The New York Herald Newspaper, May 17, 1851, Page 2

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NEW ‘YORK HERALD. | JAMES ‘GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIBTOR AND RBITOR, FTE N. W- commun OF FULTON ond NASSAU STS. DAILY HERALD, 2 cons per copy-$t per ont WEBKLY, HERALD, Pep ray Oe bo per Cs or $3 ast tad $8 to | mer sui ie ea aie tetas caren AS TTBRS by mail, for Subscriptions, or with isements, bo be pest-pai or the postage will be de- AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. Gurr ces 4 NOT GoLn. _gnoapway THEATRE, Broadway—Wxo Sreaus Tinst ou Diamonn=Pavsrve, NIBLO'S GARDEN, Broadway—No PeRropnance, BURTON’ ATRE, Chambers street—Bacieron's ete ee: ee vor TiGENs, WartONAL THRATRE, Chatham street—Too Lave rom Downai—THALAKa. BROUGHAM'S LYCEUM, Broadway—Cuunn or rue Re- surent—La Fou px Daxune. eh a WINSTRELS, Mechanics’ Hall, 472 Broadway OPIAN MiNSTRELSY. BOWERY TUSATRE, Bowery—Rarvactie—ActTaar MINSTRELS, Feltows’ Musteal Tell, No. 444 Pos Rbk MinsTRELSY. AMERICAN MUSEUM—Amvsine Pemropsrances Ar- | RR NOON #ND Evenixa. New York, Saturday, May WY, 1851. The News by Telegraph. The President and the distinguished party by which he is accompanied, including the whole tribe who live on great men's favors, reeshed Buffalo yes- terday afternoon. Uniow speecheewere the orderof the day, a: will be svem by ourrepert. The enthusi- asm at Buffalo appemrs to have beewequal to anything ef the kind of which we have yet had an account. We regret, however, that Mr. Webster's voice has et been echoed by the telegraph—but we can wait. The heaviest thunder-will come last, and its full force may be expended «frst over the great metropolis of the Union, to-be reverberated after- wards, from Maine to California. Our astern end Southern telegraphi: despatches eontain no iteme of intelligence which call for par- ticular remark. Anti-Slavery Organtzasions at the North. The two original and leading anti-slavery organi- nations at the Nerth, are the “American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society of New York,” and the “Ame- rican Anti Society,” as it is called, residing in Boston. The anniversaries of these two impor- tant and dangerous oxgeuizations were duly held daring the last few days, and duly reported in the solumas of this snal, in order to awaken the vommon sense of the friends of the Union through- out the republic. ‘Tne Boston Anti-Slavery Club, or society, whose leading men are Carrisom, Quincy, Wright, Abby Nelly, and other human beings—some in petticoats and some in breeches—held their anniversary in Syracuse—arising, provably, from the fac, that in sonsequence of their indoceneies of language, their treasonable assaults on the constitution, their viola- tions of the decorum of society, their attrocious atiacks on Christianity.and its sacred volumes, they could not find any place.of exhibition in the metro polis of New York. They were driven to the city of Syracuse-—a city which eeems to be the hot-bed of everything vile in treason, pure in salt, low in so- cialism, and capital in-hotels—in fact, Syracuse seems to be the recipiout of allthe political aad atheistical wickedness. of the day, thus proving, from its pits of salt and secialism, that it must have been the Sodom and (;omorrah of a former age, on this continent. The reports which we gave of the Boston Anti-Slavery organization holding their meetings in this Sodom end Gomorrah, were most ample, most authentic, and most correc:—all by telegraph, too. The onlytwo mistakes of which we have heard, is that of inserting the name of Elizur Wright, instead of H. C. Wright, as being one of the speakers, and a statement that certain citizens of Syracuse had to give bonds for the amount of ten thousand dollars, before the Common Council of that city would permit Use Boston fanatics to hold their meetings there, in case of damages to the hall and to other parte of that town. All other state- ments of language, of opiaians, of avowals, as re- ported in our columns, are acknowledged by the fanatics themselves to be corsect. Yet with ail the atheism, vile infidelity, ribaldry, treason, and atrocious principles avowed by the Boston Anti-Slavery Society at Sodom—we mean Syracuse—we are not sure eut the most danger- ogs one was held in the ever holy Tabernacle of this city, under the name of the “ American and Forcign Anti-Slavery Seciew whose prin- cipal managers are the two Tagpans and the one Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. The order, the de- corum, the talent disylayed by Beecher and the Tap yi jon with the New York anti-slavery agitation, are calculated to prodyee a deeper and s wider impression upon the public mind at the | North—a more dangerous impression—than the , the foolery of Abby Kelly, the n, and other fanatics, at Sy- | now probably twenty-five ctable silk aad for the Ne anaes of . which and ou mov papers of the uproar in aru y «me parties whe Gest carted the a y movement in this metrepo- «, ond we - r instruments, os a n down to the r, the pres W exists at all his pol w od MeEIrath, wich as of the oue, | with anti-slay The Tap t, ond enter. y. through the Leal , aod want of prin ular. the yate—-parti Their move sof ¢ ulti. b, or the to that which iter. much acted | 4, when y rimined *tion ve agit exists im any , “tt ne No an gunizetion that is fanned by teligion and stimu uch ane. * that will ever give up its purpose until sou. '@ fatal . phe happen to the Southern States, °F ‘¢ \ ston | a call t, or at least until Mr. Beecher rece ‘’ feom another church, witha higher salary * now gots, or Arthur Tappan & Co. can mak." tunes of half a miilion each from the anti-slav ‘waders of the free States. vw first movement aas | pans and | ** Tovr anp Pusuic Senri- Tur Pxesipenrial menv.