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Lonpon, Oot. 1, 1853. London Money Market—Speculation on Stock Ex: change— Panic, $c. Ihave just returned from the city, which is at alterations, and the meetings are held at the Hall of Commerce, Threadneedle street. The excitement of the betting ring at Epsom is of the only iuteasity to be compared at present with that on ‘Change. Yes terday many fortunes were (ost, ands well known broker told me of one defaul’er, who having dropped £20,000, has altogether disappeared, and nobody knows where he’s g: ve to. Yesterday balf-past one was the culminating tt to which the reaction tended. Cousols have en done at 90}, but, coutidence showing itself a little, prices rose W914 The sight movement gave rise to Che seldom equalled in times of the great- est polit exeitement. Che sellers at 91 imme- Posmay bought at any price, and even at the igure of 93-4 there is such a pressure from the dismayed bears that there is too little stock for tale by £3,000,000 sterling. Tule yore is a8 clear an icstanee of reaction as ou see im the funds in a ten years’ interval. Vheat up at 72s. the quarter; oats rising 1s. per diem. A smash in the Australian exporta, an im- pending struggle with Northern powers. and a maxi mum t at the bank ot tive percent, one would pot feel much woncer at « quotation of 85, but so great bas been the specvlution that artificial prices maintain their buyers because there has been such au overcharge of sellers. Whether there will be an- cther fall from intelligence from Constantinople, of course I cannot nd to say, but the only thing tor the dab blers remaining to be done, with the ac- count for the 13th staring teem im the face, is to hedge their books as cleverly as they can, and begin again next month. - ALBEMARLE Street, PrcapI.uy, Lonpon, Oct. 4, 1853. \ Continental News—England’s View of the East- ern Question—The Austrian Loan— Theatrica’s —Cholera—Its Cause in England. Here we are, allexcitement, corn up and funds dowa. The Morning Chronicle has this morning indulged us with many editions, the Jast announcing, per submarive telegraph, that Turkey nai declared war against Russia, and, yet the intelligence from Paris of to-day ws of a pacific nature. The Assem- blée Nationale of this mornivg says:— We cannot yet eater into detail on what passed in the | interview of Olmutz. Cur information is wot yet suifici- ently complete. But we can positively announce at pre- went a great result. The conference of Vienna is re-es- tablished between the Four Powers. The thread of nego- tiations, s moment abandoned, hus been resumed; and a | than could have been | y morning, is | happy and more prompt soluti hoped for on Saturday, and even ye probeble. All the rumors of ao offensive and defensive coalition between the three avrthern lowers are false. The Emperor Nicholas bas, it is known, quitted Olo ute. His Majesty left in the evening of the 25th ult with his ordinary suite. His Majesty the Emperor Francis Joseph, has accepted the courteous imvitation made to him by the Emperor of Russia to pass oae cr two days at War The Marquis of Lansdowne left Paris last evening in order to attend Cabinet Council which is to be held this day | at London. All the memters of the Cabinet have been convoked to attend it. The Constitutionnel says: It is positively stated that the Cabinets of London and of Paris have just sent off simu burg cabinet couriers, who are important communications as much promptitude as possible in their journey, and it is supposed that they will. be in st, Petersourg om the 6th inst. At length, what doating, drowsy Aberdeen and apposed charged with his do-nothing colleagues have been hesitating to do | for months past, through fear of offending Rassia | and its energetic despot of a ruler, will be forced om | them by the loud voice of a great nation’s opinion. | Sheffield has already met in stormy debate on the ‘unsatisfactory vaciilating conduct of ministers— | Leicester will do the same in a day or two—and we | tee from the Times of to-day taat on Friday evening | 7 bext a meeting of noblemen, members of Parliament, and other influential men, is to be held for the same | purpose at the London Tavern. Aye, and at this meeting, too, we shall have little Lord John, proba- bly, giving hig cpinions as a citizen of London, quite irrespective'y of his position as a cabinet minister, London, Baron Lionel Rothschild, wiil be asked to give his countenance and the light of his wisdom to the question, without ary reference to his delicate situation as loen-monger to the never paying Austria, and his consequent interest in an adverse settlement | of the Eastern dispute. Soft!y, however, is the order | of the day—not hurry; for affairs, say one and all, are not very month ago. English aud Frenca ships have anchor- ed, it is true, off Constantinople; but, nevertheless, the Turkish populace have not as yet risen and | massacred the Christians, thus cruelly compelliag the benevolent, woman-hearted Czar at once to take, as @ man, an Emperor, and a Coristian of the Greek Church, what he has hitherto sought to acquire by | 38, blovdless pen and ink. Meanwhile, where is English diplomacy? Over the bills and far away, taking its rest after the extruordinary fatigues of a whole session, dwing #hich it remained dumbd. Certainly, awkward, intemperate questions were now aud then put by wufui, hotbeaced men; bat they were at oace extinguished by the offhand dried vegetables from France. until July 31, 1854, observation, that ney tistiuns were so far on their way toa happy conciusion that further discussion, tead of accelerating, would vuly retard it—that the correspondence shuuld we fortivoming at some | convenient season; whereuyon the credulous House cheered its satisiactiun, and there was an end. The session lisgesed on till at last Black rod appeared, Parlement was up, and the mini¢ ters are now on their holiday, caring as little for Constantinop'e and + Pekin and Timm ong, SO, 227 in" 4 es .. wuich the patriotic, free, \ovg-headed people of land rte them-tives- to be snubbed, hood: Ei winked and bamboozied by the'r foreign minister. | Nev less, we wili uot despair. When Nicholas shall bave politically ruiced the Sultac’s indep»n- dence and made him a mere vassal of Russia, Lon- don, and Manchester, and Leeds, and Birmingham, | will bestir themselves, extubit woudrous sympathy with the poor Turks, and denounce the wickedness vf the Czar. At least we can mourn for a friend, if we cannot save him from drowning; and these tardy | mee vey savor too mach of this policy. The of Austria, young Francis Joseph | yessels in Mexican ports, and that all «I Jeremy Diddler, wants » loan —bexs, with a low bow, jo ask the Barings, the Rotnsch'lds and the (Gold- smidts, “whether they have such a thing as Ey millions of florins about them.” Let these capital- ists beware, and button up in time their breeches Pe for austria has been twive a bavkrapt, aod firm of Hapsburg & Cv. is at best but a cracked and whitewashed house. antecedents. down its own notes of ten florins to two florins only —payable in silver. In a word, Austria offered a Let us briefly scan ita composition uf four shillings in the pound—and even | bank will show, it was said, a considerable turther | No, no, in roguiah paper; the | decrease of bultion. | then not in silver. new paper being exchanged ios the ao her gad | Be moreover, was further depreciated in 15: is appointed Governor of Guadalouye, in room of | gy bry “A PeeSithe of tte ‘aoantnal valoe; o that, in point ot | Gory . ~ a1 #}] sorts of grain into the Two Sicilies duty free, up fact, over to her creditors exactly one and sevenpence in the pound. Her state at present | is scarcely: a whit better, for there is this yeara deficit of millions in the Austrian revenue. No wonder, then, that Francis Joveph should apply to | the foreign money lender; bat will they answer | down on Friday night, 30th ult. At the time of the sly for St. Peters- 4 ‘They have orders to evince | | appears in the report from Waterford, published in a I with regard to the potato, too, are better, an e+ | just in the same manner that the guust memver for | sent Pie Soa | of the linen manufaciure in the county of Leitrim. much worse than they were a week ora very short time Slst of July, 1854. the various departments 5t France, show the highest of wheat prices for the last week in Aagust and iirst fortnight in September, indicate that the rise had | been general throughout France. feri f | wae 5 » Peversburg a8 | Pyrences Orientales, Aude, 3, vais is we WAY | du Rhoné, Var, Corsica and Algeria, where prices 40 centimes. | In 1807 the Austrian government cried | | tion concladed between Mexico and the Minister of Foreign A fairs of Mexico | mun for the payment of the sums due to French subjects. | The following are the articles :-— American Charge d’ Affaires, Mr. Brown, was at Swyrna om the 21st, to see the business concluded. IAL NEWS. Austria, in her wisdom, will doubtless let the matter Madrid Galee wore to ule ie end here, and pocket the affront. She is toounsteady | General Consha retused or on her ten toes to take any further notice of it, Potpe Cortea are convoked t November 15: f The celebrated astronomer, M. Arago, died at) 4 royal decree authorizes the importation, duty eight o'clock on Monday evening, after a protracted | free, of all materials used in rail , the Rey Don Fran- illness The Academy of Sciences, of which he was] A new reventy-eight gun ship, 20 long an ornament, was to have met to-day, but the cnc dada was d from the arsenal at Fer- sitting was offin consequence. M. ane im ‘At Gibraltar, 8 J pillsred dollars werein great member of the provincial government, alter #6 | demand for the China market, and, on the 25th, had been bought at 15 per cent premium. A notice was issued, perp 15th, by the British Consul Gene- ral, warning the merchants of Gibraltar not to im- port, until further notice, into Morocco, sugar, tea, coffee, cochiveal or logwood, the Meorish govern- ment having engaged, within six months, to abolish the mvnopoly aud eubstitute fixed duties on the above articles, a3 also on gunpowder, sulphur, salt- petre, lead, tobacco, and arms. The Ministers now in town, constituting a majority Hi Parity a eee eerie aa se oa of the Cubinet, met‘on Monday at the Foreign Office, | yesith babe tl pean icloaes aie naan yoreanit: in a lengthened conference on the Eastern question. | “Considering that when your Excellency’ exposed Our Litle Queen, Prince Abert gud the royal chi | from Bayouue, by date of ‘the Slat of Jaiuary last, oat a ee oral, The Prince, sometimes that the jils which even then affected you did not accompanied by his “cara sposa,” often goes out permit you to fulfil the commission with which you of February. ‘The French wine growers report better prospects in the wine-growing districts, porticularly since the late rains, which have increased the size of the grapes and bastened their maturity. The prices, ex- cept in the Bardelais, are ail on decrease. Con- siderable cargoes of wheat and Jour cont‘nue to ar- rive at the seaports in the South and West of France, and much of the former grain has been im- ported from Germany. deer-stalkin gal ae a | were charged; = cholere, yeares he reeiee , ison me aa Considering that, in consequence, you were author. ized on the 9th of February to select, either in Franve or in any otber foreign country, the point in which you mgbt most easily achieve the reliet of your ills ; Considering that you bave not completely succeed- ed in this interval, since in your course to wards Vien- na you have uot been able to get beyond she capital of France; A Considering, lastly, that in the approaching sea- Our Smyrna Correspondence. Sawyuna, Sept. 21, 1853. Release and Departure of Koszta. Koezta, the Hungarian refugee, will sail tonight | in the American brig Mimosa, bound to Boston— this will be done with the consent of both parties in- | son a climate more ‘temperate than that of the for- terested in the affair, Austria and America. Thus, | ¢igh countries uear Spain might be indispensable to < i q | ellensy; so far as Koszta is concerned, the business may be | 7°Ur Excellency; ‘ considered as finished. Mr. Brown, our rem Her Majesty bas deigned to relieve your Excel. + ; lency of tne ‘commission which she deigned to con- a’Afiaires, is now here. Veuitas | fer on you on the 9th of December last, in order tant England. you m3y tansfer your res'dence to whatever plave is THE CHOLERA IN LIVERPOOL AND LONDON —THE LON- most suited to your health and interests. DON TIMES AND A NEW YORK EDITOR—EXTRNSIVE The which I’ communicate to your Excellency by FIRE IN LONDON—DESTRUCTION OF NEWSPAPER royal crder for your information. God preserve, &c. PROPERTY— MISCELLANEOUS ITBMS, in Lon- ‘Signed ) ANSELMO BLAZER. A few cases of cholera are still re; Madrid, Sept. 23, 1853. den. The malady is subsiding at Newcastle and To his Excellency, the Captain-General of the Gateshead, the deaths since September 1 having | Army, Duke of Valencia. been 1,799. In various other places a few cases are LAST DESPATCH. noted. Mapnin, Sept. 28. Gen. J. Watson Webb, who is now in London, The Marquis de Molins has arrived, and entered writes a long and spirited letter to the London / on his duties as Minister of Marine. Times, in reply to some strictures on an editorisl | The Three per Cents were done at 423. that ap; im the Courter § Inquirer of July 28, Saati Russia. MORE MILITARY DISPLAY8—W ARLIKR PREC AUTIONS— ANOTHER CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE CIRCASSIANS— on the subject of “Yankee privateers.” Mr. Webb Vl ae out, quite temperately, that the laws of the nited States against privateering are particularly stringent, aud that he is warranted atl eg they THE NAVY~ CORN MARKETS AND FOOD PRICBS. have been executed, and will be execu ates The grand military manceuvres in the presence of faith whenever the necessity arises. The T'mes | the Emperor Nicholas, at Warssaw, were to com- editor retorts in a slap-dash, style—talks of sending _ meuce Oct. 2, and to last five days. The Emperor | Mr. Webb’s letter back to his hotel, and winds up of Austria aud King of Prussia were to be present. | with an assault on slavery. | _ Gen. Prince Golizin, Qaartermaster General of the | We rotice that meeting of the importers and , Woutrenno: See, (by which is understood the venders of American overshoes, and others opposed army that haste do home duty when the nation is to the proceedings of Messrs. Charles Maekintosh & | at war,) had been placed uoder, the orders of the Co., against the trade, was to be held at the London | Quartermaster General of the Emperor's staff, an Tavern, London, 5th instant. Seventy-three firma | arrangement which is interpreted in a warlike sense. sign the Sato ies meeting, but weare | A Roussiam squadron of thirty sail was observed not aware of the nature of their grievance. | Sept. 17, about 100 miles distant from Copenhagen. Savill & Edwards’ exteasive pristing offices, in From St. Petersburg, it is stated, Sept. 24, that Chandos street, London, were accideutally buraed — the ships had been ordered back to Croastadt, there to await orders, Another account says they are laid conflagration the forms cf the following newspapers up in urdinary, in consequence of the stormy weather were being printed:—Leader, Lancct, Britannia, | on the Bultic. Catholic Standard, Court Journal, Britssh Army Accounts via Constantinople mention that the Ras- | Despatch, and United Service Gazeite, all of which | Siaus were preparing to attack Circassia, with a were destroyed. | large force, and that two envoys from Schamyl had J. B. Gough was lecturing at Exeter Hal!, London. | arrived at Constantinople to demand farther assist- | Lord Anderson, @ Scottish judge, died suddeuly of | ance from the Porte, i fever, at Dover, 28th ult. Letters from 5t. Petersburg reach to September | _ The Earl of Carlisle (Lord Morpeth) was recover- | 26, but coutain nothing new. From Odessa, dates | ing from an atcack of small pox, at Smyrua. | were to the 23d, when the wheat market was again | - | active the transactions during the week having Ireland. | amounted to about 80,000 quarters, at an advaace | The first marked symptom of reaction in the oorn- | of 28 | market, and ofa recurrence to the ordinary rates, | A despatch from Galatz, Sept. 17, says there were no transactions in the grain market, and the quanti- ties on hand are immense. There were at Galatz, at writer says :— the above date, from 35,000 to 40,000 kilogrammes The weather still continues favorable. We have had | of white wheat; from 8,000 to 9,000 kilogrammes of an extraordinary change in our markets during the last , red wheat; 160,000 kilogrammes of maize; and 25,000 few days—war and famine prices ; but a change has eome | kilogrammes of rye. ‘o'er the spirit of the dream’? of the meréhants, for a | LAST DESPATCH regular ‘tumbling down” took place to-day. Wheat ~ ObEssa, Sent. 23 Clonmel paper of Saturday, the lst instant. The sola yesterday at from 42s. to 44s.; the latter onl: ae fewlexcanseri day the top price is 48s., and few pave |, Wheat is inquired for at an advance of 2s. the As Lobserved in my last market-note— Speculation, or | tchetwert. Freighta are still high: tallow, ex.gr., | Lo speculation,” that is still the question. Our 4ib. loaf | 1108. per ton. this morning was 8d.; to morrow we expect it will be only Famine prices anil » dearta of business are casting a gloom over all classes. RATE OF INTEREST. With respect to the condition of the crops gene- | Mer cantile letters from Berlin mention that it was rally, the weekly trade report of the Freeman's | exbected the rate of discount in that city would deat? “huss ee the last Seiya een ani tie eeepton nae Bertin the exchanges on actory Dature. ie crops are near! saved, | x the prevailing ‘mprosion is that ite have turned | London from the various continental cities show a ovt more favorably than was expected. ‘The reports continued tendency towards improvement. read of the disease as in a great measure | checked. The Bank of Ireland on Saturday increased | the rate of discount to five per cent. Commercial credit, however, continues good ; there is no unusual demand for money here, and little or no speculation cing on. There is a decrease in the Customs duties jor the past week amounting to £2,400. | A Scotch company are about to establish a branch INTERESTING FROM TU Y—CONTINUED EXCITE: | WENT REGARDING MISS CUNNINGHAME—REVOLT AT | avira ¥ HIA—QUABANTINE DBCREES —TAB ¢ MONEY MARKET. The case of Miss Cunninghame, a Scotch lady, | who was arrested for distributing Protestant tracts at the baths of Lucca, continued to excite much in- | covsequence, the cotton cultivation of the Southern dignation among the English in Tuscany. The | affirms that she offended in ignorance ‘of the law. aay | A large factory is in precess of erecti i f ory Pp \ lis will and ins | cance of attempt to proselytize is punishable, by rmacent employment be given to over one hundred hands. i joa code, with ve toten years impris- | = | Frances | _ The Turin correspondent of the London T'mes, | writing upon the Sth ult., remarks thus upon the | arrest :— Whichever way this affair may oe arranged, it is much to be desired that it should te taken asa warning by our compatriots who travel through those intolerant countries not to involve either them: selves or their government by acts which in realit: ouly serve to injure the cause they have at beart. It cannot be too often repeated in this cause that there is uo desire for change of religious dogmas among Italians, but _ao ardent wish for reform of church government. It:was a common saying of a celeora- ted divine, now no more, that ‘ the Italians were not fit to become Protestants, because they were still Pagans.” Some further arrests have taken place at Valenza of refugees who were among those that tried to cross the frontier at Sarzana a «hort time ago, but escaved the vigilance of the police on that occasion. _Letters from Rome, of tue 23d ult., state that Car- dinal Antouelli, Roman Secretary of State, and Geue- ral Movreal, French Commander-in-chiet, had rach received a despatch from Oivita Vecchia, annouucing tha’ the place was in a state of revolt. Alshough wi , the 40th reciment of French is quartered at Civita The Paris price of the best bread is continued at | }utirreawente The revolt wus cated ty sand nouncement that the government proposed to sup- press the free port. Avtonelli sent word that the | projec gles wbaudoned, and order was immediately Testued. i} The correspondent of the London News, writing from Rome, upon September 24th, says: The Parma Gazette announces in its officiel part that Baron | Ward, the English gentleman who manages that duchy has been desorated with the Imperial Con- stantinian Order of St. Geerge. The same paper of the 234 ult., mentions, amongst the recent palace promotions made by his Holiness, that of “Signor Jeha Shelby, of the distinguished | catholic family ef Nidd'eston, in the county of North: | umberland, England,” to the dignity of “henorary | | chamberlain wearing sword aud cape.” | | | | | FOOD DECREES AND FOOD PRICES—DRATH OF THE PHILOs eR ARAGO—INTERNATIONAL DEBTS OF MEXICO AND FRANCE—THE BANK OF FRA) AND THE RATE OF INTEREST, The Moniteur puoliches a decree, extending the period ramedin toe decree of August 3, removing temporarily the differential duties on corn and flour imported into France in foreign vessels, until the Another decree forbids the export of potatoes and Official returns of the present prices of wheat in rice, 30f 28¢. per hectolitre, at Strasburg; and the jo west, 15f. 40c., at Hennebon, Fiuisterre. Retarns | In the Loire In. , La Vendee, Charente Inferienre, the rise | 60c. That wasthe highest average. In the erault, Gard, Bou shes the rise was If. 63c, In the other sec- M. Arago died at Paris, Sunday, 2d, at eight o’clock in the evening. The Moniteur publishes the convention, concluded 30th June last, between France and Mexico, for pay- ment of the debts due to French subjects. The prin- cipal features of the agreement are, that the debts sbail be paid from a fund consisting of 25 per cent of the import and tonnage duties payable by French hail be liqui- dated before the 15th of December of the present year, with interest at six per cent, by bonds in cou- pons, bearing no interest alter issue. A Brest paper mentions that under the recent decree, oe the import duty on salted provisions, been sent out to Central America. large orders har sent out Leet root growers in tke North of France antici- | Traffic from Newcastle, Eugland, is “provisionally fate a good crop of sugar this season. 