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10 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1860—TRIPLE SHEET. NEWS FROM WASHINGTON, |“ which isan alleged vislation of the law. | decimon of the Convention, is false. Ho openly avows ower whe Should Congrees adopt this resolution it would apply | bis determination to support the nominee, n 7 i} <p the question of rlavery. The democratic party | Tha! bis morality might not be qnestione, he sald he | to be sentenced when he broke jail and escaped ‘tcared. thas Congress bad 10 right to _legalaie | ve a See ee Del OF SF one ros! a ems | locked up ai heacquarters to await an examination, ee or out . Presiden! oul aitribus pe Meee in” nar teter of wocepiance, hed said | (laughter,) He repeated that this question brivgs up the | FIR IN MENcER SriouT—Between ten and eleven ‘vet the péopleof the Territories bad the same rights as | *bole power of Congress to govern the Territories, by | ©’Clock last night, a fire broke oatin the sewing machine sh) people of the States, He believed ia all this, aad de- | which democrats will be required to stand when the ques- manufactory of Whitney & Lyon, op the third floor of nied that elther Congress or the inhabitants of the Torri- | iton of slavery js involved. The lemocratic catechism has | No. 185. AMcteer streets “The Lanes were prountiy: eatin (1ks Could legislate slavery into or out of thom, | becn often revired, and eo rapidly, that, people were not guitbed by the flremen. The fire c mmenced a Yecause he drew distinetion not usually | able to keep up with the changes, and now he wasre- | boxes of sewing machines, and at present its origin is drawa between slavery a8 an institution and es | quired 10 Bay that Congress has pienary power allonone | unknown. The Gamage to the stock will be about $1,600, 8 property; and in this coneisted the entire difference be- | Hie, Provided it is favor of the negro. This wasnotas | fully insfred. ‘The second floor is oocuplea by POM & tween gentlemen calling themeeives democrats, and claiw- | yet published as the Jast authoritative exposition of the | Shepard, manufacturers of silver ware. Loss about $100. ipg to stand upon the same platform. He admitted to the | democratic Lod beg it would bave enoorsers more re- | The basement and Part Of the first floor are occupied by follert extent that the people of the Territories had tue | srectable than the Helper book, Incest, aduitery and | George H. Kitchen, manufacturer of gas fixtures, stock wame right as the people of a Siate, 10 legislate slavery | polygamy are kindred offences. If punishment may be | slightly damaged by waicr. The building is damaged into a Territory or out of it- But what mtd het the pee. a gl to pd ips eR a eee eee mal about $60; insured. ml 7 te legislate slavery into a State | the law may plied te whites, oka, Dmp i . rcutor it. Hecuppaned no gentleman upon tho floor | The coustivtion recognizes slavery uo more than t docs | 47 Tir Hoerrrat.—Jobn Keevan, on® of ibe sailors would aégert such a proposition. If he would, then | husband and wife. Stabbed at No. 81 West strect, on Friday evening last, a State Legislature could destroy property. If Mr. Lawak, (dem.) of Miss., inquired whether the gen- | by the deppae of asaloon, died last evening at the New they could destroy property in slaves, it followed | tleman maintained and asserted the power of Congress to | York Hospital. He was equally to Mr. Bowman, who employs Rives todo the | Be may be; reserving to himself the same right exercised 4 Y 5 Jast Presidential election by Southern men a} objecting Action of the House Committee on the | S«sste work. Bat the law referred to Prohibits the | avy portion of ihe platform he may not acqulesoe in. a Printer of either house from selling out the entire busi- the last election many Southern States protested against ent’s Protest Message, nege, Another resolution provides for Jetti the Pacific Railroad plank of the platform, but su Presiden 4 eG P ing the printing | the nominee otwithatanding. arecueely such will be THE HARLEM RIVER AND HELLGATE IMPROVEMENTS. etn . 2isre Dovg'as’ course, and peculauions to the oon: ‘ ry are mere was! ; id Debate on the Slavery Question | me viis ottorea in the House by Mr. Haskin, providing a ee in the Senate. for widening and deepening the channe! of Harlem river, regularly organized democratis party to which he has always belonged, and to aid in building up and sustaining which he has devoted his whole brilliant public career, from tke time when, as the eloquent champion of General Jackeon, he received the thanks of that itustrious man, down to the present moment, when he is engaged as Soyeeniy and as couregeously in battling for principles which wil! enable the democracy of the country to maintain tueir position a8 @ ational party, instead of, by the intro- ducticn of sectional doctrines and personal animosities, nomination from no other party or get of men than the at an expense of two hundred thousand dollars, and for Br taal removing rocks in Helljate, appropriating itty thousand f ressi dollars therefor, have been examined by Mr. Elio, of Debate in the House on the Suppression of Massachusetts, in the Committee on Commerce, and ho Polygamy in Utah. bas reported them back to the committee favorably, and been ordered to report them to the House. “ THR PACIFIC RAILROAD, making it a mere geographical party, defeated, despised, | they ci the to land, He then illustrated | punish slavery and crime in the Territories? ‘peteamethiemenlaaieitt a a Whe Pacific Railroad and Telegraph | me cciect committee on the Pacife Raiiroad mot thig | 04 #000 10 bo obliterated. If, On HC contrary! ik non’ | Ieee eee ee Dlomiy etd of San Jucioio, | PME Eemucon fester be ee Eres auticalton 6 = ? ‘acific Railroad met this | ceded that this territorial question is @ jadicisland nota | ren w ng fp their hands had established a govern- | gentlemen may bave, for fear they will not see them, ommerce Keeps the Peace, Sch J ith arms in 6: . jemes, morning. Messre. Smith, Taylor, Hamilton and Stout | legislative Subject; if the democracy of’ 1860 are content | ment, and declared that every land title within the limits | Whoever votes for the bill does so with the distinct under- | THE RELATIONS BETWREN ENGLAND, FRANGE ARD 2 ke. &e &o. were absent. Mr. Phelps, of Missouri, offered the follow- | ‘© fight the battle upon the principles of 1856, the prospect | of the republic of Texes should be abrogated, who could | standing, that Congress has power to punish adultery and UNITED STATES COMPARED. 4 2 5 will be far different. The democracy of the North can suoceesfully resist Seward and his irrepressible conflict. Abolitionism in all its phages will be vanquished, The contest now ig to defeat the odious doctrine of Seward and He)per, and it is, therefore, no time for the South to trifle with ite eafety and its interests, by etriking down the de- mocracy of North, who alone can’ stem the flood. Do glas may be defeated, but with him closes the hopes of the democracy in the North. They will contiaue to struggle, but they will lose both the Senate and the House, anc the “ irrepressible conflict’ will triumph. ing reeolution, as a substiiute to other resolutions which have been discuseed :— @ur Special Washington Despatch, Regolved, That the eastern terminus of the road shall Wasuuxarox, April 2,1860 | Peon the western Boundary of oue of the States being ‘THR REPORTED DEFALCATION IN THE NEW YORK POST OFFICE, jatione ce Repeat Fl ay be on the same Tiearn upon inquiry at the Pos: Ofice Department that | yr, Davie, of Maryland, eubmitted wing . there is not 2 word of truth in the alleged defalcation in 4 cai honest oetiaarideasta tion, in the form of a suggestion, not subjest to action: the New York Post Office. Un the contrary, the accounts Reeolved, That the committee recommend that the rail- ‘of that office have all been promptly closed up tothe end | way shall be constructed on a line beginning on the @f the quarter ending 3ist December, and the weekly | Wertern chore of the Missouri river, op) Bt. Joseph, devon forte arer jt clove have bon larger tna | 2 Metal ad reing thence’ Ueogh tbe Suis Pua ‘aval. By law the Postmaster is obliged to deposit the | be found by instrumental survey to-be the cheapest and reecipts of his office weekly with the Sub-Treagurer, and best cn which to congtruct and maintain th» road. this has always been done by Mr. Fowler, whose admi The committee agreed that at its next session all pend- nistration of the office has been entirely satisfactory to tho | !°& Propositions shall be voted upon without discuesion, department. and adjourned to meet again to morrow evening, the 3d ‘THE PRESIDENT’S PROTEST MESSAGE. ingt., at seven o'clock. ‘The House Judiciary Committee met this morning, and Mr. Hindman, of Arkansas, offered a bill for a branch had under consideration the President's protest message. | road from Fort Smith, in Arkaneas,t> tap the supposed After a protracted discussion upon it, the majority of the | central road at Pike’s Peak. Evforts are making to have Committe authorized the chairman to prepare a report | the committee include in their report the Southern road, ‘agninst the views and doctrines laid down inthe message. | by way of El Paso and San Diego, notwithstanding the ‘The committee allowed Mr. Hickman, the chairman, a | previous decisive action of the committee against it. week, if necessary, to prepare his report, when it will bo |. SUPPRESSION OF THE COOLIE TRADE. eobmitted to them for their approbation. Messrs. Hous- Mr. Eliot, of Massachusetts, has been instructed by the ton and Miles Taylor were allowed to make a minority re- | Committee on Commerce to report a bill prohibiting the port, sus!aining the positions assumed by the President. Chinese coolie trade by American citizens in American THR PACIFIC TELEGRAPH. veeeels. The bill is accompanied by a report. The sub- ‘The Hovse Post (Office Committee had another session | stance of the bill is ss follows:— %o-day on the Pacific Telegraph bill. The sub-committee Section one provides that no citizen of the United made their report, amending the Senate bill in several | States or resident shall, as master, factor, owner or other- particulars, reducing the through messages from four to | wiee, build, fit, equip, load or Prepare any ship or vessel ‘Three collars, and cutting down the bonus from fifty to } for the purpose of procuring from China or elsewhere the Serty thousand dollars per annum. If the price is re- | inhabitants or subjects of Chins known as coolies, to be @ueed, a section will be added throwing it open to compe- | transported to any foreign country to be disposed of ‘Mition after thirty days. Without coming to any conclu- | against their will for any term of years as servants or sion the whole subject was postponed until Wednesday | apprentices, to be held to labor or service, on penalty of next, when definitive action will be taken. the forfeiture of the vessel, apparel, &o. PROTRCTION AGAINST INDIAN OUTRAGES. Section two provides penalties for 80 building, &c., or ma- Senators Lane and Gwin, and Mr. Craig, of Missouri, nufacturipg, as owner, master, factor, agent or otherwise; ealled this morning, with Mr. Dodge, the Indian Agent for | and also provides penalties for 80 building, &c., or navi- Carson Valley, upon the Secretary of War for military | gatwmg, as owner, master, factor, agent or otherwise, any Protection against Indians on the emigrant route to Cali- | veesel belonging in whole or in Part to citizens of the have eaid no? There was@ moral wrong in this, aad | may extend the power to the interdiction of slavery by In the debate on the commercial treaty in the House of a there: Weal eetaoral ‘arena is destroying unfriendly degislation ; but he would vote for the bill be- | Loreson the 15th March, Lord Taunton, in the course of Property in men, for as often as it was terated and | cause he believed Congress would always have too much | his remarks, said:—Their lordships were aware that fron: reiterated tbat man could not hold property in man, yet | good senee to do it. (Laughter.) me to time there bad arisen very difficult and delicata the firet property that man ever he!d was property in Mr. Sixcieton, (dem.) of Miss., aeked whether the | questions between this country and the United States, man. The only government ever formed by God himself | gentleman, by voting for this bill, voted for the principle | which, if not conducted with temper, discretion and mo- catabhished that right ; and when the Israelites, non-slave- | that Congress bas the right to abolish slavery in the Ter- | deration on both sides, might bave involved both countries holiers, were going from Egypt to the Promised Land, | ritories? in all the calamities of war, The commercial relations hey were told not only to have slaves but'to establish Mr, Exmermor repeated that he would vote for the bill | between them, however, were so vast and so important the slave trade. Therefore those who denounced the | in order to scour this nauseating offense, and becanse he | that he was tatisfied they had a great | pales. in God thst made them, and bad breathed the breath | thought Congress could prohibit it in Utah. It extends its | preventing the crimes and miseries of an unnecessary of life into their nostrils and by whose will they | provisions to blacks as well as whites, As to the opera- | contest. (Hear.) This copsideration was an indication =: In every political community, said he, | tion on slavery, the only guarantee he had was the good | how desirable it was that they should, if Foete, Maerere fe should THIRTY-SIXTH CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION. are two powers constantly at work, There w the | sense, liberality and fair cealing of Congress. their commercial relations with France. (Hear. ) power, the constitution making, or the organic Mr. Pryor remarked that the gentleman from | now briefly call the attention of their lordships to the cir- ing power. Then there is the executing, or law | Tennessee said be regarded every one voting for | cumstances under which this treaty was made. Ever since making power. In every political community the | this bill as voting for the right of Congress to abolish sla- | a free trade policy had been adopted and acted upon by creating, or constitution making, power estab- | very in the Territories. That might be and was true as | this country they found it necessary to alter their iebes what is or what is not property, | to the gentleman, butho (Mr.Pryor) repudiated that view | with regard to commercial treaties. They found it either directly or indirectly, or by covenants or silence. | the question. He observed a distinction between slavery | was no longer of any use to go cap in hand to the ‘ft it fails to do that it fails of the high purposes | and polygamy under the copstitution. different countries of the world for the purpose of franz- or which it was organized. Then I deny that KRIDGE—I know you do; you have-said so. I | ing commercial treaties on the principle of equivalents. he executing or law making power can decide | was only speaking for myself. The fact was, tbat other countries imagined they had a’ what is property or not; and, therefore, 1 deny Mr. pe My question is, whether Congress has pow- | distinct and separate interest of their own in making pro- that a State Legislature can legislate slavery into s Terri- | er to declare and punish slavery as a felony in the Terri- | poeals of thiskind, and therefore the more we urged tory or out of \t. But a State Legwslature can legislate upon | tories, them to this policy the less they were disposed to the subject of slaves. It must legislate on that subject. It Mr. ErnxrpGe—I admit the power of Congress to legis- | rocate. In addition to this, the more wy. they carried must paes laws for it protection as for every other species | late over black as well as white persons, and while this | out the principle of free trade, the less equivalen's re- of property. Drawing a distinotion, therefore, between | bill does not embrace black persons, Congress may do so. | mained for them to offer. Whilst still desirous of a slaves and slavery, I say the democratic party never has | The gentleman from North Carolina, by offering an | moting our commercial intercourse with France, we been committed to the e that the inhabitants of a | amendment, cought to ie the question. in general abandoned the idea’ of passing a tariff treaty Territory, because they cannot legislate slavery into a | Mr. Brancu, (dem.) of N.C., assured the gentleman | with that county. But that which was most Territory or out of it, cannot legielate upon the subject of | he did not wantto dodge. Polygamy might contimue to | by them occurred—an overture from the French slavery.: a State Legislature cannot legis. | exist before he would vote for the first section of the bill | ment itself for the framing of such a treaty. (ta F fate slavery into a State or out of it, then ‘Mr. Eraxrice replied, that the gentleman was willing | hear.) That altered the whole aspect of thecase. Whilst it follows, it seems to me, as a matter | to face the Feeponeibtity by voting ‘against tho bill, but at | fuliy concurring in tho opinion expressed by the noble ear! ofcourse that a Territorial Legislature cannot do it, and | the same time afforded by his amendment a narrow plank | below the gungway (Earl Grey,) that the bad long hence the equatter sovereignty doctrine vanishes like thin | by which his friends might eacape from the burning | paesed in this country for acting on the of ace air, Butjow is it as to Con; Has Congress any | wreck. valents, yet he could not but think that wi constitution making power—any organic law making fAYLOR opposed the bill. It would be a dead letter ie French government expressed a willingness to relax power—any creating power? Where, I ask, is the ground | on the statute book. Hoe advocated Mr. Branch’s amend- | their probibitory ag Ere ram, Soares for iY If Congress, then, cannot make constitutions, or. | ment, which would apply a remedy tor the evil which all | ment of this countr; we been highly culpable if ganize governments, or declare what is property or what | Seem desirous shall be exti |. He argued thatthe | they neglected so favorable an occasion of accomplishing 38 not, where is ite power to legislateslavery, as @ politi | constitution is one of Itmited powers, and gave no au- | an object they had ao long at heart. —. hear.) Having cal ingtitution, into a Territ ‘or out of it? in tastrating to pass a measure like that under consideration. ftated the circumstances in which treac:y originated, this point Mr. Wigfall reterred to the legislative power of A motion having been made to adjourn, he would now call the attention of their lordsbips te the Congrees over the District of Columbia. I am told, said Mr. Suenmax, (rep.) of Obio, said they should remain | main provisions which it contained. They were simple he, that we are committed to the non-intervention doc. | and continue the debate. and not numerous. The concessions on the part of Eng- trine. Igo for non-intervention with slavery, but I donot Mr. Laman was prépared ¢o meet the question in a | Iand—in calling them concessions hq was using the intend to assert that Congress could not, should not, or is | spirit of and not of party. The bill ia effect | phraseology ofa bygone time, because there was not a not, bound to pasa laws for the protection of every species of | declared that an entire community is guilty of felony. | siogle one of them which was not for their ewa benefit, property ; and what certain geatlemen call non-inter- | Owing to the great importance of the subject, K should re- | and which sooner or later they would have carried out in vention, J call intervention. For instance, we have pro- | ceive # calm and not a hurried consideration. their own interest—involved @ loas of revenue to tho rty in horees, mules and hogs in the District of Colum- Mr. Nuison, (8. opp.) of Tenn., argued that the bill was | amount of £1,190,000. The present condition of tne French in. If the federal government were, by its legislation, | Of great magnitude and should ‘be carefally considered. | tariff was highly protective and prohibitory. Our cot- either hostile or uutriendly, to pass such a code of laws, | After a liberal amount of discussion, he would move the | tons, woollens, hardware, poitery, and linens were either or refuge to pass such @ code of Jaws for the government | previous question, say late to-morrow afternoon. absolutely prohibited, or such high duties leviea om them te. Wasincron, April 2, 1800. ‘THR INDMAN APPROPRIATION RIL. Mr. Honrer, (dem.) of Va.,from the Finance Gommit- tee, reported back the Indian Appropriation bill amend- mente, and gaye notice that he would call it up to-morrow. PRIVATE LAND CLAIMS. On motion of Mr. Brnsamiy, the bill for the final adjust ment of private land claime in Florida, Louisiana, Arkan- fas and Missouri was taken up. Mr. Bensamn, (dem.) of La., stated that the object of the bill was to prevent the presentation to Congress, one at a time, of these private land claims. The Dill was paseed. BOUNTY LAND WARRANTS. ‘The bill to authorize the location of certain warrants for bounty lands heretofore issued, on motion of Mr. Hamlin, was called up and passed. ‘THE BLAVERY QURSTION—-SPEECH OF MM SAUIAHURY, Mr Davis’ Territorial resoiutions were called up. Mr. Sautenvry, (dem.) of Del., said the resolutions were the occasion of his speaking on the state of the Union and discussing its integrity ; whether it is imperiled, and if 0, who is responsibie, and what remedies there were? He regarded the Federal Union as the palladium of our liberty, and would, therefore, oppose the political parties which threatened’ it. Some Gibbon would yet write the fall of the Union uplees we timely pause and wigely act. It was ecarce eighty years ago since the Revo- lution was fought by those fiom the North, the South and the West, who achieved a common liberty for themselves and their posterity. After that came the formation of the Federal Union, snd there were conflicts then which were not irrepressible. Our fatbers differed widely, but did not assume a moral government over the world. They knew no capital and labor States, now so called by political aspirantay nor did they | of this dietrict, as to destroy all title tu horses, mules and ‘The House refused to adjourn. asto have the effect of prohibition. Now it was stipulated Jornia. The Secretary consented to give a small military | United States, or represented or enrolled in the United | discuss the slavery question; but they placed a clause in | hogs, would any man dare deny that it would be inter- Mr. Taytor resumed and concluded his remarks. on the French side that the duties on our manafactared. Sores on the Humboldt Gravelly Ford, which will be a | States, knowing or intending that the said ship shall be | tHe conslitution relative to the escape of fugitives from | vention of the most odious kina? All absence of laws to | The House then adjourned. articles ahowid Bot exened 20 por con:, and slliteately ; ‘orn O1 i P st Indian incursions along that en. | employed in such trade. The penalties are fine and im protect property is intervention against property. If, should be recuced to 25 per cent. But consideradie latitude and positive recognition of rights of property in slaves. then, we cannot destroy the title to lands what autho’ was allowed for arranging the scalo within that limit,end the tire section of country. prioument. It recognized the constitutional right of one man to have | rity is there to the laws for ihe recovery | unas oat the ithe ee iy wisction | French government promised to aot in. the moet leet MILITARY MOVEMENTS. Eection three provides penalties for taking on board or | Prorerty, ip another, man, Yop h gh reenagieeot vl hear ep of Columbia? (We ask pid a si pt natal ay manner, Ho confessed thet areas soa wrould depend on be ie e 6 fe Ol yu ritin w! In obedience to the order of the Secretary of War, | tausporting coolies. peéented from the earliest times to the pretent, and clted | feoting ee ee ae oe as Deena Cais footing with other species of . We ask ‘The black republicans, béing largely in the ascendency | conceived, and he beliéved that it would be carried out that, and nothing ore.” ‘Then, si, the pola which Tr0so_| inthe State Legalise thee inc adecatags ot eho | 32. berdi and jut api but, Indopondcauy af teas to digcuss was, the Senator from Now Jersey was mista- a was very possible to carry on an extensive and advanta- ken in quoting Jefferson as authority for any such legiela- | POWer to the utmost extent, for the purpose of saddling | geous trade with a country levying high duties on our tion as he now desires, Until he shows that this govern- | our already over taxed and robbed community with more roenypin peo articles. ee ee er Bo ment can do indirectly ba iy cannot do ee, he | and bolder schemes of plunder, avowedly, and openly de- | Busts or Reema the tariff of ‘aoncea — Now, Sir, the Senator from Missiesipp! (Mr. Rrown) com- | Clred by the leaders of that party for the purpose of | ranged between 20 and 30 per cent. It might, perbape, plains somewhat of inconsistency on the part of some of | raising a corruption fund to be used this year for the | be urged that the circumstances of the United States and te, 1 not eustaining the resolutions he introduced. And | election of Wm. H. ‘Seward to the Presidency. of France wore not the same, that whilst the United States upon that a few words, and I will bave finished. I said, ee were only to # certain extent a in the opeving of my remarks, that I regretted these mat- ‘We are told on good authority that he, who is very cor- France was a manufacturing country tc a very ters had been brought up for discussion atall, If action | rectly styled “The Warwick” of his time, has openly xe than of os pene a anata pal enon Tnuredooed “bit and havo’ discern ‘a DATE | avowed this to be the object which is to control the Lo- | Hives arts were auumatectond sotiien coats at, ite merits as 8 question. I regret | sislature in these various schemes, which are intended to | cles of raw produce. There was, thero/ore, a very oon- that the Senator is not present. I would ask himif the | disfranchise, rob and plunder our citizens, Let us briefly | Siderablo similarity in the trade betwoen ‘this country Genera! Scott has ordered the superintendent of the gene- | Section four excludes from the operation of the act Fal reeruiting service at Fort Columbus and Newport | Voluntary emigration, but provides for Consular certifi- ‘barracks to organize four companies of recruits, two at | cates to be given for emigrants. ‘each depot, of seventy men each, or as near that number | Section five extends the acts of February, 1847, and ‘ee possible, for troops serving in Oregon; or, in case of | March, 1849, concerning carriage of passengers in mer- @elelevey of recruits at cither depot, to organize two | Chant vessels, to any passenger vessels from one foreign ‘Companies, and deficiency may be supplied from the de. | Port to another foreign port. ‘pot having asurplus. The recruits will be detailed to Section six authorises the President to order American Jefferson barracks on the 20th of April, and will move on | Vefscls to be cxamined, upon cause of suspicion, by the ‘the Ist of May following from St. Louis, by the Missouri | Ships of the United States, and on proof of violation of the Fiver, to Fort Benton, and thence to Fort Dallas by Lieut. | !#w, to be carried into port for adjudication. ‘Mullin’s route. They are to be armed and equipped as Section seven provides that the act shall take effect the first Fugitive Slave Jaw of 1793 as recognizing proper- ty ip slaves, and said he believed if ever there was'a blot and blur on the history of the country, it was the Missouri Compromise. He charged the agitation of tho slavery question on the enemies of the democratic party hereto- fore and now. After condemning the hellish deed of Old Brown, he referréd to the political events of the day by an inquiry if the Union was imperiled. He believed that one man more than all others bad brought the Union to the very verge of destruction by his teachings and advice. That man, now an aspirant to the highest office of the land, was a teacher of the views of the republican tw Alor the sams who recently delivered a speech in the Senate. The same man was once Gover- nor of New York, and refused to return to Virginia three men who escaped, (ia Sy with the crime of stealing carried all the siaves of Vir- Infantry, under the command of Colonel Robert Bucha- | "pon the day of its passage. slaves. If Jobn Brown ‘want of protection of in Kansas is the only evilthe | review some of the most important of these measures, and | *@% the United States and between this country and inia to New York, Mr. Seward would be # fortunate go- | country is suffering from? does he insist upon a vote ‘about ‘these honest: 4 France. ‘man, assisted by Captains Landrum and Floyd Jones and THE ENGLISH AT VERA CRUZ. Scenrfochim Inout apevent, tis quoter, Me oer. ‘pon Lis resolutions in regard to Kansas, ana fail to tatro. | £9 SoU Mae a rn erremag oe pri {From the London Post, March 16.} ‘“Weoutenants Livingston and Kantz. It appears by a statement of the Picayune’s Vera Cruz | ard’s Cleveland epeech, showing tbat he was in favor of | duce a resolution upon ® question as delicate and involv- | used for the election of Win. H. To the truly wise and statesmaniike remarks of Lord By order of the War Department, Major Morris, com- | correspondent of March 21, that Captain Aldbam wrote to manding at Fort Ridgely, will detail one of the companies | Miramon protesting very strongly against wanton acd ‘of artillery under his command to be stationed tempora- | inhuman destruction of English property and innocent ‘Mihy at Yellow Medicine, to protect the friendly Indians on | life. abolishing slevery in the States and violating the Fugitive Slave law. He there suid that “slavery must be abolished, and youandI must doit.’ He also quoted from his letter to the colored citizens of Albany, that they hada right to complain of the Union, as it did not give them 4 Taunton, who, in moving the addr2ss on the had No 1—Declaring that in future the Common Coun- te i of the South directiy at homet Here in this District of | on of our city ahall have no control, directly or otherwise, | called attention to the effects of ur commercial flee: Columbia there is theact of 1860, which declares that any | Over any horse railroads to be laid in our sand, | Courge with the United States in keeping the be- man whe oft his aleve for sale—O8, m0; Wipes Bok ro farther, declaring that all such power shall be with os? pecan ander pi gg a hey vi e hanged, or pul tentiar (fy title country cousins—' protectionists will be rendered. o ‘who compose the black republican | Qommons, that the Fr xy equal rights with others. When the republicans assem- | ry, or fined or imprisoned, but it ices that 5 ench see Daversa a) fost gOS ageinat tee “WEA “Taken, who | > elena eclareigptra inh ble around the council boerd at Chicago and oall the roll | etic £204, 0, imprisoned, but tt pr ‘abolished, and the | $6froq.7° ‘nt? t 1@ sald, will yield the snug sum of | by the mensuro the bitter © eK = are committing fearful depredations upon the peaceable tutional Union Committee to-night decided there ara na anewers (rom the Statics where free.c78e- there: ‘tn thie federat | %250,000. drawing @ parallel between the position of our own pro- that the Chair: reeset bot Weshto 6 1ere. 1 pegro goes ‘any power Bn No. 2—Relative to the West Washington market | tectioniets in 1846 and those of France at the $ e ‘man should conyene the ent-~ Cae ee ae anninewon, Sumter and Marion, and’ |"governinent to free @ im the District of Oolum- | crounds. Jas. B. Taylor & Co. gre confident of realizing hi it that Lor bade why Ad CO a a Commister vt mucu uunureu; emwtansously with thes pesicrenti oe eae ov a eae om Ya it offered for sate? “Ir So, has it mot the same | from this bill the small “douceur” from back rents, &°4 jailer finn rd hard Fer ste’ LaAtitens So wie Cerecers Tercstigating Committee met this morn- | Convention to be held at Baltimore, May 9, to ratify | [hat they baa’ a ‘risht to improm “ot = | once ‘er Mo otera tt “for Salet “bratt ing | thesumof $600,000, one half of which, itis agreed botwoon | tnon ‘teihare of tbe ectate oe Tae aerate SO mug, but transacted no business. Messre. Butterworth | nominations and take steps to further the organisation for | of these Fathers of the country, perhaps the pa- | amucetion” ‘Why, then, bring in this eternal Kansas tees a ape shail be devided pro rata | more than name, so those of France, with the experience and Schell are set down for examination to-morrow. | Prosecuting the canvass. tient sone of there Falhers wil eubmit to the yoke. The | <uestion, and leave the ‘nearer home untouched? | "ii" “fhe Forties,” and the other half goes to the election Of the tame benefits, are likely 2 exhibit the aame con- SER CnEE Copeenaye oemaminns WAL axons Diegr- hc. Our Washington Corr mdi ness, and the party was bound to nothing, and its Fe ch edge rahe cae be fore hee meine Bri No. 3—Oontrming Geo. Law's Ninth Avenue Rail- Mer} Gray, following the example of the opposition i Penditures connected with the secret service fund, and 8 a bie paris actions were only determined by exigencies. In conclu- Yeagon 11am myveif Unwilling to introduce @ bill or vote Pad cheery grant was'in our ore Se ey yee the House of Commons, chose to connect the Commercial all a8 witnerses, among others, Mr. Appleton, Agsistant ‘ ASHINGTON, April 2, 1860. sion he gaid Delaware was the first to aa the constitu- for s bill estabi slavery in Kansas, or a slave code pal ences aoe the ve egy eons Treaty with the question of Savoy,and declared that he Becretary of State; Mr. Wendell, anda member of Con. | 76 Meeting of the National Democratic Committee—The } tion, and will be the last to abandon it, and advocated the J in Kanens. In the first place, it could ‘not pass, as a bill ented barmony of the democratic as tending to destroy the evils which threatened the Union. SPRECH OF MR. TEN EYCK. Mr. Ten Eycr, (rep.) of N. J., said New Jersey always had been true to the Union’ and constitution as under- ‘would not incur the responsibility of joining in an address to repeal the act of 1850 could not pass; and in'the next | °ity charter and citizens—a black republican lature | to the crown, and thus give by implications nis spproval place, it could not be enforced. You could not get jury bere egg Oak George being good for the | to a measure concluded under such 4 Who would rather perjare themselves than enforce auch | ""STT'No. ¢.--Seventh Avenue Rallroad bill. Among the | 80°, Butone voice, he said, was heard on thle sub enact. - And I am not willing just now toaid a party in the Ject in France, nay, throughout all Europe, and that voice Coming contest, the success of which involves the de, | COrporators we find the names of Jno. 8. Hunt, Live spoke in terms of’ severe reproof and bitter scorn re- grees from New York city. Tho secret service fund, Coneanton Will Mect in Charleston—Senator Douglas— coming directly from the Treasury of the United States | 7*¢ Platform, dc. for diplomatic rervice, is subject of investigation, if thero It is generally understood that the committee bl ts here on the 6th will not take the responsibility Oak's private tecretary, and director in several of his charge 3m good reason to suspect that it has been used to corrupt | ™**' stood by thelr framers and the stateemen of that day. The | \truction of the Union. I am willing, therefore, to , 2 z the presen! attitude of Kagland. ‘The bo Sha log athe of (he country. | Changing the place of meeting of the Democratic Conven: J question was not now slavery in the States, but its ex- |: into. tho next Presidential ‘contest ‘fighting ’ the and olter lasttations Masur een his Private bank, | often brought against us, wat we were but a netion ef Wie dileninenen ess deicobsins: it la! tion from Charleston. They do not, however, doubt their | 'e”sion into territory now free. Noone pretended, ex- | tiack republican party as I find them—to fight them with 5 y y in | shopkeepers, might now be heard in every court cept a few enemies of the constitution, that Congress had apy right to abclieh slavery in the States in any way, put the question was as to whether in the broad domain, the common property of the Union, it should supplant free Jabor, enterprize and industry in the marts of commerce, colleges, schools, and the ory harvests. The different syatems of labor, slave and tree, could exist in different sections of the country, ‘but could not in the game field and workshop. ‘The question was the introduction of slavery into territory where men are now free as the wild deer bounding over the and the office, and others—value of it, $500,000—t0 bi . Along bandied spoon’ Tam wiling 0 pet inv porer tke | “iided equally with Live Oak andthe fand, “|| Yaw eas beviatans cal thet her bette teases Culp Waity “hb sare mava-the UME we deen en pr No. 5—Tenth Avenue Railroad, in which are | and her moral influence; that ake was no longer the Le Ag de at hy Thaye been o>, | fOUlid the names of Truman Smith, who bails from Con- | fant yoaraime ge oar ener ae no longer the vigi- ed to these new questions, started sts most waforte, | necticet; Bloomfield Usher, hailing from St. Lawrence | nt guardian and sone, amiaien wad goeaiaaad peal bate timo, For theee reasons I differ with my frien’ from at fama foruhen we Soho = OM, | thing to the inordinate lust of gain iq i i . Pee ee Er Brown), of %0 pis resolutions, and vote | broiled oysters, shad, &., and leo blacked thelr boots lepers epg oe ame reort te Org ipl. (air. Davis), if Gay come ap anda cote tn: beer fh incrpeeliel phd ve) rane af | This country lato. hostilities: with Fraive, has nok conte. manded upon them. In my judgment, it is better to let res eae ath the) daicoee, oii the ig bees Hob Te. | 2cended to inform us what course, short of actual hostili- ‘The House to-day went into Committee of the Whole on | POWer to do £0, but consider it inexpedient, in view of Me State of the Union and debated the subject of poly. | ‘Be arrangements already concluded, and in the absence gamy in Utah. Mr. Eiheridge, of Tennessee, produced of any general expression of opinion in favor of the the greatest sensation on the subject, by the strong ar- change from the Southern delegates. The meeting on the gament he made, that if Congress has the power | 5t will therefore be unimportant, to Imterfero with the social institutions of the | | Whilst the prominent position of Judge Douglas before white man in the territory of the United States it has the Convention naturally singles him out as the object of equal power to interfere with the institution of black attack on the part of the friends of ali the other less con the whole matter pass, and let the ‘leston Convention tes, he would @. Commercial intercourse with prairie. He regarded slavery ag an evil. Now Jemge: lect. d without Sislature intends to take from our pockets on the plea | France, as with all other countries, is a thing sbsolutel men, unless a nigger is better than = white man. deege areal ci ree a scre gent she violence ot J sbolithed it early, and then hoped others would; Dut De- | Ihe vince resusiecena tare soe mtcorm, and defeat {hat we are incapable of controlling our own afairs:— | goog in itself, wholly irrespective’ of the principles Or Mr. Hooper, delegate from Utah, was before the House | these assaults simply prove his strength. The expression | cause they did not, it was no reason he ehould come years time to rectify all past differences.’ It is not,there- | Bil! No. B worth, say... 250, Policy of the rulers by whom those countries may be Committee on Territories to-day, and made an interesting | °f Pinion against Donglas, on the part of the ultra | here and villify and traduce members of the latter State’. | fore, because I sympathize with the equatier sovereigaiy Ra! cae! 2 joverzed. ‘The annexation of Savoy is agreat misfortune, . Southern members of Congress, is lees important, | Slavery would have been abolished in many placesif taer> | doctrine, but because I deal with things » that, oat eae 3 m the suspicion and distrust which it must necessarily: wtatement explanatory of the geography of that Territory, » ; | bad not been unwarrantable interference with it. He } 1 pursue this course; and, if the Senator ‘Mississippi er pve . create in all the established governments of Earope. Our ‘and the character and social relations of its people, He | “DC it 18 remembered that it is the practice of proceeded to speak of the Fugitive Slave law, and said | can allow the statute of 1850 to remain on the statate 5 : government would have been wanting in its duty bad it tppealed to the committee not to interfere with the gov. | "° Southern States not to elect members of Congress sift had bee ee te pesthirlcti patein ee book, I think he can Jet Kansas alone for at least a few In round numbers, say ..,. 32,000,000 ce Sadcarored to prevent this misfortune frem erament or poople of Utah, but to take their hands of | “Cl¢sates. The dictation of members, therefore, 18 no, 1 heano doubt of is constivutionality. “in one wureporten apr) : One balf of which will go directly into the pockets of ‘the | Sith the four quarters of toe gibh, wun slasen cree 7 calculated to have any weight with the delegates who re s "4 2 case Chief Justice Hornblower had ed a and ket them live in peace. slave because of a defect in the evidence, and had strikers, parasites and othere, who live on the shriekers, | rorm, with rulers of every ‘character, with settled and gard themselves ag occupying an independent position, and the balance is to be held in reserve as a sacred fund unsettled, with autocratic and democratic States, N UNION. House of Representatives. for distributing religious tracts, &c., on ‘The Higher Law,” p 7 THE ADMISSION OF KANSAS INTO THE UNION. the ri th expreesed an opinion of its _ unconsti a as with countries of which anarchy seems the normal condi- ‘The admiesion of Kansas into the Union is specially as. | °"¢ ¥ ame grader varies “4 i e sitting mem- 1 but it had not obtained with them. His people were in ‘Wasenxcros, April 2, 1860. he by naginer ney Conflict,” &o., &¢., including a full history tion, swith empires ira Gabi ‘Gre "0 soomer made - 1 it with ‘tie tn ond bers for re-election to Congress. The delegates who have § favor of executing the Fugitive Slave law, and he cited « JUDICIARY AFFAIRS. of the secret correspondence between John Brown aud | they'are perfidiously broken; to maintain that with France, erga we Scene ert ie er, H | visited this city do not partake of the bitter hostility || case where a representative of the State (Mr. Stratton) rs other leaders of the black republican party. Are the citi- " al e i Mr. Hicxman, (A. L. dem.) of Pa., from the Committee on | and with France alone,’ our commercial relations shall ‘the debate continued over from today on Utah does not | 0 f Douglas which the other Southern members ex | ®¢Vocated it, and sent three slaves back te bondage, in & > ) ’ zens of the commercial metropolis of the Western hemi. furnish the oocasion for expreesing moral censui = erowd it ont. : cage before the court; yet he was sent to Congress by s | the Judiciary, reported a bill to extend the right of appeal ibaa anes ea to nse ol this ote Tale of | litical distrust, thie is, indeed the most extravagant iden ‘(THE HOMESTRAD BILL. hibit On the contrary, nearly ail of them express tho | very large republican vote. He contended that the - from decisions of Circuit Courts to the Supreme Court of | these Sl _ wu = uke leat 4 ef which the whole realm of paradox can furnish forth. It ‘Te Homestead bill is in order in the Senate to mor- | conviction that if Dongias’ friends aro true to bim the J ciples ot the republican party were identited with those 1 19 Tnited States. Manhatten Island? Wethink not. Giuzous of New Yorn, | 128 Rk Fg hii rae ep My Soap bed 5 ? » | flatter count vow, and an effort will be made to let it come up, and an | South will yield. Inthe meantime, North Carolina and | Sorsey would stand with the Middle States in repelling ul- ‘THE OBSTRUCTIONS AT HELLGATE. your rights of every geeks apt yl being wrest: | makes Lord Grey anticipate the dangers likely. to arise ‘equal effort will be manifested to prevent its consideration, | Georgia will probably go for him from the first. tralem and extravagance, and, beg the other Sates Mr. Euor, {rep.) of Mass., introduced a bill for the ro- | &4 from you by your republican task masters at Albany, | when the operation of the new Reform bill shall sonfer om ie ymories lonmouth, » Trewton, Saratoga, Banker Bill, New Orleans and Guilford—tamaintain the Union. ‘SPEECH OF MR. BROWN. ‘Benator Wilkinson, of Minnesota, will oppose the Dill in- ‘The great fight in the termination will be upon the Seduced into the Senate, because it does not provide that | Platform. Whilst it is conceded that the Cincinnati plat. ny person who is the bead of a family, or who is twenty- | form, pure and simple, should be reaffirmed, Douglas’ and all without your consent or wish. Are we to have a moval of the obstructions at Hellgate, and a bill for the deapotum under the republican party with Weed, Seward hdd ger edt hg hbo Period eee . a8 cS that ler appropriating the improvement of Harlem river, which were referred to the ae Czars? The action bany looks much | maintenance of ‘public credit. We believe friends will insist that if this is done it must be viewed Regrapieet oe at er Robe xeon Se tee oe ae Sane pa fbb gto el ee Bees! boa Pa one years or more of age, may enter one quarter section of ods wi fone it m' wed as # that he conten: a Terri re coul THE COOLIE TRADE. City Intelligence. a ad and subject to pre-emption. The House bill embraces | ® concession to him. They say that the opposition to || abolish slavery by non-action, and that he favored Con- A se great deal about the precetents, discussions and de- Territories. @is provision, and will be supported by Senator Wil- | Dovglas is based upon the fact that he does not consider eteal Protection of ty in the Territories. For proper Mr. Morsr, (rep.) of Me., ineffectually endeavored to ‘Tae Late Wasnixcron Invinc.—This being the anniver- | bates springing from Mr. Pitt’s commercial treaty of 1787. charges had been brought against him that he One The most \- introduce @ bill prohibiting the Chinese coolie trade in | sary of the birthday of Washington Irving, the New York lent should not be overlooked. ‘kinsen. that Congressional slave code is constitutional for had departed from the usages of the party, and was in- § American vessels, Historical Society dal arranged to ae a buitable dis- merger whom our country has ever Latrege THE PROTEST MESSAGE, the Territories, and that the constitutional power preston Se tal trea < Freend to miNoTae ne nee is Teas Para Res pifemarecae vmE. play in honor of the great author’s memory. An oration Eoginb honor’ Ragland ne eatianeds would, after ite ; . ; atte y ri iN UTAH. . . eneiand, 5 7 ‘The President has received a large number of letters | of Territorial legislatures over the regalation of usages ‘anything ‘not advocated by oar Fathers. iis | he bill for the suppression of polygamy in Utah was | will be delivered in the evening at the Academy of Music, | Conclusion, resemble the woman Srito yielded up her honor from leading statesmen in different sections of the coun- | slavery, as all other property, is judicial | would show that in 1822 Congress, by an expres! law, | considered. by William Cullen Bryant, on the genius of \d | and her fair name for comforts and fuxuries, for an gands Mr. Mritsox, (dem.) of Va., said this bill should pass | only members of the Society and thetr friends will be ad- | 824 gewgaws—she might henceforth qual the wines and with as dopo cna ity 8 possible, for the crime of oe ‘To-morrow ening Feception will tae place a roatie in the silks of France, but her influence and her ‘try, mot identified with his administration or party, ap- | question. If because he holds these views he is roving in strong terms nis recent protest message to the | to be struck down, they will insist that the platform sha’! overthrew ant set aside certain laws of Florida Territory, and went farther than that, by refuntiing certain moneys ‘id under the repealed law and substituted an indepen- | polygamy was not only extenei practised, but at- | the rooma of the Society in Second avenue, corner of | honor asa nation was for ever gone. Junt as littie as Mr.” ‘Mouse of Representatives. contain a clear and direct exporition of the views of his | ent law in iis stesd. It was thus assorted. shai | towsned to be legalized by the mae. ie argued, in re- | Eleventh sireet. The affair, it is expected, will be very | Burke's predictions were then verified by the event, just PERSONAL. opponente—siave code and all. If not, then they hold he | Congress had the right to protect property in the Terri- | ply to Mr. Taylor, that Congrees has power over this low | brilliant. * as little, we may feel assured, would the conclusion of the tories. He cited the case of a law passed in 1834, where Congress by direct law protected slavery in Florida, which was voted for by Webster, Clay, Forsyth aad General Walbridge, of New York, arrived here this | stands ar well before the South as any of his rivals. and degrading imposture, and that the very first year | a xormer TRAt ov THE STREL Bxis.—Another trial of the | Prcseut commercial treaty prevent England from vindi- morning, baving been called here upon business con It is clear that not a single Northern State could be aiter the adoption of the federal stitati lat citing, whenever the occasion shall require it, her ancient for the punishment of certain crimes, wherever. | steel bell, which was tested in the Park on Saturday af- | title fo be the patronese sank che Proteoiress oC ihe weak: of the mested with the government. carried upon a platform insisting upon the all-pervaiing | Grundy, and many other illustrious men of that Cougress, | the jurisdiction of the United States extended. “ternoon, is to take place about four o'clock to-day. It ig | Sd the oppreseed, and the strongest bulwark of European eres cama ts cm cess tarry at » staan wish | Stele itn we fare op cao fek | ate army Eal Wala de aBURO EM | lett he le ot en ay nd and ta | ates TTS ‘The case of the United States against Bolton, on an ap- | quirce positive enactment to forbid it, and which, spread- | eon, Yet he (Mr. Brown) was denominated a horetic for operate directly for the punishment of the crime in or- | therefore, no proper estimate of its power and utility The Austrian Treason Case. eal from the Northern District Court @f Calfornia, in- | ing to the North Pole of our Territories, extended so far, | Advocating now what those iluetrions men ates | Seared tcc ate line, veracvicd to Lashed. should be yet formed. This afternoon itis to be elevated | 78°, Times correspondent writes from Vienna March ir ir. ie, isla! history ah ‘volving the title to three square leagues of San Francisco | must continue, no matter what the wishes of the peopte J He th = = . / : to a position just beneath the City Hall bell, where there | at the outbreak of the late war Lieutenant General ands, was taken up in the Supreme Court to-day, Wm. | of thoee Territories, #0 long as they are Territories. Add B. Reed making the opening argument for the United | to this, also, the plank of a Congressional slave code—the States. The Court, in view of the magnitude of the case, | logical andproper conclusion insisted upon by Southern granted the request of Bolton’s counsel that three hours | men. De allowed each for argument. The mere question of the Presidency, it is contended, AFFAIRS ON THE RIO GRANDE, is of little importance compared to the consideration that Colonel Brown writes to the War Department from | unless some Northern States are carried next Brownsville that reports, the most false andexaggerated, | November the democratic party will find itself for th Sre put in circulation by persons interested in fomenting | first time in a minority in both houses of Congress” trouble on the Rio Grande border, immediately before | Open and avowed secessionists and disunionists would be ‘the leaving of the New Orleans steamer, for the evident | delighted with such a position of affairs, which would purpose of exercising an influence on public opinion in | give the South a material cause for a secession movement, the States. Hence such reports should be received with | but the cooler and reflecting men, both of the Sonth anc ‘the greatest caution. He adds that the Cortinas move- North, are alarmed at the prospect, and will hesitate ere ‘ment was a mere raid, and the Accounts largely mag- | they permit a mere personal hatred to Douglas to force He asked for uo new theory, yet he had been con. cemned by republicans and ‘some democrats for it. What depth of infamy was the South sink- ing to, to allow these things to go on He then referred to Mr. Atherton's resolutions of the Thir- ty- fifth Congress, declaring that Congress had no right to make @ distinction in the property of States going into tho Territories; and, concluding, contended that this ques- tion was never denied until the doctrine of ‘‘aquatter sove- reiguty”’ came into Congress, He would maintain his po- sition, and allow no petty neighborhood politician to whistle him down. SPEECH OF MR. WIGFALL. Mr. Wicraui, (dem.) of Texas said the fairness with which the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Ten Eyck) bad stated his proposition, the appareut calmness and earnest- nees of his convictions, induced him to reply to a point Girectly at issue: and if he removed his apprebensions he ‘was inclined to think he (Mr. Ten Eyck) would yield, and Mr. Taytor, (dem.) of La., also controverted si- | is no doubt, it can be tried to much better advantage than | Von Eynatten, as Commissary-General, juested M. iam : Bie poel> | Go to tiie eke enyeciaily whan an tussseaee orewi-or | Sokien Ge ‘Principal director of the Credit Beak, to pur- Mr. Mison adyerted to the gentleman’s own State | people are assembled around it, thereby Pe te na- | chae for the State » large quantity of corn and flour. AS (Louisiana), to show, when it was ina Torritorial condi. | tural diffusion of the sound. The weight of bell is | the commission was executed to the satisfaction of the tion, the penal laws were extended thither for the punish- | 5,000 pounds, and the cost about $1,600, while the weight | Commissariat Department, M. Richter was subsequently ment of murder, argon, forgery, and every other crime. of the ty Hall bell is 21,000 pounds—making avery | frequently applied to, and at the time it was believed that Mr. Pryor, (dem.) of Va., argued that the question of | great disparity. It is claimed that one of these ste! bells | the State had reason to be well content with the articles constitutional power is sustained by the uniform policy of | i8 equsl in volume of sound to composition bells one. | fupplicd by the Credit Bank, and also with the prices the government. Congress may supervise and annul the | third heavier. charged for them: After the arrest of Baron von Eynat- organic law of any incipient State. The republican party | Tue Furventn Recucexr Daca Conrs—The admirable | !e0, however, it was reported that there had been a secret: may associate polygamy and slavery as the “twin relics We Understanding between bim and some of the contractors. of barbarism,” but he disputed the philosophy of the | Drum Corps of the Eleventh regiment, Washington Rifles, | 3. Richter was arrestea yesterday afternoon when about ee ten hea! toyethe hae stand on the same | gave a very récherché entertainment last evening, at the te enter oe ete Bank. ae Me re was ed ground and woul r when driven from Hester street yesterday, and an Italian met resid! helter of common security. “In the interest of slavery. | Hetropolitan Rooms, in w tadion being verp | 2reste is tui to have been carried of wo prison the Gay he repudiated the suggestion that the power which Con. | MUmerously attended—the proportion of ladies being very | before yesterday. The events of the last few days have gress ramen _ over the aes the punishment of bol and the Mcagheins creas hey eg latest racinn, bce — Aer ingly F Pentel impression eee, ‘ake crime an suppression of polygam: be per- | ‘ashiopable dances. r4 e e Emperor extremely 4 verted for the destruction of the rights Tal atergale of | Rifles Festival March’’ and the ‘Rubel ch’? were exe- | look ten years older than he did when he left this city for pereons holding slaves. The Territories are the common | cuted in @ splendid manner by the Dram Corps, assisted | Verona ten months in doing so make the gretent,_seeritice over r ago. ‘a fla mided. Tray them into a Lanne oso anda Southern fete for his el Oe mane ate Ten Eyck) property of the people of the United fen and the | by Rubela’ excellent band. one enna Sonreaponaeee Sf the Gasettede Cologne PROTECTION OUR CITIZENS ABROAD, confederacy becomes almost a foregone conclusion. seemed to predicate the wi Slavery agitation upon the | power e88 possesses over them cann perverted ALLEGED ow tHE Custom Hovsr.—Hon. Eman: 1c — unfortunate pis Sivwk Gadus Oe ol ihe Retr ae ietiasitooss tatu an | SeeTONaNerd ay ae bare aoa Raker | soheeeee es ocean eee eee end | ‘nur, Garveyor of ho Fort of New or, bd fr oe on seemade basa fo numerous tet, in are by - were endo subve! i os ” ™ Mt. Helm, at Havana, commendatory of his partial suc- | Gvivania, New Jeep, Miameecth and Ohio, tans | We epeble, He di@red free the, Geaaioe froc aio, | Re eters acta ro, eae. Polyramy was a | Europe lat Saturday, iti alleged, on business connected | view of the number of persans jnculpated, it will bo a! cess in behalf of Liano, » native Spaniard, but a natural- | Obio has already elected a republican in Pugh’s place; | sissippi (Mr. Brown), not pinning his faith to the opinions | part of the Mormon religious faith. with certain frauds which it is charged have been com. | ™0st impossible to iO. th close. ized citizen of the United States, who was summoned to | Pennsylvania elects next winter in Bigler’s piace; Indi: | of anybody, neither Calhoun, Jackson, Mouroe nor Clay. Mr. Pryor replied, be had examined the disgusting and Yesterday evening, ever he nant Those gentleman all differed from themselves at different reriods, and at the same period differed from each other. It was difficult to go back for a pre. cedent. We must put everything in the cracible of truth, and there try the argument. What «he xporte rican, importers. ‘wore brought from Italy under a mill: Diepheisbus tarrago, called the ‘Mormon Bible.” and he | Tue .ty, totum erhucvars and Amerioa mand pubs | fete kin Tadged Sn one of the prisons of Vienne. amy ase matler of felgion. "He cid not however sve | antl some inteligence ta recclved from the Surveyor. | St¥,°%0e"t eesdetteomplisty in the embessiement of tend to be acquainted with all tho polomics of the Sali | ARREST OF AN ALLEGED Frcmvn From Jverice —Yester. | the public funda, others of igh treason, and communi- the war. Take Saints. | The results of peer ves seen in the | day afternoon Detectives Elder and McCord arrested a cating with the cretiy to describe the effect produced in b- ects in place of the two sittin, 5 sollitary duty. In addition to other friendly ofices the | S08 C}¢cis JD Pian Ot a and Tes re: Captain-General will submit the question to his govern. | Jersey elects one, Minnesota one and Oregon two. Add ‘meat, with recommendation that Liano be exempted | to these two republicans from Kaosas, and we find that from military duty. Secretary Cass has sent to Mr. Helm, | Unless the demoerats carry some of the Northern States next fall, Northern States which will be re. wanted to draw the Senator’s atten! to, was that the | bitter frusts of sedition and crime. scandalous crime It would be for the information of the Captain General, a copy of the oented by eucnootane in the Senate will be, Iilinole ove | fathers never sinctioned the principles which he wes now | thecia’ be extirpated. It was offensive in the eyes of | ™&N named Stephen Price, an alleged confidence operator | civil as well af moiltary circics by Woewe facts, which pub- Sustroctions to our Minister to Berlin, Mr. Wright, on the | 804 California one—in all two {democrats from the Norin- | defending. Because Mr. Jefferson supposed slavery an | rations and a reproech to civil liberty. and fugitive. It seems that Price succeeded in doing a | lic rumor exaggre Sees a tant of the sccceaisnetn bas nc €rn States, thus giving the iblicans @ majority in the | evil, did it follow that he believed the federal govern Mr. Emermoe, (S. opp.) of Tenn. , said two colored per- He ing in interfe of the ts of Ameri: y , thus gi y Countryman vamed Horrace out of $80,a few days ago, | two have re from the Austrian States. sabject of ference right ‘can matu- | Sonate ax wellas the . If this is to be the result of | ment had the right to abolish ft in the States or legis- } sons were converting about the milieniam, when the be eb tbecalh Q i] ee aateay to's ialegrapis a eapladl 6r dagi- alized citacns. the text election the success of the democratic nominee, | late against it in the Territories” What were tae | and the lamb shail lie Gown together; one ‘contented him- | DY means confidence game, and complaint having | _ -Aeoording 10, Saneane an York ter babmaiaien 4 ‘THE HOUSE PRINTING BQUARRIE, unless he can carry Pennaylvanis, Illinois and Indiana, | facte? In 1820 Oongrest legislated upon the suo: | self by remarking that the time had not yet oome, while | been mado to the above officers, they yi succecd- Weereh dias feetieunto tne enemy. % would in fact be a defeat—his victory would tarn to dust | ject upon what was called the Missouri restriction. | the other said, when it did come the lamb would be found | ed in arresting Price just ss he was about leaving for the | P'a= M A minority report from the ‘ommittee on Public Ex- | and ashes on his lips, whilst the republicans would have | Jefferson denounced that; and was it tot, then, | inside the hon. (Laughter.) We have here, how- | ast in one of the Fall River steamboats. He is also io ot roms penditures, signed by Messrs. Copton and Hindman, has | him tied down as securely in both houses as ever Gulliver | clearly a non sequitur to introduce Jefferson as authority | ever, the ion and lamb lying down together, po my with being an alleged fagitive from Tennessee ‘Thornton Chi » formerly ope agli coun- : He to- One resolution accom. | W4# by the hilliputians in Bwift’s aathentic narrative. for legislative action in tho Territories? He (Mr. Wigfa'l) | end it remsics for the historian to find ont | and Canada. In the latter piace he ia with high- | ty, Va., committed suicide at Alexandria, sag ag Bowed Been mate to te Lome e-tay{ One | The statements thet in any event on the | believed ip the Kentacky and Virginia résolations, as con | wh'ch is tbe Inmb and which the lion. The | way robbery, and in Tenngesee with oon oon- | the 8th'ult , by taking two ounces of afvenic. He wax be TBE ANS Res Se gfJto r vacant, on option of platform, however obnox- | sirued by the Virginia report. If he <lid not he would be- | Gemocrate and repoblicans barmonize on the vexed | victed of doing a ‘out of $706 by means of the confl- | ruppored to bave been in ap cngound state of mind when | itis. i — ara ag me nom ete yet iyen...to.. abide by Jong Ww the opposite party, no matter what bie opinions | question of the power of Congress over tbe Territories. | dence game, ior w! be was and was about | the deed war committed. 5) to. do chamber wor! ‘ mnntry: baat of | ToOm. . had s 4 GIRie. a a See RY A YOUNG GIRis ng: |_V_youne-em Tig TSC Pewee wr geet fo