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Show DESERET EVEHI1TG UEWS ; m GEORGE Q CANNON " Trdoa7, probable - Jaary i.Y m-ic- E IS, IMS. crnorc Tile war rloml which hw lowered io tbrMUnlngljr ofrX5ufUet" aemtvto i r. 4- bpkn!ns mwmy, d and the prospects for peace &re cai9 or other thi royal Jobber fyCKnrojvedanoteetn inclined for wt Jut at th prent time, and so they 4atarfift to priTint Turkey and OreecW coming to Uotra,1 and, from our latest telegraphic dlspatcbe, It eenu likely that their eflbrt will b sooceaa taU ThConrreaea the aatra Qoestiou assembled la Paris on Satar-da- y last, and remained la teailoa for a?ertthours. The fcegotiatloni, a far aWdncted; It U laid, Vefe highly atlafactory, the representatives of the two belligerent "powers manifesting a very conciliatory disposition Another sitting U li believed, will be soffldent to Mtlle the question, and to so arrange matters that war will b averted, and millions of property, aad probably thousands of lives, preserred. Xlecent news from tCret, also annoancet that the. islanders have about given op their struggte and submitted to the power of the Sultan. m '.-.-. it This promises well for the present peace of Europe', and although it may be the result of tbe Interference of the Ureat rowers, It must not be attributed to any other motive (than that of policy. None need for a moment suppose that the Ciar or his brother Kings have been Influenced by motives of humanity only; they cannot afford to let such motives Influence theoi'Wben they 'obstruct the gratlflca-tloof royal ambition. A war between brigbten-inoVcafa- Vi i vW'Ui political horlron - t I. I t ! J. I.' Ml Ml it 'f ; ' ? f 4 so-cal- led nt TrkejLand, .Greece, wouldi wlthouta doubt, have resulted in a general European war, In whkh; ItoasJa would have be xi ( overmatched, (, aad again baulked In her designs on' the 4slck man.'? And though she la prohably.the most colossal power Jn Europe, she has not forgotten the contest In the Crimea w,,L.fM, fron'a4iou7.,v Is s ecesslty In EurBeslacj, peace ope Just now. The people of the Continent are uneasy, and the flames or war once Ignited, who know 'what the result might b4 la France, the dynasty of Napoleon is becuulasT obnoxious. The people of 8 pain are still in a state of great excitement. They have rid throiTOivesrof a crownel head lately; nd though the aristocracy and the adherents Uf. royalty ire. doing' ihelr best to rcitore the institution', though It may be in a modified form, and will probably be successful, yet there la no knawiqg what effect a war between little Greece and the once mighty Ottoman to assert Creempire, waged ostensibly tan liberty and to ' secure-Cretanee .m Igb t ba vev Tbe di ploma-tls- ts of Eorope are alive to this. They would without the leut remorse or compunction wage remorseless war if y se doing the sjstem under which they thrive would be at all likely to gala by It; but peace must be preserved if tier is the least fear of a contrary rie- sult. Hence a peaceful solution of the Kstern difilculUee may be anticipated. It I a necessity nnder present circumstances. It is however a blessing to the people of Europe. The best of limes with them are by no means too prosperous; while their condition hi deplorable when the only trade flourish log Is that of war, for then distress and misery prevail generally. V This question of war with Turkey and her ultimate downfall la but a matter of time, and It would probably be a gala to the cause of progress and civilization if It were to take place Russia is seemingly tbe power destined to accomplish this work-- , and If er progress for the next fifty years equals that of the past fifty, and it promises to be lndnltely greater, the 'sick must Nman, J euccumb, Turkey though thel balance, St Ipower" In Europe should have been for evecloH sight tof, and .British rule In the East Indies bei completely over- ? i . r J . -- -- inde-pen- de n t .1 to-morro- w. 'I 1 V ; KDXXORXjtX . IS ' iv fiuaiuny. Ah the importance of producing wool and cotton in large quanUUesand of building factories and importing machinery for their msn oXictaxe are beginning to fjree themselves upon the attention of the people of this Territory, it may not be amiss to call their attention to the act that' machinery, equal in every respect to any used in Great Britain, can now be obtained of American manultcture at the work of the Bredea-bur- g Manufacturing Company, Philadel' From this company most of this phia. class of machinery now in use in Utah has been purchased; and from an account In one of our exchanges of a visit paid these works recently by a party of gent!emen,we learn that an Improved cotton carding machine, and an automatic wool spinning are now msnulACtured by them. : The cotton carder is built after the model of the most Improved now in use in England, bnt , the. company , have expended 120,000 in Improving and adapting it to home grown cotton. Tbe improved machine ba3 about two and a hall time the power of the old machine, and U fast comuse. ing Into TL i i toratio wool spiianerlj considered a great improvement cpoa th machines; ma-chl- " g-n- eral ne hitherto used in this country for this pur pose. This improvement is the result of a teur of Inspection made by CbL Jenks, the President of the company.through the wool and cotton factories of England, France, Italy,' Austria, Switzerland and Belgium. The preference was given by Coh Jenks to one used by Flats Bros, of Oldham, Lancashire, England, one of which he purchased and brought to this country, since which the company hare succeeded In making samples of the machine equal to If not superior to the original. To show the super rlorlty of the automatic over the hand mule it need only be said that the former dispenses with the spinner and twister, and manipulates six hundred BpLadles VfhGe the latter only average from ninety to one hundred spindles. By next J uly it U calculated that the company will be able to make one of these machines per day. The completion of the railroad, now so near, will make the importation of all kinds of machinery .very easy. . And as it is desirable when. Importing machiaeryof any kind, to have that with the latest improvements, we thought It advisable to call the attention of the people of this Territory to these improvements in cotton and wool this manttfactoring machinery effected byfirm. enterprising Philadelphia i - t FW the OXCBESSIOXAL. r - SENATE. 1 f 1 i I ; ! j . t j r re-ques- ted " " , - Freilnghuysea presWashington. ented a memorial, signed by several well known capitalists, setting forth that the proposed subsidies to the northern Pacifle, and the eastern division of thoTAciflo Railroad amount to. besides tbe tan d grants, 125,000.000, and offering to construct either or both the roads for a subsidy of $160 (?) per mile in addition to the land grants, thns saving the Government $75,000,000. They-of-- . for to give bonds, endorsed by capitalists representing a hundred millions.reSeveral blila were Introduced and ferred Including one Incorporating a railroad from Little llock, Arkansas, to the terminus of the National Paclflo Railroad on the. Rio Grande. The bill grants twenty alternate sections of land on each side of the road, and $16,000 per mile In government currency, the bonds to be secured by a second mortgage. . The Bur Murphy claim was debated when the Benate nd- till four O'clock ; Journed. rVvi',!; unto, introaucea a dui for Ashley, or for a temporary government Alaska, also a bill in relation to the election of delegates from that Territory. Referred to the committee on Ter"r r. ritories. A bill to equalize the bounties of the soldiers, sailors and marines who served In the late war for the Union was considered. Washburn e, of Indiana, supthat $50,000,000 ported the bill, saying would more than cover the amount needed. On bis motion the bill was recommitted, Washburne, of Illinois, moved to lay the motion on tie table. which was negatived, and further con sideration on the motion was postponed for three weeks. i pro-Tidi- ng : . HOUSE. j Butler Introduced a bill to authorize the Issue of national currency, and to ensure its stability and elasticity, and to lessen the interest on the public debt and to reduce the rate of interest. Butler supported his bill by a lengthy speech. The bill was referred to the committee of Ways and Means. rJpaulding, from tbe committee on reported a resolution Appropriations, the all that papers and evidence returned to the War Department by Davis, Holt and Campbell, commissioners, touching the claims of the Department of the West, before Oct. 14th C1, be turned over, to tbe Attorney General, who sball examine the same, and that such as have a bearing on the Court of Claims be printed and received bv said Court: subject to the examination of the wiiUeee of either party. The was passed. Dawes presented the crcdentla'a of J. M. Casemeut, as delegate from Wyoming Territory. Washburne of, Illinois, objected to his admission and Referred to tbe committee on Elections. It, the Judiciary com Boutwell. from mlttee, reported the Ucn of the; United States on the! Union Pacific Railroad, lie said the Kastern division waa not affected by the alleged Irregularities or Illegal proceedings of the company in Its construction. TUe report ; ; was ordered printed. j, a Banks 'reported 'resolution,1' which has already been published, proposing the protection of San Domiuiio and Hayti by the' United Htates. A runniog debate ensued, .at lue. conclusion or which the House adjourned, the rejoin tlon going over till re-olutl- j 1 . - . to-nig- ht purposes, u ' , ,,; jL , . ' -- i f ; ? . rati t T jrprrial : ; w;; itss iJi i ! ; I ; - V to-da- y, . ; -- " 1 "' . . : to-d- ay , 4 rj!trtiff5; p i; nrDnfis 'JSveMnng:, i ! i1 "WEDNESDAY,-JAN- j Duwroan SOS's. TTaJtTXD TO ZlxaT. A house of two; or three rooms In the City. Appl to A. Fyper & Co. East Tempto atreat,one door South of the West- uoou era A icnipavuuOT. on drsucht at Savus' CnrcACo Stocb: d 13 Sat the Bait Lake Billiard Room; t j 84-d- tf i . llSOll. t- t- . a j '"'- rll:. - V ' OI? : "' iu A MOTHER'S PRAYER. : ADUERTISEnEflTS. flEVJ from the Opera, JIAItl E, With Gems "I'll tell Nobody," .;. JUST R ECEIVED FROM IKE EAST! Londen. It Is reported that the principal members of the Insurrectionary let rnibles. .. government of Candia have fallen into raney Htatlwaary. the bands of the Turks and. have been tieheel Dletieaarles. Iklarfes for lSt, ' thrown into prison. Sterea. Havana. it la (reported on good auBrvaait A Uaotckeeniitar. Htrattan the' commission which rrmvmm mm bllk thority, that m.ic, -a.ie AT ' left yesterday to meet the rebel chiefs at Bayome, is fully empowered to con- 0. H. Elliott & Co,'s Book and Stationery Store, cede pardon and political rights, on the Opposite Bishop Hunter's Residence. basis that Cuba shall continue under the flag of Spain, The rebels are closely pressing the siege of Unevitas, the -- Wanted Immediately. garrison of which has turned one of the churches into a fortress, and with the assistance of the Spanish vessels of war IOO MEN TO CUT TIES AND in the harbor are holding out for reinTIMDEI? ! forcements. A detachment, sent to CONXOR A Co., Salt Enquire of ifcNASSER, their relief by land, has been, defeated iaae as or ur. uouse; vuiistvui, is. r. t ar. no 044 S by the Insurgents.' The latter have ' artillery, but are well supplied with Spencer rifles, which they use: with ellect.' Transports with fifteen hunIIOTICE! dred troops from Cadiz arrived here tot j . "Throu b Meadow Green," tr., Virgin," Prayer"HolT "When I my Native I.and' "Fire o'clock In the Morn in?," Doet, with Pierrot, 'Two Sous for You." j t , 5 The Grace of Heaven SOLO AND CHOhlJS . Ce-eterat- lve s i 1 -- v - I "-i- For EyntvM e Foafer crnd Programme, i - dJ ' S3trOOirS OPEN At Vt o'clock. Performane' commences pa net aatly hi 7. i ; .ti ! t , I day- . ! j StITCliElX have ibis my mold to pODBE V F, A. SIITCnaLI their entire stock el TT General Merchandise, as well as tbelr caomu- slon. Forward nr and Afeney Doslness. .Mr. Mitchell wU contlnne business, as heretofore, la itXCHANGE BUILDINas, and I respect-rall- y aoUrlt from oar frteuds throngboat the Territory the same liberal patronage for him as has been enjoyedy the Ann. i A 1 5 ' ' - -M. 11, 18GJ. NOW ARRIVING". - ; ; KCXKXTIFIC. One dull day In August, just after noon, a balloon rose In; the air at the foot of.Cleed Hills, on the western edge of the central plain of England. It waa inflated .with tbe lightest' of gases which chemical skill could produce,and it rose with surprising velocity. A mile up and it entered a strata of clouds more than a thousand feet from this, the sun shone brightly on the ! thick.--Emerarl- ne air snip; the ssy overhead was or the clearest and deepest blue, and below lay an Immeasurable expanse of clouds; whose surface looked as solid svs that of the earth, now wholly lost to view. Lofty mountains and then' deep, dark, ravines, appeared belrwjrthe peaks and sides of those cloud mountains next the sun glittered like snow,'- bnt 'casting shadows as black as if they were solid , rock.. ... Up rose the. balloon' with tremendous velocity. Four miles above the earth a pigeon was let loose; it dropped down through the air as If it had been a stone. The air was too thin to enable it to fly. to the deck were It was as if a to pass from shlpaden tbe heavy waters of the sea into an Inland unsaline lake; the bark would sink at once In theJ thinner water. Up, up. still higher! What a silence profound! The nights of the sky were as still as the deepest depths of the ocean, where, as was found during the search for the lost Atlantic cable, the fine mud lies as unstirred, from year to year, as the dust which , Imperceptibly of a deserted gathers on the furniture house.' No soand, nor life only the falling through a skybright sunshine wb ich it could not warm. Up Ave' miles above earth higher than the Inaccessible rummltof Chlm borazo or Dawn girl. Despite the sunshine, everything, ft teres. The air grows too thin to support life, even for a few minutes.. .Two men only are in that, adenturous balloon tho, one steering the airship, the other retching the scientific instruments, and rebred of cording them with a. rapidity long practice. Suddenly,' as the latter looks at his Instruments, his sight grows dim, he takes a lens to help his sight, and only marks from the falling barometer-that are rising rapidly. A theylies flask of brandy within a foot of him; he tries to reach U, but his arms refuse to obey his will. He tries to call on his comrade, who has gone up to the riDg above? a whisper In the deep silence would sufiice bat no toand ccraes from his lips he is vclcelera. " The Etccra-ma- n comes down into the car; he finds his comrade in a swoon, and fscls his . own senses falling him. He saw at once, that life end death hunsr unon a few moments. He arfrd or; tried, to tzlzs the valve in order ta let cut xorne 'cf th3 ncn dt, csd Ilishsnds are purp Is with Interna c ii not res they are paralyrgJ, th?y i 4-- : : 1 : .- -: r!. SOO 2TOTZOE! : 800 WJI.8, GODBE snd F.CZtTTCIt-EL- L the style of GODBE & MITCHELL, , under is his day, by mutual consent, DISSOLVED. All parties k no wing thenuel ves Indebted to the firm, bxnote or otherwise,, are respeettony Tt quested to call and settle the same without de lay; and all those having claims against us will 22 please present them for settlement. " ";. : d44w9 tf OOoe, Exobsng Bolldlnga. ? ; ' BOO ; IbsJ IlnenTTliread,; ..JlTnt ;300 so : ' ; lOsrslila-issfcXsrasvcr- s, 1,000 BWaOG, bsnkrnpbAssignee. P. I Wir.LJAMrt. : GLUClty, Jan.ll,l&e9. r 200 cncs Ddots antl SIioe, ij doz.l 7S carefullyBrushes, -- id. .lected. ft: ,t SO case ? cat ;. AtNorted XXosiery and , V 4 8x10 Glass, ' Palm and German 230 EigntloyrClocls, 130 coses Detroit Matches, "13b hoxes 'Vnxeme Star Can-- ! 20. . :xJXCS:iU " with Warehouse attached. Also, that finely situated plot or Land, with Hoaae, Orchard and .imp roTements thereon formerly owned by Jacob Hontc, Esq., snd situated on the corner of East Temple snd Emi gration Streets. For partlcnlara call at , ;.: . J r v Vt 'i 1 dies, IOO cases Saponirer, - . k ' 230 chests Very Fine Ten. 3,000 lbs. choice brands of To- ; f 4 3,00O lbs, TFhite Xead ,,v, 1,000, gals. Iterosinc, .uw ' ' . 'fV ;:;-..- . ' vr . 1 am Kit xurps, Linseed Oils,. and 15 ' crates Ass'd Queenk- :.! Wflfe ; 1 : Axle Crense, 230 Itcgs Xails, and eommodleoa Building occuand repied by "The SClners National Bans-',A cently by llestrs. llnisey, Dahler Co., 107 feet deep sad 43 feet front on East Temple Street; se- - -- 1200 boxes The rollewlna eligible real Estate for Sate t; .'r,lr; . .K ; - FOR GALE! . UleacU; Goods, 200 doz. Suspenders. d41V7w491ea ; That large cambrics; SOO , 2,000 dos. Spool Thread. Worsted Tl raids, 18 HEREBY QIVEN thst I will, on Imt. st 10 o'clock: arau. at the offlos of E. P. JO ah SON, Salt Las e City, sell at sale, to the highest Bbidder, all toe notes publle aberrant In Bebdule and of ti peUUon ,o . J - ARSorted color ,", il,OOOl NOTICE W. 1 ,: NOTICEI UOEQK - tine Stripe, Denims, Ea.DrIIIs, bueks aiidOsnabiirg!. 230;;, Jeans, Satinclte, 1 .1 - ,, Site i 12th Inst., between thaQ'obe LOST, on tbe L.ake City, and Sessions Set Salt m roll ol CireentMkcJc to tbaamoantor lrmn', su.73w xne nndar win be rewarded aa atxvne st this Office, or at AKSOK f;n:peaame o obure, oesiiona. wuuu a shawls, 200 ifc - 01O nEX7AHD. ' ApproTed si j JeJ of 300 300 ' " !' Flannels, Itlanltets; .. 5 - t . --- 1 Goods, 5ti; :iTicksiv;;::v; ;.. sao;:,, OO - . Choice Dress j, 00 ;jT ; '.; 1 h'f " - "'SOO j; I rpiis; Jel.niiies, j, X.lnsej'Si, 150 ..! PARTNERSHIP heretofore ezUUog CO C. f , iV NOTIONS;. HARDWARE, 1 TT'-- .1TT--- J. ; rtONTINTJE3 to give Instructions In the Art or Cutting erer article tot Ladles Uenu and Children. t.v the late, itrs Cart la ITlae lledela. Ladies, avail rnnr. set rea of th U opportunity, tt wii t take you only . a few hours. mm.ffnitUmc. T7tX Ward, uear Union. JLcarf'-my- . 14'-'- I " i ,I . , f..-- j yj- i J 1 AGLSTS Wasted la the various Settlement. d!73 ftJt trt 4 i li Ir'.l; Xancrr''. GJuocorico,) -- - .... .,. i:ii:!:il7Q(lsnoruiaGo a ETC, ITCh i H t s V '.' tl i , 1 "I W l i . j Selected with care, at afavorabte time the Jua8tam Market,' TEar.iGitLov f;or cach. 1, 1 TXT i d42 .raii'&i-;- t 'f - . . ... . tS W tf 7,; t j . ( i t?t M - . , -- 1,000 ,, ; - -- - Prints, ''00;.W. 1 Sheet In li,500 , dllwidtf t....... i. : .1 . cl.w.S.-U0DBE- TiSke C rity, Jan. Halt -- i w , to-da- y, e J We have the largest and beat stock of Boots The performance will consist of the Ccarm RhoM and TTa.ta in Rail lake City, and we wUl sell as low as any other home In town. 'Call " and exasaine at j. to-morr- ow. . V j - --A:-: ! : - j - i2 a on Klght thorough examinatirns of the locality assigned tbe shoal have been made the present season, but no Indication of bottom has been found witha line. a hundred fathom 5U Ioula,' 12. The prise flht between Allen and Davis camo oJT on Charleston Island, a few miles above the city. A steamboat load of roughs went to the scene of the combat." Alrounds len won the ftjrht. Forty-thre-e, wers fought. Davis was badly punished, Bt. Louis. Governor McClurg was Inhas not augurated reached here. yet "The Karrsas Iegislature was organised todsy, the Governor's message will in " - . j San Pranclsco, 12. The ahlp JCing with Yokohaarrived Philip ma advices, to December 15. The reported surrender of Prince Aidxu Is confirmed and the civil war In Japan Is con elde red at an end.; A capitulation was concluded on November six th.the birthday of the Mikado. Yedoofhas become the permanent residence the Mika- a do. : The Tycoon has retired to his pri-v? possessions, with all his people who wished to follow! him. Those willing to take employment under the new government were retained. The removal of the people of the Tycoon from Yedo December 15. Some 13,000 commenced were- - to be sent to the Tycoon's new ship An province of Shlmldzn. The one trip I'jiutip was chartered, ana maae to the Province, carrying 1350 passen'I gers. ' Paris. The Sublime Porte has disas a patched Sadlk Pasha to this city; war for to a loan special agent negotiate .. . '(E5..HI'aEiEiS , 1 - i .r-Ovxcimcrx- - rned mM--retu- s re-m- :, itnsw" njEWADUERTISEHEHTS. pond to his will. He seizes twic?, thrice. The baUoon beganlodeecend. rnen ine bwwucu saw tne to consciousness, andWm-He .before steersman ttandiDg must Instrument they hU looked at have been nearly eight miles up: but now the barometer was rising rapidly jstatm 4 KsasriHi: B.' lsvssa & JT. Hm,the balloon was descending. Brandy was used. They had been bigher above Encarement or tbe DisOffuIshed Lyric At any living earth than mortal manorOne minute before, been had. thing Inaction of compulsory inacmore of steesman.whose the of tion on the part senses were failing him, and the air ship, Who will appear as r with. its intensely rarified gas, would have been floating unattended, with two corpses, In the vide realms of space. r a 1 ed en-gig- - i 1 ere-dentis- ls. - ;- a ' -- ; 1 LEGISLATIVE. lct pursuant to adjournment. CotJXCiL, A eoa.ua uulealion was received from the Honorable 11 wia Illggins, announcing to the Council that lie had arranged with the Postmaster 01 Salt .Lake City for the pay meul ef the postage op all Official communication: of tho Members, Presiding Offlcers and Chief Clerks of the Legislative Asuem- bi v uurinir lis present session. j Councilor L. Snow Memorial ' to Congress for the presented, 'admission of Utah into the Union," which was read .and referred to the Committee on petitions and . ' .Memorials.' 10 a. ra. at till Adjoarnxl met at 10 a. m. Meenrs. W. Wi IouK, Clufif and' .John Rowberry appeared and -- ' were amy quaiinea. A communication was received from thai Secretary announcing that he had made the necessary arrangements with the Postmaster for extending the ttsnal postal fbeillties to tne iioufe. On motion of II ri Young the Committee on Revenue was Instructed to Inquire into the propriety of bringing In bills for repeal- in? ail laws which place taxes on sheep,' and frivinjr. a liberal premium on the beat qualities ox Bucks and Ewes which may be in tho Territory or hereafter imported: and OCNCXZAU also of a bill taxing imported San Franslsco, 12. The reveune cut- looacco, Introducing oranay wmsKey,10 sum. ana wine. ter Lincoln has returned from an unsuctill Adjourned cessful search for the sboal reported eighty miles southwest of, tbe Farra-tone- s. Savannah. Removals from ofilce.un-de- r the Fourteieuth Amendment continue rapidly; about one hundred have been removed In the last three weeks. Washington. The riecretary of State, In his report to Congress; says tho rightfulness to exercise certain judicial powers, In matters against our own citizens, has never, to his by our Consul iu Japan excalled been knowledge, Paclflo mall in question, The company. cept by the Secretaryof thinks the subject shoulden-be relieved all doubt by an express actment with a proviso for appeal to the Courts of the 'Uulted State, or to the department of State. The President to day, nominated Andrew J. Simmons, Collector of Internal 3 Revenue for Montana.'. t Fort Monroe. Receut disturbances near Kempeville, Va., between Ltbe negroes and local authorities, resulting in the logs of several lives,' have been by the arrival of a effectually quelled detachment of ISi S. soldiers. ".'Albany. Kothlug particularly . noticeable has occurrecUwlth regard to. the freshet on the pier. The current continues very strong,' and several buildwill probings aro slowly settling,- and j lost. bo wholly ably President sent to Washington. The a copy of eight rules Congress, agreed upon between the Chinee Government and the Mlnisterof tbe United States and other foreign powers, for conducting the proceedings of a joint tribunal lit can of confiscation and fines for breaches of tbe revenue laws o f XihinaSecre tary cie ward, urges Congress to approve of the rules which compromise ta be highly 'beneficial to ' merce In the east. Pittsburg. A terrible accident occur-e- d this mornlngon the Penhandle road. Heavy rains havior; washed the earth from beneath the track, leaving hund reds of tic j "Tlllioat foundation, aaletp-lnf- f C2J.v.3 CcUcbed frotu the train and hurled over the embankment sixty feet ' Esn or Taa.cz vVo learn from a relia- high. Be Yea" persons were In the car. that the locomotive Is ex- three of whocr were instantly killed ble source wounded. at Echo City tomorrow nJrjht. Tho and three others seriously pected senatorial quescars axe runnt3 to Wasatch, at the head cf Angruita, lis. aThe ,..s tion has teamed new aspect. Parry ,.Echo ..;..; A . I Th e recent Imbroglio between Bowles, of the Springfield Jlepulliean, and James Flake, J r., one of the directors of the Erie railroad, has caused considerable comment by the press of the country. Public opinion generally is against Flske; for although the arrest was made strictly in accordance with the law of the State of New York, the time and manner of the arreetmd the treatment to which the editor of the Republican was afterward subjected, aro generally pronounced outrageous, and are considered to bear unmistakable evidence that the wholo thing had been previously carefully planned, and that the Judge who issued the writ, the sheriff who made the arrest, the keeper of the prison, and all parties concerned in the transaction were the friends' and in the interest of the Erie director. The account of the transaction, as given in the Springfield lUpuUUa says: 4 "The arrest took place soon after eight o'clock, Tuesday evening, in the corridor of the Fifth Avenue lioteU Mr. Bowles was standing there In conversation with Mr. William Bond, of New York, and Mr. II sis lead, of tho Cincinnati Commercial, when the sherifTs offlcers seized him roughat the same time a writ from ly, the'presenting notorious J udge McCunn, and hurried him to the deor, and thence to a carriage which was in waiting.M 1( Bowles was immediately driven to Ludlow Street Jail. On his arrival there he the privilege of writing to .bis wife and the lawyers of Mr. Flake to apprise them of his situation. Writing materials were supplied, but after the notes were written the Jailor declared his inability to send them that night. Soon after the arrest the aflalr got noised around, and Bowles' Mends hastened to the Jail to procure his release,, offering1 any amount of ball. None of them were allowed to see him, although the friends of the ether prisoners were allowed free Ingress and egress after Mr. Bowles arrcsfand all their efforts, continued through the whole night, to procure hie release," were fruitless. lie was not subjected to the indignity of being locked up or placed In a cell, but was allowed the use ofa good sized, comfortably furnished and moderately clean room, for a sleeping apartment; and had the run of one story of the building. On the following morning ball to the amount of 50,000 was offered by Messrs, Field A Sellover. and 10, 000 more by others of Bowles friends for his appearance at any time required, and he, upon paying Sip.co for his night's lodging and breakfast, was ... . . set at liberty at about 11 o'clock. This failure on the part of the friends of Bowles to obtain Ills 'release, although ' offering any amount of bail, and making- - application to th sheriff and others vrho had the power to grant their request Is considered as evidence of collusion between them and Flske, and the outrage, as it is termed, la generally and very strongly denounced. The causes of the arrest, as given by Flsko in a letter sent for publication to one of the public Journals, is that Bowles, in the Springfield . , JtepubUan made , an attack upon him, in which he said that Flake, in his capacity as one of the directors of tho Erie rsllroad, had "probably ruined the Erie railway while piling up a fortune for himselH The multiplication of Its stock has been fearful 1 From thirty millions of nominal capital a year ago it has has now been raised to sixty or seventy millions, and what there is to show for the difference beyond some worthless securities of the Hartford A Erie road, it Is now; impossible to say, and that nothlng so audacious 1 nothing more gigantic in the way of real swlnd ling has ever been perpetrated in this country, and yet it may be that Mr. Flske and his associates here done nothing that they cannot legally Justify, at least in the, JTew York courts, several of which they seem wholly to own. Mr. Flske's operations are said to be under the legal guidance of both David Dudley Field and Charles O Conor, and now both Judge Barnard of the State, and Judge Blatchford of tho United States Court beck up and help on his proceed- J lng In the same article Bowles made some ar ka about the father of Flske being in a lunatic asylum, and said that Flske, himself, would probably finish his career in a imHi institution or in a State's prison. For this libel, as Flske. terms it, he has entered an action against Bowles, claiming fC0,00J toragcsJ There &e matter remains. The friends ofBowles profess to believe that the trial will never take place. FUke,how-- J ever, asserts bis determination to bring the matter before the courts, and if he should there is little doubt that if money can do anything towards ensuring a conviction it will be freely spent for the purpose. ; Bowles, . it will be : recollected by our readers.. was ons of the Coltkx; .party who visited our city three years sgo last June. . r uma ucciaxcu a mcmoer 01 vuu xxouse that he threw a blank rote in the caucus unintentionally. This leaves Hamlin with a clear majority of Republicans in the Legislature. Llorrilrs friends now claim that Hamlin, not bavins been declared elected by the c&nccs, are not bound to support him, - and they Intimate that they will not. A movement is on foot to bring forward a third man as a compromise candidate. Hamlin's friends claim that he was clearly the choice of his party, and waa fairly nominated, and if any member of his refuse to rote for mm he necomes a bolter. m Dwtxt Erming Km; : T , ' ' it V t -- 1 |