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NeW YORK HERALD. JANES GOKPDOVEA BENS ETS, PROPAIBTOR aN BDLTOR, FOLION sND NASSAT SPS. DALY HERALD, 3 vente per copy 7 asta. WEEKLY thm, fevery Saturday, at 5% conde per $5 per unnum ; the Kuropean editsnn, 84 per anetion, art of Creat Urkatas and $3 t0any pert of the Cont Lude the po to ny 2 mest, both t oy At LETTERS by be post-paid, rote OUMESPONDENTR ARB 0 Seat act LETTERS AND Paom aces prnv to AMUSEMENTS THIS RVENING. BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery—Hawues—Tam Winanp Sree. BROADWAY THEATRE, Sroadwoy—Vitiace TaLw— Poun Pusieonry oy—JRANSATT AND JRAN- NIKLO'S GARDEN Rroad nor—OvEiNE— Ue beN MOneren, BUCTON'S THEATRE, Chambers street— May ano Woe —Cuinson cara, NATIONAL ov The MarKe FATRE, Chatham 8q Lance ar Sew Yorum *DRISTY’S OP AOUSE, Mechanics’ Rall—Ermovs- aw Wiser ntay, RA OLYMPIC—Pri.ows' Briuevtas Orena Trovre AMERIOAN MUSEUM-—asustwe PRRvORMANCES Ar- SHEET, 29, 18: eINERVA RO New York, Tue: Gay, Octo Cacada, da at Halifax, we contiining a fal synopsis o ys later than that received on Suuday. la American stocks, an ng tendency is reported. With respect to the advices are, on the whole, favorable Arriva! of the f the Ca Ye By th have te intellig news, three adven on that mencedon the fourteenth ef the month hes passed away, the « Is are those of the Bishop of Toronto, Whose voyoges are net unfrequeat across nd of Nathalie Fitajunes, who is Astor Place O era House. preesely w mMportaat, perhe ps, startling, as our previous advices hud prepared us for the principal eveat. The interference of Ru i Gagtaud in the Ger manic difficulty had been announced, and the ques: | tion will now arise us to the result of their interpo- sition. Pr sod Anstria are in a curios confi. | tien, und there will be some interest te know how the me some Palmerston end the ambitious Caar, ® Fy future of the German con- fe Ler news is aot important. Fraace pre, enia themee for conjecture. We should be scarce. y jw ak he face of tbe telegraphic dee r ita opr » Wilh respect to the dis- etre 1 te ¢ is a disposition to prolong t sident. Sacha calm pertende i irsted. Stitt we mus, Cy,cnt Meeting at Castle Garden tin favor fthe Uniow and the Constitation.What Whi ee « ard done, day's paper will be fowod 4g, which is to be held w eveni.g, ia favor of titution, and against aati- ions. Sone four or tive d@ to it, consisting of \, avd patriotic portion cf wil classes in society, and of all ne Me » ten thousand sigua, © hove been collected in this city rity With Whieb they were enthe m which has beea mani- » it is evident that the list could be ¢ y elied to twenty thonsand men haviog this metropolis, aud to one handred aad it the Stat sition to alt vs hat letters have t ed to many of a written most diss me oe exter w thronghout the count, to ¢ oe sion vD may mention the Hoa eator Diek vrwin, & bud over Amer them we Webster, Se of New Vo ot the Tr ver weadivg m whose have we leara O'Cover, E Lor and many others, How mauy v dur veniog t trong found on wh the pu in fever of the Une sea names F immediat Gerard, Daved otye vieiai news | Caitiog, «T. Beady, Joho M also pradably be invit + eaonot tell, bat there ad patriotic aye ce F. Clark, J ad reac the whole to the corrupt treason old pur mean what thet the 4 reerot bowl t in this, vely, bigs aud the pized wud ve sed, thro ern , have stimulated, ¢ ted, fj eprerd doetiiues and princivles sab: fthe « vd the governuy t woh all law and order, and wided, as- des ime © c d ithe breaking ap of this fair aod great republic, i aad comm cial ret aud «+ don't Whether ourt able or not dupgerour, War ¢ wenoed tu this region about a qtarter of & century ayo, and has raged with more or les end embraced a greater of less cit evit ir police, t ay 1 in social affaira, to ghe present time. | venced ia the eresede which We soctate de ere began in whieh that be- neficient institution w h heraace ef a political party. Swce thea it has takea a wide ropge, ond embraced the abolition of slave- ry, tution of the moerital tie, and of the | motrioge ecremony, the placing of women ona re al equality with menj it hes also em, br ad rocialtem, tiem, communism, a® | foviationiom, wemia’s rights ce na, ia- | fidelity, bi my, agrariasiem, aatireation, | esinval mage 1, bivlogy, epititaal kaoek | ings, and impostors of every other kiad aad iption—fer full par slare of whieh, we our teadere to the colamas of that choice shee New York Trebune. At the conventions, aal meetings, sad aaniwersaries Of those pevedo reformers, but real eharletane, etotiments the most unboly, irreligions, ob scene, tevolutionary aul disgusting, ate from time to time uttered, which would alarost incline the moralist ond philosopher to be- lieve that the world had been to Ssten, and that the Prioce imited sway over it. It was only the «y that the socittion, at toeir fifty eeut t +t, ia Hoboken, asseried the the gutllotne in our mie od Gharay tarned over of Durkaess ne ce Bes ee eats wee sy etre , While we are ine | ciety. It was but ashort time since it was put to vole whether the Saviour wes or