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AMUSEMENTS. incorporated by the United States, or any | Classes. Now the College itself offers the aa eeme RODEN. 7 . t this bill be. | strongest argument in favor of permitting them CENTRAL PARK GARDEN. 7th ay. between seth nnd | ONC of the States. Suppose that " fot) ata. —Garden Concerts, comes a law, which is by no meang certain, | ° 40 #0; for it ie hardly fair to require them to WALLACK'S—-Dor 4 Biack-Eyed Susan. Matinée | oven then the French Company would not be “competent’’ before entering the new course on Saterday, ‘ . of study, and atthe same time to debar them CLINPIC THFATHE-Miccory Diceore Dock. aati | acquire the ight which Mr, Frei hae | 0000" tril ike mime ie Saba tes at 14 o'cloon, Wednesdays and Raturdays, illegally undertaken to confer upon it. sieve — Hoe a ar aoe eeersexer of rare, | The truth in, that the French Government | Some hasty people repart that ANoY © venting The Police Spy has a policy in the subject of telegraph lines | Jowxsow ts hkely to be chosen United States BOUTH' THEATRE. Hi st between sand ehave | which, until it tx abandoned, will effectually | Senator from Tonnessoe, in the event of a Con- noch Arden, Matiuee Saturday y WAVERLEY THEATIC-Moon Charm, Local Mite, &e. | prevent anything like an equality between | fervative triumph at the next election, No GUANJ OPERA HOUSE rhe Chuld Stealer, Matinee | Frenchmen and Amoricans in the enterprise | (oubt Axor would be gtnd to get back to Wash- seur of laying telegraph eables between the two | Mmiton In that way, but his chances are not as SORE Tiying Men of the Att, Merry r oxe of G je . nwane of conveying mews and information | ebb ilk are allowed to be used freely, and without | We aro informed that wo understated yes ‘ ahs » | interference; but in France they are under | terday the ill/berality of the French Government The ase Sun. perpetunl Government supervision, By tho | toward the English and American Atlantic Tele- 10 Mince for AtL express term of the grant to the French | graph Companies, ‘The Director of Telegraphs t Ce age | Company, the other end of the cable about | did not pertoit Mr. Freun to station an agent ih WEDNESDAY, JULY $1. i809 lio bw Tanded at) Duxbury te to | the Government telegraph building in Paris, Our Shamefel Poreccnion of the _ | Tun into tho Government telegraph building | ‘0 876 Information to persons having mes sages to wend to this country, The ex- tont of the favor aecorded him was allow: him to open for this purpose, at the of mes: | expense of the companies he represented, an Cubaw at Brest, and the clerks of the Government Can Gen. Graxt be aware of the atroc) | telegraph department are to be the indispen- ties committed under color of fis authority | seble intermediaries for the delivery against the Cubans in this viein'iy? Moder. | Sages between the Company and those to in the Rue Sente, about a mile distant from ttion toward an enemy has never beon the | Whom the messages arc addressed, Can the Jovernment building, Even the privilege of practice of Spaniards; but it is an Ity to | agents of the French Company pr we with we them enlist the civil officers and military | any confidence that a similar condition would forees of the United States for the perpetra: | Not be exacted of an American company ? tion of their outrages ‘This, then, isthe state ofthe case, Congress There are in this city a number of young | Was asked for a certain privilege, and refused | (0% Cubans who caine here fugitives from Hava: | it. There is, however, a possibility that It | prnch Goverument telegraph cable shall be aa and other cities of the Cuban const, Not | might grant the privilege on certain con: | janded on our couat, and operated with perfect being able to make their way directly tothe | ditens. Mr. Frsit is hambugged into be- | freedom! Republican camps in the interior of theisland, | Heving that these conditions have been com: Rie Vier cha se yes Faas tha 1h they took refuge here until they could have | pled with, when they have not, and when, | > Th Wied im opportunity of joining the forces of | indeed, it is hardly possible that they should | 3") incomes ix to be collec Whe amit Cesrepesand Qresips, Many of them are | be. Thereupon, he undertakes to do what | inent passed in 1867 to the 119th section of the exceedingly poor, having bronght with them | Congress alone has the right to do! lew Needed sothing but the clothes they had on. But With how litle wisdom Is this country “Tout the tixes on incomes heroin imposed shall s R 2 § g ut by a yeas slegraph wire was denied, and all ived at it have to be transmitted by a messenger to the nearest branch telegraph sta- tion, under Government supervision, Yet, by iprocity (2), Mr. Fism is willing that a Revenue law as it now stan heir wealthier countrymen have provided | governed! be levied on the frat day of March, and be due and ; ” ne Payable on or before the thirtieth day of April, in iberally as duty to the cause of " ‘ My them srl fecha i beac er False Praise of Rich each year, nntil an luding the year eighteen ban- : . The habit of praising rich men becomes | “red and seventy, and no longer.” plied them with food, lodging, and ne | onesie with the prea, as chronic aw it in |. Uless, therefore, Congress extends the opern- ceseary clothing ; and, for the sake of ecom | ey ing, tion of this inquisitorial, oppressive, and, as we omy they have bestowed them in numbers believe, unconstitutional tax, its existence has wegether. One of the houses used for this nearly come to an end purpose is situated in West Hoboken. Some SRR PER forty young men lodge there. ‘Their provi xlons aro purchased in quantitics; they do their own cooking; they sleep upon straw, like soldiers in camp, each man uy plied with a single blanket. They are per. feetly quiet and orderly, and there is no more feason for attacking them than for attacking she same number of peaceful boarders at the Astor House The well-paid spies of the Spanish Consul had, however, learned of this little commu- aity of patriots, and the Consul at once brought to bear those all-powertul influ: sees by which he controls the action of gen: demen in office here whose names have not heretofore been associniod with oppression and outrage committed upon the weak and defencelcss. But since the creatures of Span- ish despotism have succeeded in perverting: she servants of the United States into gen- darmes of slavery and the slave trade, we are compelled to witness things which before seemed impossible, On Monday night Gen. Baniow, the United States Marshal of this district, left this eity about midnight. He was attended by thrve of his deputy marshals, and followed Recently Mr. A.'T. Stewart, a wealthy trader of this city, possessing, so far as we know, an unexceptionable character, and en- Lager boer triumphs in Massachusetts, A tirely reapeetable—just as respectable as | vast qnantity acizod by the constables from the other folks, aa respectable as the working | vauits of one Prarr, a celebrated vender of the women who inake the cloaks and eh |, las been solemnly returned by the which hoe sells—thie Mr, Srewant made a | authorities to its owner in an unconfiseated con- large purchase of Janda on the Hempstead | dition. ‘The cireumstance and its reason are set Plains He paid fifty-five dollars an acre for | @Fth by one of the pocts of Boston in the fol- lands worth two or three hundred dollars an | ins melodios strains | acre, and which ought to have bronght that tt | and'munroken sth price if the Hempstead people bad had sense spy enough to advertise them properly. Mr. Stewart made the investinent for profit, and asa speculation, ‘To make the matter | This is sound sense plain—probably to protect himself against | Poctty. The German vote is a big thing which any implied philanthropic claims—he pub- statesmen everywhere ought to bear con tantly lished w letter setting forth, in effoct, that he | mind. If the Republicans of New York were chide’ Gh fAAHIRAS ub Ghid ota Hut oaes! as wise in their generation ax the Republicans of But no sooner is the bargain completed inate the Aegis eget es than the New York Herald opens in a culo: | who tunds here into a member of the Democratic qistic wtrain upon Mr. Sruwany for his | party, aoe idtenthropy! Aud siuce that, pretty much | Whoeger may bo at fault wt Singg Sing— al the nowepapers have followed in the | povided thore is any fuult—wo do not believe it Herald's wake. in Mr. Huway C, Newaox, the Warden, He ap- Now Mr. Serivant's purchase of the | poars to us to be a man remarkably well fitte: Hempstead Plains is in itself just as praise- | for his situation, He ix a gentleman of prepos- worthy a8 a purchase of apples by the old | sessing manners—robust, active, bright, and woman who keeps an apple stand on the | wide awa! We should say he is a man cut out corner, ‘The object of both is to make | by nuta Just such a position as he oceuy money, and he is no more w saint on account | There hes seemed to be # general concerted of his purchase of land than sho is an angel oe on the managemont of tho prison lately st e notice that one of the principal keepers has on account of het purchase of apples. They 4 i P P ; uit whate cieney there may are both aspeculutors—traders—and in that | ying the subordinate officers, we donot be Fespect on a perfoct equality; though he } jieye there is any on the pert of Mr, Newson, does ® more extensive business than she —_ does, Tho special significance of the change of “Tt ts casicr for a camel to go through | Ministry just made by the Emperor Napounow is the eye of a ‘ile than for a rich man to | to be found in the fact that the change is a con- enter into the kingdom of heaven.” ‘Phere | cession to the demands of the French pox ; isn’t mach dispute about the authority of | Pressed in the late elections, for a more liberal there until they could return to Cuba, to} 1) Pues form of government than they hw fight for their country ; and that thoy were —_ - joy M. Rovnew living there, not at the expense of thy Cubar Spanish Strategy in New York. who, as one of bis most trusted counsellors, ho Junta, but at that of a benevoloat society If the Spadish authorities in Cuba were as | served the Emperor long and fuithfully, was organized for the purpose. Ie asked if they | successful in their canpaign against tho pa- | compelled to resiga, his extreme views in favor of ‘ fieasean ri . | Imperialism, as virtnally established by the coup practised military drill, and was told that | triots as the Spanish authorities here, t! Flin oh 1nkis ponedina lin tolally aah to boll they did, but that they were not aware that | would very soon put down tho revolution, A Hasouuie aiaiiley 'oomsientiea de any Iaw of the United States forbade it: ‘The incarceration of the Cuban adventurers | 1. 5 glish sodel, As the servant of an auto- Finally, after various questions, Gen, Ban | from Gardiner's Island in the ruined dun- | grat, M, Rover, who, it Low seeing that his proceeding was with- | geons of Fort Lafayette is a hard thing to | periatist than the Emperor N out any legal ground whatever, released | understand at first, Considered as an Amer- | was in his right pluce in the Inte Cubinet; but luis captives at Hoboken, whither he had | ican act, it is not merely gratuitous and | when the popular demand for change could no marched them between two files of marines, | cruel, it ig absurd and silly, But when we | longer be refused or postponed with safety to and they retarned to their house. They had | regard it as intended exclusively for effect in | bis master's dynasty, nothing was left for him endured an outrage for which there is no | Cuba, it becomes intelligible, and we can ap. | Put to retire. The present Cabinet, in whieh Justification, and which the law ought to | prociate the skill and taleut of our Spanish | # Fowcane ta Koguerre takes Rovuxn’s place 4 . feat ‘i as Minister of the Iutertor, may be described as punish severely; but, as the victims are | officials in having it done, a Coalition Mintetry, composed of moderate tm mises | noble tiqu ter 0 well as beautiful Om by a force of twenty-five marines, Reaching West Hoboken between 1 and 2 o'clock of Tuesday morning, they broke in the doors of the Cuban lodging house, and kidnapped the whole party. First, the Marshal endeavored to bribe one of the party by the offer of money to betray to him some imaginary deposit of arms. This base offer having been honorably refused, the Marshal demanded what they were doing all together in onc house, He was told that they were living hitherto en- 4 under the second Empi oflive said, is more im. "OLKON himself, foreigners and poor, it is probable that the | ‘Tho same is truo of the singular outrage | Doriaiste and representatives of the moderate authors of this wicked deed will escape un. | of Monday night at West Hoboken, The as | owooratic party. ‘The gain, however, is clearly harmed. sault by a company of United States soldiers | on the side of the Democrats, Rovusn’s enforced If President Grant has any justification | upon an unarmed house, the kidnapping of | resignation means defeat of the extremists for ordering or allowing the commission of | a body of unoflonding Cuban patriots, march. | of the political school to which he belongs, kuch wrongs as this which we have now de- | ing them for miles in the darkness between | while the presenco of men like Dover. tailed, he will do well to lay it before the | files of armed troops, all this seems like the | Gt and Bocaurau in the new Minstry must be public with as little delay as possible, ‘The | erazy performance of lunatics rather than « | "earted. as a Henslitniumip). Be ie ents Ancient persecution of fugitive slaves among | suber aud well considered enforcement of Fact tate psig a A us, their capture by United States Marshals, | any law, But when we remember the im. | en ese ins reconstructed Ministry, the and their return to bondage with all the | pression it can be made to produce in Cuba, | period not having yet arrived in France for its forms of law, are remembered with a disgust | we see that it is not only rational, but i the | Juin Bright, whoever be anay be, to take his and horror which this outrage against these | achievement of persons who are master | place in the Executive; but on the whole, the Cuban fugitives of freedom revives and in- | workmen at their trade, change from the régime in which Rovner was a tensifies anew. It is felt that our shame to- When theso facts are read in the offle'al | leading spint to the coalition Minstry, is a de- ay isas great and as shocking as was our | journals of Cuba, how great will be the ex. | cided onward move toward a state of things in shame then; and when we recall the antici: | ultation of the savage soldiory who defond | which popular government will be no longer the ARO TERT HOLDING VANDERBILT'S MORSE. —_—_—— A Prue Story from Wall Street—Hew © Boscia nies fan Ree om tone cam Mu mao the ‘Markee aed Keatiaze Fortunes for Himself or for Others. Ayoung man from an adjoining State, who has Fec@ntly been rescued from a score of hungry cred- Stora, and who still has acredit at his banker's of about $100,000, but who not long azo was tn ree THE SUN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1869, en duced circumstances and obliged to live Sm retire | ¢ the ment on Staten Island, 0 the fhahtonable hotels on Staten Island. He was ex. tremely down-bearted, This wae the teasym of his low epirite: About two years very handeone woman, on whom he fiirly donated, At that thine he had @25,000 in casn. Soon after the nuptial ceremony, Holt removed to thin city, and Hecame a Broker on Wall street, He wns too hone est to miceeed there, The bulls and beara gored and tore lim—fnaneially -art in Ieee than a twelve: month he had nota dotior leit, Divensted, he ree tired with as good agrace as possibie, leaving Ne cash to fulfil its misafon, With wite and child ne wert to the country, and Mnatly, ax before st ted, eettiod down in @ hotel on Stiten Isand. His wife ad some means, and gave It froviy for the sepport of the family. About two weeks ayo, Iite {n one hot afternoon, 9 feontleman drove np to tle hotel where Hoit was liv- ing, and gruMly asked whether there was a boy there Who wonld hold his horse, Twill * wetted dia hotel thy t, sin Mr. Holt, and he imal during the time consumed by the ciderly geutioman in obtainlug bis dinner. A few days later the same gentleman, driving the aaino horse, stopped ut the & ste}, and hunted for @ boy again to hold hia horse, No boy being present, Holt again volunteered. He Wield the horse antil the hostier eamo ty tako (he animal to the stw ble, and then retired within thie hotel to dress for din nor, Mra. Holt had a way of making her hnsand get himself up very respretubly at least once cach day, and that was for the dinner honr, Usnally te had been rather negligent of his costume, ant since hin financial fasco had reaily become seedy, When Mr. and Mrs, Holt enter d the hotel dinner that evening, Mra, Molt wae resplendent, Mer band was at least drowed in gontiemunly atylo AG an adjotning toile sat the elderly man whose horse My. Molt hal on two al ferent oecasions liad the plicsure of howd Ing. The eyes of the elderiy individual were ob kerved to dilate consi terably, [a fact, he stored at Mr. aud Mrs, Holt, But he said nothing at thot thine, After dinner, ht out Mr. jolt and bluntly naked bis natne, * Holt, str, at your #erview.* "And who do you think Tam? again asked the elderly personage. “Oh, you? You are ‘old’ Vanderbilt! Eknow you, and the horse t have held 14 Mountain Boy, aa aniinal any tan might be prond to draw ar fs Tnstend of taking uffence at the epithet Vanderbiit—for it was the Commodore Hike it, aad he made some Inquiries abont Holts Antecedents, took a fancy to him, and peremptorily m wor, he Koue ordered the young man top his appearance at nis on-town office on t suing forenoon at pre Ligh 1 ofeloek, Holt ised to obev, did #0, and had an interview cover an hour's duravon With the miliionure. Whats was) done or sald on that been able t Holt made bis re tiated atro stocks kno: dore Var derbi reawion no one hit ever arn, Bat a few days later poarines in Wall street and sve yin w certain Hoe of Hed by Coinmo the instructions andeatte 1 th Commodore, at he ele $190,000 in coah, which he deposited wits a prot nent banking } whose vauite are protected by burginr-oroor locas, and day ant nigat nen expressly see that no unantton ser tampers with thas sulecuards, —Ewo doo wand rail Uy iin sone money Now just take my nd toot in Wall str ot ava Stan it as Keep wo Van “ Young mm Tam glad’ to second tine. You are not suited for that staoxpher You would tue devil, Yon've got enou. What you have and be contented.” Holt now shuns Wall street as ho woult a pest lence — BPAIN'S RULEIN NE YORK A Charitable tituttou In New J The Ma Vanrmed Men. About 40 oF 50 of the Caban city, tho better avd more cheaply lara house, with ample grounds, on Union Hill, N J.,and were there quietly residing together as one family. Col, J. Mo Hernander had tha superin tendence of the community, and the howe ponses were borne muinly by weelthy Cubans In this city, ‘The residents of Union HU, West Habe ken, found no fault with the patriots, and there was no visible evidence thit they were engaged in any unlawful business, excopt that the; lived there in Lirze numbers. From tine to time, as on f mity, t nun exiles about this old ex and oF secured employment and lett the commu clr pices were Miled by others, and Ko the er has of not less cian 40, “A TRAIN-DAND CAPTAIN: BKE Was ite,” Between 12 and 1 o'clock yesterday morui shal Barlow with a nu of bep of % marines from the Navy Yar¢ ed, arrived in front of the pow: Ininates we Mar thes, and a body all heavily arm fal settlement. ‘The MLasteep, ‘The Marshal's troops #ur rounded the house and then forced in the door. 1 Valiant soldiers’ uproar had by this tine awakened the sloepers, and #ome of them, | was a on, escaped by Lexy rill from windows but the majority of tiem kept still, Col, Hernandez following solution he had married a card with | th ti | |? a | ow j th ju in w | brings to che ‘Tombs, he w \™ r rT t ' a-iloveetive because he had ds 4 the mighty | that he had pleked op some wreeked sailors, and a " eof gush at tue Fomis as the Court of Bpeckal Ses. | trom what he could take out we liad murdered ried ob peel acs pal mall alo reek aon) sof theeity of New York, instead of the Coart | every one on board, and then set fire to the ship, | Me water additional reputation, Is too ridiculous ta yeeval Sosione af the Heieo in ani ioc the elty | taken ta gold, and Tort her. When the doctor cane | reecive a moment's serious contradiction, ain connty of New York. ‘Tinie wits fi was Ws (0 be taken off, ard to ‘| ible bulk. Then n ticre bad been no write ‘day (Mon iay) We were —On the 14th of September next, the hun- rder entered of dadge Dowhn ng ont sore wud put into houses, Before L | dredth anniversary of the birthday of Baron vou live, hired a | action tor t 4 ti \¢ } try, convict, aeqnit Hizing what | ail. Shut ap ond clear appeared at the door, and asked what it all meant. | t Mr, Barlow reptied, “1H tell you by nad by GRANT'S DESPOTIC ORDERS, ‘The Colonel again as armed men were th The Marshal replied tha he had been iutormed that a ¢ fitting ont there, therefore tie up and to arres sured bim that they were « had no ti to break I Col, Hern) ’ oly 4 charitable soctety, nediate connection, present or fatare. comt; and furtherguore, as he was of New Jersey, he did not know byw Marshal of New. York interfered with bin men, Marshat Barlow answered this ntcrro, by showing the recount orders trou the Pres relation to Cuban filibustering, TUB ARMS THAT THE MARSIAL roUND. Two heavily armed Hes then toc Colonel Hornan-tea, white d others went up stairs and rec of all the Cubans found on the formality having been attended to, was told Co marshal his men ment officers \o Fort Lafayette reh was nade for urns, butt osm arta by placed i at Marshal : : that it has been in Frauce for the last pations whieh attended the Weginning of | the cause of foreign despotism, of slavery, | math that it bas been in Frauee for the Ja Gen. Grant's administration, the sense of | and of the slave trade; how great the dis # ee —_ thame becomes something akin to despair, couragement of the Republican soldiers in The Cincinnati Commercial says that the ry rH their mountain camps, Hon, Lovis Dayt, whom the Republicans of Mis- The Roorsiary of Giate Humbusnods. | “rise superscrviccablo agente of Spanish | easival have talked of runolog (or Governer be, ee the Pe rrpaverae We Ores Ler’ | farneliy amieng wt teed ot hope tint thoy: || cmuee ne }p ioe: Sreceett a. sais Mar Rg Sones wating retary of Btato, aud | on defeat the Cuban revolution by auch as. | Never a Rep Aly by ay the nation generally, on the immense con : of the D persuasion; and he hay a \ rT sistance to the dying tyranny for which they | © hy aia hia hone t cession made by the Froneo-Rebel Telograph Southern wife who produces in his bosom a great Company in return for the Secrctary’s prom. | bf ‘Tho utmost that they ean do is t0 | dogeoe of sympathy for the Nouth.” Very good, lobia a heii aaah Aly render the stragle more protracted and | jut docs this prove hat the Republicaus of Mis- NA een MEE | more bloody, In other wonls, by thelr acts | sigsippi should not run him for Governor? If Re- eee aeons) cnet th “y ipl ‘i here they simply slaughter a few thousand | pablicanisin will pay, there is no reason why we a cdi Uneminal Hie te rae more Cubans, and devastate more estates. | should not all turn Republicans, 2p pgiae deere Jigcronii keyepeareedall YT ae ©; but the bloodshed and a ; fused to permit them to do, because they have airy mea eld haat ranpties ot Ghnaetad An income tax payer in Pennsylvania re- desolation which attend it may be increased. +494 promised him that an American Company cently sent asum of movey to the United States ‘ ¥ 1 The Administration and thoso whom it | Selly * , i ; may in like manner : Treasury Department, saying that it was the bal- Fann thal nna ilesine, to do ae Te it | 8018 t0 do this inhuman and revolting work France, should ono desire to do so, false ret . ‘ : Pty | eige due from bin for bis wx, He had made a possi may also mako themselves detested by | ¢ of his income to the Assessor of his ee saa ay soos through #0 tran | As cricans as well as by Cubany, district, not because he wished to cheat the Gov- LT erie d scx aaa ernment, but because he did not choose to have Tho privilege which the French Company | phe new plan of University instruction at | the results of his yeur’s business advertised in has pretended to surrender, with such @ 8HOW | jiurvurd College is designed to supplement a | the newspapers of his village, There aro many of liberality, is not within its control. It | previous course of study there or elsewhere, and | just such people, conscientiously willing to pay is the French Government which has agreed | js not intended as a substitute for such education, | their just dues, but detesting the inquisitorial not to grant permission to other companies to | as was the old so-called University course at the | foutures of this odious branch of the revenue ser= fand their cables in France, and until that | same College. Those who enter upon it will not | vice; and the device here described would prob- Government consents to throw open ita coast | be candidates for degrees, strictly speaking; but | ably be largely imitated, were it not that the law our citizens are as much shut out as ever, ihe peanianian at the edie mesons es giving rise to it expires in another twelvemonth, i it anounced, will be for honors, os ‘The bill which Mz, Fisu, without authority, - a oan th the course is to be such a» Prang & Co,, of Boston, have made a further be yeaa Aad emt. Coneroee Bis next to require in the student the attainments of a | conte!bution to chromo thographic art, publi: sion, and of which he usurps the jon of six eh: college graduate before entering upon it, | %* i power of anticipating, expressly forbids the | Women Students ure to be admitted to this course, | “ar? entitled landing of any cable the other end of which | and will of necossity compete in the e eonnects with a country in which or by which | tion for honors. Women have never, however, | trap, which kill# the animal instantly, throws ite (9 Vea wvivilace is not acrarded to companies * been allowed to attend upon the regular college } body im the alr, and eats \teelf for anoths> wtakien, oerati } ———$——————— nina | A gentleman in this city has invented @ rat MAUSHAL BARLOW APTRE INFORMATIC 4 escort were journeyin, Hyetle, between two and. th ‘ng, the Marsual critically ete a Col, Heruandes in rox Weal Cuba Ind. Ho wanted to know whether armory in Third avenue, at Twelfth street: whethe Gen, Goleouria is enzogbd in any other Cuban ¢ prix; and Wether He Wol, Hernandes) is person all aequalnted with the General a al of Ww tmany more like questions wer auawered tn he Caben interest truuktully, TURNED ADRIFT, When the party had gone avout 24 miles tron their home the eniire party was halt Bulow proposed to release then on their own. am the Colonel's personal parole, ‘This the latter frat objected to, because uid party had comunitte no Overt deh, Dut some OF lis then, Ww tor tho bastile of the 3 the parol aud he did #0, 2RAL OF THE SPIRB, ‘The prisoners were theu warn: and aight and would be detected if the With @ few parting words they Were reicase OK IN WEST HOUSTON STREET, Some of Gen, Barlow's deputies maton derived: fr: 18h api cid, , went pedition # short time aso, intending to seize hty of a at . and sto tended for the Cul 'y ed a number of plac Isa West Houston #t and there ‘aria of rifles, an all of which they » ent stor man who ts supposed Wo own or eK , Wiieh, the: in volunteers, they the pr tion, and ode. and’ removed to 4 Govern on thi «l for what purpose the | & at purpose the | $0 eR ase ¥ expedition, but they hat come there tolive the Sure right the allowed to take any baw wl with the duntes And Muretal jt 1 5 nN Hy at ny hadno relish rows, urged hun to accept uot to embark in any “ait mas Loy were closely watched day acting on infor- an ex- y ‘The gentle. THE GREA sure non Wesnnaw a Supposed) Lone of Sixtysone Lives—Saftere —Fifteen hundred virls are advertised for af The Scene Vesterdny- Beware Special Sessions, to permit Mr, Jum of bir wudden acqnisition of a competency. The | to practise his profession unmotested in the Court | pany, 42; toul number of people on board @ and | —The widow of the late Ball Hughes, the gentloman—Holt by name—wae residing 1m one Of | over which Dowling presides wos resumed yesterday | seven ch morning before Jadge Cardozo, the alternoon, suioke wos seen iesuing out or the | MF* for bis aarmirors, ment arrived, every inch of space in the court room was occupied. We do not remember ever Ww seen auch a crowd present at any civil oF criminal trinl ever had in this city, not excepting even we great Forrest divorce case, Over four hundred mem- bers of the bar were present. ¥ and made themselves conspied up an inecesant biting of hie fingers, alternately re | Famidiy, Bo weent away and. defited counsel, Mr. Grabara, did not upon this oe end of the prevails, respee Ineust at perse beat the esse, He cite Sessiond was veourt of record. 118 pe Dowling Terghoand t the objects of hie ansious entre, witadrew them from | f was out of my mind; they ali said they thor never to forget that you are the son of y : er to forget thi your futher, | that court inte another, woteh only happens to be | should wo off. Alter we had had breaktast, ail tue ‘ ‘ i hetterevers ternate month, Mr. Graham quoted | provisions we hl leit Was asmall box of sardines, | th erandson of your grandrather, and the nephew of | the lows of 8, “54, andl "0 on sas ov tis hypothe» plenty of spotied bread, amd about one guiion of | your anele., | ais, bot forgot toa on those Of “65, provavly bes | water, —The great needle manufactory of CONSOLING TO YOUN@ LAWYERS “There was a Hight breeze, and w little after 19 ” “et or eanvicted criminal, it he had be cera is a slow | | | ter | such orien had been en A Noll hig aa howe eare e U poet dress commemorative ot the life and achicvements heditioren-€ In tue world, satecsettes} Voviaalabista of the great naturalist before the Boston Society of FET ead Or A tbe TILE PRESIDENLIAL FLELD, Natural History, The orator and the occasion are argu thst, Mr. SicCs, remy At any, was by an passat bela reciprocally worthy of one another. aca an sand u eaeren Way LUMCLONS, " i S, i came up and offered his hand. “Never!” replied gear ExOunl Ay behllPae a tn Chase, Prottent of the Darte | th? implacable brother-in-law. How! you refuse to yner of Justice Chase, President of the Dart. 3 ; tas late esdngroscns 44 aie Judes Dowilex; Rick ay Nedra ote esident your hand to mo,” said . Naty h ay Judy: wiin ys, inttyg ae pa) ma eliver the address at the Alumai Understand why you should not liketo speak ta Ai Tinsiss oF eevee nce your sister, who has made a bad mateh; but what prcctitaee'Tyoult aay, UAUEM® Prevent me from | ae Hun, Benjamin Franklin Wade's | rearons have you for bearing such a cradge against Judge Dowling; *you cane practiau here, that From the Hera'a. MeCleliat tion mroposed that iM siioulate to kecure luin courte ai) proceedings.” Mr. Gri edition was | | np! Late hours, danger, aud aturvetive, It must be woimewhat exeiung to ride | iy oto squine Hon, Moses I. Grinnell, been considering whether Tau jusutled in holding 4 SUIP BURNED AT SEA. T TARTAR CASE, aoe Serv re Tnhamanity. Sioux City, lows, March last the British ship Blue Jacket was | eats bonidlat i harmed. at sen while on her way tron New Zenlnnd Georgia papers complain of the depredation to Kngland, Ont of wiaty-nine perscue on boar, batho oP ahber ; only cieht ‘are known to lave been saved, The =A butting mateh is ‘ Skinncre—John Graham Muaking bis Kod | London Herald publisucs tuo folosing totter trom | or y neera toremment a tee ee Ot he featur Wig-The Tartar Let Loose—Somebody | one of the survivors, addressed to his mother. and nt in Tennessee, anne! dated at Hort Stanley, Falk} and Elants, Apri 23: —A correspoudent informs us that the fourth O hel alas The argument of the motion for a mandamus | passenrers, grove uD, twelve second caine and | Of SMF wil nem wceue on © Sunday tm 1580, Je compel Chief Justice Dowling, of the Court af | frven children, all young, and 9 sicwardem of the | | —Tho Trinoess Metternich recently paid « faloon aearngers there were six NOI D, Mecrettan | (9 uf the children were ut he breuts minnows |" maker's bill of $4000 for anw sesson in Parig, THE POWLING-M'CLELLAN WAR BEFORE JUDGE CARDOE - ren, On the 7th of Mureh we paved the | seutpror, h ived a i dok Falkland Tlands, On the ‘Toenday following, in jrstokernsbboet ee eee THE IMMENSR CROWD. fe hateh way. La about ten monucs’ time there | It iv said that under the new system of ox Long before the hour set down forh ing tho arga- Heh rece, i Reece tel very dete’ tote rates, trarting sleohol from garbage, » palatable articte of fan saw that i wis Kkaly to | Beer May be oNtained from ol boots, ing | prove serious, le told Me. Willims co aot the yacht Notel Petham in Bosto i fi provisioned, and ready fur golng aver the ham fh Boston, weighing 5,000 fen tne two Tie boats Wers ROL rexly fOr Ving wails nearly 100 fect high, is to be provisioned, It hapyaned to he a moved by iro rollers a distance of fourteen feet, os —It is calculated that the quantity of beer ans ng doi to exe ang lawyers were " 5 ‘ater. | Muaily produced in Kurone excoeds 1,900,00),000 gale hore In laree numbers. ‘The political opponents of times warn evet. We | lons, Havorli produecs mont im proportion to bag ve Hiastrious respondent aleo turned out en maseg | Sit Kept hurd at it until alittle after Y that nizhts t | popwation, and Raseta least, 18 by applauding Which tune the coais that were tn th fre curt tad phat ; i Ene fire, and in ton minutes aiter ie whow of | It is proposed to form an inkand & their approval of the foreewstic wae in a binze, prop nod State cut of tin (hers ise openly Eastern Oregon, Mano, and a rt of Woshingt Wwilun's speceh as handl i pai wshingtom ris of Mr, MeCleils ; Cast ADFT, Territory, and @ coumtwise State out of the rest ot Uige without loves, "Tho order was given to get the yacht over ‘he | Oregon and Wahincton Territory. JUDGE DOWLING AND THE SHYSTERS, pide, winch was doue with great risk of libs 94 | 16 Beotostanis of fohe Hove’ e iMustrious respondent was present through. | ther woes nasty sea running, but sie was got over TWHETS nioivetin ea dimanaatn coe WI! vate, Deiore jowerkng her fate the water wegot | Silesia intend to cee weeding. Ho sat atone ond of the table | the “women and elildren into her all rate, a4 eClotlin and his conasel, and kept | lowered her; alter which the remaining passengers ied by Mr, MeCloll got ih, the Are inthe meantime working aft ety je the five hundrovth annie versary of the birth of Huss om the 6th of daly a¢ Caaslan, when a new Reformed chareh will be opemad wot toe | in that town, stfell | A boy having complained to his futher that Till had thrown the Bible at him and hart him om od by a nervous geratching of tis head. His | snp. About an hour aitee we left the fore ow | over the mes half an hour aiterward te waln , Mlzzen followed its example, with a heavy aleustum of sitting pext his h ral estar a dintingutehed | ue Yeueel was then in ome nies of fm tho head, the fither replied: “ Well, yor are the if you would " hobo hcult betta only member of my fuimly on whom the Bible ever “There were fifteen of as in one boat; there “ewwton.”” at the other | were twenty-seven adults and seve peer! ie er hte room, somo tweaty feet away from bis | yacht, and the reat with Mr. —The century plant at Rochester draws many rned client. In the seats behind the learned iis Goat father, Wont ree lle i the bro wn dog | strangers to that city, some of whom have come J those wreat . jas in oar boat, Six days | purposely hundreds of miles to sce ft, It now en of New York | iter we left the anip we kill the misery of the Tombe— | wud ate the feb, Siz day ws the beautital pyramidal form of flowering, the t, For Peter departed frem this 1 k for Mr. Graham you found hi alge were #4 cank the blood ho have grown fat a it wie the cyme | Shaws E site me neen the horrors of «cast away crew, Ove | and will soon be in blossom, “Fowba Shysters’—very deeply Interested in AA OE Vos dow th , c o Med throngh drinkin salt “He ¢ failure of Me, MeCleilan's motion, and manifest. Wo managed ty keep tt trom bw during tie | ——" Here's your money, boy, and now tell me t euncern in the proceedings, It in a bat at night he would Ket it, ly was ous | Why your raseaily master wro! Vieath with them, Tt this motioa avoat cleven hours before he died. We | about thatcontemotible sum. “I'm sure, t able lawyers, no longer fearing any | baried the poor Ind as well aw we could 1 Pe re oatempiibie sam,” 'w Diasare, ar, Fean't vs will practiae their procession | circumstances. We read the burid sevice; yy but if you'll exeuse me, sir, T sort o° reckon ul the funily of saysters'” wilh then be dive | the dead at wea, bat w iad) wottung ty “lnk | "twas because seventeen didn't fetow I.” the four winds of the earth, him wth, Te was a painful task, but it was |, mad jap ator: eBiapatite oil of Gen We pee eo me oe “A little girl named Katie Pitt has received « DEWAKE OF T a . Premium in Platte counts, Mo., for commitung te cj ty i that bowt with more carnestness U Shortly after noon, everything vetng in readiness memory 13,057 versace of the Bible, At last acoounte ; lb of ve tab wth on be pt ne could se fr Graham arcee and consinned iis aregament in | staring usin the fac afer day no | i F oeivion to tho motion, Ha waid that ase proor of | vessel, Five days ater the boy diol we joes the by pestdihged boghdnalanimes tui ie Agha dla ea a eanxons solitude which bis distinguished client | exrventer And ® seaman, ‘Tho latter poor teiuw | Whether the can survive the 11,000 verse, cia for the poor itnoramua whom misforty ved from ucter debility und vid age. ‘The carpenter, ~ . 4 t call attention to a | Who was a fne tall than, over . died ae Oe ne ce aees eee eetew of the Pottee Court by | drinking walt water, ‘Two days after on Thacker’s Island. off Gloucester, which is opere res) pansene ion ont ee ht mal, rough “a ated by an Ericsson calorie engine, rotates through © beneficent | healthiest lookit in the boat, There were two ol he would not say one | others (the satlmaker and one seomun) ir Lena hye dig chineetnai tls We admkex cube ed ord wives. Next day hing in sight; we thought the seconds duration at intervals of fort; -three seconds, THE MIGHTY TRIDONAL AT THE ToMns, Pe nahin had i on ht ge, there \o breathe our leet, —A convention of American philologists will The eloquent barrister then shook his red wiz, | biscut that we had'to squeeze to get the salt water | DE held in Ponghkeopsie, beginning on the ath finger, aud went ki v vied A: W | out, and about iyo tabte poonfuls of water, L tor. | thet, and continuing several days. The names of or three thon. ot ty tell you that, about ten d. leaving the e rt of Boeetal | Ship our feet breatve so parnial with frost-oiter that | Rear All the leaders of education tn this country ers over mit. | we had to cut our boots vit, the pain Was ao exera- | 9PPEtt in the list of the committee on organization, emeanors were great, Ite powers over hal pad clating. For ay bart, Iwas inclined to drink sult | = —At the late ordination in Illinois of a son of © irrational order were saprome, unt udze | water to put ead to my lite, for what with the . ime sinee quarrelled with Henry | hunger, the thirst, and the paiu in my fect, Tucariy | ¢ Rev. Edward Beecher, D. D., the candidate wag ¢ latter geutleman feartng ernelty to | went mad; im fact, one afternoon fora few hours, | solemnly “charged” as follows: “I charge you the lives attr of Mfe eighteen letters ver the door le 41 po rs of t Heware af Tombs inne site of these sunple oid, They spoke for the Smt anthorition to alow that t o'clock one of the men shouted’ out, * Sail, ho! We | exPorted In the year 1968 no less tuan 941,000,000 of AIL OF Ke Mh ot our wevkness and pain, | #ewing needles, which were dispoxed of in various Phra | qc and bth er & bark Eee ine Cone parts of the eontinent of Europe, in North aud © were soon alongside of her, and were | gout, Amerion, and in Africa. side, for we Were. as heipioe we cliile me Hasiada worthy. to ito tell you tint wel dsavedihice | —A citizen of Philadelphia who used a weale raetion berore Itt # did not posses: from the auip, yaine, $10,000, Wied | sointion of carbolic acd as a Wash to neutralize the na power H would be axecat calamity, Any felo had gold he otto W inahttal r: a 1 i Liwyer be: | He put the teatewain in irons, and two scamen | Ofensive odor arising from u cancer, discovered that kar ta la! practien the law with im- J also, and chained them down-—inen that were not | the latter was entirely removed by the applications (erat keep un practtang until removed oy the | able to itt a pound weight, and weverul tines ne | py, stad ot cnetd " Fe eee eh vemoval waunl how probably | Citvatened to take tha bogtewain's life, We just | [8@ solution consisted of one-fourth of an ounce of ‘itceted before two or three montis, as that con- | got sufficient food to keep Us ally id that ‘was | acid diluted tn a quar: of water, nid custly coach a1, Well, there istinds were the ‘neurest place. | —The Albany Aryus hastens to inform the NOW Polk TROUNICALETINS, eM ! The Almlahty blesred ws se enptalitanc s'asaene | Public that “the silly story that a barrel of salt sue notice of motion in Mr. shore wad reported | is put into Corgress Spring, Saratoga, every s loarned mute uns ut, andl that Wo present eiream in favor of Hor contd arrived here ou Sunday. Lhe s opapers | cer be hud with bin went o1 ss. lene ducts wits the ad wad | yo ini mn wer T must tel you tial three more died on | Humboldt, Professor Agueslz is to deliver an ad= r would not hear Mr, Mev, bark, Ieaving eight Hh the wale, ¢ learned tueristor conctiied by. rewling. an. ely Tow the Campatun Ope bidet esa dt hae oacigea gd pia veka Hapa pra stores throughout fils Kingdom, the division of prov ictal allies hese ce en. Grant was first elected to the | nt. heing nine-tentue to the stockholders und one n rode, and Weigun to reply to his triumph was sv thoroughly con. inating sepetat toed ition advanced oy Mr, Grain Te iattory so | tenth to the Church, Go where you will, you dad urt of Speclul Keasione that even | these tor eeriain pu Iris pont ean imprison, und for no | two suecced! as inevitable, Yet now, rabies in’ ne Topiiion Grats Court ves oe | tne Nery sures were, of his adiainistrath Saeed eae Celie roe MT two paorn in New Kniland, eevocd by the Ci iicet of Juve Dowlinses verbal orders kee ta | Batt Commercial, have ts Mr. Bouts —Brighan Young has organized codperativa PEM ‘ourt of regarded bis regiectior ZION'S COUPEKATIVE MEKOANTILE ABBOCIA TION. Lar as Ge was concerned, icanswered the pure | President in i ih Roves betory iy the ee —X., @ man on whom fortune had not smiled, ntonded by Judge Dowling. At devurred ove #0 curly; and conident indeed mus Mr. Bout- . ee inteuied by duce Dowling, “At devurred him | ei ie ge ca the discontent with which the Htadicats | Married a rich heiress, Mise D., aguinet the will of de reaird the evrecy of the grext soldier, when he thus | her orother, a gentleman in high porition, Sinea SE NEE eh silowe his name to be urg din rivalry, his sister's marrige, D, wiil vot recognize either tha continued Mr. Met ian, “if T should ——— wife or the hasband, One day he met X., whe rehal Be ye Court of Sy tous to def ud a | Movements of the residential Candidates. “eT don't eure wae er Lhave or not,’ wontd say Opiutons, me, since T have made an excellent one 1" is in Washington, looking fresh —The international exhibition of rors eh i 1 these last words | and strong aver bis trip acrom the continent. He ix | at Munich will probably be opened at the close H 6, Hunde ring volee, rescmbilag Vory moca that Bot at bar wa ae with Mie remus wt sh NIN July, Almost ail countries will be represented in. ite of Judge, Dowlg, excited the ristuiity of eve election, He Uuuks it louks bau vor (he Radicals, ndy in tne roolly not eaccpting Judge Cardueo, | and Will have a dispiritlag elect upon the party in | Austria sends 27, Italy $96, Belgium 08, Paria 00 Toe respondent of course remained scnous, the Northern State: Holand 63, Switzerland and England 19 objects for is loud in praise of Boutwell's management | exnipition; while America, Sweden, Deninark, and ye doa yorfar | Russia each send several pictures, Phe proportion withdraw y mistakes it may make, | in which the various German towns have contributed nh that | du his section © ie ¢ wney ahd mt, the pouue is as follows: Munich 500, Berlin 215, DOssclaorf 96, Pours, | are greatiy poised iwelt's scheme tor the =n 0@ Weimar 14 ne Argo? | Porohise OF bonds, it liberates greenbacks | Stuttgart 10, Baden 6%, Dresden 06 Weimar 12, and ening at iy A. M, ope h Breslau 10, The catalogue will contain about 2508 ve got 300 of which will be statues and similar ives at vome time, an dis memes gh NY yrtuvaty to putin a wedge,” He Grant is hampered. with tie HURRAH FOR LAGER DIRE. he nrrality Haws, but he belicven tue Fresideut #yin- | A gong and a cheer for the lager bier, for thee With He patriots, and will 90 all A song for the nectar brown, SI i ‘Those Spanish fellows,” says Wade, * have got | Where joy-sprites bide in the sparkling tide, stern States horae-thioving is not an | no clams ypon ns, aud we ought not to eo oatof | or hd a Ke TP Ree want pursult; idea, It has just enough ot | OUF Way to serve tiem, “The posicy of ourt z ans deh ckiess dar.ng to make rt | Ment ts to syinpachize with, aud ae fur ax vo Let others pine for their rosy » Or whiskey’s flery cheer; nid every pec if vrai “tor uberty.” Mr, Hon’ that a cleMr Majority UF the pe yor fifty uules across country, and thea seul w | tH i reg htoay er ir vor Ohi ping Cate, and Belt retly eA bce? paella Aans GertepUliouay (ken Rae eatin a | Me things (he Acthinisirution ougit to take sume bola bane Prien vo wurrepuitiously taken fom stable with w | Gognte thus tne is aa ede anced ad ae new pound let it pass with the jingling glam rer one left i his place, Bat itis more exciting Wate thinks tee Mudieals will earry Oh} rousing cheer j ehended in the transaction, Out West | He will provavly make some speech Liachpayrey rene i and abduct eae ay He W de Wiike in und oul ol he Aurrah for the fr id tren to the end, imale; here they are only locked up at hard chee, WBIONS Ie uelte eet ith on ale OF Hie fn aoe tee they hang men for thus seduein 2 depend is quite voli, aud solme- labor for years, So it would seen that appropriat 9 Wie numerous pluce-Loiders aud | ‘They may honst of joys ‘mid the din and nolse Ren W Mr, MeClollan, w part of rt Of Spuctal Ses ¢ Dowling, he » ns Im 1utUTe 6 ben and ther an heClelian: AN PRISON 150 YEARS - ing m New Jersey Horse ‘Thiet into aware Pistol s Kired aud a Nose ing horses belonging to another man is a safer 4c meas das Of a corner-grocery bar, oar the Adantio van AL, Hor ti ove pk of th $ Political Gowsip. Whore the gaslights glare through the poisoned alr, Fas | MOuuennae Ab eael MICE avery. Bi Speaker Hitchman is to have Genet’s place in | _ Wan as a clouded star; famous Hohokus (some the , But the joy for me {s a garden free, Aha bora ous) 7 vat othusiastic Democratic paper in Pennsyl. | And the smile of a Fréulein dear, Risen Be | © uf amimualn | vale cal er" tie nobiest Work oF God.” | Where the bosom thrills and the soft eye fil for moa Maas horves | gq nue, drveman’e Journal regurds Gen, Hoseorany | With love and lager bier. cade BLN OF te Lagat followed | chniug the wenunaiion for Goveenur oft Dut a maiden's smile oft proves a wile tick, and constables—-came upon hin lase Saturday, | Charle , Cornell is after Tom Creamer’s seat in For the wreck of the hopeful Heart in Wilmington, Delaware, with a hurac and Wasoa | U at the Seventeenth Ward ( od bli, rrende Gan ek bee While the joys that mass in the foaming glass 4 he, don, Joseph Cooper has abandoned Stokes and Zi" beng Olver shota, Jerry | CoWe oul tor Senter, and, J. Roweb, nominated for | , Bat Brow with age more de » wilh powder and le {le Legislature a9 a Stokes mun, his declired for | Abd a0 foul eclipse shades the havpy ips urn Sent Hang, Duin D shot carried away part | Seabee From the kiss of the lager bier, H's. nome sud bs Was cunters Gov, Pease, of Texas, who favors t of the hose ty we ym tbe. a kxigings ta the count cunts Oe bin a rw 4 1 e hotel on Monday evening, Six horses of those ie | Davin vote ut love team cq tits and eotimutes the doin ln thats muy had etolen were recovered, Mister Jerry having #8 hau teu thousand, And with leaden looks o'er their dreary books veeie (eased hint bell eine: ante ince elle Vottaville Afiner's Journat says the Demo- | ‘Through the merry sunlight pore down tpon tim rather heavy, As it Was de@nitesy Leg Pe WuyIKi! apd Berks are grievoush; t disap- | But the sages true are the generous fow ascertained He tiad slwlen fite'n hortes, he way ac. | POuled: | ‘They wanted Hancoed, and. Pucks § tencod to ten ears! imprisonnien (or ‘each otlenes, | ouiinai ‘ Me kee wet blanket Ontuem, eet aun drink from the fountain clear, and thus the gentioman has 150 sears of prison lic eral Atwo of Mad. R ere trath resides and wisdom hides, Paterson who dou't believe him guilty. Will. a Honed by some of the Republican papers of tee fously await the termination of the erlminal’ ‘State as 4 probable candidate for Governor, ‘" | Is your spirit tried by an upstart pride? risonment, andy H he hives so long, Will » General Charles W. Dustan, rn son his i hin With Open arms On return, recently, of Staten Isiand, a resident, until | 2lanloe's sweet pledge deceived ? e1 4 lave the hi Noble wot ofthe Moet McDermott, Independent candidate for appl as an | OF friends by falsehood grieved? Geet oer, Na Yan Inaepend ale for Congress in the Fourth ‘Up withthe glass! the shadows pass NITED ATES PUBLIC STORE, ie ‘ow t 21 TwinitY PLACE, July 16, 1869, f Gtiaen and Round Table (Democratic) x Or rial 300 Stet | emoeratic Ime - u A fount of health, a mine of wealth, neel’s henaatoee ante of Pennsylvania ine Ot wor and stepped up ‘to the whip, hope the Hepuolcaas. taken off their | 19 glorious lager bie PunarvoRt once | Then nere Deaw Sin: Daring th past few days I have i y } . f , a ; a to the stream with the amber gleam premiacs, Mr. W. S. Bian, was not arrested, Pro | position in the Custom House when there are 60 ime, ‘To the king with the silver erowu-~ ceedings Were at once taken to have the goods con. why maimed soldiers, of honor olligence, ‘The Ohio Republican State Contral Commi To the sparkling mine of joy divine Gemned, 8 Libel axainat the propory basing horn ae ee Aecek whe cruld alt'my leo en "| held a nie repel bey I it tbe sareline wh orie filed in’ the Courts tor that purpose, Should thi arma be forfeited, the deyatiee whet dition the thanks of the Spanish authorities, SAPM ARRIVAL OP ANOTHER EXPRDITION, Barrimone, July i fe Lae wei- ure will, of course, receive ther moiety, and in ud~ A bark bas sailed hence with o the proses reepectiully, your obdt, servan: 24,000 stand of arms und 170,000 rounds. of 1s Bop ior Cubs, She kot of winhont ages “profess: to be loaded with hay, and reached hi . tite buccesatully. “tis urderstond tint acti ae, uo sal ia Ukaly to €4il soon similarly frelghted, eting in Colambas We plas of conducting the eamomign.?’A'nal | yyiieret to the lager brown t Since my limbs are ail whole, and my bealth good, | adopted I think T can make an honest living In some other | solution Was adopted 4 ‘While the toting ero: capacity; and 1 therefore most respectfully tender | Indiana touddrrad the people ge citer Morton of wd valee thelr leven erowte Tay resignation, to take eGbot sb the expiration of | time as he peed the people Of Cincinnati at such a. ‘To join im the lusty cheer, e1 Let othe errant? Texards, Very | Iitinoin this year elects no mombers of th ieee set iit HUGH F. McDERMOTT, Legislature, but delegates to the saatiitatlonal Con- reno iat omen nag pare oh Round let Ut pass with the jlugling glasm working “ha ir principles tnt the Cor Round with a rousing cheer ; Carl Shure has offered his services to the Re- | ventions aud. the temperaneo. party will vi Hurrah true (0 (he end, pubilean ‘state Kxccutive Commies for the Olio | contest the welection of delegaten' On pre ibliery pak aphid send en ! Ww. a, \ ‘\