chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1856-03-21/ed...Priii.nci.t...

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Priii.nci.t A. . randy sad other spoils distilled trout grain or other mat* dtlsi cordial*, absyuthc, »track. curecoa, kirchcnwssser, II- gasor*, maraschino, mtafca. aud all other ipirltuout beverages of »«fmn'ai character. MMIU H. Alahaaier aid spar ornament*; anchovir*, .ardin'»* and a I rrher fish preferred in oil I sie, beer and porter in caiki or hot- lie*i »fk. alebatla.or German silver, manufactured or an- tssnufactsrrd; siticlcs embroidered with gold, silver or other metal*; art nie* worn by men, women or child "an, of whs'evar material composed, made np or male wholly or In p*rt by bind, fhr loom or otherwise *aeea' *kin»; b*lsaius,co*n»«ttr*,es«eurri*, eairects. i**te«, perfumes and tint tare*, nsed eithsr for ihn toilet or for rnrdleitial jurpose*; backets and all other article* on,rosed of grass, oner, palm l<-»f, strew, whslshons, willow or fiber rusts rial; hay rum; beads of sruhsr, rornpoition or .wsx, snd Sil other beeil», bei./cites, Itid j. * **n i-.ee« ; bra. ». let., braids, chain*, enrl» or ringlet* computed of hair, or of which hair i* a coroponrut part; braee«. «utpaader*, webbi .g or other fabric* covnjosed wholly or in part of India-rubber j bn> v * a»d brnshr* of all kinds; rompoiltion tot* for table* or other article* of furniture; cooifiu, aweetmesU or fruit preserved in antsr, brandy or molasae*; catneo*,roal ind in.i'aii. n. and mosaie*, real and imitation. when art in r .1 I, *i! «ar»r olbsr metals; raiie* and atkli« fur w*!kii>(, finished sni anSnished; cspers, o.ckle*. and aance* of si kinds; e*p*. bsts, muH» *tid Hi nets of fur, and other manufacture* of far, or of which fnr «hall be a component part; card rases, pocket-books, .hell toxe*. soovenir« end sll tin.liar artl las, of wbsterer ma- terisi ronipoasd; caipet«. carpeling, hearth rtir*, bedaides and Iother portiona of carpel in«, being el'her Aubutson, Brussels, Ingrain, Saxony, Turker, laattfsaa, Wil'i.n, or anr other steal- lar fabric , carriages and pari* of carriages; aksaaW) clocks and raits of cork*, clothing ready made sod wearing apparel of «vsry description, of whalerer material composed, mads up or a>an«la/tyrrd wholly or in part by tha tailor, msui- *tr*«s or manu facta rar; cos-h aid hsrnrtt furn.tars of all kind*; combs of all kind*; composition of glsas or pasts srhen tot; confectionery of all kinds; coral, cut or manufactured; cotton cord, gimps and gsMoona; court- alsntar; crsyofis of all kind*; catlsry of all kinds, dia¬ monds, gem*, pearl*, rnntr-a and otber precious atooaa, and imitations of preciuu* »tone«, when art la gold, sllrer, or other aaatall doll* and toy* of all kind*, earthen, chins snd Stone ware, and «11 other wäre« composed of earth , and mineral I'lhstaiica*; epaulet*, galloon*, lace*, knot*, *tar», tsavd*, treue« and wings of gold, silver, or other metal; fan* and fire Kreeni of »rery description, and part* thereof, of whsterer material «/.mt-osed; fire cracker*; flats, braids, platt«, «parteue and .Wo» »duales, uaed f..r making hat* snd bonnet*; frame* and ».ick* lor uauhrellea. parasol, and -tit ifcadgg illlahafl an j am- fniahrd; furniture, cabinet and household; glass, rut; glass I ssawad, stained, si.d painted; glass cry«t«!a for » a'hes glau or pebble* fei spectacle*, gl im tumblers, piain, molded or pr-sssd, got cot or painted; painting* on glsta j porcelain gla**; gum asnsoin.or bsnjamli. hslr pencil*; hat* a id bonnets, for mi i, »oB.cn and child;, u, c. uijoied of draw, aatin. straw chip, trass, palm lesf, willow, or ai.v ut.nr vog".Cabin aubstaiic whalebone or other material; boner j human hair, cleaned or prrparrd fur ose; ink and ink powder; Iron in bar«', klooa, holts, loop*, pig*, rod*, »lab» or other form; eastings of iron; old or *crsp iron raaaa'r of rast iron japanned wsre sll kind*; jewelry, real or ijiitatlon tberel; Wad pencils; msc- tSK.nl. tonnacelll, gelatine, ielliea. and ail annilar praparation*; ¦.nafactare of crasr wood; (Irenadills, ebony, mthojeny, rosrwoid, and «atinwood, manuta. iure* ot ths bark of the .< « tree, except cork* matiafscture* of hone, p-arl, ivurv, or rtaeUUe irerv; manlaclure*, article*, reisel* *ml ware* of krs*s, copj«»r, gold, iron, l"«.i, j*wter, platina, lilrer, tiu, or athsr metal, or of which either of the*e motals, or any other ¦jetal shall be the tooiponeut material. This *< hedule i* to ka held to ii elude all articles of silk, cot- ass, wool, worded or flax, or of which either lilk. cotton, wool, .runted or flax, constitutes component part, whether named or mt, except Kerrey cloth composed of jttou and wool, and known a* wproebith, vhrn imported *T?f*rfvf»r aegro rlothing tad 'i*«v< as auch and blanker« aitsHttC to lie u««d exclusively Mrsch, snd flannel rompcierd wh><My of wo >l, manufactures snd article* of leather, or of which lea'her ahsll be a roinpouent Silal; manufactures and sriiclesef marble, marble paving aaaaaetsr ».-... all oilier marlda more adrauce.1 tu ths m slabs in the rough; manulactnres of paper, or of which pa- art I* a componoiit material; mauufacturea, ariicle* and ware* tf p*p.< r mach«; manufacture* < f wood, or of which wood 1* a cvupunriit part; manufacture* of wool, or of which wool «hall tetie rflmiMjneol msl.rial; medicinal prep«ratioua not other- *7l*f priviued lor; raetalic poua,mineral wafars, ruuskau,rlSe«, aid other tirearu.a; eil cloth of every lieacriptiou, of whatever aataritl composed) oils, volatile, essential or expreased, gad act i'tberwite provided for; olive oil in csaxs, snd tU other olite oil not otherwise provided fur. uiinsnto; prepared fsgrtable«! meat*, |Kiultry and game, (saled and iucioaed in cm* or otherwise; i<*per, anti'juariau, demy, drawing, elephant, luolseap, mi penal, letter, aud all otber papet nut otherwise pro- ndsd for; paper boxes snd other fancy ooxe*; paper eavelujies; da and «unahsde«i j-srchmeui; plated and gilt ware of all nils; kind*; plevinx card*; red chaik pencil*; »rsglioia tops for tables w c4her srticio* of fur.iture cigar*, *outf, paper c'gara sul all .(aar msaufacture* of tobacco; ssddlnry of all kinds not other- *rl«* provided fur seslii g wax; sewing silks, in ths gain or pn nasd; thues composed wholly of Iudis rubber; side arm* of »v*rj description; ailk twis;, aud twist composedof silk and aossir; »irver-plated metal, In sheeta or other form; soap, Css- nit, perfumed, Windsor, and all other kind*; tobacco, onmauu- Jbcti'ed; twines and pack-thread, of whatever material coin- SJ; tmbtellas. xell'im. vinegar, wafers, water colors; win-*, sndy, champagne, caret, madeira, port, (berry, snd all . ana iuiitalioua of winea. tiCHEDVLE C. Acids, bora. Ir. uaed iu the manufacture of borax; citric, ns»d t* ths art* and aa a n.edicii.e, calico piinfitm e»»ahli«hments; lartsric. used ohemicsllr and mrdicinallv, calico printing eitau- bsbmeut*; slutri, u*ed extensively, paiti. ulaily iu dyeing, dress- ksj sheep shins, and fur paper hangings; amber, tht finer for or- saoirnta, the coarser iu themislrv, medicine and the art*; am ktrgrii, used in per.rum<ir)'; angina or thibet, and otber goats' hair n< mohair, used iu manufacturing fabric* of otber mstsrial; aunatto, rancon, or Orleais, uaed as s dye ; animal csrbon (bono kack), used for chemical purposes (purifjing *osp*|; sutlmouy, crude, or regnlua of, use d in making type metal«, in isic plate*, kritsnnia metal, and in medicine; argol, or crude tartar, Iu Sjrlng, in medicine, in extracting tsrtsric seid, In1 ;ar«eni ued in the arts and a* . medicine; aspi E phaltuio, used iu Ibe arts; aloes, used in med' ine ; alcorno ju«,used in medicine; an Weed used in mediciuo arrow root, do., a nutritive medicinal food;' asaftrtida, used In mrdielue; animals, living, for food, I : draught, and illustrative of natural history barks, tiard toi dyeing, tanning, medicines, aud othsr purpose*; ba- rrtr*, *ulpLate, (ground) empli.Ted chnnikslly. used iu adul- teratit ( ptlnu, and in paper making; barilla, or sods sah. used In the art* for chemical and manufacturing purposea: bells, old, ai d bell metal when uimo iu nisuufarturimi; balnea, riots, and . "gbtablea uaed in dyeing; berries, llower*, aud bark*, do.; bls- aiii'h (utder ores), used In ths composltioii of ]>ewl«r and other metallic substauce*; blest hi.ig puwdtir, used ill the arts, and u.fiilcinally ; blue or romaii vitriol, or sulphate of copper, used for various purpo«ea in the aits, and also in medicias; borax, ut grsst tier as ¦ Dux for metal*, also used iu medicine; bta*a iu oar*, pig*, piute.i, or *hrors, used In the art*; bra**, when old and fit only lo be re-manufact'ired. used in rnauu ftctutiug; bie/il Wood, Irixillelo, *ed all other dye wood* lnsticks.us.il in trctagl breeds, when uaed In the arts; brimstone, uniehueii or in rolls, in t)is insuufscturs of gunpowder, o.e., and iu medicine; bristle*, tor tbs n anufocturc of brushes; bronre liquor, when used in the aria, bin re powder, do. burr-stone*, in the msnufsctura of mill¬ stones; burr slotie*, wrought oi iinwi-ough*, n«ed In ma-mtar roring flonr, he.; bniti'ig cloth*, uaed in do. -, bi>ter apple*, u*ed i:. mtiilcme; liouche lesre«, da; liurgundy pitch, do ; csd- Biiuui when in the srts; calsmiue, iu the urn cbauiicsily, sud aasns nrrparatloua of medicine*; cameos and mosaics, not *et, In ths aits; cassis bud*, ¦. an aromatic and in tbs maiiulact-ire el perfumer* ichslk. in the art*, clsy, wrou«h',or univroug*!', in ibe stu, (mariiifactura af terra cotta); cobalt, in the srts, col¬ oring pail.tings, he. ; cochmwil, used in dj..i:ig ; 08C <m snd cocoa .bell», used in tl.e msoufsctnre of choeulate; eodills, or t jw of bciiip or flax, in the art*; copper, in pig*, bar*, plate*, or .arat. da.; copper, when old snd o..ly lit to be man- tftrtiired, do.; copper for *li-sthing vease's, do.; eop- psras, af green vitriol, or sulphsts of Iron, in ths art*, E dyeing, and in many chemical aud medicinal preparations; corktree bark,in the manufacture of cork*, kc; cream of tar¬ tar, for manufacturing and chemical purpose*; cudbear, vegeta¬ ble, used in < or-ring cbromate, oxchroms'e, hydriodate and irn**istc of tot ash, used in the artaicodre, d'rectlv imported freut the plsca of production, fur food; cslooiel snd othsr taer- ciinsl preparations, uted iu medicims; csmphor, crude, da; rsathsridrs, do ; csstomen, do. ; cuhebs, do ; dragon'* bloo.1, Bate in paints, varuishos, prepsriug gold lacquer, itaiulug aud niarble, he ; emery iu lutup, not pulverised, used in polishin«; «tutet of indigo, used iu the arts, dyeing, ate extract and .le coctioii* of logwood snd othsr dte woods, do., do.; extrscta of sadder, do., do.; tlaxseed, used in msnufaetiirilig oil snd s* ¦red fnr flax: tin.'*, for gun* and in the manufacture of pottery : fsllst's earth, in ths art*, in fulling cloths; far*, drested or undreared. when in the skin, for various manufa-ture«; furs, batten dressrd or undreasei. not ou tha ikiu, do., do.; fruit, sen, ¦ ipe. dried, preserved or pickled; gamboge; giim, Ara- c, Marl.ary Nast India, Je ids, Senega], lubctlt its trsgacautb, sstdia (!. ai'a, ii.vti.ua. and msdicinslly ; gulta ; -reha, on- ¦muftctared; green tuitlei giugsr, green, ripe, driitd, pre¬ served or pickled; hair of all kinds, niiclesnea and unman l factored.; boms, horn tips, hone«, hone tips, and teeth itnmami ta.turrd: India rubber, in bottles, alsb* or sheet*, unmtnutte- tnied inuigo; IndiuDi; ivsry, uuiuanufactured; ivory out*, or isgrtahle Ivory; pecacuaoha; iti*, or orri* root; jalap; kelp; . »:ine«; sc dye; lac *pirits listings for sbee«, «lippers, h-tots, and button*, exclualrely lemon juice; lime juice; Uns .red; liqootic* root, madder ground, and rasdder rout; manganeta; uia infsclnres of mohair cloth, silk, tv 1st, or other tusiiutaetures of cloth, suitable lor tka manufacture of alioes, hoots, bootees or buttons, sxclusively ; i- arhle in ths rongh.tlsh or bliyk, nnniauotactnred: matins oral, aumanulactured; moss and other vegetable * ib*tai.'ce« issed lor mattresses; music and m ule paper, w ith line*, bound ot anVcund j mrdkinal roots, leave*, gain*, and ra*in* in a erode stat*; machinery, axcluslvaly dsdgnea for mi>del*, su.l rxpre-t*- ly in.ported for the maiintac'ure of flax and linen go-.da; maps .Ld chart*; natron; mike) (manufacture of (lermau tilvsr war*!; uutgclls; uux vomira; ochres, si d o-hrey earths, w'brther dry or in oils; oll«, palm, rocoanut, aud olive, (olive when pure and not otherwise) i oipiinint (and realgar) aiseaic; t>»ier. or willow prepared er uI pr-psred; opi'im; oisnge and Irmtvu peel; ptl.u leaf, nnmao ifactarrd; f wter, when old and ht only to be reuisnufaetuesd; i. intaao or graphite; po.iahing «Ulias; pumlce and puEiloe stoae*; latent mordants; pearl or hulled barley; quick ail i er; rag*, of whs'ever matarUi; rstau* and rred*. nn- nianufsctursd ; rottan stone; red snd white lead, and litharge .ii '«.gar of Irsd; rknharb; ssflluwrr; a*(Iron arid tafiron cake; .a. atcuionia, laltpeter, or on rat» ol sods r -otaxh. r*iiT.I or erode, lead lac, ahailae ; *ilk, raw, not more an vaneed in msuu- ftcturs than sirislast, train or organsinc; skins snd hid.-*, raw uf sll kind*, whrthei salted, dried or pickled: »malt«; sheathing ¦i<ia.'; sheathing paper; «eed» of all kind*; sls'e* and data pen- i.l«; sponge*, steel in bars. *st, ihsar or O -rmaJ ; *ub*tance« .tpreasly used for manufacture*; *nniac ;aall of all kiud*;»piee» stall kind*; salt*, naasat, gtsuhtr, Rivheils; ssgoi aarsapa- r.' s, spiunk; s«anlll*; tallow, marrow, and all eth»r grstse aud a>sp Mock* snd soap ctufl*; terrt tin [dates; tsrra japouka, "t Utpcho i tin fill; tin, in plalrcor -bee'*; tin plstas, galvanised; tin, In p>gs, bar* or block*; tortoiae.and other ahell*, unmau.e .aclarrd numeric) 'ype metal*,and -Id type fit uly to he |S> ataufactuied tea, directly imported from the ptice of prolnc- Boa; tap'ocs; vai.ills beans waate, or ahodity; w»ld whiting, si Faria wliite; wood,'>r pastel; woods, ua-u".:>¦ e*dir, !¦«'.¦ ?"a, mahogany .ri^ew.oa, sa'i iwo J, and all csbu.el woods; ato*J ; ».|>c, s|arllrr or tenteneque. In *heef. i»r pig. i**ravcial and houarhuld esVcta, not n'erch*::di«e af cl lien* of us I'nitrd States, dying abroad. Household, oil, aud iu uae of S*ax*B* or families front foreign couutrie*. If use J abroad by (k*at tor a period uf *ix usonth« or mors, s-id not imported for staei |»?rsoti or per*o? *, i r for sale; and like noi*eho!d *>t"<t* and omauieul*, in the use of portJU* BatSS 1. au 1 ua'e.i f" thrir children, on igra ir g lo the l'i.ite.1 St*Ui«. WearLig 'Itsrvl ttil other personal .fleet*, ntt atercrtan.l.'e, pr f«<- s"ual book*, implement* and tool* of trade, oc.u;mtiou or eta- po'tb.*],!, sciaaiiv used abroad, of peiaou* srnving ib tha 1 »»ed State*; hot this exemption ahsll tmi he held to iaetu<la >r*fySapparal, msehinery or other srU-'v« !m;ortsd for af laS by any axanufat turlag st'abiiahmaut, of tor «s!s, don* B gift. M!'-rle» Import« J for the use of ths I'nltad acs»«>te.1 to ttno antry ; and in all easel where a 1 5sT* '", biajkaeller, importer, or o'h State« «ball ba contract i I her p»rain, for -j nltr*t State*. 'harta.Vtat.Tn^ iustramenU. book*. mv|sr and aste,' a»^S?l?2St,"!9! *ud «».** of marble. Siiaai, ala- .^. of aaattaaxsss I,lT:.U*ib,imn- «ra-ings. e'chiui*. spscS- .XsUcatl^f^ ri!. if *^7' «»»'"«*» of coins, inedals, gems. ssSaUUhed -»riii.r--VT "7 sociaty ucornoratel tmi ÄTc'r 'ro;'.'^ ^Tü^^^'.'1 ?{th' -rkaal rr _'i "»»"r*rrof *uyr..l eje, acadar ir. Ä"txHtn.vT''!' "' "T ,,,",h i!' ,h" r""'"J fia.a*, sjj snj %»u ,u uj tf>i m^kfmM, why* aai Hit ported for out eorietiee, 4 r., fur the eee of, tad not at awe hen din- or to make profit oat of ihr ..me. troode, were* aud metrbaudnse. tie greajth, product or manu taftaf* of Ike t 'nited State*, exported to a foreifn rosin try, and brought back to the United Sfatee n. Iba tarne condition a/wben extorted, upon which ro drawback CT bonnty ha* been allowed- ; ri/t-idrrf. that all retelaiioo* to aeeertaia the identity thereof at] bT exinini, U*», or which may be prescribed by the S r-. rr fUM Troaiury. U be compiled with, g Mr. JA MKS, in explanation of the bill, avowed hitn- N If nn advocate of Frr¦« trade as far as it can lie car¬ ried out in confotmifT with the legiaetaxelc law* (,f trade ami cor.-i-tt nth with the common ir.teri-etr.nf the eooatry. Ti e bill doe* not propose a tariff cm bracing drities impend for the purpose of Protection. It is frsmed M the principle of reducing dutu M fun ion imports to h proper venne standard; in . tier words, tu rai-e a revenue adequate only for ti e actual wants of the Government, so near as may be deviaed. The articles i mhra< .-d in the bffl are separated into four classes. Close _ Is or ly of spirituotie liquids, which are tu piv a duty of -u per cent ad valorem. Clues B «heutig nil article, now paying a duty of 30 per cent and over, 'M < pt -ointuons liquor*, together with one or two ar- tulie which now pay 13 per cent. This eom.in-- ii o f of the artil l.-e of foreign manufacture whi' k on let t.to general conenmption. Class C is free; the lint in ludirg raw materiale for manufacturers, rrjechnnic-i, Ac, produced either not at all in this eonntrv, or to r o pöal , xt, nt. Claas D is composed wholly öf arti¬ fice Dot enumerated in i ithi r of the other lists, taxed with a duty of 20 per cent. It will be; seen that this clgaajflf ation very properly discriminates between the tick and Uta poof, by so arranging the duties that the In «vier (axe* will fäll on the luxuries and elegancies of life, rind the lighter on the eheap comforts and the n< ci asm ies of life which enter into general consumption, and are Med by the laboring elnss-e. He eaid the bill, if aiio],ted, would effectually check the imvnen-o frauds prm tic«d by unprincipled Importagi ]{,. si.owid iti iiBportm.ee generally.not the le.-t of which is that it will relieve maniifa'turi-rs, meehanica and artisans from the onerous taxes on the mat. rial- necessary for their business, which, not being pro- da* ad in thi- country to aary considerable extent, and lOaM of them md at all, thty are compelled to import fioin abroad, Bach re 1 i < f wtradd do much to enable tlx m to DM et for< ign completion in our market, as it w. nid much reduce the cost of production. Not wi«h- ing to detain the Semite, ha would print the ratfllliidot of hie ifmniks. Adjourned to Monday. HOUSE OK BEPBESEOTATIYSS, Mr. CAMPBELL 'Ohio) from the Corantltteo of Ways and Menu-, rej.cried the Navy Appjiropriation bill. Mr. BENSON, from the Committee on Naval Af¬ fairs, reported the Senote bill for the eon-tne tion of ten MOOpe of-Wal, with amendment, piovi ling that the Secretaryof the Mary mny, in bit dleereUoa, oeaee two of them to be built with side-wheels, with the view of the preati st attainable .qx ed. Mr. BKKNTOX sj-.ke against the extension of Slavery, and at 2 p. ai. the House adjourned to Mon¬ day. MOM ALBANY. Albany, Thursday, March 20, 1- «5. The Senate in Committee to-day had the Albany Bridge question under discussion. Mr. Brooks spoke ¦gained the bridge, and Messrs. Kelly and Kicliardson in favor of it. Mr. Sickles moved n-< an amendment, to be inserted in the first section of the bill, that the Company be compelled to construct a suspension bridge, of the bight of at hast 120 feet above the ordi¬ nary water level. Pending the motion the Committee reported progress, when further discussion on the bill was postponed to Monday evening next. DELEGATES TO CINCINNATI. BALTIMORE, Thursday, March 90, 1836. Mes«rs. MeLane and (Jwvnn have been elected dele- fates from this city to the Cincinnati Convention, bey go unpledged, but it i- understood that they will vote for I'iercc. MB. EVERETT AT RICHMOND. Baltimore, Thursday, March 20, 1h56. Mr. Everett's lecture at Richmond last night at¬ tracted a very large audience. At the close of iL he was complimented i>y speech* s from Got. WkW fend tx-Pre.»i(lent Tyler. THE SHIP CAKE COD.FIRE. It. io«i, Thursday, March 2 i, l-.Vl. The ship Cope Col, rejMirted as abandoned at s»a, by the rsia, was insured in State Street, taitt city, for over «100,000, The Cotton Mill in Yarmouth, Maine, was dfadroyed )iy f,re yesterday. Loaa$63,000. Insured fui »25,000. THE OHIO RIVER. Whkklino, Thursday, March 20, The ice iu the river is entirely broken up and H rupidly clearing away. Stiniii.ru uro loading for Cin¬ cinnati and carrying off Um largo m eumulations of height. Between here and Pittsburgh the river is still closed. NEW-YORK LEGISLATURE. t rots Our Own Repcr'.g*x SENATE....Albany, March 20. the new i.ankim, law. The bill relative to Bauks, Bankers, the Bank De part meal and the. Bai k Kund, was takai ap foreon- nideration in Committee of the Whole, and underwent a seaichiiii.' exiiminatinn. (In motion of Mr. WADSWORTH it wan so amended in committee as to provide that mortgages which bnrking associations or individual bankers shall !:..<. utter deposit with the Superintendent of the Banking Department ns n-curity for the redemption of tnTCVV lating aoteg issued to them, shall be only upon im- piovtti, productive, uniucumber. d lands, within the State, to an amount not exceeding one-half the value Of said lands, independent of any buildings or perish¬ able improvements thereon. It will In- ¦*> n that tliit amendment permits the IVCkmteOt of mortgnge- on titv lands as banking basis, instead of only fariniiig hinds, ns the bill has hitherto pn.\ ided for. Mr. SI I'XCER iiiniouneed l.is intention of m-'iving, in the Senate, to substitute the words for farini-.,' purposis," which, if it carries, will ex aide all mort¬ gages on city property. Anotler amendment wns adopted whirl) provides; that banks returning their notes M the Siiperinteudent for destruction, mny mutilate said notes previous to returning them, by" cutting out the signature of the l*re side nt. The sixteenth section, which required all bunks to make quarterly Matern, nts of "II its tian-aetion-. t > the mii.utt>t "details, was stricken out, on the argu¬ ment that the statutes already require eullidout details fiom the banks. Several Senators then fi nOttncingtheir inabilitvto arrive at a decisive conclusion aa yet with regard to the tm rita of the various sections of the bill, a motion to reinritt ywgl. pn vailed. the partitiom OF lands. Mr. KELLY, introduced a bill which piovide» that whenever it shall appear to the Supreme Court, on tin- application of any committee, of any idiot, lunatic or pen on mentally ir.ca|>uble of mannging bis affairs, hold¬ ing any real cetnto in joint tenancy, or in common, or in any other manner, to authorize his being mice party to a suit in partition, that the interes'. of such idiot", lunatic or other Dt tatM as uforee'iid, or of any of the parties interested in such eetatcs requires a parti- Lion theieof, it shall be ref rrt d to a referee, to inquire into and report upon the circumstances; and upon the coming in 9t the rrpoit, anil n he ning nndfxatnin- ation of the matter, the Court my antlmrixe sueli com¬ mittee to agree tO ¦ partition or sale of such estate, and to execute releases or conveyances >>f the right of -ui h lunatic, idiot or other person as aforesaid, in and to the share of euch estate falling to the other joint tenants, or tenants in couuuon, or purchase r or pur¬ chasers. whihi e.l at kkw york. Mr. BBOOKti pi'-eiit. d h petition fmin several rtisetM of the City of New-Yoik, setting forth tha .he rates of wharlsge allowed bv law are iiisjfncient to support the wharvi s, tiien and bulkheads; that the ;a\>- make no provision for the payment of wharfage rati s ujxni any property landed upon said wharves, differing in th«t reapeet from every other considerable i ommertinl city; and asking that moderate wharfage In? allowed to l>e collected on property landed on -aid wharves, and that the rates now charged upon shipt ard ve-sels be mlnee.'. The Senate bid for the better preservation of notices of lit prudent in New-Voik. was announced from the Ae-emtilv, with am«i:dmei ts. Mr. S'KKNCEli ntoved to lay it on the table, (airied. The Mi'!-T«x bill wns made the fi^t special order. Mr. KELLT in the chair. The bill to facilitate the determination of the vnü.l- itv of text e r.nd a«M<-nie!.ts woe t.iketi up. Mr. WAP8WOBTB mo%.sl a rabadtate, wMeh simply provide* that taxes, if deemed illegal, may be I aid under protest, and if so proved, may recover the Mai'. with interests and coats. Pranavi »a then irpotietl. The Mill lax bill »n- then taken np. nnd Mr. UCHABJMOB moved to make 11 a mill and a quarter. Mr. I'KHAM would not impose a greater tax thau the State officers asked for. Mr. H0X0E argn. d that it was q iite likely the State officers and the Chnirmau of tfct Committee of Wa\s and Miabs in tl.i llou.-e ltd MOy iuveatigated thle ¦¦Her while the Senate had not. Consequently tl:« v km w 1 est whnt was nee>ded. W ithout taking the qneation, prx giess was reported, ami :h« Senate adie>unied. ASSEMBLY. Tiv Hvvw, Ccaaiitu« ^ Hi >Yl*^r ^ tf th« Caltndar of Crraenl Order», and dimwd of lb* fe*T lowing entitled bflta, at noted To amend Chapter thirteen of rsart first of the Ee- vired Mattrte*, " Of He Aweejrment and Collertwn of Taxas." Progress, To amend the ¦ harter of the Yillage of Cantoo. Third rending. Foi the rehrf of John Vandermark. Third reading. To change the name of Jesue Blakerlee Aioi to ***** iWatatitl Alcoti. Third reading. To aut) oriz.« the auThoritiee of Oreen Island, A'banv Co., It t!.**. -ip Pnice street and reduce the w: i: I, of ( - r.rre- htrret. Tbird readirg. For the relief of the Thorn** Asylum for orphan and a*MiiiLte Itninn Children. Tlird ri-ndintr. To an.end the act incorporating the New-York Ju¬ venile AsjIbtji. Thin] rending. To ii-corporate the Board of Publication of the Re- fotined Protrrtent Dutch Church. Third readir g. For the relief of Anna ('. Btuijea. Third reading. Mr. B. BAILFY called n the question on the a%a th.n to diät i.ar^e the Committee of the Whole from the further cot i«ider>ition of the bill to aid New.York Mat* 0o)m taatica s>< iety. Mr. BAILKY resumed hi* argume;} in favor of the pr ir riple contain*d in bill. Mr. NohTW'P inquind what was thisCo!on>».«.tion Bocaair 111 (Licet? Where was it started ' Did it Mart ¦ the Free State«, where all an- free 1 fto, It wac einited in the Sinthern Stnte*. and ite object was to fallen "till atronger the chains which bound the idave. With regnrd to the Fugitive S'ave law, he wa- ..pio-nl to it. He would obey the '.aw* af the country, while they were laws, and h'e was called upon to do *o. But he would never aastet in executing thit law until the Man-hal came to him and culled upon Lim to do so, with a proeees üi hi* hand.-; and if the fnpitive rlnve could not get out of the way, it Would baj 1 < ennse he whs dowi r on foot than tt Mr. N was. He declared himself entirely OWS*ad to trie . xt.ii-ion ml Slavery to a ringle" new State, and would be so opposed to hrs latent day. Hi* last vote would be given ng. mat it. "A* to the underground railroad, it had r, H-k>-d when it was charti red. It whs chartered, mid Mr. N., when Adam was created.it wa* chattered by frod 1 Mr. V. n-k- i if there was a man here who would (lure aflat n bill, or vote for ot.e which proved for the abolition e.f Slavery in the Southern Bttntt ' No; they do nor dare do that. And why I lieen a,e ptilitica! ih struct iwi followed. Flir¬ ty orf,ai izatir n.party drill, was too «tmwg for that Bttt ho WOtdd vote, for any each bill; he would con¬ ti ilite nil his au ans; be wsuhl l*VF:ir hinvs. lt" and family, if he could free the slave* at the South, in a fit tajatttmi n to ei joy fn-e !om. Re was not an A*. ¦!i»i..11- Lst, and never trat. He would not have Shivery abd- iafcstl at olcc. But if he eotdd elevate the km ut l) condition of the slaves, and then make them free, be would do it. Mr. YAN SANTVOORD tajstasthad the prim ipl- tt coloiiization, giving a Ssftot) of its rise, propres.* and remit*. He coi¦eluded by niH*»iug that the bill bs IttViftd to n seh et committee to repoti complete. But the HtVBSS took a n-cass to :'.{ p. in. without lUsaaiatliifl ot the question. BVnSISG OFCOVESTGARDEX THEA TER At one time the burning of a theater iu EaajWasa or this country was no uiummoii thing, fadtimt, there leatBtd to be a. kind rivalry bvtween the two aations in the race of theatrical burnint:. f)!d Drury, and Covent Oardt-u, and the f »lytnpic wcra the tro¬ phies ol the flfunts on one side.the Bark, and tno Boweiy, and Wallack's old theater on the other. But of late years both countrii - have suspended fire. We repret to say, howev er, that the long armistice bus been broken by the destruction of Con cut Gordon Thcnter <>« the morning of the Mh of Mareb. It nppoani that on the aipht of the 4th this great tanpla of the bistrioiiic art, perhaps the nohb et in Kutope, which is situatid not fir from Drury Line, and near the market from which it tak> s its name, was the scene of muck revelry. The great Wizard of the North.to whom, in the interregnum of song, it had I.. et hired.hnd held in its moguificeot sulooas a Carnival bull, and tsttatasa'l " Capitsl wa* (a'tie-red thers, Ai.d hrir.hr the Ism;* »h..rieo'er fair wnaeu and brtve msn. And til went nierry s* s marrisse bell," whin the sound of fire came on the ear. How and win nee it roee, as over in such cases, no one can tell. Many of the mankeis had left the scone, and those who still lingered were aluiiit to join in the last verse of the National Antlum, when the lir.-t bsaSfl flash-d in. The spci tacle is represented as touched with a ludii roueiiees which even the sadness of such a loss could not Mibdue. The gis being turned off, all was darkni e*, ai.d through the shadow were taei groping crowds of niHskem, muinmem in the garb of Corsoira, ]n ildler», bntiditti, wnlors and Turks, making tlieir aa. c through the flashea of fire which illuminated tl.ein from the outside. In some minutes the whole stupci dous building was a glowing mass of fire; nnd aa the rlames rose in plowing columns to tin- sky, even the dii-tant bills of 8uirey could in their rerlcction be tliaily ruen. Aller this vm- smoke and rain; and aba milknmn passing in the momiBg could S"e nothing ii.on of Unit ten.jib- in vihich Ki nibb- nnd Siddons«o lorg parg, and so ninny gn at nrti*t* have rMped their glory, thnn a few charred and broken pillars of a portiio. Covetit finrden is indeed a house surroundel with many glorious ricollci tions. The building that hat thus pi rieht d was, it is true, ouly forty-sit yeara old, but the first bouse on the sp.d was founded so farbtv-k as 173S, by Manager Bich, the Harl- iniin showman, of whom l'ope snd F:< Idiag »p< ak, nnd (is-ri. k acted then- in 17it;. Id ptemb< r, 1-Off, it waa accidentally btiini il, and on its ruins rose the Corcnt 0 trden, TVhieb has now met its pwdtweasMr*! ftte. Of how n.any s'iai .;.'*. 11.'s, raj \9t9tt hifhtoatsj tnA haarti dr pressed, uf iiinobling sadness and Inughter-wakinj; n.irth, do its ruins tell' It was born in a tempest. BoBid its cradle the great 0. P. riota aurgei nnd swelled. Then followed the Keinbks, anl cruwi'e, night on n ght, bun? with di light on tlie gh rlous ptraoha'ions tt CwioltWI or Kollt, by Kemble, ot with terror on bit unequaled aibtei at I.r.dy Mocbeth. They passed away but there (Unit others to teainfain the glory of the netr.e and sustain^ its traditional honors. The iniinitn- bft) Mtrcttlio arid Btncdict of Cliarlei K n.hle wi I live long in the memory of all lovers of the drama:i-' art, n< r will those who have witnessed them, t ein forget Iho Julia of Fanny Keinbb', or the Noraia of Adt laide, who, during her abort reign, drew larger bluets th«in wa* pi-rh.ips collectnj together within Cov»Lt trtrden's walls. The next bright efstsCk in if* rdory wn» the Mncn ady manngement, under which the immortal works of Shakenpe-ire were brought out with a eoinph teiicss of cn»t, a splendor of appli¬ ance*, and a clnssie exquisitivenessa even to the mot n innte detail, such as m vi r was equale d nor is likely to be surpassed in the anntis of tha r-tage. After Macnady it passed into the grace¬ ful hands of Madame Yestris, who suor-< .! d it do fvT laedem comedy what Mncieady did tor t!.-- 1 le*e c diama. As an idea ot the resources of the u»e, we have only to give a ptrt tt the ca«t of Mr. IKuriicenlt'* roitirdy of l/indon As-urrin< .. to impart na idin of the pcrfi ctian with which plays w-re pr 1 ih crd: Sir Harcourt C'omtly, Mr. Kam a; Sir Max Ilarkaway, Mr. Bnrtlsy; Charles Courtley, Mr. An- detain; Mr. Dazzle, Mr. C. 3Iitl;.w-: Liwy. r, M-. Hark7j DttDj gpnnkt r, Mr. KtxfaVrj Ära c Ha.-ka- wey, Madame Yestris; Lady (lay Spanker, Mrs. Nes- Mtt| Pert, Mr*. Humby. Notw:th»tandingthe attrai . tion of tui L u 1 ompauy and the brilliant »'..re-rtion tt Yi-sttis, the funds fell nnd the dr.ittia gave way to joll¬ ities. CovcBt Garden became tho^center of agi- tnt.i u i the Anti-Corn Law 1> ague, when the heod battle was at ita light, and its walla echoed to the shonta of the »turdy Inliurers and evcitcd Quakers, chiering on John Brüht ns be thutdend at Iba gbtes of the aris¬ to*.! aiy and called cut fur cheap fooL With the tri- cmph of fret-trade, Covent Garden again *at silmt, and found no one who wi.uld viLtore to rairc her up. Alx ut this tiiD*, Lowcver, there happ. ind to be at her Mejrrty s Theater uf the l.'aymarl., t in I-mdon, some of these differerjcea which sumetimes tike place even among the best regulated opt-rat.c faoivlies. Out uf this difft react' grew a coolmss bt twtcu im lr>s»ee( Mr. Li d ley, st.d Mr. Coeti the distmguiehrd leader of tie otclestra, and out of this coolrcs gr\w the apfM>'.Ltm* nt in Mr. Cota'a plaoe of Mr. ltalfe, the ct lrbratf d Irish operatic compoeer. Mr. Cirta, dismiesed fr >m his accuatumed kingdom, lietajne po*ee*>ed of that de71on of hatred which tt-K-i t-i*o suiff-ra wait otvre fury t*mtA 0% lU-m of I any other (raff, atd soon isund mean* to give hi* ^erf-earir* fi I. Herr vw wandering at that time aht, "t the Jui.ior Club* of I.or don, ia qneat of aome *} ark t<> leva** him, a youth of much bullioo aad little bra->. ne Mr. Delafield. Hi* father had ac- qeired a K rgt- fortune as partner m the errat brew- |mLoose in .London of that name, ard his son deter- a.Ined te> devex'e to music the wealth acquired by rralt. Not that he was an enthusiastic worshipper of the meine art, but he sacrificed to it a* a meene. aa he thought, *>f coming i-rto faehioa. or bsrvg p-ermM.d aon-r» of those light Iii.**» with bull« t acd (horn* girls to wbieb yon; ha in their very verdant period so fondly aspire. Opera rrigr.» j in (>t. nt Garden. TV sk '¦! of Alba- no, and the r,, ,.-a, ri. r, w,In ,.s 0f (/ra#T. .yr* at on^e en plof» \ *fs ii eke the honse a mode! of spierreior and Naut); .tad ('.-na, with ntlimivd reaein ea at hit ii ii n r-nd. S*e*Jfai ts-r-sher an orchestra <t" unrivaled «tr. rgth and a r< rnpany «f nn^urpassed p-.v»er and va riety of ee.ng, firisi and Mario passed into tie service of this rival Khtg, Labhret e ahme of the great trio rr n siting true to h:« aid all» .lance. The war of the two re#< i at u:,e- eommanred, and the battle r?\**rd for m r' eenson with en intensity of discord known oat) to irrofeseors of hairaoay. The part:*s.ns of the rival Opera* looked each other dark!/ aa they drove by in the peek. What, how . witht!:< pnJejcaet |hrf*j by the Queen f»r CoTOaJ Garden through regard for CeOta, Of* WwWffl *'..<¦ ama for soire \ears a pnpil, and th<* immense sums ex- - aadad on the n arloal n .ertaimr.^ts there.the roc it u'partment in one seajH>n, ltrt*, c»>Hing i.j:i,:u>i, and tht < reheetral JtlO.oif?-the Garden triumphed, and Mr. Llialloi succumbed. It marches! to victory, how¬ es er, over the debris of poor Mr. IVlari. Id, of whojj the world, forgtttiijg the enjoyment he hod given thtm, only *aid " fin.l and swindler.why doca he r.ot pay h;a creditors,' and pae--rd on. Proa the pe¬ riod 0< :ts unshand p.cemiiienee it ! a- been attended with great -access, and has been the scene of many triumphs of vocal and musical art. No lives were, we are happy to say, l«>*t, and we doubt Bet before amtier yar nnoUier structure of equal grandeur and beauty will spring from that " blu< kenitjg dust " which all that now remains of the great temple i»f song. Freru aa Oe<-aa>eral Onetpotwteut. Boston, Wednesday, Mnreh 19, I860, You know I leave nil matters of politics and trivialities of that sort to your I >wn Correspondent. I have no vocation in that direction, a».d never could ece any wuy at all into a ruillstoae, except through the hole in the center. But MaMaaBM there are things that happen or are talked about funny enough to come within the sphere, of a laughing philosopher like ni)sclf. Such is the conspiracy now said to be in foot for underground) for choosing Gmeroor Gardner Sem.tor in Mr. Sumner's place (or rather in his rovm at this session of the Legislature. Not that it would be any laughing matter if they could do it. But it is not at all likrly that they can. It can only be done by the Whig and Democratic Hunkers, of as many stripes as a rainbow or a lizard, uniting with the most unknowing of the K now-Nothing*. And that would bring it within the cachiunatory eatcgory again; for, if anything could move the risible* of nn alligator (the longest fact d animal known, excepting a pious, Pro» >laver>, negro-catchiiiff cburch-meiuber or minis¬ ter,) it would l»e the sitht of Whigs of the Boston brai.d voting for Gardner to sit in the sent of Web¬ ster or Kverett. It would be a beautiful conflict of antipathies, such as one has not often a chance to see. .Still, if it could be done, they would hold their noses and gulp the bitter pill down; for with gr» at reason, they hate an honest man like Sumner Gardner. But it would be fun to see their wry faces over the dose. It is not likely, however, that the Know-Noth¬ ings will consent to make this open proclamation of their uncertain tenure of power. And it is said there are some impracticable fellows among them from the rural districts who hate no more discre- prctcxt that it would he a dishorest action. These are the sort of persons, I suppose, that passed the Personal Libert) Bill and Jury Bill, and who do not comprehend the true character of their public duties. They lay, I am told, "We don't under- " stand this choosing of a Senator a year before "the usual time. It is like ha\ing Thanksgiving " t OBfl ia ptember. And if w e begin. « ho kuows " but next time w e may find Thnnksgh ing appoint- '. . d in April, and nothing but a Fast Day at tlut "' And there seems to be no particular reason why this Legislature should not choose Senators for twenty >ears to conic if they once deviate from the established practice. There has beeu also a ru- n or thüt the plot to elect (iarduer having failed, it was proposed to choose Mr. Winthrop instead.' It is hardly credible that the Know-Nothings could have consented thus to deliver themselves up bound into the lianas of the Philistines.not that I mean jou should infer that they are Samsons. But if they conld be so be sotted, one can scarcely sup po-e it possible that Mr. Winthrop should consent to lei.d himself to su< h a pitiful coup d itat as this; . racciedll as it is plain that all he is wanted for il to pull the chestnuts out of the In for the mon¬ key's eating, to play the part of LVon to his F.x- celltncj's Bertrand. If he could consent to be i: it- d up in «mb an intrigue as this, which J do Dot believe possible, he would nail himself to the sbelf, en which he laid himself some months ago, for the rest of his da\s. icuhafe heard of our ex-Governor Clifford, judging from au article or two in Tin: Tumi n B, .thoia Go?, Garoner chose as Keeper of his C*e> science, or Attorney-General, when he came into paWOT, and whom the Legislature have maintained in that responsible trust.a trust which, it is said, he has oietbiri.ed with such signal care and liJeli- ly that he will restore the delicate fabric coamit- ttd to his ch.-.rge, at the end of his term of service, in quite es good repair as he received it. Well, jcu Maine Law men will be glad to hear that tlte Attoniet-iioternor, or the Governor-Attorney, has recently distinguished hiinstlf by an official report as to the workir-s of that vexatious statute in this Ma'e. In this report he pronounces the experi- n ftit to ha* e been "an expensive failure'.the txpente to the State having been 937,000 or thereabouts. It is said that, on being asked by some outside Maiiiote as to where he got his fig- ores, be replied that he guented a' them This of ct urse, as a Yankee, he had a perfect right to do. l ut the other side ha\e also OXf rcieed their inborn prerogatite. and they guess that If the Attorney- l,i i eral l ad balanced the account of finee and ex¬ penses he u.itiht have found something on the credit side of th» ledger. At least, the fact that the sum of fr.'.nin }.,* been paid in Boston is fines ai.d costs, w bere the failure has been greatest, would s' em to imply that the amonnt received in lie r»et of the Mate, where there ia no dif¬ ficult) in enforcing it, must square off the $37,000 t< easts! at least. But this opinion of this high le¬ gal functionary goes further than the mere liquor n:atttr. If the t xpentiveness of iegal process is a reaeou for the repeal of laws tbe> retrenchment sht uld beiiin to be made a tttwrnl delay. Hangings w.i Id go by the boaid atonex.for they cost a great deal of m< n> \ md bring in no return at all. Tbisvtrj Mr. ( litford. when Governor, took a naiif' tof the .Mate Prison where he was earn¬ ing money for ns and hanged him.which I must consider a very mistaken piece of political econ¬ omy. So it would be as to all expensive pursuit* ot rocu«*; in which case what would become ..| ji ur New-York policemen and judges ? But it is in tifW of our delicate national ftdations that this new Ifk-al pLilosopby of Mr. Clidord assumes its niest formidable: aspect. Catching, keeping and nn rnicg negroes is notoriouil) a very txpensive t'lifLff*. Burn* cost something over flW.OOO, ard Sin » rear as tntich. Now, doe* Mr. Clifford vi an to say that because negro-catching is an ex- Seceive recreat:on that therefore it is tobe aban- oned I Should another Burns be seized would fee adviie Gov. Gardner not to allow hi* body-guard to hue UemKlvve wt at tw» »oU«n . 1», to keep tROM BOHTOH. tii ii tbun to object to th> kino raft)1 He maet harr« a rare, or be oaf find himself returning tta frail tiesuc confided to hit charte with a *rest hole in it. La»t Monday eight Mr Choite filled the Ma¬ fic Hall with an i>Trrf<wing andiene« to hear wlat he had to ray tt^efc;Oft "The Lait Days of M tbe Poet Bogers." J did not bear him myself, so I can pass n<> judgment N the performance, of eonrse. it wse receit H with rtptrtre.for the faith of Boston in Choate ia next on'y to that in Weleter. There were iiNv-TK^ditnrged persons, to be sure, who thought it vapiu -a.esultory, conmon. place, ard doll.ttilt-walking »-«er» tern flat cota- tn.»rd ita effervescence*, lik.* th-t of a gla«s of stale champagne stirred up wit.t a crust! of bread .as BeM shafterly'a aerrant sait-'o** hi« master's. Still he had the nest dear voices of the ir-tjltitude with him. and he was pelted with bouquets like IM prirea dotna. Isdred. it ii a moot question yrf whether Mr. Ca->ate or Mrs. W.-wtf, the .Siog- iag ( LambermaiJ of the Boston VWafer, who took a ben< tit that sight, had the mure flowers. This lady ia a great p*i of the Boston public be¬ cause of her exceeding prettiness and tnjneglmes, and she is always sure of a bumping bent-It. Thie ye*.rtke hamper was so fnll that it ran .wer iuto the next night, for so nanny tickets were bought that the pray a were repeated', and half th? profits parsed to Mrs. Wood s aeeesiat. So that, on the whole, I rather think si.e must bare had the better ot Mr. Ckoate. Talking of Rogers, I woader that " the natural malignity of Mankind " baa not reproduced Byron'a lampoon of him.the most terrible one that was evei »ritten sy man. I beliore it is not in any mi the coilectioks of I'm t, * works; but it was print*d first ia Fraur't Magazine, in one of the eailier vu'.nmes, aud since la Medwin's Lifo of Shelley. Medwin says thus when Rogers was CM ng visit Byron at Bisa, he put the manu¬ script of this etching in aquafortis under the sofa- cushion on which he meant to seat, and did seat, the unconscious subject, enjoying the malicious plesfure of hnowisg that he was totting on the p. tard which would be sure true day to explode. It ye.ii incline to reprint it. you will find it in Med¬ win's Shelley, v<4. "2, p. 191, London L'd. However many ill-natured things Rogers might have said in his life, and they were many, they were more than paid eft by that bitter satire of Byron'a. Byron waa a savage fellow whm he undertook to pull down hia game by the haunches. Ho you remember hia lines on the 1'iiiice Kek-eot standing between the coffins of Ileury VHX and Charles L, in St. George's Chapel at Windsor, on the occasion of the identifi¬ cation of ths' body of the latter I I believu that I as sot yet gone into the editions of his works. They were tor a long time handed round in manu¬ script, and were repeated to me several years ago by that elegant acholar and moat accomplished gentleman, the late Mr. l'eter, British Consul in Philadelphia. As they are not long, I will set tlicoi down here from memory, which must excuse errors: Lirtrs os Tttr nurci recent STAYDIBQ BBTWB1S the corns* or iii.sry tin, and ciiuu.ks i., i.e. Smrc» worth sn epitaph Hv Tats er Qua-let. lirre heartless Henry Use bj headiest Charles; Ite.id.- them .tan.ls number sreptered t'linr, It, |emp, in power, in nil but usme . hin», t hsrlr* ro bi« pei pie, HeDrv to his wire, fn him the Spa tta tvrant start* to lifei Justice aro Death bad sealed their tombs In rain: J h s royal vampire h'enda their blood axain; And show* a Tudor who no faith defer ds, A Staat!.faithless both to foe s'ul What, then, ran tomha avail, inne the** disrnrxe Tbe blood snd filth of both to mold s OKORtIK When we remember the noise which Byron's '. Lines on a Lady Weeping," created about Mil, m.d how the Ministry thought of bringing them be¬ fore the House of Lords, we can well imagine w hy these truculent verses were kept private till better data. Lord Kllenborough would have liked nothirg better than to have sat in judgment over them in the Ring's Bench. Hut they overshoot their mark and give George IY. credit for more force of character than he had. He w as an indo- Icnl voluptuary, hut neither cruel nor a tyrant. He never would have gone to war with hi* people for bis prerogatives, and there waa all the differ¬ ence in the world between the ways in which he and Henry VUL got their wives and got rid of them. Miss Adelaide I'hillips's friends here.rind they ore all that know her.have heard with great pleasure of the success which attended her debut at tie Academy. I am confident that it will in- creaie the more you hear her. Hi r appearances at I hiladelphia and New-York were made under pecu¬ liarly trying circumstances. Less than a week i ii re her appearance in Philadelphia, her mother, to'.\him she was tenderly and passionately at¬ tached, diid very suddenly; and it was in the midst of the most cruel affliction that sho had to prepare herself nnd appear, in obedience to the stern necessities of her profession. I think her illDfsson her arrival in New-York, which caused the difapi oii.tn.i tit of the first night, was nothing to woi.dcrat. And I hardly think her voice or her pi weis could have been in their best plight even when she did apj»ear BO BOM after that \ery serious illitess. I think she pan hardly fail to improve the fa¬ vorable impression of her first appearance after the n In shim nt of a short interval of calm and repose. _ BVI.K.S. FROM CINCINNATI CsntspsatxBsBB ef The X. Y. Tnbtir*. Cincinnati, Wednesday, March 19, You have heard before this by telegraph of Jtidt;e Burgoyre's decision to-day. The paper is some¬ what lengthy, very well reasoucd, and a decided blow to Mr. Commissioner IVndery and his f-.llow <, Of inissiouers. ITereafter, if by any accident on tie t'nderground Railroad a fugitive slave is brought before Mr. IVn¬ dcry, a w rit of habeas corpus in his behalf will m issued, returnable to Judge Burgoyne, and the much-dreaded "conflict of jurisdictions'' will take plsee. In from two to three days Mr. Robinson will be brought efore Judge Burgoyne and fined for eon- tmpt. He will l.e sent to prison, and then it is Hpposed that his counsel will bring the case he- lore Judge Mel ean (who ia now in the city) on a w rit of habeas corpus. Mr. Robinson is absent at Washington, whither te w>nt to "'see about that little bill'' for the Services of 21*3 special Deputy Marshals in the late lfa.fl case. He was authorized to pay the men per diem. He draws this amount from the Treasury, but it is supposed his commission will be hsLdsome. Since I wrote you last I have learned that when the question of jurisdiction betw een the Marshal and the sheriff waa bri ght before Judge Leavitt, ke vat pleilutd to a decision in fitor of the Sheriff, and he e>t n went so far as to irn't« oaf tuck a at- citrion. }<>u have seen the result of Gov. Chase'i re<tui- sitim. Mr. Guinea promiaes to bring back the wiiuaii. (he aays nothing of the men); and flot". < h..-e, t- r the present at least, contemplates the [mm t m further requisition. An item of nr.der-ground railroad intelligence came to my notice the other day. which I wiah the readers in good faith and implicit confidence of Dr. Ai'anv's book could have seen. A dark- colored u.ulatto woman paaaed through here MM weehe since, accompanied by her child, the ion of a Mr. Vaugbim of Kentucky. The boy was about six years old; hia head was very finely shaped. ton head high and prominent, features regular an! Kurtj can, eyes bine, hair flaien, complexion white. I m cbai <1 was neatly dressed, (his mother spent all the rx< y -heu her by her owner upon this boy.) was very gentle snd well behaved, "could rod in the second primer," and was worth about $4f 0. 1 he mother bad made three attempts previously, and this time she came armed, deter¬ mined to be free or die. The I'ndergroBud Railroad is very mtieb trav¬ eled at present. Mrs. L. B> Blackwell at an Anti- .-lnvery festival a week ago (where over $'i>0 of I rdercrt und stock was taken) stated as tbe re- ttilt of ler obter.ati< n that during the icebound state of the river, t iousands had esesped. Some 178 have passed through Cincinnati within three months, and they are daily going. I will, with year consent, at tome future time, give your read¬ ers some statistic* tod iacideut* cotiaccted with (kU toad. IMPORTANT FROM HAMAS. -«.>- PROCEEDINGS UNDER THE NEW CMSTiTUTIO*. ORCAMZATIOX OF TflK STAT8 fiOVKWMKST. aiOHaye of Go v. Kobiusou. -.*>-. C^rTMpoe i»Ec# of The K. T Triaane. FR1F. ST.tTB HOTKL, I LaWBEKPF, Friday, March 7. 1866. J I arrived in thii far tod w*r-famed ehy "in time* " to t* tc« Laif " to witMN the iaangvatioo of the? Governs* aid Government of the State of Kanaan, lut in tinve, I hope, to tianamit Fun aa aecouut of it (the Message), and otlVr territorial new* by aa »a:ly a niaut a* my rival correspondent*. Tie naJor», BepMieau«t.-a t-tA officers eieci of ine popular Government, cwuvmed on Ttw-*v!ajr the -t.ii inst. t Topeka, the t«-«porary Capital of the State. Tcpeka ia eiUuted or? the Kaseae River, on a beautiful. gently-trndolaiiug prairie. £3 tmlear fn m Lawrentz and abeait 60 frttn Fort Lea* en. wortb. Ol Menday the "bt'tßwn*" of the Fr**» r»rat» part) were rind off with great effect in Cooatttn- i:< ¦ Hall- the renal in which the Free State Coo- stitution vi aa framed.at Franklin Pierce aneX l ImA r rreatuna of the Slave Power at Wastirag- n t *11a. Mr. Stephen Sparka of Kation.atnern- bci of Um House and a leader in the fight in <M- fenon of the ballot-boi on the loth of Jangary ¦ wna called to th ebair and presided. Sparka ba an honest, brave Indiana backwoodsman.mum who may be killed by the Ruffian*, but will m-vrr be captured elite. He wai onoa aarrounded by* fifteen armed and mounted Missauriana whoor- ib nd him to surrender, but instead of complying be cocked his pintol at the leader of the party and told him to prtpare to meat bit . father, (Old Scratch) or keep a reapect&xl distance). He. win lit arrestid' The meeting wae addressed by Gt>v, Kobinton, ldeut.-Gov. Roberta, Col. I.aae* aid other*. Governor " Rob." is a tali, strong, Anely-pro- ferticiieil man, with n inrte hronine head. inscrut- ihle light-blue eyes, and an expression at once of ncfitlcners and teat lee sue**. He is greatly bo¬ lt vi d by the people heie. Kvt ry one I elievoav bin to be a man of irreproachable integrity, thoroughly honest, moderate, tirm and cautious. He is not a f.ueut orator; bis sentenceo are rather complex, at times, for a popular auditory; hi* da- livery, to«i, i* not so graceful a* it might be; but notwithstanding this, be is the moot effective speaker in the Territory. People know that he) alwa\a expreaaea hia opinions, not opinions teat he believe* will be popular; they know that !xt never talks for e ffect nor to increase hia populär» ity, and therefore e\cry suggestion be make* ia listened to and considered with respect. The Governor gave the President's Special Me«- * age a merciless review; he spoko of Pierce a* honest men ajw ays speak of renegade* and traitors. I have a synopsis of bis speech, but suppreis it, aa nearly the lame ideas are contained in hia Mes¬ sage, which I inclose. Col. Lane reviewed the Special Message his- ti rically, using the same arguments and illustra¬ tion* that he advanced in the Constitutional Con¬ vention, lie disproved almost every historical statement that l'ierce advanced, and proved, by the> Congrcsaiounl debate* on the kau.*«* Nebraska 'bill, that an immediate* State organization, instead of being a revolutionary movement, wae not only supported by precedent, but coutt-mplatod by they fran era and advocate* of that act. Lane was in ( i ngress at the passage of the Nebraska bill, and voted for it en the final ballot. Lane la a tail, tl in, sharp-facid, very dark compUxioued man, with little, deep-set, restless, black eye*; ho ia usually dressed d la militam, VFtth hia boots over his.excuse me.breeches, a red sash around hia waist, a black cloak, and officer's cap. He is n Inw idial of the political intriguer. lie couldn't live twenty-four hours if he had not some scheme to carry through. II« is a fluent speaker, but hia ti ne betrays a want of earnestness, which is fatal to bis oratorical MsMCM before a reflective audience). Id- is a spici,did officer. Every one admires hin* when i ii military duty, except the Border Ruffians, who fear him. I.icuf-Cov. irobert* is a prim, precise, sedate, old bachelor. He is from Pennsylvania. Ilehai a mummy-like or stony face ; the whisker* around it lcok as ftill'as an in n fence; and his voico ie unci iiimenly hard, and dull, and lifeless. He ia a National Democrat, of course; has a thorough know It d*e of Parliamentary Rules; is pn found in Old Hi.nker arguments and mtiims, but won't act the Mii-touri River on tire, I am inclined to believe. TblTI w as n good deal of discussion, apart from the denunciation of Pierce* Co., as to the couran the Assembly should pursue. No definite result was arrived at. The Geiieml Assembly convened in Constitution Hall, on the following morning. ('id. Lano, aa t hai) man of the Executive Committee of Kan¬ sas Ti riitorv, called the Senate to order, and ad- n mistered the oath of office to the l.ieutenant-Gov- crnor. On assuming the Chair.by virtue of hie office he it President of the Senate.Mr. Roberto expn.sed his uratitude to the people for electing in; promised faithfully to execute the dutiei devolving01 him; told the grave and reverend Senators that the eyes of all the American Peo¬ ple \w re mien them; and that "our infant Repub¬ lic is this day born of the popular will; an edifice is founded on the true basis of popular sovereignty, aed if we are true to our interests, our success, un¬ der the smiles of Divine Providence, is secured." Ti e i atii was then administered to the memben of the Senate, and the following officers elected: Asalph Allen, late of N. V., Secretary; W. L. Brigdcp, Bonn., Assistant Secretary; J. M Fuller, Mass., Serjeant-at-arms; Henry Strstton, Man*., Assistant Scrgonnt-at arms; A. Martin, Ohio, L'ooikeeper; .lohu Mack, Mass., Assistant Door¬ keeper: Jesse Crane, Fenn., Messenger; F. Wen¬ ds I i. Mo., Assistant Messenger; J. F. ('unaming*, PcM., Transcribing Clerk; .1. C. Dunn, Maine, Assistant Transcribing Clerk; Rev. F. Paid Sbep- pard, Chaplain. The immortal bogus Sheriff Jones, a tall, mus¬ cular, athletic loafer, with a cruel Mephistophelean expression, clad in the Border-Ruffian costume- blue miliary ovircoat, large boots, skull cap and cigar in mouth.was present at the organization, and amuted himself and the members both, by wiitiig down the names of the Senstors and Rep¬ resentatives as they took the oath of office. 1 he Senate then adjourned. The House was organized immediately after the adji i.it ii cnt of the Stint* Mr. Minard, late of Iowa, was elected Speaker; Joel K.Goodin, Ohio, Chief Clerk; S. F.Tappan, Mass., Assistant Clerk: M. J. Mitchell, Mo., Sergeant at-arms; Jacob Branson, Mo., Doorkeeper; J. G. Saodgraao, Ohio, Transcribing Clerk. Oil] one member eject was afraid to take thn oath.he emigrated from the Border-Ruffian See¬ th n ol Missouri. Here were thirty-fwo Representatives and eiert I Senators present. They are as intelligent a btdy of men as ever met in a Western Legisla¬ ture. I raw the Border-Ruffian " Baron* of Kama* wh«n at Paw r.ee City, and I assure you that the contrast between the Free-State» and Pro- Slavery Legislatures of Kansas is very gratifying to i \ tra patbies and complimentary to our creed. The i.'ufliano were drunkard*, bh'phemeri and gambii:.-: tkc] were personally as ignorant and unfolisbtd r>s their "'act*'' demonstrated they w .-re unpritcii d and violent. These Frec-Statn u.en, 01 the cootaary, *re intelligent, aober, de¬ cided ytt liberal in creed. I wish 1 conld get th«> daguerreotypes of both Assemblies and publish them in Tmk Tribi yr.. They weald convert thousand* of donalfaces to our party. s. F. Tappan, 1 tn iitfonned, is a nephew or Stud*01 of Lewis Tappan, the leader of the po¬ litical Abolition party. Me Is aaid to the only Abolitionist in the Territory, Charles Steams, of tie GanUouian icLov., excerpted. LNAK.lRATIO! OF OOV. lOllnSOM. Both Houses met in .joint seasion at five .'clock. to> wimese the uaun ratnn: of oar poptdar Governor. A Con.n itree was appointed to wait on hi*. aVi ih« Governor cntmd the U»U, Mvj wvknr|

Transcript of chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1856-03-21/ed...Priii.nci.t...

Page 1: chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1856-03-21/ed...Priii.nci.t A..randy sad other spoils distilled trout grain or other mat* dtlsi cordial*, absyuthc,

Priii.nci.t A..randy sad other spoils distilled trout grain or other mat*

dtlsi cordial*, absyuthc, »track. curecoa, kirchcnwssser, II-gasor*, maraschino, mtafca. aud all other ipirltuout beverages of»«fmn'ai character.

MMIU H.Alahaaier aid spar ornament*; anchovir*, .ardin'»* and a I

rrher fish preferred in oil I sie, beer and porter in caiki or hot-lie*i »fk. alebatla.or German silver, manufactured or an-

tssnufactsrrd; siticlcs embroidered with gold, silver or othermetal*; art nie* worn by men, women or child"an, of whs'evarmaterial composed, made np or male wholly or In p*rt by bind,fhr loom or otherwise *aeea' *kin»; b*lsaius,co*n»«ttr*,es«eurri*,eairects. i**te«, perfumes and tint tare*, nsed eithsr for ihntoilet or for rnrdleitialjurpose*; backets and all other article*on,rosed of grass, oner, palm l<-»f, strew, whslshons, willowor fiber rusts rial; hay rum; beads of sruhsr, rornpoition or

.wsx, snd Sil other beeil», bei./cites, Itid j. * **n i-.ee« ; bra. ».

let., braids, chain*, enrl» or ringlet* computed of hair, or ofwhich hair i* a coroponrut part; braee«. «utpaader*, webbi .gor other fabric* covnjosed wholly or in part of India-rubber jbn> v * a»d brnshr* of all kinds; rompoiltion tot* fortable* or other article* of furniture; cooifiu, aweetmesU or

fruit preserved in antsr, brandy or molasae*; catneo*,roal indin.i'aii. n. and mosaie*, real and imitation. when art in r .1 I, *i!«ar»r olbsr metals; raiie* and atkli« fur w*!kii>(, finished snianSnished; cspers, o.ckle*. and aance* of si kinds; e*p*. bsts,muH» *tid Hi nets of fur, and other manufacture* of far, or ofwhich fnr «hall be a component part; card rases, pocket-books,.hell toxe*. soovenir« end sll tin.liar artl las, of wbsterer ma-

terisi ronipoasd; caipet«. carpeling, hearth rtir*, bedaides and

Iother portiona of carpel in«, being el'her Aubutson, Brussels,Ingrain, Saxony, Turker, laattfsaa, Wil'i.n, or anr other steal-lar fabric , carriages and pari* of carriages; aksaaW) clocks andraits of cork*, clothing ready made sod wearing apparel of«vsry description, of whalerer material composed, mads upor a>an«la/tyrrd wholly or in part by tha tailor, msui-*tr*«s or manufactarar; cos-h aid hsrnrtt furn.tars of allkind*; combs of all kind*; composition of glsas or pastssrhen tot; confectionery of all kinds; coral, cut or

manufactured; cotton cord, gimps and gsMoona; court-alsntar; crsyofis of all kind*; catlsry of all kinds, dia¬monds, gem*, pearl*, rnntr-a and otber precious atooaa,and imitations of preciuu* »tone«, when art la gold, sllrer, or

other aaatall doll* and toy* of all kind*, earthen, chins sndStone ware, and «11 other wäre« composed of earth , and mineralI'lhstaiica*; epaulet*, galloon*, lace*, knot*, *tar», tsavd*, treue«and wings of gold, silver, or other metal; fan* and fire Kreeniof »rery description, and part* thereof, of whsterer material«/.mt-osed; fire cracker*; flats, braids, platt«, «parteue and.Wo» »duales, uaed f..r making hat* snd bonnet*; frame* and».ick* lor uauhrellea. parasol, and -tit ifcadgg illlahafl an j am-fniahrd; furniture, cabinet and household; glass, rut; glass

I ssawad, stained, si.d painted; glass cry«t«!a for » a'hes glau or

pebble* fei spectacle*, glim tumblers, piain, molded or pr-sssd,got cot or painted; painting* on glsta j porcelain gla**; gumasnsoin.or bsnjamli. hslr pencil*; hat* a id bonnets, for mi i,»oB.cn and child;, u, c. uijoied of draw, aatin. straw chip,trass, palm lesf, willow, or ai.v ut.nr vog".Cabin aubstaiicwhalebone or other material; boner j human hair,cleaned or prrparrd fur ose; ink and ink powder; Iron in bar«',klooa, holts, loop*, pig*, rod*, »lab» or other form; eastings ofiron; old or *crsp iron raaaa'r of rast iron japanned wsresll kind*; jewelry, real or ijiitatlon tberel; Wad pencils; msc-tSK.nl. tonnacelll, gelatine, ielliea. and ail annilar praparation*;¦.nafactare of crasr wood; (Irenadills, ebony, mthojeny,rosrwoid, and «atinwood, manuta. iure* ot ths bark of the.< « tree, except cork* matiafscture* of hone, p-arl, ivurv, or

rtaeUUe irerv; manlaclure*, article*, reisel* *ml ware* ofkrs*s, copj«»r, gold, iron, l"«.i, j*wter, platina, lilrer, tiu, orathsr metal, or of which either of the*e motals, or any other¦jetal shall be the tooiponeut material.This *< hedule i* to ka held to ii elude all articles of silk, cot-

ass, wool, worded or flax, or of which either lilk. cotton, wool,.runted or flax, constitutes component part, whether named or

mt, except Kerrey cloth composed of jttou and wool, andknown a* wproebith, vhrn imported *T?f*rfvf»r aegro rlothingtad 'i*«v< as auch and blanker« aitsHttC to lie u««d exclusivelyMrsch, snd flannel rompcierd wh><My of wo >l, manufactures sndarticle* of leather, or of which lea'her ahsll be a roinpouent

Silal; manufactures and sriiclesef marble, marble pavingaaaaaetsr».-... all oilier marlda more adrauce.1 tu ths m

slabs in the rough; manulactnres of paper, or of which pa-art I* a componoiit material; mauufacturea, ariicle* and ware*

tf p*p.< r mach«; manufacture* < f wood, or of which wood 1* acvupunriit part; manufacture* of wool, or of which wool «halltetie rflmiMjneol msl.rial; medicinal prep«ratioua not other-*7l*f priviued lor; raetalic poua,mineral wafars, ruuskau,rlSe«,aid other tirearu.a; eil cloth of every lieacriptiou, of whateveraataritl composed) oils, volatile, essential or expreased,gad act i'tberwite provided for; olive oil in csaxs, sndtU other olite oil not otherwise provided fur. uiinsnto; preparedfsgrtable«! meat*, |Kiultry and game, (saled and iucioaed incm* or otherwise; i<*per, anti'juariau, demy, drawing, elephant,luolseap, mipenal, letter, aud all otber papet nut otherwise pro-ndsd for; paper boxes snd other fancy ooxe*; paper eavelujies;

da and «unahsde«i j-srchmeui; plated and gilt ware of allnils;kind*; plevinx card*; red chaik pencil*; »rsglioia tops for tables

w c4her srticio* of fur.iture cigar*, *outf, paper c'gara sul all.(aar msaufacture* of tobacco; ssddlnry of all kinds not other-*rl«* provided fur seslii g wax; sewing silks, in ths gain or pnnasd; thues composed wholly of Iudis rubber; side arm* of

»v*rj description; ailk twis;, aud twist composedof silk andaossir; »irver-plated metal, In sheeta or other form; soap, Css-nit, perfumed, Windsor, and all other kind*; tobacco, onmauu-

Jbcti'ed; twines and pack-thread, of whatever material coin-

SJ; tmbtellas. xell'im. vinegar, wafers, water colors; win-*,sndy, champagne, caret, madeira, port, (berry, snd all. ana iuiitalioua of winea.

tiCHEDVLE C.Acids, bora. Ir. uaed iu the manufacture of borax; citric, ns»d

t* ths art* and aa a n.edicii.e, calico piinfitm e»»ahli«hments;lartsric. used ohemicsllr and mrdicinallv, calico printing eitau-

bsbmeut*; slutri, u*ed extensively, paiti. ulaily iu dyeing, dress-ksj sheep shins, and fur paper hangings; amber, tht finer for or-

saoirnta, the coarser iu themislrv, medicine and the art*; am

ktrgrii, used in per.rum<ir)'; angina or thibet, and otber goats'hair n< mohair, used iu manufacturing fabric* of otber mstsrial;aunatto, rancon, or Orleais, uaed as s dye ; animal csrbon (bonokack), used for chemical purposes (purifjing *osp*|; sutlmouy,crude, or regnlua of, use d in making type metal«, in isic plate*,kritsnnia metal, and in medicine; argol, or crude tartar, IuSjrlng, in medicine, in extracting tsrtsric seid, In1 ;ar«eniued in the arts and a* . medicine; aspi

E

phaltuio, used iu Ibe

arts; aloes, used in med' ine ; alcorno ju«,used in medicine; an

Weed used in mediciuo arrow root, do., a nutritive medicinalfood;' asaftrtida, used In mrdielue; animals, living, for food,I : draught, and illustrative of natural history barks,tiard toi dyeing, tanning, medicines, aud othsr purpose*; ba-rrtr*, *ulpLate, (ground) empli.Ted chnnikslly. used iu adul-teratit ( ptlnu, and in paper making; barilla, or sods sah. usedIn the art* for chemical and manufacturing purposea: bells, old,ai d bell metal when uimo iu nisuufarturimi; balnea, riots, and."gbtablea uaed in dyeing; berries, llower*, aud bark*, do.; bls-

aiii'h (utder ores), used In ths composltioii of ]>ewl«r and othermetallic substauce*; blest hi.ig puwdtir, used ill the arts, andu.fiilcinally ; blue or romaii vitriol, or sulphate of copper, usedfor various purpo«ea in the aits, and also in medicias; borax,ut grsst tier as ¦ Dux for metal*, also used iu medicine;bta*a iu oar*, pig*, piute.i, or *hrors, used In the art*; bra**,when old and fit only lo be re-manufact'ired. used in rnauu

ftctutiug; bie/il Wood, Irixillelo, *ed all other dye wood*lnsticks.us.il in trctagl breeds, when uaed In the arts;brimstone, uniehueii or in rolls, in t)is insuufscturs ofgunpowder, o.e., and iu medicine; bristle*, tor tbsn anufocturc of brushes; bronre liquor, when used in the aria,bin re powder, do. burr-stone*, in the msnufsctura of mill¬stones; burr slotie*, wrought oi iinwi-ough*, n«ed In ma-mtar

roring flonr, he.; bniti'ig cloth*, uaed in do. -, bi>ter apple*, u*edi:. mtiilcme; liouche lesre«, da; liurgundy pitch, do ; csd-Biiuui when in the srts; calsmiue, iu the urn cbauiicsily, sudaasns nrrparatloua of medicine*; cameos and mosaics, not *et,In ths aits; cassis bud*, ¦. an aromatic and in tbs maiiulact-ire

el perfumer* ichslk. in the art*, clsy, wrou«h',or univroug*!',in ibe stu, (mariiifactura af terra cotta); cobalt, in the srts, col¬oring pail.tings, he. ; cochmwil, used in dj..i:ig ; 08C <m snd cocoa

.bell», used in tl.e msoufsctnre of choeulate; eodills, or tjw

of bciiip or flax, in the art*; copper, in pig*, bar*, plate*, or

.arat. da.; copper, when old snd o..ly lit to be man-

tftrtiired, do.; copper for *li-sthing vease's, do.; eop-

psras, af green vitriol, or sulphsts of Iron, in ths art*,E dyeing, and in many chemical aud medicinal preparations;corktree bark,in the manufacture of cork*, kc; cream of tar¬

tar, for manufacturing and chemical purpose*; cudbear, vegeta¬ble, used in < or-ring cbromate, oxchroms'e, hydriodate andirn**istc of tot ash, used in the artaicodre, d'rectlv importedfreut the plsca of production, fur food; cslooiel snd othsr taer-

ciinsl preparations, uted iu medicims; csmphor, crude, da;rsathsridrs, do ; csstomen, do. ; cuhebs, do ; dragon'* bloo.1,Bate in paints, varuishos, prepsriug gold lacquer, itaiulug audniarble, he ; emery iu lutup, not pulverised, used in polishin«;«tutet of indigo, used iu the arts, dyeing, ate extract and .lecoctioii* of logwood snd othsr dte woods, do., do.; extrscta ofsadder, do., do.; tlaxseed, used in msnufaetiirilig oil snd s*

¦red fnr flax: tin.'*, for gun* and in the manufacture of pottery :

fsllst's earth, in ths art*, in fulling cloths; far*, drestedor undreared. when in the skin, for various manufa-ture«; furs,batten dressrd or undreasei. not ou tha ikiu, do., do.; fruit,sen, ¦ ipe. dried, preserved or pickled; gamboge; giim, Ara-c, Marl.ary Nast India, Je ids, Senega], lubctlt its trsgacautb,

sstdia (!. ai'a, ii.vti.ua. and msdicinslly ; gulta ; -reha, on-

¦muftctared; green tuitlei giugsr, green, ripe, driitd, pre¬served or pickled; hair of all kinds, niiclesnea and unman l

factored.; boms, horn tips, hone«, hone tips, and teeth itnmami

ta.turrd: India rubber, in bottles, alsb* or sheet*, unmtnutte-tnied inuigo; IndiuDi; ivsry, uuiuanufactured; ivory out*, or

isgrtahle Ivory; pecacuaoha; iti*, or orri* root; jalap; kelp;. »:ine«; sc dye; lac *pirits listings for sbee«, «lippers, h-tots,and button*, exclualrely lemon juice; lime juice; Uns.red; liqootic* root, madder ground, and rasdderrout; manganeta; uia infsclnres of mohair cloth, silk,tv 1st, or other tusiiutaetures of cloth, suitable lor

tka manufacture of alioes, hoots, bootees or buttons, sxclusively ;i- arhle in ths rongh.tlsh or bliyk, nnniauotactnred: matinsoral, aumanulactured; moss and other vegetable * ib*tai.'ce«issed lor mattresses; music and m ule paper, w ith line*, boundot anVcund j mrdkinal roots, leave*, gain*, and ra*in* in a erodestat*; machinery, axcluslvaly dsdgnea for mi>del*, su.l rxpre-t*-ly in.ported for the maiintac'ure of flax and linen go-.da; maps.Ld chart*; natron; mike) (manufacture of (lermau tilvsrwar*!; uutgclls; uux vomira; ochres, si d o-hrey earths,w'brther dry or in oils; oll«, palm, rocoanut, aud olive,(olive when pure and not otherwise) i oipiinint (and realgar)aiseaic; t>»ier. or willow prepared er uI pr-psred; opi'im;oisnge and Irmtvu peel; ptl.u leaf, nnmao ifactarrd;f wter, when old and ht only to be reuisnufaetuesd;i. intaao or graphite; po.iahing «Ulias; pumlceand puEiloe stoae*; latent mordants; pearl or hulled barley;quick ail i er; rag*, of whs'ever matarUi; rstau* and rred*. nn-

nianufsctursd ; rottan stone; red snd white lead, and litharge.ii '«.gar of Irsd; rknharb; ssflluwrr; a*(Iron arid tafiron cake;.a. atcuionia, laltpeter, or on rat» ol sods r -otaxh. r*iiT.I or

erode, lead lac, ahailae ; *ilk, raw, not more an vaneed in msuu-

ftcturs than sirislast, train or organsinc; skins snd hid.-*, raw ufsll kind*, whrthei salted, dried or pickled: »malt«; sheathing¦i<ia.'; sheathing paper; «eed» of all kind*; sls'e* and data pen-i.l«; sponge*, steel in bars. *st, ihsar or O -rmaJ ; *ub*tance«

.tpreasly used for manufacture*; *nniac ;aall of all kiud*;»piee»stall kind*; salt*, naasat, gtsuhtr, Rivheils; ssgoi aarsapa-r.' s, spiunk; s«anlll*; tallow, marrow, and all eth»r grstse auda>sp Mock* snd soap ctufl*; terrt tin [dates; tsrra japouka, "tUtpcho i tin fill; tin, in plalrcor -bee'*; tin plstas, galvanised;tin, In p>gs, bar* or block*; tortoiae.and other ahell*, unmau.e.aclarrd numeric) 'ype metal*,and -Id type fit uly to he |S>ataufactuied tea, directly imported from the ptice of prolnc-Boa; tap'ocs; vai.ills beans waate, or ahodity; w»ld whiting,si Faria wliite; wood,'>r pastel; woods, ua-u".:>¦ e*dir, !¦«'.¦?"a, mahogany .ri^ew.oa, sa'i iwo J, and all csbu.el woods;ato*J ; ».|>c, s|arllrr or tenteneque. In *heef. i»r pig.

i**ravcial and houarhuld esVcta, not n'erch*::di«e af cl lien* ofus I'nitrd States, dying abroad. Household, oil, aud iu uae ofS*ax*B* or families front foreign couutrie*. If useJ abroad by(k*at tor a period uf *ix usonth« or mors, s-id not imported for

staei |»?rsoti or per*o? *, i r for sale; and like noi*eho!d*>t"<t* and omauieul*, in the use of portJU* BatSS 1. au 1 ua'e.if" thrir children, on igra ir g lo the l'i.ite.1 St*Ui«. WearLig'Itsrvl ttil other personal .fleet*, ntt atercrtan.l.'e, pr f«<-s"ual book*, implement* and tool* of trade, oc.u;mtiou or eta-

po'tb.*],!, sciaaiiv used abroad, of peiaou* srnving ib tha1 »»ed State*; hot this exemption ahsll tmi he held to iaetu<la>r*fySapparal, msehinery or other srU-'v« !m;ortsd for aflaS by any axanufat turlag st'abiiahmaut, of tor «s!s, don* Bgift.

M!'-rle» Import« J for the use of ths I'nltadacs»«>te.1 to ttno antry ; and in all easel where a

1 5sT* '", biajkaeller, importer, or o'h

State« «ball bacontract i I

her p»rain, for

-j nltr*t State*.'harta.Vtat.Tn^ iustramenU. book*. mv|sr andaste,' a»^S?l?2St,"!9! *ud «».** of marble. Siiaai, ala-

.^. of aaattaaxsss I,lT:.U*ib,imn- «ra-ings. e'chiui*. spscS-

.XsUcatl^f^ ri!. if *^7' «»»'"«*» of coins, inedals, gems.

ssSaUUhed -»riii.r--VT "7 sociaty ucornoratel tmiÄTc'r 'ro;'.'^^Tü^^^'.'1 ?{th'-rkaal rr _'i "»»"r*rrof *uyr..l eje, acadar ir.

Ä"txHtn.vT''!' "' "T ,,,",h i!' ,h" r""'"Jfia.a*, sjj snj %»u ,u uj tf>i m^kfmM, why* aai Hit

ported for out eorietiee, 4 r., fur the eee of, tad not at awe hendin- or to make profit oat of ihr ..me.troode, were* aud metrbaudnse. tie greajth, product or manu

taftaf* of Ike t 'nited State*, exported to a foreifn rosintry, andbrought back to the United Sfatee n. Iba tarne condition a/wbenextorted, upon which ro drawback CT bonnty ha* been allowed-; ri/t-idrrf. that all retelaiioo* to aeeertaia the identity thereof

at] bT exinini, U*», or which may be prescribed by theS r-. rr fUM Troaiury.U be compiled with, gMr. JA MKS, in explanation of the bill, avowed hitn-

N If nn advocate of Frr¦« trade as far as it can lie car¬ried out in confotmifT with the legiaetaxelc law* (,ftrade ami cor.-i-tt nth with the common ir.teri-etr.nfthe eooatry. Ti e bill doe* not propose a tariff cmbracing drities impend for the purpose of Protection.It is frsmed M the principle of reducing dutu Mfun ion imports to h proper r» venne standard; in. tier words, tu rai-e a revenue adequate onlyfor ti e actual wants of the Government, so nearas may be deviaed. The articles i mhra< .-d in thebffl are separated into four classes. Close _

Is or ly of spirituotie liquids, which are tu piv a

duty of -u per cent ad valorem. Clues B «heutignil article, now paying a duty of 30 per cent and over,'M < pt -ointuons liquor*, together with one or two ar-tulie which now pay 13 per cent. This eom.in--ii o f of the artil l.-e of foreign manufacture whi' k on

let t.to general conenmption. Class C is free; the lintin ludirg raw materiale for manufacturers, rrjechnnic-i,Ac, produced either not at all in this eonntrv, or tor o pöal , xt, nt. Claas D is composed wholly öf arti¬fice Dot enumerated in i ithi r of the other lists, taxedwith a duty of 20 per cent. It will be; seen that thisclgaajflfation very properly discriminates between thetick and Uta poof, by so arranging the duties that theIn «vier (axe* will fäll on the luxuries and eleganciesof life, rind the lighter on the eheap comforts and then< ci asm ies of life which enter into general consumption,and are Med by the laboring elnss-e. He eaid thebill, if aiio],ted, would effectually check the imvnen-ofrauds prm tic«d by unprincipled Importagi ]{,.si.owid iti iiBportm.ee generally.not the le.-t ofwhich is that it will relieve maniifa'turi-rs, meehanicaand artisans from the onerous taxes on the mat. rial-necessary for their business, which, not being pro-da* ad in thi- country to aary considerable extent, andlOaM of them md at all, thty are compelled to importfioin abroad, Bach re 1 i < f wtradd do much to enabletlx m to DM et for< ign completion in our market, as itw. nid much reduce the cost of production. Not wi«h-ing to detain the Semite, ha would print the ratfllliidotof hie ifmniks. Adjourned to Monday.

HOUSE OK BEPBESEOTATIYSS,Mr. CAMPBELL 'Ohio) from the Corantltteo of

Ways and Menu-, rej.cried the Navy Appjiropriationbill.Mr. BENSON, from the Committee on Naval Af¬

fairs, reported the Senote bill for the eon-tne tion often MOOpe of-Wal, with amendment, piovi ling that theSecretaryof the Mary mny, in bit dleereUoa, oeaeetwo ofthem to be built with side-wheels, with the viewof the preati st attainable .qx ed.

Mr. BKKNTOX sj-.ke against the extension ofSlavery, and at 2 p. ai. the House adjourned to Mon¬day.

MOM ALBANY.Albany, Thursday, March 20, 1- «5.

The Senate in Committee to-day had the AlbanyBridge question under discussion. Mr. Brooks spoke¦gained the bridge, and Messrs. Kelly and Kicliardsonin favor of it. Mr. Sickles moved n-< an amendment,to be inserted in the first section of the bill, that theCompany be compelled to construct a suspensionbridge, of the bight of at hast 120 feet above the ordi¬nary water level. Pending the motion the Committeereported progress, when further discussion on the billwas postponed to Monday evening next.

DELEGATES TO CINCINNATI.BALTIMORE, Thursday, March 90, 1836.

Mes«rs. MeLane and (Jwvnn have been elected dele-

fates from this city to the Cincinnati Convention,bey go unpledged, but it i- understood that they will

vote for I'iercc.

MB. EVERETT AT RICHMOND.Baltimore, Thursday, March 20, 1h56.

Mr. Everett's lecture at Richmond last night at¬tracted a very large audience. At the close of iL hewas complimented i>y speech* s from Got. WkW fendtx-Pre.»i(lent Tyler.

THE SHIP CAKE COD.FIRE.It. io«i, Thursday, March 2 i, l-.Vl.

The ship Cope Col, rejMirted as abandoned at s»a,by the P« rsia, was insured in State Street, taitt city,for over «100,000,The Cotton Mill in Yarmouth, Maine, was dfadroyed

)iy f,re yesterday. Loaa$63,000. Insured fui »25,000.THE OHIO RIVER.

Whkklino, Thursday, March 20,The ice iu the river is entirely broken up and H

rupidly clearing away. Stiniii.ru uro loading for Cin¬cinnati and carrying off Um largo m eumulations ofheight. Between here and Pittsburgh the river isstill closed.

NEW-YORK LEGISLATURE.t rots Our Own Repcr'.g*x

SENATE....Albany, March 20.the new i.ankim, law.

The bill relative to Bauks, Bankers, the Bank De

partmeal and the. Bai k Kund, was takai ap foreon-nideration in Committee of the Whole, and underwenta seaichiiii.' exiiminatinn.

(In motion of Mr. WADSWORTH it wan so amendedin committee as to provide that mortgages whichbnrking associations or individual bankers shall !:..<.utter deposit with the Superintendent of the BankingDepartment ns n-curity for the redemption of tnTCVV

lating aoteg issued to them, shall be only upon im-

piovtti, productive, uniucumber. d lands, within theState, to an amount not exceeding one-half the valueOf said lands, independent of any buildings or perish¬able improvements thereon. It will In- ¦*> n that tliitamendment permits the IVCkmteOt of mortgnge- on

titv lands as banking basis, instead of only fariniiighinds, ns the bill has hitherto pn.\ ided for.

Mr. SI I'XCER iiiniouneed l.is intention of m-'iving,in the Senate, to substitute the words for farini-.,'purposis," which, if it carries, will ex aide all mort¬

gages on city property.Anotler amendment wns adopted whirl) provides;

that banks returning their notes M the Siiperinteudentfor destruction, mny mutilate said notes previous toreturning them, by" cutting out the signature of thel*re sident.The sixteenth section, which required all bunks to

make quarterly Matern, nts of "II its tian-aetion-. t >

the mii.utt>t "details, was stricken out, on the argu¬ment that the statutes already require eullidout detailsfiom the banks.

Several Senators then fi nOttncingtheir inabilitvtoarrive at a decisive conclusion aa yet with regard tothe tm rita of the various sections of the bill, a motionto reinritt ywgl. pn vailed.

the partitiom OF lands.Mr. KELLY, introduced a bill which piovide» that

whenever it shall appear to the Supreme Court, on tin-application of any committee, of any idiot, lunatic or

pen on mentally ir.ca|>uble of mannging bis affairs, hold¬ing any real cetnto in joint tenancy, or in common, or

in any other manner, to authorize his being mice

party to a suit in partition, that the interes'. of suchidiot", lunatic or other Dt tatM as uforee'iid, or of any ofthe parties interested in such eetatcs requires a parti-Lion theieof, it shall be ref rrt d to a referee, to inquireinto and report upon the circumstances; and upon thecoming in 9t the rrpoit, anil n he ning nndfxatnin-ation of the matter, the Court my antlmrixe sueli com¬

mittee to agree tO ¦ partition or sale of such estate,and to execute releases or conveyances >>f the right of-ui h lunatic, idiot or other person as aforesaid, in andto the share of euch estate falling to the other jointtenants, or tenants in couuuon, or purchase r or pur¬chasers.

whihi e.l at kkw york.Mr. BBOOKti pi'-eiit. d h petition fmin several

rtisetM of the City of New-Yoik, setting forth tha.he rates of wharlsge allowed bv law are iiisjfncientto support the wharvi s, tiien and bulkheads; that the;a\>- make no provision for the payment of wharfagerati s ujxni any property landed upon said wharves,differing in th«t reapeet from every other considerablei ommertinl city; and asking that moderate wharfageIn? allowed to l>e collected on property landed on -aidwharves, and that the rates now charged upon shiptard ve-sels be mlnee.'.The Senate bid for the better preservation of notices

of lit prudent in New-Voik. was announced from theAe-emtilv, with am«i:dmei ts.

Mr. S'KKNCEli ntoved to lay it on the table,(airied.The Mi'!-T«x bill wns made the fi^t special order.

Mr. KELLT in the chair.The bill to facilitate the determination of the vnü.l-

itv of text e r.nd a«M<-nie!.ts woe t.iketi up.Mr. WAP8WOBTB mo%.sl a rabadtate, wMeh

simply provide* that taxes, if deemed illegal, may beI aid under protest, and if so proved, may recover theMai'. with interests and coats.Pranavi »a then irpotietl.The Mill lax bill »n- then taken np. nndMr. UCHABJMOB moved to make 11 a mill and a

quarter.Mr. I'KHAM would not impose a greater tax thau

the State officers asked for.Mr. H0X0E argn. d that it was q iite likely the

State officers and the Chnirmau of tfct Committee ofWa\s and Miabs in tl.i llou.-e ltd MOy iuveatigatedthle ¦¦Her while the Senate had not. Consequentlytl:« v km w 1 est whnt was nee>ded.W ithout taking the qneation, prx giess was reported,

ami :h« Senate adie>unied.

ASSEMBLY.Tiv Hvvw, Ccaaiitu« ^ Hi >Yl*^r^ tf th«

Caltndar of Crraenl Order», and dimwd of lb* fe*Tlowing entitled bflta, at notedTo amend Chapter thirteen of rsart first of the Ee-

vired Mattrte*, " Of He Aweejrment and Collertwn ofTaxas." Progress,To amend the ¦harter of the Yillage of Cantoo. Third

rending.Foi the rehrf of John Vandermark. Third reading.To change the name of Jesue Blakerlee Aioi to

***** iWatatitl Alcoti. Third reading.To aut) oriz.« the auThoritiee of Oreen Island, A'banv

Co., It t!.**. -ip Pnice street and reduce the w: i: I, of( - r.rre- htrret. Tbird readirg.For the relief of the Thorn** Asylum for orphan and

a*MiiiLte Itninn Children. Tlird ri-ndintr.To an.end the act incorporating the New-York Ju¬

venile AsjIbtji. Thin] rending.To ii-corporate the Board of Publication of the Re-

fotined Protrrtent Dutch Church. Third readir g.For the relief of Anna ('. Btuijea. Third reading.Mr. B. BAILFY called n the question on the a%a

th.n to diät i.ar^e the Committee of the Whole fromthe further cot i«ider>ition of the bill to aid New.YorkMat* 0o)m taatica s>< iety.Mr. BAILKY resumed hi* argume;} in favor of the

pr ir riple contain*d in bill.Mr. NohTW'P inquind what was thisCo!on>».«.tion

Bocaair 111 (Licet? Where was it started ' Did itMart ¦ the Free State«, where all an- free 1 fto, Itwac einited in the Sinthern Stnte*. and ite object wasto fallen "till atronger the chains which bound theidave. With regnrd to the Fugitive S'ave law, hewa- ..pio-nl to it. He would obey the '.aw* af thecountry, while they were laws, and h'e was called uponto do *o. But he would never aastet in executing thitlaw until the Man-hal came to him and culled uponLim to do so, with a proeees üi hi* hand.-; and if thefnpitive rlnve could not get out of the way, it Wouldbaj 1 < ennse he whs dowi r on foot than tt Mr. Nwas. He declared himself entirely OWS*ad to trie. xt.ii-ion ml Slavery to a ringle" new State, andwould be so opposed to hrs latent day. Hi* lastvote would be given ng. mat it. "A* to theunderground railroad, it had b« r, H-k>-d when it wascharti red. It whs chartered, mid Mr. N., when Adamwas created.it wa* chattered by frod 1 Mr. V. n-k- iif there was a man here who would (lure aflat n bill, or

vote for ot.e which proved for the abolition e.f Slaveryin the Southern Bttntt ' No; they do nor dare do that.And why I lieen a,e ptilitica! ih struct iwi followed. Flir¬ty orf,ai izatir n.party drill, was too «tmwg for thatBttt ho WOtdd vote, for any each bill; he would con¬ti ilite nil his au ans; be wsuhl l*VF:ir hinvs. lt" andfamily, if he could free the slave* at the South, in a fittajatttmi n to ei joy fn-e !om. Re was not an A*. ¦!i»i..11-Lst, and never trat. He would not have Shivery abd-iafcstl at olcc. But if he eotdd elevate the km ut l)condition of the slaves, and then make them free, bewould do it.Mr. YAN SANTVOORD tajstasthad the prim ipl- tt

coloiiization, giving a Ssftot) of its rise, propres.* andremit*. He coi¦eluded by niH*»iug that the bill bsIttViftd to n seh et committee to repoti complete.But the HtVBSS took a n-cass to :'.{ p. in. without

lUsaaiatliifl ot the question.

BVnSISG OFCOVESTGARDEX THEA TER

At one time the burning of a theater iu EaajWasaor this country was no uiummoii thing, fadtimt,there leatBtd to be a. kind o£ rivalry bvtween the two

aations in the race of theatrical burnint:. f)!d Drury,and Covent Oardt-u, and the f »lytnpic wcra the tro¬

phies ol the flfunts on one side.the Bark, and tno

Boweiy, and Wallack's old theater on the other. Butof late years both countrii - have suspended fire. Werepret to say, howev er, that the long armistice busbeen broken by the destruction of Con cut GordonThcnter <>« the morning of the Mh of Mareb.

It nppoani that on the aipht of the 4th this greattanpla of the bistrioiiic art, perhaps the nohb et in

Kutope, which is situatid not fir from Drury Line,and near the market from which it tak> s its name,was the scene of muck revelry. The great Wizardof the North.to whom, in the interregnum of song,it had I.. et hired.hnd held in its moguificeot sulooasa Carnival bull, and tsttatasa'l

" Capitsl wa* (a'tie-red thers,Ai.d hrir.hr the Ism;* »h..rieo'er fair wnaeu and brtve msn.And til went nierry s* s marrisse bell,"

whin the sound of fire came on the ear. How andwin nee it roee, as over in such cases, no one can tell.

Many of the mankeis had left the scone, and thosewho still lingered were aluiiit to join in the last verse

of the National Antlum, when the lir.-t bsaSfl flash-din. The spci tacle is represented as touched with a

ludii roueiiees which even the sadness of such a losscould not Mibdue. The gis being turned off, all was

darkni e*, ai.d through the shadow were taei gropingcrowds of niHskem, muinmem in the garb of Corsoira,]n ildler», bntiditti, wnlors and Turks, making tlieir aa.

c through the flashea of fire which illuminatedtl.ein from the outside. In some minutes the wholestupci dous building was a glowing mass of fire; nndaa the rlames rose in plowing columns to tin- sky, even

the dii-tant bills of 8uirey could in their rerlcction be

tliaily ruen. Aller this vm- smoke and rain; andaba milknmn passing in the momiBg could S"e nothingii.on of Unit ten.jib- in vihich Ki nibb- nnd Siddons«olorg parg, and so ninny gn at nrti*t* have rMpedtheir glory, thnn a few charred and broken pillars of

a portiio.Covetit finrden is indeed a house surroundel with

many glorious ricollci tions. The building that hatthus pi rieht d was, it is true, ouly forty-sit yeara old,but the first bouse on the sp.d was founded so farbtv-kas 173S, by Manager Bich, the Harl- iniin showman,of whom l'ope snd F:< Idiag »p< ak, nnd (is-ri. k actedthen- in 17it;. Id S» ptemb< r, 1-Off, it waa accidentallybtiini il, and on its ruins rose the Corcnt 0 trden,TVhieb has now met its pwdtweasMr*! ftte. Of how

n.any s'iai .;.'*. 11.'s, raj \9t9tt hifhtoatsj tnA haartidr pressed, uf iiinobling sadness and Inughter-wakinj;n.irth, do its ruins tell' It was born in a tempest.BoBid its cradle the great 0. P. riota aurgeinnd swelled. Then followed the Keinbks, anlcruwi'e, night on n ght, bun? with di light on

tlie gh rlous ptraoha'ions tt CwioltWI or Kollt,by Kemble, ot with terror on bit unequaledaibtei at I.r.dy Mocbeth. They passed awaybut there (Unit others to teainfain the glory of thenetr.e and sustain^ its traditional honors. The iniinitn-

bft) Mtrcttlio arid Btncdict of Cliarlei K n.hle wi Ilive long in the memory of all lovers of the drama:i-'art, n< r will those who have witnessed them, t ein

forget Iho Julia of Fanny Keinbb', or the Noraia ofAdt laide, who, during her abort reign, drew largerbluets th«in wa* pi-rh.ips collectnj together withinCov»Lt trtrden's walls. The next bright efstsCk in if*

rdory wn» the Mncn ady manngement, under whichthe immortal works of Shakenpe-ire were broughtout with a eoinph teiicss of cn»t, a splendor of appli¬ance*, and a clnssie exquisitivenessa even to themot n innte detail, such as m vi r was equale dnor is likely to be surpassed in the anntis of tha

r-tage. After Macnady it passed into the grace¬ful hands of Madame Yestris, who suor-< .! d it

do fvT laedem comedy what Mncieady did tor t!.--1 le*e c diama. As an idea ot the resources of theh« u»e, we have only to give a ptrt tt the ca«t of Mr.IKuriicenlt'* roitirdy of l/indon As-urrin< .. to impartna idin of the pcrfi ctian with which plays w-re pr 1

ih crd: Sir Harcourt C'omtly, Mr. Kam a; Sir MaxIlarkaway, Mr. Bnrtlsy; Charles Courtley, Mr. An-detain; Mr. Dazzle, Mr. C. 3Iitl;.w-: Liwy. r, M-.

Hark7j DttDj gpnnkt r, Mr. KtxfaVrj Ära c Ha.-ka-wey, Madame Yestris; Lady (lay Spanker, Mrs. Nes-Mtt| Pert, Mr*. Humby. Notw:th»tandingthe attrai .

tion of tui L u 1 ompauy and the brilliant »'..re-rtion ttYi-sttis, the funds fell nnd the dr.ittia gave way to joll¬ities. CovcBt Garden became tho^center of agi-tnt.i u i the Anti-Corn Law 1> ague, when theheod battle was at ita light, and itswalla echoed to the shonta of the »turdyInliurers and evcitcd Quakers, chiering on JohnBrüht ns be thutdend at Iba gbtes of the aris¬to*.! aiy and called cut fur cheap fooL With the tri-

cmph of fret-trade, Covent Garden again *at silmt,and found no one who wi.uld viLtore to rairc her up.Alx ut this tiiD*, Lowcver, there happ. ind to be at her

Mejrrty s Theater uf the l.'aymarl., t in I-mdon, some

of these differerjcea which sumetimes tike place even

among the best regulated opt-rat.c faoivlies. Out ufthis difft react' grew a coolmss bt twtcu im lr>s»ee( Mr.Li d ley, st.d Mr. Coeti the distmguiehrd leader oftie otclestra, and out of this coolrcs gr\w theapfM>'.Ltm* nt in Mr. Cota'a plaoe of Mr.

ltalfe, the ct lrbratf d Irish operatic compoeer. Mr.

Cirta, dismiesed fr >m his accuatumed kingdom,lietajne po*ee*>ed of that de71on of hatred whichtt-K-i t-i*o suiff-ra wait otvre fury t*mtA 0% lU-m of

I any other (raff, atd soon isund mean* to give hi*^erf-earir* fi I. Herr vw wandering at that timeaht, "t the Jui.ior Club* of I.or don, ia qneat of aome*} ark t<> leva** him, a youth of much bullioo aadlittle bra->. ne Mr. Delafield. Hi* father had ac-

qeired a K rgt- fortune as partner m the errat brew-|mLoose in .London of that name, ard his son deter-a.Ined te> devex'e to music the wealth acquired byrralt. Not that he was an enthusiastic worshipper ofthe meine art, but he sacrificed to it a* a meene.

aa he thought, *>f coming i-rto faehioa. or

bsrvg p-ermM.d aon-r» of those light Iii.**» withbull« t acd (horn* girls to wbieb yon; ha intheir very verdant period so fondly aspire.Opera rrigr.» j in (>t. nt Garden. TV sk '¦! of Alba-no, and the r,, ,.-a, ri. r, w,In ,.s 0f (/ra#T. .yr* at on^e

en plof» \ *fs ii eke the honse a mode! of spierreior andNaut); .tad ('.-na, with ntlimivd reaein ea at hitii ii n r-nd. S*e*Jfai ts-r-sher an orchestra <t" unrivaled«tr. rgth and a r< rnpany «f nn^urpassed p-.v»er and va

riety of ee.ng, firisi and Mario passed into tie serviceof this rival Khtg, Labhret e ahme of the great trio rr

n siting true to h:« aid all» .lance. The war of thetwo re#< i at u:,e- eommanred, and the battle r?\**rd form r' eenson with en intensity of discord knownoat) to irrofeseors of hairaoay. The part:*s.ns ofthe rival Opera* looked each other dark!/ aa

they drove by in the peek. What, how.

witht!:< pnJejcaet |hrf*j by the Queen f»r CoTOaJGarden through regard for CeOta, Of* WwWffl *'..<¦ amafor soire \ears a pnpil, and th<* immense sums ex-- aadad on the n arloal n .ertaimr.^ts there.the roc it

u'partment in one seajH>n, ltrt*, c»>Hing i.j:i,:u>i, andtht < reheetral JtlO.oif?-the Garden triumphed, andMr. Llialloi succumbed. It marches! to victory, how¬es er, over the debris of poor Mr. IVlari. Id, of whojjthe world, forgtttiijg the enjoyment he hod giventhtm, only *aid " fin.l and swindler.why doca her.ot pay h;a creditors,' and pae--rd on. Proa the pe¬riod 0< :ts unshand p.cemiiienee it ! a- been attendedwith great -access, and has been the scene of manytriumphs of vocal and musical art.No lives were, we are happy to say, l«>*t, and we

doubt Bet before amtier yar nnoUier structure of

equal grandeur and beauty will spring from that" blu< kenitjg dust " which i« all that now remains ofthe great temple i»f song.

Freru aa Oe<-aa>eral Onetpotwteut.Boston, Wednesday, Mnreh 19, I860,

You know I leave nil matters of politics andtrivialities of that sort to your I >wn Correspondent.I have no vocation in that direction, a».d never couldece any wuy at all into a ruillstoae, except throughthe hole in the center. But MaMaaBM there are

things that happen or are talked about funny enoughto come within the sphere, of a laughing philosopherlike ni)sclf. Such is the conspiracy now said to bein foot for underground) for choosing GmeroorGardner Sem.tor in Mr. Sumner's place (or ratherin his rovm at this session of the Legislature. Notthat it would be any laughing matter if they coulddo it. But it is not at all likrly that they can. Itcan only be done by the Whig and DemocraticHunkers, of as many stripes as a rainbow or a

lizard, uniting with the most unknowing of theK now-Nothing*. And that would bring it withinthe cachiunatory eatcgory again; for, if anythingcould move the risible* of nn alligator (the longestfact d animal known, excepting a pious, Pro»>laver>, negro-catchiiiff cburch-meiuber or minis¬ter,) it would l»e the sitht of Whigs of the Bostonbrai.d voting for Gardner to sit in the sent of Web¬ster or Kverett. It would be a beautiful conflictof antipathies, such as one has not often a chanceto see. .Still, if it could be done, they would holdtheir noses and gulp the bitter pill down; for withgr» at reason, they hate an honest man like Sumner

Gardner. But it would be fun to see their wryfaces over the dose.

It is not likely, however, that the Know-Noth¬ings will consent to make this open proclamationof their uncertain tenure of power. And it is saidthere are some impracticable fellows among themfrom the rural districts who hate no more discre-

prctcxt that it would he a dishorest action. Theseare the sort of persons, I suppose, that passed thePersonal Libert) Bill and Jury Bill, and who donot comprehend the true character of their publicduties. They lay, I am told, "We don't under-" stand this choosing of a Senator a year before"the usual time. It is like ha\ing Thanksgiving" t OBfl ia S» ptember. And if w e begin. « ho kuows" but next time w e may find Thnnksgh ing appoint-'. . d in April, and nothing but a Fast Day at tlut "'

And there seems to be no particular reason whythis Legislature should not choose Senators fortwenty >ears to conic if they once deviate from theestablished practice. There has beeu also a ru-

n or thüt the plot to elect (iarduer having failed, itwas proposed to choose Mr. Winthrop instead.' Itis hardly credible that the Know-Nothings couldhave consented thus to deliver themselves upbound into the lianas of the Philistines.not that Imean jou should infer that they are Samsons. Butif they conld be so be sotted, one can scarcely suppo-e it possible that Mr. Winthrop should consentto lei.d himself to su< h a pitiful coup d itat as this;. racciedll as it is plain that all he is wanted for ilto pull the chestnuts out of the In for the mon¬

key's eating, to play the part of LVon to his F.x-celltncj's Bertrand. If he could consent to bei: it- d up in «mb an intrigue as this, which J doDot believe possible, he would nail himself to thesbelf, en which he laid himself some months ago,for the rest of his da\s.icuhafe heard of our ex-Governor Clifford,

judging from au article or two in Tin: Tumi n B,.thoia Go?, Garoner chose as Keeper of his C*e>science, or Attorney-General, when he came into

paWOT, and whom the Legislature have maintainedin that responsible trust.a trust which, it is said,he has oietbiri.ed with such signal care and liJeli-ly that he will restore the delicate fabric coamit-ttd to his ch.-.rge, at the end of his term of service,in quite es good repair as he received it. Well,jcu Maine Law men will be glad to hear that tlteAttoniet-iioternor, or the Governor-Attorney, hasrecently distinguished hiinstlf by an official reportas to the workir-s of that vexatious statute in thisMa'e. In this report he pronounces the experi-n ftit to ha* e been "an expensive failure'.thetxpente to the State having been 937,000 or

thereabouts. It is said that, on being asked bysome outside Maiiiote as to where he got his fig-ores, be replied that he guented a' them This ofct urse, as a Yankee, he had a perfect right to do.l ut the other side ha\e also OXf rcieed their inbornprerogatite. and they guess that If the Attorney-l,i i eral l ad balanced the account of finee and ex¬

penses he u.itiht have found something on thecredit side of th» ledger. At least, the fact thatthe sum of fr.'.nin }.,* been paid in Boston isfines ai.d costs, w bere the failure has been greatest,would s' em to imply that the amonnt received inlie r»et of the Mate, where there ia no dif¬ficult) in enforcing it, must square off the $37,000t< easts! at least. But this opinion of this high le¬

gal functionary goes further than the mere liquorn:atttr. If the t xpentiveness of iegal process isa reaeou for the repeal of laws tbe> retrenchmentsht uld beiiin to be made a tttwrnl delay. Hangingsw.i Id go by the boaid atonex.for they cost a

great deal of m< n> \ md bring in no return at all.Tbisvtrj Mr. ( litford. when Governor, took a

naiif' tof the .Mate Prison where he was earn¬

ing money for ns and hanged him.which I mustconsider a very mistaken piece of political econ¬

omy. So it would be as to all expensive pursuit*ot rocu«*; in which case what would become ..|

ji ur New-York policemen and judges ? But it isin tifW of our delicate national ftdations that thisnew Ifk-al pLilosopby of Mr. Clidord assumes itsniest formidable: aspect. Catching, keeping andnn rnicg negroes is notoriouil) a very txpensivet'lifLff*. Burn* cost something over flW.OOO,ard Sin » rear as tntich. Now, doe* Mr. Cliffordvi an to say that because negro-catching is an ex-

Seceive recreat:on that therefore it is tobe aban-oned I Should another Burns be seized would

fee adviie Gov. Gardner not to allow hi* body-guardto hue UemKlvve wt at tw» »oU«n . 1», to keep

tROM BOHTOH.

tii ii tbun to object to th>

kino raft)1 He maet harr« a rare, or be oaf findhimself returning tta frail tiesuc confided to hitcharte with a *rest hole in it.La»t Monday eight Mr Choite filled the Ma¬

fic Hall with an i>Trrf<wing andiene« to hearwlat he had to ray tt^efc;Oft "The Lait Days ofM tbe Poet Bogers." J did not bear him myself,so I can pass n<> judgment N the performance,of eonrse. it wse receit H with rtptrtre.for thefaith of Boston in Choate ia next on'y to that inWeleter. There were iiNv-TK^ditnrged persons, tobe sure, who thought it vapiu -a.esultory, conmon.

place, ard doll.ttilt-walking »-«er» tern flat cota-tn.»rd ita effervescence*, lik.* th-t of a gla«s ofstale champagne stirred up wit.t a crust! of bread.as BeM shafterly'a aerrant sait-'o** hi« master's.Still he had the nest dear voices of the ir-tjltitudewith him. and he was pelted with bouquets likeIM prirea dotna. Isdred. it ii a moot questionyrf whether Mr. Ca->ate or Mrs. W.-wtf, the .Siog-iag ( LambermaiJ of the Boston VWafer, whotook a ben< tit that sight, had the mure flowers.This lady ia a great p*i of the Boston public be¬cause of her exceeding prettiness and tnjneglmes,and she is always sure of a bumping bent-It. Thieye*.rtke hamper was so fnll that it ran .wer iutothe next night, for so nanny tickets were boughtthat the pray a were repeated', and half th? profitsparsed to Mrs. Wood s aeeesiat. So that, on thewhole, I rather think si.e must bare had the betterot Mr. Ckoate.

Talking of Rogers, I woader that " the naturalmalignity of Mankind " baa not reproduced Byron'alampoon of him.the most terrible one that wasevei »ritten sy man. I beliore it is not in any mithe coilectioks of I'm t, * works; but it was

print*d first ia Fraur't Magazine, in one of theeailier vu'.nmes, aud since la Medwin's Lifo ofShelley. Medwin says thus when Rogers was

CM ng t» visit Byron at Bisa, he put the manu¬

script of this etching in aquafortis under the sofa-cushion on which he meant to seat, and did seat,the unconscious subject, enjoying the maliciousplesfure of hnowisg that he was totting on thep. tard which would be sure true day to explode.It ye.ii incline to reprint it. you will find it in Med¬win's Shelley, v<4. "2, p. 191, London L'd. Howevermany ill-natured things Rogers might have said inhis life, and they were many, they were more thanpaid eft by that bitter satire of Byron'a. Byron waa

a savage fellow whm he undertook to pull down hiagame by the haunches. Ho you remember hia lineson the 1'iiiice Kek-eot standing between the coffinsof Ileury VHX and Charles L, in St. George'sChapel at Windsor, on the occasion of the identifi¬cation of ths' body of the latter I I believu thatI as sot yet gone into the editions of his works.They were tor a long time handed round in manu¬

script, and were repeated to me several years agoby that elegant acholar and moat accomplishedgentleman, the late Mr. l'eter, British Consul inPhiladelphia. As they are not long, I will settlicoi down here from memory, which must excuse

errors:Lirtrs os Tttr nurci recent STAYDIBQ BBTWB1S

the corns* or iii.sry tin, and ciiuu.ksi., i.e.Smrc» worth sn epitaph Hv Tats er Qua-let.lirre heartless Henry Use bj headiest Charles;Ite.id.- them .tan.ls number sreptered t'linr,It, |emp, in power, in nil but usme . hin»,t hsrlr* ro bi« pei pie, HeDrv to his wire,fn him the Spatta tvrant start* to lifeiJustice aro Death bad sealed their tombs In rain:J h s royal vampire h'enda their blood axain;And show* a Tudor who no faith defer ds,A Staat!.faithless both to foe s'ulWhat, then, ran tomha avail, inne the** disrnrxeTbe blood snd filth of both to mold s OKORtIK

When we remember the noise which Byron's'. Lines on a Lady Weeping," created about Mil,m.d how the Ministry thought of bringing them be¬fore the House of Lords, we can well imagine w hythese truculent verses were kept private till betterdata. Lord Kllenborough would have likednothirg better than to have sat in judgment overthem in the Ring's Bench. Hut they overshoottheir mark and give George IY. credit for moreforce of character than he had. He w as an indo-Icnl voluptuary, hut neither cruel nor a tyrant.He never would have gone to war with hi* peoplefor bis prerogatives, and there waa all the differ¬ence in the world between the ways in which heand Henry VUL got their wives and got rid ofthem.Miss Adelaide I'hillips's friends here.rind they

ore all that know her.have heard with greatpleasure of the success which attended her debutat tie Academy. I am confident that it will in-creaie the more you hear her. Hi r appearances atI hiladelphia and New-York were made under pecu¬liarly trying circumstances. Less than a week

i ii re her appearance in Philadelphia, her mother,to'.\him she was tenderly and passionately at¬tached, diid very suddenly; and it was in themidst of the most cruel affliction that sho had toprepare herself nnd appear, in obedience to thestern necessities of her profession. I think herillDfsson her arrival in New-York, which causedthe difapi oii.tn.i tit of the first night, was nothing towoi.dcrat. And I hardly think her voice or herpi weis could have been in their best plight even

when she did apj»ear BO BOM after that \ery seriousillitess. I think she pan hardly fail to improve the fa¬vorable impression of her first appearance after then In shim nt of a short interval of calm and repose.

_BVI.K.S.

FROM CINCINNATI

CsntspsatxBsBB ef The X. Y. Tnbtir*.

Cincinnati, Wednesday, March 19,You have heard before this by telegraph of Jtidt;e

Burgoyre's decision to-day. The paper is some¬

what lengthy, very well reasoucd, and a decidedblow to Mr. Commissioner IVndery and his f-.llow<, Of inissiouers.

ITereafter, if by any accident on tie t'ndergroundRailroad a fugitive slave is brought before Mr. IVn¬dcry, a w rit of habeas corpus in his behalf will missued, returnable to Judge Burgoyne, and themuch-dreaded "conflict of jurisdictions'' will takeplsee.

In from two to three days Mr. Robinson will bebrought efore Judge Burgoyne and fined for eon-

tmpt. He will l.e sent to prison, and then it isHpposed that his counsel will bring the case he-lore Judge Mel ean (who ia now in the city) on a

w rit of habeas corpus.Mr. Robinson is absent at Washington, whither

te w>nt to "'see about that little bill'' for theServices of 21*3 special Deputy Marshals in the latelfa.fl case. He was authorized to pay the men

per diem. He draws this amount from theTreasury, but it is supposed his commission willbe hsLdsome.Since I wrote you last I have learned that when

the question of jurisdiction betw een the Marshaland the sheriff waa bri ght before Judge Leavitt,ke vat pleilutd to a decision in fitor of the Sheriff,and he e>t n went so far as to irn't« oaf tuck a at-

citrion.}<>u have seen the result of Gov. Chase'i re<tui-

sitim. Mr. Guinea promiaes to bring back thewiiuaii. (he aays nothing of the men); and flot".< h..-e, t- r the present at least, contemplates the[mm t m further requisition.An item of nr.der-ground railroad intelligence

came to my notice the other day. which I wiah thereaders in good faith and implicit confidence ofDr. Ai'anv's book could have seen. A dark-colored u.ulatto woman paaaed through here MMweehe since, accompanied by her child, the ion ofa Mr. Vaugbim of Kentucky. The boy was aboutsix years old; hia head was very finely shaped.ton head high and prominent, features regular an!Kurtj can, eyes bine, hair flaien, complexion white.I m cbai <1 was neatly dressed, (his mother spentall the rx< n» y -heu her by her owner upon thisboy.) was very gentle snd well behaved, "couldrod in the second primer," and was worth

about $4f 0. 1 he mother bad made three attemptspreviously, and this time she came armed, deter¬mined to be free or die.The I'ndergroBud Railroad is very mtieb trav¬

eled at present. Mrs. L. B> Blackwell at an Anti-.-lnvery festival a week ago (where over $'i>0 ofI rdercrt und stock was taken) stated as tbe re-

ttilt of ler obter.ati< n that during the iceboundstate of the river, t iousands had esesped. Some178 have passed through Cincinnati within threemonths, and they are daily going. I will, withyear consent, at tome future time, give your read¬ers some statistic* tod iacideut* cotiaccted with(kU toad.

IMPORTANT FROM HAMAS.-«.>-

PROCEEDINGS UNDER THE NEW CMSTiTUTIO*.

ORCAMZATIOX OF TflK STAT8 fiOVKWMKST.

aiOHaye of Gov. Kobiusou.-.*>-.

C^rTMpoe i»Ec# of The K. T Triaane.FR1F. ST.tTB HOTKL, I

LaWBEKPF, Friday, March 7. 1866. JI arrived in thii far tod w*r-famed ehy "in time*

" to t* tc« Laif " to witMN the iaangvatioo of the?Governs* aid Government of the State of Kanaan,lut in tinve, I hope, to tianamit Fun aa aecouut ofit (the Message), and otlVr territorial new* by aa

»a:ly a niaut a* my rival correspondent*.Tie S» naJor», BepMieau«t.-a t-tA officers eieci

of ine popular Government, cwuvmed on Ttw-*v!ajrthe -t.ii inst. t Topeka, the t«-«porary Capital ofthe State. Tcpeka ia eiUuted or? the Kaseae River,on a beautiful. gently-trndolaiiug prairie. £3 tmlearfn m Lawrentz and abeait 60 frttn Fort Lea*en.wortb.Ol Menday the "bt'tßwn*" of the Fr**» r»rat»

part) were rind off with great effect in Cooatttn-i:< ¦ Hall- the renal in which the Free State Coo-stitution vi aa framed.at Franklin Pierce aneXl ImA r rreatuna of the Slave Power at Wastirag-t« n t *11a. Mr. Stephen Sparka of Kation.atnern-bci of Um House and a leader in the fight in <M-fenon of the ballot-boi on the loth of Jangary ¦

wna called to th ebair and presided. Sparka baan honest, brave Indiana backwoodsman.mumwho may be killed by the Ruffian*, but will m-vrr

be captured elite. He wai onoa aarrounded by*fifteen armed and mounted Missauriana whoor-ib nd him to surrender, but instead of complyingbe cocked his pintol at the leader of the party andtold him to prtpare to meat bit . father, (OldScratch) or keep a reapect&xl distance). He. winlit arrestid' The meeting wae addressed byGt>v, Kobinton, ldeut.-Gov. Roberta, Col. I.aae*aid other*.Governor " Rob." is a tali, strong, Anely-pro-

ferticiieil man, with n inrte hronine head. inscrut-ihle light-blue eyes, and an expression at once ofncfitlcners and teat leesue**. He is greatly bo¬lt vi d by the people heie. Kvt ry one I elievoavbin to be a man of irreproachable integrity,thoroughly honest, moderate, tirm and cautious.He is not a f.ueut orator; bis sentenceo are rathercomplex, at times, for a popular auditory; hi* da-livery, to«i, i* not so graceful a* it might be; butnotwithstanding this, be is the moot effectivespeaker in the Territory. People know that he)alwa\a expreaaea hia opinions, not opinions teat

he believe* will be popular; they know that !xtnever talks for e ffect nor to increase hia populär»ity, and therefore e\cry suggestion be make* ialistened to and considered with respect.The Governor gave the President's Special Me«-

*age a merciless review; he spoko of Pierce a*

honest men ajw ays speak of renegade* and traitors.I have a synopsis of bis speech, but suppreis it, aa

nearly the lame ideas are contained in hia Mes¬sage, which I inclose.

Col. Lane reviewed the Special Message his-ti rically, using the same arguments and illustra¬tion* that he advanced in the Constitutional Con¬vention, lie disproved almost every historicalstatement that l'ierce advanced, and proved, by the>Congrcsaiounl debate* on the kau.*«* Nebraska

'bill, that an immediate* State organization, insteadof being a revolutionary movement, wae not onlysupported by precedent, but coutt-mplatod by theyfran era and advocate* of that act. Lane was in( i ngress at the passage of the Nebraska bill, andvoted for it en the final ballot. Lane la a tail,tl in, sharp-facid, very dark compUxioued man,with little, deep-set, restless, black eye*; ho iausually dressed d la militam, VFtth hia boots overhis.excuse me.breeches, a red sash around hiawaist, a black cloak, and officer's cap. He is nInw idial of the political intriguer. lie couldn'tlive twenty-four hours if he had not some schemeto carry through. II« is a fluent speaker, but hiati ne betrays a want of earnestness, which is fatal tobis oratorical MsMCM before a reflective audience).Id- is a spici,did officer. Every one admires hin*when i ii military duty, except the Border Ruffians,who fear him.

I.icuf-Cov. irobert* is a prim, precise, sedate,old bachelor. He is from Pennsylvania. Ilehaia mummy-like or stony face ; the whisker* aroundit lcok as ftill'as an in n fence; and his voico ieunci iiimenly hard, and dull, and lifeless. He ia a

National Democrat, of course; has a thoroughknow It d*e of Parliamentary Rules; is pn found inOld Hi.nker arguments and mtiims, but won't actthe Mii-touri River on tire, I am inclined to believe.TblTI w as n good deal of discussion, apart from

the denunciation of Pierce* Co., as to the couranthe Assembly should pursue. No definite resultwas arrived at.The Geiieml Assembly convened in Constitution

Hall, on the following morning. ('id. Lano, aat hai) man of the Executive Committee of Kan¬sas Ti riitorv, called the Senate to order, and ad-n mistered the oath of office to the l.ieutenant-Gov-crnor. On assuming the Chair.by virtue of hieoffice he it President of the Senate.Mr. Robertoexpn.sed his uratitude to the people for electing

in; promised faithfully to execute the dutieidevolving01 him; told the grave and reverendSenators that the eyes of all the American Peo¬ple \w re mien them; and that "our infant Repub¬lic is this day born of the popular will; an edificeis founded on the true basis of popular sovereignty,aed if we are true to our interests, our success, un¬der the smiles of Divine Providence, is secured."Ti e i atii was then administered to the memben

of the Senate, and the following officers elected:Asalph Allen, late of N. V., Secretary; W. L.Brigdcp, Bonn., Assistant Secretary; J. M Fuller,Mass., Serjeant-at-arms; Henry Strstton, Man*.,Assistant Scrgonnt-at arms; A. Martin, Ohio,L'ooikeeper; .lohu Mack, Mass., Assistant Door¬keeper: Jesse Crane, Fenn., Messenger; F. Wen¬ds I i. Mo., Assistant Messenger; J. F. ('unaming*,PcM., Transcribing Clerk; .1. C. Dunn, Maine,Assistant Transcribing Clerk; Rev. F. Paid Sbep-pard, Chaplain.The immortal bogus Sheriff Jones, a tall, mus¬

cular, athletic loafer, with a cruel Mephistopheleanexpression, clad in the Border-Ruffian costume-blue miliary ovircoat, large boots, skull cap andcigar in mouth.was present at the organization,and amuted himself and the members both, bywiitiig down the names of the Senstors and Rep¬resentatives as they took the oath of office.

1 he Senate then adjourned.The House was organized immediately after the

adji i.it ii cnt of the Stint* Mr. Minard, late ofIowa, was elected Speaker; Joel K.Goodin, Ohio,Chief Clerk; S. F.Tappan, Mass., Assistant Clerk:M. J. Mitchell, Mo., Sergeant at-arms; JacobBranson, Mo., Doorkeeper; J. G. Saodgraao,Ohio, Transcribing Clerk.

Oil] one member eject was afraid to take thnoath.he emigrated from the Border-Ruffian See¬th n ol Missouri.Here were thirty-fwo Representatives and

eiertI Senators present. They are as intelligenta btdy of men as ever met in a Western Legisla¬ture. I raw the Border-Ruffian " Baron* ofKama* wh«n at Paw r.ee City, and I assure youthat the contrast between the Free-State» and Pro-Slavery Legislatures of Kansas is very gratifyingto i \ tra patbies and complimentary to our creed.The i.'ufliano were drunkard*, bh'phemeri andgambii:.-: tkc] were personally as ignorant andunfolisbtd r>s their "'act*'' demonstrated theyw .-re unpritcii 1« d and violent. These Frec-Statnu.en, 01 the cootaary, *re intelligent, aober, de¬cided ytt liberal in creed. I wish 1 conld get th«>daguerreotypes of both Assemblies and publish themin Tmk Tribi yr.. They weald convert thousand*of donalfaces to our party.

s. F. Tappan, 1 tn iitfonned, is a nephew or

Stud*01 of Lewis Tappan, the leader of the po¬litical Abolition party. Me Is aaid to b« the onlyAbolitionist in the Territory, Charles Steams, oftie GanUouian icLov., excerpted.

LNAK.lRATIO! OF OOV. lOllnSOM.Both Houses met in .joint seasion at five .'clock. to>

wimese the uaun ratnn: of oar poptdar Governor.A Con.n itree was appointed to wait on hi*.aVi ih« Governor cntmd the U»U, Mvj wvknr|