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10 TH NEW YOR ath daneeeaneeelooe - E HUDSON ; wor -Ixitla’, Trip of the Beason—Organtuntion of ‘ty Business for 1867-'The North River, and Enst River « river and East river fleets, employ no sail ships of any ordinary dimensions; and could Robert Fulton, whose first trip by steam upon the Hudson was ridiculed as a silly whim, return, as did Rip Van Winkle, to sympathy with living ideas a century after his time, he te point to the grandeur of that practicality which bis whim has assumed in fifty years and wreak @ glorious re" on bis sbort sighted contemporaries. of the steamship may now be heard every hour in. y 4 on its winding waters, over which, in 1807. a single Clum- sily fashioned eraft feebly demonstrated the practica- bility of steam navigation, And on the Hudson, where the firet trip by steamboat wag made, the invention “of Fulton still maintaigs supremacy, Ou no rive’. jn an event anticipated in fact, with reveries of is of the palisades by all New viow it in a specially business ‘The opening of sith no bite ple trips in oxcursion and Yorkers, save thosy why ect and connect the dreakiag ap of jee with the 8 | 4 rorica are steamers so commodiously fitted up, 7, p apts nof gregubecks. For some days boats have xcept the Mississippi have they become + foro ving between this elty and various points not spensable adjuncts of commercial traffic. Ha’, Fulton's doen plying _ thongh the majority of | ‘vention miscarried at its inception New York might forther north than Sing 1g —thoug! y not have been half as large as it is, and rent’, down town. ‘our river y have been sleeping quietly im the har- might still have at a low figure. oar St Jobns, Drews, Mary Powells and dozens of o!F org swift and commodious have taught the world ley ons of thrift commercial enterprise, Nearly all the passenger carrvine ‘steamers which ply upon the Hudsow have their lan)’ ng places along the North river, the transportation ‘of freight being as a business mostly limited to a few piers on the Exat river and in the vicinity of Coenties slip, where dozens ‘barves carefully labelled ‘Nev, York and Albany Tran: Portations” with freights take-n at the lowest rates, may ‘be noted at any time when tno river is open. Only one new steamer for the convyying of passengers has been built during the past yeay, though that one, the Drew, now lying at the foot of Tenth street, river, is claimed to be the most mmoaious and most luxuriously fitted steamer which Mas ever been built for service on ‘the river, and is in fact a floating palace, hardly inferior to the most sumptwous of our ocean craft. The Drew ‘will form one offthe boats of the People’s line for the Beason of 1867, piying between New York anf Albany. Five stearaers will be run by this company for th sptheir docks waiting for the grand fleets of ice- yearly throng tho Tiudson any time between aryand the 26thof April. This year tho river-opons at « medium and nearly equated time, basing the equation upon odservations from 1830 to 1866, and in a few days, the ice having cloared awey, our lange river steamers will move northward from their wonted piers, while multitudes of smaller craft will cover the Hadson with wing-like sails, or disturb ts eolitude with paddlewheels and the labored puffing of steam breath, Trade will have re- mumeds its “accustomed currents, and liveliness and ec tivity wiM prevail along the docke which, during the winter, have lain comparatively deserted and desolate, For weeks, notes of preparation have been sounded; of- fices have been repaired, business cards have been season of 1967, instead of four, as formerly, the force printed, and companies—passenger and freight—have Contisting ofthe Bt John, Deva ‘Richman ’ Drew, H. beon organized for the coming summer« Findson and C, Vanderbitt,” These boats will leave New Generally speaking, thoso who were thoroughly ac- qnainted with the business of the Hudson Jast season ‘are well informed as to its main features for the season of 1867—few now boats having been built, few new lines of travel or trade projected,.and few alterations having been made in times of ranning or fn localities. The pro- prietors of the People’s line have caused one boat to be built for the business of the sammer of 1867, viz. :—the Drew, which is claimed to be the finest steamer ever built for the river service—a note of praise which is the more prononeé from the fact that on noriver in the world have steamboats more merited the epithet of Mouting palaces'than those of the Hudson. FIRST TRIP OF THR SCASON, ‘Tho propeller Nubpa, Captain W. B. Carrol, left this city, pier 52 North river, at six P. M. Wednésday eve- ning and Sanded its passengers, after ficandering for geome leagues in ice, at Hudson City at quarter-past one P. M. yesterday, making the initial trip of the season to that point. Since Taosday Iast the river has been tol- erably clear as far as Tivoli, vast fields of floating though somewhat solid ice lying between that point and Cats. kiil (famous tor being as frigid ag that penineula which Greenlanders quizzically term the land of Apollo), and proprietors of our Hudson steaners have been crowing impatient at the delay of the Ne-fieids in making way for their new); pered keels. On Wednesday it was resolved to risk the Rubia with a trip of recon. noissance, and hence the wip of that evening amid floes and fields of ice which Pegan as far down the nver as hkeepsie and endsd with the passing of Catskill, ‘the Hudson being oped from a point northward as high or higher than Hudson City. ‘The steamer was not burdened with many passengers, a baker's dozen, /u addition to the bands employed on board, comprebénding the list, and two-thirds of these were captaingof river craft or ex-captaivs obviously on @ tour of observation, Two ladies and a parrot made up the remaivder and rerved to give some slight tinge of variety ¢o what might otherwise have been a rather monotonous mél of humauity. Loerie. the dock at which the steamer had been tied for some hours, flying the scarlet pennon, and steam.ns ‘with heavy tug of breath northward just as Jong rows of Tights began to spring forth, marking une ensem'le of dusky streets and avenues, craft and passengers specdiiy shot into the darkne:s and mist, the vessels dropping drowsily along like a huge leviatban with a single red York at eight o'clock P. M., several hours later than q ummer, and will be so managed as to form three distinct lines, viz., a line from New York to Albany, a New York and Troy line and a New York and Athens line, The organization of the New York and Athens line i$ not yet completed, though it is expected to be ip one- ration as early as the Ist of May from piers 41 and 42, foot of Canal stres ‘Ihe New York and Troy Steamboat Company, which employed last summer the steamers Connecticut and Rip Van Winkle, employs the same steamers for the season of 1867—forming a daily pasenger {ransit from New York to Troy, pier 44, foot of Spring street—having removed from pier No 40 fate in the summer of 1846, A third line, for transit dering the day, is formed by the ©. Vibbard and Danie! Drew. These boate left New York at eight o'clock A. M. last summer, and will prob bly run on the sate time table during the coming sea- son, They have their landing place at the foot of Des- brovees street, The Thomas Powe") will connect, as last season, New York with Catskill, ranning on alternate days, Pier No. 85, foot of Franklin street. ‘The Mary Powell and the Thomas Cornel! will form, for the season, a daily line, leaving New York at foor o’clock P. M., for Rondout and Kineston. ‘The James N, Baldwin runs also in connection with this line, which is managed and owned by Thomas Cornell, under the name of Cornell's Daily Towing Line, and employs five steamers in addition to the above, viz:—the Norwalk, Herald, Marshall, James