1
f r ' ■ : m * ct^. * i l ' l § W » l S w « T m y »BbBe^<^t faU l>MI,r—eoaeisang<>isnat»otl^ ^ ee&ta; a^eondv^ tblrdinsertions^ ^^K eenta; scd:^ eent* Ite vrexjioilienquent to- il the buiSaoi tK* paper the PMOP^BTOKS KVBOt r«poi»n>le ] fcraaw r* w iiie lrtuq r oocn r to »dT erU s iE s . THK EVENING fOKT FOH THE COHNTET, AX THHEE DOLI.AitS TER ANNUM, USEKS TWtCZ A. WZEZ. TEE NEW TOEK WEEKLY EVENING rOST, at one dollar fer annum . PttBUC«AWES, PUBLIC SALES. Antbony J. Kleaeker, Aaotloneer. ANTHONY J. BLEECKB I. BLEECKER. iotiend oa *MthStre«t between 2d and and 3 cores on the sootfaweit southeast corner of the 3da r f-orlotsonandonitthe northeast corner ol 3d arenne sveone—Poor lots on the sontheast corner of 3d avenne and 1013?n tho loutb side of 97th street, between *d * ^ & t l^ r '^ r t it a S S l’ apply to the enetieneer. No 7 Broad itied -One lot in the rear of the lost namsd. same dimsn- :S * \liH h ^ « t —Two ^ d iiW ly .!n the rear of the menlioned on Tvm «d„ of van Boren ... between th sides of Franklin avenue, be- ndes of Van Buten st. between h' side of Van Boren st, be- av. be. ‘’L kfajs^a^a^j'lots n^Ts'ioath side of LifMette nv. > y f i r . , t s g a g r . « i 5'.v ^ u w e ^ ^ j l - D n d d ! th»diistlionoi John!V Weiliivclt, Office No. 1 Broi iik'- t L iSx'.s S S x lL S -sS H S a ^ ..S ss s ’j s .' s s .w r'a.w s-. -ii., ^*F<W^li parUcular Po.lt.V.11,?“w I'ra Jrorerproperty. lo jf Johnson st. 174 I'e^a^nThTeK « _________ ‘‘a t ^ n S s i d e t l=i® § s i ^ ”w^4asa*moa6y'ean remain on bond and . at the corner of Debe- Plaee—1 lot on N side of Hanover Place, in rear ol rof Fulton avenne, between Hdhover Place and H »rdw K «.I^ E ^ t e - L e a ^ n B o ^ fe ShoM,& ffine mirmjai. coCtosftBd' u ^ ttx mooUis cr^h ajid saiDpie*< 7 i»thfr iBOTX momincat$tM. CataWnea aad atunpl (bttaioaiiMand tamal«s o« fte mominc of sa l». Andrew Meant, Auctioneer- r WILMESBINGS ic MOUNT, Store 51 Beaver street. Catatocoai sample ,LFy-300 packaces Foreign and Doraeetic Dry AilDo’eiock. at McCundtuiji^laln coiMTOfllUiden FIVE FRESH TEAE^tovoI^‘)?rS.h Teas, oonsklinc of p S SIn the nsual variety of packages. FRESH TEAS-Iovoices of 1 rato the sale. I,' corner of Maiden.lane Teas. aonsHting of In the osnal variaiy of packarrs. i^d'aASffia'e^lfape .1 ’cio^itheanetk C. W. Poster, Anotlonnar. BY FOSTEBS &I14VINGSTON, Store No H Broi^ atroot. l5 iCe" poULT DE SOIE. GROS D’AFB ILLUSION. M.aLLNE THULLE. Cataloi;t es asd empiea c^t^^j^raine o* tPRiaUBe CRAPES, the morning of galg: Catalogues and mumdI mon ih^raomnc of sale AI7|:SSS"rS;. *'^elli1nnYnifiimVCT moniini of njo^________________ Si.E»,MfrrooN ''>* «u pieces supemne orown, green, ocveaoc levantineand fancy , l a KsisrbSt”,,™ . .ri,. ..0 i.d„. bi„ im ilipr* iniipp^ * UafalOSUB. and sanmles on the morn.na o( mio. Tr isna! rari?tf o! pacltar^. William Kobbe. Anct--------- Y VAN WYCK & KOBBE, Store No. 17 'Vl'niiam rt. talogues and ramplei or_____________ Henry L. Hoeuet, Auotiont BY UHBSTERMAN & HOCrU&i, Store No. IS WrnSam atreet. Liberal eaih 'odvaaea made aDOO eoniunmenti w in eqniredi ___________________ _ HO.'iDaV. At 10 o'clock et the auction room. 31'B n a m OF FRENCH, BBITIBH. ^ A p . in fnvo'?ei“of’!^n“l LTSome” ,*Lf.Ve^“ S d B. Catalogues end samples on the mocning of »le. ^C&tlh^uM^nysam'ptes on the mommg of sale. B f° r n U '? n 'r : T T ’Sb. laeoand embroidered mnsim e morning of aala ■ f Office No- 29 WaU atreet. '‘4£’L rw T t'’c78th "l-Preo loH on nonb ode 01 Find nreet, 500 feet wet of 5th * K-Tbieo loti on aorth side of flat sUtcL 275 feet ' l ^ g b t tots on north side of 3Ut rtreel. 200 feet ea« of Sth :S” '" “i s ; W : .-^v r' VOL. XLVIL PUBLIC SALES. William HL Franklin, AocOonder. BY WILLIAM H. FRANKLIN, SON & CO. Office. No. 5 Broad atreet. A. H. Muller, Auctioneer. BY ADitlAN H. MULLER, ■mor of New ei ‘■ "-astsfaff..,-, B*8*tegVtomic^in C^meic^^^ m^reme1.’o:V:L^;rderM^^^^^^ Esc. ^^^.oreme1^ol^r:tSdi£^^^^ Steo3n;i;ry7r iiinTeme'^ilrt-oL"er”he'di^^^ ofThomns Camler.Erq. p W S cS oSMlEHn -T>^ g BuoremeAiio'„":fKJr K iffifeS n ley . E.,. '"STe legi?nolire m ""BYc7iLEi^'‘(rHlT?TON” Sra1iYrrnrg‘n7s3 i;5 ire7^^ 1 A large ponion or me purenose monwy may remuiw omuu.mi For lulfparticulars and maps, apply to the auetioneers, No 9 lls s ': rnoe. from fnth to I of 69lh St. and 24 gores on the rear. A. M. Merwln, Auctioneer. BY BANGS, PLATT & CO -jr. ------- ;— „ 1 e—,J,g ,atO ofBooki, 1 BroadwiyT * Cash advances made upon all con ,rs™ ® ® s S s £ :‘‘ Hardware. Crookey, and Goneral Auction aad Oom- ...lib . ■SJ*S!r.X ’loton south side of 33th etreet. abent )u aorth side of 46th st J £ f f S t e f e 's B g r a > g g ’gsi-. w-sass’4»|\.„ , Stor#No.l4^UBU.et ^ ^ g s g s . ^ . a a r E . & 'a ai.sai.'g iisi :S2£SSi iS T I Y iffsV A ^e^vsf .ub.'.sffiu^eS's.’JiSu-. ^.T sisS rs vinSiw.,HInkaaD mm. psTIn Homer Motwia, AtmUonecr, BY H0M£Bs MORC^ANf Store JNo. 1 Pm# aoueer. ___________ PPEM J. , ^ , Kere SSAanitieet. .^^S!as'a."®ssa.'S52! * I*MPI*EKRU|SX—so cans Uxat quaUtr OR eppeemint. for sale by ■» v H. M. SCHIEFFELIN U It FOWLER, IttfW ntlt. Also* 8«MOc DToics of fiat and half toond bastard fi at, 10. U. la, femory. Haidwaie.Ci FunUtawatlM New TfORBL SATURDAY. MARCH 33,1850. PUBLici sales Y NO. 18 NASSAU. NEAR PINE ST fU C. KEMP. Anetlonesr vay, between Pnmk. Ueni7 H Leeds, Auctioneer BY HENRY H. LEEDS fis CO„ Store No. 8 Wall st., opposite New st DS win give his penonal attsation to lalM ol e Merchants' .'Ex- "riE L L 's^rcfr ___________ S1.M 109 WUlltwlI J or Jl o’JllGK^m front of th» -toTW . j^mnrifumTntw^ umlorwfil for city trade. A. 3 o'cloca. £r^iTire c7y st Siff )d cro'ches SouUi Srde 8tD ‘>romgo Maho afilS sS lit:' B iT o^rS S Ik. store No. 191 Broadway, corner of Uey street. roS'OT3?n7oatU^Vrv'e^Sf wVi^l^rSSt" m m s a m ^ plM*i.'£3 iS=gi: ... A^”Mm£nr*long kntinm is a coflmor‘nnd'd*a'l«1 in'fale llooK S iS S sii isjmw YOKK STEAM SAW HULL. ESTABLISHED IN 184‘J npHLEi Subsorlbora haring their Stoam Saw Mill to A complete operation, and also on hand a foil 'asaort- ment of White Fine, White Oak, Georgia Pino and Hem- Bridge Timber, King and Queen Foata, Header and Trim- rSSH”^S!iis, Engine Framea, and every other deaoriptlon that may be .¥ ir "SI- s' Wn hsTG also in operation a complete turning and boring Bhop, for every description of work In the trade iSlSfSiiS-^S aU the quaUties, comprisingone of the moat ext«n8<~ -"B eomplote timber and lumber manufacturing and f "“ '-■"‘“ c Vl IS i . m-o. Save yoiir T in Roofs rp H E American Patent Soap Stone Paint has proved, i by the experience of the last ten yeara to be the moat durable and economical article ever offered to the pobUc, or naed for preserving tin roofe, and making those that The BUbacrlber will warrant to make aU tin or metal roofs tight that be undertakes, for the low price of One cent per square foot. B. F. BUNKEW, 136 Chamber street. N. B-Orders left at the atore, 138 Chamber stree either^fOT ruoti or painting to general, will be ptom^ly California Arms. W.^l^MES & ca., 91 Malden lane, one door betorr Gold atreet. A IdLBirS KEVOLVINO P IS T O L S Thumb XdL Revolvers, a new and improved article i Rifles, Car- bines, Muskete, Fowling Gnns, Bowie Knirw, Picks, ko Stc. Hardwares and Cutlery of all kinds, smtable ft California, at extremely low pricee. au22 Shirt Stare* W iTRS, CLEVELAND, 603 Broadway, New iV l V.Mk, respectfully announces to her friends and to the public gcneiuBy, that she maaufacturea and eon- Boaome, l oUars. ho. he., mad' style, and at the ahortert notice. The attention of the gentlemen is soUclted to an inspection of her atoek. In TXAXiEll W A H E H O tlS E —CYRUS W. FIELD Jr CO , No. U Cliff-Street, offer for sale— Bleaclhlng Powder—SQO casD beet quality. Soda Ash—Sk tons good quality Alum-100 bbls ground, and 100 do crude Smalts—Best English. 3 F E . 4 w E and super ntramartoe—Beet French smd German, various br'e Rage—ISO tons Domestic all qualities Ragg~fi26balei Foreign, aborted qnaUt Together with* eotoplete asf—* ---- Paper, and Paper hlakePa Matei f snu^bageiDgr^s^ncr tsrren rope, awsati whs dweriptioM cf paper nsaker’sstock, _______ Bonl4 ^0D A "A B H —60 tons landing from ship Gertrude.— O Fot«le by H. M. SCHIEFFELIN h FOWLER, mh^ }43 Front itiH t, ktods^ GENERAL NOlTICES. TxCXkETS KROm g^A M A TO SAM ERAH- Off- We are aathorized by Messrs. Corwins Brototr k Company, of Panama, {Mr. Corwlne being the American Consul at that port) to sail cabin u d steerage tickets for sailing vessels between Panama and San Franelsoo. Apply to LIVINGSTON, WELLS fc CO., 10 Wan street, New York. March 20th, 1860. mh20 Im R toSoStfts-s: a'ssrS fS riS : DAY, 2d April next, between the hours at 13 o’clock, M. The Transfer Books Will bo closed from Sffth instant ntll after too oleetion By order, mh20tA2 A. B. MoDONALD, Secretary. 0„,„ „ j on MONDAY, toe 28th tost, a t this oOce, No. 63 WaU PoU optn from 13 o'clock M., till 1 o’clock P. M. ^°N^7«k,Uto .s ’. s n r . s s i i : '" ’' " " ” ”” C^leong ulana RaUrosul Campanw—An the office of toe Company In Brooklyn, under tire dlreo- MOSES MAYNARD. Jr. f«4tI0 4p Seoretaryand Treasurer, consideration tho proposed amendments of the oonatUu- ^’jaietf SHEGOGUE.Seoy. The^poU^wlU open at 12 o’clock M.,and close at 2 ^^Tjhe^transfor books will be closed from tbe 22d to the fe23tmh'47^°'^ *?s\ ac N.’seVmOUR, Treasurer. 0?rif£^WJsVs RlTr.a r.TY'BSXe C o.J-” bearing ..ven per cent, interest, payable semi-annually, £ £ S 5 ”H |'r ’’“lutT “ J M. HOPKINS,TfeMUPM. HARNDt!?? fc CO.. 6 Wall streel. ..iXSA'S.f.SS’''"''iisf't'” «EO. S. WARRLE & CO.’S CALIFORNIA EXPRESS, FOR PACKAUES AND SMALL PARCELS, via the Isthmus, per steamer Cherokee, Wednesday, February 18th The subscriber will dispatch a special Express for ( alifornis, by toe above steamer, for small packages only lu charge of a responsible messenger, who will personally deliver all parcels entrusted to his care, addressed to par- ties residing In San Francisco. Shippers by this Express may rely upon having their business correctly attended to Packages will be received at the office until the [day of tbe steamer’s saiUngl ja3l tf THOMAS WARDLE 88 South st ^ D. E. XIEMANIS & CO., MA.NfFA('TURF. OF OIL AND W ATER COLOR AND W HITE IT BURLING SLIP, NEW YORK, J W.TieUiSS. r. C. Tiztusx. mh31 GENERAL SHlFPimft xxtould ' oivr '^notice that they have either TSfotohM toe’ BuHdllg's^ wTuUdtog’ IdMori^^^^ and will attend to tbe Bale of tbe pave, and to the pur> chase of Gold Dust,^0' tniiuess Intrusted to Bab??4R», f* I TMATCHRa,^ . Co , . ^ York. iS A 'gsrA Messrs. F.. D. Brigham& Co , Boston J R.Bartu«: tt it Son. !<Iew Bedford. CORIVINK. BROTHER iSt CO. AMERICAN^COMMER^^ HOUSE The principal of said firm is Amo. B. Ccawinz, American All conmmnlomtions to New York adifressed to toe r e r y r L a l d 'i u f r o m c ’ alti;^^^^^ to the care of H. vewk Litiboitos, San Francisco, will New*York, Jann^y lo’ , 1850. p i ^ 7 - on board at pier 10. E. R., or to the office of the consign- eea. as she will commence discharging under genera! or- AI^gtods^uM 'pASSA^ia F'llOUX JUl-V^RPdOr., 2U 000 "i5'r'',s;for,iS’ , » ‘B ra c o ,» N ™ „ « . pA N TO N SILKS.-W hite Satsnetts, black satins, Q IL S —TrnCoMSTOCK, lefl'ront street, offers for i; sa,;'sl».e.A ^o.^Tanners’ and common OOs, to lots to suit. none other need apply WM W ROSE, mhU Stationer 19 WaU st. D O Y W A N T E D to learn the trade «f a blank ao^ J J eount bookbinder, must be about 14 years of age, and '^'mbll*'^ ROSE, Stationer, 19 WaU st. toisofflea. mbs w ^ i ^ S 4 ^ 's s , s . v r ‘i s °;.ss*ri S K i? s i ”o,",asiii:A '5s harues- mbl4tt Instant Apply at 196 Front straet. mbis R ^ '^ sfe K rrS ? T L E r“ HPECUL MEBTIMOOF- iOARD o r ASSiaTAMT SsffiSHiSS 8 ..,, ended by inserting the m b and 13th lUhUGIOUB lNlTB:LI.IQBlfCS:. Bishop DoLapey, of the diocese of Western New ork, announces in the Gospel Bannerol the23d]alt., that Robert B .Taiotson, a candidate for holy orders to that diocese, has joinnd himself in communion with the Cathoiie Church, while sojonming in Europe for the'beneflt of his health. Rev. Mr. Tenney, belonging to tMs city, and for- merly settled in South Braintree, was recently in- d pastor of the church in By flelii, as successor to Rev. Mr. Durant. It is a enrions fact, in regard to tho meeting-house in that placed thnf.it is so placed that tjio minister stands in one town while a portion of his audience are seated in amother town—a boun- dary line running between them. It is said of the late Dr. Chalmers, that his favorite text was, “ If any man will do His will, he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God, or whether it be of man,” and that the burden of much of his preaching and religions coDespondence was “ Do that yon may knotn.” Profossor Bush, of this city, has just published a amphlet entitled “ Letters to a Unitarian ; or the lootrine of the Tri-personality of Jehovah incon- sistent with the truth of the Incarnation.” Professor Bash was formerly a distingnisbed and influential Presbyterian, but has latterly devoted his time and talents to the vidioation of the doctrines of Sweden- In 1824, the Rev. Mr. Wilks, a popular preacher in ondon, preached a sermon from the wards” as his text. Rev. H. G. O. Dwight, from tho mission field in Turkey, is on a visit to his friends in Washington. led the Porter Evanj North Bridgewater, Mass., he aasessment list was then referred to uic committee o B«d by Enffine Co No. 41. corner AUomey and Delanccy pafnp ''=7tl^oru;^?'rh‘,lf'5,o"7L*.^m^rir"oV reraln, and .upplie. jga-s-sS~=.= kTcH^A^ land approved. PETITIONS. By Aid. Cook—Petition of W G. Spencer and others to ave Croton water introduced through Eaststreet between Jvington aad Broome sireeis. Referred to Croton Aqe. By Aid. Cook—Petition of Benjamin Belden and others to have the sidewalks m Mangin street [flagged. Referred By Aid. Wood—Petiuon of Daniel Bowleg to be appoint- ed a Commissioner of Deeds. Referred to com. on salaries “"n/ffirp. ... 3 President—Petition of the Rev. William Lyell for compensation for Bervicea rendered as chaplain of tho fanmcni!* commlitce on Alms House Do- was read, and the act submitted after some slight amend- iS S i drali of a law in relat Counsel to the Corp< mt^oAin^^s^^ng____ ___ PETITIOMB. By Aid Delamater—Petition of Weal lease of Fort Qaosevoorl premises. I r p r o r S i o ‘Z i 1II?:nc^Tfre"ds““V e r ^ “Vy'SiTpreshlem-Peutoon of Waller »I. Underhill lobe appointed commissioner oi deeds. Referred to committee " 7 ; l M ^ P e 7 t i o n o f G. B. Shave to have the Sewer now being built m iheBth avenue between 53d and ly extended to 64th. Referred toL ) committee o By Aid Smith-Petmon of L. F. Wadsworth t pointed commissioner of deeds. • Referred to c “T ffin®1?u..or com. on roads. Communication from the Croton Aqueduct Department, sloner, that officer be required to furnish to the Croton tt p „ 5 5 ‘5 & rr s f ; s .7S.t lUi^ad Company be aUowed to lay a single track from The resolution relative to Clinton market was referted for son street to the Hudson river, be amended to read ‘ in .... _ sewer in Canal street,” and that the accompanying o NegKtire—Aid. Smith—1. FROM THE BOaH IS directing SUtes eoT€_____ a.VJ'.'S.S.?4SS™«L£S.T‘J; "" The Board then adjourned untn Friday, the 22d Inst., at 8 o’clock P M ______________ D T. VALENTINE. Cleric, THE EYENING POST. A new church, styled the Porter Evangelit Church, was organized in North Bridgewater, Moss., the 6th instant, consisting of ninety members.— The name is in honor of the first minister ever settled in that town. The American Board of Missions are soon to send out Rev. V. N. Talmage and his wife.'to reinforce the Amoy, Ghina, mission. The first Congregational Church in Portland, established in 1727, and has bad only three past Rev. Thomas Smith, Rev. Samnel Deane, Rev. Dr. Nichols, the present incambent. Nichols has been settled forty-one years, and has out- lived every member of the oonncU who acted at his ordination. He is tho oldest settled minister in the state of Maine, excepting one. Rev. David Thors- The Natchez, (Miisissippi.) Courier, notices the sojourn in that city of Nessim Bar Shemf le, and from Pe ttrioo, nuuuavo titfcvvjiou 'ersia to raise money in different parts of the ) body of their brel the Persian Empire, and who can only be liberated apon the payment of & ransom. A Paris eorrespondent, of the Presbyterian, tions the death of the learned Professor De Wette, who, for thirty years, has exercised a very importai influence in the domain of theological soienoe, first i Berlin, and afterwards at Basle, where he died. I W .tte carried the investigations of his penetrating mind) nnd bis prodigious erudition, Into ail the de- partments of theology. A Critical Introdootion to the Baorsd Doohs of th? *?ld and Nsw TvstBffiVBt?, » Hebrow Arobmology, Dogmatics, Morals, an Diego- sis of the Psalms, and of the whole of the New Tes- tament, Philosophy of Religion, Esthetics, Sermons, edition of Luther’s Letters, Praotioal Works, in- “ Bnt the case of Michisan deserves eipedtl One or the allegntiODaiadiit oonstantiy totndn' most Xemfoaslj’wrsoAx$aiast tbo admission of Ca adopted tfa *xisted"ini Precisely ithe same difflonlty __________ igan. Attfta time the pe’ipla formed their eonstitntlon, and for some i, the territory of Miehigan emhraoed kU iw included .within - • - nAhaeaie .ef Miel^e state foimed their < StateslOf titory ,of Mine- [nthehonnda- |W «1s»cln« Miohigi^ Wisconsin, Iowa, aad the t Bota. Hence, the people who resided w i^j _____ - Res of the preeeiit state of Michigan, were not, at the time reritrred to, an organised, pqUtieid community py virtue of any law of tho tJnited State*. They were only a part of such a community. Underthcsecireumstaneos, the Territotial LeglsUturoof Miehigaa, not only without tho consent of Congress, given for % at imrpwe, hut attex snob consent had been twice refused, passed .an act, which wasapproredLhy the Qoremor ot Michigan, Jana- ary 26,1835, aathoiizlpg a portion of toe people of that territory to form a wmstittttlon and ‘state govemment- At toe time cf the p^sagetoftolsaot,toe rightofsaSrage within the territory qf Michigan, as fixed by Congress, was confined to free white male eitixena of tho United States, who had resided vriihin the territory cneycar, and had paid a county or territorial tax. Yet toe terri- torial legislatnre, disregarding the laws of Congress, en- acted, in the second section of the itatnto wUoh I have recited, ‘ that the ftee white male inhabitants of the said ‘ tarritorv above the age of twenty-one yeara, who shall unsubstantial, and I trust that they wffl be so regarded Now, this is fatality! This is Providence, con- founding a man, and leading him to his own de- struction ; for, it so happens, that I was myself the oondnotor of all that bnsincBB, to relation to the ad- mission of .Michigan—moved the select committee of Senate to which the oonstitution was referred— 1 chairman of that committee—drCW the bill for admission—reported it—supported it—defended it—answered all objections, and especially the two objections which now apply to California, to wit: no authority from Congress, and that foreigners voted, and earned the bill through the Senate. All this ap- pears in the journal of the Senate, and in the public recorded debates of the body; and as Mr- Hall quotes that example of MIcliigan, thus consisting of my work, ho mmat have known that I was not iff favor of the **oId regular way,” as he oallffitj meaning au- thority from Congress, but in favor of action by‘the people themselves, of their own authority; and, con- sequently, he must have known that tto statement about the “ old regular way” was ontitt*. The fact is, I studied that question thirty years ago— studied it at the tine when the Missouri restriction agitated Congress, and whan it was donhtfni whether an act of Congress co ld be passed to authorize a convention to frame a oonstitution, and in Which event I advocated the formation of a constitution, by _____ ft few months which Mr. Hail has disooverec, and for which he has found a base and selfish con- ,o,id... w , ,f «»i, lb- eluding some Christians, said tjr amount to twenty a,go—at the time of the Missouri controversy-and thousand souls, who are at present held in slavery in officially and publicly acted upon fourteen years ago, liberatad at thc time of the admission of Michigan. I have nothing to do with Mr. Hnll’s informant— uotblng to say to the letter he read, or its writer. Mr. Hall is the pnblisherj and that makes him tho author, both legally and morally. He is thc endor- ser. and that makes him the same as tho principal. He is the gratuitous publisher, and the gratuitous endorser, with gratuitous epithets and inventions, which showed that he was doing his own work, cloak- ed with the pretext of a letter. 1 have not been on speaking terms with Mr. Hall for a leng time, and had occasicn to pabHsh him, in Muaoari, for uttor* i 0 £ untmth againsti mo. Unaer tneee oironmswuots, foy pipi to speait or mo os no did m tuo nows© oc xto- prosentativos, not only in disregard of trnth, Wnt in violation of tb© parliamentary law, and the rules of decorum, whlcb the members of the respective Houses are bound to observe toward each other, and with Euoh epithets, is to make himself the author of all le saief—and as such, I have now answered him. THOMAS H. BENTON. Washington, March 20,1859. THE TRIAL OB' DR. 'WRBSTEB. We resume our report of this important trial from he point at which it was closed yesterday. Little- leld is stiii on the stand. He continued : On Tuesday evening about half-past five (five days af- ;er toe disappearance of Farfcman.) 1 beard some one coming down the back stairs that lead from the i try j it was Dr. Webster, Ho had a candlestick in and a candle burning ; never did use a lamp ; b entry, a: le s h e d ; about ten or a few the first door was the labor room ; found it fast; nevei before on r i*ctares ; whether 1 to uudM there. They Eearchedxny rcomt doorandgoto. r«m»onttot<» toe ^ try between thefroiit and beekdeUar, «aihear« Ito. Webster go down and unbolt the door leading from the laboratory into my e:allar, AssoonaSlie chbolted toe door 1 went into the Idtchen. In a Saif a minute hi* bell r ^ g . t i eaid to my wife, I guess Dr. Webstevhas got hii dooc open, and 1 eanget In. I went np into his back room.— Ha stood a tlh e ride of» table, and appeared to bo read- ing a, paper wbich he held to his hands—a newspaper, I He asked roe if I knew where Mr. Foster kept, near tha Howard Atoeufenm. 1 asked him if It was toe prorisioia dealer. Ho laid it was, and I replied I knew him, Ha im e if 1 bad hongbf my ThanksgiTlng turkey. I had n o t; th a t 1 had talked about going ouC _ tog Thanksgiving, anddidnot know asi 1 shoni A buy one. He then handed mean order, saying, take that and get a nice turkey, as lam In the habityf giving; away two or three, and I maywantyou tudoaonieodit jobs for me. i He,gaT«anothernrder to Mr.-Foster, to sendjhim out: some sweet potatoes; It was,toe first time Shat Dr. Webster ever gave me anytotog. The-door qf thela- ora^ry waS bolted after I came back from Mr. Foster’s. Wednesday m orni^D f. Webster came to tb'e Collego nrhenhecainein. He wemtujs ---------------- front abtry. Pretty soon I hear4 thingsroundtohisla' - • - ‘’• “ “ •“ •■“ I ...... I put my hand' on toe wall, I could hardly bear my baud laboratory was bolted on toetos^ . __________ I went to the laboratory stairs door, leading from my collar, and found tost fast. I went up stairs, unlockedC hia lecture room, and went in for tho purpose of goiliE dowh that way. I found the door to the back room lock- ed. I went down stairs to look out of my cellar window to see if I could discover fire proceeding from the rear of the boildtog. 1 climbed on the wall to the the denble' window Of thfl laboratory, where lights were on e&oh side. 7 ho win- dow was tastened, but 1 got to 7'he first place l wenc furnace, in which the bones were found . and ih» and each of his books having ions, formed an epooh in tho learned world. One numerable articles of Review ; nothing esoapf laving reached an epooh laims to the grt dom is a new translation of the entire Bible, the most accurate that has ever been made. Collections were taken up for the new Free Churc’u Jollege, on tho 17th ult., tnronghout Scotland. The mounts *’ • Murray, of London, has issued the Bxnnaunt ver- hn, from" MSS. and to the Bibli- of it says that it preserved in Trinity CoUege J otoeqne du Boi, Parie. The exhibits an anoieni lent “ vernaonlar version of the New Testament as old as the twelfth century, and more accurate and literal in its character than any other translation of the same age.” “ The Romannt,” says Dr. Gilly, “ was one of the two Tornaoular tougnes into which the Councils of Touts and Rheims, at the suggestion of Gharlemague, enacted that the homilies of the church should be translated, it was the language which contributed to the revival of letters, and to tne progress of thought and public opinion, in an age emphatioaily called the dark. It was the language of the Troubadours, iu which all their poems and songs were composed and written. It was the language in which the first great attempt was made to retorm the corruptions {of the ebnroh, both by preaching and by the circulation of religious treatises, iu the twelfth and thirteenth cen- turies. The Romannt was also the longnage in which *' ' ‘ivernacular translations of Scripture were put 'hioh were prohibitedby ecclesiastical authori- -•'-‘ H h a d ................................... tog some church c( Longman & Co. have published reooi Ipistles. The translation is from the Peschito, or ancient Syriac of the id Ep made by J . W. Etheridge, M. A. The editor of the ■Westminster Review says that the introductory mat- ter caimot fail to be of value to the biblical student. The Pesohito version is believed by biblical oritios to date at least as early as tho beginning of the fourth century, and probably earlier. It does not contain the disputed passages in 1 J ohn v. 7. The sciences of Phrenology and the Sacred Scrip- tures, have long been thought to bo somewhat in- consistent with each other, but the Rev. John Pior- pont, has recently published a book, through in which he long been thought to ith each other, but th< ■eoently published a 1 press of Fowler & Wells of this city, in which he un- dertakes to demonstrate that the doctrines of the Word and of the new science, are in the n feet harmony. Ho goos farther, and saji “ They not only co-exist, as independent truths, bat are mutnal supporters and friends, each helping to illustrate, explain, and prove tbe other ; and tbae directly contributing to tho advancement of tho mo- ral, tho bighcBt interests of man, and consequently to the glory of that Being, whom Phrenology, not less than all the other sciences, recognizes as the Creator and Governor of the universe, and whom Gospel recognizes aa ‘ the God and Father of Lord Jesus Christ. ” JHELX.AC—so e 9 for sal. by a Oranr. and Campbell*. No. L WM. T. HICKS k430., 149 and m Front st. . MN«?scb, cargo ^^gatpierS, E. l E.'R , and for sale by :osES TaFLOE k t-0.-44 South st. A RSENXC.—too casks Powdtted AMsnic in sti»., -tX and for sal. by ___ H. M. SCHIEFFELIN k FOWLER, ntoao 14^ Front strMl To the Editore of the Globe: As the register of the debates of Congress, your paper of the 13th instant contains the speech of Mr. Willard P. Hall, of Missouri, from which the follow- ing is an extract: “ Perhaps, too, he [Col. BlssellJ was not aware of th other foot, that toe much applauded senator was, only . few months ago, opposed to the admestion of CaUfornia x t a etau. Yet 1 feel authorized to say, that such was the ease. A short time since, 1 received a letter from one of the most respectable men to Mlssonrl, In which he v>By o f deing thinge “ This conduct on the part of that senator, together ■;h his Tlrtnal denial of the right of the legislature of !h state to instruct its senators to Congress, forced a 1of Mifsonri to abandon him uvuvj^Ami, iijr uuii&uiK to be antme gi Ifhe Mmflis mxflTfhem*” avenue, andWHh the view to encourage him in nro- motingtheestabliilunenl of stub a govemtofntis Soon after Dr. Webster came to the College. He came into my entrance, tbe cast door. I think that he had a small bundle under bis arm. 1 followod himnp in- saw Dr. Webster again tbat forenoon before 11 o’clock. ow I as soon a« Dr. Webster ■“S ilrig S i . . Wd M . b. woYxld SO immedia-tely to Cambrids« and dlEcharge tb< a£, 1 itfSfSS” .b“.’ ,KS down to Dr. fftr)uQkn on Ps-rkman grabbed tho stJon was passed over ] that toy. 1 went and saw Mr. Kingsley and officer Stark- Mr. Kingsley said we want, Littlefield, to look arsand rough bis loom, down into the bapK room In rnm m m get to ; I don't know at what time Dr. Webster went out W08 coTcred np 'frith a isoapstone oototi ni and furnace all corered with minerals. Tbr ttajxciie rxxxd fovnad ttiaat two tii±r<iH of tAifii wa.t«r Was out--- celved that week or net.” ' been the Tuesday before, and began to work ; I had E“ 4'S£H aa-- fos: I went into the demonstration room and there I found Dr J.S. Jackson alone; I told him I was digging toronglx the wall 4 he got np qnd osmo towards me ; said he, ^ Srittlcfield, I feel dreadfohy abotit this matter, and da yon go through that wall befote yoib«l§cp*;^^ I did fiO. r then went to Leonard Fuller, &nd asked him to lend ma a crow-bar. He asked ine what I wanted to do with it. I told him I wanted to dig» hole in a brick wall, to carry a lead pipe through toe hole for water. He then replied “ I guess you do ” I then went to toe house, anct locked all the outside doors, and left the keys on the to- me : thenXgi ------0 wall j did n came'tip and 'Went utcv' w chisel; he gave me just sneh a cne as I wanted 4 . went back to work, and got aiong. for a skOrt time, very fast, but presently heard four rap* above; Iran up, and my wife raid, “ I caw two gentlemen pass, and toenght ono of them was Dr WebsteJ, bttt they weTfl cMy Ml Rtogs- iej and officer StaikwesHiw i tbny oame to the door,ana InquiraU for you.” iwent out, and Mr. jangsloy asked me what priiata place there was in the jLoUega tllflt bad not beei» searched; I told hta, and he tiff — ioJd' -Waj'fr! ______ s1taBa>iiYitrid, lasted frewiitlfo.beletff’' e examined theft)

e w TfORBL SATURDAY. MARCH 33,1850.nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030390/1850-03-23/ed-1/seq-1.pdft h efcraawr* wiiielrtuqr oocnr to »dTerUsiEs. PMOP^BTOKS KVBOt r«poi»n>le

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: m * ct .

* il' l§ W » lS w « T m y »BbBe^<^t faUl>M I,r—eoaeisang< > isna t»o tl^

^ ee&ta; a^eondv^ tblrdinsertions ^ ^ K e e n t a ; s c d : ^ eent* Ite vrexjioilienquent to­

il the buiSaoi tK* paper

t h e PM OP^BTO KS KVBOt r«poi»n>le ] fcraawr* wiiielrtuqr oocnr to »dTerUsiEs.THK EVENING fOKT FOH THE COHNTET,

AX THHEE DOLI.AitS TER ANNUM,’ USEKS TWtCZ A. WZEZ.

TEE NEW TOEK WEEKLY EVENING rOST, a t o n e d o l l a r f e r a n n u m .

P ttB U C « A W E S ,

P U B L IC SALES.Antbony J. Kleaeker, Aaotloneer.

A N T H O N Y J . B L E E C K B

I. BLEECKER.

iotiend oa *MthStre«t between 2d andand 3 cores on the sootfaweit southeast corner of the 3d a r

f-orlotsonandonitthe northeast corner ol 3d arenne

sveone—Poor lots on the sontheast corner of 3d avenne and 1013 ?n tho loutb side of 97th street, between *d

* ^ & tl^ r '^ rt ita S S l’apply to the enetieneer. No 7 Broad

itied -One lot in the rear of the lost namsd. same dimsn-:S*\liH h^ «t—Two ^diiW ly.!n the rear of the menlioned on

T v m «d„ of van Boren ... betweenth sides of Franklin avenue, be- ndes of Van Buten st. between

h' side of Van Boren st, be- av. be.

‘’L k f a js ^ a ^ a ^ j 'lo t s n^T s 'ioa th side of LifMette nv.

> y f i r . , t s g a g r .« i5'.v^ u w e ^ ^ j l- D n d d ! th»diistlionoi John!V Weiliivclt,

Office No. 1 Broiiik'-

t L

i S x ' . s

S S x l L S - s S H S a

■ ^ . . S s s s ’j s . ' s s . w r ' a . w s - .- i i . ,

^*F<W li parUcular

Po.lt.V.11,?“w I'ra Jrorerproperty. lo jf Johnson st. 174

I'e^a^nThTeK

« _________

‘‘a t ^ n S s id e t

l = i ®§ s i ^ ”w ^4asa*m oa6y'ean remain on bond and

. at the corner of Debe- Plaee—1 lot on N side of Hanover Place, in rear ol

rof Fulton avenne, between Hdhover Place and

H »rdw K «.I^ E ^ t e - L e a ^ n B o ^ fe ShoM,&

f fine mirmjai. coCtosftBd' u ^ ttx mooUis cr^hajid saiDpie* <7i» thfr iBOTXmomincat$tM.CataWnea aad atunpl

(bttaioaiiM and tamal«s o« fte mominc of sa l».Andrew Meant, Auctioneer-

r W ILM ESBIN G S ic MOUNT, Store 51 Beaver street.

Catatocoai sample

,LFy-300 packaces Foreign and Doraeetic Dry

AilDo’eiock. at McCundtuiji^laln coiMTOfllUidenFIVE FRESH TEAE^tovoI^‘)?rS.h Teas, oonsklinc of

p S S In the nsual variety of packages.

FRESH TEAS-Iovoices of 1

ra to the sale.I,' corner of Maiden.lane

Teas. aonsHting of

In the osnal variaiy of packarrs.

i ^ d 'a A S f f ia 'e ^ l f a p e .1

’c io^itheanetk

C. W. Poster, Anotlonnar.BY FO S T E B S & I1 4 V IN G STO N ,

Store No H B roi^ atroot.

l5iCe "poULT DE SOIE. GROS D’AFB ILLUSION. M.aLLNE THULLE.

Cataloi;t es asd empiea c^t^^j^raine o*tPRiaUBe CRAPES,

the morning of galg:

Catalogues and mumdIm on ih^raomnc of sale

A I7 |:S S S " rS ;.

*'^elli1nnYnifiimVCT moniini of njo ________________

S i .E » ,M fr ro o N

''>* «u pieces supemne orown, green, ocveaoc

levantineand fancy ,

l a K s i s r b S t ”,, ™ . .ri,. . .0 i.d „ . b i„

i m i l i p r *

i n i i p p ^* UafalOSUB. and sanmles on the morn.na o( mio.

T r isna! rari?tf o! pacltar^.

William Kobbe. Anct---------Y VAN WYCK & KOBBE,

Store No. 17 'Vl'niiam rt.

talogues and ramplei or_____________Henry L. Hoeuet, Auotiont

BY U H BSTERM A N & H O CrU& i,Store No. IS WrnSam atreet.

Liberal eaih 'odvaaea made aDOO eoniunmenti w in e q n i r e d i ___________________ _

HO.'iDaV.At 10 o'clock et the auction room.31'B n a m OF FRENCH, BBITIBH.

A p . in fnvo'?ei“of’!^n“l LTSome” ,*Lf.Ve “ S d B. Catalogues end samples on the mocning of »le.

^C&tlh^uM^nysam'ptes on the mommg of sale.

B f°rn U '? n 'r :T T ’Sb.

laeoand embroidered mnsim e morning of aala ■

f Office No- 29 WaU atreet.

'‘4£’L rw T t'’c78th" l-P reo loH on nonb ode 01 Find nreet, 500 feet wet of 5th * K-Tbieo loti on aorth side of flat sUtcL 275 feet

' l ^ g b t tots on north side of 3Ut rtreel. 200 feet ea« of Sth:S”'"“i s ;

■ W : . - ^ v r '

VOL. X LV IL

PU B L IC SALES.William HL Franklin, AocOonder.

BY WILLIAM H. FRANKLIN, SON & CO.Office. No. 5 Broad atreet.

A. H . Muller, Auctioneer.B Y A D i t l A N H . M U L L E R ,

■mor of New ei

■‘■ " - a s t s f a f f . . , - ,

B*8*tegVtomic in C^meic^^^

m reme1.’o:V:L^;rderM^^^^^^ Esc.

^^ .oreme1 ol r:tSdi£ ^ ^Steo3n;i;ry7r

iiinTeme'^ilrt-oL"er”he'di^^^ ofThomns Camler.Erq.

p W i « i « S c SoSMlEHn -T>^

g BuoremeAiio'„":fKJr K i f f i f e S n l e y . E .,.

'"STe legi?nolire m

""B Y c7 iL E i^ '‘(rHlT?TON”

Sra1iYrrnrg‘n7s3i;5ire7^

1 A large ponion or me purenose monwy may remuiw om uu.mi For lulfparticulars and maps, apply to the auetioneers, No 9

l l s s ' :rnoe. from fnth to

I of 69lh St. and 24 gores on the rear.

A. M. Merwln, Auctioneer.BY BANGS, P LA TT & CO

- j r . ------- ;—„ 1 — e—,J,g ,atO ofBooki,1 BroadwiyT

* Cash advances made upon all con

, r s ™ ® ® s S s £ : ‘‘

Hardware. Crookey, and Goneral Auction aad Oom-

. . . l i b .

■SJ*S!r.X

’loton south side of 33th etreet. abent)u aorth side of 46th st

J £ f f S t e f e 's B g r a > g g ’gsi-.

w - s a s s ’4 » | \ . „ ,S t o r # N o .l4 ^ U B U .e t

^ ^ g s g s .^ .a a r E .& 'a ai.sai.'g

i i s i:S2£SSi

i S T I Y i f f s V A ^ e ^ v s f

.ub.'.sffiu^eS's.’JiSu-. .T s isS rsvinSiw.,HInkaaD mm. psTIn

Homer Motwia, AtmUonecr,BY H 0M £Bs MORC^ANf

Store JNo. 1 Pm#

aoueer.___________ P P E M

J. , ^ , K ere S S A an itiee t.. ^ ^ S ! a s ' a . " ® s s a . 'S 5 2 !

* I*MPI*EKRU|SX—so cans Uxat quaUtr OReppeemint. for sale by ■» vH. M. SCHIEFFELINU It FOWLER,

IttfW n tlt.

Also* 8«MOcDToics of fiat and half toond bastard fi at, 10. U. la,

f emory.

Haidwaie.CiFunUtawatlM

Ne w TfORBL SATURDAY. MARCH 33,1850.

PU B L ici s a l e s Y

NO. 18 NASSAU. NEAR PINE ST

fU C. KEMP. Anetlonesr

vay, between Pnmk.

Ueni7 H Leeds, Auctioneer BY HENRY H. L E ED S fis CO„

Store No. 8 Wall st., opposite New stDS win give his penonal attsation to lalM ol

e Merchants' .'Ex-

" r i E L L ' s ^ r c f r___________ S1.M 109 WU lltw lI

J or Jl o’JllGK m front of th» -toTW.

j^ m n r i f u m T n tw ^ umlorwfil

for city trade. A. 3 o'cloca.

£ r ^ iT ire c7y st

S iff )d cro'ches SouUi Srde 8tD‘>romgo Maho

a f i l S s S l i t : 'B i T o ^ r S S I k .

store No. 191 Broadway, corner of Uey street. roS 'O T3?n7oatU ^V rv'e^Sf wVi l rSSt"

m m s a m ^

plM*i.'£3iS=gi:...

A”Mm£nr*long kntinm is a coflmor‘nnd'd*a'l«1 in'fale llooK

s £ S i S S i « s i i

isjm w Y O K K ST E A M SA W HULL. ESTABLISHED IN 184‘J

npHLEi Subsorlbora haring their Stoam Saw Mill to A complete operation, and also on hand a foil 'asaort-

ment of White Fine, White Oak, Georgia Pino and Hem-

Bridge Timber, King and Queen Foata, Header and Trim-rSSH”S!iis,Engine Framea, and every other deaoriptlon that may be

. ¥ i r"SI- s '

Wn hsTG also in operation a complete turning andboring Bhop, for every description of work In the trade

iSlSfSiiS-^SaU the quaUties, comprisingone of the moat ext«n8<~ -"B eomplote timber and lumber manufacturing and f

"“ '-■"‘“cVlIS i . m-o.

Save yoiir T in Roofsrp H E American Patent Soap Stone Paint has proved, i by the experience of the last ten yeara to be the moat

durable and economical article ever offered to the pobUc, or naed for preserving tin roofe, and making those that

The BUbacrlber will warrant to make aU tin or metal roofs tight that be undertakes, for the low price of Onecent per square foot.

B. F. BUNKEW, 136 Chamber street. N. B-Orders left at the atore, 138 Chamber stree

either^fOT ruoti or painting to general, will be ptom^ly

California Arms.W .^ l^ M E S & c a . ,

91 M alden la n e , one d o o r b e to rr G o ld a tre e t . A Id L B irS K E V O L V IN O P I S T O L S Thumb

XdL Revolvers, a new and improved article i Rifles, Car­bines, M uskete, Fowling Gnns, Bowie Knirw, Picks, ko Stc. Hardwares and Cutlery of all kinds, smtable ft California, at extremely low pricee. au22

S h ir t Stare*W iTRS, C L E V E L A N D , 603 B ro a d w a y , New iV l V.Mk, respectfully announces to her friends and to the public gcneiuBy, tha t she maaufacturea and eon-

Boaome, l oUars. ho. he., mad' style, and at the ahortert notice. The attention of the gentlemen is soUclted to an inspection of her atoek. In

TXAXiEll W A H E H O tlSE —CYRUS W. FIELD Jr CO , No. U Cliff-Street, offer for sale—Bleaclhlng Powder—SQO casD beet quality.Soda Ash—Sk tons good qualityAlum-100 bbls ground, and 100 do crude Smalts—Best English. 3 F E . 4 w E and super ntramartoe—Beet French smd German, various br'e Rage—ISO tons Domestic all qualities Ragg~fi26balei Foreign, aborted qnaUtTogether with* eotoplete asf—*---- ‘

Paper, and Paper hlakePa Matei

f sn u^ bageiD gr^ s^n cr tsrren rope, awsati whsdweriptioM cf paper nsaker’sstock, _______ Bonl4^ 0 D A " A B H —60 tons landing from ship Gertrude.— O Fot « le by H. M. SCHIEFFELIN h FOWLER,

m h^ }43 Front itiH t,

k to d s^

GENERAL NOlTICES.TxCXkETS K R O m g ^ A M A T O SAM E R A H -

Off- We are aathorized by Messrs. Corwins Brototr k Company, of Panama, {Mr. Corwlne being the American Consul a t tha t port) to sail cabin u d steerage tickets for sailing vessels between Panama and San Franelsoo.

Apply to LIVINGSTON, WELLS fc CO.,10 Wan street, New York.

March 20th, 1860. mh20 Im

R t o S o S t f t s - s : a ' s s r S f S r i S :DAY, 2d April next, between the hours at 13 o’clock, M.

The Transfer Books Will bo closed from Sffth instant ntll after too oleetion By order,mh20tA2 A. B. MoDONALD, Secretary.

0 „ , „ „ j

on MONDAY, toe 28th tost, a t this oOce, No. 63 WaU

PoU optn from 13 o'clock M., till 1 o’clock P. M.

^ ° N ^ 7 « k ,U t o

. s ’. s n r . s s i i : ' " ’ ' " " ” ” ”

C ^ le o n g u l a n a R aU rosu l C am panw — An

the office of toe Company In Brooklyn, under tire dlreo-

MOSES MAYNARD. Jr.f«4tI0 4p Seoretaryand Treasurer,

consideration tho proposed amendments of the oonatUu-

’ja ie tf SHEGOGUE.Seoy.

The^poU^wlU open at 12 o’clock M.,and close at 2

^^Tjhe^transfor books will be closed from tbe 22d to the

fe23tmh'47^°'^ *?s\ ac N.’seV mOUR, Treasurer.0?rif£^WJsVs RlTr.a r.TY'BSXe C o .J -”

bearing ..ven per cent, interest, payable semi-annually,

£ £ S 5 ”H | ' r

’’“ l u t T “ J M. HOPKINS,TfeMUPM.

HARNDt!?? fc CO.. 6 Wall streel.

..iXSA'S.f.SS’''" '' i i s f ' t '”« E O . S. W A R R L E & CO.’S

C A L I F O R N I A E X P R E S S ,FOR PACKAUES AND SMALL PARCELS, via the

Isthmus, per steamer Cherokee, Wednesday, February 18th The subscriber will dispatch a special Express for ( alifornis, by toe above steamer, for small packages only lu charge of a responsible messenger, who will personally deliver all parcels entrusted to his care, addressed to par­ties residing In San Francisco. Shippers by this Express may rely upon having their business correctly attended to Packages will be received at the office until the [day of tbe steamer’s saiUngl

ja3l tf THOMAS WARDLE 88 South st^ D . E . X I E M A N I S & CO.,

MA.NfFA('TURF. OFO IL AND W A T E R COLOR AND W H IT E

IT BURLING SLIP, NEW YORK,

J W.TieUiSS.r. C. T iz tu sx . mh31

GENERAL S H lF Pim ft

x x t o u l d ' o i v r ' n o t ic e t h a t t h e y h a v e

either TSfotohM toe’ BuHdllg's^ wTuUdtog’ IdMori^^^^and will attend to tbe Bale of tbe pave, and to the pur> chase of Gold Dust,^0' tniiuess Intrusted to

Bab??4R», f* ITMATCHRa,^ . Co , . ^ York.

i S A ' g s r AMessrs. F.. D. Brigham & Co , BostonJ R.B artu«:tt it Son. !<Iew Bedford.

C O R IV IN K . B R O T H E R iSt CO.

A M ERICA N ^C OM M ER ^^ H O USE

The principal of said firm is Amo. B. Ccawinz, American

All conmmnlomtions to New York adifressed to toe

r e r y r L a ld 'i u f r o m c ’alti;^^^^^to the care of H .vew k Litiboitos, San Francisco, will

New*York, Jann^y lo’, 1850.

p i ^ 7 - “

on board at pier 10. E. R., or to the office of the consign- eea. as she will commence discharging under genera! or-

AI^gtods^uM

'p A S S A ^ ia F'llOUX JU l-V ^RPdO r.,

2 U 0 0 0" i 5 ' r ' ' , s ; f o r , i S ’, » ‘B r a c o , » N ™ „ « .p A N T O N S IL K S .-W hite Satsnetts, black satins,

Q I L S —TrnCoMSTOCK, le fl 'ro n t street, offers for

™ i; sa,;'sl».e.A^o .^T anners’ and common OOs, to lots to suit.

none other need apply WM W ROSE,mhU Stationer 19 WaU st.

D O Y W A N T E D to learn the trade «f a blank ao J J eount bookbinder, must be about 14 years of age, and'^'mbll*'^ ROSE, Stationer, 19 WaU st.

toisofflea. mbs

w ^ i ^ S 4 ^ ' s s , s . v r ‘i s ° ; . s s * r iS K i ? s i ”o ," , a s i i i : A '5 sharues- m bl4tt

Instant Apply a t 196 Front straet. m bis

R ^ “ ' ^ s f e K r r S ? T L E r “

HPECUL MEBTIMOOF- iOARD o r ASSiaTAMT

S s f f i S H i S S

8..,, ended by inserting the mb and 13th

lU hU G IO U B lN lTB:LI.IQ BlfCS:.

Bishop DoLapey, of the diocese of Western New ork, announces in the Gospel Bannerol the23d]alt.,

that Robert B .Taiotson, a candidate for holy orders to that diocese, has joinnd himself in communion with the Cathoiie Church, while sojonming in Europe for the'beneflt of his health.

Rev. Mr. Tenney, belonging to tMs city, and for­merly settled in South Braintree, was recently in-

d pastor of the church in By flelii, as successor to Rev. Mr. Durant. It is a enrions fact, in regard to tho meeting-house in that placed thnf.it is so placed that tjio minister stands in one town while a portion of his audience are seated in amother town—a boun­dary line running between them.

It is said of the late Dr. Chalmers, that his favorite text was, “ If any man will do His will, he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God, or whether it be of man,” and that the burden of much of his preaching and religions coDespondence was “ Do that yon may knotn.”

Profossor Bush, of this city, has just published a amphlet entitled “ Letters to a Unitarian ; or the lootrine of the Tri-personality of Jehovah incon­

sistent with the truth of the Incarnation.” Professor Bash was formerly a distingnisbed and influential Presbyterian, but has latterly devoted his time and talents to the vidioation of the doctrines of Sweden-

In 1824, the Rev. Mr. Wilks, a popular preacher in ondon, preached a sermon from the

wards” as his text.

Rev. H. G. O. Dwight, from tho mission field in Turkey, is on a visit to his friends in Washington.

led the Porter Evanj North Bridgewater, Mass.,

he aasessment list was then referred to uic committee o

B«d by Enffine Co No. 41. corner AUomey and Delanccy

p a f n p

''=7tl^oru;^?'rh‘,lf'5,o"7L*.^m^rir"oV reraln, and .upplie.

jga-s-sS~=.=

kTcH^A^

land approved.PETITIONS.

By Aid. Cook—Petition of W G. Spencer and others to ave Croton water introduced through Eaststreet between Jvington aad Broome sireeis. Referred to Croton Aqe.

By Aid. Cook—Petition of Benjamin Belden and others to have the sidewalks m Mangin street [flagged. Referred

By Aid. Wood—Petiuon of Daniel Bowleg to be appoint­ed a Commissioner of Deeds. Referred to com. on salaries

“"n/ffirp.... 3 President—Petition of the Rev. William Lyellfor compensation for Bervicea rendered as chaplain of thofanmcni!* commlitce on Alms House Do-

was read, and the act submitted after some slight amend-

i S S idrali of a law in relat Counsel to the Corp<mt^oAin^^s^^ng_______

PETITIOMB.By Aid Delamater—Petition of Weal

lease of Fort Qaosevoorl premises. I

r p r o r S io ‘Z i1II?:nc^Tfre"ds““V e r ^“Vy'SiTpreshlem-Peutoon of Waller »I. Underhill lobe appointed commissioner oi deeds. Referred to committee" 7 ; l M ^ P e 7 t i o n o f G. B. Shave to have the Sewer now being built m iheBth avenue between 53d and

ly extended to 64th. Referred toL) committee oBy Aid Smith-Petmon of L. F. Wadsworth t

pointed commissioner of deeds. • Referred to c“T “ ffin®1?u..or

com. on roads.Communication from the Croton Aqueduct Department,

sloner, that officer be required to furnish to the Croton

t t p „ 5 5 ‘5 & r r s f ;s .7S.t

lU i^ ad Company be aUowed to lay a single track from

The resolution relative to Clinton market was referted

for

son street to the Hudson river, be amended to read ‘ in.... _

sewer in Canal street,” and tha t the accompanying o

NegKtire—Aid. Smith—1.FROM THE BOaH

IS directing SUtes eoT€_____

a.VJ'.'S.S.?4SS™«L£S.T‘J;""

The Board then adjourned untn Friday, the 22d Inst., at 8 o’clock P M______________ D T. VALENTINE. Cleric,

THE EYENING POST.

A new church, styled the Porter Evangelit Church, was organized in North Bridgewater, Moss.,

the 6th instant, consisting of ninety members.— The name is in honor of the first minister ever settled in that town.

The American Board of Missions are soon to send out Rev. V. N . Talmage and his wife.'to reinforce the Amoy, Ghina, mission.

The first Congregational Church in Portland, established in 1727, and has bad only three past

Rev. Thomas Smith, Rev. Samnel Deane, Rev. Dr. Nichols, the present incambent. Nichols has been settled forty-one years, and has out­lived every member of the oonncU who acted at his ordination. He is tho oldest settled minister in the state of Maine, excepting one. Rev. David Thors-

The Natchez, (Miisissippi.) Courier, notices the sojourn in that city of Nessim Bar Shemf

le, and

from Pettrioo, nuuuavo titfcvvjiou

'ersia to raise money in different parts of the ) body of their brel

the Persian Empire, and who can only be liberated apon the payment of & ransom.

A Paris eorrespondent, of the Presbyterian, tions the death of the learned Professor De Wette, who, for thirty years, has exercised a very importai influence in the domain of theological soienoe, first i Berlin, and afterwards at Basle, where he died. I W .tte carried the investigations of his penetrating mind) nnd bis prodigious erudition, Into ail the de­partments of theology. A Critical Introdootion tothe Baorsd Doohs of th? *?ld and Nsw TvstBffiVBt?, » Hebrow Arobmology, Dogmatics, Morals, an Diego- sis of the Psalms, and of the whole of the New Tes­tament, Philosophy of Religion, Esthetics, Sermons,

edition of Luther’s Letters, Praotioal Works, in-

“ Bnt the case of Michisan deserves eipedtl One or the allegntiODaiadiit oonstantiy totndn' most Xemfoaslj’wrsoAx$aiast tbo admission of Ca

adopted tfa*xisted"ini

Precisely ithe same difflonlty__________ igan. Attfta time the pe’iplaformed their eonstitntlon, and for some

i, the territory of Miehigan emhraoed kUiw included .within - • -

nAhaeaie .ef Miel^e state foimed their <

StateslOf titory ,of Mine- [nthehonnda-

| W « 1 s » c l n «M iohigi^ Wisconsin, Iowa, aad the tBota. Hence, the people who resided w i^ j _____ -Res of the preeeiit state of Michigan, were not, a t the time reritrred to, an organised, pqUtieid community py virtue of any law of tho tJnited State*. They were only a part of such a community. Underthcsecireumstaneos, the Territotial LeglsUturoof Miehigaa, not only without tho consent of Congress, given for % at imrpwe, hu t attexsnob consent had been twice refused, passed .an act, which wasapproredLhy the Qoremor ot Michigan, Jana- ary 26,1835, aathoiizlpg a portion of toe people o f that territory to form a wmstittttlon and ‘state govemment- At toe time cf the p^sagetoftolsaot,toe rightofsaSrage within the territory qf Michigan, as fixed by Congress,was confined to free white male eitixena of tho UnitedStates, who had resided vriihin the territory cneycar, and had paid a county or territorial tax. Yet toe terri­torial legislatnre, disregarding the laws of Congress, en­acted, in the second section of the ita tn to wUoh I have recited, ‘ tha t the ftee white male inhabitants of the said ‘ tarritorv above the age of twenty-one yeara, who shall

unsubstantial, and I trust that they wffl be so regarded

Now, this is fatality! This is Providence, con­founding a man, and leading him to his own de­struction ; for, it so happens, that I was myself the oondnotor of all that bnsincBB, to relation to the ad­mission of .Michigan—moved the select committee of

Senate to which the oonstitution was referred—1 chairman of that committee—drCW the bill for admission—reported it—supported it—defended

it—answered all objections, and especially the two objections which now apply to California, to wit: no authority from Congress, and that foreigners voted, and earned the bill through the Senate. A ll this ap­pears in the journal of the Senate, and in the public recorded debates of the body; and as Mr- Hall quotesthat example of MIcliigan, thus consisting of m y work, ho mmat have known that I was not iff favor of the **oId regular way,” as he oallffitj meaning au- thority from Congress, but in favor of action by‘ the people themselves, of their own authority; and, con­sequently, he must have known that t t o statement about the “ old regular way” was ontitt*. The fact is, I studied that question thirty years ago— studied it at the tin e when the Missouri restriction agitated Congress, and whan it was donhtfni whether an act of Congress c o ld be passed to authorize a convention to frame a oonstitution, and in Which event I advocated the formation of a constitution, by

_____ ft few months which Mr. Hail has disooverec,and for which he has found a base and selfish con-

,o , i d . . . w , , f « » i , lb-eluding some Christians, said tjr amount to twenty a,go—at the time of the Missouri controversy-andthousand souls, who are at present held in slavery in officially and publicly acted upon fourteen years ago,

liberatad at thc time of the admission of Michigan.I have nothing to do with Mr. Hnll’s informant—

uotblng to say to the letter he read, or its writer. Mr. Hall is the pnblisherj and that makes him tho author, both legally and morally. He is thc endor­ser. and that makes him the same as tho principal. He is the gratuitous publisher, and the gratuitous endorser, with gratuitous epithets and inventions, which showed that he was doing his own work, cloak­ed with the pretext of a letter. 1 have not been on speaking terms with Mr. Hall for a leng time, andhad occasicn to pabHsh him, in Muaoari, for uttor* i0£ untmth againsti mo. Unaer tneee oironmswuots,foy pipi to speait or mo os no did m tuo nows© oc xto- prosentativos, not only in disregard of trn th , Wnt in violation of tb© parliamentary law, and the rules ofdecorum, whlcb the members of the respective Houses are bound to observe toward each other, and with Euoh epithets, is to make himself the author of all le saief—and as such, I have now answered him.

TH OM AS H . BEN TO N.Washington, March 20,1859.

T H E T R IA L OB' D R . 'W R B S T E B .W e resume our report of this important trial from

he point at which it was closed yesterday. Little- leld is stiii on the stand. He continued :

On Tuesday evening about half-past five (five days af- ;er toe disappearance of Farfcman.) 1 beard some one coming down the back stairs that lead from the i try j it was Dr. Webster, Ho had a candlestick in and a candle burning ; never did use a lamp ; b

entry, a: le shed;

about ten or a few the first door was the laborroom ; found it fast; nevei before on r ™i*ctares ; whether 1

to uudM there. They Eearchedxny rcomt

doorandgoto. r«m »onttot<» toe t r y between thefro iit and beekdeUar, «a ih ea r« Ito. Webster go down and unbolt the door leading from the laboratory into my e:allar, AssoonaSlie chbolted toe door 1 went into the Idtchen. In a Saif a minute hi* bell r ^ g . t

i eaid to my wife, I guess Dr. Webstevhas got h ii dooc open, and 1 eanget In. I went np into his back room.— Ha stood a tlh e ride of» table, and appeared to bo read­ing a, paper wbich he held to his hands—a newspaper, I

He asked roe i f I knew where Mr. Foster kept, near tha Howard Atoeufenm. 1 asked him if It was toe prorisioia dealer. Ho laid i t was, and I replied I knew him, Ha

im e if 1 bad hongbf my ThanksgiTlng turkey. I had n o t ; th a t 1 had talked about going ouC

_ tog Thanksgiving, anddidnot know asi 1 shoni Abuy one. He then handed m ean order, saying, take th a tand get a nice turkey, as la m In the hab ity f giving; away two or three, and I m ayw antyou tudoaonieodit jobs for me. i

He,gaT«anothernrder to Mr.-Foster, to sendjhim out: some sweet potatoes; I t w as,toe first tim e Shat Dr. Webster ever gave me anytotog. The-door qf the la- ■ ora^ry waS bolted after I came back from Mr. Foster’s.

Wednesday m o rn i^ D f. Webster came to tb'e Collego nrhenheca inein . He wemtujs

---------------- front abtry. Pretty soon I hear4th ingsroundtohisla ' ■ - • -

‘’• “ “ •“ •■“ I

......I put my hand' on toe wall, I could hardly bear my baud

laboratory was bolted on toetos^ . __________I went to the laboratory stairs door, leading from my

collar, and found to st fast. I went up stairs, unlockedC hia lecture room, and went in for tho purpose of goiliEdowh that way. I found the door to the back room lock­ed. I went down stairs to look out of my cellar window to see if I could discover fire proceeding from the rear ofthe boildtog.

1 climbed on the wall to the the denble' window Of thfl laboratory, where lights were on e&oh side. 7 ho win­dow was tastened, but 1 got to 7'he first place l wenc

furnace, in which the bones were found .

and ih»

and each of his books having ions, formed an epooh in tho learned world. One

numerable articles of Review ; nothing esoapf laving reached

an epooh laims to the grt

dom is a new translation of the entire Bible, the most accurate that has ever been made.

Collections were taken up for the new Free Churc’u Jollege, on tho 17th ult., tnronghout Scotland. The mounts *’ •

M urray, of London, has issued the Bxnnaunt ver- hn, from" MSS. and to the Bibli- of it says tha t it

preserved in Trinity CoUege J otoeqne du Boi, Parie. The exhibits an anoienilent “ vernaonlar version of the New Testament as old as the twelfth century, and more accurate and literal in its character than any other translation of the same age.”

“ The Romannt,” says Dr. Gilly, “ was one of the two Tornaoular tougnes into which the Councils of T outs and Rheims, at the suggestion of Gharlemague, enacted that the homilies of the church should be translated, it was the language which contributed to the revival of letters, and to tne progress of thought and public opinion, in an age emphatioaily called the dark. It was the language of the Troubadours, iu which all their poems and songs were composed and written. It was the language in which the first great attempt was made to retorm the corruptions {of the ebnroh, both by preaching and by the circulation of religious treatises, iu the twelfth and thirteenth cen­turies. The Romannt was also the longnage in which *' ' ‘i vernacular translations of Scripture were put

'hioh were prohibitedby ecclesiastical authori- -•'-‘ H h a d ...................................

tog some church c(

Longman & Co. have published reooi

Ipistles. The translation isfrom the Peschito, or ancient Syriac of the

id Epmade by J . W . Etheridge, M. A. The editor of the ■Westminster Review says that the introductory mat­ter caimot fail to be of value to the biblical student. The Pesohito version is believed by biblical oritios to date at least as early as tho beginning of the fourth century, and probably earlier. It does not contain the disputed passages in 1 J ohn v. 7.

The sciences of Phrenology and the Sacred Scrip­tures, have long been thought to bo somewhat in­consistent with each other, but the Rev. John Pior- pont, has recently published a book, through

in which he

long been thought to ith each other, but th<■eoently published a 1

press of Fowler & W ells of this city, in which he un­dertakes to demonstrate th a t the doctrines of the W ord and of the new science, are in the n feet harmony. Ho goos farther, and saji

“ They not only co-exist, as independent truths, bat are mutnal supporters and friends, each helping to illustrate, explain, and prove tbe other ; and tbae directly contributing to tho advancement of tho mo­ral, tho bighcBt interests of man, and consequently to the glory of that Being, whom Phrenology, not less than all the other sciences, recognizes as the Creator and Governor of the universe, and whom Gospel recognizes aa ‘ the God and Father of Lord Jesus Christ. ”

JH E L X .A C —so e 9 for sal. by

a O ranr. and Campbell*. No. L WM. T . HICKS k430.,

149 and m Front st.

. MN«?scb, cargo ^ ^ g a tp ie r S , E. lE.'R , and for sale by

:osES T a FLOE k t-0.-44 South st.A RSENXC.—too casks Powdtted AMsnic in sti» .,

-tX and for sal. by ___H. M. SCHIEFFELIN k FOWLER,

ntoao 14^ Front strMl

To the Editore o f the Globe:As the register of the debates of Congress, your

paper of the 13th instant contains the speech of Mr. Willard P. Hall, of Missouri, from which the follow­ing is an e x tra c t:

“ Perhaps, too, he [Col. BlssellJ was not aware of th other foot, that toe much applauded senator was, only . few months ago, opposed to the admestion of CaUfornia xt aetau. Yet 1 feel authorized to say, that such was the ease. A short time since, 1 received a letter from one of the most respectable men to Mlssonrl, In which he

v>By of deing thinge “ This conduct on the part of tha t senator, together ■ ■;h his Tlrtnal denial of the right of the legislature of !h state to instruct its senators to Congress, forced a

■ 1 of M ifsonri to abandon him

uvuvj^Ami, iijr uuii&uiK

to be antm e g i Ifhe Mmflis mxflTf hem*”

avenue, andWHh the view to encourage him in nro- m otingtheestabliilunenl of stub a govem to fn tis

Soon after Dr. Webster came to the College. He came into my entrance, tbe cast door. I think tha t he had a small bundle under bis arm. 1 followod himnp in-

saw Dr. Webster again tbat forenoon before 11 o’clock.

ow I as soon a« Dr. Webster

■“S i l r i g S i . . W d M . b .

woYxld SO immedia-tely to Cambrids« and dlEcharge tb<

a £ ,1itfSfSS”.b“.’,KS

down to Dr. fftr)uQkn onPs-rkman grabbed tho

stJon was passed over ]

that toy. 1 went and saw Mr. Kingsley and officer Stark-Mr. Kingsley said we want, Littlefield, to look arsand

rough bis loom, down into the bapK room In

r n m m mget to ; I don't know a t what time Dr. Webster went out

W08 coTcred np 'frith a isoapstone oototi niand furnace all corered with minerals. Tbr

ttajxciie rxxxd fovnad ttiaat two tii±r<iH of tAifii wa.t«r Was out---

celved that week or net.” '

been the Tuesday before, and began to work ; I had

E “ 4 ' S £ H a a - -

f o s :

I went into the demonstration room and there I found Dr J.S. Jackson alone; I told him I was digging toronglx the wall 4 he got np qnd osmo towards me ; said he, ^ Srittlcfield, I feel dreadfohy abotit this matter, and da yon go through that wall befote yoib«l§cp*;^ I did fiO.

r then went to Leonard Fuller, &nd asked him to lend ma a crow-bar. He asked ine what I wanted to do with it. I told him I wanted to dig» hole in a brick wall, to carry a lead pipe through toe hole for water. He then replied “ I guess you do ” I then went to toe house, anct locked all the outside doors, and left the keys on the to­

me : thenXgi------0 wall j did ncame'tip and 'Went utcv' w chisel; he gave me ju st sneh a cne a s I wanted 4. went back to work, and got aiong. for a skOrt time, very fast, but presently heard four rap* above; I ra n up, and my wife raid, “ I caw two gentlemen pass, a nd toenght ono of them was Dr WebsteJ, bttt they weTfl cMy Ml Rtogs- iej and officer StaikwesHiw i tbny oame to the door,anaInquiraU for you.”

iw ent out, and Mr. jangsloy asked me what priiata place there was in the jLoUega tllflt bad not beei» searched; I told hta, and he

t if f— ioJd' -Waj'fr!

______ s1taBa>iiYitrid,lasted frewiitlfo.beletff’'

e examined theft)