The New York Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1852, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW YORK HERALD. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR AND EDITOR. OF FULTON AND NASSAU fYs. OFFICE N. © COR iS, cosh in rey $ S DALY HERALD, 2 cents per copy—$7 per ennum. FE WREKLY HERALD, coery Saturday. at 6 cents per ecpy, or$! per annum; the Buropenn Efition, $4 per an- en toanyprrt of Great Britcin, and $5 to any parto the Continent. both to include the poste. ‘411. LEYTERS by mail, for Subs tisements, to be post-pa: r the por eremitted. | SOR PRINTING executed with neatness, cheapness, and exp A. DVERTISEMEN T'S renewed every day. TER ge eth be deducted from ions, °* with Adver- Wotume XVII AMUSEMENTS TO-MORROW EVE) Bowery—Wttiam Tete—Pave ROWERY THEATR Jomme-—-GUARDIAN A BROADWAY THEATRE Bown ycastirs. Broadway—BentRam—Two ¥IBLO'S—Crown Dismonns—I Rian SeORETARY. street—TweLrra BURTON'S THEATRE anders Wreur—Marw or THE MOUNTAIN. tham strect—CARPENTER NATIONAL THEATRE, © ssiNG THE Line. or Revexr—MitteR s Mar—C METROPOLITAN HALL—Dempsren's Concent. AMERICAN MUSEUM—AwusinG Pervormances 1x Thy Arren noon AnD Eveninc. MPHITHEATRE, Bowery—FavestRran CURISTY'S MIN “7 RELS, Mechanics’ Hall, 472 Broadway —Erisorian Minst) v1 WOOD'S MINSTRELS, Wood's Murical Hall, 444 Broad- way—Erwiorian MinsTRELS New York, Sunday, The News. ‘A medium supply of telegraphic information this morning, fortunately enables us to furnish a great variety of highly entertaining reading which would ise have been crowded out. ‘The few despatches swe have, however, will be found unusually interesting. Our special Washington correspondent writes that it is in contemplation to refer all the bills granting Jands for railroad purposes to a special committee in the House, whose duty it will be to ‘* separate the wheat from the chaff.” This should have been done long ago. ‘The committee can push along the public business while the politicians express their sapient opinions on the Presidential question. Tha! some of the railrod schemes, for the benefit of which lands have been appropriated during the present session, are really worthy of national encouragement there isno doubt—still, a majority of them are chimeri- eal and never can be of any practical utility. The proceeds of the lands with which Congress has so liberally endowed them, will go into the pockets of avaricious speculators, and that will be the last of them. Bills which literally squandered the public domain, have been rushed through with locomotive speed. Nearly the only debate that occurred while they were under con- sideration, was whether Cass, Buchanan, Douglas, or somchody elec, was the most popular candidate with the democrats—whether Fillmore, Webster, or Scott, would be the nominee of the whigs; and whether white or black girls were in the ascend- ancy among the gallants of Massachusetts. No wonder that the people complain of the want of at- tention to the public business when proceedings of this nature are of daily occurrence in our national Jegislature. Quite a spirited discussion took place in the State Senate yesterday, on the question of referring to the committee of the whole the Assembly bill req! g the Canal Auditor to pay the drafts of the. Commissioners. The bill was finally made the special order for Tuesday afternoon, when it is evi- dent that a warn and protracted debate will en- sue, as many of the leading democratic Senators have avowed their intention of resisting it with all their power. This bill is certainly unnecessary, and is doomed to be of no avail whatever. The Auditor bas declared that he will not be controlled by the mandates of the Legislature, but by the courts; aud asthe matter bas already been carried before the latter tribunals for adjudi a, our legislators may and endeavor to attend to April 4, 1852. otherwi i The Supreme Court, yesterday, in the case of Phelps vs. the Auditor, decided that the latter must pay ths drafts. The Avditor, to make ‘ass iy sure,” will now carry the matier up to the Court of Appeals, where the whole canal question—including the po- euliar contracts which deprived the people of three | be finally settled, so far as Brunswick, stating that they had got safo s0 far. | Previous to his departure, an affecting scene took place in the Marshal’s office. His wife, a woman nearly white, came to Deputy Marshal Thompson, | Tae Ant Uxion CaSt—Tae Prose xor YET Sorvep.—The long postponed decision of Judge Duer in the Art Union case, was given yesterday, and will be found in our law reports this morning. and begged that he would permit her daughter by | It leaves still unsphynxed the riddle, “is a lottery of age, to take farewell of her step-father. The re- quest was unhesitatingly complied with, and the lit- tle girl, who is much attached to Horace, clung to him with great affection. The stern majesty of the law, however, interposed; the slave must be sent to the eervice that he owed; and he was removed in the custody of Mr. B. H. Talhnadge, Jr., Mr. Thompson, and two assistant officers, (D’ Angelis and Rakicleweiz.) At the Courtland stroet ferry a number of colored people assembled to bid her former husband, a little girl of about seven years | a lottery, or isa lottery not a lottery 7” Judge Duer, distrustful, it would seem, of his ability to | render’ a proper solution of this knotty question, shrunk from the task of doing so, and took refuge under one of those many dodges and quibbles of tho law which make that venerable institution such a fine field for parties, lawyers, and judges, indulging jin a game of hide and seek. So, the learned func- tionary who tried this cause, and listened with so much commendable patience to the long-winded The Calamity in Thirty-second Street. __ INVESTIGATION CONCLUDED—VERDICT OF THE JURY. | ‘she aaveshgation Pelative to the falli Luildis gs, while in process of erection. in second treet. near Eighth avenue. on Saturday, the 27th ult., wid the cause of death of three indi who were iyved under the ruins, was yesterday resumed and con- cluded. before the Osroner. “The following is the testi- mony sdduced :-— Amos . Woodruff, of No. 98 Bank street. sworn, said— | Thave visited the ruins in Thirty-second street, the | foundation wall was all torn down to the bottom stone— | that was sufficiently large, The mortar was very poor ; | the sand was good, but there was not lime enough; I think it was ground lime ; Iam not positive as to that, but I um posilive that there wax not enough lime to make gocd work, I saw no foundations for the chimney, on ciher side ofthe building; within the fice limits it is | necessery they thould be Built, ‘fhe front foandaiion ‘wall was standing ; I have seen better, but I have aiso seen worse; L think it was sufficient to hold the walls; | jrem what 1 raw, the brick walls were eight inches. ‘The ng ot the two { and ponderous arguments with which counsel on | timber was very eight. lighter than T have most ever either side built up his position, waked up at length | seen; I thinkit was altogether too light. If the sand is ich they can be of a little | hi farewell. The officers permitted the interchaais of adieus. One colored friend said to ‘him, * Horace, be a man; never consent to be & slave ; die first; put an end to your own life.” Another declared that he would give five dollars towards his coffin, but he would not give five cents towards purchasing his freedom, as that was all the claimant required. Horace said to one of the deputy Marshals that he had been always well treated at Baltimore, ‘but then,” said he, “it is hard. now hav- children without the hope of ever seeing thom again.” He thought, however, he would not follow the advice of his friends, to die, but would run the couree of his natural life. The jury in the Cuban ease retired at 12 o'clock, M., yesterday, and came again into court at 9 o'clock, P. M. Upon being interrogated by the Clerk as to their verdict, the foreman replied that they had not been able to agree, and that there was no human probability of their agreeing, if they should even be confined fora month. Under this state of circumstances, the Judge, (who expreased his feelings of opposition to forced. verdicts,) dis- charged the jury, with the thanks of the Court for their patient attention during the progress of the trial. The Young Men's Whig Committec—A Ter- rible Flutter among the Politictans. The publication of the report of the proceed- ings of the Young Men’s Whig Committee has | produced quite a flutter among some of its members, and has sadly disturbed their equa- nimity. Erastus Brooks, of the Express, the Chairman of the committee, and Nathan C. Ely, Chairman of the sub-committee, appointed to wait on Mr. Maxwell, the Collector, have waxed very wrothy and denounced those members who reported the pro- ceedings. They are desperately annoyed that the gag rule adopted by the majerity cannot be practically carried into effect. The Evening Express says the reports, beth in the HeraLp and the Tribune of yesterday, are ‘false and malicious,” but that it ‘tis not at liberty to cor- rect the mis-statements;” for none but the meanest kind of a whig would divulge the secrets of the committee—a very convenient method of avoid- ing some disagreeable particulars. Yet, curious enough, immediately under this editorial declara- tion, appears a communication from Nathan C. Ely, in which he does the very thing that the Lxpress condemns, and that journal, with characteristic consistency, lauds the letter and the writer. Mr. Ely states that ‘the Collector did not say, nor did the eommittee report, that no one but a Fillmore man should hold office in the Custom House. On the contrary, he held only that no man ought to hold office there who would abuee the power en- trusied to him, by being an active opponent or enemy of the administration.” Now, we happen to have the words of the report on this point, as taken down at the time by a member of the committee, who stands at least as high in the public estima- tion as Mr. Ely, and that gentleman’s account is corroborated by the distinct recollection of two others, and until the report itself is published | | Let Messrs. Ely and Brooks publizh it, if they dare. The account published in the Tvibune was the same in substance as that inthe Heratp. The principal difference is, that our report was more fall and de- tailed. But in the vital point—that ‘no man did or should get his bread from any office in the Cus- tom House who was not a friond of Fillmore’—both the reports are identical; and is it likely, we ask, that the Heranp and Tyibune would combino to misrepresent the proceedings ? The best test, there- fore, of the accuracy of our report, is the fact that it is the very same as that furnished to the Tribune by one of its own reporters who was present, being a member of the committee. Messrs. Brooks and Ely may, therefore, go and tell “the horse marines their stories about misstatements. The public will not believe them. The most charitable thing tosay dicial action. The people e cision in the eage till the next ute election. Several important Is were passed in the Assem- bly yesterday. Several of the property holders in this cily, will probably be pleased to learn of the the Dill a: ing the build cross the Harlem river, for the special ac- n elle Railroad. No n would have boen made to the measure had ion of the of the Harlem and New Haven roads; but 2 of another blockade over ana was considored inexpedient, and is tutional. permit th in the jails of Penns third re: that Sto The s a former session, by ex-Gov. Johnston. We have a brief account of another most horrible catastrophe on the Ohio river. The boilers of the stenmer Redstone exploded yesterday afternoon, and 80 completely the vessel to pieces that she immediaiely sunk. Thore were seventy persons on board at the time, nearly all of whom lost their lives. Of t ly the captaia and clork were | rpared, and a is said to have been go severely ied that it is doub‘ful whether he can recover. The numerous disasters of this kind are truly appall- | ing. Luws have boen enacted for ensuring the | safety of passengers, which require the inspection of | heless, steamers are con- hout the necessary they are trustworthy; tors appointed to make the proper surveysare, in nine cascs out of twelve, ingompe- tent, and know nothing about the bueiness which they und ke todo. This is triding with life and If Congress would let politics alone for a few and turn its attention to this matter, much o remedy the flagrant evile that now exist. Nomen should be allowed to ran a steam engine who docs not thorougly anderetaud his bust. retention of fugitive slaver 80 of » He ne measy ding in Representatives in © was vetoed during e © crew, oF former sand engines; nev ly to be found ru ificate guarantees or and even the ins limb days might be done of a | ny made arrangements to run over the | gable | has boen ordered to a | of these gentlemen is, that they have shocking bad | memori Some members of the committee and | politicians outside fecl, no doubt, with the Express, | that ‘tarrant mischief” is done to individuals, if | not to the party, by telling the truth. But our | motto is—‘‘ Honesty is the best policy.” Let the | trath come out, no matter whom or what it may | injure; and ‘let justice be done, though the heavens | should fall.”* | Since the foregoing was written, we received a communication fiom a member of the General Com | mittee, in which, after quoting the disclaimers in the Express, he goes on to say: The committee did report that Mr. Maxwell no one did or should receive his bread from an o | held in the Custom House, who was not a fy | Mr, Fillmore.” his ia the exaet langung | report: any one can draw his own inferencs of | meaning. Tf Mr, Maxwell wishes to de from his somuolency, yawned, rubbed his eyes, and after the expiration of a fortnight, discovered at length that there was no cause of action before him, and that the learned arguments of the lawyers was so much breath fruitlessly expended. Well, this case of the Art Union seems destined to exhibit the admirable features of the laws, law- yers, and Judges of this State, in the most ludicrous points of view. It enables us to have a clearer per- ing been so long away, to be torn from my wife and | ception than we ever had before of the beautiful | working of the codes, new and old, and of the com- | prehensive intellects of those who are charged with their prov: Judge Duer has virtually acknow- ledged his distrust of his own ability to decide the grave question on its real merits; but we are yet to have the piercing rays of another judicial intel- | lect brought to bear on it. The District Attorney, | who, on his side, has been also illustrating the beauty of ‘the law’s delays,” will take up the question next week in the Supreme Court, on a mo- | tion to confiscate the property ef the Art Union to the people of this State; and, perhaps, we may have a ehance of learning, on the authority of ono of the judges of that court, what we have been go long waiting to have legally decided—whether “a lottery is a lottery, or is not a lottery.” Inthe absence of all ordinary light proceeding from knowledge of law or common sense, ourjudiciary ought, perhaps, to have recourse to the spirits. One of their brethren, now in the country, and who has be- come somewhat celebrated for the progress he has made in spiritual science, would, of course, if soli- cited, put himself in communication with the spirits, and might prevail even on the ghost of Gidipus to put his old riddle-solving abilities into operation once more for our benefit, and to save the reputa- tion of bur wise men learned in the law. Or, if their brother is churlish, and wishes to keep to himself the benefit of spiritual communications, the judiciary might wait in a body on the Misses Fish or the entire we must hold that cur information is corveet. | the spear of the hunter. Misses Fox, and enlist their sympathies and services to get them out of their present fix. In the mean time, the temporary injunction re- straining the Art Union from the distribution of their pictures, is dissolved, and they are now at fall liberty to hold their lottery, as provided for in their constitution. They ought to make the most of thi opportunity, satisfy their subscribers by carrying out their original design, and avoid the interrup- tions of the law, which, in some of its eccentric freaks, may soon put the ban on their operations again. WHat akg THE LecisLature Doingt—They have been very busy, for the last week, doing nothing. | They have been trying to pass the Maine Liquor law, | and trying to do many other things. The only | thing they have succeeded in doing, is to cover over the plunderings.of the canal lettings. But even in that they have been only partially successful, and exhibit, at this moment, the rather ludicrous posi- tion of the ostrich hiding its head in the sand or the bush, and imagining that it is not seen by its pur- suers, while the rest of its body is exposed to view, and presents a huge and easy mark for the arrow or | Consecration of St. Thomas’ Chureh. The consceration of the partly newly-erected St, ‘Cho- mas? Church, Broadway, took place yesterday morning, before a crowded and fashionable assembly. A little after half-past 10 o'clock, Bishop Chase, the consecrating bishop, evtered the church through the middle aisle citing the usual benediction, followed by the Revs. Dr. Vinton, of Brooklyn, Mr. Halecy, Dr. Helght of Trinity expounding them to the people and carrying out | courvete is usual to fereen it; if fine, not—I mean fer the | foundation ; Leaunet peak as to the foundation parti- | tion wall, but the reet of the wall was strong enough, | ‘The mortar in the foundation was pret y poor ; the mor- tar Law in the street wasuleo poor, There was consi- | derable wind on that day ; I think the wind. however, ed awey inthe afterncon, We always brace walls as | scom as the seatfolding is tuken down Jonathan 8, smith, of No. 175 Fourth street, sworn, said—I am a ma onand builder; [ have seen the rains in ‘Vhirty-second street; I found ‘the buildings ali down, | it the outside walls of the foundation; I think they | wero sufficiently stroug for the building ‘to be erected | upon them; the mortar was not first quality; it was shout middlng—rather poor; the partition wall was down; the brick was good cnough; L think the stone wall too «mall fer the toundation; I refer to the partition wails; the most of them were also bad in shape; the partition requires better material than walls built against a bank or another foundation; the sand scemed to be good; the | mortar was rather poor; ithad not quite lime enough in | it; Laid not dikcover any foundation for the chimneys; | | the timber used wes smail; I should not think it fit to be | used in a building of that height; I do not see how the building conld have fallen had not the partition founda- tien ven way; the guble end next to tighth avenue thould have been braced; I suppose the walls wepe eight inches; it is customary to brace such walls, or gy ordi- | pary Wall; it is usual to run up one story, and then brace; we inight leave it at diuner-tiine without ‘bracig, unless the wind blew very hard; I should. however, brace at night Jacob Harriott, of No. 4, Kighth avenue, aworn, said— I 2mamasonand builder; I have seen the ruins in Thirty- second street: I found the building all down and the paril- tion foundation wall down; I believe the stone wall in the partition of «aid property would hold a heavy building; the mortar I should suppose to be poor; the brick were good enough fora building of that description; the bricks jd not rein to have much mortar on them; two loads of sand and one cask of lime will make good mortar; I mean barrel lime; I did not see the timber; we do not put stone into mortar; they will, however, get it; I should not expect a wall to stand, the mortar of which contained fuch stones as those; Leereen the sand used in mortar for foundation walls. Fredk. G, Leroy. resident surgeon to the New York Hospital, eworn, said—James Ferrell was admitted to the Hospital Inst Saturday. 1 think the 27th inst.; he was in- sensible at the time; he lingered five hours and died at midnight; T found a fracture in the spine, und also of several of the ribs; in my opinion the cause of death was afracture of the spine; John Brady was admitted to the Horpital on Saturday. the 27th inst., and lived twenty minutes after admission; a post mortem examination de- yeloped a rupture of the bladder and fracture of the pelvis; theee injuries wore the cause of death. Thomas Haley, of Elizubethtown, N. J.—Ido business in this city; cm a mason and bnilder; have seen the ruins in Thirty-recond street; when I saw them the par- tition foundation wall was partly down; it was dowa, anoie or less, clear throngh to the rear of the building; mld make a good wall if well put up and L should think the mortar was pretty good; I ny,of the wall down; it is diffcult to tell whether the wail is well put up without domg so; I think they were sufficiently strong to hold the buildings that were tobe erected upon them; all sand containing such stone as shown to me here, should be Kereened; the foro man ot the building should have attended to the bracing of the wail—it is his business; T think the foundation was wide enough to have built the foundation of the chimncy upon it; in cases where the foundation is not wide enough, the foundation must be carried up; I con- sider shell lime to be good when used in winter—not so good for summer; it sels too quick; Mr. Brady I consider a good workman; 1 did not observe the timber used. Danicl Shannon, of Broadway, near Thirty-fourth street, sworn. raid—I am a mason; have worked at the Dusiness about cight years; I knew John Rankin ; he was working on the building ; I caw the buildings inabout tye ininuict after they fell; ‘helped to get Rankin out. and took him home ; I sew the mortar as they were tak- ing down the walls, und it looked tome to be rather poor ; 1do not think the walls would have fallen by their own weight had th ly put up ; [believe masons, in putting up cheap buildings, are not as careful to keep them plumb ught to be; the timber was not ua heavy as I have generally ecem used ; the beams being Light, end the men carrying brick and mortar acro < | | thom, would spring the Walls in, if not braced ; most of the partition wall was down to the ground when I fir saw it; there wes & little standing at each end; [ thins the cause of the buildi dotion wali giving wa; , failing was from the centre foun- the gable end falling in might © foundation wall of the middle partition, jeratio street, sworn---L am a mason, seen the ruins in Thirty-second street; usterisl used in the foundation : were very indifferent stone, such as thovid not be used in a building of any class; I saw the tar scattered about there, and I should think the lime wringly used; IT saw some shell lime in the liad been ured in the walls; it is lered better than rock lime under ground, ¢ Guaotities ; I teok but little notice of 1 an eighteen inch wall it is customa- ed, it is no wonder to me that they did part fell first ; it is customary to Church, Dr. Shrocder, Mr. Eigenbrobt of AU Saints Church, Dr. Lewis, of the Holy Trinity Church, Brooklyn, Mr. Abercrombie, Mr. Johnson. of the Theological Seminar Mr. Eaton, of St. Clement's Church, and about twen other clergymen, attired in their surplices, and ten un- attired The Rey, Mr. Halsey rend the instrument of Donation. | upon which the title to the church was founded ; and the | Rev. Dr, Height the centence of consecration, | The first part of the morning prayer was read by Dr. | Sbroender, the firet lesson by Mr. Eigenbrobt, and the | second lesson by De. Lewis; and the morning portion was concludad by the Kev, Mr. Johnston. Dr. Height gave | out the Pealns. and the communion service was read hy th rating Pishop. assisted by Mr. Abercromby, who Gospels, Mr. Enton read the Epistles. and ided over by Dr. Hodges, of the Trinity a; Chureh cheir The Rev. Dr. Vinton, of Brooklyn fecration sermon. chapter, 24th ve places made with 1 preached the con- He took for his text Hebrows, * For Christ ix not entered into holy nds, which are the figures of the truc, but into Heay ‘The reverend Doctor's discourse was very brief, a piritual and admouitory character. He advocated th outward and rymbolic signs of religion and sacred archi tecture, and considered that its promulgation was aided by divine inspiration. Things. ho said, which were seen, were but things not unseen, and eterual. Hoe glanced al the eternal cliarneter of the kingdom of heaven, and its relations to thia world. aud surveyed the structure nnd happiness ef the New Jerurntem, Jie next referred (o the instructions gi y 1 of the temple. his large stone in it. as large as those foundation with euch stone in the mortar ¢a solid foundation ; the stone could not Lorcer a» Littie mortar as possible between two stones, that there may be as litile settling as possible ; I ink [should be as eompetent a judge of the quantity 1 the person who man and boy, for aware that mortar, after a ‘a worge appearance than it ake due allowance for that. ‘Thompson street. sworn, said— ; have seen the ruins in Thirty. 18 mason about thirty years; I materisl used in the foundation bad; the ity: atill, [think « wall tly strong to have held the brick wall: wall depends upon miaiie it, hay twonty-eeven y building has f otherwise would; 1 émos Woodruff, of 14 Iman on H roeond street consider ¢ stone wall of a might ha Re! tell: SERMONS THIS DAY. Eastern Congregational Charch—Rey. William ‘Loes Love, Morning and evening. New Jerusalem Church, Eighth street, near Broad- wey—Proferror Burh. Evening—Subject: The New Chureh view of regeneration. Presbyterian Chureh, St. Luke’s Hall, corner of | Grove and Hudson streets.—Rey. John Little. Morning and afternoon, Dwight Congregational Church in Sixth street, between Second and Third avenuer—Rey. Dr. Dutcher. Morning, afternoon. and evening. Protestant Episcopal Church of the Messiah, ‘Wooster street, near Prince—Rev, John M. Wainwright. Evening. The Christian Jsraclite Sanctuary in First street, between Avenue A and First avenue—Margaret L, Bishop, Afternoon, Methodist Episcopal Church in Seventh strect— Tey. A. L. P, Green. Afternoon. Fifth Universalist Church, Lecture Room of Uni- vertity Medics] College, Fourteenth street, near Third ayenue—Rey, J. C. Pitrat, Afternoon. Church of the Second Advent, corner of Hester street and Bowery-Lider J, Jones.” Morning and afver- noon, Evangelical Luthern Church in Mulberry street, near Grand. Subject; Has man to dread any panish- ment in the world to come? Evening. MISCELLANEOUS. A Presbyterian church was organized and two ru- ling elders ‘ordained by Rey. Dr. Gray, ou Wappa-Nocea | Ricge, in Crittenden county. Ark. on the last Sabbath in February. It is the tiret’ Presbyterian church organ- ized in thai part of the State. 1 ‘The Buffalo Christian Advocate states that Aris- tareus Champion, Esq. of the city of Rochester. a gen- tleman of great wealth and equal benevolence, bas pledged himpclf to Dr. Luckey, * to give ten thousand dollars to build ten new Methodist churches. five on each ride of the river. provided that at each point designated they rire « thourand dollars mere.” Inthe Philadelphia Methodist Episcopal confer- ence laet week, the presiding bishop, the Rev. Dr. Janes, prevented the report of the Rev. Dr. J. T. Peck, Presi- dent of Dickinson College. giving a flattering exhibit. of the afiairs and condition of the institution, and closing with a tender of his resignation, an event which ho had some months determined on, The whole number of stu- dents in the college is 111. with 65 in the German class. mokinga total of 176 students, against 152 the previous yer, The Lutheran Observer says the Rev. D. Smith, who is occupying a missionary station in Louisville, Ky., ttates that there are 18,000 Germans there, and the num- ber rapidly increasing ; one half of whom are Komanists, ond the other Protestants, and « majority of the latter Lutherans by profession, and yet not a single Lutheran church. Under the auspices of the several Congregational chreber in Portland. a new and beautiful church edifice has been erected in State street. and on Wednesday evening. the 17th of March, a colony of about fifty from the High street church, with a number from other church- es, were organized into a new church, A new church was, organized in the BeneficentCongregational meeting-house Providence, R. I.. on Thureday the 18th inst., bearing the name of the Central church, consisting of 82 members. The meeting-house erected the last year by the Pilgrim Society in North Weymouth, Mass.. was dedica- ted to the Triune God on the 11th of March, and a new church constituted, consisting of fifty-one members ais- mireed from the first church in Weymouth. At an Ecclesiastical Council, held at the Phillips church, South Boston, on Thureday last, it was unani- mourly voted to distolve the connection heretofore exist- ing between that ghurch and society and the Rev. J. W. Alvord. The ground upon which this dismissal is made, is the ill-health of Mr. Alvord. The Boston Traveller says:—We understand that unanimous call has been extended to Rev. 8. Hale Higgins, of this city, by the Howe strect Congrogational church in New Haven. Conn., to become their pastor. The New York Recorder (Baptist) states that the trustees of Newton Theological Seminary are taking mea- sures for raising $50.000 to complete the endowment of that institution; and that the friends of the Arcadia Col- lege, the Baptist institution tor the provinces of New Brunewick and Nova Scotia, are making a similarattempt with prorpects of euccors, Within = year or two, Baptists have raiced for educational purposes, $125.000 for Brown University; over $60,000 for Madison. and nearly $200,000 for the University and Theological Seminary at Rochester. The Rev. D. G. Corey, of Utica, has declined i pting the call of the Stanton street Baptist church of thie city The Rey. O. C, Wheeler has accepted the call of the Baptist church at Sacramento City. California, and will soon enter uy his labors at that piace. 4 The Rev. T. R. Creasey has resigned the pastoral charge of the Baptist chureh at Indianapolis, and ac- ecpted that of the church at St. Paul’s, Minnesota, and ‘will remove to that place in May next, The Rev. Mr. Fleischman, of the German church, Philsdelphia. baptized eight candidates on Sunday even- ing. February 20, four of whom were formerly henea Catholics, The First Baptist church, in Cincinnati, the Rev. D. Sheppardson. partor, have recently received twenty- three by baptiem, the fruit of ordinary means of grace. It is said that Sonne nearly all of the present term ofthe Whitestown (N Y.) Seminary, there has been enjoyed an unusually good degree of religious interest. ‘The revival has mosily been confined to the Ladies’ De- partment, and has taken hold of a portion of the best mind in the school. It has been characterized generally by a deep, rational conviction of sin, anda deliberate and decisive eubmission to Christ. Revivals are also reported at Ira, Cayuga Co., at Castile, and at Chittenango, A revival has been going on for some time in the Spring street. Presbyterian church, N. $.in this city, under the pastoral care of Rev. Dr. Campbell. Last. Sabbath. twenty-nine persons were reecived into the church—twenty-five by profession. Of the twenty-five by profession. fourteen were males, one between sixty and seventy, one lad, two young married men, and the r intelligent and promising young men. Of the twen five, all but two had been baptized in infancy, and sub- Jeets of Sebbath school instruction. Rev. Rufus Taylor, late of Shrewsbury, N. J., has aecepied the call of the church in Manchester. Mass, to supply the vacancy made by the death of his brot er. The Edwards Church an ton. Mas Society, of Northam; have invited the Rev. Gordon Hall, of Wil- to become their pastor. J. C. Bodwell, so favorably known for his lectures on “Social Life in England,” has accepted the unanimous mvitation of the Hollis Evangelical Church and Society at Framingham, Mass., to become their the mertar used 4x g the stone; the | quality of the rand and the want ofa sufficient quantity | of lime, made the mortar bad; I should not consider the | sand sharp fereencd; it was not clear, fine cand; none of | which [ saw, were properly built; the mortar | ry infers 1 think itwould be necessary | to build picra for ¢ n ancighteon inch founda- | tion wall when tL about eight iach; Tebould br think t a bnilding like that, built at this season of the year, the chi he in favor ef its falling; 1 did hot notice the timber; L should not have supposed that the fell: of one story of the gable wall would have breken dation w y e Ger of beams, hed not the founda- . sworn, | sre both absent om account of impaired health. | Kixet Presbyterian Church (late Rev. Mr. Jacobus's) is pastor, Ri A. Rawson closes his ministerial sorvices the prevent month with the church and society in South- borough, Mass., where his labors have been highly | blessed for a period of ten years, Rey. Cheater Fitch was dismissed, March 3, 1452, from his pastoral relation to the church and sociey in New Marlborough. North, Mass, | Rev. Dr. Cox and Rev. Dr. Spencer, of Brosk'yn, | The without a pestor. In Dr. Cox's church there is unus ‘11 | | seriousness, aud all the meetings are largely attended. Marine Affairs. Fen Evnore.—The United States mail steamship Pa- work on the butldi ng | Brady and Brooks there; | ve directions to Brady—it was be- | tween J) and 120" 1 heard Brooks say to Brady to | | tion to satisfy the doubts of the whiz p: t | observed by the priests, Bt | brace the walls Ono cf my men shoved up three joist to | | him come out, and show his hand, Why noi jib. | Seportance of the ecred rit nded their | brace the walis, ‘Che wind was blowing little; Ido not | lish the report of the committee entire? saat | Cbxervance in a particular way, and as coming from God. | romember that it blowed hard, have hoon engaged ia | | Erastus Brooks refused to allow a member of ths Gencral | Abd not from men, Moses was commanded to make all | the city ut ty busines for nine years, ‘The timters were. | | Committee to take a pen from the Secretary's table is | things by pattern. ‘The arti of the disciples were pretty good, but emall; 1 have wed worse timber than L | | true—Mr. Brooks saying that the member cou! not men selceted by means of huzaan caprice, but wore was (he kind of timber Tam | | the ure of the pen for the purpose of eupying | A most unwarrantable and arbitrary exereis | over the stationery of the committee. Ono poor | im the employ of the federal government. tried t the vote upon the motion to lay the uation tion to Mr, Maxwell on the table by negtecti when hie name was cailed; but Mr. ducksoa, a Houre officer. from the Eighteenth ward. | off the victim of federal patronage was compelled to toe the mark. and respond in the affirmative. In fact, it is the truth of our report that gives it the sting. If it was false, it would not have created such a tremendous hubbub among the wire pullers, pose ond have a certificate from a board of practical evgincors; and no ould be permitted to nun, the hich have not been pronounced experienced engineers and boiler nuinly owing to the lack of compe- boilers of w art of eng at those caluini and there is no other way of chack- | by these men to the most rusting haman life ing them than rigid exami te thety keey A derwatch from New Ori announces that the | ate lepenlonce was totally wrecked in Ma- tag , on the 23h ult. Seven persons, wh es We given in the account, were drowned. It appost j natives in the late Methodist Epic opal Conferenco, ia Philadotphia, Maine c-ewed it inexpeUent to moddle with th L que any other politi i ther fore very wisely Jaid @ ter on the t a slave, Hor.we Proston, the fi rested iu this city wader Une now law, was ond 1 to be returned to hia owner, Yesterday morning, by Mr Commissiover ite was immodiacely tuauemiited en rowle Lo Baltimora and at 4 o'clock a telegraphte despatch was received from New he fugi M bably an equal one, if uot greater, in the Old Mi Committee. Among the party outside, also, Fill- General Scott. This feeling arises from the fact | that Scott is the candidate of Seward and the abo- | ofbrotherly love, and aitendance at p of th ay | Was called the attention of the committee to the fact. and | that whieh exi jod, and their ¢ xereise of human distinguished and fet apart by depended not upon the me but upon holy ins At Who would dare to a Chrirtion church necd not be cerecn before t tL f <iin the Jewish and Popl He alluded to the necessity of the doctrine ¢ the blocd of Christ, asthe pathway to the holies.” and dwelt upon the advant the due performance of spiritual exere the cra of the commencement of bull arebitceture of which hed b | authoriticn of the republic made aleo their appearance. | | Inthe he President and the evening. the city was jiluminated. and pyrothechnic Vistiers to West Point, lt Th following naaed gentlemen have ! the Preside nt as Vititers to the Mil the hod; ured in that building ; thi int havit of using ‘on such he #. The framing and 1 the fore and afier jiding was ready to roof, ost iwenty-third at workon the | carpenter werk was done well bh partitions were ret; th Stephen H, Washburne strect, sworn, said—1 am a mason; front ofthe building at the it full; was putting up a Intel; took no notice of the mortar that was used; while at werk I heard a crash, aud looked up and saw a part of a wall and a lnborer falling through the bea ved down and ran in the middie of the street; T | | ura- and saw the eentre partition wall give way tion wall, about the first story; it teil the a uvenue, and the upper part of the | Ued straight down; the west gable fell first; | e of the fall drove the centre wall out; the wal walk when 1 left at eleven o'clock; Laid not hear him n A. Lidell, of No, 90 Prince street, sworn, said . TL anade ® post mortem examination of f John Renkin, assisted by Dr. Hepburne; 1 he building. upon the beams hen the middle wall fell; the m » of the weight of the w fier the gable end full Idle wall fell in couse: fon the beams. ja 4 | yerte | able seamen. giving them high w: | seme trouble, four of the ringleaders were placed in irons war would be of great benefit to American vessel: month of } She carries 104 pareengers—a much larger number than has left here in any European steamer for the past eight monthe, Sourmens Stramens.—Tho Alabama, for Savannah; Ma- | rion, for Charleston ; and the Roanoke, for Richmond, . Captain Nye, left at noon, yesterday, for Liverpool. | | | left port yesterday afternoon. Farat Array ox Boar Sur Atias—The following | account is from a correspondent of the New Bedford Mer- j oury “Tarcanvaxo, Jan, 20—A fatal affray took plac rday. on board the American merchant ship A‘ of Baltimore, Captain Lebrou. The ship arrive frei Colifornia some days since. and shipped sixteen m » and as much as advance, On Sunday laet, when he wished to get under weigh. all the rascals refused to procced in the ship. al- leging that there were not n sufficiency of mon After | and yerterday morning the rest refused duty. One of the | men struck the fit mate, who was obliged to grapple with him; and while so engaged another man, an Knglish- man, come up and struck the mate on the head with on * n rendered subservient to | fell on the bewms; there was sbout or ni t of | ire . i nor would the Scott men on the committee have cpr) pride nnd an ifleen The nuances | (he wall fell; 1 donot know what time Sir, Brooks left; it | this Mane hot be ven ah Che ete as ined wie been so excited as they were. ee ee aan Feimaip were not an cad, but © | was raining at eleven o'clock; about one o'clock it him with the belaying pin a second time, when the mate | vd ds alluded to the tat Estoy ak on anni te oan | ed; 1 Went back to the building. and was waiting for my | ghot him with a pocket pistol. ‘The wounded man was . Mpeg tt ogee hens 7 gen nor la oe ther; the wind wa lng; it was very gusty; 1 onl nt 1 0 i y ‘Tre Worg Caxpipates FOR THE PRESIDENCY, AND ieee and coucluted by nepititual admonition | Worked on the front of the the front as oaly Bea veqreanas tae gn 0% promed tor fia Vue si acri :, - * : and exhortation in Er pe pen i} a b py h roe 0 Ben | Tur Witte Pourticiaxs or New Yorg.—It is quite | “ane oid Hundred pealm was then sung. anda henedic- | V2,t2,the first story; Mr. 1g Oa the | inthe ship. It being very evident that the mate shot is touch- ng here.” A Rewann ov Menrt.—The Atlantic Mutual, the Sun degrees north. longitude 60 west, in ‘he ovember, 19 jonation properly best hore in distress at sea. 0, This we con-ider amyguifiernt ed, encouraging others to nseiet Moy they never be the poorer | mow displaying var new and fn | Gloves are just what ev rirt and oeeul wh © Associa for the Exhibition of the In- dustry of all Nations.—A charter having been granted by tle Legislature cf this State, for the purpose of an Ini trial Exhibition, and the Corporation nf the ity having, ¥ reat liber: A the use o Tobats penta, the patties sesociated tn’ the enterprish a now prepared to invite the co-operation of their fellow-cit xens. In doing this, they think it proper to state, at some lengih, the motives which guide them, and the objects which they hope to attain. It is scarcely necessary to ony thes the idea was suggested by tho brilliant success that attended the London Exhibition of last year. Tuat exhibition, liberal viows, and carried out witht rowned with the most triumphant € suthorizes ust) assert that, In all jt ar tl triump! of jus a in- dustry, no nation gave more striking proofs of intellectual eapacity sud vigor, applicd to ful arte, than were manifested by our own people. It therefore, a natural suggestion, of patrotic and ional feelings, that we should not’ only wish to see a exhibition in our own country, but that we should desire to reproduce in it the bencicial effects that had Fejulted from its great prototypo. Iv is generally ek ledged that the London exhibition marks an era in tl the use~ pro of the world—an eraof which the distinctive enarae- terietler are the ad: of those arts wiich inerease the he delichts o/ lie, the spread of and above ail, the pre The di is { at the outset of the en.berp: ave been over- we liberality of the English government has been d by the respective authorities of our country; f the objects of the association to whom they have boon erall apparen come: emulate and ac seem! comm d We ure aatisied that the more theve a the more will rs fello whose sagaeity can for co-operative energy can achieve, the result In an edifice, ; i which, of itself, will be ® noble monument of skill Ne hipe to bring together the chuicect productio of the Old World's industry; (aus not only opening » faie field for the competition of the productive ietellec’ of Arm Dut enlarging its scope, and multiplying its aims; and, at the same time, presenting to all clasros of the community such raresnd novel objectsof attention as cannot fail to widen thesphere of general huowledze. It is w that in London a great portion of the building was oceupie ttle interest, aud that American industri entered into the competition vory saul ex x4 believed that by amore earetul selec a larger introduction of our own pi the exhibition, in these two essent reatiyinereased, In actatement of t Fie'to“intreduee {ull details, but we may terme, that we have sncb’ aesurances, Lugiand, but from tho princi tinent, ‘as justify us in the expectation of bringi uncer the eyes of our fellow-vitivons aot only eneh mens of the industrial arts as shall cenerally intere: practical American mind, bu and ckill as have nover be among u were among the choicest articles of the London and others are now being prepared abroad expressly for ex: hibition here. And, more than this, we hope to bring, within the reach of all, such wonders of the Fino Arts as have hitherto Leen approached only by those of our countrymen whe have been able to seck them abroad. ‘Th in authorized by its chi tors; and in dixchargin tors will hereafter invi n ewinent and capable of their fellow citiens. If we effect our olject, we shall uot unly have imparted a frosh impetus tu the carcer of our great metropolis, but we shall have given d manufacturing industry; have families of the world; and, hanical skill ai igher the dof taste; wo shall the knowledge of the various in eo dviug, we shall have strengthened the great bonds of peaco and good will. ‘The Avscciation is incorporated, by; wot of the Leyislature of the Lith March, 1852, for # of five yours. The eapital of the Company is $200,000, to be divided into shares of $100 each, and may be increased Ge the Directors to bg es of admission to the Exhibition is limited to Filty nd the cost of the building is restricted by the ohar- tor to'$2K),000, The act of incorporation provide: one day, at least, the ehildren and_soholars of the sehools the Public School Society, of the Ward S:hools, and of the Free Academy, of the Deafand Dumb and Blind Institutions, aud of the Orphan Asylums in the city of N: bendmitted frce of charge, “It alvo, provides that the eet be appropriated and ire Department Pund, for the the cities of New York an a divided between thom in the propor tio te one-fourth ¢o the IAtter onE feat a former and Wa. Wuerren, Secretary, » President. pa te ere s ohnston Liv! ohn E. Devel, Chartes A. Stetson, Philip Burgows, Elbert J, Anderson, lenry C. Murphy. AUPERINTREXDING ARC! Edmund Hurry, if Aceert ation! for the Exhibition of the I justry of all Nations.—Capital $200,000, with libert; creaee it to $300,000, This iasti tion being Organized BS acharter granted by the Logislature of the State of New York, the company is now ready to receive subscriptions to the stock. The books will be opencd at the office of Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., of 48 William strect, bankers to this company, from and after Friday, the second day of April, 1:62, Ten per cent on the amount ef subscriptions be pal the tii subscribing. No subseription to ex- 00 ve thousand dollars, : DORE SEDGWIOK, President, Livingston, mont, ITECT. rr. THEO Wa. Wnuerren, Secretar} DIRECTORS. Mortimer Livingston, Johnston mont, John E. D Livingston, Lin, Charles A) Pi ‘is W. Edmonds, ip Burrowes, Alexander Hamilton, Jr., s Elbert J: Anderton, jet SUPERINTENDIXG ARCHITECT. Edmund Murry. The Christian Israciite Sa ct im Fir. street, between Avenue Aand First avenues will be. epee for public worekip on Sunday, the 4th inst. at'3o'eloc sermon will be preached th eaeion, Bishop in to preach at7 in the evening. Seats ea ei a caod ie Ba Green Turtle.—A fresh Suppiy of Soup and Steaks will be served this 4 i shillings per quart, delivered, ©” T*miies eupplied at eix PETER M. BAYARD, State street. Just Published.~New York Grace Church Colle Sacred Music, seicottd and arrangep from the classical aud sacred works of the great oomposers, and ad as a « Protestant Kpisoo- a0 s iam A King, ercanist and director of the masie of Grae Church, Now York. Price two dollars. Al orders s€¢ress- l—New Yorl race vareh C a Lica tion, 78 Bleecker street. ns weetion- Ome of pu Sandford ts now in this city, makin, extensive preparations for the appearan. pNbytd ance of bi letrated Opcre aad Ballet Trot, the Society Liteary oom o-morrow evening. 41) N Hoome, torn Hl success in Newark wa Watehes.— Many have been huded from enjoying ths conveniance of« good watch Bethe hither: sreat east. We are happy to have itin our that tir. JOHN COX, imposter, 208 Drondwah ep sacs, By Lis prices has put aw . yoach of alle Put @ warranted tinekeeper within Freeman, 90 Fulton strect, still sustains the Union, and will until overy star is shot from his colo: N Margaret i. free. | his 1 Don’t give tip the shi is counter $ Hats,” yor, Hate and Caps in ail tacit variety, G5 him a call, and you may rest assured ali tings will i AS FREEMAN, Fulton stroct, near Goli What can be more annoying to a man of farbion that a shapeless, fl-titting » art, polling here, de owhero? void ULis uuismuce with foltte certainty, and to ineure tho beat ideal of styi0 m eputy in as! itis only necessary foi i their orders to GREEN, Nos] Aster House men © 8 Singer's Sew! Machine will do what no other wachine is eapatic of in towing on cloth, teatiier, ¢ fot material, or, in fot, anyt AC requires neat, hard some, stitching. What this in teases to do it will ty perfectly. The most incredulous telly esny jnonstration; all doubta fully Fomoves Machines one Vition. C all—judgo aud be. satis charge ma & CO. 256 Broadway Spring Clothing at Wholesulc.—Merchants visiting the city or spring pur 16 cospectfully invited to call and exalnine our stock and Summer Cloth on, Manufactured with all D.&J. DEVLIN, wi and 4 John street, corner Nussan. will be happy t> ing. Itembraces everytuing that is now wud fashionable Er phickcor enineh elated oe fate for our clothing ix e dd taren cho States, Prices tniform sudlow., eee eae Ute Sprmg Clothing for City ‘Crade.—We are i styles of Sprios sarment is gob wy ne uniformly low Clothi Prices, D.& J. DEVLIN, 88 and 3 John Gents’ Pocket Handkerchtets, Linen Cambric Mandkei aida colored border d i Ail Kindy and pr 1 bow styles, und very devitavie Broadwa; etween lourt:» orof Nasaa Ladies’ Indin Rabtb< ind Garden bis eexson, f protection to the hands, ug, gardenin: ec. In wearing, they 'r ah soft, an Dleneh them perfectly White. Also, Tincier 6 sching ive, «per pair nice, Por ee LATCHCOCK LEADEEATER ‘M7 Broadway. aud: eall the Rubber mical Hale Lay prevent baldness, sud to rertore eoome thin, and to cure seur veh a brilliant gloss acd permanent « Broadway, and all the drug stores in ev America, Phelon's Mo tor, to Jen off, or op sate at 17 yaud town ia gic Halr Dye, tu color the me * 7 9, the man, not only to 01 | bair or whisk 0 mo! pplie hont fo evident, from the proceedings of the Young Mon’s | tion pronounced : rive any dircetions to Me, Brady; 1 did not examine the | Iutcly in vele-dchenes, Uae authoehigen wee eno" | tothe hnir or kine Toso Pte clicndy wi Whig Committee, and from other signs of the times, | 5,,\! nih oMay ine pie, magtalMased {yarcerating —mentar; T+hould ruppore, from the look of it, that it was | ther cognizance of the matter and the veesel eulled for solar PAR ey tne ee Manne wens . : bhai ttre rhop assisted by the R 8, Hel and Vinton, nde | 1% good © commu nf m0} erally used o1 in oe 7" eon PHALON's supee Manni 7 Brond- that General Seott is gradually diminishing ia | ministered the noly communion, aut thus thie inverse. | | cht cildinpy; the Lave was shall: Usha terewrre face | Tec zemalto ie wounded ‘man, whore name wo ear | ay. Torani ia Bae bp ct oro hi fig ‘ f spe pss” : cg affady tewnianie | luings; the as shell | died exame night. He had behaved in . favor with the whig party in the city of New | 'P¢ «fair terminated plank carried in that days they were diss the rame manner three times very lately—indeed there Phalow’s Wigs and Teupoos.— We would York, while Fillmore ie going up. The pre- | From fast0 Dowinco.--The festival of the anniversary | |"® “iflerent stories; 7 | are many vegabonds on this cont who make it a business attention of persons re 6 wi & recent iin y Sority | of in ‘ building, if the west wall to rhip get their advanee, and then refuse to proceed in | provement. The same was nwanied » ily r -.odal f. the sent occupant of the White House has a majority | ¢! Independence was celebrated with the greatest solem- | cxtricaie the men. the centre of the centre foundation | the hip’ reckoning on getting clear with a mouth’s im. | PUNhrewMsrim at the lave jar. Tey gen vat B. PIS of sixteen in the Young Men’s Committee, and pro- | Mity on the 20th of February. A numerous ccowd were Will wae down; 1 rhould think the gable end would not | prisonment. The more frequent visits of your «h'ps of Saree and Hair Dye Factory, 7 Brom way, aorner of | prevent at the church. in which t Ug =r ee ge | ¢ Tothe Deaf—1 depose tint D of 262 Broad + Meath, au- i i ent distr 1 i o's £ h 8 nec " | Mutual. the Mereantite Mutial the General Mutual, — leatness and distreseing § more’s tar appears to he rising to the fac endant; | dieploys fired on the principal squares of Santo Domitigo. found a fracture of the pubis upon erch side, with eon the New York Mutual, the Astor Mutual, the Union head, of thee gears, ducati ny | and the friends of Webster are coalescing rather | The enthuslaam of tle popmlation was immense, derabie displacement, ond extensivecoatusion of the blad~ | Mutual. and the New York Fire and Marine Insurance | {forriek. Swern before me, fail | with thove of Fillmore than with the Scott fuetion, | 1h Bea del Osama publishes the meng of the Prest- ies avis Ichanet inet toa actos | com ae! Messrs, Jone find Johnson, Insurance | mission of Deeds. i | a P f dent of the republic. *We believe,” th paper, | Poe bet a ‘uke have prevented to Cr lovey, of the | because they have a faint hope that, in the ovent of | that in it are shown the great \deas of ves wh prod byt fallix y-secoad sirect | London packet chip Devonshire, and to R. 1, Mooreand | Lyone’ Kathatrra for the fintrePrics Fillmore losing thenomination, Webster may get it, | grees. and if the Irgirlators understand the lndicetions of | in Bonid com street, sworo—I am | Samuel Warner. ti’st and second mates of the ehip, testi- | only 26 cents, This valuavle proparation ba si: hdd te» ‘Willnes tue | the government. the country will. rupidly lowardg | @ fame carpenter; 1 Wall fall; {¢ wae a quarter | mouials to the value of seven hundred doliars, for revert. | Private use, and theprosent proprietor having 1 An arrangement with which t more men Are | progress. Such are our sincere wiches,” past one o'clock; f wus in the rear house at the time; ing the passengers and crew of thesteamer Helena stoman, — pure. tecifng nasurred that eh content--in fact, they would prefer any person to raw the lower wall, towards Wighth avenue, fall insidé of | in latitude 4: ow its real merit ’ jen fairly known, vring the nervous Ii jithe hair prove si qualities in cuit, inviee nin " aca ve artin Shipton, of Thirty-ectoud et whore the | for it. most f me liion party, and owing to this unhappy conacction, 7 pos any Hon. Joel I Wuilding fell eworn, raid—1 saw the building full; the Lavxen,—A eplendid elipper chip of 1.000 tons, called Sreeeing bie, gO th Geb id ts aud Per. the popularity of the hero of Luady's Lane is | Rhee Deer A shige bo topst Ne: ti iv lb neon the building; Phad | the Ellen Foster, is to be launched at Medford. « pe Dy id a epee in a | of A well. nehing to do with of the mortar; woen tae | day next, Ly Jochua Porter. She is owned by M air DyemBatchelor's eeleloated 1 paling ite ineflectual fire” before heen of Fill- | getie end fell in thy fddlowall going down, | & A, Tirrelh Cheever Newhall, Eeq. andUapt, Calch U, | Bult bye is the bert yet dleoncrot tam te ragele more in New York; and the hostility to him will tthe ease war then g ) the Jury. whe rendered the | Grosier, who ie to commend her, The E. F. will load for reeneery eae ern eae Mo lied. The won eo and " 7 - . " foliowit et, Vix cowed, Jol Rank fan Freneitco in Winror’y ine certainty with which this feycrit ont ished Hat not be confined to the Empire city, but will radiate Yarrell aud debe come to their deaths} | Bye periorme te etontehing. Ite fir en applied, at in all direetious over the Jand, “killing” him with friutte Vy the falling of the wall of the buil Matis for the Pacific. | Sepa Te aMNtOray Ne. 4 Wall o¢ Copy the friends of ” . hoes who are | ing iu Thirly-reound rtrect. on the 27th uls.. andthe | . the i re ce and order, oo nai : hid * pea aes cee the f eonid building ears Sa THE NEW YORK WEEKLY HERALD POR CALIFORNIA. es and Tonpecsfatchelors vow atyle attached to the constitution and desire to preserve rea ler they i and im- vives it intact. Henceforth the prospsete of Fillmore will brighten, and in the came proportioa ¢lowls and dai knees will rest upou the destiny of the abolition candidate, The friends of Seott, thoagh few, ar vigorous and energetic, and they are very in&gnant at thie decline of hie fortuse—but they canaot belp themeelvee or save himafrom ihe futo that awaite him. devt bur rcecgnized Ambio Eweden and Norway, at New Oriewns, Wi vihingion: Willan fut Swepten Consus av New Ontans —The Presi Lonfar ay View Consul of | sury, whigh will be in reeion the coming week aid build tivity of Oh kin. 19 year vw enced, vig * native ef frelond vo of Ireland. T w bn Par St The tteamships Crereent City, for Aepinwall, Navy sy. ond Northern Light, for San Juan de Nicaragua, I leave thir port to-morrow, with passengers and mails | ingle eoples, in wrappers, sixpence, | atreed, near weed The, n of antura i tha moet p. ing 9 very supe 1 Wie Face nd the largest wa ei a b No.4@ Wall Copy the addcows, asnortinont ive of Ireland c elwd: equally nave under ton aye Hirnaco, with the lateet news, printed in Prench and riag pir ont baud . ond will be held to ballin |). ‘i ochnodm, Ke. theanm cf €?000 rach. to await the action of thy Grand | Hvelith, will be published at (en o'elock in the mor mis tie ot tbe. x

Other pages from this issue: