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NEW YORK HERALD, WEDN ESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1869.—TRIPLE - SHEET. 5 | nua Serica sani a ennialy nipilalipenaatia almost at once became value thn the country now, at least, | the tol, unmindful of the destruction of value, | that forfeiture incurred 4) the continuance of eleven o'clock, to which hour the court | Catesby’s “Natural Hisvory.” £2 0; Hamilton's Based upon waa i eckungd quer ihe most | susan crated irom anata alo producing bu ie starving of te aver aad the Fun aud devas: | Restities aay be ‘cuforced afterwards, ‘That was oa ee “Hilstory of the National Flag,” $72 60. Douseanions, the lands of the nation. Ly fe pad — ‘The Blaisdell-Eckel Case. ‘A LADY SERIOUSLY INJURED.—About two o'clock ‘The of the French experiment issue ly, Ought we to force ruin and distress upon Al return been y in that case reversed the decision of Obief ofa rite for anes Het eoamertoNe into gold the majority ‘of the people in order so to dot agitated ee eer Wi cone justice in the Maryland district to the con- ‘'This case, so long delayed, was to have come on yesterday morning the horses attached to a carriage and sliver has ever sinve been faithfully held up by | It is meediess for me to add amid ail | up to you the det %¢ at your | trary Therefore, up toate, 9 proper case for trial at the conclusion of the Stevenson cotton | in which was seated Madame De Riviere, of the every one who affirms that it is the law of necessity | these convulsions and revulsions the busi- | hands? W! of the have mn | the government can enforée an of forte in. that case was so abruptly terminated that | Spingier House, took fright and ran away. The lady ver can be money as an ox- | head of the country and sts currency, and the held to make to you from - | curred by the defendant in this case in respect to pro. case, but thatner side were not ready to proceed. It “i iad Paasiateth etsect smple and warning to violate | destruction of its values, the losses fell at last, | ances in this bealf? Not one; not one. Only reso- | Perty now claimed, notwithstanding | the Presi. ‘called on this mOraing 7 Was thrown out on the comer of Fourteenth stree law and as conclusive of possi- | as they must fall, upon the masses. Bread | lutions of boards of ‘ban! Proclamation with regard to the cessa- | Will be = Broadway, where she was Be Banas 4 ullty of so doing w inevitable depreciation | riots were not ; productive industry was oon. tion of hostilities. There is no doubt about | ‘The Whiskey Ring Alleged Perjury Sagat, of See Seer ND Pee, oe bert and ruin of of people, however d; the workshops, and mills were I stand here, therefore, for inconvertible But the difficulty in this case lies back of all | aivah Blaisdell, Abijah Richardson, Abraham er residence. Her phys yedaoanced Der in- stable, rich, pow: unem] ‘and unpaid; ite value | money, the greenback, w! has our bat and it is here, the government fails to ‘Jenners and Alfred A. Belknap, Juries of a serious character. Prosperous, ' w! enture to have ® our thus lost is never regained by & rise in prices or 8 and.saved our country, which has been held by us | prove the first material in the information | Powelson, Henry Carrurs oy EscaPep Convicrs.—On Monday was te ti i tig Mb rr Sersan shhh ot oy tue-goly com? | liven'ot aren eeinewesea al oar "angers easenion: of the property in’ each a taaanen. that ‘ asians against msn night Devid Brennan, comvicted of burglary, and ny “ ives of our Ly it " tem made "upon, the founders of our republic. moaity that at the instant of production, | and the Orphanage of thelr ‘children. 1 here Ehey'Rave'a right to enforos dat right of posseaaion have Bag. & Bee Philip Hartz, convicted of murder and sentenced to Contemporaries can never weigh and¢deter- | and if not them put to use is lost forever.” rn career view ia be hung, but who cheated the gallows through aes, with such precision as those who come | are the results daring the lifetime of the | of forty executive clemency, escaped from the penitentiary ‘them may do, causes and effects of govern- ernment, shows have always follow: which, HM at Trenton, N.J. they. secreted themselves on & ley might not then see as We now to condnet the business of the coun ision are stil 18 CmENOay eter A binuaD. W (avel train, came into Jersey Clty and crossed to wee that there were two causes which made the | Payments, or, in other words, with a ‘of industry and money which | Maryland district, to the effect that the clear inter- fp alae, Caran - ‘warrants | New York, where they were jay morning and mandats of the French revolution in- medium su; to be always con’ the ‘in war and has given it Pretation of that section is that no property | Dail pending Tail to peechew indict | afrested by officers Higgina Grant, of the Six- valueless, Both these forms of security | which never can be converted into gold and silver, appiness peace. To it four men | can be condemned under thas section unless | and cave ditional rahe d teenth precinct, and:seut back to their old quarters Tecate up portion af the soassca Tanda of the Letus t unine and s00 if wet fndebted for elevation from that trail of degradar Without Sine point, Tam not satiated: ne ae Q “ ion Us now ext see if we on l- Hobies aod priests of France, called by the revolu- | with our curreacy upon s supposed im whieh it hss bed, enveloped for 1 | not the declaration of the fifth section | Returns of processes having been made and no exw opus tapaameogptyg that sev. tiseey “Su veceneas toe national d low, ence has shown that it stand for that money, therefore, which is by far tne | Of the act, that for the offence set forth the property | claimants appearing for any of the following named wi 'y arrived at this port with ue of land to him who claims te ow! beyond human power to regulate or con! agen ame instrument of of an en- | shall be forfeited to the United States inasmuch as by defanit:. fresh frozen herring on endeavoring to pass the composed of two essential elements—productive- tain. ‘or finances of the country, and free than gola silver, the | the claim is based upon the statute and the whole Srgeeny wes comteneet y ocean deroes of spirits, | Custom House muster, as heretofore, tree of duty, Of iand is of little worth tothe claimant apd the ae ae rie mnt ob eechanee ee nave bound oa ‘busi- een one the inanth pection must be prey eonnec- snipped from Lancaster, Pay; one barrel of spirits, | were ae until @ duty of one-haif cent had .o bya he distillery | been on the on the ground surance of title was exactly what the foot. tion with the fifth. And the ninth section Que Copper still and worm, found at ot. make to” tne nolder. Besides, tnd bankers “of ‘turope? “We. have ado NEW YORK CITY vides “That Inga of the’ fortelture | NO. 520 Went Fifty.frat street, amd real estate and | iat, the, Hak were, not, tear tnt preserved. back upon that time a8 we do, it standard of value, which they control . of the pro claimed, must be pursued in premises connected tnerewith, through a t freezer enters duty free, and bo ayy to see why the French paper money for. their pur nt for Shets promperi any col of the United States in any t where the men in the herring interest have put the follow- THE COURTS. the pare, oy may have ben saken Ant Deo: SUPREME COURT—CIRCUIT—PAAT I. ing puzzler to the Custom House authoritles:— Si ee a, whether gold, att puneetiin. the ch ve ji —— ‘ln hat reserved—sal goes or war, or attempt to or such cor “ ver, land, limb oF lifes nether was worth an hour's Balance of power ‘among the governments of Europe, SENEAAS,.. ating. a; sani: a8 Mid Liability of Common Carriere—Verdict Agal through 8 patent freezer or erring froaen by" na bu on meer rT they me seen fit to lower or raise their re UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT. = poe apn district. aa wi of the mensions a Railread Company. ture to-morro' gold, our based us ex- — prev pony ard heripepyer Before Judge Cardozo. Higrway Ronpery,—A daring highway robbery yw, the judge n thereon, w; the knife of the lotine, like the rain ¥ Yeon shoe! quadruple | The Great Cotton Case—Argument Coune | te fifth section is to be enforced “only” by zare of jeaven, ‘ei! alike on the just and ite unjust, He | bre seetina: ray aon tartar caver, and zpid lic e ‘The J ¢ ct | Of the property, and that it cannot Vaforeed in | Goorin vs. The Baltinore and Onto Raitrotd | pas just been reported as having been committed ‘who at oné moment held the assignas olaimiug titie | both as standards’ of value, whenever the caprice | %¢!—~Lmportant Decision— jury Instru any other manner. And inasmuch as the whole right | company.—The plaintiff in this case was the con- | in front of the Hoboke n ferry (Barclay street) house to the conilscated estates at the next had his own | of some Indian prince or ese Merchant chooses ed to Find fer the Defendant Stevenson and | is statutory, if Congress thought fit to limit the stat- estate contlacated with the assignats which he held. | to call for silver in payment of the commodities we ‘Against the Gevernment—The Ruling of | Utory Fight ‘of the United States to a forfeiture to be | Signe of @ large quantity of bar iron in bundles, | on Friday night last. About eight o'clock on that Candidly and jnetiy considered, can it begald thata |r any other nation import from the East, and ha be enforced by seizure onty of the. property, and while | which was forwarded by the consignors via the de- | evening a German gentleman, while passing down fair argument ought to be drawn to maintain that | “thereby raises it to & premium in co! with | the Court to be Appealed Against. the government 18 #0 limited, and inasmuch 9s that { fendants’ road. After delivery to the defendants, | the street to the ferry, observed a stranger walking hen our gold and silver go out, not at the Before Judge Blatchford. Js its only right, ang if unable to seize the propel and while in transit, three bundles of the property | beside him, but did not mypotenr foul play at his ahs teas a er) pears ie, Career ay ee eb States their righ Ww. tthe less ie paper money of France was | value fixed by us as coin but at value at whi The ited vs, Vernon K, Slevenson.—Thit eir right, consequently, to the property not setzer the arrival of the tro: its destina- | hands. le cl fest street the valueless when and were nothing was valuable? | they are taken simply as Dallion. Gold 1s sill fur- | care cg niarnan pers pis ee oases Goes not come into being and it Unatted to an ttn. | Ton’towas walonded aud paced, ona whatt oF land: | tipped the German, Wwho ‘fei. ‘He then seized Mima Every student of the history of our country | ther depressed in value in comparison with silver, ay perfect right. Congress has not gone further | ing, where it was seriously injured by a subsequent | and shoving his head down into the mud relieved. will ‘remember that, while at the orgamuzation | which is the sole standard of the principal commer- | usual rising of the court, to give the remainder of | than to » “You can have the property ‘storm. Plaintiff had been previously notified | him of-his wallet and fifty dollars. The victim of ot the government the standard of value by | cial countries of Furope save Engiand; it is thu | the day and up to yesterday mornt: as an interv: if you can selve_ it.’ But if by any] py th mpany that the goods were re: for re- | this out which was perpetrated within a few law was id nd silver, yet, in fact, the | drawn very rapidiy te Europe to fill the vacuum rg Loy. er pt ge witn we reason the defendant himself, or anyone acting for moval. ie sued in this court for the valus of the yards of the ferry house, ‘after clearing his mouth currency of the United States was even at that | caused by the enormous exportation of silver to him, has 80 disposed of the property that the govern- jamage accrued to the tron placed | and eyes of the mud, reported the facts to the officer “ Nee é Leonie Sosa >) On post, but too late’ to secure the arrest of the high- period engraved paper, presumed to be, but not | China, Ja] and India. The extent of this drain | in the case might arrive to] give their testimony. | ment cannot seize it and me possessed of it, ounting in all to $660. convertible at the wall Of the holder into’ coin; for upon the ee of Europe and the necessary rise in | Atthe opening of the court Mr. Courtney intimated then the government cannot enforce the forfeiture, ne ee ee the ju that the defendants { Wayman. one of the acts of the first a8 Was to establish "| price as compared with gold, and the consequent | to ine Bench the non-arrival of the expected witness, That is entirely consistent with the argument of | were habie cules antitank: and reasonable time | ARRIVAL OF THE REMAINS OF THE LATE DARWIN @ Bank-of the United States, to issue what was in- | necessary flow of jd from those countries counsel, but that the power is limited which he psed une tit notice convertible currency, Which, a8 the act reads, “will | where it has a a value as compared with | and that he was In consequence compelied to rest his | latmed to be enerai and while the Court, with panialape eens panting lacy they were | 4 Fomey.