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len law of universal (gre as we i i i] H ‘ ! i ff eighth article stands: (presumptively) in the eaties, its favorable recognition o° t:—“The doctrine ‘of Heaven, teach the Britigh aud American tr: ‘the Christian religion is bigh!; ef Jesus, and the doctrine of practice of virtuo and the treatment of others as our selves. Henceforth all teachers or professors of it shall No man peaceably’ following his calling without offence shail be in the least oppressed or hindered by the Chinese authorities.” Tconfess that it is with mingled pity and shame that I eontemplate the affecting spectacle of a pagan govern: ment, almost powerless in the means of resistance and feeble in the arts of war, thus humiliated, weakened and overpowered, and the top stone thus finally set on the pillar of our own inconsistency and disgrace, as a poopie im the vanguard of Christian nations, in our deal- with this race, The year in which this monument rected, in commemoration of the fiual rpetrated on the millions of ‘enough, be marked also by the death of the Kast India Company. e from the growth of the poppy has been the chief plea and prop of the opium smuggling at we failed to relinquish on the dof Christian principle will probably be wrung us by the defensive action of the Chinese govern- i The eventual eae Oe ars ition against growing opium in the eighteen pro- anal has been a remedy long available and within reach, Eambarrassed and overcome in the tive and forcign contrabandists, it is not improbable that Chinese imperial government may at lengih have sub- mitted to a termination of the struggle, an addition to tho impoverished exchequer, in the shuj duty, be preferred to the continu Jeds smuggling of tho prohibited drug along the soaboard, tbe recognized among the legally por’ mitted indigenous produce of China. It is satisfactery to know that both in the British and in the American treaties lately concluded with tho Japanese, an article exists expressly prohibiting the importation of opium; and that thus, by the humane polic: ‘negotiators, Japan, hitherto exempt from emperance, will in’all probability be saved from one class of evils which has resulted from our intercourse with Unprecedented privileges havo been recently granted to Christian missionaries within the newly opened ‘It is right that the friends of Christian missions on both sides of the Atlantic should know how much taey aro pre- eminently indebted for the Christian clement in the word- ing, to the hearty zeal, sympathy and co-operation of his Excellency W. B. Reed, ably seconded by his Secretary of jon and his Interpreter, Dr. Williams and Rev. W. A. P, Martin, names well known ia connection with the sionary work iv China. The wider opening of these Fastern regions of mission- ary labor is an animating topic on which T could glowingly enlarge, as a call to more adequate efforts, on the part of our own church. ButI confess, my lord, T have gathered lessons of moderate expectation from the fruitiessness of my past appeals for help. In the tenth year of my episcopate I behold but few signs Of any great and sustained movement of our church for the evangelization of the Chinese race, or for our entrance pon the recent missionary openings in Japan. My dear and valued fellow laborers sent out to the China missions do but scantily fill up the breaches made in the ranks of our church by disease and death. But six Charch of Eng- land missionary clergy are spread along the this extended coast, of whom two have been only six TMmonths in the country. It is indeed a satisfactory result Jaincies instituted in the Chineso communities supplied with the Trejoice also in the increasing number of laborers in connoction with our Protestant missionary ‘bodies, and the marked success which in seme cases has resulted {rom their auempts. But as to missions of our ‘burch among the Chinese, after fourteen years since my first landing on these shores I still see (with the ono ex- church missionary station of Ningpo) but ‘Mittl made and but inconsiderable results achiev- ed. I feel no despondency as to the certain foal success: of our work, as the cause of God himself. Tam sustained By the assurance that God is working out His purposes of mercy and love to our race in these passing events of the Fast; that this our fallen world shall one day become a temple worthy of its holy and beneficent Creator, and pire, now an exile from the great ‘community of Christian nations, shall hereafter participate eed outpouring of God’s Spirit upon all flesh Iness of the renewed earth “in But I deplore the want one and all, be protected. HI may possibly be 1 ‘act in the series of wrongs per China, will, singularly extinction and corporate ar Angio-Indian revenu trade in China. contest with na- of a regulated tariff Prevalence of a law- to my mind to Beo ch: cities, and the Britis ‘Means of grace. ‘ception of the le ‘which dwelleth righteousness.” of an adequate supply of laborers to enter upon these fields “white unto the harvest’’—men suited by mental habit and by bodilygstrength for this pe men whore faith has lon; yer, and whose love to Christ has been water dew of spiritual communion with God; men willing to forego (if needful) the comforts of domestic life, and ready to yieid to the possible requirements of a “pre: free and unfettered by family ties ¢ interior from place to place. ‘Once more I reiterate the appeal to the ehurch at “The harvest. truly is Bent necessity” in bei in their itinerancy in eat, but the laborers are few.’? ‘Once more I appeal to the British Christians, that while India is claiming her meed of mi ‘evangelistic help in this her day of trial ‘overlooked or forgotten in their millions reoviye less than deration and thoughit in the counsels and deliberations of our Church of England missionary committees. My Lord, my pen grows weary and my theme becomes ‘I know by experience the mental sickness of rson I can do but littic leading others to tho sympathy and ina may not be ayers, nor her four hun. eir due amount of consi: hope long deferred. ond sounding the trumpet an conflict. The goal of middle life scarce gained,I am ex- neing the effects ot climate on a shattered frame, ‘and the infirmities of advancing years. In the early af- ‘ternoon o! my course, the shades of evening are prema- turely falling and lengthening around me. appealto my younger fellow soldiers.of Christ that they desert not the standard of the c! Fast, nor allow a standard bearer to fall unsupported and ungustained in this mission battle fleld. P| ss unfurled in the far The Paris Press on our Mexican Relations, THE PRESENT CONDITION OF MEXICO—SPANISH D) SIGNS—AMERICAN INFLUENCE TO BE COUNTER- [Translated for the New Yor« Heraxn from Le Pays, J The speech delivered by her Majesty tho Queen of Spain at the opening of the Cortes touches a very difficult ate question, to which we beliove it will be interesting to recur in order to exhibit the latest stato of affairs. We mean the Mexican question. Queen Isabella, on this subject, ¢ with dignity and with moderation. For fifty years back which the first troubles )liins her position alike I known—an opoch at roke out that led to the indepen. ence of the vast empire which the genius and daring Spain—Mexico has been dis: by continved troubles, The promises and the hopes which accompanied the federative act of 1824 were of short duration, and from that epoch to the ar 1829—nt the end of which the Spaniards left dodinite- the country—the birth and death of three governments and four cobstitutions were witucssed. 1830, her position, instead of being ameliorated, has only grown worse, and of late years revolutions bave taken such acharacter that tho great nations of Karopo have During many years, it must be admitted, governments in Mexico succeeded each other without directly injuring the interests of other people, ‘When a President was overthrown by his adversary, for- as it was said, to look on and witness: the new President. instinctively respect- ed their persona and their property, as_his predecessor had done, and after a few days of stormy agitation every- nod to ita proper order. no longer managed in the same manner. ng been expended on their own subjects, Starting from ‘Deen obliged to interfere. @igners had only ‘the revolution. But to-day affairs aro Every means of depredation hav they have commenced to attack foreigners, who are gene- ally industrious and wealthy merchants, and who, conse- quently, presont largo resources for t vernors and other superior employés of the administra- ho avidity of go Such are the causes of tho latest diMcuities, To these facts must be added the onarchy which over accompavics frequent revolutions, and before which the action of the central authority is powerless. ‘under such circumstances that outrages of every kind have ben committed upon foreigners, among the number o Spanish subjects. The government of Qaeen ressed onergetic remonstances to the then Pro- eral Comonfort. After long and fatiguing nego- hey were about coming to an understanding, onfort was diemiseod. His successor did not refuse the satisfaction; he even granted it in part; but his authority being disputed, tho governors of certain provinces would not obey him,’ and ew outrages wore committed against Spanish subjects notoriously in the department of Tamaulipas and that of ‘Tho Governor of Tamaulipas, acting without instroc- an extraordinary tax on the goods of foreign merchants in Tampico, particularly those of Spaniards, This Bir'the foreign Consuls. took Consul of the United States. ¥¢ remonstrances, in which rt but Mr. F. Chase, the ‘he Jattor recognized the le- xy of that which he called a reclamation. Tho au- ities of Tampico did not rest there, and they impri- Boned several foreign merchants in the fort Panuco, that this odious conduct gave rise toa pro- ion, in which the Consuls % Prussia and Boigium took —part—a tion in which the sending of sufficient naval a8 solicited, to cause justice and right to be Fespected, A similar disoussion to that which aroso at ‘Tampico took place at Vera Cruz, and there all the Con- Suls, with the exception of the United States Consul, sue- tained again the rights of their nations, It is under these circumstances that her Majesey the Queen of Spain de- fered the words to which wo have made alertos, this grave question the Spanish government has both right and reason—is in harmony with the other Powers— and the opposition that it movts in the United States is without meaning and withont for ‘This opporition is Mexico © thpir federation, bad called by’ epocial despatch, there ina fow days. "Fe on the ifficult; 800n assume & DEW as] and ying: pose ey ‘hope it will be pacitle, hes iri The Belly Canal and the Clayton-Bulwer [Translated from the Paris Patric, Dec. 18, for the New York ) When speaking a few «ays ago of the maritime canal which is to be opened across the Isthmus of Panama, through the Lake of Nicaragua, between the Atlantic aud Pacific oceans, we stated that the execution of that scheme was placed under the guarantee of the treaty made be- twoen Great Britain and the United States on the 19th of April, 1860, and known as the Clayton. Bulwer treaty. Now, when the cutting of the Isthmus by that coummu- nication between the two oceaus occupies more and more the attention of the gavants, of the business men, and even of the governments, it is uot without interest to know the real motive which wy ied at the conclusion of that treaty, oftener invoked than suificiently known. It is therein, in that convention of quite a special character, that are resumed, in fact, the principles which regulate the liberty and tho naturalization of the interoceauic pas- in Central America, utr op Bulwer treaty, signed between the United States England, has been made ‘to facilitate and pro- tect the construction of a canal of great navigation between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and upon which they de- clare that they never can exercise any exclusive control.’ The preamble to the treaty shows even that that canal might be constructed via the Sau Juan river and the Lake of Nicaragua, to end afterwards on the Pacitic. ‘The contracting parties promise (art, 8) ‘that it any such canal shail be undertaken upon fair and equitavle terms, by any parties having the authority of the local government or governments through whose territory the same may pass, then the persons employed in makiug the Baid canal, and their property used or to be used for that object, shall be protected trom the commencement of the said canal to its completion by the governments of the ‘United States and Great Britain.» They add aiso (art. 5) that they will protect the canal when completed, ‘so that the said canal may forever be open and free, and the ca- pital invested therein secure.” When binding themzelves by such stipulations the United States and England did notforget that the maritime canal—opening a new route to commerce, treed forever from the long and gangerous navigation by Cape Horn— was to benefit all nations. Therefvre the two Powers en- gaged themselves to invite every State with which beth or either might have friendly intercourse to enter into stipulations, “to the end (says art. 5 of the treaty) that they may sbare in’ the honor aad atvan- tage of having contributed to a work of such gene- ral interest and importance.’’ Could it be doubted that Fs in her generons policy, and withont ever hoping thereon any monopoly, always ready to promote the progress of civilization, should not foruity the Claytop-Bulwer treaty with her powerful adhe- sion? To insure the neutrality of the straits created by nature or opened by the persevering us of mankind, would it not be to sustain still the principle of the freedom of the seas—tbat principle of which France has always been one of the most ardent defendera? How many otter nations are there who have an equal interest to bring to a good result the great enterprise which the Clayton- Bulwer treaty has in view? Holland, to activate her com- mercial intercourse with Japan; Spain, to shorten the dis- tance between her and the Philippine Islands; Russia, to hold a firmer hand on her settlements ia America and her colonies in Asia. As It was to be desired that no time should be lost need- Jessly without constructing the said. canal, which is toopen the sbortest maritime routes between the ports of the two hemispheres, article 7 of the treaty stipa- lates:—‘That the United States and Great Britam shall give their support and encouragement to such per- sons or company as may first offer to commence thesame, with the consent of the local authorities, and on such prin- oar as accord with the spirit and intention of the ‘eaty.”? The solemn contract entered upon at Rivas, on the Ist of May of the present your, between the sovereign and in- dependent States of Nicaragua and Costa Rica and Mr. F. Belly, in relation to the concessions of an interoceanic canal through the San Juan river and the Lake of Nicara- gua, entirely agree with all the conditions stipulated in the treaty of which we speak. That convention creates an equa! position for all the nations; it opens on an equal foot- ing to all flags the canal to be constructed, so as to answer. completely all the requirements of its destination; it only e merchandise to uniform and moderate taxes; ig, finally, stamped in tho highest degree with the char. acter which distinguishes an international work. Wo un derstand, therefore, that Lord Malmesbury did not hesi- tate to declare, inn letter written on the 11th of June, 1858, to Mr. F. Belly, that the Clayton-Bulwer treaty was applicable to the plan which he had the intention to carry fnto execution. It is thus that the canal of Nicaragua finds its political consecration in that treaty,and under tho safeguard of the rignt of nations. There onty remains now for that fruitful and glorious enterprise to take, in the order of industrial facts, the place insured to it by the importance of the, aim and the greatness of the work. ‘The Case of the Wabash, THE PROWIBITION TO FOREIGN VESSELS OF WAR TO ENTER TIE DARDANELLES. ‘Tho Minister of Foreign Affairs of Turkey has recently sent the following circular to all the legations :— To 11m Lecation of ——, ‘The 10th Rebiul Akibir, 1275. You are aware that an old custom of the Ottoman government forbids to foreign vessels the entrance of the Straits of the Dardanelles. This custom having been con- firmed by the treaty of peace made and signed in Paris on the 30th of March, 1856, it has been agreed that the men- oe of i gpa which aie ak Be. Gisposa) of She lege ions woul excepted, an passage through the Straits authorized. z In order to maintain entirely that custom, and in ac- cordance with the exception agreed upon, it is necessary ‘that the size and the strength of the men-of-war to whic! the entrance will be granted ghould be known, as they have to be clearly mentioned iff€he Takrir (memorandum) to be made to the Sublime Porte. Inviting you to observe this rule in the demands of authorizations to be made in future, I reiterate to you the assurance of my great regard. MEHEMED FUAD. Obituary. SUICIDE OF ONE OF THE HUTCHINSON FAMILY. The telegraph sends us meager accounts of the suicide, on the 11th inet., of Mr. Judson J. Hutchinson, one of the members of the Hutchinson family, once so popular here. It is some fifteen years since, says the Post, this band of singers, consisting of the three brothers—Jadson, John and Asa, and their sister Abby—first appeared here, A brother, Jesse, since dead, was their financial manager. Their concerts were at that time as much the rage as the Opera js now. Good mosic was not so frequently heard in New York then as at the present day, and the simple quartettes and songs of the Hutchinson, with the accom- paniment of an asthmatic serephine, were euthusiastically admired. They went to Great Britain, where thoy were well received, and a long biography of the family, written by Mary Howitt, appeared in Howitt’s Journal. The: travelled all over the United States, until the marriage of Abby, and her retirement to private life, broke up the roupe. The brothers, however, obtained the services of another foprano, made a visit to California, became followers of various isms, and interlarded their concerts with abolition songs and phrenological speeches. Of late years they have not attracted such good audiences; public taste bas changed, and the Hutchinson Brotbers have not recently appeared in public. ey made considerable money by their concerts, and feveral years ago they built a curious house near the town of Lynn, Massachusetts. Directly behind this town rises a bold, precipitous granite hill, known fn the vicinity as the ‘High Rock.”? On the slope of this, and near the top, is perched the home of the Hutchinsons. It is an odd affair, of wood, painted brown, and of a nondescript style of architecture, It commandsa noble view of Lynn and various adjacent towns, while the peninsula of Nahant is seen nearly in front, stretching far out into the ocean. This house has been closed during the absence of the Houtchinsons on their concert tours; but the public had free access through the grounds fo the summit of the High Rock, which is often visited by strangers and others desirous of enjoying the beautiful prospect. Mr. Hutchinson committed suicide by banging himself, being probably deranged at the time. Mrs. Patton, {Avery John and Asa are all that are now left of the once mous Hutchinson family. The Last Hours of Henry L. Ellsworth, In this week's New York Observer we find the following particulars respecting the religious life and closing days Of the late benefactor of Yale College, Henry L. Eils- worth :-— Tn the year 1856 Mr, Fileworth found for the first time that his constitution was sinking under the weight and multiplicity of his labors. He therefore determined to give up the active pursuit of business, and remove his residence to hie native State. In execution of this plan ho came on from Indiana in the month of April, 1868, and lo- cated himself permanently fn the eastern’ part’of Now Haven, Conn, THe visited Lafayette Inte ia the fali for th» adjustment of his affurs, and returned to New Haven about the middle of December, A fowsdlays after ho was ftroek with a paralytic shook, which» howover, did not deprive him of his consciousness or the full possossion of his mental powers. During the ton romuining days of his life he appeared to be much of the time in prayer, He expressed his entire submission to the will of God, and his trust in the merits of Chriat as the sole ground of his hope, and died without a struggle, on Monday, Decom- ber 27, 1858. Mr. Kllaworth was a generous and consistent supportor of reiigious institutions, under tho peculiar embarrass. ments to which they aro liable in our new settlements, ‘Throughout the whole of Northern Indiana ho will long bo Tomembered asa public benofnetor. Mr, Ellsworth lost his first wifo in 1847, and at tho ox. iration of about six = was married to Miss Marietta Bartlett, of Guilford, Conn., who survived ouly about two ears. ‘Subsequently ho was married to Miss Catharine ©, mith, danghtor of the Rev, David Smith, D. D., of Dur- ham, Conn., who remains to lament his loss, Angansas Srare Denr—Mr. 0. F. Hemingway faye the New Orleans ne, has introduced into t House of Representatives a resolution declaring the ju ners of tho State debt, acknowledging the obligation of the Ptate to pay it, and directing the Committee on Ways aud Means to report a bill to provide for the pry. mont of the interest, and for the principal of the whole and from sho jealousy ' stag debt when it shal) begome due, NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14. 1859 lit a ttn el . CO ang ‘The Boston to Mr. ATLURE CURTIS GOLD MINBS—DISTRESS (Jere. Clemens’ Ogg a ES eter pe rom the London ier of tha The sorew steamship Alps, which arrived here on | Its ‘he postion of tings, Wednesday, the 12th instant, Drought us files of Austra- m of the Union aad the har, Nan papers dated at Sydney on the 12th and Melbourne wae Ree bere, 00 the 16th of October last. iy era hin are ‘The papers contain an interesting résumé of the events tiny io in the colony, the main points of which have been already pepe to mem- published:— if i i il i Melbourne Argus, Oct. 16. for aidand comfort from. Britain. At that ime (hee is anim; 1 pany ‘and enjoyed to cathe alge rm for gers me ciao | Bee sence ethno o the Sy: on the - for by Mm to ment to take prompt and measures to reecue | knowledge of Mr. ‘and the embassy, dis- 10,000 human "beings, without means, on a mere sheep ‘by the sovlnees whieh ite disunion scheme encoun. px Where no habitations save the shepherds’ huts tered, bleo by the fate of, Be dames antes to Ouba 1. Mon }, Graham & Co. have received af- Mr, Calhoun died early in 1851, and it is well known vices by the lagt mail, of the shipment of 868 alpacas from | that for months before he had no hope of surviving that Noleeraien, downs, Melbourne. The | session of Congress. There is no man in America who had a better opportunity of knowing, or who did know, of his views and opinions from the Ist of December, yy than the editor of : i t 2 iu bee 60,010 ounces fur week of the previous with him im the Senate year. The trie eo of the first quarter of the | ber, in his room, and even while he was upon his year was 41,925 ounces; second, 45,290 ounces; of dealhbed. The members of that mess wero all (he third, 48,235 ounces. quantities ahow a@ pro- | his personal and political friends, and we do not gressive aprovement during the year. weekly ave- | believe that he had a it upon public affairs Tege of 1857 wa847,670-—an amount which willscaroely be | that he did not freely and communicate to us. reac uns year, re Orr (now bj H Wallace and There hage not been any important shipments of gold | Woodward, of South Carolina; Hubbard, Harris and Bow- 8 work uuti! today, when 27,211 ounces were cleared | den, of Al ;, Venable, of N , aad Morse, for Exgand in the Victoria. via ‘The shipments last vuigiana. All of these gentlemen, except two—Harris week were:— and Bowden—are now living, and we venture to assert that each one of them will he never heard from Mr. Calhoun’s Kps @ syllable aboutsecking British aid, or That he did By the Kent, for London... Queen of the Seas, to Calcutta, 4,096 | consulting in any way British statesinen. Vessels to Fort Curtis...... “sh 42 | look to disunion as possible is certain—that he did believe Previous sbipments, corrected’ ‘by eomparizon that the Southern States had been wronged and oppress- with the cntries passed at the customs,..,....1,847,971 | ed, and would continue to beso, admits of no question; but he believed and said, everywhere and at all times, Retabrsitiieas is 1,949,795 He ihr to bales, ee it pip py : " rights, maint te own ini jeuce, That Or 81. tons, 4 owl, 3 qra., 7 Ibs. 11 ounces troy; the | 1¢ could contemplate the vile treason of making value of which, at £4 per ounce, amounts to £7,799,180. The total for the same period of iast gent war 2,087,657 ounces, or 86 tons, 19 cwt., 2 qrs., 18 Ibs., 1 ounce troy; the value of which, ut £4 per ounce, amounts to £8,087,557, ‘We subjoin a table, showing the yield week by week, for three months ended to-day. In tho last column the totals for the corresponding week of 1857 are given. The quantities, it will be seen, are loss this year than last, but not to an extent which requires avy explanation:— Total Ounces, 1857. terms with a British Minister while the South remained in the Union, and when no steps had been taken to dissolve it, is refuted by his whole character, by every act of his life, and every syllable that ever fell from his ‘lips in our hearing. So far from thinking of a British alliance atthat day, we know that he wag determined to exhaust every eflortto Dring about a semlement oo terms that he be- lieved to be just and reasonable. That he entertained littlehope of obtaining those terms is probably true; but he felt that it was demanded by his own fame, by a just let week. Ist week. regard for the character of the Southern States, aud by a go“ | 1 proper anxiety for the manner in which the transactions Bt of that period should go down to history, that no means Oh of) .. should be left untried to obtain justice tn the Union, be- bho. fore any steps were taken to dissolve it, Acting in this th «| spirit, he requested us to call upon Mr. Webster and bold ith a free conference with him upon the threatening state of Stn affairs. He urged Mr. Webster in our hearing to come w Oh the rescue of the Union, and it is beyond all doubt that it 10th“ . ‘was at his suggestion that Mr, Webster tirst contemplated nth“. delivering that great speech on the 7th of March, 1850, lath“, which electrified the whole nation, and tended so power. Bue , 13th fully ‘o quiet the existing agitation. And now a miserable penny-a-liner dares to assert that during this time he was Total, oe < Total. eee e704,769 | Carrying on secret negotiations with a foreign Power, and seeking an alijance with Great Britain afver the man- In the weekly circular of Messrs. William Clarke & | er ‘of the, Hartford Convention, “Worse. still, he Sona, a table of tho monthly shioments of the metal is i meri iste Fiven since tho first working of the mines, which js inte. | DAMeS Abtot Tawrence aa the American Minister Testing as showing the yleld month by mouth. Thequan- | Te abbot’ Lawrence ever gave any countenance to tities for the current year bear favorable comparison with | the charge he was either the dupe of Lord Palmer SS ‘ BiB ac the remarkable one of 1853, We omit ston, or he isa foul slanderer of the dead. There never 7 1g 1852 1852, 1853. 1854. was a deputation of Southern disunionists in Londoug buden. "G ‘Gunes Ounces, | Southern gentlemen no doubt met there in their traveles anh junc Suet, Gamers, Ounees. 1 and no doubt they conversed openly of the politics a8 uy. ae crag 78,148 | their native land; but no Southern deputation ever went to Tey. eo 3pg78 Se London for disunion purposes, and Mr. Calhoun never, by farch.... . 5 232,011 | Word or deed, sanctioned such a movement. If Abbot Lawrence or Lord Palmerston were both put upon the wit- neze stand, and both should swear distinctly and positively tothe story, we would sooner believe that they had laid the weight of perjury upon their souls than that Johu C. Calhoun was the mean spirited craven he is here repre- sented, and that Southern men, acting under his advice; crawled to the foot of the British throne for protection be fore they dared to commit @ contemplated treason. The story is too monstrous for oven abolition belief. It never ‘would have been entitled to notice but from the importance itderives from the sanction of Abbot Lawrence's name; and if that gentleman docs not wish his memory (as long as it lives in history) to be stigmatised as that of a cold- blooded slanderer of ove of Amorica’s greatest dead, he will promptly give the lieto the malignant accusation. (Mr. Abbot Lawrence died soon after his return home. | ‘Mr. Calhoun has gone. His fame is now the property of ‘the nation. Many of his opinions were no doabt errone- ‘ous, but they will descend to posterity, in the language of Mr.’Webster, “‘ under the ganction of a great name.” No: thing that was low or mean ever came near his heart while living, and “gets ag ny ewe Vag peters | of = glory are cl ut lefer ashes from ahs byenalilp slanderer, who would aig torn saToraB. Soult 2720,086 country Sand wot trosnon only; buts oringlag,coweraly country; an only, but @ ing, coward! SRTOHARy 8 OOS AEE: 8,TRP AES. treason, at which tho instincts of a siave would revolt. 4 ‘The revenue returns of the colony for the year and quarter ending on the 80th September have been published | A Kentucky Planter Selling His Da hter. *by the goveronsent. The total rovenue for the year [From the Bucyrus (Ohio) Journal, Jan. To, amounted to £2, it. £2,993,696 for the cor- A moving incident came to our knowledge last week, ding ', 1897, showing | which we lay before our readers. Wesuppress names (or @ decrease of £4, Fae ehonnhion, £636,311, against £873,615 for the corresponding Metin Near Louisville, Ky., lives a planter of wealth and stand- ‘a decreaso of £237,304. paring the two | ing. He was of @ hundred negroes, and he years is @ marked decrease in several items of the | was noted for his thrifty, money making disposition. He customs revenue, indicative rather of health than other- | had never been and was an incorrigible bachelor wise, Spirits, wine and beer have contributed £72,801 | of fifty. His was managed by a young lady of less by} the latter than the former period, aud | about twenty, his daughter by a quadroon, whose com- tobacco £22,087 more. In the receiptsat the gold fields } plexion was lighter by half than his, aad in whom the negro blood was scarcely visible. The mother died ten there is a decrease of £5,729 in miners’ rights, and of £3,411 in the leases of auriferous land; and an increase of £2,367 in business licenses. In the revenue derived from the sale of crown lands there is a decrease of £16,- 143. Under the head of licenses there is an increase of £43,986 for asseasment on stock, of £10,266 for other oc- cupation licenses, and £5,728 for these of spirit. merchants ago, leaving her daughter with her father’s solema Mat thas the should be educated andyhould live aga ‘woman rather than as a slave, and that she should pass as his daughter, as she was. planter gave tis promise, because he had been really attached to the dying woman, and was greatly attached to her and his beantiful and brewers. There is a decrease in auctioneers’ licenses | child, And so she grew up, radiantly beautiful, receiving of £1,707, in publicans’ of £2,381, and in ail others of | a reasonable education, all that her father could give, aad £5,665. The postal servicg shows an increaso of £12,208. } in time took the management of his household. sho never Under the head of fees ig an increase of £4,863, aad under that of fines and forfeitures a decrease of £2,229. The miscellaneous revenue is pretty evenly balanced as regards the total, but some of the items vary considera- bly. There is a decrease of more than one half in the unclaimed amount accruing from the sales of impounded cattle. There is a considerable increase in the rates affuct- ing the immigration of Chinese. e electric telegraph department shows an increase of knew that there was any negro blood in her veins, and never dreamed that she was a slave. Last fall a series of misfortunes overtook the planter. His house was burned down and in it the notes, booxs aad. papers that a large portion of his fortune. His crops failed to a great degree, and some heavy specula- tions in which he was engaged resulted disastrously, Ad- ded to all this, he bad lost heavily at play, the besetting sin of Southern gentlemen, and had completely exlausted all his ready means, and found himself in the terrible situ ation of having more money to pay than he could possit raise in a given time. He applied to his attorney for counsel in his extremity. The attorney, after examining the situation of his affairs, advised him to sel! off a portion of his negroes. The plant. er objected strenuously—tirst, objecting to the sale of negroes: and secondly, that his force was barely suiliciant to work his plantation. But after full deliberation he found this to be the only alternative, and sorrowfully con sented. A list was made out, and overy head that could ve possibly spared was put down. After all was done, with the most favorable prices for t! fell five thousand dollars short of the sum. £5,405. ‘The quantity of land offered by the governtnent was very small, whi'e, during the third quarter of 1857, it was considerably above the average. The only other ‘source of revenue, which a comparison of the two quarters brings prominently under notice, is that of the Customs department, which shows a decrease ot £9,538 in the du ties on spirits; of £3,996 on wine; of $12,942 on beer, and of £0,604 on the export duty on gold; and an increase of £0,801 on the import duty on tobacco, and of £4,167 on Bugar and molasses. e number of persoas who arrived at Melbourne by the seaboard during the past week was 259, 0° whom 25 were from the United Kingdom ; 9 from the United States; 1 from San Francisco, and 224 from the Australian colo- The attorney remarked quietly that he had not included nies. The departures are estimated at $2,600, chiefly for | all that could he spared, Port Curtis. The net addition to the population by the “Thave put down all I can dispense with,”’ replied the seaboard has been 11,992 for the year. planter. # name in tho ed tw t I would In order to convey an idea of the progress the group of Austaglian colonies has made in population, we may men- tion that in 1851 the numbers were:—New South Wi 197,168; Victoria, 77,345; South Australia, 66,538—Total, 841,051, In 1867 the numbers were:—New South Wales, 305,487; Victoria, 460,000; South Australia, 109,917—Total, 875,404. Adding 80,000 for Tasmania, and 50,600 for New Zealand, it appears that there are now ‘upwards of 1,000,000 inhabitants, nearly all of European origin, in the Australian colonics, ‘The returns of the declared values of goods entered in- wards and outwards at the port of Melbourne continue to exhibit most favorable resuits, when compared with those of last year. ‘The value of the exports is in excess of that of the imports of the current year by £1,575; while, during the former period, the balauce of imports over exports was £1,050,011. The accounts relating to trade and customs for the year 1857 have been pregented'to both houses of the Legisla ture. The total revenue collected by this department amounted to £1,688,05208. 11d. An extra number of the Insolvency Circular was issued Yesterday, containing a résumé of insolvency business for the year ending the 30th of mber. Five bundred that period, “T do not see Mary the housekeeper Tst,’” replied the lawyer. “ She, if of person, would make up the defic for her myself.”” ‘At any other time the planter would haye taken the suggestion ag an insult; but necessity isa hard master and he grasped at the idea, and before an hour the tran: action was closed. It troubled him not a little to disc! the matter to her, but the fear of bankruptcy and ru drove him to it. "The poor girl's horror and distress ms be imagined. She had known nothing but bappines now was to be plunged into the deopest and most hoy misery. She had been gold, and was then the soul and body, of one who purchased her merely gratification of ‘his lusts. The idea was too horrible, and she ewooned, remaining almost delirious for several days. ‘There was another upon whom the intelligence cam: with crushing weight. A junior partner ina produce house in Louisville had frequentiy visited the planter’s house on business, and, struck with the beanty and intelligence of the supposed ‘daughter, had become enamored, aud after prosecuting bis suit a proper time had declared his pas- sion, and unknown to the father the two had botrotted themselves. A® soon as possible, after her father had told her her fate, she despatched a messenger to him, stating the facts, and imploring him to save her from tho doom that awaited her. Though thundorstruck at the intelli. gence that his af bride was a slave, and had just Toe New Fisnina Vesseus ry Guovcesrer, | deen sold to a fate worse than doatb, like a true maa he ‘Mass.—The Gloucester wh gives a list of forty-two | determined to rescue her. That uight he saw her, and a schooners and three boats which were enrolled in the dis. | plan was formed for flight. . trict of Gloucester during the year 1858. They present an The day she was transferred to tho possossion of her aggregate tonnage of 3,546 tons and 66.95ths. This is an | purchaser they fled, and in due time arrived at Cincinnati, Increase of eightoen schooners and 1,549 85 tons over the | where they were married. Our hero obtained an inter: amount enrolled in 1867, or about seventy-five per cent. | view with one of the agents of the underground railroad This is remarkable when we take into consideration the | located in that city, who immediately telegraphed instruc- fact of the general stagnation of business resulting from | tions to the different agents along the Kno to keep strict the breakdown of 1857. Of theae vessels thirty-one were | watch, aud if women-catchers were on the watch at any built in Essex, three in Gloucester, three in Annisquam, | point to telegraph back, and give the fugitives timely no- two in Newburyport, one fn Satisbury’, one in Marblehead | tive, that they might leave the train. Accordingly they and one in East Boston, Of late years the size and cost of | started, purchasing tickets for Crestiine. fishing vessels have greatly increased. This was necesea: In the meantime the Inwyer, a8 #00n as ho discovered ry from achange in the fishing grounds, vory few fish | his lose, had commenced active measures to recover it. now being taken along our shores; but perhaps they have | He had no diMeulty in tracing them to Cincinnati, and become more expensive now than profitable, The new | none whatever in ascertaining that their destination was Gloucester vossols Inst year avernged nearly eighty five | Crestline. But having arrived several hours aftor their tons, and their average cost was five thousand dollars, | ‘departure, he was obliged to content himself with telo- giving a total valuation of more than two hundred thou: | graphing to Crestlige to the proper officers to arrest them sand dollars invested in the business in one year. In fish- | st thet place. But, unfortunately for bis prospects, the ing Gloucester now leads, and seems determined to intended arrest got wind, and when the train reached centrate its energies in that one pursuit. As a general | Golien, twocitigens of that place stepped into the cer, thing It is an unprofitable business; but while it is unpro. | and a conversation of afew moments ensued, in the low- fitable for the most part to men engaged in it, a floot of | ost kind of whispers, at the close of whichsthe four left three or four hundred vessels brings a great ‘amount ot | the car A in waiting, and in two hours the money annually into a place, as the three or four thou. | fit fugitive and her husband were domictied in the house sand men employed expend most of their money in that | of one of our wholesouled farmers, near Bucyrus, who port, white two-thirds of thom, perhaps, do not belong | bas long taken pleasure in helping fugitives on their way there, This renders the business profitable to the town, | to the Canadian Canaan. though the ital invested When the train on which they embarked reached Crest- wet dote wolves th acne cose, eet, Fey Sloutas. | line, the officials were considerably chagrined at not find- ter is one of the most progressive towns in Bssex or tho | ing the fugitives, and more so when they learned that sho wealth. Having now «almost the isito popu- | had been within four miles of them. lation for a city, it has perhapa inthe inet tte ie thoes {| __Atter a lapse of two weeks they ventured a move, and tin and thirty-nine schedules were filed during involving liabilities of. £1,195,213, and assets of £632,220; Years had ag great a relative increase of buildings aad | Went to Detroit by way of Sandusky city, and without Population as any other town in tho county, Wo are elnd | 8 “ar Eso the Canadian shore, They are now re- it is 80, for no people deserve it more, Heavy Vervict—The case of Cunn against Beach, an action institu'ed in Cincinnati for the recovery ‘Martin Rurns’, corner of Forty.second of for alleged malpractice, was torminated by a | jy; at ‘Verdict of $15,000 for the plaintif. Tho amount of damages | PAtay avenue, Op Arilay evening, a teat pasinens, By claimed $75,000, and it having been permitted to | orde: JAMES: GUAGAN, Captain. r. come in as a part of the plaintiff's evidence that the de. F. L Seanmay, Orderly Sergeant. fondant was worth $150,000, the jury, having been oot | some py pn to mulet him in a liberal tithe of the SEGARS AND TOBACCO. fom, All Medical witnesses concurred in the opinion Aait . ~ TT ere * AOHASERS GAN PROUURA WARIXING tbat the treatment of the fracture in tho fir place wae 0 | Cece Re ea ioe een skilfal and improper, and that the amputation was a uschery. f I u " bungling piece of bi An examination is solicited, La Rormane aha $4 por thow. Te PERSONAL. e SOMONE. ne nr OD ARMA ATHERE BAS BERN A LETTER POR YOU IN 4 yo qua FP st fee for more than two weeks. NFORMATION WA SARAH OLYNES, BY her broth deka Gade of alway Toland. Any infor mation of bo would be thankful ‘aiaaion og to ‘RS. MARIANE DOL EIERY, WIFE OF IGNA- taus y, i» hereby invited to call at the Consa- Gene's, of Kussia, t reseive formation concerning tate her. N R. 8C+. OMAN BOROH )WITCH, Ux ed FRIENDS for iim, is requested by his relatives in Busia w send hi address to'the Consulate ‘a of Russia, pre by eee gl CAN ya my Pend NRAR- i sow anaes Seinen ees lo are, wie pense as jerstaud it; certainly no was fitended, Tam aieored' tha the Hepes af ibe ia wil reader HOMAS WM MIDDLETON, BY SENDING HIS AD- T areas to box 453 Fost office, will hear of an oid friend. THE LECTURE SEASON, (A MEOTORE OW ROBERT BOR Will be, delivered betoce tra tase cn of th n ore. the clan Yor, by HENRY WakD Beecwne ‘Al the Cooper fontientn jan. 5 ‘Doors open’ e Popeneene Cbd, sng pt ly. nhTn Soeieaee jeta 50 cent ch; two ticl admi ono adie, bu a oenlie eet itting @ gentleman mod jets to members of the cb and at th: cipal botele and music stores tu New York. duwtelya’ and Jersey City. RICHARD OOCHRANE, Secretary, URING MY ABSENCE FROM Brandeis & Co, are authorized atiomey. New York, Oct.9, 1858, zo MONTGOMERY, Collecting and INDEPENDENCE, JACKSON COUNTY, MI! will collect claims and forward proceeds by express or draft; will make inv of Kastern Cy the name at Western interest; will pay taxes give ioformosiion ag to titles, ke, Keterences A.B. Henley, en. Ind. Beh. Sonthern Bank, of St Louis; W.S. Stone, Pres Ind. Sav, Inetu.; U. Turner, Sunker, David Waldo, Ea Independence, Mo Woods, ©! &Co.,8t Louis; ” Price & Co., Philadelphia, ECTURFS BEFORE RUTGER’S INSTITUTE.—FOURTIT lecture in the course hy Dr. &. Hf. Chapia- “430 lumbus’—this (¥riday) evening, at Market street chureh ‘7. L. Cuyler) Lecture to commence at $ o'clock. admi 25 cents; obtained at the door, HENRY M. PIERCE, Principal. IGNORA WHITE MARIO WILL LECTURE ON Mihustrious Italian Women, on Saturday sfteronor, tan. 15, at 1 o'clock, at Clinton Hall, Asior place. “amiasion 5) crate MAF6R's OFFICE, VEW YORE, JANUARY 13, 1g, S AnD. — My sienian, having [ll oe BYE and circular purporting to have been issued bj re and managers of ‘an tnstttntion therein entitled isthe American Union for :nventors and Exhibitors, and to which my nameds attached as one of the %oard of Momigers of the Ameri- Inventors, Thereby intorm the public that my ved on said handbiiie aud cireniar without my KBOW- Jedge anc consent, and that I have no connection whatever with said institution. DANIEL F, TIE! 10 LECTURE COMMITTEES.—MR. J. W. R. DICKENS, late lecturer to the princioal institutions of England, 1a now makiog arrangements for the delivery of his povular fectares bana through the Eastern States. ‘Adiress 72 Henry street, N. THE BALL SEASON. ITY CUARD BALL. GRAND MILITARY AND CIVIC SOIREE. Th of the we Bal NEW YORK WiTY GUARD ‘Will take place at the ACADEMY OF MUSIC, ON TUESDAY EVENING, Jan. 18, 1809. DUDWORTH’S UNRIVALLED ‘BAND Of more than ETS T ILLABKS, admitiing a gentleman and ladies, may be obtained of the members, and at the PRINCIPAL MUSIC STORES AND HOTELS. DANCING ACADEMIRS, DODWORTH'S . DANCING ACADEMI#S, No, 806 Broadway, New York, 6.187 Moniague place, Brooklyn. Now open for the sesson. Mr. DODWORTH hus the pleasure, of informing his former 8 Ubet the “Empire Quadride” menuooed as the new Annee of this season in Parla, isthe "Evergreen spire und rile” that was taught last season at his academies, ant pub liabed last seneon by HL. . Dodworth, No. 6 Astor niaos UMAR’S CHEAP DANCING ACADEMY, 267 BOWERY, Lessons $1 per month, Mondays, Wedaes!tys, Tauraiaya and Saturdays. Ladies’ afternoon classes, Wednesdays and Saturdaye, at4 o'clock. At 8 o'clock soiree. Admittance 25 cents, Private lessons 50 cents, i LOST AND FOUND. 0G LOST.—A LARGE BLACK NEWFOUNDLAND, ¥ ith some white upon him; left the Merchants’ stables, % West,Twenty-ninth street, on Sunday, Jan 9. Fiv be paid by returning bim to the above stable. Answers to the name of Nero. T OG Los?.—STRAYED FROM THE ADVERTISER ON ‘Wednesday evening, « bull slut; answers to the name of Bull; white brown spots, pointed face, brown over ony nd white the other. The tinder will be liberally rewarded by re- turping her to 169 Kim street, New York. Lose rrom NO. 795 BROADWAY, A MOUSE colored English greyhound slat, answering te the name of Fly. A Mberal reward will be paid for her delivery to Bayre, 795 Broadway. O8T—ON WEDNESDAY EVENL ink victorin NING, JAN. 12, A LADY'S im! e, im going from Eighteenth street through ‘Third avenue, Twenty-first, Twenty-secont and Twenty-third streets, to Madison aventie, corner of Twenty sixth street, ‘The finder will be suitably rewarded by leaving it at 147 Eaai Bighteenthstreet, ars will NIC NOTICE —THE MEMBERS OF INDEPE:! ent Lodge So. 155. F. and A M.. terd the lodge rooms, Masonic Temple, on Friday. January at 12 0’elock M., to pay the last tribute of respect to oar ceaged Urotber, Louis Thrall. The members of the fraternity in general are respectfully invited to attend the funeral. By order of. JOHN KUSH, Master, Jonn W. Dantry, Secretary. Hk SONS AND (Dati TRRS OF THESPIA.—THE object of this order is to afford mutual good fellowship in the amisemen 8 of the drama, and lo useet kes members in en- profession of the nage. ‘Those desiring to join the order address M, W. G, M., Herald offica, BE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE MACHPELAH CRME- ham, New Jeryey,_ will be r tery Association of New Durl held in ihe leeture room of Turd seformed Presb: eburch, Waverley place, New York, on ‘Tuesday, the 18th fort, a7 velock F. M.,'wheu the nsual election for trastees will ‘twke piace. H. GLASSFORD, President, O CONTRACTORS.—SEALED PAOPOSALS FOR THE construction of & bleck of about five acres im extent to be riten Bay, ata point known and described o0 & hap issued by the Harbor Commiasioners of the State of New York, Jan. 27, 1867, ag the Old Orchard Shoal, will be received Ly days from date at the office of the Commissioners lor uarantine Station, 23 William street, for thirt the Removal of the where Tinns and speclications eau be acen between the Bours Ofit A.M, and 20, M. By urder of the Board. Naw Youn, Dee. #1, ‘GRO. BALL, Chairman, 5 WORTH OF POSTAGE STaMes: WANTED — is) Bought tn small and large quantities. THOS. H. STILWELL, 122 Pulton street, N, ¥, MISCELLANEOUS. NINSTANTANEOUL Salt DYE.—OCR PREPARA- AA" sion the eheapest in the world. PROFES®OR GEOKGE’S HATR DYK ie entirely cifferevt from tei other hair dye in nse It is en- rely free from ail injurious ingredients, can be applied at aa: soe and ee a the gloss of the moat delicste hair. It joce uot case that dr> appearance ao generally produced b; most bair dyes, ‘The time required for , WHISEERS, MOUSTACHE AND EYE BROWS fa buts few minutes For LaDIES' AND ORNTLEMEN’S HAIR muffictenttime t apply the dye. It ts the ‘safest and most con veolent” hair dye in use; put ap in “ono bottie,” ther-oy avoiding any milstekes arising from the use of two or three separaie liquids; and any “desired color” can be produced, LIGHT BROWN TO A JET BLACK, restoring “tray hair” to its oricinal color. It wil!'not fade or wash ont, and willleeve the hair soft and perfectiy natural. “George's bair dye” is ‘CHEAPEST HAIR DYR If THE WORLD. Only ‘thirty seven cents a bortle.” Soild at'thedrug store 306 Grand oon, syd ba Agents—Wre. aon 176 Fulton street, vo; Livingston, drug! ‘and 244 Grand ttreet, Williamsbusy tis RNOLD’S FARM MILL—THE CHRAPEST AND MOST economical mill ever offe to the public. It combmes: three machives in one, viz:—Corn mull, grindia; ‘Ane: corn sheller, on a “arge scale, and corn com crushes “TREADWELL « Ht pete No. 25) Pearl street; LIDGEWOOD% OO., No. 9 Gold street. ba ROLb OF LETTERS CLOSELY Ltt ‘ad. ‘The finder will be Ifberally rewarded b; arese at the Feral! often, directed to Fe. We ee Uberally rewarded by leaving it at 94 Bast OST—ON WEDNESDAY, THE 12TH, GOING FROM Thirty-second street and Third avenue to Liberty street, a jocket, containing the picture of a gentleman. ‘The finder will be Thirty-second st. OD LIVER OIL. ¥ aia bet a bags OTL, ‘or medicinal purp ported tn bottles ‘from Lofoden, Norway (lat. 09 deg. nord), can be had of TH HAVER OATES 62 Pine street, New York, agent for P. KM ie e- SU deinite aaoaie Menmake rete a. W, De LaVergne, Welle & 0o., .. T. Green, New York; Henry H. Dickinson, B: ; Joba J. Bocrisba nd thee Genego ee some Ben Phy ad itpe A COACH ON TUFSDAY, JANUARY 11, &e. The finder will receive $3 ‘a bundle at shirts, x: REWARDS. OTTO L TT CTE ASOT TOOT O OEE 2 REWARD—LOST, ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, from 113 Third avenue, a small flax colored slut, with black ears. The finder will confer a favor by returning ‘hart the above number. She is valuable only aga pet. tween haif past 8 and 9 o'clock. a gold locket, about sizeof a haif dollar piece, in going from East Twenty-se- venth street down Lexington avenue to Twenty-first street. and in front of the Gramercy Park to Twentieth street, down north side of Twentieth street across Third avemie about hall a block. The finder whl receive the above reward by leaving the locket at 65 East Twenty seventh street, or at 49 Chambers ttreet, up stairs. 6) REWARD.—LOST, JAN, 13, A PAIR OF CORAL ) earrings. The finder, by leaving the same at Dempsey 52 Burling slip, will receive §3 $2 REWARD.—LOST, ON THURSDAY MORNING, BE- & Fargis’, 601 Broadwa; reward and thanks 0; the loser. 5 REWARD.—LOST, ON TURSDAY, NTH fing down to Bleeker street, in a Fifth or in Bleecker street, a small will receive the above reward 86 West street. REWARD—LOST, ON THE 12TH INST., IN A FUL tou avenue car, between Fuiton terry and Piset street, ‘an old pocket wallet, containing $38 in bills, $5 50 in gold, $1 50 in silver, a elnster pin, vest book and several papers of ne con- scquence to any one but the owner. ‘Tho finder will receire the above reward by gitat 152 Frontstreet, new York, or 81 Fleet street, Brooklyn. W. G. MERRILL. 1.0 REWARD —L08T, ON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, in going from the Krie Raflroad cars at fersey City w the ferry, or on the bout, a lady’# porte monnaie, containing ‘a small sum of gued by Devereux, T: Co. of $120 or SL da few other papers. The above re- ward will be paid on leaving the same with contents at the Merchants’ Hotel, Coruaundt street, INST, IN a ve pearl opera Fass othe ander y returning it to Chas. Spear, SG () REWARD “STOLBN, ON TUESDAY, JANUARY 20) AT Yash: trom #16 Secon’ avenue.ta gold hasting aes ; U. Perrigaux maker, 3 685, Loc! 08% 12 me 10 irginia Pauline Duling; also, a gold chain. ‘er will return the same to the above address or to 133 to Hugh Kelly, will recetve the above reward. ho Bower 20) REVARD “LOST, ON THE NIGHT OF THe 11TH inst., @ gold hunting cage watch and anoke chain, The watch is’ No. 30, J. Beckman maker and a doable cross ev raved on outside of cases, Call at65 Cnatham street, room No. 1, third floor. )R REWARD—LOST OR STOLEN, A GENTLE. DLe) man’s single stone diamond breastpin, set in gold. ‘The above reward will be patt on recovery of the property and positively no questions asked. JAMES H. GOADBY, No. 2 Broaaw: SHO) RENAL A DIAMOND CLUSTER RING Host OU) “on Monday atternoon, between 12 and 2o'elook, on ‘al strect or Broadway, between Greene street and Ubsell & Pierson's, or in a Knickerbocker stage, Apply at 18 Vesey OQ REWARD.xLOst, ON SATURDAY, JAN. 8. A i coat and carpet bag, containing about $500 in we. braska Bank bills and deeds and bonds for deeds for 1,70)actes of swamp and school lands in Wisconsin, of 20 poasibie tse to any one but the owner. ‘The above proserty was entrusted to ihe care of a person unacquainted with the city, and left, as he Alleges, somewhere In, Twentieth sireet, but ho has forgorten Where. Whoever will return the said cout, carpet bag and.con- tents. to the subscriber, at 625 Hudson sireot, shail receive the above reward. W. i. JONES, POLITICAL. RAL COMMITIEE— n adjourned meeting of ‘will be held on Friday evening, rder of V. FOWLER, Chairman, J EMOCRATIO REPUBLICAN @ pec many Hall, Jan. 13, 1560.~- ihe members of this Soman fe , at 73g O'clock. | By o1 the 14th inst, at 7s is Xe AIk GERMAN DEMOCR ATI CENTRAL CLUB OF THR T Year 1869 met on Wednesday evening last in the Union Assembly Rooms, and organ uy electing t tlemen for the respective ofices:—Anthony U Authony lickhof, Dan, Catoir, Nicholas Fischer Schlamp, Vice Presidents; Dr.’ Phil. Merkle, Sec Triede, Assistant Secretary; Eugene A. Secretary. ANTHONY Dr. Pat. MERKue, Seeretary. TH WARD REGULARS, WILL MEST THIS (PRE QO May) evening, atthe usw ttme and place. Punctual Attendance ts requested, a8 business of importance will be transacted, WILLIAM McCONKEY, President. Steraan Moxy, 3 FINE ARTS. OLMES’ PHOTOGRAPHIC SERMONS DELIVERED daily at bis picture gallery, 259 Broadway. Yext—Be- hold the fine portraits of the people, who are working their ‘own anlvation for time and My dear fellow patrons and sinners, your most worthy parson believes there Is time mraturenehis tnd prs thas nod cn teacd ant 46 an ching and practiain I, for the general goon of nit men, and the indies included: to open up ng improved earthly condition among men ant pie, fiven tn to nt volver but for ene, another: Wo nm us to nbor not for ourselves, but fo moolhers, equalise, to fraterniee, ‘and to patronise exch other. and there. by to civilize ourselves to a noble destiny—to an equality of condition here and hereafter. We may rash to heaven before the gate is open, but it ls no use; We cannot get in before we are clad wih repentance and humiliation—selfish, money gods of pity as weare, bowed down with rolden avarice and poverty, stricken ta crime bequeattied from ‘to son, witha weight of knowledge uneqtial and oppressively bestowed; and the money powers of Fenorsnce the world may never bape for a release of without a release of the tndividual man power, & releare of monopoly, a release of temptation, @ release af ex: trem werty and bondage. With a true idea of iber- ty, eran Rosas calles vo vise of wietioa, fotrnded apon of ediication, }yropesty end republican government, we shall be better prepared for time and eternity, and better Feared to and our portralts, photographed ‘by parson HOLMES, down to posterity. Hopefal children, who expect great works and wooders from their etvilized, money making fathers, let us slag and be bappy evermore’ tll the brighter day, Ameo. reward by leaving tai No. 1 West street, corner of Dauery YONSTIPATION (COSTIVENESS) AND DYSPEPSIA Jo completely cured, without, medicines, Lujectious or bata, “Davy's ” an and nutritios vegetable food, manufactured from “Warton's ine ervaients.”” avd bowels to the normal condivo: ny his cracker No. 219 Forsyth street. " Price 30 cents pg el stamped “Dayy'a.” AAC McGAY, 219 Forsyth street, N, Y. DE OF THE BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, drodsy, &c., cured by Helmboid’s Extract Buchu. It ia re- commended by one hundred and seventy Gve of the leadin hysiciaus of the United States per bottle, deli {oaby address, Depot 104 South Teuth bly Build- ing. For sale by & B&D. Sands # Co. 12) William street, corner of Fulton, wholesale and retail agents for proprietor. OW TO STOP WASHERWOMEN FROM CHANGING and losing your clothes. Go to No. 509 Broadway, 18, and get a stencil plate and a bottle of premium indellivle ink and mark your clothing, and you will have no more cen! trouble. «Price [* S°THAM, WHEN THE SUN Is LOW, ‘Come forth in swarms the foe, And for our blood thes bore, you kuow, ‘And suck it in most rapidly. But buge, Poaches, ‘skeetera—biack or white— Tn deaia's embrace are stitfened quite, If Lyon's Powders chance to Ip their obscure vicinity. The effect of this powder is almost iastantaneous death the tnsect tribe. Gardens can be preserved, and houses cl ofthe vermin pest. It is free from poison, and harmiess to mankind and domestic animals. All genuine signed B. LYON. Powders for insects, pilis for rats and mice. trample daske, 26e.; regular sizes, 600. und $1. : ARNES & PARK ‘Wholesale and retail druggists, 13 ani 1d 15 Park row, N. ¥. AVA GAS RURNERS.—THE SUBSCRIBER IS NOW prepared to furnish the trade with the above burners, ch Will be found to be superior. for many purposes. (0 any 86. They are manufactured from the purest steaitite aod mically hardened, for wiuch a patent has beea granted, ‘They are indestructible by acids or alkalies, will not rast or corrode, and are unchangeable by heat or cold. T. G. ARNOLD, Manufacturer of gas burners and importer of Seotch No. 447 Broome street, secoud door west of Broadwa: AHOGANY DOOKS—WUODEN PANEL NOORS—A lot of matogany paneleand cther ballting materials for low. apply to b. H. SIMPSON, 19 Beaver stre: URLIO NOTICK.—KERP YOUR FEET DRY.—BEST ‘anil cheapest place in New York for boota, Gutta peysha Soles put on and rubbers repaired at 29 Fulton street, BEUMATIO EMBROCATION.—THIS INvA LUABLB article for Rheumatism, Sprains, Bruises, &e., ia for fale at 113 Third avenue. 60 cents a BACHE CURED IN A FEW MINUTES.—A CER- tain, permsnen. aud harmless cure, no matter how much od the tooth fare. 1 invarichiy stop, the wort saace of iootmeaber aad give f wil stop the cases of 1, anne im- Brcuse tel ‘This eunedy will not injure ths teeth, haa no bad one app! lon ia a Sure cure for the Toothache, Diseased gums, ulcerated Eee, or swollen face are cured by the above article, and a decayed tooth rendered as useful as ever. ‘Try the above remedy before having your teeth des- Eroyed by the dentia's instruments. Prion Twenty five caus» bore, Principal depot at the drug store 306 Grand street, N,V. Sold to Brooklyn, st Mrs. HAYS’, 176 Fulton street; a Williamsburg, Mt EIVNGSTON'S drug ‘sore, wreak ag and 24 Grand B. Buy at no other stores. “LOAN OFFICES. DVANCES ON MERCHANDISE. On large or amail lots of ‘Diamonds, watches, &c.; on bonds, bank or raftrond stocks, ‘Ur the same bought at the cash price. J. H. BARRINGER, 170 Broadway, room No. 25. » THOMPSOW & CO.’S, BROKERS AND COMMISSION merchants, 102 ‘corner of Ana, rooms Nos. 2 dod 3, second floor, advance money from $1 io $50,000, on watehes, diemonds, Jewelry, dry goods, eegars and all kinds of greurities, ot honghi. Notes, stacks, bonds, &c., negotiated. Wing machines and so! . a ae.’ THOMPSON, Auctioneer, DVANORS MADR ON DIAMONDS, WATORES AND mit for cash, at the old established store SPL TACOHS eee Sat Brow ng ty conagntin| ‘and no loan office signs about the bi the Broad VANCES MADE ON WATCHES, J XY, DIA- ae ‘&e., or bought for ‘at sight. biished fn Titans contdental, ty ihe rear of iy retail sore, Parties wishing advances would, ceall on mn re 'L. JACOBS, 407 Broadway, (AT 1, CHAMBERS STRERT, THE WELL KNOWN AND old eatablisbed ISAACS advances money to any amount she propert? vores tae id di of valu- able au hebben cash prices. Rae confidential. N. 4,—No twanga xed on HONTOMAN, DIAMOND BROKER AND QSNERAL AA. “ester, ndvaices money in wall oF ioows ‘fet diamonda, watches, jewelry, and on mer- ‘OF buys the same for 2 bighest at bis private office, 66 Nassau atreet, up staire, room No. 2 Busl- Resa prompt and confidential, LEND-AT MODERATR RATES, ON DIA- Mo monte watches jewelry, aver, taut Heng ot persons! PEMA RWARD, Mt third H. BARNARD, a Fighn‘aid Sot sitcom, ‘Entrance to private ofee by the door. ay WRENCE & CO. of on wealth), iberal oma ofraanhy personal roperty ba cama