258 



MOORE'S Rra&Zi EFEW-YOK&3S&. 



CONTENTS OF r»« UUBttBZR. 

 AOrtlCPI-TllRAL 1 



Spirit vf 













;" -" 



•ttonir^-aeNlWbc 



Ap 



• I-...U 



id- Beuiham'i Court 







Fpifal Unrlrj Pc*t 







MIKTICULIUKAU 



, ■.. I:lln« lm. ; ..rii 



»r recovery were taken bj Mr. U'*, 

 CommiBBiooer, and Comm.miooej 

 bun lealously consummated that bu- 



: lands advertised to be sold in Min- 



limits of toe railroad grant* and tbe i 

 tbe ooriheosU-rn portion of that Stat- 

 of 1,760.000 acres. 



Personal and Political. 

 Tut; R*public^ins of Massachusetts 



tb*ir nominnnng Convtn 



lion at Fitcbburg 



•Ibih Of September. 





Sevbral tbouaand ele 



ctors of St. Louis 



petitioned tbe Mayor to 



ibmit to a vole tbe 



Iiod whether tbe Rale of 



quor shall be prob 



on the Sabbath. Tbe pu 



lion is signed by z 



all creeds, opinions end 



atioDoliites. 



Of w bat material then 



ext House of Repre 





a matter of specu 



The political character 



of tbe members a 



elected stands as follows 



-Opposition, 112; 



USEFUL OI.IO. 



minx M,.|on Hu" «>ll Triitned Tomnlo PlMt. 



■■ ntJim. 



Ui.li.-W .-..„!....(, | .1 II VeU I'rtltu. .*. M., I'fintipiLL 



^^^i^ftOQRe^ji^^ 



ROCHESTER. N. Y., AUGUST C, 1359. 



i frf.ro April or . 



DOMESTIC NEWS. 





soft 



Of I 



. Juai 



aty, ob- 



jected to bjr 



The balance in tbe treasury on the 25th was 

 nearly $6,000,000. Tbe rer, j,,i B f or the week end- 

 ing on that day were $2,S5S.0W. Tbe drafts paid 

 ■. jud the draft* issued lo 

 ?2, 114,000. 



A letter from Supt. Johnson lias been received 

 at tbe Indian Bureau, in which, speaking of the 

 difficulty between ilie Pawnee Indians and citizens 

 i ■ —"No -white person was 



killed, but the whites hire killed two Indians and 

 ■ronndtd one. The Indians made no resistance 

 when approached by the citizens, who were more 

 culpable in producing the difficulty- than the In- 

 diana. The newspaper accounts are greatly exag- 

 gerated." 

 I nton 



■S! 



'" ' 'NIL' l.J ub.iai *17u 000 



The ateamchm T,,,,,, . - ' 



understood that be toU nnd-. .,, ' . 



I JQoTcrnintm ThtS^eduL 



I 'I- P- ■.>■,, ., , 



now .a, and .s to organic Bold, „ .... . 

 authority. 



1 



1 '' l "'> 0( lbs 

 children spared (tan tbe Mountain Meadow q u . 



ucn i. iTt I., en del ■ Bed bj •■'■ • ' 



Dem- 

 ocrats, SI; Anti-Lecompton Democrats, 8; Ameri- 

 can, 1. If tbe other Stales elect as ibey did to tbe 

 last Congress, tix: — nearly all Densocats, the 

 completion will be Opposition, 112; Democrats, 

 102; Aoli-Lecompton Democrats, 9; Americans, 

 IS. Oregon will come in wiih her representatives, 

 and moke the toial of tbe House 23V members, and 

 require 119 lo make a majority. 



Tn» Kansas Constitutional Convention has fixed 

 tbe boundaries of ilie new Slate a* already defined, 

 except npon tbe west, where tbe twenty-third 

 meridian of longitude is token as the line. ThiB 

 mokes ihe Stale 300 miles long by abont 210 from 

 nortb lo south. The Constitution is radically anti- 

 slavery, but differs from tbe Leavcnwoilh instru- 



suffrage lo negroes. The State Legislature is l< 

 consist of 72 Representatives and 21 Senator*. Th 

 Business Convention disposed of, with lolerabh 

 expedition, tbe question of apportionment, tbe 

 temporary Capital being the only measure w 

 offered serious obstacles. Topeka is selected 

 poranly as Ihe Capital, Lawrence being tbe 

 petitor. Tbe . fforis of tbe partisans of both 1 

 places revealed considerable corruption both ti 



i of t 



> Con' 





members are implicated in cba 

 Tee Convention adjourned on the 29lh nil by 

 to 13, all the Democrats voting against it, a 

 refusing to sign it. 



Letter peom PnESinsNT Buchanan— Mr. 1: 

 en as- as writes to a friend, under dale of July 2,". 



"My He. 



-Ili.i 



dyonrfciod 



of the 19th ins'., logetbei 

 Pott. Whilst I appreciate, as it deserves, 

 ability and friendship displayed in that editor!*, 

 yet regret that it has been published. My del 



a candidate for re-election, is final and conclusi 

 My best judgment and strong inclination anile 

 favor of ibis course. To cast doubt upon my p 

 determined purpose is calculated to impair : 



•>>•<-■ 



!!,,,, ... 



have been dicaied by a desire to be re nominate! 

 With kindest regards, 



Respectfully, your friend, 



James Buchanan." 



From the Paciilc Side. 



Tub steamship Mow Toylar, from Aspinwal 

 arrived at New York ou Ihe 27th ult., and tl: 

 Northern Light on the 31st. The former brougl 

 $2,115,000 in specie. From the files we gather Ihe 

 following intelligence: 



Business at San Francisco remains without 



Much excite 

 the diM m.'i-y of large quai 



aused ou the Isfhm 



s of golden images 

 in tbe Indian graves in the Chiriqui District. 



already several thousands of dollais worth had 





> Panui 



• \\ turbance took place ut Aspinwall 

 tbe 20th of July, occasioned by a scurrilous article 

 published in a litilc news sheet printed in that 

 of tbe railroad employees. 

 Tho printing office was attacked by a mob, and the 

 praaaei and all lho>other pristine materials thrown 

 into Ihe sea. During the seizure Ihe propietors 

 attempted to defend tbe office, and several shots 

 : fired upon the assailants, resulting in the 

 killing of one toon and wounding five others. 

 Horatio Lyon, ptoprictor of tbo paper, and three 

 printers, were arrested and commuted. 

 Chili has at last agreed lo pay $15,000 indemnity 



- oj ihe American ahip Franklin. 

 The town of Aneud, in the province of Chili, had 

 been almost destroyed by fire. Loss 1500,000, 



Callao dates ure to July ]2lh. Tbe talc attempt 

 at revolution in the south of Peru had been put 

 do.vn, and an amnesty had been granted. Gen. 

 iLilmd been defeated by Hie 



lilla and Dr. U 



ccounts from Peru indii 



that the rcrolu- 

 i still eontinne. Castillo bad 

 all soldier? and prirule putlics 

 engaged in it, provided Ihey report themselves be- 

 fore the end of July. Castillo had alto determined 

 lo declare war against liquador, and proposed 

 leading the forces in person. 



Ajunici in Eonoi ] — A '. 

 ea E. Thompson, of New llaven, a lud 

 boa recently reiurned from 

 an Europesn tour, including a visit to Paris, where 



tyeoj n] id ".....■ 



■>iii ,, k. His schoolmates in tin I ■ . il 



'en Haven have honored the young 

 lrclerivitb n public reception, at which 



Titers have been fm 

 ships during tbe !«■ 



SoreM, Bsroja an.t 



Gbpat It&iTAiN Id tbe nonse of Col 



the ICtb.the bill ab,-lu-hiog Cbn. 

 bated, and passed to a second rea 



The I 



» Hudson'flBay Co., held 

 l.onl 8omi>rriet 



e Committee of Naval Affaire, in 1352, 



i tbe ground of expen; 

 noibiDg bud been dene. A general survey, bo 

 ever, hud been recently ordered, of 

 ntd other vessels, at the nioulbs o 



availab'e for defensi 



On tbe 15th, in both nouses, reference was mi 

 to the treaty of peace. Lord Derby pointedly 

 quired if tbe King of Sard 



that the Ei 

 the FrcDCh was bis ally, and not Ihe principal in 

 the quarrel, Lord John Resell, in tbe Bout 

 Commons, said he did not know whether the 

 parties to tbe treaty of Vieni 

 hot so far as England was co 



beyond those published bad been furnished. Lord 

 C'lwley bad called on the F 

 Ihe details of tbe peace. Welcwski told him 

 i oald afford him no informationuntil the Empc 

 irriied in Paris, which it was expected he woi 

 in the 18th. 



Sir James Graham inquired if tbe Oovernnn 

 vtis aware that a powerful French fleet was s 

 ioned at Cberboorgtmd Brest, with gun- boats 

 andiog troops. Lard Jobn Russell replied tl 

 France bad made 



.cqnenlly no explanation had been de- 

 manded. 



The English government has folly determined 



i laying i cable direct to Gibralter and thence to 

 Malta. 



The Chancellor of the Exchequer bai introduced 

 bis budget. He staled tbat tbo total revenue re- 

 ceived during tbe past financial year, was £45,- 

 477,000, white the expendi 



IcaviDg a surplus of over £310,000. He estimated 

 the revenue for the current year at £64,3i0.0"0, 

 and ibe expenditures nt £63 207.000. Ie*ving a gross 

 deficiency of £4,867,000. To meet this deficiency 

 the Government preferred direct to indirect taxa- 

 tion, and instead of increasing the 

 or imposing new ones, they propose to add 4d to 

 the income tax on incomes of over £150, nnd J^d 

 on incomes of between £100 and £150 per annum, 

 making tbe former 9d and tbe latter (I'.'d. Tbe 

 debate which ensued was generally favorable to 



N.ii, <,!,.. 



-i anddijeetio] 



France —The statement of the Bank of France 



for the month of July, shows a decrease in cash of 

 over 11,000.000 fraDca. 



Tbe Aoro'tfBays the treaty of peace, although 

 arranged in ptinciple at Villa Frnnea, will be defi- 

 nitely draw up a*. Zurich, and will tben be officially 

 communicated to the Courts of Europe— the adhe- 

 sion of these Courts being indispensable to the 

 which form pait 

 of the public law of Europe. 



A Conference to settle the affairs of Italy basjiiot 

 been arranged rit St. Cloud, and the early part of 

 nut month is spoken oi as the time at which the 

 representatives invested will assemble, but tbe 

 place of their doing m is not j ct mentioned. Tbe 

 aame correspondent learns, on very hlnhnu'horily, 

 that both Emperors are convinced that tbe bases 

 for peace which they so hastily agreed upon, are 

 in many respects impracticable. 



The Peace Congress, it was settled, would meet 

 nt Zurich in about ten days. M. Bourgneni would 

 represent France, and Count Oollaredo would per- 

 form the same ollice ou the part of Austria. 



I.etters'from Paris assert that much discontent 

 prevails there in regard to the terms of peace, und 

 the small results of the war, Although the peace 

 itself gave general satisfaction, the SiecU, the or- 

 French Liberals, is dissatisfied, aud says 

 •erythiog to begin in a few 



its, if the i 



abode in Italy. It calls 



■tv Italian I' 



Tho Emperor arrived at St. 



orning, July 17th. 



The announcement f peace 

 ready caused signs of 

 France. 



nth of all the 



It was said tbat Garibaldi was about to issue n 

 proclamation, and it was considered doubtful if ht 

 ould lay down arms. Dp to the 11th the forma- 

 >nof the Hungarian Leaionahad proceeded pros- 

 ■rously— five thousand men having joined. 

 Italy.— Sir 



rmsof the peace were visible in some parts of 

 ily. At Florence great agitation prevailed, and 

 e Provincial government had issued a proclama- 

 in which describes the peace of Villa Frnnea as 

 betraying the finest hopes, and says that the Tus- 

 m government participated 



c Tuscan peopleon tbo 6U'ject, nnd declares that 



iscuny will not be replaced under tbe yoke nnd 



lluence of Austria, against her will and rights. 



The lima correspondent at Turin 



says that peace has produced tbe greatest exuspc- 



it Capital. The Emperor 



