The New York Herald Newspaper, January 1, 1857, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1857. NEW YORK HERALD. the special interests of Russia by means of diplo | THE LATEST NEWS macy, bribery, eloquence and adroit manage- ores JAMES GORDON BENNETT, ment. Hitherto, the Russians have let the United BY PRINTING AND MAGNETIC TEGRAPHS, LD TO. AND PO@PRIETUR, States alone. But, now, we see, they are at work é here as elsewhere, scheming, contriving and in- Another Boat of ~ Lyonnals Phked up triguing to form Mr. Buchanan’s Cabinet on 2 peti in! purely Muscovite basis—their rival, England, ‘The brig Beauty, from Jamaica, arrivet“a, 1 being by her own act, excluded from the field, | Saturday night, reports that on ber ox(ward vo term “lady,” as unbecoming a virtuous wo- man, because the Cyprians of King Charles the Second were called ladies; and because this modern term of “lady” is not to be found in the Bible, nor in Plutarch’s Lives, nor in Benton's Thirty Years in the Senate—the three great books of the three great epochs of the world. Finally, it is most ment are ye before us. Sener Ospina has been 1eseé. elected Governor of New Grapada, where he will in- ‘The year whieh bas just closed has not been one augnrate a conervative regémé, and Manuel Montt | of those eventful years which mark historical has been chosen for the second time President of | oooohe, Such years as 1812, 1815, 1830, 1848, ag by bead eva eee Deprsagta can only be expected at rare intervals; and no bet- Presi a ot icra: prot pe will rule in | "T to of general prosperity can he found than Son Sa'vodor, Whilst the people of Uraguay ecem | the rarity of their occurrence, How few strik ing years have marked our ownhistory. Passing @PFICE NW. W. OOAP ER UF N&SSAT AND FCLTON STS. con'ented with their-choice of Den Gabriel Pereira. Both Geanches of the Common Council met yes | Over the initial years which witnessed the Decla | interesting of ail to find ‘Old Bullion” | and powerless to oppose them. poeskes! 4 “rs pA tp 2 wae boat, doit : “ : 5 een x 2 ‘ (Coe senile a starboard side stor: ed. terday. In the Board of Aldermen some unimpor- | ration of Independence, the peace with Eagland, | caught napping on a matter of Scripture. He The Penny aa ie maatand: Toerees Season slomestin fare be arp ; must give us his Bible translation in whieh the term “lady” is not to be found, or confess the corn that his “Thirty Years’ View” on this subject goes for nothing; for in at least one po- pular translation of the Bible has the venerable linguist been cornered, ehapter and verse, in a dozen different places, by « “ lady.” We hope tbat “ Old Bullion” will keep up his present active career for four or five years to come, and then give us his “Ten Years Out of the Senate.” It will be a great book. Meantime, in consideration of his patent right stump speech for saving the Union, at two hundred dollars a reading, we wish Old Bullion “A Happy New Year.” ‘ ‘ant routine business was transected, and resolutions | and ihe inauguration of Washington, the succeed- complimenting the President, the clerks and tue re- | ing apnals are dull till 1812, when the successful porters of the press were adepted, In the Board of | vindication of American nationality sheds a brief Connciimen amessage was received from the Mayor | yion+ over the scene; to be followed by a period vetoing the tax’ levy for 1857 beeanse of $01 O° chor dull fact till—when sll we say? Some omission of an appropriation for the improvement i fe H of the Central Park and to pay deficiencies for ser- will protest that the Miseouri compromise ought vices rendered on account of said Park. ‘The Mayor | t0 redeem 1820 from obscurity: others will have also returned ansigned the resolution giving to the | it that Jackson's election and the final entomb- Street Commissioner power to employ a surveyor to | ment of the ghost of federalism ought to make muke survey of the proposed new grade of Peari | us remember 1429, some will sorrowfully recol- street and the streets thet Intersect the Bowery ex- | lect 1837, and the same will plead that 1816 tension, These documents may be found in our re" | should be saved from oblivion by the tariff of port of the proceedings. The stereotyped vote of | ihat year; all will agree that the campaigns of thanks was agreed to, and the Commop Council of | scott and the acquisition of California embalm 1856 expired. May their many sins be forgiven, and the dates 1847 and 1848. may their successors prove more worthy of the im- fb ‘ - portant trast confided to their charge. Amen! The year 1856 has no sneh glories or disasters ‘The Commissioners of Exvigration, in response to | % keep it in memory. and it will be forgotten, the action of the Ten Governors, state that the law | 404 will claim but little space in history. The forvids them to provide for emigrant lunatics,and | events of the year, so far as the United they intimate that the Governors are liable to acri’ | States are concerned, have evidently been minal prosecution if they decline to provide for this | the contest in Kansas, and the squabbles unfertunate class of alens. The Commissoners | with England. How importan; these matters Nearly two years have elapsed since the news- | of water, and a life buoy maxed “Lat yonnais, Ha paper tax was repealed in England, and the on primed sb.rtand 6 flue cambric corchief m effects of that measure bave had time ta be fully | “#™ : tested. Several newspapers have been started at PR pe pen ypbioteniype porated low prices, and considerable efforts have been | SCOTT CABE—PERSECUTION OF GN. soorr. made io force them into general circulation. Wassivotoy, Day, 81, 184 Some of these have died, Others still survive; | 1 8m ‘formed this evening thatthe Su but if we may judge frem their appearance and | B8¥° pind & decision in the Dred Som, the general tenor of the reports concerning phased a phe vale them, they are not in a healthy condition, In | toriries, and that the Mis a word, so far as appears at present, the experi- | tonal, covsequem ment of cheap newspapers in the British capital | Curtus disseny has been a failure, Yet it is quite certain that i cheap literary food and news are a commodity for which a large demand exists in London and the whole of England, It follows that the cay of the failure of the penny papers has hu0G BY one of} the wrongness of the basis upon which Earces pet igaeathier f D D a P| 0 been 8 arted, but some errors Povfeat ‘he bill now pending before manner in which they have be In examining the pring ‘Appleton, of Maine, who has been spending some) London, euch as the &% fe | time with Mr, Buchanen, is expected this evening. Mr. BROADWAY THeATRE, Broaiwiy~Winuaw Tan— Bayi is Vani Oy Po THAN $ GARDON, Mreacway—Eseusm Overs. BOW NEY THE CTT’, Bewerr—4tternoen—Bor eto Goon aves Love and MUSDBR. kvening—KiaG Joma—POca mON TAs BURTON S NEW 6, Bron way, oppostic Bond st. Swe Nicur- WALL ACER THE AT pyr a = BIAWATBA—t Brodway -AN Awnwanp An- 0 THE Racms, RR 624 Broadway—I Dine eanes, LAURA @ Russian Diplomacy. Almost simultaneously with our announce- ment that the Russian embassy at Washington was laboring to effect the appointment of Mr. Cass as Mr. Buchanan’s Secretary of State, we perceive a confirmation of the lately prevalent romors regarding the diplomatic intrigues of ARE, (ate Rurton’s)—Aer: IN Tae Woops—Jouy MINUTE GUN AT Nes Broadway—Morn- BARNUM'S oon and KVening— twp —D VEU Kaw oF Omens . © MINSTREL’, 441 Broad give a gentle hint to the Governors to beware, or | cocmed to us at the time yet how trivial they | Russia in Asi i . Ward, of Mr, Buchanan’s confidential st yaaa ‘i stele » ye th ia, and jearn that the Czar is really | fir 2 © jpg which Pemie accus- | Ward, one ir, Buchanan's 001 ial friends, ar- sal rll inmates of their own penitentiary. | yin appear to the historian! What shall he say | about to give effective support to the Shah of | to WJ . is that they yi pclae oecica: Wikies pao tales — - “ a the i aogiradl bi 4 . “s = m . Bul ve Boston for here on New York, Thursday, January 1, 1857- Louts Baker, the here of the Staawix Hall ro ermine ead fry titernp. A Brees ca =. ™ make oo ease of the PB njs re a the igs. They | Monday next. caret wedy, was yesterday released from imprisonment, | Cducatio ‘ " verrun } clear in a few words, we may say that for nearly | ha ‘ eavy editorial, about the United States Sumy Court. hve. boil in five thousand dollars having been previously | by settlers from New England on the one side | a century the Persians have endeavored at regu- | same heavy Parliamentary subject, writ- eyckay Dee. 31, 1866, The steamship Niagara arrived at Halifax last night, with Liverpool dates to the 20th ult. The steamship Fulton, which left Havre on the 7 rived at this port yesterday afternoon, after a stormy passa, Our advices by the Fulton anocuncing the safety of the Hermana will bring re- wef to many an anxions heart. The Merman, afcer encountering some dreadful peavy weather and 6¢18 ennning “mountains high,’ was forced to put back to Southampton for repairs. All her passengers, with the exveption of two, whe bave remained for tb action of private business, were landed safely from the Fulton. The passengers of the Her- manp, when at Southampton, passed a series of re- woltions approviug of the conduct of Captain Hig- ginsand hie officers. The political news by the Fulton ispotimportant. Itis said that Sicily was again quiet and that the revolution at Palermo had ween suppressed. The would-be assassin of the King of © was hanged. The aspect o/ the re dations existing between Prussia and Switzerlan) wae #til) very gloomy, and further complaints were looked 1 The English declaration of war sgainst Persia bad caused much excitement both in Burope emi Asia. The government proclamation which recapitulates England's causes of eomplaint against the Shah is given, but many of ber best frieuds regret the step now taken as tend- ox to ensure the advance of Russia further erst ward. Queen Victoria and the royal family visited the Arctic discovery ship Resolute at Cowes, aad were received by Ceptain Hartstein in a manner wortoy an American officer and gentiemar. Rev. Dr. Livingston had made some highly interesting statements in London with respect to the scenes of his explorations in the interior of Africa. It is Shougnt th er expedition would be sent out im search of FPronkiin. In England the money market bad uproved. Cotton was firm, and bread- stats lower. The brig be Halifax from Jamaica, re ports picking up, on the 9th of November, in lavi- inde 40, one of the boats of the unfortunate steamer Lyonnaie. The boat was bottom up, the starboard ride stove, the oare lashed to the thwarts, and a Mg: si} mast floating alongside. In the boat waa a cask of r, and a life-buoy marked “ Le Lyon- aais;” also a white shirt and a fine cambric hand+ ker. hief marked “ F.E." We have examined tho pa-senger |i+! of the Lyennsis, but find no name rresoonding with these initials. The Lyonnais joned on the 3d of November, conse- t six day: elapsed from the time of her veized boat alluded to was picked Mr. Poirt the agent of the Fropeo- American S:eame Yompeny, has received given in luis behalf. Patrick McLaughlin and James | and from Missouri and some Southern States on Turner were included in the order of release, but | the other, each desirous of establishing their own they are held in custody to answer another charge. | peculiar form of labor there, and excluding all Attbe cattle market yesterday there was @ good | others; that these two sets of settlers growled at demand for beeves, but the quality of the stock pre- | each other, and even came to hard knocks, as Se ite oe Seen became their sincerity and their stalwart, earnest The. to 10de. per pound, and a few of the best de- | A28!¢Saxon lineage ; that, thereupon, a poor scription brought Llc. There was but a moderate | 42 named Pierce, who wanted to purchase supply on hand. About 0,000 head of beef cattle Southern support, unlawfully interfered and have been brought to this market during the past | tried to establish a military despotism in the year, and the prices have ranged from 7c. to 14}c. | Territory. whereat the whole strong heart of the per pound, according to quality. Cows and calves, | North rebelled ; but that Pierce, losing his veal calves, sheep and lambs, and swine sold fresly | chance of re-election, gave up his unlawful at the rates quoted in another column. schemes, and left the men of Kansas to their own The sales of cotton yesterday embraced 1,590 | govyices; upon which the whole hubbub subsided, bales * full prices, the market closing firm. The | ana people forgot all about Kansas. What shall Fulton's news was received at too late a period in . "i the day to aftect prices, and it was not supposed he say of seed dispotes with spy eo Thas & that is would have apy influence. Floor continued | foolish minister of hers, under foolish instruc- dull, and common grades were easier, while sales | tions trom Lord Palmerston, broke our laws, were light. Wheat was inactive and sales limited, | and was sent about his business, as he deserved, including Chicago spring at $140, and Soathera | and that the English made up their minds to it; white at $176. Corn sold to a limited extent at | that after being led to the brink of a quarrel unchanged prizes. Pork was in fair request, whe | abont Central America by the knavish schemes Lak baehagpacai ti fein aly ee of politicians, the people of the two mations i Ppa F cotaman Tor aa account Of | in a frank manly way, agreed that there oman sayy dea? oon al eleeignemoemomadiad, har ee panies ls and forced their di- stock will be found in’another place. Ship owners jomatists to make terms of settlement; aad that anded bigher rates to Liverpool, which tended | 3 roperetiosyies pas after all the noise, the dispute euded in smoke, to chek engagements, waich were moderate, bat made at full rates. Here are slender materials tor bistory. -_— Europe will remember yearly the treaty of Tur Coxvierion or Hoxtrsc A great | peace. When the year opened the horizon and good thing in behalf of justice, pudlic mo- | jooked gloomy enough for Russia. Her finances rality, Individual honesty and the sa‘ety of 80- | were exhausted, she was beaten in the duel at clery bas been achieved in the coaviction and } Sohastopol. her fleets were sunk, her ports block- sentence of Huntington, the forger and swind aded, aud there was a very clear prospect that ia to the nunost penalty of the law. Considering | the season of 1856, Cronstadt would be made to he success of New York Gnanciere, defauiters, | fonow Sebastopol, and peace might be dictated wdies, bullies, vurglars and axsassias, | in the palace at St. Petersburg. Austria was on the penalty of their crimes, through | the poimt of joining the Westera Powers, and, so “the law's delay,” and the tricks of artfal shy far as human foresight could go, it seemed cer- Micials we had reason to far the ac- | tain that Russia would be crashed. Accoriling-, gton upon some microscopic ly, Alexander saved himself by making peace, at cal informality or a divided | .ome cost of territory, and more eost 0° prestige. veeds our highest | Since the treaty, the year bas been consumed ‘of justice, law avdorder. | y petty bickeringe touching {ts fulfilment. it as the lamayaration | France has bickered with Eogland, and Eagland P rogue kered with Russia; at the time we write, our cor eperations are being made for a new confer- entence of Hnnting- of which almost anything may grow, i »ntinued to be tl rable despo! lar intervals to cenqner the independent Princi- pality of Herat. The English try to prevent them because Herat is the key to Affghanistan, and consequently to the northwestern provinces of British India; the Russians encourage them, because Herat is within arm’s length of the Russian possessions on the Caspian, could be taken from Persia by Russia at a moment's notice, and could serve as a basis for Russian military operations against British India. To secure their point, the English, after the famous siege of 1838, made the Shah sign a treaty binding bimself and his successors not to melest Herat. To carry his point, the Emperor of Russia made a treaty offensive and defensive with Persia, promising to supply the Shah with men whenever he went to war. Such was the position of the two rivals during the ten years 1840-1850; and alternately Russian and British influence preponderated at Teheran. The con- test was finally terminated by the superior diplo- matic skill of the Russian envoys. Colonel Sheik, who represented England in Persia before Mr. Murray, was a very good cavalry officer, but a very bad diplomatist; the Russians got the | better of him, and made themselves the real sovereigns of Persia, The rest followed natn- rally. The English struggled feebly for awhile; then struck their flag and shut up their embassy. Left masters of the field, the Russians excited the new Invasion of the territory of Herat, and promised a reinforcement of ity thousand men. With such a force, nothing could prevent the Rossiaus from subjugating the whole flank of British India from Khiva to Candahar and Cabul. The mind Joses itself in the attempt to follow the Russians through the multiplicity of their in- trigues. The Jesuits were fools to them. They have their emissaries at every Council hoard throughout the world, and their peculiar policy on questions apparently the most foreign to their mteresia, and the most indifferent to their wel- fare, A long war has hardly emancipated the Court of the Sultan from Russian supervision. Even now, the best infrmed writers insinuate that the recent change im fhe Turkish ministry has ber effected by Russian intrigue, and that the Eo.- lish must prepare for a decline in their influence. in the work. While this is the case at the capital, one-half the ten in the same conventional British Josnua A. Brown, of New York, was admitted to the newspaper slang, and intended for the private bie ites ‘Sisk Sala an reading of a select circle of politicians. Again Meret (aus Giamad © te Ge they have the same heavy Parliamentary de- | tog. prisied argument by Mr. Washburn fos piety” bates, whole columns of solid small type about No, 36.—William K, Post et al., claimants of the cargo Maynooth grants, or the rights of the Bishops, | of the ship Richmond, vs. John H. Jones etal. Argued filling up one side of the paper. Their news is on | >y Mr. O’Conor for appellants, and Mr, Lord for appellees. the same plan. Their foreign correspondents en- {| 4#/urned ull Friday, “aur one tertain them with grave and strictly gentlemanly | The Missouri Legislature—Arrest for Forgery, conjectures about the probable designs of certain Sr. Lovis, Deo, 31, 1866, | foreign courts. Their domestic reporters acquaint | The Missouri Legislature organized permanently them with the fact that there was an eclipse visi- be s paegpcarin bagerecnva papas ble from the dome of St Panis, and that H.R. | Speater ot the Houre, ‘Toe Bentinae and hmerieug H. P. Albert went ouc shooting, attended by di- | fused in, opposition to the democrats, vers lords and colonels in livery. Their adver- E. C, Davis, inte Superintendent of Public Schools, hae tisements, even, are cut in the same solid block, | bee? arrested here for ohare ge pereons and and penned with the same strict eye to British | AME houses, amounting to propriety. We have serious announcements that « Fatal Raitroad Casualty. the Typhus Assurance Company is prepared to New Haven, Dec. 31, 1856. ide Sivan Ab tie adi ” " The seven o'clock train from New York this morning jortest notice and on the low- | a's coverea wagon, near Milford, in which were est terms; that the ehip Enterprise will sail for Wm, Kelsey and Gilbert Netileton, instant! : Neti 5 killing Kelsey] Calcutta on such aday; that Mr. Robins selle » | and nearly killing Nettleton, eo Sdiehged in ‘aire. Paradise on Tuesday, and a pbaeton 4nd pair a (the property of a yentleman removed to the | ©®agrations Throughout the Country. Continent) on Wednesday, at ten. plage oak 81, 1866. i » 1856. Now, we cannot speak confidently for our A destructive fre occurred bere leet night, om the cor trans-Atlantic nelgltbora, but we strouy!y suspect | ner of Main and Van Houten strects, Hight stores tbat this sort of reading is not more imtorest- b seis dersemrarane together with the entire contents. tad . anderyoort & Snyder, 5A. 8 met to i on it weal eto wh he | cues, try ieoee w, soea: es Were ta society which enjoys elaborate bakery, a hoe store sdjouiug, D. Alitu, eXvegon leading articles, full of double entendres | James Dunn, confectioner; Mrs, Kelly, and delicate allusions, Maynooth grant debates, | Beam & Taylor, shoes and boots, were and cozy soporifics about the designs of the nev, cae aa Ste ae ee wraesy Court of Berlin or Austria, can afford to pay ten water. ‘The telel tose te catinated at pi Mo cents for the Times, and rather piques itself on origin of the fire is unknown. subscribing to the most expensive newspaper. To FIRE AT AKRON, OHIO. atiempt to wean the sturdy British commoner, Bervavo, Doc, 31, 1866. the man of acres or bank stock, from his Tine, is P begs sc aie an boos wine och eee + a’ morning. je! wi leasrs. @ and Piter’ Neer pr Pacarbecy Lage ? eckstore, Welmeco & Oa eqriowherel are, oxd Row! e other hand, the class which would be | on & Barber's grocery store, Sovera adjoining buildings glad of a penny paper does not care for any of | were aleo greatly iajvred. these heavy matters. It wants news, but light, FIRS aT uA, bg tie . " os iRVELARD, Nec, Sl, agreeable, popular news; not stupid political ‘The griet mill and sow mill of Mesere. Merry & Gey, | speculations; but accidents and murders, and at Milan, Obio, together with Mocker & Skiuners’ block battles and shipwrecks, and runaway matches, and | gctory, wore burnt yesterday morthng. The fori the like. Then it wants editorials not abont the ted at from $12,060 to s18hi095 the lattes private squabbles of lords, but about the high nails gs price of fish and the Sunday music, and the great — or een =. 31, 1988. pread of scarlet fever, and the reasons why the | sn» wedioal Department of the University of Loalaville sarines haven't got their prize money, and the ‘was destroyed by fire this morning. The ered consequences of emigrating to America, and the | by tusurance, and enovgh of the apparatus w oto 17th ult. and cormupt qnittal of Vv, some disposed to of a vew epoch in the proseca fians and swind The covviction av i woof the or the eciminal by his ont tania noe ec ¢ retrograde ste i trembles onthe verge | Sultan's subjects in the Provinces are nursed uy | right of everybody who can read to vote, and so | enable the lectures to be continued ia the Lew Depart hive arrived at x couspicn <j weld 0 usual quaérennial revolution. Persia, | Russian emissaries to a state of chronic insur- | on, throngh all the range of subjects which form | BS séJoining. fhe sseamship Vigo, which lef: Havre on the 10t Se aa inp’ instigated by Bs s broken the treaty with rection, The Armenians pray for the day of Rus- | the ordinary conversation of the intelli gent poor. Departure of the Steamship Canada. wii now ip her twenty-second day oot, We : ssi olypeaad a ape : England and Jaid s : to Herats thus provoking | sian conquest. The Greek cities of the empire | Jt should not do violence to these people's minds, Boston, Deo, 3t, 1856, learn by the Fulton t weg Hermann, when force) mixerable diseove Byes ributet | a wor, the beauty of which is that the ant agoalsts | very vatorelly sigh for the same event, hy attempting to cram down their throats things The royal mail steam#hip Canada sailed for Halifax to put vest oy te Mo sedis be open emphasis to the verdict of the J cannot possibly get at each othe Grecee, now temporarily under Western tute- | shey don't like; but should lead them, gently, | “4 miselgre e Regge Peles 10 day, wih eleven Dove , bot owing, doubtless, to the tempuat- nee of the o talty . een A ‘ , - po oe gi aiergioa in e of Jw _ Age : Commercially, the year has been an eminent'y has hardly ever risen above the rank of a luring them by a promise of familiar to a know- He pe gy hod e selsieaien ae ‘Sale, per c é ’ id m anew did not stop wit worn 4 " . i f tbe dral: . Sa fone Py a . seach Mew Yosk-eve this. Mo fears ave enhertalned pe aa ha prosperous one. The ion of the drain tue fan province. Wistory doos not contain an- | ledge of better things. Sofor domestic news, A | Cyrus W. Field, Eaq., of New York, who goes eee ae the other such lamentable tale as that of Russian f1- paragraph is all that Parliament deserves. The | t Newfoundiand to make arrangements in © rest of the domestic news colamns should be de paged be pregened trong siegragnte tar = a 4 # ’ will return probabiy in about two weok#, The voted to the reporting of such meetings a We | Canada taker oat about $273,000 in specie, always give in full here, aad they never notice in bas om board 1,200 tons of days, and her commander, rence. e would as greatly ry d the commercial t as serfously affect] | world. But fromthe fact that that drain was « the prisoner in “another | mostly supplied by hypothecations of the fatara, fom,” or that they would not have | the severity of the pressure has been yet for her safety, a8 trigue in'Greece. Catherine, rousing the unhappy Greeks to rebellion by false promises, and faith- less pledges of support, deserts them as soon as © an officer of tried exp Tre Vigo is hourly expected. spondent at Washington states that the | one out of thelr way © mexe war withdrawn, But it has been coucealed, The | ever the day cf danger comes; and writes to Vol- England, and to a record of the “short but sivaple Movements of Southern Steamers. — > he ibe f PM Ve 7 df ne +, te , - 4 Supreme Court have come to a de. | thy rty of the press. = We French government, which is reatly on the verge | taire thet te people whom she has betrayed to | annals of the poor.” A paper framed on this THE ALABAMA AT SAVANNAI. ad the cau’ be important questions presented in | would have better ser ase of Dred Scott, recentiy argued before that nal. Judges Taney of Maryland, Daniel of Vir- model would, we think, be likely to euccenl in} a Ravamnas, Des. 80, 2008, England at the price of a penny: and in the todas = beac cit clara aaa y. course of ten years it might have a revenue of THE STEAMER NASHVILLE AT CHARLDSTON. * | of tankruptey, hes made strenuous efforts to coa- ual and the wishes of his coansel, bad the public | cea) its condition, and bas thus been led into fa- press kept modestly silent upon the sabject dur- voring various financial bubbles, which, in a their ruin aud death, are a race of rogues, Al- exander, detailing his aidesde-camp on special daty to stir up rebellion in Greece, procuring for inia, Wayne ¢ ria, Catron of Tennessee, Nel ele) } 5 on b ot chien Yuk, ink Calee of Pheaiaiaas Gn ing the trial, — cg talyer . nigpoees Sid sounder state, it would not have couptenanced for | bis triend and counsellor Ipsilanti the leadership of | £10,000 to £12,000, and would be a power in the Cnaatastox, Deo. 20, 1866. tha: Congress has mo power over the question of | MO°** in court; but still. the denunciation: | a moment. In a similar manner, the remarkable | the Greek revolutionary society, turns his back | realm greater than the Zimes or the House of | TH United Stator mail steamship Nashville arrived uttered against the press by prisoner's counsel. } prosperity aud wonderful exubecance of this} on Greece as soon as the Tarke show fight, aud | Lords. B rissphiadeagy ie aon slavery in the Territories, and that the Missouri ‘omise is unconstitutional, and therefore of no | «cause of a different line of —e policy. country bave encouraged the formation of cor, | Europe warms with sympathy; for five years he But the idea, hitherto, seems to bave fallen Markets, x n ines McLean of Ohio, and Curtis of Mas | Were but a waste of breath and displeasure, and | porate institutions, on a basis sometimes quite in. | lets the Grecks be massacted. Nicholas, forced | "P00 stony ground. PHILADELPAIA STOCK BOAND. gache bold that Congress has power over the | ‘0 the prisoner were worse than useless. There | geqnate, ond on principles at war with sound | to interfere, does certainly help to make Greees | Last Act of the Stanwix Hall Tragedy Stooke steady. Penaeytvants 6's, 0; Reding Ratteps que Lavery in the Territe The decision | wes a legal live of defence which Huntington’s | fnancial policy. The railroad system, which has | free; but it is on condition that his tool Capo Raker and Others Admitted to Batt. Y | 42y: Long Inland Ratirod, 133; Morrie Cxoal, 24 will sally anno ed ina few days by Chief ] counsel might have adopted with better result: teceived an extension commensurate with the ex- | d’Istrias shall be President, Him dead, the SUPREME COURPT—SPRCIAL TERM. TPE et aera a Oninane, Dec. St, 1856, for their client and themselves—to wit—the miti- | tent of our country and the speculative and en-| same Nicholas will atill betriend Greece: bat be Before Hon. Judge Davies. Gaon can gad, ne tn aa ee is so unfortunate as to be compelled to bosiners with either our State or City i find in this morving's paper complete of the names of the exe ontive, legielative and ud) oneriea, together with those of the heace of the various subordinate departments Thove who study the finctnations of the pal Dec. B= The People we. Lewis Baber, Patrice Motougn- | Gui Pork quiet Lard, te warros, 1iete, Exehange lin, James Trner, John Hyler, and Cornelius Linn.— | om London 7\¢ per cent promiam. The weasher has ‘The prisoner, Raker, who was twice triod for the mur. | Deem very wet. Sheen, os @ der of William Pocte th Stanwix Hall—the jory ox exes | Cotten salen to day 16,000 bales ai aa advance of occasion being vaable to agreo—was thie day brought up | ‘kc. & co. payer alo on writ cf habens corpus, and bis diecharge on ball - demanded by his counsel, Mr. Jas. T. Brady. A similar Affairs at Wastfngton. Sppleation was mede on behalf of the other prisoners EXTNA’ TS OF CORRESPOND FROM OTHER PArBAS. gation plea—that the forgeries complained of were | terprising genius of our people, has been pashed not iu reality perfected, and were not forgeries in | to limite which place It beyond a doubt thay! e ordinary legal eense of the word, but financia: | future agricultural and industrial devel opeme 6 experiments of a “confidence man,” o° » bold | of this country will be Without example, but also and dashing, and singularly romantic avd suc | that ne arly all our railroads, having accomplished cesstul character. But let us, while