1
Cneinrif Koticew. IfdMK «iui o t»'»» » «4 n>w rf*K Of*. . N'-» 11/ » i IM Broadway. TV Cafltai of 'b'* Company 6«. r*e*«tly b»«a ltv-r****d by . Cats «r.»*-t(|K'''p «4 . «"" BBft maklix to* p--ietrt r-ardtal Ü»-f Mil I IMS Dm LARA Wit* e t -roir.*, it. additkti., of i, * .X ' A Tilt Crmptay tutor*! ««»Iii« L-»»* or Darnae* by ri'-- oa barEvi M letorakl* .. t1. ,|f f tu- ->ik ai.d 'M- re*j i 7 of tb* Uxeor**! aad ti Um> t> u p*. , wil. warrant L ».!. tW iT*ki.» An;i r »i. i\:, PaoaiTt-T Pa B. D*ku. ion. CNiiLksJ Miiti*, *r.*io,,-. A. P. WiLi.a»*ni. Vic. Pr.ude-it. . WiiLim o. Uiiiiii, fir i. ,,f a l A Lowreno* b Co. Oi'tci C Colli**, fiiro it ebennac, CouMc* &. Co. l>a*i..*nN. Bitarv, firm of Wall*. Farr> k. Co. L' Mi Hon ., P-r*ld*f. I r-" »'and Trader*' Bat ThoMai Matitai.tk. firm of T H M«**-f Win i*m H Mm ix. ' ¦.. M*ll*o k. Co CnAtl.li B Hat< h, tiro, "f Htt'b HIAeT h. M>«wart* .. B K'i i >o« Bin, b/m of UaaaaL, Mtrrloa k UmB. Hmi b* i ,. #> , Lett t BToas Bat* of BtotW Starr a. Co. J a M r I Hi m rn * Bl, let* firm of Barn* r bMBpt r- , i. |,|. Oio.oa Pia.< *, , ffm, * c Jim» Loa, firm of Jan.** I>'«* k Ca., M UMtrrUia. 1 H FioTMin.Hia, late tint, of I. H Kr i-ai» rbarn It Co. Criiai.li A hi ' . fin- of Ho:*ley fc Co. Crraa* HUokTO*. firm of Mory.n k JewetL Boi UHifoiiiij fi-nr' K beeaaaaB ft Baa. Titaoook* Milv**ttB, lab* of the hrra of Bow/an, Mc rinm i b Ca Au Haan Bioti ow, firm of Doao. KIol k Co of St toola. Ct BTM Ho*. » '" .* C-. .lit ar.d Nob*. Gfeoaui U Mokoai, firm of f. D M -rv. k Co. Oliiii K- Wooo, InaM Wll'krd, Wood k Co. At r«»o B Bikkki, firm of A H. Birma k B'irr. UkOkcl Blih. firm of Pnelp* Butt a. Go. Amoi T Dhicht, fkrai of Trov» bridge, fiwigot k Co. Ataa* CooBB, t.rm f C D' »d Bakrr k Co. '¦. f h ? firm of Morton, firtanoll It Co. JoHt B Bt r< mix oj f,rm of J C How* V. Co., of Bootoa. Cmai-i v t. Bai.uaik, Bnn of Baldwit, Btarr k Co. Jona O Nai.toa, lati- fin,, of NM»on a. Co. Htair A. tt «... r. firm of Ba 1ft Horlbut k Co. Jiut llovr, firm t f J**o* Hoyt It Co. Wr h.n jr., Brtn of Bturpli. Bbaw a, Co. Jona ft. Baao, tiu. of foti Rubber Co. fiir. MalOk, lat* firm of Maim It Tv.mpooo. O.T. SrabMaa, firm of Btodmao, CatBTlk a Sriaw.Lini-'naati. Cvat>> VaLk.jr drmof f jr a Ta!« ,Jf., b tie N'w-Ort«»-,*. v\ w k fokOKK. firm of Wm. r Obai B. Poidl. k Oano I. Boro, firm of ßojd Broi. k Co., Albany, N Y. t. H.Cot*tTT. firoa of Coorlt, Hill t Ttlmadi*. M*mptra IikWa ftoaeark. firm of L ftoborta k Co. BaatkL B. CktoarLi., firm of Br*w*r V «SaldweU. CHkkl.lt J. MakTia Pro*ld*a-. A t. Wii.i.Maaru, Vio* ProtidoLt J. Mil Toa Bmith, 8*riiitary. JoMa McOaa. An'itant B*. r*Ury. Ll.AKV A Co., I<*a<Wi ar.d lntrodnr*ri of faihlor for Or. t> t »ti'i IIiti, wtB tbl* day l»*o*> to* JxprlLk »tyl* of (im'knvoa'a Harx, v, wbu a the attoiition of tbeir it/ u t r. n i th- pablte§aaOtaA| i* la- Tttott Noa t, 4 and b Alto« llonao, Broadway. ErtrrNscHKll) ba« ia*mr-«l tbe Spring Style of Otayi.r.ata'x Hit., wblch for B»« 'ty of pittem. i f workuamblp. ai.d derldro ¦ ip> i rny el mater.all, itarr p* It *. the ie*«n lln of tbe aeaaon. (ilvr him a call at No 118 rot 8m om>-Hand Sai i:s. W*haro)ott rnrelTod a few Bicoao HaaD S*riv w wa erlu o*u yory low f. No. V) MnrraT it.. New Torb. STBAKkl It Mkk*lk ' No.StU Mortb Main >t Bt LaBAl, f No. m Gravier it, New Orieaa*. Alao. a btrt* aotortrnect of our WiLiikk tattkT liar *»D Rt kci.ik Pkoor Burn, fr m fjnto Bi.ono. Orovfr A Bakrr'b Cf.i eb&atko Bamilv Bawiao Macaikfi. Nsw Btvlbi it P.i tit. i ti Pkictk. fo «Wo Bao*Dwav, New-Voai, .No. .b* t. . .1 < J. . r I. V. hp; i f it A Wn sus'.s Hkhisu Maciiinü* Pile** areatly radaced. - Wa prefer thorn for family oae.".|N V. Tribune. They art Lb* fkvoritei for Unillle* " -|N V flinek. _Ogre, No. bu5 Bioadway, Now-Torb. Sewibu Macihnks..All pertoDB who have been ladueed bo bt.yBawiae MacniBBl whl- h will not perform tba mnrk that parrhooori eiportod them to do, are tuforrced that luiii'i MacNikki norer fall to do any kind of work. No one la «vor ataafyouitad In tbo*« aaaohtnek. I. a Bik-b* k Co., No. 4S» Broadway. Singer's Si vtiMi Mai him.s. Tbo haaoena* ln> leaae in the demand for th*** admirable Blaebtnoo.B bai trebled wlthit four mouth*.lodlcaVi Ue ra- BlTtaf prvopont* if the nounity. Tbo priori of o .r Machluei bat* boon fjreaL) todur-ed. i. Bt BiBtiBB k Co Mo. <M Broadway. felKt.Ut H ÖKWINti BiAt IHNES. Th* new FkMiLT Biwike MktRiiai at 0SO and *"* are atvaotlni oBlreraal attontk n. 1b all eaoontlal pocd qoalltie* bb*y era aaoh the boat Marblhei ever offered at a low prloo. I. M. Bikoaa a. Co., No. 4M Broadway. Ladh, Whist f it A Co.'s TlciiT-BliTt ii flr« ixi. Mi Hlkli, Far Taralliea, TaJi«n Mantua makrrk, aud all maat factitina purprioro They r<.mriine all ti.e BBBPBa of th* old ma< liinei, and avo'c ll .dt fault* Tbiy are adapted to every branrh af indmtry Who** the uoedie ia leauuad. tt'.', kud eaknitc* before parrbka- la«. 1- Wiurtl It Co, No. 489 Broadway. Foe to Death. Ootrok CtkTisi HvcikBk, TU I Ok t at IkHALIIC ftkMkDT, PBB CoaiCMfTio*, A>tnma, Cotoiit. f'oi k. ti all Throat and LBBfl DniAiti Pri x* roioood from ftS to Bl To ari-.-u oK date tb* vk*t demand of thai ABTABLIkHKD for. TO DlATH. BTkrltMB Pa'. a. Co., BoU A«enU for the l'nlt*d State*, _No. £15 fuHon-it, Novlli.o'b Sacred lit sic. Wait A An n, Ko. 1 Clinton Hall, Aitor plaro, N. T. CotiUutry Edition of the OkAToaioi, M^tdah, Creation, Paul, to. Be. Earh 76 cent*. Barry's Tricoimieroi h kt the B**t aud Cheap** Aru i* for Dmili.g, Boautlfyin*, Cl. «i.u«. Curtlug, Proaenrtu* aud BVitortni the Hair, ftadboo, try It for *al* by Dmiujlit* and T-r* a »r* LoXLIB'l CeiLLIO IkoK FiftE am' Bt'RGi.ar Proof Sm-es, Ba*b Vault Oooaa aud FkAMit, .erured by th* rMMoran CnamBATiok Poo oak and Bt'kci Ak-Paoor Loct, arc lb* only Safe* manuf*< tur*d tbat tvmbtnr cvmplttt Kvt-proof faaBBAB anlA a y - 'i. r prolertion /reo» borp.'ora ft full koaort- Baaat aaaataatly on hand and for aale by _9aiaaaakk b Co., a*. .. No. 189 Brokitwky. N. T. Francis Tomes A StiN?,, No. . Mtiaaa i ibb. Ni» Yota, Import'r» and \Vhole«ale DeaJori In Ottt, ttTLBkV, Platiu Win, Jaw* kt alO Kaai v Gooot, BaOHkl kin Pkl*CMBBT. Tbo laryoot and Baal extouaiv* iu« k lu the United State*. Bote Bient* 1 Ei Ctrt. Wunuau Ako CtkTkinoi:«, for i Hriiiok't Ci.i.ntAttn Atxv ftatoai. " Baldwin's GlOlllllli EsTalLlxHMEaT. Tb* Largett tn tne C'ly. Bo.lt by Wm. H Attoi BBB, rxnretily for tbe Bjilneia. r> mill TV aao Boh kir. t> c of Bba lartrti Nie 4M Moit Ta.xtv Bto. ki or IBAVI Madc Cloiiiim. UM ittlBIMIIB VOtkM Evtl Oi pBaVBSb Tea Ct.llO>^«t-. DirAkTMitT nut .tied. Compotltloa Hefied. BPktac Btti at or Im« BajacBlBTlQB Biaot. Ladktt oro invite* to raJ and * tan. lue tbe Cbildr».m t t'epart ra*al. wl ick U i t m any way air-elle* by any in in* worid. 9. U. BAi.Dv.ik_IkkkY Uikki*!. WlNlKiU MlAlll.x.. Gold N*W *tT!M- rattteJ, Watt* Holland, 6 .1 H at:.J Whc'eaal* and Retail. fttLIY BBOTHtk. k, Li xt, Hi -"l Broadway. Lioii K a t ii a i R 0 N roi TNI Hah dB» ar Ali B id EttkvwHaka. No < u. deabtoi i t l* bead ol Hklr tbould rat fc> at* tt. Iva beyouu quratiot th* In«**. Mtioi* *v*r i.*- -Jl Vo. H. ( ARI'ETs. 8 At tar. New Btor* ol B. Baarrv, No. 8 tab »y. near ta* Coop* i InMlt .'e ' } x II itn Tkrktriitt, be root*. aaanaa h*ea*Mi. vr.iu T>iit* i'ti Cabpbt* Ai. Btrtu iti laeaaia, eooent*. Ali Wool LaaBtLB, 44 coat*. Goou iBCBAta, Si'oent* AJbo, Crortl. j . i *w patt-rnt of yard od«* Ttpeitrieo, at .ow frvwa. Oil. io^ba, 2a 64. Heavy Bboet Uilciota* Ml rent* ta* tb* BBJBBM yam. B. Bum N x, _revr the tk«->p*t leotttvte. Ri itiki: Cl Rio - By Maioii A Obi KaToal V"** Trtiaa. Alao bilk Elanir Bt«kirp* fjr Mb MM *elna. tup- rttert at* aaooido! bra ei lnn«aiHf|| drtv-rrnitio* mad* order No I \ ».,, .. ^ r Mont*. N. Y. Ladle*' private roomtaod u mil aii»jJn i I'KiKTMMiKo x Hash v> k. Tbo BOitoB cry aiiloM Hwr By**, raiae* lu Clt tnuati, ha* re*l»A>d tt eoUblukiLi t*. Bart: t ,1. pel i C>> Tao«,BO . EkcrLtioa Htn pva |^,.u ^ very 'at, oburn tAli ft loytl .trr. 8.* Dr Cbirt..0 t card a* Crli-.doio* and bo taovtBcrd. for **le Hid *p|Bod prtvattly by *ap. n.n ed » Uli » h (.*¦¦ 'I' Atll'AKIA At|l kKIA ' B. Oarikwror. Mai <a't':ier W: o,. ta> aad R.-t»ll D. *Vr Bk Aacana A >in»ti of PitWcteleaya oo boa j a, road* to erdet. Al*» afis* a**oin>*Lt of Kua Piai t*. ki , a: th* Aaoa- a-BI leSrxPVt. t\*. -xil. .-vi t :.M i- i ..To Bi»i '.. o* fk'n T" *u* p " " U< «. i- . .»«.aro-rs « .-i . straps* '* **' *' *" ',r'J '**-.'". *T,i' r«'--"»Jf "-»'.** Him * i'ai i.»T Hi Lin i. r>r*.ao S. !. ii /., .. i i ita ro.t <:c f»iw rsSaJI.. itiui-raol y kjj m M, a; 0 lha Mdifi < . ''i ' . & .Or»:li i, ai v aMaftusd M V- wttiaoot.i " |Mw Tra» !.. r 0",'Ki ,T' Ban Bass Cul,f«v'." fc T^ ¦'.**. way. N V. <i» rMl f <'".' At Ml I >d Bs) H »' It' Mi riytptlra only froaa BSMaSMI a d localof»>o<- -o -aib Bsaad._ j i.i \V.»i i> > ElAlK K>>TOAATIVE tbi- only Lot«. .1 ii- Ba..l .bi <irr] 1: aili par .a; »i.'.y »rat..re. Bta'-trntr J' «IM. I' . aOO.O ISfBafl laM ». n f-adl-a »cd 0. am *J1 .aa.a Wl*> . -l ot-1 y tt. .' W>» aa¬ lt » li| '-' IBBSfl -ly. on-' la-*p .twir hair B* .i i to any aa*: tv.ll a>tr»)v.l I' '. »ai a' . .. "ay a No. 4M Br< *J»«y. GftrlAT B/ABtJ MS." PtlOK TO BrWO. iL. iUmi i m atool of Fssx H cm**, h ii t -rtMi Ci'it», Taf.1.1 Ol lit Ar.d flat J>'ix11 trv, Ataf at re.' ...... s. pri -a, f> n. t ¦><> p' a-v. d..'. ir.'..l Tut "Jit Iran. A I! prraoni in wont of any o' tn» artie . saatSSedi ab v* » lAltM 'na-.r lalatl : .«>" - a ra IV. J I Da 11 r v it Co N i >. i aad CXi Broadtray. A Neu iDEAa Ji iru't IarooMinoK K^hii-r. Jo* Bri.i-Trris.. on Ion c«if; ai Bl -i»uc B.tow . BBeB. Triviaandi of artl. lr» latMMMi ImmIoj MaaeSaberae, orarli f na t>vt, aVr. N'i. Broadway i.rat tfoor. lJOVDAY, MARCH II, 1869. TO CttnRKSPOSDKKTS. B .. ¦¦. Irttor* for Tür. Tai near. Off.on should, to ail aanri ba addreaatiti to Hos» .* OsSBASf A Co. The steamship Star of the West arrived yester¬ day eveming with the <'aliforrla mails and nearly a million in treasure. Het advices arc ro later than tbnr-e received by telegraph from New-Orleans, but our coneeixindr-nce eontaint much that ii of inter- eft. Ti> Sfiuth Ai:n'rican newn in, ai uiual, of riot and civil warfare. The citizen! of Tcmpkim County are threaten¬ ing to take the law into their own handi in the case of üdward II. KiillofT, who has recently been grant i d a new trial after a second eonvirtinn of tbe mur¬ der of bin wife and <hi!d. The Sheriff agsTsvat-'d the excitement by vveukly running out of the Coun¬ ty with hid prifoner, in anticipation of a public uierur<*, raJli'd for Saturday. Of courae, an at¬ tempt to bail| Btdkl back wai made. It ia thought that a riot will break out on hit return. We trmt that tbe acones which have ibBglBlbtal ioine of the Western Ktatea within the p >-t few months will not M rtpeated in .New Vork. We have telegraphic accounts from Vera Cruz to tbe !'th inst., brought by the Tennt'ssoe. Ac¬ cording to than- ai coonts, which, comin;' as they do through Vera Cruz, are liable to the suspicion of some cx.'igeeration, the left winn of Miramon's army had been defeated at Coidova, and driven back with some loss. Former accounts represent Miramon aa having been repulsed from Pernte, so that, if all this i* true, the people of Vera Cruz would appear to have some grounds for their confi¬ dent opinion LhatMiramcQ will Dever appear before their city. Hut this news not merely repulies Miramon in front; it threatens bLm in the rear. It is suted that Guanajuato and Aquas I'alientes hare been captured by the Liberals, how, or under whoie lead, is cot stated.an important omission, consid¬ ering the fact that previous accounts had uot made us aware of any Liberal force organized or operat¬ ing anywhere in the neighborhood of those cities. It is also stated, as if to give roundness ar.d com¬ pleteness to the story, and to insure the safety of Vera Cruz, that Gen. Degollado is preparing to march on the capital with a force often thousand men. Hut in Mexico, of all places in the world, preparation is one iMSf, and performance quite an¬ other. Tfiese nottheru Mexican chiefs ha\e been preparing ever since the war began to march on Mexico, but none of tbem has yet done it, except Bianco, and be very sojn found it evpeJient to march back n. am. If Miramon meets with rsS fur¬ ther interruption than that to l»e apprehended from the preparations of Dr^ollado, he will still stund a very good chance to make himself m.nter of Vera Cruz. NKW.IIATIPNIIIUE. The Republ cans of the Granite State did well at their late Liection; but they might have d.>ue bet¬ ter. They have from Three to Five Thousand msjoiity in the popular vote of their State, and they can bring out over Three Thousini by inaki:^ the right ritamiuttions and supporting them w ith I energy and efficiency. They fell ;-h.>rt this year, j not ao much becuiNC of tbe bad roads and tagirag storm, as because their nominations were not e: tirtly judicious. Let us beexplicit: In 1-40, when a full vote was polled, after a most excited caii.ass, New-Hampshire gn;e -ouio ;.',<tXi totes for Van Buren to KfiOO for Hameon. Ia all her 1.lections after the aocensioa of Jackson dew s to tbe patsa'.'e of the Nebraska bill, she gave Cortesponding majorities on the Demix'ratic side, except that she was somewhat shaken by the I'ro- SlaTery aspect uiven to the Annexation of Texn And the consequent secession of Joan P, Hale from the Democratic party. Once only, if we mistake m t, were the Whigs and the Free Soilers, support- | Lug separate State Tickets, able to p..11 votes enough to beat the "Old Line" Pro-Sl»\ory Democracy, prior to 16V, when the feeling arou-ted by the passage of the NebrafiA Act effected a complete renilulioa. Since then, New-Hampshire, at first nominally American, has been hear.üy Republican, as she has shown in many a desperate couteat. Last year, under the influence of tbe Lccompton outrsges ate gave a very handsome majority, w nere- by Mr. Hale was returned to the Senate It another full term. That the majority n smaller in b< r recent Flec¬ tion is due to the fact that the Republican candi¬ dates for Governor arid Members of Congress were all active and zealous Whigs in the old times. They were able, respectable, good men; any one of them by himself was '^objectionable, but all of them compoM il a ticket not acceptable t'i the Fira Thousand Democrats of other days who are uow zealous and moat rtiicieut Republicans. n<td one of the three candidates for Congress been chosen ft ob taia cLsm, we believe the majority of none of the Meuibera elect need have fallen much bebw One Tbouiand, whi e that of Gor. Gci.tdwiti might have approached Four Thousand. We make ttus explication for the betelit not of N -3»r-lTan mIj, kr.» of tha Br«ra,Miea» rut* j in oil tbe Stet*-e The l*eeoe mot every ar cere ba pr*>tM«l»»7 iMieal THK OHIO IKtl D. Atnorg the nusarroui other gr'at pubic frattd* recent.y brought to iigha, by o<> ruf ao-< the least remarkable one is the fraud up>o the State of Ohio, carried on for a series .>f )-.«.-», aod of woick three r~.-.%\;.- State Treasurers were tue lostru- n>ent/<.a fraud by wh.eh that State n a luaer to tbe amount of $.'<¦ I, -11. A report upon tnn a:!nr, latHy made to tbe Blute Legislature by an Inveetigatirg Commission, civee at t.gt a tbr whole story, at least s > far aathe Commissioners were able to make it OVt, f^r they complain not a l.tt> of tbe 'ib»tac!»i put in the way of the in.esti¬ mation by tie unwillingness of Witnesses, ami of ti> grand mistake committed ia the beg.nning of allowing the defaulting paitit« to escape, inst« ad of pouncing at or.ee ¦ their persons and their papers. 1;.- d. fa> at.ft.a. .t seems, b.'gan with AlVrt A. Bliss, who waa treuurer from Man ft, 1-47. to January, 18081 Bliss, it aeemi. was a poor man when he came ir.to office, and hit eight suret;e» were certain persons not fnenda of bit, nor even his acquaintances, but strangers, cif/eni of Coium- bas. and one of them president of a bank there, who assumes) this responsibly as a matter of .peculation, with the understanding that they aad Bliss should hare tie cm-tody, and. baring the cus¬ tody, should hate the ose of certain portions of th» public money. It does appear that dunng Buss's terui of office this custody a:,d use of the public money was a source of pront t«> rarioai 'minks and bankers. But not exclunveiy to them, since it is shown by the evidmce that Bliss hiimvelf received interest on account of the depoiit of State funds, for which he does r*o| appear to have ever accounted, and aNo that he in¬ vested >..o 's i) of tbe public mocey in the purchase of the stock of a bank, on w oich be received the dividends. He al*o commenced and carried on. while in (ffice, purchases and speculations in real estate in and around Columbus. The r< suit of all these dialings with the public money wai. ai might naturally enough have been expected, that when Bliss came to go out of "flu e there w as a deficiency in bis accounts, which be uai.ely attributed. || his testimony before the Commissioners, to wroug en¬ tries in the books, or losses occurring h* could not tell how. I'nfortunately, the law-, of Ohio, pre¬ suming rather too far on the honesty of such per¬ sons as might be intrusted with the public money, had made no provision whatever for the full a;id comp!» te acjustmei.t of the lOOOavnta1 utter of the Treasurer or Auditor at the close of ea:h official term of office. Nor was the Auditor's account a check of this sort upon the Treasurer, since it wn not kept wuh the iirdi. d'jal Treasurer, but With the office, by whomsoever held, so that the Auditor bad nothiru to do with and no over- eight over the sottlemeut of one Treasurer with his eucceauor in i :!icc. Hence there are no official m-ans of ascertaining w hat the amount of Mr. Bliss s losses and deficien¬ cies may have been. At the same time this defect in the iaw afforded him an opportunity to cover up and conceal those deficiencies by means of a pri¬ vate arrangement with John G. Breslin his suc¬ cessor. What was the preciM nature of this arrangement and how il wai brought about does not appear; for Mr. Bliss, though residing in the State, paid no attention to the summons of the Commissioners, and refused to appear before tin m. Fit ally, is he would not come to them, they pocketed their dignity and went to him but even then he refused to produce any papers or memoran¬ da. It appears, however, from other sources that the mm which he ought to hare paid over to Bres¬ lin was $904,436. Breslin, in a report which he made, states that he received from h.m $846 579, tbe balance being covered by checks given by the sureties, payable in two years without interest. But the turn of §846,579, acknowledged as paid in cash, included a certificate of deposit of W. M. Chittenc'en of New-York, which, contrary to law, Breslin ugretd to receive as money. Not only that, but he made en agreement that th il deposit thouM not be called for tor ah months. That Bliss ..; d have asked this is considered by the Commissioners as proof that at the time th:? certificate of deposit was not t.vailable as cash. By what motive Broslil was induced to agree to this postponement remains equally in the dark with his motives generally for assisting Bliss to cover up his deficiencies; but the consequence of the delay w as that three-quarters of the amount was lost to the State, leaving BIisj a defaulter, even without further impeaching his settlement with Breslin, to the am Ml | of some $35,000, for which, as the Commissioners think, he and his sureties are still liable. Breahn, who entered upon office .n January 1958, havmg previously been Speiker of the House of Representatives was at that time a most flourishing, fortunate and promiting lOeSg Democratic politi¬ cian. But fe-ariug, perhaps, that trie nigl Ot* the sham Democracy in Ohio was not to be long be B|> pesjs to have re made up bis mind to make hay ¦.vh.ie the sun shone. Having Cotniuenced hi< reerwith the above fraudulent arrangt ment. for which no Joubt he was paJi, at least ia prom s.m to cover up the diheicnees and imsconc uc t of his predtcei-sor, he entered at once on a siaiilar ouHFin of ifffiisitassj with tWfiWfi mwoj ni il he pushed to a much mote audacious extent. 11 If* Lag lied toCsxads, of course he wa* not w.tkia the reach of tbe Commissioners. He is, however, as it Mgfjsf, very anxious, or pretends to be. to get back to Ohio, whether out of regard to his own private interests and personal comfort or to the welfare t>f the Democratic patty does not appear. He made, or caused to be made, some overtures to the Comrais- s:onei> agreeing on certain term- to ObssjO to Ohio and la appear before them as a w.tnesi. With tne same anxi- ty, or sfcou of anxiety, to get at all the facts, which tie L ¦umisii.ners ex¬ hibited by waiting M BltSO, they sssjg one of their mmber to C: i.ada to perfect an arrange- ment with Breslin, into whieb, on the advice of the Attorney General they had agreed to enter with him. B'.t by that time he had altered bis .vend, and on presentation of the papers for signature, he declined to go bsckoaanysuch tOfOM llowiver. be gave some information, eapecialfy in ri'V.ua tu the Chittenden affair. It appears that, t.ndiLg Ch.ltenden had foiled, he agreed to accept trcm h:m what he said was the best he could offer, tight note- of Land i f different per>.j:i». the note of Robert.I. Walker for $5,308, snd of E. P«i k of New York for |3 000 sUr.d'.n- at the h-?ad of the Lit. None of those notes w^re pa.d at uit- turity. Suits were comrLenced, but ail that e.er came of them sj i»earsto have been a compromise with Waiker to give up his cote for j:,is»j stock of tbe Chicago Land Compary, and with IVck to I IS If t . in eveiis.-.ge Ibs »lity i-ce shares of the Chicsgo, St l'auia^t! l ocdduLac R*ur-jsd CotB^a- ry, tat. trhirb i alaaWe .*/...rtirw Mr. F.-elie grv Clout)} piw>*>e«tohand mm.tboetork ia tbe Lied Corj j.en» wh«*B he can U; Lit haadeupoB it.to the State of Otio. It was, perhaps, tbe !o*e thas real.z*d, arhi.-h tcip. d to pr**>i-ttai> Bre*| n ibm tec eoorae rt wr. i ¦p'trtilativn- \*iib the State's m ocey upon Whi<-h ka) IBtaWfi AtLt*ttfti.**»r> were cc»c«etionj w th W. If. Cr* A C > ind D. Berk*!, the Commer¬ cial Btrk of TeVav*, aid tbe C ty BmJ| of Cia- e nnati. by wt.cb, in hia Utt report, BmBUSj Bl knowledge*, through tbe failure of tbe depotit- oree, to hate n ffrred a lo-s ol $*Ju4,t>¦ which 10 tbi* r*i>ort ke attempted to »hift "IT on th* State. waa aJeo colj> < ted w.th the Ai.ro Braoeb L'a.lroad Lobd, the Ksnauha Bank tf Virginia, and the Fikhatt C\ <-rt> I.auk, at l.o*ber. in Indiana. B l pttikWn this IbbI cperation tvere John (i. ( BB9J ard Charbs L. Joi-nsor., a(j,i $; <¦) i*h>, La various State Stock*, were «tu.red and ief .-it' ai a* m cur,to * f,,r the Tbe co:^e«iuer;ce of all ttBK operations v.at that when Bre*lin. m 186*9, fi^tt-d t Bi tWBBBTJ (l toll over the pubii? money to Wat, II. Gibson. t:a succee*or, though the ainour.t to be pe:d over wet tSH 953, Bre*lin had ia land only f;»K;.Nk'( at the be*', wherewith to pay it. Gib«on wa» mi diflerect politic* from Brea- lia. lie bad joined the Republican party, and it wa« from that party that BB nad obtaine'l hi* BkV \ ffl 111 tltaV Bl. he wm 0Lce< d with Breslin by Tery cio.;> t.< a. He waa bit brother-in-law, and a re«! )< [,t in tbe same town. From 1841 he had b. n an attorney-at-Law. Up to the tiiiie that Fr alin became Treasurer. Gibson, though a boaa speculator, bad rvoeseate.l but little property. After that eviut bo appeared io bare abun la;.: fundi at >.(mmand. In 1969 he became preaidet.t of the Tiffin acd Fort Wajue LUiiroai Coniptay. purporting to be a stockholder in it to the amount ef 830,000, In 1854 be became president of tt." Seneca Count) Bank. He waa a partner with hit brother in law in various ipeculationa, and, BB the c u.c; ».:< r rt imply, waa cognizant of but BiiBBBl)IIB|riBtioil of the public money and a ihaier in it. Tbe coojnuasionerg do not sug¬ gest it. but very likely he went o*er to toe Republican part) in cornection with these specu- lations: and. aceordtig to that oU pollfj which, "luring the English at. S.otoh ii\il wtri, lei brothers to tike different fide*-, no that at all events tie t«täte mii/ht reman; in the ftmiiy. Ai \Low, BlfJBlil and Gibsi :i sevm to Bavo regard-*! the TreaM.r) of Ohio as their private fTtliT When tbe i-ettlement took pltee between thorn it waa carried on like % private affair, noboiy being allowed to !>o present. The account given of this affa.r b) Gibson in hia apologies for h ui- 'T ix* not aaticfactory. He pretends lh:.t up to the time when be en'ered ir.to < rtioo aa Treaaurer te had no ÜM of any defoior.c At mthe Bjeooatnt of his brother 10- law Ix vol.d the 8904,636 above mentione |, jet lie gare Bivtnl . .<i*charge ia fu'I Bpoa receiving enl) 83S3,86S, without makiog any inju ry aa to the. baki.ee, or stitpecting an) thing to be wrong.a etory which the Commis*n»ner§ do not believe. For ajj iciothi Bretlin an.i (i.bson worked together to conceal the defici-ncy, in hope*, probabl). to realize enough out ef their in- \ertmenta to make it up. They ma.ie deeperate effi rta to raiie the money to meet the amount of j'lirii.iU'o due for State interest in .Inly, 1856, and which the Tr< a?urer'a account* would repretent a* on hand For this BirpMB they came to New- York ard tried to borrow money at various banks They did not sue eed, but at laat, by p aying a heavy premium, got 850,600 from John Thompson on a deposit of certain bonds. But as the Bank of tbe Republn refused to discount these eecuritios for Tl. MMOP, le demanded b».ck h * check, which, even hai they held it, would have left them abort of the neceasary amount, a* to meet the iotoreat due they had on'y 6466,000 in hand. Their onia- aion to provide the money to pay this interest «\- plod< d tbe whole affair. It W( uld turn, if Brealin is to be believed, that of tbe mi-sing money iome 1800,600 waa absolutely lost in the way above stated. What has become of toe balatceT Breslin al'egea that he hss etill under hia control 8800,666 of that money in the hands of Iklta] paitiei, whom he declii ea to BttM, but he ia ready to give it up on receiving a dircharge and j.iidou. Tho Couniiaiioiiera, however, are of opinion that by proper vigilance a part of this amount may be reached without Breslin s aid. Ai tt if auui is not in money, but securities, they think it may be traced. Wto me Mr. Bresliu's confiden- tta! Mi ds. whe'Ler brother politicians, or mt-rely brother -peculators, does not appear. Itl.l I l-ll I'HIH.KIM*. The Plisec of Walea cheek by jowl w ith the i'op«' of Borne in the Vatican The Heir of England, the Fldest Son of Protestantism, he who ia one tie) to be the Deader ot the Faith of Henry VI If., BJ the ^race of Leo X.. paasing tho time of day t) tbe ti&n of Sin, to Ant.i hriat, not to aay to the Strict Woman that S.tteih DBOSJ S'veu Hills' Well, wonder*«ill never ceafe, and this plaguey ujarcb of mlcd, or progress of *o:icty, or course of eveits, or political teeesiity. or what \ou will, will tool, h aw us without a j much aa a rag of a good old prejudice to our backs. We have seen the grar.ddaunLU rof Gtorte III, embracing the nephew of Bonaparte, and mak.ng the Grand Turk a Knight of the Christian I »:der of St. George of England, and tiie Commander of the Fa-thful himseif inter hang¬ ing gifta of price with the Bishop of F .me; but BTM tLese thiLgs are not so significant of the pro greaa tt the revolut.oQ wh: h is going on all the time in tbe k .' w ithin men's minds, of which ail outward kiigdoms are lut the projection, as this residence of the Heir Apparent of the English throne in the city of the Triple Crown and uider the e)e, as it wne, of the Sovereign 1'ont ff. What would Get'ge III. or Lord Eldon BBfBJ to «u-h B thu.g. Could it have entered thtir w.'.dest In auis of postibilities i It a the first time that a rr.nce of Wales ever visited the Eternal C.ty, tint we remember. Cer¬ tainly, rince the forma'.on made an Ant: Pope Of the bmsjbXiIbj of Lagland. Charles Edward livtd there, to be sure, as Prinee of Wales and as Charit* III but bb he was Prince and Ktnz only by brevet, he can hardiybe reckoned an exception. The suggestion of such a visit aa that of Albert Edwuid we Wtr.dc: whether he will have the sense to call himtelf Eilward VII , when be auc- CC dt hj the case ajf Frederick, or of his -on or h:* grandson, the two last -gorges, uould have iWoatCZCita*] aa in»urrtct.oa in Er.gland. Tne tory squ.rts axd parsons Wottki ha.e enulled the t.ret of SiLuti fit.d a'ar oii, and Lioe seen in i: a pre?a«e of a Legate a Laurt holdu-g hia Court ia Weaiai^nster. B-.t it waa an idea that could not orcur, :n the eiiaÜEi»' nature of thing*, to any mind ir. Ei *'ai 1 thirt) years aco. Even at the time mi CatVihc EmaccipstHn, the mc*t fraxtic of the Ko-Pi I- t) tetreriits BMBT auggr-ted the frightfiu pu*.i>..::> of a Qajjeoj pf Er.aci atsidiag it: rijft £<.(*. to BoOM for k.s fdueatior. And csw it stains natural (.... .The ««...'.. m af idea*, wtieh pkL'osoyoers Uli us it only Mother name for Tim«1. bM own *o niucii feeter of lat' ). ars that it IM earned M oc MfSsswtM uraei"it.>r mi the last f «tr»tn>r. even. The iron of the ra-lwats 1 m I ut>red into tur OOait, and tbe ite«n of the Worm ti r> baa jivm Lew ai<--d to our idea*, aad g-'-dcet. knew.* where we iLa!! briog up. Steam, indeed, ras much to answer for in ten matter, fir it it . MM* agent a these rovoV r.s, by the wr.y n which ;t Mfl * tared the b ui.dar>s of kingdoms and threwr. d<WL thewnil« of cities, and hegun al least to a *>. th^> whole irocU acquaintance, Lf not kin. Then Her Msjesty ha? jast issued her Rmjmi Warrant IIMihliBJ, the Tilth it November. tt:e Tlnrt;eth of January %mi ttw Twenty-ninth of Mat, and rediced them to the ranks as private aad ru'gar day* again. Tlat ivl* brat.oc of the trat of these days w:!I linger for a few years, as a hoi Ja/ amom tee street-boys of London, by virtue of a tradit.i n strorger than the warrant of Maj -sty it»«If, but, as the ..-; stitnted authoiite« define making Guys of thec-el . am longer, tie eou-.ter- ftit presentment of Guido Lau*, will grad' ally ceaee from M the streets acd be remitted, with tue Lord of Misrule and the Abbott of I'nreason to the dorn an of the antiquanau. But we imagine fear wiil be found to fast on the anmversary of the day when Kings made the discovery, as old Lord Auch- incleck, Dmmis' father, loll Dr. Johnson, when he demanded to know the use of the operation Charles urlerwent in front of Whitehall, "that "they had a mk joint in their necks "' And fewer yet to PJostMM titat WiaslUsTI, .si Cat ttstil face* and make their hearts f lad w ith wine on the day that will rtu....d UsM of the Kestoratma of that Moat l.e.igioui Kirg, Charles IL During tbe rei^n ofthat Merry Monarch, the malignant Puri¬ tans used to d lejrate the day of his father's mar¬ tyrdom by havmga calfs heal faff dinner, as Butler has let us kne w, as a votive offering properly t>pi¬ ta! of the commemoration. A practical jest not w ithout its grain of humor, wortny the round heads :n m which it came. And these n .'. itiOM is tbe customs of from two hundred to two hundred and :iity yet;*' standing were made in answer to Addresses from both Houses of 1'arlisment, asking her Msjesty to com¬ plete thun. So QfjFtai and the two Charleses go out of the l'rayer-Book together, without a word being said in their behalf. And ai soon as the necessary acts are parsed, repealing the laws eatabliKh n^ th»-m as Fsets or 1 Vasts, of which Mr. Spencer Wa'pole has given notice, they will no more Come i »* tie path of daily life, but be relegated to their proper place in history. Nearly n.i.ety years ago un ITT'j) Dr. Notvell having preached a furiously Church and State sermon on tbe .'10th of January, and the House of < omuioris haviig pissed !he usual vote of thanks, Tommy Towri.