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er ee Important from the West—Outrage commit= or twowe thou ht we wore qhout tear a real! Deans The National sagey 6 ee Sb oy BY THE SOUTHERN MAIL. _ , Pa bi ir, it was wi difficulty that the in Criticisms, I SS SS NEW Y ORK HERAED. ae ed @ Cleegyman nae puanpanenta sential men ot both ahi arrated the affray. When or} Fave you ever heard of Mr. Brown The Seven- Wasepape Montes P. os “ SS —— a ie r having at length been restored, we turne: a >. a ‘i ituti: Proceed: In both uses Anonym = New York, Wednesday, May 25, 1942. We have received intelligence from Evansville, our eyes to the witness satywretens ‘that the innocent | teenth Axyvat Exuaprrion of this Institution has ings in (Correspondence of the Herald.) EN —— , A ley. . : cause of all this confusion had fainted, and was being | joon sometime open to the public, and we have | Slanders=Messrs, Wise and Stanley, Wasuixetox, Monday Evening. nmitted by | borne insensible from tie voom. * cami. | seen no account of the works exhibited there. We| Mr. Sovruaxp, President pro tem., v ho hasbeen | Passage of the Navy Bill in the House. blood boil. | | stowto an abrapt close, The counsel oe the penouet | may presume, that as it would be very shallow eri- | (iteunyell for several weeks past, is now serious: | ‘The House have passed the Navy Appropriation afer a brief consultation stated to the courtthat they did | |: 14 give a preference to that poetry that was ly ill, and Mr. White, of Indiana, is in the Chair | Bill, with the amendment cutting the amount down ‘ashionable, imanci i he examination du- ] : . Mr. & "3 continued sickness renders 0 . ‘ 7 pigacrea Fak pa Fine, suche ikea cote ot the public ming, and | written in the fairest hand, it would be equally so to | 0-day. Mr. Southard’s continued sic rs | $890,000, and Mr. McClellan’s proviso, the effect of Sg r i Ce y fi » Se: e elec! ‘ ES . . , . they would therefore decline attempting at greeat iB | elevate to the highest place in our Aes tl we us Senate 2 feet patie which will be to stop all promotions and appoint- eee Aer Lr pening ard pemen greedy in cnet gi 1 is finest colored, and most nicely finished ing officer. In the present state of parties, it is | ments inthe navy for five years to come, at the least. ated sects of reli- * = 4 : : no further test the partof the prosecution would | iting. We desire in both to love the beautiful, | Miffieult to say upon whom the choice will fall. | The proviso is as follows :— a. Ha poor Mormon were to commit such an | be necessary, and the only question would be as to. the | rib 1 d 4s a ce to| Mr. Bayard is as well qualified as any man in the | « Provided, That, till otherwise ordered by Congress, act, how it would be blazoned through the country, | amount of bail, ordered the prisoner into custody of the | and to adore the true, and to give pt rt Senate, except Mr. King, (who belongs to the mi- | 2° part of this or any future or existing appropriation shell , . eo a y: officers, and urned until 3 o'clock, P. M, at Squire hich has mind and genius in its «omposition, | PON S+ oy > be applied to the payment of any officer in the navy a) iead and be wise. Rowley’s office, when they said the amount of bail ng and sentiment in its expression ; and, | 8¢tity, and cannot, of course, be chosen,) and may | pointed after this date, beyond the number in each grade [From the Evansville, (Ind.) Journal, May 12.) would be fixed. At the appointed hour the people COHN SRE Pomtrene an, tie OSES vale | very likely be selected. on the Ist day of January, 1841 ; and that the excess now Usranatugren Ovvaacs ona Patest—Gneat E again assembled in great numbers. The streets were ‘ore, in speaking of the works upon the walls | ¥®" in the service beyond that number shall be redueed as 7 stew in Evansvicna, Ler We feel it our un; thror writh See Bh Ce i Eder neces PbS of there galleries, we do not expect every artist or Among the memorials this morning, was one by | fast as deaths, resignations, and promotfons, will. per« ’ i art been fixed at $4000, bnt owin: ne Ww val o 8 a " we beta. isitor to concur in our judgment. Did you Mr. Evans, from citizens of Maine, praying that | mit.” gentlemen who were about to sign the bond—in con-| every visitor 3 y . ( asvaiindinatie Suto’ lac Mendib-talie sequence of the imprudent threats of Schmall,| |. joar of Mr. Brown? the revenue bill, recommended by the Secretary of | If this amendment passes ‘ ake sulticient security was obtained with much dilli- Te Vaio sai Gals be ectlatie-this Diol the Treasury, might be passed without alteration. | five years to bring the several grades down to the ae ale 15 heh o Bay tee ae aed Wa ue ritiporeed ayded See ah ‘ili Mr. TaLtaance gave notice that when the reso- | number on the Ist of January, 1841. The establish rence sad. een. aeceptet who’ were not respo! the drend;POF i Oxeaane ft Guta, WD will gv0:e lution of Mr. Allen, in relation to Rhode Island, | ment of the home squadron, and the increase of should come up again, he should offer an amend. | promotions and appointments, rendered necessary ludiana, ef a most shocking outrage e To Let—Possessiun Immediately, n, that wil n make every man Ov late years we have seen great moral degener- in the educated, but perhaps ame teem that ctable, ric We find the iotlow “Washington yell-tian e inthe we have every t it corresponds with his views italso with those of his cabinet, [Fro the Madisonian.) We sincerely hope—nay, we have the fullest assurances now that the rule of law seems once more to be established in Rhole Island—that the Government of the State will nes of large numbers of the people, by so mo- existing Constitution as to redress all griev- » and} reason to and feeling uty y she aay with decoruu—of an outrage alleged to have b committed in our own last week, certainly of the most revolting character that can be conceived of by the mind of man. We have often—and who has not—read of simi- lar outrages charged upon the high functionaries of the Catholic Church in all ages of its history, and we have be- lieved them, if at all, to De exaggerated and higly colored sible men, the excitement was raised to an intense degree, | bias to the publie mind ; and they shall have jus- ue opinions of tne age require a liberal eonces- 4 Matements, promptein many instances, perhaps, by the | Sta he aciead hy themed, ond dealt with as there pas: | {2 a a pear ee we a acreage ment which he held in his hand. by the wants of the service, have swelled every pli iced srsen ; i iple | jealousies of opposing sect utin this instance, our be- won tg a ee oe late weakness that may one day be strong, if treate: 4 fore iat ; - aoe re Posh ‘lle, repre ery {erie ben G s it were by storm, the evidence pro- | 088 might dictate. He was, however, brought out under y y 3 His amendment is as follows: grade greatly since that period. eee tes Ge, {ie Protectan oe Oo eae as he hod | ently; but we have no conscientious scruples! pcoived, Thet, by the Constitution, the United States | ‘The excess in the service in th » 4 ai iving a cut to presumptuous stupidity; should | are bound not only to guarantee to every Sta'e in theUnion | is as follows " ° ‘ ected hi into the house where he resides, some | about giving a 0 Y 1 is as follows ie cquiuet Mr, Welngapheia the ponsacat | druaken man inthe crowd stirred up a quarrel wiih one | it cross our path. Where is Mr. Brown, the | a republican form of government, but also to protect exch luded to above, but with these we have'nothing toe; | of his Irish su pence) ai Sie emma Een? artist Y Forel ed chy wert Mo a ah pgtncopcen Bt M0 5 Tw . i jallas were found too ¥ te euch £8 usage, sommes bs eewee x cont-anay. mbin yey omar! Geuman heads. A shower of brickbats | No. I—“‘Cvurip."—G. O.—We have seen many | _ Resolved, That the form of rerament with which s very walls of Bis Chueh, upon a weak and confiding | snd other missiles were thrown at the Irishmen but with fina landseapes, and rich scenes of Nature by Mr. | State came into the Union, and has been preted ii kneeling before him, could not be increased in | Tittle ofect. It issaid that the Privst passed immediately , presented as a member of the Union, must be taken an \ditio ” 4 ver the world, requires that a due shar t should be’ given to all whe can furnish aces of attachment to free institutions. W overnor King recognises this as correct, upon the assembling of the Legislature in Jun: willfoe left no cause of complaint—of real substant romplaint—on the part of any of the Rhode Island. “We firmly believe that steps will be taken ifferent grades Jan. 1, 1841. Present time. Excess. t» call & Convention with full powers to pass upon all sub- vor by any al charge. It may not be proper 8 ade his escape from town in a] Q, We are sorry to see him leave a path in which as republican ; and that such State is entitled to interest tothe State, Governor King Har proven | £08 us, and we shall not attempt, to express the indigha- es leet torre ereiey gr Cesta ores tre he has walked so respectably. It is too late in the ftbiat protection ageinst invasion and domestic violence, ard for the lives of his fellow-citizens. He has | ton we feel in common with the whole community. If | hinate for all parties that he did #0. ‘Had he fallen into the | 1 ‘sig ae. 3 which is pledged by the Constitution of the United States. | Chanls . a in maintained the suprémacy of the iaws at xpense of not ndant be sufficient to insure his | [INN Nt ee ab the nost fearful consequences must have | day for him to begin an academical education, and Resolved, That the Government of a State so coming | Midshipmen. mi “ 459... +10 2 drop of blood. He has won a proud station among his a t citigea age Highooat Yo touts | easued. And that he did not—that he was not seized even | + become a master of the human figure, the myster- | into and recognised as a member of the Union, ean onl: Ifthe Senate shall concur in this amendment, this fellow men, and he will ratify his claims to the regard of ever, many of our beat citizens are disposed to doubt,) | ‘hile under the protection of the law, isa fact, in our opi | (° °C hick hi juded the skill of f those | Pechanged or superseded, consistently with the princi } | Uv °SUNE UM & enya seat ae hag the whole country by resorting to healing measures, and | the charge will undergo ajudiciel investigation, and we h creditable to those of our citizens wha busied | ies of which have eluded the skill of most of those plesof our American republics, when it is done in pursu- | large exct got ris yy the slow pI as far as practionble by erasing the memory of the recent troubles of his glorious little State, All that we ask of the itigens of other States is to leave the people of Rhode cipal concerns in their own heir own liking. We implore the great our fellow citizens to give no ear to the ravi serable hacks of party who always throw the Tagitaions for their own agr those who have heen deceived by the cost. We would have the most Jate troubles, to be pardoned, and there- by furnish an ever glorions evitence of the confidence re- sufficieney of our institutions, which require of no man to be shed in order to impart to them should not as journalists attempt to prejudice public opi- nion in advance. Our only object shall be to give a fair in efforts to keep down the excitement and | who have made it the study of a life. This picture, | nce of, and in the mode prescribed by, the laws of such | cegs of deaths, dismissals, resignations and promo- C1 i city i A A 5 ttempt by force to overthrow that | - eet Statement of the case and the evidence, 0 far as it went, | ee eee, Ce A oa atten a contain ausriice to | However, like every thingelse that Mr. O. attempts, | Euyeinmentis: dieerderiy. gna revolutionary, tending to | tions, before any addition can be made to any one already ee astounded with | his crime.’ Forsurely uever was there an atrocity in| is not without a high degree of merit. Does any | anarchy and bloodshed, and, in the end, to the destruction | of these grades. j Late on Friday ast, our citizens were Meee wet? | which all the circumstances combined to arouse the in- one know Mr. Brown % of public liberty; and is such a domestic violence as enti- We shall see how the people will be pleased with that the Catholic Priest, resident here, | aignation and vengeance ofa people, as did the circum. | 08° kni r tles that State, by her Legislature (or the Executive, ° : x harge of committing an act | iiinces ofthiscass. y No. 2.—Maretace or Pocarontas.—J. R.— | when the Legislature cannot be convened), to apply for, | the parsimony of their representatives. If Congress ent the vei ct ae Base Wap aar Fears have expressed that the bail is not suffi] Such is the unpretending introduction of this pic- | 9nd obtain from, the United States protection against the | do not intend to provide money forthe wants of the arn wrod i pence ie 4 ient to s th earance of the accused to answer “4 same. h , . 4 secret teeta Weaherselt ofa good family and well re" | rhe charge, but these apprehensions we trust are groun. | ture—a work of too much importance to be passed | “Resolved, ‘That the application made by the Legislature | Government, they may as well abolish the army : less. Alth it might perhaps be difficult to collect the vithout speci f syiti ination ; | of Rhode Island, one of the “ Old Thirtéen,” to the Presi- | and navy ; but this striking by indirection is not stn ane camenional forthe purpose of obtaining ab- | Whole amount of the bond in case of defn yet we | Gere on boca tee eke perenne dent of the United States, for protection aginst domenic | Oo th te thing sol for her sins. " : fu iti jnatio! fe s es, e vie Was withi terms of the Con- i and immediately upon the leoner appearing at the | D&ve every confidence that it is honestly the determination » » violence, was within the meaning an elligen ofthe l se weg Spin eg May: members of the Catholic Church, that the | else, and possessing some of the elements of art most | stitution ; and that it was the duty of the President to take Baltimoro, These suggestions have so much of wisdom and | Court House, which also was soon found incapable of con- | 3¥ teh = dive beth eaetvaret their Church, to lay | has always ranked as the highest walk of art, and | templated by the constitution, and the laws made in pur- Bartimore, May 24, 1842. Propriety in them, that we trust they will have a | taining Ee a neg des this even. | {hemaclves, and ifliable to the charge of screening such | ty succeed in it in any respectable degree, the pos- | suance of it, for giving such protection. S Mn. Eprton + ropar influence with the authorities of Rhode | ing; the counsel for the defendant moving for a postpone- | 2” offender from the vengeance of the law. We believe | iin oF extraordinary capabilities is required—yn- |, On motion of Mr. TartmanGe, the original reso- | At last the great military encampment has come to @ island. We verily believe that this glorious repub- peels pee ¢ ating thats thientton to eek for & pron tentang REM ete” | Toes the artist take up the trail and follow in the | lutions of Si Alen, and shod of Mr. Tallmadge, | close, Yesterday, after afreview, by the Ricprga in ic has had a narrow escape from civil war.—a civil foceant bata tb wveouee Wal hen enetedl race Mim inee sina toenail path of some one who has gone before him; but | Were ordered to be printed. Chief, Gen. Stuart, the tents were struck, and prepa. “ eS tpl es 5 “ 4 ‘1 ke up his resolution fixing ‘i i ED Like.—The great Khode Island revolu-] when we behold ‘the original thought, the grace-| Mr. Kine moved to ta bequnecd is rations made to take up the line of march, each for their Peseta sa maiatenly Cae nal duel, Oh! what | iu! feeling of a mind imbued with the perception of | ® time for adjournment, and the to! TEC | ospective homes. The Companies being all drawn up in adjourned until o'clock the next morning, whenvachange | ‘ hee Gece a lion | ie, beautiful, and expression of its conceptions | ed by a strict party vote—ayes i, pe heirs ef Silas | line, Mr. Mindle, aid to Gen. Stuart, rode forward and of venue was granted, and the canse referred to the deci- | @Pity! Dorr, with “that sword,” is as great a lion | in compositions appropriate, as well as becomingly | _ «A bill to settle the account of the heirs ef Silas Speirs ‘: . sion of Squire Rowley at 5: o'clock, Monday morning, | as Stanley with “that pistol.” Alas! the age of | treated with regard to the ‘design and color,” and | Deane, was then taken up, and is now under dis- procitizas 17the decision es baler by ee on) he bail increased to $2000. : i chivalry is gone! and the age of petticoats come. | We may add to the quotation, composition and ex- bar cee itveleabss eeeiar se acdaw ahd the [ere flag.” It was awarded to the Marylan , i Monday the crowd was greater than ever, having pression, we may be assured that that painter can n execulive session 18 exp A i this city, commanded by Capt. Ropes, one of the Compa. in been swelled by numbers of Irish and German Catholics Sie Sorc? et command success. To our mind the composition of | Whigs, threaten to reject Mr. Clinton, the eon-in- niga, REST Uh won edeea yan iota di e1 Y e . v, r — - way . » 4 d ” , I previously predicted 7 Y ee shoxgeent ES ne » piers y arranged, thrown into separate ones, and yet so us cf i . = ei z ee nyt erty oven tis Se a a ee wy poe launched this morning at about eight o’clock. to form an unbroken whole—the masses of lightand | _, The House went immediately ine eh considera. | ablyfe well drilled,and soldier-like nero ean highly excited state of feeling was also plainly visil The Cumberland, a frigate ofthe same size, which | shadow are broad, well distributed,and in proper ba- | tion of the Navy appropri Sai 1 4 th morning | going the severest scrutiny, 08 well as camp duty, a ough perfect order was intained, "The Court, hab hi k he Charlest Navy | lance;so much so as not to impress themselves upon The debate ceased at two o’clock, and the commit- Lancaster Finsibles, the Independent Blues, andythe Inde- ires Rowley and Mills having taken their seats, the | 148been on the stocks at the Charlestown Navy | ve iitice of the observer, as artifices at ull. ‘The | tee-are now voting upon the amendments, pendent Greys, besides several others, gave them a hard ner appeared attended by his counsel, Messrs. Jones’ | Yard for seventeen years was launched yesterday. | drawing is good—the figures are thrown into every |, What strange infatuation po:sesses certain wit : d ame bar, : A i ; ‘ p 1 P ‘an. | rub. Pee Nee hemes: 2 member or the bar tod of | ‘The Raritan, at Philadelphia, and St Lawrence | variety of appropriate attitude, with a grsceful ease, | lingsin your city? They are party Maiti Indeed it was with difficulty that those appointed to de 4 pa si c ‘ vi and without one particle of theatrical position or ac- | NOnymous letters to men high in office | . r oa gl . oe Shaw, n Catholic priest from Vincennes, was also in at- noone psn first class frigates, will also be} ine Winiy coliting Wwe cannot praise Petia deficiest | gentlemen of whom they are enemies. Do they ide could satisfy their own minds in coming to® t -—I ‘ eye lusion. Gen. Stuart presented the flog himself, and ¢ th 5 : ven in force and contrast; that is to say, it is too harmo- | Tequire to be told that assaultsof this description al- | Commer i presentation with a few-very brief but Theonly witnesses produced by the prosecution were a ¢ ‘ y: 'P p i sri Yebtarda s ; is de- i contempt for ‘When it nfurled ‘to the breeze the lady upon whom the outrage was committed and her aor ~ Veuta. ved | nious for so large a picture; and whether this de- | waysfall harmless, and only inspire con oT | propriate remarks. When it was w husband, end upon motion of the defendant's counsel, the | NEWS FROM Bosron.—Yesterday we received | Rlovi 8 sprung ont of a desire for the attainment of | the writer? Are they so ignorant as gt to know, | pndhdedicated to liberty by kissing the newborn light of Court ordered that all the witnesses on either side should | Boston papers by four different routes—first, via Al-| 4 principle, or from a delicate sense of the harmoni- | that a man, however obscure or insignificant, can | jeaven, our heroes marched back again to the post from withdraw from the room except the one who should be | bany through Harnden & Co., then via Providence } ous, it is unquestionably injurious—we make allow- } never be injured by anonymous slander? The na- | whence they had been called for the occasion of its pre- «under examination. The prisoner’s counsel also reques- nas Be Nt ieee ri Pours ominati ture of the attack pre-supposes cowardice as well as | sentation, with feelings more glorious than imagination ted that the female witness’ might be sworn according to | by the splendid steamer Cleopatra, then via Norwich | ance of course for the unmitigated abomination of | " . . aligntty indivi fT i 12 o’clock the troops reached this city, h e witness | ° ngs aa 2 z the white horse with blue legs that is walloping over | Malignity, and the individual who adopts this mode | can paint. At der-in-chief, and were dismissed. trom which she comes, to whieh fequest the late geen, | OY Adams & Co., and then via Stonington by Haro-| 74 “sround with blue shadows, placed like. the | of warfare is either Knave or fool, or possibly he may | headed Oy tee grange, though much of the time ftw eaten believed ovtiees corte aeapagy fri ci smull pox, by the side of unsuspecting health— | tniteithe properties of both. Knave, he certainly is,or | Ter Meta a single soldier had to desert his post in Wish to be sworn in any other way. A. erueflix (the one injuring it by contrast, and making this tameness | he would no’ strike at a man who has nomeansof te : 5 2 wi consequence of sickness. used at the church we believe,) was consequently brought Axorner Murver.