The New York Herald Newspaper, November 14, 1845, Page 1

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Vol. XI., No. 294—Whole No. £166. Statiitics orthe rt NEW YORK, FRIDAY MORNIN by the last census of 1845. Marriages during the year. Birth sales . - 100,375 727 Brat | a 8. 007 be Mexico or 8. Amie’a aqT “ Great Britain, &.. 95,873 ) caeeee: oe 3,763 “ rmany. 43,416 the othior Yes of Hn 3,173 Children between 6 and 16... “at Common Schools “ id Private do. “ “ “ . foade “ “ “Colle 262 Deaf and Dumb Males, . 13 ¥ ed « Do betw’n 12 & 26. 1 3 # “ Remales, under 12, Mu “ “ «Do 12 and 25, 91 ‘Total number of Deaf and Dumb Person: fe 250 Number of Blind Males, under 8.... : 6 “ “ between 8 and 25... 8 “ “* Females, under 8.... . 2 “ “ between 8 and 25. ry ‘Total number of Blind Persons. . Py Number of Idiot Males, under 21. ; rn “ “Do over2l. . .. uN * “ Females, under 21. s 2 “ «Do over 21 3 ra "Total number of Idiots. .... 39 Number of Lunatic M under 21. 7 “ Non Bee nas “ “ Females, und i “ «Do over 2 275 ‘Total Number of Lunatics. 558 Baptist Churches—Number 23 Cost of. + $378,890 Episcopal Chi Cost of. . $1,707,211 . 30 aid oak js :870,975 Co ational Churches # ae Sost Of... . es. 45 ‘ $102,409 Methodist Chusches—Number of. 4 30 if REO Biss cates $444,240 Roman Catholic Church 13 erie Universalist Churc! Bs.Cost of... Unitarian Chu Cost ‘Other Incorporated Institutions of Learning. Cost of ...... Normal Schools—Number of... Number of Pupiis attending Common Schools. Private and Cost of... Number of Children attending. Inns and Taverns. Number of Compensation paid to Cl Grist Milla—Number of hes—Number of... Value of raw mate! ject Schools—Number of rit Manufactured articles. Saw MillsNumber of . . Value of raw materials Manufactured articles . Oil Milla—Number Value ot raw material: ¢ ¥. Manufactured article: Cotton Factories— Number of ... Value of raw materials used Sree article: ‘ards of cotton cloth . Woollen Factories “Number of. Value of raw materials used. . . Manufactured articles Number of yards of woollen cloth . Iron Works—Number of. . . Value of raw materials used . Manufactured articles Trip Hammers—Number of . , Value of raw materials used Number of of Manufactured articles Distilleries—Number of . . . Value of raw materials used . Manufactured articles . Number of ..... ie of | — tol inciemal u * lanufactured ay Glass Factoriee—Number cians Value of raw materials Manufactured arti rches—Number of. . 40 m. | We adhere to th: y and Count; ofNew York | | Highly Important from Washington—Views of Mr. Polk on the Oregon Question. [From the Washington Union, (tite organ) Nov. 11.) THE FORTY-NINTH PARALLEL. We have already ‘tated our conviction that the Amer- ican title to Oregon is sound and perfect up to 54 deg, We have denied the existence of any break in the 49th ve said farther, that U: ngland have been made kaown,there is, to the best of our recollection, no argument what- ever which carries our title up to 49 deg. and t! ‘We made all thi tatements with due delil in spite of all the vague and loose ter, which are running the rounds nd we are prepared to sustain them, and conclusive proof. his being the state of our title to Oregon, it seems roper to explain, briefly, how it has happened in past ite that, as a matter of compromise, we have offered Se ey ant Wes ae of Great Britain the 49th arallel, ae & line o' te Ce peeing Br ae 1814-'15 to 1837. offer upon perseveringly from 10 1627-- 28. During all that time, our offer of thi : d,, In’ some of our unsuc e jegree. question of no small interest just now, how all this has come to pass? In what manner, and for what has it so happened that our government, through a quarter of a century, claiming and holding a good title up to 54 . 40 m.. hes Fad been willing to compro- miso its difference with England by the line of 49 deg. {It 4, we admit, a perfectly fair question for those to ask, ii pei who doubt that our title is clear up to 64 deg. 40 m. hew is it that the line of 49 deg. has been our lino of ne- gotiation, and even of attempted legislation, so long, if our title does not terminate at that line ? ‘This question we now propose to answer. By the treaty of peace with Great Britain of 1783, the northern boundary line between the United Sta British America was settled, from the source of the St. Croix, on the northeast, to the Lake of the Woods on the northwest—this lake being about 350 miles northwest of Lake Superior, and then supposed to be but ashort distance east of the head waters of the Mississippi. This line—from the St. Croix to the Lake of the Woods—still stands as our boundary, save as it has been changed near its commencement in the northeast, and between Lake Superior and the Lake of the Woods, by the recent Ash- burton treaty. Having drawn this boundary as far we as the Lake of the Woods, the same treaty of 1783 stipu- lated that the boundary line should extend due west from the Lake of the Woods, till it should strike the Mis- pi, down the middle of which river it was thento continue. Butit was soon made known, that aline drawn due west from t! ake ofthe Woods could not strike the ippi. Anew line west from that lake was then e sought and settled. A commission to adjust this, and other dispute, point fthe treaty of 1783, havin deen stipulated for ina subsequent treaty with Englan: 794, negotiations upon the subject were had in the ears following 1803—the date, be it observed, of our ouisiana purchase. In these negotiations, subsequent to 1803, the 49th parallel of latit was first named as a boundary line between the United States and tl The plenipotentiaries and governments st about agreeing on the line of the 49th degree as a line of demarcation from the Lake of the Woods to the Rocky Mountains, with the express proviso that the agreement should in no way touch the case of territory claimed by either party west of those mountains, when the affair of the Chesapeake occurred, and the negotia- tions were broken off by the troubles which resulted in the war of 1812. The treaty of peace came in 1814, and ght with itnew boundary negotiation. ‘This ne- tion, renewed on the old basis of the line of 49 dog., resulted, in 1818, in the establishment of that line from the Lake of the Woods to the Rocky Mountains as our boundary, and (at the same time, and by the next article of the convention,) in the stipulation of joint occupancy, (west of the Rocky Mountains,) which, by renewal in 1627, still exists. Such being the history of the line of 49 degrees, so far sour diplomacy and our rights are concerned, the question now arises, how came that line to be adopted as the basis of our negotiation on this side of the Rocky mountains ? ‘The answer is a strange one. The line of 49 degrees, which has played sucha part in the boundary negotia- tions between the United States and England, was first thought of, and afterwards negotiated upon, and, as there is little raason to doubt, finally agreed upon as far asthe Rocky mountains—solely in consequence of a most singular mistake onthe of both governments. We have seen that this line never came into discussion between the United States and England, till after we had purchased Louisiana. After that purch: it be necessary for us, of course, to ascertain the northern boundary line of our purchase. ‘T's find that boundary, which, after the original grant of Lonisiana to Crozat by Louis XIV, had been carried far to the north into the re- = of the Illinois, (as it was called.) then belonging to 'rance under the general name of New France —to set- tle, we say, the northern beundary of Louisiana, which ed Rope Factories—Number of 6 Value of hve wreeipee| u ss $10,290 4 lanufactured Dyeing and Printing Factorinn arom eco Value of raw materials 000 be Manufacturs },000 Tanneries—Number of 4 Value ef raw materi + $89, es Manufactured artic! + $132,000 Breweries—Number of ‘alue of - — $161,304 By anufactured 2 Number of pounds of Haw Silky becalar4 7 Incorporated Manufactories . 1 « Unincorporated ditto 176 “¥ Of all denominations, ineluding Salaries. The results are of no earthly use or consequence except for general purposes, They bear evidences of having been slovenly compiled, and it is only in want of a better that we insert this table at all.— ‘Taking it as it is it presents some curious features. There are 279 clergymen in the city, with an ag- gregate salary of $268,945, averaging $694 per an- num toeach. We thus find that clergymen of all denominations receive very fair compensations for the work done. There are 9372 more females in the city than males, which accounts for the many old maids a person sees. The 15th ward has more unmarried females than any other ward in the city; while in the 7th, with 500 less, there were 99 marriages more than in the 15th. We therefore can draw the inference that the atmoephere in the 15th is decidedly Malthusian.— Not over one half of the population are natives of New York, while over one fourth were born in Great Britain. The number of persons entitled to vote is 64,233. There are more foreigners in the 16th than in any other ward, and the whole amount in the city is 61,96! ‘There are 11,831 colored people, 255 of whom are taxed and 108 vote. This, under existing circum~ stances, is not a little remarkable. Vote at the recent election amounted to 24 only, and as there are 108 colored voters, it is fair to suppose that the colored population of this city take high and independent grounds in all political matters, and are not attached to any clique of white politicians. It is very curious, at all events, that with this number of colored voters there should be so few polled for il. the abolition ticket. PorvLation or Tux West Inpies.—The last cen- susof the Britisn West India Islands and of British Guiana was taken at different periods; as, owing to cir- cumstances, in the Bahamas, the Virgin Island : and Bri. ‘as not taken in 1844. The fol- tish Guia the sev 2 with the number tion returns) in the year 1844 :~ 32 Domm wey te Christopher. , the censu The abolition Females. | the British commissioners in 1826-"7 7 657 | *8ure that journal, further, that all such rofere: had thus been carried far tothe northward, it became necessary to refer to the treaty of Utrecht, concluded between Great Britain and France in 1713. This treaty of Utrecht contains the following stipulation “It is agreed on both sides to determine within a ye by commissioners, to be forthwith named b: arty, the limits which are to be fixed between the said ay of Hudson and the places appertaining to the French. * * * The same commissioners shall also have orders to describe end settle, inlike manner, the boundaries between the other British and Frénch co- lonies in those parts.” —2 Jenkinson’s Treaties. This treaty was, in general terms, confirmed in the treaty of the 10th of February, 1763, between Great Bri- tain, France and Spain. Wnder thi commissioners were sppelneed as al it blunders which negoti: ubsequent diplomacy seems to have tak- they perlormed the duty for which imi en for grante pointed, and did runa line of boundary be- and that the French axd tidesit por astonishing, to see how thi ed opinion ran through protocol after protocol, and negotiation after negotiatic ind treaty after treaty, till finally it became the instruction from our government to Mei atin and Rush in 1813, 4, through them, th of our boundary line, as it y them then settled, along the 49th parallel, from ake of the Woods westward to the ‘ky moun- the tains. The fact is now well est: ed, that, under the trea- ty of Utrecht, no line whatever was either adopted or proposed by the Commussioners or by theirGovernments as the boundary of ti ions on the north, or of the British poss uth, In fact, no such boundary line was evér run at all. Often as this line was cited and referred to as the basis of subsequent negotiation, it never had any existence whatever till M » Rush and Gallatin drew it in 1819. Till then, a boun line running along the 49th paral- lel was just as imaginary in capbemnoy aa the parallel itself is imaginary on the surface of the earth. , We believe that all persons ccnversant with this sub- ject are now agreed on this point. But, of course, we do not make these statements without being prepared to present the proofs of what we assert. ‘These proofs, amounting to a complete demonstration, we will present in detail whenever they may be wanted to sustain our position. It is enough now to state, onthe high autho- tity of Mr. Greenhow, in his most accurate and ‘exhaus- tive work upon Oregon, that the archives ofthe Depart- ment of Foreign Affairs in France have been searched | for any evidence of the adoption of soy such boundary line under the treaty of Utrecht, and that no trace of such evidence has been found. To this we may add, that the various Dae and French publications, writ- ten since Mt. Greenhow’s work, and in reply to it; and some of them written under the eye of the British Go- vernment, produce no evidence from the British ar- chives of any such line ive proo! that no such evidence is to be found there. And,lostly,we may saythat the only author who mi ention of the appointment | ot any such commissioners under the treaty of Utrecht, states that their negotiations ceased prematurely in 1722—they having in {719 It may be proper to add that M when our Miuister at 10 be no doubt that in his possession, ade in his correspondence. ni id by an old ma to which reference is Meantime, if any of our any doubt on the whole Utrecht line, w hi le work, to Mr. Greenhow’s learned list of contemporary autho- point. ‘e have gone thus minutely line of the 49th parallel, with the entirely imaginary, how wholly baseloss, is the id it has any connexion whatever with our title to the of Oregon. Of course, it is unnecessary for us to # that this line is inno way related, in the slightest de- , to the history of discovery, or of exploration, or of lement, or of occupation, inthe soil of Oregon. No discoverer, or explorer, or inhabitant ever started from it, (2 stopped at it, or settled upon it, asa line of dema- cation. We have shown that, as a treaty line, it was—though often quoted and referred to, and even argued upon— wholly imaginary, and without any real existence, till 1818. ‘Then it was run as far west as the Rocky moun- tains, with the express LN Mad inthe negotiation that it | should, in no way, affect rights of territory beyond those } mountains. The very stipulation of 1618, which runs this line in its first article, contains in its second article the agreement of joint occupancy, and makes no allu- | sion whatever to the line of 49 deg. | We observe that the Intelligencer of this morning again cites @ speech of Col, Benton in 1843, in which that | distinguished gentleman re to the line of 49 deg. as | fettled ; and because settled by the treaty of Utrecht, as | being) probably, the true limit of our title, as derived from France. Certainly, if such a line had heen run un- of Utrecht, (ax was the general, belief of ity of diplomatists, when Col. Benton mad speech,) the be de ‘aay ae very strong ‘hav our le ‘op there. B } Ugencer confine its citations to cot pA fies it not cite similar references to the inatructions to Mr. Gallatin, and from Mr. Gallatin’s of- | ficial statement and argument of our claim against wi Intelligencer that these references are made.” put by ell the negotiators, reference, Colonel Bi distinctly on the ground that the ine of 40 degrees wasrun by the treaty of Utrecht as the British | and y | high and dry, and French boundary line. The fact is otherwii hes been, by recent jrivéstigation, proved to be otherwise ; | and, threfore, all such references as matter of argu- | ment, showing the extent of our title, fall to the ground. | This iaexactly what we meant when we said that there was no argument carrying our title up to 49 deg., and there stopping. Arguments, which may have been urged fora compromise at 49 deg., are not at all to the | point. We objected from the first, and we now object, | that any argument for such a compromise shall be drawn from an alleged failure of our title at 49 deg. Our title, as maintained on any one of its very many grounds, does not fail there. The disappearance from iplomacy of the imaginary line of the Utrecht treaty, does bear upon the question of our title as derived from France, ‘Fhat upon the whole it impairs or weakens | that portion of our title, we are not yet, from the best in- | vestigation we have been able to nes ‘the subject, pro- | pared to admit. But this we will say, our French title may be wholly left out of the question, and yet our claim to the whole of Oregon will be clear and improg- nable against all the world, We have now done all that we proposed todo in this article. We have shown how the parallel of 49 de, came to be adopted as a boundary lin Great Britain ou this side of the Rocky Mou: We have shown that that liné uas no cohnexion whatever with our rights in Oregon. If there shall be found disposition in this country to giv any of our right there to Great Britain—if the course of Great Britain past negotiations has made it fit that we should continue to urge this compromise upon her, ina matter where s has no rights to compromise in retnrn--it her course un. der the stipulation of joint occupancy has been open and fair and just—and, finally, ifthe public sentiment of this nation shall be found willing to sanction a sacrifice of about one-half of our tetritory of Oregon, extending, as it does, from 42 deg. to 54 deg. 40 min.—why, then, admit that the 49th parallel will be about as convenient a line of sacrifice as canbe drawn. ‘And naw, since the Intelligencer has been so kind as to quote Colonel Benton against. the soundness of our claim ove 49 di nd how fairly this has been done, we all see ina moment—let us return the compliment by the citation of an authority, which, to the Intelligencer, | will scarcely be of inferior weight. On the 19th of June, , Henry Clay, then Secretary of State, wrote to Mr. allatin, our minister in London, the following instruc- Nor is it conceived that Great Britain has, or can, make out even acolorable title to any portion of the northwest goast.” 4 ‘ead is the Intelligencer pleased with this bit of “his- ory?” Will that journal now admit Mr. Polk to be a little lees censurable in saying that ‘our right to Oregon is clear and unquestionable?” It is, we must say, matter of astonishment, that a dis- tinguished paper like the National Intelifgencer—distin- guished, too, jitincipally for its editorial adroitness— should so often, and by such flagrant disingenuotisness, n the way for the severest animadversions. We de- re, that we are again and again confounded by the ut- ter absence of common candor in a paper which seems ambitious of many other good qualities. It is very mar- vellous, that when exposure is so easily brought about, and is at the same time so inevitable, any one of political influence should hazard its loss by indiscretion so gross. _ In this connection, we may well exclaim, how unfair it was for the paper to which we are referring, to tear an extract from the speech of Mr. Benton, and use it in its isolated form, for the purpose of maintaining a proposi- tion which another portion of the same argument, so far from supporting, would have overthrown. The Intelli- gencer, anticipating investigation on this head, hinted as much as we have asserted, but had not the magnanimity to print the evidence of its truth. Col. Berton, coi ing the title of the United States to Oregon as derived from France, alleged that our ter- ‘minus was at the 49th degree. The same declaration had been overand over again made by others, who look. ed to that source as the origin of our cla: But is it fe Ag re France alone that our claim to Oregon is assert- ed? Did Col. Benton, in the very speech upon which the Intelligencer relies, put our claim to Oregon upon that basis alone? Why, we demand, was not an extract, suf. fici to elucidate the fact as it existed, given from the ech of the eminent Senator? He certainly declared his conviction that our title, derived from another source, would warrant the United States in asserting a claim to Oregon as far the boundary of the Russian do: nions. Our title traced through Spain was not threaten- ed by the imaginary obstacle which the treaty of Utrecht | presented. Do the declarations of Mr. Benton, predica- ted upon the stipulations of 1818, sustain the Intelligen- cer? Far from it. ‘We purpose, inthe course of the present week, to give in ectenso the speech of theSenator from Missouri. It ma rly production. 1t is full of American feeling. Let it speak for itself. When published, the country will see, trom the whole context, how much Col. Ben- ton desired to narrow our title,and circumscribe dur just limits in the north west. A rusal of that speech will show whether he believed the United States were estopped from advancing beyond the 49th degree, The world shall thus have an opportunity pal ioe for themselves, from the recurd, between the editors of the National Intelligencer and of the Union—who has mis- represented and who has done justice to the statements of the Senator from Missouri—they or we. They will also have the further opportunity of judging, on a more important issue, between the claims of Great Britain and of the United States—which has thastrongest, the ‘clear and unquestionable” right to all Oregon—she or our- selves. For the present, the following extracts, from the speech of 1843, will make manifest that which we have asserted: — The other point in our title, to which I wish to givea little more development than it has received from other speakers, is, its derivation under the treaty with Spain of 1819. By that treaty the United States succeeded to all the rights of Spain on the northwest coast of America north of 42 degrees. These rights, according to the memoir of the Spanish minister, Don Onis, extended to the Russian po ions—the British having nothing on that coa T isthe representation of the Spanish minister; and with this, the fact of the case agreed. The Nootka-Sound treaty and controversy of 1790 had decided that point. {tdecided that the British had no right to Nootka, a place four degrees north of the Columbia, and no way connected with ind it ended in obtaining for the British the privilege, and nothing but the privilege, of fishing and hunting along the northwest coast, and erecting the temporary huts which the pursuit of these occupations might require. Colonization or settlement was renounced. The treaty itself, especially the 3d and the 6th articles, willgprove this; and the parliamentary debates of the day correspond with the w: of th treaty. Asa fact, that treaty nullifies all British claim on the northwest coast ; as a law, (if not abrogated by war,) it would still confine them to the pursuit o! rk and fishing. The treaty of 1819, by which we acquire all the Spanish title north of 42 deg., has given us all the benefits of the Nootka Sound treaty, hoth as a fact, and as a law, and tested by either, the British are excluded from the northwest coast of America,tor all the purposes of settlement or colonization. . * * . * . Such are the nature, origin, and present condition of the British establishments on the Columbia. They are | rusions upon our known territory—tortuous aggres- sions before the war on Mr. Astor’s settlement—fraudu- ient evasions of the treaty of Ghent—and have no more to. do with the Nootka Sound convention, than they have with the late treaty of China. Nootka is in vain invoked to cover these encroachm@hts upon us—encroachments for which British diplomacy has been endeavoring above thirty years to prepare the way—in which the powerful Hudson Bay Sonpeny has acted as the agent of the government—and for the protection of which company the British ministers now boldly hurl defiance in our | faces. There is nothing in the Nootka treaty to cover all this, evenif it was not athens by wi and it re- mains to beeen whether the threat of war is to have an effect upon this vigorous young republic of eighteen millions of people, which it failed to have over the decay- ing Spanish monarchy in 17: Marine.—U..S. Curren Asnore.—The govern- ment has at length been caught in one of its own traps. Ourcorrespondent at Conneaut, under date of the the ‘“Revenue Cutter on coming into our har- erday afternoon struck the bar and went ashore twenty rods above the west pior, and she will lay there until Government either makes or aban- dons our harbors. The schooner N. C. Baldwin struck on coming in last evening at 10 o’clock—carried away her rudder, drifted near the shore below the east pier, and lays in four feet water,with from one to two tect wa- terinthe hold. The Baldwin had on board about $5000 worth of merchandise, which is more or less damaged.” The arrival of six boats, including the Indiana, about which so many ridiculous stories were circulated, ena- bles us to give some farther details of the storm. The schooner Commodore left Cleveland for this port with a cargo of flour and wheat, but put back on Sunday in consequence of the blow from the east, and in going in struck the pier and sunk. We farther leara that the schocner Pilgrim, late Amazon, is ulso sunk at Milwau- kie. The under-writers on the cargo have intelligence to this effect, particulars not stated. Sho was recently rebuilt at Cleveland, and on her first trip. The brig Pre- ble, in making for this port last night, passed the North pier and drifted on the’ beach, Seti on A lighter is along side discharging her to-day, and she will soon be afloat in. The schooner ashore at Chagrin is sup- posed to be either the North America or late Girard, of Oswego. ‘The Aurora has gone to piece Thore is an insurance of $1200 on her, which fully i demnifies th The brig St. Louis is still on. er goes up onthe London to Monroe for The Bunker Hill remains er, in coming in yesterday af . nal boat culled the Empire State, which was laden with merchandize for the east, and sunk her. ‘The boat belongs to T. D. Waters, and was consigned principally to G. Of course the cargo was injured. Another boat filled with flour-ca- reened in the canal, and had to be discharged. The large amount of merchandize concentrated here | during the past week, is now in a fair way to reach its destination. A nu observed | ing port for the West with a fair wind, and three pro lors, with as many mers, are now taking on freight and will depart this evening, to be followed by others to- | morrow. | The Indiana was heavily laden with flour, and on cross- | ing Maumee bay, ruck the fragments of an old | te ‘igo, ie poke the and sprung aleak. Be- | fore the water was 8 1e und tier of bbls. got submerged Duffels tee, Noo. fe ee oe Oe Set | Siexs or Winter. ~In our immediate vicinity we have been favored with an absence of snow or very cold weather, while in different parts of the country, and expected, snow, hail and In Washington, Phila- west of wi Suuday) and the Butlale rob Varietiel. The Albuny Argus records the death of Philo K. Cole, formerly, and notil the last six months, for many | years Foreman inthe printing office of that establish- ment, and during the session of the legislature, Reporter for the Argus in the Senate. His death, which had heen | daily expected for the last fortnight, took place on Mon- | day at midnight. The Grand Jury of Hudson county, at the present term of the Courts now in session on Bergen Hill, have lature to prohibit Horse pass a law to protect Hudson county, : so much from the Beacon Course, from the nuisan The Grand Jury presented the petition to the Court (Chief Justice Hornblower presiding 2 on Wednesday morning, with a that it might be officially pre- tented to the Legislature at the next session in January. The Dansville Intelligencer states that trade on the North Branch, Pa., Canal, is quite brisk. At the Montour Iron Works the makingof the railroad ivon pro- ceeds with regularity and great despatch. George Wells, who pleaded guilty to an_indict- ment for an attempt to murder Lewis A. Hall, at Monroe, h., Was sentenced on Thursday last to imprisonment in the State prison a term of 20 years. Tirrell, the suspected Boston murderer, is suppo- ed to have made his way to the sea, and thus eluded the ursuit of the officers who were sent after him. Willliam C. Woodbridge, author of the modern school geography, and member of the Geographical So- Cleties of Paris, Frankfort and Berlin, died at Boston on Sunday last, aged 50. * ‘The Harvatd street Baptist church and Society of Beston, have invited Rev. ‘T. F. Caldicott, of Roxbury, to be their pastor. The Rev. ged deel AD of this sity, the Reformed Protestant Dutch church, Buffalo, on Tuesday evening. The Rev. Mr. Dowling, of this city, Wednesday evening in the Pearl street B Albany. At the opening of the United States Cireuit Court, Boston, on Tuesday morning, the jury returned a ver- preached in ashington st., preached on japtist church, Pdict of ‘not guilty, inthe case of the U. S. against South- worth and Leonard, of West Springfield, who were char- ged with having violated the post-office law, in convey- ing letters out of the mail, between Springfield and ‘est Springfield. és Dilton Braham, of Madison, N. Y., charged with poisoning his wife a few days before marrying another, was caught in Wisconson, and arrived at Madison last week, where he was committed to await his trial. The Hon. Cherles H. Carroll was sericusly injur- ed by the upsetting of a stage near Wooster, Ohio, about aweek since, He is now inthis city ; but isstill so much indisposed that it is feared he will not be able to be at Washington at the opening of the seasion. The in- jury is a severe cut on the head.—Rechester Democrat. A scow loaded with 400 barrels of flour, belong- ing, we understand, to M Walbridge, Hayden & Co, sunk in the harbor early yesterday morning, or on Sun- day night. ‘The flour has been recovered, somewhat da- maged of course.—Buffalo Pilot, Nov. 11. Capt Fremont states that on reaching the highest summit of the Rocky Mountains, which is 14.500 feet above the Gulf of Mexico, he found acommon humble bee in the icy region, which he captured. It is the high- est flight of the bee ever known. The Galveston Civilian denies, on authority‘ that M. Saligny, the French Charge to Texas, has been re- called. M.S., it is stated, intends to remain some time longer in America, and to make a final visit to Texas be- fore his return home Park Benjamin, Esq. is announced as having ar- rived in Baltimore, where he takes up his permanent abode. He is about to take the editorship of a new lite- rary paper there, Orders have been received by the « Quarter Mas- ter at Fort Gibson,to locate the new fort on the hill,a few hundred yards above the present quarters. The work is to be commenced immediately. The Secretary of the Navy, it is said, has order- ed the immediate discontinuance of the naval apprentice system. ‘The cause of this sudden movement is not as yet public, The small pox, it is said, is causing some alarm in Pittsburgh. The Post calls upon the city authorities to take measures to stay its further spread. The execution of Andrew Howard, which was to have taken place at Dover, N.H, on Wednesday, has been respited till the 8th of July next. ARRAIGNMENTS ¥oR Murver anp Arson.—In the Supreme Court on Tuesday, Dr. Martin L. Peters was arraigned upon an indictment charging him with the murder of Catherine Ruthford, single woman, by ad. ministering to her drugs, &c,, for the Purpose of procu- ring abortion. He pleaded not guilty. In July, 1844, while the deceased was on her dying bed at the hospital at South Boston, N.C. Betton, Esq, was a) intel to take her dying declaration, and he notified Peters, who attendedat her examination. She conld not call him by name, but identified his person. Before Mr. B. could put to her all the questions he intended, she died, and that night Peters fled, and wandered about the country for a year; but finding the life of a fugitive, in constant alarm, utterly pep ae aS he, about two months ago, surren- dered himself to the legal authorities; and has since been in Leverett street jail. Since the indictment was returned against Peters, the legislature have changed the punishment for such an offence, and it is no longer capi- tal. By act of 1845, chap. 27, if the woman die in conse- quence of the attempt to cause premature confinement, the party charged may be imprisoned from five to twent: years in the State prison; if she do not die, then impri- Sonment from one to seven years in the State prison, house of correction, or jail, and a fine not exceeding $2000. R. Choate and J, C. Park were pepeinten counsel for Peters, Next was arraigned Edmund Hollagan, for setting fire to Albert H. Chase’s house in Blossom street, in the night time. He pleaded not guilty. P,S. Whee- lock was assigned as oounsel for the prisoner,and senior counsel will be selected hereafter. A question will arise whether the stairs which were set on fire, being outside, were a part of the dwelling house. Chief Justice Shaw stated that the whole court could not be convened for the trial of these capital cases until about three weeks, and that notice would be on of the assignment of a day for the trials.—Boston Post. American Frour.—It is_asserted, by one of the most eminent bakers in London, that American flour will absorb from 8 to 10 per cent more of its own weight of water in manufacturing it into bread or bi cuit, than the English wheat. Mrs. Rundell states in her “ Domestic Cookery,” that while 14 lbs. of Ameri- flour will make 21} Ibs. bread, the same quantity of glish flour will produce but 18} lbs. We have nu- merous specimogs of English and American whent of imilar varieties, and the Singlish is almost invariably a larger and plumper berry ‘than the American. We at- tribute this to the longer time required for ripeni ng in that cooler, damper climate, by which it absorbs and re- tains a larger quantity of water. Ours, on the contrary, in ripening under a ary, hot sun, evaporates a larger Proportion of water,and leaves the farina in a more con- densed state ;and when eepoud again to moisture in cooling it absorbs the additional ane, above stated. This is an important fact, of which the dealer and con- sumer should be fully aware. We see our Southern friends claim this quality exclusively for their own wheat, which is doubtless true in part, but not wholly in comparison with English. It is a well known and long established principle, other things being equsl, that a warm and dry climate gives a richer grain than a cold moist one.—Toronto (Canada) Herald. _ Discovery or THE Magnetic Po.es.—The Cin- cinnati Chronicle, of Thursday, has the followi A scientific gentle an, Who was present at Dr. Loc! lecture on Monday evening, says it was remarkably in- teresting. The subject was electro magnetism, heat, and their kindred topics. Among other things he men- tioned the discoveries he had made and the facts accumu- lated in regard to the magnetic poles, and the line of greatest intensity. Thishas been a subject of examina- tion with him for several years. He considers now that the magnetic poles are discovered—at least their im- modiate locality. His views on this subject have been confirmed by other observers. One of the magnetic poles is in Siberia and another in the Northern part of America. The line of greatest intensity is near the shores of Lake Superior. Tne Cana anp River Trape.—It is really a sight to take a walk to the basin and see the canal craft coming in loaded with flour, Every kind of boat has been forced into flour carrying—from the old-fashioned lumber scow to the fine line boat. The holds are not only crammed, but the decks are piled up to the utmost with flour. ‘The recent snow in the western pai State, has forced line. Forwarde more of canal navigation. creates a correspon Ig ntivity. on the river. boats go to New York loaded down alm er. Sloops, schooners and scows are the utmost, and still the cry is for more. ‘The recent rise in produce ted a business beyond the most san- | guine anticipations.—Jtbany Argus, Nov. 13. | Mr. Catnoun.— This gentleman reached Mobile on the 4th instant, on board the H. Kinney. From the wharf he was conducted to his rooms at the Man- sion House, where, at one o'clock, he was waited upon His honor the Mayor dering him, in be- nd inviting’ him to | le a feeling and ap- | there for New Or- | Memphis Convention. | propriate rep Loans on the 6th, —Mobile Herald. Sreamnoat Acctognt.—The steamboat Santa | Claus rao hard aground in Kingston Creek, on | Monday night, and careened over, so that one of her guards was un About fifty head of cattle which were on the forward deck,were driven overboard, before she could be right ‘was so low that the cattle had no difficult; th ore; | Anornen.—The North Americ: been forced to | ed her piston. The Rochester is | lay running in her pla Piymovra Raitroav.—A short section of this | new road running over Tirrell’s Swamp, in Wey- | mouth, sunk on Monday, and the rails for about fifty feet | disapp A strong force is now at work rej 3 a air | the breach, which it is suid will be completed so ‘hat the | trains will pass over ites usual. M.C, Paterson, re: ce—John F. placed on trial for ca West street, bet by carrying on the busines: From the opening of the ae ts of houses adjoining the found ropert occupants of houses adjoining the foundry, Ure the complainants in the case. J. H. Dx Fon ‘on being called and sworn, testified as follows—I reside at No. 101 North Moore street; the foundry of Rodman & Belden joins my yard, and in the same block; the defendants carry on the mbeat build- ing and ixon casting; the workmen make a great di nolse; they have a furnace for the purpose of casting ma- chinery; tne smoke comes into our house when the wind blows from a certain quarter; in the month of August a person from the country, on a visit to my family, w obliged to leave us on account of the smok have been set on fire by the syeten procee: | furnace; they sometimes work on Sundays, and some- times all night. Mr. Pascu—There is no allegation of any noise at all in the indictment, but describes the existence of a dis- agreeable smoke and unwholesome smell. Cross-ezamined by Mr. Paice.—1 cannot say that there isany nauseous or unwholesome smell; | bought seven lots there some years ago, and built on two of them; the West Point foundry was there before I put any buildings there; I have’a stable near by, but there is no disagri able smell azising from it; there is also a public stable near by; there is i cowise a lard and oil factory in the same block; I do not call the lard and oil factory a nui- sance; I am fond of the smell of oil; when the wind blows from the northwest, the smoke from Coffee’s feun- dry comes o1 our ho here are six houses in the block in which my own is situated; | have said that if I did not beat the defendants in this Court, | would sue them for private damages; the building now used by the defendants was formerly used as a pot ash factory; there are four iron found! ii immediate vicinity of my house; the sparks it after falling from the chimney. : Rev Mr Stax sworn—My dwelling house is about forty or fitty feet from the foundry +f Rodman & Belden; the chimneys are so low that the smoke comes Into the house when the windows are open; | consider that my house is sometimes in danger from the sparks; on Mon- day evening some leaves in the yard were set on fire by the spark jing a nuisance in iron founders, kc. e on the part of the prose- Thave never been inthe foundry; I do not know what they burnin the furnace; I believe the sparks proceed from wood fires. SamvgL Wene sworn: live at 99 North Moore street; the rear of my building is close to the foundry; my fami- lyis annoyed by the noise and sparks proceeding from the foundry; a servant of mine had a dress burnt by sparks which had fallen upon it; a man at work for me put out the fire; when the engine in the foundry is go- ing, it shakes my house. womas Grit sworn—One day while at work for Mr. Webb at his house, smoke came into the window so that obliged to shut the windows; on another occasion I discovereda n fire, which I put out; I did not see the cinders that set it on fire. “ Patnicn Fanneut sworn—I am employed in Mr. Clark’s livery stable, near the foundry of Rodman & Belden; the sme annovs me sometimes; I do not know that I have ever seen sparke coming from the foundry noyed by unpleasant odors arising from the livery stable sometime: Isaac Foster sworn—I live in North Moore street, near the foundry; the house is sometimes filled with smoke, and on that account I have to keep the windows closed; I have got my house covered with tin, so that it cannot take fire; [ am not annoyed with any odors from the foundry; the noise of the workmen at the foundry is sometimes continued late at night, but g caged ato] work by about 6 o'clock; other foundries get throug! about 6. James Ciarx, sworn.—I am the proprietor of a livery stable, situated in the vicinity of the foundry; when the wind blows from the westward, smoke comes into the stablo; I never saw any sparks fall into my stable. ‘The prosecution having rested, ‘Wm. M. Price, Esq.,rose and opened the case on the part of the defence; in the course of which he remarked, that the defendants were young men who had but re- cently embarked in the business—that they had leased the premises for a period of five years—-that they had ex- pended considerable money in fitting up the establish- ment, and the consequence of a conviction must be a to- tal destruction of their business; and further, that the Court, in case ofa conviction, had power to inflict a fine and imprisonment for the offence. He, theretore, desired to proceed with caution in the matter. In the first place, then, in the small s; ofa block, in which this alleged nuisance is situated, we find four foundries, a lum| yard, and an oil and lard factory. Mr. Price then pro- ceeded to inquire what constituted a nuisance—whether a blacksmith’s shop, a tallow chandlery, or a butcher's shop were not nuisances? A carpenter’s shop had been indicted as nuisance, as also had e coal yard. Why, gentlemen, said he, look through the city, and take away everything that may more or less annoy one or another, and where is your city ? a city made of mere tinsel—the inew of the city would be gone. Ifthe people he air as pure as the God of ifeaven made it, retire to thoir iSite whe 3 pring ie re = cannot have suc! sings. In , Benjamin Prescott was indicted and tried before Judge Bradford, for setting up a distillery, the operation of which, it was alleged, rendered the air impure, and where do you think it was situated Wh it was in Broadway, near White street, case, Dr Mitchell stated, on thatin accordarce with his sances more mentioned a blacksmith’s shop and a potte ing of that character. i Price then went on to explain the difference be- | tween a public nuisance and a private nuisance, and con- tended that the present case was a private nuisance, and that the complainants ought to seek redress in the proper court. In illustration of this position, he referred to a case in which some students at law, hg) 2 hem chambers in Clifford’s Inn, prosecuted a tinman for brag loa by the sound of his hammer and other implements used b; hi jeged that they were unable to pursue their studies, in consequence ofthe noise made by the tinman; | and Lord Ellenborough decided that it was not a public | nuisance, as set forth, butfa private one, and that the in- | dictment could not be sustained, and the accused was ac- | cordingly acquitted. Anumber of highly res) called for the defence. caution was taken in conducting the foundry of the de- fendants; that the defendants, with a view of removing all cause of complaint of those residing near the foundry, had caused the chimneys to be built much higher, in or- derto carry the smoke over their premises; that wood gras necessarily used every afternoon for the purpose o! ectable witnesses were then algo that in caso of an accident to a boat, they occasion ally worked until a late hour for the purpose of repair. ing damages, and sometimes they were led to work on the Sabbath, when it was a work of apparent necessity. Mr. Pa then made a brief, but very able and elo- quent appeal to the Jury in behalf of his clients. He was followed by the District Attorney on the pa of the prosecution. The Recorder then explained with great clearness, the peculiar features of public and pri- vate nuisagces,and the points of law as applicable to the case, after which the subject was submitted to,the jury, who, after wbrief absence, rendered a verdict of not uilty. hl for. Libel—Michael Walsh was then put on his ra libel on John Horspool, published in a newspa- e Subterranean, of which the accused was, the time, editor and proprietor. | The alleged libel set forth that Mr. Horspool had been in the habit of lettin, furniture out to females of bad character, by which | means he had accumulated a large fortune. The case had not been brought toa close before the Court adjourn- ed until to-morrow morning. Case of Polly Bodine. Circuit Court. Before Judge Edmonds Nov. 13,—The Court met at the us prisoner took her much Th I hour, and the at near her counsel, looking very | dejected and worn. : : e Count remarked, that the apparent impossibility a jury who would be competent to try the | laced him to gome to such conclusion. Inmak- | such a suggestion, he felt that he rendered him: liable to the imputation of w roe of that, he coul but independen ; L not ing it as his opinion that ‘an impartial jury could not obtained, w! they were men of adamantine mii Four days had already been occupied in the proc ings, and over 200 jurors had been examined, and y: they had been able to ob’ but three who we tent to sit and hear the case. It was suggested on. part of the defence that a could be obtained; and, that further delay wou! tal to the prisoner. A large number of absentees we fined during the day in asum of $25 each, and som: 400 in addition to those already summoned, served for this (Friday) forenoon. The Court adjourned { at an early hour, not being able to succeed in procuring a single juror. Jury be fi Superior Court. Before Judge Vanderpo hey testified that the utmost | fore the Recorder and with the following notes of the journe » District Attorney. | yeDonald, Esq., from the Celumbia Riv: an and Horace yince. He was Chief Factor to the Hu h. and North Moore streets, | children. y peared that three or four persons, owners of | grrivedat Roat Encampment, near the head of naviga. | is about 500 bb! | the forwarding merchant in whose warehouse the | Inrgrestinc Tour.—A iriend has Frrasbod ue y of Archi! to thi and was accom| by his wife On the 28rd of September, in last y y left Fort Caldwell, onthe Columbia, 500 miles Pint trom’ the Pacific. On the 10th of October 1 pany, tion, 500 miles, They then crossed over to the McKenzie’s River—the great northern outlet, th: charges intothe Frozen Ocean—where they arrived on the 26th. On the 4th of November they embarked, but being frozen in, they were obliged to take dogs and sleighs for Fort Asiniboe, where they arrived the 4th of December—190 miles. On the 10th they arrived at Fort Edmunton, on the Sackatchawan River—100 's— where the whole party remained until the 5th of June. ‘The last named river flows into the Nelson River, which discharges intothe Hudson Bay. Leaving th inte! quarters,they proceeded to Fort Garry, Red River settle- ment—600 miles. Arrived at Fort Alexander, at the mouth of the Wini River, 60 miles, on the lst of August; and at Lac lean, (Rainy Lake) on the 17th— 200 miles. Passing through the Lake of the Woods, they crossed the 49th deg. of north latitude, (the Ameri- can boundary) over 47 portages, they arrived at Fort William, on Lake Superior, on the Ist of September— 200 miles. Over the Grand Portage, Mill Lacky, or One Thousand Lakes, (where about half way the water descends iuto the St. Lawrence,) and travel ake Superior in boats, they arrived at Sault St.Mary on the ef September—making in all 2,850 miles. Mrs. McDonald was confineed on the Sere they had the misfortune to lose three of their children by death—thus reducing the number to six. In this extensive region fine fields of discovery offer to the enterprising travel- le most,interesting objects seen in the journey Tl wasalake called the Council Punch Bowl, and Mounts Hooker and Brown, in latitude 52 north. The first is 000 feet above the level of the ocean, and out of one ream flows which discharges in the Columbia, into the Pacific, and from the other side one that and empties into McKenzie’s River,and so on into the Frozen lake two mountains shoot their 000 feet above the ocean level— t in Europe. ithe Ocea: Above thir towering pinnacles v higher than Mount Blanc, the lofti name of Mount Brown is connected one whose fate in the Sandwich Islands, renders and ascent of it a matter of melancholy interest. The other was ascended to the height of 2000 feet by David Douglas, celebrated for his skill in botany (higher than reached’ by any other individual,) who gave it the name of his patron and employer, Professor Hooker of Glasgow, both covered with perpetual snow.— St. Catha- vines, C. 'W., Jow nal. Extensive Fiourine Mitt. mee meen Mills” property in this city, embraces about seven tue acl this the corporation limits, at the foot of thi of James River. On it have been erected ex- tensive Nail Works, not now in operation; a Screw Factory and Machine Sh uilt of brick, 40 by 100 feet, 3 stories high; a Corn Mill, with two pair of stones ; a Woollen Mill, about to commence operations, 45 by 120 teet, 4 stories high, built of brick, in @ very substantial manner, and will contain six sets of machinery for the manufacture of flannels; a brick building, 40 feet by 40, {stories high, about to be applied to the manufacture of Cotton Yarn; a Saw Mill, working three saws; anda Flour Mill, 66 by 80, four stories high, besides two in the attic, built of brick, in the most substantial manner. in 1831 82, and contains eighteen pair 54 feet burr stoves and three pair of burr rubbers—the gearing and of iron—and is capable, {when required, of turning out 700 bbls. of flour per diem of twenty-four hours. In the month of August last, this Mill manufactured 4,000 bbls. of flour in six days and five nights. Its usual production Sa: flour per diem. A store house for wheat and flour, 70 feet front, and in all other oerents similar in size and construction to the flour mill, stands 70ffeet from it, forms a part of the establishment, and is connected with it from the centre of each by a in the roof of which a conveyor carries the wheat wanted to the mill, and an inclined plane returns it inthe form of flour packed in barrels. The: reral Mills are propelled by wheels, nearly all overshot, of 18 feet he five attached to the Flour Mill are 18 feet diameter and 14} feet wide. on this property for the erection of Cotton Mills, as manufactures of this description may progress in this city; the whole supplied with water by. a canal of about 600 yards in length, which is a part of the property. The flour made at these Mills bears the brand “Haxall—Columbia,” is nearly all shipped to the South American markets, and stands ashigh asany flour in that important trade.—Richmond Peper. Bopy SnarcHine in On1o.—A great excitement as for a week or more existed at Painesville, Ohio, and throughout the Western Reserve, by the dis- covery of an extensive system of body-snatching which tas been carried on in that region. It seems, according to the story told by a correspondent of the Lowell Courier, who writes from the focus of this excitement, that a cer- tain doctor in Ashtabula county, had nicely packed two or three bodies in boxes, and deposited in « warehouse in Ashtabula, directed to T. Sherwood, C! erie be intended for hed Cleveland wise vote lege. The boxes were suspected before they we: ipped, broken open, and the bedies recognised as those recently interred from highly respectable families ina neighbor- ing town, and one of them asthe patient of the afore- mentioned doctor. A tremendous excitement was raised te Doctor fled instanter to Cleveland, and the whole community was in a most magnificent state of hullabul- loo. An indictment has been found by the jary against the Doctor, and also, in the excitement, et 8 "Afew days after this, a public meeting was called at Painesville, at which a long list of awfully imposing resolutions was passed. In some of the adja- cent counties, also, bodies have been raised and c: off. More Murper.—On Friday might last, as Te- kunna, his wife, and aman whose name we have were found. | not learned, were returning home from Evansville, pass- ing through a prairie about four miles on this side of that place, were fired upon by a couple of men in ambush. ne of them was shot through and killed dead on the spot, being at the time so near that he was considerably burnt with the powder, They then fired twice upon the other man, but missingjboth times, rushed at him, and as he fled, stabbed him nearly through from the left side of the back, just below the ribs. returned the fire, and made his escape ; but is so severely wounded it is thought he cannot long survive. The devils incarnate who committed this fiendish, cowardly deed, are at pre- sent not known. — Cherokee dv. Oct. 30. (igniting the fires of anthracite coal in the furnaces, and | |R Freaks or Mittertsm.—Some strange scenes | have recently been acted at Gill, Massachusets, by | the followers of the Millerite delusion. A man named _ Miller, who had sacrificed his et arid had become de- | mented in the cause, was persuaded into the belief that the sins of the other disciples could be transferred to him, and after some silly process, it was pretended that this was done, when two powerful brethren, under pre- tence of driving out the sins thus accumulated upon his ™y head, began to beat him, and they bruised his head and face literally black and blue, all which he bore with | martyr-like submission. The farce was ended b: interference of the citizens of the town, who bro! thefanatical camp. Damaces For INFRINGING a Parent.—In the case | ™ of Hovey vs. Henry, in the U. S. Circuit Court, Boston, on Wednesday, the jury returned a verdict for ie tiff, and assess The case the damages at $350. T ocks and Canals Corpora: 4. The property in dispute is even acres of land, near the centre of than M. Ri next coi i tion somet Lowell. hos been tried twice in the Supret Court of this State, and the verdicts, which were for tl plaintiff, set aside on points oflaw, the | 5; y. chased a bott! up! RUSE: itaperatee tke, nen ‘ | over his eyes, and seems to have no dispos Anti-Renters in Prison.—From Mr. Cook, su- perintendent of the Northern Prison, we learn that Boughtor is well, and has been engaged since his con- finement in taking care of two sick convicts. Earle, of Delaware, sits “pouting” all day, with his cap drawn ion to _be- come reconciled to his fate. The rest of the Indians have conducted themselves very well, and perform their work cheerfully” : wot Aes. t EMOVAL of Warerooms to 281 ray, in Granite Buildwg, cor Chambers st—J. F. BROWNE. offers for sale, nt 281 way, an elegant assortment of double aud zle action Harps. ¢ tich brilliancy of tone, lightn touch, perfeet_mechanisza and elegant finish of these are unequalled. Warranted to bear the test of climate, and at Eu- Topean prices, ‘The attention ‘of ‘merchants, and the musics! is. world geuerally, re larly dered ire ustruction Books, 5 on sat a 4 i WNE & CO, (From ard.) London and New York, established 1610 ‘Phe first pro festion- fu Certainly the finest, al talent we have prefer these "Ctr Browne’ harps.ate by fac the most magnificent ina Mr. Browne's harps.are by far the ments we ever ‘aw. ‘Throwh his perfect knowledge ofthe i strument he has effected many importsut improvements in the mechanical department, and in the tone there js an ex i- Fhe piles hile ff yet ete} harps to all others,—: dary addition of sweetness, purity and power. ‘are f i iy carved and gilded, re cleganly shaped and foished.—Broadway ournal e Ht, 1845. im Dee W* ree A. DODWORTH’S DANCING SCHOOL. LLEN DODWORTH would beg leave to inform his A friends, that it is hus intention, to comm<nce a Private at his residence, Dapafternoom, Get. 20th: Krom hi jroome street, on Mon- I long counexi sn with the Daneing world, aud having from the best masters that fed himself of i- structions Paul Taglioni, and others of e visited thi copatry ~-saah an like celebrity—he feel sit he is ified to, teach as any in the city; and his musical ill certainly, im a great advantage over many aoe pw herb may, those who fa- wit i patronage ean rely. tpon sequiring a correct and fashionable style of Dope a 8. A Siteet of M6 Leer ns, including tho Quadrille, Watts Po Ten Lessons ia the - 50 Days and Hours o; Tuition. Qn Monday and ys, at 3 o'clock, for Ladies and On Wednesday tnd Beturday, at 9 o'clock, for Misses and Boys under 12 Years of axe tre raday and Saturday, for Gen- te, at eck nil be formed from 9 to 10, for those who cannotattend earlier. Pri hours, either at the resi- the papi orat the school. z o2i Im*re Nov. Poeeethanay pe seme © se, already fre. | PIANO FORTES FOR He tut B ie a states. juen not i" ¢ d ent . Verdict to-morrow. es wo ‘on han ‘Bi exten! Rye senor | incladiag. and Cabinets, Bere aug lige | Gold eet the Amereun Insti efore Judge In; am. e - rf 7 > ; Nano Fortes. NV ‘Organ with four in good con- Nov. 13.—Miller vs, Coffee—This case, already no- | tiano Fortes. tops, in good con | ced, stands adjourned over to this forenoon, dito nial fx sual Share Pee ey tae ‘West lith st. near 6th avenue. 16 Im*rre CONSUMPTIVES READ. PRE VEGETABLE COUGH SYRUP, or Pulmonic Balsam!—Read Leas ree ay tel, 1806 Dear Sir—Thanknnens thd range induce me Mr, Peek—De _ yey i valua ble Cov cough, atten ith symaprone ‘so violent as seriously to alarm Neath nee le | load cost eae inees green. destruction com i 1 rae ac ernd eaperieneiug wo relie{ irom the usual remedies,my indaced, by y: our solicitation. to administer your ny ‘was aston- broke up my all the alarm- 7 and the effect it and completely healed the soreness 01 the chest, bani ptoms, and has le jent appetite and complet 0 cou af may refer any one who wishes , at the Mate effects, to my husband, al Peet eh store, ‘Ne Scie No. 160 Nassau street ape and sold wholesate and retail, by onset n street and 117 Greenwich ‘Agents—Coddington, corner Grand and Norfolk 9 Or Pree Ford, Four hy avd Wooster streets; ‘Hub! 4; Mountain, Fulto. street, Brooklyn ‘Prive 75 cents per bottle. » Bi Ww Y.

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