Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
o ~ THE REPUBLICAN ALLIANC B BY JOSEPIl MAZZINT. Trom the Atlaatic If from the late war, and the peace now concluded, Yty should fal to learn a decislve lesson for the future, and the democratio party fall to perccive the path (o be follewed in pursuit of that futare, we should be driven to despair of Lotk : War for Voniee, s war 10 7e£ain our own territary and our . ewn frontier, had become a necc iy~ (he supicine and solo cendition both of sceurity aud Loner. Al en flt that, until the national question was solved, and Tialy seoure from foreign attack, no stable internal organizé tion of the country Was possibic. Ali felt that, if we des sired to place onrselves fn a condition which would ens blems, in the probable case of the Boptember Conyention, to.concenirate all tho for the country upon the solution of the Rou was of tho first necessity to secure ourselves & _Austrian invaston, by gaining possession of the Ruelic, Norlo and Carnie Alps. ) The Veoetians, owing to the exertions of our yorty, wore preparing for fusarrection. The rainous state of Etalian finsnce huperatively demanded wuch reforius and such economy as ware imposaible of realization #0 long as the Damoclean sword of war was snspended over our Scads. Tt hud beoome fmpossible for our monarchy to hold back any longer withont serious riek. Action was décided mpou. Had they really willed'lt, victory wiis ccr- tain, The monarchy had had (¥ unlimted supplics of wone 20 & countryresigned to any amount of wisgov provided only the prowise of actiou wis kept. W Aeolared, the whole of Italy rose up in a ferment of enthe- siasm, wnd ready for every description of saerifice in " blowd or woney. The monarchy, 1t srder to romain the sole unwate bed awtor of the field, demanded unlimited powers. bolh tinancial aud political : they were granted. Reluetantly, sud only under the prossure of public opinon, it demanded tweuty thonsand voluuteers: seventy thousand ea y answored the call. It demanded that all parties should tholr adbesion to the war: it was done. i de manded of Garbaldi the support of his nawe and the aid of his genius, without conditions: he gave both. These concesslons, 88 blindly made to a power that had repeatodly botrayed alike the desires and the rights of the nation, were mistakes; but our present purpose is only to show that the monarchy ebtained everytlinz it demanded, and overything that was necessary for the overthrow of every obstacle in its path. The majority of the republicans—albeit full of distrust and evil presenti- ment-bolieved that, although the national aneation of unity and the internal question of liberty were basc Adupou one and the same principle, yet their field of aplica- t10n was different; they held that, by uviting with the motiaechy in the endeavor to e mancipate npward of two millions of Ttalians frou foreign yoke, they did ot for a single day abdicate their rigbt of republican apestolate; and thoy censidered that that right wonld be strength- ened and confirmed by the tulfiinent of the duty of eom- bating Austria inaid of thelr Italian brothers. They re- ‘mombered that the nation, although still unprepsred to adopt a better system of Interua! government, was sagerly @ealrous for wur; and they knew that the true method for those who sought to_educate and eonvince the nation could never bo that of holding themselves aloof. They &mew that, if left ulone in the field, the monarehy would n oase of frinmph assume the en mor of the victo and in easo of defeat attribute the i fam ongeadered in the national camp by the sopurat of the repnblicans. They felt how grave wonld e the danger, and how immense the disgrace, of & Napoloonlo intervention in the Italian war; they knew mon- arohy would invoke that intervention on the slightest and they considered it their duty to deprive the of all such pretcxt, hy affording it all the as- sistance and all the men required. They therefore has- toned to action in the ranks of the volunteers. the field with three hinudred and thousand re, troops, one hundred thonsand* jzed notional guards, tharty thousand velunteers, the whole nation ready to acl a8 a reserye upon ter- ritory whercon every single man was a sworn foe to the enemy. Austria had one hundred and fifty thousand men in Taly. The war with Prassia rendered it impossible to t that nmnber in. any case. Yet more; on each of the Alps, on each side of the Save, by the shore of the Dunsihe, along the Carpathian chain, in Hunzw and Bohemia, in Servia—half of the populatios e whiehriaandor Austrin—among the Kounuan race o years to prepare; it had an obsegiions Parliament, ment, a jon of which is in Transylvania—in the Banat the Southern Sla- er Austrian provinces, anow; widely ex- voninns—cazerly destrous of consti uting a tended Wyria—Italy had aliics at hand; all of them r, By, eager, and entreating o word of encourage- or & movement on our part. The Government knew these things., Agents from those provinees wore in cor- - and eontact with us'and with the Govern- ment at the same time. The war, it rightly condueted, wonld have ecarried dis- solution into the very heart of ihe Austrian Empire: it ‘would have jusured t ly the initiative of the move- ment of the nations ; it wonld bave gained for her those indissoluble alliances founded on have opened up the path of Iahan economic progress in the East; it would have constituted Italy a first-class wer, and rendcred her arbitress of the kuropean ques on at onc bound. 