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    ALEXANDRIA. j; V,

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    ..The Judiciary Committee of the Senate dis-jcussed,-yesterday, the bill providing for an election

    in Virginia, but reached no conclusion.The committee will resume its considerationto-day.The newspapers are publishing copious exi. 1 f i.1. nf tlio ''ononial nr\mm!a.

    iruuia iruiu me icpuxt w mu

    sion appointed to investigate and report, forthe information of the President, upon thecivil and military administration in the militarydepartment bordering upon and west of theMississippi," which-Mr. Stanton kept snuglylocked up in the War office since 1865. Anda delectable disclosure it makes of Gen. Butler'sacts and doings while in command in New Orleans! Cotton, sugar, steamboats, were allused to gorge the capacious maws of some governmentofficials. Butler figures as the ulieadand front."A local article, in yesterday's Gazette, spoke

    of the busy appearance of our harbor, owing tothe number of eoal and other trading vesselsnow hero. * Last night, the vessels, with theirlights up, made a fine show all along the frontof the city. It was pleasant to look upon this''opening of the harbor" to the old trade..And we hope to see at our wharves, ere long,not only coasters, but larger vessels, bringingimportations and taking away exportation,from and to, foreign countries. The work hascommenced m several instances we have alreadynoticed in our columns.The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations

    have determined to report against the confirmationof Dawson as Minister to Russia, McClernandto Mexico, and Rosecrans to Spain.The Committee are averse to displacing JohnP. Hale, who sat many years in the Senatewith 9ome of them. They agreed to reportfavorably in the case of Mr. Watts, of Philadelphia,as Minister to Austria. The FinanceCommittee determined to report in iavor ofthe rejection of Mr. Cooper as Commissionerot Revenue, and Mr. Wells as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury.

    *\Baltimore was visited yesterday morning, betweenone and two o'clock, by a copious rain

    storm, accompanied by thunder and lightning.«The rain fell continuously in torrents for severalhours, a number of streets being flooded..The wate- on Liberty street rose to a heighthardly . uemhered before. Many of thestreets in the western and central sections ofthe city were flooded; many cellars being inundated.'"Daring the storm several houses werestruck by lightning.When those who claim to be representatives

    from Alabama came forward in the House ofRepresentatives yesterday to take their seats,xYIr. Brooks objected to one of them, becausehe was a resident of the State of Maine, not ofAlabama. Mr. Dawes asked Mr. Brookswhere he (B.) was born. Mr. B. immediatelyreplied, "I wa3 born in Maine, I emigrated toNew York thirty years ago, and when I settledin .New York I brought a trunk ! lberc wasa burst of laughter.A letter from a subscriber in Fauquier says :

    "The harvest, the hot weather, and the uncertaintyabout whether there is to be an electionin our State, have had the effect of lesseninginterest, for the time being, in political matters.But, at the proper time, every man wili be onhand and do his duty. The lull is no indicationthat our people will not form ranks and goto the polls, if any polls are to be opened."Horace Greeley is highly incensed with ThaddeusStevens, for the opinions he expressed in

    the House on.Friday last, in favor of the pay-,ment of iive-twenty bonds in currency. Hetells Stephens he is a fit ally for Blair and Pendleton.readshim out of the party, and bid3him not "to stand upon the order of his going,but to go at once." Pray where is he to go ?That's the .question.Over 1,200 more emigrants from Scandinavia,

    Holland, Eogland and Wales arrived in NewYork last week to the Morman agents fromSalt Lake City, to whom they were consigned,and sent by rail to the West. Over two thousandmore of the same sort are daily expected.The Georgia papers re-affirm that great

    cruelties have been inflicted upon thefprisonersarrested by military authority in that State,and oonflned in Fortress Pulaski. They haveam instrument of torture called the "sweatbox."A banquet in honor of Mr. Reverdy Johnson

    was given in Annapolis yesterday. In reply toa toast, Mr. J. made a speech full nf interest-ing recollections concerning the former timesand men of his native city.A man in Wilmington, N. C., the other

    night, shot and killed his owa wile, mistakingher for a burglar. The husband and wife wereboth up, in the dark, alarmed by what theysupposed to be robbers.

    MBI

    The House of .Representatives passed theFunding bill at a late hour last night substautially as it was passed in Committee of theWhole on Saturday.A correspondent in Warren county writes us

    that the cultivation of the grape and the manufactureof wine will be largely increased inVirginia next year.The different branches ot the Presbyterian

    Church, in Scotland, as well as in the UnitedStates, arc negotiating for a reunion.Newspaper notices of Marriages and Deaths

    are paid for in nearly every city ot the country,except Alexandria.Conservative Ratification meetings continue

    to be held all over the country. ]

    ALEXAN]Orders have been issued by the Secretary of *

    the Navy to Rear Admiral Davis, commandingthe South Atlantic squadron, to cut down 3his force one-half. This will necessitate the *return of several of the war vessels now in Jthose waters.A young man in Altoona, Pa., last week, ]

    maddened by beiug "turned off" by the young :lady to whom he had been engaged, sought an

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    interview with her, drew a pistol and first kill- <ed her, and then killed himself. *

    Gen. Blair, in hi3 letter of acceptance, states !facts in very clear, decided terms.

    NEWS OF THE DAY.

    "To show the very age and body of the Times"Minister Burlingame and suite will soon take

    their departure from the United States. Priorto leaving, however, the Embassy will proceedto Auburn, New York, where they will pay ashort visit to Secretary Seward. They willthen proceed to Niagara Falls. Montreal, Quebecand Boston, and will sail on their Europeanmission on the 16th of August, from NewYork.The refusal of the U. S. Consul at Port-auPrinceto afford the protection of the American

    flag to Haytien refugees has caused much indignation,and sixty persons have left the AmericanConsulate and sought the protection of theBritish. Appearances indicated that the U.S. wa3 protecting SalDave.We have late advices from Venezuela. The

    revolutionists carried Carracas by storm on the23d ult, and on the 25th the place was finallysurrendered, when Gen. Monangas, ac thehead of the army, made a triumphal entry intothe city. A new Government has been formed,The prisoners at Atlanta, Ga.% on trial for

    supposed complicity in the Ashburn murder,have been removed from their cells under bondand given comfortable quarters in the barracksthe bond simply providing that they shall ap- jpear at the trial daily.The Senate of Louisiana, at the sugges'ion ]

    of Gov. Warmoath, has passe 1 a joint resolu- ,tion, calling on the Commanding General for itroops to repress lawlessness in the northernand western parishes of the State.The removal of the Confederate dead from ]

    Johnson's Island has been postponed, as fearsare entertained that the health of Sandusky (might be affected by the disinterment of so ]many bodies during the hot weather.I

    Three thousand bushels oi corn have been '

    sent from Baltimore this week, by order of the (Freedmen's Bureau, for the relief of the peopleof Hyde county, N. C., who are said to be ;in a very destitute condition.

    It is said to be the intention of Gen. Gillem 1ts appoint Col. James S. Hamilton as Governorof Mississippi.to which the WashingtonChronicle shouts."we do object.we do «object."The Alabama Legislature has elected Gen.

    Geo. E. Spencer, Bankrupt Register, U. S.Senator for the long term. To-day a Senatorwill probably be elected for the short term,The President has signed the Tax bill with

    the provision reducing the tax on whiskey Irom$2 to 50 cents per gallon; so the agony of thewhiskey ring is over.A revolution has broken out in the Northern

    portion of San Domingo, headed by Cabral andLuperow. Arrests and banishments continuein the city of San Domingo.The President on Monday approved and

    signed sixty acts and joint resolutions of Congress,mostof them being lor personal reliefand for pensions.The report ot the negro disturbances in Mil-

    lican, Texas, are confirmed, and it is doubtfulif they are yet quelled. Gen. Buchanan hassent a staff officer to investigate the matter. ;Four negroes were stabbed in a quarrel while '

    on an excursion in the steamer Ajax, at Savan- (nah yesterday, and one drunken negro fell over- tboard and was drowned.

    In the divorce case of Frank Leslie vs. Sa- ]rail Ann Leslie, the wife has been allowed ali- ^mony, pendente lite at fifty dollars per week,and a counsel fee of five hundred dollars. *The number of horses that died last week in (

    New York city from the heat was 107. One-half ]the number belonged to the car companies. 1

    Jefferson Davis contemplates making a trip (to Europe as soon as he recovers sufficiently (from the effects of his recent fall.

    Gen. Grant continues to refuse all public de- jmonstrations and receptions in his Westerntour. |The most approved opinion with reference c

    to the adjournment of Congress now is that it 1will take place about Friday or Saturday. £The Georgia Legislature yesterday ratified

    the "Fourteenth Amendment."

    Foreign News. oLord Napier yesterday received the lreedcm C

    of the city and a sword from the corporation bof London. The ceremonies took place at pGuildhall, and were witnessed by a large asscm- 3blage. The Lord Mayor presided and made rthe presentation.

    _Lord Napier was loudly ncheered by the audience, among whom were u

    many principal officers of' the British army.. j,A grand banquet was given in his honor at the cMansion House. pPrince Napoleon has arrived at Malta, on tlhis return home. At Syria the Cretan exiles tpresented him an address, expressing the hopethat France would not abandon their cause.. aThe Prince replied with reserve, committing (jhis government to no definite policy. aThe Grand Ducal Government of Hesse has qsignified a desire to join the other German gStates in concluding a naturalization treatywith the United States.

    Trifling witii Nature..The papers arebeginning to publish the regular course of re- 11cipes.(every heated term finds it afloat).for ^UU>YC1 CUWyitillll*, tUUICI U 1 llliili lUili, UIC.We advise people to let these specifics severely Slalone. And let us say that such complaints pwould but rarely prevail if people would cxcroiseordinary prudence and care in their habit?. IBut as people will be imprudent and careless, \severe and dangerous sicknesses are the inevi- ctable consequences. These should always be t<attended an experienced physician. Sell- sdoctoring, or doctoring members of one's own pfamily, is a dangerous occupation, and has iigiven Death many victims. The least medi- wcine is the best, and what little is given should 1be selected by a person whose profession it is pto distinguish clearly and closely between the aalmost countless variety of symptoms and indi- iications that attach to disease in any form. A tlgood physician will not attempt to "doctor" tihimself, nor will he, if the services of another aphysician can be procured, venture to practice oin his own family, so delicate are the variations nand incidentals to consider in arriving at a cor- nrect diagnosis. We repeat that it is folly. ncriminal lolly.for people to dose themselves nwith hearsay or newspaper recipes. Nature at hlault, with an experienced pilot to assist her, cwill generally get back into the right current, aif, you do not render her helpless with drugs \and too much exertion..N. Y. Express. p

    PRIA GAZETTE AFJSen'I. Blair's tetter of Acceptance.The following letter from General Francis

    ?. Blair is addressed to General Morgan, theJhairman of the Committee of the NationalDemocratic Conservative Convention:I accept, without hesitation, the nomination,

    ,endereci in a manner so gratifying, and givepou and the committee my thanks for the veryand and complimentary language in whichfou have conveyed to me the decision of theJonvontion.1 have fully read the resolutions adopted by

    Lhe Convention, and most cordially concur insvery principle arid sentiment they announce,My opinion upon all of the questions which discriminatethe great contending parties, havebeen expressed upon all suitable occasions, andI do not deem it necessary at this time to reiteratethem. The issues upon which the contestturns are clear, and cannot be obscurod 01distorted by the sophistries of our adversaries,They all resolve themselves into the old andever recurring struggle of a few men to absorbthe political power of the nation. This elfortunder every conceivable name and disguise hasalways characterized the opponents of tno Democratic party, but at no time has the attomplassumed a shape so open and daring as in thhcontest. The adversaries of free and constitutionalGovernment in defiance of the expresflanguage of tho Constitution havo erected smilitary despotism in ton of the States of theUnion, havo taken from the President tho pow'ers vested in him by the supreme law, and havedeprived the Supremo Court of its jurisdiction,

    * * 1 ---- A« ^ rtBAof irr J I n'The ngiic 01 trial oyjury, turn uuu«io»u TIIL'U,right, the habeas corpus.shields of safety foievery citizen, which have descended to us froirthe earliest traditions of our ancestors, ancwhich our revolutionary fathors sought to SO'cure to their posterity forever in tho fundamenulcharter of our liberties, have been ruthlesslytrampled under foot by the fragment of a Congress."Whole States and communities of peopleof our own race have been attainted, convicted,condemned and deprived of their rightsas citizens without presentment or trial or witnesses,but by Congressional enactment of ecpost facto laws, and in defiance of tho conslitutional prohibition, denying oven to a fullanclegal Congress tho authority to pass any bill oattainder or ex post facto law.The sarao usurping authority ha3 substituted

    as electors, in place of tho men of our own rac<thus illegally attainted and disfranchised,ahosiof ignorant negroes, who arc supportod in idleness with tho public money, and combined togetherto strip tho white race of their birthrighttnrough the management of tho Frccdmon'iBureau and tho emissaries of conspirators irother States, and, to completo tho oppressiontho military power of tho nation lias been placetat their disposal in order to make this barbarismsupremo.The military leader under whoso prestige thif

    usurping Congress has taken refuge since th(condemnation of tlioir schemes by the ftoo peopleof tho North in tho oloclions ot the laslpear, and whom they havo selected as theiicandidate to shiold themselvos from tho resuliot their own wickedness and crimo, has announcedhis acceptance of tho nomination ancliIs willingness to maintain their usurpation'over eight millions of wliito people at tho Houthlixocl to the earth with his bayonets. He exclaims:'"Lot us linvo peace.'' '"Peace reiguinWarsaw" was the announcement which heraldedtho doom of tho liberties ot a nation.."Tho Empire is peace" exclaimed Bonapartowhen freedom and its defenders expired undeiLhe sharp edge of his sword.The peace to which Grant invites us is the

    peace of despotism and death. Those who seel10 restore the Constitution by executing tho wilof tho people condemning the Eecoiutructioracts, already pronounced in tho elections of las;year, and which will, i am convinced, bo stillmore emphatically expressed by the election oiLhe Democratic candidate as tho President olthe Unileil States, are denounced as revolutionislsby the partisans of this vindictive CongressNegro sulfntgo, which tho popular voto ol NovYork, New .Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan,Connecticut And other Statos, has condemnedas expressly against the letter of theConstitution, must stand because their Senator:and Representatives have willed it. If the poopie shall again condemn these atrocious measuresby the election of the Democratic candidate for President, they must not bo disturbed,although decided to be unconstitutional by thtSupreme Court, and although tho President iswornto maintain and support the Constitution.The will of a fraction of a Congress reinforcedwith its partisan emissaries sent to lh<South, and supported by tho soldiers, muslstand against the will of the people, and the decisionof the Supreme Court and tho solemroath of tho President to maintain and supporitho Constitution. It is revolutionary to exeeut(tho will of the people. It is revolutionary tiexecute the judgment of the Supremo Court.Lt is revolutionary in tho President to keep inviolate)his oath to sustain tho Constitution..This false construction of the vitul principle ol:>ur Government is the last result of those whewould have their arbitrary reconstruction sway,and supersede our time-honored institutions..Ihe nation will say the Constitution must berestored and the will of the people again prevail.The appeal to the peaceful ballot to attainthis end is not war.is not revolution..rhey make war and revolution who attempt tcarrest this quiet mode of putting aside militarylespotism and the usurpations of a fragment ol[Jongr- ss, asserting absolute powor over the belignsystem of regulated liberty left us by ourathers. This must be allowed to take it;ourse.This is the only road to peace. It williome with the election of the Democratic canlidate and not with the election of that mailedvarrior whose bayonets aro now at the throats)i eight millions of people in the South to compelthem to support him as a candidate for thePresidency, and to compel them to submit tche domination of an alien race of semi-barmrousmen. No perversion of truth, or auda:itvof misrepresentation can excel that whichmils this candidate in arms as an angel of peace.I am, very respectfully, your most obedient

    ervant, Frank P. Blair.

    Congress.In the Senate, yesterday, a concurrent resilutionwas passed declaring the Fourteenth

    Constitutional Amendment duly ratified. Aill was passed allowing the admission of steamdoughs free of duty for one year from JuneOth, JSGS. The bill for the protection of theiglits of naturalized citizens was called ud, butiO action was taken on it. The House billcaking appropriations for certain charitablerestitutions in the D. 0., was passed. Theommittee of conference on the Indian Approbationbill made a report, which was agreedo. Some discussion took place on the quesionof adjournment, but no action was takeD.it the evening session, the joint resolutionuthorizing a subsidy of $500,000 to the PacicMail Steamship Company was passed; also,joint resolution appealing to the Turkishrovemmcnt on behalf of the people of Crete,iome discussion took place on the bill to au-liortze the bridging ot the uhio river, whichnally passed.In the House of Representatives, the Cornlitteeon Elections reported back the credenialsof the alleged Representatives elect from

    tlabama, and asked that they be admitted toeats. After considerable discussion the reortwas adopted and the Representatives,Icssrs. Ohas. \V. Bulk ley, Jno. R. Callis,'hos. llaughcy, Renj. \V. Norris and Ohas.V. Pierce, were sworn in. The House conurredin the report of the conference comrniteeon the bill in relation to the temporaryupplying of vacancies in the Executive Deartmcnts.The concurrent resolution declarigthe Fourteenth amendment duly ratifiedras passed by a vote of yeas 136 to nay3 32.'he conference committee on the Lndian Apropriationbill made a report, which wasgreed to. At the evening session, the Fundigbill was taken up. Pending discussion, inhe course of some remarks on the Appropriaionbills, Mr. Washburne stated the wholemount appropriated for payment of interestn the public debt was one hundred and ninetylillions, and lor other expenses an amouutot exceeding one hundred and two millions,laking a total of one hundred and ninety-twolillions. The original|estimates required threeundred and seventy-two millions. The discissionof the Funding bill was then resumed,nd the amendments made in Committee of theVhoie were all agreed to. The bill was thenassed, and the House adjourned. J

    D_VIRG-INIA TDVERTSaratoga Springs in New York.TheKeigu of Shoddy.A Picture of' 'Fashion."The following description of "Fashion,1: at

    that "fashionable" watering place, SaratogaSprings, is given in the "Saratoga correspon,dence" of the Boston Post:

    This world-renowned Baden-Baden ol America,is rapidly filling up with the stereotyped1 Saratoga summer society, which of course erarbraces old dowagers, Congress water fowls,L pretty girls, heavy swells,bogU3 Indians, trans,parent shoddyites, itinerant preachers, imagin

    ary and reaHnvalids, keno players,greasy meD,* French milliners, Flora McFlimseys,and countLless well-bred, genteel, common sense and rc|fined specimens of humanity. The regular,. old school, Congress water-fowl is a genial,. jolly jocose old barnacle, whose nasal organ isi as roseate as a boiled lobster, and one would

    suppose, to view it with the naked eye, that its; proprietor had once indulged in some potation5 other than Congress water, which seldom proj.duces the same effect that old rye always does.I The present is like other preceding fashionable. seasons. Everybody and everything is so ehar5acteristic of Saratoga life. The pretty girls,1 those darling Emma Janes, are clad in smiles,5 crimps are elongated trails, which they drag' about after them as if they enjoyed the draggingprocess. Shoddy disports itself in diafinonds, full dress, and vulgarity at the break:fast table, loud swells wilt shoddyites throughi eye-glasses, Flora McFiimsey is in admirable1 confusion with her forty-eleven full-grown Saratogatrunks, and the genteel portion of so^mprofcssion has always been distaste!ul to him.Nothing but absolute necessity could eveidraw him upon the stage. Of late this repugnanceto his profession has greatly increased,in consequence of which Tom's resources randown very low, though his many kind andwarm friends were always ready to assist him.

    In this condition of his affairs the lady olhis old iove became a widow, and after a reasonableperiod of mourning, hearing of the lone!}and narrow circumstances of Ptacide, she sentfor him and offered him as a gift and meinentcof their former relation a, half of her fortune,which was a very handsome one. To this offer,he witli much gratitude demurred, and altersome discussion and reflection solved the difficultyby proposing to marry her on the spot.The ceremony was accordingly performed, andthe happy couple have retired to a pleasantcountry seat to spend their honeymoon. I'reviour to this, however, the punctilious old followenjoyed the (to him) exquisite happinessofgoing around to see all his friends and creditors,and of repaying the various loans, iavor>and kindnesses lie had received from them inhis (lay.s'of poverty and distress. And now ourgood, old friend may pass the remainder of hi.*days in peace and quietness, indulging to thefull his passionate devotion to the pursuits olold Isaack Walton. May no cloud ever againobscure his horizon, or misfortune interruptthe current of his happiness.

    rg-ri

    ttf.ef.cir of Mi?. Hkndrickx.Yesterday inthe Senate, when the resolution fixing a dayfor adjournment was under consideration, Mr.Howard and several otlmr Senators expressedthe hope that no day would be designated u n-ill alter the bill lor the reduction of the militarypeace establishment shall have fecome alaw. Uiey would not consent to pinco it inthe power of the President to retain it in hispossession and not return it to Congress. Theconstitutional limit of ten days could not applyin ease there should be so early an adjournLLiCtll.

    Mr. Hendricks, in reply to the remarkswhich had been made, said he considered thisa most dangerous bill, because it proposed toarm one political party against the other, itplaced the control of the arms to be distributedwith I he Governors of t lie States designated,and this, too, immediately before the Presidentialelection. In reading the latio of distribution,be asked what Maine wanted withseven thousand rifled muskets, Massachusettswith twelve thousand, and Indiana with thirteenthousand; and in order to illustrate hi<argument he referred to the fact that the Governorof Indiana, being a candidate lor reelection,those arms placed at his disposal could beused according to his design and pleasure.And so with the other States. Me commentedupon the action of the Senate last night in rejectingMr. Vickers' amendment, providingthat the distribution o 1' arms, etc., .shall nottake place prior to the first of January nest,unless the President shall deem it necessaryfor the prevention of disturbance in the SouthernStates. This fact, ho rcmaiked, was significantof ilie design of the bill. Arms were tobe distributed to all the States with the exceptionof Virginia, Mississippi, and Texas ; andthese States were omitted because there wereto be no elections there. Therefore he arguedthat the only purpose of this distribution ofarms before the election was to make a militaryforce out of one parly to overawe theother, and thus control the election. All heasked was a fair cdection, and that the peoplemay vote without hinderance, governed bytheir own judgment. General Grant had said,in the last sentence of his letter accepting thenomination for the Presidency: "We wantpeace; let us have peace." xVll parties shoulddesire this, and quiet in the country. Afterthis expression of the desire for peace on thepart of (he candidate of the Republican party,we found here a firebrand.a measure calculatedto excite passion and produce strife, andperhaps' bloodshed. With a measure so threateningand dangerous in its character, the peoplewould be slow to believe that that partydesired peace. He hoped the President wouldnvnvr.i.'fi »!, umi'riv tin nnccr-ucfwl fr» iirntrnnfLALILITL li W ?» ^ X J V-LV.WVU L v JU V/ » ^liV

    this bill from becoming a law. The Presidentowed this not only to his constitutional duty,but to the peace and quiet of the country. Heshould defeat a measure so full of peril to thecountry, and which invited a conflict betweenthe whites and blacks.

    Baltimore and Potomac Kailroap..TheNational Intelligencer says:"We have from the best source of authoritythat gentlemen of Pennsylvania and Marvindespecially interested in the above load,

    have been recently in session at Baltimore,mil that $2,1)00,000, in the way ol a loan, isreported as available and forthcoming lor thepurpose of pushing work upon it. The timetor completing contracts has been enlarged, andit is stipu'atcd that the entire work shall !cjompleteJ by September ol next year. Gradns is now progressing on most sections of theprojected road. Present engagements are formilding south from Marlborough to the line)i Charles county, cn route to Aquia Creek;ilso, to Washington.

    [Communicated.For a long time past 1 have observed two

    emarkable peculiarities in Alexandria. Ones, that a decline in flour, by the barrel, hardly;vcr causes a decline in bakers' bread ; andhe other is that a decline in the cattle maiketarely causes a decline in butchers' meats,yiour and beef have been coming down, by therlifilocuin t.\i* enmn tminL-ij ti.inc otm

    Tii "i ivnwvf )i v^vuti ks one andxactly the same price : there are some worthyxceptions. And still another peculiarity is,hat the colortd people who bring vegetableso market, eggs, poultry or fruit, ask moreban any body else. A Mechanic.

