The New York Herald Newspaper, March 2, 1857, Page 4

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te. 4 NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, MAROH 2, 1857! Mn $$$ $$$ tens onesie the 25th uit.,on board the steamer Fashion, The | Our Balance of Trade with Ouba—New | Orrosirion To rus Mexican Treaty.—A mora- | would be productive of worse evils than thse| THE LATEST NEWS. NEW YORK HERALD. ee et mt ee Comeeotient the a ing cotemporary, distinguished for the ferocity of | they desire to remove. Deriving no experience La JAMES GORDON BENNETT, value of foreign goods imported should Cone State ite attacks the Anglo-Saxons who attempt to | from the and eo) only at the present, PRINT! EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. ‘of Boston during the week ending 27th ult., amounted | ‘The importance of our trade with the island of Gulenend cidade dalanad aaaaices they nl ge Faces Act ine BY ING AND MAGNETIC TELEGRAPHS, to $1,897,705, showing an excess of $921,258 as com- | Cubs is becoming daily more evident; and now | wrich the Spaniards have done their best to ruin, | nearly all such reforms teaches. ‘The temperance From Washington, pared with the importation for the corresponding | that the failure ef the sugar crop in Louisiana takes open and forcible ground against the Forsyth | question, like many political and social reforms SYROLAL DEYPATOH TO THE HERALD, week last year. has forced us to peocure the greater part ef our STRANGERS ARRIVING IN THRONGS—COMMERC! The sales of cotton on Baturdey embraced about 3,000 | supplies of that uecescary article from the West | “MY bi Abas Reyes py —™ has its periods of renewal, and so long as its ad- | “Syesry wirn PEnsia THE DRVELOsn ne baler, ebtetly effected im the ferenoon. As soon aa it was | 1, dian isles, the restrictive tariff and nav treaty 'y acq yocates endeavor to accomplish their ends by le- | THE PILIBUSTERS—rmx TARIFF—SCREMES OF- known that the Niagara had reached Halifax, the sales nnn ag slave territory by the United States. Whether | gal enactments, their efforts must end in defeat. STEAMSHIP AND PATENT MEN, ETC. ‘were checked, and after pubXeation of the European news | laws that weigh upon our commerce the apprehensions expressed by our cotemporary cuesbelbnkiasicuroraneee Wasuixrom, March 1, 1867, imthe afternoon, holders demanded an advance of x0. | are beginning to be felt as serious evile The| .. correct or not, it is certain that they are | THE TRavsaTLantic Tetxararu.—The amend- | The city 1s densely crowded with strangers, lr. Cobb, Per t., which prevented further transactions for the | system of protection on one side and exclusion an : and highly plausible; and ed bill “ to expedite telegraphic communication” the new Secretary of the Treasury, arrived to-night, It dey. Operations in bresdetuits were pretiy well ever | on the other, established by the Spanieh tariff in generally entertained, y i by aiding the Atlantic is now a law, | 2.70%, Tacertais Ma 0 Messrs, Toucey and Jones going before the mows beoame public. Flour opened with a to ta end bread- | i* i# also certain that instead of operating to de- = telegraph, is now a law. | into ino Cabinet. Thoir appointment is suepended untib Deter tone, and fair sales were made to the local trade, | Télation to our cotton goods, meat ' | feat the treaty, a8 our cotemporary thinks they | 1s effect will be to authorize our government | Mr. Buchanan arrives bere. with some lots for export. Wheat was quiet, with small | Stuls, assisted in part by our own unwise retalia- | J s.14 they will constitute the very strongest | % ®8Tee upon a tariff of telegraph rates with the | A treaty is now pruding in the Senate, recently nego- r should, they ry stronge sates. Common Southern white at $1 70, and red at $1 | tory. legislation, interferes greatly with the and most cogent argument for its ratification by company, under which the company cannot re- | “ated by Mr. Spence, our din'ster at Constantinople, and. 57, Oorn-was mm good demand, with sales of mixed at | natural exchange of commodities between our- the of the United States. ceive over $70,000 a year; and, seemingly, by the Persian Minister, whose name I cannot now recall, For, while a certain knot of inflexible theorists at the North wage an uncompromising war upoo pe Scher eng nt bow and ee ooo selves and the people of Cuba, and creates an implication, will not receive much less, As to pa manga Mesprrncs Cab sipacy ser ne 60 for new mess, and 623 for ig ede A pea adverse balance of trade that is puzzling to the constitutionality of the bill, no doubt the partment for am appropriation for the expenses of a Mis- request, and prices quite steady. The sales embraced | Statesmen and onerous to the merchant. The 7 Sra cant unde ‘ai government is entitled to pay horse owners and | sion to Persia, which passed the Sonate agt evening after about 1,080 hhds., included tn which were 400 musco | probable amount of the balanoe against us this | “avery in any shape uncer any meriai®e: | steamboat owners for carrying its miessages and | Quite an animated discussion, We have never bad any ‘vado, strates given in another colums, Coffee was quiet. | year, in return for the sugar, molasses and | ‘he great bulk of the American people are will | doing its business; and hence it must be ‘an. | Seegnenaee oe caeamarcin’: volstions: wilh: War aevere $,100 