-hend.to get the loan of a vote from w hom Burke used to strain his throat, according to Goldsm th.moved that the vote of thanks be eipunged from the Journals, which, after debate, was done.an example to the L xpungingi of our own land and times. Soon afterward, Mr. l'reder ck Montvu moved for leave to bring in a bill tor the reeeal of the observance of that day altogether, which was rejected by a vote of 196 to '.C. So it sterns tha, there was. even then, a pretty large minority in favor of striking Ctarlea I. out of the calendar of English Martyrs. Dr. Johnson him¬ self said that he was sorry that it had not been a t< ii porary act. to have expired with the century. 'I am against abolishing it," said he, ' becau-e " ti.at would be declaring it wrong t> establish it; "but I should have no objection to make an act "continuing it for another century, and then '.lett.pe it expire.'' It is a proof of the in¬ veteracy of Li.gLLIi habitude's that this om¬ ni» mi ration has been endured for almost the pre¬ cise time which would have suited the great Doctor's notions of the fitness of things. But it has received its t uup de grure at last, while the same blow has cut down its two equally absurd Ci.mpat.ien holidays. And there is a general fe-d- icg of satisfaction that common sense has finally triumphed over these remains of old bigotries and Toryisms. As signs, such things as these have an Interest which raises them to the importance of events. i II i IV VMDFRFR. Tie evidence i pi n which the yacht Wanderer Wll condemned as a slav>_r appears to have been perfectly complete. Tt»« witm ssea were the pilot who brought the vessel over the St. Andrew's bar and a peison connoctid with th-* light house at Cumberland Island, on the south shore of St. An dlew's Sound, through whom the pilot was ob¬ tained. The latter testified tha: on the '.'-'th of November last two men came to the light house in a boat in the evening, ore of whom called himself Captain Cole, and said that he had a ship outaide the bar on a pleasure excursion, and wanted a pilot to taki' her in to Jekyl I-laad, where he wipQed to take Biime get,t!emen on board. Tne witness went w.th Coie to Jekyl Island, where < »de rVd him that his real name was Coire, and his ship the Wanderer, just arn- ed from Congo with four hun¬ dred negroes. Tbe p 'ot testified, that, on going on board the Wunderer with the person who called himself captain Cole, he law regroes on board, acd was told th» re were 100. He saw IU or "0 on deck, huddled together like p;gi, mostly naked. The Wild limit very badly, and was full of cock roacfcei. BOOM of the negroes appeared ¦ ok, and as they weie coming over the bar, one dead one wa.i thrown overboard. After passing the bar, he anchored the vesst 1 near the beach of Jekyl Island and they commenced landing the negroes in boats. He saw one dead one M the Island. After they w ere all landed the capt»;n requested him to take tbe vessel up to the mouth of the Little Saltülo, whith he did. The other witness ass sted in this opera¬ tion, and, returning to Jekyl Island, saw the ne¬ groes there. Thus far. the whole history of the Toyssie of the Wanderer, including her leaving New-York, wh«-re the object and intention we re suspected, herngurug away as a pleasure yacht on the coast of An .ca, her Ttryage up tiie C'tugo, tbe unsuccessful pursuit of her by our ships on tae coast, her arri. la, the laaejmgof the negroes, and everything that hap¬ pened to the ressel, down to the present time of her c.ndemnat.oD. bas been fully brought out. It is rxueh to be hoped that the subsequent deiliigs w.th the negroes after Hsjjf were landed may yet be oifOOOi w.th »-.jual MMOM On that point theie is yet very Ltt-e .nformat.on. Two or three of tbe negroes who f.-1 i^to the La-ds of the Mar¬ shal were subsequently sto'en from Lim. We hsae i.ad various vague rumors as to rxwj escf these negroes transpoit*: ri ra^.-ead, exdetonat »ar.ous j ilts. E- etxtij w j Lave had rer irts b; tslegraf h of the M i/tre of 6fl> if Item by tb*- United r.*A*a .r r ; and e*jberqu«t>tly of tkwsr r «.<-,.. w ^ ."r *t ...I' b bxit nothing de^att*»^ We tniat, kowtver, ttal tbe whole story wit] oee*. out. XL*, (bet tee purchasers of tbeee Afrieea tJsw«) [ttJjjkfj ctBMl be punished, may at least be expaaa Tee ev dmoe abo«e recited ii amply au/B -,,.tl ^ Baal hfl Csptain Come aad al! oa boari tba reest], at leaat ifl American citizens, of tbe capital criaa, ofpiracj; but if we recol.eci aright, Faf/aia Cer^ Laving- Lx en first bad '< i, m know cot why, «ek all this ev.deuce against him, aa gu It/ of ntttaf eat I rt)*sal mt tb.- «'ave-trade, waa diem'seed on ktjj, and at preset t ia not in custody. Very likely, ke>. ever, be cay brate it out. rrljini; on the fever ef a I .: Itl jury for an acquittal. It is o H rer/ rref itable to tne detective ski!! employed, or at 1%+ it arguta a great diiii.clu.at on nuong tke peoaaef tr- I"Uth. to g.ve information oa tbe tabj**i that three uiootba should bare peased si ace tka landing cf tbo regroee, and so l.ttle jet be kae«* of tbnr wbereabouta. The sale of the Wanderer berk plaee laat Sabar- day. C: «..<.« Lamar bought k>r for ft 000. Wa, a be 1 A speculator w h wuie* to tit her out tat kl tber *o;age ' The Spaotth slave-tradera Baal to attend the sales at Sierra Leoae. and buy j aj the quick-sailing veeeele, condemned as slaters, with the intent again to employ tbeaa ia the aaatt trade; t. r were the English able to put a etea tt this, except b> ordering captured äerers, of beinf told, to be broken up. Ot R ( OBPOK.tTIO^I I OFKflBL. We have !»\a waiting with aome loipatieaoe tal n<>t a Little curiosity for a reply on behalf of Us I.aw Department of the City Govennneat tetkt energetic and not corapl mentary criticisms aajj fi iward over the s «nature ot the arting Street Commissi« cer, with reference to judgments aguea the City for clainia supposed to bare originale»! aa contracts made with the Street Dcpartaieat. Tka cbargea brought forward against Mr. Busteed wer« speeiGc, and based on ofüoial mformaüoa. It waa averred by the Street Department that forty-eight thousand dollars in one case, twenty six thou eat! dollara in another, and ten thousand dollaa n another ease, were now in procees of bei if «. tracted from the City Treasury on judgments trkiek could rot have been obtained had tho Corporakea Counsel dote his duty. It wai alsj very breaaiy implied, on tbe same authority that the ('oreore- tioo CoQDtd had been guilty of similar oegiect with reference to the five hundred other judgaeats against tbe city obtained during the preoedtag jear, and facts were given in support of tkest a'legationa, whish certainly were atroag ans! ea> picioua enough to call for and rooeire an .,ih sal reply. lie it reiiietnbered that the officer assailed at tins case is the same who prosecuted a prinks gentleman for libel, on account of aa article as! containing a traction of tbe criminating 'nfaretjaw oflieiall) put forward by tbe present head of tkt stnet Department. The party ptoeeouted had as official records to fall back upon in support of ha published statement*. He could not cite tkt letters of the Corporation Counsel as proofs of Ms al'egatmns against that officer; nor could he refer to the fi'cs of a department when called upoa te substantiate the Corporation Counsel t neglect of his iworn and solemn duties. Under these eireus» stances, Mr. Buiteed ventured baldly to questta the accuracy of his accuser, and obtaiaed la trumpb of pertua<lirj|> one half a jury that tkt prejudicial statements could not be supported it open Court by any erideuce within the power tf the defendant to produce. This waa regarded ay the Law Department of tbia city as a rioters, though admittirg in minds differently Destitutes t very different construction. In the present case, however, the aeeuMhoas ef ngleet aud malfeuatice are laid before tke Cifcy I.eg;slahire, under the sanction and with all tka responsibility of an official report. The imtXrat eat is entered in full on the proceedings of theComasa Council; atil yet, after a week's delay, wearea? bo nearer to an explanation or reply than sis wert before' Some ill-natured critira siggest that tats silence ia tantamount to a cugmtrit, or ackacaleag- .. t by the Corporation Counsel of the ehaffai made against him; but aa we are aware that Mr. üusteed, just at present, is »ctive'y erjgagel ia securing a legislative prolongation of hia tera, wa must protest against this malicious and unfoutied construction of tbat gentleman's fai'ure to refsf. He i$ aaiiuua to make full ex plan stions, confeasioaj and revelstocB on the aubject of city litigatioaii but as tkeee wi.l involve very extenaive and sea- plicated developments, be very na.rely deasadi tbat his term shall be extended three years for ski purpose of eiisb ing him to compile a brief sutnoarj of the judgments which have already been ohlaiasa* agaicnt tbe city under his astute and aetire as¬ pen iaion The latotl and most precise intelligence resatiag .to the w ar question in Europe ia found ia tkereaert of the cVbate in the n<>uieof Commons oa tba eight of the O'th ult. Lord Palmerttoo asked tka Mir-isters if tb^y could give any assurance that tkt peace would Lot be broken; and Mr. Diaraai replied that he could state that the Papal Terria> i.es would be evacuated by both the French sal A uttriac forces. This announcement was natttraaj receded with cbeert, for it reuiDvee one of tai great pointa of difficulty between the Ca»ins4saf Paris BLd Vier.na. But those who read the report of tbia debate, which we give in another eotataa, wül perceive that Mr. Diaraeli ia exc?edio|l7 .* ticut in kit statement, and doea not go bejood tba sing e annoutcerxient in question. He doea aal aa> pyeei anything like a conviction tbat the dsag**' * o-.er; and jet. had heentertained euch a coBrictsao. had he been able to furnish tbe publie wila"f good ground for such a bope, he oerUinly eouldast have withheld it. Tte n.;uta/y occupancy of tbe Statea of tV Chuich is ot,!j one of the points at issue betessB the two Powers. Prance requires Austria . withdrew h«*r forces from Florence, Parana, PM* na. in short from eterypart of Italy which stoawsT gart .-ona, outs.de of her own recognized POBBS* eiocB. Taea there is the question of the DaaaaiBB Prine palitle« where France and Russia tog**** si pp'rt the authority of Couza. the newly eleetad Ilosji^ar of bt.th Moldavia aid Wallackia, whaa» ui ol key l u proclaimed in defiance of the d^ia^- of the last Pans Conference, of tne intoreai aa* do'&ity ot AusUia. and, what ia more, of en tab.e treasure of diplomacy, the lato?1*! - 1irhi»h empire. In regard to .* va aLd M'-ntetegro, too, there n trooaw betw-<n tbe two Empires; and Ot **** of thene subjects has Mr. Diaraeii a word of ooaaa- lat or to 1:1tr to the anxious audience of coaas** c ai raer ta whoes* behalf eepecislly Lord I'siasr *t a LLUir^Ka.ed hint. Still lees Could s bj a.- : to rtiatia bel.-ved tt> be the $ ^

New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY) 1859-03-14 [p 4].chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1859-03-14/ed-1/seq-4.pdf · purprioro Theyr

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Page 1: New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY) 1859-03-14 [p 4].chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1859-03-14/ed-1/seq-4.pdf · purprioro Theyr

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Hmi b* i ,. #> ,

Lett t BToas Bat* of BtotW Starr a. Co.

J aM r I Hi m rn * Bl, let* firm of Barn* r bMBpt r- , i. |,|.Oio.oa Pia.< *, , ffm,* c

Jim» Loa, firm of Jan.** I>'«* k Ca., M UMtrrUia.1 H FioTMin.Hia, late tint, of I. H Kr i-ai» rbarn It Co.

Criiai.li A hi '.

fin- of Ho:*ley fc Co.

Crraa* HUokTO*.firm of Mory.n k JewetL

Boi UHifoiiiij fi-nr' K beeaaaaB ft Baa.Titaoook* Milv**ttB, lab* of the hrra of Bow/an, Mcrinm i b Ca

Au Haan Bioti ow, firm of Doao. KIol k Co of St toola.

Ct BTM Ho*. » '" .* C-. .lit ar.d Nob*.Gfeoaui U Mokoai, firm of f. D M -rv. k Co.

Oliiii K- Wooo, InaM Wll'krd, Wood k Co.At r«»o B Bikkki, firm of A H. Birma k B'irr.

UkOkcl Blih. firm of Pnelp* Butt a. Go.Amoi T Dhicht, fkrai of Trov» bridge, fiwigot k Co.Ataa* CooBB, t.rm f C k» D' »d Bakrr k Co.

'¦. f h ? firm of Morton, firtanoll It Co.JoHt B Bt r< mix oj f,rm of J C How* V. Co., of Bootoa.Cmai-i v t. Bai.uaik, Bnn of Baldwit, Btarr k Co.Jona O Nai.toa, lati- fin,, of NM»on a. Co.Htair A. tt «... r. firm of Ba 1ft Horlbut k Co.Jiut llovr, firm t f J**o* Hoyt It Co.Wr h.n jr., Brtn of Bturpli. Bbaw a, Co.Jona ft. Baao, tiu. of foti Rubber Co.fiir. MalOk, lat* firm of Maim It Tv.mpooo.O.T. SrabMaa, firm of Btodmao, CatBTlk a Sriaw.Lini-'naati.Cvat>> VaLk.jr drmof f jr a Ta!« ,Jf., b tie N'w-Ort«»-,*.v\ w k fokOKK. firm of Wm. r '¦ Obai B. Poidl. k

Oano I. Boro, firm of ßojd Broi. k Co., Albany, N Y.t. H.Cot*tTT. firoa of Coorlt, Hill t Ttlmadi*. M*mptraIikWa ftoaeark. firm of L ftoborta k Co.BaatkL B. CktoarLi., firm of Br*w*r V «SaldweU.

CHkkl.lt J. MakTia Pro*ld*a-.A t. Wii.i.Maaru, Vio* ProtidoLt

J. Mil Toa Bmith, 8*riiitary.JoMa McOaa. An'itant B*. r*Ury.

Ll.AKV A Co.,I<*a<Wi ar.d lntrodnr*ri of faihlor for Or. t> t »ti'i IIiti, wtBtbl* day l»*o*> to* JxprlLk »tyl* of (im'knvoa'a Harx, v, wbu a

the attoiition of tbeir it/ u t r. n i th- pablte§aaOtaA| i* la-

Tttott Noa t, 4 and b Alto« llonao, Broadway.

ErtrrNscHKll) ba« ia*mr-«l tbe Spring Style ofOtayi.r.ata'x Hit., wblch for B»« 'ty of pittem.i f workuamblp. ai.d derldro ¦ ip> i rny el mater.all, itarr p*It *. the ie*«n lln of tbe aeaaon. (ilvr him a call at No 118

rot

8m om>-Hand Sai i:s.

W*haro)ott rnrelTod a few Bicoao HaaD S*riv w wa

erlu o*u yory lowf. No. V) MnrraT it.. New Torb.

STBAKkl It Mkk*lk ' No.StU Mortb Main >t Bt LaBAl,f No. m Gravier it, New Orieaa*.

Alao. a btrt* aotortrnect of ourWiLiikk tattkT liar *»D Rt kci.ik Pkoor Burn,

fr m fjnto Bi.ono.

Orovfr A Bakrr'b Cf.i eb&atkoBamilv Bawiao Macaikfi.

Nsw Btvlbi it P.i tit. i ti Pkictk.fo «Wo Bao*Dwav, New-Voai,

.No. .b* t. . .1 < J. . r I.

V. hp; i f it A Wn sus'.s Hkhisu Maciiinü*Pile** areatly radaced.

- Wa prefer thorn for family oae.".|N V. Tribune.They art Lb* fkvoritei for Unillle* " -|N V flinek.

_Ogre, No. bu5 Bioadway, Now-Torb.

Sewibu Macihnks..All pertoDB who have beenladueed bo bt.yBawiae MacniBBl whl- h will not perform tba

mnrk that parrhooori eiportod them to do, are tuforrced that

luiii'i MacNikki norer fall to do any kind of work. No one

la «vor ataafyouitad In tbo*« aaaohtnek.I. a Bik-b* k Co., No. 4S» Broadway.

Singer's Si vtiMi Mai him.s.Tbo haaoena* ln> leaae in the demand for th*** admirable

Blaebtnoo.B bai trebled wlthit four mouth*.lodlcaVi Ue ra-

BlTtaf prvopont* if the nounity. Tbo priori of o .r Machlueibat* boon fjreaL) todur-ed.

i. Bt BiBtiBB k Co Mo. <M Broadway.

felKt.Ut H ÖKWINti BiAt IHNES.

Th* new FkMiLT Biwike MktRiiai at 0SO and *"* are

atvaotlni oBlreraal attontk n. 1b all eaoontlal pocd qoalltie*bb*y era aaoh the boat Marblhei ever offered at a low prloo.

I. M. Bikoaa a. Co., No. 4M Broadway.

Ladh, Whist f it A Co.'sTlciiT-BliTt ii flr« ixi. Mi Hlkli,

Far Taralliea, TaJi«n Mantua makrrk, aud all maat factitina

purprioro They r<.mriine all ti.e BBBPBa of th* old ma< liinei, andavo'c ll .dt fault* Tbiy are adapted to every branrh af indmtryWho** the uoedie ia leauuad. tt'.', kud eaknitc* before parrbka-

la«. 1- Wiurtl It Co,No. 489 Broadway.

Foe to Death.Ootrok CtkTisi HvcikBk,

TU I Ok tat IkHALIIC ftkMkDT,PBB CoaiCMfTio*, A>tnma, Cotoiit. f'oi k. ti all Throat

and LBBfl DniAitiPri x* roioood from ftS to Bl

To ari-.-u oK date tb* vk*t demand of thaiABTABLIkHKD for. TO DlATH.

BTkrltMB Pa'. a. Co.,BoU A«enU for the l'nlt*d State*,

_No. £15 fuHon-it,

Novlli.o'b Sacred lit sic.Wait A An n,

Ko. 1 Clinton Hall, Aitor plaro, N. T.CotiUutry Edition of the

OkAToaioi,M^tdah, Creation, Paul, to. Be. Earh 76 cent*.

Barry's Tricoimieroi hkt the B**t aud Cheap** Aru i* for Dmili.g,

Boautlfyin*, Cl. «i.u«. Curtlug,Proaenrtu* aud BVitortni the Hair,

ftadboo, try It for *al* by Dmiujlit* and T-r* a »r*

LoXLIB'l CeiLLIO IkoK

FiftE am' Bt'RGi.ar Proof Sm-es,Ba*b Vault Oooaa aud FkAMit,

.erured by th*rMMoran CnamBATiok Poo oak and Bt'kci Ak-Paoor Loct,arc lb* only Safe* manuf*< tur*d tbat tvmbtnr cvmplttt Kvt-prooffaaBBAB anlA a y - 'i. r prolertion /reo» borp.'ora ft full koaort-Baaat aaaataatly on hand and for aale by_9aiaaaakk b Co., a*. .. No. 189 Brokitwky. N. T.

Francis Tomes A StiN?,,No. . Mtiaaa i ibb.

Ni» Yota,Import'r» and \Vhole«ale DeaJori In

Ottt, ttTLBkV, Platiu Win, Jaw* kt alOKaai v Gooot,

BaOHkl kin Pkl*CMBBT.Tbo laryoot and Baal extouaiv* iu« k lu the United State*.Bote Bient* 1 Ei Ctrt. Wunuau Ako CtkTkinoi:«,

for i Hriiiok't Ci.i.ntAttn Atxv ftatoai." Baldwin's

GlOlllllli EsTalLlxHMEaT.Tb* Largett tn tne C'ly.

Bo.lt by Wm. H Attoi BBB, rxnretily for tbe Bjilneia.r> mill TV aao Boh kir.

t> c of Bba lartrtiNie 4M Moit Ta.xtv Bto. ki or IBAVI Madc

Cloiiiim. UM ittlBIMIIB VOtkMEvtl Oi pBaVBSb

Tea Ct.llO>^«t-. DirAkTMitT nut .tied.Compotltloa Hefied.

BPktac Btti at or Im« BajacBlBTlQB Biaot.Ladktt oro invite* to raJ and * tan.lue tbe Cbildr».m t t'epart

ra*al. wl ick U i t m any way air-elle* by any in in* worid.9. U. BAi.Dv.ik_IkkkY Uikki*!.

WlNlKiU MlAlll.x..

GoldN*W *tT!M-

rattteJ,Watt* Holland,

6 .1 H at:.JWhc'eaal* and Retail.

fttLIY BBOTHtk. k, Li xt,Hi -"l Broadway.

LioiiK a t ii a i R 0 N

roi TNIHah

dB» ar Ali B id EttkvwHaka.No < u. deabtoi i t l* bead ol Hklr tbould

rat fc> at* tt. Iva beyouu quratiot th*In«**. Mtioi* *v*r i.*-

-Jl

Vo. H. ( ARI'ETs. SÖ 8At tar. New Btor* ol B. Baarrv, No. 8 tab »y. near ta*

Coop* i InMlt .'e'

} x II itn Tkrktriitt, be root*.aaanaa h*ea*Mi. vr.iuT>iit* i'ti Cabpbt* Ai.Btrtu iti laeaaia, eooent*.Ali Wool LaaBtLB, 44 coat*.Goou iBCBAta, Si'oent*

AJbo, Crortl. j . i *w patt-rnt of yard od«* Ttpeitrieo, at .ow

frvwa. Oil. io^ba, 2a 64. Heavy Bboet Uilciota* Ml rent* ta*tb* BBJBBM yam. B. Bum N x,

_revr the tk«->p*t leotttvte.

Ri itiki: Cl Rio - By Maioii A Obi KaToalV"** Trtiaa. Alao bilk Elanir Bt«kirp* fjr Mb MM *elna. tup-

rttert at* aaooido! bra ei lnn«aiHf|| drtv-rrnitio* mad*order No I \ ».,, .. ^ r Mont*. N. Y. Ladle*' private

roomtaod u mil aii»jJn i

I'KiKTMMiKo x Hash v> k.Tbo BOitoB cry aiiloM Hwr By**, raiae* lu Clt tnuati, ha*

re*l»A>d tt eoUblukiLi t*. Bart: t ,1. pel i C>>Tao«,BO . EkcrLtioa Htn pva |^,.u ^ very 'at, oburntAli ft loytl .trr. 8.* Dr Cbirt..0 t card a* Crli-.doio* andbo taovtBcrd. for **le Hid *p|Bod prtvattly by *ap. n.n ed» Uli » h (.*¦¦ 'I'

Atll'AKIA At|l kKIA'

B. Oarikwror. Mai <a't':ier W: o,. ta> aad R.-t»ll D. *VrBk Aacana A >in»ti of PitWcteleaya oo boa j a, road* to

erdet. Al*» afis* a**oin>*Lt of Kua Piai t*. ki , a: th* Aaoa-a-BI leSrxPVt. t\*. -xil. .-vi t:.M i- i

..To Bi»i '.. o* fk'n T" *u* p"

" U< «. i- . .« .»«.aro-rs « .-i

. straps* '* **' *' *" ',r'J '**-.'". *T,i' r«'--"»Jf "-»'.**

Him * i'ai i.»T Hi Lin i. r>r*.ao S. !. ii /., ..

i i ita ro.t <:c f» f»iw .» rsSaJI.. itiui-raol y kjj m M,a; 0 lha Mdifi < . ''i ' . & .Or»:li i, ai v

aMaftusd M V- wttiaoot.i " |Mw Tra» !.. r

0",'Ki ,T' Ban Bass Cul,f«v'." fc T^ ¦'.**.

way. N V. <i» rMl f <'".' AtMl I >d Bs) H »'

It' Mi riytptlra only froaa BSMaSMI a d localof»>o<- -o -aib

Bsaad._j i.i \V.»i i> > ElAlK K>>TOAATIVE i« tbi- only

Lot«. .1 ii- Ba..l .bi <irr] 1: aili par .a; »i.'.y »rat..re.

Bta'-trntr J' «IM. I' . aOO.O ISfBafl laM ». n f-adl-a »cd0. am *J1 .aa.a Wl*> . -l ot-1 y tt. .' W>» aa¬

lt » li| '-' IBBSfl -ly. on-' la-*p .twir hair B*.i i to any aa*:

tv.ll a>tr»)v.l I' '. »ai a' ... "ay a

No. 4M Br< *J»«y.GftrlAT B/ABtJ MS."

PtlOK TO BrWO. iL.w« iUmi i m atool of

Fssx H cm**,h ii !¦ t -rtMi Ci'it»,

Taf.1.1 Ol litAr.d

flat J>'ix11 trv,Ataf at re.' ...... s. pri -a, f> n. t ¦><> p' a-v. d..'. ir.'..l

Tut "Jit n» Iran.A I! prraoni in wont of any o' tn» artie . saatSSedi ab v*

» lAltM 'na-.r lalatl : .«>" - a ra

IV. J I Da 11 r v it CoN i >. i aad CXi Broadtray.

A Neu iDEAa

Ji iru't IarooMinoK K^hii-r.

Jo* Bri.i-Trris.. on Ion c«if; ai Bl -i»uc B.tow .

BBeB. Triviaandi of artl. lr» latMMMi ImmIoj MaaeSaberae,orarli f na t>vt, aVr. N'i. Broadway i.rat tfoor.

*»lJOVDAY, MARCH II, 1869.

TO CttnRKSPOSDKKTS.B .. ¦¦. Irttor* for Tür. Tai near. Off.on should, to ail aanri ba

addreaatiti to Hos» .* OsSBASf A Co.

The steamship Star of the West arrived yester¬day eveming with the <'aliforrla mails and nearly a

million in treasure. Het advices arc ro later thantbnr-e received by telegraph from New-Orleans, butour coneeixindr-nce eontaint much that ii of inter-eft. Ti> Sfiuth Ai:n'rican newn in, ai uiual, ofriot and civil warfare.

The citizen! of Tcmpkim County are threaten¬ing to take the law into their own handi in the case

of üdward II. KiillofT, who has recently been granti d a new trial after a second eonvirtinn of tbe mur¬der of bin wife and <hi!d. The Sheriff agsTsvat-'dthe excitement by vveukly running out of the Coun¬ty with hid prifoner, in anticipation of a publicuierur<*, raJli'd for Saturday. Of courae, an at¬

tempt to bail| Btdkl back wai made. It ia thoughtthat a riot will break out on hit return. We trmtthat tbe acones which have ibBglBlbtal ioine of theWestern Ktatea within the p >-t few months will notM rtpeated in .New Vork.

We have telegraphic accounts from Vera Cruzto tbe !'th inst., brought by the Tennt'ssoe. Ac¬cording to than- ai coonts, which, comin;' as theydo through Vera Cruz, are liable to the suspicionof some cx.'igeeration, the left winn of Miramon's

army had been defeated at Coidova, and drivenback with some loss. Former accounts representMiramon aa having been repulsed from Pernte, so

that, if all this i* true, the people of Vera Cruzwould appear to have some grounds for their confi¬dent opinion LhatMiramcQ will Dever appear beforetheir city.Hut this news not merely repulies Miramon in

front; it threatens bLm in the rear. It is sutedthat Guanajuato and Aquas I'alientes hare been

captured by the Liberals, how, or under whoie

lead, is cot stated.an important omission, consid¬ering the fact that previous accounts had uot madeus aware of any Liberal force organized or operat¬ing anywhere in the neighborhood of those cities.It is also stated, as if to give roundness ar.d com¬

pleteness to the story, and to insure the safety ofVera Cruz, that Gen. Degollado is preparing tomarch on the capital with a force often thousandmen. Hut in Mexico, of all places in the world,preparation is one iMSf, and performance quite an¬

other. Tfiese nottheru Mexican chiefs ha\e been

preparing ever since the war began to march on

Mexico, but none of tbem has yet done it, exceptBianco, and be very sojn found it evpeJient to

march back n. am. If Miramon meets with rsS fur¬ther interruption than that to l»e apprehended fromthe preparations of Dr^ollado, he will still stund a

very good chance to make himself m.nter of VeraCruz.

NKW.IIATIPNIIIUE.The Republ cans of the Granite State did well at

their late Liection; but they might have d.>ue bet¬ter. They have from Three to Five Thousandmsjoiity in the popular vote of their State, andthey can bring out over Three Thousini by inaki:^the right ritamiuttions and supporting them w ith

I energy and efficiency. They fell ;-h.>rt this year,

j not ao much becuiNC of tbe bad roads and tagiragstorm, as because their nominations were not

e: tirtly judicious. Let us beexplicit:In 1-40, when a full vote was polled, after a most

excited caii.ass, New-Hampshire gn;e -ouio ;.',<tXitotes for Van Buren to KfiOO for Hameon. Iaall her 1.lections after the aocensioa of Jacksondew s to tbe patsa'.'e of the Nebraska bill, she gaveCortesponding majorities on the Demix'ratic side,except that she was somewhat shaken by the I'ro-SlaTery aspect uiven to the Annexation of TexnAnd the consequent secession of Joan P, Hale fromthe Democratic party. Once only, if we mistakem t, were the Whigs and the Free Soilers, support-

| Lug separate State Tickets, able to p..11 votes enoughto beat the "Old Line" Pro-Sl»\ory Democracy,prior to 16V, when the feeling arou-ted by thepassage of the NebrafiA Act effected a completerenilulioa. Since then, New-Hampshire, at firstnominally American, has been hear.üy Republican,as she has shown in many a desperate couteat.Last year, under the influence of tbe Lccomptonoutrsges ate gave a very handsome majority, w nere-

by Mr. Hale was returned to the Senate It anotherfull term.That the majority n smaller in b< r recent Flec¬

tion is due to the fact that the Republican candi¬dates for Governor arid Members of Congress were

all active and zealous Whigs in the old times.

They were able, respectable, good men; any one ofthem by himself was '^objectionable, but all ofthem compoM il a ticket not acceptable t'i the FiraThousand Democrats of other days who are uow

zealous and moat rtiicieut Republicans. n<td one

of the three candidates for Congress been chosenftob taia cLsm, we believe the majority of none ofthe Meuibera elect need have fallen much bebwOne Tbouiand, whi e that of Gor. Gci.tdwiti mighthave approached Four Thousand.We make ttus explication for the betelit not of

N -3»r-lTan mIj, kr.» of tha Br«ra,Miea» rut* jin oil tbe Stet*-e The l*eeoe mot every ar cere ba

pr*>tM«l»»7 iMieal

THK OHIO IKtl D.

Atnorg the nusarroui other gr'at pubic frattd*recent.y brought to iigha, by o<> ruf ao-< the leastremarkable one is the fraud up>o the State of

Ohio, carried on for a series .>f )-.«.-», aod of woickthree r~.-.%\;.- State Treasurers were tue lostru-n>ent/<.a fraud by wh.eh that State n a luaer to

tbe amount of $.'<¦ I, -11. A report upon tnn

a:!nr, latHy made to tbe Blute Legislature by an

Inveetigatirg Commission, civee at t.gt a tbr

whole story, at least s > far aathe Commissionerswere able to make it OVt, f^r they complain not a

l.tt> of tbe 'ib»tac!»i put in the way of the in.esti¬

mation by tie unwillingness of Witnesses, ami ofti> grand mistake committed ia the beg.nning ofallowing the defaulting paitit« to escape, inst« adof pouncing at or.ee ¦ their persons and their

papers.1;.- d. fa> at.ft.a. .t seems, b.'gan with AlVrt A.

Bliss, who waa treuurer from Man ft, 1-47. to

January, 18081 Bliss, it aeemi. was a poor man

when he came ir.to office, and hit eight suret;e»were certain persons not fnenda of bit, nor even

his acquaintances, but strangers, cif/eni of Coium-bas. and one of them president of a bank there,who assumes) this responsibly as a matter of

.peculation, with the understanding that they aadBliss should hare tie cm-tody, and. baring the cus¬

tody, should hate the ose of certain portions of th»

public money. It does appear that dunng Buss'sterui of office this custody a:,d use of the publicmoney was a source of pront t«> rarioai 'minks andbankers. But not exclunveiy to them, since it isshown by the evidmce that Bliss hiimvelfreceived interest on account of the depoiitof State funds, for which he does r*o|appear to have ever accounted, and aNo that he in¬vested >..o 's i) of tbe public mocey in the purchaseof the stock of a bank, on w oich be received thedividends. He al*o commenced and carried on.

while in (ffice, purchases and speculations in realestate in and around Columbus. The r< suit of allthese dialings with the public money wai. ai mightnaturally enough have been expected, that whenBliss came to go out of "flu e there w as a deficiencyin bis accounts, which be uai.ely attributed. || his

testimony before the Commissioners, to wroug en¬

tries in the books, or losses occurring h* could not

tell how. I'nfortunately, the law-, of Ohio, pre¬suming rather too far on the honesty of such per¬sons as might be intrusted with the public money,had made no provision whatever for the full a;id

comp!» te acjustmei.t of the lOOOavnta1 utter of theTreasurer or Auditor at the close of ea:h officialterm of office. Nor was the Auditor's account a

check of this sort upon the Treasurer, since it wn

not kept wuh the iirdi. d'jal Treasurer, but Withthe office, by whomsoever held, so that theAuditor bad nothiru to do with and no over-

eight over the sottlemeut of one Treasurerwith his eucceauor in i :!icc. Hence thereare no official m-ans of ascertainingw hat the amount of Mr. Bliss s losses and deficien¬cies may have been. At the same time this defectin the iaw afforded him an opportunity to cover upand conceal those deficiencies by means of a pri¬vate arrangement with John G. Breslin his suc¬

cessor. What was the preciM nature of thisarrangement and how il wai brought about doesnot appear; for Mr. Bliss, though residing in the

State, paid no attention to the summons of theCommissioners, and refused to appear before tin m.

Fit ally, is he would not come to them, theypocketed their dignity and went to him but even

then he refused to produce any papers or memoran¬

da. It appears, however, from other sources thatthe mm which he ought to hare paid over to Bres¬

lin was $904,436. Breslin, in a report whichhe made, states that he received from h.m $846 579,tbe balance being covered by checks given by thesureties, payable in two years without interest.But the turn of §846,579, acknowledged as paid in

cash, included a certificate of deposit of W. M.Chittenc'en of New-York, which, contrary to law,Breslin ugretd to receive as money. Not only that,but he made en agreement that th il deposit thouMnot be called for tor ah months. That Bliss ..; d

have asked this is considered by the Commissionersas proof that at the time th:? certificate of depositwas not t.vailable as cash. By what motive Broslilwas induced to agree to this postponement remains

equally in the dark with his motives generally for

assisting Bliss to cover up his deficiencies; but theconsequence of the delay w as that three-quartersof the amount was lost to the State, leaving BIisja defaulter, even without further impeaching hissettlement with Breslin, to the amMl | of some

$35,000, for which, as the Commissioners think,he and his sureties are still liable.Breahn, who entered upon office .n January 1958,

havmg previously been Speiker of the House ofRepresentatives was at that time a most flourishing,fortunate and promiting lOeSg Democratic politi¬cian. But fe-ariug, perhaps, that trie nigl Ot* thesham Democracy in Ohio was not to be long be B|>pesjs to have re made up bis mind to make hay¦.vh.ie the sun shone. Having Cotniuenced hi<reerwith the above fraudulent arrangt ment. forwhich no Joubt he was paJi, at least ia prom s.m tocover up the diheicnees and imsconc uc t of his

predtcei-sor, he entered at once on a siaiilarouHFin of ifffiisitassj with tWfiWfi mwoj ni ilhe pushed to a much mote audacious extent. 11 If*

Lag lied toCsxads, of course he wa* not w.tkia thereach of tbe Commissioners. He is, however, as it

Mgfjsf, very anxious, or pretends to be. to get backto Ohio, whether out of regard to his own privateinterests and personal comfort or to the welfare t>fthe Democratic patty does not appear. He made,or caused to be made, some overtures to the Comrais-s:onei> agreeing on certain term- to ObssjO to Ohioand la appear before them as a w.tnesi. With tne

same anxi- ty, or sfcou of anxiety, to get atall the facts, which tie L ¦umisii.ners ex¬

hibited by waiting M BltSO, they sssjg one oftheir mmber to C: i.ada to perfect an arrange-ment with Breslin, into whieb, on the advice ofthe Attorney General they had agreed to enter

with him. B'.t by that time he had alteredbis .vend, and on presentation of the papers forsignature, he declined to go bsckoaanysuch tOfOMllowiver. be gave some information, eapecialfy in

ri'V.ua tu the Chittenden affair. It appears that,t.ndiLg Ch.ltenden had foiled, he agreed to accepttrcm h:m what he said was the best he couldoffer, tight note- of Land i f different per>.j:i». thenote of Robert.I. Walker for $5,308, snd of E.P«i k of New York for |3 000 sUr.d'.n- at the h-?adof the Lit. None of those notes w^re pa.d at uit-

turity. Suits were comrLenced, but ail that e.er

came of them sj i»earsto have been a compromisewith Waiker to give up his cote for j:,is»j stockof tbe Chicago Land Compary, and with IVck to

I IS If t . in eveiis.-.ge Ibs »lity i-ce shares of theChicsgo, St l'auia^t! l ocdduLac R*ur-jsd CotB^a-

ry, tat. trhirb i alaaWe .*/...rtirw Mr. F.-elie grvClout)} piw>*>e«tohand mm.tboetork ia tbe LiedCorj j.en» wh«*B he can U; Lit haadeupoB it.to the

State of Otio.It was, perhaps, tbe !o*e thas real.z*d, arhi.-h

tcip. d to pr**>i-ttai> Bre*| n ibm tec eoorae rt wr. i

¦p'trtilativn- \*iib the State's m ocey upon Whi<-h

ka) IBtaWfi AtLt*ttfti.**»r> were cc»c«etionj w th

W. If. Cr* A C > ind D. Berk*!, the Commer¬cial Btrk of TeVav*, aid tbe C ty BmJ| of Cia-e nnati. by wt.cb, in hia Utt report, BmBUSjBl knowledge*, through tbe failure of tbe depotit-oree, to hate n ffrred a lo-s ol $*Ju4,t>¦ which 10

tbi* r*i>ort ke attempted to »hift "IT on th* State.B« waa aJeo colj> < ted w.th the Ai.ro BraoebL'a.lroad Lobd, the Ksnauha Bank tf Virginia, andthe Fikhatt C\ <-rt> I.auk, at l.o*ber. in Indiana.B l pttikWn !¦ this IbbI cperation tvere John (i.( BB9J ard Charbs L. Joi-nsor., a(j,i $; <¦) i*h>, La

various State Stock*, were «tu.red and ief .-it' aia* m cur,to * f,,r the Tbe co:^e«iuer;ce of allttBK operations v.at that when Bre*lin. m 186*9,fi^tt-d t Bi tWBBBTJ (l toll over the pubii? money toWat, II. Gibson. t:a succee*or, though the ainour.tto be pe:d over wet tSH 953, Bre*lin had ia

land only f;»K;.Nk'( at the be*', wherewith to

pay it. Gib«on wa» mi diflerect politic* from Brea-lia. lie bad joined the Republican party, and itwa« from that party that BB nad obtaine'l hi* BkV \

ffl 111 tltaV Bl. he wm 0Lce< t« d with Breslin byTery cio.;> t.< a. He waa bit brother-in-law, and a

re«! )< [,t in tbe same town. From 1841 he hadb. n an attorney-at-Law. Up to the tiiiie thatFr alin became Treasurer. Gibson, though a boaaspeculator, bad rvoeseate.l but little property.After that eviut bo appeared io bare abun la;.:fundi at >.(mmand. In 1969 he became preaidet.tof the Tiffin acd Fort Wajue LUiiroai Coniptay.purporting to be a stockholder in it to the amount

ef 830,000, In 1854 be became president of tt."Seneca Count) Bank. He waa a partner with hitbrother in law in various ipeculationa, and, BB

the c u.c; ».:< r rt imply, waa cognizant of but

BiiBBBl)IIB|riBtioil of the public money and a

ihaier in it. Tbe coojnuasionerg do not sug¬

gest it. but very likely he went o*er to toe

Republican part) in cornection with these specu-lations: and. aceordtig to that oU pollfj which,"luring the English at. S.otoh ii\il wtri, leibrothers to tike different fide*-, no that at allevents tie t«täte mii/ht reman; in the ftmiiy.Ai \Low, BlfJBlil and Gibsi :i sevm to Bavo regard-*!the TreaM.r) of Ohio as their private fTtliT Whentbe i-ettlement took pltee between thorn it waa

carried on like % private affair, noboiy beingallowed to !>o present. The account given of thisaffa.r b) Gibson in hia apologies for h ui- 'T ix* not

aaticfactory. He pretends lh:.t up to the time whenbe en'ered ir.to < rtioo aa Treaaurer te had no ÜMof any defoior.c At mthe Bjeooatnt of his brother 10-

law Ix vol.d the 8904,636 above mentione |, jetlie gare Bivtnl . .<i*charge ia fu'I Bpoareceiving enl) 83S3,86S, without makiog anyinju ry aa to the. baki.ee, or stitpecting an) thingto be wrong.a etory which the Commis*n»ner§do not believe. For ajj iciothi Bretlin an.i (i.bsonworked together to conceal the defici-ncy, inhope*, probabl). to realize enough out ef their in-\ertmenta to make it up. They ma.ie deeperateeffi rta to raiie the money to meet the amount ofj'lirii.iU'o due for State interest in .Inly, 1856, andwhich the Tr< a?urer'a account* would repretent a*

on hand For this BirpMB they came to New-York ard tried to borrow money at various banksThey did not sue eed, but at laat, by p aying a

heavy premium, got 850,600 from John Thompsonon a deposit of certain bonds. But as the Bank oftbe Republn refused to discount these eecuritiosfor Tl. MMOP, le demanded b».ck h * check, which,even hai they held it, would have left them abortof the neceasary amount, a* to meet the iotoreatdue they had on'y 6466,000 in hand. Their onia-aion to provide the money to pay this interest «\-

plod< d tbe whole affair.It W( uld turn, if Brealin is to be believed, that

of tbe mi-sing money iome 1800,600 waa absolutelylost in the way above stated. What has become oftoe balatceT Breslin al'egea that he hss etill underhia control 8800,666 of that money in the hands ofIklta] paitiei, whom he declii ea to BttM, but he ia

ready to give it up on receiving a dircharge andj.iidou. Tho Couniiaiioiiera, however, are ofopinion that by proper vigilance a part of thisamount may be reached without Breslin s aid. Aitt if auui is not in money, but securities, they thinkit may be traced. Wto me Mr. Bresliu's confiden-tta! Mi ds. whe'Ler brother politicians, or mt-relybrother -peculators, does not appear.

Itl.l I l-ll I'HIH.KIM*.

The Plisec of Walea cheek by jowl w ith the i'op«'of Borne in the Vatican The Heir of England,the Fldest Son of Protestantism, he who ia one

tie) to be the Deader ot the Faith of Henry VI If.,BJ the ^race of Leo X.. paasing tho time of day t)tbe ti&n of Sin, to Ant.i hriat, not to aay to theStrict Woman that S.tteih DBOSJ S'veu Hills'Well, wonder*«ill never ceafe, and this plagueyujarcb of mlcd, or progress of *o:icty, or course ofeveits, or political teeesiity. or what \ou will, willtool, h aw us without a j much aa a rag of a goodold prejudice to our backs. We have seen the

grar.ddaunLU rof Gtorte III, embracing the nephewof Bonaparte, and mak.ng the Grand Turk a Knightof the Christian I »:der of St. George of England, andtiie Commander of the Fa-thful himseif inter hang¬ing gifta of price with the Bishop of F .me; butBTM tLese thiLgs are not so significant of the progreaa tt the revolut.oQ wh: h is going on all thetime in tbe k .' w ithin men's minds, of whichail outward kiigdoms are lut the projection, as thisresidence of the Heir Apparent of the Englishthrone in the city of the Triple Crown and uiderthe e)e, as it wne, of the Sovereign 1'ont ff. Whatwould Get'ge III. or Lord Eldon BBfBJ to «u-hB thu.g. Could it have entered thtir w.'.dest In auis

of postibilities iIt a the first time that a rr.nce of Wales ever

visited the Eternal C.ty, tint we remember. Cer¬tainly, rince the R« forma'.on made an Ant: PopeOf the bmsjbXiIbj of Lagland. Charles Edwardlivtd there, to be sure, as Prinee of Wales and as

Charit* III but bb he was Prince and Ktnz onlyby brevet, he can hardiybe reckoned an exception.The suggestion of such a visit aa that of AlbertEdwuid we Wtr.dc: whether he will have thesense to call himtelf Eilward VII , when be auc-

CC dt hj the case ajf Frederick, or of his -on orh:* grandson, the two last -gorges, uould haveiWoatCZCita*] aa in»urrtct.oa in Er.gland. Tnetory squ.rts axd parsons Wottki ha.e enulled thet.ret of SiLuti fit.d a'ar oii, and Lioe seen in i: a

pre?a«e of a Legate a Laurt holdu-g hia Court iaWeaiai^nster. B-.t it waa an idea that could notorcur, :n the eiiaÜEi»' nature of thing*, to any mindir. Ei *'ai 1 thirt) years aco. Even at the time miCatVihc EmaccipstHn, the mc*t fraxtic of theKo-Pi I- t) tetreriits BMBT auggr-ted the frightfiupu*.i>..::> of a Qajjeoj pf Er.aci atsidiag it: rijft

£<.(*. to BoOM for k.s fdueatior. And csw itstains natural (.... .The ««...'.. m af idea*,wtieh pkL'osoyoers Uli us it only Mother name forTim«1. bM own *o niucii feeter of lat' ). ars that it

IM earned M oc MfSsswtM uraei"it.>r mi the

last f «tr»tn>r. even. The iron of the ra-lwats

1 m I ut>red into tur OOait, and tbe ite«n of the

Worm ti r> baa jivm Lew ai<--d to our idea*, aad

g-'-dcet. knew.* where we iLa!! briog up. Steam,indeed, ras much to answer for in ten matter, fir

it it . MM* agent a these rovoV r.s, by the wr.yn which ;t Mfl * tared the b ui.dar>s of kingdomsand threwr. d<WL thewnil« of cities, and hegun alleast to a *>. th^> whole irocU acquaintance, Lf not

kin.Then Her Msjesty ha? jast issued her Rmjmi

Warrant IIMihliBJ, the Tilth it November. tt:e

Tlnrt;eth of January %mi ttw Twenty-ninth ofMat, and rediced them to the ranks as private aadru'gar day* again. Tlat ivl* brat.oc of the trat ofthese days w:!I linger for a few years, as a hoi Ja/amom tee street-boys of London, by virtue of a

tradit.i n strorger than the warrant of Maj -styit»«If, but, as the ..-; stitnted authoiite« define

making Guys of thec-el . am longer, tie eou-.ter-

ftit presentment of Guido Lau*, will grad' allyceaee from M the streets acd be remitted, with tue

Lord ofMisrule and the Abbott of I'nreason to thedornan of the antiquanau. But we imagine fearwiil be found to fast on the anmversary of the daywhen Kings made the discovery, as old Lord Auch-incleck, Dmmis' father, loll Dr. Johnson, whenhe demanded to know the use of the operationCharles urlerwent in front of Whitehall, "that

"they had a mk joint in their necks "' And fewer

yet to PJostMM titat WiaslUsTI, .si Cat ttstil face*and make their hearts f lad w ith wine on the daythat will rtu....d UsM of the Kestoratma of thatMoat l.e.igioui Kirg, Charles IL During tberei^n ofthat Merry Monarch, the malignant Puri¬tans used to d lejrate the day of his father's mar¬

tyrdom by havmga calfs heal faff dinner, as Butlerhas let us kne w, as a votive offering properly t>pi¬ta! of the commemoration. A practical jest not

w ithout its grain of humor, wortny the round heads:n m which it came.

And these n .'. itiOM is tbe customs of from twohundred to two hundred and :iity yet;*' standingwere made in answer to Addresses from bothHouses of 1'arlisment, asking her Msjesty to com¬

plete thun. So QfjFtai and the two Charleses

go out of the l'rayer-Book together, without a

word being said in their behalf. And ai soon as

the necessary acts are parsed, repealing the lawseatabliKh n^ th»-m as Fsets or 1 Vasts, of whichMr. Spencer Wa'pole has given notice, they will no

more Come i »* tie path of daily life, but berelegated to their proper place in history. Nearlyn.i.ety years ago un ITT'j) Dr. Notvell havingpreached a furiously Church and State sermon on

tbe .'10th of January, and the House of < omuioris

haviig pissed !he usual vote of thanks, TommyTowri.-hend.to get the loan of a vote from w homBurke used to strain his throat, according toGoldsm th.moved that the vote of thanks be

eipunged from the Journals, which, after debate,was done.an example to the L xpungingi of our

own land and times. Soon afterward, Mr.l'reder ck Montvu moved for leave to bring in a

bill tor the reeeal of the observance of that dayaltogether, which was rejected by a voteof 196 to '.C. So it sterns tha, therewas. even then, a pretty large minorityin favor of striking Ctarlea I. out of thecalendar of English Martyrs. Dr. Johnson him¬self said that he was sorry that it had not been a

t< ii porary act. to have expired with the century.'I am against abolishing it," said he, ' becau-e" ti.at would be declaring it wrong t> establish it;"but I should have no objection to make an act

"continuing it for another century, and then'.lett.pe it expire.'' It is a proof of the in¬veteracy of Li.gLLIi habitude's that this om¬

ni» mi ration has been endured for almost the pre¬cise time which would have suited the greatDoctor's notions of the fitness of things. But ithas received its t uup de grure at last, while thesame blow has cut down its two equally absurd

Ci.mpat.ien holidays. And there is a general fe-d-icg of satisfaction that common sense has finallytriumphed over these remains of old bigotries andToryisms. As signs, such things as these have an

Interest which raises them to the importance ofevents.

i II i IVVMDFRFR.

Tie evidence i pi n which the yacht WandererWll condemned as a slav>_r appears to have been

perfectly complete. Tt»« witm ssea were the pilotwho brought the vessel over the St. Andrew's barand a peison connoctid with th-* light house atCumberland Island, on the south shore of St. Andlew's Sound, through whom the pilot was ob¬tained. The latter testified tha: on the '.'-'th ofNovember last two men came to the light house ina boat in the evening, ore of whom called himselfCaptain Cole, and said that he had a ship outaidethe bar on a pleasure excursion, and wanted a pilotto taki' her in to Jekyl I-laad, where he wipQed to

take Biime get,t!emen on board. Tne witness wentw.th Coie to Jekyl Island, where < »de rVd himthat his real name was Coire, and his ship theWanderer, just arn- ed from Congo with four hun¬dred negroes.Tbe p 'ot testified, that, on going on board the

Wunderer with the person who called himself

captain Cole, he law regroes on board, acd was

told th» re were 100. He saw IU or "0 on deck,huddled together like p;gi, mostly naked. TheWild limit very badly, and was full of cockroacfcei. BOOM of the negroes appeared ¦ ok, andas they weie coming over the bar, one dead one

wa.i thrown overboard. After passing the bar, heanchored the vesst 1 near the beach of Jekyl Islandand they commenced landing the negroes in boats.He saw one dead oneM the Island. After they w ere

all landed the capt»;n requested him to take tbevessel up to the mouth of the Little Saltülo, whithhe did. The other witness ass sted in this opera¬tion, and, returning to Jekyl Island, saw the ne¬

groes there.Thus far. the whole history of the Toyssie of the

Wanderer, including her leaving New-York, wh«-re

the object and intention we re suspected, herngurugaway as a pleasure yacht on the coast of An .ca,

her Ttryage up tiie C'tugo, tbe unsuccessful pursuitof her by our ships on tae coast, her arri. la, the

laaejmgof the negroes, and everything that hap¬pened to the ressel, down to the present time of

her c.ndemnat.oD. bas been fully brought out. Itis rxueh to be hoped that the subsequent deiliigsw.th the negroes after Hsjjf were landed may yetbe oifOOOi w.th »-.jual MMOM On that pointtheie is yet very Ltt-e .nformat.on. Two or threeof tbe negroes who f.-1 i^to the La-ds of the Mar¬shal were subsequently sto'en from Lim. We hsaei.ad various vague rumors as to rxwj escf these

negroes transpoit*: ri ra^.-ead, exdetonat »ar.ous

j ilts. E- etxtij w j Lave had rer irts b; tslegraf h

of the M i/tre of 6fl> if Item by tb*- United r.*A*a.r r ; and e*jberqu«t>tly of tkwsr r «.<-,.. w ^

."r *t ...I' b bxit nothing de^att*»^We tniat, kowtver, ttal tbe whole story wit] oee*.out. XL*, (bet tee purchasers of tbeee Afrieea tJsw«)[ttJjjkfj ctBMl be punished, may at least be expaaaTee ev dmoe abo«e recited ii amply au/B -,,.tl ^Baal hfl Csptain Come aad al! oa boari tba reest],at leaat ifl American citizens, of tbe capital criaa,ofpiracj; but if we recol.eci aright, Faf/aia Cer^Laving- Lx en first bad '< i, m know cot why, «ekall this ev.deuce against him, aa gu It/ of ntttaf eatI rt)*sal mt tb.- «'ave-trade, waa diem'seed on ktjj,and at preset t ia not in custody. Very likely, ke>.ever, be cay brate it out. rrljini; on the fever ef aI .: Itl jury for an acquittal. It is oH rer/ rrefitable to tne detective ski!! employed, or at 1%+it arguta a great diiii.clu.at on nuong tke peoaaeftr- I"Uth. to g.ve information oa tbe tabj**ithat three uiootba should bare peased si ace tkalanding cf tbo regroee, and so l.ttle jet be kae«*of tbnr wbereabouta.The sale of the Wanderer berk plaee laat Sabar-

day. C: «..<.« Lamar bought k>r for ft 000. Wa,a be 1 A speculator w h wuie* to tit her out tatkl tber *o;age

' The Spaotth slave-tradera Baalto attend the sales at Sierra Leoae. and buy j ajthe quick-sailing veeeele, condemned as slaters,with the intent again to employ tbeaa ia the aaatttrade; t. r were the English able to put a etea ttthis, except b> ordering captured äerers,of beinf told, to be broken up.

Ot R ( OBPOK.tTIO^I I OFKflBL.We have !»\a waiting with aome loipatieaoe tal

n<>t a Little curiosity for a reply on behalf of UsI.aw Department of the City Govennneat tetktenergetic and not corapl mentary criticisms aajjfi iward over the s «nature ot the arting StreetCommissi« cer, with reference to judgments agueathe City for clainia supposed to bare originale»! aacontracts made with the Street Dcpartaieat. Tkacbargea brought forward against Mr. Busteed wer«

speeiGc, and based on ofüoial mformaüoa. It waa

averred by the Street Department that forty-eightthousand dollars in one case, twenty six thou eat!dollara in another, and ten thousand dollaa n

another ease, were now in procees of bei if «.tracted from the City Treasury on judgments trkiekcould rot have been obtained had tho CorporakeaCounsel dote his duty. It wai alsj very breaaiyimplied, on tbe same authority that the ('oreore-tioo CoQDtd had been guilty of similar oegiectwith reference to the five hundred other judgaeatsagainst tbe city obtained during the preoedtagjear, and facts were given in support of tkesta'legationa, whish certainly were atroag ans! ea>

picioua enough to call for and rooeire an .,ih salreply.

lie it reiiietnbered that the officer assailed at

tins case is the same who prosecuted a prinksgentleman for libel, on account of aa article as!containing a traction of tbe criminating 'nfaretjawoflieiall) put forward by tbe present head of tktstnet Department. The party ptoeeouted had asofficial records to fall back upon in support of hapublished statement*. He could not cite tktletters of the Corporation Counsel as proofs of Msal'egatmns against that officer; nor could he referto the fi'cs of a department when called upoa tesubstantiate the Corporation Counsel t neglect ofhis iworn and solemn duties. Under these eireus»stances, Mr. Buiteed ventured baldly to questtathe accuracy of his accuser, and obtaiaed latrumpb of pertua<lirj|> one half a jury that tktprejudicial statements could not be supported itopen Court by any erideuce within the power tfthe defendant to produce. This waa regarded aythe Law Department of tbia city as a rioters,though admittirg in minds differently Destitutes t

very different construction.In the present case, however, the aeeuMhoas ef

ngleet aud malfeuatice are laid before tke CifcyI.eg;slahire, under the sanction and with all tkaresponsibility of an official report. The imtXrateatis entered in full on the proceedings of theComasaCouncil; atil yet, after a week's delay, wearea?

bo nearer to an explanation or reply than sis wert

before' Some ill-natured critira siggest that tatssilence ia tantamount to a cugmtrit, or ackacaleag-

.. t by the Corporation Counsel of the ehaffaimade against him; but aa we are aware that Mr.üusteed, just at present, is »ctive'y erjgagel iasecuring a legislative prolongation of hia tera, wa

must protest against this malicious and unfoutiedconstruction of tbat gentleman's fai'ure to refsf.He i$ aaiiuua to make full ex plan stions, confeasioajand revelstocB on the aubject of city litigatioaiibut as tkeee wi.l involve very extenaive and sea-

plicated developments, be very na.rely deasaditbat his term shall be extended three years for ski

purpose of eiisb ing him to compile a brief sutnoarjof the judgments which have already been ohlaiasa*agaicnt tbe city under his astute and aetire as¬

pen iaion

The latotl and most precise intelligence resatiag.to the w ar question in Europe ia found ia tkereaertof the cVbate in the n<>uieof Commons oa tbaeight of the O'th ult. Lord Palmerttoo asked tkaMir-isters if tb^y could give any assurance that tkt

peace would Lot be broken; and Mr. Diaraaireplied that he could state that the Papal Terria>i.es would be evacuated by both the French salA uttriac forces. This announcement was natttraajreceded with cbeert, for it reuiDvee one of tai

great pointa of difficulty between the Ca»ins4safParis BLd Vier.na. But those who read the reportof tbia debate, which we give in another eotataa,wül perceive that Mr. Diaraeli ia exc?edio|l7 .*ticut in kit statement, and doea not go bejood tba

sing e annoutcerxient in question. He doea aal aa>

pyeei anything like a conviction tbat the dsag**' *o-.er; and jet. had heentertained euch a coBrictsao.had he been able to furnish tbe publie wila"f

good ground for such a bope, he oerUinly eouldasthave withheld it.Tte n.;uta/y occupancy of tbe Statea of tV

Chuich is ot,!j one of the points at issue betessBthe two Powers. Prance requires Austria .

withdrew h«*r forces from Florence, Parana, PM*na. in short from eterypart of Italy which stoawsTgart .-ona, outs.de of her own recognized POBBS*eiocB. Taea there is the question of the DaaaaiBBPrine palitle« where France and Russia tog****si pp'rt the authority of Couza. the newly eleetadIlosji^ar of bt.th Moldavia aid Wallackia, whaa»ui ol key l u proclaimed in defiance of the d^ia^-of the last Pans Conference, of tne intoreai aa*

do'&ity ot AusUia. and, what ia more, ofen tab.e treasure of diplomacy, the lato?1*!

- 1irhi»h empire. In regard to .*va aLd M'-ntetegro, too, there n trooaw

betw-<n tbe two Empires; and Ot ****

of thene subjects has Mr. Diaraeii a word of ooaaa-

lat or to 1:1tr to the anxious audience of coaas**c ai raer ta whoes* behalf eepecislly Lord I'siasr*t a LLUir^Ka.ed hint. Still lees Coulds bj a.- : to rtiatia bel.-ved tt> be the $^