Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE NEW’ YORK HERAL WHOLE NO. 17668. THE FINANCIAL PRESSURE. Additional erestadinas i ig Sourts—The €ase of John Thompson—Opinions on Steck Gambiing, ac, cos bi ‘SHE ATTACKMENTS AGAINST MR. THOMP- SON. SUPERIOR COUNT—SPBCIAL TERM. Before Hon. Judge Duer. Avaver 20.—The Metropolitan Bank vs. John Thompson, — ‘This case, which bad been adjourned to this morning for fhe purpose of enabling Mr. Thompaen to farnish addition- al affidavite ae to the atate of hia banking accounts on the evening before hie sue pension, wae called on. Mr. F. B. Cutting, asecciated with Mr More, said he 02 Lo tate inet evening with reference to this case not hed time to look tn‘o the affidavits, and he un deretood that there was another afidavit of Mr. Thomo betng prepared which it vould be necevwary also for ‘Rim torce. if there ts no rertous objection he would like ‘matter to stand over tntil Monday morning. Court will aujourn It to 12 o'clock on Monday Would tke it ‘0 go on as early as possible, as oat of town. to Mr, Fivarts that there was one of the SMdavite on Nisside which he shouk! Ike to be more ex- ; One of tho platutifi’s ctorks sweers that ho offered to ‘the motes in Thompson s office; I want bim to be more explicit as t0 whether he vould identify ‘Mr. Bvarte—Cortainly, sir. ‘The caso was then adjourned to 11 o'clock on Monday i i FAILURES IN BUFFALO. Borrava, Ar gust 29, 1957. ‘The Reciprocity, formerly the Buckets’ Harbor Bank, ehowed Ha docrs this morning, but will probably reeume on Mesers, WilMams, Tanner & Oo , forwarders, wuspondet payment yesterday afternoon. MISONIEF OF THE NEW YORK SYSTEM OF ALLOWING INTEREST ON DEPOSICS. [From the Boeton Adverticer, August 28.) ‘There are the best reasons in the world why the expio ‘ston of several moneyed houses in New York should meet Tt ie gratifying to bank stock is now wold in Hiato street. Afew shares in the Boyliton Bank were noid on Wednesday by order of executore, (other: ‘wise they probably would not have come upon tae mar ,) and cowmanded a premiom of $17 per abare There mre Bo tigns Of # panic here, and there je uo reason why Were should be, ‘We have great cause for congratclation at euch mo- wen’ his, that our banke aro prohibited by iaw from pee interest on ] ceposits, A diferent course preveils Rew York, and i ths fruitful source of just such mischievous results se have recently been de weloped. The banks im the city New York were such encrmovs crops knows. Wheat is in @re anxicus to secure of | good demand at a fair price, and corn is steady and alto in @ wey y my 4 per cent interret on amo | food demand Quantities of both are now going Das; and fees tban $5, and 6 per cent on larger amounts ‘we may s00n bope for an easy mone) marke: and more fink this» table . because they expect ty | accommodaticg banks. Tean the money again ata higher rate of jaterest. The | Rumor @ 7 @ to love from ihe moneiary circles of @@for appears tempting to indiridonis who bapper to have , the West Wr. Goorge Smith, Known far and wise as the smeney oa hand awaiting investment. Darticalsrly | great Chicago banker. He it was who cstacilsbed a rank benks are allured by thie promise cf inierest to | in Georgian few years ago, and issued what bas boen de with banks in the city of New York ailtne funds _ pominated na wild cat currescy, at which sl! the local ‘which they do net reqaire for immediate use. They are | barks took umbrago, and cndeavored is drive it cut of even wo Go eo by etroulare went out by the city | clrcuialion; but Mr. Smith was enough for the wrvie ‘Danks. Sch country banks, at pari.oular times, of source, | pariy, and they were giad wory quile. Mr. Smith hae Barve on hand a considerable they have dis- | purch: ‘A miagvificent eniate in lend, and tt i= aid counted as many notes a they dare, end it seoma to bo & Wil! marry & Doble danghter of the ‘Land o Cakes,” and Barmiess act to put this money m New York where it | reinrn there to spend the balance of his days, as be weil Se ee oe 1s gente og i | knows bow to do, vechs. itoan be recalled from New tim wa; 7 me at any moment when \t is needed for h 4 GAMBLING IN STOCKS. of bus. ‘The city banks, in thus a bor. [From the Cy-cippati Gazette, Augass 27.) the Ine of logit The iniquity of the Wall street joubery in stocks is be ; the | ginning to aturact ine large degree public attenti and ot 58 HE by the count can be employed them in siness of their own locality, W! reached we Die of eecking an investment for hie moory, by throwing upon the benk. If be knows of corta.nty ihai the bank Manage’ more prodenlly than he can manage his own dualooms, he w wise to trust |i, and wot ouer- whe Ite obvious that the aoting canes (p thie mtchievons 40: rhee of operstions liea with the city banks who oilur nie. reat on doposite, They tempt depositors on the one haud, ‘and borrowers on the other, into an ope ich is There would be opportanity enty, bat wi> are rich ta fancy stocks, to enter ‘nto specviations .f the etty Lenk old not invite them to borrew tmoner 01 do their stocks as necuiity. And there would le nded on an unsobstantial basie 7 phases woult be prevanted if tho ould discontinue the pracice of borrowing money and payirg interest. Our more seutioan leginlato in Masrachusotis have on Prohibited the hauke of be Lote payable sta Slew jusaliadle excop- a interest t be aliowed spon deposits made in ove by another: but the Prec ico of our Boston Dauwe ‘oh as to prevent any Mischief from ibis cacee, The Safoik Bonk, for {ustanoe, The ough this teeme & regulatioa, {3 ulary one, Out of1 $7,060,000 of de. in thé Borlon banks, eccording to the istest we tober, 1866.) only Gule more than $586,670) bore lawresi. Twenty si out of the thirty-six barks in Noe om had so dep wits whatever on which they paid intorset The apir't of the dew | thos exocated with Gresier Gdelity than the letwr reqvires The banks of New York city, by following another Praceice, have entered & gee whore they are likely to bo wrecked snd to dieng down their cusiomors ca both aides 8 soon af the great body of New York butiaces men sbe)l see this ovil and shall provat! with their slate Lega Jatore aod with the of the banks to pronibit t, dy the simple expedionts employed in Magechusotts, we may look for ® better nial of things Meanwbils wo Beed not be surprised to hear of the failure of banks in the ity 0: York, together with the misfortunes of prokes ad Country banks who lend, while stook in orton banks commands seventeen per cent pro miom. There is & good reason for the difference. FAILURE IN 8TOCK OPERATIONS ONLY. (From the Providense Journal, Augost °, | ‘Tho reports from New York ‘ome of the suepend- ed houses as baying fa led only in thoir stock ome, fend a8 going on thetr other business. The failure tn heir stook opersi ons, we fuPpoRe, means tha: they nave failed to pay their bots on the rise and fail of stocks: and tm conse uence of Lag rg of the securities most operated upon, certain sums of money, w sventof any moderate fluctaation, world Rave heen the pockets of one ret of gamblers a ‘of another set, will not be transferred, besaues iho 0 have lont tha bote are not able to pay them. A fail. fre of thie kind is of fast a much importanc,, if it were , ae the fallcre of Pat, Learn would be, and re. There rothing jose immora!, there in cheatung, inher LM | jd alan an consequences, in if Mt faro oF row nan ailing “st the Now York Sock Exchange tons do not represent the ‘nvestroent or (he ex ‘of one kind of property or secarity for anothor nothing bat bete, and the men who make thom bat gamblery.’ They do more mischief than ‘that gambling which seeke tho shades or night ‘and ayoide the vigiance of the law, for in ‘efforts to heat each other they attack Saxe Bremeew. ‘The cambirrs with dice to — ordinarily ¢oal with "a property; de not bring saybedy except hoasetvor ‘and the'r own to ruin, and in the end generally only blow their ins oul—very ermal! lost to the community, Bat biers at the Stock Dxohange 4 ate other ® property, and break down the secorities in which mt men have confided their means of Itvelihood and pT on) ‘heir families. They 4o more evil in one '# operation than could come from the fallare of the ‘whole of them. nm 33 3 ae ae AFFAIRS ON THIRD STREET—THE TRUST COMPANY. [Prom the Cincinnati Commercial | the expectations of many, Third sireet, in exhiblted 'p bot ® moderate dogree the appear- of a bank panio d oring the buriness hovrs of yortor- ES many Prreons gave noite a} the bank! of Menara Re ad & Co , of their intantion to demaa’ day. bouse their deposits, under: the nw, at the end of thirty days, and {tis probabie ‘nat with several other onncerns the ra- Gelpta were lesa‘ ‘4nd the payments greater than usual The forboaranqe that was exbinited towards the Trast under the circamstances. tt evidence of the Company solid poaltion which that Institution bas, during a bog course of years, acquired in this community, and of a.arge amount of public o pildence in the ekill and ‘integrity with which {t has been conducted. !tis a matter of jart sur prise, however, that since the first announcement by tala graph of the fadt tbat the New York braach had suspend ed, up to the prevent writing, nothing hes been heard of the President, pow in New York. That tsero has boon a heavy defalcation, embezz'ement or joss in that city, re- sulting from iijegitimate or unauthorized transactions on the pat of the cashier of the brasch is pro Dably true; bot ts ¢x'ent or tho probabls offact it ts destined produce uzon the sclvency or wefulnes of the parent insiivation ie ae yet ieM ea Wrely tocorjecture Ii jy thought that by tho carly matie f thm morning remetning wil! be recetred from the Presi dent to do away with the present ataic of scaperse; but of this woare not aware that there is any absolute certs\aty. The public will excect this morning, through the press, ttatement by the offoers of the compsny of iis condition, a to them on an exeraination here. To this the pad Jo ia entitled; and wecanns! but look npom the fact Yhat It bes rot been made as an cversight, of wich men of boner and experience ‘y fvencia! affairs rhouid not have seem guilty. The forbearance with which they were treated yesterdsy should have been repaid with @ sropor tienste measure of frankness: end such a return would have been the stronge:t poreible euaranty of a continuance of the pacific relations. The company bax, almozt withont a doubt, met with a lone thet will, to ome extent, allect iia vitimate rolvency. How iuch of ite capital siock, or how much more tbani:s capital st ck has been sunk io nnfortc- pate operations, ism matier of which ibe public kaow no- thing. But becsnse the capital sock has tisappesred, it deca not follow that ts depositors are in danger of ult!mate weriovr logs. Large asia its deposit account, It is bardiy resrovebie to suppose that ® bas not avaliable assots lo a sul! greater amount. PATILURE OF WILLIAY B. OGDEN— MAR- RIAGE AND EMIGRATION OF GEORGES SMITH, THE BANKER. {Corresponaenes of the Nowark Ouily Advertiser.) CmG.co, August 23, 1687. The sll absorbirg topio of conversation in ‘our city just now (s the sstignment of Mr. William §. Og: dep, who has been set down ar—and undoubtedly still. richest in the West His embar- ass men! re caused by the failuro of the Chicago, & Paoland Fond daLac Kaliroad to moet its paymen:s promotly—bo being President of thet road acd endorser ‘on rome eight aunored thourand doliers of ite paver 1s is jomporary affair, acd as soon es Mr. Ogden can res! 0 cash on a portion of the immenso property which he boler, everything will be made straight Bis wealh is variously estimeted; bat it ie belleved he is worth not jese than two and a hali millions. The Michigan Sontbern and Northern Indiapa road has aizo gone 19 pro leet. and Mr. Litch*eid, the Preekdent, has resigned; how ever, bob rode will eventually come cet all right, and be mong toe beat oasivg roads in tae West. These ditt. will not affect Chicsgo to any extent, as the olga ti both companies are for the most par! ip the bands of Eastern eapi aiiste. Everyibipg bevokens a prosperous season for us. Nover the teguiry is being made thrazgu the press if thero is some way in whicu It can bo arresied. epaintt ordinary gambing dat nelther are productive ommnelly ae pertakes in no degree ¢f the character af @ fair aud ordi bary Deriners transaction, Tne whole thing, from be- gipbing to end, is Getit.ous and fraudulent. ‘The papor is seldom if ever delivered, while (heamount 1e suie greally exceeds {he wholesiock waich has ever ‘been lseved by the curporadan to whom 1 bei Sach ere the elements of fraud, trickery and imposition in this miserable swine ling, that the bulls and bears’ of the wek market of Wall street, in order to evcoeod in their ‘ocations have to be as dretito:s of principle as those en- «inthe ball ané patent sate swindling. Yet, to ga.e in this bazarcovs+nd reckless speczlation many lead. ing Creveta! institutions have ceglected their and Jeg mato busivess, aud cauaed @ general rain of (heir as: rete avd boee of their unfortunate creditors. The masuer iu which (he commuuity ls rebbed by these sock sharp- ere ia thus voticed ine iste amber of the Albany Arg: cb aay — MYETRUORA OF THR SPOCK BOARD. Lue By N. Y., Aueust 22, i807. TO THE EDITORS OF T AS AND Anat & Daring ‘be last seventy seven daze the suive Of ibs stone of the Res4ing Railroad amonwt to 821.6K) shires exact y 97,955 shares move thar the compADy. At par tne amour exceeds € avorags per Aer 4.177 shares) i« kept op will amoun! Wo B44, B 5 4 i 5 Hy ; 5 é atAn¢ ing tbe amount ape une emt, the @tock in tre city neither sor dumialshes; and ’he iano veal or wrrally Ino om, in the shape of te: missin 10 fork Over Detween four and & he ewindia eoables | on their Uet ana | ast are it try is Deginniog to alarm the nsople wo may forced w recognl @ oa the money markt. 3 ro anon, 8 Lowry welling \e respectable compared to gush dlsre putable business. THE BUBBLE BURSTING wesr. (From the Richmor! examiner, Anguet 78 ) We sieve snag and stecrch ‘a ocr affairs here to Vir gre that the burating of bants, ihe breakin: of great vine, ard the ‘‘sospensions’’ of speculeiore which are ruddeuly tekgra shed to us in moh narrbere and rarid succession, from Boston, New York, eat wud the whole North and West, fal! opon our sere ee abruptly and stunningly sg would peals cf thunder and the sherp con cussion gtinicg from the clear sky of one of our bo A * RTH AND at , With tobscco at $17, an? m large crop in the ground With wheet at ©) 50, and & (ne barvest ready for mark with corn, cats, bay and uneanee, enabling on clean 93 We please, deen taking | copecially the veonting and relf mfticient Nerth and Wost, of as curse ves, Looking so.thward, we tate of plethoric s oundacc bome—cotton going u in price in heigtt, and wagar rihe iene to we Jo there thit <3 can give us no \dually and sllectively, being have had 1 for a jong eeries fOrpricg un CDONEY WO EXCIte Our to the ceure Of the [rig bit) levertement hit on among our neighbors and >: ihren’ in t ¥e The whi lo ercret of the trooblo—whieh, by the bye, is oat comme: nd which wo thal! not seo the end of for some Ume to ex 8 jot tb tt the ro auend Weert har been travelling entire’y to it"? Everybody has been epeeniating in thet very ‘rapid’? region of counwy on too grand to and been blowing their bebbies eu- on forrafety or /body thore hea joh in fictitions valoet; Frerybody, grown AcUsiounly rich, bas grown really extrava. p prepertion, and andertaben ‘he consumption of quantivies of elke, broadcloth, linens and a thoosand one tuxa which extra people th.ok {t be- and ‘aaplonadle to purchase for family see, Enor increased imports of foreign corte have come into New York city in eqnerce, for the Wort wade, and im menre quantities of manofactares from \ Fogiand ve been Font in the Same direction, unt!) balances of 1 have scout uleted agaings sat portion of the Union. of proport oo are (heir means Of payment’? Many have raved , or the severe! yeara pari of bad crops, Witien than bey caicuiatod pom: and balancer en the debtor side of tnolr sococt te with their merchen® Dave been compoanding for as many care, The large grain crops of the present seagon may Mons, of which wo shall | band for some pec or (wo kinds as samoles. few sections of land at the government | and equarier per acre, Ine vory short eferwards Ti haa borht A's purchase of him ai Ove ey ® foarih of the have money in Sea = in tlow notes. Cc gt | ten dollars, paying @ pordon of the price | im cash, and the Peele in Sow note. Kher. | a ined to make ® town of the property, hae | t wenty dollars. giviog his slow totes for | veater portion of the porchass and har forth wily proceeded to coavert the town ir \ mo sk com: pany, of which bimeel? 's President ‘8 capital stock | gracvated to the price of one or two hundred dollare por Acre, and then president D goes to laxurlaung in he bt that he has suddenty become rich—which he ie, in property rated ai one oF two hondred dollars an acre, for which be cn'y cave twe A, B, with D's mt oom, he: exeuan ged thi . ee rete, Jott at the rate of s hundred do lare; of, echeme, have made precisely the same by the lot of some other presidert D, who has grown rich \ jandr at @ hundred doltars an other tapttel site of as nore round for atown. The wh: ke the two Yankee boys who swapped penknives witb each other all day, and each made Sarge Smnoams of movey ‘n boot—a | rich from speculation off of each other. Thus every stream of that enterpreing portion of ovr ovuntry is lined with towns laid A fodie ink on tho whitest drafting :aver. With iands at there figures the Western people can afford to owe their morchents ia-ge ; und though town lols are a deaced bad © acconnta with and ® peeky inconvenient nds to remit to the East, yet {t would be incon. pid in a merchant wo distrust a debtor rich in & hundred dollar an acre, the prospective sites Iende of future great cities, Western mershants cannot, there- fore, collect their debte, and thes break. Eastern Import- ers who have ordered goors from abroas in ype on to their protigious sales to tho bus over traded to a frigbiful exvent on the basis of ern town produce Fortaion, » wpable shipment abroad send specie. Thu: Eastern banks are drained of the basis of their circulation and of taelr de- porite, amd bave to carta!l thelr lines of discount; and every extraordinary exportation af eecie to Enrope ool- Ispeee an indefinie namber of banking and mercantile converns ‘‘doing a large We: tern business.” The Weatern railroade, wo, enter into the chao of panio and benkroptoy, making confusion worse concunded; aod when you epeak of Western railroads you speek of eome- thing wore rotien in Denmark taan even Wesiern paper towns A raitroad is @ contrivance for trrnepor ing )ro- duce to market by the large quantity, and for cong perple from city to city by the hund reds or Lhonsande. ratiroad in the wilderness cf a new country, peopled only by a hendred oF two npeoai , fe ag useless m pleco of publio furnitore age mill on top of a hill cr # coach siz upow the high seas it does not belo the care to sey thas tho ri ‘will populate the wilder. Reve |} penetrates, and thas the pogdletion whicn the rallroad kieelf creates will suppor: It aud make it a profits bie concern, Tho case is preciscty similar to the French: man’s horse which was taughi to live witbcus food sad which tool it into tis head todie the moment it bad learned that valuavie art Two drunken men cannot koop oanh other from falling inte cho gutter any better than two Ditnd men can keep each other out cf ihe diich Either the rail- Toad must ene vast Capital in populating the wild country ie Is made to penetrateor it must be cunstrucied in a cnuniry populous b to supply it with the large trade and travel which {3 is capanie of tran, jag, aad which it must dave for trapsportatica Im order to pay He ray. Somethirg canrot come ont of nothing. T70 nothings caa- not make any fort cf s scmethicg. A retiroad boi! of nothing but ® credtt resting upon ibe basta of d rated jande—lands donated becauee worthiees in tho market, and railng a country where ‘ands are dirt cheap, be- cause dertitute of populaiion—muet eink the vaiue of bundred of i eurpins acres every tip made by ite traine, apa must burt the boiler of lie credit in & very shor: porind of time Weil, everybody in the West is more cr leearich in Dubbie railrcad stocks The ratircade are opersted at a dead expente, vecaure the country they run cver is too Dew and void of population to supply trade and iravel in wholesale quantities. Their stocks are really as an invertment. There is rever apy cash capital in these raitroad companies, tbe capiial bélug altogether in evorasticg lands. Dot the capi al belog in jands, and ihe tailrond iaude representisg, just as we havo sven t2¢ town Jote do, in the trapgactions of the A’e, B’s, C's and D's of the re‘lroad schemes, thirty, O'ty and # hundred dollars on sore, the ownere of reiiroad etocke are vory rich men in revirend thares valued af a hundred dolisre based on lange rated at ofty and & handrod, The whole Wee: ie gridirened over with rail roads owned by bobbie compapien of thir sort The ebarehoiders, requirieg money for the count lene lations jasntit ies ‘ost, and Weat speeul they are ergaging in er day, poise tbelr bobbie railroad Necks wih bubble @ for the rotten veak roies which mre thus epewed forih from expiesive banking tutions, West ‘erp produoe falling 1» go forward to (ho Eas! in sufficient quantities to disckarge the heavy Wes‘ero !adcbtedness in that quarter there notes go instead. They are shaved to the brokers by tho Eas'ern . They come ‘back in Sock: the bobble dapics, soon consume all tbeir specie, then o grandteries of cxplosious are Beard in al! he Western country in a gravd round of up- expected konitiiee, just as Ne se cauoen used to Doom upon the astounded care of Furope in all directions a the same me. ‘The bara: eapiode, Dut asseverate with great emphasis of epeech tbat ibey we solvent though obliged to “avo nd for ashorttimo, and they sie infeed esivent if ir debtors aro good for the joars they have mse thom. Fa Spear aro oe raitroat stocks ie they ve with 1! <@ are worth an: «8 rater. These raitroad siocke aro = ee worth par rates if the rejircads themselvos are as prosperous as their official make them oct to be, and if the lands (hey hoid are worth fiity and a bun- dred doers per acre Thus the whois fabric of Western credit reste on lands, varsed at fifty sad a huodred dol- lave an acre, wbish last year or ihe year before were ‘bought at a dollar and a quarter. or were donaved iy’ the a goverament ex an expediest fer Dg town then a drug at a dollar end a qrarter, set! for that price. The trouble begina with the West, bat does no: end with the West New Ergiand manufectare's who have sold ‘vast qoantitiee of their fabric to that section of tae Union UNDAY MUKNING, AUGUST 30, 1857. The Cleveland National Emancipation * Convention. Organization of a New Compensation Society. Gerrit Smith Recognizes the Slaveholders’ Moral right to Compensation. COMMITTEES, RESOLUTIONS, ae, e., be, Ourvacsen, August 27, 1857. A Dew orgavication of “Compensaiion £ nancipation- inte” took ite Lirat progressive sep in this cliy yesterday, | Jowing cal ‘The wpdorsigned, bolonging to different potiticul partior, ‘belug pereuaded thet |t is very Gesivabic that some prac- tics! ana equitable pian should be brought forward, and by which the people of the Norib may 00 operate, jaa generous ard brotherty spirit, with the people of the Sou:h, ond share with them the to the extino Won of slavery, would ros; iy end esruestty invite those of all parties and sooi'ns of the Union, who enter tain the same opinion, to meet in national per- opal |, im the city of Ceveiand the 2 recognise ciple aud policy cf = fa'r and com pensation lo the slaveholders for the manumission of their slaves. Eibu Burritt, Gerrit Smith, and the like, were the prime movers of the aGalr. There are « few here from New England and New York, but the groat mass of delo gates who make a cla:m to & seas are from this immediate Betgtbarbood. The stand is well sprinkied with dignitaries im white cravate, reporters, Quakers, and a few gentlemen of color. Up this heur, 10 o’ciook P. M of the second day’s pro- ceedings, note softary etrong minded woman has claimed to eit in thie conveniion. ‘At the appointed hour an orgauization was bad aod the officers chosen tem, ty. Rev. ©. P. Elliot, of Indi- ana, was called to ind Rev. ©, W. Dennison, of Buffalo, appointed secretary. Pome trouble was like to enscs from a point raised by a gentleman, whe:ber persons who were opp2eed to the pria- ciple of ‘compensating emancipation” should have a voice by organising ‘nto @ convention tn conformiiy to the fol- | yy, ip the convention. It was suggested that such persons were not invited to this meeting, and {t was not expected that any one holding such views would obtrude their opinions Gon the convenion. The chaiyman expressed & hope \hat all who wished to fairly discass the points a: issuo would ho kindly tolerated to do so. At the outset Elibn Burritt brought forward his budget ef \euers from all quarters, in response to Lotte 4 diffored “‘eall;” some were pro and some were con. @ that were read was one each from !"resident Nott, of » Eravtus Fairbanks, of Dr. t, of Missouri, Professor Upham, of Bou- Jobn W. Tatham, Quaker, from Delaware, apd B. O Wagoner, of Chicago. ls appeared rather hard work to set the machinery of the new order in motion. A gentleman from Portage —, Ohio, thoagbt the time since ~the call was ued too short to bring out many who hada boart In this great work. He was of the jon that hundreds would turn oat if they bot knew of t. He said that he bad cou versed with many in bis county on this very sabjoct, nd Al! wero deeply interested on the very point of ‘‘com- penmated emanc!; Mr, Wartace, of Indiana, wae heartily in favor of adopt ing @ platform after pan ng Lo Dm waged opie f the day, and setting forte their views at ance. wanted fe founded on freedom and justice, without auy defective plans, shifting or rotten :n their K ndencies, like com) fectly re! park pan peopie of the Guket Guten wore cee ‘with money, and be jered that the best plan to this superabundance of money avatlable was to rcbase tbe emancipation cf the enslaved. He wasia vor of vsing the avaiin ef the public lands, if necessary, ip order to buy emancipation. Oae gentleman doolared hi if & red hot abolitionist, end did not coincide witt the views of the ‘‘cali’”’ fie ‘war ata icse to know who sbould be compensaicd in ine event of ei sieve or the master? Ho ‘Was in favor of & free discussion on the sunject, and wanted anu of whatever grace, to take a tems and Become sof ti vention. TWO KESTUCRY QUARERS ADNITTRD, A couple of Quakera from Keutucky nied their as members. ctodeniiale, and sahed to be recogal: declared themac 0 T! vee 18s orable io & free inquiry Now York jobbers sud importore safer, The wi aren Teriia ina cous be bauer ae @ Northern and Now Ragland moro cr lees | Como to some reasonable ooclom a: mania trvotves az entire half ef the oepfederacy, republic at large does not atiogether escape. The Wertern infistion prednocs vations] overtrading on « large. scale, exbaveiing the country of onin aod of ite credit bal- ances sgaicst Rorope, and causing dghteas and stringency all over the conticent. Bot the bubbie is burvting at inet. It wae time the cn healthy state of things existing at tho Weat were coming to a catartrophe. We shall have storm, thander gos, emoko and dust 'n terrific fury fora l'ttie while, and new ‘we ehell Dave a clear eky,® Urighi scushine and & pros- perour dey, NARROW PSCAPE. [Prom the Newark, N J , Dagio, August 28 | We understand tbat the City Eank mado ® very parrow ceeape on the day that Thompeon, the New York note broker, failed. It appeas & check of bis for $20,000 !a exchange for smal! ville. ard prevented it at tho American hxchange Bank, ip New York, shortly afer 10 o'clock, where it was nasad to the propor credits, At Lt ool ck Thom on’s failore was announce? + 1 palt that the New York bank Ineo dato make a0 ef ort frounen wo have nct been informed, i} may pousivly ead 40 8 protrnoted laweuilt. Brooklyn Otty New Exrenerve ROWMRY=ARERET OF TR Srouzn Prorenty.—About balf peat ele day night, ofcer Bealty, of the First precinct, arrested @ Hedge, who had in a oi 0018, whioh bo was about to take wo New ¥ South ferry. Odlicer Deatty, im in custody. Upon being conr Miation boure the goode were examinet os articles of male aad fem: rel, airo several shawls and silks of & valuabie considerable quantity of jewelry and iwo dred dollars. Some of the cases have tbe osm: of 293 Benry etrect, and among imber of certificates of bank siock his name. 1 Mr Van Nosirar foattered aboct fed for some The house had deca unooe Jy Baving loft for the country. When were lef in cuareo of « thouse, and carly oa Friday night the the ‘howe of Mr. Vac Nowtrne i was ened, The wife of the prisoner i# & Fervant in ike ie mily residing net door, and has not resided with ber but He bas been in the bart © ‘visiting the noure {r , Rod was (hare Fridey after. nren The servant gir! inthe houre ordered bia away, aud threatened to have him arrested if be did not ga. Be left soon afer and probably embraced thai opporvacity to take the front door key. The key war found ip (he prison or's pocket when he was arrested g00ds were jieutifed by & som of Mr. Vac Nostrand as beicg bie father’s property. Yerterday morning se prisoner wae brought before Justice Corvweil, where he waived of ¢ «mination, ana ‘Was committed to await the ac'lon of ihe Graed Jury. Be comfesged (hat be had stolen the goods, kod said what bo bad not been sharp im going Of With them s thal cary hour of the night. Scapay Liquor Law.—The following ordere bave eon | lerued to the police of the ctty of Brookiyn im reference to the tale of liquor on Sundays — Ornce Scrmentaxcart Merrorent as Poor #8 Wore Srexet, New Your, acgast 21, 1) To Davcry Basceast Four Fin—For the prese-vation of the peace of the cliy of Brook:yd snd {n acoorcance with the peer ron ¢ reotlon of the sot entitied ‘An act to ertabiish ke an police district,” &c , you will direct the imepecters or captairs within your command to inririct the reveral por under their ttrictly to eoforce the Ine, y causing to be clove onthe Babbath ai! placer where intoxicating \iquors aro eok!, and in cane cf ary violation 10 report the same to the Distric: Attorney of county of Kings, thet itm penaition may de enfer “ed If any member of tho patrol forse neg: the perform nce of this duty you will report him | n P. A. TALLMADGE, @upertate: of Police. Accompanying eve ‘e the following © cer “rom the Deputy Buperiniendent to the severn! inapesiore or Derory Sermameraypast’s Ore ce, } Brooriy, A 90,1887. 5 Cartan =] Present Fer witb & cosy of an order rece ved from the Genoral Scperinienden: of Police, Avgutt 28, 1887, and you will report to tbs office $ red morning any Violation of the above ode ‘ours JOUN 8, FOLK, Deputy Superintendent of Police. Tho rar cus Inepectore ‘seued orders to vhelr men iast eee re ae Gene memenems Tt.) 0} pro- bable that any arrests will be made or forcible measures every taken to close the hovsot; but thore who persat in kerring | aaa cata the Diswriet Adtorney for proseco Rornep Tho hovee of Pdward ¢. Merphy, 12 Union place, wae robbed on Fri¢ay of articies of jewelry to the amount of two hundred dollars, Abieves took the op portunity during the Jemporary abscnoe of thy oovopants of the boure ai the agent cf the bank held | to reoover the amoant of the bank here, but apon wher | Wearog pow | mounting in valae w about twenty ire bon | v Bewsetr arose and avked We privilege of making *® fow remarks. He said that be bad through moet of the free ama many Of tbe sieve Siates, and found Die estoniakment that 6 goncrous feeling favorable to ewancipa ion wae prevalent overywhere, This fesilag | aia not embrace any one politica! party or religious creed. | He found 11 to be aimowt universes! Men of the three great poliveal parties wero alive to the interests of emarcipa- For bimoeelf, he usterly detested the name of « thet fine must 66 erased from ad Ube 9 operation of tbe peop'o of ibe South. Be war glad 10 s00 tals feecare. Fven if i was | not mecersary to the carry 'ng cut of their present work, it | at ‘east bad @ tendency to al ey the ill fecing at present i apperens Kmong the two ¢iferent eeci.ona of the Unica. | QUETION OF NEXieRMIL. Much prei! mipary dascumion touk piace relative to who the convention shoud admit as moabers, and what tno | convention was about tod> after they had admided thelr | mercbere. Wo kimmel? and no: a eabjoet ( The call waa intended for tho people who were willing 1 romunerste thor brethren of the oth for the lors they weald #: stain fo manu! of the slave Compensation fr suc. lors, f bod the eaves. fb beighbore to eoraiped 9y they F doty to share the oF TASTING COMY.T The PReerayvr announced the fulow.ng sanding com mittece — mitten on Peomanetc ry Mo! Gore: Ben ib, N Y nu Burritt, Guna Andres Walince, int; Thomes | Thorn, vb'o; HL St . Committee to Prepare Dun ess for dy Convention —Ettba | nt Oparies W oan oN. Y: 8.0 twic B “imeon offi; J a. Ww I Kerier, bic: ‘ov. Jobo Naphin, Ono, | Ommttie on Boll Monier —sooe ban Orns, lod: I toer Humphrey. a's; Jowbon Jounings, Rio; Nethaa bl Ket, lad © L.ori Leow, -t Comm iter ¢ Joun A. Fom, Mo; F | Cobe!, Oia; Hudson 7. Gee. L. Weed, | Cbio;"hid, &, Payne, Conic | Mr Br nat anpownced & focis! meeting with the cltictne in tee eveniag, ® Lau-paa: tever, ia Brysat & Mraton'e he the meets f business. Ca B60 ad curred and vA & A.M. for prayer, | ‘ wf EEDIN The secend day 0 ob commenced with an | toiciavozy mep townrde romelecit’ve actos. The Commit | tee cn Bur cote brought in the fiowing preamble nad | retoteiion — | Whereas, \e consideration of shove moral, politica’ and commercial relationships by which 0 times prat) ihe free Sta 08 bave olrectiy or ontr oaied te the sanc | measuravie adveciages Which would sccrve to every Bec tion from ite removwa.; 5 | Reroived, That in ‘the opinion oft) |s Copvention, [t is | hicbly desirable that the people cf the © orth eboald www in a penerous and brotherly spirit with the psople of the Booth, sod sbare liberally wah them in the expense of pattieg @D end to so great & pol’ a) and moral evil as Am rican slavery, ‘The great cham pion of the Comrertivn, Mr. Porritt, came forward and mede enowr more Selly L ¢ views cpon the new measu Gent SwoTr reeponded te the serimenm erpremet by bis friend Burr tt. Fe wished a elight alerstion made la the resola!ion, ee \has the objeci on would pot obo tha offer ng & pe aniary cone , ecooomiahy ve. ed eG amecdment & ihe or'g.aal resolc- bold terms denon ed s.svery es inhuman, demorall.ing and ap ost, and ebou'd be aboliahed, wh! & amendment war ad ypted, acd (Le whole lal! om the table. Rev. Mr. [mesisor, of Buffalo, read ibe folowing ser os | of reaciations — Resolved, That without expres moral obligation of th: 2 bis slave, independent of the mr s#hod wo bere offer the lam of @) aBcipedioa 09 W of compensation to the sisvenoider, to the conse proposal for the remova: of cor diferences, we | ple ¢ to ther our hearty oe cperaticn to ihe fullest extent ae ~ Resolved, | ine? by comm wlopest apyo mie fer i> pe" peme, 3, The assumption by each Save of @ reasovahie sharo of this increased vatne as @ debt duo to ite siavoboiders, to be pad Dem ro 7aia, a8 @ pari of the moneyed valne of o'r elaves. 4 The aceumption by the general government of the re maining part of euch moneyed valve of tho slaves, to bo paid from the pubho treasury, whether derived from the tale of tho public lands or pi a Resolved, That in order to show our 2:nthern men and the world the sincerity of our convictions oa this Tomentoun question, we avow ourselves ready, at soy moment, to be taxed pio raid, If need be, on all wo yposrere, for the purpose of aboiteh'ng 'y from our country by peateabio and constitutional means. Other resolutions were also proposed, and a!) were ro- ferred to the Buriners Conm tee, On metion of Mr, Suri, all persons differing with tholr views were mvited to take part with them In the debates. The afternoon sersion was taken ap by two gent'emen tp op, oaliion to the compensation move ment. By agreement Gakrrr Sxitn spoke an boar at the even- ing teeeion, The house was crowded with a very ro spectable avélence to boar him, Whilo the hats were money to cofray ex; very. The sav Pariles were benefitted, and would not consent to a return to the slavery synicm again. There was nover an in mtarce when the negro was offered fair wages that he would not work. Thriving towns baa grown u improved atate of morals prevailed ; there is a greater amount of labor performed, more sugar manafac. tured, churches, s:hools an es are cstablished, ‘and peace and bi: css provails. Taocir Dolit upon a scale cf grandeur that would be astonishing so wany. ered dollar folke. emanc'vation was por incalcalable bene tit to all Mr. Gi 1H arose like a huge tion, and after shak- ing bis mane proceeded slowly to hie work of making kpown bis vi tt seems that the gentienen who ceded him tn the afternoon had laid themselves open to Gerrit’s coid saroagin, apd he im proved the opporiuni.y to exrotiste them stigbt!y, Mr. Smith favors the compensa- on plan witb all the vigor of his wature. He wishes a Iriendly, poacefo! and quiet release of the bonds of slavery, ond if aby aro wronged in & pecuniary sense he proporos to compenrate for that loss. He still inks the consiltation does not recognize — He tald had used all means in their power for ihe purpose of effeo:ing - ion ex'a@pt compersation; now, said he, wat appears the t and mort brothorly plan; for his part bo was willing to adopt is. Mr. Smith made a very forcible speroa and secmed to carry the convention sad audience with him. He occupied the tioor three-quarters of an hour. LAST DAY'S PROCEEDINGS Cuaves axp, August 27, 1885, +I endeavored to give you a fcll report of the proceod- Ange of the American Compensation manciyation Jonven tion, Asthe work of the Assembly progresses now do- ‘yelopements are made, and the members themselves bo gin to n6e the bearing of a discustion upon the proposed pria- ciples. Some who come here with the mtrabid abolition notions think t hard to give up theirfoid doctrines and em- brace the A great number of ibose who take pert in the proceedings are clergymen, and others who bavg siways been recogn zed as anti slavery meu. Some are very cautious how they become identified with the new plan ‘or fear it may not be popu ind others aro claim- " Plank to be adoy ted by thelr party in order wer. THIRD AND ALOLMONISTS FALLING IN WINK THE BXANCIPATIONNTS A man from Ohio ocoupled the e fal ao forenoon, ming that bis party was ressy to the new measure @: once, and atopt it asa rallying cry. The greater part of the has beea occupied ta dis- ‘ous! the resolution which x: ‘of each slave emancipated. it the Convention do not propose to bay these slaves, but merely to require Congress to pass proper laws to mann- mit ihem and remunerate the owner for bis loss. The im fixed for cach slave by the original resointion was bundred and ffvy dollars, This sum was objected to ae rather Pigh, for {f the North pays that sum and tho Seuth nothing. then the South will the greatest ey will be rid amovat of Layee besiege fe hye yee of the curse, and hence all kinds of trade an! commerce will imy ; their lands will double tn value at once, while North will only reap the reward ot assisting to rid he nation of the accursed Diight WIGGLING AROUE THE PRICH OF SLAVES Mr. J. A. Foor, of Cieveland, op; tue sliding sca'e cy ees by @ member on the opporite side of mac. Ho thougbt that the ratio of benefit to exct be untform in bis own Slate and uniform throughout the Union, althovgh the pri tiave might be $OCO tn | suitian>, a Nort> Carolics apd $200 in Missouri, yes to pay each, say $200, the loss to the perton holding priced ariicte Digher be more then com: 5 jonate advanos in ciber respeow. Mr. Foot it if thia emanctpation Pah; - im Missoar!, where slavery ie now thought to . | tenw where the price of saves would de comparatively smal, the work word fo bard among tho other States, where the price was double that of mis sourl. OURRTT #xOTH'@ lDBAS, Gren Seere was of ibe opimion that when one Sisto begen to give op the ivetitetion {t would be the end of slavery; one efter another would fall into the measure and the whole thing would bo blotted existence at ones. Kantas would never hold « risvo tn that event, And wil the South weet woul t yield from the farce of paca: niary advantage. i19 thonght the uniform plan the ret- ter, stipulating tbe price by State enactment, and the | North pay that price, leaving the balance to be made up | by the slayeholding States. Aud, eaidfhe, io response to | the advanced doc'rine of compensating the slave, this matter should be left enttrely to the gensrority of those | im mediately \nieresied, When the great work of emanci- pation is done he thought the slave would be fully at well | cf as during hie enslavement, perhape a Iittio peiter, and to far a> the martor and slave wore concerned he was of the opinion that |t would be an even exchange. The master | id not complain if the elave did not XR. PURRITT'S LIRSR ALITY. Mr. BURETTT thought tbat the North was able to be onerous with te Scuth, id that & gonervue spirit | thould pervade our entire froo North and say (9 the Soath, | ‘Gontlemen, agroe opon the price of your tlayos and free them; then hand in your biil to us and wo will | pay it.’ | | | CONMEQUENCE OF THR OCT DEM 1 The mot of the afornoon was taken ap in a! he resolution introduce by Mr. “mith, to the ¢ should the South reject this brotherly offer tne spirit of contempt, then there was po farther nae of oie ndeavored to support his resolutions by his faabioned argument. if the Sooth did aot act in afvend. anner in regard to the proceedings of this convention, he was ats lors (> know what further action ensure had been pab fully posted upoa the contemplated pro o haa yet tolearn tho name of @ single Lowepaper emong thein that farored the movement Tay suryicions apd uniriently on the that this convention would bo weil Aa; but the Souih hed uot ar, and he feared aon thetr beh. tbat some people of the South decinred themee Geo to tho ipetiiat'on that they do pot wi pop any cousiterauinn oF compensatior Mr. Bi xsrrs enid tbat tn their prerent action a fair pro porition woul to to the South, aod ho knew 0} pom whet ort mith )adged ' ected. He bet no reason fo e0 prejadging: it wns rly ‘outh, which wes 4 nnt ve prover in ‘What wil i will you | y that no nad of Dole aro was vith atiness men of Wimllag. first try and aoe If they 7 holding thie property therm to ree to th you give’ aud take"? Tewne a mie'ake for Mr. Saath the South had reepended to thetr call me orliy of the 'P jenunsiations. They ovght at least to presnme ria es will bo received wit If they wo © rejocted, proper courtesy bave new food for refec ion. if rejocied sonld be at & lone then ther woul corm ard de to ony that the they Lard no ro. were ire—and from id on'y infor that they would : rejected them in advance, b eponse from them—ne kind word or « their Inaiterence they o: await their scUov. perbape to indignantly reject. Mr. Foot, of Unio, wae not willing to preuége the fo th he thoaght that an olive traneh bad boon exten ted te them, and he bad bet lite donb! but they would so re ara tt saris At thie or CONPERRATION BANC T ATION SOCTRTY is Of the Convention, when the hall bad be. in of people, the sestions having been fairly digeoneed: 4 Aenith # resolut' ms rejected, a mem moved that in order to carry out the plan here laid do+n wilh proper vicor, @ national co npentation emacc!pation focieiy be at cnoe organized The moremen! wasetopted | #mé continental fer ious arrangement Gerrit Am'th reed the coneuta hich was stoped by the addision of a singe word title, making altogeber « dorioue dee gnation. The the and constitution of the new soe.cty now roads as lowe ‘Hole 1, The name of this aseectatior shall a! Compentation | mancipation Soctety."” The ob_cot of the society shal! be ths extinction y Dy & vyttem of compensation to the slave a th 3. The officers shal! consist of a President, tive Vice ‘ea Correnponding Secreiary, Recording Seere- aud a Tresaurer. The oiliee of the society aball be kept in the city c vork. Ar\ 6 The Orstannus! meeting shall be held in New York on the second Weinerday tn May, 1863, and that meetiog shall be fall power to amend this consti ti “?, (mour rote tbe cenatitution wae adopted. The Stmav appoint’ & committes Of three to choose officers whe pene, The [oliowing ofleers were sominated and be “The Ne . Pail vt Rev. Dr Poet, Miseyar).... Bes |coun i Cigten, Del... pitha Burret... 0.0... . Corres ponding Se sretary. R. L. Morrey,N. Y...., Treasurer. 2} bal’ past 4 the Convention sdjwrrned sie aie. PRICE TWO CENTS. " AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. Oar London, Paris, Copenhagen Lisbow, aod Belgium Correspondence, Spollen, the Alleged Murderer of Little, in Dublin. IVTEBESTING MISCELLANEO! ac, &., Our London Correspondence. Loxnon, August 14, 1807, India ond China—Remonstrance of the Ame: ican Mercian at Hong Kong—The Accident to the Atlaistic Oiile—Pro Turkish Difficulty— Appropriation of tha Redemplion Pus of the Sound Duea—Capital of the Bast Indic Vompany: de, de. ‘The Indian mai! has arrtved wiih Bombay advices to ibe ‘Mib July. Delhi stili held out, bat Genera) Barnart was daily receiving reinforcements, and nex! mal) wil) in aly probability bring the news thas all the mullneers ineide Delhi have been put tothe sword. Tho rebels had mado several desperate sortios, but had each time been repulsed with great alaugbter. The city was reported io be full of sick and wounded and cholera preva'cn) The mors save- fagiory feature is thet the Bombay and Maras army con tinved firm!y loyal, and that the Papjad la qulet. The force under Gen Barnard bessigtng Delhi, consis oF 8,000 Purojeans and 6,000 rattve troops who remain faxth- ful. From China the news {3 unimportant Afew moro junks Bave been destroyed. A nad ‘aken place between some American merchants, of Canton, Merars. Augumine Heard & Oo., Messrs. King & Co, aod Messrs, Rasell & Oo. ané Commodore James armstrong, ecmmandipg the United States naval forces in the Chins, waiers. The merchants, who have been compelied lo go to Hor g Kong, complain ‘bat American subjccta and Ame. rican interests are nos saffciently pro ected, and request the Commodore to be more active. The Commodore’s re- ply not being cf a satisfactory nature, te merchants io question bave bad the wh le correspoudence printed and forwarded to bis excellenoy Or. Peover Parker, minister plenipotentiary of the United States to Chiou, Macao, &o. Copies have doubtless been forwarded to the gevernmend at Washington. ‘The Times’ city article of yesterday, thus comments on the effect produced on Change by the India news. — ‘This has been a Le oes recovery. The ludian cows, aJ- thongh tt oopfirmed the report current jest evening, ap- peared gatisfactory when taken {n conjunction with the details regarding the checks Ipiitoted upon the matineers: ‘at ai) polus, the amount of the force before Delhi, the pa- cl lc behavior cf th~ general population, az<! the continued faithfalness of the Bombay and Madras armies. The quo. tations of the rates of exchange from Obina aiso were ieee unfavorable. An equally important effoct was produced by ‘bo atetement of the Chancelior of the Fachequer, showtog that the resoarces of the home government ap pear to be ampio for the wants of tho currens year, that there is no intention to j opardize the revenue by fore. gotng any portion of the existing tea and suger duvoe—at +11 events. ontil 1870— thet there iam. present Mitlo appre- hension cf nancial diffcaities on the part of tae Mast Indie pone eG ‘and thas tho idea o' ap Kagilsh loan being m- mediately desirable on \beir behalf was altogether with- out foundation. All transactions in the shares of the Atlantic Telegraph Cempany bave ceased vail! the probavie reani'a of tbe ap- ba to the oy shall have been ascertained. ‘eepeoting the ditfloulty at Consmatinop'», on account of the Danubian Principalitios, is was, a1 i aiveady tp formed you, settled at Osborne Lord J'almereton ‘in the Commons, and Clarendon in tho Lords, apn wneed ft. Evgland apd Austria will give tn to the other Powers, and the elections will take place ig Moldavia, or at ail events, be revised and veri It is now to be seen whether Turkey wili consent to this: bu' at cam sbe do? The f Heme of general news ao — Advices from Rasgia mention that the Emperor shortly to revisit Germany, where he bas left we y end that an inierviow i then certainly take place be tween Bis Mejeaty and the Eimpercr Napoleon. Lovie Napoleon bar ordered a aifoent sitver cup from Hapcock’s, to be run me yerbia It appears thai within the last fow days @ considerable on of the £1,126,000 cue for the redemption of the dues has bees banded to the Londos agenie of he Danish government. It is onderetood that the psymenw on this account will not be remitted to Denmari bat will be retained to din }@ & portion of the Danish | ans son- tected in this country. So far, thorefore, frum cacaing inconvenience, the tanaaction is Lkely to impart ease, Since the sums, as they aro received, will moat De temporarily employed in tho élscornt ma kei Tho capita! of the Kast India Company is 20,000,060, ana wader the act of 1583, which extinguished ibe’ trating powers of the compasy, it was provided that £:1,000,000 rhould be set apari aa @ redority fund to de applied ulu- mately, with fs accumulated interes, to pay of tbe £6,000,000 of atock at the rate of 200 perceot A Perlia- mentary rotarn published to day, shows the total recetpsa on s-count of this fund up to the present time to have dec £4,282,604— namely, £2 000,000 the o ig'uai appro- lation, and £2 €94 for dividende, Taese have born inverted Im tho purabere of £806.40 onsen, and £5,509,240 reduced, mak.ug a total of £4,705,640 three per cent sock, which at tho prices of this evening woulugbe Worth 6,281,702, or wiihin £20,262 of ite coat p:ive. ITeMs, mo Loxpow, August 14, 1 Terrific Storm in Le Emptiness of re Mecrepois—Te Pheatrer—fhe Approaching Higira of Artists for United Stater, de , de. We hed last night @ most frightful storm in lordos, which lested all the evening and part of ine vight. Rain la torrents, forked lehtntng aod thunder, more anpiewsant than in the casting of the bullets scone in “Der Freye- chotz"” Metropolitan cellars are to day ‘ioodet, draice burst up, and ceilings moistened down, on the principle, no doubt, that it \1 an I! wind that blows nobody good, for brloklayers, ansisted by tholr Ivieh helps, aro gow busily engaged repairing damaged rool) and shaky chimney pota. ‘The weather, notwi'htanding this porifsction, continnes ancorfortably close. Town, save a few parting Aweriena Nien, ie in & state of empiiness, and &catnon ball lannched down Picesdiliy wockt do ‘ittle or Do damage. Nocarrisges are to be seen a Bond street erent ttrcet eu sho >ping expeditions, ani Noes row is as clear the Doth Opera Horgon aro cloned, thoagh Ttalits Opern atitt remeine ‘oes for three weeks jat the Princerses. Mr Coarles Kean snd their prety éavghier, will be week oF 80 to aly, afters vory pros percun season, t indefatigable Impresaris, Mr Wilbert Beale, will open thelr theatre wih « blaze of talen!, icc names of Grist, Albont, @ Toveant ond many more Mrs. Sirus Reeves are reorell villa and ground, quite in the style of the Arab aa t the Roya! Standard tbestre, wich Noctor Joy for eighteen nr rhts ¥ pounds a cighy— > we ton the trifilog remer would ot long to bave >a Dougine, the err} wed, tp Anan seven He \* an adie ber and Novem: 2 red the vervices of wr Ancervon and Mis Elawortby. A new end oriptoal tre prom ited. los Mathews Is playing @ y ment of a few night market teatro Ho alla for No 924, wotir( tne previous eveniog braied singer, Monaio to ory torcee e an mateur actor, as the Commodore of the Royal Yacht Club, Rear Commodore of the Royal Lon- ¢ owner of one of the prettiest and fastest Totnes day @ Dot yet Gxed when the Quees 10 te lay ibe first stone of the new Covent Garden Opera. Our Parts Correspondence. Panis, Aogoss | Te Priwipalitics Quetion—Affairs of the Chape Britich Pnbasty in PariemThe Halian 0 4 fusal of tre British Government to Oompiy mand for the Kxtradition of Maseint and . The Freich Domest: Outeiie— Madame se Adting=The File Napoloon, &., de. Hingland, as I predicted, bas had, in conse yence fh diMenliies (a the Indian peninsu's, to take ® ‘wards on the qeertion of the Pr: for « feeling of genera) unanimity was ge! dr ¢ Against the bightone of late adopted by - won. The Fnglieh Premier |s und yabiedly cae Yoriter, and both in private and in public life, wos ever nie eacapades, be gonera''y contrives to light epor BF ees. But be should not presume too far, There are syiay/ome in the distance, email to be sure—no bigger (hao ® mans hand—of a change of woather as recards We popelar reo shine (n which be hat so long) tasked, and \§ would be well if hie lordship took warning. Lord Palmerston bas boon cradied in the very swaddting clother uf raopbery, fund not & day passer but some monstrous Craik of his eariy nurtere appears. The most recent exhid'von i* we ite disowesion in Varliament relauing to the Chape of tne Bri. tigh Denbaaey in thie place, the division on wh oh bar even the Premier the most signal check be bas in bis new Parliament~ tho votes being | hum. Aa America bas Deon mentioned in this matic: \t may be inierestiny to give the partionlars in dete). Some 0” geet yeart sgn Biebop Laeormbs, Chapwie i ite F ue