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himself. Mr. Crittenden, some years ago, gave a written opinion in this identical Florida case of Mr. Corwin, that the United States was not bound to pay interest. It is on record in the Attorney Gene- esate ral’s office, and has been published in the Congres- {ovrice M. W. CORNER OF FULTON an Nassay srs, | sional documents. Mr. Conrad, while a member of | Congress, was on the Galphin investigating com- THE DAILY HERALD, 2 cents per copy-8T per | meta, and he endorsed Mr. Crittenden’s opinion WEEKLY HERALD, coery Saturday, at 6% | , in a report signed by him, made by the ii- NEW YORK HERALD. samus GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR AND SHECaE. gents per copy, or $3 per annum; the European ’ $4 per annum, to ony part of Great Britain, and $5 te ny ofthe committee. The majority of the com- ne mittee, in its report, also approved of that opinion. JE, conta marae pee Forsion Comaes- | | iv ROQUESTED TO Seat act | views, on the ground that the Florida case was weak- Fs Subscriptions, grywith er than the Galphin case, and had less merits. We een ney remitted. (he Pomase will be de- | procured copies of most of the documents at the ae Satie.” taken of anonymous communications. | time, and if we can find them, will publish them VERTIS MENTS yon wed every morning. | hereafter, for we predict that this ease will be a ond dgnunk ePecuted wih neamness, cheapness | ¢-uittul topic of discussion in the newspapers and in the next Congress. The documents we allude to are a curious collection. There were hosts of agents, counsel, and attorneys in these Florida claims, Welume XV! ... AMUSEMENTS TIS EVENING. and numerous arguments. N. P. Tallmadge, for- mer Senator from this State, made a voluminous BOWERY THEATRE, B: BROADWAY THEATRE, Boatnay A Mo written argument, and some half # dozen other lawyers ditto. We should be glad if Mr. Corwin’s organ at Washington, or any other organ, would inform us when Congress made an appropriation to pay this claim for interest, and quote the words of the act. wv oy will be lab iP4 ARE PARTICUL AND Packages 51 ALL LETTERS by ma Advertisement: be post-m Moxtz-Caxsro. | NG CALL WIBLO'S GARDEN, Brosdway—Wasixnwowan—-Ca- FARINA. | BURTON'S MIEATRE, Chambers street—ilvrocarre— Mowing Cari—Senoor vor Tloens. NATIONAL THEATRE, Chatham strect—A Pieasavr | NriGuwon—fHarawa, ais | The House of Representatives, certainly, by its BROUGHAM'’S LYCEUM, Broadway—Cxiuo or rue | concurrence in the report of the Galphin investi- Pea Zoe 42 ran Lroscn. gating com », repudiated its allowance. The RELS, Me €GRISTY'S MI nies’ Hall, 472 Broadway | claim may be just; but we say that Cong: has ee Saree renee: __ =" not yet authorized the department to pay it, and OWS MNS TRS reuens Musien! Hall, Nee 444 | shat Congress is the proper tribunal to decide as to its allowance, and the only tribunal that can al- low it. But this is not the real question. It is one that is vastly more important, and that lies nearer the of the government, than the abstraction of a few thousands of dolla more or less, to Neged arrears of interest. Who cares amount taken in the Galphin case, ich it was tak plunder” (as Mr. Calhoun styled it) is the great question under con- AMERICAN MUSEUM—Amvsine PervoRmances ar PERNOON AND EVENING. DOUBLE SHEET. New York, Friday, May 2, 1851. tals hundred The Latest Telegraphic News. ‘The whig convention at the State House in Bos | ton, together with the interest taken in it by the Boston Atlas, hitherto a Sewardized whig journal, shows. that the coalition in Massachusetts between the freesoilers aud democrats is not relished. ‘The whig party, therefore, retreats from the treasonable position it was about to as: on the freesoil form, and is determined to come back to the old established order of things. The much talked of letter from Daniel Webster to the Mayor and Aldermen of Boston, in reply to theirs of the twenty: first of last month, inviting him to address his fellow citizens in Faneuil Hall, is published under our te If brevity is, indeed, wit, then this epi . Webster's is one of his most witty letters. At least, no one will doubt that it is a wise and dignitied one. Our telegraphic despatches give us three days Jater news trom Hayti, via Boston. The accounts which we have recently published with r the dieposition of the Chamber of De fs wholly subservient to the iguorant will Jouque, to insult the American government a turn a deafto its reasonable deman sideration of the | eting as the paid as the na claim, not from his State, before Department! It issaid he waste have , dependent on its allowance. be a practice of more corrupting tenden- ey than this? An act of Congr ought to be passed to prevent members of Congress from hiring themselves out as treasury b We intend to urge this matter to Congress at its next session, and give good grounds for it. We | hope the House will send for persons and papers in s, and among them some Mexican claim 2 large co Can there ngent fe sundry e and Treasury Department cases. This ms should be sifted to the bottom, ond bottomless pit. interest in the Florida case, it is ened, transferred, parted with, re- It is reported that it Dey Custom Ho: | it be nota | Mr, Corwia | said, be has >, are cou | linquished, peg ted From Albany, we learn that a call has been made | was cold; and thereby he has become entire to re-assemble the Constitutional Convention ¢ interested.” Good! Who bought that interest? 3886. = The fifteenth of the moi named for th day; but it is to be doubted ver bers come together on the requi emanate from what source it may. it?’ The terms of the bargain important in deciding as to the | What was paid for much if the mem- | are. it will be seen, tion, let it | disinterestedness of the} The canal } ‘The reason, we presume, that influences the Secre- tary to decline deciding this case, if he is not inte- rested in it, is, because his former connexion with it may cause people to talk about it. This is a fair presumption; and delicacy, or modesty, or honesty, | has not too much to dowith it. Why shoulda man of high character and tone, conscious of rectitude, thus act? ifhe is in his heart convinced the claim is just, and owght to be paid, and if he is really not ed, he would, it seems to us, take pleasure He would gladly avail himself of the opportunity to repair openly the wrong done by atleast three preceding administrations in refusing to allow and pay this interest. ‘The truth is, Mr. Corwin ought not to continue in the cabinet any longer. He should not encumber the President with his presence, if he is ina position | not te be able to fulfil all his official duties impar- tially. It is best for the country that highly honora- le sets men, insuch disagreeable positions, should quit. There are plenty of others not in such a fix. This would be a capital course fer Mr. Fillmore to | prescribe, for many reasons. We believe in the salu- question can reevive no aid, even from the expl nt tions and votes of a conv vhich may be re- newed to interpret the mea a former day. The resolution of Mr. Loomis, with respect to increasing the liabilities of the State be- yond the current yearly revenue, was rejected, it is true, at the convention of 1546, and the probability is that the members would not be willing to come | tegether to leave the subject still at the same point, particularly at their own expense its own action at The Cabinet of Mr. Fillmore—Its Condition and Prospects. ‘The few remarks we m. fow days ago, re specting certain Florida interest claims, the allow- ance aud payment of whichis about being decided at ‘Washington, and also respecting the settlement of some Mexican claims, we notice have raffled the feathers of a good many of the game cock turkey buzzards in and about Washington. perceive that one of our cotemporaries there, who is usually cons) lineal deseendant—the hereditary suce Jones of the Tyler red the —of John | Rotation is a sublime principle of cosmogany, astro- nomy and optics. It restores the just equilibriam to nature and art—to religion or politics. houn regarded it as important. i eabinet—not the least in the wo: all is con- | cord, and harmony, and peace, and love, and uni b . , f farther, he has ventured to deny that any | %€8t, as effective as the chloride of lime. No man eanse for censure or suspicion exists againet any- | thould stay in cabinet ofice over a year, except a body, and particularly against Mr. Corwin, in re- | Secretary of State, and he not over two y : This Copernican system of cabinet officers will re- gardto the Florida interest claims. Here is the | 3 . . article — store our politics to theirancient purity. Mr. Cor- {From the W | win, we believe, is really at the bottom of half the Dean Swift, in one of hix pamphlets, defines politiesl | discontent and dissension in the whig party. He is asthe art of convineing the people of salutary | pncory a Geto! Jalehoods for some good end. Things have ehanget | 0D the “anxious bench” forthe Presidency, and has prince hisday We heap 9 ee ca . been for some years. He cordially hates Webster pope” Inogemrnty Neineogheremert yw yaaaaadgay and Clay, and hated Taylor. He fears Seward and ‘One of these we raw copied [from the New York wing, who have, by jockeyiem and foul riding, cB d Hho po a poor eB got ahead of him in the race for abolition support. in the course of adjudication bef He cares not a fig for Mr. Fillmore, except so far p a = 7 fa “ania Seer tans ashe canuse his power and patronage to subserve : his own ends. Jie may be a formidable man some- | time or another, but not soon. In fact, there isa One-Eyed Thompson in the museum of political sities at the federal city, and Mr. Corwin knows who be is are beginning to be satisfied that the best at ce for the President, if he wishes to hington Republic | Hievall| into the Union Mr department The question which iook to this f fs whether, under the law and claimants are entitled to their dues; and th Jeged to be the leg 7. Corwin. before he became a member ef the cabinet. bad given an opinion as coun tion ; but be has no in- | cur We Verest, direct ¢ ent, of any i wame or mature. h + to reform and remodel his entire ried to say. We iis ntl bn oa in the preinises, and to Mr. Webster should be retained ed he and keep at work zealous- fthe new administration, pro eion of any improper bin subject, during the ill his request, to the Secretary of the nahie ig Mr. Conrad expressly agreed to Mr. Crittendea’s | Here we have the spectacle of a Senator | and some War Department and some Navy | artment, and some General Post Office, and some | | tary effect of frequent changes in cabinet officers. | eretary of the Treasury. | | patra here, and the loud talk of emigra mere designs, framed directly for the purpose of hood- , winking our government and drawing its atten- | More Cvea Exreprrions.—Recent intelligence from New Orleans will be found in our correspon- denve, in which we have some account of the move- ments of the expedition against Cuba, and of cer- tain tactics which have been resorted to for the» concealment of the real designs of those engaged in | the scheme. Ofcourse, it is difficult to say where all the rumors will end. The Republic newspaper | even announces that one body of adventurers is marching across the country, on its way to some port, and it has been intimated that St. Augustine or Jacksonville is to be, among others, one of the ports whence an expedition is to sail. We think it is quite possible. natural that anything in the same line of plunder should be carried on in that region, particularly as those who were instrumental in carrying on the Jacksonville expedition against the pockets of the people, are highly in favor of these new illegal en- terprises against Cuba. All these expeditions against a country with which we are on terms of amity, and with which we have treaties, and which have a common centre, have been organized reeently, Facilities, too, have been given towards establishing them, by the ineffi- ciency of the federal authorities of New Orleans, who permitted Lopez to eseape from the demands of the law, which he had manifestly and coufessed- ly broken. This cannot be doubted. Had punish- ment been inflicted for the first transgression, there would have been no attempt at a second invasion of the island. We should have had peace. Even now, the arrests made here and elsewhere, will not secure tranquillity for the future, because it is not atall improbable that the fitting out of the Cleo- ny are tion from other points. Should it be otherwise— should the government be able to show a clear case against those who have been arrested—the result | will amount to nothing as a nee that these expeditions are at an end. On the contrary, though a momentary arrest of the intentions of the adventurers may be made, we permanent assu: have no confidence that the cabinet at Washington | are displaying any ability or efficiency beyond that which has shown the limit of it, in the course against Lopez and his associates. The security of Cuba cannot be derived from the present administration. The Spanish government must not expectit. They must depend upon their own power and rescurees. The little that our government can do, will be to disturb, without annihilating, the piratical organi- zation. Thus, the chief seeurity and principal defence of Cuba must be in the general loyalty of the mercan- tile classes of the island, and in the activity and wisdom of Concha, the Captain General, who, with thirty thousand well armed troops, can bid defiance to the most determined efforts of the piratical ad- venturers from this country. As to the rumors of any extensive defection of the population of Cuba from the crown ef Spain, we have only to say that we do not credit them. A few wealthy persons, ambitious for distinction and for office, may be | foolish enough to believe that, with a little aid “from without,” they may revolutionize the island; but that their credulity on this point is shared by the mass of those engaged in trade, we cannot be- lieve. They are as contented as men need be, and | have confidence that the wise administration of the ow the point of the A and wind up our foreign affairs Of View will ~ bear the light es from his or anybody's pen. “Ask So, so—our cotemporary denies that Mr. ( not Fight—submit to nothing the Secretary of the Treasury, is in any deg: ht that we should forbid | terested in these claims; but he a European monarchies from meddling with Ameri- has declined having anything w ud can affairs—this is the sacred of republican tement, and that they have be referred Tr. | freedom, and within its hallowed precincts the Grabam, the Secretary of the Navy, because of his | tifcrous systems shall not enter te, O procul, we deelin Why, we ask, if he iv not in fact ine | proc, profani. Wi should have a spirit yet him, erested, does he so decline deciding « upp army, ne @laime? Why does he evade and shrink from the | ™ performance of his official duties : some such s authority has the Secretary of th polit upon them at all? The act of ( i ac smooth faces this claim, it is said, is founded, refers them s here are around him those who, but for th tery, would seize each me of his eight 1@ Seore to the Secretary of the Treasury, and of the Navy bas no more right or power in the mat ter. nor the I’resident, nor either, than the editor of | an honest ‘on, and four at the Washington Telegraph. The Attorney General | owledge the corn. They all know may be called in for his opinion as to legal points, | °M* Galphin rot bi zed on the | It will and skilful doctors They are disaffected € no affection for the Presi These things ruined their and though they could see it before iministration already of the Treasury, rmation of the Seer ht of physic infirr , and b wer in the busine departuental officers at reflect that the “4 . placed in office 3 and if they would foo it would be well if the Washington would new and thes | dent--none whatever Bre mere minieter ial function exegnte the nets of Congress « | predecessors; wt those laws alittle more atte ly, they would | they took their places, they have since become as get along better blind as Clayton & Co, were. Like ostriches, they it ia admitted, we perceive, that Mr. Corwin | over up their heads in the sand, and forget that gave an opinion in favor of the allowance of interest | their extremities are exposed. They have little in this case, ax counsel for the claimant. This strength with the people, (except Webster.) and the excuse offered for hie declining to act inthe case | they know it. Can euch a concern prospe as Secretary of the Treasury. We very well recol- | make the country prorper? At least thre: Jeet, that about the time Mr. Corwin war appointed | thr jarters of the whole cabinet should resign be tw and in thie number we include General and Postmaster © Secretary of the Treaeury, b uterest” in t ' ned out, mtereet claims was t Per favs that terest openly master not n sund he P and some of the stated the ane didn ny i he An Mirror t—pub- | ' - A Caniser. 1 the new Captain General will bring about reforms quite as fast as the public mind will be prepared to re- ceive them. The misfortune of these new rumors of invasion, that they will interfere with the liberal plans and efforts of the Captain General to carry out those measures which he has studied to | advocate, in behalf of the population of the island. All that he has done has already been undone; for the Spanish government will not be willing to relax its hold upon the colony while attempts are made, every now and then, to seize the reins entirely from its hands, and to rob the crown of one of its bright- | est and most valuable jewels. The true friends of Cuba abroad, and the friends of its population, and to its future welfare, therefore, must regret that the wild, reckless, and illegal conduct of any portion of the people of the United States, or of those who have taken hospitable shelter under ¢he American flag, should bring evils upon Cuba which might have been spared to that lovely and flourishing island, and which will only tend to keep her back from that happy position which she will attain under a mild government by the mother country. Tux En Rat.noap—Irs Histony.—We give elsewhere in our columns, to-day, a full and accurate history of the rise and progress of the Erie Railroad, which has been completed within a few days. This history has never been written till now. This is one of the longest works of the kind in the country, and probably longer than any other rail- road in any part of the civilized world. It is now twenty years since the project was started. It has taken over thirteen years to complete it from the Tiudson river to Lake Erie, and an expenditure, probably, of twenty-five millions of dollars. estimated that the whole debt, including the origi- nal capital, the various @lasses of bonds, and the erest accruing on them, is equal to thirty-five or forty millions of do! Only one track has yet been completed, and it never will pay, utless there are two throughout the whole distance ; and even then we doubt if it can ever pay the original debt. Yet it is a vast improvement, and the property all along its line, on both sides, and at both ends, be increased in value more than the whole e the road, amounting to thirty or forty millions of dollars. All great works of internal improvement seem to ruin the original projectors, bondholders, and stockholders. They benefit those who have property along their lines, and those who buy up the stock, after they are completed, at a ch rate. The metropolis will for years feel the bene- fits of the Erie Railroad, in its increasing wealth and importance; while the original projectors, stockholders, and bondholders, will be more and more sinking into poverty, insignificance and the poor house. ‘This is the way with all great works, either civil or military. The glory of the Mexican war cost eighty millions of dollars in money, and twenty- five thousand lives. The glory of that war, costing so much, was monopolized for nearly two years by General Taylor, and now it is about to pass into the hands of General Scott, who will bly use it up before be gets through with it his is a queer world; we are a queer people; we are a very queer nation, In fact, human life is a queer afiuir, and the life beyond the grave is pr Who knows? bly queerer still or THK ( Saxatany Conpition ity the i tion and inefficiency on the part of the city govern- liad it not been ment, in cleansing the streets for the entire week of hard rain, which washed away, recently, a large portion of the vegetable and animal accumulations of the winter, we should have had loud and numerous complaints of the un healthy state of the city it many of the vaulte where oyster shells have been deposited during the winter, send up pestiferous odors, and gutters in various parts of the city, reek with un- written perfumes, which bear messnges of disease and death. In about a half-dozen wards, too, in consequence of high rents, the population are crowded and huddled together, with no regard to the terrible results which usually spring from «ach a recklexs indifference to health and life. This isa sad tate of things, and must be obviated. Why 4 not the vast host of those Who have ovt-door relief, is, be furnished with employment in ele streets? Why not divide the t 6 who have nothi r the benefit of themerly large? Certainly th prevement, and well organized sy the eity every night—for, in the day time be inefective in theit laber—would ma peliehenlthy, and comparatively desir the sumer months: Jacksonville has had areputation | for bank piracies on an extensive scale, and itis quite | Not at all. | It is | t month or two, we have noticed much inatten- | | Tue Invienation Meeting Against Sik Henny L. Buwer.—The indignation manufactured against | Sir Henry Bulwer’s recent dinner speech is too nueh | to be borne, because it is like straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel. If a subject had been wanted for agitation, it might have been found in that $25,000 fund in the bands of the Irish Directory, or which was there originally. Where is it now! Heaven only knows how many have travelled to Europe with it, on ‘special missions.” On this head, there is room for indignation; for what gin is there in telling the truth, or in seeking it! Now, with regard to the British Minister’s speech, who could seriously find fault with it? Sir Heary said breeches—and he might have gone further, and de- clared that they went without shoes. Therefore he | was historically accurate, so far as he went, and we are quite indignant that his speech sould be made use of to raise a disturbance wholly uncalled for and out of place. We claim to have as much Celtic blood as gives foree and energy to the character, and we were pleased with these historical allusions, made in a jocular way, and with no intention to of- fend. There are thousands and tens of thousands around us, who have a good share of the sume Celtic blood, too, who, we dare say, never dreamed of indignation against the fact stated by the British Minister. Why, one might as well quarrel for being a son of Adam, before the fig leaves were made into breeches, or of any Briton at the time of the invasion by Julius Cesar, when Britons ran about with no covering exeopt paint and mud. more claims than Celtic to indulge in indignation. They have to having whiskey under their skins blood. The whole meeting, and the resolutions, have originated ina mistake—a mistake as great as that of the British Minister in explaining a letter that was simply a joke and required no explana- tion, and being completely silent on that wh published, addressed by him to Chatfle Now, we shall oppose the rssolutions of this ish meeting, on the ground that no indignation is ry on such a trivial affair. Nay, more—we trust that Sir Henry will be retained as the repre. sentative of the British government till Mr. Web- ster licks him out of Nicaragua. Though he isa litile too British for us, yet that does not give us a | pang. We have plenty of shrewdness, even with “a weak government,” to see that he does not do anything that cannot be set toour side. So, having given our opinion with as much indignation as the subject demands, we shall wait to see whether or not President Fillmore fears our indignation most, or that of the speech-makers at the Irish meeting. We shall see. Hemeves or tHe Day.—Dodge, who attempted tomake a great noise in the city and elsewhere, by getting a $625 Jenny Lind ticket, and filling Trip- | has suddenly disap- | ler Hall “for one night only,” peared, leaving not even a grease spot behind him. The Fish girls, too, who rapped spiritually here- abouts, have vanished, also, and with them severa] philosophers and expounders of myths and myste- ries. ‘The truth is, that the New York public, who have been so gulled, again and again, are be- ginning to open their eyes, and to put their hands | inquiringly into their breeches’ pockets, when | asked to pay for a sight. are not all done with yet. A new one has started under the patronage of the 7ribune—the organ of oddities and isms—and we are soon to have an ex- hibition of second sight—veritable second sight. Humbug! Second sight is the gift only of the pure | ' blooded Celt. It never belonged to a Frenchman, and never will. The Scotch Highlanders, without brecks, bave it by nature, while your pantalooned Frenchman cannot possessit, even by study. Were ‘a real Scotchman, of pure blood, to come among us, and give an exhibition of second sight, there | would be reason in it, and we should credit his pre- tensions. We have a little of second sight ourself, particularly with respect to humbugs, whether in the mysteries of the age or in the cabinet move- ments of the day—but, to talk of a Frenchman having second sight is absurd. He may be a very good cook, and may see as far as his sauff-box; but it is ridiculous pretence to attempt competition with the keen-eyed Celt, once semi-barbarous, semi-clad, and, at the present day, in the High- lands, still joyfal in bare legs, and in his capacity to see far ahead of himself. Two Weexs’ Later Catirorxia News will be due on Sunday next. oo Postponement.—Dr. Banning’s Free Lec- ture to ladies, was not delivered on Weduesday last, on ac- evunt of the storm. It will take place to-day, at ity o'clu P. M., at the Society Library Rooms, 34s roadway. The ladie® generally are invited to attend. La ad Illustrated r—Sold by 8. Freneh, treet, Gleason's Pictorial Draw red into the more convenient size so enriched with mote engravings—there are til in the present number—each enperior specimens of artiat excellence, ‘The portrait of Webster te striking, and the le idea of that “ald of wgteenble te want a paper yenr, of ten cen! ote, 151 Nassau view of San Francisco gives an adi | gnecity.” There are also sixteen pac mutter—ro tl! Hp makes es pl te mn is three dollar: They wre at Mr. French's he ready Friday Morn= able {geeliion 1 and Original Mh ieivms. Look out fe ¢ Zeents. To Lady Equestrians.—ventn would res- nd visiters from ew York, pectfally anprise the bad other cities, that he hy trimmed Straw Riding Hat, admitabiy #uite April Showers and Ha during the recent rainy weather, t at Meal ale i atnaged by 1 © on et dealers and at t the hate par- f Canal street, y ther hate procured {rom Mr. Meali umbrellas, ete. Go and vee ne or tn Shade, In damp or dry e beautiful g! until it is entirely roperior quality of th i weed in the ma ate of th article as to the peculiar style of finish whieh distinguishes them from others, Indeed, they seem impervions ty wa fy efeet on them. If and Inrting Hat, ao to Ku lag, Where you will be eure to fimadit, Parts Mantillas.—The attention of Ladies | is invited to the Parisian Mantilin Renporiuim, $01 Broadway, where on new and most elegant variety of these if tes i BF, moderate prices. M . Novelties received — Important to Gentlemen—Gentlemen who priv mnt fit ae one of the requisites of thelr under elot thay inewte itat No, | Astor Ie Th &e oat that establishment, are warranted t | unwrinkled smoothness, and to be trendy for delivery om the if at Which they are promised ° « celebrated cheapest carpet establish ment i Uoited States, No.8 Bowery, Iiram Anderson's, and make # n from thore moet be 1 say twenty-Oy M per yard The Broadway Carpet Store—Peterson & Humpte lebrated earpet dealers, corner of Broat nd White streets, have the extensive aasortm Oil Cloths, Fable ¢ Mattines, Drweners vers a Sewing Machines fur sale at $29 wd, only that the Celts, in ancient times, went without Those of the Irish, therefore, who have raised the | hue and ery, are probably not the persons entitled | off by some advantage | However, the humbugs | A Beautiful L pear yrey gneve ae. Miller, Canal strect, has enlarged and deco: itis mow the most splendid ‘ntabiishmont 1 States: where ladies, misses, and children ean be supy with Gaiters, Slippers, Ties, and every article appertaiuil tothe Shoe business, at moderate pric remember 4. B. MILLERS, 1 ul strest. that deaths that might all be saved. I tell that will he unendurable to any feeling a has such unac Fou candidly, taors, th | Strengths and sheerfulnc | is cured by tt, as well ay pehidieelsuine nabs oat Bowling and Billiard Establishment for ale, See next page. Pocket and Pen Kani Knives, Razors, Tollet fesplaned call the attentivm of those im Cutlery, &e.—Thi want o} ‘he phot ment, which inthe mostcom~ letein a SAUNDERS" ‘M7 Broadway, corner ry street, and 387 Broadway, | Glass Ware.—James Rorke & Sons, No. Lave on hand, which they will sell at'low prices, American pressed Tumblers, together with « ment of Druggists’ Glass Ware. World's Fair.—Visitors to the World's | Fair are invited to ¢ xamine the subseriber's stock of Dr. ‘They are the most compact and useful article | kind manufactured, containing all that is necessary for tl toilet of the most fastidious. SAUNDERS, 147 Broadwa; corner of Liberty st., and 387 Broad ory, 387 Breadway.—Ladies are amine this choi lection of dress 102 Joho street, 5.000 dozen 1 assor' Phalon’s Magic Hatr Dye, to « color the hair gz, Whiskers the moment it is applied, without injury to the | hair or ekia, It can be warhed immediately without dis- turbing the color, and has no bad odor. It is applied, or 591d, at Phalon's Wig and ‘Toupee manufactory, {07 Bridway, | Hor sale in the city and country by druggiats generally. Gouraud’s Liquid Halr Dye Instantly con= pray bair to brown or black. Gouraud’s Italian ted Sap cures tan, pimple eruptions, | Gouraud’s Poudre Subtile erad r from upy Gourau 8, freckles, ates ha d Laboratory, 67 Walker street, first store from | Broadway; Callender, S$ South Third stréet, Philadelphia 12 Washington street Grey, Red, or Tnngeay 1 Hatr can easily | ntly be converted into a beautiful black or brown r, of the most permanent and natura + ue of Bogle's Bs » Hair Dye. the beauty of the color is ~ This, with "s Hyperion Fluid, for the . sold by Stade, 100 Fulton street; us Breacway; Cayry & Co. and Brigham & Day, Pearl street e would call the at- Wigs and Towpees< tontion of persons pecuirtag , to w recent improvement. ‘The eame was awarded silver uicdal for the frst premiura atthe last fair. They can be seen at E. PHAL and Hair Dye Factory, 197 Broudway, corner of Dey atrvets Citizens and stranger's are invited to examine before puroas- | Angelsewhere, Copy bis address. Dr. Kellinger’s Magie Fluid, for the Laser one that makes a trial is delighted with its agr Tt does ust daub and gum i redths «f the trash does. It ¢ plication ; it allays inflammation, ex- i y the head at every a | tracts fever, if diately, cures all nervy efi feeling. Sold In MONEY MARKET. Tuonspay, May 1—6 P.M The stock market opened a little more buoyant to- day, but the transactions were not large, A larger por- tion of the operations were for cash than usual, and the Dears are evidently buying in their shorts. All the rail- road stocks were in moderate request, to-day. at a slight improvementin prices, Edgeworth and Portsmouth were in demand, and several hundred shares of each changed | hands, at an advance cf a fraction on prices current at the close yesterday. It isthe impression in the street | that money will be very abundant about the middle of May or the first of June, and that the rate of interest | ‘ill rule as low as at any time during the past year. ‘This may and may not give an impetus to speculation in stocks, It does not follow that an easy money market promotes speculation. We have known an upward move! ment in the fancies when money has been worth two and three per cent per month, and a dull, depressed state of the stock market when money was worth but four and | five percent peramnum. The brokers have everything | to gain by getting up an excitement now in the fancies, | and we have no doubt they will contrive in some way to doso, Outsiders, generally, are pretty clean of stocks, and they would, no doubt, bite quite sharp if the hooks were properly baited. They have, however, become cautious, and are not so easily drawn in as in times past. When outsiders are full of stocks it is forthe interest og | the brokers to depress prices, and compel holders to sell | out. The plans laid to accomplish this object almost | invariably eucceed, and outsiders get pretty well used up: When the brokers get the bulk of the fancies in their | bands at low prices, they change their tactics ; and ac- | cording to their ideas, then, one would think a sudden ! revolution had been realized in the financial affairs of | every incorporated company; that from the poor, misera- bie good-for-nothing securities they had become the mort Valuable investments in the country, It makes a vast difference in a man’s publicopinion, whether he wants | to buy or sell any stock; and it ix curious to watch the | course of some of the leading operators in Wall street and note their remarks from time to time relative to any particular security. If a change actually occurred as | often in the condition or position of any company, as in |} the minds of speculators relative to the value of its shares, we should not know from one day to another, what any security in the market was worth, Stocks are now well held fora rise, and in the usual course of Wall | street matters,an upward movement should soon take | place, but we see no indications of such a state #f things | at present | The receipts at the office of the Assistant: Treasurer of this port to-day, amounted to $02,061 28; payments, $49,148 66; balance, $3,007,607 60 ‘The reevipte of the Long Island Railroad Company for | the month of April, 1851, amounted to $15.106 02 against $12,202 09, showing an increase of $2803 83 this year. | The report of the Mechanics’ Bank of Augusta, Geo., | 642, of which $1,183,200 wus in exchange ; deposits nvt | bearing interest, $300,876 ; epecie, $410,249 23; elreula- tion, $0 | the 7th inst. was ten dollars per share; of the paper running and lying over, only two thouswud dollars was | considered doubtful. The earnings of the Erie Railroad Company for the month of April in each of the past two years, were as | annexed :— New York axn En Receipts freia passengers and 1 Receipts from freight Rattnoan il $87.G80 81 101,168 70 Total earnings for the same month last year, $189,149 51 TAL Inerense in April, 1851 This increace is equal to thirty-three and a third per cent. The new part of the road, opene w days since, has not been yet used for traffic, and the company have not, therefore, derived any benefit from the exten- sion, ‘The earnings for May. this year, will not show the | full capacity of the road, as some days must elapse be- will take place, we believe, on the 1th inst, Arrangements ba eted by the Superintend- ent of the Michigan Central Railroad, for finishing the work from Michigan City to the [ilinois line, and thence to Chicago, ‘The iron for the entire line is purchased, and the road will be commenced at once, and proceeded . without delay, until it is finished, It is, that a conneetion between the Michigan Sout moreov em upon, whieh will constitute the longest continuous rail- | road route in the country, The Rock River Railroad conneets with another, which * Davenport with Jowa City—and this latter with still another, that ter- ‘i | minates at Couneil Bluffs, in the Indian Territory, The annexed statement exhWbits the value of merchan- dive exported from this port. during the month of April showing also the extent of # | Commmnce oF Pont or ae THE New Your—Exronts 1851 fof Wal of Pal. of Yat of ben. gidafor 1s i Furcpe | Hamburgh, Belsive Porto I Britieh St. Domingo Areontine Republie, Central America Mexic Freveh Wert Tniive ew Granada 13.18 11,170 tai Tetol value cf exp . 4.020. 1 1y. It will be ren thet the bulk of the exports was ing Incredulity 1s now causing hundreds of | dated April 7th, 1851, shows @ line of discounts of $1.549- | $3 ; capital, $500,000. ‘The dividend declared | art, ifnotattended | To Crockery Merchants and Dealers In | | most important Lines in that secti | tobacco crop in tl duce of the United States. We have, as yet, no efiviat returns showing the amount of specie exported im April. | but it will not vary much from three millions of dollars | which will swell the aggregate exports to at lemsteight | millions of dollars. ‘The importations for the montt will not much exceed that sum, About fifty per eent of the value of merchandise exported during Apeil, went to ports in Great Britain. | The engineer of the Georgia State railroad has con, | trncted for one thoneand tons of rails, of the 'B pattern | weighing fifty-three peunds to the lineal yard. ‘This wit! suffice to lay about twelve miles of road, beginning at Marietta, and ending at the Chattahooche river, | "The Baltimore and Ohio railroad will be completed te: Wheeling by the Ist of January, 1563. ‘The engineer re_ ports the route most favorable, anil that in a distance of | two hundred miles there are but six viaduets of larg: size, The first of these, at Cumberland, is finished; the second, over the Potomac, will be completed in May; snd the third. over the same river, in July. ‘The fourth, over the Youghiogheny river, in August; the fifth, acros= Cheat river, in September, and the sixth, ovet the M> nongahela river, near Fairmount, some time next win” ter, All the minor bridges and culverts, with their su" perstructures, will be completed in time, Of the 21,000 tons frail required, nearly 19,000 have heen delivered ut Locut Poit, and the remainder will be before th end of the present year. ‘The advance of the track wil! carry it to Piedmont station, 28 miles from Cumberland Ly July 4, 1851; Cheut river, 75 do., by Nov, 1, 1861; ‘Ty gart’s Valley Bridge, 103 do., by Feb. 1, 1852; Fairmount: 123 do., by April 1, 1852; Wheeling, 200 do., by Jan. 2, 1869 ‘The Sussex Mine Railroad. the Newton, (N.d.) Herald s. is rapidly extending, and it is intended it shall soon reach Waterloo, upon the Morris Canal. The Morris and Essex road will also be extended. rea hing the saue place through Hackettstown via Stanhope. The fron for the entire line of the Evansville end Viuy sville, and th: This row. and is one of the in of country. ‘The shipments of boots and shoes from Boston, fron: January Ist to April 26th, 1851, ameunted to 64404 cas: against 52,913 cases for the corres; year— showing an increase this year of 11, There we Ud Cases exported to California for the month ending the 26th inst. ‘The annexed extract from the cireular of a house en gaged extensively in the tobaceo trade in Richmond, Va, contains some impor mation In relation to from which it will be seer cennes Railroad has been receive os locomotives and onneets the Wal h and Ohio Ii that the quantity expected to reach market during the present year will fall short of the amount heretofore eal- culated on, Towaceco Insertions is Vincixta vo Manon 31, 1851 1850, 1851 Richmond... 3.4886—doficit Petersburg . 509 Lynebburg. y hha, ch, add 1.2 irg rn. brought from New York and New Orleans, re-inspected and embraced in th above table 3 rere To whieh. add for lightness in’ weight of hhds this year, (heretofore casks weighing from 2 5. Were not counted. this year they are, making an average of at least 160 lbs. per bhd.). —And you have in round numbers, above 6500 hhds shert ‘The receipts of loose tobacco are not more than half the quantity re last year, ‘The highest estimate of the crop now made is from 22.000 to 25.000 hhds. Many of our manufacturers believe they will be foread to sus- pend operations by next fall. for want of supplies of leaf During the past year there has been considerable speculation in this article, in consequence of the short supply from the crops of that year, and the probability is, that this year a <imilar movement will be realized. The dry goods trade shows considerable activity, at constantly drooping prices. Country and city dealers buy for the wants of a short period, entertaining a cle: conviction that prices must decline, and the more anxious sellers become, the stronger is that conviction, Some large sales of heavy brown sheetings have takem place this week, but in moderate lots, and at lower prices. ached goods are in fair demand, bu? prices are not Drills have been in demand, at steady prices, ax the stock is limited, Denims, dull before, are now wholiy inactive, since the announcement that a large stock of three thousand cases will be offered at auction, by Messrs, Haggerty & Co., om the 7th proximo; prices are nominal, the market being much depressed, and offerins little encouragement for the approaching heavy sale one flannels are dull, but steady. Stripes are in limit est; 105 cases Otis stripes are to be sold next pin by Haggerty & Co.; prices are fair, without greut firmness, but there isa fair Northern and Western de- mand. Ticks are rather active, and have been steady in price, but a large offering of 400 bales is announced for the 7th May, which announcement is a check to trans actions. Ospaburgs are light in stock, and t! h the demand is wall. prices are steady. by eae af rather more active, joes are steady; at the market ix reported dull aud rather heavy. Prints are very active, and are selling at the full prices of previous weeks; the demand for the eountry is very large; the Canadian traders buy Ubecally. i Ginghams are in very active demand, at the stereotype prious Sed ot the opening of the sutece-ile Dor Lene Me at casters, and 12!; a Ve. for Glaagows, The +t Delaines are active, at steady pr and corset, enjoy a steady demand. at fair prices. Cloth= are in very limited demand, but the stock is not heavy and the production has been considerably stinted of lade Low priced qualities are most wanted. A feeling ot hy © prevails, Cotton ea is heavy, nd large in tock, wi Seven. “Satinats Hing moderately, wt si Hues are rather gearce, Tweeds are beary in stock, apd deelining. ex cept for the best styles, Bheeps greys are in good de- anand. and prices are firm and even. at an advance, the production having been exceedingly limited. Faney Cassimeres are less active. aud both fancy and plait goods are heavy in price, except those euited for the falt trade. Blankets are dull, but steady. British goods are velling moderately, but not at encouraging prices though without heavy sacrifices shown in Prenct goods, whieh are auction room are making of fall goods to clothiee ns, prints, fancy silk, jaconate, rill f sale,and heavy in price, Cotton and very strong tendency to declice. ‘The eottor appears doomed to fall gradually to a range of «at which an active consumytion wilt render production profitable and liberal. fore the trains make regular trips. The grand opening | 0 *, | Railway and the Rock River Road has been agreed | do o io do 200 Long Island RR ‘ie Reading Rt do bis wo a m4 oo 5 m4 vo ONY & NIURR geworth # Stonington RR 5° ‘anten Co % wy do do 260 Tg 150 Port th De in Minois State Beak Thy 300 8 o fo Morris Canal > Erie KR io do 10 ehe Harlem RR VW Farmers’ Tro 20 Reading RR 109 we —_—_— _AOVERTISEMENTS RENEWED EVERY DAY. ——SS -REMOVALS. JOVAL.—JOUN G. ag fal Fl nerd nT TAILOR, aetemoved from ‘WT Broadway, opposite the City Hail. Jonx STAATS, MERCHANT TAILOR, HAS REMOVEL from M2 Fulton street, to 197 Broadway, formerly tho Franklin House, RMOVAL— WM. pes, Wateh to Ne i6 doh stantly a lary IMEORTRR ¢ or femoved fro fe he will hee roadway, S$ HATR DRESSING ESTABLISHMENT? e@ to 0) Drondway, whore he will be hi e his friends and customers. JAMES Hl. COOKE HAS where the largest and moxie ned wll of Counting, Desks of ali hinds made to= President of this lism P. Havemey fill the vacancy. . Cashion. N YORK, MAY |, 60L—THE PRESIDENT ANT> Nei eizectote of the Bowery Tank have, thie dey, declared Pp dividend of four » nt, payable on aad oe Une Wel hooks WiLbe closed until the 9h ber der WN. ¢ HRADPORD. +r ¥ LOAN. =SBALED PROPOSALS WILT nt ie § y of Uhh tiny «