The New-York Tribune Newspaper, May 10, 1866, Page 8

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SOUTH AMERICA, BOMBARDMENT OF VALPARAISO Ofhcla) Dispateh from the Commander of the Spanich Fleet, e ONLY TWO KILLED AND EIGHT WOUNDED CA TOTAL 1088 OF PROPERTY $16,000,000, SPIRITED ACTIONOF THEDANISH CONSUL ——— PROBAELE SPANISH ATTACK ON CALLAO. —— From Our Spechsl Comespendest. R S Pavaus, May 1, 1966, The Pacific Stean Nasigation Company's steamer Pa- aifie, Capt. Waoleot, srrived on the 20 inst. Ske bringe datos from Valparaizo to the 9ih, and from Callao to the 224 vit. CRILL No very imnportant news is ewbraced in the bateh of jo- the Pecific. 1t bad been definitely two persons were killed and eight weunded in the yecent bombardment at Valperaiso. The Sowe 10 the Government by the affair will vot exceed, in & pocuniary sensc, $1,000,000; while the loss of foreign pro yerty will not fall short of $15,000,000, of which $10,000,000 | Dolenyed to British subjects. The wost bitter feeling pervaded throvghout the cou- try sgainst the British Chargé @' Aflaires. His landiord o8 Bantiago bad wamed bim out of bis bouse, wnd the minister was unable 10 rent o bulldiog into which bis effices could be remored. No one seemed willing to afford shelter (0 one s Rie follow-men. Mr. Thompson's fatose prospects seeroed @isinal enongh, and the general Impression wag that he would have to hold court out of doors during the remain of hisstay i the country. The Awerican Minister, e contrmry, was everywhere tieated with yespect, end wlmost adufation “The vew Spauish frigate Almanea had arrived at Vilpa- ¥aiso. It was reported that the entire Spameh fleet would wail northward immediately. 1t is generally supposed that 0 has been designnted ae the next place of attack, 'he Peruvian sloops Union aud Americs had sailed toward the Biraits to mweet the new frigutes Huescar and Indepen- Bencia, which sailed from Europe some time siuce. “The Consul-General of Denmark bad addressed & com- Pmunication to Adwiral Nufiez, threatening to bold him yeaponsible for the dumage ivflicted on the property of Lis trymen by the bombardment. The note was retamed, wever, the Adwiral refusing to notice it PERU. In Callao aud Lima, Pern, the excitement following the Yeport that the first-named city woe to be attacked, was &omondoug. Everything of 8 moveable uature bind becn pend into the interior. The avthorities had crdered all the #hips in the bay to remove 1o & point beyond range of the E:::e fortifications, and the indications are that the rds will receive 8 warm reception should they enter rof Callso. The Peruvian artillery is in charge ‘experienced gonners—defunet Confederaies—who, itie t, will have an excellect opportunity to exbibit Mheix salll in & worthier cause. THE ISTRMUS. @en. Mosquera hes st Jast yewched this c ‘asrival ot Carthsgens, in the war steamer Colombia, bas Peen anvounced, and he is hourly expected to arrive at Aspinwsll. ‘Preparations are being made to give him & grend reception. Pancmefios are jubilant over the pros- pect of the rexoval of the vationel capital from Bogota to Ponama. It has long been one of the pet ideas of Mos- mw establish the capital on the Isthmue, and without be will soon proceed to take proper steps toward the seeomplishment of that object osquera’e proclamation at Santa Martba does not embrace anythi caleu- m‘w startle the political world. There bas been no mews of importance received {mm Bogota. The Central American slesmer Salvador, due on tbe 30th uit., has not arrived, and consequently we are without Jater intelli- from that country. @ficis) Dispaich frem the Commander of the Spanish Squadron. La Ciéuica, » Spanish paper publisbed 1o this eity, bax I® ite last number, vuder the hesding of * Bombardment of Valparaiso,” & communieation, & transiation of which ‘we give below: ‘We kave received from Her Majesty s Legation st Woabiog $08 & wost important document, which we lasten to publieh n our first column, in place of our leading arucle: Readquarters of Her Catbolie Mnjesty’s #qoadron in the ..in- board the Numancia. m the Bay of Valparaiso, 24 Gay of April, 1666. To Her Mojesty's Evvoy Extraor ‘and Minister Plenipoteutiary st W asbiogton— "tud!enc‘y- “}g order that your Excellency may form an exact idea of ocourrevces of the lest fortwight, 1 have the honor ing before yon a summary of the most recent ta, regrettingtbat want of tume shonld prevent my send soptes of the dispaichen 1 bave addressed to Her Majeety o ut. “On tbe 17th of last month I was Cowmodore Rodgers onboard of bis flagship. Qdinner, the Commodore expressed srdent wishes for he termiuation of our difficulty with Chili, and sv ‘fl.h':n 1 clotied with full powers, the attainment of snch wight, in his opinion, be accomplished. Upon being that T had the vecensary powers, Le suid that be ‘would immedisteiy communicate with bie Migister, aud sec if Wheur united efforts conld bot secare peace. A fow d‘&‘ afier, 1 received the visit of the Commodore, ad of Gen, Kilpsirick. Both seemed suimated by the best aod invited me 10 Joiu them in a conference which, b of & private and confidential cbaracter, might perbaps i the termination of the war. “ Upon my scceptance of the propossl. the American Min- Soter suid 10 we, that altbough tbe conference was strictly idential, tue Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic notice of the ibst was now being taken, and be (tke ‘:-hu Minister) as well a6 the Commodore, who had taken juitistive o the mm.ur.dTue very muck ipterested in u view. invited to dine by the zhlo.l which be thought existed for Spain. in the p of this war; and giving me to understanc that an onfore obstacle would be wet wite, if the bombardment of 50 Were attempted, be proposed a plav for an arravge- ent which be considered equally Louorable for both belliger- #ote. To sccordence ¥ith tiis pla, there #Lould be a cessation of bostilities; my credentiols presevted, aud s new investiga- thon wade of the different grievances against Chil. Asen earpest of pence, there should first Le o reciprocal sulute of -twenty ‘:‘l. in the following msnver: the flags of wnd Chill, hoisted at the manst-hends of the English and iean flagahips, should be ssiuted by the guns of (ke two Sqvadrone; and in this salate & Chilian fort aud the Spanish you should join, iu such wanuer, that, with the noire and swoke, it sbould uever be kpows by whom the Erst gun been fired. “ A your Excellency may readily suppe arrangewent, acknowledging, bowever, t intentic $hal bad suggested it, and siatiog that the instructions of my @overnment were #0 positive that notwiltbstanding any dith ‘eulties J wight Lave 1o overcome, and Jd 1 go to the bot Sow of the Pacific in the attewpt, I must have from Cuili the whiek was due 1o us. Moy, vertheless gwc desire for reonciliation, 1 would take u) mense responslbility of Dot requiring axy ofh ved in the arrangement yroposed by Fogland and France, and accepted by in, 10 whieh I would only 844, the restitution of the Covadongs, will its fi»r, srme aud erew, in_relurn for ibe prices and prisoners I hed inwy r. 1atthe same time ‘:w notice that if, by ¥ o'clock on ‘morning of tbe 27h, 1 should not have received an anawer @ccepiing the terms of ‘(his arrangement. 1 would address & eommunicstion to the Diplomatic Corps fixing a delay, st the eapiration of which I would open fire on Valparaiso. “Eoth the Minister and the Commodore found the terme Dovorable. Gen. Kilpatrick vaid be would exert bimseif to hiv wtmost to bave (bew necepted by Chili, adding tbat, hocerer mtraig ) T rejected this it vas Ais predecessor, Mr, Nelson, who had d any coucession 16 Spoi s had aiready passed beiween t Kilpatrick Jeft for X n of lLis own acco came_ou board of wy ship His efforts bad been it vaia. e L was not ven ~ + Dossibie 10 assew bie and cousult tie cer of the allied republics. In consequence of this reply, 1 s 9 40 the Ministe; the United States that, as I bad prev ¢ anformed bim, 1 would within au bour s, eomwunication. The Commodore then told me what tbe vuforseen obstacle would be, to which he o our former interview. He said that probably be would vot 2 Be eble 10 remain & passive spectator of the destruction of & 1 city: that perbaps he unght be cowpelied tooppose "84 by doroe, and 1hat he thought the commander of ibe naval of Great Britain woud juin biim for the same p that 1 should be exitewely sorry to collide with bim the warm interest Le iad sbown for 8paiu and her ageuts, such considersiious woald pot be sufficient to precent + ¥ execouing the oraecs of my Government. 'l ke Commodore ved wy resolutior, and said 10 me, vn taking leav » - wight be the consequences of the cont st wver® be aseured of bis fricudshiy eem; ile ssime words weret repeated by Gen. Kilpair, i hour after this .uterview I sent my comwusiestion to Lbe A wierican Minister, i order that through hiw it might resoh We other members of the diplomatic corpe at Santingo. “On e 29th March | received the of Adwiral Den ~an, Wi told me that he bud been informed by the A merican wimodowe of my interviews with the United States Migister Sbat the 1n 8 of war did uot sutlorize the destruction of de Seus, Jons ciles, inbabited almost exclusively by foreignere; Ahat it would Pe impossible for Lim to be & pussive spectator of such a deed; TNt he would Linve to adopt mweasures the extent of whio" be cotd not then define, atd thal he begged me Lot 10 comunepoe operations uutil the arrival of the wails from My auawer was that es (0 the quesiion of right. the mged 10 wy Governwent: but that as an officer, %:‘” ‘abd that, whatever might be the at. {ordfl ; aseu. | by the uival forces then ju the Loy; howerver 4 ) @igy | be 1o gone to wneb & extremity :.-an Joreos gt bo, no eeitlly o \ dless of the interests end rights of pose, 1 | u)d detaln me from the discharge of my daty. The Mnl' ! Tan hand, and Jeft me with the s ra) graepod m; esteein ae in the case of the Awerican Com- friendebip modore. *On the same day, the 20th, 1 was once more visited by the | Amerfean Commodore accompanied by the Seeretary of Lega- tion, with the apparent p of banding th comuniestion. On doing -;: \“l -uul;‘:r.b‘l hr-v haa lx’nlended I‘x“ oppose the bombardment of Valparaito by force, because be -’- at the time convined that gydn could not lewfally do m the right; bus that sabsequently he h and that Chili was in Y arrived at the conclosion that right, moderation, and dignity were an the side of Bpain; wherefore, he uot ouly should not pose anything, but thet bie skips would move 0ut of the way :rlo'nml ln-t!e morning of the 115t Tusisted, nevertbeless, in proposing another plan. was that 1 sbould write a mauifest stating that, sinco desi t such ai went of de to my de- coald prevent the bumbardment, 1 woul ught b '§aiparaiso. The Commodore th spare geverosity would be appreciated b Which would then deelare its readiness to ac mands. My reply was that, altbough by so doing I woul incur the beaviest responeibility, mili. for the sake of peace, I would secept the proposition, provided o member of the Clilian Government would guarantee (o me personaily, in the presence of the Awmerican Mivister, that my proceeding would be apprecinted snd reciprocated, The proposal of the Cowmo- doie was nevertheless radely rejected by Chill, and enother oue advanced in it stead, so ridiculous tiiat it has ouly served #s & loughing-stoek to the English aud American commanders. The ides was thot a sort of international duel sbould be ennoted; and tbis in terms indecorous and even insuiting. Tt befng axsumed thut [ dared uot seek them ut Chiloe, they roposod that we should meet with equai forces, the deiermina- 100 and equalization of which shouid be left to Cowmodore Rodgers. ‘Lbe resslt of the duel was to be the termination of the war; and to this Do other declaration whatsoever Was sdded. The proposal ] again say it, was siply ridiculon and in this Hght it bas been viewed by every one, without per- hape exoepting the very persons who origiiated it. I coie- quently authorized the American Commodore who bore the gispateh, 10 say, in wy belalf, that such proposals deserved no auswer. 1t is gratifying (o me fo be able 10 state that botb the Commodore and English Admiral approved my answer; the Jatter wus 80 disgusted that, Josing his habitual rescrve, he said tome: * Sir, the letter you bave just received Is in itself & sfficient justification for the act you are alont (0 secomplisb. Your conduct bae been most diguified and proper, wnd your met no response from the Government of thie countyy. “Previonsly to these ineidente, on the 2ith, 1 bad, in like | manner, been called upon by the representatives of Lugland | nud Frince. Tnstead of presenting themselves in the gnise of fiiendly negotiators, and strictly peutral, these gentiemen howed themselves, on the contrary, aliogesher partial to They contended that the brief delay granted to the ernment for the acceptance of terws would make any reso- hat rut with generosity | | lation appear as dictated under the pressure of | ficlent tioe bad not been allowed for o the aliles; that, in fine, o longer deloy e They concluded by observing that fear for the lives of the Spaniards at the bombardmen: take place. To these remarke Lanswered that it was #ix mouthe wince the wer bad commenced, and tbet the Government of Chili, who mow compiained of the short space allowed, had never, up to the piesent woment. made any proposal for au arrangement; that the terme offered by me were precisely those of their own Governments of En tllnd and France; and that, in the event of fo savage & utchery takivg piace, it should be visited with vew and terri- “T'be interview terminated with warks of watoal ble rigor. coldaess. 00 the 30th T received from the same gentlemen o plan for an arrangement, in which they proposed the cossation of boe tilities; (fi withdrawal of my vessels, and the presentation of 1wy eredentinle, el of which were, as your Execllency per ceives, totally inadmiseable. “ At 8 o'clock on the morning of the J1st, the foreign vessele of war had withdrawn from my front. At the said bour of cight the two gune were fired that were to serve as an A0 nouncemeut that one bour later I woald open on tho city. At & quarter past nine the frigate Blanca commenced firing &t the Governuent warebouses and a small fort, sd was iiwmedi- ately followed by the frigate Villa de Madrid, Meanwhile the scbooner Vencedora directed Ler guue against the Inteu en: aud the frigate Resoluclon against the railroad ter- minus; all of which buildings were Government propesty. At the end of two hours the warehouses were reduced to asles; the fort was considerably damaged, as were also the Iuten- dencia aud r terminus; and & lon of the city was st 00 fro br & grenade ricocketing rom ‘tho Intendencin aud explodiog 1o & chemical Isboratory. The firing was suepended half-past eleven. It is as yet lmposeible to eetimate the ) ilisn Government had &« cided on making po re- sintance, and cousequently ordered Lat not & gun should be Tt was confidently expected that the foroes of Engiand a0 the Unitod States would oppose the bombardment. ** The property stored in_the Government warehouses, and -énunly cousumed by the firig, belonged to Frenchmen aud o1 e, * The Government bad oppossd the removal of goods by the foreign merohante. 1 r:xnn. ete., Car70 MENvEZ NUNER FROM LONDON. - —— terinl Majority on the Reform Bill— erals—Nr, Brig si¢e the House—Lowe on America—An Age: Chief Justice—Political Prespects fo tiom af the Thames Water— The Bill for the Repeal of the Act of Eccle- siastical Uniformity—Sudden Death of Mrs. Carlyle, and Whai the Werld Owes Her—A Hlonx on The Times—Ttem: From Our Special Correspondent. LoX1ox, April 48, 1666, A wajority of FIVE! That is what the Literalism of the House which takes its name from the “Comwwons” of Eogland amonnte to, not a figure higher. Said Inot truly that we were not yet oot of the sbadow of Lord Palmerston? That acid paisy of faith aud nraeress which, emiling like & 8¢ Martin's Summer, is as upfruftfal. “The evil that men do lives after them: the good 1s oft interred with their bones.” If ghosts can laugh, as Charles Lamb questioned, it's enough to make the 0id Premier do so—wherever he is—and an cyuically e inlife. The Reform Bill is carried by a mejority you can count on the fingers of one band—and the fight only begin ‘s papers 1o tell you the details of last night s struggle, preferring to speak of the week generally. Through out it, it was pretty clear to everybody that the prospects the Government were declining; its position becoming eriti- cal. The majority of 30 which waa originally counted upoi bad dwindled away by the defection of so-called Liberals anc the decisions of election eommittees, uutil it bad got gradually admitted on ull haods that if the Ministry obtained & wajority at all it would be s0 small as to destroy all chance of pussing the bill through committee. Two Liberals were ousted from Nottinghaw, two from Lancaster, oze from Helston, and two from Windsor—all this week—while but one Tory was uu- seated for Bridgewater, making s net lose of #ix votes to the Government. 'Then Cambridge retarued & Conservative iu the room of Mr. Forsyth, |huugh there is good reason to be. Jieve that the interference of the under graduates has endan- is sent, a8 by them some Liberal voters were prevented in exercising the privilege of the electoral franchise. Bo the debate, like Pope's alexandrive, or the wounded suake, to which be compared it, * dragged its slow length slong” for the Jast seven pights. People questioned. aud_betted, and caleu- nd crowded round the doors of Parliament. On Mon- dsy eveniog Jobn Bright spoke, and mobly, for just two Lours, though his speech reads better than it wounded, | owing to the extreme hoarseness under which the famous “member for Birming obviously contending with moral as well as orato culties; he used the argumentum ad hominem bat sparingly, 1 grew passionate during bis peroration; snd some .nfl.l that the great tribune of the English people is only at his best be discards mere personal cousiderations,”and. “pitebes right into” the enemy, Witk & vigor and earnestness nvrivaled in the Honse of Commos But there wi thing very touching in his vindication of hie own houorable record in bistory against the brutal abuee anud slander ho Los been subjected {o—and never wore tLan during the recent de- bate. 1 know,” he eaid, **and every thoughtful man amony you knows, aud those gentiemen who siton that bench, an who ure leading you to this enterprise, they know that the rmc, 1 have urged upon the House, axd upou the country, xo far a8 it has hitherto been accepted by Parlisment, is & policy conservalive of the public welfure, sirengthening the just autbority of Parliament,and adding from day to day fresh luster | and dignity to the crown. And pow, when | -|wui o you aod sk you to pass this bill—when I plead tu behalfof those who are | wot “allowed to spesk themseives in this House—if you could | e @ yourselves for this night, for this bour, above the region of party strife—if you could free yoursclves from the postilent atmosphere of passion and prejudice which a0 often surrounds us here—1 feei coufident that at this moment I should not | plesd iv vain before this rliament on behalf of the | nglish Constitnt Think of this | appeal being nec 10 give votes to ovly 180,000 workingmen in this precious | try'—just our-fourth of their number. 1t ‘is {Aulal' pitifuM and what wonder that Mr. Brigbt's scorn snd indignation at | wuck sclfishness and folly should sometimes get the better of hiw in words which may shock caste and privilege. but are Lonorsble to hie ranhood ! But to proceed. When Lowe came down the next night (there was no Reform debate, and | nothing truospired concerning it except Ferrand's biatant . wpropos of & Manchester petition) be was fairly mobbed and fariously hissed 10 the entrnsee of Weetmineter Hall, townrd which Le made hie way with considesable celerity, and getting Policeman X between himwelf and the crowd. turned bat in band aud Len bellowing nzwinst Mr. Gladston 1 grinned defiauce at it before disuppearing from its angry re- garda. Disrael. 1o, who dreve up in hix broughnm, bad” slso hie on, while Mr. Gladetone nnd otber prom loudly cheered. We joke about the 1t they muy prove o be signs of the time Macaulay's story about J awes the Sccond | the c;owd of his day, “The Kiug, sitting in Lis p Whitehall, beais a nolse outside, sudaskiog what it | formed, ** Nothi of the bishops.” ou call that nothing ¥* quotl th lielped off 1;- throne by the soz " o nsed to whistle. 1t ma be that, after ail, Joiu Bull has not * suflered the e of the. iny e to be fattened out of Lim” so completely s to accept thi ig- nominious treatment at the hands, or rather feet, of his ‘ustural eaperiors” ns he got this morning. On Thure | day, Lowe wade tvo-aud a-bulf bours’ onslaught upon Jie- ford wad any attempt to increase the popuiar element in the | coustitneucies, acknowledging with, 1 bope, a fatal enndor, | Shat hia ve ohdeotion 10 tho bl was et ta its oun sotonar, | u# becuuse it wan the first step toward alteriug the present system, hy which the many are roled by the few. Under ex- | isting nrrnnrmam- of course, the representation is practi- cally in the hauds of the classes who live, in some form, by H other than dal uxion of the vast their fellow-countrymen, who earn tkeir living by st A Avd, uccording 10 Mr. Lowe's views. the permanent msinte. | nance of this exclusion s cssential to the welfare of country. Furtbermore, he justanced Australia nod Awmerica { a0 bowion-wirnings aga ible resalts of democracy. I is good * 10 #es oarselven as others wee us,” and here ure Mr. Lowe's remarks about the Uuited States, ready to hand, | tat you may miss none of their truth, wisdom nod friend:. | nesa.” Always remember bim as editor of The Timer, as well | as wember for Calue, a rotten borough aud village in the west | of England | Look at America. What is doing in that conntry ! Now that | heve conqrered, they are aluiont ready to go 1o war sgain. Aeisen the people have undisputed power, yet they do not send they | ] :.:n"“v‘vm.u:. ?c’:nun l:ny send lfidlv’l.. ot wre P thieir charwe i ten. sud. Lnving been driven {10 -"1'.- P Y T v for th Dos s:umu}.quh . “Avstralia, e roply o wy | NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, THYRSDAX; MAY 1. 1666, there are houndless tracts of , and the land fs (Rers & ediive . whereas in this ccuotry it is ag irritsnt. Here it s o thing 4 n there it is to_be slmost for the ¢ of Americn was left to the we 4 heep the country from destr nfew passages frou bie advocate of the X from the pr Jong snd veivabie life. et hian & €0py of the works of Jo! iil of 1733, and who never beld during the whole of iy to souie one who bad o seid: ot wer is in the bands of meroin bit slect, edocated and erply bnteresied i the se property and the maintevance of order. It s quite § oor Governmens would never be sble o restiain a discon ented majority; for with you the and bave the 7ich, ) i The day will eom of the peaple, no oe of whowm b “pect of more then half 8 di b to doubt wh Couniry (e sapreme po osenl On the wodetation, patience. and nd on the other band & us greed of ce h. bout the tyrany of cap. anitete. and wakiug why Uiey slould be permitted to drink and ride 1 their carriages while others were in want of foo: of these s likely to be chosen by the workivg wen ! Serio prebend thet you will in dch wituation sl have descri Tome time of dversity, do things which will be fatal to your proe perity, ond lieon will iise and seige the reins of Power with a strong havd. end yonr republic will be s surely plun dered eutieth centory as the Konian Fiwpire was i the fiflh, iat i the 1 d Vendale came from Vi be engendered in your % ‘your own {ustitations. U he argument of Lord Macwaiey is democraey in Amerlea, bt yob buve st proent plenty of elbow room and pibeistonce ror everybody. Rl when yoo have grown to s peiat that you have not enogh sisteance for everybody, then the crash will coma. Now, L thir coantry we have not got & democracy yet, but we have gol state of soc ety Lord Mecaulsy describes, Where in periods of pressare there is distiess and mirery; if we wld b, Pur own hauds whet he says e course of wid it to in Amesica—tley adding populstion to demiccrscy, aid we sdding democrscy o popuisiion—we ey expect something like the co whichi be foreshedowed. "The great men who founded the Constitution of. Auierica jorcsaw wil thie hind of tiing, snd sithough they were, no doubt, perfectly aware of the encrmous advantage of our systess of government, they never attenpted (o introduce it m America. They knew that deisocracy re- 4 to cheea democracy by the will of the execative officer. cople belug expressed in favor of the execativa officer A Saist hium st auotber. You bave seen what lias hoppeved in the civil war in that conutry. where the institutions which ought to coalesce for good government becowe uucle) for fac- tion, aud heuce the straggie between North and Scuth. You have seen how senstors bave been expelled, and other violent aud revoiu Uouery proccediugs, and thinge have now arrived at such s pitch that drendiv] as were the events we bave witoessed, we peed uSt be au prised if & second ci g e ook 6t the difference Letween ¢ Senced round onr judges s safeguard, v t his country aud An ing them th irreeponelble personn i the cou e aie bl ing Lo say—to the sho ud melancholy sight of person tice on the bench. \ve submit to u that the of - [Hear, hear | I8 thet the view of ca? Tn the grest State of New-¥ ork the jadges are Furtber west—in Missitsippi. for instance—ic nd why so snorts time? Express! {het ‘they may sdoivister the oath rot in wccordance with the aw, Bot dn sccordauce with popuiar setim The jast paragraph, 1think, involves a fair hit. In expla tion of the English part of it, 1 may ssy that it refers to Lord Chief Justice Lefroy, of Irelaud, who is 00, blind, deaf and im- beeile, who s Lifted o bie bench and lifted off sgain, and bas been known 10 sum up in ¢irsct opposition to exidence, but won't resign bis Lighly-ealaried office until death makes bim. Ouly Jast week the dear old Siandord bad quite 4 tonching edi- torial on the barbarity of obliging him to retire. 1In fact he is & Tory (a8 a matter of course), ard they want Liw to bold on until they can get another Tory to evoceed bim. Well, lust night oame the closiog debate of wilch Mr. Glad promwinent feature. Jovernment is son for the slightest ivfluenced by th cial office in Am elected for #ix y one or two yesrs cnly. A stone’s wagniLeent oration was the only And cverybody in now talkiog of what going to do about its r!n«lmp!{ small majority. Naturally all 80118 of reports are and bave Leeu ¢ obubly the Min # 6 not yet made op its mind its Inte) tioun will ot be announced Uil after the iu ction of the Budget, which, as reported on good suthority, way present far 1a0re favorable aspect than wes originally anticipeted. 10 Fa:! Ruseell go out without & dissolnticn, which nobody eeems to dgsire but tho hotter Liberals the two great historical partes of Whigs aud Tories wili e destroyed, or nearly #0, 1 the Opposition come in, Lard Stanley i to be the leader—Mr. Disraeli being brited ito sejuiescence by bis elevation to the Upper House, or the post of Minleter for Forelgn Affairs, or the Freueb Lumbsrey; otherwie he mieht be mutinous, Kuch, st least, ie the talk among the Tories. Lord Derby ie said not to eare for oflic be vontest to xp!l'r hen “guide, philosopher, and friend,” without a portfolio. tne Whige will, in all probability, be ices harmovious off the Trearury bench than on. Earl Rowsell is vot, ually, popuiar; a cold, formal man, enamored of rout of the fascinnting boshemric of Palmerstor toall Lis subordinates, told thom what wud took their opinjons. Bot the present * A-angland ” keeps folke at ‘arw's lengih. Bometiuce the first Tews they bave of & new colleagne ot a new eer reaches them through * the ueunl channels of iuteliigence. . With & Stanley minietry, pre destinately moribund in from three to six mouthe, aud W' reconstruction Iupossible, what foliowst Mr. Giad- stoue can alone decide, He hoide the political future in the Bollow of his haud. Suck is the erisie 0 which coste prejudice, perscou) spite, ard faction avidity for place, have brougit things. 1 ibink the people of England understand it and wil prescntly icaist on the reformation of more than the franchise. They have been cui patient about it, and would bave waited still longer by y been troated with common fair ness, but now they mast take the * downe fegon " In hand, like Moliere's chairman. The evente of the week disposed of, & paragragh or so abont winor watiers, of which it has Lot prougic. 1o a discas- sion in tbe House of Lords on Tu curlons Mcts about the diminution of the supply of Lord Kedesdale showed that the by the various cowpanies reriously aficots in bighly desirable that new sources al Thos the Weet Middlesex Water € the text of the discussion, 18 €mmpow, Thames 20,000,000 gallone of water dily, pointed out thit the 10t} AEOUBL taken Jast year, for tho uses of Loudon, was 6o Jess than 106 000000 gallove per day, whereas 70 years ago it averaged only 4,00 (0. Leside this it was shown that old Thames ie becoming incapatle of liquide- ting these tremendous (raughis ot Lis Luik and substasce. minimom quantity was 440,000,000 1u the conrse of xrfi it deeraased by tently one (061 L, oF t0 300,000, - 8. YIence I follows TWAT I’ wo kv n ot tha wama o D hall drin, wash and uee up the river bodily | urees of wupply must be made avalable for this WOLK! €T wetropolin. U Weduesday the Commors were ocoupied in conaldering 1i for the repeal of the clause iu the Act of Uniformity imposing 8 declarstion upon fellown of Colleges i the river and that it aud Lord Carnarvon that they will conform to the Clorch of Fugland. T measure 18 not couceived in any special epinit of Lostility to tho * e sed” church, beyond basiug iteell on the prisciple of religious freedom, (but of courre ii frovoked Disier oppo ition—in one inatance from the amiabie Beresford Hope aira | 3 weverih it was carncd | o feliow of | e bill recently brought forward by Mr. all religious testa at Osford ar regads dogree theclogical professorstipe, and to give he gradustes emancipated & peat In congregation 2 peation, whi r. Brigh pessed aiso. It nee u tio of the publie ee p main in the hand of the Church of }.nflund " which stured Towe's bile the other uight, was not without fousdation. By the way, everybody taiks very bighly of Mr. Coleridge's specch 0a the tests question , jt is said that he gave np £400 of feen he bad received with briefs, in order to be present; but even as o pecuniary investment he did wisely, ns afler such o wuccess be may Teckon on early promotion whenever any of the chlef legal ministerial posts become vacant. Mr. Coleridge is one of the new mewbers, heuce our gossip about him. The mid-weekly mail will kave brought you the news of the sudden death of the wife of arlyle, in her carringo in Hyde P'ark. this day se'n night, from disedse of the heart, ac celersted by excitement and alarin for ber iitle dog, which had been run over by & velicle. The deceased Las s claim to the woarld's gratitude of which it will harély be re ul, involunta: ls Dr. Holmes's remarks on cloracter and Kenius in ug of it, sud especinily his simile of the groat three-decker towed along by the iittle, toiling steam.tug. wanting which §t might “ wallow and roll aboat, aud dr./t bither aud thitber, and go off with the reflnent tide, vo kuows whither.” Tt was to bis marrisge that the gr i d leisure to write thoeo books 1! the world reads. o %0 soon appreciated oul It took bhim fve yea: e o told us, to produce Resartus.” Hence, when the lonely, obscure, eontempia young Scotchman, who, % years ago, ertered Edinburgh University, where Le was instalied the other day bancellor, who left it quite undecided e to Lis future course, who, in company with bis friend, Edward Irvivg, filled the Lumble pe sition of ushier 10 two sebools in Fifeshire, and subsequently became private tutor to Chrles Butler—wher in 1£.7 e mar- ried Mi b, 8 lineal descendant of John Knox (“ the faiker, lyle bas loved to call biw, “of Oliver Cromwell "), and ret to that solitary farm-bouse of Craigenputtook. which Emerson has describéd for us, it was a fortanste thing for all of us, In 1£34 they came 1o London, 10 s quiet street in Chelsea, from whence the deceased ludy will be con! ;;mw. lH;r hn-hulml war rest of his pilgrimage alone,” as *She in forever l?hhh‘n from ki jou, very solitary, amid the tas Mrs.” Carlyle was man Bhe had corresponded with Goethe ture, and the great German had fallen snd falling thiog: telligence and culture. and other notables of written sonnets to ber. There was a delightful ““sell * perpetrated on The 7 Friday last in the shape of a forged letter announcing agivary recall of the Austrian Enbassador from Berlin. t ven to the public. ‘The epis seeins, was seut by post instesd of by band; the chirography was entirely different from tbat of ‘the pretended writer; th envelops used wa not a foreign office one: the addr incorrectly given: and the expression of Lord Clarenden’s re- gret, with which the dispatch feimianted, was utterly incon- wistent with the rules of all official comumuuieations—yet all thess wusp circumstances faled to excite distrustin Priuting-House Square. And by suppiessing all meution of the rupposed source from which 1Le misinformation was de- rived, and par an original private inteliigence, The Times Law laid itself open to very just recrim | Mouday it backed oot ignomini In fuct, journal " s sbavdoned the proctice of haviug private tele. & from its 0wn correspondente, and s savagely resentful uer prpers being equally well informed with jtaelf. The Cannon-st. murder wtill interests people. How it was effected, why committed, and who eommitted it, are quostions wtill iuvolved in o good deal of mystery. A more ill-conditioned Tooking fellow thai the wceused man it in Dol eaky 10 conceive; wnd there can be uo d that If jawocent of this particulnr crime he ix had lot* gegerally. Sull. bis solicitor talks cmfidently of extabiisbing ai ahib. The Oul woys that Princess Mary of Cambridge is to bave £3,000 u year allowed 1o ter by Parliament oo her marringe. Y THE ADAYN EXPRE ———— EOBBERY., | | Governor of this State, wade for them last V | lodgod in prison, to awwit trial at the next | Court. Allen is the brother of Theolore All Bumerrony, Conn., May Allen, Wells, McClane and_ Grady, the brakemen cone cemed i the great robbery of the Adams Express Com- pany, have been brought here upon the requisition of the rter, and bountyjamper. olen Funds Recovered, etc, The rest of the thieves supposed to have been en- | gaged in the robbery of tie irva cor of Adsms' Express Co., last January, on the train from New.York to Beston, have | been arrested. 1t seems vow (hat the entire scheme originated [ fn the brain of & brakesman on the New Haven Rarroad, named Jobn Grady, and that Martin Alen, whom we shall more particularly refer to, war the direotor of tie affair Grady wae subsequently arreatad on the charge of robbiog s peasciger, aud this fuck gave rise 10 the belief thal he won ove of the sartics Ju the Xxpiess sobbesy. How for this suapicion e well grounded the sequel willtel. The three remairing | valuaaf ibe fose and and inform e Clork of robbers, who were .m."‘.‘x i this city and Brooklyn within | smouni upon; m‘mfl lp%xy I potity the past week, are named Martin Allen, Gilbert MoGlane, the Cierk to that effect. MeGlory, nifl James Wells, the brothor-in-law of The esta were made under the direction of Detective Piukerton, nssisted by Depaty-Sherift York of Brooklyn, aod Deputy-Sherifis MeGongle Moore of New York. Tu regnrd to the arrest of the prisoue: arrested st No. 132 Cariton-ave., Brookly heriffs MeGonigle and Moore *p d Saturday morning, Jjust aa the oocupants were astir, the er in search of their prisoner. It seems thas Allen got intima- bably from the servant girl—of the morements of the 1 when they entered the bouse he went into tbe ¥ and was there met by two ofticers in pursait, re- turned, and bolting the door, came out of the front basement door, where he met another officer, who dewanded hic surreu- der, The prisoner ran back into the house and endeavored to find refage in the basement. The ofticers who bad entgred through the parlor window at this time came down stairshod secured him, The prisover, finding bimseif oo wmade the beat of the situation aud walked along quietly with his cap- tors and custodiane. Siane alas McGlory, is & well known New-York thief, sunts in soms of the low places in Howard. o Gllly Allen was last Satarday back ya #nd had hi d-st., Dear Crosby. He is well kown to the Now-York dotectives, o no doult has boen coustantly operating in his professional live, up to this time elodivg the vigliance of the officers, He bt in Howard st., in this city. at nine o'clock the same night, on lotel. Ho wos pleasantly When the officers told surprise, but » s was arrested last Friday ni James Wells was arresto Broadway, near the St. Nichol chatiing with two (riende at the time. Lim their mission he did not express tho lea took it 8 & matter-of fact piece of business. The prisoners were taken to Bridgeport, Conn., last Sgturday aud Suuday, and there brought befors Judge Hall, B the Suprems Court, and committed in defaalt of €8,000 bail each, ‘They will be tried at the next term of the Criminal Court of Fairfeld, The against the prigoners I8 said to be very conelusive, and they will probably, ere long, go lndb keep company with thetr con- freres, O d Tristram, The labors of tLe deteotives are rewarded by the most complete sucoess—ihe recovery of within forty thousand dollars of the entire smount stoien, and the ar- rest of all the robbers. e 11 Xa Never Too Late to Mend, [Fecond Noticr.) It would be absurd to say that Mr. Reade’s * Never Too Late to Meud” is a groat drama; but it is & good work of art, within it8 proviuce, and for that reason we admire avd commend it. “Tts provine is the real. lmaginatiou had listle to do with its construction, and to that faculty it makes but & faint appeal. Herein (is indicated its iuferiority to tho best order of dramatio worke, such as we naturally look for upon the stage of the best.theater in the United States. It plucks the sweet and bitter fraits of the herd, material world, and gives us these with & precept. The continnous production of dramas of this character, &t Walleck's Theater, would not, wo fancy, be agreeable to the best educated taste of the theatrical cowmunity. Ooe does not look for the watter-of-fact in that quarter. The “ampler realms and spaces” of poeey aud art are more congenial as well to Mr. Wallack's audiences as to Mr. Wallack's players. But the occasional representation of drama wlich aims at, or reflocts upon, an important social reform, way be mccepted with pleasure, aud Ay chance to profit everybedy. 7The present scems to us A case in point; and we are, therefore, glad that Mr. Wallack has prodoced It in r Too Late to Mend.” Our hurried notice in Tussday's paper served to iadicato the general character of the play end the excelience of its represcntation, Glaacing at it a second time, aod solely thinking of ita artistic value, we have to note that, aside from its pleture of Engltsh prison-discipline, and sside from the beautiful scenery with which 3fr, Wallack has produced it, the droma is commonplace. Graphle, eloquent, trathful and tosch- 1ng commonplace, 1f you will; but commonplace, after all in said, In the first act we see an Euglish farmer in trouble. Hin farm does not yield well, He needs woney. He is perscented by » secret enemy. Heo In frowned upon by the father of agir! whom he loves aud deaires to marry. Iler father tells him that ke must earn a thousand pounds io order to win Lis bride, and (hereupon he determines to go to Austrilia and get the money. We witness bis farewell to his home, and Lis departure. We ree n conple of thieves arrested, in the same act. The scene of this net, let us bere say, in oue of perfect trathfalness to life. It represents en E landscape and farm- yard. The pigeous sit upon the oof, the honest watch-dog liee by his kennel, the Borse eats hay at bis erib. o the distance one secs the village church, with its graves around it. Every- where the scene islliright with foliage, and brimfal of natare. (ne can almost oatch the fragrance of the bay aud the roses, ss he looks upon this delicious picture. But s stern and grim picture ucceeds it. 1n the second act we see the interior of an English privon. The thieves previously arrosted are there, One, boy, bad stolen & handfal of potatoes. The other, wap, bad been & genteel swindler. Both are wretches now. for they are under English prison discipline, We witness some of the tortares to which they are subjected, and our fancy is glled with the idea of borrors not revealed. Oneof the prie- oners, the boy, dies under o the systern.” ‘The other is trans- ported to Australin A clergyman figures in (his set, and pro- cures the diseharge of the‘cruel gosler of the prison—a re- volting personification of bratality, played with pre Repbaelite exactness by that admirable artist, Mr. George Hol'ond. Mr. Ritggo'd is the clergyman, and 1s & very good one. s die charge of the goaler not ouly gratifies our resentivent agaioet that fieod, but suggests—what we shall be wise to remember— that Mr. Reade's ovel was not without its effect in reforming abuses in English prisons, and ameliorating the condition of the prisoners. From the prison soeaes—terrible in their ig: Alemmes md wmemwhalming in their pathos, and such ae ought not to be put lightly before the public gaze—we pass to Aus tralia. Two acts are devoted here to toe meeting between exiled Leroof the play—George Fielding. o part that is ated with power and pathos by Mr. Frederick Robiuso aud the tranaported, but penitent wnd reforined thief, played with humor, and deep feelivg, and graphic effct, by Mr. Charlos Fisher—and to their search for gold. The scenery with which this search is illustrated is really magnificent. It represents & wild, rocky tract of country, through which a cat- aract comes bounding from steep to stesp ben eath the glorivns L't of & summer moon. Presently, an we guze, the moon de- clines and the dawn of day faintly breaks beyond the mountain tops. The lights shoot upward; the colore change; & rovy glow suffuses the rocks, and then in & moment the sun bursta out in Leaven, and all is day, And, of course, the seekers find their goid, nud go away Lappy. The bounding savage is introduced into these two ncte, and—though personsted in aborigioal style by Mr. Young—impresscs the mind of the bebolder with the idea of something superfiuous. There is, or, ou tho first Bight, there was, decidedly 100 mach of bim. To say that he represcate @ streak of williness in the play would not be, per- hape, fo put it too strengly. But be must be very usefal to the carpenters, and 10 we bear with him. Finally, the gold having been secured, the happy farmer makes his way back to lis Eaglish home, aud weds his walting Susan. Of course the secret foe has been at work, meantime, trying to win Susan for himself; bat, like all cowardly, sneaking rascals who at tack bouest men belind their backs, and try to stab in tbe dark, be in a complete failare and fizzle, and gets nothivg but Xioks aud contempt. We need not panse o deseribe his trite mschinatio Thet is the play, and though its lesson be franght with the eloquence, truth, and tenderness of faithrul love and of child-like trust in the gooduees of the Divine Mind, it does not—spart from such attributes as we have already specified—rise above medioctity in art. The point, however, need not be dwe't upon, and, indeed, is only valuable to those who wish to fix in mind'a definite idea of the value of s drama which is certainly destived to have long run. As to the manner in which Mr. Waliack 'has prodaced it, the utmost enthusinem of praise is justifishle, The acting, too, should win cordial praises. Al the parts are exacting, without pos- sessing strong characteristion. They demand fidelity to va ture—and they recelve it. Nothing in its way could be better thun Mr. Holstow's Peter Crawley, Attorney--a cringiog, quaint seamp—or than Mr., Gilbert's old Jew, lsaac Levl. Mr. Mark Siith assumes the villain of the drama, and—though the rascali- ty is elaborate, and the stake is of slight valae iu comparison with the dangers of the game that is played for it—be is natural and cousistent, from first to last. Miss Mary Barrett played ex- ceedingly well—better than we have ever seen ber play before —iu the part of the poor boy who is tortured to di prison. Miss Henriques was u very natural aud pleasant represeutative of Susan; and Mr. Williamson, ax Will Fielding, evireed thoughtful study, and quick aptitude for appreciation of character. The reader Is counseled to sec, to think upon, and to profit by—as he may do, every night at Wallack's, for some time 1o come—thissignificavt drams, in wh misfortune in cowforted with hope, and in which degradation is reminded —(t0 borrow the words of Crabbe)— Tuat though seduced and led astiay. long, And ol the steps that led thee wrong, . LAW INTE GENCE. — UNITED STATES COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE~May Y, — Hefore Cowmmissioner OSBOIN, THE SAN PRANCISCO BOND ROBBERY—DISCHARGE OF THE ACCUSED. Johin Lambert, who was arrested charged with being conpected with the Ban Francisco bond robbery, was dis- cliarped vesterday by Commissioner Osborn, the Commissioner hoiding thak there was not snfficient evidence or probable cause to bold the accused for trial. AL IR HAMBERS—MAY 1.~ Before TARNALD. DECISIO Breath agt. Young. Judgment of foreclosure and SUPREME COURT-— W ordered. Allowance of otion denied. —~~— SUPERIOR COURT=3proian Tras—May 10— Lefore Jus- tive dJoxrs DEOISIONS. William Baudmann, , The Hudson R K. bn Bourke, DEilen Lebey agt. The Hudwon K. K. cler agh, The Same, Jacod Weil ugt. The Sa Williain iiow agt. The same, Morris Jaco Bamwe, Choe H. Van Wyck act. IhelSawme. Anp Clowery The saue, Jobn Ryan agt. The Same, Heury Schuwidt ugf. The Bame, Motious Grante Higgios agt. Builey —The attorneys sre on the viyue of the weriverehip effects Juc § requerted to agree odine therein the th in the | Bernard Hess agt. Samael Josoph.—Motion granted on terms. William M. Blaume ngt. Jobn Bowman.—Molion granted on terms, with €10 costa. James H. broy agt. William A. Glass.—Motion granted aud proceedings stayed antil seourity for couts be tled. gl 0 34 COURT OF COMMON PLEAS_CnaMpris—May 90— Before Judge Bravy. DECISION. .54 Betz agt. Betz.—Judgment of divorce for plantiff. ——— COURT CALENDAR—THIs DAY, SuprEME CoURT—CiRCUIT.—PART 1—Oger and Torminer.—No Calendar tor the Cironit.—PART IL.—Nok, 246 333, 344, 386, 1024, 1013, 1076, 10K 1100, 1132, ¥310, #02, 692, 6%, 1176 PART LIL—Nos. 147 1463, 675, 1417, i, ) , 821, 104, 2811, 403, 79, 1325, 808, 717, 427, 103, 443, 645 SUPERIOR ('OURT.—PART T . 1513, 2093, 1727, 624, 204, BIF, 1160, 1357, 1533, 2151, 2157, 2165, 1749, 2167, 3169, 2171, 3 PAwT IL—Adjourned to Wednesday ne BrookLyN City Courr—Thursday, May 10.— Nos, 56, 57, 62, 64, 67, 68, 1t0 79 inclusive, 31, 47,23, 60. CITY NEWS, - SPEAKING AT THE UNION LEAGUE CLUB ROOMS.— Ex-Governor Parsons, of Alabuwa, United States Seubtor eleot from that State, will speak, by invitation, at the Usion Leagve Ciub Rooms, this (Timrsday) eveniog. —— Lacruse By Jouy B. Govan.—A lecture on Fen- perance will be delivered by Johu B. Gough at the Allen-st. M. E. Church this evening, ———— IRELAND AND THE Imisw.—The Rev. H. M. ( laber will speak on this subject this evening &t the Elooming- dale Baptist Church, Forty-second-st., between Sevesth ard Eighth-aves. Proceeds for the banefit of the Sunday sebool. st A BURGLAR AND RECEIVER ARRESTED.—Officer Horbilt of the Fourth Precinct yesterday arreeted Willism (/Brien, aged 31 years, on the charge of baviog, on the night ., forced an entrance jnto the premises No. 1 and stole thesefrom ailverware to the smount of valued ot §36, These goods, it ie alleged, Wi prisoner to Jobn IL. Stewart of No. 2 Oliver: #t., the latter kuowing ther to bave been stolen, A portion o the property was recovered. Justice Dowling comuitted the prisoners for trial in defanit of $2,000 bail each. e ——— Terr oF A WATom—Officer Lyon of the Tentk Precinet yesterday arrested James Weinmecker, on the com plaint of Mr. William Pregizer of No. 322 Broome-st., wie oharges him with stealing from tho residonce of the complain ant & gokd wateh and chain, valued at $40, on the Zth of March last. The prisoner confossed his guilt, ond stated that 10 had sold the watch at the pawnbroking establishicent of sano Beunett, No. 594 Canal-at, for 810, 'Bepnett was theu arrcted. Justice Mansfiold committed the prisoner. The wateh was Bot recovered. Chatham ot 8116 nad cigars re sold by the sk A 870RE ENTERED AND RoBBSD BY BURGLARS.—On Tuesday night the tatloring eetablishment of F. Leonard, at {ho vorth-east carner of Grand and Allen-sts, waa evtered by burglars, ‘Tle thleves eficoted an entrance by wienching the lock from the trap-door leading to the cellar, on Allen-st., and then by boring h(;ln ’I"n thnfl n«lm, b;o:: m:t'n&:u of the o cien mit o Dlaak, eariag & ole aullc e ik he foods Wors 1o fully overhanled the stock, and selected f doesk e, heavers and « assimeres. ich they had torn ep tly carry, the thieves . of s man, O reachin; — ‘ FIRE IN GRAND-5T. —Early on Wednesday morning & fire was discovered on the third floor of the premises st tbe corner of Baxter and Grand-sta., in the apartmente occupied by Froelick & Co,, manufactarers of plotograpbio shades. It was scon extinguished. The logs of ¥, & Co. will amount o abont $2.000; insured. The sccond floor is oecnpied by James Green, mavufscturer of philom‘ipl ute. Jose on stock by Wwater, §€00; inaared. The first floor is occupied by P. Cafla rato. as & grocery; loes on stock by water. 8500; insured. The buildings was damaged to the amount of §300. pl g SoraNTON (0AL AT Avorion.—The Delaware, Lackawauna and Western Railrond Co. held their 37th auc- tion sale of Scracton conl at their new salesroow, corner of Wiliiam-st. aud Exchange-place, Messrs, J. H. Dra- per & Co. officiating as anctioneers. The Tu-mym com prised aboat 18,700 tans (2240 ™ ¥ tun), deliverable during the month of May at the Compa oy's wharf at Eligabethport, frow whepee the freight charges (o this cily smount to about 70c. per tap. Tho prices obtaiood yesterday show n warked de. cline for some sizes from the prices of two wi ago, while other sizes remain about the same. "The following is & summary of the prices received yesterday compared with those of the last sales: Tuns. May 9. 5,000 Luwp Coal ... - et 0 2,00 Bteamor Coal... 86 45 6 7000 Grate Coal ... 6 % 6 3,000 Fgg Cosl.. . 60 6 3,000 Stove Coal ... —-— i 2000 Clestaut Coal.. 5 3 piinfie-Clitl AN UNPORTUNATE POsT-0FFICE CLERE.— Commis- sioner Betts yesterday examived iuto the case of a Post office olerk who was cuarged with abstraotlng s gold masonic ring from & package which war entrusted to bim to stamp. The evidence adduced before the Commissioner ly sustained the charge, and the accused was committed for trial. —— TArsoun: SENTIMENTAL.—Poetry 18 all very well for the sen- tmental, but those who sre praetical and con. mou senred tie Rownns» FRaenant ODONTOLING for their Toeth and Breath, and the verdict agood thing. Guarauteed to contain no acid or any substance Adestructive to the enamel of the teeth. Sold by drogeists, perfomers, acd funcy goods deslers. ente | —— A PerrECT JEWELL.—'' My family has been miur 1 L1cox & Ginms - Macuixm for the lnat five yesrs. o eutite satisfaction, aad my wile . eon Prarscr —|Letter of P. Jurrets, Lock Haven, Pa. —— ('HARLES CARYILLE, esq., St. Marks-place, reports house saved from bory! h’ the BUnoLAR ALany TuLsonaps. [t never dida . Houues, No. 254 Bresdway. et TurkisH BATiS, No. 13 Laight-st., are again open 1o the public. enlarged and improved. Hoars—Gents, § to8 8. m., Vied pm. Ladies, 10 (0 13 8. m. Sundsye—Qents, 6 to 12 m. ——— Dr. DILLENBACK HAS OPENED AN OFFICE at No, 113 Ninth ok, & fow doors west of Brosdway, New-York, where he will it A be in sitendance THUR od FuIDaY of each week. —_— re Arrived. TOWN-In Steaaiblp Santiago de Cubs—Rev and Mis. Greunan, Wo, Hanson, Capt. Lomberd "Gilmore, Capt. Brooks, Dr. Clark, Mr. and M. Pillonghby ind lafunt, Miv, White, Mz, and M. J ¢ FROM GRE Chas. Miller, M edith, J o, ¢ . € M. W . Wai. P Maxow. 8. Smith, J. Wackerma: Mr. and uily. V. D. Moses, James Haerh Mrs. Flan . West. Geo. Heney, Jr. W. . Ry, M. Ackley. Jobin Rhosdes, ). V. Wilson, A. Hariis, e, Mrs. Cobb, Mr.and Mre. H. De d_fam mily, Mrs. Watts, W. Be ey, dell Leo Chenim, J. ¥, P ¥! Schaffer, P. Dalho Mr. Johnsou, Fardee, L . Lieut. Mo R. Henderson Johusou, . Athinaon and ‘amily. Sr. Brook, Mr. Gre: ut. R, Benuete, W, P. Mon 0. W et. MeDonsld, . D G W, ¥ Robertson. Helptonsiall, 3, M. ¥ r. and s, Chadwi Lacy. J d b 3 i , AL A, O, Mr wnd Mra. B ¥ L. Burnes, Misy Berves, M D. Heardon, Geo. Watson, and 410 In the | | { | | | L. Ba Boswosth, R. MeDonnell, teerage. Latest Mhip News, ARKIVED. ahem, Liverpoo), 19 days, with mdse. May 2, with 3 pose. o O Hill, Sagun la or, N. 8., with plaster to D, R, -, Cllias, Wiadsor, N. &, with potatoes to Duryee & jumln, Clark, Calas, with Istis to Jobn Boyuton's N.C., with naval stores to duys, with vogar sud A A 1 — T S Moriuy ste.. where you wil fi g esve clieeper thay any store in New. ¥ N FIRE PROOF fo1 SALE st o0 estraordivery low siice. Address J. 8. Tribawe office. PLEN l'-n_—x;:;\:znn:m i AMERICAN COTTON PLANTING LOAN COMPANY. CAPITAL 8TOCK ... BOARD Hlon. SIMON CAMERON, Hon. JUS. A GILMORE. arpebice. Hon CHAUNCEY M DEPEW, lato Sesatrry of Uiy, Hou-Yosk- on. JAS. L/ . 8. ip AU, e Rioswsses of V. Miat, Philsde/p n GEO. A -, i Biy THOS. -,nnn‘:{.f‘ “hv'v ELIJAH K. DEWING, esq. Mejor 1. O. ERIGHAM, lste & Track, Now-York ilson & Co., Boston, M. Orieans, aster U, 8. A., Washiogton, U. €. Yihin Company offere groater inducements for investments thon sy Stock ¢ l)lnpll‘ now in existence. The object of the Corpany s to afford facilities to the fmpove d Sugar Planters of tbe South to grow and get theiz cro od and sstisfuctory security on Bortga: for money advenced in procuring +:vy scessary expenses incidestal to the Jevel CAPITAL AND LABOR are tise universsl requirvments of the Iareest portion of the SOUTHERN STATES, pay went of the roil. 4nd when jadicionsly spolied, o watter by 'whom forsis) Testore tist pos 1 of our unfortunate coantry to ite for} Vority, and sake the Sonth ail that Nature desigued it, THE GARDEN OF THE WORLD! Booky opened for the sale of the Stock at the offi of the (o :‘Ow. .V“x ofliee of WALTON, BRYANT & Co,, No. 17 8 New Yo eular. [0 ine SPRING CLOTHING YOR MEN, BOYS AND CHILDREN. PRICES REDUCED. TRAPHAGEN, HUNTER & Ce, Now. 196, 400 AxD 402 Bowsny, NOW OFFER Silection frem Ueir soperior stock on & basls of GOLD, u 20 per cent premivm. BUSINESS SUITS, 18, 620, $25 and $0. BUSINESS COATS, #10, $12, $15 and §20. GEDAR CAMPHOR THE_, NE‘VS—' 0 HAR CHAPMAN, Furton F THE WEBK. WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 9. "AE WEEKLY TRIBUNE for MAY THE K. 7. WEEKLY TRIBUNE for this week contaipe the -1 Lukorne ATicLus—The South end tbe North—Response o ( Perey The Proposed New Loun; The Rightof Sesenion: The iin Tiot; The Garmans in America; in Riot; Exglisn Resources—Aus w-n Soppies; Kentucky Dewocracy: The Right and Wrong of it lr- wovale nd AppolnimentyFresider Reform in | ; Secession i levoiution ; T lrish Movemeut; Cotton in 16 many ; Tenneses ; Edi Niws Soumany—Militars ow- York; New-bogand; M e Western States ; The Te, roes . The Croy Ferisus; The Cholers; Anniv Terribie Riot in Mewphis, Teoa. ; Testimouy on Reconstractic estic Miscellany. ' Formen Newa—Europe ; Mexico; South Amerlea; Britiah Avvor hina. Tag PRitADALPRIA MURDRR—A Full Confession of Auton oot duits Havicg Kiled tie Entire Deering Family. Ret10NAL RRPRESENTATION UNDER THE PROPOSKD AwixD nod amus Promipiren.—The Attorney-General's Op (e Law; Al Former s, irosd Passes Called in sud Annulled NiTRO GLYCRRINE —Can It be Used. Stored. and Traoapo ted wilh Satety? Mr. Nobals Theorios and Experiuents. ROUINA. Correspondent—Landiug st Panama Their Color, Dreas and Lock of Dress; Ancient of ization; An Afri y of Building 1t “ Aspiuwsll; Transferring the Trew e ; fumors of ickuos; Two Deys o York. Tus Pesuc —Honml{.!lluuun of Secretary McCu wechy An Estimate from Controller Clark. Baxcuorr's Spesce 1x Exorax.—Farl Russcll Denies M Fane croft's Staten Mr. Bancroft's Reply, CoNomuss—. 4 of the Proceediugs. Twe Naw [xTinx. Won. Ju. AL Revexve BiLi—speceh of th 8. Morriit of Vegmont fn the House of Repsescntalives, May 7, 1147, WA;'—D.AID _o'_ Count Gurowskl, EnmpRRS oNNECTICUT 8 nican Piaxos AXD Plax1sTs 13 EgROPE. 'PUBL cATIONS— Huven's Traveis—Tho Pilgrims Wa'el The Calture of tie Grape ; Tie Field sod Garden les of Aweron Tuz ExLARGRD Tr180x £ —Selotations from the Ameriens Prom n it of The New-X ork Tribune aud the Cowpietion -/ ‘4 Twenty ¥.th Voluwe. A Vorce ymon Westary Woor Growsms—From Our )+ Dongols Correspondent. INTRRESTING TO FARMERS—American [netitute Farmers April 24 Will Rabbits Eat Fleah ? Alpine Spinach; Syrop e indian Corn; Barometers—Are they o Practical” Va e Yuruiers | Sclusors Siatyeu Form; Concrete Mo Timothy—The Proper Time to Cat Hay; Club Foot Cablage— I Growers' Associstion ; The Wine Plant Ouoe Mc Crasberry that Fi Butter—liow to Pack to Keep Sweet A W s Opinion on Fiowers and Other Matters; Preserving Vaine of Wool; Manures—Salt and Poudreiie'; Iy Fruite; Changes Fees and Bee Hives; Iuformation for ¥ rante: Eftect of Food on Heaith; Water-Witcheraft—"For this Time Ouly Hylidw otas ew-teiney s ug Mosroe Tarrow—Craaberry Culture i Whieat Prospects in Wew. York. ” PorTay—The Porirat. Tum Duy Goops Mauxsr. LaTsar EUROPEAN MARKETE PrRsONAL— POLITICAL (17T I7RXS. MBcKLLANRODS [TENS. MARNIAGES AXD DPATH. Lasar NEws BY MAGSETIc TsLEGRAPO—~Special Disjetcher to e MY, Trivcue, pra ‘oMMKRCIAL—Full Reports of the Stock, Money, Cotion. +/isin o Cote Marbotn, spechily roported for The . ¥. Tribive. . Weruiug Price i wrappers, ready for mfling, €ve bocribers, single copy, | yeat—52 bumbers...... § 3 Clibs of five e exed (o TTIES OF WUDACHDOES - Twventy copirs, mddrwssed 10 nacies of subsribers - Copes: 1o one addres Twenty copies, to one address A 1'be sent for esch el Post-Otfice aler, are prefel T Adre SPRING A large and most conplete Stock of READY MADE CLOWITING, Tk of SPRING OVERCOATS, BUSINESS AND Dhbss who! ), BOYS' CLOTHING of every des. jbco, GOODS, &e., k. 1040 PER CENT BELOW FORMER PRI« b5 MAN & BURR'S ONE PRICE CLOTHING K 24 Folton and 90 N Temittance. £ 1 RO 10 st FREE HOUSE HING TACKLF FOR SALE BY £ A. DRAPER, No. 83 NASSAUST,, one door from MAIDE E. REMINGTON . MANUFACTURERS OF ) REVOLVERS, RIFLES, | MUSKETS AND CARBINE For the United States service. Als, POCKET AND BELT REVOLVER! REPEATING PISTOLN, RIFLE CANES, REVOLVING RIFLES, Rife sad Shot Gun Barrels, snd Gun Matericle, S0id by Oun Deslére and the Trade zeueta ly. 1o these dave of HOUSE BREARING acd ROBBEKY evwry NOUSE, STORE, BANK, a3d OFFICE snould Lave oue of REMINGTON'S REVOLVERS. and desesiption of our Aruw will be ¥. REMINGTON & SONS, lien, N. V. 4 ed upon spplicett PERFECT FITTING . MEASUREMENT FOR SHIRTS Printed directions oF self-measnrement, list of prices. and driw- Nhirte and Collars. sent free everyw'ere 53 COMPANY, W Hi 10

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