—The remains off Darwin A. Finney, uctive case. de pi of considerable advantages to trade | silver, hke England and this count where counsel, understands it literally, it pute a different yagemen, but that the burden of proof | member of the House of Representatives, from and industry in general.” ‘The stock was to be paid gold is the ‘standard of value, may he seen ‘The Court—I wish to hear counsel’s views on the | interpretation upon the statute from that put on it ry tothe Eaury dom 1e agtoved'en the plaintiff. ii Meadville, Pa., arrived at this port on board the ship for, oue-iourth gold and three-fourths in the | from data derived from the books of the Orien- | law of the case. by the counsel for the government. ‘ There have ‘The jury found @ verdict for the plaincit in the full | Gity of New York, from Antwerp, on Sunday last, public debt of the United States, thus making at | tal Steam Navigation Uomyany, through whose ARGUMENT OF COUNSEL. been @ great many cases down to the last case de- | sum claimed. yo aa es Oolonel, Prin Ne. % Astor House. early day the public dedi a basis of three. | agency alone the sum of ‘$00,004,055 was transported | . Mr. B. K. Phelps, Assistant United ‘States District | cided (8th Howard), which lays down te law in gen- = eee Cubans apenthied ‘te, tame) fourths, at least, the currency of the Unitea | to Asia from England solely in '1866, and increasea | Attorney, then proceeded to submit the points of | eral lanquage, as cited by counsel. COURT OF COMMON PLEASSENERAL TERI. itu ase 'S. Newton Pettis, of Pa,, in the folowing year to $33,976,160, ‘To this add the | law on which the government relied for the con- ‘The Court then referred to several decisions as hair & re Woodward, of Pa,; Charles O'N ANOTHER ADVANTAGEOUS PROVISION. sum of $16,763 446 from ‘the Test of Europe, and we | demnation of the cotton in question. He contended | rendered by the courts applicabie to thie case, | Interesting Question as to the Liability of | Cf put) Tay rence ‘Myers, of Pa, and James Gy Another provision which will claim our attention | have $100,729,606 as a a startling eMux tn silver only that the cotton in the suit became forfeited to the | the laspof which was thatin sth Howard, delivered Steamboat Companies. Blaine of Me. The undertaker from Pniladelphia, fg that the notes were to be recewabie in all pay- | from: Europe to the East in @ single year, or more | United States by force of the Non-intercourse act, | by Judge Wayne, and continued:— ‘ Bs sent by the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House of Rep: ‘ments to the United States, thus giving ita bills one | than double the annual yield of all the silver mines | by transportation from one State to another, and ‘That decision must be considered as going ni Before Judges Daly, Brady and Barrett. reoentasiven, ork be at the Astor House this “9 ue al tenders uow have. Anotuer provi- | that su ‘Burope and America. To this must be | this irrespective of the fact that both the States | further than the question before the court; and it is Macklin vs. The New Jersey Steamboat Company.— morn: PP inten abating Reetee ole'| added ie One tonth of that amount in gold hamed were in rebellion, See the language of the | contrary, in my judgment, to sound principle and | nis action was brought to Dede wataa or eerie fe ee ete eee ee ee eee that while it might issue ten million dollars of circu- | $10,000,000, It will be observed that half this | acta, regulations of the Treasury and decisions in | reason—certainly there has been no case which sus- ng may te ° ae rom the vessel ori eee, 1D ol was to gO into operation when four | amount of silver must be taken each year from the ibe ip. Biatchford’s decision on schooner Falcon, | tains it—that the United States ‘can enforce'a for- | apparel lost on board of the company’s vessel on a b tryetnd fe Pepe te te iyi ttt aur . ir housand dollars, or four per cent | circulation of Europe—say $50,000,000—and its place le cases, 62; schooner Captain speddon, Bi. } feiture of RM & suit of the kind now before | trip to Albany in Angust, 1865. ‘A verdict was ren- Hee caee and tonenseteae PABetel t an Gala a iver of capiial lad been | supplied with gold; and both these exports of | prize cases, 127. the court, by that the forfeiture, as be- + iis an in e Srnerpie that its zpscle to the rast fare independent of that By force of the confiscation acts, and that neither | tween the defendant and the government, was com. dered by jury 13 err of plaintiff, from which the id EF r kof which circuit ag money, Wel ai from America and are | individual pardon nor acts of general amnesty are | plete and perfect at the time of the co: company appe: ta . ’ Wecnteeconwanstta ane sold ‘and ‘piver. But aoe ee eee eat iot xr | any defence to this claim of forfeiture. ‘That these | the omence, ‘without any Judicial procesdl Mr. W. 'P. Preniice, counsel for \oerinagr sr TOE ‘ELECTION FRAUDS, dor tts operutions tne United *Skitea Ww fe mines of California, ‘The most careless | are not pleaded, and, if pleaded, they could only | against cither the eriithe Gesed-<| Gaimed.. that. there. was a: reenieson of «me ee ee liable gave to the extent of one-fifth of the stock | consideration of this fj vely show the | be an effectunl shield against penalties conditioned | ant. at the time. spective of this—even | Company which requiaited in oy Probable Early Adjournment of the Commit. wretch eh hcl atc, ae | Ret i Sua ot ager af! | Ubinas Besta twa a | aoa Suit ata at | Foomand aH ee, naw faied | foo—Tho “eral Dinca” to be Leaked pina rohibit was ol m Ly a r le Z Gir gnaia aceighain, of cents ake, prcamtiiuan, oc Up fhe elttux of Bont amcount | fore to the GheMy, ée.,” but could not possibly 1 niunk theoreti deseribed by tne A section to comply with the regulation comput After—Naturalization Statistice—The Other el should emit bills of credit the mecessities of | kin 6 ‘the people for money to develop the resources of | el ae firing the year 1856, and nine times in | apply to forfeiture incurred under Non.mntercourse | of the connection with the ninth sec- par a fin he maracas Ae ompany | Side of “Larry” Farrel?s Yarn. {the country was go controlliug. thatevery State es- | 186%, quadrupling itin amount and in other forleiture gongs ed upon the sit- | tion, is a forfeiture that can be enforced only by a company had done all in ita power to give notice of | The Congressional Committee appointed to inves- tablistied banks to iasue bills Which suould gigculate | bankruptcy and suspeusion in Novem! \ ion or use of the property itself, independent of | seizure of the property in rem, and therefore cannot gueh to every ager. this in ‘as money, the basis of which was Honiinal ‘one- | year. I have taken this b gees for comparison as it | the personal character or status of the peraon exer- | be enforced in this action, even if yon ew | or Mr nee ‘Macklin, (or piaiuit, contended that tigate the alleged election frauds in State was fourth im specie. In the light in Wich we now view | Was before our war of rebollion and the cotton | Clalng control or claiming ownership of the Secretary of the Treasury are to be considered as the company had no power to make such & a- | Session all day yesterday and examined a large nom” pare re sane f SLytg pani they would seem oa, which so woe rein the Ruane of a Bi ecto in atta that ti Bee oh es eetunatione tion; that the regulation wes unreasonable, inas- | ber of witnesses, mainly of the lower social orders. within the inhinits cons: and. “This great drain es on. Is it w! stan . felted effec d ~ he gb et ae therefore, by femislative ear to force a return | A very complete review of all the cases and an- | these regulations made by the Secretary of the much i) it Prevenied passenger using or having Of course the greater proportion of their witnesses cause it ig only a patent evasion to allow the States tr wo ea. | Nouncement of this doctrine in the opinion of Judge | Treasury in pursuance of the act of 1862, that he ecessaril: this class, as they 4 soyeines ieee “Owner®, vo do’ taat Which pared, Our Bro actions exchanged ant Sranaports, pee A be itr hed Te pe eaees 15 Amer- a & x ete m the cone cton of Las S m8 the an Sea cae reieal and watch he eilght aoe a aan ne aay fete ae ae ments by{ which be emsel Ith to be distribu and our industries to 1 rted Rey- ares yperty hall .