Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 NEW Y' HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 38, 1856. ' The Late Fatal Affrey at Fort Washington. THE PARISH WILL CASE. ter mentioned; and 2¢. Bank | The Gigantic Railroad Schemes in x ‘and you are connecting the one with the other Our Nebraska Correspondence. ‘ CORONEN'S INQURET. p TE were, | sPRWOM OF MR. LETCHRR, OF VIRGINIA, ON THE BILL by epouatio ds, and Binding one corporation to another Wi Woops or Naukasna, June 9, 1856, as0oxp Day. Surregete’s Court. the same power: pe te ag OE Body, to arugele for the promote of common ‘ntarests, | 4 Voice,from the Frontier—Camp Life in Nebraska—Fin. ‘The inquisition commenced on Monday upen the bedy Before A. W. Bradford, Eaq. =. x be | GeameMOCTION OF RAILROADS Io) GAD STAR. Je see the power which is wielded by this one corpora- mense Emigration to the Territory—General News, &g. . ‘ef George Bolster, the coachman in the employment of | yy che matier of the Will of the late Henry Parish.— | ned by the sid F peuiioncr is | gonenn m ras htea OF merecamrentes wat i856, | Lignin Iino nowt own seldah infoesta aro consult. | voice from the frontier—a voice from cam the | Jebn H. Hopkins, Exq., who was killed at Fort Washing- | Mr, (’Conor’ealled Wood Gibson, who being sworn, | ing before the awe on: Sure} differ big) wy geotlenean from Sie. mi the people. pe wrote ago the goat Shoot ail | Heraxw’s readers, who enjoy in thought tue yomance ‘fo, on Sunday evening, by being strack on the head | gaid—t reside at 42 West street; 1 am a sadier and har. po Tha neal pe Neer Currie pe gy ralvoad corgarations, and hence i is thelr rates of char. that hovers around such a life, A stately arsoy of old whkh a stick, by some unknown person, was continued | negs maker at 362 Broadway; I am 63 years of age; 1 | ana testament; an mana an) wi expecting. We started out with Iowa for four roads, | 8° ae eee ee rr trees surrounding you, a green award Léneativit, aruda ‘by Coroner Hills. A number of witnesses were | knew Parish nineteen or twenty years; he was a | as to his competenc: promad Se yosiorst iy? for y eee thee ea we ome traces ine. Ava lot toe poled goat vy gentleman | cabin to sleep in, a comfortable horse to ride, andatrusty ~ and much testimony was elicited on immaterial | customer of mine during that time; I always dealt with | ney, or to transact gifts. by 4 —— | pe ae eae tate: | {rom Ilinois (Mr. Richardson) to whether, with this | rifle and holster pistols to protect you, or furnish you ‘points. great question “who was the small sized to his attack; after the attack, in 1849, Mrs. ‘Thal while your on mimittee oD repo @ sul i, | central railroad now running thro that State, there is ith fresh provisi Hor of ‘Mean who struck deceased with the stick?” could not be ; she generaily called at the etore, | the subject, he%s infor in. whieh they rected the gautioman from, Alabama to of- not a probability—a strong probability—that the power | ™ provisions. yw many of your readers, you amswered. hideed, 80 far, there is not one particle of tes- carriage, and stopped at my door; | competent to perform 8° is * and Se eee Jrosidas for ree 9 more. | of that Peps will sooner or later control the legisla- | dealers in tape and calico, you gallant sons of Neptune, _ mony which goes to show who this individual was, and ‘always with her in the carriage, so far as | duty, as collector of the said estate, nog | Bes comtens with Seah Bomavar, a4 heleas, There | tion, designate the members of theGeneral Assembly and | or you inbabitants of the rural districts of the East, ‘where be belonged. The evidence of the witnesses ex- she never left the carriage to come into the | all the securities and, ‘of | Dungry and greedy than thy: ae eeemceaan Mr direct and regulate the policy and the politics of that Schaef “ amined yesterday, being merely a corroboration of the went to the carriage, but mot very | said attack from etene: meres: Se See SS i aha ie, anne State? would cheerfuNy, fer @ season, change situations with a oo Gay were elicited on Mowday, it is scarcely, say way, wie tee, tad par aes ae oe ‘aad —s Sear enrel Teee Sg eee, eee ee Mi emaarnost wil aabetootne from | Ike. Or, ye fair ones, nursed in luxury, how would the mecessary ‘us, here, @ Space to & repetition as respecting any orders would give; a contest va. he , | Vir and to louse, nt railroad, in | romance ERE SR oe ye Fe * | erat on ane elect, dhru rene, tat | tetas of knos, dora conatdn onoitied of ihe | Yer However, reader, at down by me moment in oe ‘The cave, after a session of severs! hours duration, was ; up at his house but very } ed and believce, of io senen. Pe canes Which | railroads of that State; and if the State were to come | ¥ lowever, reader, sit down by me a momentin my = *, wajourned ‘Until this morning, when it is he ped that the 5 see ber respecting soanan Svat to | by Mrs.’Parigh. ‘the | Passed some two, brie ago, a4 under the control of that corporation, there would have | ‘‘camp in the wilderness.’? Don’t be frightened, for, al- ‘of the Coroner may be brought toa clese. The his brary goweraity om ocea- } Pacific Mail date | ee es tbaie having bese Sloug hae in market, | de ® combination of interests whiere there is now a | though away upon the frontier of Nebraska—for from» excitement attending the case @ the neighborhood of Fort 3 1 did my business Mrs. Parish; so far as I | of the death ‘stocks: ante A ly wid’ es the Bras Retiree we diversity of interests; 1, therefore, apprehend that there | 4, " pos bh , has abated comaderably, aad the general "tthink be paid any attention to the | of said compan; CU pa pe ey HN re Fee fone dollar and is no danger at any time’that it can have control of one | te s¢ttlements—you need not fear any trouble from tho- ‘among the ivhabetants is ‘teat the jary, in ; ot at any time hear any sound or | which she transferred if tee potbes ‘should be, reduged to the cum of twelve ani» | Lesislature in any way whatever; I, at least, have no | Indiaxs, or from that herd of prowling wolves closoom: ‘Binding « verdict, will be unatle to-crimmate any person. ord from him, either at the carmage or at the house. on the halfcents per acre, to bring them within the reach of fear of it. our lea. If you are a man, light your pipe, spread your- As we said, at the conclusion of our report yesterday, it by Mr. one think Mr. and | is informed © | eerie Ete CAiucceena Tatas wan gai tae Mr. CapwaLapEn—Representing a State in which this | soir out is Wats veka Babes on if ‘would be a conveniemce to ‘the reporters ly, : ‘several times in the carriage; I should | also testator er. t, ented Seeds ae a oon experiment ot endowments in aid of the corporate fran. out on the buffalo rol ere ; or a lady;, fand the public especially, if the Caroners of this city . Mrs. Parish would sometimes come in | and and your petitioner has | Sir or eeven raironce ihrongh that land, taking the oda | °hises of improvement companies has been tried gomo- | Seat yourself on that pile of blankets and enjoy your ‘would place their inquests epon file ie their offloe, No. 37 and I went out to the carriage; she | demanded the same or the | Sections within six miles ply: Reedy of pene is, if | What extensively, Iydesire to say that the result of this | self. There, is it not comfortable?—those grim old) Chambers street, in due season. Te be humtimg up one ‘came into the store than I wenteut tothe | payment of the par value thereof, and has received an he can get enough to make w coped t of odd se experiment, where we have seen it thus tested, has pro- ree. ve ig b ‘ful 4 of these officals through the rural districts, particularly ; ‘hardly recellect how often | weat out to | answer. That, as your petitioner is informed and be | joan Ser mough lo make ub th Pr cither side, orm. | duced, in my mind, a result altogether diferent from the » yon beautiful stream, the joyous music of/ , when the thermometer arrives at the figure of 90, is no | thecarringe; sometimes say son weut out, I thizk; Idon’t | lieves, the estate of the said testator, at the date of his Beesae thi tales within he Latte of the, ten cients | opinion of the gentleman from Tilinois (Mr. Richardson.) | those birds, the fragrance of a thousand flowers. And then,'. Joke. Coramer Hills did mot succeed in getting éown town | think I went out very often; the conversation when I | attack, consisted of the most part of personal estate, in- | tines, Sand pA does he propose to do with the balancer | 10 not. concur with him that there is no goound for ap- | when night throws her dark mantle over this beau< and upto the present time there is nothing | weut out lasted a very short time—perhaps not more ‘whatever to be gleaned (rom the records of the Coroner’s | than two or three minutes at a time; I did uot speak to @@ce in retation to the Fort Washington drama. It is no | Mr. Parish on these eccasions; 1 Rever attempted to com- doubt, the desire of tie public to hear whats going on in | municate with bin; he would make a movement of his that is all; he never spoke; I weer. prehension of the future exercise of dangerous political | , 4 Intiuences through causes Which this bill'in the regular | '‘%! Scene, why we will watch the stars as they one by’ fir isosumnsfredacly oo; ast wih venture the ee. | thrvagh the layen, eo grnanly she eoveraiooe toe ir. ely so; and I will venture the pre- ug leaves, a8 80 diction, notwithstanding the opinion of my friend from | great bighway of heayen,- raly ya: comes, a Mlinois, that before ten years roll around the Central | will surround our rude camp fire, cook our homely break- railroad corporation of the State of Illinois will wield a | fast, killed perchance in the Almighty’s park, and then power that will regulate the politics of that State, and | spend the day in strolling about, huntin; , fish read- shape the legislation of the State to accord with its’own | ing, writing, sleeping, or talking of friend and loved ones interests and wishes. If the gentleman from Lilinois will | far away. We'll tell over all our old love scrapes, and take the facts in reference to every State Legislature in | maybe, ifa lady young and lovely you are, we will tell this broad land, be will see that the corporations, of one | our own “tale Of love.’” We will spend days and weeks sort or other, have made and enforced their demands | there, until, wearied of the monotony, we Will return to for money and loans for the purpose of making improve the settlements, and there find rude hearts. ive ments or extending their works, They all combine; and | hearts and mammon serving hearts, whe will recall us where that combination is made, success in the accom- | from the ideal to the real world. ae may of their objects is certain. When and where ‘This is camp life away on the prairies, barring the mos- as there been a failure, unless the State was weighed | quitos, wet days and nights, and a hundred annoyances down by debt and burdened with taxes? which one has to put up with, not forgetting the chance I think my friend from Illinois is mistaken, and I beg | of having some ungentlemanly band of Indians, some leave to cal! his attention to Executive Document No. 88, | dark night, aporopriute your horses to themselves, with- to show the power of the Illinois Central Railroad, as it | out leave or license, and without value received. Of has already exhibited it in these days of its infancy. The | course, you expect to dress rough, live rough, and-when Llinois Central Railroad Company is united with the Ga- | you return to the settlements look about ten degrees dark- Jena Packet Company in the transportation of the mails, | er and feel “hearty as a bear?” ready, if you are @ and it is charged that, for the purpose of injuring Dubu- | young man, to astonish all the village lasses with your que and benefitting Dunleith, they resort to every species | feats of prowess and “ perils in the imminent deadly of petty warfare upon the former. And why is this? It | breach’’ in the far West. This will wear out of you after is because the railroad company are interested “in the | you have been at it awhile. ferry,” ‘the warehouses” and the ‘‘hote! at Dunleith.” | " ‘The emigration to Nebraska is immense this season. It is charged that the mail has been left on the bank of | Every town in the Territory is filled with eager settlers. the river for “two or three days” ata time. It is alleg- | From Kansas they come in large quantities to avoid the ed, too, that they have failed to comply with the aet of | constant contention and trouble that surround them, and, Congress donating the land for the building of this road. | here make themselves a comfortable and peaceful home, I quote from the document:— Property in towns, &o., is rapidly advancing in value. Your memorialists, in this connection, respectfully callthe | Everything seems on the qui vive. aitention of the President, and of the Post” Ohhece Departmen’, A good portion of the land of the Territory will be in vested in stocks, bonds and bills receivable, maturing at various dates; that, at that time, he was indebted on two promissory notes, to the amount of $90,000; that, by re- ceipts from his es tate, collected by the’ aid’ of a’ former partner, of large responsibilty, the said notes were wholly paid on the 4th day of May, 1850; that the follow- ing information bas been given to the coik ctor, of which he has been charged to take notice, and which, he has been informed, is sustained by evidence before the Sur- rogate in this case, viz.:—From the date last mentioned to the day of the death of the testator, the said Susan M. Parish assumed to manage his estate and transact his business, and received all the revenues of his estate; that immediately thereafter, and in the month of June, 1850, and from thence to the day of his death, she collected large sums of money, amounting to $800,000, or thereabouts, and made investments thereof, either in her own name or in securities transferable by delivery, in no instance making investments in the name of the testator; that the stocks and securities abovemen- tioned, as retained by her, were made in the manner and under the circumstances above stated, out of and from the resources of his estste; and that the said testa- tor was not, from the date of his attack to the day of his death, in sound mind or capable of managing his es- tate, or could or did give any valid assent to the trans- fer of said stocks and securities to the said Susan M. Parish; aud your petitioner deems it to be his duty, as collector of said estate, to contest the validity of such transactions, by which the said revenues were diverted from bis estate.grAnd your petitioner states, that uuder his order of appointment, being restricted from eom- mencing any suits without the consent of the Surrogate, and being required to pay the said Susan M. Parish an annual allowance of $14,000 in quarterly pay- ments, he requests to be permitted to take such To let them go to the settlers who want to buy the land at two dollars and = certs per acre—the very lands that be said were too high when they were at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, and which his graduation bill reduced to twelve and a half cents per acre. Now, I say that this is a most remarkablo state of things. He said that the lands were too high at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, and after we have re- duced the price to twelve and a half cents per acre, at his suggestion, he now comes forward and proposes to donate a portion of those lands toth: ei corpora- tions which may be chartered by the Legislature of Ala- bama, and that the lands reserved, the sections repre- sented by the even numbers, shall be open to entry by actual settlers at two dollars and fifty cents per acre. Is not this position a most extraordinary one? - But, sir, there is still another point of view in which the gentleman accupits @ remarkable position, He be- longs to what is called the democratic party of this