The New York Herald Newspaper, April 13, 1846, Page 5

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THE HERALD SUPPLEMENT. ed ’ he RDO HERALD CIRCULATION-FORTY THOUSAND, JAMES 4 Office Ns W. Corner of Fulton and Resse sts. { NEW YORK; MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1846. pally, Two Cents Per Copy; Weekly, $318} « Year. ‘ + Sn A RE 2) YS ea NGS Pe et i OE PREM Ni eA issue, and this stion has been raised by | Principles, long since buried beneath the rubbish of mer -| and influence of the old confederecy. The Tuscarores, Inp1awa, Franklin county, March 31, 1846. BIGELOW’S NEW ENGLAND EXPRESS. Speech of the Hon. Lewis 0. Levin, | {is "iorigoers themselves, who now maintain thei | © soar partion wo are not unrare vot the diicalty of | admitted in 181s, wore never allowed to bere Sache! The Filing atthe West om the Oregon Queation—| VOW Eusdbert, Keone, Greenfield, Bralebore, vite: In the House of Representatives, March 7. | Sh! {0 62rerm the atte oo nine onset forged | party the glowing emotions which in tho earlier eras of| theit peculiar laws us to marriage, hospitality ke, Thelt Forty-nine or Fifty-four Forty? nadas. All Fs ckage, Fare cli and business, to any documents of neturalizati ‘At one blow, this twenty-| our history, caused the native to exult with pride in the Jams af descent are pec nen an d original. All pase! in othe I beg leave to make a remark through your wide- ary: Smaet will ve fab faly tes a fed fo it Fy The House being in Committee of the Whole on the we extingui: h rtal—I | land of his birth, as a blessi and a privilege to be : " ow. Packa State of the Unions sed havi peotd consideration the | mey ate Mhie ee ofthe anny party, | equalled by no other Sstioation, But, air, it nthe dif-| ceeded by either of his sons, but by his sster’s son.— | spread and spirited journal, (which has pioneered agremocere tose tuhanted ere bill for raising @ regiment of Mounted Riflemen, Mr. | which, struggle as it may, take what form or shape it | ficulty of the task that sheds glory on our effort ;and| This is modified by the right <{ the tribe to depose and | itg way into every nook and corner of christendom) | PF — ——— Leviw moved the following amendment—Provided that | may, must eventually come to the point of settlement— | on this occasion we have foes who, when they do not | elect, at any time when they think proper. Soon after le of the wid hrivi EAGLE_COFFEE HOUSE AND BATHS, the officers and soldiers of said regiment shall be Ameri- | the natives must triumph, er the foreigners succeed. [t| hurl poisoned javelins, or shoot like cowerds from an | an infant’s birth, the family choose » name, which is | a8 one of the people of the wide-spread and thriving No 598 Pearl street, between Centre aud Elm—Warm, cold cans by birth. Ia true they claim the victory now, and point to their | ambash, & will}be ne discredit Cfeonen Eig. ee ten ta of anced af the next council, When one isselected s| Weet. And in doing #0, I shall not give my private or | 1, aad shower Bathe, equal to Shove 1a say house in the erty Mr. Levi said—Mr. balance of power as deci: tl tory at the ei who a low our trium| ¥ * | partic f P i ; Fete titan fever steps peresrory red Prag rgd ad eg rg denier? A wll frandnational victory in 164s.” For eaptives they must | To the Mohawks hea been universally conceded the pre: | Particular views, bat the views and fenings othe great |g and Lodeing #2 fpr eck:, nh reading (om wilep ed the policy of the immortal Washington, in our revo- | charge it with fraud. We prove it corrupt., And we ome. A victory we must bave. Invincibility is our| eminence as due to their superior services.Inthe council | mess of the people west of the mountai ho have fa. pers from eee 4 » the brine lutionary war, when from hie p at Cambridge, he | Dow appeel to the great American people not soldirre-| motto. We inherit it from a leader who never surren- they were styled neutral, and they were the receivers | milies, lands and homes to protect, and who detign the *T WELL" insued his order to ‘place none but natives at the out posts.” | coverably to the prostitutions of faction—to correct the | dered, and with whom courage and generosity were as| of tribute {rom all foreign nations. The Onondagas were | weit being and prosperity of our common;country. ey Fi "It is high time to be cautious, when the nation is called | evil—to arrest the march of these foreign invaders—and | natural as patriotism and success. Like him, sir, we | next in the order of p b eadea eid a F litical W Aer comes f nttes wae upon to arm for ite defences, aud preservation. It is high | laying aside tho trammels of mere party, rush to the | treat our captives with clemency—like him, we take| who were the doorkeepers. The Oneidas, at; In order that ! may be understood as to my polit 223 ut time, sir, to ascertain who are our friends—and who are | rescue of their children’s rights. bi Lee only ito make them freemen—but, Great Tree, from having concluded a treaty with the | composition, I am, and ave been, a democrat, in PHILADELPH ss . * * . shi 7 were Inst. and had no the most American acceptation of the term ; and raised ATHS just introd ‘= ns, and who the subjects of ‘o what conclusions, then, shall sheath our wea! till we behold | whites under the shade of a large tree. The Wi Cold—ia fine to make this ‘iry, d> from arra) ts before us ?| our glorious country eternally free irom all foreign ca-| the Great Pipe. Th i "9 nced—Warm, and spar’ me ¢ that th va That by Pg ‘anilite of nai ral ~ ion, we have | bala and their mercenary American allies. Here, th national @ ‘thet. ‘All their business was done in gene-| inthe West. At this exciting moment, when the politi- ments, ing wp of and Scpettment of the Wasningeon House report that thei ization and ‘eaturalised a. Pr pulation nous, hos. | We take our stand. As a distinct American orgavization | ral council, of which each was notified; and when they urcharged with the warlike, and sul- | House, comp! aliens and 4 ot aon tile, pda, ‘and Pe oe ny ere inet ty we enter the field—the struggle may end assembled the fire was kindled, and the foreign messen from the h me of our West- MANSION HOUSE, Americans. ‘Washington ink so, ai corruptions of this facile adoption of foreigners, like that of the revolution, it may ger called upon to state the object for which the fire the national capitol ; and such volumi- MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUT. issued the order to which Ihave just adverted? Far | have endangered the Union of the States, and shaken the | &Ccomplsh it. But, sir, we are “ enlisted : .” | was kindled; and then the council discussed and decided made by many, in relation to West- | ravi UNDERSIGNED begs leave to to his from it, He who never quailed in Battle—he who never | Republic to its centre—that we can only make this great | and until victory shall perch upon our banner, you will | the question; voting by majorities and minorities was | orn fire, fury, ferceness, and bravado ; I wish to say, | "Treads and the public, chat he has leased the above F erred in judgment, thought differently. It was his ad- 1n—one in soul one in spirit—one in action—homo- | find us strugg! r our native land, bold, fearless and | unknown. All their proceedings were marked by una-| in behalfof the people of the West, that®although We | fora term of years, and hopes, by | experience and a ngacity, that saved the county, by thie wise | geaous and poweasing perfect moral and political tym. | ee, hurling che fhunderbols of truth, against the ene-| nimiy;, snd they seem