The New York Herald Newspaper, July 22, 1870, Page 11

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| | \ NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1870.—TRIPLE SHEET. tracers, just sult the Indian, and hie believes that the establishment of Canadian” guthority here, and the ‘opening of roads, will be the commencement of en. croachments like those which have caused 80 om porag to the Indians in the United States. 6 Indians have heard all about the explorations of the Saskatchewan, and the inducements held out to im- migrants to settle that gountry, and while they way recelyo presents from Canada, if war were to be In- Augurated between the whites, the Indlans would bearcely side with the party whose success must lead to the destruction of thelr aiready reduced bansing grounds Our missionaries have not or RED RIVER, ann nA Effect of the Acoeptance of tho Manitoba Act. the | nearly 200 years among Departure of Bishop Tache | Northwest Indians without securing thelr contl- M dence aud understanding their wishes, and we have for Canada. hover apprehended the slightest danger of tie In- diang attacking us. Our people among the Indians, Sareea report that they are treated with the greatest {riend- | slip, and several chiefs have sent us word that they should have nothing to do with the Canadian expe- aition, Only a few daysago a soux delegation call- e| here and presented me with a beautifully orna- mented peace pipe. Ny Co#RES PONDENt—What ape fooling in Red Riv- ‘HIS V: 4 . | er regarding annexation to the United States? ViEWS ON THE SsIfUATI0 ; Rrer—I do not feel authorized to express opinions } omen em subject at present, and do not care to dia- | cuss It. Fort Garry, June 28, 1870, | DORREAT ONDE Mig Tinguire as oe the Tote ‘The penencial resulta of the acceptance by the Red ton which would “have been given to Fenian rein- a .{ Torcements lad a war ensued with Canada? River people of the Manitoba act are daily becoming: | “"Rrer— We will let that maiter pass also with an- more apparent in the restoration of harmony among pexation, Those two questions had no Practical the settlers, a disposition to abandon and forget per- fearing upon our resistance to Canadian aggress jon, fonal grievances, and considerabie trpetus to trade | 8 ha Ne focgay out the contest alone and for And business generally. Large orders have been | sent during the last few days to St. Paul, New York and Oanada for goods, and thera now seems every Prospect of the approachiag weason being one of | universal prosperity throughout the Northwest Yer- Soaee Ot netic oe Eton RON AFD And 00 ne sen clal assurances given by the Dominion witory. Everybody le now anxious for the Canadian | authorities, we regurd. the Manitoba act ua sadisfave Governor to artive a3 soun 4% possible, and his ad- | tory evidence that our rights will be respected, and \PRESIDENT RIEL INTERVIEWED. | THE ShrreRMen’ | CORRESPONDENT—Do you regard the Manitoba act as 4 full and complete guarantee of the rights of the Red River people. Firt—Taken in connection with the oMetal utter. ances of members of the Domination government, and vent will be marked by acordiai welcome and the heey Pa lise the paular, walsh Mepcansy tat ag yay SU his hangers on would have Inaugural Auitiation of an era of oder, amity and material Wi prevail We are “ready to become mem | To Tne Epiror oF Tug MeraLp:— The recent disorderiy conduct of the Orangemen at Elm Park has elicited comments from all the progress, | bers of the confederation, and shall give Gov- } ernor Archibold a hearty ‘welcome; but not any | leaves for Canada to-day. ‘This gentleman probably’) Goyersor McDougal Pad justice and comioi courtesy ‘Wlelds a greater influeuce in the Northweat Terri | been vbserved by the Canadians tu the relations ‘ 4 } of the Canadian papers singie me out for the direst 44 owing im @ great measure the success of the | punishment, anda Toronie ‘paper advised the offers 0 5 ‘great | ent part which have performed in the progress of psp pect hen arent | aduirs here, itis not surprising that some individ- that some zealous Canadians should ery ont for college, schoo!s and missions throughout @ Vast ar geance upon me. Ido not trouble myself, how- of territory bear testimony to his zeal and useful- | wiry every member of the Provisional government, | that we bave but simply done our duty ag citizens of complete, aud ail th ish and Scotch settiers | . ra m cs | the charter of righis whieh the Provisional govern. Teard him with greatesteem. His tripto Canada isi | ment has obiatned and accepted tor the people. Ang establishment of Canadian jurisdiction over this THE ORANGE SOCIETY. region. There 1: 3 much to be yet accom. | ene Machinery of its little goverument for Manitoba is ‘Placed in perfect working order, ana Bishop | asi | newspapers in the clty, and none of them explain ability result in salutary instructions to Gov- | pow 4 43 or for what cause Irishmen look upon them ernor Archibald and his subordinates. Archdeacon Boyne was not a clan or faction tigut brought on by Canada to-day, accompanying bia famtly, which 5 i civil war. It was fought on Irish soil by an ari goes to ita former home oa a vistt, .[u13 undér- | °, . ata the natives of the country. According to Macauley, with igaperandbcisngst 1 sn a King William's army “was composed of 36,000 men ord % | One-half of whom were natives of England.” Among OPPortunity presenting itself for a lenginy and unin | the foreign troops were Portiand’s and Ginkell’s terrupted conversation the HzRALD correspondent | | Prince George of Hesse Darmstadt and a great many Miscussed with the Provisional President the events | German warriors represented the ‘Teutonic element, quite frank in his discussion of the situation, aud | by Duke Chari yf -Wirtembe: i manifested no convera whatever regarding bis own | yp, sibmtorat mberg, supported Wil. were @ Brandenburg regiment and a Finland luterview are quite new and. interesting, st will be rogiment., There was also a large contingent of the dest to give the principal conversation as nearly as at ‘ country, The Englishry of Irelant oo that memor- Pee een pee ine ier aca io | able day were few In number and cut a sorry figure. PIREOR: TAD M More cordini thon would have been extended to tory than any other man, and to his wise counsel | toWerds us at tlie commencement, Tave that some Provisional government. A bishop at the unprece- ng of $5,000 for my head, After the somewhat promt. Uais should have Complain’s to make against me, with its surrounding edifices, numerous churches, a | , &bout the future, I feel, as I betieve is the case ness. His infiuence over the Freach popula ion | hed Liver, and we ask no stronger vindication than connection wi h Manitoba act, aud the approach- _ plished by the Doiuinton authorities before the ;Tache’s visit to Qunada will in all pro- . as their nataral-born enemies, The battlo of the Jean, of the Episcopal church here, also proceeds to stood that the Archdeacou’s trip has no connection | of foreigners commanded by a foreign prince against bora in many lands and speaking many tongues, After several visits to President Ktel without an | f tale | horse and Solme’s biue r>giment, natives of Holland; Anally obtained the desired interview, and freely . > vf the past yearin Red Mayer. The Pr.sident was | A strong body of Danish thercenaries, commanded i liam’s cause, Am the foreign auxiliaries fature prospects. As some points elucidated by the ae a possible in the form in wiloh it ocurred, Huguenots from France, traitors to their king and establishment-of the provisional goverament The Enniskillen Dragoons was the only Irish rezi- RikL—I presume that all the principal causes of this dimicu) = are weil understood aiready, although A perceive that some interested parties in Canada! still persist in falsehoods about the origin and pros; of our “insurrection,” as it is called. We; have no apologies to olfer for resisting Governor) McDougal, nor any regrets that we defied the Oana-' dian policy as enunciated at that period, It seems Btrange that the Canadtans themselves should have been sarpred at our attitude when the cireum- stances of our movement came to be generally un- det . Any one of the numerous odjectionadle Acw committed by Canada and her agents upon the ‘Red River people if similarly perpetrated in Canada Would grouse the whole Dominion to arms laa moment. Whet the bargain between the Hudson Bay Company and Canada was first hinted at as possible Canadian adventurers and speculators com- ;Menced flocking out here like vuiturés. In 1568, }ong before the proposition of transfer had assumed any definite shape, aud while the Northwest Ter- {Titory was as Independent of Cauada as any other {British possessions, Mr. Snow and his party ap- ‘peared and commenced building a road ‘irom here to Lake of the Woods, with- Out consulting the authorities or the people ‘of this country, It 1s true that Canada * pretended to open the road as an act of benevolence Oo Red River, but such benevolence generally has its own reward in view, Next came Colonel Dennis and his suryeyors, who commenced marking out “the country into farms and town low. Apart from the fact that the Snow and Dennis expeditions were premature and unwarrantavle, there were many aggravating circumstances connected with the ope- rations of both. Members of Snow’s party nego- Uated with the Indians for certain tracts of country, to the prejudice of half-breed setuers, and of claims of previous occupation and setilement. Colonel Dennis’ party, after surveying certain districts directly adjoining old settlements, posted up thereon the naines of unknown outsiders as occupants, This summary disposition of the lands and hemming in of the settlements by pecs having no right what- ever to interfere with Red’ River matters alarmed the people and satisfied them that they were to be | completely. ignored and subject to the caprice of Canada and the cupidity of speculators. When the negotiation for the transfer of the territo- ries was. eifecied the 16,000 people of Red River Were ignored as completely as if they were wild | cattle, “Canada never consulted our people nor our authorities, and did not even have the common de- cency to acquaint our people with tue transfer; but without even torwarding any oficial communica- tion whatever to the Red River authorities. McDoa- gal was sent with a retinue of satraps to take pos- Session of us bodily, without the slightest explana- Uon or indication of ms purposes. When we ald | Jearn the programme of Canada, we found that we | Were to be deprived of our franctises, that we were to have outsiders foisted upon us as our councillors, and that a great faucy scheme for the development of this country was to become the imachinery of ad- venturers, speculators and Cunadian politicians for robbing and oppressing the settlers, Just at the y time when Canada might have best se- the conildence and friendship of every- body out here, her agents were bee 3 ubings with @ high hand, and our people realizing that they had but.two alternatives, resistance then or reyolu- tion and civil war by and by, called a meeting, ap- pointed a represeniauve council, established a pro- visional government aud sent delegates to Canada to secure a recognition of our rights preparatory to -our admission into the Dominican confederation, ‘The Manitova act 1s the result of that resistance to Canadian aggression, and the Red River people hav- ing secured @ guarantee of protection In their rights are now ready to welcome Governor Archibald and ‘ the Dominican authority, CORRESPONDENT—Then you think that had the Red kiver people admitted” Governor McDougal iast fall and a provincial government had been estab- lished events would have cuilmimated in a revolu- » Gon and civil war? RizL—Undouvtedly. Not only had the confidence of the people in Canada been destroyed, but tho conduct of the orlictals and» other Cana- ‘dians who came out here was of the most irritating character. The officials assumed a supercilious, haughty alr that had a most injurious effect, and treated the settlers as beings utterly ve- neath their respect or considerath They wrote letters to the Canadian press depreciating and sian- ment which made any fight at tho battle of the Boyne, and this celebrated regiment at Plott Castle, about a mile and a half south of Oldbridge, ‘Was repelled with the loss of fifty men and was hotly pursued, The pages of history are open to me as } Well as to the Orangeman, and they prove that the | battle of the Boyne was fought by two foreign | princes contending for a foreign throne and the crown of England, who, by accident or chance, hap- pened to make Ireland the scene of their operations, After the battle was fought and won a lot of broken down tradesmen, gillies, spies and panderers, who always follow in the wake of a victorious army, as- sumed to themselves the honor and glory of tne vic- tory. It was matter of state necessity for the Enzlish government of that day to establish @ party or garrison in Ireland. Tney could find no more pliable agents than those scalawa; or carpet-bagging tools, Under the name o “iiberty” and “religion”? they stole and plundered with as much zeal and gusto as New England's scalawags do nawadare in the Southern States, ‘They were supported by the vast military power of England; by military power they overthrew all civillaw; they confiscated what was left of the pro- perty of Ireland: they established iron-clad and test oaths; they established the most galling tyranny the world ever saw under the name of what they called ascendency; they established penal laws and @ penal code, This code did not allow a Catholic to hold any office of profit, trust or emoiument. A Catholic was not allowed to piead at the bar; @ Catholic could not be @ common watchman im the city of Dubiin; a Catholic could not purchase real estate, if he aid the purchase was nuil and vold; a Catholic could not give his children the rudiments of educa- tion or the religion of his fathers, ‘The peasant scarce had leave to live, ‘Above his head Aruined shed, No tenure but & tyrant's will. Forbid to plea Forbid to re Disarmed, disfranchised, tmbecile. Man moves with the world—the age of effete bigotry and Intolerance bas passed away. Years ago the English ‘legislature abolished ail religious test oaths; the believers in all creeds and those who believed In none were all piaced on an equal foot- ing before the law. One would think Orangemen ashamed of their cruelty and tyrannical proceed- ings, would offer the right hand of friendship to their fellow citizens, and Geogr “Let bygones be bygones.” But no; living in the midst of civil ization, they want to perpetuate the tyranny of clan. over clan, and to inaugurate a system of warfare, No national or liberal Irishman objects to a parade of Orangemen, if they coufine themselves to @parade or picnic, But when they openly insult peaceable citizeng they must take the consequence. The principal objection Irish liberals have to the Orange society is the spirit of intolerance which 13 part and parcel of thelr nature, Irtsh Orangemen want to re-enact the penal laws; they want to deprive the majority of their fellow countrymen of the rights of property, tho right of suffrage, the right to live, and the right to breathe the alr, 4s no wonder under those circumstances that Irishmen should combine to oppose, not Only their enemies, but the enemies of the rights of men, all the world over, If a society of Vir- givtans were to parade in the cities of New York and Boston, and :openly proclaim the descendants of the murderers of Archbishop Land and King Charles L, and of all those who sympathized with Cromwell and the Protectorate were to be ostra- cized, and that they had no fights either of con- scleuce or property which the Virginians were bound to respect, lef me ask yon how long the Yan- kees would let them march without asking them what they meant? And if they had been tn the habit of repeating their parade year after year, and adding insult to injury, I think the Yankees would exterminate tiem like ‘vermin. The Orange Society 1s illegal in the British empire. An Orangeman cannot become an Amert- can citizen, His first and jast and Puaelnss oath is to bear true allegiance to the House of Hanover aa rulers of England. Hence, if he gets naturalized in this country, he is guilty of wilful and direct perjury. Duripg the late war they besieged the British Consul’s office, trying to escape the draft, out-Heroding Herod more British than the British themseives. During the late war who ever saw an Orange flag raised to protect the Union or keep the dering the people o! the settlements, referring to our ancestry In terms of contumely, and holding up our Mothers andl sisters to ridicule. The indux of such: & class Into this country, with its {nsolent demeanor, its sneers and ridicule, would of itself have brought, Toyuble in less than a year, without Pass the a@disional incentive of oppression and land seizures. DR. SCHULYZ A FILLIBUSTBR, CORRRSPOD low was tt that the Schultz arty, which assiimed to represent the English and wotch settiers, broke up so suddenly ¥ Rrer—In the first piace the promptaction of the Provisional government aispersed — Schultz'4 band, and next, the nglish and Scoteh kettlers found that Sehnits had no other | object: in view than to get into favor with Canadian officials, They saw thacif Schultz obtained control the territory would be tnrned over without reservation ‘to Canada, and the people here Would have been compl:tely ignored, while Schuitz, | And his naif dozen Meutenants fattened on the Of the Provincial aud Doiiuion government. The Behuitz movement was a private fillibnstering | Sollee, and had it not been promptly suppressed 6 | Would havo plunged the wiole Northwest ferwitury | Into civil war, in whien Indians w a Whi ians would have borue a Conspicuous and terrible part. THE CornEsPONDEN would side with Al the Indians the event of war? Rrei—A few 5 of those living be- tween here aud Lake Superior, who do nothing but | fish and beg, Would forthe sake of Canadian pres- enta and pensions give assistance. to the | Dominion troops, but” most of those. tribes, and ail the iidiaos norm and west of ud Aro Opposed to tio UNtoN of this teriftory. with he conlederation, The [ndiaus Want ail the hunt ng grounds they have got, and now obtain irom the | Lur traders, in eXchange for thelr skins, all the arms, | Ammunition, biangets aud Cinkets (hat they 1 The present condition of the orthwest ‘Territor Stripes together? StATS and Stripes (Oe MICHAEL CHRISTAL, 124th street aud Second avenue. THE LAST UF A MEMORABLE SHP. ‘The first merchant vessel that ever displayed from her peak the flag of this republic is reported sunk in the harbor of Payta, Peru. She was built in 1782," bark rigged, about 300 tons and called the Maria, A few years ago the writer of this paragraph saw her in wharbor on the South American coast flying the Lone Star flag of the prosperous little republic of Chili where, after navy Vicissitudes of fortune, she was employed inthe graig trade with the surname of one of the ayistocr@ic families of that country, heco, added to her original designation. As might be expectel, the Maria Pacheco was a quaint-looking craft, reported a good sailer, and not- withstanding for eighty-elght years she had ridden the sturmy seas of ocean and withstood the violent biasts of Boreas, was sound and stanch, giving no more evidence of old age in her live oak and locust frame than many of her juniors by half a century Uiat were floating avout her. Her history would bo eresting If ft could only be faithfully recorded. long service In the merchant marine she was sed by a firm tn Nantucket and for a number "3 Was & Successiul cruiser Of the adventurous an whaltmg fleet from that island and tho port of New Bedford. Subsequently she was pur- chased by @ Chillan merchant, Who named her for his wife, and aitor serving him as long a3 many @ ship just from the stuck, @ treacherous leak guiued the mastery, and the brave old bark now sts beneath the Waters Of the Paciic.Norwich Bulletin, POSTMISTRES! 3, of Durham, Co postmistress of the resigned the office on With its abun tance of pair Beitled prairies aud \he » » ils budalo, its a tered posis of the fur | e § accouut of the sunuliness of the salary, and a man has been appointed la her stean WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY. Annual Meoting of the Alumni—An Additional Prinoely Gift of Mr, Orange Judd to the Hall of Science—Interesting Ad- dress of Bishop Jones, MIDDLETOWN, Conn., July 20, 1870. | The boat and vars have brought a large number of | | New Yorkers and Bostonfans this morning, among | them Daniel Drew, swelling the crowds already | here; so thatthe college grounvs presented a very animated spectacle, Old graduates and those who | have only been abstnt from their alma mater a year | cordially greeted each other, and recalled the ex- Pertences of former days, | Tho joint boara held an adjonrned meeting, and | tyansacted a good deal of interesting business per- | | taining to the welfare of the University, But the meeting of the Alumni in the new college chape!, which was temporarily fttea up with seats, | The attendance was large, and the proceedings were of the most enthusiastic claracter, | Mr. Jupp, the President, called the meeting to or- * der, and after Professor Rice, the Secretary, read the minutes of last year's mecting President Cam- H mings was requested to repeat in substance, in the | hearing of the Alumni, the observations he made at . the meeting of the jotnt board. Dr. CuMutNas responded by saying that Messrs, | Isaac Rich and Dantel Drew agrecd to raise the interest on their endowment fund to stx per cent, ; Making an Increase of one thousand dollars a year | each, ‘This announcement was greeted with lond applause. “You have all seen,” continued Dr. Cum- mings, “the building that is being erected, THE HALL OF SCIENCE, and admired it, and thank in your hearts the gene- | rous friend who has given it, T announce, nearly in his own words, a farther proposition made by him | this morning. Mr. Judd sald:—‘First, [ propose to | give seventy thousand dollars to complete that | building; second, I have made provision in my will | for a thirty thousand dollar professorship; third, I ' propose to commence the payment of interest on that professorship immediately.’ '? | Dr. Cummings.was unable to proceed with his re- expressions of approval which the meeting manl- feasted upon hearing of the supplementary noble gift of Mr. Judd to speedily make the study of the natural sciences upon an enlarged scaie an accom. | plished fact. If the donor of the noble structure | Row approaching completion had almply presented | the University with the stones and mortar {t is possible that the building would remain unfurnished and un- tenanted until a liberal and enthusiastic alumnus of the college was ‘inwardly moved,” as the Metho- disis would say, to follow Mr. Juad’s, exampie and provide the ee. are for carrying on Unis additional branch of study. Not content, how- ever, with erecting the building, Mr. Judd has, tt is hoped, incited other friends of the institution who believe with him that it is of the utmost importance that the teaching of the natural sciences slould be more closely allied to theological stuates in this age of scepticism than formerly to come nobly for- ward and liberally endow the Scientific Hall. The trustees had prepared copies of the engraving of the hall, accompanied by a succinct description of the respective stories of the building, wiich were ereu- lated among the auditors, Dr. Cummings also annonneed to the Alumni that the board Concluded that the conditions upon which subscriptions were nade to the’ *Memoriai chapel’ last year had been met, and he hoped that the moneys snbscribed would be collected and sent ia without delay, A committee‘was appointed to make a minnte, exe pressive of the thanks of the Alumni io Messrs. Drew, Rich and Judd for their liberality towards the Unt versity. A committee, consisting of Drs. Gilbert, Haven and King and Professor Lane, was appointed to nomi- nate omcersfor the ensuing year, ‘They retired to an adjoining room, and returned in a féw moments with thelr report, renominating the present presi- dent ana secretary. Mr. Judd’s renomination was ratified by a unanimous rising vote, amid great en- thusiasm, He modestly stated that he intimated to the chatrinan that rotation in office was tne order of the day. The chairman and his associates disre- garded the intimation, and’ Mr. Judd modestly ac- cepted the situation, remarking that he consideyed ta pleasure to be associated with such a body of men. He wished he could make such a speech as some of the brethren present were able to do; but if he could not do mucl: in that line Le was ready for any work that needed to be done, Rey. Dr. PIERCE alluded to the presence of Bishop Janes, and CPt the hope that the prestdent would request him to address the Alumni. Bishop JANg£s was introduced, and responded by Saying that the president had alluded to the fact that he (the Bishop) was an old man. Physically Speaking that was 80; but his feelings were as young as ever, Still he was apprised that his day of active service was already in the evening time, and a8 {ts close approached he looked with increasing Interest upon everything that related to human destiny. The subject came up before him with a solemnity, @ sublimity and an interest which ne did not percetve in it years qgzo, He was sure if lie had seen it in that light when in youth, he would have been more given up to the one great service of bene- | fiting his generation and glorifying God. It would not be egotistic in him to say that there wos no man who had seen s0 much of the fruits of the Wesleyan University as he had. He remembeved well tts or- ‘anization, and was pretty weil acquainted with tts ustory, His duties required him to traverse the | enure country, and wherever he went he met some one who had been connected with the institution, whose education and character qualified them for usetuiness tn the Church, and ns Tulness in whatever sphere they were called to act. At the present time the great educational work of the Methodist Episcopal Church was more in the hands of the graduates or that university than any other. There were more of the associates of those whom he addressed who were at the head of in- stitutions of learning and who are professors in them than are furnished by any other of our institutions. ‘Tis was more especially true of the theological in- stitutions, the majority of whose teachers were graduates of Wesieyan University. What a great moral power and religious agency was this! He ex Dected that the young men educated by those teach- ers would soon reach the ends of the earth, for he believed that God was in earnest to convert the world. Hindyances and embarrassments would come up, but God intended to make them all sub- serve the great result of the evangelization of the world, and this institution was an efiictent dency in bringing about that most blessed result. The two Great religious periodicals of the Church, THE CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE AND ZION'S HERALD, were edited by graduates of that institution, and he (the bishop) knew of no men who had graver re- Sponsibilives than the editors of religious periodi- cals. He was not unapprized of the fact that ordi- narily men could be editors without any education, but he belleved that such positions are better filled by baving in them thorough scholars as well as goou. Christians. There were present representatives of all the professions, and he was glad that the young men had such noble examples piaced before them for their imitation, It may not be possible for those of you who are in the professions to find yourselves In such successful business circumstances ‘as to con- tribute to the enlargement and perpetuity of this in- stitution to such an extent as your president has been able to do and God has given him the heart to do; but tf we cannot do so on the same large scale we can do It with the same spirit, and if we meet the measure Of our opportunity and of our ability we shall meet the amount of our obligation, Let me then, brethren, for | have a brother in every human being—(applause)—and I believe a Christian brother in all who are before me—let me exhort you to make the most of life, the most you can of it for ourselves, for your own culture, improvement and appiness: the most of it you can for the good of sa- ciety and the welfare of humanity. As much as in you lies help to lift ue our race into the light of the gospel of Christ, and also into the blessings or a Christian civilization, Let yne exhort you above everything to honor your God, to seek to glorify fin both in your body and tn your spirit, which are His, and you will’ find when you come w the even- ing of life that this devotement to God, this service to humanity and this earnest self-discipline and eul- ture will bring to yon a revenue of good which no one can measure but by his experience. I invoke the continued blessing of God upon your hearts and hives, praying that you all may be useful in this world and happy in the world eternal. i Bishop Janes appears tobe in excellent health just now, and it is not unlikely that he may live as Jong as the founder of the denomination of which he is 80 bright an ornament. Indeed, there 1s a great similarity im character between Wesley and himself, The former was noted for his incessant activity, for combining reat firmness and energy with almost feminine ten- jernes?, and for an incisive and practical rather than an imaginative cast of intellect, His American successor 18 recognized as possessing a'l these characteristics, and there 18 no Protestant bishop in this land more a As respected and beloved by the different evangelical sects than Bishop Janes, By reference to the alumni record, to which allu- sion was made In a previous communication, it will be seen that the university thus far has furnished to other institutions of learning thirty-six college presi- dents, eighty-two college professors and 167 profes. sional teachers, 80 that Bishop Janes’ stavement ts Mterally porne out by the record, The committee to whom was referred the matter of acknowledging the generous gift of their asso- clate, Mr, Judd, reported a very complimentary ress | lution, which was heartily adopted. | Mr, Orange Juda responded ina feltcitons speech. | He commenced by mentioning the reminiscence his boyhood, how, when his father’s house was a | home for the Methodist preachers traveling In the wilderness, he used to put the horses in the stabi how hts father put right silver half