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‘GENEVA.| CONTINUED FROM FIFTH PAGE. there are two letters which give ground for reflec- ton. A QUESTION NEATLY ANSWERED. Sir A. Paget, the English Minister, in acknow- ledeing the roocns of a despatch from the Portu- guese Minister of State, adds:— There is, nevertheless, a point on which the govern- ment of Her Me ty greatly desires to have information, and on which the ote of Your Excellency and the papers which it encloses have not touched, and that 1s to know what laws or rules, or what other means are at the dis- position of the Portuguese government to hinder on its rritory acts which would be in violation to the laws of Portuguese neutrality, as laid down in the declarations of neutrality which Your Excellency has transmitted to me. ‘And M. Caza) Ribetro replies as follows :— reply itismy duty to inform Your Excellency that % on this matter are those which j nentione In the laws and thé rule: ofa violation of neutrality are criminal procedures, employment of force, complaints addressed to fore! ernments, or other means calculated to meet the par- lar circumstances of the case. ‘ 1 believe this heartily. Where there is a will ‘there is a way. ‘The counsel is in error when he maintained that | ‘thes United States do not understand these laws | commented upon so clearly by the writers cited, and applied by their tribunals, judges at least as wisely as the corresponding laws of Engiaud, THE EXAMPLE OF SWITZERLAND. In regard to Switzerland we have drawn together ™ our justificatory papers some precious docn- | ments, which show the zeal and the good will | which this republic brings to the support of its neu- ‘trality in the midst of great European wars. I cite also the expfanation of the laws of Switzer- land, given by the Federal Council in the Coneini | case, to show that the counsel of Great Britain Is mistaken: altogether in his appreciation of those | laws, as well as in his appreciation of those of | Italy and Brazil, (‘Droit Public Suisse,” tom. 1, p. they judge and decide who is right in regard to these laws—Great Britain basing its case on an equivocal word in a diplomatic despatch, or the United States basing its case on the very text of the laws and the commentaries of the best juris- | consults of France, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Brazil. lappeal further to the honorable arbitrators to say whether the institutions of England are truly more constitutional than those of Italy, of Brazil and of Switzerland. According to the opinion of tne counsel for Great Britain, those countries do not possess any neutrality laws. But they observe the duties of neutrality, and they observe them without attracting suspicion to their constitution. Who, then, is in error in this matter? Is it England? | or is it America ¢ THE LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES. The counsel for Great Britain devotes much space to the discussion of the laws of the United States. ‘Less time will be necessary, I think, to reply to his argument. The counsel endeavors to prove that the law of ‘the United States, so far as this question is con- cerned, is limited to the case of a war vessel, In support of that he cites the expressions of the third article of the law, which punis! with certain penalties “every person who within the frontiers of the United States equips and arms for war, or attempts to equip and arm for war, or wilfully takes Part in the provisioning, equipment or armament tor war of any boat or vessel," with the purpose of employing that boat or vessel in the service of a foreign belligerent Power, Resting upon these expressions of the law, he believes that, in order to constitute this crime, it is necessary that the ship should have been armed for war or that some one should have attempted to arm it for war, THE REAL MEANING OF THE STATUTE. But in jurisprudence this interpretation of the law is perfectly erroneous, It is established in the United States that itis not the charactey of the peonarations which constitutes the crime, but the tention which dominates the act. This doctrine ‘ts thus exhibited by Dana:— ‘With regard to the preparation of ships within our ju; Fisdiction for acts of wlierior hostility, tue criterion that ‘we invoke is not the extent and the character of the pre- fhe but the intention which piaasica over the par- fi | .) Now, I appeal to the honorable arbitrators that | | licuiar acts. If a person accomplishes or attempts to accomplish an act leading ov to these prepara- # with the intention that the ship may hostility, that person completion of the | preparations or the point to which they may have nm carried, and although his attempt may not have in any way advanced the completion of those. preparations. To furnish materials of which such use might be made, 19 furnish them with a knowledge of the object tor which they nicht be used constitute an oftence. This ix or up to no matier natory act, in a con- We have not ive to the reunion of materials, which, mot serve for acts of hostility, but which, taken together, constitute insirn- | ments of’ hostility; for the intention covers every ca furnishes the criterion of culpability. It matters Mittle where the reunion may take place, in one place or fn another, i the acts committed on our territory make Bertola flan in consequence of which a slip inay be tehed with the purpose of being employed as a eralyer. (Argument of the United States, pp. e423) A DECISION IN POINT. These extracts from Dana are authoritative in the matter, The true interpretation of law has been established by a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States. The Court has de- termined ‘that it is not necessary that the vessel be armed, or in a condition that permits it io com- mit hostilities at the moment of its departure from the United States.” (United States vs. Quincy. Peters’ Reports, vol. vi., p. 446. Vide Opinions, vol. 8, pp. 798-741.) ANOTHER TELLING POINT. | Such is the law as it is understood and practised | im America, Both counsel of the United States, | Mr, Evarts and myself, have adininistered justice and we have a knowledge of this law so personal that we are also able to speak of it authoritatively, Lafirm that the interpretation of this law, as given by the counsel, is absolutely contrary to the inter- pretation received in the United States, I cali attention to the expressions of the tempo- Tary law of 1888, reported by myself to the Con- gress of the United States, That law perinits the seizure “of every vessel or vehicle,” armed or un- armed, when there are any circumstances which Jead to the opinion that “this vessel or vehicle” is destined for military operations against a foreign | State. (United States Statutes, vol. v., p. 213.) | That law had been framed according terpretation of the permanent law, THE PREVENTIVE POWER OF THE PRESIDENT, It follows that all the scaffolding of ticism which the counsel constructs with reference to the | preventive power of the President of the United States tumbles to the ground. He supposes that this power is limited to the case of a vessel armed | o the in- | for War, because he supposes that the penal clauses | " have only that extent. He is in crror on each point, | ‘The preventive power ot the President applies to | every case of the law, to “all the prohibitions and penalties of the law.’ ’ And the Jaw does not require ‘that the vessel be arme {for war; itis enough that its owner has the intention of s | of hostility against a State friendly to the United States, The case of Geiston vs. Hoyt, cited by the | counsel, touches oniy the manus? of exercising the preventive powers of the law, and it inno way | effects those powers themselves In the justificatory documents annexed to the counter case of the United States may be found numerous examples of the exercise of this tive power by the President. ‘The fact armed or not is on) cireumstan Weighs more or less heavily upon the q tion—the question of the intention of the owner of the vessel, FILIBL The counsel enune’ where adventurers have American iaw, We have pre cases of varions dates been sustamed by the ested {n our argument, and we per- fist in protes the opportuneness 0! such arguments. Eng is belore the tribunal accused of ed to use due diligence in ob- ving the convehtionai rules of the Treaty of | Washington. If Au s failed or not in iis duties of neutrailty according to the common is not the question su i to the tribunal America replies at a proper time and place for. her acts Lo those w hh acts y have ured, ‘The counsel has cited some © the cor- Fespondence of oiclals of the Uo regard to le ions which aris time in the are, Withou present themselves American law, Jaw, comes froin a sclo te two countries, whicl of jurisconsuits and tribun We have discussed ties ment. But we are nota laboriousiy drawn together hout a longer preparation than we K from the tribanal. DANA AGAIN. The capital question Is t ot the President. This matter is clucidat: says:— As to the penalties and damage parties are Jiable to fine and im sel, its equipment aud furnitare vials surnicbed tor its case of suspicion th on of the law logous to ¢ tiong in ourargu- seuss in detail ail these cases w counsel, desire to oWore Of the yy Dana. He to inflict, the enlpable it for 5 President has | the power army and the navy, or the civil forees, to seize the ships, or to 6 ships, which are not sabject to seizure, to our ports. [tis left to the discretion of | the Exe e to judge of what vessels the departure | i ought to be required. —American Argument (p. 30). AN ILLUSTRATION. | A single example suitices to give an idea of the | recognized extcnt of the powers of the President, Spain caused to be constructed in the yards of | New York thirty gunboats destined to be used against the Insurgeits in the island of Cuba ‘They were vessels unfit for long es, They were not armed and had on board neither cannons nor any other engine of combat. War existed in law, if not in fact, between Spain and Pera, ‘The Peru= vian Minister at w York made complaint | with regard to these gunt 3s. He did not pretend that they were destined to oper against Peruy as it was clear that they could not | pass around Cape Horn. But he pretended tha applied to the de 2 of the shores of Cuba, They ‘would {ree from that service other vessels, whic: ight thus be able to attack Peru. The President listened to these reasons and or e , Memoirs of Mr. Trumbutl, one of the secretaries of | a death wh NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1872—-TRIPLE SHERT. aained oy, Srentice. of these thirty vessels unta Spain and Peru should have regulated their ditfer- ences. This they did, thanks to the mediation of the United States. JURISDICTION OF THE TRIBUNAL. A question of diligence presents itself with refer- a to any erroncous decree of a Court of Admi- ‘a I propose, a8 a principle, that the government which undertakes judicial pursuit and which sub- mits itself without appeal to an erroneous decree, has not the right to cite that decree in order to ex- cuse ulterior Wrongs belonging to the same class of cases. That is, I believe, to fail doubt, the due diligence presented by the rules of tl treaty, I abstain from discussing that question, But Ll afirm that the erroneous decree does not bind in any way. That is, indeed, evident. More, laimrm further that the decree does not bind in 7“ way an international tribunal, nis principle is enunciated and suMciently dis- cussed in the “Institutes of Rutherforth, an’ Eng- lish work of merit and puphori ty. Wheaton and other authorities adopt the views of Rutherfortn, This question has been raised by the English and American Commissioners appointed to law down the stipulations of what is called the Jay Treaty, The following circumstance is reported in the that Commission. It appears that, being in doubt, the Commissioners consulted the Earl of Lough- borough, then Lord Chancellor, He decided that the Commissioners, in their charac- ter” of international tribunal, possessed a complete jurisdiction and could revise the decrees of any municipal tribunal whatever, and to do jus- tice to the government wronged in its interests or in those of its subjects. ‘The Commissioners acted accordingly. I conceive that such Is the recognized jurisdiction in the case of special claims, by numerous interna- tional commissions, which have sat since then in England and in America. CONCLUSION. T have just treated some of the questions put by the counsel of Great Britain solely for the sake of satisfying my conscience. 1 do not believe that they are of a nature to exercise a preponderating innuence upon the minds of the arbitrators, The rules of the treaty are decisive in all the questions raised by the United States, If these rules are the true expression of common law, as I am convinced, allis well; ifthey pass beyond the common law they constitute authoritatively the conventional law of the tribunal. It matters little what is the interpretation of the | municipa! law of England. The interpretation of the law of the United States matters still less, The laws of the other States of Europe matter nothing. ‘The conduct of the United States towards Spain or Mexico, or even towards Great Britain, is not here in question, There is only one question to be de- cided—Has Engiand failed, yes or no, in using the LIVINGSTONE. Additional Comments of the Foreign Press on the Herald Living- stone Expeilition. a THE SECRETS OF THE NILE. A Land Inviting to the Adventure- some and Enterprising. THE BELLES OF INTERIOR AFRICA. Livingstone Something More Than a Lost Geographer. Pet A THE SLAVE TRADE ON THE COAST, The following are additional extracts from the foreign press on the result of the HERALD Living- stone expedition :— ‘ {From the Christian World, an English newspaper.) Some of our scientific and literary men have been acting @ very small part with respect to the discovery of Dr. Livingstone by Mr, Stanley, the cor- respondent of the New York HeRaLp. From the first they were apparently annoyed at finding that that notable feat should have been accomplished by one outside of their charmed circle, and especially that the honor should have fallen upon an American Even parties connected with our Royal Geographi- cal Society must needs express thelr doubts, forget- “due diligence” required by the Treaty of Wash- ington? fhe United States sustain here principles which are, in their opinion, of high importance tor all mai itiine peoples, and, above all, tor Great Britain, mo even than for the United States. We therefore await, with respect and submission, but also with- Meal Toa eRe, the judgment of this august tri- unl, PRENCH INTERNATIONALS IN COUNCIL, The Society Under Anothcr Name in France—President Thiers Looking After His Intereste—A