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. NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1866.—TRIPLE SHEET. Shylock Bates tells that without hi Tain would bene cuoceat Why ts it pl ogy at THE NITRO-GLYCERINE CASE. M E X { ce fe) a actresses are 80 seldom admitted to good society? It is Sa not because they are not good enough, but because that | Testimony for the Defence—The Article iach ctantatad Sand ata tr | Ply Doverined by, Rxperte-tts Come simply stupid. You remember the h:..ro of Pronkerar's Position and Propertics, déc., déo. iss by money” which had gone. They were, therefore, more careful of the health and comfort of “their mone, and this in part accounts for the much greater mortality among the negroes under the new system thas under the the Tth of April they said T was indebted to them in the amount of $7,000; I agreed so pay them this amount on the 11th ot April, and they were to fur- nish $10,000 worth of bonds in addition to those re- ceived; 1 was arrested on Monday, the 9th of April, by detective Elder and Captain Young, who said I was ar. rested for having stolen bonds in my possession , I went with them in a carriage to my house; they told me that I was arrested for giving some bonds to Mr. Ellis to sell, ‘and they made preparations to take me to headquarters; they showed me a list of the bon’: I had givea to Ellis, and [ admitted the fact; Isaid I wou'd doall in my power to restore wil the property that 1 bad receivea; I told them I had received the bonds from Clark and Deanis; I stated how much I had received from thom, but 30 excited that I might not have stated what was right; the next moruing 1 handed over to Captan Young $19,450; these bonds are the same as those identiied by Mr. Moore as Lis property. [The bonds exhibited and offered in evidence.] The bonds now exhibited are the ones in question; these are the bonds that | purchased from the prisoners Clark and Dennis. THE RECEIVER MARES AN IMPORTANT REVELATION, 1 told Captain Young tat IT was to meet Clark and Donnis on Wednesday, the 11th of April; he told me to keep the engagement; I kept the engagement, and there gaw Messrs, MsCord and Kelso, the detectives: officers Elder and Radford were there also; T entered Ludwig's place with Clark, whom I met in Greenwich street; I ‘asked Clark where Dennis wa, and he said ho had gone up to Ludwig’s to mect me some time ago, and found fault with me for not meeting him hi betng #0 hotly pursued that he can have found no alter- native but to cast himself into the abyss."” Pucbla advices of the 2ist state that on the 16th Hua- atla was taken a column of imperialists. The liberals, two hundred strong, sustained an action of one hour and a half, but they were finally routed. The military commandant of Morelia writes on the ‘26th that the band of Villanueva was between Uru: neo and Qui! to unite with the dispersed of Patam- ban ; that Colonel Santa Cruz advanced with fifty cavalry, and after a violent charge got into the town, when the enemy made resistance behind a fence, but finally had to fly to the hills, leaving eleven killed, four wounded and twenty prisoners, besides seven horses and some bayo nets. Under the new system the Bureau agent requires no cash capita! to engage in the trade, ‘Transportation from the cheap market to the dear market is furnished by nent; if@ negro dies on the road or before he is ed of ‘the agent loses nothing; the government “pays him a salary to support him while in the trade, and ail he can make from his position in the Bureau mo- ypoly is so much clear profit, Ho may only make five rten dollars head, whereas the negro trader, under the old system, sometimes made one hundred or two hundred dollars a head; but, taking all things into con- sideration, he is doing @ better business on leas capital, and a sure thing without risk. Such will be found to be the practical working of the Freedmen’s Bureau at the South, whenever a truthful report is made, Ido not question that Colonel Brow the Assistant Commissioner in charge of affairs at Ric mond, deserves ali that is said in his praise by your cor- respondent, and that there are many others connected with the Bureau, who are honestly laboring to make it an instrument for good. But, cz necessitate, they must act through sub-agents, and these last are, and always Will be, necessitous men, for no others would accept such positions, The opportunities for making money are great, the chances of exposure small; for they who pay, and he that receives the money, are alike interest- ed in not letting it be known. T am anxious to believe and willing to admit that pp ny ee UNITED STATES COMMISSIONER'S COURT. The Approaching Evacuation the brilliant genius she evinced On the stage. fle went Before Commissioner Betts. F h to see her, and “und her cleaning her satin shoos | The United States vs, Otlo Bursiendinder,—This case of the French. with bread crumbs; but he believed till, belioved in her until he saw her cane was continued yesterday, Andrew Boardman appeared great characters in the drama—saw the chalked line | fF the defondant, Which sho toed at coriain passages-—the practised | Alfred B. Nobel, being sworn, testified that he was mares eo the looking las—aud fod tha al the inventor of ‘the spplcation of airo-giyeenne | A Draft * bout to be Ordered Throughout Ccatigan, Why, the dramatiat who sets down to blasting purposes; i, was in 1863 that it waa first tnd writes dosfn the minute iustraetions for the acting iniecdtoed inticle caps wiicezivoerae ta aa explo | Memlea:by the Imperial Government. ng makes the actre: akes the su , makes: Fae ere Unch Shylock, Beto ee tins | sive uid, but it is only explosive under cer- keep. Miss Lucille Western is famous in ‘East Lynne,” | ‘aim circumstances, and that 1s the case with @ but the character of ‘Lady Isabel” is the creation of | great many substances which are not considered explo ar the novelist, and Miss Western, who is mo , Ww than thovo who have reaped profit from “Lees fort vent | S885 for instance, water in the glycerine is not an ex- Maximilian Hard at Work on you so. Mr, Forrest 18 celebrated in “Spartacus” aud | Plosive, burning substance, for if water is sot to it it t “Metamora,” but these are the creations of the Phila- | does not catch tire, like turpentine or spirits of wine, but His New Budget. delphia dramatist, Let us take a Fret . there, sometimes th a play lasting a whole covennes’ gag | he fire goes out when the match is withdrawn; its uso will see but a single scene—the whole interest is center- | in biasting was only possible through the #l-covery of ed in the dialogue—clean, cutting, witty talk; but trans- | th ° its bl ‘ in Battle Sibert apt sedge stan seaaetie' a's | on Sect, "ee can oeten te atesteeaees | ue Ge Milel cal Wounded PROM MAZATLAN. The Sombra gives news from Mazatlan to the 19th. Ow the 17th the forces of Cortina were a quarter of a mile from the sentries. On the 18th, at four o'clock in the morning, the troops of Rivas, supported by six hundred French, left the city for the Presidio, and the fight lasted till six’ o'clock in the evening. The former were sua- tained by the gunboats as far as Urias. On the 19th the combat was continued, and at midday the reserve, with all the flying artillery, went out. The result, however, was not known when the steamer sailed. ‘The Sub-Prefect of Zamora writes on the 18th that the followers of Regules, who remained in Jiquilpan, had marched for Chavinda, towards Santiago, to penetrate into the woods, as Cotiji was occupied by Col. Quintana, Genoral Aymar heard of this and sent a force of six hundred men, under the guidance of Lieut. Colonel Carriedo. In tho night the liberals were surprised by 5 American stage, and the audience would leep ove < there; | told him I understood the meeting was to x a go to sleep over | of sparks fall on it 1t will not explode; fire will not explode “ ue . tier | awig'st aud he sald "no," it was not, that itwas | Many voted for it original e:tablishment with good and | it. This is because in America wit and repartee of the | i; it has beon tried hundreds of umes; It requires 360 Under the Imperial Regime: ihe Teenie sa one Supertens with lamat oe udnte fe then went. to Lidwig's, and hada drink | honest motives, but in the ill advised heat and bad blood | best kind are daily heard in the streets, in the counting | dogrees of heat in a confined space before. It explodes; munition. This was near Tenguecho, three and a half there, Clark asked the barkeeper where Dennis was, | of civil war, “But if so, if their purpose was not to | rooms, in the parlors; the Americans demand something | water will explode at a lower heat—that is, 148 above the oe Illes to the south, bad ground; night approach when the latter said “Don't you know that he was taken | break down the old system of inter-State negro trading, } better adapted to t hale theatrical tastes; they desire hu- | heat of boiling water; mitro-glycerine when unconfined remainder escaped. . 4 away in handcutls;”” wi m wont out and walked to- | for tho benefit of a favored few of the saints of freedom, | mor, but it is the humor of plot; they love wit, but | is not explosive at all; experiments were made before | Reported Defeat of the Liberals | py x despatch received in Zapotland on the 21st.. it who are now enjoying a burean monopoly of the busi- ness; if it was not to give to those favored few an abso- Inte control of the labor and productive capacity of the Southern States; if it was not intended by them as an indirect means of carrying out Thad Stevens’ favorite idea of universal Southern confiscation, by so impover- ishing the Southern land owners that they would have to sell ont to the New England saints fora song; if it was not to continue negro trading under a new and more repulsive form than it ever yet presented; if it was net intended to create an odious monopoly of the control of the labor and industry of the South, which should be left free to regulate themselves according to supply and egy eae the laws of the eral eee interested, then it should be immediately abolished. AN OLD RESIDENT OF NEW YORK. P. S.—On reading the above (the result of observations during a trip through Virgima, Georgia, Alabama, Blis- sissippl and Tennessee) to a friend, he called my atten- tion to the following extract from the Washington cor- respondence of a New York paper of Wednesday last: VAGATIES OF THE GYORGIA FREEDMEN. it must be the wit of action and incident. One of | the Cornwall Pyrotechnic Society to ascertain this, and the most famous pieces on the is “The | the San talat ae that society is that it only explodes at Huajican. Stranger.” Kotzebue wrote it onginally in the | when confined; it is not volatile; it is a perfectly fixed German; Sheridan discovered it, saw its effectiveness | oil; nitro-glycerine will not ordinarily be ignited by Hea ae NAAR eps HGR rh emery and | friction, though still will be reddened by great friction; ei nger in Eng-") if a vessel containing nitro-glycerine were cast from & land and America; yet all that we admire in that play is | Height of Arty fect from tho ground it would not ex- | TWO DAYS’ FIGHTING BEFORE MAZATLAN the result of the genius of Richard Brinsley Sheridai. | piode; in Hamburg lately a rock was thrown up It is the adaptor and the author, poorly paid and imposed | with nitro-glycerine in it and it fell down one thousand 7 on as he js, that makes the greatness with which the | feet witout exploding, and the charge it contained was across is Glothed, " Sometimes the actress isherself a | then exploded to prove that it was nitro-glycerine. YET KNOWN 5 ae at genius in other cir- | Explosions are owing to causes thatare not yet explained, KN les than professional. Miss Kemble, Miss Cashman, Mrs. | Crocs-examined by Mr. Bell—1 am in the nitro-glycerine THE RESULT NOT YE “4 Bowers aro evidences of this. It is otherwise ' with | business; have been in it a little more than a yea actresses when the life caught from the dramatist’s ge- | connected with blasting in Sweden and Norway q aoe ergs ba bev night, hie Cv thecold, | a chemist, not by profession; I am a civil enginose by and puppet alone remains, Bat'the poor | profession; before it was used for blasting it was ttle Wlichoacan—The Imperial- adaptor, the poor tman of ile! Must sufter, as well as for ‘medicine ; it has been used in homeopathic Ba in pe poverty, the contumely of fue monopolist managers who | practice ; I ‘saw torpedoes made at Cronstadt 0 taim tory. feed on his efforts, A® a general rule, writers are poorly | Ennpowder, and the idea came to mo of discovering ists © a Vio a4 paid here. The monopolists love to keep them down. I | a more powerful agency, and I knew the power of this speak of this because I know it; for, when aboy, earned | from the chemical composition of it; I never knew of | Sant money's writing criticlams and plays. Thavoasym. | its explosion except by the patent fuse;, 1 do not profess F Di f F pathy for every struggling youth that wealth seeks to | to know all the conditions under which it will explode; res starve, 4 fine ery Re this ood of oppressor 18 oe T have reason to believe ee I pave warned Ag: Cyete urther sclosu of the Franco- oc! terman, ny, his counsel says that he has | as muchas necessary about the dangers of this sub- a rare diamond in his daughter, which he found by acci- | stance; my pamphiet, published at Humburg, tells all Austrian Policy in Mexico. dent and loves. Ifa man of noble instincts were to find | that I know about it, Witness was shown an extract sorece seen 2h eee pe ceneiaa tishow it oo his | from his pamphlet, which he said he did not think was iends; but would guard it lovingly for himself. Notso | an exact translation; the greater part was cor- with this Shylock. He brings his gem to the marke rect. ‘itro-glycerine has been used on the four} CJVILIZATION “A LA FR trains her, moulds her, educates her to got him rich continents, and most in Germany, Sweden and Why, every accident or incident of his lite he seeks asa | Norway ; have ‘known people to grease (sac nals a ER A means te accumulate wealth. If the little window that | wheels with it, and that being exploded by percussion looks into the thing he calis his heart could be opened | upset the cart, and the nitro-glycerine in the can was not oe what would be seen? Why, that he is inwardly caleulat- | injured; I knew of instances where people were killedin | The Reign of Terror Under ing how much he can earn’ by the notoriety which this | Germany; there was a fire of turpentine, which heated suit willgive him. This suit wili bring him and his | the nitro-ylycerine until it exploded; I was injured my- the French daughter very interestingly before the public, he thinks. | self by an explosion, but %t was not by nitro-glycerine; 2s The public will rush to gaze. The house will be filled; | my brother was killed, not by nitro-glycorme, but 80, What doT care whether the jury gives a verdict against | by nitric acid and glycerme; there were five people me in favor of this poor author or not? Twill make it | Killed on that occasion; it was at Stockholm; what he up fully in a singie night's performance. But this | used was diluted nitric acid and ordinary gly- f Shylock Bateman takes very high ground here. | eerine, and which Las no particle of nitro-gly- Loyal Republicans Have Imperial Greatness The author was aot to be paid in money, but in fame. Of | cerine; and in Paris lately there was an explo. Th pon Th course we know that one of the vanities of hutnan nature | sion. ‘without any glycerine; ordinary glycerine rust Upon Them. is to find itself publicly distinguished. No doubt Mr. | js not expiosive; nitric acid is explosive, because I have wards the river; We conversed together about Dennis’ arrest, Clark saying it was curious they-had not arrested all three of us; he said it was all right; thathe knew where Dennis was, and that it would be all right as long as I would take care; I cannot remember what I said in reply to this; I don’t know of my own knowledge where Dennis was arrested. Q [f there are any further facts or circumstances