`SINGLE COPIES, VOLUME L-NITMBER. 43. THE POTTER JOURNAL I icausuo EVERY THURSDAY HOMING, BY Thos. S. Chase, To whom , all Letters and Communications should be addressed, to secure attention. Terms—lnvarlably in Advance : $1,25 per Annum. Terms of Advertising. 1 Square [lO lines] 1 insertion, - - 1 St It 3 ach subsequent insertion less than 13, 25 .ISquare three months, 50 1 44 six ,i 1 4 00 0. .- " nine " 550 / .3. " one year, 600 3ule and figure work, per sq., 3 ins. 3 00 , tr,rivery subsequent insertion, 50 :2 Column six months, ' 18 00 . - 4 ~., ~ ~ lo 00 a " 0 ri 700 `A.I " per year. . 3o'oo LI 1.1 14 16 00 pouble-columu, displayed, per annum 65 00 41 -" Eiji mouths, 3 00 of 10 lines, each insertion under 4, 100 Parts of columns will be inserted at the same rates. Administrator's or Executor's Notice, 200 Auditor's Notices, each, 1 50 glicrifre Sales, per tract, 1 50 lfarriage Notices, each, 1 00 Divorce Notices, each, 1 50 Administrator's Sales, per sciriare for 4 insertions, finairicas or Professional Cards, each, pot exeeding 8 lines, per year, - 5 00 Special and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 WAll transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and no notice will be taken of advertisements from a distance, unless they are accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. re, 45 - intsz Caxlls, JOAN S, MANN, • ATTORNEY .42i11) COUNSELLOR AT LAW, CouderspoA, Fa., will attend the several Courts'in Potter and ''Kenn Counties. All busineqs entrusted in his care will receive prompt attention. Office s Main st., oppo site the Court House. F. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. 10s1 ARTHUR G. OLNST.D, ATTORNEY k COUNSELLOR. AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa.; will attend to all business entrusted biscare, with promptue3 and fidelity, Office intemperance Block, sec ond floor, Main St. 10:1 W.40 - 03,ENSON. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Fa., will attend to all business entrusted to him. with care and promptness.. (Mee corner of West and Third sts. 10;1 L..P. WILLISTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Wellboro', Tinge Co., Pa., will attend the Cuurts in Potter at M'Kean Counties. 9:13 R. W. BENTON,. St'SVEYOR AND CONVEYANCE:2, Pay -Mond P. 0., (Allegany Tp.,) Potter Co., pa., will attend to all "busin:tss in his line, with cal , and dispatch. 9:33 W. K. KING, SURVEYOR, DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER, Santliport, -M".:ean Co.. Pa. ' will attend to business for non-resident land holders, upon reasonable terms. Referen ces given if required. P. S.—Maps of any pit of - the County made to order. f 11;13 0. T. .LLISON PRACTICWG PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., • respectfully informs the citizens of the vil lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all calls' for professional services. Office on Main st., ip building formerly oc cupied by C. W, Ellis, Esq. . 9:22 cou.nrs'smiTs. E. 4. J 0444. SMITH & JONES, DE4ERS IN DRUGS,- MEDICINES, PAINTS, qty, Fancy ArtiCles, Stationery, Dry Goods, Glaceries, &e„ Main 0., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 D, E,' OLMSTED, DEALER IN DRY GOODS, • READY-MADE Clothing, crockery, Groceries, Ze.c., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 W. MANN, DEALER DI gOCIKS Sc ETAIIONERIT, AZLNES and Mtisic, N. W. corner of Main and Third sts., Coudersport, Pa. MI E. R. HA...ItiIi..NGTON, JEWELLER, Coudersport, 'a., tiering engag ed a window in iSchocnnaker .5; Jackson Store will carry on the Watch and Jewelry business there. A fine assiortment of Jew eliy constantly on hand. Watches and Jewelry carefully, repaired, in the best style. cia the shortest notice—all work warranted. 9:34 HENRYI J. OLMSTED, , (SUCCESSOIS : TO•JAYES W. SMITA,) )EALER IN STOVES, TIN Z.: SHEET IRON WARE, Main et.; nearly oppritc the Court House, Coudergiort, Pa. Tin and Sheet 'D'on Ware made order, in good style, on short 'notice. I 10:1 COUDERSPORT"HOTEL, • D. F. G LASSMIRE, Proprietor, Corner -of Main and Second Street, Coudersport, Pot . ter Co., Pa. . 1 . 