to bare voted by nation and| feel, ourselves neceamarly covfned in the foerior| stein to ‘bstias, to sen saiern shae i € + | mies of the American pepple, and stri dismay into | classes rather than by sachemsbi of the empire (therefore comparatively sefe in case | patronage. . more Nace pipet El Pee g by snevwy naturalization of twenty-o0e yoerinen, | the hearts of those ‘whore hatred may be teken esctoler| At the council convened. for talsing up sachemships, | cf foreign favesion) and, nave mot the facilities and ed. | -mré duxere Formerly of the U-8. Hotel, Bestam. rience had taught him, that in all | sir, shall we grant an exclusive privilege to the alien, | ble measure of their fears. Were practiced the games which @ such irrosisti- | vantages of that Higiee order of intelligence and refine- AVANA SEGA great emergencies, he could rely on the native soldier, hich we reuse to our own sons, born on the soil, who ble attractions. I attended at one where five of the sx | ment, that obt: many ofthe Atlantic States, still '° who. rallied to his | are condemned to a probationary period of twenty-one New York Historical Society. nations ‘had assembled for the purpose. On the day the | we do not feel that we are without the pale of civiliza- 100,000 Very Superior, recei fight to defend 101 Noreisga’s, Victoria's, ‘andering Jew’ \d. Now, sir, shall : ears 7 Why should we tto a foreign pauper, or | The above Society held its regular monthly meeting,| Coremony of the reception took place, they | tion, or honorable feelings, and honesty of purpose, and | from orn a Oe experience of Woshington for's guide, of ahail. we | criminal, or even to aforelga noblemen, what we retuse | Tucsday evening, at the roome of the Society, at the | Temained at a distance, merely announcing theit arri- | profegs to have as ardent desires to put the golden rule | Bayaderas, Emilio’, Nabije's, and flentarion egars, ‘if abide by the report of the Judiciary Committee, which | to our own sons? There is no necessary connection bo- | yniversit é 3 val. The reception was rude. but dignified. The de-| in force, as any other people and act in accordance | PCtiving consignments 0! the finer qualities of Havana proclaims in substance, that native citi re in no | tween the civil oe, oF majority of twenty-one years, Iveenty: ceased were lamented by- the tribes as a son or a father, | with its precepts and commands, among. ourselves and | tars by every vessel from Havana, with advices to close sles tate from Eu! Tespect superior to the alien, and that the alien, so far as| which we have d or ad rope, and| Among thefdistinguished ggentlemen present, besides | according to the class to which he had belonged. An | our fellow citizens of sister States; and likewise to have | ; romptlv, ‘nnd will, therefore, sell at one or two dollars Jess the highest political rights are concerned, itequal to the | the political right of » which is the consequence | the venerable Albert Gallatin, we noticed his Honor harangue was then made by wise man, explaining | our beloved country so act, in its intercourse with other | per sousand, than any other importer. Country. pee! ants naturalized citizen? Need I ask this question of anj of political int nce. There is no reason to sustain age pod path bio! national or- | nations. We ask for nothing but our own, indivi- | and he see Reapers Gide ie oe int " es aes American Congress? 1 trust not, sir. But to the point. | the law which makes the political right of the alien su- Chief Justice Jones, Mr. Morgan, of Roche It ie proposed to raise a regiment of mounted riflemen to} perior to the political it of the native born. If oth recian oliga! does pot precisely repr: aid in the defence of the frontier settlements—" the out | twenty-one years’ probation is assigned to the native-| At eight o’clock, the Hon. Albert Galla' President sree ot i Iroquoia,but there were strong featu: duals, integral part of the nation; and if there is wy doubt as to the valiait of our cl me, not} {NEEDLE & FISH-ROOK MA NUFACI ORY, only }, to have 717 Maiden Lane. usts”—the far West! Now who bette alified to | born, it is but just, reasonable, and that the | Ofthe Society, took the chair, and the ting was | resemblance. Thet of the Indian approached to demo- | of im WY, GROWLEY & SON, manufacturers of Botend the soil, than the native born—the has iy pleceer’ same. peried deta’ be assigned to the exported allen, called to order. The minutes of the last meeting Eaving oracy as far as was consistent with their wandering and aati les, eapoctially es a . jl jew Yor who peoples it—who settles it—who loves it—who has no “privilege” for the native born. Let no “pri. | Sremuler 2h, Coaineliy. hana) was) no Pepe See beprecapre tag ey ilNing to sell ates ge,” then, be granted tothe alien. Which is more| Dr. Mason moved an amendm: the election of chiefs. e body of chiefa here conti- "Any of the trade, oF im- the abo les, which his % \°. he a ‘fe hs children and.sts all-atakod on its preserva ha Hedy Ge Obtats: ner eces vance fom he minuetarng era. tion? Will you place such aman on an equality with | of an“ infant,” in a political sense, other sense — | the society, which enacts, that a . aac a belted with thatr own’ name the alien, of even on an equality with the naturalized the native ‘American youth a ighteen years of age, or Seen foe speed seere 9 saeenet of ‘op sich toed ths tie a. Even Red Jacket neve aes nh wuld spprecee, Se wire us 1a MemeR citizen, under sent lization ? | tl ‘ul js subsc: ns 8, were mo) ili ‘onvel | faa presses lowe Wyeree Af senurelixeiven: 11] S96 SUSE Mise Sendanea: Chelle misate, op eyed Bye. | Nevins Coy Dee . : catdisal virtues of Western life.” We of the West are Ra abe tere, hate Would Washington have done 40? ik you to turn to | years, I leat jite member of the society. . e of every man to deter- Net loweat off | bis order at Cambridge for a conclusive realy. * > | mine fochimeslf.’ But ‘inciple of tights, | _ After some remarks by Dr. Mason, in explanation of e most intense interest and anx sper | ‘The States have an a Wd wale teas ply: ‘decide on| I boldly denounce the pol os mt ple ee panel or ig | the object in view, $ purposes of defence, being founded on clan now being carried on in Congr: TO REALERS ’ i Gi what terms American citizens shall vote in the: right of suffrage granted to the alien at five} Th endment was put, and carried unanimously. seize with y every sentence that Beeps o jolly A Salmon and Trout Sik Worm Gut, to ra i i le wil ships. iN Jay, the Domestic Corresponding Secreta- ‘the thanks of the society were unanimously voted to | lips of the speakers, (and Spective States. But if th a Rul inthe State ry, read letters from the Historical Societies of New | Mr. Morgan for his learned disquisition. 6 right to vote as electors of nto the wor! ion of the Oregon title — the native-born till twenty-one. it can be urged with any force Ee it fishing t ede te CMON Mati ad Spree re- can grant to aliens | years, and denied United States, thi Now, sir, no argui porters,) engaged in the dis could also grant the right of eli against the period of twenty. di . y, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, in reply to com-| Commodore DeKay moved. that a committee be ap: | that all absorbing and mom: 8 topic now passing the tou st, corner of Chiff, al Im*rh President aud Vice President of the Usited States, ‘Now, fomits maa fon satost the asia ory rachel A ications in reference to the limited issue of the sci-| Pointed to. raise funds for the repair of the Lawrence | o1 tigation by so many wise heads end patrio- WINES, BRANDIES, GIN, &c. sir, the powers d eral government are | {t be besed on any principle known, or recognized ea a | entific works growing out of the exploring expedition, | Monument in Trinity Church yard, which is now falling | tic hearts at Washington. An deing the AEE ETN MTEC WERE suai L tos, SSRI of that class, only, deemed necessary to ite perfect orga-| principle of freedom. All the deprivations complained | #04 expressing their re: to join in memorializing | intodecay. The motion was seconded and unanimously gs of ‘the people of the M: ppi and Ohio valleys, | 0 Biackburn, Leal, Newton, Gordon & Co; 35 cange fine nization. No term of probation, no period of five of in the period of twenty-one years, are also e Seoed Congress to increase the edition. adopted, and a committee of three were forthwith ap. | to “raise their voice for war,” as is supposed in the ity} old Am iado and Duff Gordon Sherry, in do; Otard, De 4 initiation would be necessary, if naturalization deaenes in the period of tive dy, in half pipes and qr casks; A. Seignette in ats, ner. can the one be Letter from Rev. W. Van Rensselaer, presenting his | Pvinted by the chair; whereupon the meeting adjourned. | it is the wish and prayer of all who have any thing at pect ; only to confer rights r iv _ r on the Capture and Burning of Sch fad) id stake in its event, or wish well to their country or their jognac, 1828, in qr casks aud eighths, of a very in thas of war, Or aay et tee that ged ety ger tes fons ¢ of 8 wise ex; brass San his Ce te oa Frum the Hon. Philo Cindley, and other * ntle: eS pen ’ Club. kind, that its murderous, destroying and frightful mien of a high grade, bottled by the late that belorg to’ the residents of States.” How, forex. | feprosentative republics if the people so will it, both are | kUowledgiog their election as corresponding members, k hagoepsiglharahs may never again be suffered to blow mildew and death ars ago, and for sale 1ow, bY ample, sir, is that clause of the Constitution to be se-| constitutional; but twenty-onejyears is more wise, be-| _ A letter from James Riker, jr., suggesting to the soci- | Tnesdey being one of the semi-monthly stated meet- pone | this people,and paralyse and impoverish the com- "'K. B. DALY, ‘Sacesssor to, cured which excludes foreigners from the two highest | cause it adapts the law to the altered relations of the | ety the expediency of communicating, through an agent, | ings of this Club—which appears to increase in the ac- | Mercial and other business resources of the country. I) a4 imtre ‘Bement & Castle, 4 Broad st. offices of the republic, but by the naturalization Iaws,| country, and the necessary demands for protection | the public records of the island of Curacoa, fn ‘view of i ‘am aware that these views are diametrically opposite | Grrick OF JEFFERSON INSURAN MPANY fas they confer the right to vote, and the right of eligi: | ogainst the growing encroachments ef foreign monarch. | the close intercourse which early existed, between that | °e##ion of members and general interest of its objects—| {rom those entertained of us by our fellow citizens in Bras ibe $ bility to office 7 Concede, for the sake of argument, | ists upon our rights, by means of the combined influence | island and the New Netherlands, when both were ander | there was a very full attendance of farmers and visitors | the Atlantic States, they reasoning from saatey) and T AN ELECTION for Directors of thus Insti for that the naturalization laws lo not confer the right to-| of a spurious ballot. Sir, there is but one course for our | the government of the Dutch—the Dutch flag having | in the new room of the Institute. Upon Col. Clarke | Judging from the infammatory appeals in the United the ensuing year, held this day, the following e- is . yote—under the belief that the States ha husi its to tak been raised at Curacoa July 29, 1634, (and New Nether- tates Senate and House. Now, | wish, in the name of | Uemanwere jurisdiction in that matter, as the Tudiciary “Report, fr universal suBreg ey enone gt re lnororrred j- | lands having remained ander their ieertston until 1684, Delay elseres chansvany and the, rendiog of tre Proceed |\the respeneltts for speek pac om eater : Thomas’ now before the House, contends—how could the provi- | cates them as tleeply as twenty-one, in all’ the cons it was surrendered to the English.) Mr. Riker | ings of the last meeting dispensed with, Mr. Meigs pre- | far W: Regt aber pg mas T. sions of the Constitution be catried out? The States | quences of probationary exclusiog from citzesente | stated that Mr. Elsiveer, the gentlemen tthe hiead of | sented to. the sitention of the members 9. duninative or thought being ente ssfounded| = $F Hobaon, would make no discrimination between aliens and na-| The principle is the same. Exclude the alien for five | the Record office, and the author of a work on Curacoa, | sized potato, not exceeding the size of a Fife bullet, for. jose men are fer from being the personid- fpomege Tie tiver—no certificate of naturalization would be neces- | years, and you do all thet any extension of the termcan | Would a answer any enquiries that might be put | warded fiom Meraceibo, and siippostd to be the seed of ee b ssry—no recor! of aliensge could be traced—and the | do, but you do him no wrong on apy principle, for he | ‘© him, relative to the matter. tho original vegetable. Specimens of California John Ean |] whole fabric of the government would fall under the | has no right to citizenship but by consent of the people, | From Daniel J. Dromond,Secretary of the Pennsylvania | squash, capable of producing an article from five to fif- | control of foreigners, in flagrant violation of the most he must accept it on the terms i i i solete a fundamental provisions of our organic | fer it, as most conducive to 1! sir, is ene of the most obvious conse- | stitutions. The American doctrine of this ous Judiciary Report, | own hands to declare on what ive rightte regulate * 4 nil ag of the. sesd ons, soastad, O8 by om Facet 8 nxiety for individ notoriety, and to 5 tequire the Feputation of leaders, without any regard to | Jona C, Memitt, |. Rober Smt owas w. what thoy lead, whether to paradise or perdition. All | THORNE, Esq., was uaaaimoaaly ay feel it, who are ci pal ani opis the enaaitg vear. GO. T HO! 4 rash course in its true light ; and I wou! indly A] dire De B.C iin of Ken: suggest to those gentlemen, hat numbers of their warm, FRENCH est filends regi regrious oversight, to say the ding Secretary feast of it, ih thus ionising Goon throwit “irebraods,| ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. to a-mile, and purports to have been tinction, and his | rows aud death,” into the very bosom of this nation, HENRY & K Aut UP arin times, extended and abridged the period of probation, | become, if we allow cur country tobe transformed into | made by a society of gentlemen in America, ‘ from ac jontribute to the benefit of | by arousing, as it were, the ire of christendom against | [MPORTERS, 53 NASSAU STREET, UP STAT shows, most conclusively, that the great and fundamen: | a rotten’ borough for Kurope’s kings, who, by the turn | tual surveys and other authentic information.” It is it, when a calm, dignited, temperate and sena‘orial | 1, J offer far sale, a very large and choice selection talright conferred by the laws of naturalization, was of a fluger, can pour into our ballot boxes tens of thou. | Without dato, but seems to have been made during the | water rotted hemp raised upon hiv fat bearing, would have had the reverse effect. It is some- | MN Wier STYLES OF ARTIFICIAL FLOW the right of suffrage,andno other? = =* * ' — */ sands of voters, a majority of whom have no more right | revolutionary war, about the year 1777 or 1778, Fort Lee y and of a quality as delic what surprising, and to be regretted, that public func- | in bauches, wreaths, sprigs, garlands, Ke. ke., together wi American suffrage is high prerogative. It can ema- | to vote than the horse, the ox, or the locomoti fe | being marked as destroyed, and Fort Putnam not being | nary quality of flax. The Secrétary tionaries, who are selected by the suffrages of a sober, | » most extensive assortment of nate but from two sources—birth, and naturalization by | all know, for nothing 1s more obvious, that the * | mentioned, es it doubtless would have been, had it been | mei of the ground nut, raised by the cheirman, fonel | Well-meaning constituency, to do them justice, and to} MATERIALS FOR AR‘IFICIAL FLOWER MAKERS. the American government. Its great distinguishing | tion may be destroyed without ever being violated, and | then built, as the fortifications generally, and Fort In-| Clark, which wes handed toa member for cultivation, | Tepresent them faithfully, and endeavor to contribute to } emb: he t Roc! ‘@ variety unsurpassed in richness, and extent by chsracteristic is the right of sovereignty. What is the | that, too, by meansfof corrupt practices that undermine | dependence, in its immediate vicinity, ‘are carefully | A communication was read from Dr. L the common weal of the nation, should thne play the | ®a trea ridcial flowers by the case, imported expressly for le. im*r which they prof | Historical Society, acknowledging letter, in reference | teen pounds weight, was exhibited and distributed to preservation of free in- | to works of ene tion, stating. that a com- ple hold the right in their | mittee had been appoint he subject. terms aliens shall be enti-| Hi dor 98, presenting to the so- as the highest privileges Map of the Counties of Hunterdon, If this had been the case, sir, why hteman, * ie es Essex, and Morris ; also a part of Mid-| oil cake, pigeon m re? what American but has, in his heart despised, and by 4 7 1 reet, in New Jersey, and of the Coun | tion. Allotter was why did the Congress of 1798 repeal the act of 1794, and jongue laughed to scorn and lashed to infamy the| ties of Orange and Ulster, in the Province of New abridge the term of probation from fourteen to five | rotten boroughs of England? and yet how infinitely | York”, The map was exbibited. It is on a scale of yeurs? The very fact that Congress has, at various | more degraded shall we, the people ofthe United States, | about half an incl quences of ueezed grapes, &. right of sovereignty 7 The elective franchise—the right | its integrity as well as nullify its intent. Under our| 2oted. The roads, rivers, swamps mountains, are| onthe subject of the agricultural charlatan, zide, John Gilpin like, over everything that hbi | to govern—the right to rule—the right to vote for Freat- | constitution none but a netive born American can be | given with perticulerity, as if for military purposes; as| county, cored as Mr. Wekernan ‘absareed, with that in | Crosses their pat , without listening to rhyme or rea. Redobhing and we ~ dent and Vice President of the United States, and for | elizible to the Presidency; but if by courting the foreign | #!#0 churches, taverns and bridges, and some private re- | Duchess and Orange county, forms the third inthis | #00} create dissensions in their party, and instead ef TO COUNTRY BOOKSELLERS, members of Congress. Without this right no man can | vote, the native born becomes in heart an alien to his | #idences, among which are those of Gov. Livingston and | State, all illustrating the extension of the science and ppessing, struggle to arouse the wrath of other nations | @PECIAL NOTICE.—THE GRAEFENBERG PILL bean American citizen—no, sir, not even the alien in| country, the constitution is as effectually prostrated as | Lord Stirling. “The mi extends from ‘Trenton, on the ractice of agricultare. A letter was readfrom Mr. rd3 their country ; and all for the gratification of a SCE "ANY are now ong ie very Minois! —* * ? . . . +1 if an alien had been elected to fill the Presidential chair. | South, to Esopus, on the Hudson ; and takes in Easton, | Dallach, on the best method of the ke unworthy, end unholy ambition! Verily, we | town, city and village in the United Beat Yessir, the Grst principle, the great fundamental doc- | But, sir, we have been told that twenty-one years, asthe | Pennsylvania, on the wast. tem of selling, ko, | Extracts were resi from documents ms of a “reign of terror.” if | vinces, West Indies and parts of Bath Aes trtue of the native American party, ie now incorporated | poriod of probation imposed on the Preigzer, “a pre. | _ Mr. Stevens, by whom it is presented, is, we believe, | published by the irish commissioners.on their survey of c lowed to develope—unchoked — | rete ito ease will a dru in our exist aturalization law. "The five year law is} scription!” It it be, (which I deny, and disprove.) | ¢ #00 of the president of the Vermont Historical Society, Freiand, of the best lands calculated for the growth of | t0 full maturity. Now, oll this may sound congenially | 157) ¢'but one general agent in any towr. ‘fall recognition of the doctrines of the native Ameri-| so is five years i » if there be any pro- | #04 is now engaged in making historical researches and | flax, by which it appears that an income of a million of Span the om anum of grave Senators; but we, of the | of the G i cans. The tain head of| scription in naturalization, then has our goverzment, | ®2tiquarian collections in London. pounds sterling is annually derived from its cultivation back woods, demur to such a course, and ing of cows, sys- it—which, as | have no.ed, shows that no member | from its first start into existence, practiced proscrip-| Mr. Banturtr, Foreign Corresponding Secreta he Flax Im it Society, of Belfast, sent such flatulent appeals being made in the Sen of Congress can be elected by voters not naturallzed, be | tion. ‘The charge refutes itselt, ‘The power and right fo | stated to the meeting that he had opplied fo tho British | men to Belgium to learn the’ process of stooping ant | Thowe Senators are Detter it home ntil the whole ‘agenci entzed, which cause the naturalization Jaw of the United § protect American institutions from the corrupt touch ef| g0vernment, through Gansevoort Melville, Esq., Ame- | saving flax, and the result has been, the product'on of an Fequire some little time. Booksellers will Gnd it for their 1a this meridian, that if the le are not prepared for hostilities, un- | terest to call at the office of the comp*nr, which will cipe of some warrior, either from | the present at No. 164 Nassyu street, next door to Tammany that Mrs, Gaines will have no trou- | Hail, FRANCIS M: PRATT, General Agent. The extraordinary virtues of the Grcefenburg tal ills, and the philosophy of their action upon the scribes the qualification of the electors to th monarchy, is inherent in the peopie. Ours is a govern. | 'ican Secretary of Legation in London, for the various | article not inferior to the finest French cambrick. ‘The merous branch of the State Legisintures. ‘And heat strlotly oui generie--ite footures taller to it | feports and public documents published by the houses | crop in Ireland, in 1841, amounted to 25,000 tons, and in | til th ‘with this flood of light beaming upon pages self. It is institution of popular sovereignty, unlike | 0f Lords and Commons, forthe Historical Society. In| 1844 increased to 40,000, worth two millions of pounds Constitution, we sre told by American representatives | ali other governments, whose subjects come among us er ee. Melville stated that he would render every | sterling, ex; t inthe hall of an American Congress, that’ aliens, with | to rerve un ticeship to freedom, and wean the is power, and by the next steamer would land aie cvisghs Mi cibe or atk tas: oe a lens, Wi 'e apprentices! ret ym, and wean sm + ‘woul com- A wu D th ‘nce Clinging to their Ji selves from the habits a1 passions veculiar to royal serf- municate the adequate information as to the proper mode | acre, at pounds te “th * Pico, .. Sebi aes he too of man system, will be fully explained at an rays ra is a0 it to become the rulers of Ameri be | doms. Is it “proscription” to exclude minors, our own | °f procuring the documents referred to. stone, would give the cultivator a most remunerating ry and subtlety, superi r, that the doctrine for which I contend, invades | sous, from suffrage? No, it is deemed prudence. We ir. Gaiatin here observed that though we had fre-| profit. A letter was read fcom D. 8. McGowan, from i wer minds highly | stely become the le: he rights 7 State rights, sir, when they | hold the right to protect and preserve that | quently prese:ted public documents to the British go- | Minnpo, China, explaining the qualities of several manu- | imbued with fairness, p and honesty of pur- BILLIARDS IMPROVED. are State rights, will at all times and all circum. | which is for the common b . But, sir, if fo-| vernment, the same had, he believed, never been done | factures now on their way to the Institute, and nt- . Those men claim tobe the mouth piece and em- FIELD. relly intoress his friends and the stances find in me an unfli But the | re tre proscribed, s0 are our own children pro-| by them in return, or inany ed by him, consisting of common brick tyles, Chinese Wish of the executive. But we of the West, ca ET IS FIELD, reepectiaay, tp his. old vores way. i 1 he has r mete cry of “central power” will never intim: na-| scribed. + Let any man imegine to himself what would| Mr. Givas, the Librarian, read a letter from Mr. Her-| cutlery, grass twine, bamboo brushes, soep made from | 20t credit it ; we cannot believe that the President is re S, entrance 1% Ann st, ediomi tive American from defending the Constitution, our ns: | be the consequesce if thet tailor bones were threo, | mana E. Ludwig, a Gorman gentleman, who hes epent | lord, Contaee mode of tae Cr ea cot oeace {rem | man of such violent, ruthless and reckless passions. We pasbr Glib okt alton steets ‘The, Home and tional fame, our national character—all that we cling to | wide open to all, and popular suffrage came upon us in| #°me years in this country, and devoted much time to| tures, kc. There waa a suggestion offered inan article | Were pleased to see his communication to the represen | bles have been put in perfect order. The Tables are Slate, as precious. or boast of as immortal, flows from the] one overwhelming torrent, from persons of all ages. | literary and historical investigations, sccompanying | from Mr. Eldridge, on the sudject of removing to | tatives of the people, so plain end nt in relation to Farle s F Bins *‘contral power,” which has its origin, its heart, its pul-| What would be the effect ? ‘How long would the laws | 0¢W and valueble work by himself, entitled ‘* The Lite- | top after it had bolled ; which drew from th irman | Oregon; but we believed, and still believe, that like the | They will no Hpropem balls for Nouthernere—-Care” sations,in the Congress and P, t of the United | be wisely made or firmly executed? It is the rature of American Local History, a Bibliographical | his belief that the divease had passed its v: and | heroes and patriots who have filled the exalted niche | the bess in this country. Sti What is “central power,” but.the Constitution ? | thing in relation to this flood of paupers, whe are - | Essay.’ would not be jn existence in the ensuing crop. which he now occupies, he would solely study the | ‘N° 8 Busts -w style Billiard Tables for sale: India ‘What aro we as a poople, withoutit? What would we | tematically sent to our shores from the old world—Grest | _ Among other donations were the Transactions of the| Dr. Underhill drew the attention of the Club to a | Well-being, and nothing but the well being, of his coun- | ang french Cue iat in the city; fine Billiard Cloth, become, it we had not this glorious “ central power,” ca} Britain having. on one occasion (a8 you will find by ret | Dorchester and Maryland Historical Societies; also of | most healthy fertilising, and it would appear ess try, and the heppiness of his cou: men. That he | and every articlei n the trade, constantly on hand and for sale. tee focus of that circle around which revolve ia their | ference to, Niles Register) priated 25,000,000 of | the American Philoso; Society of Philedelphia, and | ble grass, called *‘spurry,” or ‘‘spurbill,” which is | would ect untrammelled by party, or party, prejudice, | (28 mime aime respective orbits, and with beautiful harmony, too, the | dollars to deport to this country one million of Irish | ©! Presented by the respec: | universally used in Germany and Denmark for pastur. | for the ‘whole people.” This he proclaimed the NEW TARIFF. whole confederation of the sisters of freedom ? paeupers, upon the wery ground t their competition | tive societies ; the Blue Book, from the publishers ;| age a:d soiling. A small quantity of the seed was exhi- | Tostrum at Cincinnati, when on his way to the capitol, in [MPORTANT NEWS to Shippers of Grain and other um. in what particular the rights of the States are en-| was fatal to English labor ; and they are now sent here | Magnetic Observations made at Washington, by Lieut. bited to tbe Club, and strongly recommended to the at- | February, 1845, at which time I had tht honor and plea- | A farm Produce to Great Britain. dmgered by the existing naturalization law of Mr. Jef | that they my come in competition with the American | Gilliss, U.9. A., from the author ; Report on Finence, | tention of the farmers, and a committee was named to | Sure of being on the committee for his reception to the | A new law having passed the Legislature, ad the im- fervon’s administration? Was he an enomy of State] laborer. I shall not stop, sir, to enquire what would be | from B. B. Freoch, Esq ; Force's Tracts, Vol. Ill., from | sscertain its properties. There was a letter read from | City ; and we have seen nothing to throw doubt upon | portation of fo yea eee Fights ? | Will any one ventaro that assertion T° * | the effect of such aeystem upon American labor, or the the Hon. Peter Foree, of Wi n ; Colton’s Life of | Mr. Stevenson, to whose care the petition forwarded by | the beliof, at that time so fondly cherished. And the pte the Olax The States, therefore, cannot admit aliens to vote—the | American labcrer. 1 morely ask what will be its effect | Clay, from the author ; Report of N. Y. Institution for | the Institute to the Legislature, for an extension of the | People trust that Mr. Polk will not suffer himielf to be | With the subscri the basis of all American suffrage being an United States | upon the ballot box of the nation? Will not sucha class| the Deaf and Dumb, from O. W. Morris ; several curious | time of granting a premium for the cultivation of flax, | €08ded on to rashness, by the fiery spoutings of Senators | £14 Provision trade ; and as here been ape naturalization law, extending over and controlling all] of aliens speedily overturn all the barriers that have da 1737 and 1781, presented by | in which that gentleman gave his hope of a successful | #bout the “Baltimore Convention.” Now, pray: Jet me | any importance, or who had any practical fated by the States in an uniform manner, making any State court | bees created by the fathers of the Revolution t ua Vandewater. A ber of | i to th . The merits of | ¢2quire, what has this Baltimore Convention—this cher- | trade in Glasgow, a better opportunity could not be ot record competent to. naturalizo, under tho authority | toct the rights of man ? are ta a , Rumber of} sanlough invented. by Georges Water wore discussed, | ithed text book—to do with the official daties of the Pre- | respectable houses to form a couuection in that market. of the United States Sir, I cannot imagine a plainer nf id anil handed over to the consideration of a committee ap. penence and knowledge of the Lower of pls am ov my Lory Pgh a — Seon tee cis idea of th i Grain and Provision ‘Trade, and also his friendly tucimacy rer the ri rut ‘J where he has no rights, without any idea of the nit} yers, a large table trade be alien. Bu call ve ave been told that if we deny im. | of a freeman, or the responsibility ote voter. heun fel the ba a and respect may . . . . A great number of nominations of proposed members among us from a foreign monarchy, tyin Leretet yoo: hams are to be acted upon | seen to examine it. A very favorable rt was read Prot irom the Ohio Mechanics’ Institute. Dr. Underhill cor- s0N moved a resolution, to the effect | rected an opinion w! th had been attributed to him on mediate nof the alien, and its co nt | sufficient property to make them the suejects of taxa- morial from the society be transmitted to Con. | the merits of bones asa manure. He advocated bones ss 3 a8 though riber begs to refer ahi to Mite OD ead right of suffs hat it will create moody disco: t, 1 gre: ni jainst th f rican President, who administers this governm se. RKO! HE RGB . nat pdoch cabels, nut Sieaty t ay ven bela oping or tempt ie gr a een Joon revved of that privilege | a manure in every form, but in none are they equel to tego fs Wiles uae. ke., by which they | fresh bores, whic! contain gelatine and oth r important | weal or woe of twenty millions of treem: ities. To a question upon | dictated or guided by any convention, short of a con- | ~~~" BijiE, DERS AND CARPENTERS. of taf cle go n made per- them to | #re institutions free of duty elements, of nutritious qt Faction in her wildest moods of lust never conceived a | gather, except the poll tax, necessary purer fiction, as the plea on which to justify a system Saareg ay usyew this subject in ‘the 1 tical debauchery. What, cir use for | Yention of angels, and the spiri bone dust, thej doctor seemed to advocate : whi ITk: PiNE LUMBER, well of po! xtend the term of | mon sense, and now endow the alien with bodies in the new tariff, to repeal; said| turnips. Professor Mapes explained the quentity of ge- | fect, or the conv; rations were | A. Saar Teateg camer iaaber yur err probation, and lo ! the alien is to me an insurgent, | ings and sensibilitios of the native born, and prepared, 10 be transmitted to the | Istine and phosphate contained in the calcined bones, | for the term of two years, and wh most superhu- | West and Desbrosses streets, North river, which will be sold rebel against the laws, covcoct plots and form conspire: | the conclusion, which isa non yur, the other societios f States, for their co-operation in| and the use are generally applied to by sugar re-| 20 _wisiem§ conceived and granted a charter to | ch-ap for cash, by OSTER. cies—aid the foreign levyiof our foes, and in every shape | will die of abroken heart, or be driven to “ rebellion | the samo object. finers; th if csleined'in an open vessel, produc. | Kovernhim? Outupon such demagognism—reporters’, | _+7iw*rre wu and form, plant the dagger of the traitor in rt in jon’t pen it—printers don’t print it—people, don’: read RNITURKE PL ? and massacre,” if he is put to ¥ Mr. Schoo.ruart, on the of acom: ing 85 t of of treedom—and all, because we demand of e | years, and “ taxed without ‘ Bete Nea, a . ; Red, sa cues mf, eat atieed ir telew, rs of: same period of preeetion which we impose on our own | stead of thinking of votin highly interesting report concerning the pottery manu- sons ! Such i the picture of alien treason, drawn by the | is e:ther seeking employ: r reposin facture and utensils of the aboriginal indisee of thie con- prolific, imaginations of the ultra liberals, who Plead house. He is looking after the means of acquiring tinent. | Mr. Schoolcraft remarked, that the subject had ar cou the subject had been committed, read it, lest the spirits of the patriots of the revolution appear c i \- E we conoeenicg the fetenry wine 6 you—lest the ghosts of the fathers and framers of tho | KH! ,SUnecavuycasemert of picts sua em constitution haunt you—lest your own sin for perusing | ture Flushes, of all colors and ties, suitable it, should rise up in judgment against you. | adjure you ‘ne regular subject of debate, “ , and railroad ear 4 ‘universal suffrage as the only tie that can bind the porty, not thinking of governing the notreceived sufficient attention to of much | to beware of this foul libel upon the love of country, lest V. CAILLEUX, FILS SOLELIAO & CO., . wf tha Ginn: MEAUTS tea, geveronuetel trounen. | wheceonepantion o, Sra commitise of ne | Talizing. ‘The articles submitted to them were kettles, | rage the cultivation of te plant. tf whch he. nad de. | its deleterious effects may lead you astray, and ere you | -*! mer tm Feri See Bir, if the fact support tha theory ofthese champions | turelization, hunt him up to cast him into the scale as a| Pots, stow pans, &c., taken from mounds and burrows; | voted a life of unremitting toil snd attention, From his | &Te aware of it, you take a leap in the dark, over the pre ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. ofroval rebels against freedom, the sooner we make | balance voter, by debauching his morals, in order to | £0me ofthem had been broken, probably in order to ren. | experience considerable interest was exhibited by the | ipice of inevitable ruin. the doctrine be tolerated VOELKNER begs leave to sequaint his ftiende end Provision to exclude totally from the rights of citizen- | buy his conscience. In proposing an extension of the | der them useless and prevent their removal. Neatly ali | aulience, and much iatormatioe otaweyes, trom the ac: | for amoment, that the happiness of this people is to be E, ranomer, ani ets eee OL cot eae ship, those who may hereafter visit us, or prevent them | naturalization law to twenty-one years,we not only vio. | have figures upon the from their general charac. | knowledged success of his vineyards, as developed ia | putin jeopardy, by the hasty resolutions. and run the | hats Eisoch sud A isence Muagiaeinraa at ean the from conteminating our shores—the sooner, I repeat, | late no principle of the constitution of humanity or the | teristics, seem to have been made by Tofitas stationary | the progress of his remarks. Aiter paying a just tri. | !mminent bozard of being sacrificed upon the shrine, of | Yee nO oy .n EV. will cou > cell wi i terforthecountry. * * * | rights ot man, but we protect and defend them all, at | in their habits, such as De Soto describes. Most ofthem | bute to the grape, from the sanitary influence it has con- | the Baltimore Convention? the members of which were | sid retail, at the lowest prices, at 128 William street, and nsion of our naturalizetiou law | the sam that we manifest the most kinJ and bene-| Were discovered by Mr. Hitchcock, in Florida mounds, | ferred upon mankind (cadermenhed ) the figurative and f naming | dealers to inspect his stork before buying elsewhere. al 1 distinct” than they are at this | volent allots tenes the foreigner. I ask you, sir,| in 1841—mounds from twelve to eighteen feet in height, | emblematic veneration with which, from the records of deliberations, BIRD CAGE MANUFACTORY very hour. Inone solid and compact body, they not | to contrast his condition under the twe sys constructed of sand and soil, and may hava been erected | holy, as well as profane history, it was held—its use in been tosted to ©. 18t Joha»? Lane corner Bench street. The Sw only remain separate and distinct fromthe American | victim to all the horrors of the tippling hous simply to preserve the burying-grounds from being | the embellishment of classical ornaments, chimney: y ; m and excitement, ‘er would inform bis Customers an. the ta population, but they labor to surround themselves with | hands of the wily 4 jogue who is buying his vote, | overflowed and carried away by the rise of the rivers. | pieces, vases, &o. evinced the multiplicity of forms matier of history, that they were. Still we heat | inns cons'atly on hi large stock of farcy and common Bi'the moral and political ramparts of their European | and in the hands of hie own children, and family, and nes found by Mr. H. were all in a sitting posture, | which’ the peculiar and flexible properties of the tree manufsetare, entorian voices of thone honorable Senators echo- | Bird Cages, of all descriptions: which he will sell eheape® ie study how to resist the charm of Ame- | (ri here our system places him’ inthe fall exer- mounds were circular. In one he found acop:| combines, all tending to render its cultivation a matter | Df through the the halls of the Senate on t than they can be bought elsewhere. lamstion usd how to perpetuate forever their | cise of all hiscivil ead religious prinilagessuates tho | per cola, and in anotber s ele , with, tobacco still | of interest. ‘The doctor freely explained the system by | force of ths convention he official ect Sere Seer ee J, KELLY. 9 _Kings—their adoration of monarchy, and | canopy of hie own little domestic, cartle—free from adbering to it; and also clam shells, of a kind not now | which he Las so successfully triumphed over climate | ecutive. One would b PSC Merchants would find it to their advantage to rence for feudal institutions, crested with the } the din of parties—the vices of politics, and the tu-| known. The skeletons were arranged in sadiating cir-| and contingencies, discarding the aid of all foreign | Senators, that the mem! ol atlemmisteneh ag wir dust of ages, and fed by the blood of millions. * . mults of the tave an usefal and indust/ious citi. | cles, with the feet outward, and the vessels between | works, as not suited to this hemisphore, and relying v 7" J Do you ask, sir, why twenty-one 's Will prove | 2an, whose sons a Eenee round him to efficacious in oy these disastrous, ncho- | joy the rights which belong, without dispute, to ly effects? Because it will operate to disp nd pro- | native born. Who is the best friend of the foreignei vert these bands combinations of foreign voters— | Unquestionably the advocate of that law which spat them. The mounds and sepuich: phy pulchres of the count 1 | upon that experience and watchfulness of his own, that object was to preserve the remains of their | admits of no contradiction. In France alone, in the year tate of their arts is partly shown by the | 130, fourteen thousand millions of pounds of grape: KNOEPFEL & FOOTE, No. 39 John street, potter's wheel, with a vessel in proce: ad sand millions il OTH and cut off all moti Mtar | him from the fires of political intrigue, and ensbi if suddenly stopped by some cater. | consumed at the table, or converted into. raisins. “The | oD, Kc.; #0 that, @" expiration of the olympiad, it | RE eubscribers have, ah ted Cees od ome ead theie passions an him in tke sanctuary of his own domestic affections. 1 Question whether the Blorida pottery | doctor advocated the general cultivation of the grape, | *hould stand forth to tho people equal in dimenions end | well selectedstock of desirable goods, would invite see wee te feerocetn as ome id ee oe system of poli- ked prior fad os though its red color fa-| without reference to ree yng a ary or stony soil yor ° i, forty es in — — ar’e areas, jon of parchasers to their assortment, consisting im part now at two ical chicanery wi tl magogue to irritate #0, ining was badly done, as it the Isabellaand Catawbe G nonse: following : can vote, all his the foreigner lat jar: pon: madioen, by goading penetrate to the centre. “It is made ofcley, with vibes as the bert suited. tothe, climate, triges—let the stone of the pe image, and FRENCH, ENGLISH, GERMAN “i at ‘ooo at CASSIME: business pursuits. He will not so much aa dream of po- | him with false opinions of our political system, and thes | particles of mica, and somo from a. rich sin England are en | eth itin pieces ; and let them hear no more about the OTHS AND litical ‘ceatention. No domestic demagogue will Re appealing to his ignorance ‘or his pessions, to redress | There appear to have been no vases proper; one or the wae Mercauiue Decor Caneel recommends | deliberations of American Senators and Presidents be. | | Drap ote Deso £7 gies Fenay, ee 8 fall stock of found waiting to greot him on his landing, and initiate | wrongs that have no existance—pouring into hie ear the | Vessels reeembles a funnel, and may have been used to | long pruniog ; for manure—all animal substance, bones, | 1g manacled and pintoned in their oficial acts, by the | Samme: Vous, ithe. Sacter, litres ote 4 eee seeeeeenees him in the myateriee of corruption. No countryman of] eternal faleohood, that he is taxed without being repre | preptre a precious drink for feasts, as the celebrated | bone dust, street manure, rich virgin soil of the forest. | momen ‘enthusiastic resulutions of any convention or | 2.4) 4 nis own will stand with impatient eagerness to enroll | sented, and that his right to vote is in the | black drink, to give courage to warriors ‘orna- | He nas not tried guano, but ia of opinion it is too rapid | Party. It is monstrous, and an insult to the constituency | *"A).0-"4 full stock of TAILORS TRIMMINGS. The at- him a member of a foreign’ society, in order to, cast a} Declaration of I a8 if that glorious docu. | ments upon their exterior, and ipitate in ita effects, Doctor Underhill sw of | 9 any member. As it rv the Oregon controversy, | ren: ‘Tailors is partieninsiy requested to our steel as ex- combined vote against free institutions. wity-one | ment, now almost rendered nominal by these very | simple geometrical figures; some of the curves cannot | opinion, that if Long Island had an opportunity of obtain. tif wise heads meats will be o! ‘and they are re- . Twei traordinary ind arg Cuts esunder all the threads of affiliation, tainted | aliens, were a law of the United States. It is such | fail to recall those on Etruscan vases, resem! the fish called bunker, or long fish, the whole | petriotic hearts keep the srcendenc spectfully invited to examune our. With pestilence, or teeming with anershy. It opens | polson, distilled by the wretched. demegogues of the | letter 8. They oppear to have boon borcewad frets or | jeer nad te en eiteaite a vineyerds Sebten es to taney anes ina oie RON 39 Job sro Gistont future, which to the burning zeal of p. litical | day, that destroys the usefulness of our foreign e- | Chitectural ornaments. Drawings from the specimens | - Toe question {rom the chair, bad he used ashes? the | dignity, or the integrity of our country; save what shell corruption, darkens almost into eternity. It may beal-| tion, and by maddening them with political passions, | f pottery acco: the report, and the several de- | doctor replied, that on sandy 1nd, ashes are To | be in strict accordance with the dictates of justice and SARON R 1egte ae satpeoet by ber ‘opponents, baw be earen — thom a curse, instead of a blessing to the coun- fee, sire a in ey x | eats of mone, ‘on the time of the year eae. ” eighths of these immigrants it may preve etern self. are 4 $ J be OE + 1" pi one ler, and in| declared that the month of March was though, On the possibility of such an vent, I will not diepute, | Shall we then, or shall we not, transmit our heritage | another two feathers. Mr. Schoolcraft then described «| occssionally it may be done in February. No bad effects | "hole great Western valley quaked,unticipat: | ty AVE ON HAND, Spe penertegat of Caps, Silty ond for the contingencies of life and death are never permit: | unimpsired to our children? To do this, we must at | dlack kettle of the Algonquins, some three centuries old, | result from bleeding because the top is lessened. “I1| 10g, in fact, that “war was inevitable,” and th might Fur Hats, of every ption, aud style, ted to invalidate a sound principle. Laws, si made | least preserve that harmony in our system, that shall | 0d com it withthe of Florida, and referred | the juice runs out of the end of the trees,” says the Ger- | "000 bear the thundering of British cannon o boom: | end fesume H he saweat for the li If the alien has paid his debt to nature, | prevent anarchy, bloodshed and riot—that shall define | to 8 tradition of the Shawnees, that Florida was formerly | man proverb, ‘the fruit will be abundant.” ing over the mountains Ses m6 one Dereabouts Goubte | Rise SR ae, Teak Laws; Vises ap-stocks. whieh he will native posterity, the sone of bis own love, | native rights, in characters too broad and distinct to be | occupied by white men; and old knives were found| Professor Mt ‘was about reading en im; art: | thet ifthe country had fer at very iow prices. they 0 i d' mauahetnres will do well to rxamize to enjoy the blessings of the principle of the twenty-one | confou by demegoguer or invaded by aliens—| in, the, lend. In 1843, a vase of pottery was sent to | cle upon the wheat trade in Europe, from the Nationa | had the whole {Congress composed of PA 4 4 aCe elaewhere. ‘m2 tn art probation. Such a law, did it produce no other | while it instruct the foreigner in the daty of| Mr. Gallatin, from the Mississippi valley, eight inch ine, No. statistical portion of which ie edit | that the spring IOUS, Tarsend of * Fruits bat those of the abolishment of a banded foreign | learning to become an American citizen, telore. ihe high, similar to one sent from the Genesos y by Mr oa by ae rived for the dis | *miling felds—thriving villeges—busy, opu om: 1S hip te Forriek, cm, Livccpost” "ror mle tw lots to og equity, to all parties concerned. But during the hour, praning, the Cootee | TF ‘othe water of Austerlita’’ warn the crcendent, the | 151 Water street, corner of Malden lane, = legion, the non-cherishment of alie itiments, the non: | aspires to be a political di 3 Hosmer; and an interesting question arises as to th of ‘and r fruit trees. After | ™e! marts—our happy, free, and prosperous people, Usage of foreign emblems; the gradual obliteration of | been made by that natural climax of race, of whose early civilization these various spect | Siiebsthe Chub adjourned, drat S committee | sitting beneath their own ‘vine and fig tree, quietly en: | Purity APPIY' paviD OGDEN. Wall habits congenial to monarchy, and the total disappear-|to which public abuses of great itude als mens are tokens. to examine the specimen of fiax pres by Mr. Clay. | Joying the ‘fruits of their labor—would have thrown its a ARE, Gi ance ofall that moral jawer ‘adverse fo freedom. which rnethet, native Americand or Yoreigness sbal| | MF. Monoan, of Rochester, readapaper on the struc. TE pF Eg a A, sree cb. bare cmaned a Maiden lene | 69 much annoys a them, as w , ue must be met. “The result no ‘and prince ithe confederacy which ‘ form and glanced upon sand , tm bey ts in the party ‘corruptions ef oar own people, it a de ican isted the Indian tribes of the Teoquiss ‘Tet pro: |e An gee ay vessel to run be- | Dristling B onets nthe Cannas, the ame num. | AL» (er freraie, by reegat rmporteons, a tr among v Trrepreeibte in| vide a body of rulers, there were ty permanent eee | oem ar aveguier trader. ‘The | Ser of Augie Mexicans atembled onthe Rie Grand, and Tory, Guns and Gan Merch or anproved paver | a ‘teh nconque! the Anglo: | ditery sachem nearly equall: among th was all subscribed, but the ente has bee nthe | trom and tial effet of so pee reformation. Abolish the frst settlers of the North several nations. Doe of them presided over the council, fat irapted, for tome reason or other, ci ‘nothing hes | “pon our coaste;‘all with unity of feeling, tol opneees OR ae aereets, the 7 a re comer. Hien and the motives end tem ns to combination, and | American contin: Americans, sir, must and will be | To each Cae was given an under sachem to aid and | been done in the matter since January. action, ready to pounce ia con- for cash only,vix: 155 ‘upon thi ’ these | illicit voting for a period of twenty-one years, and | the rulers of America, It is written in the hearts of elective, and fen gonprongn may Haman, end all the other count: | Nur aa mixed, $5 50. ast ite, as fe » m4 was created after their intercourse with the w! 5 Judge Whi holdsa 5 term at Aubarn, on | less ills that fol in the bi train of hostile strife, 5 ing their Coal delivered at » on you Rd least promote, as far a ty can control in: it ia inscribed on the brows of our mountains “ye hites. The ire ya oly ee ar Wait . be the pen Ml hes) aving eel i CLINTON. man 5 OR perry would prove @ national blessing of transcendant magnitude. (But this, sir, would be only a eous feeling #0 necenssrv to the peace and safety ot country, when distracted b J ARD.—100 barreis and 200 9 J the conflicting ipasslone aod interets of a pelive papalg General Gaines has figured out a ecbinan for | pense Charion Wy. Was ge yg a mg Mal g | Liv -—rani Cotctee Ts. tion struggling to resist the usurpations of a foreign bo- saeh nemes se deer, turtle, &— | the defence of New Grleans from ish | Michigan, for the conatitational term of even years, and | JY REN H LUNAR FILLS —Ladies wi vere on a bear, intruders. Deprived of voting for twenty-one The woll tribe was divided into tweive parts. Genera 0 all distinct interest will coase—all jealousy ly | invasion, The plan includes forte cheveanx de frize, | were conirmed by the " and | cannot excite surprise each was divided into cight, making fort ah oat batteries and Martello towers. The batteries Orn TUIL UA rival bside, as to who shall rule th ntry —| ‘and ‘cause thet there existed the tie of prot! Henry Hoffman, the Rochester forger, has been bailed CN inch, in 6 and 10 ¢: oats paves te lereigners. For this 1s in fect the oxy Sent open te tee slams of country. Recurring to dret nations with the same name, showing the greet strength sod manned by estapantes regular artillery. in the eam of $000. st aia i <a teh w. are Johm etd UAALN.— Enurty-two

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