congratuls | their purpose as instruments of developement, must have another tool—the Bavarian Otho—o: the ridiculous Greek throne, And from that day to this, the Greeks have never had leave fron, Russia to say their souls were their own. But for the French garrison, they would bave been bullied into the late war. i in our statistics of the past 4 g the communit t the once j spe ions r coeree lage ll yesrer) of the - = * | ting the commur y that the emer ye © | will be failures, as speculations for a profi, The { At Vienna, the Russian party is in the shad: Judge Davies made the following order:—Tho prisoner. (Correspoucence of the Courier and Baquirer ) | Ny ee ee ae mpeg this daebing ewindler has contritmted to his cou- | country can well afford to love them in view f| at present; it has beon in the ascendant for | Lewis Bater, being brought before mo, ite rotureed thet auvinn a bose * 4 ragress of fotion a c e. “ae @ " * . a Ay reseae ae gees 2 Pes saad ca od bed per viction and sentence, also express the hope that | ¢), enormously increased wealth which they will | years, and no doubt soon will he again, Tho | he i beld i ewtody by virwue of commitments wpon an | The dirpeted question of Mr. Har 4vam marine will find detaile h gr i le tesole " ¥ . 1 cS pa pees hee soit the Atiautic | iz cate sive yuietus to this insolent dodge | hays been the means of creasing. King of Prussia, © prudent, sagacions man, al- | tment charging bim and Patrick Melangntia, ana | Copier Irom Jone, tee Ree tne. enracy the thae ooenpied in cross n ntle | of «moral ineanily.” aa ways used to say that be found bie best coun James Torner, and John Hvtor, and Cornelius Liaw jotat- | cient members of the Renate, and ve by the various steamships. hilanthropist —-<-——_—_--—_—. = . ari god 7 5 ; JF with homicide, ‘The Ouetrict Auorpey for the poosie, | the repeolican caure, He wan elected by nm q@hen fernees our record of the doings of the © Drevstos Pro-Eatere asp Fanatics Ow Beissox.—“ Old Ballion” is a brick, | sellor in Nicholas of Russia; and certainly, the | on pplication now made to bail the pritovers, con. | 0! tbe whole Le Pasare; bes @ State Aeceie 11 waiok tncnal onrts, will lament tue degradation that | \ chesetrs Anean.—We published & Shonld he survive four or five years longer, his | Emperor was not sparing of counsels. At Pacis, | sents to tue samo (and concent that the joint defondante poy Ke ET of beth bicusse 2 =» hiccur ot bi cee: evounde in ou t, while all must rejoice at the | ayo a cot! for adisunion convention at We Ten Years Out of the Senate, make a mach | ail the correspondents say that the efforts which | be ctuedered as personally present with Lewin Baker), | tion: although 9B & previous*eay the'same boty nad, by sod by agreement I find tho bail to be given in the sum | "erular vow, aud io pursusace of « constitutional provi lon, ‘nto convention. “he joint convention a0) mrn- Of $6,060 each, !n good ard sufficient surety ea *o Scertaie Dut 16 the ineautis the Senet, oya ed prosp f the metropolis, as exhibited are being made by the Russians to produce an the cable showing the namber of vessels which Vassachusetie the signers of the paper pleading | more graphic and interesting book than his i , the South Ca:clina plea that the two sections are | ° Thirty Years in the Senate.” Look at the raw | impression, create # party, and exercise political | avon tha each of too cevendante, Lewis Bone Mol augh- ty Vote, a0jourbed over beyond th T f bev orrived at this port during the year 1856. as widely estranged as two separate nations, and | Materials, His stumping campaigns in Missouri; | influence, are prodigious; it is openly asserted | "aed Turmer be dlechargeo irom —~F sap Noo Scvaters consiacrea (bewselyes, bousd by ihe wote J veath avenve, became bai of the convention, and s{vended it, alding in the elecvon of Mr. Haring, The democrats contended that the tenavs could Dot Act Ae & body, nor could any member of it act Im the Joint convertion on # day in which the Gonnte was net in rereion. In & word, they protested age beceure, as they asserted, the eenate A tbe statement of the names of those eleva'- ed porsonager who will exércise a sovereign power over tue people of the world, from New Year's day, js published clsow here Their. executive designs tions, with the dates on which they succveeded te office, are also given. This paper will be found very useful for refere and in these deys of and den dymaatic charges may become important, for although we will start clear as to our knowledye of the yoyal and Presidential record, we do not know soon our ideas may be confused by the noise ) depositions produced by wholesome revolution ary uprisings, Dwing the year which ended last wiph! many impotent changes have taken place. {eo promineut men have been rebeved from the and will soon seck the sweets of thot accordingly it would be best to have the | his election to the House ; his failure te secure a Union dieolved, and an indepecdent Northern | ¢-¢lection ; his support of Buchanan for I'vesi- and separate Southern confederacy. These | dent in spite of the “ipecac” democratic plat Maseachueetts disunion fanatics are thus consid- | orm, in opposition to Old Bullion’s favorite son- erably ahead of the fire eaters of South Carolina | n-law, because of the republican platform. The latier have threatened disunion upon this or | What Roman firmness, and what Bentonian con- that contingeney happening, in which event they | sistency were there! Brutus sacrificing his son will march upon Washington, seize the public | to justice and for Rome was a small potato cir- archives, rob the treasury, and fall back upon | cumstance compared with Old Ballion’s sacrifice Charleston and get up a Southern confederacy; | of Col. Fremont for the sake of the Union, and but there Massachusetts and other Northern dis- | the chances of six years more in the Senate, unionists propose disunioa right away, upon its | What a glorious theme for the historian! And own merits, and this proposed convention f= to | then, that famous copyrighted stump speech for dejiLerate upon the ways and means for expe- | saving the Union, when the danger fs all over! that the ground they have gained since the treaty of Paris will ve seen when the Conference is re- opened. Jn the Seandinavian kingdoms, politic: 1 parties are uenally called the Russian par ‘y, and the Swedish or the Danish party, as the ease may be; the Russians have always about as much to do with the government of those countries as the people themselves. At Naples, it is the Russian ambassador who emboldens Ferdinand to stand out against the maritime Powers and the liberals of his own kingdom. Same story everywhere. The Emperor of Brazil derives the greatest comfort and assist- ance from the friendly advice and sympathy of Li Saad tg at ane ee y part in it. Laura Keene's Theatre New Piece. care bea been under advisement in the Uolted T States Senate-(or two sensions, and bas been referred to 4 trematation Of Je dine ches ma Mare, under tee Wile | ta Cosine cn ine Judiciary, which i 1s hopes wil of “1 Dine with my Mother,” was played here for the report immediately aftor the holidays, The lowa Logisia- firat time last evening. It is & noat little one act comedy, | ture will be i ion throughout the month of Febraary ormed by the elaboration of & single incident. Sophie | *84 fhould Mr. Harlan be vnseated within that time, he Avnould (Mise Laure K “ will be immedi ted. mould ( ra Keene), @ popular prima denna, has ring of pending elections to ordered a capital dinner for Yoar’s Day, expecting Penpsylvania ‘« ver _, fome of her friends to dine with hor. They al! decline, even to her toulretie, on the plea ‘I dino with my Hone solteita te mother’ Finally comes an artist whom Sophia has is aid to be openly in the field for J. W. F keown before she became distinguished, and who hag | D°Y, ard Mr. Bright, Present of the Senate, and a ra. ; Pid!y riety @ eandiaato for the Presidency of the Unites Painted the portrait of her mother. Ie invites Sophie to | Sigiin ie the favorite of hie Party for the succession to tana by fone oF y three, Tne can } ; et rement, Via: F Pieror, who vacates | diving the work. We recommend Chevaliers | Bentonian, out-and-out, including the refusal to | the Russian diplomatists accredited to his court: be po Br wa aa aha ee himecif, The republican oth States conten! ste re cos wh Hochanet will AN, | Py ooke, Rhett, Toombs, Keitt, Wise, Mason, and | receive a compensation for speaking it ; bat con. | The Emperor of China declares to his people that port . phe thought maker her yond me scaveonen with then, a eorge Aurustus, I a. "os | other contingent Souther disuntonists, to be on | ing to accept two hundred in the way of a | the Englieb, French and American are mach | aise win her own mother, and she nite down opscatte | an jomt soppes ' on eve. who je eet aside by the re of FOG TD and when this Worcester flat-footed disnaton | compliment, | more to be feared than the Russians, Japan is | ine portrait, whieh ie the end of the play, The iden (9 gee of, tale preceedion noe a , the presies } Ot ° y r ’ = ie dy convention comes off. ‘They may, perhaps, learn And then his lectare on the Pilgrims in Now | ready to grant to Rassia greater favors than cho | very cleverly worked up by heard wonaersg Mies ©. Jefter: | sta ‘inclene. two Fears ago ‘when bey ied the te. vag a i oe a thing or te upon the subject from their bolder | York—what an interesting discourse on the | concedes toany othernation. There is no part or | * #4 = arte heen vee Be cape: | engotive Be eatee, and we bad the ruajoriy o0 jolt baltos. Saxon " r og the | Newthern Qtunon brethren, each os Garrison, | marvellous virtaes and the wonderful adven- | the world, in fact, where you will not find Russian pom Amt ddr dco Mr Oete Weis hs ae ey, Ard logeroity, have siarted the a eat P vy 7 . : ia 5 A ‘ “ - “4 mi the Senate retares to meet the Ho wd Decker 4 bares of OW on. Next, his rejection of whe j mhuree actively at Work, seeking wo advance | ike suther of the yorrion, dcseces bile misery may go ine Serene oak pert twelvemunae, wis be Foes w mie goveru: + Pusily

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