Mafison and Santa Claus. Pier 33 foot of Jay street. The Magenta will form for the summer a snecial mode of transit between this ciiy and Fishkin Landing, The Jotin L. Hasbrouck and the Daniel F. Miller will form for the reason a daily Ime, plving between New York and Poughkeepsie, “leaving New York at five o'clock P. Pier 35, foot of Franklin street. The America, Captain George Livingston, plies also between New York and Poughkeepsie. For Newburg there will be no regular ger line this summer, with the exception of the numerons barges all plying between New- burg and Now York, most of which land in clusters at the foot of Warren street. These are the barge Newburg, the barge Jefferson, the barges Sueque- hanna and Mipnisink, and the barge Wallicili—ail !and- ing at the foot of Warren street and leaving New York late in the afternoon, Passengers are carried by all those barges, thongh they are mostly devoted to the carrying of freight and to the general trade between New York and Newburg. The carrying of passenzers however, mostly monopolized ,by'the Albany, Troy d Poughkeepsie lines. passen. The LP. Smith, J. C Coffin and Crystenah Jand at eye in its forehead. the I'yrrison <ireet pier, leaving New York at fifteen Ateleven P. M. the steamer Jobn L. Hasbrouck was | fp\yijccs past three P. Mi, and forminga daity line be. spoken on its way down, and from that time until morn- dng no sound disturbed the slumbering paseengers save ‘the occasional shriek of the railway trains winding moivily along beneath the castern bank of the Hudson. At fifteen minutes past two A, M., yesterday, the wind “suddenly veered round into the northwest, the mist and fog gradualiy sunk away, and the skies were only ob- secured by dull, scudding, irregular masses of clond. At Poughkeepsie and thence upward for some thirty tween New York, the name of D. D. & York. The steamers Sunnyside and Sleepy Hollow, which formed last season the jower Hadgon line plying between New York and Sing Sing, have been crected into @ siml- lar lino tor the summer’ of 1867, landing at pir No. 30 and leaving that pomt at four P. 'M. daily. The Nubpa, which ran lat summer in connection ck and interm~diate towns, under ‘T. Smith’s steamboat line for New miles huge boulders, composed of layers heaped one | witt the Jato. Hoey he fore upon eotee like Peiton upon Ossa, and floating isiands ‘ ehtaetiral Geo | ef ico, often from thirty to. Bfty rod in diameter, began | PIZ'BE Between New York utd Hudson City. : The Utica will ply between New York and Coxfackie, landing at the foot of Warren street, and the Ansonia likely to take the same route Both theeo vessels are simply barges carrying passengers and freight, but mos ly engaged in freight transportation. The Thomas E Hulse will ply between New York and Fort Loe, as last eummer, landing at pier No, 51, and a second line landing at the foot of Warren strect will be put in operation carly in the season, fur the ale ence of down town travellera, The Amanda Winants ‘will ran most likely under the auspices of the new;!'ne, ‘The Stella lag not as yet been permanently connected witb any line, but will form, as usual, one of the rirer fleet for the coming summer—plying between this city and Bath, Except by barge between New York and Newburg very little ‘freight business fs done on the North river—- though most of the passenger lines carry more or less freight, which swell the business in aggre- gate to a considerable amount. The steamers oxc'u- tively devoted to tl business are the Erastus Corning and the John Taylor, both of which land at pier No. 18, foot of Cortiand street, and leave New York at five P. M. daiiy. The tine is known as the New York and Al- bany Freight Express, Besides these, there are some few small steamers, towboats and barges which ron at irregular intervale—and with these, the list of the North river is completed, to embarrass further progress, scraping rusping!y against the copper sheathing and gathering in huge irreguiar maases npon the bow. For some leagues slow progress was made—a progress which seemed to progress very equitocally—until, at four A. M., @ point opposite Saugerties lighthouse had ‘Deen reached, and a league below Malden had been gained; and here intervened a couple of miles of more ‘or lege solid ice-field, coupletely blocking the river from bank to bank. This ficid was composed of heavy floes Beaped to the thickness of from two to three feet, and glued together by the.two hours of sharp northwest ‘wind which had biown since two o'clock. This fela of too in the only serious objection to navigation from to Albat ce Tuesday, ‘he river having been for miles above and below aud only barred at ‘bis pot with an ice-bar of two miles or more in ‘widih, Two hours, during which the voyagers might felicttously have been likened to Victor Huxo’s toilers of the sea, were consumed in ploughing a cause- wey through this impediment; and at length at six A. M. Malden was wade, and the toilers of the river ‘were securety fastened to the dock. Some slight dara- had been done—a few square feet of the copper ebeathing having been abraded from the bow, and ihe elevis of the radder having been parted by the fierce Knocking of blocks of ice against it. A couple of hours | "Tne Fast ver fleet, on the other band. ly 4 ef delay, consumed in hi ring, apd in what Mr “ non band, be macetty 5e- Picken Loreee, wink a Gailleloth raed ga Tas ait | voted to the transportation of freight. No new boats have been built for the freitht service on the river, so pletion of the trip was attempte: far a3 can be ascertained; aud owners are not in antici- ‘Above Malden, and between that pomt and Catskill A bove M i v t pation of a heavy business fur the coming season Pere ote ot age miles or thereabouts three | ‘The Troy Propeller line has arranged to put on six te bare 0: Seal dies ink can nM ¥ gtk barges, viz: the Santa Claus, R. D, Silliman, LP, Gurd- ence. pene bare about haif a mile in | ner, A. S. Perry, Inspector and A. Barnett, ‘The steamer breadth, though at no port more thau a foot in thick. meas, and, hence, proviog ‘ess formidable than that wh'ch had just been passed, and resulting in no very levgthened detention orseriousdawage. itese ploughed surough and Catskill gained, no further obstacles inter- veued, and Hudson city was made at fifeen minutes past City of Troy will aiso ran in counretion-with this line as a freight carrying boat. Pier No. 7 East river. Austin’s line, pier No, 5, will ron as last senson four- teen barges, employing four towboa's, viz: the Syracuse, the Ohio, the Austin and the McDonald, aud forming a daily line between New York and Albany. ove PM The = zs he -wifieure line employs for the sutnmer ten barges, The pee, bale bo Pepa Hudson city. wp aa viz, the Suidam, Purian, Mark Barnes, Colembus, open to point, there is no reason why the Albany | Culbard, Saginaw, Grinnell, Oregon, Schuyler and Globa, boats shonld not make their initial trip us early as io- | Siuicime a Aatly line betweow Sey York, Albany and morrow or sionday, and wilh that evout trailic and travel by the river may be sad to have been fairly begun. OF course ice heaps, heaped as they are to the height of mx or eight feet, will lie and rot and waste Biong the shaded banks of the stream until the middie o! May, aud smali floes wasting slowly will drift seaward anti! Apri seis in, depending op the question whector the early spring days are inolst and warm or raw and gusty; but we may, novertheless, malyré lingering floes ‘end wasting boulders, date the open) ng of the Hudson Trom the 13th of the mouth current. coupie of days even of ordinary spring weather will be suficient to ‘wreak into floating isiauds the ieebars above mentioned, or, it there alone be not enough, the ploughing bows 0: paring steamers wi'l soon leave no vestige of the winter ampotie «hich bas wrapped for some months in steep the ‘tude of tat stream hight the Nubpa by the Indians trom 6 immer rial, ‘The opening of the river this spring occurring at the everage time, it may be of interest to irace the variations ip time of breaking up from the cariiost date of which wecord has been kept. The following table exhibits the intermediate points, The Hudson Kiver Transportation Company wi'li con- tinue toemploy, as during last season. eight barges, lercules, Ini Towa, Warren, Clivion, ott, Learned and Pater . The steamer Joseph Jobnson makes daily pas fa connection with this line, Tue landing place of these barges is pier No. 5 East river. Owners of single boats are organizing into companies for purposes of trade, and many captialisis along the river being propric:ors of one or two barges, the number of craft plyg on the river will of conrse be lorgely boats has arranged to employ six boats for the coming season, all of which belong to private individuals; aud no donbt we shall have other companies formed in the course of the summer, owner- of boats clubbing together and forming themselves into companies. Only a sinefe passenger line lands on the East river— the line being composed of the small steamers Sylvan ¢ and Silver S'ream, whieh ply daily between Beok- A a \ man street aud Hariem—leaving Peck slip every hour, Seson Me [ar Dak 5 20, and beginning with that yeur.— | and forming a pleasant ronte of transit bet wren the lov- “Maret 16 — er part of the city aad Harlem bridge. @ steamer Jobn Romer, ply! and Rye, also leaves Peck slip making one trip per day. The Osseo also lands at pier No. 22, near Fulton ferry, making two trips daily be- tween Fulton Ferry and College Pott. In addition to the above there are, of course, numerous exceedingly small cratt, which ply at it lar intervals, and have po particu'ar local habitation. nerally, how. ever, the owners of sinall craft are rapidly curdiing into between New York «March 26 to in the aiternoon, -Mareh 21 -Feb, 20 ob 26 compantes—sneb action being necessary in order that 1s02 they may compete succesefiliy with boyy No Sea bai 1863. tions; and im process of time, the lesser having nm 1864. ven up by the greater, business in this direction will 1865. ‘¢ become more conveniently susceptible of statistics. i808. Tn a few days, of course, most of these at present tran- 1867, sient craft will have segregated into herds, most of them being employed im harbor service, and a few becoming compected with regular transportation companies. Ber earliest omnaias of the river, February 4, © Hoh occurred im 1842, and test breaking up oi oe the 10@ April 18, which occurred 1843, a RENTALS FOR THE COMING YEAR, margin Of variation of sixty-eight days, though generally tho ing UP kas taken place aboot che middle of the Some wecks ago the erarp gave its readers igforma- Juterveuing month, aH it tates place thie epring. yp erowed the vity, ing Meee the docks, re- ~ ale (be interesting fact that aif xinderos ning patu- eolly gravilate towards ceriain cen res Vie areaor dort Of the business vetween New York and Newbarg Gniquely Node fis cohtral point at the foot of Wacren t. on the North fiver. The Albeny and Troy pas. tion ae to fhe condition of the real estite market, the prices (bat wore asked for property tn divers sections of the city, and the provpects as 10 rente for the coming year, coromencing May 1, 1867, At that time it w Stuted, and the iudications fully bore out the idea, that there would not be any material increase in rente; and \ ponder Doate aii land within a picr or two of each other, | the large nunh t i Teito the toot of Dost op his phat es f ree Dunder of people who Jive in houwes wot their loot of Dostromes strec oken streét, be- | own were comforted reflection that no increased ginns th pier 41 amd ending @)th pier 46; aud again, ped bee Ng a gh onde ng wr decoand wond be made on their finances for the pay- ment of annual rental Pince that time, howey taken place. Pie jandion disposed to lot th ry eli the f : She-Medoon ie ce ght ansportation which Cutler wip—the u pred by ocean an od s done on piers in front of Co fast river being vcea- Oaly ove jine exclu ut can be named, that Jine being o change appears to have t who two months ago wore re. at present prices, have f Sound trade, iprenen. , wow discovered 4! ty mony safely demand an ine Sapien od ps. emer Erastus Corning aud John | crease; and, acting on this pXpciple, havo im many cased | patahe des NEY tere Ot OF Cortleniit atrest, N. ey | notitted thele tenants that eucih increase will be expected For thé err aan: from them after May next. Ov of our most prominent tion of fr@ight, eo) Or for tite transportas | real estate brokers 18 of the opinion that the average in- Jixaly to vege any addit A amen ae bs are put | erease wilt be in the ratio of :eo per cent, above the thin summer, and tacitly take it for crantod that trade ow the river wit be ratnor less chan in seoe, e rable croaking ie being done in varioug saipy ng cil thongh Hy OUF stoatMboas couipnnin wre hoch for and expectifig AL AveraKe eMmouNt of Lyrinese, C, nd, prices wt present raling for pro, erty the annual rental p | Of which ie $6,600; but that, in ca Yet where more (han - » thie sam is received, the rents will about the same as they were during the current your, Thia inerease of ree falls heavily on the poorer clan «* of our feliow ‘ ithvene, “ . i ore of single Leal yyy, a, Pes : ~ baths Guose par voor of them have rental’ aincdnting to oe Woe tess ony “ . . ‘genoral Jeet facilities av cay re ia donbtless a great scarcity of hows. The eap- : rotted ei ening b ply, to v80 a commercial plirase, is not equa;' to tire de re tow of nest mand, in fect, brokers largely interested jo bosioers ay that (here ore at least twenty appiicanta fo.¥ every honse that is to let, The high rates of rented hou. ‘er ere the poor man has to stand abeck, Forn thod ing, and most of them pte residents @f simalier fo, along the river, and heneé @ t pari eliy to make wp 1p local trade what is ‘ost by decrease of ther trade 4 Nepedion are in market in bers. For instanc.+-« Connection will the metropoile Uiber n°wedics, 1 Tenth. treet, No. 87, 24 by BO fect, (brick) i are being adopted, such aseombination int’ forts ani | 6 t 25,000, ‘The leasehold of a furnished hous’ Jtetligation into tem porary companies, with a office in | in West Fourtoeth attest ie offered for 960,000; anda fur. | oa York, and thys small owners expect to counter. |-nished onse in West Fifiecoth street (No, 224) 19 pat up | oe iu nome degree the tendenoy of capital to eave * ] {iE rele for $24,000. In Stuyvesant and Madison equoros | ho river fleeta, which for cor faay be pipe. | ature hearen sr Male 18.8 ratte proportionate to the | ied saved into (We Abd tygluded Under the heade of Nor W Asche travela farther town the IMcrease in the augmented ima few days. The Troy line of sienm tow- | Price of Property ” makes itself manifest. cottage sites ¢ *0rmous prices are asked. | For villa or © the island there is & demand far greater than the br’ ors can supply. ‘The prices of property in ™ say be judged from the following fgures:—In sReenth ‘street (Stuyvesant square) a four story ash basement house, $32,500; in Wes: Twonty-sec- 4 Street, ap elegant wide and deep hover, $60,000, “s majority of people, tu fact, seem to be crowding © cir way up town, Where once the tenant rested con- fident that nothing could disturb him there is to-day query as to how the rent is to be paid. culty is that men of property will not buill, and there. there is not that accommodation tat the people demand, Wages are high; building materials bave reached a figure that none over thought of premising; and, in consequence. those who have built have bone- fitted by the universal desire for gain, The increase in ‘The great dim. | | rents may be attributed to the fact that the owners of property have Gigcovored that there are not booses sulll- Glent to supply the demand. 4 inordinate taxation has, of course, Something to do with the matter; but, speak- ing truly, there is not such an increase demanded as, judging from what transpires around us, we had a right to expect. JOHN FRANCIS MAGUIRE, M. P. A Complimentary Dinner at Delmonico’s—The Tonsts, Replies, &c.—Remarks by John Francis Maguire, Charles 0’Conor, Mayor Hoffman and Others The Srish citizens of thie city, friends of John Fran- cis Maguire, M. P., last evening gave a complimen- tary dinner at Delmonico’s Fifth avenue establishinent in honor of their distinguished countryman, Abont one hundred, including invited guests, were present, Among these were Charles 0’Comor, General Yan Viiet, Father Quinn, Richard O'Gorman, Miles O'Reilly, Mayor Hoff man, Judge Brady, James B. Nicholson, Bryan Law. rence, ©, M. Connolly, Eugene Kelly, H. L. Hoguet, Judge Daly, John Keliyand Clarence Seward, The hall ‘was appropriately decorated with the Irish and Amer! can flags, which were hung in graceful folds over a ban- ner at the head of the room bearing a semblance of the Irish barp and the inscription, “Cead Malle Failthe”? and «Erin Go Bragh.” 1A fine band of music was in attend. ance, Mr. Charles 0’Conor presided, At his right were John F. Maguire, Wm. M. Evarts and Richard O'Gorman, and to his left Mayor Hoffman, Father Quinn and General. Van Vilet. At six o’clock, the Divine blessing having been invoked by Fatber Quinn, the company procesd>d to consider and appreciate the characteristic merits of a Delmonico dinner. This concluded, the first regular tonst, “The United States,’ Lum Me was proposed, and responded to by Mr Wa present —two Irishmen and a Yankee. (Applause.) Bu ‘Yankee wonld dream of at a public dinner. (Laughter. He had had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Maguire in Eng. land. all comers. This was a countr, founded on no authority, but worthily and well. (Applause.) puilt npon no trad untry to he ocr estand reciprocity in feciine, (Applause. ) triple arch on which rested a firm government, this nation had been disturbed. A concussion the States had orcurred and foreign nations had on itae the filling of the eepalchral urn of our career, but ft had turned out only to be a jar, (Laughter and applanse.) origin here bad «# country fitting senso they could call their own. at home they did not hol b dia, (Langhter.) And if ft was really batter to reign in of which in overy (Apphiuse ) (Langhter nd applaise.} er Trisnmen should live here ‘Mr. Macutre had onco said in Partiament that he nmen could be obtained on the same soil, (AD- pl would nasten this time. mer.tz of Irishmen, which wore so wel! known to them. there was danger. (Laugbter.) From the first our ma. tion had been made np by people who had, by voluntary action, made themselves its citizens for themseives and their posterity. (Applavse.) Mr. Maguire wes a mem- ber of that-prirate profession which was the ruler of society—the presa, (Applanse.) It wae the ruling power tn free communities. He congratulated Mr. Maguire on the opportenity in so inteliigent a man, to | eco the fuller frait of the growing inflnences prevalent now in Engiand and Great Britain. (Applause. ) SPRECH BY CHARLES 0'CONOR, The second regular toast—“Our disiingu'shed guest, Jon Franeis Maguire. and the Jand of his birth’’—was proposed by Cuatuss O'Coxor, the chairman, in the fol- lowing words :— ’ GrvTieWR- :—As your representative for this parpose, there now devolves upon me the grateful office of gh ing expression to the sentiment which bas brongfit us. here this evening. Irishmen and the sons of Irisnmen, together with the American friends descended from various European stocks. form thie assembly. walks of private life, and the ravks of professional, commercial and offictal have all largely contriboted to {ts formation Tu com- ing hither, we have not responded to the call of wealth or powor, nor have we been animated by the hi reward. act is a spontanoous tribute to individual merit. an we may never meet again. (Applause) It is paid, 1 was about to fay, fo a stranger and .an alien; but the words do not fit the occasion, nor can the naine I shall utter at the close of my remarks awaken a single idea belonging to them. The biographer of Father Matthew has rendered immortal the benign precepts aud admira- bie example of that apostle. (Applause) He has given them world wide renown, and benefited all by thus i eulcating them The able and snecessful vindy mn of Pius the Ninth has placed be‘ore men and nations for their cuidance a model of rectitude, He has shown in dark contrast a pictare of political craft to be shunned as fatal to Christianity and civil order, Such & man ts a benetactor to hie r ce. (App'ause.) The oe! famuy of civilized mankind so recognize bim. His servic are cosmopolitan, he ia by general acceptance a mem- ber of every well ortered community, Wherever social virtue is recognized and bonored he is hailed asa friend, @ brother and a fellow citizen. 1 will not refer to the officim record of our guest or seck to win applanee for bis stateemanstyp. The sphere of legisiation for a si gle empire is narrow iu comparison with the field of uni- Verval beneficence, Patriotism seems leas than a virtue when compared with a benevole which folds within ite embrace the entire human fay Twill not epeak of se to his native laud, neither of benefits tained for her, nor of those straggled for, but not as yet snecesefully. I shail not attempt to’ engroes th themes, nor that which ie presented by the friet visit of our guest to this country. Topics about which you are already so well informed I leave to your re fiections, ar to be dealt with by o bers. Amid the array of the learned and elegant now present there are more than one of Iris lincage capable of speaking 1p appro- priate terws for tho iand of their ancestors and the land | of Ybelr birth, There i aimoug these & voice wick, | when it tuali be hoard, wil cause ail PS ons short. | comings to be forgotten The guest and the occasion | will then receive eff'the honors that eloquence cau be- stow (Applause) Gentlemen, please to £0 for your | sentiment and mine, (Applause) | The toast was then applacded and drank by SPTECH RY JOHN FRANCIS MAGUTER. In response, Jr. M. a Jows :— Mr. O'Coxon axp Gextreven—] should be the most reat and signal compliment paid me Jo the fret city of iis vast avd glorious country by the foremost and most merely striven to do #»meibing to improve the material condition of his country and dejend the libertis of his people, such a demonsiration, however almost overwhelming. For, rir, this noble acsombly consist? Of the names of many men more exalted by their spotless Integrity and lofty honor than even by the splendor of their abitities, vastness of their acquiremente or tho force of their character, There are here judges of your highest courts of law—juriges who inspire alike the respect of the gov- ernment and the confidence of the community—men of calm, well balanced, judicial minds, whose ermine is not more free from stain or blemi-h is their honor—men who in stormy or trovb'ous times would be the safest gvardians of constitutional rights, of public as weil ag individual liberty. There are here | iilustrioug members of the grandest profession in to hie energies or the ceninaof man—that of the bar. Some | of the most glorious names in the records of Ireland for pendence, sir, there | { | the same race, teen of the samo | by | arise, would exbibit the came coura; tion independence as the Inst moment of if country's freedom in its doomed Senate, or who, frowned apou by bench, siandered by an angry execu+ Live, or even menaced by armed rofliane, of the victims of a Jesperate insurrection. Of you, sit, I have only beard thre ugh your admiring countrymen, oF rather those of whose race. you are proud to be; oF Seconded from American ancestors, ove of whoto, and perhaps the most aistingoished, wile at this table tim evening. Tehail net offend your modesty by repeating the eloquent testimonies oftered to the profundity of your Knowledge, the ragacity ot your jadyment, or the purliy of your character, Bui there is one here whom I have meen ond hewnd in court, defending a prisoner charged with an offence of deep gravity, (rater during those two days) I ining witnessed enough to the descripiion wheb, vefore 1 beard him, I ad hed borrowed much of ite colorihg from the epthveiaem of notional partiality. But, #ir, unere are | Atiagti inajADOES In Which descr ption fails in conveying a trae Evarts He remarked that when he was invited by Mr, O'Gorman a few days ago to meet Mr. Maguire there he believed there was to be only three it an Irish private dinner he foun? had more guests than a ) (Applanse.) Ours was a country which welcomed ns, jed | loudly applauded. They had here learned , more than they knew when they left the old conniry, ) and that was the brotherhood of men which made a creat nation built upon equality of -right, community of inter- This was the family Yh? people of Jrish If sway, here they certainty hell than serve in heaven, it was better, perhaps, that to see fhe time when the prosperjty of Ireland and of se.) The prosperity of Irishmen on American soil } thie ts Ho would not dwell on the | selves, (Langhter.) But it had been said that wherever | danger was, there the Irishman would be found, though others had’ asserted that wherever an Iretiman wag The of vine spoke substantially as fol- poten with poison, Insensible of mortals if 1 did vot feel justly proud of the | ipst. a boy of twel stateful, is | water of what materials does | $100, men of exalted position, | boys were cau; of whom are as household words— | was found where they those fllustrions Irishmen who fought the battle | Cate on his canal boa: ‘rained over, his hand to draw bis pistol, but dida’t have faculty of mind and heart, of soul and braiy, in detenew brother shot at me five or six through eminent members of your own profession, de- | ed shooting thie mau, and on that occasion | maser, HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. Bordering the | 2@onor of their country or Sach men such a complimént as this is indced a triamp, Being thus publi ‘and signal, T may fairly ask myself¢ 1 be unworthy of the confidence it implies? 1 can lox into my heart and answer that I am not un- worthy, & jeast so far as intention « Sir, Iam heart ane. soul & Irishman; strongly, ¢ y' attached to her and h nd willing | oy olfort, any ou ‘exertion, “ font #D science, I bégye tobe either prac Fire | Tp addition toyne other represent» 4 the yt ant Bolter, (Applause) He cherished ay admi- roton for this Opntry, and prayed (iar there wool! be no further natiog) concussions—no ‘urtier faiuuy jane (Lang ater and @pjause.) .le bad been an independent Mesuber of Parliatent, stauding aloof from all parties, etciy ng to befriendreland, deeply conscious as he was, of tno wrongs aad ajovauces under which she hee suf- fered. It was well \pat Irishmen, while loving their country, could sustains policy of 9 Gladstone and the domunds of a Brigh{ (Loud applause.) By aststing Bugiand she would be Yaced under such @ just obiij t on as Would tend to m&e her give amends by ben cient legislation for coyuries of wrong. (Applause.) Irishmen showed @ marvcigns torre of energy and.self- reliance in consideration «ine un etiied relations exist ing between landiord and¢onant. (Applause) The speaker alluded fo John B. Dion, a man whose memory he revered and whose loss he ‘pjored. The established Chureh in Ireland would fone abolished, Its days were already numbered, and Ircimy now needed Jegislation and energy and se!f-reli\pe jp its mon Of ace tion all over the land, Any Irishma\ could get along in this country if be wished to do +0, ad his devotion to his native land only enhanced bis low for his atopted country. (Applanse,) He hoped the tghts of Ireland would ‘be achieved by peaceable means, and not by a bloody war such as had marked the recout history of this country. (Applause.) A Soast was interpolated by Mr, O'Conor wWiteh re ferred to John B. Ditton, who yesterday, be remarrad, was an indapendent member of the House of Common, was an Ipchman }y birth, an American by circumstances: and an frishman by readoption, aud who devoted him- scif to the advaneement of thoso principles which were dear to ail, The toast was drunk standing and in éilence. The third regular toast the “ity of New York’ was responded to by Mayor Horrway, It was. his duty and leasure, e said, to thank them for the hearty manner a whist they proposed the toast ‘The first regular toast, the United st was of course ansvvered by a | Now Englander, or.) . Tho next toast was to the distingy: was replied to ina strain of unusual eloquence. (Appiavss.}. He woleomed hita hero more particular as the ex-Mayor of Cork. (Laughter) Be bad been Mayor fore times, whieh wes | York. zhter.) To h's right w age [Daly] who had given the best of laws to the éity,. (Laughter. Then there was the Corporation Counsel and siiies O'Reilly, sometimes called Haipine, who had had con fidential conversat ons with the President and thea Lad Published them in@ paper What he called the Citzm, (Langhter.) He was not an drishmay himself, but on next Monday he expected to be so’ thoronghly imboed with the Irish spirit that afver that he could claim to be Considered an Hrishaian.(Louzhter,) _ Irivhinen bad | added much to the prosperity of New York, had stood to defend tts rights, and statul side hy side now with the od Knickerboekers to support its mgints again, Applause.) Ho extended a welodme of thecity to the guest of the vening, and he felt that the nation ne represented n1d yor take its proper stand with the nations of the world,” (Applause ) The fourth regular soast, ‘The Army and Navy,” was It was responded to by General Van Vise, who thanked those present for the manner in which the toast had beem received, He could not grati- ty them more than by simply allowing other more more eloquent speakers to address them. He felt glad to welcome the dsinguisied guest, who came from what he might be allowed to call an ‘independent coun- y. He did not know whether an Irishman was an rishinan oraa American in view of his love for this country, (Applause.) He would close by offering a | sentiment, *ive Irisuman at howe, wheiher ou the tield of battle or in the pachs of civil life."? (Applause ) The fifth regular joast, “ihe Press,” was rosnontied to. be CLaneNce Sewaxp, who romarked thet taough not a member of the press he w: Jied on to respond and would do so. He wasglat to see the welcome extended fo Mr Maguire, although 42 took no less than the yacht | Henrietta ‘and’ a Bonnett to obtain that honor in Eug- iand which no American would receive a8 a mere Aineri- can abrond. (Applavse.) Ricvaxp O'Gorman was nex? called on and made a fow Tewarks, referring with regrettu? allusions to the iate Join Dilton. Addresses were also delivered by Judge Daly and others, afier which, at late hour, the company dis- i persed, LOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. A Pint ror Live.—Two men from the South of France, Anthony Ma‘der and Joseph Trumf, on Friday last were chopping wood together in the vicinity of De- troit. Returning home in the evening they drauk to excess and fell intoa quarrel. Maider insinuated that Trumf had stolen from him $40 in gold, This angered Tramf, and he almed a blow at Maider with his axe, which the latter, dropping bie-own axe, Warded off with and fought desperately, Maider finally getting Trumf by the throat and choking him to death, after which he walked many miles in the night to induce others to go with bim and {ind «he murdered man, and finally went back to the ecene of the homicide about daylight, where eminence in this great metropclig | he told the facts to the bystanders and gave himself up. A Dastanpty Act.—A young lady named Kate Gamble was met in the streets of Philadelphia on Monday night by a young rascal, who threw liquid caustic in Ler face, Ay dyghas tribute ie laid at the feet of one whom | burning ber badly and probably destroying tue sight of n one eye. Arrem»t TO Murper A Forwur Frexpuen’s Borrav AGext.—In Louisvilie, Ky., onthe night of the 9th inst.» Captain E. D. Kennedy, ‘date agent of the Freed- men’s Bureau in that city, was shot at throngh his win- dow, his watch only proventing the bail piercing his heart, He bas no idea of who the would-be-murder is, ‘but thinks he has made enemies by acting as attorney im certain law suits recently. Tex Liqvor Law iw Bosrox.—A iarge number of pro- minent clergymen having been examined and almost uniformly riven their testimony against the practical good effect of prohibitory iaws, the Legisiative comm t- tee have called upon the medical fraternity, who appear 1o unanimously approve the clerical judgment that a little wine is good for the stomach’s sake, &c. The aub- stance.of the evidence of Drs. J. C. White, 0. W. Holmes, J. B.S, Jackson, H, J. bigelow and others is comprised iu the tollowing:—Dr. Charles T. Jackson stated that al cubol was respiratory food—it took the piace of 80 much fat in the body in the process of jon, Concerning the matter of the assimilation of alcohol with the body, Dr, Jackson said that the general opumon of scientiiic men was that it did assimilate; he said that the breath of adrinkine man could not be smetied without detect- | ing acetic acids. the presence of which Aemonsirated | er transformation in the alcohol must have taken place. Suremes ax tue West —On the 9th inst Jonathan Fisher, of Peru, Lodiana, came'to his death in Lafayette, Tndiana, by an over dese of laudanum. He was in poor healtu, and had eaten bot littie ior some daya The dose would not have been fatal to a healthy person; but © her facts seem to e bis intention to kill himself, In Detroit, on tue 9th inst, a German tailor, named Henry Eisnacb, blew bis brains out with @ pistol. He ‘Was iilty-seven years ae nada wife and five cbii- dren, some family trouble ia ag the cause, In the same city, about the same time, Neilie Grevn, alias ‘ard, a pretty girl, who bad been the mistress of variou! men of position and wealth, made a third attempt to k ‘veing beart-broken at being again Jovesua Crim —In Detroit on the night of the 7th Charles ee ae Ss add rushed upon anotber lad in atreet, named Wilham Hoffman, apparently yn, and stabbed without provocatior honored representatives of Irish gentus, Irish honor and | him im the back with a large pocket knite,” In the xame | Irisv worth, Tho meeting here this evening 1s one of | city, about the same time, @ perty of five from which any Irishman—the man who done most for | twelve to fiftcen years of named Louis Lotz, Abra- bis country and race Lut fee] proud; but for one who, | baw King, John Redmond, Thomas Hare and Nougih ina subordinate sphere aud in a humbie capaciy, bas | Morrison, ‘proke into a toure while the owner was ab- sent, and completely ransacked and robbed it, mutilat- ing the furniture and the celiar by cutting the The wanton ed done amounted to and Prison, an . secreted it. epi de Trixc 4 Lanp Kwov.—The Ni Pegged irnals of ano wud. denly presented himeelf before Recorder Gastinel, with his brow knit and his lips compressed. Advancing to the Recorder, he remarked, od will you swear me!” Panty, tat ‘what for?’ was the response The indj- tay tobecco for flteen aye, nd that be hough « goede 6 a fore ‘oath to that eflect would help him A carrying out his resolution, a for sentence said :—: over my victuals; I void My ‘he muen’t do it, and limes, and got but oné life, if I had ten he would have ‘uxes hem Judge Lyons—Heury Norris you have been convicted of murder in the second degree. You could have avoid- He was unarmed, and ho cailed to his brother for his pistol § had you bim. if he trespassed upon your somata, and conseques you wore not justified in taking hie life. Bis or, according to the evidence 1 adduced tn th ie fred laced tn the case, never & shot bad shot the deceasea. Pp cat a Kitiep ov Raiwnoava.—Mr. Edward Fisher, was kitled on tue Concord and Manobester Peer nenee ja Ro the 7th just. A broken rail in off, ‘WO passenger care were and Mr. F, was crusbed beneath one of them, ine ‘od Great Western Road, on the 2d inet., Wm. killed at the Mondville too while runping Hood was idea of the powers of an advocate, and this was one of | before a Ireight train to cross the thore instances, The other professions are hore repre- sented by men wiio, Irish in birth or Irish In blood, are steadily winning tieir way to fame and ironor, Aud thon, sir, Ise many o! the first mercantile men in New | Mex shvie yesterday,” York—ankers, more So in bed world py cles nor desperate epecul tions, but to sturdy, perse: vering, honest industry, upon, whieh they. Were. nO. ied to call down & every morniog the; ir, I seo ore None to their datiy Jat 186 Men who, in their own ¢haract¢rs represent ‘a \hie laud tho genius, the integrity, Se energy, eowdnet and Santove Fact,—A Loujsville yory justly maker ‘southern item’? of the fact t uady if wae killed in BOVLER EXPLOSIONLOSS OF LiF. Broo vite, C, W., March 4 bolier inthe Noveity Works thie joded killing two men justanuy. Ovo blown 11 three piecer, Pa a A from the seo exploston. oly injured aud ove pf thei ine ‘tied oftener vaen he wished or expected to rejiresent Nw | @ bundle of clothes, The iufuriated men then grappled | “4 CONNECTICUT POLITICS. | leruesa unt. quer sertay and ee pe seine faculty among Whvse pro TELEGRAt HERALD. Tesseesiipe and ips might be numbered the SPECIAL imam TO TH Professorships of Joice ‘Hath, the way Bong Enthusiastic Meeting of the Democrats at et ee Mermaid, and the schol: Middletown—speeches of James F. Babcock peal, an ik ae a Thumb’s baby! These things and E, & Cleveland, lately Prominent Re- seoue tie Uealien at tee ree dives and om- pablicaum, vor of English and the Dem- Dias and eeoeie Geateanes re who tench nme eee a Nominations—The Showman’s De- young how ractify. treason even to mention the name of W: foat Declare A rs March 14, 1867. Horse Barnum within the classical precincts of Yale. It mote mcwtig of te nds of Eng: | perce in"Now' Baten, for ty ned tbe stdena A fall and enthusiastic meeting of the frien: - in New Haven, lish and the other democratic nominees was held in Mo- ve 8 oheme on ain to invite Bim bere, sot G Donough Hall this evening, Arthur W. Bacon presided, nrg) make Barn take board assisted by twenty-five vice presidouts and several Sec retariea, The principal speakers were Messrs. James ¥. Babcock, of New Haven, and E. 8, Cleveland, of Hart. plicans and former | classics or no itis certain that the Barnum ford, both Iately prominent repu nie &. cere, Sage friends of the dominant party in the State. They. ia danger of its ultimately carrying”off the entire come out flat-footed for the democratic candidates, and | republican party of Connecticut, have brought hundreds of others with them. worki in this State Mr. Babcock was introduced by the Chairman as @ 1 Joon, sumber of J ingmen oe gentleman who bad abandoned former political affilla- | tion is, as bas been ane int inne ad tions and bad come out now as the friend of a common eo Aksu te, ssen é gemrains int peers. me Congressional tive elect Each of the political parties have sougut to contro! the movement, but thus far, it would appear, The the country. Mr, Babcock, who was received with great cheering, said he came before them as an American citizen, with- pave. Sie. B) taal abr, SNES. ~ out party prejudices or party predilections. He spoke eh vs ay | election of Mr. English tar yeaa pow repoblican party aed papers are c' their tcaost endeavors ‘to break up the organi: which, it is alleged, they cannot control. Through their aciion it 18 expected they eucored in reducing the democratic vote of the workingnren; but. those profese- ing to know the probable resuits are positive that they will cause a change in oF eat vote of not less tuan three thousand; and had there been no plotting on the part of the republican leaders, it is averred doubie that number would have been nearer the figure. In ail the prominent towns of the State the workingmen are rega- of the madness of party, and said there was danger that under Its influence the constitution and government of the country would be overthrown, The government ¢s- tablished by our fathers was one of checks and balances — a government the radicals were attempting to subvert. ‘aye radicals Nad reduced the goyerument to @ paltry Panigan scancus, which, unter ty control of a few despomre leaders, mann ts fegisiati amurz. He defenuca oe? South for tking up arms under the conviction thatshey were right in supporti with using ization their State against the encroachments of the gen- | larly organized, and number in the neighborhood of eral government; but now, he contended, the | seventy-five or eighty sasociations, with a membership war was over, and he claimed for’ their | ranging from forty to éne thonsand Someeix or Southern bretbren that a spirit of magnanimity should actuate those wlio control the government when deallng with them. The speaker went over the main features | of radical legisiation and drew a spirited picture ilius- trative of its evil tendencies. He had been accused of deser ing his party when he declared that the war was G eight speakers are traversing the State, speaking nightly upon the topics of labor resorm aud urging the election of men pledged to carry them out, The interest Alt ia the movement by the workisans in this State is cer- tainly deep and wide-spread. Me Tames Gallagher, Chairman of the Democratic not one for subjugation, but was fought for the mainte- | State Committee, was to-day nominated for State senator nance of the Union, | This was the position taken by | at a convention in Centreville, and bis friends are coni- 83 at ihe outset of the war, and Thad >teve: | dent be will be elected by a very beavy majority. pe of the only two membérs of the House | {against it, Mr. Babcock sa’d he had been acouxed | A FAMILY TRAGEDY. 1 [From the Bufl'o Courter, For many years two families occupying & Eempelsile OS L101 ve in Evans Centre; one name i (Applaive.) Bat the reaction had togun. Ie bad becui'| Boe inher Vege. Sit Dolo's famy consists of hin | in New Havou, and the wave would inerease wn vote | golf an old many his Sif, oro ons Joseph and Francie, a8 it swept a a see cf icy pet a abe yea | anda young lady named Elizabeth Carpeuter, formerly ibtetyelivo hundred wae claimed aa the majority: cor | of Aimem, Wis WTghhe & widemy Tra ee ar eit” Hawley, he said be would give thein six hundred, but | Eupice and Charles >, tae earn kalltoad, aod univer. would rather make it five hundred. Hawley was ciectd | SS" known as @ young man ofdaborions and steady dy five hundred and forty. He vow prophesies that Jaimnes | fUly Knows ce & yout ND his ‘widowed. mather, E, Enghsh—(three rousing cheers were given for | Tyo years since Josep Dole married Eunice Wright, Portia) ‘gion 9 elected +: rane yhoo gain | and from this union has come the terrible affair of last Sale antie reatedta fe ‘Gonsreg: eae eve dader itie’| Bight. For a long,.time.the pair have besa the theme of era of tow vadicat leaders end have. nos the courage to | 22aling cosrip in this vicinity. hey eeitoms: Aived to- pie aes ene i a Papeigesgh ony a gether, Doie at times visiting his wife at ber mother’s ec! i a wen por " le ap pent ed oe house, and she, now and then, staying at his father’s: referring to somo of Mr. Hnglish’s benevolent acts | WAS BOT. ane Soy MN hore to be very singular. some oue in the andience exclaimed with emotion, “I | Fre utterly refused to support his wife and child, and oan vouch for thut.”” The speaker gave an unqualified | He viterly Toit W Seep en widely aroused at his endorsement of the democrat ticket. Three cheers ‘or | ROPMAF MO RIAU on nounced that the Doles had Julius Hotchkiss, our candidate for Congress. (Hurrah! | pour a Turin wear Warsaw, aad wore about to remove hurrah! hurrah!) Their opponents claimed to represent | (h'ther, Meanwoile Joseph's wife, seeing no hope of the moral sentiment of the state They did so wih a i from ber busband, and desiring to bring the vengeance in tominating Piineas T, Baroum. (Laughs | SUPPOF. from ber husband, Sit nada ter.) He believed that this Barnum would be de.eated | mailer before a lecal tribunal, threw bemelf upon. the by oight hundred to one thousand, and allowed to seek Reet ava canon ber property. ‘The trial cams of ee purposes of peaitence and buwillation. | perore Justice Josiah Southwick last night, whee Joneph i per caro It was announced that General Frank P, Blair would | 5 ordered to give bonds to pay $100 for the otto of tte next week, aud the next speaker was inirodu ed, | hilt for 0 yar, AS 8 Moree which he hed just ob- a Hpiiicera, of Hartford, who was received with @) ja ned from acourt in sikbart county, Indiana, Toe be ue Cacia ni de a lively and telling speech. He | atbouncement filed the friends of bis wife toby nce - snid that when be left the radical party every radical | hment They bad had no notice of sue Peete caiumniated him, They had said that he was always Cee ein” Tic aoment Sa ae aie oo drank whea he went on a platform to speak. Thank | Pause Till ible oe ey family started to leave the God Tam drunk to-night—drank with patriotism, (Ap. | S2P» Dele unt ue eee ag materially assisted down, plause.) He referred to Andrew Johuson (applause), avd ‘sn Sha Vright, but the jes did «i thiat while that patriot was endeavoring to stecr the | Stairs, itis sald, by Clilrice. rial, ie ae ae ee and ship of state aright the crew of radicals were in tho hold’ | the jules ‘speedily ‘made thor way home, A sort of being a copperhead because he had taken this 1 tion. Ii, he said, it was to bea copperhead to b friend of the Union and fair dealing with the South, then be rejoiced in his conversion to copperteadism, playing faro with Thad Stevens, and not caring a copper bs ig 01 have Whether the good old sbip of state went down or non Tn | OL, imphiuptn indignation meoling | seame to Have Harttord te other day the radicals fired | (wa ut ‘thirty or forty men and. bo salute for their viciory in New Hampshire, frout of Dote’s house, with th where they lost eighte>n hundred votes, aud | 4 putin. him through,” in revenge for his treatment fired thirty-veven guns, one gun'for each State. ‘How is | Of phi’ “trey aid not satu access. to the bouse, and | that? Thirty-seven States in the Union. I had thoagut he radicwis insisted that ten States were out of the Union, Why then do they expend their powder for States they contend do not exist? But probably that was an entertainment got up by request tor that ocvarion uty. (Langnter.) Mr. Cleveland made some striking points coucerning the inconsistency of the radicals, and Fead proofs thereof from the record. H» r-lated the circumstances of aa interview between the late Presi- dent Lincoin and Senator sumuer. Mr. Liucola con- teuded that the South should send Representutives to Congress, and ho deciared that if le had the power he ‘would pas: a law to compel the south to send Senators and Represeotatives to Comgrese, Mr. Sumner re: separaied; but the miscbief did not end there, Towards three o'clock in the morning a party of young men, Bum. bering perhaps a dozen, with black taces and other. wise disguised, aroused the family, who with difficulty had at las: found sleep. It is alleged that they threatened | to war down the house if Joseph was not given ap to | them. However this may be, their avowed intention was to wke him out and give him a coat of tar and feathers, or otherwise punish Lim, About haif-past three half a dozen of them succeeded in making aa entrance by | breaking in the door of an outer room, and made their way to the apartinent where the basSand was Supposed Lo be sieepiug. Two of the y entered an “str. President, you > that we wil stops the wheel of | $y un its anyor eiployed on the (eal of eel roment ile discoursing up%n the labor q i vious evening, and who had determined to the | on Mr. Cleveland stated as a fact that not less than night at his client's house. A struggle ensued, in which | fi large cotton and woollen mills in the State | Me frieh’s head. was. thrust ‘a. win- would suspend operations on the 1s. of April, and lun- | qyw with such violence as to break the sash, In the dreds oi workmen would be thrown ont of employ meat. In Stafford the mills where the Jargest portion of the | Meantime cld Mr. Dole had become engaged with threo sativet manufactured in the country is made would | OF jour more of the assailants, who in the dark were un~ stop. This was owing to the circamatance that there | jie rou At itis youre. Feank Dole, a bey ot was no demand for the goods, resulting trom the present ‘sevenicen, the cries, seized a double barrelled ng shot gun and rushed to the door ef the room in which bis father was engaged. The weapoa, he jas in- stantly wresied from,bis hand, he caanot tell by whom. He mace his way through the combatants and up staira. | A moment later he heard a report, and looking out of | the wingow, he saw the y run from the house and collect at the In it ten minutes, to the story of Frank, Mr. Ieaae West, the hotel keeper, political be gg sey age unsettled ¢onditicn of the country, and to the utter prostration of trade and jnaus- try in the south. For these reasons he appealed to every workingman in the State, to every Union man, to every one who would see peace aud harimony-and prosperity restored all over the country, to join the noble lemocratic party, vote for its candidates and bring the grand reforme demanded. The great city of New York alone could afford to give ten millions wo see a check given to ths tide of radicalism, and Connecticut entered and asked who was shot. His face ened at the can do it (Applause.) Beneath the flag floating tp day time. A light was red, and on enter- over the capitol, regarded as the emblem of Américax | 104 the mkidlo Cap a Rage tame ye dng Son nationality, sit’ conspirators who deciaro that there are a a dying condition, sician was summoned, bat the young man was dead wiihout but twenty-seven States in the Union. What, heask cota ken mould be thought of iheBeertnry of te was wouidses'| Ha"ne siren, uence, lo g0y, coherent expresson, ¥ Fedress from the power tha: inrulied it? What would | Mas taken home, the appearauce of his dead body bein bo said of tho American Ministers abroad who wonid | $0 Ast announooment to bis heart broken on claim that they represented but twenty-seven instead of Ubirty-soyen St or eg tore ves and ten Ter- ritories. He would be ridiculed by foreigners aud (Appiause,) Mr. the the North to manifest. a magnanimous, benign and heavenly spirit, and ‘o say to the South, “Brethren, ye are forgiven, come and worship again at the family Rees ee wg FR The statement in regard to the suspension of cotton ‘ vt oye] and woollen factories in this Stave on the Ist of April during red : Posty on sakoe cial The workingmen | with wi a meeting \o-morrow it and ions o tye _ magna Fe hd pen ly | CofoNor’s investigati horse coluwn is moving solidly forward all over the State. ‘ihe democrats still claim three thousand for THE MILITARY BILL IN NEW ORLEANS, English, three out of four Congresemen and Barium's . ‘ali die deieat by eight hundred to one thousand, QUS KEW HAVEN CORRESPONDENCE. A Splendid Repablican Meeting—The Facuity ceeding to extremi E New No orders have been received, as was lative to enforcing the military government, the Weolly Horse—Prevalence of the Barnum “Grippe”’—The Labor Question, &c. New Havey, March 13, 1807. ‘The republicans had a eplendid meeting Jast night in Music Hall, The hail is capable of seating two thousand five hundred persons, and it was filled in every part, in- cluding the galleries and aisies. There were but fow ladies and no colored people present. Pina civcas held to-oigut to nominate commissio: of the Baltimore Pohce under. the new bill, one ballvt | ‘was bad without an election. Mr. Jarratt, a strong cun. servative, had the largest vote, 4 woman was found dead in a house in the northern || It is somewhat remarkable that the latier have not pert ok So Oe Sp ean There are suspicions that | attended in any numbers the political meetings op either bg Go 2 oy side, One may look over a multitude of faces, and A girl sixtecn years old was attacked by although he may see numbers of bonnets he cannot dis- last night. He threw liquid corm a colored oF sable face. The indies attend, in con. | Vining Rot homibly She will siderable flocks, all the principal woolly horse gather. ings, while the anti-woolly horse mectings are crowded MISCELLANEOU: With the bone and sinew of the voting population. —PEnnys F. Ti CHMGRERT I DORIS Proteseor Cyrus Northrop, Bachelor of Laws and Pro- . dreds dally of Bara feanor of Rhetoric and English Literature in Yale Cotlege, i. ete and republican candidate for Congress from this district, Chathay street, “tig thie spoken or active partisan, Whilo in former years Yale CARGHTO Stew ‘a a Mig in in tem. eection in the institution. lorever. sta for hlet i} cy rkit NORTON ii Ann street. at the meeting last night. ‘The faculty of Yale are all republicans, from the Prosi. | A.™and Sites where desertion cole cok dent, Rev. Theodore D. Woolsey, D. D., LL. D., down, | N° ublicity or eqn advance, Praag eid ‘with possibly one exception, and he not a very loud || mode of was attended by students from the South in largo mum. | teaiment acie Ilka a this terrivie bere, to-day there are scarcely half a dozen from tbat offepaive disc! taloted breath, sore throat, “old Prete howd ona fetally extinguisher this loathsome Governor Hawley was the priucipal speaker jast night, anaes bat although he talke well snd has a good voice, his DNORGES ,FEGALEY, OBTAINED | hom er in aT abilities as an orator seemed tobe hardly up to the task courts of this ites, without pubiicity 0: of stirring up £0 large an audience in 80 spacious an at- Phy 3 ny ys, nese or desertion cause dnorium, Mr. Mahlon Chance, of Ohio, followod the B'r KING, Counselor at Law) 219 Broatwn; Governor, and no donbt shocked the nerves and moral AMP WEATHER, sonsibilities of the Faculty present, vy indulging in a Stitebes, pains p ‘the stdo, ret pets, thronte wna. number of strong Western expietives, or in other words, ee ensee act "ike's ehatan, shat Bice Sa aa Moocidental d—ne." Judge Pitkin, of Lousiana, yas | _ Sold by all druggists. to have followed, having been reiieved of hia almost ‘attack of the Barnum gri; but the hour was too he had to forego Pleasure of addressing so an aud! While the Governor when stamping with Barnim nored the existence of that indieideal altogether, a \VBRY.— ‘cure Greet i } ONBW'S, GREENW tuough taiog in, Parmu's own, disiich he was) not | (40,0 anreain where wil hoa Teas Cotes, tit enthusiastically in his praise asa fit From ‘One . cootiast It would have soos woolly horse oaadle PORTANT fea TO LADIEG—=SHOWING Hi 1 woolly je 1a HO! ptage at this sanemee’ On tes one weela have Yr ae. a alter i i" been seen learned professors of divinity, revealed reli. | Di. 195 Bim stro gion, literature, anotent and modern natural TY. LA In Shee ema ae | Pitaijonttan" Si a Rar -“tatrica and all those dane, tennant Of sciqnes and i