4 | suspended” in all the ports of the Two Sicilies It is The contemplated increase in the rate of discount exrected that the quatuptine laws will be put in at the Bank of France was looked for to take place | tre against all shipping from England without delay, and the next montaly return fromthe | rage at Naples, Sept. 24, was unnsnally dull. The exportation of Spanish dollars continued, and large orders to buy silver were still arriving. M. Philibert Augustin Bonfils captain in the navy, | “4 royal decree extends the permission to in port ailleul, recalled at his own requi | to the end of May, 1854. TIE MEXICAN DEBTS. The corn question still continues to embarrass the The M nitewr publishes the terms of the conven- | government, and to agitate the capi'al and pro- the French Minister at | virces, At Ancona the Gonfaloniere and four of the al councillors bave resigned in consequence of the cifficulties of their position. Here in Rome price of hard wheat, such as is generally used | the | | aelardan fick MraTanes aniecicn made bis | 2%}: 4 sinking fund for the extinction of French | forthe manufacture of maccsreni paste, has fallea pany wight MrJames Anderton made his | credits she { from $15 to $124 the rubbio—a meesure differ. bow. Pt ai , ere Art. 2. ing Httle from our quarter—in con-equence of the he has been drawing overtiowing honses nightly for the seven weeks. Mr. Douglas, the lessee, ater the performance, preseoted Mr. Anderson with a very handsome gold watch and chain, as a mark of and thavkfulness for the aurierous harvest fe bad realized. Mr. Anderson leaves by this mail for New York, and opens, | believe, at the Broadway towards the close of the month. Louis Napoleon, in the gener sity of his beart, (let us be gallant and imagine at the sogyestion of the nable- d and beautiful Bugenie,) hus sent over eeveral medical men, to inquire jot) th f the present awful epidemic; one amongst then, Dr. Melier, has, with Dr. Sutheriend, one of the Medical Inspectors of the London Gourd of Leach, examined the infected districts of the town of Newcastle. reports, in very wonderment oD what be witne jn the shape of houses without the secommoda vf decency, sewers, dung heaps and human beings Ulofs heap, potrefaction and respiration at the some board, and all this ander the very eyes, the very poses,of meddling, maudling plolanthropy. “Jp France,” saye Dr. Melier, “githough I have visited the worst convitioned piaces, I never before | jaw anything so depradatory.” | ALBEMARLE STREET, a ad | Lonvon, Oct. 5, 1853. Koszta’s Release— Austria will Drop the Sulject— Death of M. Arago—The French Wine Crop— The Royal Family—Cholera, §c. By thie time the kidnapped M. Koezta is free. The | the in age daties payable by republic The amount ue nt baving impor'ed 20,000 rubbi of Russian wheat of that deseript on, bat goof Roman and other ull be ve othe ge A tre ich shall - ‘ sreewlol ties Mor oe el | soft wheat for bread maintains ita price at @14 a $144. after the amougt Excharge on London, 471; Roman Consois, 96); for the bank shares vied by the Supreme | ; Jateh sinew their | India China and Australia. votually Tre Penimular and Oriental Sean: Navigation th ie | Company's ehip Indus arrived at Southampton on r and eve re r by 7 d inst., bringing the heavy portion of the Mast inoia, China and Mediterranean ma Avene sept. 10; Malta, Sept. and the aken of the cay e terest at , Steamed app ed to bri Singa y cent due up to the day ef liq , withons ad- | from Sydney, Port P and Kung mitling ony ¢ George’s Sound, having failed to arrive in tiwe for & } m ¢ ed on | Gesputehing them by the homeward steam Vhere D con} litor | geema to be no doubt, however, that the next steamer, sal ‘ the Ripon, dee at Southampt« 20th of Octo- og ned 60 | ber, will convey the anxiously desired mutls, as it is y . thought certain that the Australian packet due at Singapore will have reached that port in ample time onds shall bear ne of the and shall only be admitted fo unless detained by casnalties or bad weather. La nominal value this case, the overland expresa, in ivipdtion o tae Art 8. The effects of this convention orrival of the Ripon, may be looked for in London hat the first in art. 6, shall take place the last of April, and the others at the end of each period of four months, From the date of ‘he present convention are | suspended all payments which were destined to be made | with reapect to French eredits, not comprised in ome convertion or regulution previously concluded under the auspices of the Legation of France. the Ist of J auction, mention ary, 1864, 60 about the 14th or 15th inet., with the adva: tion of the India, China and Australian mails the usual telegraphic despatch from ‘Trieste. The news by this steamer from India, China, dor: express, publisbeo several days since. | elve bad one or benew lence. | bome in the region of the rail. Under British guid- | the and | to ted hindrances, chains wad fluctuations, So fur | se concerns mere hard cash, we have eyea a more | and Egypt bas been anticipated by the overiand | _The governor, having received an official communica- tiom from the general officer commanding her Catholic Majesty's forces in the adjacent district of the Campo de San Roque, urging the necessity of imposing a term of uarantine on vessels arriving in this port from England, es the earliest moment of apprising the inhabitants of Gibraltar, particulasiy these st present residing at San Roque and Campo, that the port and fortress may, at any moment, be placed in a state of quarantine, By com- mand. G, ADDERLEY, Colonial Secretary. Germany. TERMINATION OF THE SITTING OF THB PROTESTANT CONFERENCE—THE DELEGATES AND THE MORMONS. The Protestant Church Conventioe, or “ Kirchen- tag,” in session at Berlin, had terminated its labors, oe resolved to meet next year at Frankfort-on-the- sine. riva!, there is nothing perooeny interesting with respect to Amerisa, excepting the opicion of the conference that the spostieship of the Mormons is an emigratios office in cisguise, and its chiet objects be- ing to advance the price of land in the West. The Berlin correspondent of the London Times, wriung upon Sept. 29, mye —As this ivstitution took its rise in 1848 at Frankfort on the-Msioe, the scene of the German Parliament and the murder of Licbnowrky and Auerswald, so it must be reckoned as a good indirectly arising out of much positive evil | that those days of auarc! y, and confusion brough’ with them, that 2,000 men have been permitted in a @ermen cap'tal to meet together and deliberate un- officially on the matters they have most at heart, and bave been permitted, unchecked, to express their censures on the cemmirsions and omissions of the secular autborities, im their very presence; further, it is a very remarkable incident that so many men, almost exclusively clergymen, should have come to an all but unanimous resolution on avy point at all, particularly when we bear in mind that they were not oniy theologians, but Germans. A few more such meetings as this, and German union will cease to be the byword it is at present. Simultaneously with this Protestant Kirchentag, in Berlin, a conterence of the different Catholic s0- cieties was being held ia Vienna, at which their great and varied activity was put forward as an en- couragement and spur to increased zeal. This coin- cidenge of date and diversity of direction