The New York Herald Newspaper, October 2, 1864, Page 2

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ee FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.| ADDITIONAL FROM -EURGPE. Sarorvsy, Oct. 1—6P. M. ‘The stock market opened uncer depression, induced ‘dy the anticipation of # further declize of the gold pre- mium, consequent om the operations of the army of Gene- ral Grant. As compared with the closing quotations at yesterday's second board, Frie deciined at the first board 3%, Chicago and Rook Island 15;, Fort Way: gan Central 43¢, Michigan Southern J, Iinots Central %, Gleveland and Pwisburg 6, Chicago and Norsbwesten | French Opinion ef the Presidential 24, Preferred 234, Alton and Terre Haute 1 Centra! {, Quicksilver 4%, Ohio and Mississippi certif- cates 1%. Cumberland Coal advanced 3, Reading 34. Hudson River was unchanged. i ‘Dment securities were firm an@ active, at a frac. wentios advanced %{, cou- 1581 % , registered 44, cocpon ven-furties %, ‘one year certificates 34. State stocks were neglected, bank stocks dul!, and railway bonds steady. After the call and atthe open board at one o'clock ‘be railroad and miscelianeous share list was still fur- ther depressed, and @ general decline of from two to five Per cens took place. Later in the afternoon the quota- tions were lower, and Erie sold down to 89%. There ‘4 pel vn: anemones eee day Mie General Langiewicz’s Account ef the feeling on the street was very unsettied and tho mar- ket weak and irregular, The course of gold exhibited no violent fuctvations to. day, and there was less disposition among the operators in It to discount @ speedy victory in Virgiuia than was Shown on the Stock Exchange. Tao opening quotation was 192, upon which there was a gradual rise to 194, fol lowed by vibration between 19% and 193%, then are- lapse to 102 and an advance of 3. Between ten mi Dutes before one apd ten minutes past one P.M. the Price hardiy varied from 1913;, after which the market gradually woakened, and at half-past four P. M. the quo. tation was 1893¢. ‘Tbe new gold room at the corser of William and Beayor Streets was opened to-day, ~The belief is now becoming geueral vbat the natural relxioncy of gold is downwards, and hence many of Siocks are antic wance, Coapon fi the Bpoculators Pating thd repult. The Exchange hay DE Tabor” agala frevly, | Pubtic Opinion of McClellan's Numi ‘nd ia the genoral merchandise’ markets tusre is a | ‘Strong disposition to press sales at a sacrifice; but buy- @ vory reluctant to purst: supply their Immediate necessitie: Queuce of this state of things is grea trade and a drooping stock murk vorabie and steadily improving aspect of ihe military Situation is operating powerfully to accelerate the fall of gold, which, in its turn, will exercise a corresponding in fluence upon prices for property of all deveri; tions, There were rumors atlout to. day of several large fail- ures; but they were not traceable to any authentic That of Wright, Muxwell & Co., a brauch of she Rio Janeiro house of that namo, engaged in the cotfee | must await wor trade, is the only one of consequence vouched for. Tho suepension is said to be attributable to foreign exchange, options and the heavy decline in mer- Bat it ig well known by these best informed that many houses are ina very SPaky condi- ‘ ‘Surough their speculations ia foreignéyscuange hav- “Tag ORG AGainst thew, snd this, 19 AdG,i00 to the heavy ossba on thoir recent imnortatign’s,is likely to prove fatal to the solvency Of DOL a few of thei among whom are purti more than eno.gh to chandise and gol. GPerally supposed to be entire- ly exempt from the rig%s of speculation io foreiyn bills or go’d. The anxiety among the commercial com- munity relative to the solvency of houses hith- sense of insecurity very general, and credits are being rapidly curtailed, The banks and private capitalists are pursuing a strictly conservative and defensive policy with regard to discounts, and even prime paper is declined at nine per cent. “The yolusne of gommercial po or o limited, and from twelve To fiiech je: Paid for discounts at short dates on ¢ ‘To-day the stringency im the money market has been more marked. There bas been some and coliaterais have been closely rerutinized and wid But firat class atock houses have been able to command all they required at seven per ceut on breeds is becoming fe | 0B.’ ing iu of loans, margins exacted. ‘The speculators in produce are stil! making strouz efforts to keep up prices in the face of the decline of the gold premium, and this js speciaily observable tn ¢ article of pork, which ts now selling for nearly four dol- Inra and forty cents a Larrel more in gold than it was a few months ago. ‘ith the exception of pork, produce geperaliy was dull tand [0@0P fo-dsy. Flour declined filty cents per barrel wheat threé cents per bushel; but a much greater ‘Recline than has yet taken place must inevitably attend sho continued apprecistion of the curreucy, Foreige exchange is inactive. for sixty days bills on London ‘The Assistant Treasurer reports us follow: Receipts for customs. ‘Total receipts. Bankers ask 109% a 109 Subseriplions to g 090 : 1000 Brie 3d miortgare 1 £00 Ch &N Wet ba ! 00 Atweriosm gold... Hanover Rank "0 do 0 Minnesota M, 0... . . Bor & O RE ”) Mil'& PduChien BR 100 Tol & Wabash pref Statement Assay Office New York for tae nth Ending September 30, 1864. powite of gold— Foreign cons .. Vanes tates ballion. vvese§a5,000 | Revolution tm Ohinere Tar! Depatia of ever | cluding porchases— tne Macaw & Total deposte payehie 60,000 | progress ti Toval depowite, payabie lu Gold bars stamped : Trevsmitied to U, &. mint, Poile ,for coinage TOUKG AMERICA, OF PMILADSLPITIA + OF BROOKLYN. ‘The mated between ibece leading cricket or: menoed on Friday, deepite the unfavorable siute the cricket ground, Bedford, 1. 1. appended whow CLUR YOUNG AMMRICA. G. M. Newuall ron out. 16 DR Newhall, b> Hodson 2 ©. A. Newhall, o Sharp, b. Hudaco s A. Molior, ran out, HL Newball, | judsoo am ‘ina Satier™ Our Paris and &t. Petersburg Correspondence. Election, Paris Divided Between Lin- colin aud McClellan. Polish Revolution. PIUS THE NINTH ON STATE EDUCATION: Franz Mullor’s Self-Acoused Accomplice Held for Indisiment. REVOLUTION {N CHINESE BARTARY, &e. &e., &o Our Parts Correspondence. Pans, Sept, 18, 1864. pha ton and Ultimote Disunion, be. The news received from America by the ‘steamer Asia has crested @ very auosiug bewilderment in the camp of the French partisans o! recossion, Le Constitutionnel canvot possibly underatand tho no. mination of General McCiclian ag a candidate for the Presidevoy, with the Union ae a sine qua “What oan this moan,’ anys the writer ta the semi-oiticial jour. nal, ‘but a coutinuation of the war, for did not Pres\- dent Davis tell Messrs, Gilmore avd Jaquoss that tho Unton fs henoeforth impossible, And, then, what did all the outcry about peace mean? We thought the majority of the American peopie wanted poare atauy price, We ple particulars atair by to: AS Au uDaut! and that the p Le Pays 6 {ts readera that the , air of a fow opie had mobhing to do with it, Ow imp) ta.and at Mobile are urred ov hs, in which strong doubts CARL UpOD the authenticity of