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"r-r.• r-rqi •r• 'IT 11T 17 T't T •. . . • P1TT513141,1411; - Fltl DA - .7it. 1 „,„W41 :.:,,,... ~..a- 4,86§ t , L ,, . -„If 6,i;-_, '1 ~ 4---- - , . E FIRST 1017101. rwmicivia 4,,crwca. FORTIETH COIi,IGAPS. Senate , Special Committee -- : A , caucus Republican :" Senators . was , held this morning, to take. into considers- e tion the propriety of a c cepting the resig nation of Colonel 'Forney as; Secretary of the Senate. After aninterchange of opin- - ion, which brought forth the, fact that a great many, if riot theinsiority of the Rad feels were in faNktor of accepting =the r nation at once, it was thought best to post pone action until • next Blonday. There • was quite a little breeze in the caucus, oc cannoned by the presence of , the sixßepub . lican Senators Who voted for the acqui ' ttal St. ' I d pillil i Market: : - 'of the Preside 4 on the Impeaohnient arti :,Ur Telexessai to the Ylitsbuilth easette• 3 ' cies. This was objected to by many the ' ere LOUIS, MaY 2 8 . - - 46 baccot tem anima . earnest 7iedictdl, and Wade, Vhandler, Cat tion in -the market; • buyers sad. tellers tellsmd others of the extremeßadicals at apart, but-previous prices are Maintained: - once withdrew ' and refused`topartieipate, commonp very =; dull ; :. sales: of middling at while the recr eant Senators 'were present. • 24,( 1 e, . Hemp In demand but none in the, .E 4 ,9 01 ,a0r Cgesswell,Af Maryland. Is the market. , Wheat : dull tend lower ; choice candidate moas!prominentlY named as etto fall A264A32, 6 5;• No. 1 , spring 4 2 4 99 a 2 9 95 . moor taTorney, and the indicatiens are Corn inactive and prices talubung9d. ,Ots that be will b&,,e i hmen-oliblendaYmois. it steady 80a81)io. • Barley-quiet; sales of apneUs that . • /brag, is not au grailotes prinie spring at. 52,00. PTO none in the toliave his retgatition aaeaptad . aal e ro . nierkety Provisions dull and . heavy, with , foaled to be a w weeks Mu: arid it . is p un only a retail buainees doing. Pork, small derstood that if the Senate would „refuse to sales -- at , wlssso3,oe:"—Bacen; clear sides accept hie rest'• ation, this adios/would be .17)0 1 73‘ 0 ' . shuulders 10qauspr i o. i lard dull ' perfenlyacce table to hlto.:;Sedidii Crew t r and mu/nig at 10c. ~T here to. o small buss well, Geri..J; Brisbin,.Ex•Senatorloater, n*doing'itilive, stookUtualduinged r ates ' of. OunnuotkM Par-Sehator : Vont !Orli Iptt-410.)11r:- 749 l'blAN'`` , o l teo, 4, 9 4 67 Ilatataddre r Mr. McDonald ,!„praent Vhi ew bush;Aniah;,borit;'o,o4` cats; 111876-ut,Lg• ' Clerk 'of the !iotti,* are ' applicauwfor the .-', , ..- ,-•• * '.4...i: illp;L;--.-• :.. , .'l „, '; • ' SOCeretintelg 'i ~=.: . ..*.,'`A -.‘1,; ~ . , -,,,,,, -- ll‘'.sB4lNlti Market. ''' -•- , ~ iSoon-altir , the Senate et, t ;n ' Cllv TeleiteitUtt o rittiburg a 43 " 8 • . mends ‘ °ls) =int rise/a ci:-,to the ef ,,,,,....., 0,,i,,„ 2A4 .1.1t 8 ,,eipt5.'-',4hent • 40;= feet Abet : With sof' . be - tender „,.„, , Ptl i f,=.,/7•" 4 4: 000. b u , Sour 7,000 bbls.: :eiltegou;s.4l."-Stautrout us it t l e ilt v t o yr it ; ta t ir h e ar.l4,soo -Isili_uurn 2,5•400, du ringcornandilt° rebellitai; but in tlta , rin z. dun and un " , ..Wiseetiutdk4 recent aletiggle to 'estakliskpmea sales 7.800 bu NU. 2 Milwaukee - club at VA& out tke cou n try, a ith irm a, .._thrcHkg_ h corn in fair deeme d for interior; sales 80,000 d otor oing a b o y ndri the ow eas o mi bl ets ooted. o_Mz ummili oo th iffin--. 0 reeo u . i w nti liiea r on 7 , lota Oats d x u rd nat bu at 990 in small load m WOO. Other article' . and it went tker ' . • . . i , un til 'w•Dierririf. Arrest_of Alleged Lottery Schemers. By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette. PIIILADBLPHIA, May 28.—The defunct Riversid and Washington Library Lottery scheme is again before the public. The narties in Boston who drew the $40,000 prize were unable to obtain the money .and had warrants issued for the arrest of the alleged managers of the scheme, including District Attorney Mann. Hon. Jaines M. Scoville, of New Jersey; W. W. Ware, of the New Jersey Legislature, and others. A hearing will take place on Monday next. Itrown, the Child Murderer. MT Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gasette.l ‘ ALltAlirt, May 27. - -Judge Ingalls, of the Supreme Court, has refused an application to grant a stay of proceedings in the case of Joseph Brown, the convicted Canaan child murderer, who is to be executed at Hudson on Saturday. The 14th of September has been fixed as _tho day on which the new trial of General Cole, for the murder of t. Harris. Hiscock, will 00111.111437126. • • Preparing' for a Fenian Attack. {BT Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette., Morrrunat, May 27.—The Hera/die spe-• oial, says the troops in the garrison bore BO under, orders. The soldiers' wives at St . :John's have been ordered out of their _barracks, .and accommodations; for 2,000 troops Are being prepared.:, The hospitals artivrovided with, del& paraders. Govern. meet deteeliVeli arnuittehing the frontier. • . . 4,,ettery Injunction, Eliseo'red. [73, Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gesette.3. LOUISVILLE, IMay 28.—Judge - Johnston, of the ' Circuit Court, to-day - dissolved the tnjwietlon against. France, Stnith & Co., uusa gOurs Of the 'Shelby College Lottery. - _ ITrue Progress Launessee We have the annexed re port of a portion , of the address delivered ysterday evening . i . in the Allegheny Diamort by Mr. Boxtrm, the Commissioner of E 1 ation for 1 Ten nessee. The statements a n deductions of , the speaker an peculiarl Ifo cible an d Pima* noel, illustrating great pr ess,' in the right direction, in one ate tof the South ernin ' States. Mr. Bokuco mmenced his address as follows : r The rebellion and its an pression have ' l l • ' brought about an entire. re o ution in the industry of America, andle nesseepargely feels the powerful influence f this revolu tion. Before the war theimportanee attach ed to the raising of cotton and the obtaining of cheap food for her slab . m ade her take a part in the policy whieh o posed' manu facturers throughout the on, so that the West, being left withont a market, in the East, might be compelled taltirnish to the South the cheap food ripe needed for her slaves. In consequencil of this policy . , the producers found them elves at 'the mercy of the planters, and the planters in their turn at the mercy of the English manufac turers. In absence of the means of support which a diversity of em ployment ramielied during every season of phe year, a large por tion of the citizens of Tennessee had to leave the state in order to seek, employment sortie where else,* while-the non-elaveholding whites who remained litihind were left with out incitement to imptive their condition, since, in the absence oan intelligent and remunerative agricult ure, the soil becaMe worse and worse exhausted. The ever widening gulf between the rosperity of the North and the declinof the South then brought in the rebellio n and in sweeping away the institution Of slavery gave rise to the adoption of apolicy in harmony with the law, without whieii no state can enjoy permanent prosperity I Now Tennessee is fully alive to the fact! that it is.only by di versification of employment, that she can escape from the low condition to which her former policy has brought her, that shemust bring to light her mineral wealth, that she must use her water pc:" er for the establish ing of manufactures, t she must have a home market for her ; farmers, en increase of farmers to feed he !. constimbig **Pula tion, and that to attain this end she needs capital and the intelliintlaboi of the North. The day of emigrat en, when thousand of her children sought a hoome insther parts of the Union, has gore by, anthe day of ' immigration, when 1/ , ' her wise policy she invites the, capital d the labor of other States to her borders lissome. It is a very sad experience through which she has arriv ed at this knowledge Of her need. Ido not only refer to the ravages of , war though they have been greaher saddest experi ence has been the impoverishing of hersoil s during years previo ' to the war, and the decline in the scale Of wealth and of intel ligence of a large portion of her population. But she has learned the lesson at lastund a brighter future is dawning upon her. She no longer turrerto England to do her man ufacturing, or to the ' West to furnish her with cheap food, buC she endeavoraby the development of her own manufactures to obtain a market fr her , farmers, --, being / mindful of the fact hat by a healthy com petition among her wn people she is keep ing within her own o rders the wealth she produces, and thus Penefits every chute of her inhabitants. 1 1 _. I am glad to find in my intercourse wit h citizens of this city bow true and enlight ened a view they take of the change which is going on in the South. They are_ fully alive to the fact that if, by a development of herresources, Tennessee ceases in many instances to draw her supplies from the North, the new impulse given to her pros perity by the develOpment of her Own_ re sources must in thh end be the meant; of benefitting othef parts of the Union. •• , We take pleasure announcing that Mr. Hokum speaks in Manchester, at 7% o'clock this evening. l' t . . • =I Eill IMI 444,0.4 : f."' 11 Q II II ■