—It appears by proclamation | more palpable. By some contrariety of judgment, | turning the blow ; and fool he must be, or he would ™ wy letter of the dist, I stated thet “Lady Centon” in, and placed between two lighted candles, and the lady | of Goy Ss that George West, a German, | this picture, though occupying a good place, 13 inju- | see the absurdity of, attempting to prejudice a man of | jaq'won al the Kendall rice course on the day previous, standing in this presence was (through an interpreter) ph ieoreracy peer Shae i sa ri in this | digiously hung; we vache eaantte features where | intelligence and discernment against any one by | this was an accidental mistake, it was “Brown Stout’ sworn to speak“ the truth, the whole truth, and nothing | was murdered about 22d inst. at Sand Lake inthis | oi dS written, and expression sits; but if we go | Charges or insinuations, without proof or a name to | that took the purse. 5 ia slik llkdhen pu the truth ve gave heard the court consured by | State, by William Miller, also a German. A reward | close to it a glare interposes, and confines us to the | sustain them. Within ‘the past year, ink, paper and | Inreference to the Stanley and Wise affair, it was stat \ s ; e ; : i seg esi i je i ; : i e sent by the former and accepted by the cena ubeeres neal tpn delet po nontel of $400 is offered for the detection of the murderer. | view of a part only; if we go. across the room, | time enough have been expended against the Herald | in the challeng y by war set ow foot by a cligue of reprobates and unprin- cipled politicians in this city. Now that the danger ‘3 over, let us be thankful for the happy result—let moderate and conciliatory councils be pursued— bat let the mark of Cain be set upon the agitators aad evil councillors that led on the dangerous move- ment. Thank God matters are no worse. Sream Sure Brrrisu Qu is now momentarily expected. days later intelligence. Forrierisa.—Tar Exrtaxatioy.—In this mighty age of new occurrences—new religions—and new philosophical systems, Fourierism seems to advance with rapid strides fifty miles wide, principally through the agency and support of the “New York ribune,” a paper that can extract the essence of sunbeams from New England squashes, and put them into dollar bottles, with elegant labels, Rut still the question is daily put, what is Fourier- iam !—w are its doctrines?) What are they iving at * constant harping on ‘‘harmonies,” attractive industry,” “community of property,” cial order,” &e., &e., seem to convey no dis- st ideas. In this craving for real knowles ofaProtestant Church. ‘The Magistrate the sum of $1200, which was readily given, and the case | tion and the mighty Congi —This steam ship he will bring three dge, we must look the “F, 0 wan.” : ; farm. i ° t the jostling of his horse against Wise, on the payond the ‘Fourier’ organ,” auddin, into the | Stieeaem is a cumner tet cee nara m see So ORC ee ; though we can see the whole with the naked eye, | and its correspondent, to buy a good farm in any fittel thal ere riding out tothe races, was purely ac Fourier reservoir” itself} But this has been | stance which is mest binding upon the concience of the Acexcy or Harnpen tv Retawm.—This enter- | we need a telescope to examine the parts. western State. ental. sThis,agreeablp to the conceptions of W. C. Johi done to our hand by the “Albany Atlas,” who has a capital account of the place proposed by “ Fou- to make industry attractive at the North pole ng all the iee, then adding the following e glimpse at the new philosophy :— r thus liqnidizing the frozen barriers of the North, witness. Indeed suc! if this form was made u isa small matter, hardly worthy of notice. | (Ott: 27 .oni ot Wise, gave him a latitude for explana- the requirement of the law. But | prising concern have started a branch of their es. To the composition and drawing of this picture, This iter nOHne. of for the purpose. of intimida. | P™S!NS elingy aight d will send | “¢ May add another quality ; itis fraught with ex- | It is adverted to, however, for the pur ee tion, which wes done in writing, and provehee saento- tion, which we do not believe, it certaiuly failed most sig- | t#blishment at Antwerp, in Belgium, and will send | oression. ‘The story is richly told, and is embel- | sing those anonymous gentlemen of the futility of | rity'as to prevent the necessity of a hostile meeting. Rally to elfect it, for we venture to astertthat there was | letters, parcels or orders, by the British Queen to | lished with a hundred little digressions and pleasing | their exertions, and to suggest that the same amount | "Str. Chandler, of Philadelphia, is to deliver the lesture aot a single unprejudiced individual who heard her testi- ; e fa e pro- i vi tponed from last week. mony and saw her manner that was not convinced that she | ®8Y part of the Continent. All who have any bu- | episodes. In the left hand corner sits a group, where a En stroma a banana a rts tea pay Ce oO He ee recline ia tauranaeeow qanieHiow- spoke notone word more or less than the truch. Mr. | siness with that part of the world, will find this of | 4 Soldier is explaining to the Indians the manner of | ductive of some beneficial results. 11a J a ahtrcot at e662, with rather a dull market ; Maryland Schmall was also sworn, and in pursuance of the order | \ . lel sein the ceremony of marriage among the | | Almostevery body seems to rejoice at th ‘i invexnediat i r c i ‘ i heat sells for $1,26 0 1,97 ; Beef Cattle were sold at the Ne - ash “eo very great service to them in expediting their af-] nglish. Here in feat d acti ure | less termination of the difficulty between Meesrs. } ¥ rae Be ranging from $6.76 to 6,25 yurier presents a plan for I ti . | ofthe court withdrew from the room, his wife being of | YT rs : nglish. Here in feature and action every figure | \¢ss . - | trove yards yesterday at prices b to 6, Euglandin vx mouthy; by wieena gy heey Sree | curse the Saat wiknome tobe, eeeeiiea: Wer leare bali} Haima MroHaights; the ashen onl Consult A uke thinks ; a fine looking young siuaw, attentive to the | Wise and Stanly. - They are both amiable and esti- | per 109 pounds ; Provisions are without change ; Whis viakos a mathematical statement of the debt, twenty. | Rotes of the testimony, but as it was delivered through an | werp, is the Trans-Atlantic Agent. description, is laying down the shield, in whose | mabl e en es ane sds ‘cad aiaiemte fies, that | Fey,194 8 19 on ieei eae nil f hen atten cents the dozen for | iterpreter it is necessarily too prolix (besides being 2 polished surface she has been admiring her own | warmly attac ae rend Lanthout credewite dn The weather Sty “4 (NA would require Gfly milliards dozen of eggs to | 2thcrwise objectionable) for our columns ; we shall there- Parx Tm Orr: 1 Matp or Saxovy, | 820d looks ; and the warriors are absorbed in grave | could not have been severec Witt out prods “ing une 5 . sUish this debt in one year. ¢ not attempt to give it either in the language or order ‘arx THEATRE.—Orera or THE Matp or | attention. Immediately overhead, upon the scaffold, | speakable wretchedness and su ering: he chi- Cameates albipntas). 1009 dozen ut air sa te in which it fell from the witness. Her simple story was in | —TLast night this pretty and amusing opera was per- | js another gronp of Indians, who show by their dif- | valry” men say that the parties ought to have ex ‘ 4 Multiplied by 300 d 200 | jubstance, and as near as we can give her language, as | seonud ti highly respectable audi- | ferent expression the kind of dread so natural in | Changed shots, but the laws which govern the con- {[Conespondesee of che Harald.) P y 200 days, 200 follows :—Sh ve of Rhinish Bay: sh ‘ormed a second time, to a highly respectal audi. rent expression the kind of drea: natural in pi z a pi lived antilaiee eer about iG celia ae necrcn te the 5 fs aphid “Silence | 8uch, a position; but the mingling ©: wonder and | duct of * honorable men,” are altogether intangible Purtapenrnia, May 24, 1642. Ls 100,000 Caled, Staion) wither heer ead (heveecthneniiy | Coors ee eer ee ’L point, are be, | Caution, 48, expressed in the look of t»- boy, as he | and undefined, and now-a-days it isimpossible t0 | noiher Tyler Mecting—The Launch—vA veal Battle— dy 600,000 phalanges, 900,000 She will be ai years old on the 14th of June next. Her | in the court.” ‘The wit, humor and point, are be-| holds up his finger to enjoin stillaes:, while for a | Say what constitutes ieee affront. ance the ‘Stocks—Rhode Island Meeting, The produc 60,000,000,000 Parents, as well as her brothers and sisters, are all Roman | ginning to tell well. To-night, the ingenious au-| moment he ventures to look down, is inimitable ; | difliculty of deciding upon the proper reply to inju: Catholics, and as such she was christened and educated I the education she ever received having been in a Catholic School, to which she went three y pare herself for h he Mr. Schmall on last New Year's day, eight days before | ‘Tagarin i Ht ‘ler movement in this city is growing more for- thor takes his benefit, and we trust and hope he may | it is one of those simple sparks of truth occasionally | rious language, Formerly it was understood that pee tye ffect s : e. There was we . struck from natare by Boz. We might go on, and | opprobrious epithets could not be retorted in words } midable than some persons affec' believe have a bumper—“ if convenient.” 4 Bente Piss eng Ue’ 9 h e oft din the House th ory meeting last nignt, which numbered tell of fifty things of like interest—the Indians pry- | —that such terms as are often use: : another preparatory ing into the mystery of the book—the teased child | should be met either by a blow or_a pistol shot ; | ghout twice as many es at the first meeting held. One of which time she had gone to confession, and did not go ‘neaTnicats IN Bostox.— The descendants of the | clinging to its mother—the courtships, and every | but things are changed, ond oe We are to} s46 objects of the movers in this business is to overthrow again until Wednesday, when, having previously in. | Puritan Father's appear to patronise theatrical en- thing to the end of the picture. ve have said oe have the largest liberty in all things. the Clay interest in the city authorities. It is alleged formed her husban | of her intention, she went to get her rtainments more liberally than the godd citizens | thin: the principal personages—they must, speal MAA 1 = ERRATA . e5 0 of the city is inst the sins forgi When she entered ‘the Church, which or G sth have @ fe ‘4 raid “er for themselves ; we have devoted too much time to] , THomas Houpsworrn Bakr (of Indiana) has { ‘hat the whig oe o ae ne sea vot i was between five and six o'clock in the evening, some | Of Gotham have done for some time past. The} ¢... work, and must pass on, observing, that though: | been appointed by the President of the United | President and in favor of Mr. Clay, and as these whig o other person wasin the confessional, and she waited till | ‘Tremont has been well attended to witness the per- | this picture excites little attention from its quietness | States, with the advice and consent of the Senate, | cers were elected .by the votes of the friends of “Tyler hour’ whens th wereanpine oon ben i formances “a la Elisaler”” of Miss M. A. Lee, and | of tone, it developes incident and thought continu- | t0 be Sane of she, genes! ies oe ‘o0,” they mean not to encourage such & perversion of oh he ‘went into the confessional. (This, as | the managers of thezOlympic, in orderto accommo- | @lly. Asa painting, there are better works in the | Vice HuytincTon, resigned. ty Sgt their trust any longer. From appearances'theseTyler men es that the regeneration of hens and of ult follow from that of the social world noay. z¢ oran interrupted incubation ne turbs the caloulat proves that new social dis. ns ofthe theorist. In the same way he ving of pins under the operation of his em, will amount tothree hundred Hla devotes a portion of his essay to explaining to what available and pleasant uses old and tough hen men of the age of sixty and upwards, may be p new system, illustrating the one by the other. i 4 ; : posit was confirmed by the Senate, as we hear, with a ‘ ‘This is capital. It will be seen, therefore, mee ben te 8 paces open at the | date the public, and conform to their taste, have en- ny ut Eee few better any where, unanimity which inet he highly gratifying to Col, | Will be able te ced at cae Uiniae quieras there is something good in Nazareth. If Fourier | enough to contain only one person, in ‘one of whieh | gaged Miss Julia Turnbull, a pupil of Monsieur Syl-| No. 3—“Artomy—View From Stxe Siva.”—Root, | Blake and his friends, of whom he has many in this aed Stthey ft Woking ——" They cond, pet could make a contract to pay the debt of England, | the priest sit, and in the other the penitent kneels, upon | yain's, who has just returned from the West Indies, Havel Thit is @ great favorite with the public, | city.—National Intel. May 24: Fightly too, that democratic opposition would do ‘Tyler rs ee . stool, the communication between them being through Ape r » of 1 4 as wo Sean: 4 Y art dat by cultivating hen’s eggs, what is to prevent his dis- J 4 window of lattice work in the partition.) Having con- | Where she made asuccessful tour. At the National high see hey of engine Eaniibcebs iA dese Saperior Court, eed Uyhip defeat tactno ety sett fal Buick’ pin ciples from paying off the State debts in this coun- | {essed her sins to the Priest, he imposed a penance upon her | ‘Theatre, Mr. Scott, so well known at the Chatham F Before Chief Justice Joncs, before she undertook wh: here. * hh she wanted to pray, as is th gorgeous vesture with which nature clothes the no- May 24.—Daniel W. Lord vs Aaron Legcett—Tho plai try by also cultivating egga, or even squashes ? , but she could not pray. The priest | Theatre in this city, has been engaged and made his { ble scenery of the Hudson is precisely suited to his | tit was owner of the brig Commodore Preble, and in May, is oanineannia peoresseg tre Sak orga ones This is the great panacea that must eventually save J then believed in being married by. | first appearance on Monday night,in the character of | Tich and somewhat peculiar style of painting. — Jena, chartered, her to defendant for the purpose of pro- | ‘teqmboats aud the whole of the ealling craft will oceupy the country from the disgrace of repudiation. The | Sih, and followed this question with others of the | Macbeth and this not being sufficient, Mr. Marshal ra fa jsp icy oy slearagapons t nature relative to her conjugal iu- - . ee _ No.4.—And three others by Villamill, are inju- | co, thence on a voyage to St. Petersburgh, in Russia.— J positions in the stream, affording a favorable view to pat- tercourse. (At this time it was so dark in the Churgh she | has taken the Circus on Haverhill street, which is to | rious to others near them—and perfectly disgusting | The vessel arrived at the river Tobasco, but a civil war ‘The launch is expected to beone of the handapthest ever seat carey geet rea her prayer) These, questiont | be altered for theatrical performances during the | in themselves, and should not have been exhibited. | broke out, healed y « Gen. ‘Thompaon, on the one side, | he lnuncitle capaci pe frie bende eae them in soch a rude ‘manner that she Docame frightened summer. Four theatres in operation at once for «| Why doesnot Mr. Brown finish his pertraits resulted in favor of the latter, The agent to defendant | ™uch greater distance upon her ways. Erie Railroad may be completed in a year, simply by the cultivation of eggs along the line, under the y system of Association and Attractive Industry. ne . . 5 New Y, No. 6.—**Grovr or Cuipren.”—D. Huntington, ‘3 4 * There was yesterday a regular battle on the public pa- greatest discovery of the age. Go ahead. thabahe must not tell her Husbaad, Whilésehe was ‘thus ‘ — a portraits, so chrractenistic of nature, and such deli- | full time agreed upon, when she returned to New York; oe party of Sree ol Fame mfist hier an ad te ‘ see = — kneeling before him attempting to repeat the prayer Miniature Patwrinc.—Mrs. Steele, at 77 Chamber cacy and breadth in his manner—giving the impres- | action was instituted to recover the poh beg upon emselves aggriev ero TRCULATION oF New York Newsparers w At which he had'set before her asa penance,as well as the | street, is an artist of great and singular merit. She | sion of lite and thought so perfectly, that we be- | for theuseof the vessel. ‘The defendant refused to pay on J Zeutlemen on horse, Petition di 1 area ‘right she was in would permit her, the Priest came out | ig a native of Onondaga count this § q | Come too much interested in the mind of his por. | the ground that the voyage was broken up by the civil | were pelted by ciate Ant ground, and some of them con- vf his box, and seizing her by the right arm, which was | '® Nativ age. county in State, and | traits to think ofthe artist. This is a very lovely | War, end from circumstances beyond his control. Com: | \vere toon driven from the g1 the citizens, too, received so- vext to the door of the confe-sional, dragged her out of her | early evinced a taste for painting. We have seen | sicture. No. 157, “Porrrarr of a Youn Lapy,” i+ | missionshad been issued and forwarded to Mexico with the J “ierably injured. | Some of the eluzens disgraceful, and Oe waist Mncw her ato theltoon ta anoameqrotn’ | some $f her miniatures, and they are beautiful speci- J 4 rich and charming picture,forming at once aswee: | Siew of obtaining depositions. Ttappeared that American | ‘ere mwond cut. | ie Mee Wes Cee teen inuni: ner waist threw her apou the floor. ‘Ta throwing her he and they specie | Tr and cp auming plcturenfommuing atonce aswee! | commerce was fully respected by the rival Mexican pow. | $ wholly truck her back against some hard substance and hurt her | mens of the art. ortrait, a bic arta lihy: ‘imple subject. Have | ers, and no good cause could be shewn why the terms of s nany.—We have been informed by Mr. Jones, of at of new Ts, that the nals in that cit Now York Daily Herall,. very severely. She di not hear the Priest leave his box, ag hese ot Me. aaah Sh ile er At the! charter should not be complied with- Verdict ior sn rhe biltinees 6 stocks hae, bee MND HE Ee St Poe “— Tribune, nor i p was unti hold er. VAL J, Toshi A No. is ENETIAN Girt” —Also by the same aintift, $7,4 mages and 6 cents costs. : y ‘. jar sive was. sold aoa seer rues ee might have kidlatheraed |, NAVAt-—The U. 8, brig W ashington, Captain | painter, who appears inthis to have made the at- Poor plaintiff, Messrs. Townsend and Kinney. For de | | A rather in meeting of the sympathisers of Rhode © Express,.. she could not have helped herself. The witness then de- | Gedney, arrived yesterday from Washington. She tempt to surpass himself in the same subject, here- } fendant, Messrs. Emerson & Prichard. ee ar a tions into alleged abaces Courier and Enquire : scribed the liberties which the priest took with her while | is manned almost exclusively by boys or apprentices, | tofore exhibited at the Gallery of the Apollo Asso- é r 4 against our Post Master, 1 pret ict will end all in smoke. Three years ago, the Sun had a circulation of 500 | °F the ground, and replied to several very point: | wig have been found very efficient in managing | ciation. We think it is an additional evidence, he rape ay Regret id ; . “ ‘d questions in such a manner as to exclude all doubt i aging ! however, that every original picture is better than May 24.— Case of John .2. Barry.—Thiscase was called in Alvany—but the opening of the Great Western | as to his success in his fiendish attempt to violate | brigs of war. These boys have entirely stripped ‘i i iate-Ve i >, roceeded in. Mr. Mercein, in his | Promotions 1x tux Anrmy.—The following is a A ‘ e its copy—this is very beautiful, and more elaborate, | UP, andthe argument pi led in rrcein, ¢ ‘ . i bench sad ehttahlah bee ime ) white ease tarnieos ; thought asthe former. Did you ever hear of Mr. | Pejeated issues of habens corpus, having alrendy encoun, | of the United States by the President :— some little time, she began to revive, and exclaimed, “Oh, Increase oF Porutation.—It is said that there are | Brown ? > . ae tered four, which resulted in the mother being allowed | Corps of Topographical Enginecrs.—Firet Lieut} God' what have you done with me ? Hs would not make | goyenty thousand artizans and agriculturists in Great | No. 7,—“View ix rue June, Twav."—Living | the care and custody of her child. Inthe Court of Errors Thomas %. Linear to be Captain, 31st March, her any answer, but asked her if she recollected the pe- i Wo pee : . syery | on. —Thus gentleman paints a forcible Landscape, | an expense of $345 62 coats was incurred, which Barry | Goo ene 3 Second Lieut. J. C. nance ; she replied she did not—she recollected something | Britain preparing to come to this country. Every | ond ie no imitator, As nature presents the bold,the | was ordered to pay, but he answered the counsel that he tat Gulon ae Taenk Sist March, 1842, vice Lin- about it, but Bot Whos it was, He diea gave Lae the ih ship from England brings from two to three hun- | rugged, and the romantic to the view of his mind, might get his money out of some vo clgthes if he could. | ood, promoted. nance, and bade her to pray it. When dismissed she stil co he giv 01 i e This Barry denies, asserting that his reply was “wouldn't pwr | ‘ i felt dick and Gint, ond cegqeret dred. ‘o he gives them to his canvas—and with the vigor hi y den’ 4 ply w mance Department . it John Symingtor, she left the church.— onesies 7 soph : sei Ber | You like to get it.” Mr. Mercein “denies havin i y The open air rotreshed her and she felt better when she | — f2,ccrep.—Joel Hinman, a Judge of the Superior | f° who little regards the honey loving palate of | Sou. JIN® 8 feughter, or her child, . ageinst thar [to beMujon, 27th March, 1842, vice Lomax, deces: Railroad has flooded that city with the penny papers of Boston. The Tribune has also helped to curtail the Sun. All these changes have never atiected the Herald, which has a regular and steady increase, in spite of all opposition, in city and country. Of late the Wall street prints have been making desperate efforts to get a cash circulation—particu- larly the “Express” and the “ Courier,” bat we Jearn from the agents that the effort is both bootless and fruitless, In Albany 12 Couriers can hardly be sold in a day, while 300 Heralds march off like a streak of lightning. This is only a sample of the Progress of the newspaper pr Apropos—We un- derstand that Judge Noah, N. P. Willis, and G P. Morris intend to start a two cent cash paper du, ring the present year. Very well—Go ahead. ed . She found hi id fs : : the public taste. Do tell—where is Brown ? ” te i : Lieut. R. HH. K. Whiteley, to be C aeons eed ber why i Seery ry Boged Court of Connecticut, in the place of Roger M. No. 8“ Porrrarr or I. L. Vartan—&. Mooney, tin’ hen Sistetad te e@ernie, Mee Surry alee pivoted tain, 27th March, 1842, vice ymington, promoted. she not knowing what answer to make, evaded the ques | Sherman, resigned N. A.—and a very good one itis ; but we do not see | an aitidavit, in whieh she states that she has reason to be- | Second Lieut. R. A. Wainwright, to be ist Lienten- tion, and afterwards, when he pressed her to tell him the the propriety of pectin N. A. at the end of names, | lieve that her husband is not so anxious to have the child ant, 27th March, 1842, vice Whiteley, promoted. be wi o Ber seprre Sethe, she replied ee she was | Exrrsorpixany.—The packet ship Sheridan sails | the owners of which only oe ee ae ae So Hee to live waite _ ge weed be ih Brevet 2d Lientenant John ene tobe = Lieu- afraid to tell him for fear he woul! do himself som ry. Pipa wath ape a ; " th C inting. "8 Mr, | lett ’ itten t ife, adjur er i i ight Se She continuing to be distressed, ant erying cane nthe to-day for Liverpool with upwards of fitty cabin pas- Be Ai face painting. hat’s become of Mr, Solar ies, ek Galy oh scogrie OF tae be near he, tenant, 27th March, 1842, vice Wainwright, pro eenids caine die lod Rim upat ot heroerh cndeas,| tetikete. 0. 9—Pontrart ov 4 Youna Lapy—J. P. Lave. | bat from the example and effect on their obiiiven. | he | i First Regiment of Dragoons —Firs! Lieut, B. & she wanted to go and take sacrament, when she would | Asawa ei ; his artist, who is young and a beginner, | ree eet oe inet little bor fe worth @ mother’s care, | Terrett, to be Captain, 21st Februar vice Si- tell him all. She thought that she was worthy to take sa. | Pukasuns Rarcnoap.—A pleasure railroad, ashil- | gives great promise. 208 is also by him ; he ought telag, fa et almost a" prod nd his performance ia | monton, deceased. Second Lieut. a Sunday school a few di of which Barry is su | 10 be Ist Lieutenant, 2ist February, 1 crament now that her sins were forgiven, and that as it | ling per trip, hasbeen opened between Boston and sedulously to apply himself todrawing. How is Mr. was Ascension day, it was her duty to do so. She did take | };, Brown? erintendent, elicited applause from all that heard rett, promoted. Brevet 2d Lieutenant John Love, sacrament, and upon her return, disclosed the whole mat. { Fresh Pond. at No. M—Ponrnart ny Buoweni—Very good, but | He says that’ he went 1 Mtr Marcein’s last winter to see | (% Be dd Licutenant, 21st February, 1842, vice Chil- iireutaed to tahoe ial and if Pere pace ein’ | Trine ar Srxrexce.—The price of passage on the | We cannot go on with, the description of portraits, | his child ; his motives were pure and his disposition pe ton, promoted. HBrevet 2d Lieutenant Abram Bu- i intolerably by ble, but he was assaulted by her brother, and afterwards iy u i begged him not to do so, and made him promise that he | railroad from Syracuse to Rochester has been raised How doce Ee or intolerably bad. ) ble, but he wes assestieett, by three en, enaet whom, fond, 19, be 2d -Lientensat, Azth April, 1842, would not; he then said that he would go and see the | from two to three cents per mile. t M weet, and another ran away, He ickhifle, str \. ; : # ; i No. 13—Several others in the smaller saloon are | When he got up. he flo ‘ir. Mercein’s on the day the | -Appoiniments.—George Meade, late of the Arm: Ul morning, WN she toll iw he would be wore tiely studies of heads, made in Rome, from life, by A. B. | S4Z%. 0 that oe were owes : " . allowed, in hopes that tome | to be 2d Lieutenant in the Corps of Topographica ¥) Mr. Sehmall went | BuNkeR Hut. Monvaewt.—This splendid and stu- | Dyrand,N.A.—That Mr Durand is an artist of great | Pretent habeas corpus wes ea “for Nate SSASSINATION OF THK ( OVERNOR or Missourt Tut Morwoys.—In the “Missouri Reporter” of the Mth instant, we tind the following article ;— Gov. Boags.—We learn from a gentleman who arrived in this city on Thursday evening from Warsaw, that there wasa report current al the latter place that Gov. Boggs 7 * tosee him. | In the morning (Frid ° ; 3 Y ti compromise might be effected, and proceedings stayed. | Engineers, 19th May, 1841. Nathan Towson, Pay- Jose * follow mig Hed ald be caught before | 2 Drought the Priest to ‘he house: but she was in bed | pendous obelisk of granite is to be finished next } and versatile talent, has been weil established. We } Mr. M. called is Barry's) wife to show, as he said, | master General. re-appointed. David S. Townsend, could reach Nauvoo. Letters, it wes sald. bed tore, | *°k, and had eo exhausted herself with crying, that she | Angust. It will then loom up two hundred feet. hope his recent visit to Italy may not have been to | that she was not detained;compulsorily by'him. She came Paymaster, re-appointed, Timothy P. Andrews, written from Jafforson City to Gov. Behofare hie weeeen | Could not understand what was said, but her husband aes his disadvantage. We question the utility of paint. | into the roste) treajed his edvances with contempt, and on Paymaster, re-appointed. nation, putting him on hie guan! against an assault threat. ie pres eat cat doe Poe nal ieakiec amrae Morrauiry iN Prvavenriia.—There were 118 | ing heads after the manner of Ribeira Peturint and es Rann: ae taba ot Berry catenin the mother : crak fia Heaney tt re ees dares femesse Cay ey sureaetsensemant Wat did not Know what remark the Priest | deaths last week, 58 adults and 65 children. pihers—or' of going into the studio at all in Italy.— } 1 i heen allowed the care and custoly of &. W. Tiatcurr has been appointed by the er child ow ing Bo be husband knew. (It was to detail this ; versation, that Mr. 8. was sworn as a witness. Su: om The examination in chiet had progres Stayner Brossom: It would be an artist's best employment to examine to ite tender age, but it is now nearly five years old ; an. mom the famous works of the great men of other days; | (he father has shown, by the manner in which the boy is —There was a fall of snow at | +, learn their principles, to investigate their pro- i persous, who had learned from a Mormon belonging to N ih had beea endeavoring to persuade to murder Gov. B. for the course he President of the United States, Vice Consul of Rut+ sia for the port of Boston. . rr the prisoner's Counsel having asked a mo New Bedford last Friday. cesses, and to elevate his own mind to the standard - 2 {ook againa themafew years aga, We give this rumor | cossalteton, Mr. Davis, who Sppeured rae premeetion —— oftheirs—and thus to acquire that perfect self-re- City Inteltigence. BP aapatee ake a stated that he was anxious to get through with the wit Court of Common Pleas, liance, which is the result of true nowledge, in- Irontant Annret.—From previous We can hardly believe the ramor. The Mormons nese Os he wen Informed hy we tt she began to feel very Before Judge Ulshoeffer. ii jeeble stances, officers Bowyer and McGrath have been on the usted, and would be ¥ “ te dreadfully persecuted in Missouri ; yet they @ more peaceable, quiet and moral people than many of those sects—some with and some without picty—that live around them. r. a stead of painting and talking with the nee 7 was evident that’ she did not complatnewttt ved The scinilf ean Bnnomagy Alabang erie md Ba fe race of Itali reife oth ity al] Before Inde Noah and Aldermen Martin and Jones J ajert for several days past, in search of a notorious mem- : out e. | —The plain 0 | | ways thought a leaning towards others’ jes was a May 24.—Catharine Fenton, ch 1 with stealin { “ Konigackers,” known as “Joe Wya titer Jassat tm emanated touch | Peat eter compen ny ce | Pernt i St Bt pete wath te mpctale | eho vant ri Soh Wan wr Gage | Dt Me of” Roienher moon tan Ee high degree, The Court expressed a hope th ‘ belonging to defend: of Cole nor’ of Claude has he ever seen nature so | William M'Cormuch, charged with stealing a whip from , eg { be able to remain a short time longer, bel cave ier oe iiepbnae 1 Et aspented In evi eave ‘thet e pa truly as by his own clear ey: G. M. Clash, was remanded to prison for 30days. Michael f alias Jack Robertson, of Now Jersey. Yesterday after. . ; ; . —-- derstand that they would not detain her if sh. & at ¢ ¢ two Landscapes No. 26 and 199, beautiful as | and Stewart Neos, for stealing female wearing apparel § noon asthey were proceeding to the place of departure of ' Movements ov Tae Cauiner.—The Hom. Wal- | well todo so. The examination was then romney bet pri gente sie hig os ite Korma botone exret, they are, Ree Relea of freshness; but look more | worth $7, was sent up for 60 days. William Corbi for the evening steamboats, Bowyer recognised the long ter Forward arrived in Philadelphia on Monday eve- | h&d not proceoded far when Mr. Schmall appeared atthe Sole and set off at full gallop. The fore wheels came | like the reflections from other pictures, than ori- | %" assault and battery on Catharine knee pbaprace b sought for gentleman in company with one of his “pals,” ! z orld oP Unce nis wife nad coma eobetedean ln Mt ages off auting the crashing on the pavement near Fourth | ginal impressions of nature upon Lys mind fa Bites oh er tade worth at dollers fret Barbelo: kh oa levied upon him with the graplings of $ iad ormed | sap hey otal Fick hat ptt | street, in Broadway, and some of the passengers were in| Mr. Durand has the feeling and the learning to | ‘*°. the. John Booth t t, A Naw Mewser.— Met hae heal Me ats cena went Cour a xtees | jured. ‘The plaintiit had both eyes ‘lacked’ by his face mow. Brown, was}sent up for six months Joni eward. | the bone and muscle of the{law. Joe made full fight, , h 2 malify him for a great artist. Self reliance and | for picking t ket of G Kain, of $6, Tiining Susieas © bertra SU ie eee aa Concenteation. will make him one." you never | ok dr mes peck eccnekee Petane for, awaiting | and raised a crowd of several hundred people around him house, boing too much disfigured to yenture out. | heer of Mr. Brown, the artist ? James Ryan, was sent up for 6months. Peter Cole. | yorsro howns fully secured In the course of the opera fury gavea verdict for pinintift of $65 damages, and a black boy, for arenciting, Lucy, Movatiere ving $12 tion, he was seen to throw away a package of bank notes # from Lawrence district in Penn n such @ condition against her w She should not de abused, ke. This was like applying & torch to gun: | jean jowder. Tye moment all was uproar and confusion. ‘The | in? 3 ‘ Whee ial riends of Schmall cried to him to go ahead, and that they | ¢ cont Apporntwent ry rar} Govrrvon.--Charles’ Kin. } to the House of Refuge, fo ri J, on examination, to be fifteen $20 bills Asnivensanies t%: Bagrox. The reli could back him, and several Irish Catholics brandished |” For plaintiff, Mr. J. Anthon. For defendant, Me-wce. | sey, of Burlington New Jersey, commissioner of | Worth of wearing apparel from Michael Duane, set np for | which was foun "hare taablaead os the ene versaries commenced yesterday in Boston heir shilellahs, ond joined in the war ery. For 9 moment | 4.8 toler and We Reed , deeds for this State 6 months Sete . : i