% doing. Thus the orcakare. mane and did “ao goverped he ry basis of which 1s controlled and | enue Record, Meh Dp. 106, seacottinie 68 thd wee be seized fm violation of the pata hat the regulation was not | other men,worse, or at least equally bad, accomphsh’ very ry regulations | 89m [. ‘What wus Srohivited to the creator. Nor is it sur. | Nuctuated not only by the interesia and commerce of | Caldwell vs. the United States, & Howard, #81:— | shall be forfeited to the United States, yet the oe eee is Knowledge. objects of an illegal nature, and who, though the’ that this State 1 the Christian and civilized world, but by the tradé | “The forfeiture 1s the statutory transfer of right to | fourth section says:—The proceedings for forfeiture a aeiaenid ‘ acceia was held * Pane pamatbctlenas and needs spite half civilized and barbarous nations | the goods at the time the offence ts commltted.” | accruing under the act shall be_pursued in the mode WARINE COURT. instigation and ee inetd transactions, cause the Common convenience and necessity of the | of the East ‘The right to the goods beihg vested in the United b persinop) by the eighth and nintn sections of 0 may be traced to them, have generally wi always have, as they always will, set GOLD THE INSTRUMENT OF TYRANTS. States by the commission of the offence, any inter- e act of 1861, of which this is supplementary. } yuage Curtis’: Views on the Dispossess Pro- | matters so that less wealthy or less cunning men’ fwide the written provisions of consttational ‘law. Instead of this money, the instrument of tyrants, | meddling with them afterwards is a conversion, | So that in that sense the construction of the act of Will Not Issue ‘Buch W: shall “do the dirty work.” “Salus popull suprema est lec’ has ever been, as it | Which has wrought all these evils, I propose a paper { more especially if it be by the party who committed | 1862 is precisely similar to that of 1861, and theref< cess—He jot, Any Suc! ‘are scius serine ane ever should be, tne interpreter and complement of | currency, admittedly the cheapest and most conve- the forfeiting offence, and the right of the pied the forfeiture must be in! ed ¥, as: rants. The committee will, probi ty, porarily Go utah tra ates Sanh fang 0 | ula oh ou pon de | Ba maa a oh Ot? | Berea mtg UB S2zEDy nui’ expremy tgs | T0205 Hoon ov ax texas stra or serine Bi ey m8 ey eros Ye reckarvered 182511, the’ country remained’ With | eee ene earerliy, eimancipaten Irom, the con ti Mele n"and iano other way, | A8many applications have been made to me by | and the sub committee will, it ts expected, proceed 4 Despard, 67 R. 112 United * 1, “by & 3 eil- ey Eig oy ‘ity, emancipated from the con- | kins vs. pa inited states vs. 1,96) A eigure to some of the interior counties of the State where, Sah may anton gurtensy cltbough ant ons, whether civilized or bar- | bags coffee, § Cr., $08.” United States vs. 350 chests id and ro ver were standards of value until 1817, when ie next statute of Al it, 1861, and I con- | the bar to grant “dispossess process,’’ I desire to in- i tates: baror 1s the currency for a free le, strot of tea; 12 ton, 486.) sider these two acts ing ther, because the; if half that is promised to be develo} actually is another, Bank of the United States went mto | Oorngh to malua ever ouer of ther Institutions |. Ieit be urged that the rnle is applicable here that | are afterwards coupled togetner in, the Teguisuans | rm the profession, throagh the columns of your. | © At Tee peel Mg dag perdu districts od of twenty years, and then wound up ity | against the world, whose governments they have | if the statate declaring a forfeiture at the same time ‘The act of August Only provides that if any journal, that I have never iasued such process, that ‘@furs, @ renewal of -it8 charter ha fated | 8htagonized; strong enough to sustain the measure | points out a remedy, that remedy must be followed | dui an insurrection, after the President I never will tssue such process, the legitimate busi- | Will experience a shaking up that will be sstonishing Dy the veto of President Jackson. It will oe be use | Of their business transactions with each other inde- | strictly, prevents maintaining this action. In reply | have deciared by proclamation that there 1s ness of the court all my time. if not entirely desirable. aD in- I funy further to rt to U tory Ct endent of kings, the least, or bankers, now the most | to that, tne Non-intercourse act is not such a statute, | surrection, shall have or give any property to aia | concur in the sentiments expressed in Mr. Justice eg ; tie. encaerecee ‘oan CBee potent sovereigns in the word, It isone of the bless- | and if it were it could not apply to Cored vo the | the insurrection, the President shal! cause such Bedford’s notice to the public upon the subject of legislation of Pro- ‘tho inc ndent Treas sb of Jt , amoi Inge of the war that we are enabled for the first timeto | defendant by his own act rend perty to be seized, condemned and confiscated, and | jandlords and tenants. The proper channels for the , 1 Ab yet ll Eg bts of | business are the | by the committee shall be submitted to Congress hag the vi of which it-was enacted that stand alone in our industries‘and internai commerce | bie for the United States to proceed in rem, for that the confiscation shall take place in the District or | transaction of that class legal prety sy the United States were to be roy ae as we have in our institutions, It cannot fail to have | would be feign gs hint to profit by hisown wrong. | Circuit Court ben enn rr in admiralty | district courts of the city of New York. yet been decided upon, but among the measures whiclt collected in gold and silver, so that the currency in | atwtacted attention that the ouly remedy for all evils | Suppose that, to prevent its sewure and condemna- | Where the same shall se! &c. That statute GEO. M. CURTIS, Justice Marine Court. will in all likelihood ‘be urged and adopted will be ‘Which the goverument transacted Its buaness was | brought on @ currency convertible into specie | tion, defendant had burnt up the cotton in vod oo not deci: forfeiture at but Leyte te ; the repeal of all existing naturalization laws and traly specie. This practice, aa is well kno’ ‘ob- | When distress ls upon the merchant, rnin upon the. | sessiou, would he not be liable for its value, for | thé it it cause the ly to be semed, COURT OF GENERAL SESSIONS. the enactment of entirely new laws, which, without tamed until the war of the rebellion ana the manufacturer and disaster upon the banker; when | the damage occurring to the United States by his | and unless he causes It to be the statute docs extending the term of moe pb Rade of aliens ‘Tender act of February 25, 1862. But during ail cilg | the banks of the United Lay ed England and of } act? s not refer to it at ali. Therefore it w plain there can Before Judge Bedford. desirous of becoming cit or imposing any ‘Ume the currency of the le was paper issued | France could afford no aid has always been a suspen- ‘There 1s nothing in the form of pleeding to inter. | be no suit instituted uniesa the property is Arst . as caieash bs onerous obligations, will render the perpetration of by the bunks, sec by various legislative | sion of specie payments—i, ¢., by the use in these, | fere with our recovery. The title of the United a. There were but twelve cases. on the calendar to fraud in naturalization an absolute imposstbility.: devices, ‘the actual security for the imme- | the foremost nations of the world, of an tnconvert- | States is asserted in the information, and there is ‘Then, agatn, the act of July 17, 1862, to insure the | disposed of yesterday. Three of these cases were | The law as projected will preclude, emene oes. diate redemption of this paper was nominally | tble paper = 9e4 If such currency is #0 potent | nothing Mmiting it, If the afidavit of Hambleton | speedy termination of the ion. In it no for- against an incorrigible jal! bird named Jonn Reilly. things, the possibility of any one judge al ap one-fourth gold and silver coin, supposed w | #6 remedy for all financial divcascs which beset a | be taken as part of the information, that clearly feiture is dc Ra A be that the-Presl- to the exammation and admission to the rights be in the banks, but ‘in fact about one-sixtl nation, whether in peace or war, whether arising |- bases the claim upon all the acts now urged. dent may Broperty ge on the support A HALL THIEF. citizenship more than 8 certain number per day. and its only other worth the actual value from, oeereena ae, over speculation or over invest- ‘The title and right of the Unived States hay of the army nived Now, it does not Edward Hartnett was indicted for the larceny of a ‘The commuttee has proved in this connection that, the notes and bills of their customers, discounted by | Ment, why may it not be equally beneficial as a fixed, | existed at, during and before the time appear in case that there was any Property coat from the hall of the residence of Mr. Stout, 349 | between the ist and ‘23d days of October last, in the’ ‘the banks on longer or shorter time, or waat is tech- | permanent and median to hg 4 conversion, there is nothing either in prin or | seized; and now the upon which the he Superior Court of this city, there were ni nically knowa as the “bank portiono,” As all these | the demands of business and the necessiues of law that Innits our proof of conversion to thé time | tton in the case ed—if the theory can be | Lexington avenne. He pleaded guilty as the case | qpwards of 28,000, men. In this interval ‘Dank hiotes circulated as money, purporting to be re- | People. laid in the information. (1 Philips on Evidence, fudged from what to it, for the informa- | was about to be proceeded with, and on motion of | Sun: were included, and deducting these there Acewabie in specie on demand, #s well as the depos- | SUCCESSFUL EXPERIMENTS OF AN INOONVERTIBLE | 854; Lester vs. Jewett, 1’ Kern, ; Lynn vs, ion embodies the aMidavil in iteelf as part of the | 114 counsel, Mr. Kinteing, the Court declined to press | are twenty working days, showing an average ita, which much exceeded the circulation, and as the CURKENOY? 4 Seldon, page 148; Cotter vs. pson, 22 Barber, | information, and the information embodies the afi- tag ¢ of about 1,300 persons naturalized per day. banks held in fact so smaH a percentage of coitr, tt 18 The experiment of an inconvertible currency has | 87; People va. Ryder, Hill in rem., age 236; Glenn | davit in itself ener of the ailidavit; each embraces | judgment until Friday next. were—ex one or two hun ‘out Qbvious that these promises could not be go redeem- | Deen tried on the most extended scale and through | ve. Harrison, 2 Hanford; Dietus vs. ) the other, and the construction to be put on A HARDENED CRIMINAL. of the total num| naturalized by one Justice. ed, 60 that, whenever the exigencies of the business |. long periods of ume and under tue most trying cir- In view of these iples it follows inevitably | both together it 1s quite evident that the . | Inthe Supreme Court a single judge naturalized, be- ‘of cate ‘or of the world called for any cu ces, and has never failed. In 1797, when the | that to deprive the United State of its action for dam- | theory proceeded on 1s that the cotton was John Reilly, over whose head there wore three in- ae sth and 23d ‘sum, the banks either refused to specie ae Britiah empire was threatened with rebellion in Ire- | ages for the conversion of this Lacy eh ga be an | the Lam a of the ublic authorities | dictments pending for burglary, pleaded guilty to | yong, It has also been ascertained contracting their circulation so diminished the | land, and was sustaining ail Burope against the vic- | act of gross injustice and render it less powerful to | concerned in the rebellion, and that by virtue of the | each offence. He was described as a noted house- | that a witness as to character, residence, &c., money of the country as to bring themselves wituin | ‘ries of Bonaparte with its subsidies of fol the | protect its own ts than the meanest suitor in its | sovereign right of the United Btates they were the | 1 reacer Judge Bedford in passing sentence said he | Persons presenting themsetves, has appeared for eS lmibas Which thet cireulaulon, ‘@ necessity | question came to her great War Minisver, ‘shall | courts, and make it easy foy any man who was ac- | Owners of it; that they became the owners of this if to the peopie, would not come in for redemption, the antegrity of the empire be lost? Shall Frauce | tuated by motives of av: treachery or hate to | property from the very moment that these rebel | did not believe im sensation sentences of twenty | that one man appeared and vouched for applicants It will be readily seen that the ducwuations inthe | overrun ail Europe and vireaten Great Britain tn the | deprive it of its property Without possibility of re- | authorities ciaimed tt. Whetner you cali this a suc- | years’ imprisonment; that the prisoner was a bed | fifty times ia one day, forty-four another, on a suc- amouut and value of the currency cauged by the | Hast, or shall the currency of the empire be the in- | dress. cession or not is of no consequence; that is the | inan, and that he would tage care that aterm of six | ceeding day thirty-seven, and again twenty-six. bauks being obliged to contract to meet every con. | Convertible now of the Hank of England? He chose | supe RLATCUFORD's RULING—THR auay ry. | Heory of the Information. | If it was shown that this | years was served by him in full at the State Prison. | Another gentus did the necessary vouching {or se¥- Biderabie demand in specie were destructive to all | the latter. How wiseiy the gucoeas of England and STRUCTED TO RENDER A VERDICT AGAINST ThE | Property did belong to those rebel authorities carry- JUVENILE DELINQUENTS. enty-four aliens and minors in two days. stability in business enierprises, if noi to commercial | tue willed armies o at Waterioo attest. | Goverxm on this rebellion and calling themselvesaCon- | winiam Carley, Owen McCility and Richard | “Larry” Farrell's version of his interviews and sntegrity itself, since once in every ten years, aud a,| AD tncouverlibie currency fought the battles of | Juage Rateitord, in reviewing the caso, said that | (erate government—if this were proved, then the | McManus were accused of burgiary. ‘The former | relations with Messrs. Foster, Glassy and Davenport, lange part of the tine much orvener, ihe bani were | fnsland und of she work om that Sunday orn | the District Attorney, Mr. Phelps, bad alluded to-al | Svereyen power-ant. these authorities being rebel | Panic gUuty aud was Sener ee oruey, a | and tauru ‘The gentlemen referred (9 admit el 7 . a vl ~ - 4 5 e a from the necessity of the case were supported m go | 8¢ll, in council, ordered’ the ‘suspension of specie | jeribn denne, the progress ot the ase: Ase yees he | anthorities—would be paramount, and it would | Garvin, said as the ottier prisoners were mere chil- | they first knew Farrell as “Mr. Plere,” but say that doing by legal exactment. No mercantile sagacity | Payments Uli the 18th of June, 1816. Irredeemabie become the rightful owner of the property, | dren they probably were the tools of the man Carley, | he was first t to thetr notice by a man ih nusiness no forethought. or pradence in tavest. | baper laid the foundation of Engiand's manutac- | Pointe to which my atieution wan, directer. ana | ‘dependent of muuictpal statutes, by virtue of thé | Wao had iioaded xuilty. “he advised Judge Bedford | Welss, who sald that “‘Plerca’” had valuable infot- ment, no integrity of purpose and no-solidity of | “UFing aud commercial prosperity, supplied her | [hove have been the very points which counsel had | Constitution of the United States. And the rightof | to nave mercy ou thei, for it was a sad thing to rain | mation respecting the repeating process. after capital in the meérchans or conductor of business | Navy, Which at Traf made her the mistress of | presented, 1 have gives the subject a great deal | We,sovereien authority of the Unived States would | the boys for life by sending theu to tue Penitentiary. | some assurance by Weiss as to what “Pierce” would citerprises, “public. oF, private, under, ‘such a | te seas, and procured the gold with which all the | Br°venection; ‘but undoubtedly make a conversion of the property in | ‘Tne prisoners put in a plea of petty 1a ‘which | prove they consented to have him cali at tie coi Supposed there would havo | this case a tort, and snake it a wrong agalns: the £: was accepted, aud Judge Bedford, ‘afler seath that | mittee rooms. “Pierce” subsequently appeared it of the Dis- Iinancial system of pretended convertibility could | srinies of kurope Paid, and for eigiteen years | heen : or dia prevent comaneneten failures and ra gf Every | there was noithor Snaucial revulsion, business | 7 Some views suggested by counsel which | qiate rigut of possession by the United States. he perfectly agreed with the remarks ry and Mr. Glasay qnestioued him as to the natare of 3 perhaps micht not have anticipated as a ‘etiect case. few years panics ensued and whole ciasses of | panic nor distress. In answer to the objection that i there 1s no testimony to this in the » ON | trict Ati ey, suspended judgment and gave the | the evidence he proposed to furnish. “Pierce” was Zolved, prudent, euterprising meu were involved in | ts necessary to have gold carreney for foreign | Spor recgycry on, the part of the Bovernuent. | the contrary she Ovidonce is quite olear that none ot | Prisoners wens fackerly advices = reluctant to stave this, but, after being told that th ruin from causes which it was tmpossible for them | tadé 1 quote Maciaren, one of the most philosopal- | recover from the points | considered that 1 con- | the cotton which the government claims here was LARCENY. committee wished to’ know precisely what he prov to foreseo or control. The whole property of tne | Calas Woll as accurate writers of England, 1n his | Cimded there must be some other suggestions which | ever te property of the so-called Confederate wov- | michael Suttivan, indicted for grand larceny, | posed doing, he aid that he knew ® Nunired and country, the scanty provisions ior we widow aud | “Listory of the Ourrency:"— Gid not occur to me; but as none have been pre. | cHment, or of any subordinate governuent, State | picaded gulity to petty larceny. ‘The prieoner, it ap- | Could produce we wares ieee Ra tas as Orphan, (ho Stocks 1 OtuerwiNe prosperous enter- | Tt ts remarkable that-no dificulty was experienced by our | sonted, fam now quite prepared to dispose of the | OF other government in rebellion or hostility to the | heared, had in hts possession four robes, which had | Fepeaie’ on, the certarendeace oF theritr O'itient prises, tho aliares of public works curried On W de. | merctasts in carrying on thelr trade wih oiner nations dur- | cage, “It im therefore entirely clear to me that there | United States. So, ue I before remarked, the right | Haen stolen. ‘The District Attorney, in accepting the | done under the euperintendence of Sheri Ovsriens ‘Velop the industry and wealth of the country, ench | jis thisperiod, shougs they no lon can be no recovery on the part of the government, and | 13, at the | very throshola of | the minor plea, said there was a doubt im accasing hum | that Shertif 0" ve tickets on wh a it aterm ng inp py | Scan an Fae, og alata, | yh yeti aa etn | Skrtel eect a Toad | Souaenaees Pets Sell Sa gos ae rm in price quite one-half, 18 condition 3 | cae mectete, were ta ‘ rice ay nd was instrnet the jury to find for the defendant; but as | fate GN Mh ny seeing all thie facts to be om and that the prope! eases ‘were taken, | stand as a witness himself; “it would not do.” He sho ayurenta, fei from tbe substitu ‘of things haa the hab Hrectors 9e88 poopie apo ina, prodoenivetees ot mon-protmanve | kee tes tet ene Tanta pie ‘on cn equatiey.'n | views at wome leneth on the subjock., “et Ate MY | shown by the government; and, therefore, under the Junge Bedrond wuspended judgment. called several times subsequentiy, and, betng a ness of our industries, the profitavieness or umpro- | seems that no objection coul Tard been’ urged In the first place, the entire right of th decision quoted, it wilt be the duty of the Court to ‘The prisoners ta the remaining cases, on motion of | to some wit he wished to fu! sh Aableness of our commerce or business enterprises, | bAper carrency, tte ny t aun of the govern- | ingtract the jury that on both the facta and the law | iyeir respective counsel, had their trials postponed. | {aterposed various objections and excuses, and at las oF upon the crreut ehactigent of our Togisaturen, | ret have heard of the currency controversy. Use. The recovery by: the. government 18 sovens | te clalmants cannot recover, and that tue verdict Teme a represented that he had actnaliy disbursed over $100 Siinge Ste, oF national, one oF all, perhaps nome | , We remember our own wat of the rebelion, with: | tone made » eqniraient a Het a ppt g COUAT CALENDOAR—THIS DAY. aay mag yy yg, yen Siion propoucd. But none of these had any edfect to | in the of 1802. ‘The banks liad suspended, | Capture on land. This Is not a sult in | iu so instructing the Jury in a case like this of such . macortv=Nos, 983, 975, 996, | Would require them, and wanted to be reimbursed. hasten of retard these Muctuations of commercial | and, like broken reeds, the ft COUld DO | ey ie ita a salt soUghe tO bo kde maumed OD | importance if ft was not perfectly clear tome and if | | SU"RENF oo TET, Sie Ton bid S37, sb1, 03, s7z, | After some consultation between some of the mem. we Po fault Was inherent in our financial m, ar re oles wen; ‘pad was paralyzed, | thereto, and therefore it does not fall within the ‘S43 Ld aan oh the government can- | 4.5 "39 47; 377, 051, 06% Aes x f Jo nei ngenne Ay was —— to give hrm which was, and while based on money convertible | meu could’ hardly be obtained, the ar- | class of captures made on the high seas, jure belli, | NOt fecover under any ciroumetances. I, therefore, jet—TRIAL 'TRRM.—Nos. 1064, 1325, by rey dotane so.voney Fn. Bay hy i into specie must continue to be, but an exagyerated | Tuies were and no decisive baste had been | which follows the law of prizes. “Now, the law nas | Foudemen of thejury, under this view of the case, | gf 445" 20g 1806, 1990, 1850, 1280, 1250, 1908, 1951, tmhoot of the nancial eystemis “Of Burope, Buble | Ee ae ee oe Pactaeas restinod a mee ix | Deen settled by repeated “adjudications 1a reference Bor tet Hs arid the inw, lastruct you to ren: | {S5, "135), tama, 1300, 1400, 140%, aol, "1402," 1408, | HE, was, finally urged to, pring, the, men, distresses of other countries. It was in no sense an | pulse, labor winctures everywhere | he forfelted to tue goverument under the operation | eq Mvy, {iis ywoved for a stay of proceedings to Hee on Gexmnah Omebions.—Before Guoning & | Mdividually; but he st Atwerican system, nor in woy of its parts ad to | #prang up, supplies were abundant, and although, operation | enabie the government to prepare a writ of error. as ‘the instivnions of a free, enterprising and | By a grea errar, the egdas note was nos maae,| ne Tales of wat, and. this case, te, songht to. be ‘ine Qoart granted thirty days ior the purpose. Bee iy ite ee Georhe Williaiaa, tarceuy, | Mformauion that the witnesses he would bring would dation ; Ww larceny ent people. Many and various were the expedienta | the money of the gov nt for @ll purposes, as it Mr. Seward moved ischarge of the attach- | grand larceny; Same vs. George y | “wear to anything the committee wan sesorved to by ‘general government to remedy | should have been, yet, crippled thine: fe eangtied: | Ge a teat the onvecmtt pope ment against the property, Action was deferred on the eee a dene baa 5. mag angler: | swear nt Tho wee wormed taal were pre tus chronic vaeilauion of money tothe destruction | and paid our soldiers, pemsioned the wounded, pro- | vase prectiely, as if'it hal the covton now iamder | the Court oo the motion for the COME | ae Te Ee Me ae Mark Grabain, | °lsely the class of witnesses the commul not <= business interests of the country. But ail in get widow and oa produced @ | seizure; that the defendant nas taken the cotton and os hep besa oo ange on 47 4 Puen 1 lareeny; same va Win. Kelley, grand Taroeny; want. Be lets, p= phat ed bas not bee *Fonen 4 cares Of prosperity. therevctore < A a os . , ' Somunistes In the endeavor to do this the United States, aa we | has been maintained ever aince, and during’ thie pe. aife'pnelps-We claim the sume right to sustain | 824, Simon, Asustaut "basurict. Attorneys: ‘Messrs, a a Foster and Glassy afirm positively that Prerco's have soon, at frat chartered a bank, became a. sub- | riod of six years finunotal punics and disasters were | ne gotion now for te conversion of the pro John B, Ward and Clarence Seward ior delendants, | SAMe ve. Frank Schats, atiompe at grand Inees? | about their remarks the removal soriber to lis stock aud reeetyed and paid out its bills | wuknown and unthougnt of until the insane attempt | iritnad been seized by US and was Aitermards re, | TBE Court adjourned till this morning. ¢ vs. Terence Lynch, burglary; Sele vtron bur. | omce of Governor Hi ‘and that hed ax money for a pefiod of twenty years, Sti the | Of the banker and capitalist to force a return to | moved by the defendant. vonnaniaes Barkley, DUTEIANY tar iaris, Durslaty. | threatened to direct thelr attacks aquinst atiy par- erratic but inevitable of commercial Gistress | specie payments by # coutraction of the currency. ‘The Court—E:xactly; that ig what 1 say. Now, as UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT. wlary; an ree Se el tieular indivittuals, or what the commitce or the came round. Again it refused to have anything to | During the year 1864 we exported more than one | eariy as 1811, case of the United States va. Browne, — Prone ah wget J was to do, was @ piece of the do with a bank and left money to the natural laws | hundred mitlions of and silver, only thirt)-live | it was settled by the Supreme Court of the United The Dupuy Wiikey Onse. CITY INTELLIGENCE. absurdest invention on Pierce's part, they having of trade for flve years, from 1811 to 1817. Still | million dollars of which caue from San Francisco, | states that the seizure of enemies property ax Before Judge Benedict. ja ge Rr he ae financial disaster came and went in turn iike the | and no one knew the fact from any effect it had on of war upon land, jute bellt, wae ‘wee author, gpageyenerap hepreaamanapanancann tigation, and certainly, if they entertained them, Siteations of the pendulum, bat Wanting their rege. ‘the business of the country. In other year, ES the Jaw of nations. and the claim to it could The United States vs, Jacob Dupuy and Moses TH ATHER YESTERDAY.—The following record | they say, Pierce was one of the last men to whom ity. in 1516 the government again the ex. | while our currency was upon a specie the ex- | pe on! id bs he munierpal laws ‘of the nation | Dupwy.—The trial of this case was resumed yester- | wilt show the changes in the temperature for the | ‘ey would ackaowledge it, periment of making an ui evar. Wr i. —— 3, - ees geen | - pon my ay ot of one tenth part of aa fences bos in Re soaking ¢ am pom nat See ~ py moves day morning. past twenty-four hours, aa indicated by the thermo- THE ALLEGED ROW AT WARO'S ISLAND. ‘tines the capital of the old one as ® regulator of the | and distress greater that of 1837, our total | of this city, in the case of the prosecution against ‘Thomas Carter, the first witness called this morn- | meter at Hudnut's pharmacy, HERALD Building, iret ant ruinoua tae tees PeaROPABEY | FOE ase lite Ae eles usecase | mmf the Gras Western Ration af finas- ce | Ing fr te lence, testited that be was a revenue h a wiil ever be memorabie in the history of the country ef the country im, Whicn abet lina Deen Se wan shares of stock belonging to Leroy N. Wiley. And | inspector in May, 1868; knew the defendant, Jacob for tie wholesale destruction of fortunes and cot- paid; in which production basteenso rari a Sr United States va frown, and he eld’ that it came | Dupuy: do not know anything of his occupation mercial vatues. The bank charter expired in 1896 ; in which there have not been more than one | under the act of ¢, 1861; May, 1862, and Ju except from the information he recetved im his Str—You report in your issue of this date “An- Teel nih one ae rremengnten | Aue Pas gueng rumen umramewey | Wee That as aul infamy And peaiig | ae; he stensive occupation ot Dupty i the ctor row on Ward's aad between I a, Of the country, to leave a anpposed convertible paper | the bankers and capitalists who are sald tw have nel ce to stiits under these | rtornal Revenue Department was giving informa- ; i Dutch ts.” Allow me to state that not todo iw own work uncontrolled say acta, or prosecution of rights under these acts, he ; Lavine or A Cornen StoNe.