The New York Herald Newspaper, February 22, 1860, Page 5

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; , MEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1860.~TRIPLE SHEET. Ei nas began ven men ‘sn | THE GELEBRATION IN WASHINGTON TO-DAY | Tt" an crys, nuts cn’ srtcesaned We | sae erating cs vie oman rated = | SOUTHERN OPINION AND THE PRESENT CRISIS : the newspapers of Paris, The Paris Meena an Kop scale vote efoa You el the text eof Bis subject, and te day, in the capital of eur bo Slat of January saya:— erack of doom. Gentie loved nation, the result of his genius is te receive its crown “ rm Imports | 0! F country, not to speak of its unconstiational wee, Bee other face to e ‘We only recetved yesterday e' ate late hour, e1 ’ ‘and the friends of Mr. Hunter, it is evident, never Millw Statae of Wash- |g glery—the work equal ia stature to Rosa Bonheur’ jon to publish the Encyclical of the ry e and persistent asaanite upon slavery, which is the essen- fatecid to let this thing come to. a vote, They detgramod | TAAUSEZOCON OF ee ee Pemsniwind yates ech rivaling it im ita poouiia: [Di if what provented us from aauering to it the expres: tial basis of our aystem, political and fodustrial. "Will sha epon # im caucus theotber might (Cries of “No, no.”) ston, ’ sion of the eentiments with which that document has im if ugut more | determine no longer to remain in # confederacy which Kaursr—Well, then, sinee you deny it, I take bas! To-day the city of Washington will be the seene of a | heel. spared! eis w da it back the progress of manufacturing at the South, eid ieee ential eearieea ee ebarge. I acknowledge that are gem: and erest, ¢ plain meaning of this is, that the Siete reee! oy p y = Ie, aoe aif yea tock sec gent mn nen, Pageant of triple ialerest and significance to the American | archbishop HH ghe Louis Napoleen | ison to #¥e the letter on a certain day, but that Pi. | Graniteville bas been a deacon Rene which bas Kept con- | tion has been disregarded which stood in the way ef Mr, Hanvm—I deny utterly that aay such dotermination | People. First, because the ceremonies are in hovor of the ana the Pope, — royal pomp. cer bad got leisure to write out the editorial | Mdence somewhat alive in that most needed and simplest | Northern supremacy and self-aggrandisement ? was formed. + | anniversary of the birthday of the illustrious and immor- | 4 MEETING IN FAVOR OF ITALIAN LIBERTY OALLED explanation ¥ hich was to be given with it on the sane | Of all branches of manufacturing. With the Augusta | are questions which her People must speedily anawer. Mr | Kemrer—That’s enough. 1 was going on toray | 14) Washington, so aptiy styled the Father of His Couuir: TOGETHER ON THE ASSURANCE THAT IT WAS NOT TO ‘ay. Equa ly subservient were the directors of the Pays, | Company some twenty five or thirty cotton manufacturing | God grant that they answer them wisely, and before it be ‘that the two parties siood here face to face, a majority if %> BE PECUNIOUS. the Presse, a Patrie, the Opinione Nationale and other | estab!isimenis in the South went down, and others have | too late for success and independence to crown thelr re- aude minority, and it was evident that minority | for it was he to whom we owe our national existence. (From the Metropolitan Record (official organ ef Areb sheets, Win the Y wero permited to broathe, | dragged out @ sickiy existence from ihe same causo— | ply. Very faithfully, yours, Would bot permit @ vote to be taken. Now, gentiemen, | Second, because the nation, through their immediate re bishep Hughes), of tais week the editora ‘\xpreesed themselves in that aimless | want of home patronage. you staud face wo face, The Hunter party have it in their | resentatives, aro to Dour his illustrious i A curious meeting was held at the City ye a Room: § snd = ribald bi yay of jest against things divine From the same cause the various attempts to make power to prevent a vote being taken on this question. . . on Friday evening, the 27th inst. It was headed in the J which we noticed im our last issueas betog gradually iotro- | buckets and tubs, i diferent parts of the South, failed, Are you going to come back here on Mouday moraing | mory a work of art, representing him in as vivid a pewspapers, “The Independence of Italy.” Thegentlompn | duced into France and ltaly by the enemies of our faith. | They were far betur buckets than those made at the with the rump of this Convention to undertake Re senre- manner as the practical human mind could eonceive— | who subscribed the card of invitation to the meeting, teor Alluding to the appeal made by the Holy Father to the | North, but our merchants would not purghase thom. went the democratic party of Virginia? You are not. [am @ statue representing the man, to which the eyes of our | C&Fe for the most part, to Be personally absent’ The Creator snd Kedeemer of all men, Granier de Cassaguac | Twenty-five cents m the price of a dozen buckets would jotmg to meve to pars by all the questions under considera. P td . y card itself was an exceedingly modest affair, and les: §) tays, in the Paps:— tempt the country mercbant to buy @ Yankee article in- w to have the vole as it now stands ia the | countrymen will be directed in future generations, and | there should be no audience, it was announced that ther: “Speaking absolutely, God bas no need of anybody; bat | Send of the home made, which{would give twice the satis. Pande of the secretary counted, under the sapervision of | which will renew in their minds the memory of the man | would be no collection, or, in the words of the announec | for the lant fourioen chance He has always thougut ix | {ection to the cousumer, but would not pay #0 good « ; “ ” ‘thos ; der; and here ites tho grand avcret wh Ro ae ee ee: eorvcue ‘may be, boule parte | "hose deeds furnished the basis of our national histery, | MeBt, Re “pecunious’” demand would be mado upom ueetul to employ France for the accomplishment of His de- } Pratt te the renter: aitverally extended vo tho encourag? present. Thus, as might be supposed, there was plenty eigne.? 5 will have to abide by it. (Applause.) I move, therefore, | Thirdly, because it is to bestow a tribute to mative Ame- | of sympatby, but the material ald’ was wanting. Ag the . ment and pretection of Southern enterprise and home in- pass by all the questions before the house, and that | rican art, Oty Areembly Rooms are on Broadway, the announee ‘The wretched blasphemy had a very inepiriting effecten | dustry, of which we will treat more fully as wo progr: ss ‘the secretaries procved with the count, and then that the ment of a meeting there is al certain to attract a J Palmerston and Napoleon's friends in Eogiand, who, pant: | with ihe rubject. There was quite a spirit abroad sora President shall appoint an Executive Commitice, after ‘The colossal statue ef Washington which is to be inangu- considerable number of persons, and the fact that the ad ing for the downfall of tne Church in France, expressed were ago for raising broom corn and manufacturing Which we shall take up collection to pay the damages | rated to day is not primarily caused through any recent | mission was free Drought together many of those who | ‘Pemselves thus in the organ of the l’remier, the London rooms, and that business has failed and beew abandoned WM. PORCHER MILES. ~ To Mesers. J. J. Lecas, E. Homry Froer, J. Drayrow Forp, Witum Hxvry Lapson, Wa. L. Txexsoum, arcs, ; ‘Wasmrnaton, Feb, 7, 1860, Gurriamex—I had the honor to receive your kind invi- tation to the annual dinner of the Charleston Chamber of Commerce, at Hibernian Hull, on the 16th inst., which i would afford me great pleasure to accept, but ciroum- stances deuy me the pleasure. 1 see that commercial men in the South are endeavoring to efeet their incependence of the North by direct impor- tations for the consumption of our people, whose honest labor has bloated , Arrogance, our worst sori 28 their earth, until they not only express a determination to }om have done to the house of God. f our national legislature, but is merely the revivify- | Would not otherwise auend. Post, of the Slst of Janvary:— from the same cause, Chair muking is another branch of ‘wil, but threaten. ri wo dare ete veer geen wage 7 "Fue motion to pass by all proceodings under considera- | tf our ia . Nair Congress ja | ., 7H Hou. Mr. James W. Beckman occupied the chair rae, Know mot who may be destined to play the part of | manufacturing that ought to have succeeded at the South, | war upon us with fire and sword, even to, the vigladie OE fiom was agreed to, a8 was the motion authorizing the | ‘0g of an old series of rerolutious adopted by Congress He didn’t say much, but we perceive that there were ap. | ® Lather or of another Calvin in Franoe or modern Italy; | but that eared the fate of other enterprises from the our bearthstones and honsebold gods. President to t an Executive Committee ef one from | 1788, and which remained sacred on the records ef the plause and repeated cheers, allof which must have beew f(r Whom, above all, Will be reserved the glory of making | same causes. Under these circumstances, though I consider the di- each electoral district. nation, when, on the 17th of January, 1853, the old patri- | Very grotitying. Then there wera resolutions iatroduce: i Protestant. Paper making is another and very important branch of | ease at the North too gangrene to be cured by more com- ‘Bre Comvention then took a recess until eight e’cleck 7 ‘4 . “ by “the Rev. Joseph Thompson, D. D. His apeech ts no! ‘actly as we antictpated inthe Record, the Protestant | posinese at the South, and that bas suffered seriously | mercial regulations, yetl bid God apeea to every step ru otic apirit of "76 was kindled anew in the breasts of our | remarkable, except for one passage, which we quote from | CbUrch 18 to be built up, if possible, Jn Maly and Franoo, | from the wentar Reathérn onage. Even our news- | tending to convince the North, as well as our own peoples NIGHT SESSION. national legislators, and on that day the following reso: | the report. "While Mr. Thompson was on his lege he had bart a wd ieroaacaine ROG he Me prowey. | papers were not unthi recently printed on Souihern paper, | of Se beste capacity, morally, {oclly. commercially chance to be eloquent, of which he wi tw me veo ss in their o| 1 | abd some are ati!l usiog a Yankee artigle. ¢ or two ex- 1y, to live independently of our enemies ‘Tho Convention reassembled at the appointed hour. lutions, which we copy from the Journal of Congress, os ee) ms 4 pond 4 open oe mat Sloss fo as well as in that of the would-be Gibbous and feeble pla’ | ent, paras cals rm gd New Or! great’ edvesmten | the world. A few resolutions were submitted Himiting the number | Avgust 7, 1783, were called up for adoption:— following in parenthesis (‘The Reverend Henry Wars § k/erisia who write go fiercely on the subject on this tide | for Southern Institutions, are printing extensively circa- Please accept for yourselves, and those you reprecent, delegates State tions + Resolved (unanimously, ten States of the Union being | Beecher, entering at thie stage, was greeted with loud the Atlantic. lated journals on Northern paper—unot for the reason that he! sabe spagaied 9 frame Seeeen' ey present), Thee equestrian statue ot General Washiag, plause.”?)" "Now the cme ‘of Dr. ‘Thompsoa broke L Univers of Paria was established in tho year 1885 by | they cannot procure # Southern and a better article. We ene for every one hundred democratic votes, and propos- | Tabs erected at the place where the residence of Con. | but, and-be nod sens Sir, I shall only speak long enough | the Abbe Migne, and so hittie injury did it do to the va- | will, however, deal lightly with the editors, for we must sther shanges in the organization; but they were all | gress be established. On the report of the committee to | to give Mr. Beecher timeto rest and breathe,” (Cheers.) | "ous governments of France during that time, that it was | confess that we bave never known one who was not withdrawn. my grateful consideration, Your obedient servant, “JOHN MoQUEEN, To Messrs. J. J. Lucas, F. H. Frost, J.D. Ford, W. B. Ladson, W. L. Trenholm, commitiee, epare & plan for the statue, it was At the end of Dr. Thompson’s speech a gentleman near J reserved for the much-vannted defender of Rome to put | friendly to heme enterprises. —_ oo In erder that_yeur readers yay falty Vanier dered = Prpeolv |, That the statue be of rouse, the General to | the platform Tove and said —* Might T risa, question?” sors under pretence of @ law manufactared by him- nny ‘or the fo.) City Intelligence, ‘upon which ‘vote given taken, be represented in Roman dress, ® trancheon in | when the ioent answered, “No, sir; and Dr. J THE PIC. E—PRACTICE VS. PRECEPT. " =~ we give the original resolution offered by Mr. Coapman, hia right band, and his bead encircled isa laurel wreath, ‘Thompson vaid, “I have the floor, sir.” However, ali The writers who exclaim go boldly about the aid given | The New Orieans Picayune is quite rampant upon the | _ WAsmNGroy’s Bixtupay.—This being Washington’s and the substitute thereto offered by Mr. Dougias, King | The statue to be supported by # marble pedestal, on which | this passed off in very good humor—the one had the floor, J to the Pope by the presence of the Freneh troops in Rome, | subject of encouraging Southern Indestrial enterpriee—- birthday, the customary civic and military processions and the are to be represented, in basgo relievo, the following other couid not rise to a question, know very well that they havo been kept there for pe- | yer the type, the Ink, the paper and the press which she i willtake place, but in all probability, th The following 's the eriginal resolution offered by Mr. | principal events in the'war in which General Washing: | There were letiers read—one from the Hon. John a. | litical purposes only; that the "law against the berty of | Zece te Wikninate Me? petro settee eee she Pee Se enter, be oareaeaion a, ton mad “ II not be of such an imposing character aa in former pman commanded ip person, vis:—The evacuation of Boston; | Dix, but there was not much in it—certainly neither his. | the French press to publish charch decuments was made | 9} manufactured at the North. Southern paper manu. | ¥ Resolved, That in the opinion of this Oenvention, Henry | the capture of he eachane at Trenton; the battle of | tory nor philosophy; it was simply his -4t. Next J 2 1862 by the Emperor; anc that ever since pari pasns— | facturers have tried in vain to furnish her with paper. | Years, partly because of the absence of the Seventh rogi- A. Wiee is the choice of the democratic party of this State Princeton; the action of Monmouth, and the surrender of | came the ‘of a letter from Be: Silliman, Baq., §| With even tread—has he gone on to foment discord in the y b ie Gaal Some have gone £0 far as to consign paper of the best fer the Presidency. Yorktown, On the upper part of the front of the pedestal | and indeed if he had not subscribed it, we should’ have | Christian capital for base dynastic ends. quaiity (far superior to what she uses) to her address, re- Mr. . B. DevcLas, the Senator from King William and engraved as follows:—‘The United States of Ameri- | guessed his name. Another was from Mr. Hilliard, who | Napoleon is fond of historical coincidences, but be | questing the proprietors te ailix the price—-but no—she King and Queen counties, offered the following as a sab- 2a Congress assembled, ordered this statue to be erect- ait wrote with moderation, and, what is singular 9 Tarely carries his | serve or began Lon day be his uncle, | must have ber paper from old Boston, the hot-bed of abo- etivate for this resolution :— ea, im the year of our Lord 1783, in honor of General | enough on the occasion, with no small portion of common — ‘orgetting even rape pote was all “senda ty as he | jition fanaticiem. Lead # Wasbingtom, the illustrious Commander-in-Chief of the } sense. He speaks of “ an aggregation andan accumula | “etoribea himself, ans bespiere, who was ail decision. A’most ivery sheet of newspaper used by the press in armies of the United States of America during the war | tion of sympathy to which every generous breast in Louis Philippe, one of the most worldiy-wise of mo | North Carolia, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama, is which vindicated and secured their liberty, sovereignty } Christendom contributes a share.”” Bank stock must archs, made the following avswer to the Minister of State | of gonthern manufacture. Three fourtha of all that is and independence.” have been in his mind, for we never knew sympathy t | Who urged him to break with the Pope:— used in New Orleans is made at the North. In Tennessee Resolved, That s statue comformable to the above plan } go by shares before. If you can put your finger upon any page of history | it ig divided between North and South. The Southern be executed by the best artist in Europe, under the super- | | The Hon. Charles Sumner honored the meeting with » | 'p which a Catholic sovereign has entered into a conthet | Methodist Book Concern gets most of theirs from North of intendence of the Minister of the United States at the | letter. We bave been watching and hoping for the re. | With the Pope, and has come out of it with honor, them I} yason and Dixon's Line. Most of the newspapers of that ment, partly because of the non-appropriation of any sum: by the Common Council for the celebration, and partly because there appears to be no unity or concert m the arrapgements. Order of United Americans, the A.P.A., and several of the city regiments, will parade and be ‘reviewed by the Mayor in (rout of the Oty Hall about midday. Washington’s farewell address will be read in the public schools, and a number of balls, sup- pers, &c., will come off in the evening. St. Axn’s Cnvxcu ror Dray Mores, through a duly accredited deaf mute agent, makes a strong appeal for 01 les, and money to defray the ex- | covery of his head since the eating he received § Will consider your proposal.”” State are manufactured South. The Picayune is sound | dol’ar subscriptions to ite indebtedne Every sub- y the ai pare ee et eS treasury of | from Mr. Brooka on the floor of the United States Senate, ‘The present French Emperor is apparently determined upon the Southern question, except when her feelings, of | gcriber will receive a lithograph of the eliayeh. and thereby accomplish the overthrow of the enemy of | PoP ited Staten, and we bad thought that occupying his eeat in the coun: | to afford another verification of this tact in his own cage. | her carly prejudices, or hor interests draw her Northward. ‘Ai rox nim Newsnovs.—The friends of the Newsboys? the federal constitution, and preserve the blessings ef |'" Respived, That the Secretary of transmit to | cila ofthe mation would be evidence that under the f THE NEW COMMERCIAL CODE OF FRANCE A FALLIBLE Consistency, thou art a jewel. Galon to ourselves and posterity. the Minister of the United States at the Court of Versailles | treatment of European physicians his physical and | paren ALTERATION INTHE IRON DUTIES ALREADY. ’ so Lodging Houre will have an opportunity of aiding this ‘Tao hnperfeck scale vole which was accepted a8 8.com- | the best resemblance of General Washington to be pro- | mental health had been restored; his letter le not very The sudden sacritice of the traditionary commercial po- | The Bath Paper Mill in South Carolina lost its first capi. | excellent institution for homeless boys, by being present Premige was upon this substitute. cured, that a suitable statue be erected, together with the | encouraging on this score; he talks of the motion of the licy of France, under authority of a decree of the Empo- | tal mainly for the wantof a stady home demand for its | atthe Pupils’ Exhibition of the Mount Washington Instl- Mr. Win. F. Gordon, one of the seoretaries, entered the | f. est description of the events which are to be the sub- | pendulum, which Slearly shows that even in his own } yor, has not alforded that unbounded satisfaction which | products. That company labored long and hard to intro. tute, which will be held for its benefit at No. 686 Broad. ball seon after the reassembling of the Convention, and | ject of the previous resolutions. Mind things are not settled. bis Majesty anticipated, cither in England or France. It | duce their excellent paper into use; that establishment is | way’ opposite the Metropolitan, Hotel, “on Wednesday — the following as the result of the vote:— On that day the Hon. Gilbert Dean, of New York, | Another commanioation was Som the toe. 3. Je Would be outside tho province of a journal such a8 the | now doing well and making money for its Proprietors. | evening, February 22, at lait past seven o'clock. Nees, asked the unanimous consent of tho House to introduce a | but be speaks had rey ‘of Kig ‘Emanuel py ‘nia’ Record to collect a mass of figures and endeavor to rea- | {tis tow becoming generally known to publishers that Fin in Nassau Sraket—Axnesr oF THR PROPRIETOR OF from their aggregates on the falsity of the economic ood and chea| ir is made at the South; it is likely Majority agaizst the sabstitate “a8 Dill to carry into effect the resolution of Congress, passed aya perhome in a peta Yk hoe Rater ts pened Principles to imperiously laid down in ie uae scale that that branch of por will be abio 1% tale Tux STORE ON SUSriCciON oF ARSON.—Shortly befor 6 o'clock, Bay ea ee ages uguet 7, 1 to erect im th ital of the nation & democt ican, drawo by Napoleon, as it ia enou; for our par- | care of itself, particularly as the consumer purchases di- | this yesterd orning, a fl discovered yen the announcement of the volo the friends ot Wiee | AWfu TiN toe Washington ‘© | Another letter trom the Hon. George Biggs. pose to" uow thst the treaty inualy. concluded | fectly trom tho manufurrurer which ia aol the cae wos pl Ties re'ed vides "mua tesco, = @heered vociferously. ES er fag cig a de iia ep te bre th be tag Huotnoticeable for T between the two fovernments Bas slromdy been us. manufacturers in other branches, who can reach tee con. | eb ott cate Abrieersp a ‘Nhe Convention then adjourned sine die. introduction matter was recel anything in par id wv. Dr. » being him. sailed itish mmMons some Jy through the mercl wi eo like asrau street. 6 fire was discovered and extinguish: i) 5 elost eatidnbSa SA, 6 Fesubet, tevin "Wan! Fon] POE 8 Socinian, took care 10 repretsat Frotesantiam, ani segs iggy = acct OW oe i making by the inurance patrol waich, ander Guptain Mackay, bo- Our Albany Correspondence. and passed the same day. It reads as follows:— ao y centri rast fat genic so big oi tp rs. We | measure devised for effect, under political pretences, be- | moncy; and they can all succeed best in carrying out that | fore much damage was done. appearance fire was very suspicious. Three casks of brandy had holes bored in them, so that the liquor could flow upon the fire; and if it had not been #0 quickly discovered, tha entire {premises, no doubt, would have been hog roprietor x yd mal J us, Was eee by the 1d precinct on #8 of wilfully Oring the premises. ‘Tho stock is insured for $3,000 Tu the Eagle, and $2,000 in the Mechanics’ and Traders’ ingurance companies. Its value will not probably exceed $2,000, The Fire Marshal has the matter under investigation. Fing ty Svuuivan Srreer.—Beiween three and four o’clock on Tuesday morning a fire broke out in the attia of the dwelling house No. 68 Sullivan street, occupied by Mrs. Elza White. The flames spread to the roof, doing = damage of about $160; said to be insured. The by fire and water to the furniture amounts to abont $100; not insured. The cause of the fire is at present unknown. “ANNIVERSARY OF THE JOHN Street PRaveR Meenina.—The anniverrary of the John strect daily union prayer meet- tween Palmerston and the French ruler. object ‘by selling goods that are made far away from Atsanr, Feb. 20, 1868. Be it enacted, Ke., That the sum of fifty thousand dol- | Femember that but recently he was socused of wishing to } "Yr. Seymour Fuzgerald—a prominent advocate of free | home, for everybouy kuows the worth of a leading article ‘The Speaker of the Assembly Attempting to Silence the | ars is hereby appropriated to enable the President of the | establish a new kind of Catholic Church on & broad basis. § traqc—has protested against the measure as "one of the | Cr nekemorcincorea domestics, and therefore the trader at His Room—History of the $100,000 | United States to employ Clark Mills to erect at the city of | Dr. Bellows baa taken advantage of bis opportunity & } most objectionable papers that bad ever come before Par- may not be able to realize as large @ profit as may satisfy ‘Washington a colessal equestrian statue of General Wash. | ventilate bis thoughts on this and other subjects; but after } tiament,” and ended by deecribing it as an ‘“‘anschron- | histhirat for gain. Letter—olling Railroads—Appropriation Bill, dc. ington, at such place in the public grounds in said city as | all the puff won't reach to any great length beyond the } ism” a’ “retrograde measure, which, clumsy injtho ex. | "We have in our mind another branch Of industry§ which, ‘The events of the mélée of Friday last, in the Assembly | shall be designated by the Committee on Public Buildings | limitsof the Avsembly Rooms. on ot | tteme, was got up in order to divert the attention’ of the though small, enters into the general list of neglected em: ahamber, are felt in every direction. Especially do the | and Grounds, and substantially to carry into effect the | | The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher eS a ane country from the political relations of her Majesty’s go- | ployments—the manufacture of silver ware. In old trendn af Pro ala feel at hay hare got aevere blow | TSG aly af meicn” wi’ he Creve of Me | Omen andthe yah trad wana sehen | serumen mui cveroment.of Franc, won ax | Line, hen, fom th scary of money, Da ie lve of .merica. Hy . Bu no dor " ware was imoet pat vl Srom their own friends, one that they cannot well recover | © a7, Orr. of south Carolina, made a motion, which was | if he (Beecher) madethe audience laugh—which feat, if 1 lishmen should ‘st once become engrossed in anything | silversmith to make spoons, cups, &e. How stands. the from. From the beginning have the friends of this mes. dew) d : the papers report correctly, he secomplished more than } which wore @ commercial aspect, and give no heed to | matter now? There is not a’village in the whole South finally adopted, to suspend the rule of the House which | once. what required the closest and most anxious scrutiny—the | where you may not find Yankee silver spoons for sare undertaken to ride roughshod over all opposition, requires a bill calling for an appropriation to bereferred | | Then came the speech of the right Hon. Joseph Horie. | poiitical relations of the Viscount’s government and the sale, and wo think it would be difficult to find a and to suppress facts in connection with it; and now they | 1, ine Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union, | His voice was somewhat broken; but if he had put his | Povernment of France.” t silversmith at work anywhere in the State out of blows; but this is not all. The Speaker of the As- | prove jnto poetry, and chanted what he had to say, be | The ribbon manufacturers of Coventry, England, who | Charleston, Even. that’ city does mot support, aa poche oye #80 that the bill might pass then. Gould have produced as much laughter as the Rev. Dr. | constitute a very influential class of capitalists and arti- | jt ought to do, one silversmith. There in one os. pombly, Hon. Dewitt C. Littiejohn, and one of the most | “some miscellaneous debate ensued as to whether the | Beecher. When be had finished, the newspapers pat in | sans huve held a moctiog and toreaded anemia ty | epee tooo. city which has been struggling for life prombient Pro Rata advocates, has also undertaken to ride | statue to represent Washington should be clothed in the preieee Sng cuilgetoned aanially|ng, BO doubt» | London in order o remonatrate with the Cabinet on the | for thirty years past, scarcely able to live and almost on. ever the representatives of the press. About five days old omen. Seah) oc she Coa! a nae oman subject, whilst the Chamber of Commerce of the same | rely unknown to the people of the State, so far as trade city bas denounced the treaty in plain terms, and appoint- | goes. The establishment has been working always against ‘sine he approached the seat of the correspondent of the | sivio was designated by the original rosolutions—but it | _ Next came the great Professor Mitchell, announcing that | Cj’, han Geren charged with publishing an exposé of its | a hot Northern competition, besides wind and tide against which was commenced February 22, 1868, wi Bvening Post, and told him that he was talking with the had been all his life among the stars, and he’ evidently ve. in that proverbial indifference about Southern patron. | {2%} » 1868, will be ¢! was finally agreed to leave this question to the better a wed that he had cheated them not of ove ray of thei bl the native manufacturers have alread: ie te Wrdeer ee ba grote pes heid this (Wednesday) noon, commencing st twelve members too much upos til meaere, and/then ceu- judgment of the artist. ponies fate Ho ey “returned from celestial om “4 ats 'Y Op. | age to home industry. prop) ib | o'clock. It is expected that we proceedings will be imte~ the new ‘‘ idea” with an amount of pertinacity and | lishment is prover! for his honesty and industry, aod fiewed him as to his future course, stating that be migh; spheres # mere dull planet, and not a star; nor does his " y ‘We will ack our readers to observe this point in the lumination come from tne centre of our polar system, ‘mnees Which could be elicited only under such govern- | has struggled through life and raised a family of useful from floor of t Ni massed 1 the eae nae’ from he privoges of the Goor oF | resotutions of 1785, that Congress authorized the employ” | bat as tar aa i extode, w borrowed, from the riley ot Tnence tormnich thelr poreoual Tatarents aad te Fabure of | Castries bende? serra oe anmnenet, the woalth that bag the House. ment of a foreign artist, little thinking that before those | other men. Still the