The New York Herald Newspaper, May 26, 1843, Page 1

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+ Vel, IX—=-No. 148 —Whote Ho, 8806. NEW YORK, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 26, 1843. Price Twe oa ‘To the Public, a neat three ainy bck: Bereline Home int Saaticrus | The Great Newspaper War between F urope | wes aeluelly mds according the lin THE NEW YORK HERALD—daily entvery low Apply toW KJ T Tap and America. “Say Ld aidleahll dele op a1 lished every dey of the year exsept New Year's ee {From the London Quinterly Review ] history Of toat negetingnn ually closed. iIc is the secret Fourthof July. Price 2 cents per copy—or 67 96 per an- Astaner above | Art. XVI—1 The New York Morning Courier | Secreiary of Siae™ nee Which can alone do iustice to the aum—postages paid—cash in advance. mec | | san Rngwiren: The New York Herald: October: #0) as {ar he othe: THE WEEKLY HERALD—published every Saturday feeling must sink lower down; year by year the Con- | fa i formally charged with appropria- gress and the Senate must become of less account before | ting to his own private use the greater proportion of. all decent men; and year by yearthe memory of the great | £95 000, raised in the name of the Anti-Corn Law Fetbers of the Revolution must be outraged more and League. Mr, Cobden, and those of hie personal uo- more, in the bad life of their Je,enerate child.” quaintance who know that he ig not a poor man, but We read again to the same effect— one far,removed from the temptation to commit any “ When any man of any grade of desert in intellect or | such actof muiversation, may-afford to emile at the m: scott, 43 Pork sl day and | tou ot British negotiat i this negotiation ; but at the expiration of wieis he place FR ‘ 2. Les Américuins en Europe. et les Europtens aux | anxiously looked ior instructor htfal situations on the iu the summer season, 13 per annum-— ‘ b , s _ character, can o: to any public distinction, ter | bel; t ltbela of this class is of morning—price 6} cents per copy, or $8 13 per ale Sinker nad yamnes the, gute every Etats _ nis, (Americans in Ew'ope and Europeans | have been “ out-generalled,” we suspect that some | what, in America, without ‘frst grovollin g down apo ae i Lp sr d i ib American press al ; Ppostages paid—cash in advance. are a in the United states ) by Philavéte Chasles: Revue | mistake m b! F s ‘pow | every day notoriety, and is the Americ: ‘gs wloue meets] ae he 1D teecrdanoe with-the present state.of the | (7, Des Mondes, February, 1818 Paris. 1818 mistake may poe before long be discovered in | the earth, and bending the knee betore t of | to bear the disgrace of giving utterance to vile slan- ADVERTISERS are informed thet A. ply on the premises, or at 13? Chambers stree! 8 Lee F tats Unia:' Souvenirad’un Voyageur. (The | who have levched sie ee icy may, not have won | depravity ; when any private excellence ders, when itis merely copying the example of the ittack: ay se tig ye At Aopen oe eae e tem ees | priuts of the mother country T A tweivemonth pas least regard; when any man in that free country has | Notelapeed since two newspapers existed, the avow- freedomof opinicn, and presumenco think for himself, ana ed object of which was fo t,ade im libel "A scand shed the mest. Mr. Dickens, (to whom broken by eller many allusions have been made in these pages,) hav M. Isidore Lmoenstern. Paris and Leipsic. 1843 } ing written a periectly honest bovk. shea $4 pre- the Herald is over THIRTY THOUSAND, and increasing | N's! Arravlemout contd be mrden i dewred, by a satie- United States: Recollections of « Traviler) Par ‘ont. Oe eT Aas alae, fos ages ys rae ess 26 the Farolan: rene ie or of or the world, and ie therefore, channel for business aa 4 The North Amerwan Review for Junuary, 1843. | sumed to have Prepared himselt for it i ih nen country. Prices moderate—cash ET 7 or 0. 165 south . rie reception with | gocak for himscli, without humble reference to Jous pagagraph, affecting the character of some inthe city or ined- | am a eae inmodiate gone ion famed aay 2 jon, men a air cpkuions and parties. But such a man | ship which tor its rampant ignorance and base dividual (no matter whom), waseet upin tyre,and vance. 00! & ¥ uly iN, [Concluded from Wednesday’s paper ] oan al a) lo ines on fearless,” knowing the au | he uttery loathes and despises in his heart; when those | Py Sent othe party concerned, with al i ee eee er | ee Te TET Or FOR BALE—A three ery mse | With what face the Gracchi could complain of eg licg " Address at last ; and we muke a | who most acutely Lon tr the reproach it casts | that the paragraph would be suppressed en payment prices, and in the most elegant style. a a SS eee | sedi aon grave error, if bis book is not found in the lovg ran | "oon the nation, and who enounce it to each other, | of £5 or £10, but that otherwise it would 4 — b iitore, wi h two lu of | sedition, has been for a number ot years a matter of | to have hit the hardest thove evils of the American | dare to set their heels upon and crush it epenty, in the | THe pavers aliuded . serge JAMES GORDON BENNETT, ; sight of all wen—then I will believe that its influence is papers alluded to are now happily extmet, but img, aboat two Pe 4 r ghee goosiderable wonder ; but how the “Courier” can | character which cry loudly for instant counteraction, they existed for many months, and large sums were Pnornizton oy THE Henan Estas.isument, ba: denounce liceuce, vulgarity, and libel, may be con- i fas F lessening, and men are returning to their manly senses. | arge & Northwest corner of Fulton and Nassau stroets OTT. ean femed even alittle more startling And yet he does pou inia Pe csuiale tealinainaaaeee pests But white that press has its evil eye in every owe, and | Tea lised by the wretches associated in this infamous a . i a . '. ty its ite, ma . “—-PAUMOS ARTATE BATH, | ipna¥y “wd “im Sood terms, in good set terms, al- | and generously cultivated, the enduring salety of | Prenat a every appointment in tho state, from, | Sly fevere censure ispronounced in the “Foreign PAB A a NS EME! r it CHAMB:tR STREE Sante tae Ay aes os lo ‘hon a America and American institutions will alone at ouly s'ock in trade, it is the staadard literature of an | Quarterly Review,” upon President Tyler,for aubsi- REGUL AT MATE NE OR oO THe GENTLEMEN'S OON NOW OPEN—Great | re so worth [totem ne tee The ho neat meeances | last be found. In two French works named at the | enormous class who must find their reeding inanews | dizing the “New York Herald” in the iatevests of hie VIDA AND Baten ares ‘Reduce ion. hey are worth listening to. It—honest men and | head ot thie article (and to which we regretthat we | peper,or they will notread at all—so long must its odium ion. é Ch fath ‘d hi ‘d rt ry government. The ouly fact, however, proved, INGTON AND NEWPORT—Compose bf Inerehante and tradere having rere for he ritchie | have only left ourselves room for very slight allu- | be upon the country’s head, and so long must the evil it | thar the government advertisements have been witht ng respect for the misfor- | pion), we have been struck with the unconscious Of the following superior steamers, ranning in counection with n works be plainly visible in the Republic.” “ the ‘and Boston and Provideu: ronda :— “ A n f held from other papers and given to the “* New York MANRACKUSERTS: Cape Comatecks ua The gabseriher having ped iC aap ch eta el eA Pd antag at support which is given in almost every page of one | | Whatever truth there may be in. these remarks, | Herald,” a tuct which President Ty ler would proba: FROvipg wine Capt Lhayer. hen completed, will, he flatters hi paachina Romie piss uen sean prs qe of theme the seund and impartial observation of | we cannot say we are satisfied with the mode in bly,explain by stating that it was bis duty pot to NARRAGANSETT. ly elegence an ane Gasanate ok tate balls call central aks eed iae oer Mr. Dickens, and with the excellent means of judg- | which Mr. Dickens has handled the subyect ; and we | give the advertisements to papere which hud only a MOHEGAN inahe reels hava. waited sha bs Peidlnes atictan then | bitteal blacaBeuersien’ be ittorBer earbeads be | rent supplied by the other, as to the way in which | have read, with mauch discontent, a paper on the | comparative small circulation, But admitting t ca} tom Ber Ae 1, Bencay Pines Rie ae PYM | thesoirit which has for the past thirty vears xernated im tn | the consequences resulting trom ila dermoraleioe te. | Uisetyle and manner of recording those impreesions | ame topic in the October number ot the Foreign | the real object wus that of a simple bribe, we must v B ‘Riven, ato PM 'ARHANGE MENTS. ‘The RHODE ISLAND, Capiain Thayer, on Monday, and Wednesday for Stonington and ‘Newpurt,” and Fridey for Btoaingtos The CHU *ETTS,! Cot k, on Tuesday fvorony for Brooidgten, and Bacurday for Stonington ater at what cost.) th 't e would affect an intelligent and perfectly impartial irtocialcomfortand enpvsaivwce, ‘hallapt, onthe pre: | fluence ! True—all true. And thie man having | mind, ‘M Philurete Chasles Coho ea ane yin m be lost ight. of, pnd coat to the. Iespeoverasn's vented his virtuous indignation, hies him to the | also to claim as an awenting party to our views on ive Tesomees of hie own cultivated | Scene of his ewo “‘ nauseous” triumphs, and “de- | the American press). gives it as his opinion, that moralizing influence.” Having denounced the ad- | after examining carefully the late books of travelsin Quarterly Review. We shall notice the, observa | sill marvel at the astonishment of the ‘Foreign tons of the reviewer ou the newspaper literature of | Quarterly,” seeing that the practice is one which in America, with those contained in American Notes | the mother conutry, and probably in every State of tor General Circulation, because, in both instances, | Europe, is aboutasold as the presa itself. Is the For their and T : i he has observed wanting to ren- q @ great question which has often been discussed in | write tas ti that the morni: Remporrad Poriasnce © ination | Sythe elopagst of buh ne pens" ap feu mitted organ of the brothels, he betakes him to the | the ‘United Sites, he hes found the most recent of | these pases hes beet superficially examined, end in| Sud evening papers which are knowa an ministerial wit ence ge | Pie my ig ese Realaee, a} deseriotion of the varied improve ments wil. be given when ba nye i pola ee for voor sed is them—theugh neither piquing itself on philosophy | a manner calculated, we fear, by the conclusions | journals, support the government of the day only Settee ete he ee Boston, and if complsied, and the whole thiown open for public ing wet which he still daily labors, of turning the whole | nor profuadity, though neither ill-humored nor pre- | forced upon the mind of the reader, to operate inju- | from motivewof the purest patriotism, and that 1n re- for Newport will prareed in the steamers ‘on Monday, Wed | _™ 5 3mer ERDINAND PALMO._ | public arena of political Itfe in his native country, | suming—by far the most gay —the most | riously upon the interests of a free press. That the | turn for this devotedness there are a0 considerations brothel ! spirited —the most effective and complete, in i observations of both writers have this tendency will | in the shape ot early and exclusive information, of- be seen from the following commentary upon them | ficial announcements, or more tangible modes of in the Times of October the 29th : payment for this devotedness? We might enlarge “ When the periodical press, by a stamp daty, is limit- | upon this subject, butit is unnecessary to do eo, for ing President of America we believe to | jts del LAR ae aera ge geee, | pote a ri tion of Amer.can life and character. He Ehoon bar eet a eeeraces to he, Weat lads plan ‘of | have been aman ef good intention; and that the | quotes, in a capital translation, some of the comic ing tho sama ig the reat of “8 jhonses to rovens the odor responsibility of the worst delinquencies which can | sketches of Mr. Dickens, and remarks of them that mer boara, or at the office of HARNDEN & CO, No 8 Wall street. a pot ber f be charged upon him, shoula in the first instance doubt th be charged as deali i 3 it - 7] teat ater Vl m, u 5 no dou! ey may be charged as dealing with pet- | ed to purchasers of the higher classes, it suits its produc- | there are few who would defend the majerity of our wr cued hee eller Te Ae ee tet ee fed fe a stvener Wreteh oe sth 1e'Tss, sats °G | fallon those whose viers, with his own weakness, | ty and insignificant detail, but thatthis very detail | tions laxenerei ts the misuor iseele oftaste und under. | renc.at Ail Nhapan bbe | ingen eee pairs NEW YORK AND KING STON STEAM FREIGHT AND KING STON 8(EAM FREIGHT geiariogs, m xble statues of General have compelled him to unworthy courses, we do | jt is which reveals the peculiarities of such a people. | standing; and though political power can never be al- | tical probiry. Nbyfassace a) apwa Per-one cau with oD most firmly hold. His position has been most pain- | ‘It is Ly those familiar and minute facts,” he ob- | toxether sate in the hands of uneducated masses, yet, | “We are anxious, however, that it should be under- ingsion, and elaware and Hudson ful from the first; one in which none but the strong- | serves, © that you arrive at the true understanding | WBerethe press has no interest to toment their evil ten- | 404 that we are not defending the American press dencivs, the danger of their abusing their ‘ranchise is at least ‘materially diminished. So 4 the converse, not- | at the expense of our own. Inthe state of news withstanding the great and indefinite evil to be appre- | vaper literature in both countries there is much to hended from the political issues of a press whose cheap | deplore, und the attention of all thinking reformers est man could have kept his dignity and self re- | of a nation, as yrt too young, and already too pow- spect. Alas! then, for the good intentions of a | erful, too informed and yet too advanced, to have man apparently amvwng the most weak. Begia by | eacaped the euseepribiiities, the weaknesses, the bul- ALD, Captain John Ketcham, will leave New lurray street, every Monday and {oursday at 5 o'clock P. M. giving him credit tor no one good purpose, begin by | fyi * niai , ty di Wi is (Sede J u lying, the ‘niaiseries des parvenus.’ I preter these | ness carries its circulstion down to the lowest classes, | should be drawn to the remedy. A stamp duty, as ood dente EP ee e. Wekneeler suspecting himof every earthly villany and dicho- | sketches for my own part,” he adds, “to learned dis- | yet,so long as those classes are unarmed with the pow: | we have shown, is only a means of limiting the eck. F - a iy OWN F d 5 ly ‘The NORWICH, Captain John Samuels, will leave New nesly, and it is hard if you do not end in making | sertations.” And this preferfence, we may safely | ers of the state, society may continue to maintain ite | power ot the press, whether for good or evil, not of Fork, foot of Mar-ay street, every Wednesday and Saturday st him to rome extant in very pads chee oye which | predict, will be one dav pretuy general. pants batted eecanclee, Ulcer not ear fee, in correcting its abuses, The remedy, we believe, W lll’ ingston (Rondont landing) every Tues ay and you suspect him. us even his deplorable counec- It will have been seen, in the course of our pre- | feverish disturbance But once combine the would be found io, first, the prohibition of anony- Friday at3 o'clock, P, TRA TRIPS , tion with the creatures of the “ New York Herald” | sent remarke, that we ate not without some expec- SEIN TA rete taten teal oinaoeten Pct hepa mous writing; +econd, a law of Pp pontplg hie boe ‘The EMERALD wall leave the fost of Marra: con t cnminating public for their | hag its mitigating circumstances, and the great | tation, fairly grounded, of a possible and early re- | sty wasnt saniet 1 to protect the labor capital employed in honest Fundy morning at To'chek. Merarning leaves Ki 1 Bee a Ee aeaie ete ber. desir, as of retaining | weight of the crime lies not on the President, but | volt of the educated classes of America aguinet the | "'s-~-maria, et terras, caslumque profundum, reporting; third, a just and efficient law of libel. o’elock same,day. tallewer ‘ HENAY GOBLING, | 09 the people. We need not here speak further as | odious tyranny which we have thus done our best uippe ferant rapidi secum, verrantque per auras.’ The root of the evil is in the anonymous. News- For fr Quippe pi que pel . jor nee WHELERMSON, BARLOW & co, INES, BRANDIES, Ke. to this, seeing that we dwelt at some lengthin our | to expose fe have noted what we are fain to be- | _ The shduence of democracy inthe U. States is quite es | papers are now governed on the principle of mobs; 164 Wi a2| 3mer fest street. THE subscriber offe he following ‘Wines, &e. for sale at 45 | former article on these special puints of the news- | Jieve plain symptoms of its having already begun, FOk BUFFALO AND ALL PARTS OF THE WEST Piae street, cornes ham. i paper influence as affecting the national character, | In that case we shall not b ily tempted to return _ Madel ra in pipes, hide, quarier casks, demijchns and bottles, | and debasing the entire conduct of uffuirs of stat : {toe subject which it is om every account most de- ies, in pipes, hhds, quarter eusgs and in glaas, of various vi admitting all Hist the most pieadened: foes of | corous to leave in the hands of those whose wel- truder—atmonallado in quarter casks, ’ 3 aptain Tyler” could desire, would some decency | fare it most nearly concerns, and which we only in imported expresaly fur family ase, in wood and in | not be left for the mere office of Chief Magistrate? | the first instance approached with deep aud unaf- A SOCIATION PAasBauic OF FICK Tu ALBANY. | FHT, Chetenn M Latoure, St. Estaphe, Larose, | Js there no ‘‘demoralising influence” in the habitual | fected reluctance Utiea, $2.00 locherter, $3 00 : coer anaes . i : f such I his, in which the “Courier” i d i ‘i yrecee, 25 Buffalo, 3 50 84 Jaiiensaleo in casks, | . use of such languge ae thie, in which the * Courie! But it will not do to begin the strife by underva- Oswexo, 2.25 Up & Lower Canadas 50 | , Hocks -Johannesberg Castle, Marcobrunner Cabingt-Chartz- | notices one of the cabinet organs of Washington,* | luing the power of the antagonist. We never knew For pasage apply to, al ten’ Radesheimes? Hittonhsnn, Feigao Leeibraeaiiek, | 8 paper called the “ Madisonian,” somewhat mild | good result from a feeling of that kind. The first t New York, | Gigveuheimer Hochheimer, kc. &e fe. in its tone; indeed, as will be observed, only too | element of success in every such struggle is to grap: oie erase, Biogyac, Chal sib mild for the taste of the “Courier.” ple at once with the whole extent of evil: not to tin, Romanee. * . 4, NEW YORK, SCHOOLEY’S ‘Cognae Brand; pps? “Mr Tyler and his cabinet employ a paper which is an | look at it with the reservation of your own delica- Sap seine ORK, SCHOOL) Pstee “hes 1 y, Vintage 1783; expressly for summer utter diegtace to eaonieyi aa erate es disgrace to | cies and doubts, ent ahape tniten field of experi: ii pieepners ‘ r chief magistrate, if that were predicable of sucha man. | ence, but tully, unreservedly, and with that broad-— ; Courtland stree’, daily (Stcdays ex eviea “ve arti” mended ence, but tully, unreservedly, N at paleleen A, Deere am J ny, | ty to Morristuwn, pelenaonsey te eee GILBERT DAVIS.” Itwould lower John Tyler in the estimation of every de- if you will, that vulgar—gaze, which shall take in Post cosenos thnvegh Mendham Chester Schooley's | “sien Cent citizen in the United States, if that individual were | every possible interest ehended d Mountain, Anderon Town, Port Colden, Washington, to “7 7 TNor not already at the bottom. As an exponent of the intellect, | 1" yP oh Sateen NICK hi i seg aren Easton. At Waarington, a daily line intersects to aud from | (D4? AY SUPE] Pubic Auction ont Phun. 1 oon, | the feelings, and the public character of the present Presi | Some such mistake as this, we think. is the mis- sts apply to J. Hill, at J. Pation’s, Commer | a: 12 a%rioct, at the stor of * | dent, we do not undertake to pronounce this * Madisonian’ | take of an eloquent, manly, thoughtful, and mosi at ere iee at the. shortest notice by applying to ey Wali street, New York, wilt be moch outof the way: but ietaeesy any other standard, | acute writer, in the last number of that excellent inited State: i detrimental to the public st large, by corrupting its n the individuals composing which, screen each other ants,es to individuals y filching their good maine. And we | from responsibility, and windows are broken be- jee no chance of any cure for this pervasive curs® of | cunse no one cau discover the hand by which the the American republic. If the power of legislation were ft 1 virtually with the respectable’ part. of the community, | Stone was thrown. To destroy this irresponsibility the mischief might be checked by the enactmeut of such | 19 the first step in the reform required: and not tll it aduty upon newspapers as shoud bring the periodieal | is destreyed will men of real independence and press to depend upen and cater for purchasersof a more | talent connected with the press stand out trom the civilized description than the readers who now buy the | mercenary mass, and occupy that high and honor- farthing ribaldry of the day. But, unhappily, these very | able position in society to which they are entitled. readers are the governing powers of the land—the pos. We would willingly close our notice of Mr. Meaae eee eee eon Pope a ae aoe ration | Dickens’s book with some of hie inimitable and pec 10 expect from them an; ; o : for outting off the supplies thet feed. their own craving: ee wk ts se etenes, but ie sioaeure corucn ‘Thusit is that the democracy acts ugon the press, andthe | Of his work would no longer have any novelty i press reacts upon the democracy; and, between the one | Our readers. It haa fallen to our lot to dwell only and theother, the once hopeful Eden ot liberty seems | Upon its defects, in regard to what may be termed ated to remain a wilderness of weeds.” . its utilitarian aim; but it we differ with Mr. Dickens We believe this is the first instance of a distinct | im many of his couclusions, we are not the less admission, ontte part of the “Times,” that the ef- | pleased 'o welcome a fellow-laborer in the field ia fect of the existing newspaper stamp duty is to ex- | which we have ourselves long toiled; and whether clude from the benefit of the press the whole body | he devote himself for the future to tales or tours, we of the working people of Great Britain and Ireland | shall not cease to anticipate in every volume trom at . “ o Hocel. Morsiatown. amyl See ga ays oper opi or tried by any other test. that stupid official isa subject of | periodical, the “ North American Review.” He i national humiliation. Would that it were as gross asthe | thinks that the profligate ra, “* numerous as | The factis one which has often been stated in the | the same pen a new pleasure a, SR conwens te edd ee ene ‘Globe’ in its ruffianism ! Wouldthat it had any stamina or | they are, and winery o there, circulation ranges,” | Westminster Review, with the addition, that tie er Ase ape Messrs. Peter Hasmony & Co. aud ai vigor of talent of any sort. . .One curse (Tyler) is enough, | may “ open their foul mouths in full cry upon'a | existing restrictions give practically to a few indi- Key West. Lock a Ati ake ted Wis A DD ete ane | ee ae cca . man of character, year after yeer, and through eve- | vidualsa most mischievous monopoly in the direc- {Correspondence of jerald.) DAILY EXPResS FUR ALBANY TROY. BUFFALO, At Rede set Ayd led rates Oh moral “Courier!” indignant assailer of the lan- | ry State in the Union,” but ‘can harm tim no | tion ot public opinion, of which the “Times” is at Key Wasr, May 16, 1843. ale uutit I be ald » > May 16, jane, when ell that remaivs sha | eat bi CHICAGO AND 1HE% LASADAS it day to the idder, wi:hout rese ve ast! guage of vice. But this islittle. We have heard a | more thun the idle wind. They are read, despised, shes 4 me meena yng erage psd ‘mex ts must be closed. . . CART 2K, good deal amongst ourselves lately of inducements | and the next day utterly forgotten” We do not pf te hy ep EL Te a ose ‘Wine and Commissin Verehant. | to aseassination, but wht can an in/ucement to swi- | know all that may lurk in that expression—a man 5 che satmon of 1863 an Express Ho rT) i coasts Ren Fare ae ncee ated ariar angie oom of mph Agee we do ane that there has not atre st, ork, ey ‘of thi i , | the casuiste “*Snicide,” rem the “Courier’’ | been a public man e ed in the service of the for the ab ove named a1 4 iuteimedis oi + ctltkenets of the grigioal p'nizcicbacatsoa variyrofaeriga’ | onthe 20h of December last, “1 agreed on ull] American Siate, since the death of Woshiugion Foor the greater fery and security of all valuable and money oil Laney of coloring, wihich ler s rvass the chef -dveuy es | hands to be a horrible crime, but if Mr. John Tyler | whose means of usefulness have not been impaired Brckates ent usted to their care, they have “alam udr tro" | Gratefal {-rthe encou-agemeut he has rece should be left to commit #0 shocking: t if would | by these infamous assailants. But we discussed few 09 boats, a? and the be easier to look wp EXTENUATING CIRC! rANCRS,'han | this fully on a former occasion, and will only put it elu ively by themselves, ard the messenger i charge jeeps in | ™erous pabliegensral y. D. b the srme ro: with the ron salen into wl ae. Tonle £m inform them that he ha» ited a in any case, ancient or modera, within our knaw- | to this honest writer now, whether on greater reflec- fa He aati . (rooms in Ps ose Y " : are pla = con of Brosd ay where he eae hia okalh an ioe ec hsicetes | ledge!” And what is the effect of all this—waitiag | ion he would feel us sure, supposing ‘hese prints to . See aa OPLE* LIVE OF @TEAMBOATS } whe may hoavrhim with. their favors, will | that final and terrible effect which, if waited for, | be “ deapised,” that they would sll continue to be tT ‘ock, P.M = t Pier the head. But tor the penny stamp, the duty of one pe! shilling and sixpence upon every advertisement, and | D&4® Su:— ; q fiscal restrictions and penalties almost without | It may be interesting te the creditors of the people parallel, there would be innumerable newspapers of | of this Territory to know that at the recent session the size and price ot “Chambers’ Edinburgh Jour. | of its legislature a iaw was passed entitled “An nal,” addressed to different classes of readers; and A lati E 4 pew 2 there would probably be few families, however | Act relating to Executions, which materially poor, that would not afford the expense of a daily fects their interests. It permits the debtor in exe- journal, a luxury now confined tothe rich. Hither: | cution to pay the amount of judgment by instal- to it has been supposed that this would be favorable ments of eleven per cent, by which means three to the political intelligence of the people; but the M 7 deotsinws ia tider by sous boldly audited, and doubt. { years are necessary to collect it. The levying offi- TS —br. L. M. CYRUS- the ia Os ALBANY—Daly w the patronage hithe:to so liberally | will eome—but to make the passion tor “strong writ- | ** read.” Oi him, und of others with the same cul- [ h. Sued» wetween Cuureinyac und ed, as it would seem, in quarters entitled to respect- | cer releases to the debtor the real estate upon which fut a eeety we rest our defence of a free press upon fo, tias levied, pom. demand, yltheut bapd or se> two grounds: first, that the moral tone of the Ameri. | CUfi'y, and he releases the personal estate upon se~ can press is not so low asthe stamped press of aur | curity, of whose suffiviescy he is made the sole own country; second, that its abuses admi: of a bet- | and irresponsible judge, the surety not being even required to justify. Tats stay law has been brought to the attention of the Superior Court of this dis- trict, which, after a caretul ivuvestigation, has de- clared it tobe repugnant to the constitutional pro- hi}itien upon the States to pass any law “in pairing the obligation ot contracts,” which prohibition is 1 1823, estab- be Re ves instruction im every department of the Da- | 108’? 80 univereal, that decency isrejected as mere | tivated mind and lofty purpese, we would earnestly guerreotype aod Phyt graphic «rt Tustramen sfu tiking por | spiritiess stuff Let us turn for a moment even to | implore to look abroad trom the small and select Biramwat KOCHESTER, Capt 4 sm Iac-le, for salnyas also.the necessary | that able and res hen ir i _ pe ecaie so. r pectable pwper, the “American, community in which they live, and understand er Bao te atesic” aval aie aeiten eter mokeutek ot vortvaita ia Phy | (whieh we cannot too often place, with the “Wash | without farther compromise, or hindrances. selt- will kave Tuesday, Thursday ond’ Seiarday evenings, at 7 Nolte TO 1B HULLENS OF ILLINUIs and | Ston Intelligencer,” the “Boston Daily Advertiser” | imposed, the migchiefe of this wide-spread pesti- Oech. NORTH AMERICA, Captain MH dell, ‘Mich gau Canal Bonds and teri. and he “New York Evening Post,” apart trom their | leace. We betieve that, by forming a rallying PA rey germ: ibs. aloana, wil leave Mondays Tuesday os Wel eth ag oe ute pee Bare S dea disreputable contemporaries,) and observe the ter point for all that is good and virtuous in America, Tuesday end Sam ees Rh, oa «et vrably arnve in | BY the act of ‘the Lagiatavare rT liane, ‘approved. Feb. auth, in beet ie cs of the Kepublic of America is | they have it in their power to stay the plague. Nor aavengers "aking lag ot Boo even | a3. epoken of there. Ivrefers toa ‘“‘mock veto mes | are ithout t ident h f havi Abas ogee fo, eee ee Mens trea * abseribers will be required to exh bit their hpnds and senp. | sage,” addressed to Congress. “It was received,” distant eta abel sante ipallast aad sdehenctul ‘The abere oats ere new and substantia, are fermushed and regisver their d.te, uumber a-.damouat at the time of sal aye ‘the “American,” with belt Rinoera effort towards that great end. with new g rooms, -omMO- iL contin: he abave. ple iy far poor creature can hardly get himself the honor o; At any rate, when we meet the Americans next, Sstious wre unrivalled on the Hudson ne CHARLES akeny, @ oud laugh from the house now. He has settled inio | it will be with some plessanter things to say of ter remedy than could be found in either a stamped duty or a censorship. We say that the moral tone of the American press isnot so low as that of the newspaper stamped press of our own country, with honorable excep- tions; and we make this assertion deliberately, and atter the carefnl examination of a file of the “New York Herald,” the paper, especially referred to by incorporated in the Act of Congress of lishing a Territorial goverament in Florida, and Fe or fren apply on board, orto P.C. Scholz at ry Phe P) A the Slee oe tae weak * mire Feet te Iin-is, | & hopeless und h ipless quietude +f infamy, from which | them. It is our intention to examine the more ge- | Mr. Dickens and the Foreign Quarterly Review, as | thatthe actin question is therefore void. HALLENGES— K BEA L HEA Nn 0 BE HA! nothing will disturb him it 1845 Nubody cares | neral characteristics of the original works they | the worst in the United States. We found the The hev. Mr. Kenoy, (Methodist) late of the [Se ag FOR THREE SHILLINGS.—READ, What he saye, or does, or thinks. He cun do. us no | have put forth within the last tew years, as their | New York Herald, bad as it is, freer from gross ob. | Rhode Island Conference, is here, attaching to hint- sctraues inset and, to taybel ded ee y hurt and he can do the loco focos no good. No | claim to the commencement of a literature of their | ac-nities and ribald jests than either the “Age,” the | seif our entire Epiecopal congregation by his preach- ‘Such is the condition of a certain boat builder | 1 eADER, ifwe alpine gates will you be- | 8*Btleman in Congress calls on him; and he is left | own. Our former remark on this subject hasbeen | “Satirist,” or the “John Bull,” papers circulated | ing This congregation erected a very neat stone wy el Ho ee nd Riael yt ay ye peter Ig the companionship of the very scavengers of a li- | greatly misunderstood, if not greatly misrepresent- | extensively here among the higher clarses, and ite | church here ubout eighteen months ago, at the him | f proved ‘ont try | centious prees. He is already a wholeeume exam- | ed. hen we doubted if the foundations had yet | personal abuse of political opponents not greaterthan | cost of six thousaad five hundred dollars, but being oe you w hese are tie real and prsitive qualities of | ple to alltraitors and ingrates. . . Despised, ab-s- | been laid of a NaTioNal literature, we could not ill prove eno nos ram, Jon s' Coral Siva ed, and almost opi upon, by those for whose | mean to imply anything so maailestly unjust, as ““Large barks can ventu'e more, i 1 ral be t ticte barks must keep near shore.” hair. the: Esir sogven nthe beet, Caocacp be: meaning promises and dece.tful smiles he renownced | that natives of America, since the establishment of a think they ean cove with him in superior boat | Bait. It ie. "out wn , t ¢ alk in pwables, bat boldly meet him | t¥; Or tay Part where nara papeod ir to grow, by ae serdions and truth; abhorred by the good for his dis- | their Republic, have not written many able and ad- at hws office ye aranae (9s ‘avering teat of proof; his | turer al rotted ETT ees See ce Pant eo Bo | hones y, and 8 ormed by the bad ‘or his folly; a more | mirable boukes : m tn resi £ [e,foed faith,hie, oats to couauer | ihake the hair grow naiuraily dark and beasti(ul, Jones’ | pitiable inatance of self punished erime was never seen drvth time’ be offers to show the sternof'*Troubler” to am Pw te eh eotcenrab dpe the sign of the Amertean | by unm astonishea wurid. His present elevation rs a | * Our attention has been directed since this was writ- boat Crolvus ever built or has ob hana, for a trophy which will | Pale 82 -patham street New York. t, Philadelphia, and | mere pillory tohim. Bat we will pelt him ao more; | tento sn indigusnt disciaimer by Mr. O'Connell of a for- Rehiy repay the exveriment, Now’ whero is your boasted post tetas aeeiead Hen, Wadena bee tie | for that part of the sentence has exhausied itelt,— ged letter with his signarure that had‘: gonethe round” that of almost any one of our Tory journals. The difference between the Eng ish and the Ame- rican press is principally thie, that the latter are bad. ly conducted as literary speculations. An American editor 1s rarely a practised classical writer; his style and diction, on the contrary, are generally conse and vulgar; and this is sufficien'ly accounted for by the fact (as Mr Dickens has himeelf shown) that literature, asa profession, cannot flourish in America unable to pay for it by adout thirteen hundred dol- lars, a mortgage for this amount was given to the contractor upon the building. The mortgage is uow about to foreclose, and the coogregation have call d upon their christian trievds abroad, and par- ticularly in your city, for aid in their extremii They have not had @ clergyman for nearly fr aud embrace with pleasure the opportunity of lod anONTOAR, LK om | “ r A tiie es e "Thi i bh r 0 ing Mr. Kenny, who preaches regularly every Sub- backers; where’ Jour own daunted courag street, Boston ; Cl A more signal retribution than we now witness in | 3,>"ocourrence, that though several are marked intze | in the absence of an international luw of copyright. | bath morning in the Episcopal eharch. te is de- Martin, Fy him, the moet ferocions and unforgiving veageance | totes we had taken for our review, we found no opportu. | A newspaper, however, in American is not pur-| cidedly superior, as a usetul preacher of the gospel, i 8 leveland. King ‘Charleston, 8. C, aa oar ne et way ditance under fifsy miles. | Bate reget Albany | Michell, Norwien, Cheauteo, N.Y The“ Troubler” ean be seen at his * | yy Catahill, Ne W.1 and 9 Falta (PS). L INGeRSOLL, y could notask.” Can—we are obliged to ask, when | nity or special occasion to referto them. Indeed the rater street HAI : cUT "4 we read this vonage vie aquarter we poise are vere Dickens has arrived at such an ultra horri- ee ean a ee ILL, the inimiuabl ix Cutter, takes this method of m- | —Can even such forms of government as Washing: |’ ble and hy perbolical pitch of atrocity, as torender indig- ORTH RIVE: DE AUR KISON 36 Fulton street nos feameved feud ss emis She pabtie in ton and his great a-eociates establisned, be expected | nation neediess, and oe matter of simple laughter. We N Greenwich—Dr. Morrison, Member of the Row Prart sttect, Gp stalps; lannodianety oot long to outlive this reckless system of party war- | bardly open a paper of the States, halt of which is not de- of ‘and formsrly Surgeon in the British Nal | House, where he will he pleased to ‘cn treet | fare voted to reprints of his writii some portion of the ya comieney Céqualted day onal denanon ofs detente | favor hin ith call, mb ely ? other hall to libeison himseit. We do not know the ex- iM P a One word, before we quit these papers, on what those ynent op inja- 4 . Wi Mcat aod the imprateat avec ftack medicines. | UREA whch, for, elegance! the reader may have. seen boasted in our extracts | tmong’ our memoranda the following, token from the of wo years, wn treating | Unites States. ‘The ranious : chased because of its scurrilous libels. We believe that there, as here, nothing is regarded 8 more wearisome than the disputes of rival editors; but the circumstances which influence its cir- culation are geuverally early commercial intel: ligence, a low price, and a great number ot ad- vertisemenis, With ail the faults ot the ‘“ New York Herald,’ its commercial intelligence is gene- rally good to any man we lave yet had among us. m5 Im*ec Theatricals, Movements, &es Forrest has just commenced a short engagement at Albany. Russell gives a concert in Philadelphia on Mon- day next. He expects to visit Europe in the ensu- ae the ** out-generalling” of Lord Ashburton. We | « New York Herald.” ; and asthe best advertising medium in | ing fall, mplicated low! ices = feel bound to ay that this was any thi g but the “ Ap eastern contains an extract of a letter writ i tes, it a imi . sy. : ¢ > seen by thousands who ne- aa . scenes | Se Mr date, toe ofthe marty of ihe Aero ponte int | ny Bene! Benea os rrapeneatntnecgn | yor ease hemseiven wit sates leer | eH i at Bakimore. in} warns mel | mo ime! Prtior #having, PM sete nnts dot pivalehintorsobtie manier [imetxtenere Susan glerion:-omd the uure ania. personalities. The cause of the bitterness of iw edi- | ‘The St. Louis theatre has been sold, and convert ee and em fe 7 " - | and stuff him with the good things of this lite, th f! Heed sc coueed Ta? Beene | A CLEAR COMPLEXION FREE FROM — | srrance tom a friend of Mr: Websters, against ine | cverbeeting and ungratefal you'make him. ‘The more | Pitined thatthe “New York Herald? is published at |“ peoogh ig to. appear on Friday evening next at Geateetyietares ip «scien ERUPTION O& DISFIGUREMENT coutinued abuse of that statesman, and it certainly | Kindness you extend, and the more praise you bestow rae ieee tsaaien, aothanct Mr. Maeder’s concert, Boston ekened i , ‘4 “4 wedeed creat) MAYBE BAD BY ALL. Oy anne i remedy now well | succeeded in turning aside wrath. ” Whether or not | ah curhalent noone you drive into his empty and syco- other daily journal * tr tty on reasonabie 8. ehes, | Our present bu: me the eiiny i maps, or smart doings, and we simply give the su- | It may bave been t farther inj estes, which stimulate 8 5 feats Y iful heal jearness. \. presentatio® is id, O1 culled private history 48 @ matter of some present ia. | —for Mr. O’Connell, erful in enabiahings Bee either recommend it tall. {t changen the’ col>t terest, which occurred to us as we weut threugh the | ol” !rom the tact of himseit and bis grea! to sigue, 2 end . f dark, sanbar iow shin, to a fine healthy cl * . | ing supposed to be thorna in the side of pon, pad, tnd a oe asare pest i as received the approvalcf the Medical Couneif of | Painful and repulsive drudgrry of transcribing speci- | 1% to flave his auteority dally torged— corer yatory of bia ease abet” Sree ve _ m: Rev. Prorxsson Marerr —The versatile talents of this geatleman are next to be displayed in Boston na lecture upon the crusades. The Rave! family are in this city, and will appear at Niblo’s not long hence. George Vandeahoff isat the National, Boston. ‘anown to he one th the ic itis rateantiels ix enol a Soup, rounds, we leave others te judge.— | phanticnoddle, . .Dantxt O'Connmant? free! 1eg8 18 net to medule with red-line | and is 4 preity fair account of the cel h orit This is capital— ‘he greatest instance of personal libe| quoted against the American press, by the * Foreign Quar- terly Keview,’ is the ‘iilewing, fiomthe ‘ Louisville Gazette’: — “ The Secretary of State was called upon by a lady,to uation for her husband, when great faveri select a more lucrat his bonor invited yer it who call it a " miracle, a wouder, and a blessing.” | | Meus of American newspaper literature lor the pur- | 14 made in the following extracts trom private room, and after getting torial disputes will be understood, when it is ed into a church have seen this cure several cases of eruption that perscus have | poues of this teview. te the editor of the " Pilot.” her in, then closed the door,threw his arms about hi The Broughame are perfor an engagement a rr atari Gmsltiaa, | teomneakc vy T,Jones nt his perfamery asiablishment, aga |‘ When Lord Ashburton arrived in Washington, he with greateueprisn, in the last “ Pilot,"a para | #00, and suid,‘ Madam, this le one of the privileges cf ™y | the Tremont, Boston. Cc ‘Carriage joada, Bel” ‘ining Harness | of the American Kagie, 8? treet, N.Y ; y these | took an early day to open the sutject of his 8 ich you certuinly took from some other ni office. a ri ‘&:, . sgente—in Philadelonia, by Zeeber, cnrmer Third'and Doek sts, | with the frankness which ed his whole course | per, headed ‘O'Connell aud Dicker,” and purpoi 0 | Scarcely a week after we had read the commen. ; _ Booth is performing a short engagement at the Lig 4, havi sufficiently tested Chwles | or next to the Amen mt eg oe C3 in a throughout the negotiation, he advised Mr. Webster that & quotation from an alleged letter of mine to theeditor | tary of the ‘ Foreign Quarterly’ upon this instance | Park jn fo6 Harness aa | eg ny 9 8 ne ae ee CO yy the nuture of his instructions forbed his yielding any por- | of a Maryland newspaper, published at Baltimore, and | o; icentiousness a the Agnerican press, @ paragraph P T ’s Te Iti od ing lar er qatcis, consider them to | Beatest:in Brooklyn, ton. Agente wanced in all o:her | tion of the daputed territory north of the line of High- | called the ‘Hibernian Advocate’ The thing is, fro Avg! prea, & Paraatnp ResipENT TrLeR’s Tour.—It is announced thar ry nd veenarving uemostenticn | oo NOTICE lauds, claimed by the British government to be the true | ginning to end, gross Ite. I never wrote a letter to that pg lt: iy ls Eee perm a te the President, with several members of the Cabiner, re them. ©. Pavey also mit 7 ry. This, of course, presented the question ina | newspaper ; voram Lin the habit of corr with p , to e pue J i : rienany Neto 2 Mer [HE TRUSTEES of the Village of Willinmabargh bere very eevious light; and Mr ‘Wedser very promptly im. | editore or American papers: T'have seen foncen® with | of the maids of honor hud been discovered to be | intend to be ia Philad-lphia on the 10th und Uh of ct bammens and for, OF ASE pee, taet Seay Tate: fo not ee Mind ony tormed his lurdenip that he must either recede from this | great contempt, but without much Lint pag in several | enciente by a prince of the blood royal. The equal. | Juve nex: (saturday and Sunday) will arrive in ve Rice se qi whe have Sisime sealnst ed vitage: iy the demand of terminate his mission. As his instructions were | American newspepers, letters deliberately published un | ly groundless culumny circulated by the press in the | New York on the 12th, and leave on the evening of againet vil oreny td ay 5 peremptory, he was about to close hie mission of e, | ier my sig neta ven tothe American public as genn- % Bent, ‘and pump in the village, as well as those who may hold ~ | and war between the two countries appeared inevitable; documento—ali, of course, being forgeries, but pub- mn x4 ‘ — iy Senerets th See intor when Mr Webster persuaded him to enter into a full e:. navy, he iene as Poa: pent actly. gennine.. This ie a ? eous ry which hee been seldom sald village, at the Trvs cc's Mall, on uted ta ethty, 288 9 $ $ before the 29d day of May ins:.; stating particularly tne pe attempted im this country, seems reserved ior the wee x ing Sood vileness ofa great portion of the newspaper press in the Fuayt Hobere KK Biory ghd barge United States. . .Perhaps it is right that 1 should a1, } ‘nos Baer, f+ 18 High j¢ | that few peop! mire more the writin st, do; Thos Hol oe Findon Seah Greening new asveugnenn mapy of the case of the late lamented Lady Fiora Hastings i- still fresh in every one’s remembrance ; but norte the lah for Boston. Afier atteuding the Bunker carry our readers further back than the past year, | Hill Celebrationon the I7th June, he wiiltuke the we will ask them to turn to the ‘Times’ ot Novem: | Wes'ero Railroad—visit the United States Armory her the 2d, and read its report of a public meeting | *! Sprieat \d, M and the Arsenalat Waterviiet, held in favor of Miss Martineau The report to | NY ; swe Ibanyand Troy. Whetier he which we refer is one which we believe could not | Wil ex r to Buffalo, around Lk Evie world also give novice, that they have Ay Kosa, wed Sip ha ye this ners yy interest ian f f th to Cieveland, and thene? by th tf the On joore, 4, sai Perabo atone meee oh oe 'y ringing 1¢ bay hoe uae Tapa 4 epithe nea ~ h. bec y As Linge aie ag a hy april ener ee “yeas “4 afr = Rinlg h fore, holding real estate cal - . that Lov d As! ie tion : States; aud yet no object ap re nswere ore tlroed back to i I» selec 27 ereaumnes eanere tertneny cy toe paciectian tas | re baten ee eaniy Sepia ence ri | of the injustice of the claim of his government to the eavent | taink, @ clearur idea olevery-d-y life in America thsi! | by the inault. An attack more wanton aud disgrace. | We have notbeen intorm: d. ‘avove raed aluelee are sealy valuable and dserving of their fone, the neal sete tals le thon, ben ably nent a er bag yo caduieeeh intention Sr dee, | pavectionmeote renpecting negro ini we ave never seen in any paviie journal |The Mr. Webster is still Jingering in this city or vicini« Pag by fl the: privcioal Saddlers and Hararay Makera.— | tl euch ry vert may be iakcd thats owber. | hieyavernment, astend of promptly closing hie missinn, | ted to wusmrnt the xed detestation aitention of the pubhe had been drawa to Miss Mar | ty. He is about visiting his seat ut Marshfield. Hinness Ligwa, tn stone pott'es, 25 ceutg exch; Wa f Ny order of the a thorised to do! A delay of six weeks follow. | most brilliant declamation, oF the most splendid elo | HuCauby the fact of her refusal 10 receive pension | Mr. Cushiogis making preparations tor his mis: Compos tion 28 vents and scents per bor; Polvahiu Williomaba th, May, 1m IRN, President. which time nothing was heard in relation to | quence, That chupter shows out the hideous features of | /rom the government, which had been effered by | sion to China. He left Bahimore on Sunday morn & t 1 " paate tore us an - md W23% ee . the system far better than any dissertation on its evils | LordMeibourne. It waskaown that she was moti ing, in the steamer Osceola, ou a visitto the Presi- alls Beta Senge esd haidware tare LHe moi Kor vould possitly produce them—edious and disgusting to | ufiluent circumstances, aud thatshe had been long | dent, at histarm ia Charles City county, eee Beas w reet, nene Chatham, where all orders | atic + thy Bvann the public eye.” * uflering from ill health. A_ meeting was therelore : ‘promptly atcende: Robert Dale Owen is the democratic candidate for ae. catied by some strangers to Miss Martineau, with o Congress in the 5in district, Indiana. i picturesque +h »es of the N. eve £00) romplished and " cay thet coe [From the Westminster Review } view of proposing 4 public subscription, and the . to ene! fives ih tm city, ents ehrretug } American Newspaper Press, Times’ had the good taste to pwnd Bishop Hughes announces his intention, to the He AR tae tt ihe walks oe Hent order, vi a bl We pass on to the concluding portion of the work, me ot Deists, Social:steand Atheists Clergy of his Diocess, of poe tor Europe im- pre ~ ably * present spring. 9 twee il which, wae demande tntank nad cele met nite | which we hind seme severe strictures upon the i a dard’ of the same mouth appeared se- fer ptt soba his retura from the Provincial Couns 2 be vat reper . ! cil at . 32 by 48 AES ateee bite just oad ana ties. > thie aclucke newepeper, of bis experiences of a eet ec tik ee Awieitel WAR dinvetéimaiad as Mending anibtes, 1A WION ORE \CREASn, inecber |-O1 S 3 by 46 (theme guodsy together with 4 varrety of oti, telen the ‘with which he had been #0 lately connected. eal eh fwetrtnen tan aheantiuan to ea Gone into Bustnass — Young Mercer, who shet & 4 V4 ine, of entirely new styles. A 4 0 of tn is invited, hi leeeare this 5 ani wep _ ‘ bsg hone on ee in France 4 the mony iebeon Ro mom the Commission busi- | f r lohy atreet, * reas. i rates, Michael Chevalier, o! vee that it isen error te 38 in iladelptia, oun! E iby | A. DIACON & ED. BARTON i rang Expan’ | cufehoels any haerectad cut, went, north, and woth; | magive the Aer can wear cans nate verse ia, Philadelphia, and hus opened « counting 21 by 31 wil . aa enabled us thoroughly to understand and appreciate y sawenee 10 those of Europe, dad efizme thes whe ‘ C4 Se i 4 » every v A ior h: 2 cis hich tney oer te Sauce Ned [nett ane to nace na yataanine eeeidents Cebe } vancing, Room edge in al other forms walk thrcgh the | Jourpala at Nom hold the Cireuit Court at that place. per, of anes A) wo . “ ‘Yor | iene ee Dee wach my, ms akan Ke Pi Shd-sanbirti Link set oF scoUNDmRLA, never J lend with Blank wd a eat igh? rmorei | (Bile in England and France, th ‘tenets d by the erew wil not be paid by the Captain nor the . iy Hq, 1 Alban, mec an consignee. abject high moral | j, ised {i PR & , fe together in this republican country, aa a } / ¢ in thet Country ishepelees, ‘Yi ‘t | ins central in Pf moront omgroy & Co. will accept our thanks for late pag we W Political party, clique, oabal, or faction. nus and will go beck; year by year the tone ot publis eee erinade We. Vel, ps pers from the North and West.

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