French Spy in the Ranks—“Strikes” in Switzerland and Spain Successful. The spacious hall at No. 100 Prince street was filled with an enthusiastic throng of Frenchmen and more than the usual number of French women yesterday. They were, of course, all Internationals, Whether it was owing to the change of weather or important business on hand, certainly it was the best attended meeting that has been held for sgme months. Communications from different parts of the world were received, from which the following was gleaned:— - The Freneh Internationals of Baltimore are giving lib- of their funds to aid the “strikers” in the north of and It is their present wish that all Internation- als will do likewise, nternationals of France are to be known hereatter her name, as under the present laws of that coun- ere inflicted on those who will be found at an Internat ting. ‘There has been recently Paris, to be known as the ‘The principles upon which the society, in base the promoth niicate,” t ‘all tend to lon of good feeling among its members and in their deulings with the outside world. ‘The in- rests of the employers are. regarded by its members equatly with their own, and both par- to setie all disputes ay may arise be tes have agree by the deciston of a delegation — to ‘apbointed demand ‘such, five delegates to ates to be he employes, all the trades Nearly rele” or “Council.” to establish schools, gymna: the working people, where ainuse themselves. In fact, ahns” in France as well ax Gerinan) somewhat similar to the German Turt Aroport trom Switzerland elic affairs there as regards 1 the saine basis as that of urpose of the society: ms, &e., for the children of Y may learn as well as as the society is erein. a similar state of rnationatism, @ society on nce having been organized ple have been quite successful in their emands, as mostly all of them are now rs, instead of twelve, and receiving the sume pay as formerly. Tn Malaga, Spain, inineteen corporat cieties have come out victorious in th orl isconsiderable trouble and suffering among the the north of France, growing out ot the recent 8 or trades so- struggle for less A report from them goes t the soldiers and the * strike the latter w It was decided at the meetit International to con nt thos families who are now deprived of those who gave the read ‘The following sarcastic proclamation is to be ed to all the sections. It conveys the same sense Thiers’ commapd to the Army Department at the outbreak of the nike i— “Soldiers, put your knapeacks on your backs. Your tonts tion is are fold dn Iv. Go forward; the re public gives you the or ons ‘of workingmen, go and down “your brot pur fathers, friends, w sthat they hum for an increase of wag and not to work for merely ing, in order that they may enrich President Thiers, ‘who is'the principal owner of the mines.’ priquet (a nickname of Thiers) in- forms the soldiers:—You are merely a brigade, but If necessary one hundred thousand men will foHow you to Kill those socialist republicans, A rnmor has bees going the rounds of the International Cire leon was the ori gaye a large sum of There has been quite air International: discovery o months age s that Louis Napo- said ‘strike? and that he it” Freneh ing in league with ‘minent, and at heart an enemy to Intern rencl £0 tignalism. Detectiveism weeks, sufficient y. and, after a few videnee w ived to prove that he ronseguence ix that the Tternationals hed it their different pupers, ie appearance. Cer. was brought into pl. tainly to them he i It was announ publish their the Ist of Septembe * heen made ly on and se to tse eed to send delegates to the |} | cribed to Dr, Livingstone in his second letter about geography and of the splendid additions brought by African discovery will not enrich any nation nor civilize any tribe, nor bring that wealth of land and men one whit nearer to the world alone which could use them well. He con- cludes, therefore, that it is conquest by bayonets and bullets, not exploration, which the Valley of the Nile requires. This is a very serious assertion in the age we live in. Such a con- quest, doubtless, would prove effectual as a means of utilization, but socially and politically the right ofacivilized nation to carry firebrand and steel, unprovoked, to the heart of an unknown country 18 very questionable, The sword in eivilized hands accomplishes the same work as other weapons do in the hands of the savage—namely, slaughter. Admitting that in the course of time the natives of Central Africa may have to combat a thousand or so of our countrymen, “English ruffians and Arab Savages,” as our contemporary proposes, can Christians feel that this is civilizing Experience out of Africa has. sti us that hate, distrust, revenge .in hideous form cannot be purged from the soil watered by a father’ brother's or husband’s blood, Generations must die out on both sides ere civilization can be the result of such a conquest. If we turn from some imaginary scene of bloodshed taking place between Britons.and Africans near the sources of the Nile to consider the more civilizing example shown by Dr. Livingstone at present, a doubt will not exist concerning the immense social value of his explorations, He not only a sage, a man of book lore, he is the living apostle of the very civilization which finds its way to the conscience of human beings, be the; ever so unenlightened, There is that in the milk undaunted gaze of a man gifted with a superior soul which ‘softens even savages. The ‘great’ white man is already a figure among the men around him, He is fearless, he is trustful, he Is in- indefatigable, forbearing; all these qualities de- ascribed by Mr. Stanley as having been righ him in Dr. Livingstone are those of acivilizer, We can fancy, from the imsight given us into so grand a character, what his grlef would be if he foresaw that the high road his scientific search is opening to European and American enterprise is doomed tobe strewn with the victims of a remorseless carnage, Could not this immense discovery be turned to prove the power and might of the white man’s moral superiority? Could not an army of peaceful crusaders be sent forth instead of an army of “ruf- fans?" could not their leaders be a legion of self- forget{ul, earnest, determined men all sworn not to strike but in personal defence, not to burn, or shed blood unnecessarily? If indeed “Indian oficers by the dozen are slowly dying in England of disap- ful of the fact that their Search Expedition has played a most ignoble part, and that the sooner they square accounts with the public in that matter the better for the reputation of all con- cerned, The authenticity of Dr. Livingstone’s letters was first called in question, and then insinuations were thrown ont as to whether the great traveller had been ever reached. The de- famatory process had attained such dimensions that the heads of the Foreign OMice and the son of Dr. Livingstone had to be appealed to by Mr. Stan- ley, seeing that he was to a to have bronght letters to them from the Doctor. Lord Granville stated that he had inquired into the matter, and found that Mr, Hammona, the Under Secretary of the Foreign Ofice, and Mr. Wylde, of the Consular and Slave Trade Department, had received de- spatches from Dr, Livingstone, and that they had not the slightest doubt as to the genuineness of these papers, which were published on Tues- day last. Mr. Oswell Livingstone also bore testi- mony to having received, through Mr. Stanley, the diary of his father, duly signed and sealed, with written instructions on the outside; and it appears that a packet of letters, thirteen tn all, principally addressed to members of the Livingstone family, were received at Hamilton, Scotland, on the 2d inst. They are all in the Doctor's handwriting, but the contents are strictly private, by the explorer’s own desire. Mr. Livingstone said he had not the slightest doubt that the journal is his father’s, and that this is the case with the letters Mr, Stanley has brought. As was only to be expected from the generous ‘na- ture of our Foreign Secretary, Lord Granville took occasion to pay a well-merited compliment to the able and adventurous American. When in Paris last week Mr. Stanley was entertained at a grand banquet by the American residents, Mr, Washburne, the American Minister, presided, and addresses * suitable to the occasion were made. In responding to the toast of his health, Mr. Stanley sald that it was to the generosity of the young proprictor of the New York HERALD, Mr. Gordon Bennett, that applause was chiefly due. It was he who serft a telegram to Madrid, saying he believed Livingstone was still living, and that he onght to be found, “Here,” he added, “is £1,000; when it is spent take another thousand, and then another, and another still, Don’t keep a strict account, but find Living- stone.” He also described his interview with Dr. Kirk, the English Consul at Zanzibar. He spoke in very severe terms of Dr. Kirk, That gentleman had atforded Dr, Livingstone no succor whatever, and had spoken, when he saw him at Zanzibar, in a Sane, and indifferent tone about the rospect of finding him. Mr. Charles Anstin, an snglish newspaper correspondent, deprecated this hasty censure of Dr. Kirk. Mr. Stanley reached London on the 2d inst., and has been quite lionized since his arrival. He has received numerous invi- tations from our most eminent men, and Lady Franklin has invited him to visit her, He has brought home with him an African boy of ten years of age, who has become a favorite with the ladies. Mr. Stanley is described as a low-sized, thick-set, young-looKing man. Sir H. Rawlinson and Herr Kiepert, a Kerlin geographer of eminence, have published letters impugning the statements as- the Nile and the watershed of Central Africa, as containing geographical blunders, A short time will, We have no doubt, set at rest all ditticulties in this respect. [From the Court Journal, August 3.) Now other men than svans are brought into contact with the Nile-discovering business, they are beginning to take off its halo, “Lx Nile nihit jt" is perhaps, however, too hasty a decision? We, for our part, should look at it in this light, There is no dtiiculty in travelling in Africa, and | finding one’s way about, even alone and without resources; that is clear, On the other hand, there isa great dical to be got by the enterprising. Ivory | is not more dificult to obtain than rotten old wood, | We shall think nothing, therefor of our young men of the day wh opening to obtain wealth to ¢ sighing for an wo their wishes, and who, with a few thousands, could call the girls of their hearts their own, if they do not, if only provided with f ‘a hundred pointment and ennui,” whose services could be urned to account, more is the shame; but, on the other hana, there are ln England aspiring and noble youths fired with the desire to fight and die for “the good” of their fellow men, Suchis the army that should carry civilization all down the Nile from Al- exandria to the Equator, But this is not ali yet. The article alluded to, of which the writer has failed to mark that the politi- cal value of every nation is rooted in its social ex- cellence, calls the story of the meeting of Mr. H. Staniey with Dr,-Livingstone bizarre. He considers It 80, probably, because it is 80 very novel; because 80 much greatness and simplicity are the striking features of Mr, H. gianiy's narrative, or perhaps also because the whole affair, from the time of the young. American's interview with Mr. Bennett, junior, to that of the shake-hands with Dr. Living- stone at Ujijl, was conducted without any of the roe to wl our moss-grown minds are accus- tomed. If strange is the English of bizarre, the term is correct; but if odd is the idea meant I think the definition, though French, very inapplicable in- deed; neither do I see anything comic in this other figure, that of the newspaper correspondent, who, in the regular exercise of his proiession, move neither by pity, nor by love of knowledge, nor by desire of adventure, but by an order from Mr. Bennett, coolly plunges into an unknown conti- nent to search lor @ lost geographer, and after months. of sufferings such as only African travellers endure, attains below the eer an object desired by all mankind, to be repat By the publication of despatch to the New York HERAtp, ‘The paragraph greatly diminishes the merit of all named therein. Dr. Livingstone is surely something more than a lost geographer, Mr. Bennett something more than a master giving orders; while Mr, H. Stanley de-~ serves a very different appreciation to that which is usually applied to a class of neuen who receive salaries for the purpose of making others la There can be nothing comic connected with the heart-rending scenes Mr. Stanley must have gone through, or in his twenty-three attacks of the most malignant fever, or in his daily suspense, in his hope delayed and hair-breadth escapes; neither is it possible to conceive that one who endured so much could be unmoved by a nobler aim than that of sending a despatch from Zanzibar to his employer. Could @ man be _ inaccessible to pity, who, the further he plunged into African deserts found his bodily sufferings increase, anda (She endless vista of unknown trials even stretching out in his pursuit of a man like Dr. Liv- ingstone, when he ignored what was coming next, whether the object of his search was murdered? whether he would not soon share the same fate? Stiil if in mental blindness we persist in only see- ing in Mr. Stanley a clear-bratined, cold-hearted re- porter, one who does not value human life so much asa telegram, we shall sfill have to adnmut that, considering his moral incapacity, he accomplished in the simple performance of his charge a very gigantic feat, that of penetrating 1,000 miles of un- known country, This fact would alone show Mr. Stanley to be, ifnothing more, one that his nation may be proud of, because he did his duty regardiess of personal danger. {From the Edinburgh Courant, August 10.) The great Livingstone-Stanley question is, there can be no doubt, at'last fairly cleared up and set- tied, The plucky and indefatigable correspondent of the NEw YoRK HERALD has discovered our gal- lant countryman, who in the cause of humanity and science has separated himself from England, from Europe, from civilization itself, for a period of more than six years, Even so it is—the Expedi- tion institated by an American newspaper has achieved a signal success where the Search ex- pedition which we ourselves attempted has ended in humiliating failure. Mr. Stanley has con- trived to find Dr. Livingstone, because from the first he acted in ® mauner the very reverse, at each possible point, of that in which the countrymen of Livingstone acted; because he took measures prompt, practical and strenuous, while we deliberated; because he ad no petty jealousies of self-secking rivalry st which to contend, no obstacles of divided each, club together in company and win the wealth of Africa. Africa May be to many a new India, [t | must be a jolly life also, Livingsione thinks so, endeavors to make it 4 pular paper with the | and for those who have no such love tit thome | French people, and run it with much the same cnergy as | his rhapsody about the belles will be quite iting. | the American papers. Here is a portrait of Cazembe's queen, Moart a | Neombe by name:—"Would be moi al | “KENO” IN NEWARK, 4 beauty either in Loudon, Paris or New York, a | yet she had a small hole through the cartilage, n The Police Renew Their Raids On the the tip ofher fine slightly se. But she | Gamblers=A “Crib” “Pailed” With Fife | had only filed or 0 front of Pe | her superb snow-whit and then what ht gaa chains }a laugh she had! Let those who wish to | The police of Newark have recovered from the | know go and see carried to her far x given thani, by tha telenteat batts sons | in her pony pliteton, which isa sort ¢ ck given them by the friends of certain persons | Haeneqon two very iong poles, aod carr ested last winter and have renewed their war- | twelve stalwart yall iscats doo, gon- | fare on the gambling dens of the city, | Uemen, and don’t let Livingstone enjoy the On Saturas ight 9 aqu hir. | Of the interior of Africa to hitaselt. Wwe aad hatt | mn Saturday night = a squad of” thir | y government it would seca grand chance and tit | teen officers and . Chief Glasby made a | out an expedit ‘Of huwnanity to stop pnt on a place kept in the upp: rt of w4 | the infamous t with whitel he js “0 Ma stted © Will onl ‘ justly incensed and bitterly laments.” Why the in- om ps fbi stipe be ap tershall and | tovior of Africa would be a little thing for such A Frank McConnick, the noted lawbri r, Who has | tumn tourists we have, and the Alpine Cinb already been in the State Prison. All the persons | might, if itintended to ste her, instead of up in the place, fifteen im number, together with keno | Md down a big mountain, do Englund some real and other gambling tools, were bd moved to the The list of arrests From the London Glo! ug made is f 0 Jand has suddenly discov that tradi- McCorm ‘ayton, P in. k Coanivan, Will Richard Ward, Charl v nan, D. Wilson, Mts, n P, Haynes, Benjamin’ Sutherland, Ath a few were | liber bail, The lat. was fixed in at Is being required to give $1,000 it the night im the station hous y bonds fe consider shots are said blood = was hitve to spilted. are “going for the gamblers tion, fre aut this Pp, sure. violation of 4 few citiz ontside world rhe aid that this disgracefut practised by not a 4 ure regarded by th i tights and guides and ex- community, as amples for the youth of th TRE RESULT OF A TRIP TO CONEY ISLAND. mo tave Thomas Jenny, of 351 Firs 16, Went on a trip to Coney Isiand yesterday and while bathing got into a quarrel 1 some unknown individuals about a woman, On the return trip Mr. Jenny's mercurial acquaintances, who had in the mean- time filled themselves with bad rum, sought him out and demanded an apology, which he refused to ra} On this they attacked him with soda water bottles and cha ud beat him severely on the head an On the injared man raising an alarm bis assal yt be found on @ search being instituted. n the arrival of the boat at New York, was taken to the Ninth precinct station house, Where his wor consist of four serious abrasio the cut on the left wrist, were dressed, SUICIDE IN TRENTON, Ab Englishman named Marsal! Shupson, twenty. nine years of age, jumped into the Delaware River at Trenton yesterday and Was drowned, despite efforta to rescae him. The body was soon after ware vered, An ingnest jury ed a verdict that deceased ¢ 10 bis aboripg under mental aberration, A Is, which panda tonal foe, t snotanan end, It has only shi its citadel to east, from Guinea to Zanzibar. our diplo- matic relations with the Zanzibar are of such a nature ag to have undo: that our gun- boats and cruisers ty i elsewhere. Dr, Livingstor with « sof detail, laid before t rs whi t the caravans of ern Africa Ju competition with the once pro- verb “Mic Ler and v recently had opportanity of drawing attenti » the fact that he tye Traders fs willing to forego his a temporary annnal Income dsayear, The money final suppression of of sacrifice is so slight speech contained 0 easy, that the Queen's more welcome words tual dealing with the matter. is a ease in which ignorance of facts ist 5 or inaction, and, thanks to Dr. Li cuse tor inaction exists no more. ossible to b taken in s 1 promise ot on the Cabinet with t brought to the Foretgu On Nie may be undignified on ot the framers of a message from the Crow > their ob- ligations to the ex a journalist. But journalists themsely nore explicitly grateful, and not, like of our contem- aries, avoid all men the man who has put a posit Mr. Gladstone's et ca to the etreum= stances or W adto Wail the ar rival of ¥ € public anxiety, could be relieved by an official allusion to ouy disgraceful relations with the Sulran of Zauzwar, (From the Parla Correspondent of the Swiss Times.] As Ido not share the social views of M. A. Dumas and of M. Du Bourg, whose maxim it 18 to kill, I cannot adhere to the murderous spirit of that arti- cle entitled In one of our pubic na The Politi. cal Value of African Diseov The writer thinks that the explorations of Dr. Livingstone and his search by Mr. H, Stanley cannot have a great re | Suits that @ more correct Knowledge of African a. | national humiliation, tho els aud distracted deliberations thrown in his path, We have no ‘wish unduly to censure the policy or the proceedings of the Royal Geographicad Society. It certainly seems strange that geographi- cai science should enkindle in the breasts of its votaries sentiments of ignovle suspicion and mutual ill will, which ought to have no place ainong the session of the savans, and that anew river, a new mountain, a new lake, a new island, has uo sooner been discovered by one of thelr num- ber thaw the attempt is’ made to dis- | credit the revelation in a hundred un- worthy Ww Scientific zeal. is one thing and se tional jealousy another, and what we wani at Saville row ts nore of the former and less of the Rut our complaint is not now with tho 1 Society. ‘To the honor of that body be that its members did equip ane: dition, after a certain fashion, to find and even, if need be, to Dr. tone, tt is true that the search was organiz on principles ) ridiculon inadequate to the end in view, and that the method of its conduct from the earliest moment such as to render full humanly speaking, certain aud ine Geographical Society made the effort, put forth some little show of exertion, and herein they may claim to be considered immensely to the government which swage and nfortunately, s sway Out national destini Had 3} adstone been in the ightest degree ling or able to understand the ing of the p: have hesitated to embody that feeling in action. Had Mr, Lowe been able to look at the matter through any other mediam than that of the petty projidices Of au ignoble parsimony he would at once have seen that the occasion was one on which government might, by a financial expenditure com- paratively smail, Win for itself a moral return in- calculably great, and immeasurably raise itself in the popular feeling. ‘The institution of a Living- Search Expedition by government. would then been not merely a politic but in the long run a distinctly economical measure; and such a ¢ patriotic or less short-sighted | than our own would at once have recognized it | toby vhile there necessary | gratulations to Mr | successful tasue of bis que ti continues to M mingles with our con- on the triumphantly t a keen sentiment of © congratulations are not yn that account one jota the less sincere, Ameri has fairly beaten England, and while tt is not w natural that we should have preferred to have the | victory for ourselves, we can accord the fullest measure of admiration for the qualities by which the representative of America, Mr. Statiley, has | won that victory, The despatches to the Foreign | Office, which we have already published, must be | considered as absolutely contirmatory ofthe authen- ticity of Mr. Stanley's narrative and Dr. Living- stone's previous letters to the New YORK HeRaLpin all their essential features, They thas contain very little that is now new to us. We have several vividly painted details of the diMecnitics and the | dangers which have perpetually beset Livingstone, | and the general drift of the discoveries which he | bas as yet made ts indicated more clearly and cir- comstantially than it has been before. And here | we may remark that we now know all of Living- | stone that we are likely to know till the object of his search is finally fulfided—till he has traced the | Nile from its cradle to its debouchement into the | Mediterranean, and has not improbably joined | forces with Sir Samuel Baker. There are, it is true, | eens to be read at the forthcoming meeting of the | British Association at Brighton, But these, however | rich in scientific vaiue, will add little to our store of | popular information. Amid the intensely interest » he would not fora moment | Pitt xtening over & two Omice, of Pars abound, there are two great which out with o7 helming importance, In the first place, the Doctor has evidently discovered that to the west of Lake Tanganyika there is a third great line of drainage, consisting of hu; lakes, whose existence had been previously de- nied, connected by mighty rivers of which no one had ever dreamed, In the second place, as regards the supreme and central object of Livingstone’s investigations, the great historical stream of Egypt, as full of mystery as the very Sphinx which frowns pen its banks, what Livingstone has done is scien- to disprove the conjectures and the fancied discoveries of the race of explorers who had preceded him—of Speke and Grant and Baker and others, +; non Ango” wrote Bacon ; and this prime rule of scien research it is which, in the opinion of Livingstone, Speke vio- id not verify his geographical induc- it every step, and consequently he placed the sources of a gd at a spot de ae a, is now shown y any possibility rise. Strange Lar ike a fauire upon human ‘ogress— & geographer more ancient than Baker, and of a period ‘hore venerable’ than Speke—none other than Ptolemy himself—should turn out to be much more nearly right in the position which he assigned to the earliest fountains of the Nile then any of the race of savants which have-suc- ceeded him, The error of Speke and Grant and Baker was that they thought they had discovered the cunabwa Niti'in a vast congeries of lake: whereas “no great river has a lacustrine origin.’ The PROuDLAIN, writes Livingstone, where the watershed of the Nile is, are probably what reasons unknown, called the Moon, “From their bases,” he adds, “I find that the aprines. of the Nile do unquestionably arise. This is just what Ptolemy put down, and is true geograph; We must accept the fountains; and n Bou: but Philistines will reject the mountains, though we cannot conjecture the reason for the same.’’ Tt 18 the circumstantial verification of the con- clusion which Livingstone has thus arrived at on the subject of the birth of the Nile, which has re- mained for him the last of his labors to fulfil. It Is too much to say that Livingstone has as yet actually traced the Nile to its first springs; it is not too much to that he is upon a track which will almost inevitably lead him to them. Upon the other points, supreme as thelr interest is, contained in these last despatches of Living- stone, we must forbear to dwell. Passing by the particulars which he gives us on the subject of the slave trade and the canntbalistic tribes of Central Africa, it is impossible not to be profoundly im- pressed by the story which the Doctor has to tell us of the innate Dake laa of the na- tives, of his repeated desertion ‘by them, and, above all, by the systematic mismanagement of the supplies with which he was provided, and the despatch of the attendants who were sent to his assistance Sometimes these supplies failed to come at all; sometimes when they did come they were not what he wanted. Natives were sent to him instead of freemen, and the natives were not good. When shall we next hear of Livingstone ? He has already come within 180 miles of the his- torical Nile, and it is not likely that he will be able to perform the remainder of his long and tollsome journey within a year from the present time, As We have hinted above, it is far from unlikely that when a new batch of communications arrives from Livingstone he will lei have passed into Egypt proper, and have met with Baker Pacha. Taen we shall know much on which we can only now vaguely speculate. And the speculation, which the dis- coveries and communications already made by Dr. Livingstone Gugwest, opens up a vista of magnifi- cent possibilities, and even probabilities, trom which imagination recoils dizzy. The ctv! tion of the great African Continent, the solution of the great African mystery, the extinction of anthropo- phagy, the abolition of the slave trade, the connec- tion of two seas bya railw: rant through the heart of the Libyan Desert—there is no reason why another generation should not see such and all of these thin, For such a consummation posterity will be indebted to Livingstone; but Livingstone, to complete his great task, has need of more sup- plies and more State help, and that is our im- mediate moral, which the nation and the govern- ment should take to heart. (From the Paris American Register.] The success of Mr, Stanley, correspondent of the New YorE HERALD, in his search for Doctor Liv- ingstone, has brought out some curious facts re- garding the previous English expeditions, and more particularly that fitted out by the Geographical So- ciety, at the expense of the British public, which! Was put under the charge of Lieutenant Dawson, First, we are told by Dr. Livingstone himself that the stores sent to him from England were long left at Zanzibar, and finally sent on in charge of Arab traders, slavedealers and thieves, who proceeded to appropriate the goods the moment they were beyond the reach of civilization. Despite this experience, a second lot of goods was entrusted to men of known bad character—men who had been signalled again and again as rascals who could not be trusted with a farthing. We need not say that this caravan met with the fate of the former. During a period of three years Dr. Livingstone nov only received no relief, but none of the many letters sent to him through Dr. Kirk, British Consul at Zanzibar. reachcd the wearied but stout-hearted explorer. When Mr. Stan- ley was at Ujiji nine packets of letters sent to him from the European agent of his journal, Dr. Hosmer, were safely forwarded to him through the American Consul at Zanzibar, It makes no sort of difference whether these nine packets of letters went by nine different caravans or only five, for the fact is none the less striking that Mr. Stanley received that number in the com- aratively short space ef four months, while Dr. jvingstone was three years without receiving a single line from home. The secret of this matter would have long remained concealed had Stanley failed in his gallant attempt, but his success has brought out some interesting and some contemptible facts. We now know — that we must look to Dr, Kirk for an explanation of his conduct, and that gentle- man has been summoned to answer before the bar of public opinion. Some of our readers may re- member the hints of this which we gave in our first articles, for even at that time it seemed clear to us, from. Dr. Kirk’s complete indifference to Mr. Stan- ley, and from the mnserine unjust, untruthful re- ports sent home by him, that he had no heart in the work, and it was a matter of indifference to him whetner or not supplies or letters ever reached the courageous explorer. As he himself remarked, in the presence of Mr. Stanley and the American Consul, “As a private individual he would do noth- ing, positively nothing, but as a_ British ollicial he’ was bound to do his duty.” Those are not the exact words, perhaps, but we challenge a denial that this 1s the meaning, the strict sense, of his remarks, In no way cap we account for such apathy, to call it by no worse name, except on the ground of jealousy, and that such is the opinion of Dr. Livingstone himselr is evident from many cau- tious and gentlemanly remarks in his letters to Mr. James Gordon Bennett. Dr. Livingstone is too kind-hearted @ man to make charges against any | one, but upon the bi facts the public has already | made them for him, and Dr. Kirk can now explain his conduct if it be possible to do so. If not, he will be # disgraced man in the eyes of the world, The secret history of the last English expedition is scarcely less curious or disgraceiul. Mr, Charles New, for many years a Methodist missionary in rica, has just written a long ‘letter to the Times full of details and insinuations, We do not know the merits ol this quarrel, nor do we care a straw | who isrightorwho is wrong; the bare facts are suiliciont for our purpose. When the Geographical Society called for public subscriptions to send an xpedition in search of Dr. Livingstone the | money was immediately forthcoming. The gener- ous British public was ready to give any sum for this purpose. ‘The government gave the weight of its approval, and not t the great explorer, but put the a ernment at the disposition of ‘the society in so far as they could aid \his work. Thus, Lieutenant Dawson, with Lieutenant Henn second in com- mand, started out with the aid of the British people, the Geographical Society, the government, and with the best wishes of the civilized world. At that period only Americans, and those who know the uervous energy of our race and the indomitable spirit they bring to any undertaking, believed in the success of Mr. Stanley. But, starting | out under sue splendid auspices, and with everything in its f the new expedition soon came to grief. From’ the very outset petty jealousies arose and suspicions which made every- body miserable. Mr. New was invited to join the expedition as an interpreter and because of his ex- perience, which made him invaluable to men of so little self-reliance as those in command of the expe- dition, but before joining he was required to sign a Paper saying that he would (as the chief, after him the second in command, that he would epin his place, that he would not try to rob Lieutenant Dawson of the honors he was about to win and that he would publish nothing until Dawson had issued his book, and, doubtless, won the honors of knight- hood. The whole expedition, it seems, down to the iast donkey, was bound in this way not to try to rob the two leaders of their honors, This was counting the chickens before they were hatched; bat it seems that each member had some arricre pen. Lieutenant Dawson might be carried off by fever; to provide for that,event Lieutenant Henn had a special clause put in the contract. In ease Henn fell, New provided for his succession, and meantime the caravan formed slowly, and the season passed before it got under wa) After months of waiting, when all was ready to start for the expected lonura, some of Stanley® men came in to buy provisions, saying that their master had been four months’ exploring with Dr. Living. stoue, and was now returning. Instead of pushing out boldly and promptly as any American would have done, Lieutenant Dawson he wonld go home. would goon, but finally backed out. e going to take charge, but as Lieu- tenant Henn could not make up his mind whether he would yield his rights, the missionar, shaky. In their despair, in the midst of the rels, young Livingstone declared that he would go on alone to carry these provisions to his father if no one would go with him, and this bold attitude so shocked (he leaders of the party that they speedily met in counet) with Dr, Kirk and resolved that some- thing must be done. It Was at that time that Stanley next morning after his arrival he began vo pur- Lieutenant Henn | = fia expetition hat’ arranged ‘hele private aust ir private quer- Tels @ second van, laden with every. thing that Dr. Livingstone might require, was put under way, » gy the ish caravan in ite fate of the latter may be is ing his father well ce of Mr. James Livingstone has re- turned, Dr. irk can now make another present to the Arabs if pleases, with very small prejudice to Dr, Living- are many suggestions which we might make in pemnecisen with this subject, but He will bind no man to obey him by ae pee tract, but he will make his suborain; 7 turn ‘them adrift. Once the line is Teed is his mind there will be no hesitation about the mat- ter, and there will be no scandaious private quar- rels and squabbles like those which Rave marked the course of Baker Pasha and Lieutenant Dawson. [From the Panama Star and Herald, August 3.) The success of the agent sent out by the New + YoRK HERacp in finding Dr. Livingstone in the cen- tre of Africa is one of the most astounding events of the day, and one that challenges the world’s ad- miration. That the proprietor of a newspaper had the means, the will and the energy, with the confi- dence in the men that served him to call one of them (Mr, Stanley) and merely say to him, “Go and find Dr. Livingstone; spare no expense, and report for the HERALD what you have done,” was putting the ways of this world, in America at least, in a no- vel and striking light. Mr. Stanley, nothing loth and without the least hesitation, obeyed the orders of his chief and set his face towards the sources of the Nile by way of Ujijt. After a fight with the King of Mirambo, and got led into a scrape by the coward- ice and cruelty of the Arabs, he at last reached Ujiji by a roundabout route, and entered the latter Place with such of his expedition as disease and desertion had left him, carrying the American fag and firing guns. Dr, Livingstone was seen as a frail old white man in the midst of a crowd of won- dering “niggers,” The sight of that flag, seen for the first time since creation, so far in the interior of Africa, must have surprised the Doctor as much as the wondering natives. The moment, as the London Datly News says, is one tor the poet and the painter, and is as impressive for futurity aa when Balboa caught the first sight of the Pacific Ocean, or any other similar event of heroic enter- prise and discovery. The feelings of the two men are more easy to imagine than describe, The whole of Mr. Stanley’s adventurous journey till he sighted Livingstone is in its details as interesting, as any ordinary book of travels. The newspaper is: certainly assuming a position in the world ie more reaching than even the pulpit. With the printing press as its altar, it has the whole world who can read it for a col gation, Barbarous kingdoms and savage tribes have already learned from the pictures of themselves in the Jlustrated London News that their doings are known and commented on far away, and thus their potentates are restrained from outrages by pride for their reputation if not by a higher motive, The natives along the mysterious head waters of ancient Nile have seen the Stars and Stripes, and will not forget them. Dr. Living- stone, who, in doubtless dreams, saw aid coming to him in the shape of the Geographical Society, and his ae friends found his dreams poesececy realised by Mr. Stanley and the New YoRK HERALD'S expedition. Nay, Mr. Stanley found the supply of are nt to him from England through the Ene ish Consulate at Zanzibar, had nearly all been robbed by the carriers of it, and had not yet reached him. The American mode of putting an idea into execution is certainly characteristic, compared with this, if you want a thing done, do it. yourself or see itis done. Why would we expect orp ie) whose highest virtue and idea of duty is to rob, to carry safely a bale ot oo entrusted to. them for a dollar say, when nothing hinders: them from taking the whole bale for their own use? ‘The details of Mr. Stanley's extraordinary expe- dition are given as length in the New York HERALD of the 16th of July last, to which we regret to have to refer our readers as being too long for our space. A notice of the discoveries of Dr. Livingstone firing his long absence we give in the present ug. RACING AT LONG BRANOH. On Thursday next two great races will be run.at Long Branch for purses amounting to $3,500, The first race will be four mile heats, and the second a steeple chase. We understand that there will be at least halfa dozen or more horses in the four-mile heat race, comprising Mr. Sanford's bay colt Mon- archist, by Lexington, dam Mildred; Mr. Coffee's brown mare Morlacchi, by Lexington, dam Ban- Mickey Free, dam Cornelian; Babcock’s chestnut gelding Doctor, by Second Albion, dam by O'Meara, and probably one or two others whose entries are on theway. The steeple chase will have eight or nine entrics, and this must necessarily be an in- teresting event, as the jumps at Monmouth Park are more diMcult than at any other place in the country. Thursday will be a gala day at Monmouth: Park. Among the celebrities of the road the Flectwood: Stables are well represented by J. B. Ayre’s 1634 hand team of bays, Bully Briggs and William Van Cott, which can step a 2:45 clip. Mr. G, Seaman’s pair of bay mares, 15’¢ hands; one by Billy Denton and the mate by Manhattan, which can trot in 2:50. Mr. E. A. William's pair of champion trotting mares; nice steppers. Mr. E. D. Slater's pair, sorrel gelding Fleetwood and bay mare Dover Girl, which can trot fast and are driven to a new top wagon of the latest pattern and design, making a natty turnout. Charles Wood's bay horse Germaine; a very nice roadster. Mr. Jonn Rickard’s black horse Black Ink, who can trot well. Mr. Samuel Nowell’s brown mare, from the East. Dr. Lee's poy trotting mare, by Hiram Drew, who is rapid. bf Mr. J. ©. Howe’s original Ice Boy, a very rapid sorrel horse. Mr. House’s pair bay geldings. Dexter has become a periect road horse and neither shies nor jumps at any alarming object he meets, It is not necessary to say that he can beat anything he comes in contact with. Mr. Morton drives a very speedy gray mare of messenger strain of blood, who can step a 2:40 clip; also a bay gelding, by Concklin’s American Star, which is fast and of good style. Generai Buford, of Woodford count: revently sold his chestnut colt by Ale. dallah, dam unknown, for $3,000, The Embry trotting horse, until recently owned in Kentucky, is now owned by a gentleman living in Angusta, Ga, It 18 said he has refused $20,000 for him. The three-year old colt Silent Friend was sold by Mr. W i Jenning to Erastus Corning, during p toga meeting, for $6,000, and $2,000 should he win the Dixie stakes at Baltimore. lent Friend was bred by B. Grats, Wood- ford county, Ky.,and is by imp, Aust: in, dam Springbrook, by Lexington out of Emnaiau, by Mambrino, son of American Eclipse, Mr. ©. J, Alloway, of Montreal, Canada, has pur- chased of H. P. McGrath his three-year-old bay colt Jolin Doe, by Lexington, dam Luey Fowler. he colt George Wilkes, by Asteroid, dam Emma Wright, was recently sold by T. G. Moore, to Mr. 1), J. Batinatyne, for $600. zeb Ward has sold to Mp. Samuel Lewis, of ‘da, his. three-year-old bay filly Cynthiana, by ippe dam by imp. Hooton, for $630, L john M. Clay has sold Sutvivor to Mr. John Chamberlin, ‘Price paid not stated, ‘The Society of Agriculture and Horticultnre of Westchester County offer nine purses to be trotted Kentucky, ander’s Ab. | for at their ensuing meeting, amounting tn the ag gregate to $3,150. Entries to close September 19, Mr. John F. Dawson, of Carmel, Putn county N. Y., has become the purcnaser of the celebrated trotter White Fawn, one of the handsomest trot ting horses in the country. Ata sale of the trotting horse: late A. Noble, which took place at Anderson's veers 16th inst., the Jollowing prices were realized trotting mare Mary, r 1544 hands lugh, 10 years old, sired by Bashaw; has record of 2:41 at Umon Course, Long Island, and trotted two miles in b42—$215, Dapple gray horse, 15!; hands high, 8 years old, by General Knox, Drew Mare, raised’at Water- vilie, Me. ; can trot in 2:40 to wagon—$500, Sorrel gelding, Hickey, 154g hands high, 10 years old, r lin Virginia; won a race at Fleetwood in 1871 in 8, the sixth heat—¢ Sorrel mare, Alice Huntington, 1514 hands high, & peitd old, sired by Champion, dam a thoroughbred ion mare, trotted in private in 2:30%— 1,225. Brown gelding, David Bonner, 154; hands high, o years old, raised in Kentucky; trotted at Prospect ‘ark, October 11, 1870; beat Fanny Fern, Lady inily, Jeanie, Grace Bertram, Flora and Enigma in 4g and 2:31%, king first one-half 4 heat in 1:10; December 6, 1871, at Fleetwood, imatch $500, against Lady Wellen, dis- anced her in 2:34, first heat—$1, A DOUBLE SHAVE. At the Tombs Police Court yesterday Judge Dow~ ling committed John Cain on a charge of having stolen # valise, Which contained wearing appareb of the value of $30 and two silver watches, one of them worth $20 and the other $10, the property of Francis mpbell, who belongs to the Theenor of the State. Campbell was getting shaved in & 2 caine in, passing the caravan not yet enroute, ‘The | barber's shop and laid the valise ina corner in the saloop, bul when the tonsorial operation was over it was found that the valise was gone. The Judge | Sent Campbell to the House of Detention. ner; Mr. Bannatyne’s chestnut horse Milesian, by~