‘04ki.44 444 • 'f • -.6 A ' 4, 0.t4 '•-••• ~: f " 4 40045,10,010:-_AV,414,49*-LI ° York '; 440 'iqifia:_P)NO#i, o lar kkAt dikelmetcf4: 4 Neo (l9 R isl Altlr i tl • kia*k •1144$4 .114 1 1 : 1 1„ P6 , 4`4 , 1 . : Vasenettic wo, 44„,,J1k, St y Apo 011T45'1, 1- ' ll r itgit a i ;,,t=f 4 ", a r, w 01-j1,611 rib lad ni ths` 11bai „rx Vi a -'•• *A kose efi; ac 11 4r ir, rfiiitoteetyu'od*o-li't# 0 44151 icribiticki bVl o row trlie. 4W l hasy‘ 4 1 ;1 40 .twa ; t 0 10, - - . , r it'VP - Ode -earlieWlrellideAc to c:,s"E hail taws nOllOlOl4O qu,IW _fg z eith er AttigkirVr'4lthat'lioineoOtilip F list that white the hoMeiif .w 4401.7. yam& 4006 look:uttee-tvieir bee , s4iint,•eeitit e ki: f; the:tzoubli.to . kioW <, hat rust 1~ : t i re, - publi c of Nip ; York take t sir idea! s s s }age sad din re lation M a t f r i tyleg l = - ,ott e , u s 9 tit; • othlre _„, ;- -Y , -•• 4 ! _ !-; '_;:llowthe*Aotitsnother„aolution_rpr E ..4!4t e t - *Aden net the•Aloldefe* Otis' loside . fqe = ' the t`•ettiiit. riiretiii jbe • proP Vii: c:P:=44. l l:**?Toir york ~ • are inc ac ' , road iiis:riti,,Yisarii'bOair in a' dlylddatid4onillrf" Utt*lti did =otherwise; 44:01:0tir;;Viklkitiiiiiii,*cfok*Oii§igegiv • h ''devolved upon it, itoanliot •-( autos the ngement) P4 0 ; 4 . 1 0 01 7 -comPe • w ith • - :iektliit*idetilin• - a • •etipeetnbe' and kikt' tee it*,,iieltir(ilie.'_';,-;Yel• Unit r4ri , ' sue; upon a .schedule df ,increased _ , ' - .Ao.roubt•in4hPiliti , t l 4amtarz? fns `stock ,, ,nd -11} • elher r espect! , a'.serious 'litibit l 4 l l B l#;a 32 4 - tt: - An7Ako:aieillit 1044' 1 ;~; Whethfer human lift,can be safety entrusted !ill: stiel . i, , ,•e4 - 4*lltdeg' , :petweionf,embWere&-• and! :entettintatili - Orpepitten.o, , *o44o4 , contrast ti tit a s pectacle is egted, bgl'only to ; the ef - onr OClitaiiii;lefiketid. t iidiiene ere• lyiiit4,;it(), foe ,of; 00doii6: on •'''CP#"l e' ducted road rearoccsitonhl l y.`-tie' "4iii 1 W ,. ) 6110 .44i 4 :,'0 6 :444; . 40 1 ;7.**4%k more than one -41419 . 1.01i;t***/ tad lirhitkojii, Abe t-4reW lerly,• - ;; : its' • thee; • th,e_ entire cap e r".;?` 040-WlOO art' )aulOiarioos:dep!ii, Ineiga;:liailiaseeo4l6 -- theiktigh 40410 :'most comfortable, and ; ni tt•,oz dons You to6il;. trmtilei-roirO!'*inDen.e.,!o4:2.lliTeaYfi 01•414%:***"-ilfetitolis,,of--,,the NES Our reed," - mow that daring the laat ,iiithl_ &itittent r : WWII' tad *09 I AI a ' * iiiii inti itiaitift4:o::Ail l :kkU4igiiaersiiTrOYllites leOlfigi*thelirtiviii'ebniely fen - rite:zed 1* ~:se toot gf,a2taltabill taithwn the pert of doe' ,• ,, Nii - w l iteh OentrotltolrOad , - The sPiiet c 't,e '' Walk* exciting atAt4l.. -- iooytiipy, ,iiii the 44iiii:foirkriThitie of the; n `1,,, ' jak t hl"s 424' ill 3 B alkw44. 6'4' os 4 'l l m° l " - i - 4 4 sn'llliatat;et tie poW of the New York 4-, , ,.*6•1 . , 1 11 ,Nidiread: kettOtttill(flOidO ImPor 4itat,d,auonk of to- reacted to the cause of the ;#4l77l4tipttolf-the`` previous arraniement, , -' - 4 1 11- It'ehetM open the eyes of .our eitiseni, ,-andef the P'eoptil of 'the. Omit ,Weetp to thO' . Dittaraksavantagev,id 'lir rille# o l - ' - ‘4lll4l;itliti tittianOrler iipproyemenes now lip ,c # 6o **: *.fl6l ,Wfi l rilidili tbnia*iie- s ;''t#iel'intisr • evalible. '-liti wrlteitoldlial-' li r t a so llo64 l4 i ttgftt* "00 4 . lee 0 6 ' ' iniindifarthitinian'Ai wog ' eleroillog upon *Or liiipt,4iligot mildly tifaftfa'irork:= Ile 4, -,:' ~ ' •;;, , A . ,: . i' ', 0 , i- ' - , *., + -gt'4".g l l f tah ar l ti Wg 1 jetl telind the 1086-*sight In deerwtetng the pale; •which ' : Vet i rtor; ti r tiX iK th e e .u c t ellit;:tl ia eott ° ) e teVat 311447 4 . uolleelmei of roar eonttnent, her learned jro the - j , o t . Of ihl_.ooOPt liit ,Niebolfot lIPP ~, ttoti-Al* ktort ooo dA kuPiell , 44 o ig *mai ihe trAph r t z t;:gr tai latta, ~, kinL4farallinett wimiliftr 12 ", :, ' ' - L : :=il l 74i s afe r Petir t irnr triiirifie; " - r . '" ' ~% teattVinde, iiiiketOirkeoe4 . • J''''' •• ,to ' 'il .1 li,Ag l o4- A* • sttiP#sat advantages ! . I SIAN .9‘ . l4o4ll4zgk.tittrlytiil4l4 pAiti ;-viiftikktutoshai443pale'Nwisic,falta 11031 d ' lllO et Of Ur treat hi 4lnow.?eitiec.":4 ,- Vith I t`Medee afforded, tff Am. aeffiblifkg '4 . etolll6lllkdiliti, and Abe ootelerent Wootton of "theyStoe s of toseportaiten, tbey b eve lieu enabled -tiineeentand ilaritif4haie of. Ma Moth o bosi r .:. moo 'p ol o 4r ihig jerewrr _perset, In proportion Als they havorgainudr Nen York leeriest, awl, VD ,•)/I=Vll'leetwanto,he taken- to overeente the to : , herP4Poottorwooo over her dreteelit f' ' ' -,::: • ,J , ''' • ' ~'•- i - l o,ltfiiocourso" ~ dila -artiCioltie fear le ' t iitiailit *Silviied A1iY, 111 ,401.4 60 4-*** o 4 Is: speedup laVefn to counteract thf - Imputing , • 11drirtailliii3t,WC*00,04 e fbi) z Phlladelialise, tletr , bradaroUNeteTetitvilltittlrer greatly, , and ;4,00 ,4 000 1 0444:4 --fix ll o . , r , - 1 ,- ~,-... tg.• , .: -- ..." .., - 4 ; . - * - 0<"" ... ....‘ . €'r . 3 * ft t"piatisz Pa pkilio.?,oUtlin..lo64 ~ f4 . 44 4 1 4 *11, 4 , 400 94.ti1e110givve1dat la the eat o jelitinatqaupetetneetete „or etno r ltepablio--Uni 'Sought isk•-1 41 04 , olanicat , *Mak inighetu nosarti 14 r a Pl s iii, " 43 - ' ttlei All hltwerker l 'thelethllit -3%11 ilkOk. 4 , lift +x » d - .4 Pt ors tisstt,i)toblt individual ',Aktglitf lii'4ooillaid-licaut 44 b 6 1. 1 1 4 4414 ; -0 11 - 11 / 1 00 41 041bY 011.41M11111*ThLail **4WD:lk , s i attiiert ow , iriVAlNAktiegirforagiov .:Ersoftlizic,pl.4l.c"plf i.,l*, lial, 7- Atia . 1 4 44 it oi 4 ivoiai. 4*, ` l , . A WO 'pads* ettAliledbilk 34116014 are tOl, de/ ad*** PiP ,,, ,, itabgeAlsilOsiof aliul * rink 4 40** , 4 Po '4 oiiiittn ; African :- slave ii t la *awe Aiiiica - yloimusivilt , o4 act a 00 14 1 . 0 ir ' WA* ,Iteduletektiblu 4101 i; or 10,r1f.4*IgqiimA4 r 7'PA - 10040 qui.; owe t e l * *l l l Ol 4, ,K 4 W ' 4 0,11 0 4 ',4 11 . 0 i :PP , I" ..,iiiered, 'uraVik' t i ro* 001 • 0 •01 1 4 17 4,4 4 t bar it •l ett iKitste dark liail , ifrOtAtfritAintegOriafti Alitlicile,l4l44 *al -- ' `. 4l `,#" *l44 i l " l , l Pt 4 . ll ' f i 3 te4fleC AM 1 re1, 01,- ~'.,..:,, ~„ , 14.1111d'etWf.04,7400*VtiAi4filkobidotiois, ';' -' L , x , SosiOstrikif,g ste_clikLithatAtiPluationitr ' *3 !Tie , conifient coMatiref'l?:Tehre :A•4 3 0 , 1 2 °N . 14 regarded• as the mois4•polr*Tut.inw'itii9li of the *Mid, and as ofereialney more in fluence' uponlhe.,ll;istlidini'of ley - other -living However widely the germs of dissatisfaction may be sown over the soil ,Franee, they are_ sternly. locked in the 'grasp nrfehintiesif rower, - and is ;Xt4llll6'3* . it4tiiintlair,ttargera. After triumphing RT: t )`1(. bag)._ so f", heenpii,suCcessfill, lhr , his eign his de. tnestib policy 'statighty England waits upon his 'movements, and foll Owe hie notilideli, al most if she *ere itrlatintildie de e ieniieaoy. kßussiia in' the Qiertienith•:oe her PoireriAneiVed hte*finti his hands. vltina, that country *air sficiiidilicniopelled to yield:Weyer/ exaction lied& by het-powerful T f cie the'imiek of War his risen:in' Italy the,;•'neiitteniiine of the ; Emp eror 'has heiiii . : l ii L balmlneter, id Which 'atock•joblaers ftite'; and which; by a single • frown, inflicted a 'depreiaten of hundreds at Cepilinda 'in 'the' Market value of croiernment stocks.' - 4 great as id the power 'of • Louis HinOnlOw' at • home '••• and - abroad, no one knows`‘'betteir 'than "hialselV 'that • there is lan'Yellithli•Plitier , 'still' Mightier than that which he'petaseased-:-thei:Poirer•of the press. He dare not laterite its', freedom in thiEtn ,Piraiiiir ruleS. .He ,may cop with all hie toreigUenenideit'; he may strangle in the tha, 'conspiracies which 'his - rivals and 'Cliilmitis•fokrei to 'dettirone him; but he - dare ruit - leatit the' Preis of France free . and 'untrammeled. to 'Mileage' his 'public'ects for 4, ; :idingla year. = He - would,''laugh att any anger threatened from. the occupandy of Trance>by l'orOlgti .armY; no Matter mighty' , its legions - 5- bid ho is afraid to t allow a Angle prolate disseminate its , daily-spreading rebiontis of 'free' tholight- thinughont thadand and &lite trial nf-thelfotint Ds kfoniaimu exter"olearlY, ithoWed that , even the remotest or most covert attack upon-his management of Fronk affairs, in a' pu,blic -journal,,' onld not tie=tolerated; 'Another remarkable' evidence' ibfails appreciation.of the power of - the press, ands his -estimate) of its value modelling .public: - sentluient; is ATHA by his late letter to :Sir: Flexion; 11W.Di bak . ooll published .fa Atie -, , English, •merespapers, anit4also in the .Moisiteur, - .and is as follows : r l-• ' - • 6, l:lnas:at oa rint'lntranants; March 1. _ «Mr.nsare Sat • Femme :, I thank you for haviognoliedelCtogether, in- order to send them 'direct Ito. me, the different artiotea ' which you bare boatmen the EogiJah journals, for you, thus give um an-opportunity , ,clf expressing to yon all my gratitude for the sen timents of which you have :not:feared - the apontaneous•maidnotation'in my favor.-.. - x;itave,seenf in them, ,and I am, much touched' y %anew proof that my,old' friends in Englinditaie • not tamed.= icie r and "that - They itporr.hor mach ,lalerayetpreiarverfor the English 'people #.14 esteem , and, I.lle symputbr,whinli anima iny ba the' wildst"bt them. Even In' 'writing taday,'ldetiot myself tn - reoolleoting, as *happy Aims, thekapooh l ,when, - prosoribed, I .eaw you _in ,liegland. ~,It,le,_that ip,ohinglog one's distinrono only -changes one's' joys' and 'sorrows. Formerly the et/idiom of exile,alone appeared to' ma ; te•anY I sueplainly the cares of power, sad one of the greatest -of theta around me is, with= oat doubt, ter And' ones 'self- Miniadoratood and misjudged by those whom one, values the meat and with 'whom one ' 'desires:to live upon good Consider it very„natural that the . par. tiau whom it has been my, duty to„oppose and to, repreas shintld: bear Me itorip; And should seek I ,this Mega tetojOie Mei' bit that thit English, af *hotel - biore -always been the Mesa devoted and mint laithful- ally; should, attack zoo thre in, the journal. in the most unworthy and ,ins-the meat Most manner, is what Ticannst coup prebend ; 'far; us' truth;l cannot discover any in , tin'tit.,rAtiej , eau:Esti Wagoning the public; Mind, agaloel Praitoel; , 'lfi'in , my 'own country, I.ohociati io i act.34 thin maimer, , ,itymul& he impossible for MC atipnvird ; ,to testraln,,the ; pamionts 1 1 ; 01m:del i' • ' ,have bine alwaysigitertalitaiii grist admiration tor the libsEtisa aft thiSsßuglisli'-people • but I. re= gret deeply that liberty, like all- things, .should, also have its- exams.. Whilst it that, tn. itsiad of: making truth krioWn; it noes every effort to Ohmura iar,7Why la 'it that , armour/ging and :datislapire .generons ;airlift:pants,. it, propagates plaintiff hitkaft - . plalilitopy7the4 tiMinvinanceuvrea r'ef Mob,' nod,- to.itardonnta,defender whoi itiftda4. 'l6,36the r haa;;_not hoillated anat.- 0 1400 Y fiikppwoo to theme. bin toyalat sid"diainter. sitid . • „ -_ , ;• • . • ;-.l,l, l 3ifFffnaffAilaid;;PMfylois.!! : :„V- , :?:41*/filffiffiaflof;-Pidy*itAP-ibe Ine • I,iiti,;dttlVOC'monat4ttliL;bl4 - one of-the most c. aiotoleuttOtii-,t#ooyritlettorinttlielProsa bf tritliai“itO• , ionnat iiit4ion' in ,tO - 01114F,, wear:. which' he- has irzkid'ouf . the Pelt a sapient. iiiiterof the 'destluies' of, France- and of EtirePni - tifdrat to the ;searchin criticism of.a independent -„- _ : - "_'EtirtquAttairlo,lhulittisis untrammeled btitiirs and -no, man possesses "the, power, or authority to curivit in• the discharge of its du ilia 'tertiiii:Puhlie; ‘ ,..,ltiii;,unfortnistely tea Irae;hoiever,4hat it hiltratanieled almost as sadly as . therese:Ori`fauce,fhythe wiles and stratagems 'or politielans „end Pltmderers -theaOrdidAindcsatbesivient Metes of those who - C:4:11 . 1r9Y qt e proper appreciaL A*l o .,'.f.tiii;: c l4l4l#l,ofiliii.'eonntry of thespOw 4rtheY,Mtit' Wield,sittdA the'responsibilities of their-position., It, is a 'sad "truth, that among iiwtinittiandeorAmerican journals, but few. of Ahem -, are -really freo.' Some are -the party despetistei as exacting as the Censorship 'of Lents NAPO , " ,ntem;:_ind,by it,Stringe infatuation their own `ori,Withetit to do wrong ;:` blindly :foliate tie hisarmcounsels of ; tv few nominal I* l 4oWiiiialterS;',.*hich are. itt Completely. the,playee of rower as the itoniteur, of Vrtuimr iriof the From%'Emperor. Pitleism "upon men td,`, therefore but Ural* imPertial.a - Tiley are -.praised as angels PWr deleinceti 04021opt!-:•-iot fromtheir'own trin"sin merits Ci:denierits, but on accouni,of :the6 - relations :they.bettvio: the conductors of the'lioliti i dal - Miked they profess eery" tinforittnate that so triusth• of."-this spirit,-ef elsidsh ; dependence idinitld'ileitfhe'nr.hiblititi 'before MI, and - that 'the .eeedurefrefieStOf„2 newspapers should, t n'ot More geneMdli r egeiCimy the :reason theypoli "iicatylUithinhinge 'lo..:l4o4B;3li9i;jizi l ti in fear= &Mal:yin:Mining:4M tite peeple their honeet jadmi4oxi'alljthcf .Importatt tvittetioitp . Rhould 'hat-tin mire' parted= appreolation - of• the responsibilities and to.0,1,010,';of their pOsition; and instead `pt i ;i4iingMimpleMly:, led „hittiet• and thither .brtitelittle'clay:gods:of politicians, who, I'M. the Most part are much'Moro worthy 'of the ,contempt than of the adoration Of-honest and rational, meta ) , should Over these Lint 'pitfall tyrants the rcidS'iiith Which they suffer Ihetritedres,to, be striped.. •, • - Theatrical. „ . 41ibltrti4 who I .4 l2 4. oo thtaetioe - ci *rtiiltsßeraeat at :Walnut-greet Theatre, is an $1046161 no low4egief of ability.— Some years ago . tho 'theatres of ibis oily, t aa,a roialiwinenitakof ..the - steak. company, and, are inforMid, Wee a,oarefal l stiallous performer lifinueh promise.' ifieWent to. Ei3gland; as Mr. E. Nif''llavtapati.),Re * there gradually :Worked - hiaiway . to - deoldedperlidarl Not long herk, ,made, lenppoltratee, in this thy, in the difficult character; .r.'is.4fUt c ,g-flesoGeerreack, In'Madainger's somewhat "./elfeirWaY to Pay Old Rabin.” 9,0 1 1#14-4#l4lef this nart; hal heart - AI.POL:%OOI 6 LIV/, OtiEdiiaild;Zeia= - tbe treaderfull ielorteitueti, : pittity call it, widish electrified, and ataaetfsuei everilippailed, those 'who witnessed - it. n'ebOf.tg to yet can sa y that the'earlier scans we, 'thought hillinia/Whtet,tOodenionstrative. w kum A l i;_„: 9 l4 44, tf 0r,. by *bt eoaening he had made hie *alit; Wet A 01,14 :Erolep figir.,*iilciioi;gliiiki: ll 4**o;tiFifisr!" Lll 4 l ' l6 ' selPeinsp!seint.:eltiokle t as' orkdoh - Is the` , hlllo4,,,u4Atbat to,iatialge hisnwtt peculiar mood iif Marelyfai4kraiitic,e"lnforiaaticin,. i40,0:4440e:01,1111r.10110.44itti. One % or: tion . Other -,piaass Bat ;the perfopnauceir was - very floe. de it ad-, 4intedlt Lktirdtoree Thitintireally goad hit was , w 11mAsigr;hiantier in which , hen Wallkorn popes' .144071,44,11V;P-joi§if, r lie, edt`tio c eed 'hie foot sal .hap ,to., greet aim. oloeing peeykettos, In its iffiiirktricimpit of zottnitrttho 'deathrooene. dratlotl4) dilferent- from, butt/et-inferior - toe Roberta,' jib One; slip'=that share' Je not to hi;proarninited ;dam oertifed by, the old ballad; rfidolt-iskye:. , , solrinjahte Ahi learn • ‘.• - ," `4-***44,o „illebegtai order, of teerit, porno tOr4litmion of the frit:lo Pally in - hid admirable: (ii,:aaataly z ij, 4140 h0i14114-001O4iillel'i in, hirml Aniti:lllol:lo. a ,4* - Ifiliere hi hard al, ' 111 4 0 .„, 111:46 , 1f.,%I.4*'"fhaYei,' =Mr. ;. a ` ourtala fell, Mr. :maisi milled out to reeeive the applause of thilP"o. l oo4o4s" used "returned 'thanks, briefly, aia4 witii,good tuste. :Sr. Perry .waS also called for, but tithed Jeft the house, before: be had obeyed ;the call , _ „ •,.=Mr. Roberts, who low in stature, and well made, itricsful,in action, and.with a tine, flexible, and else::: vase, unclir perfect control, will ap , ; pear this evening in Hamlet. ' Miss Davenport. We have no desire to entei into the petty pelf, tins, the jealousies and injustice, of theatrical management. Therefore, we content ourself with , atating.thayfrom various influenoes; Miss J M. Davenport has been prevented from appearing, on the New York stage, during the lest Ave years. Her list engagiinerit there was brilliant and sue• armsful; as we well recoiled, and she woulthave been a sure card in the handset' any management who had a desire to give a fair hearing to n doubted talent of the first order.- In one rape t she stands alOne—sho is the only actress livi g who;, in the bloom of her fair Womanhood, h a mere than .realized the highest promise of her \ early Youth. " ' „, 'With aeourage and self reliance which generous 'Wadi Will' thoroughly appreciate and approve, MiseDavenport has rendered herself independent 'of the caprices, the jealousy, and the injustice of Now York managers. She has assumed, for a time, er rather she assists in ibe responsible ma- I augment of the Metropolitan Theatre, in New York, late Burton's, which eke would open, yes• jerday evening, with tigood compiny, Mr. F. B. Conway being the manager. The drama to be Played is Mr.- Oliver Leland's version of "The Csarinai? adipted from Scribe's effective play, which she produced in this city, not long ago,mi th marked eucoess. -Miss Davenport and Mr. Con way will appear lit their original • parts.of the azeriers: end Peter Ike Great, the other lead. tog characters' being sustained-by: Mrs. Conway, Mr. Charles Fisher, (one of the most acoomplisbed and versatile - miters of the day,) Mr. W. Reynolds, Mr. •Dawson, and Mr. W. 11. 'Maddock& 'The new maned , , has been" chiefly painted .by Mr. Bolster, of_ the Walnutotreet Theatre. Mr. Art nold, from, the, Barre, establishment, will aot, -wo believe,. in eapaoity• of Treasurer. With these , exceptions, we' understand that Miss Davenport 'receivesc no " outside " support or' co-oporation Of any sort. The whole responsibility, managerial and monetary, is wholly Miss 'Davenport's. Tito Orchestra, which is effective, will 'be under the direction of Mr. E. hiollenhaner, whom we root lest as one of the leading violinists brought to this country, by Mondani jullien, five years ago. ' . IV Elue,h of the BEM ,York newspapers tut notice theatrioais, aid are notoriously , under yarioua. managerial i, influences, speak , ' warmly 'and en- oOuragingly of Miss Davenport's intention of ap pealing to public synipathy and support: • Her e*-, perimint will scarcely be a long ono, as she an totally shrinks from appearing to plebe herself to prominently before the world. In fact, she m be considered in the light of playing a star.en gagement. Should she anooeed, whisk we cannot doubt, the tkeatre will be carried on, we suppose; by Mr. Conway, We await with some eipesta don the reports upon last night's perfOrmaneek. B Y MIDNIGHT MAIL. 'Letter front 46 0Coaagi011111." 10ortespondenee of The Pram] • • • ,• •• , :• Weenurctort, Aprll4, 1801) The firstMene in the Sickles,. trial commenced this morning. Mr. Sickles 'appeared ,In court accompanied by his leading - counsel, Edwin M. Stanton, of Washington, and James T. Brady, of New York. Mr. Sickles wee 'exceedingly well dressed, as is tonal with him; cool, conceded, and pale;. and he calmly I conferred .with his counsel daring several hours. Ha looked as easy as if he were sitting in his seat in the Home ofßopresenta- Lives. . Mr. Stanton, the ptinoipal counsel, 'la about the sire of John 0. Bullet, of your bar, sone two or three years older, dark complexion, and of resolute and energetic expression of ,face and Manner. Your Philadelphia lawyers will recol lect -Stanton for his distinguished connection wi the Wheeling — bridle case, dome years ago, n which he considerably worsted the Hon. S n Oadwalader, now the somewhat bizarre Judge of yonr, , United -States District .Court, James . -Brady, of , New,- ,york„ (the other oonneel,) il f.. `arrest attention at enoi .Ily,, his torearkeb a head, whiolf is in ip'?ir 'f, study ., xrp ji !,1 ' very 'elegant gentleintrei; a tearless and honest lawyer, ' Ind an' -- intrepid Sind - thironsh• going friend. - Mr. Geld (the district attorney,) younger than either Mr. Stanton or Mr. Brady, is one of the firmat-looklag men in theDistriet. He is - a little raw, ,in the:profession ; ' was an old.line Whig, opposed ; to Pieroe, in 1352; is connected With Some of " the drat families;'.', apd is a 'chic]: heskied,:oraiablo, end,"ogreeable gentleman, ..ii letiOini, 1 4 6 * -,tilloila, present at the trial, that . atiant and devoted, gentienitres, lion, E. B. Hart, ',, - Voyer- - A - Vtlnr4ors•_ 4 o-144.4 — fanr 5- w--iearristin , turrerlet dwelled,* filendi"ei Wised lis baelt ,tiport 7 en ititetnk:.'die is bare advising - Mr, Sickles in his tribulation, ,'The father of the;aeoused,lifr , G. il., *aler t e(Newl'it,erk, is also present, taking' , sa,profortiti _ intemit in, the.prooemlings. ;, Ile is hurts a yonntiooking Min, although his beard is )ling . tindgray.. Theniettennini Which had,sebilded 11113 beep jrapprivg by the trial, and now we have the 'town filled with the Mialty gossip, but I cannot doidst that - the result will beettielhotory to all the' Par ties lioneerned•; .fer fitallie the effornief therßear, there is no manifest disposition on the Part of the (deride o f ,irey to i make-'any' personal war upon .14r. Dieklee,_,The Dot is, a ease . ice 'this is beet settled by heing speedily disposed of. The opi nion Armes, apace that Sickles will be acquitted. The mairreser in wide& the traverse jurymen, who foundrthemselvee otainnitted - tat ;on the side of Id - Miles, ehoired2whiiii way' the current was pet ting: -. Z ; will net be at all "netenished if Sickles is 'ampaitted - with .the -- • least trouble, and Were is epeeohis made on either side. ' : --.- Judge Black, who has been in Philadelphia for severe, days,.goes from there to New York; end will there Mice : steamer for Havana. Thejudge is not w.ell;,his pgaition ;has been too muckier him. Hon - eift and - welt intended ,aILI believe bias to be, 4,3,' bes"been overweighed' with Preabientiol arro- SIMOS, - inele glad to escape'tci the sainbilotui airs "of What 'Jenny ''find designated " dear Cooba." Mr: Buchanan is delighted at the' idea that any member of his - Cabinet should get stair., and is in the habit of ataying every day .... "I no vor,,was in hatterlsealtit in mylife,;. I can take my glass of old Monongahela, din, heartily, indulge in Model ra, and steepreottrdly,_and - yet my Cabinet is al ways dilapidated: l ! Of hint iteannot' be said ! '.., flisetuul itat'the hese that wears a crown." Ari - sitattelog" ihoident'Mok place on the Avenue yesterday. - A Demoorat from the interior of Penn sprawls announced that he had a number of the manuscripts of Gen. George Washington Bowman, attacking James Buolusuan while ho was a candi date for the Presidency, in 1848, and that be:in tended to furnish them to the States for reputli Cation. -Do not be surprised if he should be gatetted for en Milne in a few days. Thel Hon. George Eustis, of Louisiana, and the 'daughter' of our- fellow.oltizen, W. W. Corcoran, Baq.iwill be joined in - marriage to-morrow morn log. - , The wedding will no doubt bo a grand affair, for.the.lady is the only child of Air. Coo peran, who Di himself; one of tho beat, most gene roue, and meet unostentatious men in Washington. Their 'friends hitv'e been invited 'far and near; among others Who hive already arrived, I'M:Ake Sidney Webster, Dui.; the private sooretary of ex-President Pierce; who is staying with Mr. George W. Biggs,' the banker. Eustis name into Congress some • three, years 'ago as an American member from the city of ,New Orleans. He is a very agreeable and,, quiet, ; gentleman, muoh`be• loved ..at his own home, and connected with some "of the most distinguished fajnilles in,l l outslana. " - OcCasitresan. - Prpris,paGla 4A411 TIIIS EyENING—VAtstIADLEI ,liNAL,.Esrevs._ &MeV!, LOANS, APC 7Thomas do Bone hold 'a _eery. Mega cal.' tkis leaning, Irwin dinialegant arid Aseellioge;'valuable brie!. nem Mande, building lots, Mime, country, stooks,' foam!, by order of Orphans' Court, .ereetttorei and Ohara. 800 panaphlot catalogue, (24 pigea,)lB properties, and advertketnente, nue. Lion The Ataion ostato," 28,000 gores, :with $lOO,OOO iropeovemanto, is to be sold at Bog. 11ah'elletel,.0amden,,on Thu•eday,nort, at 12 M , by order or, funsigneea See band bple. Shocking RomiCide in Coilumbui [Porn the Ohio StateJetreat, 441 1 ] ittiSEMS OF, A YOUNG li&N tilt' A WilitAki, • • A terrible affray occurred soon after 'twelve Weloitk yesterday morning, at a house of ill-fame Otkihe, corner of Mound and Pearl streets, in which t o Pang man, named Pallas Repreeht, was shot 'and quaintly 'killed b3Vii" beg, , named Prances Miller, the mistress of the boom Rupreekt, ip company with two other,young men, named Reuben Draperd and Retell—the two first named somewhat bitoxidated—stepped at thiShouse aboutl2 o'olOok medal night in qaeatioa on. their way home from ,the: theatre, and, Ruptooht knocked at, the door 1 and 'Celled for the *amen. ' ' ! ' ' ; 'Mrs.-Miller appeared at the door of the room whiehlis:abissement, end asked who was Without'. ,Re would not give his right name, but said he was 'it friend, and wanted to enter i She told hint be Could 'noteente to, as It wen too late be PeraiStad in asking forradmittanoe, and she refusing; and finally, at the,soliiiitatien of his friends started to go aWaY ,'Whan , lhe partly; opened the door, raised a pistol and snapped it, the dap bursllng,but without a discharge,. This attracted Rupreoht'a tentiOn;and be returned to the door; leaned against the , houtat; ab rif to talk with her; when she again raised tho,plstol and teed,. the ball entering his body just above the - t high, In an upward - three- The Min 'Staggered a , feW store baokward, With both hands pressed to the wound, exclaiming, am ,shot—run , for .a doctor," fell upon the paveMent, and lindently - expired: ' 'The- police came, rind the tretrent. wee arrested.. With two pls. Mama her hand, :with; one of which she admitted having shot Raprecht for ,attompting 'to break in her door. - - ' - • At two crolaek . yesterday a preliminary ,exami nation of; the ,oase, waa had before the/layer, ,The woman and tha'faini:ly wete arraigned, and plead-, ed not guilty. The vrotrumarattoes Millet,.lB $1 .n.dserable•ltwiting bag,-titlrty•fivo or forty years age f ,with a low forehead;_deoply sunken ,bhick eyes,, hollow - ohooks;,wrlnkted, - face; was Poorly dressed' , and'appeated frighteried,aLher eitnatiOn, though manifesting no other sign than a &int Oast, anxieue look, She teas subaequently emitted for trial on a charge of murder in the that degree; • THE PRESS.-T-PHILADELPHIA; TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1859. , that might be offeeetrin' evidence, BluoiC • do. telling hint I had found Daniel, and if he wanted pointed on the definitien' of the word "trans- .him he might come after him; when I • returned ( o u woo , wthieh be thought the iionnsel, Mr. Ear , Ito Harrisburg, I commenced emulating around - Ma mistaken the"' real definition of. It. vie actor him ; was within one hundred' yards of 1 neither e writing from nor a writing of, b it Daniel ; [trench , Sinipson died solvent, and his game only a body or deed written over and e em- ,restate was paid up ; I was in Harrisburg when pltfied. A transcript need not be a whole r Ord, , Don el was arrested ; I said a great many things' Ibit it 'must be a whole paper. Be r qbote the to the people to atop any excitement ; I said he' words of the sot of Congress, and thought roe was a burglar—at least, I intimated as much ; I these words ho was bound to consider it a vs isle was much confused ; I walked up to him, and die. , M lv r i . ine P t i g e . roe ; re D al i l d y We published in our paper of yesterday an ac- , copy of a particular paper, of the records of e covering a soar, took hold of him. yon aon , any ay k n t o h w it t the'D a nwi words r l d sw that a a t count of the arrest and partial hearing of a negro , ' ow l et. no also found, by looking at the mole named Daniell Webster - for the ' past few years a . that it contained all that Was necessary for em s •hurglar ? reikfent of. Harriebnig: ' OThe excitement , that ' which had h a a n d d i ; e f o r l otn hiai th in e n o c e i r t l im t o e f • a h n i d s F e a x i a n m s, in h a e ti w o a n s , _ barely smoked on Saturday, burst ou t i n t o a flame 1 convinced it contained all the requisites of the not during yeoterday. Before the hour appointed f or lof Congress, and aooerdivgly it was admitted in a continuance of the boating the neighborhood , videnee. 1 .. • of Mr. Longstreth"e ofilee,•on•Seventh street, near I Mr. Pierce. I wish to make another objeo 'Chestnut, was one crowd of animated and ion--- , exalted Mr. Brewster. Xs this in order ' llt strikes nie human beings. There were mon and women, tis not.. The paper has been submitted by the black folks and white, slavery folks and anti.sla• emmissiOner. I objeot to the - gentleman being very folks, and all turbulently 'zealous in their Bowed to make an otdeotion. • The Commissioner. X am disposed to give all comments upon the tool° of the hour. As for re. be advantages I can to COUBEOI, no matter on• porters being accom m odate d , that WB3 out of the mina side: It is inerder to object at any time, question ; reporters are , generally among the last and accordingly I admit the gentleman's point. people thought of in' these: assemblages. One or Mr. Pierce then objected o to the admission of the .two wore fortunate enough to got inside and their ' doeumentons it did.pH:llo within the provisions of . . ,'the set of • 1790 " . backs up to the ' wall, bur the rernaieder were • Mr,' Brewster iiontended that the record was forced to stay oidsideamong the citizens. It was soon discovered that it would be utterly Onjemion overrated. Oceimitite and adthissible. ime.ossible to prowled with the bearing at the Mr Hopper objected on amount of the seal office of the , Commiseioner, and the latter an being absent. nouneed that the ememeald be anjourned, to the .Objection ,ovorruled. , 'United States Grand Jury Reom, at the corner of ' Mr. Brewster then read the 'poper which had Fifth and Chestnut Streets. - This announcement been admitted It set forth the eiroatostanees of wog followed bye rush, and ao the crowd poured the ease ; of Diniel Dengertield being the slave of down Chestnut and Bantam streets, and across the French Simpson, and now of • his widow ; a do square, the ease:ergot afloat thet,the prlionrr Vad seription of Daniel's p ersonal appearance, and escaped.' The rumor fanned the flame. There. certified to by the judge and clerk of the court of wee great joy and rejoiciug among the sympathy-- Loudoun eounty, Virginia. sere accordingly. The Republic was free, our Dr. Francis TO Lucked Worn —I am from Lou nationality Was vindleatid; and the star.spingied done county, Va •, 1 reside in this city ; I (1m no banner floated in triumph over ludepandenee relative of Mrs. Simplon; only an acquaintance ; Square ; but these congratulations were hardly 'have no ititerest in this suit ; I mime to this oily more extravagant than trapeitory, as was quickly- in 1850; I am not to be paid forgiving testimony. aseortained to the sworn lovers of universal man. To Mr. Brewster.' I know the negro man Daniel Loss than the time it would take to sharpen per Driegerfialtle I first save him in Mansfield, Loudoun pencil the multitudethad throtged the streets Ads,, Out", Ye. e • I wept with his owner, French Simi,. jaoent to the Statehouse, and ell the aisles an eon, to see him 'as a physician; he wag sick with avenues leading to-the jury-room. 'the reporter& typhoid fever; I found him at the house of Mr Were more fortunate at this time, as they managed Mount, by whom ho -had been hired ; I Saw him to attain an entrance to the mem o and had the afterwards; I have seen' him ae many so .ffiteen privilege efecoupying tables in onjuiuition 'frith - or twenty times; I have no doubts as to the pet the other professional gentlemen representing the saner being Daniel Ilangerileld. • ' parties in the owe., Crags-examined—To Mr Earle. I have boon a The crowd stilt kept increasing, the windows phygician some, sty or seven years; I graditeted ' were broken, the prisoner was brooght in meld at Jefferson College, when about twenty-two or many symptoms of an attempt tO rescue acidthe twenty-three ; lam a married man now, married excitement still kept boiling at ,a fearfulTeee — A.- fu June,lBs2; my practice was among whites and great many privileged ladies .were smuggled in Meeks indisoriminately ; had other colored pa amid molt damage to crinoline Lucretia Mott Bents bolder; Daniel; Ihme seen hips since then; occupied the right hand of Poole], and Marshal he bad the typhoid fetter when I Saw him; I re- Jenkins the left,-while thateelebratetrgentleutan, member himwell; .had on a cheek shirt, a pair of arrayed in a suit of working clothes, looked with inspenders, a pair of Pantaloons, and a pair of a sort of sorrowful complacency upon the efforts Of stockings; I glee this-description from my parse his innitittideet new-coined' friefidewho thronged nal recollection; O do not know bow old he wag; the belle and .hintiways to. get a glimpse nt his I should' thinkthe was between twenty.one and person. twenty-four; I have not been instructed bow to Among the Roadsters present wore Mrs. Mott, min this Ones; there were two sick men in the • re. 'Wright, wife of David 'Wright, Esq ,of An- ro od at the time i both had same style of dress ; ' bursa N: Y. ; Mrs. Longstretb, aunt of the Com- aim ar to that usually worn by field bends; saw missioner, and other ladies belonging to too fami- nee repot in the room; never saw the negro man's • ly of the latter; Mre. MsEim, Mies Davie, grand- wife or children; sorer saw the .man in Balti daughter of Mrs Mott; Bliss Anna Hallowell, Mrs. more, (The witness was cross-examined at great George H. Earle, Rev. Mr Grew, Dr. Franks, len 'h by Mr. Earle about his knowledge of the Mrs. Nathaniel Randolph, Miss Peabody, sister- prix eery and the eiroutastatees attending his in ' ii-law of Douce Mann,;-Miller Moßbp; Professor ter iew with Mee j ' Olemoland, Ise., do. o Comminioner. To the best of my iadgment Paeeraore Williamson, Robert Puma, and oildir Daniel was about twenty-two years of ago ; I ro wels knownanti-slaVery people, wore' outaide. , member several eireumetapoes ip relation to Nom The alleged fugitive was represented by Ederefd City; should think hp was about five foot nine or . Hopper, W. B. Pierce and George 11. Earle, and . ten inehee. . H. eisjamin H dirowsterO - Esm, appeared on behalf ,To Mr. Earle, 63818 Me not very uncommon 'of the claimant. The last' named gentleman, bo- among colored people; I hays seen them fro fore getting into the room, puthis beadle a frac. geode , . Cured pane of glare end annotaneed that he waeld John W. Patton' sworn —I am bare as a witness, not come in through Meth 'a crowd; he insisted from Loudoun county,' Va. ,• Nava boon constable that the marshal shonld bring a. force in order' for six Years; my expenses have been paid by Mr. thatjaatiee might be administered properly:oThie Rogers; do not know how much ho has spent on speech was felwed by an effort to pleat the pee- me-, lam not paid for any time. sage, but the crowd wag too dense to *V easily Mr. Brewster objected to the examination as to moved. .. - , - exrienses beleg paid. Overruled. , .Finally, Marshal Yost appearodat the fraohired Wittiest'. My travelling expenses only are paid ' glass and announced that the room would be Mew, my hoard, and, if necessary, something to &ink: da:l of all persons-who had no liminess in it. - • .- To Mr. ' Brewster. 'I know I •Fronatio &lapse Mr. Pierce objected to this course, and while a well ; I knew his negro man Daniel Derivate!, number of city 'ottoman wertoossideavoriog to and he keep um; he is in tale room ; I first sal clear the room, the Commissioner stated his ail- him in 1842 ;he was then a farm hand •, from 184 Derma to allow all to remain who mid be ao- -to 1849 1 was a hand at labor; rworked for Steno comaiodated after the parties interested evermore. Simpson ; I work Mr. B(l3lpeOtea threshing pm vided with places., - Vereolittle progress was made chine ;, in let) anottior man and I tonight his ma ' in clearing the room, although Dotted States 'Dig- chine, .epd threshed Wheat for him; I saw the map loict :Attorney 'Vandyke leaded that the loge Ilion; SAW him pass baole and forwards; I saw ' 'should be *leered. Mr. Brewster, then, entered him in July 451. for the last time; i know him to , the apartment; arid the exatuination'tsemmenee& . be the who ,botortged to Simpson; ho was Mr. Earle stated that 'there. were a not:ober , of kociwn as Daniel Dangerfield then. . • witnesses °Meade who cold not be got in. Ho 'de- Cirogreexamination-:-To Mr. Earle. Had this • sired that some place should be obtainirlOwhoto man, Mr. Rogers, the claimant, any contingent • aocomnsedatiOns or a decent Oharaoter oinildthe interest in this property? procured... Arr. E. did not want to sae - -the .Infs. Mr. Brewster Objected, as the evidence under mons star ohamber practice of excluding-41104Mb• act of Congress should only be as to identoy. lieinttoduced, Mr. E. objected 'to the ?presence The Commissioner did not think the question of thecity pollee to prevent adnifeeibri of; parilea. pertinent in eress.examination. Any question may The right to do this wouldtho inquired into lore. be asked eato witness's interest in the capture. after. The gentlemen employed to report the To Mr. Earle: I'have been-after fugitive slaves case could not be o nneempoOuted . BICE:pot:01W before, for Mr. Simpson; have been paid before that justice could pot be administered.' Ho ob- for any aerobes.; there is no bargain hetiveen Mr. joeted'm going on in aloha place. ' ' a Rogers and las to remuneration for my time ;. . 'lite Contraiesiener said thOt all the courts of jus Mr.• Rogers was at my house on Sunday night; &Winn liable.to the objection named.',-7 - Hverv. 'Old lie biS heel foundlholoi; Iran" Tho to come facility ahoultibts, afforded for getting Witnesses and identity him; nothing tun Veen said about . . , , into the Mtn. ' - , :1 .:,' ' IMO lgng I would he anay ; I have a wife and -Tie eounsel for the , defoneeltaked to• eiainirie children at home; I have left enough to support the record upon eshidh the wareaitt was ityB o , and my family ; I did pt get money from Mr. Rogers insisted upon their - right to import it .0 . ,,, , ,,1 . , or their support '. . 2, ho Commiselatter said be lia&zio ,reoeird in his To Mr. Pierce I have been to Harrisburg ; I pimento;• '' • , ' • • . . ; 4 .- . : wont there, as,l was tout Battle! wee there; I CAW Mr. Brotietor Mid the torrrOit had keientsifue him in Harrisburg on the 2*l of Pebruary ; I was under the autberito of the. 40, of: 850. `-semi ; wit h in ten feet of him.; he eras in a ooal yard; I peared iriliettatineaoeaasewwwmpawestiodo , W.arOurnewelte-easeelevaltle 041; .3-wrmt b... - CO ar e aJetroneleawhe °IMO that Hiaiel Dania the hetet and reported to fir , g.ouers that I bad . , old; a , alavo; 'had' escaped &We ?Peausylvagia foundthire ; I went to pliable to Mr. plolo's for That complaint hiving:been nuidethorhe Cbmmri , authdrity to arrest him; he did not want to in. Stoner; the warrant wee leetiod and•tithfughlyowas terfere ; theta bad keen uptay sere poste that town arrested.' Mr. De eta the stet of Ofifilictithigh,pria . tenet fogltive idaverfO I eaw Daniel in llarritharg; -video that the owner, or attorney, or thelilOaroaney r az not acq n uainted with him th e as I did not partite and. take the fugitive, tabo,ltime before a wane to equalize myself with him ;, he did not let •jedge 'or a commissioner, who' aall , dispose of the on to know me; I know binelii Vrginia • I went cage in a summary mutter.. • , Mr 'Brewster read home; I returned to Harrisburg on' daturas,* thepower Of attorneyewhieti &Ramiro Sanford P - morning; never spoke to him - In' Harrisburg; 'Rogers to pane the fugitive. • Commissioner ponouneed papers fnauftiotent; I was Mr. Brewster else offered In evidence the will told so by Mr. Rogers; the Commissioner wag in of Frouoh Simpson, the husband of Mrs. • 80. the Philadelphia • - o „ claimant. To Mr. Earle. ' Oa the 4th or sth of March I Mr- Earleobjected that it (the will) was not the was told papers' were insuffloient they were whole record, ° Ile also contended that letters as amended; Rogers, did not say how treiny commie• eillary should We been take]; out in this Etate tapers he_yielfell'; I'lptdegoteod triel'ubro Tight to make dm paper 'admissible. The will 'math° from Mr. negate.' clearly proved, and the death of the testator must To Commissioner. 'Da niel was -about • ton or also be clearly proved to establish the right Of twelve years of age hen .1 first knew him, in lam. &Ippon to make a power of attorney. , ' 1842. 'he - Commissioner and Mr . Brewster agreed William L Bogue sworn.—To bfr. Ear's. lam that objections to any of the papers would be ad- heie from Virginia; I'm here attending to my missible at any stage o f the proceedings. own Opines; .1 mot hip . Rogers and Mr- Patton Mr. Earle Belted the' CoMthiseioner to note that in this city ; I did not comp along' with them ; I there are other papers of record which should- be pay my 00i - expenses; I dame to see the people presented, which are referred to in the trinket& and buy what I wanted to buy. of the will, bet are not produced. The letters of Q Did yen ever deal in bleak mon? indinintstration ore wanting. There ' are' also Mr 'Brewater objected.' !. , erasures in thet document of which no note !swede. Question overruled. Air. Hopper also reminded the Commiesinee. Q What did you come to buy? -that unleea there was:evidence that the estate Of Mr. Brewster objeoted. - Mrs. Simpson was duly adMinisterel, thm e will Oiveriuledas irreleiant at this stage of proceed could not be given in evidence . Timm may ho Wry. ' a - •• ' debts for which this Daniel ,Itiogerfiela, whoever To Mr. Arewater. I keep theEl igle Hotel in be is, may be liable. There must be evtdorans Omit Ism& no county, Virginia; I knew Daniel Danger the estate was properly administered and the field when he was h boy about fifteen ; I knew him debts of the decedent paid. when he was a mill boy, near Aldey, Loudoun Mr. Earle read fteawleth S and R, 98, to show county. Virginia; he lived with Mr. Gulick; theta portion of a record could not bo read, even Daniel Dangerfield is in this room now; I know on an application to direbarge on bail, much less him by Chooser on hia °book ;be sits there, (point in cease of the impoetance of the pregent one, i ing to prisoner ;) I was in the boot and oboe 0181- ildr. Pier-so rend on anthewitylo show that let- nese then; the prisoner often memo to my louse on tens testamentary shall not be grantable out, of business; I have seen him a great many times; I the county in whioh the decedent , resided. Con. cannot Pay how many ; I believe him to be the eel asked that rho objections Made should", be same Daniel I knew theft ; it is twelve years siren noted. Obey made them at the outset of the ease; I last saw him. • in order to pont mieunderetanding, and to To Mr. Earle. Creme here to bey just what I avoid the danger of' ' their 'beieg °stopped at a want ; I did not buy whips; I bought a pair of later stage of the proceedings. . rotors, a waistcoat, some oranges, and some apples; Mr. Hopper objected that there was no real to I cum here to attend to my business ; I did not MO mood Bola tie was indispensably neteseary come here to bpy onythirg at all; I did not come to its-validity. • • ' • ' as ati itness; did not get my expenses paid; dome' This objeotion was admitted by the Commissioner. times I buy' negroee at home ; never any Mr. Earle read en eutOority to show that the from home; never offered to buy the Intoner; whole risoord'should be Produced. when I came hero hest- 1 oamo- on bud- Oft. Brewster said that he did not deem the will nem in this ease ; I got papers and-delivered absolutely necessary to his ease, All that has been them to fir. Rogers; X went to see Mr. Brewster said so far was irrelevant to the purposes of the along with Mr. Rogers ; my wife and my bar prosecution. The sot of Congress overrides any keeper attended to my business in my absence; I local statute. Mr. B. 'contended that a suffielent do' uot knew bow far Loudoun county is from portion of records bad been produced, and that this plane; I live now about eight or nine miles they were suffidiently authotidated under the act from Simpeou'e e I never lived mush closer to of Congress of 1790 A's such he offered it, 7 Simprouat than this ;ho was about fifteen or six- Mr. Piero contended that the paper pot in eel- teenovhear I last saw him. dente was not in acoordariee with the not of-1700. Mr. J. II Gulick was called on. He did not All thatwas presented was a a transcript frost the want to swear. ' He joinad the Baptist Church two reoprde of the ooutt." The eel requires a proper or throe years NO, and pad Ooseiontioue scruples certified copy of the reoerde, and not a mere trans. PSCitaat taking an oath. - ' oriptfrem the resod. How mush of the reoordle 1 - Mr Earle asked that ho be sworn, toe an oath this? Is it a half, a fourth, or a fifth? How much woe the strongest degree of qualification. and what portion of the record Is it?' Mr Piero The Conuniseioner thought it was a matter asked the Commissioner to seize hold of ttie op- Wholly referable to a mane onsolenee, and, im portunity to deliver the oppressed from the fangs tiordiugly, Mr. Gulick was affirmed of the oppressor. This is not a favored claim under To Mr. Brewster. lam a member of the Bap. the law ; and let him abido'by its letter • tiet Church; I hold an affirmation as binding 'The Commiesionew considere4 the fact that the on my conscieno e us an oath ; I knew Dan paper was not a full record was fatal tO its Oinke gerfield twee ty years time; be is there; I sten, and it was therefore excluded. t know him and ho knows me; I saw bins in 1050 for This deolsioneaused ademonstretion of apptanse; the last time • when T. firer caw him, twenty years which was promptly checked. • , a .ego ,he Wee a:toyed five or six. Mr Brewster road the 10th section of the fulle Cross - examination — To fir. Earle. I believe I Live slay° act of 1°,50, and under its povieloria e have a Ohaugebf heart on the matter of religion. offered a record of th e 'mart in Yireolnia, to pro o Mr Earle. 'I ask you then, ou the strength of the escape of a oertein slave. • • ,I your religious convictions, whether you think it Mr. Hopper objected to this document; it only right to send a human being into bondage? purported to be a transoript from the records, and Mr. Brewster objected. Re thought the sobjeot a furl copy of the record. These:A is to tbOTldge'd a plain ono, a question of identity. He did not name, and not to the record itself.- The same otO want big words ; big words aro cheap and popular jealous apply to this paper as to thu copy of the The sitrieza lie& rights, and should to protected in will ~t hem. They should - be protested and respected. Mr. Brewster dwelt upon the lOth Milen of the He wanted no intimidation. fugitive slave net, which he contended made the Mr. Earle did not want to intimidate. He only record admissible. Ile urged that the paper woe asked u simple question' and exploded a simple auffictiently full, and that it is properly authentl. answer. . ceded. . • Tho Commissioner. I consider the quest's, • Mr. Earle referred to the importance of the ease. highly improper, and acoordingly the objection Ile had known Mr. Brewster heretofore at full of sustained. • remotions of humanity and mutineer', sad he Witness I came here for the purpose of being know thero'was a conflict golog on in his broaat witness in this case ; I bore all any own expens s • Mr. Brewster objected to the remarks of Mr. B. in this ease • I receive nothing, and (moot tog t There was no conflict in his breast ; he wanted no nothing ; M rs.e Simpson is my mother-in-law ' • sympathy nor np applause. Ho .wee hole to do wife inherits port of the estate ; I have calle d o his professional duty, mid hei• desired to do it 'oeveral gentlemen in relation to thia matter, in a professional way. He 'wanted nq personal among others Mr. Brewster and Mr. lonmelreth. telleotions. Mr Earle. Itygehat right did you roll on a Mr. Earle then urged thit the 'evidence of Mrs, person who would bo the judge in the one? 1 Simpson tended to swear money into her woken Witrate I celled with Mr. Booms a few days or this mule into the rice swamps of Mississippi. before this hearing. Her evidence should be strictly scrutinised, and Mr. Earle How many days before tbe hearing ? if Illegal it ehould fie discarded. Mrs. Simpson Witness. I cannot say. . was not here to be oroweexamined; but there were Mr. Earle. Was it seven or fourteen days ? two or three mon here who properly look like ' Witness- If I mould toll you I would; Ido not drivers. There was one with a Leeree countenance; know. 'who hod been here ,. but he was glad he was not Mr. Earle. Did Mr. Longstretit examine pa. here now to blast hie eight. `es ' ' pore? Mr. Brewster asked tut the rights of hie clients Witness. I Cannot say; I think hO did. should be maintained. Ito wanted no personal Mr. Earle. Were the papers examined? reflections oh them.', • , . : Witness. Yes, sir. • Tbe ..Commintionor insieted that Mr. Earle Mr. Earle Wbo examined thorn? should keep in the line of his argument. . Witness My amid is not clear ; I think it was Mr. Earle then Went on to maintain that the Mr. Longetreth ; he said they wore not right. doeumehte presented were not legal, and the pros Mr. Earle Did Mr. Longetweth say they were liminary steps wore all based on insuilloient not fight? grounds. Mr. Earle argued very, closely to sus o Witness. I think be did. ; „ min this assertion, and he maintained that the Mr Buie. Did he advise you to prone° others papers were inijorfoot and insufficient. : 'Witness. I think he did. - - The &gonfalon terminated, and the Commie , Mr. Earle: Did you oil on any &lions ? stoner, without dispelling of the point, adjourned. Witness. Yes, sir. until 31-eadookrri,uriocui Session. - . Mr. Earle What did ho trey? • . Witness. Ile had no time to attend to it. - . i'Oe case , ago resumed in the afternoon in the: Mr. Earle, Did you mil on guy other ? i United States Court room—larger and more cm. Witness. I think I - did; - I 'do not know hew medians, yet it was filled by no great a crowd OS many commissioners I have visited ; I really in the moroiog. - einnot tell; I first caw Dental in Harrisburg en The COnimissionorOin deciding the point argued ;the 22d February; did not speak to him; did not previous to the morning'a aajeuenumut, said that wish to speak to hire; I stopped at Harrisburg he would construe the not of itortgrese strictly. Ho for a day or two, for the purpose of spying out lubted niany'authoritleabeering.on the quern°. Daniel; there was a rumor got up in Leuifoun as to the admissibility ofa Word, or a part of a cooly, in relation to Daniel s' being in Ileatii oord. In the case of ,Christineee;;Whitehall, 1, burg;' I rionoluded to attend an afternoon in liar- S. A R., 90, the deoision was net bated on the pr-' risburgnn my way North; ,I etiolated mound in position it from," or "of," but from the absolut the oily, and while there 1 saw Daniel; O. stopped inspection of the document offered. krethii ease h away after reeogillsing bin) ; did not tertni Monte felt itliis duty to look into the body of the paper of. see me ; I called on linleko, a constablo ; he re fered in evidence, and see if it woe a full wed perfect erred tea to Snyder • I could not tint Snyder; transcript of the rOOOOO of the oOurt-ra transcript -then wrote to Mr. 'Rogers, my brother-in-law THE FUGITIVN-SLAVE CA'E. INT.i.k!_rEICITEMENT- FIELD.? DISTintbANCEGS, &o Mr. Pierce. Did you say or intimate that the prisoner was a burglar? Witness. I don't know ;my mind was confused and-- Mr. Pierce. Did 'you, by any intimation or in sinuation of yours lead the crowd to believe that Daniel was a criminal ? witness. I said a good many things; my mind was confused; I wanted the crowd to keep off; I wanted no excitement. lir.',Barlo. You hate told us, Mr. Gullek, that you wore a member of church ; that 'you did not want to take an oath, as it 'was wicked. Now, did you make any misrepresentation, or any statoment to the crowd, leading them to believe that your .errand was other than it really w,ts? Witness. I was so exalted that— Mr. Brewster. I object to this course. The witness has rights, and 'the law should maintain them. Mr. Piero°. This eouras of the witness is a very strange one. Appeals have been made to this an. dience, on the matter now before the court The witness speaks of his mind being confused—ex alted. his course appears to be the result of a oold, deliberate lie rtlmsation I Mr Brewster. Bees my'friond say that the wit. ness is a liar? lir Pierce. No, I simply said his course was ono that was ineonsistent with his ptiblio profession. The Commissioner. I most protect the witness in his rights. Be must not be intimidated. Mr, Brewster. Tho purpose of these speeches is easily understood. Tho Commissioner. I suppose it was an appeal to the audience. Mr. Piero?. I must say that for the first time in my experience as a lawyer, I em told in this court of justice, that what has been said by counsel in the performance of his duty is meant as an ap peal to the pentium/ of an audience. I do not think it knit. . The Ounarnissionor. I moroly used your own words. • Mr. Brewster. I rest my ease here. Mr Pierce. Are you not going to call Mr. Ro gera? Mr. Brewster. If you wish, certainly Sandford P. Rogers Sworn —I am from Londoun county, Virgnia, Mrs. Simpson's friend, attorney, and relative; I know Dangartield ; have known him for many years, since he was a boy ; he is in the room; I know it is him; I am ()attain of it; have no doubt of Ur I last saw him iroPrenah Simpson's house in 1853; I have seen him a num ber of times; I 'cannot say how many;, I have worked at his side is 1852 and 1853, for a great part of time. - Crosaexamination--To Dir. Earle. .Mrs. Simp son boards with me; I rented her place and she lives on it; . she leabout, sixty years, of age; Mrs Simpson has never parted with Daniel Danger field ; I went to Carliele to See Mr. Biddle, the Commissioner; rwent there to see if I could get 7/ warrant to arrest Daniel; I then came to Phila delphia to coo Mr. Brewster; be ,told ma that I hat not better apply for a warrant here until I had bettor proof I did not go to see Mr Long atroth y the mond time I did go to ace Mr Com missioner Lengalreth ; this was on kit Thursday week ; he discovered a flaw in the paper, and said. that if he should grant a warrant upon thst l aper, the flaw be detected, and the ease be brought before bim, he would have to release the man I then sent the papers back to Loudonn county, ve . and bad them corrected by an attorney there ; the papers were then sent to me and I took them to Mr. Com missioner Longettetb, who said they were all right '4'he arrest num made by Officers Jenkins and Stew art; I did not raise the cry of stop thief, nor take any Part in the arrest; Mr. Patton is a gentleman who resUes in my county; he is not now a constable; I promised to pay him nothing, but said he should not be a loser if he got the boy ,• I promised' to Pay exPebßes if he did not' get him; knowing that Mr. Bogue knew the negro, I asked him if he world nape *rig with me, bowing that be would come on here in a' short_ time t he said he di/ not know 'whether be conld' come on or not; I went on to Baltimore, and the'next day be (tame on there; the man's mother's name was Betty, and his father's name Cornelius Danger field; Mrs. Simpson has not, ,given. ma her right and title to this man; Mr. Bogue went to Harris burg with me; he paid his own expenses; I paid Mr. Patton's expentes down from Harrisburg; I want to take ibis boyhome to his mistresa ; Isap ply the most of the funds for the eXpensea;,Mrs. Simpson supplied a portion. , • - Mr. Hopper said thakthe counsel for the de. fondant had had' no time to confer with tl,eti client, and therefore asked that further con sideration of the matter be postponed. Mr. Brewster, who rose to make a few remarks, wait requested to speak louder by the opposite counsel, which gave rise to a little spirited discus- Mr. Brewster . seid, is the name of 'the law be denianded of the Commissioner that' be should conform to the law, and sustain tb® ruling that he ruled on Saturday ; and although I' then Ulf fared with. you in regard to the construotiln of that decision in reference toile identity, I erred respectfully, as I -always do, to ,the judge ent of the IMO; and I now coteand demand, in tonema of the law, that you shall adhere to that 43 , .strnotion, and to hold the party to that judge m at then given by you, in your intorprota4Mir of Alt laivotoi4-thait Ojai' be aormianerrAUgo on wilt' lb hearing. Mr. Brewster admitted that, on mount of the hostility evinced towards pursuing tins slave, if such be is, he begged that he would not falter in carrying cut that law. Mr Marla primed the oblint of-hie ontleague, that the hrthei 000sideration of the case should be postponed. as all parties were completely rx• hausted by the long session, and that, injustice tb the man whose freedom might be established, time should be allowed for testimony which might be adduced to establish his freedom. Mr. Pierre said that this summary proceeding denied justice to the party who is now here. It i s proceeding - whit& binds this man, attaches him at Harrisburg, brings him to Philadelphia, a bun dred miles frog where he has been residingoehe set his witnesses WO, puts manacles upon him, Fur; rounds: him with the officers of 'the law and the minions of Virginia, and then says to that 'man, although you have been in this manacled condi tion you shall not have one minute of time to pre• pare your evidence. Why, sir, it 14 not denied to the mat common foleu that is , braught to our courts. If he were simply arrested for robbing a hen-roost, if ,he were arrested for passing a coun terfeit quarter of a dollar, it would not bo denied him in any of the courts of the United States; but hero is a man with no crime charged against him, whose liberties have been struck down, who is not to ha't's one, minute of tline to answer one of the obargei adduced against hiar in the testimony 11.fr..Brewster replied, and said ; I beg leave tq remind my lertrned brethren, that the first act the Puritans did before they landed was to enter into a compact to obey the law—a law of their own compact; the rolomn compact, it is well knows, entered into was to establish a free Government of free white men; to dedioate their souls to God, and to establish a free ltiw. SO do I stand here, and ask you to obey the law. Now, sir, if the histori cal allusion is worth anything, .T ask you to conform , to their example. He 'asked what the law was,' not the law in its severity. but la its regular op.. plication to that case o. Ile paired srllgt the wife or children of the Cemmissioner had to do with -the discharge of the duty of the Commissioner in this ease. Now, sir, I say to you, depart not from the law, but conform to Cho wise rule and practice understood by all who are lawyers. Liston to no appeal to your prejudices, regard no, attempt to intimidate and affect you, as 1 know you will not, sir ; but turn to the statute, and look- there,' and learn what is your mithoritY'..— what ti your duty—what ore our rights. There fore, T respectfully insist upon your duty and my • rights _ Commissioner Longstroth, in reply to the op• plication for a continuance of the case, 'said' he sat there to administer jastiep and the the law as he understood It, and that between him. and his conscience lay the responsibility of the proper discharge of the duty imposed upon him by', that law. It he- grated the continuance, be wished it to bo distinettrunderstood that it was' not granted in consequence of the appeals which had been made to him, he must say indecotousiy, by the learned eounselemployed in the case. Ile' believed that although the act provides for a enix.rpary dispesition of oases alibis character, yet it must be consistent with the ends of Justice, and that, therefore, if he granted the continuance, It was only because he thought the Commis sioner should be noqusin , ed with all the questions pertaining to cue care, and that the only , question In this ease was that of the identity of the man. It had been said to h.m by the counsel for the prisoner that witnesses tplght be obtained ; who could probably establish his tree:dom if time was granted, and that it was a right which the' prisoner wan entitled 'to. He Would be the lad wan to deprive the prisoner of. any of hie rights; and what was snore, thelaw would deprive has of none. It was upon this ground ot identity, there fore, that he based his reasons fur granting a con• tinuanee; he felt it was a duty that be owed to the ptisonor, and that it was a matter upon which ho wished to calmly deliberate, In order to have the circumstances of the coca fairly and lucidly pre sented to hie mind. . . The bearing was aooordingly terminated at nine o'clock in the evening, and 4 P. M to-day fixed for the hour of the final hearing at the District Court Nora- The egoitod crowd of people, of both sexes and complexions, who had kept their stand on Palls street for five long hours, with the hope of catch, ing a glimpse at the unfortunate mon as he wee removed from the building, were forced to depart to their homes with their desire ungratified; as it, was deemed advisable to retain him at the blind. ing until the hour appointed for the final hearing this afternoon, and at ten o'clock tboptrest was almost entirely vomited, Several arrests were made during the day of eittra-turbulent turbulents, who were, as agenortil thing, looked up until their sympathy simmered down, when they wore released. shocking Suicide in Roehunter. [From the Union and Advertiser, April 2 ] Lust night James Montgomery, a _young man doing business as a barber, on State street, in Frankfurt, committed suicide, by taking opium. Ile was Intemprrate. His brother, who is am. elated in business with bloc, took the precaution to call at the bars In the vicinity of their shop, and forbid the dealers from soiling 'deemed any liquor. Failing to obtain liquor at the places where it was sold, he drank a quantity of alcohol from a bottle in iho shop, such as is prepared for barber's use. • • While under the intluenee of this liquor he re. paired to a drug store near by, end called for a dose of tincture valerian. A - boy attending the store gave him the Medicine,' which he took. 2 - re then purchased a quantity of opium, eating while, in the store, pernaps two or thtee grains ' and with the remainder went out. Ile went directly to the house of his brother, where he bearded, and milled for 'a 'glees Of water. A lady of the fauriiy'gave him the water, which ho drank, and then shook ands with her, saying that ho should not live wenty four hours. Tho person to whom this was said did not at• to h any importance to the remark, and left him. ii laid himself upon a bud and fell into a sleep, fr u which he mover awoke. in a little time he liS s observed to breathe heavily, and a physioien sent for, but could do nothing to save life. be poor fellow expired in a short time. . Mr Montgomery was a native of Glasgow, but oattre'to this i city with his parents when only two years old. Ile wee twenty-eight years of ago. Re bad been married, but his wife died slx years cisme, leaving him without children. HE LATEST NE WS BY TELEGRAPH. [PKOIAL DT/WATCH TO TUB THTB2.] - Berke County Democracy. EZ4DINO, April 4, 1889. The Downeraoy of Darks met in County Convention today, with a view to sustaM Governor Pugs's, and select delegates to tho State Convention to be held In Harrisburg on the lath. No meeting ever held here was so well represented from all parts of the county by tho substantial Democrats. Don. Jong fithiwanve presided, issisted"bi fifty Tice Presidents. and some fifty or more delegates were selected to - atteriethe'fitate Convention. The meeting was ably addreseed by A. G; Gimes, Col. a. Yourto, AM. &mama, A. JORDAN ECHWMITZ, and the EIOCI. JOHN FOHIT4.II7Z. - Berke county will make tog fanns'the First tremble: TIM WASHINGTON TRP&EDY. TRIAL OF DA.NIBL E. SICKLES. %reverse Ton, April 4 —The trial of the Hon. Daniel E. Sickles, for the =far of Philip Barton Key, be; gins to-day, and an intense interest fa =entreated throughout the community in regard to it. The spell calms for admimion to the dirgy little room in theOity Hall, where:the °mina' Court is held, have been very ,numernus, but so miserable are the ansommodatione that the reporters God groat difficulty in precorrog mate. As to desks or tobles, or the other .tacilitlea for reporting Mee important , trial, that fa all 'dot of the qnsetlon. Imbecility wed ignorance are the charee'er tattoo of the rill.they °Memel here. Though there might easily have been rr per arraegements made by the introduction of tables, or temporary desks, the Temple or marshal or whoever I tight to attend to it, hive been mace 'sing only tee eery plan of hew not to do it, muleteer' obtuseness le so ea rime that, Mtn . strum to Indere. No more than three or fear 'spott ers bare been able to get facilities for writing and those for the Assuelatee Nees are not amongst there, elthouell eppbestion Ives made by them weeks ego. They have, however, Teetered on taking mate at the ' table set apart for the lawyers.. The reporter visited Mr. 13.ckles. to prison, at a late hour laid evening There to ro special hour for coded ' irg clatters and there were then three gentlemen with him, and among them his father - He looked better than meld be expected, and his manner woe preempt end enteral. Little or no talk was bed about the event in which so deep an interest woo felt. though at the tame time there van no apparent desire to overdo the sehl.ct The converealon was kept op on 4 variety of eubj ,, ets and the E4C028,1 bore We part in ft with no moot once that no one would imagine that be bore - a g eat and abiding got-f at lon heart. During t' e intervit w hie little pet. the Italian cc+ honed. now got en his heees, ana oetaainnally got into I the bed placed in nee corner of the jailer's room, which ' is occupied by Mr illoklan The room it furnished coarsely, but kill with' comfort, and the prisoner sp rees despised t . mike the most of it To return to the court room—the Yankee clock that wets egainst tee wall has struck the hour for the ai• gambling of the court, but Judge Orawfoel ben not tat= hie seat. A large orowd hie areembled to and shout the City Hell, awe , ti eg the ooraing of the doom of the coin room. Some hundred persons had pew/lone ly gained admietabre through the private deals, and all around may be noticed the buzz and bustle of prepara tions for the great trial. The o .unsel for Mr Dickies are James T. Brady and Jahn Graham, or New York i Edwin 'I", Stanton, of Pittebusg, and Me mra Samuel Chilton and Daniel hat cliff, of , Washington day. There are-several other gentlemen associated with then, including Mr. Thomas Flithilig Meagher, cd New York. • The preemption is conducted by Mr. 'taut Onld, the United Steam Attorney Tor the District, and it is -noderstoml be will -employ Mr. J M. partible lola bin'. 4 .4/1 4 0 , OW, iS to be made to the court far per misaion to do ao. . . . Judge Orawrord presided, taking his seat on the bench at a goatter after 10 o'clock. , The Omit 'vie then, primed by the orler. and HMI af , erwerde the public doom wine thrown open, and the room woo immediately filled. Moms Brady and elraham were presented to the sotirt by Mr Magruder. The judge raid that once Fro. 3.24 that of Mr Mated, AM set down f. r Pettey, and aebed whether the men el were ready on both sides. The answer was in the eArreative ' - The panel for the petit jars waa then meted. Mr. Child asked tint the witnesses fdr the promention meld be called, when all answered but fmar. The lodge dirceted the reergbat to bring in the pee s er, but mustily:4We time elapaed before the order w e obeyed. • '' ' .. - ben Mr . B ekles WM brought into'cohit, be 'ro t reed the recognition oflita friends andordnalietacess, .}1 took hie seat, not beside' ritii counsel,. but hear the railing that separates the lawyers from the audience. Mr Ou'd begged pk.rmi , deo, be the arraignment of the pneoner, to stets that Mr. Otirllele wet moo- Mated with him in -the, plreereuteon - of The MO - This amoolationehe said, was extremely'gratifyleg Whim, and ho wan cure it would also his agreeable to the court, The imlim me, t woo Alen read to the prisoner ohs rg log him: with urn usual quality of legal verbiage, with the mu-nine of Philip Barton Hey. in the city ;4 wlkett iugton, on the 21th of February lost. , He wan asked the qee•tme, •' Ara yon guilty ,or not guilty?" In a chair and firm tone h a Sesponded, to Not gulliy.ii __ , . , , The pink of getting a jury was then cormenald. , Joseph. P. Men was the t,rtt juror called: The Judge said he would put the uetial questions to the jurors touching thpizeinipertiallty , . + ~ i. s , ' rt Mr Blantoeleted that the defenee ,Mold be salisßed with that comm. Question by the Judge' Have yen at any time formed or expremed an opinion in relation to the guilt or lflo cloacae of Abe - armed ? _ . Juror rime. The Judge. You Inar.retice, Mr. Phillips, for the defence, propored to Nth the juror whethrr hie opinion was fonoded on rumor or a knowledge of the facto ..It merely founded on rumor ;and the juror could form a fair jedgment he tom totaled that he was conipet rit ' . The ,defence wee anxious to obtain a Jury,wilhout nemecemary delay. , 1 The Judge permilnd the examination It:efts-made in th et way. , , tebineetton. Race yen remedied expressed au opinion on mere rumor or on re knowledge of the fares} t Anewer..Marely on rumor. i ' ,Q,..Would you be •able, on -hearing the -tridents, id replier an impartia3;verd let e. . . ' A. No, air; tub' mind to blank in foyer of the poi: • loner. ,_ : The Judge. Stand Aside. -'- ` • — ratouvrin—trewatr was - ttirtcaned: — q. be the dodge Have yr)i teemed so opt riTaa he rale Mon to the guilt or innostenceOf the accused? A. Not that I em aware of. . Q. Dave yen an impression upon. it r - • -' A. I have; but I have no es:tit:olm - ' t Q. Would you be able to form an impartial judgmenti - A. I would, - The Judge aid the juror wan competent, - - •, , Oliallenged peretipt-Aily . Charles M. Bkipwith bad forthed - an'optnion in rife:- once to the guilt or Innocence of the prisoner and lice a prejudice cr bias on hie mind for or "viola the pri toner. ( by Mr. Philips. In that btu of no fixed a elta.= ranter that You could not render a' fair and impartial verdict? A. Ido not know that I cunld. ' ' The juror was orde•ed to stand. aside.— - - Joseph L. Peek.) WRILREt celled.jl 0 bad formed and expr.reed an opinion. The juror was ordefet to eland aside. ' my M. Hurdle had not formed or expressed an opinion as to the guilt or Wm , nee 44 the accused Be had no bias or prrjadice either way.. A Q by Mr. Ould Have You any'coniclentinita Fern plea in regard to finding e. verdict of guilty fn a capital cane ? The juror. I bete not Q. Are you worth SRO? A / ate not Mr. Outd atibmltted that that timoultad to it diet quatifteetioo. . - - Mr. &Anton wantrdto know whether the prevention were going to insiet oa the prcparty qualification. Mr. Oatd. The her rtqutrea if The Judge remarked that the law e f klarylard fixed a property quellacation Ter Jerome, tint unless connect rated the question, _ the juror - would not be Incompe-, tent. Jan Ferlister was next (filled. He regretted to Mot he bad farmed and met seed an opicion In re• - Tattoo to the gent or inureonoe of the aroused. Rin opinion was formed from the Ibttomenrof an eye•wit• nest Ordered to maid ao7do, - Resin Arnold had not farmed or **armed an opinion. Ile had no bias orprejtadloe in favor et; -or age-heat the priamoor ; had no coutclentlous ackeyeplea about capital pranachment, and tram worth over sfo ' - Resin Arrold was then sworrras the flint juror. . William Dawson had - not formed or - expressed an opin on; hoe no bias or prejudice for or Brunet *opals ouer ; hid no, cent:dent:cm acrupl a about capital punishment. - Obailenged per emptorPy. James L D 4 7 413 had formed an opinion to a certain extent from nevrepap cc 'reports ; bad no bias or prellia d,ce on bla mind; bad no c>necientious scruplea re garding capital punia lament, and Is worth POO. The Judge thought the juror o =potent, and Mr Darla was sworn as a juror. Lewis D'utdie had tto Impreseton on his mind that wou d influence his conduct as a juror; Is not bunted on either aide, but has his sympathies. The Judge thought that this exprecolon of sympathy rendered the juror incompetent Mr Stanton held that the qtreatlon here was one of the judgment, not of the heart, nod that the sympa thies were not a diegnal dation, exropt when they wont to the extent of eufluencing the judgment. The Judge ettou:Lat trot If a men had sympathies on either side, they effected halo linnartialtty The juror, on Laing further questioned, said that he cod most uodoontedir render a fair and Impartial judgment Re did not hour that his sympathies would cloud his judgment if the cove roes close. . 'the Judge thought the juret's art sera amounted to a diequsi.fleation, end the, jury r wee ordered to stand aside. 1 , act otivii was taken. Lewin 77 right to partly to•med en opinion from the gatemen! of a who who had witnessed the transaCtion. LIM mind woe not fully made up. ' - Ordered to stand aside. - John E tee aie had formed and captessed an opinion from what he had read fix the newspapers awl heard In the attests fie could give a fair and itn; arnalmentio; on the evidence. Lae no impfession that would Mtn once hie an nd. and haw no pr-jad•ce or bias, or carnal entfowascruples, And fs' worth sem - 7ha Judge Ma-tight the juror schopctent. Mr. Nee; wad morn. bar (inflict had no Impreetion, Idae, rrejudlee, or ecn 8& nooue 'temples By Mr. Ould. Are you esofilt WO in property? A. No, dr. llterioalitb.d W m M o. Hopkins had no impreislcn, bias. preju dice, or comnientions scruples, and in irmth $BOO. Mr. Hop•ins was sewn as ajutor. John Emlth had no Dinar prejnlice against any man, no eonrcienti,ns seropies, and in Worth over SSW' - Oballonged poremptortly.. . Thos. It. isradfoad had tormel. and - experiard an opinion &lived from mere rumor; did - not th/lik could make a fair and good juror: . ' ~ • Disqualified. 1. Edwin Butler had formed sod expressed an opinion, untied on rumor; tht ught he could render a fair var let on the evidence; had always the opinion that . wy person who commits wilful murder ought to troffer ai r ; bad no bias or prejudice on either side. Die . ant fled. lawrenre lardella had formed and expressed an opinion on mere rumor, and could not render a fair verdict. Distin e htled. N. B B oaks and David Hepburn made similar an swore, ant were diequabiled. Tantel B. Sylvester had nettles or prejudice, and had formed no ordains, ,• bat no oanseientions rcreplee, but sea< ant worth $OOO .DlAquelified. Wm. Bond wan next caned. Ile had nobles prejudice, tr eanteleal low scruples. and wav worth $BOO. :reign. Ileonett Sewell was rolled. He had no bias, pr•ju dioa, or courolentiou.a strap:se, but Held he. was worth leen than nothing. Hr. Branton 'meted id 'know whether the Dietriot Attorney Oath aged on that ground. The Judge mil that the act of Maryland expressly Blabs the: oo man shall be qual fled ea a juror (101068 property worth $3OO. The he owns real ter persoral 00III3ECO might waive the objeotion, however.. . Mr. :tauten inquired whether the Liattlet - dthbruey °huller ged on that ground. The Judge sail that the question WO challenge in itself. , Mr. Stanton wished It so understood. Warren Low was called. He had• no bias, prejudice, or cone. lenliorla scrupleii. Challenged peremptorily. Allison White had banned an opinion from ota or, and could rot form an impartial verifier Diesualilled. George R. Kirk bad formed en opinion from rumor, and from the rotation that be stood to the prisoner, as a married man, be should be afraid to sit as a juror. ill,, uMi bed. Jame. Fulisloro bad fornied and expreEred an opi nion. and thought he could not render . a irir verdict. lPsqual.fied Wm. Worthington, and Richard R. Sims wore dbolarcEl rik,quallava tor the a we cause. Thin ixhenrtod the panel and the Judge orderod the notralral to summon herenty.flve taleemen for to-mor row. The whOle timber of jurors that anewered to their names was ti irty Of three fear wtro chnllotigei pe remptorily, four were Mot rarlerd on accouot of lack of property. sereoteen were set -aside for canoe, and fire we a sworn in,. ab fit 101 , 8 : 1. Ittr, n Arnold. of W• *Admit= county, farmer. 2 Jayne L Davis of Waehloron county farmer, a._ John Weshingtee city. rostahant, 4 - William IC 8. Eloyhtios, Washington cityourniab, 5 Willfsui Docd, Wanhington oay a ohne, yoinmkri,,A. totter. The jurors thus ISTIPYZI were allowed to menorah', but were duly cautioned by the Judie not to a?eak with. or listen to, any Fallon on the sublett et the trial, Mr. Stanton called theattention,of the •ocurt to the feet that the prisonerwir placed inthit Nor, where hit oeuusel had ne ready, access to hint. He - asked the court to order the box to be Placed In Multi' a position an would enable Mr. Sickles to confer with bit o - unsel. In polot of tut he might, ea remain in jail during the trial of hip atone At to be where he is now platted. The Jolts wed he ovoid not coiteMittrihareljte nri , - onersa ti'W place d betide the, lawyers.," It 'Might, how ever, be removed to the rallirg diewitly back oc, the bar, - and the marshal would be directed- ta-horp the pray a open. - Mr. Magruder-,aubrultttd, that if- It wet not asking too mach, ftwatild be desirous to have Abe Ipris-ner eerfronted With" the 'jurors end with, his, amours, ED that the accrued rolaht eondect hie own sue, and cer tainly in such a rase he tithed -not - ba forced to oteupy awl au nut. ottbe-way Owe: They would eettek any thing for him bn the ground of hit , ppaablie poeitton; or on the gronad of hie profession , but merely - what they would ask for the humblest American eitirtn.: Lathe • varione . Btatee, whence the conarel"caine, the prisoner in always permitted to nullity' seat beside hie lawyera. Me wired tha . L snob facibtiesshoced be extended in this The J'adge'aaked witetheiShe bed irrerkno vn a man to be tritd for,mnrder who was not placed in the dock t - • - - - Mr. Magruder that the' priioner might d•st be placed in thed o c k, c but the, practice in Virginia, A r ll s tr er a i , th le ,m ez t York ; , and other Status . was that the b side his counsel, and have it need CO, facilities for - , he judge said that he had never tern a man tried for murder who was cot placed in the d,ek, and be hod never read of snob a OaSE; sertalols sot in Errand. He wee not dem: a.d to Mate any distinction in this wee. Mr Stanton dominated a desire to bare any dietma• non made. Thep Would be, isodhea with the amuse -mem euggested by the juice.` . . Inetrnatima to it t effect were given to the marshal, ant the court, at 1 o t eloelr u ltdistulded to 30 o'nico's tJ-morrow morniag Of the witnesee called for the rotecatlon, the f il lowing were' wawa Div art D. 11 Cool dga, D:. Stone, T H. Martin. J. N, Rob, J °arta all, P li. Ven Wyck. A. flphor, E, Tidhall. and ,7 L Dabrow The following were - abaent P.ll. 'Downing; ld Pendleton, 1, Doyle, and P. Brodhead. WuBbinztun Affairs. WASHINGTON, April 4 —Ban Bunnell. the Newly-Ey. pointed commit to Ban Joan deltdar, left Washingt on this afternoon - , to go out in the steamer to asil4l,roor. row for Aspinwall, and will boar dospstebea to General Lamar, ' It la said that Mr. Mix; the,chlef oletrc Orthe Indian Bureau, bait been offered the position of Oommisitocer of Indian, Affairs, bat declined ...Ile, hoeover, bee been appointed Commissioner, - Erci Interim, till a softener to Gov C ommissioner ,' be-Selected - Government will, await the ratification be the New Grenadian Congress of the Senate's amendment to the Camlietran treatybefore it will act on the ant jest of the tonnage and other taxee provided by 'he treaty of MS, and, which General ILerrau has pew aojeurnlng here to arrange.- Lieutenant Parrott, of the United States Navy, hoe been ordered to tap .it himself to Ataptain Ingraham for duty at the Wa , klerrten National Observatory. The opinion has , been exp,osted in cfneisi quarters that a necessity may mtir for an extra cession of Con .gresa, owing to the condition of our foreign relettont, An unuarially.large number -of proposals for the Southern mail service are in the form of star bide, that iv. that the contracture may terry the matte by any mode they may choose, without being unlined to pa titular el/karma of Tebialelt. AVElrithetel have been given from rations quarters that certain bents will freely mimeos money on contractors , evideatea of swipe. ' Pennsylvanitt,Legislature. RASUNINDORG, April 4._ - 13EN&TR. , • . The Senate met et 3 P M. The following bills !IMO read IA place : Mr. RANDALL, one to iceorpciata the Delon Assoeta- Mon Reading Room of Philadelphia. - Also, a supplement to the aet to authorise the fasnity of Penueylvaula Oollege to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine. ' ". A communication Rl3 received from the Governer, statirg that be had vetoed the bill to 'incorporate the Pall Stook Coal Company, sod the bill to incorporate the Oslifornia Seminary of Washingtou enmity. - - The following bills were puled A anoplomenttuthe LOck Navigation on the Schuyl kill river. An act to incorporate tbo Phttat:dais Oman Mitzi. ship Company. - - An set to 171 cm-rule the Arnett= rinsnelel Army (Duff Ores s's bill) 'man by swote of yeas 27, nays 1. Adjottned. XTIMING SZNIION. The Senate met at 7 P' M. ' Tbo following bills were passed A supplement to the Second and Third atioebs Pas. meager Railway of Philadelphia, A supplement to the Lyi eta Valley Reilroadecenpary. A supplemett to the Navigation Railroad Company. . A f upplement Zonis Fairmount Market Company, Adjeureed. The House metat 8 - The following bWs pa eon firldriy An act in reference Is p rorolasery notes and bills of Mcceange. -It compels the Ars - Were and; endorsers of notes to give thtlr residence on the same. . An act to rcdeoe the Btate tax to two mills on - the dollar on taxable property. A supplement to the act innorporatlng the Cairene , Passenger It:dimly. - It authoziase the connutty to ex tend their railway by single tract, with sufficient turn outs or trdelings, - alcag Poplar street, from Nineteenth to Twentpaseond ecntorming to the established graded . Poplar street, with the right to extend the Dame to the kchnylkill river, as public tionvenience - iney vnuize. An act relettag to dtate taxes, mist - ruing the teem,- tion in the int ot last-year front three ntilia_to :twoand a hell only to real I state. 14.00111 - ned.;.: - itrEsilth mosso*: ' Thal:Emma met at 7 • motion was made to menu:Mir the lotronaro Mr. PATTERSON moved to postpone wiltairitely. Not agreed to- yeas ad, nays 131%. The bill was then postponed till iridapiarat. Who hill givisig justices of the peace posies with a Jury of Are to hear and deterrointsehargas for alma of certain osarititsiwithitsthil Commonwealth was taken up, and is anti pending _ adjortunsd. • - ' , _ The' Counetitheit:EleatlOt. , Hayl7o/I.D. grd Itemiblicana iarti-gTeettd the entire ,Clongreaalodelegatialey-as-,etailloo• the whole State ticket, and o.brge'rue.prity . of -thellgielni tare.tare... The following are' e IFOCeesiteamedidateet nor, W. A. Buckingham; pautecon; Governor, ea. ; Breainrer, L_ -Beirotatry, 7oliu -Boya; Oamptiolhas -.W. 11. The folkoohag'sratheUandffatati eleetitin` the Cos. graptoxiel delegattett - • lit dietnet-4. Lomoht, ItegulAtran,lioplaie et:Brna Clink; Jr:, Seltubittan - • •-- 244 illetriet—S.,'.lßeotittiff, - Republican, - pleas of Bamttal Arnold, Demiernat.- - 34 4littlet , :et it: - Buthb34, - Iteptetellthin place cf Stoney Dean, Ritublicab. . -, 4th dletriot-0 e. Berry, Aertb/letn, In place of Wm. D. Behr-p, Detnoc.at NIW )3a.VX*. dpzll 11 tiolock P.14..-The whole of She Filet Onnitresafonal Distrlot: Das- notakeett heatB from', Out D Loomis, the *eptitthean eaadidtte is re ported se elected lc the simunlielsiot LlWofilratt (Rep ) has 46.0 ruejori , y , , the Thiri'dletrlat the-terrine are not complete busthe ludivattoms are that_A;- A„ Burnham (Rep., has ecseral honored ni*Jorlly In the Routh district 0. B. Perry (Rep is certainly elected. Non 4 .ArrivEd`of the Indiaia: EPosvcrain, hytll4.=Midnight,--The et:amebip lndiaa bee not yet wen s.gptie4 boomr,_the wilt bring dates to the 2,d idt,lddr sLikyd lAter tlin t odvious Xosorean adsioes. ' - • Crevasses ?by iihri:lbssissippi. Nsw Outesks, Ape 2.,9everst serions erevassee hat. .caused to the river bank above the city, and threaten amens, denisgh..thos..fratei , ..aine Wag at a h abet point than at any time bat A ter.. R BIT Offili .413, April '4 —taw!, CtErTaPree have CC corm! In the levee on the Lontelana aide of the river, at Dian ond Island, fio!xang marry-plantations. there are also miens apprarentirms oP I hi - elicit' the levee shove the mty, and five huLdred men have beenput to work in etrensttrealsgAlre.erataV -Theviver at Itieksbre , g iron 2 finring Uri 1100 a el list year: 'lttur4eF of it. 'Wife am; AtkezOliteASuiCitle - 'of the husband;• -1 DILTHOIT, April 4 ,d4dwirdH:Benedtat, a residect or this mty stabbcd his wit:o9A As cr jealousy to- cdsj killing her abriost hydro:Alp. , Ideaftartriode attempted to commit suicide by hanglists himself.' He was taken into custody. - : • St 4 Louli Altanici 4 pAl 'Election. sr Loop t .4prir —lnoaraillita 'Wavle !mai the rations wirde of theeleclfonitald'te diy. Indicate the ra•election of 0 D Filley, The Berry linen atdldate for Meyer, bye mrjority of 1,006 td 1 , 600 Tot.a. The rote rolled woe s very large oce. _ Election aY Dettolt, Michigan; DETROIT, Ciiillf‘dlreaTe the Republican candidate t.l - r Chief - Imams et the bupreu e Court a majority Or:lby bundled and ttdripaLt Totes. NfislF. York 11.0.01';'SCepient. Nie Wee; A pal' we ta ekbr' bulk stitement shows the lolloWlei results es' einapszed with the pre vious weck t Increase of loans - ;951 Coo specie ' - " circulation .11.3.03 .• ' not depoo,to •-- , 41.80.10,,0 Hon. G. W..l.(aiiFisp, -4?l,4itifY,T,Ao4l°lii"n• WASHINGFIOX. .106ea,..0t lowa, who riot declined ' the' 'lakeside te . 8040 . a, telsgrapbed tO:the Prtßiderit: 3esterday.. orittidrativit Me eeelers!on." It atm beitintititied ttVrepartlitkiltill immi.1444,1, at,therkeintectent. • r • • - _ • . _ , Prom the flstenAiVp %VAL: , Sr. Louis. April 4 —The' tt:lolieiati;talitddllearta that au elVadiVililar Vaticriki did?' tribes anqiiiiVirins. toad dDp the Aftotlpms. gotiatlca9 are now pending betwada tha,c4f.jear.od, Anapalpea, Cum, pad other trines. _ 111-, k.lo.littYlitti: - ' Nsw YORK., April 4.....Thti rteetcritsfpr"..,.4trrlVeid et thld port esrly thts'lnorping, iv - ma tlektuilit the 36th 'it:; , The pipera coetalcmo political neereetleapectseee. The RUSIII94 frigate Goiter sealed on tne - 80oh Pe- New York. EkTANA -417 tar lagelive - kreigleta imptortd, Each dexe,ort Lot dozhil. peccsot.retclucci ; on Nan ~ T orli; MeeleLoir per cent 'enseeno.t. _ From-Caliwthia. - DIT OVRALAND MAIL ET Loom, April 4 ....The overland. mall,- irate See Frenel au on the 11th oft , arrived Jut Welt. In coneiquenee or the loose the express bag, o. ly a few papers are melted, and 'no news of ireportanea la furniehed. . Destructive Fire at Dmitri)le t jj. 3. , DA9Y[LLw. H: Y , Arai 4 --Yas together with ,levana fine - Noche of dweiltner 'wee burnt iest,tle,r; The lent te,eattlwtttirfAt-09,094.-. - - • ,Municipal 01/ Louzavlt.t,r, Oppggitlon - candidate for Mayor wag eh cted to.dg*,. lb, °pavilion Algo elcoted moiortlY of ettl ,7 ittcOlialftbat - body "standing 18 Opposition to ° iihavniCuctio iiiaabera• Itiarketa by' Teleggaph. 1 , 1r.w Oaimage:Apia 4,—Cetton:-.40.1ett to.dac 3,010 prieiii trzegstlar,'‘Wlttimat atteretnn ; dna'ets awaiting the exinoted rotelgu Engar dull at Oh; Freights .n'Ootten to ilyerpoot tenni ca. Agit 4 --:Oottai—Ealea of SOD o.lst et 1/ ant2e ; dialers ere waiting-the steamer , . advisee. eIIiIILVSTON, April 4 —Cotton—There is an improved demand, and a hettat feeling in the - market.- _ - Later from Ifttiana. The United Statecircuit steamaistp-Ceha,yba, 'D. BaHook,. commander, from flew cidemaa , via Ilavona, arryeed'at New York yesterflaYnifiruiwgi ha v ing left the,laitor plum on the evening of the .7'3oth ultimo. The gay season at Navanale nearly Ovir, arid, 11.9 a na , ural ea,weequenceoLeopla arleaving for the North, Ainong_the _prontweis ilio-Oa bawba are a pfirtinn opera: tienpe of 'Alas Maretzek. Nom Yolk Stock "'change, Awil=4.- 360 Boilem It'prr " *CI,K 103.1110 h Con_.-,_ ::_ -- 740i( 12 2111 k, Kiss II _ 616 , 8. 'ti ]e: Ctis R 00 160. Nloo.19 . &. X Ind 1.8 ) ; lao — d 6 ' 680 10,3 j 10/ idftit,gper 00g 1.0 - ' 4. --.,-- --,-AVX 00. 7 4 t "- Asti 40ji 100 ~-4 do-'_t- - .160 40.6 c 100 ', ,;,..: -, do irl:. ,At4l. 403 1 00 Papaw , ' Y l, - . * - - - q•litlitif 300 461 & Oki R OM 81% 100 do 610 eta! 60 do 674" 16 Clink Tan 26cji is . scoxr, 100101) V, 65 4 11 104 M 1000 Tenn efi s 93 000 Cal bt Is 15.5, 85 AtWO 511seour1 0 . 3 10000 - do , • um. 0 .lErieith int Ws 'Oh 1000 A. 131) 5 0 111 Coo Alas t.7)1, 10 0 MIA iL2I b atx. 150' • tia - , LEO Y Can 11; PO:Id PI 10,, ..: i'is IS w ' do 16N 450 - Iledltlr 1130 Ad% I 300 do UN 100 Uszloci 8 MO I.IIX
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers