The New York Herald Newspaper, November 10, 1859, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1859.—TRIPLE SHEET. 5 Court. M. Jullion appears to have wanted steam, which, | position, and therefore enabled to give his son every ad- | of the French {he important process of super heating te Siete ous . the financial gift. If he know how to he ‘applied to only one | yant in life. When Mario was quite a youth, his gil money, Purser Soler aad wars eerie ted We | Fruremerd Hart wha nemo Keay a | Suny wor srat oar of wily pean tip, yotain "4 salon ot Fist and Mrs. Charles Mathe at the Hay ren speed been ed by the ship, ed to him every salon of that aristocratic city. AB j ws by, - tarred ee Oe tortnetn a, hoe, rit sutee 1a Hari advancod 1. iano aint, he Seated to ev ting | collaghionst obfocis of Got tak vertu, collentsa cuiaay by fof all arror. into court ono morning, Dearig upon kis sousionance ihe | the putonor poner io ciety a re male take wher from, England joye, we, voyage 10 Australis | tho scrape in which ho was caught, but he ested, danvod | the aie Mme, Veslris, haa boen sold to, Mr dean Lado, oom r¥ Passo, marks of a fsticulf encounter in which bo had been in- | of Dad and wnbjualiog falsebood puraved Ahirty-two to thirty-six days, the voyage to Australia } the sorape in w wt coe ord, the | MP. The London Heratd says:—Tho whole of the Sevres | Cooksince his imprisonment has forbidden all admiasion | dulging the evening after his summing up against Brown, | ite Nesters papers J tunder the most favorable circumstances now occupying | and sung bimeelf out of all, and became, in a word, " “Aer to visters, and as his wiatea {nv that Sore bees | and'wftn ths pertsniecs cane toenter: : . 8. Of tho four routes between of id, china and bubl cabinets, statuette, &o., are most unique, 5, reg; part wi was ready The voluntary rendition of the Northern men Sirk pandas guste | pea smn ast gone Mapes | Eig oasra caenet arc it Pe tia: | Mamita ase, ete artes | Saga"? MN voy burg Deo 8 Dd | etn” ed nde cmene Be ‘ef the Red Sea and tho Mauritlus—wi course irl was dividing with him tho ip and bis counsel, Messrs, Botis have, of }» which, » taken postal contract with the Peningu- city. a8 lovely, an orphan heiress of | favorite; a superb library of upwards of 2,000 and Green, have, of courso, em gat pardoning power in cases of treason. Sucn rendition, Ker'aud’ Oriental Company, which ts thorter in point of | figh Tau’ a Masgeees by tie’ and ‘tikes. of Goneral | eonlanidg gone of the: Farest works of snsioat and m0: fen arene ui, Ibis Wik Deas 06 cs chose later ) Flas but few of the oultes haraclersics of a prison, | Bther bet daiborisy cet voluntarily coming forward, distance than by the voyage round the Cape of Good Hope, | Espeleta, once Captain General of Guba. She was known dern history; the progress of tho stago during $06 ine: Ee eR coat ho la drawing up the confession which 18 | save that the windows fronting tho streets are defended | would the innocent to but temporary inconve- the difference being, however, only to tho small extent of | as La Marquesita,® as much from her stony heartednesa | hundred AFA he work of va, Curious mailuscripte, his plea of guilty and which 1s looked for- | by iron rails. The front door is approached by some | mience, while it would evince the spirit enjoiied by tho about 870 miles; but, in point of time the ocean route via | as from her diminutive size; aud bardhearted she was, | the Of tho last hundred rears (collected by the § ward to With such intense interest. Whatever ook | stone steps on the side facing the Court House, constitution and demanded of confederated States, the would be [eau by ships of the class of the | indeed, to all her numerous suitors, exce) is al- | Inte Mr. Mathows), together with the stage jewels, &c. or his friends may have of a commutation of t | by amiron railing, The jail is not apportioned cells, The New York Times, now a her ite journal, Recon were in Jess than half the time now occupied | ways an exception in such cases—to young ‘Though Anew theatre is to be built at Canterbury (England) of from adopting this course, it is the very general 80 far as I saw, but into fair sized rooms, affording tho | half republican, half conservative, Seward, half ‘upon this overland route. The accommodation for pas- | of good rank and connections, yet Ping W8S | sass and iron, ‘The cricketers and cactary, nae Thane ouput to na pecble, at Harper's Forry particularly, re space to walk sbout and take exercise. The | Douglas, began ite existence under the sis of \- wengers and goods by the ships would be in the ratio | no match for the ‘born young heireés, at least so fo subscribe between £1,000 to £2,000, the citizens to pro- it ought to havo no effect in shielding from % Avia, is a geniamen, naturally inclined to | ism, and for a long unprofitable ox- ef at Jeast two to one over the Red Sea lino, and the rate ther uncle , General Espeleta. But ‘vide the remainder of the sum of upwards of £2, re- j common punishment, perform bis duties correctly and considerately, istence under the upas shadow of the Jribume. ‘of speed at the same cost for fuel would be ‘fifty percent | La nesita turned a ear to all hor guardian’s re- | Guired for the erection of the b ‘which will occupy ‘THE OTHER PRISONERS. ‘THE Fost OFNCE Balipeed 9 erieereen ees Reread pe vireac, By ibe fm favor of the Cape line. So far as the prospects of such | monstrances, as beautiful girls will do, whether Spanish #0 fect equare of ph peyton persons. Stevens, the wounded man, occupies the same roem Is held in @ small musty shop, over by a | arch traitor of Tribune, the ‘little villian’ the a line are concerned, it must be remembered that the rail- | or American, when they are in love, and listened only to Tho strasvure'wil’be 117 fost byt et ad patbiod ike with Brown. The wounds he received are of such.acha- | small, musty, dried up looking old gentleman, who, ‘imes soon started in quest of adventure, and moved on way system, in India, aren and Australia, is but justbe- | the passionate of her young lover. Ho the first exhibition building. ” racter a8 to preclude all hope of his recovery. He has | having scrutinized a new comer over his spectaclos, | the track of conservi ; here again met ginning to develope itself; that China and Japan, with their | whispered warm words in the dance, and when her uncle ‘ 3 two bullets Iqdged im his neck, and no effort has been peep into his pigeon holes and announces w! r there Bim, for the ground was covered ve, bine yea momenéo populations and varied products, will at no dis- | confined her to her rooms—a poor way o manage a love- | At the Seddlor’e Welle theatre, London, an adaptation } made to cxtract them. His aufferings have excited some | Is aleticr or not. During tho excitement of the trials, | rivalry or competition was useless. In the dilemma of two tant day be thrown open to British commerce and enter- | sick girl—he sang warmer words under her window. It | of Victor ‘Le Rol s’amuse” has been produced | slight sympathy, and the hope is gonorally expressed that | which not only drew a number of strangers to the place, | nsuccesaful efforts, the ‘Times, sorely puzaied, made ita Brigo, and lat already at Jeast one million of tongof ehip- | is scarcely necessary to tall how all this ended—for wo | With complete success. | The story, which served as the hho may dle before the time which the law would inevi- | but created among the citizens @ great desire to procure | Rotorious campaign’ round the “elbows of the