doliars in the Nands of hig children, and thus infused into their minds the tdea that they were stewards and had no right to appropriate God's property to wratify their seifiehness, The speaker Went on to say that gilts 1 were distributed by the Creator, Tosowe be gave | feature of to-day’s programme was the annual , marks for some time in consequence of the warm © brol the power to preach, to others to teach and to othera the ability two give, and in the great day of reckon- all” would be Sapa ly rich wf they up to their responsibility, He was thankful God had given him the means and made him the mnt in Supplying what he believea to be an eff. clent instrumentality in promoting a thorough me tal discipline, In conclusion Mr. Judd expressed the hope that further aliusion to himself personally | in this matter would cease. Rather let them stimu. late each other to toil on earnestly the allotted time given to them here, and when the final reckoning came the life work of them all would be seen to } have been much alike and equally valuable in the eye of Him who seeth not as man seeth, | Other topies of interest came up for discnasion before this most memorable college meeting closed, but ag the hour for mailing this communication has | arrived I must close, | MURDER IN PAWTUCKET, R. 1. i An Old Man Killed and a Daughter Frightfully | Injuredc—A Family Fexd=—Strange Fatale | ity. | {From the Providence Journal, July 19.) ! | | Amurderous and fatal stabbing affray took place Sunday evening at the corner of Pine and South | Union streets, Pawtucket, Charles E, Kent, a con. ductor on Pawtucket horse car No. 4, stabbed and | Instantly kuled Joseph B. Whiting, about fifty-five or sixty years of age, and stabbed, with serious if | not fatal enect, Whiting’s daughter, Loutsa, The Parties resided in @ two story house at the corner of , Pive and South Unton streets, Whiting's. lamily oc- cupying the lower and Kent's the upper portion of the house, There lave been family bickeringa be- | tween the female members of the family for some te, and these bickermgs have tended to create hostile sentiments between the male members. From the statements of eye witnesses it appears that about nine o'clock Sunilay night Wiliam son, & brother-in-law of Kent, was golag up Union street, in company with a young man named God- frey, and met Flavius B. Whiting, a son of the | deceased. = An ait reation * took = piace, — but. whether blows were exchanged 18 not known, Wilson came stood = in back, and front of the gate of Hiram H. White, who Lives on , the southerly corner of Pine and Union streets, and was heard to say In a loud tone, apparently with the intention of being heard by the Whitings, wuesd | Tiixed him now; but T guess @ plece of sticking ; plaster will make him all right.’ About half-past | ten the parties again met, and White, thinking there ‘was going to be trouble, went out and endeavored to get Whiling away. A ineiée appears to have fol- | lowed, ih Which Louisa Whiting and other members + | of Whiting’s lamily took part, Godfrey, Wil-ou aud | Flavius Waiting being the principals tn the seule, | During the affair Kent came down stalrs from the house and went out on the scene. The old man Whiting also Wont out to stop the diMeuity, saying, “Boys, this won't do; this must be Se Just, at this moment the boy Flavius, whom White, in his endeavors to end the diticully, was holding down, e away from him and made a rasa for the other boys, ahd Kent, who had been struck several times with stones, made a motion as though he were push. | ing the woman Louisa aside. ‘The girl erfed, “I am stabbed !” and Keut then made a lunge at old Mr, Whiting, who fell and died tustantly, the biood fow- ing trom his left side. Mary Whitlig, Who was watching the affair from the gate, cried out, “Fa- | ther’s dead? and Kent broke away and went up stairs into his own tenement. An officer was sent for and Kent was arrested, Another statement is to the effect that Kent had | Deen at ho.ne but a short time from lis last trip to the city and back when this quarrel oa the street, in | front of the nouse, between young Whiting and ‘his | brother-in-law, Wilson, attracted his attention, and he went down stairs and throngn the gate on to the | street, when he was struck in the left eye by young | Waiting aud knocket down, as he sunposed with a | stone held in the hand, and struck again when down, | } on the back of the head with some hard substance, | which blow produced a severe contusion, and he bled freely. He got upon his teet again and began to use | the knife or dagger which he took with him when ho Went down stalt®, a murderous weapon, with a sect blade about five inches long, sharp on both edges, with a sharp point, and first struck Louisa Whiting | in the breast, making @ severe cut, and in the avdomen low down on the left side; Loulsa shouted that she was stabbed, and Kent turned upon the next person he saw, wich was young Whiting, and cut his panta- | lvons pocket on his left side, but did not reach his | person. Mr, Joseph Bb. Whiting, the old gentleman, was then attacked by Kent aad received but one | stab in the back, but that was a fatal blow that | ktiled him «lmost instantly, and he fell to the ground | and died without speaking a word. ‘The blow was a fearful one, completely severing a rib and breaking Wil. {rains from the last named | the weather to be warm, and conse juent thereon | «7 0 SOUTH AMERICA. How the People are Represented in Brazil—The Monks and the Taxes—How Emigration is tobe Encouraged—RioGrandede Sul— Sad Btate of Affairs in Paraguay— Matters in Uruguay andthe Argentine Republic. -_—— CUBA. adnan neeniinnnnn Different Ideas of the Situation—The Fight tn Bayamo—Reports from Various Parts of Ine aurrection~The Aggregate of Killed and Wounded—Arrival of Sick and Wounded— Loss of American Brig J. D. Lincoln—Nows from Porto Rico. Havana, July 16, 1870, “Time passes and the rebellion continues,” say those who trom the duration of the contest hope that ultimately Spain will be forced to yteld Cuba to the Insurgents, as she has hitherto done with ber South R10 ‘Janemo, June 23, 1870, Amertcan colonies. Time passes, say the Peninsu- ‘The Minister of the Emptre's panacea for the fal- lares, and cach day the rebellion is being reduced | Siflcation of the Brazthan reproseutattve system {8 to. | within smatier bounds, till now it has assumed a | throw the power more undisguisedly tuto the hands Predatory character, which in a tropical and sparsely of the aristocracy of the land, and niggers and” thé populated country may be prolonged some time yet, | learned professions. At present the primary voters though the “handwriting is on the wail’ in favor of | number one-eighth of the population, meluding the Spain, Valmaseda’s forces, in four columns, attacked — slaves, OF 1,059,059 voters. These elect 20,006 elec the insurgents iutrenched in the Baird Ulli and ad- | tors, apon whom the choice of te Depaties and Sen- Joining sierras, under the immediate command of ators depends, the onty dimerence ta whose elections Maximo Gomez, destroying four camps, with a loss 18, that tn the case of the Senators the electors are to the Insurgents, a4 the Spanish accounts assert, of chosen by a jarger district than tn the case for those over one hundred killed and wounded, Between of Deputies, whose base is the parish, The 20,006 Holgu and Las Tuflas the Valmaseda rangers — electors elect 122 general Deputies and ffty-elgnt attacked tne partisans Vicente Garcia, Julio Peralia . Senators, so iat on (ne average each deputy ia and the men under them, dispersing them as usu elected by 164 electors, ana each Senator by 345 Colonel Marin, with a detac) met of artinerrmen, Each elector {4 chosen by fifty-two voters. is kopt busy by various: et bauds of insurgents | The Minister proposes that to the 20,006 between Las Tailas and Puerto Padre, the latter ; electors stall be @ided all those who by wealth and attempting at every opportunity to cut off the suppiy | Intelligence suould be eutitied t a vote, which in | ‘¢ intended for the | their case would be permanent, Thus the electors Yerrer and | would’ consist of a permanent class, composed of, ‘tion of | Dianters and members of the [earned professions and, i 301! { the former point, ajor Obregon find work to do mat Holgain, » lie ap- prose 1 0! a, } n Hol so af | Of a temporary clasa elected by all persons making aad Bayard. ero sufered accords | gi00 a year. Though decidediy undemocratic in ing to oitoiat report Spacish commanders in " b imprevement om the Camagusy (strict, daring tie past Ufieen daya, a | Principle the plan mtent pring an imp: loss of 100 KilISd, forty prisoners and Too who have the present stace of wings by making the secondary, presehted themseives ; Cinco Villas, Santt | constituency less dependent oa tie land and slave Pah peer tees Sho pettod 109” owners, Iu whose handa the atter dependeney of the partment, ninety killed i itados, Wi primary voters throws whatever power resides in out incladiag the kided & Jun ted at Bare; iot in the different potnts where rebeilion ts rife in Cuda, 459 killed, forty prisoners and i,ouy surreudered, the last including women. Li Voz de Cuda, journal of th! torial on what Cube ts worth te the nation outslde of the government will, ‘The same Mint 1s again pressing on the Legis- ature the propriety of legauzing civil marriage and of permitting it in the empire, and also of establish- lug civil registries of birtis, marriages and deaths instead of the ill-kept Partial registries of the patish priests, ‘Th pot questions which will Not ve granted by We cleriai party without a hard fight. , in an edi. ag otter , i OF Spain ‘y ital acquired in Uids island sustains the agric 1 commerce of those places and is employed in building elegant houses for those who retarn to live iu the mother country. The irate betweon Cas‘ ie alo Cuba | ‘ihe Abbot-General of the monastery of St. Bento amounts to thirty millions yearly. To Cuba is mfdea rather unfortunate tut a few days ago in & owing the fact that the me nile marine of the | protest wgainst the tax on (he monastic property, Peninsula equaly or exceeds that of the United | Alluding to the death of ihe Marquis de Olinda (at States. Cuba, economically administered, can seud | eighty years) the worthy Abbott sa:t:—Look what home $2,000,000 a year.”* has just occurred, an emiuent statesman, one oi the ‘The latest alvices from Santiago de Cuda state | bitterest enemies of the monastic order, has just passed away. Oh! great judgments of God |’ Yes,” Says & commenting writer, ‘we have just learned from Rome wat the Bishop of Pernambuco, prevented by the presence of insurgents, fom fr he who first among the Brasiltan dianops there pro- Quenting noted places of summer resort in the ad- | nounced tn favor of papal infallpility, has died. jacent mountains, now turn their steps toward | Oh! Great judgments of God” Socapa, On the coast, where a guard ts stationed for | Some fifty American emigrants return in tia their protection. | Packet to te United States, tue government having Letters (rom Perto Rico contain coptes of anagree- | given them 'ree passa ment entered into by the merchants there, fixing the | | The Minister of Agriculture has stated his poltcy rates at Which they Wili receive foreign gold coin, | In regard to encouraging immigration. He will go which are as follows:—3) ‘ate xed by | tn entirely for spontaneous imunigrants, to whom law, $17; California $20 pic Spanish $6 | the following favors will be granted:—First, differ. pieces, $5 2644; Soutn American ounces, $16 60; | ence 1a the cost of passage froin that to the United’ sovereigns, ¢4 90, and are Much sickness exisis, with but Iittle movement the part of the troops. The inhabitants of this city, Yellow fever is not so prevalent | States; second, some days’ support at the port of ar ag in Ouba, | rival; Unird, passage to the place of settlement; General Pertillo, in command at Santa Clara, haa | fourth, some aid at the commencement of settler askou to be relieved, and will likely be succeeded by | ment. He also promises to have lands surveyed In General Goyeneche. Advices from Holguin are to the | lota, upon ratiroads,curt roads, navigable rivers, or effect that Peralta, the insurgent omet there, has | towns, Jt Is sald that cle first setuements of thie 4,000 men under him, The.steamer Barcelona, just in i Kind will be forined aioug the Dou Pedro Railroad, from the east end of the fsland, brougit 117 | and that one 14 in prepstadiou about thirty-five miles Sick oficers and soldiers, The commander at | from Rio, such places the {mmi Santi Espiritu reports that on the 2d fnst. a fight | will have some c) of tur , whir the took place between 140 soldivrs and 600 insurgents | colonies, they rarely iad, thei aitaations ag 8 at a point Known as Meloneito, resulting disastrousiy | most alwaysia reg.oas without roads or navig to the last named, they leaving forty dead on the | rivers, No more of (.¢ aasisied colonies, ruled over field. The Spaniards lost ten killed and wounded, | by directors, ave to be Toate, aud as 800n as The steam frigate Almanza, sunk {n the shallow | already existing pay om their debts and are provided. water at the northeast corner of the Havana bay, | with roads they are to ve turned out to shift for Was floated on the morning of the 1éth last. Orders | themeely ‘The arrivais of emigrants last year were have been issued for the re-establishing of a tele- | about 6,000, most of them Germans and Portuguese, graph ofice at Marianas, nine miles from the cits, Rio Grande de Sui 14 the provfuce where immigras | will have to be tried ever sof} much frequented during the hot montha by the Ha- ; baneros. The raral — of Seibabo, in the Cinco | Villas jurisdiction, shot a Chinaman the other day | who had been, it was sald, acting the spy, The | American brig 4. D. Lincoln, hence for Caivarien, | Went asnore lost Monday a a on Cayo Cruz del { Padre. ‘The crew were saved, but the vessel is likely | to prove a total loss. Yesterday a court martial was heid at Matanzas to take cognizance of @ robbery committed by three mulattocs of $400, they being under arrest, and another court martial was held at the pointol the dagger, cutting off the great artery from the heart, penctrating nearly through the body, and cutting terribly the vital organs and intestines in its course, ‘The surgeon said death must have ensued in @ few seconds from bleeding, and the round in front of the house was saturated with ond for some distance from where he A singular fatality seems to attend this Whiting family. A daughter of Mr, Whiting, @ school teacher, Was shot and killed by a young man named Wales, in South Franklin, Mass., dome five or six years ago, and Wales, after shooting Miss Whiting, imme- | the same place to pa lately kilied himself,” Ic was partly on this account that Mr. Whiting sola his farm in Franklin and | Olfensive to the nation. Moved to Pawtucket sone three years ago, and opened @ grocery store on the corner of George and ae: streets, Which he las kept up te the present me, JAMAICA. Disastrous nucets of the Raine—A Village | Almost Sabmerged—Return of Sir John | 4s ces Peter Grant. | Description of Hius by nn Eyewitness—He is Pernt Sarton | Supposed to be Onc of the Lost Men of Fre- Dates from Jamaica to the 8th have been received | mons Expedition—A Characteristic Sensa- | bere. The rains had ceased, but in the intertor of | tion of the Plains. .the country the water in places was 100 feet deep, {Correspondence White Pine News, July 1. And not subsjing. On tho contrary, springs seem | The people inhabiting the northwestern De of | tohave openct up and the water was rising. The Nevada are in an intense state of excitement over | ¥!'lage of Newport, tn the parish of Manchester, had | the supposed discovery of the traces and habitation been almost submerged. The land telegraph |ines of a lost or wild White man. Rumor had located it “Sine Governor Sir John Peter Grant, | upon a high and densely-wooded mountain near the beefed se let ohn Cova Grant Dae eae | Ulan tine, and” alter. fathering all the information | powNced Lis Intention of returulng soon from Eng: | that we could we armed and equipped ourselves for | Mud. @ wip to the jocation described, about fifty miles from our camp, at the sink of Deep Creek. Alter a tiresome ride of two days over the mountains and through one of the wiidest and roughest regions of | this wild and rough country, we came tn sight of and camped near the eastern slope of the mountain. | All were now upon the qué vive tor some sign of the | strange inhabitant. We had just picketed our ani. mals, and sat by the fire telling strange experiences A WILD MAN IN NEVADA, ITEMS FROM ASIA. | ae | By way of Europe we have our fics from Asia dated in Bombay and Calcutta tothe 4th of June, ‘The journals contain the following interesting Items of news :— oy one life, ‘an Be teed a SP asoeel Madras is being lighted with kerosene lamps. | crashing sound, se ) r approach of some strange looking body com- Coal has been discovered near Cabul, and gold near Candahar, Cholera is sald to have broken out tn Lucknow and the surrounding villages, The prospects of the tea planters in Cachar were improved by a heavy fall of rain, The latest advices from China to India reported a still further deciine tn the price of optum. The Maharajah of Vizianagram offered two lacs of | | rupees to found an Alived Medical College at Allata- ing toward camp. Ju: moon suone througa the the sun at noonday. W object. Itis undoubted years old, newly at this moment the ids almost as brilliant as had a spleudid view of the @ white man, about forty covered by a coat of tine long hair, | and in appearance otherwise not at ali starting. He carnied in bis right hand a huge club, and in his leit a rabbit or some other small animal.’ He caught sight of us almost instantaneously, as the moon shone out, and with a scream like the roar of a lion, | and brandishing nis club, dashed past the camp and | bad. | attacked the hories in a periect frenzy of madness. | gonkarray Churrian, high priest of the Hindoos at | We at this time could have shot him but for the fact of the surprise of the moment, and ere we were | armed our animals stampeded, and he was after . them like the wind down the mountain. We en- A telegraphic measage was received in Calcutta deavored in vain to send our dogs after him, which | from England, vid Russia, iu one hour and dity- trained, we had counted upon | three minutes. Mysore, paid a visit to Lord and Lady Napier at but with distended eyes they Thirteen thousand and twenty-five mannds of cot- | sat mutely gazing into the darkn nd neither | ton were shipped jrom ports in British Burmah duy- | blows nor pandnbas eral 0 them ; Ky | ing the month of April. the chase, and the only recour we har ay ‘i . ” was to throw up a hasty. rampart of No rain had failen as yet inthe central provinces of India; but though the heat was very great the | health of the people was generally good. The area of land under cotton cultivation In | Madras increased during last year by 400,000 acres, and of that under ladigo by 75,000 acres. A proposition was made to government to offer a reward of £20,000 for the discovery of a good worka- ble bed of coal In the Madras Presidency. ‘Twenty-two natives of India received rewards for the composition of original works, or the transia- tion into Hindl of other works, in the nortuwestern Provinces during the year, News from the Burmese frontier reports that the logs, and then station guards to prevent « surprise by the infuriated demon. Occasionally, through the Jong watches of the night, all hands were aroused by his terrible cries; and thus, in momentary pectation of an attack, we parsed the night. Morn- Ang:sawned at last, and not one would leave camp uniil the rosy sunlight cheered the landscape, when we took the trail of our horses, after having secureiy hidden our accoutrements and provisions, except a lunch for a few days’ journey. ‘They had torn down the mountain at a terrible speed for about five miles; here they jumped down a sheer precipice anout twenty-five feet, disabling my saddle horse, He was lying near tre bottom, mangled in a shocking man- ner, The wild man had evidently vented his | Panthays defeated and drove back the Chinese tn | rage upon my disabled horse, as large strips | Yunnan, and that the trade route to Momein might of the skin were torn off and thrown | soon be expected to be reopened, to some distance, and his jower jaw Baboo Radanauth Sickdar, for many years chief was broken, We shot him to end bis sufferings. ‘The wild man had here given up the pursuit. About two miles further down the valley we found the rest, of our stock quietly grazing. The only marks they bore were evidently made by being caught by the talls by the wild man In the chase, entirely stripping some of Ce to the British Trigonometrical Survey, and in charge of the observatory in Calcutta, a most accomplished mathematician, is dead, ‘The members of the Bramoh mig Ht a depu- tation of three of their members to Madras to at- | | Company appears to | argument by Consetn | bers of the Constitt | duiy 6. | Madras. | | having gone over to the gover , Ayres papers say that the repuise of Jordan at Sauce, tempt to convert the Billawurs, an outcast tribe on the Malabar coast, to the Bramoh religion, | ‘The heat was so great at Madras that in four days | five European soldiers, one soldier's wife and one ehiid died of heat apoplexy at the Mount. In Oriesa them of hair and skin. We now had some six miles to go to reach our first camp. Arrived there at three o'clock, when we took lunch. Aftor examin- ing our arms we started in the direction trom which the wild man approached and were fortunate enough | ” and a dime, dated 1841, which leads ine to the con- i clusion that he is @ man lost from Freimout’s com- mand in 1846 or near that tim ‘On the night of the 20th of May, after a dnet storm | in Calcutta, a hot breeze began to dlow about ten | o'clock. which caused the thermometer to rise to | ninety-three degrees, or nearly equal to the heat of | the day, Many persons rushed io their windows, tuinking there was a fire, sample shipment of Austra ‘@ Was favorably reported upon by a govern- committee, The wines are sald to reaembie Burgandy, clarets, Cape Pontac hock, sauterne, chablis, and Greek and Hungarian wines, The Wheat, four, biscuits and jams were also good, as well as the preserved meats, ALONG WINDED WiLL CasE. celebrated will case which has been hanging courts for thirteen years, The jury at Marto: recently brought in a verdict for the de when the opposing counsel demanded (hat th should cause the jury to be polled, and it w G cordingly so ordered. Three names had been called and the question, “Is this rich addressed to the fi eli; but before he n, sharp seream, as if tn mortal agony, and dropped apparently ‘lifeless. Every effort was made Lo restore lilm, but at last ac- connts he was still unable to speak, and the great will case of Lackland ys, Jones 1s still In abeyance. ‘The doctors pronounce his disease apoplexy. I he dies before answering the question Wie Whole case again. —+_ ANOTHER LONGEYITY.