age &t Domingo sold for export st 10740. The | Soars imported from Cube, is estimated to be | in to entertain almost anything and everything | tho5:404 also to hire telegraphs to do th OW Ae te Na MApahod Che} thin. Will Span. ihe Waser stock of Rio was estimated at about 78,000 bags. | “© Po 7 which shall look like a fair compromise between Sraphs to do the same. | extensive business connections, The treaty 1s av impor- Freights were without change of moment. Flour was somewhere between ten and twelve millioas of dncondiicsinginlavaie. ‘Tide arilioutovenninahie The new law no more than confirms the right. tant one in this respect, aca it will be taken up after the. taken to Liverpool at 1s ¢d., and corn and wheat at | dollars. . e ratte -— 1 to the prudent |, Th¢ effect of the transatlantic telegraph can | 4th of Maroh and ratited, Here is another fell mistion- 494. ©6344. ; and » small lot of flour to London at 1s. 94., An interesting letter on our trade with Cuba, | ™™ South as well se j and to the praden| hardly be exaggerated. It will be equivalent tp | '@¢ dispoved of. Wao speaks Arai’ probably to fill up. from Mr. J. S. Thrasher, which we publish in ano- etatesmen of the Senate, especially. Now, aay | . now revolution every ten or twenty years is ‘The eppearance o ihe Sidney Webster letter in the filtbus~ hemencc eee “wry her column, throws t light upon the exist- | °° who can see can perceive that a pressure is Euro Ka tate the t | ter triais, the existence which has been strenuously denied: The Corraption Committee—Good Results of | _ RAED) CAOWR SOS GAY Ee ki beginning to be exercised on the northernmost pe—sach @ thing as the transplantation of | py the administrasion, has caused considerable ‘Luttering the Investigation. ing tariff and navigation laws that tend to cre- slave: Séaten’ Which Gi handle’ thal’ fo result the United States out of this continent into | about the Waite Ho The late Congressional Corruption Committee | ate this state of things. Two countries whose | ©°¥ Hien uh ce ea aks ilies thy W Europe, and settling it down beside France, | ¢@ Case has written to bis son to return home, but deserve well of their country. Their industrious | Teepective soil, climate, labor, staple productions | ' CBcroachments * Bpon them. | Spain or Germany. When little Switzerland, | 20% £ into the Sta:e Department. Such « taing te not ; note, simultaneously, so decided a triumph of the ‘1 : contemplated, researches have been followed by good resulta | 404 proximity unmistakably point to great in- fr with its oligarchies and hierarchies is euch a] ay “ ‘ ee State settlers in Kansas, that some of the attempt will be made to morrow, on the part of the Three of the members they arraigned as guilty | terchange of products between them, are driven sak clasts’ advonaten of avers in iad Tort thorn in the side of the despots, we can fancy | House Naval Commitico, to get up the ten Siam Sioop of bribery and corruption, Messrs. Matteson, Git- | to distant and inferior sources to seek their natu- | ™ Ae cient aalvooates of slavery in that Terri- | how the proximity of the United States, with | bill and put 1s upon ite Pastage just as it came from bert and Edwards, all of New York, when | Tal supplies. While our traders are sending their it ee to See: Naas others have her thirty millions of untameable democrats, will | Seaate- brought up to the bar for a judgment, adopted | ships into the Indian ocean in quest of sugar, | © jarned aoe Sees leaving the free State worry and frighen them. It would be worth the Be, Prodigious effort will be made to-morrow and next the saving alternative of a resignation. Two of | the Cuban merchant is driven to England and aie crag be : hy eae di effort | seventy thoueand dollars « year merely to see si pe unten wae pce Beh icrrmot Seni them, upon this dodge, were allowed to go with- | Germany for his negro clothing, to Spain for his bg sap eemesaths raps Fates in Mis- | now these venerable thrones will stand so close | grees. They are working like beavers, re ; out apy further proceedings against them ; but | four, and to Buenos Ayres for his meats. To ity 3 on pts for the time in the | 9 contact with practical, every day hard-working | _ The Haywood rubber monopoly play their lavt card on the chief of the trio, and the generally acoredited | eap this folly of economical legislation, the Spa- | L¢ei* » is evidently only checked, not kill- democracy. Tuesday night next. It ts mtended to take the bill from: inside chict of the lobby managers, Mr. 0, B. | nish government, which receives its own gold ed; and finally, the grand scheme to which we the Speaker's table when the members are worn down Matteson, was not thus permitted to escape. A | Coin in Cuba at six per cent above its standard have made allusion for the resuscitation of | Assistanr Secrerary or Srare.—Our corres- | OF careless, and putt; through, One hundred thousand fe hi | the old commonwealth of Virginia by an inflax | pondence from Washington informs us that Mr. | SVAF#'# said to have been paid out within a ‘ew days resolution pronouncing him unworthy a seat | Value—doubloons which are coined as sixteen be: : " bd Fast, Watch the vote. among the members of the House follows him | ing current at seventeen dollars—refuses to admit of free labor into that State. These signs are not | Henry Ledyard, the son-ia-law of General Cass, ‘The appropriation bills nevor were ta 20 forward # con- into his inglorious retreat back to his constita- | the gold coinage of the United States to circula- to be mistaken. They indicate with infallible | is to be the _ Assistant Secretary of State. | dition at this stage of the session as thoy are at the pre- ents, Whether he will or will not appeal to | tion. Our cotton goods, meats, flour and coin | Cleamess that free Inbor is. encroaching slowly | Mr. Ledyard is a native of New York, | sent ume them from the judgment of his peers remains to | being thus excluded from Cuba, we can only pay and surely upon the slave limits, and Preparing and is a gentleman of education, intelligence, ae nn pote bit chal bate — Live be scen, Possibly Mesers, Edwards and Gilbert, | the balance against us in Spanish doubloons, and to invade the Northern slave territory. “They in- accomplishments and respectability. He has bis earl tte Ge Ghee. whose discovered lobby offences have been com. | of these enough cannot possibly be had. one that unless the slave owners provide them- | resided several years in.Europe, and is perfectly | Tae Conference Commitee on the Tariff is composea paratively trivial, may try the experiment; but, This state of our commercial exchanges has selves with elbow room for a corresponding ex- acquainted with most of the modern languages. | of the following names Hupter, Seward and Dougiss, on notwithstanding the tremendous majority by | brought a new complication to the already intri- pansion at the South, they will some day be | Young Cass, after leaving Rome, will therefore | the part of the Senate; Campbell, of Ohio, Letcher and which Mr. Matteson was last elected, he will be a | cateCaban question. In addition to the ques- crushed between the Northern tide and the | have no chance of filling any place of importance, ree rn ee ee ee at begints - bold man to risk the people’s direct ratification of | tion of defence to our Southern waters and the Southern wall. nor ought he, Whilst we have a high respect for again this evening. It is thought toy wil a Mr. the verdict of the House, outlets of our great Western rivers, which all ap.| It is this fact which has imparted such popu- | General Cass as a statesman, a gentleman, & | pnnter’s bill, embodying a portion of tne free lies in Mr, Mr. Welch, of Connecticut, the fourth member | preciate, the admission of Cuba to the Union and | larity at the South to the rchemes of Lopez and | Scholar and a man of talent, we believe young | Campbell's bill. presented for expulsion by the committee, is | the consequent removal of all barriers to her | Walker, to the treaty of Gadsden, and to the an- | Cass to be one of the most unmitigated scamps Bele pesca lhe eel and binds honorably acquitted, inaemuch, as to the extent | trade with us, is coming home to every man’s | nexation of Texas. TheSoutherners desire peace | that ever held any respectable post for the Ame- - of the evidence against him, he seems to have | pocket. Our people are taxed millions upon tte | With the North, and are ready to surrender not ee EP abbgeoqe aka _ ag gern > RIO LI ich an oe se been rather a victim than a tool of thelobby. Mr. | tropical products we receive from Cuba, creating | Mly Missouri and Kansas, but Virginia, Mary- | American who has been in Europe who will not | Be OVEMENTS—THE IMPEACHMENT * Simonton, the self-conceited and self-talltfying a revenue we do not need, causing cmbarrass- rene beget eit ease also, Labo admit the truth of the picture. a2, amines correspondent of the New York Daily Times, and | ment to the government and stimulating corru; y can obtain a corresponding territory fur' ‘asuinaron, March 1, 1867. Mr. Triplett, the outsider sacucned ta the book | tion among the barpies that hang around it. Be South, in regions where the supremacy of slive Tur Opposition To sift Bucuaxay’s ApIx- BY goss craps proapne ys Baltimore to-morrow, and will speculation with the unfortunate Mr. Gilbert, | value to our domestic commerce is also evinced | labor shall be less questionable, and which the | !STRATION.—The opposition to the incoming ad- | our hotels are overflowing, and office seekers are - have been directly expelled from the floor of the | by the numerous lines of our steamships waich | *Peculative philanthropy of the New Eaglanders | ministration is beginning to develope itself, and | sbundant. House. as having forfeited, through their lobby | stop there in their several routes. is not quite ready to penetrate. The same mo- affiliations, the privileges awarded to uncontami- | But there is yet a more important coasidera- | tives will weigh with the Senate in considering nated newspaper reporters and correspondents, | tion at the present time than these commercial | the Forsyth treaty, No doubt had Horace Greeley been at his former | considerations. Mexico has serious points of dif- All things considered, the treaty is likely to be post within the walls of the House, as the edito- | ference with Spain and with England, and is | treated fairly, and to stand equally well with the rial correspondent of the New York 7rilune, he | threatened with a war with one at least of these | new as the outgoing administration. It may be foolish—it may be useless—but it must be con- fessed that a bond and mortgage on the republic of Mexico would be a thing quite to the taste of the people of this country. And, whatever be the forms, the new treaty would amount to this. DPPICE X. W CORNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU ore. TERMS, oad <n advance. P HERALD, 2 cents por copy, 81 per annum. THE emo HERALD, cory Beery a OS center omy 0 $8,707 exman.; the Bur spean edition, i per dunu, 49 ors Great Briiain, or ¥8 0 any Part © ‘Continent, VOLUNTARY CORRESPONDENCE, containing impor: news, solicited from any quarter of the wordt used, will Ktcrally past for, B@-OCK FOREN CORRESPONDENT ARE Pawnicetakiy Regusstep to Skat at. Lervexs anv Packs RONUTICE taken of anonymene communications, We do POR PRINTING executed with eainess, cheapness and des: VERTISEMENTS renewed evey day. Woodeeme KATE . 0... eee ee cee eee cree ceee eres Os OO AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. BROADWAY THEATRE, Broatway—Ricuminc—lnisn Pres BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery—Karwei, rar Scour; or, ‘wap Rowe! er THE JERSEYS— Bric awp's SON--GiPskY FakMER, BURTON'S NEW THEATRE, Broadway, opposie Bond st. gas Snsms Aun Ouasiaa TA Now Gaaieee. WALLACK’S THEATRE, Brosdway—Camuse—Warrixe won BoNxvs. LAURA KEENE'S THEATSE, 624 Broadway—Favst amp Maxounrre—Love in "76. AMERICAN THEATRE, @nambers etreet-Cuanity’s Move—Live axp ver Live. ACADEMY OF MUSIC, Fourteenth st.—FALiAN OrERA— ha SONNAMBULA. BABNUM’S AMERICAN MUSEUM, Broad wav—After meon—Bionm Axp Wroxus or Wowes—Quirs at Home. Brening—Rvrn Oaxury. @RO. CHRISTY AND WOOD'S MINSTRELS, 444 Broad: way—BruroriaN PEKrORMANCES—MISCHLEVOUS MONKEY, BUCKLEY'S SERRNADENS, 685 Brosdway—Ermortax NCHS—SOMNAMBULA. MECHANICS’ HALL, 472 Broadway—Neano Mevopis, @e, pr Bryant's Missrreis. New York, Monday, March 2, 1857. The News. Mr. Buchanan leaves Wheatland for Washington ‘his morning. The capital was yesterday filled with @teangers anticipating his arrival, and numerous military and fire companies, and thousands of ortho- @ox democrats, are en route to participate in the fmauguratory ceremony. Our Washington despatch states that the Senate ‘have under consideration a commercial treaty be ‘eween the United States and Persia. It was nego- tiated between Mr. Carroll Spence, our Minister at Constantinople, and the Persian Ambassador at the ‘Turkish Court. ‘The Hearn of yesterday morning contained ‘three dys later news from Europe, brought by the Wiagara at Halifax. Additional particulars may ‘be found in to.day’spaper. The news from Canton is down to the 30th of December, at which date ‘the British Admiral had suspended hostilities, and was strengthening his position. All the foreign buildings bad been destroyed. The British had bombarded the city with hot shot, but we have no account of the damage done. There has doubtless been an immense destruction of life and property. It is reported that the Emperor was desirous of peace, but the Cantonese would not yield. The Obinese threatened the destruction of Hong Kong. ‘Where is later intelligence from Persia. The Per- sian forces meditated an attack upon the British camp st Bushire. Active preparations were making to forward reinforcements from Bombay. London papers assert that England is about to forego ber warlike operations botb in Persia and China. Lord Cowley's negotiations with Ferok Khan will, it is thought, put an end to the difficulty with the Shah, ‘and no troops will be despatched to China. Mr, Cobden has brough' forward motions in Parliament condemning the demonstration upon Canton, and directing inquiry as to the state of commercial rela tions between Great Britain and China. It his been officially announced that the income tax will be re duced. An article in the Paris Moniteur on the subject efaunion of the Danubian Principalities—repub Bished in the Henap of 26th ultimo—had greatly excited the London press, dreading, as the writers @id, a probable encroachment by France on the constitutional rights of Turkey. The French Legis- Jature was to be opened on the 16th ult. by the Em- peror in person. An insane man on the 12h attacked the Empress. He hod no weapons, and said he merely wished to embrace her Majesty. The conference for the settlement of the Prasso-Swiss difficulty will be held in Paris. The steamship Persia, from New York, reached Liverpool on the 4th, ine little more than nine days. Cotton had ad- vanced three sixteenths of a penny. Breadstuffs were dull. Consols, 03] a 94. ‘The steamship Atlantic, which left Liverpool on the Isth ultimo., will probably arrive at this port to- morrow. She will bring four days later news. The neighborhood of Broadway and Falton and Naseau streets was thrown into great alarm early last evening by a loud explosion. Upon investiga- tion the cause was found to proceed from the store of Macy & Jenkins, 14) Ful fon street, where a quantity of gunpowder exploded, violently bursting out the front and rear doorsand windows of the lower story of the building, and scattering the splinters aud fragments acroes Fulton street, to the great peril of persons in the vicinity. Fortunately none of the passers by will be composed of two factions, one North and The resolution for the impeachment of Judge Watroug would have been included in the resolution | Powers. Cuba is the key to Mexico. So true is one South. The Southern faction is ultra pro- | C¢mes up im the Heuse to-morrow. The previous ques- . against Simonton and Triplett. Tis late oppor- | this, that even France, when sheresolved