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a ERY eid thing, three times a week I was up at aunrise fue ote ‘god the other days I used to get rel know that the friend of Mr. Solomon ¢ of on your direct examination slept all here A. Because she came to key of the gate, to let me do you know that Solomon Childs staid all apartment of Misa Emily Moore? A. When night I got more for the use of the room. any pay or money, or any notes compensation to testify in this case as a the plaintiff’? A. I have not received any- Q. Have you been promised anything, by way of com- pensation or otherwise, to testify as a witness in this easel A. I have not, in any way, shape or manner. Q. Have ff 30 been subpoenaed to attend here as a wit- mess? A. I have not. Q.—At whose request did you attend here this mor- ning? A—At Mr. Mimpson’s and his lawyer. Q.—Were you ever spoken to with reference to this ease, or with reference to any difficulties between Solo- mon Childs and his wife ‘whilst you were in Cincinnati? A.—I was not; I did not know he was a man un- til 1 came to the city of New York. .—When the person whom you say is Solomon Childs you at No. 51 Crosby street, did he say bx Same about a suit he had with his wife? A.—He did not. —Was the said person whom you state to be Solomon Guilds, and who upon you in Crosby street, lively, and in good spirits? A.—He was apparently in spi- rite; I asked him how he dared to come to New York on account of his creditors, and he answered that it would soon be all right—that he would have Childs & Brothers soon over the door. Q—At what hotel did he A he was stopping? A.—I did not hear him say, and I did not ask him. Q.—Did he stop at your house all night in Crosby street? A.—He did not stay but a very short time. Q.—Did he expfess a desire to stay all night? A.—He did pot, but said he would call again if he possibly could; that hé bad been in the city three or fowr days, and had > ing to get there, but had not succveded until Q.—Was he alone? A.—He was not; there were two ether gentlemen with him. Q—Do you know the two other gentlemen? A.—I do not; by conversation I think one of them resides in New York and the other in Cincinnati. Q.—Did they speak English fluently, or did they have a German bps: Ag A.—I cannot answer positively, be- cause I did not pay any attention to them. @ Was there any one else in the parlor besides Mr. Solomon Childs reset those two other gentlemen and your- self? A. There were some ladies; I don’t think there ‘were any gentlemen in the house when they were there. Q. Give me the names of some of the inmates or lad; Doarders, as near as you can recollect, who boarded wit! you at your house in Western row, in Cincinnati, during Betedy. Snith, Biack Eyed Joo, Binily Moore, alice Grey, " joe, Emily Moore, Alice Gray, ‘ aad Roealle FitzJames. @. Did you see Mr. Solomon Chil:ia go into Miss Moore's oom the night previous to the time he stated he was pets to Eugope? A. I did not see him go into the room; saw them start up stairs; I was not up stairs; they ‘were gone a considerable time. @. Did you ever see him in Miss Emily Moore’s room? A.SI don’t know that I ever saw him in Miss Emily Moore’s room; they have paid me for the use of-the reom; I presumed from that that they used the room; I hove seen them go up.and come down. Q. Didallthe brothers Childs visit your house? A. ‘That is the question I cannot answer; there were three FY cular that visited my house. What is your father’s name? A. I refuse te answer this question. what name wil] you be known in Grant eounty, Wisconsin, when you get there? A. I'll be ma by the name of Mrs. Fell, and any communication will reach me. Q. If you did not see him in Emily Moore’s room, how ia it that you swore positively that from the parlor the said Solomon Childs went into Emily Moore’s room? A. ‘Yes, sir; I have stated two or three times before that they paid me for the use of the room, and I presumed that they of course used it. @. When Solomon Childs paia you money, how much eid he pay you? ‘A. When he staid all the night he paid Me Eel sane ae ft a bat you an; er means of support except what made it this‘house in Western row, Cincinnati? A. decline answering: this question. Sbregy 4 ‘the whole house at 51 Crosby street ? A. I did occupy the whole house. Q. In the year 1851. do you know in what street in Solomen Childs resided and slept? A. I do net know. @. Had you and Solomon or any of the Childs had aay i) feeling towards each other, and have you now any ill or feeling towards any of them? “A, Ihad mot, nor have 1 now. Q. How do you reeollect so distinctly the month. and ‘time of Solomon Childs’ (as you believe) going up stairs with Emily Moore? A. The reason { recollect it is, that Thad just boucht the house that I live in and madesome improvements; that is the reason I recollect it so dis- eg Q. Have you ever seen Solomon Childs write or sign his eo A. Ido not reget bee Tever oe ras a m ever introduced to you by the name at Season Chica? AT don't know that T eves wes intros duced to him asI would to any other gentleman; my first acquaintance with him was at thestore; and from ‘that he visited my house @ Did «mot become acquainted with the other brothers the same way? A. Yes, sir, I did; they also visited my house afterwards. @ Did you call them by their first names, or Mr. @hilds simply? A. I called them Mr. Childs. Q. Did you make any distinction between them? A. Distinction inthis way, that we called the younger the pny, brother; sometimes they all three visited there and rest did not know they visited, Direct res . Q. Do youintend to leave the city amd Stateof New York? A. Ido. @. When do, you intend to leave? A. I intend to leave to-morrow morning; I don’t think I can get off until to- morrow merning. @. Where do you intend togo when youleave? A. I am going to Wisconsin to live. ‘The caxe stands adjourned to this (Tuesday) morning, ‘at 10 o'clook. Court—Part M1. Before Judge Campbell and a jury. Nov. 27 —Geo. @. Sickles vs. John O. Robinson.—This ‘wae an action brought by the plaintiff te recover from ‘the defendant one quarter's rent for premises No. 121 Barrow street, in this city. It was alleged by the pizin- ‘Ws counsel, and admitted by the defeadant, that the Tatter leased from the plaintiff in February last, the house No. 121 Barrow street, for two 8 from the-1st of May, 1854, at the annual rent of ), and took pos. session of the same on the Ist May, under the lease; but after about two months occupation, moved out, and de- clined to pay the rent. This action is brought to recover ‘the first quarter’s rent. For the defence, it was alleged pr asco Edmonds, that fraud and mis-represenita- were made by the plaintiff to the defendant in Teasing the same; and that Ce coy ape were unhealthy and uninhabitable, from offensive aftiuvias arising from the back in the a and the cellar underthe hhouse, aud that the premises were overrun andinfested with all kinds of vermin, cockroaches and bugs: and for every one that was killed, ten came to the funeral; ty * ders, traps, and other preventives were brought to pon’ the invaders, but of little avail. It was like ‘ Shrowing physic to the dogs—they’d none of it.” ‘Khe defendant’s wife's health became impaired, and they were @bliged to vacate the premises in July following, in conse- quence. It wasalso alleged that the defendant offered the tre) ‘iff $50t0 compromise the matter and cancel the ), but the offer was rejected. Medical witnesses wero examined and testified as to the unhealthinessof the pre- mises, which arose from the dampness in the cellar and the back premises in the yard. Both pleintiff and de- fendant are members of the bar, and the high standing ef the parties and the counsel, ether with the fair witnesses in attendance, imparted no inconsiderable interest to the trial. The testumony of some of the wit- messes afforded much merriment in court; and the judge’s usually grave countenance would frequently relax its gravity at the graphic description given by the witnesses of the manwdvres of the myriads of cock- noaches in their marchingsand coentermarchings through the house, and the unsuccessful stratagems resorted to Dy the occupants to destroy them. The plaintiff offered rebutting testimony as to the con- dition of the premises, and the cause was adjourned until Tuesday morning. Defaleation of Ex-Coliector Russell, of Cleve- land, Ohio. (From the Cleveland Herald, Nov. 23.) h more than its actualamount. A AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. | Xiticcyinctm: increasing week by week PEPE SIC TLE TINE for several weeks past, affords » clear explanation of the Oar London Correspondence. rise which bas taken piace in the wheat. These @gureg show also that has been nof Lonnow, Friday, Nov. 10, 1854. | hive 8 oF forestaliing im the market, such The Soule Affair—Pierce, Marcy, Buchanan and Mason | some journals have ascribed to the corn —Triumph of Liberals in Switzerland, Belgium, ape. reason why have not imported mo Brigadier General Franklin Pierce's administration has whe eiaibed ‘hve an ota BL pees sunk #0 low in public opinion in Europe that the crown- na early toe ed a byorad, et ~aeeh ed beads and re-actionary ministers have reached the | Foy pee tock pat ol ‘can be for 928., merchants comfortable conclusion that American citizens cau be | will, no doubt, import more wheat if it can be got in any handled with impunity. Witness the horrible sufferings | part of the world; butt is perfectly clear poh ad and indignities put upon Americans, ladies an well as | Sble rise in, the week of October—wat indispens gentlemen, in the lazar house of Rome this summer ; witness the brutal incarceration of American citizens at | the plies. Last year, at the same period, the constant harping upon this fact, and the @minution ax | of specie in the vaulteof the banks, sre the immediate gauses of the present financial panic and destruction of confidence. Are these substantial evils? and, if so, cam | cent was realized on cash sales. re is, that the | they be alleviated or removed? commodity, is of itself harmless, unless it should deprive | usof the amount requisite for the sound basis of a | healthy currency, and thus of the rea! foundation of credit. ‘ sable to enable the merchants to bring from abroad | large amount of foreign and domestic merchandise con: | ‘The Pank. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. ‘The export of gold to a greater amount than last year, of bonds Simeon Draper's regular semi-weekly sale at the and stocks will take place to-morrow (Tuesday) Merchants’ Exchange, at half-past 12 o’clock. At the second board there wax quite a let up in New York Central, much to the relief of those who are de- sirous of putting out contracts, An advance of }¢ per It closed at 79, buyer fifteen days, and 793, buyer sixty. Erie Railroad went up % percent, with small sales. All other stocks were | heavy, and clored at prices current in the morning. ‘The Government Stock Bank of Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the Merchants’ Bank of Bridgeton, New Jersey, were thrown out by the brokers this morning, and they are no longer redeemed in the usual way in Wall street. The receipts at the office of the Assistant Treasurer of The mere export of gol, in preference to any other California pays, in her natural product, gold, for the cesoweny » | sumed by her, her foreign goods being imported indirectly | th!s port to-day anidtpted to $84,090; paymenta, $15,916 Basle, o-Swies Mazzin . 4d. price of prime y her, | po. y Ry He. Austes Satan . jrnnpegs. af ea eee ae eee Lick maktet fo Longa tit | through the merchante of the Atlantic cities; and; th | g¢—balance, 86,583,246 22. Rome and at Berne nothing on the part of Mr. Cass oF | per bushel, and last year it was $1 6le., making a dif- | fact, all the gold exported by thix country for years past | ‘The Commercial Bank of Toledo, a branch of the State Mr. Fay has vindicated the American government from phew, of price at the two periods and two places equi- | has been California. gold, transmitted to pay California | Bank of Ohio, ¢! its doors to-day. In other words it the contempt into which it has fallen, It was time, when | valent to 14s. in favor of the importer into London, in | debts. » closed 1853, There is in this fact an all sufficient reason why wo were large then and have latterly been very small, We may take the difference just mentioned between the price of wheat in New Y: last year at this time an American Ambassador was driven with insult from pursuing his return to his place, and subjected to annoy- ing delays at an important crisis, that American na- tionality should be vindicated somewhere, find the To establish the soundness of this position, take the | broke. bacy cf are jeond eee rains noe 18465 deduct | The following were the gold deposits at the New beg rom it the whole amount of gold whic! S } t, Oct. 10 to Nov. through the mint, exported from he country dariag the | Sees Cee Dee He: emer een same period, and it appears that, apart from California | 25, 1854:— and now—about 14s. the quarter—as corresponding to | and foreign coin in circulation, the United States possess | Deposited for coins.. $1,120,120 58 American ministers and American citizens at Paris avd | the rise in the price of wheat in all the foreign markets. | at present the startling amount of over one hundred and | For bars ve 3,064,397 73 London have come up nobly to the hour. Saidi wheat—a very article—sold in Alexandria, | thirty millions of dollars more of gold than in 3848, ———— taula Wael the impression he had con- | 2 October, 1853, for 33s. 34., is now from 37s. 3d. to | Whence, then, is this derived? Certainly not from fo- | Total deposit $4,184,523 31 ug epplaee, Setinine 4 con | 40. 3344. ‘Prices last year were high in the producing } reign countri¢s, nor has California Cutnished it without | o¢ the remittance by the George Law, to one o'clock ceived of the cowardice of the Pierce Cabinet, acted with | countries, and this year they are higher. Without at- | consideration; but it is the excess of the amount receiv- tempting to specify the a rise in price in the fo- pm pind it 4 certain that such a rise has taken place, and the price is now everywhere considerably above the average price of the years immediately prior to 4653. It is said that the crops in Europe generally, apd certainly in France, Germany, Belgium, and Eng- d, uch better than the average. tin the United States the reports are contradie ; but we are fnclined to suppose on the whole it will not be much worse than an average. a great show of immovability until he found she: Soulé atlair was not to be referred to Washington, as he at first suppoeed. His Majesty had good reason to believe that Marcy & Co. would not sustain their ministers, for it is well known to everybody in Europe that they disgrace- fully abandoned Soulé in bis controversy with the Span- ish government about the Black Warrior. In that aflair the language in Mr. Soulé’s note most complained of by | Nevertheless, throughout these countries, and through: the Spanish Miniter was inthe very words of Marcy's | out the whole poise en eg Rag a despatch. The Ministers had, all of them, felt on too | high price. Qorn, particularly wheat, is everywhere may oceasions the petty jealousies of the administra- | scarce and dear; and from Naples to Prussia the govern- tion embassy, and retarding important negotiations. | ents are somewhat alarmed for the subsistence of the, Mr. Mason decided at once, therefore, what line of con- le. The coincidence of an abumiant harvest ani duet to pursue, and sent word to Mr. Buchanan, who ap- igh prices is not confined to England; it prevails plauded his high-spirited and patriotic determination, | generally. What is the cause? There are on this aud gave him a cordial invitation to his house im Hariey | subject great diferences of opinion. The Sifcle and street, in the event of bis demanding his passports. the Daily News bave enieavored to show that The Americans in Paris, to the number of some tw> | jt’ arises’ from a great increase of consumption thousand, almost to a man, even those who had been throughout Eu , without a corresponding increase opposed to Soule, resolved not to suffer American repub | of production. nother journals contend that the in- licanism to pale before French imperialism, open! crease of consumption bas been going on for years; clared their intention to quit Paris en masse if Masox | that prices with moderate crops have remained low, and left. The-afair, as it has been managed, hes occurred | that consumption was la: year, with very bad most opportunely to raise the pres of American in- | crops, and the price was only a small degree higher than dependence and spirit in Europe. | Notwithstanding th» | now: and therefore, that the increased consumption is sinister opposition ot Mr. bed to Sanders’ letter on the | not the cause; others again refer the whole dillerence to night of-asylum, it was published by all the liberal pa- | the war. Leaving the influence of the latter cause for pers in Switzerland, and was the foundation of a lively | the prosentemirely out of view, we must say a few — in Switzerland, which has just resultedin the | words more in defence of the opinion that the rise in lumph of the liberal party against its presont reac- | price is mainly caused by consumption having outrun tionary administration. The reealt has been equally fa- _ juetion. by pe . yorable in Belgian and Spanieh elections, reviving faith in the Eu! iD People. ‘The situation of the allies before Sebastopol is most gloomy. The attack on the northern side is abandoned, the:taking of the southera is doubtful, and.e retreat must be difficult ant disastrous. -Mr. Buchanan gave a farewell entertainment to Mr, Sanders and his family on Wednesday biseruc oi IND. ‘Whe Financial Negotiations of J. Watson ‘Webb im London. Morr.ey’s Horst, Loxpos, Nov. 10, 1854. I presume you will be apprised in the ordinary course of your correspondence, of the unhappy failure of Gen. James Watson Webb, ex-Minister to Viemna, in his at- tenipt to carry out his Guyandotte scheme. The General few years a combination of causes—improvements in has passed the greater part of this year in London, mix- | commercial policy, diminution in the cost of convey- | ing, as he has told us outsiders, with the-highest aristo- | amee, facilitating-exchange, the discoveries of gold in Cal- . ifornia and Australia—have given a great impulse to eracy of the capital on termsof confidential intimecy, | the progress of'the commercial and thanutactering popu- and recently, at one of Mr. Peabody’s dinners, at which | lation. Between 1848. 1853 our exports to quote one Iwas @ guest, announced the final success of his negoti- | exemple, increased in value from £52,840,445 to £98,- ations, at which, and at the fact of his having van- 933,781, or very nearly 96 per cent. In the same period | quished the London Jimes in single combat, he was much ‘the imports-of ithe United States increased from -$154,- ‘977,000 to $250,000,000. In the progress of the last few elated. Unfortunately, however, the: Guyandotte Com- pany, which it was supposed would rival the Parker ‘Years, of whidtvour trade and the trade of the United States may ‘be taken es an index, all Europe, all the Vein Company, has, at the last moment, been nipped in the bud. world, has shared, The trade of Belgium, Germany, | sand Franee ‘bas much increased, if mor so much as | “the trade of tho two Anglo-Saxon States. The in- | The General's high diplomatic and military connections | crease in the ‘first instance, if not hitherto neatly con- | had enabled him to placeon his -lisp the Earl of Elles- mere, Sir Henry Bulwer, Siz Jamies. Duke, Sir Emerson Tennent, My Dex nd Stuart, and. ethers of the Eng: Kc., tirst operate; and only as they inoreased in num- ‘Those who deny this seem to us to overlook 2 great principle, on which a mere enumeration of the quar- ters of wheat produced at diilerent times and | places throws no light. The labor of the husbani- man, as ‘the rule, yrelds much’ more food than he and his family need. “The agriculture of every civilized country feeds a great many more persons than the cul: tivatons-of the soil. It'bas, too, the peculiarity as the art improves of yielding more and more produce to am equal quan@ty of labor, so that the agricultural population of any giver country only increases as a con- sequeace of the Hai ok of w manufacturing, a commer- | cial, or a professronal population creating a demand for | an additional quantity of subtistence. The farmer grows | corn’to sell it. The impulse to improvement which arises | from‘an increase of people—the mainspring of all social progress—only readhes the agriculturist through the de- mands of the non-agricultural population. In the last | ‘fined to the mercant@e, manufacturimg, and carrying velasses, consists entirely of those classns rte or their wodlth. + On them -the stimulus .ef free | trade, facility:of -communieation, the gold discoveries, lish nobility. But on the very eve of execut! the | vers and.as:their wealth increased could an; imcreased papers, these gentlemen. discovered that General Webb | demand arise for ageicultural produce, or any-atimulas | Was to receive 2 commission of no less than $200,000 for | have come into existence to extend cultivation, Were | his services, and as these figures rather alarmed them, | the stimulus ever so rapid in its operations, the increase | they concluded to hold on to theirsenoney. As it was F Sear einaneee | er late.in all-deeenoy to bacl-out, however pradent of subsistomecemnust necessarily come etter the increased demand, «and it must take atleast one year, if not se- veral years, befor9 a rapid increase in the manufacturing | and commercial classes, and in their wealth, can be | iligwos bya corresponding increase jn.agricuttural pro | duce. There ean be mo doubt whatever that a very rapid in- crease has continually taken place in the shipping, in the manufactures, and_in all the men-agricultural in- dustry of me fi sine s 1848, creating .a greatsea! of ad- ditional arealth, tobe exchanged fur duce, and creating a greut ‘demand tor it With this Increase agricultural industry ane produce such a step might be, directed their lawyer, Fresh- field, to discover.a flaw in the documents, and he hes accordingly decided that for the security of the British subscribers, an act of the Legislature of the State of Virginia is necessary. The General, who thus lores his $200,000, which would have enabled him to square off his old debt of $52,725 to the late United States k, and have left him a nice lit, tle balance to begin the-world anew, is excessively irate and swears he is ‘‘God d—d if he stands such treatment from any lord living.’’ He is to challenge Lord Elesmere.frst, and we expect the fight to cume off next week. You may depend upon receiving full and particuler accounts from VIATOR. New Political Manifesto of the Czar. {From the Paris Univers.) The official journal of the court of St. Petersburg, of the 20th of October, contains a sort of political manifes. to which deserves the most serious attention:— The allies, says that journal, have claimed for the Christian subjects of the Porte double the advantages that Prince Menschikoff demanded; ff, therefore, they had been acting in good faith, they would have en, free foe hedprerothin sn gy more than a solicited that is tosay, equal rights for the subjects of the Sultan. The declaration of the. Czar to England con- cerning Turkey was the noble and -energetic expression of the truth; sor Ottoman domination is an anomaly—e phantom without life. England is convinced of the sound right of the Czar, but she fears his power and in- flexible character; that is the reecon why she sought in France an ally of whom she can. disembarrasa herself more easily. The great-mission of Russia consists in put- ting an end to English materialism. France is only a foaming torrent, but England is a permanent revoltiona- have not keptipaee. The population and enterprise of Enrope'bayve latterly run to manufactures, to trade, and 1» emigtation. Till the last year there was mo-great ria: of priee*to induce an extended cultivation. and then the rise was.attributed to a bad harvest, and supposed to be temporary. Governments which are dn noranv of-all suck circumstancesas wedhave pointed out, | have taken:ne means to redress the disturbed balance, but rather by their regulations and restrictions on cul- tivation, ‘have aggravated the evil, and hence it has cume to pass that seronpent Europe high prices exist with abundant crops, wey are the conseqvences of greataddition:] demand for food by the non-agri tural classes,which the necessary slow progress of agri- culture in lepg settled counties has .a6 yet prevented the agricultural classes from supplying. These observations do not include ‘the-effect on prices, whatever it be, or the increase of 3 considered as currency; -but-enly the effeets of increase in the numbers of the apes elgg 1d commercial classes and the increase in their wealth. A mewslemand has arisen for .agricultural, produce, which in the onder of time necessarily precedes the production. There is a preportionate- general deficiency of food arising froma great-developement of the non-agricultural portion of so- cie Now, without a temporary check, there is every probability of the developement continuing. We con- | ry inundation. ‘It is she, and not France, which is the T the doctrine, therefore, that the high price is tem- | fountain and support of .all revolutionary principles; to be fraught with evil. It tends to check that it is she, which, carried away by her ahop-Lesping ten- | developement-of agriculture which the high price would dencies, tramples under foot the rights of humanity aka of nations. The destiny of Russia is to guarantee Europe ara all the overflowingsof the West. From that side will henceforth come invasions. Whetever may be its origin, the present war has undeniably a religious cha- racter; it has resolved itself into this, Setweemeonserva- tive order and communist revolution. Such is the substance of this. manifesto. The following are the conclusions: There consequently remains to the Emperor but one path of honor and justice. He will adhere to his pledge not to make conquests: but. at the saine time, he will accomplish his task, which consists in re-establishing on the Bosphorus Russian predominance, which is ab-olute- ly necessary to the foundation of real order. It is the sacred duty of Russia to restore on the Bosphorus the be-otherwise sure to effect, and which is .necessary to provide food for the other and rapidiy developing parts of society. That the prices in our market may for-the moment de a shilling or two higher than is | necessary, though the continual rise does not show this to be the case, we do not deny; dut the coincidence of high prices with abundant harvests throughout Ex- rope shows upmistakeably that more food is required. The developement of commerce snd manufectares no government proposes to stop. Each government pro- | poses as @ part of its polivy to increase the commerce and manufactures of itsown sudjects. On the develope- mentor certain non-agricultural classes, all those con- | nected in any way with the fine arts, almost every government lays great stress. To place obstacles in the | way of cultivating the ground, or uot to remove them | | while the developement of all other arts is permitted or | reign of Christianity, and to consolidate it there, In | encouraged, is to run the hazard of bringing on famine | fine, the Emperor has, as the protecting refuge of Eu- | aud revelution. To stop, as the governments of several | Tope, the high mission of assuring the existence of con- | parts of Europe are trying to stop, the ull effects of the | servative Europe. Russia can only at present realize | short supply of-food in raising prices, and so stopping | this ambition by an.obstinate war, which will crush the | in the end ihe extension of cultivation, i@ synonymous ambition of the English and put an end to the domina- | with self-destruction and the destruction of their peo- | tion of the Turks. | ple. In asserting that Russian domination on the Bospho- | Tis ; | rus bas for object the protection.of Europeagainst reyo- | Trtal of Dr. Wm. B. Thompson for the Mar- lutions, we are apprised that by means of this position der of Mise Pharr. .an effort would be made to interfere in all our internal affairs. This, it must be owned, is rather an awkward DEATH OF MR. PEARR, FATHER OF THE MURDERED | GIRL. The Richmond 2égpatch of the 234 inst., contains a re- | genemal very ig: | | projects of.any magnitude cen bq carried through on ed from her, after paying for her and our foreign imports, | “#turday afternoon: being, in fact, the price of the domestic uce of the Deposited for coim ea the United States with which she been sup- For bars. ied. } Thus the mere export of gold is an imaginary evil; and if the weekly statement in the money arti- | ‘The warrants entered at the Treasury Department, cles of the press, in place of exhibiting in con- trast the amounts exported this and last year, | Washington, on the 24th instant, were as follows:— thus making an apparent balance against us, should | For the redemption of stock commence with the estimated amount of gold in the , For the customs........ country in 1848 (about one hundred millions,) and then, | For paying Treasury debi adding the amount which had beea issued from the mint | For covering into the Tre: since, should deduct the amount of American coin and | For covering into the Tr bars exported during the week, the real balance of more | neous sources... than one hundved and thirty millions of dollars gained, | For the War Department... over all extravagance and oyertrading charged upon us | For repaying in the War Departmen: during seven years, making our stock more than twice | For the Interior Department... and a-quarter what it was im 1848, would satisfy the | For repaying in the Interior Department. public mind that @ real condition of By case! existed, The redemption of the public debt of the United States and that the exportation of a few millions were one year Yi 3 5 lows:— than another afforded no cause for anxiety. Thus it | for the week ending the 25th instant was as follows: Included in the above...... 960,000 00 would occasion neither distrust nor panic. | Loans of 1842, $8,200; do. 1843, $400; do. 1846, $13,000; me tacts show that the counsey has pot parted | do, 1847, $29,100; do, 1848, $52,000; Texas indem- with more gold than it could well spare, were a conside- ‘ ehh Gf bri citie total rable proportion of the remainder in the channel where it | BitYs $12,000; debt of corporate cities, $3,600—total would prove most available to our wants. $118,300, nip But the extraordinary fact exists that although we ‘The annexed statement exhibits the average condition have in the country aa increase of more than one hun. dred and thirty millions, and a stock exceeding twice and a-quarter that of seven years since, there is in dur Liana little, if any, more specie then at that pe- riod. Our gold has not been exported. We have two hun- ae and thirty millions of dollars in the country. But where? of the leading departments of the banks of this city for the week preceding Saturday, the 25th of November, 1854;— ' New York Lar ige cS Leans. Specie. Circulat’n, Deposits. Bk. of N. York $3,039,942 $476,088 $246,126 $2,485,140 Marhattan Co..4,013,865 429,968 317,926 Merchants’ Bk. .2,975,714 1,144,925, Some forty millions are locked up in the sub-treasury, 204,651 3,438,880 awaiting a Sanaatiy act of Congress. ” | Mechanics? Bk..3,558,976 "719,200 316,288 8,231,004 Allow fifty millions to ‘be in the bank vaults, and it is | Union. 37,200 275,857 201,517 1,625,2 san excessively targe calculation. Bk. of 69,734 072,078 89,176 3,247,675 We have, then, in the United States, apart from Cali- | Phenix 350,227 158,812 1,611,214 fornia, one hundred and forty millions hoarded up in | City. 125,106 79,102 1,112,131 private hands, or passing as @ medium of circulation. North 940 202,160 815,049 This has been withdrawn from the banks gradually but | Tradesme 230,568 _ 707,767 steadily, until the legitimate basis of currency andecredit | Fulton 139,534 1,052,801 has been too much retluced, creating alarm and panic. Chemical 257,140 1,077,220 Take specieas a safe basis (according to the table of | Merchants 146,123 1,762,563 loans and specie inthe bank returns in these days of | National... 122,447 843,835 distrust) foreight times ity amouc tit, and this t 56,722 812,538 withdrawal of if from ‘t legitimat equivalent 621,94 128,947 = 425,160 to the annih eighty millions | Greenwich...,., 489,726 165,668 — 359,141 of commer Leather Manuf. .1,596,081 195,772 1,199,578 The av \ up is chiefly abstracted’from cir- | Seventh Ward. .1,011,118 174,112 549, culation residing in the country, far from | State........«.+3;643,105 538,303 2,354,528 banks, ners, or by those of «mall meang, either | American Ex 2 328,164 3,368,660 from mo { convenience or trom distrust of all bank | Mech, Bkg. Ass. 203,203 | 674,535 dills or securities, Commerc 2,575 4,073,848 But provably a far larger amount is kept out of the | Bowery... 174,470 793,227, banks ‘and passed from hand to hand in circalation, | Broadway . 196,717 1,028,307 either ‘from thoughtlessness or from the still less excu- aN... 96,222 427,494 sable nnotive of vanity:—"‘I never pay outanything but | Mercantile. 91,697 1,338,310 2? : Pacific .. 109,873 "449,180 Now, to the man who locks it up, it is just as valuable | Republic 92,180 2,241,885 as any other non-dividend, non-interest paying security; | Chatham 104,936 °272,594 to him-who circulates it ax money, it is equivalent to a | People’s, 121,621, 421,085 bamk«bill, while the country is wantonly deprived of a | North America, 77,761 1,001,816 credit basis of seven times the amount. 104,275 654,5 Fopiler indignation visits those who monopolize the 128,936 364,217 necessaries of life, even with a view to profit; but here 66,239 3,463,011 weibave the monstrous anomaly of parties unjustly ap- 158,785 '516,720 prapriating what is essential to public prosperity, while 90,824 464, they forego interest, and indirectly create a depreciation 103,516 250,205 of.all their own property. | Nass 102,034 771,804 As this the true source of the evil? Test it. Lat our | East Ri 87,875 212,384 city bank returns exhibit fifteen or twenty millions of | Market 111,363 720,562 spycie: would we hear of panic or hard times ? St. Niel The remedy, then, ia with ourselves. 74,404 368,616 Let the comma. 109,550 332,698 nity act in concert, and this mischief, 60 gradually and 86,695 945,340 almost imperceptibly created, may be arrested and over- 84,008 104,456 come in 9 moment. Whoever hay a geld eoin in his pos- 80 311 1,497,179 , session has aided in pramoting the present diftionltins, Let i " ei ‘4 eae Tights lis preater than anticipated. V\] i. oe scad ata teiienl SARIN. W) oolajiedtedle of 4 ‘Two Hovses BUILT PHOM ONE TrEw.—The Hon | Condition of the leading departments from the frst uy fore recorded since the weekly reports commenced. During the past week there has been a decrease in the Vine of dixcount of $492,280; in deposits, $1,846,908; either side of ‘the Atlantic for come time. Those which have failed during the present pressure must remain in 2,472,308 | rope, during the continuance of the capitalists of England and the Coutis much ap they can do to provide money tures of the war departments, and we wpon foreign sid in the negotiation of carrying « larger portion of our present The quantity hich have arrived at Cleveland, Ohio, of the past three years, bas been cult wi each bushels. jus 4 Oats, Clover seed, feeam, Ibs. ‘ool, Ibe... ly The above figures demonstrate that in of flour, whiskey, wheat, cora, bacon and average market prices of 1854, the ¢ Cleveland has decreased since 1852 extension of railroads in Ohio has atts of produce from the canals, and we hw receipts from tolls rhis year will show an Citizens’ Bank, val Bank of New Psy Southern Bank, $500 Tnlon Bank (em) Union Bank (mew) .. Commercial Waterworks, $100 paid. St. Charles Hotel, $25 paid.....++ Pontchertrain Railroad, $100 paid. New Orleans 67, $1,000 bonds, New Orleans Railroad bonds. Gas Light Company, $100 i was Con end Western Telegraph, Co., 850 paid Pelican Dry Dock Company, $100 paid. .... Carrollton Railroad Company.... +.» The arrivals of specie during the been :— Park John Parker, from Genoa. Schooner Esther Burr, from Indi beef) pT Mn Lig wany” Steamship Charles Morgan, from Schooner Red Fox, from Tampico, oad | Total .......essesceseees Amount received previously, Total since January 1........++-+ Having noticed from day to day the © change market, we have to amount offering hax been steadily on the that within the past day or two the do of rates has been very decided. Sterlis sed in considerable abundance, and Pints were passed off to-day at the red 10744 a 108%. The highest price fur first 10933; so that the extreme is from ‘The supply of francs has also have receded to 5f, 20 a 5f. 1134. lees New York are heavy at 1% @ 234 per it was even difficult to obtain more than for fancy signatures. Checks are down cent premium, though the banks obtal for sums at the counter. Short sights 3¢ count to 4g per cent premium, The trade and navigation returns of the { | dom of Great Britain to the 10th of October, ) tal declared value of the exports enw | £67,727,108 against 266,067,220 in the period of last year, being an increase of | is, however, a decrease on the month of £7! | compared with 1853. The decrease doesn | ton manufactures, but in linen, silk and | the decline is considerable. The total d _ imports of wheat for the nime months is | ters, or 3,163,634 quarters against 3,772,912 | 1893. Of flour the decrease is 291,110 cwts., | ewts. against 3,509,645 cwts. in 1853. The fi month is still more striking in regard to w! | ports being only 91,247 quarters against | and in flour 90,187 cwts. against 463,546 corresponding period of 1853. These lated stil to maintain the recent advances market. In some of the articles of general there is a slight increase, while in others hisn contribute to their removal: let every capitalist who | Oriental 80,690 258,631 | ling decline; but the difference is uot su eeraplains of dividends passed by, or rents unpaid, every Marine . 5 350, mercbant who sighs over the retrenchment of bank fi. | Atlantic 81,191 199,635 | for any special remarks. In the sens bi allies: etertne th Enichest be'0d4 177'098 | turns continue to show an increase in sew! eens in aes very | Island City . $5087 be ‘but in hardware and cutlery, as well asin h who may have gol y Dock... K 10,983 8 : aiteie send it to a safe bank and xchange. 188,780 10,867 Seg08 7agiy | ‘herein alargedecrense. = riedltural pro- | ‘bills. Let them urge upon ther, {vie ghbors | “Bulls Head...,. 158,774 18,420. 81,891 72,200 | Shieae " to do the Cee * ¢ conscientiously done, and in | — —— pe od Moxpay, Nov, one week a plethora of gold in the bank vaubts as great | Total,.... ..$81,699,705 10,200,983 7,718,158 60,334,199 Virgii vag the present scarcity might cay be created. "| @ Capital $200,000. ; ; niet epee ne Chg: So ee We have not gold enough to constitute a purely me. | CLEARING Howse Traxsactions, 1 qo00 do. $2 200 do... tallic curreney, orto xtand in lieu of saving banks: who- | Exchanges week ending Now, 20, ‘eign aattie 1 208) oni cic las Gt kee rg ever diverts it from its legitimate champel disturbs the | ** ye) prvi wale ee “on eeast | Seo chy Sa SR; mo SO do | «public tranquillity. H r oC 162 a Give to our plan a fair and hearty trial. The oxperi- | Balances week ending Nov. 20 J Fhaozasn | 7hG0 Brie Co Bas,'62 70 Zz me ree Be cheap and harmless one—possibly, if adopted 0. do. do, 27 5,200,788 | 1000 rie 2d M Bs.s3 +s beneficia: we ie Ti “ L000 Erie Inc Bds.. 160¢0 Pan Bas, 2d iss 700 IC RR'Bds.s3 | bolt (Cal.) Times tells of a tree in that ountry whi to the last weekly returns :-— 5000, ote furnished umber enough to bnild two two-story houses, | New Your Crry Bayxs. 10500 83 ‘each tifty feet equare—furnishing all the timber, plauk, | 1653, Loans. Deposits. Cirdulation. Specie. 5000 b10 boards and shingles, necessary for the purpose—and (we | June 21. . $05,520,656 $50,018,171 $9,964,106 $12,174,56] | 11000 do 283 resume) firewood enough to boot, to furnish the two | Ang. 2 93,866,807 57,317,658 9,424,786 11,102,55) | 5000 810 families with a winter's stock. : 23 11;860,235 | 2000NY ORR Ras, 82 Se eee re era sen Ree | a oer Cul FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. 55,073 56,312,478 12)166,020 | 300 Nic Transit - : 4 90,193,887 60,835,362 9,076,076 11,506,124 | 17 MONEY MARKET - 90,068,738 59,071,252 8,605,235 11,456,109 | Mowpliy: Nov) 27208 Pe 2 90,549,577 61,208,468 8,908,657 11,634,654 | MomDAr, "Nov! S16 P.M. 92,638,085 61,826,669 8,954,464 11,742,384 (The stock market opened heavy this worning. The hh 4; 947568421 81,975,675 9'200'830 10;560,400 eflact of the foreign news received by the Baltic has | March 18. 95:418,020 61,008,605 9,255,781 10,518,450 deen full at unfavorable as anticipated. The disposition | APH 1-.. S2820,024 59,478,149 9,395,826 10,264.000 to-sell this morning was strong, but the absence of buy- | 50,719,381 9,377,687 10,951,153 ers prevented transactions to any extent. With one or 64,203,671 9,507,795 12,282, twovexeeptions the sales were at adebline. Brie second el a le mortgage bonds fail off 34 per cont; New York Central 69,598,724 9,000,726 9,628,375 eae: A soe a bonds, %; Nicaragna Transit, 4; ; Cumberland Coal, 1; 7 9,105,757 12,267,318 | S000 N'Y On Rk Bde 821g t : i ; ii 768,289 15.720, ; 9 Erie Railroad, 1; Harlem, ‘ew York Central Railroad, ee ede La dae'eey | 4000 Pan Bae,2d ine. 77 %; Mudaon River Railroad, 34; Reading Railroad, 7. | AvS $3: gursanost 8,017,179 13,622,023 | SOY abs Penn & Leh Z 136 Illinois Central bonds advanced 1f per cent; Missour! 6's, | Aug. 19., 92,880,103 8,855,523 14,253,972 ie ~~ aa 1. Exie Income bonde cold at 851 per cent; Erie bonds, Pee ate 14,205,072 | 200 Cunt Co 1862, at 70a 7144 percent. The amount of business in 81968°707 141446,317 | 190 Nic 1 vans Co. | State stocks and railoead bonds was quite limited to-day. 8,820,600 14daaas9 | 9 New York Centra}, Exie and Reading were the principal Peas TORR OE | 1000 stecutto é railroad stocks operate in; but the aggregate of the 70'285/610 81018402 10'620'517 | 100 Reading ,B-.800 65 three today was hardly equal to an ordinary day's 69,141,597 , 8,634,188 11,130,377 Ww TRADE REPOR operations in any one of them. The European advices are 65, at 86 ' 407,305 1013201103 08h uaa aed calculated to arrest every species of speculation on this 4.21 89,360,101 62/229,011 8/238;126 10,004/686 | AsmEs.—Sales hay © been made of small lo side of the Atlantic, and to prevent any suecessful nego- | Nov. 11! $2,717,052 61,662,387 8,177,444 10,472,538 | $6 42 and 150 bbls, ote a $6 75, and 150 tiation abroad for new projects. We must make the | Nov. 18.. 62,191,904 62,181,007 7,877,604 10,805,532 | dian pearls and pots o * stv! oo Proj Noy. 25.. $1,699,705 60,384,199 7,718,158 10,200,983 | Bkxapsturra,—Flour ¥44 actively inqui most of our internal resourees; and their developement | “yt 00" ot iN " vt thé inated ith th sales of 9,400 bbls. ordin to choice State, | will do more towards removing our present embarrass- ‘appears, upon comparing the last returns with those | g6'91/. mixed to faucy \ Western, 88 75 @ - for the woek previous, that there has been a decrease in | other kinds at proportionat, "sates; with 2,0 ments thanall the temporary foreign aid woe could at ’ * , 87, in bond: any time command. It is etty certain that no bigot Segartuntat, and lower points have tonched pe pe pepe ye (ibe Sobiliern, at y Z eran - new | in ali the departments, except. specie, than we have be- | #24 4,200 bbls, mixed to fancy 4 Wheat was in better demand, t, @ *ales bushels prime Canadian white, fr. % #t $2 20 in bond, $2 0734; 1,200 Gem “Se red, , 00 do, Southern white, $1 85 a $2 06; 5 manner of justifying the Menschikoif enterprise. The Grain Trade of Ei {From the London News, Nov. 14.) The price of wheat, which again zose Jast murket day, | eontinues to excite great interest and. much controversial | discussion. No arguments can be required to stiow that the nation is better off when its own wheat fields return for the labor of its own husbandmen, about equal one yer with another,17,000,000 quarters than when the: zn only12,000,000. For the same expanse it bas 5,000,000 quarters more. But if its annual eonsumption be | 20,000,000, and when it grows only 12,000,000, it can buy rt of the evidence, xo far ag taken up to Wednesday | last, in the case of Dr. William B. Thompson, charged | with the murder of Miss Agnes Pharr, of Alleghany county, Va., in March last. A large number of wit- © side.of the Commonwealth lave? been ex. ed, and their testimony uniformly bears strongly inst the innorence of the accused. The evidence uxed had, for some time previous to | the death of Miss Pharr, been under an engagement of | marriage with her—that he did not intend to fulfil his | engagement—that he was repeatedly guiity of falsehood ! rning the engagement and other matters—that he an acquaintance on the day she was to be buried a dormant state, without the possibility of even a re- mote revival, and those which have had backbone enough to sustain themselves under existing adverse cir- | ; 3,000 Western whi We have waited two days in silefice, trusting that an explanation would come from Mr. Russell, exculpating ‘ himeelf from the charge of unfaithfulness as a public servant. From the fact that he remains silest, and from infor- amation gained from a source which camnot be questioned, we are compelled to beliew® that the obarge against our Jate Collector istrue. The Toledo Republican is no doubt afficially informed when it-tays as folloms:— C, L. Russell, former Collector of Cleveland, indicted for embezzlement at the April term of the United States District Court, 1854, and for depositing in banks at the term, 1854, was arrested on the last indictment in circulation, $159,446, and in specie, $604,549. Since the Sth of August last, # period of Jess than foue months, cumstances may gralually gain strengti aud ultimately | (pe Nas beon a reduetion in the discounts of the bane Vecome firmly established. For wore than three yoars | jo (ite ial) of EI Aaniths Im deposit, of | re ing the whole country has been engaged in devising new | goon iwiauim: of B1,E08,400, sips ge on ways for speculation. Ali sorts of companies wore | '* Mis many years since we have experienced such a contraction in such a short time, and {t is many years formed, for all sorts of purposes. Tt was the casiest e i since the movement of the leading departments has been hi i 1g depa UBB io ne None te est ope fuining oF mdénalactatings |’ ited as vi AS moment All-tkievis working company, with a capital of one or two million of dollars, cut the cute of the disease. ; and $i so, also made o, 13,1 45 a $1 48, chiefly at the latter '™®! hels corn, chiefly Western mixed, .¢ Adiveted, per bushel. ley and oats were © Corrre.—The market was quiet. About 20. were sold at 9c. a 10K, and 50 do. rac. Cortox.—The sales for the day footed up al bales, 900 of which were Mobile cottons, sola for export. The market closed at about since the receipt of the steamer’s news. Firr, Crackers.—About 1,000 boxes were ‘October : 3,600,000 hore cing | i be was going tw see ‘that gal planted’—that | and the stock was rapidly absorbed by the shrewdert / It is the only infallible | Frscum.—There was more for Nov. 14th, and required by D. 0. Morton, United States | Salto the total demand, it will ke on the cies Vote | he lid "proetized strychnine ‘a, abort time before her men im the market. The creation of stork vom. | TemedY, and although ite application te severe it can- | at improved rates. About 60,000 a £0,000 District Attorney, to give bail in the sum of $100,000— | Cir than when it grows 17,000,000, and cannot get, or | veath—that he had furnished her with a dozen v : | Bot be dispensed with. At this rate we must soon get | Merecngaged, at Sd. a 6d, im bull and failing to procure whicts he paid over to the District At: | caw oniy get with great dificalty and ata igh price the | Hills at the tine of her lasv sieknere, amongst wiicit | PABICR appeared to be the mania for the time, | Ol ye disnensel With, AL this rate we must ston Leib o henien ee ee + termey $34,175 81, ai ited in his hands bonds aml } 5 q99.0¢0 quarters more that are indispensable to'iecd | W&® & large and suspicious one, which he directed | and very few escaped the infection, After awhi : BAe LOU looking for. | abont 4,000 a 5,000 bales cotton, com mortgages, and otiier real estate securities, to theamount | the whgle people, This ta something ike arepresenta- | she should take last—that he repentedly exhibited a re- | tockholders began to look about for the sub. | , 1¢0W prices ruling for certain classos of State stocks ia 8,000 bbls, flour, part at ‘Le. od.; | lvetance t it ii | fada t 7 wheat, ie for some al 5 sell “has ever been political eed personal friend, but | sien we require are dificult to get, and are cortainty aye. | b¢ found in her stomack, ft would not fix the charge of | edin something, and parties interested began to be curi- pected crc ee luced rates | don, 150 tierces beef were taken at 4s, To Gl py honre br phage | his og ogg ry Le rebutniees to the Ghee Cent: ween | diminintering ton ies, as other doctors had been to | ous to know what and where that something was. Many | a wis rey suspension of severs} banks in Indians Loe beef were engaged at 30. 4. To An ression repro! er—that he was undoubtedly 1 ‘ | State XeR HUgAT Were private ,peculation, discharge « duty we owe the rice, boy pode Bn lon dan _ Bir a nomad asteced her—and hab doe vircttentazeos eadiubiete oh Satan hammebsanity ss tepovery yet, “Sed probally | bent yes the ssiasit b orton ai fas aie bof ms oan 000 dou, ae. What ithe exact 1 of the-defalostt js the deficiancy,ot the foreign supply—the dificulty of | of her death leave not s doubt that it was produced from {| never will. The substance has mot proved much better | Walsh ia te, het th fies at last week’s quotations. see nat the eruct amount of thedofsleation i, we are | Froeuring front the quantity of wheat or four | the effects of strychnine, The testimony introduced in | than the shadow. Fortunately, the outside public were 4 marketat ence, the depreciation should | 360. 0 d0e. measurement. everybody admits we must import, in ‘Of the excel. | behalf of the pris #0 far as it bas been taken, con- only be to e moderate extent. The annexed statement oner, lent harvest, te suppl, tains nothing materially affecting the force of the not attracted much by the bubbles of theday. They ge~ money afd security natintact ever may actin sepeites thoted of Uae eee ae en thst him. The iateligent dent of | nerally collapsed in the hands of those who inflated saactiataadiaates f Seen eer mag Ey oy gh ita pos at, end to hem we al atetin: | Soe etn Ses ce ch ease | ‘hem tnt the lca ln wad eaned oth agin. | Oo ous Or te way ~ = is It ie sald thet Mr. R. hak met with heavy losses in| Oo Suir Henine neste rin, Be published woekly, | 217. Tit will be produced more from the persoeat castor; | Wons of the projectors. With the collapse disappeated in pine lands and lumber upon Saginaw | fom the ath of October to the 1lih, inclusive, 16642 | the jury than from any want of convincing evidence. | Many of the millionaires, who figured up their wealth in pad se ae ore Fmyee arate brought about Quenti 4 » The father of Miss P.. Rev, 1). C. Pharr, died on Monday | ecrip at several hundred per cent advance on its par va- that Me. Buse | svete price deat told Ge the Wheat four grain’ the morning last, while the trial was lng. His dea come ell took the money with the intention of ‘ wangotonbi produced by his afliction of ‘mind coe yA Sup peek ie, Beinaipel business the but with an expectation of tempera. } 321 "Tyg" Moy iso” geri: imperial, | The aistressing and disgraceful proceedings dlacloned iy | mong this class of operators has been the clearing amgy rily it, and then to retarn it. boy that fact Corresponding siz weeks in 1853: . this trial. of the rubbish, and preparing for a new start. It fs our ma ip transection of much of its inality, it 61s. 2a, 549, oid 534,289 7,09 A correspondent of the same paper says:—The Alle- impression that there will be a lon; in their no exause for the taking, and we do not offer ft figures teach na several things. In apiteof | &lany Superior Court, at Covi Va., is engaged ativan mh aa mich. We ace glad to know ‘that the reasury will | such declamation 10 the conromn , upon the trial of Dr. William B. Thompson, for the mur. | ments, and it will only be after the past losses have been they show that, not- mot lore anything by the defalcation. withstanding the deficient foreign su ' —- han derived a bene der of Miss A; Pharr, »; The evidence tone vei pea ly, the consumer ig her strychnine, | long buried in oblivion that they will be able to put the fit fron our abundant harvest equi- conclusive and direct. The | game ball in motion again. Agnest or AN Expness Mrssunaus.—We learn ‘ . ‘as a witness on the stand, Her from f private ‘source that Albert Merrick, a aensenger | six weeks of 16g 410.974 ate. of “Ghent asd Hour les | and his testimony wan rend. | _ After the adjournment of the board the following TOU... esrereereercececeecses sees eyes eee OT, 021, 180 ‘of the Express Company at Chicago, and who is known | have been i thaw in (ho corresponding six weeks | 8 attrib to grief and shame nt the se- | sales of bonds and stocks were made at auction by A. H. The Indiana 214 were taken at 50 to 55, the fives at Weanscney many of our citizens, wae arrested at that place on | of 1853; and jh the su; of home in has been ‘ion murder of hie daughter. Mr. Pharr died | Nicolay:— par; Pennsylvania fives taken at 84 to 86, and all the six er Ib.: and. 60d bola, Upon a grave c! It seems that a ra, more than in 1453, the balance leaves an | !aet night at seven minutes past two o’eloek. The bells $1000 Kenosha City, Wi 5 " a 103ge. per bape rj package, ntaining $3, actual deficiency of 140,464 qrs., or more than thirteen | W¢re tolled, and the people were waked frous their a 1000 do. of A per cent stocks at par. Indiana fives and Virginia sixes a Fa wed ceping, is missing. percent. The and the home supplies together in | t hear the sad, yet expected news. This is the thi 1 ‘ form the bulk of the deposits. The small lots forced | Pee — intoa trunk, in company with a numberof |, | the last six weeks"have been 043,459. rs., against 1,083, - act of this terrible tragedy; whether the fourth will be a the market have been soll at sacrifices, The ae are Dut,camnot secount for its disappearance. The trunk } 923 qre. in the six weekaof 1 nd the markets have | # farce and the fifth mever acted, we cannot foretell. pon great g a be. Faetate rence Sor as hae | mecateens actecpenac naires, fat ‘ sled | Sexe, ver ar amen cote eee renee ir way * + At arate that re-| BomeTmmxe or a Smast-cr—Six wer! w. upon the plea of notice to Eu- spe pcg Fgh Toph TE oA tues a aaaltion to the supply Sf wheat of 200,000 | were dvabied on the tialena lalla, on the 11th late ropean capitalists of the sale of such securities, endea | “$yioin Duct crane, ‘The pac! until the trunk had | 22,000 qrs., no that the Teal bogy g the oar is rsd he cxpocne tralet-eou Wyre eaten ty nese’ vored to gain time, with the hope that financial affairs | were made at 7e., and 10 its may be able to clear bim- bp Ad ry PE 1,000 gre., ss eee | fer and gravel train at Flgin, aud one by fi 1, at or near on this side will improve and better prices rule in our fbi yt thas brought against per he a3 pe hanads je A po ape ae small the depot in Chicago. The aggregate damage must hare 1 CNM Markets. There invery little probability of a mar- | \Wiisnay.—Some 270 Bbls. Ohio and pT hb clamor irate in tk hr Me Doing found for many of our publig stovks in Eu: | chacere at 44, 0 Abe, por fallow