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Wels Xm, He —wheta me. s08. NEW YORK, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH Ql, 1846. rice ewe Ooms it appears thet he is resolutely determined not toap- | More Disclosures of the Van Ness Matsacre- (From the Cayuga Toesin of Friday.) The murderer was arrested in the following manner: HE APPAIRS IN EUROPE. | the arrangement, Our object, we repeat, is | number of Mexi d immen T NEW YORK HERALD | peopl ate oy tenntteny. We wish Pa bave mer nd benefits oa cvntaao Raber icant oo pe pet at the Opera this season, notwiltl umley’s AMES | ritory accurately defined, in order to prevent heart- | with the maritime and constitutional powers of Eu- 's most liberal offers.. He has also refused | _ ‘ f J GORDON BENNETT, Proprietor. The Oregon Question in England. burnage and quarrels between the colonists of the | rope. Amongst the cognate, suitors Gelations) of | the invitation of the Russian Emperor to go to St. ee A eee ren Notinten te Coeee LT 44 Circulation.. Forty Thousand. — | two nations. But we contend only for the joint use | Queen {sabella, it would not be difficult to point out | Petersburg. Atavern about 1} mile northeast from Phenix, Oswego ° ae a Arbitration, &c. | of those privileges which have always been enjoyed | the individual ‘best fitted for such an enterprise, by | Weare enabled to set at rest the vexed question county, for ten dollars. Grogg suspecting that the mare «Sasi | in common by both nations, and the exclusive pos- | his personal qualities and his liberal sentiments.— | ag to the re-appearance of the prince of tenora, Ru- | was stolen, went and locked her up in the barn, and left bint. We have the best authority to announce that | the negro in charge of two piel Sntl Ne could go te his retirementtis final, and his resolution irrevoca- constable of the town of Cato, who had got one of our ble. extras, issued at 3A. M., of Fiiday, and had started im The Jowrnal des Debats publishes the following pursuit—came ae learning from Grogg, that the ne. letter from Foligno (Pontifical States) of the 2nd in- gro was at pape carmel pope pea — = DAILY HERALD—Every day. Price 3 cents per copy— 4 ii im advance. seasion of which we feel that we have as much right | And even if the United States should attempt to in- * ‘B—Every 6 coms ADDITIONAL EXTRACTS | to pies donee le are more able to enforce, | terfere in this question in a pata mips pot oagee mages im advance. as tho Drices—always cash bay f hoose. B ling t ke | 18 not the least justification, th Id in From the Foreign Papers received at tho Offite |x warwitare krow would be unnatsral, end h pe |Iy be able to oppose the Dgiieal mare ofthe waited 1@ of all kinds executed with beauty and der of the New-York Herald .| may be unnecessary. We are willing to cede the | powers ot Europe, when their sole object would be - tille of sovereignty and dominion over the greater part | to preserve a national government in New Spain : ted h . joes a soprnaievionn bgt gull. addzenced to of the Oregon. We only require that thecommercial | and to repair the dismatous effects of abortive fevo: | stant :—“'Mademoiselle Fanny Elasler having termi- | 17001, nutes after Taylor abd Gregg hed left Phenix, + , must |, or the postage be ‘ js 4 ‘ nated her e: ements at Rome, has“arrived in our ii ho ‘Auburn val yremited. estion in KEngland=The P advantages of the coui be continued to us. We lutions upon the provinces which were once incor- | Mn Sveralof the most distinguished families ‘A. 2. Willies 4ae I. a rer a Pe eng Der er as nants View or birateteee pene | willnot give up to the United States places “‘re- | porated with the Spanish crown. * | had prepared apartments in their houses for the cel- | mr, and learned Fag wi Peabo at Phenix | stored” to us by Spain. We will not renounce our | We approve the idea of our English contempora- b pte, ‘Ttinihat Unporiante of Ue at aodvass‘ ait | Tight to participate in the navigation of that great | ry, buta few amendments suggest themselves to Sbralod brifit and sent te nese her end Se | Pe te aad Li of the presel RS le ri tate | river which, if not discovered first, was certainly | our minds. _ x erst Boe Nag ati pier how to make a selection | abeut a mile this side of his house, met Taylor coming SUPERIOR FAT BEEF. pate eS jomestic prety rs ve rr rh traced furthest by our own people. ‘The joint navi-| It the Mexicans, for example, looking to their in- oteats : they te ther parties. Under | With the murderer. ‘They took him to , end there THE CELEURATED OX “LUNG ISLAND | fycVented us from recurring, ae we had intended, t0 | gation of the Columbia—the right of harbors on the | terests, should say spontaneously— We wish to be | Without giving offence to the other parties. | RUtT | Taylor, Williams and Bruce watched him thet BARUER” bes bore and may be seen tae le cm enon eee twofold charac- | coast—and the right of traffic for the Hudaon’s Bay | transformed into a gonstitutional monarchy ; and bat ng ear eek yb eg A ‘daw | inthe morning took him into the wagon of apis farted Ur WicharS Townsend, lsmpcrecd Hewes, | tercitan wevdios gerry iat all” Seconda nm | servants on.one bank of the river, are, we think, | without ware, without disasters, without opposition, due out, This sue did, and the peper drawn bora the brought him to Auburn and delivered Li who i grazer ofthe highest notoriety, sedines forte’, | CerueOey, eaoinnaet le hac yp fe ndly, it | demands neither unjust nor extravagant. Nor do | we accept a Spanish prince, in the same way that oracle! Man “ Mae Heloonieri meegece ote - oe thai return they matRuminazon the city with some of the most perfeot specimens of fat bel proposes. that 307 partit ah Hen aft ci lied. to | we think that their concession would be incompati- | the Swedes, the Belgians, and the Greeks accepted | jouge ahe has taken up her Pos Telos besnan norton. ot ee peek le. ever 1 ia this city: he, however, admits, in this instance, | Great Bri © region North oF parallel 484 | ble with the reeerved sovereigaty of the United | foreign princes, who must have entertained less P > theatte2” . ratand, ting etie tae faced’ Ox SUPERIOR werk ante nek | north latitude from the sea, tercugh the Straits, in- | States in the districts which are washed by the wa- | sympathy with them than, he whom we adopt,”— gaged for 12 performances at our theatre. nega pagan pre-emi the, jeares, eg: land, leaving to | ters of the Columbia. we at once agree that this declaration would be a| A correspondent informe us that Mr. Jerrold,who [Sesetee the ‘ai exo inent in the annals of epicures. cluding Quadra and Vancouver’s a wel beet of tais Ox will be offered for sale at Stalls Nos. «1 | the United States the country south of that line, and cieechr te Seearte: te tat he eo wana to Leu: | we stated had performed as a professional actor in |.wrat ‘ne, wonted, the country, and at the Strand Theatre, also appear- and43 Ka'ton Market, on Saturday next, the 2ist inst_, where | the sole possession of the Columbia River, and the [From the London, Gazette, Marsh &:) H the publi are most mapectfully invited 16 call ndadgeof the | harbors in the south of he Sernite Both these sug- SdetTCd Chan eebiainae te OF «trials eer ratte Nee coathtorien talteee kas: Saale non = ed, when a boy, at Covent-Garden Theatre, in the | up to the stove; a mi9 3t"r | sia scifah Mot gg A eine weighed, ot ony, if" | character than that brought us by the late arrivals ; | pore any force, if the slightest opposition were of- melodrama spectacle of “Blue Beard. thet he hed his’ kalfe under a jes bec Leni aS po sot ogete allt Hen, duet er ard person from who they emanate, ut of the Vations bg ag od Uti be tye repeatedly © ‘i oars dee aoa hae terrae ie Cee b rid Bip a evlire oqest Gesilion ane dent, he had no gun; that he made a pass at Van eae, st ; od whom ate, ter irit i D t! ich are being or- | but it tradict letter froma her father. é P N the door mee or, alent the abovs: Stab ‘about fifty N and prospective interests which the adoption of | O the determined spirit of hostility which pervades ized diplomatically, and without Suetratations ibe De notions cba lates Wrens Avignon: hi Yesterday Stobbed hist, after whisk pag bls pos he was jtalbed her. The negro ved and stern Horses—among which ht matched; | ai a in i a powerful party in the United States. It appears ie tor tem gucd tend hemes, ama “ye BS eth a4 fm and pies ot emt ec gBhastes 3) pach: A Cee decom ikag ie Gone On. e purpose of impeding the creation of a monarchy | evening the* performances were |‘ Lia. Justice de | stabbed; that he afterwa ved her. The neg : , t . Gallatin, first sugge: H aig in “ ji 4 i js had a scuf- Heetate, | Pur pienias beaasmees Area ondneatietion ee er iis | ted States flatly declines to refer the Oregon ques- | Which might be extended to the Pacific, which Dieu,” with the “ Derniere Nuit de Center.” This | confused in his statement about the tine be had 8 seo Rimtre ! n i tion to arbitration, and insists that England posses- | might annex the Californias, and oppose, farther on, | morning at 10 o’clock, flames buret out from the in- | fe § ‘ ano wacson NSGRAGe Sy era es | tend Sen Would ee nto "rein: | a tim Ghnever nin ery, Reo | ag he Oregon Wo ore ter | ore me aeons Un gn ee hn ui reet, Wit inf r i i i pers of t! ion, entirely opposed as they are to » a) - | gant edifice, which ha nm built wit ie 7 Arsdi ret, wish {9.iaform ie public of their ¢ impr ly the same relation as that in which they now stand xy aHocsive Plea tawerte ngland, ck has | 0Us sceptre which rules in South Amenca? What went years, remained but the four bare walls. All Ee, pee. iy beige mk a bia the manu Gaish of their $3 Hats, i i ii i pees yee of cial towards each other in Oregon, that pont sovereign- | been assumed by their Government, pi to re- | will France sayto this? Without an European | the most strenuous efforts to suppress the flames | his knife blade then was broken. At one time he assign- ‘Yous Hunaty KstTapLsnMany [From the London Times; Feb. 26.) pharm ‘of Pelton and Nassau streets hort time, expecting Taylor to return with the ray ut becom! uneasy, went off towards Gregg’s, been up & piece and was cold and wanted to warm: that he went ; that Van Ness got up off of his chair; nife under rar. The proprietors do covfidently ase! ty of both States would remain in abeyance ; they " Y th ‘ league we deem the proposal of the ‘Times. i “a al ead snd « red poe mich superior to any ever before sold for the same price. | would each be joint tenants in the use rather than 1m | 8274 this latest of its demonstrations with unfeign agu P a 4 impossi- | proved ineffectual, and I regret. to add, one poor | od as a motive for this act, that he was unjustly impri- da reeif of this fart. m20 I ai : alarm, and to regard it as an uct of detianee which | ble.. Will thie be possible without promoting a | man, Divrien, the keeper ofthe theatre, perished in | soned for five years for stealing a horse, when ho was I ea the seisin of the Oregon ; or elee the Oregon would | Will put an end to all further pacific negotiations. | Maritime war? Will Europe wish to undertake | the ruins. One of the ecene-shitters had his {ace | not guilty at the State owed him tor his time, and SPRING STYLE. be recognised as an independent State, guaranteed This i i t ' ‘ as he could in eny other way, he was going GENTLEMEN’S HATS. in its rights, and protected by the joint guardianship Of such importance, indeed, was the position of | one is is a question of much interest, and we | and hands much burnt, and is otherwise so much | i a ee gan fg ae BOs ¥ Hat, whea Ay ese 5 " c fai by Mr. Pakenham, that ft sail- | leave to our contemporary the right ef solving it d life is despaired of. A in by je in that way; but his WHY pill you pay $4.50 nd'$9 for'« Hut, when you | of the American Republic and the British Crown.