— As far as we can ascertain with respect to the Presidental cortege on its way to Dunkirk and the Falls, together with the passengers picked up on the way—Seward, Marcy, and some others—Pre- sident Fillmore and his cabinet have been rather high in pepular favor. The two most prominent individuals in the train, howewr, were Mr. Web- | ster and Mr. Seward, and they naturally monopo- lized most of the curiosity on the route, though they are diversely opposed to each other on the abolition code of the day—Seward being the cham- pion in favor, and Webster the champion against it. ‘Well, we have reached high water mark at last, on the abolition excitement, and it is about tine now to look for the turn of the tide. For fifteen years we have endeavored to guard the public against the abolition overfow, in all its forms and shapes. Long before any other journal, or any statesman, or Mr. Webster himself, tried to meet the tide, we looked the difficulty in the face, and opposed barriers to its encroachments on the soil. | | However, people are now coming to the conclusion | from which we started in the enset. We shall net be swamped during the present generation, at least. ‘The recent letter of Mr. Charles Sumner is ene of | the unquestionable evidences of the turn in the | tide, even about the shores of Massachusetts. If Mr. Webster ¥éll followup the point gained by the country, from the decision of Mr. Summer, and oppose the firm of Weed, Seward, Greeley& Co., firmly and ‘strongly, we shall have them in the mud, digging clams, at lower water mark. Let him drivk freely of sublime emotions at Niagara Falls, and, like Moses coming down from the mount, Tet Lime expound, with his giant intellect, the laws which should-gnvern the republic, dispering all fulse theories end follies in one of those brilliant and eloquent*peeches which, coming from the un- derstandin, peak hed bad as “deep untedeep.” Tue Owery or THe Unrraisas or tH Day.— ‘The Express charges the demecretic party, so ealled by @tself, with originating mest of the radi- calisms efthe day, and makes it accountable for abolitionism, anti-rentiem, and the ether isms which are the “‘ delusions of the hour.” In proof, the sneak- ing jowrnal refers to the two Van Burens, to the Even- ing Pest, and the Albany Atlas, and to a number of persens and papers, that, being more or less iden- tified with the history ofa certain kind of democracy, are treated as a portion of the democratic party. Our mean cotemporary presents a very unfair statement of these radical movements, and does net choose to look honestly into the matter. The truth is, the whig party isjust 2s censurable forves- teblishing theoretical aaarchies ag any other. Does any one doubt it? What has the Tribune news- paper done for the last ten years, towards aiding and exciting sectional agitations and the common delusions efthe dey! Has it not been given over | toanti-rentism, abolition, &e.,&c.? We should | insult any intelligent man by answering these questions. Is the Albany Evening Journal a whig organ? Where has it been found when isms have been advocated? Did its conduetor not originate | anti-masonry, which injured the benevolent ma- sonic brotherhood, and caused thousands of secession- | ists from the order? Has it not been the avowed champion of anti-slavery up to this very hour, and is it not the political parent of the arch-traitor to | the country, William H. Seward?~ Where is the | Boston Atlas? What has it not done against Mr, Webster and the compromise measures? And where are thousands in the whig ranks, who have sworn allegiance to the “higher law,” proclaimed | from the hill-top of Albany, by Weed, Seward, and Company? Our most recent history echoes an- sewers which fix the sin and shame upon the whig leaders and jeurnals, even more than on the demo- | erate. ‘We cannot, however, expect any honest or philoso. phical analysis of the principles advocated by the two parties, fom such a contemptible journal as the Ea- press. It is the organ of a sinall clique, with whom falsehood, meanness, and secret intrigues to get spoils, seem to be staple commodities. The great po- pular masses of both whigs and demo:-rats are honest and fair—but a large portion of the leaders and newspapers are rotten to the core—Seward and Van Buren alike. | American Exmrprtion at THe Wortn’s Far According to all accounts, the exhibition of Amer can art at the World's Pair—the great Vanity Fair of Christendom—presents rather a second edition of the fairs usually held at Castle Garden. The mea- grenees of the articles begets remark in all quarters. We were prepared for some such failure as this pro- | mises to be, from our knowledge of the character of many of the managers on this side of the water, and of the conduct they exhibited when they reached London. The first thing these exhibitors did on reaching the metropolis of all England, was toquar- rel among themselves, and to carry their quarrels into public meetings and the columns of the news" papers. There was a long dispute relative to the United States agent—two claimants having ap- peared, with pretensions «pparently equally founded. On the whole, we much fear that the American exhibition at the World's Fair will be no fair speci men of the condition of art and mechaniem in this republic. Power's Greek Slave, as one ofthe high- | est efforts of genius, may help to relieve the mono- tony of the exhibition; otherwise, disputes, quarrels, | personal contentions, and the meagrenes: of the whole affair, will very much resemble, in ite morale, the attempt of certain journalists in New York to be | considered, by journalists in ingland, as the high- | est specimens of genius and art, espe: iy bee vuse | they call each other “ bankrupts,” ** seducers, | “mourdere and other uc h genteel names. | Sm Hexny Benwer axp nis Srercues. — | Henry Bulwer, in sp all opposition, is begin- | ning to make himself immensely popular through- | out the country, by his ingenious, witty, humorous, } and eloque John Bull is thawing. All t | the rum and indignation,—all t wdy aud brag- gadocio, which were recently expended, for cash or Shakespeare Hotel, to put him doy Sir shave | i pre populax dig ant.) m the ow aty, Well ». . Ste en t him matists ms he is about Andin ese words there is beginning to be a great deal of Rervy or N. P. Wutis vo J. We. Wena—New 7 Youu Joursacists in Disuasinty .—We give, tor | day, in out columns, the reply of, N. P. Willig to the | recent terrible attack made up on his privatecharac | ter by J. W. Webb, in tha*columns of the Courier and Enquirer, the other 0 ay. ‘The tremendous brow |side which Webb let off against Willis on the *,eculiar qualities of personal character, rather ber.ts ihe Boorman fight, or any- thing of the kind we ever remember to have seen in | the newspaper press of this city, since the time of certain @asb journals that the Grand Jury , drove inte oblir-ion, Mr. Webb bas run through | many tilts o€ similar chivalry during his time; bat this exceed's any we have ever heard of, even the | tilts agaivist Bennett, or Lynch, or Leggett, of former y ears, or Boorman, of Inte. When Webbis | ready ¥o reply to Willis, it will be but fair to allow | him a full hearing in our columns again. The | fadeionable world, who go to the Opera and Trinity POSTSCRIPT. SEVEN O' ULOCK, ve alii, 2 ———— FIFTEEN DAYS LATER FROM CALIFORNIA. ARRIVAL or THR STE AMSHIP cat DORADO. $1,000,000 in Gold Dust. PT aii for New York, | Bo. ke, & ‘Tae steamship £2 Dorado arrived at Quarantine this morning at 6 o’elock, with fifteen days later | church—tke respectable class of society, who pay News from California, She left Chagres om the 7th | their tailers and take no benefit from bankrupt net., and Havana on the 12th. laws—all who chiefly patronize Willis and Webb— | The El Derado waited two days forthe mails and | however disconnceted and rhapsodical, they seemed to are breathless with expectation. Serieusly, however—for, as this sudden, strange, and almost savage controversy, invelves the cha~ racter and peace of a lady, the subject assumes a most Gangerously serious nature—we should liketo know which of the two newspaper editorial models —Willis or Webb, Webb or Willis—actually speaks the truth. The controversy cannot end in Willis’s reply to Webb. The mere personal eredi- bility of either is about even. Neither, yet, have | published swornstatementsof their mutual charges | against cach other, or any evidence to confirm the | of their several personal characters. If | Willis tells the trath in his card, published to-day, | then Webb is “worse than an infidel” in dragging | an imnocent lady before the world, whose name | ie wot yet known, but whose name cannot be hidden fer any length of time. We have no great admira- | tien for Willis; but we must say that Webb is in a | pen awkward predicament. It is 2 Kilkenny busi- | a ae —The Raleigh Register, N. C., nominates for the next Presidency, the following curious ticket:— Millard Fillmore, of New York, President. Wa. A. Graham, of North Carolina, Vice. H This nomination is preposed and followed by a , culogy as strong as a northeast gale before rain comes down. Mr. Graham is ene of the present cabinet. The Raleigh Register is an old whig jour- nal, heretofore conducted by the father, and now by Seaton Gales, the brother or nephew of Joseph Gales, of the Washington Intelligencer. Thereby | hangsatale. The nomination is put forward at | the nod and beck of the Southern half of the j cabinet. j The whig newspaper press, politicians and all, | are rapidly rushing into the Presidential question. | Scott has been nominated—Webster has been nominated—Fillmore is nominated. Whose turn isit next? Democrats, is it not your play? | Srreet anv Hore Breecars.—Europe is pour- , ing upon usan army of professional beggars, who not only throng the streets of the great cities, but, with forged certificates of distress, printed or writ- ten, penctrate to the remotest villages. In this city we are overrun with them. They appear in all | shapes, at.all times, and in all places ; and it is a false charity, anda positive injury to society, to give | alms tothem. We have institutions to support the | helpless, and those who are mean enough to beg should be arrested and sent to the poor house. The Mayor of the city ought to take immediate steps to rid society of the cloud of og. se continuall; thering around our hotels and in our public oroughfares. There is no reason why a beggar should be seen in the United States. Tne Lorrz Excrtemext.—The brig Shakspeare. arrived | yesterday, from San Juan de los Remedios, reports that | great excitement existed at that place, at the time of his departure, (4th inst.) from the fear of an invasion by Gen, Lopez, and which was farther increased by a that five vessels of war had been seen soowoentinns fase | and Neuvitas, | From Sr. Domixco.—By the arrival of the brig Prim- ose, Capt. Hutehinson, from St. Domingo City, whence | she sailed on the 28th ult., we learn that every thing | was quiet there at that hat date, a aoe The reported insurrection — UH. heard nothing | of until his arrival at this port. Superior Court. Before Chief Justice Oukley. ACTION FOR LIBEL. ae "ear peony c. 0 . bored t iy gpa a aim, | gmt —This was an act! broug it by the plaint: ini dy eco ck against tI tors of the ich, for an libel, contained in a police aotiee I paper, ow July, 1850, given under the | head of * robbery and arson,” and whic! on the 4th of July, a attempt was made 10 ort of Mr. Fellows. in an Long ey to the country. article rent on on to e that “suspicion fell upon a connection of the , Who was residing in the house, and knew where the was ‘ited, and that on Thursday be was arrested by the and committed for an examina- mn. His name,” continued the alleged libellous article, “is Thomas Browne. He followed the party on the ex- investigation of the charges against him, be was honor. | ably dicharged. Damages are laid at $5,000, The de- fendants deny ail malice on their part, and contend that the article com of covtained in substance a = im reality took place before the the Gedenlatto ind soansantte and pes ‘and did then euspect, that the jure to | plaintiff was guilty of the crimes of arson and robbery. The Judge, in charging the jury, said that wietors and poubiers of newspapers were liable for icles | furnished by their . If they had done j than give a fair nde orrect repori of what had taken eg at the Police cftiee, they would have done right. hat the transaction took place—that Brow ne was arrest- edon acherge of arson and robbery, was not denied; Dut the feet Chat he was discharged was omitted altoge- dogged silenee. him. inquest at the City Hospital, on the boa specie brougtt by the steamship Panama, which arrived at Penaima on the 2d inst., with one million of dollars, and 200 passengers. The steamship Panama sailed from San Francis- coin company with the steamship Isthmus, the | latter having three hundred passengers and about a million of dust on board. A list of the passengers by the E! Dorado, toge- ther her news in detail will be published in our Evening Edition. All was quiet at Havana when the El Dorado left. City Intelligence. CLAIRVOYANCE a0 PHYSIC—DEATH OF MRS. AT: TIN—ARREST OF THE CLAIRVOYANT AND itis WIFE, BY ORDER OF CORONER GEER—ALLEGED CHARGE OF MALPRACTICE. Yesterday, an Investigation was instituted by Coroner Geer, ; reepectin g the sudden death of Mrs. Eliza Ann Austin, residing with her husband at No, 15 Second street, ‘who expired on Wednesday morning last, as al- leged. by the malpractice of Dr. George Hays. a clairvoy- apt physician, doing business at No. 116 Spring street. | Theevi , an far as proceeded with before the Coroner, in substance is us follows :—It appears that a few weeks 0, Mrs. Austin was seized with an attack of inflamma- tion of the lungs, and Dr. Belcher. a respectable physi- i} ~ was called in to attend her. and up to the lest week | and Col. Webb now accuses me of her ruia, calling her in health, and considered out of danger yet still was troubled with a cough. An ac- gna ice, by the name of Catharine Hartell, called in to see her, and in course of conversetion recommen the practice of Dr Mays, the clairvoyant physician whom she believed would effect a cure ina short time, ly, Mrs. Austin agreed to undengo the treatment. On Monday last, Mrs. Hartell visited Dr. Hays at his, office in, Spring street, aad stated the case she wished him to treat upon.’ The doctor called in his wife, and, in a few seconds, placed her in the clairvoyance state, aud while she was thus, in the supposed clairvoyance, told, that Mrs, Austia had inflammation on the lungs. and that she must have leeches applied, and afterwards a carrot pouitice; also cough mixture was to be taken, tablespoonful of which to be administered every hour during the day, uutil the patient obtained relict. and, if necessary, daring tho night likewise, Mrs. Hartel. as directed. conveyed the cough mixture, as made and delivered to her by Dr. Hays, to Mrs, Austin, and told her what had passed et the doctor's, and in what manner they were to proceed The leeches.and poultice were applied, and the doses of cough mixture likewise given; but, instead of (he patient recovering, as anticipated, she became more feeble, and expired on Wednesday morning, about twenty bours after the commencement of the clairvoyance treatment, Dr. Franklin, of 39 Greenwich ayenne, made a post | ‘mortem szamfoation of the body of deceased, and found the internal coati of the stomach highly inflamed | ard softened, showibg evident effects of & poisonous liquid having been beg in the rtomach; both lungs were fair ing) the right one very much so, very softened condition. The contents of the stonach were conveyed to Dr. Chilton, on Thursday, to analyze, and up to ‘yesterday the chemist had discovered that morphine composed one of the part of the liquid con- | tained in the stomach; but as the chemist had not con- cluded the analyzation, aay further investigation before the jury was postponed until this day at twelve o'elock. Coroner Geer, on the above facts, deemed it his duty to issue his warrant for the arrest of Dr. Hays and wife. | Omicers Wiley and Orr, of the Seventecath ward, duting the afternoon, took the doctor and his wife into castody, and they were both saree to the Tombs. pending the investigation. The following is the sign exhibited at tbe doctor's residence :-— Clairy; Clairvoyance DR. G. HAYS, ant and Magnetic Physician, . jectricity applied to the Discorery an Cure of Diseases. 4 Wasnrxeton Cemetery, sean tHe Grerxwoon.—At a meeting of the Board of Trustees of this corporation, the Henry Fitzroy, Baq., * Gen. va Bennet. Treasurer; hi Ne ely, bee M Gir era era a jew York, Met! ev. Mr. Seho~ field, Fort Hamilton, Episcopal; Rev. Mr. Curry, of New | Utrecht, aud the Rev. Doctor Strong, of Flatbush, Dutch Reformed. Counrel to the Board Trustees, Horace F. Clark and Freeborn @. Luckey, eqs. Lots of $20 juare feet, $40; lots of 50 square feet, plan road road from Court street and Prope free for funerals.) LONE dy ‘Anot) er entrance at Arlington House, 14 miles from Greenwood Cemetery. Koutes, either by Hatbush, the plank road, or Gowanus. Distance from Fulton ferry about five miles, Dr. Fay, at 126 fulton street, is the agent, This Cemetery must succeed. Imaucration.—The arrivals of immigrauts have, in the | last two days. been as follows:— Ship John Henry, London.. “ David Cannon, Liverpocl.. & Besex, “ Post, Bremen... Bark Bellona, Bristol « Lord Brougham and ‘Total. Txperexpent Amenican Frarenxiry — of new societies, Aber, called the Indepr Fey Fraternity, instituted on the 22d Febru oelations, A Arrest at Bricroe —A litth orning. Assistant Captain Hoyt diseovered a o>lored man walking the streets, unable to ive soy satisfactory account of himself: He was locked up. and shortly after made two attempts to destroy Bimactt—Ore by tylng his handkerchief round his neck; and. secondly by dolag the «ame thing with his suspenders. He inaintalas & Dr. Booream was cont for to examine two o'cloek yeator= Farat Accipests—On Thurrday, Coroner Goer held an fD. Privet~ anding | tlemen were slected to ofle, vis.:—Iabort | ther from the repert; and the eommemt that Browne had — burg, aged 24 years, born in Germany, who, on the Sth the effrontery to come back with the farty. and wasdis- | instant, fell accidentally through » hatchwey in the appointed that his villancus scheme bad failed, was the | store No. 40 Beater strect, oceupird Wy Lane. Lamson & | Part which contained the libel complained of If, how. | Co... which fall caused @ compound fractun the Aa jury thought the comment was reasonable or skull. The unfortunate man lingered until yesterday. justifieble, the defendants ere not liable. As respects | and then expired. Verdict accord: other was the smount of damages, should the jury come to the con- clusion of finuing for the plaintiff, there is some difficulty on that point. Under the old Jaw. ifa man charged an- &man named John Leary, who, on fatal injury. by the falling of wall the pulling down of a building in Broadway. veda near John 1 | other with » erime, the law would hold him responsible | street. His spine was injured, and he died on Th 3 te prove it, for the law said he never should have done so, in consequence thereof. Verdi cording tot boy wrlees he was prepared to prove but the law i facts charged, aud the defendants can show mitigating cit- | giogieg Grevewnrn.—A man named Joh ee in defence. The difiéuity alluded to arives <case:-—The parties here have chosen to form an the defendants do aot say the man was guilty; 0. of having in Broadway y warrant issued by th h cured. a week der stored in a hou day morning. on pe keg ted Thue trict Attore ix they “ey they know pothing of it themselves, aod that ue; there wae goed ground for suspicion. If the jury come va Mas t the conclusion that there were reasonable @ ” ain ’ take thal deration, with m th * As to malice, 1 ward. and sent to the \ often oeeurred t¢ { an editor of a rn eet H poper publisbes a fa hood agninst person, he | _ Fine.—At nine o’closk on Tt nt. ty 111th street and First avenny cought fire and was consumed firemen and police, it was p two others adjoining other individual i¢ for 1 no differenee in portion of the no proof of mali becau t be we re ihe tpraking of «slander, ny What one knows to be not know to be true. As te und that there i ating to ferce om the gr Ju dit wes no defence, ACCIDENTS o'clock, yesterday About. three was always inferred. Verdict for p named Michael Rernighan, whit dr mages. ing down an old building in [ ' efore Hon. Judge Duer. bone broken, and parts of his boy badly lacer hk Jevome vs the fall of a portion of the wall hiv right groin, tearing the flest nity of his vitals. It Int t fatal. He was conv John Ft is thou d to ut five o'cloek. baitery alleged to have been m by the defendants. The Court earn that ab day afternoon a bear the ease, on account of wa urisdic Looney and Thoms Carey —th Orn Renat : fendant, Lidridge, being a resident of Baros 1 the Int s “ is statemem and not personally served with « copy of t n—while enailin + William fvurgh. has beer Je by th aph r w Orleans, | im the action were upret by a \ . | that a ler arty Thomas Wintermute ve. Oliver Clavk.—The defendant in could be rende | . ans have been imprie } this eave keeps # hotel or lod ein Chambers of there anforty /° ned in for h 7 infraction | ,*treet, and the son of the plaintiff came to th the beyr. through their t on the mi me laws of ¥. sreh, 1850, from Orange county, to follow fo the bent, and were retu when they came t pe . ‘ Mery, by landings | (> a clerk, and, on bis arrival hare, took up luk melaneboly ed, ax above 4. The bodies were not | witho our pern at Tohwantepee, Hes | ot «'efendant’s hours, and alleges that he p recovered up to a late hour last etening | cently, too, the Mexican Minict made a are of defendant, and th i nd brings A won of David B pg. Of 2S Woot Fiftconth atreet, 1 at W, made & com n for the lows of the trank, ¢ his lows at | & lad about nine years of age, wart plaint at Washingtor £ ment, with re. The defence te, that the trank was taken | Wayon.in Sixth avenue, The wheels spect to an alleged wa faith the fulftle iy, the ton of the plaintiff. On the ean his lege. but forty ly thy were not ony, the Judge intinating that it w conveyed heme by officer Banke ment of certain siz y our Y, under »,@ Whether the plaintiff could recover wi ua the treaty of G nstatans Hidalge son aan witness, & Writ of hates and wa This conduct of the Mexi od of oe grated, to bring the ! was imm ely attended by De Cameron The wis was directed to the kee ® hi the Mexican } sis precisely The young bee p d Jobn Hilbert fell upon a curb stone, in of the same character whieh form qed and confined in n of the plai Avenue A dislocated his arm near the cibow, on oe ra ” . we Mec 60 aving appeared, ing examined, 4 d that | Wedveeday evening. He was taken to the Eleventh much dieeatistaction as produce a war. This jd not take the trunk, «nd did ; ot know what had | ward station house. tb h ‘ al of violent compl. P led ed! lecome ¢ Verdict for ph Nntiff, $55, Capt. Geo, Win. low, of the schooner Columbia, while wal of violen plaints, coupled w t oa ae me tn the wet ef hnulin,? hile vossol into the dock at Pier No. He severity, amounting to outra Tue New Comerrretios of Mahttawn.—The Maryland | 14, Bast river, slipped. #2d broke his thigh bone, a few bringing about another dieposition on t nel Conver open bes clowed its labors and the | inches rbove the knee, He was conveyed to the Ma : . popular vote rine Horpital, People to resent sveh co engl the re the eign by the poopie, ed y likely to wind wp the anh 'bilation of and county officers, abolishes imprisonment whieh ought io have i «ats mit of the | {7 Hebt. and provides fur the representa‘ton of the State The Weekly Herald, nena ‘ ve been rep. t ¢ | inthe Hruse of Assembly, by whic move city and The Wr tablished at halt-past | ¢ War for we must have a ot Heol go- | pepuleus cow Frege Be Got have a majority There wane Henaro will be 9 * Vernment between the mountains and California < ie of tue | I nine o'clock this morning. Single “ples sixpence, The salle of the Hermann, for Southam, tom and Bremen. 4 wij! clowe wt half. pest 10 o’eloek. doubt whether it will be ratified, as t~ leg younties oppose a red ction of their poet ee wants son Wend. 10, (iN CORRECTION OF A Sis MADE BY GOL. WELK) Scnve five orsix yeort ago, when 1 was editing # daily paper in shit gity, I recetved reveral letters fr ma young schoolgirl who ie now @ most respectable married lady, reridipg wih ber husband and children, in a neigkhor- ing State She was a chill of a great deal of irregular genius and vecentricity of conduct; but, withal never swemed tc ane to have either the idea or the ¢ nscious- | ness of any impropriety, She would go where she tiked, | cull on any geotieman whom she eared to see aml once, ‘tis well known, when offended at home, weut and of- ferod hers If asa servant gitl to a family iu the city. Being very beautitul, sho was very mutch admired ; bat [ have often said of her, and say now, that [ never knew so. | wild. brilliant. and apparently lawless a creature, who ine | spized so universal « confidenes in her virtue, ati | Col, Webb's calumuious publication of Thursday, to whieb this is a reply, I never heard it doubted. | ‘This young girl bad a passion for literary fame, and, if | Tremouber rightly, wrote a novel before her marriage: | Her letters to me were the irregular outpourizgs of a | heart and {nd overflowing aud iurpationt of silence, but, | ! To THE Pry MENT me more full than was at all common of the unconcen- | trated promise of genius. What seatiment in them was addressed to myself, I never twice thought of—for it is such as i addressed often to those who are the supposed gate-keepers to celebrity and appreciation, An editor's | drawer is full of «uch propitiatory compliments, xad he is | indeed silly if he consider them as anything but vhe tol | to the pathway of fame, On her return from Europe, some time after, I heard | that this lady was about to be maztied, and a geutloman | wrote to me for an interview, and courteonsly applied for | her letters, Thad laid them aside, thinking viva iater- | esting. as the first irregular utterances of what [ thought | | would prove to be goniue, but promptly returned them, | with no idea that there was anything elther threw | or unusual in the request. Col. Webb was present when | they were delivered, but expressed no dissatisfaction with | me or with them. I, soon after, met her father. who, understood. bad suppored me to be an encourager of the | wentricities of his daughter, end had felt nukindly to | me, but, with a few words of explanation, we shook hands and parted. and of that matter I never thought more, Of the “complete ruin’? of this lady, (now living most reepectably with her husband aad children ia a neigh Loring Stuie.) Col. Webb accuses we, in langaage too gross to copy. He begins by saying that he was, him- | self, a very dear friend of her father! She has been mar- ried six years—this is the first time she has ever been accused of guilt, privately or publicly, to my knowledge— father a “very dear friend,” whose “ untimely end he | mourns.” This accusation is unqualifiedly untrue; but, | even if s0 cruel and wilful a fulschood were true, what | human beart would be thought cipable of so agonizing the living daughter of a dead friend, as to re-parade it to the world after it was forgotten? It was because he re- vengefully thought that a fresh slander of this kind would be the “drop tec much ” im ny cup of such trouble at | this time; and—(if the public mind prefer to take sides against innocence, without proof or reason)—perlaps it | will! # : N. P. WILLIS. | Court Calendar.—This Day. |. Srexeae Covrt—Cimevrr—Nos. S04, 382, 383, 995, 296, fol, 402, 403, 408 40 A20. | Common Piras.—Nos. 345, 443, 403, 474, 499, S14, 515, | 519, 621, 523, 527, 528, aa, 580, O81 |. Free Lecture to Ladies.—Mrs. I. N. Fow= loz, M.D. will give ron phy 4 | the disea ct of anatomical pintes, iu Clinton of women, | anda | terhoon, at 3 o'clock. Private Lecture te Men Only.—Mr. Fowler, by particular request, will repent his lecture to men, on i portant topivs oularle, evening next, in ok, Tickote MdSe 20, twelve o'clock, at the Mere building lote, in Astoria o1 | Here isa chance for people who | gf the Saving’ Banks, Those who bundred dollare for a rai eel for a rentonable pri care permanent of the most healthy neighborhood of he tanks of Seana the ever-changing pano ne di we the reatlees tide of rates, "aeenstble Kk by tage at almost every mo- mer ith all the cona the f the most | tem Yori | the spxcitement, eatravagance, a: New York, ‘Wanted Commissions —Two Active Men, | bred to trade, desire toadd to their present amiss {tticles in general di " rte Slater Ce ‘onal,) Jersey, C ‘and Peansylvania they an bes sh r parties desirous to realize auquestionable references mptl j vent address M. P- Book | #0 at Resutifel work ever published & on the ie lete set of books printed in colors. au | Bor gpa pista treet Paris Removal.—Morales & Lunar inform their ds is A they have Soe removed Holmes, the Discoverer of th of the Colorcotype, [iil dinmose of i ie good, three he iituse for Apply to the peopric- of White Hats has arrived.— ie Season 1 qasr renin tie White Hat season was Webster. ada} | gfe Feasonable rates. | ho winh to be in collins ble evtabilshment, 12 Fulton street, . | will introduce mei for which it is ni penser nded, and jor beauty of | getline, sotequatieg. A laces assortment of Panama, Le: horn, and St1 ‘ts for gentlemen, boys, and chiidren, of ra Glasses.—We | PP eg gr large lenses of which were tele care by an experienced Optics pretsly for our retail trade, ness, CARBOL “esi > Beh ony these fir Mhillty, sty vam, 413 Broadway. . Cax vat Wonses ‘ull \y Low Prices— iste pete Sa pee wie Ba HIRAM DE ely sis Core | Bruceels State ‘Carpet, Bs ’ bt at ence Foome, etocked with beautiful « arpets ives. sted Tebrated, Marge and ve United States. os. per yard. Call an hea; ary ferrin” Garpate AL Bon, A Bee. Professor Alex. C. Barry's T: cr Medicated Compound, for restoring preserving, tifying Lair, eradioatin. eases of the 6k glands, spraing, Ke. Ke. Tt has that Berry's Bricopherous hae _prodne curing aisenses of th animal kingdom, From thi April § 1801.—Pro! not only the cheag preserving the hair Vader our observation. OUR, and bea i C. Barry’ et but the most acta peer in & beantiful condition, whic it recommend byt h has come of our best chemists and physicia bas been extensively and Fuceesetulty used in all pares of the country. We think it indis| neste to anent toilet. aud til recommend it: Itcan he procured. fre ita d eth od aif w dozen bottle: oad pe wo tl Ai eisads ae ata, reduced sists, and in packages of prises a Profescor te 17, 1844.—Sir—You have pertuine ing experienced the ¥ ie Prin. treeits the hein, “E tave always found ofls and poma- tum to ‘occasion a barshuess ty me hale. ‘and for threo or four years it was f but since using your Tricopl comfortuble, avi iny hair er amazement of my friends av variably found it cives the Pleas A three boteles by Copy of leet ber 22, 1Ni v erupt v the es sixteen the advice of some of tI ied all the preparatio tor th akin now without the least bene! 1 Was bya frfend te tr r Trieopherous. I ata , as a last rovort, and to my surprise and gratifion fonnd n if cured in a! months, Suc tiny ons a jwns, ane " , at the oo Vork, and. by the prio out the United States ree 187 Broadwa: cipal ts and merchants sud Canada, Removal —Dr. Lat: Hee . Kar Infirm: U for the exclusive treatinent has bes moved oT Broxaway — Mv externel ear, and the variou» " wang noises in the ears, cured ina chort time withews “rk or pain, Consultation Orhice hours from till 3. foe. $1. Unpaid letters refr «ve good rooms, with or Patients from the country va witheut board, Hatr and Whiskers « neatest style, el ttn the Latest and shape of head, fea- fall persons, by Hilt wheee a sehd mings’ complete set of Dent of premium tooth picks, t articles, embracing @ vx of dentritic dott brush, orange wood preserving the pnrifyin: thi u neat ease, ray so making a very w: ul present. <). 73 cents: Dentritic ale ‘iy ALB “ands, 100 Fulton st rondway; G. W clo, 345 Broadway; Win, 43 Pearl «treet HL. Cary &'C: Who wants a white, fine clear skin and complexion ’—Those who do, bi Shin PF. ” whieh acty ii ye ony other ern) vality. Only veer of Hovard, will prove ifs and sold only at £3 Broads sy. « LadleseIf you would tj rove your com= plexions, take [all's Palingovesia. t removes blotches om the face, eatlowness and brown » pots onthe skin, purifies the Vivod, restores the appetite, sr. 8 the syste, and ren= ders the complexion lerrabats.couke WM SMITH MA LLy sole proprietor, N 130 Bower Pl pr ppd Tiqnid 1 Baie Dye instantly con= Yerts re hair vo brown or biack. Gouraud’s italian Medionted Soup ousee tan, pimp.or, treoh ad's Poudre Subtile © Fr any pars of Rouge, for pale lips and chee re all found 39 “Dr. of Tahaemnenn er aes; aSuKaup's. wa Broad way ;t Oullender, 54 Sov» Vhird street. Sisdeiphie 18) Weablogton cteoet, Borton % and other cause: of premature Bot wth of heir throngh free «cn Hyperion Fluid, It is ive. Sold by the ton street, Boston: Ri Pearl ete ‘Wigs and Toupees.—The 1 nest and m vari: yo nent ae el rth ri M oss, and secure a healthy vey action, you should ws9 , Pegorvatiy pearance they fit the head as ¢ ‘Venienee arising from pressare, » «bviated. “Copy the address. ir grows, an t, and heat, are entirely Hutching’: a's Vegetabte D, ja Datters.— The unsettled state went mi rong an addition: or thin i tfel ns the meet cen ters. This fr the eyes pire! P these wee nie healthy. Teena be Brocured, w pristor, at his prineipal off W. V. Bush’s Celebrated Renovati Aro=- Pistle Cordial —Thove who ore teonbled with Dyspepei digestion, Lors of A knoss of the Stoua: he we would julphur Baths, 547 Pearl posite the Hospital, setabliches ta by Louis J. Thmolat, fr , for the eure of rhe wastes sells toe tions of shed. amdoniy ent We refer to Dre. Valent a Bostwick, Wallace, and the hye o~ Boston Dally Events Traveller. —Te Dye We would ca'l the attention of those who are atttcted this terrible complaint, to eS which, et way ite merits are seb fer Tt afords grees relies ‘ant i- ‘in al- overiooked by mont every int: gs Hitters fome of our frat inevchante cured by ite w tonien, are a & detility, and w: to every For a ay be had at «i “ita's mtatoxeetient medicines ft “4 stores reat ay s Rovery aby the Drugelsts eveseaily in ihe United Seatos at Canada, Hyatt's Lite Balsam.—Another Desperate one Asthma cured by tris arent life years & constant ouftvrer from, cheracter as ever mortal endured | eupetior style sod quaitys ai 'y Hatter, of = | } ¢ invoice of Straw fl fo dren. Those hate are bi | totend cheap, and © jurpassed by any other ass: | ment of thi ind in the vity. ty. Try them. White Reavers.— to Amidon.) 301 Bron + Will introduce the fashic Mats, Call and exami Also, Panamas, Leghor tle’ therm and nd Straw fate, of every v A... Finishers’ Union, No. 11 Park Row, ite the Astor House, manufacture and sell, at whole. it beautiful and stylish hats, caps, | ced. Ne BeThla te the. or ly’ aaso- Cintien of praction! rein the city, and every man on caged in he establishment isin part its proprictor. | The Genty Panamas for Boys—The be- | hape, lightness, and elecant simplicity of t ; it out this 6 jewin '* ersortment of Panamas,: Fenutiful shapes and teatnre, is be theeity. — GENIN, 214 Brondway, opposite St. ar as to et, enn be py have wever t Mitate, of It | Comb Factory 3a7 ‘Broadway.—t iesare | respectfully invited to 0 this choice gel of deees combs; the variet: b doubt, the groatert he hep, comprising the “mot beantifl open work fu shell ama jo hoes. Comte repaired and made to order, A. & J. SAUNDERS, sh Impert ‘Phree-Ply Carpeting, for vi apents in railroad st | coon improve, | at onee, and withdrawn, to of «peeulators Py ine we the amount inve She had ret 10 botties of coush remedies, nd Sarvaparil ‘with every. remed. ich ar of. oF her ph nm sueces lied to It ht. to prevent suf- become wasted to & peirod f relief from any source ertly ented by two bottles of © inthe enjoyment of soand fuention or strangling. skeleton, and her parent he was per pr cents per qunr Hon atroet eet, bottle. Ag Fer Newark, MONEY “MARKET. way, May 168 P.M Operations in the stock market, to-day, were only to a moderate extent, and prices were apparently with dif. culty eustalned. We cannot sutiefactorily account for the dull, deproseed state of things in Wall street. Moves are particularly incomprehen- f the leading ones do not swloulation very much. noes, carry up prices fer ing a period of great excitoe siven to the real worth of any the present, when operators down and figure ont the ome strange that such as Island, are not taken up ut extent, for permanent investment. Tt is nothing in the world but the daily Nuctuetion in those stocks that keeps them in the hands The first two named are regular dividend and pay ee lange & per cent interest on ed. os any others inthe market eqnatly while the prospects of the last named are suff \y sible and if prices for some wo sha jon will, in most kind of stock, and ¢ ment very Little thought ir | security; but in times like are perfectly eool, and can. er tural Value of any atock, it the Harlem, Norwich, and in ourith F Reve, oe Retell eat 1g aS | favornble to otmont inure immediate returns on the out United Staten Three ES Ge. diy 78, San, 9 lay, The net receipts of the Long Teland Railroad Com SS Cet eae oves tee pany. infeach of the past fur yours, were as followe:——1947, ‘The most briltiant display of Papter Mache | 1848, 22.057 49; 1940. $12984 05; 1850, $50,908 | goods ever exhibited in this city, wil! now be found at the | 25. This year, 1961, the net Income will, without doubt, 3 of Mr. Ibboteon, 21K Pearl street. Mr. 1. hy be at least twonty-five per t greater than in 1850, The ot | pppoiuted cote agent for the United Stator for the ree | plenutnctory nthe, world, (Meupre traMfe of the first four month: this year shows an increase quote. voirect han 2 ae) = tory "i of $7 60, over the et syonding months of last; and torer's prices, wh adies shewld thin proportion hold Uhrougho . q eal an Mitel room, and you will be well repaid | *hetid thin prop: women Pees for your trouble. © - eleven thousand dollars are here. The tatest been secured by Sarmine street, where orders will be 4 for them, Alto, men's and boys’ worn there by MeKimm, 17 thankfully reel clothing Eureka! ve Found It: pine o where Tecan get good bo | thet Why, at Watkine’, 14 te tures himeelf all the beot he rells, tisfaction to the buyer, No poor art ot his tatablishment. French Boots.—About Fitty pe 's Preweh & eas to ‘soncistiag of Ladies’, Misaes, | oahiaitis | bt } —Found what! . ye aure. Where's who manutne- ants them to allowed to 1k a Gentle a hand, BT yt of the rtoek | vigation will not be left fo aim | mouth Company's lots was a failure, wae indeft work, depter soon ns they have hammered it as much as they doom fudpciont, we mey look for » sudden gise, and perhaps an elpte for 1851 will any t to about two hundred and This will give a net income jarge enongh to pry a moderate dividend on the par value Morris Cana! has been quiet lately, ‘The. ine is but partially open. and the probability is that na- rmed on the whote length of the June, Most of the boatmen have ching employment, and it will be her again. The sale of Ports. For reasons bext the managers, after one or two bids the enle nitely postpone’. There is a strong party at sing the market price of this «tock; and as anal, until Inte newer te

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