—The corner stone | of the kind has occurred, and that the report m mavuisiona”ot | An Wes tune of wtmont hood, but ft is exne wy son) Teruarked that le acttexprensly Pro | (10m toe ee ee etre with Snoop | OC the Rose Memorial chapel will be laid at haif-past from the arrest of an emigrant Broadway, corner of Warp’s Isuaxp, New Yor, } SUPERINTENDENT'S OF FICB, Jan. 12, 1509. To THE Epiror OF THe HeRaLp:— Jawa, but the financial distresses and convulsions of | in its time of utmost neod, but tirat is exactly what | yided that all roceed cri “! ings should conform to | Dupuy except fiat he saw him with Jacob 67 caused all previons ones for the time Go be for- | they did not do. In Deceniber, 1801, he banks gus. procegyings Lee a ee ee eee itat it'haa the | Dupuy once a Week or so; sew the elder Dupuy | three P. M. to-day, in Forty-first wtreet, votween ~~atheatgbodages Foire tee ioeontione See vi bhdaiins hreriname oe wna] Be pond payments without right, without au- | inten Of these acts that proceedings for condem- | (Jacob) several times before the middie of May aud | Ninth and Tenth avenues. a Lien in tee endow ~ pag bit iS 01 ok COUNTRY. faith ae jaw, in violation ot their own plighted | nation and forfeiture of property should be analogous | ouce or (wice Within the week before the seizure of ROBBERY OF A PEARL STRERT JEWRLLER.—About TELLIGENGE. political parties were broken ot — ne. legisiation aud promises, Le the government | t proceedings in prize cases for the forfettnre of | the whiskey; met him on one of those occasions and : Seomiee cveniie 0 ed 0 ae WESTCHESTER IN Feeo tornke = hp dh. Geum Gamer ar of oe em Mati Rt @ dollar of their gold from | enemies» goods seized upon the high seas. Jndge | waiked with him to tie ofMice where Cuftey was; seven o’cloek on Monday ¢ og or thieves yer ho Monday night country aloner vi it change of a : oe ob ." 7 hi in pursuance of the | Nelson's conclusion was that all thove acts which | Dupuy said be bad been, jooking after some illicit | broke a pane of glass out of the window of Marcus BURGLARIES IN MORRISANIA- ig! no relict ‘The governtment established ie own'ats | 1062 ome. munured ay ounce at have been alluded to from 1861 down, were nothing | whiskey delivered to the Rouse of Englehardt & Co.: | Jacobs’ jewelry store, No. 450 Pearl street, and by | burgiars broke open the Feit bap Lethal rhment es its own af- | 1862, and miilion dollars but D, by favor of Congrees, to enemies? | otuer frmas Were mentioned at the same time in con- | jneans of & hook attached to a stick stole five gold | James Finnegan, on the corner of Wall street and tuts Armly on a specie basis in 1840, holding aloof | legal tender notes were 1 with which our sol- he 7 ‘accord! ith the key; themsel' tom ay tree the ones Se | an wee faa the an ths Ved un | Benga” ate eh Many aps | Rowe var algerie ger dae | rope Ga weed aso oor ae ee | Grove arent, wher er bape, Maman to « rf ~ , Lie enemiew’ property seized on the high seas, that | afler thia saw Duj in in the ofice ip 4 large amount of clothing. went to and stondinods of Its receipts and payments in colu, | the government, or did we make them for ourselves? | the same rule saad ‘be. applied ‘a property selted pirect: the name subject was again talken ol Huta Gate.—The contractor for the removal of | house of James Cougaill, on opposite corner, cheqoe lige, of buying Satin ean tena Le erere. || tee quverauect A RN the land. ‘The purport, thereiora, i that these | said he bad Deen up all nugitt (thie, 1 think the Hell Gate obstructions, Mr. Shelbourne, was en- | where they sole «lot of Clowning and sliver ware, 4 4 deposit. - | Which the United States are now seeking to ednesday) looking afver various distilleries, Eugle- f after which they 0" themselves = ek. ~| waged, with his wang of assistants, yesterday In | icy gome cake aid choice brandy witch they found to depiete lis depositories ef gold, as a measure of | erninent wanted mere money to pay the soldier and force t's among them ; Feiel to comumeese and Stil the periodi- | carry on.the war, did thoy get Thom the Tanker | ingete a.m fis suit, and the righia ie would be seek- | hawt ang thom; Kuew that Moses was employed | iriing on Frving Pan Rock for the purpose of dems | Tnine pantr}.. in nelther, house were. the ihiates 1 " rent; but the ryht it now seeks rests wholly and ortan o t incimations were ee? od 1008 qune paralisted ' tute, and nothing in the Hy and | Pexvew other witnosses wére examined for the de. | lkely that ho will ‘be ‘ole to commenoe drilling 10F terday morning. — {ug provided that these notes might by p jug Ji ight be funded inioa | ensirely on the statute, biasting before the beginning of next week. of 1827 and ‘1887 aa periods of dnancial disaster, It will noi te ~ bearing wix per cent boud, the capitalisi# | can be chatmed by the United States here but what | fence, but the testimony was not material to the uvetal further to trace the commercial history of the aght them up when they fell 0 a discount of sixty | that staqute iv Bo ae c vt rea «with reference to property | isene. OOK SALR.—An aitractive catalogue of books on THE XPLOSION pt goood gd ae tt smc y yeara of a my et wr a that ‘prema. which on. fande Phine property — rolzed eon | The defence having rested, Mr. Joseph Bell, As. | America was disposed of List evening at the auction LATE EXPLOSION IN THE BAY. jad rel 0 | is entirely different. It has deen held by the | sistant United Statew District Attorney, summed UP | Loom of Mosare, Bangs & Merwin. ‘The following | 7? TH® Eprron oF THE Herany:— Giatress, trom which tie country cannot be shielded | loan to the government, and funded this, which | supre y ‘ heat realized he Uy s f | for the government, and was followed by Mr. bh. 1. ‘ m y \, OF, juivalent. a return | nized, commercial my! rented by the it boing vem long past the nenal nour for adjourn | “Cow Chase, ; Barlow's “Coimmbiad,” River Hi 162d street, New Yor! Suu enterprise of is citizens, lot me DANKE Der and | Wapoge payments, they LOW howl WM he doce Ul | nea Bul weubgad vo Ine duration Bf hesilitieg. and | mens tue Lourt deferred oharmug tye jury ull tie | Wibic, With Tare wud curious Divetrawous § for une. widow of the love Castain Ghuscuus”