thase items of inte! higenee, La Pattic says of them that, coming from foderal : they must be received with u great amount of caution The /foniteur of this méroing confines itself to a mere dotail of the great points of interest 1a tho late des- patches. It ig waiting to translate the London Tizass’ apprectation of them, So we shall doaduess eee ty mor- row that ough the fall of Atianta is asanredly « serious check to the federals, # js in Some mesure coun~ terbalarced by the uncertain sanguiaary cvudicts of tbe fotiowing day, Ao. The great point insisted on by the Frezeh secesh | that President Lincoln has nad a «rebuke ia the nominatio: as Lis ponent in the aj & = Per contra, Le Temps exhorts ns in this wise -—« If ths people of tho Vuited States wish to contioue the groxt people they have been uy to the present tins, they will set cClelian aside aud te olvet Abr: New Enterprise ti New paper Pudtis Latour, the Noted Creminai—Opera asa Negowiavor, de. Villemescant, editor of the Figara. bas just announced @grand schome (or msking @ fortune by pubiishiog a Joarnal for uothiag—a journal which is not to depend upen advertisements, bat to ba a monthly family journal, full of reading matter. He enys that Emile de Girardin once said that the man who would find out a way of pub lishing a nowspaper for twoive iraves ($2 25 abont) a year, at dive cents profit on each subscription, would make bis fortune, but that he goes boyond M. de Girar- din, Vitlemeseant’s plan ts to induce the sudsctibers to ail tho journals of Paris to accept him as their medium, be recsiving no premium except the percent. age aliowed by the publiebers of tbe various Journals, To bring about this desirable end he offers to furnish gratis to exch subscriber & copy of his sew journal, ZL’ Abnne, He says he tried the same experiment twenty years ego, and succeeded in getting forty thousand eub- Seriptions; thit Lime, as be was unknown, there wore too many people who said, “Who knows if L trvst my movey to the fellow whether f ever receive any DeneGt’” and go the affair fell torough; but that at pre- | sent, bis star baving risen a little. Us is quite sare that there will bo nv hesitation on the ground of want of con- fidence He therefore hopes to count bis patrons by hundreds of thousands, and by the vastness of the entor- priee to come out winner. The idea has 60 reuine a | twang of Yanke« enterprise that we cannot but wish its J2ES | originator success, We have uews (rom the Emprese at Schwatbach, where her Majesty is keeping her etate as Couvteas of Vierre: fonds. Ae eeveral kings, qneens and princes have teen to pay their respects to her Majesty or France, wo shell soon bear of come new project of marriage for the Prin- cess Anna Murat, who cortain!y cannot compialp of want of real in ber fioperial retaty tokeu by them to provide ner with a ‘4ocal habitation and a ame” ‘The migerabe wretch our, who murdered four per sons in the chateau Le Jnetidae, Inet Febraary, was guile ya ping at six. Au immense crowd pecs the exeention. a large propor- tion of them being women. Tue fail of a heavy shower of raip at the time bed no e‘fect in di La- tour rejected the counsels and prayers of the priests who visited him in his cel!, and ooly the day before t cution replied by the’ most frightful blaspbem us to thé worde of the good father who exh him to repentance. He absolutely refused to be paniod to the ecaflold by a prieat, bot, as he deck would, went singing, in a loud, defiaut voice, ti of @ song he hac ly ringing wh severed bis bead from nis body. This meu wae one of the crightfal exerescences of mot erp civilization, 18 favor of whom no one ventured to was agsctabled to wi! raiso bis yoloe, eveR in support of tho theory of the abolition of the Bt ibie time with mock viva: most streou “}am tn favor of it, 00, ‘pro ting begin’ —and seyeral Fren: Amovg the iniovatione coming 2earon is the introduction of 8 Bat, ans, there are no reaily great Of the wonderfi! Taglions, of the fl Jeuth penalty, whic y by Alphonse P celebrities. Eulsiers, of Cerito, cap bie of touching the heart by the ‘poetry of motion.” In new star f the world of ballot + The Chatelet bas in du Diable, ‘The Seven Iayed in London ag the Seven e revival of this piove is not viewed with favor by the classics; but there are eo mauy people in the world who are not classic in their taster, and who mast be amused, that it is likely the Chate- il have crowded houses. The lyrique bae in re- | Ronedict’s Roses of Erin, a new opera, from which of Weber's favorite Farope the dawn of dancing Sx Carnest!y watch course of preparation pt Chatoanx known et Laura Keene's a fow years zo Danghvors of Satan, and Capital Sins (1 believe). jet beat much in expected. Benedict was ov scholars. Our St. Petersburg Correspondence, Br Parrynonz0, Sept, a Tu. Kokant—Sher AW Ta Tremendous Pires —Supicion of Incendiariam din, de The news from Centra! Asia continues to be highly $19,000 | Important. A great social and politic re which must cepecialiy affect the relative positions of Russia and Fogland. ‘As the geography of there regions, though the craic of the buman race, is not familiar to el) readers, it may be as well toremind them that the immense piatesa whieh separates British Todia from Asiatic Ruszia, and which ie bounded on the north and south by the Thisn Bhan and the Hinderkash, on the east and wash by the dovort of Gobi aud the Amor-Daria, or Oxus, conelats, bo- widen the independent kingdoma of Kokaod, Khiva, Bukbara and eeveral smaller States, of the great Chinose province of Nau-loo, formorly called Upper n—Lincutn’s NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1864. ext their (odecwadeuce the pew A '* ' likely fe cut agooriderable figure iu the Cubare Bietory of Contra Asia, af 164808 only wealthy and poputons, but ae 1 {lized, after the Orientsi foshioa, What part the Rew “* sovernment may take in these events fs difficult tosay gS the time of the last disturbances there was a Rusetac Agent in Kashyar by the pame of Volikbano!, a Man setan Tarter avd oMcer of the Oundurg Cossacks, who wre description of bis travels, of which an English transtation bas Been pablished. Anyhow, by the ad- vance of our expedition in Kokand, the Rassian troops fre brougtt quite pear the scene of insurrection. By the Inet ndyices from Geseral ChornayelT be bad sent a Tegounoiteriog party from Antiata to Chemkel, about « day's march (row Tashkent, which was attacked by «a army of twelve thousand Kokanzes and bard pressed, till, the General arriving with the maim bod; tachment, tha enemy wore routed with great, From this (t appears that Chernavelf ts pusbing forward to Tashkent, tbe occupation of which would make a dvep impression io all that Part of the country, an it is jarger and more tmportant piace than Kokand itself. According to the Academician Vehimenoff Zeruof, who Was thore ia 1856, 1 contains dleven thousand houses. threo hundred snd ten wagons, fifteon caravanaeries and fifty thonssnd tohabitunts. We are also informed that Sher Alt, the new ruler of Cabool, bas had a meeting with the itussian Cougni from Herab, at bis camp in Done, aud expresses & wish to enter intoa treaty with Russia on forms sim‘lar to the one which was concluded with the Khan of Hukbara by General Ignatie in 1858, Sher All ig the mortet evemy of tho Knglish, who the pretensions of his brother to the throne of Tost Mahomet, and. Ithough be bas complotely defeuted his brother, and driven bim out of tho country, Le is probably afraid that Bogiand will at- tate the fugitive, like ahe did Shah sooujah, and is therefore anxious for the support ofeltuasta, Notwithstanding the weather is quite autumeal, tbe fiery season, of which 1 wrote 8 me time Rince, cotinucs WHh unabated tntevsity, Lat wook we had inteliigence Of a frigbifal confagration at Tumon, in Western sive. iu, aud now the telegraph brings us tidiogs of a still my ferribie disaster, by which uearly (he w! Dirsk was Intd in asbes, Simbirsk ig the chef lien ¢ province on the ‘one of the granaries af Russia, geven bendred and eighty versts sourbo: 4 und ds. or wag, & pixoo of considersble imuortance about thirty thousand jnbsbitants. Tbe fire br ke « simultancorsly in two different quarters of the town, and, Ugh wird blowing at the time, the flames rapidiy cx derided from sireet to street, and ba fed all ondeavors to extfagulsh them. Tbe people are firmly convinced that tho repented coufiagrations are owing to incentartes, and, «though it 18 no wonder it {hey are or Frquent <cour renes in Russian townr, which: rein etly bull of wood, it | #* certain that eveu here tn St. Pelersb: { pesees witbout a fire, and vi on g BCArCely w day ¥ ofven three or four at Hud iL soe@ins tmponsthio to attribute them a! & Accident, In 1862 tho blame wad laid on Hertzen & the rev ists bow the Pees are & cled 1 am aware thit any evidence his preduced to support these rlegations sufferers besides these burned out are our tn pomuanies, Lhe stockholders of which wilint bay of dividends toexnect this year,and m thenwelves wel off if they are not catied upon f tional payments, ‘The visit of Admiral Lisofisky to the American Am bussador was returned the other day by bis Excelency « beard the Ad "8 Hlagship Ostiabds (tbe Alexander Now ky Wout from New York to the biediterranesn), General yy was recoived with almost roya! honors, aud asp en did banquet was given him, at which the Givarner of Gronstadt avd many other military and naval ollicers of rank attended, On the same day the fron-elad frigate Sebastopol lelt the Cronsiadt docks, where she has been building for the last two yours T co ths addition to the Russian navy, however, eport tge loss of the screw corvetie Nendwik, h was wreoked last week on the coust of Sweien, OF the crow wbout twonty were drowned; but the rost suc: coeded 1p getting on shore, At levgth Blondin, of Niarara, nas made his debut, and carried everrthing before bim. For a long time the unpropitious state of the weather prevented his per fortmauces from taking place, avd they were put olf from day to day, till the pudlic were inclined to think the whole afuir an “American noax;"’ but folly Jupiter Pluvius relaxed for a while, and the great acrobat bas how presented himself twics to the gaze of tnoumeraple epectators ip the vast garden of the Firat Corps of Cadets, over which a wire had been drawn five buodrod feet in Jongth god ninety in peight, The usual evolutions were gone tbroush—of which wo have read in foreign papers walking in a sack, blindfolde «but the most up- roarioua applause ws excited ‘by the stout gentleman whom he carries over on his shoulders, aod whose couraga’ 8, perbapa, more admirable than that of the ist himself, Altogether bis feats of skill have been icoassful, and Blondin will bave no reason to of hia reception in the Northern Psltayra. Specte from Mexico for India, m tue Journal du Havre, Sept. 13.) Z A coum ‘vie quantity of specie has just been sont by tao bouse of Gaudet, of Boulogoe, to the branch estab- ut Marseiliea, tha remittance consisting of 1,113 box Mexican dollars, weighing 40,000 kilogrammes, and amovoting ia value to above 8,000,000 francs, They are te de embarked at Marseilles for India by the Peu- | insular and Ortental Steam Company's vessel, on account of an Eagien boure, During four montbs 2.409,000 Crancs of silver have renchod Europe from Mexico. opponent, and author of the famous mot, dod, Moesieurs, thd argas- fe the Italian Opera for the orpe de ballet,’” rbiets, BO Buccessors | cial authorities v= Meany Operations in the Protection ({ Russian Bangiret to General Clay~A Russian Iron clad— Debut of Bion- | revolution is 19 | pess to serve the cange of truth and the a pts The Polish HNevolution. GENERAL LANGIEWIOZ'S LETTER SXPLAINING THE OBJECTS AND EXTENT OF THE MOVEMENT. Subjoined ts the text of the letter from Genera! Langtie- wicz, read by M. Janecki on the 29th of a\ at the Polish trial at Berlin, The document throws considera- ble Light on the secret history of the iste iescrrection:— Josmrstapr, August 23, 1864. ‘Sim—The trial of the Poles at Berlin, in which you take ‘fo disttaguished a part iu the defence, induces me to de- clare to you that I am ready to give evidence regarding the tendencies of the late insurrection. 1¢ appears to me if the defence thinks proper to hear me, the High Court cannot refuse my evidence io a matter in which the prosecution bas not recogaized me as guilty. It is no secret to toe Prussian authorities that for the last few years before the insurrection I resided in Italy, England and France; that I took part in Garibaldi’s campaign in 1860; 1 was instructor in the military scheol at Parle and Genoa, and that I bad personal relations with whom government ecu. tors are ple: to call the leaders of the cosmo- politan revolution; for M. Larochojaquelin even accused me of Mazzinism from the parliamentary tribi ia February, 1363, It is, moreover, known that the tusur- Tectionary movement in the palatiuate of fandomir, on the 22d of January, 1868, broke ous under my personal direction, and that, therefore, I must have had close te. jations with the chief leaders of the Polish racvement even before the ingurrection. Further, wy open partici- pation in the insurrection after the above date, and ulti- mately my assumption of the dictatorial authority, allow tho inference that I mast know the objects of the iusur- rection, at jenat np to the date of my capture by tho A 6 (19th of Marcn, 1863), and also the arrauge- ments which were made to secure the objects of the in surrection. Tam Shoroughiy acqnainted with the military arrange. ments made by the Central Committee for the insurgent bands which were to be found inail tbe palatinates of the Congross kingdom. These arrangements not only did not tend to any hostile measure against Prussia, but even did pot facilitate the arrival ef volunteers from /’vish Prassia: for it was intended, after the dirporsion of the seattorod Ruaaian garrisons, immediately to concentrate all the Poles forces against which. of conree, could. Prussian frontier, ’ alt the sien fronticr were accordingly to toarch itomediately As regards political instructions, the Central Commiites, up to the ereetion of the dictatorial autbori- LY, Most strictly directed tte snbordinates to avoid every- thing that might disturb toe peace i the Hough terri. at torice of Austria aud Progsia, and even anythi se fear er will on the part of the Aw an governmente towards the insurrec 1y directed against the Czar, { reed hardly add that the inetructions and orders issued our. jug the dictatorebip were conceived in the same gpirit If, nocordivg to the allegations of the prosecution, the nationa! government mm lepded to seize on Porish Pragsia, way do not}, an insurgent and a known loader of that governinent, sit on the bench of the eccused? S far as know, the Prussian anthorities have not demanded my extradition of Austria, although by the treaty published in Austria on the Sib Of January, 1834, that Power is bound to give op traltora to Pruseis on ber requisition, Hitherto | lu exunined & to the objects of the mearrection, e 29th April, five woeks after my imprisonment, | ps uted & petition to the Proaian goverwment, th ambaseidor in Vienna, for my expasriation object of settling in Switzerland. The result w: | fal ingoiry among the military, administrative € Dot been even On i judi: in vestigation by the Court Prose the documents of this, vory trial, with £06 objoot of asceriaising whether thé was aay objec: cutor at Per}jn At longa, on the 171b Septem- ber, 1863, the order for my S£Dstriation was mate out and cent’ me through (he Prussian embarry. jonal goverament then ovly determine to seive Pras sian Polnnd after my imprisonment? Or, rather, did the prosecution only convince itself, after the 17th of laet September, that such was the object of th tone! gov. eroment? i am no lawyer, but the fate of the accused warmly iotereste ae, and I beg you, therefore, to pardom me if | attribute av undue weight to tay evidence, and to My question of the prosecation—why jt did not include me among the aeouset? Once moro, Melaring my readi- sed, Git WiGe tion to my expatriation M. LA) | EXAMINATION OF @ROLGR sere ACOUSRD ACCOMPLICE OF MULLE IN TUR MURDER OF MA. BRIGGS. {From the London Btar, Sept. 15.) Yesterday George Augustus King, 32,0f Cobarg cottage Wick lane, Row, publieher, wan brougdt up for re-oxay pation vefore Mr. Liligon, at the Worship etree. Proce Court, charged upon bia own confession with being co cerced with 9 man pamed Moller in the murder of the tation, Mr. Abbott appeared for the prosecution, ead Mr, Vano Tartary or Jagatai, which was conquered by | for the os ‘ tants the Celoatinis 1 8 century age, " understand, air, that there is no farther J yi Commect the prisoner with the murder than Province, which contains the ousishing ellle® | his own voluntary confession; Dut there is this fact Im 6 | of Kashgar (vide “Arabian Nightg’), ‘Yarkend, Khoten, Aksoo, &o., and was, in the Middle Ages, the seat of the Great Turkish empire of the Uigoors, is isbabitea by a restless and ‘uiractable race, chiefly Mahometens, who have given their Chinese masters a vast deal of trouble, Bome five yoars ago there was aserious insurrection, whioh was only quelled aiter terrible bloodshed, and more through the divisions ef the rebele than the valor Of the Chisese armies; and now we hear that another and still more dangerous revolt has broken ont; that 4; wide, 4 1 phe Cuimese garrisons have bean expelled from Yarkend and Aksoo, and are besieged in Kaabgar, the fell of IC the fesurgents succeed ia ich is daily expected. wor at the Mitford Cartie Tax vern at the time the body was supposed to have been ran over on tbe railway, that be acoormpsnied it there, and sesisted in bathing the temples of tho deceased. There are sevorgl other witnesses who might bo oxamiued to confirm the terms of the statemont the prisoner made to Mr. Buckley of the Ranelagh Arms Tavern, if neces- sary; but as ali the other witvestes who might psssibly be able vo prove any further vounexion on the moner with the oircumetances attending the denoased'# b are cow absent from this country, | Would suggest that thore should be another remand to allow of (noir @xamination sbouid it bo considered adviasbie. Yoo: [think that thore witwesse should the case: that he real) peace for certainly the long interval between the elec a} the Kursian armies, ) not form ou the Polish — detachments which were to be formed in the palatinates on the Prus. | — ing, avd was there till an alarm was raised thats beget FUD over upoii she rails. EN "well, then let him stand Mr. Thomas Madeon=1pm Castle, im Wick tane, Vii ark. The my house a& eigbt o'clock murder; I dia’ not sce bim my: under my notie * ti nine o’l theo first saw o&™. The body isoner from nin@w”clock till that time was under wy | will be among the first = wa in my parlor all the time, except | peace that he went out once x twice t bring ina pivt of ale, like that, A70m the Der, but he wes vever out of my sight more tra | five minutes at any one time. Mr. Rilison—How came 7/8 t notice the prisoner eo observation, or somethii particularly? Witness—For the simple rea 100 that he is there pretty well evory Mr, Bealtord (the olerk)—Wer* you out of the room ‘AD yoursell Witnexs—Only once or twice to ge *° aver that the prisoner waa not out ® the bar, and I the room at y 1 " , , Briges’ body was lime more than five minutes ‘till Mr. , ‘ave per: 008 wn sot wore wag weight o'clock picked up off the line, 1 coud call fowty” sons who were Lore at the same tm cume hore unless Mr. wheo (he prisover came te your house” Witness—t do not know that personaly; that ho was, as T guy, in the house at eight o'clock, Mr, Ellison—At what time did Mr. Briggs stact from Fonchurch street? luspector Honoy—He started about ton o'clock, sh" £ Ddehieve, Mr Kilison—In what time would the train react thi Bpot Inspector Honey—They would take about a quarter of an bour, sir, to go from Fenchureb street to Bow. Mr. Hudson—It is quite an impossibility, sir, that the prisouer could bave anything to d> with the murder, Mr Eilieoo—Ihore 18 no evidence at preseut to show at t precise time Mr. Mr, ~afford (to Inspector Hon! Briggs started. that deverspttout 1° Honey—T have vot, air. the prisoner? Inspector Honey—It has not, eir, Mr Etlison——\Were you present at the inquest? Inspector Houey—No,1 was pot. sir, Mr. Ellison (to the prisover)—You have made a state ment ip whieh you said that alter the murder was com- tiitted vou went to the Mitford Caste aud rem ped there some me, ater being prose: tat tbe murder. and the body was br ught wto tor hose. The wi roves. {hat you were, no doubt, at the house, bat the time Is not wholly acconnted ir, and. ap tiaust bsve ls laniiremard you but for as 2101e—unree cays, was now much ngitated, and dis- finence and bravado he had before “Thank you, sir; wil you tke lined t0 do 80, end the prisoner wcorted, on Question, , WILL PEACE IMMEDIATELY BRING DOWN THE PRICE OF FHS STAPLE? (From the London 'ndex (svecial orgsn of the rebels in Enrope), Sept. 10.4 A paragraph anpeared tn the Londoo Tim-s’ city article on Tuesday whieh is calcuinied to excite uneasiness in Liverpool and Manchester, We cannot believe that tne Prospect of peace in Ameria causes tho present tixht bess in the money market; f rit certaly will not cost more to buy American cotton than it does substitutes for American cotton, The Times, however, suilicieatly quall- fies its evil forebodings by :eferring the dilficulties in tho way of bringing Americrn cotton to market, snd to the demand for cotton goods that will spring up on the announcement of It ig certainly trae that peace witl cause @ wy fallin the price of cotton; but, if the circumstances are rightly understood, it is not mevitable that this fail sbould be sudden of apanic. The subdjoined articie was already In type when the Times’ commonts on the-votton trade appeared, ‘and those comments render it more than ever necossary that the cage should be fully and falrly set forth. 58 called p nove of th bunibiy. sa bac?’ ‘bot Mfr, BPisen ¢ wos removed , rauch d Whe Cv ‘The American war Aas not as vet caued a panic in the | yoo back cotton trade. Hitherto most of the speculators have drawa prizes. Not only the original owaers, but ha'f a dozen Beta of consecutive operators, bave made for. tunes out of the stock of cotton in hand in 1861, It was pot at a single pcund, but by @ series of jumps, that cotton reached its prosent market value. The explanation isobvious. Until seces- sion wag an accompiisbed fact it was regarded a: an idle threat, and until tue war actually commenced few po: fons inthis country believed that the North would. at- tempt to restore tho Union by force of arms. Nor w: this tneredutity unreasonable. It ix piain enough that the South was s0 firmly persuaded of the coninuance of that she made no preparalim for war; tion of Mr. Lincom and the first bombardment of Fort Sumter might have been employed in trapaierring Southern cotton to neutral ports, so that the Confederates woud have sscapedignany of the faan- cial difficulties which they have bad ¢ encounter Even when the war broke out there were two reasons which tended to keep down the price of cotton. It was vot supposed that the maritime Powers, im the fice of the trealy of Paris, would recagnise the validity of a dlockase which coud only be an imperfect blockade. Iwo years ago there was an impression that solemn treaties cnterod into by great Powers were worth sometniog; but we know Dow that, whether treaties are old or new, they are only to be observed when observance is deemed expedi- ent. Lastly, it was thought that the war would be short and that betore the enormous acocks of raw cotton and cotton fabrics were exhausted the war would end. So it ‘was only by slow degrees that men believed in a cotton famine; and therefore it was by equally slow degrees that cotton to what are cont idered famine prices. Yet, knowing the extreme sensitivenesa of market prices, and what = events frequently induce a panic, remarkable the American war bas not caused great- er convulsions in the cotton trade. Now that there ta, tet us hope, @ prospect of the termi- Bation of hostilities, it La a woll to cousider the pru- Dabie efiect of peace on price of cotton, Judging ‘the agitation in Liverpo.l and Manchester mani- Tested as each succeeding mati announces the rapid de- Velopment of a peace nentiment, we might fear that peace would Produce such # sudden fall in the vaive of cotton | donce, But tt ts obvious that to person short of av im- Me that the holders would be utterly ruined. If @ punis en- sues, this will be the care; but we think it is casy to ow that such a panic wou'd be groundless, and that the holders of cotton need not fears heavy and sudden depreciation of the value of their property. It ie true that there is a large stock of cotton in the South. Tt would be ridiculous to attempt to give on estimate of the stock, {or nothing is more dangerous than basing a ealculation on merely problematical data; still, kaown the vast guantiry of cotton held by the Confederate cov- eroment, and that the government hokiing represeats Dot a portion of the entite stock, the whole quantity must be con: the whole of this stock cannot be forthwith thrown upon the European market. The meine of transi have been destroyed, Tho railroads bave beendut up, not so much by the enemy as by the Confederates, for the pnrpose of repairing (he main lines used for military transport. The river stoamers no longer exist, and, tberstore, railways most be repaired and a pew eet of river sterm- ‘ers bust beiore the Valk of the -ottom can be Drought to aea~ ports, aud there works it be acon completed, More. over, wa must goto carecutly that tbe eupply of American cotton bas not altogether ceased, We fud by a re'crence to the Liverpool shipping list that many thousands of Dales of Southern cotton have boen reaived at Livernoot io the tast jew weeks, and vory few #bins come from ports coutiguous to the froighted with cotton, The euterpt in thie respect; rendered the bl of Awerican sorte large supplies (rota India and elgew down the price of cotton. It way be asked if we mean lo acwert that, when peace im restored, the quantity of cvtton shi.) ed (rom the Bouth ‘will not be much larger than it is at present, Assurediy this ie not our opinion. of cotton in the terpool Lrovers y that the effect nd, furiber, we Of peace ow the price of cotton wili be cousiderabiy modified, wince already in time of war we are in reco ofsouthere cotton, Still, wakin to be denied that, go boon ae the war ively large quantities will fudden drop in_price du not enfficiently weigh ali the of Since the commencement of tho Azote One. that the American war ¥ 7. 16 go ent Be th was to be left ao expe yy more Years meuxt poss America. Now, peace in America i} founded panic among non-Americwn grow bigh prices, are seuding every vale to Liverpool that they can make ready for export. shall get mo: pliee from lod cotton from America, but our uy ciher places will (all of, And a ed 2" PFS that pence e what hutely to atop, ap; that is, we shou! more, cottos than wo did in former times. Besides the foregoing there ix ano'ber reason,and a We May expeot tbat peace prices witl not rale for rome time aficr the termination ined, there will bes excossive demaud (or cotton fabricg—a who have erected mille were men of foresight, and that those who gration of Lan: Yery tmporiant one, why © Doatilities, When peace is pro will show tbat tl looked with indifference oo the still buyers are very guarded in their purcbases, from the prevaient ides a, war ie nearly over, and that dden and disastrous fall in the price ‘of cotton. Should there be a momentary fail, the demand peace will cabee & Bu ‘will restore bigh prices; or, if high prices arejmaintained. buyers, sesing no prospect of immediate cheapness, will there will be ‘w purchase ateurrent rates. Posides, ‘a0 enormour demand for cotton goods in the cont ‘When we consider how completely the Sonth is di of cotton fabries it is not, we think, ao nay millions aterling, and that Ported [rom the Confederate Mtates dui of ‘Will be reimported as cotton fabrica. © fe submit, then there are no posing that « cotton must reault from pero, moment of property in Mr. Briggs was broaght to my honse abom' twenty-five minutes past tev, and the | suifering with a noble fortitude that is bevond al! praise— , i was pine wheo I firet aw him; but ! understand from mq” People A description was given of aome person who was supposed to have been in the carriaye with Mr. Briggs at the timo. Have you got ‘d—Hus the description been compared with partake of the features: .0r of ‘coppernead’ proclivitics, I shall zealously. and it 18 | from the federation, or the fusion of all the New Kng- Jorable. But it must be remembered thet | Weed bojleves What we say if, tuat, no matior how grest the demand. many monks must clap after the conclusion of peace befure a great part of the stock wih can he im lie hands of the LA+ these atlowances, it 1 over, cotton from the confederacy :*but those who infer that there must ben Fs, an ‘ort to forte: ene growth OLcon supply aseo- ciations Ave done what (hey se induce a belle | pouiticn ak m remedy for a fatal ga 6 Te for mavy years, aud became the great cotton fold of the ther kind of argument was tenable: for if the Amerran war hss proved anything, it certainly Das proved that oo coiton country ¢an compete with Will produce # genuine and I and She supplies from India and (be Mediterranean will be inetantly checked, for those countries, alured by the ould ic, Aud that the price of cotton rhould AM probably be its normal price three years after the war | over—that is, a ebilling per pound.—the effect would not only be to chock, but abso- Jarge supp!ies of nom-American cotion ; corive from ludia very little, if avy aggeration to her orders will amount to'from ten to fifteen jwo-thirds of the cotton ex- ing the drat your Grounds for sup. sudden and heavy fall in the price of ut,on the contrary, ‘that the holders of stocks, waleun they escrifice their mic, Wi not lowe by the tor- tion of hostities We do cot mean thas If @ od Noles satel that, Prevent those ag mille, from again at the Lancashire operativ. the only class in Engiand toat has suffered tn conse- quence of the American war, oud who have borne their f Hy to resp the fruits of blessed Wire Palling Politicia MR. THURLOW WEED. ‘From the Loadon Spectator, Sept. 3.) & sharp controversy ragin uch savans on the question whether the vesiciw pro- duced by the fermentation of mouldy hay steeped in olnes, namely, which tostead Of determining its politics by its own observations and convictions, is saturated by tho stagaant party feelings fn {ta neighborhood—whoso so called‘ principles” are a mere iniellectual fungus springing from deca: opinions and rank int-rests, and whose pelttioal ac- tivity is determined by ali the Se rine electonerrimg cunning, Fortunately us class of mea though of nmioment at an election bave no tafluence whatever ih creating or determining the general drift of political opinion. ‘The politicians with genuine crecds Of their own, battle them out defere the people, and tho wire-puliers forced to make ase of party ories bottor aud more lucid in point Of principle than the! om iv thoit own souls olthr resect or understand, & Sually at least genuiue Conviction traces the outlines of 'iticr! struggles in this couviry, and the ‘“spontaneous- Ip qoherated” poiiticians act only iu subordinatiou to those when moro oF teas thiok out thei? own coovictions, In th Nortiy’ro Stater of America, however, the situation is RomewAIOL diiforent, With & probably much largsy pro- portion of fudependent thoucut «moogst the voters, the poiciaus who eome to the gurtace, and lent appatt to guide the combinations’ in country me aps te be more compietely aes trute of cule tog principles, mere completely the spouta- Reon genera ion Of thoze Vesicles Of decaying political matter than even the wire pullers of the elections 1m Koglacd. Mr. Coppock in Engiand was a mere acer OF the tower acvactes that affected the Libor! elections, Mr, Thmrlow \Woed in America is also spokerman ior hés party, sugeosing their pelicy as woll an pulling the atri {38 thi clas of politicians that unfortanately got6o muck int in the press of the North as to tecelye Of e@metrags Ito the impression that the Northen people haw not and nevertwitt grisp with voy etrongth me esl pelaciple: shat they Ars Ms Ws 10 oat! mpromisegyith their op by hole basis of Pheir politica! Chourht as they wou'd oto vain the same end by payéng down afew more mmillio tof dollars. For exaanple, this great republican wires pudier, Mr. Thurlow Weed, deciares bts wish to bee the Union ored on the basis o. yin, Critienden's reso " oilered in 1868, To understand the fall inaniy and iniquity of this sucger- tion jet us recull to our readers what Mr. Crittenden’s resolution wax: —It proposed to Congress to resolve (1) that this war aad beou forced apos the country by the southern States, but (2) that forgetting all feeling of Tesentmnent Cougross declares that “this war is not waged upon Our part with any purpose of overthrowing or iniertaring wish tho rights or established institutions Of these States, but to defend und matatain the eupre. macy of the consntution, and 'o preserve the Uaton with al! the dignity, equlity and rights of the several States unimpaired, that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease”? whteb means @ guaran.ec of stavery to such Statesas will rs- ture to the Chion, aed a fociiive siave law a8 well. Ra- forring to this resolution ater throe years’ proof of its futitty——aiter the President’s promikes nod ' proctame- tions to the slaves have’ added to that futility a rich flavor of treachery—after the South, severely tried by ali the dorrors of war, bas proved the tenacity with which it eines to the ove institution for the extension of which it dectared war, by a thousand horrible ucts Of cruelty to the negroes of the Nortbero armies, and & blern refusal to yield: one atom itself in the great controversy—alter #!1 this, Mr. Thurlow Weed quietiy to the Critecden resolution aa @& proper basis of a durable peace, Tuese are Mr. Thur- low Weed’s words:—‘uf Mr. Lincola’s opponent be, ia Vho wapatriotic sense of the term a ‘Perce man,’ hoartily eupjort Mr. Lineoin.’ But if I can see & rexsomable probibility of electing @ President who would prosecute whe war for objects deciarod to the world in the resolution offered oy Mr. Crittenden and Lxnould give my voice aud vote for “on which the New York Times “Wo believe tis to be substantially the quietly remarks Donition Of the great body of Voton men throughout the country”—to which we oxn ovly reply that, if ft is 90, which we do not believe, tue great body of Union mon througbeat the country seem t) be destivute of both good sense and vood favth—two rather important requisites for Politics. It is ot gord faith, because to leud the authority of the North once more to sinyury, indeod, to restore the repealed Fugitive Stave law, for tbat also Mr. Crittenden’s resolution obviously involves-—-would de a fiagrant breach of thecontract on the strength of which one hundred and fifty thousand negroes are already fighting the battles not of tho Northern States, but as ihey suppose, as we Heve, of freedom. But, apart from the shame of such @ tranaction, it is impossible to believe that even the crawling intelligence oF acaucus wire puller could put it 7 aolution of the greatest and most terrible civil war the world has ever seen, A demerrat may well be in bis genees to hope for peace nu4 separation, or even for perce, Separation and @ fedorsi bood in foreign poiltics only, between tne South and Nu Again, « democrat may’ de in his senses who hopes w tempt thy South back into union by servile concess\ Such as Mr. Jetierson Davis’ organ, the Kichmond Sentinel, has lately fore- shadowed—namely, the expuision of New England gland States into one, so as te give the sinveholders the upper hand again tor another century, or the offor of & constitutional voto to the slave Stutes on every Prosident choen by the whoie people. Again, a repab- lican may bo in big setses who hopes to subjagate the Sonth, or to exterminate the one ground o' disson siom, the ‘ peculiar institution,’ 0 effectually that there ehaii no longer be a motive for secession and indepen- decile could expect to tempt the South back foto union yy auch a mere unguarantecd treachery as the formal re- turn to the old theory of theconrtitution, without giving the Sou nbstantial pledge either of ita victory on the point of slavery, or, failiag thit, of its complete future domination over the North. What Mr. Weed proposes is imply to cet (or anew Presidest @ democrat who may command confidence iu the Seutn solely by his treachery to bis own goveroment, without offering 8 single mato- rial guarantee even that he himself will cootinue to set on the policy suggosted, otill leas that his sue- cessors wil be williez to ect therenpoo. Mr. that both Nerth and South will be willing to leave the ‘whole root of this tremendows struggie abscvutely untouched, 10 pol- lard the branches of this great irce OF discord 89 a5 to leave it only a hesithe tronk and root: to put beck cir. cumstances as far as he can jt» Whe position from which this miguiiest of human civil wars (ook 18 rise; with this difference, however, that the rivalries und puasions oi bot arties have been fed iulo stron th. that the North would Jer the score of ite whole world tor tts sn) ry to the slaves wnd ita cownrdiy ertug- ng to its opponent, and that t uso would be smart under the mockery Of the world for hey ng lost bal? igbting population to gaia no wrain o security (even nominal security) which ik bad not, toget with far greater resources at ite back; betorc war. If be should sueceed in this very promi icg attempt to wrete Gil tis fearful bloodshed O6 the purchase of atshonor 10 fu 1 he one party and failure to votk, i 1 thinks Ubey would agrea for the future in reverencing the ovastitu tion avd loving the Union, That iy not the true opinion beld by apy saue creat cast of | bY & being proba. biy shrewd us woll as saue, like hc. Weed. It seriously meaut, whieh ix barely possible, ft Is not so muck a po- li tieul optoton. ag an tavoluntary foteliertual secretion by the great repoblican wire yaller of some of Wat stagnaat: political cove or elusi wh: sat four boon accumulating in th oa Hiclang, prevensele by Wielding theig Own power & The trath it that the peity wsiinet of electiouerrme agente so pre dominates among the ee called pouti inne of America, UWat thoy bait their hooke with mere sucgestione meant by eatch vaosnt, or silly, or evil minds, but hot meact for shy ulterior purpore at all, ex- actly aan angler baits nis book with a worm nov Wh any intention of feeding fishes but that rome of thera m: Mr. Weed « week, and worse than Weak, retorn (9 (he roothing Crittenden reve threatening to mortify cane be netions, or ratty ve serious in the way that a mere oenvasrer's potities are serious lie hopes, we suppose, that y° may divide the democrats, that it may widen the efit between (Le war democrate and 'be peace demorrate, that it may draw over some of the more wavering democrats to the repoblican ably. But he forgets, or pe hape be is scarcely capab'g Of recog- izing, that propositions of thie Kind frome inh Reoonte AF PURE i ES reper Pity degrade who tone of Nikieal ton Besociate tho party witb the trickery of brokea ~2% mean- inglees promises, and in the cool headea pereer Jorning overfeuch thinge in hie mind to think ail partion are equally bad and equally stupid. Pat end to the war by the Crittenden resolution! Wh. You roight a® well win back the Neapolitan throne for the Bourbons by promising m constitution, or recoveile Mr. aud Mrs Yelverton by agreeing to cave the question of the marriage undecided. These peop’ are smothered by the med of thoir own making, Wh Dryden said of the amall sectaries i# fur truer of there eaacue politic whooe only idem of tactics is & tamper wi A some party's political honesty— y bite the hook, Mr. Thurlow Weed has, we finceroly believe, miacal- eniated hie publicaswhe Know rather better thas be doew om of offering ® Compromise that would delibe. rately adjours this mighty struggle Lo another year, and declare «il that blood wbich bas been poured out like walter in the cause of frendom wanted to the inst drop, The Great W 8 of the Ag LWAY PROM THE BLACK SRA TO THR CASPIAN. et ‘hot the project of tbis line bas been under con- io, but, owing to the proseure of tho i$ financial situation, the part of the line commenting Yk wo the Biaeck Sea is to be executed first, and the rest to the Caspian Soa at A later period. According to the eatimetes ef the local inistration, says the /4 Ruse, the sombers from Trebizond to Centra! Avia bein) taken of the revenue of this line will yield at veo per cent on the tal u of military ftores and of ainm nit! save tho govern. ment about three buodred ond cighty-Ave thousand rou. bies, which could be granted to the shareholders ae « qusrantes. The praject presented by Couss Levavnell, Grand Duxe Michact. bas beso Minister of Public Works wish “9 Commitine at St Petersburg strictly mmMidered and to redvos the awaits Ko Fesalt of those studies before he definitely sanctions the pawert. The Rulers of Engidnd. ~ SEASIDE RECREATIONS OF A PAIrisH ARETOORAT. [From the Nartb British Mail, Sept. 6,) The five fashionable watering place of Dunoon wea week the scene of a goo deal of sensational aura26- arising out of the vavaries of an aristooratte visitor. The gentienau tn quostion i¢ said to bo the William Henry Brace Ogilvie, of Cowden, wsoae Dame recently figured in the London journa.s io connec- {om with come singular proceedings thera, with which he was immediately mixed up, He is brother to the Eari of Airlie, and though only twenty-four years of age {s.8 retired officer of the army. ‘He arrived at Dunoon on last Monday weok and took up bis quartere in Mr, Lauder’s Roya! Hotel, He was 008 an hour there, nor indeed in the viiloge, Uli he made M apparent that some unusual amugement we? io store for the inhabitants, Having put the whole inmates of the Royal tn a state of excite ment by his strange and reatiess conduct, he sallied {oto the village, entered the shop of @ confectioner aud cleared the counter of ail the available pasiry, confec- tions, segars, &c., throwing the same to a crow’ of youngeters outei!e, who had no objection to be thus treated by the liberal stranger. He opened his hotel tn the most hospitable way to all comers, inviting porters and laborers pigbtly to eutertainmenta, at which a piper presided. He would go out dressed, give away articles Of his clothing, and return to bis hotel parefoot and al- most naked. When restricted in liquor or avytbing he ordered, he would fet into the wiidest passions, and threaten to annihilate every one who stood in the wa, of gratifying bis extravagant desires. The igndlord aoom wearied of him, as his erratic proceedings engroveed the attention of everybody in the house. Night aud day it was ail tbe sane, be seomed never to tire of cutting tha most singular cajers, aud all, aa he suid, in ihe way of He woud run out aod in about the 1g On hie person put a short fiance! shirt. was fond of decorating himself with articles to moke show. With aiarze, bright motal digh cover fora hat- indow blind fora toga, gautty colored bell pull bes, a ish-eitcn, a rying knie ora poker for @ weapon, ro from the oviliag for ® seeptre, he would rest: upeo and fri. bten tbe inmates, oF Tuo out throuch the szrcets. a theatrical warrior, willing to do battle with any ovr who came in bis way, for days and nights he pera:od {2 ths extravagant conduct, put ting the inmates of the potel tn a constant etate of terror and alarm, He would retire es if to go to be! and mme- diatlely afterwards would be found throwimg dresstag qla-ses, basins and ewers over the windows ito the atreet. | He tore down the gaa fittings through the housa, end one night the whole premisey were so compiate ‘lled wich escaped gaa {rom this cause thet, bad the !and- lord, op discovering tt, vot taken twnmediate means to atop themata pipe and claar.the apartments of the gas, the peat have bees blown off the house and the juntas illed. On the Thursday he went, accompanied by the Iandiord, who was anxious to look after the safety of bi for a ride in achaise and pair. On arrivio powder works bebind Sandbank, where a gaug of labor- ers wers employed ia making drains, the honorable gem teman threw off the most of his clothing, along with hie Bboes and stockings. and, bareiooted, with s ade to baug, tackled 00 work, with the men, and Wid work tonghly for three hours, till the men tad ceased to \abor for the day. lie then and there made some purcharea of cattle One day Ie ran down the pier am@ wanted tohire @ small Yoat to pull acres the river, TheSman who had the boats in charge, soeing the applicant 60 excite?} and likely to de @ “tangerour customer, would not tet bim a boat, om which he ran down to the beac where boats were lying. with bis own hands dragged a Yoat dowa into fle water, strinpad all but naked, putied out into the river, avd paving in aw hour exhausied himself, pulled” vack to the shore, He would in thehotel heat a poker or other implement red. Dot, and taux to the street with it, as he said, to frightea people: but bapphy he never injured any one but aa excursionist {rom Glasgow ons: whom he struct on the {ace with a piece of iroa he had ia his naod, ta retaliation for the man aaking hit how bis nose cama to be twisied awry. Bat such conatict could not bo long tolerated. A younger brother of (ne honorable disorderly” was communicated with He came to Dunoon, but all his efforts could not make bis Brother beaave bimseif. ‘Things were.coiting to @ crisis; for ou Saturday vight Jast the gontlemae took umbdrage at his bost for-show! @stern opposition to continuance of conduct tbat pot only’ frightened every guest eave the author of it ome of the hotel, but put all te other inmates ia bodily fear, He suddenly ordeved his lugeage to be jected, saying that he was going to ieave the bouse, ‘This was a prospest ofa happy riddance. Out he wens,and when out, te prevent the chancas of his return, tite doors of the hotel ‘were clesed against him. He proceeded to the lagte Hotel; bntihis character being there-befere bim, he was ‘not admitted, at lonst asa lodger. He wandered abroad Bil night, and adout five o'clock ov Sunday morning he mode his way in through the grounds to Dunoon Castle, which is occupied by Mr. Eglinton and family. He Fang the door bell, bat being immediately sosworod, Be opened one of the windows of the dining room, vie- F slentiy forced tp the shutters, gained &dmission, and threw himself into one of the couches, making himself quite at home. The inmates of the houre became greatly alarmed at this unwonted intrusion, The gardener ventured into the ddning room, but the ta- trndor ardered him to be gone, and sent to bim agentioman to whom he might address himsew, At length ason of the ‘amily mace hia appearance, and the si conference which exnued is said to have- ended in the intruder making a doxterous leap through ‘a large pane of plate glass aut at a window. Heran to his old quarters at ‘the Royal, rang the bell furiously, end when denicd ission he tried 0 force open a a window. The landlord, however, arrived in t' vent him getting in through the window madoap found bimself defeated in his object, bo, with, one of b's fists, deliperately smashed nine paves of glass fo tho sash. By this time Mr Eglioton made pis appearance, along ‘with a couple of policemeo, who took the hovorable gem Geman into custody on a charge of feloniousty enterta Mr. Eglinton’s bouse. He was kept in tho look wpe Dunoon till the following day, when he wag sent in cus tody via Lochgoilhead to tho jail at Loverary, theroto Await the consequences.of his folly. {t is eald that al the pecuniary fiabilities he has incurred bave been, or will be, bonorably liquidated, What will be the roeoalh of the criminal obargo against him remains to be soem, SHIPPING NEWS, Movements of Cocan Steamers PROM RUROPE, ie sienmers for er fr013 Liverpost call at Questatomas as jae whieh call'at Londonderre, 7we Continent, eail at Reutnarapion. as] sieamers fer er from Mane, Liverpoat Liverpoat.. Southampton. Persia... Clr of Bait Olyinvn Washingion Ane. ‘Occan Queen Goldea Kule. ~ HATANA, NASSAU, N. P., KINGS! ORLEANS. For hassau azp Hatana—Steauiohip Corsten, from t J-Bteamadiy Montezuma, from New Tort JA. AND HOW Oct 22 For Havawa--Eteamship Eag'a, from Kew York Sept 28 Stounship Columbia. from New York, Oet 5. on Ney ORUANI—Steninship Yazoo, from New Tore a3 PI Steameh/o Champion. from New York Oct 8. mehiyy Snevo Nada, from New York Oct &. toamelip Evening Star, from New York, Oct 16. iteamsiiip Ariel, (rom Now York Oct 19. Sceamsh|p George Cromwell, from New York Oot 8. SPECTAL NOTIOR. Alliaiters awd packages intewled for (a Maw Yore Hemace ould Le vealed ALANA POR KEW YoRE—emIB errRicrs. ‘57 | MOO™ Rises. SUERTE 6 42) mtun waree, Port ef New York, October 1, 1864, CLEARED, Aicameh'p City of London (Br), Petrie, Queenstowa am@ Liverpool—Jokn @ Dale. Bark Mating Sabripius (Chilean), Meyers, ValparattcomA Ward, (Cleared Sept 24, Bark NB Gaston, lee, Barbdadoe—Bishop & Brea. Rebr Willie, Ross, Antigaa—G Wesscis, Keir Rea Nymap\y Oantey, Whitindm=L Kens. cl Hughes, Baltimore. Pioswer Baran, Jones, Philageiphia. ARRIVED anata io the centre, jas Bteninantp Reontng Sta to be the A: steamship Carolina, bound 8. 8 Ip Atianie (US tranaport), Gray, Fortress Mouros, with 380 sick and wounded soldiers, Bteamahip Lovina Moore (U 8" ts 5 rier, oar NRW fic ton’ sa "t sunken sone mith pb Me mi caw a sunt and about 25 feet of lowermasts out of water, spparently not Pe that mines ‘Steatnehip B roaitp Beaufort (W 8 transport), Steele, Fortress Mon. ccdiezmualip Gn eit S transport), Watron, City Point, ““pewaneayp es AT (0B eanapee), Baxter, Alex- hours te Brem), Ruhimann, Giesgow. 42 daya, with coat a Oot iat 4 6, Yon 6 naw ateamabip edip Penriessy Hoousies, Boaton, in tow, to Crocker, Wood sitake, Romana PAN Baten Gn Bs, so

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