1n this, the first war to he fought with our gwn forees, Heaven sot before us a glorions opportanity of eance g that stigma of vassalage wiich has oppressed sud wew: hed down our langukl existence since Vi ranea, and of trausforming that existence into vigorous life, the life of respected as powerful, aud beloved us bene In & case like ours, would have accepted th them, blessing and vernment would ho 1 of the right of rey with diplomaeies, nanght to do with tr w and alli- ances, save with those peoples called, like herselé, to the conquest of (heir own frecdom; that her banner Is the bamner of a_principle—the principle of nationality they would bave boldly raised that banner fn the face grionda and focs. A nations! government would have understood that, in order to prescryve the country from ruin of rey; wars, and to vanquish Austria, net once, but forever, it was ne- mm ember her, and that this necessity for the ent of the Austrian empire pointed out the Dadube, Vienns, and Bouthera-blavonia s the objective poiuts of the war. A national government would have Instantly convoked anliatian partiament-—ind none wich boen ulready o emb ihade thew watch over the internal secirity 1 - eld country, and kecp open every path throngh whie veituh the boly war, Kayiii 0 them, Watch also us, a0l sce that neither from weakness nor inca- wo 4] in our saered mission. A nation: ] government would have fssued a proclama- tion to th Italian people, seying, Hold yourselves in & readiness as dur reserve force, 80 long.as we onr du .y and go forward; and be also ready to punish '8 should ‘e offer to draw back while oue inch of ltalian Amains to be conguered. nationJ government would have addressed another 8401 10 the peoplos Row subject to Austria, «y- T 46 theim, “ Arisol the Tialian emy i your arm pors wong the enstern const of the Adnatic - Istrin, which we shall set free—acroes which sea wo will form tLe alliance of freemen with you.” A national goverument would have opened nnlimited registers of votunteers; would have organized tite Hun- E.lnlrxr:::z lnndnthe tho:‘uulndn of P(l):m—wn- of the , insu; ion—now wandering over Europe; it wonld have placed them with their uational thu'Tn the van- of onr army; then, leaving two intrenched camps to_guard Lombardy and the extreme Po, wou!d haveent two hundred thotsand regulars to_push on by way of Laybach and Udine to Vienna, would have given the mn&d«ulw our "“}1"’ ‘Gaflu-‘l‘«’u',hnd, when 16 had s floet, wou v (4 w‘}"’"‘" ave poured fifty m set before A national win vir- it to do st and holy mis: the God of Ttaly. elt that 1taly onl olution; that she b i volunteers beyond the Adriatic futo Croatia and plan appeared too'daring—which, however, it rua not—a mtional government would bave arrang dto ave an insurrectionary outbreak precede the war slong tho rone of the Alps, and first_ocenpying thie Trentino to its furthest froutiers by the regnlar troops, would have ttho main body of the army iuto the field between latertal and Vemce; in éither case contriving a movement by the volunteers in Bouthern Vo in. . _The monarchy, however—as if desirous of provin aa Hikiirgens Ttaly would have oo s alice agents of dasuunn—thou- for its sole ally Bis- wkho, being ed to make war upon Austria for *would have afforded Italy all the ald the mere foree of things, and without part. chy—as if dreading above all things that the 1l the consclousneas of thelr own efr number twenty thousaud; then, by the ~threatening attitude of the people, A to accept double that number, but nmufi"sx Al o riflemen or guides (Indispensable elements of mrm&t&em then—once more compelled to Ly ¥y should provide tgl.rvwn urged monarchy purposely introdaced ‘winoni £he vOLIILeers ; gwve thern upopuiay a1 superior officers ; armed them with old muskets, one-fourth ius far as the rifles of the encmy; in zlul» them appesr uscless and iuea) 0 do battle wmid Bimost Innceesetbyy mous T then nh;:fl them to oecupy c Garibaldi’s request command of the fleet; refused him dlm%: % '-Xl msurrection In Venics and the nou-fulfiiment of the | will coass, happen what may, until Custorza. After this, whothor from cowar- | importance; nor ‘momo o ng the im- | monarchy shall censo to be. on fts anms, until, when already in treaty lor ) 1y 8 I A RS o y 'allumu disputched Cialdini to invigle where thero were no rlm :;‘» UIlI:u:]iu‘x'n. w. v B (Frgho mics, and recalled Medicl=the only one of the erals who had attem) any 3 operation—irfm M’Pi;‘lfiwtmo, When he was within a fow miles of the lnusrl:m. "‘m "‘f d"‘ g‘.“ "‘“bfi%“::&"n‘“:"w‘: L8, uitons fllght from Bitan in 1848 Nevara, Cus- | tional unitys wland wmerof potwoen tho Hsing oot tozzw, NH\ Lissa—such bave Heeu the resulta of the only | mons and {;";;(Tr:’lllrunl?xv';:nnn-hy o Ve T 4. Conquest, any ¢ ll'ml'nll of |-n-l;m'n;; p of the connlsy. ¢ e e Sris ever remained. Bervilo In its origln, | an vns and s servile—formierly to France, Spaid, Austria alternately, now to France alone; but should Louis Napoicon full, it would siuk again under one of the monarehy fnseribed any of those historie i fu the records of 1ialy which mark some progress in the Hestinies of the country. Our woolcombers have played 2 more brilliant and useful paxt in our Italian life than wll Sur kings put together. Tho communcs which diffused S bt Ttalian civilization before the days of Rome ca composed of hieads of famflies. “The period of Rome's true greatness, and of her grand unifying mis- Slon, whs republican; tho Empire came later, and came Dut to nsarp awd dismember. It wos without any sid from our prinees, in al;luu of foreign rulers, and bencath @ republican hauner, t at our people overmastered the fonaal nobility, and {t was beneath a republican banner that our arts, industry, commerce, colonial influence, and literature grow, flourished, and were diffused among the Various peoples of Europe, The brave men who hav from tinis to time, protested by dagger, conspt pen, and handed down to us & radition of liberty, € amid tho darkness of elavery, were republicans; und r publicans are they who, in our own day, have treasured up tho promise contained in that tradition, Tonarchy never achieved anght either for tho liberty or unify of the eountry: it has always persocuted ho tozzn, o monarehy hus undertaken without forefin ald. Foreign rulers—we aay it with a grief that passes words— s at tiuos goilty of crime, Lave at loist shrunk from has vever identified itself with : with the foreigner, Y atural that the poace that followed shonld be ey par with the war. but the menarchy coutrived even to surpuss the point offdisgrace already Tenched. 