    DSE2>.On the 3lh day oI July, 18G8, in Fauquier co.,a., at. the residence of tier husband, Howies K.Lrwistead, esq , in the 2ULU year of her age,LJSAN LEWIS, daughter of F. Lewis Marball,esq. i

    ' S .JL

    A G K A N D 15 A L LWILL UE GIVEN' AT

    r 0 T O M A C G A K D K N SOn THURSDAY, .lu'y 2:5.

    ; COOK'S COTILLION BAN Dims been engagedfor the occasion. Pu.-iiive!y :«» itupro;*ercharacters allowed on the grounds.Tickets for gentlemen 2"» cnis: ladies fre»»

    HENRY IIKKBNKi:fjy22.H Proprietor.

    5 I M E ! LI M i;:1 JLi LIME!The subscriber having established at tin: (V

    rial Basin extensive Kiln? for the production < :all descriptions of LIME, olf-rs the-am-: t refresh 1 i-rij-« 1 v»^ =with ICES and CONFKCTIONS.ICE CUEAM at 61.00 per pal Ion.LCK CREAM, Oraugi-ade, Chocolate ('ream

    Water lc>*s and Confectionery luri.ished at lieshortest notice and delivered to any part ol tliecity.jo Id.ftg U JM A C W A N T E IJ .

    The HIGHEST MAKKiiL' PlttCE will ie

    paid by the subscriber for SUMAC.JAMES E. MrC HAW.

    jy 10.tf No. 3(3, King st.SI EX TS' PATENT COMBINED PEACE\JT AND SUSP EN DEU.Have received the agency for th « city of thePAT ENT B PvACE A N D SUS P E N K K,

    which for comfort is unequalled. Call and examinethem.Wholesale trade furnished at factory pric< :.

    CHARLES W. GREEN,jy 13 (H, Kin^ street.

    A TIENTJLON 110US EK K EPE US.

    We have just received a lot of "SERF- It A ISING FROUlij" for producing in a few ini:rA :by the addition ofcold water only, without yea-',orsalt.the most nutritious and wholesome bread

    N. B..Eiberal deduction made to the trade.Call arid examine, at 100, Prince st.jy 10 BROOKES & TAYLOR.

    OPENED, A FULL LINE OFCALICOES,COTTONS.

    DOMESTIC GINGHAMS,White Flannels, Blue Domestic Apron On eh,Striped Shirting, Blue Denems, Linen Diil!Linen Towels, &c., Ac , at verv low price-?.jy 11 It. L. WOODT1TVK HIIN'DHKI) (1AM,()\S UNSEEDJP OIL,'two thousand pounds Lewis-' repLead,Paints and Varnishes of every de-cription, in store and for sale, and in which line wocan oiler special inducement- to purchasers

    ' jy8 JANjNLY &CRAT EXTERM.INATOR.Ratche & C".'=justly colebriited Exterminator, for Rats,Roaches, Mice, Bed Bugs, Ants, Flies, afull supply received and for sale, wholesale niretail. by COOK ife KHiLLE Y,

    jy 21 107. King street.wombs, brushes. and perfumery,Hard Lubber Dressing Combs, Horn ditto,Brass-back Horn do., fine Ivory ditto, supcrkrHair Brushes, Lubin .- Extracts Love Amongthe Roses, Bloom of Youth, Kubicel. ToiletSoaps, &c., just received and for sale by

    y 8 E. S. L EA J) BEAT Kit & CO.

    COAL 1 COAL IFor sale to arrive, a cargo of Locust MountainWhite A.-h ISTOV E COAL from Phil.-nb phia.$G.GQ per ton from the vessel.

    .JOHN LEATHEKLAND,jyj.tf 2iJ, Kingstn-C

    jnASTERN HE ItBING S.dObbL prime EASTERN HE KB IN Of*, i n

    received in store and for >fde byjy 18-ot WM. H. FOWLK, JR.,

    COSTAR'S BED-BUG BANE.a lull supplyreceived and for Sale byCOOK Kr KELLKl >

    jy 21 107. h inrr >tr


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