218 



MOOKE'S RURAL .HJEW-YOKKER. 



LIST OF NEW A-DVEBTISEMEWTS. 



T>,e Atlantic Mm.m it f... JmIt- mivtr* jj»»w<»* Co. 



rltbi Smoldhyr. 

 Dun ■'■■ Roll Poi Pah -i 1 "' 1 imtoi-1 '',"""■ 



^HU^Stogg 



was chosen President of the Senate, and W. G L. 

 Fuulk, Speaker of the House. Judge Williams 

 aud Mr. G rover, lute representatives iu the Legis- 

 lature, are the most prominent candidates to super- 

 cede D«liui>o Smith in the U. S. Senate. 



At the election held at Providence, It I , on the 

 21<i alt, for a Member of Congress from that Dis- 

 trict, Christopher Robinson, the Ameri 

 licao candidate, was elected. He rec 



ROCHESTER, N. Y, lOhY t, 



'wt.lV ■ -',' 20 'l»'MU <- ML -, II Mt 



l.lrl>-T»o r.i|.l.-»,...lU ThSrli-Two du. 20 0( 



DOMESTIC NEWS, 



Matteri at Washington. 



Tne opinion among gentlemen oonnected wi 

 the diplomatic corps is, tbat although tbe gover 

 mcnls of Europe not engaged in tbe present host 



In i 



< dooi 



Ru! 



herself with France. 



The U. 8. Survejs in Ulah, which were two 

 j cars ago interrupted by the Mormon difficulties, 

 arc to be resumed immediately by Surrey or Samuel 

 Stumbaugb. Tbe lands already surveyed amount 



Private letteis from E! Paso and Arizona, tho 

 7th of June, state that the late attempt lo revolu- 

 tionire Cbibuahua by Jose Maria Zulouga, brother 

 or tbe late President of Mexico, has been entirely 

 suppressed, Zulouga surrendering without a battle, 

 and being pardoned. 



Tbe people of Ni 



take 





New 



election, on the ground heretofore stated in their 

 memorial to Congress, of baring no fair represen- 

 tation or vote. No U. S. Court is held at Mesilla 

 this year. Arizona wilt send her own delegate to 

 Congress, and if Lieut Mowry consents to run 

 again, he will be re-elected to Congress as a dele- 

 gale from New Mexico, withoutsenoua opposition. 



Tho Secretary of War has refused to permit any 

 more officers on leave to depart for Europe. It is 

 feared that they might join some of the armies, and 

 in the event of being taken prisoners, would lead 

 to serious complications, which our government 

 desires to avoid. 



A dispatch from Washington suysnn unexpected 

 obstacle lia.s occurred iu the settlement of the 

 Central American question, on account of the 

 hesitation of Nicaragua to consent to the relin- 

 quishment by England of tho Protectorate over the 

 Mosquito Kingdom, upon tho ground thut if with- 

 drawn the filibusters would enter aud sweep the 

 country; Gen. Walker's recent movements having 

 produced alarm there; but tbe Ilrilish Govern- 

 ment denies having mode any interference on this 

 point, and expresses itself ready to carry out the 

 arrangements conformably to the understanding 

 ot Washington. 





Personal and Political. 



Mu. Sim suit lias arrived in Pan-, in good spirits, 



Dn. Gamaliel Baixw, editor of the National 

 Era. died ul „ea. on board the stenmor Arago, 

 bound for Havre, oo the 5lh of the past month. 

 Dr. Bailey had for some years been suffering from 

 chrome dysp-pam, n l,ich had 80 enfeebled his sys- 

 tem that on tho 2slh of May he left the United 

 States, in company with his eldest son, to regain 

 his health by a tour in Europe. 



It has already been stated that Kossuth, with a 

 number of Hungarians, has left Englaud for Genoa, 

 where Gen. Klapka, Col. Kiss, Gen. Perezel Gen' 

 Vettcr. Col. Yasc, Co!. Teleki 

 rian refugees, await him. It i 

 pose to issue a proclamation at Genoa, calling on 

 (he Hungarians in the Austrian army to desert en 

 masse, and with these deserters (should they num- 

 ber 15,000 or 20,QQ0J and a small division of French 

 troops under the French flag, to cross the Adriatic 

 sod the Austrian provinces into Hungary, mid 

 then promote insurrection. 



Is the New Hampshire House of Representatives 

 on tho 23d alt, a stringent bill in relBtion to the 

 rendition of alleged fugitive slaves, was reported 

 1>J the Judiciary Committee. The bill provides 



H. t" y per90U who shttU aid or i,bct in a °y rcndi - 



claimed as a slave, shall be pun- 

 by five years* imprison- 

 ssed the House by a vote 

 indeB- 



'■ l"-t l.lKlH 



men t for lift, Tht "£ 



I 101. in , Le " ScnaU . 



The President of the United States has rccog 

 nized Henry W. Oveoden, as Consul of her Britan 



me M.ijeity for the State of Maryland. 



i Ulnii 



o Switzerland, wills 



be recalled. He bus not been within the limit 

 the United Stalesfor thirty years. 



Srr.r-ui:* A. Douglas is out with n bid for 

 Presidency in the form of a leltcr answering i 

 tain queries propounded by his friends. Tbe 

 "Little Giant" remarks i— " Before the question 

 can be finally determined, it will be necessary to 

 understand distinctly upon what issues the can- 

 vass is to be conducted. If, as I have full faith 

 tbey will, the Democratic party shall determine in 

 the Presidential election of I860 to adhere to the 

 principles embodied in the Compromise measures 

 of 186Q, and ratified by the people in the Presiden- 

 tial election of I&.'jSJ, and reaffirmed in the Kansas- 

 Nebraska act of 1854, and incorporated iu the 

 Cincinnati Platform of 1856, as expounded by Mr. 

 Buchanan in his letter accepting the nomination, 

 and approved by the people, in that event, my 

 friends will bo at liberty to present my name to 

 the Convention, if they see proper to do so. If, 

 on the contrary, it shall become the policy of the 

 Democracy, but which I cannot anticipate, to re- 

 pudiate these, their true principles, by which we 

 have achieved so many patriotic triumphs, and in 

 lieu of them tbe Convention shall interpolate into 

 the creed of the party such new issues as the revi- 

 val of the African Slave Trade or a Congressional 

 Trade lor the Territories, or tho doctrine 

 ie Constitution of the United States either 

 prohibits slavery in the territories 

 yond the power of the people legally to control 

 as other property, it is duo to oandor to aay, 



>tion if tendered to me." 



Pacific Side Hews. 



Tub steamship Mosts TayU>r arrived 

 York on tbe 26th ult. She brought COO passen 



From California or Oregon there is no news o! 

 terest. Valparaiso dates are to May 28lh. Thi 

 volution in Chdi is perfectly suppressed. Fre 

 lent outrages are reported by bands of robbers 

 throughout the country. The leader of the revo 

 i in the North, ftenor Gallo, was at Lima. 





BRio 



b;u! 1, 



odeat 



andt 



~s to banishment ten days. Bo- 

 livia and Peru were iu a peaceful condition. Tbe 

 blockade of tbe Equadorian ports, by tbe Peruvian 

 squadron, continues, 



The English ship Indian Queen, Cupt. Brewer, 

 from Melbourne, for Liverpool, with -11 passengers 

 struck an iceberg April l3t. Capt. Brewer, the 

 ite, thirteen men and two passengers, gol 

 fe-boat and came alongside a quarter of an 

 hour afterwards, and, finding the ship making no 

 attempted to get on board, but, losing then 

 heu too fur off to catch a rope, drifted off 

 ere never seen after. The ship, in n dis- 

 mantled condition, but all on board well, reached 

 May 10th. 

 i.— An attempt had 



, Gov. 



■ oft 



De- 



partment of Cusciillun, who was severely but not 



tally wounded. The would-be assassin was 



shot. War seems inevitable between Salvador 



Honduras, but it wns thought Guatamala 



would iulerfere to preserve peace. 



NicAKAciL'A. — Gen. Lamar bad sent copies of 

 en. Cass' dispatches to the Government demmid 

 g acceptance of the Coss-Yrissari Trcaly, ratifi- 

 ition of the Mosquito Convention, re-installation 

 of tho Wright Contract, transit holders' indemni- 

 fication for the seizure of boats, aud satisfaction 

 and apology to the I'uited States, lor the insult of 

 having offered them the Ousley Treaty. 



I subslunce of the Nicaraguuu reply is as 



■s i— -Nicaragua, as a sovereign power, claims 



the right lo accept or reject a treaty. Sho had 



jusly made three treaties with the United 



Stales, which were ratified by her Congress nod 



rejected at Washington ; that on this one she only 



ires amendments, and that after the Congress 



dcrcd the treaty last year, and it had been 



lingtou, who 1: 



. lull 



power 



to remedy it, the Cabinet, though agree- 

 erlaiu modifications, did not make them; 

 i the United States' Minister in Nicaragua 



> dos 



Furl 



, that v- 



Gore Ousley concluded his treaty, which was the 

 Coss-Yrissari trcaly, wilh the recodified amend- 

 ments, according to the American view, Gen. La- 

 mar mode the Zeledon treaty, wilh the favorable 

 amendments, as to England and the United States, 

 of Sir Gore Ousley. The Government of Nicara- 

 gua cauuot see any insult to the United States iu 

 this. As to the Mosquito treaty, it has not been 

 rejected, and will probably be accepted. Nicara- 

 thc Mosquih 



unconditionally, aod r 

 King whom neither «t 

 ever tdmi'tcd, aud she 



,,l.i„ 



■ ihe United States 



the result of tbe operations of a company of 

 risen, given in Greeley's published letter, shi 

 ) highest day's yield 8510. A company fn 

 mt 3,000 peui 

 l a sluice, within thi 



Emigrants are charged not to start without fc 

 or six months' supplies, as snows set in on t 

 mountains iu October, and adequate provisic 

 should be made by all persons leaving this seas 

 for wintering in the mining region ; this ie to p 

 vent a recurrence of the suffering and prfvhUc 

 of the previous hegira. 



Conflagrations, Casualties, &c. 



The steamer Morning Star, which had been laid 

 up at Binel's Point, about four miles above St 

 Louis, was destroyed hy fire oa tbe 20th ult. Loss 

 $21,000— insured $2,000. 



A fire broke out at an early hour on tbe morn- 

 ing of the 22d ult., in Youngs Block, adjoining 

 the Custom House, Milwaukee. The block was 

 entirely consumed. It was occupied by some 20 

 business firms. Loss on tbe buildiDg $50,000— 

 insured $.'>0,000. The Custom House is damaged 

 to the extent of $15,000. Loss in merchandise not 

 yet ascertained, but Tery heavy. 



Tnu manufactory of Avery Babbitt, in Auburn, 

 was struck by lightning on Friday evening, the 

 24tb ult., and set on fire. Before it was subdued 

 the damage done amounted to over $9,000. In- 

 sured only $3,000. 



POHEIGN NEWS. 



From the Scat of War. 



Ix the last issue of the RrtuL we gave 80u 

 count of tbe great battle of Magenta, and the 

 vals during the week tend to confirm tfce P 

 report of that engagement The Allies entered 

 Milan on theTtb. when tbe municipality cTUii 

 issued the following address to Victor Eroou 

 " Tho municipality of Milan are proud of 

 able to make use of its freshest privileges in being 

 interpreterof its frl low-citizens at this gn ' 

 They are willing to rencwlhe compact of 

 to proclaim again before the Italian n 

 great fact which has required eleven years for full 

 ntelligence and hearts of tbt 

 >f Lombardy and Pied 

 iy of public 



developrr 



moot is tbe first step i 

 right, which ollows nalii 





free, as far as tbe . 



Ilgofii 



i Plymouth 



street, Brooklyn 

 two men — James McGinnis and Daniel Olcott- 

 were suffocated to death. A child was rescued ir. 

 an insensible state, A fireman fell from a loddei 

 and was fatally injured. 



Os tbe evening of the 21st ult., H. Van Dyck 

 Jr., aged 21 years, only son of Hon. Henry H. Vol 

 Dyck, Superintendent of Public Instruction, wo* 

 thrown from a wagon while oo his way homt 

 (Albany) from a visit in the country, and fatally 



lOLEfrrfall of hail took place in the neigh 

 3d of Albany, N. Y., on tbe the 21st ult, 

 uiog half nu hour, and extending over : 

 space of about a mile iu width. The bail stone 

 ere us large as marbles, and congealed into lurg, 

 kes of ice almost as soon as they fell. Window 

 ere broken, and flowers, &c, cut to pieces. 

 The Cleveland (O.) Herald of the 24th publishes 

 Ihe foUowing from a Hudson correspondent :— 

 What hope the frost had left the fanner, has just 

 been destroyed by the worst hail storm I have 

 the ground is covered 

 of the size of robins' eggs and larger. It 

 ipped the trees almost bare, and probably 

 left nothing in the form of wheat am 

 .11 the windows which are not a 

 rs are broken, and the College 1 

 perfect ruin. It would seem as if it w 

 ble to add anything to tbe disaster, i 

 > burn the bouses." 



News Paragraphs. 

 Correspos-oence has tuken place relative to i 



sposilion of Sardinia to receive American phj 

 ans into the Sardinian army. Tho answer is, tl 



sympathy, but cannot avail itself of tbe offer. 



ooner Exile arrived at New London 

 the 12th inst., after having made what is believed 

 the longest whaling voyage on record. She 

 sailed August 18th, 1S52; consequently she was 

 absent six years, nine months and twenty- five days. 

 Going into buttle by rait, is one of the peculiari- 

 es of the present war. At the battle of Monte- 

 bello the allied supports come into tbe field under 

 Ihe lend of locomoiii e-i, rapidly succeeding trains 

 ig up a brigade. 



number of passports which have been issued 

 Gen. Cuss' administration of tbe State De- 

 nt, was, ou the 11th inst., fourteen thousand 

 ne hundred. If each person, observes the 

 New York Journal of Commerce, for whom a pass- 

 port is tuken, spends in a tour $T>00, the whole 

 amount would bo over $7,000,000. 



lail-storm passed over the town of 

 Glen, Schenectady eomiiv, and Clifton Park, Snrn- 

 on Tuesday, doing great damage to 

 crops and fruits. 

 Tub educational statistics of the United States 

 iow that there are four millions of Ihe youth of 

 lis country connected with Ihe various cduca- 

 oual institutions in the different States in the 

 nion. Their teachers number more than one 

 indrcd and fifteen thousand. The annual Current 

 cpenses arc estimated at about $14,000,000. 

 It turns out that the " Vegetable Wax" of Japan, 

 about which so ninth has recentl} been said iu tbe 

 papers, is nothing more nor less than the product 

 of the common myrtle bush, to be found in every 

 >udside thicket-bush in North Carolina. 

 Thb N. Y. Times contains an address from M 

 Kossuth to the Hungarians in America, in which 

 Idress, alter referring to the present state of 

 fairs in Europe, he warns his fellow countryn 

 iat it is not yet time to move. Grave consult 

 ans forbid his entering upon premature expla 

 nns, but they shall be apprised in due time. 

 Couo.— This famous city, now in possessiot 

 Gen. Garibaldi's forces, is situated attheSouttn 

 of the Lute of Como, twenty-two mi 

 uf Milan. It rests upon a very pict 

 esque site, 702 feet above ihe le.el of tbe sea, 

 population, inelud'ug thai of the suburbs, is 1 



It « 



< buv. 



iorly well defended by foniflci 





nily repaired by the . 



e,)ili,-,-- r.|' 



") app 



.ere Sunday o^bt. eight days from lien- 



r Cily. bringing u large mail and $3,1 u -old 



st. Tbepioviou* extraordinary »|K>1 



nranceqf the place betokens c 

 uufaoturina prosperity. It K ^ 



The heroic Sardinian army 

 , who insist upon Italy being 

 Iriatic, will soon achieve the 

 rise. Receive, sir, the honiiigr 

 ot tne town of Milan at our bonds, and believe that 

 our hearts belong entirely to you. Our cry is tbe 

 King of Italy." 



The Bremm arrived at New York on the 26th 

 ult., and we have the following by her files :— " It 

 was rumored that Nupuleon is about to return lo 

 France, and tbat PellUsier would be Commander- 

 in-Chief of the army. The Austrians hud evacu- 

 ated Piecensea, after blowing up the Citadel aud 

 fortifications. Their provisions, ammunition and 

 ere abandoned. Tavia and Lodi had been 

 1, and tbe Austrians quitted Bologna oo 

 tbe 11th for Modeoo. The Austrians had also 

 evacuated Ferrara and Ancona, and indeed all the 

 States of the Church. Garibaldi had occupied 

 Bergamo, and repulsed the corps of 1,600 Austri- 

 ans who were marching against from Brescia. 



The French army had crossed the Adda without 

 striking a blow. Prince Metternicb died on the 

 11th. The French fleet in tbe Adriatic hod receiv- 

 ed heavy reinforcements, and it was renorted that 



l landing of tl 



t Mui>eillt<s and Toulon." 





Gri 



-The • 



tofc 



dence," pending in the House of Commons, men- 

 tioned in lost Rural, was carried by 18 majority, 

 and the British Ministry resigned. Lord Granville 

 was summoned, but was not able to form a govern- 

 ment. Lord Palmerston agreed to serve under 

 him, but Lord Russell would not. Lord Palmer- 

 ston then had an interview with the Queen, and had 

 undertaken to form a new government with the 

 co-operation of Lord John Russell, who accepts 

 the Foreign office. 



The Daily Nvws of tbe 14 th saye tbat it believes 

 Lord Elgin has been offered tbe Secretaryship of 



Mi Cob den will have the option of the Board of 

 Trade, and Milner Gibson will enter the Cabinet. 

 Sidney Herbert will probably be Minister ef War. 



loDonpBgh estate. 



ren hundred and cl K htv-e>ghlooolie» have laU 



ided In Cuba from Mexico. 



a Chicago Tribune devotet over forty oolum 



ibv.tcamin Bridgeport, 



o bojs, who spend $100 p 



omplished the podeiU-tan teat t 



icts of Mississippi, Georgia, Texas, and 



> , r J 



rof t 



, the Di 



uj'.UI 



■' ildll, 



Exchequer. Sit 

 ice of Argyle had 



According to the opposi 

 Housos of Parliament, a sum of £7,000,000 must bt 

 provided by tbe government to bring to bring thi 

 revenue up to the present rate of expenditure 

 The account will not probably prove quite so bad 

 but the Chancellor of the Exchequer seems to wist 

 to prepare the public for a consideration of tbt 

 subject, by announcing that the financial measure; 

 in preparation are of the gravest character. 



Prussia.— It is reported tbat the Prussian armj 

 is to be mobilized, and Prussia soon to token pari 

 in the conflict. 



Russia.— The Russian government hud conclud- 

 ed a convention with the Itotbschilds, by which 

 Ihe latter are to raise any future loans the formei 



Later and Very Important. 

 The Nima Beottan passed Farther Point, on her 



way to Quebec, yesterday i Muudny) afternoon about 

 4 o'clock. The telegraph gives us the following 

 important intelligence: 



A Turin dispatch says that after the 

 the Austrians from Bologna, the Cardinal Legate 

 ilepiuled, and the ituniiciimlily proclaimed Victor 

 Emanuel dictator. 



Tbe King ofSurdiniu issued an order of the day, 

 extolliog Garibaldi, and awarding him a gold medal 

 of tbe military order. 



The official Wotnfr Zettung says, tbe Empcro: 

 Austria will forthwith assume the Commander- 

 Chief, and has ordered a new position for hia army, 

 which would be laken up in the best 



icuating Modena, and w 



lull I 



sthc r 



r Oglio 



oleaveFn) 



■ ■f a ('.it,:n.- 



Large reinforcements were 

 for the army. Napoleon, on i 

 headquarters to Gorgouzolh 



G n eat Bhitaik.— Lord Pal 



g I progress in 



The authentic list was expected 

 on the day the Nova Scotiun sailed. Rumor givt 

 the Earl of Elgin the Coloniul Sccretnrysliip. Mi 

 Cobden the Presidency for the Board of Trude, 

 and Mr Gladstone the Secretaryship for India. 



The Advertiser says after Russell accepted I 

 Foreign Office, any office he might prefer h 

 oflered St John Graham, who declined from in 



, but 1 



red P.i 



ciul and 



porlunt hold, even in tbe middle agei 



real fame goes inucb further back, the younger 



Pliny, (and probubly the elder.) having b born 



there. Two Pope, ul ,d il.e eminent chemist Voltn 



Tin Philadelphia Ledger says that the United 



Stales shipping office in ihnt city has been crowded 

 for more iliun a week past with men and boy* 





— At Bastrop, La., on Sunday week, the Rev. J 

 Spencer, while preaching In the pulpit of the c 



— Persons at work in the Vermont gold mlri 

 said to be making from I'i to »3 per day. Oo 

 found a "lump "worth $03. 



