Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
6 "NEW. YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1868. rae ge ae 8G WA Bi orn "ghasows.of -widbw. y under weigh with @ fine breeze from the south, and : . CITY ~Y jndgment at speciat Term Tor rlatntlas, r& E u R P E hood as ost hee eneiOeal of. her PRUSSIA. the next day a flect of nearly six hundred gail were NEW YORK . for defendants, Joho B. Dev r former veputaricy, and her present attitude of hos- ane to be seen with their forest masts anchored WAT—TRIAL TERM —PART I. tility to the liberal programme bids fair to destroy | The Dlet=Frecdom ef Speech—Beantics of under Seragiio Potat, fest uslow She entrance so the THE COURTS. ‘SUPERIOR CO} TRA. 1s ° that popularity entirely. Americans would be sur- Soi Disant Censiitutional Government—! City Baiiroa: ‘The stenmstup Cuba, of the Cunard line, Captain ra to hear the flippant and disgraceful manner Action for Damages Aguinst « iy a wi a in whi lish , who was | ration Frauds—“xplosive War Projectiles lish, Austrian, Norwegian and Turkish ; Com Dismissed. Moodie, from Liverpool November 30 vin Queens- | ghee nich Bae ment tal of in pecuniary inators Seo Geena Heaters Wate fy a ieaeed for the Stars and UNITED STATES GISTRICT couaT. Deneenr & crit town December 1, arrived at this port yesterday is Openly ridiculed; the story that she is alidly mad BERLIN, Nov, 23, 1808, Stripes, Hoorisetanaing - Une aaae ‘The Watson-Crary Whiskey Case—Verdict for | soigmon, vy ian, vs. The Central Park, with details of despatches up to date of sailing, pl Bere Creal toth cor, watchs BAYe ircies, 40d} 45 usuaf at this season of the year King William | hations In these waters, I regret to say that among the Government: North and East River Raitrow) Company.—The = | 4 real Hubar Packs, who, S0Omipsiion 5 £18688 Sop of tion, are circulated as freely a3 Joe | and his courtiers are enjoying the pleasures of the | tle 5,000 oF 6,000 ships that have en' Ismail Pacha, Viceroy of Egypt, to London, has re- | Miller's jesta, orrhas bodes no good to Victoria nor to | chase, His Majesty split pe ee ‘an invitation to Sea du the present year-I cannot learn of a sin- turned to Paris. her dynasty. Think how quickly the revolution in , gie vessel jug the American flag. Forty. are ag. 8) ripened aud how peacelully it was accom- | hunt in the dominton of the Grand Duke of Meck- | when no lighthouses wo! ihe maine exveved Two Austr an frigates intended for a voyage of a? Bee ee a A yesterday Gunday) noon | Levant or-along the whole north coast of Africa, scientitte exploration, the Archduke Frederick and | ~ Meanwhile the person who has it in his ler to | ana does not return until Wednesday evening. He | UY, Skilful and Sarne Cpenes ee ae ANY correct all this has neglected his social duties for with tn every port Donan, carrying (0 GAN Of Rene ANE. Het. Oe stupia ‘dixsipations and is now absent n a long | 18 said to have received aletter from Count Bismarck | the Yankee’ craft was a dull saller that sea anchor at Gibraltar on the 19th ult. before proceea- foreign tour. What the English a, re- |. ete recovery of mie! “walk away” from any vessel he fell in with, = Ing to Tangier. to the Prince of Wales may Ub jagged from a pangs lees readiness to hang pus those days an American ship was regarded by the er P th denizens of fo1 rts with almost a8 much vene- Several of the Paris journals speak of @ public bd se pitaing she Aaron, which qopresents 4s “of his royal master.” This, at least, 1s the | ration as saree Por ea ber commander aa only's subscription Larlpptie to be opened to erect a monu- | Britannia and crossing over to Mile. Schneider, | gtyle in which the conservative press announce the | little below an b suniraly a ie aa ae a Gi] with t to Rossin! dressed asan Egyptian girl, If the Prince would 6 canvas crows low Mthe censorship has interdicted the Betipse from | Dut establish a social CORE at Marmont: ould | Counts yeturn to business, namely, the presiding Bt | the merchant fests of Europe, soon leaving them pa he could reconcile all politicians to the seclusion of | the meeting of the Bund Council fixed for the soth | far in his wake, the consolatory exclamation came publishing likenesses of the five advocates who de- | his mother, and if he would but stand by her and | it, In the Diet, still engaged in the Budget dis- | from every in the fleet, ‘That’s an Ameri- fended the accused in the affair of the Baudin sub- ive her the advice of a son and @ inan of the world the motion of Deputy Yon Gu¢rard can.” At the date to which I allude Poh 4 cern Herein” cam anauporenespopMari | oeciag ine freedom of apeech paued the | Webad au tea tha Pui, ot comet ‘The Madrid Zmpartiat of the 234 ult. published | people aud place his future crown much more firmly | grat reading with @ large majority, though | 20 authorities here to obtain the permission to pass vnder the heading “The Honor of Spain” an article | upon his head than it is ever likely to be under pre- not without some ardent Don Q ahaa rope the straits. plaintiff is a child of about ten yours Of age, and t complained that on the 7th of September, 1867, while riding as @ passenger on cue of the defende ant’s cars, and through the negligence of one of de- i fendant’s servants, he was grievously injured. Hd claimed $5,000 damages. It appeared that the ' boy was on the front platt of the car, and when near Forty-sixth Streets in First avenue, requested the driver to the car to enable him ‘ to alight, The driver refused todo it ‘Too boy wan sting on the piakiorin ‘wits 2c oa rma. the lower steps, and shortly atter org] claimed, in co. uence of a Violent “Jolt” of the car, was thrown from his seat to the roadway, sus: taining a fracture of the collar bone, with other ins ‘At the close of the plaintif’s case defendant's counsel moved for the dismissal of the complaint, om the ground that no “negligence” on the part of the Of Distilled Spirits.—At the opening of the court the trial of the above entitled case was ‘about being proceeded with and counsel prepared to address the jury, all the testimony having been put im on the previous day, when Judge Blatchford, ad- nde , whiske; 800 long. Thus ended this protracted case, ech Ra. onaiien the court four Phole days a filth, gent circumstances, ‘During the administration of General Jackson | The Kentucky Bourbon Case—The Defendants been sliown. in which it energetically censured Spanish capitalists bing a tilt against it, Even the Minister of the In- | @ was at, last concluded, a result | failto Appear—Postponement of the Trial. | (fcndant had been own. te ariver to for not subscribing more readily to the loan. ant Eulenbi spoke of t aversion | long delayed by the preposterous demands of the ‘The United States 08. Daniel Messmore and Others— | stop the car did not constitute necligence, although FRANCE. terior, Co! urg, Spo! the great pos | Sefor Ort, the Spanish Minister of Justice, has * Porte and the and intrigues "he Kentucky Bourbon Company.—after the Watson- } the plaintit? might recover in an action for breach of entertained by the government against the motion, | pow, contract or unlawful imprisonment resulting iq rere, Gi Asaued @ decree reorganizing the Supreme Court of rving unanimity with | of the rapid progress the American commerce was | Crary case had been disposed of United States Dis- taped, Jostiog, Which 1s “RenQAIGuNrA ¥: Const Of: BpeR vaeae ead anaamnees bes parent of se cinies pas es the sacrifice, fife then ma , ead leat we should eventually drive | trict attorney Courtney Tmoved for the trial of this | tr pacar rasan tit’ auesdetiana. 32 separate tribunals, with a president and eight coun- | frosenl—tee Great Composer's Last Words | count finished by calling upon the conservatives to | $i" 4° curated eatinate’ upon the value of | case. Itwas evident, he sald, that the defendants | Vanderpoel. were not all in court, and the charge being one of conspiracy it was a necessity that all, if possible, at least a number of them, be had together at the same time. ‘The Court—The defendants in the case, as they are charged conjointly, must be tried together. Are the ieee ‘netvendan ce ? secllors attached to each. The third court is tobe b ‘Black Sea trade that it demanded at first the specially a civil court of law. Distinguished Persons Present—From the | sven thelr adhesion to began meso ae ‘gum of $10,000,000 on one occasion and on Church As before mentioned, some of the ultra conservatives os ‘The Imperial Court of Paria has confirmed on ap- to Pere La Chalse-The Last Hours another had the effrontery to propose that, as & con of Berryer. could not forbear protesting loudly against giving | dition of si the treaty, the United States shonia peal the two judgments of the Correctional Tri- Paris, Nov. 24, 1868. the Chamber the same privilege as the Reichstag, in- | replace the fleet lost by the Turks at Navarino. bonal, which had condemned MM, Dubuisson and Tt was but a few days ago that friends, on meeting | sistin; € last, however, the Reis Effendi (now Grand Vizier) f g that it would bé much more compatible with tinctly to understand that the Uni Gaittet, successively printers of the Lanterne, the | st public places or sodil gatherings, exchanged the | the dignity of the House if each member abonld feel | Was_given aaneny to uncersand thal ine olin former to one month’s imprisonment and 4,000 | intelligence that Rossini, Rothschild, Berryer and | nimself responsible for what he uttered, In that case | friendship of any nation, but that the customary pre- CITY INTELLIGENCE. THE WEATHER YESTERDAY.—Tie following record will show the changes in the temperature for the past twenty-four hours, as indicated by the thers" mometer at Hudnut’s pharmacy, broadway, corner of Ann street, HERALD Penge! 5 ) Mr. Cor -—If your Honor please, you will re- francs fine, and the other to two months and 2,000! payin were dying, This then struck all as being a | we snould have less contempt of majesty, less excit- ae Ree rey jee oe be Caper on porbie! — Pin oon pa pn) ‘oe tral by 3 34M. 30. M cag , most startling improbability, an unaccountable coin- | ing and revolutionary speeches and more candor and | how have we availed ourselves of it? Strange to special order of a, cons for the fie ay Es oo ‘ re i . _ 7 ‘The French Minister of Justice has appointed @ | cidence, as if Death could not sheave so much talent, | sincerity when the speakers know that they may be | say, since the nevigedion ¢ Pod Biack one ouariag crater Dna anne together aM... Rr. M commission, composed of former consular Judges | power and fortune together in one grasp. ‘Three of | called to account. After, however, the government | CHWNeS *o04 Trough the Bosphorus, -As no peculiar | with some of the defendants, and announced them | Average temperature... 205 nd experienced commercial men, to examine cer- | these great men are nevertheless dead—the com- | had given the cue which way they meant to vote | reatrotions are Imposed upon us, we being.on afoot? | selves “not ready.” In the meantime 1 recelyed a | Average temperature Thursday us 26 tain modifeations proposed in the law of bank- | poser, the millionnnalre and the editor wno has | Yery few of these ultra conservatives had the courage | fnywith the most favored nations, the only conclu. | letter from the authorities at Washingion MSCCung | | Tum FOURTH AVENUE RalLnoay Casvaure.—d a auptcy in France, especially as respects the dilatory | heen the cause of so much detraction and euvy— | “At the reading of the Cla? of the Finance Depart. | #108 we can come to Is that ve canpot compete Toni | A SON tC TROT chat aotor: Oe tee ceewetea | Was inadvertently stated in yesterday's paper that eharacter of the syndical operations and theheavy | while the veteran speaker was rumored as dead ed it i mee ae Bis eneat belonging fo o Another fact which may have had some in- | to the Court, and on which | acted. after tho Ispse Charles Samson, who was killed in Fourth avenue cosis of proceedings, 1 SAREE DS try, wee o | m commerce in the Black Sea is | of a week or two instructions came to me to fro | on Thursday night, met his death by being run over yesterday. nich had been struck om by the | ence on, commerce In te Mack See I | rod with the crisl of these cases according to lnw. | by stage Ne, of the Fourth. avenue liuees De ized princes, and w! The Rothschild family own the large island at | These men are now going to be judged by their fae Diet, had nevertheless reappeared in the uc- United States Consul at Puteaux. Iu thelr quallty of proprietors Baroness | trends, emulators and antagonist; but the mounds | count, Herrvon Dex teyds on being ttongly presiea Batsye Was’ a Ureek’ merchant, who, doubtless, James and her children have handed the sum of 600 hs J ith a view to his own personal interests, offered no are too fresh and tne real truth will only proceed | veto of the Chamber had been totally disregagded. | Mince ments to Americans to. éstablish themselves I immediately notified the parties, and they appeared here in court, some in person and some by counsel. They asked for a certain day to be fixed by your Honor, on the was run over by @ passenger car on the New Mave Railroad, DEATH OF A VAGRANT.—Walter Goran, aged francs to the local authorities for the benefit of the | from their works. For once, however, the Parisians | The only way in which he tried to get out of the di- 4 ° Ql there. In the Turkish ports the American trade is und that the notice that 1 had given | sixty-four, was on Thursday committed by Justice pecs that banyan a the occasion of the decease | nave learned that there reigns a supreme will, a idee Ce Piper Peel also principally in the hands of foreigners or a class fem By) ae brah oe ee ey Dodge, at Jefferson Market Police Vourt, to the care head stronger than their own, to destroy their idols. there was a moral obligation to pay. ‘There is, of Ct ampece Segara om = ae ties acing Glieged were in ae ‘Louis ‘and other places West, | of the Commissioners of Charities and Correction They announced to the Court that they would ve ready on the day fixed upon; a day was fixed and the cases were called, and but onc of the de- fendants appeared—Frost. The bail bond was for- felied and a bench warrant issued for the arrest of these parties. I caused to be issued, I think, four separate bench warrants, and delivered them to sepa- rate officers for the purpose of having them exe- 83 avagrant. The prisoner was seized with ill 7 yesterday morning and died before medjcai Couid be given. mer Schirmer was notified. Fata. ACCIDENT.—An inquest was held yesterday by Coroner Flynn in the case of Catharine Weithe man, the little girl who dicd at her parenst’ a ‘The German journals announce that the French | your readers are perhaps not yet aware what were | course, no telling whether or not these 1,000 thaiers gun factories, even those of the State, Naving con- | Rossini’s last words. They were said before his long | Will make their appearance again in the Stat for oe er at esctoely a6 Hele Me Ss ne eluded the fabrication of the Chassepots, are work- | and painful agony commenced, when at last it was | 1870. tor with so more & Goerminet par excellence | wno, by # residence varying from a few months to ng actively on the improved system of weapons | deemed urgent # prepare him for another world, | “those deluded poor people who fett the Bast Pros. Tew yoare 1p. Americn, Baye Coe eran ae ee Seecated and that — pairs eee are | He was asked by the spiritual adviser called in if he ee Bick epedi pial sax gamauaniore cine turned here with their newborn nationality and set 18) peror foseph’s government ine % ; a themselves down for the remainder of their live farni Fran was a sincere Christian, if he belleved. “He who | Sr¥cthovar enh sonieswig-Holaein, aud who were Lo CRE ‘with 600,000 muskets by the Ist of April. wrote the ‘Stabat,’ ” answered Rossini, “must be a t back to their homes by the police of this cit, day dence, No. 194 Seeond street, in consequence believer.” A ne seconds after this ‘ws suffering have been the victims, a3 tas now been shown, of tat ae Senet PAecuen ge rere the inne ie arg nat at after & inaen Mel being run over on the 4th inst. by a track at the core ‘ unscrupulous emigration agents who thought of kid- | ton of American citizens, nd : t ihe Gity of New York, but through | ner of East Broagway and Rutgers sireet. As the ENGLAND. was so intense that though his wife’s name was | Rayving them for Chile. A rescript from the Minis- | Suthorities of the land of thelr birth. An American | 18 ete oe oy Oe Ne M conlantaate suid | evidence showed that the occurrence wag.an accl- always on Lis lps, still these were the last words | fer'ar Commerce to the district authorities directs eee ene otecwietanitpwtotarvensiied |, apes pod opmteetan ‘of them can bé foil ay { dental one the jury rendered a verdict accordingly. FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT. connected with the workings of his soul. besa pet rhe epilt perp mello Aaa subject to the Porte, so that he actually enjoys the | we have the statement here this morning by counsel | 4 Ornovs Act Nor In Ta Bi1.1.—As four ponies that they are not prepared to go on with these cases. can be tried or without Prmenee, = of these aah ne 3. anes been tments since the suggestion made ny gout Houae, and I find that three of these attached to one of theNew York circus wagons were being driven down Thirty-second street, npar Lex- ington avenue, yesterday forenoon, they took fright ‘The funeral solemnities were magnificent, and ublish the necessary warnings. advantages of a double nationality while evading the took place at the new church La Trinité, not at St | Yt would appear that at the conferences now being | Te8P0 nsibities ofboth; testes which. ie frequeatly > i held in St. Petersburg on the subject of abolishing “ i if Husa, 95 15 bast Been srleinaly, xetieds 1. The explosive war prajectiies ‘a solution 1s not readily to | Cal protection to transactions which concern his un- The Social Side of English Politics. LONDON, Nov. 28, 1868. ‘The topic of the day is the elevation of Mrs, Disraeli - 5 body was conveyed from the Madeleine to the vaults | ye arrived at. So much, at least, 1s all ceriain, | Daturalized kindred. AD ? and dashed down the street ats fearful rate. Thd- et lery. he same exception woul old good for han le spite of his party trammels, Mr. Disracli is the | 72CD every street and avenue was so thronged | Poot, cli Sutrets, which have been in use in all somé time ago s motion was made by MY } wag hurt during their Might across tue to my! associate to consolidate those indictments. That round the edifice that at length none without ad- i Baie aar WALT es pa. : eat pol ng! armies time out of mind, and for which no substitute ° y en! Tae Lapiss’ Farr at THE Oitt . a ee eee nee trcctec: | mission for seats In the church, were allowed to | haw been found as yet. Both these have been exten. | The State of Affairs in Spain—The Condition op Rok teint rage mente repay | Meee ae etehe wanh nn set pponents now confess that they have secretly enter- | cross the large square before it. At the last hour, | sively employed in the late war, and how little Prus- of the People. si ‘the other lor domg business without paying. ‘AVIER.—The ladies’ » Which was opened on las tained the same opinion. Friends and enemies all | however, speculators did sell chairs inside for 15vf. | sia intends to abandon them may be inferred from , ‘ . Join ina general chorus of congratulation upon the | eal. No one knew how they got these tiekeis uor | the recent trials at the Spandau shooting grounds, | Madrid. (Nov. 24) correspondence London Times.) how they got to the church; but they were there and | where they formed the cluef subject of experiment. io Introduce & kruly Provident an ral govern- tact and finesse by which Mr. Disraeli has secured } the traitic went on ip silence, almost uuperceived by Being on military matters we may mention that ment may be a very diificult task in Spain, but there the prize of nis ambition without withdrawing from | the police oficers. When high mass began with tie | the organization of the South German armies on a | 18 20, pone that even the ere Stempt at change active politics, by shutting himself up in the House | £wrott of Mozart's requiem the interior of the | similar footing to that of Prussia is steadily progress- | Must have advantageons rostits and that the penis building was 1ost imposing. There was room for | ing. In Bavaria, where the absence of u iull com. | Sula must thrive, y its ge ment, i of Lords, It has been long expected that at the | 3,000, und 6,000 people had got inthe nave, down | plement of reserves has been the great diniculty, | § ite of its government, more especially as, after conclusion of the present elections Mr. Disracii | the aisies, up m the tribunes, gauleries, dome und | this is now removed, and next year thirty-two batta- : ater ere ohare aa Theres " _ organ cuoir. It was perhaps not ali sympathetic | lions, fully equipped, will be ready for effective ser- a 3 Would step from the Premiership into the peerage, | Mourning: it Was minense cutlosiiy increused by | vice” Tue “organization of the Baden force | @pathetic and neutral in all quarrels, attend 'to their and no one would have been disposed to deny that | gnticipated enjoyment of the singing that was to be | is, in every respect, including uniforms, | OW2, business, which, fortunately, happens also to he had amply earned the right to such an honor. in | heard. Inthe centre of the nave rose an edifice | arms and equipments, similar to that of | De the State's zeal business. “Berhaps no coun- faci, his opponents rather congratulated themselves | UAder which the body was placed during te cere- | Prussia, and Wurtemberg, while drilling and | try inthe world,” It has been justly observed, “is . mony. it was surrounded by four steps, above | exercising the troops precisely as those in North | 89 little affected by the extraordinary transitions upon the fact that they would no longer have to | which elevation was the receptacle for the cotiin, | Germany, has furnished them ‘also with the breech- of the government and the constantly recurring contend with the able conservative leader. Some of | leit empty, but covered with a black velvet pall | loader of Prussian manufacture, The slight diiter. | PQnunciamientos as Spain. | Whether constant bis own party, tov, would have been giad of his re- | Showered over with silver tears. ‘Thirty-six tapers, | ence yet existing, but which could easily be re- | Habit has weakened the impression or not it would dings . besides urns and funereal iigures, were placed | moved in case of ‘eed, is the divimons of regiments | Be dificult to tell, but # ts a fact that these extraor- tirement from motives of personal jealousy, although | around. The Pe Profundis was sung in the vaults | into battalions, there being in Wurtemberg three dinary changes, and these ceaseless revolutions pro- tue great majonty would not have known where to | before the body was deposited under thia suort-Lved | pattalons to ohe regiment and only two In Prussia, | (wee, comparatively speaking, little or no effect on look for wnotber commander. But Mr. Disraeli has | MOHUMeNL, alter which preliminary the troops came | though we see that the Hesse-Darmstadt division the country at large, and any one. who would en- i 2 x z in and Tehdered approach near it impossible by | aiready belonging to the North German army has re- | G¢avor to follow the progress of the country by its pleased al! his friends and utterly confounded his an- | forming # kind of wall round the catalaique. Tcat- | tatned the system of three. pee leaders would most certainly be grievously agonists, He does uot refuse the coronet; he sim- | uot, help ooserviug here, tual tis, ‘display of | ‘the position of the Hésnian, Premler. Herr, Von Wer deer ary: Gitggetiies: wlemmenccd ter Orortneette : , . mulitia e1C01 with ood teeling. wigk, has become a pevuliarly unpleasant one in ° ply hands it over to his wife to wear for him. He | Witla, was malcotued Mark of honor, the Ein. cheesy Jr his inmnuations to tue Emperor of | force of general civilization. Spain has been dragged does not withdraw with his honors to the House of | peror being represented by his Chamberlain, by | Russia derogatory to the loyalty of his German sub- | 02 by the rest of Euro! an oe te of her government Lords; he stays to fight in the Commons and keeps | M. de Nieuwerkerke and otiters; but tuese soldiers | jects in the provinces of Courland and Livonia, The | 884 in spite of her antiquated commercial and e0o- his title at home for social and domestic uses. came in as if for war, with their knapsacks on their | Czar, already exasperated against the Baltic pro- | Bomical views. @ population, which in 17 . : backs and cartridges in their beits, Kound the organ | yinces, has tightened the screw upon them, aaa is | Was only 10,541,221 souls, had risen to 12,286,041 You are, of course, aware that this act has a most | stood Mmes. Patil, Alboni, Nilsson, Krauss, Block | now altogether in the hands of the Young Russian | !2 1833, and in 1860, according to the last census, fijustrious precedent. The wife of Mr. Pitt became | and Ugalde. The most remarkable among the gen- | party, which threatens extermination to the German | ‘+ had further advanced to 15,073,936." | It is now Monday in the college hall attacued to tae Churca of ? St. Francis Xavier, West Sixteenth street, for tha benefit of the poor, will close to-night, The fair has not been attended so far with that enthusiasm which has hitherto distinguished the pariskioncrs of Sty Francis Xavier's. The ladies, wio are daily implored by the poor for relief, appeal to tue public for assist- ance to enable them to even partially alleviate the sufferings of the needy during the proseut inclement ; season. ‘Taey anticipate a large atrendances to-night. THE New Lamppost Boxes.—One great desideratum in the matter of posting letters lias at last been sup plied. Upwards of sixty letter boxes have been affixed ‘tolampposts in different quarters of the city. The new box is oblong in shape, with a serni-circular covers ing, which opens in such @ imanver that either let ters Or newspapers can be dropped in and the lid tails down so that no rain can pass through. The increased size of the drop is a great improvement, am the want of a newspaper drop has been long felt. Im the centre of the box on the front is 4 dial on wick is indicated the time of colleculay the imalls,— ee, New YORK ASSOCIATION FOR IMPAOVING THM CONDITION OF THE Poor.—The twenty-fifth annual report of this association, giving an Interesting rée sumé of its operations for the past quarter of a cen} tury, has been published. ‘The institution was organized 1n 1843, incorporated in 1843 and 18 now, a license and failing to keep a rectifler’s book, and the third one for ier iieteoignrs lates on spirits— were consolidated, three, the fourth indictment having another additiona! name in the indictment from the first three that I have mentioned. The first three are against the three parties. Two of Seat are misdemeanurs and one of them is for felony. ‘Thé Court—I was not aware of the consolidation, I did not remember it; but if that is so it stands as @ singie indictwwent, and it is made a Ielony, The District Attorney—The other one is a con- spires. to defraud the United States under the thir- u section of the Kevenue law. That is a misde- meanor, not pay! ‘the tax On aceriaiu amount of spirite distilied by them. ‘The Court—That is a made a misdemeanor by the section. The District Attorney—There is a charge for cou- racy. This charge has been consolidated with the others, as there 1s an additional defendant in tie case. ‘The Court—That Is specially for a conspiracy. 1 ropose to try that case. The District Attorney—In the cases I have men- tioned we are prepared te try this case I allude to. In this fourth case two of our witnesses are in Provi- dence, the spirits having been taken to Providence from New York. We are ready to try the cases that are consolidated, but in the fourth case we are not ready, but will be on Monday. The Court—then you cannot try the misdemeanor case to-day for that reason. 1 think, in looking into el oI ourh pre: N es e| 2 supposed to have reached 17,000, and the pro- Lady Chatham long before her husband would con- reo ‘Savar Ganioak. papees, ey Ree Semen sett ion peel fi pens sown me wind gress of trade has kept with the increase of | the authorities on the snbject, it would hardly be safe | 12 charge of the following board of oflicers:—Jame gent to accept the rank of Earl, But everybody had | Faure. The right of the organ was filled by the cuo- | ported that his resignation must ensue. y the population, inasmuch as in 1850 the imports | to try this case in the absence of these defendants. | Brown, president; Robert B. Minturn, treasurer; forgotten tuis precedeut until Mr. Disraeh practically | ruses of the Conservatoire under Jules Cohen; the 7 were £6,719,936, and the exports £4,886,909; while in | | find the law laig down by the Circuit Court in the | R. M. Hartley and George Griswoid, secretaries; ts ap & leit by the band of the Guard. Down the nave 1860 the imports and exports were respectively | First Circuit, inthe case of a misdemeanor, where | Stewart Brown, Jonathan Sturges, Krastus C. revived it, The friends of Mr. Gladstone now enthu- | came the deputations of Rossini's native town, Pe- TURKEY. £14,833,134 and £10,982,034—both more than double | the punishment must be imprisonment, the Court | dict and J. Couper Lord, mauugers, Its rules WUl not proceed in the absence of the defendants. In this case it must be fine and imprisonment both, and I think that, under such circumstances, the fally arranged to alleviate tie poor without en. couraging idleness, almsgiving being an inciden' and not a primary object. The report alludes to t) siastically declare that he will follow Disrael’s ex- | saro, and deputations from Bologna. Near the altar im ten years. The revenue of the country, which hi stood the Emperor's Chamberiain and Cuevalier Se een ce ras Was £17,751,563 in 1868, was estimated in the Budget reapaen eamart ene ga corey asp cr Se as Nigra, Minister or Italy in France. Amoug the literati, | Lightships for the Bosphorus—The Porte and | of 1866-7 at £22,195,276. ‘The development of the . ‘The liberal majority in the new Parliament ntat Taered nd Camille Douest were withthe | siack Sea. & rational commercial and industrial policy its results | jury. That is the idea in cases of felony. Felony charitably disposed for means to ph anverl Will be about 110, At first sight this is enormous; but | osfcials from court. CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 10, 1868, would be seen immediately. Should the ideas of | 1s @ case of so high a grade and the punishment 1ts work of philanthropy. During the year 1 0 severe that the defendant is entitled to have the jury see him, and that isa privilege which the law would not allow him to waive, and therefore, in favor of personal liberty, I think it would hardly be right, particularly as there is a paperroas hey Curtis in the First Circuit on the point, although Judge Nelson decided by the case of fitting out a ves- 340 visitors were employed and made 33,206 visit extending reitef to 8,197 families end 27,528 ‘The asount of receipts during the year was $71,096, andthe amount of disbursements in © es. cf necessary expenses Was $72,555 95. POLICE INTELLIGENCE. ou must feyeparene that in — a sa pongo the ‘Tamburini’s son acted as master of the ceremonies, Some years since the attention of the Porte was ee ce ape sae eggs and B ges ror ee iberals had a nomival majority of eighty and were | All the talent coilected from ever; t of the world led by Mr. ‘ Y 5 Be yer usable to Go amyuing with “i except |' ten In cue word wanted ant. aroun maccversd, While penta a em pvcint jap tothe ne- | gotten that Spain, like Italy, must be, above all @nstain Mr. Disraeli in office. 1 do not pre- | the organ burst forth and the three voices Rossini cessity of opting measures for the prevention of | things, an agricultural community, and agriculture, dict a similar result in this Parliament, | loved #o well could not waken him from his well | accidents to vessels seeking to enter the Bosphorus | although it may be aided by a good government, because | know how anxious the liberals are to obs earned repose. Patti, Alboni and Nilsson did their | from the Black Sea during stormy and foggy exhibits great powers of endurence against the infu- tain office; but still | feel that Mr, Disraeli has many | best; they blended their sweet lamentations first in ence of a bad one. more cari lay before he gives up the game and | one meiodious compiaint aud then sung his immor- | Weather, and for extending aid. and protection to | — Just at this moment, however, the Spanish culti- | sel in the slave trade, it not being declared a felony welcomes Gi 3 ie one a4 Premier. One of these—the | tality with sublime felicitation. The Quts est homo | shipwrecked mariners on the adjacent coasts. Mr, | Vator 1s laboring under the greatest calamity with substitution of some liberal nobleman in the Pre- | duet, from the “Stabat,” by Aiboui and Patti, | 4, having failed to accomplish his object, which Ibe. | Which tt 1 poelbie or husoundy tobe acted miershtp—I have already pointed ont, and others | created such emotion that murmurs of continued | eve was coupled with an offer of his ehcp lh ng eli emt, ney will be mentioned in good me, Personaily, how- | delight were with dificuity subdued, and it was pate fr Of personal ser- | prospects of what Would otherwi fe promise o bes over, mar. Disraelt and his sani would, be glad to | almost forgotten that the celebration was taking | vices to establish the work, nothing more was | Sood future harvest—the want of seed to cavorsay mount o! fortune atten: ir. Glad. lace round a coin, ie prayer from Moses an \- mone. The fatuilies of tue two leaders are very in- | the supplication “Sweet Jesus” produced. a no less Lorene eee en Caeereti ate ee a Sant s0mI- | combined to prepare for Ita Teception.. The re WUly timate, and Mrs. Gladstone was one of the Orst to | thriing effect. After the ‘service the body | Mer the persistent and energetic efforts of Mr. Budt- | of the condition of the rural pop a 4 Lianerag S anne te to bg oneness oS was anes - Lo —e _ which eigg ka, Chancellier of Legation of Sweden and Norway, weeny sli dik aeataiaatiaar tah Sr ae {ew CONS! . ¢ season the Premier and | convey it o «Pere La Chaise, and 1s tern: the leader of the opposition are to be seen at each | chariot, with am unpretendiag” Ron it, | 10d to the formation of en international commission, | ation, prompted by hostility to the present pouitical other's receptions, and nothing could be more cor- | was the same which had carried Baron de Koths- | 804 set in motion oficial influence which finally de- | state of things, cot gtlte evidence of my ial than their private intercourse nar more un- | child to his last dwelling piace a few days becore. | clded the Porte to invite the various legatjons to | WR eves ty coniirm tt. Tie sumorings of the flinching than their public animosities. On the coftin iay two laurel Wreaths and one made peasantry in ‘The social side Of polities would. be comple'ely | of gold, such as Danie is figured with. ‘The laurel | Uaite with tt tn forming an international commis- | another fertile district of Castile, might be the vot in England if'it were not for tee personal | forone of these green wreacis was cat from a bush | #lon, composed of a delegate from each legation, | theme of no less eloquent lamentations. The gov- Biaues and prejudices of Ler Aajesty, tw Queen. | planted at assy by Mery; the ouler was @ brauch | whose duty it should be to consider the best mea- Epis me Ale pg itl netted wand a8 Roms ears avo, When she first assumed the crown, | from tue tree suading Tasso’s tomb, sures to be adopted for carrying out the humane de | eee tet ieee na termibio climax, im th the Queen confessed to Lord Melbourne that shé The only other interesting detail is that when the tress cannot = pipe ci Galad aucanementare ‘hated the tories,” by which #he meant thatehe | provessioi entered the last street it had to go | Sgn of the commission. A preliminary meeting of soavis thowea ap — ou i cee hated the tory statesmen with whom she was brought | through (a kiud of opening avenue to the cemetery) | the delegates was held at the imperial arsenal under | Provided with mites tm curled CMe ao ni SAN into olficlal contact. She confessed this as @ fault, | an old Italian was noticed sianding at the balcouly | the provisional jdency of Admiral Mustafa 16, Boney ml oe Lcniutmees. Pian ce and @ most grievous fault In a reign it un- | of a poor looking house. He was gaziug mournfully Leo: Sey tase co nave aeaie coke GML aye ou; a dat doubtedly was. Years hi times and par- | down and had ling out his mandoline, for Le 1s,a | Pacha, at which but few delegates appeared, Mr. | the Fate of ee ae o7 1H oe pvt ong e 1 be vid toan has to give up, and doe . is wo say, the principal liberal leaders are persouaily | live, which haa 40 oiten been tuned to the maescro’s | ‘e Members present the general object sought to | are mere begears under ine alsy disguise of ee a ner, She connes saan as — meiodies, ta t bring sous in no more. “They hung | be accomplished by the commission, and after some a a = yond a Bete 4 pa 4 well; she absol K . Gladstone. On| up their harps,” says febre 4 ¢ . c 0 . y the other hand, she is deeply at‘ached to | the meaning” Ws a Hebrew melody, and | discussion the commission adjourned until the 29th | iit hitie, ‘They insist upon being pald on f this i c| Lord ‘berdy, and has no warmer and closer | than’ the touching demonstration of tui | Of August, when it was fnally orgauized at the Li: | rainy days when no work Is practicable, on they could not peresy. Proceed on the trial without the presence of the defendant. Yet if the defendant once appears he is here for the |e ge of the whole trial. he goes away then he is not entitled to any consideration; but here the defendant is not present, and [think I would not be justifled in trying the cause. What shall be done in regard to this de(end- ant that does appear ? The District Attorney—Your Honor will see the im- propriety and the almost impossibility of trying one jefendant in these cases. ‘The nature of the whole charges 18 that of conspiracy on ail the indictments, ‘The charges run into that and of course we would have to show the connection throughout, and I think it Would be a great waste of time to try these indict- ments with only one defendant present, e defendants are not here and the case cannot be tried. 1 would say in regard to the defendant who has appeared here to-day, he has held himself amenable to the court and has conducted himseif with propriety under all the circumstances, and therefore under these peculiar circumstances he 1s undoubtedly entitled to indulgence and considera- tion. He ieft his business in Buffalo to come here, ready for this trial, and he 1s entitied to the notice the counsel suggests, that he may come here again. The case, after a few further brief remarks trom ALLEGED FELONIOUS ASSAULT.—Mrs. Ann Mow Laughlin, residing at No. 59 West Twenty-ninth. street, appeared before Justice Dodge, at the Jeffers son Market Police Court, yesterday, aud accused hef husband, John McLaughlin, with having on tne night of the 5th of December, between the hours off . twelve and one o'clock, fired from the sidewalk intal her window a pistol, the bullet of which entered thé shutter and lodged in the ceiling of her room, As ‘she had been attracted by a noise just before, she ‘Was standing near the window, and, aided ‘by ai bright light in her room, she discerned her husband,, with whom she has not ‘lived happily for some tum inthe act of waiking away. ‘tie accused den the a but Was comuitied io answer in default of $600 bail. ALLEGED BURGLARS ARRESTED.—Detectives Mow Givney and Willoughby, of the Third precinct, ni ticed, at one o’clock yesterday morning, several me acting suspiciously near the haliway of No, 22 Vesey street, So they made a rush and arrested three men, the'Court, was postponed for the present, who gave their names as Charles Williams, Thomas ‘The Blaisdell Whiskey Case. iene aa oa Brown, ew bem 2 . Bt in | ‘This oft referred to and long pending case was | Session a bag, a “jimmy” and & lov of skeleton keys,’ called on yesterday morning, ae in consequence ‘of | Alock which had been used to fasten an iron scree: friendship Ulan that which sie entertains for Mr. | poor Italian. Princess Mathilde and Princess Bona: | Man Odassi—oMice of captain of the port—the fol- | the good ground that bad weather dves not interfere | Tie tiene of two important witnesses for the gov- | OVer & glass door leading from the hallway into racil. The social circle of royalty is therefore | parte were in one of the side teibunes of fowing del Putt thelt goon epPveeations yuey contend. that the | eruinent the trist ‘was postponed til Monday ext. | Store of McNary & Aruold, dealers in ‘arugistat a im two. The Court ougut to be neutral | and it said in seer vand, where great politicians of all parties can eet and either reconcile or mitigate their differ- tes belng present:—Turkey, Saal Bey, president; Captain Achmet Bey, Navy; Englan goods, had also been broken off with the intention of robbing the store. The prisoners were locked up im SUPREME COURT—GENERAL TERM. the Chambers street poiice station and subsequently —_— artaigned before Justice Dowling, at tue Tombs, whi A “Rather Sharp” Oil Speculation—“Taken | on the complaint of Francis Kk, Arpold, held all of In,” but Not “Done For.” the constr Ad answer ee courte = ote Bea. sions. Hams 18 twenty-eighi, a native of Connec- Before Judges Ingraham, Mullin and Dantels. ticut, and lives at 32 Oliver etreet, Lyuch is twenty- Getty and Others, Respondents, vs. Jeremiah Dev- | two, & native of New York, and resides at 325 East lin and Others, Appellants,—Iu 1865 the plainiids, | Eighteenth street. Brown ts a native of New Yor! four in number, subscribed to a paper, the avowed pe -two, and gave his residence as Soi s'nl object of the originators being the purchase of oll lands in Ohio, at the price of $125,000, The subserip- STATEN ISLAND INTELLIGENCE. tions were to be paid to Daniel Devlin, “trustee for ae agers,” n propert: t baagsintrnh ne ote sed engdlondion hehe hg Man named Albert Benton, residing at New righ ve taken in his name. The piainuitts subscribed tn ton, while ing to his house on the three good faith, and paid each the sum of $5,000 to the | tO, while procecding to oe ae kel picked “trustee.”’ John Bryan, one of the defendants, also | of his purse, containing about fifty do.lars, subscribed to the fund, and did so in bad faith, not PAINFUL ACCIDENT.—AS Mr. Andrew Burke, tending to pay His bubseription, He was in’ fact the well of ane property, Which cost hitn much | farmer itving at Clifton, was yesterday splitting a less than $125,000, but he concealed his owner- | large tree which had been blown down a few nights ship and the cost of tie property from the | «2, the axe glanced aside, and, striking Hannab that we kimpress Ww. With thein also, quite at the back, Comipiegne In order to attend ‘i Bad ences. The Court of St. James, on the contrary, 18 ite is tw Raid to have got In a smal! coupe way aud Mewetien decidedly hostile ground for the pronounced liberals, h was ordered to Keep up with ciat of Princess | Holland, M. Traver ud they Senture Within the charmed circle trem: | Mathilde on leaving the station, Marinitz; Russi Rugavite ecensl 1 mical c : angy and boy The Queen, they say, 18 with ‘The death of M. Kerryer is the other at sensa- | chon: Portugal, Nir. Schott. An executive sub-com- aot ae - isi oan eribie to, renee on witha sare. 9 sorties, Mr. raeli, in his sensible way, has | tion now. Not once as his spirit been broken siace | mittee was appointed, consistiag of Captain Achmet | Siderations. possi ul 5 often hinted at the same thing during the last Par- | he felt the approach of death, and the preparations a 4, ing people, in| bie to leave it to perish go lo! as r 5 " Bey, Lieutenant Woods aud Mr. Dingler. The result Hament, ‘The public repeated the same statement | he has writien and ordained jor his burial prove that | of the commission up to the present time is that Tis Comat Con iia greater wuors, iment oe when they saw baif @ dozen persons of the blood | he believes fis soul will outitve it ail. a e ) Foyul come down to Parluainent to listen to ioug | attachment be stil shows to earthy sxrougholda to Freee ates eT Gerona tie, Asatio muerte obtained on more ressonabieteres; but tse gover ee eet inn eae eer aS trapiored batons he ‘ake me to Anger. | entrance to the Bosphorus. aay better souret; The calauity comes down p08 - vi J fore he was carried there. I | form of a cone and painted In red and white horizon- her legitimate fofuence vy taking sides It pare | kared Woes Dre Neluton Toye und, all are | been given to the lighthouse at Karu-bournow. The eee ora eeimaisiy “doen wast itcan.” Whether poities, “Liberal poliiiciane, velloving that the tories | hot stand. the” journey, “ne “mney Could | Asiatic, beacons are surmounted with globes apd | jxg ‘niouna will ultimately be alequate to the wants 4 J ainted Li \7 , like 1e hthouse, 10 ~ have the Queen completely under the thumb, are | sent for the famous Maitre” Marie. | Dritted eRe wee moons ie from thirty to Ark Whether any Treasury o ration wil carry it through ‘Gne of these ts tuat which accuses her of resoving | to Ta ted "40 Wun F Near crak | etn A ienfatip pn A I ap lation aust live ‘of die. ate problems which time ct 7 o 4 a ® LJ at the arsenal, which, as soon a8 er ulp- echt aaie lrvicoan (uk Bar mal | Cuno yee Agena 7, | ee aive in gad we nenoraa aa | htt ar pe ant teat voted out of office. Everybody agrees that although | Then he re -! eighteen miles due west of the entrance of the Bos- | wich famine is apt to suggest may complicate po- sted to have @ desk brought to | : this might be flue partisan strategy on the part of | and be adi als to. his wily butued oF | Pwenty-eight and ening feet 10, Nelght. A cofred | Utica dimenities or aggravate Anancial embarrass, Disraeli, it would be Mn outrageous act on the part | destroyed twenty-eight and thirty feet in height. A colo ; Vernment come off atccesaful uld be compromising to | Lithographic print hak, been iasved with notes in Fa eteie tie elaine upon the gratitnde of 7 Y . U wages should pe tne same for good or bad workmen, Jeutenatit HF. Woods; United States, Mr. Pages | And'aamit uo difference in behalf of assiduous indus: sons Greece, M, Miaouly; | {¥ or skilled labor. What is done in Madrfd becomes Prussia, M. Dingler; Spal + | the rule for other large centres of population. Stur- yer Sneio ay | Yation im the country breeds communism in the PICKPOCKETS ON STATEN ISLAND BOATS.—A entie~ 0! tue Queen, for the whole country has accepied | the living. were entombed iu me, and 1 | Turkish Engleh, French god Italian, sowing the plaiuntifs, and signed the agreement in the - ladevone aa the next, Pree. Another, rumor ie Aull wot, cor out beyond my tomb,” tie said. | position Ot the beanoue: iz the country will be unbounded, pected Cg i ee oe ae Eerste, on tee leg. injured une iinib eo severely. twe petra 49 aaure the rejecuon of the Irisn | go out fur Stine aaa me wout eed his Wanted jo | | Soundings have also been taken in the Binck Ses Ambitions Designs of General Prim. from saveéetve BO ae ene aun ot ad teen | tat amputation may becume uccossary, verde Gn Ser naer, Hotes ne’, Lond ie £2,0ut for bd he wont. It did bin good. On | to the depth of about 100 fathoms, for eighteen or |, a casio ange =We Wats to Teccrd » Wm eho : oug 5, larger scocant bad been sede A ae oessary. use the liberal Premier shoul insist «7 retarn he ciiled Dr. Nelaton twenty miles off the coast from Chesmedjik to Killa, The London Spe . als rs t ah subseri for, but many of tue subscripl . ‘ pon | going to die Wo-day,”’ be began. for a distance of fltesn miles on cach side the strait, | disinct impression which we have long resisied, | made in bad faith. Deviin did not appropriate tue WESTCHESTE INTELLIGENGE, creating new cert to Carry the vill, ‘ihi# | to Augerville.” Hf 00,000 to the purchase of the lands im question, but oticially denied to-day. Auother re- | fur cloak and ¢ Fi me aut it over to Bryan and received in exchange for it y . co Foo.o0o stares of glock of tno Federal Uil aud. Coal |. V2et FARMS FnanuoLosns’ Assocation. " Company, Which he distributed on the books of that | Nas been organized @ Freeholders’ Association 0 company among the subscribers to the agreement for | the First Election District «/ too town of Wert ee tone fe subactibere ea Well Tuding tivo haa | Farms, the object of whici: i+ to reduce taxation fot paid a doilar on their subscriptions. On the death | @2d promote tho general wellu > of the frecholdcts of Daniel Deviin, in 1867, the plaintiff, ascertaini: and taxpayers of sald towu. 1; has bepoms tie these facts, tendered to his executors a conveyance opinion of many that such an ovcanization a A of the apparent interest of the plainthTs in the stock | So¥e 18 NOW Novessary to prevent vie Fapid tnerenee of the Federal O11 Company aud demanded repay- | Of taxation and to improve in a legiimate and Ke was accordingly wrapped ina i of the bot that General Prim |p playing either for veyed to the Lyons station, for the | fully inarced pe ae ae ee OT il be iected gs | @ dictatorahip or an infperial crown. He is accu. t © effect that the Queen Will refuse lo | Keatof the Berryers ia many leagues down towards | soon as the lightanip is putin place. We may there. | mulating troops in Madrid, he ts carctully weeding such ihe reformed Partiament ip Auvergne. Wien he stopped at the Brosse station | fore hope for an aimost total cesaation of the | te army, heis making himself popular by every va- to a ! of royal acquiesecen ihere Was another ha f hour's drive togothrough, but | casualties which have so frequently happened | Fety of military concession and military sternness, neue of constituency and in the verdict pu he backed outright and left; amiled at the houses | through mistaking the ‘“falee entrance” ta ‘the | and he does not Ox a@ date for the meeting of the e upou the Jrish Chorch question would | and autumn gardens, brought up lucid recollections | mouth of the Bosphorus, which It #0 nearly resem- | Cortes. Weare also greatly mistaken if he is not vic, and is, in fact, required by etiquette | and the spark of lus youth seemed to fitter in tie | bles tat many snips have beeu lost by running for | Suthorizing what the Bonspartiata call tentatives, fie He ©Xigencles of the criia. “The liveral organ, | gray mist of Lis eye. When he reached the chateau, | it until too late to excape. Hocket batieries, which | Placards, articles and letters in foreign journals. | A quence pte ol a out lg a moe ol * Seo Rt ed 4 bright fire had been kindied aad the old hall | have also been ordered in Kugland, are to be ste eg rule a Abad on ed eaten ee on ir \d . 0 gy mse! " Queen sbali do herd . rey oy Fy — laid out to jook best, he sat down on an easy | tioned at four poinis on each coast. Several life- jut if Prim feels this, and feels competen' 2 3 $5oZ ip the ep = fuskur to be assisted, and repeating man, boat are also to bo ke, o exercise it, and yet loves liberty, we trast he will . Wil, Lom ertatn: wut the prevalent impression ts ain at honor neg inh, There wae inet. | position for aVing alt egies ast convenient | Proclatin hinwelt King, and not Geser. Liberty is | ment of thelr subscriptions, and upontnon-compll. | €conomical manner the genoral woifare Of te town: burtiu), ‘ido it reluctantly, and that impression | ble sweetness inshia voice. His sister, the Duchess | the protection of those who may be rescued from | possible under @ very strongly monarciical regime, | ance with that demand brought this sult to rescind Drata FROM INTeEMPERANCE.—Thomas Carter, of im the second pia of Riares, came aud he pressed her to him in a long | drowning on @ Coast where there are few habitations | PUt aot uuder @ Napoleonic empire. the original agreement; to compel the executors and | west Farms, on opening his front door about hair ‘ ye en ls *, itinevident that, although the | embrace. This caused some emotion, which for ® | retuge houses baye been erected at various potnta, a ena Bryan to account for the money collected r" Thursday morning 8a @ Woman. Nuanie hon Tue. tie majority of her sub | moment weakened him, but the duchess having re- | in wiick will be kept auc articles of provisions LONG ISLAND INTELLIGENCE. under i) to have the money disiribuied Past atx o'clock on Thursday “ {eee vorty expresnce itt wlectious show that the | tired he sent for all his wervania, and when he had | and clothing as may te needed for the ra — among those entitied to it; to havo tue! a Mrs, Mary Bolen, lying on his stoop, and on goin party expresses the genuine sentiment of the | spoken to each be slipped and cell on the foor. Two | lief of shipwrecked imatinera, Since the Cri ULosing OF AN EXTENSIVE DISTILLERY.—The ex- | oll company and its stockholders adjudged to"! to her found her to be quite dead. From the evi- he lands an in trust to secure such re- distribution, aid for auch other, Feller as might ve | dence taken at the Inquest tt appears that she was proper. One of the traudulent subscribers to the | of very intemperate habite and had only that morn. al agreement was Robert H. Arkenburgh, who | ing been found lying im the street by Thomas Gilney ‘was made @ defendant, and he and Deviin’s execu- | and removed OF tod to Carter's stoop, where she tors demurred to the complaint for lack of merits | was subsequently found as stated. Coroner Robins and ruisjoinder of causes of action. At Special | son, in view of these facts, reudered @ verdict of ‘Term their demurrers were overruled, and they ap- | death from apoplexy, caused by Invemperance. pealed from that ruling. Deceased was a native of Scouland, somewhere be- Yesterday the case came before this court for ar- | tween forty-five and fifty years of age, and leaves gument on that appeal, and the Court afirmed the | three children. known as the Bliss- churchmen of Kag- | “it is comforiabie everywhere, even low on the rejecting mnt in the) BMRB Sea, ‘ne | Ville Distillery, the largest in the country, is now ireland which Disraeli once po eloquence ytureh” in | ground.” He walked to his room, followed in silence Rea of Marmora and” the Archipelago | ander distraint by Collector Carman, and will be There can be no doubt of thelr yan denounced. to the family portraits, woen, raising ius eyes, he for | the mariner sees the “eyes of commerce” gieaming | Ald on the 16th inet, This establishment com- éunately 8 iowa are Gireotsy on ‘ws, ond anfor- | the first hme exciained, with bittersorrow, “Father! | out upon him and lighting hiro on his way to his | menced operations under the new Internal Revenue the Queen, Mer Majesty Musi, Cconego eee | Memeer destination. But, alas! among the vast fleets which | law on the ist of October last, and, it is stated by the ae; bak th tee a) A a Onmequently, give | Before M. Berryer left Paris he took the last sacra- | are constantly passing this great highway of na- | Collector, \d to the government in leas than two y & bed grace poe bas 4 | 4 and ia yielding | ment, assisted Ly Father Pontievoy, and the laat jet- | tous how vei do we deacry the American flag | | months 000, ment has @ claim 4 Eiaee Bue Iajares her seputavion and | ter le wrote in thls capital wus addressed to tbe | About a mont: the ships that had been collect: | againat the dlstiiery of $4 hence the sale under i ready tie foturement of | Comue de Chambord, ing at (be Dardapejies detasned by bead winds gyt | the hammer, vantr F untry upon the Iriah Churctrquestion, The Roman his Men stooped to help him up, but Berryer mo | mean war the Porte has made iberal ee tensive distillery at Bllesvill ees and hans CC the ne of Scotland, | tioned thein back. “This is home, and,” he added, | ments for lighting ils coma, and Jend unite 10 condemning th: