Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 NEW YORK HERALD. eee JAMES GORDON BENNETT, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. implacable D'cgineon faction, it is Mr. Wise. Tye ex-President at Kinderhook, for certn Congressional services heretofore ren- dered by Mr. Wise, is under everlasting obligations to him, and can deny him nothing. The case is now urgent, and Mr. Wise should be sent for without further loss of time: Perhaps his estimates of the astonishing rise in the price of niggers with the election of Mr. Buchanan may exert a wholesome influence among our rebellious soft shells, who are still ready, however, for any speculation whereby to turn an honest penny. Something must be done for the New York democracy or their case will be past praying for before the expiration of the dog days. Next we turn te Missouri, and fiad a similar division there in the democratic camp. Col. Benton, the nti-administration anti-secession democratic candidate out there fer Governor, has opened the campaign with the' most caustic, pun- gent and merciless philippie:sgainst Mr. Pierce, his Cabinet, his administration, his foreign and domestic policy, the Cine?nati Convention and the Cincinnati plaiform—the most terrible dis- section that the whole conzern, from Washington to Cincinnati, has ever yet experienced. Benton goes for Buchanen, but4eaves him not a plank to stand upon, mer a roye to hold by. The danger is that these demord) izations among the demo- ‘eracy in New York amd Missouri, (to say nothing of the poorty disguised symptoms of this contest and umtiny in thecamp elsewhere,) may, ualess to be concocting 4 lot of affidavita at Washing- ‘on, which W1 crush him as effectually as “the Coffin Hay,dbills” settled the business for General Tackee'a, Considering all t'sese things, and the popular revolutionary mo-cements of the last three years, which exhibit the democratic party in the start- ling minority of nearly half a million votes, We cannot sb,at our eyes to the fact that acom- prehensive yeyolution bas been, continues, and will conti aue at work, until its work is complet- cd. We, want this revolution; we mast have this revolu‘ion; we shall have this revolution carried out— net only to the establishment of a new set of nen in power at Washington, but extended to the reformation of all those villanous party cor- rv ptions—stealings, thimble-rigging, — bullying, © wizdling and murdering—which have driven the people of San Francisco to the last resort of arms aad open war. Kansas and the slavery issue, we repeat, form but a part of this Presidential agitation, The elementary principles of an honest administration of public affairs; ageneral spirit of revolt against the unblushing rascalities of parties and party hucksters and managers, as they now exist; a general loathing of the worn out old party hacks of the day, aud a general de- sire for comething new, clean, freéh, and uncon- taminated by the tricks of party enbal and thieving spoilsmen, are all visible in this spon- taneous popular movement for Fremon, At such a time there is no room for any of, those whimpering old grannies, with their humbugging DEYIOR W. W. CORNER OF NASSAU AND FULTON STS. seneeesesN@e ISR AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING, HBOS GARDE. Broad way—VYoune HENGLER ON THB Teer Dansant—E.r King. BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery—Macasta—Marnigp Rage BURTON'S THEATRE, Chambers street—Lonpon Assvr- BRO. Y_VARIETI Broadway—Buscg Bran WOOD'S MINSTRELS, 444 Broadway—Eretorian Ming wamsr~Ye-Loarse-Toryn. KXLLER’S EMPIRE FALL, 506 Broadwsy—Parnione amp Moma ngyus T31e20x—Macro—Mumo. G@HINESE FALL, 539 Roe —Greantic MOVING ILLUS- weariok oF face otelax Path DUSSELDORF GALLERY, Paurrives ayv Statusky— New York, Monday, June 30, 1856. Pred: Mails for Earope. NEW YORK HERALI—EPITION FOR EUROPE. ‘The Cunard steamship America, Captain Wickman, will ‘eave Boston on Wednesday, at neon, for Liverpool. Tee Eutepean mails will close in this o&y at halfpast Gero o'clock to-morrow afternora. ‘The Henacy (pristed in Beylisb and French) will be Pablisbed at ten o'clock im “he moru&g. Single copies, ‘@ wrappers, sixpence. Subscriptions and advertisements for any edition of the / ‘Mew Yorx Hier will be received i tho follewing places © a7 =Broadway—Vatvaae rvesom oF Huss, kc. ‘@ Surope:— promptly arrested, extend to other States, and | cry of “Save the Union.” Let them clear the Loemon— Ams. & Burppean BXDree oT eee ta Boures, | Utterly break up ‘the calculations of Mr. Forney, | track, and save themselves, arene aw mesbie, aaa olewoc wi eat of afmooth and decisive victory in November. Our Railroad Iuterest—The Decision in the New Haven Case. We publish elsewhere the recent judgment of the Court of Appeals at Albany, on the great New Haven Railroad case. Into the question of law involved in the case it is not our province to enter; there are arguments ov both sides, and as many and as sound legal minds are ranged on the side of the public as on that of the company. It is to the broad moral bearings of the judgment on our railroad interests at large and on the com- mercial faith of the country that we desire briefly to draw attention. The facts of the case lieiaa nutshell. Schuyler, the regularly appointed President and Transfer Agent of the New York end New Haven Railroad Company, fraudulently and for his own purposes creates a quantity of stock for which the com- pany has reccived no value, sells it to the public, and appropriates the proceeds. The question is, who shal! bear the loss—the public, who have innocently bought the stock, seeing Schuyler’s name upon it, or the company, alike innocent, yet involved in the responsibility of the creation of the stock by the act of their regular and well known attorney? And that question, on lead moral and equity grounds, appears to he susceptible of a very easy and honest selution. It is clear that, a fraud having been committed, somebody must suffer; common justice would in- dicate that, as between two parties on one of whom the suffering must fall, favor should be shown to the one who had least to do with the fraud. The public should hardly be punished Among the outside factions of the opposition there is likewise a good deal of fuss and flum- mery, very much like that of a fussy old hen over one chicken, Thus the Fillmore Know Nothings are fussing and floundering about here and there, with their “American candidates” und * American principles,” when they ought to remember that their dark lantern, on motion of Mr. Botte, was put out a month ago. Thus Com- modore Stockton, nominated by a eonvention for the whole of which there would be plenty of room in an omnibus, is fussing and cackling, over in Jersey, as if there were a house on fire. He calls out substantially to Mr. Fillmore—* The Union is in danger. Do you think you can save it? If you can, I will step aside—if not, I must keep the field—for the Union must be saved.” Mr. Fillmore substantially responds—* American principles can alone save the Union—I am the regular Amevican candidate. I stand fast, he- cause the Union is in danger, and it must be saved.” In one of the nullification speeches of the late Mr. McDuffie, of South Carolina, he said—: When I bear a Northern man cry, ‘the Union—the Union—the glorious Union,’ methinks | hear the bugle blast of the robber band; but when I hear a Southern man ery— the Unioa—the Union— oh! the glorious Union,’ methinks I snuff trea- son in the tainted gale.’ McDuffe was a nulli- fier ; but still there is a greatdeal of humbug in this politieian’s ery of “ the Union—ihe Union— there is danger to the Unien.” All the disap- pointed old party hacks—Pierce, Douglas, Fill- more, Stockton, and all the rest, including even Benton amoug die number—tvould have us believe that the Union is in peril, ana that the election of Fremont, from the sectional platform which he occupies, will result in an explosion as disastrous to all concerned as the bursting ef an old burnt out steamboat boiler in the middle of the Atlantic Occan. All gammon—moonshine —hambug. We have had one President especi- ally elected to save the Union, and thai was Franklin Pierce. The American people a: apt to be taker in and done for the se with the same trick. The Union-saving trick has been pretty wellcased up by Mr. Pierce. He reems to ty taken particular pains aad plea- sure io show us all the mortifying extent of the deception, Yo ask the éiection of Mr. Buchanan, on the same plat‘orm-and the same policy, is like adding insult $0 injury, and rubbing it in, Still, we ane met with he plea that this repab- liean party is purely seetional—that they dave not run an eluctoral ticket.in. any Southera Siete. Why net? They donot, propose to touch the stitution of skwery in any “State, nor in the Dis- ct of Columbia, nor the ive slave daw. What constitutional impediment is there, ther, to a Fremont cloctoral et in every Southera State in the Union. There is this diiliculty—the vh vepuldican portly declare thal Kansas admitied into.the Union as a free State, very <diull be excluded from ail the other Tevrito: of the Union. To this extent thia party js a sectional party, but not more so than ihe democratic party, whose policy is the extension of slavery. q Tout there are other causee than slavery, and other sentimenis, broader aud deeper than the Koft- nm, now at work among the Northern they would be amony the Southern n behalf of Fremont. were this war of extermination between the abelidion squatters and. the berder muffens out of the way. Our ok} fogy politicians ave behind the movements, rencies and impulses of the age. New men, ney measures, new reforms and retrenchmegts— in «. word, a Rew and sweeping reformationef all the. existing political ané-party abwes of the day —aia lemanded, and the pegple are in motion to effect i. Mr. Fillmore, jnst returned from the ecloes.of the “ Mixerere” in the chareh of $4. Peter gt Rome, and from the smoke ef Mount Veruvian is not expected as yet to see through this thing. But he is already getting a glimpse of his situation, and will « ychend i¢ pretty thorongtity after a week’s rest and study of the newspapers +t Buffalo. Jt was so manifest here among ts, pearly twelve months ago, that a new, fresh man xyes the article for 1357, that we wot- ted out George Law upon the track; but “ Live Oak George,” lacking the tack bone for the crisis, broke down at Philadelphia; and so they lrive taken n.off, rubbed him down, and trot- tert him in again for a more thorovgh training for 1860, ‘Bie new man, hawever, for the crisie, appears to heve beon hit upon by a ort of popular spon- tanegts combustion with the nomination of Fro- The contents of the Furorean edition of the Heaanp ‘wit embrace the news recetved by ma@ and telegrayh at ‘the office during the previous week, and to the Lour of publication ‘The News. ‘The steamship Noéth Ameriés, which lett Liver- ‘pool on the 15th instant, is now fully duees Quebec. Bhe brings four days later news. By our telegraph despatch from Waskington we Dearn that the bill for the afmission of “Kansas into ‘he Union with the Topeka, or free State constitu. ‘tion, will in all probability pass the House to-day by a smal! majority. Itwill ofcourse be defeated in the Senzte. It appears, however, that the demo- arrtic Senators have egreed to support a bill, which. i shortly to be introduced by Mr. Douglas, that wili provide ‘for the admission of the Terri:ory, while at fe sarie time the principles of the Kansas Nebraska ‘act will be fully adhered to. One of the Washington papers having stated that the Hon. Lewis D. Campbell, of Ohio, had said bad things of Mr. Brooks, of Bouth Carolina, in relation to his caning Senator Sumner, Mr. Campbell has writien a letter to the SouthSCarolina gentleman, al- Jegitig that the statement’ is untrue; to-witich Mr. ‘Brooks replies that the'letter is particularly gratify- Ang to his feelings, on account of the long standing ‘nutuiil friendship which has subsisted between him- self and Mr. Campbell. Yesterday was the hottest day of. the season so ‘far—the mercury at one time in the afternoon run- airg as high as ninety-cight degrees in a cool place ‘wm the Hexaxp office. The intense heat was aggra- vated by a sultry breeze from the south, which pre- wailed all day. We heard ot but'few cases of coup de soiwl; a yerult due no doubt to the fact that it was Sunday, and those persons who did not leave the city remained within doors. It was clear last night at twelve o'clodk, witha premise of a con- tinnaunce of the heated term. At Boston yesterday the thermometer stood at one hundred in the shade. At Portland and other points at the eastward, se vere thunder showers prevailed. The Board of Police Commissioners met on Sa tarday. The only business transacted was hearing applicants for appointments to @l vacancies in the police force. There are but nineseen vacancies, but for cach of them there are from twenty-five to fifty applicants. Our correspondent at Barbadeos, writing on the 32th inet., seys:—“The weather bas contiaued very fine and favorable for sugar mmakking, the season for whieh has nearly drawn toa clese. The products of the island will exceed an average yield. Flour, bread, beef, pork, fish, lard and corn are scarce and high, owing tothe uon-arrival of Amcrican vessels; but I fear when they do come <he market will get ghutted. ‘The threatened war with Mexico, which is now inevitable, will, it is thought here, destroy the republic of Mexice, which will Become a kingdom 4m less than two years, as a vicevoyalty of Spain.” The total value of foreign .coods imported at the port of Borton. dusing the week ending June 27 amounted to $1,032 560. ‘The cot‘on market exhibited great firmness on Baturday on the past of holders, but sales were con- hued to a few handved bales at fell prices. Flour ‘was Grin, ani .desicable qualities of medium and good brands of Ohio and other good Western crades wanted for expor> were sold at an advance, in some Jinea, of 10 cgnts per barrei, while other descrip- tions were without change of moment. Prime wheat was fiz, and Canadiaa choice white brought $1 92 and Sauté orn prime 0. $1 50. EFece sales of the Dower, qualities, including cluband spring Western ‘wera made without change of imperiance in prices. Corn, was botter for distilling aud sound mixed lots, while Sowhern yellow and white, of prime quality, wee scarce and held at full prices. Rye gold at &c. and Ste. for Westernead Northern. Pork was duli and lower; mess opened a+ $20 25 and closed dull a $20. Lazd was firm, with sales in bbls. at 120. Segars were drm, and abort 800 a 900 bhds. were sold.at fall prices. Freighta were firmer to British ports, and to Liverpool wheat was taken, am balk and pags, at Sid. a @1., and four #: 2s. 6d.2 2a. 74d. Yo Loneon wheat svas taken, ir bags, at 94d., and glour at 23. 104d. ta Je. asked. To Havre, , 1éc. was aaked for syheat and 4c. for flour. Whatever may | e been the private understanding between ‘huyler and his employers, befor he rious stock could. by any exebeise of diliges forethought or care, have ascertained that Scbuyler tas making that stock unlawfully, and that the cempany would repudiate it. Blinded, hoodwinked, helpless—and that by the act of the company—they (the public) committed no single act from which any such went of precautien or prudence cowd be inferred as would estify throwing the burthen of the loss on them. While, on theothcy hand, the company, by the aypoint- ment of Schuyler, by cummlating powers in his hands, by relieving him of that superintendence to which the executive officer of every large corporation should be axbjected, did commé reite- rated.acts of impradence and negligence, am did, in an<quitable point cf view, earn mapy and signal claims to the cujsyment of the loss. We are not discussiag this matier as baw We ave looking at it asmen, as men of Wurincss, to whem the very nanre of lawyers and larysnits is hatefal. And we will not therefore. overlook the plaasible plea of the oviginal stockholders of the New Haven Company—that it. is hard that they—aany of them widows and orphans—shouid be mare to pay the lesser ineurred by capitelists and steckjobbers ia culating, on usurious terms, with Robert Schuyler, Ta the first plove, the distinction drawn Leveen ihe two clas stockhol@ers—their classHication into honest phans omsthe one side, aut dishonest speenlat ors on the other—is not justified by the facts. There may have‘ seen—indeed,-a4 the contrary has mot been shows. ii iv te prosuine the: : many orplens among the new stockholders as among the ad, as many syeulators amung the old as among the new. But if would never da tw admit arguments of this d. Orphans and willows are provided by law. with competent. per- sons to guard dheir interest, ibe law fe indevd ly strieé on this poiat. Guardwns are held to a very racict responsibiity, not omly for their acts but der their omisions; and (f the wninarsand widews who woul .be injured, were the spurious stocks to be forced.on the acceptance of the coupany, cai show thaé the depreciation of the value of their nroperty is clearly ane to the want.af vigilance or care in those sho were. set over their interest, we apprehend . latter rn > mave to answer for it. Jn the eguity all thew stockhelders must rank alike, But the most important and te ow view the clearest light in which thés transaction can de re- garded is in its bearing ow the railroad interests of this country. If it is established tivat the kona Jide purchaser of a vogular genuine looking valJ- road security, for valuable consideration, ean be made to love the money he }ins invested by a subsaquent disclaimer of the genuineness of the security by the compuiy on grounds which the jeuchaser could not possibly suspect at the dam: he teught, it needs Jittle experience and litt} luresight to foresee a steady decline of our vail- of Ka ex] Whe Camgeign—Symptoms of a Great Popn. lar \Revolation. The trialeend trikulations of the old party hacks all aver the country—<he family jars ble among the wrangling éemocracy—the last fe kicks of Know Nothingism—the ridienions » tensions of woulé-be Presidents sel party leed- ers, ¢nd the tremendous popular furore with which ‘he name .of Frement is everywhere re ceived, are acts ameng the “signs of the times’ forotehiing an impenfiing revolution is-our politi- cal affaes, radical, overwhelming and complete. Here ia New York te old feud between the hards amd softs, which it was sepposd hed been .patched wp at Cineinnati strong cnough at least to hold like,an old pair of breeches till after the election, hae heen ripped open again at Albeny. ‘The hards wi) ‘o be aistere, and the softs stick to their dtviae vight to rele. Meantime, dis gusted with the Ciseinnati “ipecac platform,” for the negligence of the railway company in ap- J pointing an improper agent. hy NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1856, which have been purchased with the ntmost care and precaution, and at the regular market price— repudiated on the ground that at the time they bought the President of the company, though highly esteemed and trusted with omnipotent authority by his constituents, ’was in reality a rogue? The question is the more vital, as, after all, our raiload interests are the key to all others in this country. The United States own nearly twice as many miles of railway as all the rest of the world put together, and no one who has travelled in the West, end seen the swelling progess of that mag- nificent region, can doubt but the next ten years will in all probability eee the 24,000 miles now in operation nearly doubled. But this cannot be done unless cur railroad credit can be sustained. Such disasters as the Schuyler fraud are perhaps nevitable. No country is free from rogues. But it rests with us—it rests now with the Su- preme Court at Washington, to decide whether bodies of citizens shall practically endorse Schuy- ler by throwing off the penalty of his acts upon the public—whether, in a wagfi, foreigners shall be entitled to consider our railroad companies properly typified by Schuyler. On the decision of that question much of our future prosperity depends. Within the last few weeks the charac- ter of our railroad securities has received a rude hock frem a barefaced act of repudiation by a railroad company in the West: let us hope that the final judgment in the New Haven case will prove that this sort of thing is to be the exception, not the rule. TuurLow WED aND THE Know Norstne Rump i Trovste—We understand that the rump of the late Know Nothing party, in its pre- sent afflictions has been taken in hand by that good Samaritan among political quack doctors, Doctor Thurlow Weed. He has appointed a committee upon the subject, and they meet sometimes in a private room at the Astor House, and sometimes in the commodious grog shop which fills the court yard of that vast establishment. The par- ticular trouble is, how isthe Northern Kuow Nothing ticket of Fremont and Johnston of Pa., to be managed? When George Law paid the bills of these Know Nothing delegates, and cleared them out, there were some chaps among them rather reluctant to leave this nice New York clover, among which they hed been feeding free gratis for nothing. And so a few of them have been working up various devices and excuses for hanging on here, and have fairly succeeded in making a confidence man of Thurlow Weed. It is also said that Mr. Seward, Mr. Speaker Banks, and other great men, are implicated in this busi- ness of consulting and compounding with these Know Nothing Peter Funks and their fag ends of the late great American party. All these things are very amusing; but there is something in them, Seward, Banks, Weed and others, it is feared, are already becoming jealous of the astounding popularity of Fremont, and would have no objection to cripple him if it could be done without exciding suspicion. We suspect ihat there is a plot of this kind in these Astor Honse meetings. Tn due time we shall probably publish a fal account of all the slippery tricks, hackslidings, conspiracies, break downs, whisper- in nd what not, of these Astor House meet- ngs of Thurlow Weed and his busybodies, One or the most lu@icrous and contemptible things in connection with these mysterious cabals is the part which a set of reckless politicians and seedy live-by-chanee fellows are attempting to play with the Newy York Herarp, We uimlerstand that oue of these fellows has the perfect control of our editorial columns; another can “make it all vight wih the Heranp” at any time; another has ~ fixed iowith the Heraup,” or ~ will fix it,” provided 9 and so. Now, we have te say that all there financiers ere Jeremy Diddlers, Let it be tvken for granted by every party ceucus, club or committee, and by everybody else, that when a smooth and plausible customer approaches them to sell the influence or columns: ef this journal, These customers know enough he is an mpostor. io keep away from this office, many.@ the of Jackwou Vau Buren Bourbons | mount. As Joln Van Buren would say. ia his | reed interest. What sensible man, think you, have nai only thvown it up, bat have gene over q geaphic style of delivery he runs like the | hov a few thousand dollars to invest, would with all their worWly goods and bapes of salva- | cholera’ To the old stagers this is a mystery. { put it in railroad stuck when he m tion to Fremont. Others wi! follow—fusuhordi- | They caynot comprehend it. The old Martinets | sfier le hes purchased, that the serip he holds, nation ages in the soft division of the dersera- | of Rurope wenld have it that the ittle Corpoe | thouyh segulay in every point, certified by the tic caxyp, avé all the efforts in thie metropolix of 28 agoor Captain, oer proper officers, and bought ve Woord and Fernanfo Wood, of the bards, and Jolin Coch- waaln violation of all fairly, may be repudiated hy eompany, rane, of the softs, to restore the two fretions to } he continued to beat them as they were | And if thie argument will Wold good hey their anciesst condition of brotherly Jove at { never tea to with Fremont He 2 } much more it heve “Pewter Mug,” will probably be “love's le hor | mingh en cnigma to all our old party Murtinets It js estimoted that ow ihoada haye com Jost’ It is already high time to gall out Captain | and beckenom cosyniitees, Fillmore is iv | aliogether about seven handved ond filly a lions Ryntege, wiih bie haxwonizing «ix der, for | lons--Stookson is digeveted, and the of dotiane OF th eovtat the purpose of Sing signal guns of dieteces nutit | emung beer xeeptine re than pne-thid Bare pe Governor Wiee, of Viegiuia, sail come up ta | Pre quieny cooking ls eegar at Wheatiand.) 4 spy of Here Bagopenn Khoiders aad the yewne, If any snaa eon rv wile the Van | Jook neon this yous colt (raga the Rocky M {done epi contin vecmain so if ley Buren faction to a full svrevder & the ibe witb anadevone suspicion, They are maid! wre tos ‘sm Of haying thelr eecuritien do with. our. columns. satisfied, no doubt, that were they to atterapt to carry out their swindling game according 40 promise, they would be kicked down stairs tor their pains, or given in charge to the policerae sharpers obtain- ing money upon false pretences. Once for all, we desive onr readers, for the-sake of their own pockets, and for the detection cf roguery, to hear in mind #hat neither seedy vagabonds, nor loose politicians, nor scheming adventurers, of any de- scription, have, or can have, anything whatever to The proprietor of thie paper is alone responsible or its views and opin- ious, and any attempt, here or elsewhere, to sell slavghter in any slaughter house or building in the city of New York, apy animal, shall, on fibg da @ when any animal may be so slaughtered or killed therein, cause the slaughter house and yard thereof to be washed out and thoroughly cleansed, ander the penalty of ten dollars for each neglect or refusal to comply with this section, Bec, 2. Every butcher or other person within this city, immediately alter killing or slaughtering any animal, shall convey, or cause 10 be conveyed, in tight covered boxes or barrels, the blood, offal, garbage, and other of- fensive ox useless parts of said animal or animals so kill. ed or sladghtered, to such place as the Common Couneil or the City Inspector shall or may from time to time di- rect, under @ penalty of ten dollars, for each and every neglect or refusal. to comply with this section. fee. 8, It shall be the duty of the City Inspector to seq that this ordinance is enforced, The ordinances against bone boiling and burn- ing and skinning dead animals within the city limites are also very severe, as is that against penning a lot of swine in dirty stys. We hope and trast that they will be immediately put into full ope- ration. With respect to street garbage, we pub- lish the city ordinance passed May 2, 1849, as follews:— No person or persons shall throw, cast or lay any ashes, offal, vegetables, garbage, dross, cinders, shells, straw, shavings, dirt, dith or rubbish of any kind whatever, ia any street, lane, alley or public place in the city of New York. The violation of any of the provisions of the pre- ceding section shall be, and is bereby, declared to be a misdemeanor, and shail be punishable by tiae of not less than $1, nor more thay $10, or by imprisonment in the City Prison for « term of not less than one, nor more than five days. With these corporate engines in his hands, we are certain that Mr. Morton will afford us a clean, and, consequently, healthy city. We are happy to hear that the butchers, as a class, yield very general compliance to the rules, and keep their slaughter houses in a cleanly con- dition, with a few exceptions, who will soon ex- perience the result of their neglect. The ordi- nance relating to slaughter houses was only adopted this month, instead of that of 1839, which was limited in its operation to slaughter houses situated “south of Fourteenth street,” and authorized the removal of offal to a place north of said street, there to be cast into the river, where it flowed with the tide, creating a most intolerable nuisance. This is now re- medied. We hope that this offence of throwing gar- bage into the street will be forced on the atten- tion of the police. The garbage boxes now placed on the sidewalks are a great evil, and we would recommend the Common Council, when the Boards meet on Monday to pass an ordinance to regulate the proper construction, placing and condition of such boxes, In order to more clearly demonstrate the para- mount importance of this subject, particularly at this season of the year, we publish to-day the whole number of deaths in each corresponding week of the twenty-six weeks (or first half year) of 1854, 1855, and 1856:— 1855. ‘1854. 481 483 820 Ist week.. et An increase of mortality may be exp ake place’during the next month, as years show a large inercase during the monthly of July, August and September, as the following omparison of June and July in 1854 and 1855 will ilhastrate:— vious is for four weeks in June. ths for four weeks in July, Number of ¢ Number of Eevhtre! +s -1,341 932 From this it is to be seen the heat of the weather, intemperate living and exposure, iudul- gence in eating unripe or stale fruils, vegetable &c.. produce diseases (of the bowels aud digestive system especially) which greatly increase the number of deaths. Children generally suffor under the severity of the weather, and influences causing the increase, to prove which we submit the folowing statement of tlt number of deaths of persons under twenty years of age for the four weeksof June and July, 1854 and 1855, and Tnereace YEARS WHO AND JULY, 1854~"d, aND Tuite, 1856. 490 146 136 ‘52 Tune, 1855. 37 its influcaee should be rejected as an attempt at Ki swindling, July, nye Morvairy or Disease 4ND Meas or rrs Preventton.—The weekly rep: vt of deaths in the city of New York for the seven days ended on Saturday, 28th: inst., already published, completes the statistics for the first bali. of Qe year, (or 26 weeks), and compares in detal moréality with former years ag foilows:—1854, 11,967; 1855, 13,681; 1856, 9A74—the first. 26 weeks of this year being lose than the corresponding maraber in 1854 hy 2.493 eases, and loss than the first six months of 1855 by 2.207 caves, Ht is remarkable to notice the ognality of tho:awmbers for 1854~'5, Jn connec- ti¢u with the Lossey number of deaths this year, showing a very favorable report for.1856. An awense amount.of Jabor has been perfermed in tse City Jnspector’s @epartmert during this pe- ridden causing a praupt remowal of nuisances and ie keeping am active supervision over the sanMasy condition efithecity. The Health 3Var- dens bave, we believe, vighed almow. every heuse in the cig, and exsaiined the com'ition of the vinks, privies, cessposis, yawls and cellars, aed many of fie larger nuigances have ben abated. Much ashaz been done, in so Zar, we Wink that much yet remains to be performed, and feel cer- toin taat Mr. Worton will devote bis full tiene and energies to the accomplishment of bis duties; so that, having thus far beon faithful, ke can fel a ratisfaction, in any contingeney, that the aire work has wen tendered. Onr quoravtine reguiations are, we think, faite- fully enforced, and with a continued effort in that direetion we hope we shall be able to enjoy a season of unparalleled healthfulnese. li qulations, prohibiting the throwing of gur- hage into the etveets, should, in this connection, he strictly cared out. have been reprinted, one: hage into the etreet The po- » city ordina ing to casti henses, and the other for hy These vules are so excellent in intent and so ¢ of enforcement that we insert their principal clauses here for the information both of the pey sons who are likely to offend ageinst them, and of the officials who are bound to execute them Tr thet chlor gieow, Wwe ree alaveb'er boo’ o¢ buildin: oF w alt or muy kat or Y Starisrics or New York—Cavses aveater care on the part of our citizens? We hope to find itso. There are causes of death not in¢he power of the City Inspector to reach, yet we all share in the responsibility and conse- «quences, We way add that the Commissioners of Health meet daily at the City Hall in relation to quaran- tine matters. Personal Entelligence, dent has officislly recoguized Perdinand A. Reuss ae Comeni of Frankfort-on-the-Maifl at % Louis, Charles Griawold, of New York, las been appointed and confirmed to be the Consul of the United Sates for he port of Manila, Philipine Islands, ARRIVALS. From Havre, i the soamship Almaa—P Salomon, lady and daugh tor: WE Stille, M Hubert, M Cabu, Marianne Cait, Ar mand Saha, Helens Cah, Mt Henird, Mr Mr Lriatron, Mlle Triairou, Mr Boeuevou, 31r Lemaire. M'tie Zo- any, anit 19 in the steerage, DEPARTURES. a)tnah, inthe steamship Knoxville—Thomas R 3fi wn Winn and lady, I'M Brantley, & 221 rz0r, Javed Patter,’ A F Wells, 's Dickey aud son, anvant, J Landeauer, AO Mitebell, NA joe's Rho, tes, and Sin the steer Tx Couet ov AvPEALs, Son.—Argumnent "7 not conehy » Pratt, © Scblat i 26, EveNinc Jone ¥7.—14, 19, 2, re Toun and 4 wruck om; 81, More: T, st Company, arg wee, Mr. J. f. Brow Mi. Joho J. Tahoott so respondent; 41 1 argued, Mr. G. W. Hotehki ckinoon for Teepondents, (ruck off; ,°® Hatton for Rag struck cr) yore it; 80, Casite for appellant, N. 8 nl Now York City aed, J. € tents; 39, 1 are informed Uet ® young lady, vem ahter « witow: @ mother, nam J ewe Fork. Piso! to haye one to Catt OD Ngwark Anverlier, dung 27. BEB LATALT NSEWs BV MAGNETIC AND PRINTING TELEGRAPHS, The Expected Steamer at‘ o Bor a “oN, Jane 29-9 P, M: The ‘steamship North * dorica is now over eleven: days out from Livery 61 for Quebec, and is fully due: Efforts have ber’, mace to-day to communicate by tele~ Braph Wit”, Quebec, but, owing probably to storms easy oftuts, we have been unable to accomplish it. Interesting from W: \° IMPORTANT MOVE WITH REFERENCE TO KANSAS—THB: TARIFF AMENDMENTS, ETO. WasHInGTon, June 29, 1856. Accaucus of democratic Senators was held yesterday: upon Kansas affairs, when it was unanimously determined to support a bill, to be introduced by Judge Douglas to~ morrow, substantially the measure alluded to by Mr. Toombs some days ago, fur the admission of Kansas. The bill provides that a census shall be taken ‘nu Kansas, and. if it appears there is a sufficient number of inbabitants ta entitle them to elect one member of Congress, that a con~ vention is to be then called of the people of the Territory, who will present a Constitution to Congress, and there- upon be admittet as a State. This will take the wind out of the sails of the nigger worshippers in the House, as it ig believed such a bill will be accepted by a majority of that body as a proper solution of the difficulty. On the other hand. it will be violently opposed from the onset by the abolitionists, on the plea that Jarge numbers of fre State men haye been driven from the Territory by the border ruffians, ‘The bill admitting Kansas as a free State will pass tho House to-morrow, by a majority of about five. The bi { ness of the session will then be hurried on as fast possible, a Mr, Oliver having returned, all the ‘members of thie! Kansas Investigating Committee aro now ia Washington. Mersrs. Sherman and Howard have just completed thelr report, and will probably submit it to the House to-mor-) row. The presentation of the minority report will be de-- ferred a few days. ‘ The House will probably agree to the Senate’s resotu- tion for the tinal adjournment, with an amendment post- poning the time two weeks. The resolution will becaliea ‘Up to-morrow, The Committee of Ways and Means are ready to repost. on the modifications of the tariff. There will be a cong derable extension of the free list, bat no other easentia® modification, Very Hot Weather. : Boston, June 20, 1856, The thermometer to-day ranged from 90 deg. to 100 deg. in the shade. There was a heavy thunder storm at Portland w-night. PuiLapELraia, June 29, 1856. The thermometer here to-day stood 98 dog. in the shade, and 96 deg. in the steeple of the State House, an elevation of 100 feet. Batrimora, June 29, 1856. Thermometer 95 deg. to 98 deg. in the shade, Markets. Borvaro, June 28, 1886, Floar is firm; sales to-day, 1,000 bbls. at $5 26 a $5 56 for good Mlinois and choice Wisconsin, and $5 34a $575 for do. Ohio, lowa and Indiana, and $6 a $6 25 for extra. Waeat is held above buyers’ views, Corn active; sules to-day 70,000 bushels, at 60. a 380. for unsound, Onts are firmer; today’s sales 10,000 bushels, at 3: yered. Canal treights unchanged. Re twenty-four hours ending at noon to-day: flour, 6,060 bushels wheat, 21,000 do, corn. ’ Canal ex- ports for same time—20,000 bushels wheat, 48,000 do. corn, Provipence, June 28, 1856, Cotton market unchanged; sales about 1,500. bales. Wool remains quiet at former rates; sales 43,810 ibs. Printing cloths active, prices firm; sales 70,000 pieces. Osweco, June 23, 1856, Wheat duil; salcs 8,000 bushels fair white Canadian, at $1 50a $l 62%. Corn quiet. Canal freights firm, owing to scarcity of boats. Wheat 1 8c., and corn, 103g0. w York. Luke itnpor shels wheat, 15,~ 0, Corn, 7,800 ¢ Canal exports—2,800 bush els Wheat, 20,500 «do, 5,400 do. oats, 16,000 do. rye rye. Our Washington Correspondence. Wasuixeton, June 1858. War upon the Mormons in the House—Dr. Bere Actsel Sur- rounded Ly Friends—A nother Shrick for Preedom— Free Stale Party Voting egainst Kansas, dc., &e. Among oth ing Territorial business brought forward to-day by the committee in the, House of Repre- was one throwing a bombshe#&nto the peace- ory of Ctah—well calculated to blow ap domestica and scatter the conjuga! ties om Uteh, hale tion ip this woman's: ed, possess hooked part. ars’ inpri- seatures of d wrounde a that he any as to be impr: recommen ving free tra dentiy emb: plump, r and the idea of f ulated to blanch th ve matter, 5 and Thy Loctor w lees nine b ners in conjugal ate sonmont was welll ¢ the Utah delegate. friends, howov: him, and cheercd bi h the consoling his nine might arrange matter eoned togetl But when this bill passes, which it fe tke attempted to be enforced in Uta, then will hear a shriek which will be a “shriek for freedom’’—for _ wom! ‘The daughters of will Ghen indeed hang their harp of a thousand strings upon the willew. But for th * very del i y to do, an ygomy in the over which, itis adam iat poly yamy is permitied by the, L regulates! oue of the ‘Yerritories of this Union, ground that this abomina- ts rite 0) inhabitants self govern- the practice tore, y aie and [louse of Rep:nsantatives of tes oF Arner eon oF person tory of the V mit sive jurisdtetion of the iy per- other person or ih any pel song, or live with any person or persoua as partners ackuow- ledging con‘uxal re f wife belay ry alive, he, she or pay 4 One not excee ed not lees than two yea nevertheless, that this shall not extend to any person or persous whose husband oF herself, f ot th v to be living within that p soms Who shail be, at the competent anthe mer marriage by 4 Leen declared youd. Thero ve to be a fixed detormination on the park of the House and the Verritorial Committee to choke, off sus Every movement in hor fvor Ste party. ‘This seoms to ine the show it o be. et the Kansas or to any p tence of compotent authority shall have: in, Wi we Committee of Conferenser May expect a rare tq on Usis bill, Wasuxerox, June 27, 1866. Geneval Smith and Kansas.--Ihe Reason ihe General wow Ordered to thet Territory. The vnmer telegraphed from this city that General Persifer F, Smith would be appointed Governor of Kan~ sas Territory is wholly without foundation im truth. Gor. Shannon is regarded by the administration as the mera semblance of @ man--one who js afraid cf his own gha- dow, and totally unfit for the crisis in Kansas; and yet the administration bas not nerve enough to and substitute a real man in his stead, her seems to haye had the entire comtro! of Kausas affaires of late but hey4o, is little suited to the discharge of tee duty of an Executive officer, having but litte experience, and Jess knowle'ge of the law. The di! ity, however, is this with the administration, General Merney, whic has been in command of the troops on the frontier is now. op bis march. back to Kaneas, and, upon bi will rank Colonel Surnuer, and agsume ity that territory, This state of ficts was to b a) there,. command ip tod by ome means, a5 a who have any know eras py’) characta, WEB that he would make the woo! y regordloss of partic this necessity wo tnd ther @asens of the amin 4 Smith to» a2 post haste, he rung H ind Gre tooMfcer, t part, the con U tou of Govern avoid, ine e continue li moy be well to change in the Executive otficer ed Sp 2000 1s Bie Territorial b Le disposed of, at lv new Brigadier Goneralshi oppelnted Goveruor of K. commission should tke u ever, who is now in the President's Shannon’s removal. Wasarseros, Tune 28, 1968, Naval Inteligence-—Futher Vijil and Majur (ete —Benae tor Witwn's Cane, be, be Tho Voted States steamebip Sar reived at Phila» detphia afew days opt. Johu C, Long, commaundtg, ul tive of woarly tive years in the Moditerrancan, dinring which she vi ed upwards of ¢ Hee ports wet thet diving the whole of thie joy ver onve bad to court sonraind a nay Tt in a remorka eruise Capt §