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WHOLE NO. / 7538. MORNING EDITION—TOESDAY, APRIL 21, © PRICE TWO CENTS. <p er porn TR ‘An April Storm. siege perme y Vict were Ri-7- +f DAMAGE TO SHIFTING FROM THE WIND AND WEATHER ENGLISH PROJECTS OF CONQUEST IN CHINA, and actresses, and that their natural endow- —MORB DISASTERS EXPECTED TO BE HEARD OF, 3 i a re a unfathomable sea. Hie daily and | The fourth [Pree Ameri+ Rey. H.W. Beows, of All Soul's ehoreh, rese amid Men actors ments and proclivities form of themselves a right and & | A vivient storm of wind and rain reached this city on Splendid Orefem om shakspere by Rickard | {cow ioungiug near the tap-room of the Mermaid per- | much apply gee to respond. He said:-— ——f- duty, and that that wondortul gift is not to be looked upon | sunday night, and continued until lst evening, when there | Real Motives of the Anglo-French Allian O'Gorman. a blustering, "ha bellowing fustan én the |. 2% PX! ampere ae Gmruane—I consider uhat our} He bnvaeers te any arhirany OF wapeiN which | WAH & prospect of an abatement, The wind blow a galo and bellowing fustian on the ‘i e 10 abuse or neglect, 2 ol a hol hs omit EU ; and now, after the ‘of two | friend (¥ 4, O'Gorman) who last addressed ws and whore | is not to be held the serions and’ responsi- | from the northeast, and did no litle damage to loose signs fmulleet_ provocation; lapse. of two bale ae Sane he sacle, aa plepeen : PREDICTIONS OF THE HERALD IN 1866, 6 the man set before us as | melodio ay voice is still sounding im our cars, has'réally Dundred and fifty we havi nd awnings and chimni hil the slips ships were REV. MA. BELLOWS ON THE DRAMATIC PROFESSION, | iniife. We vec aad know tho extravagant brawler under | spoken, directly, more powerfully and eflciewty for the- 2 ryan lereapee Ia iP rcdies seng I Delieve, gentlemen of the dramatic profession, that it you would nameer Ancient Pistol, and that shabb; N Fegard your own cal high vocation, not | fouled and carelessly secured rigging blown away. eee _ Spal eeeeecsetsotth ine hardelph of the red nése, the vagabond zatelttes and | Denedlty ef tho Dramatic, Fund than anybody who wilt Hy ina worldly vense but in thehighsemelawhichany | We have not beard of any ecrious damage in the harbor, Our Parts Correspondence. WAS, KEMBLE'S LETTER A FORGERY. | hangers on of that sensual, wity, Tying, cowardly, soit | fOl0N bim, however direct may bo is aim, can hope ¥o do. dir Aeros romitsion fram the Almighty regarded, | though tho utmost apprehension is Tek for the emigrant Paras, Nov. 1, 1856, Bet teees, cnlisk ae te he bactare, Doe tee Pranic Fund socoty, and our friend at repeated — i ee of ike arid? Vouwould fing | Yessels at £ea, of which a great many are mow due, and | Briish Designs on China—Reak Mave of he Anglo Bren Berean Ancive renry dinner of the American Dramatic iyi we eine, she rae pd ors an Buses. 5 pny browes esp women pb Sei joon ta thought | remit whatever is unworthy, whatever is unbecoming— | the reports from the sea coast for a couple of days will be Uiance, to a ition so dignitied and so grand, and | painfully interesting. The United States steam frigate There has been some talk in well-informed circles, * | i i “ squid prove is Cnet aa aide hile ioe Niagara did not sail as aunounced, in consequence of the | during the past week, of the Britich movements in Bur- im say—to the artists, butthat you are artists in as high | storm, and the George Law was detained for a similar rea- | mab. Theix real purpose has never been unde br mast a the Beth, san Die painter. ia son. Our ship news reporter sent us the following atnoon | either here or in America, Any one who unde = —- 3 — — wat a, ‘an Es ory | yesterday :— the true position of affairs in the East, and reflects om serious loggerheads, (Applanse and laughter.) I never The ship Navid Hoadley, from Antwerp, lying at quaran- | the policy of the Palmerston Cabinet, must come to the e see why the ends of morality and te ee dragged down towards the Narrows; the Star of | conclusion that the late campaigns on the Irawaddy have religion should not be the fri est, from Liv I, is very near the bettom at the of this highart. Ido not pe = I nee for this | quarantine landing. The firemen bark Meridian has drag. | had an object ulterior to and more important than the hu- immense antipathy between you andus. Tbelieve that you | ged near the Stapleton landing. miliation of the government at Ava, or even the annexa have yet 1 do justice 10 ws a wall ag we havo todo juticn | The sea js making clean break, over the docks on | tion ofthe strip of sea shore to Pulo Pinang. That objec ou. T assure you that so as conseqt ¥ jensels ty is Thiave the happiness of knowioe le mernbors nail orders | anchor off Quarantine, arrived last night, cannot be boarded | #8 undoubtedly China, and the British aim is to open a und classes, were only unembarassed by their position to- | this morning. road to the southwestern provinces of the Chinese empir incapable of bel abstracted, and wham no one would Afection as for this okt Feprebeiet He woes not sare | Wish to see condensed. Applause.) Tho freal cause, T @ straw for. fame. Re hasnt a spark of honest | S8sPeet,of their persecution in their lovely Green Isle by enthusiasm. He dislikes danger nest | tho mottier country—as we still reverently call twas to Ds tonal inconvenience and dong walks; he takes the shabbiest | @eubtless to | for our benefit certain tnteront means of avoiding it, poten big itogether too catm and | #24 eloquent men, Whom otherwise we never could cool and self possessed for a mere coward; be won't pay | Me ot possession of. | (Laughter and applause.) | And his debis, he tells intolerable ties, and'yetno one can be } whe wos or nary es a omer py YO angry with him; bis humor is irresistible, The Chiet | ! t tnin. whiel Lome roe beard i Oa A Justice reads him’a solemn dedture on the evil of his ways. b oat eee, he ea cane 9 ray gry ear and Jack laughs at tim to+hisface, and ends by asking of | Such worthy descend irs. (Applause.) him the Joan of a‘thonsand pounds. ‘His jel bora DEFENCE OF THE PURITANS. and sugar is unslakable—anappearable; and yet whic Ifecl very much honored, gentlemen, by the exceedingly Soleo se ld cooks the pear smead tee ons mightis | Kind—sltogether too kind—hotice which your President has nee it is to net. T suy it in no imvidious sense; | and dragging, at Stapleton. “lb “ Wut I recognize the fact that wa all. bo. | — Capt. Gedney, of the steamtug Achilles, came up from " Pee ae eee ia Com one. Jong to the” talking profession, and that we | the Narrows, ‘ahd reports the ship Fmpire, for Liverpool, | TM” organized. by. heal ot stoam, ratineute, int eanhe have somewhat the same responsibilty for the use of the | atanchor in the bay. j. | and mechanical power; the object of the British pnce tongue, and derive our livelihood trom the swinging of The Staten Island ferry boats are not making their | inet control the cotion region of the world—is 41 ciel ‘ of here, I he | wards tho laity you would find liberal, 2 P. M.—We learn from the Highlands that the wind off ae sa “ip ae Peay x society of the captivating-old rascal, even he knew | been pleased to take of my presence here, I was sorry wi wy woul ind a more liberal, I F 5 by their flank—Rangoon being the point d’apput for ahe 9 | Gur pockets wound be picked by Bardotph or Nyin before | git any necessity to give me the benefit of that foil which | larKer and freer justice dono to your profession by that | shore is from the SE; it shifted this morning about 2:30, | ('¥ ae morning? Which of us has not, some time in his life, | gonsists in a slight stroke at the Puritans. Ihave a high | Very class of men than, perhaps, by any other class of | from NE to SE, and is blowing a gale, In the lower bay ps 00 | fallen in love with Rosalind, and wondered how Orlando respect for the Puritans, indeed so deep and profound a | 2 in the whole community. 1 know what it is to labor | and about the city itis from NE The Chinese empire is now in pretty much the same bs could have missed recognizing her, for all her doublet and respect for them that all the reverence which I might feel with brain and with the voice. I know, too, a little what ‘The pilot boat G. W. Blunt, No. 11, Is close to the beach, | condition ay Hindostan was during the last of the Mogul 2 hose? What bachelor would not foreswear any school of | for’ good old Ireland, which represents rather the Bhiicecahe, ee that Sentaining; , perplexing, Me per) be- | other side df the question—not only through her children, r witching girl, for whose sake anted, and made Idren—cannot moment y Ree esis cris Vinal assed ipo” die Wee, | Mimeelta'buct for tho Jeors of his merry friends? What | tongue whenever i is necessary to-say onc word in d- come of the Pund derived trom the subscription | married mun is there who does not feel a touch of pity for | fence of those hoble creatures to whom our country owes SL mem ders and interest on investments is $6116 37. We | the heroism of that gentleman of Verona who took to wite : ay were AO at that little but very important member. Now, 1 believe | regular trips, in consequence of the difficulty in lying at | 7 : a be ; pra Have Pe aid during the past year to the aged, the sick and | thar handsome, inveterate vixen, Katherine? and which of | $0,much aaiepaeiiseed 80 grand and so great that they | mat, from the arlisuc and wstheti culture which | the piers on Staten Island. Se Smee tet Seer ee rire tacmain he nan om oo Sergiy “ogi daaeeeombainnd us does not long to know the spell by which he bronght | greater honor than when we point out their faults, | Delongs to men of my own they | We received the following Teport at sunset:— The, wind ther thas Bnciaeh petdecte a’inoveeenh Wanties asereee: Fund 6; - her back tame and docile asa lamb? Who thatcantecl | @ippianse.) With this qualilication I should be | Must know in their secret your | hulled at about 3:30 and is now moderate fro Band | {eed China. ‘The former naval war Las impressed the Chi. profession cannot be the light and frivolous ene which | cloudy, All the vessels in quarantine are in safety. it is commonly thonght, 1 have learned that it is an A severe gale prevailed all day yesterday at New Lon- ly laborious profession—that it is a very methodi- | den and places east of that. The schooner Agawam, ashore ssion—that it requires time and steadiness of | on Black Ledge, near New London harbor, bas probably habits, great care and discipline, which ought to free it | gone to pieces. “The ship American, from New London to from that light estimation in which it is held by’ St. Johns, N. B., was bound out on Saturday, the gale thinking persons. I), this respect, it seems to me: 1 on Sun prevented her from getting live by our baains, aud who are obliged to live also by our | to sea and she anchored near the Light House, New Lou hearts, as wellas you—ar in some degree todo justice | don harbor, she was likely to drag ashore in the gale of to your profession, I met to-day in a book which Twas terday, and the crew were compelled te " Teading—not without a purpose—an anecdote which brings | masts. Capt. Welch, underwriters’ agent, your profession and my pr ther, in such a | London, promptly chartered the prope ron way, and inga manner so 10 both, that | gO to her assistance, She was probably towed in last Vo translated it and will read you afew lines. It is | evening. from Dr. Veron’s “ Memoires d'un Bourgeois de Paris.” SNOW STORM AT THE SOUTH. abi ™, Secretary of the A. D. F. Association. | has not pitied the griefs of the too-confiding, foolish, fond | Yery glad” to adopt all that our excellent president has Bs Prevident is Mr. Jas. T. Brady, and Messrs. Wm. R. | old king, and been roused to indignation at the ingratitude | Juimated; but he thought it. necessary to do. ine , Isaac Holbrook, J. Prescott Hall, Junius T. | thatdrove him forth with uncovered head to bide the ght honor by elevating me over the corpse of the egy and John Brougham are trustees, pelting of the pitiless storm, and crazed his wits? | Puritans. (Applause.) But they are not dead yet, sir. " be 2 And who has not felt relieved when the long agony was | (taughter.) Wey her acauden ane. eee erantal Moe dinner took place in the ladies? ordinary, It was | over, and the tortured heart broke at last? Whom do we | freait in presenting wnyself here as a representative of the ® Mvp with that exquisite regard to taste which has long | Know better than these people? What scenes of real life | elerical profession on this occasion, for, sir, I presume the @ Btinguished the Astor House. The ornamental pastry | DAVE Moved us more? But these are mostly of English | elerical profession would not consent 'to consider me as “a type. There had been, gentlemen, in the Court of Queen | their representation. (Laughter.) Moreover, hi © smpprised figures of Shakspere and Falstatf, Melpomene | Hess—as gallant and headstrong as Hotspur—many agit! | atuded t# certain peculiarities of opinion wh 1 md Thalia, and smaller figures of the various characters of nd war a — Lape ree, mi ‘ Hes a fetd I am accustomed to entertain, ‘ T mut y Bake i comes i a 16. gach. Bo Shylock, 00, 1 that I have occupied a somewhat olitary po. Pe ee ay and trophies of | without going as fur as the Rialto, and been dared by the | ition—at any rate, Nene ia- Whi T have nit tad fragey. Dodworth’s band played throughout the even- | unconscionable old usurer in some of his early financial | too much good company. But Ido not conceive that I Sug. Grace was said by Rev. Henry W. Bellows, of the | difficulties, when he found himself in a «tight place” | make any special sacrifice in meeting whatever prejudices nese with an opinion of the power of England which will enable the British troops to invade China, and carry all be- fore them as easily as they did half a century ago or more in Hindostan. ‘The British idea is that India will still sup- tropical products—«otton, 0 p—that she requires. She has a military government there, and 100,000,000 slaves—a weak, help- lees race—under her contr If the same plan can be carried out in China, and the divisions of the natives turned low count as those in India were, the tea and sill to | Producing countries may soon be mere British provinces, and the Britich sway acknowledged not by one, but by five hundred millions ef people. depend upon it, has much to do with tho facile al- eof Englund with France, and the readiness of the “ about the liabilities of the Globe theatre. ‘There were con- am in EXAy mening Of tad} [enon of (ig Macary patiness, whieh: offen Kiel abise at Barniwoxn, April 20—P. M. ae ee P@burch of All Souls; and at the removal of the cloth the | stables within sound of Bow Bells as“ decartless” us Dog. | RY be enerunionce in nine ere Sen ee L Abas eats Sao, Riche! had been entreawrd by Madame | A violent northeast storm has prevailed since yesterday Pe career Bean ke tmon nobis domine was sung by the glee party, led by Mr. | berry, and watchmen as ancient and quiet as Verges, | with them many prejudices in this as in other | Recanulrto recite before, Chateaubriand some scenes trom | evening, with rain, snow and hail at intervals. Tt is now ‘that the Khiva frontier should be secure the partof Pauline in “Polyeucte.” Just as she was about | raining heavily, with a very high wind. saying— zi Puuapenenia, April 20, 18 husband, in dying, has left me bis {!]umination, Snow fell last night at Reading and Pottsville Hls blo ich yor es have just cove A 4 aoa ae i-teke ee depth of twelve inches, The iron roof of the machine Tbe! FMlorneastie of the Harrison troupe. \ senseless and t men’? to be guardians of the night, who | communities. 1 have sbared, as the member of a Mr. Bray, President of the association, notified the | Moh ot the Reaichcinattnand ail. “Wat where wns fomewhat unpopular, oF tot | populous, denommua ‘eempooy that they had arrived tthe part ofthe banquet | under the burning sun ofthe South, could Shakspere have may be flung as by those who bave legure to throw when the intellectual exercises of the evening should | met a nature so simple, Fonfiding, passionate, glowing and } gtones, But I belong to the Pachydermic Order—an order eommence, and he would be very well contented that | {Venice could he tind’ the model. of that false, plotting be oar 19 Neccemeareennes pesecally HeRiNc; So ehthe ieee ‘the gentlemen who bad been announced to respond to the | subtle, poisonous, murderous fiend, Iago ? How terrible | Very short and thick stimued, £0 as not to be easily ee Fegular toasts should do so without introduction; but | itis to see the anguish of the Moor, growing and swelling | py the darts of any malignant enemies. (Laughter.) Not ae iu his noble heart, while the remorseless devil whispers | t}'at all dhose are disposed w be malignant who would jude Gere was 4 peculiarity about the feast which be could not | into his ear the venemous insinuation, until at last reason = ipoaition hereto pigeon nen prodmaien' ta he fail to notice. They were honored this evening by the | totters, and the great warrior, fooled, betrayed, ruined by undeserving; for, believe me gentlemen, we should both Presence of a gentleman of whom he weuld be very well | the machinations of a contemptible knave, ina whirlwind | qo great discredit to ourselves and extreme undesert to feeatent to speak at large did good taste warrant such an | ff Pind fury. kills the idol of his heartand dies by bis own | those of whom am speaking, if we supposed that there hand in an agony of repentance was not | 4s not vastly, more truly honest und more respectful preju- fmduigence. They saw here Mr. Bellows. (Loud and | familiar alone with all natures and races of his | itice coanbéibd elthor with the disparagement of your pro- Sootinued cheers.) He was not aware whether this was | own days; his mind travelled back into the antique werld | #uct, Com covert _— — the first time that the pulpit came to lend its grace to @ | and made companionship with men of all kinds and classes | °°! OF MAY Position. @ramatic fund dinner, but if it were he had a very strong | inGrecce and Rome. He was as much at home in the SPEECH NOT PREPARED. ee ee Se be Oe Qe, Ed agora and the forum as im Eastcheap. Marcus of Coriolis | Before T proceed furthor, I beg to say that every word were awi recent i character for us as Harry Perey. No better |. tet a Buest he had the courage to turn ‘ack upon theaerid spirit | funeral “oration was over spoken oreiee Tay. of Cesar | Which falls from my lips at this time, is in the truest man- f Puritanism and rebuke it. He believed he was the first | than Shakspere has put in the mouth of Marc Antony, | ner extemporized; for J should be ashamed to ‘the reverend professors who had had the courage to an- | ‘and had he lived a life within sight of the Pyramids, he | be supposed to be uttering now what I had mmunce the principles whidh were permeated with the trae | could not have painted better the imperial gipsy of the | Carefully prepared, or even thought of before, having re- pies of Christianity, and the main object which he | Nile, for whose mature caresses the great Roman warrior | erved myself for @ more formal address on behalt of re ly) wit ‘was that the time was ad forgot friends ana home and honor, and cast away the em- ‘our interests on another occasion. I should be ashamed, wl @ir. Bellows) would discuss of the | pire of half the world. Even time was too short and the ay, to have this speech thonght to be prepared, when and its ineid@nts in such terms and with such effect | confines of earth itself too narrow for the scope of his fur- | Drought in such immediate contrast with one who so meri- ‘®@ would put this Puritan spirit to the blush. ‘The-Ameri- | reaching imagination. It travelled into the realm of Faery; | toriously and carefully brought out all the beautios of his 98 Dramatic Fund Association bad asked their friend Qtr, | caught Oberon and Titania at their quarrels. “under the } wn aniud w adorn this occasion, 8) to deliver an address, which address he spangled starlit sheen”—heard Robin Goodfellow, ‘that MRS. KEMBLE’S LETTERS. against Russian aggression. A war with Russia, in which all the military power of France is used to contine Russia within the old Muscovite boundaries, achieves this object or 6 r pletely. And while France is reaping empty glory Lsee, I eve. shop of the Reading Railroad at Reading was broken down | CO™P ant : . 4 the, scene was interrupted by an unexpected visiter—the by the weight of the snow. All the workmen in the build- | {70M vietories in the Crimea, the Indian army of Great ! é 0 Britain is slowly penetrating through Burmah towards hbishop of ——, was announced. ing eseaped except two, who were slightly injured. The y a bern reg i ae bee ecanate, $8 ges ey mine Cn wood work of several locomotives was damaged. The bea pe hang po ge oe pe | solid conquests. “1 present to you Mademoi Machel, Who Was most kind ‘ quit or ® while of J just reeling tous @ scene trom Paulnedn Polyeuctes™ “T | portion of the roof that fell was one hundred and eighty laquire how far the U pte ‘khould be wretched, replied the new er, to interrupt the | feet in length. This accident will not interfere with the “= i 4 Beautiful verses of Corneilie.”. henge nf business of the road. ‘The snow fell here briskly fora | these intrigues, and to ask ther From scruples full of Welicary, Rachel, however, declined } short time this afternoon, ‘The wires of whe Western tole eontinuing e scene from Pauline in the presenee of eo pre: . inte, She was not willing to eaclaim, likes couvert tockris. | PFSph line via Pittsburg are down. y them that—Russia apart—there ix a = he Is Trews ed = Uus falsity herself be- a “cry Inte ews a on world which has opinions to a-ert and re a minisyer of the Catholic church. Migence. rights to defend. “It Mo will a! she said with a most respectful "1 q courtesy, “Twill recite some verses tron “Father™ ingen,” | A JURY FOR THE BURDELL Menpen Trut.—Tho work of British Designs on China—Prospect of a New | pe hg £0: the work | writies bj oe wg the pang drawing a pauel of jurors for the next session of the Court Chinese War. , Pion Rother a Me the Archbichop “over. | Of Oyer and Terminer, before which the Burdell murder (From the New York Herald, Nov! 28, 1856.) Pibelmed her yi praige, Wo prions of tho Lord.” | caso is to be tried, was terminated yesterday at the offloe | W d to the attentive perusal of tho pablte a let- arias, Y have, however, twice aura that Trappiness itt | of the County Clerk. To meet tho dificulty of nding a pe atom Liga bw tg yok monger Aa eypnimine a Plo % Malabr. ul ” i y Vi , pin wy RE, ere allel pol Pays “A pocenty Ba owe jury of twelve men to sit upon the cane who have not forward ure equally new and striking. To declaim so such beautiful vs lispensable to | already formed an opinion as to the guilt of the parties n known that Great Britain—or rather its t Indi Corpany wae pushing ts trium= f have felt all the noble sentiments they exp achel made his reverence the mingt gratetal courte wnt said, with | Cbarged with the alleged murder, a panel was drawn of | Tham, up the valley of the Irawaldy, and reducing gweres eet, hak ae Snphgaie come s—"Monsignor, you 1 five hundred men, This panel was drawn from four thou- | the kingdom of Burmah to the condition of ‘the rajabships X grave nnd dignified gentleman of London eneounteredinhis | sind names, whereas for ordinary trials at this court a | and principalities of Hindostan. ‘The fuct has been noticed walk some hoys, who with gay curiosity were seen pointing 0 | panel of forty men ouly is drawn from two hundred | over and {over again in American journals, as conclusive a small but highly dressed person who that momen Rassed on mes, The drawing took place in the presence of the | evidence that the remonstrances of the British journals the other side of the sireet. | Shocked by the unseemtiness of | Sherif’, the County Cerk and two Aldermen, in complance | with this country in relation to the acquisition of foreigm chavier he reproved yous, Mudeceney. ( Why.” ex” | with the usnal statute, It took several hours on Saurday | territory were hypocritical and ineiucere, But it bas pever main @ stranger to vee whether France can ik y consented to deliver for the benefit of the fund; and 4 ” he malee! y, “that’s Davy Garrick, the ae oxenber of bearers af which be ted ao deune dona, | ey chon Noor trortals rea the timid vives from ther | Rut speaking now in a purely extomporancous manner, sak dan Kuo wae sox? mayrconie to | Abd Yesterday to completo the drawing. teen sted to our kaw tht the cit of the Bria Deequal to the merit of the address, the fund would receive | hiding places in the acorn cape, and bore them company | Jet me set right what is a most atrocious misrepresentation ven, may Bs Ee yy gee ‘Tux Crnzks Vourxtexk Parape,.—The etorm 0 tay oie veal elas cries Gite auch oeuuen teehon read ech an_acovesion ax it hud never received before. (AP- | through all the midsummer night, But these were of the | of a certain matter with which 1 happen to be very inti- the unfortunate monarch of the stage. Prevented the parade of this new army, much Ww the re ene ee eee . With these prefatory remarks he would propose | sportive and trickery sort, what we in Ireland used to call first regular toast—“The President of the United States | ‘food people.” There were spirits of sterner mood with | BAtely connected. The public press, which—with most ah jee tural ae it is, and most be for T hope, gentlemen, that by the friendly favor of this audi- | gret of those who desired to participate in the turnout. Tho it appears 40 plausible that it may well en enc wey “ ean 9 a Tay be permitted, on sotne early occasion, to expres? “0 . of America.” whom the poet’s fancy did not fear to consort. He | entire deference to the honorable gentleman who represent. i. * Commander in Chief issued the following order ‘The cecond regular toast was, “Tho Oity of New York.” | tracked the Weird sisters—those “secret, black and mid- | it here—is so argus-eyed that it can see what does not leliberate and formal words all that I have to say " eames 0. %, Cah ae POS ‘The Mayor baving been announced on the programme | pight fhage’'--Ap hl envers, aa watched them brewing | exist in fact; seems to have had one of its eyes | that is grave aud thoughtful on your profession and the Hrapauanres a ro mpire, as ie well known to those who have Paid any attention to the | pooks of travellers to Ching, is im the last stage of Ev theatre. Until then I can only wich prosperity to the o ie ho nizatic ly ‘The parade of the above organization is, in con ything Chigene ls corte ~ Dramatic Fund, and that] my be permitted, from time to ] the inch ney of the weather, postponed @ the respondent to this toast, Mr. Brady. aes the | their hell broth, and heard them mumbling their foulincan- | at my keyhole, and has undertaken to say what ——s tations, , . sty presen - , vrivate conversation with the ¥ ee ee eerie —tne esr a tas coat | ome How ietr ghasity: apnea athens Wtingulchad lay whole name ought tw continue to be ho. | time, to sco it swelling in the publie favor, whl gaining in Bhi tusk Conmmatudants of rome wl government, the muzistracy, the army, the Judiciary, the Kew York—was not present. Ho regretied tut op the | when first they greet the Thane of Glamis on tie heath | nored wit ever has been T believe, by the dramatic pro- | wiistauve ~ Mg... CARE. continued ap- | Shove cate eis ee Sr EL wes techertecien cree eke DET came aecount. and hisses, oir % career feasion, It has been understood lause 3 * HENRY WILSON. e » amen ny dist "by ihe Gice Glut, Mr. James G. wo presiding | iment ee coma ten be eta tae Shas Uipcthe’ prints’ Went. bave teccived & Afver Mr. Bellows? speech the wauat collection in aid of |W a1, isanow, Adjutant Genera, BENRY WHON. | ay and the consequence has been that's band st Beplane. : finds himself cheated ‘by the juggling fends and witha [from Mrs. Fanny Kemblo, — protesting the Dramatic Fund was being taken up, when Miss Lorms | 11 14 not supposed that there will be any falling off in the erent ©) Suatare ems ‘The third regular toast was “‘Shakspere."? cry of terror and despair rushesheadlongto hisdeath. Bat {appearance wt tho dramatic fund dinner hie nny ase le pil po Bade med fy Sam whe wil pamsietn aumeemente <f ts abled to overran the Mr. aoe Gonmas responded in the following clo ofall the spirits that ‘walked the air, or revelled on the ai ge i ES er aade for Summer Nights, und Suminer Nights werd malo Pee. 2 bop ae ane ies, E ding foreigners wo fir Promipest, Laps axp G ANTIEMEN:— night in the cups of the closed viole-—of all the apparitions | the presumption,to interfere in any manner with personal Ove. ; s Doe of & cen Wk eee need a oie mi their purpowe is w call their for P Thave been thinking during the pregress of this splen- | that human fancy ever raised, what so lovely, so fine ws conduct and bebavier, Dus saying nothing of that, I bes, Sho was rout ing! end coming back, she Place yesterday. ‘Tho independant volunteer parade was pt nc The Chinese army ix the parest fareo; vernal millions of men, it is wholly incapable Postponed, and it is supposed that an arrangement | of making any head agninat the snsallert dhesipalaed Buro- ail jes will turn out pean force, and would noe more resist the Kast India Com- heen offered a Major | tany's uriny than ihe Creeks would withstand United aa 3} Charli ir. Weevas, the Becretary of the Association, gave an | # abstract of the annual reports, and the list of donations of | ¥!ll be effected whe the evening, as follows .— together. The @id_ festival in boner and in aid of the dramatic Profexsion, through what strange viciesitudes of popular the fwailiar of the great magician who found a wa Splae, no such letter has ever been writin or receiv: @Mtimation that pfession has passed. Sometimes nthe Buchanted Island? It was in this play—the | ed. )Applause.) Some members of your profession, with si—Shakspeare put forthall ae over-all d hat his | the ots ene ‘ok parts for which i. bas always boca dls Hi ful, tinguished, but which ought to be displayed under better e i * lob thei p pm yg pe Bw ; Srecafal tn Ay -abe notion poaicnoe ST vattrance, the | and. more. favorablo* circumstances, have takeu | J: N. Gen cece Stem oT peer ete. aud # division in line, whieh Wey will doubt: | Sates troops, Up to var latest account the feoble cen- ‘Glames—downcast, dishonored and degraded; Sublimest forgiveness, the purest and sunniest love—all | upon themselves to imagine, or at any rate, to | New York Leader -.:.. 100 Patrick Iynch. 10 tral authority tad not been positively thrown off by float on the high tide of public favor—prized and ca’ | the treasures his’ fancy bad gathered, all_the | believe what has been unwarrantably assertad by 'thy | Mr-Young, ofthe Albion 29 Xow Yorker 10 | A Cuasce to Sex 4 Wiai—A schooner engaged in | any of the Vrovinors, save the strip of sea coust Feased-—the chewed vehicle by which great minds speak to | Wealth his heart had’? to bestow, he” lavishod | public press, Tet me say, in reference to that distinguist | Somes Wallack, Sen, Darter pirat: inca 10 | whating off Sandy Hook made fast wo oue on Friday last, { Which the rebel Thoping | Wang Thad subjugated. the world the thoughts that move and nerve, soften, sns- | upon this work, his greatest and hi ed Indy, ihat in the pursuit of an investigation which T } (MN tins” 35 Rev. De. Rellows 7’ | and has brought,it up as far as the steamboat basin, be aun Wes atten Gt pairs poacuenseee cama tes fain or enoble, And while I thought of all this—of the | Heavenly minstrelsy thrills through the soft alr—obedient | felt bound to go into, on the influence of the =wse, 1 have feeling this banquet betokens, and of the occa- | epirits spread the unbidden feast. In all the storm and | had a very interesting correspoudeuce with ber, and have gion which has gathered togetier so much that is | wreck there is no harm done—no hurt to any. An intelli. | received extremely interesting and valuable suggestions, jal, intelligewt and generous in our city, my | gence almost divine presides over all, and Ariel, the de! which } hope, on some other occasion, to be permitted y carried me back to the good old days of Queen | cate spirit of beauty, floats on the breeze or rides the | lay before some portion of the persous bere present. (Hear, Bess, and I found myself in the midst of another scene of | whirlwind, attentive to the magician’s great behests. } h reveiry, far less splendid indeed than this of ours to-night, | There is a touching tone of sadness over it all, for in. Prow- THE DRAMATIC FUND ASSOCIATION. Dat as joyous, frank hearty. Among the streets of | pero the port must have seen the likeness of himself. The Propping, then, this subject, Treturn te the matter af the London in these times t many broader, airier and | tempest of his life was over; bis toils and troubles we oy ob T whan 4. it haa b ‘an inn that held out good of entertainmentthan the | just. Over all the realms of earth and air his potent | dramatic fund. Although, as 1 understand, it has been &f betler repute than Cheapside” —many | spells had been cast. They that had been his rivals at | somewhat unfortuate in the orators who baye been en- “Mermaid.” Nevertheless, in the back parlor of the “Mer | last recognised the royalty of his genius and bowed before | gaged to present its claims on varions occasions, it hag maid Inn,” in Bread street, used there to assemble of | it, His prejects had all succceded—his work was dgne. ais eats & wun on nights a company of choice spirits, such as England never | His dainty Ariel—the darling creature of his fincy—so de. | Ret been unfortunate in the beg Ae A gaw before, and perhaps will nover seo again. Inthe | ticate, 6o tender in ite xympathiosetho spirit that he | ceived either from ya or from the public at lan stale, porpeival President by right of his own imperious | found’ imprisoned in the guaried cak and releaset and tind 1 think 1 might call tho attention of ‘all por y, teed tosit gra Bon Jonson, intolerant of con nd up to do his will—his ever graceful familiar, that > presen 10 the Biet, (hak One. of the sane generous Bradiction, sudden and quick of quarrel {vaunting the merits its spiriting so gently, with a sigh he sete free. He ations ever received by it was ba ot nh Teh Of tho Rove theatre at Bankside, above all theatres—the magic, breaks bis staff, and deeper from the very lady whove natuo T past, prevent and to come—eilencing opposition with an er plum sound, he drowns his book. ; honor to meg = im ays ns “ mo wath picked np in his campaigning days among the wars | The magician quits for ever the enchanted island, where oe (FR PP ge A yy rer] % Flanders—but genial, frank and kind for all that. By | his imagination had revelled and his genius kept court, Ce bear and applause.) PA gy Maman cong t his side sat the celebrated brothers in Kterature, Bean- | and goes home—home, t Stratford on the Avon, where | Associafon is to me extremely interesting. mont and Fletcher, around « host of others—wits | his young days were spent, far away from the busy buet- | fire to aid it by every means in my and playwrighis—whove names are household words. | ling scenes of London life.” He goes home to think of the | 1, sce it increase by every opportunity atl Larios re too sat one, whom # colemporary describes as “a | past and of the future, whose awful shadows, then thick. | Which your ability oa an af olan te Randrome, well shaped mau, of « vorie ready, pleasant | ening around him, even his gaze could not pierce. But his cae One a eo wWelriiwen feed smooth wit,” whose delighit it was to engage Jon. | Arici—the delicate spirit he set free—still does his bidding ] Pleasure which, in one ise on aa cae ae fon in “wit combats” on various topics, and to chafe and Js the Willow and * rune tipon the sharp wind of | UF hearts wore open and gay and when we wor poly ate him by asserting, among other things, the supe whispers in every clime tle watne of the gront | 10 receive all the ald to the imagination and all the Kin of the Globe theatre, of whieh he was then maua- | macter, and through all the realms of Faery—at whatever | ‘ing to the seutiments which the stage can give, we ull ; and the name of this man was William Shakspere, the | fountain the poet drinks inspiration, proclaiins bis ma remem bs ve received from , ‘su of all the poets that England, perhaps the world, has | There is not a «pot on which the light of Shakspere'* eloquence of actors. ever oe Wwe one pas hee toys heer d about | us even for an instant fell that is not dear to us aud " Son REMINISCENCES OF THE BOSTON STACR. over their wnary. It was the blossoming time | Who cares for Windsor Castle, though tt lifts its prow 7 “ te StpFnglish life—an era of lusty national health and vigor. | ements into the sky? We yxiss it by, and search thronzh | _ 1 recollect very well with what indescribable peasure, ‘The people's heart relieved of the great fear of Spanish | the park for Herne, the Hunter's Guk, where the merry | With what unspeakable zest I, as a boy, accompanied my Anvarion, beat froe and joyous once more. The chain of | wives heaped ridicule on poor Jack. Don't we turn aside | father to the Federal strect theatre, in Boston—=that good feudal despotism had been in part broken, but the gallant | even to have a lock ut Putchet mead, where they tumbled | city, where 1 had the felicity to be born. 1 recollect that Araditions of chivalry still remained; of the tournament of | him out of the buck basket under the name of soiled | Gi ‘theatre, and every one of the worthy men who We Held, of the cloth of gos, of the’ tough hand to hand | cletbes. ‘The Avon might flow for ever, and none of us | 2a win ita stage Teould drop tent at this very ezcouniers on the French soil, before ‘saltpetro had been | care; and now Helicon or Castalia was never more sacred, | APRMC over that worthy fellow. ail snfiuitely. capital en Coe arin acankeiion | aa «ripple by the poet's grave. Aud Eng’ | Sector, Pun. How well I remember him! (Applatwe curred’on every side to arouse the imagination and stimulate ¢ ieland he loved—what would she be bat | Tyacoliect how some of the most innocent, and ‘I might a- Gartontty, | Mariner after mariner sailed into port with ac- | for the light of his glory? Great as she is to-lay, there is | mont say the most useful hoursgor my lift, were 4 counts of goklen isles newly discovered in the Western | notan event that brings her wealth and power, and ex. | [Ost say the most nectal Bowragol my life, wore passed in waters. People did not know ax much about this earth then dled sway, but time will change. She will not escape world ‘of imagination The green ‘curtain bid @ blissful do. They had not acquired the satisfactory knowledge | the universal law As Rome and Carthage and Venice and | paradice, and when it rose every drop of blood in my aystem 10 | low Quarantin’, where it now lies. It is intended to bring 6% | iC Up to this city for exhibition. It is said w be forty feet jong. PHAR. iivivisseveres Wie tneedenovese es 3] Guy, Jackson's Sverv Box.—A letter Mr. W. Hanwusoy sang “Gramachree,” an original song, | from Andrew Jackson, the adopted son Fee eae eiat oi Fespoase Mr. Harri- | 14.0 chairman of the Aldermanic itteo on Arts and y of Dublin,” which was | Sciences, Mr. Jackson states that he has the gold. snuff . m which th encored, and Mr. KYLe gave a flute solo, box in his posession which was left by th ral for the eset thelr ey The next toast was “The Liberal Pro me,” to which | most active New Yorker in the defence of his country there was no response. He will forward the box when the isfound, The com. The last regular toast—“Woman.”? Mr. Horscastte sang | petition for this box a of the New York “Watkins? Evening Party.”? Vgluntecrs is very ergat. spoils, At most, England. Mr. Romer D. Hocus, in answer to a call, gave the fol- Staxer Piekives,—In a recent report two the City Inspec. | could only have hoped to in one third of the ret Jowing sentinent:— swale : booty. Whereas, by pushing her arms gradually north: The Drama~Tho art which leans upon her vistore— | rs department, Heuith Warden Woolwy of tho Twentioth | Wout and westward, through Burman, the object of the go. painting, seulpture and music-for the aid whieh the genius | ward ry#i—*No lows than one bundred professional rag | vernment is altaiied ax »peedily, and without attracting UA all we and climes as been ane! ij now aver teudy W | pickers reside in this ward, greatly to the annoyaues of | any att ation. |The British soldiers may penetratp wo the Dr, dvacuesnow gave the “Mechanic arts, to which | more respectable citizens. Fortunate y reside maine | that pot oral 4 tie ety apalees that party, ponded. Other sentiments, with | ly, in a particular locality, Their pms are with | and secure the victory t whichever they please, on condi: wong. be ae the company dispersed some time | those of their own kidney. They bring into the wardon | t te—may, in short, ae, ilapiyihbaleaishinhoan carts drawn by dogs and in baskets and bags om th tye med Somme atieraae City Politics. Whether the Emperor of the French is wholly ignorant THE TAMMANY SOCIETY ELECTION OF OFFICERS. of this sehome, or Whether he is willing to «lat bis eyes to potatoes, apples, oranges, Wananas, dilapidated clothing - ; * The Council Chamber of the Great Wigwain was the | mouldy bread, and numerous ober stinking sundr See ates eek Eee scene of unusual excitement last evening. A mooting of | reeking with disease and de hauling the gar 0 France t the members of the Tammany Society for the purpose of Der os - -~ Fatt’ | her coloutes in Afriea, cannot be stated with anything ike ecting officers drew thither nearly every active politician } It is coolidently anticipated that on the Ist of May, when | (ertlnty. | The wcbeames w tick thougia, beta vais fer of the democratic party in this city, consequently the nam. | City Inspector Morton has the command of the sanitary | ye dition of Meitierand French intlacne ber and character of the lobby cau be easily estimated, The | condition of the streets that this, with numerous olor | cnendons, Only to exeitement among the outsiders during the meeting of the | #treet nuisances, will be promptly abated. line is in proce Sox . ty, and the anxi a yen they looked forward Fine is Taney sixte Sreer—Twesry rive Homes Reese | Londen to ¢ to the aunouncement . ing, showed conclusively —Betwoen three and lock, yoator! through Fra Sardinia, from Sardinia to that the stake to be played for was 4 valuable. ane, The | 7 DYAT#.—Betwoen three and four 2 yomerday | ‘Algiers, from Algiers slong the orth ‘shore ef Afrion different factions inside of the wigwam were supported | morning, a fire broke out in the livery stable belon, tw Cairo and Suez, from @ along the shore ye ey ie an een mg by ty Patrick Lewis, situated at Nos. §4 and 86 West Thirty-sisth | of Asia w Hindostan, which it will crow: from room, the stairway beading 0 6 ae, originated . * Calcutta throvgh Burma, on the oue side to Canton, and oa 8 foul an atmexphere of rum and tobacco | Meet. The fire, it seems, originated In tho front office or } {imei Nate ites to Polynesia atl Austral, What Was before endured within the walls of ald | !t# vieluity, and sprend with great fury through the tabling, |) mnect wonder |, perhaps, in this remarkable enterprive i —— pa eens “ burning to death every horse therein, numbering between | the fact that in the whole line from London to a 4 He elect e@iicers occupied the entire evening. : mort wa “a nl 0 Canton, there will only be four hua- ove o'elock this morning the following ticket was declared | ‘WeMty and thirty. Fvery effort was mado by the police | snd frum Landen i Canton, tier wi One ‘place, The elected by 69 majority. ‘nd those earliest at the premises to save the animals, but Icthmus of Suex is another enterprise of NO DICTATION, to no avail, ag the only accessible means to them was from and with the sane porpose. Mr, Borkbardt, J. Vaire 10 Dr. Quackent Without with astonishment at have predicted that the and restlessness penetrated the as been receivet | interior dicunion would follow, and the four hundred mil- Uld Hickory, by | lots of Chinese would be <plitup into half a dozen na- insatiable statesmen of If they had fo nd picked a and wi to hinder the United States from the strects and gutters, sueh as putrid meats, rotten = Ghat it is a rather poor affair after all, and very lite in it. | Spain fell, #he too will fall. Decay will creep epon ber, | Feolied with Joy and gratitude, It never occurred to me that REFORM! UNION! Victory! the front, and the fury of the flames pat d States do not intend to be deft far be- BB was not thon mapped and mcasured end weighed: | and the vigor that sustained her young sinbition answer | thore coubl Weaything wrong Ge anything olborwise than | Good faith Tho Fights of the mace. | being rendered. A tnan in ebarge of the premises, upremacy, theee proceedings should Happy in their ignorance, never to her need no more. | Allies will desert her—the nations | the gift of heaven in the pleasant sense of kindly feelin, Linon ticket of is of the Admiuistration pledged | Joseph Stewart, who slept In the office, came near being a | not be overlooked. If we donot want to wake up some the exixtence of an enchanted | in the Medi. | she has conquered will rive against her—commerce will «i kindled imagination which the scenes of that old whole of Asia Britich, and the he fire being all around him when woke up. | fine morning and find ty to carry out the reform wnanimously adopted by Rerranenn & little off Naples, and a shipper might | forsake her ports, and the footsteps of some curious travel | thoatre excited in my bosem. (Loud cheers.) eecollect | Council of Sacl The Groton lrurvied to the scene of cuntngredion, and one ~ i s % eration, - whole of Purope and North Africa French, some notice Feport his ship as lect on — of Bohe % and the | ler alone will awake the echo of her now thronged and | io, ghat some years later when tis very lady whose name bor Sacheme—Isane V. Fowler, Je M. Marsh, Wil- | ceeded in preventing the fire epreading beyond the frame | should be taken of these schemes of annexation and ag- ag gy I marts. The star of empire will take tte way west. | has been already mentioned, first came to the United | liam 1. Kennedy, Peter B. Sweeny, Thomas B. Tappan, | stables wherein it Originated. A number of the horses | grandizement. A commissioner should be sent at once to ‘That mean, ee. aT mers het ten “4 Seahaed But even then—even then, w this great te Sfmt rivals, | States, although 1 had at that time begun my divinity stu. | William H. Cornell, Elijah F. Purdy, Emanuel B. Hart, ©. | were on livery, belonging to gentlemen in that vicinity, jarmab, ad the British rhinent should be potitied eminent ph Nt ene epeeaten¥ te tam ian and as thriving, shall have grown | Giew 1 was recommended by one of tho worthy Profssore Godfrey Gunther, Samuel J, Tilden, Charles A. Douike, | and considered of great value. Amongst them was 6 that if it adds another province to ite already enormous great theories of “Utility pg , = 22 the Pucitic hores—when the deserts of Australia | _ wi had some enlargement of feeling and caihholicity of | John MeKeon, Patard G , belonging to Mr. Slit; one to Mr. Harrington, three to Mr. nh the Kaet, the United States will, for their own Prhich each generate eee ia onder that Tee eens | shall wave with yellow corn, and the old island that #ont | centiment—to go and Koo this wouder who had come to | | Fur Treaeurer—Josiah W. Brown Noble; ove to Mr. Maw; six to Mr. Moore: and nine of ten © what Measures they deem heedful for ex- fend fretting and tormenting iteelf, in order t succes: | ber colonists so far abroad, shall be like Tyre, abandoned | the United States, It was as a kind of lesson in elorution— Dor Seerdary—James H. Cornwell belonging to Mr. lewis. ‘The police of the Second ward ir area on this continent. To sleep, to be pegt- might be comfortable. No rtacks of tall a= Of ber children and neatly forgotten—for ove treasure | for you know we religions people kometimes give a mnoral Geudieds eran whe rr Por 3 yet beiched forth volumes of Black smoke and flame the had for ove chili Unat was born of her, her name and | £0r ow Huaw we religious people eomedimes tivo mora Saynmorr— hares Mule ppesed to be concerned in firing | gent in thir age of telegraphs and railroads, is to die, Jur Wiskinkie—Riebara D. Letter. pre: ith olessly or wilfully. The matter is panetanaaractancionantines Gaverns of toil below, blotting the daylight and making | her history shall escape oblivion. Blenheim may be for- | Oiny, ‘Well, 1 recollect ‘that our advice was to tigated by the Fire Marshal. might hideous; but the summer eunset streamed clear upon | gotien, and Waterloo, and Inkerman, and Corunna; but as | hy ere, wes i om very Ghd to uty tan} wens Coroner's Inqaeat- he “ Fons Feuuanin=he-vensast of the tet i Se . ‘mnacers of forest shade, an‘ touched with gold the tops of | long as the English language is spoken, the tough fight | foveral ‘times, and that as it was almost the last ue New Yorn x CONTINUATION OF THE CORONER'S INQUEST—a Bue ‘Tre Serre Farat Arrray ix Came Srrt.—The im | Regiment of New York Volunteers convened at the PECTED PERSON IN CUSTODY. quest In the case of John Potors, tho pedlar, who, it was | Mercer House on Saturday evening last, the anniverary of The inquest in the case of policeman Hardenbrook, who supposed, died from the effects of a blow received at the | the battle of Cerro Gordo, for the annual election of off | was murdered oo the morning of the 22d inst, by some hands of Frederick Francis, « colored man residing at | core of their association, which they formed for their mu- | burglars, at the corner of Perry and Washington streets, No. @2 Contre street, was belt yesterday by Coroner | tual advantage, Brevet Major Morton Fairchilds occupied | was continued yesterday before Coroner Connery. The the chair, and William Peel, Secretary. ; Gamble. It was proved most conclusively tat Tetors ‘The Association then went into an election, when Ser. | ¢Videnee elicited had not any poritive bearing on the case, died from the effects of excessive drink, and not from any | peant Robert M. Harper and Private James Stivers, tellers, yet from faete which came to the knowledge of the Coro ‘= the Maypoles on the village green, where men were not | the good yeomen of Fngland fought at Agia 1 had of enter - Oey reas ent” Taere “one wa toute rooting tad | oa see Tame Sr, win be Boy yg om ixte footed ‘beck upon with pieesere. ever” since, sl came on. © Way , ames cl rT Teton = hha fearce uy writing, but “each had @ mark to himself, like | he oct Wat Wontcey, aud “Cranmer shall hve, | DID NOT PATRONIZE THE THEATRE IN SEW YORE, BCT an honest plain dealing man.” Hut it was felony to | Youth will drink enthusiasm, manhood the lessons of WISHED TO. er Oe ey re Stato | practical poou., senve—suctry, tnepiration, statemanship | pare not attended the theatzo in New York; but 1 re Was no ener ed then about maxims of ti wagacity, from wl ever brimming Anglo Saxon race.’ ‘Twas England then— | ocean of Shakspere’s “universal intelligence, ahd Rng. | Made @ distinction without a difference, by going to the Merrie bngland””—the land of stalworth men and buxom } land, even by the races ehe hat most wronged, will bo | opera. (laughter.) That seems to be tolerated. ‘The ft lasses. The ships of Drake and Frobisher, returned from | half forgiven the injuries she has inflicted for the sake of tre T wanted to go to very much indeed; but it has not | injury inflicted by Francis, Dr. Weltjo made a pret mortem | pronouperd the following gentlemen elected her, he felt fustitied in causing the arrest of & maa named i buceaneering voyage through the Spanish Main, rode at | this benefactor of mankind she nourished at her brewt panna to be ‘eotinety the thing (loud laughter), and 1 examination of body, and Fake yb enol’ cxagenea DIRPCTORA, PRIDE, X weser, on suspreran of having been implicated anchor in the Thames; and we can fancy how the news of | Thus blessing and blessed are they on whom the heavens | confess have made a sarrifion of personal feeling. (Ap. | and greatly inflamed. The physician gave it as his opin | Robt. M. Harper, Garret Dy ckman, Uheir successes stirred the hearts of the young London | have shed the light of genius. How little, compared with planse.) It might be supposed €o be the suggestion of | ion that death was cansed by congest! f the lungs from | Philip Conway TOOK PRERENNT. proprietor of an oyster saloon at No, 398 joes, and was talked Over by the folly company at | these, arc the conquests af @ nation, its territories, its prodency and diseretion. intemperapee. The jury, therefore, verdict to | Charles Mf. Br Morton Fairchild wed that about 1s) o'clock on the “ Merimaid.”” palaces—all the evidences of ite material wealth! Thero 3 :. that effect. Coroner Gamble expressed himself exc Faward Rey SRCRMTARY ANI) TREAST RRR, the man Constantine Caeser came Fometimes, perhape, they made room for @ ship captain | was never a blow struck in conquest that will not be in DEYENCE OF THE PRAMA, ingly pained at having caused the arrest of the prison Francis Craw for Willan Peel. A for come drinks; he bad bleed on Powly returned from Holland, art got him to tell how he | time avenged. Territories are lost. ‘The proudest edifices | 1 ‘beg to fay, however, here, that in avow. | und promptly discharged bim from al) further attendance | John Die, his hands and witness and another man remarked thas is Shad sailed in a eloop of ninety tous called the © Half Moon’’ | that human skill has raised cannot withstand the alent | ing these seutiments I make a mach emaller saeri. | in the matter. | Charles W, Farrell wns a singniar vecurence, Contantine remarked that he dn search of the vorthweet passage to Cathay; how he had | ravages of time. Look to Greece—a land of shattered cnuthdties coon Reports from the commdtten charged with the bill for | was a buteber aud before going out of the salooe washed Cnasted @ strange shore, and finding « channel bear- | umns nnd temples overthrown—what wonkl she be ba: | fee than you might suppose, Because they §rOW | ig for Lawyers Fees in the Matsell Case, | the relief othe New York Vounterrs, was presented by 4 his hands -~ \“acored boldly in; how it widened toa sea, | for Homer and Euripides and Demosthenes and the han | natorally owt of this philosophy of morality and . j fe chairman, who stated that the Committee on Militia and The Coroner directed the police to search the end then narrowed, and then grew wide again; how he | dred other poets and orators who illustrated her life and_} religion, which, 1 bless God, it has been from SUPREMR CODRT—crhet rr. Public Defences had reported adversely to the pawage of | recidence of Caeser for a —— whieh he pp el many ealmous and muliets and ether | gave eternity to hee thought? Rome, majestic even in b carlicet youth my privilege to entertain and receive, Before Hon, Judge Davis. the bill, and had ib their report charged the volunteers | suppored woul! be found, but the officers were compel. 3 how for days he sailed betwean shores | ruins, still contests by the might of her intellect thoem- | have never beon able to think vilely of human nature, TE] yen 90upanied “Alanson Nash vs, | With: receiving from the city of New York about twelve | led to return without the instrament in question, as mo ete were Wun foliage q10re t 6 Of the world. And if to-morrow the question would | have never beon able to think that the good Providenoa be Ranson assignee of Alans: ® | thousand dollars more than they ever recrived thing answering the description uf such a Weapob could Be and is than ever id keen; how at Ty to the English nation, choose between these two | endowed human beings with any freulties The Moye? and Commonatity of New York. Tho plainufl ‘The thanks of the volunteers was then presented to | found. he it was a river, and not «short cut to China; | w me will consent to love-—your Indian empire or | for which he did not somewhere sues, a8 assignee Of Mr. Nash, who actod J for the | Wilkam Pret for exertions in their behalf, when, ep Officer Kelly, who deposed thet he met two men in the and bew he called the river after his own name, the Hud- = my rye think you ‘should the answer be? | I have never believed that eo wonderful @ Brigxs Committee, before the Comm . when Sam | motion, the volunteers adjourned Fighth avetww on the morning ef the murder, whom the won, wml the sheltered beach behind which he firet ‘hy this: Perieh the Indian Empire, Let Sikhs and Aff | matic faculty was meant to be bid ina napkin, (Lond ap- | was endeavor to ve the Chief of Police an alten; | am Coroner suppres were the” perpetrators of the murder, cast_aarhor, “Sandy Hook.” Sometimes, too, the great | ghans pay tribute no wore. Give back the Kul-i noor and | plause.) Ihave believed that the commission which the | the stim claimed ie 81. The plaintif® contends that Supreme Court—Spectol Term. wae shown Cascer andacked whether he was one of the Sir Walier came among them and took his scat by his | allthe riches Clive and Hastings won, Leave us Shak. | possesion of these extraordinary pewers gives toa hu- | Mr. Nash was in porsnancs te a on of the fatere tien. dates & then in question or not. In answer to the inquiry, offtece friend Ben Jansen avd explained to them the virties of re. One hour on the enchanted island, one wave of | man being was as genuine a commission to go and fulfil ag | Common Council authorizing the Ceunei! of the Corporation fore Hem. Judge Roos von. Kelly spi, * The man L now see is Hike him tm height and Seren, aad Sahl af tho Gulane project, of which his heart espero’s wand brings us treasures worth all, errand eetigha the world ae Ge pesmnanen of any oeeee to engage additional eonneit. The corporation now refuse | THR DOMESTIC DIFFICULTIES AMONG THE WRALTHY. | features, but he seems to speak worse Fnglish than the wae full; and we aan believe how all that pleasant com « Lontisa Pyne was set down programme faculty of talent which the Almighty has chosen to confer. | to pay. Defendents admit the passage of the resolution; but pee an of the ene a ‘ man I wae talking to." Rany welcomed whe poet, philosopher, volte. hero of the yt aoe on wee bent Wor 8 | ee T twurt sayin fete? back $0 One poles to whtcn f | contend Wun the Pens best fing Comenittoe aid wot enll | _AFWt D0. In the mater of Us custedy of the infant chil | ™ II Rneemeriowt, Whe wan ennmined tact week, de> Into these string times, amongst these mon of | SS, Det © ao Ir. Brady regretted, on | have already referred—that ] never could regard other- | apon the then Corporation Cou 1 nion), to | OMY. ane Mrs. Pawlding..Tho bearing in this case was Hthat be heard a friend Of his, named Conklin, say mark, to catch the last tints of the | bebalf of the company, that the graceful song of a woman | wice than with regret the fact that a #0 seeming!y | act in their behail; and that off to discharge | again postponed to the third Monday in May, on the motion We saw the fatal oveurrence and Was a spectator whee that glorious age, before it | gid not come to crown the eloquent epeech they had endowed at every point for great ‘ultimate success in | such duties if requested : the o contend that | of Mr. Noyes on behalf of Mre, Paulding, who stated that | the burglar stabbed the deceased, Coroner Connery enh. it forever. He saw all, Dut the Gee Club would, in Migs Pyne's {Be Brymoton of bunae happiness on A vast seale, ae Mire. | the Common Council had no to authorize the com- | ail parties consented. Mr. F. 1. Young, who has been | pernaed Mr. Conklin and intends to amine him to-day. ond men—the: oe , eats, herreif, hud, under any ciroumstances, perm mittee to employ ihe council eo ax to make them liable, | Drought into the cave with Mr. Pulierton, appeared for Mr. | A wan named Keyser, an acquaintance of Caeser’ has alo Ampures “| | entertain them. herself w retire from Me tet on which her carling Without CoBruliation with of consent of dhe corporation | Paulding, The club sui remans in the coswly of the | been sobpenaed and will be examined today, when it ie a wae Song by the Glee Club Breateet hopors were won, abd for which her emdow coun: Decision reserved. metber Doped the investigation will be ckwed,