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. « NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1860.—-TRIPLE SHEET. 3 q 7 . Let wp not the injuries were inflcted at the Asylom; that since Personal In; . rea ee eee aumee | Wen, "Goulet as hes ula” vtregtie “ot, rise, axa | MEWS FROM THE STATE CAPIYAL _ | Sepucsuce Se vers oftxe jars gutiet tase | theres ow renting ot 10, bute exec, a thao, feeling | 1858, which —Uberated yest region— meat of facts has been put forth papers of the 7 necemiiy. (Loud applause.) Lot all ‘mi | and uperated bar rom oven the cane of any far Sie taser ea ons Saad atace | Wren call 0.30 of ag ao, coh ee MET OO ae es ea the gate fathers gave it te bet grudg- Sahat aavectes Pitt gH aS ae mnt Oe a eek wee in a stragele Report of the $100,000 Investi- ment. charged the jary with prejudice, and then re- | years old. During rebypide days prin he re- ingly, but fully as per prem se af political organization which rallies around it. You cen | which the of youre of a ee, feed adie sh srould cxemarkie Caen, ‘Tho na- pg am tp petra " SF abe Contant Capinluse) Aad nose ie uney | feared? #cattor and disperse eo army which nas been | shall rely repay. (Applange.) We reaped an sdvan- gating Committee. tare of the ease ofthe community, ape: | ded , Westchester: county, : oc lnten-se Teuppoee they wil acti woud aadress | formed into order in the. face of your Deaviat tre, bat it | age, from belt siruggle and thove "pre. Be a eee’ Sante dotsacerariey | humerous were tho eogagertois and hand to hasd Saha He es ena aaeel aden T could, how much would you gain by forciog the sen- | cious seerifices. people’ of country should : into the workings of the New York State Lunatic Asylum rangers and those depredating enid say to them: You coneidor Pecrualves.e reasonable At ay yoni yg gery apt Fe such Remarks by Messrs. Milliken and | ot Utica. If Torbell received bis injuries at the asylum, | bands called Cow Boys, Ho was also a soldier in the last EE be cham- we. ot recmateae uaitel een mates Praag mre pa fil Bedi: lh oe Se invigaibies (onearey” Hat eae oe, Littlejohn. ter ic he’ did not, se iostsiion mac ge a Wonéd ou Teer telaan “aie” anions hes tee thoes tance ciber yeopie; atl, whea yoo speak of us republicnas, | TiO 9 eno tain ralbor toon submit toa deal | . General Nvx waa then called upon and said >—Fellow- al wo rspecitully agk at Jour hands. That a, Tovbell | married, and haa cghtohilaren, all by hie Aret wife, now you do a nly to denounce us_as ropiles, oF, at tl to | of your const tutional rights. ‘That has a somewhat reck. | citizens, I canmot cousent to mar the beauty of the to his death by inhuman treatment there is no | living, the oldest being eighty years the youngest ae no better than OGtA me. Yoder bincke re. | Jet eound; but it would be'paltiated, if not fully justi. | #peeches you have listened to to-night. On another oo- : j fon and doubt, and that that treatment was reosived while en in- ‘deg pirates or murderers, but AMENDMENTS TO THE PRO RATA. BILL. capt, entitate — pt pha coef oe Neteas|) Sor ay oid a ae aeas Gratien, heath and com nothing fled, were wo »: force of numbers, | casion, when you cannot do better, I may give you some rylum ie to Ld publicans. ( r:) In ail your contentions with oe | )°p mre wo proposing, ret plalaly writlen down ia | eof words on this. queston ; Dab it pee sent there as to a reftge where he could be better cared | vividness of recollection that \s truly another esch of you deeue an uscond!vepal opademaation So ire 700, compe rights pintaly metion. aan X only, claim, tobe te of any” ropnittoan for than among his friends i# a legitimate conclusion, If} the Paris correspondent of the Courrier des Blate Unis RESOLUTIONS 0 CENSURE THE SPEAK be the th mnation When you rake these declarations, you have & as deeply, and ‘as strenuously in pro- to Csieeer Indeed, such conde: ute cio sud if nse my nd, og ptetn + fot aaaay the ‘of the State of New York cur! Of scandal inst Mile. Rai > indispensable prerequisite—lice: Srenk-amoog you ta bo eitaltied oF permiled to'speak | 60a right of yours, to take claves nto the federal Terr). | the advantages of « People sieonees f antnine 0. caries piece agai mond be lied, for an know i, and the remedy should pom y t the young lady whom Garibaldi has just espoused. It is stall. ‘Now, can you or not, De prevailed upon to panne | ete specibcaly wriice in, tas conatvaion, Tat tas which oruy ote plsce, witre thors, Union THE UTICA INSANE: ASYLUM, | tia matyor wit meieeectoguiry ants yar wis: | sated aca Bilge seamed ae yt to conskler whether ment is literally sik ant auch right jorth—| hter)— shake hands respeciful s pees General, oven to, youraamennt Bet npn dco np ton the contrary, deny teat such 5 Tig Nesey Mareen | .be dinaaiee preaching mas st the South forthe glorious a, &, do. “ued "Oy AS. tountiorss Das foreman, and ten peppy ay te ht ico ry ‘specifications, 2 ‘anmarred others, roner’s deny or justify. You say wo are sectional. We deny it, | the constitution, even by implication, (Applanse.) | and pairiotic 1 are eee oe — pay, We do not think that there is the slightest credit to be at- ‘That makes en fesue, anid the Durden | ion eer oee ee eis you be ‘allened te Gmetene | revoblionn it ter and applause.) Our Special Albany Despatch. ‘There bas been for some time a current rumor of bruta! | tached to this story. Through patriotism and admiration ‘of proof je upos CLanghter nad applause.) You Sree eneenres oe Larsen ISrant to see John Oschrane snd Senator Hammes strk> Atnany, Feb. 27, 1860, | treatment from the hands of the under keepers in that | for the Italian hero Mile. Raimondi risked he: life to bear snc tJette'n your meton-ots"no ‘aes in gore | Sepae bien you and or,” You wil ui or rei imal | Bands together at he Uonvequon, T waste s00 tbe | quo Howe met thie morning forth tat Uo at on | en, and an invest ging Comuaee hax boon ap; | derpaiches lo hm throvgh a canny overrat ty ih ene scotion. The fact i mubetantially true: but dots it prove | event. This, plainly stated, is your language to us. Ter- | Lr een de aad plodge each other, one to diasolve the | o'clock, and the first business transacted worthy of no- | Ror poraons’ sod’ dares we eke tne Potaiy resisted, | auch sentiments should pass ¥o monstrous & on saaeser principle: bemts io pet wetes'ta pons wiction ee | puted constitational question in your favor, Not quite so | Unlon and the oter to uphold it. (Zaughter.) I want o | tice was the report of the $100,000 investigating commit- | showing that there must be omething rotien some whore, | one ofthe saviors of her country, and & man, for F . whom she professed such unbounded love and eateom. teo, who have been unablo, after a week's investigation, | Has". capey gums that has asked for tbat, privilege | The fact that her father is represented to. have to find anything of the letter, which they have clearly | tion in this line is more thant oan it , unless the | seconded his daugbter’s efforts to overcome Garibaldi’s SATA ews s Ved: mind ot Rrancin B. Deno, noane | Coreen made aro tras and the keepers of thas entiation | Goieteee Ott mae aoa ta it oae ee forwarder of your city, who has concocted this scheme #8 | Totiaton aad allow iho breed pauents to recover from | Whole, very ke a Paris canard. srt shoola thereby ceago to be sectional. (areat merriment) | ¢ Sa am the lnwvere’ dietnciion, betmean and ina sort of '. stant it time come when the doctrines of fashington ae aetiaas Tee) a ae a seen eveten caer |, shall, be, eelogiaed’ suid when e aagiea Of Aven Saeaee = votes in your section this very year, (Loud choers,) | Titories, and to hold m there es property. | half of the Union—denounces the doctrine which he ‘You wiil then to diacover, a8 5 mode tofrighten those wh ir convic- eatment regist pet Four does. bow touch he faci | 1 meen I as mado ine divided our by a. bars | loeier,,lavguer.) I wnerstand Unto of todo, | a mode ifighin tao who ware honet in thelr convo: | the human ropigeyrens egies ACO ee Ay cette Mite ae Te eae, vind: it there’ 'o }one anotfer in dhe redsone for making’ it; tat itis go | themselves. « (Renewed Jaughter and cheers.) I thok saahalemn in: Peasreating of the sepent view MAMMANG;” Mr: sere public rumor that the under or wardkoepers | 22 to Febgnary 0, 1800:—Mre. C. L- Beatiy and family, : a s00n report ished panier fo 10t0 100 v8! ‘Henri Bergh and wite, +0. Me poli in that fact, that fault is. primarily Yours, | einer abeat lis makes epvartors disugtoe with one | emecre)., Bult advise them to keep Uelr seam up, | MILKEN arose and made a bitter speech against the | a their requestor offer ay retiatanos, to.jump upon them, | Roding, Greville G Mathew, W.E Schenck sid wile, & and remains so until you show that we bP ‘a mistaken statement of fact—the statement in the | with their anchor ready to slip at a moment’s warning, | Speaker and those who bad been trying to injure his cha. | thrusting their knoes into their sides, and otherwise bru: | 1. Ham, Juo. V. B. Bleecker, U.S. N.; Chas, Lonndes. Dy some wrong pr or practice. If we do | arom a mistaken stateme cine ines Tor that they will Bare as taviation tot leave” In aa oot” tally treating and disfiguring them, and thon placing a | U. 8. N’; Robt. Hoe and family, W. D. Russell and. wife, zepel you by any wrong principle or practice, the tault ie | oplnic Tin THeNT of Property in a sieve is distinctly | tain estat they go. (Bolaterous laughter.) I want to | Tecier inand around the lobby. Achargohad been made | pianuet before the glase door'in the ‘cell, #0 thatthe prio. | W. A. Badd, WG Burns W. Lawrence sivoss at? core; but this brings you to where youdught to have | om cote Mente ihahew sant taenickede ‘n | see that ship safely moored again at our wharf, without | against him, he said, by a member of this House (Mr. | cipal keeper cannot ace him when ‘thron; Myers, Dr. B. Mackay, G. B. Butler, Jr.; R. Douglas and Sinln (Loud eppianse ) mecermsinie tie gaan & slave ia not distinctly and ox, affirmed in it. ae: accident, because desire to share in the glory of” beating | Littlejohn), but that person did not in his speech make i ine matinee. If this cena vertg Ba] bag i. eo ane yd : Oe PK os) A. Moola wrong your section for the, benefitwof ours, or for | Prause:) Bear in mind tho Judges do not, pledge, voile —'T Ank ws sball?>) 1 aun going to leave Til | S2Y chargo at that tine against him; but ho understood | 19"° the’ “managers “of that institution, “we should | Guy Yassur New Yor Col & fe chatiein ieee Fe any outer objec, then ot principe and we eels the Constitution; but they pledge’ their nojs to our friend Lincoln, and there is no doubt that he | that as soon as he found his way into tho lobby, | know it, and the committee should ‘attend to it | Prentice, Albapy;H. Trowbridge, New Orleans; Anson stated that ho®(Mr. Milliken) was before there is any whitewashing done. If that | Derter and ladies, E.G. Nickerson, Boston: Thos. Clark — spgetr A _ ) mecca “hee institation’ where is’ sent. thoeo ‘who have beoa | and wite, Buffalo; John Fox, New Orleans; M, W, sievens, 4 samo story was extensively ciroa- | amicted by this the greatest of all alilictions, | Portland: Rufus H. King, Jr., Alban: ; M. Mesier Reese, lated in the lobby by the creatures of that appendage to ioe piaes administer and eee petients po Alex. Brown and family, Phitadelpis. the Eegislature. His (Mr. Milliken’s) position had also been , that are worse than ild savages of the | In the year 1842, says the Georgetown (Ga ) Times, we forest, Jet us know it at onoo, that thore who have friends we Pio Si misconstrued by this same miserable band—that hoe had | thus aiflicted may not place them in the hands of fiends. bey Sree one there at ee oe aan whom - offered the regolution to discharge Mr. Allen after he had | For the credit of the State, for the sake of humanity, let | were on the most intimate terms, Clover fellows were been convicted of violating the privileges of this House = one and ms be scam Committee be | Bob Harper, Lucius Lamar, Jenks Jones and Tom Harde- by being Prompted by & motive to escape fur- | "The House was in special aession this evenins upon tue | Preniest gavin of the four’ Lucius Later we were i ther punishment by these slanderers of his cha. | Pro Rate bill. 3 aft ‘1 . that formed after leaving the college, was the acknowledged racter. He considered the blow that was strack | , Mr. Roblason madean able speech against it, one that | leader of the Phi-Gamma duriog’ his fenior year, Jenks fe a " the least part of the offence that was mado agatuet the Hi thought that ec Pre aa a boon Red by i Jones was steady and fludious. Tom Hardomanfwhen own ai we knew him, thought of littic else than fun and mischief. House. It was the assalling of tho character of a member , and abandoned by them this: . = He was our pote many wild expedions. Now it is that be thought was the great crime. When the person eke ® je ag lo jury should at once be somewhat remarkable that theae clarsmates (in a class of . carry’ busine +, ys that had made himself officious in slandering the character | allowed ah pte nt ane ee and aoe tele "pro: Beurecebd arene oe eee eaten, DS Sees of membors was before the bar of the House forcontempt, | poted to force those companies out of the fisld. It is @ | Hardeman are members of Congress; Tamar is pro- be saw what he never heard of before; the most singular | {ect Kind of oppression that has been brouzht upon us | nounced one of the rising stars of the ‘House, Harper, ry roads, in carrying our commerce chespor ant | Tamar's borom friend, ran for Congress, and wat bese transaction that evor came before any Legislature. A | quicker than any other mode. We should have never by Hill, the Know Nothing, by a very few yotds. Jones, member upon whom the balance of the members of this | known anything about oppression if the Clinton League | by no means equal to Harper ia genins, succeeds Stephens House had conferred a grear houor, came down from that | had not informed us of the fact. | No speech vat ar Ate, | 2 Georgia. Harper, Lamar and Jones are democrats. poition and endorsed the action of ‘a foul slanderer in the | Hobincom sw Mtracted #0 cloge attention as that of Mr. | Hardeman belongs to the South American party. lobby; it was tho most astonishing thing on recor’. He | He was followed by Mr. Flagler, who made @ speech | _ OUr readers (nays the Troy Times of the 2ist ine! ) are ltadh. Gus See vabicecens “at uh -saieabacd B nearnetad peg gene or toligfaroa,arglag tet Sicpuasins aoe foam Waters lah; seine Ween tect .of this House shoud be guarded with a jca- | ofthisiaw, His remarks were ue nore epriioabie torece | which a man named Oathort was said to have eloged with lous eye by each and every member; but in- Sa et ee etna common row boat. pgthy = wite’ re gros Ramet Its termination wil! also ‘Mr. Milleken made @ le speech against the bill. Hever d. | Another not was executed in the dram mead of that they hed all witnessed © member upon | 1, dia not believe thie bill originated by pairiouam, ‘rac as y ree ‘The beg force og al thom, are a mere Tumor attempting to destroy the character | most disgraceful scenes had been enadted in this House | 88 follows:—Since the even! a hout returned of another member, and endorsing a creature of tho | ever since the introduction of this measure. ‘The schomo, | % Watervliet he had refused to live with his wife. oe, im his attempts to destroy ‘bis reputation. The | was commenced by fa'sehood before the peorle, and hal | i the meantime, waa living witn her father. The ol #landers which bave been circulated by members and | been carried out in defaming the characters 0” membors, | ™&D became tired of such conduct on the part of hie son- ‘ | th Y | will take care of that individual whom gravitation och, anon ieeteion or whvheer ome Princlple, | Patty eee, a aanrenmly,,aMiemod there | Tecmoa ai preseut to, have eo direct a Bold. (Frolanged expressly, that is in words meaning just that, without | lavgbter.) When that Convention shall have met and the aid of any inference, and susceptible of no other parted—when the most magnificent row has taken place meaning. If as had only Piedged their which this nation has ever seen—(loughter)—then I think = who framed the government under which we live | pinion that such right is affirmed in the instrument by | it will be Ss dst ene » for me, I early adopt lorse implication, it would be open to others to show that neither | “rT these have have ex: pate g pinplh Hard ton at | the word «slave nor tslavery’” fe to befound inthe | hausted thomeelves, to utter what litte I have ly wrong a8 to demand your condemnation without | COnstitution, nor the word ‘‘property”” even, in any con. | '0 :ay cn the republican prospects of success. | Until then Y ih ; moment's consideration. {Applause ) Some of you ican language aliasing to ‘the things slave or | | shall reserve ing ‘and save you the penalty of my . | further speech to-night. gains’ Lage ae r in that instru. 2 jeahip; ment the slave is alluded to, he is called a ‘‘person;” and | James A. Buccs, of Obio, was then loudly called for, and Srewell Address. “Lees than Cnt oaks “before | wherever his master’s Jogal right in relation to'him is | tessonded:—Republicans of New York—I cannot talk to | Washington gave that warning, he ae President of | siluded to, it is spoken of as ‘‘service or labor due,” ag @ | Jou at thie iate hour, afler the feast of fat ‘athe United States, approved and signed an act of | “debt” payable In service or labor. Also, it would be | which you have enjoyed tonight. You are Songress, enforcing the prohibition of elavery in the geneitet, by cohemppranconn history, that this mode | {or republicanism, as wolves upon. prairie oribwestern Terrijory, which act embodied the policy alluding te slaves and slavery, instead of speaking of | are greedy for food, but, unlike them, greedy to save—not of the government upon that sdbject, up to and at the | them, was employed on purpose to exclude from the con- | 10 destroy. It is too pe, to talk to you further upon this very moment he penned that warning; ‘and about one | stitution the idea that there could be property in man. | topic. You desire to go and to get strength for year alter he penned it he wrote Lafayeite that he. con. | To show all this iscasy and certain. When this obvious | the coming contest, and to decide, wi the sidered that probjbition a wise measure, expressing in the | mistake of he erase aad be ecoant fe their notice, a! es fe meteor: Bere Tinomsaed w Teasonal ex: vy withdraw 5 abe | 'y shall standard ame connection his bope that we should some time have taken statement, and onsider the conclusion based braver in the fight, or whether your glorious 1? And then it is to be remembered thet ‘our | York (tremenduous applause, and fat who framed the government under which we | Wm H. Seward), or the noble, stalw 8g: live”—the men who made the constitution—decided this | of Hepa peer pace, Navomber: comes, shail ‘would lame same constitutional question in our favor long ago—de- | float 5 under we aball pyre ah peng vee or fd of | cided it without @ division among themselves, when | shout, “Victory for the Union and the constitution,” and yeu who repudiate it? (Applause.) We respect Making the decision; without division among - | lberty shall be sate. Gandapaeee,) ‘warning of Washington, ana we commend it to you, to- | *clves sbout the meaning of it after it was made, and so | Judge Cutvun then took the floor, beng ap gether with bis example pointing to the right application | {@r as any evidence js left without basing it upon any mis- } ft mar miawle she RRIee ene bernie Gener ‘efit. (Applauge.) But you say you are conservative— | taken statement of facts. Unier all these circumstances +f ling ‘eminently conservative—while wo are revolutionary, de- | 4° you really feel yourselves justified to break up this fo. said, xervctive, or gométhing of the sort. What is conservatiam? ‘Unlegs such a court decision as yours is shall and untried? We abet toy contend fore the identies! | Heal action? But you will not abide the election. of ere-f olding Gibraltar, take’ possession of the citadel, and ‘eid policy on the point in controversy which was publican President. In that supposed event you ssy you | Rome will again be free. by our fathers who frameg the government under wi il deetroy the Union, and then, you say, the The meeting then dispersed. & i 5 5 # in-law, and resolved that he should either support his we hve; while you with one scoord reject, and scout, and | of baring destroyed it will be upon us! _( .) That ie characters of Ue oheedenes eee erat ts false oe | ikea roove without eolag: 10 the Okt ted Coa din | wife oF he would know why. A warraut. was thorefore sieRing ev. rhe, You Gkagresaikeng’poemeteg | tomy tat, aad brought ony Wet ah |. cnn xocuaiemtemasenenn chit ciik tng enlire row sand desired to state distiantiy that these | with the agente of the Clinton League. He socveed the | Siam Qe Stated tte temsenee ef Onion and eam fi 1. ry 7” Nee ment le Temidence of it ans Secrin, ipuamati alec te commaer, | a Crgamana Zeiten SRG Sey shy | The Woung Me's Nona Uni Gabel ts wma | Sn het ara cay nem | hat eon eats egg | mts te Seow hea, uo na s robber demanded of me—my money—wae my own. regular meeting at Clinton Hall last evening. Quite | dicaung their own 's; and if assaults are to be ie itl See ee ‘wnanimous in Eh ose ‘and. denouncing the old policy of y- ‘4 9 made here, he would teX the men who have commenced NEW YORK. LEGISLATURE. clothes. ‘The officer said “Yes."’ Oathout went up stairs to get his clothes; to the upstairs apartment was a win- oe arch poll Sarees eka’ s cetanr sec fe Reiter dow, and said window was twenty-five feet from the ain wie Uitened :to--wielr tion, the er a Senate. | eso he cared not for this; he raized the sash, and out ‘That was the last seon of him. Ofticer Brower, face being as white 48 a piece of bleached linen, whilst Aupany, Feb. 27, 1800. Home a 3 Hugh Allen satin the lobby, bitebiog about upon ‘his seat | Remonstranoes against removing the East river steam. | wat oS ree Tieng grater lone, for hn “clots, uae, evitesty Froclng eR oats, and against pro rata railroad tolls, were received. | Onthout was among the missing. Pursuit was given to At the close of “the spoech, the Speaker | _ ‘The committee reported against abolishing the office of the fegitive, bat upto dhe last aconahts ‘he hind sot uote, . ig) to the chair, and came down | Schcol Commissioners, and their report was adopted. a and said—A fow days since, in the discharge of his duty, ° ; - The New Bodford (Mass ) Standard tells ths follo he made a charge that information had resshed nim ins | MF. MUSNox. (rop.) gave notice of « bill to probibit the | story:—Miss Loulea Jones, “f intelligent and ascompliahed a member of this House had written a letter stating that | assignment or sale of any life annuity, which, by the roung lady of Fairhaven, twenty-one years of age, has $100,000 would defeat the bill. Would any member have | terms therpof, is not transferrable. Also, to prohibit all n very ill for the last four months, confined to her my and youare for reviving the Thad a clear right to keep it; but it was no more my | nomber of respectable gentlemen were present. Mr. E. P. own than vote is my own;—(* That’s so,” and “ stave (race; SSeS eee ace efor tee Rape akeel ha rein ed tats incmne eek my | Norton, President of the Club, occupied the chair, and Mr. do probibit 8 a or fae ir limits; some for maintein- | Money, and the threat of destruction to the Union, to ex- | John Thomas Phillips, acted as Secretary. Mr. Smith Ham- ing slavery in the Territories through the Judiciary; some | tort my vote, can scarcely be distinguished in principle. | vleton was elected a member of the Executive Committee Jot the “gar rem purincple”—(iaughter) that “fone | Afew worde now to republican, ‘ft is exceedingly de- | Honi, a 4 wr yered a, Inomooe tow tee Soome moan would exainan another, no ‘man shouldobject,” | Sirabie that all parts of this great snail be |" lh a 4 . Santantically called“ sovereignty”’—(renewed | # and in harmony one with another. Let us re- | Mr. Benj. F. Buck from the Fourth, Mr. John R. Liver- Jecghter and applause)—but never a man among you | Publicans do ourpart to havo it so. (‘‘Wewill,” and | more from the Eleventh, Mr. A. R. Peck from the Twen- jo‘ favor of federal prohibition of slavery in fe- | Spplause.’’) Even though much provoked, let us do no- tleth and Mr. Wm. F. Jackson from the Twenty-first neral Territories, according to the practice of our | thing through pastion and ill temper. Even though the : A fuihers who framed the government under which we ae ee poe i nels ee ait Ben 1s Bs ante.» ids common ware Sati prepere Wo Fepéet ‘the, hve. Not one of all your ‘various plans can show a pera them, if, names ‘of members of the Finance Committee. After andi ine or an advoceipiia:the century within which our | OUr deliberate view of our duty, we possibly can. Judg- r by all they say and do, ani’b sul and nature | ong and excited debate, and several devisions, the Presi- | done differently? He considered it his duty to doit. He bed, and for the last two months had lost the use of her Sovernment origiatod, neider, Cems whother 3 ‘heir coutraversy with ts, let us if we can, | dent refused to recognise a motion to elect delegates to the | had made no charge again the member ‘Westches- bend ae ne a ee ® penalty | lower limbs, £0 that she could be moved only with great Sentroctiveness against s,are based ’on the most sear | What will satiety them. Will they bo sated ifthe Terr!” | Generai Executive Committeo of the Union party, on the | ‘<F couty and if he (Mr. Milken) desires to make any | of raged ee ter reponse at $500 for | difficulty. | She appeared to be failing rapidly, and.the ‘gain, you say we have made | Vries be uncond lered tothem? We know | ground that the Club has no connection with that’ or charge against him, be would make no reply. His atlen. | Si ipomt#» And that of all ather pubhe entervainments | medical attendants declared they could do nothing moro ‘ominent than it formerly | they will not. In all their present us | Stber body. Several now members were elected. ‘Copies | {ioe drawh to an article, writen by & person ia | * $160 troduced a bill to I Petia beni an meee ee Y | the Territories are scarcely mentioned, In and La ; Albany, and in the Buffalo Courier, that alluded | . Mr. TRUMAx introduced a bill to limit the publication of | in to see her mentioned that the’Rev. Joseph K. Bello ; i 7 i : i : : £ | : to the transaction of the firm of which he was a member. rod ara canvass to one newspaper in each judicial . New ‘York, = Bere. Aaya preacher, was in town, He explained ition of affairs in connection with the 1g & series of mectings. immediately ex, ed transaction alluded to, and denied the charge, stating that | ME- Rouxrtox introduced @ bill to authoriz» the Pilot | a desire to see him, and 4he Delle that, pid cpa ely r prominence of the cause we know we never had anything to he had never been in Chicago as alluded to. Commissioners to cena ee ‘onorosobments | for her, she should recov ‘The clergyman accor ; ‘An extra number of copies of the report was ordered to | 90 the exterior une aud “ im the harbor of | visited ‘her that evening, and Miss Jones describes her question reduced to sions and insurrections; and yet this total abstaining does ry ‘000 had been formed New York. Heimer propria oat hault po. Won | Segoe com econ wade demeenuon Ie Mari ie hres das" at | S&P cinyaeatrzm ema overiaa el wars | St rnc te propre adie carn | Sassi A ORT a RW ; bas oot Ue nena, cote: he ee Ie pee hn Bil et Be A gt Wikis perio ‘The House immediately went into committee of the | '0g® of married women was ordered to a third readiug. Seemed boreal, eae a and on the following you woul vo the peace times, re-adopt ‘know thinking seriously whole upon the Pro Rata bill, when Mr. Flagler offered bath sho attende: rch. Sbe is now el the Precepts and policy of the old times. | (Applanse.), You | Sytrperienes, is no oa oe ain emo beeapeomar whi) eerie ta ‘upon im the caucus on Assembly. Dest of health and relishes ibe heartiéat ftod, fie sheng Pee en “end whet is your proot? Harper's Rerryi | 2 from the very beginning of our orgaal: | After Clay bad given Van ‘Buren that tremendous trash: Di a OE ee ALnANY, Fb. 27, 1800. te ne meat eae he eaten ae he eres jenahice). ae Brown! ( rowed: laugher.) | Srecsiien we have oustanty” yt Pale Out torte or eet Tae he faerm. De | lowed to charge one hundred and Oty per cont over and | MF. Jaques; (rep.) from the special committee appotat- | Susceptible to the influence of imagination. rind mn Brows wat no republiaaa, and you “have slones bos Ulle ban Gan ao teniesay to’ convince ‘of | Sbovepre rata rate, and for tiles seventy-five per | ed toinvestigate the charge made by the. Spoaker upon | "A young and beautifulgir\ of Concord, Mlasoar, heving Failed to implicate ao single ican —— ‘unavailing to convince them is the fact that aM Tratarnet fentng hie yeehos, | cent, for fifty miles Aty per cent, one hundred miles | the floor of the House that a report had reached him, | an intense desire to know the secrets of the Sons of Malta, paris, Ferry coer re oe, tis thal Stee doa owl: | they have never detected a man of us in say sent 0 ‘share in the sectional Muerte ca te snd Sy mies t " ty whiob left no hele ie of ite cor. | dressed in male attire, and, by ® succession of or.305,40 oh a rh Lpnqenr panei ee Tmeaus all falling; what will cosvince them? Tis, aed this oto Pat eee coer med Dy eminent Con- | and the bil) was amended in other particulars, leaving rectness, that a member of the House had applied for | ofan unsuspecting Sots who preseesed Sor ple nee you Ee oe ett aesreng panied sa couse to cat slave Ripe povet ond ar betpy ngit | of the country ‘conld rebuke and put, down this sec tee a een loopy Thich 1 | $100,000 to defeat the Ryo Rata bill, made a report. They eee ‘under an asaumed name and sex, it wae ‘especially, 10 peasist im the steertian ater you Rave tried he well as in words. Silence will not be tolerated-—we Yer travelling through | {#10 lawyers that drew up the bill can understand it. at | Set forth testimony which stlows that F. B. Dane, of No. ths Forse Wy ashacediaad oer Mice ee ‘the and failed to make the proof. eet oneeetee ‘oa | rust place ourselves avowedly with them. Douglas’ new mil LJ h | apy rate not a member the bill has been able | 100 Wall strect, partner of the firm of Alvord & Dane, of | Lodge room by the Grand Conductor. What abe saw and = not be told that agg sp Me Fey one | sedition law must be ‘and enforced, suppreasing el ‘the t Aye i thus far to explain them. the old Oswego line of forwarders by canal, had stated to | heard the uninitiated can never know 8he braved the or- joes not know to be true, is simply slander. all declarations that slavery is wrong, whether made in Aa ago Sate rei There is another provision of the bill which I think, |. i deal nobly. Her secret known only to herself, she ¢ ) | Same of you generously edmit thet no re | Douwics, in presses, in or in private. We must them; that the | under a legal + will let the Erie road out of the | Speaker Littlejohn that he had heard of such arumor, | seomed to be perfectly satisfied, and was well pleased publican eee, ere arrest and return their slaves with greedy plea- euce ‘of the | 1!!, leaving it, applying in fact, only to the Contral. This | but did not say from whom. On examination he gave the | with the good condition of the members. The denouement 2y affair; but sull oe. “We do not sure; we must pull down our free State constitutions; the ‘they were bet. | feature, I understand, is in accordance with the wishes of of A. 8. Bright, of No. 87 Exchange place, as his in- | of the sffairis—in one month's time from her entrance tions necessarily lead to such results. We believe | ‘whole atmosphere must be disinfected from all taint of y the canal forwarders lobbying here for the bill, who only | Ame of A- ~ 3 into the Lodge room she was led to the altar » biushii We know we pees) Reno, dpcwase, and makono om to slavery, before they will coase to believe nen bere. The | dcaire to punish the Centra, formant, and bad stated that the letter was written to one | bride and a Son of Malta. Perheps the only case Of ene ey eevee ae Sage ote ho all their troubles proceed from us. I am quite iets Lis nox | _ Just before the ciose of the morning seesion, Mr. Calli- | Partridge, a Wall street broker; but Bright had testified | record. J(appisase ) You never dealt fairly by usin relation to | Sware they do not state theis osgo precisely in, thle ‘The members | Ct Tore to a privileged question, and offered the follow- | thas ne had never mado any such statement to Dane, hed | _ Old nigger Jog and his white girl, eaye the Detroit Free When ft occurred, some important State elec- bait me YA tA pogo pl Bol. ‘please honest, and doubtless were, = ‘Therese, one of the members of this House, from Os- | never seem or heard of such a letier, and no such person | Pres, the heroknd heroine of the somewhat notorious tions were near at hand, and-you were In evident glee | sions sievery.”” But we do let them alone—have never disunton, civil | wego, has charged in Committes of the Whole, that hehad | 8 Partriggo, was found. The comintioe dociared that | Jageon slopement case, hare been, lost sight of by the Hwith the belief that, by charging pod blame upon | fics that, after all, it is what we sey 4 esate thik ‘Taesday in | £004 authority for believing that a member of this House | the charge @ not the slightest foundation in fact, was as sane since the ies rest in their affairs subsided into ap fae you could get an advantage of us in thoee | which dissatisfies them. They ' will continue to oy biciaius 7 12 | fed written a letter to patty in Wall strech, New York, | basclces and, groundless as a chargo could poasibiy bo, Gn stand. Thay Wate; however, Pirwaed We even ieee ction, The le ctiote aed” (Lamgbier) Yona | accuse us of doing, until wo cease saying. I am stating in substance that the passage of the Pro Rata | and that nothiog in the slightest degres reflected on Mr. | Of thelr way rogardiore of outside sues, acd etl live ia ations were, not eee Sa. aneeee) xc Sino aware they Gave not, ae yet, in terms, de- Freight law could be defeated by the disbursement of ono | Milliken or any other member. hair Ditle Shanty in Windebe.” Jee ceonpise: tha. respon ot sweep New York, and New Jersey, and Wisconsin, | Toided the overthrow of our free State constitutions. Police Intelligence. - hundred thousand dollars among members of the Asem. | Mr. MittimeN (rep.) mace a severe speech, in which he | sible position uf corporation fiddler, and, with unpre. ng Mianeso(® Ficontter}) You ere-etil drumming at | Yet those constitutions declare the wrong of slavery | Axazer ron Cincciarina Omwcxm: CincoLane.—A man} bly; and, whereas, the Select Oommitize who were ap. | denounced the course pursued by Speaker Littlejohn, not | tending mein and limping galt, tratges avon? wich a buck iu high wind. (Laughter.) You are mming with more solemn emphasis than do all other sayings a pn cena potted io investigate the subject, and were empowored | only in making the charge, but in aflerwards cadeavoriog | 80d saw on bis sI boulder in quest of eligible wood piles. this idea. Go on with it, If you think you can, by #t; and, when all these other sayings shall have named Harris was arrested about six o’c! lant evening | to send for ‘and papers have, after in. | to shield a tool who had violated a breach of the priyi- | His domestic fireside is illaminated by the presence of a ndering a woman, make her love you, or by villifying sore Hilehecd,’the ‘overthrow of these Zonstitations will | Dy detectives King and Slowey, on complaint of a number quiry reported, that’ there is no evidence to | leges of the House by repeating the base slander. young half-breed of promising proportions, and the emi- man make him vote with you, goon and try it | Ve ‘demanded, and nothing be left to resist the demand. | cf citizens residing in tho upper part of the city, who al- | sustain or. jurtl'y the charge £0 made; and whereas, the er Lirrixsoux expressed regret that the name of | ling countenance of the intellectual Sarey greets his diur- 5 ‘Boisterous laughter and prolonged applause.) Every re- Ite nothing to the that they do not demand the | ter5 that the U charge so wade ands ascertained to be unfounded’was | Mr. Milliken had been mixed up with the affair, but ho return from the tolls of his profession. Take blican man Knew that, as to himself at least, your whole of this just now. ding what they do, and lege socused has caused fo have circulated ob- | cai, to defame this House and bring its members | had doemed it ‘sis duty to bring the matter before the | ll, the is probably as happy as when at home with t rharge was a slander, and he was not much inclined by for the they do, they can voluntarily stop nowhere | ecene circulars, which have been left at their houses after | into pu contempt; therefore, House. immaculate and amiable papa, who p:eached aboilt! 4 cast ls, volo im your favor: Republican doctrines | 1 He ramen : a ae on tok tnay, base sais i i al leo olved, That this House deem it proper to put on re. | ‘The Pro Rata bill was then take up, And horsewhipped hor for Durbiag tho tos of er ahiose d declarations are accompanied with @ continual slavery is morally right and socially they’ can | fal ‘ato ths bande of the fem: ice pled | cord its condemnation of the course of aay membor who | _ Mr. FLAGIER (rep. ), offered amendmonte which entirely | Joe is humble bu: exclusive; ono rraie bores sins: om not cease to demand ae ee of it as. | at the Post Office station D, Eighth street, just as he was fives toiale and unfounded rumors against the honor and | cbange the character of the, original bili, by making a | the strength of his white wif tegrity of hie associates the force and authority of sliding scale of charges— 1g 160 per cent to be The followin, Sel. Ban he pedinn 06 ie. Meaoaiel & foure. hold this on ground save was taken Police Head charge made \. charged over pro rata for teu miles, and 100 percent for | Brown, of Ni ir) » has boen presented in the ty tor, conviction at savery ia Witke. Mt calnvery = cae ° Ee er ae ee ae hlller, Bugle, moved (bat the rosolation be aid | twenty mile, Wo Louisiana Legislature:—“ Whereas, the ects of ch John is right, all words, acts, laws constitutions | at his plaoo of business in Broadway, signed by young | on the tavic, which was carricd—yeas 45, nays 26. | Mr. Briggs’ bill to ‘reorganize the Harbor Master’s de- | Brown, of abolition notoricty, has affixed a siigmt upon ‘~ ‘tare , and should be | isdies and gentlemen ‘all in anawer to the circular. ‘They | Forty-two republicans voted in favor of tabling and six | partment was presented to day. the name of Brown, which renders it into! je to the away. If it right, we oan- were taken possession of by Ca Walling, who will hand Four democrats voted for tabling and twenty The following is the substitute proneeed, in lien of the ;omed herein named; therefore be it onacted, by the tenes pay an rng bavng jcotpend lhe mn Harris will be fhe Ulloa Aoyiuss agpic a oa ec A Nog a aac cg a ee wrong, pad upon its by these circulars lum atten- e — 5 BE By All they ask we coud readily grant, | would do well to call at the Police Bo ak nd en- | donhere. At i yeid bet eee evtion pan the ‘Tariff on freight carried less than twenty miles, 150 per passage of this act the name of Frederick Southgate .if we thought slavery right; all we ask, Seay could os it. attempt to suppress facts has led me to believe that there | cent more than through freight; less than thirty miles, 100 y & resident of New Orleans, and the names of his readily grant, if thought it wrong. ‘Cnarce oF Fis: Rosssry.—Charles ia. a nigger there. The following is the petition of the | per cent; Jess than fifty miles, 50 per cent; than 100 | minor children, Alice, Kizabeth, Harriet, Kama, Edward itright, and our it wrong, is the precise Of ESawAy. Geben, @ young | Coroners’ jury :— niles, 25 por cent; less than 160 miles, 15 per cent. and Octavia Brown, be and the tame are hereby ebangod wi ds the whole b =, man, twenty-four years of age, a native of Germany, and | To me Honoramis THE LEGIELATURE OF THE Starz or New feveral other verbal amendments were v4 and | to the names of Frederick, Alice, Elizabeth, Harriet, ghee ), they are not to blame desiring residing at 161 Attoruey street, arrested on Sunday Yorx iy Senate AND Assemnty ConvENgD:— progress was then reported with the view of having the | Emma, Edward and Octavia Southgate, which last men: , 8 right; but thinking it wrong, a8 | ovenin, clthrged with ‘Charles Wil of 17 We, the undersigned, a Coroner’s: for the county of | ew bill printed in time for the evening seasion. tioned name they are hereby authorized to adopt as their we do, can we yield to them? ‘Can we cast our votes with es es Williams, Madizon, summoned in the cue of Norris Torbell, late of | _ Several remonstrances and petitions against and for the | respective ions, and use for their respective sig- their view, and our own? In view of our moral, | Ludlowstreet, at about eleven o’clock on Saturday night, | Brookfield, in said county, deceased, respectfully repre. | Pro Rata bill were presented. natures, at all times and in all places.’’ soon oad praniel teow sibilities, can we do this? (‘‘No, | W: the was sent that said Torbell was attacked with acute mania; that . CatzscoT, from the Ji Committec, made a ‘The decision of the libel for’ divorce in the cage of Han. no,” and lense.) rcs ‘as we think slavery is, we } Attorney. It is allegod that he first struck Williams over on Tuesday, the 22d day of November last, while at an | minority report agains. the several anti rent bills prev- | nah p, Robinson va. Thomas L. Robinson, was announced ca yetafiord to let alone ‘where i is, becaise thar | tbe mouth with a sluog sbot, knocking out his tooth, and | auction in the neighborhood of his Fealdenes, “he bucame | loutly reported, Judge Bigelow in Boston on the Zist ist. The Judge, much |e due to the necessity ar! from its actual pre- from & memorandum much exciled and violent, refusing restraint from his | Mr. Cattucor offered a preamble setting forth that the pe hed to the nature of the charges egeiust the eence in the nation; but can we. ‘our votes will pro. | Containing a five doliar bill on the Broadway Bank. - | friends; tbat this restraint was no more than what was | charges made by the Speaker onthe matter of the Pro | defendant, that it was onnecessary to go into the ex- ‘vent it, allow it to spread into the national Territories and cused was commi in defauit of $2,000 to stand his trial. to prevent his tjuring those about him, and not | Rata bill were entircly refuted by the report of the com- | amination of the other charges, as the to overrun us here in these free States? (‘‘No, never,” | Cuance or PERJURY AGAINeT A JunsEYMay.—Officer Bar. | Of & kind or degree to injure bim; that he was taken from | mittee to investigate their defamatory charactor as re- | conclusively that the defeudant bad been ‘cany of ae and applause. A yolce—‘Guess not.’ Laughter, f tho Lower Police the auction to the house of Mrs.’ Clarke; his mother-in. | garded the Assembly, accompanied bye resolution cea- | win Hrs: Wm, A. Cochrane. On this round the bonds H our sense of duty torbide. this, then let us stand br Court, on Monday arrested © | igw, where he was closoly watched by his- friends; that | suring tho Speaker for having given to an idle and un-| of ‘between the libellant and Thomas J. Roving Misi io eee, eat Matuiiioe | Seen, neroeen le ce ein | eens cin oe a are Te | ace perk Tix mone of those contrivances w! Ne very raving vi 5 -law, F. H. | on 5 Genes cons lied. and. belabored-—con- | gaint hum by George Cone of Resamlon’ Foasorivnne, | Carke, thers, Tushed into the room, Clarke | Mr. Mrizxm moved tolay the resolution on the table. Scivanoss sash an greptog for. some middle, grouad be- wi je that the accused, on the Sistof July last, | seizing him by the collar of his coat, around his Mr. Conk1axG raised the point of order, that the resolu- tween the right ‘Wrong, vain as the search fora Sauer aieabar & cgittes akan pend: meh arms, ee ee a few feet to @ lounge, on | tions were a privileged question and could not be laid on man who should be neither @ living man nor adead | First District Court of this city. Justice wi Torbell fell fairly on one side, Clarke falling table. “ man—soch a8 @ policy of ‘don’t care” on s question | in $1,000 bail to apswer his knees by the side of the lounge, with Tor! hows ‘The Srgaxez. ruled the point not well taken. about which all true men do care—such as Union appeals Fast Driving om Cuwreat against bis vest, as was shown by the white froth from ‘The resolution was tabled by the following votes:—Ayes Weseeching true Union men to to disunionists, re- ent ‘gd Panx.—Michael Reynolds and | torpett’s mouth found on the vest of Clarke afterwards. Mh fore 22, Be ect mad sheet B6, the ne ieeous too Fepimmnoe re seein tees’ and re ee ee pte Seneca Ties td mane vation eae dak = Se ia bs iare J 7 for drivin faster than seven miles qi n ‘aking the forgiveness Seagtne ouch an intoontcnn of Wenbiagions boat. Taoy"wete contact as tea hreey i oe at | Of thove be bad attempted to Injare, ad expressing «| The consideration ol the Pro Rate Freight bill was re- men 2 ee said, and undo station house over night, and y being brought, bope that he had not injured them, and in answer tore- | sumed. ‘Washington Neither let us be slandered from our | before Justice ‘were fined two ‘each. questions that evening and tho next said Mr. I to strike out the enacting duty by false accusations against us, nor frightened from: telco was not injured, except aslight bruise on one clause, spoke at length against the bill. He referred to ft by menaces of deetruction to the government nor of —Last evening new coanterfe't ones on | gndaseratch on his little finger, which he received at | the withdrawal of bill as a case of dungeons to ourselves. Applause) Let us have faith | the Bank, Chemung, N. Y., made their appear- | the auction; thatj the doctors who examined him (three | When the infant was first produced it was declared to be has right makes might; oan that Lo aptamer ance. The storekeepers were soon on their guard by im number), discovered no signs of Injary—the neighbors perfect—not ap slteration ‘was to be mate P sy foa- dare our ., understand means telegraph force. arrests | ¥' auten: constantly, discovered none. ture; idenly been crushed "Nir" Lincoia them bowed and retired amid the loud and be ba yee ote Friday, the 26th of November, when they started for the | by ihe authors its being. Amother had taken spontaneously, O75 heen aefal power of Brook; wae rt Rg Oe ag er a ° Cc wagon in w! was to My wi ive their lungs. ‘ pra dah Ay yaa of the did he make any complaint white om the way except ofa etace al Unrssiemunnts ‘Mr. Robinson proceeded to ‘Three cheers were then proposed and given for Wm. H. ing grep with w his were conflacd, which he said | examice tho question of (lity of pro show. ‘Seward. Common Council last night « communication was received urt hie arms. When they arrived at the Asylum ho ing Chet i aes eee low- ‘The audience now began to clamor for more | from the Mayor, vetoing the resolution adopted on the poppe perme bye ie fy hd ing up possible for the shortest distance, the throngh and loud cries arose for Greeley, who was ‘mong | goth inst., authorizing the appointment of a ‘of | stairs in the institution, and c: alopg the on hia | freight tarift ‘amount to en actual roll —a the crowd on the platform. e Committee of | way to his apartments.” When he was bated, those bath- | Dill to violate the laws of trade—to enact mentfest wrong — Honict Gnamuxy, otf coming forward, said:—Mr. Chair- five to proceed to , with power to expend $500 to | ing him dwscovered nothing about him to altract their | to do injustice to rallroads—to sacrifice American to Brit- man and b—My eloquent Western friend, defray ex} His deems such an appropria- | attention or tocarse them to expect injary; neither did | ish enterprize—to drive away the trade and commerce of bas just addressed you, ia bute epecimen ofthe man which tion & waateful expenditure of the pul the physician who cxamined him oa reception. Re was | the State and iis great emporium. Worst of ail, it sa free institutions make. — (, nse.) Born in a slave | ‘Det the city and county are sia p crit bed, aud kept in this until wo ders before bill to volae the faith of the State and the constitation of ‘State and reared ns See ), he ia. @ proper ex- Oo Bevel ys it was | the UW Dower tolnsare thata slave twurrection sball+| auple of what labor may'be, how eiMct and boners aap | {ly undarsiand the wante of discovered thet be bad some diflcalty ects ngs, which | | Mr. MILLER a4 length aguian the Dil, de- ver cour on any American soll which is now free from may ® man from the hamblest ranks of so- | S76 $l the physician attributed to congestion of the I ‘The ‘Applanee ) John Brown's effort was peculiar. | cic:y and place him at lagt in connection with the highest their legislative difficulty increased, and on December 7 the of de- & slave insurrection. Ttwne en atiempt by white | (Cheers.) Let us never doubt that the contest in which | tat all wiee “ ceased were informed that he was in s critical condition ‘ to gst Up & revolt among slaves, ia whith the slaves | we are engaged, and in which on our side we present | ‘em. Furthermore, ~~ gad thet they 2 visit him. On or about tho 9th of ruse, tnt, Ti wanonsbsurd cat the | much spectaceg an are termed. by. the genie: | GS=AOM Cs fieon gendemen ft Daleat was suring from an Tajury wiles trectired roled for orders in Soe Spagopal Cuerch ball their ignorance, enough it | man opposite mi w Slee Tenens Mince ce, | ave ay comen ies | Sia en ernest ts so Dosen sedan ponte 13 te ov ory, tthe Phammer Prater! many in atthe | year, A tide e >, SUR OR & Pest maceseen, ship until the close of the present year. emperors. Am enthusiast Arica? we ore gure that the last wave will be higher than A Nsw it was found that he came to his death from fe — peop! ; . thus we from victory to victory, Common Coun effect inflicted on his chest, producing inflammation of Mis. Le Vert, of Mobile, bas translated the whole of ade 5 5 wed tet lagnr eor rea higage rn how vie at wee et eat, sight 10, Be that the | "The aternum was fond probes in two pieses— Guertioniere’s famous pamphlet “tLe Pape et le Congreat® t Bn s in litkte elee than ia bisown | last ¢hall be won. “Ai ‘When I heard | time bas arr! wi five ribs upon one side and t*o upon the other were frac- Gen. Forbes Bratton, of the Texan Senate, ia stated to Orsin’s Setpt oc Lovie Nepeh ‘and Jobn | our friend say what said 90 well about | te United States governmert tor an appropriation for a | tmred, and one or two a double fracture. The oflicors of be en route for Weshington, as bearer of 2 from tercpt at Harper's Ferry were, jp the: oso. | insurrections, 1 rejoiced to think that where | Post Office in the institution, from their inquiry, eames to the concla ‘The New Mr. at Lewiston, Me.—The Lewiston Adco- | Gov. Houston, relatfve to the Rio Grande Deettiies, isely the same. eagerness 0 owt om | our poticy , though there may be diffe- « sion that Torbell received thewpjories before being re- | cate says the new cotton mill at that place will be 634 feet « Delf Gr me land in the one cage, and on New Sagiand in tue } rences, there may be strikes, or temporary stiena- Srrcm rrom Mrti00 —The echooncr Virginia Antoinette | ceived into the Asyiom, an‘ 20 Wstified before the jars. long, 74 wide and four stories high; capacity 40,000 spin hep. reen arrived in Galveston, Texas, on ‘The jury, after beerivg all the testimony, and e« beeen the conflicting teetrmony of the attendants, tage’ medica) testimony, unanimously came to the conc! dies. It will give employment to 1,000 operatives. A new company, called the Androw: ‘Company, is t7 be ‘The students at the College at Columbia, 8. C, have organized to build it, with » capital Of $1,000,000, come out ip suits of grey kerseys, of home manufacture. 27, does Rot disprove the samences of the swo faons, nd man stanés in fear of an insurrection. (Loud } arrived at New Orleans on the 18th ingt. from Vera Cru; Pl mre you, i jon . f specie. The schooner Star arrived enme