The New York Herald Newspaper, September 8, 1856, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1856. full grown man, with a devel‘yped and well ba-| Exzcrion wy Maine To-bay.—The annual lanced mind, with all tle light before his | State election in Maine will take place to- eyes, will be of one ‘gniversal faith, which | day. Great anxiety will be manifested on the is neither Roman yatholic nor Protestant, | part of politicians to hear the first sews from but which takes the good from both sys-| Maine after the closing of the pdRx, particu- tems, laying aside the fanaticism and rubbish | larly as itis the only State among those which that encumber them, Martin Luther was born | have held their elections where the three and edweated a Catholic—John Calvin was born | parties are regularly organized. There has been and ‘stucated 2 Catholic—so was John Knox, a:d | considerable fasion going on, of late, among the #0 lave been all the great Christian lights for the | different factions, which has mixed up a great ‘pest five centuries; but this did not prevent | many Know Nothings and old line whigs with ‘them from enunciating the purest doctrines, and | the democrats, The follwing are the names of eliminating the great truths of Christianity. | the three candidates for Governgr:— This prying into the private affairsof candtates, either for the purpose of abusing or eutogizing them, is only worthy the mighty energies of such men as Professor Weir, John A. B. GQ Gray and NEW YORK HERALD. —— SANES GORDON BENANE?®?, &DITOB AND P! <<< 9 /Fick A. W. CORNER OF NASSAU 4ND FULLON Shee MM EP EBM AED. 2 cents ute per i ALD. every & He gis Buiojeam oli e/a iat 0° 9 9 wy poy ae Gonaincnt, 0: nephinnys to containing Loupe a Sie RSEBPONDANCR, voteining intr rally paid for. Sa SGk FOREIGN "QF. ca At yo —— ReQOsSTED TO SEAL 46, UerTeas AND Pack ————__——] Wekwmre MEE... 8. eee neeee eeeenee wonee NO 280 ee ES AWUSEMENTS TRIS EVERENG. ACADEMY OF MUSIC, Pourieehth s—TraLian rt Dem. Fremont. Whig and K. N. Samuel Welle. Hannieal Hamlin. Geo. F, Patten. For members of Cengress there ase but twe re- gulae tickets, as folkows:— GARDEN, Droadway—Ttaut Rore Pede—La | * Dis. Furey, dem. Fremont. Poutune—Asrsovet, Lieutenant Governer Raymead. domes Oe 8. Littie, Johan M. Weod, —Eben F. Pilisbury, Cuarles J. Gilman, BOWERY THEATERS, Bowery—Muxars HeantePagncn Banser—Po-ca ion, BURTON'S NEW THE ATRE, Hroadway, oppose Bond treet Tae Rivais~-A Loan OF 4 E oven. BARNUM’S AMPRICAN MUSEUM, Bi: ‘Tweety —Repry Ingalls, —Davie Bronson, nH. Moree, +-Abraham Saxvorn, Washbura, Jr., arto Wirweil. Stophen C. Foster, In most of the Congressional districts, particu- arly in the Second and Fourth, the whigs bave oalesced with the democrats, wkich may cause he defent in those two districts ef the Fremont candidates, As those districts are new repre- ented in the House by Fremonters, such an event would. cause the nigger driving democracy to throw up ‘their caps in rejoicing ever what they would claim as a great victory. On the general question the following table shows the vote for President in 1852, and the Gubernatorial vote at each gueceding election:— Southern Agitators—Dtsanion Meeting at fel Avvo, New Orteans. We yesterday published a repect of a remark- able public meeting hekl on the 27th ult. in the city of New Orleans, for the parpose of uphold- , ing the caxise of Southern State rigkts in the Territory of Kansas. We call it a remarkable f meeting, for it is mot often that we hear such tree- sonable and fanatical sentiments uttered in the South, however familiar they may be to us cem- ing frem Paneril Hall or the Broadway Taker- nacle. But when they find expression in those forums, it is mot on occasions where, as in New Orleans, the meeting is presided over by the Mayor of the city, or where the popular fecting is n-Afernoon Mixores wirn 4 Tiase—QoiTe at © ykt, Evening \— Swiss Sway GRO. CHRISTY & WOOD'S MINSTRELS. #44 Broaddway— Pexvonmances— Squash vous. BUCKLEY'S EERENAININS, 685 Broctway—Ermorian YT WOVATORE. BROADWAY ATHEN 20M, (54 Broadway—Mosicat, PERTICHORMN AND ALIAGORICAL MECuaGE—sEALOUS Hes- BAND. New "York, Menday, Sepesnber 8, 185¢. Pals re ee =— ‘Mails for Europe. NEw YORE BERALD—EDITION FOR EUROPA. "Mae Cunard steamship Niagars, Capt. Leitch, will leave = on Wednerday, at noon, for Liverpool. The European mails will cose in this city st half cerhy 1952. 1853, past two o’clcck to-morrow a‘ornoon. represented. \] Pierce, dem ; Pillsbury, dena ‘The Huw (printed in English acd French) witl be The sentiments of the speakers and of the reso- |} Scott, whig Crosby, whig.. Hate, abolition. ...... 7,808 Morrill, repub., ‘published at tea o’clock in She moraing. Stugte copies ‘ma wrappers, sixpexee. Subscriptions and suvert'sements for ary edition of the lutions adopted at the gathering to which we re- fer, would lead one to suppose that we were en- | Adoltion vote. . 1854. 18! Parti 28,396 Morrill, K.N.., lem Morrill, repub. New «York Husa will be received at the following | gaged not in mere political agitation, or in a Welle, dem placee in Furcpe:— struggle as to the peculiar institutions of a na- Reed, wnig... am. &cSuropear Ez regs Go., 61 King William st, 5 i ‘i Sil, —" ag wba 8 Pince de la Bourse, ee State, py e ee Te nee — ‘The election to-day is entirely a new move- Tevmoo.— te, See ee Ee es » For instance, i T° | ment, and will divide the State on new issacs. Tavarroor—Joba nots 12 Exchange street, East. ‘The contents cf the European editien of the Hanan ‘will embraco the news received by mail and telegraph at ‘he office during the previous week, acd to the boar of Ppablicet‘on style of Pizarro’s address to the Peravians, asks the Louisianians whether they will be deaf to the cries and entreaties of their suffering bre- thren in Kansas, and answers for them that be knows they will not. He re minds them that their State was trae to herself in 1814-15, and that she was first ia the field when the war against Mexico broke out, aad declares that she must in this crisis retain her ad- vanced position, The second speaker boasts that he fought in defence of his country, and calls upon “the chivalrous young Louisianians present to take up arms aad follow the example of the men of 1812." He tells them that they must resist force by force, and that he himself was not yet so old as not to be able to wield the sword or shoul- der the musket. And to show his bitter hostility to the North he rebuked Southerners for going to spend their money there, and declared, in language which Captain Rynders would not stoop to uze, that before he would do so be would see them to h--l. The third speaker, emulating the style of his predecessor, would have Kansas “if it was not worth a d—n,” and regarded the Union asa miserable abstraction and an ignominious bondage. One of the resolutions adopted at this extraordi- bary gathering deelares it to be the duty of the Legislature of each Southern State to take such steps as will divorce the South from the North — “peaceably if they can, forcibly if they mast ; and another calls upon the Governor of that State to correspond with the Governors of all the Southern States, with a view of creating a concert of action on the subject. We have no doubt in our own mind but that the persons who were instrumental in getting up this meeting, got their cue from Washington. The is precisely the same idea at the bottom of it as was promulgated through the Washington corres- pond nee of a New Orleans journal some days Jefferson Davis, Caleb Cushing, and Henry A. Wise bave been the managers behind the seenes. The actors in it were not a whit better, less violent, or more discriminating ac Wendell Phillips, Lloyd Garrisoa, Th eodore Parker and that class of abo- ist fire-eaters who ha head- quarters at Boston, and occasion: jal tours for the amusement of the poop! New England. These ranting fanatics have hardly ever been more violent in thelr denancia tion of the South and its institutions than their eongeners in New Orleans have been against the North, its people and its public sentiment. As we said before, one might imagine from a peru- ral of the proceedings of that assemblage, that the people of the South were actually engaged in an ihilating war with a ruth What windmills these Quixotic gontlemen hare been fighting! The quiet, business, common sense people of the North, and the same ciass of peo- ple of the South, who fortunately constitute the mass of the population in each section, have no idea of engaging in an internecine war. They recognize how indissolubly their social and political interests are blended toyether. They deprecate, as all good men do, the disastrous condition of things in Kansas. But they know that the remedy therefor is not in following the infatuated counsel of crazy, ha’ brained fanatics, or ambitious broken down pol! ticians, North or South. They know that the cause of all the mischief that has been done, and that is yet brewing, has been the corrupt and imbecile administration of Mr. Pierce, and that if he bad only acted fairly, faithfully and resolutely, the government of Kansas would have gone on snoothly, and such fellows as Lane, Atchison and Stringfellow would have had no field there for the exhibition of their tollies and wickednesere. Having, then, recognized—as no man who has paid the slightest attention to the evente of the last eighteen months can fail to recognize—where the responsibility and blame of all these troubles rest, the remedy is eacy. It isin the hands of the people themeelves, It does not consist ia placing Bibles, rifles, revolvers and bowie kn’ in the hands of misguided men, and sending them out to murder their brother men aad fellow citizens in Kansas. The danger can be averted, and the remedy applied without the shedding of a drop of blood. Let the sensible people of the South, slaveholding and non-slaveholding, treat the incendiary ravings of their demagoguos in New Orleans and cleewhere, with the same con- empt and indifference as the sensible people of the North treat the incendiary ravings of their Presidential questions and Presidential prefer- ences will enter largely into the merits of the controversy. Buchanan, Fremont and Fillmore will show the first indications of their strength. Since the nomination of the Presidential candi- dates we have had six State elections—four South and two North. In the South they have been, North Carolina, Arkansas, Kentucky and Missouri—all of which went by large majorities for the democrats, thereby indicating their going in the November election for the democratic can- didate for the Presidency, Mr. Buchanan. In Towa and Vermont the majorities were increased beyond all former precedent for the republican candidates, or those representing the name of Fremont as a Presidential issue. The election to-day in Maine will be another Northern State added to the latter list, and the result will tell much on the public mind and on the future movements of parties. According to every appearance, and judging from every indi- cation, the republican State candidate, or the Fremont party, will carry the State of Maine by alarge plurality. If either of the other tickets should succeed, it will be a very serious blow to the fortunes of Col. Fremont iu the final contest. But from the indications in the North, we don’t anticipate such an issue, and it is probable that it will add only to the great movement which ir proceeding with giant steps throughout the North- ern and Northwestern States in favor of Fremont, and which will prepare the way for the great and vital and turning point in the State electioa of Pennsylvania in the middle of next month. “We the Pubite. Advertisements must be handed into the publication @MBco beivre nine o'clock ia the evening. Aunounce- ments cf (inthe, or other equally urgen: aolices, are, of The News. ‘The steamship Canadian, now fully dae at Hali- fax from Liverpool, with four days later European ews, bad not made ber appearance up to last even- a the errival at this port yesterday of the brig Alma, Capt. Brown, we have dates from Nassau, N. P., to the 26th ult. Capt. B. reports that the Ame- rican ship Colchis, Ellis, from Boston, bound for New Orleans, was wrecked on the Gingerbread Ground on the 8th ult. Her cargo of dry goods, &., was saved in good condition. On the 25d ult. the British brig Baltic, from Ragged Island, with a car- @o of salt, bound for Nassaa, was totally lost on the Green Cays. At the last session of the General Court at Naseau, J. Simons and Robert stevens, masters respectively of the wrecking schooners Anne Bophia ond Sarah, were convicted and sentenced to eighteen months imprisonment, with hard labor, for gome unlawfu! dealings in the case of the wreck of the American brig , Capt. Wail, bound from 8: Jago to Trieste, with a cargo of copper and logwood, which was saved perfectly dry, and for cutting away the brig’s tiller, thereby preventing Capt. Ramsay, cf the schooner Presidemt, from bringing the vessel to Nassau. In another column will be found an address from President Mora to the people of Costa Rica, enfore img vpon them and the citizens of the other Cen tral American republics, the necessity of an oblivion of their past differences, and of a united and energetic resistance to the aggressions of Walker and his filibusters. This document is remarkable for the lucid exporition which it gives of the causes which have enervated and retarded the people of Ceutral America in the path of progress, and i: points out the meare by which they may raise themselves to the level of those who now presume upon their weak mess to spoliate them of the magnificent heritage which Providence has bestowed upon them. ‘A Madisop, Wisconsin, paper states there has been no rain in those parts for several weeks, and the late crops are suffering badly. President Pierce left Washington on Saturday for a brief visit to Warrenton Springs, Va. The value of foreign goods imported at the port of Borton during the week ending 5th inst, amount ed to $1,216,975. The rales of cotton on Saturday embraced about 100 bales—the market cling firm at aboat l/c. for middling uplands. Flour was less active, while prices were quite steady at yesterday's quotations Wheat was less active and buoyant, the receipts were light, and choice new while was scarce; new red ranged from $145 a $1 52, and fair to choice white Western asd Southern ranged from $1 57) a $1 67}. Corn was active, though leas buoyant. Bound Wes'ern mixed sold at 66c. a 67¢., and South- ern yellow at 73c. Old and new rye mixed, from #ip and store, eold at Sec. a 0c. Pork was dall, with sales of meas at $19 31, a $19 37) a 19 50, closing at $19 37}. Coffee was steady, with sales of 1,290 bags at rates givenio another colamn. Sogars were unchanged, with moderate sales, the transactions being confined to abou’ 509 000 bids. Caba mase> vado, at 7jc.aSc. Freights were engaged to a fair extent, including about 60,000 bashels of grain to Liverpool at 7jd.a 7jd. a 8d., in balk and bags To London, 4,000 bushels of grain were engaged, at eid. Coroxen. Fremost’s Retro When w the miserable foes and friends of Colonel F. mont exhibit some traits of common sense in relation to matters that have nothing to do With the present contest? The Evening Post of Satur day publishes an and ridiculous tirade, purporting to be a corre ndenee between Pro- fewcor Weir, of West Point, and a Mr. John A.B.C, Gray. of this ci % the Military Academy, insite pa of attending to hie duties at that excellent i welf in the J religious affairs of Colonel Fremont. Thy second or third person he endeavors to pick up testimony on this important ew t, and by the delivery of a book, through another Profe endeavors to ascertain Fremont’s religious upia jone— matters which are between him and heaven alone. Mr. John A. B. C. Gray takes up the cudgel on the other side, and endeavors to prove, by an argument as long as moral law, that is all in the wrong. are tired of seeing dential contests, Rerverican Primary Execriox.—The pri- mary meetings for selecting delegates to a State Convention of the republican party, oth wire called black republicans or nigger worship- pers, or whatever else they are. better known by, will be held this afternoon in all the wards of the city. This isa very important movement on the part of the friends of Fremont. The republi- cans, as they call themselves, or nigger worship- pers, as we sometimes call them, are only one of the many parties who have enrolled themselves in favor of Col. Fremont’s advancement to the Presidency in this campaign. Fremont is the nominee of various parties and various men. tertaining very opposite and conflicting op on State and abstract questions, We support the election of Col. Fremont for great conservative and reformatory purpoees, as we have indicated; but we bave very little feeling or sympathy in common with republicans or their abstract and local notiona, The meetings held to-day in the different wards are for the clection of a convention to nomiaat thecandidate for Governor. In the republican jour- nals several names have been put forward for that high office, such as E. B. Morgan, Simcon Draper, and Horace Greeley. Mr. Morgan is well known to be connected with the great Central Railroad interest, and as Governor would be merely an agent of that dangerous and fearful moneyed oligarchy—a thing we deprecate in the politics of this State. Mr. Draper belongs to the same side, and would be entirely under the influence exercised through the big and little villains of the old whig party—Tlurlow Weed aad Lieuten- ant Governor Raymond. Philosopher Greeley isan independent candidate, and seems to occupy a porition more popular and less under the influence of moneyed mon. He has his oddities and his abetractiona, and his peculiarities in dress, and his peculiarities in opinion; but on the great questions of integrity and honesty, as a public man, we think he is far ahead of those who have been named with him. The election, therefore, will be inter- esting today, as an effort will be made by the friends of each of those candidates to carry dele- gates favorable to their views. What we shall do in the Governor's election, for our own poor selves we have not yet determined. If the republicans, under the influence of Thurlow Weed and the big and littie villains of his clique, nominate such men as Morgan, we shall certainly consider whether it is not‘our duty to support such a fair and honorable man ae Judge Parker, who has already been put in nomination by that execrable party, the rotton democracy of this State. The only wonder is that euch a party ever selected so good and reputable a man. They must be very hard driven when they were forced to accept him as their candidate. less en It’s all this, one of the b founded upon great ar Ispran War tx Fiortpa.—Our telegraphic des ciples, be-litt) 1 political, philanthropic and reverend agitators, patches from Washington inform us that a new attacks up The best way to cure these fellows is to go on | Indian war has broken out in Florida, and that of Colonel Ire never minding them. Bat for the vile admin General Harney is to be sent down there to re- jone, bis pris ther small matters | tration which firet encouraged outrages in Kan- preesit. These Indian wars are always got up by with which the publi rge have nothing in | eas, and then shrunk from the attempt to repress | schemers, politicians and speculators, to advance We have not the the storm iteelf had raised, there should be no indifference or mercy. It deserves the reproach and condemnation of all who love their country. We trust to see that feeling exhibited in Novem- ber next, by the sweeping away every vestige and trace of that wretched cabal who hold the go- vernment in their unworthy hands, and of the system which upheld and sustained them, In tha! alone safety consiete, their own ends, even at the expense of hundreds of lives and millions of treasure. The last Indian war in Florida, got up under the Van Buren ad- ministration, cost the government $30,000,000. There is no estimating what, under our present corrupt administration, and under the manage- ment of Jeff. Davis, Cushing and Wise, this new Florida war may not cost. This trio of worthies have been lately getting up ® mase meeting in the world to do. d@oubt—and are satiefied without inquiring or en- deavoring to find out—that Colonel Fremont is of that unfvereal religion which is founded upon truth—that he is a Obristian, believing in the great fandamental truths upon which Christianity isfounded. Whether he commenced his religious life ae a Roman Catholic or a Protestant is not ao matier of tbe slightest gomeequenge. Every Bramatic and Musical Matters. The tity bas been crowded with strangers during iho pact week, and in consequence the treasuries of the seve- val places of amusement have been in an @: healthy condition. No less tuan nine thousand dollars have been taken at the Academy, of which six thousand were the receipts of three opera nights. The season at this house has certainly been most brilliantly in ugaratel, as fer as pecuniary success is concerned. The operas of the week were the ‘Trovatore,”’ ‘Lucia’? and the ‘‘Son~ nambala.”” The only event was the appoarange of tha new tenor, Tiberini, in Edgardo, He was not satiefled with bis reception by the journals and the pubiic, and cancelled bis engagement with the manager. He is en- gaged by Strakosch, who gives @ concert on tho 15th, anc will doubtless be heard to more aivantage 30 a sails DoD quite so large as that of the Academy. ‘The dramatic performances at the Academy have ia- cluded two sepresentations of Shakspere’s “ Henry 1V.,!” under the direction of Mr. Hackett, who played Fal~ staff. The cast of the piece was very good. Mr. Wate Jack, Jr., played Hotspur admirably, and Me. Georg Jordan was the beau ideal of the fast Prince of Wales, Notbing could be tiner than the appearance of the two Harrys inthe last act. Miss Kate Saxon made ® great eal out of the little bit of Lady Percy. Oa Taesday Mr. Hackett will produce the + Merry Wives ef Windsor,’? Mr. H. Placide, by permission of Mr. Marshall, of the: Broadway theatre, will take the part of Dr. Caius, in which he is excellent. Miss Susan Pyne will eppear ao Mrs. Ford. On Thursday at this house Mr, Fleming bad a beneilt,. There was a crowded house and a very bad performance, This evening ‘‘ Ernani’’ ig announced, wita LaGrange, Taffanelli, Ceresa and Colettl, Ceresa is tho tenor who: fang with Vestvali in Boston last summer, cud was much: liked by the Athenian critics. Next weels we bear that« we are to have * L’Etoile du Nord.’” Mr. Burton will open bis new theatre, Broadway, op- poeite Bond street, thia evening. He has made some al. terations in the stage apd part of the bouso, aad alse piinted and decosated it throughout. The cpening bill is. the ‘ Rivals,” and *'A Loan of a Lover.’ Me. Barton. gave bis farewell performance at the Chambers street« theatre on Saturday night. Brovauam’s Bowery THxaTre opened fer the regular season on Monday, and bas done a fine week’s business, On Thureday MrgMcDonough, the new leading actor,, made his début here, and is much liked. His chief faulo- seems to be that he fails too much “in the Ercles vein.’7* The bill for to-night, at this house, includes a new adapta tion of Les Filles de Marbre, (“Marble ilearts,”’) by Mrs Brougham, a new ballet divertisement, ‘‘ibe French Bar-- ber,’? and “Pocahontas.’” At Ninzo’s Gaxpkn the Ravels are the attraction fory thie evening. Two of their best pieces make up the billy We hear that Miss Eroma Stanley will shortly re appear. She has been very euccessful at the Boston Musical Hall,. where ehe remains this week. The AMERICAN Museum opened for the season, last week, with a very good company, ied by C. W: Clarke and Mise~ Emily Mestayer. The entertainments for this day andy evening are well selected. “Giralda,”? a capitat piece, is to be produced this evening. At the Atnex.xca, 654 Broadway, a troupe of javentlo- comediane open this evening in a pleasant entertaiament, This sort cf thing is becoming quite popular. « The Cooxep Overa, in Wood’s and Buckioy’s new balls, je sti)! fourishiog magnificently. Excellent bills at both» houses this evening. ‘The GexMan OrkRa Opens at Nibio’s Cardon, on the 16th, with * Robert le Diavie ’” Wattack’s THeaTee will, we hear, be opered on Mon~ dey next. The company is called to meet on Saturday. ‘There is a rumor that the difficulty between Bowen & MeNamee aud Mr, E A. Marshall bas been amicably set- Ued, and that the Broadway theatre will be opened tn: three cr four weeks. Two theatres will be opencd in Boston this evening the National, under Mr. Willard, and the Boston, une der Mr. Barry. H. Wallack is stage manager at the Na- tioval. Mr, Chanfrau and Miss Albertine are playing ad the Howard Athenmum. They bring out ‘Violet, or thor Life of an Actress,” this week. It was played a week or> two ago at ibe Butlalo theatre by Mr. and Mre. Franky Drew. Mr. Josern Jayrenson, stage manager of the Richmond (Va ) theatre, returned from «pleasure irip to Europe oa the Hermann. He acted in Washington list weok. Mr. Cuartes Kiyo and Mrs. Mary Prevost galled fur California in the steamer of the 5tb inet. Mr. G. F. Browne, who was reported dead some time tince, writes us tosay that he is alive and managing e dramatic company at St Joseph's, Missouri. Eastern pa- pers who have killed him will be good enough, therefore, to revive bin. Barrimoxe —The Holliday street theatre has been: opened for the season, under Mr. John 7. Ford’s manago- ment. Mr. Wilkins’ comedy, ‘My Wi/o’s Mirror,” hae been produced here, the Aterican says, with desided success. Miss M. Mitchell was the star last week. Wasuixotoy —Mr. and Mrs. Florence closed a briliaat ‘engagement here on Thureday, and pasged hence to Cai- cago. Laura Keene, George Jordan, C. Wheatlelgh, and others of her company, open here to-night in ‘* Camilie’” and “ Novelty.”’ , Pw rma.—The Walaut street theatre opened Mon- day evening for the season, Miss Davenport is the first tar. Cimcaco —The Pyne Opera Troupe g: bem gh! ae Avgust 2ith, Miss L. Pyne was com serena ze at her lo igin, at the theatre Mr. Stefarlande” the stage manager, bad a benofit on the 25tn, whon Mise Marion Macarthy appeared, Mr. and Mrs, viorence wore Pinying to great houses there last week, New Orleans for the purpose of making political] THE LA %EST NEWS. capital at the North by holding up the bugbear of a disunion, and we should not wonder if they had BY MAGNET!", AND PRINTING TELEGRAPHS, a finger also in getting up this Florida war, 80 as Ae to magnify the perils that menace the republic. | ,.omnpn 1 ionenotien ne eine bis * In this they overreach themselves, for the more SAMO 4 UPON a8 B FORAACRE 2 paananpsios8 perilous seems the condition of things the less £0 CALIF —WHAT ARB TARY ?—Tae likely will the people be to entrust their manage- SCRE AON OF DAVEE, CUEING 5D OCR WaAsnixGroy, Sept. 7, 1856. ment into euch hands, 1 understand that witnin eight or ten days communt- ©’ ations of an important and startling character haye been Pourrea Personauries—-ATtackING Fe- | received at the War Department, from Florida, of fresh MALEs.