'Tho monarchy has submitied to Lear Austrin declaro t 1 do not give back this Italian tesritory to those who are unable aud lmlurfll{ to conquer it for themselves. I fling the now uscless incnmbrance at the feat of the des- pot who has alrendy wrung sn Italian provinee from your cowardice, and "Who stiil deprives yon of your own Tetropolis. Take it as wn wims (rom Lit, if he Clooses to beatow it upon you. Thie monarchy has submitted to hear the usurper of Rome and Nice declare : 1, foreigner, bestow upon you s alms this Italian provive which you ure focapable o winuing for yourselves by force Of Arma, You_shall Lenceforth do homuge us vassals, not to Aubtria, but to me. And the mouarchy has swallowed the doublo insult. Hod it nnl,:‘fl»w enrs before, upon ground yot toeming with Italian blood, swallowed the fnsult of & peace cons lded by an ally, who, though but a few steps distant from the King, yet deigned no vord to Tim—1 will not say tolask counsel, bui not oven to juforia him of tho brupt decisiont_ “;\x:{; this peace™thongh this s of small momont com- ce nons to Italy, In- pared to diahenorCtlis perce o T uttin, tho Key of wenched within the Alps: ol pelv e o result { crn frontior; mas Deirayed Tren- | apostics pf both ; and only when It porceived the result (o qur enstern frontlor maelcr of (0 POGL Sior G ai o | bo inevilable st stopyed forwaid, to aprrobristd Lo B Ciea throngh which be ias been wont to descend into | frults of thelr Jubors, At the present day it corrupta and Koy —~tho enemy can 1o in wait to seize the favorablo gfi:x; -u‘lrhfi Lifo und ‘moral greatness that should spring moment, which the embarrassed positionsof Italy will Sively ofter, to fall upon s A peice such as the present carries with 1t tho necessity of anotber war—a war which (it 15 needless to decoive onrselves) will find Austria stronger than before. K¢ ccted by Germany, she will bo compeliod by the fores ol things, and by tho numerleal saperionity n{lh Blavonian elcment, to trunsform hersclf info a Slavonial Houthern Slavonians, and cortuin of pre- th rally round our trn, ‘ of hayiog sooner or latter to compel_Italy to maintain her n the necessity of making any fmportant reduction Vtopians—stupld and fgnorant Utoplane—nre hich ordains that the Lo of the et of the fu- Europo at the The trae {hey who, in spite of the natural Jaw tho tnstitations of a people are alw nutionsl traditions, fecundated by an i fre (and this Instinet 1s republican all o precent day), imagine that they can work oul the | ind. greatiess of 1taly through the medium of i unsustained by a powerful aristocrac Neatitto of all great memories, witheut a spark of g i, without falth in its own mission or power—in a copyist of the foreigner, or power. m which would, wer very soul of our people—and, ot impossible monarchy ongage 1 A NEW War W army undiminished, place her fresh preparations, and render in her expenditure impossible. 1t'will force upon her a progressive Morcase of liabiilties, threatening the State With bankruptcy; reduce her to a constaut condition of commercial wntertainty, alarm, and conscquent inac- !l her to new loans, hew taxes, crruption of every great industrial, ricultural or commercial enterprise. win and diagrace. A monarchy which, with a people 1tke ours, with haif a million of men under avms, W ith an ary of approved courage, with soldiers and suilors such o8 thiose who sank in the Palestro, erying, “Viva I'Ttalial™ coldly brings this vassalage, pov 2 dishonor upon the conntry, may yet exist for a brief period npon the corrnption ‘and cowardice of othors; bud, before God and man, its doon 18 sealed. Wiy 18 it that Ttaly patiently sahmité to all this aecu mulation of disgrace and wroug? Iow is it that no et bursts forth from the army—special guardian of & cou try’s honor, to whom a stain upon the banner i thia death-—from the corps of more tlian thirty thou volunteers, the majority of whom had sworn ne Aown thelr arms Gl Italy was united—from those citics whieh hailed with delight the signal of an Italian war they bolieved destined o initiate o new 1o b the baptism of our emancipation from foreign rulo—how s it that from these no cry of Ouf, cowards! Be all this shame apd infu your heads alone. We tear asunder the unrig compnet. We will ourselves carry on the war you either cannot or will not conduet. Tho canses of this silenc collcctive; nor need 1 enu ards onr m gistrust : and of all men. y inafow years that they Vit the source of that cor arehy (0 last, destroy the the same tiie, this is the reason why It i thiat the monatehy should improve. O monarchy feels itself a forcigner in Ttaly; it has sense of t eied ; it feels it is not bele tunists (th from lust n it ssity of covstituting the Govers o; hence the necessity with such 1 a as o ssity of roj nt, or the organiza a0 system; hence the necessity wploys—n sort of civil and falsifying every nof ol f a machii national Hwissor At an immense mob 110 the dnty of watehing o ) in the interest of (e Go of keeping ull these, excopt the highest wndirpaid, which ereatos a constant incitement ence the necessity of corripting the eo, industrial ssions, publie or of torrifyiog t plan « 1 things y delusions plion in every the knot of the ¥ ~om of Immorulity - N s of hail- clange, and shrink from the un nown future. crters from the o This distrust—tho parent of inertia—this want of all \tempt; hence the x 3 confidence in their own forces, this isposition todishelief | rounding the i hy with ministers and won deva {1 the capacity and power of the nation 10 save herself, 1s | 0 ita peity traditions and its foreign allies; hence tho ne ponses of its artificlal exist the result of the long lessons of immorality tanght the | cossily of supplying the ¢ [ hence country, deliberately by some, unconsciously und.from | ence by & progressive fner an intellectual habitn ired in slavery thers, the necessity of restr Our_ocountry, soeking Tege & publi tanght and relavght by & press unworthy of Ita &ible the Libers of lours and taxes; 1 A% pos- n, hind been , by tho example of men whose serviecs in the past hud endeared | pressiou of thel them Lo thespeople, and by angentire governmental hier- [ = All (hese and other dire necessl #pt n assuniug tho work done by | sequences of a state of distrust wvd perd arubly belongin their devotion to that unity defonses s nee, they derided as the dream of jour martyrs-—You shiail rulé your life by a shuun. Truth #s not the law of the thnes, and ‘the time are your master: say nothivg of your vig the monarchies of Europs should Krow susp and turn their forcss against you thie word i odlous to those wh seck only utility, & tempora Weapons others, and in boastin, which, but & few years thom. Digiitly sketehed will not de- | Intonsity, It is ti P into an edueational | The Government terslitile if achioved at the pr rof the naiion, risy ; falsehood if suceessfil, is of bidividual and coll ship. Caress the foreign tyrant, e nctivity. 1t must be ton of a prinel him in your hearts ope as splritual sovereigi & prineiple which Ivea the upity of and Viear of Chrisi,although yon know that he has | the conntiy i sockation foun ho froe consent of Al hex 5o In one A to the fol (il ashed, or for those wal law of duty, necording W wan ahall be fudged, pun trampied nnder foot and falsificd il true religion throngh Just of dominion : from the first you will soon be freed by death; and you will overthrow the temporal power—the sole fmportuiice—of the second morv casily by (he help of s which spring: from duties fulfille ronnflexions and fmposture. Extol monarchy, even | It be o gover whieh, by the natwre o. its though the old republican blood of your fal boil | constitation, eannot b 1y Mot ives or intesests Aiffor- proclalm the constitutionsl system an arca- | et from the genoral alm and common wel ! wilhin you num of eie 1 though its most devoted supportes the , and the Pledmontese Statioto (ny the fulfilment of thi confess it ufi ble, llmnr’h you Know it to be w wretehed tion | responsible for the ncts of the | extortod I A moment of fear. Declare the monarch | eacred and unlopeachable, even when Le yields up Ropublic cigner: Lurope is warmed at the Italian sofl to word * republic,” ang the King has an army. There will come n thne - bat as yot it is too soo Bubetitnte for the | war of prinetples fgnoble kirmishea bt do not attempt to strike bigher tineMinisters. The men who, from Socrates to Jesus, | hed and fulfille what they belioved the whole tr t sublime we ( 1 they perished ; hold fas guide. iings such as these have polsoned an the sources of all mor tual dey an infaut mation, which, fnstinets, hos but Just einerg slavery, by depriviig them of to judige the true worth When artifice and false Machiavelli, still pofson NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1 she has not ratsed her head nh-hl-tun&u Monddn:!edded.umbu rust sun’ own vulflrmmnz our foolish fears. Judge Dalrymple said was anytimig ¥pectal upon which to charge desired, howover, to call thelr attention lad observed through the onforcement of the Excise unbelievers in her intellect which was ngth lie In their and in e et JoSEPR MAZZINU NEWERSEY NEWS. Loras el Hpson County CoUrRT—TaE SoNpAY Liquor PrAFFIC.~The January term of the Hudsou County Court opened yesterday (Tuesdny) morning, Judgo Dalrymple of Morris Couuty—in the absence’of Judge Bedle—and Assoclato Judges Chambers, Sturges and Bohnstedt, pre- sding. e Grand Jury wero sworn in at 11 o'clock a. m. at Lo was not advised that there the jury, He oue fact: Ho ublic %lnt that during tho w In New-York large num- bers of people are in the habit of coming over from that i ‘m:(xln own Slate prohibit them from doing. tho sal tho laws regulatin the attention of ti the law Was 80 amen liquor on tho Sabbath, by licensed mlicensed dealers, the n & sumn not less the Stato Prison, or both. Jury to investigate such them, and In all cases wl to New-Jersey and desecrating the Sabbath and in- in fntoxicaflng drinks, which the laws of their e then explained 1o of liquor, and called ury to the fact that in 1348 as to probibit the sale of as well ns violatlon of which s finable 0, or imprisonment in Tt was the duty of the Grand bo brought before ©aBes 48 My b belp unda) here partics violate t! 1aw to present the same, Bome dealers would undoub edly pay the fine of $20, fore, In sich eases ',hfllv if 1 disorderly houscs, and imprisoned in the State Court, _Tn ' cons ling jJudge Dairymple said it and continue the conld be indicted for keeping oned guiliy, conld. be fined or Prison, ut_{ho discretion of the his remarks upon the su Tind kone abroa thiat althcughh the sale of llquor had been prohibited in Now-York on the Sabbath, yet evil runto-ul persons can come over to New- Jersey wiid indulge ¢ disgra ample eir passlons for stron) o of the heretofore orderly State, to prevent this, and it was the duty of the Grand Arink, to the The laws were Jury to asalet in tho enforeement of the sawme. Fine DEPARTMENT companes connectod wh nry Crane. Aaron Yok, i . Breintuall; E. Benedict, Bte Duvid J, Canfield T. Day. > nek 8—Foreman and ( and Treasurcr, Charles Willinm 8. Met R J. Con asurer, Jon M. Bteamer Fe CAN will hold t day. s th eqular kit that Essex County ( a M. Smith agt r inju MorvEReR Anyst a8 arrested in 0 of having t Alor e ca In MEETING OF THP 102 Biros ganizat the State we T here eors g o Proald The forn Sares or Brarn Est w=Tlouse nivd Lot SALES AT 11 U 8 6a1mil Reg of realizing the Just and troe, | 100§ ¢ demn the minister who liest 'who &hall say Le did not s of delosions and o Yoo ing their riutph § who shall for itself, its army howriter who recants his earl tion, and must resign | or creed—th “ ’ 1st Berles | 8., ouths—when it may or, and we will no 5,000... 108 West fice to utility, and taking a hldden the sovere 2 S r endenvoring when ke yie ut Who p Htallon thiul (o yonr path to the goal we are ul bl venture to say to the king terrilory to the forelg mission_ and {0 the co gilant sentinel of the conntry dopl the Tereby raise with the deliber: y that "l ¢ doterm grmur Aaugers, which e, are | never to lower it again, o the stute to which (he ¢ anging over the nation, and compelling 10 the ces- | try Is now reduced, the duty of Democratlo parly ro- sion { v edue In this state of perennial donbt, hesitating m the obsen- I’ poved that the necessity fo ity nr.u..n..-mlflm‘m W lm:-fln‘(nnnugh a labyrinth | action I« net unde mwj. I'rhv prescut duty <'rmnlh. nr:nr of personal questios led hither and thither by the crabic | rom- ises of cach political eoterin, without the escort of any prineiple to guide lhrlrfndgm--u'. the moral sensaof the people 1+ gradually ggunted, and they become acenstomoed 1o aceept as the onf¥ Kigns hy which to direet their choice of men, first, 1 which when o npanted by virtue is a source of evil—and {hen success—which, when tmmediate, Is 100 often the fugiiive result of mers force or cunning. In this alternation of delnsion and deception, the mind becomes contaminated by skepticism; and ke by degrees transformed into indiffe T wearled and disgusted, lose nH manly ¢ of Purpos and end by regarding the succession of events thit pusses them by without producing any real improyem inthe state of things as u matter in which and by IlN'A-pllnivnn inevitable the fatul doalism that exists” betweon thelr own lito and that of (he governing power, When things reach this pofnt, It no specdy offort be made to put an end to it by a sndden initiative, s country is Jost, 16 will tevitably sink info cgotism, thal & of the soul which is the destruction of t But a few more years of the actual sys theoretic and practical toach 11, then, 18 to educate the people, wid o remd - thie bissin of all education |5 truthi, Ttallan De- mocrncy b hotnd 10 teach the truth, trusting that it will bear froit in twe The fricnds of are corripled and that, Iy we found a epublic, people possessed of republicau Labits a virtues, “Tell them that monarchical institutions will never teach Republican virtues ; that only a Republic can ere Ie- publicans ; thut the lustitutions of a conntry are j s st potert means of public education ;" tha suddgn earncst affimation of & great’ priuciplo solentn trith s a transforming power over the who witnes it ; thiet the tendency of the mass §s Lo look upward, to he gnided by ex :m\vlw, and to shaps thelgown conduct upon the example set by the governlng pdver; that it 14, therefore, important o re power, aiid 1o publicly teach, by o nation, that the sucest meais of curling flicted pestile them at onee from amosphero fnlo & purer air, even though ber t ‘monarchy will tell you that the people ted by the habits of a servile pa wo must have i 1 republican ulng of th coples may be transformed and taught to Italy will reach this point. T act accord he cterof the luitiative i may restors ua this or that fra, uln; “ I\“i,.‘u“ A deter m" " 1“ [?k i ”1‘!1‘.« at Loited developmeut of ple,wer orrupled by the depravity of il rogeney and the reign of Lonis XV. than owr owii are or e freut soul of Italyswill sink once more into the s rom which it strove to rise. Without worality, the consciousness of a mission, without faith in the p T of truth, no nation can exist. We shall be, not a people, but the hnno, dulmod phantom of u peoy b A people can neither be revived ovhrouf regonerated through falsehood. Jesulfis: ment of religlons in dmfi; falsehood, the art of peoples condamned to siavery. Mocrates and Joous afed by e hand of the executioneer: but it was the death of the body only. Their souls atili live fmmortal, and are trans- now, aud fhat they were so tra ped by the initia taken by the minority, and were led to perforn such ps ow down (though wrougly Ve 6. h Jesudtlsm, nor aa 48 the instra- ce. on_ nnd the official aots of P 1 Romans wud Venotis nno way superior to the Komans and Venettane of present duy, futo a popmlatisn of heroes both in yalor and rifice, and that the history of all nations sn@%all tiues confirms these examplea. fuscd from age to age futo the worthiest life of the gong Th J1 tell you that th kg 10X T e "My' m:%- . "\u l‘vl«';, ell you hat the proclamation of a republie mornl i1 ihe arms of all Europe agalnst Ttaly, has been for two thousand years recall the nama | Tcli4hen thut all Europe wnz e --‘ul‘::d h? ;- b e of tho first; an eutiro opoch of civiilzation and euiune] i i ance, thon posscasing o lation of twenty- tion' was Juspired by e sacred imid of e Taeas thiscd I heiol b7 o esus. All the sclence of i did oral 1o illuraine the tomb of Ital ‘u":&!n“n?ll,l :J';«.' rope until she was reduced to 8 monarchy by Napole Rl thein that Httle HpubeAn SwlGoriand his and conld t anatomistof & period of infamy and | ceasfully d fended her terrl Charl 2 w 800 thfi ‘pg.:lnl.go ‘who, nlalrfl:‘nfi r’?;ltu:l' r‘le: g:&hhv.‘-: tho"h:u}: u{!; ffilmf’:n'é':n!fl; a,‘(::"n: b; "\;fln‘.b:bfl.'alt work, it would fill him with noble rage and fndignation, Tell them that, althongh Louls Napoleon was alle to A nation 18 & consclence ;—the cousclousness of {dca to bo Teduced to » ‘of b collectivé duty 1o be make war upon republican Rowe when sho stood alone, 16 cannot go to war agalns followed a8 anthority; of an invincible fores bro ahandoned by the rest of Italy, ght to | & strong nati y- bear upon tilinéat of theduty of all, by all. 86 long | MilNon of nien andcr wemy I{T&"(‘!%:)m" Dot thern thet ramains bright, clear, and inconf - mate, that peopls will be great; so soon as it bue?l:l.;l dar] 80 8001 88 the worship of utility 1s substituted for the worship of the ides, the spirit of calenlation and interest for that of duty, a timid, servile hope in others for a calm trust in thelr own strength, that people will dwindle and_decay, until fate poluts them out as the dmperial France hos even now been compelle recode before the refusal of Prussia to l;lal:ld o.'.:f inch of Rhenish soll; that England necepts overy fuit accompli; that Russia 1s wholly occupled with the East- orn fl"""""f; that the whole kol of Europe 1s undermined pna x‘vwb ican element, roady to burst forth and follow e first stop taken by a strong people, able and deter- vietim of othdr nations. mined to win the firs e A, s e |5t o it e, o oot i e by g iy f v | S s i gyl others 16 oloat the way, Bowe incompletely, for tho | not, s lsnt B Tk ether powerful or sdvance iac TR olod to thut | We bellove that Ltaly 1s her own mistross; the question XX "'nh«';la o m:rhwn . vy “'.h“nll'y wnd solely ol The day on which we will, consclousness ¥ o oReaRh st | o R I o Uni g G R, S ko, s | Sl o ol G, B %Hfixmnnummu.unm We call upon all demoe ":E.:::“ o&':m“—‘m’&ufl future will reveal upan | npon the h::m :ML.."'L‘W;?;"? 0, ul'lg ::.‘.'f mfii 3 i o sty ot Ttaly s e bftory ot a paoples and of forsaken Trentino; up::m:%,‘."‘fx?fi.“;.:fli N'W‘-." Great initiati it en! have | pure and free from every eompact, save with the future Dlo oF ”'V'lw‘“l from Mh .lm either by the peo- | of our commgn country; ‘upon all the thinkers who, in the bl jiduaisin f moment of Toly cuthusiaan for | ady of our” grcat Teatian traditions, hivvs taurhed MM.M u'.“. -fiflu‘ a tradition re- | path of Italy’s future greatness; upon all those who have St htln ‘-’u which they | not sold their souls for the chance of place or power de- Mm" mm We hu:c faith in eud l‘ upon & dyin, l-m:gu%:pon 'l who 89 o initiative, o o slse ta Tull fato " who gl ‘!2“‘. n wikh, shasneoh the M‘«m = g e 2 p mother by the Italian ¥ "‘“‘ -.-lk "—m‘hm donblo right to hy, round our and one daolare i—the lie that whole lite of Italy, and unlon of i s A 5 monarchy, This 18 the source of our mistoriunce aud our | Laly 16 0o lo; tho parcut of all groat beglauiugs and | 400.. 00, .. § 2. 0., 30 ¢l 1084 cTs Bhn 14 105} 100, 10,000 4,000, Téntgesee 08 15,000,,ex-cou. 86} Adas Tennessco 63 Ne 0. 7000....... Virginia 63 1,00, North 10,000. .. North Ca 5,000 X North Car 6 2,000, ... Missouri 6 | a,00.. | 2,000, . Missouri o 1 ol i 1 Ohlo & Miss Cer 000, 1 Chie & N W cons convert bouds (Cod 1,000 R | Mich Jouth 8 F B | 2,000...0....... 9 Chio &N Wes U 8 t8 520 Conp 62 Chie 1,000...........1073| con U8 e 50 Cp ' B,000........... 1044 Trean Notea 7510 1t Berick. dt ..107 | 90. &NW IMBN ({Ioa.ln Gold opened at 134} ; 15k, have each elecled now officers, as follows: Neptune Istant Foroman, No. f—Foreman, Goorge W. ahamal frgm other portions of theBlat A Lot No. 5% house, 29x5%; lot, Co. wude the following & 1 st 1taye, 5., be Ist-uve.~Honse and Lot > [ x96; 8. 8., bet. 19th & Wk of Comn 0. . £CTIONS.~The difforent fire th the Newark Fire Department Unlon Hook asurer, C. sior Hook and Ladder Co. D. Emith; Asdstant For au, Charles H. Van N President, t, Milton Baldwin; Treasurer, fiose Co. No. 1~ D, H. G and Treasurer, man, Joseph preman, Pat- lement ; Stoker, Bteamer F. I Georgo Dentnan; James Van Houn- Hubbard ; Fireman, Edward P, Vree- an, William Carlin; Fireman,” Bryan Conlin. ' Board of yge Handley; Assistant- Elerk, Lowls 1. Marsh; e Mrcuanics.—The Now-Jersey of the Order of United American Mechanics quarterly session in Newark to- largo de ons will be present o jury in the case of wark and Bloomfield Rall- nries A D.—~A man named George B. cw-Brunswick, N. J., on Monday, four years ago murdered o man visville, on the Delaware River, onfeased to being the man who cliims that he killod b in W taken to Bucks Gouaty, Penis ’ —— New-JERSEY BTATE LITERARY UNion.—The above Boclety met ut * Our Bulldwg,” No. y, and perfected thelr or- fraternity from all parts ot ATE.~A. Bleecker, Son & wlos of real estate st auction Jun. L. 16th nud 20th-« hel. 19th and 20th-sts. . No honse, 26.8% THE MONEY MARKET. —— F STOCK EXCHANGE, tWestzdm (N Y Cent “0 | o | oo 1 iean Gold th Nition n Bank PR AT ern Union Tel, 300, | a0, ..o 004 Hgudson 1 call.Doo. 47 Lo a0 4T 50N i, 474, 200 xpress | 500 s o T n ('q-n(nlr‘ 2108 L7 0 Al 1064 vo & Pitts ). vopgeadll bertand Pref 2d eall o 9 Chic & Jock I 100, 101 IND BOARD, N W egna'd N Y Central ertible b'ds | 400, [ 1043 109, cveive 83 |E lWlern Unlon Tel b, 2oioneans 80F 6,000,..... 1043 200... vene 80} Erie Preforecd lt;la.m 10 Coup Quicksilver 100 .. ves T8} B000, ... .000. 90F 300, weeses 401 Roading Tonnessce b4 “‘Iwm 0 301D 000, ...8x op. woeas 18 Clove & Pllts Northr Cur 68 Now |Cum) u 10,000, ... 100. ... 92 | 200... 91} Missourt 64 Pitts, FLW & Chie |Chic & N W Pref 1,000..... . 98 | 200, 102} 600, [ Pacitio Mull 0. 02 | 000... - 023 7 m 00 . & Miss Cor 110l Wub & West 4,000, .. B8}| 10,000, . 203 900, .ee 484 Atlantie Muil 40,000, Chic & Alton Pret 100....0ueenns AOG v wedil ————— PUESHAY, Jan. 15-F. M. sold up to 1354, and closed at Government stocks aro steady, exeept for fs of 1851 which fell § per cent. The 7.50s are firm, and are held with great confidence by Investors. In State stocks and Railway mortgages a moderate business at former rates. The miscellaneous list is dul, with small transactions. New-York Central sold down to 1074, but closed at 108} Erie was steady, between 05 and 658, Hudson River is firmer and in demand. The market bas been dull all day, and no large amounts could e sold without breaking prices seriously, The street needs an infosion of new and verdant buyers to take the load of stocks off parties who * went in for a'| turn” and find themselves the “ last men”with conrage enough to buy. The'market closed dull at the fol- lowing quotations: New-York Central, 108}@108); Erie, 05}@65); Hudson, 127; Reading, 104j@104) ; Michigan SBouthern, 80}@80}; Cleveland and Pitts- burgh, 0§@91; North-Western, 451@483; North- Western Pretorred, 80j@61 ; Rock Island, 1022102 ; Fort Wayne, 102}@102¢, Loading houses havi largo sums, and loans are exceptional. In et upunes sl 4,78 ® paid 7 per cent on oall for at less rates on any soourity commoreinl bills no change. Por cgut. Danka wa a tuly are 6, 1867, nelined to bo prudent, and money cannot bo quoted easy in any direotion. Exchange is firm and dearer, and quoted : London, 60 days, 100}@100), sight, 110}4@110; Parls, long, 5.15, short, 5.124; Antwerp, 5.181@5.17}; Swiss, 5183 @517 y Hamburg, 864 ; Amsterdam, 41} ; Fronle- fort, 4114k ; Bremen, 1}@7}; Berlin, 2i@724. The following prices are bid for Bank shares to-day: New-York, 116; Mechanic#’, 117; Tradesmen’s, 142} ; Dry Dock, 201; Greenwich, 130; National, 100; Sev- enth Ward, 110; State of New-York, 105; Commerce, 113; Mechanics’ Association, 110; American Exchange, 114; Pacific, 165; Chatham, 140; Bank of the Repub- lio, 115; Bank of North America, 107; Irving, 102; Metropolitan, 125; Peoples’, 115; Shoe and Leather, 110§ ; Corn Exchange, 120; Commonwealth, 108; Cen- tral National, 110; Fourth National, 1041 ; Ninth Na~ tional, 110, ¢ T'he Chicago Republican of Saturday says: The demand for money continuea fairly active, the prin- cipal demand being to Bupply the wants of packers and dealors in visions. country banks are drawing largely, and the market is reported close aud firm. In many eases applicants for loans are refused the accommo- dntions asked for, and only first-class names are passed. The current rate of futerest 18 10 per cent. On the street, money commands 13@2 per eent per month, Mort; Joans are quoted at §@10 per cent. The market for ern exchange is quiet and steady—if nn{thln.g, easier, "Tho supply making 18 improvivg, owidg to the shipments of provisions. The bu; Jate to-lay was 1-10 off, and #ales were made ab pur. fimu drafts were oharged a raotice N8 De- Ly iy, Wall-st. is quiet, and operations are wholly con- trolled by brokers and the large circle of professiona speculatorsbrought into life by the financial opera- tions of the Treasury in connection with the Re- Dellion. Succcssful beyond expeetation by shaping their dealings in harmony with the movements of the Treasury, while it was expanding the enrrency, and with it the prices of all commodities, they are now attempting to repeat their profits by opposing the Treasury, and by combinations attempting to de- feat not only the Department in its course toward solveney, but the natural basis of finance, The waning fortunes of the trading community, the stagnation in manufactures, the declining tendency in wages, and the constant serambling of banks to keep within the limits of the law upon their reserve, are alike lost upon them, as they pursue a conrse which can have but one ending. The shares of transportation com- panies, unproductive of income, are steadily moving from bad to worse, may, through the manipulation of the streot, be temporarily forced to higher prices, but the reaction will surely be followed by lower rates than have recently been touched. The strect was never so heavily loaded with unproductive stocks as collaterals for loans on call, and the fonndation has been' 1aid for a panic as fierce as has ever raged in that stormy region. ~ The trouble between Commodore Vanderbilt, repro- senting the Hudson and Harlem roads, and the New- York Central Managers, will in all probability: result infthe early construction of a road on the west bank of the Hudson from Athens to n point opposite New- York. The Central people are confident that the through Winter tratfic will be better accommodated by a ronte which will place its freight depot where ransportation by horse power through the city will be saved. The Central Road will in future be run for the benefit of its sharcholders, askivg no favors of connecting lines, while ready at all times to make equitable arrangements with any connecting route whether by land or water. People are wondering how the Cumberland pool will get out of their stock. In fact, they have done g0 already to a great extent. The pool has borrowed 50 or 60 on several thousand shares from leading ho ¢ 8, “ tuming” the stock with them at @1 per for 30 days, and stipnlating that the lenders the sume certificates. lers the transaction usurious, omes the assignees of the pool, nee itself insolvent, will when the ¢ which will probably anne fuel bonnd in duty 10 other creditors to plead usury, e and refuse to tako the stoc Phe Continental Insurance Company has declared a semi-annual dividend of 7 per cent. The business of the Sub-Treasury was: Receipts, 0 25-—-for Customs, $320,000; Payments, $1,- % ; Balance, $101,144,53 50—Coin Notes, The following is an official statemont of the busi- ness of the Western Union Telegraph Company for the wonth of November 1866; Reeceipts from all sonree 1,036 02; expenses and payments to other lines, b earnings, §45, 10; expended 7 70, THE MARKETS. [Carctully reported for Tag Taisvxn.| TUESDAY, Jan. 15, 1607, rally Lias been much depressed ; the ap- what Congress may do with the currency e chtige i the Cariff, Doth internal and completely paralyzed trade in both retail traneactfons. ~ The idea ot an early sumption of spe ment s the great * Bugal that s to destroy This simply is ridiculous. This ldea'of thegreat inflation of the cnrrency 13 w great i . The inerease [ the National Bauk notes since June 10, 1865, has been $160,000,000, but i we deduct the legal teniders retived during period, we have an wg- gregate inerease of Natlonal Bank notes and legal tenders of only #4,000,000, from which we must deduct the fssues of the old State banks; and during the war almost the entire bynking capital of the Southern States was de- stroyedi Hence the abundanee of money 13 confined to Eastern cities, whilo the truth Is the great West are sufy foring for the want of currency. Prices of most staple articles buve declined materisily, and the losses throngh- out the country the pust three months have been lm- mense, aud vory few hiave profited by the decline. At the close Breadstuffs aro heavy, and Provisions firu. at the decline. Cotlon and Petrolcum are lower, but at the close Refined and Froe are firm., ASHES-The demand i3 fale for Pots at 88 25248 0. Pearls are Inactive and prices are nominal. BEESWAX is held higher ; we note sales ut 33s.23%3., cash BEICKS are steady and in fair demand ot $15 for Com- ;uun Tlard, #1520 for Croton, and $76 for Philadelphis “ront. BROOM-CORN—The demand has fmproved, and with a good supply offering prices are uschanged; sales of 60 bales at 10adde. eash. CANDLES are stend, and prices are unchanged; we 1 Patent ot 482 50¢. . at §2 for Rosendale, in brisk demand for loeal iberal receipts by rall prices ialterntion. The stock continues to ) ntinues stea L—-Domest e his b but with cor are without ma increase, T light, and pric 60 W tun, senree sud fn demand at full 1;: COFFEE—The Inquiry for Rio Coffee continues moder- 0 uppenrs no disposition on the part of either oo business, the market being in v condition; the stocks of prime od, but the poorer qualities st Indla grades are dull ot Rio, duly pald, as fol- , 17@174e.; Falr, 16218)c; Ordl- inir to Good cnfiun, 1242 1640., gold ; 190 nury, 16w 164, anid Falr to Good enrgoes, in bond, 1 Kinds as followe, duty pald: Java, 2 200,; Maraeaibo, )H(r‘]qv: 1. Domingo, {5f#(ige., Al kold. up by M cott & Sons, 18 04,017 bags, Including 16,000 at Irivans, 1,000 at Baltimore, 2,600 at Mobile, at Savanuah, and 62,077 at_this port. The sales to- wy are 2,000 bugs Rio, bulauce ¢x Bremerin, on private terms. COPPER I firm and_in fair demand; sales of 200,000 15 Detroit 10, and Lake and Baltimore: at a0, Amerh Tngot has ruled quict but steady at 27§ 2e. COTTON—Buyers scern Inchned to hold off, in hopes of further conoessions, but holders do not meet them readily, wnd business le restricted; sales of abont 760 bales at 844e, for Middiing Uplands, and 86jc. for New-Orleuns. DRUGHE AND DYES. have heen in aotive retall demand, but the market Is very quiet for whole parcels ; prices are atriflelower. We quoto 1 old; other ylon, 9@ a Alum, § ... N2 e Arsenl R/ -~ Enlsam n WD - Ei-Carb, Soda, New castio, ¥ . -@ 8o Caustho Boda, ¥ 5 (gl T2 S Cream Tartur, Prime, @ -~ ¥psom Halts, ¥ b, o ? 4o Gum Arable, Pleked, ¥ 70 B S0 Gum Arab! rts, ¥ 1v, 9@ 4. Julap, "' -2 20 Manui, Large Flake, ¥ 1, - qg 00 Ol Lemon, ¥ 1 (gold)..... 95 @49 20 al Boda, Neweastle, ¥ ..., 1162 need Kooty ¥ 1, - , ¥ i@ Senng, $ M. e o A < zquh\l.. ugar Lo Kl i, EWOODS are i lighi” Ucniand, uid tho mar 100 15, FRU. are withont Ralsi New Southern 34,000. We 13¢.; Orinoco, Xas, 221025 Id, 1o 60 m, 100, Wostern and ¢ (Ox), 60 to 80 1, usual Pig, Ba Bar. %mh (@5 orse for ordinary Foreign, and §7 874 for LEATHER—The mnrkl't‘:lu cos 3 i H il Eg‘g a limited demand is lower; sales of ITS--There i3 nothing ¢: Il;n'ml chaugh, do. GRAIN--The stro in the desire > EH 38% 58- H ofE 1f i 1 Mixed, ‘estorn White, $1 17281 15; mmmlwm-’:“{hg:r;l 17¢; Vera Cruz, 18 t019 1, 1 m lo , 17e.; Vers Lo Tampleo, 20 to 1 ¥ tuy thoe, f-round, § tun 2 ?3 e i i ? H g ;3 v i 5 § : % i T has i ; fH “ 58 i xce) new, 'do box. B8 e ! 528 Fees poves 28, 2 o8! EEE our followed -?i t Vhite, $1 12281 ll'&li'a'&m 0 Ye A 1 Western i Buenos Amh at 2122e¢.; do., 20 to 23', 20¢.; Montevideo, 20 @190, cvrrlenmfl de, 20 bfl‘s m, 1117, i, 72 to 25 TN ll"\'lt'}"llh- foiled 10 23 1, 18¢.; Rio Gran Call 221, 15§@16¢,; ta, 18 (o 20 I, m, 16@i6e.; ot 15 to 25 1, I”OW} sunl selections, Wt Salted Hides—Californin, Sountry, 60 to 70 1, 11@12c.; City Slauy 1243 i3)e; do. (Cow), 45 060 1, 10§ selections. gold; New-Orleans, 50 to 80 1, ni"lsufi - R favo een fairy tive, partly for shipinont, but S bave been fairly mmmcl.n-. firmer, N5 oxtreme. salos the offerings are light, and We quote at from 0@ TRON Is tairly sctive No. 1 Americon at 848, Pig, No. 1 American, ¥ tun.. 0. 1 8eoteh, P tu ommon E. & A. s0aioe., the Latter at lower B We quote : ». 8 inch), § tun.. ¥ tun..... wa quote at 8 87§ t English brands. n quict, both for Hem- Jggk und Ouk Bole, and re without cha: the i being quite firm. ®.): Hemloch 08 Ayres, heayy : widdle, 522335 1 Caliorpia, b middle, 31 0 @sige. Orine middle, 31 3 light, 59ane. Good Da , 5a30c.; Poor do, na n the rough, $@sse. Onk Slwughter, 1 middle, 352 4sc; Ught, 2a360. Cropped, | o ight, e, i e prices. We MOLASSER rices are firm at 40755e. for Cuba Muscovado; 40ade or do. Clayed; 37 0. for do. Centrifugal; Porto Rico, and 10a@58e, for New-Orleans. i7e. In the rough, heavy, 8 42¢.; mid i, S5@c.; o, Bellies, W, selgdard continues in fair demand at steady )io Common at 8170, and Lump at §2 20, ~The market is moderately active and @65e. for Tho_stock estimated at 5,800 hhda. Cubs; 1,990 do. Porto Rico, 800 b ance s 1,6 New-Or! NAVAL STORES - tions are unchanged. The only 006 bibls. Strained Rosin at § 5. We quote: of 200 hhds. Muscovado as 46 o demand is moderate and quoty transactions of Impord Jeans; 'l" 'h“ shin 'tulllnd Newbern..... ¢ bbl.§2 00 29 75 ich, 0. 1. . Rosin, COIMON, 4o yigps: oo m.—~ — a4 §Th ]((yi\!l\.%lndnr«Y‘uuWo.':dn ) 97250 . 4 3@ 4 T Rosin, No. 1 and Pale and White. LT 60 @l 8 Bpirith Turpentine, American Pl 67 @ 6 OILS—~Crude Sperm has been inafalr demand and s rather hetter ; sales of 1,060 bbls, at §2 60, part for e an;-l» ll)i! I8 unsettled. 'Linseed is quiet at 81 15@81 2 © guote: inseed, City, in ensk A gal 8118 241 9 liale, Fair to Prime. 1152 1% WJe, Bleached Winte: 12021% Sperm, Crude, ik - @ 3,60 Sperm, Wintor, Unbleached. 19 @285 Pri 11521% 105@ 110 1 4 iy 100 Red Ol City Distilled. 8B@ 9 Keroscie (free) ... 52 e — O1L CAKE—The demand for Cake has been Hmited, bat with limited arrivals, some advanee in gold, prices sales of tuna, elosing at $1@8i3 for h n f d bbls., gold, and $59 0@ 54, eurrency, loe has been In falr demand and js firm; the 10t been so'large; sales of 150 bugs, in lots, at 82 45282 50 P 100 1. PROVISIONS-—There has been rather more inquiry for Pork, and prices are a trifle firmer, tho: vmlnw?' clded udvance; for futire delivery, we note more doing o Detter figures; Febraary, at £0 873 1,000 bbls. do., buyer do., 1 421 25 i 500 o % Mareh, ut. $91 “:g Pl tra, and 8172821 50 for N ree teady; sales of 200 tes. Prime Meas at 290 Beet 1 #2975, Commion at $28 . estent af about former rates; sales of 135 at do, Bellies, for and wales of 500 bbls, New Wegtern Mess, sel 20 752420 57 for do., $20 for Westers Mess, and 82520 for City Clear (Faney). Beef W and In fair demand for les of 230 bbls, a ew do., $123§15 for ¥x- Boef 18 1 @ ure lulr!&‘ active; sales of 125-bbls. Cut Meats are selling to a fale Shoulders, to arrive; 10j@lle. 9adte. for Rough Sides, in buk Bacon is firm and moderately active ; sales of 140 boxes &t 1le. for Short Ribbed and 11 . for City Bhort Clear, Dressod Hogs are firm at #asje. for Western, and 814%, for City. y o not wuek done for Old Mess ; $20 78 for New Western ; sales 500 priges for forward delivery were: §20 57} TUATY, $20 26 3%20 57§ bu, bayer do. Lard is for prime. PETROLEUM—The market is e, for Crode Light Straw, 27e. for Prime do., 8¢, . for Prime Lard s better and in ve: good demand ; saleq . for City ; 13¢. for No. 1 Wesd ime Western Steam. For fur here was taken early In the day, 250 s i imo Kettle-Rendered leaf at 13}e., seller February. AFTERNOOX PROVISION MARKET, 5 o'clock. o wat it umm '.m seller Feb er do. ; 21 25 seller March, $21 68 demand and steady at 13@1ye niet, but firm k, 20¢. for do.in bbls,, 2a2se. fox Light Straw to White, Wasje. ot prices remain firm at $19 in bul for Standard White, which s scarce, White; sales of 200 bbls, Recelpt: hhkn, Crade and 228 bbls, Refined. —The business in Carolina econtinues M‘:{.‘ abont all the stock in first hands has heen Prices are very fim at the improvement noted yest sales of 400 tex, at 102 10§e.: d Fast India remains very nd is quoted ouly nominally at about sjase. for ";‘f'vr-un-fiml 1s in demand at e o Islande is stea Duty: Suck, 38¢. ¥ 100 Averpool, iverpool, Liverpool, Fino, Worth! Turk’s Jslauds, ¥ b SEEDS-—Tho e with liberal arriv See 10§e, Tiwoth Diigh. ot @ er bush, ~ SPELTER-—The market is at 8530, cash, tiround ¥ sack. Fine, A firmer with & small Dusiness, owlng to the delay in Congress with regard to tho proy posed Al a s very fal Jobbing docuand foel PICES—~There Kkinds, but wo hear of n:r{u'n lnuu&ou Prices are. firmer. @ quote 4 ot o hen polt }::}:52 (lri hond o :” gold. men amalcas. - Cloves o e ok STEARIN-The Wi £°fiw—na fl:fig}" rices are wnd O at at §1 1