not more than men. Ovr columns, a day or twosince, contained a rejort of a woman’s rights conventioa, at which women ucsexed themselves, and behaved | wy a most disgusting maveer; tore the the breeches | off the men, and enea ed their owa Knubs with | These free and independent reformers, in », Wish to grasp the prerogatives which them. pettic Nature herselt has conferred on manhood, as the | infidels wont to clutch, with their sacrilegeous | hondes, the thunderbolts of Jove—the very omnipo- | texce of Heaven. Is it net dine, therefore, for the conservative periion of society to arouse, and avert the danger, which, like on irresistible torrent, threatens to sweep into the gulf of destruction all that is good, to corrupt the youthful mind, pervert the nature of men, and overturn all the social, religious, and politics! landmarks, which distinguish civuization | from barbarism, and christianity from paganism? | This new movement, springing as it does, from | the moral susceptibilities of the people, will be di- | rected immediately to the anti-slavery agitation, | } Which is an Ci. hoot of the system of infidel social- ism, to which we have referred, and mediately to allothers, [twill be a grand and sublime awaken- ing ef a portion of the community who have too | lovg remained ewpiae end passe in the midst of the storm which raged around them, to a sense of the duty they owe their country, its consti- tution, themsel rs, and their God. It will, we in stopping the torrent of fanati- cisin aad destructiveness, which, under tae garb of phileothropy, threatens the annihilation of all that good men hold dear, and that it will not be cor- | fined to New Verk, but will extend its happy infla- | ence to the whole North. What will be done at this meeting which,is to | be held te-morrow evening—practically or theo- retically—in relotion the present condition of The ostensible purpose is to expreas, ia | the strongest terms, the epposition of the virtuous and petrietic portion of the community, to any fur- ther agitation of the anti-slavery question. The gntleen connected with it msy not make any | seperate ticket to be supported by the people et the next election, or put forward any special | men as candidates at this time. The principles | | end sentiments that will, in all probability be avow- ed, end the resolutions that will be adopted, will | cient chart to garde all who ure in favor of the object of the movement, ia the selection of | cendidates in the present crisis. There can, for | nstance, be ne doubt that ull who entertain such | | sentiments as those of Seward and his co-dema- gogues should be opposed to the death, and on the ether hand, there can be as little doubt that such | | as approve of the just aud patriotic views of Mr Liekinson, Senator from this State, and of the policy which he pursued, ia company with Clay, Webster and Cass, during the last eessioa of Coa- | gress, ere eminently entitted to ard worthy of their tuflrages and support, € r directly or indirectly h » en es ave named on either of the old party | lickets, whig or demoeratic, who have beea or are H identitied with the aati slavery agitation, or who wey be connected with it hereafter, ought to be nerked and remembered by all who understand the object of the meeting. The intelligent miad can easily make celections, and no one need be be a suf in‘cimed that the triumph of the whole whig State tieket, nominated, os it has been, uader such peculiar and impertent circumstances, would be a biow at the Usion and the censtitution which perhops they mght never recover from, and that the defeat of the Sewsrdites.would put a stop to the further progress of the anti-slavery agitation, | end help to duect parties ina better path here- efter, | But the city ticket, as well as the State ticket, thould reecive some attention from the parties who have cootributed their personal and moral id to give influence to thia move meat, and it is to be hoped that it will be marked by the The anti- diverimination as the other. itation, which has given p @ movements in the State, y when we look r the cel groued in this city; but there are destructive influences at work bere, as weil asin the Stat same slavery the oy neate, wiieb afleet both the old parties, more or less The manner in which many of primary clee- Love are conducted, by both parties, has long been laict and sorrow to the iatelli- ! portion of the community in this Rowdyism, corrapt bribery, stool- | eoce of every kind, d as inetraments in getting up © purpose of nominating candi- y uulitand incompetent to oc- offices tor whieh they are named, and voworthy of the euflrages of the inlelligent people of The democrats are mot more guilty t than the whige, and the evils of which we epenk bave been echnowledged by the ns of both, to the fullest extent. They have ineteasing for years past, and have now et point ef ctiminal developement. et of cow a mo who are whe y the been reached ne high lo fact, p be pot put to thegn, and the preti- winaty movements counceted with our electioas be condneted as they have been for ec years pest, Weweuld not be at all surprived to see, at some fhture time, committees appointed to nomi- pete only such men os have graduated ia our State i or penitentiaries, or make it necessary to - th ed aye abri bring back, for the purpose of receiving the euffrazes of the people ot New Youk, such men as Thomas Warner, and there of his stamp, to fill high judicial situations, he character of some of the nominations made at the 5 ry elections, by the whiga and democrats, is equelly bad disereds tw party that ce them, and tothe commuaity that tolerate able t not time, therefore, for the great Yew York, ho mass of the now about to con set their faces against of all kinds, which have Jed the accion of our no- ligent peoy te in Certle Ars prsteon entions of both partiesin this eity ? c by resolu'ion should be taken by the to be held tomerrow event the state sVatmotphere and party poli ia the Bivadway Houee, a8 wellas ia Tammany Hall. | There evils neve increased so mach of late that it high time for them to be reformed. The p ol State end city abke want reform. Wasnimeton ont asp tan Anti-Rewters.— Washirgtou Hunt, apart from the political position | which he now holds before che people of this Sate, e life, avery worthy end excellent man. Ws, there ie no one whom we | would soone elected Governor of thia Stan then W on Hoat; but bis previous character | or hie private relotions ought not to weigh a feathel ion which he now oe: eutitive of a 2 this State. [1 this ia in the . is, in priv On ordinary o¢ n the importance of the p pies aa the candidate ond rey ’ t dang rove iofnence would creete 1 disorders ia » dangerous ecitation throagbout tt ‘ He is the candidate and repte tative of the Seward Syracuse Abolition con- vention, end m that haht, whatever his metits may be in ovber reepeeta, he ought to be opposed by every friend of the Union and the constitution. Ip relation to his connection with antiteatism, we | have /@O® certain telegraphic deepatehes to thy ef fect ther we hae refased the noreioatioa tendered to hire by that party, but that nomination and his re- {neal ere coupled with so mach suspicion and dowbt, es to render both anything but creditable to the parties concerned. The celedritted Big Than- der eteted in a speech the other day, that Wash- ington Liant wae a true friead of the anti-reaters, end bad bled freely for the eapport of the aati rent ap at Albony. If this is the case, Mr Mant eee stards in tucher en cqnivoesl position before the comm aity. Acide from this, however, he mast te vod egeinst by ell friends of the Usion and Cvesuiktas ’ pr NR EE RE RE Tre Conmipr axp Exqyrmen on tie Axi Sravery Travg, aup Sox ann Coron Line.— Our cotemporary, in Wall street, has male some statements, upon the publication of the names of mercantile firme, which are so cutraseously false, and £0 perfectly gratuitous in every respect, that we are called upon to notice this instance of injus- tice, and to demand a correction of the error Ta publishing the card of Messrs. Bowen & McNa- mee we comphed with the request of those mer- chants, and, also, copied the Jetter of Messrs. Chittenden & Blies, which we found in the Eve- ning Post. It was the first time (but the names of these persons were published in this paper ea beizg concerned with any opinions, or newspapers, | and our information was derived from the Lveamg Post, to which newspaper we gave all due credit, "The first time we saw M . Bowen & MeNa- mee nemed, as holding exy opicions of a peculiar character, was in the editorial columas of the | Tribune, last week, and on what authority they were placed there, we laow not, unless their names hed appeared in come other journal, This easimple staternent of facts; yet, upom this, the Courier and Enquirer s2y We comply with the request of Messrs. Bowen & MeNamee, by inaerting the above card in eur reading coluinna All our readers may nol be aware of the practices which have led them to publish it. There are two or three newepspers in the eily, whish havo organized a syetem of bullying merchante fato sub- reribing to m. advertising in their columas, or lending their conductors money. The mauner ia which they operate, is by denouncing them as aboli- tiontrts, and by teking special pains to send these depuncietions to their customers in Scuthere State: Tival bouses, in the same line of business with tho. thus denounced, sometimes bay Up lirge numbers of the papers, end rend them to merchaote at the Soath, whose trade they thus reek to craw off Some of thi papers opeoly demand advertising patrons, scriptions, as the fee tor discontinuing these They deneunce merchants «leo for taking, or adver- tising in, other papers than theirown and exact discontinuance of such patronage, and Its transfer to themselyes, as the price of their torb:arance The Jd ie, of course, the leader inthis manly and henor? | able style of competition; and it has ooe or two imita- tore, of whose proficiency it may well be proud, Now, it is pretty well known that we do not carry on a retail business in patriotism or prisciples. We i belong to no clique, or party, but in our views, do business on a wholesale scale. We are not obliged to court the favor of politicians, or of any other class of the community, and equally untrue is at that we have any desire to enlarge, forour beuefit, the circle of our advertising patronage, or the already vast cireulation of our sheet. We publish nearly forty thousand copies of the Henan, daily, besides thousands on thousands of our various weekly editions, making an enormous sum total; and our edvertising patronage ia more valuable, prebably, than that of the Courter and Enquirer, backed by all the commercial interests of the city. We are satisfied with our circulation and adver- | tisiog, as they are, aad it is the merest assamption of malevolence and ignorence to represent us in apy other light. We are not disposed, ia political afairs particularly, to come dowa to the small retail plan of political hacks. We take more national grognd for the wholesale field of our operations. For iweaty years we have noticed the agitatioa now coming to a head. It commenced ia the North. It was eided by foreiga agents ia its firs: steges. It spread throughout New Laglaal, where non-intercourse with the South was recommended by the abolitionists, who swore not to sweeten themselves with slave grown suger, or to clothe themselves with cotton cultivated by the colored jaborer. With every advancing year, the agita- tion has advanced. It has gone in and out of churches, has split societies into fragments, his embittered political action, and has retarded the social elevation of the freebora blacks. Tle as- eaults upon the South have been borne with pa- qienee, but the day of retaliation has commenced, und it hes begun, like all great changes, ia small beginnings, o eud in a great fact. Already, the little details of nullification and jon ure fore- shedowed aud pre-figured ia the doctrine of nea intercourse. The mind of the South taras natu: rally to all the arts of defence. It not onty waras the planter to aveid the ship of the Nortuera n the carrying trade, but it ever prompts the saz gestion that Jenny Lind oaght not to be received, because a necticut man derives large from her vocal efforts. Peo may smile at Une, but there is a deep meaning and a deeper purpose, uoder it. Civil war stends ia the dark back ground, where such light figures ar g the attention of men ia the front. The elicers of th United States are citizens of sover rtes, aad public} opinion, though guiding thei ion with Teepect to the revenue and administration of the laws, can dissolve the Union in an instant Under the strong apprehcasion of such daoger, there is po necessity for our entering upon a retail busiaess in patriotiem, We have a wholessle view of the whole matter, and one which ali men will have ia common with us, When they cease to look through the eyes of cliques, factio dparties. Let bat Seward, Greeley, Weed , succeed in their ineane plans for promoting jr own 9, at the hezard of the Union, and we ehall fiad all the social, fraternal, ant nity of the nation, turned into a fragm a, fee hich will spring mivery in all its od loatheome ehapes. With euch incentives to patriotic action as the circumstances now surrouading us, it isa pitiful vanity and sina presumption oa the part ef the Courier and Ew t that we are reduced to small mnie, we party poile ticians copetantly use to carry their ends. Oue end e'one is oure—the perm inence and eoutiaved proeperity of thie Union, et which » Sewards, the Weeds, end the Greeleye aie pp rer their plens end di gers, us efivetively as ever did ta conepiratora in Rome at the heart of Jutias ‘That which the people have to guerd agaiast, is the political bypocriay of those who are in favor of a aad the abolition whig State ticket, ad aod mark of Sewardiem, and yet declare that they do not like egitaton. Merk bow oi! aod vinegar can be mixed, as our Wall street cotemporary leaves a loop tole to jump through afer 1 is too apparent to allow the We bave no eympatty wit are have sult sien: © always iusteted thorough regerd for & and an entice tl dh weight our eolum ® ec Urege any movement, prevent, which many tend torecew exeitemen matter @ar Jeit alone, would die ow And we cannot ngs aa thy his city by tae Thele tendegay is ter ie baw, They ean ’ ernrecsrery. andiver uve been exteesivily ret 0 printer ave diced: A short time ogo, thie Weil strect paper, of large dimensions, emull segacity, and lier cireulas tien, was in favor of ail the jatrignes, plota, and | plons of Sewerd and the sbulitioniste, Now, cheehed by public opinion io its cateer of partion pliancy and geal, it would eave eff, by a pretence ta fovor of Southern righ's Southern righte by giving Seward power to overs throw theaf? Monstrous consistency of an iacon- sistent politic’ However, it must still contiaue to ease off, and discard the Syracuse abolition Stae tielet altoge'her, ot it be deemed as efi ciive and zealous, notwiths‘andiog ita preten- sions, in overtoraing Souther rights and the pro« grees of the Union, as Ward Beecher's liceations sheet, or Horace Greeley’s frlee-hearted and wrong-headed o.gan, or Thurlow Weed's cortapt and cuonitg journal. Mademotselle Jenny Lind. Admirol Reeside hes arrived im thie city from Wash- lngeon, In ender te fudave the “Nightingale” to give two coneertain that city. Haring procured the Oatho- Le Chapel tor the purpoee, he came on here con amore at bis own expense, amd has rucceeded in obtain {Pe ® promise Hhat two eonserte will be given by M’tle ital in December, The Adie 7s ocak le (he greatees woman io the world. Tux Wonxcestex Fanxaties—Progarss or Sor coraLism, ApoLirion, awD IxripgLiry.—It has been kpown ever since Fourier, Brisbane, and Greeley first promulgated their social theories, that society is all wre) I: ig also known that their attempts to reform it have signaily failed. Social phalarxes, ou the Fourier principle of common stock, common privileges, and dividends to the members of the es- tablishment, have been tried in various parts of the cogutry with the worst sort of success. In some cases, the epeculators upon the credulity and spare cash oftheir miserable followers, have pocketed the proceeds of these enterprises, and left the phalanx the privilege either to starve or disperse. Monsieur Cabet and his Icarians, in their wussder- ings over the plains of Arkansasin search of their promised land, afford a stricking example. | Fourievism, therefore, has fallen into contempt, the | xperiments not justifying the plan of the philoso- phers to make “ labor attraetive,” because there is nothing in it by which your lazy philosophers can be made to work. The next experiment by our delectable reformer of the Tribune was anti-rentism, which is sim- ply the doctrine of oveupying other people's proper- ty free of cost. Al! the good that has resulted,after Tepeated outbreska and eects of bloodshed in the preecticul working of this doctrine, has been the creation of 2 political faction controlling the poti- tics of the State. The existing laws, however, upholding the right of the landowner to collect rents for the use of his property, still continuing in force, th: experiment of anti rentism as a social re- form, has elgo proved to be inefficient. But Philosopher Greeley is not the chap to drop the cause of suffering humanity. Nothe. Union associstions were prosecuted, until he lodged a bevy of wnfortunate tailers in jail—the Rochester knockings were cousuited, as likely to afford to the “Jaboring pn illions,’’ some new attractions to labor, or come epiritual expedient by which cold victuals, atleast, might be got without labor. Phrenology was tried, and found wauting. There was nothiag discloced in * Combe’s Constitution of Man,” of practical utility insecu:, * @ distribution of eve- Ty thing to every bedy.” — ‘ittlebat Titmouse, elected to Parliament upon that p: form, dodged the question, as J. B. dodged the Fugiuy+ > lave bill in Congress. Grubby next delved into the myste- ties of Mesmerism, but although clairvoyance can tell where Kidd’s gold is to be found, if he had any, it could not tell how society is to live without work being done by somebody. Avxother kimk of our friend “ Grubby,” is land reform,which means that allthe public lands are to be given to actaal settlers, in emall parcels, the deficiency to be sup- plied vpon Big Thunder’s doctrine of the right from occupation of lands belonging to other people. But all these expedients have been found to be mere palliatives, while a radical reform of society hus been the great object of the philosophers. Fourier, Brisbane, Greeley, Big Thunder, Combe, Fowler, Collyer end the Model Artists, the Roch- ester Knockers, and Davis, with his revelations, all having failed, all having proved unsatisfactory, tried separately, what neat is to be done? Try them all together. Hee we come into broad, open smooth water. Here the daylight of discovery breaks in upon us as the first glimpse of the great Salt Lake broke upon the Mormons. Here we wabuckle our traps, and go’straight to work in shovelling up the gold dust. The old Syracuse engineer jumped up in his nether garment, and shouted * Eureka!” Cali- fornia jureps up in her morning gowa, and shouts ureke,” and Grubby Greeley wera Abby Kelly et Worcester, with “ Eureka.” We have got it. Got what? The phi'osopher’s stoae —the ‘at, | men? Shall we pay fron two eondewastion of every unpreju- | Yes, it woutd protect | key to the mitenium—the one thing needfal—the schi cle of the final reformation. The Lord be praised. It is the philosopher's omnibas bill—it ia the put- ting al in & lump the several experiments of reform ofthe Tribune reformers, with a good deal of aew | matier, vew principles, and fundamental ideas, as | pat forth an the platform of the Woman’s Rights Convention, recently held at Worcester. Let the | world rejoice. Lucretia Mott, Abby Kelly, Gar- | rison, Phillips, Mrs. Rose, Fred. Douglas, Sojour- ner Truth, and the Widow Merey, sitting in coua- cil dey and night, backed up, heart and soul, by ovr glorious Greeley, have solved the problem of the sge. They have squared the circle of society, and resoived the arcana of its perpetaal motion. Prom our publivhed reports of the proceedings, the | speeches, the declarations, and the resolutions of | the Worcester Conreation, it will be seen that | their platform {s made up of the timbers of all the philosophers and epiritual advisers of the Tribwae, | founded upon the strong pillars of abolition, social jem, amalgamation aad infidelity, compassing all | the discoveries in heaven ant earth, and inthe regions wader the earth The new dispensation of Lueretio, Mott and the philosophers, proposes :— 1. To dispense with Christianity and the Bible | After on experiment of viveteen centuries, they de- | Core the syetem to be a hurabug. 2 To sbelich the existing politieal and social evyetem ef ety as part ofthe falae machinery of | . Sexes and colors upon a foot. The coavertion having | gered by phrepola fogy that, the sexea | ere equelin point utelect, aud that color isa terre difference of complexion, it is proposed to | ebolieh the only cistinetion of sex by a universal | adoption of the breec Most assuredly, this grand reformatioa involves, tition of slavery, black aad | a8 incidentele, the a white, the doctrine of amal extent, nese, fon and refinement, AS was never dreamed ol, even by Davis, in his revelations, or by Graham, from the inspiration of bran bread and turarpa. The philosophers of the Tyewne have, therefore, pebtished the Worcester plotform ia th t of the oficial organ of this tremendous reforma- tien Old things ere to be dene away, snd all things sre to become new. Sewerdis to be sus | tuined, and Fillmore is only to be tolerated till the | wart, corver of Ble ty. sth) motion to its fattest | adventef the pew dispensation, when Lucretia | Mott, Abhy Kelly, Donglar, Greeley and Sojouracr | Truth ore to rule the rooet. Then, ant not till "| then, shall we realice the jubilee of the Devil and | bis angels. Wuat 1s To me powe yrtt Panoni t—The arrival Kisat of Terese Parodi, the muse of [taly and the South, bas given birh to a world of questions. Wiut will de an spproppriate way of arranging the prices of | | ndinistion to the opera house, while the genius of | a | Southern Europe developes the warm style of the | Itatiane, in the great lyric dramas of her country- ndred to six hon- | dred dollare fora ticket, aad engsge any agit | thus furnish food for the gossip and grave delide- rations of our relatives acroes the water ? or shall we adopt some fair and equitable methel, so that ell may have an opportunity of hearing the modern | Medea at a moderate advance upon the ordmary | ps ices? These are questions of some importance, | and we ere quite sure thet Maretzek will take each a course te Will remonerate him for his great risk, and et the same time afy all the public. There will be some plar devised to meet the enthusivam, without taking undue edvantege of it, eo that Pa- Todi, the stately and beautifal, may remain with us for a long season. Meanwhile, the bishops, parsons, laymen, doc- tors, law) ers, editora, and mablic in general, should behave in the most sensible manner, keep per’ et! cool, end not endeavor to annoy the priestess before she appears in her owntemple. Sheis now preparing to perform the encred rites of song next Monday evening, and needs all possible repose till that pe- riod. In the interim, who will write a work to be enlied “Manners for the Million 1” Who will give $200 for a new prize song? What hatter, or boot- meker, will give €360 or $000 for the first ticket, advertising in all the papers lesteted ' Getdeeeth te phi the bell prie veto coaile wi oe ake orien = Bees Sixeunak Poice Irecrigsnce—Anotagr De- VELOVEMENT Ix THE Stoot-Pickon Business —We give elsewhere in our columns to day, a report of a recent case which has been examined by Justice Movntfort, of the Police Court, in which certain charges have been made against M. C. Stanley, end for whose arrest a warrant has been issued. Stanley has evaporated however, though notin the direction which Warner receatly took. The latter went to Europe to escape certain responsibili- ties in this metropolis. Stanley, it is said, has gone off towards California, where he may be em- ployed in digging gold or pounding quartz, instead of carrying on the stool-pigeon practices in New York. These developemen's are curious;and interesting. Among the effidavits we particularly notice, are, firet, one from his Honor, Mr. Woodhull, the Mayor ef this ¢ity, one from the Chief of the Police, end others from various employésin the Mayor’s office. By these sworn statements, some freeh and curious insights are given intothe charac- ter end conduct of Wilkes, of the National Police Gazette, the ostensible organ of the stoo!-pigeon gavg in this city—a gang who have been playing so many pranks for the last two years. The an- nonymous letters which Wilkes seeaed to have en intuitive knowledge about, were certain doca- rents monufactured by some person in some quarter, and intended to bring charges against Arlington Kennet, impating to him no less than ‘he intention of taking the life of James Foster, Jr., of this city. How came Wilkes to know about the existence of these letters? They had been sent to the Mayor by some perzon; and the Mayor had read them alone, and mentioned them to nobody else. Other disclosttres in these affidavits are equally curious, equally instructive, equally start. ling. They ere exposures of the criminal stool- pigeon business of this city. In fact the perasal of these p2pers is equal in interest to that of a romance or modern novel. In connection with this case of Stanley’s, we may as well allude to the nol. pros. entered up by the Grand Jury, in the case of Oae-eyed Thompsoa, on the torpedo mystery— a mystery which seems to reproduce itself in little mysteries in every move- ment that has been made, either in the jury rooms or the couris, for the last few months. From the first moment that our attention was directed to these criminal mysteries, by the arrest of Arlingtou Bennet, every new investigation that we have made, has only satisfied us the more of the. perfect innocence of old Samuel Druay, of Astoria, of the torpedo charges that had been imputed to him; and alo of the innocence of A:lington Bennet of the offences on which he was arraigned; and of which both have been triumphantly acquitted by our juries. Every day, every week, every month, ouly serves to bring forth new facts and fresh developements, establishing to the courts, jvries, end the public m general, the perfect irnocence of these men ofall the other offences that have been imputed to them; and also the diabolical and satanic course which has been pur- eued by the National Poltce Gazetie and many of ils niders end essistapts, in reference to ail these mysteries. Justice is slow, but sure; time will reveal all. Matis for Eucope. The British m-ship Awerica will leave Boston to-morrow noon for Halifax and Liverpool, Her rail. will close in this city at 1 and 3 o'clock this afterao0a The Werxty Hexarv will be published st 10 o'clock this mornin; Sliks, Shawls, Merinuces, Cloaks, Sacks, gua Mantillas. and io fact evergehing ele thas ledien ong sirefur.theis own wardrebes, or for their household E Tia, Line bo f it KAT BR’S, 347 Broadway, corner of Leonard street, ai fair honest prices, ‘The Giass of Fashion and the Wonder of Mrs. Gioow, millener, drevemeker, Re, 2/4 0 hor Hine wake ‘Karuion ” vnad ‘hie irimitabty fashion Si the bea matoriate by « are print ‘ubon, is wow wet ter el Geant v vere “much Metitmem’ rorprsed, om visiting the oxt tober aod Crane ai f his ready ra the order of his great improvement © Ww be veils low, sive clothing And f Do vot fall to catl at Brooks! ene Fouts | Boots No, 100 F ton ares yonr how nan of trie aud the coonomiye, M holds owt. creat ins duoc ments, ax be sel & le uothing but what is really good, dvsabic, Iasbionshle and ehenpe _— ; Patent Ged-Clothes Clasps— isopod et . ; Ror hwell The by this invention Buperium cc Pon rG Fishes Ane for 8 thes The Prumhe National Dagacrecan Gallery, | No 21 be aways trai's of dis @on vit (his extenstve eotleeti many femaliag faces. The Pivet ann Ony 1 Medal.—The Da- 4 ony quid medal &: vaulter. oltbent me oting with Ladies, if you wish India Rabber Gaiter Boe ts 6F shoe , tor y: wre tver or ehaldres, (Gordy eat’s Fa- Perpetorl Gieve ) plan, the wer tada ealbon tl Freebies, Tan, ‘Ballow: ens, Pimples, era tisme ond all skin diseeena, are 4t * cing Gowrced's, Lea oa jons, at 7 Wath, jonder, South Tiind Gold Meda! —Baitard “8. Y. Fey vate, © appl “by phate In twenty [erg cectetnetion. y eating as Ne eadway. Aur (air bye Wigs and To poe mm a) Barevelor:s vee Wim ond Fonwece always = a Vase eclebrated © ‘ ” inn Aire. eraide Ot foe byt prem Dyspepsia Bitters.—The vir tre of theve #y tens dives Sut reat pom, vhs statomeaee af @ tow ase. reopen g R ‘Avabian Eilat Art -pry ° eps. ‘he steo MONEY MARKET. Mopar, Oct. 28-6P. M. The stock market opened, this morning. quite buoy. * jothing Store.—We — was upward. The European news m hae bad no-peittes? Jar influence upon the market. The variation ia pri- cer, and the position of the markets, so far as our pre- ¢ucts are concerned. the other side of the Atlantic, 1s 60 clight from the departure of one steamer to a other, that it is hardly worth noticing, and bas no eftest on the movements of the commercial commanity te this country, The steadiness of the Liverpsol cottom market was about what we anticipated. It is now the opinion here that the next steamer will bring advices of an improvement. There will, without: doubt be a demand in Great Britain for our bread. stuffs. Prices were steadily advancing, and an export: trade of considerable importance in flour aod Indiiam meal would be the result of a moderate advance be- yond the last current quotations. In financial affaires there bad been no change, Money contiaued abua- dant, the rate of interest reduced, andin relotion te stocks and other mattersin ihe moneyed world, the same remarks will apply that we have made uso of before. Bo for as commerese is concerned, everything im the old world appears to be permanently prosper~ ous. Politically, there was mot so much peace and harmony among the powers of Europe as upon the departure ofthe previous steamer, and we must be prepared for a serious outbreak any moment, that wil! spread over the continent like fire upon tho prairie. The winter may bring forth great events. The receipts at the office of the Assistant Treasarer of this port, to day, amounted to $75.451 95; payments, $53,400 70; bulance, $4,529,663 63, It is stated that = very large portion of the deposits in the sub-treasury, is composed of double eagles. An immense amount of that coin bas been turned out from the mint, and the merchants find is more convenient to make psymene® on scceunt cf dutieson customs im that evia tham any other. The directors of the Augusta Manufacturing Com- pany have declared a dividend of 5 per cent on ths origi- nal capital of the company, psyable on demand out of the profits of the last tix movths, This while the mille of the North are closing thelr doors! Da we need any better evidence than this, that the South has it in her power to compete eusoessfully with the North in the Monufacture of cotton goods? The refirees, in the case of Gilmore & Carpenter, vs. the Norfolk County Railroad Corporatioa, have award- ed to the claimants the sum of $152,700; to pay which, t will become necessary for the corporation to assign a second mortgage of the property, as $425,000 of the the firet $700,000, have already passed out of their hands. The interest upon the first mortgage will (om the eutberity of the President) by paid on the rato January uext, to protect tke stockholders from total lows, in ease of foreclosure. It is believed that the Midland Railroad project will yet be consummated, and in that case the property will probably be worth more then the debt, and the stockholders get some re- turne for their investment. Large amounts of counterfeit fifty dollar bills upow the Bta‘e Bank ef Miscouri, ané spurious one hundred dollar bills upos the Bank of Charleston, have beem received in this city snd Toston, remitted from Sau Fraveleco. The counterfeiters have driven a bold trade, end the peopl) of California should under. stand that it is entirely out of the course of bu- sinesa to carry bank bills to their count:y, and all tank notes should be looked upon with distrust, The following is a description of the counterfeit, ea furntshe ed by Mr. llaghes, the present Pres'dent of the Gank ; “Counterteit $50-Bank of the State of Missouri; general oppearances good On examiuation the engray- ing will be jound to be ouch coarser than the genu- ine, erpeclelly the drapery of tho female Agare, Big natures of the President and Cssbier very well done, The counterfeits are sigved by Jno. Smith, President, In the Jno the ‘no’ sro written out dietiuct—in the P, together. In the counter‘oit signed . Campbell, Prest.. there is a slight flourish at the termination of the first stroke of the K, not iathe genuine.” ‘The officers of the Bank pronounce the counterfeit well executed. Neither Mr. Smith uor Mr. Campbely Fuccecded correctly in pointing out the counterfeits, when presented with gevuine. Mr Sharlds, Vashier, gives it up ‘hat he cannot detect the counterfeit aud genvine of bis own signature, in all cases. From these facts it t# cbricus that the greatest esution will be becessary with those who handle tbe $10 noies of the Bank. Tt appears by the report of the Bank of France, for the week ending Oot. 8, when compared with the pre- vious week, that the cash in hand had decreased by TAMCCOf, The commeretal bills discowated had in* Cteaved by 4.52) OOO. The protested bills had decreased by 25 000f The bank notes ia cireulation had decreas- ed by 357,000. The balance to the credit of the trea- fury had decreared by 3.979,00f. The sundry credite had deoreased by 1 454,000, — Exchange. ve Me: ms Canton Co ing Harem RR paid In do ww 2b $0 shre Mant 10 Lone Vetand ra 2 Pol a hw & Worcatior 55 W Patio te 53" ee Formers’ fo so” eo do oe ao bend: 7% oe do do tod do 3 ioe RR Orig 0 wo Wo 20 8s vo 67" 4 0 ort do 4". 20 4 bio oy 1) Portemouth Dry Dork 76 POARD. 100 slvr THE GERMAN Dex RATIO waias are oatmenily roquentedt 4 wh thy i GeO. W. RODGIRS, Chairman. ver, Secretary | Piatt ws Heual Wing 2 Sunes be Wa VENTS Woe ery z OE #, Prwanné Sonnets Ranveaey, fon vee, Ba Jas H Chanen Conpeers ine Garden, «2 even oeloeh, on ening evens eorive the report of the fa is he. Wreape, Ye crue Nomiinat SRODART MULT. Che'ran ICHMOND COUNTY pout) the mee: ing bel red inthe Versi of 3 night, ne wei g28 : by fe ete” plush ste tee Bi te pets ate return of the , ftaners, rendarson th wecemary’ that. Ch should be resovared if oa | ‘na oo Watebriaker, Na. 1 feowive the above ¢ * ecard. All Brokers, op thie watoh. BTSTOLEN PROM Tag DAGUBRAIAN Teed way, orposite und # rect & poRteale in an iniett esse juacer eta. i 4 Bene ve - Ric informa yethe Saresean acu” Awa hae FOR THE RETURN TO ae. thee raer of east tide nf Second evento he inte oh hae sce) ed, oe Mind top: ae ocd "ta tae tm te feeb oat eee plate, oo which PERA ¢ EN BY MisTARE 04 STOLEN fiome. "The perry iY 74 tee root, an "Ks AeeBecwm, fea will wave all fort mierda. ™ mab RS WY. pay Oh 664 BROADWAY. WOULD RE~ cs , satin bameaatiat.re heme fr ot saxiety ew ee sini ae Se them, »| poe them at ‘