are strik- ingly mdicative of the antagonism of the two States striving for the lead in Germany, and still more in- Gicative of the revolution that has taken place in ideas and figures of speech is itto hear a Catholic priest enunciate the following :—' The doctrine of the church 1s a line of rails that mankind cannot get off witheut a certain catastrophe!” Belgium. A further augmentation in the price of coal at the its is announced for the 20th of October. At no | former period was there go much demaud for eval of all_ descriptions. The Belgian Minister of War has jast decided that | the new uniform lately introduced into the Belgian army, and whieh resembles that worn by the Aus- | trian infantry, is to become the general dress of the | Belgian infantry. The Cotton Crops of America and India. Jn the conelnding report to hand by this ar | [From the London Times, Sept. 0.] The letter of our correspondent at New York will | be read with interest, as describing some important | changes, contemplated or in progress, from a poiut of view not common ig this country. The Ameri- cans are preeminently a calvulating people, and their calculations, though occasionally a litcle too confident and keen, may Levertheless be useful to us | of this sleepy and comfortable Old World. We bave dreamt s0 long about projected Indian railways and improvable Indian cultivation, aud possible In- dian cot+on crops, and ports and harbors in the same prospective category, that we have come to regard the whole affair as Alauschar’s dream—a fabric that | a touch may destroy, and which will do nobody any goed, in our time at least. Not so the Yankees. As soon as they see us fairly at it, and bear that the sa- | cred turf of Hivdoetau has actually been move i for a | railway, and insulted by a protane locomotive, they set to work speculating op the cousequences, particuiar- | ly to themselves. They see looming across the world vast mountains of cotton wool, destined to feed the British loom, and clothe the world with fabulous cheapress. Locking at home, they see, as anatural Statee—perbaps the most rapid growth in the history | of rages Tednoed eo" sudden bamkreveey? and psss- | ing away even more quickly than it sprang into being. e train ot consequences docs not stop here: The it of the cotton cultivation hes ever been the chief e.ement in the value of the negro, and when the former falls below zero the latter will be ni. ‘Thus this dark incubus which has always rested over the -oil and prospects of the Union, which has puz- zled statesmen apd occupied philanthrophists, and which seems £0 obstinate that the mere cost of aboli- tion. should it ever be effected, is estimated at £300 660,000, but of which the cost is the very least difticulty, disappears like a summer cloud. e tarn our eyes fora moment, and itis gone. It expires from simple exhaustion. Solid as it seems, itis but a bubvle, blown up by a speculation which, meeting with au unexpected rival, falls below pay- ing poizt, and leaves the “ domestic institu. sicn’”” as valueless as the decayed butler of a reduced gentleman. ‘Thus inscrutable Provi- dence performs With a touch the work on which we had been lavishing °F interest for ages. While the placid Hindoo picks the sotton, cleans the fleecy crop, aud then, with wonda ing obedience, feeds the fire of the locomotive, waves thé flag, or turns the points, he is unwittingly knockiog the fetters off three million childrea of Ham on the pther side of the world. He underbids the negro’s to.!, for the latter is doubly ehargeable, for cuercion ad well as for maintenance. By the same unexpected inter sition the great stumbling block to tue peace of the Union is removed, and the Northern and Southern States will turget their feuds. Sach is the prospect of whi-h we are allowed one happy glimpse in the letter of our American correspondent, and we caa- not but add that, if this could be effected, we on our side of the water should be spared a prodigious deal of philanthropy of the most unctuous and most sur- feiting description. We should be spared it very socy, for, if Brother Jonathan had not a slave of his own, he would soon lend @ hand to see that nosody Bot muy ail this be really expected? Why not? | we ask Stranger things have happened in our day, and it certainly does seem we order of events to ac- complish by such small means as the spontaneous | cunents of trade and the accidental discovery of me- | tals achievements that we had assigned to genius The consummation will, however, be distant; for something more is requisite than the | laywg down of rails, the planting of cottun trees, or | the ure of better implements, Bat, when the com- | munications have once been opeved to the interior, | | ava the docile popuiation have become familiar with the iren yeni, we ca ensily believe that the arrangements of property and of indastry will | Teadily adapt themeeives to the new opportunity. Surely a race that with such marvelloug rapidity has coptormed to the rule of conquerors so different as the Mobamedans and the Euglish, and that has fallen so successfully into the discipline and arms of the Euroyean soldier, will soon be not less at ance the putives build houses and ships, print books and newspavers, ad comply with our fashions,tastes and pursuits. There is, thea, no reagan in the nature of men or of things why we should not have so large ap importation of cottos from India as to render us independent of tre United States, and eventually the be may thus drop from the hold of his master; but india bas immense arrears to make up before she can pertormy so important @ part in the story of the worlt. I$ must take mavy years before the cotton crop of Indis can at all keep pace with the increasin, cemand all over the word. The human race is mal- tiplying faster than our ships and our railways, and its Wants ore daily more presting. Even the Hindoos, within sight of tbe steaming locomotive, will not be content with their one garmeut of coarse cloth per atutm. China, to all appearance, will now be open to its centre, The old vugbear of tue whole earth be- itted with our manufactures bas long been dis- Jed. the world will never have too much of what it sevliy needs. Considering, then, the growing de- menue of all rations, we see very slight yspec’ of ‘ting eo heforeband with the wor@h’s to rain nericon cotton planter, We may confidently | preoict that there wilh be many risings and fallings in the cotton market, and many fortunes won and lost at New York, before things have settled down to such a permanens depreciation us this must sup- Let our travsatlaotie customers vherefore take | There is recm et for us allio this wide | Let them plant cotton, ly down rails, aud | build clippersas many and as fast-suiling as they can; they will bave many a@ profitable treight before thoy are unders Id by the worshippers ct Budaha or of | the Sun. Only it is as well to bear in mind that | slavery may oct be an eternal institution, and that, | if anybooy tad ever a cailty pat bis house in oruer, it is ihe owner of riaves. &: Bout it may romewhat assuage the soreness on this | | Hishinau tas | ne €Xibts In the mind o| any s » Ko ject, i sible Ame cans, te © more peewwiary Mterest in the pros »| Hi doo teen in thatot the American cotton | and siuve-oaner, Fortunate | jnmay be regarded in diffe | American commerce are sil but ove thing. ill debtor and creaitor tcetber, wich one circulation | of paper emong us, borrowing end lending, and de- | pendent more than most of us me aware, on the | watntenarce of the general cred which, in its tarn, ucperds on the aggregate wea'th of the trading corm inupity in all countries. Creait is the platonic soul of the wercantile world, and, hike thas Poul, suly teneficiwl interest in the negro than in the Hindoo, We bave all the benesita of hia industry aud of his had receded, with comsiderab! a Gd. per barrel flour, was without chang short, 1117 Frankfort, Vienna, 1i, 1 In Less is doing in coffee, and prices are unaltered. im demand, and held’ for full terms. 