building should be seated With ibis Orman* i It Is
a perfect preserver to the walla, and makes a beantiful,
fine finish,' equal to _Eastern brown flandstone, or any
colortesired.
Among others for whom I have applied the Mastic
Cement, I refer to the following gentlemen • . • ,
J. Bissell, residence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished
five years. _
T. H. flhoenberger, reweave, Lawreocenkue, dashed
flineyeass. -
James Weal:dims, residence, Allegheny City,finished
five years.
Calvin Adams, residence, Third at set, finished four
years.
A. Hoeveler, residence, Lawrenceville, finished four
years.
J. D. M'Oord, Penn street, finished four years.
Hon. Thomas Irwin, Diamond , street., finished four
years.
St Charles Hotel and Girard VOUS., linished five
yearn
Kittanning Court House and Bank, for Barr & Moser,
Arehiteets, Pittsburg, finished five years.
Orders received at the film of K. Witidowaey, Paint
Shop, 20 Seventh street, or pieces address -
T. P. W ATSON,
mayl6-tf P.O. Box 13:6. Pittsburg, Pa.
MEBBREI. OHfOKERING tr. 00.
RAPE AGLAIA OBTADIRD TXB
GOLD MEDAL:
AT TRI
FAIR. BOSTON,
TER A;71" . :, T O Bsl
Wareroori% for the OffICHERIPSPIANOS, at, Harris
burofdst 92 Market sues . .t,
W, KNOCHE'S MUSIC STORI.
fitDPES I YOU KNOW WERE YOU
% osn get fine Nots Paper, Envelopes, Visiting end
Wedding Cards At SOWiFIPER'S BOOKETOR.E.
RUPERIOR STOCK OF LIQUI)118.-:--
Wid.lloelfi Ja., & 00_ are now able to offer to
their costoLners and to. public at large, a stock Of the
purest liquors ever imported into tide market, eon:pri
sing in part the followins varieties :
WHISKY SCOTCH,OLD BOURBON.
WINE—PONT, SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA.
OTARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY.
JAMICA SPIRITS.
PRIME NEW ENGLAND BUM,
• DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS.
These liquors can all be warranted; and inaddition to
these, Dock & Co. have on hand a large variety of
Wines, Whisky and Brandy, to which they invite the
particular attention ofthe public.
WEBSTER'S ARMY AND NA.VY
Poculele DICTIONARY.
het received and for sale at
80M11111111 , 11 BOOKEITOILL
rt
iikenbia 1 I—MiB - ON'S "koHALLINON
Szkoz.nto."-4.00 Chide& :woo' it'd . olio Jae r. •
pato/ and for elle. Wholesedifand*A
mid - WM: pout, & on.
AILTDIDOW SHAMES__of ,P 1 1,..%. gilt"
v Wrilered; 'and *APSE 'BLINDS * - Wpm
= gift of designs sad mums*" ; On; OUBTAIN
VIXTUREO sat TASSELS At very low epic OAI/. _At
ElchefferPs Booketerti.
HARRlgtitßpr e PA., FRIDAY. JULY 31
'THE
Weekly "Patriot & Union,"
THE CHEAPEST PAPER PUBLISHED IN
PENNSYLVANIA
AND
TER ONLY DEMOORATIO PAPER PUBLISHED AT
THE NEAT 411 1401TERNBLENT !
FORTY-FOUR COLUMNS OF READING MAT
TER EACH WEEK!
AT THE LOW PRICE OF ONE DOLLAR
AND FIFTY CENTS •
WHEN
SITBSCRIBSD FOR' IN cLuns OF NOT LESS
THAN TEN COPIES 20 ONE AP. REss!