-—A few days sinee, in reatting in the Bz- insurrection among the Indiang in the everglades, It 1 : rea what purported to be a repert of aimccling | re ett weston was sried. through the comtry of the friends of Mr. Fillmore, et Rahway, New | 4 year or two ago and feud as a lion, now chiofs have Jersey, we were shocked with some expressions | started up, and « terrible war is antisipated by the people which were put into the mow of David Paul | of Florida, Aid will be required from tue general gov- Brown, Esq., aneminent member of the Phila- | ¢rpment; new troops will have to be sent to that region, np te - se ‘and more demands made upon the treasury. According Celphia bar. Ruowing ‘thet Mr. Brown was & | 1) ine account trom the everglades and their victaity, gentkman in every reletion of life, public and | there is strong probability that the ‘ border rufflans” private, we were astonished beyond measure at | of Florida have bad a hand in this business, and have ia- what we reed. The repsrt of the speech repre- | cited the Indians to a new insurrection, in order to bave a sented Mr, Brown as attacking the mother of one | chance for another grand hau! upon the public funds, | nee NHN ; will be remembered that the Florida war, caused by the of the Presidential esudidates, and we expressed mismanagement of the Van Biren admiuistratioa, cos’ the cur sunprise that-anz gentleman should so far } United States, exclusive of losa of life, upwards of violate "the proprietics of lift. We are happy to |, $30,000,060, in the shape of pay for troops, claims of Ia- have it in our:power to relieve Mr. Brown of this | diane, Indian agents, contractors, speculators, ant offi stigme. In anote received from him yesterday he | ‘isis of all eorts; all of which ended in the remoy sl of « re-affirms our former opinion, that he is a gentle- man particularly attentive to the niceties of civilized existence and engaged in a war against few Seminoles only to the West, cach Indian costing men, not women. Here is Mr. Brown’s note:— about $1: 0,000. T also understand that the War Department has ordered Pritapeuraa, Sept. 6, 1856. Deak Sin—For myself I am not sensitive; but I havo a Gen. Harney, who is somewhere at the North, to proceed immediately to Florida to take command of the troops there and to be concentratod there. Gen. Harney has horror of aséailing wotnen tn a political controversy or wny other controversies. In your paper of yesterday ycu fay Laseaited, in my speech at Rahway, the charac ter of Fremont’s mother, This is not tue. I expressed my abhorrence of dragging females into the areua of porty surife; and it wag in referring to Colonel Fremont’s abeurd biography that the introduction of his tamity alone was noticed, and then it wag noticed only to be con demned, So far from attacking the mother, [ went out of my way to repel the iueinuations of one of the public journals, toat the mother was not divorced from her first husband et the time she married the second. The oaly war lam enlisted for ig against men, not women. Re- epectfully yours, DAVID PAUL BROWN. This only shows the character that this con- test has taken from some of the politicians who ave carrying it on. The report on which our re- marks were founded was published in the Express of last Thursday, The report says— Be eays Fremont's mother married an old man of 62 years, she being 16; lived with bim two vears; had no children and applied’ for @ divorce. Tae Pennsylvanian feys rhe ren uway with another man. The biographer aisoeays Fremont’s tather fiually walked Spanish with Mre. Pryor. Mr. Brown said he was fghtiog with an ad vervary’s weapon, This report, in the usual style of the Ecpress— disjointed, ungrammatical and muddled--cer- tainly gives but one idea, and that perfectly justifies our article of Friday. We are glad to know from Mr. Brown that it is a gross false- hood—a libel throughout—and that he made use of no such dirty weapons as the Express would force upon him. There can be no doubt that many other reports of meetings held and speeches made, by the Zxpress, are equally false—all manufactured out of whole cloth—to keep the Chevalier Brooks in countenance. They are not satisfied with exhausting their own vocabularies of blackguardism upon Colonel Fremont’s female relations, but they must put words of the same dirty character into the mouth of a respectable man like David Paul Brown, hoping to get their slanders credited by his endorsement. But he bas stopped that game, at any rate. Another remark: the allusion made by Mr. Brown to Colonel Fremont’s biographers is too true. Many of these books were gotten up for monetary and political speculations, by adventurers who have nothing to lose, and who know but little about a Presidential contest, or he proper manner of conducting it. “These romancers have done a great deal of harm, and urnithed powder for the enemy. just got through whipping the Sioux and other In fiaas at the West, and is now directed to make war upon those in Florida. It fs eaid that the Indians have a large num- ber of runaway slaves with them. These negroes are more gavage and ferccious than the Indians themselves, and it is to be expected that to exterminate them will lead to frightful depredations upon the national treasury. 1 am informed, upon pretty good authority, that tae instructions sent outa few days since by the Illinois to California are very strong and bitter against the Vigilance Committee and the acts of that Committee, but in view of the approaching Presidential election, the govern- ment officials are urged to adopt moderate measures at first, and that Governor Johnson is again to call upon the national Executive for aid to euppress the revolutioa- ary government, before resorting to extreme measures. ‘Time will be gained by these instructions, and the parti- zans of the administration pacified for a while. If the State gces for Buchanan the vigilants are to be crushed out, as a reward to tho faitaful; if for Fremont, ap effort will be made to annihilate them, as a punishment for their temerity, Let me assure you that beneath the whole there is a deep laid plot. The “Army bill’ will auswir the purpose for which it was so strenuously sought for by Jeff. Davis. It appears that in this movement Jefferson Davis and Caleb Cushing, aided by Governor Wize, of Virgiaia, are the master spirits. Poor Pierce is merely used by them to carry out their schemes. It is their plan to carve California into two States, to make tae southern portiona slave State, and to bring the subject up ag an addilional question in the next Congress. Tois forms apart of the scheme of Davis, Cushing and Wise, in getting up Southern secession meetings, and calling extra eeasioas of the Southern State Legislatures, to be prepared for apy emergency that may not agree with their ar- rangements. The whole internal policy of the adn inietration is controlied by Davis and Cashing. Mar- cy and also Guthrie are against them. Puor Pierce \s no- body. He is merely used by the Secretary of War and the Attorney General for the purposes I have indicated to you. Iam told that theee movements have led to several scenes at (he Cabinet meetings, but I am not surprised at this. Davis argues his points with such violence that the more conservative members of the administra. tion, like Marcy and Guthrie, fare startled out of their propriety. The Pretident lef’ Washington yesterday for Warren- ton Springs. Non-Arrival ef the Canadian. Quanrc, Sept. T~P. M. ‘The ecrew steamship Canadian, with four days later news ‘rom Burope, is now in her twelfth day out from Liverpool, and tully due at this port; but up to 5:20 thix afternoon she had pot been heard of at the telegraph station at River du Loup. nton, Ma: Provivxxen, Sept. 7, 1958. The,Teurton’Eoamelling Worke, at Taunton, Mass., wore destroyed by fro st 12 o'clock last night. The lose is about $17,000, Insured for $12,600 in the Etna and other offices ip this city. Arrivel of the Florida at Savannah. SAVANNAM, Sept. 6, 1856. The stcamehip Florida, from New York, arrived bere at her wharf at noon to day. ire at “Wn Doctors Dirren’’—Awn Iytenestine Disrvre.—A furious controversy is now being waged between the American Medical Gazette, edit- ed by Dr. Meredith Reese, and the Medical Spe- cialiet, edited by Dr. Robert Hunter, in reference to the merits of the latter's system of inbalation. We have so frequently expressed our opinion of its efficacy, that it is not our purpose to take any part in the present discussion. We notice the quarrel simply as another indication of that ma- nia for public disputation which seems to be in- fecting all classes—politicians, lawyers, journal- ists and divines. Each has his nostrum for pub- lic or private evils, and the medical profession, jealous of this invasion of their prescriptive Markets. Provinexce, Sept. 6, 1866. The demand for cotton during the past week has been steady, and the market closed with a rm feeling, | Wool —A light stock of pulled on bacd. Flecoe very firm Sales ot tho weck, 79,700 Ibe. Frinting clothe very a2 tive and prices irm; sales of 1 x Wisconsin, S é . hoiee Ohio, Indiana and Michigan, $6624 | aw Fraxcwco.—Mra. Julia Dean nt played for rights, now rush into the arena to vindicate their good to beet entree, most at $6 60a $5.66. Wheat the benefit ‘ofthe Poctad ¢ Kellet Fun ay n, being {a science. It isa pity that some specific cannot be | opered active and closed quiet; pales, 35,000 bushels, at delicate situstion, bad tempor veured trom —— $116 for choice Iltinots epring: $1.41" fur’ common white ce. Lala Montes bad arrived at San Francisco froma found to keep them all quiet. Pugnacious asare politicians and priests, they are outdone in vio- lence by these medical gentlemen. Dr. Reese calls Dr. Hunter a quack, because the latter, like a man of sense, confines himself to the practice of one thing which he knows well, in preference to practising many things of which he knows little, according to the general custom of the profession. Dr. Hunter retorts by recommending his readers to call at Rushton’s, and to ask for Dr. Gris wold’s sovereign remedy for fever and ague and intermittent and bilious fever, Dr. Griswold, the patentee thereof, being the assistant editor of the Medical Gazette ! The thrust is a home one, and we are curious to see what reply Dr. Recse will make to it. The Gazette also twits Hunter with being an English- man, and we presume that the latter will retort by throwing “ Taffy” at Reese, without, we hope, Indiana, $1 46 for choice do. and Lilinois. Corn dull; 20,060 "poshela, “eK a Side. After the rise in freight. no boyers at 640. firm at 0c. Rye dull, Canal freights to New ‘York f firmer; l6c. fer corn, and 19. for wheat. Receipts in the twenty. four hours up to noon to- day, 3,280 bols. flour, 30,479 bushels wheat, 64,161 do 234 do, oats Canal exporte—25,) 1049 bushels wheat end 100,229 bushels corn. Oxwroo, Sept. 6—7 P. M. Four steady—eales of extra Oswego, 700 bbls. Wheet quiet. Corn firm and scarce—eales last evening 6,200 Dusbeir, at Sic. ; to-day 2,700 do., at S8c., tw arrive. Importr—34,586 bushels of wheat. Canal’ exports— 30,094 busbels of wheat, and 38,072 do. of corn Cyicaco, Sept. 6—6 P. M. Wheat unchanged—shipmenta to Builalo 99,000 barhe's, and Montreal 28,000 do. Corn duli and ¢eclined le, the dechne mainly owing to the advance in-freiahta Ship pgs ee Buffalo 14, bushels. Freight to Buffalo 12),¢. on wheat, New South Wales. The Misses Govugenhetm bat ® com- phmentary benefit at the American, and sailed for Sydney in the Star King, aan’ ats ‘Bacbanwn SS . W. B. Chapman, Caroline Chap- men, Hann and others were at the American. The * Ea- chentress.”’ with Jolia ec iar ties AL = was rune bing at the Metropolitan. At the Acelphi, etderant Onion theese, Fa ote, Phelps, Leman and Wilder bees gen FR ag The a Papers = hay pon ‘erdi’s last opera, “La Traviata,” “produ miley. The plot ie that of “Ia Dame aux me {cae} ‘The Times bap the following account of Barney Williame- and bis wite, at the Ade phi— There could not be a more unequivocal testimonial to the talent of Mr, and Mra. Barney Williams than the their laet tranratiantic importation, entitled nce and Yankee Modesty.’ The piece is thoee indescribable works that now seem peculiar to based on Mirsent Letters. Litt of letters advertised in the New York Hanatn, Friday, Sept. 6, remaining in the New York Post Oilloe uncalled for—tor Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore and Albany housee—no doubt misdirected letters — UIT ADELPHIA HOUSES. mes Kidder & Co., in e of that porsibility, a volun’ idling together force it would e uaendurable, but Mr. and Mrs. a4 Youth and aborcughicoing ‘Yankee “gal” soppos ou a ugh going Yankee “gal,’’ sa; to servants in the Tame ean yn ees George W. Cat nded fur Bugbee, ‘iid. the usual accompaniment. These are certainly | Campbell & Co. jen & Co. o say eared om th the greatest vigor curious features in medical polemics, and if the Sree pectpemnery & 00, taioh be padtacinr bo bs welt iontonien tanh profession cannot make use of more forcible argu- | Selah Mart, path special record. The Yankes iady endeavors mente, we are afraid that the old opinion will | H. Pe. a conus atte and is DB. chewing tobacco, and the Hibernian, gain ground, that agua pura is the principal ingre- dient in their prescriptions. In fairness to Dr. manners, coneents to bel Lamy A HopsEa. Mr. Narney ‘Williams wo ke out this situation, Hunter, it chould be stated that Dr. Reese hasnot ine & Oo, pte TT © | bis incredulity, and then, with a sudden gasp a jes, Bulling&Webrheim. “ " always been in the habit of speaking in this de- Befarana evan Ho, Hodger Pact Sew seve ef tniecheed, ts saunrebie, cna noe preciating manner of his rival's talents, In com- | Strauss & Goldmar, Be S-&W, A. Loney &Co, fore share rie Sh ermees menting upon one of his papers upon inhatation, Willean, Diihegs oo Shona” 0O—2 | “Pesky ike,” which but which was inserted in the March number of the | Charles's. Warts, 0 ERUNASY BOSS, wigs Bat, a iar al ral a paren James Burton & Oo. Shear, Pacaard & Co Treadwell, Perry & Norton. POSTON HOSTS, Wm. A, Brown & Co, Curtis & Co. hes os gone the round of the Sanday pooh, from the: Morning Chromicle, reavecting an arrangement foto whic itis raid ar. E. T, Smith has entered with Mr. Gye forthe: transfer of the lease of Drury Lano theatre to him in Feb. roary next, The Morning Cnromtele stated thie informa. tien was obtained trom wu untousiet acthority. We are row itive contradiction, Medical Gozette, he speaks of “his scientific views in regard to diseases and remedies,” and says that, though designed for popular instruction, « it may be read with profit by physicians.” As, how- ever, facts in controversies of this kind have more value than arguments, we refer our readers to a etter in another column, from one of Dr. Huat- er’s patients, which will enable them to form their own conclusions, as to the merits of the dispute. te & Co. City Polttics. NOMINATIONS ALREADY MAD#. The political cauldron is beginning to levil among our local politicians. A few nominations have already been made, and before long the names of the candi¢ates wi! be given. The following are the names of those regularly nominated — FOR CONGREER®, Seventh District —Geo. N. Briggs, KN. FOR ALDERMEN, Ninth Ward —Corneline 8. Cooper, K. N, Pifteenth Ward —Harry Snyder, ¥ hig. Seventeenth Ward.—Jobn ven wd KN. Nineteenth Ward.—Hiram Abill Maynard, K. N.; Henry W. Genet, straight whig. FOR COUNCILMEN, Twenty first District. —Jown Kennard, K. N. Twenty tecond District. Alex. Hemphill, K. N. Twenty eighth Dietrict —D. 0, Hant, K. N. yy District. —Hiram A. Maynard. FOR ASSEMPLY. Chl Brevoort, K. N.; ©. 1, Irving, ASSEMBLY NOMINATIONS IN THE NINTH WARD. N.; John Bullock, Personal Intelligence. Gorerncr Wire bas returned to Richmond, afer a de. ghtful rejourn in the mounteine, Gen, P. A. Herran, Minister from New Granada, and Den Raiael Pombo, Secretary of Legation, are in Wash- ington city. Charles W. Abbot, of Rhode Island, hae been appointed Pareer in the navy, from the 2d of September, 1856, in place of John P. Abbot, resigned. ‘The Board of Engineers, which was reconvened on the 10th of Auguet, adjourned a few days ago. The following engineer® were passed for promotion —First Assistant bourg is at ten ope Sanday Tones’ oa contradicts tho t that W. V. Wallace wae = rays:—Mr. Wallace, we rejoice te eay, can ree most men ; although we doubt if he secs any Proapeet of his operas being produced for soue time to tenth bas a hae sufferer whom disease bed long wibdrawn rom setive lite. Forviga journala pounce that umann it on the 20th July aes Bose, rren Joachim, Brahma, For- Engineer, Theodore Zeller, to be Chief Engineer. Second Hiller, and map: ; aswtaat Eogincer, Montgomery Ylewher, o be Pires Be. on ee erenag ones Cable o> en Ga Nothing etinter toni Inst ries ane come. eer EW. watuing, had y. Bc Rimval, to ve secre | nominee for Astembly. Henry J. Irving was nominated wk pre avin Paving (been, oered oy te ous ‘Assistant Engineers. by the old Council. ft was ‘claimed by one majority; | were appointed to Tse ey cores At the Later Mogientons 7 but this was ¢isputed, Samuel Brevoort’s friends claiming | Thomas, Scribe, St. ere 3 Pe ai Wt ij a fay Porta, that he was the successful party, To support the latter's cnn ot ee ‘All that array ‘ipston, ri T: fe nies we, Aim: claims a new Counct] has been organized, Meanwhile, pent Taiyo ie about to Eke Fy kes nk tenets both candidates will be run, tree dramas, tweet whiee ordered by

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