' 2f>2 



MOOHS'S RBIL&L BEW-YO&EE&. 



THIS ITOMBEB. 



*<;i:ictrLTUBAL. P*< 



ferula OsU; I«rpU»nO*««; Own Mountain Oat*,.. 



Selehum* Onr Hr>r« Mo"". [Illustrated 1 ,) 



enit ■■»-■ -Preface: Best Breed of 



,. .,, |, ,|,. M.-'l. I " :'' '--'ll-l -!.-:i'..-. p.i.v 



B*Jt; illlMlm the C«w»; Dairy Apartment; Care of 

 " : " irtW; i wl Packing, '■:.' 



limJ .v.'.'-.' f> /'■■ i..i-.-. -■ BnaO Hones: 



[UTMMof IheTurniiJ Fir. AV.nl rW-dlnj Tic* ; Com 

 Agricultural 2flie<l!nr\v~-Ta-; Frwl-ll* Raoi« and 



BOBTIODT.TCRAL. 



CHOICE MISCELLANY. 



SABBATH MOSINGS. 



After tt«KlfliUM»riii.ii:. [('...■■! i.:.il. JTbi' Ideal; "Lead 



KDDOATIONAU 



USEFDL OLIO. 



FcedlnB Cutvc* ; An Out-Door Cellar; Quiet M. Fuss, . 



STORY TELLER. 

 DreomtotrPociicnUThe "HouiclioldAnirtlsof Zanjre 



LIST OP NEW . 





> 



DOMESTIC NEWS. 



Matters at Washington. 



Tun Administration has nol yet fully determined 

 on its course of action pending the war in Europe, 

 but has under consideration a declaration or state- 

 ment of the principles by which the United States, 

 as a neutral, will be governed. It clearly sets forth 

 the just rights of American citizens engaged in 

 peaceful pursuits of commerce, which, as far as 

 possible, the Aitmhiislraliou dentins to protect. 

 The precise positions which will be assumed, can- 

 not now be ascertained, but they approximate to 

 the principles heretofore declared, Darnel? :— Tost 

 free ships make free goods, contraband of war, 

 excepted, and that the goods of a friend captured 

 on board the vessels of an enemy, with the like 

 exceptions, shall not be >iilijcel to eon fist alien, and 

 that the rights of war ought not, in the nature of 

 things, to extend further than to exact from neu- 

 trals the interruption of all tiade with a blockaded 

 port, uud to subject uriicles contraband of war to 

 capture and condition. The official exposition 

 will involve the discussion of important questions, 

 including thut ..rbkickad,., l is(. J lK.tt fur this bellig- 

 erent right should be exercised. 



Tbi' Secretary of the Treasury has given notice 

 thai sealed proposals will be received until the SOth 

 init,, for the issue of any portion or ihe whole of 

 $5,000,000 in Treasury notes in exchange for the 

 gold coin of the Dnited Slates, under the authority 

 of the acts of Congress of I'M and 1S59, the inter- 

 est uot to exceed per cent. The receipts or the 

 Treasury for the week ending Monday, were $1,- 

 drafla issued $1,718,- 

 , .ii.. I ill.' amount subject to draft $2,674. 



A dispatch from Washington on the 11th ins!,, 

 states that owing to complaints from the English 

 nRhorities, of the iuellicieuey ofour Navy in carry- 

 ing out the treaty stipulations for the suppression 

 of the Blare Trade, President Buchanan has de- 

 ttnuBftd loaend to the Coast of Africa and/Gulfol 

 Mexico all the guu-boats now being built at the 

 several Num | 

 Personal and Political. 



Got. Goodwik, of New Hampshire > n ll ' a lllte 

 Message, congratulates the Legislature on the verv 



■'■' I '1,, si. ltl .. h nowunounUto 



$72,8Se,hsTi,, g 0(cu rcducedthe last year $17,70d; 



Uls... "I ■■■ ' ,!,,...!!, 



schools, and upon the great improvements made 

 w.lhm a few (tar. post , n agriculture. But, tho' 

 much has been done and , s d one in lhi De j, B {j ,,, 

 the agricultural societies, there iaunpl, room foi 

 further advancement, sun ua & means 

 UwQotHHOI refers with much ttUifaetio 



tabliah an agricultural de- 

 partment in Dartmouth * 



New- Hampshire has also dcnv r ,i 

 the manufacturing 



; i. : , 1 1 , i . . i i ,,,,;, i ■ 

 of sixteen millions of dollsrs— by 

 towns and cities have been built up where, a few 

 years since, there were no inhabitant.*. This bin 



D«H is lecorcring from iU late depression. Liti- 

 gation seems to be on the decrease in the State.— 

 The business of the Courts is so much diminished, 

 that it might be well to inquire if some of the 

 terms might not be discontinued without aoy det- 

 riment to the administration or justice. The bank- 

 ing system of the State is in a sound and satisfac- 

 tory condition. The banking cupital is live mil- 

 lions; the circulation three millions; the specie 

 and specie funds upward of eleven hundred thou- 

 sand. The Insane Asvlum supports itself, as does 

 also the State Prison. The House of Reformation 

 for juvenile and female offenders promises to fulfill 

 the objects of its establishment Though the law 

 against the sale of intoxicating liquors does not in 

 ila operation satisfy all the wishes of the friends of 

 temperance, yet, it Is a great aid to their efforts, 

 and ought not to be disturbed. 



Thb Democracy or Louisiana, met at Baton 

 Rouge on the 25th alt, and, after a stormy session 

 of three days, nominated a ticket for Stale officers, 

 in the selection of which the Rlidell wing or the 

 party seems to have triumphed by a small majority 

 over the Soule faction. The result of the Conven- 

 tion was the nomination of Mr. T. O. Moore, for 

 Governor; Mr. Hyams, for Lieutenant-Governor; 

 Mr. Hardy, for Secretary of Stale; Mr. Semmes, 

 for Attorney-General ; Mr. Robertson, for Auditor; 

 Mr. Defrecse, for Treasurer; and Mr. Avery, for 

 Superintendent of Public Instruction. The Con- 

 vention adopted resolutions highly laudatory of 

 the President, and adjourned. 



After tbe adjournment of the Southern Conven- 

 tion a Society was formed for the encouragement 

 of the Slave Trade. 



Thk House of Delegates of the Virginia legisla- 

 ture consists of 152 members. The election re- 

 turns thus far received show that 77 Democrats 

 and SO Opposition members have been elected. 



State Editorial Convention. 



The Sixth Annual Meeting of tbe N. Y. State 

 Editorial and Typographical Association was held 

 in Convention Hall, Syracuse, on the 9th inst. 

 Aboul for ty representatives of the press were pres- 

 ent nt the business sessions— principally from Cen- 

 tral, Southern nnd Western New York— including 





m.g m 



_-..,U 



EEomS 



Tbo President, Thomas S. Tbuaib, Esq , ol th< 

 Syracuse Journal, made a very happy and appro 



priate speech on calling the Assuciution to order, 

 and the proceedings were generally h. 

 Various matters pertaining to the interests c 

 tors and publishers were introduced, discuss* 

 adopted. Among the propositions submit! 

 the Business Committee, and adopted by tbe 

 ciulion, were the following: 



liiMilutious were unanimously adopted thanking 

 the Press of Syracuse for the courtesy and hospi- 

 tality extended to members of Hie Association, and 

 complimentary to tbe retiring President. 



In the evening an Address was delivered by Dr. 

 F. TutniLL, of tbe N. Y. Times, and a Poem by 

 A, G. Chester, Esq., of the Syracuse Journal, to 

 ii In -lily ]■ lea- ed and ii|'j'rei'iutive audience. Both 

 were excellent, and welt worthy the four compli- 

 mentary adjectives, ( able, eloquent, instructive and 

 appropriate) included in the resolutiou of thanks 

 and request «1 eopies lor publication. We shall 

 endeavor to publish extracts in a future number 

 The evening's exercises included tbe Bilging ol 

 several fine ballads by Mr. Jaiiks G. Claiiic. 



After the public exercises the members of the 

 Association repaired to the residence of Mr. Presi- 

 iud spent an hour or two most pleas- 

 antly in social intercourse. A flue collation was 

 partaken of, an unexpected serenade I 

 and a beautiful display u( pyrotechnics wilrn.-sed 

 The occasion was apparently moat pli 



— Tbe Pressor Syracuse, and tbe 

 \ u. rhees House, Sjrai use House and Globe Hotel, 

 are entitled to the acknowledgments of members, 

 ferine court csv mid ho-pitah'v manil 

 . i nrei Thursday nlgl I 



Silt W,.,u i [died a flumon i rtday, under the 



eacortof Ex- Mayor Wintos and Mi- 1. 1 

 «od Halsted, ami were highly plcii- 

 theysaw of the works and institulioi 



Conflagrations, Casualties, fto. 



A riae broke out in Cincinnati, at 3 o'clock, or 

 ihe evcoiogof the 10th inst.. in John Piper's tir 

 shop, on Front street, and communicated to Mr. 

 June's carpenter shop, and French and Wilson's 

 feed store, all of which wore destroyed. Loss $25, 

 000. At 2 o'clock in the morning, the sawmill o! 

 Richard Swift, on Easl Front street, was almost 

 destroyed by/fire, Loss Ji <| . ,Vh ''; purtmiiy insured 



A fibe broke out in Salem, Mass , at 1 o'clock on 

 tbe morning of lb l- vth, in Ihe stable of the Mansion 

 House, in Essex street, destroying it together with 

 18 horses. The hostler, named Hatch, was burned 

 to death. The stable of the Essex House was 

 destroyed. The Mansion House, the largest and 

 oldest hotel in the city, was also destroyed, as well 

 as a large number of smaller buildings, containin 

 twenty stores and shops. Tbe loss is estimate 

 from $100,000 to $150,000. 



Tue steamer John Lawton exploded near Savai 

 nab. Geo., on the 9th inst., killing the Captaii 

 Pilot, Asst. Engineer, Biid John S Montholin, 

 passenger, and a man named Goly F. Barnwell. . 

 number were scalded and bruised, some of then 

 it is reared, fatally. The number killed and misi 

 ing is eight. The steamer is a total loss. 



Minnesota papers contain full details or the n 

 cent flood in the Mississippi. Toe damage done 

 appears to be far greater than at first stated. The 

 levee at St. Paul ig entirely submerged, and at St. 

 Anthony and Minneapolis, the storm and flood 

 eiimbiiii.il were terribly destructive. In the former 

 place property to the value or several hundred 

 thousand dollars was destroyed. Tho St. Anthony 

 Water Co. lost 5,000,000 feet of logs, valued at $i0,- 

 000. The boom at Coon Creek, containing ln/ioii,- 

 000 feet of logs, is momentarily expected to give 

 way. Logs to tho value of $13,000 went over the 

 Falls during the three days previous. The river is 



within a Toot and a hair of its height at the time or 

 the great flood or 1550. The storms of tho last 



i that 8 



f the < 



rihed 



as the most frightful ever witnessed. 



Thb steamship Edinburg, from New York 

 Glasgow, put inlo St. Johns on the evening of 

 7lh inst, with two or bor compartments full of 

 water, having struck an iceberg on Monday at 11 2( 

 A. M., 180 miles east of St. Johns, in a heavy fog 

 The iceberg was first discovered directly abend o 

 the ship, being in lat. 47.40, Ion. 49.20. The heln 

 was put hard aport, and she passed close along- 

 side without touching the part above water, but 

 struck under water, a littleatjn.fl the port bow, a: 

 stove in one of her forward plates. The two foi 

 most compartments filled almost immediately with 

 water. The pumps were quickly set go 

 sails and bedding lowered over intothe boi 

 tbe male passengers assisted the crew in working 

 the pumps and bailing. There was a dense fog 

 day Monday and Monday night, with rain — wind 

 fi esh, but sea smooth. At noon of Tuesday an oh- 



■ first I 



i fort 



At — o'clock, mado the land, all hands worki 

 vigorously at the pumps and bailing to keep the 

 ship from sinking. The water was only kept from 



labor. 



News Paragraphs, 



The export of cotton to Great Britain this sea 



son is BOl',000 bales larger thai' foi the correspond 



period or 1857; and the total foreign export is 



LI.OUO I! 





i busi 



extent i.f $D 0,000,0(W at least, in liquidation of in- 

 debtedness abroad; and makes amends for the 

 short supply of grain. 



Thk St, Johns News learns from reliable author- 

 ity that orders have been receive.! fiom Fn-I.ind n- 



regie 



. Cam 



England, and to break up the military sations at 

 Montreal and Toronto. Quebec and Kingston are 

 to be the only garrisoned cities, and the head- 

 quarters or the Royal Canadian Rifles are to be 

 fixed at St. Johns. 



GUnlBALDl, the while-haired leader of the Italian 

 volunteers in the army of Sardinia, was exiled 

 from Italy in 18-19. and found refuge in the United 

 Slates. A Western exchange says that he kept a 

 coffee-house in Cincinnati a few years ago. He is 

 now a General in the Sardinian service, command- 

 ing fifteen thousand men, and to a great extent 

 controlling the destinies of States. 



It has lately been discovered that the Post-Office 

 Department loses about a million dollars a year by 

 counterfeit postage stamps. It seems that there 

 are two classesof personscnguired in this nefjrious 

 business— one which manufactures, either from 

 engraved or photographed plates, and sells new 

 po>lnge stumps; and another, that gathers (hose 

 which have been used, from waste paper col led ions, 

 and by means of an acid washes off the Post-Office 

 stamp that was put on them when they passed thro' 

 the Ofliee. 



A Boston paper states that of 953 clergymen at- 

 tending the late Anniversaries in that city, but 7IS 

 wore tho professional badge, the white cravat.— 

 The growth of hair on the faces or many of the 

 divines, was another sign that they are willing to 



priate distinctions in something of more conse- 

 quence than peculiarities of costume. 



Tue imports of dry goods at New York, during 

 lost week, amounted to $1,2P6,C37, against $497,- 

 753 same time last year, and $Sa4»676in 1857. The 

 total for the year thus far ia $-17,70^,656 againsl 

 m I. - -?, and $1U, TG:i,<J41 in 1858. While 

 these immense importations are mode, trade is 

 nearly stagnant. Millions of coin are flowing out, 

 while I ii \ in -it-s arc coming in at this prodigious rale. 



Tut- whole North American Continent has only 

 36,000,000 of inhabitants, hurdlv as much as France 

 or Austria. The whole or Central tind South 

 America has only UJj.opO. uOO; less, then, than Italy. 

 European Prussia, with its 00.000,000, has as many 

 inhabitants as America, Australia and Polynesia 

 together. More people live in London than in all 

 Australia and Polynesia. China proper has more 

 inhabitants than America. Australia and Africa put 

 together, and Indiahus nearly three times as many 

 U tbo whole of the New World. 





FOREIGN NEWS. 



From the -Scat of War. 



In the Rdiul of last week we gave the particu 

 lars of ihe first collision ^t Montebello,) betweei 

 tbe Allies and Austrians. Since that period w 

 have been particularly favored with foreign arri 

 vals. and tho ball then opened seems to be kept u] 

 although alack of spirit is observable. Anofljaial 

 Sardinian bulletin says that tbe Sardi 

 the Sesia in the face of the Austria 

 fortified at Palastrio, after a severe conflict, one 

 carried the place, making many prisoners. Tht 

 Sardinians wero under under the command o: 

 King Victor Emanuel. Garibaldi was making 

 somo bold movements in Lombardy. On the 27th, 

 after a furious fight of throe hours, he entered 

 Como. The Austrians retreated to Canierlatta, 

 where the combat was renewed 

 again retreated towards Milan, 

 on the lake were in the hands of tbe patriots. It 

 was reported, via Berne, that on the 29th, Gari- 

 baldi was defeated by o superior force, and with. 

 drew into the Canton Tessin, but this lacks confir 

 million, nnd Turin dispaches give Ihe impressior 

 thai ho was making further progress. 



The Monitfur publishes the following telegram 

 "Tho Emperor ia enjoying perfect health. W* 

 have but few sick. The weather is beautiful and 

 the harvest is begun. The army is abundantly 

 supplied, end tbe soldiers continue to feel full ol 

 confidence, and are in high spirits. The Emperor 

 was about to remove bis headquarters from Alles- 

 sandrio, and it was reported he would go tc 



Ghkat Britain.— Tho London Port, in reply to 

 some statements as to Lord Palmerston and Lord 

 John Russell being actuated by mutual rivalry, 

 says the public may rest assured that if the Liberal 

 party cannot act unitedly the fault wu> 



ah , 



chiefs. 



The English Parliament met May 31st— Speokei 

 Dennison was unanimously elected. 



The terras offered by the Government to the At 

 lantic Telegraph Co. to be considered at the ap- 

 proaching meeting are % per cent, guarantee foi 

 twenty-five years, provided tho cable is in sucess. 

 ful operation, at the rate of 100 words per hour 

 and they will pay £20,u00 per annam— the ar- 

 rangement for £94,000 per annum to stand good 

 The company in return surrender the exclusivi 

 privilege of landing a cable on the coast of New 

 fouodland. 



The Red Sea cable was believed to have been 

 successfully laid from Suez to Perim, a distance or 



The London Times alludes to the designs on the 

 part or the Viceroy or Egypt to take advantage 

 of any disturbance which may arise in Turkey, for 

 the purpose of obtaining, if not independei 

 least a large measure of authority. The ind 

 of France for the moment is supreme, but England 

 will allow of no trifling in the matter. The slight- 

 down on the Viceroy the whole weight of England'! 

 power. 



Co C ?o U orl'tli u ' l il ' v ',,', TV ;"w n faf', l ' nCe * 



an. I ■■■Ud.r-I I,.vv.t. Ttie .pi-l j li- ■ l, ". r. r „ 1 1 ,.„■ i:;,s-l! 



Clippings from Foreign Journals. 

 Tnr. French army in tho city or Parts is largei 



than it was before the war. 



Austria, has recognized the neutrality during 

 the war of the States of the Church. 



The Vienna correspondent of tbe London Timts 



400,000, and the other German States 250,00 



Tns London Tim-.* Turin correspondent snys 

 the feeling there and in some other parts of Italy 

 was particularly hostile to England. 



A battalion of Hungarian volunteers, 2,000 

 strong, arrived at Vienna on the luth of May, and 

 were received with the most enthusiastic cheers 

 tbe people. 



A Vienna letter says that by the middle of .In 

 the Austrian army in Italy will probably be 32 

 000 slrong, with 76,000 horses and S&0 to 900 gui 

 A conscription of 100,001) men was expected to 

 made in Austria in a few days. 



It is announced by the Suez Canal Company that 

 the iliL'^'inc ul tin- Isthmus- of Suez commenced 

 tbe 25th of last month, nnd that the first sod v 

 turned by M. Ferdinand de Lesseps, at the point 

 determined on lor the outlet of the Canal in the 

 Mediterranean. 



Tne London A<lortii(r states that Kossuth 

 tended to quit England in eight or ten days for 

 Hungary. lie goes, in the Gr.>t instance, to Gei 

 with the full concurrence of the King of Sard 

 and Hie Emperor Napoleon, and will ihcn cone 

 wilh Gen. Klapka and other eminent SungBJ 

 officers who are waiting to receive him, measi 

 for throwing oil' the Austrian yoke in Iheir na 

 country, and for restoring its independence. 



the Ban Jellachieh, famous during the Hungarian 

 war as an unscrupulous ruler, and a firm adherent 

 of the Emperor of Austria. No Bau of Ihe Croats 

 ever possessed such entire power over that wild, 

 unruly tribe, as Jellachieh. In spite of the life of 

 warfare he had led, he was devoted to tbo arts and 

 sciences, and was the inventor of the art of fixing 

 the color on zinc by means of acid, now so gener- 

 ally adopted, and which, in France, lias increased 

 tbe value of zinc, according to returns of the Vicille 

 Montague, more than forty per cent, during the 

 last few years. 



Utaomof Vi.i 

 ambuco reprcsc: 



-Tbbbii 



o Ter 



i Per 



t l he 





ind the whole coast 



from Bolivia southward was covered with wrecks, 



and the loss of life is terrible. A Bratiliao fiignte 



down with over i> "J on board, only 40 of whom 



saved. The yellow fever is worse than ever 



at Rio. People are dying by thousands. The de 

 natation among the shipping was unparnlleled.- 

 One English brig bad lost five cuplnius ; the itxil 

 manek and Mi upectod to recorer 



— It la staled that M. Collard.a Parisian, photogr»ptu 

 t nlghi 



— Tho wheat harvest commenced In North Carollma 



— Copper ore, vert pure, has been discovered In Mo- 

 ienry Co., IU. 



— The 8 plrlto allots at Sturgls, Mich., have huill i 

 lotblc temple, costing «8,000. 



Htuin three dajs In ClncInnalL 



— In New Jersey there Is a gc-nl prospect <>f upph r 



— A number of ripe watermelons were shipped iron 



for obtaining photographs of red, green, violet, o 





January last. 



- The najtleu Leglalal 



1 Eorope, died early Ii 



— A large-sized "elephant," wit 

 on exhibition In the vicinity of 

 attracting many visitors. 



Co., Ala, recently, 



the ruins of Nineveh, which cannot li 



fae- New York Historical Society arc 

 (■>4,o00, necessary to compute the I 

 it's Egyptian collection. 

 — The City Council of Boston havo spl 



jvmsw r. 