to attack slavery, and will be headed by such men as Jef- | 4% Wil! be moved to syem debate, tune trip to the West, on a course of moral lec- | Vera Cruz some years since, concentrated her fleet ferson Davis and Toombs of Georgia, with such Preto raisin or ehaionk Gee: ure - hop tures, illustrates the importance of being away | ®t Havana, and the Prince de Joinville sailed from the place of danger at the right time. He | from thence to bombard the castle of San Juan organs as the New Orleans Delta. The Northern | citement consequent on the event, and Lee, who 1s out branch of the opposition will be headed by | om bail, bas gone to Virginia to avoid unplessant con- will remain, however, under a very extensive | de Uloa. Should either England or Spain de- “moral conviction” until he shall have frankly | Clare war against Mexico, the political considera- Seward, Sumner, Garrison, Greeley and Thurlow | #¢@"ences. Weed, with such organs as the Liberator, Tribune | . William B. Draper, who was connected with the Japan stated the exact disposition of the money pocket- | tions that concentrate around Cuba would in- ed upon that draft of a thousand dollars. crease in intensity, and it might become the expedition and Albany Evening Journal, ultra anti-slavery wn geri p mead brie mig Candy secant Such are the principal results of the late lobby | scene of disturbance and perhaps conflict. investigation--the arraignment of four mem- We will not consider now how these political all through. So it would seem that the nigger | side ts paralysed, and he is «pcechioss, ari and ni ippers SESE fi ip owl ERNE on8 ee tam ceed Pennsylvania Democratic State Convention. . ‘or the same figh' Haxsuspcnc, March 1, 1867, bers; the resignation of three, in anticipation of | considerations might affect our government, nor condemnation; the indignant repudiation of the | what aqtion it might force upon it. There is principal offender, notwithstanding his resigaa- | another point of view that comes more directly tion, and the acquittal of one, upon the satisfac- | home to us and to the world. The London Times The Democratic State Convention assembles to-morrow * Fraca nas Nor Yer Sroxen.—Comptrolier | to nominate a candidate for Governor. General Packer, tory reasons that he did not mean to do, did not | bas laid down the axiom that “what the world know that he bad been doing anything, and real. | demands of the negro race is the production of Flagg has not as yet opened his mouth in reply to | Wiliam Witte, of Philadelphia, and"Colonel Biaok are the - the heavy charges made against his capacity by | Friclpal candidates. ly did nothing demanding the supreme penalty | ¢otton’’ We will add sugar to cotton—the one of the law. All these gentlemen are of the | is quite as necessary to the world as the other. the Mayor. This silence will not serve the pur- News from Kansas, pose of Flagg. The ignorance, incompetency, nig Ui aileh aie &. ped 28, 1867, and something even worse, openly and boldly wes not killed, and the! rg pobegeh par Ghervea charged by Mayor Wood against the Comptroller | was not the Gevernor’s Secretary, He had been “9 “a and his management of financial affairs, are mat- | bail in $5,000. ters that cannot be disposed of in this way. | whe Gubernatorial Struggle In Missourt. moderg Seward republican echool, with one ex- | When we contemplate the great effect the loss of exception slightly tinctured with Know Nothing. | the Louisiana crop has produced everywhere, we ism. The three resignations are front that class.] can but recognise how important it is to all clvi- of New York epoils jobbing politicians from “the | lized countries, and particularly to our own, that rural districts,” more or less skilled in the tac | the sugar culture of Cuba shall be preserved, ties of the corrupt Albany lobby school of Thur- | producing as it docs twice as much as Louisiana low Weed & Co. The expelled correspondent of In thie economical view alone it becomes in- Comptroller Fagg must speak up. Sr. Lovis, Feb. 28, 1857, imonton-—was a hopefal pupil of | cumbent upon our government to be prepared The Americans have nominated James Rollins as their Poor Stwoytox !—Now that Simonton, of the | Ceéldate tor Governor. John Wilson announces himsett the some school, for as far hack as tbe investiga- | for action, and to take every possible step to tion into the Colt pistol patent case this face- } prevent future difficult complications of the Caba an Indopendent candidate, and that he wil! open the cam- vidual appears to have been a sort of | question, The greatest and most complete step Tue Prorosep Excise Law.—The select committee of the New York Legislature to whom was referred that portion of the Gov- ernor’s message which relates to the excise laws, have submitted their report. They depre- cate, as was to be expected, the evils resulting from intemperance, and express the opinion that if the “moral reformation” had not been met and checked by political influences those evils would have been greatly diminished. Looking at the subject in this light, they say that ‘‘politi- cal and prohibitory legislation has been at- tended by the most lamentable results.” They then recommend “an act to suppress in- temperance,” which, if it does not actually pro- hibit, places the sale of liquors under perhaps greater restraints than any cxcise laws we have had in this State, While they retain many of the provisions of the old license law, they have modified the law itself in some very important particulars. They recommend an entirely new Board of License Commissioners. Instead of a town board, consisting of the Supervisor and Justices of the Peace, they provide that the Times, has been kicked off the floor of the House, ‘constitution we wonder if he likes the result of his attempt to earirian other. Ail oli eden bene head us off in stirring up the investigation in | the present Legislature, Congress? He is like the little rat who, having ed Wires aaaaae Aihes lost his tail in a trap, is eager to soe the tails of beech iC Ga aie eh, his fellow rate lopped off by the same process, ‘The steamer Isabol, from Havans and Key Wost on the ‘26th inst., has arrived. There is no news of importance How 15 Ir?—How is it that the anti-slavery ig ese ‘The sugar market was unchanged. jowanlsaigce worn rather~so fu | Zs Maio ra ar Wa nh riously deny the allegation that their circulation | gute steamer Corwin arrived on the 18h trom Now is rapidly diminishing throughout the conntry * | York, It looks very like a suspension of circulation tious in lobby bribery broker or confidence man between | that could be taken, and ene that would solve Dr. Kane's Rematns. pb s sn 6 i hen they lose their temper in refuting the “ee ¢ inside ngers ° . eal considerations, balances of trade, | County Judge and the two Justices of the | © ‘i Lovisvitia, Feb, 98, 1857, |. The aff it sterious. Th the inside epoilemongers and the outside finan- | all political y } . cu eitians been a diaheeal fr of pol ak. ciers of Congress. and questions of defence would be the advent of | Sessions, or a majority of them, the County assertion. Price an an oe <n obese oe The matter will, we understand, be thoroughly in We are not surprised at these results of thie | Cuba to the Union as a sovereign State by | Judge being one-—and that of the city of Now | Daring Attempt to Destroy a Wine, pe eae fi epee in-erowabietetie 4 quired into by the proper officer late committee. On the contrary, they embrace | praceable purchase and negotiation. It would | York the Mayor, the Recorcer and City Judge, and fea Store with Gunpowder. on Tuesday or Wednesday. Business will be suspended A TERAIBLE EXPLOSION AND NARROW RSCATE OF | when SEVERAL PERSONS ON THE SIDKWALK. they arrive, and the Cy Counetl, Mavens, fremen and About § o'clock Inet night the neighdorhool of Fulton streot exd Mroadway was thrown into considerable ex- i pacientes citement, produced by a terrible explosion in the win | Markets. liquor and tea store of Macy & Jenkins, No. 146 Fultoo New On.uans, Feb. 27, 1857, orany two of them, shall meet at the place where the county courts are appointed to be held, and appoint three reputable freeholders, residents of the county, as commissioners, to br Advices from Porto Rico to the 24th of January state that 7+ Deum had been chanted in the cathe Gra] at Ponce because of the cessation of cholera, which had for a long time been prevailing, princi but a small part of the lobby schedule we sug- | be cminenthy a popular move, while the opening gested to the committee at the beginning of their | of a bome market of three or perhaps five mil lebors. From the evidence of 0. B. Matteson, | liona to our cotton manufactures; one of two there are still some twenty-five or six members of | and a half millions doubled to our lumber men Pally among the slaves. The sugar market was uo: | 11. ricuse belonging to the band of forty thieves. | ord one of ten millions of dollars opened to the | divided into three clasecs—the first to hold office jet, but fear and indesision still prevailed as tothe | ‘¥¢ House belonging to males Mumtoes z oe open hens ~ | ane Cotton-saiee to-day 13,000 bales gt former raica, The weld fret hissing Was Gheiininiae . These, however, may Properly be made | products of the West, would give a great im | for two years, the second for four ~araee the The alarm of ‘ire was given, when the Fire Depariment West, ano0e vabeons Ste *- ~ $a She port of Ponce, and it was hoped that the market | he subj t of another committee at the pulse to our trade. third for six years, and one to be sapelated by was s00n at the promises. Capt Mackey, of the lasvrance Pending woek i i Zea Tae Tempe are, ne 800 weald improve in activity. The stock of suger on | next seston ame alt 1) Orn New Pressns—Onr two new five story | tn soar thersafion te bold olbca ale, cou’, | Sizel wuts, wih hie san catered the promises; ont | vale. Meum si Seuhers pert ers cht0s ates Band was estimated at 1,500 bhds., of which 100 | proved that this heartbreaking sympathy of * weno Me ti a tate We two years thereafter, to hold office six yoars. | discovered a champagne basket under the counter and ty TL -L—) py Fy of bad passed into second hands at 7 cents, and 90at | our New York Seward pollticians for the slaves | ™2mmots ten cylinder F * are finished. Wel The license fees are fixed at from $30 to $100, | the dooring to be om fire, The application of © few Gatiee firm, and ‘M0. higher: sales at Tie wiles 8 F Sate : , | Paid a visit on Saturday afternoon to the manu- i hibited | Pale Of water soom extinguished the flames, when | Voor's in-iness foote up 20,000 of the | cents. of the South, ix an intense humbag, and tha and the sale of intoxicating liquors is prohibi a woe a ed that a most daring attompt bed been | week 5,000 bags. 4 0 bags” rene’ By way of Charleston we have Havana dates | wiih Sewardiem the public plunder is the Alpha cer of Moura. R. Hoe & Co, corner of to minors under cighteen years of age and per- made to aeatroy the promises by the use of gunpowder. | lower. ' is “ “= to the 25th alt. There was no political news. | a4 Cmoga, the leginning and the end. The | "McTiff and Broome streets, and found them both | sons intoxicated in public streets or places. | ‘The toree was so great that the {reat deers aad windows et Monn, Fob. 98, 1887, Sugar remained unchanged Ov respon : Fea up, and one in motion, working admirably. It i wened shutters being biown | tne week 10,000 bales; vocolpie dutlog the tome tease ‘ount H it - ia th nf bs excope of Thurlow Weed and the Chevalier | .°: sible to @ : Pi 4 Persons convicted of eelling liquor to others ino | were ski to atoms, the large i ey 19,000 is rosetete So mae tne, in Havana, writing on 294, states that Webb from this lete Inventigntion ls, we thlsk is impossible to deecribe them in language tna’ state of intoxication are to be fined $10, while | S¢ros the street and lodged against a pile of brick. = gt Cp te emul @ Das petees the meeting of Awerican shipmasters who felt | Webb from this , ’ * | can be understood by persons unacjuainted with irom shutters and door at the rear of the store wore burst | MUTT oy bali g the ‘samo time last Your” Bleck, ffended at the agfion of the United States Con | the most remarkable and the most mysterious | rrinting machinery—they must be seen to be | “ulteration is punishable by a penalty of 50; | oo, asa the bare which sovured them wreecbed off and | Sa hand, 144,000 bales; middling Ida.” wul with reapect to the Kane funeral arrange. | feature of the whole business; and why they properly appreciated. Compared with the and the hushaad and wife, on proot of habitual | qhrows into the yard; yet, strange as it may seem, but Paovipaxos, Feb. 28, 1867, ments, was not held, a8 two sea captains were | were not summoned as witnesses competent, | (9:14: double cylinder tae © | intoxication, may serve notice on tavern keepers | very slight damage was done to the goods in the store, wen, Se ee. eS Tie undelete added to the general committee by the Consul. It | most likely, to explain all the ramidcations at ’ J Printing press, the com | not to furnish liquor to either for six mouths, | netther the bottien on the shelves nor the stove pipe ap. | Tink, ith Mauermls nalee at fal Ros, | dine tencemey ie trast proeented is equal to that of a one story thanty alongside of a magnificent five story brown stone palace on the Fifth avenue; while in point of speed, it is a locomotive to a Boston truck. Our present four and six cylinders, which have been working daily between seventy and eighty thousand copies of the New York Henatp, will be thrown entirely in the shade by these mou- ster machines. They ate capable of throwing off over twenty thousand copies an hour continuous y. These new presses will be removed to our peared to have been displaced, of the ‘The object of the perpetrator of the aot could mot have | sales of ihe been plunder, as no articles are missed from the store, ——— everything being aa loft om Saturday evening. Consacnarion OF 4 Cavacn Paintivo —The {nteresting ‘The Fire Marshal, Baker, and Captain Leonard were | religious ceremonios attending the raising of a large altar- eariy at the promises, which wore thoroughly | painting in the church of St. Francis of Assissiam, im searched, but no olve obtained of the Incendary. | Thirty ‘irst street, near Sixth avenue, were celebrated ‘The whole matter will bo investigated by the Fire Nar | yosterday in that edifice, The church itesif was erected’ ebel ‘very recently, and w intended particularly for the Ger- Several perone narrowly e-caped injury from the | men portion of our Catholic population liviog in that viol- flying splinters, One person had but just pasged the ‘To these the oscasion was one of much interest, door when the explosion took piace, Twe @umen, attracted a large congregation. The painting te pe: -ing ap Fulton street, were but two bonses of when | . leven fest’bysevon, and is weil exeouted. It represents The report has been made the special order for the 11th inst. Just at this particular time, while the report of thie Committee is before th» Legislature, the New York State Temperance Society is in a remarkable #tate of activity, and has addressed several petitions, or arguments, to the members of that body in favor of prohibition. The society contends that a fair trial was not given to the Prohibitory Liquor law, and that notwithstanding the decisions of the court wes agein reported that a naval demonstration would be made against Mexico, and that a frigate and three steamers would sail soon for Vera Craz. Shares of the Spanish Bank had declined from fifty to thirty per cent. Spanish gold coin of the value of $5 bed been put in circulation. Silver coins covdemped in the United States were=if the pillars were not effacedtaken at twenty-five cents for the quarter, but if defaced the quarter only brought twenty centa. We are indebted to Mr. H. J. Bullay, purser of the eteemship Philadelphia, for \ate files of Australian Werhiogton of the lobby from Albany, we are at « loss to conjecture. At all events, through thie late committee, we have fairly broken int) the ehell of the lobby, and another committee or two, equally fearless and industrious, will clean it out. it would require a good many millions of dol- jars to cover the savings to the treasury and he people effected at this ecssion of Congress, thus far, through the disclosures of this Corrup tion Committee. That little book job of one a3, . . papers, from which we take a report of the Mel- | hundred and eighty-five thousand dollars, of the | ™ulding during the presomt week, and will be | aginst ite constitutionality, the great majority 0 po beth redh acer Pererseitdl stalbcrsrden for Sod thats hb to on of baie toms to bourne markets. Hight hundred Chinese had ar | tones, struck out by the Senate, is but a small Put in operation as soon as powible, when visitors | ne people are still in favorof it. Now, the fact is | t ome, The noi-e of tho exploion, and oven ths | heaven by angels, while from the marke, or sacred tig. rived af Buckland from Hendigo, and & host of them | iter in the general account. A vigilant man or | C2 have en opportunity of admiring their | ye Jaw has been tried, and not only found uncon- | jarring, was sensibly fli at the corner of Mroadwar— | mas imprinted in the hande and feet by the Saviour, radi. wor assembling fat Melbourne. John Chinaman renee" al be " tplendid proportions and witnessing their unri- tional, but wholly i vative, and any at | balf a square distant, Had any person been im front of | ste (lames emblematic of his seraphic love, On the left ie had ion eeized with a perfect passion for billiard | 'W° im either House will vet papery valled epeed, We now begin to see 7 — romps eee or tts aot ed the store at the time no doubt they would baye been | am ange! bearing the symbol of mortification and playing. keep the rogues from the public funds and lands cleat, andi hope wtta 40 7 ma ee our Way | tempt that may be made to legislate it into life tastaatiy kitted pF] we be - * Cg Wye TT The Leo del Purblo, of St. Domingo City, of Jan. | 10 the end of this remarkable Congress. | sent proves. for the Ht rend to supply the | wilt result in a complete failure, Tt is also par This it the mom 4 attempt to destroy property | Prorection. undernes ie ‘the topmost Sona eek |. says Chat the government of President Baez was ; ! . the merat : rs BRALD at an early hour ticularly worthy of notice in this connection that | wrioh has occurred in this city for some time, Ag = osnal ~My the Sains prayers. getic measures against conspiracies ‘ bt amt _ un W = we eo | dit Gand ce : alten areas wa there is less drunkenness now = = was ahahaha : este et siete Sand oro i hana tad fo A. 4 it supposed to be mataring. General Santana | tel! us the name of the man to whom he paid the | . ' jousand uring the great temperance agitation which pre- Tar Growino Warar tx Virgixta—The Staun- mame viour whee booed Hen comducted to the capil ener an escort of | thousand dollars, and for what purpose he was | COP: per day. | scaed a pugs It soems, in fact, that the bp art py 5 — AF oe croc rere aa aa hem 0 the Sor Mm three hundred men, which started to take him pri- | constituted lobby broker in that transaction? | Becxuixe ox c O1p Hansess,—The Know | more legal restrictions are placed upon the trafic, | parte of Fastorn a toe A. Lr fits Wwaicatog how tne at. ht ry moner at bis retreat in the province of Seybo, amd | When will Geceley inform us what became of the | Nothings arc coming out of their shell again. | the greater is the increase of intemperance. The friend fn Miseovet writes totbim that the wheat In tbat | worldly siiuremems which stood In the way of eternal be nal — Without meeting with amy resistance, | $59,000 which were collected from certain sim- | They held a State Council at Troy the other | impracticable characters who are at the head of this | Teg\on pA Serpinam, says: Lo sores of fotended 0 seh fran popes, cordtatls Sookabe ho | a fo " Z oe “a A yoess = aa be pletons in this city for the purpose of getting up | day, and have commenced barnishing up their | movement will not, or cannot look atthe matter in | oopsiderable Injary 12 our seaple ms Gane cuarver, 4 me and crow! iy forqare te ve mentee ane prison. To judge from the violent language of the | ®FevOlution in Ireland? When will Greeley be | old weapons, polishing their platform and pre- | ite common sense aapect, and therefore insist upon | Pause oer at toner’ tes peagon, Ot Nghtor sit he Crier 01. ‘Francie. "The paltiing ine copy of an ota pices with regard to his person and objects, it was pleased to let us know what has boon done with | paring for next year's election. We should not | rubetituting prohibitory legislation for moral frost bes one more musene mune "The corvmony of copmvoreiod Castine fod Lea o voly likely thit he would be expelied from the | the large sums which were collected here for | be surprised if they were to trouble the other two | swasion. Such men give a romantic coloring to Ne (Va) egal thet ihe Chiaetion Corey’ fer temeney ne ae oy we oomney ‘bleeding Kansas?” Light tx bumbly reyuested | parties in the State very mugh by next No- { their so-called reforms, and will not soe that the ea, ana tae’ wentner tow | choren. Rey P. Sern, ef Eiteotevii: as tory: AW Come Heiney pu sulle pvivel o Key West ag | on these kugtty points yeber. menus by which they eck to aggommplis Whoa = ‘ 7

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