The New York Herald Newspaper, May 23, 1843, Page 1

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. THE NEW YORK HERALD. Wels 1x—-te, 140 -——wnete Bias 80035 NEW YORK, TUESDAY MORNIN » MAY 23, 1843. Price Two Cents, To the Public. EXCHANGE HOTEL, BALTIMORE. The Great Newspaper War between Ku- | gure” against the President of the United Statesfor | prove, and the honest never stoop to notice—the | ergn Quarterly Review !” Other artifices are adopt- THE NEW YORK HERALD—daily newspaper—pub- rope and America, the disgrace of connecting the government at Was! most gross and filthy calumny, Every way charac- ed of course, tothe basest of which we have al- lished every day of the year exeept New Year's day and [From the London Qusrterly Review } ington with the infamy of the *New York Herald,” | teristic was its tone and spirit, of the only man out ready adverted. The most natural and the most amusing we will now detail. {t is very t have to remind the reader of the well knows oreo pensity of delinquents of all times and county: ie k ‘ ‘ isthe reviewer's closing subject of remark. ‘*Gov- | of two hemispheres who, it is to be hoped, could a Ae TS ote Dee ae ernor Tyler,” he coolly mena “would probably | have been found to write it It was an article in bruary, 1842 3 z explain by stating that it was his duty notto give the | which nothing was wanting to the perfect selt-com- Fourth of July. Price 2 cents per copy—or $7 296 per an: num—postages paid—cash in advance. THE WEEKLY HERALD—publishedevery Saturday ies 4 advertisements to papers which had only a compa: | placency wnich waits upon the consciousness of a | when detected in some common and notorious vi morning—price 6} cents per copy, or 8 12 per anntm— % Jas Aen entes on Europe, ot les Européens aux } vative small circulation,” and the matter is then fin- | perfect infamy. ‘The mun quoted the account we lany, to catch at that draperate chance of escape postages paid—cash in advance. in the United States. by Philarote eels: coue | tly dismissed in these extremely “knowing” para- had given of himself, asa mere matter of course | which seems to them always, by some universal ulation of des Deux Mondes, February, 1843) P 1843. | staphs:— It is said of the criminal, that in confessing the | process of no-reasoning, to be implied in the treach- ADVERTISERS aro informed that the circ Nig pear aay meg gs ¥, > aris ih “ But admitting that the real object wasthat of a simple | greatest offence, he gives himself credit tor his can- | erous turning round on their associates. There is, the Herald is over THIRTY THOUSAND, and increasing : ease 5 Souwrnire d'un Voyageat. (O00 ho we mn voi nttacnt of the | dor. Youand he seem to have come to an amica- | happily for the virtuous, no confidence, no frien Tone Si wt cm a still marvel at the H United States : Recollections of a Travellir.) Par erly,” sealng thet the practice is one | ble understanding on his character at last M_ Isidore Lowenstern. Paris ani Leipsic. 1842. | “F° 7 men inthe city or country. Prices THis house having undergone many impcrtant alterations on, i 5 40 innocent to suppose that the morning and evening | tract one specialcomment on one of the statements vance. J and thorouch repairs. having been io part refurnished with We have reason to be satisfied with the effect of } paperé which are known as ministerial journals sapport | jy our ‘Review,’ to which any thing like a special PRINTING ofall kinds, executed at the most moderate | ‘ich aud elegant furufture, is again open forthe reception of | our article of last October, on the Newspapers of | ‘he government of the day only from motives of the purest | Geninlig given. . A atriotivm, and that in returi this devotedness there ‘ Prices, and in the most elegant style. too well known to require a de- theckinttact ee, eee eeeny pipe the rane paar Peneconal erationsin the ial early and exclu “« We quote gain from this infamous review. § shipin crime. Thus, in the case betore us, it has been sought to make the ‘* New York Herald” the sole luckless scapegoat. “ It is notorious,” says the “Journal of Commerce,” “that the “ Herald” was established among us after the model of the London press.” (Oh! excellent “ Westminster” reviewer, whata prize you will be to your worthy associates!) “Foreign Q ast. [thas the largest circulation of any paper in this city or the werld, and is therefore, the best channel for busines, NNE' . Itis comfeased to be, for peor D n it ry ict aman in America, unless he happens to be And now they have the impudence to come out JANES GORDON BENNETT, eas OF I ove of the moat favorable of any in the city | plimented with that calm indiflerence and philoso- | ‘nodes of payment for ther deecerc oe Oe tangible | grace by no means a necessary prelude to hia pun | and disown their own bantling, We have frequent- Paornieton oy THe Hesaup Estas.isHurnt, The present ‘proprietor inten's that care aud indnst h hich 4 cree payment for this devotedness avo, fe by Pee er charentar, Llwthoughs.” : : , Fal ani py not be wanting to unurove its natural sdvantages, unde P ic contempt, which were lavished by Sheridan’s We have given this outline of the defence of the | i#hment. A murderer, whether of life, or of character, | /y thought,” adds this cautious and considerate jour- th west corner of Fulton and Nassau a rintendanee, and he respect(ully solicits the patronage of his | hero on the villainous, licentious, abominable, in- | american press and. its upholders. by thei herds without which life is worthless, has infinite chances if he | nal, “that the influence of that violent and abusive role eter tener aca e eRasTus coveman, | (ermal Review, that had been written upon him. In oNneutea” etamee Agee aad ti ge tid has awhite face? « ith the fatlest endorse: | P2PEF Amongst us was exaggerated: that is, sup. peat throe ‘Dwelling Ho loath 7th | Baltimore, April 20, 1843. 23 rods gther quarters, it has been met with guarded | throughout the course of our present article, it will | ment or trath and honor that any person, ever tock from | Posing it was not full of obscenities, tor which un- doubts, with well meant remonstrance, with timid x x NGER, 3 ally pomeaneons Ane questionings, and with agreement 786. —% sarge | community, chat eeps that large oui inati f houses on the coruer of 8th street and 8d avenue; either . ei, situate uf the corner of 1 ee eee trae recaiane of them is caleulated for a public house, grocery or pri ‘opposite the Town Hall, in the Bor red. “in all 1¢has invelved o| Yate residence. ¢ premises is afine stable, bowling alley, | ough wf Pousville, which has beea thovughly repaired and ma- | HECessity, more or less, a discussion of the nuisance aad « fine garden, consisting of 8 ots, with grape vines | tenially tmoroved for she accommo ation of visitor. The ho, | it exposed. trees thereon. For terms, inguire of tel is forty feet frrnt on Centre street. H i A OHN A. MORRILL, Esq. irty eight feet frout on Callowhill, thre Thisis the main advantage. And for this we re- No. 11 Chambe: provided with parlors, sitting roo! turn to a subject, only more important than hateful, and large airy chambers—'he most spacious, since it forces us, whatever the tone we adopt, to admit at any rate the continued existence of a 1 Howse at | Bloomin tement dining rors in the country—a new aud super establishment—and every convenience and comfort to rend = zal one Sul er’s Bay, and nearly Tesirable hotel. rene" | power, enormeus in proportion to the absence of is Inge and well constracted,and | every quality which inspires respect. Power, happily readers may be found every where.” In other words, the repudiation might rum thus: Our violent and abusive associate would really, after all, get no more by his violence and abuse than we do; but he isso peculiarly admirable in the obscene line, which every body is unhappily inclined to,that there, we must admit, he carries the day. We sym- pathize with the journalist of Commerce in his con- teased inability, that way, to compete with his more successful rival, and we will add to kia credit, that we cannot say we have ever observed himeven make the attempt. Indeed, this ‘‘ Journal of Com- story ‘near 4th at., rentvery low Apply toW & J T Tap- WCHANGE HOTEL, POTTSVILLE, ? Peck slip. m T-0e E SEITZINGER, respectfully announces be instructive to keep in view. The writers’s pur- | the United States ; and of course, the reader pose cannot be mistaken. It is to involve in the | reign Quarterly Review” cannot doubt the faithfulness of same disgrace the most respectable of the Tory | ‘his picture. What say his New York friends to its journals of the metropolis, and the literature we for. | ‘ruts ? i merly clagsed as but part of its social dregs and mo- We will teli the editor of the “ Courier and En- ralfilth. Itis to convey the impression that the “mo- | quirer” what his friends say to its truth, which may ral tone” of the “Times” and the ‘ Standard” is in | possibly be more sausfactory to him. All the world point of fact on no higher level than that of twoscan- lessaae the account of the attempted rebellion on dalous journals still existing, and two still worse, } board the “‘ Somers” American brig of war, com- which are extinct. The last two are not named, but | manded by Captain Alexander Slide!l Mackenzie, proceedings at police offices have forced their names | the “ Young American,” whose “ Year in Spain’ tip all respects a moat epee euperintended by experienced and attentive hostiers. Horses | founded on the junction of literary incompetency, on respectable men, and we understand the review- | made ‘9 very favorable impression in this country merce” is on the whole a very dull, and (as far as neh ne Moon taxes pase and repass the gate every beans mi be nad at any time to convey persons toany | ith moral indecency, and terivihe ite inedne of Loe Cle tre It aks AT is notthe fact. mie sone shoes Tima seach It ea slleares to Rasaibern any thing of the genus “newspaper” can fe yc OP cae Cilio: ta Kecordance with the present state ofthe | An omnibus runs from this hotel dealy, to and f-om the depot | support from nothing save scandal, slander, wretch- | Were "8. newspapers.” They were prints of the } headed by a midshipman of the na ve * | rica) a very harmless journal—one, for example, as Oo ae gr to meet the cars, fer the wecommodation of persons travelling | ed ribaldry, and ruffianly abuse, is the humiliating lowest price, uastamped, indecently illustrated, and | nineteen years of age, with whom were said tohave itnaively confessed on the 10th of January last, 4 giy.on the premison, or at 132 Chambers street ee befor tea ek P Re for omnibus fare to this hotel. antagonist against which we enter the field. You | “led with the sayings and doings of shameless and | been directly implicated two of the common sea- | who “cannot see the * Courier’s’ wit in tellin, our. abandoned profligates Why dacs the Westminister | men. It was revealed as madly as it seems to have a factory tenant, to 1eta part of iture now in the house WADAWANUCK HOUSE, cannot afford, with justice to allthatis at stake, to RAGEOUS LIES chee in the face of public know- he v cb! Reviewer thus reckless y class these toul publica- | been planned, and a sort of vague jsuspicion of the eh retin raraciofie hose Wil MePeMLCMET umes | cpu shor, Hoth Totes HE oF Nien ity and | withthe sume contetap the tances wher sett | Gans withthe grea! body of English newspapers | probable’ co-dyeration of ‘several of the erew was | (tor ici It hay mot fallen iat thin ft of aager ET—The fire proof brick store, No. 165 south seventy thoussad dollars, aud furnished io a style o t sur | him, and of whose blind lusts and ignorance hisin. | “HY does he leave his readers to imagine that such | founded on the discovery of a paper which was sf- | against ourselves. But now for the wir of the “Cou- ("a st, with immediate possraston if required, Wy 18 passed by ko miler establihment mn this country,isnowepen | FitAce is composed, You may lente xyes ‘and | Journals as the “Times” had countenanced or in | terwards described by Captain Mackenzie, in the | rio, 1 er Seath street. | The how : niiage, over: | trample under foot a single number of the ‘New | 2tY Way suffered to appear in their columns, the in, | exculpatory narrative he submitted to the authrities. | "Tie cries out, too, of couree, and in far louder vy id obs York Herald,’ or the ‘New York Courier and En- famous slanders of which he makesspecial mention? | in these curious terms :—‘‘ On this paper strange E—A three siory modern . 4 i quirer,’ but at that very instant, there are tens of Why, with the stamp returns at hand, does he talk | characters were written, which proved to be Greek, wi h two lows of | TV. cam wo tone,the precious “Tu Quoque” argument. “Pooh!” pumerous islan exclaims the wit, in his least indecent mood and Williamsburg, about H é of the extensive circulation of papers, of which the | with which Mr. Spencer was familiar. {t fortu fs H “ ise | be rnd ved its bi id . thou di _- ‘ papers, 0 hich the Y ane “the ‘§ a oc ApOlY gh te prem | Pht, Ueuabtwhaient erlove suvetor advantaces for bathing, | Nal earl Teta iat Fea eter of either jour- | miserable sale is ax notorious as the miserable and | nately happened that another midshipman was on | {hrse, the American press compared with the En ¢ tT TAPBCOTT: + | having io the house bot and cold salt aud fresh water baths, aud > LJ never isaction which | mean contents? Because he is defending the Amer- | board who understood Greek—one whose Greek, as | + 13 48 & Vhestertiels fo a Vodbetu’ he ar ies a A Pet st at a few re stance, belonginx to the hotel there isa ba hing large classed Gh men will never cease to take, in the ict: Prese: well as every thing else he possessed, were wholly pene become natural to lar lasses in America. ws orse for sea bath with alarge swimming b th fe ite: ratification of their i i it - s 5 A bd e J. Jory Grove Farm sitaeted in the town of Mamoroneck, Autached to the hotel there is ail iard | 0h, Need y rf articles of the same number of the ‘* Westminster | translated those characters.” Upon Mr. Rogers’ y A . y, esichester county, three miles east af New Roch:lle, | Room and dowling Saloon, and for the saccummedation of ger oes any well-educated man in America read ced | 4 . 4 bi ‘ find you dealers quite as dishonest; charge them afew minutes walk from the Boston parapite, evnsincit once ih fond of fishing, there are a number | these papers with respect,” is the strange question of Review,” there wes one bal met coleny enthusi- explenaiiany Gor lho sone reesona se rate with national degradation or dishonor, and they Aree Ot ceicert henssr ten rooms. ‘The house is our ouuded | 0010 aud.commedious sailing noats, with eareful mes to take | the ‘Edinburgh Review.” With respect ! Why, astic writer, who said a number of fine and flatter. | of the possible rising of the crew, the whole affair | 140k round for anution in a like predicament. To prtthadey what has respect to do with it? Does any wel ing things about the English press, and put forth no- | is as unintelligible as deplorable) it was resolved on i plumb, pear and otber fruit t 5 , with nye ous cherry, plumb, pear anc the times,the charge | educated man entera gambling house. or a thing but the very grandest claims in its behalf.— | the sudden to hang Mr. Spencer and his two asso- es, TORE ther an arple orchard of the ch.ricest kind, ‘The ou butte hich th lace reform their dealings, or to strive to amend their n: f the devressed state iy ge tre ote handsome garden in front of " ei | pee * . tion, is the last thing thought of.* But passing th: a erat adie tmch Gor acd. gravet walks througout, a “ci ip so jnetouoseing rates a brothel, or any other scene of vice, with respect for Waaeiintrand and pcolleacueiwad) sevice eke Siales Joana Ram Hee Parity fea aera we come to the Chesterfield Innguage, wherewith is stocked wish all of the rarest shea »bery, flowers, ‘and Persea sacalshiiar ic wreksiin‘ thie Kcailisiol the inmates he looks to find there? Far from it eli ee alle i ‘babl lean fl gly li ‘ito; they were told | the “Courier and Enquirer” would repudiate (it is a some lawns in front «nd rear of the huuse. The tekory grove July end August, per week, 700 {tis more than probable, if he has any feeling at all, | (elicate monster with two voice wag probably ne. | shadow of a trial was gone into; they were told | ood American word, that!) his worthy associate. stinds on a rising ground, twenty rods distance frown the hous>, For six weeks, of lobge , i» the months of hi i a - y at all, | ver plaved to greater perfection. ‘ His forward | within an hour or two to prepare for death; and at | ®' » y tvith beaut ul loty teed, and iy kent as oleasare ground, hav: May, June, Septamber, or October, per the ofenee he guraecdt for going: but he goes: and | voice (the first article) is to speak well of his friend; | the expiration of thattime were hanged at the yard- | ,, “The great burthen of this Review, is to fix upon th ing a good view of the Lorg 'slan ind. Ths place is well uJ the oftener he goes, we will answer for it, the Jess his backward voice (‘he second article) is to mee aan This aeniin cen: (under orders) cheered Press of the United States, the folly, the ebscenity, : week, rth ‘he att-ation of any gentleman wantirg a country resi- any Jence. For further information enquire of RODE LEWIS, | p,q niléren aod y ants, half price. he finda it necessary to trouble his head with notions comer Jones lave and South street, or of Captain SAY UEL quiet renteel hotel fe t ber will _e to render his hourea | of “respect” of any kind. And this is what we foul speeches and to detract.” The men of the press } ver lustily for the American flag, with its stripes Gv tion ths premises, rmittoer | @uit genteel hote ¢ time h seuiudy | charge upon these newspapers, as not the least | 2°¢ the authors of the moral life of nations, says the | and@tars. “I then said,” adds Captain Mackenzie’s ANDSOVE APARTMENTS in Houston street, clese tales. PAK frightful mischief that is in them. They level, to forward voice. Nothing can be so morally low as | narrative, “that they had given cheers for their flag, sf ‘to Broadway.—To let, to gentlemen, with break ast and Bormerly of the firm of Blake & Reed, of the Marine Pavilion, | an undistinguishable mass, the educated, the igno- the tone of the men of the press, says the backward | but that they should also give cheers to their God, by tea References required. ‘Address, box 203 Park Fost office, | Rockaway, and Waverly House, New York. _m5e0d3"_' | rant, andthe base. They drive into one bad direc. | Voice: Bullying, exaggeration, downright lying, | singing to his praise. I ordered the hundredth paalm ‘mi2 im rod®ec E SPRE4D EAGLE HOTEL. tion all: the=foreed “of gociety, which, if perso nf don’t apply to the newspaper man, cries the forward | fo be sung.” Duly arrived at home with his dreary COENTRE DEALERS are jovived tr call at the great me 45 Whitehall street, opposite the Battery Garden. liberty is to be preserved, or the rights of individual | Voice: The newspaper man bullies, exaggerates, | news to tell, the first paper in which any thing like dicing and Fesfumesy Warehouse, 227 Broad way, whet HIS houge having undergone many alterstion: and tepai— | thought and ouiatn biel ougtitte be cneagad | [ifs criesthe backward voice. Hisownparty deem | an authentic account of Captain Mackenzie's trage- iches Mlenunetioad te hin trecivatthe cide chee Li ; . ngaged | him a servant of Right and Patriotism, says the for- | dy appeared, wasthe ‘ New York Courier and En- they e q the richest Pe: ery inthe country. Allo ders . . nga: acai Tucked for aay distance. Call eoeetaDy suncanees te his. friesdeof the old c-yatry and tre~ | 1D counteracting. ach other. Democracy is little recklessnese,and the vulgarity of the “New York Herald;” a paper fer which, as Dickens well knows, tho American people entertain no other sentiment than unmitigated dis- gust, and which happens to be edited by a band of foreign- ers, whe were actually his boon companions, and co laborers on some of the most scurrilous of the London papers.” (11!) The allusion is to the distinguished writer on whom, for purposes before described, the author- ship of our Review has been attempted to be fas- tened; and on whom, we are very well aware— prowptly executed and nei . ic geuerally, that it is how open for the reception A ward voice. His own party have retained his servi- | quirer.” though, as with the former article, he will not have And melee tee a2 end2w Sr dranesicDt Borger ey Sndeaioods iE iia mipeoace 0 ips) Senporaer: ces, and do what they like with their “own,” says | The selection was a happy tribute to the influ- percent Asp aS writing, will not have been FB iscapd skin, sock on puntos, bios , ted freing the Battery Oneeu.and er m- | ranny to which all are subject, being that ot a prese the backward voice. No profession is more honor- | ence of this base press ; highly illustrative of the | consulted res} cng it, will not have seen a word of ‘worm ; also freckles can be speedily ers by the 8 of the Bay; within one minutes’ well of | the most infamous on earth. ” ed in England at this hour, ty the intelligent, than } unquestioned and unquestionable power of that spi} ir till it is made public to all the world—the roffianly Chureh’s Vegetable Lotion, which has been im extessive use 'elphia, Bostonand Albany ste -mboats. ‘ that of the press, cries the forward voice. Until | rit of party with which it has cursed America ; emi- | libeller and his triends will seek to fix the responsi- re Ip ae s juthe United States and in’ Earove, and i admitted to he the | . ‘The proprietor interds tat care abd indastry,and moderation To pretend that such a condition of things must ‘ ‘ b: f deli fect goemetie ts for clearing and Nahvng a brilliant | in charges, shall not be wanting. t it th tthe | flow asa matter of Sat thev sign their names to what they write, the press | nently characteristic of the utter absence of delica- compiexante Sold’ wholesale or ret ‘at Chureh’s Dispen- | ppblie. Pee een ee eee ee atter of course from the institutions of nery mass, cries the backward | cy or decency which marks its influence over men bility of the present article alsv. Equally, and as h’ c. sary, 188 Bowery, coruer of Spring street. Teena ver |” Home-brewed ale, wines wilfully, does he mistake the ‘‘ great burthen” of America, can blind only the most thoughtless | Will be a mere merc i spirits, So, of the hest quality, | The Times” i voice. The journalist 18 not believed ready to re- | esteemed the most honorable.{ The miserable | that Review ef October. it was to fix upon the bottle. sy aS a e aes three, cents a glass, HENR! B GRIFFITHS. | ple a oe sees sbiyctor, all its Faetippeettie peat his lies for a few guineas, says the lereaelvaibe! voung man, Mr. Spencer, whom Captain Macken- prom of the United States, in companionship with “fob fale Nae Db Mr Wal arest oot FAVILION-FORT LEE of this. The government and society of America Is any one simple enough not to believe that bribes | zie hanged, was the eldest son of a prominent states- | like qualitiesof the ‘‘ New York Herald,” the folly, Broadwa ous tou the agency of some mauu- | FTVHE above eatabiishment having been refitted inthe most | cannot be assumed to have as yet taken permanent | 8 28 old as the press itself, asks the backward | man ef America, the Hon. Mr. Spencer, Secretary | the obscenity, the recklessness, and the vulgarity of facturing, y other respectable busi- fashionab'e and modern style, was opened on the first of voice. The man of the press is a Lion, cries the | at War tothe present government of Washington. | the‘ New York Courier and Enquirer.” He knows reantile, patent, o aken hess. Apply to box No. 19! Nicer Post Office. m5 lm*eodr ‘Saad. lor the recention of saapent bosons: shape. On the great experiment which is going tor- ; een ‘f ” ness. Apply to box No_19! Upper Post Office. m5 imSeodr_ lor the recep A visitors and pern nent | ouders ward there—he right of any one broadly and finally forward voice. He isa Libeller, cries the backward | So connected with His Accidency,” as_ the pas ‘ a ; ; “ jer” ; ‘tuated within nine miles of the city at the i voice. His autographs fetch high prices, says the Courier” loves to style the President, we need not the Palisadoee, on the west bauk of the Huds m. COREE OUE Oe Say gt from having yet begun. Inthe | forward voice. But we had better stop here, seeing | say that Mr. Spencer had been the mark of all the Or those wishing retirement aud recreation, this | Present stage, of it, we must still maintain, the bl hing Ii i hat this vil Id di ishment presents many advantages, fug extensive | character of the people is more distinctly at stake that we stumble on something like agreement | most venomous abuse that this vile, priat could di- roucds for promenade, where visi ers are sheltered from ihe | than the character of the institutions. Nothing | £0" responds the backward voice, one must vity the | rect against him. Which, indeed, it had pursued summer sun; with conve ience bathing, such vs to please | seems so dangerous as to palliate the soci deli. innocent who does not know of “tangible modes of | with its most perfect hatred, Mr. Spencer or ‘‘ Cap- this, and he knows that we have done We have pilloried him here in England. He tries to escape, and it is the dreary impotence of this very eflort which fixes upon his name more deeply aud irrevo- cably “the folly, the obscenity, the recklessness, and the vulgarity.” He makes dismal eflorts to be NOTICE. ‘THE TRUSTEES of the Village of Willinmsburgh, here- ‘by give n tice, that they purpose to adopt measuies for the erdy liquidation ‘of all legal. clai the Vill ‘nose, therefore, who have claims ape of warrants either agai s or well avd pump in age, 1s those who may ho'd « . The extensive prospect from she Ps A - PP payment” for the devotedness of a man of the press! | tain Tyler,” would be perhaps difficult to say.— | facetious—talks with frantic o' e of the writer Trig-end or aim’ of aay descriprion for Te rarment of depend sree aL maa ALS Which is perhaps only more delicately put in the re- | There was an article specially devoted to bothsome | who ie supposed to have placed him m his pillory, as ination to the f said village, at the Tris ee’s Hall, on 2 mark on high-priced autogr few days before tive arrival of Captain Mackenzie, | one ‘who for more than half his life has lived in the government of any kind responsible for what lies in boat Boston, Captain Babcock, will ply regu- | 4 direction too deep to be amenable to them. Go- ies to those having bueness in the city, to | vernment in that sense is much to be considered, but self-government, in every form of society, is ble ‘aphs Between such exaggerated differences in men of | in which ‘ mi: x ‘test wretch,” * un- the same political views, who thus flatly contradict | princip'ed politic imbecile,” ‘‘ traitor,” “ dis. each other, and stultify the journal they write in, | grace/ul imbecile, greatest curse,” were the choi- of ‘or before the 23d day of May inst; stating particularly the na- ‘wire, amouut ond date of the claim, toget ‘with the name of the origi: #1 owner. 4 The said Trustees wou'd also give no Dew asse: stews of London, and eaten his daily bread at ‘‘cold wittal” shops, supplied from the refuse garbage of ho- tels and the tables of gentlemen”—and in fancy hears himself, acrogs a!l that wide Atlantic, only the more ty A wngements for proc ent mape of scrim or particnlars engyite at Jollve's Music Store, 385 in three distinct OH 5 Jeo worth considering: . si tl A the truth has, at any rate, room aud breadth enough | cest epithets appiied to the President of America eens, three disuner agctious, All persons there | iadway. IN A. WHITFIELD, though cast in athe an percep eget to make iiaell ealmiy and clearly known. And if of | and his Secretary at Wer. ‘The Jast man then, we | loudly greeted with jive notice. at as early & ‘104 as, possible, to tar ard | —————GORBYN'S COTTAGE, ~~ | dom, will avail surprisingly little. The existing the overweening claim it should hardly approve, on | would say, with whom Captain Mackenzie should ‘The dismal, universal hiss, the sound jurchal ot the Trenton Reastbg tase, oot of toe sature cts constitution of America has not yet outlived the the low and false depreciation it may assuredly | have entered into communication on the subject o' Of public scorn. allsuch priverty mey bo tax d to the trae owner. STRYKER’S BAY, test of fifty years, and for every vice and failing oft | rample with scorn. nglish journalism, whatever } the dreadful events in which he had borne chief He hould feel for the “‘ Westminster R Py V order of the Board v1 Trastecs ‘8. NOW OPEN, and ia tull operation, (or the Spring and | th | e asked i a its defects may be, represents not unworthily the | part, was the man signulized by his hatred of the fa. |. How we 8 : inster Re- Li %. MINTURN, President. | [5s = pring the peo;le we are asked to make this fraction ot ‘i d intel f Engl view,” with such a creature as this to defend! How Wittiammbareh, Mav 82th * me taatec During the winter many alterations and imorovements have | ime acccuntable ! seis arice fee dieneee tate Fog pa Se ole ih wrbiond thdes events bed paises aa seers yetmore deeply should we sympathize with such a been made which will,icis believed,and materially to the com | Will those who require us to do so, point out the | Seq? © Tuas an ance in it for every possible | affliction—the editor of this“ Couriér and Enqui | ran ag the intelligent ‘* New York Merchant,” who difference of thought and of opinion, and a respec | rer.” Butas we have said, he wasthe first. And BRANDIES, ke. fort of visitors h : i m : table community has no call to be ashamed of it. | he has paid the faver back with all fitting gratitude. ines, &e. for sale at 45 | A RALOON forry-five feet i example in history ot a political constitution framed is obliged to think the * Courier and Enquirer” de- mngth has been erected for Pi th waodasion of I ai z im this rapid ex-cathdra fashion, and turning out of | 7 5 ji cidedly one of the best papers published in New fe ‘ the gee iris of large parties at dinners, suppers ~ greater account than ‘the /paner it wae wrinie Gnt Che man who says, 1t wages war on private life, or | He has zealously defended Captain Mackenzie York, although that does not say much, he mourntully ‘ca ‘con - ‘A separate entrance has been opened for the bar, rendering | Will they furnish us an example of constitu'l who implies that it is conducted by professional bul- | throughout, and upheld him as a friend. i eam v Bhe quarter evans and in glass, of various | the ladies? perlors omiet «pd selreted y P lon oF T lies, whose avarice or other passions invite the price | Even this friend, theretore, we will now bring | Gontesses. But—we are to believe—no other sentiment than unmitgated disgust is entertained in America for the “Courier’s” associate, convicted like himeelf, jes—A montl ‘quarter ke , it is only vece ‘sary to will be, as heretotone, i ted expressly for the ‘spe ted EVERY FIRST QUALTI Orthe Wires, Liquors, Conrrctionanizs Curams, &e., | orm of government of any kind whatsoever,which | of their dishonor, utters what we can only call a | to justify the only special passage in our “ Review,” Th ssato~Cbatoms Margeanr, Latonre, St, Estaphe, Lareve, | Civil and othging attendants are engaxed, aud © had within it an element of permanence—to which * f } vy eff | the Habits, the duties, the rights, the capabilities of | {*sehood. | Ite writers are for the most part men_of | which his advocate has cured to dispute. We do known character and station, and have all the in- | not Scologiae for having detained the reader with 8: Jusien—also iv casks. | i ‘ will be ved to. sustain the reputation this house has already | the people governed, had in any manner found it | Gucements to keep them true, even if they had all | the episode necessary to introduce this evidence, | 224 like himself under punishment, the “New York Se ee eee eereacan Raine [ne ee OGET ES COTTAGE epee Geeta as a ae ete) the baseness to be able to be false. As 1@ the par- | because ithas served at the seme time to throw netuey Tn ema cae eee ven jm Prisporter, Leibfeaamileh, | desirable and satisfactory. is in 2 tuk waaeie ead ease Saores door he ticular “revelations” to be expected from the Eng- | valuable illustration on other points of our subject bog Phe ie « a eeatat Nand wi rape hoe Si ‘ar Be. An Ordinary every Sunday at o'clock, Tirketesn cents. | | 1" A St dM ig ihenaclvene Admnitine he © | lish journalist, or the special “truths trom the higher | We asserted, that to convict a man in America, un. | Per! a Preeti eet hoed fabave tha lew, bertin, Roman eee ee ea ee eee eg meeting heres | regions of philosophy,” of which the enthusiastic | leas he was 8 negro, was no neceseary prelude to his | "4 it that it rears its impudent head above the law, apresaly for futevery hour from the eorucr of Tryou Hlace and Chatham | py tine it ie om the lntter: ground we for de ec. | article in the “Westminster” speaks, when it likens | punishment. We said that « murderer, whether of | *" runs its career of recklees villany, vnbridied te ae Holland Git. street. _Fare 1236 cents A misime | yt take ourstand, We say that with no efloncs | him to Spring in the Greek ode, shining forth and | life—or of character, without which life is worth Sethe Arastiéan peeeles hat aera it abe he abuve artivles are recommended to nati ttove- PLANTERS’ HOUSE. hheak the cufluences which ore now running riot fq | Scattering roses—we will only say, that when he | less—had infinite chances. it he happened to have a | Of the American people, that retdets it worn the Tr el EBERT DAVIS. Sz.Lovis,Mo, | check the influ : Tunning riot in | sets forth a pretension to deal in these wares, it is | white ave. And, asks the editor of the “Courier” | While of the Chief Magistrate, who hopes for his re- election at the hands of that people, to incur the ac- tive hatred of a majority inthe Senate, and the con- tempt and distrust of (let us hope) large classes of educated men, by openly connecting his governe ment with this ‘* New York Herald,” by taking un- der his protection the wretched slanderers in its pay, and by rewarding their zeal for himeelf by “ secret agencies” in the service of the State! Willeven the Westminster reviewer be able to believe that? F REDUCTION OF THE FARE !—In consilerauod of the | America, the chances of that great society being ul- The subscribers reapretully tuvite pressure of the times. the undrr igned has reduced the | timately gathered together under any one set of po- 1 TANO FORTES.— . : \ ‘ P their friends and thr pablic in general, 10 call at their estn | Qyoes f Board oe Ree Der dat more than probable he will be found actually sup- | tsumpnantly, what say my couutrymen to the truth plied with them. Meanwhile, we contemplate him | of that? Let Captain Mackenzie answer, in a de- blishment, No. 251 Kast Broadway, where they have on hand ¢ | ner totore to be supplied with every luxa+y tl with equal admiration in a somewhat humbler | scription of the last interview he held with the Well asgoried ex of msho an tie goremeu ench grand | ‘The tu lding is the largest, most airy,and combines mire com | they had wars upon their hands, if they had threa- sphere, where he no doubt feels he ble to do | youth he was about to hang, as givenin his memo- tnd to be kept in tune tor one est. surmerbers also bea | {Or'4 pap aby im the ety, aud is not surpassed by aay Hotel iu | tering and troublesome neighbors, nay, if thy had Soled Path, thet no pill passa bed "tn ilk figure we ati be to Spencer, and again arked him if he fepsscdatare tacehs teat tele eee ee wire: Every attention will be civen by the andersigned, his agents, | their milli of ill-governed, starving poor, cla- | who understood his own talents, nor a good SS had tay werenge ne Trieods Herepued that he had abscribers ‘The pr.cea will be (ued suiting to tue times | nd servants, to accommedate those wh may fav him witha | moring for instruction and for bread, we do be- | Who mistook them; and itis, we think, one of the | none, but that he died wishing them every happiness.— be u call. BENS. STICKNEY ; isto 1s) we. . Fagehgoors are regpeattally lori ed 0 eat ae cate ne made | _ay 5. 163. inlswr_| lieve that their chances of existence as one people | Chief distinctions of the English journahst, that he |‘! deserve deat,’ he added, * for this as well as for other nd the rate of inetitati rth ieontinue os | litical institutions, we care not of what descri: tion marketaffords. | are extremely remote and problematical. Why, it = = would be greater than they now are. Frightful as i H cfimes. My only fear is, that my repentence may be too | ‘The first part of this description of an influence so i omnlaciaiten ciiinnteny... COMMER OIAL ACADEMY, we must think these penaltiesand vices from which | Dott understands his talents, andtheir most cautious } teh" when T asked him if he could or would mention | horrible, we proved in our former review ; the last HENRY RICHARD & JOHN KU ASBKU STIMET. older countries suffer, at the least some centre of | Mich more seldom goes too fat. He doesnot forer | 22y.one whom he had particularly injured and whom he | we shal! now froceed to prove. When rogues (we 925 im*r 251 Enat Bi ud rd System of Wr.ting, taught by | resistance would of necessity evolve itself trom La 4 oes Not oiler | might save tromobloquy, he answered not for some time grieve to have to draw so many illustrations from this special walk of lite, but the subject will be our excuse)—when rogues, we say, fall out, honest men are apt to get theirown. A month or two since, this happened with twoof the most notorious rogues of the ** Herald;” the “chief devil” himself, and the fiendish representative, (a person of the name of Parlemee,) he had stationed at Washington. The near Apsiey House while his friends are some dozen | put at last said ‘he had injured chiefly his parents, and th miles further on the road ; nor exercise his speed in } jis death would kill his poor mother’ 1 was not the Park at Windsor, while his readers are strug- | then aware that he had a mother. I then asked bim gling to be lifted out of Slough. He is an eminently ae not Base eee Lge guilty had Fe ge | p 3 the in jesigns. He replied thet ‘1 do not know what Ra versal and predominant, and silencing. an indepen: Ra Ne aera e ictis cnbbctee | woul have become of me if 1 had succeeded. I fear ete modem | dent thought wherever it would make itself known. gave some proofs, in our late paper on the newspaper | i may yet injure my father.” 1 replied, it was then teo Mae kegtia douse Ane | No governm 0 society, can long exist with such late to think of that, and told him, that ithe had succeedea rom Albany—the only in‘alible | them, to what now overrides the land—crushing al! bad {he course of fiver? | that is of elevating tendency, everywhere estabiish- ch un recedented impievement ob | ing like narrow prejudices and foul passions, mak. tthe most | ing one mean view and example of mankind uni- orl, — This ware ie at the following, pr haves, 7 oye y) Iam the 4 ylow On 2, ee ee ae on $6,the sameas done awe stares system of siugle entry, or double for $10 and ed common ware for grocers, by the hel. | same result as $12,000 (raaleat Ee mtry 4 5 press of France. His great ability we do not think i js it ;, i oy cm No chugs. fur crates to country | Yyupie entry book keeping, in five differrot forms, acquired in, | & Power as this abroad, subject to no control. We | ° H it would have injured his father much more—that it. | difference, which dates within the last month : _ ‘ ube 3 e : agi any one would question, except perhaps the friend t haw i ture for his father not to in- : i mare aeon Ween 0s tenes from six weekaco two months. Five collars for the course of | are quite prepared to have it said that we exagger- of the American editors in the “ Westminster Re- would not have been in nat fathe fo in: | ur six weeks, first appeared in an attack upon the terpose to save him ; AND THAT FOR THOSE WHO HAD MO- In: derdatk. Oa our called. ex ti h view.” Avid every disadvantage to contend | Ney AND FRIENDS IN AMERICA, THERE WAS NO PUNISHMENT Mae droid my Gr so-call ‘aggeration, the | against; forced to write wpon subjects with which | ror THe worst OF CRImEs.”$ state of affairy to examin axone | Wogt ter Ri ” 3 phe Cts ‘ : ow being! or the summer months thoroughly | state of affairyy 10, exas r estminster Review” waives any advantage de- | he may be least familiar; al ‘i Bn jart ini ‘and partnersh'p cone=r ‘ ‘ ne may be lenst familiar; always writing against | So fares the only attempt to dispute by direct d to tre West India plan, of | to fanish apeenmens or plans of books adadpted to any basidess, | tivable from its exposure, and asserts, that even ta- | time ; never able to escape such immediate contact whi Asef bs Sinthe ae » ict ons. ai ate: we say what we believe to be true. . Mr. Amaold, at his I hours, continues to wri ‘ TPHE FRENCH AND AVERICAN 2 ATI. HOUSE, | 1h etl athe i er eee a rogue in chief, in ene of the “ Herald’s’ rivals. This was Cea the pen of Mr. Parmelee, who having just been displaced from his honorable post at Warhington, took occasion to describe his John street, Teonired, the kitchen to having the same in the rear of the hovses to p arranged by the moat simple concise and satisfactory forms. | king it a8 a fair description of the newspaper press | wi means, a single statement or opinion in the “ For- | successor as ““Attree, the notorious vagabond” “It Pier eng Banoo Fora Serene gp ihs N.B—Mr. A. will give instuctirns. at the residence if re- of, Ecaerioa the case attempted to be cet up signall seetttars Ly Sone ian ba wed ro eeue CXteN! | meee - very curious,” he proceeded, “to notice how a ee aoe d vde, wisdima ble ta Tea, supern oil | auired, and in academies, om moderate terms. fails, And why 1 We say,” says the * Wa 'Y | cloud its just proportions; how seldom isthe English | + rom the extraordinary evidence tince adduced im Tifferently the “Herald” ia looked upon since = Ree eee en etueral Wi ‘ke where |. References—T'o Jonu'S. Van Rr nvselaer, Esq. at Howerd’s | fails. And why ay, eays the estmin | journalist a mere caricaturist, dogmatist, or de- | justification of this act before th very ditferently és e aa ee ent pet one ca with convenience ntateree makes | Hovel: Alarrman Ar. old Nelson, and to the offige of the Sua: | ster Review,” “ that the moral tone of the Ameri- | claimer ! og: Parmelee leftit. It wah, before, a sort of semi-official this house one of the most genteel, saperb ard comt tbl day Mercury. Seod2ar_ | can press is not so low as that of the newspaper | Withsuch aman asthia,it is now attempted to con- | this man, which seems too moustrous and | OY@2N of athe abut Ea ips a bp eg To me! the Unica—vher Brom 92, {0,7 ROSSVILLE BOARDING SCHOOL, STATEN stamped press of our own country, with ko.orable | found the newspaper man of America. But it will f. ie ‘a solemn investigation to in- | gained such a circulation Coys “3 nit = cian Gen ent ceamacesy te bert ISLAND. exceptions.” The reviewer is at pains to repeat the | not do. Our exposure of last October stands on re- | 4 T¢ Whether a seaman has been justly hanged without | An attempt of the Scotch yagabond who owns the cen gn Nl aaah W. WESTTHORP respectfully informs his frends and the | assertion, and to have us understand that itis made | cord against the stale trick; and, if anything else | ‘Ti8!"ora suspected intention to mutiny, evid ne | “Herald” to cheat him of several hundred dollars, enaib'e of the truth thet retrenchment is Pavenel and aera Bee Tene We We aaghe Ww, | ‘deliberately. He adds that he has‘‘carefully” ex- | were needed, the answer of the American press to show that he —— used to speak coarsely of his | led to a separation.” In answer to this, the 0 Ef i from the ation of one of the w: point of conscience fo, gaard in every possible way the morals amined a file ot the ‘ New York Herald,” the pa- | that exposure is now on record also! A precious pa Waoeiwall spe of his wife and dee baad om tonr to twelve years 0 A 4 : bean "Heading writings orthograrnyy airway Ledeeinhe | Ret especially referred to as the woretin the United | and invaluable testimony to the truthfulness and | in avery light manner tor a man who had just been mar- and grammar taught. 'I'h hen doing up editor of the ‘*Herald” undertakes to prove Mr. Par- malee ‘a self-convicted liar;” and, it may be said, he quite succeeds. He prints a number of his let- the order: { U.e day, ts confident that no piece exists where Meals cf the d-ncripiion faroished at hia house can be st Pissed for lowners of ch been his cone: ant aim to ende Yor 10 carer at the mor ecor y tia nseless to men- States, and found it, “bad as it is, freer from i “ Fore: jew!” f location ‘is delightful and healthy; iv tty ft gross | justice of the oreign Quarterly Review It | ried : he said, he supposed some one w: J 3 yer pore th. fase of ie faoare nesinge establish des | the orchard, perdens aud olay ‘rotind are spacionsy abont ten | obscenities and ribald jests than either the becomes us gratefully to recognize it, and to offer | her fixings at home, but he didnot care as long ashehad | ters, professing eternal gratitude and friendship, Same oon be 6 More c minutes walk from the landing, the satvamboat Revita | the yor the -———-, pavers circulated exten: | some slight deecription of it, Sch is our present | he berth clean when he returned! The Judge advocate | nnd thus delineates Mr. P.’'s general literary career. Teepe cea eee aac out and tuition, incladine weaning, $65 per | sively here among the higher classes ; and its per- | purpose. We will be careful to do it as briefly as | sseested the propriety of pursuing the inguiry further. | Out of pure pity, he says, ashe had acted to “many Lee Te retian iron (a sabeortver, quarter, paid in advance. References i~ i sonal abuse of political opponeite not greater than we may. Tt was dropped.’ ” yp | other scoundrels (the phrase happily expresses the wetacl canes ofp freeiy signs ims Kev. David More, Staten Island. that of almost any one of our Tory journals.” The first steam-packet after the Revi « t Let us supply, by the way, from the same extraordi- | only clase which such aman ever pities or employs) SOrnel meses OF paTOGENY, Teely wre our, ¥q., 4 Chatham Square, NAY ; e first steam-packet after the Review had | cary case, another notable proof of the absence of these h “7 found, mil 2wer ENa Henry Stewart Beguive, feq., Staren felend. ” We do not gi-e the names of the papers thus spe- | reached the States, brought to this country the letter pt A Siok cones odes ne surprise, aud provo he had taken him into his service. soon fount HOTOGRAPH PORTRAITS —Dr. L. M. CYRUS | Wm. Ludlam, £1q., 121’ Beekman street. cually put forward, because the third, though of po- | of an intelligent “New. York Merchant,” which | dadnoremark of any kind. Captain Mackenzie, offering | However, that he was of little use as a reporter, a he inventor of this new art produers by it pot only acor | fonn Qian Fad Ie Maman Hane is Cedzr atreet. liteal opinions with which we cannot sympathize, | was published in fthe, ‘Spectatator” newspaper. | himel{ for trial in a cate where, above all others.it eeem | (00 lazy for say. purpose, except Joafog, at; tavenie, rect likeness of the original p rtrait.bats! parity ofve 7 fee is conducted with pertect decency and honor, and p fe i +e i 1 is duct should be free from the | or playin : 7 a bril'iancy of coloring, Which fer srcass Gove Haward Ferber, idea . Hicks street, Brooklyn. p y In that letter we found it stated: “The review. of | ed essential that his conduct shou ree him, but found him totally useless, deceptive, im- rim@r_ | ison no pretence, save of a most reckless disregard | the American newspaper press in the ‘Foreign | slightest treath of suspicion ; in which his first anxiety ot it or m dern—of the mos i miles} ERGIERS OF PLEASANT, BOAr OING—several iojmities «an op ac | of truth, to be classed with that literature of the | Quarterly’ is attributed here to Dickens, I believe | should have been, that no faintest color of a motive could of a oudent, presuming, and extravagant Hence his drafts for money. Irefused to fork over more money, after his numerous deceptions practised both on President Tyler and myw/f. 1 then dismissed him, ds rad the publicgenesaly, D.- LM. . ited up, for the accornmo- . x 4 Pa ae Dee gain €e7h. Pisce Hoses, commer pounaemewas etnlet ol gol Aomy, | not fail to denounce when we entered first upon this | pgeri.x ; but justice is scarcely done to ihe “Cou- fession. nd | rural walks, and a prospect unsurpassed, be Iand and water’ | subject, and of which the other two journals named | rier and Enquirer,” which is decidedly one of the commodated at Stratton’s Point, ove mile trom the village | ** gambling honse and ti ¢ brothel” which we did in it ii possibl, @ been attributed to him, of even the most re- ae emine cones gambling e e did | tulsely. In the main it is true, and therefore curs oly ° ecting with any shadowy own profit or advantage, events so dread! of Broadway e he irosts his skill im 0 nd ‘ i f 1 , ful necessity ; Cap his aitention fo, Il who may ronorhim with. ther f{.vors, will | Apply to STRATION. are the admitted representatives. It is important } best papers published in New York ; alth ly to be treated asa aw! H losed the | and am sorry to find that the President stitt, con- Iieu'e him eoningance cf the patronage hithe:to ao liberally | m8 timer tomotice that what we must call the design ofindis | sfocs not say much, T confess ™ We Kew amat ench | Rect etth ee remmte rcierence iotne text | Vinwes (0 employ’ him in the Treasury Department. m every department of the Da- NYASHINGTON GARDENS, HOBOKEN. | criminately bringing within the same degradation | was the esteem in which the “Courier and Enqui | “lll the credit which might accrue to Commander Mac | Ifthe President has any regard for his reputation, he aie a ches carenebary rd Howie Noe sa a yenows, Proprietor «f the Fis’ | and reproach every class of English periodical pub- | rer” was held, and it was for that reason we singled | kenzie, in case of his justification by the tribunal to whose | he ought to dismiss him instantly.” Little may be Se ernest contomies ot i erat~ful for the patrounge ithe "tro lication, is very “deliberately” pursued by the | it out forexhibition of its style and character. We | ordeal he expected he would be subjected solicited | added to this gracetul picture, but if it could re- portraits in Phyto- : ' hs or colors ‘Terms moderate. pinto m0 Im*r ceive another eflective touch, it has it in the follow- ing letter. It isa part of the private correspondence rous ty merit ac id the public gener. Westminster Review. hould grieve to think that we had not done it justice; | [7 (he benefit, af his nephew, O. H Perry, whom he recom Gently passing the “ New York Herald” as “with | hue what was omitted in the former article ima ae ne iy Aree aud commod| n + 1 « : . .. ‘ * . bell (3 i i ii HE reteeriberios hie cote: nine dteovered that the foqton House, aitoete ry sereot, Ht boren, | all its faults” having “early commercial intelli- | jossibly be supplied in this, ‘In the main it is true, | "t,o", ste ounicn was appended to state: | of Mr. Parmele with his friend, the editor of the atove inta-uable medicine has been consteteited, and per- | ithios Te Tmuaigee walk from the ye formerly occupied gence,” and by its circulation “the best advertis | and therfore cuts pkEPLY.” This statement, in an ain ‘of the moral condition of the iewspaper-ridden re | “New York Herald.” ; ‘ hapa o comet erable, guautity has heen sold duiing the port | tiie from the irerds of the late orebs peer ee erect | ing medium in the United States” (pretences we | intelligent and altogether unprejudiced quarter, we | public, was. not, less happily characteristic. Per- |“ Waswixorox, Friday evening.—Dear Sir-I have Counterfeit meditines are pur up inthesame descriprronof ehip | Keverally. ‘The Grrtens being newly ard tastetuily add out | had already noticed as those by which decent Ame- | could not but observe with pleasure. But how little | haps,” saye Captain Mackenzie—with his editorial friend | just returned from the White House. (The White Howe box-s; with the!abels on the boxes conniving the same ep, | Will be susplied ‘ASOR wi exe Hent asson- | rican citizens attempted to justify to themselves the | were we able to appreciate all that it conveyed, | in ali probability, at his elbow—" perhaps this is an erro | ts the mansion of the President of thet dap "3 2 dorse ner viet the couutes frit of Joba Moffat, aud wee Saucer ee s gncionss rs athe b ¥,beivg | admission of the foul thing within their houses,) the | rill we had seen the papers it had cut so deeply ! neous opinion, which I could net justify ; but | must now | for myself, Teannot have dy ag ponte like enwnverfert 1 ne advertisement ot | sertment ot Wi ; inane approved shy, | ceviewer proceeds to quote the case of Lady Flora | We songht, through a leader of three lengthy | ‘rear fuith(uily whet was gait oo this melancholy orca: } Senate would not Coi1ttt ita mare than any man inthe aval bern cnmite | Aye ta of the moat sup si-r braude—also Sherry Gu ble Hastings ; a more recent falsehood against another | coinmns devoted to us in the “ Courier and Enqui- | ; ptain—eo scetipulcus when inen tie not Salting 10 be | country. except the President and yourself. Friends am, hiet ca led Good 1d and pat with the hoxes in the lope. Tre ing about to take legal proceedings aghiuat the naities eu goged in che manufacturing ard ven couutertes ibs e Miut Jalr pe and Panchee made in the. b ofthe maids of honor ; some scurrilities in the report | rer,” for one word that should proclaim the manly ofa meeting on the subject of Miss Martineau’s re- | yr the bold antagonist. We tound only the meanest “ly bet ‘A the “* Herald.” ish the Senate; but the two united would —and quote upon this subject an authority proba ry fitted ap sepa ate ter than hisown. The “New York American,” son. He lors for ‘adies, which front upon ( ne vy, killany man Wilt not, me me, ni # | fusal of a pension ; and an alleged libel against Mr. | choffling, the most cowardly and bullying evasion. | sneof those few wi Il written pa i k down the angel Gabriel. Yours, : i . + . ‘ + , nn papers ofthe Stares—" rariv- J brew theca rie geaerally top See alaee abel be wear © mat re ct Wi Cobden. “Is the American press,” he then asks. | We found our review falsely charged on a distin: } simi nantes in gurgite vasto”—which, as we formerly re- T. B. PARMELEC” lao re fitced che B. htwo enin | “alone to bear the disgrece of giving utterance to | yished writer—who had nothing to do with it, and | marked, not even ti curse of party ean purg: of its title | The difficulty seemsto have been solved at last by My pt patrons, hes ' Drag ‘ate 19 new ‘Al eys, built oa the mort appr ¥.d plan, ina vreise aco | vile slanders, when it ismerely Copying the example | nad never, bot as one of the public, seen it—that | (0 respect—thus rem orked upon the point in iseue befor appointment “to a secret agency on the frontier, f guce which fime ALA: Saar oe Mast | te anpoces nay ‘will, iu alleacce be | \%f the prints of the mother country t A twelvemonth | what admitted of no reply might be the excuse for ee ener tre epeueiee: we weveune oe late Fin happy defiance of those Clay Senators, whose 30, 1843, tors. The subse. iber, | 88 not elapsed,” he continues, “since too mewspa- } , series of vulgar personal libels. We found not a | {Moh melancholy ew: of the facility with which oriminals 7 hatred to the “Herald,” since it implied no hatred persed Se etre ts Belarus ot Wray | eeu ecb Jneatvesua, | fryexiste. ine avowred object of which waa (otrade | ingle statement met, ot an areument even at | OP nd yar: sat tehanee, tet ween BaPly | ar gunshot sik sn tal lol n L. Thoay . Ne of c in libel. je papers alluded to are now hap- | rempied to be answered, not a syllable of any kind 7 ’ 1 have re * As these sheets are passing through the 4 n shall be hi those 10 his Noy, to . 4 emp 1 tl 1 vad would ha “ear em pall Bos 2, OFFAT op A AF I pily extinct, but they existed for vs months, and | but that which the dishonest is never called to } ow roaze thet ths sbendeged Foe fey not paid the fi serve almost the Fakes) nam ln roa | per JOHN MOFFAT, the ton Gardens. sarge sums were realized by the wretches associated penalty on the very deck on which he had determined to | “ Spectator” (March 25th,) in remarks upo New York, May 16, 1943. mi7 im®r mao Im*re JOHN IRELAND, Proprietor. os this infamous speculation.” Our ‘severe cen- in orig. eveliennty guilt.” the“ New York American.”

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