58s, 6d. a 595. om the spot. Scotch pig irom, 63s, per ton. Tuenday and what little irregularity in anything Nike a correct ides of the general market. three days, the to realize speculative parce order to meet existing engagements, rates have been accepted. however, jamparted fres with a good attendance transpired, and the declin ered weather since Friday has been stormy and cold, with fre- quent showers of hail and rain, and such portion of the crops still out will probably never come to maturity. ogainet Ru wh are eaic to be not very far whead. Weather continues wet and stormy, which is very detri. d? No. As a question of £. 8. d. the scale is decidedly in favor of American versus Indian cotton. On the question of philanthropy, of nations! bonor, and of vational pride, there can only one opinion, and that is the ‘opinion of all edu- cated Englishmen. We are bound to raise India somewhat nearer our own level, and to mark our dominion with other tigna than barracks on the face | ofthe country, and other results on the population than the uniform of its soldiery. Our obligations to the United States are those of men to their equals; te the Hindoo they are of a more parental character, Ere the whee! of fortune turns, ere the stream of con- quest ebbs, and the word is given that it is toe late, we must turn to the noblest account a dominion which has ever been the bighest object of military ambition, and which now renders us the envy of all nations. In this account we rejoice to think that the Americans anticipate much from our incipieat In- dian railways. The Corn Trade. The aceounts from all parts of the kingdom con- firm what has been previously stated as to the defi- ciency in the yield of wheat, aud the value of all kinds of provisions will rule high ail threugh the wiater. Our French neighbors are evidently um ‘reat apprehension of scarcity, and we learn that the goverpment had decreed that the prohibition ry jt the export of grain be extended to the 3ist of July, 1864. The export of potatoes had alzo been forbidden. ‘This latter eircumstance wil, no Lael have some panes on our a jet, a8 we have lately received good supplies of that article from France. The ion a af- fairs here, and on the Continent, dees not, there- fore, afford grounds far concluding that the upward movement in wheat has yet reac! its maximum, and many holders are sanguine a3 to a@ consierably higher range of prices The excitement has ot late been greater in the country than in London, and ours is now one of the quietest markets in the kingdom. At Merk Jave yesterday there was a small show of wheat from the ret Weel counties, which induced factors to ask higher prices. The demand was not eo active as of late; indeed the millers were evidently averse to aying ary further advance, and they auc- ceeded ultimate y in po on tecms similar to those current on that day week. There was some demand for new for seed, and a few picked lots commanded rer full terms. The arrivals of wheat from abroad have for several days past been quite trifling, and the probability is that we shall have no immediate increase in the supplies. In the abeence of fresh arrivals there was no pressure to sell from on board ship, and for granaried parcels very high prices were asked. Buyers acted with more caution than of late, but they could not buy cheaper, and we consider quotations quite as high as on Monday week. There were but few offers of floating cargos, either from the Baltic or Black Sea. Towards the end of market there was an improved inquiry, owing, it was raid, to the receipt of a tele- freghic despatch of a warlike character from key. Quotations of town made flower un- derwent mo change; the demaud was rather languid. American was in fair request, aud realized the extreme terms of last week. English barey hardly sold so welilas of late; there wasa slight increase in the suoply and only @ small pro- tion of the same consisted of fine quality. Foreign rley fer grinding was sought after, and its previous value was in some cases rather exceeded. Malt sold quite as well ag previously. The arrivals of oats coastwise and from Ireland were quite insignificant, and only one small cargo was received from abroad. ‘There was not so much life in the trade yesterday as | about the middle of last week, but the rise then es- tablished was well supported, and we must quote prices at least 1s. per quarter higher than on that day week. Beans were about Is, and peas 2s. to 33, per quarter dearer. Indian corn was held with in- creased firmness, and seeds were generally dearer.— London Gazette, 4th, P. M. Markets. Lrverroor, Oct. 4—P.M.—Corrox.—The advices from America, por steamship Asia, had a favorable effect, to a slight extent, upon cotton, but the partial improvement was speedily checked by a report (founded on s private telegraphic despatch) that the Turks had actually de- clared ‘This report, coming to hand towarda the close of to-day’s market, caused it to close with dullness. Pricos are somewhat irregular, but cannot be quoted lower, Sales of three days:—18,000 bales; export, 2,000; speculation, 1,500; import for same time, 12,000. Breapsrurrs —During the poss three days the market le sales at the decline of 3d. \d 2d. a 3d. om wheat. Lodian corm The rumors, however, which de- pressed cotton, raised breadstutffs, and the circular closed wi hout much variation from the prices of Friday last; say for United States white wheat, 9s. 10d. a 1s. 3d. ; a. 2d. a 98. Od.; Western canal flour, delphin and Baltimore, Sta. dd: & s.; Indias (a. a ts. d a corm, white, 41s. a 423.; Ohio, 358.) a» 40s. a 418. xign exchanges on London—Amsterdam 11 1934, et “ Antwerp, 25, 40, 45; 44, 121; Paria, 25, 40, short, 25, 10, 15; Trieste, 11, 15, Rates well supported. N, Oct.’4—P.M.—SuGaK.—Sales of 700 casks We's + former rates, foreign ix quiet, at previous terms. Rice is ‘Tallow is brisk at WRIGHT, GANDY AND CO. 8 LIVERPOOL CIRCULAR. $4 Cuaret Smet, LIVERPOOL, Oct. 4, 1853. Since the sailing of the Canada om the Ist inst., our cotton market has presented no new feature worthy of comment. The advices per Asia, to hand on Sunday, would, in ordinary times, have had an important influ: ence, but at present other causes are of greater moment, and their effect merely checked the pressure to sell at the ince ular rates previously “prevailing, and which charac terlzcd the transactions of Sacurday. Holders continue to offer their stocks freely at the earrent value, the par- tially revived contidence ap) day. owing to the report of Turkey having declared war against Russia, which has depressed the value of the rent yesterday being lost to poblic funds and restricted business operations, although previous to the receipt of thts imformation some large transactions bad taken place. ‘The sales for the three days are estimated at— Bales. Spec. Bx. Am. Brazils, Surat. Egyp. 6,000 500 4,300 200 300-200 2.000 6,008 90800300 1,000 4,600 200 1,100 260 ‘The import for the same time is about 12,000 bales of all descriptions, In Manchester business is almost entirely suspended, im progress is in {ayor of buyers; the x precludes the possibility of giving has not been so active for the past ficulty of negotiating inducing several of both wheat and flour in nd for such lower ‘The continental advines have, stimulus to the demand, acd to-day’s market more business submitted to has been recov- The The grain mai Prices are about the same as on Friday last. JAMES M'HENRY’S LIVERPOOL CIRCULAR. LuvKkPooL, October 4, 1863. Provisions.—In rides very little ls doing. Shoulders have been cleared for Jreland at a reduation of 1s. to 28. Beef is neglected. Pork remains quiet. The inquiry for cheese is only moderate, and late extreme prices aro net maintained. lard steady. ‘Tarow is in demand at full rates. CLovenskap has not found buyers this woek, Fuck continues in request. LINKED CaKx is a ready sale ex ship. QUAKCTROW BARK moves in retail only. JOHN ATHYA AND CO.’8 GLASGOW CIRCULAR. GLascow, October 4, 1853. We have advices from Constantioople up tothe 27th ult, shih state that war had been declared by ine Sultan 1a, and that hostilities had actually com- exced. Consol are quoted at 92 in bondun ‘to-day. ey ie dearer again ; Banks here now charge from five X fercent tor discoun'ing good paper tralian advices continue unfavorable for shippers, cares anxiety in commercial ¢ relos, and tight times mental te tha is reported te DrADsTUYrS are firm, but not active, dealt in triffingly since our last advices per Canada, and pricen'are, if anything, a chade easier. Flour is quiet, but not lower; not much real good sweet offering, Sour is heavier, and 1s. less money would be taken by holders to portion of the crops still uusecared, which pe Jaige, expecially in this district. Wheat has been fell quantity. Should the news prove correct that Purkey and Kussia have actually commenced hostilities, then prices of wheat and flonr will materially im prove. ‘There is less demand for P’Rovisions—-ome heavy ship- ments that were preparing for Australia have been aban doned, and the stuil ha pappeared for sale to the trace re. Bacon go y inw consu at 468, ‘There is great Grmn f. Pork is oftered freely, without buyers houlders are very q dot. The bueyauey in eb i Ayrshire’ hollers have lowered their ideay fully 5». per ewt., nat this reduction, the trace buy spar and sautiously. Bat | ter keeps adva nd hikedy edeaver. Grease but: | ter is very Fe 65.0708 A good copstim 160s is now readily ot ve stock io all hands is under one th y has bee ey dull | thir week e, will revive it; business passing in inge firm, with a good business doing. Common quietly, at 6a. a ¢ od. Tar m m reat from.tarmers, at 2 ts turpentine A syeculative Qemand has arisen for Por asites, and | reveredeales are reported at 28s. ¢d. a Qs, Od. bow 31m at 50s, Pearl ashes are ly neg! Casrcrmnos Maxx wanted, Philadelph: 6, At last week's rates. be wanted. Owing to the changed aspect of Aurtralirn affairs, our | ‘ \ yoarket for Tonaceo is very dull, expecially for negrohoad; ‘The imports and exyorts to and from Bengal, from | custom, of his wife's love of finery, and every ovher | good cavendish is in more favor, and brings 8d. quistly, 1a) CAKE have all gone inte deal bare, aud the article will soon THE HORRIBLE ATROCITY AT JAMAICA, L. I. nected with the Brutal Affair—OCoroner’s Inquest—Arrests on Suspicion, d&e. During the past week among the inhabitants of Jamaica and its vicinity, and, in fact, throughout Long Idand, the inest intense excitement has been manifested, in conse- quence of the rape and murder perpetrated on the person: of Catharine Quigley, a very interesting girl of fourteen or fifteen years of age. The body, as will be seen by the annexed evidence before Coroner Hendrickson, was dis- covered in « pond, situated on the farm of Mr. Denton, adjoining the black stump wood, something like » mile and @ half or two miles from the village of Jamaica, The cuts and bruises about the face and head of deceased, to- gether with the lacerations and violence evident on other parts of the body, left not a doubt in the minds of the medical gentlemen who made the post mortem examina- tion, but that a deliberate act of rape and murder had been perpetrated. We have procured an autheatic account in reference to this appalling crime, the magnitude ef which cannot, Probably, be found in the criminal records of thig country. It seems that Catharine Quigley was the oldest of some six children, Her parents are natives of Ireland, and came to this country some two years and halfago. The mother has since died, and the father with the other ehildren are living with a relative namod Solow ia the village of Jamaica, and Catharine being # stout ae- tive girl, was living out at service in the family of Mr Lorenzo D. Hulse, also a resident in the village. On the fatal Sunday, Catharine went to Suniay school in the afterneon, and after school she took a walk up the black stump road to the residence of Mr. Skidmore, ce of mearly three miles, She had once resided mily, and like all girls of her age, wished, on @ Je opportunity, te pay her old friends a visit. She tt Mr. Skodmore’s a short time, and at about six i took her departure, they harrying i appreaching dark. Catharine, however, sie wasnot afraid, and asked permission to take yome apples from the orchard through which she passed, lead- ing to pathway used asa near cut to meet the road om ber way home ; this was the last they saw of Catharine alive, ai into this orchard aad procewed om her way f . Her non-arrival home that night ere- ated an alarm, and Mr, Hulse proceede:i around the neigh- berhood, notifying the people of he: pearance. whole ef Mooday was spent in making search, when near undown, Mr. Denton discovered, as he was passing slong he read, part of the dress of a female floating on the sur- face of his pond, aad knowing that Catharine Quigley was missing, it immediately came to hia mind that it was probably her in the water; accordingly, he steppod on = kind ef raft floating on the pond, and pushed himself to the place, and there found the body; he then called to one of his men, named Michael M‘Coy, to render him aa- sistance in extricating the body from the water. Michael came, and Mr. Denton left the raft, when Michael stepped on the raft, and lifted up the body. Mr. Denton asked him if the face was cut, and Michael replied that it was a good deal. A bea gh op then procured by Mr. Dentom, whish Michael made fast to the arm of deceased, and the body was then dragged ashore and conveyed to the bara, The finding of the body was soon spread through the village, and Coroaer Hendrickson was notified to hold am inquest. Many were the surmises floating in all Airections, ‘as to who could be the monsters guilty of the murder. meeting of the citizens was called, a vigilance committee formed, and subscriptions amounting to five hundred dol- lars were obtained, and offered as a reward for the deteo- tion ard conviction of the guilty parties. Th» committee visited the Governor of the State, and presented the hor- rible cetuila be‘ore him, whem the executive forthwith offered # reward of one thousand dollars additional. On Tuesday the Coroner continued his investigation, but ncthing was elicited whereby he felt authorized to make an arrest, The following is the substance of the evidence produced before the Coron+r, and the verdict of the jury = TESTIMONY. Solon, sworn, says :—I reside in the village of Ja- maica; Ihave seen the body lying in Jobn L. Denton’s barn, and know it to.be that of Catharine Quigley. she is 4 or 15 years of age; she is a niece of my wife; she iving with Lorenzo B. Hulse; she waa acting as a do- mestic in his family. Albert Priest, sworn, aays:—I reside in the township and village of Jamaica; my residence is.on the black stump road leading to Flushing: Iwas at home on last Sunday evening; I was at home from four o’clock in the afternoon; a thort time after dusk I remember to have heard some screams, but as I am very often annoyed on Sundays I did not kuow whether it was a noise made by some rowdies or a scream for help, and I believe it was a voice of a wo maa; it was northcrly from my house: I heard it twice, that could swear to, iu succession; 1 wantod to go out but didn’t go out at first; Idid go out afterwards, but didn’t hear anything more; the screams were heard for @ short time; the sound appeared to be about 2(0 paces off; 1 think it waa in the next wood north east of my house; it was about half-past six P. M. of thet day; the screams Were like that of » persen in distress; it was monlight; it was still evening. Lorenzo D. Hulse sworn, says:—I reside in Jamaica; I know Catharine Quigley; she was from 14 to 16 years of age, she was living with’ me ase servant; I saw her last on Sunday, at about ove o’clock in the afternoon; she then left my house to goto Sabbath school; I have not seen her since. 5 John L. Denton, sworn, said—I feside im the town of Flushing, on the black-stump road; on Monday afternoo between five and six o'clock, as I was coming by my 1 saw something on the surface of the water that looked like a female's dress; having heard that this girl wae missing I went to examine it and I found it to be the body of » young girl; the body was identified by Joam Solon as thiat of Catherine Quigley; when I discovered the body it was from ten to fifteen fet from the rhore; the water and mud there is perbaps some four or feet eep. Icalled one of my men, named Michael McCoy, and e assisted me in removing the body from the water; I rocured @ rope, which Michael made fast to her arm, nd I then dragged the body to the shore, aud placed i& in the barn. Miehael McCoy, sworn, stated—That he assisted Mr, Denton in taking the body of deceased, ne Quigley, from the pond; stepped on the raft and lifted up the body, and saw that her face was much cut and bruised; 1 did’ not know it was Catharine Quigley; I made a rope fast to her arm, and Mr. Venton dragged her out; I thought at first that she had been run over by a wagon; but] don’t think now that the cuts on her face co have been done by a wagon; they look to be done by @ knife; I could not, myself, throw the body as far into the oud as it was found; on the Sunday evening, after candle ight, Ileft Mr, Denton’s in company with James Duffy, and as we went along the road, a short distance on the other side of the pond towards Jamaica, we passed a girl who was walking on the side of the road, and we were walking in the middle of the road and she oa the lert hand side; I'did not say anything to her but passed on; nothing was sald to her; we met a wagon going towarda Mr. Denton's near Dutch George’s; I think it was between Durch George’s and Mr. Mackels; we went down to the village, and I remained there until between nine and tem o'clock; I left Duffy at Week's corner; I then came home and went to bed; it was then about ten o'clock; Edward Malan was in bed I think when I came home. James Dufly sworn, said—I went up the black stump road on Suncay afternoon, about 6 o'clock, and calledtto see Dutch George; 1 then went to Mr, Denton’s to see Michael McCoy; 1 remained with Michael until he fed the cattle, then we came together down the road to the villages as wecame along, a short distance frox Me. Denton’s, recollect we met or passed a girl on the road; we were walking on one side of the road; Michael remarked some thing about the girl; said he knew her or something of that kind; I don’t recollect whether we met a wagon or not; 1 know a girl named Catharine Quigley, but it is not this one; on the Sunday night ia question I was in dark clothing, and wore a cap. dr. John D, Shelton sworn, said—I made a post mortem examination of the body of Catharine Quigley on Monday evening last; I found marks of personal violence upon the face, comsisting of wounds and bruises in diferent pl sufliient to shew that great violence had been inth upon her; Lalso found sufficient proof that her persom had been violated; the impression preduced om my mind, as the result of this examination, was that the person of the deceased had been violated, and also that she had been murdered; I did not think, how- ever, that the wounds in themselves were | suffl- cient to cause death; under both eyos of the de- ceasd were severe gashes; they were about am inch, or a little longer; they were down to the bone, ‘There was a severe laceration ef the cheek and upper Hp, on the left side of the face. They were evidently pro- cueed by blows, inflicted either by the tists or by a stone or some blunt instrument My impression was that they had been produced by tre fist, yet w stene may have beem used; the appearance of the body, when I first saw it, was that of one who had been straggling in self-defenoe; the whole appearance presented that of one in great ago- ny; I don’t think the cuts were produced by @ knife; there was no fracture of the skull; my impression is, that after she had received the injuries she was rendered insenai- ble, or msy bave been stunned, and was then thrown into the water, where, being too feeble to help herself, she lad drowned; I should think that there would be some probability of blood being found en the clothes of the Jerson or persons committing the violence. On the sbove evidence the jury rendered a verdict— “That the deceased, Catharine Quigley, came to her death inti sted by some person oF from violenee, felomiously persons at present to the jury uuknown.’” In conseq rence of this terrible alfwir the female portion of the con munity in the vicinity of the murder, have Decome mush alarmed, and fearful almost to venture out- side thei ings, expecially alter sundown; nor ix thie txtitement and alarm fikely to alate for some time to come, unless the guilty parties are discovered and brought ¢. jest, Esq., one of the influential citizens of nay taken & very active part in ferreting out rs of this foul murder, and spares neithor ering every facility to the ofticors nmittee of ihe village eam bert Seirey, Win. J, Cog Y Dr. John D, Shel Nicholas Holland. y last, came to New York, ancealled £ Volice, velated the bed for the ser . The Vig xe following g lis. Mr. Priest, on, on Mr. Mateel, Ch f the mu dex, an Chiet’s detectiv \ them in the search for tao ¢ffen- q The Chief he request, and depoted officer Davee, one of the attached to his ollice for that par- ore, sineo which time Justice Snediker and other authori- es have been diligently at work, and it fs to be hoped bat the perpetrators of & murdgr so flendish in its charag er will, ere long, be made known to the puldlic. Jarwes Dufly and Michael McCoy were yesterday arrest on suspicion of being tho guilty parties. These are the ring mem who testi“ed at the Coroner's inqueat te . | tw worth 10%, ad. | passing a girl on the rosd bearing the description of Ca- tharine Quigley, on the Surday evening of the murder, | Tho prisovers were detained in oustody for sn examinas | tion, The funeral of Tristam Burges will bo solomnized at his tate residence, Watchomoket Farm, this day, at 3 o’eleols, PAM. He wil be at tho Notth Burial Ground,