which you have not given us please statefthem, A, I don't Know that | have anything else to say EARLY HISTORY OF MORRISON. Cross examined—I am forty-five years of ; I was born in Scotland; I was born in the North ot land ; lean't tei! when Lleft the place I was born in; I was very young at the time; my father left Scotland ten or filicen years before I did; he came to this countzy and I followed; when I got here I found that my father was dead; I can’t recollect how long he had been dead’ betore 1 got here; I left my mother behind me at Edinburg; I heard of my mother about two oars ago; she was then living near’ Stonchaven, Scot- fand: { was in Edinburg about seven years; I came from there to Philadephia; I was then about thirty-cne years of age. (The witness’ was clo.cly examined as to his movements in Scotland previous to his departure for America, but nothing interesting was elicite T was married in Edinburg; my wife is stil living; 1 never bad been arrested before leaving Scotland; had no charges preferred i me; I was worth about four hundred pou appears that the fugitives of Jiquilpan, being on the 18th in Santiago, Tangamandapio, they were surprised and routed by the French forces under Neigre, arrived from Zamora, The enemy lost all thgir armament, horses, &c., and all were made prisoners. ‘The Prefect of Dueretaro, on the 2d inst., advises the defeat of the force under Segura, near Limon, and the town of Tamuin was restored ‘o perfvct order. Escobedo had approached Mateliuela with some rillas. Another account states he was between San Luis and Saltillo. The ditigencias were not permitted to leave the former place. Lieutenant Colonel Rodriguez, Emperor's battalion, writes,-on tho 28th, the’ haif a league from Cooneo the enemy appeared in the Cerro dela Palma, numbering four hundred picked cava'ry, under Garnica and Barbosa, They could not reais’. the impetuons attack of three hua- dred and twenty imperia‘ists, despite the inferiority of forces and difference of the ground, and the position was taken: without firing a shot, at the point of the bayonet. ‘The liberals were completely’ dispersed, with loss of forty to fifty men killed and thirty priscners. The imperialists only had seven killed. He pursued them with his cave airy, and received a lance wound. Among the enemy's killed was the so-called Lieutenant Colonel Rosead® Marquez and other officers, Of tho prisoners ten were shot, in accordance with the law of October 3, of whom three were officers. The liberals lost thirty muskets, four lances aud sixty saddled horses, Milledgeville papers say that more than three thousand ne- ro men within, two weeks passed over the railroad uinatn and adjacent counties for the West. They n induced to leave their emplo; the promise of higher wages, althe they made contracts with them, which contracts’ were ratified by the men's Bur Planters thus deprived of their employes will be disappointed in making their crops. This complaint comes trom many counties, notwithstanding arrests have been made of per- sons who are thus tampering with the employes. A letter from Southwestern Georgia says that the corn is growing finely and promises a large crop. If the Milledgeville papers dared to tell the whole truth they would say that this movement of negro men from Georgia in violation of contracts ratified by tho Freedmen’s Bureau, was the work of sub-agents of that Bureatt, induced by the higher prices paid to those sub- agents for men without encumbrances to go West. But Mr. Stanton, as he used to do with Mr. Lincoln, has undertaken to revise and explain away President John- gon’s proclamation, so far at least as to retain martial law in Georgia to protect the negro trading operations of the Freedmen’s Bureau. If the Milledgeville papers should dare to tell the whole truth, under the blessed rule of martial law and suspended habeas corpus and the Civil Rights bill, they would be suppressed, their edi.ors NCA The Press Despatches. REPORTED DEFEAT OF THE LIBERALS IN TAMAULA- PAS—THE CASUALTIES IN THE BATTLE NEAR MA- ZATLAN—SMUGGLING AT BAGDAD, ETC. Havana, April 21, 1866, From Michoacan we have an account of an attack made “by Lieutenant Colonel Rodriguez upon scme four hum- dred Juarist’s cavalry, near Corneo, at the Cerro dela Palma. Of course he claims avictory. He says:— “They could not resist the attack of my column, which, without a single shot, charged upon them with bayonets fixed, and dispersed them.” 1850; I came ‘in the second cabin; I left my mother when I was abcut fifteen years of age; Tcould not say how many times I have heard from’ her since; I may have heard from her twice ora dozen times, but I cannot tell, L havo never tried to trace out my father's wheren- bouts in this city; when I found that he was dead I did not make many inquiries; I kept store at No. 65 Race street, Philadeiphia; I kept a clock store there; I staid in vielmhia about two years and then came to New York; I was ‘arrested for putting @ man out of my house in Philadelphia; I don’t know officers Blaney and Young, of Philadeiphia: never was before the Mayor of Philadelphia on any crinvinal charge; Idon’t know that I was well known to the police of Philadelphia; don't know that I was undor suspicion; never kuew that I was the reputed | Gna publishers tried by military commission and sent to | pal He continues: “The lost in this battle from sealant Aes a ote Biles f lishers y ly would have been happy, as he walked the | known nitre to explode; nitro-glycerine is formed of & ke. ke. od sayyats army: sf ns Pig bakerc Fo eT carne to New York | te Dry Tortug streets, to see on every wall the announcement of Leah, | glycerine treated with nitric acid under the addition .of ee g . forty to Ofty men left dead on the field. Tcaptured | coupled with his own name as author. ‘The celebrated | sulphuric acid; my advice is, that when blasting oit is composer, William Vincent Wallace, who is now eter- | packed in boxes and saw dust it will not explode by con- | The steamer Morro Castle, Captain Adams, from Ha- nally at rest, begged the rich monopoli: t who had bought | cussion; it is packed in tin; if you strike ofl with a tee’ Skee tat AAC Tila oec eaae aaa out bis works in this city, to permit him to dircet a re- | hammer on an anvil it will explode just where the ham- | Y#ua on inst., arrived at this port y iy hearsal of them without pay, simply for the pleasure of | mer strikes it; [heard of an accident of this kind in | with dates from the Mexican capital to the 11th and from seeing his name associated on the placards with the dar- | Siberia; [ knew an instance of a miner boring and the | Vera Cruz to the 15th inst. ling creations of the brain. So the immortal Meyerbeer, | boring exploded a emall portion of the oil, which threw rendered famous by Les Huguenots, ahd excited to grander | gut the drill; an explosion of gunpowder sets fire to a = efforts by the knowledge that fame await his efforts | thing, but an explosion of nitro-glycorine wili not; gan- Our Havana Correspondence. wrote his greater opera, the sublime L’Africaine. Vame, | powder has to be soaked in nitro-glycerine before it will Havana, April 20, 1866, the tood of genius! I would take an infidel even to hear | explode; [ wrote a letter to the New Yor« Heratp on the gaerdioeay Q : thirty prisoners, of whom I shot, according to the law of October $, three officers and seven soldiers. We captured thirty muskets, forty lances and sixty saddled i! horses. ”” Conspiracy is rife in the city of Mexico, and Genera Galvez has been thrown into prison. Several arrest have been secretly made; persons disappear without any cause being publicly assigned. . opened a small store in Prince near Varick street; I then went to 305 Hudson street, where I have been seven ears; | have known Clark ten years, and have knowa Dennis about the same time; I borrowed the money to give to Dennis and Clark: I dont think am worth more than $15,000; I never kept a bank account; I got $4,000 irom a man named Gleason; I gave him no security for it; I might havo done something wronz before Uhis transaction; I can’t tell how often 1 have done wrong; I am not aware THE BATEMAN-DAILY CASE. Theatrical Monopolists and Bohemian j Critics. The following are the remarks made by A. Oakey Hall, counsel for the plaintiff, in the case of Augustin Daly against Hezckiah L. Bateman, which was tried last week ohare Fe th segess intl atone person before | in the Marine Court, of this city:— that soft opening prayer, and those other melodies, to | causes of the accident at the Wyoming Hotel; the box in | The French steamer Imperatrice Eugenie, from Vera | Qn the Sth inst. smuggling was discovered from the ’ poblinirocraay Mr. Hall said—Gentlomen of the Jury—For the last | the grand, sad closing dirge in Meyerbeer’s later work, | that case was in a bigh flame before it exploded; the | Cruz, arrived here yesterday afternoon. She brings | park William Anthony, of Bagdad, and the whole it and ask him if he doubted that the soul which framed | cause of the accident in San Francisco has been that the those harmonies had no dream of immortality beyond | sawdust in the box probably caught fire, and that caused | more than four handred French troops returning to the grave, I do believe that the ambition of genius is | tne nitroglycerine to explode; the cause of the explosion | France and about three hundred and fifty passengers, Q How many times have yon bought stolen property, ten days the whole people of the county of New York with a guiity knowledge, within the last live years? have resolved themselves into a jury to decide a ser.ous cargo was examined by the officers, who found thirty-five muskets with bayonets, eight bayonots, thir- A. 1 caunot tell that I have bought’ any Kuowing it to have been stolen; my store never was | question presented to thom about the rights of Inbor; | not inoney but fame—a beatific future and not a sordid | was careless packing; sawdust and water will create a | among whom I notice several distinguished individ. | ty.four swords without scabbards, sixteen thousand pie searched by the police; don't know that I have the re- | the whole county has weighed and considered the claima | Tecompense here; but genius dies without money aud | heat of three hundred and.sisty degreos, for cotton will, | aig His Excellency General Almonte and family, Gene- tai cartridges, two hundred and eight dracoon single without food. But this Shylock has no idea of the dit is fibrous matter, as well as cawdust; the accident ment due to genius. So long as he atasses wealth the | at Aspinwall was not by nitro-giyoenine in my opinion, | ral Heran, his eon-in-law; Goneral Brincourt and many creato: of that fortune may starve. ‘Let him die,” he | for percussion caps were on board and other explosive | others. You are already informed of General Almonte’s barrelled pistols, twenty-three Mississippi rifles, thirty- putation of'a receiver; didn’t know that my character eight swords with scabbards, twonty-one carbines, three was considered bad until within the last few days, until these events transpired; I meant to buy all the bonds of the poor man against the rich—of the miserably paid car drivers against the wealthy monopolists who oppress: Clark and Dennis had; Lid not Know whero I was to | them. With one voice this whole public and the mighty | *#Y% “like the pauper that a genius should be.” materials; not over six thonsand pounds has been ship- al mission to Napoleon. .He may be absent six peered my eageterini and Cestee see ree ia get the money from except by selling the bonds; on Sat- he press, are with these poor men, avd I Qver the stones 216 Araetion, DUNS Isl craxmtt over, Barens no Soot oi One of the boxes was found a paper with (hese words— Grday, the 7th of April, I must have had $30,000 worth engines of the ) are wend hem: Rattle his bones, dent has occurred; regulations are made by the Prussian | months or six years. That depends upon circumstances. — ‘hr General Crawford.’ This is probably an inventian, @f these bonds. * : with them agmnst the railroad monopolists as I am ‘He's only a pauper police for the carrying of niiro-zlycerine; it is tobe | In the actual state of things in Mexico I believe General | and intended to asperse the character of Aorg general nobody awnn, mnarked “N. G.,’? or “‘Nitro-Glycerine;”’ these regulations Diario lishes a letter from. But what fame oven does Shylock Bateman insure to | are quite recent, and were occasioned by an accident, | Almonte can be by far more useful in France. Maxi- Rivas, en iedy ety eh epee tn py ny a the author who is to be patd in that coin orly? He put his | ‘to ExaJudge Dean—Nitro-glycerine is a poisonous | milan is one of the anointed, It is often a misfortune ‘thes name on the bills for two nights and then took it off for- | tiquid, ‘whieh will not explode with fire to itif it isheated | ¢9 be bora a prince, However good and accomplished « Peay AL counsel Teoose ple papas ever. His name was never mentioned in this memoir as | to three hundred and sixty degrees; it has more concen- man may be, if be is destined to govern he must have | with two officers and sixty soldiers wounded and seven Q. How came you, then, on Tuesday, the 10th, to sur. reader but $19,400 worth? A. That was all I bad wita me then. Q Where were the rest of the bonds? A. [had the balance bid ina pile of lumber in King stree, with every victim of monopoly against his oppressors, asT am to-day with this plaintiff against the wealthy manager, the rich theatrical monopolist, who denies him the poor reward of his labor, And I find public "When did you put tiese bonds ig the lumber pie? | opinion is with me in this case too. As I walk up the | tho author of the play or the author of the book itsel’. | tration of power than gunpowder; it is composed of "4 aca tow anys borore: Tput tiem iain te nighe time; | Mepe that Iead to this Court—as T pars along the | When tho. play of Yeah ‘in mentioned. this avaricious | cnrbom, , nitrogen and oxyien; if blasting ofl is | experience, and to obtain that advantage years of adver. | Killed; and of the Mesicaa Maporlut, Ave cilcere sas ‘there was a piece of oil silk around the package. thronged corridors—I see in every the public | Southern Yankee couples with it only ‘the name of his | allowed to saturate sawdust this would produce, in my sity must roll over his head, Such, I think, is the case | claim to have killed three hundred and fifty of the Jum» Q. How much did the package contain? A..$19,450, | verdict aude por upon this case, no matter how | danghter, and as his last payment to Daly on account of | impression, a more dangerous article than the oil; hypo- 7 : ristg and that they wounded a still greater a & Where did’ you keep the balance: A. “i-had that | Your verdict shall be found hereafter to be. see around | hie “fame” he comes into court here nitric acid’ would be produced by this mixture; this | With Maximihan, e nded i umber. sanmatad in the Oomsrat Davis Tha package was dane up in this court room, crowds of anxious eyes, | without Miss Baternan Leah ix nothing. ‘would burn, but not explode; it would heat the of! til IMPERIAL DISTINCTIONS. _—_ ” in oil and contained $9,000 or more; I gave this | Watching the proceedings here with painful inten- | says this ae “to the tone of the bio; y Mr. | it would explode; itis about @ month or five weeks since | The Emperor has been pleased to decorate General New Onveans, April 24, 1868 sity, because to-day you aro to sottle a question which is | Daly wrote. It was too flippant!” Flippant! was | ~~ to Captain Young after I gave him the $19, 400 After sgme further questions the examigation was ad- journed S¥er until Friday morning at ten o'ciock. reguistions were made in reference jonel Duprez had defeated Liberals unger “ iM tne tone'et Uhie Betsenen Bhnanit on the hand, when he | the heame ceeteramentr my. brewers wed’ aties | Atmamio and Sener Joe M. Gatlerres de Ratoads with | Ons ae bz! i waves his supercilious band and says, ‘‘I took a kindly | in a laboratory; all in the establishment were killed; the Grand Cross and Collar of the Mexican Eagle. Iam | Largisa, Lenten na ae ‘as Pag ee ronal in Paris an sxpicsion of tallow and R Te: gure neither of thom care much about this mark of dia- rag had pean for the imperialists the dis } ° ‘spoke thor made him was first Sombrero having arrived at the tricts of Abasdo and Guerrino. rich and his ter famous Gentlemen, Lhave read | 1848) the frst application to blasting wus made in 1863, | “mctou. General Garcia, having capital, this memolt, and'T find it'to be as beauufully a wrisen | nites givestae hea formerly, more’ dangerous than the | bad taken charge of the War Department. Senor Lacun- | Matameros has prociaimed for the empire, and taken book aa was over penned asthe beet chronicle of a life. | article wow manatactured; We nee was sever abandoned | sa, Present of the Council of State, hed besa named | Conception as its name. It is now garrisoned with about it which is calculated on account of ita ; vague reports that it Guee Nori Indians. please Shylock Bateman, and that is that only oneline of | was used In France ata blasting agent; It would have | President of the Ministry. unin aia ak It is devoted to Shylock bimselt. If my client had | sumk the ship at Aspinwall if it had exploded on board | been appointed Under Secretary of Finance, ® post re- | we pp aNCO. AUSTRIAN POLICY this man Bateman in it, its tone would not have | of it; “glonerine” is the technical name of nitro-glycer- | signed by Senor Villalobos. . mn “flippant ;" if Thad had an opportunity to advise | \ ~~ my friend Daly before he wrote it, | would have given of interest to every literary man, author, every Gramotic "Oriier te the city of New Fork, Hore is a ‘has canalngiy ovaded all responsiblity, riite he hes can or y, while he 1s ae had the venahe of my client’ labor, and a you! thor who, trusting entirely to the honor ef the nd ani, failed to take the precautions for security which a man of business would. Authors, like all inventors, all patentecs and men of original genius, are seldom practi- cal men. Their thoughts tend always to the higher and emotional faculties, and they live rather in a world of i ion than of business. AN professional men are carelesa of the commonest practical precautions. It has become a erb thut a great lawyer is the last person Revival of the Inter-State Sinve Trade— Monopoly of Slave Trading by Government Em, y' TO THE EDITO! (HERALD. Your Richmond correspondent, under date of April 13, aays:— that was the name marked on the substance that | ‘rhe rumor that the government will order a general jed at Aspinwall. him the same sort of advice I have given my young rt my testified as follows:—Nitro-glycerine is | draft ere long is confirmed. Farther Disclosures=The Reign of Tere ror in Mexico Under the French, &e. Major ® ey ued into the working the Freedm Burean | in the to trust with the administration of his own | friends when they go courting—6rat court the mother, barning fluid; it cannot be lighted by ay ‘ing ire THE COMING EVACUATION OF THR FREN ' = mines md ot eartinae te ane is Ly affairs; you may search the city through and you will | and thon you may be sure of the daughter—and I I have not been able to Saploee tte owe The gana follows:—There have been The following is from the official correspondence em ' Fike tenis by tho entire people. “Ot | find few rich lawyers, rich doctors, rich would have said to him, “Be careful to praise Father | ing it on the ground from a great height, or by ni dy Pagers Mexican affairs submitted to Congress by the President ‘ant Commissioner in ct of affairs, iric apes im | Mon oF rich authors; professional men are sad to | Bateman plentifully and you will get your pay, and | breaking a bottle filled with it in a quarry with | many rumors of late with regard to the proposed evacu- peers xi i terms of at reapest. a fdministrat fon he seems to ha bad abl a be die om it ) thie Be wil re ie the fone of ihe book ror son. indeed.’ | great force; 1 have exploded it by great beat ation of the French troops; so much go that their ap- with his message of March 20, 1866:— ve achieved the difiew conc iliating rvery one class mi jound a reason for Mr. 1" who tells you cool a y oi “ py ag ot ‘cokes i ecln pone de a cantiae toceok ies Maen. ibd bat oo y y he a young | f have filled a small tin ‘with the oi! and surround proaching return to France would appear to be a settled MR. ROMERO TO MR. SEWARD. strucgling author away from his work in New York, | jt with dry oak chips, saturated a newspaper with spirits Mexican Lacation 1 Tae Unirep ae) larity of the Bureau done not arise from any parm carried him to Philadelphia, used him to further his | of wine aid the explosion took place in about five or | Matter, and there are even persons well informed who Wasminatos, April 7, 1865. long @ period, not wringing from this rich monopolist tion at headq? ‘Other causes account fer the disl ‘Da ted in the fair jises of Bat ter’ eR, ed him for nearly fou bei i date pa an ETARY—Pursua: mm a P jong these Is the feeling that the Burean is a | Bie rights, Daly tru in the promi o- | daughter's success, worl im for nearly foar weeks ! six mines, the flame being tive or six feet above it; | predict the very of their departure. There is Mr. Secrerarr. nt to my intention to cor Part of the “army of occ pater 7 aa tue Coated Staten man; he believed in the pretended friendship of father | at the business, and then sits coolly and tells you he ac- | the can containing the nitro glycerine was open. ‘ peta eRhni Sn iaphtgtemndlpe anf sintairmnciosrarg I pyrene ligt, om and daughter, who were tilling their pockets with the proceeds of Bis labor, But now, at last, awakoned to the character of the mau he trusted, he stands forth to claim bis right. 1 kaew little of the facts of this case till yesterday, when they transpired on this trial; bot that little showed me the kind of maa with whom’ my ‘unsuspecting client bas dealt so long; and I stand up to-day as the champion of his rights against this man Bateman, and Lam ready to staud forth thus for ‘man this defendant has overborne and deceived, as Pbetiove there uro many such. What sort of creature ix this Bateman’ Gentlemen, I see among you several of my friends who belong to the Israslite nation, You kuow how for centuries it has been customary for every obloquy to be heaped upon that race, and it has passed into a proverb—"As mean asa Jew.”? But now fet this be altered; let future Shaksperes take for the buit of scorn this Southern-Yankee Bateman; let us henceforth express our contempt by saying, not “As mean as a Jew,” but “As mean as Shylock Bateman." Shy lock Bateman, who says to this poor, author, straggling for fwme and fortune, “You have made no contract! I agreed to give you nothing! Tt i# not nomi. nated jn the bond’ I claim the poundof flees’ Look at the two mea. At Doly, who has made the fortunes of copted these services ax gratuitously given. “If be had Cross-examined-—This experiment Was made yester- pect ‘hannel, the c jocuments which the blood of a man in him he would have bivshed to | day; I have used the oil oo blasting, becanse F ome is | that which even may be desired. Suoh rumors are quite ley come mph hands, an en, fear cove to give make sach a confession; but he did not blush, as we all | less danger than loading and from splinters; the cause | acceptable both to friend and foe. We deem them at | an idea of the policy observed by the forces and the could see, since he does not allow himselt the luxury | of the explosion in Greenwich street must have been by | jeact ag premature. So far the only actual fact is that | agents of the French government in Mexico, I have the of whiskers, and comes barefaced into court. | the material in which it was packed becoming saturated | [¢&st&8 P : y honor to accompany with this note some of those pub- Thew he takes refoge in the fact that he gave Mr. Daly | with oil and catching tire; I made the experiment yes- | France has opened negotiations with Maximilian to agree | |j.hed in Nos. 9 and 10 of Jl Corren de Mazatlan, the or- & benefit which netted him two hundred and twenty-tive | terday with Mr. Nobel; he was introduced to me by | upon the period when the evacuation may commence | gan of the so-called government of the ex-Archduke dollars! I tried to make bim show how much he tnade | Mr, Burstenvinder; these experiments were made in the | and the conditions upon which it is to be eflected. Maximilian in the State of Sinaloa, I will take the liber- from a single night's performance of Leah, but you raw | Ninth avenue, al Kightieth street, ‘The same paper contradicts the report that Maximilian | ty to briefly cal ttention to these evidences how he retused to answer, and begged his counsel to ‘The case was then adjourned tili twelve o'clock to- | intended to make 2n excursion to Guadalajara or any | brought to light by the agents themselves of the French ee ee of making the statement, | day, other part of the in erior at present. He will certainly | intervention in my country. Tins mesmly Se ped tne peer poate TO THE KDITOR OF THE HERALD. hot do so until be has conclided his financial labors, | The first is a decree irom the French General Qs not equal a single night's receypts of Leah. He refused I shall not speak here of the question of the priority Roa aor octing of sameisions, sromaen over oy Sitter to. castuer ray —_ Faget iyeek ‘ to answer how much he and bie daughter have mada | of the disc { nitro-glycerine by Mr. Nobel. Ithas | him, The foundation prepared by Mr. Langiats for the | from the General-in Chief of the French forces in Mex- | from Leah, nd to tell of the hundreds of thousands of | aiready been discussed in other journals, and I shall | budget of expenses was tefnitely adopted at that meet- | ico, and to the instructions of Maximilian, a court loliars they have netted at the magnificent outlay of meres A If to th 4 di ing, and it was soon to be published. It shows the | martial is established in Mazatlan, from which there te *$250 and a benefit of $225." Now, gentlemen, as to | therefore confine myself to the question of ascertaining | Pe ousiy economical system which the government had | no appeal, to pronounce, at discretion, coakeneas the proof of the value of these services, what witnesses | if Mr. Nobel can really prevent nitro-glycerine from ex- | jn rati-n, which are to be executed within ‘twenty-four does the pinintiN produce? Mr. Caylor, who. ie | nioding otherwise than by a special means of ignition of e fame organ admits that the application of the law | hours against every republican guerilla, and evem one of the worthiest most coleerated | Of | 1. inves of the 10th of February created much clamor in the mer- | against any prisoner made from the living dramatists, tells you that the plaintit bas under. | bis own invention. cantile circles of Tampico, Taxpan and Mazatiai forces who defend the independence of their yalaed bie own services’ Mr. Gaylor testifies The experiments of M, Berthelot, Protessor of the | that the applicants for redress will not La country; for it is known that the former, and even Yee Wooton: tei ook aueoee P yd Rg A School of Pharmacy and of the College of France at | for satisfaction from the administration : many cases the latter, are called by invaders the plaintit’ has ‘charged, So docs Mr. Methua testicy. | Paris, have demonstrated that the gases produced by the | amor Esler, ex-Cecrelary of Dutie, um capeard ie | these ert ea esmeak’ ie levelled” This barbarous Tn what estimation does this Shylock Bateman stand to- | explosion of this substance are not the fame as the gases | ooo 4 Territorial division. kystem of trymg by foreign courts martial, and without, al brethern in America when | produced by the combustion of organic, substances, sind | ‘The government bud fixed a new and stated term for | subjecting to any law or Tule, as they pass ‘sentences a6 ” h down the | {hat its ¢ at Coomente Sees olently under i0- | the presentation of ail claims against the revenue of the | discretion, haa already carrigt to the gallows hundreds | aintift’s price i an agent that he himself employed, | flucuces more or less indeterminate and impossible to | orn pire of victims, among them many such as senor Chayez, the | fir. Outarsan. "What. ‘commentary j# it upon the pit: | foresee; that they belong to that series of unknown and sited SOLITARY STATIETICN constitutional gueerace of Aguas Calientes, and General of Garibaldi. These troops are termed, and # sia ern people are wot to be trusted. It is Thad Stevens and Wendell Philips ana Sumner present in the flesh—a living embodiment of the me radicalism which brought on the war and ts now ke the South out of (he Union, 30 it is hated with a hat not loud but deep,’ ‘That the Freedmen’s Bureau should be regarded with feelings of dislike aud hatred by all respectable classes ai the South, black as well white, may well cause some surprise to those who are not familiar with all the bearings of the question. The explanation suggested by your correspondent ix no doubt correct in part, so far as the Southern whites are concerned. But the true solu- ton of general dislike is to be found in the fact that, in its pPactical working, the Freodmen’s Bureau is but another phase of the African slave wade. It has taken tho place, performs the functions, and puts into the ‘kets of ite employes the profits of a class of men nown in the South before the war as ‘‘negro traders." ‘That business was always considered at the South as de. grading and disreputable, Those who followed it were socially fabooed. The profits were large, because few who aspired to social position for themselves or their deecend- ‘ants cared to enter into it, and, therefore, to the few who did not care for social position it was a quasi-monopoly. That monopoly was the result of a public opinion restrict- ing competition. Those who engaged in the business had to do so on their own capital, unassisted by the gi ix evidence, modest, unassuméng, cla ming only the poor price of his labor, which has heap d op riches ea the defendant, and you have seen the lordly air of Bateman—this fellow who strats up to the witness »tand, who talks with bis supercilious air about « taking a tance which this Shylock and his class dole out to the | Unsolved actions of things in seience which has been pro- | according to official returns published in the capital, | Ghilardi, the companion i State or fedoral governments. } ' . | kindly interest in the young man’; who patronives the rary men who serve them, when Mr Ottarson testi. | visionally defined by the title of cataly\ical foros, ~ Prone! " ? Wear an ean Wendie clone TACONOCNTIEE, © caaltooare | paar eultiee, (Deb sd Soak tick wilh oll Ene pocemoue, | Sen that he willen co ge to Fisadeiphin uaa de ak | Fulsts viteoot tiie Sores, 908 enexstetnad, that | ‘nse bed beun 2es cpepasters Deevese the Prone Coont | are the, armed matefaciers” whees the invader corte ts vs ‘as to the whites of the South | Rees that bas given him that nickname of « Lord Bate. | this work for twenty-five doliars a week. I leave the | chemists often witness in their laboratorics transforma. say June, to the 3ist of December, 1864; the number of | The secoud point in evidence, which I accompany wita alized monopoly, supported under mar. | Man,” after the ancient ballad which recites how that | case with you, gentlemen, to decide how this man | tions suddenis effected, either as the Tesalt of | change SeLS, 1° Sa L'soo wonsdea, Yn 1008 tnere were 958 | this “note, 19 kncther deores trom FP agement | noble lord “stood by bis castle gate combing h mike white steed.’ This fellow, who confesses that his daugh- ter plays Leah oftener than any other piece becanse it is “so perfectiy adapted w her talents.’ Whose was the genius that gave ler this opportunity to become famous and rich? It belongs to the ill-paid, neg lected author that sues here to-day in court te Batewan siands in court to-day. This Shylock who | in the magnetic : ‘ quaningty inenagedte induee the plhintil te nylok whe | quently observed al the moment of s sudden aeration | encouaiere, or nearly one daily: the casualties wens | Cestagny, removing the political and civil authorities of 7 ; 5,674 killed, and 1.279 wounded—total killed 8,961, and | Mazatlan, appointed by the Freach agent which preceded services, holding himself out as the agent of his daugh. | of a chemical composition disturbances In the inclination | 2.600 wounded. Therefore, during the first six months enaral at Mazatian, and constituting other per. ter; who advised her to put in a pieaot infancy when | of the magnetic needle or by the simple contact of ® | the average number of encounters was seventeen teh heir places, under the threat that if any one of the plaintift sued her for the miserabie stipend he claims, | substance the molecules of which undergo no trans | month, and during the following twelve months twenty. should not accept the position to which he baw ant who, when the unfortunatd author then sues bi formation, and which have no part in the fragments | seven per month; while the averace nutuber of killed will suffer a penalty of imprisom- for the money, says coolly, “*L wns an agent, you treated | produced by the decomposition. with me agent, and { am not inal Mago’ (rented | Pome by catalytical force. thai platina, in froth or in | “ecreared In the proportion of eight to five, In the be- | ment for six months, agreeably to the law issued upem ry . iat law by the government for ihe benelit of a few, at the expense of the many, and of the ger «Interests and welfare of the whole country. ‘A planter, say an Georgis, wants fifty hands to work his plantation.” He goes toa sub-agent of “The Barean’ ‘and offers tor dollars per head for them, The negroge aro gathered in (sometimes by the use of the bayonet), we. ‘anes tom awry, sed toe ‘burece ‘spose divide Tequired to accomplivh this s ean get no pay fom any one for the work you have | delicate threads, determines instantaneously the com- py Cad a ee grey tons dng ‘oad incronoea to bag Fy nee Ag Tar wig the nec: five hundred dollars by the operation, es his daughter? Let w The play of Leah | performed.’? bination of a mixture of gas which would have remained | {hie hut por month. ; of thecatening We enecuuen 10 ‘aseree to whisk Another, am enterprising emigrant from the Werth erman was @ very © play—for the Gor. for ages without combining; that a single drop of sul- | “Me Ul tay vr rive, of the 20th March, states that the best proofs which can be imagined of the Jto try cotton planting in Misausippi or At. | Man, so are French plays very excellent plays—for the | Iwrrrictevcy or THe Frennuen's Boneat.—We have | Pburic acid determines the explosion of certain combina: | Gonoral Galvez had been arrested by superior orders, at | want of popularity with which the cause of the interven inte himeelt Ai the Bureau and offer, twenty | French; but for Engiish and American audiences a play | travelled over several of the northern counties of Missis- | ovs of orvanic azotle bodies with metale; that the sin’ | nig own house, on the night of the 26th, and, after suter- | tion conteuds in Mexico doltars'a head tor Afty able-bodied negro mn. The die | t be eucceesful must be specially prepared for them— Bo within the past two months, and have taken parti: | Pl contact of a copper wire immediately causes the | in: two daye’ imprisonment in military quartets, he was | The third evidence comprises several communications egroes aro | iultarued over to be | adapted to thelr tastes—moulded to the peculiarities | cular pains to inform ourself im recard to the workings | ‘Solution in weak azotic acid of a piece of iron, rendered | sent ander eacort to Pucbla, The cause had not tran. | which have passed between the so-called Political Prefect carried from ¢ pt or Arkansas leaving | Batural to the English aud American tnanners and foel- | of the Freedmen'a Bureau, and it is evident, from all we | Patsive by being placed for only a short time in | pind Ho was one of the first to apply for pardon to | of Sinaloa and the Licentiate Don Ladislao Gaona, from tho useless dren and mgod of the fatnilies te | nas. Mr, Daly found a translation of “Deborah,” a | saw and heard, that those sections of Mitsiesippi that | the same smoking acid. One must not confound the the government of Juarea, and among the foremost to | which it appeary that this advocate Grd not \emedissaly f which they !» rea bandon tothe people of | dead eenilees translation, into which he breathed the | have not been cursed with the agents of the Burewn, are sudden separation of Lie elements of & composition ae secotsion the Toreign invetvention although he hed e | accept the appointment which was coaferred upoe hiss Georgia If the requisit ber of able-bodied men can. | breath of life. He saw in it the germ which he culti. | far the most Prosperous termine y a very feeble catalytical influence with the force under his co and confided to him with a view to | of judge of the first instance, and though he excused combination of elements of a mixture determined by he adapted it to freedmen are happlet, not otherwise bu had, the orgia planter, who has paid | Yated into a na A work better and seem disposed to do their duty an - combat his antagonists with the Army of the East. He | binvel! upon the plea of infirmity, he was ordered to be 4 Ris ten dolleee por head, undedaoue prevent of Hiiveage | Mise Rareman's powers such as they are; he softened | comply strictly with their contrncta. In the immediate the shock raised by the temperature in rendering the | will probably be dealt with severely ltaprisoned, and compelled (o accept the office j or of having violated his contract, is required to give up eee ahact tal naan eaeiaee hi] vicinity of the Bureau agents the freedmen are not only | frn'ant Cliser, this lant case Ie fulminating cotton OMe — arth and last evidence which I have the hi his laborers that they may be shipped to Mis#issippi or pacity; where her liaping Lae oo might | impudent, but seem determined to labor as little as por. | OY" Ni OP ave’ ith Uh 4 ce Sores of celine Havana, April 21, 1866 to transmit, although of a later date, constitutes from ite’ Arkansas, where the “negro trade” in men ig now pay- | tll against her, be arrang: to conceal her lisp; | sible, and in many places they seem disposed to loaf | *”* with sulphur or phosphorus; ~ eg | tenof & very singular document. a procecding aub- ing larger profits than in Georgia. The “Bureau’’ agents | Where her voice m ght not be « ual to its demands, he | around the headquarters of these agents, and do nothing pe which can be inflamed by oS date Having obtained some further news and papers, I give | orihed by ar eons of the city of Aguas Calle divide one thousand dollars ‘on ity contracts by this | Moderated to suit her harsh vovee; where het tavcrte | jn the world, except what they arw compelled to do by | {hat oF gun or pistol ball and, in short, ofall fuliminat~ | yoq yhe principal iveme:— et OY cenpetice by the, pelinael Pretest to operation postures and gestures, her hands crossed om her breast, | siern necessity.—Holly Springs (Miss. ) Reporter, J ~ spatmatenaed: a Mrs thea abet? ‘According to the Zacatecas Porrenir of the 25th | that they would not be hostile to the new order of thi If Generals Steedman and Fullerton will took into this | ber stud.ed motions might be made effective, be adapted ee Ot | But the fact is to be noted that the majority of fled that it Water thoroughly, they will find that the above are not | !t to find occasions for them. So with all adaptors. They imaginary illustrat cf ” | find « foreign piay, like a piece of cloth, they ent it to Peet re able baa ae reuse ta which the Bu; ) ne the actress or actor for whom it is intended, It is AM © P, erttean f anwan, Lo teenaged pe « bal firet bree oe 2 March rumors were afloat in that city that gueriilas bed | sienera not © AINE COLONY FOR PALESTINE. —A vessel Wi! ‘rom at of the joduret and chlorine of azote, as, also, J : ‘ a Jonesports Meine, for Jada, by the way of Malta, about | agrest number of asctines, metallic and organic; and saq | Appeared ie diferent parts of the State. It was latierly | ment that they the middle of next July, ‘with lumber and other | experience has proved that Mr. Nobel has been too bold | reported that Commandant Mena had been defeated lo set forth ould appear in (he instrue Kk reau system is are true examples of its actual rat ol ret oO . | humble comparison, but it is an apt one, to compare complied wit t act ool re fe Went ot chterbedion tsery' teen ttes Geena of mime: | oale ehaptnton uta’play to the cutting oFa‘coat, Where | building materials, furniture, agricultural implements, | in pretending to master and conduct at will asubstance | Subsequent advices to the 26th confirm that defeat, | fume with wi Ge a ee Sippi and Arkansas bd the garment is to be a doublet for a masquerade, it's cut | and about twenty-five or thirty families, numbering in | subject to a jaw declared by great sclentific authorities 88 | oiween Huanuseo and Tabasco, by Garcia Cadena. In | tugillar in this docurwent, which reveals what has takem ‘the interstate negro trade, as carried on under | doublet-fashion; where it is to be a coat it is cut like a | sll atout one hundred and twenty persons. Their new | still unknown and insolvabie in the present condition of ; h woe ais drawing ep oll the ects of eabemon to (he ome the government monopoly, known as the so-called | COM The failings and the excentricities of an actress | bore is near Jaffa (the ancient Joppa). It is situated in | science. the action the imperial commander was wounded and sire, should be brought to light a# & proof of the spon. Freedmen’s Bureau, is not confined to Georgia, Misais fe studied; the piece is written to the | the midst of orange groves, lemon groves, pomegranate lost a number of horses and arms | anh ty with which itis being accepted in Mexico, I Sippi and Arkansas, ae appears by the folowing extract | Abilities of the company; perhaps ono actor is of w | groves, fg trees, grape vines, date trees, and almost | New Drive at Sanatocs.—Tho enterprise, long talked | The same accounts speak of a blow given to the libe- | forbear from the reflections which these documents sug. from your paper:— broadly humorous style, and the pr: play bas are. | every deseription of Oriental fruit and shade trees, of, of building an avenue to the lake has been com Is by the f ¢ Genern: 1 gest, because they cannot be concealed from the well fined humor running through it; then the humor must menced and will be vigorously prosecuted until com. | fais by the forces of Generat Lozada. Tho liberals were | Pooy on ation of the government of the United SRORORS FPNT SOTTH, ; be broadened; perhaps the actor is of a delicate and Toaterday orening forty ight where Tecan ee ele | chastor style of comedy, then the broadness of the charac- and women, boys and giris, contral joa! | ter must be refined to his standard, so wit must _be low- men rn vi were, with thoir bwu covsert, ylaced en rows fer Louriane, ces on Congress tered at Huajicori, and the following details are o ope mate Vavpatiey,—The monument erected to commemorate | Pleted. | The route, as iaid out, commences on Co = « States, which I have no doubt will properly esti the surrender of Vi ksburg, and which marks the spot | #tFect, at the intersection of Regent street “4 bs ' given by Lozada to afriend at Tepic, under date of the | them where Grant and Pemberton held their memorable con. | Old foad for a distance of three miles eastward. Thisis® | os, 1 took with*me the Nava, Escalante, Nunoa | , | avail myself of this opportunity to repeat to you, Mr. ered to humor cr humor heightened to wit, This re- ac single trunk, From thie point there are three lines, See surances of my Very ditingushed com- andes charge of an oficeso\ ine Freedman s Bureau. They | quires & genius not second to originating a play. Sbaks- Pk he ap Aa hcg Ge peg seeing wt diftereet polnte'on the lake; one straighten: | and Tapia Compaties, and marched all night, so that | suceuich 8 eM ROMERO, tered & yim each of the’ ema § pere's plage were bul adaptations; Boacicault's plays The destruction of | ins the old road to Moon's Lake House; another bending | by eight next morning we were before Huajicort Hon, Wituam H. Sewan to the south, and skirting the east shore of Little lake, | ¢. 4, eiatet recios rer. This is the case with - to Abell’s Lake House, and another still, running directly | @02man Immediately provoked a fight with three hum- | 9. 1. cones de Masala 28, 1898, vol. 1. No. % errs (by the propery cloth, “About ore hundred ana | MF. Daly's play h talent as she | They will te repel ed een ce by tho chidter of | east t0 the site of the North Lake House, and from | dred infantry and Afty cavalry, posting themselves be Cree ne corres. Buperior Pe VB SRT | ron, Woh st the sete Und Yor tbs South, whore'trs sitess ¢ brought o 4 to the | the very men who teat them down, because of the bis. | thence to Moon's—making together @ distance of about | hind a mountain ridge on the west side, where he made | ment of Sinaloa, 44 ie Dhalnicnom > Prouiited good wages “ve L0F (Re Mouth, where they ail are | best advantage in “Leah,” and so she js the perfect re | toric interest they Weaken and the nesociations they | Biné miles The road will be buill immediately 0 | a ostinato resistance, though in vain, as after anh Khow ye that his Excellency Major General De Castagny presentativecst the part; he could Mit to another | lorc,iaterest they awakes, and the ace Moon's, and possibly some other work will be done this , though in vain, as after an hour's | has directed to me the jecree = ‘cases d the court will i sto be turned eter ta thy | they set it for the special w are mostly adaptations. They find the rough gem and | monuments intended to mark the loeality of great events, is In many economic respects the Bureau agents under | actress and then she would be as great and as effective. peason, The avenue is to be one hundred feet wide, with | combat the enemy was completely routed, with the loss Fonce ov Haste ba Bem aystom enjoy great advantages over their proto. | To prove this, see Mis# Bate in “Leah,” as : & macadamized track eighty feet wide, with substantial | of forty Killed and fifteen prisoners, together with a large oat Uitiigis. eruhading ha Fans itt Udiia s ete canal eae, old system. | The iatter then see her in, say, ‘Julia,’ in the | Cwrar Seneversece—A letter written on board the | walks and rows of trees om each side. All the stock h ao Frsuco-Mextenn’ fing, in virwus’of the eopoiivaeas o> required a large capital to start with; had to pay . The former she can always be great in, | Unite Statee steamer Tuse hile at Montevideo, | subscribed, $19,000, has been called in, the last instal. quantity of arma, ammunition, copper coin and old bay- | Cree of the general-in-ehief, tesued the 20th of June, ia ' own expenses, deriving no direct support from h was written for an actress of Mish | nays —Toe first day wo arrived we bought for our mess | ment of fifty per cent to be paid on or before the Ist | onete. The rest of the men encaped to the woods The | virtue af tne cram Tram te majesty the Ranparan Rig A quarter of matton for forty-five twent; nds | day of July next, This avenue will afford (what Sare- | pursuit lasted until six in the evening, and several pris- fiitign and using powers confer ; of steak for three ceuts « pound, and all kinds of ‘meats, tone iias lacked more than anything else) a first classé | oners, together with some families, wore taken from the | ""Revcue i, A.court martial is hereby established in Ma- frean killed in the morning, at cents and a baif per | drive, and when completed there will be nothing supe. summit of the hille Guzman took to flight in great | garian i Pound —Newark deere, apres i. rior W it in the country. —Aldany Argus, April 9. diarm, and perbaps he may not gurvive vo tell the tale, Aut, 2. This court ia iavested with discretionsl powegs @ LL LL , —_ wb move ernment, they bad to oir own tion and that of their 008 fen the cheaper markets of Wash. Ington aud the Middle States to the dearer markets of the is, Ki ye Of thelr megroes died it was “their