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County Court of Oyer and Terminer. Our New Hampshire Correspondence. ipreme Court—Spectal Term. ianages a ‘mark of his ’s | for ita honors and prizes, the war is certainly not popa- Bete on. Judge Reckwell, presiding; Hon. H. A. Concoxp, N. H., March 7, 1864. bie Before Hon. Judge Roosevelt. ARRIVAL OF THE ASIA AT BOSTON, (hate nitaeate hon nominated Prince Meets lar. A war of morality, aa this is font o wari ‘Moore, County Judge, and Justices Stillwell and | 7, v ooainrtar sane HABEAS CORPUS. NAKA RARAAPORRAABARA | Grand Cross of the Order of j gad tae cee ea Scien Ong snot oe Fee = forts Stryker. Hampehire—Shetch of Oolent Baker, the Democratic) yy syou'7 In the Maller of Petition fabeas Corp ied mninated to i grades inthe | money, them ofven- OF WILLIAM BRENNAN FORTHE MURDER oF | Candidate for Governor—Iroubles of the Democracy— | aireaing Caplain ita Pek produ James ro ADDITIONAL FROM BuRoOPE. ie tage, such ae the acquisition of territory, We; and tae MICHAEL HORAN. ‘The Senatorship, dc. ' Mr. B. . Dunning, Assoclate United States District At- | i | Mr. E. H. Kimball, of New York, has jnst purchased a strhege aiidnans they nev have, in the Ques eo ONCLUSION OF THECASE—VERDIOT OF MANSLAvan: | ,,1™eent to havo written you before this time, but cir. | HiT ihen to the habens cor ws, teat Deeva op an | ERI ] ian cites Poe ape) eration _— ot | the agents of Russia, toorare busy Aitting in the air, Wee <ap elumueeieaneoeen SB | cumstances prevented my so doing. Onsome points that | ed by virtue of an enlistinent in the service for the | THE GREEK INSURRECTION. | these animals have been before exported to America. | 50 yolsoned atrows. Look i he Sorel rae ‘Manca 10.—On the re-assembling of the court this | I had intended to write I have been unable to obtainsuch | os Emnyonns which was yet unex; |. Brown H eee Seer | They fetch from 250 fr. to 3,000 fr. each. i England whi are Sey + prenieg,, Hotels Re pos foto ad | information aa 1 think would bo satisfactory to you. | Potted as a deserter, Dem od eee ee hnd been ar. sa Nay | continge tb occupy attontion, The Priscoss Mathilde ia | sbeclutely dare not lot a sngle sailor or ofiter, excepS ee the yf waa already been | THs matters, however, are such as can be taken up as | Getained on board the Columbia, as such, when iu fact OUR PARIS AND COPENHAGEN CORRESPONDENCE, determined to have her Olympic quadrilie if there tea | admirals, have tbo slightest communication with each in the trial of this case, and he thonght not un. | Wéll after clection as before it. I propose in this letter | he never had enlisted and never to the service. iy should _ | Mr. Dunning ced the record of = court martial | &e., &e., &e. Oe gree ptm ys Derg pe rn a a algredcar compensa ihe TRON tA Tom one Tiere ey Men bey last, by e that of Venus, Independent of the impersonation, | I¢ turns out as I hinted in may lat, that the Russan feet public as well as the defendant might be vindicated, ‘Hie | £720% of whore election there seems to be but one opin- | which it sppeared that the rel 4 been tried, under The steamship Asia reached her dock at East Boston | there are obvions other objections to the charac- | did avail iteelf of the opportunity withdrawal of on d that this was a case of murder, fully within | ion. Ashe is likely to play prominent part in politics | the name of Brown alias Lee, for having attempted to ter. ‘There is an om dit that the Emperor | combined flecta to the Bosphorus afforded | possibility of doing so, She herself is willing to play the | other. Your alliance is an alliance of flame and gunpow- rt of Juno, but a difficulty arises as to who shall | der, only safe in division. he meaning ri mot desert, and was convicted of that offence. The relator | *t nine o'clock yesterday morning, and her mails for New was desirous that a Miss Sneyd, an English | madea very serious attempt at St. ee ce aimesie atten kee Sena ae tan| 1 Sabet: ronan te mentions Soe sce ag ‘hougn, | Himself was sworn in his own behalf, and’testited thas | York and the South left in the afternoon trata. | young lady of surpasting beauty, and of a kind not dis. | have provet another Sinope. In fact, the Hime had had been selected. A us weapon: was averse to learning something ) Shough ‘ he never had enlisted; that his name was James Brown, ‘The newspapers afford but little news of importance in | *imilar to that of the Empross, should enact the part; | when neither the French nor the eal {n requisition, which of itself was a violation of law; that has not been very eventful. and that he had by mistake been arrested as James Lee. { “ } but from some reason or other the fair Eugenie does not | either on the part of their governments pr officers in com- 3 Hn This was the only evidence that was produced, the re- | *ddition to that received from Halifax. | approve of this proposition; indeed, it ig said she by no | mand, toa shilly shally course, If war there mi OEE Coy EST Ogee eng Makeeme boeing peemnehnipon beanies sulting ofler Tieing absent on serviceand thedescrip- | It was reported in Paris that Lord Raglan, Prince George | means approves of the pariy receiving any invitation | It must be carried on by brave hearts and stout harged. In eriaiewr te case, he adimttea | me thirty-sixth pb yee 7 Pe ibaa gah. | tion ie betas on board the ‘Columbia, now on bervice at of Cambridge, and other distinguished officers of the whatever to the balls or receptions which in future take pot by gentlemen who are afraid of cate cold in the earl settlers Massachusetts. . > | Bea. us e] there considerable dou! ee a ¢ Palace. reere ; an result to w! ate, wes soane Giatarbance st the house before the | oNtT member of the Massachusetts ju |-of the identity of the relator, and ordered him to be dis. | English army for the East, would pass through that city | there is talk of erecting a now theatre in the Rue Ri- | now brought us shows very clearly that liad the gover ‘ tragedy occurred; but in all tothe witnesses, | father was & j ity , said he never heard evidence, taken together, which diciary in the last century. In the Revolution the charged. to Marseilles and thence embark for Malta, | voli, where only pieces of the most unquestionable mo- | ments backed their interference, if interference was pe- incided in alana parciarssofhoroughy: Hoare | Boe", wore good wiga, MF. Baker war educated at | THE RIOHNS OF nivspanpe axp xannrep wou, | A psvatelotir dated Athens, February 0, dseibs the Tl and euch at re calculate ty rane Uh ast and | senaty, in difgrent manner & drew tempat ig , dnl. ase tia ie toriotetee sree N. HL, and at Calabeldgs Mass, graduating at | onan Peetitan othe cece ee Aaymomr and | intense excitement existing among the Greeks. On that | teract, as far as, possible, toe vicious tendencies of but | ‘There is not a political man in, Barepe,, wishes Ge’ Citane so ‘afta ’ Seapst \ pence ion. —This case presents seve: culties, | day one hundred students of the University called in | too many of the dramatic works of the day. The Arch- | Siecle of this morning, who does not now think that = tuepeooreation’ set gamut yew) yy yd cu ta soa Sopa ss bic gl Traut Dalal ont of the alvece seteiel the Taw tm F011 cas ait tng Olin; ind. deuendid to higies against | bishop of Paris and tho high clergy are said to be highly | the governments of France and England had responded te & . ions cast upon his veracity by counsel for defence; instead of an actual ion of the undivided interest | the Turks, and urged an alliance with Russia, gigs tert lbeerd peace : the invasion of the Danubian provinees by the entrases : HL, . The celebrated preacher, the-Pere Ravignan, has had | of the fleets into the Black Ser, the state of affairs would 7 al agen tbat they watered the place perfectly so | of the lew at naan oe = ofl of Pierce & | of the parties, and asthe rights of {pfente as wells of | On the0th of February, the students of nearly allthe | an interview with Napoleon, the object of which was to | have been now better, that the realization of what is maw ord, which he flor ‘about head; being induced the bs; ited eine | Mr. Fowler is the same gon! eats themselves to the mind of the Court demand the | **bools in Athens determined to volunteer, and com- | protest against the suppression of the College of St. Mi- | demanded would have been more easy, that the Osar it aside, he immediately up stairs, more careful consideration. of BE | chael, closed on account of ita being accused of holding | would have been less prepared, and that humanit; BLE See, ee iemadetel Ri phdumablsh gan aula rmeoting last evening, | {Rare careful consideratio ‘e counsel for the plain- | mienoed selling their books and personal property for arms g ro feg of Sinope ialist principles. The Emperor received M. Ra- | not have had to deplore the frightful misfortune granted, in the draft decree | and ammunition. Large sums were being contributed by | vig ith gresh courtesy” and is ia f Maich, as the Eun marks in bie was loaded with shot or with a bullet, was no | at which he made a strong specch. 3 ibse- | which he has submitted 0 t i Dg oy ignan wi great yy even sai a misfortune which, as the Emperor re: in material difference, as death ensued: in consequence of | Ohenth pion dem + = ptycitrs ws ee} Nee ae cath see epproval, | grater io ind | Private citizens, one having given $175,000 for thearming | to have promised to use the utmost circum- | was as offensive as unexpected we] yond and discharge. From the evidence of Ayers, it appears | oO ™ EOI initted to the bee in 64d. te adr ae | married men entitled to their ancient prerogatives. In | of volunteers. spection in the use of auch measures for thefuture. He | It was no longer our policy w! ro . associa complained, however, of the existence of such tenden- | cheek; it was our military honor. b he sav ¢ ihe Jpteonar cook the gun, wad even describes ciated himself with the late Mr. Carroll, in conduct. pees av ae Beh wa alpbeaemaprd a %rthe ct | Tho King appears to be entirely powerless, so doter- | cies in various Jesuit colleges, especially in tho south, | The price of bread for the second fortnight of the Ii pa it te Seoncnee — have been | 228 7a ow Hampshire Pateiot, then, aa now the hie Oe eekiadioasaeta teekn aca cones) at in parti. | ™ned are tho people on war against Turkey. and declared the necessity of adopting some mode of ex- | month is fixed at 40c. bibs cenaly Gra aay ect Cag ees iat ete Marat empice: | tien, W yet proved that yaeu they shone to eabeate our Paste tones prc i he eer garni rc a | wiht omen ott mo mean ig of Get fore Miah 8 eas, Eve: Seer pi ment to the office, or offices, of Clerk of the Courts of | Télease to their husbands, their inchoate right of dower peenaeaee. 7? is in active rehoaraal at the Theate Francais;and | that the public are anxiously awating (he of He ee nee eee ane datenee’ ting | Merrimac county.’ He held this place down to 1850, and | 12 vtch cases should be valued, and a corresponding por- Panis, Feb. 19, 1854. {5'to very shortly appear. eatte srancaity ®2° | the new eomle opera entitled “'L’Etoile @e'Nord,*" We” PPivintimate acquaintanceship existed between tho priso | Ws § popular officer. se i see EA ES omate Jnrerite: cred vet) tie The Princess Liewen’s Farewell Soiree—Popwtarity of the | The Gymnase has foun a remplacant for Berton in M. | principal personages of which are the Emproas Ca sri et alge Wehcieat er | neta ose shpdar Wns’ See | Sih and tthe aig "Une | ein Retin are_War Pup In| Brae rpan variate sa nr | tte, sre hee er $0 prove this aasertion. He had no doubt that though there was a small whig majority at tha: | Sct {he ordinary practice formerly, when a release | he English Troops to Pass Through Paris on Thir Way | made one of the most decicded hits of the season. The | {his representation might be attended with some inoem- etendant exhibited a degree of remorse after he saw wha is time in the town. On tal his seat in the | CUld not be obtained from the wife, was to pay the to Marseilles—The New Loan—The Fresh Negotiations— | Emperor and Empresa were present at his debuf, and th: ience; the Emperor, hi as not of that opinion, fhe had done; and t had proved an excellent charac oney set apart for her dower into ceurt. By the acts of a " peror ai P re present a jebuut, an: venience; the Emperor, however, was no tevbe uly admitted; bat hi wana court of jumon ant | Sore Noor chetne Atay ioeakats puke," | 1848 and however, for tho botiter protection of wie | 4M Incident of Be Bat of Ciate—Mhe Ball Couto | somedy since wat is Rome: Savane of Maller. | ante du Nord wil shor be perormed be i yarn Beg pie fhe eines, Wir conduct in the chair fully justified the seetusé ‘o. | Tights of married women, such persons were, in effect, Interview Between the Emperor and Father Ravignan— cayieg pe amper te te ie erat ie Teaneats, pas deliess Pan, Monday, Feb, 20, 1864. ctu mn comaniting to henguna cringaznoa hfe rua, aa" he pred vith digity”tmpartty | Gelared in respect of property ani managment | hear, de Fes 28, tand precisel footi Tgingle’ fe d, { quence of his absolute refusal to adopt her high-flown Effects in Paris of the Cear’s to the 's Lele mkacngy.Ahing ever tierasat c | un "aires ig an ep, ena ot | Sa Poe ED ng a ty cay | _ Prema ie gone chars of guy an oy von | ey marin ish icons alk | 7 ero Cas Beal le Re licited + y { 4 ter—The French Ardor Cooling Downin Proportionastie hich, as from the very fount of hilarious harmony, | §¢t¢® confined to'platonie sontiments, transfers his at The F 4 gain chosen Speaker, and was probably the only | "ere unmarried.”’ Why. then should moncy awarded | w! 7 harmony, | fentions to her sister, whom ho finally marries. English War Fever Risee—Louis Napoleon's “Roland fer he of the melancholy tragedy, and having dis | ¥°* * to them, be ai into court? Why, in oti , inglish War 'a pole harged his duty, hoped he jury Would doso.as faith | dmocratie member of that body who could have been ‘should Jonge Fes bt agpr 7 re | seem spontaneously to bubble up from this charmed city, All doubts as to the fitness of M. Breasant to occupy t character which required ng < nd. The law rds her capacity to resist asin no | Sethe Ce Sera < aa learoful deliveration, ‘The prisoner at the bar stands in- | Sacred with the Stayvesants: so that this couple may | Wise impaired by her promise to obey, and assumes that | O1,'ne Orandé monde nays, a distance of eight hours shall | Characteritic Gayay of Paris ém Dem of the Gravity of dicted for the crime of murder; Dut by a description of | bo said to nt the oldest families of the Puritan | #He can say No, quite as freely and quiteasenergetioally, | "Ot prevent such re-unions, the Prevent Crisis—Ball at the English Ambassador's— pe 4 have been offered him, surprises noone. That it haw produced a vivid sensation cannot be denied; for however - words, 6) of the city, without h ‘3 FS { " ‘ “ an Oliver’'—Triumphant Success of Meyerboor's ‘‘Ehetie ully as he had endeavored : Gasone of the democratic condiantes tor Proacnhn | their tequest, be made their trustee? Money paid toa | tere may be distinctly heard just now, a low wail of | the hono rere at ones param cod Coby hie delhnry ark; | du Nord''—Bread Rot at Perigneus—Suieldes Conese Counsel for defence mace a fow observations in favo: | Pietion. “Beside age: litical and judicical offices | ™4rried woman is not as formerly her husband's projer- | mourning and lamentation, of weeping, and—tell it not | frit few lines of the character-tone accent, stole, an quent on the late Bourse Lowses—The Abbe de Lamme- wig Prisoner, when the Court proceeded to charge th’ | named, Colonel Baker has filled several positions that Fy Beane ees We, hes, hashant’s epee ‘liable | ‘on the shores of the Baltic—of gnashing of teeth. elocution, were sil admirable, snd Uistened to’ with’ reli | jaie_Grand Ball atthe Hotel of the Minister of Finamean 4 . legal control ov. e—anl a “i Hoe i They © reward i a | grias Cheek ee dita, indicate the confidence of the public in his talents and | £9" hit debis.”) | His legal control ove nt day is pre. | ,, Te Princess Lieven has given her farewell party in | gious attention They were rewarded with alongand | 20° ‘Moniteur that the ‘ integrity. In 1852 Governor Martin appointed him one ; ud saleo of aypiacee | ce Emperor Judge Rockwell said that this ease had consumed | of the Commissioners of the State Reform School. sumed to be so deficient in strength of mind as to need | the Rue St. Florenten, and if Brussells is pro tem, to be sd ce | netexntanehetann tt ta of odation while feonsiderable length of time, but no longer than it de- | °‘Colonel Baker in 1843 matried Miss Tenbrocek, daugh. | Protection against the persuasive potency of any lne- | her headquarters, Baron Rothschild, speaking in bebalf | Pu Hee 16 806 i ee Ms Imanded, as it was one of | the greater offence, as well as tho lesser, 7 | and the Dati settlers of our country the veorie tee | after marriage, as while she was only ‘a single female. In Paria no foreigners are so popular as the | The Court Livery Question—Ball at Prince Ceartorisky's | °M*rly we foresee a result, there is always a perceptinile Ibe convicted of what the jury may think is estab- | *™ Pd ana | True, the amending act of 49 indicates, on this point, | Russians. Aa residents th , : . shock when the last thread of hope is snapped, even hy lished by the evidence. The offence of murder and | $76 famous in the histories of both New England and | jor) niet misgiving, and provides that where an ex: | womans residents they may take place among | —Speculations om the War Question, dc , . A th ‘ho hi laced the least it. aughter sre ofencor at, the’ common law, but | “GN rANerth ht" cemens? appointment tothe oftce | Pret trast has been create for a martiod woman i the highest personages, their rank and fortune | While the question of peace or war hangs in the air, | ‘Hose Who have placed the least dependence upon it the wi has now been codified by the Legislature x ® | shall not be discharged even ‘on her written re- | generally giving them an unquestionable right to | suspended by a gossamer thread, on which the blood of 280 next step will probably be a formal declaration of jand ‘all is embraced in tho statutes. (He here | of, Collector has given much offence, and other appoint- | Ovett "naless ‘@ Gustier of the Supreme Court, after | Go ao, Their cannmens Tasks When cet We a : bitly ri oe nn | War on the part of France and England against Russia; for 1 hecho ert ogg ct Se mur. | ments.are scarcely more satisfactory. The Nobraska bu. | quest” unless s Justice of the Supreme Court, after much Urbanity | thousands and the welfare of millions depends, the | "ars Uy bert of Francs ant Hogan’ egainet . : , henceforth words m ce to blows, The respeotive Fe aed teen oe agar ook Tanner, and hose sections | mats bas caused al@eulties, by placing the party inone | fic, Stauant with his corded” to tho elfectetey | *2dgalcty ofthe French, with something of the franknesa | metropolis of 1a Belle Franco flings out every syeces of rescaled Br ap Seg! which define homicide.) If a person’ breaks into a house | Sreauieation,” The President, @ New Hampshive man, | Sch Iam inclined to think, although not very clearly | and solidity of the Anglo-Saxon. They havo great facility | attraction for the gay, the grave, the idle, or the care- ; Pposed, th point of Huaaeaary eK > fem Roper tally Kills & man, while in jhe pur- | makes it a point to tell every one, in private conversation | ¢ eased, was the intention, of the act—that he is satis. | in languages, and aro always familiar with French and | worn. Its shops team with the riches of matchless art, ee % be seine Leoreaiey af ie sock na 1 as guilt , 4 w capaci : ; ri " 8 case where the killing is porpetrated with’a premedi- | $4 through his newspapers, that he is all for Mr. Dou- | Conitoi.» But oven this qualification, confined as ris ¢o | E06lish. They live en prince, and with unbounded hos- | its palaces glitter with purple and gold, and the high | fT 6™rison duty, perhaps the Russian and the Ottomam dated design, such as laying in wait for, or poisoning a | fions Rik Shar the Meroe compromise Ae jancenstita- | particular trusts, and bearing on the present case only | pitality. With these agreeable and estimable attractions, | officials of State and diplomacy vio with the Imperial | ™¥ #¢P#rately dispose of some 120,000 men. But an expe- which, if follbwed up, shows a direct intent to | porden of thedemocratic: song here’ ds thay th sa source of analogy, is ina great degree neutrali they are perfectly unfettered in their political associa- | Prince whom they serve and are accredited to in exercising | “tionary force of 50,000 French and 20,000 picked mem Lite fe,” Tt 8 likewise murder where perpotrated with | Durden of the demoeratie song here 4s, oo thatie | by the spirit of a subsequent statute, on the 80th * vd exercising | from Epgland, will enable Turkey to take the off fa depraved mind, with malice aforethought” for mallee ig | bat has just passed the Senate is pots party one, that it ogame aset. ern nt statute, passed on the 80th | tions, Legitimist or Orleanist, imperialist or socialist, | the rites and splendors of boundless hospitality. nh fo Taxkay to: take the <ateaeneay be inferred from the act itself. Cases have been cited | M*uPPorted or opposed, indiderentty, by whigsand demo- | ov ckhciders or members of . hich always immensely increases the foree of say - corporation, the absolute | are alike welcomed to the halls of the Russian stranger, | Tite Moniteur of this morning had presented to the pub- | y y angel for defence, as, for , where a gin is it ought not to be regarded in our present elec- y nger, tion, and. much more of the same sort. At democratic | Tight ‘‘to vote at any election for directors or trustees,” | and the doors of every political aspiration, no matter | lic, in type of unwonted magnitude, Napoleon’s autograph | °7™Y: into a crowd of or where a person on & and this without counselling either their husbands or a | Both French and English are armedrith and well ex- Seatieha esate ore Weel ee Wee cee thoes ke aoeelings the speakers Genvanee as Notuaaa DID and] STetSs" or this or aay Sth Court. after thee ationg | Nbat the shade, are in return equally open to him. M. | epistle to the Emperor of Russia, and, though it atruck | ercised in the practice of the Minie rife, ‘The health of Rey HEAT eset whee th captors Lae P S| and unequivocal logislative indications, it would seom te | de Kisseleff, it is well known, was himsclf a most | the Bourse with such fear and trembling that the prices ets j eath mast occur if consequence, it ts inferred tliat he fog ap cawhere in thin game, and the biggest rosuenat | be the duty of judiciary to reverse the former common | graceful, not to say, illustrious personifeation of all | of stocks palpably receded, and gave a visible impulae to pera ara Maeteercararidecat ella’ Pine ca eee ee rueMs of tuman life; OF | the lot, (think, is at Washington. Considering that the | JV Presumption, and to assume (unless the contrary be | this; and mostsincere have been the regrets at bis de- | every class of politi quidnunce, in the evening the | ‘sly on horseback, performing his duties with his usual expressly proved) that every married woman, of full Uttle children in the street, the inference would be the | T551“that he denounced te: Fugitive Slave lng in the in as ceoepatent tormanage and control” atany manor | Darture. But he has left behind him an intimation which | sound of song, of tabret, and of viol, was as rife as ever. | *xHctness and energy. , ; There can be no doubt that an inkling of the intelif- game year—that he approved of Massachusetts co- | ‘single female.” Next, asto what has been called the | no Russian affects fora moment to misunderstand. Its The English Ambassador, Lord Cowley, gave a grand med i ‘ ; eae nec atts | alts, saat th Pe ‘mouth of May, 1852, urtery of the husband: By the common law, every | purport is that the sooner thelr goods and chattels are | dinner, at which assisted the Grand Duchesge de Bade, | £¢R¢e contained in the Monitewr, had previously found ite quity in the frat ald be, man ve ye Hi an intrigue to get the vote of that State, rst in fee cone | husband, in right of ‘his wife, ‘immediately on. the mar- ked i | way to the inner recesses of the Tuileries, or the publ- zy diiolt pont io arrive at in most cases of | "entten®aed (hen in the Hlectora College for himself, | Tage, except Where,» settlement wa agreed upon, te Packed up, given away, or sold, the better, for that thelr | aunt to the Emperor, the Duc de Bassano, the Grand | "1 or waDolcon’s letter could somecely oo Nal but here it is arnt plain-—there can be nO | the latter by the aid of the free soilers—considering all | c®™e seized of his wife's houses and lands during their | hours are numbered. Every Russian knows that com-| Chamberlain, M. de Porsigny, and their ladies, the Ame- ie OSE pred ah barrel cgatoat te hocage ar He held the gun, | these things, Tsay, there is nothing improbable, and cer. | Joint lives, and (if issue followed) during his owa life. The | pliance is absolute, unless they would submit to imme- | rican Minister, Lord Templetown, the Marquis and Mar. | ™&4° it# appearance. rot seeker ee! 2 Es ketearig caused instant dath,. ‘The | ‘ainly nothing uncharitable, in the opinion that he is | Sct of '4® while itleft to the married property, it would | ‘ate confiscation. So there is » rending of hearts and | chioness of Ely, Lord and Lady Pollimore, and others, to hats i eae dedteen iho tee tae beatles second branch is whether the killing was perpetrated.so as | Now Sgnged 's, deluding otk, Northern and Southern | srr Goo onthe lustod: intestioealiy oe cavers, | cracking of pecklog eases, and Russian fers and pelisses the number of twenty-eight persons. In the evening #9 come within the meaning of the second sub-division. | +, manage New Hampshire polities, to the management | his common law right of curtesy in that of his wife. | fit across the Boulevards, the Rue ge In Paix thi upon as 9 war proclamation. killing ‘is presumed to be malicious unless proved mPa) ’ As mai whatever be ita other attributes, is in J , among the | Lady Cowley commenced her series of receptions, which s ‘ " otherwise by the evidence, and unless so proved it is the of patlonay states; Dut he will find that the businoss will | 1.17 civil comtract, it i obvious that this act of the Le- | ®*ctdes of the Rivoli, and the eolumns of the Place de la | will continue once w fortnight till the 24th of May, the | _ M-de Hubner, the Austrian Ambassador, was over. 2 4 whelmed when his servant placed the Moniteur in hie duty of the to convict. Did the prisoner do an act lature, so fe as it operates on exi marri and | Concorde, only to agonize the heaving boso: f beaut: i | = iy jury vi Pp ‘There will be some trouble about settling the claims | Sislature, so far ype! ist ‘iages an ) Only 3 m of uty, | birthday of the Queen of England, when a magnificent hands which contained the document, and did not sora- rous to others? It is claimed on .. | existing impairs the obligation of contracts, | or excite moans and groans from marchands who have | the part of the prosecution that he did, by bringing Shige thowld ‘hate party oes Wee inane ee ann ie Sot tae tasetinan vie (White | lived and fattened on their excellent, pratiques. From | ball, generally the most brilliant of the season, concludes | 11, 44 ones to say that the last hope of peace was and placing it to the | Togislature, as it is supposed will. The programme | Y# White; 5 Barb., 474.) As to subsequent. mar. | house to house, go wherever you will, it is the samo: the | them. | destroyed. Its effect, h the public mind t | wan, and is, that one Senatorship shall be givos to Mr. | Tages, however, and as to subsequently aoquired | Russians, the dear Princess Lieva, the Prince Gutorski, | The palace appropriated for the residepee of the Eng. | “tFoved. Its effect, however, on the public mind has gen down —vhether he did cock it whether he did | Wells and the other to Mr. Hibbard; but thin arrange. | PfopeHty under prior marziagos, ta ty, Lprenume, | the Count Galosts, aro going! The war is already unpo: | 11.1 Ambassador is ealled the best house in Paris, It ia | °*T'tinly not been enthusiastic. tit against the breast of deceased—whether {twas | ment’ was mado at a time when ihe President, ft; | whatever may be said of its justice, cannot be disputed. | pular. : wand a. Ttis | re becomes more and more obvious that the war je ast Leaded with shot or with s bullet, ts for the jury to de- | framer, was of more weight in New Hampshire than he | Hence the necessity in all eases involving the claim of | — Yet for all that, it is thought inevitable, and Lord Ab- | admirably constructed alike for the pageantries of State | nts ‘his side the channel. In . The next question is, if this was an act immi- | iat present. Gov, Martin wishes for ons of the aeate, | tenancy by the curtesy, of stating the dates when the | erdeen, who has just declared he does not think ao, with: 8 popalsy Com seas eae ee nently dangerous to others, aid it evince a reckless and | Yiende his ‘appointment of Mr. William to succeed | Union between the partics was formed,» and when the | out assigning any reason for the thought, is universally | | the enthusiasm of England is apparent the French ardec depraved mind, regardless of human life? The investiga | Jr Atherton until the meeting of the (ale ge roperty sought to be partitioned was acquired—without | believed to be an imbecile. The Assembles Na- | Eiero ele and the comforts of a residence. Its northern aspect commands the faubourg St. Honoré, while the southern : 1s. The gov its Jine.and.will teange to deter- | tionale has — fairl; jiven way, as has like commands the Cha: Elyaces, fr lo) fg coo nee ee Fe crime, in this as well as in all other cases ely inexplicable on any other hypothe. Seavcnitohen teonees ‘soothe oman of the the Journal der Dea he's Sonn tpossbie ora which it is separated by s beautiful jardin anak eae To do that thay are sieebilae’s ph tpapla~ s ne bd parties. And even when these elements are sup- e alliance between England and France. 6 publica i ‘site taste, and ornamented and sheltered | PP rc ‘ gt he next Legislature; but even a little ie “they sh constitutional right in the | tion of the various documents on either side the Channe | OUt with exquisite taste, ay | their old enemy and rival, John Bull, is about to moumts, ; in ios: cose My must ted ee from gairest. remy ey then and et od te thay ere = {anes a wayban ri ry on egal Lee oN ite has cleared away an immense mystification which for- | by rare trees of luxurious growth. It was purchased of | t y ival, Jol , is al to m oa to Pe 1 The Emperor of the French, it seems, with all his im- be malicious, and | rust show bis hand on the Nebraska bill; and if he | duration, and of course its value, still depends on th» | merly enveloped the subject, and the whole conduct of | the Princess Borghese, sister of the groat Napoleon, for a | therefore, murder, until the contrary appears. Another, further circumstance, generally overlooked, of issue born. | this mad autocrat is seen to be so palpably wrong that | sum of £30,000; and one cannot help suspecting that a | Passability, could not resist the temptation which the o¢- coming whder the same head, is where & ioan intends the | Snowld vote against that, would not hi election, by & | With issue, the estate (o for the husband's Own ife; with | 20 one bas now the courage to utter a word in eatenua- | great deal of the furniture which it oven now contain’ | casion afforded of paying off the great autocrat for some patural and probable consequences of the act he per- | support of it? If he should vote for é, then he must | Ut issue, it cannot extend beyond his wife's Its vala: | tion of it. To be sure, certain hints are thrown out | must have originally belonged to it, ap the style is de- of the superciliousness exhibited by that personage te-- ry . If be loads @ gun, sims it and pulls the » | lose some of his own party’s votes in the Legislature, therefore, ete only upon the principle applice vs | #bout the expense, and a calculation made that should | cidedly that of the Imperial regime. | ds him on hii il “y sis. natural to supposo that he intends to kill. It is & | ror it cannot but happen 7a, Totes in the Legislatare, | to life annuities and survivormhips, but upon the fact or | the war last only one year the cost would be, at the | “Within the lost year a sum of 8,000 has been expend. | Wards him on his elevation to the throne of France, A deadly weapon, used in the manner it was intended | chosen to the House who will be opposed to the bill; | i#8ue; and, if none, upon the likelihood of issue. In this | least, forty millions sterling, the half of which would, of | edin simply repairing the offices and renovating the | M. de Kisseleff, the Russian ambassador, was bowing his to be and tt is therefore to be inferred | 514 the union of these the opposition members | sspect it differs materially from the inchoate dower of | course, have to be furnished by the French; and this is | gilding and the furniture ; and it may readily be suppos- final adieux, Napoleon is said to have expressed himself that the man using it had s deadly motive. This | S02, the union, of these wi @ati-Nebraska demo. | the wife. The widower, after his wifo’s death, takes only | an argument to which the French are by no means in- | ed that the representative of her Britannic Majesty wants with a certain arch-gravity, ‘Tell the Emperor, mow is murder when ted by an act imminently dan- | Sat to the Senate. lam not acquainted with Mr. | 00 the condition of d paternity—the widow, after herhus- | sensible. “i nothing of those externals which are by many thought to | boname,’’ he said, “that should the ruder fate of war be gerous to others, evinces a depraved mind. Another | wen, views on the Nebraska question; but it ean | band’s, whether she has beena mother or not. The It is said that General le yng 'Hilliers has selected | add dignity to the office. He has, moreover, a salary of | unfortunately his, I shall not ye oss the Christian max- estion to be investigated is, Was there any necessity | hardly be doubted that ‘are those of the Presi- greater or less likelihood of issue, in any given case, must | % piece of ground at Selivri, on the borders of the Sea of | £8,000. | im, that a frere is welcome in adversity.”’ The Russian $b this case to use a deadly weapon-—one designed to kill? dent, whatever the:President's may be, for it is not to | depend again, it is obvious, not only upon the principles races, bere she Ange Daa opresi oneey, overs ie reception rooms, which are very large and lofty, | envoy is said to have bit his lips at allusion to the ‘The evidence having been fully stated by counsel, !sball | be'potioved that the President ‘woull’ favor the elec: | @ppllcable to life and survivorship, but facts and | #° to take up their quarters—40,000 French and 10, richly gilded, and glittering with mirrors of colossal pro- | Czar’s refusal to admit the French Emperor into the not review it; but will say that, the defendant keeps a | {,,00r a gentleman who should Gisagree with him on | Slrcumstances not usually taken into consideration by the English. They will thus be enabled to oppose any army portions, presented a coup d’eil last night, such as per- | ‘‘ fraternity”’ of sovereigns, however he might acknow- dram shop, isa public invitation for all mento | {07.00 © Sontrmeestion law. One extreme ease, it is trae, has been admitted, | which should menace Constantinople, oven after having | haps can, in these days of political, heart-burnings, be | ledge him a (‘my friend;”” and, it ts ponsible, that enter and buy drinks. Horan and his three com; Pe RY te oad oo ak 2 and that only under the , Row abolished, of entail: | turned the Balkans. It is gen believed here, that | only scen at the English Ambassador's. Here wore min- | the disastrous contingency hinted at, was not al came in there to got drinks, No one was in at the time Board of Education. ment, An estate tail, ‘after possiblity of laaus extines, the English troops will pasa through Paris 500 at a time, d, a8 on neutral ground commontothemall, the proud | acceptable from the self-proclaimed ‘‘parvenu’” of ‘but the barkeeper and Murphy. The was for [AL MEETING. if *t was a recognized head of ancient jurisprudence, | on their road to Difon and Marseilles, and so to Malta. fogithmist, rejoicing in a pedi, of a thousand years, and | France. Bim to give or sell liquor toa drunken man, and drink ons Or Waal ag, B.C. Benedict, | Short of impossibility there was no case that I am awaro | J! is even sald that the Girgus in tho Champs Elysees is | the Citizen-Orieanist, whom the policy of Louls Philippe To pas on to lighter matters, M. Lefuel,,architeot of him. The company took seats, and all drank more, | ,,,TH*,Board met on Wednesday evening, E. C. ict, | of. How, then, in other cases, is an inchoate tenancy by | being fitted up expressly for their accommodation. There | lifted from the bureau of commerce to the eabinet of _ the palace at Fontainbleau, takes the place of the lament- bt, than they should have done. Ayres proposed mo te Reetiae Sas teasoshignieererrendstalt the curtesy to be valued? In other words, what sum in | is wisdom in not having too many of there red-coata at a | State ; here were the ministers, the kinsmen and lieges of | ed Visconti, for the completion of the Louvrp. ipproved: time, for there is no saying what effect on the French 5 eas > an as a-substitute for the probable tive incofhe, ime, for bl Bonaj and they who by speech, and pamphlet, and Meyerbeer’s new opera, ‘‘L’Etoile du Nord,” has just git SUMAN presented tho roport of the Commaitteo on | fFto'be allowed? On this and other points suggested f | mind anything like larger bodies of them might produce. Fontennctony. bastion, hod peocisinved hit teat’ ne, | come out ok ths Dpecs Gorlaver and had oon oe antiomt and vas knocked down. It seems, then Horan took hold | Sites and Schoolhouses, in favor of spproving the memo- Wish fo hear the counsel for the paris, before adopting | Ove account states that Enos, Jn Homuelie {a fo be the | and wsurper 1 to watah with what etarmine fac) snecemartl dats over witneeed: at that. theatre: he 4 draft been becat tran: ‘was a marvel to wa’ h what c! i - Emperor a: res in al nee, wore, ot Board of Councilmen in relation to tho schoolhouse at | Son0 othor casess ne ee tess tail atey | tedious delays and dangers which alwaye attend the navi | ctiliy tho fair ambaasadrens received’ ani saioentty. | reeeived with more thau Usual heartiveas, Tosco ‘thought tmoré than the moving of chatrs; : wus enough to fring Sowa, Brean, who came an Ia Dr. Hrs ted s communication from the school terfered. According to the testimony, he soon went out, i Lap ex Meantet racoaadl nacootlionse: ation of the Straits of the Dardanelles ; and next, be- | harmonised this throng of discordant sympathies and | member that the opera in question was condemned Soc big dies —-<t | Sanse it is the nearest point of the sea of the archipe motley prejudloes: now with gracious smile‘and. happy | the censorahip, and rescued’ by the clemency of the Inet of Adrionople—that is, the theatre of the war, which is | specely ae adapted to each person or the word or | peror. stating that he would soon settle that, or something like it, | officers of the Twelfth ward, nominating A, V. Williams First District Court. ‘ the key of European Turkey between Constantinoble and | Lok {ho occasion demanded; now she sorils tienes hor | P The hero in Peter thd Great, who, distinguished as sa He then went into an adjoining room, and brought out a | &% Commissioner for said ward, in place of Thomas Len Before Hon. Justice Groen. the enemy. ‘The Emperor of the French has personally | way through “silken skirt and starred ves,” and divided | ouvrier, ia working at a shop in a village in Finland, swordca Goatly weapon -owhisiche about, evi. | Rom, Tesigned ; and E, Ketchom aa Trustee, in p MAncu8.—Landlord and Tenant.—Robert L. Stewartand | given directions on the subject to General Pelissier, | or formed the various cotefies, which obeyed the impulse, | Where he falls in love with a rustic belle called Kathat dently for the pu: ‘of frightening the parties; but | E. ©. Weeks, resigned—which no: ms WEFe COM-'| oirers vg. Sylvester J. Sherman.—This was a su who is to have the selection of the troops at Algiers, | all the while unconscious of the mesmeric charm which | rine, who, conjointly with her brother, koopa & dram shop. Sut had not the hesired He again went out, and | firmed. ‘ from the school | °e¢ding to recover sion of premises 118 wi tam *| and the organization of the army. Generals Canrobert produced it. f | Peter’s vile temper and beastly habits of drunkenness are uring the interval the parties became separated, and Mr. Mrmr a communicatjon ede street in the city of NewYork. The plaintiffs claim torecoy- | and M. Mahon are likewise to command divisions of the The gentlemen were in ae evening dress. Lord | conspicuous, tharine refuses to ye him, thor }- wae ef the McDonald’s was Horan out; Ayers was | Officers of the Eleventh ward, nominating W! €um- | 964 30, for a balance of rent due on the first of March, | army. For the moment nothing is said about MarshalSt. | Cowley wore across his breast the red ribbon of his | she é herself, Peter goes away with an int ou’ tide, the door. Brennan appeared | ™ings sa Inspector for said ward, in of Charles | 1854. ‘The defendant admits the letting, but denies that | Arnand, who, notwithstanding bis infirm state of health, | order, and the Turkish Ambassador covered his head with | friend, who is a pastry cook. Katharine puts on male at- tho sing natn loader inhis band. Itisfor you | Perley, who has not qualified. Nomination confirmed. | hye holds over and continues in sseasion of the pila Soak is supposed to be jealously alive to his authority. There | the national fez; but the only real exception tothe rule | tire and joins the army, and becomes of docu- e NO ee ee criatoa tenner | without permission of the landlord, and says that he has | ate special reasons why such a personage may cause | was that of an American captain of infantry, who was in | ments revealing a conspiracy against the Czar. She does yy were ‘out | Officers of the me bien pan aha ion to pay | paid, or offered to pay, all the rent as it became due. A | Louis Napoleon some trouble. . uniform. He had a figure of handsome stature, and was | duty as sentinel, while her guardian lover, now a oa) ie 4 bills for sundry repairs to the scl ruses in said ward. | Witnexs was tod by the defendant, who swore that | _ tieet from Brest has just put to sea, in order to pro- | altogether a person of good presence, and his dress was | and his pastry cook friend, now Hentenant, get ds notgpute about presenting tho muzale, aud mow as to | T@FinanceCommitter, | | on tho drat day of March he called upon fr. Stewart and | ceed o Toulon, Algeria, Civita Veechia, and embark the greatly sdmired forita rich and mourtial wimplicity, Me. | with two rivandiers. In ber despair and jealous y . y she inent—i side: tendered him $10 42 for the rent due on that day; Mr, | French expeditionary corps. nford, the American Secretary of Legation, was there, | strikes a corporal, for which the drunken Czar orders hee poten ce jeer to piaatlon: “trom | Twelfth ward, which ha Fi ead Btewart refused to receive it for one month's rent, but | The Walgehian Somiteur « new Russian Journal, com- | and created considerable interest in consequence of its | tohe shot forthwith. Katharine makes her way to hie f . In relation to the intent great atross has | ,,Dr- Ixwm presented. the following: “Whereas, section, | would consent to receipt it on account of the entire’sum | mands all the male population from eighteen to forty to | being known that his resignation had lately been forward. | tent, but he is #0 drunk he neither recognises nor under- i Idd, and justly, too, by counsel in defence, | thirty of the School law pro ee due'for the rent. The Court decided that such not being | do compulsory service, on pain of tried by court | ed to President Pierce, by reason of the difficulties which | stands her, and she is led off to execution. the fact of the feeling evinced by the prisoner after aS enn eatonable expenses of commissioners | 4 tender of the amount duc, the tenant could not avail | martial. All beasts of burden are to be at the Russian | had arisen in relation to the question of court contume. Some dreamy recollection of the voice and features of Grmission of the fa ‘ » ‘ deod; and in relatio is himself of it to defeat these ings; that the hold. | #rviee, as also all boats, barks or barges®tn the} I have, in one of my previous letters, remarked that | the woman he suddenly, however, forces it- DOM thiere war great force in the xemarks of the District | _,eeolved, Tat the Clerk have placed at the disposal of | (Me over without the Decision of te ination wane | Danube. ‘Every nccount seems to show that the Rus- | there is no one in Paris holdings diplomaticappoiatment | self through the ‘clouded that, it was a sudden burst of remorse natural | the members of this Board tickets Principal stage | iogql inference to be drawn from the facts set forth in the | sians but wait more propitious weather in order to | who is more popular, and deservedly go, than this gentle- | arch, and horror struck he orders herreprieve. She has, under the circumstances, and. in no manner showing ha- | Lines running in the vicinity of this hall. Laid on the | DEM irae ss 0 Ont facts had not been contro, | make a cash at Kalefat and the Danube: anda curi- | man. it appears, however, that Mi. Mason, the Ameri. however, plunged into the river, and a's parting laa . After adverting to the law Aine 9 ‘ould | table. t : verted by the defendant’s testimony; and he therefore or- | 0us report is current that the moment it was ascer- | can Minister, has judged fit, in the exercise of his discre- _ left him the treasonable documents to make hia govern the jury in the of their duty, the Judge | r. Weer offered the following :-— pered a warrant to issue to put the landlord in possession | tained that the combined flects had withdrawn to the | tion, to don the diplomatic uniform, while the Secretary, | With. waid:—The next grado of murder to be eo! cred is that Resolved, That a select'committee be ae re- | of the premises. Thereupon the defendant paid the | Bosphorus, the Russian fleet left the port of Sebasto- | believing himself to be prohibited by Presidential author: On perusing these, the om oT Em becomes: rt to this Board on the propriety of abolishing corpo- ‘and made an ineffectual attempt on St. Nicholas. | ity, refuses: And as subordinates must not, I suppose, acquainted with his danger, boldly himself, oe) ees brary age Ae y podernpecres Feal punishment in the meet: departments of. our Leet yy lantag of Ga enh on Goa Ro g would tend to quicken Lent Aberdeen’s intel: | persue conteary lines of action to their principals. even among the soldiers, proclaiming his real character, and” ‘and you can judge if the defendant is or is | Common Schools. Laid on the table. ai" M &. Ne ects more than that such a report should be confirmed. | In the fashion of the dross, he has sent ix his resignation; | is received with scclamations, Katharine is fished ap nok guilty of any of them, ble homicide is that | The subject of amendments to the School law being | , Mancu 9. layer, de af New York, ws. | “the Turks at Constantinople are certainly not alto- | and maidens are weeping and widows are wailing that 26 out of tho river, but has lost her senses. Thea, the ‘which results from acoident, or iu'e sudden combat when | ¢xt in order, Henry, Meyerhally—Action is brought to recover | gether content with the state of things. They say that | proper a man should leave them. Gear i the meant of restoring her by placing before har w an unlucky blow causing thedeathof another, | Mr- WaTaubcxr presented various amendments, and | against the defendant the penalty of $60 for vio- | fis quite possible for the Russians to strike a decisive hich bo hetalematone, t} the subject in dispute, the | fac simile of her native village wi moved that the Board go into Committee of the Whole on | lating the Corporation ordinance. ‘The plaintiff proved | fiow otic hunube before a Eroneh or English sokdice | 1 (a resards the subject in dispute neral seein, | illage Ite ary dah pleoer eal of excusable 1 think, seems to be that in this as in other more built; and on his presenting himself to her in his old y oust bring in verdict of not guilty. Or if, in | the subject, Curried. Re, Aue Or uate, cox os phere 1 Sept, S84 | can come to their assistance, and'that should the Gear do | tant matters, the Taajority should rule the minority, and working dress, she recognizes him; and the eurtain falle sing then a ie After a session of several hours, the committee rose 5 ity in- | this, and at the samo time revolutionize the Slavonian | that it is beneath the dignity of a great and influentia | 24 Peter the Great places the crown on Katharine’s head. qersist of mansacgiter ic’ the hrst degree must be rene | 8° reported that, they had considered over forty pro. | specter of weights, and, mrerurep, unde Geran Co: subjects of th Porte, the Sultan would be altogother, at people to refuse compliance with the mode end usage o |. The mics in tho, very best style of Mayerber’s . | posed amendments, and adopted most of them, and sub- } ae ¥ grocery 5 tl 8 tand, wfectly t % masculine jus, a 1 ‘rom der pall pe deemed manslaughter ithe seeona depres. | mitted @ ‘ill complete for the consideration ofthe Board | of Hector and West strocts, and there saw him usin | His mercy. They addy routs babar, "00: paeep poe Aa Mega the nleetie fad af tacos, sleet focors of, euthursiasne, ov thet is Saliews trabeitina I a teaal aia wees rere The report of the committee was agreed to, and the fol- | weights and scales; that he examined and found tho Czar hag only, even at the eleventh hour, to accept the | it is eaid, the freedom, the gigantic vigor of the Unio, | end in pe ial that the Killing was committed under | Wing resolution adopted — were not marked, and he then spoke to him about them | subdivision, terms harded into him on the part of the Sultan, so that | needs not an exceptional drest—a dress, too, which would ‘The new in fact he has nothing to lose and all SOT set They | imply a censure upon others—to cause men’s to @ been, rane gold pieces are issued, and are the eyes to bo | size of a four sous piece, though somewhat thicker. ; and whether its representatives be habited | They are very well cut. prisoner found Resolved, That the proposed law, as unanimously adop- | Defendant then admitted that he had used them before: | think that provision should hay that the | fixed upon in that ‘The iiliod of another in the heat oa ted by the Board, be presented to the Legislature, with a | that the few ‘weights that were light he would not as | exponses of the war should of right fall upon the Orar, tho | in sim Me ‘broadcloth, or in silken or embroidered flagree, | _ Great. amusement has been caused in diplomatic cirelee Hom with s, deadly ‘wespon, shall ‘be deemed none | memorisl, under the seal of tho Board, and signed by the in, Witness f swore that from their appearanc | azgregaive party,and that it should be understood that any | le will ever be regarded as an ‘elect among the’ ua, | dy the intelligence that three Quakers from Kogland have shughter in the degree. Killing is man. | President and clerk ; that 250 copies of the pro} law ny, ot never been marked. | The defendant hero move | acquisition of territory he may be enabled from circum: | tions,” the more expecially, it {a impertinently added, if | bad interview with Count Nesselrode in ‘of peage, in some degree, such as dank by the of re prints and that a committee of five be Sppointed, to dismiss the complaint, on Imag par that the plainti's | Stances to make, he should nat have powor to hold. This | America will advance a little more plier to support the | and were the next day to be introduced to the Cear. slightly constructed houses, or the blasting of the President, who shall be chairman thereof, | had not proved that the sealer ts and measures | 9; t, they think, would plaoe the Ottomans on | porttion of her envoy. There has been » serious emente at Perigneux, {a conse where thas been no intent to do injury; but in such | 424 that the said committee be authorised to procure, it | had been af defendant's storo and offered to seal them. 2 init footing, What they fear is, that the ‘of the)!" Frince Czartorisky gave algo the same night a ball on | quenee of the price of bread, and the authorities have eacen a very in left to the court. In con. | Possible, the adoption of an additional amendment gi The Judge denial the motion, saying that it was obli- | Cear once resiored by some decisive blow, Austria would | q «empiuous sealeat fils Aine hotel, to which many of Lad | bad the greatest difficulty, even with the jusion, the Fakes vont. the jury that thoy must | Power to the Free Academy to confer the usual scadem{: | gatory Oo” the defendant to seek out the sealer of weights | coglesoe with him at once, and in the general melee that | Cowley’a guosta afterwards adjourned. The presont as | the military, in preserv! uillity. The price of te tnto consideration the tostimony given on both si cal degrees; also, that said committee have power to fill | and measures, and have his weights marked. A noglec’ | would arise themselves be forgotten. t of political affairs has excited st ‘and thrilling | wheat is, however, dail Farmers are snd satisfy themselves beyond all reasonable doubt that | Vacancies in their own body. Se Ne eet iene eee French government has made an arrangement | hopes in the borom of the long op; Pols, and al, | eonvinced of the necessity of at present prions, the was "Of murder before concluding | _, The committee consists of the President and Commis. | fendant from s compliance with the law. I hall, there- | with’ the Bank of France for 60,000,000 francs. The | jinmmgh on such a péctliar occasion even the sacred | 88 the importations made are ev ¢ for com- ‘upon a verdict; or Fay believed him to be guilty of an | Somers Waterbury, Hibbard, Rutherford, Phelps and | fore, order judgment for plaintiffs for the amount of the | Putletim des Lois publishos an imperial decree authorizing | flame of patriotim became subservient to tho all seducing | sumption to the next barre, which at present gives ex- inferior Sto say 90; if not, to say so; and thus dis- | Wheeler. deairegvorgnar ~ the Finance, Minister fo raise the treagury bonds in olr- | allurements of the dance, still it was not possible that trnordinary promise. om ebarge their ithfully and impartially. ‘The Board sdjourned. culation to 260 millions, instead of 190 millions as fixed | the big hopes and selling hts which are heaving | The suicides in consequence of Bourse gambling, are Counsel. for mhde some observations to the Tee Isteh Militncy. Gunpada ‘The Caban Ja a te aay) of 1806. pies fe in so many bosoms should be al conosaled. | vay frequent, and moet cases cctor. One Irish Organization. journals supposed leant prejudiced | ‘In the intervals of those strains which poured | gentleman, of great +, Supposed Sent errs cereale (oe pens ‘Yonx, March 8, 1664, pial gemsancaloimmte acon stg ME the Orar, the Journal des Debate and the Assemblee | forth from the fine military band provided by’ the’ vene- fing to the f of Poua is reported to have sustained Vast Wale OCanil to Witter Unck tad treats nae 10 THR EDITOR OF THE HERALD. Ea eaten Boece pot the | Nationals have put forth two very contrary statements, | rable Poliah Prince, the ‘and sonorous voice of vome | 8 los of Aix million francs within the last " when they returned with a verdict of mans! ter in | _SiR:—Having seen by s report in your paper that it was | [niversal Democratic Republican Society, regarding tte | but w! ‘engage considerable speculation at the | enthusiastic descendant of Sobieski might be heard, | the fourth degree. announced at the Democratic Ro} on last | sitting held on the evening of the 7th instant, #0 I hope it crisia, when Europe hangs trembling in the | stoutly maintaiping that Napoleon’s recently published Sentence was reserved and the Court adjourned. it that I would be present how, when, and helenae, ‘That of the former that Austria has | letter was veritable proclamation of war, and could be the Irish mili nization intended to operate | YOu will be #0 good as to insert in your columns the fol- ly tnformed the Court of St. Pebersburg that any received in no other sense: that s be Baropons ruggle, I beg you will allow | lowing letter, which I have addresed to the President of | attempt to cross the Danube will be oe thrown to the sutoorat, but which he. os hike} ‘The Gardner Case. pociet! by 60 dot a Tr ober belli. The statement of the fationale | not accept—that the thing offered was fair and goodly to Whatton Cer Indirectly authorised any one | hat seelety, and by pg bees corel nro bat @ tion, or rather overtuse, has been made | look upon, buf the goad—the threatened pikes and bows— ‘March 9, ‘ssa. } say that I would give any such information, or any in- | ‘lent servant, to the Orar, in which is conceded the position he has all | which was so glaringly held before him at the same time, | ‘Hooss oF REPRESENTATIVES, , formation at all respecting the Irish soldiers, Cor. Fornes, Secretary of the Universal Democratic t fit to take up, namely: that Turkey should | left him no alternative but to refuse. That the Czar was, Error ov Taz Naw York Henau>— r—I had and have no suthority, direct or indi. | Republican Society :— tiary to hint at St. Petersburg, and treat | in fact, in a dead fix ; that he had hounded on his however, convalescent, ity, ) people My Dear Sir—On reading an editorial in your paper of ‘to speak for the said organisation. Dear Sin—In the account given in the Hxrato of the alone. All the Four Powers, says the Assembles | to a Holy War, arid.couldn’t, if he valued his life, with- | M. Berton, the su of Brossant af a hia ts —If I had, and knew their purpose—which Ido | 8th instant, regarding the ordinary sitting held on the | Nationale, have ted for js, that Turkey shall be | draw ; that in persiating—that in taking the upshot of | the Theatro du be rgd hee an action brought yepterday, under the head of ‘(The My: not—I would not be so utterly senseless as to tell it open- vious evening by the Universal Democratic Republican | understood to be in eommunication with the Four Pow: | chances—he had before him France and in | against him by Emperor of Russia’s manager of (@ardner Case,” I find my name mentioned, amongst | Wy. All Tecan vouch for is that they will do their duty by Bociety Colonel Forbes is said to have read an interesting ers, without whove advice she shall decide nothing. Of | his flank Poland! Poland! once more and forever, free! _ theatres, for yoann, his e1 to the Em- others, as one of the counsel of Dr. Gardner in prosecu- is country, under whose fiag they are enrolled; and be- | proposition from the Cuban Junta, inviting thelr mem- | the two journal, the Debata has incomparably the great- | And many a high dame and dark Polishdanghter, | peror, and been m in the sum of 50,000 frames. hts dial Vee " fab sworn to that ‘duty, Teonstier ‘and have sochar. | berpand some others to write a treatise upon the best | est for the authority of its statements. and y niS sogio-Saxon and Roncaifel see tt | A grand ball was on Thuteday. ‘night given by M. fing his fore the Mexican Commissioners. Per- | sotertved them, “he Yoldiers of beet aa poe method of abolishing slavery in Cuba, As Seoretary of | “Some strange peculiarities in regard to the late battle | France lent no unveiling ar to mucky le om | Bineau, tho Finance Minister, at his hotel. Ne- snit me, my dear sir, to assure you, that I never was, | of them in the society I took care to say I only ex} the Cuban Junta, I hasten to correct the mistake therein | at Cltate are exciting attention here. The Ottomans, it | thusiaem. And the dance was more tly, the music poleon #0 re Epetade [eso Geatinmen, Veal Bo Se either directly or indirectly, connected as counsel for Dr. | my Own opinion. incurred, It is not the Junta which has made the propo. | appears, fought with brilliant courage, ‘but committed grew louder and inspiriog, the more piquant | pects them to spend their salaries liberally in this man- Gordner, in that or any other business of his of any na- did promise to be present last night. intention | sition alluded to, but the Cuban Democratic Atheneum, es ov ite in er: The Russians had en- | and witty, the badinage more graceful and playful, and er, that with all the inclination to Ty my 4 renched behin ‘was to repeat what I had stated before—that in framing the mme of a literary compétition gure or description: I hope you will do me the justice to | act with any soclety ot any body that made religiec cnet | wherein viduals trlent as ; While the snn shines, they are compelled to keep themselves the love-making, perhaps, more pressing individuals, limiting themselves to the aca- | which, if resolutely attacked, might have been carried, | the thought of «people's ivan tyrant’s doom | doors open to the crowds of dancing and dressing people a cluster of hay stacks, make this avowal as public as the has been made | version or reformation one of its objects. I would demical character of their institution, purpose trenti and saved much eventual slaughter. The Turks, how- | assumed shape and form, and tion reality. #0 eager to enter. lawyer, of f Jon ny Sclty organized on the base of extipadng Wier | sucess cosrtioes os vmicern tin sabetticuen 06: freete | ever ‘ucoenfully attacked them in the apen plaa, and | "4 Of the autographie leter—the Patric: te som | irreg testantim; I would oppose such society my | the place of slave labor. four hundred felled and dying at one tm: | offical government organ, has been awfully mubbed for Our Copenhagen strength. It is not to be “a ‘that I could acb ‘The Cuban Junta is essentially revolutionary. Its only | mediately after this bad occurred, an immense herd | stating that it had reason to believe the Em; a reply Cormwuacmx, Dawmank, Feb. 14, 1694. with one the basis, or one basis, of which would be toex- | aim is at the political freedom of the island, and in no | of swine rushed upon the battle fleld and thrust | had already been recoived. It has been vislted with ax 4 Grand Court Ball—IAst of Distinguished Queste—Open- tirpate Catholicity. Iam for political Iborty, equality | manner whatever mingles or interferes with social ques- | their horrid snou's into the blood and bowels of | official warning for ‘completely false information”? me and fraternity, the world over, without refersnee'te the tions, which exclusively belong to, and are solely and | the wounded ani the dead. The shrieks and tho | — In spite of this, however, the general opinion ts that ing of the Ball—The Dance and Supper. Feligion or nation of the oppressed. With the religion of | entirely to be decided ty, the Gubda people, when they | struggles of fie poor victims es they attempted | the t would not have published the letter un- ‘The hereditary Prince and Princoss of Denmark gave = the liberated I have nothing to do. I would leave that to | have achieved their independence. ‘to’ keep off thei: beastly assailants, is something | less it had had cogent reasons for knowing, #hrough its | grand court ball on the 10th inst. in their palace im the churches, to reason, to the vitality of truth, and to Be pleased to apprise the society of the foregoing ex- | too fr 1 for the mind to contem) The Tutks | own diplomatic machinery, that it was rejected at St. Bred The aplo; God. As farae 1 can judge, this opinion is shared by all | pla and the consideration of high regard | themselves exclaime:, as at a distance they witnessed the Petersburg. ‘The feeling seems unanimous that now the fade. splepdid ball-room, fitted up with great , the Irish soldiers. To, Oe eno ay 4 td oon your eedeat serra fiendish earounal, «tite not the prophet justly forbid us | Inst card in this terrible game has been played. | taste, excited genoral admiration. : P 0 VALIENTE. | to cat the Mesh of syise‘ Raoep! cuicag ie ipitary, wae are Ot course aaxioug | ‘The guests included her Royal Highness Queen Dowager