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. _: r...,, -4 ; ~-_ at t TM.-..1aI * 1 Mme:~ ,tf ; b . hrw 'sue awsuau am. di h .wet ss .tlr II *#I F'Y;--- r tawM i.mmaaw, xO4. ,as3,6. 'p14.1 btmgnrlgaio c~ '.6-sec r6t rau sea. L& "mu~ .* z zar rb hss--, ml .V. b ul 1 w. N..-.,*rrr Pnwnm APOIt. egy . N ur Cowu MAPR ft baanrnr clrr d MN ll~l ncUZ w f. ~o-UUW w uAp t he. -ern t w M m h+r. ~o--pe -met at -1iI. - angL e Loom, ApI P, tuB. "WheemboataaM,m ye lab sha.dy bem In a- SMawenM esto . ii. a. l. toumie, mtheurefo euskt ld a l, aough anLmei wbhleaw beoe. the ie nutm" was adlpted, sa alhog . a good d Uuih-i mn atgIattheyate oswleg m l , abst vwm the lsemt•atel oatwe t emeb eam wae -m as g eelar a-heeI lm fs el e t eeiot mbL6 a e t•ld , I ananes easo w ew tawl er bn I thea1sw twata Nw table, Heerelve s twenty I AMel %06090, hamer ee r.Ne, al tn I ema ms A mlsUq m Iu a us, dr. an. Masl• l iJanela, he frthur be•otitea ,Umeop aWenIame .s m ah def.ed.l held a 4pa Ia.ho9.nes r as tam l..i .km. e pmlae i~slt 31 W.. usel eape them to vet. s en; RW il . NO.i.e aeml.tt. m me...a a. •t ia el * ; i u e sar .. he.ythat hi. . - '. 6600 thse eat aes, or they had sk W hithiusali hey val os so me over 1 ". h110 r ib W' ap a r e it3sel a d ow o u l d , umumateetht veol,)e ml that, wo, they a tEe e slseesseo* e mai eat •imr weuld aet e•Mtoy, teL woll some war sad hes theiri lam; a ( er . eetmmam. a.t.,m ut tmr" Mr Map, whh s•uspe• g e6ti. Uert seleleom, -,at .•lbdae]WiN aagI ats, a ewo•l '•ths fhinds, WILw -h Y b m-- l hiitISe.pl t , AIS mlae•aimekml axr. ipMia. M.....so hiae 1eua s stue sa se ylt, danhi, as t ots pee. wouem n .1 00 ametair, wm, wall stah- vtelrAue i ee wel hae (uas t(he Iae. have sisSe.) s ea• es b eeoe. lr. e tIlll'e . I beuo hUeai all that ov. robeg had i sa.U Mr. Mealy err ahoIay hi wthesaw his al Nit he d 1eel thL han im o It. d ta I sa.lmenaIthlfeb who wie I• har oft hi. with- hitUm•l Megg ie a whud t nat get the a.un fI y m noet wish to se him beaten- aus e thre'rned him to wtlraw (.mcl his ab aes teal) while a kiti had a meajotty. I•)n low bas telted gool lst eof ogry mad per pLh athea the ealel mldt b the town-o eoo saMe iu edeeklb hew neeat. mvetonwda omt hi ia l hvotLeettee, it bdtag neo tool that el emaog.a-ae that, a I eaite belt. Mr. ihI ggamgghemaeo tiweempnem, resety evey vote t btp paty. Le habean wUwahg Ir it teg eaegh adL lie megSh, ma bd had fteinds enough helpiag him, tumeR so tmaee the elty and "unoty, p josh. him Ie&aue asgee with the very astelel alelatneer he pad Op we hetrr b he did egt pta deoldedmajority m ldsilLo bud. Moha had a pest many thbtgs to eela.Magteilo yaLesteedy loo somewhat fatigued, sad, I *heeg a mIt Iledhnaten; mad his ant vote "(4y alghma) ahowed that he bad good eason to be. Del th pa sig he leaks qltIe rjavtnated and as mllegalhdapp as though i level htmealf sd all the weal aBet baeehes at the Legistare ah rd at work to. dlay eal gettlg theugh with a good delt busleera. Tne i k tnow, mat thaan wuIsareely be agta, any Im ppetam Sapp' be.bI the. Loadl so private bill will o"t ah their time, thai wrilbe reshd through waough aw sh tay or dlbel. Privatahe ma .r f aHL" an impeotaea. to moheab (on aecoust of theUir eolagatie) than say eytead t oralreads or any other pegeela at eantl Iupeowmata; cad It aseems to hi a sast f gapea neaeetndlag between the. that ali ame art of bil (pelvet out) shall get thregh a fot Y pgeulis. An the membega ma ensetooly tied cod aalnems h gel hame-where a good many of themn will S layp pad keg 0Ceom. Sham sr Orsenpos ' no. COmiacOLAL T AJUAtorox-armreax or ncicn- rUdWu-?B COOLLCTO3IE-APmPOINTEMENTS -UALtT•EOu AMD0B1O AILOAD-BTRRE AT TUB COAL n.as.-p I NMfrITUTIO, RTC. 4Mdem pesawedi *s easest. aLnu.o~, April 2, 1863. r LhJeek t eeting hu been on of usual Impotanee 1* thebgeeat f beheluo trsaeotteed in our eommerelal a.Les. Ihe total value of our Ireelgaexnortsfor the peal ab•ye bau aesehed 474.6-.n sost which has 0tMat n equaled here hr m y yjear past. The export ofbeedetan hoa bees large. cmprieag within a raction c 2000 bhYr•s of eour. The tobaeoo market has a s bee eute, the tospeetos amounting to a thousand begeades eat the expor to fli hosgbeade. ath. erec- t•l as dtaosloopatits were ade. The blour aspection B the week bowsam aggregate of ,7TD brras. In the pgroey ,arket a br bhualeo has been done. The ntroa of •a•se amo• t to 000 baes at study rate, with a tiffl •mre; the i•npahtlio• hre been 012S baop from Rio, •e•lt born lM e. Bougs have bas very qolet-no easot'em sas and se" fom store on smaL 8oek larg COtes bae .m dall, with a limita demead. The City Goomoil ad other Baltimore guests at the openin of the Gaston and Welte Railread returoed btea yestrday, nd are eLraremalt with peoas of the meutry, the people, Sat ot ea1y thing they seen and boasd The ocopletion of thi, road plae, Baltimore within tweaty or hue of Raleigh, the ecpital o f North h aeld a Uz.oroyura Thoas yetadq took poaereaoo of blo ool s Oottat; Se teteot of the boupgy aepattanta omla him le lathe sep aceasothop he tasked. it et:, he deobtad ubsihor the dtatuethaeoethe'"euabe'" ho hO ill pasaeptthtp awl the oommtton. Theea .44d to hoe esthoqosd sptilaaoto for poattlome to the OCkosmahoass so oetes of tea for .coh oloo to be *5.4 Oecitoat , the Isle whit tacumbeot, oSt out wukb tho po i tfethobtton of the public, so a faithfut .. a dems hegoa. toe absamaeof Tutheat oouty, baa been appoatod hooksed of Oltaclato of Ihe Tiasaory, Toaotod by asuw Thrseu. Jeuds Loend to peatttvsy neerrtat hohwan soaSa* th pool of ldtatts o the UOttefrtatea Tlteoeuq,bet ho dl eeuhimta Is dtshoae ehie dete il t gIaCJuep f She Osset OfAgmie. Jedge (Jestobta antheDMe of the alattaro. Otety Otlsoalt mq.toIItl qshe ra hhmeeeaese,. ilelOlllb h as o theW let s cad Ohio BaIt- r" w espltyu t dot. ot al the 005~e e btm, the emoopa heag meablo 1e. .altiece Ow bees koamehes wlst 3 a.S4 be th to#M ma poeltebte SOW e'hiemteoiltos 00eaestk to ttqa5. welkses the ethp as asa *m111 e keaseof doter. w~ 1.nb -dap at w w un prandba pa. e r3aehoe eor thenai im *weft bw L aimsaie 41Z C~~ am -- r Usesell i~ poaedas otiet ma h uet wwhospa mhg ar mg~ ;P~r S aoas~: SWrr~ t m- M t , 3 e•trsewe, Me its 1 Aaga g SI.-We less em - amunre, etts. is -a zallt stats at *e ttg sad bid fair . a hasy m,, the sidtleost pound planted this sleaso war- rtiing th esimate that the prodt this year wilt be double that of the last, or about 10,000 bate. The Tobacco, so far as tr•msplanted, looks well, particularly in Marion county. The Arrow Root which has been set out, looks well, and a considerable quantity will be manufao- tared the eaning season. Saw-mills are rapidly increasing on the St. Johns. There are now eighteen mills in the aeighborhood of Jacksonville, nd these are n- able to supply the demand for ragling sad other lumber. Emigra•on to east and Middle Florida is in- aoreslg rapidly and steadily. Many planters r who selested their land last autumn, and placed their force upon them, are now removing their omlles thither for permanent settlement. The health of the country will compare fvo- rably with that of any portion of the United I States. Tax nsea Dnarrs. -It is stated that the new Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Guthrie,in his determination that no political speculator shall Lske money oat of the Government, has put a stop to the operation of transfer drafts; no more transfers of public money are to be made through brokers and bankers, or other inan- cai favorites. The money is to be carried by government porters, in boxes and bags, and delivered wherever it may be wanted. Congress has never recognised the principle of the trans- fer drafts. They are not tolerated by law, but are directly contrary to it. Congress must, by law, provide at once for the protection of the publio msbey, and for the employment of ordi- nary machinery for transfer of funds. The NewYork Courier thinks the refusal of our Government to recognise the independence of Liberia-Great Britain, France, Prussia, Brssll and Belgium, ive monarchies, having all recognised it-will soon bWn to tell most mis- chievously upon all our•fse relations with Western Africa. The sei : " The Afriloan trade ng a very considerable item inthe transac- tions of the world. That tEngland alone amounts to about fire millions of dollars annu- ally. And it is Liberia, with its sea coast of seven hundred miles, and its convenient har- bors, its law and its liberty, its religion and its irvilisation-it is Liberia, we say, that chiefly controls this prosperons and growing commerce. STo recognise the independence of Liberia will be an act which will profit her much, and cost us nothing. It involves no necessity of opening formal diplomatic relatons with her by the mutual ehange of diplomatic repre•snta- tives. Our delleate position in this regard is no where better understood than by the Libe. rian government; and no government would be less likely to claim from us any form of Inter- national etiquette which would be repugnant to the feelings and habits of the the American people. Our country has no reason to be ashamed of Liberia." The New York Sun, of the 22d inst., publishes a note from a Professor of Chemistry in the Pennsytvania MedicalCollege, (Lawrence Reid,) showing what caused the sudden death of the five men in one of the cells in the city prison the oter 4-d.. Thr .une, It will no remembered, were in a state of intoxication at the time: " Having paid much attention to the subject of respiration, permit me to offer the following explanation of the cause of this lamentable oc- currence: "Alcoholic drinks are principally expired by the lungs, or burnt of by them in the shape of carboniO aid gas. If you collect the air from lunge of a person who has been drinking, you can easily extinguish a candle with it from its cause, and, on examining it, a larger quantity f earbonic acid will be found than under ordi- nary circumstances. S,'The five men being confined in the same cell surchutrged the place with the deadly gas, and hence tLe catastrophe. "The. unfeeling treatment of drunken people, shoving them into any hole, for the time, de- serves the severest reprehension." A DsAUPIN REnRED FROM B~SIsmss.-One event in the late advices from Europe has not excited the attention it seems to deserve. We allude to the retirement from public life of the predecessor, in the Dauphin line, of Rev. Eleascr XVII., the nearest lawful heir to the legitimate throne of France. And such a retirement! It is an omnious descent from the sublime to the ridiculous. A genuine Dauphin of France has entered the Dutch Army as a private soldier! Poor Prince ! Tas i a tougher experience than he, or Rev. Eleaser, or any other of his doubles ever underwent at the handspf Robepierre, Ma- rat, Simon, and the whole crew of the Revolu- tion. If the Royal Court, temporarily estabh lished here in partMus, cannot officially go into mourning on his account, we outside barbarians may at least drop a teast at his misfortune, and raise a passing monument to his perished gran- deur. IN. Y. Tribune. ' This is all very clover and amusing: the only drawback is, that the Tribung has got hold of the wrong man. The pretender, Naundorf. over whose Parisian career it makes merry, died in August, 1845, at Delft, in Holland, leaving two daughters and two sons. One of the latter may have entered the Dutch service for support, the profession of arms not being considerel derogs- tory, even to the sons of Kings. Ils father, if living, would be between sixty-five and seventy years of age. Rather an "old soldier," even for the Dutch Army. N. Y. Express. Cuasocs Lmls. CAss.-The NewYork evening Poest reports a case of libel in the Circuit Court of NewYork, before Judge Edmonds, the par- ties being Gilbert B. Spalding vs. Wm. A. Del- avan & Weasel, and T. B. Van Ordan, jr., vs. William A. lDelavan. There were two separate actions for publishing a defamatory libel on the characters of the plaintiffs, and it was agreed that the jury should decide on the two cases at once. The plaintiffs are circus proprietors, and at the time of the publication of the libelious matter, were absent from NewYork, and thede- fendant was at the time tn business at the Branch Hotel, in the Bowery, in that city. The libel in question had been printed on a broad sheet, and was transmitted to the defendant in a letter, and he for eyveral weeks exhibited it on the walls oMthe bar-room at the Branch Ho- tel, a house which is said to be the resort of persons well acquainted with the plaintiffs, and concerned in the cirous businesse The libel consisted of forty-seven verses of most wretched doggrel, and the second line had the names of the two plaintiffs in it, so that there was no dis- pute as to the meaning of the author. On the part of the defence, it was set up that defendant resilved the verses and stuck them up, ignorant that he was doing any harm to any body, much lees rendering himself liable to either a criminal or civil prosecution. The jury awarded the plainti ive hundred dollare In each ease, as their damages. jtLAJW-TessEZovus -The daily inereasing Sthe population is beginning to rmeact upon the labor market, and, almost for the first time li the annals of the working classes, the re a scroarcity of hands to till the soil form the stale oomplait of nearly all the Irih pro- vineialjemau. Already wages have advanced toea al hitherto andreempt of by the ias- eat y, and, in some instances, oSrs to triple end -w quadrple the ordinary rastes, have hIh dbea lwy he dma nd of tie lahbrere, o t a to remaa at hoa ad ive the the er di~L U m iii nlb i a a e* r+sy as• •e tl•e ed, uansad e. bondman a eater el t slavery 'I The lujr e Sla.n Law b ws Jleo del_•-e-- as" ~mabarbaroe, ernel, njat, ad wiekd." bAno rA a Ion MAKmo.-It has bem sarlonity contemplated i. theM NewYork Legn- latmr to make railroad bond a basIs for ban•- lg. No additional privilege to the business of fIre banking could more aesravate the evl con nequene ofthe great brea up that is sure to attend i tha this The busine of railroad makLing ertainly now af or near the higheet prudent point, with bonds at from seven to ten per ct. for loansm. With the additional credit that will follow making them a base for bank- ing, it will be ditnalt to estimate their increase or to measure the evil should a disastroue end be genegt on by too g reat extenslon. New York btanng, the Phldelphia Ledger ays, is now a perbfot powder riaasine, and as soon a the match is applied, will astonish the country by one of the moeet terrifo shooke that paper oredit has ever experienced. IOceMON nOonots IN Uaro.- rrnu ani rspo.r of the Ohio Secretary of State, on the condition of aomnmd schools for the pst year, we learn that the whole number of youths in the State, s 888,669. The entire number of pupils enrolled, sale and female, is 487,412. The average daily attendance during the year has been but 266,- 298. Thee are nearly 600,000 children who are entitled to attend these schools, but who do not. The difference between the number of pu- pile enrolled and the average attendance is a still more painfulone. Eitherparenteor teacb- ers are in fault when less than five-eighths of the scholars of all the schools in the State are present. It is a signi oant fact that the enroll- ed number of boys exoeeds that of the girls by more than 40,000. There are 9916 schools, with 12,464 teachers in the state; to the latter of whom $771,146 are paid as wages. One hun- dred and-seventy-one school houses have been built during the year at a cost of $61,887. Aca•raza RsvsNos.-thir Paris correspon- dent says that " the news from Vienna is, that the process now going on against Madame Mes- selanyl, a sister of Kcesuth, will terminate in a sentence of death." Fortunately, the lady in question is in Brussels, beyond the reach of the anointed butchers who rule over the Austrian people, and there is good reason to believe that she, with an elder sister and their children, will soon join a third sister, already established in the United States. Mainly through the efforte of one or two ladies in this city, a sum of money has been recently raised, sufficient to pay the passage of both these sisters of the gifted and heroio Hungarian exile, with their six children, under the reduced prices very kindly fixed by the Bremen Steam Navition Company and-the house of Grinnell, Minturn & Co. Madame Rutgay, the elder of the two, probably now in the Hermann. Madame Messelanyi, who is younger, and in delicate health, will oome later in the season by a London packet. Both are highly accomplished ladies, as remarkable for their genius and virtues as for the misfortunes which have fallen upon their house.. [Times. An exchange paper states that about nineteen years ago a Mr. Hait, of Wilton, in Fairfield county, Conn., then a remarkably good student in his collegiate course, was suddenly deprived of his reason and memory. Under these crcrum- stanoees, his father, Rev. Mr. Hait, sent him to Hartford, but fmding no relief, he sent him to Dr. Chaplain, of (ambridge, Massachusetts. The doctor said there was no present relief for him, but at the age of thirty-six or thirty-seven there would be a change; that the brain was too much expanded for the cranium, and there weould at that age be a contraction,which would enable it to act healthily. His anxious father and family sawtheir hope peremptorily deferred for nineteen years. That time has recently ex- pired, and, to their great joy, the prophecy is fulflled. The man began to inquire for his books, as if he had just laid them down. and resumed his mathematical studies where he left them. There was no trace on his mind of this long blank in his life, of any thing which had occurred in it, and I did not know that he was almost forty years of age. THE IRlIa ExoDUS.-A letter received in New York, dated Parsonstown, Ireland, March 26, says: "All Ireland is in motion. I left Dublin for this place eighteen days ago. On my route I met the people in gangs of 40 to 60, in all direc- tions, wending their way to the coast to emi- grate for America. The emigration is terrible. If it continues a few years longer at this rate, Old Ireland will be depopulated. Our beet farmers and mechanics, servants and ci-devant soldiers, and policemen out of employ, have all taken the ' emigration fever,' and are prepar- ing to emigrate. Our wonder here is how you find employ for all these people." The Huntsville Advocate, in commenting on some of the recent removals in North Alabama, says: " Our old friend, Sam Cruse, after 28 years hard service, is turned out to grass, and his crib is occupied by a gentleman heretofore classed with the secession wing of the party. ' Fare- well, a long farewell to all our greatness!' for we never more shall meet again to examine maps, books, etc. Good by, and let it be your boast in future, that during the Van Buren reign, out of 67 Receivers, all were defaulters except three, and you were one of the three!" THE LOST RECOvERED -The $1748 in gold drawn on a check which was lost a short time since, by Mr. Altemus, has been returned to the loser, less $400 which the finder of the check retained as a compensation for himself. The $20 gold pieces received from the Bank, were placed in a paste-board box, and dropped into the letter box st the Post-office, directed to Mr. Altemus. The clerks in the office suspected the contents of the package from its weight and appearance, and from the jingling of its con- tents, and hurried out after the depositor, but he was out of their reach before they could ob- tain sight of him. [Philadelphia Bulletin. A DEnUTANT.-Mies Annette Ince recently made her first appearance on any stage at the Walnut street Theatre, Philadelphia, in the verJ difficult character of the Countess, in Knowles's beautiful play of" Love." Her per- formance of the part was one of the most bril- liant triumphs ever achlbved by a novice. Her rendering of the character was natural, impul- sive and life-like, and elicited the most raptu- rous applause from an immense audience. Pos- sessing as she does, youth, beauty and talent, she will no doubt soon rise to an eminent posi- tion in the arduous profession she has selected. The Legislature of Delaware passed an act at its last session, prohibiting any non-resident debtor from beingarrested or held to bail in that State for any debt contracted beyond its limits. The act further provides, that if any non-resident debtor shall be arrested, upon ap- plication to any judge of the State, he shall be discharged, upon proving that he is a non-resi- dent, and that the debt was contracted beyond the limits of that State. A STRONo CAsT.-Lucretia Borgia was per- formed at New York with the cast embraoing the following persons: Meadames Alboni and Rose de Vries, Signors Salvi, Sangiovanni; Ben- eventano, Qulnto, Rosi, Zanini and Revere. Parts which bave hitjerto been consigned to mere chorus singers, have, in this instance, been undertaken by artists of considerable eolibre. MILFuARY CIANoI.-The military of NewYork are all adopting the same uniform, instead of each company appearing in a different dress. Entire regiments with the same uniform now parade in that city, which gives a look of solidity and strength, and is considered as tend- ing to greater dlBiency and discipline. The notorious Jack Stevens, who escaped from the jail ofPortsmouth, Va., whilst await- ing trial for robbang the Pertemouth Bank, and Was sulseqeMtly arrested ia Philadel a d tted hre s m st aeas e l t oG e sa ie el, b~3~,C U k~U" ug Psatrssmm' Psowaorrns moo.-A- quissdal .arspdet of the psetsh ar pepe the I. rtian will be made, after te a eary Sthat gsa Ib aittas tos )eto r l tan it______ers, dd eUl it beueo hae Down with scsqolie! " Dm54 Tr L.BfrrainsAK- 4 ,gr). evrn- teen years ol4.ps batn by a ralesuake on the lft instep. Two hours and a half after- wards, Dr. T. A. Atchison, who describe the case in the Southern Medical Jomnal, visited her, and found her sightless, with her fase swolla, and her mind.wandering. He placed her in a hot salt bath, andadministerod whisky and ammonia, until she had taken tbr e pints of the first, and eighty grains of the latter; no intonication followed, and she was oured. POLAND.-The shattered hfbric of Polish na- tionality has just sustained another shook from its arch-enemy the Czar. By an imperial ukase, just issued, all personclaiming to belong to the nobility of Poland are to send in the evidesce on which they base their pretensions, wh en those who shall be recognized as of noble blood, will be inoerporated into the Russian peerage, while those who fall to make good their clains, will be forbidden to assume noble titles. GIN.--The Boston Mail says, the best im- ported real Boheidam Gin, is now manufactured in town, at about a dollar a bucket, yet our toddy makers are talking of striking for ten r cents a cocktail; six cents without sugar, cheese, cod or crackers! Where is the pump? Teeoeu. Ion HUlTS-The great suceem which hae at- tended the eonetuctilon of tubularbridgee, has inducerd some of the British ship bhlders to take up again the question of ron masts. It is stated that tubular mats may be made ofIro, tronger and higher than thae of wood, end with the additldhal advantagethat they might .de down e into thetheher, telecope ihehion, while they would req•re neither shrouds nor stays, leaving room for braneng roundthe yardsto the outermost. A•loasro. -Pr. W. . Allen, a colored man. of McGtrawvl , N Y., was married in NewYork clty a few days ago, to Mie Mary E King, of Felto, N.Y., daughter of Rev. L ondon King, of ulotton. BuGeg,.--slsty-one Portgem Refnae from Tnil- dad reached St. Louis on a receat trip of the Lady Pike. They contemli-ated settling In the Interior of Illnoie. A block of W1yptlan greanIt for the Washingtoa Mo. nument, has beem brought from Alexander to Maermiese by a Trcenh hmoer. win. 8een, an e -polloe aaptatn In NewYork, has been committed to prison on eharge of larceny. Hon. Edward Bahm be b• n elected Presnet of the Mimonuri StateColonhlatlon Society. .The presentbanking eapital of the city of NewYork L about 42o000,o. Loctd Intollgece. I•iQuTrs.-A n lfaquest was held yesterday by Deputy Oeroaer Wi. 0. Tern on the body of Bernard Pitspatrisk, a native of Ireland, aged about 46 year• found dead on Girrees street, near Poydru. Verdict- D. Died of oonston of the brat, caused by a blow with the but-end o a hlekoey whiphandle, In the hands ofone DanielNolan, on the eventog of the tith Iust." Another inqoest was held by the Deputy Coronero the body of Anthoy Boner, a native of Baden,eged abo• Syeas, mad dead in a house on Port stre, Third Dl- triot. Verdiet-" Dled of a diseae of the hart." The deceasee was dreseinghimself at the time of his death, and while standing beftre a glae fqll down and ozpired. COAurrr HoSrrPIAL. - The following is the weekly report of this insetittlon for the week end-ng April 29: Admlilions 209; dthargese, 211; death. 17; number rematning, 152. GRaND JtUR FL'DINGS.--The Grand Jury empanneled in the First Dtstrle• O4urt, yesterday, found atrue bill of indiltment against Lsanlel MeClskey fre murder, in kUling John Yost, on the 20th Mareh last. Aleo against John Bel, for robbery, in having eanlted and robbed Solomon IH. Eldridge,of a pooket book con- telning money and valuable papres on the 7th of April, lnstant. Alo, ngelnot Mary Green. free womare of color, for con. oeoding and harboring a runaway save, onthe17th Maett And agalest - Burke. a keeper in the ParishPrison for an asault and battery on Solomon H.Eldridge,on the 7thof April lnst. AGNES ANDERSON, THE HOMICIDE. - Agne Anderon, the woman oharged with the murder of Wm 8. Taylor, on the night of Wednesday last, was yterdae brought before Reeorder Winter to be arrigoed. in answer to the afdavit which was read to her, eharg leg her with murder: ehe made a speech. She said that she did kill the man Taylor, and woulddo the rame thiej aglan if it wes to be done. He hbd, she ed deprived he of her innocence, and after getting tired of her had drivee her from hismother's home and dragged her to the esl- boone. He had used her badly-sald a brothel was goo enough for her, and wanted to get rid of her ; an u e ha killed him. le hadcried murder and she haderr d mr der. He had tred to get the koife away from her and sh. had got it away from him, and had killed him with it. Marh of her victim's blood were visible on parts of he drew.... She wasremanded for examination on Thurate CHARUE oF IIHOIrDE.--George Morgan, a free man of color,is under arrest in the Third District, on the charge of having stabbed and killedEdmund Wayne, another free man of color,on the 17th Instant, near the Convent, in the lowerpart of the Third District. ANOTHER HOMICIDE.-A man named David Nolan wasyesterday brought before the Recorder of the First District, toplead to the charge of having struck on the head with the butt of a whip, and killed, one Bernard Fitspatriek on the 26th instant. The affray ocourred on the Levee, near Poet 17. Fitspatrick was taken to the Charity Hospital, where he died on Thursday night. A potlnmorlee esmlniatlon was held on the body ofdeceased, oand it was found that he died from eoneueslon of the bran. Nolan ws remanded for examinationon Thurs- day next. KILLEDA NeGRo.-Lou i s Canfield and Peter Harrison, employed on board the steamboatBellaDonna, were yesterday brought before the Recorder, on the charge of hnving killed a negro man, slave of Lewis W. Lyons, in the Parihe of West Flocians, on the 19th instant. The weapon used was a stick of wood. The acnsed were ad- mitted to ball in the sum of $000 each. Arrivals at the Prlnotpal Hotels.-April 29. OT. CHARLYS..., WIlio. u.J r MsCa ,w P, R R Bnearw W bd,; 0 o 0teI.st, T J Mott. resP R Mouuford. Msa O RIke.. Tod, NIDY; A H . lopo, N d sD. ls, Alr. W JialieTW RO Dty N AO, PW.l h0, K W Wtt Alp Hcu L walie T Or WSith, Ohio. V RANDA....J W Ars'd ron OD T Raho, I s Hre't, Misi; Col Cas•, tno,, Me nosum, Me Sehidloe, Me rolle, Mm Col u J mes, ,obils; Chu Cae ol , Ky. ST. LUIe....A N Harrie, lad Vnd srsnt.A Ia; W Johnloae , Wil- t n,JW IJNewoll, JW PsroelttAis- HL Psuresll, T0Th0- hey,Y;L oyardl C fr~ ~isesptoe, re, PHecy,TUss, cITY....A Medlbeey, IaC Hepb. H H umaked, D Rirr, A aob- iasLoniu;t P, Miu; e NLh; I HGerds. CuCSeey7, hm CStubbs, on. ARCADS....T L Neu rtk G H Phillles W I Colemu Mir; Dot. y. J A Bavl,s, I l.ineort•. a W iHe C P cilghou A l FReot O A Clayhe a. C M Wnld.il, JW Hledly, J S eo,. W, rln, T J ws,h BFCh.mhelio. NOTICE.-The DAY and Nawrr POLICMEIE who wensr t-4 out onl..t wddn.. ry r Ip-0.1l)r lno It~l agel'ed a m. t ba bald THIS RVINLO. ,(Satrdy,. tblS l0 icl..) aI ldrbrL., a lb . URLKANOBALL- Y, OrlM.Oe. mos AAtwenu Rry.l .ad sBourbo. All .ab.n an nqemaUl toIa .Od. b--l of iporeeae 'l!I Iabl tiakod. apSO I CONSTABLE'S SALE. F'IUTJemna.'ea Cuull J. T. OSSIRINE..M MOULTCR. PII.. oO.*.Ia. I N o. IS,0S0. B)Y VIRTUE of a writ of Sari facisa to ma U dlaead bv lb. Hon. L.LU. Galai,. Fint JasA. tbaPu,. for lb. Y'ri.b oIilhl.aa tall sapoas t public sal, as SATURDAY Hay Ia, 10l3,t 19laclo a., m1 hourrbeaa No. rio Taoaspibnla ONE1-- wN WaIx VF i(0U HOLDA IINITURZ US' SaeLds t a b. ba,.al.w Tenms r.h. .PI3 03JOHN. nOpPa. Cnloabi.. S UND D-ES- . CODISI-Sl ~OlO ha..., IaL sa1s s9dIa,.5 b s7p R A.E 0 D. ackaes li., bd 1lb. ... HAVAN aOVEEad elsssnp . A-. LAI- u LARIID-LE MSa saD PSL IME oVM ban*ao~ls;puhn 830USD. ODIEta-llbbsad .W sN i. fsa .s har~r O LRDL O I IDL-W5 a TALLO-W CAN -F GmL oalol .on A. D. kaBnJ. N It. .54 Oid TA2. SUNDRIES- HHAVA(A (OfFRRca-ll bag. Irlu; SM SOOD5.dI Ma msaS peas S p d MSIsAnI WHAL'OIL .m MUGARCjikRD ba I-nh SEAT FOOT 051 ,; p PANE cr-.m w...1. ORISD aa. asm . OIL, OIL, OI- 10 n.RAR. A11 d0 OL 100 arrls ~w ... Ydpre rIM OM •"tWe a8ll thee s•ttm o our resder to .m O MA•5 r , •ab , I.--IT ,r m., THEPORW. AEDUUATOS Y. A. o . .axS. W t.h Am IA.. 11 lmW1e I• A •w e .U'.* Deeb., * NW.14 oxA. ustn. Tl TT0'S r L• kt ZME OF .. IHEL NATTA ABT L K WAHHAGRI AT OR TIs FILOT CA mMAN r RARmIONaNDNnRSH.--4EOONDEXFEDITWST LAT4RS1 MrmaWE.L'S TENYSrON'S AND OseLOWW PaOET ICA W WOES L ; OR TiE MAON T AN HISTORICAL NOVEOJKS, wqS0.t EN'hS STESle Sprsg asd ISummer CLOTHING. VERY EXTNBEIVE AUSORTMENT ! )mBWgRTmPIT or tHUAN Uw PSI ALFRED MUNWOO & GO., TH MNA HS 14 AN OAHIC NOVE ,rrU A A RoalASo.. oI..l oflb. I .iog g euekonJ rulm th ad 1•sw oery SINL MILLDCLOTH FROCAND SAC A P5CM DNA? DT Fr ROCK, DREAND AOACOATS ; COMMON ALPACA FROCK AND SC CWA O. SBLACK SI L r FROCK COAT. NEW ARTICL SBLCK SMMSAMAN G BSAC WA V; SINLE lMOGLE AND COLOTHRE ALPACA COATS WHITEHDUCK, FANCY DRILL ANDUINE T WAE; MANY OTnM NEW STYLES SMER WAV. PANTALOONS: BLACK FRENCH DRAP 'ETE pANTALmRON ; ENGIHW PARAMETFAA APACA PANDTAS ON S WHItE DRILL AND DUCK PANTALOANS ; ABOTDEC, AND CHDRINL CFANLAENOATSNG INDIA NANKIDN, S•ERUR AND FRO H COTTOI AGE LEN' P UNISHIN GDl oS Owse Pric for Grood so; WHITE AND FANCY LINAN ES Sre RICH EMBROIDERE.D MARSILLES VESTS. BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING, O ALFL KINDS. 8ILKW AND GINGHAM UMBREI..LLASo .. INDIA RUBBER CLOTHING, . OF EVERY DEIt PTION. Br AR h.vy WINTER CLOTHIENG seling d.etrm'iy low pr... ALFRED MUNROE & CO., .FSnpIW N. 4MS.i t-,:,.,lGAr CochIn-China 8 Shanghai Eggs FOR SALE. BE bd d ly., t FPIV DOLLABS PEI DOZEN, by plypg 4t N,.91 Comp.E PIII . If M.cp. d, tEbywl A. 4rMolpy p.nd M wt 6. .. y tof th - . a st Something .lwt I JUST OPENED AT SIMPSON'S, 116 CANAL STREET. gRA NEW STYLE OP SKIRTING !!! ! ItI . II,0% .owk., NMlM, ad .. bA. .Mbd wil.t s;J 3. IANd GA .fr I.. Or5r kull. pfl SpI Great Bargains .... I .... UMBROIDERIIE ANDOTHERFANCY GOODS. "P. & E. REILLY.& CO. S3" Wo.d Ial the.. Uni. oef t• L.Wp. to.. SPLENDID STOCK f hlb. f.lowb.g g•.d., r.e.evd p.r E•*i. City,.ll boght WS cutie t u1n.preeamted low pkrk : BLACK LACE MIANTILLAS, VELVET TRIMMING EMBROIDERED MUSLIN MANTILLI; 84 PLAIN BLACK LACE. POR MANTILLAS; BLACE VELVET RISONSl, FOR MANTILLAS; GAREGE ROSES. PLAID FLOUNCING ; ROSES, EMBROIDERED FLOUNCING ; BAYADERE ROIE, GRADUATED SATIN STRIPE ; LACE GRENADINE; bOLNE PAQUrrA l VALENCIENNE MOUSQUETAIRS COLLARS; lONlION MOUSQUKTAIRES COLLARS; KIM'D MUILIN MOUSQUETAIRES COLLARS CREPE MOUSQUETAIRRi COLLARS; MOURNING MOUBQUETAIRES COLLARS VALENCIENNE CHIIIBSETTF AND SLEEVES EMB'D LACK CIIEIISETERI AND SLEVKE ; LINEN CIIEMISKTTES AND SLEEVE•, EMG O SKIRTS AND ROBES; I EMB'D HANDKERCHIERS, NEW STYLE; SLACK CHILRT; BLACE GRENADINE; BLACK IIRNAM; IRACK TIUE OM BLACK OULAIRD; OR LACK CAATON CREPE. 5- BLLAC BAREGE; / ELACK ENGLISH CREPE; WHITE ENGLISH CREPE; I PRINTED LINEN CAMBRIC, POR DRERES; PRINTED REGATTAS FOP.R CILREN; SPLAID LINEN. POR CHILDREN; 1 64 IRISH UNEN. PROM I6 MA PIECE; 114 LINEN t SHEETINO FeOM 1 .1. PER YARD; .. conePRINEDnl andSt. Charles Ae*. .d. sp tRpm N.w OrUI... A -mpt S. trtme. m 16 PAPERJIANOINGS, FRENCOPAPERS AND BORDE•SR , UPIIOLBTERY GOODS. DP6Pyr hung and Upholstery IoCk e.euted. Spring a'Ed Summer Ulothing F. STRINGkER & CO., . HI CAMP T SAre mw evnI th lupprl o 8 SPRING M ND SUMMER CLOTHING. SAre W•te LIGHT WOOLKENGOpC d. Ca Ifors tAeMt, MRKINO, ALPPACA, LINENS. eR. t SAMe 8r.M.iEt S BILK, SAT1sTE MG. CAMBRIC CRAVATS. . LS TRAD4 COTTON HO. BILK, LIE TRA a COTTON GOVS HIL, MERINO. DCTTON UNDER GARMENTS. PTrDlFa,,t)rarsa oe Unlrv euera: P. & E. REILLY & CO., CORNEA E CANAL AND ROTAL B ST. S OMPLETM ASHORMMNNT O GOODS S. Ii E lrT Aer .lI,-n.B.A4 CRTAbINS (MA.. Suppmu or IMPORTED GoODS, whle1 th.p I. 3. SMAML QUANTITIES SRAW.by gIvOg A. p.BR..R AGNPENTRADAESORT. iFOREIGN AND DOMTICDEAERSA, C UO. 1 ROYAl TrEtim.., WIIES, MQUOR, OOBDIALS, *e. eSt. i w' s4wfr i wt r. ig .. R*AP," i" .mmd y Il b i a' g . .m a S ;..l MERINO, ALPACA, LINENS. ate. - q dBAreEw tl bE6.. .. L w j..atauiSqm aAI . mod ad b. b arua IllS lL.~*. CANAL. IFRNT, W bjutt ptd .la. Mte. 1 M g.. Ir~w aPai( M iMax BUMMVR DRY ROODS, InUNIOR To NONE it Ibkdy. S,.Iaw aa.y, M. .d .kq..p m...phiaghlahba,.. HOUSEHOLD, PLANTATION ANDo FANCY GOODS, OF THE LATT IMPORTATIONs. Ata0014qttthit'..aiWd aa h.a1, So. Good. w41 M Ias dhlly .he.w.th. lattat .Std at I,.daa cit., pa..d it pat. ,...,.. my tI idt.rc A I tb. qa.t tad .lyl. of IS. G.,d., .aaJtei. with It 1.5-. .5.1 /M W. madn. am . .aitI C. M. SIMPSON, US CANAL ITREET. tptl 45.41 T...' vEt. Day ansd Boardinsg Sch..l FOB YOUNG LADIES. GONIICOTND NY MNIX. D. DIMITRY. 1/' Thtt 'S .. f taa.a ... ao ,W A. aI.,...S MONDAY Naa-hw.gI "1.itrraE.p 5.G*la.,.r Adt book. of 0..,d..Mdi1.tFI.tyaat.dit. atAdauaaiblapid, .u .Il it W. phpa1W .I*n n N the mStaltmititgdl tacctal develop .. ,1r lb. ppU. Th.I.MlUI o bn Er.M 4.,.t.., w Ill. lnr r p t th. F,.. A I p.., by, itt1t,, a lb. Itaditit, TIVOU CIRCLE, DuINleks' .userlcan 1F'.fpha.4a HAMS. " TEN PIONNIR BRAND, ESTABLSHED IN Hal, AND FOR WHICH A PRIZE MEDAL WAS AWARDEID AT THE WORLD'S FAIR, OR LONDON INDUSTRIAL EOsION, IN 111a. F1' C.. be bd I. 1. ,tUy, tk.,aghaal Ithe . pata "at, M ta S.. N. MtALFIN * CO., No. to C.aoa datta, rd Na. ta I C. Mnd Row; HALL, EREID CO., taa..r ofC.CIltad Tabapltaalool tt..t 3. I. JOHNSTON A Co., aat at MaatMt .ad PaySn.a. WHITVOtt A LANIERN, ew., ofT*bhoplkaiaata PFaFa.o.it A. O. SOBERTI 0 co.,Fn myda..itetl; JOtIHN. WALLIS. 100 Mq..Ar t. I DUDLEY A NELSON .tto.wa. ta BC Ct.1.it; 0. hL BATL 00., II Com.. rd Carl wt-t; UIDAIJ.YOE A CO.,am..a, oa ttam .dTaohoaplitala.t tt; R.W. ADAM, n T.abptalu atattl; HOLMES A CLAUtGt Oatai..a. W; 3. M. JOHNSON & CO., Fa.t Ltvtt; JOHaN C. SHtANNONa SFall. aata W. S. WRIGHT A W00.11 Tthatpb.ita.atla.a CONVESSE A 0t..aa, , Ldyhtte ad T.Nq~itau~;In.a ; aDtit t a. tb FIRST to atblitktbt tatit.,a Wet.It Ham,, .adh., tphatlly ti. WESTERN FIONEER Ialb. Aaaaaa. It.. ,.re} lpvr+bo y ood-ol*LW. tm" (L1.draU l~ rtt. CSte' Cad Ab, mi. by CHARLES DCFFIELDCO., Laaitadt, Ky. ta.la/tp MIATIN. OWEN N CO...Ortttl Attatt. 0 Joseh H arry, a WHOLESALE AND RSTAIL DUALER FINE WATCHES, JEWELRY, RICH FANCY AND STAPLE GOODS, NO. 20 CAMP STREET, UNDER CITY HOTEL, d ld.,r Ih. It. CuI. Holol, SI. CtAIH IGt, I.,A.n l. VERY LtARO STOCK OIGOODS. wbkih b IM.lllv SHELL COMBS, IMITATION IIELI AND RUIALW) OMBI, , ,,e'y7 47L- -i JL•1U i OF EVERY DIIUCRIPTSIDN, a( hloWn mobler, ud TOILET ARTICLEB, WATI LMRY R OCHR , H HAIRINS OMATUM, AN- I COLTS Od WARNER'S YVOLTINI COIL IIR ZS, LIFE FpREl . FRLHIIW SAl" TC .Lg e•e ery pl eUy, t h eW mn at yldlom. WATCHES, JEWELRY, Etc. TIOIr Rt A BO I, plut T BR..I T. T. C.o•p, ,. J. T1t d . Jh.1.. momm nu., wri6 M,. ra .at of SwUB .s EN•iLSH LLEYRr,1.1,,,rilth . .t.a orB.. ASn JnWELR IY ILII.a W 1J6"t<., b RG( uE eni.ed with FU, li .Logn(;lo..b...lny .. ldlrhwrb ."tu lO< Th at MALL T rlp*a ND ST SntL Spit WTHMJEWaLI,.., CAREYOLLY RAPAIRD .d RA. RNTED. " R TE I Truu- Alrt.--ShIrte. NORRIS & WAY, (CLOTIIIEDS,) CORNER CAMP AND COMMON STREETS, Unler t. City fglo:I. UrH uAnr e itoe aIlglstd complete i.k of LINRN4•ND COTTONT SHIRTB, .urgo l fly Ib, L.ir•t f EVEIRY THING NEW AND I•N. tABI.8 thy U .1 .iiu Ihmolhoul th tb. Yn•o. th-u .Y.1l ig.n4 .. I1 iU STOCK..hli+ eLWy oLr fm me on mbW mwt REASONABLE TERMSY . mbS Bp cew Goods. TIIOMPSON & NIXON, NO. 1't CAMPSTIREET, opIrSte te (",y l otl. tI An ur .. rce.lpo f . LARGE .ad S LIEIOR SIO :K ef SU.M• hER C LOT HIX FURNISHINII I N AODS. OF ALL THE NEWEST AND, NLST SrYLE. Th. ath.llto of pnrtrls i rlllly ImlJ.. p r o pta IOLUSKIN iATS, CASSI IEREHATS, PEARL AND GREY MATELOT IHATS, SENNAT BRAID HATS, LADIES' R[IING HATS, CIdLORKN'S FANCYIhATS, D. W. & 1. BELDEN. Boots, Shoes and R grogans, MEXICAN, PALM LIAP,BTRAW .. d CAMPEACIIY HATBS, A I. I. .I mrIIIIt pricel, by I1 Syll D.*W F.OST A CO, 10 II.,n. tG.•J. m ats, C'ape, etc. ATWHOLEbSALI 'O,.CA,.dr.d H, IIATS. GAmpr iisEg EEI*IStI•I) ILK.,UR,CAPSIMIREI.MIXICAN.WOOL.BTRAW.PAIAILE/ F IEdCAMPEACHY HATS. fA.rll by 1718 . ... w "%T . CO. 1D El...I, .- t STRAW, LEOHORN AND BAID,- amot extesive r-ortlpnt om GENTLEMAN, BOYS AND CHILDREN, Et D. W. A F. DELDEN'S,. ape f,lumtf _ (Ch.nr•. ,treet. SThe Plrst In Fashlion. m SPRING STYLE, 185368, SFOR BALE AT D'A RCY'S, dof .,L.9Ptt___ __~___-__- erCIIutm~ r~na1.4. Cheap Clothing Store, NO. 8 CHARTRES HT., NEW ORLEANS. MEN'S, YOUTHS' AND BOYB' CLOT IIN0, GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS OF EVERY VARIETY: TRUNEM CAR•ET BAGS, VAUCES, et. .,I r.,.Sdptf J. P. MDONNOLD. WILLINI STUAST. .JceDonnold U Stuart, _8 . .A...E............ 18 Ae M TREET,- 18 "he pleu - in elall ug thesttauti of their friend nd theput is to t, r wLL urtod ,sck of BOOTS, SHOES HATS and CAPS, alM elN y fto the ~ wth l trale, hieh theywillu ellat SThe HAT DEPARTMENT L unRder the iedIate charge of Maro. .II IKELL, (for moy yearsegaged inthe Hlit buIin•u asNo. 1 Chrtretreet.) Mr. H.wold be plesed to le hisfsn land old ptrons.at No IS CpatrIIetI. MODONNOLD A STUART, oIs .,p . it f Slatter'l tow, Iodr City Hotel. Curb Stone. A A full supply ofCUR ISTONEII eotatly on band a.Id for Ealh Ly JOHN PURCNELL, ep No. 19 Jaksn t.eet, Fourth DIItrit. B. F. Smith, DENTIST, E14 ST . CHARLES R TRlLT EllS dw. C r o. f I fR.etteS ,are. Charles E. Kells, From NIw York,) DE N T"I ST, 106 Cl .Md om houroh at. N. O. SARTIFINCIAL TEETH ised int he bet wAoA K BAUTY, TrITY AND COMIORR THE W IAREtR, fadaame Lewis. Ur YRI..I.Sl.EEd PHILOSOPHER, ASTROLIOIST ad pjjy SIOaNOMIT 4 own.r , tI EIGYPTIAN ORACLES OF PATE, rrea.poUCI~ Isr the Ldie and Oemtlemen of N e wOrleIU, that il hSe moved fom her A.d,- an bi•Rin. to No. S61 CAMP TPltELT, Mtwl Inllt •ta-d Edwrd nr,, whe. s,e M be an- -T Ud_-.id 1,ar i •ouo the PAST, PR•ESEN, AND ( TGAR, MIXICAN AND PLANTATION AO.-Te . Ira EA y n, o Iy nd and roi..le. UI l t CUBA, H FAALORIUA MAP.SN ,,d F, "ES. AIE 11OSACCO III HOGSHSEALDS. sdAL, s.. YR T E & RENSHAW, BANKINGG HOUSE, 61 Camp street. m3a00, ST. LOEui, NIW YORK, LOUISVILLE, IPR DKLPULPIA, CINCINNATI, NALTIZORK, NASMY'.LS,
1

~o-UUW ~o--pe sale · 2017-12-15 · pa. e r3aehoe w un eor w prandbathenai im *weft bw L aimsaie 41Z C~~ am Usesell -- r i~ poaedas otiet ma h uet wwhospa mhg ar mg~;P~r S aoas~:

May 29, 2020

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Page 1: ~o-UUW ~o--pe sale · 2017-12-15 · pa. e r3aehoe w un eor w prandbathenai im *weft bw L aimsaie 41Z C~~ am Usesell -- r i~ poaedas otiet ma h uet wwhospa mhg ar mg~;P~r S aoas~:

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el emaog.a-ae that, a I eaite belt. Mr.ihI ggamgghemaeo tiweempnem, resety evey votet btp paty. Le habean wUwahg Ir it teg eaegh adL

lie megSh, ma bd had fteinds enough helpiag him,tumeR so tmaee the elty and "unoty, p josh. himIe&aue asgee with the very astelel alelatneer he

pad Op we hetrr b he did egt pta deolded majoritym ldsilLo bud. Mo ha had a pest many thbtgs toeela.Magteilo yaLesteedy loo somewhat fatigued,sad, I *heeg a mIt Iledhnaten; mad his ant vote"(4y alghma) ahowed that he bad good eason to be.Del th pa sig he leaks qltIe rjavtnated and asmllegalhdapp as though i level htmealf sd all theweal

aBet baeehes at the Legistare ah rd at work to.

dlay eal gettlg theugh with a good delt busleera.Tne i k tnow, mat thaan wuIsareely be agta, any Im

ppetam Sapp' be.bI the. Loadl so private bill willo"t ah their time, thai wril be reshd throughwaough aw sh tay or dlbel. Privatahe ma .r faHL" an impeotaea. to moheab (on aecoust of theUireolagatie) than say eytead t oralreads or any otherpegeela at eantl Iupeowmata; cad It aseems to hi a

sast f gapea neaeetndlag between the. that aliame art of bil (pelvet out) shall get thregh a fot

Y pgeulis. An the membega ma ensetooly tied cod

aalnems h gel hame-where a good many of themn willS layp pad keg 0Ceom.

Sham sr Orsenpos ' no.COmiacOLAL T AJUAtorox-armreax or ncicn-

rUdWu-?B COOLLCTO3IE-APmPOINTEMENTS-UALtT•EOu AMD 0B1O AILOAD-BTRRE ATTUB COAL n.as.-p I NMfrITUTIO, RTC.

4Mdem pesawedi *s easest.aLnu.o~, April 2, 1863.

r LhJeek t eeting hu been on of usual Impotanee1* thebgeeat f beheluo trsaeotteed in our eommerelal

a.Les. Ihe total value of our Ireelgaexnortsfor thepeal ab•ye bau aesehed 474.6-.n sost which has

0tMat n equaled here hr m y yjear past. The exportofbeedetan hoa bees large. cmprieag within a raction

c 2000 bhYr•s of eour. The tobaeoo market has a sbee eute, the tospeetos amounting to a thousandbegeades eat the expor to fli hosgbeade. ath. erec-t•l as dtaosloopatits were ade. The blour aspectionB the week bows am aggregate of ,7TD brras. In thepgroey ,arket a br bhualeo has been done. The ntroaof •a•se amo• t to 000 baes at study rate, with a tiffl

•mre; the i•npahtlio• hre been 012S baop from Rio,•e•lt born lM e. Bougs have bas very qolet-no

easot'em sas and se" fom store on smaL 8oek largCOtes bae .m dall, with a limita demead.

The City Goomoil ad other Baltimore guests at theopenin of the Gaston and Welte Railread returoedbtea yestrday, nd are eLraremalt with peoas of the

meutry, the people, Sat ot ea1y thing they seen andboasd The ocopletion of thi, road plae, Baltimorewithin tweaty • or hue of Raleigh, the ecpital o

f North

h aeld aUz.oroyura Thoas yetadq took poaereaoo of blo

ool s Oottat; Se teteot of the boupgy aepattantaomla him le lathe sep aceasothop he tasked. itet:, he deobtad ubsihor the dtatuethaeoethe'"euabe'"ho hO ill pasaeptthtp awl the oommtton. Theea.44d to hoe esthoqosd sptilaaoto for poattlome to theOCkosmahoass so oetes of tea for .coh oloo to be*5.4 Oecitoat , the Isle whit tacumbeot, oSt outwukb tho po i tfethobtton of the public, so a faithfut.. a dems hegoa.

toe absamaeof Tutheat oouty, baa been appoatodhooksed of Oltaclato of Ihe Tiasaory, Toaotod by

asuw Thrseu. Jeuds Loend to peatttvsy neerrtathohwan soaSa* th pool of ldtatts o the UOttefrtateaTlteoeuq, bet ho dl eeuhimta Is dtshoae ehie deteil t gIaCJuep f She Osset OfAgmie. Jedge (Jestobta

anthe DMe of the alattaro. Otety Otlsoaltmq.toIItl qshe ra hhmeeeaese,.

ilelOlllb h as o theW let s cad Ohio BaIt-r" w espltyu t dot. ot al the

005~e e btm, the emoopa heag meablo1e. .altiece Ow bees koamehes wlst

3 a.S4 be th to#M ma poeltebteSOW e'hiemteoiltos 00eaestk tottqa5. welkses the ethp as asa

*m111 e keaseof doter. w~

1.nb -dap at w w un prandbapa. e r3aehoe eor thenai

im *weft bw Laimsaie

41Z C~~ am -- r Usesell i~poaedas otiet ma h uet

wwhospa mhgar mg~

;P~r S aoas~:SWrr~

t m- M t , 3 e•trsewe,Me its

1 Aaga g SI.-We less em -

amunre, etts. is -a zallt statsat *e ttg sad bid fair . a hasy m,,the sidtleost pound planted this sleaso war-

rtiing th esimate that the prodt this yearwilt be double that of the last, or about 10,000bate. The Tobacco, so far as tr•msplanted,looks well, particularly in Marion county. TheArrow Root which has been set out, looks well,and a considerable quantity will be manufao-tared the eaning season.

Saw-mills are rapidly increasing on the St.Johns. There are now eighteen mills in theaeighborhood of Jacksonville, nd these are n-able to supply the demand for ragling sad otherlumber.

Emigra•on to east and Middle Florida is in-aoreslg rapidly and steadily. Many plantersr who selested their land last autumn, and placed

their force upon them, are now removing theiromlles thither for permanent settlement.

The health of the country will compare fvo-rably with that of any portion of the UnitedI States.

Tax nsea Dnarrs. -It is stated that the newSecretary of the Treasury, Mr. Guthrie,in hisdetermination that no political speculator shallLske money oat of the Government, has put astop to the operation of transfer drafts; nomore transfers of public money are to be madethrough brokers and bankers, or other inan-cai favorites. The money is to be carried bygovernment porters, in boxes and bags, anddelivered wherever it may be wanted. Congresshas never recognised the principle of the trans-fer drafts. They are not tolerated by law, butare directly contrary to it. Congress must, bylaw, provide at once for the protection of thepublio msbey, and for the employment of ordi-nary machinery for transfer of funds.

The NewYork Courier thinks the refusal ofour Government to recognise the independenceof Liberia-Great Britain, France, Prussia,Brssll and Belgium, ive monarchies, having allrecognised it-will soon bWn to tell most mis-chievously upon all our•fse relations withWestern Africa. The sei :

" The Afriloan trade ng a veryconsiderable item inthe transac-tions of the world. That tEngland aloneamounts to about fire millions of dollars annu-ally. And it is Liberia, with its sea coast ofseven hundred miles, and its convenient har-bors, its law and its liberty, its religion and itsirvilisation-it is Liberia, we say, that chiefly

controls this prosperons and growing commerce.

STo recognise the independence of Liberiawill be an act which will profit her much, andcost us nothing. It involves no necessity ofopening formal diplomatic relatons with her bythe mutual ehange of diplomatic repre•snta-tives. Our delleate position in this regard isno where better understood than by the Libe.rian government; and no government would beless likely to claim from us any form of Inter-national etiquette which would be repugnant tothe feelings and habits of the the Americanpeople. Our country has no reason to beashamed of Liberia."

The New York Sun, of the 22d inst., publishesa note from a Professor of Chemistry in thePennsytvania MedicalCollege, (Lawrence Reid,)showing what caused the sudden death of thefive men in one of the cells in the city prison theoter 4-d.. Thr .une, It will no remembered,were in a state of intoxication at the time:

" Having paid much attention to the subjectof respiration, permit me to offer the followingexplanation of the cause of this lamentable oc-currence:

"Alcoholic drinks are principally expired bythe lungs, or burnt of by them in the shape ofcarboniO aid gas. If you collect the air fromlunge of a person who has been drinking, youcan easily extinguish a candle with it from itscause, and, on examining it, a larger quantityf earbonic acid will be found than under ordi-

nary circumstances.S,'The five men being confined in the same cell

surchutrged the place with the deadly gas, andhence tLe catastrophe.

"The. unfeeling treatment of drunken people,shoving them into any hole, for the time, de-serves the severest reprehension."

A DsAUPIN REnRED FROM B~SIsmss.-Oneevent in the late advices from Europe has notexcited the attention it seems to deserve. Weallude to the retirement from public life of thepredecessor, in the Dauphin line, of Rev. EleascrXVII., the nearest lawful heir to the legitimatethrone of France. And such a retirement! Itis an omnious descent from the sublime to theridiculous. A genuine Dauphin of France hasentered the Dutch Army as a private soldier!Poor Prince ! Tas i a tougher experience thanhe, or Rev. Eleaser, or any other of his doublesever underwent at the handspf Robepierre, Ma-rat, Simon, and the whole crew of the Revolu-tion. If the Royal Court, temporarily estabhlished here in partMus, cannot officially go intomourning on his account, we outside barbariansmay at least drop a teast at his misfortune, andraise a passing monument to his perished gran-deur. IN. Y. Tribune. '

This is all very clover and amusing: the onlydrawback is, that the Tribung has got hold ofthe wrong man. The pretender, Naundorf. overwhose Parisian career it makes merry, died inAugust, 1845, at Delft, in Holland, leaving twodaughters and two sons. One of the latter mayhave entered the Dutch service for support, theprofession of arms not being considerel derogs-tory, even to the sons of Kings. Ils father, ifliving, would be between sixty-five and seventyyears of age. Rather an "old soldier," evenfor the Dutch Army. N. Y. Express.

Cuasocs Lmls. CAss.-The NewYork eveningPoest reports a case of libel in the Circuit Courtof NewYork, before Judge Edmonds, the par-ties being Gilbert B. Spalding vs. Wm. A. Del-avan & Weasel, and T. B. Van Ordan, jr., vs.William A. lDelavan. There were two separateactions for publishing a defamatory libel on thecharacters of the plaintiffs, and it was agreedthat the jury should decide on the two cases atonce. The plaintiffs are circus proprietors, andat the time of the publication of the libeliousmatter, were absent from NewYork, and thede-fendant was at the time tn business at theBranch Hotel, in the Bowery, in that city. Thelibel in question had been printed on a broadsheet, and was transmitted to the defendant ina letter, and he for eyveral weeks exhibited iton the walls oMthe bar-room at the Branch Ho-tel, a house which is said to be the resort ofpersons well acquainted with the plaintiffs, andconcerned in the cirous businesse The libelconsisted of forty-seven verses of most wretcheddoggrel, and the second line had the names ofthe two plaintiffs in it, so that there was no dis-pute as to the meaning of the author. On thepart of the defence, it was set up that defendantresilved the verses and stuck them up, ignorantthat he was doing any harm to any body, muchlees rendering himself liable to either a criminalor civil prosecution. The jury awarded theplainti ive hundred dollare In each ease, astheir damages.

jtLAJW-TessEZovus -The daily inereasingSthe population is beginning to rmeact

upon the labor market, and, almost for the firsttime li the annals of the working classes, the

re a scroarcity of hands to till the soil formthe stale oomplait of nearly all the Irih pro-vineialjemau. Already wages have advancedtoea al hitherto andreempt of by the ias-eat y, and, in some instances, oSrs to tripleend -w quadrple the ordinary rastes, havehIh • dbea lwy he dma nd of tie lahbrere, o

t a to remaa at hoa ad ive the

the er di~L

U m iii nlb i

a a e* r+sy as• •e tl•e ed, uansad e.

bondman a eater el t slavery 'IThe lujr e Sla.n Law b ws Jleo del_•-e--

as" ~mabarbaroe, ernel, njat, ad wiekd."

bAno rA a Ion MAKmo.-It has bem

sarlonity contemplated i. theM NewYork Legn-latmr to make railroad bond a basIs for ban•-

lg. No additional privilege to the business offIre banking could more aesravate the evl connequene ofthe great brea up that is sure to

attend i tha this The busine of railroadmakLing ertainly now af or near the higheetprudent point, with bonds at from seven to ten

per ct. for loansm. With the additional creditthat will follow making them a base for bank-ing, it will be ditnalt to estimate their increaseor to measure the evil should a disastroue end

be genegt on by too g reat extenslon. NewYork btanng, the Phldelphia Ledger ays, isnow a perbfot powder riaasine, and as soon athe match is applied, will astonish the countryby one of the moeet terrifo shooke that paperoredit has ever experienced.

IOceMON nOonots IN Uaro.- rrnu ani rspo.rof the Ohio Secretary of State, on the conditionof aomnmd schools for the pst year, we learnthat the whole number of youths in the State, s888,669. The entire number of pupils enrolled,sale and female, is 487,412. The average dailyattendance during the year has been but 266,-298. Thee are nearly 600,000 children whoare entitled to attend these schools, but who donot. The difference between the number of pu-pile enrolled and the average attendance is astill more painfulone. Eitherparenteor teacb-ers are in fault when less than five-eighths ofthe scholars of all the schools in the State arepresent. It is a signi oant fact that the enroll-ed number of boys exoeeds that of the girls bymore than 40,000. There are 9916 schools,with 12,464 teachers in the state; to the latterof whom $771,146 are paid as wages. One hun-dred and-seventy-one school houses have beenbuilt during the year at a cost of $61,887.

Aca•raza RsvsNos.-thir Paris correspon-dent says that " the news from Vienna is, thatthe process now going on against Madame Mes-selanyl, a sister of Kcesuth, will terminate in asentence of death." Fortunately, the lady inquestion is in Brussels, beyond the reach of theanointed butchers who rule over the Austrianpeople, and there is good reason to believe thatshe, with an elder sister and their children, willsoon join a third sister, already established inthe United States. Mainly through the efforteof one or two ladies in this city, a sum of moneyhas been recently raised, sufficient to pay thepassage of both these sisters of the gifted andheroio Hungarian exile, with their six children,under the reduced prices very kindly fixed bythe Bremen Steam Navition Company and-thehouse of Grinnell, Minturn & Co. MadameRutgay, the elder of the two, probably now inthe Hermann. Madame Messelanyi, who isyounger, and in delicate health, will oome laterin the season by a London packet. Both arehighly accomplished ladies, as remarkable fortheir genius and virtues as for the misfortuneswhich have fallen upon their house.. [Times.

An exchange paper states that about nineteenyears ago a Mr. Hait, of Wilton, in Fairfieldcounty, Conn., then a remarkably good studentin his collegiate course, was suddenly deprivedof his reason and memory. Under these crcrum-stanoees, his father, Rev. Mr. Hait, sent him toHartford, but fmding no relief, he sent him toDr. Chaplain, of (ambridge, Massachusetts.The doctor said there was no present relief forhim, but at the age of thirty-six or thirty-seventhere would be a change; that the brain wastoo much expanded for the cranium, and thereweould at that age be a contraction,which wouldenable it to act healthily. His anxious fatherand family sawtheir hope peremptorily deferredfor nineteen years. That time has recently ex-pired, and, to their great joy, the prophecy isfulflled. The man began to inquire for hisbooks, as if he had just laid them down. andresumed his mathematical studies where he leftthem. There was no trace on his mind of thislong blank in his life, of any thing which hadoccurred in it, and I did not know that he wasalmost forty years of age.

THE IRlIa ExoDUS.-A letter received in NewYork, dated Parsonstown, Ireland, March 26,says:

"All Ireland is in motion. I left Dublin forthis place eighteen days ago. On my route Imet the people in gangs of 40 to 60, in all direc-tions, wending their way to the coast to emi-grate for America. The emigration is terrible.If it continues a few years longer at this rate,Old Ireland will be depopulated. Our beetfarmers and mechanics, servants and ci-devantsoldiers, and policemen out of employ, have alltaken the ' emigration fever,' and are prepar-ing to emigrate. Our wonder here is how youfind employ for all these people."

The Huntsville Advocate, in commenting onsome of the recent removals in North Alabama,says:

" Our old friend, Sam Cruse, after 28 yearshard service, is turned out to grass, and his cribis occupied by a gentleman heretofore classedwith the secession wing of the party. ' Fare-well, a long farewell to all our greatness!' forwe never more shall meet again to examinemaps, books, etc. Good by, and let it be yourboast in future, that during the Van Burenreign, out of 67 Receivers, all were defaultersexcept three, and you were one of the three!"

THE LOST RECOvERED -The $1748 in golddrawn on a check which was lost a short timesince, by Mr. Altemus, has been returned tothe loser, less $400 which the finder of thecheck retained as a compensation for himself.The $20 gold pieces received from the Bank,were placed in a paste-board box, and droppedinto the letter box st the Post-office, directed toMr. Altemus. The clerks in the office suspectedthe contents of the package from its weight andappearance, and from the jingling of its con-tents, and hurried out after the depositor, buthe was out of their reach before they could ob-tain sight of him. [Philadelphia Bulletin.

A DEnUTANT.-Mies Annette Ince recentlymade her first appearance on any stage at theWalnut street Theatre, Philadelphia, in theverJ difficult character of the Countess, inKnowles's beautiful play of" Love." Her per-formance of the part was one of the most bril-liant triumphs ever achlbved by a novice. Herrendering of the character was natural, impul-sive and life-like, and elicited the most raptu-rous applause from an immense audience. Pos-sessing as she does, youth, beauty and talent,she will no doubt soon rise to an eminent posi-tion in the arduous profession she has selected.

The Legislature of Delaware passed an act atits last session, prohibiting any non-residentdebtor from being arrested or held to bail inthat State for any debt contracted beyond itslimits. The act further provides, that if anynon-resident debtor shall be arrested, upon ap-plication to any judge of the State, he shall bedischarged, upon proving that he is a non-resi-dent, and that the debt was contracted beyondthe limits of that State.

A STRONo CAsT.-Lucretia Borgia was per-formed at New York with the cast embraoingthe following persons: Meadames Alboni andRose de Vries, Signors Salvi, Sangiovanni; Ben-eventano, Qulnto, Rosi, Zanini and Revere.Parts which bave hitjerto been consigned tomere chorus singers, have, in this instance, beenundertaken by artists of considerable eolibre.

MILFuARY CIANoI.-The military of NewYorkare all adopting the same uniform, instead ofeach company appearing in a different dress.Entire regiments with the same uniform nowparade in that city, which gives a look ofsolidity and strength, and is considered as tend-ing to greater dlBiency and discipline.

The notorious Jack Stevens, who escapedfrom the jail ofPortsmouth, Va., whilst await-ing trial for robbang the Pertemouth Bank, andWas sulseqeMtly arrested ia Philadel a dtted hre s m st aeas e l t oG e sa ie el,

b~3~,C U k~U" ug

Psatrssmm' Psowaorrns moo.-A- quissdal.arspdet of the psetsh ar pepe the I.

rtian will be made, after te a eary

Sthat gsa Ib aittas tos )eto r l tanit______ers, dd eUl it beueo hae Downwith scsqolie! "

Dm54 Tr L.BfrrainsAK- 4 ,gr). evrn-

teen years ol4.ps batn by a ralesuake on

the lft instep. Two hours and a half after-

wards, Dr. T. A. Atchison, who describe the

case in the Southern Medical Jomnal, visited

her, and found her sightless, with her faseswolla, and her mind.wandering. He placed

her in a hot salt bath, andadministerod whisky

and ammonia, until she had taken tbr e pints

of the first, and eighty grains of the latter; no

intonication followed, and she was oured.

POLAND.-The shattered hfbric of Polish na-

tionality has just sustained another shook from

its arch-enemy the Czar. By an imperial ukase,

just issued, all personclaiming to belong to the

nobility of Poland are to send in the evidesceon which they base their pretensions, wh enthose who shall be recognized as of noble blood,

will be inoerporated into the Russian peerage,

while those who fall to make good their clains,

will be forbidden to assume noble titles.

GIN.--The Boston Mail says, the best im-

ported real Boheidam Gin, is now manufactured

in town, at about a dollar a bucket, yet our

toddy makers are talking of striking for tenr cents a cocktail; six cents without sugar,

cheese, cod or crackers! Where is the pump?

Teeoeu. Ion HUlTS-The great suceem which hae at-tended the eonetuctilon of tubular bridgee, has inducerd

some of the British ship bhlders to take up again the

question of ron masts. It is stated that tubular matsmay be made of Iro, tronger and higher than thae of

wood, end with the additldhal advantage that they might

.de down e into thetheher, telecope ihehion, while they

would req•re neither shrouds nor stays, leaving room forbraneng round the yards to the outermost.

A•loasro. -Pr. W. . Allen, a colored man. of

McGtrawvl , N Y., was married in NewYork clty a few

days ago, to Mie Mary E King, of Felto, N.Y., daughter

of Rev. L ondon King, of ulotton.

BuGeg,.--slsty-one Portgem Refnae from Tnil-

dad reached St. Louis on a receat trip of the Lady Pike.

They contemli-ated settling In the Interior of Illnoie.

A block of W1yptlan greanIt for the Washingtoa Mo.

nument, has beem brought from Alexander to Maermiese

by a Trcenh hmoer.win. 8een, an e -polloe aaptatn In NewYork, has been

committed to prison on eharge of larceny.

Hon. Edward Bahm be b• n elected Presnet of the

Mimonuri State Colonhlatlon Society.

.The present banking eapital of the city of NewYork L

about 42o000,o.

Loctd Intollgece.

I•iQuTrs.-A n lfaquest was held yesterday byDeputy Oeroaer Wi. 0. Tern on the body of Bernard

Pitspatrisk, a native of Ireland, aged about 46 year•found dead on Girrees street, near Poydru. Verdict-

D. Died of oonston of the brat, caused by a blow withthe but-end o a hlekoey whiphandle, In the hands of one

Daniel Nolan, on the eventog of the tith Iust."Another inqoest was held by the Deputy Coroner o

the body of Anthoy Boner, a native of Baden, eged abo•

Syeas, mad dead in a house on Port stre, Third Dl-triot. Verdiet-" Dled of a diseae of the hart." The

deceasee was dreseing himself at the time of his death,and while standing beftre a glae fqll down and ozpired.

COAurrr HoSrrPIAL. - The following is theweekly report of this insetittlon for the week end-ng

April 29: Admlilions 209; dthargese, 211; death. 17;number rematning, 152.

GRaND JtUR FL'DINGS.--The Grand Juryempanneled in the First Dtstrle• O4urt, yesterday, foundatrue bill of indiltment against Lsanlel MeClskey fre

murder, in kUling John Yost, on the 20th Mareh last.Aleo against John Bel, for robbery, in having eanlted

and robbed Solomon IH. Eldridge, of a pooket book con-

telning money and valuable papres on the 7th of April,

lnstant.Alo, ngelnot Mary Green. free womare of color, for con.

oeoding and harboring a runaway save, on the17th Maett

And agalest - Burke. a keeper in the Parish Prisonfor an asault and battery on Solomon H. Eldridge, on the

7th of April lnst.

AGNES ANDERSON, THE HOMICIDE. - Agne

Anderon, the woman oharged with the murder of Wm8. Taylor, on the night of Wednesday last, was yterdaebrought before Reeorder Winter to be arrigoed.in answer to the afdavit which was read to her, eharg

leg her with murder: ehe made a speech. She said thatshe did kill the man Taylor, and would do the rame thiejaglan if it wes to be done. He hbd, she ed deprived he

of her innocence, and after getting tired of her had drivee

her from his mother's home and dragged her to the esl-boone. He had used her badly-sald a brothel was gooenough for her, and wanted to get rid of her ; an u e ha

killed him. le had cried murder and she had err d mr

der. He had tred to get the koife away from her and sh.

had got it away from him, and had killed him with it.

Marh of her victim's blood were visible on parts of hedrew.... She was remanded for examination on Thurate

CHARUE oF IIHOIrDE.--George Morgan, afree man of color, is under arrest in the Third District, onthe charge of having stabbed and killed Edmund Wayne,another free man of color, on the 17th Instant, near theConvent, in the lower part of the Third District.

ANOTHER HOMICIDE.-A man named DavidNolan was yesterday brought before the Recorder of the

First District, to plead to the charge of having struck onthe head with the butt of a whip, and killed, one BernardFitspatriek on the 26th instant. The affray ocourred onthe Levee, near Poet 17. Fitspatrick was taken to theCharity Hospital, where he died on Thursday night. Apotlnmorlee esmlniatlon was held on the body ofdeceased,oand it was found that he died from eoneueslon of thebran. Nolan ws remanded for examinationon Thurs-day next.

KILLED A NeGRo.-Louis Canfield and Peter

Harrison, employed on board the steamboat Bella Donna,were yesterday brought before the Recorder, on the chargeof hnving killed a negro man, slave of Lewis W. Lyons,in the Parihe of West Flocians, on the 19th instant. Theweapon used was a stick of wood. The acnsed were ad-mitted to ball in the sum of $000 each.

Arrivals at the Prlnotpal Hotels.-April 29.OT. CHARLYS..., WIlio. u.J r MsCa ,w P, R R Bnearw W

bd,; 0 o 0teI.st, T J Mott. resP R Mouuford. Msa O RIke..

Tod, NIDY; A H . lopo, N d sD. ls, Alr. W JialieTW

RO Dty N AO, PW.l h0, K W Wtt Alp Hcu L walie T Or

WSith, Ohio.

V RANDA....J W Ars'd ron OD T Raho, I s Hre't, Misi;Col Cas•, tno,, Me nosum, Me Sehidloe, Me rolle, Mm Colu J mes, ,obils; Chu Cae ol , Ky.

ST. LUIe....A N Harrie, lad Vnd srsnt.A Ia; W Johnloae , Wil-t n,JW IJNewoll, JW PsroelttAis- H L Psuresll, T0Th0-

hey, Y;L oyardl C fr~ ~isesptoe, re, PHecy,TUss,cITY....A Medlbeey, IaC Hepb. H H umaked, D Rirr, A aob-

iasLoniu;t P, Miu; e NLh; I H Gerds. CuCSeey7,hm C Stubbs, on.

ARCADS....T L Neu rtk G H Phillles W I Colemu Mir; Dot.y. J A Bavl,s, I l.ineort•. a W iHe C P cilghou A l

FReot O A Clayhe a. C M Wnld.il, JW Hledly, J S eo,.W, rln, T J ws,h BFCh.mhelio.

NOTICE.-The DAY and Nawrr POLICMEIEwho wensr t-4 out onl..t wddn.. ry r Ip-0.1l)r lno It~l

agel'ed a m. t ba bald THIS RVINLO. ,(Satrdy,. tblS l0icl..) aI ldrbrL., a lb . URLKANOBALL- Y, OrlM.Oe. mos

AAtwenu Rry.l .ad sBourbo. All .ab.n an nqemaUl toIa .Od.b--l of iporeeae 'l!I Iabl tiakod. apSO I

CONSTABLE'S SALE.F'IUTJemna.'ea Cuull J. T. OSSIRINE.. M MOULTCR.PII.. oO.*.Ia. I N o. IS,0S0.B)Y VIRTUE of a writ of Sari facisa to ma

U dlaead bv lb. Hon. L.LU. Galai,. Fint JasA. tba Pu,.for lb. Y'ri.b oIilhl.aa tall sapoas t public sal, as SATURDAYHay Ia, 10l3,t 19laclo a., m1 hourrbeaa No. rio Taoaspibnla

ONE1-- wN WaIx VF i(0U HOLDA IINITURZUS' SaeLds t a b. ba,.al.w Tenms r.h..PI3 03JOHN. nOpPa. Cnloabi..

S UND D-ES-

.

CODISI-Sl ~OlO ha..., IaL sa1s s9d Ia, .5 b

s7p R A.E 0 D. ackaes li., bd 1lb. ...HAVAN aOVEEad elsssnp . A-.

LAI- u

LARIID-LE MSa saDPSL IME oVM ban*ao~ls;puhn

830USD. ODIEta-llbbsad .W sN i. fsa .s har~r

O LRDL O I IDL-W5 aTALLO-W CAN -F GmL oalol

.on A. D. kaBnJ. N It. .54 Oid TA2.

SUNDRIES-HHAVA(A (OfFRRca-ll bag. Irlu;SM SOOD5.dI Ma msaS peas S p dMSIsAnI WHAL'OIL .m

MUGARCjikRD ba I-nh SEAT FOOT 051 ,; p

PANE cr-.m w...1.

ORISD aa. asm .

OIL, OIL, OI-

10 n.RAR. A11 d0 OL

100 arrls ~w ... Yd pre rIM OM

•"tWe a8ll thee s•ttm o our resder to

.m O

MA•5 r , •ab , I.--IT ,r m.,

THEPORW. AEDUUATOS Y. A. o.

.axS. W t.h Am IA..

11 lmW1e I• A •w e

.U'.* Deeb.,

* NW.14 oxA. ustn.Tl TT0'S r L• kt ZME OF ..IHEL

NATTA ABT L K WAHHAGRIAT OR TIs FILOT CA mMAN r

RARmIONaNDNnRSH.--4EOONDEXFEDITWST LAT4RS1MrmaWE.L'S TENYSrON'S AND OseLOWW PaOETICA W WOES L ; OR

TiE MAON T AN HISTORICAL NOVEOJKS, wqS0.t

EN'hS STESle Sprsg asd ISummerCLOTHING.

VERY EXTNBEIVE AUSORTMENT !

)mBWgRTmPIT or tHUAN Uw PSI

ALFRED MUNWOO & GO.,TH MNA HS 14 AN OAHIC NOVE ,rrU

A A RoalASo.. oI..l oflb. I .iog g

euekonJ rulm th ad 1•sw oery

SINL MILLD CLOTH FROC AND SAC A

P5CM DNA? DT Fr ROCK, DREAND AOACOATS ;

COMMON ALPACA FROCK AND SC CWA O.

SBLACK SI

L r FROCK COAT. NEW ARTICLSBLCK SMMSAMAN G BSAC WA V;SINLE lMOGLE AND COLOTHRE ALPACA COATSWHITEHDUCK, FANCY DRILL AND UINE T WAE;

MANY OTnM NEW STYLES SMER WAV.PANTALOONS:

BLACK FRENCH DRAP 'ETE pANTALmRON ;ENGIHW PARAMETFAA APACA PANDTAS ON S

WHItE DRILL AND DUCK PANTALOANS ;

ABOTDEC, AND CHDRINL CFANLAENOATSNG

INDIA NANKIDN, S•ERUR AND FRO H COTTOI

AGE LEN' P UNISHIN GDl oS

Owse Pric for Grood so;

WHITE AND FANCY LINAN ES Sre

RICH EMBROIDERE.D MARSILLES VESTS.

BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING,O ALFL KINDS.8ILKW AND GINGHAM UMBREI..LLASo ..

INDIA RUBBER CLOTHING,

. OF EVERY DEIt PTION.Br AR h.vy WINTER CLOTHIENG seling d.etrm'iy low pr...

ALFRED MUNROE & CO.,.FSnpIW N. 4MS.i t-,:,.,lGAr

CochIn-China 8 Shanghai EggsFOR SALE.

BE bd d ly., t FPIV DOLLABS PEI DOZEN, by plypg 4t N,. 91Comp.E PIII . If M.cp. d, tEby wl A. 4rMolpy p.nd M wt6. .. y tof th - . a st

Something .lwt IJUST OPENED AT

SIMPSON'S,116 CANAL STREET.

gRA NEW STYLE OP SKIRTING ! ! ! !ItI .II,0% .owk., NMlM, ad .. bA. .Mbd wil.t s;J

3. IANd GA .fr I.. Or5r kull. pfl SpI

Great Bargains.... I ....

UMBROIDERIIE AND OTHER FANCY GOODS.

"P. & E. REILLY.& CO.S3" Wo.d Ial the.. Uni. oef t• L.Wp. to.. SPLENDID STOCKf hlb. f.lowb.g g•.d., r.e.evd p.r E•*i. City, .ll boght WScutie t u1n.preeamted low pkrk :

BLACK LACE MIANTILLAS, VELVET TRIMMINGEMBROIDERED MUSLIN MANTILLI;84 PLAIN BLACK LACE. POR MANTILLAS;BLACE VELVET RISONSl, FOR MANTILLAS;

GAREGE ROSES. PLAID FLOUNCING ;ROSES, EMBROIDERED FLOUNCING ;BAYADERE ROIE, GRADUATED SATIN STRIPE ;LACE GRENADINE;

bOLNE PAQUrrA lVALENCIENNE MOUSQUETAIRS COLLARS;lONlION MOUSQUKTAIRES COLLARS;KIM'D MUILIN MOUSQUETAIRES COLLARS

CREPE MOUSQUETAIRRi COLLARS;MOURNING MOUBQUETAIRES COLLARSVALENCIENNE CHIIIBSETTF AND SLEEVESEMB'D LACK CIIEIISETERI AND SLEVKE ;

LINEN CIIEMISKTTES AND SLEEVE•,EMG O SKIRTS AND ROBES;I EMB'D HANDKERCHIERS, NEW STYLE;SLACK CHILRT;

BLACE GRENADINE;BLACK IIRNAM;

IRACK TIUE OMBLACK OULAIRD;

OR LACK CAATON CREPE.

5- BLLAC BAREGE; /ELACK ENGLISH CREPE;WHITE ENGLISH CREPE;

I PRINTED LINEN CAMBRIC, POR DRERES;PRINTED REGATTAS FOP.R CILREN;

SPLAID LINEN. POR CHILDREN;

1 64 IRISH UNEN. PROM I6 MA PIECE;

114 LINEN t SHEETINO FeOM 1 .1. PER YARD;

.. conePRINEDnl and St. Charles Ae*. .d.

sp tRpm N.w OrUI...A -mpt S. trtme. m 16

PAPERJIANOINGS,

FRENCO PAPERS AND BORDE•SR ,

UPIIOLBTERY GOODS.

DP6Pyr hung and Upholstery IoCk e.euted.

Spring a'Ed Summer UlothingF. STRINGkER & CO.,

. HI CAMP T

SAre mw evnI th lupprl o 8SPRING M ND SUMMER CLOTHING.

SAre W•te LIGHT WOOLKENGOpC d. Ca Ifors tAeMt,MRKINO, ALPPACA, LINENS. eR.

t SAMe 8r.M.iEt S BILK, SAT1sTE MG. CAMBRIC CRAVATS.. LS TRAD4 COTTON HO.

BILK, LIE TRA a COTTON GOVS

HIL, MERINO. DCTTON UNDER GARMENTS.

PTrDlFa,,t)rarsa oe Unlrv euera:

P. & E. REILLY & CO.,CORNEA E CANAL AND ROTAL B ST.

S OMPLETM ASHORMMNNT O GOODS

S. Ii E lrT Aer .lI,-n.B.A4 CRTAbINS (MA..

Suppmu or IMPORTED GoODS, whle1 th.p I. 3. SMAMLQUANTITIES SRAW.by gIvOg A. p.BR..R AGNPENTRADAESORT.

iFOREIGN AND DOMTIC DEAERSA,

C UO. 1 ROYAl TrEtim..,

WIIES, MQUOR, OOBDIALS, *e. eSt.i w' s4wfr i wt r. ig ..R*AP," i" .mmd y Il b i a' g . .m a S ;..lMERINO, ALPACA, LINENS. ate.- q dBAreEw tl bE6.. ..L w

j..atauiSqm aAI .

mod ad b. b arua

IllS lL.~*.CANAL. IFRNT,

W bjutt ptd .la. Mte. 1 M g.. Ir~w

aPai( M iMax BUMMVR DRY ROODS,InUNIOR To NONE

it Ibkdy. S,.Iaw aa.y, M. .d .kq..p m...phiaghlahba,..HOUSEHOLD,

PLANTATION ANDoFANCY GOODS,

OF THE LATT IMPORTATIONs.Ata0014qttthit'..aiWd aa h.a1, So. Good. w41 M Ias dhlly.he.w.th. lattat .Std at I,.daa cit., pa..d it pat.,...,.. my tI idt.rc A I tb. qa.t tad .lyl. of IS. G.,d.,.aaJtei. with It 1.5-. .5.1 /M W. madn. am . .aitI

C. M. SIMPSON,US CANAL ITREET.

tptl 45.41 T...' vEt.

Day ansd Boardinsg Sch..lFOB YOUNG LADIES.

GONIICOTND NY MNIX. D. DIMITRY.1/' Thtt 'S ..f taa.a ... ao ,W A. aI.,...S MONDAY

Naa-hw.gI "1.itrraE.p 5.G*la.,.r Adt book. of0..,d..Mdi1.tFI.tyaat.dit. atAdauaaiblapid, .u .Il itW. phpa1W .I*n n N the mStaltmititgdl tacctal develop.. ,1r lb. ppU.Th.I.MlUI o bn Er.M 4.,.t.., w Ill. lnr r p t th. F,..A I p.., by, itt1t,, a lb. Itaditit, TIVOU CIRCLE,

DuINleks' .userlcan 1F'.fpha.4aHAMS.

" TEN PIONNIR BRAND,ESTABLSHED IN Hal, AND FOR WHICH

A PRIZE MEDALWAS AWARDEID AT THE WORLD'S FAIR, OR LONDON

INDUSTRIAL EOsION, IN 111a.

F1' C.. be bd I. 1. ,tUy, tk.,aghaal Ithe .pata "at, M ta

S.. N. MtALFIN * CO., No. to C.aoa datta, rd Na. ta I C.Mnd Row;

HALL, EREID CO., taa..r ofC.CIl tad Tabapltaalool tt..t3. I. JOHNSTON A Co., aat at MaatMt .ad PaySn.a.WHITVOtt A LANIERN, ew., ofT*bhoplkaiaata PFaFa.o.itA. O. SOBERTI 0 co.,Fn myda..itetl;JOtIHN. WALLIS. 100 Mq..Ar t. IDUDLEY A NELSON .tto.wa. ta BC Ct.1.it;0. hL BATL 00., II Com.. rd Carl wt-t;

UIDAIJ.YOE A CO.,am..a, oa ttam .dTaohoaplitala.t tt;R. W. ADAM, n T.abptalu atattl;HOLMES A CLAUtGt Oatai..a. W;3. M. JOHNSON & CO., Fa.t Ltvtt;JOHaN C. SHtANNONa SFall. aataW. S. WRIGHT A W00.11 Tthatpb.ita.atla.aCONVESSE A 0t..aa, , Ldyhtte ad T.Nq~itau~;In.a ;aDtit t a. tb FIRST to atblitktbt tatit.,a Wet.It Ham,,

.ad h., tphatlly ti. WESTERN FIONEER Ia lb. Aaaaaa. It..,.re} lpvr+bo y ood-ol*LW. tm" (L1.draU l~ rtt.

CSte' Cad Ab, mi. byCHARLES DCFFIELD CO., Laaitadt, Ky.

ta.la/tp MIATIN. OWEN N CO...Ortttl Attatt.

0 Joseh H arry, aWHOLESALE AND RSTAIL DUALER

FINE WATCHES, JEWELRY, RICH FANCYAND STAPLE GOODS,

NO. 20 CAMP STREET, UNDER CITY HOTEL,d ld.,r Ih. It. CuI. Holol, SI. CtAIH IGt,

I.,A.n l. VERY LtARO STOCK OIGOODS. wbkih b IM.lllv

SHELL COMBS,IMITATION IIELI AND RUIALW) OMBI, , ,,e'y7 47L- -iJL•1U i OF EVERY DIIUCRIPTSIDN, a( hl oWn mobler, ud

TOILET ARTICLEB,WATI LMRY R OCHR , H HAIR INS OMATUM, AN-

I COLTS Od WARNER'S YVOLTINICOIL IIR ZS, LIFE FpREl . FRLHIIW

SAl" TC .L g e•e ery pl eUy, t h eW mn at yldlom.WATCHES, JEWELRY, Etc.

TIOIr Rt A BO I, plut T BR..I T. T. C.o•p, ,. J.T1t d . Jh.1.. momm nu., wri6 M,. ra .at ofSwUB .s EN•iLSH LLEYRr,1.1,,,rilth . .t.a or B..

ASn JnWELR IY ILII.a W 1J6 "t<., b RG( uE eni.ed withFU, li .Logn(;lo..b...lny .. ldlrhwrb ."tu lO<Th at MALL T rlp*a ND ST SntL Spit

WTHMJEWaLI,.., CAREYOLLY RAPAIRD .dRA. RNTED. " R TE I Truu-

Alrt.--ShIrte.NORRIS & WAY,

(CLOTIIIEDS,)

CORNER CAMP AND COMMON STREETS,Unler t. City fglo:I.

UrH uAnr e itoe a Ilglstd complete i.k ofLINRN4•ND COTTONT SHIRTB,

.urgo l fly Ib, L.ir•t f EVEIRY THING NEW AND I•N.tABI.8 thy U .1 .iiu Ihmolhoul th tb. Yn•o. th-u .Y.1l ig.n4.. I1 iU STOCK..hli+ eLWy oLr fm me on mbW mwt

REASONABLE TERMSY . mbS Bp

cew Goods.TIIOMPSON & NIXON,

NO. 1't CAMP STIREET,opIrSte te (",y l otl.

tI An ur .. rce.lpo f . LARGE .ad S LIEIOR SIO :K ef

SU.M• hER C LOT HIX

FURNISHINII I N AODS.OF ALL THE NEWEST AND, NLST SrYLE.

Th. ath.llto of pnrtrls i rlllly ImlJ.. p r o pta

IOLUSKIN iATS,CASSI IERE HATS,PEARL AND GREY MATELOT IHATS,SENNAT BRAID HATS,LADIES' R[IING HATS,CIdLORKN'S FANCY IhATS,

D. W. & 1. BELDEN.

Boots, Shoes and R grogans,

MEXICAN, PALM LIAP,BTRAW ..d CAMPEACIIY HATBS, AI. I. .I mrIIIIt pricel, byI1 Syll D.*W F.OST A CO, 10 II.,n. tG.•J.

m ats, C'ape, etc.AT WHOLEbSALI

'O,.CA,.dr.d H, IIATS. GAmpr iisEg EEI*IStI•I)ILK.,UR,CAPSIMIREI.MIXICAN.WOOL.BTRAW.PAIAILE/ FIEdCAMPEACHY HATS. fA.rll by1718 . ...w "%T .CO. 1D El...I, .- t

STRAW, LEOHORN AND BAID,-a mot extesive r-ortlpnt om

GENTLEMAN, BOYS AND CHILDREN, EtD. W. A F. DELDEN'S,.

ape f,lumtf _ (Ch.nr•. ,treet.

SThe Plrst In Fashlion. mSPRING STYLE, 185368,

SFOR BALE ATD'A RCY'S,

dof .,L.9Ptt___ __~___-__- er CIIutm~ r~na1.4.

Cheap Clothing Store,NO. 8 CHARTRES HT.,

NEW ORLEANS.

MEN'S, YOUTHS' AND BOYB'CLOT IIN0,

GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS OFEVERY VARIETY:

TRUNEM CAR•ET BAGS, VAUCES, et..,I r.,.Sdptf

J. P. MDONNOLD. WILLINI STUAST..JceDonnold U Stuart,

_8 . .A...E............18 Ae M TREET,- 18"he pleu - in elall ug thesttauti of their friend nd theput is tot, r wLL urtod ,sck of

BOOTS, SHOES HATS and CAPS,alM elN y fto the ~ wth l trale, hieh they willu ell at

SThe HAT DEPARTMENT L unRder the iedIate charge ofMaro. .II IKELL, (for moy yearsegaged in the Hlit buIin•u

asNo. 1 Chrtretreet.)

Mr. H. wold be plesed to le his fsn land old ptrons.at NoIS CpatrIIetI. MODONNOLD A STUART,

oIs .,p . it f Slatter'l tow, Iodr City Hotel.

Curb Stone.A A full supply of CUR ISTONEII eotatly on band a.Id for Ealh Ly

JOHN PURCNELL,ep No. 19 Jaksn t.eet, Fourth DIItrit.

B. F. Smith, DENTIST,E14 ST

.

CHARLES R TRlLTEllS dw. C r o. f I fR.etteS ,are.

Charles E. Kells,From NIw York,)

DE N T"I ST,106 Cl .M d om houroh at. N. O.

SARTIFINCIAL TEETH ised in t he bet

wAoA K BAUTY, TrITY AND COMIORR THE W IAREtR,

fadaame Lewis.Ur YRI..I.Sl.EEd PHILOSOPHER, ASTROLIOIST ad pjjySIOaNOMIT 4 own.r , tI EIGYPTIAN ORACLES OF PATE,rrea.poUCI~ Isr the Ldie and Oemtlemen of N e wOrleIU, that ilhSe moved fom her A.d,- an bi•Rin. to No. S61 CAMPTPltELT, Mtwl Inllt •ta-d Edwrd nr,, whe. s,e M be an-

-T Ud_-.id 1,ar i •ouo the PAST, PR•ESEN, AND

( TGAR, MIXICAN AND PLANTATIONAO.-Te . Ira EA y n, o Iy nd and ro i..le.

UI l t CUBA, H FAALORIUA MAP.SN,,d F, "ES. AIE 11OSACCO III HOGSHSEALDS. sdAL, s..

YR T E & RENSHAW,

BANKINGG HOUSE, 61 Camp street.

m3a00, ST. LOEui,NIW YORK, LOUISVILLE,

IPR DKLPULPIA, CINCINNATI,NALTIZORK, NASMY' .LS,