The Sun (New York) Newspaper, January 23, 1869, Page 2

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1 THE SUN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1869. a } the tl and will undoubtedly take rank among | Gardea, It nover looked in tho least like | both eminent talent and eminent character in that SOUTH AMERICA, aNeERviET OF 4 NEWAPAPER COR- nea ‘ v3 ‘ i — 01 ' NT. - — Pi SLALLACK t—ahe tioope to Concaer. ; tho accomplished debaters in the Senate. | Event. Ie bosom friends couldn't recog. | office, Mo served with distinguished success 1 | 4 estoy gn Pannma—Caled Cushing's Missle RESPORDENT W “ft ts proposed to bring all the railroads into’ pics THEATRE—The Bottie; or, The Drunkard’s | Mr, Canpenten eupplante Mr. Doors. | nize any resemblance, and quite turned their | 1862, when he was selected by Mr. Braxton to Pim oun Opectas Covrespondent. The Presid: Elect Pnblie Men. Clacago by enbterrancan tannels, \ ATION CADRE Ute eelaNeranoiuon or | TEM Who, nextto Mr. Hexnnicks, ie perhaps | hacks on it, and the poor Boston folks have | settle the confused and inextricable business of | pyyawa, Jan, 15.—There is an absolute earth “Pat Contributor” telographs the follow: | —The Lideral Christian anys that the mosb s Texas. « Baturday. ie te Sati w bee's tention in |e ae oe Hiawnten'h. wee vi ress, d other Jo role’ * one of our most civil engineers. Many have eco o . SREATHR FRANUATS-L/CEA Creve. Meuntece sate for maintaining Its power and prestige in | at the sound of Parnicn’s orchestra of a | 8! ‘eciniciiiniiinlaanas pil Rs a me ee sa hese cae of ONT, moet irl epeineery: Manz parece | Thre are,one hundred and Atty wusett j orday. that body. The loss of Hixpriexs, Doo. | thousand flutes and rackbuts and pealte.tcs | +The enthusiasm with which Gronon aicis el ‘at = aPeciaa hed ei aie heads ae tree, bat Thin LAM dog J eae pave teed Unitarian milnisters—nnsettied in parishes, not [no OLYMPIC THEATHE—Morspty Domopty, Matin’es at | LITTER, Buexanew, and Dixon te not made | playing “Hail Columbia,” with a chorus of | Fraxcm Train is everrwhere greeted by the Fe- | Setive, and another eutoreak may eeeur. at any tno. ising to me that « uaa : PRO ECOeS eee ae SMT eng, | UP by the abilities of those whom it has went | twenty thousand voices, the fifty thousand | nians proves that his disinterested labors in the | ment, Tt may he that Gen, Cushing remains at To. | Of feumany words comin t be Pretty bathed iia antl el flea el Hilt" “ Yovenitte Vatiey” and other F to supply thelr place, It hos failed to com. | rood Bostoniona, each with hia hundred-dol. | cause of Ireland are justly appreciated by her | gotain hopes of « turn in the tid Balgar'e aw j f wel ng i cock pcre = do ut Ie considered to have @ (ai , H ime! rc! en A come down ont of the trea, of passtog. Ps = ponaate the absoneo even of Itevenpy Jom: | lar ticket in his hand, might bow down to tho | Warm-henrted sons, ‘Tran himsotf is such a | rents mow deetare that the American envoy t# In veread ie tie Gite. SOHiva, oli; ad ainevtvred TRtOrRAlT;c Ib tp. tae son and Jastes A, Bayary, and two years | statue of P while the artillery ronrod, | 8tamee mixture of idea and imagination, of senso | lengua with Musquorn, and that the latter, If re- Train ts one of our moat noble by prominent English practitioner, is an exe > ‘ * | and eloquence, of feeling and fact,that heexercises | stored to power, would grant ail of Secretary | women, His appeals in behalf of her sex are both . tt, Gee. ago ft works than throw away a font in| and the church belly rang, and fire engines ee 7 4 Seward’s wishes, even to the cexston of the Isthmus | PoWerfal and convincing, No one ean real her Ay for the gont | 4 AIT. K i ¥ suilaeil Habs t bat layed ik a S great charm over the masses whose national speeches without being convinced he ouzht to vote, of Cleveland, 0; te th great oF TEE, = - Kentucky by retlecting that incessant bab- | played like fountains, and the world looked asaions and animosities he 60 cordially sha: for a substantial eonsiderat Tut this is wild talk. Brick ander the Grent, te a aad 18 Shtwes for AT. Der and intolerable bore, Ganner Davis. on at the magnificent spectacle. i ia wonderful, too, tho vitality of this Trish | _ THe New Zealand Steamship Company is still In | weeping 1 © Worlds to oun. pillar 9 . his wife sot tA Pusan ore tard — — = onderful, too, , " y A, tre iat quer, Whi yugh be gain the | took all the money eived during 9 years of Joint Ia Sar RIT TT Ean | A popular delusion prevails In regard to | Let no one suppose this to be m joke, tin | national sentient, ‘Decpor and moro ye Shih WeIkbd G0 Gb tee ceca enteaa ine Mtoe Words And love boid ie dally aud Weekly Chit | hor, put he tuluks i a cheap t oon | pee | the character and eapacity of the Senate of | quite a sober reality. The iden is entirely | patriotism than that of the children of Ireland | pany, has not yet arrived, It was A that the Thave nothing agtinst Jef, 1 in particular, —The Stato Agricultural College of Kansas hag ’ ha New beuutors our times, aa compared with the Senate of | that of tho great Gitstone, except the statue | never existed on earth, ‘Time and distance can- | steamer Hakain would he selzed by the ereditors an | {hat Lknow vf althouch he kept me away fran iY | tho names of 71 lulics ant OF gentlemen in ite last Without including any doubtful cases thar | Mitty and forty years ago, during the era of | of Peace, which is our modest offering to tho | ot extingnish it; failure doos not quench its | deran Injanetion, but thus far nothing of the kind | seil outat a sacridico, But, no matter fur that now, | Céalogue. Ther tom of ‘mtitary del in tha i raha Chay, Wensten, Cantovx, and Bexrox. | occasion, ‘The fall particulars ro not yet | aor Hence it is that every Irishman iin | Mas ovcurred “Taye ne Lies ol fobvitig: “atuaty'* from the | cok hunate teasnliy waranud tice” aceon may arise ii nm ucted Siates,thoun- |, ‘ ff 6s " r at , Jonna Smith, alias TLV. Ciloton, and three others, r} "4 yy —A female recently paraded the streets of @ peual number of twenty-two Soniators will bo | There 1s an amiable propensity in tho lumen | announced, and wo aro at present unable to | tome tort s Fenian; and even those who are not | i Ve tet iY. Cotes Al SO | Pome mea, He mast bee sabatanital aAdtion te | weovcen town exhibiting, above a palt of sowt fora into offce en the 4th of March neet, | Mind to revere antiquity, We look back | «ay whether Parnicx will conduct from the | ™ ig ceding Malta game hope | ime since ; another for the robbery in Mr. Cold ahhevery How dA fy te Hinited St ankles, a skirt upon whieh the indelibte brand of the Six of those aro rotleoted to fll their own | W8P4 Upon cur ancestors through a golden | enpola of the Stute House or from the top of ersa yolllihina phy partion may. ancer at | Rmllb’s tore, and another for the robbery, we be- neo Twill voy Midi miller was still visite, “alnetyele pound, eiva . f Wi ead oO} ol 7 ne vi e ie ni . * ne porto 7 bi y td live, of a bur of silver from the Rotiroad ¢ had been elected President of th superfine—warr goats, and sixtecn aro new members, thongh i a nd ‘ f oa Fr at deeds with ies FH Monument. ‘Tho latter would | yf, ‘Taaix and the Fenians as narrow-minded | att cacuped from Jail on Saturday afternoon {hint attempter to re —Albert Brisbane, the well-known Fourierite, some of these are not stra in Congres, | kindling eyes and swelling hearts, and ox. have tho advantage that all tho monofwar | goutots, but that does not obliterate the truth | closely guarded by sentinels, They are BORE TOF oy Las Longht a large tract of tend in Kansas, for @ Among the new Senators aro many men of | °# here were giants in those days.” | at the Charlestown Navy Yard, close at hand, | that after all they are a groat power in the land, | to Mexico, C1 ny of Fronchien, who will cultivate the land mark, Mr. HAIN has alroady served four | But atmosphere through which we gave | could join in the chorus with their batteries, a * The Star coutains the full arent Gaal je codperative principle, and aleo manufacture House and fourteen in tha Sen, | UO tho acts and tho actors of bygone times | Tho time fixed for this earthquake of cong is | _ The veloctpede question has extended to | reat your readers: ail wed to “do” years tn hd Fourteen in tho Sen: a oT , Georgia, and excites an interest there in the We observe by our © ween bitants of Pockskill are enjoying @ to, was a short time Gover: f Maine, | Macnifies their dimensions, Tis distance | the 15th of June next af reerulted in San Fran for that old he might be, Tam not i. 5 atc, was a she me Governor of Maine, minds of the fairer and better portion of the citi- 5 " \ first-class sensation, A wild panther from the wood ine 1 lends enchantment to the view. ‘The four - — - ' © ct | damestow ly trust shi but he wonld make a good Beeretary of the p ) and was Vice-President during Mr. Lin- | 7 : Pate Mr. Claflin and the City College rons, A lady of that State writes to the Setentije he ns b Ho is in favor of deeding all the lund | and two escaped hyenas nightly roam through the ‘ te He X, distinguished mon we have named displayed +4 : s: kere of vel Jet it is Kure to bre dun Jet the Ind m0 the | streets of that pleturcaque town: and as a conses ¢ term. He carries to the Capitol | ; Mr. Honach: B. CLAPLIN is a wealthy dry | Amriown to entreat the mekers of velocipedes Pied Ration Mh 1 certainly be an casy and fan aptit for public aduire, business 1 rare gifte and performed eminent services in goods merchant, who resides in th f into special consideration the wants of he diseai Fapid solation of our Aaanetal Giaieaities. | pies adit ning parties are but eltmty atten ted, ' mae * 7 | i " roo. erchant, who resides in the y of jer a month belore a case broke ry Peat " i meanin; Of much principle par ons wacon Ber ite, and a straightforward, off style of | Heir day, We are not quite #0 suredow She ays that the awkward position | Uirvemnment ean niford-es hen the ald h upon which Re la realized: a great. deal of interest LH Fale leh on Paintings. Day and Evening. WOOD'S MUSEUM—Krnaniand Mion, Living and Wid Animale, NEW TORK CIROUS, 14h st. opro«' Mosic=A new and brilliant bill, M. day and Saturday at 24 P.M. THE TAMMANY--Kobort Macaire, Matio‘e on Satur: day. BNOVGHAM'S THEATRE, 21h «trot ning Fifth Arvonuo Hotel, Jan. Better Late than Never, and Dramatic Review for 1 ORAND OPERA LO! Academy of te Wedn Perichote, Matinée on Mr. Beowtn speaking NITAM Was eight yoars stilenee abroad, we trust iu neve we omfortable eiream. | Jutiae, Samnel, and Erasins, wore born re: jovernor of Ce y ahd during the | ne years have produced, ‘The seta | HOW a Btudent of the College of the City of ctpede for two persons, Timight have scats hese ent ary furth "hanake reports, | themselves to abject bramary for the purpose of get , 178%, 1788, 1700, 2 f° Septemce stormy period of the war won distinction by | U8"? Years havo produced, The subjects y Work. ih he Rawle i La aa abel ete i From Pera we have further esrthanake reportty | eit norton of tie loguey, thereby ‘setting u very | Hast all five were stift living, with the wives of thels ii call iaiNaRVAMUIRE Mecsas ‘they landled dwarf by the side of thoso ; ‘ork. ie the Ls dies of op institu. hing like @ side-saddle facing in mingled with rumors of another datiep on, . baud exam ie Muee Ske Gi : youth, Since September one of the wives hos died, och! : hoe tae bbls 0 mt ‘ . jon, you SDARLIN’S adc vel ji a he. propelia he cc The got! Melue in Dollvia are attracting eonsider- an Rice Wanted to be Presttent, and he may be ‘anik Wate ‘ Hy are 2 gare sir anenatiecd wi with which tho statesmen of tho current | 10% soune Crarrix’s addrees 18 given as | directions, aud be prog l by the ¢ ee t f A cs vin ar ai ig He ae Sriihentene ueeaial oat he puvile bunieye A lotter bearing the following superseriprion an orntor, rarely makes a epeech, and w flcelod Hite oni: called 4A sQkl eC AWVE ORTD being at the corner of Church and Worth | power of the two riders, each on her own side of | ¢ tention. Th ; bi eee ts & y Veh * | devoting the proceeds towards p the National | aa rccenity received at the Silver City Post Omtca not fill Mr. Dixon's place as a terse, lucid perce he : ‘ ? | atreots, the location of his father's warchouse, ‘heel. ‘This suggestion ix worthy considera. | there tn any numbers, but a party of thirteen Amerix | ctr, ant carry on the Governutent a canvass | from Town: debater, know that in attempting to p controlling. Ht think | Cams Ove of them old California miners, wit leave the music of a baud. It's hard to go back on. th 1 Anwonena Gone: & Weidoat neal, lebater | ‘ F : As the youth manifestly does not sleep and | tion, but the Scientific American doven't thin! the next Callao steamer, flly armed and equip: ty ofallie tine, Tshould be ed if Nahata this letter wanes ten gerved ten. years in tlio parts in the opening scones of this grand 1 iM Aas, ‘ 3 : abl ; He would Work Wall Wilewe fale Mt here u the next Calla rT y a |: Gappe es & GOAGERN: Race eth cee Ven ee ) Be AMO i sera iia wrest nof sonaplenoualy falle’ voard ina dry goods store, the giving of thi beet pier EA Ta Aha wnt@anrot iat: It ts sald that the surface 4s are sur. Fisk isa welltnconing man—toward Fisk, He iver City, Idaho, Pprpilndehten Acc etereD biel ibe eR TE posterity will decide that address looks very much like a pretence of | 7° at eae nats fd ba tad We pame Tee Cina hve ac ab cnaiiee tate | taliroudtan opera Ronee, ant thee Spriag@et opus | 2. Pickering, of this city, has just Anished pleted a second term as Governor of New he 8 he ll i ce his being a resident of this efty when ho is | J7NThals Bia good ay re r sa) raft From Chili we have news of another bet licun all’ at once, Weis hot a temperanea. man vx- | % velocipede for Miss Carrto A, Moore, who is ene York. He isa thorough man of Dusinosr, | he Senate and the House of Representatives Mr Charan wenion ROWEVER COIN cc soe eee cer | erence Miah lie keene heater antes i | Gebed Wo exHIDA thet sete Of Hocomation ta tq = has hal laree experience in politics, is thor, | °f 0UF time contain as much talent and wis y Q tiv a ed. Accounts published in. (he Hero tsa reat deal of useless oughly Informed on pending issue extraordinary powers of combina mand or. | | they would lia | dom, and exhibit as much practical states- displayed the ablost anti Republican in that body, Me ie a learned lawyer, @ cogent reasoner, alu minous and eloquent speaker, and is probably the foremost man among the new Senators, The sum total of gifia and attainments in the Senate, we think, is not diminished, but rather increased by these chang: The fale ing off in doubtloas upon the Democratic ide That party has Ml led to embrace of stood tho test of the try- nanship and effective eloquence, as have been those bodies in any preceding heen at their wits’ ends to know what to do with it, As it doesn't look lke Evinerr, perhaps it does look Tike Peaea. No one ina er seen that interesting individual, and no one, therefore, can deny that the statue is portrait. Let them set it up, then, ns Peace, It could be whitewashed and crowned with olive, and a little eotton drapery wound about it to give it a fominine appearance; and Brooklyn, Lut docs business in New York, Mr. Wc en B. Chari has a son who is to the remark that ho sponges for his son's education on the taxpayers of New York city, and writes a note, which wo print clse- the Quartermasters Department at Cairo, Hlinois, Ho organized the Bureau of Internal Revenue in Washington, displaying in it administrative tal- onte of the highest order. As a momber of the House he has constantly given proof both of in- tellectual fertility and industry, and conscientious attention toduty, The country hes few persons who can be accounted auperior to Mr. Bootwant, in the power or tho principle which make a statesman, whether for the Cabinet or for Con- of news. Theeity is Mied with dogs and dust The former make ua miserable at night, and the latter makes us detest iife by day, The north wind sifte the dust into every eye, and the dogs snarl at every heel. The Legislature will undoubtedly adjourn withont taxing the cars. ‘We have no farther news from Gen. Cushing, Me has not yet returned from Bogota, A grand site wos given therein his honor on the 3d inst, It looks as if his mission would prove failure. The eober Star and Herald conderans it without knowing what it y are now forced to axumo astride the front | time to do so; bntit abe ts etill kept afloat to «prend tia lescrive the fight axa long and bloody gravely gives ua the Information that «and seven wounded. This subject is ono on which Tie Sux a feel itself qualified to expre whenever our scientific con an opin mporary has #0bj ing Information to the Cinctnnall Tine: f have just had an interview with Gen, Grant, and obtained some of his ideas of public men, not given mn.the opinions published in the New York World, which I herewith «ond yon, Den. Franklin is unquestionably ar ty Aticker, and bis enterprise in collecting the lat news renders him invaluable to at almanac, but he visionary. Hie theory about lightning-rods pro tecting houves and barns during a thunder storia i one of the most absurd things Fever heard of Old Parr tea young man of brilifant talents ard am Ditions, ut he onght to take Letter care of himself, Tfenr that he 14 hastening to an eariy grave. Warhington is an efficient General of Militia, and | ils princely gift to the London 7 L fear, ia work: the “rin, member of tin some wort ofa “ring” nowa- 'y rare, indeed ; and thereare few of those 2 the prizering, Big men to fortune. His etnb-honse successful lobbyists now in Washington are women, —Towa, with @ stringent liquor law, consumer $1,900,593 worth of liquors per year, —The ball season has commonced in Te: base arly 5,000,000 eres of grape vines ara cultivated in France. The average annual value of the wine exceeds €190,000,000, —A monnment to cost $5,000 is to be erected over the remaims of Sam Houston at Hunteviiley Northford, Conn., namely, Thacdew West, ‘The wheels are of the ordinary height, tnt the reach connceting them ia made somewhat lower, and the saddle ia differently arranged, —Donn Pintt writes to the Cincinnati Coms —— q @anization, and though he will not atten where, to inform us that he pays taxes on | ed its theory to the test of experi we shall is said to be the louse that Vunder-butl?, mercial that the late Col, Key “was the anthor of d : riod “Ct one HSE: | LAND MASSACRE. ours, &., FAT CONTRIBUTOR, eCtelian's ‘. ove thr iBikine anda orsiois Wl pire be TL period of our histor: 000,000 ‘werits or veel eatat-(a thls eft, und’ | lakd grial’ pleasure fer restrding (his roeull, a i y oe eer ONT KIBUTOR, nl ™ hoi ee nals be bye had a tinge of i : 5 iL EOS - y umanity n, and as the confide f ustrions, painstaking, and able Senator. Murphy without Lott. therefore has @ right to send his #on to the rible Tragedy—Cawnpore Over Agaln, How She Astontehes | iit ag privet ynaichiralradiarig 4 Mr. Srock ron, who now succeeds Mr. Fi We have stood aside, now, and given the | College reqpondenre of the Panama Star. urna, much to create that popularity wiiteh so strangely LINGHUYSEN, Was himself unseated to make | Hon, Henny C, Munriy a chance to loom Our point all along has been that tho Col- | academy of Destgn—WatersColor Exhibition. tox, Deo, 8, 1868.—Daring the past Famous Amo- | #urvives lis blunders and misfortunes.” room for the latter three years ayo, on the 1p once in Lis full, native strength, without | lege was maintained for the benefit of the month even! urrod in New Zealand while fore The Academy of Design has been ol + Californin Io —A nsible English judge lately instructed 9 wred with shuddering hort rtain Uwe , and of the illegality of his election. le } i r . “7, ie ot fol [—- . o fmrert r the last steamer left here f . cious conversationa jury to give moderate damages In a breach of promisa Sonn ality of his election. Ho | casting over him the dark shadow of Lort's | Tich, and not for that of the poor. Mr. | few days, to admit of rome imjoriaut eh Uement was deatroyed, and the | ers i ly or chiefly case, because {t WAS & most mixchtevous thing to belongs to a renowned New Jersey family, | And what is the result?) CLAYLIN kindly corroborates the position | Many of the former pictures have been rehv aM one of whom occupied a sent in tho under Waciixeron’s Administration, aud another, the distinguished Commodore, ear. our flag in triumph through severe bat- te) Why, nated by the Democratic moml Legislature for Uni was not only nom iapopularity. r Meneny is unanimously nomi, 8 of the | ‘ He |} dd States Senator. ated unanimously, but we ha rest of the taxp otaken by revealing ono item only of Lia enormous fortune, and showing that it amounts to $900,000 at least. It Is for the ta to say whether they 1 put to death by the rebel who you will remember ti ‘of the worst have be ban! a fow merite Oil paintings have been added, and the general tn terest in the exhibition greatly incre: iby a very large collection of wu These fil two of the rooms of 1 omprive the | eolor paintiogs. Academy, and Hy eulsivaing potatoes, Mies Hitcheock, ele would be a fir less But she 4 © far browder age than’ he fy aan netress requit r house than ollie | ume, She is an only daughter, an only ehild, 1 believe, wealthy fo family, her futher, “frighten aman into marrying a woman he did not like by heavy damages. It fe much better for tha kirl that he should find out his dislike before thary after marringe. —Col, Thomas Adams, of Roxbury, gives #10,+ " t for n ithe, batit w comie to this coust'as an army | 060 to the relicious society worshlpp! the sto ' Ye last war with England, and sat in nile will help educate the eons of men like Mr, | seeond exhibition of the Society of V oe | upplics they requ Net aie a fe Je rellztous eoelety worslpping in the stona ae a by acclamation, 4 «| Artists, As a who!e, the exh{bition, as remodelied, On Theadiy, th ed physician, and an wt substantial and | chureh edifice in Quincy, where the Rev. Jonn D, au to 1857. ‘This shows the damage, politically, which CLAFLIX, who has $900,000 in real estate in | ie one of much meri, The really bad pletnres are sit | worthy of San iy accomplished | Wells oMiciates as clergyman, for the support of pub= \ u kes tio post which | tho association of his name with that of | this city alone, to say nothing of what he | gomparatively few in number, The galleries were te hee tanec te | GAO eee ee oe eta tbe ten oie lic worship, on the condition that Charles Francia t 4 me don av d when he went Judge Lov? has done to Mr. Munriy, But | 6W"s in Brooklyn, and the enormous capital | thrown open to the fellows of the Academy, At thre ck | amp one gre shall give to the same society @ vy Levens to rote th Alabama claims, | for that, he might have been Governor, in | he has in his business besides. whe ats, anda few Tnvited guests, | eee a to <obe Rav. Des Bills eis, thel the Quakers 08 vol Chen i ‘ ee pee i “apap dnaiacpts ; on Thursday evenin no occasion was The reply was a volie’ pol as ! i n me ead fi eral place of Horrman, Mr Ciariin evidently thinks that he POY8'| cao of & pleasant and soctal nature, taoet ot th 1the Major. He e v1 ng © colonial times wero “the indecent, ignorant, and y 4 £0. wn of talents, he will Well, Mr. Munrny is not an old man, and | !8 full share of tho cost of the College. | ho, professionally or as amateurs, are Identified A it p.tan for thelr tives, ae fees and In ofl places, 8 5 a ae Laelia Coupe of Lae pyremartyt rise Boon have an opp. ity to prove that fact | (hero is #till a chance for him if he learns | Let us seo how near he is right. Suppose | with art in this city, being present, Of course the aged, by crawling vath the veran- | ghe is a duly elected member,costly presents ranging © scarcely asingle point of afinity with the dig. ’ before the country. Mr. Scort supplants | w . +7 | hia real estate here to be assessed at its full | attention centred on the watercolor pleturcs, Of | doh boards, t ‘out tuto the flax in the imine- | from the cherished "5" to the gold mounted fire | vified and highly esteemed Friends of our day. ‘The wisdom from his past experience. He is said diate neighborhood of the house, from whence be | horn. She is eccentric to an extent that would shock | conduct of these two re's of men is not more in Mr. Buckauw, We is said to be a sound | yong tinva ified to infloenco Lor | value, $900,000, which it probably is not | there there are some admirable specimens. Tho (whole proceedings, Mojor Higgs was held | our New England notions of propriety, showing her pea ah smbeehorvic bbe tac vin our di ‘ : ong ago to have tried to Influence Lovr to | 1 peal 5 catalogues not being rendy, we are unable to tdeatity | Gown on the eround wil cceontrielty now by presenting the * Sa" a barrel of | Contrast than thelr respeetivo religious views. ver, and ho will do well if he proves to | pehave better himself; but that was vain, or | bY one-half, At tho rate of last year's tax | them ny name and number, Among the most etrik- | with their mus ow by staking © tonsand one favorite be as able a dobater as Mr. Buck atnw, who has been one of the leading minds on the Democratic side of the Senate. Mr. Tien. MAN, who follows Mr. Wapp, has onco or twice been a member of the Lower House, and has been distinguished on the bench in Ohio, He made a good run in 1857 as the Democratic candidate for Governor of Ohio. Ne is a Jawyer of eminent ability, and a pow- erful debater; but we presume his new asso- clates will not look to him for the boldness and vigor, the quaint sense, keen sarcasm, homely wit, and sometimes rough but often thrilling eloquence, with which, for cightecn years, his predecessor has made the Senate Chamber and its corridor® to resound, Mr. Cassenry, of California, formerly re- sided in this city. He was then a Free Soil Democrat. A furious contest was waged over his seat in the Democratic Stato Con- vention of 1847, at Syracuse, between the Hunkers and the Baruburners. The bone of contention was the Wilmot Proviso, of which he was an advocate, CassenLy was unseat: ed, as were Joun Van Bowen and other Free Soil members, Paxson Kina meantime standing on the platform and shaking his fist furiously at the Hunkers, his voice frowned by the indescribable uproar, while James 8. Wapswontt, his tall form mount- edon a bench, was able to pierce the din with the long remembered words, uttered in response to a taunt from the Hunkers: “Though it may be too late to do justice to Siras Wiucn’, it is not too late to do justice to bis arsnss'ns This disruption of the New York Democracy, caused by the Wilmot Proviso, ultimately extended through the whole party, the chasm continuing to widen till negro slavery fell headlong into the yawning gulf and disapp 1 forever, Mr. Bayanp, of Delaware, aseumos the seat which his father leaver, and which was onco creditally occupied by his uncle, and was filled with renown more than sixty years ago by bis grandfather, the elder Jamis A. Bayann, and in which Ricmany Basserr, his grandfuther on the mother’s side, sat during the first four years of Wasirncton’s Admi nistration. It remains to be seen whetl the young Senator has inherited anything more than a name, Mr. RreveNson, of Kentucky, was for th terms a leading member of the House, and recently served with distinction as Governor of his State He will prove a valuable acquisition to the Democratic aide of the Senate. Mr. Brown Low is known to the nation as the editor of the Knorville Whig, and latterly as Governor of Tennessee, He is a good hater, and his rhetoric is as racy and vituperative as that of Wii Conner, wh his oratory te gar- nished with epithets more stinging end pun gent than choice or classical. ‘| ¥ edge both of his pon and tony Mya at best produced only a temporary improve: | ment, He las too mae eonse 00 rely on the | repetition of that experiment. But if Mr. | Munrny keops himself distinet and separate | from all unpopular Judges, and comes up at a future day, under such circumstances that thore will Le no suspicion of his being under their influence, it is not too late for him to be rnor yet. Mr. HovirMan had greatly the advantage of him last full, for his name was singularly exempt from identification with the unpopu lar men in his own party. Judge Lory will probably be more ex- tensively disliked now than he has ever Leen before, because he isin the Court of Ap- peals, and will be known to more people, Deicide oie The Great Boston Peace Jubiloe. Litde Boston has got an idea, It is a mu. sical idea, and she is about to astonish the world with it—in fact, to give the world f first-class sensation, ‘I'his is the way it is to be done, Peace has come; everybody knows that. The nows has finally reached Boston, and they are going to celebrate the occasion. A gigantic building is to be put up, and all the singers and players from everywhere are to be invited to come together, Brass bands and string bands, chureh choirs and singing schools, everybody that ean play and every- body that can ring, are to be gathered ina great band and chorus of 21,000 musicians, and they are all to give expression to their feclings in“ Hail Columbia, Happy Land,” ant other such jubilant music, Lest noise enough should not be made to satisfy the | fifty thousand spectators who are expected to | attend, all the church bells of the city are to join the din, and a battery of cannon is to be | fired in the choras, This is accomplished by the use of electricity, the bells and cannon all being connected with the orchestra by magnetic wires. There bas been nothing like it since the | good old times of Nebuchadnezzar, That gentle and herbivorous Assyrian once on a time, as is well known, set up a statue, and called all the people together; and though he didn’t charge a hundred dollars a ticket, as they propose to do in Boston, still the band was there all the same, for, as the good book tells us, he ordered out all “the cornets, flutes, harps, sackbuts, psalterica, and dulci- mers” iu the province ; and when they played “Hail Babylonia, Happy Land,” or whatever the national anthem was, all the people pros. trated themsclyes, The Boston Nebuehad nezvar ia named GinMonn—P. 8. Ginaton In the prospectus he has suppressed his Chr's tian name; but there was no need to do so. 1 is Patrick; and Patrick is a8 good a name | os Nebuchadnezzar, and better, Parnick | (itaione has been prepared for his duties by bably be smoothed away by #ix years’ use in the Senate. Mr. Pratt, who succeeds Mr Henpuicxs, though a Republican, will hand ly fill the large vacancy made by his prode- coasor. Mr. Scuunz, who succeeds Mr. Henpin- gon, has won a high place among the ora- tors of the country. A Gorman refugee, Jea' Enropo because of his participation jy gh vaak ora of 1848, ho has been the ardant advocate of liberty in two hemisohercs, the fact that he owns a band. For many years he has trotted about the sircets of Bos- ton, with much acceptance, ue tle leader of Gimone’s braas band, #0 that le knows ‘all about cornets and flutes, is on familiar terms with harps and duleimers, and ona tight pinch could perhaps even play @ sack- but or a pealtery. Jovy, 2 67-109, his tax would come to about #24000, ‘The tolal tax of the city was | $24,000,000, so that he paid the thousandth part of that total, The cost of the College # $150,000 a year, and Mr. CLAFLIN, thero- f pays of it the one-thousandth part— that is, $150. Supposing his son to go | through the whole fi vars’ course, he will have pald altogether $750, provided he has held his real estate all that time, But as the College $150,000 a year, and as tho graduates average in number only about thirty every year, each one costs the city $5,000; so that Mr, CLarLin gets for $750 what costs Mr, CLAriin's actual profit on the transac tion is not, we admit, as large as it seems to be, because ho could procure at Columbia College or at the University quite as good an education for his son at two-thirds the amount he pays in the shape of increased taxes to keep up the City College. We put it to him, as we do to all the rest of the tax- payers of this city, whether it is not hig! time that this noediess expense were abol- ished. me About the smartest ense of political sharp practice that has ever come under our notice is found in the manipulation of the Hon, E, M. K, Guuxy, of Wayne county, by the lobbymen in the interest of Mr, Fextox, at Albany, Inst Saturday evening. Mr, Gurxw is a very honest and impulsive man, but eredulous and capable of being deceived. The caucus took place at half past 7 in the evening, and at balf-past 6 Mr, Giexs waited upon Mr, Mono as in person to assure him {hat whatever else might happen, the vote of Gvesn was his and his only, But no sooner had he left the presence of the Senator than he was taken in hand by three shrewd friends of Gov, Fextos, who, with becoming seriousness, said to him: Mr, Gueny, do you know that these seoun- drols about here have been selling your vote to Moran?” No!’ said Gres, opening all his eyes; “you don't tell me?” Yes was the answer, ‘and Monaan’s hounds have paid them five thousand dollars on condition that your ballot should be cast for their candidate.” “Well, well,” responded the unsuspecting and excited legislator, “if they have sold me, they shall find that I aim hard to deliver, I'll take care that this trick is never tried on me again, 1 can tell you The result was that, in his indignation, Mr. WN went into the caucus and ostentatiously un open ballot for Mr, Fextow, whose thus accomplished by metaphysical means wh could not have been accomplished by any other, see f The failure of Mr, Cummack to obtain a seat in the Senate from Indiana, though the regu lar Republican nominee, proves that aspiring politicians should not write letters, But for his unfortunate letter to Gov, Daxer he would now ave been the successor of Mr, Hexpaicns, I said of Maurin Vaw Bogey that he would tra hundreds of miles to confer with a politician, rather than write him a line, » indeed ends t iiararcaenaanerenee That ever fair and just rnal the Nation, in speaking cf Mr. Bovrwet as a possible suc- cessor of Mr, Sumwer in the Senate, inthe event of that gentleman's transfer to the Cabinet, » that Bourwent is rated high ow account « honesty, but then something moro than honesty is needed, and nothing more appears to be claimed forhim except ‘soundness.’ No one who really knows Mr. Bourwaut will There will probably be a statue of Peace set up for the occasion, They have a dreadfal siatue of Eowanp Dyeuerr in the Public thus limit his qualifications for public station, He has been Governor of Massachusetts during a weriod of great volitical difficulty, and manllested forced to see ing was one by + representing a German vile lage by twillgit, the rising moo adding ft Nght to that of the departing day. On the right, in sombro | short distur Te | oC cap \ lidren was shadow, hangs a Christ upon n stone eross, The | {ine Rit viysnu the subject i# an effective one, and efivetively treated, Colman, whose merit as an oil p generally scknow! pirable water-colors, on son, taken at Irvington, and fcene entitled La Giralde, lence avd brillia Mra, Elizabeth Murray has also contributed several very eficctive work, portraita and genre Of the other pictures exhibited deserve more than a passing no! in greater detail on a future occas fortunate, his Wile mi nter has been 80 contributed two ad. on the Mud: i anish street a Work Of great excel d tour ebill anil dest pietures, ne of which wo shall apenk ly-three cold igo: ie eottle is desiroyed, crops, ones tn fact one of the most ents on the Last coast has rH 1, ed and tn: ittie ae had left her house, 10 ¢ swamp aed hide hersel From an Occasional Cor She was, with the excep: Povauseersie, Jan We have had a sens tion of her night dress, lotely Without clothing, tion in cur Poorhouse—a sensation rivaliing im ine | and #0 she retmined for seven or eight days, tensity the story of * Perichole,” Some montha ago | ..QHC oF her little cildven, @ noble little fellow only did. Who had managed to eseape from the nd lier thus on the evening of the day of re,and kept her aive on eggs which he ed about for. At length after making several {neitectual aitempts, he succeede: ching Turan ganul,adistance of seven miles, serosa a country + voice was soft | hat Neal never Deiore travellid, Here he fel ( # capt ees oe y Capt, Westrapp avd a sinall guard, beside some o end molodions, and her eyes Iustroas and sparkling. | tie seiticra who had 110 the "redoult, and bly poor, both in purse and sistance waa immedi y went out to the poor and appeared to have suffered in past years much | Wlo Was sent down to agony of mind, She elaimed to have once moved in re- | COvETesl ns to be ont cistored her name in a beautl- 0, She performod all her ution in the Almshouse faiths A frequently fang sonnets in Freuch and Italian, It is reported that she was formerly an opera singer of some not When spoken to on the sulject she gave am evasive suawer, and preserved a lon Two weeks ago, one C * Pignitio” tattered and torn was comn vagrancy, ro than ordinary Anteliixence, but seemed to Lave becn euibittered hy the trials of lve, and: his conversation was marked elghty A woman, aqtalidly dress tthe owner of a face singularly beautiful, was committed to the Alms- house for vagrancy, A little child » Her manners, though coarse, evidence of former refuement, 1 houre, t pier, and is Mow so far Ve f danger, This frightful tragedy was the work of ex-Chate hom island prisoncrs, who have been joined by othor dinates {natives tll their force now reaches 700, under th hip of a young Maorl named Te Kootl, They are stil In the axme district, and with the exception of having been twice attacked and de- ated by friendly natives with @ small loss, are uns vlested. Indeed, there is no European force here to cope with them, e. My firm convict mont, a | gwier in this ery and forlorn, of mis, ant Tam by no means sin- tat either seme ot A Wilmington (N, C,) letter of the describes the loss of the steamship ( ny, the 1th fuet,, a brisk night was Intensely dark, heavy the face of the heavens, and the s By 8 o'clock the ve Usth inst, If City in, The ude rolled across: ran mountains 1 Was shipping heavy and netwith ng the unwearled exe:tions of the crew and ofliccrs she became utterly uncan- troflabic, At 10 o'clock # shock plainly told that the ship was onthe shouls, In a few honre she was dashed to pieces by t ker A wail of angaish went up from the crew, who valoly cling to the broken timbers of th and one by one the met death e iT upon the wre ber, A was ine vital te In Now, mark the sequel, Clarence Beaumont was discharged from the Pooshouse on Friday morning. Before he loft, the pair had made preparations for an | clopement. AUB A.M, E with her sleeplag chit on her arm, met her lover Deneath the cold stare at ie gate, and carefully erept away over the snow. At TA, M, they were scen arm in arm, floating down tho Dutchess county turnpike, since which thie nothing has eon heard from them, It now turns out that Elolie falien heir to some $90,00 by the death of an aunt in Adrion, Mich,, and that Mr, Beaumont’s attentions were pid ‘with a view of securing the 1 —— and the City College. ise stole out of her cot, Mr. 1, Be Chat To the Editor of The Sim; A few days since there appeared in your titled “ Whose Sons Profit by the City College,” wherein I was made to appear a *ponger on the New York taxpayers, In this elty I pay taxes on real estate vatuod at about $900,000. I Delieve this gives metho right to have ason at tho Now York College, I, B, CLAFLIN, or struc nd the doomed men spe atering prayers to Him who ru pout @e'clock the vessel was wi wl the three survivors—Patrlek Me dersey Cliy, avd Henry MeCardle and Anu hous, of New York—In company with five were clinging ton portion of the deck resombiln, elve feet lons by about clgbt wide, ndence for life they were t s, drifting out to hausted with terrible. sufferin., and faint with hunger, and one ir five companions dropped tnto the a and How to Explode Bogus Corporatio henumbed by ¢ Wien curried on board the Clyde the nen were un able to # The mate of the Clyde reports that tho men were picked up about tweive miles north- west of Cape Lookout, wud that except the raft on organized under our State Inws are affairs, managed by swindiers for knavish purposes; and as the public are frequently defrauded use after house was thus | = a -. thus deen ed out of the ap f : : Thore who eacaped have done so tn a. stute of per. ARYA EN AN 40ueRe feet denition. One Voor, wulnian the vind or | ‘ Capt. Wilson, after being stabbed seven or elghi Cupid's Darts Wildly Thrown-A Singutar | (ally Widh'ebayguet ond lel teing. scoscless anitus Elovement. it was, supposed maw get when the fends 1 into a neighboring | On | + | tounded beyond n he cow-eateh> y ralitondy ¢ | woleh ride she chatlen; neer, und still again Uy some of the noblest deals of puilanthrophy and | eharit f Ay thousand dollars in arse is expected to. inher: From s generous in the extre Sho vibrates, betw hor way, and astonishing the natives of each of ict (") intermediate eitics by what she docs at she does not do. ral sand mete mpany fom he confidence and ntionalities of society, wes everywhere, Rees at will, and yet com DL will'ot all, She is ns at te grand bail of the Empress at the attends annually ihe Derby fn Bngland, wald, she amures herself by winning of Jew huidred pounds a day ut the hands of sprigs of nobility, ays since she started in company with her tiaud for New York, hence to Paris, pe after her tm vared as evi Atow parente Two d dence of the last of bi he In a quiet Way, With the persons ut two. hue | ie herwelt 8 foriunate groo aly experiinented in. the réte of bride, rWak With ber all the altervoon of | OV. M., when she went, as AUS'P. M. ho met her again by ap- | pe ul, and Went with her to the theaire, afer | Which he dceompanied her and the family as Sacramento, on her overland journey, quigo ignorat of the tact that from § P.M. he bad been fn company With Mee. Howard Coit instead of Miss Hitcheock. This is the same youth whom she dared to drive down an cmbankinent on the Clif Honse road a few | years ago, which he did at the small cost of €1,200, Her luisband is left behind, she not having seen him, itis said, since they lef Saint James's Pree Chuich. Doudtiess, ero this she has Informed her loving pa and dearest ma of her late romantic experi ment, and is now enjoying #ome other innocent sement. But while tis heroine Is thus eeeentric romantic in her composition, and thus reckless Wher demeanor, as before remarked, there are in licr character many of the noblert traits poaseasod by any. Sho speaks evil of no ono, Lut has a kind Word and a warm heart for all, A . fa Wites MW Commercial, yoard and animals of the How to Div Prom the Cin Faporitucnts with rodent tribe have demuinstrated the fact that it ts casice by tar to get intoa wap than out of one, Uxorious gentlemen who have embarked in rash ¢ uch as the rupporting of two wives at the terpr 1(0 apply this lesson to mane tine, have often learr created objects that are animated witha much higher with coarseness and profanity, After belng in the : | prince than brute matter, Such persons ence Almshouse three days, Ne ma ts # | cunt, rarely eseape with a disposition ty again In- isp by ays, he man A A strong at atonce tilt mes. | duige in slinuilar lusarle But we have beard of a tachmont for Eloise, snd souzht her company cons in her arms. een | pont Ih this city, renowned for gallantry stantly, walling upon her with the assiduity of @ . tes wives | and fortune, Who has just got out of a serape of have beca vayished, tortured, cud thea murdered | ¢ a egy eal servant, and paying her the most respectiul attention, | before thelr husbands, \t » He soon gained her heart and affeetions, On the day — ho: @ foreign de before his discharge they hada tong interview, aud | Fearful Tale of Shivwreck—The Low of business becoming slick, be boran tof separated with mutual tears and e: % Gull Chive embarrassment of having the expenses of the ents deducted from th y woek, and determined ¢ wanee of this ni | paid ty to dat ot favored woman out ricing on the avenue, The carriage bad Larely tnrned » corner When two lance furniture caty hacked ap in front of the house, The ear men opened the door of the house (whieh, by the way, {son Freeman strect), hastily eollected all the furniture, staple and fa the divelling contained, chucked it ull into the wagons—soias, chairs, bed? steads, corpets, pictures and all, and in’ less than an hour from the time of thelr appesranee had com: viiely emptied the house, locked at up, left | it desolate, aod driven thelr cars off, nobody | knows where, ‘The gemtioman and ‘lady re- taced from thelr drive in duc course of time, Dut did nob go to the house togctier. He got out of the carriage at the Brighton House, and re seating that he had Dusiness to attend to ta thelower part of the town, jumped on a etreet car, directing iver of the turn-out to take bis wite home, aud the stable, ven to her domicl ‘sure to find tt pe fate as if it had never been occupied, Went to her husband's place of business to se explaination of the mystery, but found that b upled by other parties—that h A from the sika—and, in town, afer squaring up his retiring from the ofice whieh he had vc Hort time, The wiley by the aid of 0 ray The wife was and was ‘ectly empty, he ecounts and pied but a ome of her hem, afier another t friends, obtained a clew' as to ihe direction taken Ly ihe Editor of The Sun sen, Patt pai patil fate w “| averted by the her Jogitive husband, aod started last Friday mora i rival of the steamship vile, Which ve gto hunt hi enforce hei \s sup: : It is an unquestionable fret that many | Mited apthe sree ualt-starved men andsaved them, | MAto punt hin up, and enforce her claim to Inv sup port end protection, To the Kaitor of The Sun. theroby, the Logisiature should forthwith apply a | mbich they were found there was uo other trace of | |, Bt # SUN that shines for ui remedy. Itmay be done by the appoint the wrecked vosse, here ni Newsparen Prosrenity.— The Binghamton regavowau wit of commit Wakly Standard hue beon transferred to the Ping: | hietwitc disc borne aerao on i vistas ana meabwenece, Jaw for manufacturing and mining parposes, and by | Aanion Duily and Weekly Mepudlican, Tae publish | an accomplice, who escaped, The girs screams at- Fequiring them to pay into the Stato Treasury, anau- | ors, Messra, Maleite & Held, were formerly city ei | (acted wevital of our clliens, who) after @ dvape: ally, a sum sufticlent to defray the expenses of tho | ‘tors and assistant-foremen of the New York Evening | Brunswic 3 aw Gavartinent to be eatablished, DD. ft Poet, Boned Amsoy. NJ 7_ 10 100g oe 9 ' —Tho Rov, J. F. W. Ware, a Unitarian clergys man of Boltimore, is of the opinion that Methodisan {9 to bo tho religion of the South, but Is to become “more broad in ite faith and charity.” Unitarians ism, he says, cannot be popular there, It will suc ceed in the Wost, but not in the South, where erceda and prejudices are inherited, —During the year 1867 no fewer than 17,544 French fishing boats, manned by 70,125 men, wera employed in fishing on the west coast of Frauce aud as far north as Newfoundland and Iceland, where the cod 1s principally found. ‘The cod fishery alone em ployed 445 Voats, all sont forth from tho French ports on the Channel, and manned by 11,593 Indl+ viduals, obert the Devil,” a sort of boul bur- lesque of Meycrbeer's opera, has just been brought ‘out at the new London theatre, the Galety. One of the scenes is the interior of Madame Tussaud's Chamber of Horrors; and at the witching time of night the wax figures, like the Abbess Helena aud her guilty companions, come to life sad cut all mam ner of antica, —When tho famous wine-growing estete of ‘Chiteau Lafitte wae vold last year to Baron Roth+ sehild, the late owners retained in their cellars the proceeds of nearly the entire vintages of 1866 and 1907, and, having pradently delayed the sale, they are now about to dispose of the whole by auction ja Bordeaux, The day Is not yet fixed, but whem it comes it will be an event in the chronicles of gourmets, = —A newspaper, called the Zichmond Head= Light, is published on board the steamer Richmond, one of the huge passenger palaces whlch ply betweem Louisville and New Orleans, It has two compos! tors and one editor, and is published six times du Ting each trip, or about three times aweek, It is intended to be a faithful expositor of river Ife, affording entertainment for the passengers, as well a8 an advertising medium for hotel proprietors aud morehants, Oliver Dyer is between 44 and 45 years of age, abont six foot high, falr complexion, light hairy inclining to gray, full beard, clear dark blue eye, with juiting eyebrow, Ho t# apt and genial in cou versation, very pronounced and fearless in his opinions, and has the quality of lonesty stamped upon every word and act, He is not a clergyman, but a lawyer, albeit he does sometimes presen, He is @ communieant of the Swedenborglan or Now Jerusw lem Church, —The largest library in Germany is that at Munich, consisting of 90,000 volumes, an increase of 100,000 in the last Afteen years, Next t9 that of Bere lip, 700,000 volumes, and others follow in this order: Dresden, 500,000; Stuttgart, 450,000; Vienna, 400 000; Darmstadt, 200,000, ‘The university Mbrariea are also immense, That of Gottingen numbers 400, 000 volumes; Jena, 900,000; Breslau, 380,000; Hele deloerg, 220,000; and there are thirteen other unle versity libraries baying opwards of 100,00) volumes. In addition to thero there are scores of city, cooly and private libraries, coutaining from 0,000 to 200, 00) volumes eacn, The Lavacca (Texas) Commercial, of January 6, says: “A welldressed gentleman, in stepping from the cars at Brenham recently, fell in such @ manner as to cause a contusion of the ekull, At tached to his name on his baggnge was a designation of * Assistant Surgeon United States Army,’ Every attention was paid the stranger due to his supposed rank, The injury oceasioned bis death, On the ine speotion of the contents of alorge chest bearing hie name, it was found to consist of every variety of burglarious materials, skeloton keys of every de scription, rope-ladders, acid, chloroform, files, de. He was probably the head centre of the noted clan now depredating in this State —A new method for seasoning green wood in @ very short time consists in bolling i: for come hours im water, and leaving it then to cool, by which the soluble substances are removed, It Is then bolle@ In an enormous solution of borax, by which the ime soluble albumen of the wood ts rendered sola ble and escapes from the pores, The wood is then placed in dry.ng chambers heated by steam, and allowed to remuin three days. Wood thus treated 18 more compact than it would be by tem years of ordinary exposure, it does not shrink oF warp, and {8 secure against decay; on account of ite Greater deusity it is more easily polished, and better fitted for articles of furniture and musical inatramente,

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