House, ‘and endorsed as such the Baltimore platform, which de clares ‘‘that the constitution does not confer upon the general government the power to commence and carry on a general system of internal improvements;” that it was anti-democratic, and in violation of the’ principle recognized and acted on by that party. He fought the last Presidential battle on this platform in common with myself and others. Now, sir, here are those four rail roads in Iowa, one thousand one hundred and fifty-three miles in length. Here are those three railroads in Wis- consin, five hundred and three miles in length. Here are also those three railroads in Florida, five hundred and odd miles in length. Here are these railroads %in Ala- Dama, six or seven in number, some six hundred or eight hundred miles in lel ; making nearly three thougand miles of railroad to be constructed by donations of the public lands by this federal government, and yet and would by no means damage their chances for re- | he recollected me perfectly well; I so under- @lection to otlice. stood from the motion of the ake Se — og hardly recollect how long it was af attack ‘when ‘THE CORONEN'S INQUEST NOT CONCLUDED. — _— iim A enlahs hove town tive a thves yose af ‘The inquest upon the body of George Bolster, the | ter his attack: 1 think he recognized me the first time I @eachman of John H. Hopkins, of Fort Washington, who - him; 1 tes cine nim tre ee onan val between ime € ‘was Killed in an affray on Sunday evening, was continued | TOOTS tien after his attack: I did not observe what day. A few witnesses were examined, but their | his sense of hearing was; | took no notice of that; paid ny was merely @ corroberation ef what has been | no attention to it;1 made {out my bills inthe name of Beretofore published. Strange to say, none of the wit- | Henry Parish. messes could tell who “the small sized man” was. The | — Mr. O’Conor called James Mulligan, who, being sworn, fase was adjourned until Saturday morsing, when Mr. | said—t live at 125 Grand street, and my shop is at 127 will be re-examined, Grand street; I am a horse shoer; I am aged 45 years and upwards: 1 knew Henry Parish! think I got acquainted Coroners’ Inquests. with im in 180 or 1842, and knew him from SesoviaRn axp Farat Accesr.—Coroner Connery held | that time; he was a regular customer of mine in my businhss—shoeing horses for him; prior fm inquest yesterday at the Fourth ward station house, | to pis illness 1 had cosnsbnial. comvenestions. “wilt hins ‘epen the body of aman named Frederick Regnel, who | about my businens— my hl pa a, | one ‘was kilied on Tuesday might, about 11 o'clock, by the | to do work for the family in’ my line, up to ; Law 4 Mr. Parish after bis illness; I saw him frequently in the falling of a chimney at No. $5 James street, The deceased, | street, and frequently on the road, and on one aictiiiar % appeared, was the proprietor of the grecery store situ- | occasion at my shop; these times he was in his carriage: ated as above, and was some time since warned of the | his lady was Eenerally ee ki eee " etween you and Mrs, Parish an r. ish at e time @angerous condition of his chimney by the fire wardens. | hat they called at your chop? A. The last time they were (@n Tuesday deceased and his brother proceeded to the | at my shop was to pay a bill of shoeing; Mr. Parish owned eof of the house with a view of patching up the danger. | 4 Vicious horse, and in consequence of his being so I paid ‘ous chimney, and while at work there the structure gave | MY workmen fifty cents extra for shoeing him; Mrs. with 's| loud crash, and falling upon the roof, not | Parish objected to paying the fifty cents extra; she told i cnt legal proceedings for the recovery of the stocks and entle' 8 ly 0 cy ol aaly Duried up the workmen, but wrecked the eative | mel shouldn't charge anything extra, im consequence of | securities retained ag aforesaid, amounting to the sum pl ne pont Ph a oe aS to the manner in which the provisions of the act of Congress | market this fall, and hundreds of greedy speculators are house. The police of the Fourth ward and seme firemen | her being a regular customer; I stated to her it was | of $428,912 35, or thereabouts; and he also asks the | eral government. Now, if thousand oe of rail making Blind grant rss specced September 20, | awaiting it, outside of the large amount of active and Rastened to the spot.as soon as possible, and succeeded | 20 interest to me; that I paid the amount. to | direction of the te whether the said annual allow- | road in one session of Congress is nob fencral sys. | ed the actiprovides that the’ branch of the gauconlin iis | Hokest settlers, Persons desirous of entering good lands after a great deal of labor in digging out the bodies of the | the man who had shod his horse; Mrs. Parish | ance shall be made so long as the said stocks and securi- | tem’ of internal improvement by this government, when | direction shall extend, via the townof Galena to Dubujue, in | 12 Valuable locations, and are willing to pay a hberalcom- men. J was found to be ead, but his brother was | banded me the bill and I pointed out to her these items; | ties continue to be retained. WILLIAM KENT. | will we get it? & 7 Nee | the State of Iowa. In point of fact the road actually que.in | mission for so doiug” by addressing Join W, Pattison, still alive, and up to the present moment continues alive. | I handed the bill to Mr. Parish, and I think she stated | City and county of New York, as.: ‘The next remark I have to make is, that these bills have | pales at Dunielth, in the Btate of Tiiinois. “In order t reach | Omaha City, N. T., can have the opportunity. The health ‘The jury in this case rendered a verdict of “death by ac- | tbat he did not understand it. Q. At the time of handing ‘liam Kent, the person’ described in the foregoing | been introduced in a very unusual way, and have been | Dubuaue. the passenger proceeds to Dunleith, the ter- | of the county is good. Large crops are already in the ¢ident. "Further, we find that he was (deceased) wreck. | the bill to Mr. Parish did you say anything to him? A. | petition, being ‘sworn, says that he has read the same | hastily pressed to their passage. None-otthese bil, in. | Buns, Of ie, Toad In point of fact, and thénce hires | ground. Jess 10 human life, by leaving his chimney in a condition | Yes, sir, I think I repeated the same words that I told the | and knows its contents, and that the same is true of hi: | troduced by the Committee on Public Fands, has ever | actof Congress. by s ferry boa" owned in great part by the Bable to fall at any moment,~for a space of several | Surrogute a moment ago. Q. State the words which Mrs. | own knowledge, except as to the matters therein stated | been printed, or put in a situation where they could be | agente and cilicers of the Lllinois Central Railroad Com- Our Maine Correspondence. ‘Weeks, and to bury in its ruins himself and family—the | Parish used? A. Well, I dou't know thatT could state | to be on his information and belief, and as to those mat- | accessible to the members of this House. The bills and pay. company does not ticket to Dubuque, and all PorTLaxp, June 27, 1856. Marvel being, that the catwsirophe hat not earlier oocar- | the exaet words, but Isbouglt, they wore ralher unkind: | ters he believes itt betrue. WILLIAM KENT. | amendments have been introduced and read at the Clerx's | eM taba th Mh coutaus Me AiatMNED! yIIGKEAMAY | Proarees of the CityPoltice—Buchanan Ratification , and Was not more disastrous - | % worn june, me. , . . trous an in its conse- desk, and then we have been compelled to take the bills principle cities Rast, Shieh wil take the er over this Mecting—A Straight Whig Caucus—Fremont’s Pros- ."’ The deceased was thirty-six years of ‘and | them’ A. I think when I made my statement respecting ‘was a native of Hanover, and fares ‘a wih ond y to | the charge, she told me that she understood them as Iament his untimely end. well as I did, and did not wish to be imposed upon. Q. Fors» Deowsep-—An inquest was held yesterday, at | Tisa2or whim, did Dire. Part say ‘angtling? “4. | Me foot of Spring street, North river, upon the body of | thin the words she sakd were that he add tet undersiam (@@ infant found drowned. Verdict, ‘“Found drowned.” it. Q When you showed the bill to Mr. Parish, Also, upon the body of a boy, found floating in the | 80d made our statement to him, did he say Wa. Currie, Commissioner of Deeds. Mr. Evarts, on behalf of Mrs. Parish, read an affidavit claiming the $428,912 35 as gifts made to her by bir. Parish over and above the will and codicils. Argument was heard from counsel on both sides, and jon reserved. The testimony of Dr. Delafield and Rey. Dr. Taylor on ‘the part of Mrs. Parish will be published in due course. | in that way, under the of the previous question. Take the case of this bill this morzing. The gentleman from Alabama introduces a bill, and brings a substitute pinto bi hth went epee gs on Pub- was an ly in manuseri; with pumerous Interlinestions to make it conform to the views of the gentleman from Alabama. The substitute comes to us in manuscript along with this bill. Neither the way of Galena Packet Company to St. Paul, and apo ‘us on the river; pects—Tabular Statements of Previous Stale Votes— of but be bought, and ee fe Disastrous Fi) hiained, which expense when ge i "is Pasa, Several ete Fits in the State capital, not rm ppl is reached: eral years ago, an rin ' pin nd is unknown upon the tickets and waybills of the | having the love of truth in bis heart, had the temerity to Your memorialists submit that this is in violation of the act | publish to his three hundred and fifty subscribers that + aforesaid; that the compan; bound that y oo “Portland was wilting.” The hue and ery which the » Bast 1 Seamen’s chapel © ee ee is printed, and they are followed by an amendment is own means of trans of freig ae nn sats ac Toediphte Pani wid: |S tady saucer me ene a mar and ome Dem Political the'geutlemen from Alabama. "Nether the bill, yout ihe spintand leder of that ‘ack the ‘Tiisoin | denizens of this city then raised about his ears finally ex- @rowned at the foot of Pike street, Fast river. a ority A VadccnzeT disremember. Q Can you de. | The Fremont ratifcation meeting in Newark, N. J., on Bees, Se a secmenens, 6 iin te rence Company should do at ins place what other | torted an apology for the rash assertion, and his example Also, upon the body of Patrick Donnelly, at Spuyten | scribe the motions of his bead and handst A. mo | Monday evening, was the most enthusiastic political | not teen printed and laid befere us. Now, po: eg ng 4 bridge ‘the Mi has proved a salutary lesson to all despisers of the as a bridge can be comstructed, the com- | ‘Forest City.’ What ground there then was for such a . charge is of no consequence now, for no city ever en- - | joyed a more satisfactory present or promising futura for ite construetion, and that the road | than Portland does at present. T ’ ‘as completed wpill the same has been ex- The “ down Easters” who have visited NewYork thie a4 Buyvel Creek, who was accidentally drowned while en- | tioa of bis head was slow, and he used his hands loosely @eavoring recover an oar which falied overboard | and carelessly; he bowed his bead slowly several times, from & boat in which he was fishing. tnd once more he gave « kind of shake from side to ide, Deats rxou Kick Horse. —. Cross examination by Mr. Cutting— we not contin- pss sd -—An inquest was | itp do the shoeing of Mr. Parish since that occurrence; iso held upon the body of Adam Reidman, a child two | gher that time I did not speak to Mr. or Mrs. Parish, but gathering which has been called together since the days of ‘Tippecanoe and Tyler too.’’ ‘Fremont and victory” was the ery. The Daily Milwaukie Wisconsin, the long established cannot be considered old, who was killed by the kick of ahorse, received | merely passed the compliments of the day as I passed | and leading democratic journal of Wisconsin, has raised | janag dircetion intended tended to this city by @ bridge. HN G. SHIELDS, Fostering —— while in his father's stable, No. 232 | by. % Did Mr. Parish, on han —— ‘about = bill, | the banner of Fremont and Dayton. Its editor was for | time the bill “wee "ander considers and a Per + of the Cit connate = city of Dubuque. spring have been struck with the amount of re-building Ne ace re een quest. wan held | 0 Yotsny that you" pointed out the items of the bil to | ™erly connected with the Albany Argus. by this body. | Sir, 1 say ere that, under present | F! wertier of the Ciy Council. ey Gooprrcn, | and other improvements that are taking place there, but» Pee la Parish: how many items were there’ A. T presume | Among the Vice Presidents of the Fremont ratification | {hcuuse wtshinet here nad ibere weet Levene Panne Ter onder of Tee ae Menard of Trade of Dubuate. | Ithink that Wyreater number of new buildings are ta. | ‘Teesday at the Fourth ward station house, upon the body four that #he objected to. Q. Was the | meeti ‘ of erection here than in your cit; 2 ing in Cincinnati was the President of the Pierce | there is an equal chance for a mistake, as there iy for a Epwin Janes, Jr., Secretary. process yor 'Y, Proportionably fs man named Hugh McLaughlin, who died suddenly 4 st Tiree pea At think, hot; t | Fatidication meeting in the same city, in 1852; and four of correct engrossment of the bill; and there is noboly iu Desvers, Jesiery 1, Ise e This is partly due to innate enterprise, and partly by the Sherry streets Fhe awe pect pre bonr p ey Wan tiene, peeing oes tee tome and | the speakers voted for Pierce. passed, with the Dillas cagrossed and miguel Uy the res the malls at the price fzed. by tbe Tostmaster General. | SPI in Aten gece grat ye i fe deceased, as soon as his condition became known, but Lime what | stated to the court. | The Buffalo Courier insists that the democracy of the | dent, because we have no printed bill with which to | And if the company and the Postmaster General can- steamer, for the reception of which a new wharf is hora age cine arn deiner acer | Sq "wari afer Farn‘bat sd at anc | Sal of Hew York ew pery of te pen and cot | Make DECOR ae « on unis | Sorat as Rtas whee hereunder | nea, angen of mt nn feo river sloope. “Verdici—"Death from disease of the | Bot wish to be imposed on, that you spoke to Mr. Parish? | commits, and it calls upon the people to rise in their | proposes to graut millions of acres “Or the ‘public Tant= Knesnccredhietece eens Space and ity, eae aaa gata da | wih hwo er provi hoy at he sia pon nan a pg will 4 j gg moh RA yr nd the | utterly repudiate the idea of any disturbance from the. - company is #0 strong in louse before @ dollar has ismissal of Mr. Crampton, or from any other cause; ‘been realized by the corporation, that it can have a bill passed through under the operation of the previous ques- nd this feeling appears to be predominant throughout + poh gl a Lyng hasty’ Bon ap heedbnse sto open his | be State. It seems to our countrymen on the frontier, mout e against it, much stronger will it be when | ext to sacrilege and blasphemy to hint at anything so ~ the road is made, when money is daily and hour! Coming iio ite treavury ? I have’ another: objection, to | Fuinous to their most vital interests; and while they are these billx; I cannot debate it, as I would like to do, within eady to repel anything like an insult from whatever - the limited time allowed me. My objection to them is ource it may come, they shudder at the consequences this: my friend from Alabama (Mr. Cobb) was the old f @ rupture of amicable relations betweem our own and + soldier's fricnd here in the last Congress. He was for | he donating bounty land to them, for giving them an increas- es ed quantity, so as to make it one hundred and sixty | which call sir, Q At what time was it that be made m>- ‘iheart.”” . oo tions with bis bead and band’ A. At thetime I was ex. ‘Tas SvGar Hovse Accipeyt.—Asormer Victim.—An in- ining to he YY A ight, and no longer allo w committees to thwart a popu- sentiment that is almost upanimous, Mr. Francis P. Blair, Jr., republican candidate for Con- grees in Missouri, signed the address of the Benton demo- crats, but after it was published he found in it the senti- ment that the ‘‘Kansas-Nebraska bill was the great tri- umph of the true genius of Ameriza.’’ This was more than Mr. Blair could stand, and he acccordingly wrote a letter to the St. Louis Democrat, in which he says:— “If the Nebraska law is intended to be eulogized, I must say that I do not unite in the eulogy. Neither am I, \n ‘any sense, in favor of the extension of slavery. I have always denounced both, and think that neither can be too severely denounced.”” Mr. Henry H. Bedford declines being one of the Know Nothing Presidential electors in ,Miseourl. He says, for the last eighteen months he has condemned the wild, #.1i cidal course of the so called American party. The Lehigh Valley Times, published at Bethichem, Pennsylvania, has the Stockton and Raynor ticket at the head of its columns. In order to elect Fremont he must carry all the fee States en masse, with the exception of 27 votes, the exact number belonging to Pennsylvania. If be lose Pennsy! vania, therefore, he can afford te lose nothing else. ‘The Pottsville Miner's Journal, a paper of great in fluence among the miners of Schuylkill county, Pa., takos down the Fillmore flag and hoists Fremont. Governor Gardner, of Massachusetts, has declared in in favor of Fremont for the Presidency. The Buffalo daily Democrat and Wetberger (German) proposes that the people take up the subject of the differ should be passed here, under such circumstances, under the gag of the previous question, denying to everybody not only the right to debate the bill but even the right to read it. The only privilege we have is to hear it read the clerk’s desk, before we are called upon voi ‘upon it. Then, sir, the next remark I have to make is, that theer bills are unfair, that whey, do not present a true state of facts to the country, and that they are calculated to mal an erroneous impression upon the public mind, when it is declared by the authors and advocates of them that for each odd section which the government grants it re ferves.an even section to be sold at $2 60 per acre, which will balance the sections given away at the original co-t of $1 26 per acre, Let me show that such is not the case There are thirty-six sections of land in each township. By a previous act of Congress the sixteenth section in each township has been donated to the States for school purposes, and thirty-five sections only are left io each township to be affected by these bills. Seventeen of these are even sections and eighteen are odd sections. Now, you will notice that every one of there bills for the donation of lands for purpe- © declares that the States are to take the odd sections wi in the ri of six miles on either side, and all the re. served within that limit are to be sold at $250 per acre. But there is this remarkable difference be tween the government and the corporations to which Unese lands are donated: after these railroad companic~ have been organized, if be 4 cannot get the quantity of edd sections of land to which the bill entitles them, ‘within six miles on either side of the road, they aT se lect such deficiency from any of the public lands lying within fifteen milés on either side of the road, and yet not even one of the reserved sections outside of the six and within the fifteen miles, is increased to $250 an Do you not see, then, that the operation ix an un ner When it declares to the country that @ quantity of land equal to that donated to the road is doubled in hed and reserved by the government for sale, it is per fectly manifest that the declaration is not correct. The next remark I wish to make is in regard to the ar gument relied upon here, that the government, being the q@mest was also held upon the body of James Nazerlow, @meof the men who were fatally injured at the sugar hheuse of Harris Evans &Co., No. 25 Leonard street, on y. ; ‘afternoon, the particulars of which accident were | &, When he made these motions with his hands, id he in y's Henal. The jury S| accompany em with the » bake of bie bead rom side to J side that you have mentioned? A. Yes, sir, ink he Forde of ecldeaa! cod did, a litt after; he moved his head from side to side Barat Fat rnow 4 Horse Tor.—An inquest was also | after be lowered his hands. Q. When he made these mo- eld upon the body of Frederick Dalmer, a resident of 143 | tions loosely and pete yf et he. aodlng ee a ‘ » ‘es, sir, Bust avenue, who died from the effects of fall received Stak Seppenres to me ar if be took po. loterest at ail ge ty om from the roof of his dwelling while | in the matter. Q. You have said you think the words 3 deceasd was killed almost instantly. Ver- | Mre. Purish used were that Mr. Parish did not understand ict in accordance with the above facts. it. Can you state that these were her nat woe Daowxen wins Banumyc.—An inquest was also held | A. As near as my memory Serves me, - upon the body of « boy nine years of age named Wiliam | He%ait tou ‘understand yout A. ‘Think hot, ‘ir ‘Winters, who was accidentally drowned while bathing at | Q. Did you make any memorandum of this conversation ? the foot of Forty-fourth street, North river. Verdict, ac- | A. No, sir, I did not. Q Did you speak of it to any per- eidental drowning. fon before the death of Mr. Parish A. Her coachman Covr pr Soum.—An inquest was held npon the body of | 8nd myself had a conversation in reference to the matter ious to bis death, and also her footman. Q. How @woman named Catharine St. John, who died fromthe | [py was either of these conversations before Mr. Paris's eects ofthe heat. The deceased was thirty years of age, | death? A. I resume nearly two, years and betier, and eceased sl ir the eet en! ie pl ; jou ry ithe bE Mag mg Mh. panes, on know’ the bame of the footman: I know the name of the Monday afternoon, and was conveyed to the New York pay pe = eS en ete Boepral man, not mention this Mhat an: Deing al for medical attendance, but she died goon after | Cer person before the death of Mr. Parish. Q. After his 2 death did _gou mention it to any person until after pro: ceedings were taken before the Surrogate to prove the Police Intelligence. will and codicils? A. No. air, I did not, until the foot Divvennn! man called upon me, and arked me questions relative to gle om in Rewaiovs Beusr may Brisa | SOn she efairs—if | had been called upon [told hitm no; Asorr.—At a late hour on Tuesday night the attention | | think that it was the same footman with whom I had @f Sergeant Wright and officer Bryan, of the Ninth ward | the conversation before the death of Mr. Parieh. @ police hance About what time was it that the footman asked you eee eee thea going | Thether you had been called upon? A. I can’t recollect @ in the drinking saloon corner of Thirteenth aud West | the first time he called, but the second was at my shop @treetz. On entering the premises they found two men | on Tuesday last; he told me that Mr. Inllon wished to see country. of war takes me on to Eee Stes STR Re here evening. Among peshars were Senn. tor Har, tbe last bor fom the Mochanan democra- . ‘essenden, district. wv. Seeanion others, wnlese 1 be ex-Governor Kent, an ‘old line whig,”” as these referred to are favorable repre- sentatives of the whole. Uno disce omnes, ex pede Hercu- lem. ‘The mecting was large and enthusiastic, and the tieman from Virginia allow me paaergio! joy and Dayton made the walls of the ' the 8] ‘Conp—Will the gent to state that I introduced the Bounty Land bil of 1860, and ball in ghe city to resound with their applause ae voted for that also? ere vd laudauions and adulatons of the re- Mr. Lercurn—Very well, sir. And now the gentleman | pub! candidates. The assemblage afforded rather is trying to destroy those who were to reap the | striking contrast to the scene presented at the democratic » benefit of his legivlation. I am sorry to see one | ratificationmeeting, which oceurred a week or two since, who thought then that tnere was due to | and when all the citizens of Portland who approved the ‘the old soldiers, and who helped to procure jJand | nominations of Buchanan and Breckenridge, to the pum- warrants, seeking now to destroy their value, so as to | ber of nearly two hundred, met in a ball over ‘se. make what he then considered an act of justice ent drug store, and condoled with each other for an hour or worthless to them. Now, take this case of the lowa rail- | two. road bill, When that bill was pass ed, the Commissioner A rara aviain ferré—a genuine out and out whig caucus of the General Land Office telegraphed to the land officers | —was also held last eveming, in the City Hall, to select + there to clore their offices, Land is no longer to be taken | delegatos to the Whig State Convention. I can give no + by those warrants. The land is no longer in the market. | farther account Of the proceedings than that the desi railroads must be accommodated, They must make | of the gathering was accomplished, in spite of the di their selection. The value of the land warrants immo- | turbance ari from the shouts of the republicans ia diately fell three or four cents an acre. So with the Wis. | the ball ‘over the way.’ consin bill. When it becomes a law, tie land warrants The indications are that Fremont will carry this State will, of course, take a further fall. Now, it seems to me | by moderate majority. No thanks, however, are due to + me; I then called to see Mr. Dillon; IMon’t know in whove | enees between the hards and softs of this State, discard proprietor, should contribute to the construction of | that all these are considerations which to have | the efforts of the press, ax the conductors of that mighty fighting with one another in the moet desperate manner. service the fowtman was on Tuesday Inst, I don't know | both committees, and make a democratic union that will | these improvements, as it would be a judicious appro some weight in controlling the action of the House on | engine are Lo epg Rae apon the manufac- ‘They immediately arrested the parties and took them to | where he lives: I can’t state the name of any person in | 4 priation of the public land. Why, sir, ‘bo | this subject. I sould like to know, Mi peaker bow ture of bad on and ‘and the rents ‘Ge station house, whea it appeared that one of the pr howe service be has been since he left Mr. Parish; I call thought of that individual who, owning six hundred acres | many more bills there are yet behind this, I should like | citation of old stories abowt ‘ten cent Jimmy.” There ie @eners was a member of the Protestant Association, while ‘a footiman because he accompanied the carriage of | There is to be agrand rally of the nigger driving de- } of jand, should, on being called upon, contribute more | to know how many more miles of railroad are yet to bo | little doubt that the coming election will call eut one of Pe other was & Roman Catholic, The Orangeman bad | sr. and Mrs. Parieb: 1 think it was in the autumn of | mocraey of Kentucky and Indiana, at Heurysvillo, Ind., | than three hundred acres of bis tract for the made—bow many more acres of public lands are yet to | the largest votes over in this State, and the follow- ) ‘Been on an excursion along with a Koow Nothing Lodge, | ig¢1 wr. and Mrs. Parish called with the bill; I could the 64h inst getting a railroad to run alongside of what was | be taken for their construction under the Cag po ing figures wit! give an idea of the increase of the nigger end coming into the porter house above mentioned with « | give the correct date by referring to my accounts; | may : fuch is the operation of this policy. Th entered into by the Committee on Public Lands. I should | worshipping party duriag the last clover years. In Yellow flower in his coat buttonhole, excited the ire of the | EL \n dhe year, 1800 or 1861. The Philadelphia Penneyteanian tolls us that in the | the proprietar, and holding this land in trust for the like to hear from the Chairman of that committee how | Maine gave Polk 48,719 voles; Clay. 34.240; Birney, 4.840 Seturiastic Catholic. Some words passed between them, |“ Tirect examination resumed. Keystone State the nomination of Fremont has fallen | of the States, is to be made to contribute to the building ot | Many more bille he bas upon the stocks? In 1848 Cavs, received 40,200; Taylor 38.276; Van when biows were strack. The countenancos of both men Q. Since Mr. Parish’s death has any other person than Against this put the fact—vouched for by the these roads more than one half of its land, within certs. Mr. Besxert—The committee has agreed to reporta | 12,178. a = ree Pm ge ¥ it, 92, were sadly battered when the police arrived, and such | wis tootman called on you about this? A. Yes, sir; Mr. | 404 ings limits, running the entire length of the roads. I+ bill for the State of Louisiana, Hale, 7,088. vote for 1888, shows aan apparent falling Jas tbe woeful condition of each individual that it would | Tijom called to see me on Tuesday. Q. Do you know Mr. | United States (Philadelphia) Gasetle—that Gfty-throe Peon- | such conduct asa man of ordinary prudence and Mr. Larcumn—How many acres does that propose to | off in the free soil ranks, but it will be remembered that « > Base to te tho Protestant Som the Cathetis or John B. Haskin? A. Yes, sir. Q Td he call ou you on | sylvania papers support Fremont. sense would exhibit in te the disposition take? Mr. Van Buren commanded many votes which properly Catholic from the Protestant. The parties were brought this subject previous to last Tuceday? A. Yes, air, he pe a) ot | Own land? Not at ail is not ded. No man Mr. Beywerr—I cannot give the exact quantity; | belonged to the democratic party, and Perve's gain was Before Justice Davison and committed for afew days. | id" he made some light inquiry of the about the matter Hoorar for Boo cannon and Broken Bridge” shouto! | Qn. landl Not At AN Milt 20 erence how thie | something tess than half a milion of acres. There a entrely disproportionate to Una Feceivea in many of the Cuance of Prucet.—Henry Bernstein was arrested ‘At a subsequent stage of the proceedings Mr. Dilion, on | an Irishman the ether night. That isn’t “the bridge matter works. Hore is the State of lows, sehich has pro nee a ae weig Sates, sine at ys been aA stronghold of Yesterday by officer Sweeny, of the Lower Police Court, behalf «Vn. Kent, the collector, presented the following | that will carry us safely over. ee ae ee tain ee we = i ies eaten. ae tune aa yy an index of public . year, : em charge of having, on the 21 vit, committed wilfsl | Rothe Hon. A. W. Branton, Surrogate of the city and Mermon Account of the Assassination of | £iv¢ to each one the alternate sections within six mi Mr. Lancomm—Well, how many sores for these Alabama | Morrill, (igger worshipper,) hed 46,780; Wells, (sem. perjury, by falsely swearing to certain matters material | county of New York — ‘Strang. on either side, and if they cannot get the requisite land | rate ’ bw. a a mitadand, « per Ba pioies of being the fieeal ‘auti-Maine law, an- fo an issue then pending in a canse on trial before Justice The petition of William Kent, special collector af the [From the St. James’ Islander, June 20. within that distance, they are authorised to to a dis Ir. Comm, Rennett)—Say 5 Real Te ‘eae 2 a of the Judicial District Court, wherein Bernard | €00d8 and estate of the late Henry Parish, deceased, ap tance of fifteen miles, making a distance of thirty miles | & to make um. uo Dow candidate, and there can be little room Om Monday last the United States steamer Michigan en mg oe Mr. Ler iow, 1 would like to know how my | for doubt that, had the Maine law no: been made am friends from the South haye permitted themselves to be so | issue, Morrill would have beem elected by « triumphant taken in, According to the Commissioner of the General