— | #fisi"= reyerded by Ms. Pakenham, thal s ewitt ball | Ciba e mawterly skill which we acknowledge it {0 hone or Charpauds iso was desitous of saving | R2CtOry om thle point van Nestle can goto ing vessel was said to have been charted by him for ROBERTSON’S It 1s'to the latter contingency, rather than to the for- the purpose of obtaining fresh snatractianh tere his a favorite viol'n, was near losing his life from suffo- | sumbied and fell, near New Guinea, the murderer PHCENIX HAT AND CAP MANUFACTORY, | mer, that our attention should, for the present, be (i p e ‘ f 103 Fulton Street * | confined, inasmuch as the tone of American politi- Government. The advices from Washington state The Pupjaub and the Sikhs. cation, but upon being bled, was restored to anime- | ceeded on footto the big dam, which he crossed and g00d, $3,501 it ;. ca that whilst the House was in committee on the state ich i tion. During twenty minutes a mason and his child | proceeded through the east part of the village upon the srt food, 4 ote for S81 Gound eraming or rou | cians hardly eucourages the, notion, that the joint | ofthe Union, ameasage wasreocived trom the Pre | seat of wat a Geral Asie, ia some measure etter | who were endeavoring (0 escape by the rook, were | ber road lending to Skaoelialey, to, th farm oconnied tor pa length of time, and fing ait heb t ‘the dent, accompanied by the correspondence which | known to the public, the following remarks by Von | 12 imminent danger of losing their lives, but were | by Ms. Bueringten, where be rice the Fray mares Be heeat diagute’ inuat™ have’ wiined ‘he ate | has taken place, since August lest, in reference to the | Orlich, an officer in the Prussian service, who visit. | Ultimately rescued with great difficulty. ‘The da- Fg oe aso es aa Revuteer’ Natalee aharee Elbridge. {Seem et countries that to leave thee te, Hae, relations of the United States. It appears | ed these countries in the early part of the year 1843, | age done is estimated at 200,000 francs, but the | ii¢ passed through ‘Syracuse soon after daylight, and AD that the American Minister had been requested to | will no doubt prove vos hy ‘At the period this | house was insured to the full amount. The cause | went from thence through Selina, Liverpool, snd Cle ‘and of every variety, sage as Ce | tion of sovereignty open can only complicate | ask Lord Aberdeen if the warlike preparations said | officer wasat Lahore, Shere Singh, the unfortunate | Of the fire remains unknown.” Corners to Phenix. Justice Bostwick made an exami- elias, Peonias, Arborias, ‘ ials; | the difficulties of the case, and increase the embar- cae t 5 r : wi is 2 Ppa deat ch Hea stg vary rasement of their successcrs. Recurring, thea, 1o | ‘°,o° making in England had any view to the pro- | eyecessor of Runjeet Singh, was Maharajah of La-| We are sorry to announce that Mrs. Braham, wife | nation of Freeman, rete tear” earect eal cape oath anc iss perfec sate of prasiv the alternative left by the first suggestion, let ueask | Dability of a rupture with the United States. | Mr. | hore, of the unrivalled vocktist, died paddealy Gat Santay cree with nae Sie following fe the result of the ex: ‘Ths depot is at roadway, under the bookstore of Mr. | what must be the inevitable consequences of erect- e is. communicated with his lordship, | ‘The Punjaub, or Land of the Five Rivers, has a | evening, at her residence, No. 5 Gloucester road, | gmination :-— |, Berthvu, where the catalogue may be obtained, and the plants | ing (; i ind 1 declared his belief that they had not. A correspon- | surface of about 180,000 square miles, is of. & trian- | Hyde Park gardens. She had retired to bed in ap- | °™ Exemin f William Fi , March 16, 1846.— andi ions examined. For sale. ‘at very reasonable prices, Tes Ife abso a econ Beate Ia bia dence has taken place between Mr. Pakenham and | gular shape, and bounded by the Tate, the Sutlej, | parent’excellent health, after Passing 8 cheerful eve- Nobeip eee told me that Mr. Van Nese got me to State i i Mr. Buchanan ; a summary of which will be found ‘ hi i ji h her famil . Braham. turned | prison. 1 ki ho did get me there. Si aweeney Risks Gemaceie It ie abaost elsewhere. The latter gentleman, on the part of pone which low through te Punjab, and forma honte irom Sonthan pba, but in, preys caitienr Bonstable Jack ‘Furman, end anothe! “9 pliner pet Or will be for city lots, a very fine Farm im | Cally certain that its tendencies would be anti- | bi, Go d rath Gana. b, i . u p . 0 ey de i 3 j be vei Stlietien » Columb constr. ata Anglican. This result necessarily flows from the Te MRS rng cceeroarecmcnlg ceed ov junction with the Indus ; thus dividing this country | she exclaimed that she was dying—that something | Somber te name. anda Nomen. eg Sos tee o JOHN C. 8T 4 ior condi igui vi < into four unequal portions, of which the first and | had broken near her heart ; she got out of bed, an Pic A, sleiilaedl Reaa anal So snterroe oomuiipe, of acct ement,. Ite cents eee 4 in the House on the 9th, the day on which the | moet western, lies etwixt the Indus and Jelum. it | in less than five minutes she was a. corpse. ‘The oe een Beet ie rrr Pe ae . FOR SALE OR TO LET, ears caused a migratory influx of citizens from the | #tfick Henry sailed. Let us hope that the result | is about 800 miles in breadth, and being very barrren | family were aroused, and medical aid sent for, but, | Thursday night? Never have talked with any white ar, | manabout having been sent to State prison, except Ee at | quires Paine and Bost wick.” jaid in situated on the Blazin; 5 which the correspondence is referred, will give evi- ke hi i i i i tion fe come. apo eterres x d merous wave-like hills rise to some height in the | her maiden name was Bolton, and she resi bond, one ands hal i miles from the Rahway, iN lertey sa eed thie tocthan OF aN Oortaneiatee ee mre. dence of more wisdom than the past “consideration | centre, and interspersed by deep proeipatens pavines Ardwick, near Manchester, when Mr. Braham mar- tice Bostwick also examined John Gabriel, 8 fant be gi eaparagns, baru, stable, be. The cottage 1 | cularly of American emigrants, will at once agree of the question by the Senate has exhibited. The | cover the face of the country,thus rendering commu- | ried her, in 1816 ; she was then a remarkably fine | negro, heretofore arrested on suspicion, and Ne- H eas rep OTRAUD, Res ed aeentee! | that the mew government thus constituted must present aspect of affaires any thing butsatisfactory. | nication difficult ; while the rivers flowing between | and handsome person ; she has left four sons and | Eee and his wife, in relation to the Ber few po Nena niaheg sueet- | have prejudices and sympeihies of an anti-British [From the Paris Journal des Debats.] high steep banks, prevent the employmet of their | two dav; hey eldest daughter was married to | put Pi i alll mi ill eM ae. | nature. Nor would any counterpoise to this gene- | * *"* [tis for the advantage of the | waters for the purpose of irrigation. There is but | the Earl of Sn in. 1840. Mrs. Braham | tor, “ Hersey swore that he hed heard Freemen threaten cs] A Handveme Counge, and about five'scres of good | latter, and holds out the prospect of a coutinual im- of the deliberation of the committee of the House, to | and uncultivated, has but scanty population. Nu- | alas! too late. Mrs. Braham was in her 46th a | last ro: OBL, ralprejudice be supplied by a co-extensive influx | Union to remain at with Ei d. first | little fertile eonl, the land being covered with brush- | was of a most amiable and affable disposition, and | the life of John Do Pup. a bl $ peace ngland. . : lack man, but hed not heard \ Pa preg ery [ree tag od mists es of British be serene. leita of the Ore- } interest of a people before whom a question of war | ¥‘ nor are there any towns of great importance. | greatly beloved and esteemed by her family, and a! him oy any thing about murdering any body else.— Grand sta. m9 Sere |. WISE. | gon has for the last two or three years been almost | is placed is, to avoid certain defeat. To all men of | The Jelum tsa broad clear stream, of from 800 to | n umerous cirele of friends. Nothing was elicited on the ex n tending to throw WANTED, entirely condpeted by Americans; whilst the settle- | sound sense it must be evident, as well at Weshing- | 400 yards in width, ranning ie sandy bed, atthe | The actors of the Sheffield theatre have present- | any light on the aha of the Van Ness family, and BY a Family of fc , aparten respect- | ment of our own people has bee: id ton as in London, that the first campaiga mst turn | rate of about two miles our. The temperature | ed to Mr. Edwin Forrest, the . American tragedian. able hence. Tews rood and obs or ccs fs Oh thwarted, if not wholl prevented, by ‘Soom to the alvedtuge Of Great Britain, rink pawerhins in December was, at pac 46 deg. Fahr. ei! noon | @ handsome silver soufl-box, asa trifling testimonia Peete eee old Me Woketract Q ames, HE a rene, cies eiving Sericalarn* Disiess: | privileges of the Hadson’s Bay Company. ‘Their | for several years pastbeen making immense prepara- | 51 deg. es ___ | of the igh opinion entertained by them of his ta- | sod'yaye tho alarm, and wheu it was supposed that there por sere oa Serra hay been tied and fer ound bis | on Shige and tamer, sorter and me |, 7h accond orion x snlond teen sheila aga rand aria ane Weg | wanna aa sens coneron Whey Bee -) ere on rent sites out the territory | ries, are \ ¥ i elum am wi exce; of a | to eee thes lad 13 fage, altho iL ‘Or will be exchanged for vacant lots, the House and our. 4 ry wae has athe se ay mel yo yp a ig range of low hills, which, crossing the Jelum, run | kindness interchanged by the actors of the old and borin Py veluctesred tenesbete "ae orn he wodioal id, q Baablo No. 14 Barclay in dispute; but no extensive colonization has beei tay . | re JOHN'C. STEVENS, seis ‘on by other subjects ot the Crown, This | bleadversary. The agricultural, commercial, and | parallel with ite left bank, 1s word flat, mostly cover- | new countries; and we feel prqud that, whatever po- | and other assistance. He came fe ina te ae | No.4 Barelay st_ | circumstance alone, apart from all others, would | manutacturing interests would suffer immensely | €d with jungle, but the soil g light and sandy, | litical differences exist between England and Ame- | slarmed: Messrs, James Law. W! sietely ea | TO LET, IN HOBOKEN, operate to our prejudice, if the Oregon became an | froma war. Cotton, which forms the principal arti- | grass and roots are so abundant that large herds of | rica, nothing but the best ‘and: kindest feelings have | ouers., Yona etd 2 how boomer fae ‘de- TWO New thros aud besement brick Houses, | independent State; but, when it is viewed in con- | cle of American exportation, would, by a rigorous | cattle, sheep, camels, &c, are maintained. By | been exhibited towards the different. transatlantic | Yor thomecives to the of the family, 2nd. Bo pith the Privilene a snow in course of cpu | junction with the vicinity of a great republican go- | blockade, be kept in the ports of. Mo- | means of wells, artificial jon is practised ; but | artisis whe are now and have’ reeently been suit of the murderer with a zeal snd energy that de- iC Se ee Tie beaut eecle mend eoe | vernzent, it ie impossible not to foresee that British | bile, Oharleston, sa tue porta ot New ee prove | by the aid of camels, the whole country might be | forming onthe English stage. We can also testify | serve the highest recommendation. ‘Their ence ‘wih all tre" Late 1 n They sack consti] | interests would be swamped, even if they were | the ruin of the greatest part of the capitalists in the | conducted ito a most fertileand productive garden. | that an equal degree, of good feeling and liberality | communicated to us, and our first extra,was the cause of = ths kitchen, fambed with marble not openly disregarded or wantonly insulted, by | twelve or thuteen, States whe cultivate | that ‘The Chenab is a clear smooth stream, 100 yards in | hus been shown to English artists now playing in | the arrest by Taylor. wide court arte snd tebe eae aeee the hostility of Americansprejudiee, and the ‘col. | precious article. ‘The commerce of the ports of width, and 10 feet deep. _ |America. o Bymacens Duty Ses sates’ Cah: Re 'magty Pee ith, lags Bae view , bay and eity,and 1 | lision of democratic influence. It would be im-| New York, Boston, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, | ‘“Tne third doab (space of land between tworiv- | Risley is playing at the Drury Lane Theatre. man, the murderer of the Van Ness family, wes born in ‘one miaute’e 7, where fern for the British Government to urge as a{ which have dispensed so much capital throughout | ere) between the Chenab and Ravel, which latteris | Mr. Wilson, who is celebrated from the Land’s | to prison, he became off irre oe eee hy Po tnad eeeerecrery wal foe Harelay st, crossing ia 8 precedent stipulation, that the traditionary rights of | the country would be destroyed, seeing that England | the amallest of the four streams, not being naviga- | End to John O’Groat’s, as the ' most accomplished aicaelar'y em e mis swore | British subjects, or the former privileges of a] isin a poston to ficctag? all thoes. ports tor her | ble till below fect lle it has a breadth of 200 | because the most natural illustrator of the sougs of mane SALE. British company should be respezted in a new re- | immense navy will enable her todo so. ‘The only feet, and a depth of about three and a half feet. The | Scotland, gave one of his pleasing, instructive and | life. She escaped, however, and he was permitted to aK ‘COUNTRY SEAT. witha few or | public. And, even if sucha stipulation received | retaliation which America could inflict would be by surtace of this portion is parched and uncultivated, pular entertainments at Liverpool, lately. W. irae unishment by making a promise to l €a ‘anmover of acres that may be Serene sBeras ke. the assent of the other igontracting parties, it would | means of her cruisers and her privateers. Those | two-thirds of it being overrun with wild indigo, ta- | Rathbone, Esq., E. Ruston, Esq., and J. Corrie, | self in future. ‘The Star furiber states that Freeman art on the ee ore Staten Talend, from | be impossible for the British crown to insure its | would doubtless cause much injury to British com- marinds, and other tropical plants. Canals, conduct- | Eeq., were among the audience. oe sent to Auburn for bik Reha for ae stealing, and Se Liver within three rumatss, walk’ of Castleton | fulfilment, without recourse to a conflict which duty | merce, but it would be trifling when compared with | €d into this district from the mountain streams, | ‘Th. Frazer Family, the celebrated Scottish voca- | In his confession, wean being asked what took bis to the fend ahalf(com New Brighton. and humanity enjoin it to avoid or to defer. How- | what America would suffer. ly, the prizes made bein make this also one of the most fertile portions | jist, are on a visit to Liverpool. house, he said,“ The world rolled him there.” When 1 rege teraealar guia Trier grabout see feet... | ever aday ed, therefore, the Oregon may be for ox by the privateers would not repair the injury which cp ae desulitorbcos attae reas is Boe di the Mr. Betiy is now playing at the Queen's Theatre asked'why he murdered them, he replied that he had Hou. Io. 19 Well street, or onthe premwos, of Mrs. Jane Burger. | tensive colonization—however ite magnitude and | the American regular commerce would experience. b illages Sh mer a Of Mr. Sloan’ | Bo Teason to give at all.” He sys he had no gun with Pat te? extent may entitle it to the rank And us verished, what market | that the earth is tilled. A large but neglected canal | Manchester, under the management r. him, but a club about three feet long, inthe end of which ie y entitle itto the rank of a separate State in a country thus im) y m gl with te. Some of the papers speak highly fo perms ret emerone amr oh ; TO LE 7 —no English Minister who cares for the interests | would the national manufacturers find, even when | shows that greater cultivation once existed here.— | with s A. MODERN BUILT. COTTAGE, gana | of English subjects, can propose or accept a proposal treed by war from the competition of the English | Several considerable towns lie on the high road | his “* Macbeth. ' A fanecal of the murdered individuals was : House atjuched, with about ax acre of land, the | for a echeme which, at the outset, would injure the productions t Should hostilities occeur between ees Mp uieg isk among wie oe most im- | The Italian opera flourishes at Constantinople. Spadiyre denna ehaipel inbqtlebedt ene fact, wall pee wrth ire interests of the latter, and hereafter sacrifice them, | England and the United States, the latter would be | portant is ussulman town of im ouggur, on Salvi, next to Rubin, the greatest Italian tenor, | that Wm. Freeman, the murderer of the Van Ness family, sg? oe bs, and ea ith & pi 4 stages 3 .. i ‘, it isi H the lett bank of the Chenab. i i re thi , by ressive violation or collusive intrigue, to | menaced by & social subversion, for itis indubitable e has been creating a at sensation in St. Peters- ‘the Freeman who was executed pon: esta rece ethene athe es ae cries {afore ‘Kinticen ambition, - No one whe has attended {to | that an Ea ish army would try to proclaim the tree- tee an mone - ae ain “8 burg. i Donizett 8 “ Bevorite The Emperor af- county some five or six years since, for order DA 154 Dr. | the recent debates of Congress, and remarked jom e slaves in that country. The convention ie bet ant Sutlej, earing him, sent to him the next day a prese: There must be some bad blood in the veins PHOODN. Marion. sult (wre _ | sentiments which are most popular in the United | ot 1827,will be adhered to by the United States; no- | only 240 miles broad. Here are situated the grea:est oF 6,000 roubles. ‘ Ae mt | the Freeman tribe. It ie stated that ‘Wm. Freeman i SOHN CARR IS NOW IN NEW YORK, AND | States, can be ignorant that the American Govern | tice of the cessation of the treaty will begiven; but, | cities of the P aaah eee Umritsir (essence of cue-quarter indian, hie mother having been ane-balf In- > i i i i it wii - | ambrosia) and Sutlej is the most im- || THE Bs ag pe TO CALL ment contemplate the extension of their great em. | instead of being a signal for war, it will be the pre- eh pr fie cibttatied ef tanta ie ie aoe ee Emile Prudent, the celebrated pianist, has been the Madrid lion lately ; the Queen made him a pre- —_—_——_ sent of a diamond pin, and General Narvaez a gold | _ Excrrement at ItHaca~More Murvex Die- prerom ee “yr i paged oe Se os ‘cont “oy ina se al sed oe Roy rom 350 to 400 yards, and im the rainy season, it an it rican or- tates as COM} as Tational citizens lat 1 A t i — ratand i THE GREATEST ward to the time when no European power shall | republic can desi whieh will preserve entire the | overflows its banks, rendering tertile the surround. | Wateh set witherubies. i aot Comes yg eae that na focemaalgh water i Q IN T E WORLD. dare to interfere with the mutual policy of the nu- | honor of England,and which will preserve that which | img country to eome distance. Private concerts take place at the Tuilleries once | ithaca hus disinterred a box the Bodies of a i umanGbeaied Ne ascot | merous States spread over the great continent of | the enlightened mien of all countries should endza- | | ‘Besides this country, go richly blessed by nature, | a week, at.which all the persons of rising musical | woman and child, horribly led and red i HOUT fear of contradiction that the 488 0f | the West. How far such @ consummation is desir- | vor to maintain—the peace of the world, being, as | but so neglected by man, the provinces of Peshawar, | talent in Paris perform in turn. ‘They have been identified as the wife and child of aman | or lone, Consusieien, 1s the grestesteure | able for the peaee and happiness of nations, it is|it is,the first benefit conferred by civilization and | in the north, and Moultan, on the right bank of the | Alexander Dumes, the celebrated novelist, has ob- | WBO wae tried a few weeks since for their abduction, kaa in this orany other 5 not for usto say. It is sufficient! nt that | the first guarantee of liberty. Indus as far'as Miltan Bote, also belong to the king- | tained permission to erect a new theatre at Paris, of | $d semtenced to the Auburn State prison for ten years. eTahociig auder not my. appare gu y of the 8: F F, I, Tt was supposed at the time that they had been mur- = it isnot the interest of [the English people, nor [From the Madrid Eco del Comercio.} dom ol the Sikhs. |The whole extent of the domin- | which he isto be manager. dered, but as the bodies could not be found, he was onl ex Y= duty of an Mnglish Minster, to play into the} Anarticle in the Times, of London, written in | 0 i al ho may be caumated ‘at | A society has been formed in London, called “‘ The | tried jor a lesser offence. | We shall probably bave ands of the United States, by assent _ to | view of the preponderance of the United States of | © equare 1 Wil 000,000 inhabi- Society for Promoting Church Music. particulars to-:morrow.— Syracuse Journal, March 17. 0 mee) the Oia een of new Ruane ae _ Which | America, and the weakness to which Mexico is re- sonnte menting bee Bs Md renee William (Hawes, professor of music, died on} Darina Arrumpr at Ropseny anp Muaper.— ry; bar Must either become me in the growing do- | duced by her internal revolutions, appears to us a r Lok erie ‘of Wednesday morning, at his residence on the Adel- | There was a daring attempt at murder near East ' Masck, brews, head wad arm completely covered win | #idiary to their designs. It were wiser to wait | nal of sound doctrines of government, and the most | $e Teeree oo. en Poo of officers called rie Chapel Roy: i, Almoner of St. Pathe Cathe. | Two men, one named Ir minions of their powe neighbors, or sub- | very remarkable one. The London Jowrnal—a jour- | ‘Ticts which, for the payment ,of stipulated tribute, phi terrace, a; Mr. Hawes was a gentleman | Worcester, in this pares Satnrday, the 14th instant . or to squeeze as much . Little, and other Chas. ‘months ago ‘all deep rauniag ulcers, most of | the time when the conflicting interests of the | iofluential in the politics of that country—deplores | mucl aad miata IL ling } to ths bane. tah and $08 Mr. Cart, who takes pleasure | separate States, and the encroachments of the fede- | the condition at Which affairs have irrived in pia as possible from the country. Moultan, which is ert aoe tamil ag nat gt peer aioe be ite Rimiier jn goaretiotion. iy waien sian stated the showing bis spenrs 0 alt wh are desirous of satis(7i06 | ral government, shall dissolve a union incompatible | rica, and laments because the emancipation of the | Zoverned by a Hindoo, rejoices under the best ad | Ti Lager, Mise Maria BH 8 | object of their journey, &c. Arriving at a piece of yay diag John Onrreanether -aca'ef King’s | with intestine or foreign fears. ‘The prox- | ancient Spanish colonies has entailed an evil upon | ™inistration, while Peshawar is the most impover. | the eminent singer, Mise Maria B Hawes. woods, Little told Hunt that he had some meney buried er > 4 I ot Adige ‘seein Nor won enters ati Barope: have: ai ere ee sergio’ ee od Van nich then gives a brief sum iit thencuosn eoeaterines ‘Rem bocadh aetveabcd tired Hunt to go with hin ‘ond a ri up. Heat coment Cs 5 A Principles in | America, w’ lways | tention to this question, and some years we em- ; by a ’ BCHENCK’S PULMONIC [aris telort and a protection to tides who fet | ene ey ane a marsphlet, “it Barope | of the history of the rise of the Sikhs, from which | the Museum, at Amsterdam, 2 #4, and they on came 1th, pice betel me . over the growth of popular license, and seek an escape tributed inno small degree to promote and ae- | ‘+ appears that the origin of this sect dates from the | Dumas, the French novelist, having engagements Little suddenly turned and struck 7d pabic ma the Flo mng, thn edge fr them | from popular turbulence. For'this reason, no less Sint the ineurrection of the Spanish colonies, she did | €D4 of the 16th century; At first they were mild | 49 write only eighteen ca oct pe So agen am ey dev pepe meng gma Sir, been afftieted with the Sefofala for a number of years. | tHian for the preservation of national honor, it is the | not perceive that she suicidally sacrificed her politi- | ty seeceetnaideite ir caine ony Practice ; but | num, is going to turn stage manager, and bring out | was about two inches in diameter. The club \ 4 serofuious ulceration on my side, which duty of our government to see that we secure for | cal influence in an equal ratio, even if she gained in | HrroMBtont ie Vat Summarys Om ng been much op- | a play of his own, in eleven acts, to take two mights’ | brittle, and broke at the first blow, to whick across oo ST 3 subjects a firm footing, for our laws a permanent | her mercantile and industrial enterprises. It is not re “i A ° ritaal head, the. 0 at Jast ‘ty mur- | pe; formance. Creat prebatly ewes tie once ee weary | validity, on that continent which has been peopled | easy to combine every thing at once. For the manu- oeaaed iat frame ‘aeons ‘caer ieee Donizetti, before his reason had utterly left him, ty pardons in pursuit, before he E lt i i "adeep | by our countrymen and governed by the maxims of | facturing interests of England, the rapid progress ot ; ‘ ‘ d began no fewer than four operas—one for Vi- back hich yjawrs | Our constitution. It is ot extent, eo much as cer- | the Norih American Union haa been Tse/aly and the | Covind, the son of their mardered priest, arose as | Oaa,”"Aie' for Madrid, one {OF the lalian opera at | owtey tase,am ecominaep wet eld’ before terkos eneces, Vari mf saree- | tainty and definitiveness of dominion, that we | emancipation of those States has been more profit- | Phen Cnemuce Mf 7 ie id -sngo Y, their deo. | Paris, and one tor Drury-lane Theatre. pion, when Little was committed to jail MMe cds of nie raeticatane: | ovght to care for. It ia not our object to advance | able to Great Britain than if theyhad been maintain. | 18 the course of the succeeding century, their deo- |") "ro. ig on a new drama, of | chefged.with feloniously artsaltiog Charles I. Hunt and i Ai any new claim, so much as to abide by an old and | ed as an Ei colony. Under colonial domina- reac un or eae ae fications. Dif- which Maswrin” Pag og eg beating him with an intent to kill. ‘Little is oald to be onions pos [erent ae for giviig a new constiaton tion, and subject to the mother-country, the Stats were introduced, every tun wes bound to serve es | John Loder, the emi viola hi Lite ropretaed t Huot tat he wen golng to werk fa to Oregon be a merger of our present right ; | of the Union would not have attained the rank of a nip john Loder, the eminent violinist, who was for ard Hunt told him he wes ‘on business : u r ‘an object of | but it would eventually prove to be a surrender, a | firat- wer; theii ion would no doubt | #20ldier and bear some species of arms, the use | many years the leader of orchestras at our great Zils f | epitlaion, and a digisee + | rate power theit population would no donb |S cbacon wan forbidden thet eaten were tbe |qrovotalTemva othe, Shiatmenic Sosy. |e temter com uh per at a aah ius now turn to Mr. Gallatin’s second propo- | has been observed in those ‘parts for fifty years; | Of 8 uniform color, (olue,) and their hair and beards | and of the Ancieat Concerts, expired on, Friday | oi money supposed to be in We tbat faves sal. He would give us all north of 484 degrees | and for a corroboration of this truth itis only ne- to be allowed to grow. Lhe Akolio, fanatic takirs, | evening, at his house in Albany street, London, | probably, have his trial at the April oy. ; ‘would prodace | north latitude, in a lime running east from Fuca’s | cessary to turn our eyes to the English colonies in | °F wandering priests, have great influence among | from aropsy and ossification of the heart. He was | —Cooperstown (Otecge Co.) Letter to Albany Argus, those regi i me yh Ss esent recogni 7 > c them ; they recognise no soverei and only en- his 56t! ; Me 7. ibs ever to recover. uid yal Radke ast He ‘would mart for hie perigee fy Ee England finds in the markets of the United States dure their whom if. 1 er they censure ae they a pte is engaged at the Theatre I, pen ynom Jamaica.—By the Spartan, As my cough was s0 very bed, and my palmees fast | Inlet and its coun nenn te oes possession of the | of America the principal outlet for her commerce ented ey es ine of le be a eine wae Liverpool, in the characters of Hamlet and Othello. | Rogers, we have dates from Hingston Ta, ay BC BY ADE forthacdvecase oud siterusing it for sometime’ | COmbia River. Now, the very Lege) me and manufactures; and, without doubt, the amount Leaye Von ‘Orlich.) is a species of quott, about afoot | Mr. H, Ruseell gave his vocal entertainment, at | 21% tit. The Kingston editors meke themselves exosed- ed wacthe only romedythat Tever used thut had the least | Strikes usis this:—It has been ed that it would | of the value of herexportations may be placed as the | ‘ ui 2, with od aa. wub ich, | Mies Kelly's theatre, Dean street, to a phy ingly facetious at the mad pranks-of some of our mem- t ' us OF i greatest o! ; i. ' : most . sit upon ae. lneslieved ne of my ocneb,pesm ond tee et inconvenient to Viglen of | first and teat of the commercial halance between Fa a hy 2 ap poet cm ea wy vor eaeudi y ‘who epilaeded hitn'to the ad Dato is. The ire el We “ as arsiog tre Syrap for some tie time, "ond t to | lumbia River between English and Ameri- | the other nations of the world. Tees pony heed: veeno pola he ane Sn See y, leera were ripediog aid Segianiag to |C8M8. Supposing (the Americans say) that we re-| If, in this part, she gained in wealth, she lost in | #™e the political hi t the @ikh panera sone: whic a ee fowuny. Fustapelths® thisk thai toon te reef slog the Brrup afer Twas tain erat at beth banks of the ‘olumbia, how | power, and from her colonies arose a colossal flag comaery unter feet Sing, us) ts ost ct Sanoforte.’ Most of the songe in the fitet part were theatre af Kingston was still open, end besides thie elt healed, vessels pase and repass without danger | which at curbe and restrains her. 5 rered rh between the sailo1 i ‘i calculate Shere Sing, and the subsequent sanguinary palace | in the same key, which palled on the ear. We re- amusement, a band celling themselves the Congo Min- ie we aak, i — not jr eipShahye hans ‘ol ron can Nanas bt chine ewe ve able to ba revolutions, with all which our readers must ect reommend Mr. Russell to remedy that on a future see ncecee Lect Weal, ‘Get Frm F5 ‘You ‘Yaller, ‘ | sion between them when the two powers have an| We have adduced this example in order to prove acquainted, he concludes with expressing an opir occasion. . Gals, and C; ‘Bue. 2) equal right wehengie ‘of Da Fuce’s Straits? To | that the Machiavelliam of foreigners, although the | favorable to the Attock asa boundary for British | The Ethiopian minstrels, whose original and | A writer the Kingston, Mereing. Jewel, under the concede an equally divided possession in the straits, | Spaniards contended with the great captain of the | India. ; quaint performances of negro melodies have earned | Signature of “ Vox African,” that Great Britain | and to make sach a partition of the adjacent land as | age, has been fatal to us. usted of assisting us,|, These countries have frequently been explored | un! popularity throughout the United States, | *howld not hesitate one moment about declaring war shall exclude either of the possessory nations from | and being grateful for and compensating our saeri- by Beropeans, toe ieewiae travellers ee Re are to give a series of representations pe yy ey rd the harbors of the other, is at least as like to breed | fices, they contributed to the emancipation of our | various times Cashmere and the Punjaub:— | at the St. James’s Theatre. , salanty on mvonmear” pgs a FT fends and contests as the equal right of navigation | colonies; and as there was no Washington in them, | Bernier, in 3 Foster, in 1786; Moorecroft, | Tne celebrated Swedish cantatrice, Jenny Lind, | upon the facilities with which Great Ditleis’ could pou? ina river. The navigation of the coast is dithoult, neither were the customs of our colonists like those | Guthrie, in 1828 ; Victor Jacquemont, | ; i "7 ‘at Berlin. Sho is to | her“ Afvican sows” into Floride, Louisiana aod the Ce- ihe reading lhe ey snot and tien 6 | of Fuga hey bre been rm or hme 8 | 8," goed Br eh ncaa; | keer mn Gal of Weamoteandy oe | ig eeu td ite ae toalont between American and Britisheeamen..etotherights years by civil soot Sgn fmed of Kine: and Leopold Van Orlich, in-1843. r F BE gad oe w isto be perf at his lord- Bion, t would Fequre «special em seaipeaten toget these c h govern- Woreign Theatricals. - baci 7 of Capt pa io. ments, and principally that of agiand, witoh hed ‘The success of the Misses Cushman in the char- tha Healey Testimouel Ponds rye ky tf rain yey Ps oe ogee og the King a . the ston Ives¢ on seas and this | the greatest interest in the non-sepatation of those | acters of Romeo and Juliet, has been unpreceden- i hich inded Chronicle — hat | countries from Spain. ip . =| ted. Hine Cuatrnan’sdelieations of the Mantaan | muse hall, wh vlad oseames Mle By Eo ‘“Webave herd thet a gentleman at fn thie they should feel exclusion and resis-| ‘This is acknowledged by The Times, and this il- | lover has all the freshness of novelty, added to the | ‘oder masters were sung by Hullah’s su | Island, who saw and koew Seasiets in ho Uns arbitrary and offensive. So lustrious journal would now desire to see a monarchy | power, the intensity, and the intellect of the best clase with good effect. Mote by De Creek, | to4 Stator, completely e: Copt. Prisbie all truth, the against the division of the Co- | ereeted in Mexico,which would serve asa centreand | male performers that we have witnessed in this dif- an Zingasell encored, as was M ‘a glee : 1s ” % | lumbia would apply with equal strength tothe divi- | basia of peace, in order that, under its shadow, the | ficult part; and public i from becom- | & ne Ucawallo’ % fearn this.” | deca Reece sastr | ence in interac | reduce ak oem? |reieag mer Sool eer ye | eee eae might cease ; wit is mot appeared in this with increasing in- heles. « —N.O. " &c., are the best, exclusion from them grounds ‘some fumin flections, — terest, tinuance u i 4 e per- a freaise pevance on, our side. But the fact is Tune fat an ‘Spun hereelt is coneetraed, euch’an en- few Tigine to which oer i mt at the Sted with the national anthem. Br. Tux New Yorn Post Orrice.—We deposited and division are now matters of ex- | te; ‘would not be unworthy of the man* whose | Haymarket extends. Mitses Cushman have oA ggroyrg buy fact and ability. We have | with our own hands, in tility ‘ined . itis Intention of | the committee to | ton papers printed in New York pedien j parties are sensible that the claims ‘and whose resolute characterhave | been very successful in .1 . Hy Donded on discovery and occupancy are very de- | alread: lustre of th ‘ build_a music hall at e end of Endell street. a rent bateable, end admit of being cited on both sides | ish tmonarehy, jp malady aig ode te ee Mathews are engt-| Mad’lle Jenny Lind is engnged far a limited num- | make srurence doubly sare, we direeted gach paves te alike. tis, therefore, the object of both parties to | bringing with him a foree eapable of restoring order , oval. i ber of representations at Saxe Weimar, to sing im | Sity some daye wince, and have been gredusily recetv effect much a compromise a cell dasnaty exter 9 the country, aad the Guarantees of a constitution: | + in nag wong Baer boven with a great leer, fave of characters, The chapel-mas- | ing tacee said papers, A they . Now, if we one e 101 it i i i . $3 . at ro i to arrive al , come ’ singe io ee SSST urea noes tm eee ht |S Ud ese eh osetia Recs eee Se i be ako ia ora the'word in tna plea, and vo obearlog ur eusing. | regeread ia Riton from the grees tense, bp | county, Ohio, refused applications for tevera,diesases, | New Yotk correspondents y Gea. Barch 98 | some six, some only twelve after they had been waviled? Now tain, while exct astate of imbecility. ‘worst,