9:44 ALLEGkNY HOUSE, SAMUEL M. MILLS; Proprietor, Colc:iborg Potter Co., Pa., Seven miles north of Cou -del.:Port, Qi tlielirellnille Road. 9:44 i - . .frriginitt , ligt-4:is. [TVrilleta for Diu Polfe7 Journal.] IMPROMPTU THOUGHTS ON A DAGUER— REOTYPIL INSCRIBED TO Tim ORIGINAL. JENNIE, dear, your form atid feature, Almost life-like now I pee : Only speak, and kiss me, Darling Waud'ror from out; threshold tree. 50 - - - $1 50 Oh! that smile,Sotweet and soothing, Ever to my heart appears • Like a ray of fitful sunshine— Sunshine clouded, sow, with tears. Those dark eyes, so blue and "witching," Speak to mine in silence now; Ann deep - thoughts, of priceless value, Can be read on..that fair brow. Here I sit, and. fondly gazing, Seem to think you'll speak my name: • But, alas! there's !something wanting— That sweet smile reinaitis the.same. three " 16 00 one month, 600 per square Yes, the laughing, mild expression, f those eyes so deeply b!ue, Changes not,—while I am weeping Titus, so far from home and you. Ah ! 'tis true there's something missi l ng Something that l l EVET. miss : i Tis your friendly•grasp, my JENNIE, And your unresisting kiss. ELEVEN MILE, PA., April, 1858. S. M. L 1 50 II hear a brooklet gnashing, free, From rocky fountains near; • It kisses pebblu, fair to see, And something whiSpers, 'tis for me— . For ace, the brooklet clear. I hear a tiny warbler's n-e3.,7 From yonder teltn-'ivood tree— :No notes more sweet frinn hu,n,n tongue; I fondly hope it dry prolong Its hippy la) fur me. Bright woodland Bowers bloom all• around, As fair as fait• can he ; Their sweet p. , ri'unies, like music's sound, I ever prize—audlthese abound In Nature. sure, for me • I hear—(ah I thrObbilag herirt, la still: ) I think. hear: . tone From '•hiidden depths' such accents thrill— (How dare I lisp iinLayet I u7O - That heart i ALL YY OIVS. I list for more to e'all it mine; But something whispers : These bind to earth ;_ though they are thine, Be God, in Heaven, the only shrine At which to iirorship and obey," ELEVEN MILE, Pa., April, 1858: S. d. 'Atating tO tip 110it,5. (TO BE READ 1N PRIVAT,) FEDLs.LES GROWING bLa. , I The following venturous essay on the l most delicate of subjects is from ! Chant , I,cr.s's Edinburgh, Journal r 1 .. " Growing old. ,A time we talk of, and jest or moralize over, but find ali4ost ilc ~sir possible to realize r t leaSt to ourselv . In others, we can see its, approach. clear er; yet even then' we are slow to recognize it. '`What, Miss' So-and-so looking old— did you say! , Impossible,: she is quite a young person; only, a year older than II —and that would make her just—. Bless me l I am forgetting how time goes. on. Yes'—with :I taint deprecation which truth forbids you to leontradict, and polite- Peas to notice—' 1 suppose we are neither . of us so young as! we used to be. 1. 6 ' Without doubtlit is a'trying 'crisis in' a tvoman's life—a single Woman's partieu-!, larly—waen she betzins to suspect she is ; if not so young as, F6e used to be;' that, after crying •Woff' lever since the respect able maturity of seventeen—as spine young ladies are fond of 'doing, to the extreme amusement of their friends—the mini wolf; old age, is actually showing his 'teeth in the distance; and no courteous blindness on the part of those said friends, no alarm: ed indifference on he own, can neutralize the fact that he is, , if still far off, in sight, And, however charmingly poetical he tamy appear to sweet foUrteen-and-ahalf, who writes melancholy Verses about ' I wish I were again a child,'] or Merry three-milk twenty, who preserves in silver paper i my first gray hair,' old age, 'viewed as a near approaching reality, is—quite *other thing, , ." To feel that yFli have had Your fair half at least of the Ordinary term! of years allotted to mortals; thaty,ou have no right to expect to be any handsomer, or strong er, or happier than you are now ;Ithat you have climbed to the i sututuit of life, whence the next step mus necessarily be deca dence; ay, though; you do not 'feel it-, though the air may be as fresh, :and the view as: gland—still, you know that it is so. Slower or faster, you are going down hill. To those whO go 'hand-in-hand,' r I 'And sleep thegither itt the foot,l it may be a safer andswector descent; but I am writing for those who havei to make the descent alone. , I "It