by oy i to each road. Here, then, are one hundred and twenty miles in width of the public lands in lowa covered by th. man was a party interested. The accused was hel! | pointed 7 order made in the aBove entitied matter bear e date grant to secure the construction of those four roads Fried jastic 2 ‘26th day of May iat, respectfully represents— eee on of about the 8d day of June, iu-tant, aceording tered thie ‘bor, at about 1 o'clock Visited by the inhabitants promiscx egmnst Lim ternoon, i Land Office, the ired under this Towa bill is four from his recommendations as a republican, Fre- to previous appointment, he attended at the residence of at To" Well, now look at it in another point of view. Will ithe | Lam , requi ‘Theatrical and Bustcal. the deceased in Union square, ia the city of New York, | At About To'cloek Capt, Mela sente messenger (Sn | Freenied that these grants af lat will notconstrict the | milion three hundred and twenty thousand scres; the | mont is regarded here as eminently a national man; and entire roads, pay the whole coet of them, and leave to the companies which are to be organized by the State Le gislature an amount with which to make a large gividend out of the proceeds of the sale of the lands after te work is completed? Take, for an illustration, the [llinois Con tral Railroad, one of the first measures of the kind par by Congress. A charter was granted by the Legislat of Tiiinots to certain individuals in the States of New York and Massachusetts, who were to take these the road for them. What The work has been com and carried on successfully, and the road is now ing order. Their fares and freights for the month of February have increased from $59,000 in the Year 1866, to $120,000 for the month of February, 1856— showing an increase of more than one bundred per cent from this co alone. Their lands are now being Wisconsin bill takes one million nine hundred thousand | bis Americanism will be no drawback upon him, what- scree; the Michigan bill gives about one million of acree— | ever. The straight whigs, what there are left of them, inall some seven million two bundred thousand acres, | entertain a high respoct for Mr. Fillmore, but they repu- Now, let us see how it is with the South. Here is Miwis- | diate bis Know Nothingism; and it will be impossible for sippi; she is to get five hundred thousand acres; Louisi- | them to swallow Mr. hanan’s identity with the Cin- ana js to get five hundred thousand acres; and then here | cinnati platform. They almost universally accord Maing ia the Alabama bili giving one million of acres. This | to Fremont by 8,000 or 10,000 ity. makes two millions of acres for the South, against seven A disastrous fire, in the very of the business millions for the North. How moch is Florida to have? quarter of the city, has temporarily dampened the ardor Mr. Bexxerr—I want to correct a mistake or two into | of ome of the politicians, aad proved a perfect God-send which the gentleman has fallen, unintentionally, no doubt. | to the local items people of the daily re. Thirty or ‘The fact was, that the Iowa bill and the Wisconsio »il! | more buildings were ed, but ruins are al- were printed, and lay here where every gentleman could | ready thescene of energy activity, although the fre obtain copies. I do not know whether the gentleman | took place but three days ago. from Virginia was aware of the fact, but the bills wore seen by & great many gentlemen then. Now, as 10 the Gueat Finn at Connmna, N, Y—We 1 fin lands for lowa: it is tr there is a statement showing. I understand, that there’ are granted to lowa ove Mr. Thompson, Messenger on the Genesee Vall Gannes.— imie, el ie ai | for the purpose of receiving from Mre. Susan M. Parish. cord casts troupes, = Proonbas thon Sere talent | the widow of said deceased, then residing there, all the this evening, thus enabling the patrons of this house to | stocks, securities and other personal estate belonging to enjoy a series of pleasing, novel and astonishing perform. | the estate of said deceased, and then being in her pus fqnces. At the commencement, Young Hengler and as- | Sesion or under ber control. That thereapon the said eters on the tight rope, foliowed by M'lie Ro- | Susan M. Parish delivered to your petidsener certain ert and others in ‘Les Abeilies,”’ and the Ravels in “A | stocks and securities, amounting to the sum of $452,000 Soldier for Love.” pA conga 9 goof Sree on Twn 1 bejeves to a necks a now re. eer eh eroning in two oF which Me, Mancece | Maining in the name of Henry Parish, which belongist Groogham eurtains favorite Irish characters. ‘The amuse. | % Lim, at the date of his attack of paralysie in July frente open with the popalar drama called the “‘Robber's | 1849. That the said susan M. ParieB then exbibited 14 Wik,’ Rose Redland, Mme. Ponisi, Mark. Mr. Fisher, | YOUF Petitioner certain other # and seouriti O'Gig, Mr. Brougham. Fellowed by the “Irich | % N@F Own property amounting to the sum of $400,000 Seey, ee, ram ca’ the hero, and closing with tue | oF wereabouts, wh and securities your pe et — = - me | \itioner is infor were purchased with “Married Rake. dis of the «bh in bis lifetime visit him on board. Mr. Strang the messenger, and just a® they were stepping on the bridge leading to the pir in front of F. Johnson & Co.'s store, two askacsins approached in the rear, unobserved by elther of them, and fired upon Mr. Strang with pistol ‘The first shot took effect upon the left side of the head entering a little back of the top of the ear, and, rebound ing, parsed out near the top of thé head. is ehot, fired from a horse pistol, brought h mediately accom panier! as they fired the second and third shots from both taking effect upon bis person, one just below th temple, on the right side of the face, and lodged in thx ubeek bene; the other on the left side of the spine, near the tenth rib, followed the 1ib about two inches anda half and lodged Mr. Strang recognized in the persons of the asea : jenry Broapway Vanenes.The Woot & Marsh javen his estate n of about the - ed ond or Wer patent, | brought into market; they are advortised to the count xprene will thie evening concentrate their remarkable histris June inetant, your petitioner caused to be sere rolver, and Bedford a horse pistol, with want, | for sale, and held out to purchasers at prices rn tnilliont, if the State gets six sections for each ile of | allrond, that e destructive fire coourred in the Qbilities in the navtical drama of “Black Eyed Susan on the said Susan M. Park mand for U he struck him over the head and face while ly th. | from five to thirty dollars per acre, asf am jniort road. At assumes that the railroad companies | 4! ulldings, some of valoe come bear and the whimeical farce sayies “— Wa dering | a and surrender to your petitioner of the stocks and sec round. The assassins immediately fled on board t ) this ina State, too, where gentlemen a few y ; ag Fog a 4 ot £7 \y | worthless. ‘The fre broke out in the foundry of eae b @trel.”” Master George enacts his famon of Jom dding theretr 0 4 " - a 0 were complaining that their lands were too high eeetions per mile will make over fou is 1 Lad anes ot hited States steamer, with pistols in hand, claiming hor | &# 4 re Ouglt to be a grad heres; but the fact is, that if all the roads in lowa were | Alcott, on Market street. This extensive establishment, , in the intter piece, and sings the ‘ul Villikins and bie Tinab."’ Burme Bast. —This pleasant and refreshing place of re Gort will doubtless be crowded thie evening by person $1 26 per acre, and saying measure passed to reduce the price, fur the pur, encouraging settlements upon those identical lands. No sir, does this mode of disposiag of them tend to encor Protection The assault waa committed in view of several of t officers and crew from the deck of the steamer, also [) H. D, McCulloch, Franklin Jobuson, and others, aod no he machfne shep adjoining, owned by the same to get the ix sections per mile, it would only be about | hat ¥ ifco millions of acres, aa the lengths of the roads are | ‘TM, Was totally destroyed. The re a along — over estimated. But these four roads will not take up | |‘ Ctttreet for a congiderable distance, ani across lock to Frie avenue, All the territory on Market street fo the & ; vt ? Are you pase nth has two roads would if there were @sirous of witnessing M. Keller's new. and beautiful pa | to the sun offort made to stop it, ties eyenanees sf Chcee Dene Are yon pasties 5 poh Et oe ; om C. 8. Potter's livery stable down to Dr. Gilbert's ote seones, entitied the Third and Fourth of July he 10th f Mr. Strang was taken up by a fow friends and some of | Calewlated to advance the interest of actual sett ready agg ri = being, in the rug store, including bob, was burned over, and on Erie variety of #uperior miscellaneous tableaux, mag rom W. M. Evarts, Be ho ciheaee of ee beak, end carsied 0 the hone you place the lana in the hands of corporations, an f construction, entries have beon largely mate | ° Tus store, meluding bald, was lett ens G@jusions, songs, music, &c., will alko be given this | Parish, an answer 6 the Messrs, Prindies, where the surgeon of the ete. yor | ive them unlimited authority and power to sell them for ¢ lines of thoge roads, The roads Ay welling. The Bank of Corning and the Diet pe fon of the stovks and made an examination of bis Wounds, and declarod reco. | SB¥ price they can get, from five to thirty dollars per ig to the on were caved as were other buildings near by, only with ‘eM A. old & grand Shakep fostival aid, amounting to the som of $982,412 . very hopelees acre? te: but when that estimate was made. there were no reat exertion. Among the buildings destroyed were Bee i hs Corteeges Of the Macquerale’ Ball’ me | bouts, and expressing her willingness to 4 we. | "EL ESE oes tigen ont for the epprchenaten ct 0 Well, it taid now, after this tinois road haa been | returns of the entries made since the Ist of March, which | fre", enre tose, sore of C. 1). Silt grocer: the dwell: s\n the | Pender the residue. That thereupon, by a SI , rant } ‘8° | completed, and when they are paying a secretary a ea nght to be ¢ great many vit Nye Robinson, 0. B. Lacey, Mi © the most comical pleces with which they arein the | jintment, your petitioner, evening TAR Tgp why ah ae by fary of $6.00 a year, and paying other officers salarie | entrics made on these routes since the Ist of Marc's, | ‘nes of James Robinson, Nye Robinson, vicey, Mrs. habit of entertaining their friends = ye ~ 4 Roh - MeMlair for their delivery. The captain refuse to ~y4 A if . hy = : | Clark and others, A number of shanties and small gro- a ced tiled se une | 20; Attended at the res if Mrs. Parish wo receive | them up, eaying that he would take them to Mackines, | St A like high rate, whea their lands are prosentod in | which would reduce that estimate very much. Tam con. | OO" tres nnd lodging houses were also destroyed. We Corveee Hart. —The grand pictorial illustration the urities last mentioned, and did there | ana deliver them into the hands of the civil authorit x | Market, and when it is prociaimed in their report that | dent that the estimate a ion anda half will be fo pot bear the entire joss estimated, but it is not leas Russian war is still on exhibition here same. That your petitic fo- | the Mate there. HOPKOS OF) the whole improvement can be made, and a surplas lor | found to be too high, rather than too low, for all of the | 1 Meany “haine & Alcolt lost $36,000 alone, and onus Mvseem.—A series of dramatic and vocal on. | ceived from the said counsel & memoranda “bh teamer left the next day, carrying off all the par. | {rom the sale of the land, that we, ih making this grant, | lows railroads, The statement in the newspapers ie cal. | tam Sisal ean Me ee Me Gy bad ments are to be given thie og for the benetit | balance ond receipts, being a memorandum of the ca supposed to be implicated w tie aflair, t | have acted the part of a prudent proprietor, cated to proaues 6 ble By aye ge ® Sonne pa Q J ‘Thompson, widow OF the inte favorite | in bank to the credit of Mrs. Parish, at the d wy protection 0 terdere + neta fir, what has become of the cry which wo | that these railroads get land for al jength named Sere i Yallock’s. The plays copvist of “Perfection.” | testator, and aleo of cash reeeipts by her since ‘ i © | heard in thie ball a. few years. age. about land | which # really not the cage, They donot get lands for halt | ‘Tam Crors ix New Yore—The W. “A Soldier's Courtship’ and “A Day After the Wedding apen the stocks and securities as therein i tained of Me. Strang’s recovery. | for the landless, and home for the houselees? | their length, and never would have been all reported Times states on what it conside mMpetent auithority, ‘The beneficiary deserves and will probably havea fail | amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $1 welog Oe ok ee meee), (i | That ery was popular two OF three years ago hera, and | the committee if they did, | But as they gave to lows less | that the wheat crop through that section «f the State pots | thereabouts; all of which the said Susan M. Parish declined | lomeeqnenss of the, rangemmect of affairs grew! + | a measure was actually passed through this House, npon | than the grants made to other States, they wore jacliued | never looked so poorly as at the present time. Through- 4 en to delives to Four petitioger, but which your petitioner of the cxeart the Daily Islander will bo the agrarian princ ip of donating the public lands to those | to make a fair division among ail the roads ont Wyoming, Genesee, Orleans, Livingston and Ontario nformed end believes have been purchased of a ow that is abandoned, and the very counties, the etalk is very short and the grain has come mary. i Tied, at Phitadetphia, Mra, Manta Campwent, wife vp sparingly. The crop will be, it thinks, from one half to ¢ | from the fends of the said testator, and to belong t A same partics who advocated that measnfe come in and ander Campbell. She was the second daughter of | estate. That, ax your petitioner is informed and believes, val Intelligence. propore to make a donation of land which shall increase Deereverrve Free i” Trrmopavs, La—A | two thirds the avernge yield. On the contrary, the bariey late Alexander James Dallas, and the sister of the | of the stocks and securities thas retained by Mrs. Parish The UL &. steamer Fulton, Diewtenant Commanding | the co-tof what remains frem double to forty fold to those | fire broke out on the 23d ult., on Second street, between | crep looks well and healthy, and there is fully as many Present American Miniter in Great Britain. Distin. | as aloremaid, ail of them were purchased after the date of | Richard L. Tilghman, from Key West, arrived here on | very men who now have no land, and are struggling to | Maine nnd Levee streets, and extended over two blocks, | felis of this crop as of wheat between this village ant hed from ber youth by a saperior intelligence, ahe | the paralysis of the testator in July, 1849, with ¢ ] Raturday evening, bound to Washington city | acquire afew acres estroying about twenty-eight bulking The principal | Canendaigna. The crop of oats is also in an exooilen’ wae, during th: administration of James Mad: tiy | coptions—let, 60 shares of the Panama Railroad Ge | patebes from Commodore Pauldidg, of the Hor | Look at the matter in another point of view. This | eutferers are Mesers, Joseph p——] ©. Horton, J.T. | condition, and promises a full yield. Corn, after being admired in the highest circles of socrety in a m | tany stock, $6,000, which were, on the Oth May, 1861, he F. sailed again Saturday night for ber tout'na | cowntry 1# almost overrun with corporations of one sort | Daunie, J. Angier, Horton, Edward J. Lamereaux, and | planted two or three times, is jnet frirly appearing io ety ren: ferred to herself under power of attorney | Norfoux Herald, July 1 | oranother, Here are city corporations, and logal town cor- rae and Bordes. bight. 9