5S&M 



210 



MOOKE'S SURAL EFEW-YOftKER. 



IOTE 25. 



LJ8T OP HEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 



. .. ■ 



ft It.COWlM. 



Monroe C* riiif -ii»i>w-»wUd Hirm r, /r« f. 

 TERMS. IK ADVANCE 



■'■ '. -.'i.t. - ?.■' iiM.I^-i^u'd^. sou 



nder 



■ the 



1 P™porl 



Tho Collector of Baltimore has applied to tbe 

 Secretary of Slate for information as to the nature 

 nod extent of ibe protection which maybe afforded 

 by the United States to a foreign built vessel, 

 purchased by an American citizen. It is under- 

 stood that our Government entertain* the views 

 held Lit (be last Administration, wa ;— That if an 

 American citixeu buys, in good faith, a vessel from 

 a belligerent or neutral power, with whom we are 

 at peace, it becomes American property. Tbe 

 vessel, however, cannot get a register unless by 

 the act of Congress. 



A dispatch from Washington states on probable 

 authority, that Mr. McLane has negotiated a treaty 

 wiib J uarex, cedeing to the Coiled States the Stales 

 of Sonora and Chihuahua, sod u part of the Tvm.au- 

 lipas, tbe United Slates eDgaging to asaiBt tbe 

 Liberal party and to pay the claims within a limited 



., be u 



71 v 



a. month. 



ANOTHER HALF VOLUME. 



Annoanccment to Agents and Subscribers. 



Aob.nt Fniesos, Subscribers, and all others in- 

 terested, will pleu'e note that this number closes 

 the first hnirof Vol. X of the Rdral New-Yorkee. 

 All whose terms expire this week will find "Time 

 Up" printed on tbe margins of their respective 

 papers— and we trust each and all so notified will 

 not only be disposed to renew their own subscrip- 

 tions, but that mnny of them will form new clubs, 

 thus furnishing the Rural at n low rale to neigh- 

 burs and friends who bnve long desired it, and 

 only waited for an invitation or favorable oppor- 



tunity i 





" Where there i! 



nil tl 





■ ndih'^M-d who bos tho 



welfare of tbe pnpi 

 community ot heart, con. by a Utile timely effort, 

 secure a clubof six lo thirty, and thereby promote 

 the interest or all parties. Some have already 

 renewed and enlisted new recruits, and we hope 

 the remaindered our Agents generally— to whom 

 we are largely indebted for the remarkable pros- 

 perity oftheRmiAi. this year— will give the matter 

 such timely attention as may be consistent. 

 Tub Nbw Half Voltjub, commencing July 2d, 



will act be inferior to either of ils predecessors 



'and the one now terminating has been more 

 wujTuly commended .ind approved by Subscribers 

 tfore published.) Our 



"'."<"< 



suaacd such 



lul prosecution ,,| the cnU-rproe in which we have 

 been so Inpg and ardently engaged, nor a greater 

 desire to maintain and nngment the pre-eminence 

 of theRr/iUL.NEw-Yii|{fcEJt in all the essentials of 

 an Agrjcultuiul, Liteiiarv akd Family Weekly. 

 The extraordinary success of thelttmALhus created 

 in some sections a spirit of envy and jealousy 

 pworthy ony one engaged (as all rural journalist; 

 lar efforts to promote the Best 

 less of the Rural Popu- 

 i of this animosity has 

 d coDser|UL-ut influence 

 U endeavor to wield 

 pousibility wilh 

 weagoinfrankly 

 is doing good— 



Conflagrations and Casualties, 



e Classical Institute of Galena 

 its contents, was destroyed by fi 

 Tbe library was partially s 



scM.o 



h,M 



]*,;,„, 



At 2 o'clock on the morning of Ibe 15th inst , 

 a fire broke out on board the steamer Endeavor, 

 lying at ber dock in Pittsburg, Pa., which soon 

 spread to tbe Gazette, and both boats were burned 

 to tbe water's edge. There was no freight on board 

 of either boaL The Endeavor win partially insured, 

 having $1,100 in the Pennsylvania Co., at Harris- 

 burg ; $2,000 in the Quaker City Co., also in Har- 

 risburg ; and $1,500 in the Great Western, at 

 Philadelphia. Tbe Gazette had but $1,500 insur- 

 ance on ber. 



A train of the Cleveland and Pittsburg road ran 

 into a train of the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and 

 Chicago road, while standing at Rochester, Penn., 

 n the 15th inst., taking in wood, and injuring 

 he following persons;— Phrus Kaufman, of Lan- 

 caster, Pa., and Mrs. T. B. McKean, seriously ; Jo- 

 Steward, of Clarlcsville, Pa.; C. L. Warner, 

 of Salem; Frank Grebe, of Sheboygan; W. A. 

 Benton, of Chicago; T. H. D. Blake and Edward 

 D. Porter, of Boston; D. H. Cook of Mansfield, 

 slightly. A number of others also received bruises 





Km 



■ Sni:i:c Sin;.. 



should be) 



Interests and Home II. 

 lation,yet every nihil 

 increased its circulatm 

 and usefulness, and v 

 wisely and well the power and 

 wbiob we are Ihns endowed. Ant 

 ask all who beliave this Journal 

 hat it is enhancing Rural Progn 

 moot, and worlhily fulfilling the i 

 slructive. Entertaining and Useful Visi. 

 family CircJc — to lend a portion of attei 

 influence to extend ils sphere of useful 

 thus augment its benefits to community. 



DOMESTIC NEWS. 

 Matters at Washington. 



of an In- 

 ) tbe 



the ri-hts 

 ii Kuiope, 

 a letter to 



ilJiii. 



tbe Chenango Teltgraph, a man named Reu- 

 ben Orr, who lived in the town of Otselic, met his 

 on Wednesday last under the following cir- 

 ;ances :— He was employed in shearing sheep 

 for Mr. Thomas Havens, and was olone in the barn 

 te distance from tbe house. He had a sheep 

 upon a low table, and was working at the animal 

 H kicked ngainsl the handle of the shears! 

 g one blade into Orr's leg above the knee, 

 and completely severing the large artery. He at 

 nee started for the bouse, the blood flowing from 

 omul in a great stream, and as soon as possible 

 fter he reached it, Mr. Havens bound the limb 

 ghtly with a cord. This stopped tbe flow of blood 

 -it had been running freely about fifteen minutes— 

 and an express was sent off for Dr. Day and other 

 physicians. When the doctor arrived, he found 

 Orr failing very fast from the great loss of blood 

 before the limb was bound, and although every 

 effort was made to revive him, be died in less than 

 three hours after the accident. 



Toe Eaibu Gold Mima— Mr. Bwlnkurn tr- 



rived at New York on the 14th inst., from Leaven- 

 worth, wilh $000 worlh of gold from Pike's Peak. 

 He says a much larger amount might have been 

 got, but the miner* were asking $20 per ounce, 

 which purchasers thought too Ligh. Tbe Leaven- 

 worth Timti says the accounts from tbe mines 

 continue encouraging. Claims which four weeks 

 ago were considered worthless, are now command- 

 ing from $5,000 to $20,000. The snow had disap- 

 peared from Ibe mountains, and prospecting was 

 rigorously conducted. New rich leads were being 

 constantly discovered. At Gregory's diggings 

 miners were making from $65 to $100 each per 

 day. Arrivals of emigrants from the Slates con- 

 tinue large, and all rush immediately for the 

 mountains. The healib of the mining region was 

 excellent, and ibe spirit of the miners good. 

 Ettsct op Wab on Hdwajj Stature,— E 

 Belt says that if the curse of war be long en 

 on a nation, tbe physical energies of the people may 

 suffer, by the loss of its finest population, to such a 

 degree that the succeeding generation will fall 



case wilh the French youth drafted for tbe army 

 after ihe general peace. Thus, in lS2u, out of one 

 million ihirty-threo thousand four hundred and 

 twenty-two young men drafted to serve in the 

 army, three hundred and eighty thousand two 

 hundred and thirteen were sent back because they 

 fell short of even the diminutive stature of four 

 feet ten inches French. 



Lpudeh TriAPK op Milwaukee.— The schooner 

 M. S. Scott, or Milwaukee, Capt. N. II. Blend, 

 cleared from that port, 31st of May, for Cowes and 

 a market, with a cargo of assorted timber, about 

 170,000 feet, the product of Wisconsin and Michi- 

 gan forests. This is the first venture of the kind 

 from Milwaukee to the Old World. The vessel's 

 probable destination is Hamburg, and some of the 

 German brewers in Milwaukee shipped by her some 

 kegs of Layer, to show the good people across the 

 water what Milwaukee can do io that line. 



FOREIGN NEWS 



From the Seat of War. 

 The latest Intelligence from lb. 



contending pa 

 i teem to indicate lb: 

 i to be the rule hertafte 

 ed on the 1-itb, and by 

 ' vice defeated 

 Tho K.ng of 



i>t*d ihe 



Disti 



ur recent notices of deaths, saystl 

 e find that of Walter Hunt, aged 63. For i 

 ian forty years he has been known as an cx\ 

 lenter in tbe arts. Whether in mechanical m 

 ients, chemistry, electricity, or metallic com] 

 *js at home; and probably i 

 experiments than any othe 









, the I 



nail i 



, the 



g brads by one operation, 

 ier for soles of boots aud 

 ng docks by concrete, 

 -reparing a paper pulp so as to form boxes by one 

 peration, the vapor baths, the ball known as the 

 linnie ball for the rifle, and many improvements 

 o fire arms, printing by rollers instead of balls, 

 nd so many other things our space will not admit 

 f details. Walter Hunt, like most inventors, de- 

 oted his life to bis friends rather than to himself; 

 ■as liberal to a fault, and none knew him but to 

 sve him; he struggled with that monster, the 

 ollar, all his life, in hopes of mastering; yet his 

 numberless experiments kept him always poor. 



Sales is Iowa.— The quantity of land 



ber wc learn that t 

 in their attempt t. 

 Sardinia comment 

 and Gen. Cialdini 

 rnent. The Zouav 

 siderablc time, an. 

 assumed tbe offeni 

 1,000 prisoners, and capturing _„_. 

 by theZouavcs. Some 500 Auatrina wcredrowned 

 in tbe canal during the light. Another fight 

 occurred at Confreosea, io the presence of Somel- 

 repulscd by division 



le Pales 



be 4th di 



tors of tbe regi 

 ■Hack for a con. 

 in, having very successfully 



pursued the 



40, after t 



Tbe arr 



alofthe 



confirmed the reports brouj 

 startled all wilh the annou; 

 battle bad been fought nei 



l- ]Mll II 



12.000. Theforcesengi 



victory. The loss of the 

 ),000-lhat of tho French, 

 ged are reported at 150,000 



100,000 to 130,000 French. 



■I' 11 







embraced in the President's Proclai 

 mounts to 1,609,601 < 



No. 

 i be offered b 



News Paragraphs. 



The Couhe.vcejikkt Exercises of Elmira F 

 College will take place on Wednesday next, 

 2Blb. Oration by Rev. Joseph Cross, D. D., of 

 Charleston, S. C. 



The Rochester Theological Seminary, and the 

 University of Rochester, announce that their 

 versary and Commencement Exercises wil 

 place from the 10lh to tbe 14th of July. We shall 

 endeavor to give the programme of each in our 



Thb Davenport (Iowa) Democrat says thi 

 official letter from Kossuth to a Hungarian 



ALSh.ux City, . 



This land 1 



Moines and it 





i Of 1 



Des 



represented to 

 be General Land Office us excellent farming land, 

 fell timbered, and well provided with water, 



Tnc Mormoss Oroakizwo fok Resistance.— The 

 ate news from Utah represents that tbe Mormons 

 -j organizing military companies and arranging 



■ feilen 



,t place 

 take imnieiim 





cived, i 

 lrds em 



individuals voluntarily return to countries 



whfeh *bev owed military service* m n ■ j 



trvn.c- Hi ii,,. p,. no ,i 



tb«ir depart urv fori he United States, 



Tbe State Department has received advices fr< 



our Minister at Chili, giving all the fact* relati 



•choocer Town B end J 0B . 



The Adminietrati 

 Minister-to demand reparal 

 of the exequatur of 





|..,f „ 



islruction'j 

 i for the rev, 





e ordering of a more efficient naval fon 

 X-ican coost was not in consequence of any 

 complaints by the British Qovernmen 

 long ago contemplated, but until rei 



isels wbicb could bo used for that 



Government is aware, nc 



Mued by the British Gov- 



onnection with the treaty 



ppreesion of the slave 



there 



Purpose, go 



»ew order* have bern 



« , "»«rt-rfnafcl64a in 



■touting f<lr „„ 



f .'.In.. 



A d ~P«el. - U ,.(,, 



saya Government i ia , de( 

 from Texas eontnm a vonfi 

 of continued bortil.ty w |i u ' 

 them immediately to die rt 

 Choctaw settlement. The o 

 have been committed by , 



i^ti.n 



ii the TYi&uta 

 f next advices 

 of the report 



n of tbe West 

 Ml ttt Indians 





Tbe proposals for the $5,ooo,ooo Trcas 



opened on the 20th inst.. by tho sj^ry Tf 



Treasury. There were u 

 *,'ond about 

 e awarded under per cec 

 i per cent., and $100,000 at 

 dders proposed 6 per 



>su the late i 

 Slate of Indiana, the valuations have risen 

 about $400,000,000 to between $600,000,00 

 and $700,000,000. This, underthe presentn 

 taxation, will produce a large revenue. Tbe a 



anticipated. 



TriK reports from the manor towi 

 county, indicate that more and .- 

 will follow attempts to collect back 



Tiir; Louisville Journal says t 

 evening a terrific descent of gnati 

 thai city, places of amusement were rendered un- 

 bearable. Gnats were showered ou tho hotel tobies 

 till the lights io the chandeliers had to bo ex- 

 tinguished. Eyes, ears and mouths, wcreexposed 

 to the annovance. 



s of Rensselaer 

 •ents by Helling 

 101 on Monday 



m British Columbia are to May Htb, 

 of gold shipped from Fraser's Rivet 

 11th lo May 10th was $195,000. The 

 len at the mines was rated from 2,000 

 I" the yield of gold w> 





h«s been won at the bridge of Magenl 

 thousand prisoners have been token. Fifteen thou- 

 sand of the enemy are killed or wounded. Tho 

 details will be dispatched by telegraph. 



On the following day (Monday) the JfoniUur 

 published the following dispatches from the Empe- 

 ror to the Empress: 



Magenta, June 5.— Yesterday our army was 

 under orders to march to Milan, across the bridges 

 thrown over the Ticino, atTuibridge. The opera- 

 tion was well executed, although tbe enemy, who 

 bad repassed the Ticino in great force, offered a 

 itermined resistance. The roadway wi 

 and during two hours tbe Imperial Guard 

 sustained, unsupported, (he shock of tbe 

 In the meantime. Gen. McMabon made hims 



Magenta. After sanguinary coufl 

 repulsed the enemy at every point, with a 



aide of about 3,000 men. The Austrians taken 

 prisoners are at least 7,000, and the Au 

 placed Aor* du, combat are 20,000. Three pi 



nnon and two flags were captured from the 



emy. Today our army rests for the purpose of 



organizing itself. 



Milan is insurgent The Austrians have evacu- 

 ated the town and castle, leaving in their precipi- 

 tation Die cannon and treasure of the army behind 

 them. We are encumbered with prisoners, and 

 have taken 12,000 Austrian muskets. 



A dispatch from Paris, Monday night, to the 

 London Post, says, tho municipality of Milan pro- 

 claims for Victor Emanuel, King of Sardinia, and 

 has presented an address to him in the presence of 

 the Emperor. To-morrow the King will make his 

 entry into M.Ian. 



n accounts by way 

 meager and unsat- 



» Peoale of Fnuw e 



> Washington pap«rt advertise- buUVo- 

 leoaver's Island gold ml 



— Top population o 



r »lU"iriin<r 

 f Nash vino 



'» Inland have dcstriij 



f Naples, It to said, has prohlbll- 



f Vienna. The information i: 



Thirt 





mpt has been made to fit o 



Quec 



r the -1 



Cliiirloito'. 



V-i;ii.'iin] 



of July ni 

 e wilh the act of Coogress passed 

 April, l&iS, which declares thai, on the admission 

 of every new State, one star shall bo added, and 

 that each addition shall take place on the 4th of 



The Supreme Court of California, in a case be- 

 weeu a citucn of that Slate and a Chinese liener- 

 ■lent Company, has decided that idol worship is 

 mt forbidden by the Constitution. 



lain of being arrested and 

 punished as disturbers of the public peace. The 

 execution of this order was entrusted by the Gov- 

 ernor to the Miusluil ujipoink-d by tho Mormon 

 Legislature, and to this tho Valley Tan— the organ 

 of the Gentiles in Utah— strongly objects, us hav- 

 ing a tendency to deleat and make of no avail the 

 command of the Executive. Serious troubles are 

 still apprehended, from the insubordination of the 

 Mormons to tho United States authorities. 



From Boenos Arass.— By tbe arrival of the 

 ship Parana at New York, we have papers from 

 Buenos Ajres to April S9tb. War had not yet 

 been commenced between Urquiia and Buenos 

 Ay res, and the probabilities were that actual hos- 

 tilities would be postponed for a while. Urquiza's 

 appeals for assistance to Lopez, of Paraguay, and 

 Parrcira, of Montevideo, had been unsuccessful. 

 The government and pooplo of Buenos Ayres ap- 

 peared convinced that there would bo no actual 

 war for the present. The season was too far ad- 

 vanced, and winter was approaching. The Pam- 

 pas iveie without grass for horses, and an army 

 could not subsist on supplies from the proviuccs. 



From Mexico. — Late and important news from 

 Mexico is to hand. Mir am on is reported to have 

 suppressed a proounctumento by the pri 

 vor of Zuloaga, at tho capital on the S8d ult. The 

 Church tried Miramon, but the Padres were arrest- 

 it to Vera Crui. The Liberals were en- 

 couraged. Munuaz'sexpcditionasagainslMorUlu 

 been driven back, but not until tbe town bad 

 i ravaged and tho women stripped uaked and 

 whipped in the effort to moke them point out the 

 hidden treasure. The American and other foreign- 

 ers suffered much loss. Miramon had decreed the 

 importations of Vera Cruz confiscated, and modi- 

 fled tbe advalorcm duties. Mr. McLane was at 

 Vera Cruz on the 30th. Miramon is reported to 

 have been at Jalopa with 3. r >0 men. Our despatch 



FtjOWA, Monday, June 6—11 30 A. M.— A despe- 

 .te combat took place on Saturdny between the 

 t and 3d (Count Glams' and Prince Lichtenst's) 

 ■rps d'arinee and the enemy, who had passed Ihe 

 Ticino in considerable force. Tbe result of tbe 

 stest was undecided. Thecombatwaa continued 



)ur troops threw themselves upon the enemy's 

 ranks with ardor, and showed a .ulor and perse- 

 worthy of the most glorious feats of arm; 

 of tbe Imperial Army. Milan is perfectly tranquil, 

 The heiid qmirU-is yesterday were slill in Abbiatte 



ustrian telegram from Verona gives a simi- 

 lar view, but adds that the authorities and weak 

 garrison of Milan, with the exception of the castle 

 garrison, have withdrawn at the command of Gen 

 Gyulai. Tho town is quiet. 



Great Bit it a is.— The Queen of England had de 

 livered her speech to Parliament. Tho document 

 po-sesse* no important points. 



A motion of want of confidence io the Ministry 

 was pending in the House of Commons. 



It was stated that the prospectus of a company 



lo.ll.l 1. 



isued i: 





■ laying two tele- 







M ■ 



lonilla issued i 



responsible, and that Am_ 

 able for his acts. Consul Black wa3 reported to b 

 going to Vera Cruz for safety from tbe rabble o 

 the army. Gen. Cobaa is reported at Oujaca, am 

 private Py*k* advise people not to cross tb. 

 Uthmus of Tenuantepee. Zuloaga is reported ti 



gruph cables from Cornwall. England, to Canad. 

 direct, and Hint tbe proposed capital of the com- 

 pany was £500,000. 



A great explosion of saltpetre occurred on the 

 troopship Eastern Monarch, from Kurrachel, while 

 at anchor at Spilbead. She had 500 soldiers and 

 iheir wives on board, returning from India. The 

 ship was speedily enveloped in flames, but prompt 

 action saved all but seven persons, including five 

 children, who were killed. 



— The Monittur publishes the official 

 notification of the blockade of Venice. 

 The recall of the French soldiers ou leave of ab- 

 nce had added 120,000 veteran soldiers to tbe 

 French army. 



is Debate had a letter from Rome stoting 

 that Piedmont has recognized tbe neutrality of the 

 Pontificiul States on certain conditions. 



TcnuEY.— Tho garrison of Belgrade has been 

 reinforced, and it was reported that it would be 

 trebled. It was also said that the Porte was about 

 to send a strong naval force to the Adriatic. The 

 Hertz Govina was reported to be in open rev 

 and the latest intelligence says tho whole or Ei 

 pean Turkey was bordering on revolution. 



German!.— The feeling in some of the Stotei 

 Germany against the French is so strong, that a 

 French manufacturer at Hesse Cussel, employing 

 TOO workmen, has been compelled to quit the place 



Prussia. — The terms of the new loan are an- 



sd by public subscription— the redemption 

 nence in 1860, by tbe payment of one per 

 .nually— 30,000,000 lhalers is the amount, 

 e grave of Humboldt, the United States 

 presented not only by our Minister at Ber- 



Ilin, but by a representative from each Slate ef the 

 differen 



tsilislppl, Georgia, ' 

 ber last trip, took out 



d daily pap.:r m the Freui 



— Tho Paris Debata h 



I, bas resigned all office on 



g company In Clnclnnall will 

 lo four days have Ii mode 



-J7V 



^e-s^-r 



