The New York Herald Newspaper, January 21, 1858, Page 1

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| THE NEW YORK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 7811. PRICE TWO CENTS. MORNING EDITION—THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1858. State governme: recommended itia— this was all at the Concord street sido; ia . bat P in News from Havana. IMPORTANT £ROM KANSAS, yee jut. “Thola sey peace ar nei, iin, Meets, Learnard, Belin S08 Gooding, THE BROOKLYN CALAMITY. the crowd; there were about five iar aen tee ot THE SPANISH FLERT ON A CRUISE—SANTA ANNA make ihe people of the United States, Congress and the | Ranks and Banking—Mosers. Crozier, Allen and Mead. ie Wille ag gg Al pabe. W. Gresne; ween SAID TO BRON BOARD AND A LANDING AT VERA | Confitet between the Two Free State Logie | finery cheald, if we cannot et aa be known vo longer | nach mits Couny Seats and Lincs—Mosars. Patrick, Lear- | one Catastrophe at Public School No. 14—Only Six | come out of tho main euirance, aid weston ee | CRUE HXFHOTRD—THK UNITED STATES viugaTH is time we should, if we cannot let us be known no longer mous—Rabid . " a . . WABASH WITH COLONEL ANDERSON IN PORT. latures—A General Ca Speeches | 1, the name of democracy. Let us cast aside ine namo Education—Mersrs, Ror t, Holliday and Wrigh’. Children Dead—The Wounded Recovering— | Come out while standing thera; I saw the smoke coming | DY ee aurH REPORTS. —The Topeka Legislatare Rampant, dc. republic. Those principles are right, we say wo | Roads and Highways—Messrs, Nash, Rt and Crozier. out of the top when I went into the street after getting SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. can make the government acknowledge them. way Agriculture—Meeers. Wright, Harding avd Carr. Coroner’s Inquest. them out; have been under the impression that the fre ‘The United States mail steamship Black Warrior, Cap- Lawneyce, K. T., Jan. 11, 1868, | Should we turn aside from our State government at, this | Apporti Mesere. Harding, Loarnard asd Nash. ind of pitch ainell ia ayy! houses f wearched ee ik, | win Smith, which left New Orleans on the 12th and fy- Tie TERRITORIAL, LEGISLATURE—LOWER HOURE. iw Fan there bean any ange in ee camera Ts fittewad pli Nepey conn ed "pauses ant len, After careful inquiry it has been s@oertained that only | house to see if] could find the cause, but I could not; all | Vana on the 16th inst., arrived at this port early yestor- ‘The House of Representatives of the Territorial Legisla- necessary for us to turn aside a people and come down Ratlroads—Mess: - ? Crozier and Root. six children died from the accident atthe of Public | day yesterday I {smelt the same emell, and aired | day morning. Pt it re. Learnard, Cro: ture were in seasion several hours en Saturday, the 9th | 4 an expediency? Can any person recommend such a | Public Printing—Meesrs. Allen, Crozier and Harding. | School No. 14 on Tuesday afternoon. Thove who were se- | ‘@ house; it was so offensive then T thought that | Tho Black Warrior brings $82,000 in specie from Hae i it was in my own apartment; have heard of mst. Members of the press were admitted to seats in- | (ourset, PImIBE nok. | hope this resolution will, Pass | Loerie hemre. Cros, Ws ay. Root ced tiead, | Yerely injured have recovered wo as to be out of danger. | no conjecture from any one that tbe Duilding would barn, | VAD. side the bar. A pillwas intreduced by H. Miles Moore, | and that we may have the glory of achieving this tri | Enrolled ills—Mosers. Root, Wright and Carr. The names of those who have dica are as follows:— Alter Teft the passage way I went into my own house; | A division of the Spanish flvet, consisting of one frigate, r mok staircase, was Meq., of Leavenworth county, stating that al the last couaty Tee tanbiainre be . A seers the tT eage * Acconnts—Mesers, Nash, Allen Learnard. John W. Greene, 5 years old, taken out of the entrance pe Skee e cage breviously; Igave the | ship of the line, one aloop, one brig and a steam fri Unfinished Business—Mesers. Patrick Crozier and Hard- | on Concord street, dead, His parents reside at the corner | alarm of fire down the alley way; the crowd were begin. | 8 sailed from Havana on the 12th inst. for a cruise in eleotion fraudulent, iNogal and fictitious votes were cast iD | Wr ciesome and good laws, but that isnot the question. It | ing. ‘st county, thereby defeating the will of the people, and | jg not the clfaracter of the laws so much as their source Oredentials—Messrs. Holliday, Root and Carr. of Concord street and Hudson avenue. ning to come when I went away; I assisted in taking out | the Gulf for the health of the crews, but a rumor was ferdenng the seata of the officers chosen at that election— | that we, as Americans, look at. We want proc tcpany pcm George Weck, child of Philip Wock, roviding in Oxford | SbOut two hundred; the children had been nearly all taken | wdoat (though not generally credited) thst. Santa Anna ia Commis. | the laws to express the will of the whole people and not | ©, W. Pabcock, President, . out before the alarm became general in the noig ; | om board, and that th 1 intention of the mamely, Sheriff, Probate Judge, Board of County 'S- | tho will of a portion of the people, and mot the will of a TK. Grodin tk - street, near Myrtle avenue, The boy was Syears and 10 | took out about fifty or a hundred before any one came at A © real intention of cornise is to aioners, Assessor and Coronor—to be declared vacant; | single man, for as soon as you come down toa portionof | G, A. Colton’ Assiotamt Chest, months old. Coroner Cozine held the inquest on Tuesday | all; have noticed that lately 1 could feel warmth in | pay their respects to the Mexicans at Vera Cruz. alo, ordering a new election for the choice of said officers. | the people's wil being reoresenied in a law, 80 fee the B. T, Hutchins, Enrolling Clerk. ae a ard Coe bins redone FS i o bn wal: Alea ae ee itpauaand The United States steam frigate Wabash arrived at Ha- The bill likewise remodelled the precincts of the county, | fmernment leaves a democracy and Becomes a despor | . H. Wier, Fngrossing Olerk. between Park’and Myrtlo avenues.’ Tho child. was 16 | Doticed lately: that the heaighas boon unagaally ‘great; | Vanaon the morning of the 1fth inst, She had oa board those of Kicki and Delaware to Leaven- ‘A REPLY. soe . ears old. He was taken out by officer William Brown, of .| have never heard of any r expressed by the teach- | Col. Frank Anderson aad his command of about forty vemoving ‘poo T. Bronson, Doorkeeper. BA by D ‘worth. The bill took the usual course, and will probably at Mr. L. ALLEN, of Lawrence, being called upon, rose, and Rev. 8. Y. Lum, Chaplain. the Second precinct, and taken to, the Second precinot sta- | ers as to a fear of dre. men, the last of the Nicaraguan heroes, MEMBERS OF THE ROUSE OF tion house = Coroner Cozine algo held an inquest on this Ebenezer Smith sworn—Resides at 178 Nassau street; ‘The weather continued very warm. REPRESENTATIVES. Leavenworth County—Mesers. Geo. H. Keller, H. Milos le é heard the school was on fire, and went back to call Businegs dull. Moore, R. G. Enleott, 0. A. assert, Wa. M. MeCture, Win, efieary Le Blanc, son of Ambréee 1. Le Blanc, 186 Nassan my workmen; when I ot to the entrance, on | Exchange on New York, short time, 5 to 6 per cont pro- ade some remarks in answer to above speech, which aa.carly date pass both bouses, Another bill was intro- | Tere to" tne following effect:-—He considered that. the @uced for the removal of the county soat of Leavenworth ka constitution was formed as the only poesible means ck. Pat Concord street, the children were all 4 We eounty from Kickapoo, where it was located by fraudu- | of their getting out of the difficulties in w! they then | Pennock. Patrick R. Orr and J. P. eed Pins gh | was taken out dead. y 5, mium; on London 118 to 120 per cent. ¥ - is seven old, reside at No, | went upto the second story, and about thirty from Ment voles, to Leavenworth City, the largest town | Det Wer hareanedes tanned e fy te “eee Messrs. James Adkins, Jobo Bennett |, sy iieestrect.” baa thadcnas the westand ef the, bulldiag, on the Concord etrest aide, OUR HAVANA CORRESPONDENCE. | fm the county and in the Territory. A resolution | government into immediate operation? No, they were in- | Doniphan County—Meeers, B. H. Brock, 0. Graham, H. | _ Stephen Bloomfield, seven years old, was taken to Dr. | in a room, at the top of the stairs, we saw a hole about HAvANA, Jan. 16, 1858, ' passed the House to repeal all the laws. or pre- beay-rree ybsh non pea, ny ls da bee nota made | Stratton, J. B. Wheeler and A.'A. Jameson. Stowe’s, No. 103 Nassau street, and there identified by his Fs go serene encckad ove Poe geek pr oy ome ne Saiting of the Spanish Fleet—It Santa Anna on Board?—~ together; rey Bi ie Chuakion orrill. parents. 5 , : ante aon, CON an TENE: peta Samy pete what for? t to start itt en? No; Dat when tn ‘Maronatt € aa aie eine ‘The boy Gallagher, about ten years old, livingin Dickin- | there was; we went up to the third story, but the smoke War with Meztco Imminent—Ship Fever in Port—Death Territorial Legislatures or pretended Territorial Legisla- | emergency should arise to call for it. Well, does that | Jeferson County—Messrs, Henry Owens and T, s, | Sows alley, near York street, was , but is recover | was so dense we could not proceed; we then inquired if | of an American Caplain—Preights and Trade, all the children were out, and learned that they were; we ic i No! ing. tures which sat previous to the meeting of the pregent | emergency exist now? No! Do the people want it now? 1g Martio, a boy ae old, jumped out | then went out to the rear, on the alley, to save the other We have many rumors as to the whereabouta of Gen. Cooper. Berritorial Legislature in extra seasion at Lecompton, and | No; not even in Lawrence, here, would a majority of the Calhoun County—Mr. Asa Reynard. liey. ‘ tawattamie Counties—Meesre. Charles Jen- | of @vecond story window and escaped uninjured. buildings; did not go to the Navy street side at all; this | Santa Anna, and again we are told that he is on his way to onact good and wholesome laws in their stead—these | PegPle urge that policy. effect, the | nine ali nerccneere ne Oeaee Ree Mame cache ox x1 casi | wosmime Ut lopuen tnd onw thet ihece wae comderatic | \e stecien cuter Ghent tae protection of the Spanish flees, said laws to be repealed only s0 fast as the new laws are | Speaker came to the United States gevernment and treated | ~ Douglas and Johnson Countics—Mesars. John Speer, Geo. | street, is recovering. peat escaping from the furnace at the ond of the building | the first squadron of which put to #ea on the “I2th, con Guieted; itas follows:—I say the government of the United States, | Ww. Deitzler, Oliver Barber, Hiram -Applennam, Andvenr T. | These are all the killed and wounded, as far as acer. | Hvard & mae ion caer pwns th pil des boys several | sisting of | Niajephonercnnrabgate ys Heaven; the whole Wing ava to ames Dectanee, | dco toate anette | tained from tbe most reliable sources. times going alter water, carrying several pails at a time; | ~ ship Tsabetlo Second ‘The Council, after a short session on Monday, adjourned | Hag he shown us principles of republicanism in his treat- ‘There are nineteen counties represented by Messrs. John Coroner Isaac R. Snell proceeded to empannel a jury, ieee it — iting the al > —. . othe Shao Frigate Cortes. om account of the ment of Kansas? No. He commands and we must obey; | Curtie, Christopher Columbia and Samuel Stewart. and at two o'clock yesterday afternoon commenced the i a males cles tan tooth hye A Bs, yoda wrt A sioop. 08 ras. ae Androw J tiead, bv of Hey couatys' in introducing | enforce his commands.” It was thor on te Fourtn of July | Lyin Ceuta Mesa Jobe Banas aut & A stennon, | BVEsteabon no thecauee ofthe death of Henry C mith, | {oth gir’ ratrance, on Concord street, aw ciiliren | iy'ctser tater Seeioa ome rerolutions in regard to the death of the deceased, | last, when we were dispered by the Unitod States troops. Taereare pis sae aenunreie in the Lower House | Henry Le Blane and Stephen Bicomfold. coming, down the stairs; at the time Jima, {here | The declaration that these vessels are bound to Vero prefaced them with the following remarks:— heel Be seoeeanee Pa Ng biog’ son ee a oe i lature. It consists of thirty-nine members, ‘The following jury were empannelied and testimony a folding door on the ground floor; it was quite dense: the | Cruz is derived from suggestion or surmise. We bavo Mr. Pussiexr_—It is my paiaful duty to announce to this | needed no law to comman States troops i Ie sentieete me a Atchison county, which probably | taken:— children had entirely got out when I went up; saw alittle | pot a fact as to equipment, embarking of soldiers, &c., to enerebie boas the cacenss of cfs : iford On referring to the attempt to put the Topeka State go- ‘MEMUKRS OF THR COUNCTI. i sie ag girl and passed ber down stairs, and then went around | predicate the supposition. It Is tape the soldiers may have honorable members, my friend Hiram B. Standiford, of H unr es Uite leas be acre t tae ie c 1—Nicholas Ammerman. i—Richard Rogers. and passed to the wing ou the Navy street side; there | been sent on board from a pear port to the westward Assembly of the Territory sas. Mr. Ren Te | wy caer tiie the Vian of th Teenema ede, Rad thane Too ‘a Dtstrict—J. W. Ca 3 us Maples. 9—William H. Kennedy, entrance; I then found a jam on the stairway and ‘opened | ghip Isabel, as asserted, the matter bas been very pru- @ member of the late extra session and also of the present Preis of naieine ontadvan Oolat & The |. Cen Dael SW: Our. 4—Wihett Balden, 0—Abraham Ammerman. | window and astisted in passing the boys out of the win- | Gently managed: and certainly for the initiation ot S| braced the doctrines and practices of the Jeffersonian de. | Principle of making Congress admit us under the Topeka | “ Myth District—A. J. Patrick. ‘Wm. M. Harrie, sworn—Am a member of the Board of | {otoor npen ta tet the erica nat ae Auéles there ay |e oes a eee Sizth District—1.. Allen, C. W. Babeock and F 8. Nash. | gducation and Chairman of the Building Committee; have Seventh, Bighth and Ninth Districts—C. K. Holtiday and | heen nine years in the Board. The building was erectod mocracy, in the taith of which he lived, acted and died. | Constitution. If Congress admits us under the Lecompton He was called into public life at an early age, haviug | constitution, then is the time for revolution; and when- served in several minor offices in his native State. Here | ever that tune comes revolution is the only means for us moved to the State of Missouri in the year 1846 and get- | to obtain our rights. Then we will bave the Topeka or fied in Cass county, where his courtesy, frankness and | the pecs 's constitution and a Legislature called together Beble bearing won him the admiration, esteem and confi- | bY pene 's Governor. @ence of his friends. In 1860 he was elected to the office Hands, of Doniphan county, offered a: resolution ef Sheriff of Cass county. At the expiration of his term of | that the Territorial Legislature should engage in making service, in 1852, he was re-elected without opposition, In | laws at once, and at the eame time rey 1 conflicting 1854 be was elected a member of the House of Represen. a until the whole existing code should be abol- issouri Legislature, and served in that | ished. Doay with jor to himeolfand credit to his constituency. Mr. Exziorr offered a substitute and resolution that the hh spring of 1855 he removed to this Territory, and | State and Territorial Legislature should enact laws for ‘was elected a member of the Topeka Legislature. Onac- | the election of members to a new Constitutional Convea- fear boing xpressed as to danger in the building: found |" “An otlicer of w French vessel of war in our port told 3 E one of the boys lying suffocated in the third room, boy’s | me afew days since that it was perfectly understood on eae tates. Sidnningca (awcengets) in the fall of 1863, and oocupied on the Ist of September, | department, on the Navy street side; his name was Week: | bard ‘his chin that spon way abou. pein te won This House copsiets of thirteen members. There is | 2%043 the school building, as such, was considered most | gt the time i saw him, the smoke was #0 dense that had | with Mecico, The only war, for the present, at any rate, one vacancy, owing to the death of Mr. Standiford Scenny cmmmrnsnd, Sen meat of anne ware Spee; ‘al times; be looked as if he had had a | will be helping Santa Anna into the bosom of ‘the Mexican The crimes incident to older settlements are beginning | CBC, Malm, entrance for visiters: oa the vain ms ec. th: T paased bimwout of the window and told the men | Church, and indirectly to ait bim until be bas obtained ; ° to take bim to the dector’s. eating place for the sole cf bis foot, herkpebene will ET pe cecellel pore cord street and ope on Navy street; the floors were divided | Thomas Pettit—Live corner of Concord street and Hud- | ““xugere are more dull, und the market inactive. Difficulties ba existed between the deceased and the ac- re erp De ot der Rabe ntl pd fon avenue; was present at the fire; wentig at the first | Our health is good, although we have a few lingering ° ; exuarce from Hudson avenue on Concord street; saw | cases of aiteaseamong the shipping in port.” Yeosn ull ing peares' enue, and the ‘tairs, and otbers coming down upon them; discovered no. embalmed to be sent bo house except one, and it was then when he is said to have | 4) towards the park; the accident red at the | C™re . y » | mains are embalmed to be sent home. been poisoned. The circumstantial evidences are strong | tnq'uf the bulding towards Nassar street, the stairways | HOKE aE that tine; assisted in getting them out of the | "Business not active in any branch of trade. to etreat sey . - e ywd; whch the passage was cleared started up stairs; T Freights in a little better request, but no improvement fount cf that instrument not receiving the approbation of | tion, and that the Legislature elected under that new con- | against the accused, but there is no direct evidence a8 | wore guarded by walls instead of balustrades. thé stairs ys Ata on < x request, Pt Ooogreas, he refused to take his seat in that body. In Oc- | stitution should be the legal successor of both the exist- | yet. The pody of deceased is to be exhumed and ex- | Seenpred tbe whole of the space, leaving no well hole; | °t, 00 the first tight, and went in the hallway aboot } in rates. os aie Ta tober, 1857, he was again elected by the people of | ing Legislatures, having been equally begot by them. | amined by physicians, who will be called upon to bear | they were the largest and widest stairs in any public leame back; 1 then went down stairs and up to the Navy AVANA, Jan. 15, 1858, Franklin, Anderson, Lykins and Linn counties to | After ig peng bad levreg \ short speech in favor of his | an important part in the case. school in the city; the plans of the buinding were mado | street vide entrance, and got up to the first platform ‘on | Opening of the New Mercantile Exchange Building—Gen. the present Council, and served with us at Ie- | motion, he was succeeded by Mr. Leggett, who offered | ‘The last that was heard of John Calhoun was that he by Mesers. King & Kellum; the furnaces were on the | the staire, and raw a pile of children about eight fect | Concha on the Financial Crisis—A Currency Pamphlet compton during the late extra session. After the | he following preambje and resolutions :- close of that session he was suddenly seized with an TOPEKA KESOLUTH ‘ attack of pneumonia, which terminated his usetul lifeon } Whereas, the Legislature under the people’s constitu- Baturday evening, Jan. 3, 1808, Mr. Standiford was an | tion are now in session in the town of Lawrence; and ardent and zealous advecate of the doctrine of popular | whereas, the Territorial Legislature has failed to do what sovereignty. Jn the States he was a democrat. Ever | Was the people’s wish they should do when elected—re- since b's residence in Kansas he bas been an urdeot free | sign and transfer their power to the State govergment; ‘State man, opposed to ultraiem and fanaticiem, and an | and whereas, a large number of menjclaiminog leadership advocate of reason and truth. in the free State party seem to have forsaken and to use Resolutions expressing sympathy with the family of the | their influence against suid government; therefore, deceased in their bereavement, and resolving that mem- Resolved, 1. That we recommend the Territorial Legis- was at Weston, Mo., making a speech to Missouriena, ad- Tiers ground floor; the hot air flues came up in the partitions | Jhon’ 't nas the Mr, Wolost abow ; yy eae “a Vising them to let Kansas alone hereafter. Iam inform- | (utside of the projections to the folding doors; samuel | bleh Song to eg rg tov Wolcott above | Circulaled—Measures for Financial Relicf—Catehing @ £0,dy.s gentleman of the pro-siavery party that Mr. Cal- | sale built the tin work; he was required to bave the | he then handed them over the baluster, I tried. to oxtrl Glimpse of Santa Anna—A Slaver Seized—Robbery of bent pavers pod ciirhaganerthy federal capital, Sich croamg | Wood work lined with | tin and perfectly protected | cato the boys from the pile, but could not wntil aaeistance | Gamblers by Highwaymen. weull tend hi be Territory; tor the feel. | absinet tire; the wood was lined with tin wherever it came | came; it took about twenty minutes to get this crowd of | On the 10th inst. I proceeded to the Plaza de Sam Fran- fin rome parla of Hine co trots SEAR Mor ‘Caihory | iB.contact with the hot Mr pipes; last your it was found | children out; thove that died, have died {rom being crush- {pg in momo parts of it is so strong exainet Mr. Calboun | that the old furnaces were giving out, and the Board di- | 64: did not go up stairs to see if the children were all out, | ©i8¢0, to be present at the opening of the new Exchange. Scat edema anere would place his life in mos im- } rected that the place should be re-painted: Isent for Mr. | hui went home to vee my own children; the door on the | The Captain General was there. I found the Artillery The good city of Leavenworth is in the habit of hearing | Mahan and directed him ko cut out the wood surround. | Navy street side was open; all the doors opened out- | Band, in gala dros, stationed in the court yard. The ti , GN ‘th frequently that the Missourians are coming over to wipe | (REINO Tkinters and Bt i tad ‘ain tatpettece, | Marly. entry and stairs were foarpeted fund the balusters hung Ders of | waneil should wear crape on their left arm for | lature to adjourn without date, 2. Thatthe Territorial Legis- | her out,’ whereupon her warrior sons rush forth into the 7 The in vestigation was then adjourned till to-morrow sai cg mer then read; aiter@hict 0. E. Lesnard, | lature, in their action compelling this rccommendation,bave | etreets, marshal thelr bande, parade throug all the re. passe rptongeerl ot mp rege gn pet | raatatey) st two. with drapery, all being of quiet colors and quite un-Spaniah Faq., delivered a eulogy upon the deceased member. | acted contrary to the well known wishes of the people and | gions of the city—to the advantage of shoemakers only— | \n the furnaces and warranted them to give in the coldest Necereaieraeere renner in appearance. In the grand saloon I found some two or The bouncil then adoptod the resolutionsand aljourned. | | their pledges, and we deer them unworthy of confldence | then return to peaceful quarters. The good city has very | weather 10 deg. fabrenhell; he was not to get bie. pay Police InteMigence. three hundred of the chief Spanish merchants and their THE TOPRKA STATE LAGISLATURR. ae eS ee eee oe ue ae recently had such “‘a speil.”” until March next, The stairways are four feot six | SnooriNG Arrnay—Two Mey Wovxnrn—At an carly | omployés seated. His Excellency, the Captain-Genoral, brancl islature were in session on | ap peop! ; — ; al p : Po nary ea ths ws tes iva before the Territorial | who now try to weaken the people's and strengthen the LATEST NEWS FROM KANSAS, posse yo a ae the ret gins ron pdtv hour yesterday morning, e hooting aflray occurred at the | wearing ascarlet uniform and the ribbon of bia Marquisate, Legislature met, for so many of the members of the former | Territorial government, have departed rom the principles | GRRAT EXCITEMENT—THE TOPEKA STATE GOVERN: | scholars to the upper story; the children of the grammar | **!00nof Henry Harmann, No. 487 Fighth avenue, in which | was sented at a table covered with crimson velvet, whilat body latier that there is no quorum in the | of the free party. Sete Whe too taller arein sesaion. The iaemabere who Mr. Leaaer went on to speak upon the first resolution; ‘Delong to both organizations regard the former asthe most | before he got to the second, he was interrupted by Topeka important, at least at the present time, consequently when | Governor Robinson, so the last two were not read. 1 sits the Topeka State Logislature finds the'r “occupation Onartes Ropinsew Eag.—I do not know who are meant gone.” This condition of affairs stings to the quick the | there by the leaders, but certainly there is a fling at some tatives of the State of Kensas who are | one, Fefore that resolution passes | should like to know MENT TO BE PUT INTO IMMEDIATE OPERATION. department were all dismissed by the Concord street side, | two men, vamed Frederick BeSker and G sorge Lattermore, ee him Lape dey ~~ — ao length psoas and the accident oveyrred by the larger boys of the pri- | were severely though not dangerousiy wounded. It ap jor Majesty, — Government Lawnancs, K. T., Jan. 12, 1858. | Try departmant erdwding upon the susaller boys in ihe | feura from ths voters ot ane "Acting Thspector of the | Tead the decree authorizing tho establishing of the Bolas Great excitement prevails in Lawrence this morning. | came department; I am of opinion that the registers ‘wentieth precinct tbat about one o'clock A. M. Becker | 8&4 the rules framed for its government, after which, General Lane arrived from Leavenworb yesterday magn- | should not tbe shut when the fire was too reat; that the | and Lattermore endeavored to gain admission tothe saloon Stuaserded seerenae Leathe pdm! Bcmngy at rg ‘ : windows should be opened instead; the registers being | jn question by knocking and violently kicking the door. ing. He found an express here from Marcus J. Parrott, b othe ‘and this |. tues Le, pow Bhs chy train. outthe benelits likely to accrue to tbe ‘also the representatives of the ‘Territory of | What menare there ~ i. w Lave the free thate-representative sent to Washington, whieh | Caised fire; if they were shut, it was not a prudent | now to let the fellows in. When, however. their loud | ™« this island by the establishment of immediately their arrival here, they un | Dames F: in the tion. Thor of the | informed him that Congress would admit Kansas into the | act on the part of those closing them: the principal of the ipockiog lhsemina Sevedtanas be.) tepared the deer, that institution. Commenting upon the immense 4 ern i itoria! 1. Jature so as to | State of Kansas went on to explain that he was con- ior esa Saar have ware ineeasantly to | sidered by [some men as one of the leaders of the row the legal representative authority of the Ter- | free State party, a'so to define his position, which defini ritory, whichwas, like them, elected by the free State | tion, if it meant anything, ment™this—that ne was in favor party, and to estAdlish an illdgal power conflicting with, | of having the Topeka State government put in force now, ‘and ig,rebellion against, the federal government. In this | but pot unless the whole party was in favor of that project efortthey have been ably secondea by the residents of | and would rally to its support. He cousidered, however, this place, In their session during the day nothing of im- | that the Territorial Legislature, by repealing all law Union under the Lecompton constitution. Mr. Parrott ha: | school bad the entire charge of clearing the rooms and | aud withadouble barreled gun in his hand pursued Bec resources of Cuba, his Excellency congratulated tho making the fire; the new furnaces worked the best in | and L more into the street. Here the gun was dis. | Merchants upon the courage they had exhibited during always heretofore believed and represented that the Le | comparison to the old furnaces; last Thursday the princi. | chasged twice with pretty tolerable effect. Thirty grains | the recent financial crisis, and the facility with which the compten constitution would never pass Congress, but now | pal stated that there were two rooms which were not suf- | of shot were lodged in the back of Lattermore, while just | “ifficulties were overcome. Would that we were ail of us, he he that he di ot | ciently heated, the others were comfortably heated, or | fit of that number were embedded in the head and seck | "4 bis Excellency, t# conelusion, im the same pros- e saye he has no hope it will pot pase; joes not ‘th J atiode teas Nenshan’ Seah ‘ oh bili | W&Fmed; 1 am of the opinion that if all the doors had | of Becker. The noise of the firing attracted the attention | Perous position we were in the month of July last. ve that Douglas’ Enabling act, or any other such Bill | been kept cloned none would have been burt, as itiemade | of policeman Dean, who, upon arriving at the scene « ‘Then rising trom hie chair, accompanied by the Austrian, can be parsed. Under these circumstances be advises | evident by the tact that all the girls got out unburt, but | difficulty, had the wounded men conveyed to the stati Prossian, Sardinian and Dutch Consuls, also by the Chiet portance transpired, but in the evening they held a previously enacted and framing good and wholesome | ine free state party here to put the Topeka State govern- | the boys not being under su jection, broke beyond | jr. Kierstead, one of the police surgeons, was called in to | JUCKe of the Tribunal of Commerce, he visited the vari * eaveus, Ques ln thelr stead. would give aatinfaction Wo nivetoen | ment into immediate force, to organize their forces, and | coptrol and thus were injured; Ihave dismissed the school | attend to the 'wanta of the Injured, while n posse of po, | OS POrUODS of the building. fm which they vented their indignant patriotism in no | twentieths of the people of the Territory. Upon some | prepare for the worst in three minutes; the number in thie school was | licemen were dispatched to Harmank’s saloon for the pur Never have | seen his Excellency appear to so great ad- very measured language. rabid remarks being made against the President of the ¢ free State party have been rather confident recent. | about 800; the primary class of boys number about two | pose of taking him into cumesy. When the officers ar. | Vantage. As bis Excellency went down the stairs he was he " W. Deitzler, Eaq., was in the chair. A small number | United States, in regard to his doing this and that with the we members of the Territorial Legislature were pre- | army. Mr. Robinson expressed himseif as follows :—The gent. The resolution which was being discussed when Premdens, < we v nied Staiee Lt cI rank a child, hen caucus irned ». it fol act without law. esi ‘ni 8 ee CERES wes Cg Ee eS a | oa is mane ee heaven with anybody except he Resot Tere itor cislatore re: | does it in accordance with law. I would like to see the all Seb cr peomuice Sore Over tareteioe pest by | President of the Uni'ed States ‘try to Interfere with the Territorial Legislature, saving vested rights, and then people be Kanene te viclation ieee ELA Fecom e Topeka constitu- r. ALLEN said there was such a thi *, om poten gga et eS r and that the President had instructed acting Governor SPRECH OF J, M. WALDEN RECOMMENDING THE IMotEDIATE PoT- | Gen. Denver that if there was an attempt to put the To TING IN FORCE OF THR TOPEKA STATE GOVERNMENT. peka State government in force to use the whole United After the reading of the above resolution J. M. Waroey, | States army sgajnst them, member from Johnson county, arose and spoke as Several other persons spoke during the evening. The follows —I am in favor of the ution. I think it is a | C&neus Was composed chiefly of Topeka legislators and men Plain proposition. It may cover some abstruw points | of Lawrence, so they bad power tocarry things pretty much ‘which I am not able to comprehend, but I do think itcom. | a8 they liked inside, but at 114g P. M. they adjourned sine prehends some things that the whole people comprehend die without any reeolve, without a single resolution hav- and have desired for the t few months. I should be | img been put to vote during the two sessions. This is a vory glad if the Territorial Legislature and State Legisla- | pretty good indication that the representatives of the tare, both convened in this place, could determine upon | State Kansas will shortly return to legislate for their some mode of procedure that would be satisfuctory to | honorable household constituencies. However, the spirit ‘oth and enable to go before their constituents and |.existing among them is such that were it not for satiefy them. I dif’ not suppose that when | started for | the expenses consequent upon their stopping here, Lecompton there would be what there now appears to be, | they would remain and legislate ; providing always ly that they would obtain an enabling act,sothe revuision | hundred; the primary class of girls were about the same | rived at the place, they found the assailant coolly reload. | £reeted with loud and long centinued cheers, and a small, of feeling upon learning the substance of this letter was | number; Mrs. Voorhies was the principal in the primary | ing his fowling piece abd making all due preparations for | ¢auly printed pamphlet was distributed by a servant en- most violent. The poor Topeka Legislature got together | department assisted by eight young ladies; the visiters’ | arecond assault upon his castle. He offered no resist. | titled the Causes and Remedy for the Present Financial in the evening, in an unfinished church; they | entrance at the corner of Concord and Navy streets bas | ance to the policemen, but quietly proceeded with thom | Position of Affairs, supposed to be from the pen of a did not call the roll, for there was pro. ‘ways some six feet wide; this was to guard against | to the station house, where he was locked up for the re wealthy and prominent merchant here. bably no quorum; but they passed resolutions | accidents,as in case arush was made from both ends of | inainder of night. Yesterday morning the prisoner It attributes the cause of our present financial depres- in favor of putting the Topeka State government intyim- | the building the rush could be accommodated; a heater | was broughPbefore Justice Kelly, at the Jefferson Market | 100 to the issue of guaranteed post notes by the Spanish mediate operation, determined to go right on and jeg@iate | was in the centre of the wing on Concord street, another | Police Court, where he was held to await the result of an | B&B, which only prolonged the pressure, without dimin- for the Statejof Kansas, seut resolutiongto the Territorial | was: near the centre on Navy street and the other was in | exumination. A similar difficulty occurred at Harmann’s | ihing it. Infact, it takes the same view of these post Legislature, inviting then#to resign, resSive the Territory |*the fuel room in the corner apartment; the flaes from | saloon on the 3d of July last. On that occasion he offered | NOte iBeues that was given by the Henarp op the first pro- into a State, and transfer all their Power to said (Topeka) | thesqyheaters passed through the partitions except in the | a stout resistance to the police, when he fell to the | Poeal of the measure. The writer further consilers that State government. A request was also senvthat the Ter. | roonf,where the fire occurred, and in that room the flue | floor, pretending to be shot dead. The police picked | "ese notes have not supplied @ circulating medium, in ritorial Legislature should return them an immediate | came’ up through the floor and was guarded by soap: | him up carefully, supposing bim to be defunct, | VieW of the fact that, hearing ten per cont interest, they answer, stone, and conveyed him'to the station house on a siretcher’ | Were at once absorbed by capitalists as a safe invertment Gen, Laye delivered a revolutionory speech. He Gamaliel King sworo—Am an architect and planned | There be was examined by a physician, who declared | '? time of universal doubt, The remedy proposed is to thought the time had come for action, The grea’ majority | the building’ in question; have heard the testimony of | tha could find no wound upon ike person of Harmann, | Tedvee the rate of interest on these bonds to five per cent, of the people had orgunized and established®the Topeka | Mr Harrix in regard to the arrangement of the tlues | and gave it as bis opinion that the latter was “playing | 8° 4# todrive them into general circulation, aad thus constitutional State government—that government ought | and corroborate his statement; personally superintended | poseum.’’ At this jancture the supposed viet opened | Create & guaranteed paper currency. now to be put into immediate operation; there should be | the patting in the hot airtpipes into the bulding; Mr. Saie | hie cyen and lauybed heartily at the crodulity of the po. | _ The currency question is one of great public interest bero no longer delay. The Topeka Legislature represents the | was requested to make everything secure in every re; | licemen. He was afraid he would have been clubbed by | justnow. Silver is becoming very scarce,the larze quan- whole people, and should enact laws for the whole | spect; so far ag I know, all that was necessary to be done | the ‘stare’ and feigned death for the purpose of escaping | Wty of American dimes and balf dimes that lately formed people. The Territorial Legislature ht to give | was cope: thefe might have been a breach of the contract | punishment at the bands af his captors almost our eotire silver circulation having disappeared way tor them; but whether or no, the State Legislature | and | not have known |; should not think it wae probable: AN Autecap Fvornve rao Justice —Samuel P. Buck. | Part of it bas no doubt been absorbed by the country, and should move on as the independent authority of the State, | the wood work was about i “ : * : partof it sent back to the United States, in order to savo The free State men should be organized, armed and equip- | near ax I could judge; ju bee, an alleged fugitive from Elmira, Chemung county, N. | the present high premium of exchange on remittances. Scollision between the State Legislature and Territorial | that they could get @ quorum. If they thought | ped as militia, ready to defend their rights registers wergall closed , » Y., was taken into custody yesterday by policeman Edsall | American coin pow bears a premium of from 256 to 4 per Legislature—for this talk among the members of these | the counties that elected them would pay them the three | one and every one Who should assailthem. Leavenworth | the melting tin would run down on the wood, and thus set | af the Deputy Superintendent's office aul couveyed back | Cent in our market, and jt is not improbable that necessity Legislatures amounts to this—from the fact that [un- | or four hundred dollars it would cost them here, they | City had organized an armed force of from six to seven | fire to it; from my persopal experience and knowledge of > . hence he .. “ ged | Will force as to admit it in our circulation, nowwithatand) to the place from whence he canv ye ae . the opposition of the rn ronment oe merchant of Elmira, by means of false pretences, and On the 10th instant the new Spanish screw schooner of- then fled to this c ity with the proceeds. war M. Isabel Francisco arrived in this harbor from a iain sie tapes ciihaheas Saka eine cruise, bringing with her a slaver bark she had met with, 7 fe: sreacy deg ing MAN, | derelict, somewhere I believe between Mariel and Bahia was admitted to the New York Hospital on Tuesday night, | Honda, not having any papers and only a Sardinian flag on suffering from the effects of a severe wound in the§ neck, | board She is called the Heveranza, and is believed to received at the bands of some unknown rowdies. Tao ee a ph ta bam oven a | outum ae — ‘On the 12th instant a dtewton of the Spanish fleet left , > men, hie barbor on a cruise Spanieh Admiral, I bear stabbed him in the neck with & dirk knifé. Tho cries of | (hm Paro Jue wiah the remainder of the Beceiee the injured man attracted the attention of policeman Fer rome 0 il “"" * ¢ - ris, of the First precinct, who hastened to the spot, but ee er er ee eee before be came up the rowdies had made good their Uniess my eyes and memory greatly deceive me ercape. Subsequently s man, giving his name as William | nave geen Senta Adu within a few days past, walking “ Nolati) was arrested ou suspicion of being implicated in | 9 parce ‘Jewus del Mente—the garden of the house in the affair. The prisoner was brought belare Justice Com | «hich, atany rate, bis wife reskles. Some few years ago, I nolly, at the Lower Police Court, and committed for | ia to see him frequently mm another part of the world, examination and I do not believe either my eyes or memory have so Comrtaint Diawiesrp.—The complaint against Smith | much decetved me as to cause me Ww miswke another Wilcox, for attempting to pase a false token, was dismissed | person for his Highness. fenterday by Justice Brennan, and the accused was Last Monday, 11th inst., two gamblers, proceed ng from bly discharged from custody Alquizar to San Antonio (both «mall towns within seven or fight Jeagnes of this city), to establich a monte bank, and having a guard of three Salve Guardias and two . countrymen, with long swords with them, were met and A Crimp Berxeo 10 Death.—Coroner Connery held an | attacked by & gang of eighteen highwaymen, arined with inquest yesterday, at No. 480 Madison street, upon the | blanderburser, and who caged the gamblers of about body of a child three years old, named Anna Welsh, who | 'Wélve thousand dollars in money and valuables, rings, it was well understood what was to | would probably remain now; then we would have Kansas Sens. oT ought the principal thing that shou legislated for ae a State, and Kansas legislated for as a done, and what was intended to be done and w' by the people of Kansas to be done, was, ph should be so changed that it would be impossible that this resolution should be carried out by | State of Kansas and representatives of the de facto Terri the two Legislatures, that the Territorial Legiviature should | tory of Kansas. ‘wipe out every vestige of that code that has = od | Judge Campbell has been released, after being held upon ue, and that they should then give way for a Legixia- | here a week a prisoner, as he considers in violation of tare that represents the people of Kansas. Tthoughtthe | law. The sffidavit against him etates that illegal and of ag cloarly understood that this should be | fraudulent votes were cast at Oxford ; and that if ‘course of procedure here unless circumstances | Judge Campbell signed the returns from Oxford, should arise which would make it impossible. I do not | Johnson county, he was guilty of a crime, &c. Know what peculiar ideas may be apprehended and com. | Now the Judge declares that he never signed prehended by this change from a Territorial to a State Le. | the Oxford returns. No one says he did. The re, by persons who have read more law books than | affidavit says if he did—there is not a particle of evi Fibave: butt think the people 80 understood it. Theques | dence against him, and still he was detained here a week tion now is, has there been a sufficient change in cireum- | @prisoner. On Saturday, the 9th, he applied to Justice stances to justify a complete and radical change in the | Miller for atrial. Mr. Miller said there was no evidence y to be adopted? What are the facts? Is there any- | against him, and discharged him. Judge Campbell was Sing in the circumstances which surround us that would | arrested merely to enable the free State party to get a prevent us from carrying out the cherished desires of the | plea or excuse for issuing writs agaiust, and obtaining the je of Kansas? Is there anything that can make it im. | arrest of, Calhoun, but the trick did not work possible for the xpirit of this resolution to be car ‘The returns of the election on the 4th come in slow; Fied out? 1 think not. The first house of the Ter. | nothing certain is kuown in regard to the general result. Fitorial Logisiatare has resolved to repeal that | Both parties claim to bave elected their State officers. The code which disgraces our statute book. Now, if they | free State party think that notwithstanding the frauds, have done this, is there anything that should prevent us | they have elocted twenty four out of the forty-four repre- from carrying out the whole of this resolution? I think | sentatives, and eleven out of the nineteen senators. got. | think thove who oppose my views are mistaken. | COMMITTEES OF THE TERRITORIAL LEGISLATURE. hundred men; he had never seen men better armed or | the work, 1. am satisfied that the work was done in the better men than they were. Lawrence and all tbe other | best and most proper manner towns in the Territory should do the same. Leavenworth Mr. Harrie recalied—About a week since the principal would, if necessary, send out a body of 1,200 men. #tated to me that the «moke became «0 hot in one of the It had been believed bere for several days past that the | rooms on the Navy street side, that he was fearful that it free Sta’e party bad carried the election for State officers, | was so hot as to set fire to the. wood work; on examina under the Lesompton constitution, on the 4th inst.; but | tion it was found that no wood work was there, and no Lane said the pro slavery party bad carried it by 2,000 | thing but a stone wall; it was found that the cause of the majority. This statement greatiy increased the feeling | pipe getting hot wae on account of the damper being and excitement which already pervaded the minds of the | closed; Mr. Mahan came over and examined the flue care people at Lawrence. Parroct wrote that, if the lee teen fully, apd pronounced that to be the cause. ton constitution did pars Congress, he would immediately Jave Fanner, assistant teacher in Public School No. 14— start to the Territory to aid bie party here. Was in the schoo! house, but not in the room when the If Kansas is admitted into the Union under the Lecomp- | fire broke out; had been on the ground floor and was on ton constitution, and the free State party did notcarry the | the stairway leading to the principal room, as I was go State election on the 4th, then the ‘troubles in Kansas” | ing up the stairway «aw the principal, Miss Voorhies, at will resolve themselves into the “war in Kansas,’’ for | the head of the stairway, first floor above the play ground; notwithstanding the majority of the free State | she was teiling some scholars to down the stairs; the party went into the State election under the Lecompton | fire had then been discovered; could not say what she constitution, which morally binds them to abide by that | said; directly after the scholars came rushing down: they constitution, the feeling existing in that party isso intense, | were passing down the main staircase at the corner, hear fo permeating, eo controlling and abiding, and so in- | po directions given to close the doors of the class rooms veterately bostile to that constitution that they will fight | the crowd and accident occurred on Navy street, at the rather than submit to it. If such an overwhelming federal | boy's entrance; the principal part of the girls passed out force should be Lg ng ‘Against them that they cannot in | at Concord street side; don’t think any of the girls went open warfare resist the new authority, they will kill and | down the Navy street ide; I was on the first landing of slay their opponents wherever they can, and however they | the first stairway; there was no jam where! was. | as can, It is dangerous to bave men who are intensely ex- | sisted them in going down and prevented the rush from cited so calmly resolved as these are. Many of them | being woo great, when they were a’) out I went up and from personal injury are ready to do anything, however | caw that no children were in the grammar department obtained $456 worth of goods from Mr Coroners’ Inquests. Hscems to me that if the Territorial Legislature would The standing cocnmittees of the Territorial Legislature | desperate, Many of them will not reason upon the sub- | | am one of the teachers, in the principal's department, in by her clothes cate! &e., they wore. The Salve Guardias, not having made ont these laws, and adjourn in favor of the State Le. | which were appointed to day are as follows — ject; they merely point to the past and cry “revenge.” | the grammar school; when I got up on the ‘first floor ihe | [ras barbed to death by her clothes, wren euire during | any’ resistance, are believed to have been in league with gislqure, there could arise in consequence thereof | STANDING COMMITTERY OF THE HOUSE OF RRPREENTATIVER. Indeed, if the Territory was admitted as aSiate under any | smoke had filled the room next the principal’s room; the occurred. The deceased was in company with a y ap | the robbers. would LL! trouble upon tc. The only Committee om Elections—Mossre. Speer, Jameson, Bas- | constitution, there aré marked men in the pro slavery | smoke was pot dense enough to su! DOr Was | wister, who narrowly esc from being burned ‘oe aenn to be Ce ied is a conflict of authority or re- | sett, Mitchell and Jenkine Lens Who must die if they remain im the Territory. The | there much beat thatI perceived; Mise Rutherford first | Verdict, © Accidental « ” ; Additional Items from Utah. . Well, the Territorial government can so prepare Committee on Militia—Messrs, Owens, Appleman, Hat- | pubjie may never know how they die or on what account, | saw the fire; when! got up on to the (irst floor, 1 could ; From the St. Louis blican, Jan. 14.) Fatat Accinayt is Morr Strert.—Coroner Gamble waa Col. Johneton took command of the army on the notified to hold an inquest at the New York Hospital upon | November, a day or two after which Sibley tents the body of @ machiniet named Stephen B. Young, who See pie cual te beep ware, Ge see, wi & a ut they must die if means can be added to will and re- | not see whether all the folding doors were closed or not solve. Political parties here cannot be judged of by po- | from my position I could not see, as I stood on the first litical parties elsewhere, Jarding: when | went op afterwards part of the doors wrayrthat there wal be no conflict—it can so re | terscheidt, Hanpa and Barry. way thatthere be no rebellion. 1 cau find no ob Ways and Means—Messrs. Barber, Stratton, Lockhart, to th course, but strong reasons in favor of it. | Cooper and Elliott. Ks a PARTMENT, ETC., RTC. The Metropolitan Police Commissioners have awarded the contract for building the boats for the use of the river all do deference to the Territorial Logisiature, t) hb " ¢—Mosere. Raasett, Seymour, De- were open; did not go towards the Navy street entrance | was killed while engaged at work upon Singer & Co. shew Seer hand ‘mate ‘Legiolatare Sete, ‘ba toe foveal teR Sie Prentieg Movers Seymour, Speer, Pennock Metropolitan Police Matters. = he pe the school snd Tem | pullding in Mott, near Spring street. The deceased, it ap- | beicw sero” Om the atiy Gol, Jonaston muted. for talk Legislature there are nineteen counties which are entirely | Danford and stewart. 4 : ; * | AWARD OF CONTRACT FOR BUILDING THR RIVER he room came down by the Concord atrect entrance ai | feared, wae engaged Ip raising @ heavy iron post, whea | Fare cy, the train stretching out fiftesa miles On the & nearly disfranchised. In the State Legislature, there is | Apportionment—Meaara. Danford, Graham, Bassett, Ap- | TOLICR BOATS THE POLICE HRALTH AND INSIB- th Seunonn of peariy teerty 1006 ond tgeag bin heseete | 22 three hundred head of cattle were run off by the Mor- county but what is represented; therefore, if the | pleman and Jenkins. orp ENTS e ‘4 mona, also took a number of mules wo Bante Legislature that he dled seon afterwards. | Deceased resided at No. 00 | Povernment. The death of between two and Unres ‘Biate goes on and makes laws, they will be Corporations and Banking—Mesars. Mitchell, McClure, Sqanabie and just—they will be made by the vore of the | Seymour, Barty and Seer. ; entire people, and not by a portion of the people. Now, Judiviary—| ra Moore, Curtis, Barry, Mitchell and if Third avenue, An inquest will be held upon the body to. | Kovernment. | The majority of the horece, day. ments slow, and it was not until the 17th thats Foun Drowxen.—Coroner Gamble held an inquest yea- thirty miles was made, Salt ie short, and i Mf we adhere to the principles we have been DA. battling for this many years—for the by = nee. Kellor, Zinn, Shannon, Wheeler and | police to Mr. J. B. Webb, at a cost of $100 for each boat. terday at pier 6, East river, upon the body of a drowned | wanting, wane Ne ets Se FE the le to be fepresented—it is necessary ' ward There was ene bid at $110, two at $105, two at $100, one man. Deceased was al 5 be hte + nlpsnediny ‘whale people to make ws orto be represented in making | Rducaiion=Messra, MoClure, Speer, Hanna, Delong | 2r'sho tent one Cigna, siagh Wout £108; two at #100, one In beight, with dark halt and, Wiavere othe wot nctee | cl tegetables were brovght into camp, aad turned over to them, it makes no difference to me by whom Iam die | and Moore. the award is manifested by the unsuccessful bi tders, but month or i be | of his face. Deceased was dressed in the garb of a la- | ‘Be hospital department. franchised. 1 hold that the le who are diefranchised Vice and Jmmorality—Messrs. Zinn, Pennock, Morrill, | the Commissioners say that they bave awarde! the con- | sald he thought there was danger of the building taking | borer. On bis left arm, printed in India ink, wae a black On the 19th November Col, Cooke caught ap with the ‘Will be no more morally bound by the laws of this Legis. | Adkins and Stewart. tract to the person whom they believe will execute the | fire; he alluded tothe great heat from the pipes; don’t | «mith, anvil, and a sled ener " main army, with #ix companies of the 2d dragoons. He had Jature than by the other Territorial Legislature. Then. Avcounte—-Messrs, Elliott, Reynard, Orr, Brock and Co- | contract in the most satisfactory manner. remember that he specified any particular piace, but | «J. 1, H., born 1805.” Verdict, « lost nearly all bis horses, and those that were left him were @ince one of those Lngisiatures represents only a portion of | lumbia. The clerical department of the Commission is now in | epoke of it in a general manner. Scrven Daw Ww. 4 unfit for service. Gov. Cumming and his wife came up Sree and the other represents the whole people, Counties and County Lincs—Mossrs. Stratton, Cooper, | admirable working order, under the of | Mr. Harris, resumed—The heaters§ pass through the TH ty WASHINGTON MARkeT.—An inquest was | with him, as did also the mail. . C. had her foot frozen. Hd make the lawst-through which of ae | Se ea Eats. pee ae the gentiemanly ctef clerk, Mr. Geo. Wtmbree There | woodwork wilh double in at the side and around them. | sleo beld by Coroner Gamble upon the boty of Benjamin | while crossing the mouataing, end still suffers 4 can you secure to the people ond leeers. Jameson, Keller, , Owens | are now open at hie office, for public inspection, a com Mr. King, recalled—Was requested to take especial care | Jasacks, a butcher, doi iness. le q h the State or through the Territorial’ If the State | and Morrill. Pitot ‘book, wherein may be entered complaints for | in puiting 1a tbe pipes, ana be carefal in rogurd. to who died suddenly, of diease of the Near aig aiarket> | ic also well and hearty.” There are three other ladies in oes on to make laws, the whole Territory will Internal Improvements—Mesars. Wheeler, Miller, Morrill, the violation of every city ordinance; a book for | tinning; in consequence of this there was extra expense g. Deceased resided at No. 157 Weet | CAmP, being Mrs. Colonel Canby, Mrs. Tyler and Mr. be morally by them, becatise the whole Torritory is | Columbia and Appleman, the entry of complaints against, pillosmen, with | putting m the Un; the tin was nailed close to the wood street, he teaves a wife and family. He | "urns. They are all as “ . What then is there to represent it? Nothing, ture ana Megara Messrs. De-Long, Hanna, the dispoeition which is of them; @ book a ann eae. Yoars of age, and was A native of Dutchess county, | “O¥ in the world. In the ime marked out last | Jenkins, Pennock and b ‘ for the record of all meritorious actions of officers ; oa 190 Concord ror. _ Colone! Cooke Jeft the main body on the 26th for Henry's fall People of Kansas will have a code of laws Public Institutiont—Meesrs. Cooper, Shannon, Colum- | a book for the record of general and special orders, and a house; assisted in the escape Of | naowsen York for ing for his horses. ( Marcy left on made by 0 Legislature which ro} ts the whole bia, Zinn and Orr. record of all the special policemen appointed by the | the children; entered in the primary entrance on Concord ‘Winte IxtoxicaTen.—Infor mation was receiv. | the Z7in of November to procure salt, mules and ‘Vour—Where shall | find it upon that the Bille—Mosers. Lockhart, Hatterechoidt, Ben- | Heard. There is also a robbery book; but that, for obvi- | street; heard great screaming of children, and then | ¢d at the Coroner's office yesterday that a negro, named | cattle faate party Inst fall designed that this int Legis , Brock and Stewart. ou reasons, is not open to the inepection of the public. | heard & person's voice; then went out and saw ‘some five | John Groshon, had fallen overboard at the foot of Spring | Mr Hartnett, of St. Louis, is well, as all the party are Jatare ehould give way to that of the State? Enrolled Bille—Metsrs, Curtis, Orr, Still, Graham and | tn the preparation of the blanks for the use of the depart- | of the children crying, and a teacher in the gateway; sho | strect, and was drowned. Deceased it red, waa a | Péported to be. The doctors not being paid by the pum~ Sreaxme—It was geverally understood that that should | Miller. ment and the ari ent of the forme of the new bocks, | was trying to drive them away; quite a large girl | hand on board an oyster sloop. On Tuesday night he be. | Per of patients under treatment, have pretty easy Ames, | be done. I am emphatically in favor of this resolu waned Graham, Elliott, Adkina, Morrill | much difculty bas experienced, aa the books of the | came by, and 1 asked the reason, and she said | came intoxicated, and while in that condition fell over. | ,, The main body is about ten tailes above wh ae tion, becanse T want the principle of self government | and Danford. old force have not been accessible unt!) recently the school was on fire: I then went in, but pre | board and was drowned. An inquest will bo held upon | Fork empties into Green river, being about ts ae awry carried out by our own people as by any OFFICERS OF THR HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. The Police Health and Insurance Fund now amounts to | vious to going in T saw the gate open, it was custo | the body of deceased to day above Fort Bridger, which is on the same other want the le to have a voice in making George W. Deitaler, Feq., Speaker. $570, and is, as the law ‘ides, made up from the re- | mary to the gate and door locked in school their lawe—in act. 1 want their voice frecly, C, F. Currier, Chief Clerk. wards given to officers the force. The Board recenuy | hours; saw teachers come out and fasten the Court of Common Pleas. foarlersly and ly in them. I don’t be- W. B. Parsone, Arsistant. passed a resolution appropriating to this fund the amounts | doors open; I then went in and saw about a dozen girls in Before Hon. Judge Brady. Neve eB ey represen . If this resolution was G. F. Warren, Sergeant at Arms. an aa i imposed upon officers for disoved!. | the passage way; saw one little boy fall, and a girl caming JAS. 20.— The Fire Wardens vs. Daniel Buchler.—Thie carried ag put down on paper, in a fow riot T. A. Blake, Doorkeeper. ence of re. Since that time theee penalties have | bebind fellover him, and T trict to get the gir! out; aasiet- ‘Was a eult against the defendant, as lessee of me Jas, 20.—Jn the Matter of Lowisa We ‘would have our State government in operation all STANDING COMMITIRES OF THE COUNCTL.. amounted to $200; but as there is some conbdt as to the le | ed in getting the children out as fast as | could alone; they | corner of Pearl and Chatham etreete, for infriny ire | @ Lunatic —A formal order was enter the coungy, and then there would be no danger of out Juticiary—Mosers. Holliday, Learnard and Crozier. lity of the priation of these fines to the po ond | all camerosbing down on top of those who failen, | | laws by raising the building in question Verdict for plain [| committing Miss Wolfsohn to the care of side influence or treachery. I hold that the principles Ways and Means—Measrs. Mead, Wash and Root. amount is held in abeyance. fot one ettire clase out before any men came to nesiet we; ! tite, $400. the asylum at Flatbush.

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