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ORIGINAL ARTICLES. {rRemteteosonen ‘and but little know Gas Moters—Impertant te the Public. ‘The Mechanics Institute Scheel. POOLS ALAA out of their own store , there was a On the same day that our reporter visited the two gas | On Tuesday evening, the Twelfth Annual Exhibition of ‘The Scymours.—Sketches of Political ana | J0K¢ 41 the time, that People’s men" hhad | establishments of the eity, he also visted the establish. | this seminary was held at the Tabernacle, There wana | “MARGE OF Personal History. bis Saker Doe who was the Sasieswerietit ment of Mr, Samuel Down, in Twenty-second street, near | very large and respectable audience present; in fact, the Aven 17- Although the ve ‘ t, 8 cal su] to be the candidate wheit had | Tenth avenue, where meters are manufactured exclu- | Tabernacle was filled to the ceiling. About half-past six | tion for the h Toomas H. Seymour, will not prabubly bene, | turoed out so unexpectedly was clctel. However, | sltely fr theManbuttan Gus Company, conderablc | e'loc the children arrved numbering about 10 boys | fy cqure war red owe frat ccaalon we tort | Yee caen frum ons ‘Aianayt Metis elected; in consequence of there being # whig ma- | ™!*- Thaddeus Seymour made a very good Alder- | number for the New York Gas Company, and also exten- | and girls, ranging from eight to eighteen yeary, accom. | forthe last six days, Messrs. A. L. Jordan and Staples | House, Jersey City, on the 34 of March, lat. A mast series in. tha: Lagislasaceict’ that Stata, clect; the | aks bee Gh ey ee wee he was suc- | sively for other gas establishments threughout the | panied by their teachers and the School Committee. having concluded the summing up on the part of the | {he authorities deeming Bogie eee tee there, bat 5 3 ceeded by Mr. Samuel Cowdrey of the same politics. | United States. The New York companies charge the | The exercises commenced at seven o'clock with ahyma, | defendant, Mr, ¥. B. Cutting closed on bealfof the | tained Norman as State's ev ‘nce to be used against him. family of Seymour seem to be still in luck, by the | |, Jonathan Seymour was from Hartford, Vonncc- | oo sumers for these meters, and also fur service pipes; in | sung by all the children, after which an addres was | Pint — PERT RS Sea EN concluded not to rtand « trial ; he pleaded ticut; and coming to this city i i Bagley guilty election of Origen S. Seymour, of Litchfield, to | One of the most dis ingulabe cle y rp Philadelphia there is no charge made for either. For «| made by Miss Charlotte Dodge and Master James | said the # patent in controversy iu this cause wis granted othe! -—/ and wus sentensed to the State prisop Congress, from the district composed of Litchfield | In politics, he was a decided. whig; of retiring | long time the public have been dissatisfied more or less | McCombie, A Eulogy on Lafuyette and the “Farmer's | 0M the dd September, 1842, and is for un itnprovement in . - nee of light Barber. —An innecent-appearii and Fairfield counties; which district was repre- | munuers and of liberal disposition. He was for | with meters,and many bave very little confidence in | Blunder” were then admirably given by Masters Edward -~ makin Tenet "The description (ate pig mins fadieied ander the ‘bame ot Wille owl (hie sented by a whig, (Mr. Butler,) in the last Con- | ® time connected in the printing business with | tiem, and that for two reasons; first, very few under. | McCulrum and Isaac Smith. An Essay on Curiosity was | great particularity, and,I may say, clearness, by the pa | Teal name, we learn, is Luce) was called to take his ; 7 s ¢ the late George F. Hopkins; and. in’ the latter | stand thelr operation ; and in the second place, by Masters Williams, I a, Smith ang | tentee, Models, toe. have been produced, which render | O84 charge of grand larceny, in stealing « wateb, Salat, gress. part of his life was engaged in the paper commis- P i place, thove | next seclted. by i Madguen, it perfectly intelligible. After describing the various | $100, from Mr. Frederick Reichard, of 4 Clinton Place, Origen S. Seymour is a lawyer of Litchfield, and wion » business, atl continued by his son, Melanethon | "he do nagermond — cannot a whether | Rogers, after — « a Rad ata Pg Barts of the machine, the plaintiff then closes, ax isusual, | under the following lzonmctanees —m Prisoner was & was speaker of the House last year in the Connecti- | 1. Seymour. Another of his'sons, the late Daniel | they may not have been constructed togo too fast, | spoken by Miss E. B. Rosselot, The “Village Lawyer” was | with a specidcation of the particular things which he ir dresser, im the emy r. Giffin, in 2 Seymour, was distinguished for his li ine ‘i ont will be urtrayed by Palmer, Merritt, Ballagh, | claims to have invented, and to which I shall now cull | Opposite Delmonicos’s hotel. On the 27th of Mareb, Mr. cut Legislature. His father was brother of the late be te, aid was pany. port gry 4 hag and though their ior wi owe and pert, Fig Lo ne me wr Wall, yi ‘Enea: + a. your attention. The first is the segment slides acted | Reichard went to Mr. Giffin’s establishinent, to have Henry Seymour of this State, who was a native of | tees of the New York Society Library; which ine | SU they may register too much gas against | Votives then recited by Master Wm Il. Garrison, | © by *prings, iu combination with the platen or hop- | hair dressed. The prisoner waited on him, and took Litebficld, Conn. The son of the latter, Horatio | scitution isindebted to his labors for the many | '%¢ comsumer, just like a watch that will re- | after which a duet and chorus was sung by al the ehil- | Per, conaeructed or arranged as deveribel fn the sect adie Dy lan pengegterrs Bpey mpeg yen ° 4 if “ A A + ¥ koi e. | cation. e object of this contrivance was to close jes as to attract no 5 Seymour, was the democratic candidate for Crover- valsan fhe ‘libre made by him in Europe, and on pind ie pope pe pice . ae pitt ange fate ‘ oat at welenoe of Phrenology’ by elghtorn of the the shot in the end of the press which was epen, | Mr. Reichard discovered his lors shortly after be left the nor of New York, " e Sey: : ; * ’ d thr cl “ i shop ; ke therefore returned, and asked the prisoner t the last election, and was de- |" ‘The name of Seymour, although found among | never be wronged by it. On the contrary, the gas ma- | Py2u:hwd itis only, Justice to say that it was opt up for abject war “to. prevent the “mértat trom. being | about the watch. Lewis dealed all knowledge of ity feated by a very small majority in favor of Wash- | the early emigrants to New England, is not con- | mufucturer is most liable to suffer when the meter is not | mueh so that they were frequently interrupted by bursts | Pressed out of this aperture, ‘The patentee claime next | Mr. It. immediately applied to ex-officer Melyea, who ishington Hunt. The present Governor of Con- | Spicuous in the colonial history of this country, nor | properly attended to. It was ascertained « short time | “fapplause from all parts of the house, “Childish xpecu- | that he was the original inventor of the combination of | wn tum der which Mr-R. lost bis property, Me, - : :, ., was it noted, as we are aware, in the times of the lations,” “Death of Alaric,” and the “Heirs at Fault,” | the carriage E, suspended at its rear end the frame | circumstances under w! ir. R. lost his property, Mr. necticut, Thomas H. Seymour, is a distant relative | Revolution. So far as public honors are to be con- | #0: that the meters at Washington went twenty per | were pext given by Masters Hamilton, Austin, Mills, | With the connecting rods and shait for freeing the m: G. instituted « search, which resulted in the discovery of of the two we have named. He was a fellow-student | sidered, the Seymours of America are a modern | Mt too fast, and they were taken down in conse. | Seligman, Rogers, Means, and Maimgran. after which the sale free. lapenetione, ome sengnoliee 20 ihe cate the wate » {a the bed cooupled by Jewis. He was these, in Capt. Partridge’s military echool, (then at Mid- | family, the architects of their own fortunes. requence, The only security the public have at present } iGO ‘Tawsbanks brighteyed sister about eight | Barts Used by the patentee in the consteuction of this clearly proven. ‘There was no defence offered. The io S In England, the Seymours have been a distin- | for the truth of the meter is the character of the manu- | 2/88 “Ory De alte Teed cz cd girl of about eight | oc rriage so a8 to effect the puposes intended, that is to was found ‘guilty, and sentenced to the State dletown, Connecticut,) with Horatio Seymour. 4 pane e 4 years of age. After she had concluded, there was @ Ne puy Pri y David L. Seymour, of Troy, in this Slate, who guished Deals Sor forse ee They Came | factures, and the honesty of the gus company who supply | simultaneous burst of applause from all parts of the {yee st Sones Sir Sia waver Jo sare Seen 8 ieee ponte Eason ante F Pay i . . over from Normandy with William the Conqueror, | them to the private consumer, But this ix not always | house, which was kept up for several minutes. | M hing in these machines; this ement the plaini « John S. Taylor. to whom reference was made in our was elected to Congress from Rensselaer county | inthe year 1066. The original name was Saint ctory, and it seems necessary to have the meters gers, the chairman the school committee, the claims as his invention, and the carriage thus arranged sions wt” of yesterday, as having been robbed last fall, is also a relative of Horatio Seymour, and | * Taure, afterwards corrupted to Seymour. One of tamped by an engineer under the State or | forward, and said that Mr. Greeley, the vice-president, mbination with the moveable carriage F construc! if $250, at st Broadway. resides at Newburg, or some ‘ rosy . “ r the most eminent admirals and several other com- | City authorities before being used. A meter isa mea- | had undertaken to deliver an address that evening. but | €4 in the mode pointed out in his spec ‘These | village on the North River, in that vicinity was in Congress with Thomas ]. Seymour, inthe | manders in the navy, a# well us officers of the army, ¢ any other measure, and ought to, be regu. | be went off in the Baltic that morning, and that he could pie te Shree ae eee Of which he supposes | Arai, 17.— Theft of Carriage Springs —Two mon named 28th Congress, (1843-5.) 1 ster 5 haaat bs > ae law, und subject to the surveillance of | not come. (A laugh in consequence of this disappoint. | te be pgs 4 a fe David Strait and John Johuson, were indie h Congress, ( ) The latter gentleman, | have been of the name; also the Dukes of 5 au inspector, The works of a meter ave like those | ment, and the late hour at which they received Mr, | t0 the first claim, the defendant insists that whether ori- | Dud jarceny,in stealing mes carrageepringe z Rod ame while a member of the House, took the pains to | set, and other members of both houses of of aclock or watch, except that instead of the wheels | Greeley'’s note), ‘There was no address, ginal or not, the titute of utility, and | fhe property of Win, Harriman of Broome ateett. The inquire of each member as to the place of his na- | "#ment- being moved by springs or welghte, they are turned } | ‘Theexereises wereagain resnmed with the grand polka | Gould not be carried into practical effect and Vondencia | Prisoners pleaded gullty to petit larceny, stating that by the action” of the gay in passing ‘through the | de concert, composed by Wm. V. Wallace. after which doned by the patentee immediately, The defendant's | they aid not intend to steal the property, but merel: tivity; and he found forty members in that Con- | Sketches of the Great Stool Pigeon Gang meter, and the quantity or bulk that thus passes | reply to Carry was given by Master BE. C. Merritt; a | Counsel assume the fuct to be proved, and then they in- | took it as they said “in fun.” The court did not se gress who had emigrated from Connecticut, or of New York. is indicated by sets of hands on the dial plates, corres- | composition in English was then read by Miss sist shat as this claim is invalid either trom want of O-igi- | to chink the prisoners were thieves. and the: hose parents had resided there ONE-EYED THOMPSON. ponding to the hour. te, and second hands of a | Cook; ath of Marmion by Master D. R, Pri nality or utility, the whole patent becomes. therefore. | cepted the plea of petit larceny and suspended judgment whose parénts had resided there. - rT bbe’ ‘ x — wateh, numbering hundreds, and tens of | a dialogue by Miss Mary L. Bennett, Miss Martha Dun- | Yoid. n of Law for the Court to decide. |” Srating Money—George Glassenbergh. a young German The four Seymours we have named are of the de- | One-eyed Thompson, from his youth, was gifted | feet; and in the large aillions, and hundreds of nd Miss Sarah Fairbanks; enlisting reeruits for her | It is ar; dant, that in order to have save uid with diMiculty speak Bug.isb, pleaded guilty gas turn the works of the | Majesty, by Heath Falkn with the assistance of wate: after which Master W illia: mitted into the meter without water, it | venth Plagu and will move neither wheels | temperance Courvoisier and Campbell; | te ps H. Ballagh recited the Se- of Exypt, with much applause; a shcrt dilress was next delivered by Master Ford larceny in stealing $300 ‘n money. consisting of bank notes and gold coin, from John Phillips of No. 190}: awieh street. Part of the money was found on the soner, who confessed his guilt, ‘The court sentenced moeratie party, as was the late Henry Seymour, of | With more than an ordinary mind, or, at least, hig | millions, But this State. His brother, Horatio Seymour, of | brain was not balanced in a manner suitable to pass | ty the gas i ous whig, and | smoothly through this world, without conflicting me og entee should ha wed this part 7th and 9 of the act y and at Vermont, was, however, a conspic , f p sk ye é 4 : ; cate Tien y bo like so much airin it, Inthe | tke pext was a composition by Miss. H. McKay, and » tite Btate prison for rs represented that State in the United States Senate, | materially with eres and privileges of others. | interior of the meter is. large tin whecl, called a drum, | dislogue by Master C, Austin’and B, Felkecrs the wear to show hat this con new and soit bee spice a ee * Lo ae Ae or tw 3, ¢ ve y i . 82) All who have read his letters on the event of his | The space around this wheel is filled up with water toa | cises concluded with singing, under the direction of pro. | BOt used — before, perhaps, the isht of it grt Megs a ee mre for two terms, or twelve years, vis., from 1621 to certain height, called the water line, which is ascertained | fessor Charles L, Burnes POF ETO” | ie that it is useless, ‘or could Sperated—- | placed at the bar charged with burglary and grand kar- thing store of A.C Gettes, No. 1433, William Seymour, a democratic lAwyer, of | Suicide, can readily form some opinion as to the | 4! 0 crew i side of the meter dd ale y) ic yer, by taking out a serew inthe side of the meter, and al. the 1th of March, and. stealing Binghamton, Broome county, ¥.Y., represented the character and mind possessed by Thompson, should | lowing all the water above that aperture to run out, r 7 - are is abiliti il i gates The screw is then inserted, and the gas ia let on over the | pleaeed with tt in whieh the obilives, cases referred to, and Lam of opinion that this suit may | about $50 worth of property, consisting of handkerehiefs, Delaware and Broome district, in the twenty-fourth ly his abilities to evil instead of good deeds. | iver of the water. The pressure from the gasometer, | ale and female, acquitted. themselves; at all create we | be maintained under the two sections seventh and ninth | aud articles of clothing. ‘The prisoner was seen by » po- Congress, 1835-37. Ile was elected over the late | Thompson was about 35 years of age, born in this | caused by weight, sends the gas with a certain degree of | were. and we think that great credit is due to M |. | of the act of 1837, notwithstanding a disclaimer has not | liceman, to go into an empty tenement in the neighbor- oT . pie Swapetc des Seagate : that grea 2 mes the hocd of Mr. Gettes’ store, and deposit a bundle, there celebrated politician, General Erastus Root, who | ity, residing nearly all this time either in it or in | force through the meter. Al! around the drum are fas- of the male department, Veen seett 3 a cae, the platati® | ond make off again. ‘The policeman examined the h ot probation manifested by the audience du- | Perhaps this is the fair result of the ceny, in ente “3 “igen should Teage they andienne th T bave looked into the provisions of tue statute. 78 V street would not be entitled to costs. diagonal shaped hollow pieces ot tin, somewha the prineipal of the female depart bundle, and found that itcontained handkerchiefs, then ran as 2 whig, having formerly represented | its vicinity--consequently was well aware of the | sembling the buckets of the wheel of a s r cssistants, for the training they baye given the this construction of the i the same district as a democrat. Seymour received habits and eustoms of city affairs. Ie was fond of poteng of these as are over bee surface of the pupils. ed Pastieniany inte is a br Wegat Ady bet 6m eporitiog, wily, anaes 4 majority of 1717 in Delaware, Roots’ own county, | Te@ding; and in his conversation he was romantic | ¢) uve the yreavers oud turn the Gruse, as the gas pees re tered before the suit-certainly shows that | Where ft, and await the return of the person who a Wend * ivid A Te geet out into the pipe leading to the burnees.” The revolution Brooklyn City Intelligence. and Root had a majority of 299 in Broome, the | #4 visionary to a degree—always dealing in mys- | of the drum causes all the other wheels connected with | Boaxn or Epvcatios—Fivanciat Brat h be wi hed, Box r tho in. | Coangumenta, when the pelocner’ sppeonced im gvest county of Seymour's residence. tery, mysterious movements, continually scheming | to revolve, and thus the quantity fs axcertained. “The | gcroot, Law.—At a. necting of the Conic Fention, | 1¢ the disclaimer has been made and entered | Tite eathered up the handkerchief and wae waking aren action of the gas upon the drum may be seen at Mr. | short time ago, @ statement. was required. fro pace Ray — pelle raid ag instituted, | of. when one of the policemen hailed him, and asked him ‘The late Henry Seymour emigrated carly in life | to astound the public mind, whereby he could feed | Down's works, through a meter with glass sides, The | Board of Education showing the state of their funds, &e., | ‘Le? the plaintiff recovers costs in the usual way. inde- ? F : E . niearts : : 2 died 4 a a ee “ pendently of any question of disclaimer; but if inthe pro- | What he had, He replied that he did not know; it_wax from Litchfield, Connecticut, to Onondaga county, | bis visionary ideas, by involving the reputation of | mement the gag ie testes eee bebo tone Olen Ooeesihe 1 Ghote ve cea, Uren of the trial, {¢ turns out that a dicclainer ought to | sumething he had just hit his foot against, und #0 pieked in this State, and afterwards removed to Utica. | “ome fair-fumed character in conneetion with the | Ifthe pressure is great, the druin will revoive the fast- | dre now required by the special law to raive by tax for | pave been made as to part of his claim. he may recover, | 1h Ubi tt Bee the ofiter wee Well entlated aud 90 took ts where his son, Horatio Seymour, resides. He was | Perpetration of erime. ‘This was Thompson's | er. and a greater quantity will pass through in a given | the conduct of the schools not less than $1 25, nor more | Put shall not be entitled to costs. Another qwestion | oot oe i i ety into custedy, and conveyed them ; oe “ 1 “08 ig | forte. He aspired to be the Vidocq of New York; | time Jf the pressure is small, a lesser quantity will pass | than $1 75 for each child, according to the census. ‘The Ming or negligence it making a disclaimer” ebay | to the Third ward station house, where the property was for a long time conspicuous in the politics of this | forte. He aspired to be the Vidoeq of New York; | through. At the meter menufactory there is a gas- | majority of the committee report that the minimum sum. ble delay @ ae aking s iselaimer’—but | to the Mhird Dy Mr. Gettes, Tho prisoner soutty dented State, and was considered by Mr. Van Buren and | nd, to attain that notoriety, it became necessary to | ometer made with great precision, “its contents be- | of $1 25 will be sufficient for the conduct of the schools, | t#tjs « question which goes to the,rizht of action; if the | ren eae a. he could give no reasonable account. of -) Grape build i ni aac ing ascertained by filling it with distilled water and | That the present number of children being 24.422. this | “ly shows great nevligence. the jury may say that the | yi ane i ed dkerchiefs, the jury found bina the Albany regency, as one of their most sagacious | build up 2 prima Sacie case of crime, in order to weighing it. This gasometer is graduated by a scale in- | tax will amount to $00,027 59 | Patent isvoid. This provision, regulating disclaimers, vite penned red exprrba a He re ag roche and trustworthy adherents. He was elected to the | discover it to the public. In these last matters, | dicating the quantity of gas that passes from it through | And they would require in addition— applies only in the case where the part claimed by the | BNILY. 9 a “ a ag - i Sa aaa Se patentee isa material and substantial part of the thing | the country but about four months eve State Senate in 1815, by the democratic party, | Thompson was not alone, but was assisted by several | fhe meter, Par every inch If fille, so much as, must Fe igen eer pearl patente, of which he is not the inventor, ‘This | Recorder—Did you intend to become a citizen y pagers : . ee M “ ; has saa 7 auales 10m Cah Ween Prisoner—Yes, sir. two years before the election of Dewitt Clinton, as | accomplices. The latter part of Thompson's career, | right, itis altered and made right, Creer eee eee ant capstantials past oe | _ Recorder—And in four months after you arrived you ; i i i in. | This is exactly the sort of thing some public offic ? 7 kee r ' Governor. When the latter came into office, in 1817, | S4y during the last few years, he was confined prin: smiths ee eee ie seven ic officer idee epithe raise. oe es ear, sine the machine invented. The question, therefore, sous ia Daag ee eae ee Mr. Seymour co-operated with Mr. Van Buren, | cipally to an association with Thomas Wamer, the | to him for examination by « private contume the Special eet omancas’ In viewot tie “new school Law, | or tro’ importance in the determiuation of the rights | 105s. sem t0 think thas freedoms eandiets tn setting te wo saad thas. alk: eee S lawyer, out of which association evidently grew the | Not mean to question the integrity or accuracy of Mr. ee : Bard iat Be pod Dane a Ryley etn Teed ete ti | laws at defiance, The only way. therefore, to convince was then, i ber of the State Senate, ys Down, or any other manufacturer of meters in particu. | %%, by the latter, Brooklyn will have to contribute about | and essential part of it, or has been introduced into the tats Sochentat “4 in organizing the bucktail party, to oppose the | Drury torpedo mystery, and the astounding forgery | jar, but the public ought to have some guarantee that | $9000. (receiving for their share about $18,000 only.) | description to mislead the public. I am of opinion, if ] You that we have laws which must be obeyed is. to make Pa : atts “i Mr. Foster, in which James Arli e they are not cheated in this description of measure. The | 224 they accordingly recommend a petition to amend | you find that this slide or spring i+ not essential to the | 3! oe = administration of Governor Clinton. Mr. Hammond, | 02 Mr. Foster, in which James Arlington Bennet y iP The | the special act by muking the minimum tax $50, and the Court ix, that you be imprisoned in the State privom at who was likewise in the State Senate, from 1S18 to | Was villainously implicated. AIl these exploits were | tte? fe of various sizes, from the large ones made for | Maximum $1. A minorty report staved that the amount | mislead dhe public, it affonte no ground for invatidating | Sinz Sing. at hard labor. for four years is ‘ s » : ‘ the use of the gass manufacturers, which have a clock 4 5 mt i ; She: <, mA see 1 s The "3 geni rete om, . ie required would be— a _, | the patent. Then, as to the second claim, it is as I have Store Breaking—Blowing up « Safe —Two men pamed 1822, serge Mr. eve a = a well bred sidanaase Reaitetel fs : 3 selva sth Heer Gian ik tae day td toe unto ekaed ee peercte The tax ag above $9042 $0 | already -tated it.” Upon the view I hate taken of this | Jobn Williams and Henry smith were placed at the bar, man, and very gentlemanly in his deportment. 5 deep- a i 8 ind | ccasumere, ‘Ehepeies of am. ondinary aaatae la OF 50, existing liw 1.241 43 | patent, the question presented in the second claim will | charged with feloniously entering the wholosale grocery His great native shrewdness and sagacity had | of Thompson was clearly discernible to those who | “Ifa meter hias Loo much water iu it and the wheel is | '°¥ mall repairs 3495 00 | be found. I think involved in the material one that | store of Mestrs, Alger & Brother. corner of Dey and West Me . Bisel RE : this ‘the ‘ahh too deeply enbanenged, the poonvase of the gue will wat be arises under the third claim. Theretore it is not im- | étreets, on the night of the 10th of Murch, and stealing been improved and highly cultivated by association | in any way were conversant with the character of | Sit Sturn it If on the other hand, there is no water portant to call your attention with great particularity | therefrom $205 in bank bills, a draft for $100, a cheek with genteel soziety. Asa politician, he was ¢ Thompson’s propensiti in the meter, or if the water is too low, the gas will pass Pea also repent the sums to be re to in poeple on bos alfa irae pomake eS Coord ad i KS heerlen sg peat tiousand wary. His opponents charged him with | For the purpose of involving Arlington Bennet, it | th ba aticpa Pres eae Bec grceg hr hain County. 6700 00 | B, xe constructed with the connecting rods and shafts | March he found bis store in charge of policemen, who in- being jesuitical, but of this, Mr. Hammond says, | Was necessary to become acquainted with the man, the gas companies come round to examine the meters | State. 6.700 60 | for freeing it from obstruction—now, if this carri forn him that it had been broken open during the he cannot speak from his own knowledge; for he | aud then devite such plans thereafter as best suited | and make their charge for the quarter or half year, they | Under new school law. + 18,000 00 | which is one part of the soeabtoatlets arranged by the joux, On going into the store, Mr. A. din . : whet Page ‘ a ae pond . ew improvement, then that, combined that his iron nate had been diowa open by the certainly never gave him any proofs of a want of | the project. Accordingly, Thompson hireda small ayo Semtned.” Eine ar Garant rar Apdo Wile i os assis, SWide taaeuees selon 60 contrivance for letting W dow, thotigh the lat- | uve cf gunpowder. ‘The outer door of the safe bad beon sincerity and candor. He was then a country mer- | cottage from Arlington Bennet, d L They set dow: ¥ tity, Now it often hay may be old, the invention of the eurriage, if useful, | blown entirely off, and bad apparently been thr wa up r i iti a ; erage ‘*. p= ed, the be ry be old, B i hant in the county of Onondaga. His opposition es tio prance Weigle Bean heed FF None heldivel Gua thee dees. te eee Sharht those ee ranted, the tax tobe | ccupined with the old contrivance, will maintain the | through the ceiling. and fallen again upon the ficor, The i gi Toe ee Tren chee i reer ee ear enave, | lesied on the city during this year, fur sehool purposes, | Cittm under the second clause, beeatise one part of the | inner deor, upon which was & eomplicated lock, waa als Sarena combination being uew, when united with an old con- | destroyed, and thus access gained to the valuables whi C700 wo | trivance makes the whole necessarily a new one | the safe contained. Acconiing to the testimony, 4 ie 00 | Wearing this ip view, I. past to the third claim, | peared that, at about 12 o'eleck on the night of the 20th + eo WO | and. te the real point in controversy, which is | of March, Mr. Walling, a private wateboxin in the neigh 3435 00 as I have already stated it. This arrangement of | borhoed of Mr. Alg: heard a cresking ne, as if 3 the carrhiges! fs distinct and iad-peadent claim | mute by the opening of a door. and preventhy be saw the <a material and substantial Gue, and without which | privoners going towards the dock. Me imme Hagely cried : nade b , te ‘ = pases Fs eye . 4 sly required, as being indire:t opposition to the ; - vtarti ‘down to Yernor and four Xenators—the latter chosen by the tes him to his house, not knowing anything of | constructed that it rectifies these errors, and by looking | views of © majority of the citizens, Bork reporta were | C&TFIMEC om she eee a Pin. Ber Be be BR Ea wel Assembly annually, and selected from the four | his previous character; and a neighborly feeling and | at a meter at any time you can arcertain all the gus that | referred back to the committe, aud a resolution was | 42418 the model, (a Stak’ bod booed Gast cub sho-grischene wee-bethr-eoeeten hanes Chay tad great Nenate districts into which the Senate was | jntere oe ph ly, betwee ever d through it. Ifall the gas bills when addeg } finally adapted to the Legislature foran amend- | Provement upon the carnages = se pin a pea pe then divided. Mr. Van Buren, bavi ‘anized | intercourse took place, apparently, between them. | toeher make the sum total indicated by the dials, then | ment of the special act.so that the aum to be raised alto. | PFO to the invention of the piaintiil, ‘This is mceessary | run fur. Williams had seme of Mr. Alger's propety on See Sean phetys to operote’ nonin Gorn Ih the curse of these interviews, during a space of | the charges are correct in the main, though there may Je, may wot exceed the range of from $1 2 to $175 | KulPiveweond, “Wie is question at tacks A great | aud ting put om the stand. swore that Smithy war ued ton, in INNS, was desirous of having a couneil of ap- | two or three months, ‘Thompson related his whole } Dave been error as to particular quarters of half years. | for each child, exclusive of the sums required for rit eal of evidence bas been given on both sides, all bear: | with him The proof, however, was, that whon ami pointment chose n which rhould beaubservient to bis life to Bennet, embellighing it, as he went along, to | qortand it for himeclf ‘s at os peg sieges we yas zerree i ing cm this point; "and except thre are kine Lol «artes. i hands were besmeared with xunpowd views, or which the Governor could not coutrol, but | 945 i 2 i a waTany Parape—Tne rinsy Mooviienr Dait.— | principles bearing on the quetion of fact. and in which I | and he had the odor of that combustible ta Meroe | suit the circumstances of the ease, mixed up | _ There is one very important secret In reference to me- | me first com of ¢ i , c ets. public \ Gov. Clin- J pany ‘ontinental Guards, under the | inay aid you. it ix a question which must be determined | clothes and about his person, to a degree for whose sote;the pattie would hala Bim ((o0v; Clie | with facto and fection, uotil Mr. Bennet. be- | to which the public would do well to attend. Often | command of Lieut, B. G, Edmunds, paraded ali the prin- | by the good sence wid soutrl Judgment of the jury. It Mf the oflcers of plies there wan re I which should b rate ete! ded lati ee eee eee te the fall pmeenat pusht | cipal streets of Brooklyn, on Monday evening, and in | is not, of course, whether this was the first bed of car. e he Was arrested « elieok, which * which should be nominally | came completely astoun at the revelations | to be, or ix necessary, owi g to the full pressure Mg | their unique and brilliant uniforms presented a ver: “ mneih loadenltonhanas and Micaibhthes oun Mab bakes ; dis he b i f regula: if z | ree a (Hintonian, bat which at the same time, should bs | thus made, then got alarmed, and ultimately feared | */lones) to come dincet on the Wurners, instead of Feguls- | pleasing and handsome appearance. This was the fret | carriages and h ‘The prisoner was on a hard run — heats 36 the Coranees aye by ee him. It was during these friendly visite that | te Fe enstie pe ae Agora seush of thn aab terry ae fewer ane aren we contew- | tion is ax comparing the plaintiff's earri iy ie aoe All the oe ment, and partly by accident, a council of the cha- | | ‘ J ion by jous companies of this locality ed by him, whether it is a substantial impi inet h e jury, without Ie, racter last described, was actually chosen. .Al- | Thompson stole from among Mr. Bennet’s pa- petra ne 4 erat cite tameeonctod ah a comtonins AHowirame Recertion.—Thomas Welsh appeared | which it is used on all of the previous cart “ if guilty of though the Clintonians held a majority in the As- | pers a letter from Mr. Foster to him, over which | matter. ‘The true way is to have two cocks, one a regu. | defore the police court yesterday, together with Michael | mal change would not be sufficient ; such axa change in | against Smith. The prisoners were then sembly, the Bucktails, led by Van Buren, managed | 5 nat the writi 2 ext: db: hemic a} | lator at the meter, by which just sufficient gas to light | Donnegan and Christopher Harrington, to answer a | its proportion. « mere change of form in (he instrument | sentens : and the Recorder, after adiululstering a oevere to get ap a quarrel respecting two of the candi- | “snsture iting was extracted by achemical | (i Aablishment islet on, and to this no person ought | Charge of disorderly conduct, all having been fund rivance ; « different shape would not be a change | orwl castigation to them, sentenced them to the Ste dates, tor the council, and consequently the Nena- | Process, and the substance of a promissory note to have access but the proprietor or some confidential | fxhting ina house in Myrtle avenue, near Clinton, the the meaning of the law. In the idea of an im- | privon—Williams for five years; aud Simith for four years tors chosen were Peter R. Livingston, Jabez D, | a large amount inserted in its place—all by Thomp- | person that he can depend upon, The other cock may | evening before. It seemed that Welsh had ouly that Vement upon at old contrivance of sufficient impor- | and six months, H. nd, Henry Yates, and Henry eyr of ches ; be left in the charge of any person to shut off or let ou the | *flernoon arrived from ~ the old country.” and bi tance to rise to the degree of being the subject of 8 mew | Charge of «tscault and Battery. with inten: to KUL—A Gere jaminond, Henry Yates, and Henry Seymour. son. ‘This note, on completion, was put into eireu- daily. The quantity necessary for any establishment | “fallen in’? with some acquaintances, and patent, the invention must. embody ‘some originality | man, ramed Frederick Mwricker, was put trial, these, the ouly sincere friend of Gov. lation, and an endeavor made to trace it to the po P) tty freely, they very soon, ng j and something substantial in the change producing | charged with shooting Francis Cavenagh. with intent to was Hammond; L gxton and Seymour were ¢ ae 7 ’ f nd ® row ensued. The justice fined Donnegan ore useful effect and operation. It is proper to ray, | Kill him, on the 17th of December bist. The complainant, sktalle 5 Yates wes doabtfal, bat eventually session of Mr. Bennet. The whole scheme failed, bb of the others $5, and, in default. committed | that in deliberating uj improveient claimed to | Cayenagh. boing called to the stam idcd that be went with the bucktaile. ‘This election ofa cow was considered one of the neatest and most ingen action may be maivtained for other parts of the in- | Pleced it ther he officers had just completed their to Gov. Clinton, Mr. H. does not think, originated | and, to reside in, and here their acquaintance | Pie quantity when there has been little or perhaps no from Tagg motives, but, is inclined to believe | began. Thompson soon read the mind and dis- satall consumed. Hence dirputes arise which might Mr. W527 50 ymour thought Mr. Clinton's poliey, A P, prevented, if the gasmen would always inquire ed, wookt endanger the-sepeblieantparty, | CCYares_ the credulity of Me. Bonnet, thereby | SL Incr any gashes been burosd When tiny fsa that and his attachment personally to Mr. Van Buren, | ®PPlying his eubjeets of conversation most likely | the meter indicates none. Aguin, they often make grave controlled him in his political action. to effect the object sought to accompli-h. Mr. | Mistakes of another deseription. They enter the figures Under the first constitution of the State of New | Hennet, who is a man of learning and ex- | Rundredscor vice terse aml charge accordingly cither | Total Tl Fmall repairs cece SSBOM 45, n be ascertained by experiment, and the best way is to find what quantity will give sufficient light with the : burners turned to full ©: By adopting this course, 1] and Mr. Bennet was honorably acquitted by a jury. | gas cam never be wasted by using too much in a partien- hile ‘Tho >. | lar burner, for it requires the whole extent of the tube ; While Thompson was thus sojourning on the pre- | (0 give enough of light under the diminished pressure, King’s County Cireult Court. days to City Pri have been made in aud which is of he same howe with the defendaut, of whom he —— nt value and ame the subject of apartments, The house was on the Thied avenue, »f the many political tricks play by Van Buren. ai - 7 is! ke into considera: | pear Fortieth street. On th witness, The mom A co cells ouch pec %, was stated | Wises of Mr. Bennet, near New Utrecht, Long | As an illustration of the importance of reducing the Before the Hon. N. B. Morse. Judge. tien, in counretion with the change, the result which | jad been out with d's, they that he wrote toa friend in Celambia county the | Island, two very noted characters were entertained by | Pressure at the meter, we may mention a fact that has | REACT OF PROMISE OF MARRIAGE. —$2000 paoricrs. | bat been produced. for this reason, that the result ix | had enjoyed theniselves till ats ut h 4. when ‘Smith This action was brought by | &teatly more beneficial—greatly more useful than the old | they returned to the heuse and found the halt dor inster forty years of aze “hoo contrivance upon which it isan improvement; if such is | jocked. They made considerable noise ; but as they del the reeult. it dors in a measure retteet back. and tends to | not succeed in bringing the iniuates of the h characterize in some degree the importence of the change. Ido not agree with the learned counsel for the defendant, that 4s respects this carriage as constructed by the patentee, that it is to be regarded as embracing « combination of materials within the principles of the pateat law, and that unless the defendant has tal whole of the combination he is not liable, My own © er, struction of the act is, that that principle does not inply. ‘On the part of the defener, it was aserted that, when If the piaintift, in your judgment, has maintained that | the door was broken in, Mr. Murricher though it was the carriage constructed by him is a substantial im- | the work of burglars; he. therefare. tired b+ provement upon all previous constructions, he is entitled h the aperture made in the dae. Th and inetrumental, « pursuit | 17 Sou telieve the evidence. mustains these views: the | V™miess ith mall rhot . od o “4 evider sust wae Views, mn er. who was called to Cave nd, as was alleged on the | risintt i# entitled to recover. If you believe the di beg Siedler? a ng r, following brief letter:— ‘Thompson, called Darlington alias Bristol Bill, the | Some to cur knowledge : Mr. John Flanagan. lawyer. re- | | Arai 17.—Bunes “Allis safe. Seymour! Seymour! Seymoi burgler, and Christian Meadows, the Boston engra- Seedicain oc senann oe vA line wich tse at Set tocrane co is Wilton against The following year, at the Legislative session of | yer aud counterfeiter, Here was a trio, guided by } his uighbor who has exactly the same number of burn. | Stith, a japea-work on eee IHW, Mr. Seymour was chosen canal commissioner | Thompson's intellect, and the mechanical skill of | ers and consumes gas the same length of time, he found | at the corner of Water and. Beekman street in opposition to the late [Ephraim Hart, of Utica, | Darlington and Meadows, enough to accomplish al- | that he was not charged more than half as much by the | formerly residing in Williamsburg, and aged abc who wasthen also a member of the State Senate, | most any degree of crime known to our laws, Re company. It is bad enough to have to pay a very ‘The case appeared to have excited some interest, aud w wod had been then temporanly appointed to the It is well underst»od that the large quantity of | high price for gas, Lt is still worse to waste ft. People | numerous audience attended the court room all day office in question, by Gov. Clinton, in pursuance of | one’s altered to tens of the le Bank, Bristol, : poe LA Apes ppt BR a ~ piods Hee proceeding, having wen opened the ‘i ¥ i vi e Jal ie © °, re | 1 suthority vested in him by law, as the vacaney | Khode Island, was ex at this cottage. Alar | oily or the gas, but the exesesive quantity proadng | It seemed that the defendant hed, « long time age, happened in the ree of the Legislature. As Mr. | garet Connor, the mistress of Darlit a ’ Seon hthe burner—more than it ean properly consume, | been acquainted with the plaintiff's family, whieh inti- Hart bad many bitter enemies among the old 1 te Boston to cireulate the said hills, and | She best kind of burners those which shoe gaost, tight woaey wae renewed ip 1860; when be was {nthe hable of pare ee it bah eh is reins Nao pe re ng, she was arrested, tried, and convicted. | in proportion to the vas they consume—are the fish- | visiting them, and spent a good deal of time in musica! with members of the Legislature. He was, how- eo sure of hi mediately re Subsequently, she was liberated from prison on bail, re not economical. It tertainments there, v , that he was angry with | by Warner and Thompson, with an understanding | is to be hoped that this statement will be useful to | of which he was very fond ; ing feare that he might be | she must perjure herself by swearing to such matters | many of our fellow-citizens, and that it will throw light | one side, he was extremely attentive to the plaintiff 5 to sae “ . that his wounds were very elight ; he did beaten. mar was nominated in the Senate, | us were dictated by Wa Se, whee called ua 4 witness subject upon which much error prevails owing to | whom he made an offer of marriage. That in Oc those pes a hat —— aye boos peamenye them at all dang where the bucktaile bad a majority; and Mr. Hart | aginst the Drarys. At the first trial, Murgaret tof information. pene yn eer as cates ao nak ne suming that you arrive wt the conclusion th t in the Assembly, where the Clintonians prevailed. | © Connor was not to be found, having left the city | spisttnal Mantfe Otsego County. | that month in which he eceused hitgeelf on the carriage of the pluintit is a substantial e 1) daminges, Mr. Seyuour wi at ballot of the two | with Darlington and Meadows, who took up their TO THE EDITOR OF THE NEW YORK HERALD. ¢fli heath’; 6nd ta November, he wrete to Ur. a, netructions. th i best for the part houses, by aw _Yote, receiving some | abode in Vermont. Pending these trials, Thomp- Sin:—As the columns of the Herald are at all | a relative of the plaintiff's, infurming him he had. been arriage used by the civil courts, They returned a verdict of Not Gu fifteen or twen the Clintonians and federal his own party. Thie was a bucktail» in the Legislature, thre ymour; and by putting bim in ereabouts of bristol Bill, they not enly thwarted the wis! nd Margaret O'Cot by placing « political enemy by his side, but greatly | arrested in Vermont, were moted the bucktail party interests, through the viting, and are now litical opponents, ee tha votes ot | md triumph of the | i gh the name of he Canal was arrested in Brooklyn on a charge of being i 1 in the torpedo affair, to the Kir n b # open to the public for the investigation of sub- | married to a persun whom he had never sven but twier, | that of the pluintif: if», then it san infriugu = es united, | jects which interest its readers, I cannot pass over | by the persuasion and will cf his children, whieh he | (20%) (iy ustenwe : iT the suineur Police Intolli, i i oul not resist ; again alluding to bis Ut ee ee hw ee the absurdity of a communication in the birt heen tu be he J is a rubstantial improvement on all previous ones, t Broking @ Letter, and Forgery. —ottieer ¥ bune, without’ calling your attention to it. It wishing Man to break ¢ 7 the defendant must prove that his carriage is ditt Thirteenth ward, arrested on Thursday a Gorman ; BY For the defence the promise wat denied - y ’ headed “Spiritual m: ations in Otsego county, anewer put im that the deh fore from that of plaintiif’*. The question of damages, as | Lame a Miller, and a woman calied Mary Yalu, Be ily inanswer toa “wish” thrown out by the Hon. Horac into the marriage state; to this latter p joaten ee arrive re begga ats of = a change of obtaining & letter from the ps ed of counter- | Creeley “ that some candid observer would more cir- nawer, the plaietli? put in wo repl the plaintift have been |. is one of minor con ireeted ty Mary B. Martin, No. 6) M: the Fete peiess. cumstantially deseribe the * hand : eamlecaon t | raising’ matter,” ieeusel Giietinen were cumindasten Goth ot sideration, the great tion being the right of the party | which was a draft for $50, made payable at one day + ¢b A e of power by Mr. Seymow As to the o affair, ¢ fact is that | ‘The writer, (O. N.Y ) who has been an obser Mrs. Abrahams, the plaintiff « sister, to the machine f law whea the infringment | at the eftice of M.T. Brundage, No. 62 Wall «tre 4 ? P . er, (O. N. e ». Abrahai sister, p + made out, is to 0 : e wel f etter, when i " Jof “anal « | Thompson « the whole anatter him of near ty all th nt phases of the manifesta. | had known the defendant twelve years, and by Sitch W bp 'estotdied be hes pevtalned, nd nothing | was theben open Uy teem, ana thd ancttone sioners wa i i of the bu The box wa min named Me tions,” deseribes how the hand is raised by some i their house in 1849, and that he had been very o beta the noun ae yanthene § by adding William ('. Bouck, afterwards (Governor, | Thompson's — une! the isible r, on calling to the spirit of some de- | 4nd insisted on seeing her sister in her bed-room when | yg heceseary to personate Mary Martia. According!y. Mary arted relative. and illustrates it with the following | Sn Ceased da the month of October, 850, That ue had | $< ludicrous fact which occurred in his neighborhood; | 2nd caaved ta the month of October, 1830. That be had | The pin “Allady was aroused from her slumbers by astrange | hw had ail (he repairs and alterations dome ax she des | fl, ty the defen ion ix one of her arms; she awoke, and found | sired; that her sister was to pay $2508 year for It, and | Py Vane eettlement to the Poard. Gov. Clinton was still retained av | with the combust bles, and young Drury con- one of the commi: ‘, and #0 continued until he | veyed it to the house for Thompson, with- was removed by the Legirlatu 1424. The ot owledge of its contents. It is gene commissioners were Stephen Van Kensselae ved that the “torpedo was intended for Matline represented hervelf to be Mary B. Marcie. and ved her name: and Miller represen ed hime! to be rother. aud signed his name as John Martin. reupon Mr. A. 8. James, clerk to Mr. Brands Samuel Young. and Myron Holley. The latter | 3 Warner, as Warner, the night the box was i tical " e . tbh " as to nine orten of them whieh } the draft. This occurred some time in the me gentleman, although he had been a Clintonian, | ed, was in Philalelpbia. Several months mud toleted theleeibon’ tote eoaeneatis | Wiatitesh and werent whee Mae | pe iadeaeetasdereiasede mameae eae: finally co-operated with Mesure. Young, Seymour | then elapsed bet ween the explosion of the ** torpes her hand down in a | the conduct and deportment of the parties, and Profit. upon them, bor, Michigan—who forwarded the draft—not hat that by la The jury, after a short deliberation, brought in a ver. | ceived an answer acknowledging the receipt, and Bouck. do” and the arrest of the Drurya, and in the n H y yo | Russell, a servant, and John Henry Labau, a nephew r yas . . = - ; . pe ¢ position (L should like O. N. Y. to prove “ 7 Y, dict for the plaintifl of $1,000 damages another letter to Mise Martin, asking if the draft he: Seymour cont n the Board of Cana | mean time the farnous stool pigeon manmuvre | the passivencss of it,) “and calling on the spirit of pede gd Ee on oo, ae oe IMPORTANT 20 PATENTERS, been received. This letter was the frst fatimation re- » for ten of twelve suggested by George Wilkes to Thompson, took | one ofher children, her hand would rise.” ie or Wak, cad ak ce Join Brown oe. Leonard Johnston and Richard W. Trimdy. by fuch draft having been She, then, | speaking tube or trumpet, and that they did overbs it . called the of its rising, and asks “the | certain conversations. in ene of which, he had ter vigilant seareh was or the: - e aleo fon me nf fj ‘This suit was also for an infringem: Wy one egpetrar for | made by the police, and subs rh in which were en | seems to know the cause toget Thompson, Bill Dar- | spirit of her son W. to carry her hand to her | whether shedid not love hi he aald ‘-you are | use of the gaff on booms of vowels. ° quently it was ascartaimed alias Willian Jenkins, Cras | Shad, and ««W.,” recullect 4 the foree of the Mand so forth, “Te tras abso proves’ thei cn some the defence; and, under the direction of the court, the Sete ton \eer teh tn tr peceeieea Se aren ie on a pores rat coun Thomp- | command,“ Honor thy father, and thy mother,” | cecasions the defendant had been very lil, and the plain- | Jury assessed the damages at treble the amount sought ries. They wane enecedieatey tahun baby came ak favorable invest y his skill and | 0 + * stool pigcons, immediately obeys her mandate, and takes the hand | tif had paid bim very delicate attentines, bathing his | There were two other cases in which « rimilar ruling | Pore. | ed wer Accumaiunly taken ate ou Lie frogatity « hand e died at Utica, | and an attempt was made from tho Drarys | tothe “shoulder,” the elbow, or, T «upposs, ang 1 Dott, Xe, apd thet be bad on twe pacecjons staged th ee made. vee ‘yrivom. They will this day be transferred. befvce te in August, IX, ae ate some indications of confession of guilt. These al- | other part of the body that itches, “O. WY Moor. f Ml might.” ‘The letiers above mentioned ver Pit In evi CRIMINAL CASES came jnto | Umited States Commissioner, for examination, tts dene, Kills of Indictment Found. —The Grand c ts reets the supposition ihat inorder to become a me- | Te” acendant: : cases —- |? Dishonest Fireman.—During the fire on Wednesda: if \ . tthe anewer he | court, and handed im true bills in the following case y 1 ry tobe “innoculated” by one | nat putin aid which was atrial om the plealiugs to | The United states ve Francis, Williams, Join Burns, | evening, at the store of Lawrence & Brother, No, 80 of the Sr mediarnm, and are that Litas] be true, wae a eufficient answer to the whole. fora court | Martin Meekin, James Brown, James Suave, William | 4) oat cade Lippitn' | rand, detec or ” ‘ss ¢ eitys pce chown member _ want to know if you are a medium ourself, | would er oY ¢ perte ol ‘oid con | Powers David Humphries, Robert Brwin, James George | men by the name of We bye J cap on, Sinha nately the whole fabric was unwoven, the | you have only to ‘Tiny your hand caltaly on | tract, end in thie case tay saberiare which might have | aod Haward Wilton, for a Fema gn board the American | 8 member of one of the ence cutmpanien Bing hi, a se js pecaine apparent to the pudlic eye, [i table in compos mentis, and eall on the xpirit | been had between them might be annulled under the | ship leaae Webb, lying in the Kast River; the Unite poe ; consisting Hezekiah ©. tate Engineer and % and thus resulted in the utter defea: of the prose: oe aoe oy ne oe . “hase and George Stoulfer four eruct | fringes, tassels, silk buttons, ke Officers Feeny and ; " i ‘ p of some friend, and, if you possess the amount of I Statutes, (vol 2. page 201, section 19.) but be | State J, Chase and George Stoulfer fur cruel veyor of this Stat merly engincer os the | eutions. These last bold and desperate schemes of he a F I tid prove the case, That the defendant was #0 infirm Henry Wilson, on | Baum took him a hia porkets to yon be Wicabaveeet he | PS) wngpedinan: any ou hme cheek necessary to join in, and carry on this hum- at the defendan om | tbe filled with the stolen articles. ‘The dishomert fallow are mn Hudso peay; anni Rowe wa*y to cosy Tree ea failing $9 | bng and deception, your band will be raised, I sup- | | dekibdren) ban Sonn ek tr evae momo apa ngninst | was conveyed to tbe stution bouse, aed thenee breere eymoor, late President of the Westchester Bank, on thereafter baa |? r eh us 34 Pa ., | in order to secure hiim the necessary attendance of a ainet Rainuel Shearer, for larceny of gold duct | Juetice Osborn, who cvmmitied him to prison for trial. and now Cashier of the new Bauk of North Ameri jompsen been able to obtain confidence through eoneur with “O. N. Y.,” in his opinion that it | nurse; that as the wife had been forewarned the statute te et gaia Thomas aoe orem pena aie mon Another gentlemar nnected with | leged confessions were said to ha eon made, and the Albany regeney, as one of the minor members | upon it a powerful attempt was concocted by the as of that bed: William Seymour of Albauy, | socia e the je mind by fales who was elected ot various times to the Common | vewepapers and otherwise. i le elt: » Ge . “4 io aaened “would not to write amore elaborate account | above mentioned yy) 4 ete were de- | Mapraw. fur pom oor ton all nana echaaerndl a Ug public prosecuter, itd ee asi’, | of the manitestations; although, unfortunately, in | prea toby spayeicinn okey Pry thet the defendant | Ushied states at Wiliam Swartz Rud Josiah Shep | frthwith from the company be 10 RE ey ast accusations made against Arlington | thie age of advancement common sense, huin- | had hod severe attacks of paralysie and was completely | pard. for possessing counterfeit gold dollars, The Rescue of a Young Girt from Prostitution. —Tustice me Comnectious Beywrnes, bave | Pennet an Drurys, were conceived with amas- | bug and deception pay better than truth, candor, | Prostrated physically, and ably so in his mental | The court thea adjourned over till Saturday morning. | Mountfort, aided by Officer Vanderbeock and a Philadel- weiicah die a thie city, namely Thy Meus ter spirit; bad they proved nae Ml, no donbt | and T tet cap, Koteuven tend om tee pure, bring seated at the & “ Jinn item hen of i fame Temday wig, s » Who Was © ¢ Fou vanpeonand bis allies would have still continaed “ A tod u 4 counsel's table ; hi oat rituated at No, 73 Gra reet, for % ‘taard in’ IMB; an was | their wicked and heinous crimes age mntinned | Gelusive nonserse that was ever brought before an — pearance did not betray any grow: Supreme Court—Cireult. ine a young oud besutifel GML te Tee ame os ust the public | enlightened people, the spi tual mania seems to be | ANT cee Stee. W sievquenpeniet Cinta Before Hon, Judge Mitebell etesen Assistant Alderman of the Seeond ward, in Aven 17 —In the cuse of Farrington vs, the New Vork | Brown. from the destructive influences of a house of pros ce. But, as it turned out, Thompson, finding he m, isa! and “Z. wand Lewis Seymour were opinion, iustend of favor that mort calculated to deprave the human heart, | dant on the cee: vact be going to ae the plaintiff in rd Hatlea Railread the jury. feictered a seated verdict | tution, Itscems that the father of the misguided girt, dura ware merebant: in Chatham square, aad doth nrelf, ana lust resort, witha man called | [0,2feclaim a war, with lotegrity, And pominn | bedrormn, reY difleront nevount of the owearenee, | Stating. that they Talitved the howe of the pininti took eee ee oe Tnlncdetrhin ean eaemmeuter, who fa very popular m It was desirable on the part of | 1 former aseociate—and entered into the ee ae at the plaintifl * desire thed fire from parks from one of the lasomotives on the line; |! hort oy ken up her abode in the *p copl a the party was called which | manufacture of couuterfeit money, ai T ths “one the iden whicl I entortain | come pee ateice he having first declined to do so; a0 | but an they could not vay Wt wus throwgh negligence or | {hls city, tri walih Preceded to New York, accompanied i Opposition to ‘ ew of the © epiri an’ any 0! Nh @ love making. bul an ordi: ate tae ~ od ry one wt < 7 office: nt alone » eppesition ty ‘Famsmauy Hat, i | seme. Farnhaw was ar in the pour gendsre Lam wrongaud | tary convervation; also that Mies Bunce hod constantly werners, they found @ verdict for the defendants, tothe house, but were unable to leat anything satisfac. | man to run for Alderman, ia | the spurious im it will not be w very ea-y iT shall | beet ot her house afver Mf tery frm the woman, called the reputed keeper. incumbent, Jamar Halla dry | Thompson, and ‘ mace a subject of remark. Supertor Court. Accordingly. the magistrate proceeded to the prom rant, and nw remed ag a citizen, | the destruction * Le hap yt i ‘I uch statements from reliable per | i. own room to avoid hor, Besore Hon, Judge Sondford and demanded the production of the mlasing «int ‘Ke a with the Taonmany Hail aml Swanp | ham himself is now in the Sate Prison, "Whe Shales demon eo and hyd myself. | above is only © synopsis, occupied Avni. 11 —Syteester O. Post ce, John J. 1. Westervett, mendeavored to mislead the justice, bat nterest of the til ander the vdxteol of | — We shall continue, flom time to time, sh The Tribune's honorable editor docs not seem to | the rreess of one hour) ‘until near! lore Sherif | This was an action of trespass athe positive determination of the magistrate ohn Turgee. Me us Neyinour w fe. ted; | the various criminal steol on operatic think the statement of ©. N.Y.” faetified enough; side summet in eri for the alleged illegal selanre of 3 5 to have the girl or convey all the inmrtes of nd. to the genetn! “urprise Of the citizens, «ae | which Thom tee been aoa I for the I and I iuet eay, in the language ef Stephen Plum, ardware, the property of the plamtiff. made by th» | (he honse to the station house, she ultimately produced Clegted, over Aldermay’ Hall, who was cousilerodti. | ten or fifteen years; sume of which will be found | Thar repented.” i ‘ith oma 5 Ww ceawh the year 190, The ease wustened | the Peocasipine chew aoe yoverte sereny mersing 50 709 - w her x lpr 4 + he fifte years; A salad ave the honor to be, sir, your obedient ser, | into court with @ verdict for the plaintiff. DP mages © W Coane in the year 1847. ye care wastriet | the Philadelphia officer. and morning «| snvine. ble enndidate of txe Swamp. Tis fad ) Jo be very remaikable and interesting. ahora ee Te Raweon, | 12000. v uve befize, wey tbe jury dil not ageee, "Bewled verdie’, gonveyed back to Philadelptila, ‘.