The New York Herald Newspaper, January 17, 1855, Page 10

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12 NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 3855. VOL. XX a tbat lacks this elemont—the power of search—m State sball present to her sister States, and to the | delivery shall be prima facie evidence of the sale; and | ‘Gas! bab! bumbug! nonsense! tot us have o sack. . AFFAIRS IN ALBANY. the present state of woiety, prove insuiicioat g iikagl ot enn he thiopentone by the provision of section 7, that upon, trial of « | epeech,” eried the audience, MARITINE INTELLIGE ECS: » Another objection urg: la, thag, should a prohibitory | mor! Sart conquering their t_vices, immo- of property seized for confiscation ‘‘the Custom ‘ Gentlemen, you will please come to order,’’ said the This o! ¥ law be passed, it cannot be executed. jection | Lat selfishness upon the of public good, | House certificates of importation and proofs of marks self-constituted President in the most permuasive man- R NEW YORK—THIs DAY, THE TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT. would come ‘with better frum | thane’ whe | not Shthe mandate of ‘monareb, but under the sway | on the casks or packages, corresponding. theesta shall | ner. TB paid — spent years in endeavors to put an | of self enacted iaws, at the behests of an exalted virtue. | not be received as sufficient t the liquors S Ab, yon, now doen't yoo come to coder,” said a Aastra ti So Chahare tes | etn Ge stag vad oo: | Sepa waa Slats eet is | eh pean li anual tag es a The Majority and Minority Reports on the Sale | far teat their influence ia upholding the traffic, really | mead its dasange. statute conflicts with the rationale of evidence and take | laughter. { Intoxicating Drinks, believed that the proposed bill, should it become a law, JOHN W. STEBBINS, away from the power of courts, and of the jury, by in- ‘What's your name?’’ asked some one at his elbow. CLEARED. 0 (4 could not be executed, and that existing laws can, they CHARLES C, A terposing between a class of facts proved and their le- “My name,” he replied in the most deliberate man- ESEESTA Ce COLI eet ie gee M O Roborts. Bock would join its friends and its passage; ‘and that L. 8. MAY, Committee. gitimate ¢eductions, or by straining evidence trom its | ner and with marked emphasis, ‘is Frank Martin.’’ Ship Matilda, Lee, katwere WF eeelee Sead pgameag + | thus we should see the friends and opponents of the LEVI ‘7 Drapes constunien. “Three cheers for Frank Martin, boys,’’ cried half a Ship irom), Raschon, Bremen, vis It &., &o., &. measure meeting upon common ground, though with N. MM. ere are examples in law of such enactments, but | dozen on the announcement of his name. The cheers | Pavenstadt & Schum: r Opposite motives, vi with each other in zeal for the C, P. JOHNSON, they are most common where government shows the | were given, and Mr. Martin finding the task be had un- Bark Pepe Gr), Ry: Sort Goo, Logan. " enactment of such a law. The bill sccompanying the report varies in some | least respect Se ives rights, and is most arbi rather difficult to accomplish, left the stand Bark D ms yy hai? wd Ya ar NEW YORK LEGISLATURE, If such a law cannot be enforced it will not be because ‘ae f ‘the ee trary and tyrannical. To sus' the wide spread sys- | and mingled among his brother members who overwhelm- on ‘Ann Johnson, Lothrop, Havana, H D ienata, wisfocl nor aad lensing ote sng np te: | snce.* There ach however, ang altretion i aay | ssn led ‘tetany Mish te Tad Signa Pu | fees be Sadefomncd tu pert ofShateman tot” | Be Eat Ant, Lines, Ce, Drman 8 co now an a ng coming uj er | since, me any ration in 6] public | in wi of el % , Nouvitas, W ‘Aunany, Jan, 16, 1855 through the ballot box for two successive tures, | main feature or principle, and mig difference between | Prosecutors, and spurred to extraordinary exertions to | ‘Mr. Benjazain ext assumed the duties of that | Brie mamellots, ogre eretall Becks Ge. SCHOOL MONIES, leaves no room for doubt. Nor will it be because the the ted, and that h the fore- Pegg by the offer of half of the numerous fines inflict- office, in accordance with the call of the meeting. ‘“Gen- Brig Melazzo, latanzas, Nesmith & Sons, rs ‘ public good does not require it. Security to person and bill, as printed, presented with the for ed for the breach of the statute. These fines are from | tlemen,” said he on taking the chair, “it is usual for Bric Sarab (lh), D pansen, J Fleard, ‘A memorial presented from New against the use | proj BU, rellee from onerous taxation, order of | going report, is quite immaterial. fifty dollars to five hundred; and besides this, a counsel | the President to state tne ol ject of the meeting. (Yes, Brig Geran’ a ¥ece Diabes ‘Mes ‘nique it D Bi ’ of schoolf moneys for sectarian purpose, was referred to | Society, t ¢ highest interests of humanit: demand it. & fee of from five to ten dollars is allowed to the complain- that’s it—go it, old fellow.’’) Now, I don’t exactly a Rebeces iJ 44 rookmas ‘Why. then, cannot it be enforced ? Wher rer it hes MINOBITY REPORT. ant, with 4 liberal tariff of fees, to quicken the righance w the object of the meeting; but I supposs, as you ‘Sohr M L Davis, Wheldon, A ‘ by 4 select comittee, consisting of Messrs. Whitney, Spencer | yeon dried, except when it bas proved detective selec , The undersigned, a minority of the t ittee | of jistrates and the zeal of other officials. have an extra quantity of on hand, you would like Schr Catherine (Br), sneligro: and Putnam. Subsequently Mr. Putnam was excusedand | or in some of ita vital peovisives, it has demonstrated | +, cs aBceyont. acle 40 ae of the _ se thaimgpin Teinalso 10 be noticed that in this bill all the provi- | to let it off. (Cheers —s Ses of “Gas!’’) Well, gen- Schr w A iia ‘Nichols, Wilmington, » MoCready, 4 its power to accomplish what no other law ever framed sions are 80 contrived to work er, as to discrimi- | tlemen, we will give you a chance; but to erve order | Mott & Co, 2, Clark ie mee” upon the-ubject has. While some defecti ly drawn | ge a8 relates to the subject of intemperance, nate against certain classes of society, and to interpose | it is necessa: fat caly one st a time shenld come upen | Sept Row You, Qfnine, Redmond, CH Pieeee pass provisions have in some instances failed before the REPORT barriers against the poor and humble, which the rich are | the stand. 0 will you have to address you, and I ake Semen ‘Wogism, City ‘Point, Mr. Brooks introduced a bill for the relief of the Stock- | courts, the great ideas of prohibition, search, seizure, That they reget that the briefness of the time allowed | afforded facilities creep, ‘The barrel of cider is not | will appoint a committee to bring him before ? Sehr Re: Palmer, New Haven, maste: bridge Indians. This ison the claim of the Indians to | and destruction of liquor, have not been assailed by to them for the examination of the bill proposed to be probibited, though the single glass is severely punished. | ‘Crawford, Crawford!” said a dozen voices {n unison. | Schr Wonder, French, Providence, mas lands in Albany, Columbia and Dutchess counties, | Court Your committee are not aware that any respect- | reported by the majority of their committes to your wine grower his own wines and sell ‘The PxesipentT—Mr. Crawford will please come upon | Steamer Caledonia, Morley, Baltimore, H B Cromwoll. manor lands in Albany, - | able lawyer has put himself upon the records of any | honorable body, is such es to forbid that full investiga- | them to the aul purchasers, ‘The epicure info- | thestand. Seeniaen Remethen; Ovpeg, FHISORpRm: SADE ESS ‘Mr. Srxncur gave notice of a bill for life-saving gates at | court against the right and power of government to | tion of its details and that legal and constitutional exe| reign liquors may import brandies and rare old wines Mr. Crawford, however, did not appear, but another ARRIVED. New York ferries. 2 embody and apply these ideas to in ‘ting liquors. ition of its features, which its importance demands, | from abroad, in package. young ratioman, rej 1 a profusion of locks, which Steamship Knoxyillo, Ludlow Savannah, 60 wit Mr. WALKxR introduced « bill authorizing town gub- | They stand an the four corner pillars of thatdepartment | Indeed, it is a matter of such public notoriety, that the | The owneror renter of a single dwelling may revel to | might be called ‘‘am! ” was dragged and p mdse and ee SE Mite, | 9m 16. Mt 2, soriptions to the Erie and Now York Railroad. of jurisprudence known as the internal police of States, | undersigned believe there is no breach ef itary | the possession of an unlimited supply of intoxicating | upon the stand, to the infinite delight of the audi- nine 1230 midnight ¢ Dill to expedite the canvass at the Ontario special | and no Samson has yet been found strong enough to | etiquette in alluding to it. That the oblin question | drink, while the citizens who live in houses which in | ence. ‘Gentlemen,’ began the unwilling orator, ‘I had signals with steamship South: election was passed unanimousl: remove either from its place. ‘was pre, by a committee of a political temperance | part are occupied as atores, offices or work-rooms, &c., | no idea’?— F Cl n. Mr. Ronxrtson laid on the table a resolution to elect a Time will not permit your committee to review | convent eld in Auburn, in September last, and that | are not legally permitted to retain in their houses the “No, nor never bad,’’ said some one. (Uj iarshall © Roberts (of Robbinston), Felhes, Ta United States Senator on February 6th. all the objections urged Aesioat prohibition upon | the elaboration of its, and the discussions ‘in regard | smallest quant hy 08 spy aiienixture of the liquors ye Leioptoi) ‘*Gentlemen,”’ he proceeded si ra with mdse, toW &JT Tapscott &Co. Ni this traffic. They have sel the most pro- | thereto, have been taken charge of by persons not mem- bibited by the act. In the city of New York, the cl cigunty ai the compliment he received, ‘I had no ar, passed the wrock of British bi Assembly. minent and most Page ones, if the term | bers of this House, ce bolting aay Tesponsible relation | thus excluded, it is helieved, constitute the it class | when I came here this evening that I would be called . Cardiff, 82 days, with rail Auuany, Jan. 16, 1855. is Sepeue toany. Others, like ‘ sumptuary laws’? | to the people, Pet Acting in of a self-constituted ies Peeples and a scrutiny would probably show that | upon to address you. (Renewed age.) I would | road ‘order; vessel to C © Duncan & Co. Experiet 1 to % i— the sacredness of the domi- | political organization. juded a rity of the most temperate, the | say, however, in selecting the candidates you have | heavy westerly weathor; split mainsail, &c. cil,’’ &c., upon which the changes have been so often Ata time when table ophniok expresses itself in terma | most law-observing, and the most industrious and useful fos eda) Fix’ have conferred an honor upon them, and! Ship DE ne Colippar)., Stetson, Havre, 2 dope, wit rn ul . Mr. EB. L, Smith, of New York, appeared, and was walified. rung, are generally introduced also, and must each | of alleged influen ht from without | members of society. t, if they are elected, that they will be an | mdse and 2/0 passengers, to Nosmith & ‘ Bills were reported to incorporate Newtown and Bash- | ¢0n' ribute fs part to make up that romething, called in to Fee} oe he action of tus "representatives of It may be regerat ‘as one of the peculiarities of mo- | honor to the association which they will represent’? hoary westerly gales tor 10 daysinthe Channel. Hed wick Bridge Co lawyer’s phrase, when he has a bad case in hand, ‘‘a | the people, presence and the dictation of such a for- | dern legislation on this subject, that this law, after de- The speaker here retired amid a shower of Bibles, Bark Louisiana (Br), Brownlow, , 15 days, wit ige Company. show of defence,’’ midable organization in the lobby of thé Legislature | claring an article of nearly universal consumption for | prayer ks, reports, and HPs balls, with which he | sugar, &e, ye ent n 15, off Barnogat, vn wa. THE PROWIBITORY LIQUOR LAW. That the sale ot intoxicating liquors, as well as all | might perhaps excite the distrust of the ple, Confi- | centuries ‘‘a nuisance,’’ yet maker ial provision for | was assailed. ral of the Bibles were torn and | liams, 2d ing the lead, fell overboard Mr. Sresniys, from the majority on the select commit- | other practices, the tendency of which is to endanger the | dent, however, in the independence, as well as the ia! its use as a sacrament ot ion, and connives at the | trampled upon the floor during the meeting, {f meeting joat; he was an Eng! an; has a wife in New Orl i happiness, security, health and morals of the citizens, | rity of this e allude to the fact in no suca 8) means by which the so-called better class of society | it can be properly called. mn e » tee on excise laws, reported » bill to prohibit liquor | say and ought to be, legislated against, end mechivited | Laz peas ‘ogumstance winch be tating the mea’ | shail bave the freest access to it. Such characteristics | The CuaiRan here protented against the use whtch | «DAtk Exact, Grumley, Ci.arleston, 5 days, with cotton, traffio—as already reported. to the extent that human government can consistently | sure under consideration out of the committee, has pre- | of a law are not calculated to conciliate towards it that | had been made af the books. ‘‘Gentlemen’’ said he ‘Rio Jansiro, Nov 19, with coffee, The Canajobarie claim bills were ordered to a third hibit viee, hardly admits of intelligent doubt. ‘Such | vented us from giving that close investigation to its de. | respect and that loyal obedience which a republican peo- | ‘we should not throw the Bibles and prayer books about wel to MM Frooman & Co. ; reading. mane the united testimony of many of the most emi- | tails which we rae atl Gia moan ple should ne li times extend to laws passed by their Finn age eS ey ee ar pee aes oaGieiecen th, Folgee, Ries Ba nen’ zens. Inthe returning the bill of 1854 to the Sena‘ ives. , a a The dill to increase the capital of the Panama Rail- | gaid Justice Grier, on an occasion, after quot with his objections, Gc vernor Seymour pointed out its he main features of a bill which, in many | at present. : Pe A a ° u ‘ ASBRGO. way Company was under debatein Committee of the | the familiar maxim, Salus populi suprema lex—‘all | most obhoxious features, in its summary modes of pro- | respects, especially in its attempt to regulate the trans- ‘The only reply to this was another shower of similar | wont ashore on Brigantine Sho fc House. laws for the restraint te puulshtoont of crime, | cedure, its artificial consuctions of eidenon, its creation | portation o! pone between States, and obstruct the | missiles, from which those who wore hats suffered most | she remained for oven hou Mr. Arrxen, from the minority of the select committee | for the preservation of the public peace, health | of rights of action heretofore unknown, and having no | reception of imported a, conficts not only with the | seriously. ‘Three cheers for Wood,’’ cried one, and | false keel and some shesthiag: on the subject of the Liquor ne reported adversely, | and morals, are from their very nature of primary | equitable character, its taking of property with- | laws of trade and the rights of citizens, but with the | three cheers were accordingly given. ‘Wood is a block- i she dantes,. bes ~~ He moved to lay both reports on z table until he | importance, and lie at the foundation of par exist- | out due compensation, and es} ly its subversion ctr of the UnitedStates constitution. These ar- | head,’? sais it. “No, sir, he is old hickory Wood,’ mare! Srdead coa, &o, to Burdett & Noble. could frame a bill. Refused. ence. They are for the Preservation of life and liberty, | of the doctrine of English law, ‘‘that every ma house | bitrary provisions, this seizure of property, this search | retorted anot! This play upon the name of one of rie Hd BEsGhoKsor Cesith, Mobile, 20 days, with oott The friends of the bill pressed its second reading, | @nd necessarily compel all laws on subjects of secondary | is his castle,’’ and that no power in the State can enter | of honses, this perversion of evidence, this disorganiza- the candidates brought down a round of applause, which | 46, to Laytin, Ryerson & Huribut. which prevailed. Po Saei which relate only to property, convenience | therein, except on due process of law. In the bill pi tion of the jury, are es necessary steps to enforce | was followed by the announcement that Mr. Svooss Brig Meee, ‘arvi with cotton Pending the reading, Mr. Lucu moved to suspend the | or luxury, to recede when they come in contact or col- | sented by the majority of the committee of the House, the | the provisions ef the law which assumes to prohibit ab- | would adaress the audience. Mr, S. then came forward, | rice, to Geo Bulkly- ie pit: further reading, which prevailed. lision. language of the act, the character of which was th solusely a traffic not forbidden by religio } and in itself | and prefaced his remarks by informing the audience | Schr Almoda, Dickinson, Fredericksburg, 28 days. Mr. Leigu then moved that the bill be referred to Said the Hon. Geo, Sullivan, of New Hampshire, on | exposed to public censure, has been wholly modified. not injurious to public morals or well being of | that he also never had an idea—but he was not permit- Elisabeth, which ar aaiane aa Brigantine ‘Shoals. Committee of the Whole. one occasion; ‘The right of the islature of State | form altered. and its objectionable characteristics, foo society. ted to inform them on what subject, for the rest of the ~ BELOW. Mr, Arrken objected to such reference until the bill | to allow its citizens to trade in ardent spirits, may well | few instances, removed. The attempt which characterizes the bill, to escape | sentence was lost amid the omer, After this had sub- Oui baud: cad babble Gatoien, had been read through. be questioned. To do so is, in my view, morally wrong, It is evicent, however, from a brief examination, that | from the constitutional question involved in all such | sided, he told them that he did not expect to be honored Wind a i ar > ti rool sh Mr. Luin then moved that the Temperance bill be | If the Legislature of a State permits, by law, a traffic | certain modifications in form and in words have been | legislation, by declaring that the property which it aims | by being ncminated as a candidate for President. ind during the day from NE. made the special order of the day for Tuesday next, im- | Which produces poverty with all its sufferings, which | made of the bill which last year passed the two houses, | to destroy is not property, will not avail. The liquor A Voce—Yes, but you ain’t elected yet. es SAEED RE mediately after the reading of the journal. Carried. corrupts the morals, and destroys the health and lives | but was prevented from becoming a law, by the veto of | brewed by the brewer is property as mnch as the malt “T did not expect,’’ he continued, ‘‘to be so pi beg, Ly apad Marine Report. ‘a aetiainadt dailies of thousands in the’ community, they defeat the great | the Governor, The discussions among the people which | of which it a made tl y rain hich is planted and | and it vas entirely ‘at the request of my friends that pBOSTON, Jan 1f—Arr barks Radiant, Charleston; E RXCLUSION CF YORKIGNERS FROM DIPLOMATIC OFFICES. and important end for which government was estab- | that measure and the action of the Executive in regard [tiie nd the soil which yields it. consen! ave my name presented for your consider. wight, imore: ry Chee Patietghine ‘ lished.”? toit provoked, threw a light upon it which re its imated as property, it is assessed and taxed as | ation.” (‘‘Ah, yes; that will do; now we'll have some. | fuegos; Mary H Baker, a pike House took up the resolution offered by Mr. J.T. | SQid the Hon. Mark Doolittle, of Mass.: “The seal of | defonuiey, ie dangersus sharacter, and ‘the evil | property, and this very Dil rogardel; an property when | body else,” cried a dozen "voices, while the Bibles and Spa eee eee eye omece °F the exclusion of foregners from | everlasting reprobation and abhorrence upon this traffic | consequences that must result ‘rom it. The | inthe hands of its specially appointed dealers, and in | prayer books were again sent flying through the room.) Herald Marine Ouse Omlces, ket od 1 is, that it has no redeeming qualification. It never has | complication of political issues in the election | the possession of those who hold it with intent to use it One of the members came upon the stand and stated PHILADELPHIA, Jan 16, 4 P M—Arr steamers Tho pit, Hxapuxy spoke in support of the resolution, urging | done man any good, and from the nature of the case it | of November last has made it difficult to verify | in certain designated ways. The liquors imported from | that the inspectors had just made known the result of Fparee; Marrison, Woe Yorks City of haw Seeks eaney the} sewigpers ranst either ‘retain & pretersnce for thelr} never can? with certainty the character of public sentiment | abroad are property where made, are regarded ay pro- | the ballot for President, which he announced as fol paton sebastian Ui cwshoipadbac uc ech native fend, or have renounced it. In either caso they | Said the Hon. Mr. Davis, of the same State, in the | in relation to that bill, but as it is apparent that the | perty by United States laws and’ treaties, pay duties as | lows — are unfit to represent their adopted country abroad, for | celebrated cases of Massachusetts, New Hampshi didat Hy’ identified with it received but | property, and aro assessed and taxed as’property; and | Geor : . 425 Jonton; brigs Saab Blliaooth in the one they would favor the land of their birth; in | Rhode Island, in “the United rBiaine | Gupesmse about one-third of the votes of the State, it is evident Tie tact of the original packages in whieh they areim- | Frank W. Ballard + 318 ga Bedtords Faulinn apler, Bowton; sohee rout; Ocean, Wave nd Char the other, they have feelings of hatred against theirna- | Court:—‘‘The world has raised its voice against | that the result cannot be claimed as a popular verdict | ported being broken np, no more impairs their character ‘Three cheers were given by the friends of Wood; but Sie couney) for lato fancied or real, previously in- | the indiscriminate traffic in wines and spirit ig it | in favor of the measure; especially when If appears that | as property than does the fermentation of the malt in | it was soon rumored around that the report of his elec- Hew. York: Sally Whoato icted, and to revenge those wrongs would gladly plunge | seems to me that if health, morals, usefulness re. | the candidate mentioned was run as the exponent of the | the brewer’s vat destroy its quality in that respect. | tion was false, upon which the friends of his opponent h . our countey and their own in war. spectability are worthy of public consideration, and | views of several conventions, and that the party which | Until, therefore, the provisions of the constitu- | indulged in the same vociferous demonstrations. A few Mr. Warenuny, of New York, spoke in favor of the | merit protection from an insidious foe, the Legislature | presented him on the Maine jaw platform was compelled | tion ‘are abrogated which declare that ‘no person | moments after, however, Mr. Wood himself made his Disaste: resolution; and Mr. Stennins, of Monroe, made a good | would be criminally guilty in wholly disregarding a | to propose a modification of the bill. But while the | shall be deprived of life, liberty or property, with | appearance and announced his own election amid min- Wheaton, Brook!: show that by the constitution a distine- | matter of such obvious importance,” undersigned acknowledge in the altered lan, of the | out due process of law, nor shall private property | gled bisses and cheers. intended to be made between native and | Hon, Mr. Burke, of New Hampshire, on the same oc- | bill and its subtle mridiheations, a concession to public | be taken for public use without just™ compensation,” | © “Briends,” said he, ‘for I believe you are all friends, i eamee Re Sac wooe e s ns. aud he said in no case was that distine- | ogsion, said—‘Nearly the whole civilized world now | opiaion, and a desire not directly to confront and asaail | the provisions of the bill which authorize the arbi | I thank you for the distinguished honor which you have | {*}iy, ‘nysvhitmusknown, siso ct anchor deeened frond rl necessary than in that contemplated by the | concedes that the traffic in intoxicating liquors is a the constitution, they recognize in the bill the same in- | trary seizure of liquors, &c., and tlieir coniiscation, and | conferred upon me, snd I shall endeavor to show my ap- | and their masts were cut away. The A rode out tl resolution. Grime againat society. 14 is disapproved of eam ae by n, and | trinsic errors, and the same dangerous consequences | which prevent citizens from recovering the price of the | preciation of it by performing the daties of the office | with both anchors down. A Mr. O'Kiare, of New York, made a most effective and | stands condemmed by the great Moral Judge of the Unt: | that distinguished the condemned and repudiated | sale thereof, while they confict with the constitutional | to which you have elected me faithfully and earnestly. ted black, and getting up Sulisen Maeeen Serios® the xeeciatien, verse, whose purity cannot countenance such manifest | bill of 1854. The same summary processes are | inhibition are void. The modes in which such enact- | (Good.) I know Frank Ballard, and I aay that even I feel posed to be one of t soon Mesera. Aitken and Mundy, of New York, also spoke | gndadmitted wrong. It isan inhuman traffice a moral | authorized, the same dictation. aud perversion of | ments are sought to be enforced, viz., the preliminary | a satisiaction In having run against so good @ man, for Ae eeyeh nen. COrtnnhy Wee GaN buanpe one ageinstit, crime, that grows blacker and more hideous the more it | evidence, the same trifling with the obligations | seizure of property and its subsequent destruction, are | he is s good Without taking any action on the resolution, the | jg contemplated, and the more its horrid effects become | of contracts, the same endowment of the lowest 4 e Said Chief Just! ett—“It being admitted that with the it of jury trial, and the same | @ ments have been passed, have so de |. Among su e sr at is elect as you have sup- th, while lying at anchor, the Great Isaacs besring Report ot the Select Committee on thé Sale of | s0'ise of this article in destructive tov health, repute: oh intorent ea eee eee The theory | these are the States of New Hampshire, Massachusetts; | ported me, you will bring up thirty thousand mer~ | tro mile cians, in twelve fathoms water, with » modera Intoxicating Liquors. tion and property, it follows conclusively that the: lute prohibition is retained; while the right of | Michigan, Rhode Ieland, and the District of Columbia; | chants’ clerks who are in New York and make them | brecse from the SSW, MAJORITY REPORT. who make and?sell it, sin with a high band | against God, | scearch is ostensibly more guarded, when conducted | yet in none of these, it is believed, does the constit join the Librery. By doing this the moral aspect of Seer, pauealt aad onthe any Jomn dk & Asie, Wiss saat at ; and the highest interests of their fellow men.”’ upon the warrant of a magistrate, yet aection twenty: | tion and Bill of Rights so carefully, or with such pre- | thie city will be greatly changed for the better. (Of | that the anchors would oun M. Stensins, from the majority of the committee | “"Said the Hon. Mr. Frolinghuyse five of the act which declares that ‘all liquor kept in | ciseand emphatic language, guard the rights of the | course it will, said seme one, flinging a Bible, which fell to whom was referred so much of the Governor's Mes- | history, to our free institutions, violation of any provision or provisions of this act shall | citizens, as in this State. with crushing weight on the hat of a orother member.) an, although he was my opponent. | new suip Hexios, Mitchell, at NOrloans 10th from P renee It is too late in the ever land, was obliged to cut away Her matty off the Great L ually in conflict with the constitution. (Laughter and sage as relates to the subject of intemperance aud whose benignant providence has so richly blessed us, | be deemed and is hereby declared to be public nui- | _ It ie not m for the undersigned to report the | The ent now informed the audience that the pv i Sasoatoatire fi lag sania eae cy the | That'we puny our laws. If mon will cogans in this | sance,’’ reopens the 00s for atl more fearful abuses. | argumentesct forth by these high judicial authoriti meeting was adjourned. The meeting dispersed after | topealiant yards sent down, but the gale i sah ~chhasti ene, destructive traffic, if they will stoop to degrade their ‘The undersigned cannot but believe that the phila: in the defence of their position. We point to them only giving hree cheers for Wood, which were followed by | fy taardn the lant whem al tree cone REPORT: reagon, and reap the wages of iniquity, let them no | thropic men under whose superintendance this measure | as likely to be repeated by our own tribunals, which, ree for his defeated rival, lard. The ballots for | rigging, an: rything attached : That they entirely concur with the Governor in his | longer bave the law book fora pillow, nor quiet their | bas been brought forward, were ignorant of the purport | however, will not be able to give afinal adjudication | the other officers were not counted, and’ could not, | her from going ashore. Th views, as expressed in that portion of his message re- | conscience by the opiate of a court license.”” and of the scope of this sweeping clause. It breaks down | upon the bill, until society bas been torn up by agita- | therefore, be made known at the time. As there was ferred to . They are also satisfied that the time Lord Chesterfield, in the British Parliament, over a hun- | all the guards which protect property and the privacy of | tions, by litigations, by heart burnings, by vindictive | no appearance of the result being obtained before one has amived when sound and wholesome legislation, | years ago, uttered upon this subject the ever me- | dwellingy and ‘individual rights, and gives up the pri- | prosecutions, and, it is to be feared, by acts of official | or two o’clock this morning, the building was soon de. | (f the gale. : io next Ge beied mgperte cap «0 Cs on tl which shall ethoraatly put a stop to the sale and public | morable sentiment—memorabls from the time, the place | vilege of search and seizure, and destruction of property | violence on one side, and public resistance on the other. | serted by all except the inspectors. with jury masts, having been obliged. to slip small wnehdd use of imtoxicating liquors as a beverage, is demanded | and the person by whom it was uttered: ‘The number | to the arbitrary willand unregulated violence of a mob. | Such have ever been the results of coercive legisla- Tad Sitade Dekker ete the niiue Coe nina alike by the voice of the people and the highest interests | of the distillers,” said he, “should be no argument in A public nuisance at common law, may be abated by | tion, when applied to the enforcementof dogmas or wind blo trong and the rou; Uae shi of our State. their favor. I never heard thata law against theft was re- | every citizen or collection of citizens upon ther own ractices not within the true province of government. City Intelligence. near the lai that it was imp: to hem. king f are aware that since the public attention has or delayed because thieves were numerous. Ifthese | motion, and without the Provence or authority of a ma- here coercion begins in a State, liberty ends; and the Narrow Escare or Mr. E, K, Coutins.—At 1034 o'clock | ¥ took pe saplatanen, From ihe wreekees, whe wasp ate been turned towards prohibition, very many objections | liquors are so delicious that people are tempted to their | gistrate; and the destruction of the property, ana the | wider the domain of the former the more marrow the | yestorday morning, as Mr. E. K. Collins was proceeding | board.’ STest Bumpers Dut were not permitted to go have been gravely urged against any law upon the sub- | own ruin, let us secure them from the fatal draughts by | trespass andvi lence done to private premises, in the pro- | precincts of the latter. In a republican system, the ject, now that prohibition is likely to be adopted. The | bursting the vials that contain them. Let us crush at | cess of abating such nuisance, involve no criminal risk | introduction of the element of force is always the more | from his residence to foot of Cortlandt strect, on his way annals of the past abundantly prove that intoxicati: once these artists in human slaughter, who have recon- | and no responsibility for damages to the participant | dangerons because the theory of such government rests | to Jersey City, where he was to have taken the cars for Uquors have been regarded as dangerous to society, and | ciled their countrymen to sickness and crime, and have | therein. It is true, that the law holds every trespasser | upon the assumption of man’s capacity for self-govera- | Washingtbn, an accident occured which, bntfor th their use a proper subject of legislative restraint and | spread over the pitfalls of debauchery such baits as | to a strict accountability to prove that the tl abated | ment; and its administration should always be directed id Pl setts dphcond ” ol robibition. For more than three thousand years, in | cannot be resisted. was a public nuisance; and in the rigidness of its re- | to the elevation of the citizen to his true dignity, by | Courage of a young man named Ackerman, a clerk in the feront countries, under different governments, they Said our own distinguished Chancellor Walworth, | quirements found a means to protect private property | education, by the amelioration of his con<ition, and by | store of Talcott & Brothers, might have terminated fa- ‘cotton, by throws have been thus treated. History tells us that the an- | many years ago, when reviewing thia subject in tho inst outrage, and the public peace against outbreaks | the guaranty of his individual liberty of action. tally. As Mr. Collins, was passing the Park the axletree fast to'ths kedge, From appearances her mi cient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans, and other eastern | light ot his clear intellectual and moral vision: ‘The mob violence. But by this act, the question as to The efforts of the teachers of, temperance, by moral | of his carriage broke, and tl jock caused by this cir. | have been on fire several days, ut ho conjecture as ts how nations, through most periods of their existence, main- | time will come when reflecting men will as soon be | what is a public nuisance, is not left the courts, butit | suasion, to lead men to abstinence from intoxicating | cumstance started the horses, who rushed madly down | ofixinated can be made satisfactarily. ‘The oargo consisted tained and enforced rigid and severe, restrictions upon | caught poisoning their neighbours? wells as dealing out | defined and declared in advance, and with the dispensa~ | drinks, directed as they were in appeals to the intellects | Sroadway, and had they chanced to have struck against | 22;talet Stand 109 do Upland Cotton, 3 bole ayrup, one the use of wine; and excessive indulgence was at all | to them intoxicating liquors as a beverage.”’ tion given to every eitizen, at will, at any time, ay oF and the hearts of men, bad more success than any teach- | any opposing object, would certainly have overtarned and three bundles mdse. times deemed crimi In China, and some of the bor- Your Committee might sone at any length similar | night, alone or in company with others, to abate | ings not of divine inspiration. The customs habits 3 Bric J Conxr, from Havana for Portland, which gt dering nations, abstinence from intoxicating drinks has | opinions of eminent jurists and statesmen, all pointing | the nuisance, we confess we see no limit to the | of society were c for some time been enforced as a religious duty. to the one (pee idea’ of probibitory legislation as the | invasion of the domicils of storehouses of citi- | brought to aid in Most of the western nations of Europe have, from time | right and highest duty of civil government. Such le- | zens or the seizure and destruction of their pro- | drinks. Liquors we: to time, pasted laws condemnatory of intemperance, | gislation, in t opinion of your Committee, would now | perty the carriage and probably caused Mr. Collins’ death. ane influence of woman was | yr. Ackerman, who ehanced to be passing, seeing the | tor and, NCR real gh per ap bps discountenanee of intoxicating | danger, boldly rushed forward, regardless of the fury of | month, was undoubtedly the wreck found on Seorton gee ore dl ? | the excited animals, and by an exercise ofgreat strength | East Sandwich Ist inst. d that with the impunity thus securedto other. | snd temperate fathers inculcated the virtue of self- | pore them back on their haunches, and held them until | Brio lao, from Card for Portland, at Holmes's Hj and laying restraints upon the traffic in intoxicating | grace the statut sof every civilized nation, as a | wise violence, we can see no reeson why the pro- | restraint to their children. The example of such a re- liquors, and they are continued to the present time. The ijeoral braces se beam oC hensin have it ook cuit | cennas ef seaton ued lotions asd eocieemetibe eben Con? | Soebac wt MOOt pte he |julguiad: OF Sase ant toate Neo a eee papieasan’ anf Gsn: | Misnis Gerad, bet gevenins wilbeav omeaee, ty toe common law frowns upon intemperance. It holds it to | avarice has been so long wedded to appetite, that their | ducted under the color of law, should have been regard- | moral and religious convictions, gave evidence of a | Feraus Position, | Mr. Acl y sistance of US revenue cutter James Campbell, be without apology, and condemns as guilty him com- | offspring have become legion, ed by the majority of the majority of the committee, as | race of sturdy-minded people. It was a of Bric Foster frot mitting a crime while in the wildest insanity, caused by | “Xsur Committee tubmit th bill they have prepared with | worthy weniet tia cera dafoguards with which | their intellectual training, which promised ‘ilo "most | Tue UNrurtoven AGaix.—Yesterday groups of the | cademe an © t the use of intoxicating liquors. much diffidence. They are aware that all human laws they are surrounded in the proposed bill. gratifying development. It was most unfortunate | unemployed workmen congregated in front of the City | The deck load a 14 When Oregon, years since, was new, and made up of | are imperfect: that He only—the great Author of the inch misunderstanding of the relation of the State to | that ‘this system of persuasion to virtue and prn- | yall, discussing together on the probabilities of getting | Se'feorilir’, pees ae people congregated from different parts of the | higher law, which is above all laws, because perfect— | the business of the people bas grown out of the term | dence was ever abandoned for statutory restraints. P get se Procpect of yet Lgert Bal he world, the sale and manufacture of spirits | can frame a perfect law. They are aware, too, that its | ‘‘license,” which is used to define @ pecuniary fine or | Thus far, the practical consequences of the change | Wrk. Most of these men are under the impression that | Shryo" was forbidden by law. In all periods of ourown history, | imperfections viewed through the colored medium of | tax, but which in its more general acceptation signifies | have been, that the efforts of good men to resist the | the Common Council, somehow, are devising means to and that of most of our sister States, such sale has been | self-interest, will be magnified and distorted, if possible, | a special permission and approval granted by a superior | spread of habits of vicious indulgence have been relaxed, | give them work, but have not as yet their plans perfect- laid under severe restrainta. Indeed, but one opinion | into hideous spectral forms, to stalk the State and terri. | to'an inferior. These several, statetes which authorize | and the evil has become of wider influence. It is to be | ed. The most bitter tirades were indulged in by some, has, to any large extent, prevailed throughout all ages, fy the Reople. Yet they confidently believe that should | the issuing of licenses to auctioneers, peddlers, victual- | feared that the transfer of this moral question into the | directed against the Mayor, for his first veto which they in to the evil consequences of this trafic. the bill they submit become a law, it would prove ef. | ers, pawnbrokers, cart and hack men, andthe exhibitors | bands of the sherifis and constabulary and police of the | said should not have been made. They separated ata barous and semi barbarous, balf-civilized and | fectual in suppressing by much the larger proportion, | of public shows, do not intend to imply that the class of | State, will, without effecting its end, tend indirectly to | late hour to meet again to-day, when the address pub- | * ¥e*t- civilized nation in all ages, regarded it as eviland | the traffic in inloxicating liquor. dealizgs which these persons pursue {s injurious to the | degrade the cause of temperance and discourage its true | lished yesterday will be presented to the Common | .BRic Puruuma, at Baltimory from Savannah, oxi pernicious, and requiting restraints even in the milder | They have called to their aid the experience of the | public welfare; er that the State, by licensing them, con- | friends, by identifying it with the idea of violence and | Council gnend very bad weather on the passage, and off Cape Hat forms in which alcohol is combined by fermentation, | past, and some of the ablest in logal ability, ani wisest | nects itvelf with them, or becomes morally oF inany way | coercion, and straining it with the suspicion of hostility | Tuovatx ow rmx Docks—Tux Srmnxe ov rmx 'Lowosnons- | “Sow 0 goer. ogden oa cortainly we, a highly civilized and Christian people, | in practical knowledge. Nor have they been unmindful | responsible for them. to individual freedom. ‘ent Sada it Sesshbidh ition tke wi bevold, together with the materiain es the igen ait” ought not to suffer It ‘to go at large in its subtler forms | of the opinions of the opponents of prohibition. These fe “license” is intended first asa tax imposed in a | The laws now on the statute book, if enforced, would p betas saggy sige atte 2 nada g ek she , an seer be Davey, of Brooksville, from ‘sshington Heights, NY, run into ¢ larboard id carrie bowsprit of distillation. Your committee would not, however, | they recsived and carefully weighed, and in the | mode easily collectable: and, second, as a method of re- | toa great extent, do away with the more publicevils of | and docks yesterday, caused by the strike of the ‘long- | ¢,SC¥R Sivan Croup, urge these records of the pastas establishing the sound- | light of all, have sought to frame a bill not unnecessa- | muneration and identification which greatly facilitates | intemperance. they might, Lea be judiciously | shoremen. It appears the shipowners have come toa neas of legislative restraint or probibition now. The | rily stringent in its provisions, and yet suficiently so to | the operations of police. ‘The tax contributed from these | strengthened by new enactments. ¢ undersigned be- y world may all this time have been wrong, and thesere- | secure obedience, and accomplish the great end in view. | sources is large and cannot well be dispensed with, now | lieve that a bill could be framed which would mect tho | S¢termination, to reduce the ySht I Ad Neh A ter; st nd a 7 of stanehi cont scintillations of genius struck from the anvilof | To aim at less than this would be folly; to seek more, | that the pressure of ‘municipal county and state exigencies of the case, and yet not be obnoxious to the | Tur and refuse to work, They yesterday even wont | ys mbem conte 7c a aaueeok self-interest may be revealing to us the real and true | tyranny. has been so largely increased. The bill rej to your | objections which arise against the majority bill. further, and assembled in peg two hundred alo1 feoamers oad dais bhal anatiouneend whe channel of legislative action. From the bill as drawn, those who intend to observe | House, however, dots acknowledge the principle and es- pe law might judiciously punish drunkards. It | the docks, and tried to intimidate those who accep : Spoken, Res ls nid dS ales beers the law have nothing to fear; those who do not, much. | tablish the practice of ‘‘licenses”’ in the more obnoxious | might prohibit the sale of liquors to minors and t> wo- | the reduced prices. The shipowners had hired a number m Damariscotta for s Southern It contains no new principles of law. On the contrary, | meaning of the term. It first outlaws the traffic in ppir- | men. It might deflue what is a common drunkard, and | ¢f‘en som mperate or honest by law.’’ Your committee had always | itis based upon familiar ones, extensively applied in | its, wines, and ales, and provides sweeping processes forbid the sale of liquor to him. It might impose pen- | hu+ the threa supposed that, inasmuch as government was established | legislation, and which date their history anterior to all | against all engaged in it, and summary modes of execu- | alties for the vitiation and of liquors by adulteration, or to protect its citizens, the primary object of law was to | statutes. tog them by search, seizure, confiscation, fine, and im- | the use of drugs or any unknown ingredients, or in ‘the restrain and prevent crime, not so much to punish and | — Only two principles enter largely into it. These form | prisonment; and then it authorizes two thousand per- | manufaclure. It might retrict Se te tae cate large crowd had assembled and endeavored to prevent {whom were newly arrived emigrants; | J%2!, lat of the strikers alarmed them, and they | ponds would not work for fear of violence being offered them. In the vicinity of Franklin Market, ( No. 10,) a largare Shiverick, hence (abt Oct 5) f ‘Ayres, Nov 26, lat 27 5, lon 4% 15. Fairy,’ Willeby, from Kio Janeiro for Philadel Pernambuco Dee 21. Tioga, from Mobile for St Jago, Cubs, Jan 4, It 27, reform the criminals—that these latter were rather the | its basis, and pervade ita entire framework. They are, | sons to be specially appointed to deal in liquor. without | ner in which liquor , incidents, not the end. It- this be s0, the objection is | first, prohibition with ite exceptions: aud second, rearch | fee, tax or reward. ve partien who appoint: them are | premises of the seller: fat te Gree sO, on ree | Foreign Ports. powerless, since, though true, it argues nothing against | with its attendants, seizure, forfeiture, and destruction. | the judges of the courts, and the qualification forthe | | The committee ask leave to bring in a bill having | yott & Go, The men were ao’ alarmed thar they we Care Havtinn—In port abt Deo 90 bark “Storlirg,” any law. "Because ‘‘ men cannot be logisiated moral’’— | These embodied, and all elae ie the bills mere detail, no | office is an affidavit that the applicant does not use intox- | these objects, which they shall move as an amendment | Melt ® 00. The mon were no f Jived to | {oF Hambure, Hs alge, Maria, Beton, trom eve! or, in the language of another, because ‘‘temperance, | arranged as to form a simple and direct plan for carry- | icating liquor asa beverage, and will not infringe the | tothe majority bill, and they regret that the proceed- | Doovect them. ‘The whole neighborhood was ina most | icrchif?s Laurillia, Smith, from Boston for Port au P Me other virtues, is not produced by law-makers’”— | ing them out. limitation of the law. ings in committee have been such as aot to afford them | Pr°its ciate’ as it was fearedea riot would take place, | °F; (Tavesgoy—t Dee 17 b does it follow that the weak, the helpless, the dependent, ¢ ordinary modes of procedure are made applicable | These limitations are that he shall sell such liquors | sufficieut time to perfect the details of it, and to pre- | Thy police however, are on the alert, and there te bat a Coe Tih ta tous foe Worbons the moral, the virtuous, should not be protected from | to the extent they can be, consisteatly with a somewhat | cnly for mechanical, chemical, and medicinal porpoves, | sent it with thefr report. little danger of anyibing of the kind occurring. “A larg ‘ooster, for do the strong, the immoral, the vicious, by laws that shall | summary proceeding. ‘Two processes are authorized; and, pure wine for sacramental use; and it is enacted WM. B. AITKEN, foros Rae’ bem. Getalled to 1oGk ent fee te ‘bathers, we, for N York 10; ee! restrain them? Is it an argument'to be urged against | one for the arrest of any person violating the act: the | that the sellers must have good reason to belleve and F. 8. DUMONT Committee. | should they make any disturbance to-da a ye ath Sh laws punishing theft. burglary and murder, that auch | other for searching for and seizing an fiquor kept in | must believe that the same are. purchased with the in- GEO. A. SEARING, id y Me ng in 1th, twe Am sohre, laws will not inake immoral, crime inclined men moral | violation of uny provision thereof “Neither can issue | tent to be used for one of the. purposes mentioned, | Assxumty Cnamnun, Jan. 16, 1856. ‘Tam Fuanaton Fassrvat.—The diethday of Benjamin | [PERS (ee Mevsageages,, Cheawells, tiem ‘Boows © pre Meio t xe lee gon Leg aH og — except — ee omer reas cause, the same | How far Sait tele ig opr omy ge Agel we Franklin will be appropriately commemorated this eve. yiAbiv ax Are Jan 4 brig Trio (one account says True Bi ions w' , and gravely, too, OR in official | as a in all of criminal cases. one man shal ieve in the intention of a ir, Or jeLeod, Charlottetown, fi yw York; Sth, schi position, which objections form the key that unlocks | arrested, and property seized, are brought into ‘court, | thet. the other shall do.as he intended isa question | ANPUAL Election of Offlcers of the Mercantile | ning, at the Broadway Tabernacle, by the New York | figaq. twat, Baltimore: ese a that Pandora’s box of executive charms which the peo- | and a trial thereupon is had, differing inno respects from | which has never yet been practically solved. It is un- f " Typographical Fociety, who have decided to omit this | _ Livanrocs—Ia port Deo 80 brig Sami French, Brows, § ple have been scrutinizing the past year, the ordinary mode, except the preliminary examination | fortunate that it was reserved for a day andagenera- | OREAT EXCITEMENT AMONG THE MEMBERS—UNSUC: | year their usual ball and supper, and hold instead sim- | Pare, Ide, a Dies’ SO hate Blaine Tibet, fot But not content to rest their detence upon this issue, | is waived; either party having a right to adjournmenta | tion in which the law has refused to define whatame- | CESSFUL ATTEMPT TO ORGANIZE A MEBTING—A | ply a literary anniversary. Proceeds are to be de. | po thet for Matansee Sith sobre Grand iviand, from’ Ni the opponents of prohibition object, again, that prosent | for a reasonable time to prepare for trial. If a trial by | dical purpose, and what a sacramental use, is. It was | NEW USE FOR BIBLES AND PRAYER BOOKS. voted to the support of the printers’ free library. The | tarypors for NYork do. a laws are suflclent if they be but executed: ar ired, it must be demanded at the time of join- | thought that the legislation which threw off the re. | The Mercantile Library building, in Astor place, pre_| goteslon it he tueidt reat Wanerant, and fo doubt the | Hana—s beige Gustavus, Pereiyal, Tarks Tale answer to s ion ia, ey are, w! eld. Sal ia Sore set var pppounase Ph ee oe | y iy After trial, an appeal may be taken to the | straints upon the practice of medicine, and which sented a singular scene last evening, on the occasion of | their wives and sweethearts, to celebra eee their sufficienc me tribunal, in subs same reac! administi vee by executing them? For several years past prohibition conducted as how previaee: vies were foe tnbeise ‘o tie liberal 6 i of the age ‘and that any | the annual election of officers for the ensuing year, | turn of the birthday of the printer, sage and es vv Dec 24 brig Breeze, Outer! has been ae throughout the Bate as the only sufi: | The ‘‘domicil of the citizen” eannot, by the provisions | evile that might attend ie were more than compensa- | These elections are generally very exciting, but we do not ea eure te Artis Uepdcntgcisen ots Becta wig Wm, Price ot Philadelphia, condemn cient remedy. meant Li by. ‘near % IN . yan mi ives of it s ttanooga, is, the present laws thoroughly, but without any consid: ched under any cireumstances, until | ted by what was gained freedom. recollect one in whieh the members appeared to have less secrrand pres Geta TEE, and becenseed 0x Babin’ Wishout brent yal, after a regular trial and conviction, and then only f The amended constitution of 1846, in repealing the dle auccess, Their efforts have become a part of the ja- | the period of one year thereatter, °F | clause of the constitution of 1821, which excluded clergy: control over themselves, Throughout the day, from | the ancient and famous Six Nation of Indians, who had vesscsia:adiih tive hes pusamne haoehi be dictal records tad = nage Lape opinion Bas, dw oer a y have now Lng described the entire | men from office, removed the last remaining — re eight in the morning till nine in the evening, the ad- ok Nie eth to Ue sacks e Wostingter, ot Tiverpest for Portland Tepe to sail 30th. igher, and approaching nearer ings au' the bill, except - hich that class was recognized asa y | herent and who figured in procession at Wasl eo is jaurimat the Point of prokibition. For sometime it nas been | Lateral provisions introduced to ald’ in denecti view: ‘i inbolhaabsste reipeg elgir erie der are $ | tin'Ta to loud for N¥orn, Uo nen B abies item. It intended by that change to appeared on ’Change yesterday, and drew considerable | jin, 1. abolish ail existing, ond te * all, future, attempts | ¢xertions to obtain votes in favor of their own particular sivention from the werchante, The three tribes of | _ Sr Sreruxw, NB—Arr Jan 10 sche St Stephen, Randall, mainder is devoted to defining the duties and fixing the | of the State to define a mati po ae religious charac- | tickets, and nearly every member that presented himself | Oneida’, Cayuga’s and Tuscarora’s, in this State, had | York. Cld 1th ship Pamphylia, Larkia, Queenstown. «| a it to the mort o was done, such ual observer, that unless some- | tions, and to enforce the penalties i 4 _ law would be inevitable. Why iol ond txing tx have not its opponents stepped out upon the present | fees of officers ter. The of this act, on the contrary, will | at the door was beset by at least half a dozen part each its representative, one of whom was a doctor, or laws and demonstrated their sufficiency, if they really Your commiteee have deemed such an analysis of | have the of bringing before the courts the = a upon wily otter a aie of pty medicine man. They were a weather-beaten 1» LS ogy gs RS it? Had they done so, this exciting question | the bill necessary, in view of the idea that has ob- | tion not only of what is a medical use of wines, &c., bat Lsonggens| and the hand of time hed made its mark upon thelr | Tee, Oe Taw since been put at rest. Hamanity would have | teined, that similar bills have been, and this probably | what isa sacrament, and what are its characteristics | vorites, and using their utmost powers of persuasion to | countenances and apparent physical an well a8 clay hands for joy. Posterity would have bowed | would be, based upon new and unjust prineiples; in the | and ite limitations? The unders cannot conceal | induce him to vote for their men. At the head of the | upon their white scmsputeiota, who had been with them at their shrine in grate(ul remewbrance, and have felt | language of one, ‘subversive of every Brinciple of the three tickets—for there were no lens than three in the | '™ the struggle of 1812, ij elevated by its homage. common law, and repugnant to the moral and religious Fine iy toe Esoutn Avence.—Yesterday morning, at Another answer is, that existing laws cannot, from | sentiments of the community.” ¥ field—were the names of George C. Wood, F. W. Ballard - ress for as before re} ; Benj. Sti their nature, effect this object, They do not propore to | "A careful examination will readily convince the un- | governments, where it haa been attempted, proved | and E. Boudinot Servoss, These gentlemen had been | *0¥t 2o'clock, « fire was discovered in the clothing | Nvork. Cli baiks J A Hobart. Hill City Poin do it; they are yresely based; they proceed upon the | biased that these are the merest vagaries of a distorted | equally disastrous to religion and liberty. nominated by their respective parties for the | *0Fe of Morris Plantard, No. 466 Eighth avenue. It was | Pononry, shane sobre Joeephine, Dissowway, and Ric nt and proper to drink intoxi- | fancy; that the bill simply applies old Principles to “To protect the two thousand liquor of the State, Vn first discovered by Mre. Muir, the lady residing over the | BaTiiCid “4 LJ bedroom 15 brig Hesperus, Adams, Trinidad. cating liquors asa beverage. They professediy aanc. | new purpose, in the judgment of your committee, to a | in their law established trade, four thousand office of President several days before the clec- | store. She was awoke bya dense | abip Waiter Scott (new), Smith NOvieans nls eee bevy _ cova 3 oe id noida re my wha ‘ adh : and a ee Ig Raph poe end | tion, and each of course was sanguine of suc. | when Mr. bed e hg) alarm. fone eames peed Pettitte Bonet tere ap je, and then pu’ wi found, a) 4 critical examination, that yal al who 5 ot a mono- were at the succeeded in . J ae avimoral (1) driver to hold it in check. ‘The conse. | there is anything’ Very strange OF ‘anomalous fates | poly, and [a order to. protect tais houopety by 8 more | CeM™ S# all euch youthful aspirants for distinction | Teer TU Gnas 0 oks RTRs thus to aprond beyond the Bray, Philadelphia: sober, Dayligi quence is that in the State there are now over 30,000 | mode adopted for the carrying out of these principles in | xacred guaranty and more vigilant su than is | generally are, They bad their caucises, thelr schemes of | store. A workman, who is said to have been sleeping in who, deeming themselves as skilful reinsmen aa those | those points of difference between the meaner herein | extended to the lives and property and’ dearest rights of oe ud if they did not exbibit the same tact in | the back room of the store, said he was suffoca- selected by the toards of excise, have assumed the | provided and the ordinary one. These differences are | other citizens, this array of tes is wu 4 | their plans displayed by older politicians, they certainly | teq by the amoke, There in an insurance of $1,000 on driver's seat, and their number is annually increasing. | mostly drawn from summary proceedings now known to | upon the allegation of a # were not wanting in zeal and earnestness in carrying | tno stock, in the Granite Insurance Company. The loss r will that number the law, but ina modified form, less string-nt and se- | the identification by name of the party sus todi- | them out. will amount, probably, to $200. There are some curious | | aye, (preriomely: reported ta in each town twenty. vere. In ever: nee the ait has been to, make the | rect the search of premises and the sclzure and destruc. | At nine o'clock the polls were declared to be closed, | Circumstances about this fire, which are now under in- | yiyrhool 7 days, (previously city of New York seven thousand moral men—to | medicine ss mild ible, so that it only has power | tion of ‘ty held in contravention of the terms of | when the test confusion and excitement ensued. Marshal. Barcelona, via Mal swear, steal, and let them go about doing so; and all the | enough to cure the Eseess. the act. Not content with this, the same provision al- rs, however, succeeded in making their way J jertran, Ivica, vate room to count the ballots, where they mee. their duty without interrap- Tux Covrrs.—In the Hudson County Court yes! Jaws and police power of the State not preveat Your committee are confident that but for the amount | lows the bringing into court of « suspected mt with. A cases, requires. Upon the trial of any case | tion. About ten the members assembled in the lecture our youth growing up an army of swearers and thieves. | of interest involved, which despondingly hopes to evade | out that personal service which the law, ex in, having by law created this morbid a] ite and | the law, and fain would induce the introduction or | treordinary 5 ‘ eedblshed thie custome, the ériaker aud’ Trees ore | avon at of some provision by which a door of escape | under this act, not only persons convicted of unautho- | room, where they amused themselves for about an hour liquor A wet leaae’ ajt, PM. ship Juniper, Pi wedded t by ® community of interests. They | might be opened, such « bill would pass without oppo- | rized selling ‘of liquors shall be excluded from the jury, | in Bibles, prayer books, cushions, and annual re- ¢ same charge, resulted in his con- ‘many (n0W), is the commission of this flagrant wrong against ion, ond'be acijuiesced in with pleasure. But interest, | but any person anonymously accused thereof, who # ports of the library ateach other. Several a were 13 sehr Magnolia, Nickerson, hemselves and society, and neither is the least inclined gangren by avarice, bas im too iastances #0 | decline answering the interrogatories of the trate | made to organize & meeting, but they all failed. One of —A regular mesting of the Co Denman, Getehell, NYork; Mth. EF to expose the other. bend authoritatively for the in- | welded the fetters off selfishness, that break them | instituted for the purpose of examining into such accu- | the junior members ef the Library, named Frank Bal- Common Counon..—A reg’ ot te mmm zfower, Robiason, do. Cla 13th, brig strument which causes them to offend, and you have | assunder requires something more than the soft accents | sations, may be jualified from acting as juret lard, bad the courage to ascend the rostrum and call the pal. teeps of : se ATE “ Doth removed the occasion for offences'in the future, | of perruasion or the gentle volce of entreaty ‘The ordinary logic and presumptions of evidence are meeting to order, but it weuld not come to order. home oC wadoees | oe RY, airnhcibserieir ee ORS it into court Aino ig momo ine fa tee lief a fe rt oi qe aiite Wy Pos Cx, 17th seetion, a pat sn Ny Aeoymn | tt fair hatred young ‘ee tres: wat PGES arr Jon 8 brigs Baltic. Muszoe, Bosteps whose timon} peac' sooner oT ter consummated, vt a ‘trial complaint commenced under front with pronunciation ry, 4 Tth sebe Montrose ow, Trott he'tse caused to be impeached the testimony ot | in thelr, sovereigaty lave “avereed it, your’ cum. | provision of this eet, proof of the sale sball be sufficient | was evidently intended to be very Frekch. ‘Qui Alen foreach wad fr | wh lbark Geils. Aahir, Brovidvacn. t. Od ol U i {housauis, Avy law, however stziageat its provisions, | mittee look forward to the time whoa fais | fo sustain the avormente of aa walaw{ul eale, and proe( | siewr,”’ replied the speaker,

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