The New York Herald Newspaper, May 1, 1846, Page 1

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‘Wel, XII, Bo, 120 - Whole He. 4333 ae i ‘NEW YORK THE NEW YORK: HERALD. Circulation---Forty Thousand. DAILY HER, conts x oan at the of all kinds executed with beauty and despaten | eeet Nosth-West corner IG CHARLES SPANIELS—O) the latest arrivals chang use degen foot me porter and desler ta Bids, Cages, he FOR SALE CHEAP, street. from the curious, in Lh » suitable fora Physici SALE. ih SL HORME {Lanta nt ih make a first re.e carriage THE Aweltiog part the tt, between 8 and 9 o'clock in te more: the evening. 8390 R*re FARM FOR SALE. SITUATED on the south side ean eye of Oy ii a ith kitchen attach- im ing te sine. Y ection with New York by Railroad and stages iy. Went street, New ¥ ork: al6 Rawiw *r aah Be EPERD, on the premises. ‘0 ¥ OM THE FIRST OF M. ‘all street. TO LET rear of 33 Reade street. Inquire at street. fh 928 lw? fi: EMENT TO LET—A commodions and conve- or x54. Stable in the 5 ed f or purpamiis in iat ruts esndicios. SALE, OR TO LET, f M ol the Pareeate men Yo be made on che romins tel 104 Ib 315 Adams st, Brooklyn, el ie're DEEN BUILT COTTAGE, Stable and - le an Hoe with about ‘of land, the wi is well stoc! ‘of the house. Por farther informe: ‘between 110th aod 111th HN GA‘ Or Dr. ee art tam in advance of the trade. An exten- Examination will prove s ais eterieat af Fares vie above, as well cs of rich A EA, HATS, Paris straw gim} 9 latest shape, for sie at CARL KIN “NV. B.—A genera! assortment of straw Hatsand Paris Ribbons PURARL KING, 17 Division stroct. TRAW BONNETS. IN, No. 12 Joha street, near oftvelling asthe lowest satkat Milliners and others are invited to call before purchasing | on w Bonnets, which: u ia the munner ul)ace sold in Broad iver Lyte of hows o great disparity in is ia consequence enabled to Ti WHY will you pay 4,50 and $5 for a Hat, whea you and get as good @ one for $3,507 Go and examine for selves. marl hi METROPOLITAN HAT AND CaP SLOKE, a No. 27% 1-2 Grand street. ]O. Sa riuscerraco, meat witha [EMEN'S HATS—SPRING STYLI ee : ariekes Somer of Pine and Nassau str ot GEN [LEMEN’S SPKING FASHION. BEAVER AND SILK HATS of the best quality sates, pro now reaty for inspection ier Eine, Bria) epee acs “arise pe phi ale at the esta Best Beaver. arent Foe em saaicats ‘More Cawal at.. career Hallteas Lowsmna end New uy, hor robalar aay **** § Hal ship offi it theta is Taner nung; ad hn to se asi Alderman be in a perteetly spund conditiog. ‘Affirmed to and subecribed, this 34 me. (Signed) CHAUN' Evesnam, Bar! We, the subseribers, rei dohereby certify that we arc L- Cog, and frequently visited BRT alasn ean ba itto the consumptive in the strongest possible been eye witnesses toone ofthe greatest cures evs William L, Brows, Andrew Maatrton, ai eve Sexe { the dgacous to see one of his neighbors, Mr. to all haman bcecplenend at taken one of Richard L. Cox, then |; re persons BiReenad ae earn? & Co. 373 Broad iy For sale also . B. Sands 3 Ford, 274 Fi WINER’S ARCANUM EXTRACT. 8 A SPRING PURIFIER OF THE BLOOD, this me- dicing cannct be ou , working sts way through the wen witha silent and effective force, movies D Influences, ° utes bstractions and Diseases that woud ‘wise couse injury to the Liver and Lun; WINER’S ARCANUM EXTRACT is alo a certja cure 1m an impure state of the blood, such as Serofule.or King’s Evil, White Swellites. ecases of the Bin, Pmpion or Foweale om the face, moving for all diseases arisi jones, Uleers of all kinds tiso or alpetions. of the Lr pation of the Heart, aprrior to any other sold. chealned of agents gratis. taot 1S ong of the very best medicines. for tious crargone heard of. ours, truly, L. A. BLODGET, $2 South 8 st. Pr 1, M:.E. B.G. Kinsloe-=Sir—Bsliving that W pers Arcane Extract rel a Soare erletan f feo eruntiod: le ndteieete prieeiples of phi ‘tnd yaaniy. enwch ag I name before the pavlic as a puffer ine.) to state a case Which "My litle grandson, about th of | ot raat Lene een eee caan ios ‘ ve a und trey ail pronosneed it an hereditary. serofulou: cmeneposrealy exileapl tus ieee tensa pe irks oh Oa glee Da] this enlld would cove follow hiin” After haviag used all falons Medicine within my Tesaon 7) vertisemeet for the sale of Winer's bu: le, eg used it ly free from any now titan Baers tral street. Tam, sir, Your very grarefa' Seates. siz Fropued by Jobe Wines Cos tb Props the Us by Wyatt & 188 Bowery, ¢ and J & J. 'Coddi Boring: Judson, J LAIRD’S, 92 Chatham st. AND FUKNITU. r )—Gentlem Me ilies y z eee rors aS: N. | hy A NEWS to Shippers of Grain and other wae ie las A Cady rh GAMER ab SSA sr comer ry. ier STE hy + GRAY! eraser “ans Is the only criterion . COX, A MAN OF JERSE inte may exrmive acd s:tisf y, wwe ards van A Jen's exse is Ove amoug the numerous instances cures. “ My sickness beran somethi region of the were, +f Year rol ve. ald not omit to say to my cure. to keep | those ol etions which, in ercome. gaschiter, ‘afflietrd for and Dyspepsia, exter di the city, and his ami sented to see any one ree would like to converse with her ct y in ™ Cavtion.—To gu as the means of saving hus life. The: Palmoni is gory Diesen peer Mercurial Diseasees house in Bordeaux constitu’ ot aug of dete erions ted iy pu sons rt seigheiaars take properly administered, will most surely following certificates are selected from among many others in ion of the proprietors, ¢ For farther particulars and conc!asive evidence of the value this medicine, see pamphlets, which may be a works jication to Cutting ibiished either in wargre or . T. Horner; James ost eae of the New York, price from $8 to $10 per copy. Puitaperrata, Jan. 6th, 1846. loe—Sir: I have tried the ‘Gatvasre ‘connection ‘with vgybeen ted with ete anecess in ail cases neute or chroaie, appl Gout, ‘Fie ‘Dol face or limbs ; Nervous of Siek Headache came under my own ‘Maiden lane, N. Y., sole et; J: Brice, 37 Somes bia and treet, and 8. G.- igsloe, 309 eh Of Sha airtel ALKAPILATORY, R LIQUID HAIR O hae any seed Nhe oF Steck oe brown, in a few minutes, by 8 simple and easy process, wi the skin, or in any wa) juring the hair. The Possesved by this Hair Dye over : It produces a those. hitherto in use, will perfe |, 406 Broadway a7 ’s eka _ FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 1, 1846. THE REAL GOOD DONE, which to estimate Some BE most emineat PULMONIC SYRUP To BE THE BEST REMEDY EVER DI8CO' to the eure of whieh itis i tha’ the certificates of cares published from those so eontinuall: yiewicy, in order ves' if tres! feverish, farred. My bowels were costive, but occasionally suffering ‘was a tenderness at the pit of my stomach, with anch a barning -ersation od dy Up an lowed by heat of the skin, and Ae id bnraine sensation in the ad batung cuenta ulm of che eomy | . lied slowly ( bitter suffering aud melaucholy. ths since 1 obtained ites * om the Character and Cure Cou. hs. Diseases of the Lungs, Liver Comp 1 carefu ly perusi ANS BYRUE- diate, and most beaeficial iy whole of it atthe same time. Its ger Perceptidle to my fe: silutary results brought about. |, became less and less, and fivally left me ; my lungs were completely relieved ; i the evacuations regul fal affection ; my ery, pain! teady, V, that Syaur ce ‘one door fe., aud for fc Diaste ant — ng the crops by the Planted, agsinst the grub’ worm, ‘appl; to 7 apr LEWIS FEUCATWANG sberty street, 24 door f ‘Vailen Dacre, ie. The undersigned bei Seacmets’ Trosties on Cutting OBRISTIE’S GENUINE GALVANIC RINGS MAGNETIC FLUID. direly. sate and novel appiteaion ofthe of. Guirao as remedial teen r and ANIC = spine orm se vera Peete hak ol and permanent advantage. in Cy HOME ©. AN CHANGE Rey LF ye apn erie Bat ros Stocaba ene az] ore Books will ‘will be closed from New York, April 25, 1946. reapeetfaly made, every one of these high considera- 38 have generously stepped to his re- He is authorized to begin where to call upon Hercules, until he ler to the wheel. are not yet out of the woods—we are still ob- | scured in darkness; but common sense, peace, ing the effervescence of petre and patriotic ebullitions of gas. Io the event of a war, the American people will forget in their the unhappy causes inducing 1t—in the event of “a speedy and amicable adjustment,” inconsistencies of the Exeeutive will be ¢: ed in the glory of the achievement. _ | his discretion” the destinies of Christendom; and | We trust that in ita exercise, he national honor, and preserve the peace of the world. He has one of two roads to ch think he is ready for the bee-line of the forty-minth terminate in an amicable adjustment, the honors | siderate! is | liet at his 6b Ms. Gelpornssin} lett off, and not Wasuineton, April 28, 1846. Question of the Day—A Glance at its Progress, from the Baltimore Convention down to the Meeting of the Present Congress—Position of the Secretary of State—Of the Secretary of the Treasury—Of Messrs. Cass and Allen—Of Col. Benton—Mr. Van Buren not Abandoned— Position of Mr. Calhoun—Mr. Buchanan per contra—Gen. Houston—Col. Johnson—The No- tice—The President—A Dispassionate Examina- tion of the Perplexities that Surround him, in Connection with the aforesaid Individuals, and the Succession, and his own Consistency. At intervals, the “Doctor” finds it opportune, ap- propriate and salutary, to relinquish the lighter man- ~ | Mer of his daily memoranda, for the more serious ost | recapitulations and deductions of the dispassionate With an encouraging presentiment o: contributing to the entertainment, if not very mate- rially to the edification of the intelligent thousands who read the Herald at their morain, therefore seize the lucid interval afforded, for atem- perate disquisition upon the crisis, the events and the tendencies of the times, as associated measures of the government, and the management of the political leaders of the day. ‘a the election of Polk and Dallas, the Oregon re- solutions of the Baltimore Convention fully accom- very vagueness of the Ore- to of that church council, plainly was designed as a counter-balanc- ia influence on the North, to the matter-of-fact re- . | solves of the South for the annexation of Texas. But the new President, overflowing with a sense of gratitude commensurate with the unexpected glory of the result, and desirous of endorsing the sense of the people in his election upon the proclaims, without examination of out consultation of the probable exi- ncies of the future—that our title to the whole of gon is “clear and unquestionable.” This decla- ration, better adapted to the ephemeral declamations ot the “stump” than the standard position ot a r, at once excited a counter-assumption tish government, of its “ indisputable tide.” The assumption of the Executive appeara to meet with the unanimous approval of the country. To divert the attention of the cliques from their quarrels with each other and the administration, about the division of the the organ keeps up thedelusion. The President oes for all—he will not abandon one inch of the merican soil, and the title is “clear and unques- tionable” to the whole. The South begin to be ap- prehensive that what they desicned as a ruse for the reede and demolish their anti _Teduction of the. tarift. becomes ambiguous as an oracle—the West begins to be suspicious; and while in eve: Oregon policy of the President is enveloped in mys- re of an offer of the come a rumor—the rumor The attitude before the country, eminently flattering. The leading» and peaceable and statesmanlike notice which been given; the champion of free trade, a doc- trine which now from necessity, is about to throw open the portals of England to our surplus bread, and which is daily infusing a spirit of reciprocity into the American mind, from the advantages which in its consummation will be mutually conferred; i spotless purity and simpli- | city of his private life, (to-say nothing of his being an advocate for the improvement of the Western waters,) and his long appreciated talents, place him in a very prominent attitude be- fore the country. fi Mr. Buchanan is also understood to be a candi | for 48. His reliance is, Pennsylvania and the tariff. | His refusal of arbitration, therefore, may be sct his own account as to that of the President—for while the President desired no fur- | ther responsibility in so responsible and complicated uestion, it has been the policy of Mr. Buchanan o keep the question open, asa safeguard r riff, without the remotest intention of so conducting itasto hazard the alternative of war; for the honor of maintaining the bounties of ’42 upon cold iron, be more potential than the promise to restore shall have once been removed. is subject of the Presidency, it may not be amiss to state, that the opening speech ot Gen. Houston, in the Senate, has an “‘awful squint- ing” in that direction, and that the arrival of Col. Johnson, in time, as we is in view of a movement and for the establishment, perhaps, advance his claims. But of t we are not officially advised, and await further de- We have an intimation from the Union, to be sure, that the gallant Colonel is still fit for service ; but whether the editor meant a cam- paiga in Mexico, or the campaign of the succession, we are left to conjecture. to be sent off to the Rio Grande. We come now to the main pri course, the conduct, and the and of all the mysteries of W the most inexplicable. Judging from what he has done, it is imposmble to rather what he may not do. two things to him of inestimabie value. The firet ys, his own political consistency revenue tsriff—and both these he vith a pike’s length of destroying, indefinitely, by his in- considerate gratitude upon the Oregon question. His election over the great Aristides of the whi ‘was so unexpected--such a high honor—that he co not otherwise than be grateful; and looking to the Baltimore resolutions as the secret of his success, how could he do otherwise than proclaim our title to the whole of Oregon, able,” notwithstanding it had been a matter in question for forty years’ 0 looking into the precedents of his predecessors, he offers to divide this clear and unquestionable title with Great Britain ; but from the bare rumor of this roposal, the clamor of his im out of his propriety, ti o ress, he throws the whole matter into. their hands, correspondence and all; and while he is un- willing to incur the responsibility of war, makes it discussion in Congress, whether he has recommended war or ce. Jus- tice, however, requires us to say that lent sende up | letter of Mr. Buchanan, in A upon the Kussian boundary, there was no other al- ternative left to the Executive, than to cast himself back upon this attributable to a aE and distingaished for the ing like six years Mgocsan wes tyeguor aed Reiching ap of wind ond | i and we rather ey ay ere, as, Bt times, to dé down as much to tickling cough troubled m ficulties appeared to be tending rapidly to April 30, 1846. 1 The weather to-day is worthy the month which is Just closing—one of alternate coud and sunshine. As the wind has now veered to the westward, it is to be hoped that the latter will proponderate, and give the ads and lasses a chance to enjoy May-day, in the good old English {setyle, to-morrow. The late rains have been of incalculable service in bringing forward tation ; and the early flowers of spring have donned their choicest colors, through these balmy Now and thea I woul , was oaly’ tem, orary—for ressive sense of t xhtness A rather novel trick, of a burning character, was successfully tried on the book-keeper of Jones’ Hotel A boy presented a kege, and a er with a neta ar plished their object dicted a fortnight gon one of Baxaman’ 7 indicates that it a day Or two since. he came in to dine. At the transaction was discov- ered, and on opening the bundle, a cast off coat and pants, of the most worthless description, witbin it. It is probable that this scheme in New York; but if not,a word of caution may - vent some of your “hosts” from being “done” ina - ‘The ancient Zion church, at the corner of Cherry and bout to be embellished with a steeplo designed by Mr. Jos. Koecher, me! The edifice was erected ing been burned out, leavi the walls, standing, ph was ‘rebuilt th steeple, urch, back of Cherry street, The bark Pons, celebrated all over the country as the red eo it of Africa, cashed, and the pac! Its effects upon ae dinner time the chai erhaps the Colonel is ‘and, ina word, I am entirely re- stored to sound health. ** | do solemnly believe that if I had not taken Syrup at the time and in the manner ington, these are Beotman’s did, i shoalu have bees I made use of Dr. Beex- man’s Essential Pints to the greatest advantage, durii ‘They operated in rhe e stomach aud bowels free from my weak state, were at times s0 what he may do, or There appear to be on the east side of the chi as come within | #24 has been long standin loaves and fishes, ral tat! McC neral expectation, McCu! y, has become so much ae of yesterday, that his recovery is confide: for. The stock market is still in a state of inactivity. State stocks have been influenced b; by the Legislature, and a still further decline is looked r. Sales of Stocks at Philadelphia. Arie ovis bn ag hs Girard Bk, 1634; $510 Cam- to aff-ctions of the Kid snow taking BeexMan’s Syaur and Pitts, an recovering her health. : ‘am the wife of Mr. C. Van Sickle, and our residence is No. 162 Barrow street, New York. e * PHEBE VAN SICKLE.” pril Sth, 1946.” 's family is one of the most ‘and intelligent lady “clear and unquestion- the revenue bill Six months afterward tery, there are whis| degree—the whispers a general report ly known to tee! 6 expe ies }, tw, 67, 4200 ; do, 67; 1587 shares Lehigh Int, cash a at they get Beekman’s ue Leer 80 aa no other. on the meetin; the old established office of the Proprietor, No. 4946 Courtlandt street, ng now a9 general; most respectable Brooklyn, &e. different parts of the country. ear: and the organ, for reasons hard- if, denies it, ambiguously, but with auearant candor; and the matter is dropped, pro 1000 Reading Bonds 743. er SERS NEW YORK Am HARLEM RAILROAD SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. OW and after Friday, May 1st, 1816, the cars will run as gy Hall for Yorke yin nee, they. are kept Teg Spothgearies snd dro "To be had also of au vents hurry us along—the plot thickens—the | a matter of four mont mystery increases—the tariff, the sub-t matters of equal doubt with the Ore, 'y. Congress assembles—the Presi his budget of recommendations; and there the con- fession stands forth in honest simplicity, that six months after he_had declared our title to whole, he had offered halt ot Oregon ut the British Plenipotentiary refusin; Executive had fallen back upon the Russian ing given up all hopes of a set- led for the notice, le matter upon Congress, intimating that at the end of twelve months we must prepare to sustain our rights by i Russian bou: " ist last, falling back of am extreme claim is perhaps as muc! counter-movement of the Secretary of State, the well known it of the Secretary of the + sury tor an ad valorem tariff, as from the convic- tien of clearness in the title on the part of the Exe- cutive. Next, we have arbitration proposed, and the Executive is, from consistency, compelled to decline it, the American title ble” te the whole. ir from qiltieae se. v and John street; ‘comer Fulton and Cran A. Dreer, florist, Chesnut st. lock, P.M. , and 1110 o'clock, dary; and that hi Bordeaux, 700 caseo mi Larove, Margeaux, ‘8 casks and half do red Wines, Bt. Julien, Medoe, Mar 1 half do white Wines, Haut Sauterne, Hant ne and Graves. above wines have been carefully selected for this ‘house in Bordeeax and are aow landing snd offer a sean seat. 192 Fulton st. TO TAILORS. "TS celebrated work on ( ed the being “ unquestiona- vy President, on a rainy addresses his fellow-citizens from the portico ¢ Capitol, and in the plenitude of his declara- tions of orthodoxy to the measures upon which he was chosen, makes an assum the expiration of six months. 4 t government into a “clear and unquestionable” diffi- culty; for in his first essay at diplomacy, he blun- rainst the stone wall of the “‘ clear and le title” of the inaugural address. And ps ; and there all hands are brought to a dead halt ; and there they stand “I wish, Tnm,” said my uncle Tobey, Was ever mortal Presi tt dilemma like that in which our affectionate Chief Magistrate is now overslaughed ? He has preclaim- ed the impossibility of a settlement by negotiation— riadiction of the whole territo- ry in dispute, and has asked for the notice dissolv- ing vd Joint occupation, and a gees sures for maintaining our just rights, relying upon of The radicals seize the ital, assume to be the 2xclusive guardians of the President’s conecience, in the pros- pect of the exclusive patronage he has to bestow, aod they are defeated. The scales are reversed— the President is empowered to give the notice that he has asked ; but with this preamble: ‘ You were ir; negotiations are not at an end—our clear and unquestionable” to the whole —you must divide the territory—if you give the no- tice, this is to be distinctly understood—it 1s better that you should appear inconsistent than that the na- tion should be plunged into war.” The fact that Mr. sition to insert, as a preamble,a pat gage in reference to the “maintenance of our just rights” to the whole ter- ritory, was rejected as an absurdity, 1s proof conclu- sive that the Senate regarded the | having overstepped “his discretion.” e which he had thrown up in force, and that ‘hite Plains at 1 o’elock in the t by His offer was made imdeference to the examples of tis predecessors, ued something of a claim to jut the refusal to accept half, xt of a title on the part o: established our rights to be questionable” to the whole territory. : e, like the incantations of th: witches over their infernal cauldron, set all the ele- 'y into active effervescence and com- © war party was predominant. Headed by Adams, Giddings and Douglass and by Cuss, Ailen and Hannegan in the Senate, it threatened to overwhelm all grace, and to involve the country at once 1n the glo- ¥ beyond conciliation at the annexation of Texas te the balance of power in the to the contingency of war as lution of slavery, Messrs. Adams were foremost for the “inevitable the whole or peed —_ have (oe the cup of your iniquity, says Mr. Giddings, alluding to i exag, and you shail drain it ‘to fe to the succesion, and t n. Cass opens the ball in the Senate, with his tamous declaration that “‘war 1s inevitable,” and his resolutions for an immediate preparation by land and sea. But Mr. Allen is also @ candidate for the favor of the West, ana for the Presidency; and with desperate resolve for the war ims a war with England, e gauntlet ot defiance to the ers of christendom, declares a paper m Cape Horn to Behring’s Straits, on the one side of the American continent, and— “ From Greenland’s ic) to Terra del Fuego, on the A 5 : defence against European colonization of , | about 40,000 miles of sea coast,with two war steam- ers and 500 whale ships, armed with harpoons. T! absurdity of this wedge to the annihilation of the ti Mr. Calhoun, elected to the Senate mainly With reference toa pacific adjustment of the Ore- vigilant of the firet occasion seized this happy imprude: morning.” On City Hall at 7A. M. which, of course, Sted OPA. ie according to the state of ie contesting party; LAP-WELDED BOILEK FLUES, EE’ and from 13¢ to 5 inches in diameter. Can only of the patentee, ‘THOMAS PROSSE!} 28 Platt st. BILCIAKDS AT ST. LOUIS. ion which, before Great Britain, an rings him and the say more in favor of STENE- Cutting Garm that it most anboun: prs the profession. By the aid of th opposition with dis- ries of war. Ince: double that of ours.’ Please troomn,sorsanen Ann or 149 Fulton st., where for 8t Louis are up for trial. JI and Cue South, and looki: a its ar ‘Amesica. F. fieor re, ke. Ke., for sale ns above. IES, Sc. D RETAIL, CHEAP FOR » 250 Greenwieh street, comer the annexation of occasion and the capital, rages of the West, WHOLESALE AN author, at No. 119 A casey O. FOWLER, jreenwit Samatra do. 1 apa male i ~ a he not oni; of fine white, yellow and brown Sugar bares down de or DEALERS IN PERFUMER a with PURCHASE IN Bi sad with perfect convent a iy tic borders, embra- you to eall and examine before pui Manufaetarer and Im Brondway, between Lil 8% Im*r erty and Cou tlandt streets. with an expli- that if he fails in an amica- is to be held responsible, if e country. Now, th A ing todo? The will of the e land. Your instructions lear and unquestionable” majority— clear and unquestionable character.” Now, what are you going to do? You hold the notice at your peril—tnat is to say, at your ‘ dis- cretion”—the terms are equivalent—the conditions are® explicit—“ earnestly cted forts.’ With all the responsibility, for de- | consistency, having asked the notice, we believe the President will give it. Assuming, at all events, that he will, the question recut cit understandi gon controvers: and Fi dent, what are ARTICLES 1010 ay STATIONERS, Lowest Possible Prices mat imme CH & HOUTEN, Sot below Csdar. DRAPER AND TA) publie to the most, ra Chairman on. Bo a itive experiment of resistance. to vote of the Senate, in the face of a question of cour- Thus | esy, clearly indicated the ultimate triumph. Case becomes taciturn and reflective—Allen and desperate—Hannegan EDWA! Tsar a qed smimegr trade." in eddiion ers for arts the marker, ot if skill employed in th indignant and mortified. the day of action arri and atter a series of incidental monster debates, unequivocal victories over the war part; cisive day, the notice js taken out of h they are Jeit standing against a measure of their own ndation, and the reece pany encamp for ie result, prima facie, Col. Benton, that so far r being inevitable, it is evitable, and ‘peace is inevitable.” my the position of Colonel Benton. . _Hannegan, in this relation, should have been so far led astray. T! and letters of Col. Benton, for twenty-five years paste look to the 49th Northern boundary tojthe Pac: nected with the proceedings upon this ‘a|der the administrations of Jeffereon, Madison, it would be absur hacsiver oekh soeios ‘who prefer. to have the ove” stock having boca re Pate al who “wish to patchans at leave wn at those houses who are obliged to do basiness of sho army and navy are puricalsly wart ‘ceasitners, whieh will be notice, and in a manner not. possess Galvanie action, by i P STRENGTHENING aconcession, definitely or indefinitely, of the free “$ navigation of the Columbia to Great Britain? Not jightest. No ‘amicable adjustment” can be attained, we fear, without such concession. And resident has declared that this is a proposi- tion which he could never entertain for a moment. Willheentertain it? There is the difficult, cy in the way. Bat his only hope is ina policy of inconsisten tions. He didn’t expect sucha notice—he did not want it. He thought it was understood that he was to be entirely sheltered by the responsibility ot Con- that they would save his consisten ing the responsibil'ty out-of hie hands. e could have induced him to throw the whole subject into their control, correspond 1 Su that they will insist upon his doi he has said he can’t do it; when, and a single failure, he thrown np fuses to play out the Aly A Lrg a som ming che i D ry} jout turbid water, rendering it of all putrid vegetble he filtering properties 1 as one continuous fic. Intimately con- Monroe and Ad: that his attitude in favor of a com basis ot the 40th degree, was merely the result of a these | jealousy of the pretensions of Cass and Allen. that he is jealousof their pretension: and unquestionable” as can be. has no personal aspirings for Cd presiden strongest gE At on Fh u romeat, wer Benton, fed. ~~ were bestowed ec taken his pleasure. was er, away at hie ter tan the throne i> partly edi orgen, Congress, and the Gesarealipadl lechons. Wr was u ional | ons. ules unlimited somal Z Col, Renwd a at the aly wi iret excit Mr. Boohsean’ and of the ern fe Hess, no odor, and of a e trial, as his hand and re- cae, rsa = fog i vias paige the administration. By clarations and assump- tions, he is committed tothe Russiin line—by ssors—by his own example, by the notice, which he has urged so ously, he is instructed to a ‘“ compromise efforts foran amicable adjustment” | eS nine Peg oo of the Fg em ninety tl ian boundary, he incurs the responsi- ity of wat “ at his discretion.” A ‘* maste: inactivity” is no r ¢ that he give the notice ; an end to “masterly inactivity.” | res of the day—all the great interests alternative of war; and adjustment.” Now, what will he og) oman chase ; but we suppose he tere ets som Sn ties “rence; rt. Os =O the other hand, we sus- ir the defeat of the ction of any other available candidate. And in his instructions to an “amicable Benton was unlimited. 4, a find it to their advantage to the atteation of the es ot President himself. Mr. the succession, was well the hands of such a bold position into humble jittina to no child’s play, and a aonipr Med np Missourian, id be a dangerous obstadie in his way, and one which, to be removed, must be removed at once. {t was done, and the power of Col. Benton te! of the and the “ great enton has any- w, therefore, if it is not Mr, Calhoun. ‘azed object. bef the succession, it is thérestoration ot Mr. Van Ba- ren. Mage a age sounan wil ir. Calhoun, Cass and Allen, may be Col. Benton has been heard to say of late, that way—that justice must yet be oung men must give foae to Mr. Vou] A. gbNiomary, itr eee hi f d candidly, we itiously di i 5

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