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eee Ls alaamitied semddine Pemba sins Price Two Cents. Vol. XL, No, 170—Whole No. 4041. NEW YORK, TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1845. 4 3.7. sion, he d in his way, to give good counsel . i i { constitut be ir ired, he ton: 4 & NEW YORK HERALD. | THE FUNERAL SOLBMNITIES AT WASHINGTON, | Sop ite,tnengen PUY which he Pelioved hostile to re-| judgment, bad commited eggrestion, he, would here | fied forthe comtitations and ite hame he published to | supplant that ad come Up ts hin for succor. OF the mane | | be | During his period of service in th te, Jackson | reconnoissance to made ; and, with an army of five | the world “Tae Union: it must sx presenven.” The | strifes in which he was sumer in his earlier life, not 4 RDO} rietor, ' was elected major general by the bri rs and field of- | thousa: % ready guaranty her redemp- | words were a spell to hush evil ion, and to remove | one sprung from himself, but in every case he became J)MES GO! DON BENNETT, Propi MR. BANCROFT’S ORATION. Hoors of the militis of Tennessee.” Hariguing his place | tion from evleatel thesidses, 7 "> : vomP” | Oppression. Under his guiding influence, the favored in- | involved by forth as the champion of the Beaks ee oulation---Forty Thousand. —_ in the Senate, he was made judge of the supreme court | But when was restored, and his office was ac- | terests, which had struggled to peapetnate unjust egis- the poor, and the defenceless, to shelter the gentle f | ‘The men of the American revolution are no more. | inlaw and equity; such was the confidence in his integ- | complished, fis physical strength sunk untler the pesti- | lation, yielded to the voice of moderation and Cant oppression, to protect the emigrant the \.Y HERALD—Every day, Price .2 cents per That age of creative power has passed away. The | rity of purpose, his clearness of judgment, and his vigor | ential influence ofthe climate, and, fast yielding to dis- | and évery mind that hai for a moment contemplated | avarice of the speculator. His generous soul revolted at ber $7.26 per annum—payable fnadrence. eiaiaes last surviving signer of the Declaration of Indepen- bf to deal justly sang te turbulent who crowded | =i he was borne in a litter across the swamps of Flor. ial a amd Sheannend vit, forever Soe, besbarone penatios of dale, by no man in the Ve ERALD—Every Saturday —| 6 6} cel : rs : into the new settlements of Tennessee. towards his home. It was Jackson’s character e ent the past was inv yl eee reer ercen table is atrence, dence has long since left the earth | Washington | rite Sa tnehort period of uine years, Andrew Jack. | he Rover coIet ea lft ay aexsoe t cinevor forgot | of the. constitution-from abe council chambers of the’| Tho sorrows af those that were near to him went deep- fathers, who moulded our institutions—from the hall | ly into his soul ; and at the ih of the wife whom he rs ° i his fami- ienali pl H | f "TISEMENTS at the usual prices—always ies near his own Potomae, surrounded by his fa son was signalized by as many evidences of public es- | those who rendered him service in the hour of need. At \ advance. ¥ ¥* ly and his servants. Adams, the colossus of inde- | teem as could. fall to the lot of man. The pioneer | atime when all around him believed him near his’ end, | ‘/S'TING of all kinds executed with beauty and pendence, reposes in the modest grave-yard of his | of the wilderness, the defender of its stations, he was | his wife hastened to his s le ;and, by her tendernes clear, loud cry was uttered—‘‘the Union, it must be pre- | tears, and weep and sob qprica, native region. Jefferson sleeps on the heights of | their lawgiver, the sole representative of a new peonle nursing care, her patient as: | iduity, and the soothing in- | served.” From every battle-field of the revolution— No man in private life so possessed the hearts of all (> All letters or communications, by mail, addressed his own Monticello, whence his eye overlooked his | in Congress, the representative of the State in the So- | fluence of devoted love, withheld him from the grave. | from Lexington and Bunker Hill—from Saratoga and | around him—ao public man of this century ever return- ) establishment, must be post paid, or the postage beloved Virginia. Madison, the last survivor of the | Bete, the highest in military command, the highest inju- | He would b remained quietly at his home in repose, I nog oe ie Posies of Bg al ro the ed be to A ehlpe fd beng an abidi ; preingt eked the .» deducted from the subscription moi rematted ituti H ii di med to be recognised as the first in | but that he was pri informed, his name was s that sheltered the men of Marion—the repea' affections of people. No man w: ir rer JAMES GORDON BENNY! cr men who made our constitution, lives only in our | love of liberty, the first in the nee of legislation, in | to be attainted by Flessty {etsndud nis gape i amppood long-prolonged echoes came up— the Union, it must be | ceived American ideas—no man expressed them so com- peo- sincere where American independence was declared, the | loved, the orphans renee lopted, he would melt into achild. roron or tHE New Yori hearts. But who shall say that the heroes, in whom | judgment, and integrity. ings; he came, therefore, into the presence of preserved.” From every valley in our land—trom every | pletely, or s0 boldly, or so sincerely. He was as Torthwest corner of Fu | the image of God shone most brightly, do not live Fond of private ite, he would have resigned tho judi- les representatives at W: pat ne ‘only to vindicate | cabin on the pleasant mountain sides—from the ships at | a man as ‘overilived. He was wholly, and al- aepeeenneenereennnnnees | forever? They were filled with the vast conceptions | cial office; but the whole country demanded his service. | his name; and, when that was achieved, he was once | our wharvesfrom-- the tents of th together sincere and true. ‘NNTREVILLE COURSE, TROTTING. | which called “America mto being; they lived for | “Nature,” they cried, “never designed that your powers | more communing with his own thoughts among the | most prairies—from the living minds of the living 'p to the last, he dared do anything that it was right . eet | those conceptions ; and their deeds praise them. of thought and independence of mind should be lost in | groves of the Hermitage. millions of American freemen—from the thickly coming | to do. He united personal courage and moral et to comn ori virtues of one | retirement.” But after a few years, relieving him: It was not his own ambition which brought him again | glories of futurity—the shout went up, like the ound of | beyond any man of whom histo: eps the record. | -.h att Bee ineatear ee nar ll gee’ part | from the cares of the Dench, he gave himself to. the ucti-|to the public view. ‘The afeetion of Tennessee com | Toany waters, ‘the Union, it must be preserved.” The | fore the nation, before the world, before coming ages, he | in winning the territory and forming the ‘early insti- | Vity and the independent life of a husbandman. He car- | pelled him to resume a seat on the floor of the Ame- friends of the protectiv: item, and they who be stands forth the repregentative, for his generation, of the | tutions of the Wost, and wa imbued. with ull the great | Tied into retirement the fame of natural intelligence, and | rican Senate, and, after years of the iutensest political | nounced the protective m-the statesmen of the | American mind. And the secret of his greatness is this : ide which cons ral force of our bsp reat | was cherished as “a prompt, frank and ardent soul.” His | strife, Andrew Jackson was elected President of the Uni- | North, that had wounded the constitution in their _ on By intuitive conception, he shared and possessed all the he apot Whaiee bi ciaateaicrs to tes vigor of character constituted him first among all with | ted States, centralism—the statesmen of the South, whose mind creative ideas of his country and his time. He expressed lecchete, wilete' ie ment wef whom he associated. A private manas he was, his name | Far from advancing his own pretensions, he always | carried to its extreme the theory of State rights—all con- | them with dauntless intrepidity; be enforced them with Deo- edged himself before the world to Shi 7] " s uity of | an immovabl. 3 freedom, to the constitution, and to the laws—we meet | ¥°% familiarly spoken round every hearth-stone in Ten- | kept them back, and had for years repressed the solicita- together; all breathed prayers sites ~ perpet ata - power reise ed will ; be (Feige bese Ibid ae i + ired W TP ONESDAY, July 2d, at 3 o’clock, P. | nessee. Men loved to discuss his qualities. All discern: | tions of his friends to become acandidate. He felt sen- the Union. Under the pru i a to pay our tribute to the memory of the last great name, | Bese mm | ty (neon nel regard for all'| The nation, in his tion t t take for $110, mile heats, best 3in5 iS. rs i inti ed his power; and when the vehemence and impetuosity | sibly that he was devoid of scientific culture, and little | under the mixture of justice and general rega: 5 1e not one great it, of ‘Wi, Whelan enters... 5 Henty Clay. pipers ieee Fp itself all the associations that form | or hig nature were observed upon, there Were hot want- | fvmilinr with letters; and he never obtruded his opinions, | interests, the pooled danger to ott iuatitutions was turn- | which he was not the boldest and clearest expositor. ee RSS pe trouble, | the SitlcCaralina gave a birth-place to Andrew Jackson. | ig those who saw, beneath the blazing fires of his ge- | or preferred claims to place, But, whenever bis opinion | ed aside, and mankind was encouraged to believe that | | History does not describe the man that eq him witsion to all part of the Course 36 cents. o On its remote frontier, far up on the forest-clad banks of | MUS; the solidity of his judgment. was demanded, he was always tealy to pronounce it; | our Union, l’ke our freedom, js imperishable; | in firmness of nerve. | Not danger, not an army in JOEL CONKLIN, Proprietor. | the Catawba, ina region where the settlers wore just His hospitable roof sheltered the emigrant and the pio- | and whenever his country invoked his services. he did The moral of the great events of those days is cre - 'y, not Neh not wi ore clamor, not age, not oweryville, June 29th, 1845, 530 3t*1 boginning to cluster, his eye first saw the light. ‘There | NeeT;,and,.as they made their way to their new homes, | not slirink even from the ‘station which had been filled | that the people can diseern right, and will maken t eir ra anguis! ee aor Pyar Pages imp pe “Nf NEW PORTAND PROVIDENCE. higinfane sported in the ancient forests, and his mind | they filledthe mountain sides and the valleys with his | by the most cultivated mew our nation had produced way to a knowledge of ri Priest the whole oe e-igor oF is si ast nab te Toes oe entianiy, ’ . Fare * | was nursed to freedom by their influence.’ He was the | PF&S¢. Behold then, the unletered saan of the West, the nur. | mia, and therefore with itthe mind of the nation has | would have contemplated with awo the unmatched hard DAY LINE via GREENPORT oungest son of an Irish emigrant, of Scottish origin, | Connecting himself, for a season, with a man of busi- | sling of the wilds, the farmer of the Hermitage, little ving existence; tl mg oT Bee dites fil, could a ro possess ats 1 i y iJ ” | ness, Jackson 00: ‘ned the misconduct of his asso- | versed in books, unconnected by science with the tradi- | fr the unjust ley tion of to-day must made a im ‘erested will, could never have been vanquish. o The Long Island Rail Road will run a train in | who, two years bee! the great war of Frederick of Prus- connection with the Sound Steamer Worcester,ou | sia, fled to America for relief from indigence and oppres- Phureday, the Sd of July, at EX o'cloel A. sion. "His birth was in 1767, at a time when the people Cdr Nacom the Depot at Brooklyn. the days herea!ter | of our land were but & body of dependent coloni 1 5 ‘ingly; to the more enlighten- ckson never was vanquished. He was always sien garmeatly, Dero yer Ely, that submission is | fortunste- "He conquered the wilderness; ho conquered the people, ie he juered the bravest veterans trained in ciate. It marked hit racter, that he insisted, himself, | tion of the past, rnised by the will of the people to on paying every obligation that had been contracted; | highest pinnacle of honor, to the central post in the ci j and, rather than endure the vassalage of debt, he in- | ization of republican freedom, to the station where al! | due ‘othe popular will, in the confidence Be 0 | stantly parted withthe rich domain which his early en- | the nations of the earth would watch bis actions—where | when in error, will amend their doings; that in a eee attle-fields of Europe; he conquered everywhere in Eo i i es terprise had acquired—with his own mansion—with the | his words would vibrate throngh the civilized worl), | govecnment injustice, is neither to stablished by |.statesmanship; and, when death came to get the mastery slong an immense coast, with no army, ov navy felis which he himself had tamed to the ploughshare-- | and hie spirit he the moving-star to guide the nations — | force, nor to be resisted by force; ina word, that the | over him, he turned that last enemy Peal side tranguilly fi ‘FOURTA OF JULY EXCURSION. i q 4 eT WEEN NEW YORK & PHILADELPHIA, | (oma, oxPored, (24s atom ts oF eyes with the forest whose trees were as familiar to himas his | What policy wil he pursue? What wisdom will he | Union, which was constituted by consent, must be pre- | as he had done the fecblest of his adversaries, and esca- “At reduced rates of Fare, by the New Jersey aaa ene ine ant ee montact witht Grout Beiter eae | friends—and chose rather to dwell, for atime, ina rude | bricg with him from the forest? What rules of duty | served by love, | ped from earth in the triumphant consciousness of im- | Boe cabin, in the pride of independence and integrity. | will he evolve from the orncles’of his own mind ! It rarely falls to the happy lot of a statesman to receive | mortality. “S09 Rail Road and Ti tation Company, from the ty iti lo; i great Frotat Liberty street, Ne HC, fromm the 20 tothe | Hest great political truth that reached his heart, was that | “Gr tiv seat occasions, Jackson's influence was defer- | “The man of the West camo. at the inspired prophet of | euch unsnimons applause from the heart of a nation. | His body has ite fit resting-place in the great central ya and Fr. | Scarcely more than two millions in number, R. . th July, with the privilege ‘of returning on the | all men are free and equal; the first great fact that | Jo4¢o. When Jefferson had acquired for the country the | the West: he came as one tree from the bonds of here- | Duty tothe derd demands that, om this occasion, the | valley of the Mississippi; his spirit rosts upon our whole Peery oh daly. id, inclusive. ae [ BOSSE JO His MAETaPR Dea) wey piscountry’s inde! i rele of Louisiana, and there seemed some hesitancy on | ditary or established custo; he came with no superio: | conse of mea-ures should not pass unnoticed, in the | territory; it hovers over ino valos of Gregon, and guards, Fare for the zcursion Four ae 2 F The strife, as it increased, came near t des of his | the part of Spain to acknowledge our possession, the ser- | but conscience, no oracle bnt tis native judgment; and, | progress of which his vigor of character most clearly | in advance, the frontier of the Del Norte. The fires of Be eC oe ad an it ly aD Si rintan costh | own upland residence, As @ boy eit, | ¥iees of Jackson were solicited by the national adminis- | true to his origin and his education—truc ty the conui- | appeared, und his conflict with opposing parties was most | party spirit are quenched at his grave. His faults and we e%P. eturuing from Philadelphia on the Sth | 1) 1 tration, and were not called into full exercise, only from | tions and circumstances of his advancement, he valued | violent an! protracted. railties have perished. Whatever of good he has done, bi July até A. M., and ith, oth and 6th July at5 P.M. | nessed the sce horror that ypany civil war 8 can be procured at the office of the Company, foot of | and when but old . ~lder brother, he | the peaceful termination of the incidents that occasioned From his home in Tennessee, Jackson came to the | lives, and will live forev ition out of L.baur, street, N. R., and will not be received after the time to ; the summons, Presidency resolved to lift American legi Bhcve tated. Peace musket; strike a blow | “"T.'the long series of aggressions on the freedom of the the forms of English legislation, and to place our laws Boston. Pte agers from New York Tovous‘o America and for humanity! But for | 848, andthe rights of the American flag, Jackson was | guished; yet not to dwell on his career us Presi onthe currency in harmony with the principles of our {Correspondence of the Herald.) abe elas nian Btbepey ap Sears tis, the or soy, the events were full of agony and | 08 the side of his country, and the new maritime code of | were to leave out of view the grandest illustrations of | government. He came to the Presidency of the United Bostox, June 28, 1845. — Pevpare odreeale Hef, His father wasno more. His oldest brother fell | fePublicanism. In his inland home, where the roar of | his magnanimity. "States resolved to deliver the Government from the Counter Statement of the Bell Ringers ae are TT NOE ITS Bieatine to the war of the revolution ; another (his com- | the breakers was never heard, and the mariner was never | ‘The legislation of the United States had followed the | Bank of the United States, and to restore the regulation ir A s HOW BRUNSWICHAND SERIE LOY panion in abc) died of wounds received in their joint | 8°e”, he ranented. ihe continued aggression on our com- Eo epentn Vda pas of eee ata pienclinnges to Be, aed ka st Ayes a ee dee ; 1 re al pea eh aA sor of terete hose zi “dei : , | Telit © Se mn 7 Joti merce and on our sailors. was the office of Jac! ift the country out of -the e commerce of the country. He ha er signed ‘ H. Swift,” for the Cam Loy rothers J 1dctom Barclay street, at 9 A M. ni | captivity ; his mother went down to the grave @ victim | When the continuance of wrong compelled the nation | European forms of legislation, and to open to it a career | clare his views on this subject in his inaugural address, | i. which the writer comp anette rie avawin hie [eave the foot of Barclay street on'Eriday | cane he was alone in the world, with no kindred to | t@Yesort to arms, Jackson, led by the instinctive know- | resting on American sentiment and American freedom.— | but was persuaded to relinquish that purpose, on the |) | laine Ty Mth. at 9 o'clock, for the above places, making | Cheah hin and Lisle. vheeitance but his own untried | ledge of his own greatness, yet with a modesty -hat | He would have freedom every where—freedom under the | ground that it belonged rather to.» legislative message, | Hand into a newspaper controversy, by denouncing ‘she Outer and Inner Passages, affording pleasant views of | Cowers, on ba * would have honored the most sensitive delicacy of no- | restraints of right; freedom of industry, of commerce, en the period for addressing Congress drew near, it | them as impostors. I will, with your Pei state $e if and Harbor, Government’ Fortifications, Sandy Hook | PORT. wie) omancipated itself from British rule | Ure, confessed his willingness to be employed on the | of mind, of universal action; freedom, unshackled by re- | was still urged, that to attack the bank would forfeit his | what | did; and leave it to the public to decide if 1 was jiacis, ond the berutifal scenery of the Sound and Kilns, Re | Te ater fe icration gives way to the con- | canada frontier; and. it is. fact that 6 aspired to the | etrlotive privileges; unrestrained by the thraldom of mo- | popalarity and secure his future defeat. “It is pattie Bead Pace nab gEnL one cae bale AE phage og te aan a ge Ste Detere 5 5»: {dares q r be command to whic! ‘inchester was appointed. We ma; nopolies. answered, ‘ is not for mysel at . Ly » Perth Amboy at 3 o’cluck, arriving in the city at's before 5 | autatso i tbe Be aan its, grat ask, what would have been the paberray if the command or he unity ofhis mind and his consistency were with- | urged that hastewas unnecessary,as the bank had stillsix oe first time, the sdvertisement of the new band of Bell- | g-Fare for the whole Excursion Fifty Cents. | Soeraliahede ashes ie ruins unity neva | the northwestern army had, at the opening of the war, | out «parallel. With natural dialectics he developed the | unexpended years of chartered existence. | may die,” | ringers. This did not surprise me, for I had heard that a FB Fe iiic awd olen oe lecce Cit Mitchie ahaof | ott gee “1iem among the | Peen entrusted to aman who, in action, was ever so | political doctrines that suited every emergency, with a “before another Congress comes together, Lah puegising tee ut I was very much aurprieed to : CaAasE pieces at Sea iaLibth Rotana eeenaton thera ev) Sarenumnone Batata 7 ' the | fortunate, that his vehement will seemed to have made | precision anda harmony that no theorist could hope to could not rest quietly in my grave, if I failed to dg | find that they had assumed part of the title of t 6 origi: Syl ttre p Bamers OFS Sa formed by America, is | 4estiny capitulate to his designs. equal. On every subject in politics—I speak butafact— | what I hold so essential to the liborty of my country.” | nal band had copied our advertisements almost PEOPLES LINE OF STEAMBOATS FOR ALBANY, | tha takion roccstsion of the wilderness. Th i5 | ‘The path of glory led him in another direction. On | he was thoroughly and profoundly and immovably radi. | And his first, annual message announced to the country | tim— referred to their success in Europe !—(where they D. : td 1 the taking possession of the wilderness. The magnifi- | t4¢ declaration of war, twenty-five hundred volunteers | cal; and would sit for hours, and in a continued Row of | that the bank was neither constitutional nos expedient. | have never been)—assumed the same style of dress—and AILY—Sundays Excepted—Through Di: | cent western valley cried out to the civilization of popu- rect, at7 o'clock P. M., from the Pier between Jar power, that it must be occupied by cultivated man. Courtlandt and Liberty streets. | ambost ROCHESTER, Captain R. G. Crattenden, will f bout him, in | to cap the climax, had a fac simile of our wood cut at the principles to every | In this he was in advance of the frien | had risen at his word to follow his standard; but, by | remark make the application of his Beh, i | countermanding orders from the seat of government, the question that could Mee a legislation, or in the inter- | advance of Congress, and in advance of his party. This | head of their advertisement. This I considered, and still ehold, then, our orphan hero, sternly earnest, conse- | ovemunt was without effect. pretation of the constitution, is no time for the analysis of measures or the discussion | do consider, a most unjustifiable attempt to use the repu- leave on Monde, Wadueatay ad ri y Evenings, at7o’clock. | crated to humanity from childhoed by sorrow, having | "4 new and great danger hung over the West. TheIn- | His expression of himself was so clear, that his influ- | of questions of political economy: on the present occa. | tation of the “original” band to their ad , and a Steamboat KNICHENBOCKER: Captain A- Houghton, will | neither father, nor mother, nor sister, ner surviving Dro: | dian tribes were to make one last effort to restore it to | ence pervaded not our land only, but all America and all ‘¢ have to contemplate the character of the man. | most pal tempt to lead the public into error, and Lapp bby gry heey eee ngs at Torelock. | ther, so young and yet so solitary, and, therefore, bound | its solitude, and recover it for savage life. The brave, | mankind. ‘They say that, in the physical world, the mag- | Never, from the first moment of his' administration to | a8 such I denounced it in the card published by me on » landing at lnweemediate places, fromthe foot | the more closely to collective man—behold him elect | eientless Shawnecs—who, from time immemorial, had | netic fluid is so diffused, that its vibrations are discerns. | the last, was there a calm in the strife of parties on the | June 3d. of Sarelay street ‘ é fox his lot to go forth and assist in laying the foundations i in ev ject of th ; and a the whole pe- | | With reference to their precipitate retreat from Cleve- eamboat NEW JERSEY, Capt. R. H. Furey, will leave i | strolled from the waters ofthe Ohio so the rivers of Ala- | ble simultaneously inevery part of the globe. 8o it is pial o! coon Rp 4) never, during 3 ee land, it appears somawhinbreoge thet they pon gtd iqnday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday Alteruoons, at 5, °f Society in the great valley of the Mississippi. | bama—were animated by Tecumseh and his brother the | with the element of freedom. And as Jackson developed , did he recede‘or falter. Always in advance of <x yout NORTH AMERICA, Captain Le W. Briaend, | OF to Feade ee ean, Washington was pledging bis | Grophet, who spoke to them as with the voice of the | ts doctrines from their source in the inind of ‘humanity, party—always having near him fiends who cowered be- | remsin there a single night, on, account of “prior en Poll a " | Spirit y tated t - re is courage —] imself, throu; gagel oi Detroit, save on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Afternome. nt institutions which were to be the light of the human | (res Spirit gis Tae te Creel toe te deeds, | catene world Uli is name grew. everywhere to be the | out all the contest, was unmoved, from the frst sugges: | #8 they intonded, they-went beck tobafiso,and gare 2s ae taking either ofthe abore Lines will arrive in Alba Waa Gin ieee aoe ee symbol of popular power. tion of the unconstitutionclity of the bank to the moment | concert for two or three nights afterwards. massacres. Who has not heard of their terrible deed: when their ruthless cruelty spared neither sex nor ag le ume for the Morning Train of Cars for the east or | jv rocking to their centre, and the mighty fa- | Wien the infant and its mother, the planter and his fami- | Himeelf the witness of the ruthlessness of savage life, | when he himself, first of all, reasoning from the certain | __Mr. H. Swift speaks of a challenge said to have been tal : 3 : | brie that haa Goine dawn from the middle ages was fall- | 1, who had fled for refuge to ‘the {rtress, the garrison | he planned the removal of the Indian tribes beyond the | tendency of ite policy, with singular sagacity predicted | offered by me. { offered neither nor bet. The (he Boats arenew and substantial, are furnished with new and | 108 Do tne Ady us Jackson. in the radiant glory | Pat capitulated—all were slain, and not a vestige of de- | limite of the organized States! and itis the result of his | to unbelieving Kiends'the coming insolvency of the in- | editor of the Cleveland Herald told me they had assured sent state rooms, and for speed and accommodations are unr | Oe eee et the. wildomess, closed ‘the ontz, | fence was left in the country? "The cry ofthe Westule. | determined policy that the region east of the Mississippi | stitution. him that they could learn and perform a piece of music Pcie taken on proderete rates, mountain-barrier that divides the western watersirem | @anded Jackson for its defender; and though his arm | has been transferred to the exclusive possession of cul-| The storm throughout the country rose with unexam- sei day, which my band could not learn in Jess than a “persons are forbid trusting any of the Boats ofthis Line, | the Atlantic, followed the paths of the early hunters and | “28 then fractured aha ball, and hung in a sling. he | tivated man. pled vehemence; his opponents were not satisfied wi week. I laugied at this ridiculous b: and said s. ;, | fugitives, and, not content with the nearer neighborhood | Placed himself at the : ght, apply ,on board the boats, or to P. C. to his parent State, went still further and farther tebe | 8e¢, and resolved to terminate forever the hereditary | neers of Amori | to w - the | ‘struggle. rican statesman Wort, till he found his home in the most beautiful region | “"Wite oan tell the horrors of that campaign? Who.can | s scheme so liberal for the emigrants as that of Jackson, | him to ben ad of the volunteers of Tennes- | A pupil of the wilderness, his heart was with the pio- | addressing the public, or Congress. or his cabinet; the | ! should like to give them an opportunity to prove their Por life towards the setting eun, NoAme- | threw their whole force personally onhim. From a | s#ertion, gnd that the original band would give them as ever embraced within his affections ts men i Geos around him, urging him, entreatin | $100 then and there todo so. Further than this, I told . Congress was flexible: many of his perso | ‘he same gontleman that if they would remain ‘ys pla: the Apollo Hall on one of the two NEW FERRY TO. { 5 . ‘ ; he y n FORT HAMILTON, Srenleathe cass dieaee cerry ties he ¢ oom | paint rightly the obstacles which Jackson overcame He longed to secure to them, not pre-emption rights only, | nal friends faltered; the impetuous swelling wave rolled | We would reling Tall o1 / YELLOW HOOK AND NEW YORK. | ing emigrants were sure to find a shicld. ‘ mountains, the scarcity of untenanted forests, winter, the | but more than pre-emption rights. He longed to invite } on, without one sufficient obstacle, till it reached his pre. | Nights for which I en, it. To this offer I received ! ‘THE Steamboat HAMILTON, Captain HH. | ‘The lovers of adventure began to pour themselves | failure of supplies {rom the settlements, the insubordina- sion of the unoccupied fields without | sence; but, as it dashed in its highest fur feet, it | 0 reply; and as quickly as possible after their arrival, \ Mallan, has beea put on the above Fen | into the territory, whose delicious climate and fertile | 40 of troops, mutiny, menances of desertion? Who | money and without price ; with no obligation except the | broke before his firmness. commandin; jesty of | they left the city, and “returned whence they came.” will commence on Monday, the 30th inst. Aas Ly ay unul further notice ; leaving ier No. 1 and | soil invited: the pretence of rocial man. The. hnnter | ca measure the wonderful power over men, by which | perpetual devotion of iteelf by all A nde: lance to its country | his will appalled his ep) d_ revived his friends | Since then I have “ pursued the even tenor of my way’ | Sith hip site and nis personal prowess and attractive energy ,drew them in r the beneficent influence of his o pinions, the sons | Ho, himself, had a proud consciousness that his will was | Without reference to their movements,and shall continue ier No, 1 East River. Fort Hamilton, | is axe, attended by his wif: and chil- } ciatwinter from their homes, across the mountains and | of mi: v y i todo so. i | ; wa ‘ of misfortune, the children of adventure, find their way | indomitable. Standing over the* rocks of the Rip Raps, % P Kt 2 BM. siutbiy as thar beemeoda tee colivperon thea | morasses. and through ti deserts?" Who can de- | to the uncultivated west. There in some wilderness | and looking out upon the ocean, “Providence,” said he | _ Of their performances I can offer no opinion, no, ace, 1886 eon | all came to the inviting region. Wherever the bending | ¢tibe the personal heroism of Jackson, never sparing | glade, or in tie thick forest of the fertile plain, or where | toa friend, “ Providence may change my determination: | ¢ heard them, which I regret | Of their using our will be resdy to-cominence her trips on July | mountains opened a pase-herever the buffaloes and | Mmself, beyond any of his men ; encountering toil and | the Piaizies most sparkle with flowers, they, like the | but man no more can do it, than he can remove these Rip | ty neter dress, engre and advertisements, Ae sibgeiro Ring Je30 3t*re_| the beasts of the forest had made a trace, these sons of , {atigue, sharing every labor of the camp and of the march, | wild bee which sets them the example of industry, may | Raps, which have resisted the relling ocean from the be- ae — pop les re aes re unwise of artists, any EW YORIG ALBANY AND TROY LINE. | nature, childien of humanity, in the highest sentiment of foremost in every canner giving up his horse to the | choose their home, mark the extent of their possessions gas of time.” And though a panic was spreading ‘OR ALBANY AND TROY DIRE iu t the beautiful wilder. | ‘valid soldier. while he himself waded through the | by driving stakes or blazing trees, shelter theirlog cabin | through the land, and the whole credit system, as it thea | 9ttractive character, could, if properly conducte | Personal freedom, came to occupy the beautiful wilder- | Vamps on foot? None equalled him in power ofer | with bougue and turf, and touch the virgin soil to yield existed, was crumbling to pieces, and crushing around | Pletely outstrip in public: favor a band from an il, ¢ —at T o'clock, P. M—The steamboat EM- chi iries blossomed everywhere profuse f With wild Sov ote whane wand oping ony Shame, | durance ; and the private soldiers, as they found him | itself to the ploughshare. Theirs shall be the soil PIRE, Captain R. B. Macy, will leave the : f eirs | him, he stood erect, like a massive column, which the | P2t of the worlds. J promos always,” (and thi < (9 Dboat pier Coot of Courtlandt street, every Tuesday, | by their magnificence, the cultivated gardens of man. passing them on the march, exclaimed, ‘ he is as tough | the beautiful farms which they teach to be productive. — | heaps of falling ruins could not break, nor bend, nor | '™poxtant point,)that they posses: Se eee inday and Saturday aiarnogt st 7 o'clock. B And now that these unlettered fugitives, educated | 98 the hickory.” “Yes,” they cried to one another, | Come, children of sorrow ! you onwhom the Old World | sway from its fixed foundation. talent with their competitors. But e matter of cam- iy steamloat COLUMBIA, Captain Win. H.Peckvevery | Coy by the spirit of freedom, destitute of dead letter | “there goes Old Hickory !” frowns ; crowd fearlessly to the forests; plant your| [At this point Mr. Bancroft turned to address the May- | P8nclogy I have not the slightest reason to doubt that I * ad, Weduesday ad Friday afternoon, at 7 o'clock.’ | Srufition, but sharing the living ideas of the age, had | ,, WhO can narrate the terrible events of the double bat- | homes in confidence, for the country watches over You; | or of the eity of Washington; but finding him not pre. | have the pleasure of Janaging the best—aye, incompar- pr fesrege ight app a Mi) re | made their homes in the West—what would follow 1 | tles of Emuckfaw, or the glorious victory of Tohopeka, | your children grow around you as hostages, and the wil: | sent, he proceeded. ably the best—band of belk ringers in the world; for a - : J 7 — —. | Would they degrade themselves to ignorance and Inf. | Where the anger of the general against the faltering was | derness, at your bidding, surrenders its grandeur of 1 People of the District of Columbia: I should fail of a | better, or even an equal band, would be able to MORNING BOAT FOR ALBANY. | delity 7. ‘Would they make the solitudes of the desert ex. | 0Fe appalling than the war-whoopand the rifle of the | less luxuriance to the beauty and loveliness of culture. | duty on this occasion, if 1 did not give utterance to your | their owm talent, and not on anoth: D INTERMEDIATE LANDINGS. | Cs8) for licentiousnees 2 Would the doctrines of free. | Savage! Whocanrightly conceive the field of Enoto- | Yet beautiful and lovely af is this scene, it still by far | sentiment of gratitude which followed General Jackson | | Mr. Swift proposes that the two~ ~~ Senbitla play « Breakfast and Dinner on board.—The splendid | ‘0 live in unorganized society, destitute | Chopco, where the general, as he attempted to draw the | falls short of the ideal which lived in the affections of | into retirement. Dwelling amongst you, he desir 7 | Wickstep,” asa trial of skill. This would be av PREEREE seamboar SOUTH AMERICA, Captain H. dom lead Chen to tise de 7 © | sword to cut down a fying colonel who was leading a | Jackson. His heart was ever with the pioneer ; his po- | prosperity. ‘This beautiful cit P autrounded by hel Jgnts | Poor mode of ascertaining their comparative abilitie firggsdelly willeave the foot of Barclay street (north side | Of time when European socioty was becoming broken | fegiment from the field, brook againthe arm which was | licy ever favored the diffusion of independent freeholds | the most attractive, watered by u river so magnificent, | The ‘* Swiss Bell-ringers play “ quicksteps” merely as ioe (pha 5 in pieces, scattered, disunited, and resolved into its ele. | but newly knit together; and quietly replacing it in the | throughout the laboring classes of our land, the home of the gentle and the Cultivated, not less than | ¢”remets in their feast of music. Overtures, symphons jual Landings—Caldwell’s, West Point, Nowbatgh, Fough- ments, a scene enstied in Tennesree, than which nothing sling, with his commanding voice arrested the flight of | It wouldbe asin gaat the occasion, were | to omit | the seat of political power—this city, whose site Wash- | 224 selections from the best operas, are more solid proofs whic, Hyde Park, Rhinebeck, Redhook, Malden, Catskill, | more beautifully grand is recorded in the annale of the, | the troops, and himself led them back to victory ! to commemorate t! devotedness of Jackson to the | ington had selected—was dear to his affections; and ifhe | ° their skill. Very mediocre bell-ringers with six ‘won, Coxsackie, Kinderhook and New Baltimore. race. In six short months of vehement action, the most terri- | cause and to the rigitts of labor. It was for the welfare | won your grateful attachment by adorning it with monu- | ™Onths’ practive, can ring “quicksteps.” ‘Ihe originals : reise. These adventurers in the wilderness longed to come | le Indian war in our annals was brought to a close; the | of the laboring classes that he defied all the storms of po- | ments tf useful architecture, by establishing its credit, | h@ve attained excellence in a higher order of music, MORNING LINE AT 7 O'CLOCK, together in organized society. The overshadowing ge- | Prophets were silenced; the consecrated region of the | litical hostility. He longed to secure to labor the fruits | and relieving its burdens, he regretted only that he had | _1 am now more than two hundred miles in advance of FOR ALB ANY, TROY and intermediate | nits of their time inspired them with good designs, and | Creek nation reduced. Through scenes of blood, the | of its own industry; and he unceasingly opposed eve not the opportunity to have connected himself still more | ™y band, and cannot, therefore, stipulate time and landings, from the Steamboat Pier atthe foot of | fj1ed them with the counsels of wisdom, Dwellers in the | &Vebging hero sought only the path to peace. Thus Ala- | system which tended to lessen their reward, or which | intimately with your prosperity. place, but should we meet in one of the large cities, the Sebtaer tad Dinner oa tigar’ the boet, forest, freest of the free, bound in the spirit, they came | ama, a part of Mississippi, a part of his own Tennessee, | exposed them to be defrauded of their dues. ‘The labor | As he prepared to take his final leave of the District, | “ Brothers” will find the " Swiss Bell-ringers” ready to eee ee eee eve araesdays, Thursdoys | up by their representatives, on foot, on horseback, | d the highway to the Floridas, were his gifts to the |ers may bend over his grave with affectionate sor- | the mass of the population of this city, and the masses | meet them on fair terms. ASdurday, and Troy at6 o'clock, A.'M., Albany at 7 o'clock | through the forest, along the streams, by the buffalo | Union. These were his trophies. row; for never in the tide of time, did a statesman exist | that had gathered from around, followed his carriage in | One word at parting, ane. 1 have done with the M Monday, Wednesday and Friday," traces, by the Indian paths, by the blazed forest avenues, | ;, Genius as extraordinary as, military events can call | more heartily resolved to protect them in their rights, | crowds. “All in silence stood near him, to wish him | “Brothers.” “Dearly beloved brethren”—You have Thelow-pressure steamboat TROY, Captain A. Gorham, on | to meet in convention among the mountains at Knox. | forth, was summoned into action in this rapid, efficient, | and to advance their happiness. For their benefit, he op- | adieu ; and as the cars started, and he displayed his grey | Partly altered your title—partly ceased copying our ad- eslays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at7 goles! M ville, and frame for themselves a constitution. Andrew | 224 most fortunately conducted war. s posed partial legislation; for their berfefit, he resisted all | hairs, as he lifted at in token of farewell, you stood | Yertisements, and attem to look like the “ original” iy steam boet Sign, Faptain A. Degroot, on Mon | jackson was there, the greatest man ofthem all—modest, | _ Time would fail were I to track our hero down the | artificial methods of controlling labor, and subjecting it around with heads uncovered, too full of emotion to | band in print—proceed in the good work, brothers— Feeney adc aprly au board, or to F. B. Hal, at the | bold, determined, demanding nothing tor himself, and | Watercourses of Alabama to the neighborhood of Pensa. | to capital. It was for their benefit that he loved freedom ak, in solemn silence gazing on him os he departed, | Complete the task at once—drop the title “ Campanolo- fe prap mpdioky sheisking frock asthing that tls Heart approved. cola, How he longed to plant the eagle of his country | in all its forms— freedom of the individual in personal in- | never more to be seen in your midst. ian”—call yourselves “ American” Bell-ringers— . Notice—All goods, freight, baggage,bank bills, specie, or any | ‘The convention came together on the 11th day of Jan- | its battlements ! dependence, freedom of the States as separate sovereign. | Behold the warrior and statesman, his work well done, | brothers is pretty—call yourselves brothers, then—but eb. | , Time would fail, and words be wanting, were I to | ties. He never would listen to counsels which tended | retired to the Hermitage, to hold converse with his for- | behave like brothers.” This is a great country, (as ruary. How had the wisdom of the Old World vainly dwell ou the magical influence of his appearance in New | to the centralization of power. The true Americ: a to cultivate his farm, to gather around him hositably | you'll say when you’ve been round it, as we i hee the risk of the owners of such goods, fi ht, bee: f om ¢ “ oak i i 4 «54 ke. i tasked itself to frame constitutions, that could, at least, | Otleans. His presence dissipated gloom and dispelled | tem pre-supposes the diffusion of freedom—org: his friends! Who was like him? He was still the load- | there is room enough for both bands; therefore be just, 5 , 1 starof the A people. His fervid thoughts, frankly | ifnot generous—take a title distinct from our's—write ‘ NOTICE. be the subject of experiment ; the men of Tennessee, in | #l@rm; at once he changed the aspect of despair into a | life in all the parts of the American body politi J 5 STATEN ISLAND less than twenty-five days, perfected a fabric, which, in | Confidence of security and a hope of acquiring glory. | is organized life in every part of the hun uttered, still spread the flame of patriotism through the | Your own advertigements—don’t copy our woodculs, FERRY its essential forms, was to last forever. They ‘cama to- | Every man knows the tale of the heroic, sudden, and yet | jackson was deaf to every counsel which sought io sub. | American breast; his counsels were still listened to | and you will find only srlandly rivals in the “Swiss Bell- h : ver kind of property taken, shipped, or put on board thi fost, uary, 1796, and finished its work on the 6th day ot aRRY, e gether, full of faith and reverence, of love to humanity, | deliberate daring which led him, on the night of the | ject general laborto a ceutral will. His vindication of | with reverence ; and, almost alone among statesmen, he | Tinger#,” and Consyn, their Manager. FOOT or wHITERALL, STREET. of confidence in truth. In the simplicity of wisdom, they third of Becember, to precipitate his little army | the just principles of the constitution derived its sublimi | in his retirement was in harmon withevery onward On and after Saturds eee Sie GN Steamboats SYLPH ana | {"8med thei: constitution, acting under higher influences | 0” his foes, in the thick darkness, before they grew fa- | ty from his deep conviction that this strict construction | movement of his time. His prevailing influence assisted Detroit. WPATEN ISEANDER will eave Now Yank every hour | than they were conscious of— miliar with their encampment, scattering ay through | is required by the lasting welfare of the great laboring | ‘0 sway a neighboring nation to desire to share our insti- [Correspondence of the Herald.] except 5 P.M., commencing at 8 A-M., until 7 P.M. Leave ‘They wrought in sed sincerity, veteran regiments of England, and defeating them, and | classes of the United states. tutions ; his ear heard the footsteps of the coming mil- Mi if Meee iit stern Lacs oan) cotameneng creakre este 2 tng a PE arresting their progress by afar inferior force. | To this end, Jackson revived the tribu tions that are to gladden our western shores ; and his eye Derrorr, Mich., June 21, 1845. atil7 P. ju7m They builded better than hey knew; Who shall recount the counsels of prudence, the kind- | the veto, and exerted it against the decisive action oi | discerved in the dim distance the whitening sails that are Population and Trade of Detroit—Shipping— Wheat d ling words of eloquence, that gushed from his lips to | both branches of Congress, against the votes, the W to enliven the waters of the Pacific with the social sound: aR ae The conscious stones to beauty grew. cheer his soldiers, his tkirmishos and baitles, till thet | the euteectioe of personel aca political haende Ofour successfuleommerce. ts | Crop—Wool Growers—Iron Steamer Michigan— FOR NEW ORL a York Line——Regular Packet, to sail Monday, 21s ; : d BiSsinsignt—The clegant fast sailing packet ship OSWE- | |, Inthe instrument which they framed, they embodied | eventful morning when the day at Bunker's Hill had its | me,” was his reply to them, ‘show me an express clause | Aye had whitened his locks, and dimmed his eye, and | Presbyterian Convention, Capt. Wood, will positively sail as above, her régular | their faith in God, ard in the immortal nature of man.— | fulfilment in the glorious battle of New Orleans, and | in the constitution authorising Congress to take the bu- | «prevd around him the infirmities and venerable emblems by, : ; They gave the right of suffrage to every freeman; they | American independence stood before the world in the | siness of State legislatures out of their hands.” “You | of many years of toilsome service ; but his heart beat as |. Wrote you about two weeks since, from this Cee ee ee ne ehart Tested Winter, | Yindlested the sanctity of reason, by giving freedom of | majesty of victorious power. : will ruin ua all,” oFied a firm partisam friend, “you will | warmly as in his youth, and his courage was es firm ast | place, but not having seen the Herald since, cannot a 5 fk. COLLINS & CO. 90 South at.” | peg ani beats he press; they reverenced the voice of | | ‘I'hese were great deeds for the nation; for himself ho | ruin your party and Frown prospects, ovidenve,- | wad ever been in the day of battle. But while his affec- | tel] whether the letter was received and lished. Hostyely no goods received on bourd ater Sa’urday evening | Gd. 98 it speaks in. the soul of man, by asserting the in| did a greater. “Had not Jackton been renowned for the | answered Jackson, “will tuke cure of me," and he perve: | tious were still for his friends and his country, his Published. pth inter, defensible right of man to worship the In! vehement impetuosity of his pass y Of his pessions, for his defiance of | vered. er faecal coda thoughts were alieady in a better world. That exalted I was, as any one else would have been, very much A in je unben In proceeding to discharge the debt of the Unrted | nino, which in active life ha ways had unity of per- i i i i forward fire | lity of elections; and they demanded from everyfuture le- | will ? Behold the savior of Louisiana, all garlanded with | Stater=a measuse thorougity. American—Jarkeon tol. | ception and will, which in. action had never faltered | SuzPrised to find Detroit so well built and having 80 ; phigh, ST, JOHNS, N.B—The British brig VIC. | gitlator a solemn onth | never to consent te ‘any act or | victory, viewing around him the city he had preserved, | lowed the example of his predecessors ; but he followed | trom doubt, ond which in council had always reverted to | Much business. The population is from 14,000 to bhi Fries meaist, detained, wilt take | ee at re at bon Ng even a tendency to lessen | the maidens and children whom his heroism had protec: | it with the full consciousness that he was rescuing the | first principles and general laws, now gave itself up to | 15,000, and the principal business streets are built in bw. Alst daly.) ler 'whieh op paseege,-apiny to the Capteta ac |. ‘hese thaldelio Inveptvere: Wiser. (han th ted, stand in the presence of a petty judge, who gratifies | country from the artificial system of finance which had | commuuing with the Infinite, He was a believer: ftom | , fine wubetantial manner, It is the east L f : | X givers, wiser than the Solons, and | his wounded vanity by an abuse of his judicial power.— | prevailed throughout the world ; and with him it formed | feelirg, from experience, from conviction, Nota sha- | @ fine sul manner. It is the eastern termi- oard, foot ‘ { | 4 4 4 i inati jel” PERSHER PROGRES. Nos.65 &67 Nassau, | z ses, and Numas of the Old World—these pro- | Every breast in the crowded audience heaves with indig- | a part of a system by which American legislation was to | dow of scepticism ever dimmed the lustre of his mind. | nus of the Central Railroad, now terminating at Mar- ., Agent New Orleans James E.Woodraff, who will prompt: | tohis conscience: they extab other’s authority, ¥ forward\}] goods to his add i | ic founders of a State, who embodied in their consti. | nation. He, the i —he w i ? ! y hundred i PLEAS 7 vary 5 5 | q - x . He, passionate, the impetuous—he whose | separate itself more and more effectually trom uro- | Proud philosopher ! will you smile to know that Andrew | shall, one hundred and ten miles west, and of the P EAS Ue Bd “i FOR BARE glk pee en bie st truths of humanity, acted without | power was to be humbled, whose honor questioned, | pean precedents, and develope itself more and more, ac: | Jackson perused reverently his Paalter, and Prayer-book | Pontiac road, running to a village of that name i fe praises. i whose laurels tarnished, alone stood sublimely serene; | cording to the vital principles of our political existence, | and Bible? Know that Andrew Jackson had faith in the | twenty-five miles north-west. The tonna, ole Wd | _ They kept no be pole record of their doings; they took | and when the craven judge trembled, and faltered, and The discharge ‘of the debt brought with it, of neces. | eternity of truth, in the imperishable power of popular ie rsa bill a of steamers, ane ue: ovens Liechiye: | SOpenE® vance epfre spae tbeit orn was Cited net proceed, himself, the jprrsigned ons, bade him sity, ©, greet reduction of the public burdens. and | freedom in the destinies of humanity, In the virtues and ships, is 11,000 tons ; the increase over 1844 is about te para: x 5 stood by the law even in the momen rought, o: sity, into view, the questiot., how far of the people, in his country’s ions, y Ay 0 ‘ | limest acts ever performed among men. ‘They left no | when the law was made the instrument of intuit ond | Amecica ‘shold follow, of crolces tha old. rostsictiog g and overruling providence of a merciful and | 8940. There are two daily lines with Buffalo, one FOR WVERPOOLS The superior ahi NEP. | Teco, as to whoce agency was conspicuous, whose elo- | wrong on himself—at the moment of his most perfect | system of high duties, under’ which Europe had op- ing God. with Chicago, and a number of daily lines to places TUNE, Ca ! y quence swayed, whose path will predominated; nor | claim to the highest civic honors prossed America ; or how fe ‘The last moment of his life on earth is at hand. It is | on Lake Ene, and St. Clair river, Canada, &e., and ngth and 8 feet wwe comet der: brie "00 Itistec CROSBY, Ith, is offered fe hi * in Peach, will sail on he: i iti : she should rely on her r = This on eiaet having iturtaered! aceon oh hod BAA tare by what | BR Sad i grew to hold many Pro millions, |own freedom and enterprise and power, def ing the | the Sabbath ofthe Lord: the brightness and beauty of | two steam ferries with Rea nae noticed 27 idbvateal de: ERDMAN, ba nf Q | hat then was coming in, has risen up to tition, ki ‘kets, and receiving th lothe the field: im : i res some twelve whol ‘ ee 61 South street : A est spectacle on that day, on earth, | establishments, and several wholesale groceries. I wi ic8 cs SPL: gress Be ttes fos Cree LE ie gpa pace ae | the peeity oP is foals fd hor did mace os “oH first to aa of J mrcn en Gre ublect ieecoes rsp dt re the victory of his aotlenohing spirit over death it- find on enquiry, that goods are retailed here at iar Packet of thi ~Ouly & Tie = i¢ people of Louisiana, to | and without passion. In the abuses of the system of | se! cs aera cane the a July Ae maguiteert | home of eloquence—the citadel of pop Tates? Nour, will cherish his name as thelr greaiest | revenue by ckeetsive imports, he stv evils which the | When he first felt the hand of death upon him, “May | 2b9u the sume prices as in New York, and that, too, lar power ; and, | the arthen 0p son A ee MONTEZUMA | With one consent, they united in selecting the foremost | benefactor. ablio mind would remedy vant). incliniog with the negaion,? he. offed, (hod, a ie hie tien sy | including molasses, sugars, &c. 1 have nodata by tye ou Buea iat of duly. “Mer, wil sil pos | man among their law ivers--ANonew Jackson. ‘The culture of Jackson's mind had been much promo- | Whole might of his energetic nature to the side ‘of reve: | my country endure forever.” | which to give the amount of flour shipped from here steerage paneen commodattons for efvin, ad cabin and | th he people of Tennesseo followed him to | ted by his sefvices and associations in the war. His dis- | nue duties, he made his earnest but tranquil appeal to the hon his exhausted system, under the excess of pain, | last year, but I am assured by a gentleman who has ing for thelr feeds, these returning forthe old cot, ig, OF send the American Cong: le | cipli himself as the chief in command, his intimate | judgment of the people. sunk, for a moment, from debility, ‘ Do not weep,” said | just returned from the interior,and who is a in select this dneauale Fine of pesioes interest alanomfort to ; 'e tune wi dg So Beet Mig che a, Tagine Soe reeaeetal deeds e portions of opantry that suffered most saxorely he to hip adopted daughter, ‘my sufferings are less than | the milling business, that the wheat in thi ate, ex- plieatia 8 of Pes ange ite secure, the best berths, ex ap Ps mellowed his sharehtee Judgment and | from a system ot legislation,which,in its extreme charac- | those of Christ upon the cro for he, too, as a disciple | cept north, looks extremely well, and willinall instan- teras it then existed,is now universally acknowledged to | of the cross, could have devoted himself, in sorrow, for Id a full He al: fe that th n thirty, he had | Peace came with its delights; once more the country | have b, al and e less tranquil; and | mankind. Feeling his end near, he would NPE Benedetti Mt ps Paco eA Sacadl ven wayed the de: | rushed forward in tie development of its powers: once | rallying en the doctrines of’ freedont, which made our | family once mores and he spo none by one, in | Were at least ten thousand acres more. of land put na to the subeeriberss carcely mo} 2 Fitton ioe! the settlement of the wildern i {Bee ROCHE, BROTHERS e COS | ext door to the Fulton Bank, N.Y. \Tiberation of a people i blishi i igh His two wide grant hi han last, _ Wool is also be TOR + people in establishing its fundamental | more the arts of industry healed the wounds that w: th ds of tend id 5 ittl a. | ito wheat this year than last, Wool-is ae Juow fast sail i eae recht RL taws 5 sated as the aireon hae of that people, and | had inflicted; and, from commerce and agriculture ad irecarcepten or iain was nugato » be- children were absent. at ja ay, school” Het ‘asked for ming a staple, and large quantities bave already gone nd Upon arrival Wi eeaat et 439 tous bur hen, daily expect: | plltey to cane pleas ob tne, Semen Hine Peni teate SOUTHy of ACTS Te ner ee Frey J es they’ held, without authority he prayed for them, and kissed | forward; one county alone haa senteaped wi send, and wy ith quick despatch. ; vity of unrestrained enterprise. . oH " i ands ; an anti ‘or freight or Paswace, GUpIY Bo | ats on the States ; the associate of republican states- And Jackson returned to his own fields and his own a that ensued was the most momentous in me in his oom, Tontowe: on the will, eid cretily informed, come “pues rtd store &MINTURNE, mame pe eta et Kear IE nati’ Piha Oath pursuits,to cherish his plantation, to care for his ‘The greatest minds of America engaged in clinging to the windows, that they | dred thousand pounds, which will do melt towards ScRTVER #78 out stutes, menWho framed the constitution of the United | to look after his stud, to enjoy the affection of jon. Eloquence never achieved subli might gaze and hear, And that dying man, thus sur- lying the immediate wants of the farmers. The sais \VERPOOL—The spe POOL—The splendia | Stites, many ef them, did not know the innate life and | kind and devoted wife, whom he respected with the gen- | triunniy he American Senate than on the rounded, in a gush of fervid eloquence, spoke with inspi- | pul YB ii es SINGTON, Captain Shumvay. will 1 | Freodom soul wuersy.of their work, They feared that | tlest deference, and loved with an almost miraculousten- | sions. The country hecame deeply divided; and the an- | ration of God, of the Redeemer, of talvation through the | Preed of sheep, is notby any means what it should Fin presale har ian dacelle reedom could not endure, and they planned a strong go- | dernes “ y 4 atonement, of immortality of heaven. For he ever thought | be, rams being only one half blood. Horses too are tagonist elements were arrayed against each othe: ea And there he stood, like one of the forma of claching ‘authority, “uenacing civil w th s ERDMAN, 01 South st.” | his quice, deopls nected trae ngrent, Jackson showed | trees of his own West, vigorous and colos freedom of the several States was invoked against the | private happine LOK LIVERPOOL—The New Linc—Rerere: | freedom, 'and inthe institutions’ of frown ’ | summit to the skies, and growing on its native soil in | power of the United States; and under the organization | tions. Having spoken of immortality in perfect conscious- | ‘The United States .steamer Michigan, iron you Hwee duly The me By hy vee aa ie institatioas oF freee om He was ever, wild and inimitable magnificence, careless of beholders. | of a State in convention, the reserved rights of the peo- | ness of his own coprenstae end, he bade them all fare- | know, is here, and jn my next I will give you a de- SRR HOP UINGU ER inst confidence in humanity ; and in the vetoes’ denon | From all parts of the country he received appeals to his | ple were summoned to display their enorgy, and balance | well. ““Dearchildren,” such were his final words, “dear | scription of her. The Wester Pres precten, Cone For freight or * by mindg, this child of the woodlands, this Sep division of | political ambition, andthe severe modesty of his well- | the authority and neutralize the legislation of the central | children, servants, and friends, I trust to meet you all in | vention i an i nd numbers nearly three mrodationss te the ving excellent and superior recom: ‘Tile mn the West, Was foand rae ert resentative of | balanced mind turned them all aside. He was happy in | government. ‘The States were agitated with prolonged heaven, both white and black—all,both white and black.” | Venton 1s now in Session, ane Hull + I Paptain on board, forest life in the west, was found modestly and firm: i i hundred delegates—few of them men known in your. Pri CODHULL ESN TURNG 9 Sonth street, | the side of freedom, ieaid not occur to bio to dousy ter | watarm, happy in seclusion, happy in his family, happy | excitement; the friends of freedom throughout the world | And having bore his testimony to immortality, le bow- d e—few of, ) right of man to the free development of his powers ; it did | Bat th Steerdge, aint ‘yt accommodations in Cabin and | Vérnment for its protection. grxe, apply onboard ie Bh foot of Dover street, or to | _ During his short career in Congress t pure and undefiled religion was the foundation of | inferior here, and fittle attention seemsas perenne nd the bulwark of republican institu- | been paid by the farmers to stock generally. looked livided sympathies, praying that the | ed his mighty head, and, without a groan, the spirit ofthe | section, Dr. Beecher, of Cincinnati, and Capt John Eldrid not occur to him to pl Jinnship ove ions of the southern Indians were not al- union ‘of the ta es might be perpeta os also thatthe greatest man of his age escaped to ike bosom of his God. | man, of Troy, are amongst the members. One ob- om her regular day. 2 of | itdid not occwy te hin to weak to einen ah over the people; | layed by the peace with Great Britain ; and foreign omis- | commerce of the world might be free. |" In life, his career had been like the blaze of the aun in | ject among others, is to establish a book concern, in occur to him to seek to give durability to popu ries were still among thom, to inflame and direct their | Fortunately for the country, and fortunately for man- | the flerceness of its noon-day glory ; his death was love- renee to the old school, but as yet it is all talk. » PACK ~ Je% ec | lar institutions, by giving to gov , de. | it > hi ibi wid Shi Mt AoE if nae CLES, Tie Packet poatent left giving 10 government a strength ince matigntty | Jeakeon was called forth by his country to | kind, Andrew Jackson was at the helm of state, the re- t sunset of a summer's evening, whenthe | No great talent has been exhibited in debate—what ‘of fre! Pree of pasa . he Packet Ship Li Verpool, 1150 tons, * 8 will H Kusprane oe the Hotere” ef the Ist of July. ta ? , e of the treacherous and unsparing | presentative of the principles that were to allay excite- | sun goes down in tranquil beauty without a cloud. To . Duitield, of this city, is CHERRY ‘pay: apply to." | tetnos tp oestra be wren ttgohed tothe {undamentaldoc. | Seminoles. It was in the train of the events of tile war nent, and to restore the hopes of peace and freedom. tic energy of an indomitable will, he joined a may be, pel a a Duatields My, No. 9 Tontine Butta BOYD & ‘, ih go faverencs tor hey Fema bate Me raien aie ryt be ape e ancient towers of St. Augustine, deeds in friend to personal freedom—by education, political sym: | in the tenderesteffections. Onthe bloody battle-field of A Singing Telegraph has been inv in Jeidrre lings, corner Wail and Water streets, | drone from tho Ho T Repro BW achington | Cutt Wat, of themselves,form a monument to hi pow- | pathies, and the fixed habit of his mind, a friend to the | Tohopeca, he saved an infant that clung to the breast of | = A Singing. N saintard and a meotatt ’ i the House of Representatives to Washington | or, to the celeri is genius, to the crot fortility | rights of the States—unwilling that the liberty of the | its dying mother; in the stormiest moment of his nce by a physician named Saintard and a meckenyy on his rotirement, because ite language appeared to sanc: | of hig resources, his intuitive sagacity. As Spain, in his | States should be trampled under foot—-unwilling thatthe | presidency ; st the imminent moment of his deci- | named Gilbert, i