The New York Herald Newspaper, May 8, 1857, Page 5

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NEW YORK ” Ae ONC Bi ei ‘HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1857.—TRIPLE SHEET. Ee Ee is s life was attempted whilo visiting Madame de Qastig- | to get rid of an exaction which must now amount in ex- | ring districts of Cermeny and Switeerland; whilst at INTERESTING FROM EUROPE, — |! 1 docvt not io this bis, toniship. was om) fet fem P ; ; ; — Pa of story ts that he barely eseaped being garroted | cessive price of the raw material to £5,000 per annum to | conthampton they will complete their loading, with British nnntiddiamndtingdes foe Tooke whys jmytonnee English 4 Sarat in fact nearly strangled. Tho allowance made to |'that individual, | (Hear, hear.) We were now paying not | fonds and passengers, and French ne forwarded PROCRIFTION OF THR BODY—DISOOVERY OF ANOTHER Pnesatnge-poayeesanrf t - ken | Madame do Catliglione it said to be 10,000 francs a month, | lees than £10,000.000 per annum more than should be paid | from Havre, at which port, and at Paris, arrangement AMENT. ABRIVAL OF THE EUROPA’S MAILS, | tleman. Lord Palmerston, however, backed by a fow | and other fair are reported to be on the Duperial | for our cotton if the supply were unfettered. The resolu- ve been made to secure the traffice NeWwncnG, May 6, 1807, mnnancAniapesnannon: members of the ministry more averse to American inte- SS iow Tady’s receipts aro the highout In going to tion was for the formation of an to bo ealiod The London Post, of the 18th of April, We 30 Tum Eprvom ov} maar. THE DALLAS-CLARENDON TRE rests than even the distinguished Premier himsslf, pos | 0° the back-and Hwan daring iis pene oe ae sn ee ee ica and odor | (e,ttenns it our hands of patting down 'the Cuban slave | The following in description of the female found murs eo CL R ATY. tively refused to agree to the action of tho American | was made. Colonel or General Fleant, always accompanies | countries, by didueiog information, supply of machinery, | Spanish ow SDR withont ae = fa dered near Marlborough, Thureday, April 0:-—~ POIANA DNDN Senate in striking out of the treaty the Bay Islands clause. is Laperial master on these amactry visits, and It ls to be | and every possible removal of ive bn sens orp failed ua, itis time we ‘aaa ee Since diplomac ed Size, 6 feot 4 inches; form sleuder, complexion fair, Views of Lord Ciarendom om | carcodon urgod tat all minor diferences,inclouing the | salesrdrnip is tase ate cee ae coum of hit | Mr. Greg seconde dhe resolution, which was supported Oy | sccomplshing aur pirpose. Ae SEES) memes Gute bows, sharel of he comes American Progress. THE CHINA WAR. Phe Position of the Spanish-Mexican Question, &, be, &e, ‘Whe European mails brought by the Europa reached this ‘ey last evening. ‘The Dublin correspondent of the London Times, writing en 234 of April, eays:— $e: gc0i ces of emigration there fay not eackenrs, notiithstaned- Eran the recent accoonts from Aimerica aro dtscour- q The 4 o/olock train to alg yt ry “pete Suess the seasim advanoee iis fared Uhat Who draia of population will be further increased. According to the annual circular of Messrs. Seblusser & Gb., of St. Petersburg, dated the 10th of April, the supply @f tallow for this year is estimated at 150,000 casks, in- @lusive of the 10,000 casks now on board tho wintering state that the pro- ships at Cronstadt. The price was 150 roubles for cash, ‘end 154 with band money, Of hemp the quantity for ship: c ‘Will be qbout 90,000 tons, mostly of very fine quality, the! ebt im 1858 will be of inferior cot The ‘Of Sinsocd is estimated at 180,000 r than half the quantity exported in entof wheat last year wes to the enor- mous extent cf 525,000 quarters, and of oats 225,000 quar- fees. For 1657 tho supply of wheat-is cstimatod a! 900,000 quarters, and of eaus at upwards of 1,000,000 quar tore. The Paris correspondent of the London Times, writing @@ 2ist ultimo, e2ys:— I hear that orders bave been despatched from Madrid to eo Spanish seaports to saspend the preparations for the @upeakion against Mexico. wie ‘The Paris correspondent of the London Posi, writing on 908 of April, ays:— Bhas been reported hore that the difficulty between Brain and Mexico might be considered as nearly setiied, @wing to favorable diplomatic intercourse in Paris. Iam {wformed too much confidence must not be placed in tho eomplimentary and conciiiatory language of the Mexican or Marrha} apt My —— are provided with nt powers to suspend hostile 8, or repre- See ine deal Cocictins nad yeu ieee ef tale pomnentee ments. Roth Evgti-h and French influence has cer- Siow been used with the hope of preventing further @emplications. ‘The Hoja Aulografa, of Madrid, which is a semi-officiay ergan, denies that, as asserted by the Epoca, the dif ferences between Spain and Mexico aro in a fair way o¢ Deing arranged. ‘The sharehokiers in several joint suxk companics are Deginning to lose patience at tho losses they have sus_ tained for some years past through the mismanagement of ‘the directors of those companios. Several complaints Bave consequently been forwarded io the Procoreur Im- perial, One company, for coustructing branch railways, Ye mentioned, whoso shares, issued at 100f., have fallen to 4af. The Imperial Attorney Genoral has ordered an in. quiry, and ts waiting the result, ‘The Neapolitan government has at length met the accu” sation of torture which has recently been brought against #8 m foreign journals. The (ficial Journal of Sicily of the ‘St of April has a long article denyirg the accusation. ‘The Paris Pays eays that the Grand Duke Constantine ‘wiB arrive in Paris on Thuraday, April 30, and will remain ‘aD May 16. During his stay there will be /é/es in Paris and Mt Fontainebleau, a grand ball at tho Tullerics,a grand snirée a4 tho Hotel de Villo, races in the Bois de Boulogne, — at Fontainebieau, and a review at the Champ de _ The colobrated Russian writer on political e¢onomy and Matictics, M. Tengoborski, died at St. Petersburg on the ‘Mtb alt.,. within a very fow days after his return from @openhagen, where he had been engaged in connection with the treaty for the redemption of the Sound ducs, The Journal de St. Petersbowrg thus announces his decease :-— We have just been informed of the sad nows of tho death tM. Louis jeagoborrkt, Privy Councillor and member of ®e Council of the Empire, who expired in this capital this morning, at 8 o'clock, afer a short ilIness. The works on | of finance and deprives the weror of an enlightened adviser, whose emlpent talents were of great utility to his sovereign and Bis country. ‘The Paris correspondent of the Loudon Times, writing on ‘284 of April, eays:— ‘The accounts et 9 pane gpemem Foon onad | are not satisfactory. Tho Lyons weavers complain ‘Mat they are this year deverted by their American cus- . Letters from New York mention that the sl im that city are eufciently enpolied with si ‘and that they will parchase as little as possible | ‘enti July next, when the new trill’ will come into opera- Mon. The Paris manvfecturers are suffering from th samme cause. Letters from Rouen state that is little usinoss doing there in any branch of manufactures. ‘The eon sequence ia that the mill owners are wor! only four days in the week. Some sales had takea p: at Malhouse of white cottons, but at very low prices, The ‘woollen mannfetarers have bat a small etock of the raw | ‘material on band and price: are riving. Colonial produce, eepecially sugar, continues to rise, while the distillation from beetroot, to supply the deficiency of alcohol ogca siened by the wine diveare, cowsiderably duninishes tho Beme production. ‘The London Times of 224 ult., speaking of the conititi of the Bank of France and the offorts of Napoleon's govern- ment to obtain a loan, says i} ‘The letters from Paris ¢cacribe an uneasy —e. The eontrivance of tho goverament to obtain a new loan by eompeliing the Bank of France to double their capital Reems 10 have occasioned considerable dissatisfaction, and His positively stated that the opinions of the directors | were unanimonsly agninat the measure, Tt appears that 6 bank ta to be allowed Increared powers of issue, which Hi probably lead to the ciroulaiion of notes of a denonal- mation lower than thoes at present anthorized, Its men- that M. Mires has becn summoned before the Trivu- gal of Commerce, in connexion with complaints regardiny leis mode of putting forth the shares of the mo rail ye. Heat first announced that the number would be 100,000, and, after large dealings had been e‘fected oo thir ‘a strong action was prodaced on the market [ By 8 notification that the number woult be reduced, in or- er thai a certain proportion might bo reserved for the ehorgy. The St. Petoreburg Bev of 16th of April eays:— | ‘This passing over of Cobden, Bright and others in the @ection+ Tenglish} shows us how powerful the hoetility Russia still is in England; they ng Be Cobden consequences or bie the war now ended, and that, too, after the of #0 longa time. | most be a nice sort of a peace that we havo with Enghind, when public opinion, which influences every thing tere, cannot even yet pacify iwelf. ‘The Brith Parliament is to set for baviness purposes on ‘Wiareday, May 7. ‘The Liverpool Times of April 26, publishes the follow. | me | Deep—On the 18th tnat., at era, on board the Damascus, nthe passage from Alexandria, Fxypt, wo Liver- pool, Dr. Charles H. Mason, of New York. } ‘The Monileur pabliehes the official return of the | exstoma revenne for the month of March, amounting to | 35,904,902f., boing an increase of 1,682,078. on the oor. | Peepending month of last year, The Paris Monticur pudlichos a decree promnigating a @cnvention concluded between Franco and the Grand Dueby of Puden in February last, relative to the strongth- ‘ening of the banks of the Rhine, Letters from Madi id represent everything 18 perfoctly | qait there, and the clerieal jouruals deny there has beon | any Cariist plot at all. Mr. Stevenson, from Honduras, had an interview with Mr. Seeretary Labouchore on tho 2ist instant, at the Co- Jonial office, London. ‘The latest accounts from Russian Finland continno to give a mort distressing picture of the famine raging in that country, In the districts of Unleaborg, Wasa, and Korpio alono, ont of a population of 657,000 sonls, no less than 250,000 have no other moans of subsistence than Bercing, or eating the unpalatable bread made from the bark of trees, ‘The mortality ta consequently very grest, end it ts dally on the iwerease, as the famine tppus has droken out with great malignity. The distross is euch | dat chiltren have been seen who for want of othor food | have actually eaten Si their own Gngerg | ! . Wor London Correspondence, Loxpos, April 25, 1867 Defeat of the Doltas Clarendon Truaty—Ctjections on the sport of Broglia Tord Palmarion's Hoetility-=the Hon. | Guras Diffensty—A New Treaty suggested ty Clarendon Preatricals in London, de., de., de ‘The news of the rejection by the British government of fhe Dallas Clarendon treaty, ae amended by the United Biates Sonate, loft bere by the last steamer, and you may ave learned all the facta connected with the action of the @@Bcials hore before this rexches you, although the rejec- Bon iteolf is yet a socret here, It is anticipated that a great excitement in commercial circles will follow its pro- Grulgation this side of tho water, When Mr. Bvane fest arrived here with it Lord Garendon did not Deettato to express a very decided opinion that it Would be fatisfactory to bor Majesty’s goverument; Bay Islands clauge, should be overlooked, the treaty bo ratified, and the hands of the British government washed, now and forever, of Central America; that vicinage was the great natural law which must eventually govern, and that American institutions would and should influence and control the whole country, England, be contended, had no interests whatever in Central America beyond a sate transit for her subjects and commerce, and this she would only secure when American {nstitutions were established there, To this argument Lord Palmerston opposed the facts connected with the negotiation of the Honduras Lo 8 ‘The ministry had agreed to transfer to Honduras the Bay Islands—a Britich province—without any con- sultation whatever with Parliament. This was followed by violent attacks in both houses, and the excitement was about seizing upon the popular mind when the Protmier, always good ata dodge, admitted that he had been guilty ax charged, but that in transfering to Honduras the Bay Islands he had secured them forever against “slavery or involuntary servitude.” Thus dexteronsly touching tho peculiar prejudices of the English people on. this subject— and turning the tide of popular feeling back upon those who had raised tbe storm. With this key to his action it is easily peceeived the mo- aves which led Pal ton to reject the new American treaty, as he thinks the Amendment by the Senate virtually annuls the saving clause in the Honduras treaty, and would give him over to the opposition side of Parliament. Thus fou Pereeive, We are again at sea wilhout a compass on the entra] American subject. Lord Clarendon expreszes the opinion now, tha Ce ments. An exhibition of the works of M. Tau! Delaroche opens to-day, at a franc per bead, ‘i ‘The China War. ENGLAND'S DIPLOMATIC AND MILITARY MISSION TO NAs Tho Far! of Flgin has left England on his mission to China. On Tuesday he started for Paris, where ho will have an interview with the Emperor of the French, and will then proceed, by way of Marseilles, for Alexandria. Attached to his ‘jon are four gentlemen—the Hon. F. Bruce, Mr. Cameron, Mr. Oliphant and Mr. Fitzrey. Gene- ral Ashburnbam, who is to have the command of the lacd troops which will accompany the expedition, has taken Fesecence of his diplomatic superior. fie has arrived at falta, where he was seized with fever, and could not attend the parade in his honag. The leading ministerial paper has small hopes of his qualifieations tor the high t to which he has been appointed, and it is now tardily iscovered that his only goktlerly aeiievement is that he commanded a brigade im the baitle of Chillianwallab, without exhibiting extraordinary promptitude or ability.’ This is not very encouraging. ‘The days of great soldiers are gone, we fear, never to return. Mr. Roebuck remarked, when he was in Liverpool a month or two back, that England had only produced two great soldiers from the time of Queen Ann to that of Queen Victoria—Mrriborough and Wellington, while the navy during the same century aud abalf luced several great admirals, and he accounted for this ‘4 stating thit until recently the navy was not a fashiovsble profession, and the truth of this saying ro- ceiver a striking confirmation in the case of General Ash- bi : ernment if- again tendered, . He says every point o will bo felt in this Chinese war, if, unhappily, war should joterest will be yielded by them, and by the two amend ments; the questions of honor would likewise be satsfuc- be really necoseary, : PROGRESS OF THE WAR IN CHINA—SHVERS FIGHTING torily settled. First, some provision for the protection of IN PROSPROT. the Muequito Indians for a few years, until by the laws of {From the London Post, Apsil 24.) ‘manifest destiny’? they cease to exist; and sesonily, “The departure of the Himalaya and Pa city with nearly some flight provicion or guarantee for the British sub; proposed t be transferred tothe Stato of Honduras, With. these two amendment?, honorabie only in their character, the distinguished head of the Foreign Oflice doubts not the ban g would still be vatifled, and has, I understand, indl- this opinion to the government at Washington. Tue two thousand troops on board, is a significant index of our present relations with China. Thore is a possibility of a fatisfactory adjustment of that untoward and unlookod-for difficulty without the aid now on its pa sage to Canton; but pip tpery op Nga greater pragiin deoe n o must be worse before are better, and the sanguinary Yeh will not sudcumb till he result may be another effort to reconcile differences. has had further ex- As the time erprceies for the opening of the new Par- rience «oof our naval and military operations. lament, Loudon becomes a scene of life and bustle. Busi- ve are not, indeed, at war with China, but ness revives, and the placer of public amusement are in | wite the official of a Single province; and full blast. Tho Italian Opera at her Majesty’s Theatro and at the Lyceum are doing well. within its pre- it ik an obvious duty to confine the contest But when quarrel like the sent dimeneions if possible. James E. Murdoch, the talented American tian, eae breaks out it is as manifestly impossible to caleu- who has been playing successfully In bag 2 left London e where ft willend as to determizo how much fire @ on Weduestay last en rowe for Rome, Mr, M. iz in excel- | given spark will kindle when cast upon a huge mass of ig- ent health looking better than at aay time during the | nitable matter. The sight of our troops and the action of past fifteen yenre—a pedestrian trip in Wales and ashort | ovr gunboats may work a ch: of purpoze in residence at the wells of Great Malvern haying almost ro- | the barbarian mind. A flotilla ‘oF those tny craft Juvinated him. Mr. Albert Smith, the tourist, is now all the rage with the London fashionables, who nightly crowd the Egyptian Hallo hear his side splitting lectures, and witness the Panoramic view of his aseent to the top of Mont Blanc. ir. Smith designs visiting the United States; and should he do 80, will be taken by storm by the universal Yankee Our Paris Correspondence. Paras, April 20, 1867. dir. Buchanan's Policy on De China Question—Sbange Criminal Accusation and Trial—Mental Hallucinations that wronght such devastation two years ago in the ca of Azoff may, without tho like devastation, con- vince the obstinate Commissioner at Canton that he is playing a kesing game ; and he, with the instinct of self preservation powerfully at work, may perceive a mo- deration and reasonablene=s in the Englixii demands which now are quite hidden from his eyes. ‘This is possible, but It is more probable that considerable firing, storming and bayonetting may be necessary in tho first fustanco. ° That there will be considerable bloodshed on both sides is a contingency that must be coniemplated. Itis not a plea- foal gd would be folly to ignore tt. But death and wounds: action are not ibe only losses an army undergoes, as wo learnt too well in tho Crimea —as, indeed, every ormy has learnt oh} howe! ror’ too well pr ipaq Fover—The Recent Attempt on the Hinperor’s a the slego ef Troy. The ife, de, de. will be at Canton to the wasting de; an un- Matters of foreign policy were never less intercsting in | healthy , augmen'ed by the irregular and almost am- Paris than at present. The Neuchatel question has lost Ufe they will have to lead, Let the best precantions its claim to attention, although a final settlement with King Ciicquet would appear as far off asever. His Majesty is one of there who can decide nothing when not under pres- sure. There is a great calm in Spain and Narvacz is im- mensety in the ascendant, the progressistas being no where, Portugal is dreaming of its ancient glory by means of arailroad. Austria and Sardinia tic nose to nose, ever and anon exhibiting their teeth, but nothing more; , Still fever, dysentery, and probably cholera, will be inevitable; and these, together with losses in ac- tion, will form an’ aggregate ‘of faltering that will be se- severely felt in our #1 expeditionary , Our readers will readily see whither our foregoing re- marks are leading us, if wo can with certainty calou- late upon suffering, wo iy with equal cer- tainty to prepare means relief; and, with the experience of the o aS, the three points to be attended to are hospitals, chaplains and purses. It is not fur us to prescribe Low the arrange- Crimea and while Rusela shows Fo Mttlo good will to the Power, | ments for supplying these are to be conducted. But one which in her days of misery and Hungarian affliction she available, uate 4 well fitted up ‘hospital A, ip in 4 £0 signally befriended, there {s ttle fear that Austria will proceed to extremities. with Sardinia, however much she may alshor and detest her. England's +lections termi. nated, keeps French intrigue quiescent, for Lord Palmers- psedhe end tho expedition. ‘This would answer all the pur- pose of residence for medical staff, chaplains and nurses, ee for the . The whole ia a question of detail, which Miss Nighungale, a field doctor ; from the Crimea, and the principal chaplain of the farce, A ton, thus confirmed in bis power, is felt to be a dangerous | Could oe ina few honre. rect retend to do Is to, ; c urge #2 at withoutsomething of the expedition will tool _to- play with, Mr. Bechanan’s tnstatlation at tho be not only incompleté, Lut ined deGeidnk. ™ White House is, yerhaps, the) only thing which causes a ripple in the calm stream of things ‘withoot, for there ts something enigmatical about him, as if hy had a deop set American policy in his heart, which, without reference to any other country on the earth, he Intended to work cut. This refusal to hamper himec!f with Franco and England in the Chinese question, is felt to have ®@ emack of danger abot ft, ant to foreshadow an independence of action which, coupled with the daily increasing power of America, is ommous of a state of things to which Europe generally hae been little habitu- ated. If governments are slow to believe in the light which shines across the broad Atlantic it is notso with the people. It is not too much to say that the hearts of man- kind aro with the land of liberty, par excellence, thatfhey smile benigniy on its efforts to ecize the glorious futuro, and that they look for the ultimate triumph of civil and religious freedom in the onward progress and independent policy of the United States, If, then, there be any excop- tion to the stagnant interest towards external relations, your President, Mr. Buchanar, is the cause of it To compensate for Die lack of excitement towards things without affairs at home have attracted considerst!e inte rest and sympathy. The trial of the two Leandris aad their comrade, Fergoant Beuaquet, for the rape of the wife of a butcher of the name of Paillard, has created an Amount of interest which has been perfectly absorbing. | The trial, which lasted several days, aitracted such nam- bers of persons that many were content to wait outside the doors of the ecurt throughout the night in the bope of ga'ning admittance the following morning. Ihe details, thongh covering several columns in print, may be given in a very fow lines. Madame Paillard, the butcher's wife, who served tho regiment, was not less conspicuous for her modesty Uaan her pariic alarly pleasing appearance. It was her duty, in furthorance of her but- Dpand’s bosiners, in which im France the women take 20 large a bare, to call upon the paymaater, M. Leandri, to receiveorders, payment, &c. A tew days after paying one of thece visite she sickens and diea, solemnly averring on her death bed that M, Leandri, sisted by Sergeant LORD PALMERSTON’S POLICY TOWARDS CHIXA—THE NON-COMMITTAL ATTITUDE OF THE UNITED STATES. From the Landou Chronicle, April 23.) * ‘The refusal of the United states government to co-ope- rate with ua in China, and their determination to strengthen their forces and send’a specta! onvoy—surely this is a phase of the Chiuese question demanding that tho diforent soc. tions of the House of Commons should make up their minds im advance as te the principle of our future policy in those regions, withcut awaiting the tardy and imperfect aunounce- ment of Ministers? Tt may fairly be inferred, that the communications of this government to that of Washing- ton could not have been of a atisfactory character, or a Tegolution so discourteous to th's country and implying #0 much suspicion of our intentions, would not have beon adopted. The chiefs of the opposition, aud those sectioas of the liberal party whose mombors are opposed to mere aggressive wars, are absolvtely bound to form an opin- fon and resolve on @ cour-e of action of this subject, founded upon the know» character aad texdencies of Lord Palmerston. ‘Tho United States govern- ment have in all provaiility been actunted by a fear of boing implicated in some scheme of whole- sale epoliaticn and plunder. Ought uot the chicfe of partios to take ecgnizance of a fact Lio this, aa a mailer of publi | notoriety, and to be preparod to take a xpecifie course, contingent on certain event: lities? Ought they not to be pre to demand explan«tions, whether Lord Figin goos to China as a negotiator for peace, or as the director of a scheme of conquest? And if the latter be the real object of bis mission, a8 may be inferred from the military pro. parations and the tone of Lie Ministerial jouruals, ought not they to determine whether or no they will srnctlon such a policy, supposing it to be openly or covertly adopted by the government. Duke Consta: tine of Russta at Toulon—Itts Reeeption by the horitic dated Monday evening, an account of tho and by Mr. Hadfeld, M. P. — The Great Adantlc Submarine Telegraph Cable. TO THR BDITOR OF THE LONDON TIMES. Wiil you allow me to assure the writer of the article under the above heading in your impression of to day that his apprehensions in regard to the Atlantic line are ground- Jess, and that the form of cable now being manufactured has not been hastily adopted, I will not remark upon the kind of cable which he ro earnestly advocates, for the columns of a scientiGc journal are more suited to such a diecussion, but I must say that 1 do not wish any antagonist so a loss as the en. dorsement of Mr. Allan’s theories by ap experiment of their value upon a large scale. T do not know upon whose authority he ventures to rush ja upon us so boldly with the assumption thatour conduct- ing wire is “ridiculously small.” Ihave had some prac- tical experience for some years in working tolographic lines, and have had, as engineer to the Magnetic Telegraph Company, the charge of the greatest length in the world of subterranean wires, the conditions of which are electri- cally the same as those of submarine wires; and Mr. Whitehouse, the electrician to the Atantic Telegraph Oom- pany, has been engaged for a long time in experiments yron submarine conductors. ‘We are not oppressed by any fears as to the clectrival Success of the cable, and, to my mind, the alteration in the conductor, by using return wires, Which your article ailides to, woulé be (to follow op the writer’s simile) like laying an additional pair of rails over a long line of when a modification in the form of locomutive d would answer every purpose, knowled; acgearie ee ze, ian penctical nowledgo of nid rs which prac nt oe ean. teach, to jee before they thrust eir theories so positively. *. CHARTERS T. BRIGHT, Engineer to the Atlantic Telegraph Company. Bankkragap, April 2 ‘The New Planet. TO THE EDITOR OF THE LONDON TIMES, The following the new planet which was discovered at the Oxford Ohsorvatory by Mr. Pogéon, on the 15th, have been deduced from observations tacen With the large equatorial at this observatory. — Greenwich Planet's Planet's mean tine. right ascension. south declination. hem. Am 8 Am & 10 14 32.7 13 27 20.84 15 23 35.2 19. 9 68 583 13 26 31.20 16 16 89.7 From the above the right ascension of the planet is di- Minishing daily 69.20 sec., and the declination ia also di- minishiag 7 min. 1.1 sec. daily. Tam, tir, your obedient servant, JOHN HARTNUP. LaVERPOOL OnsmkvaTORY, April 20, 1867. It would be more tha Miscellencous Foreign items. The London Siar of April 8, says:—-Judge Taney argies that the enslaved African race was not intended to be in- cluded, because, at the time when the Declaration of Inde- pendence was issued, the fixed and universal opinion of the whole civilized world was, that they were beings of an infer‘or order, unfit associates for the white race, eithor sceially or politic: England, at least, had delivered a solemn judicial decision on this subject, when, 80 early ax 1705, Lord Chief Justice Holt declared that the law of Eng- jand afforded no warrant for holding anybody in rlavery, and that in this respect negroes did not differ from other men. The Lendon @lobe, of April 10, says:—The progress of demorratic opinions has quite destroyed in the United States that which wo hold to be the safeguard of justico— the appointment of Judges for life. The whole of the judl- cial Institutions. with the exception of the Supreme Court, have been entirely changed since they were founded by Washington ond his colleagues. Already the Supreme Court, we are told, gives party judgments. On the Sd instant Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M. P., ad- dreared 2 meeti @ electors of Vlintshire resident in against deal with the weak our a el is strong. ‘These were the true canons of foreign policy; but he could not say that they had been properly observed. He did not think that they wore observod last year, when hor majest By vided ewe fostered and biew up a quarrel with the U: States upon the subject of tho recruiting laws, and when brought it to sueh a piteh that the govern- ment of the. United States dismissed our ministers and ‘We are compelied silently to acquiese in that in- dignity; and be did not say it o1 not to haye been ac- quiesced ip. ‘The bel por od (re Herald eays:—In our city potice a the, Hear.) senor will ling case of a very young gil abstracted ntal Fog re formons, for the viloat of purposes. or it, We uD- derstand, a most respectable inhabitant of Malverp, and ‘we point out this misfortune as a deplorable iltustration of the dreadful evil¢ which this horrid band of impostors may tnflict ap»n families. Mr. Thomas H. Gin‘atone says in a letter to the London ‘Times:—The information that has reached me leads to the tpterence that the Chinere laborers at te guano istands are subjected to f+ evils. The mortality exhibited among them is appalling, and sufficiently indi- cates the wretchedness of their condition. As in Caba, | enicide in every form is reported to be of daily occurrence, In consequence of the agitation produced by tho English elections, the operations ‘n the iron market have been con siderably reftr! 5 The London Chronicle publishes a letter from the Chincha Islands, dated February 23, which says:—Tho Tribuno steam frigate, 31 guns, Captain Harry Figoll, has beon lying here for the protection of mercantile {hterest’ in general during the revolution in Peru, which is likely to touch the interests of the British farmer, as regards gu- no, the only valuo of tho lo—the golden goose to Pera. On ‘tho 224, Weatingienre birthday, the English frigates ‘The London Herald of the 1th of April Fw ‘The ye position of America is not the work a day, it is the slow but gure growth of years, Look at the reli- gious institutions of America, split up into as many ridicu- Jons sects and ereeds ad there are casts amongst a nation of Hindoos, Their bid bames—their Donkers and Sha- kers, Mormonites and @ mockery to reli- gion; and what is worse still, they lend theraselvos, under the gnise of religion, to maintain slavery, and call it an in- stitution of Providence. ‘The Manchester Guardian of 18th April, audacious denial of law and justicn than decision could hardly be conceived, The right of the “sovereign States” to abolish slavery within their domi- nions ia simply and flatly abrogated; the nationality of seoery is declared to over-ride the local exception of froe- says:—A moro the Dred Scott ‘The London Telegraph of 16th of April, says:—The an- uexation party in the United States have their eye fixed ily upon Cuba, and they have, therofore, oxorted all ir insnenes to produce a quarrel betwoen the Mexican ish governments, with the ey ident determination thot during the strife they may have an excuse for elntch- ing tho much desired island, as well as, perchance, for annexing Mexico tteelf, Under the head of tho ‘Rent Crisis in Paris,” the Revue Contemporaine has published an interesting article by the Comte de Tourdonnet. The simplicity of former days, he contends, has given way to expensive habits and to a taste fir luxury, which, in due proportion, has pervaded all claseen of citizens; a fact which is not’ only applicable to the inhabitants of Paris but to the whole of Purops, and may be considered a peculiar feature of the period in which we live—a period, he thinks, of moral decline. Tho Paris correspondent of the London Post, writing on the 19th ult., says:—Within the last few days the police of Paris discovered a ripened plot to kill the Einperor, and 31 persons were ar accordingly. From the interroga- tories which haye-takon place, it appears some of theso persons helt communications with the foreign eecret e ety in London. ‘The: Evgtish Ambaseador. in Constantinople and the East India Company have given up the notion of passing the tele hie wire from Constantinople to the Fast Indies by the Sea route, and had determined that it should fol- jow that of the Euphrates Railway. The Liverpool Times of April 18, says:—From Calcutta, Madras, Penang, Siam and Manila, we will 2eume that the experte of sugars may be increased by 15,900 to 20,000 tons—whilet from China shipments will, a0 doubt, be im- peded to some extent ky the war, ‘The amount of specie and bullion shipped on board the Indus, which was to leave Southampton for Alexandrla on the 20th ult , was £744,905, of which £11,777 is gold and £753,188 silver. Accounts from Bucharest of the 6th ult., state that two days before a deputation of landed preprictors, advocates and reveral young boyards ¢f high station, paid visits the Commiecioners of Ue European Powers. ‘The London Times of 15th April says:—The new Franklin expedition we believe to be a Quixotic one; but who will venture to epeak with ‘lisrespect or even with indifference of the efforts, aye, of the desperation of Lady Franklin in such a cause The American misgionaries at Canton, in a report of their proceedings for the year 1849, say:—We wish to advert to the obstacles we encounter in the opium trade, and the extentive use among the Chinese ef this drug. This most seductive vice ia on the increase, carrying po- verty and dizeare wherever it goes, and is’ rapidly tmpo- vorishtng the empire. We have only a limited knowlodgo of the evil which this practice occasions; but what we see proves conclusively its bad effects, The Paris Constitutionnel of 11th of April, enys:—What will now become of all the splendid hopes of pacitication and nnion contained in tho inauguration message of Mr. Buchanan? We will aot go 0 for as to vay that acon- flict is imminent; however, until the next Presidential elos- tion there are no lezal means of appealing from tho doct- sion of tho Supremo Court, and it 13 seen that this tribunal has taken care to deprive Congress itself of the right of in- terfering in slavery matters, An accelerated rae service has been established bo. = Odeesa and Tiffis, for the conveyance of Ictters and Fpecie. News haa been received in St. Petersburg of the new Bessarabian frontier baving been marked out on the 16th of March, and the ecded territory haying been evacuated on the 19th. These events had heen followed also by the reap ot the English ficct from tho Black Seaon tho ‘The cpring emigrant flert bad railed on tho 21st of April oat Leb pameebichs, Tamara stteny apricuiltsel ako o 0D; - are vultoral 3 setiers in Upper previ ly gone out, chiefly from Aber , and ihere is every pros 4 pect that Hetore many years fow agricultural laborers will bo Jef. at home. = M. Lazzaronl, member of the Consulta in Rome, has been assassinated in a corridor of the palace. ke waa or] ceeding to pay tho clorka of tho establishment, and with bim a pocket book containing 1,200 scudi.’ He was stabbed ip the stomach, and the asrarrin escaped with tho sum, Raron Ward bas given notice to the Imperial Agriculta- val Sorlety of Vienna that he challenges all reaping ma chines, constructed in Europe or America, ty compete with his, patented in Vieuna, 10th December, 1356, for the num of 1,000 tloring, to cut five Austrian jochs (nearly seven English acres) next harvest, on any ground in the Anstrian dominions which the seceptor may pleave to choos The treaty of amalgamation between the Lyona and Mediterranean Railway Companies has been signed. The Paris Monilrur publishes the exparé des motifs of tho bil) for the purchase of the Exhibition Paloce. “It ia ar- ranged that the basis of the calculation for the repurchase should be fixed at 1,000,000f., being the amount to which the capital was Krolted 'in the original concession. ‘Tho dressed ship and saluted at noon, the Americay ships ra- turning the salote, A“ Jamaica Planter’? writes to the London Chronicle >—- ‘Of the great profits thet mast acerue to the Cuban plantere from slave labor, and the use of the lash to the unfortunate African, and I fearthe Chinese coolie also, there ean be but litle doubt, az compared to the ase of free isbor by our West India and other planters, as the free Afiiwan works or not, as it may suit his inclination. The Tandon Chyonicle of April 10 says from the United ii The slavery problem las attained a wider © willdemand more prompt solution than was Leretofore deemed porsible. The export of gold from Australia during the year 185 amounted to 125 ton. The first month of the present year | i the arrival in that port of the Grand Duke Constantine. His Imperial Hightogs cailed from Nico at 11 o'clock on | Sunday night, on board the Rassian steam friguto Olaf. | The squadron which accompanied lim, under the orders of Admiral Behrens, consisted of the screw shiyy Wrorg, tho steam frigate Polka, and tho railing frigate Castor, Baron Dubordien, Maritimo Prefect of Toalon, despatched, at 8 o'clock on Monday morning, the small stoa ner Navetto has «et an average which, if maintained, will prodnce ai- | milar result. j The London Por of the Sth of April says:—It isan ex. | traordinary thing that £72,479 shonld have been expended im the purchase of Peruvian 43¢ por cent bonds, with yittle effect epon the market. In the ward of Bishopsgate, Tandon, there la a narrow | ca called Rose alloy, which contains a row of twelve | i Penaquet, had violated hur porson. The conacquence i#, | to meet the Russian squadron and pit them from Capo | hougem; each contains fro.a ix to ¥even rooms, tubabited theve parties ‘ar® placed on their trial, and as the circum: | Cepet. The squadron was not tolegray “ fog 1 ; a | by the very poorcet of the poor Irish. In all there are 77 | ‘on board the Frene stantial evidence brought against them fails ia every par- ticular, a4, in fact, their is nothing against them bat the woman's dying aswertious, they are necesearily acquitted, great movement was thon per serv fleet. The drums beat carrying the Admiral fog) and the other ships, ant at 2 o'clock the batteries of the € troses Tour fired a salute of ‘ arma on board the Bretagne | ! e thre ‘tera of an hour acide, Mirna a? that Malo Paitiart had hat, afew days | €Wenty-ene guns, The yords wore manned in lant style before, a miscarriage, and died of pucrperal faver, a | On board the feet. At that moment the Olaf? entered the Alecase which le well toown to give tse to tho strangtet | ovter harbor. The panoramic view was muynidcent—the | i | delusions in woman, fn connection with the womb. The day afier the alleged violations she is found going about her businces in her usual quiet way, and the following letter was written by her to Mi. Leandri—~ “Mowarcn—Aa yoo have premised mo to be kind c by t! um parttions, and neta sound was heard by any of them that could give riso to suszicion of visience. at the unfortunate wciman believed she epoke the truth in he statement she made, no ous doubts. cireumetance reminds me of an cccurrence to iy some years ago. 9 ctergyase fesiding on a enracy in ausband weven children, and The which I myrelf was A lady, the wife 0 Norfolk, after bearing ber passing many years of matrimonial i. Was 8 with puerperal fever after the birth of her Inst child. Within forty-eight hours of her decease, however, ail de- Uriem apparently left her; but her etate of metton was such that she felt her like was ebbing away. Sao do- sired her husband should come alone into her room, as she had something of great importance to communicate to | him before she died. On his entrance she begged that the curtains might be drawn closely around her bed, that her face mizht net be recn whilo she communicated a tule of blasting crime; and then, to the astouishment and horror of hor husband, she went on tosay that both be fore and after her marriage with him «he had been in the habit of intrign! with various parties whore names | cases menti - ebe particnlar mad’ and the details of which inrignes, she | were fresh detaila ennld be furnichot whieh entered minutely Into, Indeed, sho strung together facts | would probably fx the respensibitity of those attempts tn ‘Well knewn to him, with her disclowures in such an in. | & manner ave no uncertainty as to their design Frpious manner, again and again, adfuring him not to lieve ho was’ under any doliston, that the poor man, almost in astate of insanity, ruehed from his wife's room that he might not heap maledietions on hor dying head. It wns not tll many monthe after that he had the covsage to communicete the cironmstance to his wife's family, and soh was tho conviction of her guilt her commonications had made upon bim that a year or two was eulfered to elapse ere he could pereuade himeelf to have any inqui clear blue sky, and she heights crowded with # wetatora: ve and berrabe filled the air, and cries of * Vive P Bm; the volleys echoing from the hills had an pable of, | fect. Scarcely bad the smoke caused by the guns of | | the fect dixpersod than tho Olaif, which passod be- | | | | | enough to secure’ to me the custom of the regi | tween the double Jing of ships, returuod tio | saluto 1 will assist you In performing your promize. I will | and hoivted tha tri colored Mag. steamer ~ peas charge the meat at 70 contimes the kilo. Have the kind. | and the Maritime Profect, = b fa te Be. nese to inform those gentlemen of it, and let me have an | perial wee, wemolee ide. The !'r Ayr. | answer, either favorable of unfavorable.” The alleged | of the Grand Duke, and returned tol « esenal, aseault, too, was eommitiod In house in the rne Chabrol, | time the troops of garrison were fe Te rd ecenpied by ten oficers, whase rooms were onl; to military honors to the iMuairions visiter. he Mart time Prefect and Admiral Trehonart received tho Grand | Duke on his landing at a quarter to §. The Grand Duke is described as 30 years of ages fair, and of middie height. | He wore the decorations of St. Andrew and St. George over | an admiral’s uniform. His Highness pars d (irough the lines formed by the troeps in the arsenal, the bands play- | ing Queen Hortense’s air, “Partant pour ia Syrie.” | drums beating an Imperial ealute, Ho then stepped into | the Prefect’s carriage and drove to the Profectare, where | the pripeipal officers of the army and aayy vere prevented | | to Lis Imperial Mighoess. | Russian Railway 8; | Parts. a ‘om the London Times (city articte), April 22.) | The disereditabie ed by the specu! interested in the Russian Railway sehem) have | Surther illustration to-day, and scarcely a doubt snpears to be entertained in any quarter that a deliberate plan had | been formed to eutrap ewheecribers hy Intucing re pectable | persons to act unsuspectingly the part The | od yesterday are unquestioned aud, if it tn London and " | origin. “ay an almost total disinetination tod, dealers to have anything to do with and the price of '{ to M pre pominal, Such at have been b have been taken by parties acting upon enna. One case is mentioned of a mercantile house writing from Dunkirk on behalf of a friend—whe aclergy | man or otherwise ie not stated—to know he could tn ries as to tho truth of hor relation institute’. Thase inqat_ | vest £20,000—apparently the favorite «um. ne shares | Flea, however, onse eet on foot, the unhappy Indy’s story | in London. The rejoinder was that, ox he isa French | Was found to Be the morest thble from beginning to ond, | purchaser, his best course will be to appiy for an allotment and her hole conduct a weil known pathological foatira of pnerperal malady. Tho lady hod lived the last soron Zears inn country tillage, whore everything ehe did’would ag voll known as if she were in a glass honse, and as before her marrioge she spent her life in the constant presence of a virtnous mother and sisters, it was easy to infer that the delusions of the last part of her existence was equally applicable to the foriner and T rejoice to aay that the husband, who js still alive, is now perfoctly entietiod in Paris, where the quantity to be dispose | of have been beyond the canacity of the market, and where in the untkely event of the allotment not being granted | | ho can at all events obtain them on the Bourse. } | Cotton Supply Association In England. (From the London Timos, Apri! 22.) | A numerous meeting of merchants and manufictarert qwas held yesterday afternoon, in the Manchester Town | that in the partner he lost, he has to regret the bereaye- | Hall, for the purpose of forming An as a for the ment of a most yirtnour and estimable w'%o. sromotion of the growth of cotton all over the work. | And wo are all agog about the Grand Duke Constantine. | Mr. Cheetham, M. P., presided, and among the gout'anen | The correspondent of the Times has incurred the thunders | present were Mr, Hadfeld, M. P., Mr, RN. Phillips. MP. of the Moniteur, for daring to say that Prince Napoleon had ir. Baziey, Mr. M. Rose, Mi refused to go fo Toulon to give the Raseian Prince the | and J. Simpson, The ‘Chairman, in somo ¥ rendezvous. Though it is nevertheless a fact, and onloes | observations, described the present porition and | fome great change come over that Prince’s dream, he will | prospects of cotton cultivation in all parts of the not assuredly be the Emperor's epecial bearer on that oc- | World whence it was now obtainable, and tho urgent Bat nothing is to be spared to do thie Raseian Duke all honor, All the officers and all the officials aro commanded to be on the qui wire, and Paris is to ecessity for increasing the supply by the remoral of legislative impediments, and by every possible encour: | agement, Mr. Raziey, in moving the first resolution, said | do her best for the oscasion. It ts fortonate, from | he believed no round principle was vii by the for | all the accounts, that the Grand did not | mation of this association. Assuming per an- arrive (to witness # sear that might have | num, though he did net anticipate #0 much jalf that gouty ri the aspect of in France, namely: | amonnt being levied, from the owner of a (0-horse power death of the Emperor, The story is confirmed so Sao cogine, Or Se paren Soe suonten, Ons many different quarters that there 1s no doubt the would be profitably invested in endeavoring {| and shat resolnte | to the rice fields. rooms, and of these there are 76 tenanted by ¢3 famities of | 262 persons. Eight of the rooms are ocoupled by 10 men, 17 women and 12 children. | ‘The London Times of April 10 seys:—NMr. Bright, as far; 88 Mancheetor is concerned, is baoished froma the Foun | of Commons. We foresee atime when even Manchestor | may desire once more the service of that cloquent tongue | art. Sarely iho present liouse of Commons is aristocratic enough and ‘territorial’ enough for all useful purposes, and we mbt bas found our ads | ‘antago in tho prosence of the bold tribyne. The London Nimes of April 8 eaye—Thas has been solved, as far ax man can solve it, the Fastern question. | Nover has a parsage in the world’ history poreesed mor | ‘unity and com oes. Nover has a enterprise | | j great been more suddenly resolved on, more en*huasiveticall conducted, and more speeily and eucreesfully conclided. | ‘The Port Louis Gazetic of March 1 says:—The next sngar | Crop promises exceedingly well. Owing tothe constant | rainy weather the plantations are more forward than they | have been at the same time for many a previous vear. | there was not so much uncertainty about a supply of la | bor there wonld be a fair prospect of making 190,000 tons | of sugar from the er i oe have ve pe oe = to the Ist aoa. | tho clove crop was being proceed ith | The prodoce of Saparvn was reckoned at 281,200 tbe.: of | Bila, at 93,465 Tbe, which hat Seen all gathered; and of | ‘Amboina at 83,200 Ibe., of which 31,105 had boen got in. | tm Batavia, Java, on the Lith of Pebroary, rain, tt was | raid, had done much injury on tho west coast of Samatra | Insome places the coffe plantations he quantity of coflee exported frour | amuunted to 140,91 piouls, The London Times of April 7 cays: crease in the rato of discount by the direstors of the Banke of England has created an unfavorable impression on the | trade of Paris, wvich waa boginning to recover from tho | effects of the ‘long dead season through which it had | passed | The London Neve obecrves -—A significant organization | must have been long known to Mr. Bachanan—that of the | Emigrant Aid Association, which propowes t take j tion of Virginia, on behalf of freo labor and in deflance of | the South. While Governor Wise, and ether old fehioned Virginians, have been raving about dissolving the Uaion | for their party objects, Northern capitalieta have prepared this scheme—with no small encoursgoment and aid from | Gitizene—even from newspapers—of Virginia itself. The unexpected tn. An article in the Northern Ber, of St. Petersburg, in an effort to prove the fulure preapority of the railway fram Moscow to Theedtosia, affords ue some interestiny daa, The chief article of export from the Tauric Peainsnla ls alt; at present from 5,500,000 ponds te 11,090,009 ponds of this article are exported (0 the woetern provinces: the salt Inkes are capable of producing 33,000,000 poude The Moniteur de ta Piette, of Paris, lars relating to the Britieh and Fre Western const of Africa, which ments concluded between the Britich and French gavertt ments with reenect to those cettlomenta are highly advan- tageous to both entries, Mr. Cobden enys in a recent letter to Huddersfel! —No one can be fairly bel responsible for a miscalculation of the chances of success, nor dors the result of the election afford any criterion of the strength of partios for the future. ‘The London Pow of 17th of April, observee-—From the | very moment that the plan of Russian railways waa an- Dounced to the Englivh, Freneh, Daten, and German pob- lie, we never had tho slightest donbt that these linos of Intereommunication were mainly intended for strategic pores. We trust that Rnglish capitaliets of every poli- tien bue will any nay to this atempt to make us islanders | Pay our contribntion toa plan of the Czar for the more easily moving bis armica. | ‘The directors of the Furopean and American Steamship | pong ME their report:—Starting, in tho firet in- Btaneo, ‘8 continental port, the ships will receive the | large freight and passengers of the populous mavufacta- testine conflict which we predicted woul | { { Citizen of the United States, is Hicely to reeult | chair, in the absence of the Rev. Dr. Knox. | Cash from ladier in New Haven, debt of the company to the State, amounting to 2,009 ,000f. is to be deducted from the purchase money of 133,000,000f. ast year 176,854 emigrated from (he United Kingdom. Of that number 16,378 went to the North Ame- rican colonies, 111,227 to the United States, 44,584 to the — colonics and New Zealand, and 3,705 w othor ea. Pine London Advertiser of April 20, says:—Tho recent decision, that no man of negro descent is, or can be,a | wee all the in | be its necesary The Anniversaries. TR NEW YOUK MAGDALEN FEMALE PENEVOLENT | BOCTETY. | The anniversary of this cociety was held on atthe asylum, Yorkville. The meotin Mr. R. @. Pard tho Sabbath , of The procood od by renting the 1th | ings opened with ringing, folle chapter of the First Corlothions and a part of the 26th of | Matthew, Rev, Mr. Parker then engaged in prayer, Tho | choirinan followed with a short speech, ta whieh he atated | that there was bnt one clare of beings whom Obrist camo to save, and that clus was tl nparaible to | calculate the amount of good that may be effected from the erertions of this soriety; and at the present day it te most rye 4 to view the number of avenues for dois lied wp by ludiew and gentle ere the lady patrouce ‘The Rev. C. C. Dowie th port for Ue past year, which was a follows — TREASURER'S KRPORT. Deldor., To cach paid for provisions, fnel, &e $1,785 26 Insuranee........ see . aT 80 Printing annual report. . 48 60 Charla 0 60 a * . favor . 192 72 Assistant Matron 0 88 Borrowed money 545 15 Intoreat.... 43:09 | Physician: : 50% ‘Total... «88,540 73 on. 6 Availe of Boudinot faMd. 6... cec cee Availe of work done at the Asylam [ the forehead for a space of about one inch in tength and three quarters of an inch in breadth; eyes Kght hazel or gray, cheek bones prominent, thin cheeks, long chin, surved scar of about an inch in length over the left choek bone; teeth regular, not decayed: middle incisor on right ride filled with gold; nose straight and rather email; hands delicate, fingers Jong and slender; skin at tha union of the fingers with the palm of the hand somewhat callonsed, ekin on the end and side of Jeft forefinger har- dened by the use of the needle; indistinct sears upon boun | legs, near and below the kneos; partiafly webbed condi- tion of the second and third toes of each foot; small mola on the front inner side of left leg, about midway between aukie and kneo; vaccine sear on left arm; a cameo pin found on the ground near the body; di trea inclined aver a cottage, anda child riding a doukey over small bridge; an ear drop, likewise cameo: desi head; pin and ear drop each marked with the figare 4 in- vide as with a needle; body dressed with three skirta; one outside lead c tion oe woollen texture; white muslin uelin needle worked af the lower extremity; chemise needie-worked at the yoke. ‘The corpse will remain in the vanit a few days longer, 80 that if avy friends should arrive they may be able to identify at, JNO. W. FENTON. Nawaues, May 5, 1857. ‘The aged Creole aboxt whom so mmch has teen, said ag bas j refused permission to see the se, has been found, and proved to be a respectable old colored Indy living'abont four miles from Newburg. She knew no- thipg of the murder, and said nothing about her gran- daughter, but spoke of two ladies coming up from New York, on Thursday night, on board the Caledoaia, Sha then went np with them fo the Court House and they saw the body and said it was no relation of theirs, and they did hot reeogniee it as any one they had ever seen, So mach for flying reporta. After the body waa ‘in the vanlg the old lady bad a crowd her, about the murder, I went to her mysolf and’ asked ber if che knew ere 4 about matter If, and on her vaying who did not, T requested the crowd to disperse, ane lo cay — fae 1 bare: seen her and conversed herexthat she recollects my, ask question, ber Eerees me che i darn We Pease ‘about ceased. Anear drop corresponding with the eameo breastpim was fonnd yestereny by a gontleman who was ouriou® and de z tins, yousaey pine oviacnoe eas sree ee bane to identify the body and dnd out the murderer. Another Letter trom Nellie Dalton to Her The billowing in spomnen of a lotions which Mr previous to the encement of the action for divorce in the Supreme Court of Boston:— - H Pun. 26, 1856. ey! epg ry 1 a Lig ges > 1 Diet aene day Isee a bri 1 * future belore me. on deat Fras! I ‘the day ais cone when we shall be happy, soon. 1 feel happier than I did yesterday. I feel pow as i I had a. husband to live for; before, I felt as if I did not to livo—I bad nothing to live for; but ob! what a fills my heart—that I have him, dear. Frank, to live for im and build all my future hopes on his strong arm, Jean on his dear w aml swoet smiles to oneourage me; fT should ever falter T have Frank toaay, “Oheor uj lie, we shall soon be happy.’” Ieacem'aa if teoud not express on paper my thoughts; but I long to to his arma and lay my feo close to hia, and thon tell all my heart, Frank, have done wrorg, very wrong. Young as I was, I was led astray. Twas tempted, and a moment yielded tothe tempter, Oh, when I think of this, itseems as if T must tear myself ‘to pieces; bat he, tha tempter, is laid low in the grave; would to God he had laid there tong before he did ite thero. Will you now taka the erring one back to your heart again, and say, “Come, g - child, your husband forgives you, as he would wish to ba forgiven; go and sin no more. If Teduld know that he, my husband, forgives mo, and would lake me back and away fiom Boston, 1 would axk no more. I woukl share poverty, hunger, enfferings, with you, and I woukl love you #0 dearly and make you so » [know Tecan make dear Frank happy; fer, oh, Lwould try so hard ta make bim so, Frank,’ pkwe yourself in ‘my eitaation, and conider all the ereumstances, and wretched as am, say, would you not wish to be forgiven? Ob, I can not realso my sitaation when | want§ to be forgiven by Frank; sny, is ft not atmoet ernel after what I have suffered; and I was willing to suffer for a time; say, will you not, can you not forgive me, and loye me and live “with Nellie again? Do wot say, you can- not, nay, will not love me, aud have me in wre! ness to stroggie with this bard, cold world, with po husband to tell my thoughts ‘o, But Atill, dear one, should you pro- roonee that awful word, Timtet Hike aowoman bear up a best Tean. Frank—I am a woman in. every rence of the word—and do, oh! do not, I implore you, cast me from you in this my insery—but last nigit you talked go kindly to me, and now there is a bright he heart, avd long may it last, toon. | have Abbie, dear Abbie to-day, ° § kindliest regards to yon, snd atso Wiliam, and Abbie says she has an engagement for Friday eve. and'she say gif it is a convenient for you to ¢all Thursday eve she would Nie it, but if you have any engsgement she will try and defor ler engagement until another time. Will you please ta cond word by Féward to-night, if it would be conventent for you to come Thursday evening—if not, be anro and send word by Edward, if you please, darting. Frank, you pleave excuge this writing, as I ar not well today; my arm feels yery lame to-day; I have taken little cold, | and it has gettled in my limbs. How I wish I contd be | enfolded in yonr arms to-night, God bless yon to-might, dear one, and may you be happy. Hoping wo see you Thursday, I remain your own dear wife. weizen ag ook | —— | Totals... 66. esses sesgeoes eee BO 73 | The annual re wed, We are unable to give even 9 synopels of jis contents it to fay tut the namber | of cages of reformation , are considered induce | ments to the friends of the institution to coutinue ia their | labore of love. j The Rev. Mr. Mocsrm, of Rrooklyn, was then intro | duced; he said he shoul! not attempt to give any instruc. | tions ae to how such an institution shoald bo enndacted, | bor would he congratulate them on a anecess which war | merely uewal nthe would suggest that in ta- | boring with Ch in charity they should not forget to | labor with Christian petience. Impetuority te the fant of most Chrintians. ity ehowld not ommoaxtate it- | 6 F to the ti i bring the times to ite own tory i¢ a history of eucoossive | of , and therefore difers from rees, The charity th not give bread ant @ germent, as weil ae 9 tract, to thore in need, mnet gotothe | Gew Teslament to learn the very alphabet of Christianity. | No reform can be laeting which does not change the heart; me ocial influences will never | effect a change; therefore, gla to eee that re- n Was properl ey. Me. Peers hy re found and yet marriage was the netitution of the + before the venth day Sparta never | duced anything great in the ot literature, peoauee she respected not the Ordinance of marriage, whilst Athens, through her regard for the marriage tie, wae © first in beth literature and the aris. Ancient Rome held sway whilst she had euch wemen but when she became licentions her power pa her. The mothers present ehonld tell their ons these facts ae a warning to them in after life. Rey. Mr. Brotinert,’. missionary from Africn, mato a few remark, in which he stated that having studied seve ral African dialects during thirteen years past, ho bat never found the word chastity in any of them, aud (io idea even is not known there. The information Waaithen given that a debt of $400 wes weighing apon the rockty, andl that a cotleetion woul! — bo made to cancel it. Tho sum of $47 wre collester amongst tho visiters pre The Doxolkgy was thon sung, and the Rev. Dr. Rivington pronouncal the banelte. | tion, after which the visiters dispersed amonget the dor. | mitorios of the establishment REXION VETERAN >) | corner 9, Broome _ ADVERTISEMENTS RENEWED BVERY DAY p d containing 2100 In gokt whieh beqneht from reward of $4) was offered by his fri ew, for any information that shall lead thé is body, or to the manner of bis disappea: nes. He arocter, and Mule doubt Any tnformauon may lane. Aur which they re finding of bis YOURG LADY, Rt Wo AR- rived in this etiy in th Orleans, left the ebto in a coach was plated hy the drt w betel, who earriod young lady to the howl, oF the Keeper of they hotel why has ewstody of the haggnge, will confor Afavor by Inaving te name of the botcl and i's location with Marshal Fievens, Mayor's offi, TION AND GOODY om bis haetnesg roe rahty of etrenmatances 7 0 Jerald aioe JUB a ow Bhe arrived here \bor Auy information respecting ber wil ug on her hurbaad, 178 Titlary MSSINGSSINCE FRARUARY 18 RLIZA ILIrr aged about 20 years, tall and elentor, fair hair; sho lath her situation at Henry Jones’, 29 Livingwion street, . yn. Any information conerming will be Folly received by bir athoted parents, G2 Nassaa street, ARTIN-M D—NTI—M WISITES YOU TO COMMUNT- cate with hira tmmedstely. Me haa tome suggestions ta an WINE MERCHANT WOULD RE PLE. \sep SD to see Pain} gomner of Fonrts street, oF you alone Fesday. 0 POOKBINDERS AND MAP MOUNTERS —ON TH 2rh of April, « gentieman left Pactfic Rattroad ex. ploration sto be hound, and to be mounted. in all near twenty three piers, at some ’ be in Berkman near Nassan street, Agreed thren shtilines each, work to be done Wednesday, Apri 2. The name ond address being ort, please send them wih bill, tothe Atwntte and Wepre Company, 12 Bron way. TON COURSE, Fri ) Gi.te9, nile hemes, Best 4 Siren ‘wagon, owner tat Pevek, Wagon; Sohn Le Teoty names & 8 ‘w harness, pte ies elena tare, to be named at t ;. Pain or shine. SHAW & WIITS, Proprietors. “ORPS OF I612— AN ADNOU ENED ne held at ‘he Mercer House, | Lie pA eyeaing, 4 na Pring eves vot ead teeing of the cory 0 fruit of Chrletianity, flo | fue lew, af prior 2 rmona in his lifetime, bat | house to x “EAYMOND, Coke r heard » single sermon on the divine origin of | committer, Taaac M THR 8464 BBABON. YAY EVENING, MAY QA’ neal Bo. How and 12 Texeus ea acd gentiemen every day "4 ‘eeT SROOND HasD $5.01 10 TC ieiewen to ow 5 00 ee ae ees Pt oy Te : RY.—DR, DURK CANAL Dra Faron tt, fhe, ew aS Ineten “accom 6b by agent

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