We have been compelled to raise the Club subscription
Wee to one dollar.and fifty cents' in order to Mire our
selves from actual lose. Paper 'has risen, Including
taxes, about twenty-five per cent., and is still rising;
and when we tell our Democratic' friends, candidly, that
we pus no loupe afford to sell the Weekly PATRIOT AND
'Union at one dollar a year. and =Mgt 4dd fifty cents or
'stop the publication, w
e e trust they will appreciate ,our
position, and, instead of withdrawing their subscrip
tions, go to work with a will to increase our list in every
county in the State. We haiie endeavored, and shall
matinse our efforts, to makfillie paper Mani AO ;Arty
organ, Mid weileitine'as iiii v eweiniemienger to Wirer,' hem
ily. We flatter ourselves that it has not been without
Some influenee•in - prodnelog the glorious revolution In
the politics of the State achieved at the late election;
and if fearlessness in the discharge of duty, fidelity to
the principles of the party, and an AnXIOOO deAirAte pro
', mote its interests, with some experience and a moderate,
I degree of ability,mn be made lerliViielide,hereagter, the
Weekly Rawer IID Ifistox will not being ntefful to
the party or lme weleemarto the. /aridly oirele in.the fu
ture thanit has been ifs the past. Aire confidently look
for increased encouragement brats great enterprise,
and appeal to wary IntMential Democrat in the State to
Lend us his, aid In running our eupseription list up to
twenty or thirty tbronsand. - The expense .to each indi
vidual is trifling, the benefit to the party may be. great.
BelieAng DIM the Donicinricy of the UM. 1441 the ae
easeityof sustaining, a fearleas central own, we make
this appeut to them formelatance with the fullest confi
dence of:income.,
. .
The same reasons width induce us to raise the price
of,the operate •in regard to the Daily paper, „the
p r icc I;.r whlek Is also increased_ The additional cost to
each subscriber will be but trifling; and, while we can
not persuade ourselves that the change neceisarily made
'will result in any diminution of our daily circulation,
yet,
,were we certain that inch would, be the come
quoin*, we should still be compelled to make it, or suf
fer a ruinous loss. Under these circumstances we must
throw ounelvee upon, the generosity, or, rather, the
justice of the pliblie; iitiCabitie their verdict; whatever
it may be. • . • •
The pOtiod for which many of our subSeribers have
paid for their paper being itoi the ewe of, expiring, we
take the liberty of issuing this notice, reininding them
of the same; in order that they may
RENEW ,lintrit
We shall also take it is an especial favor if =present
subiscribeis will urgeirpontheir neighbors the fact that
the Pilaw' , AND Trauma is the only Democratic paper
printed in Harrisburg, and considering the large amount
,or reading Matter, embracing all the current news . of
the day, and
TEZEGF - RAPHio DISPATOTINS
from everywhere up to the moment the paper goes to
press, political, miscellaneous, general and local news
market reports, le decidedly the
_ _
CHEAPEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN
THE STATE !
There is scarcely a, village or town in the State in
wLtoh e c h i a saanat beraised if the proper *Sorties be
made, and surely there ere few pieties in which one or
more energetic men cannot be found who are in favor of'
the dissemination of sound bemooralie doctrines" Who
would be Willing to make to rata a club.. '
DEMCieRViII OF THZ INTERIOR!
Let us hear from tft. The misting war, end the air
propeidng sessions of CongreSs and the State Legisla
ture, are invested with unusual interest, and every man
shotil have the'news..
- ' TERNS.
• DAILY 'PATRIOT AND UNION.
Sties espy for one year,itdvanee... • ...... $6 00
Innate eopyAlUing tip session of the Legislature.. 2 00
,City fittbreribers ten cents per Wink. . '
Oopiee eupplied to dents . at the rate of $f 60 p er b ee .
dyed.
WUKLY PATRIOT AND UNION ,
PubliaW seem Thursday. •
.
Single copy one year, in advance 52 00
Ten copies to.one addiess • 10:00
linbscriptions may commence at any time. PAY AL.
Wan IN We era obliged to make.thin
imperative. is ithsry, instants cash mcii accompany ,
subscription. Any per Son Sending ns a club of twenty
subscribers to the Weekly will lie entitled to a copy for
his services. The price, even at 'the advanced - rate is
so kw that we Cannot offer greater inducements than
this. Additions may*, !widest, any time tss a club of
Mai:lnhere by remitting one dollar and fifty cants
for each additional name. It is nots'necessary to vend
fir the names of thosie constituting a chili, Is we cannot
uridertake to addreas each paper to club subscribers
separately. Specimen Copies of the Weekly will ba sent
to all who desire it. •
0. BARB TT h 00., Rarest:Air& Pa
ff, fallowing iaw, pained by Congreall to NW,
Mines the duty of Postmasters in relation to the de
livery of newsiapere to club enbeinibere : "
(See LOU*, Brown t (ditto* of the Lama of 1860,
page 38;ehapter 181, seelios 1.)
"Provided, however, that where packages of new pa
lmier periodicals are received at any post office directed
to one ,address, and the names of the club subacribere to
whiCh they belong, with the postage for &quarter in ad-
Sallee, shall be handed to the postmaster, he shall•de
liver thews= to thair respective flamers.) ,
To enable the Postmaster to comply with this regale,-
tion, it will be necessary that be be furnished with taw
list of names composing the club, and paid a quarter's
(or yeses) postage in advance. The uniform courtesy
of Postnuicters, affords the assurance that they will
cheerfully acoommouate Club subscribers, and the latter
should take care that the postage, which le but • tribe
hi each ease, be paid in advance. Bend on the °tube
A SPLENDID A S SOR TME N
OF' '
LITHOGRAPHS.
Formerly retailed at from $8 to $6, are now ~ f ared at
60 andl6 cents, sad $1 and 1,1 60—published by the Ar
Union, mid formerly retailed by them.
Splendid Photographic Album Pictures of. all distin
guished men and Generals of the army, at only 10 ate.
For sale at • ' 80EDIFFBRI3 Bookstore,
18 Market street. Harrisburg.
B ASKETS!
LADIRP TRAVELING,
MARKET,
SDHOOL,
PAPER,
KRIM
CLOTHE!,
ROUND,
CHILDREN'S AKB ,
C,
Per sale low, by
jel2
WHITE B RANDY I I—FoR PRESTAV
nut PmtPosiss.—A very Importer article, (strictly
pared just received and for sale by
3 111 7/ WM. DOCK, & Co.
MEW ORLEANS SUGAR I—FiasT IN
Lit MI MARMOT !—)or isle by
0 12 - • DOOR is., & co-
Air ACKERELI.
111.
MACHARIL, Noe. 1, 2 and S. in sq els pildrdirda—
new, and sack pilaw loarranud. Just oosived, and
for sale tow by +WM. DOS" Jr., & CO.
QKV—VGHT GALLERY.—The rooms
on tho cor opr of Marlot equate and Market roe;
apposite the lonaa notale. oaexipkid as a Gailory for
baguarraotype,,Photograpa and ambrotypo
are FOR Blfarr "frOak Ike theBth of Oopumber atzt.
Apply 110 JOHN IWYRTIL
. • - 01&41awaw.
And it tame to peas as her sent Was in departing, that
she called his name Ben-oni. And Rachel Tied, and nit
buried in the way to Ephrata', which is Bethlehem.
Gen Xxxv. ah. • •
" Bring me Benoni, bring the son of sorrow,
Let him lie gently on his mother's breast,
Help me to hold him to my heart. To•morrow•
liy soul will 'link to rest.
‘‘ Wnat strange mysterious magic in this meeting:
Lo while I watch his pure and even breath,
My waning life's faint pulses wildly beating,
Seem struggling against death. .
"Nay, cheer mo Lot withliattiring hopes beguiling,
Nor mock my fears, ye who around my bed '
Rain snwiliine show)rs,-in love and pity smiling
Wet through the teen yo eked. •
Vorgive, good Lord, the fretful bold petition .
That Brat I prayed" r Give children, or I• die. , ,
Withdraw the cloud of Afirk and stern:contrition
Which yet broods angrily.
"For ever since that day the voice of weeping,
Such as we heard in ADon-Baohuthis shade, .
Bath sounded in mine sa k e, awake or Bleeping,
And Mode eni - soul, afraid: 1 •
"Yes, - ever since. the trenttiling fear of dying •
Bath gotten hold and Chtnpass'd me around, •
And on the wind a wailing voice and sighing •
Comes JON/ a mournful sound. , • -
"Fie der and faster still, deatb's hand doth beckon,
As nearer unto lifamre's land I come,
Ephrath ii nigh, but life by hours I:reeling;
may not reach my home.
* * * * * * *
it dome •Acer'mad kite mei 7440, it Tv woreitut;
The clouds and darkness all have passed. away,
The western light my chamber is adorning,
Day breaks,l, cannot stay.
.
Whose is this Voice - that calla the shipherdis'daugh.
ter, • '
Whence is th's rod—this.staff on It bleb I leltn
What is this well of pure and living water,
Through the dark valley seen?.
c' Once more. aim in the morn of young affection,
To meet my Lord, I wander forth 14/0114);
And, lo! the. Angel of the Resnrrection
Hath rolled away the stone."
The old prover!) goes, that for a glove to be
,well Slade, three nations must have a hand in
it; Spain must dress the leather, France 'cut
the shape, and , England <sew the seams. - At
the present time; France has tha monopoly,
et least in reputation . ; 'for not even the best
Spanish kid wou!d le 'preferred. to the rat
tekins of Paris, D.Or can the stoutest English
sewing compete for favor—WCWill PO speak
for excellence-- , with those slender, easily loos
ened stitches of French needles, so sure to give
way at the bell of the thumb, and - in the three
cornered joinings of the fingers. Though, in
deed, the French glove sewers use a - machine
invented by an EnglilibMen, which shofild se.
Cure the wearer against all such mishaps as
flying ends and ripped seams; only it does not.
But for all their shortcomings, - French gloves
are 'unapproachable, even' in tlisse•Aaytt of
general! cOnmerei and awake'ned - `wits,'when
ever 3 body imitates everybody, and there is no
epeeist art left to any one
,; and neither COl
dove nor Dent can:give us-such well-cut, well
fitting, well-looking, and desirable "hand
shoes" as those delicately tinted marvels to be
found on.the Boulevards of. the Circe of mod
era cities,
WM. DOCK, Jr., & Co
tilt Vatript ti- 7itni*
FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1868.
[Prom Once a Week.]
THE REATfI OF•U&CHEL.
GLOVES, AND ALL ABOUT THEM.
Gloves are very different now to what they
titled to be, say in Queen Zlizeheth's time,
wien they were perfumed—then called Fran
gipanni gloves, from the Italian marquis of
the attune name, who first invented that deli
site
_.a t as eFeetid Rerfume e.m
ployed; 'but Titter tbi; seen t rwto c a lled here the
Earl Or Oxford perfume, from its English cha
peron and introducer. And not only perfumed
bat' lined and quitted, and 'trimmed with four
tufts of roses of colored silk, were the Eliza
bethan gloves; as we find in the desericrion
of that royal lady's hand-shoes. Perfumed
gloves are said by some old writers to have
been first brought into England by that same
consummate coxcomb ant top, Edward de
Vere, Earl olOxford, when he'oame !ma from
hie self-appointed exile in Italy, in the fifteenth
year of Elizabeth's reign, laden with sweet
scents, and'nick-nacks, anl man-millinery of
all detioriptions; and it is 'said, too, that the
earl presented her Majesty with her grzt pair
—among other thine, costly and curious';
gift so pleasing to gracious zealotry, that she
insisted -on being pictured with , them on her
hands. For Elizabeth, though a mighty queen,
and tolerable ruler enough, wasn' villainously
bad artist,•and understood no more of the 'har
monies than modern Choetaw. But if per
fumed Frangipanni gloves Were erg brought
in by the Earl of Oxford, what, then, was "the
payer of sweete gloves, lined with white vel
lat, each glove trimmed with 8 buttons, and
aigleits of gold, enatiteled," mentioned
in Henry the Eighth's secret inventory of his
wardrobo at Hampton Court. If these were
not Frangipani glevna, they Were very like
them:
Those " sweets gloves" were dangerous
sometimes. At a time when poisons sere so
subtle that they could be conveyed in any me
dium whatsoever—food or clothing indiscrimi
nately—and when gifts of gloves perfumed
delicately, were common among friends and
enemies, sweet.soented hand , shoee were as fit
instruments of death as anything else; and,
unless history belies her, Catherine de Mediais
knew the value of them on more than one oc
casion. Ruddy-checked apples or Frangiganni
gloves, it was. all one; for what matter is it to
us of what metal the type is cast which prints
the word Finis across the page? It was so
easy, too, to give the death-blow► under the
guise of friendliness ; for notting was more
common in the way of present-making than
gloves, perfumed or not. Ann, Countess of
Pembroke, that heroine of stately biography,
was great in this. She was always taking her
friends into her chamber after dinner, to kiss
them and give them new gloves. "My cousin
Thomas Sanford's wife of Askam and her sec
ond son" one nay dined with her.
Atter dinner she kissed the wife, and took
the son by the hand,`gave to her a pair of
buckskin gloves, and to him five shillings,
which doubtless he appreciated more. A t an
other time she kissed the women of Mr Thor.
Burbeek and Mr. Cotterick, gave ien shillings
to some, and a pair of buckskin gloves to
Mr. Carleton ; once, also, a pair of "bock
skin gloves that came from Kendal," to. a Mre.
Winch, of Settee, Park. Royalty, too, used to
make the same gifts; only something costlier.
At the Earl of Arran's sale, in 1759, a pair of
gloves given by Henry the Eighth to Sir An
thony Denny, sold for £3B 175 ; a pair .gi'ven
by James the First to his son, Edward Denny,
said for £22 4s. ; and a pair of mittens, given
by Queen Elizabeth to Sir Edward Denny's
lady, were sold for £25 45. They were bought
by Thomas Denny, of Irelaad, the direct de-,
, seendant of the great Sir Anthony Denny, one
of Henry the Eighth's executors, and are prob
ably the oldest gloves extant. •
Gloves were greatly favored as special pre
sents on. New Year's day and other .solemn
occasions of gift•making. By degrees the
fashion died out, having first passed through
the phaees ,of glove full of Money ; thee of
"glove money" without the glove, until the
glove money , was i tax long after the meaning
PRICE. TWO-CEN. S
of,the name had died "Out, and people hid -for
gotten why' it wag given or expectedi. It was
not thought indecorous to present New Year's.
day gloves even to judges, though they Mig,ht
not be worn ;. at least not in court, where it
was deriguer that a judge appeared hare hand
ed.' Was thire mispicion Of the itching palm
beneath salved over with a silver plaister ? Sir
Thomas Moore once decreed a cause in . favor
of a Meg_ CrOokee against Lord Arundel.—
In the warmth of her gratitude she sent him on
the following New Year's day a pair of gloves
inside; but the Chancellor wrote back that
as . if. would be again good manners to refuse.
a gentlewomen's New Year's gift, he accepted
the glovies, 'but their" lining yeti will befileased
otherwise to bestow." Pardoned criminals paid
to the court a kind of symbolic fee for their ell-
Cape in sundry pairs' of white gloies. John
Bull, who had been endeared' on an indictment
for murder, and whose' outlawry' was reversed
in; 1464, "paid the fees of gloves to the court,
two dozen tor the officers of the court, for these
in all four ehilliese; end, in addition, three
pairs of furred gloveS for the three judges
there, to wits Markham, chief justice, Yelver
ton and Bingham, and so the prisoner went to
God."
This is from the Year-book of Edward 'the
Fonrth,as quoted with Notes and Queries. Adif.
ferent ending this benediction of "alit a Dien."
to that found in the Year-book of the third Ed
ward, when the Bishop of Chester was defend
ant in a cause against the king—an unj net and
and illegal attempt on hie • hurt—so the bishop
got his cause as he deserved; and the report
of the disappointed royal reporter, concluded
-with, " and you bishop go to the very great
devil without day—autrur ground doskic gams
/our." .
It is a pretty, piece of symbolism,. kept up in
our formal,•unpoetio, matter-of-fact old times,
when a pair of white gloves is presented to the
judge of the occasion—unhappily too rare—of
maiden smite. • In 1856, Lord' Campbell held
his third meidan assize at Lincoln ; the third
in six years.; so the authorities presented him
with a magnificent pair of white gloves, cun
ningly embioldered turd - ornamented withßintr
eels lace, and with.the -city arms bmbossed in
frosted silver on:-. She • back, not exactly fit for
dancing in, but pleasant and acceptable to my,
lord, doubtless, if good for little but to be kept
•, • ,
under a glass . case, and respeothilly examine&
Knitted gloves of silk were common in' the early
times, before the delicate white kid came auto
fashion ; also gloves of fair white linen, curi
ously wrought about with gold and tieedle
work. Kings`royally clethed for their burial,
were royally gloved as well, in these fair white
linen gloves, kith gold quatrefoils, or Mlles; or
other emblems beseeming on the. back, as part
of the needful paraphernalia of the grave.—
Time and the damps of the tomb, which have
destroyed tha gloves, have left the golden or
naments entire_ •
OEI
Long before our time gloves were worn, and
held to be stmlmolic too. Xenophon speaks of
the Persians as . effeminate for clothing their
bead, their feet, and their hands with thick
gloves against the cold. Homer speaks of•La
etres in his garden, with gardener's gloves to
keep him from the thorns; and another tioet.
Vane,
the Roman, says twat °Bees gathered
by th e -naked hand are better than thode
plucked with gloves. The Chinese think dif
ferently about their tea. Atheumus„ in the
Deipnosophists, speaks of a glutton who went
to table withhis gloves on, that lie might e'at
hie meat hotter than the rest, and so get a'
greater ithart ; and Masoning, a philosopher,
who lived at the close of the first Christian
century, among other invectives against the
corruption of the age—that poor age which is
always so much more corrupt than its prede
cessors I—says : "It ia shameful that persons
in perfect health should clothe their hands and ,
feet with soft hairy coverings.". All of which
collection of erudite lore maybe found in Die ;
riteli's Curiosities of Literature.
The Jews knew the value of these boudoir
everiegs. That expression in the -Psalms,
"Over Edom will.' cast out my shoe," is said,
in the version knewn to 7 seholars ag the Chal.
dee Paraphrase, in mean': “Over Edom will I
cast-out tdy glove"—l will take possession, I
will assert' my right, and challenge denial;
throwing the glove back is an Eastern manner
of taking possession. Also in Ruth, when it :
says, "Now this was the manner in former
time in Israel concerning redeeming and con
cerning changing. for 'to Confirm in all things;
a man pluoked off his shoe, and gave it to his
neighbor; and this was testimony in Israel"
—it was a glove that he plucked off; his glove
which Boaz iiithdrew when be bought the land'
of Naomi's kinsman, and - which he gave np sit
fyinbol of taking possession.
So, Saul, after his victory , over the Amato
kites, up a hand'as the token of his victory,
and many Pbteciicilart monuments have an arm
and a hand held up as a sign of supremacy and
power. The custom of blessing gloves at, the
coronation of the kings of France is a remnant
of this old Eastern habit—a glove ' indeed,
meaning of them investiture. WhenConte.din
was deprived of his crawl] and his life by the
usufper Mainfroy, he flung his glove among
the crowd as he stood on the scaffold, desiring
some one to take it imp and carry it to his rela
tives, who would revenge his death. A knight
took it up and brought it to Peter, King of Ar
agon, who, in virtue of .this glove, was after
wards crowned at Palermo. The feudal and
old-time custom of delivering a glove in token
of investiture is , the same thing.
FIGHTING DEMOCRATS.—The editor of the
Uniontown Genius of Liberty, in an able article
in reply to the slanders of the Abolition organ
of that place upon the Democrats, or "Copper
heads," as it styles them, makes the following
telling remarks :
"If be intends to insinuate that it was any
class of people whose opinions he represents
that took Vicksburg. then it is a slander upon
that noble Democratic commander, Gem Grant,
and his brave army, who are fighting to restore
the Union- as it was and preserve the Constitu-
Hon as it is—which the Standard opposes. If
he would falsely assert-that his partisans drove
the rebels from Pennsylvania, we ask him what
evidence he has for the assertion, or who it was
that went to do it.
"We know that the "copperheads" from New
York and New Jersey came to our rescue by
hundreds and thousands; we know that that
"arch traitor Frank Hughes," raised a regi
ment of copperheads in Schuylkill county and
led them against the enemy. We know that
Col C. J. Biddle, or Philadelphia, Chairman of
the Democratic State Central Committee, raised.
a regiment of sixteen hundred recruits in the
first twenty-four hours. We know that Col.
Alfred Day's coal regiment of six hundred cop.
perheads from Berke; who went into the fight
with 446 men and 19 officers and came out with
101 men and 7 officers, and we also know-of
' , trims companies and squads of "home" cop
perheade who turned out to defend Our glorious
old'Commonwealth, but we have not heard of
a iegiment of Leaguers, Abolitionists or lig-1
gers having been raised -for State defenee.t-
Where did the valiant
"tlrentYthousand
Leaguers of Pennsylvania" eerie daring the
lite emergency ? now many Of the Letigaire
of this county were engaged in the heroic stamp
gle ?" • .
.ITO BE.CONTINUBD.]
Mumma) ran' MINING.
lIINDAYII SICSPIIID
DV 0. BARRETT it. 132
Tali DAILY PATRIOT' MID Trinor will be ONO to lib. aeribere reddilag in the Borough for Taliallall Ni mum,
payable to the Carrier. Mall subscriber!, Mil 'VALAIS
rex Allllllll.
Tun W r zi . Y PAistar sun Mums to pubikkhlattrikro
DOLLARS IMIR ANSIIMI INT41114,j111141"n".
to one addreee,Afteen
Connected with thin n annsislati
J OB OFP/CR, containing acarlety of plain and fancy
tyDP,
_IIIMIIIIIIOd tor ektaldfilestent la the Interlot 91
fir MIM I for withal ilia patitinses ot.the public
THE MOB AND ITS LE. HERS.
Under athe New York E17,1,9T0ei
of the ' lsth 'ins a rang and interesting' tirticle
giving the leading incidents of the late riots
in that city. We extra ct the followirw which.
•
is not devoid of
.interest
'Tthe mob began again
—tbe o 3
principall .n
outrage being the
i u h e f s a d t: e r y e
parallelogram hefore described. Mackerelville
proper, so iftiotna tbetto/10P,Idotreiete of the
between Teeth and Fourteenth streets,
from Second avenue 'to the river. From this
region the rictere'sVirribed'neitiiiiii=like their
friends and allies the 24'er0erfi rfljele=prefer,
rirg to carry on themar. out of,their own pre-
CiII/S. A congenial populatitin, however, re
ceived them in the upper s'reels, and. there,the
riot was waged. Yet it is-worthy of noteithat
a feeling existed, more or less strong,..frore.
Nineteenth Etreet up, against the mob: Near
the corner of this street
.and :First avenue liveit
an Bogliehman—one who would be pielEej out.
anywitere in a crowd its-ad gland epecimeW of h'
6-bruiser." Ile is called "Tom," and is said•to,
hold the neighborhood in his hand. Think' of'
a man five feet high, — with &latest forty-eight
inches girth; an - arm that a dandy would envy
for his best leg ; a short., bull neck larie
round shaggy head ; IoW forehead . , big liP4rai
lowering. eye. This man, part by persuasion
and more by force—himself an alien—gnellled
'the mob more than once on Tuesday and' Wed•l
,nettday. He knew end controlled every martin
'hie district, and expressed undying hatred of ,
the "Mackerelites," •wlrrt,ohertaverred; 'lan
guage certaiblyeireelioldet then' their own, had
no bnadnesi bat of theit 'Parnell& Ho started.
the cars,-..which they bad stopped several times,
aided by his•neighbors, who abhorred and te-;
sisted the' draft, Sat whom he had pershaded
that "stopping the zero was the.way 'to being- ,
thersoldierw tip:" .`.. 7
' "Well; Tom,' said one (a, etranger tO hini, -
but who bad seen his proceedings,) "how does
it go now ?"
Lowering for a moment upon the questioner.
but meeting a frank and friendly look, he re
plied,
"D—d bad."
"They say you can do anything, you please
with people around-here•?"
"Well, I suppose lean," said he, relenting in
manner—"that is our people. But do yonisee
them fellows ? Them rowdies, them be ;
them aint-eur . pcople.7
,
"Wito'ire--ther?"
- "Maekerel fellers 'from Avenue A.
ii .Ncrbusi
ness"a 41L-2 , rowdies. I don't' know tWircelt
of -th e etiVie." • • - - • •
'Juba then they 'filed down our wily Leaders
-
stepped to speak to "Tom," wholfits eilderttly, •
though no Mackerelite, regardedivith'beitiect;
urged him to drink, Whioh he seemed to haven° '
particular scruple about, thong-It his - mother, an_
old crone, rushing out of a cellar, arrested him,
Sereitining .
' , ls it to fight, Tom ? Is It to fight t"
"No !" roared be. in return,; "it aint—just
go in and mind your business."
"How do 'our! people feel ?" presently asked
the first questioner, getting hold of his button'
again:-
""They feel_ well enough." growled he, his
voice just one shade thialtdr- teem the nddi-
Hanel dram. "They're down on the draft
though." •
"But there is the appropriation by the Com
mon Cumicil." • '
, •Yes—thatll:do. I'd just as lief go myself,"
added he, .otlddeoly ; ?though I'm what they
call a foreigner ; but no bloody three-hundred•
dollar mete shall make me."
Th 4 other explained that the law was inten
ded to provide for the purchase of substitutes,
and particularly for the support of the fami
lies of those who had no $3OO. and must, there
fore, serve. "NM" seemed convinced that the
intent was just, but asked, pertinently
, •Why•didn't they soy so, then ?" adding-: -
"Wilson"—(Senator Wilson,,,of Massachusetts,
which-shows that's degree of intelligence
men of this class, though it doeswot change
their opialtodk brings ttoOtt nearer to law 'and
eider, as in. this case,) : —"Wilson_was a block.'
head to make such slaw ; be might have known.
that it would be taken,. as. holding up the rich
egin the poor."
..But Wilson was a poor man himself—once
a working man."
"Panne—if he• was, he hasn't a working
man's ,head." Ou all which law-znakers•,may
do worEs.thad to ponder.
WIWI& OUB:PILESID'gNS HAVZ BEEN EOM/I
nn —Of the 'Presidents' of the ftnited-States,
three were edUcated at William and Mari Co
llege, in Virginia—Jefferson, Monroe•and
:w Ty
ler; trio at !laniard, John Adoind :wild" RIP Q.
Aams. Madison graduated at Princeton,
Polk at the University of North Carolina,
Pierce at Boidoin College,'and Buchanan at
Dickinson College, in Pennsylvania. The rest
never had a college education.
OF the Vies Presidents, Harvard boa gradu
ated two; John Adams and Ethridge Gerry.—
William and.Maryy. two, Thomas Jefferson and
John Tyler.' Princeton tvio, Aaron Burr and
George M. Dallas. Colombia College two,
George Clinton and Daniel D. Tompkins. 'Yale
one, John C. Calhou,n. Transylvania Upiver
sity one . , Richard M. Johnson. Centre Col
lege, in Kentucky, one, Jahn C. Breokinridge.
Of the Chief Justices, Jay wass-a graduate-of
Columbia, Ellsworth of. Princeton,. Marshall
was net a graduate - of any college, and Taney
graduated at Dickinson. Of the Supreme
Judges, Prindeton hes educated eight, and
Harvard three. Of the Secretaries of State,
Princeton
: has graduated five, 'William '.and
Mary four, Harvard three, Yale mg, ,Voion,
Dartmouth and Brown one each. , Of the
Ministers to England, Harvard and reinceton
tr,
have each graduated five.
It will be seen that Harvard= University,
William and Mary College, and the College of
New Jersey, at -Princeton, have furniphed most.
of the occupants of these high offiCell.
CURIOUS CAB® .—Among' the distinsuished
ladies now residing in the'East may be men
tioned one [Lady Stanhope] who some nyears
ago, was a leading star in the fashionablecLon
donhemisphere T wl refer to Miss,r.ly
daughterotAdirit..shemardia
noble Earl, well known as a leading statesman,
and upon their marriage being dissolved, was
united to a German Baron. Subsequently, she
became the wife of an Arabian chief, the Shiek
M.--. Eor six months in the year the Bon.
M. M—, as she is called from the fact of her.
brother having succeeded to a peerage, resides
between Damkacns and Balbeo with her hue
band, passing the remainder of the year with
him in camp. It was upon the occasion of an
English traveler visiting this camp that his
countrywoman was pointed out to him, when
she expressed, though an, English lady, how
happy she was to wife to the Arab chief. Were
the life of this lady e mbodied in a modeeit to.
mance or novel, it would be looked upon as a
gross exaggeration—quite a work of: the sense
that sobool—for who would look-upon the trans
formation of ,a belle of Almack's, in the West,
:to a Wife of an Arabian Shiek as en over-true
Wel Truth is more wonderful than Sefton,
ab tie history of. the aboirt 1i47 would prove.
...-Etighsh Alper.