ri*k^ii_- 



154 



MOOHS'S &URJlL KEW-YO&K3EK. 



COMTtBTS OF TBIS WT7WBER. 

 AORICDI-TORA1* P 



- Whrit MM«-*iS^ m ™ 



Kirt^* Aarricto a*r>r*er m * Reaj.tr. [IDiutnUd.) 

 JoHadtura* UtoiUanV. — Mldfc-Proef Weeal; 

 Faopto't 0>N«W* i M»tW«trtlr«; To Kill Sb«»D Tlefci; 

 JVtTCotJrc for BtSCfcQlUUler; Cur- fur the llora All; 



Ilvrf. » Ejiporlsof Eanffom Fraac«lo Enilaod; Cblna- 



(iomUmud Corr^pondtntt, — Hanrel VTum*t« ; 



ji DM 



A Small and Cheap Vlnrir. jIHurfrtJ-d,J 



Effect* <>l » Southern Eiputur.-, 



KrUirir Ilcdfl I'lairl*. I llluilrAled.) 



r»I Criticism 



0Pt»l|JB lllid*. 



DOMI i 10 ECONOMY. 



loakte; Filed C 



LADIES' OLIO. 

 Winirtf Aiteca, rPnetlwiUTho T»o name*: Scold 



rlmri. Uo*ip; T* run -One ami Sara) Iccn, .... 



ouoice in<t<rauNr. 



Muilr of Earth, [iv-ii-l I A ui It; Oor 1 



Mi ■ ■■ i Life: llopt'liicM. 



1 ' : ''■ ■','.' 



Ilrmn to Ih* Pconl.-, I ■■"■**■■ r-_-=»l_ I Tin Twin Coltnges— A 



the payment «f the English elairos, demanding 

 million tuid a half of dollars nnder the penalty o 

 the bombardment ol Vera. Cm*. British men-oi 



□ of the a 

 I lat 



ival of 



The telegraph gives inforrr 



tool intelligence- The British Parliament hatbet* 

 i be Queen's speech merely says that a 

 ■a been resolved on to give ao oppor- 

 tunity fir an expression of opinion on public affairs, 

 and give to the Government the confidence of the 

 House of Commons. The dissolution would take 

 place on the 2-3 d. and the election a few days after- 

 wards. The British Ministry hove madeao official 

 statement relative to European affairs. It was 

 considered a matter of regret that Lord Cowlet 

 bad not been allowed a loog( 



I !,.,;. 



sofa 



result than at present. The Ministry could not, 

 however, refuse the proposal made by Prussia for a 

 Congress. The five powers agreed to tbe slipnla- 

 tions that the treaties of 1815 should be left undis- 

 turbed, but subsequently collateral questions arose 

 as to tbe composition of the Congress, and the dis- 

 armament of tbe powers antagonistic to each Other. 

 Tbe latter had not been settled. It was the opiu- 

 of Her Majesty's government that a disarma- 

 it was necessary previous to the assembling of 

 great, Sardinia hud also been invited to 



[arks i 



d -J. RapaUe. 





Rochester, n. y, 



Summary of Home and Foreign News. 



■_• I'lil 



1 d away, nint 



culiiir organism rcqiun 

 i ihuIi.i loble, in- j.ntii'i) 



lonted to the P tby ry Cass. In dc- 



ll1 ' ( l"' letter which accredits him ns the 



'■'i'- "> I \lr:ii>n.liii:iiv mill Mioi.tor I'letiijinieiit nir V 



ol ""' Mexican Qo i n 'nt to the United Slates, 



bj E ■■■ ■■ ! to tin' President at tbe samo time the 



MQtiujcntsfif friendship and high regnril which tbe 

 CODBlitulionnl OoT«romont, as well as the people 

 ■ Btorlain for bim and fur the citizens of 

 tin- jreal Republic. 



The revenue for the current month from Boston, 

 New Yurk. I'lutnrtelphm, Baltimore and New Or- 

 leans, is oMutnad to bo M.oiio.ono. on the basis of 

 returns already received. The revenuo for the 

 quarter is estimated nt over $1 2,000,000. 



England has signified hei willingness to accept 



Secretory M^bct'i proposition substantially, for 



the exemption of nil private property from seizure 



' inalats upon a 



tfiaiHioa u . the blocked] :. ,vi,ich effectu- 



! ' ' llliioD of Hi,- negotiation. 



l'h" '•- '■ : ' 

 dispatches from Commodore CoxovtB, of the Afri- 

 can I Iron, dated Porto Praye, March 12, The 



sloop-of-war VinceuDca, and the flag-ship of the 





■Hy, Qui 





c ipturea hod been made, both by Ai 

 1 nglii ii cruiser*). 



Ba. 1\h;net, Superintendent of Indiau Affairs in 

 Ck*, write* to Hie Indian Bureau, under date of 

 March lsth, Hint be la iu possession of reliable in- 

 formation that leaves no doubt of the complicity of 

 the Uormoni in the Mountain Meadow Massacre, 

 i "I., h, there waa distributed among 

 i i- ies, thirty dollars' worth 

 i ■ -i who escaped 

 and emu 





I'neiols i 



'nt length in 

 another column, and wp will .. i . v . L . 



fill only remark here that 

 MiRAiios, tbe ConsHtuiionai ri .- , >r • t 



"I, n„ I ( !■,, | , . .. 



succcedtd m the purr..,,. i„. , , r „ , , 



lormed after abandon- 

 Beh. ... i 

 ay through the lines of the Lit. r 7 , 



1^. and reached 

 .', '"'" "" I 



i .. . . 



bis troops. Arrived 

 i ghterand 



Hi Bu 







Uhad. I" llU niL'AiitiEiir. Jcau 

 whose recognition and reception by our Oovei 

 ■ 

 e believe i who holds the i 

 e lower country, is having tr 



fhi British i : ■ 



s bear of 



tbe Congress. Some rci 

 Lords Clarendon and Ubrby, the form 

 party spirit would prevent him 

 iog every allowance for tbe diflicullies 

 ject, and that be should be only too glat 

 its success; and the latter stating that in case of 

 war, which Con forbid, the position of England 

 must be one of armed neutrality. Lord PitHBBCTOH 

 thought the Congress might meet at once, aud set- 

 tle the real questions upon which the peace of 

 Europe depended. Let France and Austria with- 

 draw their troops from Central Italy, and pledge 

 themselves that at no future time they shall return. 

 The Congress, might then, if il pleased, go into tbe 

 question of amelioration uf It-.ily in general. Lord 

 John Rcssbi.l coincided with I'almerstok. 



The ifonittur (the organ of the FreDcb govern- 

 ment,) of the 10th, has an official article on the 

 War question. Il explains the basis agreed upon 

 for the proposed Congress, und tho present condi- 

 tion of tho negotiation, and says that France is 

 willing to prove her conciliatory disposition, and 

 promises to request Piedmont to disarm 

 condition that Piedmont and 

 States be invited to take port in 

 hoped this proposal would me< 

 mous consent of the other powers. 



disarmament preliminary to the Congi 



tbiug, therefore, seems to justify a belief that if nil 



the difficullies are not removed, a definite un( 



farther obstacle will oppose the assembling of 

 Congress. 



Oon Canadian politicians (at least that port 

 coinpriaing tbe Ministry,) seem to have a lively 

 lime of it. Tho Supply bill passed the lower House 

 after a sharp fight : but while tho Cabinet was re- 

 joicing over that achievement, the bill was defeated 

 in tbe Council by a vote of 20 to 83 1 This vote 

 the Ministry quite as much as the 

 Appropriation bill in our own Legiala- 



) the people— there's no 



Personal and Political 



Ma. Lktchbe, of Virginia, is too ill to tale the 

 stump in his candidacy for Governor. 



Tni Anti-Douglas Democracy of Illinois have is- 

 sued a circular announcing that they will elect del- 

 egates to tbe Charleston Convention, in opposition 

 to the Douglas faction. 



A General Contention of the colored voters of 

 New England has been called to meet in Boston on 

 the 1st ol August, to take action in reference to tbe 

 Presidential campaign of 1860. 



Tub Democrats have called their State Conven- 

 tion in Ohio for tbe last week in May, and the Re- 

 Mr:. Phillit Clatton is appointed acting Secre- 

 tary of the Treasury during the absence of Secre- 

 tary Cobb, who left on Tuesday week for Georgia. 

 Scnb- Mata, the new Mexican Minister, has ar- 

 rived at Washington, and will be presented im- 



De. Acklet, of Cleveland, a distinguished phy- 

 sician of the West, died in Cleveland, on the 24th, 

 after a very brief illness. Dr. Ackley was one of 

 the founders of the Willoughby Medical College, 

 now located at Cleveland, lie was a man of emi- 

 nent ability, and ranked among tbe first in bis pro- 

 fession. He was formerly a resident of Rochester, 



Mb. Bibb, who died at Washington on the 14th 

 ult., was a National Senator nearly SO years ago, 

 in 1311, and was active as a politician before Jef- 

 ferson was President. He bad been forgotten, and 

 the announcement of bis death was to most persons 

 the first they knew that be had not been long in his 

 grave. Ho was one of President Tyler's army of 

 cabinet officers— for if that gentleman's party 

 could have been got into an omnibus, it is certain 

 that the ark might have served to accommodate his 

 constitutional advisers — whose advice be rarely 



wed. 



.. FoasYTn, ex-Miniatei to Mexico, in a lettei 

 me friends at Columbus, Ga„ who bad invitee 

 :o a public dinner, explains the failure of hi) 

 on by laying the blame on President Bucban 

 Under the Pierce administration, Mr. F. hat 



tb Mexico would have been largely in 



icured, 



3 other Italian 

 3 Congres 

 vitb the i 



Weather of ApriL 



Tun cooler weather of the lust half of April has 

 delayed the progress of vegetation, so that there is 

 uo advance on that of ordinary years. Indeed, 

 some flowers are now litter by a week than in ISM. 

 Finsythiii, that beautiful shrub of yellow blossoms, 

 before a leaf appeni s uo it, showed it* first blns^oins 

 last year on April 2Gd, and was full of blossoi 

 the 30th; but this year tbe blossoms first opened 

 on the 80th, ond came out with far more rapidity 



few early maples .iml elm*, vegetation is much the 

 same in forwardness ns iu common years. The 

 mean beat of the last half of Aprd is 42.1", or five 

 ilcgrcss le.-S than tlieavei nge for twenty-two years. 

 The mean of the month is 41', or three degrees be- 

 low the average for twenty-two years. 



The rain of the 22d, and viofent snow storm of 

 the 23d, gave us 1.7*1 inch of water, and much re- 

 sembled that or two days earlier in the month, 

 1 s;.r,, when tbe Suspension Bridge, below the Lower 

 Fulls of the Genesee, collapsed. Then we bud less 



inches of water. From the great and continued 

 rise of the Geucseo the lust week, it is probable 



the south of us than about us. A large quantity 

 nt Water has fallen in April, and from the heavy 

 rains at the west, the Lukes have risen— Lake On- 

 tario hus ri.veu half a foot in the month, vet the 

 Lake is not so high bj 1} | inehea as in August, 

 N" less than 4.11 inches have fallen here in 

 the month, more than one inch of which fell on one 

 day in the first half. 



Iu tbe warmer parts of Kentucky, Indian corn 

 was mostly planted before the 25th ; and in Sooth- 

 eastern Missouri wheat was fully beaded by that 

 day, and apples, cherries, Ac, were as lurge as 

 bullets. There the earliest cherries began to show 

 ripttDI ■ "u the .".'th. 



Aurora Boreulis was splendid on the evenings of 



:li and 29lh. The auroral arch and 



cloud did not riac to the height of the Pole Star, 



though some stream- pa'- L ',i higher. On thcereu- 



rth and 29lh, a fine belt of cotton from 



May 2d, li*». 



BitrraH AmnxiTio*.— The British have 



other island in the Red Sea, 



'bc-y clnim to have purchased from an Arab SI 



■ 



i < rim. near the Arabian shore 



it is said to be almost wholly surrounded by 



Mk--n 



ihe country gradually Ameri- 

 , easy and peaceful process.— 

 r pending when Mr. Buchuuau 

 ,was rejected, but tbe Admin- 

 ished bim with any form or 

 ,n policy ; and ho adds, truly 

 tone. It approved in express 

 f every step 





and 



Exciting; News from Utah. 



.■ Utah mnilr 



■■ (lieatr.ii 



aspect, and t 

 tyofthofedet 

 Cradlebaugh 

 grand and tr 



;.. -,11-oi 



s fort 



l1 court administering justice. Judge 

 on the occasion of discharging the 

 .verse juries, charged the Mormons 

 ng the uirieersof the Court, and sup- 

 mony, and refusing to make pro- 

 r confinement 



Xcius Paragraphs. 



The Charleston Mercury says that the jury ac 

 luitted the men of the Echo slaver, because thei 

 ousidered the foreign slave trade no more a crimt 

 ban tho domestic trade, and that further prosecu 

 ions at the South will be idle, expensive and vain, 



A DBArr for the 110,000 awarded by Paraguay 

 is indemnification to the family of the seaman 

 lilledon the Water-Witcb.by a shot from tbe fort, 

 iss been received at the State Deparlmen t in Wash- 



forma paper : — " 7 

 Tear's day. This 

 bean soup; second 



rrespondent writes to i 

 iad a splendid dinner o 

 he bill of fare:— First c 

 rsc, boiled beans: thei 



Cali- 



sweeping macbi 

 re "thirty yards of 

 a reticulated frame 



Focn hundred Allopathic doctors in Paris a 

 three dollar dinner, on the 2Sith of March, in ho 

 of their triumph over the Horoa-opalhists, in a t 

 before the French Courts. 



Genio C. Scott says that th. 

 of the Broadway sidewalks, i 

 eight dollar eilk, mounted oi 

 of whalebone and steel." 



Toe American ship Florence, of 1,000 tuns, ht 

 arrived in the Loudon docks, from Japan, with 

 cargo consisting chiefly of vegetable wax. This 

 the first cargo from that country. 



The Legislative Council of Canada have taken 

 firm stand against death-bed bequests — enacting 

 that do bequests will be valid if made within 



Baron Humboldt, tbe confidential adviser of 

 Prince Regent of Prussia, writes to a diplomt 

 correspondent at Washington, that war cannot 

 postponed beyond July. 



The Vicksburgh papers state that card play! 

 among steamboat travelers in the West has dim 

 ished fully one-half within the past year, and 

 place has been supplied by chess. This is a good 



Soutiiejin papers state that recruiting ngent 



fate of Lopez, Crittenden and t 



mal Treasury is in better cond 

 ticipated. The receipts from im 

 i large, the balance of trade agt 

 since the 1st of January being about 



:, and Secretary Cobb will withhold 

 OS his receipts continue as ful! 



The flood in the valley of the Lower Miss 



-"'IT 



> plant* 



r fifty r 



U\['i-n the i\ 



U'vn,.. 



> the 







1 state of popular feeling, 

 en moved from Curop Floyd, and en- 

 Provo. Gov. Gumming issued a 

 taking grouud with tbe Morn sen- 

 withdrawal of the troops from Prove, but by his 

 action he fins laid himself open to the charge of 

 complicity with lire Mm mon llice'Ci acy. Much bad 

 feeling exists between the troops and the Mormons, 

 though the former stationed ul l'i, >\u behaved with 



The Utah correspondent of the St. Louis Ripvb- 

 Uean, writing about tbe affairs of tbut Territory, 

 says that things are in a worseconditiou than ever 

 before. After the advent of the army, the feeling 

 reached tbe culminating poiut, and we are on the 

 eve of open hostilities. The writer also says that 

 there is a difference between General Johnston and 

 Governor Cumming in relation to their respective 

 powers, and an open division and rupture between 

 tbe Executive and Judiciary. The misunderstand- 

 ing between Gov. C. and Gen. J., seems to 1 

 grown out of the refusal of the latter to withd 

 the troops from Provo, sent there under a reqi 



The DcsctH Jfews has published a memorial 

 from tbe people to Gov. Cumming, nttempt: 

 prove the illegality of Judge Cradlebaugh's 

 ing Court at Provo. It also severely criticis 

 Judge's course, and accuses bim of setting hi 

 up against the civil authorities of the Territt 

 It also charges him with a settled purpose to force 

 a collision between the people of tbe Territory 

 the troops. The Mormons regard President 

 chanan's proclamation as exempting parties f 

 arrest for past offences. 



of CoDgresa of 1850, some fifty or 



ads in tho Pacific ocean bavebeen 



taken possession of by Americans, Six of them are 



wn to have large and valuable deposits of guano, 



this is believed to be the case with twenty. Of 



others little is known. 



Important Mexican News. 



Toe steamer Tennessee, which arrived at N 

 Orleans on the 2Uth ult., brought advices fri 

 Vera Cruz to the 22d, and from the City of Mex; 

 to the 19th of April. The news is of great intcrc 

 and indicates u very decided change in the aspect 

 or afluirs in Mexico. GeD. Miromon had succeeded 

 in forcing the lines of the Liberal Generals Ampu- 

 dia and Llave at Orizaba, and bad hastened foi ivai d 

 to tbe Capital, which city he reached ou the 11th, 

 with a diminished uriny. Tbe victorious general 

 bad already commenced the work of slaughter, 

 and was murdering peaceable foreigners indis- 

 criminately. He bad also issued a formal protest 

 against the recognition of the Juniez government. 



Tbe Exequatur of Mr. Black, the Amcricuu Con- 

 sul General, had been withdrawn, und he banished 



a tbec 



ntry. 



Liberia.".- Intelligence.— The Liberian brig E. 

 M. Rogers, Captain Alexander, arrived at Ken 

 York on the 23th ult., from Monrovia, which port 

 she left on tbe 15th of March. This is the first 

 vessel belonging to Liberiun merchants which has 

 arrived at that port. When she left, everything 

 was going on favorably, and the prospects were 

 pleasant. Among the public acts passed by the 

 Legislature is one prohibiting enlistment of na- 

 African emigrants. The Liberia Herald ex- 

 presses its satisfaction at the appointment of the 



John Seys in place of the late Dr. Forney.— 

 Dr. F., American Commercial Agent for Liberia, 



it Monrovia on the flth of February. Chief 



c Day died at Monrovia on the 15th of Feb- 



, in the C2d year of his age. 



iHOH Exonns raoa Denmark. — Over four 



hundred Danish Mormons left Flensburg on the 



t , in the steamship L. L. Hoidt, bound for 



England, where the? would embark for the 



United States. Their destination is the Great Salt 



Lake. The men were mainly young and robust, 



ile the women seemed somewhat more advanced 



Mazutlan had been captured by Pasqui 

 Englij.li were threatening that place, and the oil 

 Mexican Pacific ports, and demanding payment 

 claims against them. At Vera Cruz, too, niuttc 

 are approaching a crisis. The British tlinisU 

 had insisted on the full payment of all the claii 

 of his countrymen, and had instructed the co 

 mandcr of the English fleet I 

 maud $16,500,000 from the ct 

 city— and in case of refusal, t< 

 Juarez had withdrawn tbe 

 Spanish Consul at Vera Cruz. 



Pike's Peak Fillibdstehi 



Vera Crnz to do- 



binbu-J the city. 

 Exequatur of the 



t I ■Ike' 



Mexi 







worth and 



tion to the gold regions 

 Peak sufficient material for their purposes. The 

 leaders base their hopes on anticipate* develop- 

 ment* in the gold country, and the probable dis- 

 satisfaction of great numbers with their prospects 

 at the mines. The plan of the leaders is i 

 fully developed, but it embraces, il is said, 

 descend upon Sonora, and afterwards upc 

 rango and Chihuahua. Ten thousand emi 

 have already left different points on the Mi 

 for Pike's Peak. 



<£l)c Kcnjs €onbcnocr. 



i 1 



reject fur a dally religion* paper to KcwT 



leuiniPiiallj high throughout 



'll-nl '"Tr „ I 



•ntly from England t 



CoNTi.vraD So i 



pBwi 





S,L 



ver to India and 





-The stirr 





whi 





e .nerease of Eu- 



Hum, 



trade has 



seq 



ent 



,,'cr 



ustry in India and 

 ase of the value of 



aborth 







K b 





g but afewcentsa 



luy to i 

 mong 



„n,.i ( ,n 



l!io 



I of 



ives, in the aggregate, 

 veople, reaches a great 



of ailver from England and 

 Continent to continue on an enormous scale.— 

 The last fortnightly steamer forCalcutta and Hong 

 Kong from Southampton took out about $5,000,000. 

 The place ot silver in the circulating money of 

 Europe is supplied by gold. 



p. i I r i ■ J i ]:.■ puMliTHi r.'f.iort* 



I lludsin, of Geneseo 

 *, and amliient in tu 

 rd on Tuesday weet. 



Cowley wen! to 



i." Emperor of 



: :-;^F : 



*•"-" 



- A Baltlmo- 

 harneasca, two c 



D preiiurjlh.n i 



':::£ 



■. 



gtO buggy 



B rl":<£p"« 





mo hogihcads of 



-dued at |M,000 





sass; 



SCjGj^ 