—We are informed by Seth Hopper, Assistant United States Marshal for this | distict, that on Tuesday last be found a lady by the | pame of Holland, living near Michaelsville, who 18 over 114 years of age, who Is in the enjoyment of good kealth, quite active and sprightly ana whose menialiacuities are unimpaired. She has a daugh- ter who is seventy eigitt years ol and the mother of Arkansas has a in produce to CURIOUS CASE OF AMALGAMATION, —Yesterday a | white man, of rather good appearance, was brought to the police court, charged with druukenness. His case being a mild one, five dollars was considered eumMctent remuneration to the city for his temporary lodging. To pay the five dollars a gushing girl came forward. She was black all over, especially in the face, and looked full of sweetness, In tendering the | five she said that the young man had befriended her in humerous Ways, aad spent @ heap of money om ber in earlier and better days. Now he was forlorn, and she proposed to cover bim, when in black ad- versity, with her stlil more sabie Wing, As she took out her wht What sheepish looking “ f jer,’ she mac the court, When the two, y together.—Leavenirarer % arms, we | Of the government poucy, | Ofeen children.—ddaure de Crack (Md.) Kenubiican, ns; Commercial, July 3 tion presents the most leaitny aspect, Germans, especlaliy Prolesiauts, luuigraung tere spon taneously, to German s@iticucuw, which have in eneral thrived and developed, The province haa, just formed two colonies out of 399,000 aeres of land which It has received from ‘he government, a8 bave all the other provia Au application has been made to the proviuce from the religions sect of the Mennonites, in Norti Germany, numbering about tea thousand sonls, who, advised by a German nataral- ist of eminence, have determined to settle in Rio 88 judgment agaiust several | Grande de Sui if they be guaranteed exemption Persons known, but not to be found, for writings | fom military service, Wiel tieir tenets forbid them toenter, ‘hey ure leaving Gerunny because. the exemption willvl ‘hey enjoyed uuder the old dispeu- gation has been annulled oy the new org and they are, (heretore, determined to sell property aud seek # couuiry Where thelr Tespect to the sta of military service will be respected, It is to be hoped the Brazilian government will have the good sens@ to accept tuew offer. ‘The British residents gave the British Envoy, Mr. Buckley Mathew, @ banquet on the Lh, before Dis departure on leave Of abgence to Europe. He haa been very hospitable and loeral, in audition to bold. ing Many tough Ages for Briieh tntereats, #0 he ts very popular here, Heit was whose umely media- tion enabied General Ve he Brazilian govern- Ment to squirm out ty that (hey nad gol themseives Into in about tie Canada Qifair, We vadersian) Hs altar was - mitted to Mr. dhorn the British Mdmister at Washington, for an arbifracon, ‘The issue ae to surisdictiousn the gre. Baron de Maui agamst tie san Pano Railroad 08 decided couclasively th favor of the company, and the case will have to be tried in England. The tree Relagain decided last previous tree must be 4 case of the of them di clared that be was not neyed Jato subserg vience to the supreme Uc 1d he be tight. ened by the pro: not the two drat Judges. On the 2zd tie tr he cane od, and after 1 bevalt of the judges accused of conte Supreme Court held @ sectet discussion ani tually acquiled the Judges. The news from Paragnay 14 that a temporary atop. page had been placed to (le szutog of the prelimi. Dary treaty of peace by a proposal made by the pro- visional government, Waica, “saough accopied by the Brazilian Miniter, vould tot be by cre Argentine without fur Instructions, Tue ejection of mem* it Assembly was postponed to The condition of ple 1s said Lo bs Thost distreseing; wom 2 ik wuMbers of starvation, iu tue sti aid could not be iven. In the Argentine Cor to be going yor of th force detached by Lope ederation matters appeared general gove Canny Jordan to be rhe Buenos or the Willows, was disastrous to his cause, and many chiefs had abandoned D say Uhag the government tro ivom Oorrtentes to disperse the Y accounts, bows ever say Jordan Was lu good tru, aud (bat he wae ariiling 3,000 m infantry. ‘The government troops had secu os, wita Urquiza’s can. non and muskets, Sarmiento red the closed ports open again to me Au auth ei important me! He says that ra y wiites that Varioug pe. and 30¢ rou Corrientes had naking th the north of In Concordia the town was Neld for the government, and 600 foreign réaidents had armed themse.ves fo defence Garcia bad alse declared for the gov . Conesa had issued a prociamation dec'aring that ail was over with Jordan, and that General Mitre was marching north. - Ger trom Corrien. tes, and he himaelf were re All, except the murderers of Urqutza to surrender within tifte to mare ‘0 Would come forwatd 4 should be pardoned. favorable accounts, port of Jordan bay- Joucorila, with 8,000 to 4,000 men, @ 8. Sarmiento i8 asking a ization to borrow $30,009,0.0 silver to take the port aud dock at Buenos Ayres, extend the Cordova Kaliroad, &e. The state of affairs in Uruguay {3 a8 uncertain as in Entre Rios. President Battle had gone to Di no to organize his campaign. "a J mtacke nts, to strike his trail, with the well defined footprints of | the crops were drying up in the gardens and the Chal oO whipped ine “the aflair is nic at a @ man who Would wear a number nine shoe, but | water in the wells and tanks. {the Battie of the Spurs, Castro, however, says he ing very broad on the bottom. We followed his | Captain Cadell was deputed by the government of | thrashed them when he came up, and he writes wih trail for about three miles, when the gorge opened 1D | maja to settle the differences between the Mahara- | true Castilllau Doastiig. Suu, the insurgents scour @ beautiful basin, and half a mile further the trail Jah of Ulwar and his Thakoors. This petty dispute | the Southern Department at will, Pi a very in» ended abruptly at the entrance of a cave. We exe | ‘was telegraphed to England, as “serious rising of | fucntial vader, had sold all. ties pro! nd gous Plored this cave, finding a ses of soldier's bute upwards of two thousand chiefs In the Norinw: to the Confe tiou, saying that le despaired of roemniting the Colorado party ani could not approve That utter rowdy, Colonel a command by the Prest- yrders to Mave Lin sent tO Flores, has been refused dent, who also had sent him as a prisoner, FATAL POISONING BY EATING MUSSELS. ti ‘om the San Francisco Bulletin, July 6.) On Sunday a party of about fourteen | 8 and gentlewen, residents of San Mateo county, went om: @ dishing excursion ia the viciaity of San Gregorto, and as the creek of tha: name did uot yiolel sumetent proposed foast, they went to’ the beach and rom the rocks and sands a large quanti These they cooked, aud nearly t whole party partook of tem plenteously, In a& time ten of tweive of the number became dangere ll. They hastened to the hotel, and a@ messene point from wi a ger Was sent 10 al! la > Spantshtown, tWenty-th ich Whlie he was cg) miles distant, but the near Physician could be procured, such rem as suggested themselves were admi ‘anh Came one of the! sword, of this city, @3 iste ut before p Dumber, Captain Willian pired. Tne rest of the party were properly car for, and it Was thouguttiey would all recover, body of Capta wal be brought to this oftyy and the fun piace to-tay. Capt Nanford wa taocage. He formerly resided Ju Calavera county.

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