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NEW YORK HERALD. ZAMES GORDON BENNETTS. FROPRIBTOR AND EDITOB. FFE N. W. CORNER OF VU'T.TON AND NASSAU STB. THE DAILY HERALD, 2 cents per copy—$ per we. Fu WREKLY HERALD every Saturday, at 6% afer ur Bi per cnnem ; the Buropean Edition, sre He Ses appari of Great Britein and $° 19 ony asiment, bath Co include the pastoge. 18 EVRNING. POWRRY TUBATRR, Bowers—Srv oF Sr, Mano—Jacn AMUSEMENTS TH Avs Ata RAP PALL, EQOADWAY THEATRE, Bros@way—Two Boxvveas yise—Beri TrON—DiANA aND Hem | Wrens - he ance HIBLO'R GARDEN-—-No ‘ona -W TRE ~PInst TNE’ ambars street --liewway 2 ONT. AL TUBATRE, Rume Gun Gar—anrye SMPRIGAN * © Prnvonmaxers Aw wEamoON AND & BOWERY A Rewery—-Bqurerniam Per ron ANCES. Y'S MINBTRELS, Meobanics' Hall, (72 Broad. aERT oyian Binerke " STRELS, Fellows’ Wusiesl Hau, Ne, 44 TAN MiNSTRELSY. Sovpree Kvere eerOs PLAOR—P wrure oy, ANDER SH a hursday, January 15,185. This Morning's Summary. The steamship £3 Dorado orrived from Chagres Mest night, with over one million dollars in gold duet, and the California matis. Sho brings as, eoante of continued Indian bh {es in Upper Ca, Bifernia, and of the execution, by orde court. + of two men who Wire che The ladies tock entire pozt Yiovse—placed themselves i and refused to budge the milijary were moize was wonde the chagrin rpeatiable @ented. The v atier of tongues fthe speaker was ; tholonder he o oe m- she the disorder; and when the me ers ned them o their fate, and intro ae od psrson and command of lan- Ee, wooge, seeme to have unded. Speeshes | were made on the o or, at least, are sup- from the fact the were seen were none cantell. ‘Pho Cas ogeption was but a pigmy, so far as¢ gerne boisterousness, compared with this affair. One of our Washington correspondents s' ithough Chevalier Hulsemann, the Aue! Minister. did not go so far as to pro to the i pore both he and the Russian Minister com individval espacity, yereued towards the Magyar, and allege that it will be ult for them to explain to their re nce between MM Nir. Fillmore as a pii 0, concerning governments wil epective governments the diff Fillmore az President, and ren—end ditto, ebster. Their very likely want to know tho difference ‘betrean , fweedie-dum and tweedle-dee” Our dent 2 states that ‘‘there is every reason to believe ihat had Lord Palmerston remained ia the Pritieh cabinet, the affair of the g into the Frewetheve would have been amicably adjusted ia afew days.” ganged or not, it is highly proper thet an Amorican war steamer should be placed on the Mosqnito e@esst, in order to guer A repeti’ act in question. Nothing of importante tranepired in the Uni # Senate yesterday. Inthe Houso of Re ventatives, the delogate from Utah stated that ho wae greatly eurprised to fud that the official print #d report, or atatement, of the returned o: from the territory be represented, as receive © Department, was similar to the ono Heravp. lace lace fro the Pre previously published in the New Yorx He averred tha ro was amistaRe somewhero— | ° thie not being tke bons fide original doe at Now, if this ie net the actua! exposé of M 1 errapti and eigned bz thod t Jadger a where i real one? Ii there je anoth The / € deal of fur mall may bo vay by Ferhape oat mor . not appear to w ho harness. or tho fact, that pristing wae y delayed, to the gr h nations but wae, witnal, erior tc men ever expect operly and expedi our plan, and establish Yerbaps eome of the honest creditor Texas will now get a portion of the funds whicl sbey bave so long andanxiously been looking for. lettings are etill produstive cfa great deni of hard feeling at Albany. Lard at work at them in the Le; febjecthas cver caused half the excitement, politi- C canery, and official corruption, tha: the have inthis State. From 15!7 up to the present time, taey have been a conticual be ¢ of this day's paper, are valaa' e e he Ban th r ¢ ircue the winding portant an c to stock and con 8h ced Ons nected work al improvemon; aro in o tory conditien, and that tho vevenue, in the abeonco of extraordinary con- sungencice, will meet all the requirements of tho constitution relative to the liquidation of the “tate debt nthe hoard of Aldermen, last evening, a mes tuge wae received from his Honer the Mayor, veto- ong the resolutier, paesed by both buarde, direct img tbe Comptroller not to pay any moneys for conizacts entered into by the previous Common Counc. after the YJ et December, 1K}. The report of ibe (omm'iiee cr the Lepariwer’, In faver No. hte re } crasy throughout the North, and W. to meve, but | ont, relative to the courtesies extended to } the course | correspon- | ,, Whether the matter is amicably ar- | m of the | of memorialising the Legislature for the passage ofan act to extend the fire limits of the city to Fiftioth street, was, after debate, ordered to be laid on the table and printed. The Board of Education met yesterday afternoon, | and organized for the present year, by electing Mr. | Benedict, the present incumbent, president, and Albert Gilbert clerk. The principal feature of the business done was the rejection of Nelson J. Wa- terbury and 5S. J. Goodnow, Commissioners elect from the Twentieth ward, from taking their seats in | that body, until some legislative action has been taken in the matter. | Theannivereary meeting of the liahnemann Aca- | demy of Medicine was held last eveniog, at the Stayvesant Institute. The address of the President, | elect, Dr. Curtis, was delivered in bis absence, in | consequence of indisposition, by the Corresponding | Scoretary, Dr. J. W. Metcalf. | One weck’s later news from Europe ie now hourly | expected by the steamer Asta. The Next Presidency—Movements ef | Parties. In addition to the Kossuth excitement on this | side ofthe Alleghanice, the Kinkel excitement in | the Western States, and the various local exciic- | ments epringing from the Forrest case, the Lola Montes controversy, and such like iteme of human life, we are now beginning to get into s more laat- ing and more important excitement—an excite | ment that will continuc for nearly o year, viz :— | that ofthe preliminary steps and the advanviog | progress of the movements looking to the election | of the next President of the United States. Tne | democratic p —whose National Committes mot | at Washington a short time since, and fixed on the first of June as the day for ihe assembling of the National Convention—have set all the’ eloments of that great association, Nerth and South, in motion. The whig party—who have fewer candidates, and lesa trouble in the beginning io be somewhat oxcited at Washington between their two leading candidates—Genora } Seott and Mr. Webeter—and their three or four second rate o: bh as Fillmore, Crittenden, Corwin and Seward. The abolition, or iree soil, party ofthe North, and the secession party of ro Watching the movements of the others eft interest, being determined to ay | themselves of their blunders and mistakes, and bring up the rear in the middle of eummer, er to- wards tho fall The elec £ delegates to the Baltimore C. om is now cogoging the atteation of the demo- and Souti in this State, where the movement first com- wenved, the greater part of the delegates have been elected, and in a few days the selection will bo completed. ‘Ibis eleetion has Jemonstrated some facts of @ moxt curious character, besides throwing me light on the p nm of the democratic candi- dates, and their various prospecta to get the nomi. | nation, and to succeed in the olection. Here is a table containing o fair statement, as far as can bo ascertained, of ihe resulte of te rceent election in this State:— Dis Ki. 2. Gaeens, Richmond, asd Buffelk Co's... 2. Brook'yn city. 5 NYY Fos} wot yet choven Wards 4,6. 10,13 Williameburg, the Tih and x, Delegates. In Favor of. 1 (mt liam T. M'Coun.. Marcy, § To be choern next Lo week. ’ Ldward C, We ) ar ub. Conover, Cees. ares 12,18. 19.To be chosen on 15th. 9 ea Weekes, fGen. Aaron Ward... Casa y. Sul Lotiridge. « -Brasius Corning. } Walter GOR acre 3; Winelow ¢ : a mo Wateou. Not committed. | end Franklin .. Crain arey. Darforth,..... Not committed, ir Otsego Jaware . committed, comm Wine pamper. see regal t Th will eurprise the oc | have no means at hand of testing their ne although the @ probably sancar tho to reach ion, ond that is—that 2 ma soem to have for their firet date for the next Presidency, Marcy; thas a portion of the remaindor al Caes; ond thatthe rest are uncom- mitted. re is no indication that there iv ono for Dougia9, or Buchanan, or Houston, 6r Woo), or Butler, or any other of the numerous list of do moeratic candidates, except thoso we have namad Jt is, however, generally believed, among tho knowing ones, that this sudden derclopement of th® | strength of Governor Marcy, and this rallying under bis old breeches, isa mask to bring forward General Butlor, of Kontucky, who has heen se, Jeoted by the barn g and Van Buren intorest | in this State, as a man on whom they may unite. Governor Marcy himself iz a double- dealing, shut , Bing sort of politician; and, although he has here tofore been a hunker, be has, no donbt, boon bar- gaining with the barnburners throughou! the fer the exprees purpose of cheating both thom and Butler, if he should have a chanco at the Balti more Convention. lio isa very unreliable man— } always m a the rever at he saya, and wan ders to the object he has ia view in a Tho mover f tho ° @ been bring 14 utler, of } r b pr committ i Simil ts a of d thire, Kentucky, Pensylvania, Oh porhap2 others. A State convention was recontly hold at Frankfort, Kentucky, at which, alvhongh it was timated that Gen. Butler was the choive of the con- vention, no positive delcaration was made to that | eflect. In Pennsylvania, as farasithas been ascor- | lection of thema—sre like vise | tel. abe, | I Th | public could then depend | Statutes, &e , know Bow very is ave seen the barnburnere in this State bring fcr- ward Governor Marcy. A resolution to that effect, bowever, was negatived by a vote of 144 to 136, in the Legislature. New Hampshire, likewige, has had a State Convention on the subject of the Presi- dency, at which s resolution wae passed in favor of ibe nomination of Gen. Franklin Pierce as their candidate to be eabmitted to the Baltimore Conven- tion on the first of June noxt. These are the moe} important mcvements in re- ference to the next Prosidency that we havo yet seen throughout the country. ‘Chey indicate avery doxtrous system or policy—all of them siatilar to that which has been adopted in this State. where the opp n te General Cass, who seems to have heen the leading candidate, bas brought forward @ separate candidate in every Siate— Marey in New York; Buchanan in Penuzylvania; Batler in Kentucky; Pierseo in New Hampshire: Stocktou in New Jersey; Alien in Obio; Douglas is Mlinojis; Lenein indiana; Houston in Texas: Walker m Wisconsin; and others in ether State This iw s species of Cuerrila warfare former peeition of General Cass, which may yn the Valtimore Convention, ia domolishing bie prospects, in spite of all the old etrangth which he may have had, or the new popular position he has taken in relation to cur forsign or domestic poiic At present, Buchanan ie his most formidab'e op nent; but by and by, Butler will como o strong man, and if the friende of all the then stro caudidetes should quarrel in he Balti tion, we should not be at ali surprised to aoe © ral Pierce of New Hampei aro up ’ formidable man, on whom the factions migh be able to unite. la such case, ead of contest being between Case and Savhanan, who will be almoet demolished before they get inte the Baltimore Convention, it will be between Pierce of New Hampshire, and Butler of Kentucky, both popular p. —both tolerable stat tage on the side of Pieree, qho has more brains, but short or legs, tban Futler has. Thus stand the democracy. The movements of ihe whig party are altogether of a different character. They have fewor cra re Conv dates, are more contracte! in their operations, and | | have less confusion in their ranks. Kerctofore, Gen Scott has been considered :heir leading and moet popular candidate. We have heard, howevor, that a coolnese has lately sprung up between (en. oit and Seward—from what cause we canuct un- derstand, unless a belief on the par’ whig abolitionists that should Gen. Sco Prezident, he would give them the goby, and change his cabinet on the first day of every month, if the old ones did not evil him—sa policy that would be capital for the nowepaper: the whig candida‘ee is pri Washington, and is between and Gen. Scott. Mr. Fillmore, we believe, is entirely out of the question. Ho is a weak, amiable, imb2 cile man, and ie of no account whetevor, exept as on tenons, and & respectable chief m. r. Webster's friends are determined to ior the Presidency, at all hazards, and be has taken a cuas? position on the Jiungarian ques- confined to | tion, caleulated to take the wind out of the sails of Gen, Scott, and to muke a sad inroad on in the Philadelphia slaughier-bouse convention bext summer. ‘The free coil party of the North ard the seo party of the South, are very quiet, lying = looking with much interest on the movements 2 struggles among the candidaces of the two great parties. ‘The free soil, or abolition party, are pre- paring \o go for the Kogsuth policy, and against the compromise measures, to any and every extent. They will avail themeelyes, en these points, of the inistakes or blunders thai may be made by the Balti- more and Philadelphia conventions. Tho secession uu inclined to fall back on the cld democratic nd toe reeognise tho Paltimore nomina- p'atform tion. ent indications of going back to the old whig platform, and they will probably unite on the Philadelphia nomination. r come time past, bothof the old parties have rated a etrong disposition to fall back on the ind The Union party of Goorgia, Mississippi, | | audotber Southerm States, also pri Every- | —both Mexican generale—both horoes | | all thie, i agreed on, and the work furnished being almost worthless. We fuilv and unreservedly sgroo wich Mr. Smith in denunc'ation cf that system. The mescure we have sketched commends itself to the practical sense of the Legislature, and we trust that the saggeetion will be taken up and acted on in Con- | gress, and that @ system baged upon it will be sub- | etitated for that now pursued, and which makes | the public ictereet ovly subsidiary to*sckomee of | favoritiem and pelitical eubserviency. ABOLITION AGITATION, aNn 1T3 Frurre —The important proceedings of a meeting of the colored popaletion, held in this city on Tuesday evening last, which we publish in this day's Henan, will be read with interest by all classes, For those who | the report, for the exeroieo of their risiblo faculties; | for those who love justice and hate swindling and | fraud, | | | Brally, to the patriot, there are materi | ond serious reflection. | J. will be perceived, by reference to the repert, oy,-| What the sentiments ultered were of the mos: violent | charac | one ‘ and that tho antislavery agitation is ned afresh, with se wild @ fanaticism a3 evar. sent, and that they participated in tke strong fael- sxe fond of fun, the:o ia ample scope, inthe perusal of there ia abundant room for the iadal- gence of thoir indignation; for the free sollora and | White sbolitionists, thero iz & mirror held up to which (ey may 2eo themrolves to advantage; and for sober preara that there wore several clergymen pre- City In Cee RE—TEREE CHILDREN BURSED TO DEATII AND SBVBRAL PERSONS INJURED. Yesterdsy morning, about half pest sevem o'clock, a fire was discovered in the between Weet and Washin; house No, 18 Morris street, gton streets. The building is three stories high, the first floor being & grocery and liquor store, owned by Patrick Fitzsimmons; the second and third being occupied by a large number ef poor The fire. it is supposed, originated either in the second or third story, completely destriyed by cempanie was toon brought under, tubrequentiy found eos figured four mouths; and two firet being th following are tie name of burt Crosby jumped from & Buppered to Dave fractured to th: hospital, ard is nc wire suetuinea conriderably damage spot wes Firet Assistant Captain Saoigras of the Virst ward. with the eocond platoon; Arsiatant Captain | Yeu Zandt, Captain Silvwy. Captain Leonard or the fcoond, Captain srennan of the Sixth, and Captain Hopking, of the Third, were present, together with thelr mon, who did great rervice a: the time. wo onrerved Nos by whore strepuous exertions the devouring elemen io which part of the building ibe most people were congregated together. In the first Tnemans of the alan and catalan several ofthe in- wetes jumped out of the windows, eod by falling the icy sidewaiks, susteived severe and fatal ioju while, by some circumstance or other, three children were left in @ back room on the third story, and were burned to death, Thetwo upper stories were almost the fire, while the store like- 5, 14, 18,40, 21, and othe ‘The pames of the three chil- dren who perished inthe flames, and whore bodies were pletely charred, and s0 dix thet It waa with the utmost difficulty they could be osognized by thelr paren Avnn Deery, vad eight years; Bi len Caonpn, aged three uhtera of Phillp Herey. ithe persons who were inj ured: — re, Leery. who leaped out of the window with a child fa her arma, and both of wh She wun oonveyed tothe © ty Hoepital, Sota Ad stery window, and is spine, t exoected to live, d tb Cat upon ter; ‘Toe fret on the Among the tire er ere as folows y= meth Heory, aged yeare—tbe Toe were very much She was broagh! Munich. S00n after, I reocived, from an aid of the good old King Louis, an invitation to a royal audience cn the pete A After hesitating scme time, I jed to the ae = ao ef my friends, accepted {novi y interview with the King at noonday. Tne King treated me with kindness, 1a s familiar cooversation with bim about French politica, Tgave my epinions Pretty freely, aud especially iu relation to’ seme French editors whom 1 was acquaiated with. Waving always been, as I ain yet, in the hebit of meking fail motes of public events, men, avd movernenta, was emabied to be sccurate The King of the information gare bro, and seeme rn terested as to ark me to etay in Munich ag hie gue-t for a few deye, I at first dectined, and tinally observed— “Willit pot give cause for scandal againet your Ma- jesty?” The King replied—« No; Ihave no fear of that.” L consented to stay afew days. cud renewed wy conte rations with the King several times, on visite to him Bisinstance. These visits wers naceremonious, U talked to the King, as I slways do to every one—truth- fully, Mankly, and without concealment, I told him of exrora avd «buses in his government—1 told hira of the perfidy of his ministers. nnengpecting, ha did pet oelieve it; buc 1 proved it to him. He express+d his gratitude to me, His Queen was my friend I expored to him e*pecinily the art, duplicity and villapy of his Prime Minister, Baron; 0°A bei, t, who had wormed him relf into bis confidence: ped I to gain by all this but the establishment of righ. ama the protection of an honest man from rogues? King Louis was convil in spite of all the scandulons fabrications thet were lated, that I was bir fieud, os 1] wasmosttraly. Sora Jong time his preiligate ang faithless coone’ not imagine trom whence their betrayed roaster learned the facta os to thetr conduct. 4 When they did, what a torrent of sandal wad fale Bod wae opened Upen poor me! | was everything that was bad and vile, But they could vol injure me with the good old hing. The king defeoded aud justified me, end de- nounced their seyersions and caltipmies, One day be teld D’Abel. in reply to same observation denoudoiug me, that “She is right; abe told me thatrath = 1 will do gs she told ine? D' Abel reeled, ¢ She is hig. then iy Rexion, ears of are, hadboth her lege and one ; “ Yer”! ewid ihe good old Louis, ~ she ie hing;” ana thi ing that characterized the proceediogs Tho | gym eer Caureend to ha | remerk, s0 mundo, was disccried. reported to the pu | bloody deed which seat the Rev. Mr. Goreuch pre- from the second atery wi = aud made the theme of the choussnd scoudaions « ade Snlbiey Ue Sus nag, ee on aua ekuil fractures. fle want | ridiow ous stories maturely tohis-account, with all his imperfections md all hopesof ree ” conuuct towa:.! | on hie head, wae lauded in thoir pressnce, and with | the quiescence, a8 @ praise belief. toe hell’a fire, where they tell who aro lixe him will find their Jasi homo. Ministers of the gospel who do not sgrea with us denunciatory language, of the moat, fierce de: n, isemployed. Ono of the rpeakers—Rev. rnish—exuliingly tollaus that he coald name s which are at work that will very soon re avarchy and revolution, if something ta n no speedily for the complies emancipation of ed race by peascable means. Thera is no doubt that ke reforied to the Kinkel and Kos movemente, and to the Gorman paper pnblishe: this city, under the chiof. and by hie former editorial associate. | auepices of the Hungarian From is quite evident that a new impulse hay been given to tho abol: n agitation among the | colored race, aad where it will end, heaven eniy The struggle emong | ' | Kossuth and Kixkel agitation, the prediction of | perty of tbe South, according to present appearances, | old ground, and carry on the Presidential contest in | he old way; and we rathor think that mattor: will take thie complexion befor fiddle of next | urogoer Jp the mi f all these m is very evident n policy, started by Ko: extending its influence and widening in ite of ond that it may d Iti Le have fe worl and di pner in which the publi is managed, on the n embers of Congres to refor tothe printed j gracefully they are pablished, an exio!s for 2 tolal change in this brane lie service. Independent of this, b another reason why the p holished, and that is, ¢ moralizing the public pre an extent that the journals of t! abla, and no* to be depended on rication of important intelli, vest on which cach expestant fixed in prospetu—if he can by any 1 to get the printing contract—czoats spirit ef toadyism and slay with the conducting of an independ the consequence is, that the p; igo nonentity Itis high time that this system was put an end to by the cstablishmont of a regulary government printing concern, and the appointment of a a of the best cditor?, reporters, engravers, litho- graphers, printers, &¢., ia accordance wi-h the plan sued by other governments and corporations. ¢ public printing of the country could thus be carried on with far lers expenee, and ja a eficiency which would be in str ridiculous exhibitic and fosters a leat journal; and the accurhey publications, and on tho various dutt¢ +e how t 1 of contra ” act of a ary y a a this 1 which ia néce i ttoy only me and (hough the outlay req tired purpose may appear to be £0 large as to forbid i wbly fact Ww years, boing carried into effect, yet it isa pa that thetaving which it would offect, in 4 would counterbalance this expenditure. Our attention is called to this mattor, at the pre- cent time, from a speech made in Corgress, 9 few | tained, Mr. Buchanan has received tho support of | days since, by Mr. Smith, of Connecticut, in opposi | thirty six of the de! egates clectod to the preliminary | State Convention, and Gen. Cass thirteen. In the same proportion, the delegates to the Baltimore Convention from that State, may bo ottimated at two-thirds for Buchenan and one-third for Cass. In Ohio an effort was made to put forward Mr. Allen, formerly Senator from that Stato, as a can- didate for the Presidency, in the same way that we tien to the contract proposed to be entered into for printing the ecventh census. He contended that the effect of tho resolution was wholly to givo work to @ political organ, without any consideration a¢ te the competency of the perties to whom it was to be entrusted; and he declared that the contract syetem for Congrestional printing had been a fail- ure— po contrector having complied with the terms e the eame | - | he do that, reef the day } bis | tion of the country abe menage | ness, irreconcilable | | Enowe This dange: exe ent among the black population, whioh is Jaily rising to @ higher pitch £ frerzy, is all the result of the white ebolition agitation of days gone by ; and Hant and Seward, and Van Buren and eeley, and all tho white livered tribe, are responsible foris. it is but the natural fruit of their principles. ‘Chey have sown the wind, andikey are reaping the whirlwind; but the tempestis only beginning. ‘They kave planted dragon’s teeth, which have eprungup armed men to overwholin themselves: but whigh, ac yet, aro only ek which istocome. Tho barnburners on one side, and the free soil whigs and abolitionists on the other, have beencheating the colored population, and using them for their own purposes. But the blacks have been in earncet all the timo, and will now uso for themselves the power put into their hands; and there ie every prospect that with tho assistance of tho Jobn ©. Calhoun, IJr., will be realized at no distant day. One of the epeakors remarked that Hunt was only elecled by @ majority of 250; that it was by blach votes ke wag made Covernor; and that they would serve him out next time, ond with him all those who had so long ‘eceived them. Thus the white abolitionists are receiving somo- what more than they bargained for: for, lila Frarkensicin, they bave raised a monster which they caunot ¢ elt. NiEL WERSTER AD Heusearny—Wuar pos ui the jourrals that claim to be the ps nents of Mr. Webster's ideas, dociare that th tinguished Secretary of State does not mean. ir hi recent speech, to profe: ervention—intervention to provert int as Kossuth understands the terms. These organs state that Mr. Webster's notions extend no fur her than moral intervent, We must cay, however, tb exposition. Mr. Webster k of Congriss and of the 1 suth receiving bia: at W ae! the fi Koesw lowe at &® matter of ec r et righi to eutivo ly it ia but fair to hol r ns ond b's moral comm & policy of @ most impor | favor he House of Repree have takon no netic bs | Tecent extraordinary and monstrous eed by Mr. Forney to Mr ing the latter t ate of ‘on ton, ety Jet into. from him te F Forrest. 1 and hon | tinge onghont the of end wo trast that of | Represe es do not mean te pass ove ub O> | traordinary developesient without taking somo proper and opore pr. the eenduct capable or m cury eng place in the g governioent ab Washi Tur Ber ror tie Hvsearian new penny cotemporary—ihe Zimes—-is very dull of compre- hersion. We will try to be explicit. Somewhere about last September, the Hon Henry J. Raymond, formerly Speaker of tho House of Asi sembly in Albany, tumbled down a litle way, and started a | #mall penny payer, which he calls by the magnifi- cont nome of * The New York Doily ‘imes.”” Since | its establishment ithas again and again assorted i | Duras that the daily circulation of the ‘Naw Yor« ** has diminished, We assert the con and bave offered, and now offer, a bet rP, 600 doll hat ovr circulation has increased gi LOWE 1 whero, &h V InRatp reporter's book is neg Larcount of the trial, it all those Who have forgotton what oc- three duye ago, to refresh their memo- | riee. The Court again referred to this Toport, yes- | tordey, ne the reliable report ; and those who desire to read what has occurred, and look upou the seenos 8 they are daily enacted, should provide thomselves with the pamphlet which is being pub- ed by our careful and impartial reporter. We wish tbe cage was done ‘and ended vn MR. Cray on GaneraL Cass.—Our correspon- dent still assurcs us that Mr. Clay has written » yetter and made « declaration in favor of Genoral Cass candidate forthe Presidency. Tho whig journals admit that Mr. Clay has declared his prefe- rence for General Cass among the domoeratic trio— but no more. Well, this is enough. vorthy act. though tho murder harled the deceased, according to thoir | all them, are called ministers of the dovil; and otnor rmishing, in anticipation of the deadly strugg'e | | covery. from the second floor to t nelive,) while leaping trom’ her bamd severely injured. vote that can” be safe y ©. he p | leaped cv | Gofury, while all the the buliding —Thore who generally caught before itis & rem cn, exactly opposite the tree K pratse duct ofthe three decessed chil that they eem: No. 18 Morris ¢ Sap Accmpes man vemed Jobn Je Prankfort and Willten: str ges, (on aces iis eoupling on the tert with the nature of gas, consegn ‘ken i ared picture, He was ety stere, by some friends, and ought to be @ lesson to ou Mrs, . aud three not be bestowed ree | the Gas Company. Death wy Bu Ton Flynn, azed eighteen’ yoar inst.,by which he reeelved tines, cansing his death ye dict according to the aboy Couieios oN Tin Ue ovelook yerterday worning, this road, loaded w into by # down train belon and» large pumber of shi of the New Haven car: mpnal. Mronanice? Insriute.«: Purdy; Second Vico Presi Charl Delay: cue: Treasurer, Edward B B. keh ‘Thomas Littte, yered in tho premises 24 rlip and Dover strevi, 2 the second floor, from a | with but rriting damoge. For B nemThe RM. left for Liverpool, at her carries 48 passengers. Tre Packer Brur Great sick with the ship fever. ‘voyage. arrived here, has been a ¥. vere westerly gales, ehe en Gitude in seven days, Lola Montes=Past, Na Besser Tem eure appeal (oan tn njuet one ii jee the paople #: je atzanger, and pz mint. Iknow that fe any who Vulzer treatmen ard bsppy Jand 14 0 son.and Frank your institutic | connected wit mn One va sustal: ed no seriovs injury. but ©: psiderabiy secrebed. of the front wind: | thia way Michael Nelpiv, ewner ol the Chagres from berag hurt Mrs. brown ant ch ss clean ar if it had been shave: the nature of gan, to leeve it alone, and send ab yesterday, at the City Hospial, on the body of Latr hab sheep, while motionless et Wiliame’ Bridge, was rua boris attached to either train were injur on which wes mostly consumea. Two of the Li were pleo mach damaged, The seotdent wes he Hariem train neglecting to exbibit the proper | Vice Vresident, George Steers; Correspon ing § bie ; Recording Secretar, Finy —Last night, ebovt 11 o'clock, sa wholesale seger Bud liyuor store, Leing promptly om the spot, i wes ror Her passage, like that of many net he OPP. Cornedius Tookey. with one of his children. fell he iret, amid the the window, wiih her oil: iertwochiliren were saved, These are about relied on. Others rhable fact teat all thos: lighting on (ne t, saved tke er four upon him dren, ened Te o thelr death by accidental burning, at ts, in attemp not buruing), tuscrevwed the Pp dy veyed to noighho: afterwards taken home. This hers who do not us: OvrmwAn inguves wis b 7) native of Irelaad, who was accidentally ran over hy a horre anlcurt,on the 12ch an injury in the small inte storday, al the he Vor e tacts, nue Rannos , «freight tram t ‘ge pumber of cattle and ing to the Harlem Railroad, Bo violent was the collision, that several head of catie »p were killed; bus none of (be Astovefo eto the 8 Was upset, end set fi ~The following were unapi- mourly elected as Offivers of the Mechanivs’ lustitute, on Tuerdey evening, for tee ensuing year:—)or Pre dent, Thowes small; Viret Vice Lresident. E ‘ident, John T. } Joi Fetlows. Dire at 6 Front siree 'd by eheerinen & Bandfor pe steve, apd f Mastne Affairs: steamship A usual heur, y: Wiest from Liverpool! She hed seven ers late’ ery ly made three dezrenr Present. & ble jon, and 6 vy cous of such v those given ix may nave seurred, but as yet have not come to the knowledge re Jackson alte, John Roach, Peter Grant, John ¥. Putz, | ‘Thomes if. Burras, John Lowden, Bensov J i | T. Fiener, Samuel Clark, Thomas C Dodd, W obn ok edon mp sales hed, ATS | ived yesterdey at Quarantine, where che iv doteined, in | consequence of having a large num) {her passengers ths on the sever one, Owing tose | myce £ too Petore, ; om v) } wha were beth @ | mapletry, The people were oppress ters, who tid their own bad acts to the King. covered @hat (he ministry het one copy of the neweparer poblitbed as tbe govern aeut printed fer vis eye, end Olfferemt copies prluted (or the people, which be never enw. I oxposes this vile deception. “| others of the neturtous Ministers and courtiers, as everything it nd everything el @ © Moorish Cou a Spanish epy, ands I repol The king taid ne woald waka me» * Ba vatian”? Counters"and be cil make me" Qountess of Lendsfeld,’ and made we liberal gifts, Know ng his own purity. he ¢id not intend to b men around him to 60 me foju their denunet: talked of “8p Ly t | montane,” or ministerial parcy | views, and was the auvoonte 6 but Tam n withot 61 bullied by the bed y. Lentertained ibe if liberal measures then, as } am pow revolutionist Tae Prime Mivister, DAbel. was determined to dvive me awey; aod he plotted agsinst we, roir kinds of” ecandal wbout sent to France, | rdies, and Spain, wo g 7 ‘ to the pecple that Tinflnonced the Sing to das of wickedrers. and he altrionted bisown oppre to the King and wyscl? In oll thess vallane he failed, ti! he called in the wid of the Austrian Minister, Prince Motternish Then troy h , to conciliate and soothe my, and bribe me to their | i was Cored four millions of trance avd of Frincess. 1 IE would consent to aid to control tbe King to advance their plane, nantly refused, and Jmmediately exposed ir othr to the King, | Tle was astonished, end Imes, “is eaanot be {dv ermined & eit pon an inversiew with Metternioh’s end DAbela agent, Baron Militzhin, ia @ room, the King being concealed sorbet he could hear all thet passed. He heard the whole, wae cow’ 3 of those around him, wud be dismissed b. forthwith, The suc © of D'Abel ween l Protestant, My cours: etrengthoned tue king's conte dence in me and auguented cho hostility of the Jesuits tobeth. They sourht my iite by poison; they « aseail my reputation by misrepresenting my position with the King, and they tradnved me to tie pecple. as intinencing the King to their iejury. The Jesuits in Munich ere» powerful perty. ‘Thoagh they feiled in the attempt upon my lif, they did eucceed in their rlanders againet we. An ocourrence that took place just at that time eided them. The radica's in Switzerland had just driren the Jeeu'ts out of the Swiss Confederation. Louis Philippe professed mon-interven- tion a* his pelicy; but at the very time, Guise, wrote to Metternich, proposing the subjugation and division of Switzerland, and an alliance ivtweem Prance and Aut | tria for that purpose. Kiog Louis of Bavaria was soli- | cited to become a party to this wliiance. Me told me oF it. I spoke my wind iully to the goed old King as to theee intrigues. I told bim it was unjuct and infamous. | Ltaw that the Jesuits were Une prime movers of the scheme —T begged ot him to keep aloof feom th't allianca of robbers, ‘This caused o renewal of the atlacke on me, with increased violence, ia every way. Tho popvince of Munich were excited ezeinst me by the fopler: filer hoeds, artfully contrived, es toe Jesuits well i ho todd, They were persuaded I was the enemy of the people, whep, as Heaven knowe. atl my ambition waa to promote their happiness and well-being andmake myrelf beloved for lind oud gocd acts, A revelution was fomented by the Jesuits, and the good old King was dethroned and exiled. I eyupathice with him ic his rvaiefortunes, and in his exile. aud comt’nve to correspond the aris in Durope; he is catled the irtiste King. He isa cet, & painter, a sculptor, ord na yirtuons ard kind- carted # gentleman ns Jives oneerth. Ih's venerable Was slandered with respect tome Lam a pod ki, litle woman, Tove bim as 1 would love a foth It is not n love that any woman neod be ashamed of em proud of it, Mo was vy friend, and while I hi shall he his friend. I¢e-pie and loathe #he mis | wretches who have elandered thet kind old mon eit . For the injuries tome f forgive them. and pray they may be forgiven by all they bave injered; b th: for bisaneroy, od in | i bore ¢ to him, Linvoke God's justice upew chem, dt will eurviy ovestake them in this wo v ‘operty, the fruits of hard and lat « siudy and tneessant exertion, the toil of yeere, ant nef my hind benctucrcr. Tame poor davicens fora subsistence. J have been prodizal LT have learned st wns atanit. In my 6x and exile T have never lows eanfdence in the justice ¢ u rigutiy to tre world, pie whom I would have ek of theiramiable old 009 brava, and honest people miiegutded by the b2d mon who have de h e story, told in my american gentiewen Fam not the wicket I base never barmed acy Tam not the enemy of a I>, unobtrusiv th no relabian, apd ae pal to, god oan only a: todit wy simple the high souled, feoe 132 1 do hope; I do trns howisher & and ladies true, aa) live women yon have been told ove knowing being livir ! 1 “Tam a bar inveip trem Lorable Americans ? ot chil the beart of ast toall by bawhand crus) and rumore, Onn Terk of my own sexto be refuced? p ww L have erredin hi been vat. look back ox m; ay e ty Hever Loxisted you help it §f bad men ape j ila dream??? T hevo been wil: pronch me—if bad men echeme to become a vainte? know myself, never wicked. I con a to every e With me—ti bad met ef me--and $f bad men eek te panton or servant in my whole lize, co my own nex, to say | Ake me despico myrelf, I know bub few cevtlemen if lever treated th upgenerously, vilbt ju L have bee | The very from whom 1 was obliged scoured me of faleebood We were divoretd. upon the world f: means of support, e3 | abilities, J owas in Englan a from the decame, as the only rerou idler countered all those iexxib tion to take cate of myeell cf the licentiour—to the N of the envio gery, and eve ®, and bonied m rr) wh given wu of ine have my forpivencns 7 thes may ever moetgw enyone, ‘Tin aweo nies is {0 forgive them, sivenesn, it Ta pvtnr eben tel has re; rs col a that Bis a eo have Jp wy profersional career 1, Ruste one elon Bry By thet reparation Iv pt my_own industry end the East Indies, any one. My profession exposed me to the ap) on my rectit il. bt au honorabje women, who would not sb revenye Loan take ef a nd, thank Heaven, L can exercise it. Hut in relarion to rome of the statemente and iovinua- ae oe Fobay! some hapoly ct ghee f- te jeehoo: forgeries, uy] tical ene- mies at the court of Bavaria, nmlserabls Peat who ie Jesuit sented fi ot cocupy,” Ubgeure sents acted as my servant, and who was bribed by th stiy, unkindly, end, J wiiladd, n traduced, and slandered. k, thaa any human being, man o= ved for a century. ney, It halt of it wers tro Jf all that i -T ought to atrocities attributed delity to F to part my to my vows of is, Without mce to the Continent. ree for am honorable aud vir- | tuous ilvelihood, an artisie, an actress, @ dansmuse Jen. ple triale incident to a resolu. if without dependen slanders of the malicious—to ns, I was defenceiees, excopt ide of purpore and conduct, enemies because | was @ proud | ‘on--en ambitious women, if ry sp throu, aod he fs) nai to pea notice aseanit notioe F ith similar oakindners from tt is the prorogative of inofien- rope. aud my conduct in 1 0 me, show thelr falsehood. At the-age of thirteen, | able gentlemen, and shall persevare in go doin bot well meaving iriende, conetraiued me to | | aes an alliance with one much my senic bad not my afiections, who did not seek ¢» ‘ein them, and one ever fn years, but who | eno» | or ladies in America. T obtrvde may ceifon no one. & T Bave ced to know thar I wish I had pot kacwn; but T have met come w eacted and kind people whom } sbell remember with gratitade while i live, 1 ave repulsed from my doors sll who T have nc: | assured were woriby, correct, honorable, and ra ite with Jools of my own or the other <= beseech a generous pubile to suttain me in my © better my fortunes in am honorable profiesion, 1 appes! _ ton biberal press, and to the intelligent gantlemen who control it. to vid me in myexertions to regain (be meave of an honorable livelihood. Adieu. kind sir, with thanks for your courtesy, and my best wishos for your bap forts to * end prosperity, MARIE DE LANDSPEUD LD * Loa Montes, * Kew pe Crannne, Meroredi, Jan, 14, 1863. Court Calendar for This Day. Burne Oovat.—Brecia1, Tenst—Nos, 50,6, 11,12, 13, 21, 47, 52, 60, 60 to 67. The day calendar will be called at the opening of the Court, and defanits aliowed to bs fake. “Cincvir Covnr.—Nos. 112 to 119, 12) to 125, 20 Age Common Preas.—Tasay ThastPert 1--fame terdey. excepting 111 off. Part 2-Nos, 94, 102. / 26, 128, 120, 132, 136, 66, 158, 140, 142, 144, 140, 24° ot and Beckman » lothes for $5, eonaiesin 4 Fanoy Vest 0 price Nasay here wi Cloth | every nty | the inerod: ple auib of Pan ta, eae) a who at, T | o | Buffalo Ove cavelling, and cork hold aaii rub Mocenssi» atond loathor, for orson having © denthor,” history or #: § jntes of the curos hia eifeote |, 0 thing relatines to} alto, the firet number of -" weekly Rowansper le hed in Now York abou thf4,4.0 edited by Varo k | Wattey will fad 9 Liberal purclaser, by addzossing 2 line to | ASTEN, 444 Greenwich street, aGourand’s Lignid fntr Dye te without Kooption or renervation tho yory best overinvented; o» gclebrated i¢ Goaraud’y Motivated Som ole, for curing pic ahne the. Bon a i G: 08, sailownose, chavs, ohialse, row stile hi uproote hair from’ sn t of the bedy. Liquid 0 Whit, and Hair 2 038, ab Bear ae Gatlendor, £5 Third Mtn Phaadelp sett Maitre! Batchelor’s celebrated Liquia. the bair or ro se with whi ere dancense, hat berm Sapte Vand, totaenee “t Honest avd” With Lim, The King is known es the first proce teur of