The New-York Tribune Newspaper, February 15, 1867, Page 8

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to British and American nf-m;e of | the Chambers rasing the Greek army to 31,000 men, | be, just as well known in the EUROPE. REWS EY THE ATLANTIC CABLE TO FEB. 14, e Y TRLKGRAVE TO THE TRIBUNE GREAT BRITAIN, Lowpon, Feb. 14.—The British Government will mewaine the legal expenses of the defense of Gov, Eyre of Jamaica, whose trial is now proceeding. Tho bill for a confede ration in British North Amer- $ea erobraces onlyfthe two Canadas, Nova Scotia, and New-Brunswick Phe British Government yesterd of the landing of two ship loads o tis. Sir Mugh Rose, the Commanding troope in Ireland, and Loid Naas, left E Ihere is a wild ramor that the Fe received advices { Fenians at Valen- ce. Treland at ¢ plans will attempt to ent the Cable. Duran, Feb, 14.--News has reac hed here th: Fenians assembled this morning at Killarney marchied toward Kenmare. Troops and artille Rhave becu sent in pursuit. ——— PARAGUAY. Lisron, Feb. 14.~The mail steamer from Rio Ja- ings the intelligence t a rebellion bad usly threateved at the 1 Avexaxnmia, Feb, 15— A number of vesscls have passed thiough the Suez Can 1 P os MARINE INTELLIGENCE. Livirroor, Feb. 14.-The steamship Denmark, from New Voik, Lias arrived at Queenstown. The steamship Edinburg, from New-York, has arrived Bere. The steamship Gerwania, from New-York for Bamburg, Las arrived at Southampton. st FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. LONDON, Feb. Li—Noou.—Consels closed at 903 for u Eecurities are as follows: United 33; Ilivols Central shares, 783; RWrie Railway sbarcs, 404 Evening—Consols closed thie eveping at 91 for meney. Amer.can securities closed at the following rates: Waited Etates Five Twenties, 13 ; 1inois Central Shares, Hlinois Railway Shaves, 20, FRANKFORT, Feb. JM=~Evening—United States Bonds, voi. PARIE, Feb, 14— Evening.— Rentes are declining. LaveERroor, Feb, 14—Noou.—The market 'or Cotton sontinues to show & deelining tendency, though Middling Wplands are still guoted at 1ipd. # 15, Busivess is dul), and the sales 8o far have been tiifling. Eveuing—The warket for cotton improved this after. peon, and, though there was no change in prices, closed firm. Middling Uplands still quoted at 143d. ¥ 1. The market for Breadstuffs is fim. The Provision mmarket is generally unchavged. Tallow, however, shows ® slight declive, being quoted at 439 § cwt. for Amer- oan. Aslice—Pots, 2%s. 6. per ewt. Spirits Turpentine, §78. 9. perewt. Refined Penusylvania and Canada White Petrolcum steady at 18, od. per gallon. i e BY STEAMSHIP. 2R e The steamer City of Baltimore, from Liverpool Jan. %0 and Queenstown Jau 81, arrived at this port yesterday morning. The Helvetia left Liverpool simultaneously with e City of Baltimore. LA G TE, GREAT BRITAIN. THE UNITED STATES VS. PRIOLEAU. The following letter from Secretary Seward to the Vnited States Consul at Liverpool appeared in the English journals of the 30th WDEFAKTMENT OF STATE, WASHINGTON, Jan. 14, 1867 “«TroMAS 1. DUDLEY, es., United Staies Consul, Licer ol EE0R: 1 nave 10 acknowledge the receipt of your d hes of December 24, No. 725, and December 26, Tt concluding the account gaven m previous dispatches of the wotion hefore Vice-Chiancellor Wood to discharge she sureties of Mr. Priolea. “ It has oceasioned some surprise that the fact was not @leclosed in opposing that motion that the pretended set- tlement wade with Priolean by Messrs. Consul Morse and ont gomery Gibbs was disowned by this Government by graph 10 Mr. Adanis, on the 20th of November last, ii- telligence of the proposed arrangement having been first yeceived here on the 27th and 28th days of November. No mdfla than Wis m-wwr( 1o examine the papers which an authority to jutermeddle with the suit Boder your charge ught be supposed to e extracted was fted to iutervene before the transaction wae dis- Bvowed, and the officers who had assumed to make it cted to return home to give explanations. This bbs was based n the t waiting to eonsider whether the prope angement might or It not be pecuniarily advantageous to the United TMI'elvlt:\i\‘ however, a mh‘lix'rh! d!»u(l\'fnl;(w\’ wonceding 10 Privleau Jisgs 10 (he progynt of £150), wu 1his Goverument fi(&,mw rgfizmu, 3“1, e, the validity of any liens whatever created by ¥ nts of Rebellion, or for advances made, Or upon co %,:Em‘r o) into, with & view of giving ald and cow- bellion. “In respect to fuuds and propexty, as Mr. Morse rity really applicd to, he was under express ini snis 1o do nothing which should recognize the capacity of the pretended Rebel officials, or abettors of Rebellion who dealt with them, by making ¢ontract whiek could #ve validity to suc h liens ofichll'k(-s. “You are at liberty to make such nse of this dispateh 4 eyl deem proper and expedient. 1 aw, Sir, your nt servant, WiLLIAM H. SEWARD.” THE REFORM QUESTION. The Reform guestion is still uppermost in England. The Times, in aleading article on the 27th, says that the days of any Government without a Reform bill were numbered and almost the honrs. Milner Gibson addressed bis constitvents on the subject on the 20th, and wged a settlement of the guestion. THE ANGLO-AMERICAN TELEGRAPH COMPANY The directors of the Auglo-American Telegraph Lompany have issued their report to be submitted at the meeting of shareholders on Febrvary 4. After Qescribing briefly the various steps taken for laying he cable of 106, and recovering that of the previous year, the report states that the condition of the nhln is eminently satisfactory; that as many as 100 ters per minute have been sent through each cable; and that at present their capacity is only limited by the power of the himan eye aud b to follow and the transmitted signs. With pect to the land es beyond Heart's Content anent has been g Tess for laying, by th and Newfound- Company, & submarine cable between Bosto and Placentia Bay of land line between Boston and the terminus sub-Atlantic cable. The capital acconnt sho sotal of £60,000 received ou the paid-up shares, & sam of £10,000 premimm on_the sale of sha which, together with an item for interest, makes a total of £610431. The expenditure shows €000,000 for the manufacture and laying of the cable, and £8954 for preliminary expense: i f £1,447. The revenue shows: fal receipts on nessages to Dec. 31, 1 ,342; rebate from the New-York and Newfouud- Company, £10,416. The salaries and expenses E-"' £5,483, and a sum of £2,08 is paud to the Atlantic ‘elegraph Company on_acconnt of five months’ in- terest on the £100,000 of mortgage bonds. The bal- snce of revenne acconnt is £67,514, and this being at the rate of more than 25 per cent per annum, the directors will pay a dividend on and after the 20(h fnst., on account of £1 pe r share, or 10 per cent of the pubscribed eapitdl. In making up the aceounts credit was not taken for the amounts due to, but not re- eeived by, the Company, and which bave since been found to amonut to £14,006, whiel, added to the tot slready stated, increases the net earnings from £67, 814 to £81,88 for the five months. After the pay- ment of the dividend this would leave a balance of £21,8%0 for distribntion on the A Prefer- suce Stocks of the Atlantic Telegraph Company -‘@_f.ay; MORE BREAD RIOTS, | There had beeh & Title food miotng on the part of Bock laborers and roughs at the east end of London, but it was soon put down, aud as the weather had | become very mild the laborers were mostly at work in, and no forther trouble was apprehended, Fem’ shops were plundered of their coutents and some places property was destroyed. THE PRINCE OF WALES TO RESIDE IN IRELAND. The Ivish Times states that it has been determined wvide & residence for the Prince of Wales in d, where the Prince will, in future, spend some ion of every year, Sir J. Emerson Teunent is created a Baronet. CONFERENCE ON THE LICENSE QUESTION. The Conference for considering the laws relating Yicensing, and the fearfnl and increasing dri its of the ople, was in session on the 50th, the Presidency of the Earl of Litchfield. :;:-bmsbop, Manui v, thus leaving only about 70 miles | f the ing, made another speech on the pubiject, urging the immediate interference of Parlia- Wwent to prevent the increase of drnnkivg shops. THE DUKE OF HAMILTON. * The Beotch papers are commenting severely upon reckless course of life pursued by the young ke of Hamilton. It seems that his whole estate now entirely in the bands of ‘‘turfites” his name continually posted in black lists of dishonored ac- ptances, and he is_constantly mixed up in ignoble Prawls. he dast Duke lived and died a selfish and dishonored votary of pleasure, but the present is a | tw far worse representative of this ancient aud almost royal bouse. b FRANCE. MORALS IN PARIE, The Frendy Goyerususus b isselysd 2oy & Gell- EW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. eate complimer No w decorum nis to be allowed to one ipper houses in Paris. This inter- a system of surveillance of 1 asa mark of It is to be yespect 1o visitors daring the Exhi hoped, says The Pali Mall Gazctte, ™! atriots will now find nothing * shoc king ners and customs of Parisians. HONOLS TO MR, GRADSTONE IN PARIS, M. Gladstone was receiving great attention during bis brief stay in Paris. On Saturday, the 2th, he was entertained tin company with Mr. Cardwell) by the Political Econony Societ dinner at the Grand Hotel. On Sinday he din the Tuileries. I'he Empero {invited bim for Saturday, but on 1 been asked for that day by the in the man- S hearing tha Political Econ comrteonsly changed his invitation to Sunday. He dined on Monday with M Kouber, Minister of State and Fin who was Minister of Comine and Public Works during the negotiations for the treaty of Commerce, in which he 3 active part, Mr. Gladstone gpoke for thre arters of an hour at the Political Economy dinnel Tie attributed all the merit of the commercial trea the Emperor Napoleon and Mr. Colden. The all wion to Mr. Cobden was received with a burst of ap- plause. The Nord contains the following description of Mr. Gladstone's appearan ce at the banquet : + A soon a& the applause with which the toast was re” ceived ceased, the illustrious English statesman, with that cloguent facility which we all knew, atleast by repu- tation, thavked the Political Economy Society, and dis- cussed the influence of men of science on the progress of Governments, the peace of the world, and the approxi- mation of the two great civilized nations of the West. He dwelt on the reei proes] benefits which the treaty of com- eree could not fuil to confer on both England and Frunce, and, on this head, adroitly introduced a pane. yyric as original as it was characteristic on Cobden, and an approval of the enlightened firmness of the Emperor Napoleon. Then takivg a rapid survey of the past and future, he said: I have abolished or reduced the taxes on 1,400 articles, and I look forward to the tiwe when the Custom-House will be merely a recollection. If it be per- witted me to do this immense service for Eugland, and to -pare the way for a like one in other countries, I shall never, gentlemen, forget the aid which the learned and distinguiehed statesmen who surround me have given in enlighteniug the wtellect and preparing public opinion. ‘This day is at once for me an honor, a gratification, and a treaty of alliance.” It would be difficult to convey the effect produced by this remarkable speech, which Tasted for three quarters of an hour. Of fair hight, the foreliead Targe and bold, the eycs brilliant and strongly fixed, Mr. Gladstone speaks in turn with a warmth, a persuasion, and a logic which enchaing the hearer and forces upon him his own couviction, after the manner of doctrinaire at other times, with a slightly ironical smile, and with a fund of humor which rivets his andience, and lends at tractiou to the force of his eloquene ROR'S REFORM DECRFE. s paper, La Liberté, which was the first to speak hopefully of the decre of Jan. 19, is goaded, by the rumors that the old an forming winisters who remain in power are doing their ut- most to nullify the Emperor’s promises, to publish the following monifesto: “THE U —Liberty of public meeting at least Anring the elcetoral period, aud common law for the press, that is to say, the abolition of ‘m-luuhm authorization and re sive jurisdiction of the correctional tribunals over all press insdemeanors—such 18 the minimum to be expected from the 1 of Jnnmn‘j 19. This minimum akloyally accepted—and we may add, courageously sup Jorted—by us. But if this minimim, a8 we are now led to bear, is to be diminished, then we shall be compelled 1o sce in the letter of ary 19 nothing but what is lite ly there—namely, the suppression of the dubate on the . substitution for that debate of aright of dependent npou the previous consent of %0 sisting of 283 members— hands of & minority of the dr interpellati deputies in & Corps Legislatif c an illusory right, because in the majority. “For all the political rédactenrs of the Liberté, one of them, “ CLEMENT DUVERNOIS." ‘The Emperor seems to be in good health ain. On the 20th Junuary his Majesty rode through the Quais the Halles, and the Boulevards, and was everywhere enthusiastically cheered. g The Etendard and France again deny the rumors which have been current of the approaching issue of anew loan. An Imperial decree dated the heen published, convoking the Legislatif for the 14th of February. : } “The Paris Patrie believes that affairs in the East have assumed a more pacific phase. The France denies rumors which were current t a want of harmony prevailed among Mimisters re tive to themanner of carrying out the reforms prom- h Jannary, ate and ( ised in the decree of the 19th January. Gen. Mautenf is own request been ve lieved from the command of the Ninth Armny Corps on aceonnt of his health, and for a period of one year will only retain bis post ag general aide-de-camp 10 the King. The rumor that Prussia had tions from Austria relative to alleged wilitary moyve- ments in Gallicia is totally unfounded. —The Enghsh Minister_at Berlin, jointly with Dr. Windthorst, for- merly Hanoverian® Minister of State, would nege- tiate with the Prussian Government for the restor: tion of the Hanoverian royal property to King panded explana- cattle plague has again manifested itself in Rhenish Prussia. The Minister of Agriculture | prohibited the entry and transportation in France of all ruminating animals, their produce, or carcas coming from the Khenish provinces of Prussia or Bavaria. ————— NUNGARIAN AFFAIRS, A Pesth telegram of the 23th tends to confirm the statement that the Hungarian difficulties have been adjusted. It says: The Emperor has, it ¢ 8aid, accepted the propositions of the Cormittee of Fifteen, and a compiete Hu an as been appointed. The nominations wil pe made public uutil the pi npositions of 1 Fifteen have been approved by the ¢ ittee Com mittee on Common Affairs. The sittiugs of the latter body will commence on Monday. The Lower Hungarian Honse had resol ed that no onstituen- Tepre notice should be taken of votes passed | » expressing want of confidence in' tl atives, John Simou, Bishop of Raab, had been appointed Cardinal Primate of Hungury. The Committee of Sixty-scven was in session at Pesth, and debating the ¢l of the propositions of the Committee of 15. The propositions were adopted in prineiple, JTALY, LEGISLATION ON CHURCH AFFATRS, The bill before the Halian Parliament, proposing to grant liberty to the Church and to liquidate the ec- clesiastical property, declares the Catholic Chureh in its exercise of religious worship to be free from interfere all abolish the nomi h b and the formalities of the | placet and the exequatur, as well ax 1} exemptions, imnnities, and prerogativ of the | Churd in the el will maintain it- . self with the free concurrence of the faithful, and | us of the property belonging to it or legiti caqnired. All station s the State DIOVILCES OF communes is consequently 1o cease, f the Bishops decls w willing to under take the convel ion of the ecel tical ust be alic 1y 1o he cony into personal prop ate 600,000,000 livre in half- 20,000,000 livre each to nudertake the payment of the pensions giant individuals belonging to the suppressed relig corporations. the wajority of the Bi not be willing to undertake the conversion, the Gov- ernment would proceed 1o canry ont that weasure, allowing 1o _the Bishops 50,000,000 vente, It wonld dispose of all the eccle: tical w b, and alienaie the landed propeity ous above re- red 1o wonld have t the Bishops. The bill for the lignidation of ecclesiastical pro erty is followed by the convention couchuded be- en the Halian Government and M. M. Langaud Dumoncean, This stipnlates that if the bill be ap- proved by Pounlt and the majority of the Bishops co sent to effect the conversion of the property. M. M. Langraud Dumoncenn will undertake on behalf of the Government to collect the 600,000,000 Jive, ox whatever less sum may be determined appertaining to the State from the pr liguidation, the ADMIRAL PERSANG. On he 20th the Seuate decided 1o impeach Adwi- | ral Persano on the charge of disohedience to orders, by 87 to 48 votes, and on the charge of incompetency | and neglect of daty, by 115 to 16, RELATIONS WITH AUSIRIA i The visit which Prinee Humubert, the heir to the Ttalian crown, is to pay tosthe Court of Vienua will crlu e, it is stated. toward the end of Febriay. ‘The Italie says that this visit is to be one of mere courtesy, and is in n connected with any matri- monial projects. * re-establishent of good relations between the two conntrie it alds, “is complete and definitive; doubt is imposs ble upon that point. This new position of 1hings may be o secrated 1 iprocal visits, by acts of politeness | A prince, but we donht whether aliation of the 1wo Governments Ww. the political will' extend further SOUTH (¢ The Conference of K Wurtewhurg, Baden, is shortly to assemble RMANY. entatives from Bavavia, and Hesse-Darmistadt, which Stuttgardt, was convoked by 14,000 of whom and the ren 1 of War justifies thi will constitute the standing army. der an anxiliary force. The gfinin(er s measure by the armament, an the threatening notes of Turkey, and the imminent rising in her Christian provinces. —Greece, be says, offers provocation to none. She desires peace, but without umiliation. THE CRETAN INSURRECTION. Intelligence received at Athens from Candia, dated an. 21, states that_the insurrection in the eastern provinee is not quelled. The Sphakiotes had again rejected propositions made to them by Mustapha Pacha, who was in possession of the seaboard. it RUSSIA. THE DIET OF FINLAND, The Diet of Finland was opened on the 26th inst. at Helsingfors, by an Imperial Commissioner, who read the Emperor’s speech from the throne. The speech annonnced that a bill would be laid befo e the Chamber fixing the periods at which the Diet is to assemble. The Emperor does not intend to mpose new taxes, A bill will be communicated effecting & reform of the tax upon landed property in Finl al reforms are adjourned. e SPAIN. The Epoca denies that England has protested against the decision of the Spanish Court declaring the Tornado a lawful prize. A royal decree l;lm. been sh army, issued upon the reorganization of the Spa o e which fixes the effective force at 200,000 men. provincial militia is abolished. pdctotse 2 ol FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. ———— PARIS. THE EMPEROR'S REFORMS —STATE OF PARTIES—THE NEW CABINET—THE WEATHER—INCREASE OF POPULATION. From Our Special Correapondent. PaRs, Jan. 25, 1867, All the world is ‘still busy with interpretation of that Imperial letter of the 19th, announcing reforms that will close the era of “ incertitude” and * crown the edifice ” of state with liberty. The new incerti- tude, asto the quality of the announced changes, is more dense, so tofspeak, than the “respectable in- certitude ” as to their ever being annonnced, w h has reigned since 1860, The value of the decreed re- stricted right of interpeliation, substituting the right of discnssing the address, withdrawn by decree, can only be known after the test of experience. Whether the promised laws on the press and th ht of meet- ing will reform or only change the actual comdition of oppressive restraint, can only be guessed at until we have those laws (the mere létter of which is not yet edited) and have expericnced their application. Nothing is certain, and the opinion of the “well informed,” so far as it rests on any pretended base of special knowledge of the Emperor's actual purposes, is worthless. In this respect of * well infor- mation,” newspaper correspondents and oracles of the Bourse and clubs are very little better furnished than ministers themselves, Napoleon's manifesto of the 19th took thewm just as much by surprise as it did the public, and ouly about 24 hours sooner. It is a per- sonal act, propriojmotu. Nor was its announcement in Cabinet council the only surprise that befel ministers last week. ‘The story of what passed at the Cabinet meetings, with preface and appendix, circulates in varions edi- tions. Here isan abridged version of what is wost credible and generally accepted as nearest truth. But first, by way of preface, let me remind yon that among those, winisters and others, (among whom the Empress is to be counted), who * have the Empe- ror’sear,” there are two parties, one stagnant conserva- tives, the other slow-footed progressists. Accordingly as he seemed to lend an ear to this or that side, either ¢ and their followers of the outer world, fancied y really had his were inasort leading him by it. It has been carions to see the melan holy light in which, a sudden turn of his head, he has left these disappointed ear-holders again and n in the last years, especially since 1850, A few vears ago, after the elections of 1863, and {i the death of De Moy, there began amovement what seemed the germination of a lib- constitutional, Napoleonio party. Monsieur ted to the Corps Legislativ an votes, was its leader in that ly, with, at first, two followers. Do Morny favored the movement. The #5 movers of the liberal- izing amendment to the address last y approved on the final vote by 66 members—all 1 as Gov- ernment candidates, accompanied the movement, longo intervallo indecd, but on a convergent line Had De Moy lived, the of liberal Na poleanists and mildly, bot really, liberal liberals (vare birds) that a thisd party, loyal to the throne and loyal to the cause of fr have been folfilled; and the Legislature would now present a third party—itself subdivided into right and left center—moderating the extreme left and the ma- jority right, holding on some questions the balane of voting-pow ot succeeding on first attempt to mix oil and water, but making ever broader the way out by parliamentary road toward freedom from the impasse of a purcly personal regimé, with- ont running back to violent revolution. M. Walewski, successor of De Morny in the Presi- dency of the Corps Legislatif, succeeds also, more or less completely, to De Mor qualified liberalism: He favored a new reformatory demonstration of the Emperor; when it broke out on the 17th, he favored the resignation in mass of Ministers. In the compo- sition of the new ministry, he counted, among other, on these two points, that he and Olivier should have prominent places in it, and that Finance Minister Fonld and Ronher should be excluded. Ministers did give in their resignations in | be lect hope dom, might [ as it to them, wmainly for form’s sake. For son of them the vetiring form proved a Il nently excluding fact, Old Marshal Randon of the War Department, where he is succeeded by Mar- shal Neil of the Jaliun campaign, is said tohave the general resignation and the ane twenty-four hours f us on going ont for- ques (1 hecks) at the t 1o be literally true, but haracteristic enongh of the situation. The Ministry, as it stands at present, is composed for the most part of the same sons who we Jast week Tuesday. The Walewski-Olivie the * new-hlood” element, has been entirely ¥ s Rouber, who, with Fould, 1 ost mportant member of it then, now cumulates with his old func- tions those of the Finance Departent. o far as the term is i any sort applicable to the irresponsible ministersof « itnent narch, he is the Prem Here 1will positg that any sequent thie: the raveled tangle, 1o rens al in political economy arative, sup- iible throngh ther is a Lib- wot in politics ;. he is not A, the longest-lived of all Napoleon's ..a..m«.-u 1o il loans ; is supposed to orable to a loan which should be mainly appropriated to the furtherance of internal inproye- wents—puhlic works, &c.—-bnt opposed to war with any power. In general, the new composition of the Ministry is thought 10 judicate a pacific foreign policy. But the discarding from the new combination all and any of the thivd party people, whose ch of try into the new hinet secimed to be entertained, s probable for a wowment, clouds the hope ned of the practical worth of the o 1 f the 10th Jun pus instrn edd i the e themselves, it th forum, here for inangurating pplying them ? | How shall Rouber, who resisted the S sugeestion of them last year with his hittevest effort of & ment aud cloguence, Iy favor them this y other than sirive to dexden the letter and crosh the spivit of thewm! ¢oready answer to these timeions 4 the record of nt master's poliey. No different phases of | Lhey ash rms, not mere changes ¢ nary. ‘ stioners is furnished by M. Rouher's somewhat vanions but equally ferve lelities to the variations of hi i defenses of th xieun i the lust energetic, cloguent in i onr own adiairable Minister - | sou's Howme and Foreign Alfairs s practiced athlete, ready lorall comers, opportuncly supple of kne asionally stiff ol back, not 1 ne ontward mgack or inward reproach. Apter to either of these than to simply brave Capt anniels the old admiring words of Q. 1. Flacens: T robur et aes triplex Cirea at this committ of e practical shaping of ew refortns to the hands of old ministers should e who were willing to expeet 1 1 initiative is natnral, exensable, this period of doubt and nneertainty it must | fessed that nothing, absolntely nothing, in the way absolute knowledge of whit is or will be the pur the Bavarian Government i an identical nated; | of” e Tmperial “miud in vegnd” o the an | the uth inst. This note luys down the Prussian m ";:‘.“‘:;‘I"jl‘""j o oo '~N\u-'l-\h*'."‘"‘" “;I-“"’"“'l:.*l. | s the basis for a new uniform military organizatic T e II“I“'I"I"‘ B tion. i ':‘4 | and proposes general liabilit to military service, the |y "0 Y g ””!” |', I 1“““-”“ L of L vl | division of the army into ments of the line, re- A uperis i st | serves, and landshirm, and the snppression of the | right of ieernits 10 be replaced by substitutes. GREECE, INCREASE OF THE ARMY. The Govaanwent Laye Ligughy dviwasd abill in And this not by reason of any “ information” ha our correspondent’s inkstand | from the bal slight)y-attachvd member of | the family of a clerk or boot-black of any winistry or Tegation, but from cousiderstion of facts in himan nature, and o the personal and political history of Napelevn Sur thy sl Gftecn yours, (Wit wic, or nay IDAY, remotest diggings of Colorado as in your Paris co) dent’s room. The letter of {he 19th is a manifesto, an exceptional declaration to the French and general European world of the imminent fulfilment of grave, onf— meditated and Imperial purposes, Its author could but foreseo that it would excite the great attention that it has excited, and the ‘ great, expectations.” If he only meant to make slight *concessions to Liberty,” merely grant new formulas to old restric- tibns, slight apparent reliefs to very real oppressions, why not_have kept therr unimportant announce- ment to fill a brief paragraph in his Throne speech at the next month’s ownin'g of the sessions of the Legislatif and the Senate ‘It is not like Napoleon—who, whatever we think of him, is not to be set down a8 a fool—to wantonly provoke this great ery for the mere fun of seeing it end in a quarrel about goats’ wool. The letter of the 10th is a word of promise—la- mentably vague, it must be confessed, and closing with a hopel word—but_that_* crowning of the ce,” the writer himself could hardly have meant ed sfll’lulln\y ; it is like the “yours always” at the foot of onr lesser private epistles, not to be taken, excepting afigurative sense, au pied de la lettre. His Majesty has donbtless read and profited by the reading of the old story of a great monarch whosat by the sea when the tide was coming in, till even his conrtiers advised that he should concede somewhat more to the ad- vancing wave. Our severe cold snap broke last Tuesday night, t content of the suffering poor and the equal discomfiture of weather-vain proj hets, who fiad got up o rare edition of signs of & cold Winter, and of the skating club, who had just time to get through with the nigm fate on their pond in the Bois de Boulogne before the thaw came on. The féte was postponed from its appointed Monday night to nesday, the 22d, at suggestion, equiva- lent to command, from high quarters, in order to escape the association of such ‘gniety with the funereal remembrances of the 21st, the execution day of Louis XVI, A similar reason, pressed, it s said, with anxions urgency by the Empress, led to the publication of the Imiw ial manifesto on Sunday instead of Monday—which gives the * hurried expl nation,” f)erlm s, of the publication of the appended soothingly explanatory of the decree, making part of festo, in the next following issue of the Moniteur. : The féte given by the Paris Skating Clnb was a l)na(ty affair, with abundance of colored lights, and [adies, and electric lights, and emotions, and some ood sk by foreigners. The Parisans themselves on't get a chance oftener than once in two or three years to practice, and then for not more than a few days. Their skatingis like their horse racing and tea drinking, or our New-York “club life” and “social d ot ? a rather laughable and unsuc- cessful dilletant, pinchbeck imitation of foreign man- ners. Exeepting here and there a rare Rus- sian, Hollander, or other Hyperborean, the skater who has cut the most incomparable figures on Paris ice of late years, was an American artist, W. E. Marshall. » Duke de Morny froze to him in the cold snap of 1864, and ma im honorary member of the Skating Club, The Empress one day asked the honor of being pushed about on her sledge by him, but had her Spanish nerves alarmingl excited nuder the bold, dashing celerity of Marshall's impulsion. The _othe day, = the Emperor had a fall on the i His Imperial ~legs slipped up even as those of the humblest of mortals, and he fell ker-whack ! striking on his head and other parts like any prostra democrat. But —and this has o serions political importance—he picked himself up (if one may so express oneself) and went on skating with no apparent_harm done ; whereby the spectator on land concludes that his Majesty is temporarily well recovered of his lust Au- tumn's ailments. A first installment of Mexican troops has actually come home, A decree dated January 16 strips Mar- shal Bazaine of the extraordinary delegated powers with which he was_clothed as Commander-in-Chief of the Mexican Expedition. There is also good ground for believing that the report of the sure con- valesence of Princess Charlotte is true, although it confirmed by the Memorial Diplomatique. A provin- cial yacht club has sent an honorary medal to Mr. Bennett, representing their respect for the builders, sailors and eaptain of the Henriett From much notable matter in t Interior’s report on the French co following items are especially worth extra waving ont the annexed Dist Minister of the he o, the increase of French population in five years in 680,033, 1861 it was 87,356,164 : it has risen to 38,007,0M4. The angmentat i3 a trifle less than 10 Considering the epidemic maladies and bad vests of the per inister thinks this per A Cause n} cong e forgets to state nations whose m angmented at in the same period to like He does not forget, how- such as it is, with the ratio of angmentation that ruled for one of the five-year periods under Lonis hilippe's reign. Among the chiefest causes of this sow growth of rllul.ulun in a nation whose rclative growth in m prosperity has been nearly or quite equal to that of any of its European neighbors, Mi I8 dette makes little or no account of these thr three to which any observant fol | would give the firstefficient rank. A national French «h teristic of economical, calenlating foresight; e marry till yon can support a family, don't a family larger than you can support. The fact that 0,000 n—the scl vigorous best of French youth between th < e in the army and cannot m Al unpr army of priests, with the fact of the illegal unproduc- tive relati ween the sexes, admitted by cos vention, overlooked by the law and permitted, nay, encouraged by the military and clerical facts just mentiol The tendency of country populations to cities, and the m.mrwm disproportionate growth of the tter, appear by this report to be as prosounced in France as in the United States, — ATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. - ALBANY CONVENTION--WEDNESDAY'S EVENING SESSION, BY TELRGRAPH TO THE TRIBUNE Aunaxy, Feb. 14.—An ineffecty to force the Soclety to an jmm question of the location of the ne tion, however, was lost. Mr. X. Willard procees Aliver the usual ad- dress before th ety. Inv to the manufacture of chicese he n many iuteresting statements, cmbody g the results of his observations in England. He had ted and inspeeted with great care und fidelity the dairfes in that country. He had looked for any Improvements upon our American system of farming in vadn. In machinery, and in what- ever economizes labor, they are decidedly’ inferior to us. He proceeded, at some length, to give a full description of the Royal Dairy, and the manuer of manufacturing the butter and eheese for the use of the royal family. In one partienlar, England is ahead of us as an_agricultural country. Khe raises better eattle than we do. She sets e attempt was made pon the The mo- better Joints of beet and shoulders of mutton on Ler table;” and her people eat less pork than we do, 1 'more mutton, and, consequently, are healthier. 1 into this country. T thought it would be well to introdiice English sheep This might prevent the need of a high 1 wool. He went on fo speak of racers amost spinted and graphic secount Lich he had cd while lon of this protective tanf and races, uhrod ear any condem; nationil Leir to the throne to the lowest ¢ . As to the moral effect, he did 1 pass referring to the VIEOTONS Teasurs t rtily applauded pved the usual vo upon to give the « to_the 1 among trees and pi The New Pre - viek, being called upon, gave a brief, terse, military return of thanks for the honor conferved upon him, assuring the wembers of his most cordial sympathy and coiperation with the work of the Soclety. Owing to the lateness of the hour, the Society postponed the wldress by the retiving President, John 1 o'clock on Thursday mornin, VESTERDAY'S SESSION Yeh, 14.—The Society met at 11 a. m., at its rooms in State-st., to listen to the address of the retiving Presi dent, n Stanton Gould of Hudson. The Speaker sald : The object of his address was to briefly point out those purts of the machinery of the Society which his ¢ ¢ has tanght him to be e exper =z can be materially altered and iuproved. Tho ne of this lies in the fact that the st tools of the State are valued at §25,000,000, With ananmual prodict of - $163,000,000—the profit being short low The annual profit falls production is cent. The rato of but three per res Jahor. Our aver. Ps Geddes and bis neighbors exp now and haye heen for v annnal product| i their annual net profits. This also trae of others in other parts of the State, mers of the 8 be divided into two classes: those who know the culture and obey those who are ignorant of them anid e State Al ul q sly assert that they 18 increusing their interests of the fa has gatiered products of different parts of the State for and has sought to publish in 15 pro . i nstruet and futerest him. 1t Ltural surveys of different countles 4 s experimented With plows ther wiehinery that may facilitate his labors It hits experimented with sorglim and with native and for- elgn malt, During the p v th d tho Rinderpest under careful conside X 6,211,728 tuns. 169,708 tuns, 206,864 10N, 147,60 tuns, 802,055 tuns. 5,000 tuns. 4,000 tans. 2,000 tuns. Total .covesrenannanns ....6,000,350 tuns. Many articles have been omitted, such as lumber, straw, plaster and lime, and the products of our gardens and orchards. If expenscs of transportation be lessene per cent, it would add a profit of $2,000,000 to the property of the farmer. Our system of ug 18 ridienlous and oxpensive, a8 1t 18 useless. If a Surveyor were appointed in each town to make our roads what they ought to be, it would in a few years reduce the cost of transportation one-half. We Liave had theories and inconclusive experi- meunts without number, but scarcely anything in Ameri- oan Agriculture has been settled. Avalyzers differ hope- lessly; analysis give startling facts in relation to differ- ent kinds of grasses and corn for feeding cattle, but our farmers have not, by experiment, proved what is the best for their use. Yethere is a great source of wealth for them. The same i8 true with regard to different kinds of manure. Farmers ought ~to kunow the facts in regard to the results of exposure in _ man- ure, but they do not. The Boclety ought to uplm experiment by substantial knowledge. Trials should be made by committees in ditferent sections under our Vice-Presidents, Agriculture reduced to an exact science. A bureau should be organized which should ex- riment and throw light on all the processes of reproduc- on. Another bureau, consisting of all the Presidents and Vice-Presidents of the society, to collat eand compile such Information. The Speaker dwelt on the beneficial results of experimentiuting uwn and carefully solocting the best seeds of Tnn . If this Boclety had & bureau of seeds, have no doubt we could inerease our crops 40 per cent in ten years, If these nf:ggmlommmfle out every member (and not the officers alone) will be engaged in the Boclety’s work. It will invelve more expense, but it will amply pay for it- self, There are 13,000,000 acres under cultivation in the Btate. If every 400 acres furnish one member annually it will be enough to pay all exg:mem ‘There are 900 towns. If15 persons in each town become members there will be no need to apply to the Legislature for funds. The subject of stocks and breeds is one that deman ms-ren attention at the hands of our societies. Grades of cattle of all kinds should be exhibited in conuection with their parents, so0 thatthe questions of farmers in regard to reeds and valie may be auewered by the living facts themselves. The exhibition of fat catile should be encouraged, with Accompan; documentary testimony as to their dict. The exhibition of machinery at the last Fair at Saratoga was one of the grandest i tae world ; but prizes, either in medals, money, or diplomas, should only be fgiven to those machines ‘which have been thorou‘thly tested by adequate experiments, The speaker gave interesting de- tuils in regard to the last Btate Fair, and returned thanks to his colleagues on_that occasion. He concluded with thanks to all the officers, in especial to the venerable Secerel of the S«'Iel{fl The address was cordially received, and ted with applause at its close. It wis a masterly and interesting aper. Mr. Conger moved that the thanks of the Society b returned to Mr. Gould, that & copy of it be requested for publication, and that the recommendations be re- ferred to the Executive Committee for carly action upon them. Adjourned. During the day an exhibition of various yrodncu and articies of interest wus held at the Soclety’s rooms. It r{exwuulve however. The principal article nterest to the farmer were ome_ specimens sugar manufactured from the Chinese and Otaheitan cane, in fine varielies. There were samples of syrup from the same canes and from the maple, the whole sxhibited by the Hartford Sorghum Machine Company. In this connection it 1s stated that some 26,000,000 pounds of cane sugar were made by farmers west of Lake Erie lust year, and 6,000,000 poutids in the Eastern States this year, The regard to the locatiou of the ne. mittee were appointed to visit Utic decide upon the facilities offered. As Buffalo has not had the Fair since 1857, and Utica has had it twice since then, it Is lu]v{nnd that the preference will be given to the former city. CITY ITEMS. ——— AveTion SaLk oF OiL PAINTINGS.—The sale at auction of the valuable coliection of oil-paintings, com- prising the entire gallery of A. Cadart, esq., of Parls, was commenced last evening at the Fine art Galtery, No. #2 Fifth-ave. This collection, which has been on exhibi- tion for the past three monthis at the Derby Gallery, No. 625 Broadway, was recently removed to the present place of sale. Notwithstanding the inclemency of the weather, a large number of bidders were present at the sale. The catalogne numbered 177 pleces, many of the paintings being the works of well-known suthors. The bidding was also spirited, and the pictures, aé & rule, brought fair Executive Committee came to no decision with xt State Fair. A Com- and Buffalo, and prices. Two small pieces—Teaching the Doll” and Child Pouring Some Milk,"” by Arnoux, brought respect- ively $40 and ore at Tronville,” by Boudin, #7; “ Young her,” by Bemundt, $30; * Landscape and Cattle,” by Brissot de Warville, 77 50; ** A. Spahis,” by Brown, #5; * Fruit Plece,” by Caron, $5; * Washing Woma tin, $52 50; *'The Litl moker,” De- pieces by Darru, §75 each; Land- puses, 4100, Plctures embracing h artists as Duvieux, Lanfaut_de Metz, Mollet, Pous, Rosicr, Oudry, Suhr: landt, Germain, Todd, De'La Port, Lefevre, Frere, De- lorme, Billon, 'Charlet, Cuturler,’ Farruffin, Lambert, Culverhouse, Van Elvit, Walker, Selgneurgens, Reynaud, Nieunveulings, I, Gustave Doré, Picon, Goupil, Cortes, and other artists, mostly were also rapidly disposed of. Eighty-eight pleces were sold in all. The will be concluded this evenin Viscount do Chabro , at the Clarendon Hotel; Judge Hallet, Colorado, and Liston Stephens, Ga., at the Metropolitan McCook, W. Va., at the itth-ave Hot Tisble, California, at_the Prescott House Marvin, Florida, and Col. T. W. ; the Houn. E. o ——— SaLes OF REAL EsTATE.—A. J. Bleecker, Son & Co. nd-tenthost.~1 1ot n. side 200 w. Sec o e nbiviatsi s ot SO0 One-hundred-and-leventii-at.—1 lot s, eide 200 w. Sccond-ave., 2034 | Sriadioen 1,010 110t adjoining, 25x S 1 1ot adjoluing, 25x 1100 1 1ot adjolning. 25x4 bl sk S Sy wade yesterday by Miller, The following eales Were Wilkins & Co.: House and lot No. House und lot No. House and lot No, Tiouse and lot N House and lot No. House wnd lot N¢ fouse nud lot N 5,000 8,900 2 $1 19.2x66.10. ... . 19.2x€6.10. . 40 West Thi 42 W. Thirt xecutor of Samnel Griffiug, deceased House and lot 26x79...... .| House and | st., 25x799..... House and I 6 Madison-st., 50x9 House and lot Nos. 3 and 30§ Scammel-st., 27x95. . gl Tne Hovse oF Mercy.—* The House of Mercy” needs more room for its work. It s now obliged to refuse admission to persons who offer themselves. This ought Midnight Mission, too, will multiply can- ge. They need a wing, or her, they tantial edifice, which will v cost £30,000, If the ** whole 14" I8 too little pt tu exchauge fora soul lost, what shall we give ave hundreds of immortal souls? Answer, ye wen and women of wealth! HORATIO POTTER, Bishop, &e. New-York, Feb, 5, 1867, A meeting will be called for the purpose of devising means of ralsing the §0,000 necessary for the extension of our building at the foot of West Eighty-sixth-st. Con- Dutionn will be asked for n Al the churches. Mean however, those disposed to ald this work of charity stianity may send theirmoney to Mr. R. A, Brick, r of the Bullding Fund, No. 109 Leonard-st. - 3 Aip ror TnE Greeks.—The following subscriptio lidates for a p o tim Treasu arc acknowledged by the Treasurer of the Greek Fund: £100; Mre. W. M. Titus, $100; Mre. L. F. Therasson, $20: Dr. A. E. Hosack, , $10; Zabriskie, ownsend Scudder, $5; . $26; Two Ladies 1. Drak #1 Mrs, Vau #1: A Friend the Pilgritos, per v. B. A. Buker, §7; School 200 Broudway, $28. Total, 8453 FOR THE . D, Mk, DEMOREST'S new style BENOITON Dipss- LOOPRAS—A great hmpr et. Mailed free. No. 433 Broadaag, N. Y. Very e utal, and effcient. DEMOREST'S une ed StockiNG Sus- ating ligat d feet, in- 3 Children, ¢ ——— Lapies axo G Pleace eall and exmmine our Ready-Made Cloth Youths,"” anl earu the present prices BROKAW Brorine 62 Lafayette place. ¢ for " Gents, Boys, and SUBTERRANEAN DISTILLERY.— v Thorn on Wednesday ation that a small whisky distillery was in o premises in the rear of P. Gorman's liquor store, corner of Greeno and Steuben-sts,, Jersey Cit, fter the imattel found a 40-gallon still at work in Srmin's store, said to belong to & went before ¢ r hing shoul wed 1o OF A States Collee i L matter wi en, pon Officor Kipp visiting the ¢ the mght the still and 1 been removed. manilests itself here it will, owi confined within narrow lmits, among cows has enunder ed has been from continue their s, The and cotton bas been duly recommended e Legislatur s Lo the laws whi u re heir Lande, roads, cattle, tenants, &c. puiop 1oads 1o 0ue BisL expecially Gewande altention. JIOPLICLOE OF ull Suleaunted o Hquor store to be seized aud closed up, 10 Lwiit Juyestigution. LATEST SHIP NEWS. POKT OF NEW-YORK... ARRIVED. Steamshio Hatteras, Alesaader, Norfolk, 24 bours, wdse., to Liviegs stou, Fox & Co, ‘Stip Abiguil (of Yarmonth, N. 8.), Raymond. Newport, E.. via Mi Haveh, Dec. 22, with raiiroad iron (s master. Jaa, 4 e n,—u“n from the jibboon and was Jost, it blowing beavy at the time. BarlAJnlhlflny.(Ml, Auhfl'l:al, Izl cotton, ke, to B Dy Huribat & Co. Bark_ Virginia (of Liverpool), Reynolds, Demarara, 22 daye, with Fun. 16 ar, ke to master. 'C. M. Von Bebr (Meek.), Rutgards 0ct. 10, and Gibe raltar, Des ith wool to Heinneman l‘b’:‘:" Bark Jesny (Brew.) Hevricl, Bremen, 61 days, with wdre. and 309 passenyers, o F. Sehwoon. Had two births and wo deatis s the pas- e. Had beavy weather first part of pas aad wplit saile ark Casco, Garduer, Trinidad, Cuba, 20 days, sugar, ke, W Geo. 8. Stevenson & Brig Inenlancren (Dan.), Sensen, Stautos, 56 days, with coffee to t. Funeh, Miencke & 45 days, with molasses to Veek d ith hea! Brig Penniman. Dickson, Ha Chureh. Hun been 37 days e stove bulwarks, , aud fore and sfter houses strained the vease), causing ber to leak badly. 7 npoke bar MeAdamm, henee for Marsellles, wbo sappiied us with provisiors. Brig Bachelor, (of St, Andrews. N. B.), Millar, Malaga, Dec. 13, with fruit und lead, to Jobu Boynton & Co. Schr. Hillegonda (Holl.j, Hiekamp, Rio Grande, 34 dags. with bides, to Foueh, Miencke & Went, WIND—The wind during the day has been soutberls ara fieht Tn the afternoon a dense fog settled down, which still continued up o the the of our golog o press. BELOW. 8hip Nile, Aglward, from Liverpool, Dec. 11. Brig James Maschie. SPOKEN. Jan. 18, lat. 23 02, los. 3620, spoke don, 50 days out, showing &t dist. pend 0. 4430, Feb, 4, 1t. 27, lovg. 63 20, ship $iaria Adelaide (Prass ), frows Liverpeod for Philadelphis, 63 days out DOMESTIC PORTS. WiLsivarox, Feb. 14 —Sailed, steamsbip Jusmes Gary for Faltjmere, M)g;-:a. Fob, 14.—Cleared, sbip American Usion for Liverpooi, with i r. Johu Whitehouse, Satilia Firer for ark from Morecco for Lo cotton. Bath. 'L{'.?:.‘,r":!'fia’:‘.’. Tong. 66 40, passed schr. Pilo Jan. 31, 3 g & Lish, Now-Tork, baring been 5, P s Bl ‘Deing on board, who {:fl-. part of the crew appeared to be mrippiog T, ‘BAuTinons, Feb, 14.—The steamship Cuba, Capt, Dukebart arrived from Havaua this afernoon. Among the passeagers were Capt. Fice and six of the crew of the scbr. Jobn Durance, of ristol. Pa., abwioved af sea. She sailed from New- v Philadelphis, with & ehrge v’ grain, and encounteriug severs weather was blown of the coset. Whe was abandoned un Jan. 17, in Jat. 34 08, long. 62 14. The captain and crew were rescned by Capt. Acbun, of the bark Isaae Rich, and cunied into Havana. Cuanrasrox, Feb. 14.—Arrived, steawsbips Whirlwind, Piiisdclybing Lula, Baltimore. MARVIN & CO’S ALUM AND DRY PLASTER FIRE AND BURGLAR ork Dec. % Be;i in the World, 265 BROADWAY, New York Prineipal Warehouses, § No- 250 CHOATNUT T, Phiadeiphin. 8. B. CHITTENDEN & C0. Have issued the followlng Ciroular to thelr friends: Nos. 88 and 90 LroNAnD-st., Wednesday, p. m., Peb. 13, 1867, Omxrunxey: 1t gives ua pleasure to fuform 70u that we bave rescued our books aud valnable papers from the Sre which destroyed our Ware- bouse yesterday morning, and that our ofice busizess wil proceed withe out the loast Interruption. We bave alsofn bond (with large arrivals Io port today) se excelend assortment of FOREIGN GOODS, embracing our usnal varlety, including CCARPETINGS aod CANTON MATTINGS, all of which we are prepared to sell on favorable terma. We hope to reorgaalse our busness in all departments » thin & very fow days, a3d to offer the public a very attractive stoek of PERFECTLY FRESH GOODS, of whieb further notice will be given. We beg, alwo, to express oar grateful sense of obligation te & gread number of frieas, who bave hastened to offer us their sympathyic the time of our misfortuze. Very truly yours, 8, B. CHITTENDEN & ¢, GO, 1o THOMAS R. AGNEW™, Greenwich and Murray-sta., where you will fud Teas, Coffees, Fish, Flour and everything clse cheaper than aoy store in New-York. _One price bouse. 30 TO MACFARLAND® Book Store, comer Twenty-thirnd-st. and Broadway. There you will fnd all the NEW BOOKS of the day and all the old S(udu{ Works, and alse choien ish, Freneh and Scotch Statiogery. TIIE EMPIRE SPRING BED COMPAX BEST AND CHEAPEST SPRING BED—RECEIVED FIRST FRR MIUM New-Tork State Agricaltural Society, Saratogs Meeting, 178, Bet lowpriced Spring Dol made Oniers received sad mngles showa at No. 62 Libert; Rew-York. ol rerywhere, "',"L","‘f & enville Glass Works, hne, tent Frait Ja T.--War- for_piles, old or sae ot e and by all the principal druggiste. TS—GOOD ARTICL NGTON HADLEY'S, middle Cooper Innt tute UT sOBL per dosen, at WASHT .. Fi(x-: CH CHINA TEA PLATES—$1 %0 per dozen, at WASHINGTON HADLEY'S, middle Cooper lustiinte bloek. No connection with corner store. ER 0 'S, middie Cooper Iustic 'H CHINA TEA'S ASHINGTON HADLEY'S, middle Cooper PS_AND SAUCERS— IN HADLEY'S, middle Covper hue rer store. ACTIVE HOMES and productive _£X FARMS, in all localitien; healthy locations and conven.ant by iy “an be bought'on easy terms of JAQUES. No. 208 Bvawwsy. NOTICE. L. 8. JAFFRAY & Ce. HAVE MUCH PLEASURE IN INFORMING THEIR FRIFNDS AND TS—44 piccor—87, b s B CUSTOMERS THAT THEY RECEIVED ONLY TRIFLING DAM- AGE FROM THE FIRE THIS MORNING. THEIR §TOCK I8 IN PERFECT ORDER, AND THE BUSINESS WILL CONTINUR WITHOUT INTERRUPTION, Ne. 220 FROADWAY, New-York, Feh. 12, 1867, 3 'nivm; weils, he., BOSOM, CUEFFS, The Jatest fmproved Plaiting Machines for Bosows, Collars. and Cuffs imade to omler by W, H. TOLHURST, coruer Usion avd Futtow ats., T PRESSURE TUKRINK WA- TER-WHEEL—The best Wheel, usivg lrsd water, and selling for le wiy other bnt- class Wheel, Every Wheel warmarte! for & deseriptive Circular. Alw, our inproved Brick Machive and Brick Machiner:. Frgnes and_Boilern, Cane Mills, Portable Forzos. b¢ PBEKSKILL MANUFACTURINC Pee, SEYMOUR will be at rd & Hills, No 195 Was Thursdaye, and Frid L4275 ke contacts for Machluer ’ Kinds. #— , &1, JOR SALE Tho celebrated, fast trotting young stallier, SAM PATCHEN, Jn. This horse is a beautiful bay, 15 bauds bigh, uili be six yoarr «\d on the 14th day of April next; ean trot his mile now with a littie «m three minutes, and Is pronounced one of the finest animals of b+ Mind ia the State of Delaware. [ean easily get for bis senvices %100 ¢ present season, and Le is only offered for sale for the reason that ke bids fair to be ae of the fastest horses in the State, provided he s jroperly trained, which {8 & busivess T am unacquainted with, A farther deserip- thon T deem unpecessary, as.those wisling W purchase ean eall on the subseriher, SAMUEL M. ENOS, WM. POLK, B C. HAVES. or DANIEL CORBIT, esqs., all of whow reside in Odeasa, Nev L axile 4 0.y Del. WESLEY Porso A L% PARTIE: WISHING OR LA DRSIROUS TO SELL HORSES. (0N, yhing perisining o the HORNE BUTNESS, HORNES, & shoid INER & SOMERVILLE, No. 37 Nassau-st, opposite loe Poste 1S & CONE, No. 684 BROADWAY, in- spect their exteasive assortment - risitg CLARENCES, COU and other S cluse and open work, wade of the besb the best workmen, at their own waRGfarto, s lar, new two-ho W. WILSON, Ne. 29 Hrows S8 will be sold and b e SALE — Four X' TRUCKS. Applyte \ NICE SET of new HARN LN VERY LOW, if called for to-day. Ap Staire. EA GLISH KERS HOiSE BLANKETS, Now. 26 aud 0 Weah Brcadway, No. 100 Libertr st enteth and B X Suaddon Light expresm w atatng locetlow agous, batween aad leriy, W.

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