find ample remuneration in the trade with the East. | know how Copia laughs at bolts and bars, and so and so—- | basis of the libretto to Verdi’s tto,” has, however, # tably fix. As to the others—Coppie, Copland and Green— | the Hxraun, this od gentleman and his son, a youthful | and established its “ quadrilateral” reputatiéa. But ‘wants of commerce in that part of the world are even | one morning fair juesita was missing. Ping had } Undergone some changes, and the climax which all three occupy the same room, aud whenever a fee smelt had a great deal of extra work thrown on | glories of such achievements were found evanescent and Bow but insufficiently auppiied with shipping, ‘The actu- | sung in delicious strains of a ladder of ropos; a ‘in | gave #0 painful an interest to tho has been mate- | visiter enters he finds them standing together at the win- | their bands. They, however, adopted CE leer Hepes ele ar p my trates red ally existing trade with the Fnet Is ten times greater than | w: near by; fleet horses to take them to the coast; | Tially altered. The piece is by ee Tae Mz. | dow which affords them the only prospect of the world | them some time to’get through their work. ‘They closed | reputation, so they brought but little that was.s ites the ity of a whole line of those large vessels would | and of love and ess in Italy. Phelps appeared in the part of the Jester and Heath pevetecnmmaboy can ever hope to see till bi t out shop immediately after the mail came. in and kept the coffers, ‘The exigencies of business req another tack, rovide, au if their performance on a Jong voyageshould | | No trace was found of the runaways in Madrid; but ere | &8 his daughter. for execution. They evince ro to into | crowd waiting outside while they scanned and sorted the | and thenon-intervention of Mr. Douglas has supplied tho ba as tri nie aes oe ate pose that the tee wnat fo a home neers how ra pena ag tire a tds So inae Poege tin could well squeeze in an Cine, then pat throngy thelr oevith Jefferson Brick and his new pro. tem. politics, wa e short re ig DO reason to su) i were co id, they 9 » entirel a Bs i. \ expenses would be disproportionate to the speot obtained never should return Y eh oe THE HARPER'S FERRY OUTBREAK. the presence of the mane of people who are sometimes ‘business, to their own satisfaction at least. have no inclination to meddle. We think doctrine and Sbeurd to ove that args mata of the Great pte ‘onamt: iy Ping ee con a i Beye te te may wierd Ne 1859, iso harmony between the Megeiion te niet Bu} ‘vessel rn v 7 [N UNDER MARTIAL LAW. Caanizsrown, Nov. ‘qlags sould bo worked with profit upon short transatlantic | twa yeas boa passed syray ievccty wae sing tions me THE TRIAL OF CAPTAIN COOK. Few whose duties called them to Charlestowa-during |p.) O13 ssonoy His dake iene ae and Mr. Jefferson Brick that jt would be gruel 10 dai. for the time which would bo oopmermed:ia Ako dorks the ‘What wasto be done? Goto No, novor; Caasxstown, Va., Nov. 9, 1860. | the Harper’s Ferry trials will forget for time either the fo Ne sutor extra crepidam.’? OF this country and the United States in loading un- | pride forbade that, “trcan aig,” aaa Ping; “work Twill ‘The trial of Cook commenced yesterday, and theeourt J excitement and undue suspicion which prevailed among tence—Green’s Prial—Coppie and Cook, dc. dc. Mastecerend beech Mi'yeyeetion teitae socaeie® th’ Wot. but wun true’ Spanish’ spirit bs deeoned hie onire: | 00m was crowded. Governor Willard and Mr: Crowley, | the extant relunteag, soe ar ardor manifested BY | thave just been in to #00 “Old Captain Brown.” Like | DR. HOWE-THE 8. G. H.” OF BROWN'S a we ‘8 we would si wi 8] Sbably a month's delay, while on long voyages—and it | uyiic, aud was ‘heuesforih Uaown 28 Mero, Mano tho | Drothers-in law of the prisoner, were seated beaide hian. | treme cousiernation inte wink tens boot ca Teeeeee | an illustrious General fust before writing a despatch, be Pog set a 2 ‘waa for theso, and theso only, that the ship was design- | great (enor. ‘Wo all know how rapidiy Mario rose on the He plead guilty to all the counts in the indictment, except J by the irruption of the abolitionists. Certain it is that | had just taken # plate of soup, whether hasty or not de- Dr. Samuel fe Howe’ of Boston, ‘is a peculiar and Very e@d—the delays in port would tade place only a ntervaa stage. His , , and beauty were valuable ad- that of treason, ‘Tho prisoner was well dressed, firm and their short stay in Virginia will furnish amusing souvenirs posent don’t: say, and was sitting up enjoying the Naw | remarkable man. We first knew him nearly forty’ ef amonth. With anc Great Eastern it would bo of course | functs, and his unrivalled voice drew for him tho admira- “ sak J to all for many @ day to come. It ie well known as a +3 cad conti: ass student in Brown. University at Spenaidio to establish any line. of ocean _communteation tion of Europe. Fortune smiled—gold was showered on | dignified. 7 Of our nature tbat in safety the dangers we have | YORK Heratp. I inquired after his health 5 ‘ode Island. We ‘that. traditions of ‘his. ‘tho East or ‘Australia; three such vessels at lenst | him—care was forgotten, He sang and sang, and must be ‘The demurrer to the treason count was argued and over- fare forgotten, and the circumstances calculated | he replied that his recent wounds had caused some’ in- | as’ student ‘are still preserved ‘apd related in the Uni- aie dire eot Sentaa bonis temare 1, cietbelevinviootinn marquesita, what of her? Ho | Tbled by the Court, Porilsrecur: With greater “orce, When thee ett nos | Sammation in an old one, received, doubtless, in some of | veral iy He was quick and bright and talented, but osed, and which is under tho consideration. of several | had woarried lize for her money; or if even ho had ever | The jury were then sworn and the same questions put §) passed away. Those strangers who have loft Charlestown | bis “Kansas work;” with that exception he was easy in ee it Ba Aes paper tg cniyg ms Srvc ‘persons connected with the present company, tstoconstract | loved her, be was too fond of his riotous life to be long | to them as in Brown’s caso. may now laugh openly at what they before had to enjoy | ‘mind and body, and thought he had done his duty to God | as scarcely any kind of mischief which he did not ‘and equip for sea two other vessels similar to the Great | content with the quiet pleasures of a home circle. Firat Gi the ted the fact of a con- | 12 secret, regulating the modulations of their cacchina- | an4 man, If it was decreed that ho should suffer for it; | habitually practice. If any prank, or.even Raster, but with such alterations and improvements | he neglected her, then illtreate’! her. Broken hearted, | Mr. Gxxun, for the prisoner, adm tions according to the privacy they had secured for the tohim, He | Outrage, was perpetrated college or mee experience 3 may point out as necessary, and which with ae aon ne tthe retirement of a ‘poavent in Paris, where | spiracy with the slaves to rebel, which was punishable P00 eee hey | now t ha At not . word shoud very jest it was of but — pte wh in the vicinity, general sentiment uniformly at existin; ‘main - le r cared but little + Tasked regret me E put soe a wi re ine | fae a HD ea ber pocrowa, and noe took the black veil, | with death or imprisonment for life. commandiig, t0 fee ciher colonels, OF 46 the * any way. once setiled upon him as its author. Ho was, to ase w Good Hope. Branch lines, worked by smaller and power- or thing, in thet gay