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NEW YORK HERALD. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR AND EDITOR. OFFICE N. W. COKNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU STS. errr THE DAILY HERALD, 2 cents per copy—ST per Secon or kate am Tefal 8 annum Great Britain and Ste any | PDP REBEL weg | cdl be iasraly pldjors"Ocn Fonston Conner ARE PARTICULARLY REQUEUFED TO SEAL ALL AND PAackAaGes SENT TO Us. | AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. Bernt. THEATRE, Bowery—Camrexten ov Rovey ‘Tuar Giirrens is Nor Gown, BROADWAY THEATRE, Bros@way—-Wno's Your o—ALL Thar Guirrers 1s Nor Gorn, NIBLO'S GARDEN, Broadway—Equwsraran Pearone- ences. BURTON'S THEATRE, Maze—Scnoor ror Tie NATIONAL THEATRE, Obatham street—Macsern— Mae Tar Guirreis ws Nor BROUGHAM'’S LYCEUM, Bros@way—Daarw Corren- wrety—Fast May. CHRISTY’S MINSTRELS, Mechautice’ Hall, 472 Broad- Swey—Erniorian MixstREisy. ws’ MINSTR! Fell x i= FELLO ear Ee oe fusieml Hwll, 444 HORN & WHITE'S OPERA TROUPE, Coliseum, 450 | Beoadway—Erniortan MinsTRELSY. SABLE HARMONISTS, Chinese Rooms, 589 Broadway— “Bemorian Minsrn etsy. . AMERICAN MUSEUM—Axvusnve Pervonmances Ar- Semnoon any Evening. | ‘NEW YORK AMPHITHEATRE, 37 Bowery—Equestaian | Peevonmances. WASHINGTON HALL—Pawonaua or rue Promim's | ‘Paocrass. pena | BATTLER’S COSMORAMA, corner of Thirteenth street | ead Broadway. wesery | MINERVA ROOMS—Pavonaxa or Ineiann. | HOPE CHAPEL—Concenr By THE ALLEGHANIANS. DOUBLE SHEET. New York, Thursday, April 3, 1851. | | | News frem Europe and California. | ‘The Baltic, Capt. Comstock, from Liverpool, is | ~@ue to-day, with one week’s later intelligence from Europe; and the North America, Capt. Blithen, | Empire City, Capt. Wilson, and Georgia, Capt. Porter, with two weeks’ later news from California, will be due to-morrow or Saturd: Summary of the Latest Intelligence. | It will be seen by our report of the proceedings | of the Legislature of this State, yesterday, which is published in another column, that the bill for the | eompletien of the canals was the prominent subject | ef debate. The unconstitutionality of the mea- Bure was clearly pointed out ; but the members who have, from the first, seemed determined to force it through at all hazards, care little whether it is according to the constitution or not. The select committee appointed by the Senate to Investigate the charge preferred by Mr. Suydam, of | this city, against Mr. Bull, the ant-at-.Arins ef that body, made their report y rday, anda eopy of it will be found in oor report of - | ings of the Legislature in another colu | ecommitice w sustained by the evidence in th the attention of the Senate to punishment p weribed by the statute. In relation to Messrs. Robinson, Stove, and Jobnson, the com: pe were ef opinion that their conduct was highly improper, | in writing letters to Mr. Bi giving their opinion | in reference to the probable fate of the bill for the | more effectual suppression of gambling, but did not suggest any action in the premises. Further de- Date on the whole subject was p onday. The Senate promptly discharg - Bull, but whether they will punish him any further or not, we | @an’t say. They have the power of imprisouing bim during the remainder of the session. Another unsuccessful attempt was made by the Legislature of Massachusetts to elect a United States Sendtor yesterday. The ballotting showed @ loss to Mr. Sumner of four. That gentleman's | ehances of election are decidedly smail. a | to postpene the ject for three weeks was then | earried, but a motion to reconsider was offered, aud will be debated to-da Presidential Movements—Signs of the Times. | The movements of the pol 18, the tone of eertain classes of newspapers, the drift of those who live on public plunder, are beginning to look very pointedly towards the ey. Iadicat of the next scramble lions of dollars @ year, are multiplying on ail sides in the > specially ns where the the prog he case, and di jions | | J to promote the men to office and pow e very plain ia New Y and tration of Mr. Fillm The admir re, aided as it Se by the powes Webster aud his amociater, in ry og made by eplenuid » : | arrangements of a political character, « De losing gr every day, the moving « North—elements wh. anti-lavery seniim t t 1 Union funds, ha produce any genera effect, thou y have boen sf d leading combined wit Comgross and out « ut of it, appears t ealmly and qui te. We much f an febster, Mr. Filme ' feeting the ricent messures for the « wer the slavery difficulty in Cong ehance of renewing their pol Sato political estimation aft . val Tom Thamb—with ail “a Buncombe of Barnuun—has tw arrive be | id stature of al Winfield - Ex-Senator Lic , of New York, who ied Buch a distinguished post during the grea mise fight, is utter! eb inte private life. out of it, either whigs or demo the same policy that be did in fa and the constitution, and for a sett! quarrel between the North and the South, jeying a similar fare, and @ similar fate is storia them in the fa Even in th Bowspapers, and other organs of public op: fame general characteristics of decay The Union Committee of this city expended thei fands and their influence without avail, and the jeurnals, both whig and democratic, which aided the Union movement, are withering and disappear- fing in every direction. The banker @lote, of this @ity—the organ of the Union democracy—has @uizight, from want of eappert, while the anti-sla- wary Leening Post is now the only rewaining organ of Tamunany Hall. Mr. Websver and the admi- mistration, by taking the p of the laws ftom certain journals in k and New England, and giving it to « ad by making @ertain removais of public and appoin:- fing others in their atead, have widened the breach between the Uniow whigs and the i whigs, in pil sections oF the country Albe Beening Jowrnal wnd tue Boston Atay, with vir of forty other anti-slavery whig journals in connec». | tion with them, exhibit the n.o#t bitter and unre Jenting animosity to the admint tration of Mr more, ad to Mr. Webster and bis syciates in ihe ng back | 9s oF . who pureacd on qi wer departments of pol abl New Y y y y | backed up by twenty or thirty echoes, joins heart | we will see this Union arrayed against itselfi—one | | Orleans to Natchez, from Natchez to St. Louis, from government. ‘Ihe truth is, that in spite of the prestige of great statesmanship and mighty talent, } present, she has had thousands of fools in her train which a great or good author alwsys confines him- The Secretary of State at Albany, Hon. Christo- | of the time that she arrived at the wharf until the | to mankind, he @eperts from the high sphere to Newspapers tn the State of New York. Mr. Fillmore and his cabinet may, to # certain ex- | wherever she stopped, exeept in Havana. Bar- self. He sows seeds of error, which are sure, eventu- | pher Morgan, has made a collection of the news tent, be considered as serving the second term which Captain Tyler once sighed for, with some of the same men for advisers, and some of the same mate- rials for stock in trade. [low queer! how very queer! In the midst of this singular exhibition, distinet and positive movements are being made in New York and New England, with reference to the next presidency. The anti-slavery or Seward whigs | have taken upGeneral Scott, and placed him be- fore the country as the embodiment of their princi- ples, their purposes, and their hopes. The auti-sla- very or Van Buren democrats in this city, and in other regions of the North, have in like mauner seized on the popularity, the sobriety, and the pre- tensions of General Houston, of Texas, as their rep- resentative in the contest which is now opening throughout the country. The Boston Atlas, the Jeading anti-slavery whig organ of New England, and band in favor of General Scott; while the Eve ening Journal of Albany, with thirty or forty similar echoes in this State, is assuming the same ground in favor of General Scott, and a bitter hostility to the administration and all the old statesmen of the whig party, Mr. Seward and his cabinet in Alba- ny are undoubtedly the advisers of the movement, and the instigators of these attempts to make the whig party of the North, now,hencefore and forever, an anti-slavery organization, without caring what the result of so doing would be on the future peace of the country. The prospect, therefore, isthat the anti-slavery elements of the North, under the impulses commu- | nicated to them by Mr. Van Buren in the demo- cratic, and Mr. Seward in the whig party, may | heave some chances of prevailing at the next Presi- dential election, with the assistance of, and under the pretence of supporting military candidates. If, under such leaders, the anti-slavery sentiment should | overrule the North and the free States in the elee- | tion of a candidate at the next Presidential election, | section against another—the North against the | South, and the South against the North—on a | South depends, and over which the North has no constitutional or legal right. The dangers which | would surely flow from such a lamentable state of things, we will not attempt to predict. He who has common sagaci New York, the London of America, ‘The progress of Jenny Lind, the vocalist, up the magnificent Mississippi and its tributacies, from New St. Louis to Nashville, from Nashville to Louisville, and other places where an audience worth ten thou- sand dollars can be found—the progress of this songstress is amusing, interesting. philosophical, characteristic, profitable, and most suggestive in various particulars. We de not wish, in our re- | marks on this interesting progress, to touch on the prefits of the speculation between Jenny and Bar- num. These profits belong to themselves, and they | may be allowed to enjoy the fruits of the specula- tion in any way they please; but the philosophy of Jenny Lind’s progress im the great West, to say nothing of her career in other parts of the country, is a subject of grave philosophical speculation, , and historical embalment. The extraor- dinary rise, progress, and growth of the city of | New York, isa subject of which her people may well be proud. Her career is unparalleled in the history of the world, in any age, or in any country. Notwithstanding that it may offend some | of the neighboring cities to say so, there is very | little doubt that the city of New York is not only | the commercial metropolis, the great heart and centre of America, from the Aroostook to Pana- ma, from the Atlantic to the Pacifie, but the Paris | of America, and tat its influence, both good and bad | silly or sex spervades the whole continent. Other | cities, like Boston, Philadelphia, or New Orleans, have their iuflucnce and their peculiarities ; but both are local, or, at anost, only sectional. The influence of New York, on the contrary, is general, | and its peculiarities are distinetive and peculiar. The influence of New York is much greater than is uum’s binrney was swallowed with avidity in New | ally, to spring up into mischievous York, and hundreds of dollars were given forthe first that may spread their dangerous and even destruc- ticket to hear her sing. Boston, Philadelphia, Pro- _ tive ramifications, so as totangle the very truth itself vidence, and New Orleans, out-Heroded Herod in | in irremediable perplexity. the folly. Indeed they went #0 far in New Orleans, It is not Mr. Hildreth’s vain attempt at history in their extravagunce of folly, and glorification of that has alone suggested to us the necessiqy of @ the songstress, that there was a rush to the auction close watehfulness of the conduct of authors, and of sule of the furniture of her rooms, and the meanest | those publishers who are able, through the terms utensil of her bed-chamber was eagerly purchased | on which they advertise in nearly all the public at twelve dollars. Oh! ch! oh! Ifthe people of New | journals, to make the reputation of writers by limit- York had not made fools of themselves in the first | less puffs of their productions. Searcely a day place, people at adistanee would not have done so. | passes that some one or more of the publishers of We are the first sinner | this city do not place before the country the most We might give many additional proofs of the outrageous libels on common sense and common influence which the city of New York, the me- | truth, and force off on the Southern market, by tropolis of America, and destined at no distant day | means of the large trade auction sales, vast edi- to be the metropolis of the world, exercises on the — tions of dangerous and untruthful works. Some of rest of the republic; but the above are sufficient the Boston houses seem particularly zealous in this for our purpose. It is undeniable that in politics, species of abolition literature. It is seen in the religion, fushion, piety, folly, insanity, morals, so- weekly newspapers, in the leading magazines and ciety, trade, commerce, theatricals, pugilism, and reviews of that city, and in hundreds of books which everything else, we lead the rest of the country; are issued from its prolific press; and the conse- and that whatever is done here is imitated and quence, sooner or later, must be that the South copied throughout the country. Other cities will | will deem it prudent to interdict, by individual ex- not be willing to acknowledge this; but it isa ample, the sale of works emanating from a locality Kivo’s County supervisors papers in thie State, one of each of which | Bow Utreimeat is to be sentto the World's Fair, in London, and & Vlatbush—Janes ¥. duplicate is to be deposited in the State Library, | 4, /4tiir Y at Albany. The following table shows the number Constables —Geo. padre gage time, compared with the num- for this county. ber publ in 1888, according to Williams’ New =. A Stock York Annual Register for that year:— in the ey} No. in No. Ne. in No. in ber) i mn : . i e1 i il ‘e | question purely local, on which the existence of the | matter, will continue on a successful career, | wholly foreign. fuct, a reality, notwithstanding. There is no de- nying that what Paris is to France, or London to England, or Pekin to China, New York is to Ame- rica—the great heart and centre, the leading, moving, and direeting power of the continent. Philadelphia and Boston are very nice little places in their way, but they are no more, after all, than suburbs of this vast metropolis. Is not this true philosophy ? Tne Monty Magazines—Anti-Stavery Larre- | rnarure—Bryayt anv Hitpreru.—Punctually, on | the first of the month, have been issued Hurpers’ Monthly Magazine, and the Internation d Magazine, published by Stringer & Townsend. The former, | it is said, has now reached the enormous circula- latter has advanced already to about twenty-five thousand copies. Both are very popular, and as | they contain much entertaining and useful reading | We observe, however, that there is one thing in the management of these magazines which betrays | carelessness—that is, the utter disregard of those constitutional principles which have been the foun- dation of all the success and prosperity of this coun- try. This isa point which cannot be too rigidly , watched for the future, for it is important that the youth of our country should not be led from their allegiance to the patriotic principles of their politi- | cal fathers, who framed the early government and | constitution of our country. In the present number of Harpers’ Monthly, we notice culogistic remarks on Washington Irving and William C. Bryant. Mr. Irving is entitled to con- siderable credit for his literary works, and there is a pleasure in discoursing upon his merits, or in being instructed as to the qualities of his mind and genius. With regard to Bryant, as a poet, the world has heard enough—and more than enough. In his early years, he gave signs +f being a patriotic poet, whose verses might be of use to society. Lat- terly, however, he has abandoned the realm of the muses, and has become a rabid and dangerous anti- slavery man, to whom delicacy of thought or ex- | pression towards the patriotic men of our times is | In fact, the great statesmen of our | day, who are devoted to the Union, are daily as- sailed by him through the reckless politieal organ over which he presides. From the possession of a be deemed, indeed, even more dangerous than that hater of the sound constitutional statesmen of the day. Several years ago, Bryant was a prominent, consistent member of the democratic party; but he has united with Van Buren-in a terrible anti-slavery | citizen will deplore. When a person so notorious, therefore, as this | writer, has made himself offensive to the eyes of the people, and particularly to every lover of that Union | under which we prosper, it is strange: that. publish- ers should attempt to preserve the literary fame of | any such political agitators—of any man 80 hostile generally supposed, and much greater than our rs would be willing to admit. } of the best proofs of the influence which New ercises, is to be found in the fact, that what- done here, silly or sensible, is imitated by other cities at adistanoe. Every undertaking in which we engage is imitated; aml even our folly, ex- 1 Ye travagance, and vice are © great moving and dire other cities are but satellites reve matter what we do, other cit g power ‘ing around it. # will attempt the Every remem bers the abolition riets and outrages that were committed here a aumber of years since produced under the patronage of a porary, Similar riots followed in Philadelphians followed our example, and got up @ very respecta ation, and showed to the world that they could burn churches ae well as t New Yorkers eould. It would seem, therefore, that even what our “higher | » their he to do, is inai- | was, too, in the organ- | rican party. Archbishop impradeatly doffed his political m H. Seward, State, a reactioa too same. Let us give a few instances in proof. Which were military co! Philadelpbia The ry entered arena, the | and connivance of Will of the Ithe result was th ace; organization of a } party. which carried everything before fret eleetion followed. There were | Dishop Hugheses out of New York, but, notwit 1 hat want, the Native Am ple was as strong in Philadel . St. Louis, as they were in New York; g applied the spark to the train, and | lowing in our lead as naturally as | s sly imitation, for we hard} t had not originated in | uld have been a Native where. The people of miselves on many oe- ng to distinguished foreigners, and | complimented with base ingratitude for | hey almost worshipped Dickeas when | have bec. cir pains. «this, Diekens that, and Dickeue eves yth book, whieh east ri i the return was a Dickens le on the very persons who | that gentleman, and lost f respect in adulating him. We had ation for the toadies then, nor have | we now ew York adulation and toadying were followed by tion and toadying eleewhere. The People of « te of the country would not al- Ww us the orof making fools of ourselves, but They imitated us in that Again, Thurlow Weed * monufactured an anti-Masonic and, although there was gan in the country, or probably in the in any age, yet other States attempted to imitate us int , and to get up similar ex Failure, however, was the reeult every where out of New York, in consequence of the want of a “good enough Morgan” for the purpose. So, too, it wae with Mormoniem. The ee- ebrated Joe Smith «id he dug out of @ hill in the neighborhood of Canandaigua, in the State of New York, a new Bible, th eof which were overed with bieroglyphiee, which he alone eould ine things exel but one world, citemente. oh ferpret. Mormonism from that time to the present hae made great strides, priteipally in the other throngh the influenee of New York city when, as we bave already stated, infla- nd direct the reet of the confederacy. wn to later times. The fuleome adula- almort deifleatton of Jenny Lind, has been & other places, uf not exceeded. hl ond State To come JUN ow in feeling to the continued prosperity of the country, and so evidently bent on sapping that constitution under the wholesome influence of which we have | prospered and risen to such high national impor- tance in the scale of nations. Really, we cannot understand what publishers propose to do by acts their books into the Southern market, or into the families of men devoted to the country, the cousti- tution, the Union, and the common welfare of the people t If they do, this is a very curious way to effect their object, for it appears to us that no true lover of his country will be a party in exalting such authors above those whose talents and love of their native land are not subjects of doubt. t ‘The truth, we suspect, is, that the publishers are not sufficiently careful in engaging competent edi- tors for thelr magazines and other literary works. They indulge in an expensive cheap economy, by employing sumall litterateurs, who are carried away with the sophistical political follies of our time, to read over and decide upon the merits of manuseripte. Recent works have satixfied us that this is the case; or why is it that the old political land marks are so often treated with contempt, and that attempts are so frequently made to misrepresent the intentions, and purposes, and patriotiem of the fathers of our ince pendence, our constitution and our prosperity ? There are seen, every day, in the newspa- pers, particularly in those devoted to the ex- tension of abolition doctrines, extravagant notices of the first volume of the second series of a work purporting to be a “ History of the United States,” written by Richard Hildreth, an author whose fame hitherto has rested on the fact that he has made one or two sehool books on history, in whieh errors are much more prominent than merits. Ilad Mr. Hildreth confined his ambition to these small specimens of historical literature, perhaps be would net have provoked any particular 1 but when he gravely appears as a learned historian, and virtually challenges crit! . our firet inquiries are—What improvement has this author made on the works of those who have pre- ceded him? Has be any new, precise, and reliable facts? And what is the philosophical design of his juction? It is not our purpose to answer these questions at present; but on turning over the re- ecutly published volume devoted to the administra tion of Washington, we are impressed with the ne- cessity of applying more rigid m to the books isewed from the press in this country. The tineture of abolition is #0 strong in many of the new publica- tions, that it is quite time to inquire how fur itis | to be used, and to how many classes of books it ie to be applied, ae well ax how far publishers are to be permitted to mislead the public by puffy in the journals. When bietorieal works are made vehicles of a falee and prurient philosophy; when socialistic and abolition theories are made to color the whole field curveyed by an author, and deductions are made from facts and premises merely to eupport those | vegue, and yet dangerous, theories, it becomes an | independent journal to expose the means resorted to for mere effect’s suke. Mr. Hildreth, for instance, is a man who is carried away by the dreamy visions Pacific, the next after the Baltic (hourly expeeted) leav- | of the lovers of political abstraction. Being a vio- lent and rabid abolition newspaper editor, it is not to be anticipated that he could curb his faney—even | in an historical work—sufficiently to do justice to a subject so important, and #0 full of varied political interest, as the administration of the first President; and we are not surprised, therefore, to find that the meanings which are to be gleaned from the one- | Try rudder of the ship Warren, Job @. Lawton, master, | vided views of Mr. Hildreth, are euch as must for | ever eondemn him as a duly conscientious historian. When a writer gives to party what should be given | so deeply infected with the diseases of socialism and anti-slavery, the spread of which threatens to sap the very basis of the federal compact. We give the warning to the New York publishers in time, that the publication of such works as we have alluded to, will be sure to prove injurious to the book-selling trade. Men will not shut their ‘eyes to the insidious spread of doctrines which are aimed at a deprivation of their political rights and privileges, as established at the formation of the Union, Already they begin to inquire into the po- litical opinions of authors; and henee it is that Hil- dreth’s works, and other similar efforts, springing from party feeling, are deemed by all sensible men devoted to the Union, as unworthy of being read . Sagi , | as fair and just representations of practical and ho- rs tion of siaty thousand copies this mouth, and the | ..4¢ truth. Should our warning not be heeded, we | Rochester. know the inevitable result. The publishers who will supply the South and Southwest will be locat- ed in districts where the taint of abolitionism has not corrupted the literature of the day. Tue Fivanctat Leotstation or New Yors.— The Legislature, now in session in Albany, has distinguished itself in a much greater degree than any preceding one. It was the first that ever ac- cepted an invitation, extended by the Common Council of the city of New York, to “ visit the insti- tutions,” drink champagne, and make speeches at the Astor House, swallow rum, brandy, and other sweet-meats on Blackwell's Island, and finish the evening by dancing with nigger wenches at the Five Points, or some other equally classic and re- spectable place. It has distinguished itself for its anti-slavery tendencies and its gambling prs pensi- ties, and it is about to be distinguished for its finan- cial operations. We find before the two houses, and in a position of being soon acted upon, the fol- lowing important financial bills, v Proposed loan for finishing the State canals, to the amount of, tes $9.000.000 Proposed loan for the ly of New York. 2.000.000, Proposed tex for school purposes TLL 800,000 Proposed bill (or bull) to enable the Sergeant- at-Arms and door-keepers to levy on the aunbling establishments of New York, pro- _ > sak NORD fis eaias 10,900 ‘These important measures are now before the collection of wise heads, known as the Legislature of this State, now in solemn session in the city of Albany. In regard to the first item, we certainly think the canals ought to be completed, and ren- higher literary reputation than Garrison, he may | dered available, to transact the internal commerce | of the State and of the great West; but we would like to see them finished in a constitutional manner, and by means constitutionally acquired. Norare we opposed even to increasing the State debt for that pur- pose, but we want te see it done constitutionally. crusade—e crusade now in’ its full career towards | But the way in which the Legislature are attempting — exhibiting results which may be such as every good , t@ do it, is illegal, unconstitutional and atrocious. If | by the preas; but the company to whom belongs it is necessary to raise the sum of nine millions of dollars to perfeet the canals, the constitution points out the manner in which it shall be done and there is but one method of doing it, and that is to submit the question to the people in a distinet manner, ia the shape of a law, to be passed upon at the polls. So much on that point. We do not wish to see the canals and the constitution finished at the same time. In reference to the loan for the city of New York, when it was first mooted, an item for paving Broad- way, on the Kuss system, was struck out, very much against the wishes of the people. There cannot, | in favor of such authors. Do they intend to send however, be any constitutional scruples to this loan, | lect this route, if they please, with the confidence and besides, a new addition to the city debt of two millions of dollars, will furnish plenty of opportu- nities to the Common Council, of providing their friends and csusins with fat jobs aud juicy contracts. We have no doubt it will be passed with the same ease and facility with which the Legislature passed from the Astor House to Blackwell's Island, or | from Blackwell's Island to the Five Points, or from there to some worse place, during their drauken and disereditable revels in this city. We are, and always have been, decidedly in favor of extending the benefits and blessing of education to the youth of our country, for the education of the masses is the ark of our safety, as a nation. | We would have the State dotted with schoolhouses, as thickly a¢ a plum eake is with currants; but the expense ought to be borne equally by the whole State, and all parts of it. We believe that at pre- sent, the tax is unequal, and bears more heavily ou some than others. The gambling money movement is a lobbying measure of fi Bull, Sergeant- certain parties whose names it is not necessary to mention. The system of raising money from gam- blers in order to stifle legislation, is probably as constitutional as some of the schemos for increasing the State debt. In consequence of the excitement caused by the exposition of Mr. Bull's financial operations in this city, it is very probable that this gambling bill will be passed, and gambling houses will be shut up. The consequence will be that the whole business will be concentrated in the hands of a few, who will have power and influence, and cor- ruption, and raseality, and determination enough, to carry it on in spite of law, lawyers, judges aud juries. Such is a brief view of the morality, the honesty, the liberality, the character, the philosophy, of the present Legislature—a Legislature distinguished jor anti-slavery, anti-rentism, auti-gambling, auti- everything except drinking rum and dancing onthe Five Points, of New York. God help this peor State! Blackwell's Island never should have let its visiters escape. Marine Affairs. Sanuse of rae Ancrie—The U, 8. mail steamship Aretie, Capt. Luce, sailed yesterday at noon, for Liver- pool, with 124 passengers, among whom are the Hon. Famuel G. Goodrich, Conenl at Paris, and family; Hon. Charlee B Haddock, Charge d°Affaies to Portugal; Rev. Dr. Chowles, of Newport, R. 1, and Rev. A, Cleveland Coxe, of St. Je remainder will be found under the proper head For Cyantestox.—The steamship Southerner, Capt Dickinson. departed yesterday afternoon for Charlestow For passengers’ names, ew Maritime Intelligence Tie Steen Anmascrsests of rie Livexroot Sreast: snirs —The Collins line have changed their days of #ail- ing from Liverpool. from Saturday to Wednesday —the ing Liverpool on Wednesday, April 9; and those from New York will leave on Saturday instead of Wednesday The Cunard line reeumed their weekly departures on tle 20th wit. by the sailing on that day of the Afrien for New York, to be followed by the America, for Boston. ow the Oth inst., and the Asin, for New York, on the 12th Ax Ivoxstovs Repoen —Masters of vessels. and nanti- eal men generally, would do well to examine the tempo- 107 days from 6 , how laying at Pine street wharf, divabled at ren by lose of ' will there divcover a man's ingenious mode ef conslrnet ing a rudder at wa, whieh brought the chip rally into port frow lowgitudle 24, we, Which was set on foot by Mr. | ~Arms, in secret conjunction with | Church, Hartford, The names of the | A foremast. They | sant oumcanweleucwsvneesenles win tounwve| wees toneene—enS $i sesamin abciiiibindiania eee all B | a cocssssmncomeseseocrestones | man0e | os lows, compared with 1883, viz. :— No. in No. in No. in No. in | 1833, 1801. 1883. ISS New York City 1318 —— 3 Albany . aes - #8] T 2 3 - 2) 2 4 - 1 Bufialo. - 6 - 1 Brooklyn... — 5 - 3 Williamsburgh — 2 - 1 | WeARh so vn cecsnescerarccsvecsenee - 2 » 36 Increase of daily papers..... | The number of newspapers printed in the eity of | New York, in 1832, was 64, and in the State, 258; | and the whole number of copics issued was com- | puted, in Widiam’s Register, for 1832, as follows:— City of New York. Total New York city Out of the city ‘Total in the State. Copies annually,16,028,000 The above shows the situation of the newspaper press in this city and State before the establishment of the New York Heraxp, in 1835. The astonishing increase in the circulation is | | shown in the fact ‘that the New Yor« Heraty alone issues annually over eleven million sheets, being more than the whole issue of the city press— num, to which the weekly and other papers will probably add 7,000,000, making the grand total for the city, 47,000,000 of sheets per annum; and | the whole annual iseue of the press of the State may be estimated to excecd 60,000,000 of sheets. | | Tue New Rovre to Canivorsia, via Nica- RAGUA.—The new route to San Francisco, via Niea- ragua, it is now settled will be open and in com- plete operation by the first day of July next. Public attention has often been called to this route | the right of way through Nicaragua, have never, until now, thought proper to communicate any of their proceedings. ‘They preferred to remove all obstacles to the successful and speedy transit be- | tween the oceans, and, when ready, to begin trans- porting passengers aud freight, than to boast of | what had been done by them. | _ Mr. Vanderbilt a few week since returned from | Nicaragua, whither he went to establish a Moe | Across that isthinus. ‘The company’s arrangements | are now completed, and on the first day of July | next such of our citizens as desire either to go to | or return from San Francixeo, will be able to se- | that they will reach their place of destination in as | speedy a manner as possible. The line, we understand, is made up, for he pre- | sent, as follows:—Mr. Vanderbilt is to run a line of | steamers, of the first class, (among which is the | celebrated Prometheus) between New York and San Juan de Nicaragua. From the latter place the passengers will goin steamboats constructed for the | parpose, up the river San Juan to the lake, thence across the lake to Virgin Bay, and thenee by a good road, built by the company, to San Jaan del Sur, on the Pacific, a distanee of twelve miles and thirty chains. Thus, the eutire land transit between New York and California will be reduced to the | short «pace of twelve miles. | On the Pacific Ocean our enterprising citizen, Mr. William I. Brown, has entered into a contract | | torun, between San Juan del Sur and San Franeiseo, | the steamers Pacific, Capt. Baile: «l the Inde- pendence, (both of which are now ou their way,) and one now building, and to be shortly completed, New Orleans drafts, pps eta So UI Bee Or Sores ae Fact ef the Ware for Liberty ' os AA of Rome: ‘tus ittare has +: Shen eacea ttc allots aad Ne | $ : # worse any body else o bere, with paler. is wow porte.” by the Pmoticlae “hechwichs Beoond * ine ee, % avewur, between Twenty sereath sad Teenty cighth streets. any article te the Vee can . targer and better ar. rortment et s % ~y typ ty ether house te this city. Ladies aad Vy the deaen oF ethers lee according Wo qeality, % | piles nents sn senna teste ear 126 At the residences or ve . ° EEE She DSS Increase of neWspapers in the State, since 153, 204. | Pe... de nod policed to habs cnt ped DAILY PAPERS. . | wes vitatioms ete i. yo ty Te » The number of daily papers published ir as ful- yh, Pe ig oy oven aden g Prench eo Srramgewe! materiale, hae Ney afloat, Ade and eR hibiiow, tha thors v wee Miniatures " o Vy HOLMES, No 20 Brow ‘The Eye.—Dr. Robinson fician, recently frem Lemdon, Dr. Wheeler, Gewliss, fi is at once t Genin bas imported. Urillinnt selection of sale vity. Unredeemed Pledges.—300 Frock and Sack sorts $80 $m dre WA) bovslnons coats, $1 We $3,000 pour: sie LAW) vents Assorted, W cents te $2. eens sed Bookman “s Electric Hair Dye ts ontively free from ail ingredionts which © jure the hair or skin: ite fe ‘ ‘and & beet black or while the hair i made daily, semi-weekly, weekly, semi-monthly aud This with Bople's Mype monthly—in 1832. ‘The daily issue of the New York . $I ie ws city press is about 126.000, or 40,000,000 per an- | Brigham C. Day, Pour! stree®, and drugyiots pemcraily on Phalon's Hatr Dye, to color the hair or whiskers, the moment it Witheut iajury te orekin. It can be wi hagely withous e Wi sd Ts ly par ys Toh Ne J s Li- attimeres Wositagtengtte sau ouly bape erage el kate Se" are ¢ ‘ale, wholesale ond ‘retail, oe” appliods he gy ed ‘s Italian Medicated cures freckles, eruptions, chaps, fa. | Poudre Subsiloe from any part of the body. i Monge, tom ‘and cheeks, Hair Restorative, Lily White, old established depot, 67 Walker street, near And T. R. Callender’s, 8 South Third street, Wigs and zens and Strangers iful Wick and } #7 Maiden fe ry mi long Hair. fromt Braids. & purchesing elsew Paneer this city. © Phetpe’, Chapin porte wale w tem, like a clock, ad we hes sonched the os « Uvew, and keep 0 Wroudway. Corns removed in from pain or da fully treated, by Attention in this eity f of these disease: at medi he sev ores Orde: geretin, Es te r: o to be called the San Franciseo. ‘These steamers are all new, and two of them have | already earned reputations for speed second only to the Prometheus. Mr. Vanderbilt is alse building a new steamer for this line, at the yard of Mr. J. | Simonson; and we have reason to believe that ere | long,we shall have a weekly line between New York and San Francisco, via Nicaragua. The more routes we may have to the Pacifie the | better it will be for the public. There is nothing like competition in thie, as in all other business, | Numerous com + have been made by travellers of the inconvemienees to which th re subjected t ing nd returning from California, whieh “ iM doubt remedy. We therefore | rorpect of soon having another line | etween New York and oar new State INTERESTING ros THe Mormons ar Sant Laxe. —We have received three numbers of a weekly newspaper published at the City of the Great Salt Lake, in Utah Territory. It contains eight pages, about eight by ten inches eneh, and is conducted | with considerable energy. We publish elsewhere, all the chief news which it contains, together with | | several of the advertisements, which show to the | Tender that the Mormon people are intent upon | building up this territory upon a true business prin- | | ciple. The extracts are interesting and worthy of general attention. Police Intetingence. ; |e ‘pares We ADVERTISEMENTS RENEWED EVERY DAY, Yor ie : a MUSICAL. HEODORE Bevan. THIRD AND LAST CL ane tal eal Quartette Soiree, will {0 Headway. on Saturday ox H.C. Timm: Voraliete, M © ’ Grand street. fern day and Saturday ato clock. ERKSIEG. 421 Broad Music, Vooal Moyer's ail. N ENTIRELY NEW 6; OCTAVE: 1¥\NORDRTE. sery ow by KERKSIEG & BREEDING. Importers LS ~ 3 * ' & aise, Weevign musts, G2) Breedwey. ; ‘e , PUBLICATIONS. W MAPOF THR ATES. CANADA, india tela, > r Central Am boundaries Utah, a Violent Aesautt with a Ki ife Ot ~ ficers Kev MeDermott. of the Sixth ward police, | a oe Sere, “Lakes ts Galian bal one | arrected he nnme of Willinm Heyland, on ‘American sa | bw of ercwulting. with a large carving it the Wert Cy yy § kuife. Theedore Anthony. inficting a severe cut on the skman etree’ pte covers 0 cones, | erm end shoulder, aixo on the and forehead. The weunds were considered very dangerous and may possi. UpoeRarn surrvens, AMILTON. ROBT. Diy cause death, Some difficulty cecurred between the cheap publicn ne of the a Prelate te Sagrevieg, yaatice in Cow Ray. on the Five Pointe which lend to | pare eld Boo pe the viclent aesnw ‘The intention of Heyland, itis al. | literary ge! fold. All pervome legrd, war to take the life of Anthony on the spot, are requested to ea! em e the stork Shieh be would undoubtedly have weeomplished had he OKN F. NEAGLE, Wi Nasene street. not been stopped by persons near him. by whieh his | murderous derign was frustrated. The injured man was conveyed tothe City Hoepital. The accused was locked up in the Tombs by Justice Osborn to answer the \ __ Char ee of Stealing @ Wa'ch—An individual enited Win. Cunningham wae arrested. yesterday, by officer Kelly, of the Fourth ward. ona charge of #t # gold wateh valued at $90 Uh property Henry Witeon The ae- | . cored Was convey Justice Osborn, who detained | priate | him for «further bew Charge of Wen rested two met whe PAPER HANGINGS, dic, PAPER WANGINGS 263 Brondway, invite the atte: Heblicagmeraliy te Ubeie extensiv reneh P ‘ wale, whole Lh JOMON & HART. 1 the trade and the