is not a ple ant descent at the be ginning. When 011 find at parties tit you are not asked, to dance as ihuch . as formerly, and Sour partners 'are: chiefly stout, !Lid:lle-aged gentlthann and slial lads, why blush iterribly, and - _require a De,bott9 to tilt bipipies of Dile Deinoclaey, qll3 the Vsseltlipltioq. of 11_1004, T.itchttthe 419 ifetos. • [Wrillen for Potter Journal.] FOR ME COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NAY 13, 1853. gre,at deal of drawing out; when you are ' dear'..ed and patronised by stylish young chits; who were in their eradles when you were i 'a grown woman; or whou some boy, who was your plaything in petticoats, has the inertinence to look over your head, bearded and grand, or even to consult you on his love affairs. When you find your, acquaintance . delicately abstaining from the term ' old maid,' in your presencd, or immediately qualifying it by_ an eager panegyric on the solitary sisterhood: When servants address you as Ma'am' instead of ' bliss;' and if you are at all stout and' comfortable-looking, strange shopkeepers persist in making out your bills to •"Mrs. Blank,' and pressing upon your notice toys and perambulatdrs. " Rather trying, too, when in speaking of yourself as a 'Orr—which, from a long habit, you unwittingly do—you detect a smile on the face of your interlocutor; or, led by chance excitement to deport your self in an ultralouthful manner, some in stinct warns you that you are making yourself ridiculous. Or, catching in some strange looking-glass the face that you are too familiar with to notice much, ordina rily, you suddenly become aware that it is noel a young face; that it will never be a young face again ; that it will gradually alter:and alter, until the known face of your girlhood, whether plain or• pretty, loved or disliked, admired or despised, will• have altogether vanished—nay, is vanish ed : look as you will, you cannot see it any more. "There is no denying the fact, and it ought to silence many an ill-natured re mark upon mutton dressed lamb-fashion,' young ladies of a certain age,' and the like—that with most people the 'passing from maturity to middle agls is so gradual as to be almost imperceptible to 'die indi vidual concerned. It-is very difficult for a woman to recognise that she is growing old ; and to many—nay, to all more or less —this recognition cannot but be fraught with considerable pain. Even the most frivolous are somewhat to be pitied, when, not conducting themselves as passies - , be cause they really do not think it, they pose themselves to all manner of !miscon structions by still, determitiedly grasping, that fair sceptre of youth, which they nev er suspect is new the merest rag of sove reignty'—sovereignty deposed. " Nor can the mast sensible woman fairly put aside her youth, all it has en joyed, or lost, or Missed—its hopes and interests, omissions and commissions, do ings and sufferings—satisfied that it is henceforth to be considered entirely as a thing gone by—withont a momentary spasm of the heart.. Young people forget this as completely as they forget that they themselves ,way one day experience the same, or they would not be so ready to laugh at even the foolisliest of those fool ish did virgins, who - deems herselfjuvenile long after everybody else has ceased to share in the pleasing delusion, and there by makes both useless land ridiculous that season .of early autumn which ought .to be the most peaceful, abundant, safe, and sa cred time in a woman's whole existence. They would not, with the proverbial harsh judgmeot of youth, scorn so cruelly those poor little absurdities, of which the un-! luoltyperson who indulges therein is pro bably quite unaware—merely dresses as she has always done, and carries on the harmless coquetries and ininauderies of her. teens; unconscious, how-exceedingly ludicrous they appear, in a lady of—say forty ! Yet in this sort .of exhibitien, which society too often sees and enjoys, any honest heart cannot but often feel that of till the actors engaged in it, the one who plays ,the least objectionable and disgrace ful part is she who only makes a fool 'of herself. • "'Yet why should she do it ? - Why oling.so desperately. to the youth that will not stay; and which, after all, is not such a very precious or even .a happy - thing? Why give herself such a world of trouble to deny or conceal her exact age, when half her acquaintance must either know it or guess it, or be - supremely indifferent about-it ? Why appear dreSsed—undreSs. ed, cynics would say—after-the pattern Of - her niece, the belle, of the ball; annoying the eye with' beauty either half witbered, or long overblown, and which in its prime would have been all the lovelier for more concealment? " in. this matter ,of il4cs, a word 'or two. There are two styles of costume which ladies past their premiere jeuite* are Most prone to fall into: one hardly knows which is the worst. Perhaps, the', it is ;the ultra-juiTnite—such as the in sane 'juxtaposition of a yellow skin and white tarlatane, or the anomalous ,adorn ing of gray hair with artificial flowers. It . may be quetstioncd whether at any age be yond twenty a ball-costume is really ,hp cowing.; but alter thirty, it is' the very last sort of attire that a lady can assume with impunity. It is said that you can only; Make yourself look youngar by t.; res-s -ing a little older than you really are; mid , I have seen many a I sroman look withered and old in the customary even ing-dress which; being unman:4 thinks Accessary to shiver iu, who would have appeared fair as a sauShiny October day, if she would only have done nature the justice to assume,, in her autum an autumnal 'livery. If she would only have the'sense - to believe that gray hair was meant toSeften wrinkles and brighten faded cheeks, giving the same effect for! which our . youthful grandmothers wore! powder; thatilitnr , l light-colored gowns,. frippered over with trimmings, only t- suit airy figures and •aetive motions; that a sober,-tinted sul••,:,tantial gown and a pretty cap, will any day take away ten years froni a lady's appearance. Above all, if she would observe this one grand rule of the toilet, always advisable, - bat after youth indispensable—that though good person 'points' are by no ureans.a warrant for undue exhibition thereof,lmo point that is positively unbeautiful Ought ever; by any pretence of fashion or custom, to be show. " The other sort of dress, which, it must be - owned, is less frequent, .is .: the dowdy style: People say—though not very soon —' Oh, lain nut a young woman now; it does not signify what I wear.' ' Whether they quite believe it, is another questidn; but they say it—and act upon it when laziness or indifference prompts. Foolish women i; they forget that if we have rea son at any time more than another tomind our 'looks' . it is when our [ looks are de : parting from us. Youth can do almost anything in the toilet—middle-age can not; yet is none the less bound to present to her friends and society the most pleas ing exterior she can. Easy is it to do this when we have those about us who love us, and take notice of what we wear, and.in whose eyes we would like to appear gra cious and lovely to`the last, so far as na ture allows ; not easy when things are oth erwise. This, perhaps, is the reason why Lwe see so many unmarried women grow careless.and 'old-fashioned' in their dress What does it signify ?—nobody cares.' " I *think a woman ,ought to care a little for herself—a very little. Without preach ing up vanity, or undue waste of time over that most thankless duty of adorning one's self for nobody's pleasure in partic ular—is .not still a right and becoming feeling to have some respect fur t jtat per sonality which, as well as our soul, Maven gave us to make the best use of? - And is it not our duty—considering he great number of uncomely people, drat are in the, world—to lessen it by each of us Making herself as little uueomcty as she can ?- " Because a lady ceases to dress youth fully, she has no excuse. 'Or dressing un-, tidily; and though having found out that one general Style, suits both her person, her taste and convenience, she-keeps to it, and generally prefers moulding the fashion to herself, rather than herself to the fash ion. Still, that is no reason why she should shock the risible nerves of one generation by showing up to theui the out-of-date costume of anutner. Neatness invariably, hues ca.-cfally harmonized, and, as time - advances, subsiding into a general unity of tone, softening. and dark ening in color, until black, white and gray alone remain, as, the suitable garb for old age; these things are every . wo in a u's bound en duty to observe as long as she lives. No p9verty,trief, sickness or looelutess— those mental "causes ivhich- act sO strongly upon the external life—can jUstity any one (to use a phrase probably soon to be obsolete when Charity and cumuion sense have left the rising generation no fifth of November) involuntarily 'waking a Guy of herself.' " That slow, fine and yet preceptible change of mien and behavior, natural and proper to advancing years, is scarcely re ducible to rule at all. It is butzthe out ward reflection of an inward proem of the mind. We only discover its full effect by the absence of it, as noticeable iri a per son 'who has such . very "young" manners,' who falls into raptures of entkusiasm, and expresses loudly every emotioh of her na ture. Such a character, when real, is uti objtetiouable, nay, charming, in extreme youth; but the great improbability: of its being real, makes it rather ludicrous, if not disa g reeable , in mature age; then the passions out, or are quieted down, the sense of happiness itself is calm, and the fulleit, tenderest tide of which the loving heart is capable, may be described by those still waters' which run deep! " TO 'grow old gracefully"—as one,. who truly has exemplaied her theory, has writ ten-ant expressed it—is a good and beau tiful thing; to grow old worthily, .a better. And the .rst effort to that eud, is not only to recognise, bat , to becoMe personally re conciled to the fact of - y - Mith's departure; to see,.or, if not seeing, ;-to have faith - in, the wisdom of that which we call change, yet Which is in truth progression; to lol low openly and fearlessly, iu ourseives and our own life; the same taw which makes spring pass into summer, summer intu nu tuam, autumn into winter, preserving lan eSpecial beiiity and fitness in each of lie• four., • Yes, if woman Could only believe l it, there is a wonderful beauty even in grrv ing old. The eharni of expression arisnig from softenetl,temper or ripCned intellect, often apply atones for the loss of form SI and - aolOring.; - a! d,' consequently,. to-t hose who never conla boast either of these lat- ter, yearsigiVe .utich moro than the/ take away. . A sensi;ive person often requires half alifetime t get • thoronghly.insed .to this corporal tip chine, to attain a whole some indifferen e both to its det'ecwE and perfections—an tole Tarn at last, what no body would acq ire from - any teacher but - I experience; that it is l the mind alone which is of! any consequence ; 1114, with:a good temper, sinly and a moderate stock of ,brainsor eve t ' heltwq former only-any sort of body can in time b-e made :useful, respectable , and agreeable; as a traveling dress for the soul. ,Many.,a one, who was absolutely plain in yOuth, thus grows. pleas ant and well,looking in declining . years. Your will hardly evdr find anybody, not ugly in mind, iwho is - repulsively ugly in person after middle life." 1 1 The Chivalry and the Law. • • 1 -4—t The "chivalif are showing us d new phase of theirharacter.• Last year, - and in fact in all time Past, .they figured as the fighting men of t,he federal:capital— the 'bloods" Of the metropolis--;—who avenged all insults at the isword's point or the pistol's mouth. They absolutely .howled for battle. I The, Northern: men were sheered at daily for their pusillan imity and unwillingness to engage in,pu gilistic and other encounters. The relig ious, moral, intellectual and muscular su periority Were all- on the sunny side of the Potomac. This year, soinchow, the tables seem to be turned. In.the ecent Homeric com bat in. the House'. 'of Iteprese.ntatives, Keitt, as the representative of the Pal metto chilialry, Went into action with his recent impetuosity, but, on. being knock ed 'down for his pains by the - uitellivalriG . • Grow, of i Pennsylvania, seems to, have suddenly subsided into a devoted peace maker and asserter Of the authority of the law.. If he had been =Minted by a Car dinal, the effect could not haVe- been More marked. The g ood work seems to be progress ing. . Mr. Helper, of North Carolina, has apostatized froni , the faith of his fa thers, and refuses any longer to believe in the rio•hteou-ne-s l and pnulitableness of slavery. Ile published a book - saniminiel last year, in which he declared it to ha his opinion that "a crisis" was impending, over i.he sunny o South, in consequence of its devoted attachment to the peculiar institution, and; Moreover, supported his I 'pinion by a numVer of• arguments to I which, for a long tinie, the South has not pretended to have au better reply than, assault and battery and banislinienk. Mr., Helper was, however, not within .reach of this sort oflogie when his. book ap peared; So, as the nest best thing, they charged him with theft and eaezzle nient—charges which he refuted, and which were; last winter, withdrawn by their promulgators in this city., • His work was large.y quted by Senator Wil son, of 11Iassachusettis, in the .recent de bates on 'Kansas ; and in reply Senator 13iggs, as usual, hact nothing better to al lege than the ul>l accusation of swindling, directed against the anther. Helper .forthwith proceeded to tile a rejoinder, telling Mr. Craige, informant, that in circulating such story, he had com mitted .a cowardly a't. Craige thereup 7 on committed an assault, but Helper, it appears, is ithe bettei pugilist of the two, and although Craigel -measures seven feet, or thereabouts. he Was "punishing" him severely ,when the eoinbatauts were:sep arated. I The "law" now ti brought up beforel Craige, whose count) marks .Of the strife,! tervenes; Helper is ",Justice" Arnold . ; ounce doubtless bore declines to. appear; he chivalry must be - ken noses and black iJustice-Arnold,there . fact that no one ap but the wrongs of edressed, their. br eves atoned for, and fore, in spite of the' peared to prosecute quent to find bail in sand dollars to keep, remains to be t01d.,1 sentenced the deliu the. sum of ono thou the peace. The best The roberly, orderly, Sgentlemanly_Keitt,'of uddenly_ conceived, lwas in custody, the kthe prbbably carried him, and at his sug led of a•bowic-knife was then arrested a ed twenty &liars for Weaens. discreet', fastidious, South -Carolina; while Mr. Helper horrible thought th weapons about wit) = and revolver: second time, and fi carrying . concealed • . violence and Crime been permitted to 'go hington, these pronipt measures tire' highly it must be 'confessed -we Mite in -recount lii iew of the which have leo unpuniihed and vigorous peace eneauraging,, that the satisfactio, somewhat lnerass'ad was arrested and Juan who domini4ed of the man who. Was fact •that it ws ~Mr. ti .thc first blow vas Campbell, of Olio, and. Wright, of 'Cloorgis, b i 67, thel,n if the person; who ished bad bciefith the assault, instea assaulted. ELM Crnige !who struo, sworn to b-;iMr. testified. to by Mr. -IFOUR CENTS TEICIS.- 41.25 Tait LE . a letter publiShed fit the Vann; so thr.i.) can bpi, no doubt The ordY.thingct(f, a serious usure ' eharged; : agninsOillt..!, Helper was the statemeat•by Mr. Wright:i that hi was' 7tall".i and - 4• !dark," - "a 'rather savage: and sinister look." Helper, considering that been is •a • tr.opPO-•:, !lent slavery, has been .let 'off: cheaply. 110 has been villifiedtby North Carolina Senator,- - .assatilted . Ikra North: Carolioa meinberof.Congress, fined a for doing what every Mau in Washington; is..known to do; and, put tinder. b,Mdi!to ; :... keep :the peace for six-, months. ...Nlr.!., Wright gives it as. his opinioo.that.Help-:. er intended.; to assassinate comeboiiy; -; though he Ainly tiSed his fists-.to defend. l . himself when lie was strilek, - aridlliinks.. it, was "one:„ of the Most determinately wicked and naproVoked assaults _lie , .eirer-) . witnessed." • But after all, it must bell:,; great `Satisfaotion to know, that somebody ' has beea pnikislied for an assault jiu , Washington; even thoniel it was,gie matt who was assaulted`.--d. - Y. Times. t. , gitt . '(4r-tie4l:l-311,:1ti(.',.::,i LETTER: FROM NEW YOlalki -,. . Carrespondenee of the Potter Jounuil. ' L. ~ -—''', l'Cliw YORK, April 29,1858.. ' ' The Orsini demonstratton.has, cc li e event, of the4week. The lurid flame 4 of. ` the revolutichjary torch and Europeartaik 1 3 11,€Tublicaniatn, threw, their gastly g are . athwart our thoroughfares to give im 05,,.' ing signitica;nce to the occasion.., yiye t . thousand refugees, exiles, and their'syni,,.• pathigers, with lighted faunbeana in their hands, and the iire:s'of vengeance in their hearts, marched in procession down Bryi& i • way and the. Bowery to the Par'; irli6re a rostrum lidd bean erected, ,and 21./01;. people asseuibled to hOnor the meatories of the several conspirators who havestif, ~ fered 'death for attempting' the litO of,tlp Frendli Emphror. The, exercises wereren gineered bp John Allen; an .Ameriy.*,., who called the vast assemblage •to ,ordq,.; made the opening speech,•read the re s fli. 7 :: tions, ,and• introduced the.. ppealc'er - of trio evening, Alherto C'. illazzi, ,wio-tlisen re ed in : Ita‘ lian *.,- ?f. -1' 4.''!-:r4 4 , , ,' : ' . . IV,#. have a one' horse court in thil.ci called. the .liarine.,pourt (Horse Alul t'aneifully so ealled,becausa there•is .. little marine . busiuess transacted in it. decisions are ; made mainly to tell .to; marines, but' never to be respected" di --- -.. .. up as 'precedents. ' Well, our of thahrse:' hair wigged judges of the court, the o her . day, trotted put Dred Seutt, thecrac - est.. nag now on the judicial course, gave, • din an airing in ihigh blood style,. air I_ . roclO.' hint rough, shod over the complaint Uf,a ; poor ohleolOred - woinan who has no rights: that one of Our wilite ear-condnetorS (a,* one dickey car at that) felt . ,b'utirid to .re :poet.. The old woman; Windt:" d to. ITide . .. atid pay- her:tive pence. 'like.,white.4o,lk.s,.. bat tie conductor wonidnot let her, pus h., ed her di the car, and did her, material'. personal dathage., . hence .her pomplaint, upon which `;'.Juilga,Tiimiipsorrchar,ged the' jury at much length, and .laid. down, ther.: following rules . of lawt - ;- . - -L'.i ..,... i , i . That 11C , Tbe.S.do not possess the >Same. ... rights and privileges as white men'i i .re,,.. marking that the Dred seottilecision.was not only soUnd law, and should be,Obeypd: by every goOd citizen of the comthunity, but that it was founded-on . principles of justice, rpaSmi,, and iChristianity,:..,That.. the Plaintiff, being a . negro, had no: right ;to a seat in the car in cinestinr9., that It was ?the, duty of the conductor to, expel her, under the rules and regniations, of the company.; that the opinpany :had - , the right to: establish . such rules and reg 7 i ulations; that uegroes might ba - perniiited,,, but were nett entitled to a scatln4nblic, conveyance.! That the - only qiipstiou-for: the jury to consider was whether the, 14. T fendant used any more foreethatovas . n,c 7 . cessary to put the plaintiff 0ff,te . ,e4 . .11, o a' That if he did she was entitled t verdict,;i otherwise it must be for'-the defendant..: The jury:retired, and in a ; short.time re . -; turned with a verdict for the"- defendant:, The hat-aluip windows, in BroadWayare, displaying the new regnUtion arniy ; hut, It is :modelled :after; the `style ; -knot n: as. gi Kossuth?! coldr black., rim -turtied'iip,.ai . one side`to„furoi.sh 'sticking - ,plac . c fp; a black; ostrich: feather, gold-lace bt* o :OA utlie.r; °main e n tfi, according to - the r ek: of the- wearer. It r looks - exceeding!, trim and picturespe, and must be .a sgtc' I lief; iq tile head. of the., soldier,,: th, ' cannot think it-.altogether . .hedtti 1 profeSsiori,i as I r einem her, a f soft, ha eth array Wrath, and how - cad 4tol ' battle unless he be brimfull. of The artistic brush and chi Seline National Academy, of . -DpSign . are;,,r • the full tide, of aa.nnal ,oxhibitioo, - fairer, rarer showing in.seidniii,seui ;lem agn ie ' 'fi - 6 t nt series oftkpliihted,, whose Walls are adorned With,eFery ty of; lantiseape,',.sea-sketch,: '&3644 and domestic -gronping;, - ; ;vvith hi.:ri there a ;" Ntoripd urn and animated 1 On tineaftern,-rins,,strelli-ng through gaily ; erowde.Art .11allS,-,- pile., kO l o_Ni I .wiaioh to admito mos,,t, gin:pieta:* II HEM Aty, ine) very; Its the set t re; ugh I ,11 ! tura; ieldo Ater c.f.gur KT in uud , g. opni,• vOrie rural c nod irot." t4so «A©
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers