New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY)...

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tShiW-YORK TR1BU1NK. .SC NEW-TORE DAILT TR1BTNE II TVlM*.* EV"ERT MORNING, SUNDAT EXCEPTED. It ti« VHllWJM Bnl|dtn*T*, estraer "J^."* .Bd Nassau ¦ur»«iu. oppoelf the City HaU, jjj isdvorod u> City .uoscrlbers tor Him g»"« »* Vfwk or wfcmiitey prefw.ibercsJ P»Jtnadva^ donTi».««. for .1* ninths- Three Dollars In advance ~.. iTrA io »!i aichanges with Country Newspapers, oil- papers received at tlda office whose terms are ygber tain those of ¥¦» Tatausa.arenotallowed any .Uflereoee. rum or asvsaTtaiss. ¦ t«-*> Une«. of less.First tnaeruoo.2* cent* »IT* each subsequent taaeröon.12, JJ rflotbetnslde " _ " " ........SO " n er five Lines.First lcaertlon.. cents a Una. rl-h snosequent Inaertlon, which may be} «very oaf, or once, twice or three time* a > J cent* a line. .«.I »t tie option of the advertiser. ) r.,.ide Ad vertlaetneate.Fl»e cenu a line for the First irt-rtlon, and Four cents for each subsequent one. giarus. Miaatacii, rnacaaL NoTtcxa.ax matmmmM« Am ceots. rtr All Advertisements Inserted In this paper appear both t> e>» Morning and the Evenlui edltioa. THK MEDTl-WKKKLT TKI BUNK. ü rabttabed every Wen*bsoav and SiTcaDaT mornings Prte- #3 per annum. Two copies for 8i. .tKVr.VOKK WEEKLY TRIBUNE. A VKRV LARGE PAPER FOR THE COUNTRT. l> oabllsbed every UATUaoAY Moan inc. at the low price of £j per annnm. In advance. 10 copies for 815, or » copies for $14 Belshazzar's Penal ; ia Atumpt lo Fw.nl On L'rKituhed ZJtsign of WAsniso- tox Allsios ijr Thomas «isar. Everyone knows the history of this picture. bow it was projected by the artist, and while jet odIv a mental sketch, was bought and sold by an:i- cipaiion.how the weight of obligation thus incur¬ red, probably even more than the obstacles and dif- Scoi'.ies that beset his course, hindered it from com¬ pletion.how it lay boxed op for years, and bow, when at last having erected near his house a-euita- ble painting i *>m, he was again with animation engaged upon it. Death came, one night, to snatch the pencil from his hand. To those who venerated in him the noblest artist, the purest representative of ibe realm of beauty who has ever enlightened our country, the unfin¬ ished picture, whoso history was so interwoven with that of his more shadowy days, to whose com¬ pletion he looked as a more full expression of his inward life than he had elsewhere been able to give, which bore the last touches of his hand, and the re¬ flection* of the last sun that shone upon his earthly career, was hallowed as if upon an altar. In life Mr. Aliaton was a consecrated object to all who ap¬ proached him. It was not merely tbe dignity and singleness of bis devotion to art. in youth and age the same, so that with him, at least, the artist life, unsullied by vanity, base Irritations, or any alloy of mercenary motives, had no vulgar side, nor the pu¬ rity of his life, the elegance and silvery lustre of hi* manners and conversation, which at the moment turned the meanest, poorest nooks into the Italy of It- aly. and gave to the poor little parlor the dignity of a Grecian temple. It waa with him no one or two noble qualities or attractions, but an URiiy. ati in¬ tegrity of spirit and nature, that pervaded his work«. his aspect, his manners, with one expression of dignity, loveliness, and holy tenderness, and shed through every thine he looked, or said, or did, gleams of that pure beauty for which our souls and thirst so often aud no much in vain. Feeling thus ns we looked on this unfinished pic¬ ture there mingled with regret that it should be unfinished a dclLbt and awe at being admitted, as it were, to ihe secret stages of growth and develop¬ ment in the mind whose completed works had done so very much for us. And we never felt a more in¬ timate approximation to tbe secret of genius than through imagination and sympathy, through a spir¬ itual sense of him who is not dead but sleeping, was given in tbe silence and loneliness of the room In which we were admitted to contemplation of ibe unfinished picture. No one dreamed of any other hand being compe¬ tent to fiuiah ont tili» work. It is true the greatest masters have often employed tbeir pupils to paint a Urge portion of their pictures. But they did ploy their pvpih who had become intimately- ac qnaintod with their methods of composition and coloring, and on subordinate parts of tbe work, re¬ serving to themselves what wa« needed to give bar motiy anil fti'.l effect to the design. Mr. Allston had no pupil; nor did any person ap¬ proach him as to coloring or finish. Beside, bis de¬ sign was left unfinished and confused. Under these circumstances the request of Mr. Spear (we speak from common report, not from im¬ mediate intelligence wiih the friends of Mr. Allsten and owners of tbe picture) that he might be permit¬ ted to copy what was already existent on the can¬ vass and catry out the design as he conceived ii, was naturally refused. The case was peculiar, but of course did not stand on the footing of permission to copy a completed picture. There was danger ot lampering with the fame of Mr. Allston, aud substi¬ tuting to ihe public a caricature for the ideal presen¬ ces before his miud. Mr. Spear, then, having no open access to copy the picture, was in the habit of drawing from it privately on his hat. till he had all the parts before him in little. He carried with him the composition asa whole in his mind'seye. and has studied out the subject for himself, und painted it according to his idea of the intentions of the painter. If this report of the case bo correct, it would seem that most persons would feel it coutrary to their sense of honor thus to usurp an inheritance to which the great painter had not elected them, and run the risk of substituting their ideas for his, on ground which he had thus enclosed ami »et apart The case, as we said before, is unique, and we find noi rules or precedents. It is not a parallel with ihe attempt to finish Co!eridge*s Christabel, for instance; a late folly of a very good sort of a mac. becau»e in that instance the new does not mix with or disfigure the old. But. taking it as a new case, we must say. it is a thing we would not have done for worlds, at least vt ith any view to public exhibi¬ tion. It is a thing, of coarse, which any artist would have n right to do, as a study for himself t'.onft. But if Mr. Spear's motives were purely or chiefly mercenary, we deem the act unpardonable. We think, at any rate, he should never adver¬ tise the picture as AlUton's BelshazzarA Feast He ought to acquaint the public that it is not All- ston's. but only his own view of what Allston in¬ tended. And he ought to let us know by what right he justifies to himseil this act. Was he haunt¬ ed by a feeling that he could really bring out the ideas ot the great painter with due force T Did he vvsut delicacy to perceive the objections to such an enterpt i»e ? Or was it w ith him simply and coarse 1} a m- ansof getting reputation and money, wiih- oat respect to those rulea of conduct which uted the more carefully to be studied thai they belong to » regio» so refined that they cannot be exactly marked in codes or enforced by courts of law ? Suppose, however, that Mr. Spear has reasons that justify his proceedings, and lhat the facts as to the production of the picture now on exhibition here he every where made kutnvn. wc are, for ourselves, much pleased to see it. The degree of success is such as to justify the attempL. The conception of the artist shines out very visibly, if not with the effulgence his own hand would have bestowed. The canvas is rich with motion. con¬ centrated thought and .. tbe fuhness of forms." We oo not describe it, because people can see it for themselves, snd a work of art is always its own best kterpreter. To those wbo are disappointed in the Prophet, we must say that the work of Allston did .Ot promise much more. That central form is no jfropbet: no heir of Moses worthy to be marsbaled °y tbe piliarof cloud and the pillar of fire, so elect °* God whose eye of majestic faiih could tame the *»» in their den. but in all save tbe beard not Ssor» powerful in expression than tbe elders and listers of our modem synods. Tbe force of the design is io the astonished figures of the voluptu ** »nd reckless court, with its unworthy royalties, |w idol shining with a light that this moment casts toto the Past its scoffing figures of the priests and .XKbsayer*. whose face a the monstrous develop- aenis of pride, vice and hypocrisy have exagger¬ ated, into masks, that mark for us the odious posei- BY GREELEY & McELRATf TOL. Vf. NO. 55 bilitics of human nature. Yet even in the odicui- nese Is the grandeur, the superior luxuriance of an¬ cient oriental growth. The poem of the epoch is brought nobly before us in this picture. The de¬ tails of execution we leave to the artists to criticise. We mast not for?et to observe bow finely the con- trast of lights and the furniture of the scene are im ngined, nor tbe grace that the beautifal and highly dressed female form on the left lends to the terror. Mr. Allston had the finest understanding of the effects of different tissues in dress, the arrangement of hair and jewels. The poetry of social life, all those fine garden flowers which these things ex- press, stood at his command. The picture, Allston a la Spear, is in the Gran- ite building, corner of Chambers-street and Broad¬ way. ^ New-York Constitutional Convention. .NINTH DAY. A f.'ood Dny's Work-Eisbteen Committees Appointed.A Mate f^ub-Trennury. Harmo¬ ny.The Ladlen.Irlah Delegaten. Albant. Wednesday, June 10, 1946. To the Editor of The Tribune: Sir In my notice of Monday's proceedings. Mr. Kirkland's opinion on the centralization of State governments is referred to. He said nothing at all about it; in the manuscript I sorely spoke of De Toeqaevrtle's views, not Kirkland's,as it is printed." The Convention having, this morning, by a vote of 30 to 43. refused to go back into Committee of tbe Whole on tbe repovt of the Committee of 17, that report only tv»i fore it, bat the amendments of yesterday wer ne of them, strain submitted. Mr. Tilden's pltv wr.s sobstaniiai'v adopted, and there were addi .». subdivisions, and other altera- tions proposed , until, by two o'clock, the Conven- tion, as well as 1 could comprehend its action, with tbe closest attention, had agreed upon and adopted the following eighteen resolutions: 1. Resolved, Tbat a Standing Committee be appointed to consider and report on tne apportionment, election, ten- ure of office and compensation of the Legislature . and that the several parts of the existing Constitution which relate to these subjects respectively, be alto referred to the said Committee. [Tbe other Committees, using the same phra*e- ology at the beginning and end of each resolution, were:] 2. On the Powers and Duties of the Legislature, except as to matter» otherwise referred. 3. On Canals. Internid Improvements, Public Revenue and l'reperty und Public Debt, and the Powers a:,d Duties of the Legislature In reference thereto.and the resbric tlons. If any, proper to be imposed upon the actioa of tba Legislature In making Donations trom the Public Funds . d In making Loans of the Moneys or Credit of the f lata [This last resolution, as amended by Mr ''Con¬ or, includes Richmond's proposition, to look into tint ¦state credit-lending system, and Hutfrnan's idea of having the Debt, Finances. Taxation. Revenues, and the Loans on Stale Credit, considered by one. Committee. 4. On the Elective Franchise.the Qualification to vote and bold office. 5. On the Election. Tenure of Office, Powers and Dutiei (except the ppwer to Appoint and .Nominate to office,) of theOovernor and Lieutenant Governor. 6. On the ElectloH or Appointment of all Officers other than Legislative and Judicial, tbe Governor and Lleuten- Hut Governor, whose duties and poweis are not local; and tbelr Powers, Duties and Compensation. 7. On the Appolutmtct or Election of all Officers whose functions are local, and their Tenure of Office, l'owcra, Dutlea end Compensation. Z. On the Militia and Military Affairs. 9. On Official Oaths and Affirms Ions, and on Oaths and Affirmations and tbe Competency of Witnesses, In Legal and Equity proceedings. m 10. On the Judiciary, tbe Appointment or Election of Judicial Officers, and their Tenures of office and Compen¬ sation. 11. On tb« Rights and Privileges of the Citizens of this State. 12. On Edncatiou, Common Schools, and the Appreprl- atn fund*. 13. Future Amendments and Revisions of tbe Consti¬ tution. .~ 14. On the organization and powars of cities and lnoer- porated villages, and especially tbelr powers of taxation, . assessment, borrosriug money, contracting debts and loan- log their credit. 15. On the power of Counties. Towna and other Munici¬ pal Corporations, except ones and Incorporated Villages, and CBpeclally their powere of local legislation, taxation, assessments, borrowing money and contraction debts. [14 and 15 are subdivisions of the 13th resolution of tbe Committee of 17, and were proposed by Mr. Chatfield.] 16. On the Currency and Banking. 17. On Corporations other than Municipal. [16 and 17 are sobdivirions of the I4ih resolve re¬ ported by the Select Committee. If 1 beard it cor¬ rectly stated, No. 17 will require a more clear deli- nition. otherwise the daiies ef Committees 16 and 17 will clash together.] 16. On the creation and division of estates In land. No. 18 was amended by Mr. Worden. It stood at first, " the tenure of landed estates."] Each of these Committees, with the exception of that upon the Judiciary, is ordered to consist of 7 members.the Judiciary Committee is to be com¬ posed of 13 members. I would outy encumber your columns were I to enumerate a variety of propositions for Committees offered on subjects clearly within the scope of the above resolutions.as, lor instance, on the rights of women a* to laud. Ac. the imprisonment of witness¬ es, Ao. Mr. Morris remark -d that gentlemen might at any lime offer such propositions for the conenlerr linu of the Convention, and have them at once rder rod to the appropriate Comtnittoos. Mr. Shepard wanted to add to the third, after "public revenues and.'' the words .'and the safe¬ keeping and disbursement"* thereof," but ihe Con vootiou refused. 41 to 39. Mr. Snepard, though he alluded lo the Sub TreA*u_y in this, and to the opin¬ ion of a large number of ihe people who are anxious to provide more folly than as at present for the safe- keeping of the State revenues, reminded the Con- veniion that he had expressed no opinion on any principle that might be involved, and that his desire was to see the order of reference in all these Com¬ mittees comprehensive enough to include every shade of opinion that might be offered. I have eeen minorities, in legislative bodies, en¬ den vor to hinder and embarrass the action of the ma- jority of the hour, but there is nothing of the sort done h'-re. A stranger, ignorant ofthe party divisions of X. Y. politicians, would not find it out by listening to ihe Convention. In Congress there seenis to ne too much difficulty in totting motions marie. Here we have tbe other extreme.propositions are read from the Clerk's desk, and acted on at the moment, ict/k no notice at all. There were many shades of opinion to day rela- live to the amount of business pri-pcr to be left to a Standing Committee. Mr. Stow remarked that the Committee of 17 had departed from tbe action of the Convention of 1821, in dividing among tw o Commit tees the consideration of the powers and duties of one of the great departments of Government the Legislative, while they admitted that ihe Judi- riary must be referred to one Committee. One, Committee on the powers and uutiee of the Lc-' Rtslatnre, and another on the restrictions to bo placed on these powers, in certain maters, would clash.one Committee might be reporting in favor! of conferring a power, which another would be try-1 ing to annul through some restriction.one Cotnmii- tee would perhaps report that the Legislature should, and another that :i should not, possess cer¬ tain powers. Would not tbia create confusion in¬ stead of producing order? The Committee on the 2d resolution could not properly fulfil their import- ant duties it they bad not a:so before them the mat- ters proposed to be referred 10 tbe Committee on the 3d. How could the Committee on the Sd resolution report whether the veto power in tbe Governor. Ac OUgbtor ought not to be continued, unless the coti- sideratioo of the important mattere enumerated in tbe 3d were entrusted to them? Mr. S. supposed certain cases in illustration of his argumeut. and Mr. Loomis replied by showing that other resolutions, besidoa the 2d an i 3d. have reference 10 the Legisla- live department, and adding that the Convention would noi be embarrassed iu its action, even if ar¬ guments and conclusions of an opposite character were sometimes ofJered to its notice in the lorm of Repe rt-> Mr. Hhoades took a liberal view of tbe proposi tion of Members who felt anxious that the orders of reference should express in so many words tbe ob¬ jects of reform and Improvement which tbey had been charged with He would not object to load tbe several resolutions with specifications even to tautology, if Members thought that by so doing the minds of the gentlemen on the various Committees would be thereby belter directed to tbe particolar things required to be done. Mr. Loomis. on the 3d resolution, as it was finally amended by Mr. O'Con- or. differed from Mr Rhoades. He liked tbe princi¬ ple but was averse to the tautology. Mr. Townäenä' would allow the Legislature no powers that had not been expreaely delegated to il through a Constitution approved of bv the people. to which new powers could be added* if found no- IVKW-Y cessary, by amending the Constitution. He wished to confer additional local powers on the Boards of Supervisors elected by the various cities and Coun¬ ties, and to enumerate the general powers to be vested in the Legislature to enable i: to aid in car¬ rying on the Government. The Amendment adding " the appointment or eiecion of Judicial Officers, and their tenure* of office." to the 10th Resolution, was by Mr. Ban- corn.the concluding words. " and compensation," by Mr. Chatfield. There may be some additional arraceements for Committees to-morrow, or some alteration made in the wording of the above Resolutions: but I thoaght it important to show what had been agreed upon al¬ most unanimously as to the subdivision of business. The names of the members who are to compose the various Cummittees will doubtless be announced to- morrow. We had not many ladies to-day, but three or four members were talking about them, including Mr. Morris. Mr. Bowdish got a resolve referred to one of the embryo Committees to inquire into the expediency of giving to females after rrarriage the right to hold and dispose of property, at d to secure the same against being seized for the debts of '.he husband. Campbeil P White is not the only adopted citi¬ zen in this Convention. Daniel John Shaw, a Democrat, a Farmer, a bachelor of S3, and whose ancestors were originally, If I may use the ex¬ pression, from Scotland and England, is a Delegate from the County of Cayuga. and a native of the fine old County of Antrim, in the North of Ireland. I am told that three Irishmen are honored by seats on the floor of the Convention. May they prove worthy of the honor.for it is indeed one of the highest that Man could bestow on Man in civilized life. K. .The error was corrected for our morning edition. [ED. . - Capt. Page..An anonymous friend writes us that our Washington correspondent must be mis¬ informed in regard to a profane remark said to have oeen made by Opt. Page in regard to the recent defeats of the Mexicans by our army ; he says Capt. P. is a gen¬ tleman of high principe and gentlemanly bearing, who would not use vulgar and profane Isngusge. He adds ; "I know well his views In regard tothie War.that he was from the commencement opposed to the whole measure of Annexation and of concentrating our troops there for its defence, and that it was unjiet and wicked, but as a good soldier be faced danger wnen duty called." Tnia writer should have observed that our correspond- -'nt only rupied the remark from a letter, to llluatrate the horrors oi War, and these It dors Illustrate. Whether Capt. Page made the remark or not. it is a legitimate and logical expression of the spirit o! War. Rev Leonard Bacon has accepted an invi¬ tation to deliver a Discourse on Civil and Religions Liber¬ ty in New-IIavcn on the Fourth of July. The object of the celebration, of which his address will be the principal feature, is to redeem the 1 rum-soaked, powder smoked* anniversary frrtn the riot an ! dissipation which have so generally characterized It in lime past. B?* A large meeting of the Disbanded Volun- i teer» win recently held In the Parish of West Fellclana, . La The meeting passed Resolutions strongly commend- Ine Gen. Galnes in calling out the mounted gun-men and as strongly censuring the War DepannKnt for couater- maualng the order ot the General. From the Sandwich Islnndsj. We have Honolulu advices up to the 14th of March. aa\» the Commercial Art%-eulser. Mr. Everett, the Minister to China, had arrived at the Sandwich Islands. The U. S. ship Cyane, Commander Mervine. ar¬ rived at the Sandwich Irlands on the 1.1th of March from Mazatlan. which place Capt. M. left on the 22d Fcbrutry. On the 22d of February, the birth-day of Washington, a temperance society was f irmed ou board the Cyane, called the " Washington National Temperance Society." Fifty- one ofthe officers and crew signed the pledge. Rf.portüd Loss or three American Seaoiln. .The Friend, of March 14tb. contains an account ot the supp-.sed loss of three se ltnen belonging to the whaling ship Morrison, of New-London. It Is given on the author- Iiy of several individuals either now or formerly connect- j ed with the vessel named, though In some of Its partieu- lars It may not be correct On the evening of the 23d of .September, while the i Morrison. in company with the Louvre and Monte zu ma. (two other whaling vestels belonging to the above named port) were lying at anchor In the Streits of Juan de Fuca. near Cape Flattery, three of the Morrison's crew, with i three of the Louvre's, escaped In a boat belonging to the Louvre. The names ÖT the tirst" three were Church". Klrby and Royce. Their Christian n»msi are not known. In a book formerly in the possession of Church, there ia written on a blank page. R. Church. Palmer. Mass He is believed however, to have belonged to Monson, Mass.. where it is supposed bis parents are atlil living . He was probably between twenty and twenty rive years of ago. Royce was also from Mass and is suppesed to I ave been a native of Springfield. He Is represented as having said that iu consequence ot difficulties with hit gn .id father, with whom he lived, he resolved to leave home and go to see- In the execution of this purpose, he accordingly shipped on board the Morrison in the Autumn of 1344.. He was tall and slim in person, and probably between 19 and 20 years of age. Kirby Is supposed to have been a native ot Hirminebam. England. He was a currier by trade, and had resided in America but a abort time pre¬ vious to bis shipping in the Morrison. He was probably about 2.1 or 24 years of age. He is said to have been a young man sf very amiable disposition, fsithtul in the performance of his duties, and a generous favorite with captain, i ff.cers and mes.. After leaving the Morrison they started for the mouth of Columbia River. Having repeatedly attempted to land for the purpose of procuring water, hut without success, they at last entered i.'«> a Harbor, where, upou approaching the shore, theU boat was swamped among the breakers and the three be- longing to the crew of the Morris, n drowned. The three survivors wer- taken by the Indians and conveyed to Chin- nook Point,opposite Fort George. Hero thry were kindly received and entertained by ('apt. Scarborough of the schooner Cadbcrough, a coast- leg tur trader. To him they stated the f«.-ts ^respecting the loss of their boat and the drowning of thvir three comrades in Gray's Harbor. Soon after this Capt. Scar* borough sailed to the Straits of Juan de Fuca, and there stated the same to various individuals, upon whose au¬ thority this account is given. The statement that the three men drowned helo' ging to the crew of the Morrison is said to have bt en derived from Mr. Dooglass an officer in the service of the Hon. Hud¬ son's Bay Company. Other accounts however represent It as uncertain whether the three belonged exclusively to one vc-sel or In part to both. In this particular there Is some discrepancy, though ail concur In the fact that three out of the six were lost. Thus three young men in the vigor of health and strength are believed to have perished, in consequence ot yielding to the hailish mania h.r running away, now so prevalent Htnong the crews of whaWs. Tne news of their death will doubtless be the source of pungent grief in the bosoms of taeir suivjving parents, brothers and sisters, and other relatives. This too, in the present Instance, w 11 be enhanced and acgravated by ihe thought that they died In the a t ol es¬ caping from -Inn- on a savage and inhospitable shore, where their bodies. If driven to land. Instead of receiving .t Christian buna , will prohably soon become the prey oi voracious wild bts«ts. Death OF Charlfs W. Thompson..We fol- lowed to the grave, yesterday, Charles W. Thompson, a,-ed 29 years, foremast hand of the Panama, Captain Crowed. He was the eldest son of Lt. Col. Thompson, v. ho now resides In Nottingham. Eng. and who served un¬ der Welling on In the i'eiiiusular war. and tiso at the bat- lie of Waterloo. From the Friend of March 14. Wo are happy to learn from Capt. Green, of the Ontario, that our friend Mr. Buffett of Pitcairn's Island ar- rived safely at his home on the I2:h ultimo. Capt G. also informs us that previous ro that dale about 20 whale ships had touched si Pitcalm's for supply. At the time of this v sit eight were lying off and on. Some were obliged to leave without supplies on account of Mr. Buffett*! engagement to supply the " Hannibal" with 100 bbls. of yams potatoes d: -. in dart for bis pas- sage from the Sandwich I.lands to his island home. The Belgian br<g Express, which sailed from Bonotnln 22d August, for China, did not arrtve, nor has she been heard from in any wsy. the was reported to have 5300.- 000 of specie on board. The Oregon Treaty. Correspondence of the Commercial Advertiser. Washington, Wednesday. Jane 10. The President's Me-sage communicaüne the prop- osltlon of the British Government for the adjustment of the Oregon Question was sent to the Senate to-day. Tüe Senate is now in secret session upon jt. I am sorry to say that the President has not sent in a t-rnry. but has merely asked the advice ol ihe Senate on the proposition. I much fear that, in ibis way, difficulty Will i«CCUr. The Ashburton treaty would not bare been ratified If the advic- ot the Senate bad been asked in the first in¬ stance. The Senate coasentrd to ft because it was al- r»ady made. 1 am afraid, from what I have beard and know, that the Senate wtil modify the terms. From the Phi'.adwlphia Pennstlvsnian of yesterdsy The Oregon Difficulty. We understand from a reliable source that the President sent a Message to the senate yesterday after- noon,in whicb it Is stated that lue terms odered by England relative to the settlement of this difficulty are not as favorable as has heretofore been expected would be f tfered. Accompanying the Message is the correspondence be¬ tween ihe respective Governments. The President, as we understand it, takes decided ground in favor of our Just c'alm. but refers the matter to the Senate as the body who will have the final responsibility of the matter. The affair had created Intense sensation at Washing¬ ton. With the Imperfect information tc our p->ssession, we forbear farther statement, and await the official ac¬ count, which the morning's mail will bring us. OFFICE TRIBÜNE BUILDINGS. ORK, FRIDAY Tf OB>I."VG, JUTE 1 New-Hampshlre.Twi.üDgi of Loco-Focoism to Defeat the Election of Hole. Concoxd. June 9, I»4b. 2 o'clock P. M. To the Editor of The Tribune : There was considerable discnssicm tn tbe House this morning on the Hesolotion relating to the elec¬ tion of U. S^ Senator for the onexpired term. It was before the Honse yesterday afternoon to pro¬ ceed to the election today at 11. Gen. Wilson made a motion to amend by inserting in the place of 11 to morrow, to 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, ap¬ pending which the house adjourned. The question came up in order this morning, and was discussed by Gen Jas Wüaon in favor, and Messrs. Swasey and .4»er against it. Mr. Swasey novel an amendment to the amendment, to go into the election to-Jay. which did not prevail.. Amendments to amendmots were made and successfully met and put down by a majority of 19 and IT. Tbe hour of 12 arrived. Gen. Wilson movtd that the farther consid¬ eration of the question under ccnstderatlc.c be postponed at this time, and that the House do now proceed to the business assigned tor to day a: 10 o'clock : the election of Senator for the long term. This wa* oppoed by the Lo¬ cos, hot the majority was large in opposition. The Locos then moved an adj.iu'nment, and demanded the yeas and nays, which were 119 to 141. Thus the Hi use reiused to adjourn. They were therl about proceeding to the choice of Senator, when Mr. Swt'y moved that th tine a«sun- ed for going Into an election of 1". S. Senator fir the term of six years frr-m the Sd of March next, be po.tp ned to Friday next, at 4i o'clock. Tills was promptly voted down. Mr. Swasey demanded ;he yew ard nays, which were as fallows i In favor of postponement 116. opposed 141.. Sj the postponement did not prevail. Upon the announce- ment of this vote, Mr Ayur cd IMlsborough moved to ad- joum, wHich motion did not prevail. A division was c«!l- ed for by count, tod resulted 109 in tbe affirmative to I in the negative. The Loco Focos not being >atisfled with the connt. or rather determined to wa«te the time of the H use aad the money of the people, called tor the Yeas and N'ays. The Speaker decided that the Yeas and Nays were not in order, and Mr. Miller of Peterborough appeal¬ ed from the deci-lon of the Chair. Mr. Swasey cilled for the Yeas an! Nays ot. the Correctness of tne decision Yeas 150.Jfayi 100. So the Speaker was triumphantly sustained. So you will perceive that the Loco; lost ground from the firs: to the last. 6:111 anoiber motion was made for an ail; urnrrent, a/id voted In the negative. The Speaker ilien called for ballots for Senator. A: this time it was j minutes pan i. Mr. Hale left the Chair, and re¬ quested Gen. Wilson to take it. who called up"ti Messrs. Seimlth of Franklin, and Saiiborn of Sanbornton, to assist In counting the votes. lie result was announced at half- past 1. and was as follows t James lltll 1, John Kelly 1, William Badger l, liir.v nibbard H9. John P. Hale 139. and he »«.< daclared el atcd Tbe !Iou*e adjounied. The Senate will thf« au«rn(h)ii confirm this vote, and Mr. Hale will be the Sabator for six years from the lid ot March next, to represent this State In tbe Senats of the Coiled States. As I came nut of the State? B< .use. [ observed a line »x tended from the Kag .. Hotel across to the State House, on which several :la.'s;w-re; suspended. Soon the guns began to boom, whlcb'l feel f-ur«. had a tendency to wake somebody's babies, If not Amin Kendall's. The Locos have rnad»- no capital out of their conduct this morning. D «ugh-lacedorn dies hard. The bell is ringing tor the cars to start, and I must close. Yours. Ac Pknacook. N. Hampshire-John P. Hnle elected Senator by both LIounei-Whig Councillora, &c. Concord. June 9.6 o'clock. P. M. To ihe Editor of The Tribune : The Senate and House, in Convenvon. elected John Kelly" and John C. Young. Whigs, to Gil the vacancies lett in the Council by a failure of the People to elect. The vote for District No wrs. B. W. ,1-noeae. I; Benj Jenneaa, (LOCO,) 125; John Kelly, 14S. Iu District No 9.Zebulon Pease, 121: J..bn C. Young. 145. Tne State Government is now tuliy organ ized. and business wii! proceed wuh due diligence. The Senate sent a message to the House, inform¬ ing them that they had, on their part, elected John P. Hale to lite Senate of the United States for six yeara Irom the 3J of March. 1-47. Tbe vote etood 3 to 4. So Mr. Halk is elected Senator. Tne House was very peaceable this afternoon It reeolved to elect a U. S. Senator lor the uncxplred term on Friday alteration next at Iii o'clock. Mr. Low, of Dover. Introduced a series of Reso¬ lutions in favor of Protecting American Industry against Cheap Foreign Labor and the Slave Labor of the South, having a reference to this election, as he laid. It was, ou bis own morion, laid on tbe table. A Resolution was introduced to the effect that a Committee of one from each County he appointed by the Chair. Instructed to report for tbe division of the Statu tnto tour Congressional Districts. Just as 1: was passed, the Sonate c»m« in m meet the K-.usu tn Con- vention end. as tbe Houao adjourned immediately after the Convention .rose, no farthee action waa had ocs it. It H wjiispered in certain circles that ex-Governor ,Hill lias given in his adhesion to the ' Cliqne which he has beeu fighting bo desperately for the five past years. H- la Chairman of tbe Delegates to the Loco- Foco Convention, which is to meet tn this town next Thursday. ' The Party' will survive only one more de¬ feat; and the contest which preceds it win be bot. But Loco Fiatotim is doomed in Ibis State. After tbe Party has used the Governor one year longer, he will find, to his sorrow, that tbri prediction of Mr. Hale, In his memo* rable contest with Mr. Pierce. Junn 5tb. 1345, wili bei lully verified. He warned the Governor not to attempt to creep Into favor with the Clique' over his shoulders, because If be did. they would have no power to reward him if they would. The Stark Guards came up from Manchester this aftprooon It Is one of the finest Companies In the State. The Rogers Family advertise a Concert this eve- nlng I have heard them sins: and like them much Your Letters from ihe Old Man of the Moun¬ tain are very mnch admired, and almost universally resd In this section of the country. Yours, Ac PznacooK. North-Enatern Ohio-Erie Extension Cnnal- Atrrlculcure, Manufacture*, dkc.Ohio Politic*. Correspondence of The Tribune. Yocngstown, Mahonliig Co. Ohio,'» May i<ilb, Istti. J This place is delieh'fu'ly situated in the pictur- esque valley of the Mahoniog, on the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal, which affords a channel of commu- r.ication both with Lake Erie at Cleveland and the Ohio River at Beaver. The Staple A-'ricultural pro- nuctsof this reeion are Bread-stuffs.Cbeeee, Butter and Wool. The last of these. Wool, has of late at- traded universal attention on the part of the farmers, and the production has been greatly exteuded. More c ire than formerly is given to preparing il properly for market. hx peril nee has shown that thorough wa-!nng and clipping of burrs and tags are amply recomp. n«ed by enhanced prices, particularly when the article Is required for the E' gilsb murket. In this respect 1 think it will be found this year's clip throughout the Stale Is superior to any former one.. Prices range ßre or llx c- tits a pound lower than the quo¬ tations of corresponding grades last year, and for no earth- ly reason that I ca'i imigtne, except the curtailment of the means to purchase. Our firmer- are thus beginning to realize that the lawless attempt of a rash and imbecile Executive to exten 1 the llave-trodd« n fields of Texas to the Rio Grande, has indicted apon th«m other evils bealde indelible dishonor. The Manuning Valley Is rapidly rising In irarortanc" from the development of Its mineral resources. Inexhaust¬ ible beds of Iron Ore are here found iu the most conve- nisnt juxtaposition with coal b..ds of a character better adapted, it is believed, to the purposes of smelting, than any before discovered in ihu country. An enierprlMng and wealthy firm from Kuffaio, ;n jour State, has Just completed, at a very heavy expense, a blast furnace, in the Construction of which some Ingenious and valuable Im¬ provements have been introduced, for the purp« se of using the Mount Neb-j Coal In its ras »tote. It is the opinion of both practical and scientific men to whom this coal baa been fubmitted for examination, that iu component parts are such as to render the success of the experiment entire¬ ly certoi l. Tne value of the discovery that mineral coal can be applied lu its native state to the smelting «f Iron ore, can hardly be appreciated. In any event this region Cannot fail rapidly to acquire Importance Iu the presJuc- llon and man ifacture of iron. A company of operatives and capitalists ha- just txen formed, under the general Ii* f this State, for tbe purje-»« Of erecting an extensive Rolling Mill a: this point. Perhaps!: would be difficult to find any locality We-t of the mountains presenting advaa- tages superior to this for manufacturing operations of. tne kind la que-ti n. Wuh cheap er.ad-aturls, excellent water, a tempcra"c and salubrious climate, an extensive market ImmedUte y contiguous, and a cheap, conveners ai.d exped.tious outlet in every direction, it Is not surpris¬ ing this Valley has attracted the attention of cafitalists at a distance. I have it upon good authority that several of the most extensive manufacturing firms In the Iron City Bra COntarnplating the establishment of works in this vicin- Ity st an early day. In connection with this subject, I am reminded of a remark recently made ny a gentleman re siding in a neighb-nng town and we;; known in national politics.'when be emigrated to the »'e>t, the satire Mis¬ sissippi Valley was supplied with Iron trom the Junlatta Work- in Pennsylvania, but n-w. rr.irkli.ee :.;rj.-i 1- «-. was taken rrota Tennessee, to Pittsburgh for manulacturiug purposes ' The canvass for Governor will commence in good earnest next month. Mr. BtEB. the able and popu¬ lar nominee of ihe Whig party, is expected to ad¬ dress the people of New Lisbon in the adjoining County in the course of three or four weeks. A happier aelection could not have been made by tbe Whigs of the Stele fortbe high office of Governor. Simple and unostentatious in maunera.thoroughly sy mpa- thiiiug with me humblest classes of his fellow ciaaens and yet poeieseimmtell-crual powere and acquirement* of the flrst order, "nothing i* required but peraooal ac¬ quaintance on the part of tbeelectora to give Mr. Bebb a majority unkoown since tne ever memorable triumph of the Wagon Boy in '40. Yours, respectfoiiy. AMERICANUS. Another Phenomeno.v.Isaac Hill, who de¬ clared that the Democratic Central Committee had no light to call a State Convenrdou. has been appointed by the Slave Democracy of Concord represent them in that Convention, in connec'lon with his friends CarroU. Pierce. Treadweli, Eastman and Low. Ift.be Governor has again repeuted and submitted to the control of the Clique, we hope be will have the wisdom to wear the yok* with meek¬ ness and humility. His spasmodic efforts at rebellion sub¬ siding so suddenly into the tamest servility, are really painful to witness. [Concord {IS. H.) Fraemac. 3. 1S46. CUT Items.Deferred. jgp'The Editor of the Evening North American Lis bestcwed a good deal of pains in sugaring over bis dish of sour cream, which he commends to oex lips, bnt bii net been aitogo'.her successful in disguising toe true i'hllsdei- ;hia ;»i.>; c:'the 'article.' Wo have truly, divers and sundry reason- ;' r believing that the Fhüadelphiaas de surpass sil creation, and New-York Iteiide. ia the aanafsc- tire of Ice-Cre .a ; but oar confessions are 'ike FaistafTi reajoas. and will aot out on compulsion. We mean ts be liberal, however. !n this delicit* matter: and whnn we ge to rhiladelphia to receive evidence in the case, we shall take good care that the cause and cream of the defendants shall receive strict Justice at our hands. Notking on this sahject shall ever pass our lips that our inmost sense of the fitness of things does no: thoroughly approve; and if the people of Philadelphia have the vanilla to believe that they can beat us In the manufacture of Creara, we shsil on the priority of Sew-Yort, as the Commercial Emporium, by (lisnosin; of arty quantity cf the article offered. E*?y The Brooslyn Eaele. after mentionine a beautiful beu,-,uet, v. hich he affects to believe must have been made up by ¦ female taste,' says.' Close upon the heels ol this comes another,'Sec. Dar ban an A Nm.iaet w-.ih heels would be a pretty figure! ty Kemoval..'No Chirge until the Hair Is Restored.' The proprietor s uriice for th- application of ¦ Beat's Hair R-atorative,' on me above teiras, ts removed to Po. 19 De- lancey-tt. near the Bowery. Depots. Bazaar, 173 Broad- way,'New-York t 2 Mill iL Boston ; 109 N.nthst Phi'ads.- phia._ Je9 Iwos* ry "»I tit mil Benefit Lite ItiMurttnee Company, No. II W'all-st..It ts now a year since this Institution com¬ menced the business of Life Insurance on the liberal plan then first announced in its prospectus. That the principles therein contained have met with the approbation of those who have sought the advantages which such an Institution affords in maaing provision tor a family, needs no othet proof than the statement of the fact that ITOi Policies have heen Issued, and that premiums n> the amount of S.M.JtjS 35 have l*~-n ravceived during that period. The amount of funds receive,! for prem'ums has already estahllsh-d a large capital, which must rapidly lucrease by the payments of the second year's premiums, the accruing interest and the current receipts for new policies. The ac- cumu atlon from ttese sources enables the Directors to ml- Si inelr promises to lay up a reserve fund to meet the Ins creaslce ages Insured.equal to re-lnaufing every life.pay all demands for losses, and to divide large profits among the Insured. .. fy A pril !»tritctnent-Muttial Benefit Life Insurance Co..Office No. 11 WaU-st..Policies Issued: To Merchant* k Traders..9ö'To SeaCapainsk Mariners. 5 Farmersk Planter*.... 9 Inn-Keepers.4 Engneera..3 Cashi-rs. 4 Accountants. 7 Manufacturers Mechanics.27 Clergymen. Physicians.13 Lawyers.6 Professors. 2| Clerks.10 Teachers.7 Editors and Pnnlera... 5 Public Officers.7 Officers of Navy.S Student*.3 leidlea .2ti Gentlemen.5 Servants.5 Total.272 Policies issued from 1st May, 1845, to Slat March, 1846, (II months). 1429 Whole number policies 1st year.1701 Whole Hmount of premiums first year.81.14.289 25 This Company has met with hut two losses, amount¬ ing to seven thousand dollars, ROBT. L. PATTERSON, President. Bemj. C. Milles, .Secretary. Jos. L. Loan, AgenL J»s. Stvwart. M. 1". No. rt2l Broadway. myl tf ry American Institute.-A stated m«eiing of ihls Institute um be ue.d at Hie Repository In the Park tbis tThursoav) evening at 7} o'clock. A full attendance ts re- quested. " [J-ll 2,'J H. MEIOS. Ree Sec ry The Cure without -Medicine..Dr. Christie's Galvanic Rises anu Maunktic Flcio..Tin* new appil- Cation of the mysterious powers of Oalvantsm and Magnet- Ism 1* attracting Increas-d attenilou lor Its wonderful effi- cacy In ihe cure of Nervoue Disorders.the most paluful and leomu* of tile many diseases to which we are ail subject.. Tne simple application of the Rings and Fluid Is sup* reed¬ ing the u*eo'lbe«xpensWeBaltenesand tnachines, a* being more preferable for their unlrorm cheapness, safety and suc¬ cess. Ouly Agency in New-York 182 Bboapwav. A new work on Galvanism hy Dr. A. H. Christie, Just issued and to be had grails at the agency. uij 18tf sip IS"" To Ladlen..Mrs. G n E continue* to give »dvtee and directions with reaped to the application of Water Cure in all diseases of women and cbiidren, at her resl- deuce, 261 luta-st._ _. mj7 Sm ry for Beaton vta raasrwlcss susd Worcester. .The steamer CI«7»-irra. CapL William«, will leave South side of Pier No 1 Nonn River every atonama, WuLuatUv and Friday, at 5 P. M. counee.Oog with the cars at AUyas' Poiol fmyStfl CALF's PRATT. Jr. Conductor. ry y. ¦syhervS'ood. C^ooTil.sioDer it Deeds Tor the' Slate* of New-York, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois sud Texas; aiso, Wisconsin and Iowa Territory. Orfice 25 Ptne-sL 2 doors EastofColoan lmas» »s stairs. ravJS tf ry iYIay Statement ..1 u>a Mutual Benefit Life In¬ surance Co. No.ll Wall st.Issued during the monthol May W7 new Policies, viz To Merchants and Traders PSiTo Brokers.. . 3 Manufacturers Mechanics..12 Clergymen.12 Physicians.5 Lawyers. 4 Teachers. 7 Students.4 Fditora and Primers., b Pul> lcOiticer. i Sea Capls. i: Mariners 4 Farmers.6 No. Llv-s Insured.'.07 R03T L. PATTERSON,President, Benj C. Milles, Secretary. Joslth L. Loan, AgenL Jas. m -i art. M. D. Medical Examiner, No. 621 Broad vav. Je|, Imeod Sec y of lesurauce Co. 1 Bans Tellers.2 Civtt Eogtuears.2 Agents. 4 Bookkeepers. 2 Clerks.14 Innkeepers. 3 Ladtes.1« Gentlemen.5 Servant. 1 w HOT AIR rURNACJä. YVJ*-L,**KJrt*!' Patent Improved Hot Air Furnaces, for W healing Dwellings, Stores, Churches, kc.These Fur¬ naces «rill beat economically and ntficleully; the air In the apartments will be pure and healthy, free from dryness, dus orras. Tney are pnl up ander the personal supervision of Mr A/alker, the Patentee, and have hitherto given entire satis¬ faction, and are In all casus warranted to perform well. Reference N. W. Taylor. Esq. Governor New-York Hoe pttal; Mr Charles Starr, Superintendent do Edward Be- a'dcl. Est). 47 Wall-St; C. D. Rhodes, Esc. 190 Pearl-street. r. Thomas McElrath, 154 Nassau si; Mr. Oeo. W. Turk- 'r 2fK5 Bowery ; Half-Orphan Asylum, fith-avenue ; Mr. Wm P. Chapman, Br,«>kiyn; Mr. W. C. Greene. Zi< Ulh-si. Mr. J h. Ransom, -liuid-at; Chemical Bank, Broadway, Mr. J. h. Asb. Är2 Broadway ; Dr. Alfred Wagsuiff. 27 Wa .erly-plsce; Mr. M. Snow. *ith-sl. cjF.O '.Vti,KFR.W»»«iiet» UUlii, ^iKANOOjulili, 4tc. LAMPS. GIRANDOLES. IIALL LANTERNa, ANT CAN de LAB RAS, for the Spring Trade..DIET/., BROTHER it CO., No. 13 Johu-sireet, are manufacturing and have always on band a completeassoruuenlof article* In their line, of the following descriptions, which they will »eil ». wholesale or retail, at LOW PRICES for-asb Improved Cbenr.cn Oli and Cauiphene Lamps, Sola Lames, Glltand Bronzed, in great variety Cornelius k Co's celehrated Patent Solar Lard Lamps, fltrandoles, various patterns gilt, slivered or' ronzed. Suspending Solars. Doric Camphenr Lamps, Bracket Solars Sldu <du do Solar Chandeilers. Bra. set do do Patent Lard Hand Lamps. Stand do do Britannia Hand Lau.pa. Cauiphene Chandeliers, {superior Chemical Oil. Pure Sperm Oil, do Camphene, Solar and Lard Oil, do Borelsi F"uld. Refined Whale Oil ml*,* A K.>I W KATil KK.The un^.essatt cold ar.d n^ weather of .est month woi now undoubtedly he ...llowed by excessive beat, reminding those noialr-ady provided that o-ey require a Rerngerator to Seep cool and preserve their f-iod, a P,.tent Ice Freez-r to freez- their cus¬ tards, a Wine Cooler for tie adv, cst-s of -'No License," h Wsier C.acer for thse who voted in favor of License and lastly, but to bi used firstly every morning, a Snower Bain to ^ooi «nd cleanse ibemseives corporeally. Ail these articles may be found in that *u»re of cool novelile* descrip¬ tive of and about which ba* been written a tract, already distributed largely around the housekeeper* of this otn- maclty Tnese tracts may be bad gratuitous.y ai the suire No +5 Maiden-lane_J*4 ajHEKllAN, ATWATLK. tV CO. Commission a?? MerchanU, corner Beaver and Broed sis. tffer for sa.e: 2s' loos best New.Jersey biooms 50 do Large boiler do ISO do Noribe.n do ?5 do rlesi refined wire do 5<i do J-rs-y b«mrn-r-d, 1 j«2 Inch sqiare Jisi i.undles Sh-ei IrOS, 12a27. 9. A U. Co. wlii purchase »r seit any description of Arne- rlcan Pig, B.oom, Bar or Bundle Iron, Metals of sn7 <t- scrtpuon, on the mosi reasonable terms, anC advance liber- auv upon all corssignr-est* which may 1. made to th>m I ^Utl-IBLK INK. for marling on si.a, iloen and col- I ton. with or ss haout preparation, warranted not to btijure or norrode me fi^esi camoric, and for coior and durability cainot be surpassed, hold, wholesale and retail, by FRANCIS Ii LOUFREL. S'adoners, mv2f Im _T7 Maiden-jane N~ MiKTHEKN BAH. 1HON, dkc.-a») ions Nortn- ern flat Iron. lio tubs Northern Fqnare I-on 200 d.- New-Jefse) Bi orns, for sale bv sherman. ATWaT FKJiCO nr Broad Jt Beaver a a CMITe>S HOMCEOPATHIC Pbawascy, No. 5*i C? broaJiwsy. adjoin, ng Ninio's T neatre..John T. S. Smlin has a large assortment of Hoin.eopatnlc Medicines, In tinctures, ir.lurauons, dilutions and globules. Sugar of Mux, Pure Aicobol. Distliied Water. PeiieU. stc kc. Phy¬ sician*'. Pocket and Family Case* at M-didnss on hand and prepared tu order. Hom<ropatnic Plaster, a suhsttmte for ordinary Court and Adhesive Plaster, and an excellent ap¬ plication for Corns. m19 If HALL LANTfcHNS-A variety of pattern* and sizes, macu'actrired and for ssie, wholesale and retail hy |je6| DiETZ. BROTHER k C" No IS Johr. ,1, 5 OLAK l.A Ur'ts.A largeassoruuenlul aoiar Lamp*, ativered. gtil and hronzed. for aa e by _>ö_DIETZ. BROT HER k CO. No. 13 Jobn-*L 0~ IfFICE TO LET wita or without lorJm^the*econd .lory of store lsi West-st. the otSce suitalile for a awaun- boal or forwarding agent Possession given tmtuedtately Apply to HOWTXl *> 0«n . rrn. in .>' ,2« ASI PHKM K.Warranted of the best quality, for aale 4 hv ri-fi| myrrz rroth:r t, ro isjohn.st L'Olt rsALK.Vi5 FH «« r.-Ono lot on ZfiuVst! near a? the Third-*»-iue Apply 10 Je9 Iw BLEECH.ERkVANDYKE.No.il Broad st. L OR SALE-30rÜ »T.-Oae lot on 30in st. near i the 8i>-avenae Aoplvm je9 lw BLEECKER k VAN DYKE, No 11 Waij-st woo!) EN«lU7INii. rCTJCR HORTON k CO. Designer* acdEorrwver* oa Wood, No. «uNtsssu-su IT« U FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR. WHOLE IVO. 1610. Potent fiUbirinrs. SANDS'S SABSiFAR.'LlA, Ml the IIMO'il amd ntXiSIST core Or all diseases aeisimo rsosi am :vr. «r state or the slood os HaMIT or the system. tiz Scrofula rrr King's »vi, Riricatsstuaa. I *.«iaafr iVjvnu X'-ufiijTu. Pimpiesrr Pustules saa hW Pace, BletcAcs, Jwi. CArmK Sott i.yj, Kmg U'or-sa or Tttttr. >Vu_i .W ah- Istrgrrar-u ami Pas» ¦/rAc /S.-wj ttcert, Jejs.AAh.rv: .S^ipStmu, .s'rutun »r .' u.^fj «sui iX*ru«i anrrug from a* uywdi .¦.us use e/" Atrrcto .JscaUs »r DrvfUf. Exposure or I-v-v-isa m Li/r, .1j», CArw»vr C<nutLTU.*unai /XiffrarrA sre THIS preparation Is ¦ combination hitherto ankown In the history of Medicine, differing entirely In '.is eharsc- :er aso or-rs .: s IVoui various preparations of Sarsa¬ parille which hare been at different times offered 10 tbe pub¬ lic, ii an* specifically upon the whole sys thcieoy bringing ll under tt* direeiand immediate IcSu-cce. Al¬ though possessed ofpowerfu! hee.tng effecta, yet Kit en- Ln»l* harmless, so thsili caunoi bjure the moat delicate c (MMMttaa. VV ben In perfect bea. S, no -ffect ts produced by It* use except as increase of »-petite i hut when disease ta seated in the frame, and ca-rjln,; fast us vuiim along the path of life, then Its mysterious mil lence ts felt and seen i it enkindle* new ;ife, and vigor. ai.c brtagebealib and tir«ugin to the suflertng d disease,.. The propr eiors submit to the public the following certifi¬ cate, fron a highly resp. ctaMe sources of a cure ui.deby using thai: preparation of Sarsspaii' a E' iiASSTiipokT. N. J May 15.1346. A. B. A D. Sauds..Gect -tuen. Kvtig been cured of a severe scrofulous disease bv the ate of yi ur celebrate I and to me mva.uabij Sarsspanlia. I 'e-1 it be an tci umbeul duly w-hlcb i owe to mil ufleriog el,ow beings to lestlfv to the c* of providenc:\*Aer nil o.b~. real-die* failed. The disease Srsl means which restored me to heaiih, uu.-.er tbe b esslr ppeved tn small ptmpirai or bi sters, which was silenced with violent ltcbln* and nuruing ; These spreadi )g, covered the body, and oattlog toee.her ornieai iarg-j scales and scurf. fr. m which issued water, a-id th» tain cracking aid burning and mallet combined, waking the distress so great as lo deprive uie < I ail natural rest My oca. > being covered wlib a mass of scuif atd scales ad-cted my gen¬ eral health, wblch rapidly relied and l was obliged to aban¬ don my business, l we* u-ea.ed t<y various physicians and tried i!irJ>renl remedies wtihuUi receivto* any permanent beueni. I then went into the New-York Hcaplial. and te- tua:oed for fiuneen weeks under l'«etmenl, which pro- dueed temporary redef. Af.er leavjrg the Hospital the) dla- ease returned m a few da}., and. w beu Kiveo up by my friends and despairing of relief from auv source, 1 heard of your Sarsapanlia. aLd lmmedlatelv resolved on gtvtcg It a iriaL The firatbottle raiiaved me of allude dlstreaaingsynap- tome, and did me more gocJ lhan all the medicine I had taaeu for yeara before. A continuation wf vour Saras parti- la, tn cjmht-atiin with your Salt Rheum" Rkmkdy arpii- ed externally, effectually removed the olsease, restored mn lo health, and 1 am now able to attend to my business. I would say to all, and particularly lo uiy German coun¬ trymen. If you are suffering wr.h scrofula or any disease similar to what 1 have been, use the medicine that has been tried, proved and acsnowledged u> tv» all that la required to bring health lo the debliluted frame. Yours sincerely, FREDERICK. DICKEL, Cab net Maker The following testimonial lo ihe value of On, Sarsaparille, trout Iba Rev. Luther Wrtgbl. aged 76 years, Congrega- Uona, Minuter, residing ai W oburn WoufRM. Mass. March 3Utb, 1846. Mr.ssav Sands.tantieme* From wbal Ibsveexpert- enced. and from the Information I have recently received from a numher of per.o"s "f high respectability who have used your Sars.ipaitl a. I have not me least doubt but lhat It Is a most valuable medicine, and 'list the numerous certl- fi-ale* you have received of Its erticacy are fully sustained by experience, and although tls r-puiadon and mtiltv are v-ry exiei.slve, and stand in no neeu of my burn Me tfforl* to increase then.. I want all who are art):.tied by dlaease lo necome acquainted with the eibcacy and power of your valuable tredietne. 1 am, gentlemen, grelefullv and very respectfully yours. LL'THER WRiUHT. For farther parilculars and conclusive evidence of Its su¬ perior value and etScacy, see pauipblele, which may be ob¬ tained of Agents grails, Prepared and so d by A. B. It D. SANDS, Druggists, IN PuliousL cor. of William, New-York. Sold aiao at .'i Broadway aud 77 East Broadway, and by Druggists generally throughout the United Staiea. Price 8i per bottle. Six bottles for rive dollars, ry The public are respectfu. y requested to remember that It Is Sands's Sarsaparilia that has been and Is cona'anlly achieving auch remarkable cm es ol the most airhcuii class of dlse'se* to which ihe tinman irame Is su"Jeci; iherefore ask for Sanda's baraaparbb.. fiid Ute no oiner. N. B. To the poor II Is fre-iy given, on their bringing a cor Ideale of c-ed from ihe Minister. Aldei Jisxi or Jusilre of Ihe Peace. wh«re ih-y resloe _Je>* Im CONSTIPATION ,OOSXIVJCNESS) DESTROYED withi.uih MeaJleines. Iojeetlooaoe Uath». Discovery recently made tn Fisuce by Mr. Wsriou.. Price 90 cents. The fifth English editloL, translaud from ihe S3d French edition of the exposition of a natural, altuple, sgreesble and Infallible means, (receully discovered tu France.) not uoly of overcom lug. but also of completely ueslroytug obstinate, lnveterata, aud habitual constipation, without using either purgauves, injections, or baths; followttd by a graal number of authentic document* from eminent physicians aud other person* of distinction, cnitlfying the coru- plete etricacy of die mean*. Sold ai the National Depot of Warum of Part*; No. 1ft WuJiam-M., botwoen Fnllouand Aon als. and also of Mr. John .V lll.au, 1RD Broadway; Mr. C. U. Ring, comer John-ai. aud Broadway; Messrs. Wyait it Kelcbaui, !£. Kui-ou-sL *ud tn Kiookiyu of Or CbarUs* Stan*. No. 184 Ful.on st. ruyis gawlniFrkTu BAILEY'S SAHSAPAB1LLA. r\STABLl>H'ell> IN 1-3-1 Thi»rrraparairem of Sar*a: dT-j parlOa baa been 12 yeara before ita. public, and from Us aupunor merits, ha* gslaed for Ilse.i « high reputation as a remedial agent; Is 'avor..b:y regarded by ihe medical fraler- ally generally, mo.I prescribed by IbeOS in their pracUce ; la id very high repi.ie in the Cniteal Stales Navy and Army: It has always received their patronage and approval, aud for all the purpose* for which Sarasparllla la used this pre¬ paration of Sar.aparllla .lands unrivaled. It possesses double the strength of any other Sarsaparille In u»e; Oeing prepared in a regular scienlih: manner, may properly be regarded a* ihe triumph of science over q'ir.raery. The following uro my wholesale Asrenls In New York city WYATT i KETCHAM. HAYDOCK. CORL1ES A CO. M WAKD. For said al relad by Messrs Wyait It Keicbam, and the dru/eisU g«. e a ¦¦. '.uroughoul inu United Stales; and of WM. U AI Lr. i'. Proprietor, Brooalyn.N. Y. Price 6a slngie, $7 ru per dox jo Im'^awMliK* GrHEEN MOUNTAIN vtiOEI ASLK OlMTMEMT. AMONO ibedl.ea.es lo wnlch this important OhabMOt I* adapted are the following Sore Th.-oai, Broocbllta, Olandular Swellings, Er>stpeia« Sbtngies, Felons, Ring¬ worms, bait Rhoum, Swelled and Broken Ureasts, Sore Nip- S'.e», Fever Sore* Mllkleg Sores, Kheuuiallaui, Ooui, In¬ animation of the Eyes, Inflammation of ihe Bowels, Piles, Scro uious Sores, Burns, Scaids, Bruises, and trash cut Wounds. Powerful and pervading as this Ointment is, addressing itself lo so many and so formidable diseases, Ii I* ou.y to ¦» applied agreeah.e to dtrccll >ua to satisfy the m«j< tcrupn- tests lhat It Is an Important remedy for all the purpose* set form. The obvious rea.on of lit power and edicacy in »s» many and to formidable dlaease» I«, In Us sovereign pole ney lo reduce and subdue I d immailon, which ts tbe exciUug and permanel cause. This removed, tDe funclloua of uature resume a beailby action, a..<! a a,.ee>ly cure 1* the result This Ulnlineulla purely vegetable,and ai.hough poweiful, yei mild in it* operatii.na commencing a soothing influence wherever applied. It may be administered with perfect safety lu any stage of health, from the Infant lo the most aged person. It will retain Ita etSeacy in aii climate*, and any pe'lod ofil'iieULiinpalred. Every fault y and the crews of amps should be furnished wiin this Ointment Oood. competent and responsible ageuls are wanted for each and every Su e in ihe L'nton, lo whom liberal term* will becivett. None need apply without ihe in >*i satisfac¬ tory references. All applications for agetclea or the Oln fuent may 1^ ad¬ dressed lo tue sutiscrl-er. at 'heir depot. No 3a Coriland-sl, New. York. ARMSfrlOM« V rilRI) in ¦ ,o lme.>d- CHART'S AM Bn EIN E 0H£AM. THIS SUPERIOR COM POL NU is prepared expressly for die use of ihe ladies, and 1* designed beauufy Lbe sk n and give a clear complexion. Il glveq verv ,«u-» rtu sattst».:tlo:i tn Boston, Loweii, Providence and many other Eastern elites. And ibe proprietor has been greatly encouraged by the Increasing demand for ihe article In many oilier section* of the Country where It bax beam but recenliy tniroduced. It is used lu washing. 1. umSsderod very re r-sfilng and ita fragrance very delightful, leaving u.e skin soft and smooth. Tue Arnbre'.n« Cream la confidently offered to dealers In fancy goods throughout the city. D'ugguuj are particularly invite 1 lo give lla tilal. S^iid at wholesale by Um Manafactarer. N. A Crary, 140 Merrunack-sL Boaton. WM A. CROCKER It CO. Whole.ale Agents, V7 John sl New-York. CRARY'S AMBREINE S.MP. a superior article for shavtr.g. is recommended lo the attention of gentlemen, and Is mat u'acuirad aud sold a* above. Naw-York. Msy 2<>ih. .Ht6 my20 Imeod* FOR THE PILES. DR. L'PHAM S ELECTCARY-An Internal remedy, la .eertam care for tbe Pil««. hiternal or external, bleeding or blind. Sold at 121 Full ,n-sL 8 I)tvl*loo-at. and by the Pro¬ prietor, a regularly educated Pby«iclaa of twenly yeara' ax- oeneuce, conSnerl us an otiicn pracl.ee, where Plie* and all Chronic dlseaae* are t ; -a-e.i Medlr.ai OtEc* TR1BDNE JOB PRINTING. OFFICE. No. 7 BraccE-strcet.f Three dnom from Satsau-street.) THE factliüeaoftbUe*ulili*bmeni for JOB PRINTING are, perhaps, uosurpaaaed by any office in the city The patronage of ihe last year has been such as lo guarimtne a neat exieoaioti in our resources. We therefore, with con¬ fidence, issae me fol.owiog Card TO MERCHANTS..Merchants supplied with ah tunas of PR1NTIN0 at ibei cheapest rale, vu Cards, Bills Lading, Circulars, Receipts, Bill Heads, c.~ Ur To LiteraRV Okmtlemejt.. (engvnal Manuscripts prtnte ed with accuracy. Pamphleu, Stareoiype Work, and all kinds of Books. letter Press Printing. To Lecturers and Musicians..progmnmtz neauUfuily printed. Lecture Bills, Small Bills for Distrl- Manmolk HdU, buuon, Ac And -very ie»crtption of Plata and '*nuo»rntal M Work, execuied with great uearnest and punciuailiy, at the Othce, No. 7 Spruee-*L The Improved POWER PRESSHS. for Booxs. Psat- f HLET3, ac Ail work on the abora ?res»o* wild be done at extraordi¬ nary low pricea. J A. FRAKTAS, J12 tf Tiihooe Job Printer, F*KE«JH AKAH I A> MATES.A few trail* very superior dates, for .ale by_ ,_ mySft r.tSNVft k YOIfNG.l'gCr!«th«m-«t of Rodger.'. Penknivea.for sale «^8"1a?"^^ Ishmeet of* |m-,gS| JANSEN' tt BELL. Ig Nas»ao-.t 500 BoxwiXIc^rÄrr0NW VV,r ^ No. K3 Broad-** mvU aaiTKAW WKAPPI.NO PAPEiC-SiOO re«a*. - ^r^T^^T^m^ * B.rllug^p. S Ta iB aT-Ac Iron open Nialrcajse. LS*'.J aewJCT ft ^.l<«r.iWPlr*ai_»2* BNORAVBR. JOHN HORTON, Udalorlcal aud Writing engraver. No. SO Massen sl j.-9L ßiiiiaiiniw, «Sc Oanud. W; \ v"a>TKD .A «Itnadoo *y ¦ Young Woman wlih good tt reference, as chambermaid and waiter, or at child's aarse or to do general Sousewora. No objection to the country. Apply at 269 Sixteen tn-st lc tbe rear, betwaen 9lh end IOth avenue*._ _>ll 3»* aiTANTBD. By a respectable Young W»msn. asiwsv »y Uoa chambermaid or waller, or aa corae and learc- (tress. No obtecuoo to going In the country. The beta of Ctrl reference "can be given aa to character, sobriety aad ability. Persons wishing to call may inquire at Sri Oliver*!. Jell 2l*_ W4NTKU-Families supplied whb the t> st of S»r- ranis for city and country at 4S8 S'osdway. fto Cba'ge toempjojrer*._JH 1 $** ' ANTKO.St nation* by two respectable Young Wo¬ men ibe one to do ccuusberwork and fine woabtag and ironing, or no obj-cuon to do tbe genera, bousewoia la a small fatally. To* other as sur»e, aad Is willing to go to the country. Good city reference given from the 'a*t place where tney nved. Apply at No 19 Second-11 J-112r* \V AMTKU.Situation* by 3 nice Gin* Torn Cst-ada, tt with few acq-iaintance* here.cancook, wash and tn>o, or chamoerwora and waiting. Pie*** tr quire at No. 4.Sj Broad w»y._jell ft* a YoL'Nt» WO.UAN wtsfe* a situation aa .suede**, Aot to so chambsrwork, washing and ironing. She well understand* ber worS, and can give the heat of referee co.. Please call at 37 Tbtneeotb-*! tx-oed floor._jell tt* ANTED .A »ttuaiion u> cool. wa»h aad Iron, or to do hjusework ia a small family. Good city rafar- encegtven. Ca.l at SI Muherry-sl ba*emecl jelt It* \*' A> CKD..FsariüWs are supptlssd wim good atCSSSS " tic*, with g^od references, lor city and country, at 234 Gra"d *t n«ar Bowery. ltllSl* VL'A>TKD.8y a very aireGir. a piaCe a* chamber " maid and lurse. Alto bet toother wants to learn tbe eareen'er'* trade or grocery business. Apply 43 Wület-st. jein 3t«_ \TL'ANTfcD-.* Protestant \V.«nac as cban.berit.sto and tt waiter.awch ocij at can produce g -od re-corrtne-uda- ii<nr-ay apply at No. 54 Fourth-evenee, Sd do r a Vive '.fob-*'-_jell S * \Y'A>Tl.V; PUCK* tt 139 dots.rv a gotal **- vv lorUneat of select Serv^is, none but grreufcotea with rut recomuieedaUoria. telOS.* \\J ANTED.At 1.-3 Hudeonatcear C»u:, er-iployo^eot " for firttra'e cooXi. curses, chaaioertuald*, walltua fcc. Je9 ttn-_ tMitl.M 11 MKMt WANTKD-A axgte F euch Woman to act a* narse and seamstress la a private family, apply al S-1 P.uo an J«3 y lVA>TKO-$i>,000. ou bond and moit|r*ge, on two " three alory oru-a bJuse*. and lot* lu lae.tu West TMr- leenia-»l netr the Aih avenue, at 7 per cent Apply to ANTHONY j. BLEECKER. Auctioneer. leSlw No 7 Broad St. w aNTK O .Fa-ntlie* In want of Servant*, to apply to P. HILL, 44S Bro-tdway, corner Brooipe-tl, where tbey can he lultea and no charge mviS lm* WAMTJtU. a lew ncuve Touug i'ea lo go SouiO or West, to act as A;enls for the sale of ae w and popu¬ lar Pubdrauona. J3<\> over and asasve their expense* will .>e Insured to diem m wrlltag, with an opportunity ol clear- lug 8l.< oo per year. Some men now In our employ wtH, no doubt, make over t)l,t>u per veer clear of all expense- Each ratal will have hi* district It will he necessary for them to have at least from S _s ui $v to otilalo a good fittlpg oat. Apply at FRENCH S Pub.Wbtng Hall, 29, Broadway, up elaira, OtSce of ike Flag of out Lulou. All letters must be p.ist paid._myt4 lm* Vl/ANTKU.At MlllvUia, Hu s«veuty-Qve men or . v girl* that are «urtictectly acqualuted with the an of westviug, that tbey tan readt.y turn Ibelr hand to weaving fancy ca»*tinerea on power lc uns; also, twenty Jack (pin¬ ner*; also, help to work in a woolen car-1 room. The strove described help '.* wanted Imtcedtalely. and such a* are strict¬ ly temperate and Industrious will Hud siessly employment at liberal wages by applying to the subscriber at Mluvtlle. idW tf_C. U HARPING. DIAMOND HUH r.l.kT I.OMT.- On Tuesday «veuing, 9.h tust., hetween L'uton-place and Cllntcav place, Eei|(h-b-at (orubab.y lu S.h-sl In going f-uin cart lag* to b -.sei a Dlamund Bracelet The 6: der will b .suitably rewarded by leaving It al 231 ülnth near Pifltvaveoua. Jell 3i* _ C'^ll KkWAK1*.. -Lust, a Lady * Gold WauA, V'-'" brother* Molly, maker. No. 673d Toe above re¬ ward will he paid on delivery of the watch, lo good order, st No a KWrv st and no qoesttons asked. J»li'3f jtioaröins and tiotrie. MK8. CUITTKNDKN'N private boirdtcg-hoase, 222 Gr«ene-at near the Washing - .i Pirads, where Iwu or three gent'emen with their wives, or a few siegle gentlemen, can And coiufortab'e apartment*, either fUrcUb- ei or unfunl-h d.w lib board. jeliif !>UAttU AT IM» KUOD.tltl.-a-r.-A slugie »eB- I ' tleuiaucan henccomuiedsied wtih a pleasant room snd goial B isrd, 10 a privaie family, by applying ss shove Re¬ ference rtq-itre I. Je9 lw" B~ OAUD DOWN TOWN.-Two or Three plestsnl mi m<, wnli psatile* atiaciW, to !et, aliber fitrblsbed or ': v - ish> d. wltii hoard, to gi-ntlrmeu and ihelr wlvs* or .Ingle geutlmien, <-n rra*on*h;e term*, ut No. 17 Bee*mau¬ st, near Nauau. One 01 two day boarder* will al*u be ac- cointuodated by applying aa above. Reference rrqulred, Sic._ Jelll IUI* \ lfc W genieei boarder* can be accommodated wlm *\pleasant r.Himsat 99 Ciambers-tt }-9 lm* * KKW GBNTLBMEN raube accommixlaied wlüi <>, luiard, bieakfasl and tea, dluuar on the Sab' a.b. al SB Fast Broadway. JnH lw* PUlVA i t. MOAKDlrsU.-Two large chamber* 00 me sucuuu door, wl,b eiOSSti attached, to a pie***- t lo¬ cation, can be had by sln*l» eerV-a.r., .... »luioul breakfast and lea. ny applying »t No 2 Se'coad-st Je6 Tt* \ U KNT CkM A .*4 A N D MIH WII'K. and '.ss 0 ur . (»a«d, *H psstsMU ,., ... r,rV ',el »*r» V_- Jrtf t*Saaditb» .*sasMssts user Mittut In BÄrJ. w'ay, No. 25, corner of Morrls-st Is now completed and will tie opened on the first of June next. No pain* have beon spared tt) reuder tt one of the most comfortable ta üm dty and persons desirous of a pertnaneot home, as w«)l as strangers merely passing by will find all their wants and coupons attended to wlik the moat strtot attention. my at l.St_ BISA KDIN(its.A beautlfai Room for a gentleman and wife, and a few other* for traaslent hoarders, may be had at Mr*. Swsi.t's.d) Murray-st between Broadway and Sleamra.at Landlrirfs. North River. m7'13m BISAK.D Ina Private k'amlly..Two or three gnullemes may ublalu lioard, wllb pleasant lodging rooms, at 10Ü Bayard-*t_uiylU tfc Hi 1 \ H I) N0 at 10 Barciay-at-Two o~lh7w~g7n7irv men can be well a«;comino<laled with hoard rind *epa rate apartment*. If required ; also apartments suitable for gent einen and Ibelr wire*. Moat respectable reference* given and required. my'.; lm* »WH I.OK and Bed-room, wldi pantry attached, to let, unfurnished, without hoard, lo one or two (Ingle gentle). dornen. Tim apartments are pleasantly located In a modern built bouse, In the Immediate netgbhorhood of the Park. Anniv ai rt CtW Hal' Pls.-e si' tt inioccliont'OHo. i Orricc or ths Daiwut and Hupsom Csisal Co. ; New-York. June I, "46. J THE Board of Managera of this Company ha»e declared a semi-annual dividend of Right per cert out of the Proiiis of me Company, payable uo and aflar Monday, the Uih Instant. The t'Nuafer-book will remain classd from tbla dato to die morning of the 8th ins.ant Ho ders of the jfcnjr St'Kk are particularly rsc/iestad lo '-turn their Certtficaies, lu order that new one* may be issued lu their place. By ordet of the Board, je I tu_ISaAC N SF.YMOUR. Treamrer. NKW-VOHK and Brie Rail Road Company.The Slocaholdera of the NoW-Y ut and Erle H-.ll Road C.ud- panv are hereby notified that an Instaimenl of tun dollars per stv.re -n a stoek on which lb.- payments a r.-H.iy made do not exceed teu dollar* per (hare, Is required to lie paid at me office of ibe Compauy, No. 46 Wali-*t. on or before ire l&lh day "f Juceneit Tnose Ste-khoH- » who have paid more than ten and les* than twenty dollar* pet «hare, are required to make up the .urn ef twenty dollar* per share as above. By order of tbe Board of Director*. NaTHANIEL MARSH. B-c'y. N-w.V irk. May 14. IMS._ my IS MIS .ilUHAWK AND HUDSON RAILRAOD COMPANY. ' I -Tii- Annual Elecuou for Directors of this Company '111 be held st tbe otfee of Rawdoc It Oroesheck. No. 44 Vail-st New-Yorl, on the second Wednesday (l''th day) f Jane next, at 12 o'clock al noon of that day. The pou ./111 coniUiun open one hour. Albany, May 4ib, 1840. By irder of the Board of Directors. mylBtd_K FOSTER. Jr. Hee'y. fj<AOL£ ilAUUOK IMINING Company.-Notlca stis hereby given thai an a**e**mect of one dollar on eaeb share of the capital stock of tiie Eagle Harbor Mining C mpany. la due and payable on th- 26:n of June, it46, at me office of the Treasurer. SAM'L COIT, Treasurer. D.-ir.iit. Mav2ß. IH46. Je2tjesY>e TO HAT MANUFAOTOREfiS. 8AXONY HAT BOUIEd, equal 10 any In the world, at a raducUon of 5U per cent from market price*..The -jscrtoer, agent for the manufsveturen, offers for sale Sax¬ ony Hat Btsdies, equal 10 any lo ibe market, at V) per cent beiow usual price* and earnestly IuvIum all dealers and man¬ ufacturers U) call al I6<! Broadway and not only examine- hut try tne article before purchasing With entire conadeocs) do the manufacturer* offer their Bodies, feeling ibe utmost assurance that iney are a superior article and will give full *atl*f*c.uon. A liberal discount to dealer* and large menu- «ctur-rs. J B VAIL. Awertt. 1»'Broaiway my3l lm" PI 4i IKON-.x tons No. 1 Oar tat.« rue Pig Iron now landing and for aale by jell_CASS. WARD k CONOVER. 69 Broad-sn T T LMTKR AND POM FT«N IKON .Tbe ULler *J Iron Works, 8aagerue*.N Y. and ibe Posiptou Iron Work», Pompton, N.J. are In full opentloa. Ord-rilor round, square, fist, b»od, scroll and hoop Iroo, will be promptly execuued 00 application to . "It JOSKPff TfTKt'RMAN.^ West-tt isit. IWOra-lUVI .r.. .iieuuon" no 1 IT«unor, Irorl| X -Odo F'irge Pig fron; Mdo" Poit Hsory' No. Foun¬ dry Iron. For sale by_.«.obuoj Mor-u /en JOSF.PH TLCKKRMAN.63 West-st. C10AJL FOB SA 1.K-A large quantity of diesmal and y r«* Co*l cheap, sultanle for steam purpose*. Also, all .ixe. oVeH'fa Orchard si these low price* ; i.roaen and egg ino^vrvT*- vf.n«.and.l-ve *A 33. greened and debverei rr^ 0r King and Oreenwhich st*. X"*- PUTER CT.INTOW- t llflTsVBK B4THH-For sale at u.e low price of 40 tS'renis and uowerd*. also a supnly o0 hand of »eonging h.üi !. n batb.'. foot tub*, scd isrge rstthlng tola. Don- »w's n..w Pateatlron Purr rs, lead pipe. lie. kc for sals UssrVrföm*San) wu WEST. I3S Hadisn »t a CCOL'NT BO«K"*.Marufactared and sold at very A low price* bv Fraoc:» k L-jutrel, 77 Msldeo-lane.. a^so ever/ deacrtp'tion of Paper and Slaiieneiy. PrlBtlnf, Rnlirg and Hin.Hnge»-ruutd *t 'he lowest rt es. Jet lm S~ FlItlT <sA"»..i"oi>is.nssjiqiisuiiy Spirn Gas,for sale -,T or:iT7. BROTHER k CO No W Jobs-st m2> jlhHICAN PATnNT V1CK3,corner Broad and Besver..Sherman, Alwater k Co. Agents for the Pa¬ tentee, offer for sslo a superior article of American Tires, assorted pao.-rr.* and sixes. _jel THO.nP*aON*f4 PKK.IHl'Jl TUt'frt, >old by J. R. Benjamin, 13 Beeamvan-et Is the lest the world afford*. Pressure graduated from 1 to So lbs. without aback pad. wedeb does so moeh lajory to Ute spine, dtx day* trial erven and If co perfss-tiv satisfaetorv. money ssenmed.m5 if Otts ULl,let*V TKt'»f»XSS andsVel»- ^Ical Supporters.Orfice Nor 4 Vsarsy-st. AS- torTJouse. Manyper«oo» haveundesiaken 1°veaidtrni- tatlods of EfllF* ceiefcratett Trusses. aodJhoJ- sands are impoestd a poo In coosetraejoo*. a^SSSPSSS. cannot be reded upon; tbey are made ttyonsklllfeJ^^J* nie*, and are co Oetiar than tha erdlnary Trusses, sww

Transcript of New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY)...

tShiW-YORK TR1BU1NK..SC NEW-TORE DAILT TR1BTNE II TVlM*.*

EV"ERT MORNING, SUNDAT EXCEPTED.It ti« VHllWJM Bnl|dtn*T*, estraer "J^."*.Bd Nassau ¦ur»«iu. oppoelf the City HaU,

jjj isdvorod u> City .uoscrlbers tor Him g»"« »*

Vfwk or wfcmiitey prefw.ibercsJ P»Jtnadva^

donTi».««. for .1* ninths- Three Dollars In advance~.. iTrA io »!i aichanges with Country Newspapers,oil- papers received at tlda office whose terms are

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»IT* each subsequent taaeröon.12, JJrflotbetnslde "

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n er five Lines.First lcaertlon.. cents a Una.

rl-h snosequent Inaertlon, which may be}«very oaf, or once, twice or three time* a > J cent* a line.

.«.I »t tie option of the advertiser. )r.,.ide Ad vertlaetneate.Fl»e cenu a line for the First

irt-rtlon, and Four cents for each subsequent one.

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l> oabllsbed every UATUaoAY Moan inc. at the low price of

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ia Atumpt lo Fw.nl On L'rKituhed ZJtsign of WAsniso-

tox Allsios ijr Thomas «isar.

Everyone knows the history of this picture.bow it was projected by the artist, and while jetodIv a mental sketch, was bought and sold by an:i-

cipaiion.how the weight of obligation thus incur¬

red, probably even more than the obstacles and dif-

Scoi'.ies that beset his course, hindered it from com¬

pletion.how it lay boxed op for years, and bow,when at last having erected near his house a-euita-

ble painting i *>m, he was again with animation

engaged upon it. Death came, one night, to snatch

the pencil from his hand.To those who venerated in him the noblest artist,

the purest representative of ibe realm of beautywho has ever enlightened our country, the unfin¬ished picture, whoso history was so interwoven

with that of his more shadowy days, to whose com¬

pletion he looked as a more full expression of his

inward life than he had elsewhere been able to give,which bore the last touches of his hand, and the re¬

flection* of the last sun that shone upon his earthlycareer, was hallowed as if upon an altar. In lifeMr. Aliaton was a consecrated object to all who ap¬

proached him. It was not merely tbe dignity and

singleness of bis devotion to art. in youth and age

the same, so that with him, at least, the artist life,unsullied by vanity, base Irritations, or any alloy of

mercenary motives, had no vulgar side, nor the pu¬

rity of his life, the elegance and silvery lustre ofhi* manners and conversation, which at the moment

turned the meanest, poorest nooks into the Italy of It-

aly. and gave to the poor little parlor the dignity ofa Grecian temple. It waa with him no one or two

noble qualities or attractions, but an URiiy. ati in¬

tegrity of spirit and nature, that pervaded hiswork«. his aspect, his manners, with one expressionof dignity, loveliness, and holy tenderness, and

shed through every thine he looked, or said, or did,gleams of that pure beauty for which our souls

and thirst so often aud no much in vain.

Feeling thus ns we looked on this unfinished pic¬ture there mingled with regret that it should beunfinished a dclLbt and awe at being admitted, as

it were, to ihe secret stages of growth and develop¬ment in the mind whose completed works had doneso very much for us. And we never felt a more in¬timate approximation to tbe secret of genius thanthrough imagination and sympathy, through a spir¬itual sense of him who is not dead but sleeping,was given in tbe silence and loneliness of the room

In which we were admitted to contemplation of ibeunfinished picture.No one dreamed of any other hand being compe¬

tent to fiuiah ont tili» work. It is true the greatestmasters have often employed tbeir pupils to paint a

Urge portion of their pictures. But they did *»

ploy their pvpih who had become intimately- ac

qnaintod with their methods of composition andcoloring, and on subordinate parts of tbe work, re¬

serving to themselves what wa« needed to give barmotiy anil fti'.l effect to the design.Mr. Allston had no pupil; nor did any person ap¬

proach him as to coloring or finish. Beside, bis de¬

sign was left unfinished and confused.Under these circumstances the request of Mr.

Spear (we speak from common report, not from im¬mediate intelligence wiih the friends of Mr. Allstenand owners of tbe picture) that he might be permit¬ted to copy what was already existent on the can¬

vass and catry out the design as he conceived ii,was naturally refused. The case was peculiar, butof course did not stand on the footing of permissionto copy a completed picture. There was danger ot

lampering with the fame of Mr. Allston, aud substi¬tuting to ihe public a caricature for the ideal presen¬ces before his miud.

Mr. Spear, then, having no open access to copythe picture, was in the habit of drawing from it

privately on his hat. till he had all the parts beforehim in little. He carried with him the compositionasa whole in his mind'seye. and has studied out the

subject for himself, und painted it according to hisidea of the intentions of the painter.

If this report of the case bo correct, it wouldseem that most persons would feel it coutrary to

their sense of honor thus to usurp an inheritance to

which the great painter had not elected them, andrun the risk of substituting their ideas for his, on

ground which he had thus enclosed ami »et apartThe case, as we said before, is unique, and we findnoi rules or precedents. It is not a parallel withihe attempt to finish Co!eridge*s Christabel, forinstance; a late folly of a very good sort of a mac.

becau»e in that instance the new does not mix withor disfigure the old. But. taking it as a new case,

we must say. it is a thing we would not have donefor worlds, at least vt ith any view to public exhibi¬tion. It is a thing, of coarse, which any artistwould have n right to do, as a study for himselft'.onft. But if Mr. Spear's motives were purely or

chiefly mercenary, we deem the act unpardonable.We think, at any rate, he should never adver¬tise the picture as AlUton's BelshazzarA FeastHe ought to acquaint the public that it is not All-ston's. but only his own view of what Allston in¬tended. And he ought to let us know by whatright he justifies to himseil this act. Was he haunt¬ed by a feeling that he could really bring out theideas ot the great painter with due force T Did hevvsut delicacy to perceive the objections to such an

enterpt i»e ? Or was it w ith him simply and coarse

1} a m- ansof getting reputation and money, wiih-oat respect to those rulea of conduct which utedthe more carefully to be studied thai they belong to

» regio» so refined that they cannot be exactlymarked in codes or enforced by courts of law ?Suppose, however, that Mr. Spear has reasons

that justify his proceedings, and lhat the facts as tothe production of the picture now on exhibitionhere he every where made kutnvn. wc are, forourselves, much pleased to see it. The degreeof success is such as to justify the attempL.The conception of the artist shines out very visibly,if not with the effulgence his own hand would havebestowed. The canvas is rich with motion. con¬centrated thought and .. tbe fuhness of forms." Weoo not describe it, because people can see it forthemselves, snd a work of art is always its own bestkterpreter. To those wbo are disappointed in theProphet, we must say that the work of Allston did.Ot promise much more. That central form is no

jfropbet: no heir of Moses worthy to be marsbaled°y tbe piliarof cloud and the pillar of fire, so elect°* God whose eye of majestic faiih could tame the*»» in their den. but in all save tbe beard notSsor» powerful in expression than tbe elders andlisters of our modem synods. Tbe force of thedesign is io the astonished figures of the voluptu** »nd reckless court, with its unworthy royalties,|w idol shining with a light that this moment caststoto the Past its scoffing figures of the priests and.XKbsayer*. whose facea the monstrous develop-aenis of pride, vice and hypocrisy have exagger¬ated, into masks, that mark for us the odious posei-

BY GREELEY & McELRATf

TOL. Vf. NO. 55

bilitics of human nature. Yet even in the odicui-nese Is the grandeur, the superior luxuriance of an¬

cient oriental growth. The poem of the epoch is

brought nobly before us in this picture. The de¬

tails of execution we leave to the artists to criticise.We mast not for?et to observe bow finely the con-

trast of lights and the furniture of the scene are im

ngined, nor tbe grace that the beautifal and highlydressed female form on the left lends to the terror.

Mr. Allston had the finest understanding of theeffects of different tissues in dress, the arrangementof hair and jewels. The poetry of social life, all

those fine garden flowers which these things ex-

press, stood at his command.The picture, Allston a la Spear, is in the Gran-

ite building, corner of Chambers-street and Broad¬way. ^

New-York Constitutional Convention..NINTH DAY.

A f.'ood Dny's Work-Eisbteen CommitteesAppointed.A Mate f^ub-Trennury.Harmo¬ny.The Ladlen.Irlah Delegaten.

Albant. Wednesday, June 10, 1946.To the Editor of The Tribune:Sir In my notice of Monday's proceedings. Mr.

Kirkland's opinion on the centralization of State

governments is referred to. He said nothing at allabout it; in the manuscript I sorely spoke of De

Toeqaevrtle's views, not Kirkland's,as it is printed."The Convention having, this morning, by a vote

of 30 to 43. refused to go back into Committee oftbe Whole on tbe repovt of the Committee of 17,that report only tv»i fore it, bat the amendmentsof yesterday wer ne of them, strain submitted.Mr. Tilden's pltv wr.s sobstaniiai'v adopted, and

there were addi .». subdivisions, and other altera-

tions proposed , until, by two o'clock, the Conven-tion, as well as 1 could comprehend its action, with

tbe closest attention, had agreed upon and adoptedthe following eighteen resolutions:

1. Resolved, Tbat a Standing Committee be appointed to

consider and report on tne apportionment, election, ten-ure of office and compensation of the Legislature . andthat the several parts of the existing Constitution whichrelate to these subjects respectively, be alto referred to

the said Committee.

[Tbe other Committees, using the same phra*e-ology at the beginning and end of each resolution,were:]

2. On the Powers and Duties of the Legislature, exceptas to matter» otherwise referred.

3. On Canals. Internid Improvements, Public Revenueand l'reperty und Public Debt, and the Powers a:,d Dutiesof the Legislature In reference thereto.and the resbrictlons. If any, proper to be imposed upon the actioa of tbaLegislature In making Donations trom the Public Funds . dIn making Loans of the Moneys or Credit of the f lata

[This last resolution, as amended by Mr ''Con¬or, includes Richmond's proposition, to look into tint¦state credit-lending system, and Hutfrnan's idea ofhaving the Debt, Finances. Taxation. Revenues,and the Loans on Stale Credit, considered by one.

Committee.4. On the Elective Franchise.the Qualification to vote

and bold office.5. On the Election. Tenure of Office, Powers and Dutiei

(except the ppwer to Appoint and .Nominate to office,) oftheOovernor and Lieutenant Governor.

6. On the ElectloH or Appointment of all Officers otherthan Legislative and Judicial, tbe Governor and Lleuten-Hut Governor, whose duties and poweis are not local; andtbelr Powers, Duties and Compensation.

7. On the Appolutmtct or Election of all Officers whosefunctions are local, and their Tenure of Office, l'owcra,Dutlea end Compensation.

Z. On the Militia and Military Affairs.9. On Official Oaths and Affirms Ions, and on Oaths and

Affirmations and tbe Competency of Witnesses, In Legaland Equity proceedings. m

10. On the Judiciary, tbe Appointment or Election ofJudicial Officers, and their Tenures of office and Compen¬sation.

11. On tb« Rights and Privileges of the Citizens of thisState.

12. On Edncatiou, Common Schools, and the Appreprl-atn fund*.

13. Future Amendments and Revisions of tbe Consti¬tution.

.~

14. On the organization and powars of cities and lnoer-porated villages, and especially tbelr powers of taxation,

. assessment, borrosriug money, contracting debts and loan-log their credit.

15. On the power of Counties. Towna and other Munici¬pal Corporations, except ones and Incorporated Villages,and CBpeclally their powere of local legislation, taxation,assessments, borrowing money and contraction debts.

[14 and 15 are subdivisions of the 13th resolutionof tbe Committee of 17, and were proposed by Mr.Chatfield.]

16. On the Currency and Banking.17. On Corporations other than Municipal.[16 and 17 are sobdivirions of the I4ih resolve re¬

ported by the Select Committee. If 1 beard it cor¬

rectly stated, No. 17 will require a more clear deli-nition. otherwise the daiies ef Committees 16 and17 will clash together.]

16. On the creation and division of estates In land.No. 18 was amended by Mr. Worden. It stood

at first, " the tenure of landed estates."]Each of these Committees, with the exception of

that upon the Judiciary, is ordered to consist of 7members.the Judiciary Committee is to be com¬

posed of 13 members.I would outy encumber your columns were I to

enumerate a variety of propositions for Committeesoffered on subjects clearly within the scope of theabove resolutions.as, lor instance, on the rights ofwomen a* to laud. Ac. the imprisonment of witness¬es, Ao. Mr. Morris remark -d that gentlemen mightat any lime offer such propositions for the conenlerrlinu of the Convention, and have them at once rderrod to the appropriate Comtnittoos.

Mr. Shepard wanted to add to the third, after"public revenues and.'' the words .'and the safe¬keeping and disbursement"* thereof," but ihe Convootiou refused. 41 to 39. Mr. Snepard, though healluded lo the Sub TreA*u_y in this, and to the opin¬ion of a large number of ihe people who are anxious

to provide more folly than as at present for the safe-keeping of the State revenues, reminded the Con-veniion that he had expressed no opinion on anyprinciple that might be involved, and that his desirewas to see the order of reference in all these Com¬mittees comprehensive enough to include everyshade of opinion that might be offered.

I have eeen minorities, in legislative bodies, en¬den vor to hinder and embarrass the action of the ma-jority of the hour, but there is nothing of the sortdone h'-re. A stranger, ignorant ofthe party divisionsof X. Y. politicians, would not find it out by listeningto ihe Convention. In Congress there seenis to ne

too much difficulty in totting motions marie. Herewe have tbe other extreme.propositions are readfrom the Clerk's desk, and acted on at the moment,ict/k no notice at all.There were many shades of opinion to day rela-

live to the amount of business pri-pcr to be left to a

Standing Committee. Mr. Stow remarked that theCommittee of 17 had departed from tbe action oftheConvention of 1821, in dividing among tw o Committees the consideration of the powers and duties ofone of the great departments of Governmentthe Legislative, while they admitted that ihe Judi-riary must be referred to one Committee. One,Committee on the powers and uutiee of the Lc-'Rtslatnre, and another on the restrictions to boplaced on these powers, in certain maters, wouldclash.one Committee might be reporting in favor!ofconferring a power, which another would be try-1ing to annul through some restriction.one Cotnmii-tee would perhaps report that the Legislatureshould, and another that :i should not, possess cer¬tain powers. Would not tbia create confusion in¬stead ofproducing order? The Committee on the2d resolution could not properly fulfil their import-ant duties it they bad not a:so before them the mat-ters proposed to be referred 10 tbe Committee on the3d. How could the Committee on the Sd resolutionreport whether the veto power in tbe Governor. AcOUgbtor ought not to be continued, unless the coti-

sideratioo of the important mattere enumerated intbe 3d were entrusted to them? Mr. S. supposedcertain cases in illustration of his argumeut. and Mr.Loomis replied by showing that other resolutions,besidoa the 2d an i 3d. have reference 10 the Legisla-live department, and adding that the Conventionwould noi be embarrassed iu its action, even if ar¬

guments and conclusions of an opposite characterwere sometimes ofJered to its notice in the lorm ofRepe rt->

Mr. Hhoades took a liberal view of tbe proposition of Members who felt anxious that the orders ofreference should express in so many words tbe ob¬jects of reform and Improvement which tbey hadbeen charged with He would not object to loadtbe several resolutions with specifications even to

tautology, if Members thought that by so doing theminds of the gentlemen on the various Committeeswould be thereby belter directed to tbe particolarthings required to be done. Mr. Loomis. on the 3dresolution, as it was finally amended by Mr. O'Con-or. differed from Mr Rhoades. He liked tbe princi¬ple but was averse to the tautology.Mr. Townäenä' would allow the Legislature nopowers that had not been expreaely delegated to ilthrough a Constitution approved of bv the people.to which new powers could be added* if found no-

IVKW-Y

cessary, by amending the Constitution. He wishedto confer additional local powers on the Boards of

Supervisors elected by the various cities and Coun¬ties, and to enumerate the general powers to bevested in the Legislature to enable i: to aid in car¬

rying on the Government.The Amendment adding " the appointment or

eiecion of Judicial Officers, and their tenure* ofoffice." to the 10th Resolution, was by Mr. Ban-corn.the concluding words. " and compensation,"by Mr. Chatfield.There may be some additional arraceements for

Committees to-morrow, or some alteration made inthe wording of the above Resolutions: but I thoaghtit important to show what had been agreed upon al¬most unanimously as to the subdivision of business.The names of the members who are to compose thevarious Cummittees will doubtless be announced to-

morrow.We had not many ladies to-day, but three or four

members were talking about them, including Mr.Morris. Mr. Bowdish got a resolve referred to

one of the embryo Committees to inquire into theexpediency of giving to females after rrarriage the

right to hold and dispose of property, at d to secure

the same against being seized for the debts of '.hehusband.Campbeil P White is not the only adopted citi¬

zen in this Convention. Daniel John Shaw, a

Democrat, a Farmer, a bachelor of S3, and whoseancestors were originally, If I may use the ex¬

pression, from Scotland and England, is a Delegatefrom the County of Cayuga. and a native of the fineold County of Antrim, in the North of Ireland. Iam told that three Irishmen are honored by seats on

the floor of the Convention. May they prove worthyof the honor.for it is indeed one of the highest thatMan could bestow on Man in civilized life. K.

.The error was corrected for our morning edition. [ED.. -

Capt. Page..An anonymous friend writes us

that our Washington correspondent must be mis¬informed in regard to a profane remark said to haveoeen made by Opt. Page in regard to the recent defeatsof the Mexicans by our army ; he says Capt. P. is a gen¬tleman of high principe and gentlemanly bearing, who

would not use vulgar and profane Isngusge. He adds ;

"I know well his views In regard tothie War.that hewas from the commencement opposed to the wholemeasure of Annexation and of concentrating our troopsthere for its defence, and that it was unjiet and wicked,but as a good soldier be faced danger wnen duty called."Tnia writer should have observed that our correspond-

-'nt only rupied the remark from a letter, to llluatratethe horrors oi War, and these It dors Illustrate. Whether

Capt. Page made the remark or not. it is a legitimate andlogical expression of the spirit o! War.

Rev Leonard Bacon has accepted an invi¬tation to deliver a Discourse on Civil and Religions Liber¬

ty in New-IIavcn on the Fourth of July. The object ofthe celebration, of which his address will be the principalfeature, is to redeem the 1 rum-soaked, powder smoked*anniversary frrtn the riot an ! dissipation which have so

generally characterized It in lime past.

B?* A large meeting of the Disbanded Volun-i teer» win recently held In the Parish of West Fellclana,. La The meeting passed Resolutions strongly commend-Ine Gen. Galnes in calling out the mounted gun-men andas strongly censuring the War DepannKnt for couater-maualng the order ot the General.

From the Sandwich Islnndsj.We have Honolulu advices up to the 14th of

March. aa\» the Commercial Art%-eulser.Mr. Everett, the Minister to China, had arrived at

the Sandwich Islands.The U. S. ship Cyane, Commander Mervine. ar¬

rived at the Sandwich Irlands on the 1.1th of March fromMazatlan. which place Capt. M. left on the 22d Fcbrutry.On the 22d of February, the birth-day of Washington, a

temperance society was f irmed ou board the Cyane, calledthe " Washington National Temperance Society." Fifty-one of the officers and crew signed the pledge.Rf.portüd Loss or three American Seaoiln.

.The Friend, of March 14tb. contains an account ot thesupp-.sed loss of three se ltnen belonging to the whalingship Morrison, of New-London. It Is given on the author-Iiy of several individuals either now or formerly connect-

j ed with the vessel named, though In some of Its partieu-lars It may not be correctOn the evening of the 23d of .September, while the

i Morrison. in company with the Louvre and Montezuma.(two other whaling vestels belonging to the above namedport) were lying at anchor In the Streits of Juan de Fuca.near Cape Flattery, three of the Morrison's crew, with

i three of the Louvre's, escaped In a boat belonging to theLouvre. The names ÖT the tirst" three were Church".Klrby and Royce. Their Christian n»msi are not known.

In a book formerly in the possession of Church, thereia written on a blank page. R. Church. Palmer. MassHe is believed however, to have belonged to Monson,Mass.. where it is supposed bis parents are atlil living .He was probably between twenty and twenty rive yearsof ago. Royce was also from Mass and is suppesed to

I ave been a native of Springfield. He Is represented as

having said that iu consequence ot difficulties with hitgn .id father, with whom he lived, he resolved to leavehome and go to see-

In the execution of this purpose, he accordinglyshipped on board the Morrison in the Autumn of 1344..He was tall and slim in person, and probably between19 and 20 years of age. Kirby Is supposed to have beena native ot Hirminebam. England. He was a currier bytrade, and had resided in America but a abort time pre¬vious to bis shipping in the Morrison. He was probablyabout 2.1 or 24 years of age.He is said to have been a young man sf very amiable

disposition, fsithtul in the performance of his duties, anda generous favorite with captain, i ff.cers and mes..

After leaving the Morrison they started for the mouth ofColumbia River.Having repeatedly attempted to land for the purpose of

procuring water, hut without success, they at last enteredi.'«> a Harbor, where, upou approaching the shore, theUboat was swamped among the breakers and the three be-longing to the crew of the Morris, n drowned. The threesurvivors wer- taken by the Indians and conveyed to Chin-nook Point,opposite Fort George.Hero thry were kindly received and entertained by

('apt. Scarborough of the schooner Cadbcrough, a coast-

leg tur trader. To him they stated the f«.-ts ^respectingthe loss of their boat and the drowning of thvir threecomrades in Gray's Harbor. Soon after this Capt. Scar*borough sailed to the Straits of Juan de Fuca, and therestated the same to various individuals, upon whose au¬

thority this account is given.The statement that the three men drowned helo' ging to

the crew of the Morrison is said to have bt en derived fromMr. Dooglass an officer in the service of the Hon. Hud¬son's Bay Company. Other accounts however representIt as uncertain whether the three belonged exclusively toone vc-sel or In part to both. In this particular there Issome discrepancy, though ail concur In the fact that threeout of the six were lost.Thus three young men in the vigor of health and

strength are believed to have perished, in consequence ot

yielding to the hailish mania h.r running away, now so

prevalent Htnong the crews of whaWs. Tne news oftheir death will doubtless be the source of pungent griefin the bosoms of taeir suivjving parents, brothers andsisters, and other relatives.

This too, in the present Instance, w 11 be enhanced andacgravated by ihe thought that they died In the a t ol es¬

caping from -Inn- on a savage and inhospitable shore,where their bodies. If driven to land. Instead of receiving.t Christian buna , will prohably soon become the prey oivoracious wild bts«ts.Death OF Charlfs W. Thompson..We fol-

lowed to the grave, yesterday, Charles W. Thompson,a,-ed 29 years, foremast hand of the Panama, CaptainCrowed. He was the eldest son of Lt. Col. Thompson,v. ho now resides In Nottingham. Eng. and who served un¬

der Welling on In the i'eiiiusular war. and tiso at the bat-lie of Waterloo.

From the Friend of March 14.Wo are happy to learn from Capt. Green, of the

Ontario, that our friend Mr. Buffett of Pitcairn's Island ar-rived safely at his home on the I2:h ultimo. Capt G. alsoinforms us that previous ro that dale about 20 whale shipshad touched si Pitcalm's for supply.

At the time of this v sit eight were lying off and on.Some were obliged to leave without supplies on accountof Mr. Buffett*! engagement to supply the " Hannibal"with 100 bbls. of yams potatoes d: -. in dart for bis pas-sage from the Sandwich I.lands to his island home.The Belgian br<g Express, which sailed from Bonotnln

22d August, for China, did not arrtve, nor has she beenheard from in any wsy. the was reported to have 5300.-000 of specie on board.

The Oregon Treaty.

Correspondence of the Commercial Advertiser.Washington, Wednesday. Jane 10.

The President's Me-sage communicaüne the prop-osltlon of the British Government for the adjustment ofthe Oregon Question was sent to the Senate to-day.Tüe Senate is now in secret session upon jt.I am sorry to say that the President has not sent in a

t-rnry. but has merely asked the advice ol ihe Senate onthe proposition. I much fear that, in ibis way, difficultyWill i«CCUr.The Ashburton treaty would not bare been ratified If

the advic- ot the Senate bad been asked in the first in¬stance. The Senate coasentrd to ft because it was al-r»ady made. 1 am afraid, from what I have beard andknow, that the Senate wtil modify the terms.

From the Phi'.adwlphia Pennstlvsnian of yesterdsyThe Oregon Difficulty.

We understand from a reliable source that thePresident sent a Message to the senate yesterday after-noon,in whicb it Is stated that lue terms odered byEngland relative to the settlement of this difficulty arenot as favorable as has heretofore been expected wouldbe f tfered.Accompanying the Message is the correspondence be¬

tween ihe respective Governments. The President, as

we understand it, takes decided ground in favor of our

Just c'alm. but refers the matter to the Senate as the bodywho will have the final responsibility of the matter.The affair had created Intense sensation at Washing¬

ton. With the Imperfect information tc our p->ssession,we forbear farther statement, and await the official ac¬

count, which the morning's mail will bring us.

OFFICE TRIBÜNE BUILDINGS.

ORK, FRIDAY TfOB>I."VG, JUTE 1

New-Hampshlre.Twi.üDgi of Loco-Focoismto Defeat the Election of Hole.

Concoxd. June 9, I»4b. 2 o'clock P. M.To the Editor of The Tribune :

There was considerable discnssicm tn tbe Housethis morning on the Hesolotion relating to the elec¬tion of U. S^ Senator for the onexpired term. Itwas before the Honse yesterday afternoon to pro¬ceed to the election today at 11. Gen. Wilsonmade a motion to amend by inserting in the placeof 11 to morrow, to 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, ap¬pending which the house adjourned. The question came

up in order this morning, and was discussed by Gen JasWüaon in favor, and Messrs. Swasey and .4»er against it.Mr. Swasey novel an amendment to the amendment, to

go into the election to-Jay. which did not prevail..Amendments to amendmots were made and successfullymet and put down by a majority of 19 and IT. Tbe hourof 12 arrived. Gen. Wilson movtd that the farther consid¬eration of the question under ccnstderatlc.c be postponedat this time, and that the House do now proceed to thebusiness assigned tor to day a: 10 o'clock : the election ofSenator for the long term. This wa* oppoed by the Lo¬cos, hot the majority was large in opposition. The Locosthen moved an adj.iu'nment, and demanded the yeas andnays, which were 119 to 141. Thus the Hi use reiused to

adjourn. They were therl about proceeding to the choiceof Senator, when Mr. Swt'y moved that th tine a«sun-

ed for going Into an election of 1". S. Senator fir the term

of six years frr-m the Sd of March next, be po.tp ned to

Friday next, at 4i o'clock. Tills was promptly voteddown.Mr. Swasey demanded ;he yew ard nays, which were

as fallows i In favor of postponement 116.opposed 141..Sj the postponement did notprevail. Upon the announce-

ment of this vote, Mr Ayur cd IMlsborough moved to ad-joum, wHich motion did not prevail. A division was c«!l-ed for by count, tod resulted 109 in tbe affirmative to I Jöin the negative. The Loco Focos not being >atisfled withthe connt. or rather determined to wa«te the time of theH use aad the money of the people, called tor the Yeasand N'ays. The Speaker decided that the Yeas and Nayswere not in order, and Mr. Miller of Peterborough appeal¬ed from the deci-lon of the Chair. Mr. Swasey cilled forthe Yeas an! Nays ot. the Correctness of tne decisionYeas 150.Jfayi 100. So the Speaker was triumphantlysustained. So you will perceive that the Loco; lost groundfrom the firs: to the last. 6:111 anoiber motion was madefor an ail; urnrrent, a/id voted In the negative. TheSpeaker ilien called for ballots for Senator. A: this timeit was j minutes pan i. Mr. Hale left the Chair, and re¬

quested Gen. Wilson to take it. who called up"ti Messrs.Seimlth of Franklin, and Saiiborn of Sanbornton, to assistIn counting the votes. lie result was announced at half-past 1. and was as follows t James lltll 1, John Kelly 1,William Badger l, liir.v nibbard H9. John P. Hale 139.and he »«.< daclared el atcd Tbe !Iou*e adjounied.The Senate will thf« au«rn(h)ii confirm this vote, and

Mr. Hale will be the Sabator for six years from the lid otMarch next, to represent this State In tbe Senats of theCoiled States.As I came nut of the State? B< .use. [ observed a line »x

tended from the Kag .. Hotel across to the State House,on which several :la.'s;w-re; suspended. Soon the gunsbegan to boom, whlcb'l feel f-ur«. had a tendency towake somebody's babies, If not Amin Kendall's. TheLocos have rnad»- no capital out of their conduct thismorning. D «ugh-lacedorn dies hard.The bell is ringing tor the cars to start, and I must close.

Yours. Ac Pknacook.

N. Hampshire-John P. Hnle elected Senatorby both LIounei-Whig Councillora, &c.

Concord. June 9.6 o'clock. P. M.To ihe Editor of The Tribune :

The Senate and House, in Convenvon. electedJohn Kelly" and John C. Young. Whigs, to Gilthe vacancies lett in the Council by a failure of thePeople to elect. The vote for District No wrs. B. W.,1-noeae. I; Benj Jenneaa, (LOCO,) 125; John Kelly,14S. Iu District No 9.Zebulon Pease, 121: J..bn C.Young. 145. Tne State Government is now tuliy organized. and business wii! proceed wuh due diligence.The Senate sent a message to the House, inform¬

ing them that they had, on their part, elected JohnP. Hale to lite Senate of the United States for sixyeara Irom the 3J of March. 1-47. Tbe vote etood 3 to4. So Mr. Halk is elected Senator.Tne House was very peaceable this afternoon

It reeolved to elect a U. S. Senator lor the uncxplredterm on Friday alteration next at Iii o'clock.

Mr. Low, of Dover. Introduced a series of Reso¬lutions in favor of Protecting American Industry againstCheap Foreign Labor and the Slave Labor of the South,having a reference to this election, as he laid. It was,ou bis own morion, laid on tbe table.A Resolution was introduced to the effect that a

Committee of one from each County he appointedby the Chair. Instructed to report for tbe division of theStatu tnto tour Congressional Districts. Just as 1: waspassed, the Sonate c»m« in m meet the K-.usu tn Con-vention end. as tbe Houao adjourned immediately afterthe Convention .rose, no farthee action waa had ocs it.

It H wjiispered in certain circles that ex-Governor,Hill lias given in his adhesion to the ' Cliqne whichhe has beeu fighting bo desperately for the five pastyears. H- la Chairman of tbe Delegates to the Loco-Foco Convention, which is to meet tn this town next

Thursday. ' The Party' will survive only one more de¬feat; and the contest which preceds it win be bot. ButLoco Fiatotim is doomed in Ibis State. After tbe Partyhas used the Governor one year longer, he will find, tohis sorrow, that tbri prediction of Mr. Hale, In his memo*rable contest with Mr. Pierce. Junn 5tb. 1345, wili beilully verified. He warned the Governor not to attemptto creep Into favor with the Clique' over his shoulders,because If be did. they would have no power to rewardhim if they would.The Stark Guards came up from Manchester this

aftprooon It Is one of the finest Companies In the State.The Rogers Family advertise a Concert this eve-

nlng I have heard them sins: and like them muchYour Letters from ihe Old Man of the Moun¬

tain are very mnch admired, and almost universallyresd In this section of the country.

Yours, Ac PznacooK.

North-Enatern Ohio-Erie Extension Cnnal-Atrrlculcure, Manufacture*, dkc.OhioPolitic*.

Correspondence of The Tribune.Yocngstown, Mahonliig Co. Ohio,'»

May i<ilb, Istti. JThis place is delieh'fu'ly situated in the pictur-

esque valley of the Mahoniog, on the Pennsylvaniaand Ohio Canal, which affords a channel of commu-r.ication both with Lake Erie at Cleveland and theOhio River at Beaver. The Staple A-'ricultural pro-nuctsof this reeion are Bread-stuffs.Cbeeee, Butterand Wool. The last of these. Wool, has of late at-traded universal attention on the part of the farmers, andthe production has been greatly exteuded. More c ire thanformerly is given to preparing il properly for market. hxperil nee has shown that thorough wa-!nng and clipping ofburrs and tags are amply recomp. n«ed by enhanced prices,particularly when the article Is required for the E' gilsbmurket. In this respect 1 think it will be found this year'sclip throughout the Stale Is superior to any former one..Prices range ßre or llx c- tits a pound lower than the quo¬tations of corresponding grades last year, and for no earth-ly reason that I ca'i imigtne, except the curtailment of themeans to purchase. Our firmer- are thus beginning torealize that the lawless attempt of a rash and imbecileExecutive to exten 1 the llave-trodd« n fields of Texas tothe Rio Grande, has indicted apon th«m other evils bealdeindelible dishonor.The Manuning Valley Is rapidly rising In irarortanc"

from the development of Its mineral resources. Inexhaust¬ible beds of Iron Ore are here found iu the most conve-nisnt juxtaposition with coal b..ds of a character betteradapted, it is believed, to the purposes of smelting, thanany before discovered in ihu country. An enierprlMngand wealthy firm from Kuffaio, ;n jour State, has Justcompleted, at a very heavy expense, a blast furnace, in theConstruction of which some Ingenious and valuable Im¬provements have been introduced, for the purp« se of usingthe Mount Neb-j Coal In its ras »tote. It is the opinion ofboth practical and scientific men to whom this coal baabeen fubmitted for examination, that iu component partsare such as to render the success of the experiment entire¬ly certoi l. Tne value of the discovery that mineral coalcan be applied lu its native state to the smelting «f Ironore, can hardly be appreciated. In any event this regionCannot fail rapidly to acquire Importance Iu the presJuc-llon and man ifacture of iron. A company of operativesand capitalists ha- just txen formed, under the generalIi* f this State, for tbe purje-»« Of erecting an extensiveRolling Mill a: this point. Perhaps!: would be difficult tofind any locality We-t of the mountains presenting advaa-tages superior to this for manufacturing operations of.tne kind la que-ti n. Wuh cheap er.ad-aturls, excellentwater, a tempcra"c and salubrious climate, an extensivemarket ImmedUte y contiguous, and a cheap, convenersai.d exped.tious outlet in every direction, it Is not surpris¬ing this Valley has attracted the attention of cafitalists at

a distance. I have it upon good authority that several ofthe most extensive manufacturing firms In the Iron CityBra COntarnplating the establishment of works in this vicin-Ity st an early day. In connection with this subject, I amreminded of a remark recently made ny a gentleman re

siding in a neighb-nng town and we;; known in nationalpolitics.'when be emigrated to the »'e>t, the satire Mis¬sissippi Valley was supplied with Iron trom the JunlattaWork- in Pennsylvania, but n-w. rr.irkli.ee :.;rj.-i 1- «-.

was taken rrota Tennessee, to Pittsburgh for manulacturiugpurposes

'

The canvass for Governor will commence in goodearnest next month. Mr. BtEB. the able and popu¬lar nominee of ihe Whig party, is expected to ad¬dress the people of New Lisbon in the adjoiningCounty in the course of three or four weeks. A

happier aelection could not have been made by tbeWhigs of the Stele fortbe high office of Governor.Simple and unostentatious in maunera.thoroughly sympa-thiiiug with me humblest classes of his fellow ciaaensand yet poeieseimmtell-crual powere and acquirement*of the flrst order, "nothing i* required but peraooal ac¬

quaintance on the part of tbeelectora to give Mr. Bebb a

majority unkoown since tne ever memorable triumph ofthe Wagon Boy in '40. Yours, respectfoiiy.

AMERICANUS.

Another Phenomeno.v.Isaac Hill, who de¬clared that the Democratic Central Committee had no

light to call a State Convenrdou. has been appointed by theSlave Democracy of Concord represent them in thatConvention, in connec'lon with his friends CarroU. Pierce.Treadweli, Eastman and Low. Ift.be Governor has againrepeuted and submitted to the control of the Clique, we

hope be will have the wisdom to wear the yok* with meek¬ness and humility. His spasmodic efforts at rebellion sub¬siding so suddenly into the tamest servility, are reallypainful to witness. [Concord {IS. H.) Fraemac.

3. 1S46.

CUT Items.Deferred.jgp'The Editor of the Evening North American

Lis bestcwed a good deal of pains in sugaring over bis dishof sour cream, which he commends to oex lips, bnt bii netbeen aitogo'.her successful in disguising toe true i'hllsdei-;hia ;»i.>; c:'the 'article.' Wo have truly, divers andsundry reason- ;' r believing that the Fhüadelphiaas desurpass sil creation, and New-York Iteiide. ia the aanafsc-tire of Ice-Cre .a ; but oar confessions are 'ike FaistafTireajoas. and will aot out on compulsion. We mean ts beliberal, however. !n this delicit* matter: and whnn we geto rhiladelphia to receive evidence in the case, we shalltake good care that the cause and cream of the defendantsshall receive strict Justice at our hands. Notking on thissahject shall ever pass our lips that our inmost sense of thefitness of things does no: thoroughly approve; and if thepeople of Philadelphia have the vanilla to believe that theycan beat us In the manufacture of Creara, we shsil on thepriority of Sew-Yort, as the Commercial Emporium, by(lisnosin; of arty quantity cf the article offered.

E*?y The Brooslyn Eaele. after mentionine abeautiful beu,-,uet, v. hich he affects to believe must havebeen made up by ¦ female taste,' says.' Close upon theheels ol this comes another,'Sec. Darbanan A Nm.iaetw-.ih heels would be a pretty figure!

ty Kemoval..'No Chirge until the Hair Is Restored.'The proprietor s uriice for th- application of ¦ Beat's HairR-atorative,' on me above teiras, ts removed to Po. 19 De-lancey-tt. near the Bowery. Depots. Bazaar, 173 Broad-way,'New-York t 2 Mill iL Boston ; 109 N.nthst Phi'ads.-

phia._ Je9 Iwos*

ry "»I tit mil Benefit Lite ItiMurttnee Company,No. II W'all-st..It ts now a year since this Institution com¬menced the business of Life Insurance on the liberal planthen first announced in its prospectus. That the principlestherein contained have met with the approbation of thosewho have sought the advantages which such an Institutionaffords in maaing provision tor a family, needs no othetproof than the statement of the fact that ITOi Policies haveheen Issued, and that premiums n> the amount of S.M.JtjS35 have l*~-n ravceived during that period.The amount of funds receive,! for prem'ums has already

estahllsh-d a large capital, which must rapidly lucrease bythe payments of the second year's premiums, the accruinginterest and the current receipts for new policies. The ac-cumu atlon from ttese sources enables the Directors to ml-Si inelr promises to lay up a reserve fund to meet the Inscreaslce ages Insured.equal to re-lnaufing every life.payall demands for losses, and to divide large profits among theInsured. ..

fy A pril !»tritctnent-Muttial Benefit Life InsuranceCo..Office No. 11 WaU-st..Policies Issued:To Merchant* k Traders..9ö'To SeaCapainsk Mariners. 5

Farmersk Planter*.... 9Inn-Keepers.4Engneera..3Cashi-rs. 4Accountants. 7

ManufacturersMechanics.27Clergymen.Physicians.13Lawyers.6Professors. 2| Clerks.10Teachers.7Editors and Pnnlera... 5Public Officers.7Officers of Navy.S

Student*.3leidlea .2tiGentlemen.5Servants.5

Total.272Policies issued from 1st May, 1845, to Slat March, 1846,

(II months). 1429

Whole number policies 1st year.1701Whole Hmount of premiums first year.81.14.289 25This Company has met with hut two losses, amount¬

ing to seven thousand dollars,ROBT. L. PATTERSON, President.

Bemj. C. Milles, .Secretary.Jos. L. Loan, AgenLJ»s. Stvwart. M. 1". No. rt2l Broadway. myl tf

ry American Institute.-A stated m«eiing of ihlsInstitute um be ue.d at Hie Repository In the Park tbistThursoav) evening at 7} o'clock. A full attendance ts re-

quested."

[J-ll 2,'J H. MEIOS. Ree Sec

ry The Cure without -Medicine..Dr. Christie'sGalvanic Rises anu Maunktic Flcio..Tin* new appil-Cation of the mysterious powers of Oalvantsm and Magnet-Ism 1* attracting Increas-d attenilou lor Its wonderful effi-cacy In ihe cure of Nervoue Disorders.the most paluful andleomu* of tile many diseases to which we are ail subject..Tne simple application of the Rings and Fluid Is sup* reed¬ing the u*eo'lbe«xpensWeBaltenesand tnachines, a* beingmore preferable for their unlrorm cheapness, safety and suc¬cess. Ouly Agency in New-York 182 Bboapwav.A new work on Galvanism hy Dr. A. H. Christie, Just

issued and to be had grails at the agency. uij 18tf sip

IS"" To Ladlen..Mrs. G n E continue* to give »dvteeand directions with reaped to the application of WaterCure in all diseases of women and cbiidren, at her resl-deuce, 261 luta-st._ _.

mj7 Sm

ry for Beaton vta raasrwlcss susd Worcester..The steamer CI«7»-irra. CapL William«, will leave Southside of Pier No 1 Nonn River every atonama, WuLuatUv andFriday, at 5 P. M. counee.Oog with the cars at AUyas'Poiol fmyStfl CALF's PRATT. Jr. Conductor.

ry y. ¦syhervS'ood. C^ooTil.sioDer it Deeds Tor the'Slate* of New-York, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois sud Texas;aiso, Wisconsin and Iowa Territory. Orfice 25 Ptne-sL 2doors EastofColoan lmas» »s stairs. ravJS tf

ry iYIay Statement ..1 u>a Mutual Benefit Life In¬surance Co. No.ll Wall st.Issued during the monthol MayW7 new Policies, vizTo Merchants and Traders PSiTo Brokers.. .3

ManufacturersMechanics..12Clergymen.12Physicians.5Lawyers. 4Teachers. 7Students.4Fditora and Primers., bPul> lcOiticer. iSea Capls. i: Mariners 4Farmers.6No. Llv-s Insured.'.07

R03T L. PATTERSON,President,Benj C. Milles, Secretary.Joslth L. Loan, AgenLJas. m -i art. M. D. Medical Examiner, No. 621 Broad

vav. Je|, Imeod

Sec y of lesurauce Co. 1Bans Tellers.2Civtt Eogtuears.2Agents. 4Bookkeepers. 2Clerks.14Innkeepers. 3Ladtes.1«Gentlemen.5Servant. 1

w

HOT AIR rURNACJä.YVJ*-L,**KJrt*!' Patent Improved Hot Air Furnaces, forW healing Dwellings, Stores, Churches, kc.These Fur¬naces «rill beat economically and ntficleully; the air In theapartments will be pure and healthy, free from dryness, dusorras.Tney are pnl up ander the personal supervision of Mr

A/alker, the Patentee, and have hitherto given entire satis¬faction, and are In all casus warranted to perform well.Reference N. W. Taylor. Esq. Governor New-York Hoe

pttal; Mr Charles Starr, Superintendent do Edward Be-a'dcl. Est). 47 Wall-St; C. D. Rhodes, Esc. 190 Pearl-street.

r. Thomas McElrath, 154 Nassau si; Mr. Oeo. W. Turk-'r 2fK5 Bowery ; Half-Orphan Asylum, fith-avenue ; Mr.Wm P. Chapman, Br,«>kiyn; Mr. W. C. Greene. Zi< Ulh-si.Mr. J h. Ransom, -liuid-at; Chemical Bank, Broadway,Mr. J. h. Asb. Är2 Broadway ; Dr. Alfred Wagsuiff. 27 Wa.erly-plsce; Mr. M. Snow. *ith-sl.

cjF.O '.Vti,KFR.W»»«iiet»

UUlii, ^iKANOOjulili, 4tc.

LAMPS. GIRANDOLES. IIALL LANTERNa, ANTCAN de LAB RAS, for the Spring Trade..DIET/.,

BROTHER it CO., No. 13 Johu-sireet, are manufacturingand have always on band a completeassoruuenlof article* Intheir line, of the following descriptions, which they will »eil». wholesale or retail, at LOW PRICES for-asbImproved Cbenr.cn Oli and Cauiphene Lamps,Sola Lames, Glltand Bronzed, in great varietyCornelius k Co's celehrated Patent Solar Lard Lamps,fltrandoles, various patterns gilt, slivered or' ronzed.Suspending Solars. Doric Camphenr Lamps,Bracket Solars Sldu <du doSolar Chandeilers. Bra. set do doPatent Lard Hand Lamps. Stand do doBritannia Hand Lau.pa. Cauiphene Chandeliers,{superior Chemical Oil. Pure Sperm Oil,

do Camphene, Solar and Lard Oil,do Borelsi F"uld. Refined Whale Oil ml*,*

A K.>I WKATilKK.The un^.essatt cold ar.dn^ weather of .est month woi now undoubtedly he

...llowed by excessive beat, reminding those noialr-adyprovided that o-ey require a Rerngerator to Seep cool and

preserve their f-iod, a P,.tent Ice Freez-r to freez- their cus¬

tards, a Wine Cooler for tie adv, cst-s of -'No License,"h Wsier C.acer for thse who voted in favor of Licenseand lastly, but to bi used firstly every morning, a SnowerBain to ^ooi «nd cleanse ibemseives corporeally. Ail thesearticles may be found in that *u»re ofcool novelile* descrip¬tive of and about which ba* been written a tract, alreadydistributed largely around the housekeeper* of this otn-

maclty Tnese tracts may be bad gratuitous.y ai the suire

No +5 Maiden-lane_J*4ajHEKllAN, ATWATLK. tV CO. Commissiona?? MerchanU, corner Beaver and Broed sis. tffer for sa.e:

2s' loos best New.Jersey biooms50 do Large boiler doISO do Noribe.n do?5 do rlesi refined wire do5<i do J-rs-y b«mrn-r-d, 1 j«2 Inch sqiare

Jisi i.undles Sh-ei IrOS, 12a27.9. A U. Co. wlii purchase »r seit any description of Arne-

rlcan Pig, B.oom, Bar or Bundle Iron, Metals of sn7 <t-scrtpuon, on the mosi reasonable terms, anC advance liber-auv upon all corssignr-est* which may 1. made to th>m

I ^Utl-IBLK INK. for marling on si.a, iloen and col-I ton. with or ss haout preparation, warranted not to btijureor norrode me fi^esi camoric, and for coior and durabilitycainot be surpassed, hold, wholesale and retail, by

FRANCIS Ii LOUFREL. S'adoners,mv2f Im _T7 Maiden-jane

N~MiKTHEKN BAH. 1HON, dkc.-a») ions Nortn-ern flat Iron.lio tubs Northern Fqnare I-on200 d.- New-Jefse) Bi orns, for sale bv

sherman. ATWaTFKJiCO nr Broad Jt Beaver a a

CMITe>S HOMCEOPATHIC Pbawascy, No. 5*iC? broaJiwsy. adjoin,ng Ninio's Tneatre..John T. S.Smlin has a large assortment of Hoin.eopatnlc Medicines,In tinctures, ir.lurauons, dilutions and globules. Sugar ofMux, Pure Aicobol. Distliied Water. PeiieU. stc kc. Phy¬sician*'. Pocket and Family Case* at M-didnss on hand andprepared tu order. Hom<ropatnic Plaster, a suhsttmte forordinary Court and Adhesive Plaster, and an excellent ap¬plication for Corns. m19 If

HALL LANTfcHNS-A variety of pattern* andsizes, macu'actrired and for ssie, wholesale and retail

hy |je6| DiETZ. BROTHER k C" No IS Johr. ,1,

5OLAK l.A Ur'ts.A largeassoruuenlul aoiar Lamp*,ativered. gtil and hronzed. for aa e by

_>ö_DIETZ. BROT HER k CO. No. 13 Jobn-*L

0~IfFICE TO LET wita or without lorJm^the*econd.lory of store lsi West-st. the otSce suitalile for a awaun-

boal or forwarding agent Possession given tmtuedtatelyApply to HOWTXl *> 0«n . rrn. in .>' ,2«

ASI PHKM K.Warranted of the best quality, for aale4 hv ri-fi| myrrz rroth:r t, ro isjohn.st

L'Olt rsALK.Vi5 FH «« r.-Ono lot on ZfiuVst! neara? the Third-*»-iue Apply 10

Je9 Iw BLEECH.ERkVANDYKE.No.il Broad st.

L OR SALE-30rÜ »T.-Oae lot on 30in st. neari the 8i>-avenae Aoplvmje9 lw BLEECKER k VAN DYKE, No 11 Waij-st

woo!) EN«lU7INii.

rCTJCR HORTON k CO. Designer* acdEorrwver* oaWood, No. «uNtsssu-su IT« U

FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR.

WHOLE IVO. 1610.

Potent fiUbirinrs.SANDS'S SABSiFAR.'LlA,

Ml the IIMO'il amd ntXiSIST core Or alldiseases aeisimo rsosi am :vr. «r state orthe slood os HaMIT or the system. tiz

Scrofula rrr King's »vi, Riricatsstuaa. I *.«iaafr iVjvnuX'-ufiijTu. Pimpiesrr Pustules saa hW Pace, BletcAcs, Jwi.CArmK Sott i.yj, Kmg U'or-sa or Tttttr. >Vu_i .W ah-Istrgrrar-u ami Pas» ¦/rAc /S.-wj -» ttcert,Jejs.AAh.rv: .S^ipStmu, .s'rutun »r .' u.^fj «sui iX*ru«ianrrug from a* uywdi .¦.us use e/" Atrrcto .JscaUs »r

DrvfUf. Exposure or I-v-v-isa m Li/r, .1j», CArw»vrC<nutLTU.*unai /XiffrarrA sre

THIS preparation Is ¦ combination hitherto ankown Inthe history of Medicine, differing entirely In '.is eharsc-

:er aso or-rs .: s IVoui various preparations of Sarsa¬parille which hare been at different times offered 10 tbe pub¬lic, ii an* specifically upon the whole sys thcieoybringing ll under tt* direeiand immediate IcSu-cce. Al¬though possessed ofpowerfu! hee.tng effecta, yet Kit en-Ln»l* harmless, so thsili caunoi bjure the moat delicatec (MMMttaa. VV ben In perfect bea. S, no -ffect ts producedby It* use except as increase of »-petite i hut when diseaseta seated in the frame, and ca-rjln,; fast us vuiim along thepath of life, then Its mysterious mil lence ts felt and seen i itenkindle* new ;ife, and vigor. ai.c brtagebealib and tir«uginto the suflertng %¦ d disease,..The propr eiors submit to the public the following certifi¬

cate, fron a highly resp. ctaMe sources of a cure ui.debyusing thai: preparation of Sarsspaii' a

E' iiASSTiipokT. N. J May 15.1346.A. B. A D. Sauds..Gect -tuen. Kvtig been cured of a

severe scrofulous disease bv the ate of yi ur celebrate I andto me mva.uabij Sarsspanlia. I 'e-1 it be an tci umbeul dulyw-hlcb i owe to mil ufleriog el,ow beings to lestlfv to the

c* ofprovidenc:\*Aer nil o.b~. real-die* failed. The disease Srslmeans which restored me to heaiih, uu.-.er tbe b esslr

ppeved tn small ptmpirai or bi sters, which was silencedwith violent ltcbln* and nuruing ; These spreadi )g, coveredthe body, and oattlog toee.her ornieai iarg-j scales andscurf. fr. m which issued water, a-id th» tain cracking aidburning and mallet combined, waking the distress so

great as lo deprive uie < I ail natural rest My oca. > beingcovered wlib a mass of scuif atd scales ad-cted my gen¬eral health, wblch rapidly relied and l was obliged to aban¬don my business, l we* u-ea.ed t<y various physicians andtried i!irJ>renl remedies wtihuUi receivto* any permanentbeueni. I then went into the New-York Hcaplial. and te-tua:oed for fiuneen weeks under l'«etmenl, which pro-dueed temporary redef. Af.er leavjrg the Hospital the) dla-ease returned m a few da}., and. w beu Kiveo up by myfriends and despairing of relief from auv source, 1 heard ofyour Sarsapanlia. aLd lmmedlatelv resolved on gtvtcg It airiaL The firatbottle raiiaved me of allude dlstreaaingsynap-tome, and did me more gocJ lhan all the medicine I hadtaaeu for yeara before. A continuation wf vour Saras parti-la, tn cjmht-atiin with your Salt Rheum" Rkmkdy arpii-ed externally, effectually removed the olsease, restored mnlo health, and 1 am now able to attend to my business.

I would say to all, and particularly lo uiy German coun¬trymen. If you are suffering wr.h scrofula or any diseasesimilar to what 1 have been, use the medicine that has beentried, proved and acsnowledged u> tv» all that la required tobring health lo the debliluted frame. Yours sincerely,

FREDERICK. DICKEL, Cab net MakerThe following testimonial lo ihe value of On, Sarsaparille,

I« trout Iba Rev. Luther Wrtgbl. aged 76 years, Congrega-Uona, Minuter, residing ai W oburn

WoufRM. Mass. March 3Utb, 1846.Mr.ssav Sands.tantieme* From wbal Ibsveexpert-

enced. and from the Information I have recently receivedfrom a numher of per.o"s "f high respectability who haveused your Sars.ipaitl a. I have not me least doubt but lhatIt Is a most valuable medicine, and 'list the numerous certl-fi-ale* you have received of Its erticacy are fully sustainedby experience, and although tls r-puiadon and mtiltv are

v-ry exiei.slve, and stand in no neeu of my burn Me tfforl*to increase then.. I want all who are art):.tied by dlaease lonecome acquainted with the eibcacy and power of yourvaluable tredietne. 1 am, gentlemen, grelefullv and veryrespectfully yours. LL'THER WRiUHT.For farther parilculars and conclusive evidence of Its su¬

perior value and etScacy, see pauipblele, which may be ob¬tained of Agents grails,Prepared and so d by A. B. It D. SANDS, Druggists, IN

PuliousL cor. of William, New-York.Sold aiao at .'i Broadway aud 77 East Broadway, and by

Druggists generally throughout the United Staiea.Price 8i per bottle. Six bottles for rive dollars,ry The public are respectfu. y requested to remember

that It Is Sands's Sarsaparilia that has been and Is cona'anllyachieving auch remarkable cm es ol the most airhcuii classof dlse'se* to which ihe tinman irame Is su"Jeci; ihereforeask for Sanda's baraaparbb.. fiid Ute no oiner.N. B. To the poor II Is fre-iy given, on their bringing a

cor Ideale of c-ed from ihe Minister. Aldei Jisxi or Jusilreof Ihe Peace. wh«re ih-y resloe _Je>* Im

CONSTIPATION ,OOSXIVJCNESS)DESTROYED withi.uih MeaJleines. Iojeetlooaoe Uath».

Discovery recently made tn Fisuce by Mr. Wsriou..Price 90 cents.The fifth English editloL, translaud from ihe S3d French

edition of the exposition of a natural, altuple, sgreesble andInfallible means, (receully discovered tu France.) not uolyof overcom lug. but also of completely ueslroytug obstinate,lnveterata, aud habitual constipation, without using eitherpurgauves, injections, or baths; followttd by a graalnumber of authentic document* from eminent physiciansaud other person* of distinction, cnitlfying the coru-

plete etricacy of die mean*. Sold ai the National Depot ofWarum of Part*; No. 1ft WuJiam-M., botwoen FnllouandAon als. and also of Mr. John .V lll.au, 1RD Broadway; Mr.C. U. Ring, comer John-ai. aud Broadway; Messrs. Wyaitit Kelcbaui, !£. Kui-ou-sL *ud tn Kiookiyu of Or CbarUs*Stan*. No. 184 Ful.on st. ruyis gawlniFrkTu

BAILEY'S SAHSAPAB1LLA.r\STABLl>H'ell> IN 1-3-1 Thi»rrraparairem of Sar*a:dT-j parlOa baa been 12 yeara before ita. public, and from Usaupunor merits, ha* gslaed for Ilse.i « high reputation as a

remedial agent; Is 'avor..b:y regarded by ihe medical fraler-ally generally, mo.I prescribed by IbeOS in their pracUce ; la

id very high repi.ie in the Cniteal Stales Navy and Army:It has always received their patronage and approval, audfor all the purpose* for which Sarasparllla la used this pre¬paration of Sar.aparllla .lands unrivaled. It possessesdouble the strength of any other Sarsaparille In u»e; Oeingprepared in a regular scienlih: manner, may properly beregarded a* ihe triumph of science over q'ir.raery. Thefollowing uro my wholesale Asrenls In New York city

WYATT i KETCHAM.HAYDOCK. CORL1ES A CO.M WAKD.

For said al relad by Messrs Wyait It Keicbam, and thedru/eisU g«. e a ¦¦. '.uroughoul inu United Stales; and of

WM. U AI Lr. i'. Proprietor, Brooalyn.N. Y.Price 6a slngie, $7 ru per dox jo Im'^awMliK*

GrHEEN MOUNTAINvtiOEI ASLK OlMTMEMT.

AMONO ibedl.ea.es lo wnlch this important OhabMOt I*adapted are the following Sore Th.-oai, Broocbllta,

Olandular Swellings, Er>stpeia« Sbtngies, Felons, Ring¬worms, bait Rhoum, Swelled and Broken Ureasts, Sore Nip-

S'.e», Fever Sore* Mllkleg Sores, Kheuuiallaui, Ooui, In¬animation of the Eyes, Inflammation of ihe Bowels, Piles,Scro uious Sores, Burns, Scaids, Bruises, and trash cutWounds.Powerful and pervading as this Ointment is, addressing

itself lo so many and so formidable diseases, Ii I* ou.y to ¦»

applied agreeah.e to dtrccll >ua to satisfy the m«j< tcrupn-tests lhat It Is an Important remedy for all the purpose* set

form. The obvious rea.on of lit power and edicacy in »s»

many and to formidable dlaease» I«, In Us sovereign poleneylo reduce and subdue I d immailon, which ts tbe exciUugand permanel cause. This removed, tDe funclloua of uatureresume a beailby action, a..<! a a,.ee>ly cure 1* the resultThis Ulnlineulla purely vegetable,and ai.hough poweiful,

yei mild in it* operatii.na commencing a soothing influencewherever applied. It may be administered with perfectsafety lu any stage of health, from the Infant lo the most

aged person. It will retain Ita etSeacy in aii climate*, andany pe'lod ofil'iieULiinpalred. Every fault y and the crewsof amps should be furnished wiin this OintmentOood. competent and responsible ageuls are wanted for

each and every Su e in ihe L'nton, lo whom liberal term*

will becivett. None need apply without ihe in >*i satisfac¬tory references.

All applications for agetclea or the Oln fuent may 1^ ad¬dressed lo tue sutiscrl-er. at 'heir depot. No 3a Coriland-sl,New. York. ARMSfrlOM« V rilRI) in ¦ ,o lme.>d-

CHART'S AM Bn EIN E 0H£AM.

THIS SUPERIOR COM POL NU is prepared expresslyfor die use of ihe ladies, and 1* designed beauufy Lbe

sk n and give a clear complexion. Il glveq verv ,«u-»rtu sattst».:tlo:i tn Boston, Loweii, Providence and manyother Eastern elites. And ibe proprietor has been greatlyencouraged by the Increasing demand for ihe article Inmany oilier section* of the Country where It bax beam butrecenliy tniroduced.

It is used lu washing. 1. umSsderod very re r-sfilng andita fragrance very delightful, leaving u.e skin soft andsmooth.Tue Arnbre'.n« Cream la confidently offered to dealers In

fancy goods throughout the city. D'ugguuj are particularlyinvite 1 lo give lla tilal.

S^iid at wholesale by Um Manafactarer. N. A Crary, 140Merrunack-sL Boaton. WM A. CROCKER It CO.

Whole.ale Agents, V7 John sl New-York.CRARY'S AMBREINE S.MP. a superior article for

shavtr.g. is recommended lo the attention of gentlemen, andIs mat u'acuirad aud sold a* above.Naw-York. Msy 2<>ih. .Ht6 my20 Imeod*

FOR THE PILES.

DR. L'PHAM S ELECTCARY-An Internal remedy, la.eertam care for tbe Pil««. hiternal or external, bleeding

or blind. Sold at 121 Full ,n-sL 8 I)tvl*loo-at. and by the Pro¬prietor, a regularly educated Pby«iclaa of twenly yeara' ax-oeneuce, conSnerl us an otiicn pracl.ee, where Plie* and allChronic dlseaae* are t ; -a-e.i Medlr.ai OtEc*

TR1BDNE JOB PRINTING. OFFICE.No. 7 BraccE-strcet.f Three dnom from Satsau-street.)

THE factliüeaoftbUe*ulili*bmeni for JOB PRINTINGare, perhaps, uosurpaaaed by any office in the city The

patronage of ihe last year has been such as lo guarimtne aneat exieoaioti in our resources. We therefore, with con¬fidence, issae me fol.owiog CardTO MERCHANTS..Merchants supplied with ah tunas

of PR1NTIN0 at ibei cheapest rale, vuCards, Bills Lading,Circulars, Receipts,Bill Heads, c.~Ur

To LiteraRV Okmtlemejt.. (engvnal Manuscripts prtnteed with accuracy.

Pamphleu, Stareoiype Work, and all kinds ofBooks. letter Press Printing.

To Lecturers and Musicians..progmnmtz neauUfuilyprinted.

Lecture Bills, Small Bills for Distrl-Manmolk HdU, buuon, Ac

And -very ie»crtption of Plata and '*nuo»rntal M Work,execuied with great uearnest and punciuailiy, at the Othce,No. 7 Spruee-*LThe Improved POWER PRESSHS. for Booxs. Psat-

fHLET3, acAil work on the abora ?res»o* wild be done at extraordi¬

nary low pricea. J A. FRAKTAS,J12 tf Tiihooe Job Printer,

F*KE«JH AKAH I A> MATES.A few trail* verysuperior dates, for .ale by_ ,_

mySft r.tSNVft k YOIfNG.l'gCr!«th«m-«t

of Rodger.'. Penknivea.for sale «^8"1a?"^^Ishmeet of* |m-,gS| JANSEN' tt BELL. Ig Nas»ao-.t

500 BoxwiXIc^rÄrr0NWVV,r^ No. K3 Broad-**mvU

aaiTKAW WKAPPI.NO PAPEiC-SiOO re«a*.-

^r^T^^T^m^ * B.rllug^p.

S TaiB V» aT-Ac Iron open Nialrcajse. LS*'.J aewJCTft ^.l<«r.iWPlr*ai_»2*

BNORAVBR.

JOHN HORTON, Udalorlcal aud Writing engraver.No. SO Massen sl j.-9L

ßiiiiaiiniw, «Sc Oanud.

W;

\v"a>TKD.A «Itnadoo *y ¦ Young Woman wlih goodtt reference, as chambermaid and waiter, or at child'saarse or to do general Sousewora. No objection to thecountry. Apply at 269 Sixteentn-st lc tbe rear, betwaen9lh end IOth avenue*.__>ll 3»*

aiTANTBD.By a respectable Young W»msn. asiwsv»y Uoa a« chambermaid or waller, or aa corae and learc-

(tress. No obtecuoo to going In the country. The beta ofCtrl reference "can be given aa to character, sobriety aadability. Persons wishing to call may inquire at Sri Oliver*!.Jell 2l*_W4NTKU-Families supplied whb the t> st of S»r-

ranis for city and country at 4S8 S'osdway. ftoCba'ge toempjojrer*._JH 1 $**

' ANTKO.St nation* by two respectable Young Wo¬men ibe one to do ccuusberwork and fine woabtag

and ironing, or no obj-cuon to do tbe genera, bousewoiala a small fatally. To* other as sur»e, aad Is willing to goto the country. Good city reference given from the 'a*tplace where tney nved. Apply at No 19 Second-11 J-112r*\V AMTKU.Situation* by 3 nice Gin* Torn Cst-ada,tt with few acq-iaintance* here.cancook, wash and tn>o,or chamoerwora and waiting. Pie*** tr quire at No. 4.SjBroad w»y._jell ft*a YoL'Nt» WO.UAN wtsfe* a situation aa .suede**,Aot to so chambsrwork, washing and ironing. She wellunderstand* ber worS, and can give the heat of referee co..Please call at 37 Tbtneeotb-*! tx-oed floor._jell tt*

ANTED.A »ttuaiion u> cool. wa»h aad Iron, orto do hjusework ia a small family. Good city rafar-

encegtven. Ca.l at SI Muherry-sl ba*emecl jelt It*

\*' A> CKD..FsariüWs are supptlssd wim good atCSSSS" tic*, with g^od references, lor city and country, at 234Gra"d *t n«ar Bowery. ltllSl*

VL'A>TKD.8y a very aireGir. a piaCe a* chamber" maid and lurse. Alto bet toother wants to learn tbeeareen'er'* trade or grocery business. Apply 43 Wület-st.jein 3t«_

\TL'ANTfcD-.* Protestant \V.«nac as cban.berit.sto andtt waiter.awch ocij at can produce g -od re-corrtne-uda-ii<nr-ay apply at No. 54 Fourth-evenee, Sd do r aVive

'.fob-*'-_jell S *

\Y'A>Tl.V; PUCK* tt 139 dots.rv a gotal **-vv lorUneat of select Serv^is, none but grreufcoteawith rut recomuieedaUoria. telOS.*\\J ANTED.At 1.-3 Hudeonatcear C»u:, er-iployo^eot" for firttra'e cooXi. curses, chaaioertuald*, walltua fcc.Je9 ttn-_

tMitl.M 11 MKMt WANTKD-A axgte F euchWoman to act a* narse and seamstress la a private

family, apply al S-1 P.uo an J«3 ylVA>TKO-$i>,000. ou bond and moit|r*ge, on two" three alory oru-a bJuse*. and lot* lu lae.tu West TMr-leenia-»l netr the Aih avenue, at 7 per cent Apply to

ANTHONY j. BLEECKER. Auctioneer.leSlwNo 7 Broad St.

waNTK O .Fa-ntlie* In want of Servant*, to apply toP. HILL, 44S Bro-tdway, corner Brooipe-tl, where

tbey can he lultea and no charge mviS lm*

WAMTJtU. a lew ncuve Touug i'ea lo go SouiO orWest, to act as A;enls for the sale of aew and popu¬

lar Pubdrauona.J3<\> over and asasve their expense* will.>e Insured to diem m wrlltag, with an opportunity ol clear-lug 8l.< oo per year. Some men now In our employ wtH, nodoubt, make over t)l,t>u per veer clear of all expense- Eachratal will have hi* district It will he necessary for them tohave at least from S _s ui $v to otilalo a good fittlpg oat.Apply at FRENCH S Pub.Wbtng Hall, 29, Broadway, upelaira, OtSce of ike Flag of out Lulou. All letters must bep.ist paid._myt4 lm*Vl/ANTKU.At MlllvUia, Hu s«veuty-Qve men or. v girl* that are «urtictectly acqualuted with the an of

westviug, that tbey tan readt.y turn Ibelr hand to weavingfancy ca»*tinerea on power lc uns; also, twenty Jack (pin¬ner*; also, help to work in a woolen car-1 room. The strovedescribed help '.* wanted Imtcedtalely. and such a* are strict¬ly temperate and Industrious will Hud siessly employmentat liberal wages by applying to the subscriber at Mluvtlle.

idWtf_C. U HARPING.

DIAMOND HUH r.l.kT I.OMT.- On Tuesday«veuing, 9.h tust., hetween L'uton-place and Cllntcav

place, Eei|(h-b-at (orubab.y lu S.h-sl In going f-uin cart lag*to b -.sei a Dlamund Bracelet The 6: der will b .suitablyrewarded by leaving It al 231 ülnth near Pifltvaveoua.Jell 3i*

_

C'^ll KkWAK1*.. -Lust, a Lady * Gold WauA,V'-'" brother* Molly, maker. No. 673d Toe above re¬ward will he paid on delivery of the watch, lo good order,st No a KWrv st and no qoesttons asked. J»li'3f

jtioaröins and tiotrie.

MK8. CUITTKNDKN'N private boirdtcg-hoase,222 Gr«ene-at near the Washing - .i Pirads, where

Iwu or three gent'emen with their wives, or a few sieglegentlemen, can And coiufortab'e apartment*, either fUrcUb-ei or unfunl-h d.w lib board. jeliif!>UAttU AT IM» KUOD.tltl.-a-r.-A slugie »eB-I ' tleuiaucan henccomuiedsied wtih a pleasant room sndgoial B isrd, 10 a privaie family, by applying ss shove Re¬ference rtq-itre I. Je9 lw"

B~OAUD DOWN TOWN.-Two or Three plestsnlmi m<, wnli psatile* atiaciW, to !et, aliber fitrblsbed

or ': v - ish> d. wltii hoard, to gi-ntlrmeu and ihelr wlvs* or.Ingle geutlmien, <-n rra*on*h;e term*, ut No. 17 Bee*mau¬st, near Nauau. One 01 two day boarder* will al*u be ac-cointuodated by applying aa above. Reference rrqulred,

Sic._ Jelll IUI*\ lfcW genieei boarder* can be accommodated wlm*\pleasant r.Himsat 99 Ciambers-tt }-9 lm** KKW GBNTLBMEN raube accommixlaied wlüi<>, luiard, bieakfasl and tea, dluuar on the Sab' a.b. al SBFast Broadway. JnH lw*

PUlVA i t. MOAKDlrsU.-Two large chamber* 00me sucuuu door, wl,b eiOSSti attached, to a pie***- t lo¬

cation, can be had by sln*l» eerV-a.r., .... »luioulbreakfast and lea. ny applying »t No 2 Se'coad-st Je6 Tt*

\ U KNTCkMA .*4 AND MIH WII'K. and '.ss 0 ur. (»a«d, *H psstsMU

,., ... r,rV ',el »*r»

V_- Jrtft*Saaditb» .*sasMssts user Mittut In BÄrJ.w'ay, No. 25, corner of Morrls-st Is now completed andwill tie opened on the first of June next. No pain* havebeon spared tt) reuder tt one of the most comfortable ta ümdty and persons desirous of a pertnaneot home, as w«)l asstrangers merely passing by will find all their wants andcoupons attended to wlik the moat strtot attention.my at l.St_BISAKDIN(its.A beautlfai Room for a gentleman and

wife, and a few other* for traaslent hoarders, may behad at Mr*. Swsi.t's.d) Murray-st between Broadway andSleamra.at Landlrirfs. North River. m7'13m

BISAK.D Ina Private k'amlly..Two or three gnullemesmay ublalu lioard, wllb pleasant lodging rooms, at 10Ü

Bayard-*t_uiylU tfc

Hi 1 \ H I) N0 at 10 Barciay-at-Two o~lh7w~g7n7irvmen can be well a«;comino<laled with hoard rind *epa

rate apartment*. If required ; also apartments suitable forgent einen and Ibelr wire*. Moat respectable reference*given and required. my'.; lm*

»WH I.OK and Bed-room, wldi pantry attached, to let,unfurnished, without hoard, lo one or two (Ingle gentle).

dornen. Tim apartments are pleasantly located In a modernbuilt bouse, In the Immediate netgbhorhood of the Park.Anniv ai rt CtW Hal' Pls.-e si' tt

inioccliont'OHo.

i

Orricc or ths Daiwut and Hupsom Csisal Co. ;New-York. June I, "46. J

THE Board of Managera of this Company ha»e declareda semi-annual dividend of Right per cert out of the

Proiiis of me Company, payable uo and aflar Monday, theUih Instant.The t'Nuafer-book will remain classd from tbla dato to

die morning of the 8th ins.antHo ders of the jfcnjr St'Kk are particularly rsc/iestad lo

'-turn their Certtficaies, lu order that new one* may beissued lu their place. By ordet of the Board,je I tu_ISaAC N SF.YMOUR. Treamrer.

NKW-VOHK and Brie Rail Road Company.TheSlocaholdera of the NoW-Y ut and Erle H-.ll Road C.ud-

panv are hereby notified that an Instaimenl of tun dollarsper stv.re -n a stoek on which lb.- payments a r.-H.iy madedo not exceed teu dollar* per (hare, Is required to lie paidat me office of ibe Compauy, No. 46 Wali-*t. on or beforeire l&lh day "f JuceneitTnose Ste-khoH- » who have paid more than ten and les*

than twenty dollar* pet «hare, are required to make up the.urn ef twenty dollar* per share as above.

By order of tbe Board of Director*.NaTHANIEL MARSH. B-c'y.

N-w.V irk. May 14. IMS._ my IS MIS.ilUHAWK AND HUDSON RAILRAOD COMPANY.' I -Tii- Annual Elecuou for Directors of this Company'111 be held st tbe otfee of Rawdoc It Oroesheck. No. 44Vail-st New-Yorl, on the second Wednesday (l''th day)f Jane next, at 12 o'clock al noon of that day. The pou

./111 coniUiun open one hour. Albany, May 4ib, 1840. Byirder of the Board of Directors.mylBtd_K FOSTER. Jr. Hee'y.

fj<AOL£ ilAUUOK IMINING Company.-Notlcastis hereby given thai an a**e**mect of one dollar on eaeb

share of the capital stock of tiie Eagle Harbor MiningC mpany. la due and payable on th- 26:n of June, it46, atme office of the Treasurer. SAM'L COIT, Treasurer.

D.-ir.iit. Mav2ß. IH46. Je2tjesY>eTO HAT MANUFAOTOREfiS.

8AXONY HAT BOUIEd, equal 10 any In the world, ata raducUon of 5U per cent from market price*..The

-jscrtoer, agent for the manufsveturen, offers for sale Sax¬ony Hat Btsdies, equal 10 any lo ibe market, at V) per centbeiow usual price* and earnestly IuvIum all dealers and man¬ufacturers U) call al I6<! Broadway and not only examine- huttry tne article before purchasing With entire conadeocs)do the manufacturer* offer their Bodies, feeling ibe utmostassurance that iney are a superior article and will give full*atl*f*c.uon. A liberal discount to dealer* and large menu-«ctur-rs. J B VAIL. Awertt. 1»'Broaiway my3l lm"

PI 4i IKON-.x tons No. 1 Oar tat.« rue Pig Iron nowlanding and for aale byjell_CASS. WARD k CONOVER. 69 Broad-sn

T T LMTKR AND POM FT«N IKON .Tbe ULler*J Iron Works, 8aagerue*.N Y. and ibe Posiptou IronWork», Pompton, N.J. are In full opentloa. Ord-rilorround, square, fist, b»od, scroll and hoop Iroo, will bepromptly execuued 00 application to .

"ItJOSKPff TfTKt'RMAN.^ West-tt

isit. IWOra-lUVI .r.. .iieuuon" no 1 IT«unor, Irorl|X -Odo F'irge Pig fron; Mdo" Poit Hsory' No. Foun¬

dry Iron. For sale by_.«.obuoj Mor-u/en JOSF.PH TLCKKRMAN.63 West-st.

C10AJL FOB SA 1.K-A large quantity of diesmal andy r«* Co*l cheap, sultanle for steam purpose*. Also, all

.ixe. oVeH'fa Orchard si these low price* ; i.roaen and eggino^vrvT*- vf.n«.and.l-ve *A 33. greened and debvereirr^ 0r King and Oreenwhich st*.

X"*- PUTER CT.INTOW-

t llflTsVBK B4THH-For sale at u.e low price of 40

tS'renis and uowerd*. also a supnly o0 hand of »eongingh.üi !. n batb.'. foot tub*, scd isrge rstthlng tola. Don-»w's n..w Pateatlron Purr rs, lead pipe. lie. kc for salsUssrVrföm*San) wu WEST. I3S Hadisn »t

a CCOL'NT BO«K"*.Marufactared and sold at veryA low price* bv Fraoc:» k L-jutrel, 77 Msldeo-lane..a^so ever/ deacrtp'tion of Paper and Slaiieneiy. PrlBtlnf,Rnlirg and Hin.Hnge»-ruutd *t 'he lowest rt es. Jet lm

S~ FlItlT <sA"»..i"oi>is.nssjiqiisuiiy Spirn Gas,for sale-,T or:iT7. BROTHER k CO No W Jobs-st m2>

jlhHICAN PATnNT V1CK3,corner Broad andBesver..Sherman, Alwater k Co. Agents for the Pa¬

tentee, offer for sslo a superior article of American Tires,assorted pao.-rr.* and sixes. _jel

THO.nP*aON*f4 PKK.IHl'Jl TUt'frt,>old by J. R. Benjamin, 13 Beeamvan-et Is thelest the world afford*. Pressure graduatedfrom 1 to So lbs. without aback pad. wedeb does

so moeh lajory to Ute spine, dtx day* trial erven and If coperfss-tiv satisfaetorv. money ssenmed.m5 if

Otts ULl,let*V TKt'»f»XSS andsVel»-^Ical Supporters.Orfice Nor 4 Vsarsy-st. AS-torTJouse.Manyper«oo» haveundesiaken 1°veaidtrni-

tatlods of EfllF* ceiefcratett Trusses. aodJhoJ-sands are impoestd apoo In coosetraejoo*. a^SSSPSSS.cannot be reded upon; tbey are made ttyonsklllfeJ^^J*nie*, and are co Oetiar than tha erdlnary Trusses, sww