The New York Herald Newspaper, July 24, 1844, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. Vals Xn He. 80= Whole Hes 2006, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 24, 1844. Fler See Cone ee (ee thi traordin: re waa Houston, T City Intelligence. THE NEW YORK HERALD. THE CLAY AND POLK TESTIMONIALS. litraly eto meaty uve whole codntry ual the (didaereaanee oc oF ehitads wlevbbMisbanal Suigst Sree wicked taplest AGGREGATE CIRCULATION THE PARTY PRESS OF THE UNITED STATES. erat aarp Becatbeeryntiat cy Houston, Texas, 29th January, 1844, | 442 MoT Siaanae Cass ov Pansuny.— A few weeks since THIRTY-FIVE THOUSAND. ITS LICENTIOUSNESS AND IMMORALITY. Wie Evoquence.—Mr. J. W. Houston, the whigcan-| By an accident, the other day came to my hands, | to Alderman ‘Tucker of the Eighth Ward, m which ber THE GREATEST IN THE WORLD. ‘ didate for © lared, at a small meeti: . 27 OW. . dwelling is Jucated, that some unknown person or ons tex last week, that “James. i. Polk, of Tennessee, was | 8°“ Alte und Neue Welt” No. 45, of 25th No-| were in the almost daily prostice of turowing stoves, at born a democrat, was nursed a democrat, would continue | Vember, 1843, and among other communications | the rear part of her house, and doing much damage by suiluntanes BESEE, CET. JAMES K. POLK. @ demecrat, and would die and be d—d a democrat, therein contained, I saw oue headed ‘ Reisebilder | breaking windows, and also endangering the lives ot the RALD—Jaly vewepapes—pu i A =§ # fA ini ¥ bth "7 4 Lished every day of the year except New Year's day and Gv BB ar hg betes Ce was osked | ‘2 Nord-Central und Siid America,” von Paul von | Police, betore Justice Toylor, for a wartant againet ‘ae Fourth of july. Price '2 cents per copy—or $7 96 per an- j i whether he thought he could hit upon the nominee of the | Vicksburg, and not to my little astonishment I read | ham Barnet, pe ode pe greg ary THE wit Baltimore Convention in twent insaid communication, a very unjust charge against a Ge oon ae Reess eee Is eeame for exch Btate in the Union the undersigned, which I can not pass without con {rage Shesiated tuber efldavit, ou an ‘exuruatcn ‘et naivance. : [0 opty heat he we a ty tradicting, tor Lam certain, and 1 challenge con- | the case, that she had sucn Barnet throw stoves rom the ADVERTISERS ore Talormed that the clroulation of come it.” “Then the gent] ith ‘whom h tradiction, that during the ‘whole time of my s0-/ a:tick window of the house where he resided, and. spoke the Herald fs over THIRS'Y-FIVE THOUSAND, und in- _—_, \ 4 saetersation pall 0 ooo Bs iy veh journ in Merida, viz: from the Ist, November to | to bim atthe time, saying * I’m glad I’ve tound you out, Tt haw the circulation / | ah this tin etunaiaamnetas “tue oot re 12h December, 1841, and again from the 20th | to which she suid he answered, “you must be crezy, exclaimed the unfortunate gueszer, “they can’t Poke m ) , he | He: statement was copiismed by ‘the testimony of ber One of the locofoco U. 8. Senators, on hearing of the no- January to Th June, 1842, no such person as the pi tg J eieliey i xt a re me mination of Polk for the Presidency, and Wright for the said Mr, Paut, of Vicksburg, pretends to be, or any | eine, M Prt, yogis: ate she PRINTING of all kinds executed at the most moderate Vice Presidency, exclaimed: “A> kangaroo ticket, by | other German bas visited Merida; neither were | row threw price, and in the most t ! f G—d ! strongest in the hind legs.” ‘The beautiful ani- | there during the said periods any such “ respecta- | one of JAMES GORDON BENNETT, " | , mal has been considerably weekened in the hind legs | ble Germans” as he refers to, or any Germans} tien exbiditedto the justice. On these representations Proraror or THe Heratp Esras.isHMent, é 4 i" since that time. whatsoever resident there; couzequently it 18 aD UL-| Barnet, who denied hole transection, wee held to Northwest corner of Fulton and Nassau streets /- «WS 3 It seems thet the locofocos have considerable difficulty | ter mistatement; that he visited Merida during my | answer. During the same period she made applicatien to for throwing stones at her windows, causing much de- —————————— \ in get iF tb hang of the names of their candidates. A | sojourn, and a he has ee me there, or Ndpet piss or ees lor recat to Li ye 6 a a or Revival of Business and Everythi ilsem violent locofoco went through the streets of Cincinnati, | those respectable rmans have informed hin Jered officer Jame rows to aid viticer P. ohne, Pinepeste-decie Ana = emmy Ufr0M, the Burlington True Democrat, SSS | ye the other night, crying with the whole might of hislungs, | hat I took great deal of pride for my. being by de: | W22 hu been wut by Alderman Tucker, i wating the z > hs eway Crav’s Moran Fr FoR tHe Presipency, \ d Y “Hurrah for Pork and Dull-ass!” scent and by birth, a Turk, an rtion house to det fenders. ae ge py ear, Every person must admit that the country, in all Tretep ay sue DrcaLooue—(Wespectiully dedicated to | 7 \ f . \ The editer of the New York Courier and Enquirer has | never made to any persou, and much Less | Beret erin rauuninn wes Sbaceiosin alias the elements of prosperity, imtelligence, and mo-|™;""% rigs ¢ 1 morality, all the religion part; given the Locotocos a new name as an especial evidence | great deal of pride.” That 1 was born in Turkey, | jer Sephaw, who reside In the Bouse, in thebet of thiow. s i : % e Lord thy God; thou shalt not have XG VA Ss t his’ d. rals, notwithstanding an occasional outbreak, is strange gods before me.”—"The God . a aia seat He oe them Loco Polkos, been the living God. His God is mammon, whose temple (From the Lexin, of Mr, Clay has never eee as little ashamed of as 1 am of living in stones through the windows ut diffrent periods of the ‘exas; in the firstof which | had no choice, al- | cay, and with the apparent knowledge of old Mrs. Los going faster forward than ever it did at any former fat \ % \ |, Sires Waicar.—This ge fully satisfiea ct be! yi evider egen bs he United States Bank. Since 1611, his life has been . \ gen ly satisfied | (hough | have in the last. A man is but a man | ‘Tis tact being made fully evident in several instance period of its history. Prosperity seems to be fall- | devoted to the service of this monster, the enly God to NE S| ait ths lecotoco editors would never Re able to Write | after ull, whether born in the stable or in the par- | theinformauion was communicated to the Muy or and Jus ~ ingupon the land, like the dew of h jlently, | Wem he has been known to pay his vow: Sv Polk into the Presidency, nor to Poke Wright inte the} {oy tice Taylor, and Mrs Lonee aud Ler neice, Miss Hoff, are por }» luke the dew of heaven, silently, \SY | Vice Presidency, prudently declined the nomination. Whatever my transactions with the Yucatan | tested ior perjury inmuking the against’ Mr. 2 “Thou shalt not make thyself uny graven i S and perceptuble only at stated periods by the general | thou shalt not bow down thysell untc them, nor sscve, . SS \ [From the Barre Gzette. government were for the purchase of the Island of | BarHet, Who wus proved enuiely innoce nt of the charges ay , tele peering Pag ty deny my loner aengbeeeg re ‘ Raceniene ¢ Island 01 | steged aguinat Lum, us irvm examinution it Wan prosell results. Trade is increasing—mannfactures are living & eudattege ths Mhehatty of seonian Sooritione \ SS | polk with “having killed his man.” This is not yet true, | Cozumel, that 18 my business, and not the PORE | awepossible to bit the house of Mrs, Losee with & stone increasing—the crops are increasing, every year | He is now laboring to acquire political power, in order spree but he will do it next November, seme think. object here to state; but had Mr, Paul, of Vicks- | thrown from the attic window that she aud ber neice ul- increasing. ‘Travel is increasing. ‘The revenue of | to reestablish his favorite: scheme of a Rational Davi, Frem the Louisiana Journal) peta buyg,.if he really had. a.tletter of introduetian to |Jqrethey sew him ai whan th ed him in the act, * ry Ps He is the representative of the whi; Tr _ Washington. me, in christian forbearance delivered the same to} They were Leld severally to bail inthe sum of $500, to the railroads is increasing. And fortunately the ae gambling blacklegs, | A Brno iw Hanv.—The Richmond Enquirer thinks that gto h ht have had an opportunity of becom. | answer the charge of perjury. ‘The only cause for such excitement of politics—fanaticism in -rebgion cad ‘oplemaid ee nat or oes piphing ay teen theinmarg aie topes eaniloaie ante (Carnespontennt of the. Hersey ingaomalweed wicks ieacrenticnet buctness, which [strange..nd extreordittery conduc ; ase G em | secure a _4 C) 7 and extravagance of opinion onall subjects are de- | bnking institutions and monied corporations, under the that!'@ bird in the hand te wocth two in the bush.” "We Wasuinaton, July 22, 1844. | would have enabled hun to write an unvarnished | & create rome excitement prejudiciel to the ho order to prevent its being purchased by other peri guise and clouk of their favored branches of manufac: | don’t know that. Ifthe bird be a poke, we had rather have | The Herald—Hotels under way —Member! hancery sale soon to be held an this city, creasing, and separating their isolated movements | tures, commerce and navigatioh, riding and ruling over | one in the bush than a dozen inthe hand, from the general common sense movement of the | the plundered ploughmen and beggard Heomanry [From the Charleston Courier. feos ie mito, si pe eet spi country, In finance—in religion—in_politics—in Hh Se. gr repeats igi oe, penal of the Lord thy God Pox can’t ne Exzcren —James Knox Poik, and George ‘ord for lenator , len, and a hint to all con- i) ‘ome, Gd G—mn you! where you be- | mitin Dallas, are thonames in full of the new democratic | cerned—-Politics—-Sir R. Packenham at the literature—in morals—in slmost every department | long,”was the language of Henry Clay to Mr. Polk of Ten- | nays for the Prusidential race -the whi Incid : ~ i coursers carr ; bes ha of human life, from high to low, the same general | House’ eb 6, 188, en the later Mainly hesoade int name than thelr rival steeds—they are simply Henry J peared py he spats thn po anc wes tht pcnge fn eis mere Une Cay | hy ni Tacedreercngaemn, O° |G Bawner, Esa ‘We could refer to a number of general facts in | Ha left his seat in the Benate for the purpose of driving | ry; borne but two names, except John Quincy of Con-| and impartial narrative of it from an authentic source, and not made random statements upon |” Cysy of Puren B. Watxen —In the case of exofficer hearsay. ° Walk urged with compounding a felony at the ar- The latter part of the story as regards Germans | rest of Duily, he desires a suspension of public opinion and lrishmen having been brought to the Islund of | until the Jacts can be presented to the commumity, us they Cozumel, of whom the best half died, aud the | will be ina few days, with develojements strange and ex- others were taken by Capt. Smith to New Orleans | traordinary. He iequests the community not to place ~ : is a matter of which I do not know any thing, nor} Credence 10 an ew parte statement made uring his tempo- The Herald, this morning, by a duzen gentleman did Lever hear of it before. Lhere, however, de- | "iy #bsence trom the city. through by his presence. +g Periodi i . tna Boncranvter 4 Mu.xs@an.—The dwelling of Matthias proof of the accuracy of this view of the great and| | 4. “'Hemember thou to keep holy the Sabbath day.”— | Adams. ie a Brooks's Periodical Agency, was dropped like a} clare, that had nite, ee or inane aay i At, | Lang, milkman, of the cerner ol 6th avenue snd 69d street uk ity of the bi Where was Henry Clay the Sunday previous to the New Eset Newark meavertiaee) ;, | live lobster. “A stitch in time saves nine. either direct of indirect, it such be the cage. | us torcibly entered on the 16h in the day time, rowing prosperity country, but we may 81 Oriecans Aptarea? f Parading the pe, Bo wit Gtuts and Nort a Goon Fit.—We do not think the glorious old mi- ‘The most extensive preparations are making for la conclusion 1 would ouly remark, that Mr. | aq asmall umount of money ond a plaid silk bandker: well confine ourselves to ene of which we can| banners, disturbing the worship of thetrue God. He leit | {itary boots of Gen. Jackson will prove u good fit for Mr. 4 : Paul of Vicksburg has traduced me without jus | Chiel stolen theretiom. A young maz uamed John Cump- ak with a degree of certainty, beyond any | Louisvilio on the Sabbath ; arrived in New Orleans on | (olK, Calling the latter Young Hickory” is abiting | the accommodation of Congress and its aecom- | cause or provocation, and all upon hearsay ; and | bell, who has lived us a dur) men with Joseph McClure ne : > enY | the Sabbath ; left on the Sabbuth, and arrived at Mobile | Tatife—how can the fragile, rotten poik stalk be like the | oanying strangers next winter. Within three | would refer the reader to what Mr. John L. Ste-| in abth street, was arrested on a charge of committing th other, and that isthe remarkable progress during | on the Sabbath ! we i ‘A JING 0 play squares, om the north ide of the Avenue, near the | phens has thought proper to record in his valuable | uffence, us the silk hanvkerchiet was found in his but whil " i Jackson, has been attempted by John Tyler, and Benton r td i sah | 6. “ Thon shalt not kill”—He has t: 1 ni vi in Yu he was aslee; nahey mow. He bas since confessed th the last few years—and we may say the last few commit mourn at Rill 7 He has twice attempted to | nas thus exposed it—the fit is as good for Polk as Tyl Capitol, three large hotels are expected to he found | and highly interesting “Book of ‘Travels in Yuca- } be wie tlecp ina hay mow. | plea of guilty to the indict- months—of the New York Herald establishment. | fonds in the bléod of ucceeded in imbruing bis | .: He wants to play Jackson, but let him have a care, from |1n full blast. Ist, Gadsby’s, now suspended, but | wn,” in relation to iny_ origin, subsequent adven- are : ; . the ted Cilley. To killin ® } the sublime to the ridiculous there is no middle ground. | undergoing a thorough renovation aad refaraiah tures, and my business in Yucatan, founded upon a | &t ‘When intelligent, industrious, and business news- | duel is murder by the laws of God and man. Clay is the | ‘The hero missed, the harlequin eppears, and hisses salute menip by Sur. eon: of the fraternity of the | personal acquaintance aud observations of a critical LB Siena Aspen oer ay § xine it gold lepine 0 gold cl 1 ci stolen om papers are succesaful, they furnish one of the best ea wee ee laws of “honor.” He is now | the ears which were itched ior applause.” Astor House. This is a farge establishment, in the | writer. : . : ace. 2 Mi Levan, of 69 Elizeb eet, i possible pieces of evidence in favor of the general} 7. “ ‘Thou shalt not commit etatety ja! elle {From the Portland Daily American } form of a hollow square, froating on three streets; | Aslam not a stranger to all who might have read the Upper Police Otten Byes hen ainesaaecien (eh proeperéus. movements of the country at-large. ane Wie Ei eae ae Gov. Poux’s Rexicion.—The whige say, “Don’t attack | it numbers 240 roome, the half of which, hereto- | the narrative ot Mr. Paul of Vicksburg, I hope the | g.o, humed Thomas Williams, at Elizabethtown, No Je The history of Mr. Clay’s debaucheries and midnight re- | Mr. Clay’s private character,” and they are mightily an- | fore, have never been regularly filled. We have | editors of the “Alte und Neue Welt,” will, as in d rec the gold chain where he bud th tin © Now we are happy tosay thatthe New York lerald | veiries in Washington too shocking, too dagusting to | noyed at any allusion to thet gentlemen's gameling snd | been sofermed that the teacee, designs taking,‘ | cartial conductors of a public press, give the above | wuaeesauered the g brought to this-clty and: Mr. Mount. at this moment, has a circulation and a business C4 iol gooey - ; a duelling {od pe 00 Pile pronounce it quite an illegi- | boarders for the ensuing seasion atthe reduced rate | an insertion in their very respectable and wadely | tort, clerk of the uj per police, succeeded an aycosseing probably one-fourth greater than at any period of its | iemnly rte tte salons wetinane e: Oley ve; pei aladeem yt Ly pect om POR oey Let of $4 per week. This, we regret to say, will cer- | circulated paper, that their readers may read the | the gold watch ana pencil case where the rogue he ospel is goi r tainly operate to the detriment of the reverse of the picture, and disabuse their minds, pawned them. aa Shells elt ht cir rt " te of his ehnatn coe 4 the soto pec ap dass nyrerre betel They ein’? : “Four score and ten of us for which favor they will much oblige their Cuance or Grayo Lanceny.— William Johnson, who with a momentum equal to the general momentum | Orth United States when ho was only twenty-nine years | Why, they haveior years indulged fa wholesale slaugater Poor old maids,” Most obd’t servant, Feze.els #.ealL maken: recently fraps, Baltiooare, wes.ap of the country at large. The aggregate circulation | and five months old, when the constitution provides that | of innocent reputations. ‘They have dragged the foul | and widows, whose families depend upon their Guo. Fisuer. ed in the act of carrying away two coats valued i i no man shall be a member of ‘hat body before he i: thirty. | slime of their personal calumnies over the very hearth- | (, H be ” — $35, belonging to Simon Hatten ufid Michwel Duff ot 972 at present is far beyond what it ever has been betore, | 1? 169 when he became Secretary ‘of Btate, be ates tok prose pip a nid te doraastio’ Repjaness, ‘The obj sation Pomecauch (feng slashes tec : Boston. Grand sireet. He was tully committed, and now reaches nearly 85,000 copies, The cash } thefollowing oath comes with not the force of afeatner from such a source. ! bepbererlnah care tip macys Pabst cain eae [Correspondence of the Herald.] Coroner's RecordeJusy 23.—An Ivvant’s Deatm receipts of last week, by cash book, were over |, Henry clay, do solemnly swearthat I will support | Even now, while their lips are yet warm with these | ‘@blishment, heretofore occupied by grecers, tailors, sy Laupanom —Mra, Sarah Lyons, wile of Patrick, of 18 soph a = the Constitution of the United states, #0 help me Goa protests, they are trying to excite a religious feeling | 4nd boarding house keepers. ; ; Boston, July 22, 1844. | jumes street, ig the rear, went visting on Mopddy and 82,500, making, if every week were similar,| ”Yetin violation of the constitution which provides that | against Mr. Polk on the charge that he isa Itoman Cathe | 3. By John Withers, of Alexandria, an entirely | mp. Eprron— left her infant Sged about’? months and a nurse child with vari um. We pay to our r- | D0 man shall be called to account for words spoken in | lic. The New Yok Journal of Commerce denies it, on | new establishment, from the extension and coneo- Alice Kelly Sue remained jabsent nearly all day, and eee Maal lee aa fi 100 pe $1000 fa either House of Congress in debate, he challenged and | the testimony of a highly respectable gentieman, residing | lidation of the buildings, corner ol ‘Third street, | 1 observe in your paper of Saturday last, acom-| Turning Youud her child dying and the other two in maker alone 4 um varying from attempted to murder John Randolph, who indignantly re- | in that city, who lett the following memorandum, signed | for Gadsby, son of the old gentieman, deceased, | munication headed ‘Small Feelings.” 1 am sur- | nearly the same situation, An inquest was held yester- ‘week, accordll cire! ces. e employ, to craven life when in wer, wi name :— : ime day 0 ee k, according to circumstances. We employ, | fused‘o take his life when in his igh ibe A fourth is under contemplation, within the lim-| prised that any peraon of common sense should | 24Y,oR the dying child and a veraict returned of death po’ ‘ SBE: 10. Thou shall not covet thy neighbor's goods.”— | “‘Gov. Polk is nota Roman Catholic. His father is a]; “ H : trom convulsions. Some laudanum was found in the by the publication of the paper, probably more then | wise sense of honor can possess the man who will rise | Presbyterian; his wile aud mother ae now senmont ot | its designated) to be formed of the buildings of El-} aye cupposed for a moment that Col, ‘Thompson | coom where the children were lying sick, and when they two hundred persons, here and elsewhere. In | roma gambling table -vith $40,000 of his neighbor's mo- | that denomination; und he attends the Presbyterian church | i0U’s Row. tended any insult to the Tigers. There is no- | were first discovered it was supposed ‘that Alice had short, in the midst of a Presidential election—in | acy talon in ome night’ sitting? That man Ser Hem | oftener then any eller, ‘The writer of thas tne teoneg | Next winter, therefore, you may tell all your thing in his remarks that would’ imply an insult — | iven the children an overdose ih order to make them MU roe a ites | Slay. _ It ts notorious that he is an unscrupulous gambler | neighbor of Gov. Polk for thirty years.” friends tocome along. We shall have pleniy ot The whole object of his remarks is simply to make | *leep, but the investigation elicited no such tact. They the midst of religious, financial, and other excite-| Notior the mere excitement of the game—not for the | We epprebend that Mr. Polk's religious faith is not the | room, better accommodations, and cheaper tare Mile play deouthe word hens, Gola Thompson | Were ailicted with summer complunt which hed been ments—in the face of an opposition of the whole | ¢musement, does he frequent the card-table—but because | question at issue ; but we are inclined to think that to be | than heretofore Competition in hotelsand board. | ¢ 1U® Pay up ™, Park ‘a ta produced probably from neglect of those who had them th hi hemselves | e.covets his neighbor's goods. “ & good Catholic is vastly better than to be a duellist,gamb | ing houses is the sole business now under conside- has @ high regard tor Major Par Tend woul on Jn charge. press, and of all those who arrogate to themselves} “The above facts will seem exaggerated ; they almost | ler and libertine. In the time of Jefferson, un effort was | ration Don't henlecracd hen in regara to the | 90 occasion way or do. anything that would hurt nom Avortyxy.—A man named John Steere, the position of leading elements in society, the } surpass belief ; and yet they are literally Facts, Wechal- | made to crush him on account of his belicf—the result > ig the feelings of Major Park. Col. Thompson is a pative of Engiand, died suddenly at 169 Ham: New York Herald is going faster ahead in all] ite | le6¢ contradiction. We dare any Whig to deny them. | not yet forgotten. next Big te ent athesty We shall Bue gentleman ot high and honorable feelings, and , irom apoplexy, induced by sntumperence fl Loeb i oi a ee They compose a succinct biography of the man who pre- [From the Alvany Atlas, July 22.) enough lor each, enough for all, and enough for} ouid not stoop to do a mean thing on any occa- | nad recently bourdd with James McCanley at the sbove business operations, and in its healthy tone, and pspire 0 the c! Emagisteaoy of the United | Govennon Poux’s Axcestons.—The Federal press, after mn, Me Chi f ily bh sion. He has moreover, no feeling of jealousy to- | place, and had been very dissipated in his habits. moral influence, than ever any paper did in this ihe be successful? What ! Henry Clay, the | failing to discover any thing in the private character or on. Mr. Chapman, of Ala., and family have | wards the Boston Light ‘Iufantry, but on the con- —— — fF a in th 1d nn the name of God, the Sabbath breaker, the | public career of Col. Polk that could be turned to nis | l¢lt this city for Niagara Falls. ‘ trary, thany of bis {riends are there, and have been ‘ommisstoncr’s Office. ese facts are given, as forming merely a small | ius endangered! It will not, it cannot be! So dire a | pracken the memory of his, aucesters, by the fou ‘Hon. W. W. Payne politely franke this lette he heard of the ‘attention they reoeived in your} | OP R Catt an ander errest belore Commusiner Mor, t of th ide! showing th 1 jumnies, ey first charged that his father was y on. W. W. Payne politely franks this letter. < I believe that Major Park bas no idea that part @ evidence? Snowing the general progress | calamity we pray may never visit the American people. jn the Revolution!” This slander was readily exposed, | Senator Bagby, we are happy to. learn, is soft- | CY" at believe that Maj tin tie lat huiged vy the captain ot ¥aid xchooner with deser- of the country. We have, from the commence- {From the Eastern Argus.} and they then transferred the cherge to his grandtuther, | tening towards the letter writers. Upon this ground Col. Thompson intended any insultto the lulaniry, | jon, He was arrested by Marshal Smith in a boarding ment, in spite of the lies and falsehoods circulated | ,, Ct4¥’s Quazities.—A Christion, who has three or four | Ezekiel Polk. Thoughnoone doubted the utter fulsity }the gugacious Senator Allen, of Ohio, knows the | Out,thinks us 1 do about it. * house in Cherry street, and stands fully committed under hack ere ;_ | times shown his bravery by attempting to take away the | of the charge, yet as ew, if any, of the cotemporaries of 8 H ‘. ot ane hio, knows the | ‘rhe “small feelings” eeem to me to be in the | thecharge. against us, advocated the highest principles in } life of his fellow-men in # duel. Ezekiel Polk are now living, this calumny could not be so | #€ Position. He knows that the correspondents | jerson of that man who signs himself “Vid ed morals, politics, ethics, religion, and every depart-| A Statesman, who is for a high protective tariff in the | easily refuted. of the newspaper press at Washington are the me-] Sodger,” and who seems so willing to catch at Superior Court—In Chambers. 5 < north, for a horizontal tariff in the middle States, and free | | ‘The Nashville Union, however, promises to show its] dium of diffusion of the merits as well as the de- | straws for the purpose ot widening the breach be-| Before Jnage Oakley. ment of human life. No doubt, errors have been | trade in the south. falmty. We give a portion of the article from that paper, | merits of the Legislature and Legislators of the | tween these two fine Boston companies Jour 23.—A writ of habeas corpus was issued int ommi ror, wherever there is humani A Chieftain, who fights duels, and curses worse than | though we consider the time and labor required to refute | nation, in aggregate and detail; and he knows that ; " case of Ann Kenzie;who has been confined in the Pe committed, for, wherever there Friend dee any other man in his State, and’ who, at the age of seven: | sueh® idle calumnies unprofitably spent The lie has} to secure a Malls fair and favorable representation apy saneertiog, 02 Se Aa nie MANY | tentigry as a vagrant; but the woman did appear and will be error ; but we believe that we have done ty years is under bonds to keep the peace. done its dirty work, and the papers that gave it currency | before the people, it is Necessary to conciliate. the friends of the Boston military. SUFFOLK. | stands cemmittd, more good in the brief period of our existence, b; Philanthropist, who, if he cannot have black slaves, | will not suffer their readers to see the contradiction, or it ont or 5 Bt pel y 1 id id hi > ie determi personal respect of said reporters, andto meet them More or tue Toxnavo.—The town of Cham Fy . Cg ined to turn his fellow men into white ones. they do, the charge will be renewed against the great a F i . the ineulcation of sound principles, and the expo- |" 4*Republican, whose wife and daughters are toe ‘good | grendfether of Cal. P. as men possessed of personal rights, and the com- | persburg was visited yesterday by a storm that wil Before Judge Ingraham, sure and condemnation of bad ones, than any | to werk in the kitchen. re pices Fem hat ON a hr ted man fee ings of ee in generaj; and not racnae not be forgotten for a long timo About So'oleck in the 4.2! jv Tae i srbo Bps niitad in the j i iti AD ho, by a base coalition, cheated General incti as | they are unfortunately poor, to sneer at them, on | atternoon a most violent storm of wind came up trom the Fie res 7 + 8p) . her, other journal in existence. In politics we have | s,oyson outof hie clection in 1028. reine goed nam, witout diuetigy of Party at [the ground that they are inevitably vicious. ‘The | aor west anf lasted only « few minutes, Mut in’ hin Jad npplidto be clccharge! on the ground ot having Always fearlessly maintained an independent stand, |” 4 Politician, who joins each und every faction, howev- | ted through the whig papeté- ihe Htichmond (Va) Whig, | thanks of the newspaper press of the country are es- | short time the destruction was frightiul. ‘The laige five | enlisted under age. dncherges Seed yeas discussing the measures which divide the two | er discordant their sentiments, and secretly pledges him- | ; onisyille (Ky ) Journal, Mobile (Ala) Whig paper, and | pecially due to Senator Allen for his efforis to story paper mill on the Falling Spring and Conocock king lad pared to be. i ig higioant dethciston off chit self to each to carry on its designs. ther kindved printschorging tet Gov. Loacy grand-| cure their reporters a more favorable position for | £48 creek, the property of Dr 5:D. Cuitertson, wae en | 190kIng Ind he appeared to be parties on the highest principles of philosophy, and} "“4 Gentleman, who says to the Speaker of Congress father, the late Col. Ezekiel Poik of North Carolina was a] their duties than the out-of-the-way gallery as- | rely destroyed, and now lays a.m Navau.—The United States frigate Potomac "7 if H ny —n yi . e) neteen ha ed f J treating the personal and venal viluperation of the Kenge Go home, G—d d—n you, go home where | tory in the revolution, A baser libel on deceased pa | signed them, as if unworthy to walk the same floor ware than eet Lites, but dine OF thumm'ee tr Thomas M. Newell, Esq., Captain, and bearing the lower order of the journals, of both factions, with triot never issued from a licentious press. However the | with the “grave and reverend seignors” below. |; heii bread pei t of C dore David Ce 5 A . Fi the Kentucky Gazette.) és 8) * , jured as to leave no hope of their recovery. read pennant of Commodore David Conner, commandi that contempt and severity which they merit. We| A Gamaunal tis whole bisory in this-country is 10 Would Lalleve fora moment, that the moral oF politieat { {ll You, gentlemen Senators, wise us ye are, that . 8, D. ison, Edward Culberixon, Jol he Home Squadron, returned 10 this port’ om. Saturday believe the position which we have assumed in | ™ixed up with hi t the card table, that @ conver- | standing of Gov. Polk ought to be affected by it. But the | YOUr #peeches verbatim et literatim, would often | br ons of Dr. C ,) Samuel Reid, — Reid, (sons c/ } last, the 6th inst, from a ert in the Gulf of Mexic jum sation about him is almost invariably intermingled with | Charge, in every possible sense, is a vile fabrication. The | 4ke a poor show betore the country. For your | E. and grandsons of Dr. Culbe ‘The United States brig Somers, Co der Gerry, ar- the contest, now fitfully going on over the coun- i . ae , ichael Craver, Samuel Fry, Lew rived hereon Thursday Jast from Vera Cruz via Galves - i y going sporting anecdotes of his past life. writer ‘of this raph has seen full, clear, conclusive | Teputation as speakers, therefore, you are vastly in Pye Lenooerasen Maweet Mentions Lian Pp ; i the | 3 try between Clay and Polk, hasbeen of advantage [From the Albany Atlas.) and demonstrative proot of the high, honorable and man-} debted to the pruning and grafting hands of the | euern. | Perch licmeretger. line Monahan, Mrs, | ‘The United States steamer Poinsett, Lientenant Come “ A Cuay anv Ranvotrn’s Duxt.—We recently read inhis | ly course pursued by Col. kzekiel Polk, as @ citizen of | quill-driversin the reporter’s gallery. Respect this. | /' “ tg ci ‘They are less personal than they were six months | rate excuse for his having missed John Randolph, whom, | struggle for Independence, showing that he wasatrue| P.S.—There. is a spa spring at the little village five atéries Nigh, DE. B.D. Culbertion wab'In the to Mantas leek . ago—less violent—less vituperative ; and one of} When member of Congress, he, then Secretary of State, iE Eh sel palieaite ees Brees Seige Ty FER. | of Bladensburgh, seven miles from Washington. | hird story when it fell. Hels only lightly hurt ond i | ‘The following vessels of war, composing the Home ae eae ed to aduel for_word It “ ; N : ‘He 1 the most unprincipled, proscriptive, and vulgarly was pleed 16 behalf Papa eset one the aie catineimen, of the same tamily name, and his noble! Was out there last Saturday 1s ely pole Jable to waik about. Dr. E Culbertson ja very severely | Squadion, are now lying in this hes bare abusive of them all, the Courier and Enquirer, | gaunt form of the Virginian was so, concealed in the am- | | ‘That the refutation will put the propagators ofthe slan- | raising, Spealking had commenced within 8 sane’s | Hivrad Met tad been caught umong the timber | | ‘Theship Vincennes; Calta Buekenoa® . 4 jown, that thou; ir. (day d a . ci cl it a 2 hap n yoin Bu lo seems, at last, to have come to the serious discus- | fen: bullets thro sgh his robes on il sides, ane pierced the Meactegreebaies ios Hittegt tee tents een ahs lady, ‘and attendant, came up with their equipage | Was a considerable time before he could be ken from lis | ‘The brig Somers, Commander Gerry. an sion of the measures at issue in this contest, and | spot where he should have been, it was impossible for him | all Gov. Polk’s friends may repose with perfect Conf horses, and while they were standing round | foie athe heavy welghtoltimbersesting on Risieer | We lean that the wheleaqnedion ie reaty eee ana to have abandoned, in some degree, its vitupera- | ‘© hit the meagre kernel within. dence. | To say more in this place, would be forestalling | the spring, imbibing its mineral tinctured waters, | ny screamed frightfully und beeged of those around hin | will sail in a few days “homeward bound”-that ia to say : . {From the Portland Daily American.) the praiseworthy labors of the honorable and distinguish: | the orator in the stump proceeded, ** Yes, gentle- | 19 cut off his iegs, and save him from the horribl: | (o1 the North, tospend the summer ——P. le tion and scurrilous abuse. . i Tue Man or Buoop—A Shoat Bioczaruy—A western | ed citizens who have this matter rr: pees Goa es men, these are the principles for which our fa- agony he was vafring ; bis ancle bone je fractured, vn. July 13. Pieri igs dara arabes Inrelation to religion, and to the introduction of Pape sige tea sollowng utnenl shee b- and whore work, when doue, will be ample, perfect and | thers bled; these are the doctrines which led to | he is bruised very much, but not considered dungerous religion into political controversy, we have follow- a Uheg Bey Dork fa 1777 he the expulsion of the British lion, and the establish- | John Culbestson, another son of Dr. C., was considerabl Canapa ann Tuk Unitep States.—The Quebec A f In i aquarrel with Col. Davis, of Kentucky, | The Nashville whig papers, with all their rancor to- 1 Of hisguaranteed through | injured. We was much bruised about the body——not du, | Official Gezette of the 18th instant contains @ pto- ed the same course, and adhered to the same gen- anda duel was only prevented by the active interference wards Gov rane not dared to propegate or republish | men Cher At vetacibe tie Benak dion. ar the spsine foros, We was Drvught out by some of the fms lamation dated the Sth July 6, Dundee, Hu rae rsdn ; . \- nil. : yD, Reid, anc ungdow, Russeltown, aud n the coun- eral principles, treating with propriety and decorum | ° 1 '(8)3" ne challenged Humphrey Marshall, of the Ken- | that it ws tru had heard enough, and with his retinue retired, | O° 8" Culbertson, was got out uphurt. Hes al y of Beauharnols, Lecel n, Clurenceville, every Christian sect, which may have its founda-|tucky Legislature, They: m-t; three shots were ex- the orator elevating his voice so as to reach the | tient eight years oud. Hecalled to one of the girls t. | Rowville, Freligsturg, in Misenquei, Potton, in Bt (From the Albany Argus.) te . . . changed, and both parties were slightly wounded before James K. Pou, loyal servant of H. P. M. (Her Prolific Majesty), | give him his at, he wanted tobe off. Auotherson ci | stead, aud Compton and’ Kuton, jm the county of Shere sine ve eternal truth, but invariably setting our face the quarrel was ontiled. The first impulse of whiggery on the nomination ef Mr. | as he retreated. “ § ir. Reid, quite a child, had his skull fractured.’ He wa | vrooke, ports a ntry for good: he iy bt ob inputted against the introduction of the clerical character | "jn 1925, he chailenged John Randolph, one ofthe purest | Polk, was to assail him personally. Some of the presses | Burs.—Mr. Sengstack of this city, proposed last | got out alse by the females. It waa heart sickening to hes, | inland, : custetn hou- intothe political field; the mingling of religion with | statesme » the country ever saw. | While he aimed a bul ger in the work of delamation, thut they week in the Globe a series of bets upon Polk and | the poor chili beg of he do ave his life. His ses to be es ‘This pro- " . : When Catholics have b let at the heart of Randolph, that great man dischar sed | not forthe key-note from head quarters, but broke | Dalia., amounting to two thousand dollars, or] is Cousidered bad. Thilip Craver and Michael Cray r 4 Willum the dirt ot this world. en Catholics have been | pis pistol into the air. ‘This was twice repeated. out on “their own hook,” and the r ,in tome | ore.” We ure informed that three strangers ar- | (Germans), fither and son, ace both very seriously in | iV. It is probably intended to facilitate the execution of unjustly assailed by Presbyterians, we have de-| In 1838, he assisted in planning the murder of Jonathan | cases, been laughable. ‘The contradiction came so quick “this mn from. Ball d—the father dangerously—his shoulder he agricultural tax get, posted at the late session of the y-and when. Presbyteri h Cilley, of Maine. He counselle Graves, urged on | upon the calumny, that, in one case, after the outeide was | Fived this morning to be besich e sae seach ured, and some of ribs, ‘lao, b Caueda Parliamen fended them; and when Presbyterians have | tie duel, and actually penned the challenge with his own | worked off containing the lie, the inside was obliged to | “more, one from Frederick, sand one from | ire bodily. injur His son was discovered hang been unjustly assailed by Catholics, we have defend- | hand. ey fell, and it is said his young wife died in a | give aretract on. The following isa specimen of the | Winchester, Va., who conjointly offered to bet | ing py the hand, which had been caught by the tm Dearu or Tur . Wisk.—We stop the pre d ri wed But sat A wo liees fallen upon mad house, gfe his two children are ieit destitute or. ste to say evil, and the humiliation of instant detection. | hundred thousand more, $10,000 forfeit. Poor WF eee dreadiully - the flesh of bis hod Psat o announce the death of Tully R. W se, Eeq. First A ha . od phans. M pee eM obi # announced the nomination: | business, this turning the Presidential election | much to head wus badly hurt, either by bis fai) | !tor of the Treasury of the United States, which took both, when they departed from that golden rule of | ” In 1841, he insulted Mr. King, of Alabama; a challenge mocratic Ticket—For President, James K. Polk. AJ into a game of hazard. Jt is downright gambling, } mg or by timber failing on him. He suffered dreadtully | place this day, at 86 iinutee past 1 o'clock, alter a pro- the author of the Christian faith— Whatsoever ye ed; the police of Washington city interfered, and he it, who has deliberately shot at and killed bis neigh: | and men ought to be ashamed of it. Bon. 71 4s it was a considerable time before he could be got down | ‘Fucted illness, in th h ¢~ Madisonian, was compelled to give $10,000 bonds to keep the peace, | bor; a profane swearer and free drinker of wine He hung, 4s did also Dr. E. Culbertson, above the ston: q . the hee d'neen mote would that men should do unto you, do ye even} or goto jail. This bond has not yet expired. Speaker in Congress he gave great license to rowdyism wall which forms the first story of the mill at the wes 3 ; pe 80 unto them.” ut the whig leaders say, these ducls were fought | and insubordination.” Consulate General of the Oriental Repablte | os. ‘He tried hard to get his knife out of his pocket tc | cone cure n) Aish aie Bele sly Ma ee Uruguay. . when Mr. Clay was young, in tiscreet, and hot blooded. The zetraction cume fn the same sheet as follow: bs 5 cut off the hand by which he hung — He is not considere: al fi In financial and commercial affairs, we have car- | (et us look at that a moment, “Since the outaide of this paper went to press we are wat! pvanraae or | dangerous. “Samuel Fry wanslightly injured. Habied | ‘venru which will Insuse fienty: of weler — Pitioburg pretension, from the first inception of this jeurnal, | 94 1808, Py that he is not only @ man of exemplary morals, but of reli. | State IE ieihe Depanmecevy the United State C onsui | Was got out unhurt. Henneberger aud Mellinger bow | cam TROMLLIBRAG RAILAIN GOT RS ji i a ‘ @ son of the Captain, of your city, also ped i's ten years. In this contest we have met with the} fry «teat, cumstances, wish to have the charges considered as |thorewhom hey may concern i= | Tamnot certain'whal part of the mill he was tn ia strongest opposition from the speculators, the bank-]| Truly, he must be a very indiscreet young man when, | withdrawn, We shall make further inquiries and give | ARTICLE 18. beg wage coe oe nd ay he was on the fifth story, and others t Y ruv MPATR BALL OR LIN. rupts, the blacklegs, and corrupt financiers of all | at the age of 64 he is under bonds to keep the peace. But | the result ” sailing to ports of this Republic, first, aud escaped by the wil 1 touro Le (POOL PACKETS, this propensity for blood runs in the Clay family. Itwas | Some have gone, for political capital beyond Mr. Polk, | Consuls of the Republic, must, through him make xcept that Vise | (Spitink from Liverpool ow the 7th aud 19th of every month. 1 able their manifests of cargoes or ballast, bills of henith, int escaped inj : t " kinds. But having planted ourselves on the prin-| only lavt year that Cassius M. Clay, a nephew, at a cock tarted a tile of dishonor upon his grendfather. ¢ n p08 OF Kerr got into the creek and would have been drowned b' Persons wishing to send to the Old Coapuy for their friends eves ot honesty und common sense, we are harny | Mor ee rng a Lal Araya Aves tor the Prenitency and iin patitinm, are | onde a veda proceedings and, deciions pre | 2F the atrintance of aman, who Jumped and rexcte: | ‘irc cou sat Qs aaperoy Line of Parka, Stag ri Mr. Brown with a bowie knife, slashing out one of his | supposed to be impugned, by making out that his gr “ g , - ot te Mrs. Willis hast r! jously hort. It wa pactuslly on the 7th and 19 'y mor pit hee — ie Gane anne in eyes, and mutilating him in a horrid manner. father adhered. to the British and was a Tory, seventy eh coccageae anes Wee earner, arte eet t abe would hav: d betore this ima, Bt uve nen ute age of Arnriea trading iy the whole country has almost adopted the prin- (From the Warren Democratic Advocate } Years ago. Fine logic, iftrne—bat what if it bofalee ? | WA0 MMs Captains contravening the dispositions in b Thave been told that she was eats | # ‘7, sie dave, thereby affording weekly, communica: i i Ri “Go home G—d D—n you, hatfif it be a slander on the dead, as well asa wrong to etd out of the mill and went back with Miss Taylor to ge whe im (Mr. James D. ne) is ciples of finance which we have announced and wheee Sarton se Mr. Clay's apecch to Mr. Polk while | theliving ? We know nothing of the facts. Col. Polk’ by Fecal eee am hegie taveneemee te te Mr. Reid’s child out, and in attempting to save thut poo: shall be forwarded with 4 defended, and that the currency is now in a better | j) was 8) ancestor, emote degree may have been leas a repuh- child's life, will, in all probability, lose her ows. The the ys ny ’ ipeaker of the House of Representatit ; ft hence they came, as also any other liabilities , 5 P y» he parties agreed for not come out, the money will condition, and better understood by the people, than | « You had better mind your ewn business, 1m Bec ee pecaee e ig Len’ bat Cn tetany Boy doen covonmined Wpiaw.” 7 raised a mass of timber that six of them could not hav: | w returned to thowe who paid it ‘hero, without nay Pedte- it was before. are fat und sleek.”—Extract from Mr. Clay's speech to Mr. iH ly shine brig! ple, JOHN LEWIS DARBY, done under any ordinary umstances, Binck Ball, or Old Line of I tpool Packets, comprise i diana. wn person built up ahigh character for his family ‘ Miss Henneberger was severely cut and bruised,! ut she x Ball, oF ibated yey of this, static nt, and Mert ccaeyt te Kio challenge,) I accept it.”"—Mr. | name The contrast would add merit to his exertions and Yonx, July 20th, 1844 Praca bo is not at all dangerously hurt. Betey Williard had, like | ilOWewine inexusteent Ships, Ww YORK. fa laced it beyond cheireadh, Of is 168 Clay's perch to Senator Linn. distinction to hisown name. The shame would belong to | New Your, July z P+ | Mrs Wills, got out safe, butreturned to save Jobn Cul CAMBIIDG COLUMBLS, higirep low " We have been in the midst of a it (Cilley’s death,) will be a nine days’ bubble.”—Mr. | the petty malice bo de * ‘ na bl th bere tack |. atrens By THe Hinennta.—The letters destined | Dettson, who was screaming dreadfully ; v oval th ERROR ROUTH AMERICA, a . Y ~t is accestor’s errors, w Lt s vee e s | D “dd seve ee iNGL. NORTH AMERICA. financial, moral, political, and religious revolution | Clay's speech when he heard of the murder of Cilley by scendunt, the reproach for h pon in getting him out, but wae knocked down several tim AMERICA, Graves which death has #0 long set its seal of oblivion, that no | for Baltimore, brought by the last English steamer, | hy timber falling on her in the heroic act. She told m« With such saperior and unequalled arra ? ever since we started e have now passed the i ‘From the Detroit Free Press.) thing but partisan meanness would seek to break it. But | which arrived at Boston on Wednesday last, have not yet | she could not Tisten to his screams without assisting | ober confidently look forward for a coutinuauce of ¢ c 1 7 % piel 1 em 20 Tan for whieh most dangerous parts of that revolution, and begin . pe much of the popular. | if the tale be merely a malevolent invention, it is worse | been received. Whether thie is the result of accident, or | him—her arma were quite wet with the boy's blood. Tan | if "lie haa been extended to therm so many years, to reap the fruite of having advocated throughout pe Senty Clay Whe Wetheevidence of f?" Twitto | than ameanness—it is a flagrant crime against both the | whether the failure is caused by negligence or inatten- | only giving you a disjointed and hasty sketch as the cir Those ‘proeceding, Of remitting mouey to their relatives, ena adherence to right principles in every department atte if dog: dead and the living, which is not redeemed from its turpi- | tion, wo are “nable to say. This much we know, how- | cumstances occur to me,it would be utterly impossible fo: | tall umes obran Diets nt sieht for tus, amount, drawn dleret ot humaa life. The recent riots in Philadelphia tude by its failure to do the evil which it designed. ever, that our merchants are greatly disappointed ot the | me to give you anything like a correct account of it sir | 1 the Noval Bank of Ireland, Dublin, also ow 3 and Illinois, and the excitement in this city, in ir? Je i Poux 4 Stavenouoen.—The Pittsburg American says— | non-receipt ef their correspondence, aud much vexed ot | this hurried letter ; it would take me days to do it, Messrs, PRES i eee £S.. which the prelate of acertain church participated | ‘0 jeful d of 1824 and 1932 ; The Polks ong the largest slaveholders in the | the delay and injury to their business Paice tnite then it would fall short of anything like the reality. qhich will be paid on demand at any of the Lonks.or their s0 largely and so foolishly, are but the remnants— | re shameful rejection, in 1840, by the Whig Conven: | south, Lucins, the brother of James K., married a laly | by. ‘The steamer reached Bowion at six #’cloc! nt ¢ | saw many a wet eye yesterMay iirteh will te paid on, foment, 96 ene ot Cay jargely Y> irit of a day | 0m? Is it because he still adheres to that ‘ obsolete who owned 2000 of these chattels. James K. is also the | morning, and the mail left that city for the south at four | had been saved, rushed from the wreck into each othe sad, Seotland and Waler i Aedes the expiring efforts of the troubled spirit of a "Y | @ Bank of the United States 7” Iv ic because he is in at number, whom he hites ont through the | P. M.—-ten hours thereafter—aftording, we should think, h joy at their almost miraculous e ROCHE, CKOTHERS & CO now passed for tver. These recent explosions will | of distribution to help States and stock jobbers, and St -gaining with thé employers for #0 much a year, andance of time to institute the most careful exami- vith roof was carried entirely oidoes tin Tee mat only tend to give a new force and momentum to | ation to drain the pockets of the people to replaceit ? generally from $100 to $160, with board, clothing, and Jer to prevent mistakes of so tious soe ogland” hill, and thrown i N. 8.=The O14 Lieeot Ds ep alven Rept. Nite the public mind in the right path ; and also to give | nune of these things produce it, what does? The ek paymentiof the doctor's bill. ‘The first is positive—the character, ‘The bag containing the letters 43 a °e, probably iifty yards, and the sort for Liverpool on the Ist aud ith of exch month. Parties to those journals which understand their position | tion will show that his popularity is confined to that class | others depend on the pleasure of the employer, Baltimore has probably been erroneously labeled, and it It wan atwo story brick house | curning to the old y will find it to ther corfort and and the time, a greater circulation and a greater | Whom he has helped to quarter upon the Jaboring class (From the Forum } iv not imposrible that it may beet bg iy > r idl ag Ag sadly fences were torn down —Cham | sivqutage to avteer for Thor eonwevagee, 0 influence than ever. receivers of bounties. He was always sup by | New Wonxs.—Works of fiction are increasing—the | leans belone the error is corrected, OM lhawered by the | Craeura dellers July he : With these few remarks, on our present posi riends, to bag lar belore en election, but always | «pubic Services of James K. Polk” and the “Consistency Meamen, Which willeave Boston on thefiet OF Ae | Impoatantll Mait, AWRANOSUNT.s«We undet STON DUCK.=260 bites AmeMenn I hit Doel, come d eet ru r enough in the rear to avoid the dirt from the heels | o¢ «, M. Dallas” will be the next themes, Meta Bele «ian t " ea compl te nae “r No.! Vivo oe ie Prosperity, Stor procee; brilttene ee bi ha of his adversary. He will do ro again. ‘The people will het geese Putedelaki aie in Sip pomerminy oc Sesh, © Soatmmency (ve are servis ee important negociation seg hav beer ured eX teasiv for plot tows, ad em e prospect before us is a brilliant one, and no- 5 = From the Nadel ja Enquirer, rprised at the vexetion which exists among thore on ween our government and that of Grea very respect ry pape arts te » 1010 te oo 1. prospe r '» never trust him ; they dare net—they will not. His past t ip! J i Tate’ bine tue Bravetes fi italn, respectiog the tiensit ol the Eegiich: ails te y iS carr some? en for sa tym 1onT ON THe SuBsECT.--A writer in the | interested in the Europ ays, Mr. Polk is ‘one of the,first men of | was written the missing letters have been received at the | signed for her provinces through the United Stutes, her been concluded. Bunker Hill Aurora, thing can prevent it from being realized to the ful- | jife furnishes the clearest evidence of his true character, | T#nowiwa reten %, 5 there Portland A: ime 4 eters TT title tos edu; c Aaash'te comteuns vad free’ 7 the age. ol y oan’thold a candle to him.” The Louis: | Baltimore Post Office.—Baltimore American, July 2. a 1. K COLLINS & CO jyaa 06 Benth etecet

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