announcement that he lived among | their country have been so immediately exposed. Some | yer ware. @n Friday morning he commenced upon the corres- | resolutions were carried into effect, the halo of genius | the stars is « puif which we should have expected rather | brine employers in the provinces have oven now com- | — We inspected beautiful silver tea set mato by tho pendent of the Rzpress, stating to him that he was vio- t | atthe hands of Dr. Bellows. Everybody knows who | menced to work on short time—five days in the week—s proprietor of that establishment, which was exhibited at ant hae he was taking. Immo. | "Ovid encircle the brow of an American artist—a sigh’ | Professor Mitchell is—at least in his own esti | Necessity fraught with the most dangerous comereercoe | rORrictor of that esta years ago, which, to the manutao- lating his privilege by the course } sketch of whom we annex. mation. He says, “I have a a living ae, to social order and the very existence of tho throne, as | turer’s great mortification, did not get the highest pre. diately after the adjournment of the exciting seasion an | we repeat, then, that the event in Washington to-day | life among the millions of g) = evidenced by the dread with which Napoleon the First | mium, which was awarded to artictes of Yankee manu- resting. Run Over Casvarrirs.—George Ferris, a boy seven years of age, while with a companion endegvoring to ap upon the platform of a Second avenue car, near Eighty- third street, on Monday evening, missed his foothold an@ fell upon the track, the wheels of the car pasting over his leg, breaking it in two placce He was conveyed to his residence. far away { er earth; what, then, should < C (On Monday afternoon Mrs. Moore, of No. 99 West Twen- Friday; Ht Docame the tarn of your representative 10 Te | hase national signifloance, which will in future oocupy a | Tungw of thie parti cecert that revered cenit the aha xeuariee gate,» cost ftlgeraN Ci ia icobtde’| tue ponple’ month ot Blas ane terete rae iat || ty-noconel siveet Ube croming ‘Eegouy arouse sat te eeive a lectare from this republican Speaker, which I wish |. sinent place in our bistory. sun freighted with living sentient py Now hore | aificulties which surround Napoleon aro s good deal more | pretend to ray that we lack ism at the South, | Corner of Twenty-first etreet, was knocked down by m to eall your attention especially to as the doctrine of repub- ‘The event will be of very imposing interest. Major | W®2 genuine eloquence, but the ots ‘the speech would urgent than those seen only in the perspective, so hecon- | and that there are not dg whose breasts | boree and sleigh, which waa being driven up the avenue Means at Albany. Whilst I was obtaining a copy at the 6 rather suggest that it was loston the audience, for there | cocted the free trade scheme in order to “divert public | do warm up at the very idea of domestic en- | St 4 furious rate, severely injuring her. She was conyey= Glerk’s desk of the resolution adopted, and the list of yeas | CCReTM Jecup is to be the Grand Marshal on the coca. | is not a word about applause or cheers. attention” from bis relations with England on the Italian | -erprises springing up in the South. You will | ¢d to her realaence, but the driver escaped. , sion. The President and his Cabinet, the Judges of the | We éceit preposed that another, or several mectings | question, as well as from his unfortunate towards | scarcely find a man who does not rojoice to see sad nays upon it, I saked Mr. Littlejohn how he could re- | scpreme Court, members of the diplomatic corps, officers | *HOwld be held. Wo trust that the object for euch - | the head of the Church, hoping that the free. born. shop. any Tad etre manatees Trowitg vo eoveg'ea eae @oncile his decision upon the case with Hugh Allen, with ‘ . ings will be more distinctly understood by the public, abd | yeepers would forgive’ his approaching assaults on the | particularly at the idea thal we can make articles of con- ote - Of the army and navy, the orator of the day (Mr. Bocook), | that the orators will come to enlighten the audience witha Mberty of the French press and the Catholic religion, m | sum) as and as cheap as they may be made at tie howling of the republicans upon the Sumner assault. | 4.4 isst, though not least, Clark Mills, Haq., the artist who | litte more historical information and common sense. The | liberty of the French press commercial advantages, and | the North. Everybody is ready to commend the aplrit Says he, ‘‘ Brooks entered the Senate Chamber with the I People is a vague term. It means a few discon- for the pleasure of enjoytg a lusty “‘no Popery”’ cry. that will & capitalist to invest his money in any ye he, executed the statue, besides oflcers and soldiers of the the ted by aed: intent to kill, whilst Mr. Allen came with friendly motives; type represent When the manufacturers lately on the Emperor, branch of manufacturing; but when the goods manufac- 2 have asked | Revolutionary army, in uniform. John Brown on the banks of the Potomac. Our opinions | and told him that, if compelled to do sa, they would'‘rend | tured bave to find customers, in order to eustain the bat, sir (with an emphatic tone), since you have The military column will consist cf the Seventh regi- ee of republicanism, hii treaty with eabnon stot,” he assured them, with bis | manufs there is an unaccountable indifference and me this question, let me say to you, sir, that some of the of New York; Col. Ai 7a Firat Virginia nt, | OF some Georgy O In this instance our eloquent | habitual » that he had studied the subject fully out | apathy; and that gives tho merchant power to dictate to violating thelr privilege to the | Tents * Now York; Gol. Avett Guard, a | an Tergrend patriots go for the degpotiam ofan Emperor | for years’ that the tari scale was falrly and cquitbly ad | the aohasor: en ihe ened Beer reporters of this floor are violeting Major Warner's battalion of Baltimore City Guard, a | who was raised to the lency of @ republic, and, after | jnsted, and, above all, that it could not or would not be | he will offer the article om which he can make the most, ftoor ef the House by impugning the motives of mem- | too1, of yaryland Dragoons, tho companics of the District Fiolating bis word of honor and his solemn oath: bas | aitored. Just let us for a moment test the actual amount | and will be likely to put forth an article whieh hes bong bers,” and immediately whecled aboat and took bold ot | of Columbia, and probably the United States artillery from | Planted his heel on the neck, of «nation which wil! not | of Commercial knowledge, possessed by the royal ap- | manufactured far away from home. Everybody knows the arm of a prominent lobby man, and left the Assembly | 471 yronroe will be present, and the Commandories of | cording to the exhibition of Friday night, ous enlightened | Prentice ; “7 Tirance’. “te” one || edie? Gi heme made, goods, nd mot much obasice for Lapis Detivery at me Poet Orrice.—The female por= tion of the community who are under the necessity of applying for their letters at the window of our Post Office have for some days feund a new person in the place of the polite and obliging Mrs. Wadham, who has so served them. We learn that the change hag been by this lady undertaking a new business at 861 Broad- way, where she has opened a hairdreesing boudoir for ladies, and we doubt not her friends will fud her just ag rs and attentive in her new business as ahe was im ncle Sam’s. Mayor Woon returned to his home from Washington om Monday ‘night, and yesterday resumed his duties at his foreign iron imported into one Ghamber without giving me an opportunity to reply. Knights Templar from Richmond, Baltimore and Wash. | cn have more admiration for a despot than they havefor | tundred ‘aud twenty francs per tong, which | Prenton tem unaccountable inaif- | (Moe. Thero was quite a rush to see him during the day, ‘The whole tone of his remarks, and everything connected | dire aon idck Cobnamsaas nelechs genuine liberty as we know it in this country. the imperial manera redoed o forty Sit fates This | fer Dencrervading oe ere at the South about patron, | ODE them quite a number of leading politicians. three other “s A N OF LIBERTY OF THE PRESS IN FRANCE— | Order, as with respect to other articles, was after | izing home industry. atrongly exemy nnn ee eee ee ea mas kanes || TREE adeanther, Xt will be ons of the mast imposing. | SEEFEREION OP. LIMEETY OF THE FERNS (i FRANCE |i eee sxiaith veuestan.cthen aalcies: Infallible—forkine | the almost universai use ‘of Yankee shoo, when every. | AMother Estimate of the Population of standing around, to look upon it asan attempt to intimi- | a onies held in Washington for « long time. heii rg Emperor said 20. Now M.Schneider—a talented represen- | body knows that they will not woar half as long as a the United States. date your correspondent and prevent afree criticism, such CLARK MILLS, THE ARTIST. We baye kept our readers duly informed of the pro- | tative of the really powerful iron interest of Franoo—went | Southern made article, and that they are dearer in the 70 THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD, ‘as the public demand from the independent press, of the We do not propose in this paragraph to give a bio | sees of the correspondence between the Emperor Na- pba esi ape a ae tha ere a oes Leirgeree eA po a ener be eae ab Ag ity halls. poleon and the Holy Father on the question of the legiti- gical wagon ; good trancactions in the legislative aphical sketch of the gentleman whose name forms the | macy of the claim of the Sovereign Pontiff to exercise | Country, and throw several thousands of workmen out of | home made is worth two of such as you are able ‘Teere had not a syllable appeared in the Henarp, up to | &**!" oer, theStates of the Oburch. At the | employment in one week, and thus endanger the public | to buy ready mado, and still we find people unwilling to n of this article, but merely to inform our readers | executive authority in the States Ober f {fect of this on the for a substanti fro my the motives of mem. | °*?tio tame me we bave not hesitated to openly prociaim and | tranquility. Let us see the effect of this on the mind of | pay s reasonable advance in price for e substantial. hace thes time, from. my pen, impugning , | onthe main points of his artistic and eventful career: | Cross the royal and diplomatic irregularities which pro- | the Moperial calculator and disinterested ruler. Ho at | made article. | Those who are not conversant with such bers, with the exception of ‘socusing them of being advo- | cist wis ig an American, a native of the Empire State; | cared and sccompanied ihe communications oftne fortrer; | o0ce covsented to advance the duty en iron from forty: | matters may thiuk we exaggerate, bet ull mautreweecs eates of certain measures to forward their party and pri- for prea ‘and for education he fol. announcing our promierng that his untenable plausibilities | cight francs (new) to seventy francs a ton, announcing by | at the South will confirm what we gay about the want of vate elie apirations— erticiem whic is coniered | TOV in gto own gine, ant bo han reacod the | ad, enchcrovs aod,anltah Cvjgns aenoe-the Indo: | te ery act hbo raly da ot veranda ows po. | Southern patronage to caable tm to noe’ th legitimate by all political writers when there is even a nd of the ladder of fame. An orphan, with no- People, Pe cad te ipeechty dwuipaiot aa tate nenies te Peaches the accuracy of his tariff schedule all through, | Politically, wo are the most suspecting, wide-awake suspicion of the fact. Thus far, and no farther, had I paige: es Ginn et ae saidisletic, Rasa, ed the work! wher bis Hollases thougie ft: to-do t,t ax And gives some hope to the French Lec they aay | people on the face of the globe—economically, the most ° ” Cs yet al preser' ir jufacturin, lependenoe. | careless and unsurpecting af that time impugned the motives of members; whilst, 0D | »447 yore to South Carolina to seek his fortune. There. Gompelied 40 listen to tho ‘ereligious cagections cod | _ It will require manly efforts o do #0, howover,for aa we | “Weave been woeine & political war against the North. the other hand, Mr. Littlejohn has, from hearsay, boldly | 1, saonted the trade of a plasteror, and, by the | rowdy insults—euch as mentioning the name of Garibelai | &fé informed, Lord Cowley bas already assured’ the Em. | erm people tor thir y five years; first on account of the ta- eharged the opponents of the Pro Rata measure of acting | "° Mi Baggs pois | Mase toetaned ae feon’s letter of the | P#ror ‘tbat England will not consent to the proposed al- | riff, then negro slavery expansion. At the beginning of sel strength of that will which bas secured him reaown, he very Lr vance,” 80 that Palmerston Antends to stand “on his | this strife, when we ought to have commenced « system TaD ie aaneee lt Taree | determined to seek additional tame. Taught by kind and | S1#t0f Decémber, Pope Pius a publie repig te the Majec, | bod,” no matter what tbe fate of bis unforvanate con. | of manufactuing our Sen sayplice’ cot Mrenuhiey ae baa written for the sum of $100,000 to defeat its I would | actinguished friends in his early carcer, and his impulses | ty” This important docemente dated ‘on the 10th. of | trere may be inthe end. selves with everything our people ought to make at home, lke to know which has been the greater transgreasor. AH Januar willbe found at length in the present ‘number ——_ the three great centres of American commerce contained, those of genius, and that alone, he, amidst the discou- 4) Police Intell: collectively, about four hundred thousand people. If we ‘The Speaker made his chargo by virtue of a statement ragements which usually besiege the paths of true merit, of the Record, Cd ee org bd lee Imtelligemce. had begun’ then, ‘where we will have to begin now, to made by Mr. Deane-—s lobby agent of Pro Bata—that be | 2164 tor yours, until be produced the equestrian eta. | cor to cer gorscnel mroreres or ehiwos night Pronauiy Fatan Stasping Arrmar.—On Monday night | make and importfor ourselves, we would havo built up bad seen the letter in question ia Wall street. After Mr. tue of Jackson, which now stands forth in Lafayette How different the case in France under the so-called | ‘0 men, named Joha Dalton and John Brennan, between | by this time three considerable commercial cities at tho Wasuinaton, Feb. 18, 1860, ‘The writer of the article in your paper claiming thirty- five millions of population has fallen into numerous and serious errors. The increase of American population is @ subject Ihave studied carefully and closely, and withz your permission I will make a few corrections of the mig- takes contained in your editorial. ‘The first regular census of the United States was taken in 1790, when the population was ascertained to ba 8,920,827. The rate of increase from 1790 to 1850 was 3 per cents year, or an average of 34 per cent every ten years. Dur- ing some decades the increase has been a8 high as 3036 per cent—as that between 1800 and 1810—and again as low as 323;—a8 between 1830 and 1840. Tne last census ex- esa ecg gitar rela Look at the follow- g table:— Years. Population, Increase per cent. wer mn ” and hom a difficult; fe existed, mot in a | South, with the profitable commerce derived from us, 35.0L ter rm an 3 “' , 7 1) our rt raed 4 calls arty tee Shen Ceara re bhp, Cpe re oo of watiigoa tee: | Twelfth avenues, and, an was natural, both parties came | neariy a millon and a half of poole wy (awe ied 33.48 tee, he immediately repairs to the lobby an: that he | . Petbape, anticipating the thread of our sketch, we shoald prt Ren Sotelo g Plat idly agen be eee to words, and finally to blows. During the affray Bronnan | cities. They have amassed millions on millions, uptil 32.67 Ua not neo tho lotion, Dut that i was seen, by Mr. Drako, have said something about the fortuity of circumstances | and appeared in the columns of L’Unévers of the 30th of drew a knito and stabbed his antagonist in the abdomen, Meccstmuransdciece-garts foae/voeshl pee Mi eee joie vr 4 @ Wall street broker, who had taformed him of the fact. which obtained for him the work of executing the statue | thatmonth. As we always imagined, its attacks on the tions— care amie bes or — der- As Mr. Drake’s residence was in ae suspicion | of Jackson, and his introduction into artistic life. After | red Lrepap oan ¢ complications round and in Rome + at wi raapchah beatles ‘aes it chegpogie bh EE Se eter re, aN A MS er, From Weatebsoter cost roe tery i Ne rumor has | bis migration to South Carolina his first efforts were direct- | Detrator of the coup @'élat. ‘The lotior bare his heart to | taken into custody by officer Steele, of the Twentieth pre- | Tailroads to Be bam Ea oon ee Gre ee ak been cireulated ab ‘Congress Hall about this mysterious | ed to making plaster busts, in which he obtained such | the gaze of Christendom, and 80 enraged tbe conspira- } cinct. Brennan states that he did it in self-defence, aa | capital they havo in bm gh 'y ae hey letter. It was said that it gave the names of | ceigbrity in making admirable likenesses that his merits | %r—ifa man without counsellors can be termed even « | Dalton struck the first blow. Justice Quackenbush gave br al on generations to come payment sigbtcen 5 me ean, sae i 4 en eet ey 'Y, and committed him to await Cet ou ftiimidbe txport duck iat ts'not imndwn fi éary expended, and on Friday soso he the news was indus- | Were appreciated by soon finding plenty of employment | any longer, and, tearing tt from his faoe, he renoanced | further developements, etidas outisnatoaaons a (in igioa, nemce ten heaais trious! circulated by the pro rata hangers-on at Congress | in his new sphere. Hoe subsequently made a bust of John | his hollow professions of devotion to tbe Holy See, and Faiomovs Astavit.—John Culter, a colored barber, was | {% byte ao yer pots M goog Be Toy alot seeeiga his oat, A suniber of the members came, to | crcalbou from a plece of Carolina marble, A frat the | FOrieG 8 Separate nor people | arrested on a charge of committing a felonions ascault | to be found exceptin thecabanoed value of our lands and the Houre on that morning with the full belief that they | ‘‘grest nullifier”” was incredulous in regard to the ability | who form the united Catholic world. pon Mrs. Ann Barton, also colored, and kéeper of aboard. | Besroet, Our foor millions of negroes have risen Syicrd were to see some person qe from his seat and resign. | of the artist to execute the work, but encouraged him with ign being able to ae Legg toed En ptf ing house at No. 168 Mercer street, by striking her upon } Ahrodte aiieene in valee, cf our lands have increased ut we are now told by these | 4 view to foster tho aspirations of American art. Time ae cfd aon A Tote ee seppreased, by royal the head on Monday evening Jast, with s glass lamp, | in value from the same cane. But are we any Detter off Sea oases aie eee teem! | eee poms ce romans ne | Seas eS a eee ee ee | mal Mens erga We tae ee | mb einen ean cies eines i - id, | State. ‘This is ald to have been in virtue of an organi 2 3 ber (ry on of | cognate petvees, bites, aa It scaeyshery ese sarin y ag besha'gh of | J8¥ of France, but our readers will recollect that the law | table and threw it at her, inflicting a eerious wound. Ths | negro | cera we have not grown in actual wealth. A a cumnds of foreigners have returned to rope, and re have been two severe visitations of cholera, which carried off tens of thousands. More ac- tivity in trade does not cause a nation to breed material! faster than otherwise—at least early marriages, int by the “flush times” between 1862 and 1857, would not tel! much on the census returns of 1800. The increase on. the population of 1850 will be found to be covered by 36 er cept, which would give a return of thirty.one and @ alf millions. It may possibly reach thirty-two millions, but the probabilities are against it. Hxnraty’s estimates place the population of Califor- Dia at 1,018,589. But s census will not discover over 700,000. The growth has not been rapid since 1866 im that State. You estimate Iowa at 900,000. The actual popnlation ts ig es accu ‘commitiod raminatio ustice | negro laborer is not now capable of producing a Iargor | only 660,000. llinols should be 900,000 higher ‘ is not of older date than February of 1852, when it was ed wee bs th rolls Mls Be a : pinned. Vormaad aed New York city. Charleston, as an approciation of the work of the artist, | framed and directed against the liberty of the press by the | Queckenbusb. income than he then produced. Our soil has not been im | figures. New Hampehire and Vermont are 60,000 each ani a eageeg orginal peor pireraiae ihe a tates © aplendid gold 1. ” | very person who has Sow used {t so Serpe jously. The | Hsavy Rouexny ny a Pickrocxer.—Mrs, Hare, of Ottawa | Proved, ana where, let me ask, is to be found the signa of | below your cetimate. Maine is 75,000 less. Massacha- Detter again been seen Drake, ulated wealth. 5 , the Wall " tyrant’s farce of receiving a previous reportfrom, the Min- 1. W., had be 4 picked of a wallot our accum' dettor Hod Agata ven meer io cortly (ot hic, Draco, | _ 22 the "year 1848, while the Jackson Statue Committes | {re uectats ia very clumsy in ite device and arrange. | “'¥» ©: W., had her pocket picl wallot oontatning | “Tt may be truly said that wo have the greatest powor of jooki artist, passing jecree casion - | $2,000, in Broadway, yesterday. She had come to the city | any people to produce facome, but it may with as mach aited upon, aud he positively denies | Were | ig for an artist, Mr. Mills chanced to be ment. The d of suppr: is supposed to be found. nf “ ne gen bryan evar onli of the lelicr, excepting through | through Washington on his way to Italy. Ho bad never | ed on the report of the Anh, butte Minater himself com- | to make some purchases in the millinery line, and left her rw fey CIN ated h aprck gee mp eo the newspapers. He states that ho has never beard f | before been In Washington; but, spending a few days in | "ences his reportthus — organ of & religious party | 20! Yesterday morning for that parpose, but on arriving | to supply us with’ tho . commonest he source, that city, to look atzits public buildings and ite works ef | whoee pretensions were every day beooming in more di- | 1h detectives are in hope 3 veng ata is te tone Iie than suy. ection of the werkd encompassed by the ‘There was a groat deal of caucusing st Speaker | art, he became acquainted with some of the committee and | rect opposition Lda aceh, sibh the State. gt from the fact tbat the money consisted in waren re} rift cor Haun on vagy te free. oA 'g room on Saturday all dey. Tho description of | wien their object. He was offered the work of exccuting be ig er Lae meh epee vr wreiuisthe | £8 and £10 notes on Canadian banka, . {hom ta the pretaae oF the eciteeonenn ciples of dommer Honorable Speaker somewhat nervous; he could not un- | the statue, but at first declined, but subseqaently executed | covniry. 4 ‘TuerT BY SeRvANTs.—Officers Holbert and Bennett, of | tic uso, ranging from the fly trap, broom and axe handle, derstand how your correspondent obtained the fact that | the work aftor four years untiring labor. When he under Tt will be locomotive. seen from the use of the words ‘was | the Fifth precinct, yesterday arrested two colored women | “P,{0 # od tai Chad ro crore lecltoag closer tw oar interest P he sent his private messenger to discharge Mr. Allen from | took that work he knew that the sum offered—$12,000— | ‘be orkan, sdpeesdante Suda Westotee agreed ee named Ann Willams and Mary Ann Murray, on charge | and exhorting evory consumer of the South to patronize ico calling t the mp ig peat Ana ‘would not pay him; but it appeared ho was laboring for (tenes ocho, per , betore be had received his copy | of stealing various articles of clothing and jeweiry, in all ee dewinn dmeeeen nt all instances to For the information of the Speaker, I wili here state | future fame. Besides this his friends wore offended; some | the encyclical letter. We would wish ‘all fair-dealing | of the value of $280, the property of Mrs. Henry, of No. DOMESTIC INDUSTRY. that there is not an assertion im the despatch giving the repreached him with presumption and folly, saying that Re nate te es wen ete a pottip Hy alleged thst Mary waa « servant in LESTOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. divisions, 1 estimate tha description of the affray in te Assembly chamber, that ar yore pression is no older year 1862, when heirelin 4 the house, suddenly disappeared one day with $250 , CHARI ) ved 6 of cach as follows: — the Haratp on Saturday last, what be | he could sever execute such work; but his eiforts, | . octed by Napoleon, who even then had commen to | worth of the property. She then sent Ann to Mrs. ‘The following letters (: othors) were recel: y 9 old free States. en in a court of justice. Isaw it with my own despite the prognostication of his friends, in due time Bon Ne order to interrapt free communication betwoon | Henry as a servant, from an intelligence office. Mrs. Wana and heard it with my own ears, and am not the only one proved to the world his capacity and gentus, by the com. i glee a To sustain this position, | Henry her, but soon after she turned up migsing, ‘that has that Kind of evidence ‘of those facts, from the ch Orleans”? a nove Jaw iteelf, which says:— | $130 more of the property disappearing with her. firat word contained in that despatch to the last pletion of the statue of the prereset pa BR Tec ont, ae (345 Sediheitaibese ba te er ee ‘This is the sixth winter that I have spent about different After the passage of the resolation which speci- pry crehpe en pont A rete ament . 3 ‘been heard of t Court of Rome, when concerning private | him or the since. Ji Osborn locked the a¢ Leet tine Leave novecrwtamaiee ee oma vars flcally authorized him to execute the work, he gave up | ndividualn, may be received, Drinied or otnerwise mde cused up for tral, nee tisan in the Speaker's cbair, or seen that othce, whtek, his projected tour to Italy, and purchased a farm near BIE pd Mowery io rma ‘hala AFFRAY- AMONG Wowss.—On Monday evening, three pa Echo Tearennh aa Washington, and stocked it with all kinds of horses, by bis fonda baa’ It really shows that the French | Women named Maria Storiff, Hannah Maloney and Maris have seen it this winter by the Hon. Dewitt C. Teese weasel Duffalo, elk, and deer, where he might more fully | troops were sent to to preserve the city {rom | Hender, got into a quarrel in the yard of No. 107 East is park. develope bis genius, studying nature without consulting | the naturally sacrilegious and blood! ni a y y attacks of Garibaldi | Thirteenth street, during which Hannah Maloney was cut Powe ed up with vanity, and has an idea that be can walk over | apy school of art. His principal object to be derived {annoy the Austrians, and forward the designs of the in e frightfal manner upon the head with @ hatchet in the ~ breryboay tnd do aa be pleases. from this stady the nature of the | iouid be ered that tho letir Gf the Poe ie ade | ands of Maria Hender., tom Of interent, expediency. and ‘The Pro Rata bill pas taken up so much time that no- atep, however, was to study a a 19 letter of the Pope is ad- f= a RS, BE tion reat, ency has been done with the General Appropriation bill, | horse, eo that when he made the impress of that animal | dressed to each and every eccleswmatic in the world, for its Superior Court—Special Term. they should and toe freaat swith i stally before the House ot thie Cine, sas yor, | 2 his work of art, it might be portrayed as noar as | SuPerscription reads: me ‘bah Before Hon. Judge Hotinan, Se Ea Moe — ‘Yours, &c., L. P. JONES. Suen) Cred anced ees Beenie; moching bas Down Possible to nature. To effect this, however, he was | “Vibes iiishope and other ordinartes, ahaa by Grace and Fen. 21.—Sanford 1. MoOomber vs. The Mayor, de— wr? want, I repeat, self-government and free trade. POPULATION OF GEORGIA. obliged to procure animals of tho most symmetric forms, the Communion of the Apostolic See. outline a ‘avow their determination to prevent our regain- a cats be gen nctam: To got the callin of their! , Tits commute ted ers the Ronreal eetberar the | of 1800, © st aide a fod pment for Sand 76, obtsined by | Casall bray, aie determination te prevent cur regale will also ing. the Proxy bill applying only to railroads. Many who aro | ™Ovements he employed the most dexterous equestrians, | mystic circle of the unity of faith, ae well as to warn the | the plaintif for services as keeper of » corporation | verting the government in evory way to the purposes of iting This was a motion made by the Comptroller, under the act scorn to be ruled by a hostile section who The official table from the census of last year bas becn published, and shows the following result:— Whites. : 576,716 i i : Z i f Rata, ‘House for tol clothed in the Roman costume, month after month, to | representative of the newly revived house of Bonaparte of | yard. The Comptrolier sect up that the judgment was ob- | thelr own soctional nggrandizement ; and every enlight- | Blacks . 063,745 mye ean that coast oan Stas Sealants ride the spirited chargers, and taking his post ata distance the dangers which its was evoking. tained by defante, and the ietntit fens performed the | ened jitical economist (outside of the Northern | Free persons a «= 8,B8T ‘engrafted on the Dill im the Senate will unquestionably bo : ‘The principle of a sudden and violent suppression of | services for which he t to be paid. { man ring States of this Union) would tell you ‘ates, vetnstated In the House, and in that from whore he might by pencil and impression sketch the true | one of the leading Catholic journals of Europe being | The Jodge rendered decision vacating the deciaion, |.thal, toa cotton growiny people, tree trade would | Total population, 1959... 024,008 indications, will pase that branch of the Legilatars. and natural delineation of the appearance of tho rider. | established for only one day, let ua look at the humiliating | with $10 coste, be the boon of boons, The question-is: Will the | Reproeentative population 884,905

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