The New York Herald Newspaper, October 6, 1846, Page 1

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“ ——— naan = meceeenteeeemn ies an <== ESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 6, 1846. : eR gs NEW YORK, TU Re | gate, which was of great strength, and very skilfully | Panis, 16th Sept., 1846. ’ OUR RELATIONS WITH MEXICO. | Sonttived; anlthon went alouga sone pustoges Which | The Controveredegerding the Mentions upon, wewen poved mea ped a. | ig} SPIRIT OF THE MEXICAN PRESS. aes Nes hh as watches the goddess. She ix accompanied by af empaniod by fawn. “The Missing Ship. | sippe, the uncorrupted Indian, both becoming sart ‘of ‘The dog of Endymion is also introduced. The whole is | follow} : tee lusus nature in the Funpire State. inpusetaod classic taste, and not broken by teociose an | he following beautiful Poem, describing the eter Ie carte’ haating up, in this, wilder: | attention to minute parts. The figures are elegant. | loss of the steamship President, was recited by | ness, many of the tribe spend some months hun t- ie. This | of Spain— Prospect of Famine—Ireland—Ger- anal, or moat, with a drawbridgs erica, ly modelled ; they are not portraits, but have the Greek | 3. Mow: irk - ing upon these preserves of the once powerful svi cpaasanatnn net ie ze neat arrived ai fights of stair, and paasiog up , Where more rational ideas pre- | Outline of features. jae. Tye att, fo an admiring audience, on the ‘six Nations. “After passing our luggage foto. the The Territory of New Moxioo. | piicries Their general chartcteriuie in that of great | Y#LiD regerd tQthe machinery of governments, you will | Perrot js engaged at the Scala, at Milan, for three | evcanion oj her benellty at the Park{Theatre Iss canals, ‘Tom took hig seat in one and, mya te fe | strength, and plenty of room to work in. They motinted | doubtless regergiwith curiosity the sensation produced | Moms; he will receive the princely sum of 60,000 | Friday night ‘ ‘ord, He iv one of those res &e. ke. &e. 120 long twenty-four pounders, all of brass. They were, | in Europe by the @nnouncement of the fact that bare dhemerrdhany stag | God speed the noble President ! so he cannot keep still, and has see: — for the mort part, in excellent condition. The mortars y we pi col anager tee A letter from Bruna states that at the last concert A gallant bout is she ' it that there is Dut little new either for him to PROCLAMATION were of large calibre, though not in such good order as | 1 Paris, possessiag mo very special claims to attention for | given in that city, List, Dreyechock, Erust, and View: Aw over enieres ut! ou sad, above al zs, his greathobby ir To the Inhabitantaof New Mezico by Brigadier General the guns. The powder magazines were each literally a | eny known quality of mind or body, is about to marry a | temps performe: | Or crogs’d @ stormy sea where } cen ofthe relics he possesses; of S W. Kearney, commanding the troops of the United dry stone weil, plug; at the top with blankets, and | little Spanish giflof about fourteen, whose most notice- At Wolverhampton, Mr. Woolgar and his daughter are Like some majestic cas # Uideroatcousecruced and interesting places that he ‘States in the same. having around metal lid over the mouth that opened | able quality is Of possessing a large dowry. This | Play‘ng in a variety of parts. She flouts upon the stream has visited, and with the ingenuity of a sailor, is he As by the act of the republic of Mexico, a state of war | upon the batteries. ject, nev Rescaneed a lively agitation inthe |" Modeme Anes Thillee hat od ‘ig, goed Saige Booetd healie ber, ever spinning his graphic and varying yarns. exists between that government and the United States, | We next doscended to the inner works, and gained the circles, the interchange of a mul. | at'the Liverpool Adelphi Theatre. Madasne®Togliont Like pigmy shallops seem ! | "Phere is now but one left of our litte party that I have andes the undersigned, at the head of his troops onthe | secondary walls by a circuitous route. Besides the ne- | Ltude of diplomele motes between the representative af | 2 Noah va aemute on retioe lakh ont toactie How will her mighty bulwerke | not described. Yet wait till we get among the w Toth inst. took of Santa Fo, the capital of the | Cossity tothe besiggersof having guides who well Knew | the European powers. at all the peeat cates Sone | was suncunced te appear on Friday night, and the Misses ‘The leaping surges brave— emblems of her innocence, youth, snd spotlessness department of New Mexico, he now announces his inten: | every tra of the works, the exeitement and smoke are | doubts are still ontgstnined whether thir eh crreat ren | Cushman are to perform at this theatre in the ensuing How will her iron'sinews and which she is now awoetly entangling among bet tion to hold the de; ’ with its original boundaries | almost certain to produce a confusion, in which the voice | can be allowed to! eitican caterer A . Make way ’gainst wind and wave ? locks. It is Exupere, the Indian's wahtid: “She alts be- ‘on both sides of the Del Norte) as a part of the United | or presence of the guides would be lost, and the party | not be the means « the peace of the world’ | ,, Phe srstifying reception which Mrs. Fitzwilliam and Farewell, thon stately vessel ! | fore me in the canoe, her small hands grasped around « tates, and under the name of the Worritory of New | dashing onward might only arrive at a dead wall, » gap | Surely, surely, ty.can no further go! Alas, that | it. Buckstone met with, on Wednesday last, has Ye voyagers, farewell ! fragrant cedar paddle, and, with a beating besom, she Mexico. looking out upon ie ‘or the mouth of a twenty-four | mankind in this h century should be the victim | C@used @ poenasgenent for “ The Cavalry Week,” and Securely on that deck shall ye her father to urge forwar! our hg! t shallop. I The undersigned has come to New Mexico with a | pounder. The circuitous route of our descent from the ble! Will nations never learn to |‘? ™rrow (Monday) they make their appearance under ‘The tempest’s shock repel. for an infant locomotive to save her exertion— strong military force, and an equally strong one is fol- | upper to the lower was entirely exposed it the costly and absurd the patronage of Colonel Clive, and the officers of the The statel: in, Ai je side by side through the saris cut howa any oppo that espa |hikeso many ack wr ata froand vonecauie: | SeesscLDTA foment freee ebarity | Gat"ehurvarae let tnd grt sity up te i alee Beli ray aur uj the Bt ewrece! sary to putdown any can #0 man: stone 2 if er at . batteaux upon the St. Lawrence, brought against him, and therefore. it would be but folly | ways and narrow passe ta might here | ““In the midst of theebidlgcussions, the cecvla of traggpe | boards. A glorfods sight, O landamen, from her fed lipe ia unison with the dashing ears or madness for any dissatisfied or ted persons to | be raked down, after had conquered the outer al parts of the continent with the | The Liverpool 4/bion says that Bernard Gregory, hav- PP rl nal pe —afax the mountains, with their blue gummits, bl think of resisting him. walls. But the “chances of war” are numerous; and one i city. The harvests, ing been hissed off the Haymarket boards, got a Aitienbe eta with the sky ; and around, palisades of grey rock filled The undersigned has instrugtions from his government | imperfection in the gre est power (if otherwise perfect) | below their avera; ‘and " clique to hire the Strand Theatre. There, any one who “parewell !” all the ait up the foreground, while dark green woods seve e to respect the religious institutions of New Mexico, to | may render it inapplicable, and perhaps ridiculous, On | the prices of all iad 10 attempts to hiss is turned out neck and crop. And serve ys Poitiers a < aE breadth of beauty to this enchanting wild-wood. The protect the property of the church, to cause the worship | arriving at these inner batteries, we found the guns in @ | gtrong are the fears 9 right for going into such company. tne hh thunder spans. lake through which we are now passing is the first of a of those belonging to it to be undisturbed, and their reli- | wretched condition. They were no betier than a Chinese | ties in many parts of Et Mr. Patrick Sutcliff, who hos been for m: ave e Flee, on thy vapory pins chain of eight that are connected with outlets ot from one Fy rights in the amplest manner preserved to them. | effect, “calculated” to strike terror into the mind. But ing measures of dl + particular- aa by D “i ‘ithe r roy any ye pb a Back, back to England fi to three milesin length. As we were turning a sharp point .topratect the person and property of all quiet and | one may imagine how vory angry the subtie architect | fy, the coming win B ie looked forward to with | £rfec Quattor nee van © few mornings since, Where pationt watchers by the strand he fi et, gliding quietly side by side, as one of peocouble inhabitants within ite boundaries, against their | of this formidable castlo would have been, could he have | exxiety, "The he ch had been entertained that |) Have waited long for thee; pirit boats upon a spiritsee—e noble stag, enemies, the Eutaws, Navaboes, and others; and while | seen his excellent arrangements for the safe and nearly | the repeal of the Gorn Laws would lower prices,have not | , 1" the morning of the 3ist ult., while the workmen at ‘Where kindred hearts are beating with spreading antlers, was within six yards, feeding; he assures ail that it will be his pleasure as well as his | certain destruction of the assailants, thus rendered abor- . is deficient, and yet the im. | ‘he Hambargh Theatre were hoisting to its place a To welcome home thy crew, broadside towards the boat, in which Tom was seated. duty to comply with those instructions, he calls upon them | tive. ir ad to that oxtent-which tire | §Plendid bronze chandelier for gas lights, just bronght And tearful eyes gaze constantly Ofcourse, my friend had the first shot I saw, as be to exert themselves in preserving order, in promoting} We now descended ry ‘wide and steep flight of with the deficiency of the | 0m London, and weighing above 10,800 Ibs., the rope Across the waters blue ! raised his rifle, the canoe being suddenly hauled to concord, and in maintainiog the authority and efficiency | stone stairs, which led us down into the grand castle Wave promised. On the contrary,the | Ye, and thh enormous mass, falling to the ground, Alas, ye watchers by the strand! shore, that he was troubled with what the hunters term of the laws ; and to require of those who have left their | square, or little town, as one might almost call it. prices have risen. “Am the prineipal English markets a | W#! broken to pieces, crushing two Englishmen, who Weeks, months, have rolled away, “back he trembled with excitement; and as the homes and taken up arms against the troops of the United | entered at the bottom’ through stone gate-ways ( Tise of six f has lately been announced, | 4d come over to superintend its being suspended. But where, where is the President ? crack of his rifle rang through the air, the deer, unhurt, ‘States, to return ferthwith to them, or they will be | chitect had never missed an opportunity for giving the brisk as ever. "3 ora aye" And why is this delay. bounded towards the forest. It wi wimy ture. Just Gonsidered as enemies and traitors, subjecting their per- | besieged protection in retreating, and time to rally). and ind is truly alarming. Other peo- Catno, It., Avover, 1846, Return, pale mourners, to your homes ! as the frighted stag paused to look at the rash intruders, sons to punishment, and their Property to seizure ‘and | then found ourselves in a large open square, enclosed | pl cafeity, cen fall from an highor to Lowisville—Slavery—Abolitioniem— Cairo. Ye gaze, and gaze in vain; well-aimed shot transfixed him to where he stood, from confiscation, for the benefit of the public treasury. It is | on all sides by very lofty walls the’ lower part of which | ets aioe tphe, ter apie 8 Sie Oh ! Sever shall that pennon’d mast my trusty rifle. Tom feltbad. He who hed killed with the wiah and intention of the United States to provide for | displayed doors and entrances into barracks, guard ibm falerior quality of food, |., snoewenine Yen from Clacipat, { have been trave. Salute your eyes again ! unerring sim the chamois of the Alps, the gazelles of New Mpnice 8 free with the least possible | houses, and shops of various kinds for the such | the quantity Seog ins abet ly, in | Ling slowly down the Ohio, stopping at various points. And ‘ho; Arabia, the came-leopards of Africs, and monkeys of delay, similar to those in the United States, and the peo-| articles as a garrison would need. The Governor's | Ireland, the actual standard of subsistance has been the | I spent several days at Louisville, and have formed a ate Go uraen ane Brazil, had made a miss shot in the wilderness of his na. ple of Now Mexico will then be called on to exercise the | house is at the further end. [t was a gepuine soldier's | cheapest quality of the Cheapest article of food~ the po. t ‘ ‘And stern despair tubdues st tive State; yet, when the savory venison was rights of freemen in electing their own representatives to | lodgment, and very bare of all ornament, except those of | tato. They drew. thaig subsistence from the very bot. | Very f@verable opinion of it. The inhabitants are a The e doubt? from the dainty hands of Exupere, he forgot it all, and the territorial legislature, but until this can be done the | war, for it was riddled all over with the marks of shot | tom of the scale, and b that remains nothing but fa. | uch more aristocratic” class of people than these of But still’affgction iifte the torch we felt vory—in truth very, happy. Our encampment la Jaws hitherto in existence will be continued until | and shell Its strong covered balcony, intended to serve | mine and the grave. British Gerestaieatnen hu- | Cincinetti, and consequently much more attention is By night alo mth shore, under two tall pines, that make a most shade. ‘ed or modified by competent authority, and those | both as a protection from the broiling sun. and from the | manely resolved to come'to the rescue of this miserable | paid to their style of living. An air of comfort, and, in And! lingers b; y the Dest rocks, The bill of fare for our back wood’s dinner is as follows: persons holding office will continue in the for the | fall of missiles,was in many places torn in long gaps. All it can come, without pro- | many instances, of luxury, seems to pervade the whole To marvel, to deplo . BILL OF FARE—RDEN CAMP. ; present, provided they will consider themsel ‘od ci- | the towers and buildings of any elevation hed alo been ig is, by the promotion of | city. r i we dirbi adn yh Fishhead Soup. Fens and willing to take the osth of allegiance to the | knocked about and d ¢ shot and &! b low rate of interest. i wasforeibly struck with the comfortable appearance In dreams I see the fated ship Salmon and Speckled Trout. United States. Vera Cruz, previous to the surrender of the c In Germany the serigds Gonsideration of most of the | in every way clthe slaves, Thair dress in many kastanoee Torn by the northern blast; Venison, diene. The undersigned, hereby absolves all persons residing ns and destruction did not materially affect | State governments has Deen directed to the subsis. | is equalin. point of atyle to that of the most respectable About hor tempest-riven track Petite avec ground nuts. within the boundary of New Mexico, from further alle- of the place. Very few of the guns had | tence of the people ui next harvest. Breadstuffs | whites, ind uni fy there is among them an appear- Khe tad antlers Pigeo! ‘rete. e to the” Republic of Mexico, ‘and hereby claims iged; even the outer batteries were not in- | of every kind have dsen in the northern as well as in | ance of tidy wholesomeness, ‘They have in Loulsville Bi ne cop tenn, Seagal Venison, avec cranberries jem as citizens of the United States. Those who remain | jured so as to render them ineffective, with the exception | the southern provino@® Provisions against a famine are | four churches, which belong entirely to the slaves, and Their heads the icebergs Lift, Jean Caneux, et caper sauce. quiet and peaceable will be considered as good citizens, | of a gap of ruins in one ortwo places. ‘There is about a | glroady in progress i places. The government | are paid for.’ I attended service iu ome of them last In lucent grandeur to the clouds— DESER’ and receive protection. Those who are found inarms, or | mile’s brevdth of sea running between San Juan de Ul: | of Hosse is taking uc . ‘The citizens of Co- | Sunday afternoon, where I found assembled some two Manic sarryerertenginl Box and Wintergreen . instigating others against the United States, will be loa, and the town of Vera Craz. blentz have formed an for the purchase of | hundred blacks, listening to the eloquence of « colored One mingled shriek of awe goes up, Tonly give you what the forest produces; and with « sidered as traitors, and troated accordingly. Don Manual | How strongly and skilifully this fortross is protected | 50,000 hectolitres of corn sold at first cost, if the | proauner, the tones of whose voice exceeded in power At that stupendous sight; few extras, your city epicures might well hey hey Armijo, the late Governor of this department has fled from | by.art the reador has now some idea. San Juande Ulloa is | price should rise above a certain Limit during the winter. | any that lever heard. The scene was one that Now, helmsman, for a hundred lives, To-morrow we loave this lake, which is the third of the it. The undersigned has taken ssion of it without | equally protected by nature; for, while the defences of |" Unfortunatoly, it is to be feared that Germany, inst had I time and space, would beggar description Oh, guide the helm aright! chain, and has in it one of the most beautiful islands thet firing a gun, or spilling a drop cf blood, in which he most | art which [ have briefly described are chiefly devoted to | of giving increased means yment, tho e: Inc oat wie ‘an intelligent coniman, he re- Vain prayer! strikes! and thundering down | I have ever seen. Tom and I have racked our brains for truly rejoices, and for the presont will be considered as | the side and angle facing the town, those angles which | tension of its public works, compelledto close | marked that it-was the dosire of Kentucky to become a The avalanches ful a metaphor. It is like a bit of the world before the flood; Governor ofthe Territory. face the main ocean on the opposite side, or back of the | many of its larger factories. ndently of the me- | free State ; and that such would have been | the case ton vrusl ell the stately vessel sinks— | so bright, so green, that it laughs in silent beauty at this Given at Santa Fo, the capital of the Territory of New | castle, are protected by long successions of rocky re naced scarcity of provisions. isthe toa] years had it not been for the misguided zeal of nor- The cold sea covers all! world of ours, half filled as it is with sin and shame. Mexico, this 23d day'of August, 1640, and in the 7lst year | utterly defying the approach of any vessels of war: | financial crisis. “ue public fande at Berlin have falien | Yoorn atolitionists, Seid he, “wo feel the ousae of. sles Anon, unresting Fancy holds Tint wecie saeie inom the lakes —Cisy ‘sre san of the independence of the United States. Many black and rotten wrecks, visible even at high | from sto 10 per cent, andit is appre that the calls | very—we feel that it is an incubus upon the prosperit ‘A direr scene to view: sada Rae scereedtrimrade pap hdhioseslilelng. set By the Governor, water, attested some ofthe natural “terrors of the place.” | upon the shareholders in the ays will not be oad happiness of our fair State, but the efforts whic! ‘The burning ship, the fragile raft, 8. W. KEARNEY, Brig. Gen. | But in these daysit is generally understood by all milita- | promptly or fenerally answered; possible, even, | have been made to despoil us wrongfully of our rights. The sadiiying crew! we ¢ R. L, Aug., 1846. SPIRIT OF THE MEXICAN PRESS. ry men that no place is impregnable, and that thorough | that the companies will be compel suspend their | have only served to draw the chains of the slave still Ah me! was such their maddening fate ee et ae {From the Chihuahua Provisional, July 31 soldiers, well officered and led, can, and will, and do, | works, unless the government will com@ite their aid, at hter. Let the abolitionists cooperate with us instead Upon the billewy brine? Aristocracy—Meral Character of the People—The Suf A thousand bonds unite Mexico to the Old Werl , from take any place. At what cost, is not tothe question. | a moment when it 13 30 necessary to employment | of taking ground in opposition to us, and especially such Give up, remorseless Ocean, Srage Agitation — Feelings of Animosity Engendered which modern and European civilization has been com- | 2% thing canbedone, to the laboring classes. It is calculat the railway fanatical ground, and‘the great work can be accom: ‘Arelic and e sign! thereby Visit to Gov. Dorr—His Health—Hen. municated to us. From it we receive our hubits and [Correspondence of the London Times] - | ip progress in the German States emplgy @ million of la- | plished.” No answer cometh from the deep, oy Ballow—Retlread Mecting--P the Ne sympathies as an inheritance. Alike (though not the| Mexico, July 30.—Matamoras remains in the hands of | P°Fe™®- ; b Loft Louisville on Friday, 21st, at 6 P. M., and after a To tell the tale we dread: een Ballon Retioos’ -Mactinge< Fics ef the ew tame) has been the origin of the United Stsies of the * m r In France, the prospects are little bette. Disturban- | tedious journey, during which we were obliged to un- Torsff among the Manufacturers. : the Americans, and Vera Uraz and Tampico are blockad- i ; No messenger of weal or woe north, notwithstanding that there exists between the two ins; ; ces have already broken out in several nts, al- | ship our freight to enable ys to @ sand-bar which ob- P i ings hb ed by their ships; but the rains prevalent ot this time of f Returneth from the dead: Ina previous letter I spoke of the buildings here, as republics ail the difference which may be found between . thoughthe minister of commerce, in his Mile circular to | structed the channel, we arrived at this place on Monda; : p in | the year, und which have fallen w nce In | the jrefeots of departm 1 “4 But Faith looks up thro’ tears, and sees boing thrown together, without much regard to order @ the vulture and the eagle—between the man who consi- | that part of the country, have paralyzed the further | 2°, orgie ot departments, endeavors evening last, at 9 o'clock. From earthly haven driven, : Cairo, as every New Yorker knows, and many of them to their sorrow, was once represented as being able to ‘Those lost ones meet in fuirer realms, architectural proportions. It may with equal truth be ne with any western city. And upon the strength Where storms reach not—in Heaven! said of the people, that they have been thrown together ol dvanced, fucing: the: mposolative times of 37 200 35, Wasninoron, Sept, 29, 1846, | teirmtural afaitier end that it would be diMeult te wich have been expended in laying tho foundations ef | We had thought that there were no more te | whom there issuch diversity of taste ant digpontions ‘the ‘speculators were Lepore pn proton ‘The | turn out ; butitis said that with the first of the One things nor. er, sre aneed lena, eatabiaaed Se ae aaa oe Te ce voenaeg | Month, Mr. Walker will make way for nine or | on"the respectability and influence ef certals, ancient miserable nature. ia by ten new subordinates in his depar‘tient, by warn- | families, as is the case in many towns and cities. ‘“ Let ders human life as 0 which he desires not to operations of the American army ‘ou the Bravo, uader. | LS perpetual nightmare, and him who regards Wes jeneral Taylor. Nor has any oxtack yet been by | De pre aoe tice three times as long as it is con- Commodore Connor on Vera Cruz or the Cas 4 cease le . P ‘aylor has now under hiscommand about 14,000 Catholicism and Protestantism are exactly personified | force sufficient to penetrate to San, Lily Fotos) A peat | Gouet that th by the Aztec and the Yankee ; - Countries which they | proportion of these, however, are volunteers from Texas, | the South mad in the W inhabit complete the picture of the differences. From | and the western States of North America, men who spurn | of this year are very tn! the soft and beniguant ¢ imate ihr a pen at all control, and whem it will be difficult to subject to | and aay fered apr 9 they were in 1839. Soret Conciliete them by urbenity, decency and mo. | mutary discipline. It is known that they intend to march | that In'a few of the Northern departments they exce Tality hile tie later procecd: e interior as soon as the weather permits, and | the local consumption, but they are much short of it in there 3 ee corn harvest has been in general defic at. The produce has been eatimated with some precis: and it is found that the Is the brutal North | that the first point of attack will Montere: i American, abadly:licked bear, who delights in disples- | the Y | the central and Southern departments. ‘The vogetable large, airy and originally well built hotel, as also an | ; i “ every tub stand on its own bottom,” appears to be the ag ll, wherever itsaay be in hit power to offend. © | ‘he,CaPital of Nuevo Leon. distent 85 leagues from Mate- | crops have also been materially defcient, owing to the Seivanicy cal mucking’ shop together wate | uu cusnine or ten old. anes, _ Bo wego nds | ROU2 here. The only aristocracy’ is of very recent he ‘American Baohante, who, in her religious fury, | there, and Mejia hasled the wrecks of the ary of the drought, tnd the petatoes have, in many locellties, alto- saw-mill and several other udings are entirely Speaking of the Treasury Denar tpieiit ork | date cand feeble’ iiSnense, having spesag.up and four. > presides over the and disgusta us by her put} gether fai a ; pied and aro going rapidly to ruin. A levee, f information communicated several days uals eee ne ceteeveatiaet beta fa ae tes rate perth te siceneey Tse seat plontorey is an open |” “Already these effects sre manifested practically in the iikainds: tab weole distance ef the coatempisied | 02% infor Y® | the manufacturing business ; and oven now the lines ere markets. At this time last year the price of corn in Paris ‘The enthusiastic daughter of the Church of Rome, who | goon as the Americans uppear. Gen Arista rank); : : - Placidly breathes out her soul at the foot of the alts, | expressed hie opinion that Mexican soldiers, in thet | feast france, whck shown inerease ot bia | hala pe ag od joe ee anche. present state of discipline, cannot be brought to face the | percent. on the price. The price of bread announced | cur a eee ence erty petween the Yan. | North Americans. It might be thought that this govern- | Por thie week is 30 to al centimes the kilogramme, (or ‘a, climate is makeniie bane Pin, that of | Ment would see the wisdom of negotiating for peace be- | ahout 2d. per pound.) It ia nearly the same price al = Sonn erie Oe alt, t of | fore the Americans penetrate further into the country; | ‘Rouen, andthe principal towns of Nonuaniy, Itis 244d. the Nonth is sour. No!—there is no congeniality be- | put the national vanity aud a touch of obstinacy, which | der'pouud at Lille, and hee risen to even higher pric Thevo sentiments we hold in common with the ola | {hey inherit from the Spaniards, forbid them to take the | fn Loraine and Alsace. ‘Thus it isi. at Strasbourgh ; r t ‘World, and with ell the inhabitants of South America. | medistion of Gront De is of the offered | 91/4, at Nancy, and 3d at Colmar. isa po inich “almost every boat sto > | if not liable te any such accusation at the present time, ‘We feel that the Anglo-American is au apostate from the | mocsuon.of Gront Britain in the contest, has, however, |" “rhe government, although it discourages any serious | and at which, if conv to recover the money ; and that the said Curtis | Churches, schools, and other good institutions, flourish he Fee New Mente ch the ateiigence has been received | apprehensions, is, nevertheless, taking measures of pre- | travellers, and lacilities were afforded for storing and re- | and his associate, will each realize the handsome | here, and the people are as moral and pious as they are lexi @ invasion o} provinee by | chution. ‘The ministers of the interior, of public works, shipping freight, an, exte feo of $50,000 by the operation. We have no ob- | i other villages of this size. iy ‘city, sud-~which wae built at an. expense of | 2g0 On that subject. It is said that in virtuy Of @ | not very distinctly drawn between them and their more faillion of dcllara, is now in a state of ‘complete di-} bill passed at the last session, authorizing the re- unfortunate Deighbors, #0 far as secial intercourse is ‘ : : . concerned. The mantfacturer, however, who is ac- tains since, nas fottit “alles cH eck: | funding of certain excesses of duties paid into | counted rich, ia lion, and he wields considerable influ- ‘covered with snags and floating timber. | the New York Custom House, while it was under | ence among his fellow .citize: 7 5 r 4 F ly, Wi ket hi tation of a iT mention of Cairo, is in every way to its | the control of Mr. Collector Curtis, the said Mr. very ungodly hana, fail eGGlt aeeraeee i ; jint of land formed by the ; ‘ “Miselseippi Food the Ohio rivers, toa) of | Curtis, and a distinguished member of Congress, | Whatever might have been the character of the pepula- ively navigated rivers in the | have been employed by the merchants concerned rp durisg the early period’ of ith histery, Wetmsecket religion of him who suffered on the cross. No, no; these men can never be our political brothers. Americans. Armijo, the governor, has applied for During the agitation of the free suffrage and constitu ‘We hi ural allies—; rtainl j 4 and of commerce, have sent instructions to the preiects | Thi bstacle which prosent ia the fact that | ject 2 i é ies | ; tiona.at the southonm poe Pep wg Pret el nes peat rary inet imeate: aidt verieeane! jm of departments to estublish extensive works for the aaa owhige to the low marsh satu of ground, the place US dpa Sp at ey nae ager ta ait tonal question, in Rhode -laland, Woonsocket mane rgani thro! J y 6 canals, Fr i . vl , however, f r ) OT, final); ore Font ae aetna Hg el oe ta < + A i i | anitl doubtless Dothe maid soumeol goreommamelione| cone on Tie speetnry unre more extensively clear. | lead to excesses upon the treasury in future trans | termed, Dorrites. Under the old ‘charter government, a such are the true lytes of the Christian church | ‘The blockade of the Atiautic ports, of cou Jers | Ployment. : ed,and more densely populated ; andy predict thet at | actions of the kind, despite the closest surveil- | freehold qualification was required to enable e man to every where, in whatever land the word honor has its | ary, ports, Of course, renders |" 4 merica is, of course, looked to in this emergency.— lance of the Secretary. To allow such excesses, | vote, anda vast majority of the people of Woo 4 no very distant day Cairo will enjoy at n of true meaning. and man loves man, without distinction of | zaugements for the payment of the public debt, the | wiit"not the high prices to which ail breadstuga must | the provperity which its friends have 20 long hetned tor color of the skin, whether rod or black, Indian or Afri- inevitably rise in Europe, attract subsistence from the | We have now been laying at the levee throe days and = tom houses ian ered het Speen enpritd Sate West ? Will it not, in fact, assist the prices in your own | three nigits, and the prospect of the time of our depar They are our natural allios—the inhabitants of every | decreed, financial scheme, the leading feature. of | ™atkets ? ture is still uncertain. The delay is occasioned by country—from the poles te the torrid zone, where the | which is the resumption by 4 F change of boats, and a consequent exchange of: Man: them were emigrants from there ought to hea stopping place. We dislike | were disfranchi excuses af any kind, a aapecially upon the al- pot Ligeia Da ogee’ nag ON ned a treet polities es mostempty pockets of Uncle Sam. They are | couli not understand why they should not enjoy the excessively inconvenient about this time. Same in Rhode Island. Dex many years they had tion t vernmont of of If of Foreign Theatricals. 4 ‘ We found yesterday morning upon our table, 1 assembly for a redress of grievances, but Jenguoge of truth is spoken. ‘That which was taught us | the customs’ rovenue, while the other hulf is appropris- | 80 great ‘avon a Tabes OhieAl butalh | cen Tae secrete tes oo oun ob aurea ae as charming a bouquet of flowers as we have joy took a bold stand, to obtain their belong to that which cur neighbors employ towerdsua? | 2¢,0.tte brewed Cho nats fiat the Engi pith SiePerisiaa pablie stan her geeteoalien OF Clartass 5 thar. We have also several passengers d since the days of John Helos Will yore Pear oe at cs te vounices well known to the No, ne—a thousand times no; a thousand proofs contre | pondholders, and to the pa: ; Harlow, e Gymnase, that ‘heatre Francaise has | fo) rmy, among whom is Dr. Benjamin Stone, who in a little poetry in the expression of our | coun! constitution uperse ie old charter, 5 lders, 0 yment of British claims,adjust- | p, Il its diplomatic skill to indt her to be- hi i > | und although it cts such as the suffi dict i ria ed by diplomatic intervention, the quota assigned by | come a member of ite corps, having even gone #0 nae Prt een ronan nvemeyioes viata i liberal and enlightened donor. ? “ improvement on the of2 Americans have for many years called other individual than the public (st lr meres it is a gre those conventions. | donot observe, however, that any | to offer to liquidate any damages that itensue upon » » ta orem shinee ae Facade nee provision ia made for the repayment of the suns soized | her precking off tay pesereut vontreot thet ahs way Dave ba acer) Nera — fan er Mig ed are | ‘The Dorr party was in this place, and until the wis sodtn of tek iven tinea Iet ligsiosh territeey, | 2" lation of all agreements by Senor Iturbe. Hit entered into with any other establishment, but in vain; ‘The Onondagas—Indian Feast of Suckertash. Pi d is latitude, excep’ final failure of their enterprise, and the raion of the Known. to our neighbors by the name of Arkansas. -’ | (wer When applied to on this score, is a remarkable spe- | Ma’lle Rose Cheri has positively declined its offer. It | We yesterday made a visit to the castle of the the public groun is small force that rallied around the standard of Governor Ne, no; this is not the language which our ances- | g.n'sti of assurance. “if I had to repay those sums,” sail | js rumored that she has received magnificent offers from i ‘That Beautt: met. Dorr, at Chepachet, they exercised complete sway here, tore twaght: Seti dome temenaner you” cried Bart ber ery ae Bain Cato Ee marina ae Russia. Onondagas, a remnant of whom only remain, The singing birds of and were areloulesly openeinas § the Algerines. But ,on duembarking io 1828 on the shores of Tampico. | considered satistuctory in Downing’ street, The pew | _ Mademoiselle Lucile Graba is staying at Paris, | aud they are divided into two parties, (about fe feft for lands afar, iter the defaat of Gaels Leaiiet Fad Chee, Sitwey Sea Se 'ylor occupies Matamoras. For what did he come | scheme would place the future control of th stom | for @ fewdays only, as she will shortly set out tor ually,) Christian and Pagan. Many of the Though still they cheer the lingeter near ithe ity Be tied Bs y wore, tested there?—to establish the federal system among ui Lecter sorta id, ‘she goes mouter several new bal- | @dUally, Sua . fe fair domains of Mah’r. with much severity by their opponents, w! The man with the least d of Penetration, whe lin ere Ganka Deen eee ee which she has in her possession. younger members of the tribe show the * bleach- Some solitary minstrel, to pay them principal and interest, for all the trouble flects carefull hat is ere said, will see what has | {2W 0 tbe other holders of the 25 per cent fund, to Fa a sy os ing” influence of association with the whites very Sul warbling all the dey, they had caused * the powers th ‘The most bitter been the over itoreseing desire, ena the bash ot ios oe oe ea = fe Lome bo oertee ceca entat —_ Paris | plainly, especially the children. ‘The whole num- Among the bowers, whence came my flowers, of animosity were engendered in the bosoms of i murred and protested, and it is thought that the ne: “ i 5 * : phe flowers—the flowers of summer, ve not bee: down, and eympathies and aifvctions towards Europe. We perish | Minister wi alter or repeal the decree. ‘This is th SeRid tee eet cae Pent hy eke kasl beR eh well cultivated, under leases, by the whites, and couLetiaenaliveren , beentively eralica@t pspene rather than allow the latter to resume her dominion | great evil of Mexican tion; is permanent. 5 " over us, We will aay no, and this will sumice; for we | Sythe formation of theo per-et und, they aidtheir best | UGE, Kreutzer on the following day of his triumph | @ few’ of thei (the Indians,) ‘are wealthy. A Like blessed things have spread their wings jovernor Dorr, the unfortunate leader of the suffrage 'Bindoos 4 t t roved himself at once a worthy and sensible man; at | Very great proportion of them, however, are idle ‘And left us, one by o: party, is now stopping with his friend the Hon. Olne; j; the ee Fisttiutediann lo.tie themaselves down by peilting the decree fi the {ie moment, when public applause waa at its height, the | an dissipsted, notwithstanding the great exer- Yet still around the Capito Ballou, in Cumberland, about five miles from this vil- “Turning our eyes to the north, where the iuhabi ly of ovis, bu fluttered scholar sat down, and dedicated his work to his | tions which have been made to educate and re- ‘They smile along our wa} I rode down to i all ne brotieeen: ond. aller. Gs, drels apmepeth ready undergone several modifications, and now a sweep- | former master, the ill-used Cherubini. form them. ‘Tis from those stars of Jemmy Mahr’s, ry pleasant intervie God! whom ase we to call brothers! Ali! no, We are | 3g Meastire is attempted, giving the fund an entirely | Daring the past month of August thero were produced | During the past year the Sta’e has appropriated ‘That beautiful houquet. political questions of the content with marking our cattle with red-hot irons. gah ae eee eer at the Paris theatres one new opera, three dramas, thir- | about $400 toward the erection of a ublie ‘school The rose buds and the roses, ness and great ability on Cursed be they, who apply them to human beings.” Atnaxv, Oct. 3, 1846, | teen vaudeviiles—in all, seventeen novelties by twenty- | house near their council grounds or “castle,” aa Just blushing I helt ip lr mag “a GENERAL KEARNEY. Closing Scenes in the Convention—Theatricale, $e, | eight authors: | There were, besides, ten revivals of old | (vis called here. Beside that sum, the citizens of Diffusing here the atmosphere, welke' buh tary hile it [From the Washington Union, Oct. 3] ‘The closing proceedings of the Constitutional Con. | Piece mine debuis by performers, and four reappear: | & use have contributed about $300 towards hts hana over recover from the disease which . - > 0 “ jas Te golden, onde wees Onateeontey mateente hand: Your. | vention are hurried ina manner quite inconsistent with | A society has been formed at Madrid, for the transla Lesbos nec gi purrs ; Mise amea nei ths bie And half the flowers of May, oF ap eng an peg npuene aaa, nish us with a biographical sketch of this excellent offi. | their grave importance. ‘The discipline and tact which | tion of French dramas, vaudevilles, &c., and another so- | Seat self denial and perseverance has been la- ‘With blue and green, are mingled in, could be expected, after the sufferings end 9 performed & i ciety has also been formed for the ‘representation of the | boring to educate them in the common branches. ‘This beautiful bouquet. a oor. TeeUae wrmcanhs tomar 's | the members have acquired during the session would | C/01y as Ave, bast Torres on arouts af thote two ocie. | Lier saccess thus far has been very flattering, far he bes encountered. I found him surreuaded with Press > Shen dol pom grhpecbrar at thet have been of material benefit at the beginning, and | ties are thus identical; without the former there will be | exceeding any male teacher who has made at- l eetee Uae onsascieie pss: ‘in provinces of Mexico. It is an intermediate link in the | might have qualified them to present a Constitution to the | no pieces, and without the latter no representations.— | tempts to instruct them. hehe: bonged ae-aeh tthe mnttie lou, at whose house he Epis. get isin, practi- chain of commercial communication between Calit people which would have commended itself to their in- | This theatricel oligarchy has spread consternation among | Yesterday was their annual “feast of sucker- To en pend rately, 1 ipelgiecad cal farmer, of unco: oe sind ond political and the United States. Caravans already travel toresta ard wants, ‘The session has been a long one, but | those Spanish writers whose bread is dependent on theit | ta," as they call it, ‘The preparations for which Ps ged peter nie hig or sogacity. ‘He has bean a leading man in the {rom one to the other—and, besides, the intercours et too short by half, because nine-tenths of the mem- | pens. nud Bean woes thea dily ciweiotusty. “tiie Raket.” tS ree own potty for many yours, and now holds the office of Btate tween New Mexico and St. Louis is becoming fre Bors have simply gone through an initiatory or prolimi- | According to an Italian journal, M yp y- . einiak Oredin jenator. Athis retired, unostentatious house, away \e Stoltz, the i “twould seem, a ple 4 so far as we could discover, consisted of corn, po- To ee oe from the noisy world, Governor Dorr constantly re- pine jespectanoe, ol, wos e oe Ren a ayear | gaged for the Cremone during the next re, pe ets, Re a and errs soi bee x rR ny pork, ‘This bea z i ssa? rane f ceives the kindest attentions and the most seated, sym. Fee esiee ca ome - | long et, 8 peed Conaiitniion es Sx — e Moriani, is oarning golden laurels, at Bergamo, his na- | P'S fect, sonnes t r i 'y eile date in E man has his weak side, sir. ¢ confess pathy. ptt balilale Ob Walaa <n ea ae anna OU of ee a, | pire Tne Cael lat Sama ge, | drape; Liqardorn “Luce a Lemmermeer’™ "| laige {on Kees, From these eack, Indian dipped | chat flowers oflaveliness lopomative and ations || lars nd suited meeting of ha fend of ha without fring one gun, oF shedding one drop of blood — Clyde, of Columbia, made tremendous ‘it te elo sn omink in expected to arive shortly at Pari, to super wad aes witt his jasiarde vpootty nase eh-weanas | tones "ar ieae:, oil coucote wit ear eu voyrt Jetterday. “The numerous aitendance from the several 2 i artic! 2 ise en scena ¢ , i) i jassac! Batter ascot ak arte ta Ete |Snesieestvoang is te?ant Gonsutcton ne | oper . ‘Aor she feast came ine dances. Tne dst was| "May ihe Lord iorgive you.” Posticaiy” "| Stmettuan ‘he sarang eeay na gd ‘Tux Doctor. | feeling manifested, evince a disposition to carry this and mutually profitable to both. It is impossible, indeed, | nary process. the work which has been done could lebrated cantatrice of th nd the importance of such an acquisition to the | be cancelled, and the membe a rchd ter the Crosiaile @urhis tie text to caleul ry the Rio Grande. We all wish tobecome acquainted with | 7. All feudal tenurcs of every description, with all | Mr, Bunn has entered into an ment with Malle, | the war dance, some twenty or thirty men joining his life and character. He is a native of New io & their incidents, are declared to be abolished, saving, how- Fouc im pape hee comren eee ngewe, wi on ‘short | in each sett or dance < a sia each hog ai MY ssdibeater Danes Level Mauaibiee Os grest work through. It ine very popaler carry ‘ we are informed.) L, married the stepdaughter ever, all rents and services certain, which at any time | time ago, at the Academie Royale de Musique ; and she | his official costume. lost 0 em were nake Sept. 1646 7 and the copitalists and business men are beter Ad bry celebrated St Seong ht Yaeee rated, with | have been heretofore lawfully created or reserved. will dance at Drury Lane during the months of Novem- down to their hips, excepting their,caps, and a prea 0 Bs Mngt Podien- Tous their power. . aiding Men asd jena ou Goaol sed | peti asa yt barely mcs in "Shck wats | Prsed bewomba eat Le roles, hei pereraanoes | PUM ie Heat Me at | gi hanaaee eerste, ta tar ie genrl 12 ; “A + | At the Grand Theatre at Nantes, a few days ago, there | evinced great muscular elasticity, and with some | —Zzupere, the Indian Girl—Twm’s first Shot—Death o) rers ee ora petlecs ambient, tor” clove of Hehe | Tesorred any rent or service of any kind, shall be valid’ | was a disturbance from the following incident ~The | great power, but very irregular. Next came the| ¢ Stag—Lake of Dreame—Eden Camp Bilt of Fare— | {ct Will be to diminish the sale of their goods, and to re- pak’ -) ise of rising to distinction, if eny op. | whereby the right of the grantee to alien fs in any man- | Peformance commenced with, the piece entitled “Lee | religious dance, in which the women engaged.—| sre in the Woods—Beouty of the Wilderness, Sen Oe Goo ably. erermolens, (hoy. ong coat portunhiy did offer itself, Contiaued ia the | ver fectrsinedvabd sll fines, quarter sales, and other | Couleurs de i igri bferne™ iA ete Casas Their music consisted of a very simple drum, and} consists of one stout ‘six feet and well pro. | get. regu! by 4, A peep Tog eh 4 trmy ever since ; and for the last fifteen or twenty years | charges npon alienation, reserved, in every grant of land Winey hase Te ue pit he said, ta tw eedgal ote: shells filled with pebbles or seeds, and singing.— peri mas wine not only understands the wood, | othe more frank and candid portion of the Sa ‘ Nenerelly ot F ee Desiegeeresth on the iaieorn Miers vey ble ‘and inerowtiog debete among the | “You spear angry, gentlemen.” These worde pro- “y ng yt oni Sepreleam, w whisker rit Take likes a book e-capitel shot—and will build | Seuwcure Seal manors insane of oenneya pe & ice He has made frequent reconnoissances, | most distinguished members of the Convention, the first | YoKed still louder hisses and disapprobation, and the jm- | made by some one , minutes from the bark—i. @., peel the | the Are bills out. they are genevally prudent actor was called upon to apologise, ‘Apologise! | sponses were given by ajloud cheer or whoop | ® cabin in twent in wilrery expeditions, in that region, thus acquiring | section, as above, was a 1 amendment to the the stege. Another |somewhat similar to the regular war whoop | bark and Laon in " 8 to shed rain—yet will newspapers, in at Knowledge of Ke phyeical iebtorse. of the Iudieg | second section was offered so that the section would rena | Bever” saying which he quitte th i BM Bee del nnraepmel ceope ‘ 9 -a cance 0, head with the accomplished ease of an /hether they are well found- Ibs of the eeearces af 2 wertarn i, ax wold geal | follows TEE a ee eed cede | Made ding their dances, ‘SScimot laden, pelos, boggege sad ailomn al |cine’e"MROM eutte watts ay toy pre fy him to act the pioneer and commanding officer of the | ‘2 No lease or grant of agricultural land for a longer a Y | Iwas quite amused with the performances of | whether a deer is fat by the tracks—and from their fresh- | ferto have a moderate tariff if it can be permanent, to expedition, which he has so successfully conducted to | period than twenty-one years, or during the natural life | Y te police. one of the young hereditary chiefs, a lad about | ness will guess the distance since he passed—and is fa- | high one, which can never be # to remain un- Saute Fe. Ho ae re high as 4 bold, indomitable, | of the grantee, hereafter made, in which, &c., shell be | _ St. George’s ballet of “La Gipsy,” was brought out by | eleven years of age, gi eat grandson of the famous | miliar par excellence with all kinds of woodcraft—his | changed for any length of tim: energetic, and accomplished officer—who has the head | valid.” Balfe asthe Bohemian Girl. Translated into German | 414 An-te-au-ga. The name of the lad is Ga-no- | assistant is a stout Indian of the St Regis tribe, who has to contrive, the hand to execute, and the heart to brave ‘The amendment was adopted. It will be seen that the | it has become “Die Ziegeynerian.” Never was success owks, Bi id astonish a good Personal Intel mec. ir of imitating animals that wou overy difficulty, Such is the man who seems rapidly | adoption of this amendment, prematurely, totelly defeat- | more complete; the piece is now performing simuliane- erlormances were some of them | ® powe! jm 8 ntriloquist—t at times deceives the shy tenants Asa B. Smith is the abolitioa c ite for State Sena- ‘sing to high dietinetion ; and whose services already | ed the purpose of the anti-rent committee, which submit- | ously at Vienna, Berlin, Munich, Hamburgh, &c. truly astonishing exhibitions of elasticity and skill forest. From the drum of a partridge to the yell of i entitfo him to the applause and gratitude of his country. | tedtho article for the consideration of the Convention. | {¢ ig reported {n Paris, that Barrez has been, for the se- |i evolutions. Ife i a great favorite amongj the | { wolf, the bark of a fox, and the crytot an, ecgle, a | ‘OF in the 7th district ne Te NEE ae As a consequence, the entire body of anti-rent delegates, | cond time, engaged as ballet master at Drury Lane. old chiefs. deer’s snort, and moose’s whistle, he executes with such | Srowon SaLvaTORE 2 O giedly San Juan de Ulloa. headed by ira Harris, took most decided ground agebast | sre vosheor is o in the composition of an opera |, Agreat many presents were exchanged be-| accuracy that he is one of the most successful hunters | notice that Sighhe Sy Vian ms es the (Correspondence of the London News.) the whole second seotion, as amended. A very for the Academie Ralosde Miasiane at Paris. itwill \tween the white spectators who were present | in allthisregion. He is, like the most of the Lower wate oa Wyer Sikes: Engl fend ge mong ite On the termination of the war with Old Spain, ed debate ensnod, in which the very best materlal of the e miserable remains of their garrison had been ee ohied Convention was Drought into play. Messrs Harris, Van | Hot be brought out until the end of 1847, Havana, | went with two companions over the Castle of Simmons, etc., distinguished themselves | M. Corelli, péfe, is putting the tngrnge } touch to a | 10 ; he whites was ted th Ah San Juan de Ulloa. It is a tremendous it at all | by @ most able defence of the great principle sought to | new ballet for the Academie Royale de Musique, to be | ach gift from the whites Prosented throug” | rupted, and whose native virtue well manned. No wonder it had told oud ee tou . Had | be establis by them, to wit: that estates entailed fora | called La Tattienne ; the principal character is destined | the head chief, La Forte, who accompanied the | 5." ‘leprosy of civilization. it not been forthe raging of the yellow fover within its | life or lives are a curse to th | for Carlotta Grisi. presentation with a speech, when the gift was laid | jife yet, as hia father wa and the want isions, the Mexicans would | Repeated efforts were made to re-amend the second | Grisi, Mario, and Corelli, after having concluded their | aside for deposit in the national archives. ‘the tribe 5 ‘ol a (some of whom were the most fashionable and | Canada Indians a professor of the Catholic faith, and as . Spain, intelligent ladies in Syracuse) and the Indians.— honeet and uprighta man es I have ever seen—cne of just returned He has bi with hist not ca, 1 yw that the vices of the white man have not cor. | only the honors of his literar o¢e ns, mentioned in 1 rs, and particu! in the “ New York not wen tainted | rer re keening Pout,” vad) “ Saturday his articles y ” 6 is in the afternoon of | Herald, chief en it without a naval force very superior | section, and after a very fierce struggle the section was | tour in the provinces, will Paris, Fornasari and | The Christian party of these Indians do not join | of ow information, concerni: then they have never | Feamedded, and the period for the imitation of all leaves | Caytellan will, ater having concluded thelr eeyese n't | in their fensts, from the beliet that they are con- | about, this wide wildefness, ino whic Av the. moat part of these aticles ae about Silly and ree comparable to that one. fixed at twel T SS rae tique in Ireland, Jeave for italy. Fornasari goes to Ve- | trary to the doctrines and precepts of Christianity, | ing—to him it is still the paradise of tie sage been pleasing indeed the | fic men of thors distant repent we should have been p'rased to report tuem, with the grateful sentiments with which te foreigners have accepted the same; bat bre to outer walls of this fortress are of immense thick- | adopted. A very rds of twelve fe and in the tions most | debate Tho Convention then adjou: teen feet in| The City Hotel, in this city, ia to be pa every mountain, rock, island, and lax« It is rare that they attend 98 spectators, though | S207 Merten dim with ears: les cheracter |) it range | for a | SE eee gna RAMBLER. oar Gar pet Lisbon wT dose x ag Ante | n, Tag! has h, of solid white stone, It is a rous, and Yankee Hill has hased building, i’ is | house, and admirers of Taglion! has just been completed, | P.S. Being in Syracuse to-day, I learn that the eg nie Space of OOF paper not perm’ us to enumerate a GeKier softstone, eo that balis do not split oF crack ito | sat. ‘The weather is pecullarly fine here; wo bave bad | and will shortly be presented to her. {thas boon maantes! grand jury, Mow in session, have found a. bill dian potete with gr fo ani eH es nation of amalyze ail of toeim, we hope that the suthor will pub much asquietly embed themselves. hese outer walls | No frost yet in this city, and there has been nove in ‘he | tyred in the ‘orlablisnwmenset har. Gerrard, ofthe Haymer- inst the noted Empire House, for the ne ore eloquent in iheir = these #l se hg ‘is work hg Pag: = ~~4 oa havo batteries all round; the guns were well planted, | Western part of the State. | Coverall, Keise or No License jaw. ‘hat house was at- he sufferings dieten of those Mre. , Mr. Rubio as naeiree of chizatrous France, the | tourists, as he promises; which o! Carell hero and there. a neat corner fora mortar. The ‘ tached fiter, because it was deemed the greatest } dese r form their opinion ii walls are 60 constructed, that if the outer walls Poiltieal Lu! once. consists . ’ ‘Canada au Bas. Ever ready and ever | thereby enal our readers to form prays it would still be at a slaughterous expenseto | The Hon. Wm. C. Preston, Piesident of the South (’a | figures, and the figures of two animals, taken | Sner, prolessing to be temperance. mail “a ogee ah nian me with toiling, nights wih | meritsot such literary works, and the title pA 5 the be gers, if the were at all competent to | roling Conege arrived at his res.dence in this place yes. | from the balletof ion, in whieh Tag! There are only fourteen causes on the civil ca- talos—of years now lost in the oblivion of the past. | zen has for the love of his native eoeatty mo whole avail themselves of their position. terday, muc! improved, we are poy to state, in heyith. | in the season of 1849. Diana it survey Eaten dar. These are divided between more than | "have how given you a fair idea of my two admirable | of Sicily —Polermo Government. Gazette Cerere, ‘We entered the fortress from below at the principal | ~ Columbia ($.C.) Chronicle, 30th y't. who sleeps oa a bank, behjud which Capal, erovohing, ty lawyers! Hard business that, | aidede-camp—Willis, the backwoods hunter, and Mena | Aprif 16th, 184

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