The New York Herald Newspaper, January 31, 1861, Page 10

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

8 NEW YORK HEALD, THURSDAY,, JANUARY 31, 1661. ae — m3 yotution had been © remeditated ‘and that, | there wae no rearou why they conid’not | tertsined that it eam be sucessfully Reh against any T'aE REVOLUTION. ice, by the T6FY ” aen'who an ofloors of fhe government, | Why et take Ube “ritteuden Sereaen | that may be Sought ngsioat were Sworn ¥ meintsin eonatitation and the laws, | vpite once more asa band of brothers for a common PATRIONC CONTEI but who bi, thrown off the mask and revesied tbemw- | ‘glory. States Will maintain their honor and [From Advertiser, Jan. 26.) at © RMTINUED PROM FINED, Paetore the som | wn tt, uebmar thi vary capa of ie can. | No Sre"Y mS choy fevered conciation and | nis"hegrocs wo any wotk meoessary forthe defence of ca ul ‘ by the pomer ef settling wi Mat your President | histor”, and authors, be very outect saw bow comnrenies i doregudel Pear Prewilections and plat- | the State, and wi Juperintend thera himself free of , into ala verb! cl hole couuiry, oF Oaly itty. the} coud do beyoed abiding the eve which | forme. Upon the members of this rest the | charge. on at far cf thtoo' Staten whith once belonged, t0 Tle Tv ® vaited them, Upon the bis Cabinet grave | destinies of the republie, Bix stare of our national fug | Mr. Jeel . Mathews, of Dallas county, baa by Bhion! 1 trvet you will do something that peace, mY | “y apcneihlition bad bean cast repenalelltie for which | have been obscured, but he Dellaved, dhe government bat | ne:iexs of twa negroes 1 thi same way. ry we may not be called to one anot “T'S "| tLey would be held deeply answerable pefore more than | , cwer to bring back the seceded Btates, he would sadition to Sis, ‘the, soho, Renee. eas WEE that peace may prevail from the to tne tet | ove tribunal. By the oonstitation it was the duty of he | xhauet all oier means before resorting to force. Fauk of Moblloy on Ue 24 of dauary, 98,000 the sup, and from the lakes to the of Mexivo, | President to eee rarlagron manana he had ‘THE SICKLES CONTESTAD ELECTION. credit of Alabama for Btate defence. pas ‘ your ity no longer. offered an excuse for their it by the act that Mr. Gruurr, from the Committee on Elections, reported Col. Alexander an Perry, for may need sob Sty ‘procoodings of the Pemo- | os il ministerial and federal officers bad: in | aresolution taanimously, that no testimony his been | neighbors, bas tendered the services of oue bi @ratic State Convention in favor of some settienent of | South Carolina his power was practically paralyzed to ful- | presented impeaching the re oe Mr. Sickles to his ect, | negro fellowes to the State. ee Ey en homthder eo fl the lew. 5 aa was <4 ene tad caked %0 be anaes ‘the further considera pre a Critvencen plan. ‘especially favoring Bg | umportance, ra been jallow: up ject. UTH by! Cy bye nan’ event of still vaster I a he ae Bee pe e President was commander in-chief, and was | yield:d it to of the estate of the late William McKenna, of 3 ite to: on the tas hay wis ona be ~ he taasaingiaiehl thalls were needed, Ni was wanted but firmness | Speaker, ea to how inary names of gentlemen who wish ty ack of cate fms Oe x een: ‘Mr, Revxotns, opp.) of N. ¥., from the select com- | and integrity. Thiehe had made no attempt to do; but, | to speck are recorded. Ne had been waiting here fr ™ | 17 on Wednesday, 177 negroes were gold at an average mittee of five, Fe ‘s Dill for calling forth the militia | on the contrary, had left the country to its ene: | day to day to obtain the floor, but it it was | Srer7a.. among vbem were. several amall children and Zike United’ ‘mn ce-tain avies,’”’ and left brave men in fortresses upgarrisoned, } farmedout. ‘Ihe practice was Epson ought not to | Pons siderly negroes, one of which sald for $10, It is | ry to their face. Mr. Benen, (opp.) of N. C., presented bis reasons in | Gad refused to send them succor and support. But if \t | be tolerated inany body. Such things had been allowed | joieved that the whole estate will yield the gross sting for his hon- concurrence In the report. were said that to bave sent ships and men to those forts | by the Fpraker. mount of $220,000. The bit} was recommitted and ordered to be printed. would have preotpitated , then he an- ‘The SPEAKER tempore said that he was not able to swered that “it should bave been before the | inform the gcnticman. SOUTH CAROLINA. first muttering of the storm—done early, gradually, ‘Mr, Courax, (rep.) of Ind., reminded tho gentieman 7 ciniseze “bad ai’ | abat ihe Spealer wae now absent, and pointed 1s the Fact Ee Eee a aimee arrived ov ieenes vised implored bim. But it had not been | 60 far as TKinois was concerned) ‘that, three gontiemen ton'a few éays ago from. Earope via Savannah. Ite des done, and the outive of this great country | frm that State, two democrats and one republican, have tination is G ‘and it comes to the order of Mr. stood petrified or vacillating between determina. | already occupied tho floor, toate Me Corti pladlar’ chs recden ia What loonlty. woanee wane ast Soa Pere erweiens une Loaas--I am speaking for myself, rot for Ti- Ho has aloo imported one heniestand fifty rmugeota at grusp the insignia republic, is no! " i ; the Reaner of secession and rebellion, grees Was Mr. McCurrnayp, (opp.) of W.—Tho “peaker of the bien expense, for a volunteer corps in iis owd neigh: powerless to control this. The constitution had given | House did uot give me the floor on this question; I had it ser. Jour, Cocnnan, (PE) of ovide' for the alee Mr. Venue (rop.) of Pa, resented the proceedings eee eines fuel, asking the sduption of Mr. Crit square tencen' time other principle of eompro- mise me yey ny acceptable to a large nnmber of 4 4 ther subject. people, and have the effect «¢ allaying the arte them no power to interfere. They had voted the money | on anothei ; TENNESSEE. ‘ Dommittes hed requested that their peti- | to carry on the 1, and whatelse could they do? | Mr. @ovonx, (rep.) of Pa.—Are such proceodings in or- | Beet aoe wus, accordingly read, ordered to be | Nothing but to take their share in’ that great sue which | der? ( CIRCULAR OF THE SOUTHERN RIGHTS ANTI-COERCION printed and referred to > relect es of Five. o remained—the paramount i of t CO. ds ot Locax—Such favoritism is detestable and damna- COMMITTEE. sania taal House resumed the consideration report to the secession movement, that any one State ne | ble, ABHIVILLE, , 1861. gqtemmitice of Thirty-three. right to go out of the Union he did me believe, The von- SPEXCH OF MR, MORRIS ON THE CRISES. Dear Sir—Oor earnest sclicitude for the succers of the stitution showed no such right. ‘Their fathers would | fr, fosnus,of Pa., aid this was the question, whether | 67at eget oreepenh, 10 secure 20, nets EVERCH OF MR, CONKUING ON THE CRIBB, ing a. iy eeald be seared be eas uitlejen Mr. Goxxctanc, (rep.) of N. Y., im opening hia remarks, | {P°r" ‘vcemen who believed that. they "wore not | t@ Union was to be dissolved or not? Ho believed that | yolstical and soeial safety, will, we trust, be a 5 t sid that from the first advent of this secession move- | making a compact of voluntary _ affiliation | it eam be and that it ought tobe preserved. Neither | apology for the trouble we beg to impose on you. flor would stem the current of revolt, knowing that it | folomnizn the urna meine ald cue scif loose froma | PO#e.of the slavery question; we must remand it to the | men may soe thelr way clearly, and the prayer of every fad been long smouldering and festering in the Gulf | federal allegiance—by the amendment of the constitution, | people who have Sa ‘mmediate interest 2 i. yewes true patriot will eventually be realized, Tennessee wi of vided in the constitution itself; by the consent, not | opposed © extension y errit i b aoe eras ROOT TT as weicg of the State goitg out, or of the remaining States, but by | but was willing to let the people there battle it out for Although the time be so very short, this object may mission of the republican party was to subvert the con- the universal acquiescence of the American ple; and | themselves without the factitious intervention of Con. | yet be accomplished, if a few men only (the more the by that right o ae which inberes in poe ge not in | grees or Territorial Legislature. He argued in support of | better, however) in each county will their entire States—that option which all men had to defeat thei the propositions reported from the Committce of | energies to it during the canvass for delegates. We : pat ohana wf oe ite for | soveromente, and if, they sugccoled to live in peace ag | Thirty-three, If be could not get these, ho would | earnestly beg your attention, therefore, to the following | jy, ‘Stites toy, 0nd ras only another name for | Patriots and heroes, and if they failed to die as rebels and | be willing to vote for the Border Stato Committee plan. | sugrestions:— aaa sbolitionism, and that upon the firet accession of power | traitors. But as 10 this question of coercion, it was not | If he understood it properly, he would vote to suomit Mr. . Be sure and have your ablest and best men in the | 4_ John Tracy, qm their part they would liberate the slaves by armed in- | the coercion of States but individuals, States did not | Crittenden’s resolutions to the people. He bad no fear of | field, without regard, oes panes. een ‘Richard Parr, Be. , commit murder and such ofher crimes. Men did such | them. Jf they want a chance to vote on them, let them 2. Be sure that no submissioniet, under whatever pre- Richard Kimmey. Mervention of the federal government. These charges were | Tih’ snd men were ponfbable, not Statce. It had | have it. He wanted forever to get rid of this bone of | text of compromising our rights, or of waiting beyond the Femean Wendel sown brondoast throughout the land, and were sentforth, } been ‘suggented that supporo’ eight States #e- | covtroversy, which is the cange of the present distraction | 4th of March for new guarantees, impose himself upoa Henry Creble. Like sow storms, or clouds of locusts, to cover the entire | ceded, what thenf That was tho old puzzlo, the | between the two sections. “In speaking of the proposed | you. Our only hope of peace and aafoty coneiats in de- Jerael Walton. old problem solved by every government that ever de- | convention to meet at Montgomery, he said that the per- cided action before the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln. Luther P. Tompkins. monstrated the power of self-perpetuation, In the crime | sous who are there to assemble may establish a con 8. Do not wait for a meeting of citizens, but Bouth. These charges were founded upon the sayings ‘Wm. McGivuey. ‘ef republican politicians, torn from their context, and | DOr to iy toh Pat reand may bave beon engaged, and | stitution stronger than our own; but its strength | get together immediately a few active, intelligont, dis- | amass J, Parker. nick were a8 nor the ériginalas.a shred rent from the | fr. °arg all equally gully, UME Dot all punishable practi- j will not rest on moral, but brato force. It will | creet, but thorough-going, uncompromng, true pr bi eg foo peer. Bas wey abouaded in another thing, in. | Cay, because the wheel raiment, in inflicting | rest on bayonets, on an oligarchy, excluding poor } “‘sowtherm rights, anti-coercion’’ friends, aod appoint 1). Holstein. : Be renter. cc trimenal. ‘They abounded in scrape cat | Punishment on all, would roll eep in blood, and #0 | white men from participating in their government. Its | committees and canvessers who are willing to devote +R Gute i a areri Lowspapers, which assailed throughout | lex. But the principle remained the sume. AB to the | strength will rest on the effete military despotism of the | themselves entirely and unceasingly to iho great and pa- 3B Plumb. srr clinicel contests the motives and principles of the | @estion of waging war. Jn this material age war was a | Oli World. "Ever since 1882 South Carolina has been dis. | triotic work, from this hour up w the éluse of the Ely Perry. ean cere on thousand “springs of falgebood | Bumdrum thing. ‘The battles fought by the knights and | loyal to the constitution and tho laws, and there has been | tion, Mewes Patton. ad opened and filled the very atmos. | Crusaders, and sung of by the troubadours of old, had all | @ fi: conspirs cy, which has never relaxsed, to break up 4 Appoint committees also for each civil district of i. D. Willard. Perrine South with noxious “vapors, which were | Paered away. War was no longer a question of personal | the Union. When Mr. Lincoln’s inaugural shall have | men known to colneide wih you and ourselves im senti- | 3 Frastus Corning. persistently for years by Southern politicians into | Valor and idual achievement, but a mere queation of | been publithed it will then be seen how utterly base and | ment. i Stephen Clark. a ourrent co mighty pt it had broken over the safe propa | ™urder—of who could indulge in most iron and lead. It | unfounded are the aepersions on those who have elevated 5. Organize forthwith Southern rights, anti-coercion as- ‘Alex. 8, Johnson. of order, a0 that the South believed tho great party of | Was Do longer regulated the law of honor, but by the | him to the Presidential chair. They do not desire to } sociations. law of trade; and if he the bad heart imputed to men | abolish slavery in the States, and if they did, 6. Wo will send during the canvass the Union and Geo. A. See ne Ne a iainaity 9s hopeless as to beat. | of the North, he might indeed be anxious Tafiet seccesion | they. have not the. power. All tho agitation | American and Gazette to supply your county. These, we es A ae ferly extinct. Ae was constrained to believe that the | tke its course, and he would willingly crown | which prevails in the South, so far as it is based | confidently trust, you will send immediately to the dis- Geo. W. Hobke. teak or conciitation ‘was hopeless, so far as regarded the | very absconding State with instantaneous independence, | on the allegations that the people of the North wished to } trict ig Rare ee vida! the hour of delivery, start Stephen McKnight. Gul States. He was conrtramed to belive that every | !ere would then be no more rendition of fugitive slaves, | abolish slavery in the States i utterly unfounded, a | out upon the of distribution, and thie though'thore | 4 thdmas Keartey. ‘avenue was closed to everything except what was calcu- | 2° general government to quel) servile insurrection, no | calumny and wicked falsehood, got up for the base enus | be but half a dozen copies for each district. Do not, we ‘Wm. Gillespie. Iated to lash the public mind throughout the South into | More foreign Powers to interfere with the government. | of aiding in the scheme to disrupt the Union. He spoke | beg of you, wait for persons to call for documents. Ask L “ fury. ‘If tbe avenues of compromise were still open, he | Rlavery would of itself die out. The cotton statistics of | of the conservatiem of Pennsylvania and of Mr. Lincotn, | each person to whom you may furnish documents or Kiex. 8 Lobdell. did not be.ieve, eo faras the Union was concerned, that | the world showed that American slave raised cotton is | wbo was the most conservative of any other prominent 18 to read and circulate. James Roy. ‘compromise t could offer would have any per- | Pot to reign as king forever. ‘These statistics, the woird | candidate in the Presidential election. He stood by the |. Write as many letters to your friends as possible, Charles H. Adams. om ible effect. Dupes were never leaders, und the men risters which attend the king, proclaim that his reign | constitution, Jet the issue be what it , and in dying | and urge them, by every consideration of patriotism, to Geo. W. Wager. Rhe South who wero deccived with regard to the sent}. | *hall be but short, and that hie sceptre shoul? go 1ato | might he stand there and defend it tothe last. The gov- } ‘work, work, work. Gabcrn. fmonts of the North, were not the men who would head | Slien bands, ‘‘no son of bis succecding ” But the ques- | orument of the United States has a right todefend its | Pleas write us immediately and advise us of your pr rebeion or ‘instigate revolt. Those who sowed the | tion was what was to be done? He believed that a more | Own existence, and it is its duty to do it against coercion organization, and to whose address we shall send papers, 2—Benjamin Chamberlain. Whirlwind would direct the storm, Those men, however, | Unjuet rebellion, and more perfdious as regarded the re- | which is on the part of the seceding Btates. &e., at your ‘country seat and elsewhere; also as to pub- wee, Gemnel who had succeeded Old Boreae, and who bad let'ont in this | lationship of the men of the government they sought to The House adjourned, lic sentiment, and whatever elee you may think useful. John C. Devereux, south wind, were not deceiv for they knew well that | Overthrow, was never known. And his difliculty was to Once more, may we not, without offence, beg of you, David N. Brown. 4 b see how avy branch of the government could with| THE KEY WEST, FLORIDA, *ORTIFICA- | by all that you hold dear on earth, to give yoursell peony, ‘She party which bad recent; revailed in the countr; ma ty z idea ofan invasion uj ‘coustitutional right, or | S*fety and peey, enter upon negotiations TIONS. earnestly to this great work; that you wili know no rest vel nti |} at all. For govornment to conciliate in ‘until success shall have crowned our efforts for our coun- Peter Vanger. gerd to slavery or art} other subject “Thry koew we | this Matter wos to evince that they were either ia the | Fort Taylor, on the Tortugas Keys, is in command of J {ry's safety and deliverance from all future alliance with Wd. Pattioy. t the mission of that party was to restore the ancient | last extremity, or that they possessed a magnauimity en | Capt. Brannan, United States Army. The work is welt | Shore whone vory breath is Poison whose ombrioe ie Case. icy of the republic—a policy wieb began with Wasa | Urely sublime, Could it be supposed that they would deat jess satisfactory guarantees are offe: fore jon ob, and calried the government fucciietadly own | Change the laws of the land at the armed behest of those | Prepared for defence, and cannot be captured by any | the army, navy and treasury of the government shall T. H. Houghtaling. fhe rtieam of time for neventy yeare—eoventy pure, | stayed 10 resisting them To do so would demoralize | force the seceesioniste may send against it, The naval | bave pamed into the hancs of a party virtually pledged Walter He Rayre. 1 ow and jeopardise any government, How could they offu " y es 0 tae us doctrine of hang’ » O. Brosperons and peacet al yea eee ae we aia | termis torinsurgents Situ uputeca hauners of recolt im | PTOPerty near the fort is protected by the United States | “We'can, we must carry our Siate, Our hearts would | 20,0, Rathbun ‘ef compromise. They know how barsulest things | hand? To do 60 would be not only 10 conters their im | Fteamers Mohawk and Crusader. sink within vs at the Dare thought of thadegradation % ova. the “Porsonal Liberty bills were, if they conflicted | Potency to execute the -laws, but would be offering a Fort Jetiersun in @ formidable defensive work, and gar- | Abd infomy or abandoning vur sore Southern brethren, | 4_ son, Hiram Gray. Mog tT hounty to popular clamor and fnsurrection. He never A united to us by all the ties of sympathy and of intorcet, Jobn Arnott. with the constitution or with the law. They had : : i risoned with a large number of artilleriste, under the Sr eed tn Uh tA . D Te example of this. in” South, Carling, ‘where | Sw a mob lees deserving to be leniently deait with than 5 A and of being chained to the car of black republican 8. G. Hathaway, Jr. ‘tbey had already jearned how harm'vss a thing was legis. | ‘hat which had seized the possessions of the federal command of Brevet Major L. 8. Arnold, of New Jeracy. | States, who would themselves despise us for our aubmis- ieee lut. ve usurpation in States before the beak and claws of | Rovernment, and taken the property and money, md | Hie subalterns are First Lieutenant F. Benson, First | ftom, and, worse than all, by moral influences alone, if ‘COLUMBIA. who bad fred upon an unarmed vessel bearing its lag. | Lieutenant M, M. Blunt (N. Y.), Surgeon MoLane (Pa,) | Pot by force or legal enactment, destroy our entire social In the view of Weee things, and es long'as they | and Captain ‘Mc G. Meigs. (o'). of the eee SF fabric, and all real independes.co of thought and action, rontinned in their present. condition, lot | Fort Jefierson is provided with subsistence sufficient t> | Your own good judgment will suggest many things there be no compromise, or if there must be let him be | last one year at least, which wo cannot now aliude to. Very respectfully, 2—Jobn F. Collin. James Van Alstyne, ht. Y. Tilden. federal power. That none pretended to invade the rela ‘tionship of master and slave these Southern leaders woll knew. They knew that the declarations of alt political partics were against it, and they knew aiso that if any s “counted ont’? at one all the way to the end. Not con- | Among the naval officers at Key West there ia much WAL WILLIAMS, Chairman, rman Rae eee ser teanld aot be effected in ange peril of | Oning Bie views to the Executive, and the people whotud | feeling of unbappincss at the Delligove attitude of affairs, §. 0. GODSHALL, Bocretary, foocean Van hen. Aime which buman propheey could foresee, Phey knew | Taised the standard of rebellion, be they many or few. ha | and almost a unanimity of eentiment aguust engiging it ARCHER CHEATHAM, react nan that, whatever bis intention might be, the President elect | had no compromise to offer, and no terms tw talk about, | a civil war, Mauy resignations are received, and more JAMES R. BRUCE, J-James Mabbitt. Would be harmies: to iujure them, as harmless asa chid, | Nove. Never, until they had dofted their cockades aud | will take piace ere long. The navalotticers think the pre R.A. WILLIAMSON, ‘Albert Emmons. With a majority ngaust thom i bots Houses of Congress, | hatiied down their palmetto and their pelican flags, aud | sent perturbed state 0° the political fea could be cvimed by ag Ao ad Wm. 8. Ketcham, Bud the representatives of the South beer but truete them: | Wore, it heaps ped nce the habiapents ot fey ge amend ‘ paris (anger g ra gos without the wa ee soel Benton, nese Citizenship, of men «ube .- Destrnetion | Aduption of the eul-sureat policy of evil war. .S. BLIPPIN, elven snd remained faithful at their ponte. They ery out | citizenship, of men eunject to the laws. Destruction | adop wer cat Stote Central Sonthern Rights Anti Cocroion Commitiee, | 2—Wim Kelly. against territorial injustice and usurpation, and yet the; knew that they had more slave sersioty etbuu cout Charles Wheaton, Benjamin J. Hicks, le'are teyal te the, sonetitation and, the Union. There THE BROOKLYN NAVY YARD AFFAIR, - . ates, however, tbe people of which had the xGITIV ever bepe to people, not by the law of Mexico, as it was | ¥e ey tbe poor th THE CLEVELAND FUGITIVE SLAY: ath Plea faid, but by the torritorial law, varices mw Oo mee hh io eden eer oa ee 8 a a i? “inal Be de Giekee bie no voteg | RENDITION OF THE yicetve saveietn ota: + 3 been uvavie to pare under the ‘organ! but for the 0 oF Becersion, ey are connecter ally, poiitionl. , and once » aid G or Foote, who vo! - 3 set i ; hs = votes of Northern people as well 28 Sout i ally and. commercially with s community | for the Miesouri Compromise lin 1820, and who afterwarda | cma. ne DCATION OF LAW AND Jus | egal ee stood the list of grievacces, but yet considering le Union had gone 60 far that fealty tothe cnn. | introduced into the United States Senate the resolution on raraciant L A. Verplauck. apottaic Ameri¢ans were plotting the ruin of thiecouutry, nion had gone so at feaity to the gene come For several weeks past the people of Cleveland, Ohio, ¥1) Cook for +vclr wus their avowed reason. While this was gong nt hed veey mado panishabic with dea the public lands, in which Webster and Hayne measured | have been kept in a state of considerable excitement con. Jeesie C. Dani Nn 4 States two parties exieted, on favor of dis. | their intellectual strength, come out in a eard to the pub- 7 . be mag AS nc 9 union abd ihe other persistently opposed to it. If. the corning a fugitive slave woman, named Lucy, who had John E. MeMahon. fe. Now I, his son, being somewhat slxed io opinions | gccaped from Virg and positive in character, “follow im the footsteps of my illustrious predecessor,” rather than permit some of my jo were wavering between the two conclasi ator to remain ip, if they were waiting t cou. if that wat 80, i! the people of any St ir by the government, he for ose inja and sought refuge in Cleveland. At the time of her fight the woman was in the service of Mr. William 8. Goshorn, of Wheeling, Va. Soon after her & parched reroll. throw cn the wave of revolution our warning the nasions of the earth to keep aloof from the wighty ruin. importapate friends to offer anonymor lanations, Mr, Hivpman, (opp ) of Ark., appealed to the Chair to ¥ part in such transaction. He would not see | ‘MPO ere » | escape Mr. Goshorn received information that the know whether the ae was in order in using and Tument go into an auction room to bid for alle. | Which might place me on the defensive—just where 1 | giaye had gone Westward and he thorefore mooning then 3 ge an ““spemtale Américane.” ‘Hi Wf they were to be coaxed into wedlock, he | never intend to stand, except by order of the govern. started in i he feeling of the old conqueror with regard | ment Pursuit. He arrived in Cleveland ry and of wh m the poet suag:— a5 the 16 search should her bridegroom be, Iu two of the New York papers of the 224 instant atelo- | Se ee ee ince maids were best in battle wooed. succeeded in finding that she was employed in the family Fo pres tenes che . graphic despatch appeared purporting to bo from amem. | of 1. A. Benton, jeweller, whose residence ia No. 161 This was the way bo would prefer to woo | Bef of Congress in Washington, in which was stated, eub- | Prospect street. “A warrant was issued by United States thoee States who stood wavering, and who wanted | ®aptially, that (he conduct of Capt. Foote, in appealing to | Commissioner White, and placed in the hands of J. ff. ‘Woulo inquire of the gentleman if he intended to app'y that Japguage to any members of that House or to ubeir | © bis constituents? If such language could be used abe time had come for the dissolution of the Unioa, and for the secession of the Southern States from it.’ He would aek the Chair to decide whether or not such Jan- Tean Richmond. Heman J. Redfield. Daniel W. Temiingon, juage was iu order. ; ohneon, De : ore Cow rep.) ot Pa.—Tho point of ordertwas not do- | 1° be, coaxed i athe So Dangers @xisted | local authorities for protection of federal property when Teruel oy pul Sates 5 Marsbal, who, amnisied by c Fitch Bissell. a ey i. » “Tennessee, Ken- “s hows " _ bares so ae seqemls of tie cusptnan vere iepue | Weky, Missouri and North Curolina, In” those | Usited States troops wore at Governor's Inland, in ease of | ef the slave, proceeded fo the git mw | ig ‘nlees genthmen made their remarks personal, he had no | States public virtue still lived, and the patrictism and | !mminent danger, ia+o far disapproved by the adminiatra- Hes mesoing SC she Jah of January, and made the’ ar- A. Beardsles. goeer eames. genius of her sons was exhibited during this debate. And | tion thata removal and trial by agenora! cours martial are | Louse. They weooeaded tO tre Hock een reached the & ee Mr. Coxxiixa was vot addressing hia remarks to the | bow, in this great struggle, they not omly found them not | iiwely to follow. ‘He acto beyond the responsibility | and as they wore movming sme atom tho come nee Cort. tlemen from Arkansar, vor did he desire to ray any- | bly Maintaining their own position in the storm, but ah on ” Whom they in search parted the curt a for Wm. J. &kivner. ing offecsive to any geutieman on the floor. Bu spiring orbers with thelr spirit; apd yet they promised | &'Ven him by Commodore Preere. dow near the door and Woked out. “As her eyes hy tw was 4 tine which iwpoved upon every isan the duty of | 1 sive all the help they can (applanse) to stem tue cur. | In refersmve 10 this despatch, asserting, without know. | upon her master she gave a slight rerease act H. G. Crouch. ing unreservedly on this aubject rent of revolution, and to rollback the tide of sectiemst | ing the facts in the case, that I acted bey: is aoe ioe mage marness and egotiem which prevailed im itr Seate nd the respon- | disappeare!. The officers burst the door open, Hon that be believed oye tie the “pread of dia, | Sibility given me by Commodore Breose, I remark that | { 1%, it was bolted, and followed the woman, who «. They would, however, make | id not om that occasion exceed one whit the Commo- | “¢4 into the sleeping apartment of Mr. and Mr. Hinpman again rose. He said that the worie “American apostate” had been ased for sume purpose, Sea choles ie ais promer to spsty, Cone 0 this Euan nist’ Taverelon they might Wo. bow tat they | sote’s itstructions.. so far from it, the Cemmodoro not | Mi: wrho had not yet arisen. She locked aban. it was proper to apply them ia thi Bad’ not ‘stood idle wpectators while. the ship ‘acy | ouly gave the directions he‘ure he loft tho yard. at thees | Ber arms throvgh the foot of the bedyatead and some iit KING driftimg on the rocks, which would ehow that they did | 0’cl ck in the afternoon, but received reports from those | Ue force was required to remove her. After she was not stabd oninterested spectators while the barpiow on | whem the directions ‘were given—includivg the repiy | Pi8eed im a carriage standing at the door she became shore attempted to destroy the eagie of conces. | Of the Mayor to the message, Which T had been orderea | Wiet and made po further resistance. Hor greatest fear sions which would phow that they word anxious toarert | © cehiver to his Honor—during which interview 1 | “PPeated to be thet her master would sell her “Jown citi! war until after they hud exhausted every expedient 4 the opiaion that fald not at all believe in the | Seuth.” She berought him not to Jo so, and he assured t 2—Charles Colline. James R. De} Veochio. F. 0 Perrin, Richard Lawler. S—Henry McCluskey. J was better to meet the question now. t= « time Some inte: cuption followed. Mr Coskuse, resuming, said that he was about to say that these grievances of which he had epoken were the avowed reasons for this revolt—pitiful, chutemptible ex. euses of designing and desperate meu ‘He believed therm | 824 employed every fair means to secure peace. Bu boty of men, as currently reported, ald. | BEF he would not. | This quieted her. She was taken bo- Veter dturphy. te be chek toae m ‘ehitts of an unholy and vapid whe could Computate the ovosequences or phon the is . mnte we can tuke care of the Navy Yara pes United States Cominiseiomer White, who committed Laniel ont ambition. The trve reason of this revolt lay deeper than | @*ter® of grapling Lo slavery al: the possession horeaitar | i! Jo can take care of Brooklyn; and from thai | Ber to jail too examination, Shorty after ber ar James Craig. Shore reasons which hod been assigned. The true reason | t be acquired? Who could predict the disasters waich | Me until I left the yard in the evouing, to | fest Mr. Benton to the house of a negro with whom | 4—Robert Furey. was, that by the sentiment of an overwhelming majority | wht arise in making slavery the golcea promise embo. | itil an «engngem m New York, “nothing further | the woman liad lived previously to working for bis fa James Durey. of the people of this republic, slavery, as a moral | “i€d in the Crittenden proposition of furtherempire? To | ¢ My part was requil Now, while the first and second | MY (she had lived with him only about two weeks) to Hugh Mel aughtin. seen, wes. celiewee “end abharcel. it wan » would be to make the goverumen’ the armed mia. | 32 COMMAN Were thus temporarily absent, bith tac | MAVITe about the woman. Intelligence of her Charles J. Lowrie. arrest soon spread among the negroce, and in a javery, and would want to ‘ 7. ogy ae short ume after she had been lodged in jail « end tho North Carolina had their complement of against every people and tribe aud stare | vill +18 and wen present in guficient foree to protect the 5—Jobn A. Dayton, use that slavery, af @ policy to be fos Thor. Giddings. fered, had ceased to be national in this country. it was charged on the North that at all its ecial asvem bites foot “of isnd between here and | GOVerbwent property; but the fuctot my spoading the | "Re and excited crowd of whites and blacks asecrabled Richard Ternan, p dpe Et pat my oe bpd age ie onin te for alt ‘thd | evening in New York, with the previous escort of the | im the velghborbood of the jail, and romaiued there dis- ‘Wm. H. Campbell. Gharge fe true, owry word of it. Tlwas true th: rons declaratory of the duty to observe all covers, | Commodore, shows to all persons whose opinions. Teepe. | CUesibg the affair throughout the forenoon. No demon MADISON, Fest majority of the peuple of the North ) pledges. Ho would wote for even an amendment | CMl'y value that no assault at that time War apprehonied | “Fations were made, although the #entuneut seemed to | 2—Charles Stebbins. on ails, oked upon slavery as au ‘axthaton ase 2 gitive Slave law, providing they could have two | by the authorities of On this potot I further re- ] Prevail among the colored people that the woman should J. 1. Ledyard. ster of the worst fable and destructive to a There was 4 praviéion proposed for trang | BMFk, tat it* is not of the government ty | BOt be taken back to Virgiuvia, Lucy is twenty-seven Jomes French. Victim, to the maste to the land, In that reaped ‘erring from the government of a State to federal Judges + and communicate tia | Years Of age, a full blooded African, of comely and R. F. Chapman. fhe North agreed with ali then the civvinod writ, | the auty of surrendering fugitives from justice. Ho evctt to a member of Congress before that officer $ Dealthy appearance, She was placed in the female apart MONKOR, War slaveboiding was the workt of wrongs, “he could not vote for that, The blame was not that the con warheg. Ni i do the Hon. | ent Of the jail, and ecemed little affeo 1—Justus Yale, founded, moge! republic, alone etitots giarantecs were 20t sufficient, but that the of the Navy the injue to suspect him of Db ‘Hon that “ole massa’? was likely to “ 'y Jerome Keyes. dence of the work! was gains! m. Vf they’ were not ob- of such an act towards any officer. in short, She was dumb to all questions, probably kK. Houry Barnard. a of the world was against bls pect them to be observed © slightest idea, from the first, that there wes ¢ of her connsel Horatio G. Warner. ¢4 World was againad siavery euld still be provisions as danger. | @&¥ Guth tn the triegraphic despatch, ? would instant Aster Lucy had boen safely ensconced in prison, William jacod Gould, and a wl the I oe Li ve eailed for a court of inquiry wea vindicated magni, Ambush, Esq. , made an application to Judge Tildeu for a parict Son Ay: He w cunetitutig | & 1D a course of more than twenty yeurs’ soa service | St Of habeas corpur. The judge granted the writ, aud Isaac Butts. de the enligitened judg of mankind”? hey Fhovld al wy conduct has uniformly mot the approval of the gov. | ‘ weman was brought before him on Satarday, tie 19th Jobn Lutes. too, i¢ against slavery. ‘There was no one © with that hoerty CHiment. But, as it is, Lam quite coutent, especially ax | \P8tant—the same day on which she waa arrested. Whon NEW YORK. ; betier still, some Dact crime. Some Jimi tation b the fact became known thet Lucy was to be brought be- fore the Judge at two P.M., the crowd which had been quite cited the opinion of a navy Tommany Delegates. high Evropean #a woll at Ame. n that. No, it was one of the enact » 1—Jobn Von Buren. * which was recognized by « n io eouthic the law of Got, was to | #etors of the fe eky, full | 1a; he we a irie ce » ably increased. Tho color Wm, Miner. Be held utterly as novght.”” He atiirmed that that ove | 0% ‘howe who shall he ‘ Taine 2 tried | fumales, who formed no inocneldersble portion of the A. J. Mecarty, of Niberty, that detostation of opp: jon, that on Ul stand by it, Opinions are valued ac. | STOW, were loud in their throats and expressed great 2~—John Clorey. able batrot of tyranny, which iy at the to the source trom which they omaunte, and | CBM Mpt for the black “men folks”? for thetr “masterly ‘Avguet Belmont, Fepebl ‘ Petona Pap Mr aoe thelr country, with an s however much of modest assuranc seaeistne | invetivity.”” They would be sauatiod with nothing Dut Morgan Jouve. a Jaw which ay at the outs IS Pores OF We Breas 2; There 108 toor, abd ‘bot 6x Tovtae i, | SP. staut attack opom the Jail and liberation of the fugh: George P. Rickford, . Te was the oi er f of “tnhabri aislaturo, | Amn quite Aiepr ns to pi telf right on the ro. | “ve. orth and &@ law which coubl wu: 14 testified {9 their Inte message to the government in rd; beiieving that comm in sense and the pricy Judge R. P. Spalding appeared in behalf of the prisoner. ‘ ietpica . Dy Congresei ‘compromises, nor relation to tue setion of these men, who were no orto have sustained me will c Tt was not deemed prudent to take the woman from y eo vy iia, erent, Legislator fbage | onactinans Mare of the repubiis! shat Ae the ches eng corti; nee Jail gaat wae deelded that the case should proveod with- Samuel F. Berger. f om essereo of human if ple of liberty. AND : : re ReLCE. a ; Jie severed, tbat thie ants avery rons 'mowt ey in tho fupr macy of the overs sew omit ge Ra Jude Tiizen, in calling the ease, stated that the mattor aa ol of Bouthern discontent: pot whue is Ja Opeiwet all cc mers. b6 men of the North be i lsw Yorn, Jan. wnd ome ider ation was s havens corpoa, the proceed! tf while it " - tad ad for wl ite mmomorte mi . balding a colored woman, Ww: me mi fo res ppuinien et ike ana "= stalekiee " They peta hed ryt heron, a | wre eatin ees : aud m Ao ame unknown, wil t logal ent a ae charged with « dex . ‘ agtp®: that storm which w tL yd NEAT DAUPHIN ISLAND. ‘The investigation resulted in the deliver 1 a. Ske, tad in pre ns eee ie SRO driers te centinadn bat conte i A correrponiest of the Mobile Tribune deceribes in the | 10 her master, who Look Immodiate steve, watake carey | gyllgen,. Haut, 414 not shommei ven b pegen # na ns Mi Promisen $e tpare iy following What he etyles an “exe:ting lictie dash at Dau- | the authorities vw convey he it Fetayel B. Garvin. nel ve® Belke but it had Comwolied tae Kec ; vcompliahed, its hin Istana,” of whi aire: . vey her back to the scenes of hor | 6—Klijab F. Purdy. “ flow, and Yoore was ine ru. Tt ind oome, Hike a chilies | 8°, «nd its dertiny unruisited Geers? Hn we bave already had brief men: | youth ol, Michael Corcoran, Wee tho deep inva Tne <jponsl axab:tion, and vo true r ence MUS tL soe Ieecome that Information wae given to Col, Todd, at fiates yan peat oot ia Ceres pols te roe eeeaiom, D Ms af sectional ampreage was ren! from the President, atatl Fort "e oat. of the by > ae P . e ort, no Geor | a ba te bain oF pol shat ba fad wighed the bill for tue wdmn'eshon or aon a nee ee eee SA it tus date ot Dor manter ta Yirgiola, Where she arrived about halt. 1—Philip W. nga. iso Prova noe gh, LC to-day, Dat |» Mutidiy ouppressed demonstrations 0: joy on the re, | for the parca of removing ail" property formerly bo. | Gonhorn family, There wes great tetistacton ox heart e Seeueel J. andereee ushers in a negiiy ol be eny ba pr in ede Nging to tho Raid United States, desea 1 of the . pert o : tt 0 More Mexican ware TOMO. There mut | Mr. Qnaw announced that Martin F. Conway, the rep. | the Coiopel sent his ampbibioss chiet of orden puch of the people as wore aware of her arrival at the Wm. D. iy. a of of ordnaneo into | result of the affair, and the escort gaye'ing aling the crimson. way oF intuary cnt reeentaiy® fron SSS Te reo ite advauged to | Navy Gove (0 neizaon the schooner Alert, for tho purpose | welcomed, Tho girl was lot returned: however Wiley tae, ‘arms of the re eho 7 cou the chair « ne Speaker, who adminiwte he oath + A conveying & Gvlachment of troopa over t ‘ , . , : ta, M. Tweed, e 1ange realms in%0 Sovertn tan oR > | supper tyahe conse tution, ° | teuand ano provent Mr. Leesa ‘trom Jotng thle wrong 0d seme eotbensarvieoe aE con cope nwt Pill pa Maries in order & peoply shew win ect Ye sR mALe APSR OP MR. BrevE NBO ON THR cre, our State, “When about half swe peer ditlenes, wusand inlin. lamer J. Redily, Ta them with aleve feproventanon Vetere aud on. Tate. rman, 2 of Wy. Raid IP Mr Vouk ia a Gainen the witd fell calc), hal the alae wan oom | ena nak hee Prope ouka bo ussonibien vorweeeretea: | Sees: Brey. G08. republic to Europe will sever ateentiateta! rs | ‘air reprereatatlve 9¢ Norther -eatunent, thea the bop | Pile to snebior on account of the edd tide Negroes and ‘abolition's's from all quarters were thors | Gangs tagnyer semble be 1 aeaet te Steat, Charlnaague and pro ~ fe eae oT hase He | At inie Janette a steamer wan teen Joaving. the asrombled when the train arrived, Frade He Hart, fleet b Auserioah ‘ae. ‘ging that sho had beon har’ not 4 large? No longer was who 0 deelgn 10 el South from } tered by Rerse to tow his toid of plunder out of reac! eated 10—J. Winthrop Chanler, Naasio’ ampared aad ot heer a Gutiny a a fens Soeteen beis, roves | tho caler, promptly ordered the but. to be yest ony 2 _Ovitaary: Job Whoo. As toned” caresgor by ths goverumn-nt. 'Nov bn equal, bave'w commas right “8all tha | B9r0ed,’formped jno ber, aceompanio! by halt g dozen | DEATH OF BX-GOVERNOR LefoHRR, OF eK psd hn from thia tim ' (8 it would boa simpie noceesity te the | oni to tired Under the constitution, a Ward Morr, aid dashed for tho ialand. ACter an exciting gall Kx-Go vernor Robert P. Loteher, of Kentucky, iw! nt | yy bine ag gomntry, havin denna covmtuational rights, ani havi | ing to tbe “Tease ene welt Broperty ‘herein. “Ac Ferd | ee cane aan Rent BAN Aprank upon tho wharf at | ie resitentee, In Frankfort, on the 24th inst. ito wis | Andrew Mounts more, re been furesesn b tureey | on ag. platform an m re & anne t the ex Lieute of eyes of soare’™2 Poiuclune, who protictes | Pitt, 80 Mra ave Staten ean bo. edeuittea me yw eps Rates Train defraid. tig Aicbuma of soveras | OOM to Cmgrene from Keutadky tm 1908, and verve Joho Hardy. Fi oar when ‘Hey would come i pure, ha tuat | ‘be enieatees wets! ot eurronder the hopo which was in 8 worth of properly during rucces.sive Lorne till 1883. In 1843 be was toctod | yo wn” P Rewbe farce Dour, when the "08008 foretoid the politiow ro. | sre mn sem merle beeen O the Border state Commission. At Port Morvan, the writer represents tham | Governor of hia State, and in 1849 was appointed Sfinigtor Weaiey #mith, vervon of 1N60, 0 chin V4 born whieh haw siready | war goferous ay 1 ley ee ee oF February, Kentugky sehing condivon, | Tho Fires regiment of | to Mexicn by Pre “dept Fillmore. Ta politics Governor Manateid. Lovell grmren into wrmed redelnoy’ From shas hour to thie ro ' Cmon excey NA Ne Would not remain fh the Ors are ati"! on duty, the Lew worke of | Leteher wae a Ciny “Dig; in private life hw ch raetor wae Charles R. Rowe. « Af an eqUA. Le proceaded Yo show that | defer ¥@ Me 10!'r boing atrongtbened, ani ne doubt en. ! unexeaprions ie " ee eT - MEETING OF THE DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION. The Democratic State Convention will meet to-day at | 7« Democratic Convention—Tummanyand Mesart Rivalries. ten o'clock A. M., at Tweddle Hall, Albany, The call is signed by the members of the Democratic State Central Committee, in an apparently patriotic card, signed by all the members. This card exp@iates on tho alarming con- Sition of the country and the hostile feeling existing be- ‘tween the two sections of the Union. They call upon the «conservative men of all classes, upon our time-honored party,” to co-operate with patriotic citizens elsewhere, to put down all conspiracies and agitations cudangering the fair fabric of the Union. The card ts well written, and to the uninitiated looks very fair on ita face; but as it is a trade with politicians to use patriotic appeals to bide their ulterior designs, in this case, as in subsequent ones, the sentiments expressed must be interpreted exactly contra- In looking over the list of delegates—these patriotic, « conservative men of the time-honored party””—we im- mediately recognise the same old horde of political ma” chine managers, officeholders and office seckers, whose love of power end place has not abated by frequent de- feats and rebufis; but, Preentx like, they rise from the ashos, hoping against hope for a reaction to enable them to dig in the rich plaogrs of public spoils. ‘This city sends two delegations to the Convention, viz., the Tammany Hall and Mozart Hall factions. Both claim tobe regular, and a warm time—a repetition of the seene in the Charleston Convention—may be anticipated in tie efforts of both delegates to got seats in that body. As tothe practicability of any measures the Convention may adopt to avert the crisis in the Union, we have not the slightest faith, ‘The politicians of both parties are culpable for the present condition of affairs which has brought the country to the verge of ruin; therefore we apprehead that any measures calculated to pacify the Union must come from the great mass of the people from all sections of the country. We append tho list of delegates to the Convention, 0 far as the returns have been received: DELEGATES TO THE DEMOCRATIC BTATE CONVEN- ‘TION. William Brydenbdecker, Our Albany Correspondence. Aumaxy, Jan. 90, 1961. the Question to be Decided, amd Bot the Safay of the Union—1he Buffalo Platform Anti-Slavery Men in the Arcendant—Ihe Union Saving Convention a Mere Pasty Trick, de., de. . It is now too apparent that the Convention which is to meet here to-morrow is nothing more Dr ta lee ob Utical move for the most selfish party purposes, set om foot by the very men who, at Charleston and Baltimore, were mainly instrumental in breaking down the demo, cratic party. Under pretense that the movement @ national one, and intended te represent the demosratic sentiment of New York in relation to the condition of the Union, the Convention is nothing more than a political trap, designed for purposes of self-aggrandizement among the very men whose counsels have placed the country ip ite present embarrassed condition, preparatory to a re- organization and reconstruction of the broken down de- mocracy for the fall election. Many credalous and honest men from the western part of the State, ignorant of the true designs of this precious movement of the managers of misrule, have given to it the benefit of their names, and even an ex-President of the United States has been chosen as one of the representatives. But it i@ ever doubtful whether this gentleman will be present, ‘and there are others, it is supposed, who stand le of seceeston, 106s 1 Clo ee Sea nae ceppecurcs neuyre. Dean Richmond, one of the hoa crepe tases were “ie supporters {ere of the Wiltot proviso, and in were the sty who since that time have been the ben Be gd in every moyement set on foot to create North and South, upon the slavery question. Now, what have these professional intriguers to propose for the harmonix- ing of present diMcultics that can carry with it either respect, weight or consideration with the country? No~ thing at all; and what is of still greater there 8 no’ intention cn their part tas anit de dene that will in the Jeast conflict with the fi histary a8 politiowns. ‘The distracted condition of the country te seized upor, as afforémg an opportunity to reinstate the party, which the leading members of this Convention are Dis. Names. EW york—Continued. Bp at arin roca head and front, and to consolidate, if the frag- Peter ments of that party whieh, instrumeu- ‘Thomas Jones, Jr. tality und corruption, they have ed into atoms. 14—John TP. A ‘That the Union, which they profess to have at heart, is Isaac Bell, Jr. only adieguise, it le but necessary to read the resolu- Edward 5 Jations adopted by these cl of freedom at Tam: ‘Wm. MoMurray. pone , as instructions to thelr delegates. They are 16—Richard B. Connolly. to of no “compromise,” no “concession,” this W. McLean. very Convention which is called to deliberate upon and SL. M. Barlow. to it as the settlement of our difficulties measures John Murphy. of *comn ise’’ and ‘‘conccesion,’’ are to be met at the 5 of their organization by the Union loving ah Towle. men of iy with the demand for their uneor- B. Tally, ditional tion as an alternative to their instant se- Jobn H. McCal cession therefrom. No doubt this movement will sorely 17—Charles 0’Conor. i the more cautious and re rab ety eet el FE. Sickles. spose of it sat! and Bartlett Smith. without a general emash up of their grand scheme ‘Thomas ©. Field. by an ¢x] its true character, Morart Hall Delegates. will be bered that it was these j—John Callahan. men who last Tammany out of the party Henry B. Cromawell. decided in favor of the legitimacy of Mozart Hall. Now Alvah W. Lockwood. Tammany has sworn to be revenged in dorre, the bull John B. Borst, of excommunication recalled, or to break up Union Barry. assemb! whieh is to take place to-morrow. Jobn Bauich. Dean will bave bis bands full in dealing with Patrick Garrick. his troublesome brethren of the Old ) and as nO Felix Murphy. “compromise” will be entertained, he t> tako the rig Bogart. Dull.by the horns, and thus make the Michael J. Kelly twtr tfes of your city the prominent feature of Vain, James Nowlen. Jovirg Convention. success of Tammany, under theee circumstances, is of the utmost im, just now, being nothing lese than her final and defeat im the next election. She has her slate up, and she cannot aflord to lose any more and Registers, and “‘still live.” To put down Mozart to put up Tammany is the only question of substantial importance that the Albany Convention will definitely de- Christian B. Woodruff. 4—James E. Kerrigan. W. Hennessey Cook. Robert Beatty, Jr. john Bush. we y 6—Benjamin Wood. ™ iL Ignatius Flynn. % uy and how far the decision of thie ques- event | tion ‘will’ operate in saving ‘the Union ‘we shall 6—Nelson Taylor. ee gy mae ga gene When the James Lynch. “whole head is sick the whole beart faint,’ Cornelius Corson. the disease has gone beyoud the nostrums of political James McAlarney. quacks. While true men ure seeking, in the extraordi- 7—Edward J. Hamilton. nary perils of the times, to discard Partisanship Morgan L. Harris, William J. Van Arsdale. Henry K. Blauvelt, \—John Galvin. Union, seek only the conrideration of their own * Peter Maeatght, and the future ¢stribution of the loaves and. €shes, Wim. H. Roach. which, until the Union is reduced to its last fragmentary James W. Crossman. Ei Ward. ‘‘union of spoilsmen for the sake of the spoils,” and Peter Puller. have the height, apd breacth and doptb, the be ali and Jobn Caffery, the end all, of this Convention. 10—Johin Cochrane, w George C. Genet. Aprom axp Extensive Forcrry.—On Luke PF. Cozaps. - Y. the 27th of last Seplember, @ case of sitk goods, valued at about | ‘William A. Seaver. $2,000, invoiced to the firm of Goodrich & Walker, im- 11—Wilidam A. Walker. . G. ey. Porters, doing business in Broad street, near Exchange . 4 e ead place, was taken from the United States bonded ware- Barnard Kelly. houses, where it bad been deposited for safe keeping James H, Breonan, ‘The order upon which the gouls wore delivered op waa Witliam Turnbull. in the usual form, as follows —; James Marshall. 5 13—Benjumin P. Fairchild, | 10 Te Sronexkeren oF mmm Port Thomas W. McMahon, Duties havitg been paid, you will deliver to ——« Ambrose L, Pinney. —— (here follows a deseription of the merchan‘ise), James Walsh. imported into this district on the — of ——, 186-, by M—Inaac ©. Del —— in the ship ——,, — ———, master, from ——==, John K. Hackett. Theodore B. Voorheese. Maunsell B. Field. —and was signed with the names of the Deputy Col- lector and the Deputy Naval Oflicer. Upon it were, also, 15—Peter H. Jackson. the apparent signatures of the withdrawal and bond Gilbert Dean, clerks of the warehouse, the Ooilector's cashier and the Charles Guidet. John. ©. Anderson. cathier of the Naval Office; and, in addition to all thie, t Earl. the oblong stamp of the delivery clerk, with the date, c. Was placed upon the back of the paper. pm taht g In spite of the number and variety of these signas 17—Conrad Bwickhamer, | turee—eeveiPin ali—each one of which was iudispensa- | tyienneny ble, and all of which combined seemed sufficient to bid Thaddeus P. Mott. defiance to any atsempt at forgery, the permit u J. Dagget Hunt which the cake of goods referred to was given up bas omes. been ascertained to be forged, and the detective police Horatio Sey are now in search of the crimiaal and of the property. Alexander B. Johnson. Evidently the affair could have been planned only by & John Munn. person intimately acquainted with the way in which the ‘Thoo. 8. Faxton. operations of the warehouse are trangacted, and was car- ‘ONTARIO. ried out only by one who knew that the case of silks Pee wos there deposited, who knew the W. Warner. and the copsignees, who knew the ship in wi WW. Wright. the goods were {my , and who was inti BB ‘ mately acquainted with the yy | of the ‘ORANGE, Custom House and warehouse officials. the dif. John W. Brown. floulties to be overcome, the amount of know! and P kill required and the splendid manner in the ‘Thomas McK isgook. effair was carried out, this exploit excels evan the fabled Jobn D. Van Buren. feats of Monroe Edwards, and puts any of roa) trans- oswago, actions completely into the shate, 1—Wunsem Dur The forger, whoever he may be, is still fanknown, but cot. cannot, certainly, long esc: detection. The Knowledge could have been pylbensea by 80 few George H. Me ; Ls Whorter. 1 that the Circle of inquiry is made very small, and eo few James M. Crolius, it ‘cine, Persons of there very few conld have possessed tho requl- J—Jonn Wo Prentiss, ite skill that suspicion, and then certain conviction, mas Geo. 0, Clyde, soon fall upcn the guilty party, if our detectives are euch Alfred Clark. in any way but th name, Nanum Thompson = quiere. ersonal Intelligence. 1—John Ht. Brower gqlmiah Coline, of North Caroma; W. D, Gines, of Cana. . H. Lawrence, la, and §. Hooper, of Boston, are fins J each, yoort House.” ere ee james T. Souter, : Taited A. A. Degraw. stopping al the Union Place Hotel. ad ‘Thomas Bradley. Commodore Armstrong, of the United States Navy; Majer Charles W. Wilson, of Bortous, F. B. Morgan, of ham ten, . EB. Jones, of Vis at the Astor House. =~ TRS Pe W. F. Cochran, of Albany; J. J, Jones, of Louisiana; J, ew an Buck ing mn, are stopping at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. ” _ Delos De Wolf, of Oswego; J. G. Mathows, of Kentucky; J. M8. Williams and family, A. Maynard and &, D. Win) slow, of Boston; J. C. Osgood, of Troy; J. W. Lewis, of Virginia, and RC Shriver, ot South Oacclinay are siop- RRNASRLARR. 1—Hon, Jobn C, Willard. Hon. Jonas ©. Heart, Hon. John A. Griswold. Hon. Darius Allen. Ald. Thomas Norton, Geo. B. Warren, Jr. James H. Worden, Ald. Miles Bosch. SJ. L. Van Valkenburgh. Milton Knickerbocker. Martin Springer. prsiey Deming. ping at ichoiaa Hotel. M.Mfiler. | Major Johneon and G. D. Payard, U.S. A; Halsey Creighton, of Rbode tsland; H. 5. Witeom, of Tiinois eee Syracuse; G. 3 Carpenter, of Maine; W. field AARATOGA. 3—Hon. John Cramer. Hon. Geo, G. Scott, P. Orne, of Georgia; A.D. Briges, of Masa, © Winton ‘ W. W. Wade, of Philudelphio: W.’ 8. Henderson, of Chi John Stewart, cago: B.A. Filey and G. W. Alexander, of 8% Louie; p Hole ofl John A. Rice, of Ithaea, nod V. V. Bond, of Baltimore, are A. ©. Paige. stopping at the Metropi:tan Hotel, 3. Re Craig James Fuller. Coroners’ Oftice. siege Tim Orrven Srumer Case —The inquest in the case of Charles Goodyear. Margaret Boarebell, a native of Bugland, aged forty-two ron Stanton. years, who died at No. 40 Oliver street, under oi;cam- et ae stances which led the police to believe that sue had bean Tobias Bouck. beaten to death by ber husband, waa postponed Charies Bouck. yesterday, by order of Coroner Schirmer, until ten o'otoak Judge Sanford, this morning. A post mortem vxarination of the body — O'Root, made by Dr. Bouton, showed toat there were clot o| BRNEC A, blood pressing on the brain, hese clocs were ently ‘Thomas Fatzingor, the cause of death, but how or im what manuer they Edward Myndorse. were received yet remains to be seen. The husband of Wm. Dunlap. the deceased js atill under arrest, and is cvnfined in tho Michael Aoster. Fourth precinct station house, SUPPOLE. 2—William HH. Ludiow, Sale of a Railroad. 8. B. Strong. Srrtvermenp, bio, Jan, 96, 1661. J. Lawrence Smith. ‘The road, bed, rightor way and estate of the John R. Reid. Springfeld, Mt. Vernon and Vateturg Ruolroad Com WReTUKeTER, from Springfield to Delaware, including the on oe? Edwin Cros-vell. chinery, shope and roiling stock, was sold at sheriffe a= - A agg hoy bdo 7 oe A. Lane, of New York, beeamo MM. 5 u urchaser 6 Ontire property v Joun W, Mills, bondiiolvera, at $100,000, PH» for Best morigeco WARHIVETOY, Oliver Ragoom. QRATES, SKATMS AKATER S Lagies and gentiemen can now learn the art of #kating or a ih RTRAL PARK FAVORIR, P. Cartier. Jobo B. Foleo. A.D. Suiith, James 0, Ferris Dr. Wm. Dean, Jobo BK. Rkinner, 24.

Other pages from this issue: