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“NP Ar YORK HERALD Medical Movements in the Metropolis, fey There have been and are still, protracted Albany. P I pPagn mast ¥ i = Peet "| The present isan age of activity. There is 00} meetings in the various Methodist churches ia this {Correspondence of the Herald. OSTSCKRIPT. Borer itr Eurspant gi the South, and the master and La New York, Friday, January 28, 1842, such thing as standing still. Here and there, it may | city, The result of these is a considerable acces Acsany, Turspay, Jan 25, 1815. = == | the inequalities listwere the maa” and the a = ———— | 0 there are « few long headed octogenarian, whe | som to the churches. Most of those who have | Among the candidates for the State offices, whieh ‘Wasbingsen, 9 sey jin the northern factories” The disuoieniste’ had ( Ths Dorian Whemty Humaro was published at | “uietly set in their “snug loop holes of retreat,” and!) found peace in believing, lave been converted in | ##@ beginning to show themselves, or their elaine, iar A age cantase—James @ Blemey et Newt York ie eal this otficeon Tuesday merming—and is now for sale, it | look out witha stupid stare on the bustling Babel, | the Allen street church, tinder the preaching of | @ Mr. Amasa J. en, of Delaware, member | Business im PRS gg ll sap pany ris, af Ohio, for View Preeitent This \ bie + continued report of Colf's trial, with engray- | butthe great “mass” exhibits agmuch stability a8} Brother Poisell, whomwe proposed during the last | ©f Congress for some time, for the Attorney Gene- Presidemt—Congressional wa ee ey ee bed the connection of British ings, up te the day of publication, Price two cents Lipsom salts in the process of crystalization. The | annual conferrence, for thie station, Mr. Pisano: | Talship; Davies. S. Dicetxsom, of Broome, atalent. | Agente questions of peace and war, where the rights aedistce (Q- Tue New Yoru Lascur No.4 was published ot | activity of the arch-enemy himself seems geometri- | ble sonled southeruer, and is recently from the Bal- ed man, und for some years a State Senator, and All doubt of the defeat of the bill repealing the they must mor pecteorone righ |. The south wae told this ovfioe, 21 Aan Street, on Saturday last, It is a very | cally to increase with every decade of his busy ©X-| timore conference. Our fut friends of Willett and | 1% democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor, | Bankrupt Law is removed, unless the friends of the | SPRY would be sent from at ate Cont oeeeee wt he soln a ee Zo ide number) istence. Walll street speculators reach the goal of | Second streets, must be up*and doing. Brother | "4 !'sexrzen Macx, of Tompkiss, for Secretary of | law are unwise enough to protract the debate until Tren Hebee ae Dortheast Ie oe Welied will be publis . Feet aturday. Tt wi Tae baukruptey and, plunder with redoubled speed —| Maffic willtake charge of the Odeon, in Boston, at | Se. Mr. Mack's chances, at any/rate, are slim, | the legislatures of Indiana or of Maine have time to | of the fierce democracy of the orth, whe kod ie ae aug “ eho as ia coh pi Banks explode—brokers cheat—saints squabble— | the terinination of the session of Congress, ‘This | @8he is more thaa suspected to have been inflicted | instruct the Senators from those States to go for the sould nevelepate i, house of Braintree ; and she see ad bldin ag ccama Gateny sod sve | Sd sianers go tothe devil, with railtoad velocity —| building has been eased by the Methodists for five | With the shibboleth of conservatism, from which he | repeal. ‘The discussion is perfectly useless in itvelf, | Hsloyslty. ‘There wan sence noe Teer? oe Re has net done sufficient, in these dominant times of ra:npan* locofocoism, to redeem himself. The first Menday of Fobruary is the day upon which, if not otherwise ordered, these elections will be made, and then if e of party di: Why, even the great united, yet unincorporated, years. jank-jawed, many fiagered body of medicine, “with ——- surgery and surgical and pathological anatomy,” Tue Amespe Hovonaut. + Emmett yester- 3 hascaught the contagious influence of the times, day, made an ample apology and explanation rela- tion should be! and actually bestirs itself, and; beginst think of tive to the remarks he made the day before yester- powerful to call something else than hunting after fees and “ fat ca- day on Mr. De La Forest's evidence. The Court ‘ occupaney of the Territor; . aad every hour’s delay increases the danger of such supposed The Britlih Indnezce woul th ‘a oe ayia as will ensure the repeal of the law, but Sin aaa emtiat fons. He would do the justice to 1 A . ; re Py eman from Massachusetts. i Cushi fe paesion for speech making is 80 strong in some that on thi subject, he Pprpies eeu? 1 ‘ men 8 to overpower all considerations of wisdom | him as an Amerisan stat id 2 r will be the time to try the strength | and prudence. This wasa subject, in ipline and union existing among the de-| The debate on alike interested, and he called upon the it. ‘The Crisis--The State of t What ts to be Done fs tt not time that some demons! made by the people, sufficiently back the government to the exer of good sense | cau stata id it was satisf. ‘he Paes ; ws % : the proposition to cemaure Mr. | of the Nantucket fisherm ti ist in th ees aes o Ry “ ery Fi er intefligence from os irene Bf ‘ ‘ Po en AES ae and Shien habe mocracy. The whigs are anxiously looking forward | Adams seems likely to consame the week. How | téblish # naval depot at the mouth of the Columbiss? me 4 = he Sesh ins + taclaneholy, siore BieRPA * Dark dexterity of groping well.” Balthmane’ for dissensions and discord, whereby they may pro- | much money are the, people willing t . ify 1 Another question involved was the right of search of our Washington, ir more melancholy, more disheatten- | And so the medical faculty is at last all in motion— Battimaae, Jan. 25, 1842, | {3 but they will be disappointed. The history of | the old gentleman’s vindictive hatred ta tue Say | tion of free trale ana nae etuce involved the ques- ing—more demoral ning ¢ han the preceding one. Is | jostling, struggling, squabbliug—here fighting about {Correspondence of the Herald.] the democratic, or locofoco party if you please, has] ‘The probability of a union of the whisei wl paves a pigs 3 cs sate tain ito: time to move & “school”—there, perchance, contending about | Curious Doings in Baltimore—Relizion— Lotteries | Ways shown itself able to preserve its unity and | port of the administration is gaini sduilp, {poleso ar cause cf suspicion, she bas be Fight tom The only branch of the government that seems (o | important improvements in a sticking plaster, or the "Baik : integrity firm and unshaken, am/dst all the storms sierny=. mn is gaining strength da ily. } Prison our seamen, and send them manacled to Dartmoor ’ -ct anda desire to perform its pub- Ag at 2 eri : janks raised by intrigues and apostates. Indeed, if there | The President is prepared, as he has ever been, to fg aay pedi was the confiscation of Ame- axeoutleey ethhin drip President | eee clyster-pipe, but at alleventsin a state] J. G. Benner, Eeq.:— had beenno other example, the present deplorable | fulfil the just expectations of the people as to remo- porta beth the ee re the British colonial a ig 8 of extraordinary agitation. This is certainly a queer place. The good folks | §!uation of the great whig party would be enough vals from offi He has j - feta of a oy . There was an- and In both houses of Congress, to warn them o! ice. He has just removed the postmas- question, nexation of Texas to the United the folly of intestine dissentions, and it needs no gilt of prophesy to proclaim their passage through the coming ordeal unscathed. In the Seem, to-day, we had a long and some- what interesting debate in committee, drawn out on a motion to amend the bill to incorporate the village of Chittenango, Madison county. The section io ter at Norwich, Connecticut, and the collector at between t erases mace eee ae New London, on the ground of improper interfer. | 2¢Tease of slave States is presented ence in elections. Mr. Downer is appointed post- teehee pp ig Toms, on master, and Wolcott Huntington collector. swamps of Florida; whether done These changes are only an earnest of his determi- be on pe hy am Soitek eats ware In this city in particular, ‘¢ the profeesion,” as they | here are always under some great excitement-—the style themselves, par excellence, are in a wonderful | Rev. Mr. Kirk has just left us—He carried every state of commotion. For several years past, the | thing before him, in the way of religion; old belles medical science, after lamenting the death of a few | and young ones were alilce affected by his sermons, favorite sons, seems to sit, like Niobe, ‘stupified to | and many were converted,and many got on his anx- the spirit of misrule—the spirit of mischief—reigus supreme. in the upper house, attacks are made upon the Constitution, and propositions introduced to change i(3 most vital features—in the lower house, petitions are gravely presented, praying for a “ dis- 2 - sem ~ | stone.” But the old dame has started.inte life again, | ious benches. Hope it will prove lasting. The other | relation to who shall be allowed to vote at town ti fe f, . It solution of the Union.” In both Houses the public : : 5 ‘i tinge, for the purpose of raisin, jaf. | uation to enforce the {rule promulgated by him for | wasstated that the gentleman from Masesehusetis time'asd)insney are poured’ away’ like Water: Were ‘with a numerous brood, who, Reverend gentlemen were seriously alarmed, and He moneye the Depot, oF rg Fe) appropriat- the regulation of the conduct of office holders.— eine was Secretary of State, upon the abolition 4 a 9 'y by Mexieo, wrote ‘complain- was made to strike that portion of the 8d section so | Those who have diseharged their duties honestly | ing of the act as unfriendly to the Usited aise One as to leave to every voter the right of participation | and faithfully, and abstained from meddling’with par. | °{ the frat movements of this British party was te dis- insuch proceedings. This was strenuously oppo- i is fie + arm their own country, and break down its defences. sed by Mr. Harnawax, of Chemung, who could | W,Poutics—thatis, from bringing the influence of | The Home Squadron Wat stigmatised as having Deed efi ace no reason why individuals, who were never vi- | “Mice to bear upon elections, will mo doubt be per- | 8! ed in the Stic an Convers Xo vessels sited by the tx gather, who’ never paid even a mitted to retain their places undisturbed ; but in | member from Massschuratee vot crate, He asked the highway tax, should be permitted to have a voice | cases where allegations of this sort are established, } im ry report of the Secretary. which coustenanee oes in the disposal of other people’s property. the incumbents must expect to give way for men | fore rhe Committes on Naval Affairs had now. be- “Chattering, grinning, mouthing, jabbering all,” | many were the lectures delivered by them in their . play the usual pranks of bread aad butter adoles-| private lecture rooms to their flocks, warning them People, oF to foreign nations, usthose now daily €x- | cenee, and alas! contrary to all the morality of the to beeen sill caligicee frenzy, religions diss hibited in the Capitol ? Is it not time that something | nursery, proclaim that their ‘little hands were” | pation, as some of them call it. should be done ? that the people should move ? that | exactly “made to scratch each other’s eyes.” In| However, he did not convert every, one, for balls a rally shonid be made to surround some honest | the midst of this auspicious agitation, the ‘new | and suppers have been given without number, branch of the government with patriotic influences | school” was born, but lately came near meeting the | and each striving who should outdo the other.— there ever such scenes presented to the American and aid4 a H ° », Mr. O’Suctuvay replied that it was not the rich : ce is plan submitted by our imitat. Phd greacabakde ‘of tub aiiebleP ii Cotigrene? be fate of 4 poor baby, overlaid by a fat mother. But Lord Morpeth was at several, and appeared to en- | man nor the landiord who paid the taxes and sup- | Whoee views coincide with those of the executive | the example of England in oe ean ate oe phe once : aeDpe alan AT icra the venerable dry nurses have tried to set-| joy himself much. His Lordship was in good ported the Rovernment. They always repaid them. | and hisadministration. oF es Par Rivgrh, Re coasty, apd Sieg where tad in the pass eside aking. | tle t ‘ere. “« , i rhil .¥ i “Ei % swore 4 Z ead ys é ommerce with stea: eels, A SON ushcoll #ivtch’ieannelalnwienk each still kept on short allowance. In the meantime, Pcl hae es ‘Anglais, and showed him off to Fotuy by cieta, hace he treetton eventually in town yesterday. He is in fine health, but as for | Ah!) rot so far sathe Treasury would permit. Sheuld ques ch has its Giflerent candt- | the « oldechool,” who almost lostits seven senses} the best advantage. 7 ak eye: Ary . 2 “ ‘war-come, he had the same reliance on the bard: date fort! These secret motives and | Gn ihe appearance ot the young aspirant, who bawk | , Now Me Kirk has gone, and most of the parties | {2lls., This was done in & thousand ways, by the | Spits; no man can guess, for is face, white and in. | qan ofthe north asthe s-aman of the Chraspeake, They: geivalévvic ot the dotret BF'ae. ppearance of the young aspirant, for the present run out, lectures and concerts are | 2cTease pues of articles which entered into his | sipid asa beiled chicken, has no more expreasion | would both strenuously defend the honor ofthe Americas ed so lustily for public favor, has plucked up couf-| alithe go. Never did I ace such a people, | | 4%/¥ and hourly consumption, rent, &c. For in- | than a Conestoga wagon. Perhaps he has come on | “88; #%4 Great Britain would again be defeated, dishon- bate, and prevent azy honest legislation—any sensi- stance, there was John Jacob Astor, of the city of ored and disgraced, as she wee inthe last war. Ourcities age, and js actually going “‘ ahead.” think they beattae York hollow. During for the purpose of making an issue of veracity with | might be sacked ‘and destroyed. but it w ‘a8 not in this le action y good measures from passing. I 7 ; i r* 7 New York, the richest man on this continent,whose s : i s Blo action—any good measures from passing. '9 | Seriously, the “ Old School’ has adopted very ju- id bate Dene ee eee, talking about the | taxes on paper, nominally amounted to an immense | President Tyler in relation to the blow up of the late | COUSttY 98 in Burepe, where the conquest of a great city consequence of this state of things the public busi- i : 3 Lf janks, ill the Banks resum Will the Y, a th h aft EZ is the conquest of the empire of which it is the capital. . dicious tactics ; and unless the ‘‘ New School” re-| Legisiature compel them?” Pe sum. Yethe did not really pay as much after all, at Cabinet. Mr. Webster must be prepared b: i ¢ tartntel Ps: af M y this | While they, with their black troops, were harassin, Gi many mien Jo the sams ou ene, te ante] time to disprove the incoherent musrepresentations it ogra aay Whe Bese a bomen would be it was they who paid the taxes, and so it would be | Of Mr. Ewing, and set the character of the Presi- | Sow before them was whether the considereiod at mois oon allover, aries the prec tele classes, and | dent in its true light. resolution should be postponed und printed, and the not the capitalists who supported the government. y. t 0 ; . | House prepare to discuss the question of a dissoluti Maior Davezac advocated the amendment, and | ; Arena igs ie Dinos on the avenue this morn- | the Unton, Should the member from ‘Massachusetts ye strongly eulogized the poorer classes. ‘They were, ing between two members of Congress; Mr. W. B_ | permitted *o indulge in tirades gainst the South, not for he said, to use another’s language, to the grand | Campbell of Tennessee, and Mr. Boardman of Con- | the Le ronda Leg then to gratify those who fabric, of society what the bricks and mortar are to | necticut. The difficulty was a small matter, and wart ey leewiaene seencheinliother tose | iy ae the building. The poor composed the armies of the | hardly worthy of notice in the Herald 3 but asthere | shake confidence in our institutions, than had been done country, and when defending her rights on the field | |. e F 2 the last fi It of battle, were never found, as he had known the will be various and probably contradictory versions Ppianeeneraene Eanes tote ee _ com tions pro and traces its steps and regains lost ground, it must come | €en are mead in nee ae si Y. “Stop at Bar. i é Tse Gye | Bum’s and you would think the city. w: en ove in second best. The fact is, bets are three to five | ¢q cho chiduad of ane Bortaue; fer esr hicss in favor of the ** Old School.” The “‘ New School” | is a lottery shop It ought to be called the City of has abandoned its Clinique—the * Old School” has | Lotteries, instead of “Monuments” Byftie bye, opened one, which, by admirable bibbagenret, Ler hal lh ot kee le Mino pene supplied with ali the unique and remarkable c in the face wherever you go, even in the oyster presented at the various dispensaries throughout the | cellars, and market houses. They Propose to build city. The ‘New School” has excluded the Editor | a “Towa Hall” by the proceeds of lotteric of the Lancet from their class-rooms—the ‘ Old | There is six Commissioners who manage the con- ness is neglected—the halls of legislation disgraced —aud the country is left almost without a govern cy of riots, émeules, insurrection, f inisrule and of Lynch law. What does allthis lead to? It indicates plain enough that the next election for President is a matter of sheer accident. No candidate, among so many aspirants, can be elected by the people—but a sufficient num- ber will be returned to the House of Representa. ives, 1 ne will be e| si se : cern—They are great charact: E>. é t, ¢ i = i th ar bo pone wal» shah - seed ee School” permits him to report their lectures when- | gad T wav on the eve of Pilghabgeh ey Bilston rich, willing to snbmitto a diggracetul capitulation, of the circumstances published, it may be well to Maseachnsets,an Ex President ol the United Staten had ? i ever he thinks proper. The New School” are | to try to help on the great work, but | heard such a | ‘0 Preserve for themselves and their wives and chil’ | state the facts as they actually occurred. i Mie eo aie anes dren, as they alleged, a roof to cover their heads.— moved itsconsideration. But the member had said he fall fe, why will not both ‘ood thing of them ‘that 1 § : " ees ato a ft ",, | afraid to move astep, for fear they should knock | 8°° ing em that I put up my bank note | x0 their cry was war to the knife, anddeathin the | Yesterday, inthe House, Mr. Campbell, in con- | was opposed to dissolution now, and thus he rsid of Abo- ae sere Bi ah a pen eh ai decane their crowns together—the ‘* Old School” live in a CE ad Paes ld ryeivind cbome on fast ditoh—-they were willing to yield up every thing vervation wich Mr. Ridgeway of Ohio, remarked tenets a gl ep att big De betlite ea ouatt Ar meres xen Be yewtlt taesitable Som A harmony that is something beter than a “painted | prize of $14,000,and carried the ticket to be cash- for theiscanntty, Held! wothiinig' to bay 48 tha bal in substance, that the conduct of the northern | promptdissolution of the Union, it would be less danger. ne fic sng rib +n he me c ee "| sepulchre.” The *‘ New Schoel” seem in a state | ¢d, when lo nd behold, they paid himin railroad | 4,4 hear of ite Pebtioinin ra New York (Me whigs on the subject of abolition was ungenerous cues eeegh intlanaites with sahion # would be great mass of the people to rally round the Pre- | oF ¢ctianse—the ‘Old School” is as comfortable az | OMeY and charzed him six per cent. for prompt O'S.) butit did not change his opinion in the least, | 29d unjust towards the whigs from the south—that | question open, by discussing sad dniete ie Ge payment. Wasn’t this shaving in style ? Railroad ne ie De, minds sident and hi to it as to cabinet—for the purpose of presery- Mr. Swackuamer said, that if country gentlemen | the loco focos behaved far better towards the | ofthe people would become so familiarize : i an Alderman, that refreshed with wine, money at 15 per cent. disceuut and 6 per cent for | ing the character of the government, in ‘one of its eidkead traoaaates ance Gash; hau they. woulahevebesnidilioes Grins didnot know who paid the taxes and supported the | seuth; that the whigs in Congress, from the free | could'hs accomplished, Hie weull, atthe erates oct elements, untarnished. The “ New School” leave us in doubt as to their | 44Y8 after the drawing to have paid the prize in | & , Y, Cie ell | States played into the hands of the abolitionists,— | move to be excused from voting on the question of cen: them that the laborer and the mechanic were the ones who universally did it. Lock at the city of New York—when the assessor called and taxed the landlord five per cent, he increases the rent of his tenant ten per cent, to indemnify himself for the tax and risk. If gentlemen calling them- | ®! selves democrats were willing tomake property a | his remark was general and had no personal applica- Let the honest people of this city make the first move for thie patriotic purpose, and the whole re- publie will tollow. Now is thetime, ‘ A . He had ‘ed to th bi Mr. Boardman, who was standing near by, under- | sion ar unde to try him, and he scknowldged thet his standing Mr. Campbell to charge the Northern whigs feelings were spehiel vould mae him an tae" dodge i ‘i i tionis! ree A on the present occasion. le regret that with being abolitionists, said the allegation was | Ys" compelied to netice him, buteif.s wild bent slanderous and false. Mr. Campbell, premising that | was lect loose upon a crowd,’ they all knew what they had todo—they must either kill him or eage him. Ny ood money. This beats Y i} future arrangements. ‘ This may offend dear bro- Bue tuekeby inact ‘cal 1 Nadel chase ah ae ther A,” or * that will offend dear brother B,” o1 | ney they have in bank to build “I won't move a peg so long as I see Mordecai sit- ree sintrorsh pit oree atl tatoes.” S a Seu, 2 __ | ting at the King’s gate,” are the only sounds wecan | jook, Stranger, that ou arenot bit Lng sng 4 Toe Gaxany Bask Exrrostox 1s Paitapetrits —| near from their councils. The “Old School” have, | on bere, (oraticket 1s poked at you fromthe tne joners put to- a Mea ; “s The atinal ee a cs ; : ; ke, in self del Weegive io-day further particulars of the final ex-} \\¢ <6, announced a summer course of lectures, by | you quit thejsteam on the Raiload at Canton, until | !¢S! of menit, he pga aan cree and noes 1 | tion, asked Mr. Boardman. whether he intended to Satbn Mie ost perhaps Kili Hid, even'thouge Rees: plogion of the Girard Bank, which took place on ninbor Ore talented “eneareaT f the | YOu leave the city. the third reauing of this bill, and give them a} jovi: him? Mr. Boatdman replied—“ If you i tend | maniac; nay, if even an imbecile attempts to injure ws Wednesday, in Philadelphie a number of the most tarented medical men of the |” Oh, this people, what a queer set they are!—Re- | ©24uce- Such principles were wholly in opposition 5 oar sie pean sufficient force must be used to restrain him. If an NYE da eeditach wGeh'TipoeMace tO this Thane Really the “ New School” must resume their | ligion, dancing, eating, banking, gambling, beset | '° Democracy, and he could tell them their consti- |+0 insult me, then I meant to insult you.” Mr. man,even though he be au imbeoile, attempts to Ma Se ae eee Fea expect. | former activity, or fallin the wake of their rival. | youat every cotner and in every place. 1 thought | "en! fposid Iookimpoa te ear a ia df Mia, | CAmpbellintimaced his determination to scGk Fedteps Remmbaeecinclene, He mil Ys cone Dearie diane: . : Aud allthis revolution, the Lancet is also moving | § Would warn you of what is going on here at pre- |: p). vecuc's compurieon of the mechanies to bricks | Ut Of the Honge, and there the matter dropped. | ran from Massachusetts, for in his opinion, he Waa far ed thathalf of the banks in Philadelphia, and every city south ef her, will, sooner or later,explode in the seme way. The principles on which the southem and western banks have been conducting their busi- aces can lead to nothing else but final exploeion and liquidation. If the banks of New York and New England had pursued a similar policy after May, 87, would have ended as all these southern . : eee pthe ae + ae is fetrieved erate aa rh the recent movements in the profes-| To give youa little knowledge of actual facts a8 their eeps—they came back to commercial princi-| “WOM existing in this place. 1take up pen to inform you of what I actually ‘experienced this morning. I : tend i onward with a velocity worthy of theage. From| you ‘here fromm seen ee Wathington, wilt let no quarter have we heard any complaint es to its matteror management. The number to be issued to-morrow will be occupied with a great amount of original and interesting matter. Dr. Morr's Lee- tures—Leetures by Prof. Revers, Dr. Burxney—Dr. R.S. Kissam’s new apparatus for curvature of the] Mr. Epiron— and mortar. It aseumed that like pricks snd mor- | This morning, they met on the avenue near Gadby’s. taria the hands of the mason, they might be | Mr. Campbell said he wished an explanation of the ‘but he believed th formed to any purpose that designing men might | offensive remark made by Mr. Boardman yesterday twat Ea iranath tion of ibs unions jibventy. at his choose. Thisdrew eutthe Mayor again. He said : i he had hoped that he had estabiished hie ckaracter | Mr. B. repeated in a decided tone the reply of yes. Our Roams roseto apoint of order, and. would mot de- for Democracy in the State, upon which he had | tercay—that he intended his remark as an insult, if Phat the resolution until that was decided, The reso- engrafted himself, too firmly. to need explanation | Mr, Campbell intended to insult him. Whereupon | lution accused him of the crimes of subernation ef per- He was sorry of his friend from Jeflerson’s incapa- Mr.C: mn k bi The bi Ta jury.and hightreason, eri ‘ich that tribunal were city to understand his figurative comparison. Ge | ™™ ‘ampbell struck him. The blow was returned, |“not competent to th ariets. and look at :gypt—look at the Pyramids aud other | and followed on both sides by several, all delivered | ments to the ocnieeriecctip be fennel . mementos of ages past—the. monuments of an en- | with equal determination and good ‘will, but they | cuj@snctient to i ‘seco slaved people. He meant to compare the durabil- i ity of a community like this, in which mechanics more wicked than weak. If it was 2 monomania, it was a hereditary monomania. He was able in powers and Philadelphia. {Correspondenceyof the Herald. | Pamapevrma, Jan 25, 1842. The Devil bet loose again—Girard Bank—Greut Excitement, §c. pkes—and hence they alone present a nucleus around Locoroco Pinosoray—Barownson, THe Prscoso- gern eo Breet ta di . a » on. "4 ? rs! received by mail from Columbus, Georgia, were a component part, to those structures of bona ' which the bonest trade of the country can concen- | jpn — For several days past, Mr. Brownson, the aanitipty ae payable one day lak idl week Side brick and mortars ae was alleged, he continued, | the younger and more active man, but they seemed haste se for new bank explosions—more forgeri ne lseolace, philonophars:iak been 1eeciak OAM being well icndwd in the mercantile wba: I obtain that ane “ae 4 oe capa He wont Pig do a ace aan siti lara aati oe) Bee ne Prepare for new bank explosions— ries ines, in Phi : ‘aidites ’ ; , - | that as yet, how long it would ¢ » if cor- i i . for the decision of the Speaker. ica?) SV eae nt: 2 er Sel ae ee ee 8, = caret ase this city. eda friend who accompanied me to the respectable | porations orcanetnead to overshadow the land, The Select Committee of the House on the Fiscal 2 cuike ak dente 5 Pe nea dia ve dave Half ianot over Te has not created a great sensation exceptamong | brokers, Messrs. Charnley and Whelan, in Sonth | be could notsay, every able bodied manof twenty | Agency, expect to be ready to report in the course | fused to decide on questions of privilege, believing it to ali i¢ not over. hs afew intellectual people, who appreciate a new] phird-street, who bonght my! draft; and gave me ie popmeana a capi jaliol atleast Pen or Se of the present week. The precise features of the | be matter en yt myer ites af ge Licge eieeetse reerer sats 2 cof 2 ai 3 . (lay in his r, Which was worth, at the lowest |): : House to decide, ani ice I Ste Begiars.—'The Boziuma movement gocs ahead | idea as mach as a locofoco does a new pairof} ieir check for,g106 on the Mechanics’ Bank. I naltetinn, $1 per aay wad the capital thus invested bill to be presented, has not transpired. It is under- wa of the point rsised by the gentleman from Mas- Uorse-shoe Fullof Niagara. Itisa | breeches every tenth year. Mr. Browngon is a re- like the great so A went to the latter Bank and presented the cheek, | im 18,000,000 of nen woud be found far to exceed | stood, however, that the plan of the Secretary is } sachus perfect ros'—filteen feet thick, blue waters to the | markable man—very original—a profound thinker. | (. which he gave me a mktires nated that possessed by the bankers and capitalists. Af | to undergo considerable modifications. Noman can | Mr. Rapetlt psy erp te ms Spier: surface but he is not the father of locofoco philosophy by &| rege current money. I demurred at taking the fer porinicanreemntionie Neh ernie predict its fate in Congress with any degree of cenfi- | Mr. Anams begged he would not be interrupted. ie dence; but as the people expect something to be | had been already interrupted forty times. A private meeting has been held in the Astor | jugful, although he hus made greater improvements ieee tt done, their representatives will hesitate long before | gone ore tom & Girard note, having just previonsly read a monied | willingness to accede to the amendment, House, and a couunittee has been appointed to invite | in the science than any of his cotemporaries. Tho- artiele in one of the morning papers, which stated The Sreaxer rose and said that this bill did not chusetts appealed {rom his decis on. Boz to ayroud ball, at the Park Theatre. This is for | mas Skidmore of this city—a perfeet original in his that the brokers were selling Girard notes on time, abridge the privilege of the elective franchise one | they disregard the popular will ear ye, appeal, This resolution iota. Itonly gave to those who owned property, dnd they were the ones who generally favored tax- auon, end not the poor, the right to do with their own property as they chose. Every man who held a single dollar of the notes of a Bank was inte- resied in it, yet it would not be proper to allow him to participate, for that reason alone, in the meetag the purposs of exhibitiag Mr. Boz and his lady to peahere oe father ob the Fonsloen vosloeoney of! at five to tenper cent diseount. The teller re- vies of New York—price $5, or $10, ia eee t as 1 kn 1 are “% ere plied by stating, that ;that was the kind of money per ticket. Mr Simpson will furnish the theatre at | learning,—or the classical Kknowledge—or the spe | wiich they received, and that they took them in ht—which will ben better speculation | Hes of dialectics that Brownson has, but he Was) depocit at the nextdesk. With thie I came away; 2m that with Fanny Elssler. There is | €qually original, more practical—and just as bold ) + having no payment to make whieh required the vt aie ; 4 : use of $100 note, and not feeling satisfied with hav- TF. Drownson, lowever, is @ rare genius—pos- | ing the Girard on hand, I returned to the Mech:- sesses great enthusiasm—is energetic and untiring, | nicg* Bank, and tried them on another tack, saying any dinner ever yet got up at that justly celebrated | and may be Le ae aut Smith, the Mor-| t the leller that I wanted to pay the money away prefian mon, es one of the great lights of the age. We pa-| in small sums. He then took back the $100 note, We oont.nue our valuable Boziana extracts, as fol- | tronise every thing in the shape of mental or mate-| and gave me in lieu of it three $20's, of Girard, rial movemcat. and the remainder $10's city notes. Here | was 4 E se to a question of order. (Cries of order ofa) "ire understood the Speaker to decide that without he took an appeal, the gentleman from Massa- chusetts had no right to proceed. 7 jo, sir—no, sir. Weprespay, Jan 26 reg rene tening to the Speaker, and not Tne Barxevrt Law. to you. Noneof yourimpudeace. (Loughter. of the stockholders, So ina large manufacti Mr. Survrtr presented petitions from Indiana, for Mr. Apams said he would make afew remarks on the establishment, where a hundred or so operat the repeal of the Bankrupt Law, but he expressed: | point oforder, which he would rave made yesterday,but Were employed, and so deeply interested in it, as to | himself to be strongly opposed to the passage of the | that he wished to give the pena a on a derive their very means of subsistence frum it, | prayer of the petitions. baton Arocha eng Pf eeu cart... hetinember would gentlemen be in favor of calling every one of emonstrances against the Repeal were present- fot dette! my iain 2s; segs og those in to participate in its direction. pre-| ed by Messrs. Berries, Maxaum, Hustineton, pest oe mh he had obj: Fe ma bein: sented these illustrations to gentlemen who con- | Wriont, Waxxer, Tattmanes, Boonasan, Mone: | hit trier, Batt ne Ree iecedelea ehick | tended that every man had an interest in the di- | axap, Bayarp, and Cray. TWENTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS, Second Session, Senate. tor t alsoa vplendid dinner to be given to the ‘ ion,” by ung literary men and poets. This wiil also be g' at the Astor House, and will surpass ad*refused to be his trier. Four or five years there = ¢ into this Halla man with his bande ond Bie face lows — ‘ ror 5 x y . J f] by theme. Ls again, alittle better off to be sure, but still saddled | rection of village affairs. There was no one more ‘And forthe repeal or amendment, by Messrs. Frans rex Bor.—The New York correspondent of the Nase Sunedy M We have with 96) of that ebadxioud money’ i strongly opposed than hunself to any abridgment ot | Wricur, Buenaxax, Autex, Woopnamnar, and | stildripring with the ‘blood of murder, ond the blotches National Intelligencer, expresses some foars lest thopre | ‘Tae New Jensey Maize —We have more com- | “ Coning off the steps of the Hank a friend pulls | the eicctive franchise. Huwnixron. of whieh still hang about it. The House proposed to sence of M:. Dickens in this coustry should b followed | pigints of the irregularity of the mails from New | me by the arm, wanting to know what kind of mo. | Mr. Loosus thought the whole of the section had | Several petitions from persons connected with the | try him, and he had oppeted him, bioayse it was. tor a which etter ded the nord 5 of Capt, Marryatt, after his Jersey, than from any other State of the Union. | ney they puid out, when I told him. “ Why,” says | betier be stricken out, as it waz so loosely worded | manufacture of glass and iron, were presented, pray- Ce ee aid Nbi:atl pears Ug = iad An The Philadelphia correspondent of the | 14’ wish the Postmaster General would remove the | he, “they have just refused to take it on deposit.” | that under it even Women and negroes might be al- | ing for a protecting tariff. trymen, and it was probable that he saved this blood Rerupiarion or State Deuts. | Mr. Cray presented a series of resolutions from the Legislature of Kentucky, condemning and dis- countenancing the repudiation of State Debts. He said these resolutions had been passed unanimously picely mennonea Me das bia bhidels in botbrbranches ot the epelmures asd of. once tr. Loomis replied that his objections as far ae | withthe concurrence of both parties. ey ex- i women Was coacerned, might be obviated, but he | pressed themselves very etrongly in favor of the pre. | | Mr. Wise nas yrs vie 9 re ceeieeiae. did not know even that He himeeif had Known a | servation of good faith; and the honest discharge of | }emnly decline? Delete Non Ns ofn satassach setts, and a woman come forward and vote under the applica- | all obligations into which a State may enter; and apeng to he had ia the matter alluded t lowed to vote. ‘ Tur Sreaxer would ask the gentleman if he meant women. It so he would agree with him. _ This sully of the Speaker's excited a good deal of laughter, as upon reference to the bill, it was ex- stained man, and his less culpable cecomplice who pull- ed the trigger, from expulsion. No sction was had u on the report of the committee, and the individual ese: ed, though his hands were red’ with the innocemt blood of a member ofthis House. Mr. Speakor— ms—Ah, he's up, ishe? pot appe pk the: is id 3) Bae a ot haseldars. He sayen Thavete ples, | tole batch of postmasters there. Since the trial of of knowing Mr. Dickens personally, and do not | John C. Colt commeneed, these complaints hi apprehensions of my worthy colaborer {or | increased four fold. ‘The Heralds are stop Now I began to feel wrathy. I had just parted with a diaft on New York, whieh I considered equal to gold, and had icceived in exchange what - Beh good cynae to pay ny Soe. It imme- veifils the idea which the intelligent reader of { stolen, and read, in fransitu, and what remedy can | diately occurred to me that I wonld go to the Gi- PEAT hay Wie wensers. sre isnd lice t cae rard Bank, and ask them for other notes in ex. assuming. They are the offspring of hie excel- Sy change for their own, On the way I met kuots of art.”—Hosten Transcript people fussing the condret of the banks ; all Larnovemest ix Inox Castino—-Ay Iwexse | with their hands fall of Girard money, and not Crtaspen —Mesers. Stillman & Co., of the Novelty | Knowing what to do with it—cursing the bi 5 A Wecocome to Bor. Uiokons, thy foot ison a stranger land, st : s saying that some had been paid to them by t' 2 | tion of the term he, in the sense it would be used in | he had particular satisfaction in presenting tl re- 4 for the protection of the life o vot wilt thon graspa heartin every hand— Works, cast yesterday, one of the largest cylinders ferpar bauks this imotatigs and reftieed sn depen the expression ‘* Man, he is an animal,” where it sotiveens) because the sentiment was entirely co- ead ay br at als with the greatest Feluctance. enlace casio ton ever cust in this country. Itis hydrostatic, weighs | half an hour after—here was a community bank- | evidently included both sexes. Tis repartee tura- | incident with his own. He had always professed bis willinguess to be tried by a mn be fortiiegr brother ivet hand twenty tons, aad is intended for the Screw Dock | ridden, and made a pack horse of. e ed the langh in Mr. Loomis’ favor again. The com- Tor Rereat or tite Banxavet Law. | jury on that charge, and he was oe Se doch us thee belong to every “ee ’ oh ep Bipdrautie Gomp t the f f Pik f Betore I reached the Girard Bank I met plenty | mittee rose and reported progress, and asked leave | Mr. Benriex resumed the debate on ‘the third | ‘case now to any jury in ene [Ree ws * neem pe Uyaraue Company, at the foot of Pike street. | oF people returning with the Girard notes, who | tositagain. reading of the bill to repeal the Bankrupt Lav, and | ‘The ansertion ofthe member in, Marasehucgis was A Message was received from the Governor sub- mitting cetiain resolutions adopted by the Legisia- ture of Alabama, protesting against the distribution Qn {he felline nwete eieces 5 Ig whole length when cast, was twenty-feet, and | had tried to get them exchanged for others, but wos end tha knell when fisished, eighteen feet. Its outside diameter} without success. I was told they were exehang- ing for little Nell | is thirty-one inches, and core thirteen inches, leav- | ing $10"s; I therefore concluded f would not ofter continued his remarks from the point at which he Hoa had arrived yesterday when the Senate went into | it ted this little explosi Executive session. His purpose was to rescue the id he euticipeted ths Siitton 0 ed to comment upon the rerolution of wing hearts, mou A - : 4 + . J * f b bi # and then pro ” Mr. Marshall) h 7, from th eptie 3 my $60 in a lamp—that it would be too large a sum | of the proceeds of the public lands, and in favor of | Bankrapt Law from the imputation of being obnox ~ Phe honorable member (Mr. Marshall) who var yeoman hearts shall ery “all hall” to thee. ing it nine inches thick, for which twenty-two tons | "Y ihe Girard Batik t> exehange all st Suce, al- | the armexation of Texas {o the Union. ious to Constitutional objectiors. He pursued his ted it, hed recently pledged hime to a reform in Nt ehildh , of American iron of the finest grain were melted. | though it ital was five millions. WhenIreach- | Mr. Horrwax submitted a series of resolutions | argumentior two hours, but as the points embraced bits, which he hoped would ‘be ol poctved. A: ave poeed in ra Lave pehlsplag Ec = nae Tt was cast in three minutes and forty-five seconds, | ed tits Gitard the counter was lined with people on | Calling upon the State officers for a liquidation re- | in 1 have been heretotore fully discussed, it is un- two Petr baited 4 ead ts nd eaoh have bowel the knee, and cl pitas it d be 1 and ful fors * | the same errand as myself—outside the door groups | port. Oa motion of Mr. Dix, the blank in the reso- | neceSsary to report them. act he would ir honor anda glory to bis country A thee, thon wondrous portof the hearts and amore beautiful and successtul performanc: 0} Cf’ citizens—1 handed the teller a $20 note, and fation offered by him a day’ or two since, fixing | Mr. Surrn, of Connecticut, followed and Mr | to make himself a9 Bonet ve weatd advive bim t6 go ° They bow the head in reverence to the plan, the kind has never been witnessed. asked him if he would please give me other notes | upon a day for the election of Regents of the Uai| Bartox and Mr. Bavann also expreesed their de. | putto cna ote echool, aud learn w hat were the rights Which gave to earth the poot and the men This eylinder willbe the first Amerigan one ever] for it; he said he could not, that he had none to | versity was filled by fixing upon the next legislative | sire totake partin the debate. t being therefore of amember on that floor and of a citizen under tho evident that the question could not be taken today, the S dj d. constitution of the United Stetes. Thet instrament gare he Senate adjourned. toan accused person the right to be tried by ani tial itd ‘and would any bodytprotend that body imypar- tial in a case like the present, There were on: eedcet slavebolders there, who hed all ap inverest in the matter, and the member from Peagpany NT abba hie ney to act af an impartial judge. 5 ose wien ila that was not the reason assigned by him. his personal loathing, an! dread, and contempt of [United States Garetie. S, far eo well. Every thing must have a begin: : Phe world was not made in aday. Lafay- e¢ ¢ wae not «hero the first time he put on hie feath- ; > C te the ¢, was not exchanging any of a higher denomi- wnad by the kiydrenksc Compesy,, .Heretolore they 1). igs a6, Here | was arlie MLtSNeWH staal have imported, and two now in the establishment | oa what opinion was I to form of an institution, of cast, after six unsuccessful attempts, by the | whom | did not ask specie money, but merely re- w . 4 first machinery makers in England. And that cast] quested other notes for their own—that they had L ec Flomer did not sing the ware of Troy to young yeoterday, Sepipronita the rate of another which | Hone to give. Well, thinks I, they must be pretiy | expunge from the journals of the Senate, the Go- muidens. Sam Patch did not break hie neck at his s well used up, and J left the concern with but a poor | veraor’s Message in relation to Receivers After first plange. The advent of amiable Charles | “*'™? vrted, and split open or burst, afew days | opinion of their notes. a long debate, the motion was adopted,13 to 12, Mr. day after the passage of the resolutions. 4 Mr. Wer introduced his bill for the exemption- of household furpiture from seizure. In the Senate the principal partof the day was ovupied in the discussion of Mr. Fosrrn’s motion to Wepnnevs Tue Tarasuay Note Bui—Tax Dissowution oF THe Ustos—Cexsune oF Ex-Parsipent Aas, pealed to the gentieman from Virginia e the unfioished business for the “ine Allthrough the streets I found the excitement | Banrierr being at his request,excused trom voting, to pon ize the issne of | the me: Dickens, bids fair to become one of the drollest | 1: was thought till yesterday afiernoon that no sach sitingthoatae and increasing, The different banks | on accouat of not being present during the discus: Cle Ene Oe Dor the Treaty was | Mr. Cariovs hoped that these interruptions would ot evente of the age. Fanny Hlesler’s reception was a} vice. ormachinery could be made on this side of | had been shelling out theGirard notesas fast asthey | sion. tush ne justifed bim in the oxpectation that the House be permitted by the Speaker. iis colle goecme. A dusas) euriosity—so was Lord Morpeth’s—#o would Sa-} fi Pree game lee 8 nce OF} ewuld in the morring, and when the people return- | J pereeive that a correspondent of the Herald, | Would take up the bill and dispose of it. had permitted the member from Virginia te Atlantic, and large bets were made just before | eda few hours afterto the same banks with them to | writing irom Congress Hall, in this City, assumes | “Mr. Wese said this question of privilege was forced } out interruption trough tis Ong Ane tan’e—bet Charles Dickens’ will beat them all.— Trade amet revive. the cast s—Not worse than yuu misrepresented im. Mr. Wise—You had better tako it ap for him. (Criea of order! order!) ‘ > in objected to the jurisdiction of the prgeacennen rina bie surprise that any lawyer — on have drawn up such a paves ne that submitted y the member @gm Kentucky, charging him with su! eaatic nd high treason, and them (and this was whet hor) and therefore, though they upon bis, ond against his wishes, and he thought it her. that it would be unsuccessful. And even | pay their notes, they refused to take them. It was | my siguature, and styles me his fatner. {have the Upon hice emoull be disposed of The Tre now, many will no! i it e ‘ e said some of the brokers were buying them at ten | mistortuae to be a single man, and have no cil era ce iit octet elieve it te be perfect tll they | rey cent discount, that others would not buy them | drea, at least that Tknow of” Therefore, T must | bill could not be decided upon without consiae Le nae e. Having my rent to pay, I went to my | Object to his use of my. signature, and unless he | Pate, and. bef se Id Jacob Rlagwey, and restieres the Pa Bid eh better evidence bo ga yet, I be * bcspeed fo thet ed that the order of buai A rs rape rect. | i the progress of improvement in shu in this es; but he refased them. Well, bere | mu:¢ disown him as a son, ave Uciscar. ld be o'clock, but objections being Honse of Delegates have a vole demanding immed: | outry, end is conclusive pace Mee en ore. | Was the John Jacob Astor of Philadelphia, throw- — : ; Seen a reeesrtare, tue motion cute not be.eater teremumption, by a vote of 56 to 15. Beginning in re oe g discredit on the Girard notes. My excitement | Cuatiam Treatae.—The interest in the new 4. a, there will be a general rising among dace as large and as perfect cylinders, and as good | andl alarm began to increase rapidly; 1 began to | spectacle of Undine, got up at this popular little hi Baxtmgone Baves.—Look out for some émuete im) 41 1 OP : Baitimore, relative to the suspended banke. Tie © 100K Upon this casing as an important event at the adjournment yesterday he was tained. Mr. Wise Philadebpht sph (Rg * , i f f : . silered the bat dhe saspended bank?, who boast that they canie- | Md Stillman & Co. have one of the most complete | entirely, and a dwindling away Aualiy toone tal | occioa of the troupe of female warriors, who bid | prove that American citizens have asked for aid | snd morcy, they woudl Min A ni eet Away from him, estyblishments for the manufacture there the entire amount; so I determined to make another ‘ in time | not only by sending missionaries to this country, bat | grace and mercy rece @ume, but won't. eters ‘ ‘ Nereol we ever} rally and push at the Mech snies’ Bank, from where | fair, at a judicious friend remarks, to make in time | (Ny uid of British moncy. He then read from the | and if they could, tet them expel hiss al cue. ttt uy tt, ———— bea Txtarted—so with the $1(0inthand, I iold the tel- | adinirable soldiers, the fout ensemble of the piece | proceedings of the World's Convention, held in London, } them. He had constituents fe igo, ity toe Nak in New Yous Piursey's Bact.—On Monday rext,| ae ne ee ler that Thad given him Charley & Whelan's | i, such ae does great credit to the enterprise of Mr. | in whicl the Rev. Jahn Keep of Ohio asked the flo! | Sonera him again: if j : : c, Asornen Vesert Asnoar—We learn thy: : his money, 9 “a 5 ritish influence, Ns oney 5 ; Le op ho * grand bal! is to be given at the Park Theatre for : B that the | ebeek, and ne iad ire ae ee eet, Te secuty | Thorne, and a judicious public meartre out to him | faa that convention had gents on this foot, Docu Eid he ws not nego La lawyer as 9 briz Emeline of Mystic, is badly ashore on the} a 1 could do nothing with the Girard thank him to take his money and give me the | his reward accordingly. ments promulgated by it were circulated through this country, under the frank of an honorable member of r. Manenta oughtto be, tat Be tment after tbe merits of the case he benefit o: the Fire Department : in pleaded to. He contended that the gentleman shoal abreast of Spermaceti Cove. She was epo This ig one of the moet deserving charities in the - , choek foack again. which I placed a muc’ high- " York (Mr. Gi ‘The « ffort ity: Charles Dickeue, the iaimiial Bos, has.been om off rote pp be the etl i pilot boat | er va'ue on the Girard aah . He eonnted ibe Lerrix Dacry.—Miss Clemence, art a Seek Sie sliveey i (eee apuenae teen on efost i ral aN Fe eh tiostatigns ob to master invited. ‘irginia, No. & Her Captain retased to toke 4 | money over, withdrew the Girard notes, and | considerable talent asa danseuse, prese. Tname | ogtablish white slavery ; to break down the inequality | o “ " invited Reg Setween white and block, ani tocsteblish it amoug the f with bigh treason or subormetion of perjury. Tike fo pilot from the V., but did from a Jersey boat she | fare me other notes for them, for whien thanked | for 4 honefit to-night, at the. above little Teatre. fee Diekens dines at Harford on Wedoe day | tren plumped ashore. Comment oa this {3 upye- tee, Wueatiae ary nena tet ManTay owt of pen The bill of entertainments will be found in ‘another peat Poor Dickens! we pity the comary. \ serape #0 well columa. ‘ble placed these charges ineonnection with the ob- jocte e the petition. At coen not barge the gentleman veith having drawn Uhe petitions. ~ whites, To break down the institutions of this couutey . and build up others on the basis of the English mov afchy. Ho ould not contrast the relation berwees ‘he -