capital, where her husband was | _ Mr. Hoxras then rose and read the confession of Cook, J sctves upon ‘any account—that is, derogalory wo or re- | {oF the valuable lives he bad destroyed. The old sinner | rather low word, full of all manner of Sdevilitry.”” He ‘and squand tinuall: immoned ful steamers, would run bétweon the Cape and Australia, | charming thousands ering fortunes, sho was | as written by himself. ‘There were twonty-fve fooleep J flecing, upon their bravery or dasipline. It was, how. | replied hehad not intended that. In answer tothe query, | ty conumually at Batre the Moshy, saa peD- licly admonished and fined, and rusticated, and suspended, and between Trincomalee and China, “Maras and Gal: | left to dio alone. Did a ‘note of his syren voice ever | pages of it. Nothing new was elicited by it, oxcept that § ¢ver, felt on all hands that own consciousness | “If he thought his designs could be carried out without | and the constant expectation of ail nae tat nee cults, m connection with the floct of large sbips, and | reach his dying wife? Dida memory of that desortad of courage and seourity should have sprung somo cour- | »codshed?”” he replied, ‘Tt had been done in Misgouri.”” | expelled Still he romaited att otto tise earry: tht and passengers to and from them to their | wife ever cross tho mind of the favored Mario? Quicn | he implicates Fred. Douglass and Dr. Howe, of Boston. tesy and consideration for tho strangers who were J a d graduated—we think 22 thougt, eatinadon. ‘Thero ie no intention, 0 far at loast as a | tabe 9 | rhe condeesion-will vo:published: in'a ‘pemplilat:fivin § ‘emsbogst ions thas ess srinpers GaeOe er ee pet ee | dustedifhas pobis the interviow termignted and eratuaind—we in the class of 18: ch larger body of the pro} rs and directors are concerned, Inover can hear his witching voice without a sigh to dodily fear, as they were, turn where they might, from The prisoners are still guarded with the greatest vigi- Samuel G. to permis the grond ship to exist raerely as a oneneonee: | ths of his poor wife—the brilliant, lovely “mas, | fF the benest of Samuel ©. Young, who was wounded at Sharp's rides and’ revolvers, capped and loaded, in tho # Greatest vigh |” We suppose that nobody who mew 1G. Seat, i ¥ . Hundreds of men all the time under armsare | or knew of him in college, had the slightest expectation be visited at haifa crown a head as the ‘“ Great wonder | quesiiaof Madrid. Harper's ferry. hands of every one they met. was poor compli. } lance that he would ever come to good. We remember to have of the world;” but, on the contrary, to endeavor to carr: May not these facts account for the recent scenes at the ‘To-day was spent in taking testimony and opening the | ment to pay to a few unarmed strangers, ainon; stationed at the jail, which, by the way, in its external ap- ‘ Out to their legitimate results those advantages which the | Opera in Madrid? Paka 21 y. a neeres Debra | y heard with a feeling of utter surprise, afew alter argument for the State, them for purposes well Known to all a8 peaceful. | pearance looks much more like a private residence than | he graduated, that he was studying with the utmost induse employment of vessels of larger size may be calculated to} « Marquesita is a bard, bright stone, as well as little Notwithstanding that their business was known they . ‘The public feeling against Cook is stronger than against | Wore looked upon with suspicion and dislike, | Jil, with its curtained windows and porch or stoop, to try in the office of Dr. Ingalls, @ distin, sician and NARROW ESCAPE FuOM DaNarR av woymman, | MAIC 4 any of the other prisoners. He is regarded as having { and one of theso military commanders had tho hardihood } speak in Yankee parlance, leading out on the street— Gistngusbed in "tho proteaon be had moet ete aca tat Snipe ante onl Weeghat a | ralowng “ar” which dot tv toot ate | SEC 2% fr be nsurecin, Song ers wil furan or oh rs imports | Pa ner oe a sre AN, an wa | mane sD gle we Rr, e et and it te anohors woul ye an P ve A to and all hi then that the wonldaiounncesinis ine lreanthanealiee cps fying the public, and it was announced that neither sho | ¢™&ée by Governor Willard to save his lite. sitive heroes might think reflected upon them; “For,” | is, you may rely on it, allamistake. 1 mentioned it in con- aye Scho kaw hiss xeqnedetins upon i a8 certain to win professional distinction. He carried into fell quickly, and a squally wind set in from the N. E., that nor Mario would ‘ were the words of Coionel John Lucius Davis, “if you | versation with an ex- Member ot Congress of high standing the pursuite of pete the same spirit and energy that in *8 position ‘ogain appear in Madrid:— write anything derogatory to the military forces under | in the State in the least lavery disirict of all. He . ErHolphead at all questionable as to safety” Whe dres Gn aasareso. OUR CHARLESTOWN CORRESPONDENCE. || Sry'comutand'ishull'ut you into jl, ‘id and | thought Wise would ‘not cntoriain such a propestion for | MS previous years ho bad manifested in vexing and ab a as pr 3 and injuring al around him. had been “banked up” for a few days; and about six Tam accused of having failed in respect to the public. Cnarzzstown, Va., Nov. 7, 1859. comfort to the enemies of the Cuca eal Of ia.” | an instant, if he knew which side his bread was buttered; it Dr. Howe was at that time too impulsive, he had @clock on Thursday i fisare seas erilated 40'be got | This acousation afflicts me so much that I will endeavor to Appearance of the Prisonert—Charlestown Under Martial | Perpetrating a joke was an overt act of eons ts the | in short, if he did not wish to risk being hung himself. in his soul too much of the spirit of wild, and reckless, quickly. This was done, and between seven and cight aa tho contrary. In my artistic career I have always ‘and Medici eyes of the Commander-in-Chief. In the trial of Green to-day, his counsel, a lawyer, of | and saventure, to be able to settle down k the paddies were several timos moved slowly, so | had the happiness to appreciate and to feel profoundly the | © Law—Dialogue Between a Citizen and a Quack ine } The circumstances attending the espionage be oo stran- | Boston—who bears a striking resemblance to the “gift | inthe practice of a peaceable profession in New Bagland as to easo the strain upon the single anchor to which the | kind reception which I have obtained in all the theatresin | Vender—The Herald and the Furbes Oorrespondence—Pc 8 sometimes afforded much amusement, follow. } book enterprise” man, and who, by the way, once taught | when stirring events, that could touch the heart of a bold ship was riding. She dragged very slightly, if at all; and | which I have sung. I therefore accepted with pleasure an Aelegraph—Post Offices, dc. ng dialogue, which took placo in the Court Houso yard, | School in Clarke, the adjoining county—labored hard to | and genercus man, were Place in any part of the a second anchor having been dropped, all was considered engagement at the Theatre Royal at Madrid, being assured i for the | Detween a stranger and one of the inhabitants, furnishes | prove that the statute under which he was indicted waa | World. ‘The Greck revolution had at that time broken out, tolerably safe. The steam was, however, kept upall | of being able to full my en, t, and counting onthe | A person visiting Brown in jail and seeing him for the | an amusing illustration:— {oo loosely drawn to admit of his conviction under it, | and the Grecks, rousing themselves from their old and here: . might ban were moe very heavy squal fs ‘bout at. Sees oe ~ Lao i Inder a circumstances 1 | frst time, with an estimate formed of the man from his ooomee Ce ae pose meine ae ee as Uni specify orgie alg hued ditary slumber, were striving mantully for Independence. st Bix on morning; and storms of hai! and win believs |, on my appearance on INLAN—] . ing made; that The odds against them were terri their cause Pontinued at short intervals up to two o'clock but to that | the stage, the. indulgence which ihe chiveinre spc, | conduct during the trial and the speeches there delivered J ,, VIRGIN, prosecution d to prove that Green was free; desperate, but these were e: the circum- fimo the Great Eastern was steady and safo at her an- | ish nation acoords to all artista; but my surprise was | by him, would find his preconceived opinions rapidly dis- | ""Sreaxorm—What am I doing? I'm minding my busi- | alto, thathe had not conspired with slaves to make in’ | Seemed desperate, but these were extctly the ciream- chorage. ou ee, curiae: ine Peeccan. Be oa — re before having res sgDall portion ¥ appear before the subject of them. It is true that, acting neiand ae iee ee yor eas do,I reckon. he ¢ eng Aaa hence a, ps to oe Howe. with whatcver means he could command 2 men stood an or two ick uj e ship’ A ul Manifested discontent du 0 first act. ci ‘— What is you! mero > id haste! to Greece, and 80 bore himself squally was it, that about half-past one it was ordered that Gonfeas that these, facts canged he pain, a hat under excitement and from the consciousness that he was } sr2.xcra— Minding my business, I tell you. ’ tool of Brown’s, that had acted under his compulsion. | tid money he, hasten : lic, ut all her war that his name is mentioned no more visiters should be brought off; and afew hundreds | without the protection of the rest of the public, I should | surrounded by his enemies, Brown frequently indulged in ‘Virciian—You know thore is great excitement here. During this effort a brother of the famous Ned Pendleton, | and b) by her gons as that of one Fis ber floblest 7 themselves compelled to | mot have been able to terminate the representation. I at encountered wat ‘ks, fecling somewhat secure in the protec- SrmanceR—I don’t know, and Iam darned if I want to | the gambler, sat by him, and at its conclusion the logal | Sh4 best and most devoted benefactors. He an uncomfortable night at Holyhead, with the pros- | therefore eupplicate the public to accord me the grace of | ‘rascible remarks, fecling pr 1 : F pass know. man indulged in such a.quiet laugh in his sleeve 88 | overy peril, and did more than any other man td prevent pect of nothing like = bed, or to ‘without the ex- me for what I may have done in the situation | ton of the law whose victim he must be, while, at the } ““Vinaiwrax—Come, tell me where you are from ? toinduce the in a close observer that ho did not | Sndvelieve the eufferings of the Grecian soldiers and part, ‘Pected visit to the big ship. which I found myself. Far be from me the idea of re- | samo time, he dared, and, indeed, seemed to court, the SrraxcER—I'm from Georgia really have the interest of his t sanfihinpsce 80 much at | people, Pited, asd iethes Tee ete Ws apeak T shoeta tenes | Worst his foes could do, thinking, perhaps, that he might agony ery eper gi erp ee Reaeh os milan bare sapeerne from! Jory brought in a | «2's Home’s career (org teers 1 a 5 a. 2 i Palas estan oa amore faid—!<Gentlemen, listen to me with indulgence, and it | e8¢#pe the slower and more vengeful process of the law. | Visaivux—Do'youknow Governor Wise? ro” | verdict of guilty. A motion was inade for arrest of jodg. | {2¢,tniled States is probably better Known to thou- ‘The influence of a great event passes over the popula. | Sfter having sung, I have not the happiness to please you, | In this state of fecling, sensitive as an enthusiast in giving } Sraaxcxn—No, nor I don’t want to know him. ment, but not argued. ee coof the | FOF many years he has been the Superintendent of tions of the East like & wave of sound; it goes on increasing | 2 will respect your decision, and will put an end to my en- | to the world the motives of an act which, to his own dis- | _Vikarxx—Do you know President Buchanan ? Ei glend oy biel Tae an nope Paral FEES setts ARylum for the Bind, and. un- ts ares every moment, reaching every unit of tho human Co a could not certainly haye continued to sing eased mind, was great and good, but which the world Stranaxr—Yes, sir’ee; Ido know James Buchanan. 1 ies vagy _ fn en — mesg ne hoe. questionably he bas made that sy e anak mass, and pervading every mind. Whon tho voice has 8 public whose approbation I had not obtained. > take off my hat to Presidont Buchanan, and he takes off woe- Set bare. wae te n for his look: | tion of the public and the model of all similar insti died away the idea remains. Accustomed to violent re- | Accomplishing a sacred duty, I lay this just manifesto be- | must condemn, he claimed with petulance and impatience } his to me; and he says to me, “ How do you do?” and I | ing worse. I went 1 sag fete home to | Mrougheut our land. He has devoted to it all the powers Yolutions, resulting from superior foroe, Eastern races are | fre the public pena aes cee te Ho it for | those delays in the administration of the law which neither | *®, ie a nai ean ong meddio'in olsers’ afhire. "Ho replfew that be haa been a deteteinbeey se casnaed etet ee aero taenOEa: preasal poner, to cringe betnte te, conyossee sud aa tct | By destiicaion,” zi OOPINGIULIA GRUSE” | is crimes nor the circumstances of the court could falrly Sraanaee—=Why, darn fy dn't T tell you Timow no- | completely deceived and taken in in. this i | plished before, and what, but for him, might not perhaps Py yee 2 ped deltas "| Tow Tarror’s Eqcasrmux Pray—The London ‘Zimes | admit of. His object in this was, as he himself said, } thing of Brown or Wise either. Wished | he had been | more cautious, it | Pave been accomplished for half a century to comp, And o ¢ # «6 «6 of the Zist October has the following notioe of Tom Tay- | to sive the world a fair opportunity of judging of his mo- | ,, Vimcixuux—Well, T must know your business; what js | wastoo late now. One of the visiters spake harshly to Ries ponent ote ete eae oes pei ete de gmp ere tae err Jor’s new play at Astloy’s:— tives. Ifthis opportunity was to be denied him, asum- } SrpaxcEr—Do you want to know ? rebuked it by saying the prisoners should not be in- } Of Massachusetts he has borne an important and leading t generations, has re- SiraxcEr (putting his hand into a capacious Coppie was sitting inthe same room reading a letter | of the chief men relied on, whenever any great as now open, but they may make their own regulation as to colt a menace i A, OAm, eaueatrian, drama, by | of his enemies. was sll henext. meet denired. Now thet J. ,_ Srmancs punting, Tua wulect on pestered the jallor Drought him, and looking miserable enough, and | {swe cdcrtaken ter the’ retort ane oles rae aed Pi ri ees Bel eeonnens. tition soa toe ties | suverel techs in the le.ke the id LiLo onan | Be basreceived at the hands of justico and fair play al | is my business; to get ‘fifty cents for this’ bodle of theal. | but ‘small remove from “his eee pertan b in his native State or for the promotion of her Libera - tn r. race he has manifested such an unfortunate an pened oe ocelot pn Me A Cell eR IE eploen en obec tauiaglcaitilabsbinceend) Ei aire epg op ge ipeepend (re aro Ee sly ay gry see ie te ee Oe tween the two precious metals in that country was somuch | Uriguay in 1846, a commander of the Italian legion in the | cd over five days—with the fullest publicity given to the om a Ba e iatto tol up, I af continues to bear upand show any real pluck. Cook is | yore’ se ‘aboli ‘soir. pt ait) ge of hie Fa eee ee eer a ey ee SS ot ics Crucntal, living in & slate of great | statements of those witnesses who testified most directly | Piaini® ‘20 mumerousite lot uP, Trockon.) | horetesti. | not visible, He is presumed 10 be acting under the aavice aceon reece lewlie: earsrnmeaantin Guollans promt by-exctarging thete tec ood soca a | athe Mean Gels Be ee as ne |. ana.generooaly.ta:hle hurmaniiy-to hieprischere ib the As-! |! shumy webs genutnenots of the article, upon wih the | of ha brother in-law ; Governor Wilard, and preparing © | regard him as sincere aid Ronan’ whalever he says or reas 1¢ expor' ver ani ci It is allke forbidden by the lawsof Japan, TheJapanese, | with Procopio, faithful negro, Al at last the faluhtul pale sult with that calm firmness which is the sure charac | the jail, where he was detained a short time, and ordered | have some hope for his life. in bis bosom has no doubt made him what he is toward. treaty. They are bound to admit our ships at the ports | _ This house, the delight of so many re- | mary quictus from one of the Sharpe’s rifles in the hands ‘Vircintan—Yee. sulted. part. He has been one ot the first men looked to, and one re ? Mr. Vorkees, the Attorney General of Indiana, is also in | sia ‘and slaveholders. If it is true, as it certainly ap- 1 probability, discovered that they had been | become di shed as ‘Garibaldi’s lishman,’ | teristic of a brave man. to clear out u bis parole. The next morning tho slavery 3 ey ly ap. Gpacrenched: inthis maitie. P¥banroer upon’ ieee || ante Garibahite Slack? Tes alr villian, | ‘What Brown was most anxious tocstablish in the eyes | stranger cbeyed the injuston. Charlestown with eeerace Mart “aay vie peek fs pears to be, thathe gave his countevace to the eonspira- ehants caused some irritation by refusing to await the | named Mancini, makes his ance, whe, in- | of the world, during the trial, was his claim to being con- THE HERALD AND THE FORRES CORRESPONDENCE. gp Eee iteetel oyar. ? oe ee at the Bauihern Seater expiration of the treaty period. But last and principally | spired with hatred for Garibaldi and love for his wife, is sh 4 The people of Charlestown were hardly more ai he should, whatever his merits in other respects may be, be execrated by the present generatien and by posterity: But if,as we can scarcely hope, he is innocent of the great crime, we shall most heartily rejoice in being able to proclaim his innocence. jurprised tound: that the invincible barbarians | equally pertinacious in works of villainy. His first bad | sidered humane and merciful from bis conduct to his pri- | at learning that on the morning of the 16th October a . hed nie “aefeated fa ‘a battle just opposite the ahores of | coed ‘ete revelation of Garibaldi’s retreat to the | soners. Whatever good quality a man possesses in any | handful of men had seized taken of BROWN'S RELIGION. Japan. The Japanese having been taught by the Euro. oldiers of Rosas, and the escape of the Italian family marked degree he is most anxious to have acknowledged Harper’s Ferry and Arsenal than they were at needing TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. how loss might be sustained by exchanges, had | nder circumstances of picturesque difficulty, involving pean bes correspondence as published in the columns of Thave repeatedly noticed in your paper, since the Har- Hgrovea the hint by preparing a special currency forthe | ® great deal of firing and the blowing up of a bridge, is | at@ time when circumstances point the other way; and so } the Hera. They appeared utterly at a loss to compre- “g Ferry affair, intimations that the fanaticism which foreign trade,whereby the foreign merchant should becom- | the main incident of the act. We next find Garibaldi’ at | jt waswith Brown. Though hisdeeds in the Kansas border | hend how the thing was done, Old Ossawatomie himself | Per’s Ferry add pelled to exchange the silyer dollar against.a coin ge of a | Rome on the 30th of June, 1849, and the whole second act did not entitle him to be considered either as hu- | ™&uifested some astonishment, and wanted to know how | has culminated in that atrocity is of Presbyterian origin. very insufficient intrinsic value. Against this Mr. Ruther- as the rg i cocupied wit the eri t defence of the a aap aa Ae fie bang se pension ta these bepers samie. $0 edits and A how they got iain the Your Connecticut letter in yesterday’s paper is an illus- cock id tiates in vail \d the cr’ cif ainst the arms ‘ranco—an affair of art ry an ef ” H he i Be qa ein ther the dapan teeta bas becomo. wast musketry from begtantngto ond. the, fuird act, hie prisoners at Harper's Ferry bad no fault to find with him Son, comnd his catinon walla Bharod that astonishment: _ ais cow Zane ds a eae We it quite see th itude of es place in lo ugust, is Of a more quiet an " ‘be question round wag ‘How?’ ut not one of al esbyterian. ay nt Lp a on Pirineipal artiolesf.walne which we || domertia interest, showing ihe furaits to, which Garjbaiai | °R that score. ‘They frankly acknowledged his humanity | {he tamous echoes in Virginla-and thers are og eeaor et are entirely untrue. Until within some five or six years can at present expect to import from Japan are copper } 18 putin order to evade the vigilance of his Austrian pur- | and courtesy towards them. Atallevents, the opinions | them in the State—came to the help of the good citizens, | there have been no Presbyterians in Connecticut. It is duncan lave ods comma ona | Sublet cmneral “Sorel, etieaedy | Mnf the man fom te darko tien of ino | ESTAR ASME cet Qt phe Bry | Conran et Tour ernie tse v ni in A : : bagey wk Gea 'vuigtirs value of Zaponees snd a dance of fisher boys and girls and a milliary execution, | Wouldfade before the influence of a personal interview with | Giatieric. The “how” was discussed till the very rifles | tions are as much unlike as are the Baptists and Methodists. British produce will find their representatives, whatever | The affair of the Stelvio pass, in which gunpowder is more | him in prison. Now that his fate has been decided by the } and revolvers got full of it, and were likely to explode in | There is no more conservative body of religionists in this an ot ' | 4 reer inn baind aston upland. engiatid ia under seleoe |) Daving previonsty been suade, hagey, by. the recovery | longer indulges in complaints and invectives. Horarely } of their owners in forcing a solution of the difficulty, had | not fair that having been etigmatized in that way the in those parts. We gained our treaty by the echo of our | of his daughter, stolen in the first act. The story hay- | adverts to his trial; but whenever he does, he pays atri- | there been anybody near posseasing the wondrous secret. | should now be madeto bear the brunt of abolition Tana THE LEGISLATURE OF TENNESSEE ON THE HARPER'S FERRY AFFAIR. ‘The following resolutions have been introduced into the Legislature of Tennessce, now sitting at Nashville:— solved by the General Assembly of the State of Ten- nessee, That we recognise in the recent outbreak at Har- per’s Ferry, the natural fruits of this treasonable irre- pressible conflict doctrine put forth by the great head of the black republican party, and echoed by his subordi- nates; and that it becomes the imperative duty of national men of all Parties throughout the Union, to announce ta the world their sense of its infamy, and to unite in crush- ing out its authors as traitors to their country and ag deadly enemies to the public peace, the rights of the State, and the preservation of our republican institutions. Victory in the Peiho; we have imperilied it by our subse- | ing arrived at the present year, 1859, Garibaldi, 25 | pute to all concerned—Judgo, counsel and witne@ee, He ‘eWell,” says one miltary ralor, (ct haven't a word to iam. That must be charged to the _Consregationalists. Fag pect rer priser tered np od aed baal pepe the will ee aa mere Te: | | sacian uit vubeed (aloes literally, as the General hols | SPeaks freely upon all subjects but one, and that is, the | fai, PF but I would give something to lexrn the secret, | aint, x CONSTANT Pre... | eapecenele portion, of he Pe penbe., carer the ties of ney ove foes by oe oti shies get vee bis drawa Coie! ieee a pe viel eae aa death of his a Potion; his prepay aad been ad- fed se lon; bee vhs Pretty tothe obipad bk Nov. 4, 1859. with the black re publi eal mr a Bay 3 reasonably asks. ie key and many r icturesqy - | judged as entirely lous as to the fate sons and the i i of slavery, and will eventually “‘rise up against slavery,’? > coming the author of a hippodrame Mr. Tom Taylor has others are just beginning to think there is a screw loose » 2 difficulties lies at Pekin erage tially changed ape of the Astley’s Yohool of | cther unfortunate victims of his mad enterprise; but ola rere But thereis no use in thinking how he does it. DENIAL OF GERRIT SMITH’S BEING A SLAVE | js a libel’ upon the honor and loyalty of the Southerm people, and will but serve to make them more watchful some’ Sir nee, Franklin’s Expedition—A play; nor would, indeed, a complete transformation be | this is a very great mistake, and arises from ignorance Taneas Til get the Herat. Isay, reporter, de you take OWNER—LETTER FROM MR. FITZHUGH. Pe nd fexacting of their public servants in the national coum Captain McClintock. easy, when the exhibition of horses and a perpetual dis- ‘uman heart. olds ibject, Bul TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. ‘Tho foll wing isan extract from a reply by Captain } play of fighting must necessarily be the chief objects con. | f te bi waivi prczeiy vd prc fee cfs = “No”? Oswsao, Nov. 5, 1859. fs of Spal voheed ood het Tes odie ne vind ge ids eoncuter’ being marta Ontos ce pes ee id pier the f nee etcn cae it iat ropocteteatstteeooumar rairabeoen, “Marylander,” in your paper of the 1st or 24 instant, — ol ly cont le a - | can mark and un fee! re} ive mM irect 5 vt Be ites a 8 os ‘Oba 0 ton Foow if will not do,” added the. spoaker to those Dusty, Oot. 17, 1859. cident is to be condemned on the mere score of improba- | his own heart. He speaks freely cnough of his wife and Would have your readers believe that Mrs. Jas. G. Birney blished report 1 simp! stated the leading facts | bility, and that the right of living person on tho : around, “to be without the Hxratp if wo want to be post- from their eat tcerariins ere as net room: to exproos: in saat not to Ne eecae hte ‘story bo intelligibly | daughters, and ho has been some time considering the pro- | eq up in time upon what is going on inthe country.” “This | *24 Mrs. Gorrit Smith inherited slaves needy jons; besides which I wished that all interested rei told; the fidelity of Garibaldi’s wife and friends preserves | priety of allowing them to visit him. They are now on | sentiment was endorsed by all present; but whether they | #04 that their husbands sold sald slaves and pocketed the should draw their own tnforences. Tho boat was only 65 | a thread of intcrest through four long acts, and there i8 | ineir way to’visit him, although he had resolved on avoid- | ®cted upon it or not in the manner adopted by the gallant | avails. miles from the ship, and I believe it to have been return- | something touchingly pathetic in the death of Anita, This ing an interview with ‘them until some few days previous | Colonel, the writer would not undertake to say, Neither Mrs. Birney nor Mrs. Smith inherited slaves, ing for more provisions. The two skeletons found in it | is certainly an improvement on those incomprehensible to that fixed for his death, and which hehas nc the slight. SRLBGRAES OUNIDD: CLONED. be eevee ia i “pita eps were probably the boatkeepers—men unable to march | plots which no one attempts to disentangle, but which est hope of seeing put off a si rr, ‘The le of Charlestown had never bad a telegraph Maryland father, when with the others, all of hom, Lawepoee £0 have proceeded spectators are contented to regard as mere pretexts for | ““yrcl Russell, wife of Judge Russell, visited him the | offlco jocaed in their midst, and had never heard the moved to this State, remained in possession of my brother, poeple cht papas Sir raw elt Ae cel Pe pee ig gg geste crazier ts | other day, and had along chat with him. He appeared | short “click, cick” of the instrument disturb the mo- | the late William H. Fitzhugh, of Hagerstown. After my - . spring, at least, whon our oountrymen were thei Petual pair of lovers who for halt a century at least have | VcrY much pleased with the lady's manner and was very | notony of the dull neighborhood, until the John Brown | father’s death these slaves were set free by the joint con- lack republican party, any action on their part which favors a co operation with. black republicans in organizing the House, and thus the officers and im} it committees of that - commt with her. In illustratin; own charac- } affair occurred to bring their town into notice. Then the before fords Ho game Whatever. “Even Eaquimeux cannot live | filed up the interstices of equestrian speciacle with thelr | for he eaid that he haa never known vase ey cits | ocgazred 0 bring thelr town into notice. “Then the ientoned, Dr.D. Hl Maung, 0 Mourt Morr: Liviegs, | REMINISCENCES OF THE KANSAS WAR. neotenic et | “are tnt a rt, | Se ares Rehan | ear tes Sem mane aes | Greeny ono hh | IDOE OF AA Wa toned chocolate, tea and It ig clear that theso | with Dottini, a new prima donna, Albon!, Graziani, the “whom his | was a : ie bei Mrs. . introduction to the higber class of men with wham his | was thus brought into instantaneous communication with ‘When Mra. Smith was a child a servant Po! Saany inene cemnceeee ae ben ep rtd A baritone, and Gardoni, peculiar and wayward life brought him into contact. This | New York—an epoch in the uneventful history of the ca- | to her an friend of the family. This anes taken by even to men in vigorous health, in cold climates. The clever little pair of artistes known as the Boone chil- | feeling, he said, was very awkward and very painful, bes) ,of Jefferson county. But as soon as Old Brown’s one of my brothers to Kentucky, and afterwards, wit Had the country been capable. of sustaining natives, not | dren, from the United States, have been laying at the also, when entering the society of women. The interview | trial was concluded, and the sentence of death passed | her husband (Sam Russell) and their children, came into ‘ene of these traces w have remained for us to gather Soho theatre in their fayorite characters F Sir Poter and | with Mrs. Russell seemed to touch the old man’s heart, | upon him, there seemed to be no longer any necessity for possession of Mr. Worthington, of Mississipi, from whom q Lady Teazle, in scenes from Sheridan’s celebrated come- | 82d no woman could turn from him, go full of trials ‘and | the aie, and go the unhitched his instra- they were purchased by Gerrit Smith, set free and Frith respect to an overland expedition, you may recol- dy.” Tho versatile couple afterwards dance an Irish jg sorrow—for woman at such a moment rarely looks back | ment, pacl itup, did the same with his carpet bag, bi t to this State, at an expense of some $4,000. Gerrit Ject that such a one was gent out by the ‘Admiralty under | With great characteristic spirit and humor.—London Sun- | ‘0 first causese—without emotion. closed up the Feces ge himself to the railroad station, ‘Smith never sold a slave or bought one except to set him a Hudson Bay officor, Mr. Anderson, in 1865, in prefo- | 2ay Times. Brown frequently indulges in amusing narratives of his | and departed, leaving to the Titoctng impermatestcne free. James G. Birney was at one time a slaveholder, 84S TERRITORY. {From the Heratp of May 23, 1856.) Govurnor Rosrvsox—The bearer of this is one of us. ‘We have, since you left, in addition to the forces, 980 mora to join us, all well armed, and will the border ruffians hell whenever and wherever we them. Be sure and send us more rifles, powder and ball. We must have two more pieces of cannon to p'ant on the northeast corner of fort. In the send our women and Zesouto gnaral expec by Darrow eetrale “Mr, An Onis evening of the uh Cutter, the These Boral, | (1, ao thud tometinienen oancoaeee et | ieee ‘whaler by sobeetianoe oe porches; or Gods Tiaow 20%: | Sires, $0: dlMeWar furl OF Wao SarrNy: re lerson descended the Blac] 4 ad. res ? cod So ae rn | succeeded in running away with a party of slaves from THE COURT HOUSE. afterwards it was r | Teaches you you will Ff & slaughter amonget the pro eee eer eeaner pacorde Weald Ee fama rs | Cac aiage f Denmark's greatest actress, Malle. Heiberg, | Missouri, but that be was eo hotly purseed thar tren | _ Never since Charlestown was ret selected. af the: seat ihopurpose of getting hima free” Will “Marylandor” now | 2 Gnd ruffians, in cane ha cannot see you imme- Seed batten bees Git memos pete Von lnc | Shestorhaeisnied te ter con cee y Teaco, in Sheri. | S*alagem was necessary to prevent them from being | of the Cireuit Court of Jolerson county did anything have the magnanimity publicly to acknowledge himeolf in | {iMely- Vo want more men, if you can, prevail on thers pecs was to reach Montreal island aud | dan’s “School for Scandal” (Laterschader) overtaken, in the event of which asevere fight and conse- | transpire to attract such crowds to the Uourt House a$ | error? If he does this justice to himself, be will still have wusetts, and York to come ; ent sacrifice of life must be tho reguit. ‘To avoid this | during tho trial of Old Brown and his associates. ‘The house pea ote Foint Ogle, where Anderson's search terminated, and, | he following are tho recefpts of the Paris theatres. du- wn, himself turned off the track of the retreating var- | itself is a square, plain room, capablo of containing five | {he,"9eret or satisfaction, as the cage my. be, Of wert from hence to. where. the. lost People landed from their | T!28 the month of September:— Fray, ou, | Zeaat baring completely dius binsol joined an | or aix hundred people. Its nierod by a wide balliad- | 2 hwro'toon read and, belted bY. thoasnade Whos ‘ nes. . | amateur rsuers. With ( he remained a da: ing from the outer door. ‘ont e ben rail- reach. ITZHU ships. The greater part of this painfully interesting route | Grand Imperial Theatres. 267,864 60] andanight, entering into their counsels ond affectually | ing separating itfrom the body of the court running the | ™s retractionmay never oe as ‘was gone over three times—twice by Lieut. Hobson and | yfinor ditt the of the South her Sinus crempaeee oe just come nor dittO.........e008 489,537 25 | controlling their ions, so that he turned th the | whole breadth of the room, ascended by some half dozen ern mi ‘once a, myself. The natives repeatedly sola us Shaya Cafés, Chantants, Concerts, Ball 184,981 75 | right track and gave his friends an opportunity woman steps on cither side. Immediately to then ht, andunder | OUR QUADRILATERAL CONTEMPORARY IN | of 150 more men, armed—making in all be gee well armed the white people had died. Iam yer Moe sincerely, Various Exhibitions,,...,.. 8,981 75 | The old man laughed as he recalled the scone, and said, | the Judge’s seat, is the Clerk’s desk, railed in, while from FURTHER GEOGRAPHICAL TROUBLE, and well drilled men, well expericuced an: — | “Tnever was ata disguise, but that time I deceiys this place under the bench is a double row of seats for (From the Richmond Enquirer, Nov. 8.) Reeder is still with us. Thoy think he has left the To F. T. Susy, Esq. Total. ssi... .scee 06 | bereral in Ge party wit Bed mean con Kecee Tes.| Go acocemeatine of jurors. In front of these sit the | _ The stupid booby who drives the quill for the New | Write as goon as a eae he et re eee In Angust the total receipts amounted to 648,881 francs | before.” | With all who come in a kindly spirit | membors of the bar, at a long, narrow table, and behind | York HXRALD’s quadrilateral contemporary, the Times, ia | Easterni] . {think we can hol eo Suse or four Foreign Theatrical and Musical News. | 15 cents; tho balance in favor of September was consid, te visit him Brown is fxceedingty freo and open. them, again, is a oe generally jappropiated to the par - fyeeinarh ~ ped phn es ‘Virginia, but even of — = pee , &c., except powder and balls. — |. | erable—viz: 886 fre . le esteems such as friends, and seenis to view | ties most interes in the proce the cow er q y order gh ta i AST eh aR ee Te ene en their leave taking with rogret.- But. these visits | this portion is railed in, and within it, on thorright and | shouts to us from the fair vales of the Shenandoah, and | Soaactvaadake care of this. Don't let the mon im ‘nce of the Brussels Independance, says:— italian Opera Compass garantie Privilege of forming | aro but as angols visite, few and far between, for tho oa. | lett, are two stoves for warming the place, These rereta, | tho rocky gorges of the Virginia, Alloghanies.”” Does not | Lexington gett. nbs or SLtiY Boreons, hired for the purpose, and plaood aot in Rely fareny ag been Brantod to Salvi, who | tousy and suspicion with which the pooplé of Charles. | vorltespoteduring thotrial, audiuonmouniofcheslautand | the.1imes know that Richmond ia upea the ‘banks of wee e ixeazn of June 6, 1866.) in littie groups in the upper galleries, have renewed, in a | 18 mu 4 ° iy yen mae jupe. Madamo Lafon is | town regard all who are likely to feel for and sympathize anut shells that collected here day after day was amazing. | James river, and nowhere near the Shenandoah or the A letter to the 5 Facies May 20, more scandalous manner, during a second representation | *Poken of as la prima donna. with the prisoner—in fact, all strangere—keep barred the e exterior of the building has a rather neat appearance, | Alleganies? ‘Will not some humane reader of the Times | says that thirteen persons implicated in the mi the of “Norma,” the scene which ocecrred in the first repre. “Don Giovanni”? was recently given at Drury Lane, with | prison doors. It is not 80, however, in regard to thoso | tanding back from the street and shaded by trees. The | forthwith send that journala map of Virginia? Cannot [ogee men at Ossawatomie, have been arresteds sentation. twas no longer murmurs and whisperings, | the following cast:—Donna Anna, Milo. Titiens; Donna El. | about whose carnest host to all abolition movements oof is surmounted by a wooden column cupola, in which | the Heraxp supply its Me ot MN gee contemporary er re] the murderers are fortified in Dut groans and noises of all kinds, which completely | vira, Mile. Vaneri; Zerlina 'MlloJPiccolomin! (for this night | there is no doubt entertained. The enter in in flocks, | s suspended a bell, which morn and noon summons judge | with a school creditof the press, @rowned the voices of Madame Grisi and Mario. Tho up- | only); Don Giovannl, Signor Badialf; Don Ottavio, jor | and gape and stare and follow the jailor in out. It | nd jury, lawyers and litigants from the Carter House | and froma decent ‘4 for the intelligence of New roar was at its height mmencement of tho duct in | Belart; Tl Commendatore, Signor Castello; Masotto,” Senor was even with eome difficulty that Lsuceeeted ic effecting | Hotel, on'the other side of the strect. No sooner was its | York journals, we implore the Hrratp notto be slow to Brown. Two of sons are under tho second act. were thrown from the upper | Aldighiori. an entrance to Brown’s prison; but scarcely had Icom: | first stroke heard than the next momont was also heard | supply the means of knowledge where #0 much one of whom insanity. One bundred Galleries, falling at the fect of Madame Grisi and rebound ‘The Master of the Ceremonies of the imperial house. | menced a convereation him when the chlet jasiter the roll of the drum, which called to arms the guard ap- oxi, But as we are in a matter that belongs aha dren States dragoons aro asseinbled to ine PAO whe pit. |The public in the boxes tnd other parta | noid haa just siguided to the directors of the Theatre Fran- | Called me to join the tail of the retiring viiters, pointed for the day to escort Old Brown to the court | exclusively to our neighbor, the , weahall turn | ‘he murdei but fore indignantly to protest against such an | cais, the ‘Opera Comique, and the Vaudoville, tho pieces In every conversation Thad with Brown he denounced | room. This duty was performed with a of milita- | our attention to the ‘ complacency and lack Sader tacaiieaen, 7 racetis . Sen ee smn og ape _ Show, pasted i which aro to be porformed by the companies of those {he stlerapts ae boing. tere with Gorermen, ‘Wise | ry caution and pomecosneny Tie vay at =) Le ae Sense” with which this eminent me eee sana out, < gemec. ” conde vo 1a iterfere in any wa: ie course same time highly Storm, Wut was oblige to leave the stage. One of the | Cut hnet° dhe Mhuire frecosis Wilt play Gee che | marked ont by the (il and the tesalt, fees men, worthy of Fulstuf himselt, were drawn upset | "The tie having fairly gotten out of the ‘elbows of | Boston and lying at that lacs, has boon tolls employés theatre came forward 10 announce that ‘de Figaro,” the Opera Comique the “‘Songod’une Nuit | it tends, Ho fecls that those. who aro thus. troa the jail steps in close ling. At the word of odmmand the | the Mincio” and from its ‘‘quadrilateral | and will make her trial trip on Thursday next, the fas Pb bed Bo phe Madame Grist br heey eg ery tho “Dottes de Carur.?” the su not ite and coun with him are not | line, fa ouble _fles, extends itself Ho tin catranoe of on cenberrestmaenta,”” hea frequently displayed He malgnly, Br ed at EO nl il fainted ', Overcome motion. The autho- aestion Court House. rear rank then came right about well Barracks Fitles Were quite impasstve, Mme, Unido, tho singer, has font ken & wecond Wes. aaely his bed Weectiieds tion 5 Mgt Se aging ‘open order, when both fronts brought their the peel ak mogh the earns Navy Yard has advanced ‘main Mckieeamne tea ‘The following explanation of this occurrence is given band in the person of M. Varoollier. shared, ‘whose confidénco ho possossed, and whose | loaded, ‘capped and cocked—to the charge, and lasees ‘witnessed the panic of the and their 5 ey a is vip oo Pee ym red or ane nF r= mena rasan prema "Las | Reheat a era | eae ey ee ne aa naaehe ney | eco niece cart aacc tee | Rett ite cane geen ome concerts an Porch or 0 at two I. ‘ hgh bah Jodependance bas ox- music, las been rolvasod from his pecuniary. Croberrame- dare not publicly avow themselves, and the ane in | and as no one replaced it he always Kg ‘The Times having a speciatite in such affkirs, wo do not | to protect the walls from the weather until ct 7) pena: a nt, abe Surprise is cx- | montsin Paris. Ho attributes his rain to the “scorpions” al capital, and the gchemera in political evontuaR- | pearcd barebended. This was the military order feel disposed to the accuracy of the ju when the work will be renewed ona more eres the eee have ten | of the logal profession in Iondoa, and to cortain ‘music ho never had, and did not now desire to have, any- | of p during tho trial. Some curious customs | so experienced a critic. Fae Raed big otal. new Iriquois, ‘atthe Brookiyt? Joss there may be some political cause for this moan D- } Speculators who have fatioued on his former success. ine to 4p with. He that the object of these Eee lustrative of the free and easy style of ce ‘urge in behalf core le irper’ ST ‘iq ; ying declares tion, its explanation may por be found. in the fact. During the twenty years that Jullion reigned asthe mo- | menis as base as that of those varices who, in Harper’s ) ns the darkness parch of the famed popular concerts he acknowledges to | Ferry and Char! Governor | perseverance with which the audience applied themselves | ber of their assailants, ‘lestown, apochryphal ‘y comm 5 dents of Mario’s carly which are not forgotton in } have received the enor! sum of £200,000 in England | Wise as Brown’s friends, threatening him with vengeance | to the cracking and shelling of chestnuts Peanuts, - battle of Solferino was not without similar inc! nearly all reported, and her crow and marines are only Madrid, though Mille known outside of Spain, and that | and America, Ho has lately refined, ofa to Tctaen to | gd Gosih Would: No cares tee ieteae pronounced | from the moment the court opened ull i closad agaie’ | ive fright of the Times’ caitor at the baitle of ‘rating ordors to be sent on Board. lau io inntltaaro Intended for hina not for Gri Tondon to preside over entertainments of a similar cha. | by the law. He rocogniges foes under both garbs, and is | The floor of the court, Within a fow feot of the | was certainly not less than that of the people of A ‘beg will be despatohed from the, redme cs uae ‘This Wirth, but ho eran ae raly, supposed to be an | racter, and is now busily engaged in writing “His Life | a8 equally unmoved by ono mode of enmity as the other. | Judge himself, was inches deep, in places, with nut sholle, | Ferry—the former lost his wits and the latter the Naval Library and Teettate, ‘at tho Navy Yard, Chepiee Bartana write guano cee | legend Meets oe ate cerbe | Sean St eee Buten't: Mba Se | tains oven tomcwes ee wat | Fern ery ypu. umnoe rear | eno eae ued era u mai concerts, whon ¢: same cell wi Vens, whose iside he is con- re le ramplit Times recovel os can, -s ef which his father was once the . Senor Pi 8 late occasion ‘before tho tribunal at his GS ation | stantly found sitting, wit 4 Pans, cide ee oa oonne sing de ‘ Coast of Africa, ‘ ‘ eal ith the Bible (just, closed | a continual cry from an official of Ss Ienges, : a he lecide. Mario's father—was a man of substango ag woll as $0 obtain reloase from bankruptcy, elicited tho sympathy ' ys the visiter entcts) placed upon im gourt, there;” and, though the sogar might be taken ‘The Maguirer bas never propored to “barter” John

Other pages from this issue: